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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-15 - Orange Coast Pilot• • . • ' C!na.vare· ol Airline ~s Action • • • • . 1~500 -Marines Area Food Unions Bit the Bea~hes Ready · for Strike t C~_•np Pendletonr. Of Gro~ery Marts ~--"1-..-----· ---- DAILY PILOT . . - * * * 10' * * * ·'' THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 YOL. 66, NO. llt, 4 SECTIONS, ft PAHS • • t , . Illegal Airline Request Denie~ By L. PETER KRIEG Of flMI DtllY P'llol l ltff Sources close to Herbert W. Ka lmbach of Newport Beach, President Nixon's personal attorney, conftrmed today that he did solicit $100,000 from American Airlines but "he had n'o idea they would make illegal c:onlributions." "He did not ask for corporate funds or fo r cash and the point is absolutely C·oast· Residents . . . . To Face -Pickets At food Marts? Orange cb:inty residents may .have to cros~~ picket. lines to . shop at ft\()#1 market§· 'next' "eek. · r 1 ,. • Predictions of a strike . b~' four fobd Industry' ljll\ons varie,d . toJ14y,_ But ., \M Food Employers .O>Uncu· {FEC) •Wal' preparin g for the possibility. (See related story;.-32,1 . • . .,, ,,. . . "We're getUne: ready,'' Robert Voight of the FEC said. "EVerybody Is cranking up their stiike~gear." The FEC is negotiating with the CaHfomla Food and Drug Council, which represenls ·the ' teamsters, butchers, opf!ratlng engineers and machinists unions. T}te labor negotiator~ represent ' about 28,000 empk>yes from BaWsfleld to San Diego.· About 3, 725 of them work in Orange County. The month-old talU hit a stalemate again Wednesday w~ labor officials rejected a federal mediator's request that they exteild the . Sonday strike deadline. W. J. Usery, director ol the Federal Mediation service. asked the Wlion leaders early WedneAday to come ·10 Walhlngton, D.C. Mohday 1o '·continue negotiations. His request waa tumed clown .by about' JOO union officials at an emergency meeting at the Biltmore Hotel In Los Angeles. A labor representative said today that moving ,.bout 160 persons essential to the negoUaUons to Washington, D.C. would be expensIW?,· would be a drain on tt energy shortage and would ~ terro the progress of negotiations. Un on o£flciali saiij loll•1' they want U1ery to come to Los Angeles. "Hls belp lilirj'enl!y nttded." NeaotiaUons are continuing while Uoery, determines his response to tho (See STRIKE, Poge 11 • I clear on that," the sources said. They did ; however, describe how Kalmbach approached American Airlines president George A. Spater in the_fall of 1971. Spater had testified on the contribution before the Senate Watergate • committee today. · "Kalmbach met twice with Spater and the second time he asked the executives of the airlines to take on a $100,000 goal. "Sp~le~ agreed bu! said he figured the be!!it ·they CQuJd piobably do was betwetJf·flQ,000 nnd ... $75,000,"·the sourCes said. "He tOld them Whatever. t h·e y could do would be appreciated." Spater 1oday testified that American Airlines did contribute $75.000 but $55,000 of. It was corporate funds written off on, a phony invoice for used airplanes from a Lebanese company. ' · .Kalmbach never saw Spater after that !ij!C(,nd' meeting. the sources ~id, adding that when he was later infonnOO t the contr,ibutions were in cash and part of (!fem· wete"corporate fundio . he was totally surprised. nle """"" · said ·Kalmbaclr had no way of knowing the contributions would be Ulegal, . · 11$pater is the form er general COUMel for American Airlines and donations of corporate funds are clearly illegal and Spater knew it,'\ the sources said. 11lt never occurred to him to say ~Uta( they can't be cdrpora te funds because everybody knows that." Sourees said that Kalmhach had e,- pected that the many executives with the" big airline would all chip in to -(See KALMBACH, PageZf • Nixon to Sig1i ,, P,~peli~ .Bill . WASHINGT\)!j (AP) -. f>rtsi.' dent Nlx6n said t<idiy he will iign Friday a bill authorizing con- struction of. an oil pipeline. across Alaska · despite what he said were objectionable features of the bill. · 0 1 Will; of course. sign the bill," Nixon said In a 4 speech to the Nalional Association of Realtors. However, Nixon said be would ask Congress later to remove cer- tain a mendm ents attached to the bill in the Senate. These grant broad regulatory powers to the Federal Trade Comml8.!io - ·-FROM THE HALLS OF M~_EZ\JMA TO THE SHORES OF CAMP PENDLETON'S RED BEACH ' Marines Stormed Ashore 1~ Strong This Morn Ing To C1pture Mythic1I Country,. Test Wupons Marines St0tm Ashore at Pendle·ton -. A wave of 1,500 Marines stormed ashore at Camp Pendieton e::irly today ; to "save •• a tiny ·occupied island of . "Margiiritas", and despite a few stuck jeeps and a couple landing craft, their • mission appeared to be a roarlng suC-1 cess. The mock war, the first major exercise 1 Involving ·regulai Marines In months, ' is dubbed "Operatim\·Bell Bango". It ls calc11ialed to give th~)eathernec1'$ prattlce al-kbockirig out . enemy gUn • emp1acements on hilltops above I.be reservation's Red· Beach~· The straod usuaUy serves as, the private hauqt of President Nixon on his trips to tbe South Coast. • But this mcrrning it became a bat- tleground wltb landing !"aft and Marines swanning over the sands. "!'be craft .,.re lll\lllChed' In trodlUoaal fashion from Navy ships offshore and the Uth Marine An\phlbious Unit used the vessels and helicopters to reach land. A few of the bulky vessels failed -to ·make it off t h e beach on their own power and a pair of jeeps operating on;·the soft sand found the going a bi(. rough as wen. 1\~otk bombardments of shore locations ano were staged by Navy vessels and •e units were ordered to seek · out an enemy missile boat base which had been "threatening international sea Janes." • ....... _ FOR FOJVL 'lJ EED S ' . WOODLAND (UP!) -Three men were held here on $1.500 bohd on a charge of stealing and killing three turkeys. The turkeys, val.ued at $25 each, were taken rrom a turkey fann a n d slaughtered on the scene, sheriff's deputies said Wednesday. Fowl rustling is classified as grand theft In California . The battle for the "nation'' is expected to last through the weekend with even- tual success predicted sometime ~1on­ day . During the lengthy exercise the mettle of the Marines as wen ns their latest weapons will be l.ested, spokesmen ~aid. The l\1arines particularly \\•ill be able l°"'faJniJiari.ze .lher;nselves with the lalest addition to their 'arsenal -lhe 'hand· l:i.Unchcd Md.etc antlaircr&it missile. Student ID 'Out' OAKLAND (AP ) -School officials said Wednesday. they discontinued stu- dent Identification cards called "op- pressive" in a Jetter from a group taking responsibility for killing Schools SU pt. Marcus Foster. A letter from a group calling itself the Symbloncsc Liberation Army claimed the photo-be••· ing cards were ~ to create police ~dossiers on students. · ' Claim Filed Against City 111 Kidnap A ma'n accidenta lly shot by Newpori Beach ~lice as he v.·as being hel~ hostage. by a kidnaper today . has on file a $250,000 claim against the etty. : Attorneys for Marco de Silva, 20, allege police intentionally shot the . youth an<! claim the Newport Beach Pohce Depart· ment is "too prone to the use ·of violence." · City officials have routinely denied the claim, clearing the way for the claimant to file a lawsuit. De Silva was one of two persoo1 held captive in an Orchid Hills Drive· home on Sept. 12 by Roland Dale: Cra\vford, 29, of Huntington Beach, whell police closed in. •· In an exch<inge of gunfire, de Silvi and Crawford's second hostage, Denine Baeseman , 17, were both struck by police . bullets. Miss Baeseman has not yet filed II clID19 althou~h the ~wner of the house. H oWiirit Fe!Chtmarto;-rs seekilig about $1 .000 for repair of structural Gamage. Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas, who admitted after 'the inrident proper police proctdures· "ere generally followed. -but mistcikes had been made • -y.·as unavailable fof comment today. (See CLAIA-f, P'age % ) 'Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast Will be fair through Saturday with some coas t- al to w clouds Friday morning, ac· cordi ng lo the weather service. Highs in the upper 60s to low 70s. Lows tonight upper .40s to low 50s. I ~. .... . •. I N"S I Ill·: 'l'OU \ \' Rapes and assaults on coeds have become a ma jor problem 0'1 the nation's college ca111- p11ses. See story, Page 8. ' 10111111 11 t,..M. ltYcl 24 c111toml1 H Clln:itl1cl Jl·'l C111'1lt1 2' Cto-ort 1' Dtll!I Ntllt•' 11 E61torl•I P11t .. , 5l'lltft1111mt11t .. .,, Flflll'tf U•ll FH "" 11:.nN 11 1-1¥ GlttiMf JI Mt-rfM .. t H • Allll L111tff1 Ill Mo•ltl ....,. M111t,11I Fwfldl l' 11 N1li-I ""'" 4 Or1ntt c"""'' 11 Pl A • s-•• ».w ~1K1t M1111..-. n>tJ TtM.•ilitft • nNttn .. )I WMl!lff 4 W-'• ,....,. U.17 W9'1t Newt 4 • • OAJL 't' PILOT s lh11rS41J , Novtmbtr 1.5. 1971 POW Trade Begins ~:-::: Egypt Military Shake up Rumored in. Cairo · 1---·-..r---11:y--.ne AlllOCl.aled Preu The lint. Red Cross pt1111<1 carried woonded prlsooers, some walking and some on 1tretchers. The International Red Cross said il expected t)le futt exchange to take about a week. Suez line In the last 10 d a ya ol the October-· ·, .. Prisoners of war came home to J.srael 'el1d EllYPt today: - -: ; tsraeU Defense Minister f\1oshe Dayan, ·on hand to welcome returnees to Tel Aviv, declared: "At least we have ... ).rTanged things by ta1ks, like human )lelngs, instead of by tank fire and , -.exploding grenades." ~teanwhlle, in Cairo, i n I o r m a n t s reported a major shakeup ln the Egyp- tian milltal")' hlgh comnu.nd following Israel's lightning break through Egypt's •nought Land!'> They 1aid the mflltary calamity, which ltlt the Egyptian !rd Army cut off In the Sinai Oeoert, resulted In the firing ol at lea.st one anny chief and creation ol a new field command. Obstrvers foresaw the possibility of courl-mariiat trials In the wake of the failure to follow up an lnltlal Egyptian a:uccess. The wraagling in Cain>, bidden from the public and offidalty unconfirmed, LI an Egyptian counterpart to complalnt.5 In Israel that the Israeli armed forces were Wlprepared for the Oct. 6 attack -N-ixon Lauds .Reul E~tate Buy tbiifOpebed-ihe-war. -- As part ol the POW exchapg•, Israel W AS!IlNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said today he proved ' his faith in "America's real estate" by sellin~ his stocks and bonds in 1968 to finance the purchase of property 1n California and Flor· ida. '. i' Addressing 4,000 members of the Natio~al Association .of Real· FAISAL-STAUNCH FRIEND OR FOE? Story, Pago 17 agreed to turn over to U.N. forces its control of the highway from C&iro to Suez. This gives Egypt access to the city of Suez and the isola~ 3rd Army without going through Israeli con· trols for the first time since final stages of the October war. tors Nixon made an oblique reference to his acq u1sit1on of homes at San Clemente an d Key Biscayne, Fla. Some presidential ~ritics have 9.uestioned Nixo n's financing methods to buy th~ .pro~ert1es. Nixon said in the speech tha~ he sold hi.s. secunt1es ~ive years ago to invest in real estate. He said the secunties transact1~ns were aimed it eliminating any questions that he would benefit would he assume the presidency it:i January, 1969. 1 • • "I bought a house in California, n1y mother s house in Cali- fornia , and I bought two pieces of property in F1?rida. -one. of which I sold," Nixon said. "That's what I own. I beheve in Amenca. I believe in America's real estate." 1be deal, worked out by Egyptian and Israeli generals under the agreement sponsored by U.S. Secretary of S ta t e Henry A. Kissinger, flmled the cease-fire on the Suez front. But on th e Syrian froot , Damascus reported an artillery duel ln the Golan Hinshaw Meets President; ' 'All Out for Confiden~e' Helght.5, the fifth truce breakdoWf! in 10 days. The Damascus conunuruque did not say how long the exchange of fire lasted but said an Israeli bulldozer had been destroyed. Prisoners returning from Egypt to J61'ael were y;elcomed by a large sign on the tarmac reading, "Welcome, Heroes of Israel." In emotion-packed scenes the m en were welcomed home with bouquets, tears· and cheering crowds. -~es1den[ Nnron has-every appe<Jra1~-1~hae-~"tlinHn~hls..-aye-that-~._.~31~co/~~W· P\SQe _tp. of going to any length to restore con· he was going to' get at the truth, re&eh---:~ unloaaeG at a ~uiet Jidence in his administration, Rep. said Hinshaw. "I had the feeling he and remote comer d. l he ~nnac: A Andrew J, Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach) .knoWs the fight Is not golng Well, but senioroffidal~ldithadbeenlmposs1~le said after meeting with him today in he still feels he's the right man to to plan , a Jar~~ public welcome. with the White House. be President." the men s families present. He did not Grove Man Hel£1 Iii Assault Iii Costa Mesa A 250-pound Garden Grove truck driver is held today, accused of being the potbellied would-be rapist who supris- ed and assau lted a young woman in a ~ta Mesa service slatkm ladies' room Wedn esday. Phillip M. Bernstein, 23, or ./13 112 Nelson St., was arrested and booked on suspicion of assault with intent lo i:ommil rape following the incident. His alleged victim in the rape attempt and subsequent chase, involving a varte-- ly of bystanders. suffered minor face cuts and bruises in the incident. The 21-year..old victim who was grab- bed as she left the ladies' room in a station al 3195 Harbor Blvd., also had her culotte outfit and undergarments ripped . Ross Velasco. 19, an acquaintance and attendant at !he station, said the young woman stopped for gas and to make a phone call during mid-morning hours. She said a hulking, tall man with a big belJy loitered around the men's room eyeing her as she made her phone call. then suddenly grabbed her a few minutes lat er as she exited the restroom. ··Shut up !," he reportedly snarled as he slammed her against the steel wall, • mauling her with one hand and slapping her with the other. Velasco said he heard the girl scream· ing and raced to her aid, confronting the suspect who claimed he simply walk- ed into the women's room by accident. The young attendant said he chased tile suspect to a 1973 stakebed truck, writing its license number down on the palm or his hand wilh ballPoint pen. A second man from an adjacent coffee shop jumped into his car and followed the truck from the sce ne. I , OU.Not COAST IT DAILY PILOT • rM Ot'•no• COit! O"ILY PILOT, wltll 'lllll'lldl It ~lntd 1111 N1w1.,l'9U, b publlsh.i b~ the 01"1ng1 Co.ti Pvbll1ll!no Com,.ny. $epa. rlll edllk>nl 1•1 P\lbllt~td. 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C..11 ~ temMny • ~ -11trltt, l"11tlrll•1 td!"'ll' . mttw It' "-'~" "'"Iii -· .. ,~ "'""""' "*"' ..,.. f!'listlln fl ~I ..,..,., i1cot111 c11M ............ w ti c-1• MIM, (tllfonll•. ~ltll .... Urf"lfr tl. .. ~' 11w ONI! U.ll llW!tl'llFI mllffltY ----f.2AI -"'"'· , .. ·- Hinshaw was among 78 Repubtlcan e~ain why. . congressmen invited to the White Ho~ In its latest POW count Israel sald for a no • holds • barred question-and· it will be ~tu~g 8,221 m~ to Egypt. answer session with Nixon. The Egyptians list 238 Israelis captured The President said he Is cOnsidering in the war, plus nine captured in military a personal appearance before Congress operatiODS before 1970. COX DOESN'T WANT JOB BACK. Story, Pago 4 -and even one before 'the Ervin com- mittee -to reveal his knowledge of such issues as Watergate, IT'I'. his personal financt.S and the firing of Archibald Cox, Hinshaw said. "He showed no irritation, aJthough there were some embarrassing questions --particularly a bout resignation," Hinshaw said. The figures leave unaccounted for the remainder of the 350 troops Israel had previously estimated to have been cap- tured by the Egyptians. Israel also said it captured 368 Syrians, 13 Iraqis and ab: Moroccam and believes Syria is holding at least 127 Israelis. Israeli officials 1!oPe f~r-a .POW ex· change with Syria IOOD. From Pagel CLAIM. • • Reversing dramatically his previous strategy of only occasional public a~ pearances and statements during the crisis caused by the scandal, the ·Pres!-His adjutant, Lt. Ed Cibbarelll, denied dent had a rush schedule today Including the charge that police shot de Silva four major appearance -three witll on purpose. , congressmen. "We have conducted an investigation In addition , he will make three and we have admitted that we made speeches outside Washington in a period certain tactical errors," Cibbarelli said, of four to five days beginning this "but there was no intentloft by Police weekend -all in the South. to do any harm to innocent penons. The President also was described as "Our main concern at all times was planning more televised news con-the safety of the hostages," Cibbarelll rerences and submitting to more in· sa~ claim filed by attorney George terviews by both broadcasten and P.kDonald also cootends "the city newspaper reporters. uni le and The breakfast session with the second negligenlly failed to comm ca group of House GOP membera preceded or to comm1Dlicate accurately a descrlp- a speech to a realtors convention -~~d.n!l"suspect to the offlCers Nixon's first such appearance ln nearly McDonald said that resulted 1n "the two months. It was to be followed by Inability of the police officers in the lunch with a group of Democratic con· field to distingQlJb between claimant gressmen and an early ·evening session who wu 8 victim' and the kidnaper." with the last one--thlrd of the GOP De Silva was bit twice by police senators. bullet.5. Miss Baeseman apparently wu At the realtori convention, Nixon told stnJCk once, with the slug tearin1 an audience of 4,000, "I was elected through one hmg. to do a job. Jim not going to walk De Silva's attorney claims that away until I get that Job done." Newport Beach .w a 1 also "nedlgent ln . Speaking at the convention of the Na· ret.ainlng" the officers on t5e police tional • Association of Realtors at the force because It had knowledge of the Sheraton-Park Hotel , Nixon was l& "propensity ... for violence." . terrupted six times for applal.W! during Glavas, ln his explanation of the a 30-minute appea.rance. shooting at a press conference early Mostly, he reviewed his 1973 ac-last month, said police were forced to complishment.5 in both the domestic and open f i re as Miss Baeseman ducked foreign fields, and turned to Watergate to give police a shot as de Silva struggled only toward the end. with the abductor. Some mistakes were made b Y Officer Al Ooum fired the first police "overzealous people" In his behalf during shot whic a light switch beside the 1972 presidential campaign, he said. Q-awfo head, Glavu explalned. "~1istakes were made, mistakes I. en then tried to .shoot , Glavas would not have approved of, mlstakea said but ·s gun misfire~. t would not have tolerated but mistakes Police ed fire from about 10 feet for which I mm t accept responsibility." away, he id, and as Crawford d.rv,>ped He declared. ''As far as the President -for cov ugs from a police gun rlfped of !Ire United Slates Is concerned, he Into de va and Miss Ba ... man. has not violated his trust and he ls "Obviously their aim was not as good not going to violate It." as It 'could . have been," Chlef Glavas He is to appear Saturday at the aMual said at the time. c:onventiQn of the. AssociaJoi.. Press Both v:I~ were taken to C.Osta Managing Editors Associatlon'i!' Orlan· Meta Memonal ~Hospital and were do .• and Sunday at Mercer Law SChool released ~ 1ew days later, but. are still · "'con convaJesona:. m "~ · ., Q-awfonl Is In Orange Coimty Jail * -tf -tf M $100,000 bond fadni 12 felony counta 1n connection witb the lddnaplng, wltb a court appearance due this montll. Frot11 Page I KALMBACH. •• get the donation up. "II a large enough number of them paid $3,000 each, you'd get up there," the sources said. "Or if you get one or two dlrecton to go lnto it together, that's how you get 10 tt," tlley said. Kalmbach and Spater atao "laulhed about the fact that one of Kalmbach's major cllenta ts United Alrilnt1, Ont ot American's dUef competltora. "Spater knew tllat and Kalmbach assured him tllere would .. no conflict," the .IOU1'Ctl 1ak1. WINE HA.D THA.T EXTRA TA.NG GENOA, Italy (UPI) -Bruno Marocco was pourlttfl wine at lunch in a rataurant when a 111-lnch lizard plopped from the bottle Into hta l)w. Police said Wednetdsy he went to a hospital to have h!J stomach pumped for fur the chlm<lon might have contaminated tbe wine. ' Despite Crisis Tire F orrnula . _Jheft Cliarged LOS ANGELES (UPI\ -A Union on Co. research as.s.Utant frt.fD OrMge County has been amtted on charges of stealinc a secret fonnula for bardenlna tires and trying to sell It to a -petitor for $100,000, the District Attorney'• Christmas . Light ' Show Still On O!fice has dlscloled. . James Wesley Falrleu, 36, Stan· ton, was booked on suaplclon or theft or trade secreta with ball at 115,000. The District Attorney's Office said Union Oil teamed of the mat· ter when a competitor, who was not named, told the flnD that Fairless had offered them tile fonnula. Fairless was arrested Tuesday night. -BART System Confounds T·wo Tlieft Suspects • By TERRY COVILLE Of fM O.llY 1"1111 Iliff 'n:le Huntlnl{ton Harbour 'Oiristmas Jlght show will go on this year despite the energy crises. So will the lluntington B e a c h Christmas decoration contest, sponsored by the women 's division .of the Chamber o Commerce. Both groups have refused to bow to the President's call for dimmer holiday Ughts, but say they aren't in the dark about it. "We are asking everyone to turn o(f Uitlr lnSRle tights--while-the-Christmas lights are on," says l.1rs. Edwin Sud· darth, publicity chainnan for the Hun· Ungton Harbour affair. Last year more than 1,000 homes lining the water channels of Huntington JJarbour in north Huntington Beach were decorated with Christmas lights. The show, called the "Cruise of Lights," is sponsored by the Huntington OAKLAND (UPI) BART foiled a Harbour Philharmonic Committee. 11 has burglary. tt nights of boat tour> (0.c. 13-23) It was all because the Bay Area through 12 miles of brightly lit channels. Rapid Transit District's ticket system "We were quite concerned about the energy crises," explains Mrs. Suddarth. was too confusing for two men w h 0 "So we studied the problem and found had taken a televisi9n set. that compared to inside lights, the Station agent Steven M. Bales said Christmas bulbs draw very little power." Wednesday, "It was their fint time In a press release. the phllharmonic on the system, and they had to ask mmmittee points out that an elC(:tric me how to bi.:y their tickets." dryer, or a skillet, a toaster or an iron, uses as much power as five to However, the men didn't gel the hang seven strings of Christmas lights. of i!. ' Paul Richardson, district manager for Bales explained to the pair that each Southern California Edison, says the passenger ming BART must have an company has "taken a position of absolute neutrality on Christmas lights." individual ticket lo work the a!ltomatic He added, however, "there won't be toll gates. He told them to buy 30-cent 8!\Y Christmas light.5 on any Edison tic kets. -facilities." Instead , he said, they used all the One string of JS Christmas bu!Qs would. lQ!XU~Y.J~e)',,hl!ddo ID!J~nllar UclieL-..-Jia3e.. fR ~ ,a.t!!(>uU.ftKt.h>ui!, to uae Bales finaJl y let theni through an a full 6irTel ofo1l;"Eaison offiCii ls emergency gate. • estimate. A string or the holiday lights Just then, a man ran up to Bales is roughly equal to one 150-watt or 200- and told him two mmmitted a burglary watt indoor bulb. · in nearby BerkeJey. The witness pointed Mrs. Suddarth said, based on that out the St.18pect.5 who were waiting for information, the philharmonic society ls a train. They held a big box. asking all participants to be doubly aure Bales called security police and board· to turn. off indoor lighting when the ed. .the train with the men. Christmas decoratk>n.s are on. When the burglars got off, Bales Some changes in the charOOer of com- pointed them out to Police who arrested merce contest have been made to ac- them. comrnodate the energy crunch, says Mamie Seltzer, co-chairman of the .event. One daytime category has been added, which can be entered In this year's Orange coast ''40 Miles of Christmas Srpiles". Officials of that decorating con- test are suggesting daylight displays. ,"The night eventa will also be Judged more oo their theme ind artistic quality, rather than the amount of Ught.5," uys Mn. Seltzer. From Pagel STRIIfE-. • • union plea. Union ofncials dlff~red In their estimations of the poss1b11lty of a \\'aikout after Sunday. Meat Cutters tJnlon vice president Jack Boyd said there's a 95 percent chance, but Teamsters negotiator Jerry Vercruse cut !hat dOY.'n to five percent, but added he could 1be wrong . If a strike is called. it ls expected to last more than a month. But the FEC 's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about not getting food. · "We plan to keep all stores in opera· tion during the strike," he said . Labor unions originally said the strike ·may be against one wholesaler only, but Voight said a strike agains t one , is a strike against all. ''\Ve're a unified industry," he said, promising a lockout of \VOrkers by the FEC. FEC preparations for a strike include: stockpiling the back rooms of 1tores with food; gelling extra orders in now ; arranging deliveries with independent trucking companies; recruiting non-union personnel willing to work under strike conditions; alerting management to get ready-to-,w,,ft<.-o~erUnte:..and..asklng the retail clerks union not to OOnor the picket lines. . The clerks union. although not involved in the negotia'tlons, has been represented by the Food and Drug Council and is being requested by the other unions to support their eUort. , Altboogh union olficlals said today there has been progress in the talks, Voight said Wednesday that there are too many Issues "left on the table" ·on which there bas been little agreement. ~ CJ/oliday cq)Wi~er CSale : • FOR ONLY $1.00 MORE We will make a normal re- placement installation of any standard undercounter dish - washer . YES , ONLY $1. MORE! The stainless steel dishwasher. 6 IJrJIVf ~·~A L ,..........,;-t-.;.._ . \,; ·,,:_~: :-~:--::~ - ~ , . . : ' .; .. ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIV~ YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING• RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTR.A:TION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE• ACT NOWlll . SAU! ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 ............. ,. .. • « • NOBODY SELLS « • WASTEKING "« • DISHWASHERS « •·FOR LESS THAN« • E>UNLAPS « • .« Why Waste King Universal Is 5•ways better **********·**• ..... EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTIDll ~} • • • SAFE, SANITARY DRYllG ~"'""'2()""''1 l"''~"":5--·~1 ~e ~YEAR :~ I STAINLESS I ~ ~ns G""rantce on~ l! STEEL j; ~ lh• mo<or. pump .. ; 3 ~ :-.timer. waste'!: ~ ; heater and pu!hbut· ·:: -, -GUARANTEE ~ ~ distnbuilon ,,,.,m.~ ~~ _ ~ ::.. tom on 800 nnd 900.:; RUGGED BASKETS, 3 ~'*"'!"" ~ ~ """ dl•h•as11e rs. ~ RANDOM LOADING Z!1l'llnntr111 (1'1yt\"1'1"1'1"1Ym~ Z't.:11111 111.1 1!1fi'fll'm1rf11~ • • 90DAYSCASH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • , I• · $2.10. Per Hmcr • Dtll~ 'llot Sltl! 'hato SAYS 'NO' TO IRVINE Plenner Robert Blurcott San Juan Seeks -Cens·us Counters · San Juan Capistrano's quest for a 1nore accurate population figure is set to begin Nov. 27, but at least two dozen persons must~ be found first to serve as paid census takers for the special project. City spokesmen J!Bid today 3pplication blanks for candidates to the · $2.10.per· hour positions are available at city hall. The persons selec ted for the temporary assignment will go door-to-door over a five-to-lo-day period to accurately oounl the nUmber or city dwellers. The special census. calculated to cost more than $6,300, is an attempt to obtain a better count than tha't estimated recently by the California Department aides have added pc>ssibly 1,500 ad- ditional residents. , The volunteer workers who will try to verify 'those premises , will work at least tJx hours a day including evenings and weekend$ to accomplish the task. They will be 'a..sked to work every day until the wotk is done, Weidner said. Among the requirements for the job are a minimum age of 18; good physical health, capability to do extensive walking and the ability to write legibly. _i:L_ -*--*-- Population ' . • ThlJrsday, November lS, 1973 UPI TeitPha•• Douse Tfafft Butt Philadelphia11 Rejects lrvi11c Planning Post of ·Finance. The agency's figure of 7,600 residents was deemed too low by local officials. Unless the figure is changed by a Spei!ial he.ad count, it will rema_in as th e legal yardstick used to determine San Juan's share of tax rebates. For Irvine ~ow 25~855 ' A firefighter directs water on a three-story. four- alarm fire in Seattle as a reclining figure on a roof- top billboard puffs a cigarette with the inappropri- ate n1otlo : ''Refreshes naturallv.'' 'fhe billboard stood intact for hours while the building belo'v crun1bled. A secondary effect or the special census will be to assess citizen responses M of Oct. t the city of Irvine had. to special questions geared to seeking '.?2 percent more people living in it opinions on city l)ervices. Among the secondary questions will tha n livlC'd there two years ago. be queries on previous places of, Final state certification of the city Irvine city officials \Vednesday receiv-residence, occupation, auto ownership census completed last month sets the ' He Loves Coast ed regrets on their o(fer of a planning and shopping preferences, city aides city's popu\ation at 25,855, an increase Booze Cutback E11ergy Tool? director posltion to a Philadelphia plan-sa id. of S,6!J8 persons over the December, EVANS I ner. ''.We are asking a 11 residents to TON, ll · (UPI) -The t I II 't)l b k 1971 etimate. Women 's Christian Tumperance It's Pciradise to Norivc~y Visitor "The prospects for planning in lrvine coopera e u Y w1 t e census ta ers .,.,,hen they come to the door. If there The 1971 figure was arrived at by Union (\VCTUl. now in its lOOth are great," ""'rote Robert Blurcott. depu· . year suggested today cutt•'ng do•"n By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ille Dtllr ,llol Slelt are any questions about the census or multiplying the number ~f registered · " ty planning director for the city of th pl s'd ts II ., on the production of liquor as a e em oyes, re 1 en can ca ct Y voters it> lrvm· e by Ulree. Populat1'on f h While qu•'te a d•'n was ra•'sed b P1i"I d I b" h II f I t' " 'd c ·t 'l · ·"' · means o meeting t e energy crisis. Y 1 a e P 1a. Dona 1 odr Wex~dnana ions, sa1 I Y •• anager figures are used to divide state collected Mrs. Fred J. Too7.e, national grumbling. grousing coa stal residents pi- "The membe rs of the city council I~'-e1. her. . 1 d taxes among California cities. \VCTU president, said, "Consider qued by the gloomy summer of 1973. ~nd your staff ""'horn I 1net are outstan-Ad fough t ef specia ~ensus_ woul i:e The new census means an estimated the saving of energy were all a Norwegian visitor has become pretty ding people with whom l would have pa i or out 0 city co ers, .1t is like Y extra revenue amounting to $8S,OOO, city liquor-producing facilities curtailed enamored \\'ilh t he place, and the •. d k' .U......h .d . _ that the extra money received ftrom officials say in the use of electricity. gas:· grain climate. ~!IJ0~~~1:.2~~ _ e:__s~. pr~:i~g ..!...__ Ql~w~~.eulation ~rigure _would .more Other findings of the survey suggest: and the main other means to oro-In fact, Rolf Gunneru·d. a professional - pos111ve attitude toward planning as than pay for tllespeclaf'Pfijjec-r.--· --"!::Wcffif~ouUltlffi'6eiF'fu'eii-irt"'tiiiH;,:e::,~;,1,""'4~'iduct a phiduCl"*whi~ kills ·on·~m:,;,e~+--.. .,,,;, •• ii;~ne p~ptier. lilrerlh.F.1'"1F-' being "most refreshing:''. At present . San Juan receives $18 of l.rv'•ne 12 92' to 12 873 "' ~ ' , "' , · highways. destroys e health and so much, he'd just aS soon stay. Blurcott said he cOuld not accept per. residen_t eqcb year in tax rebates, -The average "single family home v1'tality of the 1·nd 1'v•'dual, and the · 'l ' 1 r N · · b rr f h w dn s d · • ts an easy pace o.r a or\lj'.egian lrvme s ·jo o . er in view o t e im-et er 31 • • houses 3.44 persons while the. typical sanctity and happiness of the t l'k It · thi h d pending doubling of the size of. the If only· 3S2 .new res1de~ts ~re round , apartment shelters 2.43 persons. The home." o I e. is every ng e reams Philly .Planning department as result ~he census would be paid for through combined average is 3.03 per~sons per :~t, summer all the time,'' Gunnerud of receipt of a federal grant. increased revenue. . dWeUing unit . including the mobile home "I can't walk awa y when we are The new sum, however, 1s expected average of l.S9 persons per unit. The young award-,vinning photographer on the threshold of a broadly based to exceed that. ' -The UC Irvine campus houses 773 w Ith w·d is living with an American family in planning program," Bluroott wrote . City planning consultants working on persons in apartments and 1,223 in ea y I o~· Laguna Niguel, having met Ched Myers, The rejection moves the city of Irvine a new general plan program have used dormitories. · a Saddleback College student in Europe . back to resunJplion of a full scale search their own fonnula . to assess poputauon· -Sixty-one percent of Irvine families Knifed tO Death Gunnerud said that at this time of for a city planning director, having a_nd ~ve determined that the state own two cars and 21 percent own only year in Norway, the sun rises at about wailed two weeks for B 1 u r c Qt t 's figure 1s almost 7SO perSOM too low. one. 11 a.m. and sets at abou( I p.m. for response. Since the time of that estimate, city -Sixty-six percent of Irvine families In Old Mansi· on a whole two hours of full daylight. \ live in homes with three or four "It is pretty cold and pretty dark,"' j bedrooms. ~ he said . V • • • D-. J -'Il ·z '· irginzaJ~aws.. · evi . :~ . In Miss Jones' Obscene .. RlC•l~lOND. \'a. ! UP!l -Circuit Court Judge James Lumpkin has ruled that the cOntroversial "porn<Khic" movie "The Devil in f\1iss Jones" violates Virginia 's anti-obscenity Ja,vs. Jury Deadlocked Over 'Deep Throat' Lumpkin issued his ruling on the film \Vednesday after hearing testimony last month and this monlh. The movie played at the Biograph Theater last summer for nine days, attracting near capacity audiences, before Lumpkin issued a tern· porary order shutting it down. Lumpltin's written opinion called the film "lowdown, common trash" and said •you've got to see it to believe it ... lhat such matters are publicly ex- hibited." SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A three-GUMerud came to the United States L-More than half the city's residents · on assignment for 'f F 0 t 0 g r·a f-e • • anneriog the qt1e11tion aaid they earned stocy Russian Hill mansion . waii the . . H between $10.0IXl to $30,00l in 1972. Five scene or the savage killing of its SO-year--maga:zme e's been 4lking color photos percmt said they earned more than old owner, police say. up and down the coast and is due $30,0CXJ and another 5.8 percent said The body of Stella Pasqualetti. with to leave for his native country Saturday . they earned less than $lO,OOO. • • a gaping stab wound ig the chest and He said he's been taking pictures "of two others in the back.~was discovered everything," and. said he prefers the -The average Irvine resident is 26 \Vednesday in the kitchen of the house coastal sector for its sCenic qualities. years old. by her son, Roy, a 60-year-old Kentfield "You have here the sea. the shore, Jilted Suitor Held in Slaying LONG BEACH (UP1) -A :i&.year..,ld man allegedly shot and killed his fiancee of one day after she gave him back an engagement ring, police said. physician. roc~s .and the mountains," he said. Homicide inspectors said the ailing Only 22 years of age, Gunnerud ha s widow, who used a cpne to get around. been taking photographs since he wa s was probably murdeied sometime ?w1on-a child. day. The spacious, antique-filled mansion He has already won in 1970 the "Film showed no signs of-robbery, they said. of the Year" award given by a Police found a 12-inch knife, part of Norwegian government film board and f\trs .. Pasquale(ti's kitchen set. and a· has taught photography. pair of bloody canvas gloves in a garbage He's been in the U.S. three times can near the kitchen. before on freelance assignments. He has The victim \vas the widow of Ghan exhibited his work at the only official Pasqualetti, a wealthy contractor. art school in Oslo, · Norway. His DllllY ,IW Sl•fl ,llofo LIKES 'THE SUNSHINE Photogra,pher Gunnerud Nor\\•egi:in salary ·...,ould be about $10,000 comparatively· in the U.S., he said. noting that he seemed always busy. · "The fact that I have more than enough to do is1. ! thi~k, because people like my work," he said. He said he'd leave Scandinav ia for a job in sunny California parlly for "the excitement and challenge of trying to make it," and partly because ,;I like the climat e." HOUSTON IUPl l -Five \\"Omen and seven men deliberated the artistic merits of the motion picture "Deep Throat" for 14 hoUrs and reported they wece hopelessly deadlocked. Judge Garth Bates scheduled a second obscenity trial for Dec. 4. He said 70 to 75 percent of the movie was a "sex marathon" and said it proves that "given the right audience, any depraved spectacie may provide entertainment." Robert Casanova of Long Beach was arrested WednesdaY night shortly after Maria Huerta, 22, also of Loog Beach, was shot in front of about 20 customers in a restaurant. Friends of the couple said t.1iss Huerta accepted the engagement ring Tuesday, but · then ·returned it, saying she planned to inarry another man . Sofa Bed Floor Sample Cleara11ce Reductions of $50 to $1 00 on all Floor Sa1nples "They are hung up ," Bates said \Vednesday. "I don 't know on what. ri.taybe in the next trial we can find - out. This needs lo be disposed of," The trial was conducted under civ il statues and no penalty "'as imposed on the theater's management. Com- monwealth's attorney. Aubrev M. Davis Jr .. however, said that future obscenity cases will be tried under criminal statutes. He's Got Wheels . ~tis.s Herta died at Long Beach Com· munity Hospital 30 minutes after the shootin g, police said. BuiA:h Fennell, gas station attendant at Smyrna, Ga., .makes one trip take ti).~,fl~ of four. He says he gets less tire~ out that way. But what happens if the front Ure gets away; t \ , I Quee11 a.ncl dual • size e These a re vecy comfortable sofa beds sittin9 and sleeping. e Reversible bacls <!Ind seat cushion1 . e Several styles to choose {rom. Open as bed I Your favorite i11te·rior de.~igner 1vilt b~aJ>PY to assist uou. - . ,, H.J.GAI\l\ETf ftlRNl1URE ~. PROFESSIONAL INTERIO R DESIGNERS Open Mon., lhurs. & Fri. Eves. 2216 HARBOR 8LVD. ~ • COSTA MESA. CALIF. I I ./ 4 DAILY PILOT Thutsday, November 15, 197) Japan Pressures Kissinger Over Oil ~ Porno Probe ~ Puzzlement .. -mE ~tYSTERY PROBE : Huntington tkach school authorities apparently con· t~ue to have dlUlculty in sweeping under u~ public-rug their mini-scandal wherefn ttft workl's most famous sex movie "'is screened privately by district ad· n:dnistrators. )..U this occurred way back last August \\'~en certain administrators of the Hun- tiiigton Beach Union High School District githered for a conference in San Diego. Having exhausted themselves in discussion of profound educational topics, they broke out a videotaped version o!, the Big X movie "Deep Throat'. and played it a couple of times. Huntington Beach vice cops ·got into th~ act some time later, apparently when they were tipped that a district eniploye had the videotape aod it may have been illegally reproduced by use of district equipment . This later ap- parenUy proved.false. But the vice cops kept• the videotape which they had con· fiscated froni the employe's domicile anyway. 'Vietnam Repulses Red Tanks SAIGON -Government tooops today repulsed a North Vietnamese tank artillery and infantry assault nea r the Cambodian border, killing 100 Com· muni.st troops and knocking out two tanks, ··but taking heavy casuallie&,. the Saigon command said . The North Vietnamese attack came against a government defense line five ( IN SHORT ... ) mj]es south of the abandoned governn1ent camp at Bu Prang. about i20 miles northeast o( Saigon. the co1nmand said. Forty government soldiers w e re reported missing. e llou•flrd lluyl1es DPfll? !o.tANAGUA, Nicaragua -American billionaire Howard Hughes has sold :i SO percent interest in the Nicaraguan Airline Lanica ( Lieas Aereas d e Nicaragua ), ilccording to sources in the company. Hughes spent several hectic. secretivC' wee ks in ri.1anagua in l97 2, visiting Nicaraguan Leader Anastasio Somozil Jr. In Los Angeles, Dick-Hanna, llugh es' official spokesman .. denied the repor t. He said Hughes did obtain a 25 percent It's Tlint Ti11ie Talks on Middle East End on Note of Gloom 1'0KY0 -(UPI) -Secretary of State Jlenry A. Kls.singer today heard anxious pleas from Japanese leaders for a quJck aetilement lo the ldlddlt East conflict and re~ioo of nonnal oil supplies. Aichi described the meeting as a 11friendly and informal" exchange of views without any speclric negotiations. Tanaka's cabinet decided Wednesday to set up a specia l headquarters to carry out a nationwide oil saving cam· paign in the face o! possible Arab cut· backs. Observers sald his round of titn With Prime ~finister Kakuel Tanaka and three other cabinet ministers ended with the Japanese gloomy because Kissinger was unable la ... ure them or prompt relier KISSINGER SEES from oil cutbacks. Japan imports 99.6 pereent of ll! oil, • 10. pcrce•l o1 u lz:onLA<ab OOions._JA.PA.NESE DA NCE_ , . who ha,·e cut back production as a bargaining lever against Israel. It facts a serious economic slowdown if nonnal deliveries are not resumed soon, senior Japanese olClcials said. KISSINGER MET today with Finance ~Unlslet Kllchl Aichi , Tanaka and Yasuhiro Nakasone, minister of in· tematlona1 trade and industry. Foreign f\11nlster Masayoshl Ohira, who talked wlth Kissinger for two hours Wednesday, attended the meeting with Tanaka. State Department Spokesman Robert ?\tcCJoskey refused to reveal sped.fie contents of the talks, including whether Japan wa,, edging toward a diplomatic break with Israel. ReporU from the Middle East this wt>ek said the Arabs were demanding such a break as a price for reswnptlon of full oil deliveries. 'the Japanese were more forthright. TOKYO (A P) -Foreign 1t1inister ~1asayo~hi Ohira gave a banquet for Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger· at a leading geisha restaurant Wed·' nesday night and did a Japanese dance for· his guests, local newsmen reported today . They s:iid Kissinger was so delighted he told Ohlra he would have to learn an American folk dance to entertain him with the next lime he came lo \Vashington, · The newsmen said the impromptu entertainment also included harmonica solos by U.S. Ambassador Robert Ingersoll. House Voting On 11% Hike . . . . interest in Lanica irt 1972 in exchange AFJ'ER THAT, the off1c1al Hunltngton for several eonvair 880 jetl iners. Bea<h police posture seemed to be cth~t e /Ullltn11t Killed . Nakasone, the strongest voice i:ri the government for a pro-Arab p>Ucy, told a news confereoce after his meeting l\'it h Kis singer . that Israel'• withdrawal to its 1967 borders should be the basis J\'irs. Pat1icia Nixon receives turkey fro rii National Turkey Federa· .. ftr a settlement. J B f • li on a( ceremoni;s al While House. Presenlalion is annual event. FOREIGN ~QNISTER Oblra denied n . ene its 9'"--otwlHJP l~ ~~':ia::tt!~ e~e!1SJ '=:"NE\\1'"10RIF(1:'Pl l -;-,.-A':tlac~ibe!"ti- b th hoot district and its trustees. hon army leader wanted in connect1pn _ _;::===~="""==,-,r;;trnnoo"!rilii fisdmliaeii\'filii!iai\dl~-------------- regardlng the future course ol Japan's WASlflNGTON (.\P) -The House y The: ~ust the other night, the school with the s~ootings board had another ses.sion where some o.f at least eight po- 200 folQ showed up. Some argued tha t !icemen was killed District Superintendent Jack Rope r in a shootout . Wed· should have been dispatched from nesday n 1 g h t employment because of his role in the "breaking the back" "Deep Throat" screening. of_ the black leader· Others defended the board action in >hip. simply having Roper apologize. Get on T wo detectives, Tl1ougl1 Disn1issal filegal, Cox W 011't · Seek Job Back with .the business of education, thty an FBI agent a n d ed a passerby \V e r e ura: · \vouruled in the gunbattle with Twymon THE ONLY REAL action the Hun· rityers. one of the FBl 's most wanted tington trustees took, however. was to fugitives. outside a south Bronx groccrv, authorize their attorney from the Orange none seriously. · County Counsel's Offk:e to turn °'"" all e Prlsota /llelee E11ds his findings in the case to the Huntington HONOLULU (APJ -A one-day Beach Poli<:e Department. • disorder at the Hawaii State PrisoO 'Ibis action strongly suggests that Hun· has ended without bloodshed and am idst tington's law enforcers are going to calls for prison refo rm . continue an investigation into the se~y The disturbance, which began lat e movie incident. You have to see this Tuesday when an estimated 150 inmates as a bit of a pUzzle. What's left to took control of the prison's main be probed anyway~ cellblock. ended late Wednesday when Tbe school board apparently has shut the inmates returned to their cells. the door on the whole business, For this, they drew praise from Fountain e Da11ghter Released Valley Mayor George SCOtt. 1t1UNICH. Germany (AP) -Kidnaper s released. the 12-year-old daughter of AND WHILE ms very ov.-n police \Vienerw ald restaurant m a g n a t e department is . appa.ren~ly geari~g up Friederich Jahn early today after a an additional invest1gahon, Huntington friend of Jahn handed over 3 million Beach Mayor Jerry h-1atney was telling ma rks -$1,la4,000 -on a rainy Munich newspaper people to cool it on "Deep street, police said. Throat." Quit printing all that em· Evelyn Jahn was fr eed unhurt at 4 barraMing stufr. You're giving the town a.m. after being held for about 30 ho urs. a bad public image. the police said. They suspected that So you have the police probing .on she bad been held by four or fi ve th e one hand and the mayor saying persons. at least l\YG of them in lhelr for get it on the other, Puzzling. early 30s and anned. \\'hat will the Huntington Beach police DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otlivery of 1he Dail y Pilot 1s guaranteed \VASHINGTON !AP I -Archibald Co:c 'Says he 'von·t try to gel back his job .:1s \Vajergate special prosecutor even though a court has ruled he \.•:as fired ill egally at President NixOn's direction. "For me to make any legal claims under (the decision l would only divert attention from getting the job done,'' C-Ox. said in 3 terse statement shortly after the ruling \Vednesda y. The aclion by U.S. District Court Judge. Gerhard A. Gesell prompted new im· peachment demands from two of the three Democratic congressmen who had sought the ruling, mE DECISION also made clear it \Vas intended to protect the independence of Cox's successo r. Leon Jaworski. and discourage legislation to create a ne w. court-appointed prosecutor. The \Vhite House declined to com1nen t on the ruling, referring requests to the Justice Department where acting Atty. Gen. Robert H. Bork said he had not yet decided u•hcther to appea l. It \Vas Bork \vho fired C-Ox after Aty. Gen, Elliot L. Richardson and depu· ly Atty. Gen. \Villiam S. Ruckelshaus refused to carry out Nixon 's directi ve and resigned . .Bork. as solicitor general. \~·as third in command at the time. BORK \\'AS SAID to be upset by the jud icial slap but uncertain about the wisdom o( appealing an order that had no actual impact. Gesell declared that Cog's firing was illegal but stopped short of ~rdering him reinstated or any other actfon ta.ien. Bork, meanwhile. testified Wednesday that Jaworski is going ahead with all the investigations Cox had under way. He also told the Senate Judiciary Com· miltee he had not been anxious to fire Cox, but carried out the President's directive because he thought it was the proper thing to do. The committee is investigating Cox's dismissal. I IN lllS DECISION, Gesell noted thal_. Jaworski. as with C-Ox, Can only be dismissed for extraordinary impropriety under the regulations establishing his office -regulations he said Nixon's dismissal or Cox violated. "lt is therefore particularly desirable to enunciate the rule of law applicable if attempts are made tO'" discharge (Jaworski)," he said. Reps. Bella S. Abzug (0-N.Y.), and Jerome R. Waldie (R-Calif.), two plain· tiffs in the suit that produced Wednes· day 's ruling, said at a joint news conference that the ruling n1ade im· peachment of Nixon more imperative. find? Tha t "Deep Throat" is a pornographic mo vie? Well, ma~. But that's a question many courts are split on right now. And regardless of your personal views, it should be noted that this skin flick has enjoyed wide screening in public, sit-down theaters across the nation. WAS JT AU some sort of misap· propriation of taxpayers' equipment or funds? You wouldn't need the Huntington Bea.ch police to investigate that. The trustees themselves and their attorney could handle those questions. Mt11d1r·Fr+O•r= If vev do 1101 111•1 r•v• ,.,.. •r J:)I '·"'·' tlll '"' ,...,, lOPY will tt ,,.w1111 11 rtv. c1111 ''' l1k111 vnhl 1:)1 ,.m. su11rd1r t MI svnt11r: 11 y•u cl• "•' r«•I•• ywr t•Pr '' ' 1.m, S1t11rd1y. •• I 1,m. Su11~1y, ctll tr.d f <•PY wUI H ~rlwf"t II y1u. (•Nt lrl lfktll •11111 11 1.m. T t ltphonts .... •41-4111 Princess, Groom Fly To Island Honeymoon Puzzling. It sure leaves you wondering what's going on behind the green doors. Oh , e1'l'U9e me. That's a different movie. Norl~W•ll Nv11n11111n ltl<~ I nd Wtttmln•ltr . • .. •. Mt-IHI S111 Clell'ltlllt. Ctj0l1lrlM It•<~. 1111 Jw•ll Ca,!tlrtM, O&n1 l"llnl. Stwl!I 1.11wn1, L•t•~ Nifv11 .... 4tJ-40I LOr\DON (AP ) -Britain 's ne\vlyweds, Princes.s Anne and ~lark Phill ips, flew to Barbildos royal Capt. toda y Fair Skies Over Nation Nortlier1i Sierra Nevada Mou1itains Get Heavy Suo-iv I HAf/OHA~ WI AIHll ill 'f'ltl tOll(Alt tt 1A• 1Sf II• 16-,, 29.77 ., lfGIHlt>----"I ~IAIH l;~:Z;l1HOW ~ ..... ~"'°""l' ltOW clear in ll'lr 1tltrl'IOQn. U.S:S11111111nry Fair s~ltl covered most of 11'11 nat10<1 tod•v 11thcuclll rl!n Ind mo¥11 11411!ec:t some Mldwtlle!"n 1rt11. R~ln cl'la~ lo 1now In oortlon1 Of lilt 01kol11 ind Mlcllio1n'1 UPO'lr Ptf'llnsu11 . Two lnclle1 of snow co ... rtod Ille around In MOtN'IOQe, S.D. T,,,...,.....,~ Wtdnfld#lv •vtflfriq !'Iii SJOU)( Clly, 1,,,...., 1 n Cl Qllnillt. K~n,, wilh "•II I Mff.lll(h 1'1 df•mt 1tf' alld 011mlltd 11rnos1 1n 111(1'1 al r1fn on Jontln, Mo.1 L1ns!n<1, Mien .• and N•woort. o .... HHVY r•ln Wll I01'9Clfl !or tilt llOl'll'lttn C1lltorn!1 co.11 111d lraveltn 1., tlle norlPltl'l'I Slt rrt Nlve<I~ ll'IOUn• lli"I Wfrt btlftg Wlrntd of PlffV'f "''~ Coastal Went.her P1r11v ctooidv 1oc11y. l.lglll 11 .. r11b11 wffld1 n!Ql'lt 1nd morn!nv 11011r1 Oteom· lnq we111rt., 10 10 10 kllOll In llltr• ~I !odly 11111 l'r'ldly Hlgl'I lodt r 1,, Co1u1al !1mper111ur11 r11191 from SO to ~I. lnhtnd ltml'ltlrl l11t'tl r1no1 from ~1 IO n. Wiler ltp'IH •llV•• .1. S1111 , /llno11. Tides TH UltlO-,Y SKoi>O ~1,n n.oe 11.rn. l.1 Se<ona IOI" 1:d p.rn . .o 1 !'tlC,t.Y ir1)11 h~ll ,,,, '"'· f,l l'tnt tow 7~• •.m, I.I $4(0flel hiQh , 1:.)1) p,m. I I S«ond lo• l ·loO 11.rn. -0.1 Sv" t lMI '·'~ •.m, i:'tt1 •:50 p.m. M-IUMI tO:tt l>.11\. 1111 11.11 •• m. - for the start of an 18-day honeymoon cruise aboard the royal yacht Britannia. The couple left Heathrow ,Airpor,t as regu lar first-class passengers aboard a scheduled British Airways Boeing 7VI flight. It's a nine-hour trip to the Com· monwealth nation, an island off the northern coast of South America. Anne and Mark had spent their wed- ding night at the country home of one o( Anne's cousins. The royal couple, the last to boerd the plane, were driven across the tannac In a• maroon RollJ.Reyce belonging lo Queen Elizabeth ll, Anne'~ mOther. The princess, 23, wore a blue coat over a flower-printed cream silk shh1wallt dress. Her ~year-0ld husband wore a dark suit. Alsa aboard ror the 4~mlle flight were Sir Winston Scott, the. governor general ar Barbadoa, and Lady Scott. They had betn in London ror Wed- nesday's wedding c e r em o n y in \Vestminster Abbey. As they reached the cabin door, Prlncesi Anne and Phlllips turned and waved smlllngly to the 300 well·wishors gathered lo ... them orr. The princMI preceded her husband inl!> the 1111111 llrst-class section whtre nine of the 11 remolnlng seats were reported booked by journalists. Brlllsh Airways omclals said no special arrangements had been made for lhe couple. ~liddle Ea.st policy. is conslderlng a two-sta~e. II percent Kissinger, arrived in Tokyo Wednesday cosl-of·living increase in Social security from Peking where he reached agree· benefits that v.oold bring an additional ment for cootinued efforts to promote $2.4 billion to about 30 milllon persons ., next year. tbe normallution oC Sino-American ~es The legislation, to be voted oo today. -bkicked 90 far by America's refusal to break relations with Taiwan. also provides a speed-up plus a boost Kissinger, scheduled to· fly to Seoul in welfare pe.yments to several million -the last stop ol his round·tbe--world poor, aged, blind and . crippled people trip _ on Friday worked out p18M under the nation's new so-called su~ during his O:tina stay to expand Uaiaon plement~rity income proti:ram next officers in Peking and Washington. yearr. 'gned Aichi, following hia SS.minute meeting I SI into la'A'. the Social 5ecurity d measure would take the place of a \\'ith Kissinger, said the two men iscuSS· 5.9 perctnt benefit ·boost approved last ed the secretary of state's visit to the . July and due to become effective from -itiddle East and China, ''but it was June 1974 through 'December 1974. That agreed we woWd teep these ~ b,tke ~ ~enac:ted u ·91\ adv~' , 'fldential." • " · payment"on part of an automatlc'Ol:Jl!lt.of· "MR. KISSINGER expressed Un· derstanding and conctm on our p~ blem," Aichi said. ''He s a id it was of concern not only to Japan but to Ameri<!a and various European countries in greater or less degree . '1 Pr.esJent Tells_ Senators 1970 Income Tax Sum WASIIlNGTQN (AP) -Pi:esident Nil· on has told a group ol ...alon how much he paid in federal Income taxes in 1970, and one senator aid it was "a substantial figure impresslv.e l.o any taxpayer." Bui Sen. Charles H. Percy (R·Ill. ). who reported the President's diJclosute, wauld not dlwlge lbe figure . Percy said, "I would rather the President do it." Percy indicated Nilon offered lbe fiicure in discussing news articles sue· gC!ting he paid Uttle tax in 1971 and 1972. The White House has said only that Niz:on paid taxes thole two years, refusing to OOllflnn er deny on Octobe< roport by lbe Provld«lce Joom&l·Bulletin that NIJ.oo'• federal income t • i: poymenll rcr -two JUI' totaled $1.670. Percy ,.1d Niloo did mt give a figutt for -to<> yean, Gl1ly for the year "just prior" to -1 ... yun. "If -tliroe Y-. -· added Ut> and put In balance, It would be 111bllan- ttally liqir than any ftgutt we lla.ve heard," Percy said. Tbe White HOUIO, uUd about Percy'1 -. bad no Immediate comment. t.:ourt Out to. Halter Wendy, Tople11s Act ClllCAGO (UPI) -An .m.t \ltrant Wal lllUed In O\lcqo Wedneoday fer Wendy llttlowla. 21. whtn sho failed . to appear In wmiai'• oourt oo ehaJ1U she toot olf btr halter In public Oct. 2i belore • -Cl'01ld of 2,500. Mn. Btrlowta, en a ...-try prclelt campalp apllllt the nallon'• nudity Ian, .,.... reltued ln>m jail without 11111 thortly alter ber amat In the ctYlc center jllaza, .hear\ ol Cblcap'• loop. Marshal Probe LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The Loi Anielea County Grand Jury bu launched what wu llnMd a full•tcalo In· v..ilgatlon Into an alleged "Vlrlety ol misconduct" by the county manhal'• olrlce. olfk:lala said Wedntoday. Bruco Clmpbell, tn aide to Dist. Ally. JOl<pll Busch, confinnlnr the probe. living increase in benefits due to come in January 1975. THE NEW legislation would grant Social Security beneril boools or 7 per· cent starting with next April's checks followed by another 4 percent increase beginning In July's checks. Thereafter. , cost-of-living raises in beneDts would ..., automaUcaUy come each June rather than january. Along with the benefit!. the bill calls for financing by widening the present 110.800 Social Seeurlly pa)OOll tax wage , base to $13,200 efferJive Jan. I, while the CWTent S.85 percent tax rate would not change next year. THE REVISIONS wou ld mean the average old-age benefit each month for a single recipient would rise from the existing fl67 la $178 in April and $185 in July, wblle the one for a couple would go from $277 at :present to $296 in April and 1310 in July. Meanwhile, the finan<!ing fonnula : would mean a worker and his boss • Who each paid a top $831 in Social . Sccurtty taxes this year would be paying mi each in 1974 -a 22 percent boost in the maxlmwn tax . Fcrthermore1 the legislation would R~ vide a pair of cost-Of·living increues in the payments under the supplemental security income program ror the elderly~ blind and disabled recipients of public aid. . Bair-led < Unda Lovelace has been ••· cused from 1estlfylng In Tue-. son, Ariz., court for her film "Deep Throat." She had just washed her hair and ll was still wet. • s more boudol T the to Dr· of the and Medi The SA Mar' dire< buildl of a c are Ii like In Tue said "a s en vi do no I d v I ----... "' . -. ·-. Girls Experien~ed StanfordMenMore£oncerned Witli Books > STANFORD (UPI) -Stan· ford University's coeds are more experienced in the boudoir than tllcir rn. a l e counterparts, a study shows. un1verslty in 1970 and again when they completed their rarst year. led," the doctor said. '"'Whlle the v.·oman attracted to Stan- rord is likely to ~ less tradl· tlonn1 in her view oJ the world. and sexual morality." 1"e reason is that the ll\('n lludenl! are more Concerned with their academic prowess. Thirty-live percent of the freshman girls had boon sex· ually active when they entered the school , Miller said. This held true for only 29 percent of the men. And, Miller said, there are. many more men students at Stanford than women. This, he expla1ned, provided more opportunities !or women . THAT'S TRUE, nt least. ror the dass of '74, according to Dr-WaJTen Mlller~directo.r of the Laboratory of Behavior and Population at Stanlord's llfedical Center. AT THE END of the first year, the percentage for won\Cn rose to 41 while the one for men was only 27 per- cent. EIGHT PERCENT 0£ the women who respcinded that they were not virgins also said they had become pregnant, Miller said. The psychlatrlst queried 400 members of the class of '74 when they entered t h e "The man who opts for a prestigious and a c a d e m i c university-is n1ore likely to be studious and book-orien- He attributed the high pregnancy rate to PQOr use of contraception. ~· -- Commune .Seeks Code Exemption . There's an energy shortage being felt T-d1roughout the nation. And it's going ~o take more than just talk to cure it. 1b keep ydu supp·Jied with nat ural gas well into the future, wffre going to ,be doing things you never even dreamed of. We've already embarked on a world- wide ~Carch. Places like Ala ska,lndonesia, Ausua1ia, South ana 'central America. We never thought we'd be bringing gas from 7,0CJJ miles away. But it.looks like we'll have to. That means building som~ very complc,it ships. Each costing moll: than $100 million.Then shrinking natural gas into a liquid so each ship will be able to carry more gas than all the homes in Los Angeles used during an entire wcc.k last year. In a few )'<an, these ships will be bringing gas to Southern California. I Right now, Southern California receives its natural gas by way of a pipeline from lliasLWc used to think this pipeline was really something. Bu~ now we're talking about building one clear to the Arctic. A S,(XX).mile pipeline through some of the most savage terrain in North America. ..,. Closer to home, wt!re looking toward another natural resource for help: coal. W~re getting rea dy to product gas from coal; cleanly and without undue hann to the environment. Keeping you supplied with gas will be a mam- moth and costly job. But we'll db whatever it takes to keep your hof'c fires burning .. Southern Callfomla Gas Company W.'re lnvutlng In tomorrow: • fhursday, No~embtr 15, 1973 ~ DAILY PILOT ft Sepm·ate Premixes Ordered lta±\.t .a.nd Pa..\:\t Q..re.. bCL C. \<._ o...\:_ I&Qd..ore's WASHINGTON IAPI -The government has ahnou,nced it will requiril separate packag- ing of spices and sodium nitrate in all meat-curing premixes lo prevent t h e formation of nitrosamines. some forms of which ca use cancer in test animals. Premixes are used to flavor , color and preserve most proc- essed meat products. in- cluding hot dogs, poultry and luncheon meats. 333 bo...~ide. ne.wporl beach "r\cl°"t _ noon w·l±.~ f'f\e.nh ~h 1·0~~ ~l"'OIV) Col~a,r (\1 Lu...~ ~rMe.C''-4.-· ~ sbt'~ 2>3.3 ~ l!')~ c.o::.t.o._ C"'le">Ch CA • • (~-------coLORTILE COUPON'--------·\ I .-.af?["r. : fl)RGfTPAINTING! : ...... -I 1 :~ UGLY PLUMBING! i FIRST QUALITY BATH VANITY! 1-piece top and bowl; lovelyl white base trimmed in gold.r 20x20 inch si1e. I Without faucet. "' I 881 I WllH 1 THIS I COUPO.N r CERAMIC TILE fiord, fright glaze; ·3--,-C decorator colors. 4 % x 4V. inch. SQ. FT. , OFFER ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 ! ~-----------------------------..1! BATHROOM SPECIAL! rOflGCT"ILAH" BATHROOMS! rOflGCT SHOWER DRIPSI TUB ENCLOSURE fOllGETCOLD FLOORS _ OZITE SHAG CARPET TILE • GllOUT CLIANI• e TILi CLIANll o SILICONI 51.t.Lll • :OLOl o··-1'11.1 -"• -•D·- ' • ALL3 MOSAIC TILE $449 fORGET NOISY . ROOM SI DECORATOR CORK TILE n.rlfty, -•Y to IMtoll 12 • '2 l1teh tllff. 39c SQ. FT. ~ DARK COINER.$ CLEAi VINITIAN MllROR TILE laty, low-cotf, 10 x 10 Inch tiloL NOW 49~- SHEET Shcrttffproof b•llt-1• to-• tlou paMh: ..... fl)llGET IAiH CLUTilll MIRROR CABINET Deluxe 11 inch model NOW $13sa rlJllGf DULL FLOORS LOOD/il4A SOLID VINYL TILE Mort.lo, _,,,..1,. or tloto pottor111I ,.,,., .. , 11. 11 IRCh, J6fa. FT. STANDAID MZI 11GEl ~l\XING S.lf•tlkk, Mlf· podded 12 .12 Inch .u .. 1 NOW So shioy. and-tough , ~ou couldn't wax 1.t. even if you wonted tool Sporklln .. col: ors; supple, ea sy to insta)I 12 x 12 In. tiles Costa Mesa-2221 Harbor Blvd. 645·1126 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. • 9 P.M. , SATURDAY 10 A.M .• 5:30 P.M. -SUNDAY 11 A.M. • 4 P.M. ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING A"'htlm, 2607 W. Lincoln Avt nut (Corner Magnolia ) -127-4200 ' ' ; ' •• • • '• • • ' ., ' .. • - ' . • .. . . DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Oil Dr illing Federal and state government proposals to ease offs hore oil drilling restrictions in response to the en· ergy crisis pose some grave questions for the \Vest Coast. In Washington, the Nixon administration has with· drawn its support of legislation that would have barred oil drilling in federal waters in the Sanla Barbara Channel. In -Sacramento. Gov.· Reagan's Energy Planning Council has urged lifting of the moratorium on drilling in state tidelands, put into effect after the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill . These maneuvers may well cause Orange Countians to wonder about the status of our own offshore oil sanctuary, created by the Shell-Cunningham Act of 1955. and extending from the Santa Ana River to the A1exican border. The sanctuary, covering the three-mile state tide- land area, appears to be relatively secure and cannot be changed without additional legislation. Both drilling and exploration involving penetration of the ocean floor are banned within the sanctuary. Exploration via sonar waves produced by underwater explosive charges is pennitted, but so far no productive oil deposits have been located. II is the opinion of many experts (and the hope of conservationists) that most of the state's seven oil sanc- tuaries were pretty well examined in the past and prob- ably are not likely territory for further exploration. The Santa Barbara situation is quite different. ·Here oil companies already had divided up potential oil areas and_paid the government !'IOme $900,000 for leases when the 1969 disaster occurred. Understandably, they want to proceed with exploration. Questions Supporters of drilling ugue that technological ad· vances bave greatly reduced the possibility of oil gpl11$. Opponents are less MSured. They point to a bat~h· work of earthquake faults under the Santa Barbara CbanneL one of which is blamed for the 1969 blowout Capping is not the answer Where the ocean floor is laced with faults, they argue, noting that a similar situ- ation exists In the Huntington·Beac:h area In the vicinl· • ty of the Inglewood-Newport fault. One ~an only hope that the technical experts' fail· safe measUttS succeed -and that Orange County's oil watchdogs will maintain their tnditioruaJ vigilance. Behind the Times ' Under the heading "What Corset Ads?" the New ;· York . Times gently chides President Nixon for one of his recent comments on the press. Nixon is quoted as saying that reports about laxes on bis San Clemente home were carried •;usually in eight~lumn heads," while stories on the private audit he commissioned lo refute the reports "ended up back with the corset ads." "Without quibbling with the President's complaint," says The nm.es, 11we have to report that a broad search or major dailies has failed toruncover any corset ads.11 We are told that the President, in lieu of reading newspapers, contents himself with news summaries prepared by his staff. This might explain why he is about 20 years behind on what is being advertised for the ladies. -- , •df e, the undersigned, feel it is ovr patriotic duty to yolunteer the closing of Whipple Grade School ·.during the months of December, January and February to conserve fuel during this .great .. .' Memos Reveal ·Administration Effort ,to Discredit Press • --. One the c late slstcn curri mean cou black AS dent minis was histo ing Jou tion, as r I. to I Was allra Univ the stud has ac AS part , bla c ca us or t his to cull Neg ed i cipl -·---------the memo friiiii Jeb Stuart Magrmler ·io-( • a ' • )-·--'l'o"do'"tills;·we"1U·lillv•·10~;;;-""'."5;g-,,.m..r='famy. ci,;;.i...~,..>·-111<>--Pr · eni'&-<ljjht:"~~ ~ •••. 1.i1 \VASHINGTON -· President Nixon's- scathing hostility toward the press in- fected almost the entire White House staff long before his latest press con- ference remarks. A series or secret 1nemos, dating back to the first year of the Nixon Adminis- tration, show how the staff schemed to in- timidate reporters and their employers into giving favorable coverage in the med- ia. The White House .tactics included plans to use the Federal CommWlications Com- mission aga inst the networks , to stimulate letters to newspapers and to block reporters rrom interviewing Nixon aides when it appeared the stories might be unfavorable. THE FIRST disclosure of the cam- paign to intimidate Nixon's news criti cs was made recently by Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., who made public a former White House staff chief HR. jectivity into an issue and the subject \\TOte to Haldeman on August 26, 1970: should in no way be restrained1" Colson the Haldeman. Magruder re<ommended JACK ANDERSON ol public aebate." . "The other side is really being hurt wrote "Both CBS and AB C agreed with and using the Justice Department Internal The Magruder plan called for the as they begin to understand the F~ me that oO most occasions the President forg Revenue ServiCe and Federal Com-White House slaff to "plant" stories decisions . The Democratic National cam-speaks as President and that there is mwiications CommisSion to harass of. raising "the questlcm. of objectivity and mittee is using every procedural move no obligation for presenting a cootrasting_ fending .news organizations. and we should attempt to pop hlS bu~ ethics in the news business." ! (and CBS is cooperating} to stay the point of view under the Fairness ~ Other documents, which haven't yet ble." 1 decisioos .... I think it is time for trine .... " surfaced, show the White House was Higby suggested stimulating petitions HE ALSO sought lo 'recruit a 1 us to generate again 8 PR campaign going after the media with a vengeance. from the public and pressure from sta· journalism dean, congressmen, private against the Democrats and CBS." 1n one memorandum, Haldeman's brief-tion owners demanding HunUey's im· groups and Vice President Spiro Agnew A month later, Colson submitted a case carrier, Lawrence Higby, declared : mediate removal. "Let's put a full plan lo flay the press. FCC Chairman Dean brutal report on his meetings with ol- "What we are trying to do here is on this and get the thing moving," Burch would also ht called upon to ficials ot the three net\\'Orks: tear down the institution." urged the ynnnn Haldeman aide. "express a:mcem..,.,_ about press ~ ... _ jecti vity." HE REFERRED to a July 1970 state-BUT BY mE next day, the White ment which Life magazine attributed House learned that Huntley p 1 a n n e d to newscaster Chet Huntley, then about to apologize to Nixon and to deny the to retire from NBC. Huntley was quoted valldjty ol the quotation in Life rnaruine. as saying of Nixon : ''The shallowness Magruder, in a memo to Haldeman, of the ~an oyez:whel~ me ; ~ fact suggested: "Since the newscaster enjoys that he 1s President fnghtens me. a very favorable public image and will Wrote Higby to Magruder: "The polnt .. apologize for his remarks, claiming to behind this whole thing is that we don't be misquoted, we should not attempt care about Huntley -he is going to to discredit him personally .... 'nle leave anyway. What we are trying to focus Of our effort should be to raise do here is tear down the institution. the laJ,"ger question of objertl.Vity and Huntley will go out in a blaze of glory, ethics in the media as an institution. . MasnJder also envisioned "a blue:rib-J boo media watchdog" mmmlttee, which "John Cosgrove,. a formtt president ol the NaUonal Press Club," could set up. The presidential assistant wanted even to arrange for "a senator or con- gressman (to) write a public lelteT to the FCC suggesting the 'licensing' ol individual newsmen." ' WHILE DEMANDING fairness for themselves, however, the White Houte schemed to keep the Democrats from •1THE NE'nfORKS are t e r r I b l Y nervous over the uncertain state " the Jaw, l.e., the fecent FCC demions and the pressures to grant Congress access to-'f'l .. ~are also apprebeml~.f about us.'\\)tboUJ!b ~ tr!«I to 'ell ...... Ibis, ii was obvious. The hanler I jirased them (CBS and NBC) the more ac- commodating, cordial and a·1 m·o st apologetic they became. (Then ·CBS Pmidenl' Frank) Stanton ror all his blUJler is the nml Insecure ol all . • '.,There was unanimous agreement that "I Al\f REALISTIC enough to realizl !hat \\'e probably won't see any obvious improvement in the news coverage,'! Colsoo said, "but I think v•e' can dampen their ardor for putting on 'loyal opf position' type programs." • Haldeman had his own ideas on ho\I( to intimidate the press. In a memq to Magruder on February 4, 1970, ~ ailed for the "mobiliza tion of the Sil• Majority, which we touched on brienf in the meeting today. We just haven't really mobilited them, and we hav6 got to move now In every effectivf way we can lo get them working td pound oo the magazines and ~ in COWller-action to the obvious shifJ of the establishment to an attack ~ Vietnam again." Citizen s Vow Court Fight To End Utility Users Tax Iran As Guardi~n of Persia~--G nlf ~ • Oil Helps Finance Shah's Huge Armaments Pr g ram In 49 California cities citizens are taxed every time they turn on their lights. or get a glass of water. or use gas for the stove or the furnace. They are also taxed when they use the phone. In 14 cities, there's a tax on cable TV and in two citiC's -s a n Leandro and Santa Barbara -folks are taxed on the tax for gar- ba ge and sewer. It's called a "uti l· ity users tax" and it's right there -on the utility bill -a the end of each and every month. In 1971-72, the total statewide tax take on utility users came to $93.2 million. That was about 30 ·percent more th an the $70 million take for 1970-71. The tax ranges ·from 1 percent in Sunn yvale to 7 percent in Burbank .and Pasadena and 18 percent in Inglewood. Fo r most cities it is set at 5 percent. Berkeley had such a tax but cancelled it in April , 1970. That is the fir st good thing I've heard about Berkeley in a long, long time. THE UTILITY users tax is a stinker. Jt is unfair. One of the few gracious attributes of our tax-mastera.-·has been .. lheir goOd sCnse to exempt food and other necessities from the sales tax. Yet, heat and light and water are also necessities -and they are taxed in 49 cities. That's what John A. Rowe, Jr., thinks , too. And Mr. Rowe Is an attorney of Dear Gloomy Gus "Whit we need la a gUy like Hoible Hoove again," warbles Archie Bunker every Satordny nlghtc and maybe he'I aot something there ... F. K. ' ( RUSWA LTON J action even though he is Tl years old ... J~owe is a member of the Irate Tax- payers Committee of Sonoma County. On behalf of himself and 30 other Santa Rosa utility users, he has' brought suit against that. city and a whole string of utility companies. He wants to knock out Santa Rosa 's 5 percent utility users -lax. ' TEHERAN -When Soviet Prime Minister Alexei Koaygin on his recent visit here complained to the Shalt about Iran's soaring armaments program, which he said was costing $2 billion, the Shah smiled a chilly smile and munnured: "Three, not two." Indeed, the Shah's ambitious defense program is costing la loto even more ll>an $3 billion. The Shah privately esti· mates its aneual cost right now at bet\1,.een one and t'wo billion dollars -a lot of hardware even for a TIIE SfATE Public Utilities Com· last-developing coun- mission rejected Rowe's complaint. He try of 32 million . ( EVANS·NOVAK) lo the teeth by profligate Mooc:OW, is a secondary reason for the Shah's huge military buildup. The greater rea!On is to keep Persian oil flowing and Persian control over lhe Gulf and t~ '3ea of Oman. . , . As the Shah told us in an intsview, "We must depend on ourselves. Bo one will do it for us... ~ The Shah means just that. He sent Iranian (Persian) armed help to Oman early this year to quell a radical left· wing movement in that small emirate. They are ..stiU there. He Will do the same anywhere along the congested wes t bank cl the Gull. -,._PUBUCLY, he and King Faisal of saudi Arabia, another traditional but more passive monarch, have agreed to cooperate on keeping the Gulf clear ol foreign influences and to protect the small oll emirate! from radical in- filtration. BUt the two monarch& are not dose, despite efforts by Wasblngton lo make them so. Moreover. the Shah's pros- pective mllitaey power pull b1m in A Gersh.win Retrospect appealed to the State Supreme Court ,Yet, considering and his Writ of Mandamus was recently the Shah's ability to dismissed. The C'.ourt gave no reason cash-anci-carry every dollar's worth out for the dismissal but its action was of his oil-fattened treasury, and· coo- probably prompted by several past sidering bis plan to make Iran the decisions and established precedents. principal guardian of the vital Persian 'Ille Gtnhla. By R<>bert Kimball and The court Jtas upheld the power of Gulf waterway, his decision to build Alfred· Simon. Atheneum. 292 Page,. $2.S. cha rter cities ~ to levy the utility users the best: combat force between the Soviet Tiie GernwlD Vean. By Edward tax, unless a charter includes limitalions Union ·and India is very good ·new.!l Jablonski and Lawrence D. Stewart. in the matter. for lhe West. Doublieday. 416 Pages. $12.95. , Several years agu, in Paclrard vs A CURSORY " 1 the ' Shah' George Gershwin, 7S yeanl' old It be Vallejo, the state PUC made several K'anoe a 8 were alive today? Thll lt bard to believe important rulings on utility user taxes: inventory, either in place or on 'order, -not becauae he would be so old I. The tax must be dearly labelled makes pleasant reading for frienda, but becauoe be would b( relailvely d I. l d t I th th! among whom the U.S. stands high: dose ~m• an is e separa e y on e mon y to 1 thousand British Chieftain tanks, ,, .. -~. 1 utility bill. · AJttt all, think· of the eJdurance cl 2. ·Th• utilities companies ~ .;• F-41 of the ' advance D and E lrvtnc Berlin, ,_ 8$, wh<> was pretty disconnect a customer's service if .he cl~lfica~, 14! . F~. a. couple of well established when tile young fails or refuses to pay the tax. Tbat ·is spectally built Bntisb frigates, a couple Genhwln WU beidllninl his appr<11Uce a problem for the city no! the utility ol U.S. destroyers, U.S. air t.nkera to years, before World Wai I. ' · pve his . fighters maximum range, fast MR. ROWE now plant to appeal the patrol lloats, Brilisb-made llove<craft THE llEAllON for ~ 111 u 5 0 r y court's refusal to review his oomplalnL and much more. ,.,,,_,,,.,.., ol CCMll'9e, (a Gersbwin's He cites several bases for his protest: Neither the Shah nor his Prime .:::::.:.r~-ho matureclloearly and -The tax is a capitation (head) tax Min.liter, • hard-headed n lhe-vea. r .-~ in -d h h think • • , dl«f 9C) yNm00 1131, 1 .... an as sue e s 1t 1s un-veteran,. will ·menuon such statistics. -• constitutional (persons getting the same They arouse auspldons in 1ndla and We must not fOl'lel .fbtre ~ two utilities service do not pay the las Jn -of the Shah's neliJibon, Gtnhwina. lrl, George'• .older brother, If they are outside the city limits). parllc:ularfy the (iQIU!e Iraqis.. ""'le .tho lyrics for 'llWIY of George's -The state revenue and tax code ,_ broke relatlMS with Iran in 1971 oom~lllona, from the , later George spedflcaUy exempts from the sales lax w11en»""the ,Shah oelUd BritlsHontrolled White '"Scandals" Jn the 1920s lbrough any eas, oil or water delivered by pipe, areas In the Gulf, Including the Jraniln the glorious .,.,. in "Porgy and !less" and • aide" ol the Shall-al-Arab waterway lo the Fred Asfalre-Olnger !!<>gen -the city or Santa Rosa Is not vested dlvldlnf Iran and Iraq _ and tbr<e movies. Alll>ougb now retired , be keeps with the power to force public utilities llratqlc lsleta near the neck cl the a sharp eye on the G e r 1 b w In to act as tax collectors. Per1ian Gulf _ just before the British· legend. 'lbe 7$th 1 armlvenary of Should he rail in hls Ult with the vacated the Gull area A 11 ho u I h Gocqes' birth 11 brincing rortb c:om- SUpreme Court's wlndmlll, ll>ere ls dlplomatlc relations wm restored by _.u.n.. rlllllni In size from con- always another battlegroond for Mr. .Jre~ for tactical reaaons wbe1l the war certa and boob fu, 111erally, a ·postage ' Rowe and his fellow-cilizens:, ol Yorn Kliit>ur broke oul, the two coun-s lal!lp, already In clrcullUon. The precinct and"llil"ballot"box. · Laws or no laws, precedenta or no .trles are bitter entmles. THE TWO BOolS llllder C(IC11lderaUon, prec:&lents, pollUclana have been known THUS, protecilng hls flank along the while naturalllt covering the! same to listen to irate taxpayers. volaUle border with Iraq , which Is !11'ffied groWld, are qulte f'lettal. The more \ . . :) (. T~ BOOKMAN J Interesting f« the gener~l reader Is "The Gershwina," put together. by Robert Kimball who allll0ll1bled "Cole" on Cole • • Porter, and Alfred Simon, GershWJn's rebe$na1 pianist for "Of Thee I Sing·." II includes many brief remlniscei>ces of the composer ·by famous people who 11iiew ·him. '1bere 'ta appropriately ' a very g<>ocl foreward by Richard ROOgera and a compact biographical Introduction by John s. w~ jllZI critic for The New York Times. THOSE OF US who -lived . through the '20tl and '31>1 · lhlnl: of Gershwin as tho minllrel ol the j111 age, from the BroedWIJ abows lo the "RhaMOdy ln Blue" and "Porgy and Bess51-8o ii startles us when Kimball and Simon say: "George Gershwin. eclecUc aa he was was DOI ,..JJ,y a compoeer cl Jau music • . . The Rhapsody .• ; • owes far more to the Jnlluenc:e ol Tdlalkovsky and Lint,· bolh~unqlie!tlonahl~ •killed -lorl. than ol Buddy Bolden or K1n .Ottvet!J ,{.;· "oiber tiOOk, "The Gerahwln YeW'S/1 baa more detail on the whole Gerahwin clan -ratber a bit too much, dhM>Jn( oomeWbal George'• meteoric rile. Boll> bookl are elaborately il· lustrated. I a unique class, far supe Saudis. Soviet influence in the todQj' is weak, except for q Sovi~ mission in Kuwait is small, and tJ'C! half-dozen imirates have not evfll granted diplomatic exchanges rl Moscow. •' ' That hasn't stopped systematic a6'f increasing SoViet naval penetration 1il the Gulf. however. Small Soviet naval vessels are frequent visitors, and eer.tJ this year for the first time a Sovie\ cruiser steamed up the Shatt-al·Ara~. Soviet activity is Intense in Aden, ~ to the soulh on the Arabian ttp, bljt on the. Gull Itself there is no eal)' toehold other ll>an Iraq -not yet. ~ . SO LONG AS Moscow behaves, ,, future Pait Irana in the Gulf is con- ceivable. If MoM:OW tried to" subYert !Ji!, Shah's pledged role of Gull proteci!i' and guarantor, U.S. counteraction lo predictable, will> detente a posslljlll casualty. "Detente is not . divisible,'' Prui!e Minister "Abbas Hoveyda told 111· "MOICOw cannot : have it in E~ and the U.S. and. Ignore ' it here.'' -ll Moscow tries, the big slick •the Shih is abaping will i..· used and used bud. He permits no doubt abo\lt that. ~ .. Ol'AN61 COAST • DAILY PILOT 1!4bert N. Weed, PubU.htr Thomas KorvU, Edilor Barbara Kre ibich Editorlat Pa.g6 Editor " • ' The editorial rP'l8W Of Ole" Dally Pilot lttks to Inform and ltlmulate rtadera by PretenUrc on th ls pap. dlvenc icomm~ntuy'on topics of tn.• lertll by sYn<IJcated columnl1l1 and': car1oonlrt1, by PfOVklins t. forum fir ; .ttaden' vft1 and by prnentlr.-th newapaper-'1 opinion. Ind ldeu on~ Cll1l'tftl toplc:a. The t<11t .. 1a1 optnior.l ot the Dally PUot appear ODly tn ~he~ · editor\al column at the '.fop or the .. . ~· OplnlOns ..... 00«! by the ... . umntm and car100nim and lett 'Mittn are tht:ir own and no endone-~ ..... t ,, ...., v1 .... by 111. ~ I Pllol ~ "' """""' Thursday, November 15, 197 I ' • •• \ Interest In Black Studv Off I Survey Finds et~erlands I 'Mosi Livable~ in ·Eur ope • • One of the watermarks of the campus turbulence ln the late 60s wa s the violent In· sistence on '1relevance" in curricula, which primarily mea nt the institution or study courses designed to glorify black history and culture. LONDON -11The envelope, please . Ladies and gentlemen, the winner of the title of Most Llvable Nation in Europe is. . . . the Netherlands!" Yes, the Netherlands. The world's second most densely populated nation finished -first in a survey of 15 European coun- tries conducted by Vi.siOn, a AS IN so man.v other stu-business magazine. ' dent causes, faculties and ad-The runners-up In t~ Vision ministrations gave in. George poll were Denmark, Sweden, washing ton University's and Norway, in that order. history deoartment, for in-So perhaps Scandinavia can stance, instituted a course in boast that it is the most Negro culture one day after desirable rqloa in Europe. about 200 students marched But pity ooor Ireland and on the administration building Portugal. 11ley tied for last. and demanded th at the school Several curious· facts emerg- do so. Some 167 enrolled in ed from the survey. The the course. Republic of Ireland (as o~ Today the haste and waste posed to Ulster) is the least of such capitulation Is becom· violent country in EW'Ope. The ing •clear. The Wall Street French are the least in· Journal, re'viewlng the sltua· tereste~ in ~ports. And, would fion, quotes a recent survey you beh~ve 1t, London receives as revialini;t that in contrast · Jess rainfall than any other to that 1969 total of 167 European capital. l..' enrollees, the G e o r g e · Washington course th is year attracted only 24. American University's "The Sociology of the Afro-American" drew 339 students in 1969. ntis fall it has 12. The story is repeated across the-country.· I :£diTORIAL •'Rf'+SEARCH WNlrN _ ... ' allnewl974 SOLi JATE (ll~lllROM1(0~ ·111® .f.~~ giant-screen cons s , - • brilliant new chromacolor picture! • 100% solid state chassis! ., • 30,000 volts* of picture power I • one-button chromatic tuning! ............... lt.. ALTAlll E41147M Authentlc•lty atyktd Ear.., American lo~ console. Wrap- around gallery. Spoo .. turned tegt. Maple color. Chromalic One- butt!Sn Tuning, Power Senl.y .System. AFC. '55811 - MODER .STYLING ~Eii"'"'n..:;;: ANTARES • E4545W tyled console. Fuh recessed Genuine oil finished Walnut 1 rdwood solids, exclusive of I omatic One-button Tuning, 8Y•tem. AFC. $559tS ~=======t========\I EA!\lSTYLING T MARACAllO • E4541 Majatic Medlterranea led full t>.se console wtth caatel'1. Dark finis O•K color (E45490E) 1 or Pecan color (E454~P 'hromatic One-button Tuning. PoWGj" Sen!.y S m. AFC. •599"! ' L..~_.:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--' L..~~~~~~~~\0~1uc+-.,-.-,-,a-•-:-,~.,-,,..~,~n~~ .... ~I HARBOR CEN UNITED .. smus . TV & APPLIANCE C~NTER Pit 540-713 ~·.m· 2300 Harbilr llvd., Costa ' Thunday, November 15, 1973 DAILY PILOT f % . . ·Sheds a lot of light on savings . -.-. -. .. Sale12.77 Regularly 15.97 Amber styrene ball swag, :brass-tone chain. 1S.inch diameter .. ' • ' ' ' -, . Chugo ii on rour JCPtllMJ chargo .. d. . . ' Regularly 24. 97 Walnut finished or · brightly colored cane swag In warm Tiffany-like styllng.18"dlameter •. All U.L. approved. BUENAP,ARK 8tacf1 at Orangethorpe Opell Diiiy l :IO to 1:111 P."'• lulldlf 19 to 7 I ORANGE City Or. at G1fdtn Grove 81\ld. 0pto 10-t p.m. Dl•ly lulld•r 10 to I , Sale 9.59 Regularly 11.99 A. Quilted glass swag, black wrought iron accents. 19" deep. 8. Color·dome swag, white glass ball. 13-inch diameter. C. Cylinder shade swag , fluted glass and tassle trim. 24" deep .. ----~ D. Walnutfinished wood cage, colorful plastic inserts.15 \lt"deep. Also : Swirl glasaawag: (not shown) : -obwi\ CHAAGEIT with your JCPenney Charge card. If you don'! have a charge, jusl see how fast we can open up yQur neN account SANTAANA 3900 So. Bristol· No. of So. coOst I'tua ,)pin 10-t P·'"· Dilly ...., 10 to t • ·- • ., .. 8 D~LY PILOT Thursda1, Novembef 15, 197.3 • ANIMALogic¥.,""""' ":SI' Rape of Coeds a Major Pr bl m ********************* * MERCURY SAVINGS : ( Vo1uiegut Defends His Book MINOT, N. D. (AP) -Kurt Vonnegut Jr. says he can't imagine y,•hy the school board in Drake, N. D. ordered copies or his 1969 novel "Slaughterhouse Five" col- lected from students a n d destroyed. "mERE'S NOTHING obscene about the book," Von- negut said in an interview in the Minot Daily News. It's the first time any or his books have been burned, he said. The author said he did not know v.•hether v.·hat one Drake resident termed "barnyard scenes" were necessary. One meaning of "barnyard" is sn1ulty, earthy, scatologicaL "111ERE ARE NO barnyard scenes per sc in the book." Vonnegut said. "lf~ou mean could I have edit it more, the answer is obviously yes." The no1·cl is about a New )'ork op tome tr i St who becomes WlSluck in time, en- dures the American bombing of Dresden in World War II and winds U!> spending eterni- ty on another planet with a Hollywood starlet. Good Deed make the scene Sundays in the l1tjlflijl!1)I By TERRY RYAN AlffdttM ,.,... Wrlltr Rapes and .... u11s oo coeds have become a nuijor problem on th e nation's conege cam· puses, security officials say. They cite coed donns, hitch- hik ing and lack of concern as contributing factors. ranging from bicycle thefts to muggings. There are ex· ceptlons, but not many. TllE RISE IN rape com· plaints on campus Is also part of a nationwide situation tenected in the 70 percer!t, jump In reported rape! in all jurisdictions surveyed by the Federal Bureau o f Investigation the past five years. "Crime Is increasing in our society," said Audie Shuler, police chief at the Unlyerslty walk by themselves to the library alter dark. • ''YOU CAN COME out here any ntgbt of the week ond you'll see a coed walking alone," saJd 'A. L. McCoy , security chief at Louisiana State University. "You just wonder. 'Now, she's jU!l not concerned.' And a lot of them have the opinion, 'Well, it's just not going to happen to me.' So I don't know what the answer ls." Changes lo campus living Campus administrators have responded by imposing tighter regulations in living areB!I, in- creasing police palrols and in- stalling better locks and lights. Coeds are taking self~efense courses. and male students have started escort services on many campuses. • "ATfACKS ON females have gone up at. just about every school we have contact 'The increase of rape fs not fso· lated phenomenon but part of a gen- e ral rise fn campvs crime.' with," said Herbert T. Voye, ·~~._,-.._.-------------editor of the Campus Law ' _.. -.--~ """'"'."'" -- Enforcement Journal. "It's of Florida s Gamesville cam· not just a question of more pus. "We live in It, so we women reporting it. It has are part of it." happened." Twenty male students at the Voye is chief of security Florida school were hired last at Tufts University near Boston. Several fem al c students have been raped on or near the campus In the past year, including one girl raped in a dormitory room the first week of class this fall. "I was looking forward to a ni&; quiet year," said Voye. "Now the students are up in arms demanding more securt~ ty. They want rne to beg the administration for money to have a man with a dog patrol- ling on campus." TUF"l'S RAS spent $30,000 to upgrade campus lighting, has a female security officer training at a rape crisis center and stationed guards inside women's dormitories. Llke nearly an campus police 9fflcials, Voye said nonstudents were responsible for the ·increasing attacks on women. "To judge from-the people we ha'le apprehended and what I've heard from other campuses. the majority of cases don't involve stud~ts," said Voye. "It's outsiders." The increase of rape in- cidents is not an isolated phenomenon but part of a general rise in campus crime the past few years. Long con- sider<'d. inviolate sanctuaries, schools across the C<lUntry arc now plagued with incidents month to augment the campus police force after one coed was raped in a parking lot and another ·abducted and raped elsewhere. They are armed with whistles and badges but do not carry guns or have arrest powers. RAPE REPORTS have in- creased at big city and small town schools alike. Two girls were raped and two others assaulted in a hous· ing complex on the Brigham Young University campus in Provo, Utah. City and campus police were alarmed b y reports ·that gun-toting male students had taken to guarding girls' apartments. At the University or Illinois Champaign-Urbana ·campus, four rapes or attempted rapes were reported in the 12 mOilths that ended last June. Four such cases already have been reported this school year. Teams of security officers were dispatched to lecture in dormitories and sororities on preventing rape and dealing with it if it occurs. The increasing.independence of women was cited by many security chiefs as an un- derlying explanation for the ·increase in rapes. Coeds are more likely now to work alone in a laboratory at night or patterns have made the job of protecting all students more difficuit , said security officers. Coed dorms and open living areas mean anyone ca n wander around without arou. ing suspicion, they said. Although students just a few years ago fought for such ar· rangements, dormitory s:ecurl· - ty is oow being tightened. often at the urging of students At the Univenity o f Pennsylvania, 200 women staged a sit-in outside the president's office demanding better protection after a serie1 of rapes in the campus ar<'a. lllTCHHIKING coeds, now a common sight around most campuses, are particularly vulnerable to attack. In ad- dition to numeroiu reporta of rape, hitchhiking college gtrt, have been murdered during the past year In Boston: Ann Arbor, Mich., and Santa Cniz. While most ooeds recognize the danger, many consider It an infringement on their freedom lo be told they should not hitchhike. "It's the only way I have of getting home," said a girl standing beside a guard booth at the _edge of Indiana Univ e rslty's Bloomington campus with her thumh out. "Why shouldn't I?" -"Iii' Fifteen rapes and at least ro other assaults on women have been reported in Bloom· ington since April. Six rapes were reported in the entire county last year. The out- Ai.L MODELS IN STOCK AND ON DISPLAY SSff wltti rewt0te XL-100 100% Solid State diagonal . ,_;i 100'\i SoNd Stale " RCA Remote Control NOW $6 2 5 • .":.:'.~7:!: .~~ ... ONLY GI 721 he .. Wood CeM•t While They Last!! LOWEST PRICE EVER 19" Black & White 16'' diagonal :RCA COLOR ·TV Stand Included AIC PRE-XMAS SP'ICIAL CHECK OUR PRICES ON OUR '73 CLOSEOUTS! • N~l!!. c~aV! 11 !1T1n :d~y~o~ Low , 902! Atlanta St 19046 Brookliurst St. Down and 36 Mon~ to P'IY (o.a.c) • 1 Year Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Fr" Parts • 1 Ytar FrM Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty e Fru Dollvory and S.t Up ,.~• BankAmerica rd/Master Charge e We Service wh•t we S.11 e Wt know our Pn>duct Inside and Out • No Comminlon S.IHmon. OUR WARRANTY IS NOT PRO.RATED! HOURS: MON .• FRI. 10 . 1 SATURDAY 10 • 5:JO CLOSED SUNDAY OPEN THURSOAY 'TIL 9 962-5559 HOURS : DAtLY 0 I0 °7 SATURDAY I a • SiJO SUNDAY 12 • 5 968-3329 .. .... * and loan association * break, during the su,mmer s months, has the campus and the community on e d g e . Response has varied. g up at er schools. -NOW uPEN EVERY SATURDAY ,.,.,, 10 AM -4 PM , , .<' .... :~.~"-. . . . .. ~-\ ... '"' he Unlver ot Colorado ha "People alkers ," and •t:ternlty e University of . st er s fall started A FE~UNIST group called a .. ial·A·Sa program. ~·-.' ' . WAR -Women Against Rape self-def ens classes f 0 r * , open Mon.·Th111s. Sa,m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 91.m • .&p.m. -has urged every woman women hav Iossomed on * ' ME.NT SAVINGS " PRESTIGE Card to carry o whlsUe white walk· "S TA TE • ing at night and organized campuses f Boston to * BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., Valley View at Uncoln a campaign to establish "safe Berkeley. A 100 Indiana* HUlmNGTON BEACH MorcurySavlngs Bldg.,Edlngerat BUlch * * houses" ort' every block where Univocsity are enrolled * port A women could seek refuge. in karate judo classes. * TUITIN Mercury Savings Bldg., lrvlM Blvd. al New ve. * Escort services have been While worn ps support * LA HABAA·FULLEllTON Me1cury Savings Bldg., Imperial Hwy. at HartJor * started in three of the them as a m ure to counter * CAllSON Mercury Savings Bldg., Ava lon BIVd. at San Diego Frwy. * ~verslly's dormitory com· !he passivi.ty y say ls bred* llXIYICHOLLSMereuryS.~lngsBldr.,Lonr Bt1chBlvd.1tC1rsonst. * plexes. In Teter Quandrangle, mto Amer1 "'.omen, some * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * one of the dormitories, 7SI·-peo~~pl~e~~~ooo~~·:":_:re~a~l~v:•l:u:e~*~~*~*==*==*============~~~==== male volunteers signed up to in detedng l escort coeds around campus after dark. "I got one call the first week of the program and have not received any since," said William Barnard. a freshman who was photographed and issued an identification card by the escort service. "Most of the guys I know report about the same response." SIMILAR SERVICES have SLIMMING RECIPES By Chef Susan of Weight Watchers Nov. 16-17, 11 to 3-Nov. 18, 12 to 3:30 South Co st ?Iua ' PINKING SATURDAY, 10-4 SEWING ALL WORK DONE · BARBER • GARDEN Wl11LE YOU SHOP· KITCHEN NOWAlTING! SURGICAL ETC: 0 • Ground to a perfe un iform edge by experts with the finest c rcial equipment GYo il- able. Bring in your scissors. Your ntighbots,too! Al ork done while you shop. 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Throw· Away Bag o Two-Speed Motor- 50% More Suction With Clean ing Tools. • Famous Hoover ·auality. R HOOVER STORE , HOURS: I MON. • F~ •. 9-9 SATURDAY 9-6 SUNDAY 10-4 • •• I • .. ., , - • . Thu'>day, No,.),,b., 15, 1973 DAILY "LOT ,,,.,----------------------------, ~--'--"---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-" IO-year-old Girl Wi11s Car as Prize TAq>l\I A, IVO>h. (U PI) - Joe She-mky 1nay be lhe only Cather ifl America '''ho \Viii be as~lng his JO-yenN>ld daughter if he cnn t'Orro\v the family car. \\'llh a ~·uuung naine for a new Ice cream and now the fifth grader is the proud O\vn.er of a brand ne\v automobile six yea1·s before she can qualify for her d r i v e r ' s license. She also ,,·on a ti·ip to sponsored by the Carnation Disneyland and $$00 in cash. Co. offering prizes fo r the best na1ne or a nc1i.· ice crean1. JT ALL STARTED sl:< The Shcnsky family, in· 11lonths ago. Suzanne's 111other ~ el uding Slrtanne's 8-year-old !'ead a Rew ll p aper an· brother and three sisters, aged nouncemcnl ubout n contest 21, 10 and 14. gall1ered around Angeles telephoned. Shensky, who answered the call. was told his youngest daughter \\'as the y,•inner of the firs t prize. But Suzanne y,•as out picking raspberries and It w~n't until two hours later she found out. ~"2nnnc Shcnsky c:un~ up .. ~ ~. t ' t ,! • r :,. l • • • the kitchen ta b I e to , -.,,""II "brainstorm" a name for the • ,.,._ product. "lt ha s a lot of different colors," Suzanne said. "There v.•etc chocolate, van i 11 a , strawberry, 1·oeky road -all different kinds. It sort of look· ed Hke little pieces of colored paper. l sald it looks like that stuff you thro\Y at parades and mom said, 'You 1nean confetti.' " "EVERYBODY IN t b t family· "was all excited fJld wanted to know if they could use the car, even Joey," she sai(J. Suzanne said this was the first time she had ever en- tered a contest. Her mother said the girl would 4bave been almost as happy to have won a half-gallon of ice cream. ·But when a newsman asked how much money she thought SUZANNE NAMED the ice $500 was, Suzanne replied: cream "Confetti Carousel." "Enough to buy a 10-Speed filled out and mailed the entry (bicycle )." blank . ------------1 Suzanne and her family had all but forgotten about the ronfest until a representative or the dairy firm ' in Los Kids Like To Ask Andy . LAW-A-WAY ROBES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Best Selection Now! THE HOUSE ·oF FATHER ASKS, 'MAY I BORROW YOUR CAR FOR TONIGHT? So11r• Coost Plu. • c .... MHa • Lower Le¥cl. S.m• eiul of tnell, Dlrect9y ecJOd fro111 Woolworth1 -Pho110 546·2066 Suzanne Shenski Won It for Naming New Ice Cream It's part o! the treatment at First· Healthcare Centers. Because we know that a little pampering does wonders for the spiriI. We oiler all th e pro!essional nursing care yo ur doctor ordered. We're , ·•I ·~· ~·~...-.. . 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Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., .Costa Mesa-5"6-9321 Shop dally 10 a.m. to 9:30; Saturday , 10 to o; Sunday, noon to 5 -. ~. , . / • / • • ' • DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Oil Drilling Federal and state government proposals to esse offshore oil drilling restrictions in response to the en- ergy crisis pose some grave questions for tbe West Coast. In Wa shington, the Nixon administration has with· drawn its support of legislation that would have barred oil drilling in federal waters in the Santa Barbara Channel. In Sacramento, Gov. Reagan's Energy Planning Council ha s urged lifting of the moratorium on drilling in state tidelands, put into effect alter the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill. . These maneuvers may well cause Orange Countians to wonder about the status of our own offshore oil sanctuary, created by the Shell-Cunningham Act of 1955, and .extending from the Santa Ana River to the Mexican bor4er. The sarictuary, covering the three-mile state tide- land area, appears to be relatively sec ure and cannot be changed wittiout additional legislation. Both drilling and exploration involving penetration of the ocean floor are banned within the sanctuary. Exploratioil via sonar waves produced by underwater explosive charges is permitted, but so far no productive oil deposits have been located. · It is the opinion of many experts (and the hope of conservationists) that most of the state's seven oil sanc· tuaries were pretty well examined in the past and prob- ably are not likely territory for further exploration. Questions Supporters of drilling argue that technological ad- vances have ~Uy reduced the possibility of oil gpills. Opponents are less assured. They point to a hatch· work of earthquake faults under the Santa Barbara Channel, one of which Is blamed for the 1969 blowout. Capping ls not the answer where the ocean floor is laced with faults, they argue, noting that a similar situ- ation e<ists in the Huntington· Beach area In the vlcJnl. ty of the Inglewood-Newport fault. One can only hope that the technical e<perts' fail- safe measures succeed -and that Orange County's oil watchdogs will maintain their traditional vigilance. .Behind tl1e Times Under the heading "What Corset Ads?" the New York . Times gently chides President Nixon for one of his recent comments on the press. Nixon is quoted as saying that reports about taxes on his San Clemente home were carried "usually Jn eight-column heads," while stories on the private audit he commissioned to refpte the reports ''.ended up back with the y ot'set ads." ' ' ~Without quibbling with the President's complaint," say1 The Times, "we have to report that a broad search of major dailies has failed to uncover any corset ads." The Santa Barbara situation is quite dif!erent.i Here oil companies already had divided up potential oil areas and paid the govern·rnent some $900,000 for leases when the 1969 disa ster occurred. Understandably, they want to proceed with exploration. - We are told that the President, in lieu of reading newspapers, contents himself with news summaries prepared by his staff. Th~ might explain why he is about 20 years behind on what is being advertised for the ladies. ' I, 'We, the undersigned, feel it is our patriotic duty to vol unteer the closing of Whipple Graqe_ School during the months of December, January and February to conserve fue l during this great ... ' ~~~~~~~~ ~~ministrati?~ ~£.~?~~ ~~~.~~~~~~~.~~~~s-~ scathing hos tility towa_rd the .Press 1n· fonner White House staff chief H.R. ( J · ject.iv!ty into an issue and the subject wrote to Haldeman on August 26, 1970: should in no way be restrained," Colson fected almost the ~nt1re \Ytnte House Ha.Ideman. ~agruder rerommended JACK ANDERSON of. public debate." "The other side is really being hurl wrote. "Both CBS and ABC agreed with staff Jong before his latest press con· usmg the Jus~ce Department Internal .· The Afagruder plan called for the as they· tiegifl to understand the FOC me that on most occasions the Presjdent ference . remarks. /,./ Rev~ue: Service .an~ Federal Com· Whiter House staff tO "plant" stories decisioos. The Democratic National Com· speaks as President and that there. is A senes ?f secrt1,. mun~cations Comn11~10!l to harass of· raising "the questioo of ob;ectiVity and • mittee is using every procedural move no obligation for presenting a cootrasllng_ 1nemos, dating ~ck fending .news orgaruzati~ns. , and we should attempt to pop his bub-ethics in the news business:." 1 (and CBS is cooperating) to stay the Point of view under the Fairness Doc-o to the. first.~ _of Other documents, wh1~h haven t yet hie." decisions ... .I l;hink it is time for trine .... " the Nixon _,.A;Om1n1s-su:faced, show the. W~te House was Higby suggested stimulating petitions HE AUO sought to recruit a ,·us to generate again a PR campaign 1 tration, sh<Sw how the going after the media with a v~gean.ce. from the public and pressure from sla-joumalism dean, oongrasmen, private against the Democrats. and CBS." "I Mt REALISTIC enough to realize staff schemed to in· Jn one memorandum, Haldeman s brief· Uon owners ·demanding HunUey's im· groups and Vice President Spiro Agnew A month later Colsoo submitted a ' that l''e probably won't see any obviou!i Unsidate reporters ~ase canier, Lawr~ce Higby, declar~: mediate removal. "Let's put a full plan to flay the press. FCC Chairman Dean brutal report on 'bis meetings with of. improvement in the news coverage." and their employers What we ar~ t.ry~g .t:> do here 1s 00 this and get the thing moving," Burch would also be called upon to ficials ol the three netv;orb : ColsCll said. "but I think "'e can dampen into giving favorable tear down the 1nshtut1on. urged the yoong Haldeman aide. "express concern about press ob-their ardor for putting on 'loyal op! th d J"ectivity." "111E NETWORKS are terr i b I y position' type programs." ·' coverage in e me · HE REFERRED to a July 1970 state-Id ho ia. • ment which Lite magazine attributed HBIJT IeBY edTIIElhanext Ueday, the White. Magruder .also envisioned "a blue-ri~ii nervous! t ~the uncertalDFCC. decs~t_e of andthe t H~ldmlat.mldanl hadhehis O"ll lneas on \If The White House tactics included plans ouse am t Hun y p I an De d hon media watchdog'' committee, which ff" aw, .e., u-::-recent l!llOOS o in l e t press. a memq lo Use .1._ Federal Communications Com· to newscaster Chet Huntley, then about to apologize to Nixon and to deny the "John Cos ,____ 'den ol. the pressures to grant Congress access to Magruder on Februnry "· 1911>, ~ uit: to retire from NBC. Huntley was quoted vaUdityoltbe quotationfqLlfema:f.':· grove,.. a IUlllll:J" prest t to~~-~.,. ajso3':rolltn!li~· about ~ailed for the "mobilization of the Si= mission against the networks, to as: saying of Nixon : "The shallowness .... ..._ • ..i.. In Hal the National ~ Club," could set ..... ,...._. tr1 • IO-dl . • "·Jori ched brl st imulate letters to newspapers and to •"'"'&' '""""r' a memo to man, up. The presidential assistant wanted ....., ....::1 ~ ty · wh1ch we tou on block reporters from interviewing Nixon of the man overwhelms me ; the fact suggested: "Since the newscaster enjoys even to arrange for "a senator or con-it was obvious . The harder I pressed in the meeting today. We just haven~ aides when it appeared the stories might that he is President frightens me." a very favorable public image abd will gressman (to) write 8 public letter to them (CBS and NBC) the more ac-really mobilized them, and we havf be unfavorable. Wrote Higby to Magruder: "'Ibe point apologize for his remarkl, claiming to the FCC suggesting the 'licensing' of commodating, cordial and al m'o s t got to move now in every effectiv4 THE FIR.~T disclosure of the cam· paign to intimidate Nixon's news critics was made recently by Sen. Lowell Weicker, R·Con n., who made public a behind this whole thing is thal we don't be misquoted, we should not attempt individual newsmen." ... apologetic they became. (Then CBS way ~·e can to get them working tO care aboot Huntley -he is going to to discredit him personally. . . .1be 1 President Frank) Stanton for all his pound on the magazines and netwo~ lt!ve anyway. What we are trying to foeus i5f our effort should be to raise WHILE DEMANDING fairness for bluster l.! the most in.secure of all. in COWlter-action to the obvious shifJ do here is tear down the institution. the larger question of objectiVity and themselves, however, the White Houae of the establishment to an attack oq · Huntley will go out in a blaze of glory, ethics in the media as an institution. schemed to keep the Democrats frUn "There was uoanimom agreement that Vietnam again." • . Citizens Vow Court Fight To End Utility Users Tax Iran As Guardian of Persian Gulf ~ ·- Oil Helps Finance Shah's Huge Armaments Prog ram Jn 49 California c1Ues citizens are taxed every time they turn on their lights, or get a glass of water. or use gas for the stove or the furna ce. They arc also taxed when they use the phone. Jn 14 cities, there 's a tax on cable TV and in t"·o citil.'s -S a n Leandro and Santa Barbara -folks are taxed "" on the tax for gar· bage and se"·er. It's called a "ulil· ity users tax" and it's right there -on the utility bill -a the end of each and every month. · In 1971·72, the tota l statewide tax take on utility users came to $93.2 million. That was about 30 percent more than lhe $'10 million take for 1970..71. The tax ranges from 1 percent in Sunnyvale to 7 percent in Burbank .and Pasadena and 8 percent in Inglewood. For most cities it is set at 5 percent. Berkeley had such a tax but cancelled il in April , 1970. That is the first good thing I've heard about Berkeley in a long, Jong time. THE ,.U'J1LITY users tax is a stinker. JI is unfair . One of the few gracious attributes or our tax-masters has been their good sense to exempt food and other necessities from the sales tax. Yet, heat and light and water are also necessities -and they are taxed ln 49 cities. That's what John A. Rowe, Jr., thinks, too. And ~1r. ft.owe is an attorney of - Dear Gloomy Gus .. What we need is a guy like HoiblC Hoove again," warbles Archie Bunker ever)C. Saturday night, and m~ he:a got something there •.. F. K. I - ( RUS WALTON ) action even though he is Tl years old. Rowe is a member of the Irate Tax- payers Committee of Sonoma County. On behalf of himself and 30 other Santa Rosa utility users, he has brought suit against that city and a whole strin·g of utility companies. He wants to knock out Santa Rosa's S percent utUity users tax. ' THE STATE Public Utilities Com· mission rejected Roy,·e's complaint. He appealed to the State Supreme Court and his Writ of Mandamus was recently dismissed. The Court gave no reason for the dismissal but its action was probably prompted by several pa$t decisions and establiShed precedents. The rourt has upheld the power of charter cities to levy the utility users tax, unless a charter includes limitations in the matter. Several years ago, in Packard vs Vallejo, the state PUC made several imfKlrlant rulings on utility user taxes : 1. The tax must be dearly labelled and listed separately on the monthly utility bill. 2. .The utilities companies c8nnot disconnect a customer's · service if -he fails or refuses to pay the tax. 1bat is a problem for the city, DOI the utility. MR. ROWE now plans lo appeal the coun '• n?fu.sal to review his oomplalnL He cites several bases for his protest : -The tax is a capitation (head) tax and as such he thinks it is un-· constitutional (persons getUng the same utilllies servJ« do DOI pay the lu il they are outsldo the dty limits). -Tht state revenue and tax ccxk specl!Jcally exempts from the sales tu any gas, oil or water delivered by pipe, and -the city of Santa Rosa ts not vested with the power to lore< public uUllU., lo act as tax collector1. . Should he ran 1n his tilt with the Supreme Court'• windmill, there ts always another battleground r., Mr. Rowe and his fe.llow-ell.izens: The precinct and the ballot box. Laws or no laws, precedents or no precedents, politiclarfi have been la1owlY 10 listen to lrale ta1payert. TEHERAN -When Soviet Prime Minister Alexei Ka1ygin on his recent visit here complained to the Shah about Iran's soarihg armaments program, which he said was costing $2 billion, the Shah smiled a chilly smile and munnured: "Three, not two." Indeed, the Shah's ambitious defense program is costing In toto even more than $3 billion. ,,,. Shah privately esti· mates its.annual C06l right now at between one and two billion dollars -a Jot of hardware even for a fast-developing coun- try of 32 mlllion. Yet, considering the Shah's ability to • cash-and-carry every dollar's wortb out of his oil-fattened treasury, and · con- sidtifing bis plan to make Iran the . principal guardian of the vital Ptnlian Gull. waterway, his decision to blilld the best combat force between the Soviet Union and IndJa is very good ·news for the West. ' A CURSORY gl ance al the Shah's Inventory, either in place or on order, makes pleasant· reading for frlet\dl. among whom the U.S. stando hlgb:·dooe to a lhouoand Brtttsh Chieftain tanks, 1119 F-41 of the ,lldvance D and E dasstflcatlon, 111 F4", a. couple ol specially built British frigates, a couple ol U.S. destroym, U.S. air tankers to give his fighters maximum range , fast patrol bolts, Brttlsl>made Hovercraft and much more. Neither the Shir nor his Prlme Minister, a bani-headed n In e ·ye a r veteran, wt!I mention such atau.ttcs. 'I1>ey . ....,. slJlplcions In India and In ...,,. ' of the Shah'• neighbors, porticularjy the holUle lroqis. Iraq bri>lte relations with Iron In tWI wbelt the .Shah setted BrttislHlcotrolled areas In the Gulf, lndudln( the" Jral\Lln side ol the Shatt-ol-Arab waterway dlvldlnc Iran and Iraq -and t1>ree 1tra~1lc tsleta near the neck ol tho Penlan Gulf -just before the Brttilh vacated the Gulf area. A l t h o u I h diplomatic relations were restA>red by lraq for tacti reuotta When the war ol Yom Klppur broke out, the two coun- trict are bitttr enemies. THUS, protecttng:hls flank along the volJUle border with Iraq, which ls anned ( EVANS·NOVAK) lo the teeth by profligate M06COW, ts a secondary reason for lhe Shah'• huge military buildup. 'Ibe greater reason Is to keep Persian oil flowing and Persian cootrol over the Gulf and the $ea of Oman. . _, . . As the Shah told us in an ioiervi.ew, 11We must depend on ourselves. No one will do il for us." The Shah means just that. He sent Iranian (Persian} armed help to Oman early this year to quell a radical left· wing movement ln that small emirate. They are still there. Re Will do the same anywhere along the congested "'est bank o1 the Gulf. PUBUCLY, he and King Faisal or Saudi Arabia, another traditional but more passive monarch, have agreed to cooperate on keeping the Gulf clear ol foreign Influences and to protect the small oil emirates from radical in- filtration. But lhe two monarclll are oot close, despite eff«ts by w.,bington lo make them ao. Moreover, U. Shah's pros- pective military power puts hbn In A Gersh.win Retrospect 'Ille ---By Robert Kimball and Allred Simon. Atheneum. 19'l Pages. $25. 'Ille Genlim Yean. By Edward Jablonski and Lawrence D. Stewart. Doubleday. 416 Pages. $t2.95. George Gershwin, 75 years old If he were alive today? This Ia banf lo believe -_not \J<C"P.' be would "be so old but llecauae be would be; relatively young. . ' Aller all, think· o! the "ejc!Uranc. ol Jrvtnc Borlin, now IS, wh<> ,..._, pretty well establllbed when ~ y 0 U D g Genhwiri wu =tning his apprenUce years, bef"9 W Wir I. THE llEA80N lot ...i ll I u,1 or y dlscrepency, of courae,fs Gersbwig's ~-be maturodoo early and • clled so ~. at !!I, in tqJ. We llllllt not for;et there were two Gerohwtns. Ira, George'• ,older brother, wrote the lYrtc. 1or many o1 0eotc•'• oompoottlons, lrom the ; later George Wblte "Scaadal•" In the 1920s through the glorioos -In "Porgy and Bess" to the Fred Aata~lnger Rogers movie•. Althoqb now retired, he keeps a irharp , eye on the Gers~wln fecend. The '15th ahntvenary of Georse1' birth Is brillClnl !wtb com- --r11111n& In ·111ze rrom con-certi and lJ!>ou ii>, literally, a postage stamp, already in clrculatton. THE TWO llOOll Ulder comtderaUoo, _wlllle natunll1 eovtrtnc the same pound, are quite ff!enaL 'l1le men ', o) interesting f0< the genenir reader Is "The Gershwins," put together by l!obert Kimball, who '\!oembled "Cole" ·cin Cole PorlOf, and Alfred [llmon, Gershwin'• rebeersal pianist for "Of Thee I Sing." It lncludea many brief reminiSCOllCOS of lbe:composer by ramous people who linew ·him. 'l'hert 'ts appropriately ' a very good torewaril by Richard Rodgers and a l'Ompoct biographical tntroductloa ~ John S. Wllaon, jazz crlllc ror The New York Times. mOSE OF us who lived ~ tho '* and '30s think of Gershtrin as the mlnslrel ol the jaaa age, from the Broadway shows to the "Rha-.ty in Blue" and "Porgy and ~.~So H starUes us, when Kimball and Simon aay: 1'George GerShwin1 eclectic as be i was, wu· riot re1Uy a compoeer (If jazz t music . • . The Rhapsody .• : • owe1 far more'to the tnnuenco ol Tcliatkovaky and Llazt, · botlt unquestlonsbly •killed syncopatoro, than ol. Buddy Boldeo or KJng .OUver." Tho other book, "The Gershwin Vew-s," bas more de.tall on the whole Genhwtn clan -rather • bit too much, dlmni!nc oomewliat George's meteoric rise. Both boob are elaborately ll· lust!"led. -led Pnn ' '· ' --< . a 1.Dlique clau, far superior to the Saudis. Soviet influence in the Gulf area todaf' .is weak, except for Iraq. A Sovi~ mission In Kuwait is small, and tf1c! half-dozen emirates have not e~ granted diplomatic exchanges t 8 Atoscow. ~. That hasn't stopped systematic Jit: increasing Soviet naval pe.netratlon Of the Gui£. howe ver. Small Soviet naval vessels are frequent. vi.siton, and eartJ this year for the first time a Soviel cruiser steamed up the ShaU-al-Aral». Soviet activity ls intense in Aden, fil' to the south on the Arabian tip., bq:t on the Gulf llaelf there Is no wy toehold other than Iraq -'!"I ye~ .; ~ SO U)NG AS Moscow behaves, .a future Pax Irana in the Gulf ls coB- a?ivable. U Moscow tried to tubYert t'f Shah's pledged rolo of Gulf protedli" and guarantor, U.S. counteraction Is predictable, with detente a possil!IO casualty. .; . ' "Detente is not divisibl e/' Prilne Minister Abbas Hoveyda told U.. "MOICOw carutot hav~ • it in Euroj:ie and the U.S. and Ignore il here." •lf Moscow tries, the big slick the Shih ts shaping wm be used and used bald. He penntts no'doubt about that. ot•ff•I COAIT DAILY PI LOT Robert N. Weed, NU.her Th0!1141 Kecvil, Edil<Jr Barbani Krrlbich Edltortol Pape Editor -. .- • ' The f'dttorlal ·JMllV Of Ille" Daily: Pilot Wt to lnronn Pd .Umula.te • read.en by ~tl._-on this pep ... dtvtrwJComm'1!tuy'on topies of tr..."" lertlt by s)tndlcated ro1umnltts •nd 1 cartoon~ by provid:J._-a ronun IOI'· .ftllden' vltw• and by prnentlrc this( new1p1."P'f''t opinions and ideu Ctlm'nt toplca. ~ editorial optnknl of ~ DallY PUoL appear~ In the! editorial column at the-top of the} ' 'P&(t. ()plnlons ftPttmd bY the c:oJ.1 unudafl •nd Cartoobllti and Jett wrlte'I' att the.Ir awn -no~; I mmt ot 1hetr views by 'the Dai.t/i )'t1ot _Id,,. w..- Thursday, November 15, 197 · I Interest In Black Studv Off Survey Finds .Net~erlands 'Most Livable~ in. ·Europe . , . I • • LONDON -"The envelope. ,---.,,r.--------.. One of tbe watermarks of please. Ladies Md genllemen, E 1TORIAL . tbe campus turbulence In the lhe winner of the !Ille of Most , 1 · ·, late 60s was the ·violent in-Livable Nation in Europe Is. 1 "RJr~ARCH 'Sistence dn "relevance" in ... the Netherlands!" Yes, ..._1~1 __ -_--r'+-~------' curricula, which primarily the Netherlands. The world's , ; ... meilnt the Institution of study . second most densely populated -te"iina 'ot •1reipect •.for," in· tries. The ratio of taxation courses designed to glorify nation finished first in a divl_duat tiberu~· ." i. to gross national product. iD '.f>lack history and culture. s~rvey of 15 European coun-The French hose working Sweden is 43.0, as comaared tr1e~ conducted: by Vis'!on, a hours &re at~, g tbe,)ongest to Spain's low-ranking r~tio , ; AS IN so many other stu· busmess magazine. . · and who ha the "'highest . .of 19.2. The United States ratio 'dent causes, faculties and ad-The runners-up in the Vision hornicide---rite. on the con-of 27.9 olaced it rougbly 1n ;ministrations gave in. George poll were Denmark, Sweden, tinent, were Oe':ver in1 the run-the middle of the pack. Wash Ing ton University's and Norway, in that order. ning for No. ~' The food in , In the end, . tiny Holland history deoartment, for in-So perhaps Scandinavia can Paris may be Matchless, and , finished first in the Visicm 'stance, instituted a course in boast that it is the most the sunshine alQJilg Uie Rivi era survey because of its tolerant , 'Negro culture one d8y after desira1?Je region in ElD'Ope. beyond compare·. The fact re-'spirit, Its lack of class about 200 students marched But_ pity ooor . Ireland and mains, tho'ugh, $it no visiting divisions, the excellence of its ' on the administration building Portugal. They tied for last. European would1.try to com-social security system, and and dema nded th at the school · Several curious facts emerg-munlcate by ·telephone in the relatively relaxed Jife-st)'le :do so. Some 167 enrolled in ed fr~m the survey. The France if he cOutd possibly of its people. The multi-lingual the course . Repubhc of Irela~d (as op-. avoid it. And forget about the ability of the Dutch also earn- Today the haste and waste ~sed to Ulste~) JS the least Mis~ Congeniality award . ed them high marks. When of such '"Capitul ation is becom· violent country in Europe. The France easily won the dubious all is said and done, however, ing clear. The Wall Street French are the least in-distinction of exhibiting the there is not all that much Journal, reviewing the situa-lerest~ in ~ports. Andt would most surly .and aggressive na-separating . the top-ranked tion, quotes a recent survey youJ>ehev!?.1t, London receives tionat behavior .• 1 countries from the others.,.All as revealing that ~iil. contrast Jess rainfall than any other Th~-Org~a n +a tioo or suffer to greater 'Or lesser to that 1969 total of 167 European capital. Economic Cooperation and degree from inflation, political enrollees, the Geo r:g e Development reports t·b a'l unrest and J)ollution. The Washington course this year ALTHOUGH 8 separate polt Swfden is the niost heavily pastures look greener only of 2,000. Vision readers ,con· ed f !9 be r d' ta attracted only 24. American eluded that Britain was the,.;;ta;;;;x;;;;o;;;;i;;ts~;;me;Jim;;;;;;r;;co;;;;un;;·;;;;;;'°;;'";;;;a;;;;;i;;s ;;;;nce;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;~I University's ''The Sociology of best country in which to work l1 the Afro-America n" drew 339 and live, Britain finished fifth students in 1969. This fall it in the over·all survey. The has 12. The story is repeated reason is that the magazine across the country· took into account not only liv- ing and working conditions but AS THE Journal comment s, also climate,,food , telephones, part of this decline itl specilic and sui cide rate, among other black: course is. of course, facto rs. caused bv the fact that much Britain ranks near the bot- ..., of the previously ·neglected tom of the heap when it comes historical, intellectual and to per-capita ownership of culturPI · C<lntributions of the ref rig e r at ors , washiQg Negroes has ~n incorpoiat-machines, freezers, and ed in appropriate existin~ dis-dishwashe rs. On the other eipllnes. And .this is all tr:> hand, it was top.ranked in the .good. the industrial-sa fety radio- "THERE'S ALWAYS AN AN'fER" A flU ~rllf1o11 Sclnce Lec.hlr• by,._,. N."HMfe11, C.S.I. TONIGAT :.._NOV. 15 ~ 8 P.M. CHURCH AUDITORIUM MESA YERDIE DR. EAST AMPU PARKI NG -CHILD CARE . . FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST COSTA MESA ' Jt shouldn't, however, be ownership, and news paper taken as a total expiation of sales categories. Most sa tis- the mindless student violence fying of all, as far as Britons and upheavals of the not· are mncemed , was the finding forgotten recent past. that their co u n tT....y out- ~allfornla Fea=tu=r=e=Se=r=vl=ce= distanced all the other~s~ln~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;:;:I r,NlrN .. '. all newl974 SOLID~STATE (ll~lllGM 1,0LOll II' 0'{.~' giant-screen r--c_o_n_s -+.e--,s __ _ • .,rllllant new chromacolor picture I • 100% solid state chassis! • 30,000 volts* of picture power I • one-button chromatic tuning! Tho ALTAIR UM711 Authentlcalty styled Eal!!': American 16~ console. Wrap. around gallery. Spool-turned legs •. Maple color. Chrom11llc One- button Tul'.'llnQf' Power Sentry Systein. AFC. '558" MODERN 'srvuNG Modern styled console .. FUii recessed base. Casters. Geouine oil linished 1Walnut ven8ers and select hardwood solids, exclusive of decorative front. Cftom'Atic One-button Tuning.· Power Sentif System. AFC. s559tf t Ol~or',. 1uantiicl rehM ~. ' . . TV & APPLIANCE C~NTER. ' ·HARBOR ·cENTEr. , UN 1'1 Efl I . OtNlDl:'G · ' ' ' ,OlUDDD Pl! .. 540-7131 \ ...•. ' t i' ''" lftl• 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa M••· t .. ,. . " . .. ... " . . ' Thur~ay, November 15, 1973 DAILY PILOT l % . . . Sheds a lot of light on savings. Sale12.77 . Regularly 15.97 'Amber styrene ball swag, ~ :brass-tone cha"in. 16-inch diameter .. ·charge It on your JCPtM•Y ~rge .. d. · Walnut finished-or · brightly colored cane smg In warm Tiffany-like styllng'.'1 a· diameter .. All U.L. approved . • I •• ORANGE • City Or. •t Oardtn oro .. Blvd. Opet11M p.m. De•ty IUnuJ 10 tot. • , -• 4•' Sale 9.59 Regularly 11.99 A. Quil ted glass swag , black wrought iron accents. 19" deep. B. Color·dome swag, white · glass ball. 13:inch diameter. C. Cylinder shade swag, fluted glass and tassle trim, 24" deep •.. o. Walnutflnlshed wood cage, colorful plaslic inserts. 15\lz"deep. Also: Sw irl glass swag: (not shown) CHARGE IT wilh your JCPenney Charge Clrd. If you don 't have a charge, just see how fast we can open up yqur new account SANTAANA 3900 So. Brlttql . No. of So. COilt Plua '1lllfl 10.t p.m. Dlllly•'!"*J 10 .• t • J ' • ) • . . 8 DAILY PILOT ThUtsday, No'ftmbtr 15, 1~73 ANIMALogkliti\.,...,. -:sr Rape of Coeds a MajQ;r Problem Vo1111egut Defends His Book MINO'!', N. D. !AP) -Kurt Vonnegut Jr. says he can't imagine why the school board in Drake, N. D. ordered copies of his 1969 nov e l "Slaughterhouse Five" col- lected from students a n d destroyed. ·"THERE'S NOTHING ohscene about the book," Von- negut said in an interview in the Minot Daily News. Irs the first time any of his books have been burned, he said. The author said he did not know whether what one Drake resident termed "barnyard scenes" were necessary. One meaning of "barnyard" is smutty, earthy, scatological. 1'111ERE ARE NO barnyard scenes per sc in the book," Vonnegut said. "If you mean could I have edited it more, lhe anSwcr is obviously yes." The no l'cl is about a New \'ork opt o met r i st who becomes W1Stuck in time, en· dures the American bombing of Dresden in World War II and winds up spending eterni- ty on another planet with a Hollywood starlet. By TERRY RYAN AtMCl•tM ,,_ Wrll•r Rapes and assaults oo coeds have become a major problen1 on the nation's college cam· puses, security of!icials say. They cite coed dorms, hitch- hiking and lack of conctm as contributing factors. ranging from bicycle thefts to muggings. There are ex- ceptions, but not many. TllE RISE JN rape com- plaints on campus ls also part or a nationwide situation reflected tn the 70 .percent1 jump In reported rapes in all jurisdictions surveyed by the Federal Bureau of InvestJptlon the past five years. "Crime ls Increasing in our society," said Audie Shuler, poUce chief at the University walk by themselves to the library after dark. "YOU CAN COME out here any night of the week and you'll see a coed ·walking alone," said A. L. McCoy, security chief at U>ul!iana State University. "You just wonder, 'Now 1 she'.s Ju.st not concerned! And a Jot of them have the opinion, 'Well, It's just not going to happen to me.' So I don't know what lhe answer ls." Changes IJI campus living Campus admlnistrators have responded by imposing tighter regulations in living areas, In- creasing police patrols and in· stalling better locks and lights. Coeds are taking self-defense courses, and male student! have started escort services • on many campuses. "ATTACKS ON rem a 1., 'The fntteasl!l of l'flpl!l Is not bo- have gone up at just about latl!lcl pra-on fJut part of G ,,,,,._ ever.y school we have contact ercal rise fn eanapMS eritne.' with," said Herbert T. Voye, ------------------editor of the Campus Law , ~ --- -------------Enforcem~n~. "It's of Florida's Gainesville cam-patterns have made the job not just a question of more pus. "We live in It, so we of protecting all students more Y<omen reporting it. It has are part of It." difficult, said security officers. happened." ud Coed dorms and open living Twenty male st ents at the Voye is chief of securi1y areas mean anyone can at Tufts University near Florlda school were hired last wander around without arous- Boston. Several f e m a I e month to augment the campus ing suspicion, they said. students have been raped on police force , after one coed Although students just a few or near the campus in the was raped in a parking tot years ago fought for such ar- past year, including one girl and another abducted and rangements, dormitory securi· - raped in a dormitory room raped elsewhere. They are ty is now being tightened the first week of class this armed with whistles and often at the urging of students fall . badges but do not carry guns At the University of "I was looking forward to or have arrest powers. Pennsylvania, 200 women a nice quiet year," said Vo ye. staged a sit-in outside the "Now the students are up in RAPE REPORTS have in-president's office demandlng anns demanding more securl-creased at big city and. small better protecUon after a series ly. They want me to beg the town schools alike. of rapes in the campus area. administration for money to Two girls were raped and have a man uith a dog patrol-tvlo others assaulted in a hous- ling on campus." ing complex on the Brigham TUFTS HAS spent $30,000 Young UniveM!ily campus in to upgrade campus lighting, Provo, Utah. City and campus police were alarmed b y has a female security officer reports that gun-toting male training at a rape crisis center student! bad taken to guarding and stationed guards inside girls' apartments. women's dormi tories. Like nearly all campus At the University of Jllinois police officials, Voye said Champaign-Urbana campus, nonstudents were responsible four rapes or attempted rapes for the increasing attaCks on were reported in the 12 women. months that ended last Jll[le. "To judge from the people Four such cases already have we have apprehended and been reported this ·sclio<it' year·. what I've heard from other Teams of security officers campuses. the majority of were dispatched to lecture in cases don 't involve stud~nts," dormitories and sororities on ·said Voye. "It's outsiders." preventing rape and dealing The increase of rape in-with it if it occurs. mTCHHIKING coeds, now a rommon sight around most campuses, are particularly vulnerable to attack. In ad- dition to numerous reports of rape, hltchhiklng college girls have been murdered during the past year ln Boston; Ann Arbor, Mi~ .• and Santa CrUz. While most (.'()eds recognize the danger, many consider lt an infringement on their freedom to be told they should not hitchhike. . Good Deed cidents is not an isolated The increasing independence phenomenon but part of a of "'omen was cited by many "It's the only way I have or getting home," said a girl standing beside a guard booth at the edge of Indiana U n i v e rsity's Bloomington campus ,_,Ith her thumb out. "Why shouldn't I?" make the scene · general rise in campus crime security chiefs as an un-Sund the past few years. Long con-derlying explanation for the ays sidered inviolate sanctuaries, increase in rapes. Coeds are ~iiiiii~iniiithe~~j~,J~,j~jt~•~Q~!(~1)~j~isichoo~l~s~aicr~os~s~th~e~co~u~n~lr~y~a~r~c .im~ore likely now lo work alone i • • ••-••• •• now plagued wifh incidents in a laboratory at night or Fifteen rapes and at least 20 other assaults on women have been reported in Bloom· ington since April. Six rapes V.'ere reported in the entire county last year. The out- Ai.L MODELS IN STOCK AND ON DISPLAY $599 with remot. Xl-100 100 % Solid State diagonal •I ~i 1<>0'\ Solid Slate • 1 lutto11 Tu11hHJ Arito Fine Tu11e RCA Remote Control NOW $6 2 5 . ::.:'.~~:: T~~I .. ONLY GS 721 '-c: .. WoM C:.W-.t While They Last!! LOWEST PRICE EVER · 19" Black & White 16'' diagonal :RCA COLOR TV DJ62 $269 Stand Included AIC PIE·XMAS S,ICIAL , . CHECK OUR PRICES ON OUR '73 CLOSEOUTSI • N~~!!. c~.v.1.11 ~1I1n :~v~ ~!Low 902~ Atlanta St 19046 .Broakburst St. . Down and 36 Mon~ to pay (o.a.c) • l Yur Huntington Beach Huntington Beach Free P•rts • t Y••r Free Service • 3 Ye•r Picture Tube Warranty • FrH Q..elivtry and S.t Up • BonkAmorlcard/Muter Charge • Wt S.rvk1 what we Sell • We know our 11roduct Inside and Out • No Commlsslon S.lnmon. OUR WARRANTY IS NOT PRO.RATED! HOUR.S i MON. -F-RI. 10 . 7 SATCl!:DAt' 10 • IS :JO CLOSED SUNDAY OPEN THURSDAY 'T!L 9 962·5559 HOURS : DAILY· 10 ·7 SATURDAY 10 -15:30 SUNDAY 12 • S I, ' \ . break, during the summer sprung up at other schools. months, bu the campus and Tbe University of Colorado the community on edge . has "People Walkers," and Response :has varied. a fraternity at the University of Rochester this fall started A FEA1JNIST group called a "Oial·A·Sam" program . WAR -Women AgaiMt Rape Self-defense classes for * -has urged every woman to carry a whistle while walk-women have blosso1ned. on * , Open Mon.·lllurs. 9 a.m.-4 p.rn.; Fri. 9 1.m.-6 p.m. • • "STATEMENT SAVINGS"·PRESTl&E Card Ing at lght and nl ed campuses from Boston to * n orga Z IUEMA PAllK Mercury Savings Bldg., Vallo)' View It UncolR * ti campaign to establish usafe Berkeley. About 100 lndlana * ch houses" on every block where University coeds are enrolled* t!UNTIN&TON BEACH MefCUrYSavlngsBld(l.,Edlngtf'atllel * women could seek refuge. in karate and Judo classes. * ....,rusnN Morcury Savings 81d0 .• lrvlnt B!lld. at Newport Ave. * Escort services have been While women's groups support * tntABAA·fULLERTON Mercury Savings Bldg., Imperial Hwy. at KartJor * started in three of the them as a measure to counter * CARSON MerCIJry Savings Bldg., AvalOn B!Yd. al san Diego Frwy. * university's dormitory com-!he passivi.ty they say is bred* · BIJl'l'lNOLLSMercurySavlnasBld1.,Lon1Be1chBlvd.atc.aonst. * plexes. In Teter Quandrangle, m10· American women, some * * * * * * * * * * * one of the donnitories, 75:,_!'.peo~pl~e~!lou~l>~il~t~h~e~:_:r:•al:_v:•:lu:el*:-::*~*~*==*==*=*=*==*=*=*=========== male volunteers signed up to in deterlng \Yapc. escort coeds around campus after dark. "I got one call the first week of the program and have not received any since." said William Barnard, a freshman who was photographed and issued an identification card by the escort service. "Mast of !he guys I know report about the same response." SLIMMING RECIPES By Chef Susan of Weight W•tchers Nov. 1'-17, 11to3-Nov. 18, 12 to 3:30 South Coast ?lua PINKING SATURDAY, 10-4 SEWING BARBER ALL WORK DONE GARDEN Wl11LE YOU SHOP - KITCHEN No.WAITING! SURGICAL ETC. ~ Ground to a perfect uniform edge by experts with the finest commercial equipment avail· able. Bring in all your scissors. Your noighbors,tool All work done while you shop. REGULAR49¢ PINKING 79¢ SHEARS SHEARS Al . ooVER APPl\AMCES 0 ' New HOOVER Portable e 52007 the vacuum cleaner wilh eve ryth in2 ... INSIDE #1 12() HOOVER HANDIVAC e Oe1 lg11•d for qui,. pit~·up1, 011 ru91, b•r• floor1, ·or •bo"• floor clt1"i119 • li9htwei9ht, t11y lo 1tore e Built·i11 c•rryi119 h•"dl11 e Co""•"\•11t .. off-on" 1wit,h e Pow1rful motor • ler91 l qi. lhrow-•w1y beg -h•11d1 do"'t touch th1 dirt e Combi1t•lio11 ru9°floor /I01ll• FREE RUG SHAMPOO ACCESSORIES ATTACHMENTS $4950 FOR EVERY NEED ! TELESCOPING WAND ! the most powerful HOOVER cleaner ever built! 'f amous Hoover Triple-Action Cleaning -"It Beats ... As It Sweeps ... As It Cleans"! Converts In Seconds For Use With Attachments. • Instant Rug Adjustment ... Low Pile To Deep Shag. • Extra Large Capacity . Th~ow-Away Bag • Two-Speed Motor- 60% More Suction With Cleaning Tools. • Fam11us Hoover Quality. '"' WITH PURCHASE OF A D~LUXE FLOOR POLISHER 1' Scrub • Buff • Wax • Shampo0 Carpets HOSE (1lw1y1 1ttoch1d) KING-SIZE UG I r •• r, YOUR HOOVER STORE HOURS: MON.· F~ .. 9-9 SATURDAY 9-6 SUNDA Y 10-4. I J • I TA Joo fotbe be d•Ull f3mi ~ij . ,,. I > • -I Th111'$d1y, November 15, 197.l DAIL¥ PILOT 9 IO-year-old Girl W .ins Car a~ Prize TACOlllA. Wash. (UPI) - Joe SbeMky 11'\PY be the only father, ip America y.•ho \Viii be as~ing his ' JO.yeUN>ld daughter it he CAil t-or1 O\\' the family c.•ar. ~uzannc She(\Sky• can1e up '''Ith a wlnnlllg nan1e for ;t n.e'v ice cream and now U1e rifth grader is the p1'0ud O\vner of a brand new au\01nobile six years before she can qt1allty for her d r i v e r 's license. She also \VOn a tl'ip to Disneyland and $500 in cash. IT ALL STARTED six 1;1onths ngu. Suzanne's n1other 1·ead ti RCV.'8paper an- nouncen1e11t ubout a contest I FATHER ASKS, 'MAY I BORROW YOUR CAR FOR TONIGHT? ' ' -f. ~' • Suzanne Shenski Won It for Naming New Ice Cream .! ' • sponsored by the Carnation Co. .offering prizes for the best name of a ne,v ice crean1. The SheMky family, in· eluding Suzanne's a.year-old brother and three sisters, aged 21, 19 and 14, gathered around the kitchen t a b 1 e to "brainstorm" a nan1e for the product. "It has a lot of dlfterent co lors," Suzann e said. "There v.'ere chocolate, van i 11 a , strawberry, rocky road -all different kinds. It sort of look· ed like little pieces of colored paper. l said it looks like lhat stuff you thr.ow at parades and mom said, 'You mean confctli. • " • Angeles telephoned. Shensky, "'ho answered the call. "'as to1d his youngest daughter \\'as the "'inner of the first prize. 13ut Suzanne was out picking raspberries and it wasn't un\il two hours later she found out .... "EVERYBODY IN the family was all excited fnd wanted to kno\v if they could use the car, even Joey," a:he said. Suzanne said this Wa.!1 the first time she had ever en· tered a contest. Her mother said the girl would have been a1n1ost as happy to have won a half-gallon of ice cream. -But when a newsman asked how much money she thought SUZ,\NNE NA~tED the ice $500 \\'SS, Suzanne replied : cream "Confett i Garousel," "Enough to buy a JO.speed filled out and mailed the entry (bicycle)." blank. --------------1 Suza nne and her family had all but forgotten about the contest until a representative of the dairy firm in Los Kids Like To Ask Andy LAW·A·WAY ROBES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Best Selection Now! THE HOUSE -OF So11t• Coast Plu• • Cu .. Mes•• L•wtt" Level, $11H"s •:ut ef NI~ Dlrtctly ftross frowi Woelw1rths -Plt1111 546·2066 It's part of the treatment at First Healthcare Centers. Because we know that a little pampering does wonders for the spirit. accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals. • salon, we offer a full program of activities-crafts programs, movies, bingo games and much more. There's soinething for everyone. We ojfer all the professional nursing care your doctor ordered. We're ~ .... ....... ~_ And as important as nursing care is, it isn't everything. We !\now that: emotional health is vital to physical health. So in addition to our beauty After all, we have parents, too. • Firs! Healthcare Corporation • A part of CNA Financial Corporation Pult Lklo H .. - • • ' • 466 Fl'l'hip Road N•wport Beach, Call!. 92660 Phone 642·8044 Plrl<Sopnlor ff ....... t445 Superior Aw • Newport Beach, Calif. 9'1660 • Phone 642-24 t 0 , Nowport VIU1H.- 4000 Hilaria Way Newport Beach, Cllif. 92660 Phooe642·$161 • ----~-. , . • - t· ' • ' '.,.,,. luJ~iou1 Emb .. !'.I r••• qutlity "'tur•I mi"k Sale $888 . l:.tlt•4 1tr1lltr c1 1t i" r1di1nt n1tuttl mi"k .... < ~:!') _,,·--< ,. $~88 . ~ : , - ' \ only at may co •outh coast plaza two fur day sale .. ( ·- 'C .. Frid1y ind S1turday onlyf Come. See 1 wid• and wonderful collection of outst1ndin9 quelity furs et exceptional s1viiigs. Choose desitner inspired styling at low, low prices for two d1ys only! Timed just r1ght to mike you • fabulous S1nt1! _ s .. tit ... •IMI more ountandlnt ·fur values: • n1tur1I French rabbit bicycle jeckets with glove soft l•ether p1nels $69 • n1tur1I grey kid pew coets trimmed with pigskin $169 • multi-hued natural mink sides coets with soft leether $299 •double fur collar n1tur1I p1stel l'hink stoles $366 • bl1ck dyed broadtail processecl limb co1ts with natural or black dye~ mink collar and cuffs $366 • oltltr1do mink stoles in color-1dded r1nch mink $366 • rt~i1nt n1tur1I mink h1lo coll1r1d c1p1s $366 • n1tur1I mink stroller co1ts with dyad fo11: collar and border $411 • luxurious natural mink stroller coats $611 •plush tart quelity n1tural mink stroller coifs $118 fur stlon 47-••uth co1tl pl111 o"IV ........ 1..-..'ll ltlll yo11 1.i felliru•tY 1 t74 1etry n• mtil 1r pho"• 1rd1rt fur products l11!1l1d te 1~ow country of erigin of i"'pottte fu11 m,I J Cl tlo11 "ot Clrry fut1 o( l"d1ng1rtd 1p1cl01 MAVCC> South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., .Costa Mes6-540-932 I Shop dilly 10 a.m. to 9130; Saturday, 10 to 6; Sunday, noon to 5 • • • t • ' ' .. . , JO DAILV PILOT Tllurulay, No~tmb~r 15, 11173 Warlock Mo ves Into Lead By AL.\ION LOCKABEY Of !tie Otllr "11-t tl•lf I nea red Cabo San Lucas. C11llfor1un 011 lhe rtnal IOO·inile Based on \VednC'Sday's !){'flt lo the fini!ih . Spotty winds _ or sloppy report. the leaders in the lle<!l t:\cbro"s Y.l're lifted after navlg&tlon? should have rounded the cape \\'L""<incsday's pg~iuon reports OttSS B entry. well out In front of the Class A boat!ii. Her po!t1tion report placed hrr 681 1niles oul of Long Bench and only 119 miles h·om the cape. Th this morning and be \\'ell on showed llai·ry Re r k u s' ese y,·erc the t.,•,.o ques· h . h G II f Er1·-.· n-<6 sloop \\'arlock. a tions that begged ans"·ers t~ _1_•_"_"_8.;.Y_•_P_1 _• __ • __ 0 ___ ---Five rniles behind was Boll C.ranrs Robon, the previous da y's leuder, and Ragtime. leader in the early stages of thf' ract\ 1vas eight niilcs astern or Robon. day as ,the 17 boats in the l.oog Beach to La Paz race ""'"""""' Gas Cuts Threaten Boating SACRAMENTO !U PI) - Government plans for gasoline rationing couJd sink pleasure power boating in Californi a, a state navigation official said \\'ednesda}'. . Carl l\.1oore of the Depart- ment of Navigation and Ocean Development said that if ra- lioning was initiated "most of your boating y:oul d be scaled down considerably. "If it comes to deciding between pleasure u s e s , boating might take the back seat," l\.loore said. i1ore than half a million Ca1ifonians in 1973 registered boats with the state, all but about 5,000 of them pleasure craft. Gas consumption for the year, l\.1oore said, ,.,, a s estimated at 85 million galloru -with about 90 percent of it in the tan~ of pleasure boats. SOr.t E FEDERAL officials have predicted rationing as early as January. Interior Secretary Rogers C. B . l\.·lorton has said ·it could be imposed in "tv.·o or three" months. John A. Love, \\'bite House energy adviser, has said it will probably co1nc n e x t spring -kickoff to the tradi· tional summer boating season. The first five on elapsNI time \\'ere onl y 20 miles apart \\'ith Bob B ea uc hamp '!! Dorothy 0 four n1iles behind Ilagime. and Loi Killa1n's Graybeard. three 1niles behind Dorothy 0. • The handicaps tan din gs 1\·ere scrambled also. Kari IL skippered by Dick Kelton of Los Angeles Yacht Club mov- ed up fro1n fourth to take over the overall !rad. Elaps·ed lime leaders with distances frotn Long Beach : ( l ) Warlock, 681 ; (2~ ·Robon . 676; (3) Ragtin1e. 668; 14~ Dorothy O. 6 6 4 : (5) Graybeard, 661. Handi cap le~ders: OVERALL -(t) Kari II : (21 \VarlocJ.:; (3 ) Panache. CLASS A -(I l Tribute ; (2\ Dorothy 0; (31 Spirit. CLASS B -(I) Warlock ; (2) Fleetwood: (31 Robin. PHRF WINNER-Cal Preston's Sanlana-26 DeCore from Newport Harbor Yacht Club beats into a sm art breeze to win Dana Point Yacht Club's seven- race PHRF Series which concluded last Sunday. CLASS C -(I) Panache; f2J Tinsley Light; (3) Con· quest. Cl.ASS D -Kari II : (2) Quasar ; f 31 Aquarius. Dana Point Race Wo11 By De COre ,j0iiiii=-=-iiiiiiiiiii0iiiiiiiiiii0=-=-=-=-=-~I ANNOUNCEMENT W illiam Anthony Chose, M.D .. announc· cs the opening of his office for the Gen- eral Pract ice of Medicine on 19 Novem- ber, 1173 at San C lemente Medical • Pla zo , Suite IO I: 653 Camino De Los "' M ares, San Clemente. ' PHONE: 496-65 11 Office Hours 9.12. 2-5 Monday thru Friday . -' • OUR VERY FINEST COLOR TV'S ' -;Tf 'f''H. SONY. KV•IJU TlllMITION ICl SOLID STATE PORTABLE "TMf MAOEIA" MHtll ... ll COi.Oii TV • 11•1ft<~ IC~ mu .. u"" tllftff!lllY • Ntw, 11i""ll'i,t '"'"'"' "'"' • ,,., .... ¥ .. •Hithl uy1h11 • 1'tlfllt ... -111111-*"• 1Y1'-ftr llllr,, llfttltl, la..illl ult• • l'M-kllftlt IUllJMtlC llitt llll'lillt, Ctllr 11141 ~·· ""'"" e $tlkl 11&t. relltHllly • l11tl&1t ,ict.rt 11'111 .... ROii JVC Xl-100 THE MODERNEnE IC..l.1 11""1 lt·lftCll •llttMI :XL•I.. <lltr. FNlll"I 111 Hlid '"" lln::vllry. ,..,_ lie-11" tunll'tfl, l (C-lk f91tt "*"*• IU,., btiflll nt.11fill plcl11,.. lvM la I Ill-. Hint WllMI trtl ..... Cl lHMf. •• ll4Mll Oll!tfllll l!IS Ml· \"-I TH11Mod•I ~eit. ~i:.:,'~:,:."T::!~i•lt!I Tlll1 .ultl.,llllnt moclll '"'" JVC 11 11nWrtlf-HIHI Ill lltl'· H1rm111t1 •ftd ven•tn!tv, A i.11<k mHrill Jlclu,.. llllM 1nill .,., llnHI In Miki •••I• cir· Cllilr'!' II llfff Ill JM n .. ftr !ht cl11,.11, mut wl~Jd ,re. tur1 "''· Sift-1n1..,11nt J\IC INT .... II AfN!MtlC 1'1111 T11N.. (N'"1, A11N11111ic COMr Ctnt-.1, A111MNll< P'lc· lvrt Cllltlt1oi 11111 U..teftl Ilic· -. ..... --... "' " . .... ~,., ~I'"' IJll\I Jilt <M lltllYll' lfl Cfillf' llhwbiM. JVC GOLDEN WARRANTY 2 VRS, FREE PARTS 2 YRS. FREE SERVICE AA&O ELECTRONICS 275 E. 17th· ST. COSTA MESA 642-8882 • CALL FOR SERVICE Open. D1ily 9-6; Thurs. 9·9. S.rYhtt tile H•rMr "'"ii•• 1f 56 Why ~uy From AA&D ,.. e 011e Y"' lob.,. ••ara1111 • o ... '"' ,.m ••"'""' e f.ift ynr pl(flllt 'uM warrtnty e Dlsc1u11' prk11 e OM '"' •iteM•r 1:1cll•11•• '. 60 lll•y IAflDt' flC-H ll•• • FrlaMlly. ptrse11al Hr~lc-• KNOW 1111 precluct1 ffd ltack "'',. with SEI VICE A UPI sur\rey of marinas, yacht commodores and skip- pers produced an incon1ing lide of gloom over the pro- posed rationing. Cal Preston·~ Sanlana-26 De 1 Core from r\e"'·port llarbor Yacht {:lub en1erged ·as the overall i!nd Class A \\'inner in Dana Point Yacht Club's seven-race Pt!Rfo~ Seri c s 1 \rhich ended Sunday. Class B 1rinner 11·as t\arl l~"""""""""~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""~"""""""""""""""~----------------------~----------_:_ _______ _ Lassey's Sola \'ia nnd Class C \\'3-S \ron b:: 1hC' \'ul~nr Boatman. s.kipp~red ~Y Hugh Curran. bet h 1..of OP\'C. rinal J Bll..L JfiNES, president or the Pacific Interclub Yactiting Association in San rrancisco, \\'hich represent s G:l '.':orthern Calircmia clubs. ::aid po1rer boating could \Je in troulJlc. "I think pov.·cr boa;~ 1\·ill be the first in line 10 fall. \\'hat's going to happen to diesel J'.lO"'er boats, I don't · k1101r." he said. result s: CLASS A -I 11 OeCo~·r.: t21 Lush Life. Jack Day. Sl 13\'C: (3 ) Endless Summer. CLASS B -II) Sola Via ; 121 Skirr : 13l Briny Deep. CLASS C -(1) The Vulgar Boallnan : 12) Tantivy Dick Uicfi:y, D?\1C; (31 Ki\vi . Hydroplanes a11 Ai1s,v er To E11er gy Proble111s? ' ClNC l~TNATl ' A p I America's hydropl anes. those st reamlined v.·ater-spauting machines that skim alt1ng at blurring speeds, Clpparently ~-on'l contribu te to lhe na· lion's energy crisis. The chairman t1f th c Unlimited R a c i n g Com· mission, George ''Buddy ' Byers, told the roore than 200 delegates to the 70th annual American Po11·crboat Associa-. \\'ar II aircr:lft rni!ines. Byers also said thnt nH.'r!ing noise standards b~· 10i5 1\·i\I be no problem b eca u se ··prcsrnt d:ly rn~incs arr so c1ui!'l they ::ilreadv \\"ill pas~ I and exceed rcquiren1ents on noise abalt'ment." A revt1lutionary new muffler svstem invented in Australia iS also in the v.·orks, Byers said. The lo u r · d a y convcntit1n con1inued today. --'-------tit1n \Vcdnesday tbnt "our big hydroplanes will be a part ---- of the answer to the energy problent" Byers said the dwi ndJ ing supply of fuel could be overcome by converting gasoline·using vehicles to methanol or synthetic ad· ditives, such as are sometimes used In hydroplanes. The Columbus man said hydro racing vdll not be restricted by the f u e 11 shortages because of a large supply of high-octane aviation fuel "which has bei:!n sitting in storage tanks all over the country, occupying va luable space and begging lo be us· ed." ~fany of ,the racers are equipped with vintage \Vorld ! For Weekenflcr Adve rtising P hone 642-1321 lfi'S BE FRIEHDI. Y If you hive new nclghboni or know of anyone movln:; to our area, please 1cll us so that "'e may extend a fl"Jend ly ~<elcome and ·help · them to become acquainted ln their new surroundings. SI. Cast Ylsitar 4M47t _,,.. Mir Ylsltlr MM174 Give the Gift that "Keeps on Giving" Back to YOU! • w. don't bt!int thlt JhilC should ht • Dne·WilJ stren. If you contribute to us, wt think we sllould do somethin& in retuni th1t will &i'fe you ~k more than 1 warl'll ftelinf 111d a !al deduction. • Now, we hne fo11nd' most lemarkable way to rtward you for your generosity. You still enjoy the ple1sure of ttetpinc your felklw·miln, plus the henefi1s of a lilJ·deduciible 1ifl. But .•. you don't rive up lhe. lut~re lina11tial s1curily you ~ould have enjoyed b1 keepin1 your gilt. • As long as you live - bt:ginnin1 immedl1ter7-we'U PIJ you a generous lncomt out of the earnings of your contrlbulion. Thus, it becomes •~ irnestment to protect your future, and tile fulura of )'OUr filmily. At the same lime, JOU trin be uvin1 on fLrturt t$t1lt hies and probate costs. • Wllat other way CID yoa use JaUr il'l'ltstment funds 111Cf secwiUes to do so mud! for JOU Hi so rnany ways for 90 Ion& • lime? llllllt OR CALL for Free lttlonn•li•i Without llllliptioll Tell,ll• (714) 645-8&00 Emmilo 10& • ' • oJ-Wrfiil:. Thom•• K. St.cflingw Hoag M1mori1/ Hospital Plls/Jyl1fli" NowponBoulmud N-rt 8"ch. CA 92660 . --·- OPEN SAT. & SUN. II .10 AM TO 6 PM r:,-. MON.-FRI. 9 TO 9 PM 2110 W. LINCOLN ANAHEIM• 772-8813 DuPONT 501 99 SPECIAL MILL PURCHASE NYLON CARPET .- -> EXTRA THICK SHAG REGULAR 9. 95 SQ. YD. HIGH LOW SHAG REG. $12.95 MULTI COLORS DuPONT NYLON SPACE DYED TWEEDS BY WALTERS 99 SQ. YO : REG. 7.99 Completely Install ed with Dt lu1e Rubber Padd ing 4 ROOMS SQ. YD. MAXIMUM 40 YDS. I~ Dul'OllT llTLOI C..,letely Cllota Of COLOIS ·-11• .1 .. hi••·· 199°° ...... ..... 1 .. 99 SQ. YD. C..,letely luNlleol .......... h••·· CA DON NYLON BY HOi LYTEX 99 SQ. YO. REG. 10.99 Complete J Installed with Deluxe Rubber Padcl"'9 ) ,, • • <eml,l1ttly Jrutallei wltlt 4th11l• rultMt ,.11;;,... SAVE $129.00 NOW: ALSO INSIDE Ll~BROOK · HARDWARE -M. 'FOUNTAIN VALLEY 17200 Brookhurst • INSIDE HARDWARE STORE ~-8541 EXTRA HEAVY DuPONT SOI • IY MAND 99 so. YO . REG. 9.99 Complete Installed with Dtluxt lubber Padd1119 · • ' 1 ' • HllNDIEDS Of ROLU ON DISPLAY MOHAWK PHllADElPHIA HOLLfflEX ARMSTRONG CABIN CRAFTS CALLAWAY BEATTIE BARWICK t-LDON MAGEE 5MITH ROYAL WEAVE LEES \ .. ! I ' - For the Record Bfrths HMt Mftnorl1I H0111t11 OCloMr It. 1m Mr. •·l'ld Mrl. 1(1r1 Slrollm, io:in e r1n11i-, Hun!h1111on INCi\, bOV Mr. Ind Mr1. Allbert lilO<ll!, 1JU1 811d1 ll'Jd., !p 6'. Mktway Clftl. girl Mr. I nd Mrt. Wllllah't Mot .. , 7700 Cllll Drive, NtwWt !NCI!. olrl Mr, 111d Mr1, TllOINl1 Htdley, 175" Sto:i\IOl1 TrH Llln1, lr11ln1, Twin '"' . "":8' 1.1m Mr, Mn. C!WrM Zlrlltl, .sn II 0!'11, API I!. COll1 MH, bo~ Mr. Ind Ml't, J~ SllONllO. 2tO Either JI .. COlll o\MM, tlrl Mr. Incl Mrl. TendY OIUl1, "2t,2 111\octt If., l~llhl NIQllfl, girt Mr. MO Mr1. J_,., Hn11, :NlJ l hHI ICfY, (Ol'Ol'll dltl Mir, boy Mr. tlld Mr1. Jahn Ytu01Won, w ll1vwood Or .. N1W110rt l•Kll, boY Ot,_.,. ,,, 1m Mr. 11'111 Mn. o.nn11 wn .. 11, 2106 FloriU, Hunt1119!Clfl tHd\. bO¥ Mr. 1nct f{lr1. Htl lwa. tOI &. C1l1P~ ltnll A/11, girt Mr. Q!f' Mrt, J1rne1 L1tl91,1r, ltSJ l"ort l~•I Plitt, N"""'1 INdl, "" Mr. •nd Mn. Otvld l rllfttOfl'I, 1ma sin f\r1nclK1, 'Ollllt•ln 11111...,, air• Mt. •1141 Mr&. JKk Wllltlktr, llJ L.ytol'll1, Ntweort 811ch, {llrl Mr. l#llf M .... lll:IClllnl (f'tWfty, ... WtllKI Ave., Cotti MtM, llO'I #tf, tflt Mra. Llnll J""""", 1112 W. HOll•t.., A~ .• •11HtrtM, tlrl OCt......-17,1t7J Mr. end Mr1. Jol!n krll(ktbl'r1, 213' HllMY Avt., Arcadl1, 111'.W Mr. t nd Mrs. Cll!ford Cofi.lt, 101'2 Du••~ Rivi!' C:aurt, Founl1ln Vlllf'I", glrl Mr. •nd Mr1. Jtmts StlbY, «A SWiiie Ave., fletbool, 111!1 Mr. end Mr1. LtMtnte l fO'Y8l'IO, 2586 Ll'l'llgh, C:Ollt Miu, boy Mr. •!Id Mrs. James Qulnle11, tt5ll N...,,.,1 Blwd., Co.It MtH, girl Mr. tnd Mr1. Gtrv Wlllt rl, 11'°J M1rl(lold C:!rclt, Fount1ln Vtllrf, ""' f.\r Ind Mra. 0Klf Mtll~, lf90S Burn~ Ln .. Hunth1oton lltech, ghl Oc!Oller 11. 1'7J Mr. Ind Mrl. K ...... ti. Erlk$011, 229 Monercn Bey, South Lqlll'lt, bO'f Mr. •,I'! Mra. RO"Y Brown, 2226 Senti A.W, Apt II, Co.ti Mtw, 9'rt Mr. Ind Mrs. 81!1v Cowv, :nn So. Grl1.i Pl., Stnl1 Ant , girt Mr. end Mrs. John Gullfdot, ~n Hunter Ln, Hunll'IQIOl'I BIKh, boy O<lobet-If, lt7J M•. tlld l,\r1. Frtntl1 Edwt•d 0111 II, 21Nl B1r1>td01 Clrclt, Hvnrl'lgton Btith. girl Mr. Ind Mr1. Ttrry C1rron, 3:11 l•th St., Hunllnatoo Buch. girl Mr. end Mr1. ll:lchtrd Henrv, 166!1 \t!le LI Bomllt, ~!'I Ju I !'I C1p!Sfl"ll'IO, gi rt Mr. lllll Mrs. Alan Sov111trt11'1d, lllS Norl1. Legun~ 8e1th, girl OC!oMr :ro, 1'7J Mr. 1nc1 Mr1. Otnnls Higo., 1m Mlfi:tltlt, Tv1!1n, girl Mr. dnd Mrs. ll:obtrl Rind, 14111 StWltOn CJrdt, WHlmlnr;ttr, girt Mr. •nd Mfl. Aol»rt llvrns, '42 CtltHflt Dr., N"1!0<"1 lltt<h, boy Mr.' ~nd Mf9. Wiiiem Sm!lh, 7°' E. S1nl• Cl1r1, S1n1 AN, glrl Mt. tlld M•I. Gordon Kr•ll'ltf'. 16141 M1ltgt, Lt1, Huntington &Mch, tlrt Mr. Ind Mr•., Jtmet Ktrld1ll, IUl Copp«l(ff(I, Tu11!n. boy October 21, ltJJ Mr. Ind Mtl. Jay ,.,..., 10005 An1tltlm Awl., Apt E., COllt MtM, ""' M•. end M,,. Mlcti.HI (Cl'f'l\9, lu:rt SC.khl'/111, ,.wnllln v11....,, tlrt Mr. Ind Mr•. koll Sh111bV, 2tSI Mllbro. Cotti MIM.·tlrl Mr. tlld Mfl. OCtr Anclttd1, ~ll7 ll:tOlltlllc,. COl!t Mlfl, bar. Oct.W.-22, lt7J Ml, tftd Mr•. W11t..,. e-. M12 Vl1 Ltflt, LttllNI Niguel, bOJ .• r. Mr tnd Mn. Fft'd Scot!, :zo.112 lt!Vff· W1lff Cln::lt, Hunllngton llMch, !loo'( Mr. ~nd M,,. Dt nltl Snow, ttMl Etl\i1rv. Hu"Unqton llttc~. boV Mr, •ntl Mr.I. L.N Miii.,... !062 Yutl!l'l(I. ll'vtne. boY ' " Other Deaths . ~ SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP ) -Kate McSpltldea, an in· spira tion for lhe Wr.iid War I marching song, "K-K-Kalie", died Wednesday . Mn. Pt1cSpadden, 91 , W & I BC· quainted wi~h Jeffry O'Hara. wbo laler wrole Ule IOlll lhat was 111111 and marched lo by American 90ldlen on two con. -MILAN. Italy (AP! ' - Italian painter Pompeo Borra, 75. for mer director of the Milan's Brera Arts Academy, died of a heart ailment Wednesday nigh!. Death l\'otleea ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY IZ7 E. 171b $1., Colla Mesa ~6-41111 • • 'BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar . S?a.MSt COsta Mesa "'4414 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\-1ea1 u &-3481 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES · 17111 B<acb Blvd. H11atlngton Beacb NJ..77'11 UC Redondo Ave. Loog B<ac• tl!411-llll • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17111 1.qn1 caayoo Rd. '9MIJS • PACIFIC VIEW M.EMOJ\L\L PARK Cemetery • Mortuary Clolpel IAt Padlle Vltw Drive Newport' Beocb1• Calllornll 144-17 .. , < • PEEll FAMILY COLON£AL FUNERAL ROM.E 7801 Bolsa Ave. l'f••lmlattor !93-IDS ~ SMl11l'B MORTUARY m Mohl St. H .. 1111,... B<ocb ~ • • Thursd.1y Nc~erubi/r iJ, ! .... "AIL I PILOT .I PolltlCtll Notes Superior Court Mesll Residents to Get Valley Murder T1·ial Delayed Social Security Office SANTA ANA - A delay ha> been granted in the Orange year in a ruling that canceled his trial . on charges that ht shot and killed Mrs. Betty Ratcliff, 41 , Craig P. Hirst, 52. of Anaheim and Mrs. Barbara L. Carew, 42, ol Westminster. praised Callfotnia voters for legislature to Interpret the Legislature to lnttrpret the County Superior Court trial of their rejection or Governor by limiting exemptions, a measure's defeat as a man· ORANG£ COUNTY a man accused of killing his Reagan's tax and spending dccreasinO' reliance on the date for increased spending wife and her boyfriend at her After nearly a year o1. urging U 1 . 1 . . . .. "!:> and laxati·on. ...._ ________ _, FOuntain Valley home and the By O. C. HUSTINGS Of fflt O.llr Pllet lllH by Congressman A n d re w m ta t1on rut1ative. property tax for local gov em-· of h. ·r . Hinshaw (ft-Newport Beach) "The defeat of Proposition ment services and education "In spjte of the defeat of later slaying lS wi es the soc ta I sec u r It y J •ys once again that and equalization of I ax this speclllc proposal, the UNICEF Cards girlfriend. t Administration will open a Califomia 's voters do not want b.urdens carried by local com· tremendous number of people United NaUons lnternatlooal PRESIDING JUDGE Bruce branch office at 1895 NeWJQ't to put long, confusing, com-munities. who voted for It indicates the Children's Emergency Fund Swnner set Dec. 17 as the Blvd. in Costa Mesa in mid· ptex tax schemes into the * depth of feeling resulting from (UNICEF) holiday greeting new tri!i:l date for Amos Lewis December. state Constitution," she said. the ever-increasing costs of cards are available on the Ratcliff, so. Anaheim, in court It was determined last mooth that RatclUf has no" recovered his sanity and , if able to face trial on the triple murder charges. Hinshaw said he pushed for She said, however. that PROPOSl110N t also drew government," he said. UC Irvine campus. action designed to give lhe the new facility to provide California does need tax the attention of state Senator "For far too long, the tax The UCI chapter of the defense more time to prepare FOUNTAIN VALLEY police called to the Ratcliff home at 10526 J\1oming Glory Ave. J uly 8. 1972, found the body of 1\lrs. Ratcliff in the home and that of lUrat sprawled on the front lawn. more efficient and lmmedlate reform of a workable, logical James W h ct more (R· spenders have had theif·~ Model U.N. is selling the cards its case. service to Harbor Are a type. , Fullerton). in the taxpayers' pocke6 a·C:. from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Ratcliff was found insane rllidtnll 'lbt offlOI will havt Among other thlnp, the Whetmore 11y1 It "WOuld be ting as if they were bottomless weekdays in the stud en t and committed to Atascadero a staff of 13, most of whom I ea g u e ls recommending a tragic mistake for the pits," Whetmore added. government ticket offiei?. State Hospital earlier th is wiD bt trlllSfemcl from dutles•I-':..:.:"'-':..:...,::__;;_;;;:.___--"-----"--------...:_;:.__ ________ ~=====:::...:;__ _____ :_ ______________ _ In Sll!la Alla. * JliNNIETI: TUllX, pnal· dent of the Or1t11• Count~ Loque ol Women Voters, h~ . Road Crew Work Ho1us Disputed SANTA ANA -Lawyers f<>< Ille Orange County Employes Association :w111 ask a Superior a.urt iudg• at a hearing .as yet unscheduled. to or<ler the coonty's Rood Department to negotiate with tbem. At issue, the complaint filed Tuesday states, are the work· ing hours of 53 road depart· ment employes who as ked Road Commissioner L. McConville to keep their four. day, 10-bour work · weelt in effeet when the \clocb -were put ,back an hobr l8't Ocl. 31. It is alleged that McConville refused but decided t o reconsider . hi!: decision to restore the five-day week in discussions with the 5 3 employes Who signed a peti- tiop submitted to him. • OC EA Jawyeni ctalm that the affecte d road crews were told by McCo_nvllle and . other senior county officials that there "'as no point in entering lnto negotiations with the emptoyes' organization. They uk in their demand for a 'tiri! of mandala that Ule counly be onlettJd to open iucb discussions. - Chavez Sets Coµnty Visit On Saturday GARDEN GROVE -Cesar Cba\ie%, president ·of Ihe United Furn Workers, will be In Orange Counll' saturday to meet wtlb local AfL.CJO leaden. Pete llemmel.i..._~~tary· tr.ulftr ol Ibe """"" °""" ty Central Labor Council, said the meeting of tmionists would take place at the county AFL- CIO labor center, 12311 Chap- man Avenue, Garden Grove. After the meeting, local labor leaders will join Chavez In picketing a supermarket at F.dinger and ' Main str..ts, Santa Ana. The market is ac- CllSed by the labor leaders of stocking table grapes and "''ines produced without a union contract. Drug Unit Puts Out Directory SANTA ANA -A dlrtetory of"drug abuff p r o grams available In, Oninge Coupty has been prepared by the county Drug Pro g ram Coordlnalion om .. and is· of· fettJd free of charge to all interested organJzat\on.s. According to Hal Frank of tbe drug program staff. lb~ directory llsls most agenct .. havlng drug abuse program:. for counlJ l'Olldenla. lndeidng theln ~y type of sei•vtce. The document also coolainl a small section on emetgency procedures to be Uled for drug ovudoH cases. FRANK SAID the directory , wiD be upditecl regUtarly and is being distributed In loooe leaf forma t IO th1t Pll" con be mailed .out moathly with additions and ci>rrectlons, For further infonnaUOn on the directory or sugge1Uons on how it might moat· ef· fectively be utilized lnlereeted pt.rsons may conta ct Frank al -or 1134-:11111. Malling address Is Drug Program CoordlnaUon Ofnet, 511 l'I. Sycamore St.,. Santa Ann, Sl~~LE LENS REFLEX WITH F1 .I LENS, CASE l ACCESSORY SHOE stL 104»0 Prof111.io"al DIKk Flnitll IMtrchan111blt Ptntaa MouAl CoslftOfl L111s O~blt CdS TIM'1totl .. -l1ns Mllt tllll Srsttlll with Mtltr LO Cl Swilch Mttal Cop.11 Squ111 Shulltr •• l·l/1000 Stlu lltr Spetds plus "D" lltchonic Flash S)'nch al 1/125 Ste. ,,,,.,., .. GrouM GI••• S,ot Foc11s1111 1 ~9 95 0.la)'td Action SWltr Rtltast· .... • ~~.',~~:.:::~·:~.:~• ot Ca•r• ·llFS,ii&ST PRICE .249 .95 ~ YANKEE ROTO TRAYS FOR GAF l SAWYER PROJECTORS HOLDS 100 SLIDES 1.49 OUR REG.1PRICE 1.79 · '"/JiD~ · 2SM M-F2.8 AUTO WIDE ANGLE LENS ., HONEYWELL PENTAX TILEPBOTO PENTAX MOUNT • I ll•mtnls • Anrle ol View 12' • Cits• Focwin& 2'h Fl. WITH CASE &9.97 \ LEN$ 13SMM · SMCT FlS e Multl-Co1tht1 Cuts Sutl.tet R1ft1clion .. Trans mlls up lo 5~ Mort LI.Chi • UllftYIOltl R11s art Rtlltcltd • Supe r· lllul!l.Coatln1 h a Hardtr Tou1Mr Coalin& 99.95 MFG . LIST PRICE 129 .50 OUR REG . PR ICE 129 .95 SYLVANIA MAGI CUBES CARTON OF 3 .., aac cameras et cetera SYLVANIA FLASH CUBES C11nieras et cetera KODA COLOR ~~ FILM CARTON OF 3 ~ ~ ·• ex 12&-12 EXP. •• 1.22 97c ~ 2680 SLIDE -PROJECTOR ~ BAUER E161A ELE~TRONIC STROBE • f/1.S "•clslo11 L111s • HO Walt •1111111ce e Pt,.u(ll ldllor for Slidt Prt vltw with BUILT·IN Nl·CAD BATTERIES l AC ADAPTER ·RECHARGER • Ctnr1111 Cast ·and GAF 100 Sllft Ttt)' • Rt .. lt Control • ,.,.,,,, R1vtr1t, focus • Compultrl:rtd Ll&ht Oulpul 1 • Guldt Number 45 for Kod1chro1111 II ASA 25 e R•crclln& Tlmt: Batltr)' 1·10 Sic., &7.BB· 43.57 AC 15 Ste. DUR RU. PRICE 78.95 OUR RE"G. PRiCE 49.95 ~ZZOPOCKET m CAMERA · OUTFIT " WITH KALIMAR .. i K412 STROBE · ·STROBE • Powtrtd by Two 1.SV l'e11ll1ht l&llttlts ~ Rec ye line T ime Appro1. I Ste. On/Off Swltch CAMEi/A OU"/T · e U111 Ult MW 110 rll11 c•trl•p Sh•p l ·tltMtnt 1/1,S ltns e lrl&M Vitwflftllltr e Otulllt 11po1w1 _.wt11tltn • leiilltlfl1I wttd1rala.tlnl1" • Comes compltlt with dtlachablt wrist 1t11p 1nd a ma1lcullt 1 OTH QNLY34.95 DUR REG. PRICE47. 5 SOUGOR F4.S 90-230 ZOOM Automatle LENS T4-MOUNT ' ... ~ 1--· KODA COLOR f~ ..., FILM I ~ CX126 · '• 135·20 EXP • 156.74 DUR REG. PRICl 189.95 • 11 El1mtnl Zaom T4·MOUNT NOT INCLUDED • Anal• 27·12 HONEYWELL STROBOLITE ZI e Guldt No. 21 tor ASA 25 e Us11 Two 1.SV AA Slzt 81lltrlt1 . • I Ste. Rtcycll nc Ti mt e Hot Shot; Fhttd PC Cord 12.aa OUR REG. PRICE 15.95 AGFA SUPER 8 MOVIE FILM WITH FACTORY PROCESSING SO. CO~ST .PLAZ ~-COST~ ~1~SA • BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FRWY.-PHON E 979.3373 MON .• TUES.· WE D.· THURS .• FR I. JQ.9 SAT. lo.6; SUN . 11 !No.nl ~o S •• _, -' • :·:· •• :::: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~~~~ • • ::: • • • ::: ::: • ::: ::: • • . r - • .. • • . l ' ' • • • . ·: ; . ·; ., ' ... , "BARELING" CONVERTIBLE BRA OF CREPE LONG VERSATILITY WITH COMFORT BY HOLLY- WOOD V ASSARETIE. WHITE & NUDE. A, B, C, $6.00 D, $7.00 Veta's 1NTIMATE ~PPAREL " • . . . . , . .. "• . .. i · \ . '. ~.-. . ' ' . . '· r . . ~ ·. .. , ' • \' . \ \ . \ • Phone: 642-1197 Open Thursday & Mond1y Evenings FIND ANNE KLEIN AT Westcliff Plaza Newport Beach .. OPIN THURSDAY & MONDAY MNINGS ' • 'dne-stop' shopping at its firiest! • I • OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS '" . ., ~ ---·------.. .,-.. __ ___.:___, GAZELLE $24.95 f-- HAILLET $19.95 The most popular Sport and Leisure Shoe in the world. Nine super 1fyles in sizes from Chil- dren's I to Men's 14. , "Where shopping is a real pleasure" (JJ ~e/itfSHOEB YY~ IHI IMTIH~J.:..,, 1052 IRVINE 548 8684 HALLI DAY'S . ' ~ .. ··, I . "" .... : """' • .,,. THE VERSA TILE WOOL SHIRT ' D.Signed to be worn like a jacket. Deftly tailor- ed for rough-tou~h wear in a fine beefy wool. Great colorings. $16. • JUST GREAT FOR THE FALL -WINTER SEASON ··- • •• ·Movado SPORTS\YEAR ·Modem Artllmc. A classic design in time . )'ou can find it displayed int~ pennanent collection of the Museum of Modem Art. And in ourown rollection of ~lovado timepieces. 14 karat yellow gold Ladies .. ~$190 · Mens .... $225 . ~ .. CHARLES H. BARR • • Westdfl! PJm, 218 Marine Avenue, Ncwpcrt Jlacb, CaliC B~lboa IJl:uid, Catu. BankAmerlcard Mastor Charge M .... Tkn. ·"Tll t MaM•I" AMl "ICAM e lM IOCll TY t , r -" . ~ ,., • ~1 . ~ • • . . • . ' I • ! t: l • • •• . '· .. '· n "· !• :> •• :.-•' • • • • . -. ~ • •• • :- ·' •• . :-• •• ;., _, ,. .. r ~ • t! • t • .. '• ~ l;i, < ' • l • l • . ... • • ·~ . ;. • • •• f I· ' • • •• •• l' ~. • •, • •• .. • • •. .. :· • . •• •• • :l ••• " •• :: • • .. HITE • • . ~ .. .. .. -' . ' ' [] -.. .. .. Prices 1ood th11 Sat .. 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HAS IT Alli . n import buying di:;:: of countries all over lhe 1~~~/~l 0&1f1 ideas selec /ion you 've you more and you'll 1 d ·! ur direct lhe thousands of ~ver seen' Here are just a ;n the grea test reasures you 'll find in lh' ew examples of Gree t guests with this pleasing tropical grass woven door mat. Sizes lo 72" round at big savings. 2~ 4.11 CUSTOM BAR STOOL Uniquely good looking woven aaa cord top bar stool with stro ng wood frame with rungs. Buy ou1 several at savings. 111•1•1 11 . is complete store ! 16 IN. SAtAll BOWi. Handsome wooden salad bowl from Formosa is big 183 enough to make family s11e llG salads. Excellent gift. 4.ai thoose from a variety ~ ol • colortul realistic 4 pieces. 110. . ""'· FOR ~ BOOKS FOR EVERYONE AT'iDISCOUNTS! ·~ SHOP AND .. SAVE IN OUR PET DEPT. :; ~-• •• ,. . · . • . . . . ·l , . • •... • .. .. r: • ' • ,• • :. ~· ,, .' ~-.. " •' ~ .r;; :,.O! :· ... .. ·r· ' ... :.: ·! .;. ., . ;.. •• • I • I ' • CILTilll'S . 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J • .. • Jtj DAil V PILOT Thursday, Novembtr 15, 1973 ' -Rose Kennedy Keeps Going Strong ) ' . fE:dilor's note : Tills is tlle /ourtl1 i11 a series of <irt.icles on the assassi1w· rton of President John F. Ke,u1edu. its i1nplicatio11s atld effects 011 the decade to follow.) By CVNTIUA F ANTO HYANNIS PORT, Ai ass . (UPI) -The pace has slO\\'ed, but Rose Fitzgerald Kenned y at age-83 still pursues her public and private lives with a disciplined energy. Mrs. Kennedy swims almo.st aily (when weather permits ), ~vels rrequently, makes ~0rsoru1 appearances to · efit the mentally retarded, end she has . just completed la lengthy autobiography. parish priest. said r.trs. Ken· nedy's "great trust in the pro, .. i~ence of God" helped her endure the assa.lisinations. 11SHE JS a woman or deep faith ," he said. "Jler faith has carried her through all the tragedies of her life." Mrs. Kennedy, wearing a mantilla, enters the white frame church th rough oak front doors donated in tribute to her family by an Armenian n1er in hopes of seeing ~·l rs. Kennedy or other me1nbers of the family. "Th ey sit in the pew and have their pictures taken and so on,'' the priest said. At times, f\.1rs. Kennedy will attend a different church to avoid cul'tous crowds. Mrs. Kennedy has raf ely granted int erviews in the past three years, although she will appear in French a n d American television memor- survive or you succumb. You just keep busy." She toJIOWS this J?Uide \V\th a daily routine or physical exercise and activity. MOmlngs are spent at J\.tass and , through October, working on her book. An a£temoon nap pr~edes a swim. Late each afternOOn, even on poor days, she can be seen walking along the beach or narrow roads close to the Hyannis C<Jmpound , Ker beautifully kept hair ahvays C<Jvered with a scarf. She retains the dry wit for \Vhich shq is . famous . - an extended visit to flyannls Port this summer, and Some friends says she is cl~er to Mrs. Kennedy thDn any of her daughters. ~ Sen. Edward Kennedy , when he is at Hyannis Port, joi.rul his mother on her seaside walks. She is said to have '\.been an ahnost isolated ramily 1orce in encouraging him to conti nue his political career following the Chappaquiddick incident. She shook hands at reception lines and hosted teas in 1970 to aid his campaign for re-election. • • ' 1TOURISTS WILL ask her ~~~~~~~~~~~r:~ I ·1 1 · h I . -•-. be h where the KeMedys live," a and with Doubleday editor·in· 'Ber faith has carried her through all lhe t ragedies of her life.' am1 y w uc or generations i(U,) m Novem r on t e fri end said. "She'll point out ha' been Woodcarver' I Pr . chief Stewart Richardson, has · 10th armlversary o the est-the compound , and they go In 'd th 1 J compiled an autobiography IN THE PAST three years, wever, she has abandoned :plfing, her longtime favorite !fpe>I't, and tennis practice, and isbortened ber afternoon walks ~•Y the sea a bit, s1 e, ere s a P aque dent's death. oo their way, never knowing." I tit ed ''Times to Remember/' marking the place in the third On her 80th birthday, she The 'll grandchildren keep which is to be published u,}.,y.....,. row where President Kennedy spoke or her p h l l o s o ·P h Y , the-fenced-in compound, which March 29. She used letters, ' sat during worship. 11 is strongly based on religious can look barren on gray, wind-notes and diaries she saved ON BEACH -The pace has slowed , but Rose Fitzgerald ..Kennedy still pur- ~ 1'She is in very, very good !Lealth for her age, but just ;)lust take it easier," said her j!8octor. h ,, . h .. h faith , for withstanding the swept days, alive with their since teenage days when her sues pµblic and private lives. Mrs. Kennedy (left) walks alon1 beach at mot er sits anyw ere w en "agon1·es and ecstac1·es" or her voices and games of touch H · P rt 'th h d ht M St S lib ( t ) Mrs P I · h ds I lather, John (Honey Fitz ) yanms o w1 er aug ers, rs. even m cen er an . a n-s e atten 7 a.m. ~ass, ac-life. football in the yard beside cia Lawford. · cording to Msgr. Thomson. the house. Mrs. Jacqueline Fitzgerald, was politicking in--------------------~-----------Boston. She prays before a \vhite HGOD WILL not give us Onassis, the President 's The book, describin_g her eX·· altar donated by th e family a cross heavier than we can "'idow. spent long hours with Nearly Everyo1ie Liste1is w Landers Since the death in 1969 of the IOftnef ambassador-to ~lireat Britain . Joseph P. Ken-t-~y, his widow has lived ;a1one in their home within '.'he family compound here 'and , in winter months, in 1~lm ·Beach, Fla. She attends ~'Mass daily, often at St. Fran-: :t;i-'> Xavier Church on South if reet in Hyannis, where '-. emorials to twO sons are as a n1e1norial to Joseph Jr., bear," she said. -''Either you lhe !Smily matriarch during (See KENNED\:', Page 15) the son killed near the Englishol---------------------'-------'-.:-_.,~---------------'--------------­ ·Channel in 1944 during a bomb- ing mission. BeSide the cross .--------------------------------------------------------------. are portraits of St. George . ~ isplayed. _ ; . Msgr. William Thomson, the -,, :J * * * i ! representing England , and Joan or Arc, represen1 ing the Frenc9 side of the channel. TOURIST BUSES s t o p regularly at the m o d e s t church and hundreds o f persons visit daily in the sum· JiMillions Visit " . . ;f l(ennedy' s Tomb • ' ~ By WAR REN L. NELSON ~ ARLINGToN Va. (UPI \ - )\t one time it was Robert ;E. Lee's fron t lawn. Now a ~ied gas line feeds an · 4ternal flame tha t marks the l!Ate where John F. KeMedy ; ~!es buried. f Ten years arter the , ~ssasslnation in D a 11 a s , . bullions still ·visit thP. slt.e. , Tl:":-:! .:<0m; .Aim C.rm,i&ou~ ; ·t>e r.::..:on, and from around : 'h<. ·~· 'J. : r :tESIDENT KENNEDY ~ ~1 ..... i vlslt'Mi ~he hlltS\de just :.~ lf!w weks be~ore his death. 'ti i • . • I ! Looking over the city and do\vn the Potomac River, he was reported to have said, "I could stay here foreve r." Seven million" people came to th~ grave In the year after the assassinatio n. Now , of- ficials say, there are about fou r million visitors a y~ar. After fiu• GJ.pitol Bullding, the Kenn~ grave abd LincoL, :Memor11ll. are tied as etJ city's gret tourhit attractions. One recent day, Charlie Ibarra of Aruba Island in the (See HO!\tAGE, Page 15) , Ul"I Ttlffllofo . ~TERNAL FLAME MARKS KENNEDY GRAVESITE . ~Vi 1itor5 Come From Throughout Nation and World ~ l ' • . ' l t' I • . - ' . . I See by Today's Want Ads • TlllNK SNO\\' then go \\'ilh tht?se 20.J Fi.'Jher Super Glas11 sk\11. They have Marker Rotomat bindings. " e TH IS \\'ILL SUIT \'OU IJJ ti "i". It's a 1963 Thundrr· bird in good cond!Uon for only $3.iO. • ,I SOUTH C08ST ViLLaGe WI SHON-HARRELL STONEWARE a !rulv...,iQ~ to!lrt!lon ol h1n~tllrO""' POflerv. mM:r1mt , and 1>i.11tl. l!T \JS ~ESIGN YC11R NEXT JEWELRY Pl cCE TIME LIFE BOOKS - AREAVAILABLEHERE. Singletitln orcompletoMritt -ithout 1ublcription. Com.in•ndbrowM MERCHANTILEBLOG. S57·ll75 ·Emi:udqm? ---~ J;l\.1971 ..,.. -:-y """ '"'' va.,. ... i;,,,"" .. ~"l 1.11.nu Tl/E J/Lf •.. fGf A COLLECTI ON· OF QUAINT SHOPS NOW OPEN A complete -Pint Shop. Ovtr 10,000 piirs to choose from. Hang Ten & Surf Lint Shirts. ~ontalbo~ DESIGNERS--GOLDSMITHS WATCHMAKERS fcompl•I• lin• ol 1,111iqve Gtlftl" •nd Ccl'Y:11tt1 5~·7Y31 WHIMSEY . TllE l'ILL IGE IS NINE RESTAURANTS • Stoneware by Pfaltzgraff • Antique nostalgia r1tplica1 • Original Romertopf clay poJs • Potpourri of gift il1tms • 556·7911 .1 IN1: city plum tr", Oral'lg• TIJE l'/L/ACE IS OPEN 12-5 SUNDAYS I • .. HDIJ.QW 1'1/E n LL,ICE Unique Shops a nd Fun Pla ces To Eat PLANT BOUTIQUE Specializing in : FRENCH • Houu Ph1nts •Fem • Ttrr•riuml • C.r•mics • Mlcr•m• • t:i-~ J:ngry tiger '.RESTAURANT phone I 5 ~ s ,' I f:ll!BTAUf:IANT AllO 11.t.JOOO OTITt• I.toll 979·11 8 1 OPEN Saturdays for Lunch Sundays !or Brunch T/IE J!/LL,ICE HAS l\M PLE PARKING i PHIH b • fllmlOOl 0 5 ><:.a 5 b • '• • • • • • '• '' • • • The •..u..u..u..u..u..u..u.a -' Belg ian Waffle lntt •WORLD FAMOUS BELGIAN WAFFLES •OMELETTES •SOUP & SANDWICHES We Are Looking Forward· to Serving You OPENING SOON · TllE YIL/ACE MOST STORES OPEN 7 DAYS the lofty l•cfy Tiff llUACE MOST ,STORES OPEN 10·9 DAILY Your' ~mpletc \Vomen·s Fashion Shoe Boutique !7141 979·9252 UNUSUAL GIFTS AND APPAREL FROM AROUND THE WORLD 1'11/i IJl,/...IGE. CLOSES 6 p.m. SATURDAYS WINE ETC. T/IE Y/LlACE EVENTUAlLY OVER &O SHOPS 11"n.-'r1, U.LL& ......... METAL SCULnUl'IE ,I CUSTOM OEStG~EO l"t BILL TOMA OlllGU•AL COtfCl"I IH l ltOHll. lllA.11 "-NO co..,111 1000'• OI rin7, "'< !Odtl111M 1~· to"no"•~ur • :J tne tnln u•l••.Hc tmal!y• ' 01~••WA'" ~•ltd 'IOICe,. •o•ont ~"omuc nrnort 5s1.2223 Ant iques and Plants LOCATED NEXT TO, SOUTH COAST PLAZA . ---· -• 1; • • ' .. I ,_ , .. 1- ., . ----.. ' . U"I T•ltllllol• UNFORGETTABLE - John Kennedy salutes during his father's fu· neral in 1963.11e's now in fifth grade at pri- vate school in Ma11- hattari and is regoi rd- ed as one of the live- liest and most popular members of his class. CANON'S MINl-CALCU.LA TORS. ONE OF THEM IS RIGHT FOR YOU. ro1nmo.1c LE.fl Lon; QPel"lllnQ houn: 100 on •lk•· llfMll !Nller1•. U r11e, ftlJV·IO-rnd LEO cllspl1~. Built-In conSltnl lieu. 11y, ••11c0relc Ioele, 12 ot. -· .. Thursday, Novtmber 15, 1973 DAILY PILOT j · Mrs. Kennedy Keeps _Faith Req uest Spur1ied Homage Paid lly Milli~ns • (Front Page 14) r~owtdatlon !01 the Mentally Retarded in \Vashlngton. The periences as the wife of an foundation wa-s set up In 1946, ambassador who reared nine short!)• aft~r Rosemary , -a children and Jost three to Kennedy daughter who bad violent deuths, will be a fat been mentally retarded since volume of 576 pa ges, heavi1y birth. was· placed in a home illustrated with family pie· for ~ceptional children near tures. 1.trs. Kennedy Is ex-Jefferson, Wis., where she re- peated to make some ap-mains today. pearances, in ·Aplerica and "WITHIN Tl1E past five possibly abroad, to pro1note years, . virt1i1ally every ap- it. . pearanCe A.1rs. Kennedy has Profits from the book will rnade was · uoo lo the cause _g_o_t_o_lh_c_J_o'-!•_,_ph_P_. _K_enn_e_d_y_or_m_en-'l_al _;retardation," said Herbert Kra n1er of the foun- dation or in 'co!U1ection with a fund raising drive, he ~1d. "Sht! actually made ap- pearances at de partment stores to sell perf'u1ne. '' She also appears at speeial Olympics programs for retarded children. The foundation. fonnall y headed by Sen. Kennedy and Eunice Shriver. has distributed some $45 million for research and educational programs. NEW YORK (AP ) The U.S. Court of Appeals has turned down a request by Jacqueline Onassis for a full court ·•rehearing of u decision that allows photographer Ron a Id Galella to come closer to her and her children. (From Page 14) Caribbean was at the grave. ''There are great things thAt happen in your Ille that you want to see something of," he said quietly. TllE GRAVESITE is simple -just a flat, stone-covered area with the etern11I flame bu.ming in the middle. The stones were gtan1te quarTied more than 150 ye rs ago and collected from a b a n do n e d I foundations of barns and stone rences near Pruident Ken· nedy's home on Cape Cod. Probably every American and many a for e i g n e r remembers where he was and "''hat he was doin~ that November day in 196.1 when he heard the. news that Presi- dent KeMedy had been shot in Dallas. This is In the thoughts of many when they come now to Arlington. Charles McGuaggan was scheduled to play in a dance ' STll1·811TID WHITIWA11 RADIA1 Guaranteed 40,000 Miles! 195/14 .. ,,,,, 205/14 215114 Hl71/1C 205/f5 44ts 34 49'5 39 5495 175/14 6.45/14 6.50fl3 155/15 5.60/15 185/14 7.35/14 . 195/14 7.75/14 . 205/14 8.25/14 205/15 8.25/15 21sA14 8.55114 215/15 8.55/15 - 11.95 ------~- 12.95 13.95 16.95 16.95 • n 1nwltlll 11.•t llTlJ •• 'llCll.. 11.11 .. 12.4J fll. lL TH DUI TO llTl.A WIOnt MO Wd:l.t.HTT rOll HT Oil Q.14'1ANCI Otol ill~ Sll•S T9.IS • . WIDEST of W-l·D·E 50 SERIES ~ 1i'.i1 :ti'.'!e 1!1.11113:11 i1-• band l n Belfast, Northe.m Irela nd, when the manager interrupted with the news that ended Jhe dancing. McGuag- gan ls now a resident of the United St a te s, in tJ10 \Vashingtop. area and visits the gravesite o!ten. "He was a great man," McGauggan said as he stood , before the tomb. What does he think when 1 he visits? ·•1 just say a prayer," he answered, ---RAISED WHITI LlnlR ,,,~e_f!:'!,~':!~~, .. P~"'f'O•lc ll·IOI ' 129.95 Pel'l•)•1•I t•lcul"or with JC!Ult• root l1cmry. BB11tr' c"«t, &dcHno m .. ch•nt logic . 0,,...11"5 on penUght blllltrl~. rec1"1.trge1t>l1 tl.!Jlltry Pltk or AC. 15 Ol:. C:-1• UIO 139.95 S1mp11 to use -..nemorv desktop comp.cl. O~ra!n on AC or ordl11-•rv tt..\llllght tl.!Jlllt'lts, Prn.t or lloa!lng dttlm11L. N-.glare dllpl•y, Algebr1k logic. 159.95 Plf'50nll c11c.1,d•IOI' with -v. B•llerv ch«t , •luttink 1001e. ~ tf•llon wllll penllgl!t tl.!llltrles, •• cl!1r111lll• bttlerv Jll(ll or A.C •• 1• 01. 179.95 WOrtd'I only pocket-silt orfhll"ll eel· cule!Ot", IEhY IOMllnQ wtlll llP' c11- 1t1!11, 12.dlg" rtllcl-out. AddlnQ rntd'llllt loQlc. Oper11 .. pn rtcllltll· •bl• btlt...,. pe~k Ill' AC. CAL-MART ' 2960A HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA S46~oi8 be~.• It.It• ._,,,J fMI. ta. l•~ lllOlll·RAOIAL & AUEYCAT TIGEl: PAW 8ELTEO IAISEO LETTER . 160/14 U0/15 , ... ,., ... •••• 150/13 . '"' w1•• M71/171114 524?l IH~•nP .. • , .. ,-4 '" fOJI MANY CAIS LISTED : A••11Morl, l"6ck1. Cl'tfJ1te11, Dodge•, fOtft, ~. StliUon Wagona A otMrt, wHrewtf c.. • •••· TRUCK TIRES l71t1 5 .. 5.1 Sts. 7.11115. ~22'5 1•11l}24ts 7.51/11 •. 528'5 1.1111u.~34u l7511u '.~3905 1llll1U544ts 1t.ilr1us49u 11-15 TRU-TRAC TYPE s49" *********** · HIADQUARJIRS 'OR DUP11X CAMPIR JIRIS . & "'HllLSf ORIG. fQUIP. HOH·IAOIAl '74 CAIS Youl' Choice Any Size C78 /13 F7&114 G7&1 S (7&/14 G78/14 H78115 E78/14 H78/l 4 J7&11 S DOUBLE ACTION SHOCKS "'!:''495 LOW' eac• A'S • • • "'''All.A, ... AVlllAl\l •• llM. Intl. IMI. IMI IMl, 1•1 .. fMlt 19'1. IHI. 111t. llM. 1•1 •l.llfl IM4• ~ .COSTA · MESA GARDEN GROVE I • 1l1,j~ft·! ( h.ll(jP ' ltMflci.I n-.1 ..... 3005 HARBOR BLVD . (comer of Boker and Harborl 1714) 557-8000 -. •• 14CMO Brookhurst j (CorMr Wtttmln1M .. .Broekhvnt 1714) 530.JllAi .... llAtm .,.., .. 1wsaane ..... 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All ~ , ..... w.ctr....tt1 • ....,,. i-"clffM ) • .......n .. ~ • . l .., • . . . . . • • ·• Ji DAILY PILOT Thursda~. NO¥tn1btr 15, 1973 Paris Designer Schiaparelli Dies of Stroke oward Hughes SubpoenaS~ggesred ASIUNGTON (AP) -A IUbcommlltee has been ged by a member to aub- bilUonalre r e c I U s e ard Hughes to testify ENIE about bis efforts to obtain a multi-million dollar lax break. Rep. Ben Blackbum (R-Oa .) said Wednesday the in- • B Phil lnterfandi I dustriallst seeks the break by hnving his Howard Hughes A1edical Ins titute in Atiami declared a medical research organization instead ot a private foundaUon. -foundation by reorganizing it as a medical research facility operated in conjWlCtioa with hospitals. PARIS (UP() -Fashion In 1928. Years taler, sHe gain· Cacclap<JOlo Delglullano, laid designer Elsa Schlaparelll , ed lasting fame by launching the designer pa-i away ID THAT WOULD allow the who created lhe bro a ·d the "wide shoulder;" destined a coma in her house o(f tbt aircraft company to keep shouldered look ol the '30s to dominate Western women's Champs El13ees. llE SAID IN a letter to a larger portion or its tax-ex-and '409 and popularlzed the fashion for a decade. Schlaparelll, who will be Chainnan Wright Patman CD· empt income, said Blackburn. color of "shocking pink," dled bW'led Saturday dressed ln an Tex .. ) of _ the subcommittee "Information has been sup. Tuesday after suffering a HER NAME WAS also antique Chinese robe the <.'Olor on domestic finance that lhe plied to the domestic finance stroke seven weeks ago, her associated w i th 0 shocking of 11shocking pink," ls IUl'Vf'led institute was chartered in subcommittee showing that daughter d ls c 1 o s e d Wed-pink," the color of cyclamen by the marquess., her only Delaware in 1953 as a faun-Howard Hughes has gone nesday. She WM 77. pink she popularized in the child, and two granddaughten datlon and wholly owns the outside normal channels in The Italian-born oouturlere '30s in her fashion house on -Mat.Isa Berenson, the jet.- Hughes Aircraft Corp. order to get favorable tax u•1 T..._.. began her career by opening the !a5bionable Place Ven-set oover girl and film &ctrell, '!be coogressm_on _&llid tbe_regulatioos _for his -fOWl-DESIGNER S_UCCUMBS JI s_w-'ater_ shop-on the dome. and llerry Beremon, wile ol arrangement provides the dation," sajd Blackbum. El111 Schiapartlll-fashionable Rue de la Paix-Her daughter, tht! Marquesa actor Anlbony Perkins. aircraft company with a tax:,-~~~.:....~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:........:..~~-'--~~~~~--'-~~~~- exemption for a large part ol its income. He said federal law requires the aircraft com· pany to provide the foundation with a certain percentage (ff its income. A payment that has been running about $2 million per year. BUT, SAID B1ackburn, pen- ding changes in f e d e r a I regulations would raise to as much as $40 million annually the amount of money the aircraft company would be re- quired to turn over fu th.e foundation for medjcal work. That money caMot be plowed back into the aircraft com- pany. Blackburn said Hughes is trying to. hold down the amOWlt of income the aircraft company must divert to the ' 2640 Harbor Blvd. 5'16-5527 Let Winter Months Work 'For You ... Cool months ahead are great for establishing tr11 and shrub roots CITRUS Standard, full-g rowing citrus tl'HI. Also dwarfs. "KinnoW and 'Kari' Mandarin Wash· ~~~~~~~~·.~~~.~~I~~~'.~' ........ 8.50 'Bearrs' Lime, 'Eureka' Lemon ·1 98 'Meyer' le.mon-Dw1rf, Reg. 2.95 . , , , a AVOCADO Plant several varieties, have fruit yur 'round. 'Bacon•, 'Fuerte', I 'Haa•' ........................ 10,50 COSTA MESA ' •'~ ,•'·"II> .• ' ... . ~,,.·-~""~ OPEN DAILY 9-5:30 SUNDAYS 9·S -·~=.1~;:·.~~a.r~.~~~~~~~· ......... , 9.95 Dichondra 5 s.,. Ft. 1.69 ' Pyracantha Trlldlrlo11GI brlgltt·berft.d ahrubs. 'SANTA CRUr, pro1fftlt. trowtti. hceUnf for bat1k1, 2 50 9ro111d cower ••• , • • • • • • • ~ H911che1M, luth ond 9rooo11 ell y .. r. Needs little or 110 'RID ILf,' lrlghf red a,.,r1e1 011 dw•f YOrloty. ho1ttlf1I 2 95 •owl'"J. Spr"41 Hlll,......rHt for potdll.. nlltl119 ,5'Wt11. co1tolMr ry,. , •••• , • , , • • -· Onion Sets E•siest, fastest way to grow onions .•. Plant ONION nts (small bulbs} now. Harvest Feb. and Mar. • .. Reg. 79c NOW 59~ Pkg. JAPONICA AND SASANQUA CAMELLIAS Outstanding winter and spring blooms of white thru reds. Dark gr11n shiny foli•g• make them handsome shrubs anywhere. Loadad with bud• 1 gal, 2.95 5 911. 9.93 all'i.s}t?S Flower S~op Delivery anywhere the fast FTD 1cayt ~ Thank someone with a beautiful THANKSGIVING table decoration. 'Each one an original Holl1ttr design. Can't be home for the holidays? Send • rlant or flowers by FTD. Call 546-552 and w1'1l arr1ng1 it for you. Molor credit card• accepted. 11111. ' • . l lr1lil "*" n •Bllldnl If~· ...... ,.,, .... °'* fllllfJ Dow-• ORANGE 2445 N. T uitln Avo. l1c,011 from Or11191 M,11 ) P~on1 6)7·051 I SANTA ANA . ' & Fountain Valley 161?1 Herbor llvd. lcorn•r of Edl119•,l N11t to Zody's ,ho1111 IJ,-4170 ANAHEIM 1811 WHl -1.lncoln An. lttw;~ll Euell~ 1114 ltttkh1nt' A••llUOI Ju1t •••t of F.d Mtr+ ""01111 776-21•0 LAKEWOOD Hll Cendl1wood An. . Coltdlewood Shop• l1cro11 from L1k1wood C1nt•r 'ho111: 6J~·26) I . . 0-SO Storn to Sert• You lo: LOI AHGl!LI' MOOlllO SAN l"ltAHCISCO l'•llHO IA"' Dlf:!)C) bA.CLAHD IAN JOSI • ,MOENOC IACtl:AMe'NlO TIJCM>frii STOCK~ ATLANTA 1AL T LAKI CITY OPEN DAILY 10·9 ·SAT. 10 ·6 ·SUN . 12·b ·FREE DELIVERY· CRlDIT HAMS AVAILAllll · BANKAMlHICAllO ·MASHA r.Hnlll;f .,. .~ . I ' \ ' • • - • 1 ll11rsd1y, Novtmbtr 15, 1973 OAtLV PILOT King Faisal: A Benevolent·n spot RIYADH, Saudi Ar a b I a (AP) -King Faisal of Saudi Arabia Is both the Americans' staunchest friend ln the Arab world and the man who cut off oil supplies to their COWl· try. Re(ently he told the new U.S. ambassador here that hP agrees with Washington on everything but its pro-lsraell ~fiddle East policy. HE SEES THE recovery of Arab lands occupied by Israel as his mission in Ure. And he is prepared to use his desert kingdom's fabulous oil wealth to get it -even at the risk of angering an energy. hungry world. Always a devout Moslem. the 6S.year-old monarch a~ pears to be growing more rellglous with age. He regard.! himself as the Arabs' spiritual leader and bi& burning an1· bition is to see an Arab flag flying over the holy places Jn Jerusalem. .. "Before t die," he keeps country. He abolished sla,•:ry, plan Is ln Its Jinal stages. as the Sharia is still the only telling foreign diplomats, 111 built roads and opened the A $200 billion development I · the I d 11 · · th •1 a\v 1n an , res u t ng in want to pray m· e 1' osque doors. to lucraUve Western Jn-plan is on the drawing board of Omar" penalties that Westerners con- ves tmt>nt, in 'exchang~ for for 1975-80. sider barbaric _·chopping off AS THE-ft.JAN sitting on American and Euro Pc fl n the hands of thieves, stor.:ng 150 billion barrels ol oil, the technology. PLANNING l\tl~ISTER Hi-adulterers. flogging b I a c k orld's larges( known Knowing that oil ·is a sham Nadir clallns the pro-marketeers and behe ading reserves, Faisal has emerged depletable resource, the king grams will Insure a minimum murderers. ..... " as the leader ot oil l:Uld-surrounded himself w I th income for all Saudi citizens There are \\' o m e n an- economic policy in the Arabi· brlghl, young Western · and diversify the economy to noun cers on Saudi television an Peninsula and the Persian educated ministers -n1en ''provide work and food for but won1en are not allowed gulf. Other Arab states In· responsible £or planning the all when the oil rw1s out." to drive cars or w e a r spired with a new sense of industrialization and agricul-The emphasis is on "-'Ork, he miniskirts. Alcohol , movies unity engendered by their tural development of Saudi added. and nightclubs are taboo. And October war aga inst Israel.,, __;A~ra~b~io~to:,_p~ro~v~id~e,_..,a1~teo:rna~li~ve:_~Soc~ia~l .]an"ld~~l!!!it!l\ic~al::c'"h"lan~e'-.!the~r!!:e ;;:i~s ,,noC",-;~°'':;'~i~arn~en!!,t ·~";;.• --l ft 'Rl L LE ADER? -reei-Ulelilif~-has-the-clout sources Of Income. has been sower. The stric t emocracy as 1 ts own 1n ~ · to make the superpowers A $40 billion development Islamic code of ethi cs kno"'-'11 the west. King Faisal, 69 listen. ' ' • J~ Order vuur- ".~H1lida1 Pies 1011! The point out thai both at _ home and abroad, Faisal ha!! always got what he wanted before. Friends say there are two Faisals -the first a polished man of the world, at ease in the White House or a Lon· don drawing room, the seC<lnd a bedouin warrior, able to ride bareback, squat by a desert fire and eat roast meat anq rice with his fingers. DOME$TICAILY, he has led his primitive d e s e r t kingdom out of the Dark Ages into the 20th century, treading a delicate tightrope hr.tween Moslem traditionalists and, a new generation of young, Western-«lucated Saudis. 1tad1e lhaek-® -------\ ·COME IN AND PICK UP YOUR ''MINI'' LABEL MAKER i , I • • • • Call or visit your House of Pies •.. Place your Order Today! DINING ROOM OPEN THANKSGIVING CAY 7 AM TO 5 PM =~rt~:!I~ When he pushed aside his older brother Saud and assum- ed the throne in 1964, the country was fmancially shaky. The spending of Saud and other members of the royal family appeared tb have doomed the monarchy, which was likened to a solid gold Cadillac rushing m~dly down an oil-slick hill without brakes. $ERVING BREAKFAS·A~-~~'P~ Available at lhese convenient locations: · NEWPORT BEACH, 311 0 NEWPORT BLVD. HU NTINGTON BEACH, 9791 ADAM S FOUNTAI N VALLEY , 16155 HARBOR BLVD. Today, Under F aisa l 's management, Saudi Arabia has no foreign debts, and a currency reserve expected to hit $100 billion by 1980. Saudis r.ay. no taxes. medical care is free and their education ls paid for right through University. FAISAL HAD to send troops to open girls l!Chools in some ultraMnservative parts of the . Giftldea 1 Rockwell Swht·free Orbital Sander e ll·1q •• jn, p•d t•ndt flu1h on 3 1id•i e Doubl• h•ndl11 gi¥• compltlt co ntrol e llt1tli·r11i1ftnf housing e Doubl1 lnsu11t•d for tltclrictl 1•ftly SAV£$200 SI"" NOW ,-- Giftldea .4 Put a Rockwell PowerTool under your Christ111as tree • Use this gift selector to answer Jlllf'~fo..give problems • Gift Idea 2 Model 73 Rockwell ¥a"Drll e Big-capacity tconomy-prictd model e Double lnu1lated for 1ltclric1t 11fety e S11nd1 . poli1ht1 ,grinds with acct11ori11 SAVE S2tll . $1299 NOW Rockwell %-inc• drill Model 83 · $1ftH SAVI $500 NOW '7'' ' e Double lnsulattd for tltcfr ic•I 11f1ty e Exclu1l¥1 anti1pllnt1r ln11rt "'" chip fr•• Gift Idea 3 Rockwell 71h" Cira1lar Saw e T•cklt1 hardwood up to 2 318-in. thick e Double ln1ul1ted for eltcfric1I 11fety · e Ttlt1coping btade guard e llalanctd, aa1y to control e 8r1ak-re1i1tant hou1lng June 1972 $2'9' wasS39'1' · NOW Rockwell~" . r Variable-speed Dn11 ... e Hold1 any uni¥tt1i•l-1h1nk jig itw bl1 d1 e Br1ak-r11i1t•nt hou1in; : SAVE SSOO $1A40 e Drill 1pttd ad1 ph e S•nd1, grindi, poli1ht1 to m•t1rl•l1 with •cc1t1ori1t • . e l r•ak-r11i1t•nt hou1inv • Ooublt insul•itd for t lHtric•I 1•f1ty NOW .. -- Two-speed Iii saw Modol 968 $1AM SAVI 5511 NOW '7" 11 Any Rockwell double-insulated power too l which fail• to function to your complete J11lisf1clion, due to de.feels ia n"11lcri1I or workm1nU1lp1 within one 'year of pUtChl!IC, may be returned • ~lice of p\lrchltt: •I'd ttplated with a • new ind \jko ptOdutt. SCOOTS INDUSTRIAL -SUPrLY IEAlljNG5-POWEI TRANSMI SSION-INDUmlAL SUPl'LllS 838 W. 9th St., ·Costa Mesa i . Phone &45-7318 IANUMU ICAID e PHONE OlDElS ACCIPTID e MASTEi CHAIGE •• A • • You'll find countl ess uses for this compact label maker •.. great for home, business. school. Fits in packet or purse. Prints easy-to-read letters on 3/8" self-adhesive tape . Simply dial each lett_e . squeeze handle;-cuf off finished label. 68-1020 r---------------------~ I I I /i FREE! WITH THIS COUPON 100 VALUE NAME---------"----- AOORE$S----------CITY ___________ _ STATE _____ ZIP. ____ _ ( 3/8" VINYL LABELING TAPE IN ASSORTED Reg. 79 COLORS gg; Ea. ~EA. First label Maker Free At All Parlicipatino..Qadio Shack Slores. Add1honal Label Makers $1 Each . Persons Under 16 Mus t Be ~ccompan1ed By Parent . Oller Expires Nov, 24, 1973. L--~-----------------~J CHECK OUR SELECTION OF MONEY SAVING GIFTS • . . and you can CHARGE IT SAVE $10 8-TRACK STEREO RECORD/PLAYBACK TAPE DECK Regular 109.95 9995 Realistic"' TR-88 1 puts !jle fun back in Christmas. Add it to yo ur present system .•• riecord tapes from any so urce AND play prerecorded ca rtridge tapes. Professional features include pause control, au tostop to prevent acciden tal erasures. 14-881 SAVE $20 ON 3-PIECE REALISTIC® 8-TRACK STEREO PLAYER Re.gular 99.95 7995 A gift th at's syre to please . .. stereo cartridge tape player and matching speakers in handsome 1<=c-....;;: walnu t ca bin ets. Enjoy car tapes at home. Balance and tone controls. headphone. jack, input for addi ng record changer. 14-923 SAVE $20 c. REALISTIC® HEADPW.S Reg ular 5995 79.95 Electrostat energizer makes these headphones unique. Eliminates distortion , d elivers trebles and basses as pure as fine speakers. Lightweight and comfortable. 33-1017 3-CHANNEL COLOR LIGHT KIT 2995 This Ch ristm as ad d a new dimension to stereo enjoyment. Brilliant shades of red, blue, and green flash and swirl to the music. Works with stereo system, phone, or rad io. Woodgrain cabinet. 28-138 SMART SANTAS SHOP EARLY.:. STORES OPEN LATE NIGHTS ALL STORES OPEN SUNDAY 1803 Newport Blvd. -Costa Mesa. 18120 .Brookhunt. -Fountain Yan ey (in Fount1in V11l1y Pl1u) a••r..-• loolt '°' '"'' s. 1" r-NtigM.o. 8941 Adams Ave . -Huntin9ton Beach 6991 Wamer Ave. -Huntln9ton Beach 30232 Crown Valley Pkwy. - 2701 S. Ml.in St. -Sa nta Ana 1443 W. 17th sf. -Santa Ana (In Honer Pl11a) ' 814 S. Camino Real ....... San Cl emente 13024 NeW?Ort Blvd. -Tustin 15389 Brookhunt -Westmi nster LaCJ!lna Nl9uel • A TAt.OV CORPOAAllON COMMNV ~, , I I ,. , ; • • DAILV PILQT * REFLECTIONS ~. Reyn Sheffer "Prkl• •l•y• th•nkstivlnt ltut • humlll• mind Is th• Mii .ut of which thanks naturally 1row ••• " Henry Ward lff<h•r We all have so much for \.\'hich to be thankful that merely r<'Citing: th!> list \\'OU!d take n1osl o[ Thanks· givini; Day. \Vho can ~ay that he him.self, of his O\\. n ablAty and diligcncc, has s1•. cured all these bcncfils fol' hin1scl!? Thanksgiving is an OC<'tl'1.- lon·,..,1len humble n1inds v.·ill \\'ant to c.i-:prt'ss th<'lr grntl· tude to the Aln1ight\y for a multitude' of blessings. \Ve arc thankful, ·among many otht>r things, for a chance to serve the famili<'s of this community '"ith an - s lht.lf1day, Novtmbfr 15, 1q73 Dec. 6 Date? Sa 1i J ua1i's Book Fc1ir All-yeru· Scl1ool Electio11 Sought "The Child's Garden of Books" will be the theme of this year's San Juan Elementary School book fair today and Friday. The Committee on All·Year School v.-111 suggest an election date of Dec. 6 to f'ountain Valley School Board trustees tonight. But \Vardlow School Prin- cipal Sonny ~1orpcr is con- cerned that the date is too ~n to comply \\•ith election The annual I a I r • "The logistics of the election sponsored by the school -of all the ~tings prior Parent· Teacher League. to the election -lead me offers a large selection of to believe that Dec. 6 may new and used lx>oks for nol be the most expeditious sale. Profits from the sale, date," he said. which runs from 7 to 9 "At the last meeting I had p·m. both nigh ls will go with' the Committee on All-toward school and PTL year School -"''hich is made , __ act_i_v_tt_l•_•·-----.....J up of parents on both sides - --• • Saddleback Ev aluation Cit.izens Grade District Citizens, parents, teachers and students of the Saddleba.ck Valley Unified School Dis· trlct will be asked to evaluate the ez:isting educational prog· ram and aiggest new direc· lions this month. The community-wide effort to forge an educational master plan for the 18-school district begins Nov. 29 with simu1taneous conferences al I each sehool site. The con· an<! lair discipline policy. I NFOl\MA110N gathered I hoot from the COIT\munlty survey ferences begin at 7:30 p.m. 4!hanges ln sc year wilt be analyzed by several organization such a.s the four ABOIJT 10 percent of all quarter plan and the 411-15 Saddleback Valley Un If 1 e d plan (45 days of claas and School District t&k forces. Saddleback Valley residents 15 days vacation). " Dr. Robert Jenkin5, director have been chosen at random -Reorganliatlon of th e of the eduCatlonat"tnaster plan 1 to participate in the sessions. grade level!, such as putting project, says the responses 1 All of them have been invited 9th graders in intermediate will form the "raw material" j by letter but any interested schools, or eliminating the in· ror the master plan which !ermedlate school concept en-should be finished sometime citizens not invited may come f 1 in January. their concerns. -procedures recently adopted by the boartl . "I will be presenting a date to the board, and it may be Dec. 6, but I do ha,•e lo talk to more people - particularly lhe staff of my school -to detennine if it's feasible," Morper said. of the Issue -they requested an informational meeting for the school's staff, a polling of the staff on their opinion on all-year school and the resu1ts mailed to parents in the commWlity before the election," he explained. Father, Son Clinic For Basketball Set to the conferences and share1~~or~e~y~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ During the meeting the participan~ will be asked to give a priority rating to a list or 60 school needs which were developed by a special needs assessment task force. Lake Forest Exhibit Set "But time is running short. and in fairness tO the teachers, I can't see holding the infonnational meeting and polling them on the samP. day,'.' said l\1orper. The Fourth annual Kil\•anis Father and Son basketball Clinic for boys from 8 to 15 Some of the 60 needs the years of age will be held citizen groups will be asked to evaluilte and establish starting at 8:30 a.m. Saturday prior)ty rating.s for are the at the Laguna Beach High following: -Eml¥iasis on the "basics," School boys' gym. such as reading, ,math and The clinic, co-sponsored by language skffis. Y•ucm .. ,....,. ..... ,,, .... , .. ~, ......... ta ........... .. ... ,1,.. ............ c-.... . CALL Ml. JIM HIND l C1>sential service, and for th e nt any valued frlendshiJl5 \vhich have grou'n out vf such service. The Lake Forest A r t Association and the lo.fission Viejo Art Association ha\'e scheduled a combined exhibit around. the Lake Forest foun- tain for 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. "lfowever, I plan . to talk to thC teachers today in- formally. and -see how they feel about the Dec. 6 date. I'll know Thursday whether it is possible, or whether I should suggest a later date,·· the principal said. Bloodmobile's In Clemente th e LaiU1'a Beach Unified ,. ... -c.. c........ Helph1'1 ... "Uwt., Tmt ,,..,... ... wr1 ... , c•llferMtelill ....,. 499-1311 Ext. 600 Scho.ol District and the Laguna -M A K I N G STUDENTS Beach city recreation depart-aware of moral and spiritual The Amer'·can °·d Cross t ·11 I I T values. OAST ·'OMMUNITY HOSPITAL ·~ men . wi ea ure ommy -Including .fine arts in the SOUTH C <-. • tSttBFF€R mollTU ... llY •1• SOIJTH,COAST HIGHWAY LAGUNA BEACH '494-1535 Crafts and paintings will be offered for sale. The fountain is on Bridger Road off the El Toro exit of the San Diego Freeway. At the /I'hursday n i g h t meeting, li.t 7 p.m. at the district office, Number One Lighthouse Lane in Fountain Valley, the board will first hear the committee's sug- gestion, and then Morper will present his decision. Bloodmobile v.·ill come to San Curtis, starter for the UCLA's ctlrriculum. 11172 c..:.. H5fliwer, 5-tA a..,11 .. , C•llfor•S. •2677 Clemente General Hospital ;:~de~f~en~din~· ~g~n~a~t~i ~o~n~a~l~ch~am:-~~~P~r~o~v~i~d~i~n~g~and~~a~d~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Friday to gather blood needed pionship basketball team. ministering a firm, consistent, to restock the county's blood f banks. I S,A.N CLEMENTE Donors will be processed fron1 2:30 to 7 p.m. and reservations to give blood can be made by calling the hospital or the Red Cross. 1531 NORTH EL CAMINO REAL 492 °0100 f\.1ore in formation may be obtained by calling 837-9267. • • FURNITURE Round-square 42" table is very ne\v, very smart and very much at home in a corner of the living room as a game set, or as a graceful dining set Marvelous matched grained waln ut never-ma r finish, and four rounded cane.back and waln ut chairs with black viny l cushioning. Te r .. rific looks, sensational price! Delivered free, of course, with the famous RB warranty of quality. THE IMPRESSIVE PARTY SET WITH THE EXPENSIVE LOOKS ATASWEff i.lffiE RB PRICE Ula.DD: 1121 Wl9'1irtllft. MirKlllfllrJ: lll*!W ..... M.; .. ,,........ ~1111 W.I.** IAll9llll:JOio--. CMUU YllTA.: 411 ....... , ClMDllll'l'I~ DZ L fMltill lltlllt M5 I.,._ ~ '435 L fhltM E1 Wiit: • .. ..._,, ... 11.1MrM1: ll3 If. CM111 Mt. UMAM lfll.UI JOJCIG •h IW. •IMIN 1DC1t JMJI IMdl ...... ., U. llMU: 1720 W. Nlilt LIM lllat: 21n ~ l llod. fllCNf1Uft' ""'= ll5 I. Air.tic M PAMtlM IS I. --.u tmlllll: lCl,CIGD ""'*" :MIJTA AIWT\ISTlll: 110.J L 17th SI. SAit IUIMIDlllt: '91 S. "l~ st. IMI Mii: 74~ Clll~ flllna 8l¥IL an! IAY: l~US S. C........ M. TllOlMll OMS: 244 TMvs..w O.h .,_,.. TOllAllCr: 2012l ltlwtllarnl 11¥t ftlmlM: >40I ,,,,._,. M. WDOIWCI Milli: 22211 YllltvN H ...... ' '"'" ............ ,. " u•n~ •• MtU•NT,. .. .,..~ •• •U•DAf , ... u •Tll •• , ........ ,. •• ,..._Tell 111'91~ •••• M U¥111't' °'""""'&llfl•--.------ ., . • . - TOYS FOR TOTS SPECIAL from STORER CABLE TV Regular $15.00 Connection Now FREE with Exchange of A New Toy • All toys will be turned over to the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve for their Toys for Tots Campaign. Toys .need not be expensiv e. "Put A· Smile On A Child" and enjoy the best in T.V. entertainment. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS s STOCK REPORTS N P to E 0 W R S T s c M A 0 R v T 0 I 0 E N s s STORER CABLE TV, INC. CALL TODAY 494-8595 493-1800 -'""" OFFER GOOD WHERE T. Y. CABLE AVAILABLE Local News ·That's ·' I • thiR ~c z~l~~, local I ·'On · the Ball' • \ . . • • • ; . . • • ' ~ I /, l I : • l I ' • I \ ( I ) ' ' I ' • ' \ • ' ' '. I • ) I I I I I ' I ) i ' ' I \ ' ' I \ ' \ I . . . I I : • l ,. ' • I · Man's Answer To Gas Crisis By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ttM OtllY ,li.t $T•lf You have been waltlng for good ne\vS, Instead we have given you Watergate, A1ideast madness, and the Christmas tree acare. Here is some good news. The energy crisis is a myth. There's plenty ol gasoline Ice all Forget aboot slowing to 50 and fretting over making It to work on time. N0t I'm not crazy. But .all th06e Washington dummies who are scrambling around the earth looklng for.more oil to be uled ln your car are. They are the same people who are telling you that the way to conserve energy is to crawl along the freeway. Maybe those guys were ratiooed when they pasaed out mental energy · , J , IT JUST DOESN'T make _,nse N iiDl1 u w.1 to use mere gasoline so you can drive a big car and go slow. Why not make a small car that uses Jes. gasoline so you ·can drive at a reasonable speed? With gasoline over a buck a gallon, the Europeans have recognized this !or years. Un!ortunate1y there hasn't been an economy incentive here. How could there be with gas at SS cents a gallon? The small displacement car has traditionally been un- American . Americans wanted cars with a good ride and lots of ~h. not a little buzz box that was.beatil'.lg !ts heart out on the freeway. It was false economy, the driv- ers reallOlled, to save gas while having to spend a fortune repairing cars that couldn't atand up on U.S. highways. Well, the dire pl'<C!ictions ol the energy experta have now given us the incentive. Plus there are now American and foreign powerplanls on the assembly Unes which can take sustained freeway speeds. WHAT WE NEED Instead of a SO.mph freeway limit is a displacement limit. Take your average-sized V-8 and cut it in half, Then take olf a few more cubic inches until you get to 120. That equals about 2.000 Cc and is large enough for adequate horsepower. Many racipg engines have had fewer cubes. What kind of mileage would a t~Jiter car. get? It depends on a lot ol factors. But it doesn't take any brains to figure out that If it is only hall as big it will drink up a lot less of your precious gasoline. ) There is absolutely no excuse for the existei:ice_ qf..!he 8-mile per gallon behemoth today. The age ~ .. din- osaur has passed. And the sooner we all recogruze it we will have enough gasoline again. Let's outlaw those big monsters, get rid d. them over. a period of five years, build some .reuonably..sized . yet. sturdy automobiles, and cross the energy crisis off our v•orry list. I'll gi ve up my VI if you give up yours. F~urnay Trades . For Smaller Car SACRAMENT UPI) State Cootrolle< Houston I. Flournoy has traded his gas- guzzling UOcoln Conlinenlal for a slx-cyUnder hiuslang to He Makes Whisky For Wife Cll!LL!COTIIE. Ohio (AP) ,_ Moonshiner Cyrus Kerns, 61, told the judge he made booUeg liquor to quench the thirst or his wife. Ross C'.ounty d e p u t i e s recommended leniency for Kerns , and Ch l I Ii cot he Municipal Judge Wlll!Bm Sam· mons took their a d v i c e \Vednesday. SAMJllONS WARNED lire defendant he could face a siJ;- month jail sentence and a fine of $M0 for manufacturing illegal liquor and posse>Slng the 9lill. Instead, he received a S250 fine and a two-month sentence. • Kerns testified that he made the rooonshine whisky for h'is wife, who he said drinks up to five gallons ol liquor in two weeks. He also said she drinks about 15 to 20 bottles of beer a Oay. FEDERAL AND s t a I e agents with the aid of deputl;s •. raided Kems' barn 'l'uMlaY. afternoon._ 9£ficcrs said the liquor In caMrng Jars· was about 100 proof. • do hls part in easing the energy shortage. "I have been speaking out about the energy crists for month.! now, and it occurred to me that this was something I should do myself to conserve our energy supptits," he told a news conference Wednesday. FWURNOY ,A Republican who wants to succeed Ronald Reagan as governor, called on Reagan, the Legislature and other state officials to switch to smal1er cars that bum less gasoline. He said his own switch should cut his gasoline con- sumption in half. However, the car still will have air con- ditioning and· an automatic transmission. Asked why he didn't lease a foreign car which would bum even Jess gas, F1oumoy responded: "I didn't want to upset the balance of payments.'' HE ALSO SAID Ire was "driving &lower now than I used to" but that he hadn't re1<hed lbe proposed 5 O m.p.h· limit yet. cl= tt!~~: o~al~l , legislators, drive bi g luxury cars at state expense. Tax· paye" pick up th• tab !or ga90.line as well AS: most or lbe monthly lease payments. FLOURNOY'S ' Lincoln cost about $100 a rnOOth more to ~ lease than the 1974 Mlistang. The Mustang uses regular gas Wteed ol elhyl and gels between 15 and 20 miles per gallon, about · twice lhat ol the Lincoln, Fiolll'DQY sald. ( ';111 you hl·lp yuur la111ily through pr;t}l'l".1 ' • . ' "THERE'S ALWAYS AH ANSWER" A NII C"""'-k .... LtlNN loyM-N.H-C.S.I . ToNIOHT·'-NOV. 15 -I P.M. CHU.CH AUDITOllUM MDA mDI DI. IAIT Allril PAl'!IN• -CHILD ~H FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST COSTA lllSA I • ' ' . • 1hllrsday1 Novtmbtr 15, 1q1> DAILY PILOT 19 • / • HOST, OF HOLIDAY LONGS AND TOPS Fritzi of California knows the California girl. She was first to love lon g skirts , and know how to wear·them. With shiny little print or peplum tops. Easy. Soft. Individual. If she , needs more, she adds it. Her own way. a. Ban-Lon ® top of nylon, black, pink 12.00, b. oack-slit skirt, black, white polyester crepe 12.00. c. acetate top 14.00, d. polyester crepe skirt, beige, pink, black 19.00. Tops S-M-L, skirts 8-16. conterhp. blvd . sptswr. ' , • , • ' •' t • SHOP DAILY TO 9:.30 ; SAT. TO 6 EXCEPT DOWNtOWN.l.A., CRENSHAW, OXNARD. NOTED BELOW OWllTI. • lli.Slllll • CIOSHIW • L'lt!WOOO • IMJ!ll. I\." !.OSll.ll'D • SQ. BA! • Siii ~[;D • BUCK! r<. • TOPlllGA PU • W(Sl LA, • YjMIOl!I • SQ. CQ.IST pt, • ARCADIA • Siii 81 ... • 110.,CLNR • CAAl.SB.IO • OX•. • Cl CAIOll • llMISttlC ' llGtl IOCK tllOll DAIL! 1>30 lG I P.11. • "' l ·llll • Cr i·2291 • 01i·O113 . Kt 1·1171 • 11111611-1111 • Ki 1-1661 . SI 1.IOllO "'' z.mo . ,, •1111 • Siii m;o 191-1111 • w Y£GAS 3IA 1794 ... UPHOOC, Ile CHAACf.1111~u•Dll11. t.O.D.'1 UIOll ~'O • ·-• '. \ . . -II l >l " • , I l • l i • • 1 ' • • ' ' l ·J • No Relatives Shy Man Leav_es Fortune to UC From Wlre Services George Peterson, a s b y lirelong bachelor, left more than $180,000 to the University of California for medical research because he ne\ler had a chance to go to school himseU. Peters.on, ·a native of Sacramento, died Saturday at 81 . His attorney, Uoyd G. ( PEOPLE ) Buchler, announced that all or Peterson's estate would go to the university. Peterson had no living relatives. * The home of deposed Mafia dtiertain Joseph Bonanno is among 15 the city of Tucson says it will acquire for a street w idening project. Bonanno has lived in his Tucson home on the city's n or th side off and on since the 1940s. * House Ways and Means chairman WUbur J\11lls return- ed to work at his office following an operation on his back and said he feels "pret- ty Iii)<." ~fills un- d e r wen t s ur ge ry M1L1..s Aug. 31 to correct a ruptured disc in his back. l\1ills said he has made no decision on whether to retire at the end of the congrcssion- ·al session. * State Sen. Eugen~ ~1cLaln, . a Huntsville attorney and developer, declared hi s can· ' didacy for gov~rnor 0 r Alabama. J<icking him into a battle that could topple Gov. George C. Wallace from his traditional base of political pcrwer . Reportedly packing a $1 million war chest, the 53-yeaf'- old McLain lashed out at Wallace as a governor who Sen. Frank Church (D-has spent the last 10 years ,,. ldaho} says he was urged to more interested in political ;,r-fly across the nation to hear campaigns t han governing. a Cabinet offiti!r speak on * the energy crisis. A huge, blac k walnut d esk The invitation to hear a owned by Hoosier ix>et James speech in S e a t t I e by Whitcomb Riley has been sold Transportation Secret a r Y at au-ction in Ind.iaMapolis for Clhau 1 de 1 s .. BriSecnegar1 camRe from $2,600. t e n enor re ary ogers The desk was the most ex- C. B. Morton and Bernard E. pensive item ori t~ block. Kelly, chainnan . of t h e t ood · I d d Federal Reg ional Council. but other Ri ey g s inc u e "I think we'd save a lot personal papers, silver a nd fine china. more of our scarce fuel sup-Irving Materials Inc. of plies if the secretary w e re Greenfield bought the des k - to invite me to travel the handcrafted by the poet's mile or so to his department father, Reuben Riley -and to talk about the problem," donated it to the Riley Old Church sa..id. Home Society. * President Nixon will address * the Republican go v e r n o r s A, day of activities to honor conference in fl.1emphis Tues-Skylab 2 astronaut <h\.-en Gar- day, Gov. Winfie ld Dunn of rlott Jr. has been arranged Tennessee announced. at his hometown of Ennid. In Was hington. White H ouse Okla. where Phillips Universi- officlals confirmed the plans ty "''ill award him an honorary for the p r e s i d e n t i a I ap-doctor of science degree. pearance. They said previous· Garrio tt was in orbit 591h Jy he was expected to visit days during the second man- ?-.1acon, Ga. Sunday. ned Skylab mission July 28- At least 16 of the 19 GOP Sept. 2.5. / governors, including presiden·,---'--p-U!ILJ--C-N_O_TJ_C_E ___ , tial prospects Ronald Reagan ____ -------- of California a n d Nelson FICTITIOUS •USIHESS HA.ME STATEMENT Rockefeller of New York, are The tollowlng person• are doing expected to attend the Nov. oosig~~1a~i. 316 N. HarbOr Blvd .• sanra ,. \8-20 meet_in_g. _ ______ An.a. ca111. 92703 Al!)bfr Anne Bellird, 244)1 ll:tdlen PUBLIC NOTICE ~ El TD!'o. Calif. 92630 mbfr McGinley Belard, ?.Ul1 Redlin El TD!'o. Call!. •?630 FICTITIOUS llUSlHESS This btJslnt$S Is condvcled bY ' general NA.Ml!. STATEMENT . p;irtnership The tollowlno P«M>ll Is doing b•n•neu Amber A. Berard Is: EL TORO MEOICAL WEIGHT This slllement was filed with lM CLINIC, 73861 El Toro RO*d, No. Countv Clrrk of Ora~ C1111n1V on "' . Et Toro, Calltornla t26S3 October 2). 1973 F·tto16 lt1cflel'd Earl Zink'"· M.O .. 16'11 Publlsl\ed orange Coa1t Daily Pilot, Malden (1r(Olt, Hunllngton BNch. October lS irld November 1, a. IS, C1lltornl1 '264t 973 ' llll 7l This buslne11 11 colldvc:led by 1n 1 • lndivldu1I. Rklllrd Eart Z!nkan This 1!1tement .,..., !lted wilh !he Counry Clerk of Orange Covnty an Qctotier 2l, 1t73. PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSIN ESS NAME STATEMENT F·2'0U The· lollowlrog 111rson1 are clbing Publlt.h«I Orange Coa11 Dilly Pllo!, bu1lnen as; CklMW'r lS, arid Novemblr 1, I, 15. ROYAL PRINTING. 10 41 Beech . 197l 3140-1] 6oulevard6 Unit L, Wes I "' I n s ta r. Call!ornia 92683 PUBLIC NOTICE Greoory K1lomlrl1, 11312 Goodwin Lane, Hun!l"'IJ!Otl Beach. CalllD!'nla ""' FICTIT IOUS llUSlNESS Calherlne l(alomlrl1. l&Jn Goodwin NA.ME STATEMENT Lane, Hunlingron eeach, California Tile toUowlng per.ans are doing 9264' bu1lnen as : Thl1 business Is col\ducted by In DALE CLOUTIER ASSOCIATES, 1081 lndlvli:lual 6uslntll (en:er DrlYI, Sul!e liiO, lrvlne, GregC>ry l<.ilomlr!1 California '206-t This st1temen1 was filed with lhe Oii• Ctoull1r, 33511 B/g Sur, Oan1 Coo(lty Clerk of Orange County on Point. C1lltornla '2629 Ne>vember 5, 1973 Tl>l1 btJ1lne11 11 colldV<:!rd by 1 limited p1rtnershlp. 0111 Clou!ler, Gener1I P111ner Published Orange Coast November t. IS, 72, 29. 1973 F·lllSl D~\ly P\lo! J3?().7J This Slllement .,..., filed wl!h ll!f P U BLIC NOTICE Countv Cl1rk of Or1nge County °"1-------------0ctOtler 79, 1t7l F·2t2U FICTITIOUS llUSIHESS MAME STATEMEMT PubHs.lled Orange C~sl O.illy P!lol, TM tolloW!ng perMH11 ire doing November 1, I. U, 21, 1973 3'94-73 business as1 PUBLIC NOTICE ·J. SUNDQUIST ASSOCI ATES, 1599 SVJ>rrlor A"ff. A·S. C0$11 Mt11. Ca. 92627 FICT ITIOUS BUSINESS J1rnt1 P. SUMq!Jlst, 2U7 Mirlmtr, BalbOI, C.i. '2662 NAME STATEMENT Biii 8 . Webster, 1*21 E. 6alboa The followlnv Pll''°"' ire doing Blvd., BalbOI, Ca. n661 btJll,..s1 as: Helen 8. Sundqvlst, 2157 Mlrlmar, W.C.ll. FABll lCATOR'i, IU Cille De BalbOI, Ca. 92662 Los Mollnos, San Ctementr, Callf. '297l This t1tnfne1s Is 'onclV<:lld by 1 general Waller (. Renfro, 6'l0 C1ml11C> Ori pjlrlnershlp. PafQl/e, C1rl1bdd, Cal!!. 97009 James P. SoodQvist Elalne A. Rentro. ~630 Camino Ori This 5l1tement WIS flied w!lh thtr Parque. Carlsbad. CaHr. VIOOI Counrv Cler-ot Or1ngt CovnlY on w. Claylan llenlro. 111 E. Lowell, OctDbo!r 2t, 19n Sierrt Mtdre, Call!. 9\07• 1'·2'1H This bvslneu ls condvc!ed by 1 general PuDllshed Or1rige Coast 01fly, Piiot, part ... rshlp. November I, I. IS, tt, 1913 3310.73 W. Clav1an Renfro Thl1 statement wts filed w!!h the CoontY Clerk 01 Orange Coon1y en PUBLIC NOTICE October 23, 1973. FHGlt STATEMENT OF WITKOllAWAL .. Ill.OM PMlTNERSHIP OPERATING UNDEll l"vtll1•hed Or1nge Coast Oally PUol, FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME Oc.lo1>1r 2S. arid November l, 1• 11• The fDllowlng oerSC>n• l'llYt withdrawn 197l lnt~ es gerirrel pert"'lrs from ll'le Pll•lt1tr~l'llp PUBLIC NOTICE Ol)t!rtrlng under the flcUllov1 blrslf!fll n1m1 AltT OESIGNS BY ROMEO. HELEN & MARGARET 11 Art O.Slqns, FICTITIOU5 I US I NESS 132 l:ttHI ...Av~, LagWM,. l lacll, Call!. NAM&: STATEMl!,.T '71651 • ' Tiit lflllowlng perMJM Is dol1>11 IMlslness The lkt!tiorn bll1lness namt 1t11 .... 1nl as: lc.r !he p1r!nershfp was ffled on Jvnt CAL·MAllT, 2911).E Harbor Blvd .. 6, 1'73 In !hf County of Or11191. H1r A. Wiiiiams. 2161! L• Vin.a Wllhdrawlno: • Cos!1f.n.a, C1lllornla tt6'6 Full Name and Address of I~ PerMHlt OrlV9, Mls1lon Vlt!lo, Calllor~l1 9'1611 M1r111ret L Wright. l07' Ne1ta N Tl'lll bo.lslMSI Is Condvtlld b't' an Rd .. Lag11n1 Beach. Calll. lnicl!vld.,.I. Helen Matloc-. ~SCI Cleo SI., Lagvn1 H.A. w1n11m1 Brach. Calll. Tl'lil stat......,! 'ttll lllrd with 1111 . Signed; Margar.t L. Wrlgl'll COllf\IY Cltrk of Orange tounry on ~i.n Mat\ocll iottober 23, ltn F·UMl F·2'011 .f!UD!llhed Orange Coasl oanv Piiot. , "*lhhed Orange Coasl Oa;1, Piiot. 9 0-.embtr I, IS, :ti, tt, 1973 ll97·1'l OclOIMt lS, Incl MOYl!mbe• 1. I, 1s. lm m1.n PUBLIC NOTICE • PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAME STATEM•HT l'ICTITIOUS •USIHESS The followfng pertons ll't' doing fllAM• ITAT•Mll'llT btJ1lnns 1s; _ Tht IOlh:rWlnt person 11 clolng b!J1lnns TERRA GRAPHIX. 1~10 EI 1 I •s: Edlll!llr, Suitt 207, Sanl1 Ana, Ca. KALSO EAllTH SHOES OF LAGUN.-., '21'0S ~ !U. S0!,111'1 COISI Hlghw1,, Lagunt Vlc AleKandtr. 191' Maplt, No. 11, BNdl. C•lll. '2.SI Cvs11 Mew, Ca. 92621 Melv1" l4r111llln. ''50 Octan w.v, T1rry c . UCle\r. 25561 B!Olt.Om L.-&Mc:h, Ctl!I. '1'51 P1r~, Et Toro. Callf. '2UO Thi• ll\ltllltlf It conduc:tld •by an T~l1 1111\l"'SJ Is condU<:ted by I t1Mr1I Inell~. Pl•Tntrshlo Mtlvh;i 1or"1ttln Vlt Al1a1M(l9!' ™• •l•t-1 Wit flied with ll'lt ThfJ llal~l WI$ lllfd wlll'I '"' (turl"I' f; .... k of o....-.. Counlf on Covn!Y Cieri! of Or~ C-h' °" "~ n . 1tn NO¥tmbtr s. 1tn ' ,,........ Orlfltl c .... 1'4ow.M« 1, L lS. tt. 1t1'l ,,1'11 OaHy Piiot. PUblllhfd Ol-1ng.r COIU sin.n ~~ •· u. n. tt. 1m ~ l'·tnU Dilly Piiot . »117·1> • Sale Prices Honaretl T~11 Su11., lov. 18 COO'KWA.RE SETS "Sets For Cooking Thanksgi-ring Dinner or For Christmas Gifting!" Ekco-Flint .5 ~S·Y!r~uo~n!.~' ~ e St1i•l111 stffl IM nn lttet & le1li"f k111ty. 99 • A ,.rt Kl S ,if<t 1l1rttr Ml -lttattl 1111ift 1ivi11f. REG. '22.99 - Your Clwice FOOD KEEPERS • KtiMy .. , ,., , ... ,...,. i.., lr1.i-.1 i111iH. • CJ.ice tf MWt11l 1irH - 111 llHyY Hty ,lestic witli lifs. --.- LIMITID TD STOCK ON HAND • Completely Avtomotic PARTY PERK "Make Coffee for The Thonlt19irin9 Crowd!'' • lit n "" 1i11 ,.n ... Mr is Mly......m:. • (~ wirit 1i.y-wt1• "'-"' -kHpl ., , ..... '#lftll1 ,,, hiMr•tt. • 1 •• , ,, tltu , .... -. Milli .. ·--<M4 iltdHH. Cost Iron-Divided CORNBREAD SKILLET ' • ftr ,.,...M wilt! tllll '-' .. .......... "''"· • P11ts • cmt • 1ll 1WH -<M• ir ... w•'I ''"'"· REG. s23s 'l.lS Set of 8 TURKEY LACERS e t 11'1i11l.s1 stttf lectfl wlrit • '"'"it!'"""*"" '""· . e Tt H tt.. l"-*&flWill itr4 .,,.lit. 25~ .. Steel FOLDING CHAIRS "fdra Sealing for The Holldo1 Crowd1I" a Jh..,. Wlffiff ............. t. Mlf tl.sl ••"'• rw,...._,,...n. • Stntclteirs•l•n...,t4sMts&Md;1.ftW .... ... , ................... .. REG. ''·" WA NE • I • Fo"1ous Regolwore••""""'-••--~ 7 PIECE SET 11Your 'ltoice of Stainless Steel or Teflon-II Lined!'.' • CliM11ptt<11.i1 ..... twlth ffty'd ... Telle. II i1le1i111 If l'f .. llffflllt t1'1iA11111re.i. • ltd! stt hwlMtt ,, ... .,.., "-ttt~ .w., Millet !Mdt 99 - ,, .. <fflf fib) ,WI I IM 2 ... Cfftrt!il MINI:'';';':-,. ...... ~ REG. '19.99 Corningwore• Electromotic COFFEE MAKER e 6 ~ Ht ... ric c•""-ltr. • J111tM1 <•r•Mlf .-Jity IM 1•1111lte -"'',,kt., ,,.11 •• , """· • fir h11h irtwt4 ,effet i11111 ti• -lvd ,1111 it i11 & ii 11e1 l1 W•rk ftr ,.W • .~:~s s 1 _79s SAVE'l0.001 - Mirro Diol·A·Cookie COOKIE PRESS · ''Gel A Head Slorl on Holido1 lolringl" • (r..tt \2 ijlff" .. ' c..lil11 ":" lit tM kWs..., Murete. • Al..t-wiltl '""' llM trlt11. • J llfllM'I ,tel••·'""'' .... Mi1tr1teliH1 ilH."'"4. .~'.~; s349 Gourmet VEGETABLE ITEAMIR • .... ,, Mtt. tltllsW 1!1ifllt11 llH •. • Mdu _, ,.i 1 Wl1 Mil« -.;p,.n tt lit ., .... •EG. '2.6t s199 Meets & Poultry BASTER HG.7t • l"'rllllllt tnMt-, Mitt IMi1icy...._cllli... • •itw • .-..uw.wyt... • • Mlft!M llf IUlfllt --59c 4 Oz. Skein ACRYLIC Y4RN ''Top Quality -Am•rican Made!'' • Stttt wtft 111 Ht.11 <h1i11M11 tih• ••I • UM tWs 111y ""'4thlt r•11 ltr kMn6", c~ .If·······"''· :.J."" 1-.t -.,......, -di.Kt .1.., ctltn . --R~·9c •-•· ;,:· · I . s .... - ARROW HYW. • i ~ [E!N:C:z...__ I •' • ' . ~ • ' -· • ... / I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI TO C•IOITOIS li'lt'tii1ou5 IUllNl:SI IU,llloa COUIT 01'" TNW .NAM• STAllMINT + NOT1(1 o,• ,.Of'O&IO "TlllANt"•lll ITA.T• Ofl CALl..-ORNIA "Oil fl'lt fol1owlne lltT'On I• 4oll'll butlntlt 011 TtlllTORV Aflll'ICTINO 'fHI '~CZ::~o:t.:l:'t"HS.:' THI COUNTY 01' O•AMGI: ~It BOUNDA•V 91TWllN TMI SAO-"TM following ~ •rt dolllft H0.A·17Sll CORONA. 011.. MAR MEDICAL OLllACk COMMUNITY COL.LIO I ,,.,1 °'' E•t•T• of C,a.RL. J. WEiTIR, Ooc••m WEIGHT CLINIC, tJ4.S e. CotU .. ...,., .. DISTRICT TO THI! COAST COMMUNITY ooli TOWN 1250 Adafl\I """'"' MOTICI 15 HERE8V GIVEN to 1f\f No. A. COrOll• dll Mlr,-C1llt, HUS Cot..l.101! OISTllllC:T CO.It Mt .. Cilltorntt tt6U-' ":tllors ol ll)t •bo .... n.mld t1ec.dln1 Rlthtrd E111 Zll\kon, M.D .. 16'111 NOTICE 1$ HE.REIV OIVE-M lttll C011llntn1tj lll lnol1 Proptrtl~ o • 1114 1111 perlOflt tltYlflQ c:t•lll'I• •G•lllU M•kl111 Cl~lt, H11!1ll"9t011 ,l11ch. (Oii!, • PUDl!c Fl14+1n11 Wiii bt J\Old ,, • C1llfor11!t RMI 111111 lllWll'IM!ll th.._ tlld Jl~f •r• requlrid to lilt T~' rt0ulOI' 1Mtll119 ot tnt Orlnot COVlltY Trust, '°' WUJhlre, Stnt• M«llc• CSullt lrt•(I\• Whn Ille' MC .... rv vouct111l, In '"' bullMU 11 «nduc-ltd by •n 6Wd' ol Educ•llOll to contfi:ltf I... 5001 Cllllornl• 91M06 "'I office ot th• cltrll or lh• oDOv• llldlYldutl. ' petltlOfl and r-J'Mlld•llOM COllC*'l\lt'lt T11t1 builn~i 11 cc.nduc-ttd bY , M1neu •nt !Itel to1.1rt, or to Pt•Mfil 111trn. wtlh 1N ltlctw.rcl l1rt tlnk111 . _ tlle tr1111ter OI' territory rrom ''* S•d· trutl ,,.,... 11ec:111•rr VOU<hari. to tha un. • ll•ltl'T'ltnl wa• iUld Wll1'1 lM dltOIC:k CO(Jlini.rnltv ColltOt; • Dl1!rlc:t to C011lllltfllll 11111161• PtOO«'IJ.., dt t-IQMO •I IN O!Uco of htr tllorMvt Cocmtv Cl•rk of Or•nQ• COlll'TIY Oii Ille COlll (;omm1111l1Y • Colll!I' Db Ir let A CtHfornll ltt•I li•l•t• SHEPHERD. SHEPHERD Mid DUNOAs' OctOW u. ltn Wllerlb't' 11111r tommOll OOUl!d•l'Y wlll lnvttlmtfll Tru•t AtlorMYS •I Lew. '51 loutJI $prl"9 ,,,..,. Dt clltntta. S•I• PVO!lc ""ring wld L.N #Mnltft st~t, $ult1 1100, LOt A.t1Qol11. (:lllfOl'llle, •Ubflthld Or111119 Cout' D1lty l'lllOI,' bf n,10 ·•I tllt llolif' ·of 1:00 •p ,M. Aulitt11t s.crtt•IY Truit• wl\lch Is tht Pl•t• ol butll'lfff ol tl'lt OctODtr ts, •nd NoYtm!Mt 1, 1, U. on tllt lllt d•Y of Otctl'l\O«, 1912. Tlllt •llttmtnt ••• lllff wlll! ul'l4trtl9ntd In •II m•ll•r• f*rt•lllln; 1'13 il41·n 111 ti.. Boaro Room OI' lllt Ot11194 C111,1111Y Cltrk of Orano• 'C01.111tv to IM ltltlt of Kid ~i, wlll\l11 Cou11tv De1>1rtm1111 of Eduutlon, 12SO Nov1mblr 5, 1t13 lour month1 •lltr rrie llr11 publlcollOll PUBUC NOTICE S0!.111'1 Gr1nc1 Avtt111t, S111t• Ant. FttlM ti 11111 nollc:1. C1llloml11 .. All lntw111M PtftO'll wilt P\lbll1Jltd Qrll'IOt Cotti PlllY , Piiot Dlltd·OetOOtr 22, ltn NOT•C• TO, ... -,,....-. bt •llotdtd •II opporlunttv to bf llffrG NO ........ btr. IS 12 1t 19n ~n Cl!Cliil.IA Wl!iST l lt Oii 1111 q1111l1011 or Wlltllwr « not ' ' '-·------Sxtc.utrlx 01 lht Wiii SU,1.ltlOI COUIT 01' lMI lllt ,,,-~ 1ron11W 1110uld Dt ord.,td. PUBLIC NOTICE .or lllt 1bov1 nlmad Ultllllnl STATI 01' CA.Lll'OllNIA FOil Ot!ed IJll1 13111 d•, Of NOVlmbor, IHl,NlltD, SHIPMlltD TMI COUNTY o; OIUlll • ltn. (-----.;_ ______ _ orMI OUMOAI NO. A.·~ a, O. HlthflOll, O.,Ufy l'ICTITIOUS 9USINISI AttrlfNYl at l.IW E.llat• OI' 8A1.ILI J, ,LOUMACNE, • Or111191 County luperlnttlldottl of MA.Ml ITATIMllMT 4SI SMJI ll't'llll StrMI Otct•Md. SCflool1 • , TPll tollowlno 11tr1011 Ii doing tM.lllMIS Suitt 1111 NOTICE II HERE9V Gt'IEN to the Publlallt\d Or•l19• COl•t Otlly PUot 11: .. l .. MftlMo c111tohii. Crtdl10r1 of lllt •OOV. llall'ltd dtctdtnl trtovtmblr lt 21, ,,, \t13 3502.ti 8l.ACICMOllE El.ECTIUC:-co .. 1129 Till (Ill) ~u-tm/ •n.tts. lhill •II Pl'f!Olli hlttlnQ c:\91ms ... l115t -. Gl111ta9le• Ttrr1ct, (OJI• M .... C11tlr, AnWM)'t .... IEsteftill • llw Mld d~t •r• requlNd lo 1111 p f2'27 l'ubll•htd 0••119• COIJI Dilly l'l!lot, :~k~n ~ht flll P«:i':r~"' ,r:."-r'bo lr1 UBUC NOTICE Tltoll'I•• W1rd 81act.mor., 112' Octoblr 21 al'lli HovtmWr 1, e.· lS, tntllltd COl.lrl ot 10 ''""" -· 1: Gl•n1ql1t Ttrrtce, Co.I• ~ C•lll. 1tn -3211·13 • • w 1111• n121 ---...,.°"'::c-::---------lll'lt nte;HMry YOUCMri, to lllt u11-MOTIClf TO C•IOITOlllf Thll bu1lr.e1• ii condllChld b't PUBUC NOnCE e'0~1\Md...,,",..:er.~11~:' .!:fflrL':~: orA~2f;io:=?JD" 0111~11~t!!!~t ·~~: lndlvllllu~~01M1 w Bl•ckmor• •---;;;ror.m;r;;-;;;;.-r.;;;o.---1m1 WUthlr• ai.-.. Loi Alltel••· ' ' ' ·-.. , Thi I I , • Ill.. •ffl FICTITIOUS. IUl.IN•!S C1llfort1l11 90010 Wiii h I tf1 I llOl'•I on, ntll\Cl1 to trtntflt, II bul-, • 1 a •men w11 W NA.M9 STATIMENT ol bulllllst ot 'tht U~l~OMdt 1:1;~ I MCurlly ln1ert•I to PACIF IC NA· COll!llV Cltrk of Orll'IQ• COl.llllV Tl'll !ollowlng ptrMlll 11 doll'l9 b.Jslneii mtlltrs Ptrlllt1lnt to lhe 111111 01 TIONAL SA.NII; OF WASHINGTON, Oclober 23. 1971 Id I II TRUSTEE, lntendld Trtntftrff, WOON 11"·2'011 e1: •• Clae9dtl'I • • lllll 10\lr monll\i •ll•r tddrh1 11 Ul Mlrktl Slrlff Ctllhalls Publlllltd _Orillfl• CGa$I Dtlly Pilot, BR ISTOL ORYOOCIC CO., 291S !hi II<$! publlc1tlon Of lhll llOllCI, WllhlllOIOll "$32 I certeln' r.o0trtv' Odol>lr 75 and NOYtmblr I, I, 15, 81Kon SI., Ntwporl l••ch, C1lll, O•ltcl Ck:ICbtr 22. 1tn • Q«'ltr .. °"' 1,;,.,," or wtllCll I ..,.r..: nn 3U6-13 '2.660 l.OUISE LOUMAGNE ' ,.., --'---...,.------ .Jam•• L.. Ell111d, n1s ancor1 st., Elle<:vtrlx ot '"' wn1 of ;:'"~'-:..'!~/:es ;net tnl'''~'::.,"':r N••PGrt B1K11, C•llf. ~ . lht •ll+W• rt•mtd dtucltnl 111t lnl.nctad Tr•ni leror wr111111 rh'"' ---cPcUB~cLl~C~NcOTI=cCcE~---1 Thi• Dllt1nt•I . .. condllcitd by .,. LOUIS"· A.U~n .,... •• latt PISI •n<I 1'10 loc•lloi\s orr NOTICI: TO ClllEOITOltS lmtl'tldUJ!· ...... L Ell6nd ~r:ri.::,.u.~~ Kid ~rty. art •• follows:' W"ltl'l'S, SUPl~IOlt COUlllT O• :fHe Thie 1111.m~. w•1 llltd ¥11111 11\f ...... Afttella. c1u""'11 •1• Int .• IOI) SI•!" Slrffl, $11111 8lfbllri , STA.Tl: 0, CALll'OltNIA '0Jt Plastic Food? Th11rsday1 Novtfrlbtr 15, 1'113 DAJLY PILOT 2J OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listing• for Wocfnesday, Novombtr 14, 1'73 ' T.l'ltlf QllOlll!Of" OutOl'l'\11 U\o Ulh Minn F.ia 4lt S\o ..i11 $tov wPOlltd llw ttw' NI· Oun~+n o n-1 2h M1111.11 c°' \4tto 1•~ Qll. Aft llol\41 Alloo<lttlOI\ ol £1\lmt to:i.. 21"' M""" Tr 1•Vt IS 1itr1r ~UdUtt Ottlt•,, E,'.~, l.lib )t~ .0"" MOiii! lorn s~ !\lo kMll In ftl bl4' ll'IO Olltr\ Mlle 1•.\o It"-Mell>! Hm U"-I ktO 11111 QVOl1d llY owtt•tf.,.. £1 P1t0 lll/;I 11"' MO!l"I Cp 21 2t Oltll G ''""'le' Of .. tn to El N1,1t tl 10t• 11\11 Mole• Ill "3 "' •I~ ,. e•tfl ot11tr '' ot Ene rey C 11'1 t Moore S. ti .. • · wrld CIO't tl•,tt•ll !qully 01 1th 20\oo Mortn e.r IOIA 11 " W..t<JI lltN.I Tl'lt qtiOI•• fl!;u S&L. l!\\ it"' Morr!'" II I~ ""''"' llonJ do Mt IMIUOt Elhtll A ill\ 1t\O M19 -'''c 1~ lt\lt _._.II Up rtllll N•k\IO, ,,.,.,_ Eutu Ill 1\'o 2YI MO,t_ Cp S.t:W. JI-\ilcw"tw Gown or <.ommlt· li•lft(p 14 · 11 MollOll In ll it imlll9't tl«I' tnd 00 l'IOI Ft l\ l..nt '"° '"" MolOI (I 10 lOVI !inap Tolt reoriMnt •t lutl F•r on El 32 » M) $mlth th l<IMI So Ct t Wl tr"11Ut0ont. Fttm Br ~ \lilt SI Dfilt t'k t it Ct111Gt FtlO LIQ 1'-'-" Ml.lltln'll Ii 16 Slnd Ptp UtCIUSTIU.\l.S Fl!'19rhl s•.t • -II CllYSI ·~ 1'4 I•• AND UTILITllS flt 8'»t11• lf \ll 21)\, NII Lll>t't' t\i t l't •lltd't' I II• A1ll 151 C•Plll ~llt Jl\1 NI MCllCt 1;ii. t~ Std Jt1ol' Ac:lllMI IS\.'1 11 hi M+iK .. ...~ Nt P11et1t 10~ llllh St•lll Km Ad lt\ICrO 1u . "~ hi T1Fi11 1UV, 121'· Nffdt>m '"~ t't. St-" Ale Mtt11I Cp •1.0 1~ flii•to ll'IC 2"'-j"' Newn CO 1 11,i St'.N Brw Alt• A.I• U \. ~4 Fii , ... , 1101 1 NEl'IO GE It) Ill St••-N s Ale~ 811 n 13'111 FOOCI Tw 11"1 It J t.i-11 G Sfi H\4 Sir;. T•t A!lto L.llO ll\>:o 14 For1'1 Ot !Sl~ lt~ l(Oltt In •i.:. l\:o rwo Clo A.lltQ 111'1 1\'ll iv. Frtt H 101'0 11..., Nilltf'll A 21~ jlh Supt' El All9"1 f'ht 11 11 Frink El ,..._ 1-\\ Nltl!.111 9 2f\/i _I YMf Cp Alhfd Tel 11 UV! Fr•n1I• » lO cl51r 10\111 a1 •UV Crp Am ~rtl Si. Jh FtlltflCI tC: If\~ 20Y. WI NIG I~ "Ao TtmHll Am EllM' .fZ'lll SJ\lol Frw .FclE •\) 1 •tll CD 41 0 \111 T•r.•• W Am Ell pf Fu1!4'r H I\~ t -wd H 1'4 1'il Tt t<m ISi 160 l'un-Ste l \/o '" t"11 l>I' 70 71 Ttnntnl Am Fl11tl 11\11 ll!o\i Gt ltw'lll If 13 e1n E• 11\.'r lt\lo Terry Cl'I Am fltth »lo\ lOt• GtrU11-lf~ ll~ l'IQf Mt I~ 2~ TUr1nv Am Furn .$~ S'lro Gt\e 1.-rJ 1V. 1\lo Ml Lt' lt\>:o ltl>lo Tlmt 0C Am Gr!e 31.,., tO\ro Gttew Tr I '"" llv't' M 11"-'"'° Towlt Mt AM!tc !;'f 21 11 ''1 c;.1,0 (;p l l't t •to 11 Catt 11\:o 11\ro Trn Ocen Ml TtltV UV. 1si... G-n Aulm 31 32 l'Nlllt )\It s~ TMIOh Fl'I Am Wtld l \'I 101(, Gn AutoP U U ti NA 3:W. '"'° TrltQ Pro M"'9lilt •~ 31~ Gin Bind ll\:o )114 1111 Cto •Vt 1 • 1 .. 1n 011 "Ptl•CO U\'I It Gn (;ruelt 41'4 •2 10$1 It t4'11o ''"-Ul'll CtPI APS lr1cp ll'h. IJ'h Gnl Shilt 11\ .. 11\\ 11cc1r x)ll'4 Jiiii Union Sol Ar on Mvt l'k 111\ Gold SFd 111'> lt Ptc C.tm 20\lo 10¥o UnArt Th Arrow Hr 1• 16\.1o Grllm ~ 11 lllolo It Lum ll\lo ~ us s.uo.r Atvldt l \'f I~• Grlph Sc; S~t •V• P111 OcOI It'-1' US Tri< lo ,l110 Coll lllh llV. Grty A.CIV I'll 9\'o t UI RIV 15 lll'I Ufllv Fdi Atl GI LI 13\\ 14 Hlth Ch nv. lt YISt C.1 ,. lt\ro veoM l'40 All Slffl 21\o 24~~ H•fln EW 0',~ 14'/• P•y M O,v 11\'f 12\'e Vtntl So'I Auto Trn 12~ 11\.t H&ll Fl'lk 1JV. Ut'o tGll;& W l•:it lt\ro V•n l)yk Btlrd Alo l"' 6'\ Hirn!! Br 2'\lo :tel't. Pet H .. H U It VIII Sl'lct 81lrd Wr 11•• 11'-11111 SqRI II It'll. Petro Lw 9!/t t •'t 91ttorl St 8•kt• 8r U'.~ 11'1• Htr°"' R •V. 1 nllrll'I 2SVt 2•V. VIMO Sy\ ea~er Fe ll JIV. H1tlr1 Sc ''"• ltU 1-r w 1.,. I\~ vlsuel Sc; Btldwn L 8:i.:. 9\lo "l•wtfl Fl '"'-t~O 11\d M• 22'-2)-\lo Vol S'-8tll't' Mil 31 40 Heino MS ••. ,,, ·--P'l'09fll u ltVa W1r f8k 8tn-Rtl 23~ 2t~ Htlttl C 13"" U'I) .N Ctt 91.io 10~ \ff1'h NG 8t$lol!tl F ll\li 2)1h HloOe Co ,,,,. """ tn C•d ,,,. 41/J Wlllmrl I 8ty1e11 1014 11"'° Hll'lll EL )IV. J9V. ~llr (;h l•V. 11 wttden (;04.llllY Cltrk ot •Ortl'\ft CO\lnlY Oii Tiii ta•J) JIMl4t CAI Wisttn 1 C•mtres Etc:., .l'.M THI COUllTY Dfl OAANOE October tt, 1t11 ""_., "' •nc111r1x Pnn'll'fftd Sl'\Opplflll c inttt, cimp11eu, No. A·neM Pia tic aste 1·s bet'ng b k d t d c 1'·"211 ,ubll11'1td Or•~· Cotll DlllY 'Piiot, o.. 1.Q eastrldGt Moll, Sin JOit, CA.. Etlitl ot HELEN BURNS GAFFNEY, s w ro en own 0 pro u e a .'b,1,--"'""'• COlst • .,,, Piiot, Oc•obtr u al\d "'ovtmbff i, 1. is. s73 sout11••11e1 Mlltt, 1-1 • .,.,l'd, cA.. sm. 0tc1•m. protein that could be used as cattle food in -N .... b.7"1 • 1) n 1973 -·-·--3212 13 1t7J ., 3260<73 Cllll R1at, Gtletli, CAI W••ltn' NOTICE ts HEREBY GIVEN to the '.o-0 m ' • ' '. ' • Hlllm•rk. E•tl•n•d• Sllopf)lno C1r1ter. uldUor1 of ll'lt •bOY• lllm«I decedlnl search being . carri~ out in Great-Britain's Uni- 6ekln Cp l\:o )'II. Hoover 2t'IJ JS '.>latl'I C1 '"' t.v. Weig\ WI &entlv Ls 11'1> 1'1h Hunt Mio 11"" n v. R1111r Cp 1 1'h wtlll'l9 M PUBUC NOl'iCE Pl.JBUC NOTICE ~=~·c~1 :i!1' s:::1~":!'.i~:~~ l~' .:l~ O::=n1~v::e r:c:~lf'~ ~"1nt~ versity of Manchester Medical School. Researchers ·--------------Wiii LOI A11Qtl11, CA; Ml Horth VltlDf"'f tlltm, with fllt ntclsurY vouchlrs, Jn have developed a method Of breakt'ng the plaS(t'CS &l'~l Prd 19\it ~ Hy11l C ·~· 1'Mi R&ycm 241 2Sl WOcll pt 6eU Ub ''"' 4l\.'J Hviter c 12 21V. R•Ymd 11 II Wl KvGt 8ibtl Co t'lo 9\.o IMS l11tnl !JV• 1314 RllM Ptc 16'-11\.\ W1IPub 11 eto Orm 14 ltlO. lndl W&I l9l.;o 20\lo R1coo IEq ,,,.,. 3i. W.11• Fd Bio MtdS .U.lh ttVI Ind\ Nlil:I 24'4 ?S'n R111 'El« xl4\4o Ullo WIUtml J OFFICIAL •1tOCE&DINOS 01' THll IOARD Of' IUPlt'/ISORS 0' Blwl., BurtMnk, CA: J611 Hortll Sen lht orllce of flll cl.,k of 111t abov• · -DRANCill COUNTY, CALll'ORMIA ' Ftrntl'ldo Blvd., 8ur1Mnk, CAI lUU lllllllH c111,1rt, or lo or••ent tlltm, with dOWll then feeding the reSUJting OXidation prodUCfS Bird SOnt 241'1 JSI/) 111•0••• 4't. ""' Ren Univ 1011\ 11\.\ Wlllll H Senti ....,.., C&Ulor11la Collm1 II.Old, Rowltnd Heights. CAi the ntctUll"( lfwdltr1, to lht un.. t • · d · f f I · A ~u1er mfflll'IO of th• SO.rd of superttl-'°'• o1 Or•ni1• c;;wnty, c11uor11t1, '°°North 51pu1.,ltd>I Bpull'l•rd. El s.tu11-dtrslgn~ it 419 E••' 171h s''"'· Co"• o m1cro-organ1sms, pro uc1ng a orm O pro e1n. Bl-HI Pw J6 370,, ln$1r Uib 1S'4 1•'t. R111 P!IS Sllo SU wlnn' Sit Blo<k Da Ii U'lt ll'lltl Crp ll 'lt IO Reyn &R 41 421>\ Wint Pt.T BhltC1'1 s 9 t\:o ll'llerc: En It"" 14 .... Rlvll Mf 21-\lo 211'1 Wist PLt 11.0 1Utl11Q ti th• Gov""ll'IO &otrd of lht Ohlrltt1 QOvtrl'lld llr tht ao.rd of do. 0.1 lWl$ CrtM/11• al)ld,. Torr1nc1( Mtsa, C•Uforlllt, "t.fllth I• lllt pl•«;1------------------'------~~---- SUO'f''llt0r1 wes htid N0tttmber 6, 1'1), 11 f.3G A,M. Tlla foUowll'IO llllfl'ltel ~ CA1 lllfl H1,bor BIVd., G1rd1n GrO'<lt, of bullneu of Ille !lndlf'llllnld In ell / 8MACp 191'11 20'& 11'1111'11 Gt IS\.<o lS'i\ ROICI E• :U'IJ :1.t 'NoOd Ltll BOb Ellflt 22\ro 2l Int Alum 4'11< S\'i llobrt Oil 10\lo 11 WOrld Stt btlnQ dl'"ll'll: Ronald W. C••IJl1'1, Chtlr111tn1 O.ttlll I.. Beker, R•IPh A. Olldrldl, CA; l:tfOG &tlltlv.ver • ,81wd.. Downty, m1l11r1 ptrtelnl119 to the "\ti• of R•lptl a. Cllrk and lht Cl1TX. A.bMnl : R. W. ll1tUr1. CA. fhl1 ''aniltr will be c011summ•ltd Kid dtcldtnt, within fOur mfllltlll ellt r A11r""*"t wllh lhl Sltll !Or lllttvpe 1trvk1 I~ r..,...ld. C1rl1ln Countv Oii ot •ttar MOtttn'lbtr 19, lpll •f rt1f l'lrit ouDtlc•!IOll or thtt nollct. ~lnKllon c011lr•tl1 ••• 11w1rdld. Jeronimo Roed 11 IC'*PllCI ln10 TM CO\lr\IY llM offictl' ot Rtild•ll lllfffl, Esq.. Oi!M November 4 ltll roed 1v1t1m. R_k l'l&rd HtrtlHll 11 rHppolnted •1 A.'MStor·Tll CoUtc.tor·TrM1ur., 122~ AlltCIPI Street, $tnl11 8•11Mr1, HUOl'I c118r1.; O.ff~ for SUM,I 89aeh ~l'lltt1y Olll, RIPltlll.ilmtlll of (&Ill Ollltrft'KI Ful'ldi, MUI CA tnd of Murr11y, A.tmslrOl'lll I. V•llCler Admln!itr•lor of the EOlll $qi.Mitt 1t1111ont1 Park •nd· T•l Co111e1or0TrM1t1r1r, 11 tulhorl11C1.· ""'11'111 11 ill $toes>. fff P•clllc Avll'IUf, Cllfhal11, ot 11'11 abovt lllmtd dtctdent on 1nn1111llon to Tu1Un llllhlll'IO d1'trttl, Ex1rtlM or oPllOfl for tddlllon1I ll)&CI WASH. tllA.UL A. MANNA tor Mtnltl HUllll Orug ArluK Progr•m 11 •pprOYld. Propoeld Nit Of BrM· OATED: Mo"9mblr 1, lf73, 'Attonlt I U 0(11111• Unllltd SChool DI••. borid1 .. llPQfO'tlld. Ordlntl\OI No, l11J la lldopled. PACIFIC NATIONAL. 8ANI( H•..,vL• w ldl Tiii Counly (OINl5•l I$ tVll'IOrlud to ·commtnet lfttl •cllOll fot ''"°""" d1111 1n1 OP WASHINGTON, TllUSTEe 41f Ettl ~ri" ~~!...:" C-11Y lot madlc.il ••rvlCH. Wllltr1 mtttert ••• •pPfOWll. HomlOW!ltfl exemp-ay Rlndlll Reetz. E111 tnt• MtM c .. 11 f2'21 11«1, 1111 tltl1'19 11 approvlCI, Allrffl'l'lll'TI tor rtnttl ecwlpn'llflt, II.old Oe~rllnll'TI, lllllf'ld.td Tr1n1ltrM ' Ml-ltfl • w .. ,4,' 11 epprO'<l.i, 8udQll Trtfllftrt ''' 9/"1111911, AFHP Mo, m Al!r..mtnl wtlll the ltANDAL.L. aaaJl, SM. A.tt.M . I Ad IA!" City ot LD* Aleml101 11 -1Pf)l'oved, "'""m'nt Roll Corrtellons ere orenltd. Gllll ltu AlllC .. I Sll'HI r or 111 ltnfflr • · 1o .,,,IOU& co..;n1w cleperlmlflb 1r1 •tttPtld, R~ 911 mone1arv 01111 10 lha s11111 ••11Mor1, CA •l111 .. ~::~ 1 ~5~' Jo.1':,3 O.lly )1:11~;; COUlllY 11 rect!Ytd. Contr1ct tor tduutlorltl lrtlnl1111 ol Mll'llll HHlth Wll'litr• Publl1hld Or111191 cw.i 1)11ly l'llot, r ' • ' • It ippl'f!Wd, (hllnge Orcler to S!MIMI 9Mch 511rklnf ltcllltln I• eporovtd, AQr .. N~ 1S. 1m l-192·13 PUBLl!C NOTICE ", ...... fot •tqul•lllPn of •UrfKI rlOhi. Incl oll n11C1 rtdllly ttmOVtl, Cr•le 111'910lltl 1--''PUiiiiC:iiiinmi;---" I---~~~~,:'~'.'::::'.:~--· I P•rll·Fulltrlon •r• 1pproYtd. Cflr l1!1•11Mn tiid A11«l•l11 •rl lll«ltd· •• El'lljll• ; PUBLIC NOTICE llttf"l tor Ctpl•lrtrio !111tn Storm 1>1'111'1. Anllllll Flntncl•I Sl•ltmtnU W•lml111I., SLP·IH Civic Ctl'lllt Aull10rlly Ind Civic Cenltr Aulhorlly 1r1 •«tpttd. il:l(lht of Wd'f -• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS Conlrtct for 90IK G••!llM Slorm Cll&Mtt ... appr'0¥1d. Ctrt•ln COUfttr ~tr"'" NOTKI 0, .OlllOl.YJION NAM• STATaMl!NT lion t'Olllrtet1 ire compl,l«I. SupervlMlr B11tin errl-11 1111 mwt111g. ll.e$0)ullon Holfet IJ hertb'f given 111111 tha Tiie following pir1011$ ara cior.., reearGlng Slllt BNcfi, Per-. RIC.rt•llonal Ind Hillotltll Ftd lltln 80flll A<I of P•rtl'ltl'll'llp · he1"1lofor1 1•1111"8 btlwff!I b\1$ln~s1 ai· lt11·11 adOpleG, ierppor1ry Dorrowlrio ol mortltl, Counly OI Or1t1gt, Is •11tllorlitd. BESS I. Tl891TS lt'ld LAWR!NCE A. H081E ~EWPORT COlt\PA.MY 1100 Ctrllll'I dl$1rltl ollktrl tra •PtlOlnlld Jn lltu ot tltcllon, H .. r1119 11 Ml on rtct1.1al llA.80111 dolll(I bush'11u lllldtr !flt flrll'I W••I Coat! Hlghwav, H.,....pbr1 Beidl tor 51!1rltl'1 (HllfOI or Clrllln """" wlll'lln ""' Lak• """' •ree. Htflry a-v nema •nd style or SUNSET FIREWOOD-C1Uror11I• nue ' 11 comnltndtd, Atciu.st tor tOl'lteH•Uan Of pllon ol 0Puol11..Sunkl1I AQrkultur1I FEED STORE &. POLE CO. ti 2127 Wllll•m MHS411111tf, J r,. 2DlS 8•yadert Pr•ll'vt Agrtemtl'lt, It r•rld IO Ille Pleilfllllg commfuloll. Contkllrtlllon or 1111 Wtst (Oii! HIOllw•"t, CllY ol Ne wp,orl Ttrr1c.. Hawport 8..Ch. CtUIOl'nll pul'\'.N .. of two tddllloMI O.Uol rffd«I I• eonllnued. Rnolullon or the CllV or 81acll. St•I• OI C•lll'ot'nla. 11111 on Ille '2'60 . lr'tl11t r•n:lll'l9 l1lf MOtqUlto A.btltmtnl Dbtrlct, Is rtc•lved. Thi ltll Grind 111 csar or Slllltrrtbtr, 1t13. .dbMilwd Merk Olson, 110S 1Sth strett Htwp0rl Ju<Y TllPOt'I Oii c:tmptlgn flfl'tl(lnQ, 11 rattrrM 10 Iha County C-..1. Oranee by Iha wlttw:Sr•w•I from Kid firm ot IHCh Callfort1I• '2'60 " ' COurlly PrQ11rn1 Report, Volume JO, 11 rec .. vtd •nll I !tJIOrl 11 tuthorlUd Oii BEU I. Tl881TS. fltl~lltr OllOll 1IOS 15fll Slrfff VOfllfl'lt 11, "' tludy Ofl ,,.. prflPOMd IWll'd el • c:«TITKI lo perform f1le OEDP 5'1d but!MU In t1'll Mvr'9 will be Htwport a ti, (: Ill I nHiO ' Slucty It aun1orltlCI. Nollet ot the A.c11ltnl1 Employ-,t,poc:l1Uon II recel'ltlll. c:onducl9cl tiy LAWRENCE A. tA.BOR, Thtl bullne':.c 11 ~~~.: tiv , llmUld ProPOiM 1Pf)Olntmenl Of cor11111 111111rlc1 oll!Ar• In 11111 or tltttlon, 11 C'Ollllnutd. wllo lllall tit -.iv n1POnllbl1 IOI' pertt1tra/llp Thi 90llrG ldjO\lrMd. W••Uo-(, Sl Johr'I Ill lr•nllCllOllt of Mid . IMllltu., 1111 . WUli•m Mtuengor, Jr. ,.. wllMr•wlfllt Ptf1ner .Jltvlng ltl'mh'!lled Thlt Jt•t1m1nt w11 lllld with t1'll Ol'fllCIAL ,AOCl•DtNOS 0' ri:r'~~ 8c::~uo:.:=~ OP r1lttlon1 t11tr1!n. &EIS I. TltalT$ Wiii CounlV C1.,k of Ore119• C01111tr on •-·-·· COUNTT, CAL....... not Dt rnponllbl• to!' •tlY dlbls or Ocloblf" n. 1t73 ..,...... ,.. ll•D111tlff OI' •IW kind l1TCurrld on or ·1&111• AN, C•tllol'l'l\I 1tt., Sti>ltmlllr 1, '''l. A f"'ilUl•r mwtl119 of tllt lolrG•of Supttvllort flf Or•ntt (;our11y, Ollfornl1, D1tld: NIMlmblr 10, 1tn '"""' Publlsllfd Oref\09 Coast D1l1Y Pllol, NOYtmber 1, 1, 1s, n. 1913 iiii-n •IJO iltfll'l9 fll !ht Gowrnl1111 lkloln:ll of !flt Dtt1rlet1 .,.,,,..ntll DJ lht SOlrd ol BESS I-Tl881Tl kolrYllOI"' wa1 111kl H0"<11mbtr 1, \fJJ. •' t ;JQ A.M. Tiit 1o11owll!Q nemtd mern11et1 MOl•11 SINGll PUBLIC Non-" ~1111 prtsel'll. ROl\lld W, C.loWI, Cri.lrll'lln; 0.vld L.. 8tk.,, ltllpll A. OIHrlclt, A"-""'V •t L•w ~ R•IPh 9. Cltrll ind tllt Cler•. Abunl: R. W. llllllln. • . lllllt I, Ut5 L.111f 9..c11 9\ttcl. COllllC11r11lon or PTOCIOltcl ·~l'ldontnlnl or Thln:ll Slrltt I• cot1llnved. SUClfl'VllOt, ~ .... cauflnll• 11111 NOTICE OF TlU..tl'I IALI 9•111n artlvt$ 11 11'11 tneltlng. P~ c:Mnea-or lont. Dina Polnl •rM. •re PuDtl1htd Ore.nut eo.11 OllU't Piiot L.oU Net 731 ,,....,11:1 btct 111 lh• Pl•M11'19 Commilslon. AITltndtMnl to ""' 1193 l..lnd u .. Novtmt11r 11 1m ~n T.s. M .. """7J El-I (lnltrlm) tTilundnrd Cepl•lrtl\O), 11 tdopttd. V&rltn<w Permit No. · ' SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FIRST HA- V"41\ft Is Cltl'lltd, Nw.mbtr IS. lfll, It Pl'ttW.lmlll Mf11l119 111 Acllon O.y. Jtrnn PUllUC N.._._.. TIONAL I ANK ••duly appolrittcl Trullll M. Ev'"' Ind 81tty"loUndley, •• cornmtl"ld«I. -lt-lullon ol apptttl1tlon for , .,..,_ l.IFMMr the Mllowlne ~•Ibid dtl'l:I or fi-1 l)lc1t1-,.11 ......... OnllNMl.-He. 2114 b .......-. Tht 9otrd .. jtvnMd. fl'ull WILL SELL. AT PUBLIC.A.UCTtON Wljl\lm E. ,, Jotlll "'.C!!.'.,'°"'•T•T·~!',"•'Tss TO THE NIGHEST BIOOEJt FOR CASH Clllfll ol ""' &otrd"'tll i,uPtNlllOl't ..... .... (Pll'f•ble •I tltN ot NII In ltwtul •·c"';...'""":..c_,,:o="=""'---'-"='='=°'__,.,";,'='-'°'--"-w ____ ,_"c'='="'=-:::--:-:::::::=----'-'i Thi to1iow1no Plr'IOlll •1'9 dOlng bull!llSI mor1tY ot ,,,. unn.i st•rn> 011 rlghl, ~ 11: . lltlt 10'\CI lnltrest COllvt'ftd fo •nd now 2UBlJC N01'1CI!: PUBLIC NOTICE THE V.UGHllllG Loe s TE It 111111 bY It urid•r wld Otld of Tru•I :tROfllCAL FISH. tit N. COl•I Hl1111W1y, In Ille property htrelnenw clelcrlDtd: HOTICI 0IMVITl"O SIALIO P'•OPOSALS L1111une aeacn. C11lfornl11 t26$1 TRUSTOR: IH\IESTORS MANA.GE· PUTli;fnl to Sl•tult tnd RtoMllullon NO. 7J.11 ... , •llOOllCI Oii lht '6tll UV of • 8rlaro RIV Hiii, J1'S ~" Vttde MEHT compe11y, I llmllld N11M'1Np ~tmDlt 1tn. by 11141 80lrG c:;I $vt)tt"Vltors ot ""' Co\llllr of °'''""' Ctlll'ot'n!1, !:11t, Cod• Mesi. Callforpll ~ . IEMEFIClA.ltV: OUMOltO co ... 110'\CI Oii tll'f ll'I Ille oflltl Of rt!• COunlY Clerk OI' Wld C1>11111V, onltrl119 flle work: J•nlct Olftl'fOn, 117S Mtw V•rdt , C11lfor11t1 Corpcr1tl011 dtacrlbld In "Id rtlOlulloll, lo wit: TJ11 tOlliln.rctlon or • 1.11nU1ry ,....., c:ollecll119 £111, COf.11 """"· C .. tlornl• '1626 lttcordtd J•nV11ry 13, 1t7l •• 111111', •J'tltm. • CIOl"l*llC w•llr dl1trlbu!I011 l)'lltm, •''"' lmprotttmlflli. lntludlno Thl• butlMSS I• c:onductld b't' • 11e11tr•I No. st&O In book 9511 Plft "° of grHll'IQ, peYintf, c:urtlJ, QUlltr•, •lcltw•lkf. Ind appurttr1tt1l _.k 111. Or1!19f (OUl!ly, 01rl11tr1h(p Offlclal R1tllnl1 111 the Ol'fftl OI tht CtllfOl'lllt, 111 •t more p.1rlltullrly dt1tr!btll In Rts0lullon of lnltlltlon Ho. n.Mi, a,t1n _R1 Hill Rtc:Ol'1ftr ol Ore1191 Cou11ty1 11ld died po...,:i •nd llCIOPI• or Nld 80ln:I on AUQUll 14 1'1l. Thi• •l•ltmenr WI• flied '1111h Ille County ot lru•I dte.ctlbt1 Ill• followlllQ Pl'CIPlrlV:' Fw Furtlltf portlt~•r•, ,11ertne:• 11 lltr~ made • 1tlcl kolvtloll of Cltr-11 or Oran;• Countv on MovtmDtr TM &oulllwt1tertr 60 t.11 of tlw 1nt.,,tlflll No, 7J.tlS. and 10 tnt pleni. proflltt Ind •r•wlllft on 1111 111 11'11 offlc:" 12, Im Hortllffst«ly · a fMt 9f I.al 11•, ot ,,,. lllOld Otcltrtmtnl ol wkl C-11)' ar'ld lh• Ellllltlttf' ot Wort of MWS (ounly, F•tftlf of Tr.ct No. -., "-" on I arv:I to ,,,. •PC1Clllcttlon1 I« lllt Wld --All'~· HOl>ltcl bY Mid hen:ll or J"\lbll$htd Or•noe Coa1t Ot11y Pllflt, m41P rec:Prdtcl In tlOoll. 14 H9fl 11 Suptrvltor• Ind on tll• In 1!11 offltH .. '"' Kid ROid 0toerltn1nl Ind tllll EflCll-NOtttmDtr 15, 22.. 2' •""' O«tmOe, and 12 of Mlst•ll•-· '"""'' •Kor'dl -of Wiii'-tor Mio '-IY· •nd 111 ol Kid "'"" IP!'flllltt, drowl11111 lflll ape<-.. 1t1l· "'7t·n OI' Ol'lllGI Coulltv, C•Hlotnll. EX· ltkatlOM htrt!Ol'orl t.,,,-OVtd Dy tlla 8oerd Of $wtrvll0tt of Kkl Coilntv ··~ CEPTING lM SOUll\Nst.,ly 33t tttl l~flOt•ltd htttll'I •nd ,.._,enc. It lltrlby mtdt ltltroto lor 1 more P;'rlkuMr PUBLIO NOTICF! . lhtreol. ct.crlp!IOll or Kid Work. r -2"4 Stnll Ano A'lfllue. Slnt1 Ant, S.ld ao.r11 Of S\IOl!"tlton hit atttrmllltd •1'111 CllCttr.O 11191 Ille ('Oll*"""ttd .. C11ff«1'1• · work and ll'Jlf)tOVllllllll hll'ttofor• mll\llontd ...... In IPI• oplnlOfl Of' Mid BOlll'll ,ICTITIOUI 1us1111•ss "(If • llrffl tdd""• -common OI' S<.IPW'lltofl, ., --· tlltn IOUI 01' onlkllry ouolk btntfll, and lllt Mid llOilrcl NAMI STATIMllNT dffl911111 I ltlown bO ty ot $yplr\'ISOl'1 .,. ~ !ht ... ""'" of -.. Id work d\OflMblt UflOI\ • cl!llrltt.' For The followl119 Ptr'MMI II doll'IO bvlll'lllS I• 11l111n on .. • f lh. c:::·i:.::.r:-OI' 1111 1>9rtlcul1r dftc:rlptlotl or wl<I 11111rltt, retertnct 11 1'1trlby riltGt to ~ ~"°' ••: ROVER GO<.• CLUe P 0 8 -ss eorrectnui)." 0 1 1u11on or 1r11..,11on Mo. 7:..'4. ' . . ox .,., ,,. ,. , , " '' __ 1 Seid Bo.rd of Juotr•lt0r• his dfltrmlMd lind cltc.!.tr.d 1htl Ml'l•I lllOM• Costa """' Ctllfoml• '262&. 2000 P•r· ne c uy un t u ......, • o bterlng ll'llortSI •• "" r1I• of ,,. ,., ·-•1'111 ultndllll .,,., • ptrlOll •lllO aon. Rd. ~ ,.. Cotti MIM, CA. TMI. by JllllOll ot • bl'NCJI or dtl•ull ntM y .. ,, rrom !ht ..tOf1c1 d•Y Of' Jen~ry ,_, i\IC.Cttdl!'IQ tht Ml'I sapttmbw i.t r.im In the ot>llQ1tlon1 Mcurtd rtltrtb'f, toUowlng 11111r d•'• wlll o. 111ued """"nd" In tht mtnMr tn'lldtd bt tllt "lnl· 1ton.11d f . Hoovtr'. toOO P1rson1 lta tltrtlot<n exetuled •nd dtllv1rod to provtmenl Act or lf11.'' llllllO Plrt s. Ol'llllOI\ 7, °'tilt Slr"'I •nd HloN#lyt; Code No. 1t. COltt '"'"'· C•lll. nw the Undtr'llOlltCI • wtll11n Otcl•r1tl011 ot JM '"'' or C.lltorntl, 111 rtprtltnl •Cl\ a .... IMl'll ot S.S0.00 or more rlmllnlf'lll Thi• bUtlfltM I• conduct~ br 01'1 In· of Dlf1ull tnd Oemtnd lor Slit. •rvl utTPlkl tot JO Gtya •II• t11e·d•t1 of A>Cot"llltW.fh• Wtrrt11t. Seki BOllrd or.Jiil*"· dlvldual , written notlc• 01 bl't&ch •nd ol tlktton vltort hll llttltcl •nd determlntcl to Jla'lt *i ~IOll provlifon1 of Mkl bOtld · Rontld f , Hoowr to uuM 111• ll!ldertlgMd •to M:!I "td P!'l'lldt fot I prtml\lflt Of' S"' OI' tht U!lll'lllUACI prlnCJOtl 11'1 •tcordt!ICI 1111111 lfll ""nlll 1t1ltmellt w11 tlltd wl!h lht COUl'll)I f)l"OJltrly to Mll11'f Mid ot1Ugatton1, and P!"hhleni of kclfon ... of lllf lh'MI• Ind tlil!IWIY• Cod• ol "'' Stal• or C.11· Cltr'k. or Or•nge CO\lllh' on Nov1mbtr lhlrNfllr !ht r.mdtrtl11Md uulld wtd fo<nl" -1,, 1m lloltet Of oruth ancl ot tll'CllOll 10 AU of tPll _.. Jltrl411 Qfd«9cl 111'1111 0. doM &nCli Utflld thl'OUQll In purw. '·1'114 0. ltk'Ot'dtcl July IJ. lP7J •• Wll'. MICA of 11n Act of 11'1* l.1111ti11turt OI' Illa Sl•l• ot C•ltlornl•, detlQntlM ttll "I,,.. PllOllt.Jltd Oru1v1 Co.ii Dally Piiot, No. 131:12 111 boOll: IOIOO P'Ot JU, pr .. ement Acl 01 lflli" bl4119 OIYlilOtl 1 ol tilt S!l"ttlt tllll Hlgllwoya Codt. Hcwtmbi'r 15. tt, 2f 11111 De<tmtltr Of Wld Otflcl•I R.tcOl'dl, ltlt1 alS-1\'11111 I• c:Olllirrntd, • w•rr&l'll, • I end dl11ir•m will be dlllvwld COYlll'ltlll Ol w•rr1111)1, 1xprts1 or lmplltd1 Wll.-i lflt work • COll'lpl"H and aµlld by 111e llOll'd or SupeNllort •nd 6.-'1tn wt-13 Slid Kii w111 bt !Mdt, bUI wllll<M.ll to t11• con1r11etor or hi1 •t1I0111 tor 1111 •I (;Olt or 1111 work, 1iw:tuc111111 •ll 1nci. PUBLIC NOTICE l'Qlrdlllll 1111,, pouaulon, ot en-e11111a1 tltl*!MI wllldl..111 M• tdv•nctcl I lflt COurt1y, 1 ... anr <41.,. COlllrlb!Jllon. cumbl'1nc ... ro · P'Y tllt rtrtMl11l11Q prfn-mtot by tM' ~ty. • . clpal wm ot lt1t (IO .. (s) HCurH by EmPIOY• peymtttb Oflltr lhlf'I tllOfe lt1ml1tcl Jltrtlflo ... cltt11141d In Section JllCTITIOUS IUSINISS wld DMd ot Tru1t, wllll ln!lrnl •• 1m.1 or ""' l..lbO, COM, •r• to lll peld 111 llCCO<'MllCI Wllll th• llm'll OI' lllt... NA.M• 1T.-.TIM•NT lri Midi nCll provldld, MY•llCll· II ltcfl,,. btr;tlnlng 19,...,.,..,.,1 •PPUctDI• to Ill• IYPt or d•UlOctlloft OI' !tie '#Ottlll'llSI Tiit tollOWll'IQ Plf'IOll I• ctolroQ buJIMU •ny, under ,,.. tarme of Miii Qetd 0t mtc111n1t1 employed on ll'lt proltc:I. 11: . ot Tr1111, ~. c111r1111 •l'ld 111pen111 Dvet11mt, SUl\dtrto 11'1d tlotldayl-4!0t l1S1 "''" -ind on.Nit (II>\) • M<: YACHT-UNOl!!ll:WATIOlt 3ERV· of t11t Trvtlff tnd Of !ht h'u11t crNltd lllMS the 1N1lc tlourly r•lt Ofut 11ppllctblt 1n'91QYll' f\IYll'lllllL TM llollcl•ya vPOll ICES, 1007 ()(Mn ,.,,., No. 1, $HI 11r Mid Otld of Tr1111, wllltn .~., ,., .. 1hlll lll ptld .n.u ·bl Ill llollll•Y• rkfllll'llltd In JM c:oUtc.tl,,. Mr· ••ec:h. C:.llfoml• 901..0. Seid NII will be Mid °" Mond•V· IHl'!tlnl qrffmtrtl •Pflllc.obl1 to the Pflrllcu11r uan, e11ulllc1!I011 or lype of work-H•nt o. Albl'tc.ht. 1007 OCM11 Avt .. NOYtl'l'Tbtr 26. 1973 11 11:00 A.M. 111 1'11111 .mploy.i on tllt proltcl. . Ho. 1 S••• '"¢", CoM!ooll1 to7AO. lllf Offlet of T. o. $e!"tlC.• C6m9111y, 'llPI" or •JI c0Utc.lltt1 IMrptnlno llOl'ttmtnl• rtl•tll'll lo ti!• -'C' •1 Mt Thi• t1ull11t1• I• ~lld" by ·•n In· e1nk of Arnerlc• Tower, ont City for1'lt In lllt etortm1111lorltd LAbW (;oGt ••• Oii nit and •v•ll•bl• for ln1PtCtlon cllvldutl aou11v1rd wnt. su111 1110, Or•llllt• 111 tl'lt ottlu ot tf1t Otper!IMl'll of lndV1lrl1I Rtltllona, ONlslOfl of L•bor lt1tl1tla Hant G. Albrttlll Cilltornll · #Id 111-rpi. Tiii• 1t1ttff\H1t •i• tlltd wl!JI 1111 Cou11ty 0.11: Octobtr u. 1913. • Allll'ttlon It cllrtic:ttd to Ste11on 1·1.GIG OI' lllf Sl•l'ldtrd IPtelfletlloM Pf'O\ltdo (1911( °' Or•not County Oii Nov•mbtr SOUTHERN CALIFO.NIA Int .... """'~' or •tPl'tnltcn on ll'le worll. lwry ludl •llP"'lllC. ,.,.., .. 12, 1m FIRST NATIONAL BANK pelcl 111t 1tarv:llrd Wiii• peld to ,,,,....,1ic. ll!llMr lllf r111ut1l10rlt of tt1t 1rtc1e •t •·2'911 11 Mid Trull"' wtitdl ,.. I• 1mtMO'l'td. lnlorm•liflll rtMllW lo employlMl'll OI' .,,,.tic .. Wll P\ltllltl\ld Or•ntt (Mii D•t1Y l'ltot, By T I) Strvlce co. Alltnt 1:1e ol:lttlrltd from the Dlrtctor of 1111 Dlplrt"*"t flf 1nc1111trl•I .. 1111ona, Wht I• Novtmtitr 1S, 22. 2t 111111 DKtmbtr •· 8 riu1h e 8rown ' II* Mml11&1trallvt Olfker of ni, CoUlomlt APPfll\tktlhlp ~"· i .-lf13 · 3411-n .J.11Jiin1·..cr.i,,., •· In K"all'denct w1111 111t provlllOfll or Mellon 1m2 "' Ille i.a--Coclt of tllt --------------Stiiti Of C1lltomlo. !flt loerd or Suotr\'lw. of OrtllGI COIJl'llV Mi tK*'1•111111 111t PUBUC N011CE ,ubl1J!:'1:.. C:0.1t Dolly Pilot lllM!'•I prt'ftllll'IO ,,,, or Wlf" •Pfltklbl• IO 11'11 work. 'Tht , ••• et "' diem H<l'lltmlle I .. IS 1m 3303•73 = ~· ,:.,...~n Anolullon 1H<M on ~It In ttll onlce of ~ Clerk of !tit 'lCTITIOUI 9Ullfllllll , ' ' Prevldl1111 tftlf w .•nd °""1Nllf tlrNt ltl• Mid ,,.....11111t "* of MM NA.Mil tTAT•MllllT PUBIJC NOTICE 111111 -peld IOI' WOtk/119 1111'19 l'l'IOl'I 111111 .. {1111 llovrt Clutlng MV .. c.tlellcler Tht follow!nt Hft(lfl' lf doll'IO lMlflell t\.P·IH c&tr wt\lre ludl WOl'll " """'1'*' "' -of .. ~llllry ~ 'UWICI ".' -·•voo ............ ,, ... _ •ICTITIOUI 9USINISS °' "'" flood or' °",..,. to Ill• or 11"'""1 tnd ..... ,tlmt "' luncleY tilcl IN -... -1"'1 llolld&v .. lo WI!: NW• "f•r'• Otr.i. Mtmotl•I o.v. Jiiiy ..,., L•--~(In .... Ll9llM IMCJI. (tUror~I· HAlll• STATIMINT o.y, vet.,1111 o.v • ..JMflkt0l"tlnt Dor.-1,0 ""''"''"' OtyrJll'Olfldld...t.. fWtfllr, .. _, TM fflllo'Wll'IO perton• are clolng ' ""' ~ pty f(lr ~ fer eecJI elollt·lloW tMY .w11 -"'' .... """ ti.GO 1"0N Victor "·~· rwni. 1041t LIVl!nt bWIMh 11: --tllflt 1~n t•i. fOt Ille c:ratt or )'Wb#ttmtn IMO!Wd. ' Cttnron .d .. t..a11111t -..Ch, c1nron1l1 VElt.SAILLES NliW'°"-f C~PAMY, II '"'" -,,.,.l!dllaq llflOl'I any conlrtc:lor " ""'°"' • contr.ct I• IWetCMll niSl too CtOMV LIM, NIWPOl'I IHdl, 11111 UJIOl'I 1ny 1UOc011tr•~* 111\W him lo NY fl01 JIM 1'1111 lllf 111d tP«lfttcl t•J-. ·Thi• b1111nt" I• condVcted bY '" In-Calltornl• nHO to · tll 1111ortt-.,~ W'Oflll'Mll" •nd fl'ltdlt11k1 ~ W ftltm lt1 lhe •tc.lllltl'I M dlvlclVOI• • 1. Cr.t Store, t00 Ct;M)' lAM1 H..,. mt conlr•ct TJ11 l*llltv l'ot' t1llur• TO "°"""t htrt'Wlllt It •• JPKllltcl In $k),k,I • Vl<tor Emard pOrt 8•tch, Cell!. .. 171$ of !JI• UDor Cod.. Thi• •IO!tfntlll wet fllld wit!! !ht COU!llY 2 • .Join ,,,.,, '°' CellntY laflt. Nn• NOTICE IS HiltlEIY 01VIN rl'T•I "-Coi.lntY of Orlntt Wiii td'I• Mlltd Cl•k .. er.net C!lllnt'/ on Navtmblr POii IHC-1'1. C.Uf. blltl Ill_ aoom JQl, Or•• ,,J:ounty AOml11l1tr11tlon a1,111c11ne. SIS Mor\tl l)'(llfl'IOtl. 1a. 1f7J Thi• IX/llntjl 11 cofld!Ktttl b Olfttrll : SOllll AM,~1, isl 10 1M"llM' tlf 1111-.. M. fll'!.,.l11mtlef' Mr 197t;•et wflld'I • ' -P·lffll P•rllltflll1p.l •--- tllM f!ltr Wiii bl P\lllllt:ly .....,. tflf "* llOud IF\ t1'll IOlrd R_,,., llkl ..... P'iibl1•Jltd 0rt1'tt coatf Dt\ly PllOt, Clltt Stire ~DI/ be fOI' mt (folng rO!~"" llUl>lk ""°""' l'lll'elnbtfOl't dftcrlDtd •rid O!'Olfld NOYtmOtr IS, b. .Jt w .DKfrnblr 11111 al•ltmllll w•• flltd with tilt '" t1'll Mkl rltOlvtlofl, Tht ... Moll ,lll ..... by *"' Clerk of Ille SO.rel II " 1m ,...,.,, COUii... Clerk OI' Orltltt• COl.llllY Oii ,_,,_. .. ., if IKJI D!lll or llt'QllOllll lhell bt Madt tut •nd tullmln.d Oft • form to bt ·---OctoCltl' 29• lm. ittt1•1 o6M!llld •I Counly of 01'9nte R...a o..iertfl'llfll or af Itel~• l119lt1Mr~ c.....,.. PUBLIC NOTICE ,ublllMd Or•not a.If Dilly Piiot, ~=~fL-:"J~r:i.~::k"::'~'°'"'~K\y ~ 'i.:.!~j:J. =: IUl'll•10• COUll:T 0, TMI HOttMllllr 1, lo fJ, 22, tm '31WS •_"",...-:'I OOnd fOr 11'1 •ll'IOl.l!'lf .-1•1• tl\Jl'I _. 9' tlle tftllllnl of the 111111 or OI' SfAJI 0, CAl.ll'Oll'llA flOl • tl)it 191•1 amo\ll'lt fOf' Milc:tl tt1ty wm i«tPI • Clftlrect 11111 """' ""'e. to tt11 '"' COUNTY °' 011.Ue• PUBLIC N:OTJCE WW •or hi !ht ftVOl"0 9' fllt C-fY or ~IKll Mii bid or 1 lhalt NO. ""'*' -, ~1 -lld •nd flltf Ill ll:oorn 1111. Ol"anttt AclfnlflhlrallOll 9ulld -• 511 Nort!I NOTICI ~ NIAii• .OP ,ITITION S"•lt'I kalll'IH'•· lonl• f.M, Cllllol'l'll•, •l Of' btf0f1 """ In tlllt ~ Pfl!Yldtd, l'Ol PI09AT• 0, .Wll.t. ANO FOil ,ICTITIOlll •UtlMltS ~ •• , .. OOOV."*1110noci c:hec:l Of 941\d tl'llfl bt glVWI It VIHlr•nl• tll&t 11\1 LllTT9-S TltTAMlr•TA•Y (9DtlD NAMI tTATIMllNT .,.., wlll enttr lntt • (:Oft!fld If Owtl'Gtcl ttlt Wll'k ancl ""' be c:lllmed .. WAIVIOl Tiit loltowln1 ""'°"' a,.. .... UtuJGlled """"'" II lfl• IUCC:ffllUI •IOOer ~ IO "11Jf lt!to !tit COlltr•cl, E1t•ti'ot 10.t. •• ClAll:K. 0.C:NMd llu1lntt• I•' • Tiit COllll'•c~ lo wl'!Onl~lft • .,,,.,. 11\1)' .. ~· Wiii IN fMl,rlrtcl to hln'llftl NOTICE IS HEll:llV 01\/IN tti.1 N&w,0'11:T PLACE 0, "Ice w!lll 11\1 COllll'Od two tmfY bOlld .. -1•11111111 "!'fOtrNnol bOlllil In fl) •mot,1t1l IL.tlll:T CAL.VIN CL.All:IC. •lld WILFOt.O ASSOCIATES l)Oa Al!Kffo A,,.., $Ulte ""'}to Mt l•t 111111 l°"4t of l1'lt •DOreo.ttt tt'l'IOllllt ot 1119 bld,-•M Ol)t nllttflll A. CLAltlC Mve llltcl fltr'tlll • "llt!Of\ lJS. NIWPCll'l 'affch, Ctllf, f)6'D w ·= Oolld In lh •ri'IOlllll e!Nlll to '\Of 1911 ltllll 1~ " Ille> *''°''' IAIO\ltll lot ,robltt " Wiii Incl for IMU41lltl I, ,.,,.on D1ttlloll1Mnl Co., 20t1 .. II O(.lhf~oi1c1 II P:URTNElt HllllllY GIVIN to lllf llCktets lllot.the t~ of Ltlten 'Ttt.llmtrillrt ,fO lht COiM?I• .~-11111 MIU• ... Ht\llflOl'f IM<h, lldllw ttl•U ,., to lllf c:oyrity et-1111 lfmt of IUCVflng Tiit ctlnlr•c'I • ¢1111 .. ,. llenert CIOnd WOl"!:dl1. j l"tflreftCI to Clllf, t11MO ..... lfltlclt!ltlt ......... lnwrncl .,,. .... CflllrilY ..... ,..Ille tMll..,. tM an. whlcfl I• madt '°" Nmlfl' P'rfk;11•1n, 2. T1lt ProtPl<f.C•lllOl'llll CtrnpaflY. l(tMf 16 •ltMdr -..tlmeted· .. ~IM-"''*•..!n wPilc:ll "Id lft'llllJ!'ll tlllirt 11 Included Iha •M tt'1tt 1t1t tl!'M W~tet of Mtt1ftl Ofle Tower Squ1r1, H1rtforG. C-.ijili .. ..,~ wllldl " fM ttlfmtllCI ~ Of"t.,.lltlOll DI -••rr-........ !tit .. ~ .... "61\ I« H.w.m~ lltdlcvt 061U ,..,,. """ r1Q1111o0f.w1r ~t tflt lllflt t11• etnttK• ,~, ..... !tie •1+'ftt1t •fMll· 27+ 1m ti t :oo •.m.. II 111t.,covrtroorn -a..• ...,.Jlort Dewl~ ~1'Y. -.. "' ... ·1r NY--"" _,, 1M toclltlellli -..---.-,' Of DIPertrMlll-He.-t 9' Mkt ·cwrt-1 1m-A-...O A-. lul .. -IU. ~-·' Ind acir•rn. ... 1-. ""I""" i_ . . -"".... .. 100 Cl'llC Cll'lltt' o..-. W.i, 'In + ~ lff(JI, (Ollf[tt ... "9"'f,: ~:~~;tMf'V" the ,MM ,.. rtllCt •"Y ~ tr! "°' .,,. tlW CllY or kont• ...,,., c1ujorftl,. , 1 • • 1 Tl!Hli i.nines1 11 cOriil\lt.ttd by 1 Gtntrll Wwtlyt env lnf'or'r!'lllllY ln' bid"°' 1t1~t1Ci bj1iw. • • + Dlttd NMmbl'I' 7, 1tn · ~~P lf-Qer.d lhl1.Mlll di'( of $9p!ltl'llltf, 1'7:L . , . ' Wll.Ll~M ••• , •JOMN, All.ol'I DtwlPE c.. ()141,.) , " ' • County Cltr'k.. A C.llfOttllt t!IOl'I -· · W. I SI JoM.•t...Jnty C11rll. of'1111 ~LIWl•.·Ll"MAN • l!Md1 l•YINll. elldttlt , ..,.. ti.ftltlo tltttt or ltlt IOll"O 9'' 4111 Cfellltlllw ltwt. 'TJllt 1111i.mtrti W:ll llltd "tll tlll ,., '""""'ilOt'I Of Or•• Co1111tr. l..ot ........ Cat!Nt'Mf... Counl'f Clf1'11; ol Or•noe (OUMY ., col1tot11la T•h Ctlll $o51JI O¢lnlMt 2t, 1m ' 8y June Alo•""' A"'"'8'( "' C• 1Cllte1tn ''""°' OIPl/tv Pubtlu..d Ot--it'IOO (;oa1t 0.llY ''lot. Pvtlll"*I °''"" Coe1t Diii)' •11ot; Puo11111td 0r11111• COid Oellr Piiot NO'<ltmbtt lJ •net tl.197) JJOG.73 NO'ltmblr •· '· 15, 1m , )121·73 NoYemW 1, 1. u, n . 1•11 3ll4-n 1 l ' ) ' , I Anle1~ican Motors Booth Np 16:W. 111'1 In &kW A ·~ t'h Rolllnt 8 11 It Wrlthl W Brtnco 1 21"'4 2•'li 1111er1ll 1~ 10to RouM co t •/, t~ Xoma C11 Brillkt 111 10 lll:W. l11trS1 Co 10 101h Ro-Fnt l Vi l 'AI V1llo Frt 8i'ocl'I GJ 2t\IJ 2SV:o ti SO VIII 211'1 2t Ruckr Ph UV. 11 Zion• ut" fkOWll ltr S S'IO l~IY t.(;o 10!,'J 10\lo t~t:: ;~. :~ 1::0''~m ;(!Jg~ OTC JO Mo1t Active Burl'll) SI ''"" 2•¥-Johns EF 1l\lo ""' Stoc:k vo•-•kl AlkM Cllf. Butler M •} •• .Joslvn M lS-\lo lt'I» R-_nkOrgn A.O ,.,,BOO 10'h I~ ""' CllWI Stt 27V. 21 JusMl;I 1'1 2J 1l"'-AmE•P 113,000 )J'llo J:l't.-t>,, S!T~ Tag_ 241(, lS Ktlltr St 16'11 1614 A.,.icoE,tlt M 11,700 s sv.-~. ..........,, Ml u 111 1s k1t~ar c 4.,,. 4:\.o Pl!n...Othh 78,<IOO ,,,. 111>-"• C.phart 7o,i, 1~ ir.1,,.,.n (; 14 14:r,:. GovtEmpl~ l11i 1~,300 ,....,.. •1'1o-1\lo C.ymen 3\oo 3"¥1 Klt•ll T-S'-• T•l'll'llto ISl'I ' 76,lOG I\\ It.-''• ~11Mlg Rl 111>\ 19\.'l 1t1nv Ser 11 ll'h Oi1Slltle p n,soo 1'1r 7~ ~i tn 'O'IPS U:V. IS'lo Ken COf\11 I 9 Cont1 Get1lnt 10,MO S2~ Sn'I-31/t enlrn 0 21 23:\lo Ir.lull f\J 16111 17'1. An1Wu1 BuKh ,9,IOO. J6~ 31~ 2\'- Shows Big Profit DETROIT .(AP) Arn· erican MotorS Corp., the nation's fourth largest ;auto maker, announced Wedliesday that it has.completed Its most profitable fiscal year in mo.re than a decad~ ' i Tax Field Makes Move The Employmtnl Tu Field Office of th<! Departmeot of Human Resources DevelOtr ment will move on Friday, to its new offlce,,1n the.state Building in Santa Ana 'Civic Center. - This office ls the source of employer tu information, audits and tax collectl<ios covering State unemploymeilt· disability insurance. and State Income Tax Withholding. The new address ,a n ·d telephooe nu m b e r of the employment tax office. js 28 Civic C.enter Plaza, Rooril 755, Phone 714, 55M20l FS Cnll 16VI Iii,. 1!:1y Dtl• • •'h O.ttGn ((I t1,500 3SVJ ~'h-3\''> \. Chmp pt 11 12""4 ir.1.,.1 Fb U\lo IJ'lt The company claimed its Cll&nc• "' 11v. 11"' Key c;;uu '"" 1 NASO VOiume Tod•r 1901 ooo Cl'l&nl Co S'l'l 6 1t1v1t Int 21'11. 26'11 Adv1r1cri; 20I ' ' best perfonnance since 1960 ct1tm CP u 2'VJ KMS Ind s:i. s~ eet11ne1 112• for "-12 rn011ths that ended Chi Br 1" 'M\IJ 100 l<n•,.. Vt 11'1:1 1>v. un·chaii9td 1 .SOJ I.lie (hrl1 ~~HI V. 16' Knudi 1J 1J¥.o Totll 2 tl9' Se t 30 · · ed Cllrni Ul XI ll'lt ICogtr Pr 19't. 20Yo ' • . p . as tt cont1nu to c111i u A XIV. '31 Krueger '"" 10 Gai11era atrrl Lo1ert Te bound from the financial ~l:~o1r. Mt 2:,,.,. 1:"" ~~I: ~I ~'!' 3j'-" . 0•1M1Rs bardships of the last d,ec",.e· c1,,, "rr1,, 1i.~ 1111. u11c1 Ptt nfl nv. 1 NoEu•Oil 10b · l'>lot 1v. VP 21.1 ~ (;low (;rp I'll. 9'i• Lll'IC•tl t •t. 1o 2 Amlllls$dr Go-5\\+ ~ UI> 16.7 AMC said it earned $44 5 Cob• Lib 21 » Linc• 1sVJ 11y, l Lvnoen Tr MP 11~ + 1 VP 11.8 · c:otlurn O It 16'11. u.win Pr 21"1 21 t Combtr1k1 ."II 36\'lt 3~ Up 11.s million in the fiscal year on Cot1C u. 11'11. ,."" uw11r c »'h la s GRT Corl)Ofa• 1v. .. 10 up ,,,, f $ COmm (;t 2JV. 2•V1 Uiy Boy 210,, 12\1> 6 FlylriQ Olttnd )V•.. \IJ Up 10 .• record sales o 1.7 ,billion. cm1 s11ro 32v. l4 u~r Nti 10 11 1 e1rne1Mc1 w11 4l•+ •• uo . e.• I th · J2 lhs Cw MtG1 21'1o 221-\ uo,.et Pl 11V. U I AQMtl [ncorp 1411.t 1 U1> 7.S n e preVIOUS DlOD , Cmwn P 21~ 2•l; Llbt'1't' H 1\'I 2~ 9 EntrQv Cv utl 11 + 'Ill Up 7.3 the fl"nn made $16 5 nu'll!Dl1. Cptr Auto u•,. U\.t Lii Cllmp ·~· ' 10 S~il Uitsil'IQ S'M t 1, UP 1.1 · Cptrvl1 l•h \S'IJ Limtd S1r 1t•IJ 11' 11 F•n~cGtp .lZ 6 + '• U1> 6.1 0,n revenues of fl.4 billion. Conn Fcl 16'11 11 Linc Bdsl ,,,. s"" i2 Coquonaou Cp ~ 2s + 1v. Up •.4 CM Ptpr 211/o tt Lion CIS& JV. 2~ ll Energy COllW l ih+ VI Vd 6.l AMC ~k advantage of past eonsu wt 12v. 2114 ll!.~ ,..,.11 1• w.s11 sci ln(ls 1v.+ ~ up •·' I I · --..!:: Cordlt Co $4 se--nt S\v-101,1, 1\\ n Equ!lyOll .40 19Vo+ \\fa Up 1.0 osses to c aun tax u~ts coui1r1s 11 11~ tfll'Qv FDl'3 139 11> winnsston .ss 13\1•-+ ''• Up 6.o totalln $41 5 rnllli ~-\ CIOll Co 21 2l,,. Otwi (;o j() SIV. 11 Survlv11I Ttlwl ll\>O+ >, Up S.• g · Ofl, lU<:l Clulch R 1t9 l'.lo MOerml 13~ 14~ 11 Elurrll lndUstr •It+ '" UO S.7 brings net earnings for the C11r1 Non t•YJ ''"" ~c1 Gts 11~ 14'A 11 c11M1<o1R• 1.vo 1ev.+ 1 up s.1 Omsn Oil t'h •~ ""°I R11y l\ro , ' LOSllRS year ·to '88 million. 0.111 1nu tJ'll< ""' Mt 1c11 " ts 1 01 .. E•rth $(1 1v.-111, Oii 26.i The Ye. ar's earnm· gs, m· • o.n1y M 1:w. ,.,., Merine c 28'4 tt'4 1 PlonrH1arc1 111 1s-,,,. . oi1 22.2 O.rl Oro Sf• 6'.<o Merit Frt U\O iS\lo J Morgn M .Otb I -1 011 20.0 Cl'"''"" the tax -••ts, 0.la Gen Ul'l l6V, Mt•-Tw 11 11~ 4 Etttlro Nlil:lll tor-2'h Off 11.7 UUU1f5> J.;1t:W Ott• 100 uv, 13'11. Mery ltV 24 lS s Ellronlt ,.,., t -2 011' 11.2 amount to $3.18 a share. The 8:fi~ : 2~ 2lvi :0;.rc: l~~ tt~ i ~.~~~It :~ 1i.,.::' ~¥: g:: ~~:i AM.C directors .voted to omit Delo.lb AR •?-43 . MCMiUll • 11 1S'll I Stt•k& N•R' 20 ~' Oft It.I Cel1'1i lnt~ S S'll McOuey IS.,,. 14\1, 9 COu$1MPrO ,IS 11 -l 'h ott 1•.l payment of the dividend for o.•u•• c ·3S\>\ :Mv. ~•1ur ''"" 1J1>1o 10 S111Ctr .. 1 Oyne '"---1 ~,, Pf' 16.? Oltm Cr1 U 11Vt Meckm 12\.<o 13 11 Wl .... llk t \lo-ll• OH 15.9 the period ending Dec. 3}, Ol•m HCI 1-" flt MIOitrn ,71') 5tl'I 11-lt PM Inc ,12 T)~ 21') Oft ·~S.6 AMC I.st declared a divl'dend 01vt$ Sti 3\IJ t \IJ Mtrclll!C 14 U \>'I" I) Urll'IRundl ,JI I\/>-l'h Olf IS,0 Dotu\11 10 111'1t Mtrvt 1J )I 14 Cl'l&I MIGA. ,S1 16 -21'. Oii 14.1 On !'ts co.......,nn stock 10· Dollr Gin 6'19 61oio NllY'r Fr 21\.'t 12 li 8•11~ Mfg .02d 3' -•Vt ott 14,l ~·••-OOl'ltlds !S 2SV, MldTI• C 16 16'11o It H'l'Cl•o Culture t -I Ott •l•.l September 1965, the firm said. Doreh G' 6¥1 '"-M!lttr iiS ll'lt 14 17 Myerl lllCI\ .10 41/r-ll. OU f4,J Dow JO/II f2 """ llliper S2 " II Sttak .. ll'IW ' 3 • -'h ()ti tt.3 The finn's strong position Doyle 08 10'111 Ill(, tii GM i.~ 20v. 1t Tipperarv Ct 1 -1 0t1 14.J was reflected .in an an- nouncement that it wijl make I MUTUAL FUNDS l profit-sharing payments to United Auto Workers 1•--------------------..1 members for the first t'ime since the pian was negotiated in the 1960s. EAtON & KIYSTONll: SPtc•I ,7.2t 27.J4 MOWARO: ·cust ,, 11.lt lt.16 llAID GR~: 811n Fd t .SS 10.U C1r11 81 1t.IS 21.42 Acl Gw 4,20 t ,611 Gwtn F 11.03 1t.24 Cust 1M t.:tt 9.20 Ad llK J.SJ J.11 llltmt t .11 '·" Cull Kl 7,11 7.90 Ad In~ 7.17 1.t.2 SDKU F J,SQ 1.20 Cuit kl s.a •.• Cm Ctp 4.5' .... $lei; Fd 12.U 13.•I Clilt $1 llAtU.SS lllC Fd8 S.19 •. 4S EOtE so 20.s.120.St c111t SJ: 10." 11.10 sw u~ '·"' s.oe Home Sales Surpass .......,.y Eortt GI 1t.111J.14 £°"'1 Si J.S7 ,.30 ll:ClllltlTY l"OS: November 14, 1973 Eflu11 Tr\ U.14 . . . po lo 4,5' .tt ECIVltl l.4' 3.11 14d AM Emtrg l.W 1.11 Pi:ll•rs 3.60 3.90 '"""' •.Sl 1:1J Aclttlstr 4.35 t.7, El'llrtY 11.• u.• Kn it-• S.9' I.SI Ullr• F •.• 2 1,ti Mtna Fd 1.4» 8.13 Fah'fld I.ft t.SI Knkr Giii 7,tl I.QI llLICTEO fOS: Attnt> 111 13.tl 14 ... Fm Burt t.al t.tl L.lldmrk 6.15 J.tl Am Sl'lr 7.78 7.11 Aluturt t,JS t.3S "" Rib 1.n ... L.11'1• Fd S.21 s.u 01111> Fd 9.40 '·'° . AGE Fd 4,1S 4.15 IJIOILITY LIX OltOV•: · spr $tori 12.13 12.13 AUtl•ll 12.45 13.3' GltOUfl: Cp L.tClr n .ss U.02 S.il\lntl 10.u 11.0 AIPhl Fd 12.0113.11 8nd <leD I.ti 1.1~ Grwlll t .OS •·'' Stlltrr F . Amttd F 4.9' S.)I (;•p!al 11.14 1?,11 RllvtJI ll.U 14." 1111.11 ll.ft Am 81111'1 '·'' 10.6' Conlr• t.S6 ••• llbl't' Fd &.t3 S.3' SMAll:EMLD Gflfl ..i Am Owi 8.16 .... Ctt SSK 1.21 •.. tUI lnltt 1.14 '·'° comtt l .SS •J •• Huntington Record New home sales'lil-ilun:... months with September tington Beach have soared to recording the highes t one- a new anni.Jal record with two month total of 229 homes sold. Am Eqly '·"' S.OI Oest •."6 ,,, ~il'IC ~ •1.15 7.ff Ellhpr s.1• 4'.lQ AM •XP.ll5S Ene• ,,Ol ••• LOOMI Fltt ,d •.03 "'AO PUNDS : Ev1r1t 11,3112 ..... SAYl.ll I Herbr J.St Ill!! C.tttl 7,15 7.81 FunG 1S.1i 1t.S7 Ced DY IS.JI 13.21 lAtll I.. 1.S2 1.13 lntom 1.11 9.tl Puritn 9,H 10.1' Muf\IOI 14.6t u . ., '-" Fd 1.lt I.Ml lnntm 7.11 I.Sol S.ltm I' l.90 t.26 LOflD Al9: -INIAMOH 'DS: Slllcl 7.S2 1.12 Tr111C1 22.a2,.01 All'll1t t.,j() 1.~ APorc 11.•1~0.1t Slot-,,,. 7.93 ,INAMCIAL Am 8u• 2.'IO 3.1• ln<om 11.0S 11.tl Am GrtJI S,40 S.90 PflOGlllAMS: Bnd dlb 1·"' 10 ... ln'fttl 1.17 10.24 months of 'the . Year still re-Back credits the resale maining value of Htmtington Beach After io nw.mths 1 s4c. new homes -a 15 to 20 percent single family~ have~ increase . e~ery year .-for sold in the beach city, ac--the con~mg boom m new Am ln,11'1 S.01 S.tl Fin 01n ,.ll 4,21 L1>!llerll 1 ,26 11.11 Sil °""' 11.0111.01 ""'1,....,, s.11 s.11 Fiii Ind 4.11 (,ii Lu0111 In .)SI0.21 Sldt Fd .... 1,S2 Am Mut 7.9S 8 ... Fin Inc S.17 s.11 ""'Mtro l.1S .t.10 SIOMA FUNDS: Arn~! Gr 2.IS 2.» V111t S.tQ S.'IO MASS CO; . OD 511r 111 , .. AMCNOlll lstFCI V• 11.211J,2S l'rMm 1.07 1.M lnw 10:09 11AJ GlllOUP: JlllllST lllllP F 117 tO. Tnt JS6 1.26 C.0111 4.tt (.'2 INVlSTOlllS: Milt ~ 11:1s 12: .. v1n1ur a:IQ 1.11 Fl'ld ll'IV 7.MJ 1.11 Oise Fd •.•S ,,.., MASS FNCL! Smltll 8 10.JS 10.25 -~~-N~W•T ~~a---cording to Bill Back, the city's home building. economic development direct- tor. That surpasses the old one year mark of 1,328 homes so,ld during the boom year of 1969. Back says the city has led Orange County in new home sales each of the past four . . VWJ1unting ' ' Audi Foxes For Defect lncom 7.Ql 1.10 lt1com 1.19 l .M MIG 11M14~ SO GtnF 1243130? Vtl'l!Ur l.4Z t.2J Slot-F 7.U I.ts MlO 1l'.os1.'.21 Sw1t lntt 1"10 ,· .. W• Motl 11.6S 12.77 Ill Mulll 1.21 1,21 MFD IZ.IS 14.IM Sw lfl'I G 6:06 'l' Allro11 3.13 4.lt l'tm lltr tA1 9.41 MCO 14.SflS,IO SOwr In 11.20u, $ Audax F 7.4 8.1' l'OlllUM OllOV': Mttt1 lw 2.00 J.00 SDtttr• t .ti ..,. A.XI • 100 flld 10 ... 110.42 ~llltr 10.•s 10.d SlP lnO •.• , •. ,1~ HOUGHTON. 101 Frd 8,17 I.II Mid Am• S.t3 s.n STATE •NO GllPl fund A 4.'4 S.07 Colum 1.17 1:21 Mony Fd 10 70 11 .. Com Fd t IQ S.1$ Fund a t.91 7.SI ll Fund •. as b.05 MSB Fd 1ios1ios OIWSll s"11 51S l~~-$(1 !·~} :·e Fdl'l~r •.•S 4.tl Mii BnG .:,. 10:21 Pl'OQr• s:oo s: •• BLC Glh 11'1111'1• FOUNDERS MIF Fd 7.4! •.os 51 Fr Gr '·'' ol.11 Bll:llOI\ 11'2111"21 GROU,. MI F Gro t .2l •.S1 St Fr Inc 1,89 I.It 6t~rot 1'1~ 7"31 Gr,.lh • S1J 111 MuOm QI 4.70 S.11 Sftte Sir •S.4l•J,IO g-...t..1 to the Dally Pilot a . . I ' . MuOrn rn In 9" STEADMAN FOS· ,,_.... a:m Wt i:l; ·H~ ,,"':..'r"'1 1~:21 1::!~ ~~' SllTrs 1s:,.141s'.lt Am tl'\CI 3.04 1.cM LOS ANGELES -Pie N 8e•con 101110.a F Spetil 11jl"03 ..... u r1 1. 1." Ano Fd 1.11 1.11 Save Corp. a Call.fomt'a -t•'! lltrli,511r l.15 , JI four14 F I , ,·11 Ntl 1""11 t .97 '·'' t1111tt1 1.JI 1.31 ....... Bondslk i s1 itt Jlll:AHll;l.IM • . NAT SEC FDS: Oteal'I 1.11 1.11 store-chain, announced an ac-Bolt Fdn 9't0 10"21 0111ou,· 8•t1nc 1.1s •.u STEIN •OE Fos: celerated expan!ion .program t~= l:u s:n g~t,.c~, ~·t I·~ ~1~nsr t!: ~Jl ~~~~ ::U::H 1tlO,Qt 10,Qt Fr •ntm i: .. 2'02 Pl'et Slk 1.18 6.7 .. Slotk 14,911'.'9 under which.five new · stores CA.I.YIN FUNDS: usG ... s •.11 1o:n ll'ICom •.•z s.os . are being opened· durm· g the 81.111. I'd 1t.)41s.s2 uuuue '·"' ,,92 ~tot~11sr •.» ,'·,", s~~~~u',,7 ,1, con Fd 11.Sltl.M R11 C•P •.•S s.10 ••'w• ••• '·'1 · 1neom In 9"01 flv ee'-per'1od ending Nov 01 .. Sl'lr ,.,. 1.11 Rt Eql't' 4.11 • SI LI': ' ' . • e-w L • Nttwd .Sl10.4t Fkl LIEQ 11.1412:17 Equi1y l•.J•ll.tt T~l'I~ :·~ t~ 31) NY Vf!1 10 ... 12.0l'.I RI Mt dp I.ft t.'1 Grwth 10,St 11.U ••. ,...,, F 10·02 IQ 9S · CG Fuild '·" I0.•9 FUNDS INC, Sidi 11,1111.11 ..,. · • Presktent Arthur Fi'ankel ~P "l'r111 11 .. 1 n .47 oAou': • NEA Mt .1• •·:t s~ero G •·" 1.0. Pie N Save Expanding said the five-week program, cM,.lNs~~3·90 u .i• f,:'; · lfl :·:JI:~:"' I:~ 1:'2 t.:p11: J:~ t: ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS · a rec 0 rd lor ~-company, 'UNOS: 1ndu1 1r 10)111'.1s Newton 1J.ss t•.•t Tow.r c 111 10 , Ule' 8•111i;d 10.Sl 11,2? Piiot , 10 1 SJ NW Pt" 1,,11 IJ.fl Tr111 Ctl> I.ti 9,00 N.J.(AP) -Volkswagen of. will add 8.51000 square feet ~ti: l;!;'l~ 8t'T.IP ,tu·:~ Wic~1::~ il:U;!:U l= E~ l':~~l::H Amen' ca announced it is ask-of selling space and bring the Eq1y Gr 1.ts 8.S& Gen Set .:,. •·• Nt,1 1"1tr 11,211s.t1 ~ c,•, -•,.•"1-~.,", Eql't' Pr ),l)t 3.32 OltOUP SIC: om.-_,ti I.CJ> ovm . • •••• l·ng a•-·t 13 000 owners of ·~-' nwnber ol ~-In Fnd •m 1.14 1.tt API• F s.21 s.7(1 o Nel1 td 1t" 11 .... un111td 1.n t.10 l.IVU ' wwu i»Wl~;:I G(W\h ''·'' S.61 Bal Fnd 7.tll l .O'I Ont Wltl 1•.I' 16,,7 uu'•'""'•••'•·····",,," .. Audi Foxes to return the Cirs oper&Uon tO 35. 'n1C first is l11com •. ij '-41 Com S01 IO.S111.'6 Ol'l'INirM ,O· I h bol II in Full • to Spt(I 1.tol 1.01 Gtll FAm 4,Jl 4.62 Op Alm t9 .. 10t2 (;ROUI': to their dea ers to ave ts a un er n. -Y1n1ur t .OJ '·'' Grlh 1nd 20.Js N.JS op ,-1111 .-,, ,-11 B•cl s '" OJ o! On rear Wheel backing plates CNASE Gu.rd 22.zt22.n 00 Tm. ,·,, >'n Neu in,, ~11 u -,?~T':; IG HAMii.TOM ORI'· ~c $tc 10:,111:31 ~1~!f" :~l ~~, Checke4. ~· -D-on~-t Have' t' F'ro11 Cp tt~ s:to Gl"lll'l:l tf>' i,q P•~~'W.v :·=·~·~UNITED l'UNOS: A spokesman said the ar-ShTr B5 7.21 7.'IO I ,....,h •. )I 6.'° PotlU$ fl ... s"36 Accum 1.01 1,'9 ~ $CIKl 6.tt f.06 ntom t.19 •.17 l'>l nn Mt 2·..., · Bnd Fd 7,16 l,10 fected cars w ere manufa~ Chim l"d 10.u 11 ,., H1r111111 9.13 •.&J ,.~,. so •91 i•i C0111 ~· t.1• 10.10 lured bet'f'een F e bruary :.-.1 COLONIAL Ht .. ,rt~v •.•••.• s PllU• Fd 6t1 ,·,, COlll f'I( ,•.,ss 1g,t!. """ A Id ? FUMOS: -.. '·" 1,19 l'll.0111\M oi· . tll(om l. 'l•,r, July Of •~-year. ny ea. COtlver t.1'10.~ n::ra •, ... 11 ·~ C•t!ll 3t1 314 Sel'"' t.it 1, 1 UU:I EQU!tf ).21 I.SI HO ge . '·"" ln<om 1'11 t's2 Vtnf(I •.20 .. ,. .... i'•bl rl edd Fund 10l011 2t ••<• u . lt.'3 Pllorr" 1'n 1'47 USAAC• •.in!·" iu' UDSU w e g US \lr• Grwtll , ,;,, .: .. :mdl'!._~P J•'t 10.JO Pi"' St tt'4. t'tt US GvtS 10,0110.1• Ing I•· loading of the Cars · lncom t .7310.13 mp....,. ,XI 1.9' l'ln Trt f7o " VALUl LINI FOSr ne A recreational vehicle v1ntu, !·" !·,~ 1rw;: •o•m 1t.•21i.1t l'IONllR 1'0· ... '111 Lnt s.•1 s]" at the port In G.nnany a~ shell manufacturer com· COh,..,., G 1 ·°'' °' lllCI FAm ,, .. 3,11 P• ' '~ '" \111 lnc 4,,9 •. · -Y-COMMONWLTN . llllt(IOll xt.$2 t.11 ,.::: Ff u'tt flt Lett Glh 6,J4 •• i plied lateral forces to the rear plained to Irvine police TRUSTi 111 rn ... u io.•111.'6 l'1onr 11 10·,.J,·10 vv11 ~ 3.01 3.n wheels which may have ex· -..-..18y th a t e:>meone ~ ' B l;!f l·ll :~:-~ i 1t:::f 1::~ PllMd 9:3s io:n J:~111s: tended Or Stretched th. •••k-l""'9U Comt or '·" 1'.o. •~w Guiel 1.r1 1.U :~·,c~111io~~~ 11.31 111ttttt 6.tt 7.YI l.fC'\; t ried to burglarize his of· com" 8d •.11 1.to :nw lndlt l.lt .. , Gtw111 u 9i 1i;1 Yl Com 1.11 ,,., ing plate mounting boJts, caus· • .fice, . apparently seekin g ~~Fd t!! ~:~ .~'Ve:'i\' 10·•91 1.11 N• ••• u :,, 11'.' v'J:,~ !:l: !:1! l'ng ·•-m to lose their proper COlll '"' 11.0011.JO COUNSEL ,::w •"'" 9·'6 ., ..... Vll\Qrll 1,)0 1.41 iuc the company's funds . CM1n~"" s:p sl.l C11>1m 01 llJ 0 11 '·" • v1t11110t0 •OS torque'" the spokesman said· R i.... UMM1 1r1 1)1 1:11 C•11j1 1,, I'! o ?:!:0vloc •.1>4 4·12 v111iM 1 3:M ,:;t Andrew o~, owner of ~try c 1z.u 11.12 C•P•t Sh 1 (U ..-.ovd Gt '·" '·" ""'!Gt-u1 tr! He said owners ol the af-th Stockl nd c ..,. °'" e.u '·" 11rtv1s1 OllOU'! ~u1N~,: 10.•11.00 wen, or J.JI '·, fectcd cars may experienc.e e a om,pany, :fl Div !·4l s.t1 :81 ~h t'~ "' F!JNos· W•sh Mu io,t1 n.-23.12 Barranca Road, said .. r~ t.-1. 1:16 IOI"" 0 4:11 ~:1': COll<ltl ,. 10 •• , u ... ~n.~~ I0.'2 a .shimmy In the rear wheell. whoever tried to pick the LAWAllll• Mu11111 •·• 11. , liau 1v 1.n t.• OltOUI':· "E " nt lhl-OU': Slock 1'.)llJl.02 Cito 14.r.11,lt I••• Jl, .. 2l.6f veo u no appare _ ",,. toqk 00 tht-doc:n:.J~iled. R!<•t •·!"I·" Se1«t t ,3110.ot 0t•t11 10.&1 11.ss 1,,.11 •." 1o.o1 my ts felt, owners are urged al'i....•gh they did darni ge o;iw ~ t. 1 ·" v•r Pa, "'' •.111 •ftt t.• 1.11 ,,..,..-1111 it.tt to visit ·their deale"'S to have w~u oe~':ri J:rjJ:!! :n; ::·~ ••.n '·31 ~i;,, F ;::; l:'.~l t~::;• ,f: n'iO bol heck•"" if, e•C• •.S •.;c Gf,.111 t,Oll '·* fl.VOJtO I" '·n l~ Wtlt!V 11'11 n·IO rear 'wheel plate ts c C\1 ""'·estioned a t ou t ~.1. 11 11·• u .•1 1ntom · !~! 4.)1 11:;::.• ,t·,. wtt1'•\ ~;q; 11;42 for proper torque-;" the "(U 1 '""" Dllllv',t.s o"ft11 t .IO ~~~: k'.: u :i: 1ifi ll1-c I• .:. Ui w""""'•-' IPl.10!» '1':11·" Spokesman oold. ble susotets. Rok~ tot~ f:Qtyl ,. 'l.tt 1\.n Is"• ,lld ''·r. tJ.,. Wik llllf_ '·'' t,)t Wt" Ind ,;,, ,_ ) -pOUce he had none In E11~ Fe1 ... •·1• t"J ,~ 1. • 1.i. kfiui '' 1.• 1.n w111d Gr':J .,. •re said ncctssary replace-mind1 but nottd he laid :-.,,;:.. 1 J;1l:I! jen! ,: ,'·U •':= ~~o't• igt;t.tt Wi\('Ol'll • -"It --t and proper torquing ''"' c.~1 .a.r, 11.21 JH111 Qth t:u i.11 t111r lhv 11.~ 1!..a l l"ltf . -,,, .,..,., O(f 25 CmpJoyes last week. I&! MU 1 t tti J111n !oli 7 •l 1.6J &tl•l'C 1JM ;,. •·t•-dl would t.akc abo.ut 30 minutes. .._ ___________ _, E•o11 Gr ,,.,. 1.J1 JOlln•tn 21.,> JJ.•> COi"\ 10.2• 10.t• ,.._,,,11.oie. I I • I ' • ) 22 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, No¥ember 15, 1971 PllVATE TRUST FINIS AVAILABLE Cost of Gold Up FOR MA&. ISTATI LOANS 111 l llld TRUST Of.EDS tl.MJG Ta tno.000 UP TO '°"' UWl3 c.11 TflUST DEED COUATEIW. h1 London T1~ade MWOftl IQUIT't' ntNDI ~c.ttler S20 Nt!..-po11 Ctn1t1 Drl,.. ~...._,C.llf.(714)~ YOU CANNOT EVALUATE A MEDICINE IY ITS LOOKS • . ' - LONDON (UPll The price of gold sank $1 an oWlt.'C in Zurich today. but buyers enterOO. the market in London and pushed the free market cost QI the metal up ~Y $1.25 after the biggest one-day decline in live years Wt.>d- nesday. London traders said the market today v.·as even more active than Wednesday, but today it was marked by buying. '''here the previous day most of the action was ~, TERRY GRANT, R.Ph by selling, This is \\"hY so many doc--tdrs still prefer to prescribe TltE OOU:AR gained or producL" made by manufac-held its own on world money turers whooc n>putatlon they markets. forced golds' price down, CO&- tlng millions· of dollars in los5es to speculators who forc- ed gold above $13' an ounce curlier in the year. TODAY'S OPENING gold price in Zurich's big-volume bullion market also was $90 an ounce. But this was a one-dollar drop rrom the \Vednesday closing price there ol $91. In the currency markets. the doll ar opened bighE!'.r in Loodon , but d ropped marginally in Tokyo, Zurich, Paris, Frankfurt and :Pt1ilan. Sees Heeesllo11 Former Inl<!rlor Secre- tary SU.wart Udall predicted Wednesday gas rationing will cause recession that will crip- ple the travel aod reo. reational industries. , Senate . Leaders Pushing • WASHINGTON (UPI) The Sellllte rtfultd today to order Preddent Nb.on &o ra- t1011 ga10line. Tho votd was IMO.· WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate leaders urged their col- leagues today to move with haste and approve a bill to grant President N i x o n emergency powers to meet the energy crisis. "Thi! is an antifreeze bill " Republican leader Hugh &»tt of Pennsylvania, said al the outset ()f debate on the meQ!;ure. 0 The big Utlng now ls to get going so we can get wheels rolling tn this coon- try and get the heat we 'need." that the Jnst tanker carrying Mideast oil prior to imposition or the Arab oil ernbargo would nrrixe at an American port next week. !\1ansfield said there may be no more Mideast oil "for months." But he said the ene.rgy crisis would have oc· curred regardless of wb..'lt . happened in the Mideast. Ma.nsf'leld o p p o s e d sug· gestions for a stiff tax on gasoUne to di scourag e automobile travel, saying it would put the burden of tax- ation on the ... poor. He said tation.ing 'M'as a b e t t e I'. alternative. , Despite prodding• of ~1~ leaders of both parties, ' 4 -bipartisan effort to solve thd crisis ran into some problems: Republicans on the Sena~ Interior Con1mittee issued ru~ angry minority Teport saying they were not allowed to write any provisions increasing t~ ~nergy supply into th t; emergency bill . TIJEY SAID the bill as writ .. ten by the Democrats deals only with conherving energy --.... • are closely familiar '''ith Gokl's price at the O"""ing rather than those made by a r~·· company that has copied a of · London 's pace-setting formula after it has proven market "'as $90 an ounce, the Tokyo's closing rate was 279.99 yen, a bare shade below Wednesday's 280.00. ln Frankfurt, the dollar dropped nearly one percentage point at the opening, but quickly recovered most of the loss. The opening rate was 2.5870 marks lo the dollar, moving quickly upward in hec- tic trading to 2.60. Wed· nesday's closing rate was 2.61 marks. 4 Ex-National Bank AMENDM~NTS were prepared by both Republicans and Democrab-lo' the bill that would give Nixon power to conserve energy by such n1eans as ~ imposing lower highway speed limits, suspen- ding clean alr requirements and ration ruels, inludlng gasoline. Scott urged that the amendments be to the point, with a minimum of talk. 11le first such amendment, which would call on the Presi· dent to give special con- sideration in fuel aJlocations to those states or regions 'Big 3' Cite De~line successful. same as its closing price Like co1>i <'S or anythinit. Wednesday. from medicines '" famous The price \V e d ii e s d s y art. some reproductions are represented a fall of $6. 1& dur~ ~Chiefs Quit Crocker · depr.essed economically, with high unemployment or lacking adequate transportati on for fue l delivery was adopted by voice vote. In November Car Sales very faithfu l to tJ11• original. ing the day, the biggesl plunge Bi.it al so like arl, '''ith ml'di-dne!I you often can't trll since major government banks· "·hich is "·hich just by look-set up a two-t ier gold price lng. Your doctor insures you system five years ago. getting ,,·hat hr \\"M IS you Ab d t f that t to have by t'~act.ly specifying ll"===an=o=nm=en==o==='=Y=S=e=m=I a product in "·hich he has conlident"'c. YOU OR YOUR D OCTOR CAN PHONE US "'hf'n you nf'ed a delivrrv. \Ye will de--liver promptly· "·ithout extra charge. A great many people rely on us for their health needs. \\'e v.1elrome requests for delivPry !':Crvice and charge acrounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY 351 Hospital Road FrM Deliv.,-y Newport Buch 642-1580 Sunday .is Fllt1E>AY' · DAILY PILOT • AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE O RANGE C OUNTIES VOLUME DISTRIBUTOR LOWEST PRICES! lnllallation & Ser .. ite G t1rQ9e Ooar H ordwore At'ploccd 642-3490 Sea Caast Builders Supply 1651 Placentia, Costa Mesa LDndon's currency traders priced the pound today at $2.39, cheaper than Wed· nesday's $2.3975. To Qualified lnvHtor We will provide . frff SAN DIEGO (AP) -The former president, chairman and two other directors or the insolvent U.S. National Bank have qui t their new jobs v.·ith Crocker Bank. All four became senior vice . presidents when Crocker took 40 ACRES OF BEACHFRONT on BHutiful Tropical Island. Investor nlust be prepared to finance 40-Unit Resort Complex at cost of $530,000. l\1aste r Plan by Prominent Orange County Architect Completed. \Va ter reports, Engineering Surveys, Market Studies all rovided without cost. Investor will equity in Proposed Resort. PRINCIPALS ONLY: Call 675.()540 Even j ngs:-~4-8402 ~l .. dtl ("l. :i~··: I' 1:0,ij. l'r1<1• ••Olt .!l:o For the first true . self·adjustin color set ever. • C11.nt 25 inch diqonal picture " ChroM1trb; II 1"" picture tube •1th the 1Ui)er bild; rnatr11 (Ol'" 1 i.hlrper rolor picture • GT ·100 r .. chauh 1• IOO'l. solid-statf ror lht ultimate in io\id.Wtt Jll.'rrumwict and reliabll1ty • l111tant Color 1"" providitt rolool pictu.tt in ste0nds. no wum-up hmt reqwred NEW lhm'-!}Vl color ll'¥tl monilOring syd.tm 1ul.o-o malic1lly currecu. moil.probl~s c11u5l"'d"by signal changt&. NEW locked GT-Malic memory c ontrols remcmbcr-yo11t color 111eh·1enct, You gel a key to keep it that ..-1y. . NJW Syll.o1n111 intepated circuit hold.' lhe pictur~to 1li!10lutely s\tady, we've ht.en able to ehminat.e the vertical control en\Jrely. NEW 1 00~. ~ohd-sl.alt• GT·IOO'"cha.uis is cablerwty. l'lµC·in ciri·u1l modUlfS [Ot fllat_ ea.s). i;ervice; O(W'll in holl'll'. - ABC COLOR TELEVISION OFFERS A COMPLETE SELECTION OF '74 SYLVANIA PRODUCTS • 9021.~JM~IA ST. I HUNTINGTON HACH 962-5559 Mon~-•;;i'.' 1._7 I 19046 !Ml,~~~!RST ST. I S1tunl1y t0-5,30 HUNTINGTON HACH CIOMd Sun4ay Opeo Tlrunday 'Tll 9 968•3329 Hwn: ... 11. 10-7 SatuNar 10-S:H lund•Y 1Z...S • Mmter<Nrtt • c:.11 90 Piao • 36 Mootlr1 Fbia•<l•t .(0.A.C.I ..... _...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' • \ over U.S. National Bank Oct. 18 after the San Diego bank had been declared insolvent by the U.S. ComPtr Dller of the Currency. They are Jan1es F . Mulvaney. U.S. National presi· dent: Richard P. Woltm an. chairman of the board; Vo\er Viles, executive vice president and senior credit officer. and \Vil\iam B. Conneley, senior vice president and head of real estate finance. A bill pa~ed by Congress earlier this wee k authorizing construction of the Alaska pipeline will be signed by Nix- on at 10:30 a.m. Friday. DEl\10CRATIC Leader Mike ~1ans£ield ()f ~1ontaaa, who has been critical or Y,1hat he said v.·as Nixon's slowness in reacting to the ene rgy crisis. also ur ged haste. He noted DETROIT (UPI) -TI1e na- tion 't ''Big Three'' automakers have reported drops ranging from ·10 to l8 percent in domestic car sales for the first 10 days of Novem- ber. BIIT AMERICAN Molors Corp., the number-four automaker, said its sales were up by nearly 17 perCi!nt during the period when compared with the corresponding 10 days a year ago. Figures released Wednesday showed Chrysler C o r p • domestic salt's down 18 perJ cent. 1'"ord fi1ofor Co. do,m- 14 percent and General Motors Corp. down 10 percent. Chrysler, stiU reeling Crom the nine-day United Auto \Yorkers strike last rmnth, said-its dea lers sold 29,832 U.S.-made cars during the· period, a drop of 18 pert.'tllt. Complete _Mid .. da.y American Stock List Vol. ~1 · Vol. N<!t LlstOIQ. LIU! O>Q. AAV Co -A A-C.0 Fd .1l'b 1 2\~ t ~\ Fleld'l Plasl 1 1 ~1 •.• .lO 5 S~ 1:. Cf(ltlln .llb 2• l\o-~ FUmCM .a. 11 .,, ... •.-. A&E Pltslk 1 2'M-'11 C.rnw .10 39 ){1+ lo Filmwr 11\C 21 )(-\'o Abef"MI .<IOQ I I -°" (l•Nlln .1111 11 12 -1 FIUrO! .Old 1J 10~, .. "" Aber Plltrol 11 2\.'o-.... C.f'P!n .Mo 1 1111>-V. Flnc:I 11 .10 IQ 11 11-\'• A<11an Inds! S •'ill ••• C1rrierC w£ 22 l~-\» FlnGen .llot 211 10•0-\\ !"o!!",-~~. 1 2V. •. • C..rrols Oev 3 J -II Flrtl Conn I 2 IJ~ ''• ... ... ....... 2 It.-\.II Ci\Ut AM 1 I 21 -\t FsDln J.2111 11 2J\-"' ~ "', 0 SI 12"--"" Ci\llt\on In 26 IV. • Fst Oer>w wt 12 JI» ... .. erOflc• nc: I l\IJ •.. C.slltM 111 l 11,,__ ~ ''' '''[ '"• Alrasol Ttc S It.+ 'i\ C•vill'"lll'I Cp. l t \_. ~~ Fsi 5.£ .4 ~ ,j(";: 1! AHU Cap st I llot .. . C 0 t Coop l J..,_ ~'I 1\!VM 1."tl I Uh-l'o All "°"' .20 I s . .. CtnMo• ,,, ''° (J\ • •v .. , .• •• • ... 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K .» 21 •~ •.. · Fr..,•s~ .12 AJICI Control ' 9~ "'°' CitmF•• ·'' ' >• ' 1 t '" AlpN Indus ' J:i.-•,. .. · · · •tnlJNI .... J I'll All1mll "' ,. j._ \~ (IUMI I.Ill> n 16 -v. F.••,nlllo .40 2 ~u11o~ ·i~ ., ,.._ C11r•10n .16 1S t f't-~ Frltr lnd\.o1 1 t i..-\·4 ... ttc '""'0 11 'II. • •• Cl•ro~lat M S S -:It Frl9llronl( ..., 1'1't-h AlltC Co Of 10 114-v. (l••Y (.orp 2 n11 •.. Ftl~l!S .)()Q • 12(o-l't Allt c Cp\Ot 10 'l.<-1-V. (11Ut0 .Xlb 1 I -'I• Frontier Air SJ S ::lf•F::i~ 1U s~~+ ~ (lop.II .OS. 11 •V.+ v. FrontAlrw1 ' 1>:. •.• A~':: lnch l i 11 1111! ,,., ~.~ i~.''•'•'• l 2..._ V. -·--G-G---· l\m .... U WI' 102 U 'lo-'4 .._... " 21 I -'I• Gtbrll In Sit 2 ,,,..,. Vt Arn Colchmeto ' J\4,-"'' Gtr1n In .16 1 l'I>-"' A9ronm t l it • . . r-"'-><O '' > ><o • • , • ' ,_ > Am BHtrt .SO l ,,__ ~ • ......,.. • ""''' • ...,rp 6 •r.-II> ._,,, l O>O 1 >> Coll Mlt .St • ·11' •-"'° Gt'(!'IOr Sift 2 l '4-\.II _,, ' -"" Cof>e.n Hltld .,! l'--\..:. 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" _.,..._ POE (If .tl S ~V. stECIOf 7.SI • 110I -" 1•lfl llldln fl IJ!l+-~ l'Gllt1111n 1 ,,~ Lil.·-''' 1mrH111 '' 2 '''-... ,_ •' I .\ • I Wednesday's Closing Pr ices • ' • NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE •• Nov1mbtt 1973 s DAILY PILOT Year's Hjg h-Low s App~ar Eve r y Saturd ay ' Stocks ·Nosedive; Dow Off 21 Poii1ts • j ' NEW YORK (UP!) -Gloom over the energy crisis and its probable effect.i; 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 acuve The Dow Jones Industrial avera{!J! plumn1eted 21 15 pomls lo 869 88 The da y's decfine was mler· rupter only bncfly as some selective bargain hunt- ing occurred in the early going One factor tha.t could have weighed heavily on the n1arkct, analysts said, was a remark by Con1- n1erce Secretary f'reder1ck Dent that if the public doesn'rt sharply curtail its energy use, a recession could occur . I ,, --· ,_ . f DAILY PILDT Thursday, N0vtmbtr 15, iq73 '111 B U Keane ·\'Daddy's feelin' o lot better, Mr. Horton, but you can 't talk to him right now 'cause he 's ploying golf." I L. ltl. Boyd Tomato Ranl\:ed Top Vegetable . Nevermind that ancient argument as to \Vhether a, to- 1 ~ato is a vegetable, a £ruit or a berry. Point here· is that 1 lhe pollsters asked citizens nationwide to name their fav~ orite veegtable. And the tomato ranked No. I with more votes than all other candidates combined. Onions ranked No. 2. Odd, isn't it? Corn on the cob, blackeyed peas and hashbro~·n potatoes certainly should ha ve come out ahead of those dumb tomatoes. Stcd loses it's liveliness in ti1nc, too. Old steel is brittle. New st~el is resilient.. Thal's why the boys at the Berlin Techni cal University contend a new car is twice as safe in a smashup as is an old car. Student Hal Hollov.'ay of )e-x as Tech at Lubbock is reported by re- liable witnesses to have taken one un- interrupted shower bath that lasted seven days one! hour. MARTINI Q. "How do you mix a Cann iba l Martini?" A. Voll must refer to old Fred Allen's recipe. Pre- scribed he: "Take a third vermouth , [l\'O thirds gin , and into this 'drop a small gi rl named Olive." Name of that fox terrU with car cocked to the rec- ord player in that famous Victor advertisiment of yes- teryear, I'm now told , was Nipper. Nor do many souls realize the No. 1 definition of the v.'Ord "extinct" is "no longer burning." CHARACTER Ignatius Trebitsch \Vas born a Hungarian Je\v in 1879. At age 18, he leaped off to Germany where he \Vas bap- 1iscd a Lutheran. Then he sailed to England to bocome a Quaker. There, also, he was elected lo Parliament. but a forgery conviction sent him to prison. After release. he appeared on the scene as an Anglican curate for av.•hile. serl•ed some time also as a German spy, and wound up as a Presbyterian missionary to Canada. \Vail, there's more. He .returned to Germany after \Vorld War I, hop- ing to boost' the militarists back to power. They didn't need him. So he fled to the Far East, took his vo\vs as a Bud· clhist monk, traveled worldwide to win converts, and fi · nally ret ired to a Shanghai monastery. He died in 1943. Unique character, what? Statistically, the widow \\'ho re\\·eds soon is far more likely to enjoy a happy second marriage than is the widow who waits many years before she reweds, cont end the matrimonial experts. Sir, ii has been proven re~tedly that orange peels make excellent fish bait, remember that. • Address 111oi/ to L~ f.f. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beacli 92660. Huge Settlement • . Reached for Girl SACRA~IENTO (UPI J -A $1.3 million settlement has been ·reached. in a damage suit Oil behalr of a 13-year-('lld girl , ""ho surfered permanent and massi ve brain dama ge while being treated for a bicy- gie accident . Kimberly Gerringer was 7 · and riding tandem on a bike SollJJ Bar R eturned NASHVILLE. Tenn . (UPI I -An Ohio \\'Oman returned ;i, small bar of soap to a Nashvil le motel with a letter of apol saying she had no tcntion of stealing it. "Enclosed yo I find this bar of p," \\TOie Mrs. Ida Valentine of Jronton, "I found it in my purse. I put it in my purse Dy mislilte. Please rorgive- me." \vhen it collided with a car on Sept. 28, 1968. She was treated by Dr . Gordon Runnels at Arcade General Hospital for a "V"-shaped gash on her leg. THE GIRL 'S attorney she went into convuls ions for nearly a ltalf-hour during the treatment, ca using bra i n damage so severe t h e )!Oppgste~..had to learn tq w~lk and talk atrover again. The attorney said the girl will 'never be normal . The settlement was an· nounced this wee k during opening courtroom argument.a in the suit. Agreeing to pay various sums from $550,000 lo $20.000 were Pharmaceutica l Inc.; Bischoff's Surgical House , Inc.; \Valter Kidde and Co.: Arcade ~lospital : Runnels and two former partners. TllE FIRMS manufacturec' or distributed drugs or equio- ment used_ to treat.. the youn'~ster. Runnels, fOrtJ1cr chief rf ~taff at Arcade. is now W'lrk· Ing at Camarillo St a t e Hospital. his attorneys said. The · docto r sal in the It cost the 54--year-old widow 25 cent! postage to return the IOI~. It cost the M'at1dor Motor Inn less than two cents. • courtroom during arguments .._ _________ _, • and cried quietly. • ' . • • • .. \ 1 • ' • Kerm Rima Brightens Your Day with Bi.g, Bi.g, Savings! Pir~~~ EFFECTIVE . . . 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" "1 11tould never make a1111bod11 uncomfortable but mvself. '•t should never make anyone other than tnyself resetitful. "I sllould 11ever do a11ytht11a that would djsplease anyone but tny- self." Rita Whiteley, a counselor at UCJ, refers to the above as the "nonusertive credo." It Is S>methlng she believes many people, of either sex and from varying backgroundi, follow but e s p e c I a II y Women "because t think women In our aoclety as a group are particularly train· ed to be unassertive." She believes the female role which a woman must play in society requires her to learn skills as avoiding or reduc- ing conflict in relations.hips. To do this, the woman ·often de.fen to the needs and wishes of another, giving up her own needs, wants and rights in the process. FEMININITY DEFINITION ?i.1s. Whiteley objects that this nonassertiveness is the definition or femininity, or the loving, caring woman, of the ,.good Woman" ln our culture. ll does affect men, she said. "Much of the male-female rela- tlonshlp.41 In our culture are predicated on the belief system, which I s burdensome on men, that they must be superior to 50 percent of aoci~ty to be minimally adequate." Bqt Dr. Jolin Flowers, a professor In the Program tn Social Ecology who trains students In the group processes, said many men are nonassertlve as "'ell. Referring to it as a 11human problem" ralber than a woman'• problem, be explained. "There are an awful lot of shy people in the worl4." Yet he agrees that women are trained to believe that in certain situations their wrassertiveness is a, part of the.Ir appeal As one of his class uslgnment.s. he has his ~tudents count the number of times they smile and why during a certain time period. Women. h@ said, "tend to smile to please someone else ratheP than wben pleased." · Ms. Whiteley uses this as an example of women deferring to others. For more proof, she suggests watching two women -~rganizafion Backs S·pecial . Education By ALLISON llEERR 01 tM Dllllr , ... StaH CANHC began the way many organiza- Jlons do. ~ groups o~pai: nls, scattered througOOut 1 the state, ganized to de- mand needed servi or their children, v.·ho were educationally handicapped. ·They joined forces in 1959 when the first official chapter of the Califorrtla Association for Neurologically Handi- capped Children \vas formed in Los Angeles. A. L. Baletti, 'president of the Orange County Chapter and past state president. said lhe local chapter was chartered In 1963 "when something happened that broke the dam." · What happened was a o n e · d a y "''Orkshop presented by a team ol San Mateo teachers on a pilot project for the learning disabled. -· Baletti lived ln San Jtlateo at the time and his son, now 23, was ooe of eight students in the pilot program. "They expected about .50 people at the workshop. Between 800 and 1,000 came. The school districts could no longer rail to recognize that these children existed and needed special pro- grams." DISORDERS Ll®J Children with learning disabilities, CANHC explains, are ttJose WOO have- a disOrder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or using language, spoken or writtoo. "This disorder may manifest itself tn Imperfect ability lo listen, think, bear. write, spell, speak or do mathematical ca1culations. "These may include such condi'1,oos as ~ual handicaps, brain IGjry, minimal cerebral dysfW!ctioo, -xia and developniental aphasia ." A major initial goal of CANHC (it rhymes with panic) has been to establish classes for the educationally o r neurologlcaUy handicapped where none exist and keep Improving existing ones, said BaietU, a Newport Beach resident. -"\\re are working for a good liaison between CANHC and all of the . school diStricts in the county. When possible, we want . to find out what are the needs of each district and fund, or fmd sponsors or donations o'f ·supplies and equipment." The Orange County chapter has a sophisticated resource system f o r parents and professionals which update s current information on 1 e a r n i n g disabilities. Speakers at monthly general meeung. disow medical, perceptual, educatiooal and vocational services and other current topics of interest. Parents of lea~ing disabled children get together at CANHC coffees, held informally, to talk with people who share similar experiences. It is a positive reinforcement fpr parents, Baietti said. Perhaps most important for parents is ~agement to participate withln indivi<lual school districts, he added. LEARNING PROBLEM "Education ror the''NH 'Child,'' Baietti, said "means recogillHon that his learning problem exists in all places where th e child comes in contact with bis Sur· roundings. "It must be a professionally-based P.f<>- gram, with follow-up training in lhc home, with peers and the general com· munity." Statewide CANHC v.'Orks to pass legislation favorable to the learning disabled; provides publications and films for parents, professionals, t(!aChers and community: encourages r esearch through scholarships for teachers of ,,,_special education, and maintains liaison with service agencies. K.e)'ll lo making the NH or EH child .. a self·supporting, independent young adu1t" Baiettl said, are: early, accurate diagnosis; constant, updated teacher training'; research into medicine, edu.ca- tion and psychology as lhey relate to lbe .NH child, and better . public un· derstaruling." We have to look at the whole spectrum, he said. "It's a pyramid effect. There are the most children who can be· diagnoseil at the early levels, as early as kindergarten. FOLLOW THROUGH ;. '''Ibe numbers decrease as children are worked back into the 'normal' school program. But we must have· follow through lo high school and beyond. "1£ we stop before lhe child is in- dependent, all the work we have d~ ls for naught." Further information' about CANHC can be obtained by writing: CANllC, P.O. Box 445, Buena Park, CA., 90620 or by calling 547'4206. ~ictory Won DEAR ANN LANDERS: I saw myself Jn your colunm a few days ago. It was the letter from lhe bride who Is going nut.. because her hus\>and stays ouJ till all hours and 11lorgeb" to telep'.hone her. ms alibis are always aJr.lighl. She IMll him. He just 11forgets." • Well, I've got news fOr her. tt's going to get worse ao She'd better learn bow lo handle It. , Tho skunk w111 come home. They always do. Decide right now that no matter what time If I.I, no matleroow • many drinks he'• had, you wlll N<YI' greet him at the door with, "Where in the hell have you been! I've been out of my mind worrying ohout youl " JJlilead, smile (e\'tlll ii ll atmosc kllls you) •nd say "I'm glad you're home, dear. You need some rest. Let's go to sleep." 'l1Je next morning, don't say one "'Ord about laSI night. U he starts lo apologize, say, "l widerstand, dear. Let's forget It." I know what I'm talking about. It took me two years to make myself oo It, but "11en I finally. "8S able lo, It cured him completdJ.-"V!Cl'ORlA IN ALBANY, DEAR VIC: No••tot.... and poah~ reslitance are Ml •IJ wtse·bat die)'-'< W-H ,-b-1 wllb f111ly memM1el. Clnp'al1latloM. 'l1te ~1te1t vlet«y, ti -wu Ibo victory over )'OlnOlf. ll llwl)'ll to. DEIR ANN ~DERS: 'How dots one decide which "worthy causes" lo gi•• • • I •' Fema e • • e 1nes ' . , I . deciding where to slt ln a restaurant. Each oormaUy wants the other lo cboole the seaUng. RELA TIONSIUPS TERMED asse.ftlon tralnlng, a telatively new idea In gi;oup therapy. Participants, she said, are self· • seleeled. Between males and females, Ms. Whiteley said women believe a re1a· tionship will exist only on two terms ••• 0 your (the man's) terms or we ·won't have it at all" .•• rather than how ll might best suit her too. In group projects, she said, If a male gets a new girlfriend, the group usually gains a member. But if ·a fe1nale gets a new boyfriend, she said, the group probably will lose her as a member. When aske4, "Do jou fuind if I smoke?" the woman, acwnling to Ms .• Whiteley, is most likely to say ')No" 1 e.nd even get the smoker an ashtray . . ~ although she really wishes that persoa wouldn't smoke in her house. J She may believe it would be sellish to ask the person not to smoke. "TheY're women who previously decid· ed that they are unhappy with their 11res'1t behavior and are looking for somF .•kills and ways of chanslng their bchivlor and some support for doing ft," she explained. She believes more women want to change their behavior. lt follows the raised cooSciousness in which a woman is no longer willing to accept certain relationships, ·yet. she may not have worked out something dillerent. local NOW chapters in assertion training when she takes a mat ernity leave in February. ASSUMPTION Some people have asked her: 0 How can you be a feminist and be pregnant?" She obviously rejects the questioner's assumption that becoming pregnant is done not by choice .. and contrary to assertion. Assertion. she explained simply, "has • ' Roe to do with standing up ror one's rights.''" The main goals of her training, she sai(t, are "getting women to eons.ider tha\ they do have rights, teaching tbetn some skills by_whlch they can stand up for some rights and giving thcro some. support for developing a belief system that will enable them to engage In assertive behavior when that's lh~lr behavior choice." (Ste ASSERT19N, Page 17) .. But If she did object, Ms. Whiteley explained, she would be sayfng, "My feelings are important~ J have a rlght to say how· 1 feel." TRAINING Another university counselor is doing assertion training with mixed groups . And Dr. Flowers trains both male cind female students in the process. He has also used it with hospitalized Vietnam veterans. Ms. Whiteley has made several presen- tations on it before community wo'men's groups and would like to see groups like the National Organization for Women get into it. • '• ~men It JS to th.is point which she is helping some UC! women students reach through She may train some people from the ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursd•r. Novem~r 1S. lt1t Pitt u Reluctant Writers Married By JO OLSON 01 ti!• D1Uy Piiot Slaff Mildred and Gordon Gordon admit they'te_ schizophrenic about their writ· Ing. Their ney,•est Jlol?k, "'l)le Informant,~· an espionage thriller. was released about the same time t'1cir most famous cat book, "That Dar~ Cat" was reprinted, a duality if there ever ~·as one. They discussed both ror the second Celebrity Book ReYiew in th'e current Pi Beta Phi series. "'!bat Damed Cat" originally was ti- tled "Undercover Cat" but was re· named to coincide with the Walt Disney movie of the book, which also is being re-released. D. C., the hero of "That Darned Cat" is still living with the Gordons. "\\'e bought the cat at the SPC~ for $2. He is now 12 and in good health," Gordon said, "but he needs a girdle. His . duties include patrolling out property al night." BOUGHT BY CAT GordoO noted that their Encino home has a sign in the breezeway reading, "This house bought and endowed by a cat." The Gordons, writing as a team, have produced 17 novels which have been translated into 13 languages and sold more than 14 million copies. Eight have been made into movies. · Mildred Gordon took lhe podium:. "He's still locking me in an empty room with a typewriter,~· she said about her husband. "I'm still trying to get out. "I thought I had it made when I married Gordon. He was a newspaper editor. 'Ibere was .glamour but no money, so he started moon1ighting. "When the war started Gordon went Gordon and Mildred Go~don (top left) share writing c11reer and 'darned cat' (left) D.C. to Work into the FBI. Then he decided it was time for me to start writing Action. But l wanted to be a housewife." . FORGOT IT Mrs. Gordon said she wrote a \\'hole book to proVe to her husband she couldn't. They mailed it in to a publisher and forgot about it, and four months later they got an air mail letter ac- cepting it. "And what did it get me? ~ifty years of hard labor," Mrs. fx0rdon said. How do . two people write the same book at the same time? And what do they do if they disagree? "We don't fight or argue," Mrs. -Gordon said. "It's much easier to giVe - in. We have a rule of thumb -if one of us feels stroogly abotii a pOint, the other a:ives in. "U we both feel. strongly, each stateo his point, then we let it go for 24 hours." \Vriting is "hard, back-breaking w&k," she complained. Then kiddingly she s8id, "I've done a lot of research on homocide. Divorce is easy now days, but who Would get custody of our little breadY.in- ner, D. C.?" STEWARDESS PLANTED Gordon commented about "'nle Jn· fonnants": "It's aboot a terrorist organization that wants to seize control of the United Slates, · patterned alter the French Revolution. The 1'~BI plants a stewarde$S in the terrorist organization." He warned that there actually ls ter~ rorist activity all over the world. "TU .. rorists now have international systems. It was predicted by the U.S. NewS and World Report that they soon will have nuclear devices. Terrorism has ... become a worldwide rear. "These are not wild-eyed anarchists. They are "'ell-educated, sober in· dividuals." In keeping with this fa ct, the main characters in the GordOns• new book are a university graduate and a scholarly prolessor. "This is the most exciting book v•e have written so,-far," Gordon said. "We fell in love .with Chris Roberts (the stewardess laud we think yOu will too." In closing, he quoted a saying bis wire often uses when au.tograPbing books: ''May the swt shine on you and miy all your days be filled with catnip." b'i Not Fi_ghting , Any _ 6attles ; - ~ ' ,411#,t4#1MM .. . husbMd a $30 sport shirt for biJ birth- day. He said it was the best-looking sport shirt ha had ever seen. ~ week I washed It by hand in lukewm:zn water and gentle suds. !These day> you can put almost anything in the' machine but to? While I have a good_1ncome :ind no dep e ndents 1 can't give to everything. When I read about frauds and crooks.JI dampens 'In)' enlhpslosm for any kind of giving because I don't know whal I.I legitimate. You musl -rece1 .. -hundrM.-o1-app .. 1s. Can you tell me ptease how a person can know what to glV. to!. Or, lo put It anolher way, oa whit basis should a person glve?-RICllA!\D J, OF KANSAS DIA:ll 11.J.: -I peoptc give te .-la wtildt .lbe7 bave o 1~ecla l 'I ,.. • slake. 11 you've lost a de•r Oftt \o.. I wanted to be especially careful wi th cancer, you mll(bt be: mOre Inclined this shirt.) Well. it came out ruined. The to donate to tbe American Caacer SOel~ maroon stripes faded into lhe yel!Ow and ty, tr a medlcal school tbal Is doing the shill look> like a rag. i:aoctr re~are)I. Tbe same for heart 1 examined the shirt arterwards and or kidney disease. We all know tbe found a_small --1ag_thatl_r.ead dcy fted--.Feather--drlVt:stCommuntty-ctiests-. aad United l''und campalcnt are U'lt clean only. I took the slurt back pereeat legitimate and deserve tbe ••~ to the salesperson .who should have part et every citizen. T.he fund-raising TOLD me, because not everybody looks appeals l.O bew~re oll..lirt the unfamiliar for tap. He said he was sorry but • .... Chec.k •·Ith lbe ::-uer Bgjl ... • It was no1 their fault. He n>fUSed lo B~au lf )OD are In dou t. gtv~ me a new shirt DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 )JoughHn In my opinion he didn 't \rea l me • • ' as if he wanted my future bu.siness. Am I right! -ABUSED CONSUMER DEAR A. C.: 1 don'& agree. Before laundtriDg anything new, you abouJd always check to ~'e U lq SHOlJW be lallDdered. People. "·ho C:lon't read lags ba\'t lo pay for ihilr mistakes. And that means yo11, doll. Doo't aunk your chemistry test. Love Is niore than one set of glands call\fll to anolller. If YO\! )lave 1'9uble ~ a distinction you need Ann's bookie~ "Love or Sex and tlow to Ttll U~ Piflerence." Send a long, stamped , IOlf· addreued envelollf with your requtst and 3$ cenu In coin to Ann Landera, P.O. Box 3l46, 222 River Dr., OlicaiO, Ill. 60654. -. ' ' -;:fi U.t.U. l t'I LO I --------"-'-"..:';.:"..:.' _N_O¥t_m_bt_•_1_5;._' _1 q_J_l ,. ~ -• Club Agendas Feature LectLJ res, Socials Town , Gown \\1h!it's Up \\'ilh Aging, Fact and Fttnlnsy Ydll be the topic of Or. Ruth B. \\'eg "'hen h she :iddrcsscs UC! To\vn and ·Go\vn l\1onday , Nov . 19. •nie IO a.ni. meeting ..-1i\l ·:-,take p1ttce in Room 220-of the Social Sclentt To"·cr on t~c 1,can1pus. ... Nov,, an associate professor . or biology at the University • ' or Southern California and '"rhrcctor o{ training al thi:. Ethel Percy Andrus Gcnon- tology Center. Dr. \Veg ha s "a deep concern \\'ith educa- Lion as a continuing and ef- ff'('tirc part of lhc total life I cycle exper ience.'' ~ Mcmb<•:t~t~h:n~<cphcns l :-College Alumnne of Orange I ;Gounty \\'ill gather at 7:30 ~!~-rn. 'fuesda v. Nov. 20, for ~ :i concert by htrs. J . e. ; obcrt.son and Mrs. Garriet ' ;;;..___ ______ _ ' .. ml[e . Sleigli HUNTINGTON H.f.llOUR L.aclecl Wllh Ntw ldi11 MOft. lhru Ill, la • S:)f CHIU5TMAS WORKSHOI' DAILY (NI IChl rtt) • The 11111111101 In 1011 Cordi •' l l1199ote C•ndle1 • N•tivltle1 &· Advfft Wit1dmlll1 from E11rope * 40 Doy1 Until! t1111ft Tiie 911rcw1r~ C111ltr HUNTINGTON OE..llCH 1M41 ALGONQUIN 11 WA•NE• 14'-nn Dirksen in 1he Santa Ana honit or ~1rs. ltobertson. A graduate or Stephens and the University or J\·llssourl. 1.1rs. Rober1son was hono1·cd by Stephens as Alumnae \Von1a11-of-the·year in 1957. A Christmas party tor'mcm- btrs and husband Is sc hedul- ed by the group for 8 p,m. Slturday. Dec. 8, In the Mission \'iej() heme of ~!rs. Tho1nas ?i.Ioore. Sec retaries 1\ Knight in Canada \\'il l theme the Tuesday, Nov. 2. Executives' Night in Big C.1n· yon Country Club planned by the Orange County Chapter of Executives' Secretaries. Inc. A prelude to the ronvention to ta ke place. in Toronto in ~la\', the e\'cnt will .honor the se<:.retarics· .. knights .'' Jr. Miss Contestants in lhe annual lluntington Beach Junior ?.1iss J>age ant v.•il\ be honored. along v.•Jth their mothers, during n tea in the home or r-.t r s . r..I8rnelle }leek at I p.111. Sun· day. Kov. 18. Sponsoring the event are the Huntington Dcach ~I r s . Jaycees. ---·---------- j @BRASS R_JN(l Wo~n·s Apporel bt e lleyle e No1mon )¥iott e A .. d SHOES Nat1rollier1 Clets ·• So11dol1 31 27 Ea 1t Co1Jf Hwy. Co1on1 d1I Mir 673-4740 DTERY AIR STEP -CALIF COBBLERS - DR . SCHOLL -BERNARDO - VINER-BEARTRAPS-MISS AMERICA MAGDESIAN - GRASSHOPPERS By KEDS - Edward1 -Hi p.,f, by We!lco - Robin Hood -PF flyers -U.S. K1dJ - CORRECTIVE SHOES FOR CHILDREN ·-~ C1pe1io Dence Shoe1 -D1n1~in 225 E. 17th ST ...... COSTA MESA 548 ·2778 a !ANKAMERICA•O e e MASTER CHARGE e Our dazzi in g cap frostings ""!llt great pre-holiday savings It's not <oo late lo steal a li 1tle sum- mer thunder. Our beautiful frostin gs · are now 1ale priced. If you 1hink th e look of sun-1treaked hai r is dazzliJ!g · , o n the beach , 1hink wha1 a fi reS<de ca n do for ii' Make your appoinl- ment 1oday 'hon hair, regu lad y 25 .00 15,00 long h.,,, •egulM ly 35.00 25.00 And for inore CUii .,, Otlr')Q .00 perm wave is now on 5;;i'lc fo r 15.00 ~. ... beauty salon 705 -.(closed sunday) 1'he pagennt is scheduled fo r Saturday Dec. 1, t.t Golden \Vest College. Affili a tes J>orcelain treasures or Japan \rill 00 discussed by Ed\vard Beh1nc for the Art Affiliat es of tho Laguna Beach l\1uscum of Art at 2 p.m. Monday, Nov. 19, at the museum. Mond ay Cl ub Fashions ror the \'linter and holiday season \viii be shov•n during the Mondy. Nov. 19, meeting or the f\Ionday l\1orn· Ing Club of lluntington Beach in the Sheraton Beach Inn. which \viii begffi \l.<ith a social hour at 10 :30 a.m. Ka ppa Del ta A· cookie exchange and book Dr. Rulh Weg review are planned by the NeYlport !'!arbor A Ju m n a c Your Horscope . Tomorrow Association or Kappa , Delta sorority at 7:30 p.m. Monday. Nov. 19, In the Fountaln Valley ho1nc of l\frs . Peter Schaefer. ORT llands of a Wonlan will theme the fall luncheon plan-- n<.>d by the Eastern Region of Women's American ORT for 11 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 20, in the Disneyland Hotel. Roncho Viejo A silent auction. w i 11 highlight the Tuesday, Nov. 20, meeting of <he RAncho Viejo Women's Club in the Peoples Federal Savings, El Toro:. \'1ite elephants. handcrafted goods and food Items will be sold during the 101 a.m. gathering. Rebekahs M•sa Rebekah Lodge 40Z will celebrate its 25th an· nlversary Tuesday, Nov. 2.- during an 8 p.tn. meeting in the Odd Fellows Temple Costa l\tes a. Charter members '\\1Ul de honored, according to !\h's. Calcolril S. Overton, noble graod. School Nunes Sagittarius: Teach, Learn FRIDAY NOVEMBER 16 By SYDNEY OMARR "In the Third Reich, \\'e have to forbid astrolog y. Those who contravene the new regulations must txpect to be locked .up in a concentration camp unti l the war is over." -lfeinrich llimmler ARI ES (ft.1arch ?.!·April 19 ): together bi ts of i!lfonnation -you can come--up with (:9mplete story. Don't be satisfied with superficial ex- planations. Eic:plore reasons, .examine motives. CANCER (June 21·July 22): Emphasis is on money and gelling full value. Household product, luxury item i s spotlighted. Family member wants to talk about . budget, allowance. Be diplomatic. If you make intell igent con· cession, you'll be happier. LIBRA (Sep<. 23-0ct. 22): You may fiod that friend op-. poses plan ~ch you promote. Key now is to know when lo draw line. 1f you invite others to sing blues on your shoulders,.they will do it. You may feel nob le about it but you should feel foolish. Think! SCORPJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go to heart of matters. See person in charge. Be direct and independent without being arrogant. Leo , A q a a r i a s persons figure .: prominently. Set sights on goal. Reaffirm sense of direetion. you are on brink o{ discover· ing \\'here and how -and V.'hen. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2{).Fcb. l8 ):•SJow pace. Li s ten, observe and check 'A'ith one who cares but also is skeP: tical . l\leaM don 't seek out only those who natter. cajole. Find where v.·eakness lies - then build for strength . Scorpio could figure in im· portanl way. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201: Inquisitive individual could cause you to be analytical. Accent is on how you serve, v.·ork .and achieve. You find \\'ays of bettering pos.ition - Unified chool District. I ~iembcrs \Viii contribute ~ • -4 '7 ....__ ruJI materials [O • new learning Pettuig £VV a center In health. Model UN UNICEF Chrlslmas cards and calel'ld&rs wUI be sold by the UC! Model UN fro1n 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. we~kdoys throughoUt the current quarer at the ASUCI ticket window on the first 1loor of Gateway Commons on the campus . 31 FASHION ISLAND To y Show IANlAMlllCAID MASTll CHAIGI We Have What You're Looking . For VELVET FOG HAIRSTYLING 8466 lndianapoll1 Av•. Huntington B•ach. 536-8829 • -· l J You will experience gre:ater, Creedom, creative.stimulation. ·success is indicated by adher· ing to YQOr own style. Social contacts mu ltiply. T.he ex· citement or discovery j s fealured. Welcome change of pace. Ti\URUS (April 20-l\1ay 20 ): Stick to facts . Those 'A'ho offer rumors should be ignored. You succeed now by accepting test, challenge. Some, who claim you are in rut are merely envious. Know it and maintain balance, humor. Aquarius, Leo persons migh t be in picture. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 ): Go after what you need - personal magnetis1n aids. You see1n able to attract persons v.·ho can now do the-m~ for you. Maintain aura of mystery, glamor. Don't tell all . Leave plenty to the im· agination. Then you're on right track! SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Teach, I earn. Investiga te special study. You . may be fascinated by foreign language. Writing and reading take on added importance. Do some renecling; heed inner voice. Intu itive intellect is sharply honed. and attitude. Diet , health and 1 .----.,--::::~:::::::~::::: recreation shouJd be con· sidered. IF TODAY IS YOUR GEr..11N I (r..1ay 21-June 20 l: Be ready for change, travel , variety. Also. you may be asked probing 11uestions 'by 1nember of opposite sex,. Piece VIRGO (Aug. 23-S,.p<. 22 ): Study Leo mess~g.e. Check behind the scenes £or result ol clandestine arrangement. Capricorn, Cancer persons could ·rigure in important roles . Organize. !\fake contacts through special clubs, groups, organizations. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J211. 19 1: Mate, partner may be reaching too far. too fast. Tighten rein on budget. Do so with humor . understanding. Sagillarlan can aid in getting ideas into working fonn . Your creative dri\•e needs outlet and BIRTHDAY you arc spiritual. creative and introspective. You come out of doldrums next month. You express and love and are aQ8'C'Ciated. You have carril'd a"l!i\!avy burden this year :-but you are about to embark on road to greater · freedom, fun and h e a I t h. Many born under Pisces and Virgo are drawn to you. , Reason for Not Working Novel I NE\V YORK (AP) -l\lary lived, she changed her mind, any place. But then I was sent telling them about astronomy An n Harbert's job hunting is and joined McLaughlin to try to a hospital for care and got and seasons," she said. comp l i ca t e d be cause out his new boat. She wound fai rly well and slill I wasn 't With nothing 10 read but 8 en1ployers raise an eye brow up in China. relaesed . I wondered if I . . over four years when she "Before we were picked up, would be there forever, she little red book of Quolauons didn't \\'Ork at all. a British crew had been laken said. from Chairman J\.tao, J\.liss The pretty brunette ca n ex· from a yacht, fed and releas· She laments the wasted time Harbert thought longingly of plain why, but it has taken a •ed. Mter 1 came back, some from her life. She said she thick boo.ks she had alwa):s book to do it. The book is Americans ha d a similar ex· tried to talk about home to her meant to read when lihe had "Captivity: .How I Survived 44 perience. ' various interpreters but cfidn't time. Months as a Prisoner of the "I still don't understand why get very far. IU:leased from China in ear· Red Chinese," \vritten by Miss th ey kept us, put out the ex· "They would run away. ly December 1971. as a result Harbert and Charles Einstein. pense. y don't think they g~n· They didn't wan t to hear it.. or the thaw in relations \Vith Jerry McLau ghlin, a ed anything," she added. Their education is limited and between the t'A·o countries, HOLLY HOBBIE Y*iri rnvst -1111 wondtrful lllllNI Arn ... l<tn ~·· Cl'Mllll wOll Mftly .....,,, c ... 1mlc1 1..-m ¥t s.ts i. w1t1rh11 c1ns. pl111u11. ll'l•let llM•lnl "" ,,,, Cl11i1l'"91 .i<it.oJ, ct fllllts .... hell41y Cll"'ln , lletten. trwriflll Clf11 4111'1 .. htt M•M Cllrld,,,..1 c.1'111), clKkt, tilt Wrt• '"' i..li.ar wrtt1. 1114 u 1...-n, •w.rtll\lt 1r1ffttd Hin •llCI d..itorwl'Mlt -.:...,... 11'111 •"fCMorY ~ltt. 11e11_..., , •• •1'111 mwR ,.,.,, ••• -lllifHMllTl l I vy ., .. , ..... , ...... long-time family friend , J\.1ary There was a time when J\.fiss they know very little about the she w a s rttumed to the Ann decided to sail from Hong Harbert thought she might rest of the world. U~ted Slates by military CARDS e GIFTS • CANDL!S e JIWRRY Kong lo l\.lanila. never be released -that she, "If they can read and write, flight. 9049 Atlanta Ave. et M19nolia in•Hunt in9ton B1aeh a's It was an advent ure, which like her companion, might die they are considered pert of the Her parents, who had Courte1y Gift Wra p Mon.-S1t. T'tl-b 968-011 I soured when the Chinese cap-of diseases brought on by po;or Intelligentsia. I, 0 flt e n em· presurtied her drowned, ha d 1m z za• ~ \ , ..,_. · • ~ lured the pair. l\1cLaughlin care and bad food. barrassed at home oecause I not heard anyt hing from her died in caPtivity. Mary Ann "It d 't . g lack sc1·entif1·c •--wJedge, was while she·was imprisoned. survived, and became known seeme we were n go1n rua.1 to her captors as "the girl who r docs nOt cry." ''It still see ms pretty real lo~j~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:;:;;;;::::::::=;;:=:::::::::::::::=il me," she said in an interview · St'.?CJJ• 'd:i),• here . "Now n1y life has chang· ed. If I hadn 't been captured, I \VOUld have a higher 'income, a betler job. l'n1 starting all , ~~B O"Cr, th inki ng of going back lo * ·~!'Q •• school and deciding what I can ' ~ a. eventually do." Harbert was graduated from • 9 A psychology major. l\.Uss ~ the University of Utah in 1968. She had planned to do prison guidance or parole ,counseling and had already done field work in the \'IOmen 's section of the sta te penitentiary. When she did not find a job immediarel y in the Sa n Fran· cisco area where her parents \ Kids! Free! Toy Sho1v b.cyo mns1r ~zny 'lUl'.li !)11yr,, PY.tn.co c:uoi. Otnsli p•rnYO 10 DAYS ONLY ' Large Sizes \ ' Sizes 4Q to 52 i Sleep pretly n a new gown pastels. frem $7.00 Sunday Shopper? Fullerton & Huntlnglon Beach ~ Ope-n 12 to S • ' -•• Daily tliTti Sun., -~------u ---No ..... J8Uc-S•• at! the sea.son 's new tous. SPfClal be"e/lt U.S.M.C toy.! for to ts drive. Also -r:,nbt!nl dff\S!r xr cui ll11yr; rn~$h, d1ns1i p•rnirro, ~.\ru i:rr.i'lcnl dtns!i. p,,.t SHOES 1-~~'.1Jc_a_ __ H~Uc..rNl,...T~I N G T 0 N B E A c..--+-------1 MHUNTINOTONCINTIR • MAVCO So11th Co.tit Pl111,'lJJJ lrl1tol St,, Co1t1 Me11 -5•6-9l21 hop dtllt 10 '·'"·lo 9:)0: S1t11rcl1v. 10 to II: Swncl•y. noon to 5 .... fea turing Jeff'• Petti'11a Zoo bl Huntington Ce11ttr Nall, Beac/1 & Edf"g" at lht San Diego Freeway. \ I'-------' • SOUTH COAST PLAZA 141-12 10 •nr.,,.-an ••• , ........................... .... • • j ( ... 1¥a lilodl Mtrth ef 1ttfrl St. I INttf to a.rt.tr INt. ~W'll. I , NC1fiu.c;uNA.HlLUMALL •LAGUNA HILLS • 10.ti)t .. .....,. • Prlffr1 lt-I s.t.4eJ1 IJ•I ._.., ••nltAmer/u1N • M•d•r fhrfl• [ • • . The Rob ert -OeBolts of Pied,,,ont welcome Wendy, a 5-year-old blind Korean ,' to their family of homeless and handi dapped foreign children as new "brothers and sisters" watch. Their Hospita I ity' s Relative PIEDMONT I AP ) -Dinner at the Robert W. DcBolt hoJnc is an international affair, almost a miniature United Na· lions meeting. From Page 25 And another child joined the family to_ make a total of 15. including 10 handicapped or home less children from various parts of the. world. ' • • • Assertion · The latest addition is \Ven-Two or the Vietnamese are gy, a blind S-year-old South paraplegic, one of the .Koreans Rorean who joined her tiew is-tmralyzed-by-pollo-and. the American b l a c k is a }amily after a 2.3-hour flight quadraplegic. from her home COWJtry. Eight of the children were Wendy joins three o th e r on band at the San Francisco Kc>reans, fO:Ur Yietn3mese, one. International Airport when Thai, and one American black · Wendy arrived and some wept in the DeBolt household. when the litUe girl got off Mrs. DeBolt established a the plane. ~ program called Aid to Adop-Mrs. DeBoJt said Wendy is tion of Special Kids to help-alread'Y a part of the family. place. handicapped or foreign "She already calls · me children for adoption and bas Mo.m," said the mother of She uses s I i d e s . to ~lost of the time people adopted some of t h o s e the houseful of children whoSe demonstrate be ha v Io rs , honor request s. he said, children for whorh parents ages now r~errom. 5 to discussions which "make ex· estimating that only one in have been hardest to find. 25. Thursda~. NO\ltmbtr 15, iq13 DAILY PILOT 2('. Unwarranted Shocks Absorbed Offspring Balanced ' ~ ' By ERMA B01tfBECK ~ty obstetrtclan never ~ 1sed me a rose garden, but I never tbot.lght I'd hav& to build the kids from scratch. My friends bore children With sound plumbing, str"1ght teeth, curly hair, natural arches and sinus passages that you could give a concert m. Not mine. They had hemlai. lnfiamed tonsils. walked on the inside of their shoes, had teeth erupting in the roof of their mouth, and were ~llergic to air, school and antibiotics. It was like giving birth to used cars without warranties. There wasn't a week that went by when -there wasn 't a strange wheezing under their hoods. And just when we made the Jast payment on the removal ol the war!!, someUdng else would go. It came as absolutely no surprise to anyone when last September Brucie came home with a form from the school nurse suggesting he needed glasses. "Are you sure?" I asked the school nurse ove r the phone. . "He has headaches," she said stiffly. "Maybe he has to go to the bathroom," I said. Andersons Tell News AT WIT'S END nurse summoned me to her office and said Brucie had been retested and the results \\.'ere miraculous. H i s eyes were stronger and she was sure the glasses bad made the difference ... however, his Petting Zoo arnl Toy Shoiv "Is there any scientific basis phys. ed. teacher had noticed ·Today thru Sutl. f ha d · '" h k that one shoulder was a fra c-or t t iagnosts . s e as · H1tntingto>1 ·ce-nt-kick• tion lower than the oth e r ~· ed. one. . • off the V.S.M.C. annual "I read that once ln I told her I'd bring it to Toys for Tot! drive tolth Reader's Digest." he · of f ·1 t attenuon our arru Y these 2 great childreti'1 "He squints and he says mechanic on his 5,000 mile ' his vision is blurred," she checkup. events. Bring the kiddze1 persisted. down to Beach and Edifiger "Very well," I said. "We'll at the San Diego Freeway. get the glasses." lfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I'll have to say this for ,,._, New PALM SPlllNGS C.IMl .. l•I•• Brucie. He wore those glasses S.ACRIFICE BY OWNER -$38,850 from early morning to late 111 l•ch1.i•1 Moulll1l11 llllcWwt, ..,,IMI OM,.... O.i.. Ml f'tl'" 1"41111 at night, removin& them only Goll c1ur11. t •"'"'"'· 11m • c1111t11n11 c1111111 • Air c .... 1c11fll/Drfl'/ for polishing and when I slip.. 1'1111 • Ten11b a ' 1w1m'"1"' .... 1 •• ped into his room as he slept , S.. ScrtlS.,. O.ty • '134 Amy• llh • 4 and took them off so theyJiji' _____ .. _ ... j~·-w---,,·=· l-"~"•'""•""--~~--i wouldn't get get broken in his sleep. That was the first d<IJ',. On the second day, he left them lying on the back or the commode between a wet towel and Time magazine. . Qn the third day he took them to school but left them in his lunch bag which was well on its way to being recycled before we caught it. Occasionally, I would see the glasses ... on the mantel, the dashboard of the car, on the dog for laughs, in the sewing basket, the clothes hamper, inside his baseball glove. . .but NEVER ON BRUCIE! The other day the school Manufacturers' Sale! An Outst•nding Selection of Exquisite EVENING WEAR & HOUDA Y DRESSES e OriiJinols e One-of.A,Kind e AT BELOW WHOLE$ALE ! DESIGNER FABRICS AT COST! Sat & Sun. On~ -9 a.m. to \ 4 p.m. WAREHOUSE 729 W. 16th St; Costa Mesa e O#MIM l""rt & l'IMI • Mr. and Mrs. Edmund\i~;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=::~~~ Gilmour Andersonof N•wport Beach have announced lhe engagement of their daughter, Carolyn Prinuose Anderson to Alan Richard Connors. The announcement w a s made ·at a party given by Mrs. Anderson at W e 11 s C.Ollege, Aurora, N.Y. during the traditional m o t h e r s • -kend. Miss Anderson, a graduate .of Newport Harbor High School and a Children's Home Society·debutant~, is a -senior at Wells. -· plicit the implicit be 11 e f 10 may be ~used. Mrs. DeBolt. \•:ho has rive There is one problem with systems which lead to non· In the "heavy kinds of re· children of her own from a such a household l=c:---------==11 assertive behavtor," behavior· quests," he admits, the refusal previous n1an·iagc, tried to remembering birthdays, 22- . al rehearsals in which the rate increases. One ·of these .place \Vendy for.aJmost a year year-old Stephanie, one of participants role-play different may be in requestirig a rela-before deciding with her bus-MrS.' DeBolts' own children, - levels ·Of assertive behaVior -tionshlp of t0meone, either of band to adopt Uie little girl. said. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY - in a certain situation and feed· the same or opposite sex. Now the family is planning But, she said, a solution back from the"" 8J'OUP' xriern. He found some of the . a corneal transplant for Wen· has been found . Two dates hers. returnirig Vietnam· veterans dy, in ho~s o! restQring at will be chosen next year, one W... '" W•t ....... ''".....,.an. C.... M ... -541-02St She also trains participants had lost some of their social least partial s i g h t for the in the first six months and in conflict resolution which is skills and .forgotten how to youngster who already has one in the last half of the I!!'!~~~~~~~= neither aggressive in the make social contacts. had one eye removed. year. authorita rian s e n s e or But Wendy is not the only And all 17 birthdays will nonassertive followuig t h e These groups dealt with . . starting a conversation and membe.r of the family wtth be celebrated on one of those martyr system. a handicap two days. "Problems are worked out arranging for a future contact. · In competing needs ratllcr lie cautioned, participants that than competing solutions" she S9ffie peoples refusals come --~---------------­ explained. ' about because the other per-'!! •• e ••• e ••••••••••••• A.' HOMEWORK Dr. F1owers uses similar techniques and · gives his students a lot of homework. They have to go into a market, get one it.em and ask a· person With a load of groceries if they can go in front of hlm . As apother exercise, he has students order a steak in a restaurant and send lt back to the kitchen if it is not cooked properly. "You have a perfect rl~ht to as1t-1or anythlnf, you want," he explained. 'The other person has a perfect right to say no." • Kids! Free! Toy ShoMi Daily thru Sun., Nov. 18th. See all the season's new tOtiiS· Special benefit V.S.M.C toys for tots drive. Also featuring Jeff'• PiltttnQ Zoo in Huntington Center · Mall, Beach & Edinger at tile San Diego Free.way. Sund•y, Wodntsday and F rlUy Jn tho DAILY PILOT Pat Dunn Gets it Done in .At Your Service ' • son also 1s shy. • '"W Assertion training groups, • OUR LADY Of MT CARMEL • h~ claims, are fun, ~·not like • • e th~~~prn a:d~:~~ to that. he • Rumm· age S·ale • said, the people feel good e e about themselves doing things e e they 've never done ·before. • FRI. • SA 'f, • SUN. • "rt is," he sald, "good ror NOV. 16 • 17 • 18 a whole lot of women ... • • and good for a whole lot of • 1441 W. Balboa Blvd., • men too." • NEWPORT BEACH • ,.. ••••••••••••••••••• ~ Ad Good Thru Wed., Nov. 21 PRODUCE MART HOLIDAY SPECIAL SERVICE. FRUIT GIFT PACKS SHIPPED ANYWttERE IN THE U.S.A. COME AND SEI, OUR BEAUTIFUL SELECTION. ' RANCH FRESH 59¢ LARGE AA EGGS · do1. Limit 2 Doi. F~NCY OREGON .. . ·19¢ D ANJOU PEARS ...... -· . . . . . . . . . . . . lb. U.S. NO. 1 LARGE BAKERS , 2 12s~ RUSSET POT'~TpES ............. , lbs. JI ~WC~ ~ . 49~ · Jumbo Walnuts, Filberts, Brazil Nuts . : . . JI lb. OCEAN SPRAY 29~ FRESH CRANBERRIES 1 lb ba9 ........ ' JI ea. CLOSED THANKSGIVING CAY TO ENJOY OUR 'TURKEY CO~I AND CHI.CK OUll UNADVIRTISED SPECIALS DAILY WHOLESALE TO RESTAURANTS DAILY-FREE DELIVERY INGAg[)IA BROS. 0 , ..... co.ti A 1'1.0U• TOtlT1LLM • 2140 PLACENTI~ AT VICTORIA COSTA MESA 645-1365 I f Colonial Dames· 1888® vitamin E oil beauty discovery. Pure Vitamin E oil, E Cream, E Body Lotion, E Fluid Moisturizer and E Complexion Bar at a price you can't resist. Use on flaky, rough and dry skin. Helps soften fine lines, stretch marks, end skin"blemlshes. Now, beautify with nature's natural moisturizer, Vitamin E, "just like nature intended." VH111nln EAll OVtr Hond and Body Lotion, 35001.U. 2.95, 17\i oz. Vitamin E CrNm, 14,000 l.U. 2.95, 2 oz. Vitamin E Oil combined with Beautifying Oil, 14,000 l.U. 2.961 oz. Vltamln E Fluid Mol1turtnr, 14,000 1.U. 2.95 2 oz. Vltomln E Pure Oil, 28,000 l.U. 4.95 1 oz. Vitamin E and Glycerin• Comploxlon Bar, 2,000 l.U. 1.SO·f'>z. Vltamln EMakoup,2,0001.u. (not1hown) 1.751 oz. "'Not connected with any, society. \ JCPenney . We know what you're looking for. • Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following store,: ' FASHION ISLAND, Nawport Beach (714) 6-44-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach (714) 892-7711. • ,• I I .. • ;i_J DAILY PILOT Tttursclay, N0vtmbtt 15, 1973 Daily Pilot Ph otos By Patrick O'Don nell • -• For the fitting of the first students in HOH classes at Wilson School, Costa Mesa, some little ones had to be coaxed. Candy offered by HOH teacher Elsie Deeter makes the process a little less frightening to Carrie Hall, 3, (lop left). Next, Owet1 \Vhelchel, a local hear- ing aid specialist, prepares substance for making earmold, makes the nlold for Carrie's ears and checks for a proper !il At bottom right, Mrs. Jean Hufford, an HOH teacher, is fitted for her own mini receiver. The system will operate thi s way. The teacher will operate a portable transmitter which sends signals to a stationary transmitter, which in turns sends out a ·signal in the classroom which the children and teacher pick up in receivers built into the eannolds. Through this process. the teacher will be able to take advantage of what- eVer heiJ_ring children have and amplify and clarify the sounds. I • Units Plan Salesl Tours, Talks ' ... . _., l\DAl\fS PTA: Gen c r a I the ~A sports night Tues· meeting 1Schcduled for tonight day, Nov. 20, al 7:30 p.m. has been changed to 7:30 p.m. in the gymnasium.· Tuesday, Nov. 2,. in the HARBOR IXIUNCIL PTA' multipurpose room . Students Annual tour· of the special from all grade levels will education program will take present -a-Thanksgiving pro. place Tuesday, Nov.~· A-fark gram . Hansen, coordinator or special BEAR PPO' Sludenti from education and his staff will third and fourth grades will serve as guides at Killybrook:e, present a ThanksgJving pro-Paularino, McNally nm, Bay gram at the general meeting View and Corona del l\1ar flign tonight at 7:30. • Schools . Buses will leave at CoLLEGE yn:W PT 0 ' '9:W a.m. after .Killybrooke Final sale day of the PTO-School has been toured and sponsored Book Fair is return at noon. ~frs. James scheduled tomorrow in lhc Tillotson, cha irman invites all school library from 1 to 4 intere sted persons to visit p.m. Prices range from 10 classes for the educationally cents 10 lt.50. On sale will handicapped, aphasic. hard of be the rerrialnlng volum es of hearing. educable mentally the original 2000 offered by retarded and the trainable the unit. Proceeds from the mentally r e t a r d e d . No C1lr will be used to bt:ne!it reserv ations are necessary. the student body. Workshop for publicily ard PVBS PTSA ' School wrestl-record boo'ks has been chang- ing t<am wtll be featured at ed to Wtdnesday, Nov : 21 , . ' • • at l p.m. in the Girl Scout Council office, Costa Mesa. HARBOUR VIEW PT 0 ' Public is invited to hear special guest spea kers at general meeting Tuesday, Nov. 20. at 7 p.m. in the Parks and Recreation b u i I d i n g at Saybrook Lane and He i I Avenue. l\trs. Harr iet Weider. an cxpcr~ on envi ronmental proble ms, Yli11 ~k on the subject I Wonder \Vhere the Litter \Vent. and Don l\1oraga will discuss the AAU after· school athl elic program for seventh and ei ghth graders. KILLVBROOK E P'l;A: Cub Scout Pack 439 sponsored by the PTA will hold a paper dMve tomorTGow in the school parking lot. ST. JOACHIM PG ' Volunteers arc m~tlng each Tuesday, from 10 a.m. to.noon In the hon1e of J\.1rs . Jack Toelle to make bazaar items for the December sehool benefit • . • :J\.frs. Olarles Zamora, chairman or the Golden Garbage coffimittec requests all members to save food coupons and trading stamp books . . . A group of 17 mothers has volun · teered to prepare and serve hol lunches each Tuesday. VICTORIA PTA , Friday afternoon movie se ssion featuring ""1aster or Highgate Pond'' will take place at 2 p. m. tomorrow. Ad~sslon is 25 cents. • WARDLOW PTO: Eighth graders will stare a PTO- sponsored .car wash Saturday, Nov. 17, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Norm Rice Chevron station, 8971 Adatn.'I ·Avenue. Huntington Beach. Price or wash wiU be $1 for cars and $2 for campers and vans. Proceeds wHI be used to help finance..., the eighlh grade graduation trip. ' /, I • Di .strict" Sele·cts Hearing System Better communication between teachers and bard-of-hearing students through ad- vanced technology is under way in the New- port-Mesa Unified &hool District. Mark Hansen, director of S;pecial educa- tion, explained that afle~ a study or new auditory systems made by the hard-0f-hear- in~ program staff, himself, consulting audiol- ogist Dennis Landesman, and speech pathol- ogist Darrell Mountjoy an FM transmitter- rece1ver system was chosen. The system includes a teacher-operated portable transmitter which ·sends .signals with.in the confines of the classroom only. Teacher and students are fitted for special earmolds which contain receivers. Children in two classes were fitted last month, two more classes to be fitted this month. ·Three-to-IO-year olds will use the new system. ' ' I• 1: • •• ...:.: •• • :' y • • • J • -- AMBLER • TMAT's YOU W>ltN '>00 WERE Wlrn C¥\LLAS, TANKER! TUMBLEWEEDS l'VI: MA11!' OP Ill( MINl110 ,fa)1f A CA!l!lft &llU.1 l'lllLJ IM AFAA117 M< Pl.ANS 1tl MARRY \00 ARE OFFJ IWANr I 1t) !IE A I 51MlaMCH I SUllMPISS! THE'( ARl!f! I MUTI AND JEFF · FIGMENTS ...... ......,_ NANCY - OH, BOY--- A TURKEY WISHBONE ., ~l ., Ii fl JI , MAYBE l'l.L ASK Sl.UGGO TO PULL IT WITH f'IE -"''"" ... TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLB ACROSS .. o-• Ynteniay'a Pun:lt Solved: • , . • •• • PEANUTS by Tom K. Ryan 'tl:Xl mw ... 1 l<Nl:W \001111\LK MEOOTOF!f[ by Al Smith = by Emie Bushmiller THIS WAY I ·CAN'T LOSE J~ • t! /'1!1HCIPALS OFFICE !; " . JUDGE PARKER I • 1-1-Y $c1-100L .~!,,.ARION I ! • DICM TRACY • • GORDO MOON MULLINS . // " . . ANIMAL CRACKERS --- Thur~ay, No~tlT\bfr 15, 1CJ73 DAIL / P/LOf 21J J: CALL 1r O<E'A1"1Vli HOS-r1Ll1"Y By Charles lfarsonl h'VV&iLuaet..e f ir: You Have T'4e R !Gl--IT QU8$TION, DUM-DUM't by Ro~er BoUen 'TNEONE ON T~E RIBMT.I I ,...,.,..., . ••• :I: M ... ..._ ... ~ UP,{, by Ch'arles M. Schulz -1H~5 NOT A 6RADE- 1HArs stJtCASM ~ by Harold Le Dowe -ANO t ,MUST -SAV t 'M PL-'A~EO THA1" YOW JISI< MY OP\NION OF' 1'\-1~ 1'HIN"S ! VOU FOAUOT TO C.IVE ME BACK MY KE-.s WMEN VOU OP,ENEC> TMJ!.T PAD~OCK • • by Mell W~ SHOW"DN'T wa? •AFTe!Z' -ML1· "'OIA'lt'I!. "Tl-f~ ~owe~-r COMMON D!NOMINATO~ Wl'Ve 601- -i~ '·~" .... . ·-:·" ,,.,, '"""' .... ~. by Chester Gould ' . 11-16 THE GIRLS • ~~.,~;1Jt): ~~'\. IH!I~. "Isn't it awful about the expected fuel shortage this winter? I think we should do everything we can to meet it, don't you?" DENNIS ·THE MENACE , • • · 1 j I • • " • I • ~ I • :> 1,.. • • ;): ~ Y. ~: • • ,· ,, , I •• ,. 1 .... -. •• ' .-. ' " . ... " .. ,. ,, . I • • I :JU DAILY PILOT Thursday, Nowmbtr 15, 1971 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHHGHTS - CBS D 8:00 -The Waltons. An accident threat- ens John-Boy's sight, and possibly his life, ln this special two-hour Thanksgiving show. .NBC 0 10:00 -"T@ Blue Knlg_hl.:._In Part Three of this four·part drama, Bumper M'"organ (William Holden) continues on the trail of a p~os· titute's killer. ABC 0 10:00 -Streets of San Francisco. Was a murder set up ~Y a police officer? Detectives Stone and Keller investigate. <!: .... -c,__..r1' • TV DAILY LOG Thursday Ev-ening NOVEMBER 15 @D Los NVlm PoliYocts a!) Cartv1n1 Muslul Q} MO'll•; (2hr) "lune llid( (com) '48-Bette Divis. 1:30 m Merv Griffl1 SbDw 1:00 o a o ei m e m .... @~Cil~C!ltQf(IJI .... 0 lonlnzt ([l)Movll• . 9:000.@@@la;)lronsiH "'Mind for Murder" Wtl•n 1 ni111tdub psy. chic (Ross M1rtin) tells hl1 1udienc1· more tha11 the news p1pers 1bout I fattl fire, Chief lronsldt smells 1r· @ CourbhiP of Eddie'• F•thtt 0 The Luc, Skw m The Flintst.nu ID Stu Trtk f.E Si111pl111nt. ll1rill ""· @ The Bold Ont• @ llMt: (Zhr) "M11 Wltll 1ht "' C.lclln Arin" (dr1) '56 -frank Sinalf1, Kim Novik. 0 @00 &) llu111 F• ''The Ton(' Without retumin1 violence for vio· Jenee. Cline tries to end tht tyranny of 1 Chinm crime boss ind Uberi tt 1 boy sl1ve •. ID""'""'"""" ID"'""""' t'E Histori11 d1 l'lp1 J MIMI 1:30 00 lHl rn Hes:••'• Keren ED M" Wiii M1dt MMI (RI "Frink Capri" 0 MD'l'lt"(C) (90) "A Min CllW Sled11" (ldw) '71-James G1rner, Claude Akins. C!l ~ C!l tli!I ({JI N•n 0 Dff:k Yin l>Jti• Mtrv Criffin SbGW Andy Griffith A Time To Build Up (R) • Uwina EISJ · • Novel1 · Desert Th11tr1 um. R1SC1ls el Y1rildldes Ylfcel 9:l0 €C1 LI ttitn1 a!) Roller Dtrby 7:00 I (1) 0 m News lowtin1 fof Doll1n Mo~e: (C) (Zhr) "lo fftH ud lack'' (dra) 'SS-Audit Murph)') fnaer Space 10:001J (~ CIJI (jJ QI 11!9(ll]!!AIJL I.Tiit Or· 1nge Blosso111 Special Camedi1n Geor11 (Goober) Lindsey and lin1er Loretta Lynn are CO·hosts for this hour of music, oand the special guests include Charley Pride, Jody Miller, Barbar• F1irchild, Ch1rll1 Mc· Coy, The Oak Rid2e Boys, Tom T. Hall, Kenny Price ind Miss Ttlll ~ 1973, Julft Mallett 0 fAJ @Qg m I l•IClll I Tht Blue llnlaht Part Ill. Bumpu lllkl to 1 hooker who · might hi ve hid connections with 1 murdered prosli· lute, 1nd she tells him 1bout 1 customer of hers who was 1rmtd. Bumper bre1ks into the m1n's hotd room ind trt!!ls him. oamm@•m · Whit's My Unt? 'Low• Wey ......... w=· tf ....... (!)Dn .... Ericl ' Titeoltll ~Cl) Liiiie I El JJrlmer Am01' T1Je.Rnistl M11si"' .......... @ ftigbt lillluy 0 THE STREETS OF SAN * FRANCISC~BIG HITI 7:JO IJ oru'.n Welles' Cralt Mysteries \ "Unseen Alibi" An innocent man is m1de to 1ppe1r 2uilty of mu1der thro u1h an lnt1lc11ely devised p!1n. Dean Stockwell I UHIS. O @@ fll"'""''"''""" Cisco "Shield of Honot' Detedives Slone and Keller i11Westiplt 1 mur· der they decide hid to be set up by one of their own-1 police officff sworn to uphold till law. 1:00 I tto11n'1 Httoes The New Price Is Right Help ThJ Nel1hbor You Asked for II Conc1nlr1t1011 Lefs Mike A Otal QI Bewitched I m To Tell the Trvtll @ The Thrillse•-•t• ,, Acclo11 Chle1no !'()))Jimmy Dt1n 9iow m Jon1th1n Wlnten Show ED Tht Chaul C.1111 10:30 T1lk Bid 6 Twlli&ht ZoM Bill Cosby Yid1s Ill Conftldo : Session "Burton & Cunko" · Jueves dt G1t1 · • News/Sports ll:OO '? ~ 91~111::: Ii Twilip! Zone [61 Ptny Mut11 0 Phll Dollakit1 $bow 0 THE WAL TONS TONITE * A 2-HOUR SPECIAL THANKSGIVING SHOW I To Tell tM Tnrtll Get S1111rt @ The Medic Alfrt11 lfltdl<td htsttlb (Q!; 001 Trilli Wut 11 :15 al Cine1111 34 0 13 ({JI ({)~ W•""" 12h!l 11:30 0 (I!!) C!JI cIJ CIS "" ""°' A . spea1I Th1nkS11vln1 show '" (C) "Don't M•kt WIYtS" (com) '67 which John-Boy seems .to ~av• much -Tony Curtis, Claudi1 C1rdin1la. to bt th1nkful f?t" IS his htgh 1r1das Q efj (jJ ®J @!;) JthllllJ C1fMf1 haw• 11r~ed him • ch~nce ~I • Roy Clark and Paul Ehrlich (eeolo-scholarsh1p 1nd his 11rl fnend, ~) guest Jenny (Sian Barb1ra Allen ), is coin· IJ Movie·· "Cocolnvb" (com) '29 Jn~ ho"!e: Then a pu!le~ falls at the -The Ma~ Bro!l!ers. mill 1tnk1n1 Joh~·Boy In the head, I (fii rn m ltck 1"11r Tonitt .. a.nd h~ l~arns his sight, and PO.S· Alfred Hitchcock Prest11ts · s1bly his life. 1ra thieatened. Movie: (C) "Little Eapt" (dr•) O @@®lm Flip Wilson B~se· '51-Maik Stevens Rhonda Fleming. ball areal Henry A.Iron Is Fltp's · special 2uest and will be "101sted" 12:00 00 One Step Be1ond by Flip 1nd otlllr lurpriu ruests In O TI!riller '- 1 spool of 1 friars Club banquet m Movie: (C) ''Tiii M1r1tld111" O Mavle: (C) (2hr) ''The Froz11 (wes) '55 -Dan Duryea, Ke1n1n Dtld" (ho1) '67 -Dana o\nd1tws, Wynn. Anna Po!~. 13 Phil Don1h11t Sllow O @(I) aJ T 01111 "frame-Up" Dawe is suspended after beln1 set 1:00 i 0 00 ~ @ Hm up by the he1d of 1 crime syndicate · @l@ m Tomorrow to lak1 the blame for 1 ne1r·fat1I · W1nted Dead or Allvo beating of a hoodlum. O Million $ Mowit: (2111) "W11· d1est1r 73" (wes) 'SO -J•mes Stew1rt, Sflelley Winters. 1:45 1) Mavie: -rJte N1kr4 trl1adt" (dra) '6~11en Scott, Shirley E1ton. Metro's Empire Crumbles By BOB TIIOMAS ENTERTAINMENT LOS ANGELES (AP) Ntxt Year Met~Goldw}'ll· A1ayer will mark its 50th an- niversary, and the film crowd has been wondering if there will be a company left to .. , ---------' celebrate it. With the resignation of AtCAf presi dent J ames Aubrey, fears for the survival of the venerable studio con· tinued to grow. This despite lhe clai;:;, of Aubrey's suc- cessor, Frank E. Rosenfelt, that "the ~oar of Leo the Lion will not be reduced to a Vo'eak meow." Aubrey said in his resigna- tion statement 'that he had done the job he set out to do and was leaving the company. But observers found added concern in the fact that ijosenfelt is a lawver, and lawyers are ' well sUited for presiding over the liquidation of companies. A SE!>'mlENTAL nole wls sounded by James ·Stewart, who began his film c8reet at MGM in 1935 and has lately returned. for a televisiOJl series, "~Jawkins.'' "Now that I see the place as it is and, reme mber what it was when l first saw it as a contract player, the whole thing makes me sad. IS.ears I SAVE *33! Sears Tru-Ear• 46 Hearing Aid Replar $t99 Se'.a rs trained hearing aid consultant may be able to adjust this hearing aid to your par- ticular hearing Joss. It has a wide variety of settings, one of whlCh may be able to help you. T'fu·Ear 46 is equipped with a ceramic frontal microphone for fine sound quality. Separate on/off switch for easy operation. Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans • DURING AUBREY'S $4,000- a-week· service to , MGM. he sold the studio's props, cos- tumes and back lot: mustc publishing and record·mOlking companies : foreign theaters and a studio in England. Last month he announced that AlGM was going out of the film distribution business alter 49 years and the company made a deal with Unite:t Artists to release its past and future movies for the next 10 years. HELDOVERI MARLON IRANDO "LAST TANGO JN PARIS" + Aliff f••t't ''WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?'' lotti 111 Color tXI •• ) 'Red Bot Lovers' Jl-Come1IY-at Laguna_ . . -Cris.: EWOTT KASTNER presents CUFF --GORMAN JOSEPH BOLOGNA Weekdays: 7 & 8:40, 10:15 Sat. & Sun. 1 :45,3:30, ~:15~:7 & i:.S Intermission~ Tom Titus SHOW ST~Tk 6:45 ,,M. 2nlll •-"tre, Dri"'411 0..'1 "THRIE IULLns fOl A LONG GUN" , scenes. The Laguna set is well designed and truly looks like 14tli llCOID WllK! W ... ffyl • 7:30 • •:10 Sot./S .... 1:10.1:30 S:JO. 7:30. •:JO THE WAIMEST M051' HUMAN COMIDT IN A LONG, LONCi TIMI. .DREAT _BELLY LAUGHS Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You ,.,_.,.,, ··~•t. '2~1,Zf tN1 lut«MU llOAOSt waNDH WOMIN l'"i nus. THI DOLL · YUl ..,.,.. e WMS llOl .. ..--WISTWOILD lflOI • SOYLINT GlllN r,.l • ... 0..11• ,, ...... . .. -•Ilk.I 962-2411 -~·-'-THI WAY Wt Wl~l lllOI .... """"· ' s. . .i ..... .. c;. ... , ... _, si•.•212 COPS ANO IOlllll INI "us • THI GOOD GUYS & llAD GUYS ._..loo!_. .. '.'' .... 11 ...... . ._ ...... 111·11U ... -TIMI lo. tirT IUUS CHllST SIM•ST.U I Nat IOOT Hill !'It s...1 ..... ·--..... c...._. '"'7ot2 '"""• ... ·--llfi•~ -~' .._ ... ,.,. '~·­°"··-4n·•••• .... ,..,,.... ..... .... llSUS CH•IST SUN•ST.U "'.,. 1 IOOT HIU "9 ,• • ' i I [ I I Allrtd Hitcllcodl l"ruenb ' 801in1 From tllt Olympic L1 Senora Joven 06: MDVie: (2hr) "Th• llttidtnr' (Ma) 67-Tony Mus1nt1, Z:OO m All·Nlpt Sher. ''Eu11b St9ct· Ide," "It Hlpptntd i• lroad DIJ'· 1 -------::::;;;;;;;;~:~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~ li&flt" 3:10 IJ MO¥i1: "CUruc11, le11f 11 Utt Amaz1111" (hor) '57 -John Brom· fie ld. ~vtrly G1rl1nd. ED The AdrocWs Friday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 (fi) (])''Women Asen'I An1els" (com) '42-Roberlson Hare. t:JO O (C) "Thi SKond Time Asound" "-"m) '61-0tbbie Reynolds. 12:30 ID (C) "'The Pir1t1" (1dw) '48 - Gene Kelly, Judy Garland. 1:00 O (C) "M11nlflc1nt ObMnio1" (rom) '54-J1ne Wym1~, Roell Hud· son. 3:00 ({f (C) "T1•c Her, SM't MIM" (com) '63-James Stew1rt. Sandra ""· l1g) (C) "TJie Stcorld Thu Arollld"' {com)''6l-Oebbie Reyl'IOkls. 10:00 (])"'The ttusUet' Canel. (dra) '61 , -f'iul Hewmin, Jac~it Gluson. l .SO ~ @ ."fhe S11nsbi111 ~1trlclt" (dr1) l-------...all~Jll...ltll 11 Lts1 $ellls" {ditJ ,33 68--Cliff Robertson, Dini Merrill. -Bel• Luaosi. I •:01r1tccrR1tU11-.l ·l'Vfl'""'(ara•i-•10= • • U :OOIJ "l'lllnlorl Prtsident" (eom) ,32 louis_Jourd1n, Annt B1-1er. -Geort• M. Coh1n, Claudel11 Col·J 4:30 !Il S.111111 lOAM list1111 bert. "T1rle F1f'lftlf'1 Dlu111t1t' (com)j (~ (j)) "1111. Deeds Con 1.-Tow11" '47-M1rth1 R•Yt-Cond. (dr1) 'J6-G11y Coopef, _KOCE TELEVISION LOG J:M .U M•11 .. MlllOI IC) l tts.on 1• "Tlwt Mlllll of Min. Par! IV" p,vcllOICGY couri.e fOI" cot!Tot (redlr.--- 11• ~r.Mll Clltf CCI "Fl11tw P11lrv" -Julll Cflllcl 1Mmon1lr•tt1 Frtncn eookhl9 .,,d baklllf Nehnlqut1. 4:Df Molll'lftt Tiii• Grow ~C.I M1t11lul 111fC11"m1rlon 11. orow1111. 1111nt1no, •nd ll:ttplnf YoUr 1ndo!:lr ~'111 11111. CIOOI" plMllt lll•ltrl'/ llld IUlll. •:• 1Eltc:lr1C 'c""',."' !CJ LI n I 1ootl!pa1t1 oet• 11110 J1mmv l ovd'I Fl•lr Wlltft 1 ~cl•I 11 ~ ll'ltf 11tcflft fhl blendlllll Urflt91n Of Tiii ....,.,.. "I.'' I! .. W.-ltfffl (C) I ll l lfd 11t1 .,..... 1 llr'd Holll Ill t11t nlloMloftlood -bl.rt thif COllllltll cftlrpl111 lllflve• 1'111 MlehbOI'• c,,,.,., •~II Or-. C._,., "' Wnllft.tton fCJ s.t 11111 ... SllftlltY, Nritl'nCRr 11, ,, 6'00 ~·"'· •1• MlllWY 9' Art !Ct lltllOO'I 11 "Mtlltlll$11'1, Gr1tlr., tnd 11tom11 Sc<•I l1ttt ' 7:IO Ortflfl CCHllllV llt"ltw !Cl TIM "m~lrlM! of-11'1! l!+r" lw Gmn - Counf'f. Publi< 1tl1lr1 1nd IOc:ll e."11111 1round Or.tnot Counly •11 '"tvred tech -..... 7:» Al Miii l 11!1vt1 :CJ LHSO!'I 16 ""Tlioe MIN!, ot M•n, Ptrl t\I" -PIYCllotOOr cour5e !or t Dl!l!'Ve credit. -l:M l'OCll't Ora11t• c-tv !Cl ''Tiii' J1W11h Cemmunlly 11'1 O••nv• C0\111-tv" -Sn 1!111119 MOl'ld•v. NOYembtl' l~. 11 a~lO "·"'· t1>t '#omlfl (Cl "Antrn1!!~•s tr Tr&CIJllONI Marrlt<;r•." N t l't • O'NtUI, Mtltiropol09!1l Ind co 1uttior 01 OPtn MllrT1IQI 11'1d Cllhen JllKVH l1Ctt1 of 11111 ~IC •"'Cl Olt>ttt' otMrl. t r• l'Jri"' lJIMI CCI Wllll•M I'. 81,1Cklt\' Jr, f(plorn IOflkt II 1111foftftll •MCI lnit1"n1ll0111I lnltrni ,., \ r OWfl.RO'. ~l\J\l\•\\l~K ··-.. . . . . . ' " ... "' ' ' ' .. NIMIE• ENGAGEMINT TllE--·u• ) • 2"' !OP ATllACTIDN CLINT EASl'WOOO "MIOM PLAINI f -(I) ' !NI I ..,l , I ,I I : I f I • ,',; - ' I ' . '• 4 ,1LOS bard '-Davis tertaln ' 1But i 'okl en a revi ~his firs ddy ·at ... . ll in : the all " "Rufus .inr.,hi · siilas You're . You." •. •I ' 1,, -JIE •• 1 Cri I ·• 'j"l ::Ji . t. '"610 r v W'. ,. l: I: :·an I: !410 t"CO I. 1 · "'Of I C I 1 f I f.1 " "'Pl l · " ~ ' " ., . ., ~· " .. •. .. :~ "' " ~ :: < ., . . . .. :: : 45 Years of Sam1ny 1 __ S.....:pecial H i:_g!ili hts Career Friday --. By JERRY BUCK ;,LOS ANGELES !AP) -It 's bard lo belie ve that Sammy Davis Jr. bas been an en· tcrta ncr for 45 years. ''But It's true and ~he 47-yenr· ·old cntert'ulner will present 11 review o( those -years In his nrst television speci81 F'ri· day ·at 8:30 on NBC, Oiannel ... I~ include!i a film clip rro1n the au • black 1933 m 0 v ·1 e "Rufus Jones for ,President." .irftJ'lhich the 7-year-old Davis siis "I'll Be Glad When You're Dead,, YOO Rascal You." Davis recently \V&S named cniertainer of the year for the-third straight year by the performe rs in Las Vegas. He's i>a!t 0\1.'._J~r and a vice presi- deat of the Tropicana Hotel -~the first black man ever to l>wn a part of a Las Vegas ho(el. \Vhen he s t a r t e d performlng in Las V~gas near· ly .20 year5 ago, he wasn't ev0> allowed to' stay al a holtl on the Strip. The special, taped in Lon· d<in, will be shown on NBC ·Friday. Jt features highlights frQm -his n J g h t club performances, the fight scene from his Broadway triumph, "GQ!den Boy," a nd a re-ereated scene from "Porgy amt Bes,.," in. which he plays .both Sporlin' Life -his role In the movie -and Porgy. ''IT'S REALLY something every pe rformer wishe.s for ," Davis said. "To do nn bour and -not have o-offer any apologies. 1'here are n o 1.11>0logics hare. J think Ir's the best specia_I that I could do. ' "Every performer who walks out and says, ·Good evening, is trying to prove something. Of course, you're trying to prove something. This is the only business where you don't bet on place Or show. You go for the roses ." Davis, who ha s a five-year contra1."l with NBC, is careful to separate the special from his regular series -recently relillcd "Sammy Davis Star· ring in th e NBC Follies.'' The musical c omed y "l•'ollies" has been running third in the ratings, behind ABC's "Streets of San Fran· cisco" and CBS' parade of bii; movies on Thursday night. ASKED IF he was satisfied \Yith the series, Davis replied, "I'm not satlsfied with th e rati ngs. I'd llke to be No. I. We've got troubles but no( in the concept. !l's su pposed to be hokey, it's supposed to have old jokes and be on a stage that's the 'Follies.' " Davis said he believed lhal an earlier tiine period would help the show because '"il's FACTl1 FINDER FOR • ~ f:imily show."' "But I! I had to do that kind of show 'The Follle1' is the bes t concept. l desperately wanted-to do 'Poor Devil.'" 1-(e made n pllot last year for "Poor Devil.", 11 comedy in which he played an inept devil 's disciple who is never able to sign up any recruits for a life or sin. A few yeari;" ago he made an ABC Movie of the Week called "The J)igeon ," in which he \Yas a private detective. It was not a pilot but if it had caught on that would have been no obslaclc. .. ••tr \VAS FIVE years too early,'' he said. notin~ that this season there ~u;e two series about black privute eyes, "Shalt" on CBS and "Tenafly" on NBC. "There \Vere na guns, no violence. I-le wasn't su perspadc. lle was just a guy doin g a job. It hark ed back to the old John Garfield pictures.'' 11 e said he has taken parts on episod ic television -such as ''The Mod Squad " - because ''for me to get a chance to do what I've done on television I'd have to \.\•ait 20 yea rs in the movies. Television is by and large 10 years ahead or the movies in presenting black1 actors and · bl ac k thoughts. "Television eats up stories and actors -but if y'"ou can survive it, \\'hat a c,hancc. ,. THE OFFICIAL ASSOCIATED PRESS . . •• . • • ' • • • ' ALMANAC . ~ il731N W11thtr Financu Sp1c1 <REVIEW For1ign R1l1tions Awards Eanh .. F-$11111, Ci~H Hlitory ·industry Dinsters ' labor Educ1tion ~ :.tml Rights Spons .. leisure T r1nspon1tion ,,Crimi Religion ::'Fisc1I Alflirs Hom as Health World Nations •• Communications ~G1ography Arts Science I • Whatever you want to know about any of the above subj11cts- ··and many others-can be found in this valuable r11ferenc11 . . l:book. There are more than 1000 pages of instant information :·combined under the direction of the world's· largest news ·organization. plus a map section of the United States and .,Canada, a color section of flags and a complete chronology f:Of the Watergate scandal. It's a big bargain at only $1.75, tJ"us 25 c11nts for handling. Sand for your copy now/ •• fflll OUT 1/IND MAIL THIS HANDY COUPON TODAY! ·- • ~ ·. i ~ ~ • ,--------------------------. I I I I AP ALMANAC Orange Coast Daily Pilot P.O. Box G22 I Teaneck, New Jel'ffy 07666 : Enclosed is$ __ · t of AP Almanac·. I I I ., Name ___ _ Addre11 ___ _ Clly _ . Send me ___ copies ·--· ------- State Zip _ t I I S :J prr bnnk 11rrl11 d1·1 po,•lll~~· and ~011dl111i. 1\f(lk.11' rhtrk.1 p111~ilifr I•• Tlir A.1.•0<·11111•1/ Pit",. ~--------------------------~ ·-. .. I . ·- ENTERTAINMENT 'Gigi' Ope11s B1·oadwa v • • • abian Really • Bared 11~ All Q: Fabian, the 1lnglng star from Philadelpbla, wa11 a 11elgbbor and one of my teenage cru1bes. ls H tnie he's doing a Burt Rtynolds bit and appearing tn the nudi; in a natlonol n1agailne? -''Please-Just ldenllfy.ft1e-as Emily," Phll11detphiu. A: Yes. Fabian (Forte , you'll remember!) up.staged I~eynolds bY. giving hls all tuln1ost) as A-Ian of I.he tdonth (of Seplc1nbcr) ror Playgirl, the distaff answer to Playboy. In addition to the centerfold. Fab's shown skinny-dipping in a pool and mounting a Honda -illegally, because he isn't even \Vearing a hehnet! This is qu.ite a dcpal1Ure from lhc days v.•hen . as an upcoming young star, he won !he Aincrican Bandstand popularity poll conducted by Dick Clark. And c..omplained: ''Girls jumped up on the stage, trying to take my clothes off." But tha!'S ·lhc name of the gninc -publicity. Engagemc11t( (' , ) By JACK GAVEii Glad You Asked Th~t NEW YORK (UPI J -Alan .Jay Lerner and Frederic~ Loc\ve arc a courageous paif of 1nusical show collabor ator1 They have taken a fuJ:' musical movie of theil~. ''Gigi." \\'liich \Vas cveryonf'~ love about 14 years ago. ~llld risked comparison '" i I h themselves by ·turning it itl!> a stage musical of the same title. The show opened Tucscl:l)' night before a glittering a1· dience at the Uris Tbeatc~. and so far as I am concerned they have brought o!f Y. tunefiil . beautifully staged anil acted show that has class and style. \Yhich are things tlJ! theater can use these days. TllERE \\'ILL. of courst. be those. \Vho \\'ill carp th•t it isn't as good as the movie. but thafs their problem. Ler ner, the librett ist. lyricist, and !,.owe. the coai - f>0ser, have taken seven Qf lhe songs fron1 the popular score of the motion picture and aug1nentcd them v>'i th fi\'t! , new musical numbers th<t serve \YCI! even if they do start \\1ith the disadvantage of unfamiliarit y. Before going further into lhat angle, il should be pointed, out that the admirable cast deserves great praise. t Karen \Vol fe , experienced but little known here. is a delight as Gigi. a singer. dancer and actress v•h o mak es a fine impression. THEN THERE is that \l'onderful singing act o T , Alfred Drake. for years one. ol this country's most stylish players. in the role of tht aging Parisian roue, Honore Lachilles. He is singing better than evei-, and his light touch in scenes where he is sort of an observer-<:ammentator . on the events does much for the show. Leriter, incidentally . has given him some good !ires for these bi.ts .. h1aria Karnilova and Agnes Moorhead are most \Vinning as the relatives of Gigi who plan her future and Daniel lt1assey does a fine acting and singing job as Gaston Lachaitles, rich. Young and a man of numerous affairs . The show was created by the Los Angeles and San Fran· cisco Civic Light 0 pc r a organization of Edwin JLeslcr and has been playing since last summer, first on the West Coast, then across country. Saint·Subbcr is spoqsorlng it here. GE N(Allrl CINf..,11. CCllU•OAjl.flCIN 0 IOUNTAIN VAlln .,.~.:~I ~~;oc..:;.:;;;;-,-; f100He1~ "WISTWORLD" IPG J + "SOYLENT GREEN" "·'--"" C!ro~'·• "'"ite·~hor" '""' ............. c .................. .. ~·1J~1tfl. "'f•w"''"·•ry Fl~11" 1,~, .. " Q: \Vhnteve r happened to that beautiful moYle star. t:lla Raines? I never see her anymol'fl, not t\'en on com· ni erclals. Also, ~·as she ever married to Claude Raines? - fttrs. Esther I)., Richmond, Va. _ A: No. Claude Rains~ London.born, had a sho\ver of \Yivcs -a total of six. But · Ella Raines was not one of them. She dropped out of films to marry Air Foi-cc Brig. Gen. Robin Olds. and it's 'proven to be one of the longest- running such matings in moviedom -26 years. Q: Could You ask l\1lss Helen Hayes if ber husband p_ain ted a pi clure or a nude woman, CO'!'.ered with veils, that my uncle had hanging ln his saloon back In 1918? - l\1rs. Frieda Bossick, Scranton, Pa. A. No nudes is good neY.'S. From ~1iss 11ayes's hon1e in Nyack, N.J .. comes word that "Mr. {Charles) Mac· Arthur did NOT paint the picture your reader describes ."" Q: I've never heard of Doris Day ever appearing on a charity telethon ar at a benefit. Is she too imporcant to do those things? - G.T.A., San Jose, Cal. r A: Not at all. Doris' day will come -for the only cause in which she's interested, her 'pet project: "Actors ilnd Others for Animals." If she can make the time and place, she promises she'll appear as a box-offi ce attrac· tion lo help raise funds for her four-footed friends. Other stars active in th e project: Lucille Ball and Mary Tyler r-iJoorc. · Q: Are the Smothers Brothen. about lo reunite for a television series? -Mn. Amelia R., San Antonio, Tex. A: No. Tommy Smothers is going it alone as a sta.ndup ·care comic. A11d if he garners juicy reviews, th e William Morris Agency plans to book him in Las Vegas. Chicago, Miami, Reno and elsewhere along the scotch 'n' soda circuit. Q: I heard that Charlie Pride uses a flying rehearsal hall. What's that? -R.l\f.P., Garden City, N.Y. A: rt's an F·27 jet which the singer rents to hedgehop his group to dozens of cities. Charlie takes great Pride in nying an airborne penthouse suite. With genuine leather and suede seats and sofas, solid teak\.\'ood tables, hand· crafted by master artists. Also a stereo tape system, movie equipment, a wet bar, a hot-food galley, a restroom and a dressing room large enough to accommodate two or three guests al a time. And, we almost forgot, folding partitions to conve rt the belly of the craft into a rehearsal hall. Q: What writer 1aid: "Writing is tough; what is most difficult is to know when lo slop"? _: l\frs. Lynn Aftab, Go lden BeacH, Fla. / A: Aetor·writer Peter Ustinov. POSTSCR!PTS FROM MARILYN. To Mrs. Leroy Hay. Sa n Antonio, Tex.: The original host of what NBC-TV named "The Tonight Show" wasn't Em.I~ Kovacs but Steve Allen. He was followed by "America After Dark," wh ich Jack Lescoulle anchored with colwimist interviewers sprinkled roast to coast like pins on a mAp. Then Jack Parr came, saw and conquered, till he yoluntarily bowed out to be succeeded by the series' most $Ucce$$ful host. Johnny Carson ... First Jate--rtight TV show in that formal was NBC·TV 's "Broadway Open House," starring Jerry Leiter and Dagmar. About whom we'll do a complete up- to-da:te "what happened to'" sometime soon . . . · QUESTIONS YOU WANT ANSWERED AGAIN: Reason you · never see the actors and actresses in TV beer rom· mercia·1s actually drink the beverage has something to do \Yil h not encouraging under-age viewers to guzzle the foamy brc\v ... Lucille Ball was bom to Henry D. and Desired Hunt Ball in Jamesto\vn, N.Y.: around 1910, and Lucy's been ha ving a ball ever since. ·I Send your qu estions to Hy Gardner, "Glad Yo1' Asked That," cO.re of tliis newspaper, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn ond Hy Ga rdner will ansiver as n1a11y questions as they can in their colun111, but tlie volume of 1nail 1nalces. pe rsonal repltes impossible . ·-·---·I ·-THE MOST IENSATIONAL SEIUf.S Of ANIMATED FILMS EVlll SEEN ON THE SILVEll SCllE.EN AN IVY fllM PllESfNlATION . ~w•eucK ROGERS .,,. LtmE RASCALS Ch•tet" 1 7:JO & t :lO locll l'fetllllt SUllf THIATlll-Hu ... lclrl.-5l6•tlt' 'Try Saturda)·'s News Quiz We Dat·e Y 011 ---1 -• DAILY PILOT 31 Kid Sttiff ffamburgcr huckster Rodney :\lien Rippy and ·ry host Dick Enberg kick off the NBC l·lolid<ry Festl· val for Chil dren week.· Celebrities arc co1npcting on gan1e shows this \veek \\'i\h prizes goi ng to children's orga nizations. --. ·-1 ~-------. LIDO N~'g."' it 'S: 1884 Newport Co to M -1552 lj ELD OVER Dally from 4:30 Sat./511". froft'I 12:30 "BIG FOOT" !GI "NORTH COUNTRY" FAMILY TWIN CINEMA f er ' ' > , •' I• .. " ' ' , ' < 'I ' "'o''l'b'""'~•J•'"• . CINEMA I "0"!.AHOMA CRUDE" IPGI • '"JUNIOR BONNER" IPGJ I I · 1 1-- IHTRANCI lO LIDO l~I 67J..8l50 "SCARECROW" !Rl wlfil G•11• H•t•mc111 & Al Pecl•o Also "THE LAST OF SHEILA" I 7 & 10:45 P.M . -----------~ · -.-'THE REIYERS" (PG) CINEMA II I ,,sa · "THE AP.ISTOCl.ATS!' IGI • , Call TiieaMr I for Sv11dcry Matl...- 5clrledvl• "SONG Of THE SOUTH " fGI iii79 Jbuth Coast Rep ertory A MASlEll. .. 1£CE OF TIMELESS SATllilt: Mol1-r•'1 "THE WOULD·IE G-lNTLIMAN" ~ MOW TMRU DE C. U AU Tll• Eltlll ... tl 01 A Mu,.t•I Comedy -a119111H1 5fylt l ltt7 NEW .. ORT, COSTA MESA FOi. RESEllVATION5, CALL -'°"'lJU _,-!!.Ji~ CINFODME 20 . " .. ~~'-''-'-i...J' -... " -· '". CINFDOME !I .. :·, ... ,.~ • .!J;.:J.J.U::r.J.111.<' -.... --r;r SrA01uM ·1;;::, .. ..&llll.1 U.'!f.U.lL'_'"1""_J 8.lrtira SlrtiMIMll RoMrt Jt .. tm "THE WAT WI Wiii" IP&I "SOUND 011 MUSIC" "' "CHAllLOnl'S W'I'' (61 "'40 CAllAn" (PGI ... "IUnERFLIES ARE Fllll" CPGI "DON'T LOOI( IN TNa IASl!MIHT" "TALES THAT WITNESS MAONISS,. "LAST HOUSE ON lNa l ll"T" (ltl "COFFEE" (Ill ... "THE MACK" IR I "ELECTllA GLIDE IN ILUE" CPGJ ... "THE OUTSIDE MAN" U.A, (;lty 11141 5"tll CoHI CIMnMl-T11.W1y jk !L~ll$ and Gol*n Aterll-Otff 'lll l:lll p.m. .. ~ Horrorr "Don't LOOK 1N THI 8ASEMENT" "TALIS WITNESS MADNESS" 8011'1 In Co1orr IRJ l<llllt ... , A_ "WONDllt WOMIN '' V "THI! DOLL SQUAD'' ' IDll'I In Colort (I.) lJnl11111tPd f"t(·C Parking At All lt1,•t1ttl'<. FROM Fash ion Isl and Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR. .. • • I .. ' .. ,- • ; ' ' • , b . .. ;, • . -_;2 DAil • PILO 1 ·1 hurSday, NO"tembtf 15, 1973 lnd1rstry. Strike Food Union Asks U.S. Mediation LOS ANGELES !UPI !UPI) ~A coalttlon of foocttndustry- unions which have set a Sun- day strike deadline asked the government's top mediator Wednesday to come here to oversee negotiations. Of'flcials of 40 u n i o n s representing about 2 8 , O O O workers In the wholesale and retail Southern California food industry set a telegram to \V. J. Usery Jr., director of the Federal ~tedialion and Consilialion Service. THE WIRE Was sent in response to an earlier telegram from Usery , which urged the unions to suspend the strike deadline and come to Washington, D.C. fo r talks if negotiations remain stalled ~-fonday .. The un1ons ' telegram said Press Aide To Reagan Quits Post SACRAMENTO (UPI) &twin J.-Gray, one of Gov .• Ronald Reagan's most in· lu1ential advisers, resigned to- day as the governor's ,press secretary to become vice president of a gVings and loan assocaation. Reagan , in announcing the resignatioq. said a new press secretary would be named 100 persons are involved In -1he-bargalninran.d ·thaH t \\·ould cost more than $100,000 to ny them back to the na· tion's capital. TI>e unions ot- tered to pay Usery's fare to Los Angeles to come mediate the talks, saying in the telegram, "with your help, we feel we can hope to each an agreement." The wire also said that negotiations were producing "substantial p r o g r e s s . ' ' Involved are unions represeir ting Teamsters, Machinists, ~·teat Cutters and Operating Engineers. A number of other unions, although not directly involved in current negotia- tions, have pledge to support the four negotiating unions. UNION LEA DER J er r y Vereruse, president of the food and drug council, Sfl id i{ a strike does come it ~uld be against only one o~ two superrharket cflains. ''If the industry elects to lock out the rest, then the food shortage will be created by the industry and not the union," he said. Treasur er's Campai gn Fundi1 ig Hit SACRAMENTO (UPll - State Treasurer. Ivy Baker Priest has solicited and ac-, ________ , cepted campaign contributions ( ) from California banks whil e BRIEFS her ornce decides which tinan- -• cial inStitutions r e c e i v e '---------" dei;w:>sits of millions of dollars shortly. It was expected to in state funds. be Gray's assistant, Clyde l\1rs. Pr i est \Vednesday Wa lthall. denied any impropriety ex- Gray. 38, will be in charge isted in the practice,.declaring of public relations for the San deposits are made according Diego Fed eral Savings and to "set rules" which have Loan Association, whose presi-their basis in la\\'. dent is Gordon C. Luce, former secretary of t h e bus iness and transportation agency in the R eagan Administration. e Te111blor SAN JOSE. (AP ) -A mild earthquake shook residents on the east side of San Jose Wednesday night, police said. Police s a i d the tremor registered on a seismograph at Mt. Hamilton, but the Richter scale reading was not determined. e Drug Rn Id TORRANCE (AP) -A raid by . so"?e 30 federal agen ts and police officers Jed to the arrest of 31 persons in this Los Angeles suburb and the seizure of $2,000 v.·orth of heroin and some $1,000 in cash, officers said. A police spokesman said \\'ednesday about half the persons arrested u·ere booked for invest igation of possessing heroin for sale and the remainder for investigation or JM).SSession of heroin. e Wldom Sue• • LOS ANGELES (UPll - The widow or radio talk show host 11-·larv Gray, who died of a heart attack after police mistakenly arrested him for drunken driving, filed a $10 million \Yrongful death suit again.st the city \Vednesday. r.1rs. Lillian Gray said her husband suffe red from cardiac hypertensioo a n d was on medication when he was ar- rested for erratic driving Nov. 6. The suit alleged Gray died because he did not receive any medical care at police headquarters. \\'here he u•as given a drug by a nurse. No doctor u·as on duty. After his release, Gray \\'as driven to radio station Kfl where he collaps'°ed and died. "IT WOULD mak e no di{· ference u·hether a bank con- tributes to a campaign •or doesn't. It's all handled the same." she said in an in- tervieu'. ~lilton G. Gordon. a poten· tial candidate for t h e Democratic nominalion for Treasurer. ootvever. sharply questioned the practice. lie declared bankers w e r e "pressured" to make the I donations. ! f.1rs . Priest also solicited I contributions from banks dur- ing her 1970 campai g n . Gordon, who ran against her in that election, also attacked the practice then . fl.·Irs. Priest. a Republican . is seeking her third term . 1 State Pa11el ' Okays EPA j Standards SACRAMENTO (UP ll Yielding to the federal govern· ent. the State Air Resou rces Board has adopted U . S . E n vironmental Protection Agency's exhaust emission standards for new 1975 cars sold in California. "We're being politely run out of the (clean air) business anyivay, maybe we ought to relax and enjoy it," member R. Robert Brattain s a i d \\lednesday at one point in the proceedings . The board, the s t a t e gove nlment's primary smog fi ghting agency, also adopted exhaust emission standards for new 1975 light trucks sold in California. The new stan- dards were slightly tougher than the federal restrictions. H STAR GAZEK1<i'~ AlllS ByCLAYJt PO . ., , ~ M..-~. 11 i:.. Y-Daily Admty c;.HJ. M: '".A,.,~. 11 AccorJ/1111 lo tit• Sto~. Y 1 · _. 7 To develop m=~ for frido)", ¢: S.76-77 rl!Od WOrds COfr ing to~fb.ribtrs T u•us of your Zodiac birth sign. sco••oo .; l ll:ttp 31 lie 61 SWtl• . 1-~~---I-~----'2"Y111r 32 AM TMalt--oq .. n · . _., }O J The JJ Food 63 Unexpeded Hor. Jr • .. b ,. 'f I " ••• ' ,. ,,. lr • ~· .,_- t ~ ) 1-22.J3..44 ,. Your J• Voluobltt 64 Be . 1 .5~ J.5Mill~ 65r.vrous 9-2G-Jl <;GIM~le!Nl!...-l 6 ~ 36 Blow 66 A<;d • ~58-11 ---• .1..510~-__ J7-.You_ -61 VO.,, • - N_.J JI I lle'"f 38 But 68 ""°"""" JuHe 1 9 TcQor J9Gtoti1ude 69 Y°"' 0 Lon •0 84! 70 Rornonct 7-11-32-Q 11 ~ •t p~ 71 0.90"i1td 54-6.).73 12 Trac~ ,.2 fO<fUnett 72 lmpos.ed lJCo...id 4Jb:f*t 73Now l•Lkf .. ,And 74 You 15Tol~ ,..5Check • 75Wm 1l6L,,.,,1ci11oris <16f!v 761rnptns 17 Show-; 470tf 776't..u ~~f,j!:i:~ 18l.ooM, ,.ll To 78Hr1Qlulnffl l9At •9Don'r 79y.,.,, ""==-""! 20 Con 50 For 80 RHenlil r- 21 Mcl"1111 .51 ~If· 81 ~•loin 22 Your .52 Gttt 82 c.,.,.,1virig 2J OI .53 For Ill Ro,~ 24 S. 5.t The 11• Brtak l;i:;J!t~:tii1"25 Cou1d .s.se.w.,. asn-.• F 26Enob!r S6Eu1ond 86Co.i. · vmeo· 21 Mciv S1 You 81 Ho.1rortt ....,._ 2'J 21 TM1r 511 Mc.t 88 Acliv•lies , 29'-ld 591n 89~" SN(. I lO C... 60 8ucli;,rt 90 Pe"°" ~:!Z;i21!!!; 1, ®Good @ Advusc {)Nc~1~~ ' • ) S.ALE STARTS TODAY! 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COSTA MISA -DAILY 7:3.0 TO 6:00 -..... son 540-5710 • ---... --.,..-------·------------·-,.,..------....,-------~--~----(-• I I • • to a th vi w ·_: w ' • c ( v t B I a j I h •.U ,...., ~ .. li ( r " t f .• d s d -~ t •• . ·1 , • t -. • 1t111r)day, No~e111ber 1::>, 1.1J OAJL1 P1Lor 33 1 Angry Allen ~umes, S~ys· Dru1gs N0-ProhlCm , --··_J_o_e_Louis~ T-0 uches ~on easf _ • At Bleak Coullty Rec,eptio' Joe Louis : came to oi-ange · County gofug to whiP" yop." . thing," 'M. recalls. And ·~e rememf>ers· to ipar with the past, t'he present and Who doeS he reel was the best champ how he 'D\tt President Ro o s e.~ I t the press: And. ·when the Wednesday slnct" he retired 24 years ago?. Cassius sometim~ after . t~e fight and the I tter afternoon affair in Santa Ana had ended, Clay (Mubamad ' Ali, is he oow calls gt'~bbed a Louis bicep anf:l said, " s is the 59-year-old Brown Bomber had sur-himself), Louis replies. ..wtiat we need to beat the Germans ' vived another bout. . . "I Jik'e Clay's style. He ..... moves and Y~ tfle person he met ~ im~sed It wa,s "haf~ to · believe for. th?se' ~f moves in the ring. But 1 think we U:xPs ~ was not the Pres1leni!, furo- us who remember Joe Lows m his had more good fighters in my day. ~an royal.ty ~r the IRS ag~t w.ho boxilig heyday ... hard to believe I think the No. 10 man of oqr top f!led ~ax v1olat10~ charges against. him that 24 years have passea $ince , the 10 fighters would beat anyone around ... it was movie act~r. ~ Mix, a onetime Detroit violin student r,etired today," Louis says. cowboy hero who later died 1n an auto as unbeaten heavyweight champion of What would have happened if Louis and crash-, . . the world. Ali could have fought each jer when Louis tells how his ~1~ 1nte~est be.gan And' it· hurt inside· to see a paltry they were in their prime? . 'It would and ~w ~e thought his ftrst fight nught group of 14 or 15 people in a banquet have been a nmnln' fight," uis says. be, with his m~ther -when she learned room set for 100 -lightly applauding "I'd have had to chase him all over ~.d bee~ ~smg the dollar she . gave when 'touiS entered the room. him for Vtohn lessons t~ l~m boxing. • · , lie started ducking v1olm lessons and - Redskins Boss Nixes Chm~ e Of Mass Usage WASHINGTON (AP) -Coach George Allen says his Washi~ton Redskins don't have a drug problem. Other officials in the National Football League-say. if the players-use amphetamines, they're getting them on their own. Allen lashed out strongly against a report by one of his players that said at least one-third of the Washington Redskins, and probably tha't-many players on the rest of the teams in the league, took pep pills before a game to dlarge them up. . . "I Know we don't have a drug problem on the Redskins,". Allen angrily told newsmen Wednesday. "I'm positive of that. Anything we purchase has to be approved by our medical staff." Reserve center George Burman, a pro since 1964 but now on the inactive list, estimated that about one-third of the , A man ·oi;ice toasted by the P'!'es1dent going to a nearby gym to watch a friend • 1 ot·-the1 Urut.ed States . had arrived ~t ~ . work out in boxing. He liked what he ; the point of ~ning on .wa~ed over WIJITE sawandgaveitawhirl. ,. . . enchi)Adas. A in~n an~ good wnter would But his mother was understanding and Redskins players use amphetamines to 1 bolster their physical endurance for games . one time have given his soul to 1ntel'Vlew, stood by his side, as be says she always ·~ was ... now· largely ignored by Orange WASH has, in the victories and defeats of .:. County's press corp~ as_ only four writers Hfe. came for the advertised pre~ luncheon. . ~ Llfe was tough in those day~. The A man who once . tore th,rough the r Brown Bomber and his family str\Jggled world's greatest fighters is now a greeter e LINN wN•T• ror survival in the tough black . (modern ja!gon for· t>ouncer) at a Las neighborhoods or Detroit. . VegljS hotel. . the ring, bot I think I'd have cau)!ht · And he soberly admits that if had The Brown Bomber may have had him in 15 round s. He wouldn't be ruruun' not ended up in the ring, he might trouble keeping up with his i~~e tax~s. because he's afraid · · · that's just the have ended up in jail, pointing out But he ha<\ no trouble g1v1ng boxing way .he fi!ihts ." , . that he was in and out oC trouble a the )ast high measure of respectability Louis le{t me \Vilh the clear impression number of tinles befOre settling down and J$0pularity that it has known. . . that the past means a great deal to to OOxing. He did it by fighting often. and \Vinning him. "lf makes me feel good when Joe Louis' boxing talents earned him just as often. And he· did it through kids who ·weren't even;.. born when 1 thousands of dollars. ~,. the color.tu! and-exciting rarlio b,roa~casts \vas fi ghting C!!_me up and recognizeh .But most of the money has come ot .hiS ma:ny bouts. Twenty-four times me or When 1 see people· nudge eac aJ)d gone and even Louis is at a loss he faced title challengers. Twenty.four Other and I hear them say, 'that's Joe to explain wtiere it. went. " tirhes he won -·21 by a knockout.. LOuis' •r the' Brown Bomber says. "" . So riow he~s a greeter. •. ": His name became household as vast AS 'w~ sparred with the past, Louis And he's a man with indelible •• _ listenjng a~ettces t~ed. in to get a s3id his tough!'!st opponent (except _tor memories to help hold up the pride r words-eye view of Vtctor1es over John the Internal RevenUe Service) was that is so clearly felt when he sees ( Lewis! Jack Jtoper, ~ny Galento. Gus Conn. one person nudge another and he hears ., • Dorazio, Lou Nova, Billy Conn. Buddy And he feels that one of his befit-ever them say "that's Joe Louis " 1 ' Baer, Atie Simon, Tami Maurielo, Harry fights was in 1935 when be ·whipped ' · ,. Thomas. Joe Walcott, Arturo Godoy, Max Ba~r in four rounds . "I threw • AI McC.oy, Tummy Farr, James J. Brad· 255 punches and 254-of them hit him ,, dock .and.Max SChm-etlng. . .. I only miSsed one punch," Louis · - UPI Teltpl!OIO Par~on ltly Reach · Randy Rota of the LA Kings·Oeft) puts a band in the face of Philadel- phia's Tom Bladon Wednesday night at the Forum. Bladon and ma~es had the last laugh, however, 54. Sports ,Clipped Sli ort Bunnan, who playeji with Chicago and Los Angeles before joining Washington, said it was common practice in the NFL but said the clubs did not dispense the pep pills. He said the players that use the pills get them on their ~wn. Pete Rozelle, pro football com· missioner, issued a,..-statement in which he said, 'George Burman's coihments oonfirm what our inVestigatio'n has in- dicated -natnely that amphetamines are not being dispensed, either directly or indirectly, by club managements. "It is obvious, however, if his statements reg~ing players are true, that we are going to have to have the active cooperation of the players themselves in eliminating o u t s id e. sources," said Rozelle. -"It is unfortunate that George has seen fit to label his J teammates anonymously." · Dr. Theodore Fox, team physician for the Bears. said: "They do not take any drugs _as far as I'm concerned." Fox said the medical staff of the Bears does not prescribe dangerous drugs or amphetamines to players before games. ".To say that . we prescri~ amphetamines to . players would be Why has bo.xing l>OPUlarity slipped said. . since .he reigned (1937--49)? Louis' second fight with Hitler's · absolutely false," he said. P h A Los Angeles spokesm.an said : . rot r~"We've done everything ih our power "Heavyweights aren 't defending their protege, Sch me I i n g, also stands titles ofJen enough," Louis says. "And, Out as one of . his top perfonnances. '· regardless Of how good you are, if you He says it was, however, more than Chargers Wooing , to they e not used. Beyond that, don't tr8in and figflt, you lose your just a fight between tw~ !'l~n. : ~·Urning .. When that happens, somebody's "Sports writers made 1t mto a racial . . I .. . • 1' .. • FORMER HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP JOE LOUIS, GLENN WHITE CHAT • Blasts Tennis Foes Billie] ean Dodging Me, SAN DIEGO -Ex-Los Angeles Rams coach Tommy Prothro haS ~ con- tacted about the San Diego Chargers jOb left vacant by the resignation of Harland Svare, a newspaper says. !'Nothing official has been lfiscussed," tbe article in the Evening Trl!>F'e said. - "The subject was approached 1 more to feel out Prothro than anything else." The story said Prothro was unavailable fdi' comment but quoted an associate of the ex-UCLA coach who spent two dikappointing years wlth the Rams as •saying of Prothro: "He misses football.'' Ron Waller is interim head coach ol the Chargers. e Bierman Recovering ,football Hall of Farner Bernie Bierman, who coached Minnesota to five national championships, was transferred to a convalescent hospital \Vednesday to continue recovt:ry fitlni a'stroke: Bierman, 79, suffered the stroke in South COasl Corilm1¥1ity Hospital nearly two months ago alter undergoing surgery in which doCtorS instilled a permanent pacemaker in his heart. · A hospital spokesman said 'his ""1- dition remained-satisfactory. He --\\'.BS transferred to the Beverly Manor Con~ valescent hospital in Laguna Hills. • Wat.on Lead• PINEHURST, N.C. -.Tom WalS<Xl fired · a low rQWld of 62 to take a six-stroke lead in. the $500;000 World Open goU tournament here . WedneSday with a five-round score of 347 .. . Watson pullecfaway from second place Gibby Gilber.t {353) with · his sizzling rowtd. Gilbert had 73 Wednesday. Miller Barber and Bobby Mitchell were Southern Cal SwIDm· So~g Music-to~Mcl~y~s-Ears LOS ANGELES (APl -It seemed as thougb -t,ynn Swann would call it one of his better games as a Southern California Trojan - a leaping catch and second effort to get into the end zone. a 54-yard punt return and two reverse runs for 34 yards. "Jt was definitely not my best game." the senior flankerbaCk said. "[ d~poed a pass. It's one or only two that I've ever dropped at VSC. I don't mean the kind you haVe to dive for but passes that you have right in your hands." Swann. who J'leeds only four catches In two remalnl'ng games to equal Rod Sherman's USC career mark of 91 , con· !ented that ~inus the one drop his play in Sa~ay'5 27·26 victory over Stanford_.l!U •. his moslGJ!'U-J'OW1<1ed _ perfonnanceL Going into Saturday's g;i.me at Washington. Swann has caught 33 passes this . season for 583 yards an4 six touchdowns, retUrn~ 16 punts for 163 yards and one t6uchdown . and rushed 13 times for 98 yards. A year ago, coach John McKay said Swann was as va~ble to Southe~ Cal as Johnny Rodgers was to Nebraska. Rodgers won the Reisman Trophy, McKay said he restrains his praise of Swann this year because there is another player with Reisman Trophy potential on the team, tailback Anthony Davis. "When there are "to candidates on the team, I could easily alienate one or the ·other's special group of ~rooterS,'' be safd. tied 'at 356 ·with Je,ey.· Heard~ alone at , 357 . in_ the marathop tournament, one of the richest on the PGA tour. ~ e Yanks Eliminated N(\Tl'INGHAM, England -T w o Americans , Bob Kreiss and-Grover Reid, were eliminated \Vednesday ih the Dewars Cup tennis tournament. Ille Nastase of Romania defeated .Kreiss, S-1. S-1, and Tom , Okket of Th~ Netherlands whipped Reid, 6-3, 6-4. e Bu%%ie Parking SAN DIEGO -As far as Buzzie Bavasi's concerned, the San Diego Padres are still moving to Washington, D.C. But he's ready to start making plans for next season in San Diego. "I'll wait for Monday and if things are not settled by then. we have to assume' we have lo sell tickets and a radio sponsorship," the Padres' presi~ dent said in an interview Wednesday. But he added, "As far as I'm CQll· cemed, Washington is where we're heading." e Designated Ru nner? -BOS'.f'ON-----=-An American League spokesman confirmed today that league owners were discussing a "designated runner" rule £or the 1974 baseball season. "I know it was discussed at Tuesday's meeting in Chicago," said Thomas S. Monahan, league publicist. "I don't know of a_py-concrete move on it yet. It wilr come up at the December meeting in Houston." · He said he did not know precisely how , such. a rule would operate but that "it would be similar to the designated hitter-rule." e Prlre Doubles NEW YORK -The cost of the Yankie Stadium project has risen to almost $50 million, $10 million more than the price iag · affixed by the Lindsay ad· ininistration just a week ago and more than double the original $24 million estimate. R H Me-C -His best game! "I bad 157 yards . iggs a f!nts ourt r.r rooi~:~~t~,.~~~:i~i~= Lav e"r vs Ko.deQ m· Opener "'•te altl>Ough In ·thst game I didn't e O .--~ -....... ' 1 ~""'r+Y tlle'b1il1 front scrimmage. ' ' -~-· MELBOURNE (AP) -Australian ten-· Bonne Bell Cup matches this year and "I;m running more reverses this year: n....--mv:i;:~~~bl:;~~~ ~1~.':i::'~':-;~~; .. -wit• ·~~µ:i:r:;1;.'!i:r.;;~~~ussWs;-czechs in Davis Cup ~de -Americans Billie ~ean King and Bobby "She made demands and. every . time Ilynn sakl he' nonnally doesn 't attempt •, • .. Riggs. they were met she made other demands. to run th'1>Ulb ~le but on this play MELBOURNE Australia ' (AP) -Newcombe and Jlri Hre . ' 1' •·1 1/elieve Billie Jean Is dodging me "She finally -uked for fO perooit of he bod "bomrnd' 1-teommata's run-Antonin-ilofaii!t.' manager $i the Czech )lolardt ;.id, "I ihlnk . os.'\vlll do _ ·and !'Jn trying to eocape Jlobby." the.gate which Is oulrafieous." nlng style. . Davis cup tennts team,,managed a glim.-better against Laver than U he · bad said Mrs: Court trom tier hOfne in Perth. Mn. Court has met Mrs. King four Rod McNeUt, 217-pOtmd ta 11 back• mer cl. a Srnll~ afler Thursday's draw dra\vn Newcombe in the first match. •"Billle 'Jean fs frightened to lose 1ince times in rteent mouths: 0 1 won tbree earlier had knocked Stanford _defensive for the seinifinals match against "We might have more o( a chance she \\>on that ballyhoo match against of them and In \he oth~' I had three• back JI~ F~.rJIUSOll temporarily o\Jt of Australia this weekend. than people here think." .~ ... Bobby Riggs. match points," Aid. Mrs. Court, who the ~ame. Rod . was running super. "It is the best we could hope for,"· The Czech team merrlbers are t -~ , ~.J.:m._not .int.ctested......in.-lakinL has won •.ooo this year. "The fact He hi\ Fe~n so hard he could've he said. 11we could not have wished · underdogs against Australia in their on .!\iggs. again -the taxman -.,111a ~ thal 1 liive won\hls-111uchtmts .. ln'C-~n-called for UM<Cmary-roughness. lor aiiYffiing ell<.' --semifinel clash-to '. decide who plays • ht the, only wiMer. '' off taking on Riggs again. 1'1'm not a strong person but I saw The ceremonial dra'v from a huge the United States in the final in : :Mrs. Court contended that Mrs. King "Rls mtlj1ager bas offered me $50.000 thooe tacklers and figured If I tried silver bowl ot the Kooyong grass coorts Cleveland Nov. 3G-0.C. 2. ; bid made unacceptable demands to ap-win-or.Jose to take on Riggs in Australia. to dance around, they might hurt me. clubhouse pitted Jan Kodes, the Wimble-Lav~r s~id. ;·we. might appear a bit 'I ~ oa the team to represent. th• United I'm just not interested." So I thought about bow Rod had put' don singles challfpioo and Cuch No. 1 long in the tooth bu~' we are also long • Statet In the Bonne Bell CUp against Mrs. Coµl'I lost to Riggs In straight bis bead down and drove through people. player,. against left-handed Corona del In experience. Australia. sets in the first controversial man vs. Then it wu time for con:tm. Mar ,.esklent Rod Laver in the first • "I must admit lhat t was 1osln3 li· 'ibe cup. scheduled to be played in woman challenge. Mrs. King later "I got up right away and started singles motdt Friday. terest In competitive tennis. I forced , Sydney Dec. 21-23. wu,won by Australia defeated Rlgga. • . nmnlng back without my helmet when The seco00 singles match later in , myself to work hard to make the team In .lhc Inaugural clash last ~ear. Mrs. Court has won the Amencan, tomebody told me, "Lynn, you might the day will be between Australia's and I'm delighted to have achieved , 1 "Btllle Jean asked ror $30,000 for the Australian and French titles this.year. @eel this~' leading player, U.S. titleholder Jolin my goal of piaylng the singles." , , ' -. we can'.t corn,m~nt; you'd have to ask the players individually." Coach Alex Webster of the New York Giants s3id:. •:1 .doubt if any of our guys are invo1ved. I can't see where it helps a guy ·play any better. And I imagine • I could tell if ~one was on those things." Allen, who became angry during ques- tioning about the Burman story, told newsmen : "I'm sure we don't have any problem. l'IJI not worried about it. It surprises me that this type of thing comes up. It's ridiculous to talk about it now." • .' ·- Rams' Kicker Assails Critics ' -Of Field Goals LOS ANGELES (AP) -Kicker David Ray of the Los Angeles Rams would like to put his boot to critics who say field goals have become a plague on this National Football League season. "You guys are the Ones who say that stuff about field goals ruining the · J?:ame, we just try to play the game /' Ray .said WedneSday. "The only thing that bothe~ me is the people writing about it. Most of the sports writers h~ve never been around pro football enough to know anything about i~" said the fifth J!f' pro from Alabama. Ray said be didn't think JOOre field goals were being tried this year but if more are kicked successfully than in years past "it's because we're working harder today." · Tl!e· only other difference Is that kickers now have a longer range than before,· again beca~ of hard work, Ray said. Ray said .he'd attempted fewer field goals this season than at the same. point in previous years·and unlike earlier seasons ~ yet to · win a ,same with a kick for the Rams , 7-2, who boel Sful Francisco Sunday. . . Suggestions to curtail field gOals "only sl>ows the ignorance" of llxloe-making the proposals, Ray said. "I'm speaking as a football player, oot qnly a Jticker,11 said Ray, a backup wide receiver fOr the Rams who mce set up a-winnl:ng--toachdown with•_,, __ clutch sideline catch with aeconds re- maining. "I don't ,.. where anybody -1<1 want to see less offense but looking at It logically tlxloe ldeu would Gilly give you Jess scoring. "ThoSe people who want to cut cjown on -the kicks don't look and ,.. that the onb: reason we're kicking is be<Ou.,. the.~offense hasn't been able to score," said.Ra ---- "l see no sane way where a penon would want to penallte an offeme, tb&t \\'Ould only make it boring.11 Ray said he considen hlmoell • -~-tve-and klctter Hev'en lliougb I may 'It ~e a rec.1ver Ulte Jack -« .• arold Jackson." ' And be sai~ be ~dou~ _,,. ii ha would want to stay In lootl>AR only'flS a ki~r. . --' . ; . _____ _,_ ___ _ ' I -_.;.. ________ ....,j....;::.._______ ~ --~''-'----:-1 --" • ..... " .. IL.Y Pit.O r • - El Toro Bids Five Losing Years For Perfect Akins -to Hang It Up Grid Season Afwr Football Finale? SUch records aren't kept but the · number ol llrs~year high sohools who have gooe threugh !heir ina~al ICJC!l-Laguna Beach JUgh's Artlals trek lo l!l<U-~asoo·w1t1>out·a·1.,.-""'1<'1>n>bBl>IY-San-tllemonte Frlday"11ghHo duel-Dena be counted on one hand. Hills In !he llr7S football llnale -and The number could go up by one tool ght don't be too surprised if It's Laguna U El Toro JUgh can duplicate a win Beach coach Hal Akins' farewell Biler earlier this ~a.son over Canyon High. 13 years u the Artists coach. The two square oil In the rematch Aklns has fallen on hanl Umes at at I'll Modena JUgh, slartin_g at 7:30. Laguna the paat five years -much For El Toro the game L!I particularly of it undeservedly ' lrn4M>rtant since a win would clinch a · . . apot in tho CIF l·A grid playolls ., Eight yean o1 wmmng waa capped an al·large team. Should the Cbargen In 1968 when Laguna Beach swept paat stumble, there Is still a good chance eY<rytblng In algbt in the !-A Crestvie)f they will be Invited since there will League. be u many as nine open spots in Playen like Steve WlezbowlkJ, Steve the !&-team bracket. Klooterman, Brian Bagley and Jim Klihn , "'lbere's on1y one way to be certaln to make tbe playoffs ," says El Toro coach Mac Moore, ''and that's to win this game. We expect a much tougher match this time than when we beat them early In the season. "They've gooe through a lot o[ changes and the team from canyon that starts agaimt us tonl~on't even resemble the one we played last time." • In tbat -.s1 El Toro romped, 32-6, =hlng for 224 yards while allowing just Jr7. Further, canyon completed just one pass while amassing only four first ROGER CARLSON '-' paced the Ar)lsls juggernaut that finish- ed !fl.I. downs. But there have been feW alh1etes such Chuck Van Liew, who romped for u those at Laguna . Beach since. And faur touchdowns last week, scored three the ones that might rank among that against CanYon the first enmunter and elm have been cut down by injuries now stands just llQ yards away from at a consistent pace. a winning mark at Laguna Beach - ~- But even Akins, who re/en to blmsoll as the eternal opllmLst, hedges when queried about next year. "I'll wait until this aeason Is over and after a few weeks try to evaluate the situation. To put It mildly the situation oppears bleak at Laguna Beach. Half of his varsity haa acldemlc problems and Aklna admlls, "l don't !mow If I want anymore. I "It hasn't been a very pleuant year. •.. but I bate.to go out 1 loser.11 Akins Is considered one ol the bett.r football minds In Orange County and the odds of coaching at a achool that Is bail the size -at beat ~ to !Is opponent each time out are Conatderable. Should he bang It up after Frldoy's. game against Dana HUis he'll continue to teach at Laguna Beach and paint as he's done the past 1! years. But regardleu whether he leaves now -or later -It's hard to ooacelve of Hal ·Akins as a loser. In the event Aklns qulls the only loser I've been able to uncover 11 Laguna Beach JUgh School. a t,OOJ.yard season despite playing just Since 1968 Laguna Beach bas 8 lG-46 eight gamer. The Chargers, however, will be without ret.'Ord and that includes two forfeit ·Pro Hockey GOLDEN WEST'S l(URT WESTERFELD (36) PASSES OFF TO A TEAMMATE. ' Against Magnolia Corona del Mar Seeks i To Halt Losing · Streak i Corona del Mar High look.! to salvage J a football season that has been scarred 'with four straight losses as it closes out tooight against Magnolia at 7:30 at the Western High field in Anaheim. The Sea Kings, 2-6 on the ·season and 2-4 in Irvine League play face a Magnolia team which has lost six eames in a row in the league after opening the season with a pair of 000:- lOOp victories. ne Sentinels need a victory to avoid claiming sole posse6Sion al last plare in the ronference. "The psydiolDgy Is juot about equal, Jt's a matter of which team can bounce back after a big loss Jast week," sums up Corona. del Mar coach Dave tt<?!Jand. Both teams will be concerned with generating more of an offense than they've shown in recent games, and whichever succeeds should be the winner. Falcons Tabbed By 32 Points Over Eagles Estancia Hlgh will ring down the cur-l fain on the 1973 football season tonlght while undefeated Santa Ana Valley will uie the Irvine League encounter as ·· a J final tuneup fd'r CTF playoff competition l \vhich begins next week, when the two team s meet tonight at Santa Ana Bowl. Kickoff is at 7:SO. The Valley Falcons are heavily favored by 32 points and few, if any, will doubt the odds. Coach Jim Hemsley at Estancia, however, is looking forward to the con- frontation. Corona del Mar has managed more than one touchdown in only three of eight games this ·season: The Sea Kings striking power was shortened by the loss oC ·sophomore quarterback Gary Guisnes.! to an injury earlier this season. And the defenses of four strong op- ponents in the last four games haven't helped much, Steve Behrem, who bu picl<ed up 3IO yards this season, and Brent Ogden. who has accounted for 256, pace the Sea Kings rushing attack. Senior quarterl>ack Jm Terry, fresh from his fll'St start at quarterback Jut week will again be at the controlS for' the Sea Klnp. Magnolia'• offense has been good enough to keep the Sentinels close, but they've Jost three games by a Iota! of four points in the six·game losing streak. Returning all-league running hack Monty Bullerdlck and quarterback Larry Randel are keys to the Magnolia aUack. Both were nursing injuries early this week. and although they11 undoubtedly see action neither may be at top form. Junior Don Kindred may start in Bullerdlck's place il ne<essary, and Tom Tello is a possible starter at quarterback if Randel isn't at fUll strength. Corona de! Mar is a 31h point favori te to ~ the seasoo. with a victory. In six previous games between the schools Corma del Mar has wm four and one game ended in a tie. CtrtM Ht Mllr LllMWI Offtfllf 0........ 16.!I Ml~ .. OE G1rn .. TU FrMt LT OT NLluon m 16.5 Alktr LO OT O.MI!!• "' 200 Gtrn c DE Tuck~ "' 110 I. Guk111u •• L.ll Froal ·~ 1n Twyman "' L.8 Ml:~ecllY '" "',.... ,. LI Wilson rn 15' TtrfY QI ca Mlrvwllt '" 1.0 Ml-t FtrrlrO " " Tw~ "' ''° Oodl'll " Rov Mooft "' lJO P1rtr. Fl ..... "' GWC (23-0) Breezes Past FullertQn, 7 -3 the full-ti me services of regular tailback wins. Even when Akim was winning ' Clyde Birchard, who suffere_g_a mild he had rus· detractors in the Laguna coocusloo last week. The Injury is not Beach area. £"._ S ~..ii: considered serious but Moore isn't taking {f {f {f uuge • 1JIDIDtu·.1es any cba.n«s. ,I , · canyon, meanwhile, has bolstered its Now . that he's down the pot shois NaUooal Baablkll - defense with the sudden emergence of are coming at a faster pace. A hamlet Larry Consa!Vi . and Todd Talbert, a W.edaetdlly't G1mt1 scribe reportedly published some sort pair .of rugged linebackers who have of comparison between-Akins' son and Boston 110, Seattle tot helped the · club win two of ifs , last the second string quarterback. Pqtland lll, Detroit 1118 four games. The aeU-appolnted authority had talked Kansas City-Omaha ua, lloaltm US 1be Canyon Comanches have won just ll bu ch Chari to Akins once this year -prioi' to Amer! 1 n~'--.a.-11 • ___ .... _.._ By CRAIG SHEFF two games a season t ooa es c n_ -~ -- ood his cl b I ·cu1a 1 d the start of the season. Whether he's · 0, 111e o.nr ,..._. 111,, W says · u s part1 r Y rea Y Wecbtetdly'1 Games for this . actually seen Laguna Beach's football Golden West College's water polo team .. A t~~~t "loses always welaxnes ~team is a matter of conjecb.µ't. Virgiilia l13, Memptil1 108 completed the regular season unbeaten a chance to get another crack at the To be frank neither of Laguna's Carolina 107, Kentucky 102 Wednesday, downing tough Fullerton team that beat them," says Wood. "We quarterbacks are going to be considered Indiana 84,_San Antonio SS College, 7-3. in the wihner's pool. have an advantage in that El Toro for All~F honors. But neither deserves Utah 129, San Diego 119 Thus coach Tom Hermstad's Rustlers has made very few changes while \\'e're to be burned in the press, either. go into next week's Southern California really a completely different team." The latest thorn in Akins' aide was N1Uonal Hockey Leai\t JC playoffs at Mt. San Antonio College the decision of three junior starters W~y'1 Games with a 23-0 record . Golden West faces Otteft1t •1 T.,.. u-om-and a reserv.e to Ignore a downtown Boston 4, Montreal 3 Chaffey Tuesday morning at 11:45 in l'i r.':~119h ~i Cf t=~ ~'1 Homecoming parade. Chicago 4, New York Ringen 4. tit the first round. jOJ };:," R';i ~¥ ~:i, \~! Akin!: sat them down for the Sonora Detroit 4, New York Islanderl 3 The Rustlers offense Jw taken the 1~ Gf""'1 LG RE K~leri 115 game and went with a squad that con· Buffalo 3, AU·~· 1 115 C:t1lll10 ~T LI Vin Liew 115 AUWI spotlight most of the season, but Wednes-l~ l.~rdt ~ ~1 _:•n 11: sisted of three players weighing over Mlnnesota a, Vancouver J day it was the defense tha t stood out. 1:& ven Ll•w 11 fl ur'CIVllllrt in 170 pounds. Toronto 4, California 1 Hennstad's club 1imi ted the Hornets '-"/,.:...;;2::~ri.::'::'..:'_' __ .:.•::.~ __ "_"_" ____ 1 _" __ 0es_:..Pl..:te:...:.:th..:e_l..:ea..:n:...y::.ea=r'!i:...:.:Aklns:::.=.:.still.:.. :...:.:has=.. __ Phi:.::·:::1':::d•:.:l:.:phi:::.:.• :::5 ·:...-Los=:::Ani~:.:el:.:es:_I:_ __ _ to jwt six shots in the opening half 1 (one in the first quarter) in %lpping to a comfortable 5-1 lead at the ln· termission. ' The -c1osest coach Ernie Polte's Fullerton club couJd get after that was 6-3 with five minutes left In the game. But Golden West's Kurt Westerfeld banged ln a goal one minute later• and the Rwtlers bad it locked up. Westerfeld scored the Rustlers first two goals, both times on assists from Frank Browne. After the 'Hornets got within one (2-1), the Rustlers scored three times in Jess: than a minute late in the secood quarter. First Browne hit a goal from close In. then Jim McAdams followed it up with a goal with 1:34 left on an a!Slst from Keith C.Olton. Thirteen seconds later Westerfeld in· tercepted a pass and tossed it to McAdams who was afone at mid pool. McAdams, working one-One-one with the Fullerton goalie, scored easily giving the Rustlers a 5-1 edge. In an earlier game, Chaffey topped Grossmont, 7-6, in a double sudden death tilt. Orange Coast faces Groosmont Friday at noon at Mt. Sac, with the victor advancing lo_1he.SoCal playoffs. Fulltrton 0 1 1 1~ Golatn Wn l 1 4 l 1-7 Goldl'll Wn l KOrl,_WHl•rl•ld 3, Ml:Adtm• 2, ll rOWTlt 1. We would like to show you what we're of. Thrifty, ,.., but gully too ••• , Courier la engineered for durability, long Ille. Under the hood: modem 1800-cc. cvema1d cam el'lgine. Aluminum alloy head. ~ Roomy Clb hit •¥ti vllibi1ity, lnauleled quiet. Fotm Mil Opllonal alr conditioning. HiJ190d--behlnd-9MI 110,.ge fPICe. AU-welded 1'"4 tlOl ll 74.S lnchtt long and • wlde-62.2 lnchn. 11-.. _ lndudtSon ... _ "Our kids are going to give It a full shot," he says. The Falcons are prohibitive favorites largely because of their offensive poten· tial that includes one of the CIF's leading runriers in jun!or Myron White and the pass catching ability of former bac kfield ace Gary Templeton. San Oemente Favored I "They are great in any aspect of the garrie. They throw th e ball well . nm inside and outsid e, have the speed and moves and utilize every physical , aspect of the game ," Hemsley says. Although his Eagles will be outmanned, • Hemsley feels they can give a good T accounting of themselves. In pos ting its firs t victory of the ' season ag ainst Magnolia last week . Estancia had Roy Buttellng at tallhack ~with Steve Adams switched to wide '-rece.ive.r. With Steve Morton at quarterback, ~ the Eagles completely dominated the Jtr--.....,effensive-action-whi.le the defe.n,,ive unit 'bekl the Sentinels In check Includin g t one of the top nmn1ng backs in the , Jugue in Monty Bullenlick. Bullenllck : was limited to 13 'net yanls and the : Sen!inels lo 82 on the ground. • Falcons coach Dick HiD doesn't lee! •his team will have trouble getting men- : tally prepared !or the Eagles (1·7). The Falcons have a perfect 8--0 mark thJs season and have-already clinched the 10.gue championship and a berth ln th~ playoffs 1Which coukt cause a 1 letdown. ; i "'":i-i Ooi' ':le Ill ~ Ill '"' iil • ,\J -- l To Topple Uni _Tonight Orange Coast area prep football teams University and the host Trltons of San Clemente clash tooight in !he 1973 Orange League finale. - It's a 7:30 klckorf and coach Allie Schaff's Trltons are %:-point favorites lo make the Univ.rslty Trojans their lilth victim ol the campaign. San Clementi enters the-game with • two sophomores in the running attack behind &-5, 225-pound quarterback 1 Dan DOdd. Dodd can burl the oppos!Uon with his running or passing. He's tough lo bring down and he's canjed for 2!0 yards and • polr ol toudxlowns. lllo passing bas accounted !or ll7I yanls with 16 completions In 105 st· teqipt.s and he's been Intercepled more than once in only one outing. Sin Clemente has scored through the ·air sllC times but It's the tough Arkansas slMt defense that haa domlnaled mos t oppoqents. Five foeS have been unable lo get lnlo double figures against San Clemente. / Tom Arons and Brian Wood are the aophomor< running baclai on the spot !or San Clemente ofter the Trltons I.St the servicea ol Nick Vlelsldeo and Steve 01.!oifto lnJurieo. ' Coach Jerry Redman's University • team moves behind !he Orange League's No. I rusher -Murry Graham. Graham has punished the opposition for 817 ~anls In eight staru and It's been his running that has sparked the Trojans to three wins In thelr last four games. Redman has credited the overall coheolvenesa .ol his 'olleDBlve Une fqr much of ~e Trojans succea in the ninning game. And quarle!:baclL1ofO:Lougblin_Js capable of burning the opposition with his paaalng. But overall It shapes up as a battle between two ground-oriented leama bent ·on malting the fewest miJtan.. .... c ....... u ...... --r~ f 1111ttrorn uo 1u l!~lf :& ~:~'' lff /" ~""""' C Ct\ftllMlt 1S 60 ollln1 LG SheoM!'d 1 s IU y Off LT GrOlll 11s 1.o s.:r;:'n ~R Ja111on Jfi.. 170 F ... n II ~. ""'J'l; jll ;r::::. r: ·=" "'1Jr 111 m~ ~ •• ~ndtnt lr~nl .. - tulPfnllOn. Big coil 1pr1ng1. Stabillzer bar. Fully synchronized Long, widt 8·l11f 1pr1ng1, Double·•cilng 1hockl alandard, fron1 and rear. • 4-1petd tran1ml111on. Automatic optlonel. 4·cyllnderenglnehu 5 main bfl1rlng1 tor rigidity and t\raoglh. Dual cylinder bflkft •• , each wtlf!I has not t , oul 2 brOMtynnilell for 1u'r1 atopt:. Ruogtd 7-crotsmembtr f111m1_ Boic-secllon rails. 2,515 lb. curb weight. P1yl08d·1nd~ people captelty 1,400 lbs. Ford's Courier·. . Long 104.3·1ndl Wt..,... tltlpl 1moolh lht ride. Courier lhown.,. optlOnal lltlplng, _,_ the 9utsy little and mlrrort. P~· FORD -COURIER • m ~ ..., FORD DMSION 49 (I . _________ . ___ ..:.:_ _____ -==--~---------~----=-....; , ·---· ---~-~.-~---~:-~---,~-·----.:,.___ ___ . t t 1 t . ---- CAILV PILOT 35 Figgatt l\eys J)ef ense I 1\'lonru·chs' ' Gru·dea MV Goal: Maintain Control Mesu1i Has Eigl1 .t l11te!°ceptio11s Returns One of the teys tCl ~tlsslon a lot but It can be stored Diublos, says lti ... 11er· club Is playing 11.t best football Vleio Jflgh's success in the upon ," says Hivner. "T'ustin is very explosive . of the season. past few weeks bas bt:en its 1i1ission Viejo has a $-3 It can score from any where uwe•re playt ng good fool· ability tb maintain control or record and Hlvner Is hopeful oo the field. Quartttbac:.k J im ball. \Ve have n\Oved the bell Rod Figgatt is a marked man. Flggatt will lead lhe Costa Me.~a ~Iigh derensJve unit against high-scoring FOWllaln Valley Friday night In the cl06lng Irvine League football game of the season al Newport lfarbor High. The senior safety man in the Costa Mesa de!ens.lve secondary , has eight pass in· terceptions this season, seven of them in league play, and the only team that hasn't felt his sting in this respect was Foothill. More amazing is the fact that Figgatt leads l h e Mus- tangs in tackles despite being a safetyman. He hes 25 un· asSlsted tackles and 32 assists. "lie flies up in a hurry and hit1 hard," coach John Sweazy praises. '·lle's as good a defensive back as I've seen -in the league this year and that Includes Gary Templeton of Santa Ana Volley." Figgatt and his mates will have their hands full Friday night against the Barons of Fountain Vall ey. "They ha\'e an outstanding offensive uOit and they have beaten some good teams ," Sweazy Sllys. "fo'ountain Valley' runs the v.•ishbone \\'ell and we haven't seen it this year. 'Ibis mean<11 \\'e hh\'P. to put in new stuff to defense against it and that Brmnmett: Title Tilt For Oilers Huntington Beach Hights 197' football season comes to an end Fridav night ag;i.inst invading Newport H a r b o r High. Newport Harbor is gunning for at least a portion of the Sunset League championship and a berth in the CIF 4-A pla yoffs. But for Huntington Beach it's the end of the road 1and Oilers coach Roy Brummett says. "This is our cham- pionship game. "Ne\\'PQrt is · lied for the league lead. \Ve're playing the champs." _ Brummett says his team's problem with Newport is ba lance. ''Newpo.rt is the most balanced (ootball team I've ever seen." says Brummet I. "Offensively they like to mus- cle you around u·ith a very conservative attack . "It's grind, grind, grind. Then they throw the ball 60 yards to Vince ?iiulroy and they score." Brummett says one way to stop ?itulroy ~s to tak~a gun and shoot him in the leg on his first pattern. "\\'e don't want to kill him ... just "·ound him.'' jests Brummett. makes it harder. his team Is about as close the football . Jhe Dlalll~ will close the DeBord picks up his receivers just about on e\'erybody." "They throw lhe ball welt lO full slrenglh as il ha. bctn rrom the wishbone and they all season. Three games ago ~tater Del football was In a dire posiliqn. 0ne-more-loss-would mark the team a t e first·cvcr to finish the season with a Josin,: record. And Diablos coach Bob sea~n ":1th their th I rd very well and those receivers The Dlablos' leading rusher Jli vner figures that'll again stra1~bt victory. are gt eat. --seaior Ken Robbins -have exceptionally fast backs. Pau.J Farris is back as or- And that ltne is-llke-a-bUnch tensive center and lfefenslve or mountains. Thye'\'e -go.vit...,. tackle and · Kim Josephson is all .'.' operating al near full strength have to be the--ease against "WeJtave a_good....ziWr)'___!!.W~e.~uat_needs 134 y@rds to..,_,,h~il_tht=--~- tough rival Tustin in the ¥.ith Tustin and it's. uslj&lly times.. ao"'d "'e nave a 16t of lJ.000 mark and ·1 vner s season finale Friday night at a pretty good ga1ne. \Ve'\'e respect for the m. Their -hopeful he'll be able. to. do ?\'llsslon Vi ejo. \\'0!1 t~ last three years and coaches ha,·e doile an outstand-that agair~ Tustin. Sweazy says the Baron$ after dragging a leg most of defense does an adequate job the year wtth a pinched nerve. Since then the Monarchs haYe won two straight and now need only a win Friday night at the Santa Ana Bov.•J against Servile to finish 4-4-J . "Tustin has one or the better we ,d like .to ~rnake It four. i.ng job. And tho y ha\'e A·lission Viejo will make only offenses in th e Q-estvlewi \Ve d also hke to SQ l~to nexl outstanding skilled peopl~. ooe lineup change th is week. League right·now. They're not se~on.1\Ylth three straight vie· They 11rc so much improved moving ~lark Batza lnto lll. huge and physical but they toi:ies. . over what they've had in the defensive end spot in place get the jQb done. Defensively Stopping Tustln's p.issing at-past." of Bob Freed who is sidelined but adds that it isn't their Farris had major surgery slrong point. early in the season but hns '''They can be scored on but returned for the last three il's hard to outscore them." ga mes -all COsta Mesa vie· they get hurt . Tustin scores 1i'ta;;;;;cit;;;;;iiis;;;;;~;;;;;bi;i'gi;;;;kiie;;y;;;;;ro;;;r;;;;;lh~eio;;;;;;;;~~lei;a~n~w~h~il~•;· i;H;ih~'11i;iei;r ~sa:;:,;;ys~h~is;;;;;'i;'~it~h~a~·.Qriiiiu~is~edi;;;;kn~ee~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i The Costa ~iesa coach feels tories. Edison Eyeing CIF Playoff Berth The rally isn't what it seems. "We haven 't even mentioned the fact this team might be the first to post a losing record," says coach Gary CaTT. "Credit the players for learning to belie\'e i n themselves and the n e w system. Kicking Important For GWC COSTA MESA DATSUN Presents FOOTBALL FORECAST l\·Tost observers are of the o'pinion the Irvine League has little chance of getting a sec- ond team in the Clfo' 4-A pla yoffs. Santa Ana Valley is the champion and if form s prevail Fount.a.in \1(llley will defeat Costa ifesa Friday night and lie for second place with the survivor of the Los Alamitos-Edison clash. And a tie for second doesn't figure to gain either team a berth in the l~team playoffs tor 11 leagues. .. But Edison football ooach Bill \\'orkrnan disagrees. 1·\Ve get some different rumblings." says \Yorkman. ''\Ve feel there u·ill be a sec- ond team from the Irvine League in the playoffs e\~n u·ith a tie. This is a prt'lty strong league and they did it for the Sunset League last yea r. "You kind of get penalized for picking off each other in this league. \Ve 're just going to try lo ..,_ Friday night and hOpe for the best ." His team ventures t o \\1estern High to battle Los Alamitos in the regular season finale. Edison is coming off' a resounding Joss to lel!gue champion Santa Ana Valley. but Workman says his team should be ready for Los AL "We were a little ~ do\\'11 naturally over the weekend and Monday. But we're bounc- ing back. There's mtbing wrong with being 7-2." · The only de£inite. change in the Edison attack is at of- fensive tackle 'vhere Mike Metz (200 ) replaces Kevin Ford. Bert Sherron could work in- to the starting defensi ve wall providing Bill Rutherford can assume his regular duties at tailback . ' Good .Shot "They're playing bet t·e r , • GIO. ZIMMERMAN he•llhurt Sherron is billed to start for Edison at tailback but \Vorkntan is hopeful Rutherford can return to the Edi.son backfield: football, that's all. especially sat u rd a Y • s Southern on defense. They'll have lo California Conference shootout play a lot better to stay with Servile, though." u•ilh the Los An geles City Al•lli•IM •11d L.S.U. ~··•_.dote•" Ttirk•Y 21td·t•ted Olli• St•,.. alld u.c.l..A., •4, For a while.=it:..looked-liike-)'C~o~lle""1e~Cu~b~s~m,,,.,a'L~b~oi~I ~do~"~'ll!.11 _,~~=~:~~w:'.!::!f..:! t~ '"'"' •• thi11k wlll "'"' '" ttie a ... Workman ls \V~ry of the Los Alamitos attack the h1onarchs "rould have to to, a kicking game between a!HI Mlllksl,,1 St11te i.... •• bill' ,. .... care -.awl ,are lliOHi"liH"iY fa.,erlt.s . The luck..," play Servile, 6-1-1 and Orange the Cubs' John \Vagnet and of flm. n.. llt '" C•11'-retK• thowdew" wlll roll • .,., lowo .. tfle ,,,...., 11 SJ ,.11tt1I espi:cially the passing com· binalion of quarterback ~like Olivas and receiver Brian Ticehurst and the. running or Louie Ortiz. Countf's No. 2 rated team , Golden West's Brett White. MtWOH MkhJt•• •114 Ohio Stota c•Met off A1ttl ttio lrul11•. h1 tMlr fl1tol t11••11p for urit.hout No. 1 running back, Action will take place on • Wffll fro• hhirdoy, ltllt l'vrdH ••ti Iowa So11thor• Cal, wlll w111, the 1 .. .,er1 ol Ore-wlll daMAd l'flerlty thll weft. Aod an tti• "Ortiz is the second-leading scorer in .Orange Gounty and we're sure we won 't be able Jim Gardea . the LACC football field be-Wut .Cout. W..W11ttn •d 0 , ..... Stat. t•" Stote lty J4 pol11b. But Wednesday the doctors giruting at 7:30. are tho flHI h11rtll" t.r Sollthor11 Callfonila The RIYetets of f'11rdt1• ote 26·,.11tt u11tl1r- reported Gardea \\'Ould be Wagner has been in-•lltl U.C.L.A. Hfere tley ..,.... to Mttle thoo dot• to Sth·ro1d1H MkhlfCNI, o•d bewl·bo1111d available Jo pla y Friday night strumental in wiooing at least l'ecltlc fltlit tltlo •• Nofffllbff 24tti. l'e1111 Stote. rotetl 7tti, will ,1.,. Olll• u. -•Y although he isn't expected to fy,·o games in conference play So· · tlow• to tllo 11ltty1rltty of wtiot we'll probie1M. The Nittoniu wlll wl• lty 37 pol•h. • to key on anything. Los Al is \'cry quick defensively," says \\rorkman. t rt -for the Cubs including last call "TM Set11rdoy a.foro." Wnhl"'to1t wlll poae t.w ,, • .,~ for S a · -OklUolff ,1oy1 K111t1MI I• 119 I cot11,.tl· ltlt-roidtod 5011tllen1 Cel . . tM Trojon "Except for that," says OlrKl;.,,s to Los •-st• cc t1 .. , olttl the s. .... rs oro foHretl lty JJ 1liotild M , .. .i, for U.C.LA. ott.r .,.OJ.it Carr. "we're health)'. The key 111:·~~ •• =:: ~~;..J.,~-~,J'':c,w•~:~ ~lttl. lr~·,....etl .Alobo"'o wltt-,._11 u11. tlte Mnkies by JJ ,.11tt1.. A•d '" ,,.,..... y,·on't be numbers, but how 10 111e Holl.........-1 Fretw•v. Ga west lfefH'9tl, beotl1t tlle HunlcoMt of Mlo111I ti .. kw Alob._, L.S.U., •12, wlll -w on IM HollVWOOO FrHW8Y to Vermont b 2< well our defense plays -and Aven1.1e off.r1mo. Go north nn "'""Of'I' Y · tlow• Miululppl SNto hy twe•ty ~""· Attitude • 1•1· we can gen-ale some or-1or •Plll'"Olllm1~1v -mil• 10 1111 L • ,,., ~.,, LACC Clft\11\J'S 1ll6h,1m. " ...... • ••••••••• 17 s... ffoMltc• •••••••••• ' fense . '"eek's 1., , __ 1•51•0 n over Rio unuwill to ••• •nc•"w....,u1 4'tr• .,. 1111i.111 111 N~c we11 .. AINI 1111v111t 10 t11U ...,..,.'"''"' J1;11111 tttlll "Servile is frightening. They .. ..,..., ~ -·111e10. L.A. won tint rnMt1n1, 40-20, 11111 11 111v1rtc1by1. Difference ha"e no weaknesses and really Hondo. Qttrolt · · · · · · · · · · 24 Clilcoto • • · · · · · • · · 1 J v ON" c.m1111 olf tu1y Mollll•y niter 1191ln11 Clllefl ••• Lion1 tr•m 1ussJ1 wllll \likn, Otlrtoll du1 ,., 1110lller should 'be unbeaten in Angelus \Vhite has likewise been a wi11, 11111 •n• by to11¥111 ,.1""· 1w111 111o 11., In Chic.,•. League play: They outplayed ke y factor in the success of Oolilo•d .......... 24 c1ewle1td ..•.... · ... 16 St. Paul bul lost oul on breaks. the Golden West eleven the •rown1 Jtiv1.., olfficw1t t1m1 •••YI"• w1111 s1 .. 11,.. In Al'c c1n1r11 r•c• M1ttP1H ,1,r1111 kluelt Jt •lden INk•• ii _.. dlltlc1111. Otkllllll 11 htm. . ,-, 1hould win by I, ' "They have the added boost past t".);O campaigns. It Cl... 21 -=Boswell ~ ••MS ., • • •••••• Ho111to111 •••••• , •• , 'f of playing for a CIF playoff \Vhite kicked three to one c111n1 II••• •ronc01 •• win 11 R11d1r1 11 w1rry •bout In AFC w1u rt1i1 1.i1. combln111on ,,, 1tr1• l•ck 11 spot while we're just trying game including a 48-yard ef-Ml(c.., 11> •1111 K.c. no1ntt crowd .,.11,1tc111'11k1 tlli1 •Mtr11r Mou11on 10111> lo reg .. som losl ·de I f l nd ., ru· lo• l ' for Now Or1""1 • •• • • • • •· • 14 So" DJoto ...... , ... f am e pr1. • or a l ne ~ ' T .... ffltl111I ... ,..,....,., .,., """' 111w very ll'lllch •!iv. •lld 111, 1th..-11111 in tr1111111 11111, s1rnt1 !'!•kl"' It was a long time coming . expect a very touglt game, the yea r. Conversion k.icking, com11111o 111r-~ ~''"' .u111111111111 ~enllv• IHtnn. but the cohesiveness that Bill a game y.•here bre·aks will he has connected on IS of Donn • • • • • · · • • • 21 l'hilodelphio ....•..•.. 14 Boswell was looking for in play a very large part." 28. His longest field goal effort ~~c "l::: .~~..!..,~':t~:,':i~~~i:;~:.O~':i:~ w111 "•""" •1•ln, 111111 lhll 1t '" 1>e1111• ~"k''"'· hi' \Vestm·a·nster H;•• football Servile coach Chuck Gallo came !i year ago when he Plf'tllttlrth .•........ 20 . Dfl>f•r ..••• , • , .• 11 "O'f indicated he felt ?ifater Dei booted onl home from 52 '"''°" '"" ........... Tit AFC CMlrll Dlvl1ion,' •Ad Otol'ICtl .... ,., ll'IUCll •llVI '" AFC Wnt If St...., team earlier this season ap-might make a'lot of changes yards out. '"'rtwaocb ""•fin .m,.., oe.w1r (1u111 ,.w111v 11UH bit up••t· · l h f · 11 •Met! f lhi W•littt...-;" · • · · • · · · 27 loltlmor• , .. , •• , ... 6 '-pears o ave 1 n a Y Swc • Y or s game. \Vagner has kicked a 49-yard .1.1 ctwlroyt U1111noo i. or111, Skins 111w1f1!1 -... t~bl• 11111 yNr ni.11 ,.,, 11111111 oo1 111 1r11n1 111 N,c E•11." materialized. "No. we \eally aren't plan-three-pointer this season and SlltUY "111 tl"Mlllll '''"'" 111 1ron1 If c1111. 1111w1v"'. And ·, lhi f · ning to do that," says Carr. h l I ast I l M .. ml _, ·••••• •• • 31 l11ffolo ...•...... 14 . 1t s s act wtuch has as a e one m a m<>S Dll-"'• .. 11• '911'1"4 111 rtnt t11-fotltlt1r, 11-l. 11 o ,J. w11 Mid .. w.111 r11hi11t 11111. AMIMI' "" ttr 0 1111 hnr h "We've been playing u·ell e'•ery game· • m1111t• ll'ltm 11'11'11 A,.c E1111 ""' '"'-c.ui. bl ;1, • t e veteran coach feeling a lO li I gether the last tv.·o weeks l'~ile both teams have li\Ted Cl•i...tf .••.••...•. lt . · Hew Yon Jets •.•....•.• 11 "tt e bit better M his Lions and it's a little I ate to try' "U • ... •,.•• ""_. Wllkll Jtt <11t11rtert1tc11 111ey•n 11(e .•. m•w" 111 ,, Jets ,.v• oe1pti1111 .... M1111 1w1 wMk• b.v the field goal only Golden ..., • w1u flllllfl c111c:1111tatt-•1ry ""'*-'"" 111 t1111 ..... prepare for the finaJ game to throw in some new things ... Wesl will be forced to keep S1turd1y, No•. 17th -M1jor Collen_s of the ·season with Marina an eye on the scoreboard while SOuthern 1t1inois Friday night at Westminster. R • concentrating 00 the game at ~=-;~ ~/:;id;!.1'· 1~ ~~:!:'" Missi"1ppi "We're definitely a better UDDIIlg band. ~~kz•~~tate ~~ ~:~·.fi:· J t~=se• team now than we were A Los Angeles win 'Wlll 9o$ton Collea• 27 swrocu11 1 Texa• · h Cb l I l l' BowUnaGreen 21 North1rnlt1inois· 1 Te A&M earlier in the season,' says S • give t e u s a eas a ie Ot.del 21 Davidson 15 Te~: Tech n-··eJI. "We're a ---m· )Jmmanes for the championship and . g:',rn!!ith ~ CoBoston U 20 Tulane 11U<:tw ....... ~ ...., assure them ot a playoff Dayton i.s M:~~1!11 21 Tul5• plete team than Y.'e were venitt berth. =~to11n1 tt =~~1111n 1 : ~~hLA. earllet,"y.i'th a better attitude . 1. =: r~~ ~~:1; '4:! ~=n (M l Golden West must not only ::.~=rd ~ ~=o"s1111 j ~~l7"; J think 9+-e've been a good •:54; 1. H•r•i• (Ml 1o:n ; 4. v1nHor11 win the Saturday night en-Illinois 17 Mlnno$0l• 13' w:it Vlr&io;;';:uite foo.tba.11 team all year, but !.M>.._:.~~zs.IT~~~·:~; 11~-' ~~; counter but must . pull for a ~:~u~t::• ~~ ~~~ 1; ~=1~i~hipn didn't play like ,., --· {T) . 10:$.1 ; 11. \l•ldt? IT) lO:JJ; Cypress upset or Rio HOndo Loni Buch 28 Wichita 27 Wyomlna 21 lndi1n1 Stat1 42 Wt11t Te:o.11 21 Ch1nanoo11 J4 Or1ke 2l Mlssls1lpp{ JS T.C.U. 28 RICI 2t Sayloe 22 \1;1ndttrtl llt 31 North Ttlll S 41 Oreaon Stalo 29 Uhlh Stott 38 Xovier 21· V.M.1. 21 C.lilorni• 20 _ \lira:lnl• lG Al'tfnrtvn 2t Northwt5ltm 21 NIW MIJ.ICO 23 Princeton _.... 11. SllnlJ'llil IT) 11 ;12; lJ. Hendtrton l . t. lhe I yoff l..S.U. 34 Mlsslulppi St•te 14 .... ,, Other G1mes -For Wost " 12 1 1 IO • " ' " IO 1 u • • ll " " I ,. ll times·" t . 1r1 n:u; 14. ,.,1~ IT! 11,..,, o gain a spo m Pa s. Mt>'Yl•nd 29 crimson ll • JWllw Vonl!Y A Golden West viclery and Memphis Stat. •S sw Lou ltl•n• & After losing five or its first l. '!'!:a::.,vi~~l IS:o:i:} ~'."~~et' a Rio Hondo win will put ~~~1:1.k>l ll ~~~~Mlti l~ Boise Stile 24 ' c.i Pol)" IS.L.0.] 20 s.ix games, Westminster has !Ml 1o:s1; l. cox !Mi 11:rn ; '· the Roadrunners in th e Mk:hipn Stat• 26 lnd'l•n• 14 c.1 Luthenin 21 Azusa , Wl.lf$1 IMJ 11:12: s. 8111 (M) 11:311 Missouri 21) low•Stale 10 ChicoStoto 20 SK~ml'lllO 14 rebounded to win t\11-'0 in a '-Dike CTI n:~; 1. Good \Ml playoffs fot: the fourth sue-N1vy 15 Geor&J11 Tech 14 Davis 2s san Fr1nciK"O State 20 11:53; I Fun ... IT) 11:001 t Morfo'!Mon · season Nlbruko 31 KllllSllSSUlte Ii Emoori•Stall 26 Colot•doWestern 14 row, largely behind t he (Ml 12:09; 10. f.\arkinlc 1Ti' 11:n. ceSSJve · NOl1h C.rolin. lO W•k• l'orest 11 Ful lerton 11 c.1 Po11 l"°"'°"'l ' rushing of l a 1. 1 b a c k _ FniNt-sDPll Los Angeles City College· is ~o~:'~"' stoto ~~ o,_"',• 1 Humboldt 21 Portland $tata 14 Ml1s1on \11•1• on 147l Tu1ll11 · I l lhal larls o L•Veme 21> Claremont u quarterback Tony Acromando. 1. Ma"n !Ml 1o:S1; 2. Ancrer1011 a typ1ca earn, one s Olll•IM>tM 21 Kenus 6 l.os Angeles 22 Northrid,. u For a Win, lh Sun 1 , • , l IMI 11:01: 3. O•vton {Ml 11 :1S; slowly but comes on strong ~a.~• smi. }: ~~~: 10 Moritan. State 35 S•nta Ct1ra 1 e se L.Cague s op " Fr1n1tY IM> 11:11: .s, ca~ (Ml al •••son's end. Thi·s li·me hcilk: 30 n NO'+'•d• ll.Js Veps) 24 Nevad• IAenoJ 17 S rusher 11;11; 6. 81111"91 IT) 11 :31; 7. Eub1n~) IK'<I Penntyhlanio H1w1 il 17 OccllMntal 27 Poml)nl U Aki · -111 11 :50; 1. c1rrtno (Ml 11 ;53; around the OJbs are a title Penn State ~ C01u1T1bl• 1 oreaonCollete 24 L1wls&.Cl1rk 1 ays ns / Accomando is just 55 yards t. John1an !Tl 11 ~s.c; to. Mercuri Pitubu rih 39 Otlio U I PuntSound 11 Pacllicl.uthefan 11 shy of a gaining over 1,000 !Tl H :s1. contender. Richmond 27 ~17lr.l'll&.M1ry l~ ==~! !~ Whittler 20 yards this season, and tras In the series, the Cubs hold Ruta•n ft Holy Clos• 12 st. M•,,;s 2s g;.:y!·Teeh ' Laguna Beach High football ~red 16 touchdowns -eight a 4--0 record over Golden West. ~~~~in• 24 ~r=1: i~\: 1& ~in'e~'~aon ~ ~11~ washinaton 1t "Actually. Y.'e just want to try to stay wHh ?..fulroy. He's an excellent football player and Steve Dukich has to be the best passer around. Their pass routes aren't that com· plicated. though." coach Hal Akins figures his mhis lasttwQgames. VoJJeyhall Last ycar'k game ended in Sl;!ulhemc.u1om r11 4Ct WMhinaton 7 WiJl•mene 20 Whitwottl't 11 team has as good a chance If Accomando is to continue a 14-17 victory for the Ver-IJ ' _______ "'! __________________ "'!""~O!"!""'""• as any of winning Friday . the a"'e-inspiring pace he has uc 1,y;.,. def. occ1c1ent111 1s.•, '"''· mont Avenue residents. Two _cbanges· in the starting lineup are evideflt at l~un­ tington Beach. night's Oriiigel.eague fffiale maintained in' those t\\'O con-0lr;;;;~;;;;;;;;;,,;;.;;;;o;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:ll wl!h in vading Dana Hills· tests. he'll have to do it at OUR CAR IDLE OUGH? Robert Nicolson takes over ror Paul Gassman at split end. Gassman has a slight injury but will still start at safely and will man lhe Oilers "\\'e feel we'\•e got a good the expense of a sometimes START HARD? WE chance lo win, bul I'm sure stickv ~larina 'defense. GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP they feel the same way. A 11Marina is one of the best THE CARBURETOR SHOP victory lo end the season ;5 defe nsive "•= in t h e kicking game. · always good when you 've had league." Boswell says. ''They ttc1 ::~!:" :~~':;:!':~·~· ... ~ a disastrous season like .,,·e've don't play any special type or·1~~~~~..!!~~02!!i;!iiSii5~~~~~~~~!!! Gary Erpenbeck may be lost for the game at defensive tackle. He sustained a thigh injury and Steve Fullmer takes his spot in the starting lineup. But l~untington still has a solid runn ing game intact with Loren Micldin a n d Mike ,.1cAdams at halfbacks. "l think Newport has to stop Micklin and we h a v e ?itcAdams now, too." Area Girls Basketball had," says Akins. defense, we've seen the The Arti sts, after a season-Oklahoma defense from a opening victory over Oanyon number of teams. illey just have lost seven in a row. ' do a tine job or il" "Dana Hills has been in-"Offensively, Gregg Foster consistt:11t and has had a lot is a very good quarterback, or fumbl es this year. But when and Nelson Matsukawa is a you run that high risk offenSe fine ~ng back." . (Houston veer) like !hey do Westminster has given ·up you'll have a Jot of rumbles~ an average of thr ee When they don't fumble they t o u ch do wn s per geme pla y very well. defensively; but ~ell sees .. ·And \Ve beat them last marked improvement tately in year so they probably want a group of junior defensive us as badly as any team we've linemen ~nd a couple of senior plaved all year" says Akins. regulars. 'lbc Laguna Coacti feels~at "We th1nk we've got an a\1- the Dolphins' defense y ~nty defensive end in Rich give his Artists a little trou e. Bhss, who h~ ~ coming "Tony (Leon) has changed along all year, and Rich Rosen defenses in the last two weeks has bee~ doing a Une job -.,. ..... c..., 4.,1 and we don't know if he'll for us 1n the secondary," l---.-.,.----=-:--~•!''-':0,__-stay-1!rlhelme4M:ha! now Boswell...ay AYll'btCll S l 4 11 01r-•r o o ! \ or go back to tht old one. ,,.--------• ~~,..~ ~ ~ 1 He went to a 6-2 against POOL ,..,1"'., ' 3 • 11 Valencia and San Clemente, ot•" o.i.e. w..f~»f.. 21 49 but ..against Brea he was in ~;.. j j ,r ,i a ~-4 wllh a lot or stunlins TABLES j:f;I,.,.. -and a stunting dtffllsive ~~r. • t l j' 1 11 team has bothered us all year. 13. 9500. N~"° '' ' g "~h teams are going to . ~,r;:fi'!" r. 's r1 L be coming at each other. rt ---...;:_ • o: !::t ,., c:""'"\• '\ 154 Sh OU l d be 8 good baJJ o w .. t • 1 t-» game." DON'T DISCARD THOSE -. OLD ' TENNIS .. SKOUI' Wt ,.,_,, •• "'""""" •II f't11tt " ....... Ml ,,_,.. It!"" ANTHONY'S SHOI SllYICI e -.UCL.l,.IF l'LAIA • L.IDO e IFAJMtOft JSLNID • COltOHA DIL MAit _-::...._ ---.!'---""'-- •nd up ,~ ...... ,,., .. • 511'' ' H1lf Gtillon •flllOf fl(lllTIICll' Sflf.1'Hf IOlltfll)ll WlltSICCT\OISnt.l(D AlllO I OfTW IY Ott ~SL IWI OISJIWMI CO. CUlllOIT, llM, Klllll¥CllT, • • First! B-210 HATCHBACK 4 Sp,1d, hli!l•r, wll!l11 ,1d1w1lt tir ot , power 11.itt fron' d•1c br•~•t, lift.up. re4r 911•, f11ll wh111I COVl ft , 1nd fint•d 9!111! R ADY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • I I ----"-----..,.--:::-~--~---t -' .. 38 OAIL Y PILOT lh11r&i1y, NOYtmbu 15, 1973 Men's Golf Offensive· Players of the Week Gauchos Seeking . Record s • Ainslw; Renius • " I . .... ,. JON TERRY Coron• del Ma r STEVE MORTON Estancia JEFF JOHNSON Laguna Beach MIKE O'LOUGHLIN University KIM JOSEPHSON Costa Me s• OAN TROUP Fountain Vallev CHARLES TWEEDY N\•rina JEFF KRAVITZ Newport H•rbor MARK STEWART Westminster ~College Grid Schedule Hire is !hr mtlO!' collcgr !0010111 'ched\111 tor S11urdev; l!A5T P ill 11 Armv H1rv1rd at Brown Boston U"IYrrslty et Colgatt Penn 11 Col11mbl1 Cornell at Oartmou'h Rutg1r1 al Holy Cro1s Ohio Unl~rsl!y 11 P""n ~1111 Y1!1 11 Prlnc1lon ecuon Collegt 11 Svracu~ Virginia .. 1 West Virginia SOUTH Miami, Fla. at Alabama OavldtiOll a! The (11 .. dcl l.\.,y1alld at ClllT'Wll Nori n Caro!in1 sr~re at Ou~r APJlal1chi1n Stat1 11 E1u1 C1rc.l•n1, niQhl ICenllKkV 1t Fllll'ld1 Soult! C1rolln1 I! Florl<la S11!1 Auburn II Geor!lll Miss/isl~ St111 "' L011!1l1111 Stale. ,,10111 D1yt011 •I #Mr1h1l1 T.-uat .,.., M111111ipPi 11 J1<-1on, Miss. Georgl• Tech vs. N1vv 11 J1ck11111vlll1, Ft1., night Wf!kt Forest 11 NOl'lh C1roli11& 't.\rmphls s111r 11 Sou111w 11ltr n L011!1t1r>1, night UT-Ch1!!1nooga 11 T1rn1H. night V1nd1rbulU at Tul1n1, night VMI 11 Vlrgl11i1 Tt<h Richmon<! 11 Wlllllm & M•rv ~I DWl!'T Northl!rn 1111noll el lowtlno Grett1 O~l&hOm• St&ll •I Colort<To Tempi! 11! Orakt Mlnntl01' 1! Illinois Southern Illinois 11 lndl•n• St11& 1,\luourl &! lowt Stell Ntbrlt\kl at 1(1n1as S!&Tt F.,rm1n ot L01.1l1v1lt1 Clndnn&li 1! Mloml, Ohio loC1i1n1 11 Mlchi91n Sl•le T ... 111 et Norin TtK•I St111, nlghl IOWI 11 Ohio Sl1tl1 Ken111 '' Oklehoma A'lcho91n 11 P\lrd11<1 Ktnl S111e 11 Toledo, flolght l "'9 lletcll St.it &I Wlch1!1 Still N~•thweslern 11 WlKont.ln \lll!•no¥1 11 x1v1 .... Top Aw. 3-:::-:i1. --1:::~~~~;5l::::~., t1·u Tt•ll (hrlUl•n ,, T•••• WH!ttn Mlchi91n 11 T11f11-Arll1111ton To Waltmire Oua.nt! Waltmire has been nan1cd the Pirate of the Vear for Orange Coast Coll,ge 's cross country team. The co~aptaiif awards \\"cnt to Evan Jones and Owen Gorman with Gorman also being honored with a trophy for th< moot effort by an OCC runner. 111¥10t II Tt•ll Tte:n South1rn Ml11l»lpeo! t i ¥J61f Ttllll s1111, nl11ht ~ l:OCIClll Air F1>rc1 11 Arlloot Wtblr Si.le •I lr!gllam Yiwng u1111 s1.11 11 u111n Arl1on1 si.11 •I T1111 IEI '•110l.- nl9ht 1111no Stile et ld11lo Wyoming '' Ntw.Me~lco WIST ~ or4ori Start •• UCLA Sou!hl!rn C1rll'ornl1 11 W11hfng10n C•!llornl& 11 w11lll09ton St.it Strl DltflO Sltlt I I Fflll!O sr111. 111(1111 ~•dllc 11 tliweil, nlgnt JV-Football A .special award went lo • t Waltmire for setting the OCC i-.,~---'"-record. Tho '"'ards-Jlinner_}t:H~7•1•1 .. 11 t-11 t:tt , was held Tuesday nlght tn W••'~"'~"' l~ -O.M•tt ~I· r lhe OCC stud,cnl center. · 8~~~~r,:-.,r."~' -1:0l'!ll .. '"11 • '· , • BILL SPRINGMAN • D•na Hlll5 Mll\E McADAMS Huntington Be•ch JOHN LaGRANDEUR Mater Dei Summaries ... I CHUCK VAN Ll'EW El Toro BERT SHERRON Edison Saddleback College has a lot ot things it hopes ·to ac- -compllsll Saturday...wltW.vi<> tory over Palomar College when the two schools meet in a 1tfisslon Conference foot- ball game at Mi&&lon Viejo. And -Saddleback c o a c h George Hartman is about as contented as he's ever been with his team as it prepares for lhe s~ason finale. ·- A victory for Saddlcback this week would · assure the following : Nab SACC Title Dr . Ernie Ainslie and Paul Renlut ca~ured lhe 24th an· nual Hl-Lo -championship at ~nta AJ\a country C!ub this week , defeating Jack Wilder and ~1erle Boyle. 4-and-2 in the championship finals . Dr. Ainslie fired an even-par 35 on the back nine to lead his team to victory in the t\t'O low balls o! foursome scoring. president's flight; Ed Molcdy in the secretary's Cllght : J!oward Byall in th e tre8.9urer's flight ; Chu c.k Ca55idy In · the so c i ·n I chairman's flight : and Ed Mendlesohn in the publicity chairman's flight. 11•1Jh1e Coast Two teams tied for first place in the aMual turkey shoot at Irvine COast Coillllry Club with net scores of 61. o~ange Coast Seeks - A tie for the conference ·championship and a final con- ference mar.k of 7-t. the sanlc as San Diego City College. -A final seaso.n record of 9·1. the best regular season record and n10st regular season wins in the school's ·Wilder and Boyle "'ent into nn early lead taking three points on the first two holes but lhe Ainslie Renlus duo knotted the match after eight holes and forged to a three-up edge after nine. A(tcr hitting a SO.foot putt on the 10th hole, \Vilder's put- ting magic f<1iled as he missed putts of t!JIO. three and four feet on the 14th through the 16th holes. On one squad were Gene Feltner and Joe Marshall with Bob Crowner 8nd Ted Finster on the other. In third place were Web Ostberg and Bob McKenzie at 62. ; Consistent Offense Orange COast College is the South Coast Conference's No. 1 defensive football team and coach Dick Tucker thinks that standing will be severely challenged this week. "Mt. SAC ha' the con· femce's No. 1 rusher, the Nos. I and 2 receivers and a quarterback who '~s the state's No·. l large school passer a year ago," says the Pirates coach of ~ft. SAC's offense. "I think they must be frustrated because of four straight losses, and, what we have to do is pretty cl!ar. Our defense caMot allow them to have the ball for any period i:i.f time. , ·'The defensive backs "'iii be tested more than at any time this year and we'll simp. ly have to hope the offense can keep the' blill on some good, Jong, ball-control drives." Tucker is confident his club can do just that Saturday night at OCC. "\Ve really haven't played \\'hat I'd consider a perfect offensive game." says 'fucker of the club \\•hiclJ is tied for · FG I . I Phones 646-4421 -54<k4343 , .. second in the conference at 2·1-1 and sports a fine 6-2-1 0;verall mark, "\Ve'.,·e given up the ball on fumbles a lot yet still have our three backs, John Dixon, Mike Nanka and Dan Prin· ceotto ranked in the top 10 of the confer.ence. "Ml. SAC apparently has allowed some teams to run on it so that's what we'll try to do." Tucker says he wouldn't hesitate to throw now, how- ever. "In the last few games l\1ike 1.tagner has completed 54 per- cent of his passes and is fourth in the cOnference in passing." he says. "The team is confident it can 1nove the ball." "\Ve're 100 percent no\v," says Tuc ker.. "With the exception of Reed Johnson. who will have surgery in a couple o,f \\-eeks, we'll be in good physical shape. ."\Ve'll have to be ready for 1i1t. SAC. They couJd so easily be leading this conference in- stead of being Q-4. I'm afraid thev'll rtake their frust ration · out· on us and really explode. ·IJ that happens we may have a real high-scoring grune." I history. -For the · o u t going Ainslie gave an indication sophomore players, a two-year of things to come when he record of 18-3-2 and two con-chipped over a sand bunker ference co-<:hampionsbips to. lo y,•ithln l4 feet of the .cup their credit and rarrtmed in his pull for ' . If that wasn't enough In .-a par. Low gross honors y.·erc won by Art Dougherty and LYM i.~rantz with a 68, A ham shoot will be held on Dec. 5 using \he same partner's better ball format. Don Huddleston scored a hole-in-one at Irvine Coast on the 133-yard fourth hole using a seven iron. /lllsSioH Viejo itself, there are sidelights such Rcnius added his bit, on the as sophomore running back closing hole, No·. 17. lie hit Aundre Holmes seeking to his second shot to the green, become the second Gaucho in five · feet from the cup on history lo bf'eak 1,000 yards the 327-foot, par-four hole and rushing ~n a season . with 'Ainslie getting a par, It's a neat little package the duo closed out the match. if the Gauchos can wrap it up. and Hartman feels that if his team continues to play the \.\'ay it has in its last two games it's a definite possibility. Costn /llesn lt's turkey shoot lime at f\.lission Viejo Golf Club \vilh the men's group staging a ·Shootout Saturda,y. the I}' joining in"'-n1ixed couples competition ~unday for a similar.., event. ··Last week was , the most productive game offensively we've had all season, \Ve pla.yeQ. il lot better than y,•e have," '!lays Hartman. "this is a big game for us. Palomar is the highest sooring team in the con· ference. 1n Ron COppess they 've got the best quarterback in t h e con- ference," Hartman says. "He runs the option series very well and makes them a very tough offensive ball club. \\'e knocked them out of a chance for the cham- pionship last year. and rm sure they'll be n:~dy for us:· Bob Darnell and Jack Feller IUY A NIW 7l DATSUN Will meet in a 36-hole cham- pionship finals match. Sunday AND SA VE AT at Costa Mesa Golf and Coun· COSTA MESA DATSUN try Club for the men·s club 1145 HAllOI ILYD. C.M. cr::'h row1ds will be played,1~""!""!""!5""4""0""·6~4~1""0""-""!""!~ over the Los Lagos Course. I' Senclltr Paul ~loro posted a '1-up victory on the 31th hole .to v.•in the men's club chan1- pionship at Huntington Seac!il{ Country Club recently. Frank Watson closed v.'ilh a net· 67 to defeat Willard Klick in the satellite touma· ment for first round losers . . Flight winners included E. P. Corntasse l in the president 's flight: Bob ~1acI~Ioorc in the IN VALUES IN SELECTIONS IN QUALITY IN SERVICE ' un't 11fford to 'iprs SHAKES and SHIMMIES LETUSTRUEI BALANCE YOUR TIRES NOW' MOIT CA.Ill •• 395 '"" "LUS WEIGHTI I • ' I I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I T WA I I E t ai cl w v L 0 t $ -3 c 1201 t·hc> rlin Tc ,., bri TO C» $2~1. Iii d kl! F;n '" The Bl1aest Marketplace on the Orin&• Coast DAILY PILOI ·CLASSIFIED ADS You Can ~II It , Find It,-[ 642 5678 ) Trade It With a Want Ad • "'--···· •• ' : .• $00 • t)4 ,._._ 300 ,.. 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All mamtenence free in the new adult com~ rnunlty or Costa del Sol in beautiful Mission Viejo. $42 ,900 Full Price · La Pei Reat Estate G1ner1I oflJo .J~fe 830-0700 LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family nn., or 5 bdrms., wilh 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec· tacular view ! Waterfront living rm. with step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $Zl5,000. * * * * -WATERFRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD 30'xl05'. Magnificent View! $185,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR .341 Boysi~t Dr., Sulto 1: N.B. 675-6161 CHEAPER THAN REN.T . $201.00 TOTAL $201.00 ill all you 'pay. KU· 1·hcn ">ith a vie\\'. 1''orn1nl r!lning. B1'ick fll'eplace. Tt'xo.11 · sized Hvlni: roon1 . r·i1n1ily slzed bmroon1s. Red b1·ick t»ttlo. HU)(e lot. 5201.00 TOTAL PAY!\1ENT. llurry. Cnll 00\\'. 963-6767. OPEN TIL II • IT'S PUN 10 BE NICEI :~· ~ THE REAL ESTATERS OCEAN VIEW s.:::i.950. ctrcu!ar .-ti1•f'I .,r fine holl\f'S. 3 bedruonis in- eluding guest f11.cili1y. npcn kltchP.n 11nll (Wlrl) 1"00111. EntertRincrs plll lo. Breatll- t:tklng vlt'"'· 1\~. f\.1s-tl.103 . .i Bednioms, 41 ~ Bath.~ pool roo1n, pier & ~:i•1 sr.:i0.cm * sn. 11~1 General SPYGLASS HILL Lusk built 4 bedroom home on fabulous comer lot.-Paneled bonus room. C-Omplete- ly landscaped. Ocean view. $169,500. ' LET'S MAKE A DEAL Owner transferred and is ready to sell this large 3 bedroom home. Spacious family room plus game room1 3th baths. One year old. $81,950. BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUM Large two bedroom. two bath with double water view. Roon1 for your boat. $125,000 with good terms. A VERY SPECIAL OFFER Eastbluff beauty! Lovely family home with view. 4 bedrooms. Dining room. Many bu.ilt·ill features. Fw1ctional, spacious. $65,000. / BROADMOOR BIG CANYON Exceptional value at only $119,500. Fully landscaped, draped, and decorated. Ideally suited lor family living: 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room. BIG CANYON SPECIAL Exciting new Bordeaux model in latest area. Air conditioned. Owner has added many custom features. Large lot at end of street. $124,500. DECORATOR'S .IEWELBOX New 2 bedroom Big Canyon condominium. Imaginatively decorated end unit with view. Terra cotta tue entry. family room and ltc6eh~ Many extras, $951000. CAMEO SHORES Ocean view, very large livlng room and master bedroom with beautiful -parquet floors, beamed ceilings, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. $115,000. NEVER OCCUPIED ~ But you can move In today! Yes, the land· seeping and drapes are in, and this 3 bed- ~oom 21> bath home ls near the pool and tennis courts in University Park. Just llsted at only $67 ,000. ~- Coldwell, Banker· ~-644°1766 • • 2161 San J .. '141In Hiiis Rd ., N.B. - r I 0 1nff1I '" ~ .. -=~· ··~··"' !· ..... ·! .... ,., ... -, ff1!~RJ f 11 '' Ill , . ...i '"' ·• A. U""11VUI: tltMi: . IN ..MESA VERDE-There are several im· maculate family homes available in pride or ownership neighborhoods in t1:JY; unique country-club community. Golfing a chip shot away1 schools a bike ride rron1 home, parks just around the corner and a library in the middle. Mesa Verde has it and Unique Homes (formerly Mgsa Verde Realty) is it! Listings from $40,000 to $198,000. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 546-5990 2850 Me•• Verde Dr., Coste Mesa G1n1r1I General WESLEY N, TAYLOR CO. REALTORS since 1946 •TENNIS CLUB VILLAS-$78,500, Brand NEW in The Bluffs! Move right in beaut 3 BR -I-story Linda model! Lovely end unit on a corner site. Many extras. MACNAB IRVINE ATTENTION COUPlESll 3000 sq. ft. of low n1aint. loveliness in this beautifully appointed 2BR , den home. Cus· tom designed pool. $169,500 Maxine Wil· Iiams 642-8235. (t32) · HAI HAI HAI You may have the last laugh when fOU grab this SLEEPER Newport Heights View Home for ONLY $64,900 -Best Buy in town!! Lois Miller 642-8235. (!37) DOVER SHORES-BEST BUYI 4BR, 3¥• bath, FR home w /Dover Shores beach privileges. $98,500. Ddiia Chichester 642-8235. (140) . DESIGNED FOR GRACIOUS LIVING Light & airy, one,story -4BR's, FR, fonnal DR. Vaulted ceilings-step-down LR -brk. fire place -water softener. Lo-malnt. landscaping $75, 900 incl. land. Lois Egan 644-6200. (t4s) FABULOUS VIEW-POUNDING SURF Privacy of China Cove-Multi-level w/ele- vator. 3 BR's, 2 hathsd'hower & dressing room for beach. Nevt.cpts., drps, & newly painted & paneled. $143,000. B. Morphy/P. -Johnston 642-823!i. (!311) •. Irvine IOI Doff'r Drive 141•11:11 I ... MHAnllw 144·'200 Htwport letch, eantoml• t2tu ' Thursdi,f, Novtf!lbtr 15, 1973 ... A1LV PILOT :J i.:G:°";;;'';';l::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::;G;•;";';';';;;;::;::::;::::;::;;;;;;;;l'G:::;tn~,~r~•:l~~~~~~..::::•~n~1:r•~l~~~~~~j·G1nera • HUNTINGTON • I EASY LIVING NICE 3 BEDROOM -All bltns, dble gar .. clubhouse & pool Condominium, excellent l<r cation. Vacant -1nove in quick. Owner will help with financing. Asking $24,500. Cell 540-1151 NEWPORT HEIGHTS JUST LISTED -FANTASTIC BARGAIN - Large 3 Bedroom, family room, prime Hell!hts locatlo~. Ownet transferred -Must seUfHls loss -Your gain. $52,500. CALL 540-1151 ERITAGE REALTORS CHARMING TOWNHOUSE 2 STORY SECLUDED UNIT -featuring 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized patio & beauti- ful carpets & paint. Spacious grounds with ~beautiful pool & landscaping. Lots of lrees, ocean breeze in quiet ~dult only community. Perfect location near Newport Back Bay. Priced only $36,500. REA~TORS • 2 OF A KIND Identical 2 BR. duplexes, side by side, close to everything! One lllls an extra room off the patio for room or office. A NEW LIS'rtNG of J;>orothy Nelson. Asking $74,500 and $73,~00. CALL 644-7270 2821 E. Coast Hlghw1y, Corona d1I Mir WI CAN Hn.11' YOU IUY, . HU. OR TRAOE ·A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * OCEANFRONT Only one like it ! Nelf deluxe triplex, 4 car 1 parking. Choice toe. Submit trades. HARBOUR Enjoy life tn th.It Bachelor Apartment wtlh ocean vkw, pr\,·ate partdni, CI u b prlvlleees. Offered tor $2-1,!ICXI or wUI lease $3X> moolh . Call COLWELL ~ . BEACON BAY Lo\'ely patiO-ol"lented home in private ccimmunity with green belts to beaches, docks wld tennis court. 3 bedr9<>m. h9!l-1l. h11 titauUfUl patio with Its own bricked in electric stove and oven w I rotiJ!ICrie. Thermador heatef'I in patio lengthen hours of Cnjoymlint. Shower- dressing roon'•· •Plus ln- rome Crom cute one bedrooll\ apartment. All thll tor $87,500. Call COLWELL &-~. TAX PROBLEM THIS YEAR? COMPANY OWNED AND VACANT $225,ooo. 675-7060 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ba. split-level. Extra lge. lot. Owner extremely anxious! Call & submit 642-7491. This may be your solution. This lrlplex 11 clear. Owner •Niti Can')' }st. Dted of Trust and accept pre.paid lntere111. Excellent N.B. location. Of· fered for $95,IXX>. Call COL· \\'ELL 646-0555. . MUST SELL THIS NEWPORT BEACH -2 Story Cape Cod home. A terrific value fea- turing 4 huge bedrms, den, lge. heated pool, separate laundry area and much, much inore! 2500 Sq. Ft. of living in a beautiful selling. Priced only $67,200. Call for complete det:jils. p, ~,.. HERITAGE ' . REALTORS 546-SllO Open Eves. Sells More Homes Than Anybody! Two area offices serving you · · - EASTSIDE 3-UNITS Fixer-upper. Bargain--$55,000. LARGE· COUNTRY KITCHEN 3 Bedroom, ranch style. Owner anxious - submit reasonable offer $39,900. 1/4 ACRE-VIEW 2 bedroom, 1 balh-eute R4 zoned $30,000. MESA :VERDE SPECIAL 3 bedroom 2 bath, large shade trees--$41,000, NON-TRACT HOME 4 bedroom on 1/3 acre covered with trees. $54,500. SPARKLING DUr1.EX 2-two bedroom units rompletely upgraded. $51,500 CUSTOMIZED HOME 3 large b<:droom•, 2 baths close to every· thing. 3 years new $33,950 DELUXE CONDO S bedrooms, I I> baths, good area, owner says sell $26; 750 BRADFORD TOWNHOUSE Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath, deluxe patio, priced below market at $27,495 $212.00 PER MONTH PAYS ALL 3 bedroom pride of ownership dollhouse. Subject to existing VA loan of only 71>%. Only $29,500. ' . • COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 546-1640 '45-IOIO '629 HARBO}l BLVD. 2n &AST 17th Opon Evonlngs Until 9:00 Coll ond got the RED CARPET TREATMENT • UNUSUAL F'IND Luxurious du p I ex. IMMED. POSSESS. Ow ner's unit 5 BR. + 3 BR., 2 ba. Comp. 3 BR rental. Secluded redec. New carpets. Newport Island. Call Frplc. Shady yard. for further infonna-$36, 750 -10% down lion. 673-7420. 556-8800 * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * 4 OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Salesman oftt.month · Bob Hynds h1 1 b•tn n1m1d s11esm1n ol Ille Month 11 our Huntington 811ch olllc'e. With Wilker & Lee tor n11r· ty H¥e ye1r1. Bot! 1111 won numer~s 1w1tdl tor out· , 1t1nd!ng monW'lty 111e1. He w11 11'1l1d In the comp1ny 101 combin9d 11111 In 1911 1nd 11 1 memb1r ol our OWNER .SAYS "SELL NOW!" Thi& owner has just found another house he \\'ants to buy. Take a special look at this custom-built 4 bedroom + family room home. It's on fee land In Corona del 1.1ar v;ith a ter· rltlc view. Call · WI for details. 6T.!-8$0. OPfN nL t • fr'S FUN 70 BE NfCEI i .1@$111 HOT! HOT! HOT! Paint & profit!! 3 BR. 2 BA, 2%-cflr gar. I-luge R·2 Jot. great yard • pRtlo. Out of 8l'e& ~ner ~1 "Sell II!" S27 ,900. Call lackie · rttt"es quickly. 663400. PLEASE ·CALL 675-3000 m HA\' ,\ 111:.\l'll EASTSIDE HOM( , & INCOME : EVER STOLEN A DUPLEX Try this: t\\'O 2 bedroom units • double garage i.n- rome oJ $3750 ~r year. Asking $35,950. Try your own price · owner says SELL! Call Red Carpet, Realtors, ~. BUY A BARGAIN! ; Liquidation forces Ale of 3 BR, 2 BA, Newport Hghta home, gas BI, fireplace, fam rn1, 15x30 H&F Pool, 8%% r.in avaU. All oUera will be considered. Call Realtor for Info.~ .. WILL TRADE * 4000 nnval, model grove for income p.roperty. * '56 T·Blrd + cash. C4 car lot, garage, offices SGV for beach properly. BKR 67HTI2 or 548-8796 r.1 tSSION VI&JO, sharp 3 BR .. 2 ba. B..'lrcclona home. Custom drapes, patio. Fortin Co., Rltrs. 642·5rol TO be moved largl' nll\Ch style exec. hotilW. Can be •plli Jn. h\'O" QP>. Drive ~ • by Ul9 Oran... C • M . 6~Tl'88 (eves 673-1337). DISTINCTIVE MESA VERDE Just sit)>! fron\ the cluh-Winner's Cir ell. • Out111ndfnQ 11111men llkl Bob Hynd• mike W1lk1r & •Lff ind ou1111ndint;1 com· pany. Together. we're p111 otyour fl.l!ure. UNIVERSITY PARK hou,., 2300 sq. 11. or •httr eleganc-e. t.ush carpets, drapes, "'11llpaper and a~ (714) $40-.11..0 (714) 141-4411 7Mf l<l'inOI' ""'"'"' H111'0lll'Ofl0n 8MC1'1. CA t,141 IRVINE polntmPn"', >fl,"() nreplaces. Exctptlon61 patk> dl'&lgn. Lu'Xury pool with jat·unl. Popular 4 bednn 2 story Exqul•lte to the finest di:!-' "•'onlham Model." Double 1"il . Call M6-2lll . ~·=1 :~-::. ~· rj'1ZIDtlf.LI' ~lk:~d~1ri0;· ~C~~liiN1li·i~ M.s.842.1 SouU!Co r.c:i. · _ _ ..:::1 • 11111 • ----- ll'1 a breeze. . 1ell '}our 1 •'be flllttst draw tn the West. Items "'Ith cntt, tt!lt' Dally •.• a Delly Pilot Claulftfd 1-~~~~~~~~~Pllo.::::•~Cl= ... ::=:"=ied=·~642.:::;.s611.::::~-~Ad==~=~::..::::.:.-..~---,..._ • I ' . • • • • • .• • ' • ' t'38 DAILY PILOT ;-~Th~ur~ldo~y~, !!:N,,.~m~bor~lS~,Hl9~7~3ifOiiion:8.ilclil:......li:;;;n_;~~~==:!~~~,...~~==J'.~!!!!!!~~!!~"1ncomo -rlv 2 -Gener•I co'sia Mt•• , 1 untlngton 811c L19un• Blach Newport Mach • --~ 1 . n1y to n · . -'REDUCE. D $l,ooo•. s mi. 3 BA. Mesa del "'"'· REPo ssess10Ns _ RusT1c ·BEST auv IN "'G::~.... ·] 1'A1 a u~its ·Beach 1st TD , Loans i=c;....,=· :.::•:...1 --__ ,.,,,,,•-11-1 30 x 18 ''"· P<itlo, superb tJo Wood & ~1.,., 3 bdrm .. • den, NEWPORT _ ~ R·..1 TII R f $155 • UUI Pd. sn-ut . UKE NEW HOME ' lo ~M Sq F '-" ~ ~or tnfoo·mnllon and toe• " 2 b<lhs , all level 'home. • ... • 00 • UP TO oo~ -1 BR., CllUtl/P"~ La· -inter r . ._.., · t • .,...,,QVIJ. ,o! t11cFc Fil(\ •'-"/A home1, D<-1 fo I 1 2~ bl ks tines be ch' 7'I .. bwner 8aY8 SELL l'r! Price llc09 El CflMtfllno. lRO'll IOowt II. ('()lll&CI .. • ~=i;~ ;aa;~;/e:n1alll= BEACH AcrNt• r •• • so ~ v£w1 s~ m:.th. 81.4% INTEREST ~: l BR.~ N1celi turn. •IJShed to $39,!Mltl for quick o•I• ... .. y Kl\SADIAN A•king !63,500 but own" Back -,,.,, convenient to $95 ACllE working cattle old. All two bedroom units. 2nd TD Loans f'rp!c, pool, """"'" vl•wt 5ftle. Swttpina curved drive Since 1951 * 541--7711 wo.nt.8 offer! ~ freeways & altport -ll!.rge ranch in the S i e r ra 2 1lory Spcu1lsh. Ea.ma 9% ~ 10 \\'Ide ceranllc tile entry, flfltr 6 PM Cllll 557·4617 Real Ett•te · "2""'" living room, formal dinina: Foothill•, 45 mln .h'Om pn . do\\11. Exb'emely sharp. O C $235. Charmine 1· Bft.t frplc, Carden kitchen. Ovc~l'ted SUPER Sharp Ha 1 e er" st t BLK to bch. 3 br, $29,950 atta. li!J'&t kitchen with Sacran1ento, 2 sept. housea, . Call today ¥ low•tt r1tt1 r1~9• o. p:>ol, aar. Col'OQ8 del Marl. li\1llr rooin views manl· llome. 4 BR, l~i BA. 842-0691, ew1 536 .. 4558 family room, new carpets out buildings, cteck, aold 546-1600 Sattler· Mtg. Co. NU .. VIEW Rl!NTAL cuttd erowtda. FOUR lam· ·~· 2.'51) 1or1. down 0Pf:n nun ~pajnt. 4 bedrooms plus mln_e, can _be split, $650 INVESTM"'"'T DIVISION 642·2171 545-0611 675-4000 or 49f.3US tty ttd"bedrooms. QUletCUI· ~se~tBy -'Owner. Call for .~ H bo rumpus room. Easy care acre, S84ll acre. Paul Hales ~-" Serving Harbor~-·-24 yrs. $ 'LANDl:OROS $ .. de-sac location. Room for appt. 540-9S42 Huntington 1r ur yard roo1n for ~l Pliccd 544-1440 ~ I -~t~;~re~m~:i.~':ro~~: WESTCLIFF. CVINER . HARBOUR. VIEW ~,f!:tJt&~~·~v.:e11~ 20 AC eo1. ranch property, ' 1J.ila!!flll 'Tr~~ciu82:~ons1 u~~:~ ~~~~- OPENr1L t . 11'$ FiJN 10 BE NICE/ Spac. 2 Br. 2 Ba, lge yd. IV tc' ... bOa•~ •-m eve..., F'or a rare opPQt'tunity call nr. Span. P~M._Hunli.o(. Ql!liE Borrow ""ur home equity CIUH A l nlaba' Oranat·CO. ~. .. ~ 480 Shady Dr. 64$-5028. ~d,l-ht'too t':rritiC sta£e~ , 646-71n. F'Jsi:ilng $0000. Term a on ~., :..serv~· FEE, FREE •. Sa\'e Tlrne A-$$ '' l~M~·1;·~1 COURT SALE ·-11)';1 OP<NT"'"""UNroOENICEI ,,.,1, Pvt. pty. 83"2733• · RED CARPET :;~~~f.':'~nty tor $,ALA RENTAL~ J --·-·--i.~. ~-" · ·~~ii i come NET 60M-~OM Now Orange County! FOR RENT- ')1\ Y ' Dcn,v1e1 Abyg,'nlt~ .. !h~n. ~~'. S:ii3f.·000 with 10 EDGEWATER ~ 1 ~·~ 116 ACRES in. Oranges in· over ~ yea.n and NOW lD Newport• Bay, CM 842-· HJNTINGTON HARBOUR COUNTRY SET11NG • 2 4. If at 60% of potential. Ritt. rvcLUSIYES SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. 3 bedroom townhoule. ~(lie INTSlESTED----~!m°",:[·2 4~r01£.!i!M~r.: R£Al1Y bdrm,.den, utUity-nn, lanai,• 4 642--6l40 -u (n4) SM-0100 opUoa ·'$275. Mo 'nth 1 y. @Unusual opportunity to have Woocts. 7% Jottn. $43.~. 2 frplcs. Vu of Hills $43.900. Cemetery , 451)) Carnpqs •Drive, N.B.. •Purch&Je pric. f2T ,495. l •a prirne C.D.f\1. soutli of M7-1246 Irvine~ PRJl\fE COMMERCIAL ·14500 GRAND OtlENING Lots/Crypts 156 $33,950. Two 2 bdr. 1 ba. $2,500 down 81J'. 1ntertat. build 'New~rt Bly Towers · on a lot. 10% Down. 1J1come Morftl .... , _ _ JJ.r~!>l'4 ft.oo _MR Pl!/l .. -highway location. 7'JOO' • Fount1in Vall•y sq ... ft.)&plus kalng3 bdrlot"!' A~ bat '1 & 2 BEDROOM T\VO cemetery lots 1 n $3.750.X'e~ly now and rents T;u1t Deed• 260 ~ Carpet. R ei.-l"'t o·r' • ing AND PARKING· FOR -YOU'LL LOVE IT ! ! use, par · ~a e CONDOMINIUM flOMES \Vestn1jnster 11 e n1 o r la I need ral.amg. Gf(_at low $ 645-l:(J80. "1 • .. ~=~~~:~afiA~iJ~~ ''BRAND \\'alnut Square Condo. super near Pottery Shack $250,000. Baytroiit Homes , Parle. Reasonable $5 00. fi~t~ time investor starter OWNERll! a.t-..1ltlllftll " lachenmyer Reallor ., "========= $1695 TOTAL DOWN. PRICED TO SELL! $326 • month. Curved drive. Gracious entry. Elbow room J iving. 4 family sized bed· rooms. Convenience kitchen. Formal dine. Enormous CO\'ered patio. Park like grounds. Recreation center. ~1$1695 buys it all. Take ad· vantage. Call 963-6767. ~ _[i'"''~ro~~"~ EXPEk. Gen. Contr. seeking new projects. Joint·Ventw'C. 1 54J.-1i148 eves. I,, Balboa Island ' ·upgnded, 2 BR & den "A" LEASE OPTION this 'all Boat Slips 536-2976 un1ta. . , ... -. •• '· • NEW'' Model. Better than nev.', \Vood & Glass 3 lxlrm, den, Full Security Highrlse Commerct•• , $52,950. Beac'h T t .1 PI ex· \\rill, take frus t deed ln lieu ~~ W~·~J3 qullilty carpets, shilUers home. $1500. Option deposit, Steel & concrete constructJon P-rty 151 lnw~st priced bi~!_eb1~ ot cash .do"l'tl :puyment on BR..yJ atory. N-tCe!Y'~, thruout. Super location. An· $400 per n10. Xlnt. Vu. Private Ba.loonies • .... ....,. . Newport Beach and 711 . vacant • SENSATIONAL!! $(130 pet:"rn.O. ll:leludhtr ~ VACANT · MOVE IN 3 large bedroo1ns, 2 full baths large family kitchen, huge 50xl35 I.DI, boat, can1per gate easy tenns $32,9'.iO. 546-1754. Gov't repossessed homes, some have pools, some no down pymt, varl~.is areas & pymts, No obhgatl~ .. Equal Houslng Opportunities 1-lERBERT HA \YKJNS REALTORS It 839-1600 xlou!l owner 88.)'3 "Submit $64,500., ~ 2garagespat"E!sperunit. NEWPORT BEACH to beach. Grea~~ for in· 2 BR, 2 BA, trplc, ·all cul· 'Mer ;.1974, &tz;2'l22, 5I0-009G any offer." $32:,500. Call Phil Roof top sundeek . vesbnent, appreciation and tom features, Best LI d o or•l.295. .. ,,. McGowan, 645-8400. 1350 S. Coah st H~;:. 0.,_,.., unusual Opportunity to Pur-1Prl~~t !8y:n&t !l:s ~~e.!' uFse too1. On! 21 ft Isle location. Call Jqyce CHAiWfi.JG, l :_BR , ~b& Laguna Beac ....... """" chase Baytront Property In or....,.. pa ..,...,07'.N. ourp ex. Y e Olapman, 645-&405. home' ·~I 1 ry pauc)' Newport Beach. . Bill Grundy Rltr. 675.6161 of these 2 bdr. 1 ba. -~. . ~ • 'r '$5.lo~ th • V. E. Hot.anl & Co. 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. TWO adjoining CoslncomeMpro-•,.ourll plexest. altlo/.cto Do0w,n. ~ V. E. ., __ :._. &N~~ ~ielt~M WJN.rJN 675-1551 perties, center ta esa. con r , .. "... nuwUu us. n....:1. Ea~· ~ .. 67$.3.Ul ..,., "-....... Rambling 4 Bdrm. just blks ~=~~:;;~~==" Owner 645-?tl20/642-6560 ventlonal. Rents 0;n wa~ to ' '._ ..__ -..._ · · ""'... _ _! · ~::::::::::::~::~1 10 beach. Asswne 7% VA "BEACH GIVEAWAY'' ' • • $600. per morlth. -~.,,. FANTAS 3. Br, 2 &, • loan with llex!Qle down. Hard to· find ! ' Deluxe 4 Condom1n1um1 $58,850. Fourplex. 2 bdr. 1 ba. all bll!"', y,•aterfront '°1t Ut- TURTLE ROCK S306 mo. payS it all! Prof. ~. 3 .baths, tamlly f!>r sole 160 backs on. golf course. '10% PUT YOUR.MONEY ue Island. 'AvaU · t:n!auty· PLAN 1 decorated with brand new beach home, Open beam DUIT NOW Down, ~di sell cootract or TO WORK FOR YOUI $350/mo. call,eyea,, I~. ankle.deep cut pile carpets 2 fireplaces, gigantic · convmnonaL ". . YEARLY or untum 1 or You'll find a ·real custom thruoUt. Painters just le1't! room. Steps to the water DON'T WAIT FOR $175,000. Eastsi<:le 12 Uruts. Earn ].0% or more on well: 2 Bft, full ynl, Stept. to channer in this 3 bdnu., 2 Huge isolated master suite. from this prime peninsula· Attractive compl~x wltb secured 2nd Trust Deed1 on bay Sl85 mo 675-{;666 bath home with atrium and Exterisive use ef glass, mas-location .. Price Js right at PRICES TO RISE pool. Tv•o owner apts. Walk-Orange Co1111ty real estate. • ·• lpeo~~t di~~g·~~~~tio~~~ m~v,e1 kb•_tnch'c!_._f8ireUBpl~1·e!Te; vgourOUR. $79,900. Must seU now! . SZl,00> for these ·spacious ing distance to slK>pplng and Sl9NAL MO,!;!G 0 A 06 GE CO. B•lboa t!.'?lntul• ~ ""' " ... G-RUBB & ELLIS CO. 2 BR, 1~' BA adult condos. bUs services. (n4J ""'°'" 1 -venient to park and pool. DOWN PAXMENT!!! Bkr· 67,5..7080 ChoiceoflocationsstillavaiJ. $63,000, Eastside. 4 rouses 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. BAYFRONT 5 BORMS., 4 A rare find prtced at $59,500, owner 962-5511. able. As low as $390 dowh on a large lot. 1()% down, BA11fS. Pier, Ooat. Winter "CALL 552-7500 Lag~n• Hl11• DUPLEX 10% DOWN to mwe in, l"itb $220 mo. 10% 2nd, 80%'!!rsrcommtt· 35% rose w•U·'"""1ro<I lot or yearly. 6n-l039,• VISION . W' ALK TO eE'AcH' pays all. 836-4206 Agent. me~t . received. ·In.Om• TD w/$63, 568 bal; pays Coron• dol Mir !OffNTll g VACANT ASSUME 70/e LOAN NEW~RT RIVIERA $7,956. and rents w~. belov.• ~ mo incl 10% int; all ---No increase · no quali(ica· Co1npletely redeeorated 3 Gracious 3 Br, 21,11 .Ba, fpl, market. Each house hllB -due 1978, Bx 3 Apple Valley, LRG l br, 2 ba, Immac. ·MUST SELL • d h'fl tion. l..agurla Hills pondo-bedroom and 2 bedroom rani.,rm. 2 car gar. Inimed. own gar~e &-yard. f" Ca n4-242-3144. Gaf, patio. $425 mo. . re I minium. Sharp duplex nlodel units. ,One block to sandy Po~. $32,(X)(). Financing For detail~d Information . on TO make, buy df"-seU $a 673-1T16 or 6"-06ll Thi s beautiful 4 BR, 2~ BA. 3 BR, 2 ba . Central heat & beach~ J:-luriy,' \\'On't. last: avail To inspect c a•l J these and, other units Call T t Deed an,y4 wrt Laauni lffch Located 17755 La Rosa La. REALTY REALTORS air t.'Ol;ldllioning. Includes Onl $76 500 642-9002 Don Berman Broker and rus • a.mo • ;.:; E-Z terms. Seott Really, Univ. Park Center, Irvine · d -~ · · ENY TU,R '21 642 1771 . . wiit spceialtsi. Red Carpet. 8:"ytime, ph: 6J8.50l5 Ma. FOR. •--t, Mo--....... e.v, carpeting, 1,._.r1es, mirror C y * ... · NE\VPORT Crest 3 Br, 21~ Realtors 979-2550 2629 jestlc 11.tortgage Co ,,,cu 1 ..... -.;u Dll,~ 536-7533. '\'ardrobes, electric garage n-1 3 , t '=.iiiiiii I Southern Cal'a tl.nettpr1vate Comly Co711 Condo I I door opener, pool. facilities & 4 BR TOWNHS lN TI-IE °"'• P an • nu o: vacan · Harbor Blvd. Cosla .Mesa. • beach, 3 BR. 3 BA hom,, Huntington S.ach -, much more. S29,900. BLUFFS ' Xundlnt, .. fi=~~· 6 ! ~~ ~ ~ SAN Juan Capo, follt' plex , •. --IL &I com.Pl tuni. dishwasher, ool· OY.net transferred, mu 5 t CAPRI REALTY 6#7525 2~ir BA, /i~place. wi;t bar, ' 675~ "',,.,,, ine01ne $7800., large lot, ,-or tv, ' washer, dryer, OPEN HOUSE see!! ·2 Br, 2 BA, plus den, · pool ·facilities. M•~· · , add.I units $79,000. 4~. 1 213-327--0913 uk tor Jt.E. 16651 ARBOR CIRCLE ~~~~~u:'t~~tedbes~ ifo~!· _L-'1g,,_u_n_a_N_i,_gue_1_· ---• 1 ~S:.~cf'ci~gi~~l D.uPll•xe1/Un1t1 162 liidu1trlal P~operty 161 H It.~--' AUtng.,Am, or n4-870-f109 HUNTINGTON BEACH . $32_,500. CALL 645-8400 GOLF oourSe honie 1n-.e lot 1a • OUMI Furn 1nea 300 ~week::;::;•;:ndo=· ----- SAT & SUN 12 5 ".l2E!&lll!!Y!!l!Ul<!/l.!l~1U, I -• Aloo one 5 BR & den at 3500 SQ. FT INDUSTRIAL L= 1·'• • • ,.t. tOPENTIL9 3 BR + study, beaut land $66,500. GREENTREE BLDG. on -1rg lot. Good GMeral .::-:=..:::~::...----- HunMtlngttonPopullaloechr 11 V. E. fb'Rftf & Co. ~~~:~.~B-~· 4%--l~~=·~if,g~Y=· =·='=='"='=·· 1 ::::835:-:::":t»t-:·1:~::S':'t:;A;Y::~ l Duplex & TrlpleFx u1n!ts unbeder w. Side of 0.1 loc. offices WINTER ieue, betlut; So. OS a..i .._............ Lido 1119 -construction. rp cs. an1 cpted &. drped $78,500 1 BR. House, $110 util pd, bayfront Mme; f BR. 5 2 Bdnn condo., desirable '::~;:;;;::;_:;:;;;::;:::;;::;":;;:;;:~ 1 ceil. F'rom $6l.500. Builder. wkday.s · 642-8601 wkends Kids/pets. Abo 1 BR hll., beaut. tum. Sand,Y ground level Door plan, 11 ,; -WATERFRONT 646-4414 · •' 557-1352 mobile CM. &. 3 BR. Fim beach. Pier It Ooat $1650 ye= new, Freshly Painted UNIVERSITY PARK ABANDONED PIER & FLOAT Income Property . 166 3010 FT •i.i New for tease. rm, uttt pd, $180, Hnl<-Bch. Mo. _ ,_ with tastefully paneled and Be the first lo occupy this UDO ! ! ;::;:;::""-..;..;'-'-';.;:;.'-'-.....;-'-'..;l \Vestminster; 962-8986 After Agt, Fee. 97!J-8430 Bill Grundy Rltr. 91~61 mirrored living room, plu sh charming nev.' home. 3 BR, $94~500· , 2· 4 UNrr5 6 pm. · ''Weed It I:: Reap" Fat ProHt U attai.d wbm wallpapered dining are•, 2 BA, den, family room. A Presti"e'.!!! 2 BR,--2 B_A, BROKER 9'3••710 Fro to--• U ,._ h --·'< t '!FOR t h e discriminating. shag carpets & custom stone's throw to recrealion frplc," sensational condition. 1 ..,..,~~~~~~~~.., + · ~COL ~Ott' for Sale 170 Tu':n ~~~to c:m...u ~ 'D..u;':'=·,~ 1-"Award winning 2 ·st or Y drapes, oversized pantry center, swimming pools, Prof decorated. Best ii;land I' -cALL DaU,y Pilot Ads. IC2"'6678 I-•0 -" • rebuHt by leading ·-a, neor schools, walking '"hoots & park• t-ation Hurry" "" ~ 60' BAYFRONT $245 0001 CDM BAYFRONT-1~::~~~==~~~===~=~1 ;;;bitect. luxurious appfs.-;u;tance to Hunt Ing ton ,_ $59.500 * i;73.3177 &!1 J~yce ch'ap~~~: Pier & slip, 3 Br. 3 Ba 2 st~ry • 24 .U:Ut a~rtnienl 50• x 100• Yachtnian's Cove dtiRli7 '4aA1LLJtJ:::C'TJ(F:rAL'llJ1ll lo'" plus charming 1-st,Y. house Center, Swimming pool and B h 645-8400. + guest. \Vould you believe plus s\vimmina. pool! \Ve 11 lot. Q\vner suddenly trans· 'on ••me lot $139 500 m••y park ·-a•. A-'-ing Laguna e1c $'"" 500 Call o ·e n·i s on ~'b .,.. ..... · ' .._., ........ all ~ 1 fN tt:Jl'EnTIL 9 _JJ;J, 573 7311 located.10'7i>cap. rate! Over ferred ·Anxious. Loan can Ottered by :~~3095~24,495 c ay CHARMING Assoc. .-$3500 spendable! Take ad· be subol'dinated. Submit any Ralph V. Hinger Realtor -iiiioiiiii'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOi l .V. E. Howaid&Co. NE\VPOR1' Cl't"st Condo vantage -ea.II nov.•. offer. $129,500. Call 645-8400 . . AI.G. Elliott Real Estate • d h ry• CI •e to ...,,_~ delux·e ne'" 3 b•, din rm, '"1600 ','rot Marine Ave . 67~54 · • • an c ee · 0" --,-• • ~ RVI YOU/OPENTIL 9 .. CONDO SPECIALISTS I everything location. Pie· 3 ba, dbl gar, below INVESTM~NT DMSION Corona d•I Mar Have one to sell? We ean turesque older home with PRIME market. $72,500. Owner. 642· V. E. Ib"'anl & Co. do ii! W•noa buy one? hard~ood Doon<, sunroom,, :· Lido Opportunily 55.13 ~--llMI !I ~Ii ..., .-....-. : :f~orona ~el Mar We've gottem! One or tv.·o built-in kitchen & many · LIDO ISE -Charming. 3 i ' 'E'CNOGULNITSHR:! :~r!:as~~~1:~~re~ oth~er nne extr/ias. $69,500. r~~:;~1;~r~~Ya~euL1~~ ~~ ~o BASt.D~~~ge.s~:JfZ: _· .JV j ReE•l,cEh11tng•••. 182 rate. Good assun1able Joans ·~.. 2-· Cl al d 640-8146. BRITISH CHAfill. Thi s available. Our salesmen are "''~ . storu.~. iaracter rea Y ~~~"=~=~~~- ·rustic 3 bedroom, 2 bath has bonded. Best protection for REAL ESTATE ~~00;.0~79~~sc your OY.'n E~g~~tT~~l~Fg~rd~~L~~~. SEN~f :~~AL TRADE ! ! -a sweeping ocean v:ie\v, you \\'hen selling or listing 179 500 ~. 6 • ., 5616 , , A, C ,1 Small home or lncon1e prop. open lieants, 2 fireplaces, se· your home or Income prop-1190 Glenneyre St. • • · v .. •ner . ..,.. · ,-i aere Orange \e., ·" · ert,Y LA Orange or San ,.1 eluded master bedroom suite erty. Call: 494-9473 549-0316 DUPLEX, steps to beach. 2 houses, garages, shed all Diego C~ For sensational ! (<.&. formal dining room. A larwin realty inc. View Forever Needs paint & fix-up $53,000 rented PLUS huge beamed 2 BR 2 BA Crplc custom _ i.i .. must see value at $83.500. 968-4405 (24 hrs) Sweeping ocean, Catalina & Property House 642-3850 exec hotne. 5. BR. block VACANT .'Lido 0Jsle. Call HUITY! Equal Hoto<in_ g Opply. 0 o·ty lighl s view from this NEW LISTING I NE\VPORT Shores home, 3 awa~. J\>love in 2 halves Joyce Chapman 645-8405. ~ 'G UBB & ELLIS CO .... n1aking 2 more houses. All • , I ' R • ... ,,,;~~~~~!.!!!!!"I beautiful 3 bdrm. Gorgeous 'Gorgeous Nord corner home. Br, 2 Ba. $47,900. By owner. plans .supplled. Sc:hed. inc. ·~" 675-7080 7% LOAN master suite. Spacious llv-Spaeiot1s 2-story w/3 BR, 645-4599 or &12-2563. $6&(). Prin only. $39,(X)(I. l'r·,:1 DESERTED I, 1, I, Assume VA lolin w/pymts of ing rm with beamed ceiling -21/: BA, & great bay vie\v. TRADE Ne\vport Be ac h Trade for commercial . I $238 per mo . Nev.'IY clec· & balcony. Fire PI 8. c e · $119,SOO Prop. for Out~f·Town Prop. 675-7788 (eves 673-1337). }>est Cd~l buy!!! Supe r orated 3 BR, 2 BA home. Dining rm. Lux u r Y "t! • Bkr. n4/673-2ffi8 6 UNITS I NT!L • v. E. n..vd & Co. .... ...__ Rff1E1tato Wanted 184 ·J sharp! 2 BR home on R·2 BackstoElem School,walk f~.nitied! $59,500. pnttin9J'1m'Rcaltg Newport Heights 1 Jot -add a uni t. Priced for to all shops. Big back yard " $8500 EACH 1 quick sale. An."<ious oy..-ner. w/boat gate. Bike to beach! TARBELL, R•1ltors -fEAL:ra::ls A KING SIZE • PRIVATE party wants 3 or I .. ~ $56,450. Call 64f>.8400. Our very best buy. Call nov." 1920 So. O>ast Hwy., L.B. "675-0123 True. 16 units · two buildlngs. 4 BR house in HB or F.V. , 1 F 1 .. ~A-NT!l ' $31 ,500. NORTH LAGUNA BEST BUY LIDO H011E, 12 ROOMS: 4 BR, Only $8500 per unit. 1.3% Call 968--0888 RED CARPET, REAL'!'.QRS French Country charm, with 2 Ba .. huge recreation rm., spendable. Central locauon.l~~~~~~~~~~I r;: • V. E. Jl<ftl.-ard & Co. 5.16-8836 open 'til 9 P1'.1 beamed cell's. & planked 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay Viev.·. utility & laundry rms., & HUITY . c11.U today. 1; i .. ' .....i .,_...,.. floors & a full ocean view, 88' to heh, 425 Via Lido office or den. Lge living 546-.1600 :."'1 ':L!!!!~-----'--' Never Uved In create a ealm, secluded at· ·Nord. n37.500. 675-7414 Bkr. rm w/channing frplc. Lge. INVESTMENT DIVISION An.nci.1 \"' mosph~ in this 2 bdrm., Mission Viejo kilehen w/all bltns. All NEW MODEL HOMES 2 bath + artist's studio, custom built w/many extras. ~-~ !.~ 1 o~~.2 left. See before you ~~500,1d Terr. h ome. f\~<XXJGo:~:i~:·ce~: t,.:~~,,ng$68~,· 0 ,.2414 11~1111 ~u011pnpo"rt'unlty 200 I•°' BROADMOOR I I' , TURNER ASSOC. within walking distance , ~..'% ,.~ , ----·--,.,i.I .;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;; I· Lg sngl story, 4 BR Dream liffi N. Coast Hwy., Laguna from this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, __,... ....., _1 I ,~ House on Lighthouse Ln. 494-1177 air cond., luxurious IEALTY TAX SHELTER Super vu. Xlnt cond. 96z;4471 ( :=) 54""110~ ~=-.:..:_;..:..:.:..:~~-ciirpeting, electric kitchen Nt•r 1'ewp0rt P••t Offlc• 8 UNITS. 2 Fourplexes side ORANGE JUUUS I DOES your dream of a home \Vith built-in barb a.q u e, N t Sh by side. North Costa Mesa Hot location In Ea!t Coeta !71 ~ YA-FHA at the beach Include a quiet Dining area plus breakfast ewpor ores area. Assumable 8~~% loan, 11.lesa. Terrific opportunJty 1,1.• sec 1 u de d neighborhood, nook. Covered patio with BLOCK TO OCEAN no loan fees. Annual in· tor $7000 down. , . which is in easy walking panoramic vie,v. 24 hr. come $15,0CM}. Sales price ',..LOVELY new SPY g I ass Repossessions. Latest prices. distance to beach & shop. security g u a rd . All 2d·Sty. 3 ~R&., 2outbat~:_,Nenwewly $129.000. Sale subject to in-! home, for sale or lease op-WM. McCABE ping, a minimum of upkeep, n1aintenance free in the new arpetseoor. rn& _._ • ""'' spectlon, escrow to closel.~~~~1~~~~:1 ", 'tion by owner, 2 BR, den,. and a traditional home with adult co1nmunity of Costa c ,45100b5· January '74. Call 545-8424 'many xtras. Prof. lndscped, REAL TY trple, all new kitchen, & dEesltaSotel ~1'.~100' _La Paz Real CAYWOOD' REALTY SouthCo Realtors. Tennis & ~lub & pool . 8740 WARNER AVE. guest apt? Jt so, call owner. °"""" , 6#-2696 ""· FOUNTAIN VALLEY 494-5256 Newporl BNch * 541-1290 * 2 DUPLEXES . Br, on con1er lot. Nu pain BY Ov.·ner, lk.s to uo:::o:< , One o guna s mo pro-.. ,,., i:.r 1n ed In w......,•, \lierld Call Mary Beth 642-5671, ext. 330 Zip Up A 1'.ent! Croctiet T,,e11 CUTE Coron• de! Mor,. 21 * 842 2-4405b ~ch COMMEf LaRC1A7 INCOstME * BEACH HOUSE * Soni• Ano PRICE REDUCED . *o~ftr reShoprt.\* insld~· & out. Deck. frplc, 2 sty, fdrmal dtn rm. sep ntlnent downtown corner $49,500 Buys cute 2 bdrm., LICENSED A OPERATING Owner says .sell these ad· *· F•st Food Till 0 Out '"" 500 Red carp" fa rm 2400 sq tt, crpts locations, adi'acent to pro-sh · ~ \Valk REST HOME -on~ oak joinJng 2 Bft duplexes on S -•-d l ---~' .. .1oe, ' .... ~om 1drps. Assu~e 1% .......-d new Shopping Mall. arp, rustle """-v~. shaded avenue. Lovely in· huge Jots. Only 1~0 Down. * '!'Org•~r ~ ,_....,, t"'~ CHOLS to beach, Va1ua.ble R-2 lot! t"no· -• close to town. Price reduced to · S34,950 . PlentY ;/.:1*Shopmg 9251 -LOVELY home & income loan, pmts $325. n10. $49,000. Only $188,000. NI GEM " "' "" * C Pair __ , pl ·" i -on 49• R-2 lot. So. of Hwy. $4000, dn. Owner \Viii help Real Estate, ~South All applianecs &: 4 ton a/c each. O 5aES3'--d up0 tuiu ,go aces Ml ~-Pr' fo'nan"e ·833 1103 or Coast Highw•Y'·• La ~m• '~FTustin ·Ave N B st•y, o'ncome makes CENTURY21*642-1771 Seets27. 11ea10J11lPthele·""'"'.caPes· .: ·:y~7~~9 v.-'ner. inc 963-40s8. -4M-7?20t .. --REA£F:roASRST POSSE"SG4S2 • .4s23 ~~m~~sking $37,500. 3BRUNfI'S~~~t~~.:_;_9ne·; R!~'=!~~y~~~JY ·(,., 11f,.,_,.._ 1['°"'-r..._· ~~ltr. ·ft~r::::~~ ·• '"' ........... 642 7rlJ7 645-5609 E es capes of knJtting wonted In ~.'. Harbor View Carmel n1odel. Sin Ju1n Capl1tr1no Garages. $8,00> A n n u a I • v ' Look, , ti?et lighter ·and uve-tlfte colon.· Pattetn , 7099: d. fiQ-0 A\"\,. .( f) -C ~Q. • 3 BR .. 2 ba., family rm., Gross 1.y In the tent -that 90ft, directions, C'hUd'• Sbea 2·12;, .. • • • • • • • ' . • '• • ~~ J.,'-QtJ ~J.. -(,!a ,IJ(./" p lots or extras. Pliee reduced HORSE PROPERTY TOM MIU.ER e Auto Parts Store S23M relaxed line that d°'5 the MiaeeJ' IO-XI JnCllJd!d. , ' h Ch 'f to $68,950 including !f~d 2 Br house on 1 hlUslde acre, REALTOR 642-4811 • ~ Store $400M Year. nicest things tor yoUr figure! 8EVElftl'·t"I~~ <d'rl ~ That Intriguing Ward Game wit a UC. e CORBIN-MARl.llll... fenced tor horaes $38,500. u Units, room ror ·3 more. : ~~ LISt on '"J:. + Easy-sew -itp ts up nowl for each l*ttem. -,Mid Z! · ------loyCLAYl.POUAN REALTORS 644-1162 25% dwn, Call HB, ln41 1&2BR.G,.,.$1875/mo.e L! "ll~~'i2sM +mo Prinled Pattern 9257 : een,.h'.~,~I OReorrange lette11 of the :r.tUST sell, front row, fi.tillion 968-35S3. Prine only. See 187 E. Z1st Ho(LlND &""NESS. Women's Sizes 34. :U 3:t ~Alr.~ltl i •-dollar Vo'ew, brand new, • . St, E/side C.M., or call &'.M\ _ 40, 42, .. 44. 46, 48. _ •-+"' .. .iu ......... -four x-rambled words .,.. " ~ Owner, 642-1960 · &iS-4170 SALES · ~ (bu,t 40) take& 2% yards dt WI)' 't"~~ ....._ , low to form four a!mple wordt. BR, 2~1 ba, Newport Crest, lilll Co lal g</i . SO.inch. weeks Of TllUn, $1114 tb Jot 305, plan 5, $88,500. or LEASE-~tum. m=. tena~ Bottle W1ter R te SEVD'n·tl\'~ -~ ~""'~105 ~ ~~J . , I f I ·s I E R' ~· 3BR condo, w/36' Boat slip, . . Harbor ;Blvd. Qoca, OJNn ,_,.,.. botlle-tor·for eaclr jJittom ·-•~ ~ .~ .. , , ·.:....-.~r,_,;l!:..,~l.-!:~.,.;;,..:'°'a,1...-4 ·-· '"=lde.-~1 .Soo~~=ke-d~' MobiloHomff ~~702Bkr. '· • :'~e.C:~;.'~.J~=: ~;~1:.:c:~~I~ t"ttOn~:WCS.~~ 1 ' . • ) ' ! . .._ .. >-•• • • • • i · >" • . . . -. fer. Owner, n4-682-7424 For S.'hi 125 (3) 4-PLEXES b\ HB. $49,950 Will adjust~U1eme-10 D:.or;-~Pfttttnk9e:ttr. -~~"~I tito BLUFFS TRl·LEVEL CON· each. $6500 dn. In e flt your 'needs. Earn $1500 llW: ' cltherwtae thlrd-clalo ~ ~ II ,. • o I GAW RE I J DO. 3 br, 2 ba, cothedral -$600/mo .. 842-3546, 496-8896. per mo. PotentW unlimited dell~ wUI tak~~ Nl!lEP·LIX!RM'l' .'121 1 t f be•m ceilings, pool, walking • GREENLEAF THE BWFFS Sliver Sprlno Water, 960 = ~art":"ii.. DAILY c~d ·--. ~ ~ • ...,. I ll I I J . distance to ~his, cburche~. A private 5 star adUlt com· . , . N. Batavia, Orange. n 11th Sr New ,,~ ~ .. L-'-.l-L-1-I East murf Vollage & tenms . munlty, 17SO Whittier Ave., 6 UNITS . tn41 5)U501 ror1r,wer:.Y. 10011.''' Pitnt .~--; ~' .,...,_ ' d ub. 152.500. By owner. Alt C.M. has a~allable a 24x00 The Bluris. Newport Be•ch! BE THE BOSS lflME; &DDllW, wttlt =~$!':"' · -pa ! I N O B T A • , i 1 1 ' 7pm, 644--0987 Key West m beaut. cOnd., Fanta11ttc VIEW from very NUty fake.out rest. Duty SIP 9IZ& and nn.a lbl9ut Ci*"'t , ... • .. 1 ~-.;;,....:;..~-r-l • What 1 family moved tn 1 PENUL Tl MATE Just like nci.v. 646-7965 deluxe 6 unit apartment. Ex· West.Ide center. Low rent, xuMm, , Lllln b:t' ~ Pit.· I ! · -1-j k nd Super Lliida Isle fatnily & 9 am to 6 pn1. tremcly _ . spacioua. Eama "'eU eqil.fp'ped. SpeclallUea SEE MORE Q u I o It tl!!nli'.. 11.oe. ·, ,. L-...J... _I....1.-L. -.L--..1 ~ next doorl lwelv• ids 1 entertainment hOme. &iii up over ~ per month. Once chicken & plna ... O(l(l.. nahlonl and dloc:ltt' one .,.. ..... ,_.. 818 ... , ~,--------~ two old -· ll'1f to your door. Imagine! MOBILE Home-Budget Ex· tn IUetime value. Take ad· Un1vor1ity Rulty item-ttM from our • mart tltM lOI atftl .. , V _E E B A R I fl95,000. Deni90n As!OC., pando In park nr beach. van1••e . call todaf. •""• ~ ~-t u~ -0 ~· Cslalor· All $1.GO. -673"73 Newpt Bch. "64&~2748,---54'-1600 ~~--~-'"'~ ---!"Oiilr-.0.. . (Jw1 ... le a....., N -1-~1-""1•,....,1-T1 -,1,...-i 0 c..,.1 ... "'" ch""''• ......, ==;::....--~~~B=R 642-3128. INVESTMENT DMS!ON A!AN or wom1n moture,.-r.! JNSTAllT 8IEWlNG JIOOK $loGO. I . L-.J-.1.....JL....l.....J!-J by filli:i Jn t1oo "'"'1 "°'d. BLUFF.S, tmmaculai. 4 NEW 2 BR 1 BA livlna management oblllty, -n toda¥, ...., -· 11 ~l"7 .. -• * \ youdevelop rom ...,No. below. ~~·°t-,w::i:-~ rm. Adult 1 PA!'k wjprtvate a· IJJM~:11~·~1i :VUbu~fit~~ 11rNSTANT ·f'ASfft oN ::*·:"a ..... w: b 8 PR1Nf N~&ERED tEITfOS IN 1 thfs week BIOl 546-0022 beach• $!6,500.-M);3672. "j!r""i'--:•-!ill&-1350 ll[XJK • llunil-ol --1 ·lt~ I I !HES[ SO ARE S DUPLEX nr °"'an $62,500 CABANA 12"33, r\iabog. int, I In-I . !a.hton -U. !!Ot. :-UNSCRAM8lE AlOV E lETlERS Miies ~~Realtor ti~~. sell $800. Flt Profit 1s attained wben Opportunity 220 .~~~,_~;..~ ~ Maze ~ .... ..!,: 1---1 :,_. __ _.__;_.;l:::O""G~E.:.,f _::A:;:NS~Wf~R ----L...J-..1-..J.._._, ____ ~Any d"I' 11-t .. Bmf-DA-\'-to-BARGAIN-J:;OO-wai.rfron~ ,,.,.rreU-~Jt-'if:i * Sii-Bulllon ~ Tum them Into r* ..... f!r 'l'iitlol'~. UtJof • I: SCRAM·LE'i'S ANSlf/l:RS IN CLASSIRCAnON 818 "'"c.Ji 1'All'.'~''P'IW · · =ir.,0::.i.~. m.i~ ~~-~ ... 999 + FINE BARS • _ ' ' -··· • ' . ' • ,. t • , , • .· • • DAILY PILOT Unfum. .. nfum. Conclomlnluma II.pis. F....,, Apt. Un turn. 365 Aj>t. Unfurn. Ttlursd1y, Now-mbtr 1.5. 1973 Apts., Apta., 370 Lido lalo Co1t11 MIN _u_n1_u_r_n_. ____ 320_ Co1ta tMu S.lboo Ponlnsulo Cosio Mo.-Furn. or Un furn. 370 Furn. or Unfum. RUSTIC CHARMER Dorlln& 2 br 2 ba. beam d, nu 4haa 6: drp, fpl \\'nir $350. m-2211. 2131793-0127. Hew. Unlurn. 305 o-r.1 ALA llNTALS BACH House $125 tum. util paid, Im). pet ok. COMFY 2 br tri $165 &vi serious st*nts Ir pc!t ok. GREEN Thumb ~ be $1'13 nice lawn, 01cd ••/gar, GAROEN Plot 2 1>r =. single on Joe. clilld/pel. FRUIT Trees 31>1' ms . fncd for ptt &: ldds, 'Now. WI """'111 ~ MIYIQ GRACIOUS 3 br 2 Ba $310. ii All apptl'a, fro. bring ram. f llit·-.u BACK Bay 4 br, 2 ba S3'S urs grdnr, AU .xtras, l>M.t Uvin'. I ..,.;. · Al:A Ronlola '42"'313 --o..i .... c. .. , .... .,.,. *3 BR-$225 MO* ==== \\'e pftR'ntly havt: a i:OOCI telecUon ol l'Pfltals tr'Om sm • montJi • up. May v.'e be of lm'tce lo )'OU in IOhing )'Olll' bouai)la O«dsT • " : .. I , I · 1. 11 11 . .. I I -·· -l 11·111 l11 r "SlNCE 1946" hl Weltem Ba.rue Bl<fa:. llnlventty Pa.~ lnine Day• 551-7ll0t Nights --------Caso de Oro JU:AM ceUtng, I br. •ha& DELUXE BEAUT. 4 BR, 3 BA. + ALL UTILITIES PAID crpt. I bile to bay l bcacl>. APARTMENTS lam. nnt. 2-ca.r pr. Ir: Compare bc!:f~ )'OU rent Sinai•· SOO iM-009? Alr Cond • l''rpk"• • l ~·Im· pal)o, 0\1eriookinlt beau!. CUstom deliJnerd. featurinr:: Capf1trano ~ min& Pools • Jleahh Spa • pool. Xlnt cond. Harbor Hi e s-~·-ki'~-"th · Ttnnls Cour11 • Gym and Dllltrit'r. UiS. mo. C•ll dlra;'°'"l.J&b~..,n \\'I ln· NE\Y deluxe 2 br. 2 ba, Billiard Room. $·&&-ta t>em ' or aft •• Sey&ra!e din'a area t~. 2 ~ smtmo. 1 BR. f'ro.m s"° .f PM. e flome-like storap 34592 Via Cata1lna.. ~96-191&. l BR. A Den From $195 Huntington_ Buch e Private patios 2 BR, 2 Ba. crpts. drps, 2 BR. fron1 $21D · --~~~-----1 • Cloeed praa:e w/1tor-Jgt" bl.tins. dish"'9.lhtr, ln the J BR. Twnhscs F'rocn $250 1 br • wubtr. ctn..,., ""'"· • "•""• punman Paliaaoo. mo. W-1155. MEDITERRANEAN ttlria'. ·~r nu crpt, drpo. • Kloe·IZ Bdrms Coron• del Mor 'VILLAGE p&lnt. $16S. 5>2-9(i6S alt l :30 e 'Pd>I • Bari>eques • '""1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil wkdays. l'Otindro '4i lh plWih land-1 1 2..00 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Irvine SC&Plne • --\il-1) 557~ . 2 BR 2 BA WAI.NUT • I BDR.\I. $185. n, 9:30-S::IO Adull.1, No Pets ~ .... v OPEN EVERYDAY Vacant • naive in for $223. NEW Tov.1\hou.se 3 BR, 2 SQUARE.· $225/MO. Avail 36S \V, \Vi.18on 6et9n . ore$ NEW VILLA PAULA Huntington a.Klt Huntlntten - Gnjo'I W11l11r oflving _j}f 'J/ie Ca~a rflonlerre'I . -Let us •how you a new way of lile in ganlen setUng apartment.. Fireplaces, heat¢ pools, putting greens & ·much more. Personal·• ized management guarantee.• problem-free living. Bring this ad & we will show you What r we really have to oiler: Sorry-adults only. 6551-0 WARNER AVE., H .B. 847 .. 526 plus UOO /ieC11rity deposi1. BA. Walnut Squllnl, fenced Nov. 2Sth. Call s.,,-1008 S30 WEEk &. UP TOWNHOUSE ONLY 1 LEIT! Kids &:. pets OK. Lg fncd yard, pool, drapei. No pets. 2 BR condominium, \\.'alnut e Slu<lio A 1 BR Apts. 12 B 1 r 2 Br 2 B8. Lower Apt A Unfu 36S A t U f yard. Quiet area. Reis req'd. $265. S.U..i'036. Square, Irvine, pool, $23) • TV Ir Mald Service Avail. r, t repla~, pool, P v•te $19.l. ,.~;\AllUES \VEI..Cri~fE. I '-'-p-1.-'---m-·____ p • n urn. 365 ~2-222L (mag. &l&9666}. 3 BR, 2 BA, crpta, drps, mo, inuned occup., 644-5.398 • Phone Service ~ Htd. Pool patios. C?nttnental break-Super for 2 'l'i"Ork'g gals. $'1&C Sh1rp 3 B.R, 1 BA, dbl. bll1!3-2 CaJ" at~achtd gar. Lasiun. Niiruel . e J:6~n ~~Ji!f1~ :~~~:1°beU:: ~ c.rpt, drlle, potio. ~aru Ct'U· 1 .L;lll;;;U;;;M;;;;a..;;;;c11;;;;~;;;::;, Newport S.ich n1r1-, pool. Qulot $295/MO. 83'1-Sll5 el\'.....-• '• niahed-~ ni.shed' f ings garegn. I• • -f'OR rent or leax, 3 BR 5'18-9155 or 646-3967 or r • rom 622 liamUton, C.&t ~2002 EDGEWATER strMt. Av•ll. now. $250 L89fln• Beech 2 ha. u .. -. ..... .on ninlh hole (Ad good for SS on rent) Jr!J. 26· ll.Corooa. del Mar, See Mgr, Mr. &. r.tn. llol:wtn d • th C II _ _.... ~ 2 Bdrm. 2 bl\. North Pn . per mon • • Dave, S165 • 1 BR near beach, big $350/$400 mo. at7~9.117 or LARGE 2 BR, 2 le\."l"I, 1 ~1 Vu. $26.S. ptr n10. Adults Heritate Real Estate, fe111...-ed yard, child/pet ~"l"I· 496-0:19 ~D9'!.DnU •I LOVELY, lge l Br apt, o\'er ha. $163.. mo. Nr. Baker&: only. S..1151 <.'OmP! Newport Beach ~...... .. earage. \Valk to beach & r.tendoia. 637-2943. * * * •• EASTSIDE I 2 $210 • 2 Br ocean vie\v apt, 1 BR, 1 BA Furn" S200 mrkt Gar enclosed $225 ~rful 1 Bdnn. ~-per arge BR. 2 !Jog de<'I( sml pe1 ok. BRAND ne"' 3 BR. 2~ Ba, 151 E. 21.st St. CP..t mo ~" · 415 Helu;trope. Dana Point n10. No pels. ~A, h:f ~y rm .. trplc, $31() -3 Br, 2~1 ba, new crpts, deluxe condo. N e w Po r t * "46 1666 * 673-3007 wknds or aft -I pnil-----'-------* * * * * tJ5 Y per" mo. ~~~ drps, deck. Beaut. ocean Crest, pool, tennis • \l.•kda)'s. PAN 0 RAM IC OCEAN Spac. 2 bdrm. in Nonh <'nd. •·z.-view! ~ courtyard setting · aingles: •!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!ll BR. bel h VIEY.'. Lrg 3 BR. 2 BA. No steps, Adults only. $225. V't .wu;:i MANY OTHERS AVAIL! Ol' family $500/mo. W\f. E . ow . ~'Y· range 27' llv rm, bltn kitchen. )X'r mo. MESA DEL MAR - 3 Br. NU-VIEW RENTALS $600/1ho furn. 644-1211. Ai"t. N WPORl,../' retrig, beam ceihni;:s, frplc, 2 Unit bldg, l yr old. * * • * * "Oialet." Nice ~e. great 613-4030 or 49-1.32-18 NEWPORT Crest No 4-APARTMENTS ~. s~~fu av:~es 12/~0;. $310/MO. Adults. 493-7557. 1 B<lnn, close In. Adults, no =~· ;:_a;j Ji;:·~: 3" BR, 2 BA. cpl, drps, bit· 1900SF 3 BR. 3 BA, pool, Jr~~ J~ wkends CUTE, clean 1 BR apt, Up-pets ·"" •· .. " .. ··"' $160. ttowh * APtt. radio 1*ie K-16L ins. HJll&lde, $300. mo. = $475• * Ml--0736 No Pets· DELUXE townhse, 3 br, per. Avail Dec. lst, Refs., 1350 So. Coast H\\'Y .• * 141•0111 * 3 BR $215. Fruit trees. Work· .~'9S-437'='-::3':..'=>l--0509~·=-~-2-15() Ne\\'J}Ort Blvd., Cl\t 2~S ba. 1'"''rplc, dshwshr, \V/w $l75. mo. 491-6220 Laguna 4948536 shdp. Fncdyrd rorkids/pets. 3 BR. 3 BAs. crpts, drps, San Clement• Call 646J.\J. ~ crpt, l~ blks to heh. YI' E•1t Blu~ "'ok11W.1tdtcotTAMllA Calli's Lrge&t Rental Agcy I \\'8lk to, beach + view. $380 2 BR, spectacular ocean 2 BR, garage. ~fature adults,l:;:lcase=-·-=6_73-~7127_.,..,,...,~-=-ol e DELUXE e 2 & 3 BR, ocean view. NP\\'. !~Super Bachelor E/side Homefinclers 547-9641 mo. yrly. 494-0663. · ....Jf l <EI\ no children or pets. Nr. E\V & beautiful 2 Br, l $2-10 10 $300. 49-1~2339 or l view, on 6" ... COUl'Sl'. ~. I . t 22 4 0 Ba. Huge nlllSter Br, beam 3 BR, 2 BA apt for_ lease. -19-l-33.S3 $ • 1.1 f':: !:~~~II r .. ts. 3 BR p ltsu a drplrg ~.___T.'• ~guna Niguel ' OCEmo.AN4~37, '.'92-GoZll"'IF' ~ti Drc:.n ::;t· B, C1it. clngs, tree top vie\Y. $300. Innncld& 'dpablc.gam_!g"e"A'uwtote,doodin, Msse Ven:M drpS ne':Y ~ , s, u-..-iuuy $325/?\fO 4 BR, 2 BA, [rpli:;, VJew, on course =,-== mo. 673-1658 .... ' · $l7' : c;ri;;t·t!! ..,,./gar. painted mslde ~nd out, lrg bltins w/rcfrig. All util 2 BR. l~i BA, dswhr, pool. 'Dt'0~0-0-.p:-0-.10-,1,------1 ,2~B~R~~1 -BA~----,drp--1 opener a'1ail. Pool & Recrea· • HO!lfE AT1'.f0SPl-IERE -fncd yard. Family, no pets, paid. Nr. Cro\\'tl VaUey & S250., 492--2780 • • crpts, s, Uon area. Dix 2 & 3 Br, n10 up. crpta~ drp.s, Incl. Children $265. 547--019L La.Paz.. l\flke. 4!f>...5006. ~l~P.ool. $ 2 2 5 I ~f 0. • $291 • Renta1 Ole, lJ95 !\lace Ave. ok. San Juan Capistrano_ .,,.......,_,.,,. 865 A igos \V NB ''"e: 03-t $225 • Family home! 3 br CLEAN &: Sptlcious 3 Br, 11,i $300 ?itO. Nev.,er 3 BR, -2 LIVE in the all new Dana m ay, ~1 . house w/gar, )rg~ yrd for ba. Fenced yd, stv, crpta, ba. home \\'/pool facilities FOR Lease; O:lndo ;! BR, Point · Harbor at · t be 2 BR .~-b~, .~~'.. Adults, 1,m 'I \l\>llanlagVAedLTb!.RS CO Newport. Beach kid& &: pets. Stove. crpts, drps. \\'aler pCI. Nr. Wilson PLACE REALTY 494-9704 2 ba. LR, DR, kitchen,DW, beaUtifuJ MARINA INNl,SE~no~·>!~~L~E~· _IR~E':, . ..,~_,_IS~~~·;:":=~:;::'=::=---::~~-=--· drps." . School. Kids OK. $275 mo. Bl( St~ ref. Pool access. Motel. 3'1902 Del Obispo st.r: ' · * 2 WEEKS FREE * Y,'e Also Have Furnished 557·3850. 547-mt. 2 00 .. ~~gx~'~s~ ~~: 493-"'1007 days. eves, 496-6960. (496-2:.lM). Kitchen. Ef-2 BR. . \\lalk to beach Huntington Beach Vista aer Mesa BaCh. l , 2~3 br Apts. PRIVATE Patio, encl gar. 49J.....6368 2BR den .,'i ba ll'Ptc pool ficiencies & Apartments. -C'!~$210~1To~lmt.j·~·:if_Ye~a~r~ly~~1;;;;;~~~~;;;;fvf;;;;; LANDLOR'DS FREE 2 BR. Crpts &: drps. · · by 'gou '&·te.n'.rus, t8oo &i Heated pool, direct dial q,range ~t R.E. 6-114848 UNDlR NEW ADULT GARDEN HOMES Families, no pets. $17:.. lido Isle ft, adlts o/17, 493-4720 aft phooes television sauna C st Mo MANAGEMENT IRVINE AVE. AT l\IESA LANDLORDS! 613-3600 7 bath· i au n dry facilities O • sa · )love in w/deposits only • $800 LEASE, yearly, choice pm, $290 n» meeting room close to Sazi L"SON G •. 2 BR. Bit-Ins. Newly dee-2 Bedroom W•· Sprci&lize in Newport QUAINT 2 Br. w/lrg yard, location on Lido Isle, 3 BR, Townhouse Unfurn. 33S aemente & ~ Beach. WI . ~RD.ENS orated. Encl garages. Beau· $220. Beach e Corona del ~Iar • unlum, S225 mo. 2 3 4 den, din area, bltns, 2 BA, Come play in 0 u r Beautiful gro~s. quiet 2 BR tiful landsc~ping. Lrg plRy Day &: Night Security, Pool, A-~· Our Renta1 Ser· Avocado st., Costa l\tesa. 2 fplcs, huge private patio, Huntington Be•ch ~ sportfishlng, shopping & Townho~s. ·~t baths, c~ts, are, a rhi!<;I s drenm. Close Fountains. ·n~. Bldg. \V/ vtCI!" s FREE to You! Try Call.642~ Gene Felder · top cond., 6-12-9'224 0 r ---''--------1 restaurant.II. $60 week & Up. drps, blt·ms, closed patios. to shopping & -schools. ex,erci~ rm, billi.ards, col· Nu-View! 2 BR 1 d 1 644-5050 2 BR, 2 BA, 1 sty .. Adults. Brina this ad &: receive Pool. $162.50/1.!0. Adults, No Children "'ell'On1e. ' or TV.· Ea. Apt . has dish· Nu VIEW RENTALS • crp. ..... e.n< •••.• """==c=-~="-=--=-A "" All .,,_ --pets 211 blks IV r H bo c II 8'2-0480 • . adult cpl, 00 pets. no ~ VIUl now. ameni n:S. $:> otf on first Wttk's rent. · . · 0 ar r a '' · \\'Uher, refrig, shag cpt le RESORT LMNG FROM $155 Great Recreation: S">fmm!nz, saWWJ, 2 health clubs, wid volleyball. tennis. tennis pro & pro shop le h"tt IPSIObl, billiards, 'indoor golt drivin& range, color TV lhealr'C', ele- gant p&rty room. Fun A.ctivltit:-11: Full·time actt. vity dlrector, complimentary SUnday brunch. Weekend BBQ. Parties. Trips. Lec- tures. Beautiful Apartments: an- gles, 1 & 2 bedrooms, fur. nilbed I: unfurnished. Renta from $156. SolT)', no pets or children. Models open daily 10 to 7. OAKWOOD GARDEN ' APARTMENTS N.wport S..ch North lrvlno A 16th -Newport S.och South V'16th ot lrvlno 642 .. 170 · Equal llousing Opportunity 73-4030 or 49t-32-l8 chldm:. 1175. 5 .._ 8-8 2 5 1 • Cl-IArufING 3 BR, 13 BA, $26.5/A-IO. Lease .. 536-0065 I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!11\,!B~lv~d~. ~O:n_l:V:d"':· :n~ . ..:C~a~l~l:1~·=~;ri~~~:;~: I prt patio or deck. 545-4855. ~ DR, lg. patio, nr. club & N a.. I' 646-2846 -'iOioiiiiiiii.iiii ... iiiiiiiO l o'!ii~tiiia:Y<iUiiis:iOO:C-FANTASfIC OCEAN VIE\V· "';og.=1"'405""'·=-----bch. S52S mo. yr. ewport ct! LIVE v.'atching those harbor · VILLA YORBA '!II 2 BR, 1 Ba: yearly $250; BR., beaut. lndscpd, cov I!\fl\1EDIATE ocrupancy, 4 lse. 640-8146.-SPLIT level 3 Br. 2 ba. lights on the bluff Qf Dana *NICE clean 1 BR garden 714114 •• , 22 BLOCK to beach Jc bay. 2 Br., 2 Br., 2 ba., yrly. $265; ,palk> overlooking oc-ean. 5 Br, 3 Ba. $325. 8JS....6341 Mesa . Verde J\,!arlna. Deluxe ne;-v 2 br apls. irrn.s PAID:'° Mohair "'"' l·ba., frpl., enc<. patio. New-3 BR., 2 ba., yrly $200; min. rrom S.O. }~rwy. San eves. BKR 1----------2 Car gar. Pool. Bltns, cpts, :t den apt. Swim g pool, cpts &-iltps, D/W, blln 1, 2 & J lit': Unfurn. ly dl'COr, carpe-ted &: draped. 4 BR. 2 ba., yrly $32;; Oemente. $350/mo. \Von't D=---.p~·~,-----IM'IEDIATE -upancy 3 drps., refrig. Adult couple Jacui:zl, su~ter. pr kg oven• --natural .. ---' relrlg, util incl. Moderate Yrly. $250 1\fo.. A..1k for ll!ik.e Last! 644-QGl or 49;3;7227. , __ •_•_•_•_•-"-----· n ..,...... only. $300. Rltr. 642-5.lll··-o oc: ·--q-.. uuu Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves. JONES REALTY 673-QIO 1 Br', 2 88. $310. Option P:>ssi-t $500/f.1 · Opt. ~ buy. cabinelj. heat~ pool, c109ed Income · Applications \\'el· 3 .BR. Fam Rm, walk to NE\\'ER .l BR house for ble. 838-6341 eves. Bier. Santa AM Bkr., Jean 831-2600. garages. Walk to shopping. come. NEW :r BR, 2 BA. YRl.Y associated beach, $180 util Pd . lease. 1 mi. from D.P . Newport S.ach h l pl"e-6Chooler OK. Froml ~"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!"'" 2BUtll to bch, $295. 642-nM, Kk:Wpet.. Alao 2 BR. Marina, Neighborhood Pool, DELUXE T 'Tthse 3 B l . Huntington lffc $100. 642-8378 NEW 2 Br, water pd, Crpt, 642--3188 starting Sll>. Vacant. Agt. gar door opener $300. mo. FOR. LEASE. Brand rte\\' Ba, crpt/~ b11ns.~· ,:: LOW WEEKLY n •TES drps, stove, garb. displ, priv BROKERS-REAL TORS 1!.'15 W Balbae 1>71 11\t) Fee. m-8430 493-1019 da,yi;. 837-4740 eves Harbor View . Uome WITH pri patio dbl So ~ s· Villa pat, gar. ~-sh/dry hookup, or wknds. VIEW! AlonaJ; model. 3 Coast piaza. ~mg 0; Executive Suites 1erra CJ• 1 child, no pets. \\lkdys alt I "'!"!'~~~~~~~"" Apt• .. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 S.lbH 1.Und 04fUllNG CAPE COD Br· Ii: den. 2 Ba., frplc. small )'d. & patki. SUndc<:k. Ynr(y. 615-7001. lalboe Penlnsul• · 2 BR, bottage; nr &y, adults, no pets. srv /Ref, nu crpt, $185 mo. Yrly, 673-ll78. LARGE, roomy 4 Br, 3 Ba home close lo pvt beach. $S25. mo. 646-1461; (213J --Bl)' atAR~fING home, ·2 BR, bedroo1ns or 2 + den, 2 557-1531. 727 Yorktown Blvd. Small Adult O:lmp{ex In Lush 6, 962-7295, 842-1002 PARK NEWPORT mam rm, "'/W crpU, drps, bath, luxurious carpets & ;;D:--01--;::Fc-----:-34~5 Beach Blvd. at Yorkt0\\11 Forest Setting. Localed 5 CLEAN quiet 2 BR neatly APARTMENTS ----jlolboo Ponlnaulo minute lb beach le marina. 91her ·up-graded features. up exes urn. 536-0411 2i~ T>M ~hG& ~-new bldg. \Vtr, gas Pel. Child Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooms r.Bl. nio. ~7220. St~ to private tennis S.lboa. Peni'Jtufe STUDIOS & 1 BR's. Pd · as tr OK, no pets_. $155 & ~l60. and TO\\'nhoUses 2 BR apt1. Yearly . Pf'ninsula. l blk Bay I: .)leach. New d e c o,r . 1225.-$256. Adult>. mo w. Balboa. 642-4568 or 61>-¥57 J F t 1 V n court, swimming pool. etc. -----~----I e k.i · 842-1652 ii oun 11 n • ey This NEW home will be CHAru. Full ·1chen 11-1 E. 2001 St., c .M. • Fr. $19-1.50 Open 9-6 oa· y 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 car gar .. aJJ. bll.ns, lffiim pool, kids OK, like new only $249 mo. No fee. Agent 8'12-4421 a>ND0-3 ~· 21,i ba, range, dsh\o\·r, patio, 2 car gar, air, wet bar. crpts, drps, ·adUlts. $32.5. $62-8337. 3 BR, 2 BA, crpls, drps, bltns, family rm, d b I garage. Fe~. 968-1021 Huntlngt)>n S.O<h coinpleted sonletime in Dec. tING lov;er 2 Br., 1 • Heated pool 5-IS-0137 or 646-4005 Groovy Bachelors pad. $130. Spa Pools Tennis please phone no~·. it will ba. Wsr/dm, gar, Aliits. • Laundry facilities NEWPORT All utll pd. Wlk bch. Across from Fashion Lsland he 10 your advantage, is $250. 673-008. 492--0491. • Free utilities CaHl'ti Lrgest RentaJ Agcy at Jan1boree 011 San Joaqwn drnJ)f':ri ha\•e .i'lll been Du~O.es Unfurn: 350 •Free linens ·APA·RTMENTS Homiifinders 547-9641 Hills Road. Cost• Mt18 St>\ccted & it's possible We •. Tear..,V:B&Q":1 .. ~id serv. avail. 1 BUTR.IULnfurnlTIESFProAIDm $130. •WALK TO BEACH '714) "'1900 ==TH'-"E=EX.;..Cl_TIN_G ____ I could order thent· mutually Coronl "del M•r "" " 1v~~ -1 1 •-hi S: •Phone.service No Pe-Brancl.newl,2&3BR.Car-"-"'>'~""• ovey u..:S Y PALM MESA APT . lo your tasle. $600 pr monU1. '" d bl pal led 2 b l ba 64 .. '°7 SPAC ne"·er 3 br, 2 ba, • 1 l\1ile to ocean 2-1.j() Ne">rV>rt Blvd. Cl\1 pets, rapes, t·ins. 11 r, upper M~'UTES TO NPT BC!! 't-"lQO • .... • ' 22116lh St 847-3957 w/frplc. CrplS & drps, bltn 11"' • • FOR LEASE: Brand NC\V SCJV. porch. Walk shop. 516 $155-$165 . Call 6-16-1038 • range. J. .. 1:g~ gar. Prefer; nJRN. OR UNFURN. . I BIG CANYON Country Club Iris. $325/mo. Lse. 644--6682 BACHELOR & 1 BR. Patios, 2 BR, 1 ba & 3 br, 1% ,,...,WALK TO BEACH person over 40 \\"ho likes Unbelievably large apts., l Beauty, 4 Bedroom,. 3 Bath, Cosfa Mes• trplc's priv garages • DI· ba, bltn range, drps, crpt, 2 BR &: 3 BR. Carpets, quiet le refined atmosp¥re-hu.,e JX>OI, Jacuul, elect bit· : Family Room, For ma I ----------1 vided bath i. lots of closets. pool clubrm, carport. "2212 dra~ bltins. 31:* 16tlf St. $210. 673-1664. ins. shaa crpts, drps, a&una Dining room, 3 car garage ROOJ\fY, cptd, 2 BR, dble Rec. hall, pool & pool tables, College Ave. 6 4·6 -6 0 3 2 . 536-8$48 or 847-3957.' Sl'PS to bch, lrg mod, 2 SINet'c· LESAduits, no Pl!!:..__ •1l0 I on Cul-de·sac. overlooking gar +.hobby nn. WaJk to sa.uqa baths. "See for yow-.. Undernewllliment ocx; RUN 1 1 all bl " ......... ' ' FOR Leue. Yearly. 2 ~ Bedroom house. Refs. req. io ' Avail Jan. 15th. 673-55n: RENT' WITH OPTION Family townhouses. 1, 2, 3 le · 4 BR. $115 &:. up. the Golf Course. Yearly shopping $Z5.. mo. Agent !clf. 17301 Keelson Ln. (1 2 BR,D~I. crpts, drps, bltns, 2 Br, $159, Crpt/drps, pool, br, frp c, beam ce · t 1 BEDRM. From $11:5 Leasf' $950. mo. ALL 646-3928. Eves: 5-18--8651 blk. w. o( Beach, 1 blk N. small pvt patio, Washin& gar, child ok. 842-3546, ws~..!!:5 .c;:~er3 ~ 3)'rlt>! 2 !~ERM. .......11From ~~ BRAND NEW EXPENSIVE N t B h bl Slater). facilities; nr. shopping. $175. 842-4504. e .. t""". • U n.1w;11 Apts n vcu from ~ I ~por HC 842 . pool/tennis crts, $ 3 7 5 ID $15 LESS. . ' C...-ftl Mor , • $285 2 BR. blt.ns, blg ltone f'rplc, beams. garage, yard. • Lra: 3 BR, yard, patki,. li)la of llglit &: air. • New l '+ Fam Rm, excepUonally nice. Harbor :· ... __ Hm ,1 .. _ s. ,; NU.V,IEW RENTAl<S ; . m.C'IO Of !tl'i48 .: SEAUTIFUlL Y remodeled :• home. New thnXlut, So: of ;' H\W. 3 Br .. 2 Ba + huge laµndry roorri & game room. : ' • Jumlile. $400 '.nlO. : ~1658. ENCLOSED pa. t I o , su~ rounded by 2 BR, 2 BA. den, dbl trplc, Nr. Big Corona. $350 mo. yrly1 Agt/owner. ~2058, --eves. rn;..,mi.· ' NEAR new 3 BR. 3 balhll, trpl., patio; b 1 t -In s , d~wahr. Xllit! ~Month Scenic Properties 61:>-5126 ' SHARP 3 BR, tam. rn1, J • vtew, nke yard; lea~. Avail. l\nmed. Realtor m.zm WHY RENT? $1500 dw<n i)Uys this 2 BR, l ~ Ba, .tam. townhouSe. *"·Total $1B7 per mo. * 'SLADE REAL TY 963-4543 or 968-1198 aft. 6 pm $ LANDLORDS $ Let US rent UR properties. We service all the beach ewe. " Inland ·°"'""' Co. FEE FREE. Save Time & $$ $'ALA RENTALS $ Newj:iort & Bay, CM .642-838.1 RENT or sell 3 BR, 1 % Ba· &. family. '6 yrs, redecorated.' $290. Mo. or buy" at 10% dn. 17812 Altamirano. 1st st E. or E(IY.•ards, 1 blk So. of Slater. 842-7090 or (213) 375- 3272 NU PAINT THRU-OUT Sharp 4 Br, 1% Ba, gas bltns, 2 car gar, fenced yrd, $270 mo, Ews. 962-5a19. 3 BR. family nn, trpk, 1 IO ba. crpts & drps, bltns, cbililren & pets ok. ;2!6. 536-7036 W,ALK ID beach, 2 BR & den, dishwasher, 2 car pr, big yard, No pets, 968-2.16.i. 3 BR, 2 BA on cul-de-sac nr school( A J> e a c h • $285/mo. Call 8'6-3410. Irvine · I SPYGLASS HUI; 2 BR, den, leueorla.le Avail mid Nov. Tennis, pool prM., $000 mo. 2.BR .. 1 ba.lh •••••••••• 1315 &M-2696 eves. 2 BR, 2 ba, den, ale •• $275 3 BR .. 211 ba. .... $385/400 3 BR., i bath• ••••.• $400/425 4 BR., 3 baths • • • • • .. • • • $425 4 BR.., 2% baths ••.• $450/475 5 BR, 3 bal N'pt Bch .•• 1315 I: 3 BR. 2 ba, clean •• •paciowt", Patio, gar. $425/mo. Yrly lente. 644-06U f .Br. s Bo. adulll. nO ..... Leue $35(1, 424 Polnllettia. ''• 675-5218, 55J.968.l . Coot• Moll CAL 552·7500 VIS10N--- 9 reef hill FUP'l~~E. can After 6 l ·7848 mo. Adults only. 373 A Ogle NEW APT, adullS, pets, ~2 \\.inter 5475 yrly, 642-3490 You're right, -.•re u~r-1 •~ .,.......~.., BRAND new upper unit, 1000 be St. 644-4359 ml t bch 2 B 1 ·-, lllEN, mall ach hotel. · o · r, 1uge NEW 3 BR. 2 BA apL Bltns, priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. SUPER new four bedroom sq. ft. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apt:s. • TR<?PICAL ~L • patio/le~ yd, 1 story. {rplc, laundry, ~S blk ocean. (5 b1k.s from Newport BJvd.} I Harbor View Homes Phase huge balcony, bltns, dshwhr, $95 per month. SJ6...7056. 2 BR, l 'ii Ba. Spiral strcse, $22(), ~3166. $350. Days 979-3165; Sat & 546-98&1 I III. Pool&: tennis privileges. & gar. $375/mo. Yearly. frplc bltns lrg encl patio 2 BR ts drps bltns s 6-6--0232 POR'J'OFINO •••• $590 p/mo Agt. 673-2058, eves 675-5487. Huntington Harb,:tur fncd' )'I'd. Gas 4 wtr pd: carpo~t )fr • shp'g • schl & \Ul. * CASA VICTORIA * P..10NTEGO •••••• $545'Jlfmo UPPER, dock, gar, 2 BR, * LARGE J & 2 BR * 548-1168 fiwy. $165. '1 child ok. No E2~Ltm; Arc· 2 ~f·• 1c 2 ~bl~ :rR. ~I~ U~ ':i= ~~I:=~~~~ ~~w c=n .kordi:is.bl~~~ . J150. & UP ~d el~ N2 brls ~1:· l pets. 646-3786; 54>-0160, 2 s~ll ~ rp$3oo1~'. an~~I. e~~Sz Vi~twla & plush carpeting through-$300. m_:927 Quiet le secluded 2 Br, 2 m Afbert0 ~ • 7 moCM. LGE 2 BR, 1% Ba Studio. 644-0079. St. at Harbor, ~f. 6-t2->891'0 1 out. Ready ln December • ~ Ba. Furn or unfurn, heated 646-5996 °· ' Encl gar. Infant OK. No SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 BA DW, Alk about our special Movt: reserve now. Duplexes, pool. Nr. beach & shopping. ' pets. $157.50/mo. 847-4440. bltns, 2 patios, nr Hoag in Allowance, ~ CAPRI REALTY 644-7525 Fum. or Unfum. 355 Warner to ,\lgonquin, g? by 1100 Victo1ia, 2 new a~ts, ** 2 Br, new paint, closed Hosp. Adults. $D> mo. Huntfnsrtan IMd'I ~ 1 4=°'B'°rn="R"='oo"=""M~.~2~o0BA""TH='. I----------Board 'Valk Shopp 1 n g lrg, rooms, gar., pvt. patios, garage. Oiild & small pet ok ~2-43S7 _ Family nn. lo--• dln•"ng Newport Beach Center to end of Algonquin, 2 BR, 1 BA, sin . pet or child . $150. 847-8149. DELUXE adult p 0 0 Is Ide '·iuw xii turn right % block to 11602 67~2749. OCEAN View, yearly 2 Br, garde bung 1 rm, privnte tennis & .J>OO LRG 2 m:• 2 B~. Newport Sell Circle, Peyton Manor, 2 Br, 1 Ba single story, new 2 ~R, 1 BA. Blt·ins, cpts, l Ba. duplex. $250. 644-61llO ,,.. 1 n1_ a ~w, 16' c::n, pr Iv lieges. $545/month. Shores. Nu crpt g. $25(1/mo 1 lt,lanagcr No 53. 8413-3105 sh . 1 drp fncd 11 dips, 1 blk to beach $175 or 642-3639 ,..p • ... pa O, 1• ! ()H...5686 evenings & zy $225 · t ~8-4802 · ag crp_, s, . pa o, mo. 645-3053, 536-1336. S sauna, lennia. 846-0259. "'eekends; 642-5735 days. yr · '"1n er. · Laguna a.ach beam ce1l, frplc, gal'. ·$175. 1 BR F" 1 4 block 1700 WE TCLIFF DR. Also 1 Br. From $13:). , Apts. Furn. 360 2544 Elden 5.17-3125. · u-ep ace. __ 5 2 BR. 2 BA. Bltn appliances. 1 ._ URGENT / Immac 3 Br, tam 1 -~--------LRG. mod. do\vnl0\\'11 studio * E.'ITRA Jra. 1 or 2 BR. to beach. Gas paid. 41.l lath Pool. M2-6274. G1ARurnDp<unAf"~·· N2o ~11..l:-,; ' rm, Harbor Vit'\v llome. Bolboa Island Fu Cl · St Huntington Beach "" ui~ $430/mo. Ph: 644.6863 or apt. rn. ose to nuun Heated pool. From $145. .' • BAY Ave, 3 BR, 3 BA, Uv or pels. 19822 Brookhursl, 644-7SlS. • bch. Respon, Adult. Lse. Mature adults, no pets. 1887 $150-l BR, nu crptg, garage, rm, lam rm, Jaund rm, BACH. l adult, $Ll0 rno. $160. 494-~. A-Ionrovia. 645--0926. 3 blks 10 town. 5 blks to study, intereom, $.175 yrly. Newport Beach CLEAN 4BR + Nr Mariner, tv~erit~W~·::«ilf pets. CHAID.flNG 1 Br. on ocean. SPACIOUS ne\v 2 Br 2 Ba beach. 515 7th St. H.B. Util p::I. 6/a-1901. Bachelor Furn $205 c:ican~ 337_5847 $200 in~. uW. q PP bltns, drps, ca.rpelini, pool: 4 BLKS f~m Ocean. garage. DUPLEX 3 br 2 ba all bltns, 2 . BR Unfurn, $235 NR.-.Beach'~4 Br, ram rm, 3 Ba, trpk, .<Olldo. ?pol, tennis, $500 mo. 645--1658{ SHARP-Vacant 3 Br, 2\1 ba. Pool & yard malnL Lease $5!!0/MO. 83H6,15, San Clemente 1 FURN apt wry elean, Albert80fl s. 729 GaVlOta. frplc, gar. Adults, 00 pets. New n1C<! 1 Br. $19.5. blk to bch, xtra lra:. Nice elderly people ye a r I y 49'1-1719. 316 \V. Say St., C.hf. 549'--3669. yard. Yr round 1_827_2382 Ocean ' View. Yearly lepe. • 6T:>--0343 I-tested Pool. Adults Only: EFFIC. -& Delu."e from $50 LARGE 1 Br. Pobl. NR Laguna Beach YEARLY rental -2 BR. LAS BRISAS APT$. & $75 \Vk. Pool. maid, Ph. shops. Adlls, no pets. $152 \\'/gar. $275/n\o. ,...,15 RI A NB !dry, Village Inn. 494-9436 util pd. 1884 tlonrovia. * FOR RENT * CALL 673-$1G ~ CaJ~'l'00,:56 $35 WEEK & UP Newport S...Ch 548-00J6. CHAR~llNG \VALK to Beach 2 Br + • Sleeping Rooms LG 3 br 2 ba crpts drps 1-Bdrm . apt. by Pottery d 2 Ba $260/ San Clemente •Housekeeping Room.a ''EXTRA SHARP'' bllins, 't180. 'mo.' 787 Shack;. walk to bench & 6~-or ·~l. n10. LOVELY OCEAN VU. nr. • Ocean View Apts 3 bedrooms, 2 bath condo Shalimar Dr, Phone 551·5932 e\·ci')'thing. Hdv.·d. f 1 rs · ="""-="'o.~.=~,_.,....-,-,c fO BUENA Vista, on cllff ' BALBOA INN In niost desirable secUon if 00 ansv.-er 6454512. Ocean vu, ln<;ludes stove Fat Profit ts attained when · N. Beach. 1, 2 or 3 BR, view dt!ek & patio .. Lal'ge lll> Main Sll"eet of Park Udo Large pool -A refrig~ $200 Month. you sell through result-get· no pets, 15'11 Buena ;Yi.ta, 1 2 BR 2 BA + fam rm. 675-8140 •-lenty of par. king Furn LGE l brJ bltns, C/D, rtbig, l\USSION REALTY 494-0731 ting Dally Pilot Classified S.Clem. 49hil70. ~-~==:;;_---1 ""_P · · pool. lnary. Adlts. no pets. I I 365 A U t V6!%~~. ·~ m31672. 'car gar. ,,C_•_•_I•-~-"-----$350. month. $145 l26 Monte Vista l\!gr Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 Apt. Un urn. pt. n urn. --~ , · GRUBB A ELLIS CO. ~ Tustin *ELM GARDENS~ PCK>L* 67S.70IO •STUNNING 2 ar, 2 .Ba Cost• MM• Costa Mesa Costa Me. II •Adults Poolside $150 Up. ¥ 3 BR. eAI Child , Sec lo $35 per wk & up. 1 BR, Garden Apt POOi. Rec. . I J.175. BRAND new ' 90 rens 1 n 2 Br & bach's. Color TV, Rm. $175. TIO W. 18th, CM. r••• ... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••: 2 BA how;e. Cpts, drps, rn-E. 22nd St. CM &42-3645 Id 1 THE Dif" Adul Livin hltns. Ganlener incl<L .No 1 Br !<K. $100 & mo. Ter-~~. "",';? J°" j.i0,,,.,,.. 1, . .'f. 2 :;i:::;'~d s::;: i Distinctively 1 1..e~t t · -g, . . i I .::~s::.:~. or ~~·ts.Ide~1gg~or ~c:~I~:~: Blvd. NB. 646---96SJ Adults, no pets. &45-8965. : IACHl.LOR APTS. 0t 1 IR'APTS. w/LOFTS From $155 : Unfurn.. 310 548-gs;u. Groovy J?ad. Fw-n studio. $90 $150. 2 bv, slngle story, beam : : _.;... _______ -:::-~I · u1il pd. ceiling. 2043 W a 11 ace • •1• \ • -·-LGE. 2 ~R. ll00.11')' apt. £a!U's Lrgelt Rental Ag~ fi46:!..qZ4.1 or-6*-8882 :. .. 1.., •• ;: ~;~.·~'.· : ;G;;;"";;;;;;;ro;;;I;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BAdltnsl • ~'!!~ hpeated pool. Hofneflnclers 547a9641 LRG 2 BR. bltns dshwhr ·~-'.;.~~;~ ... 1~t:".r):?.,'i'.~~,J;,:,. ..... ,.., ..... : / uts, ........... omona . • • •ji: .: 1~ · j..:j::;* l.l"i.$ .. ., 1 ~7289. 1 BEDROOM, pool, blk to l'ldUlta, no pets. $170. ru 'j." ;,~!_.'. ,:;~r~. ~'. : 1 365 ' -1 . pesk . "-rv • .-. . on. '"'l" • ""'·~·· adult. Call & --LRG 2BR, bltins. ts drps • . , . ,,.• 31_BR.1~ !31-erpt. .. l'Ner. REAL.TY • REALTORS 3 BA.., :;: ha., uni. new carp, by pra.ge..s. Empio)'ed adu l SEASHORE 2 • 3 BR. 1 child ok •150crp ·... • • , ;' .. •• · . . Costa Mesa.Co.92621 2.lJ.R., l ~uni,;.]'~~ • 1'ICE-l~br.-~~ _ll<•<b •• X.Wi;Jf $155._fil!>gl Sl>allmar~.J\!2-51" • ·' i ~.'.,.. ~'--"' I ' ... JU. w/i-.HO. Univ. Park Cer;tter, lrvine : drapee, decor, yrt,y. $325. over 30, 1)9 pets. SC&-1071. .• ;;1,.• monu,, . (714)645-4411 ' S.C. 'Pla!a. $300. mo. ""-""""""""""'"""'""'~13 BR., 2 ba. Octalifnmt. COMPLETELY turn I BR. From$2flflpermonth -9210 · 60-0445. ~ BR Condo ••••• $225 MO/lse Fum.; winter $325. $130. ' 131 Flower St.,CM. Property House 642-3857 2 BR, bltns, shag crplg, fresh it .. ~ Tan A tookl,2 Br. $175. Car. 2 !2R c.ondo ""' •• $245 MO/i.e 2 BR., 2 lllba. turn, winter Adulta, no pell. 646-1883 OCEANFRONT 2 BR , paint, encl pa~, nr OCC. Fl1<d YnJ. Kl<lo/peU ok. 3 BR .Home ..... fl!I; moilta S30fl, · DELUXE 3 BR. 2 BA I GARA~E. $240 YEARLY. $16S/MO. 557--0350 ·Callt'• ~ Rml1d Af,CY 3-BR Horne ...... $300 mo/lae 3 BR ·2 be .turn $300 yrly. blk to ocean. 968-6767 ·or 64.5-$08, evf'll I: wttkends, NEW lge deluxe 2 Br. Good HemeflnCler1 547·9'41 ; Home .... ~.$325 mo/lse 642-7671. San Clemente loc. No pets. Adulls only. • ba Home • •••• $300 mo/1ae ' 2028 F\lllerton $44-1869 • 3 BEDROOM, :IA lb BR Home ••••• $425 mo/Jse $175 2 BR, l'ii be., patio, OCEANFRONT 1 BR ' : ~ . Fam ly room, RANCH REALTY 551..-.0 garage, crpts. red pool ' view N ~ $125 • LR.G. 1 BR. Quiet • ftreplaCe,, pool. $325/)tO. FOR ltllte, beaut 38R..J1lA:. . • ca.ll 833-8731 ehll~ltn, ~ pets,. $165,, area. Water~ : !·. 66-8SlO. 'fV/lovely ya.rd A-lrg peUo:-2 Bit turn apt. utU pd, $175 492-2684. Bkr. 6 : 4 BR, 2 ba, new aka& g>t.s. enclsd RV atorqe crptt, rqo. •· Unfv 3'5 $135. LRG. 1 BR. Close In. • gar, Ira lncd yd. Npt RgU drpsi bltln• 1315 tnclds '"'l'k lolbH 1...... ·r.l8--091ll ..,.t, m . Adult•. n<> "'"· : I·· ...... a.to. mt. ~ & pool priv\. 55Ull58 ,, I BR-. Apt. fumitlled. $125 S.lboo lalond Rel\ltor : 3 BR hOute w/f:rplc, Int NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, bllnt, , .. EW Blilbol I It~ mo incl. uttt.j Suitable fOl' I BDRM, range, ahag ctP.tl;'.::!S!j ! )'I'd nu paint 2 kids ok $275 ll"alh compactor, c r pt 1 , ~ ~ -: Bacbtlor. 6* 809. · NEW 2 .BR. trpl., all elec &. drps. $145. mo. + deposit i~-:--U:~~ 60-83 dT,' oonim patk/pool. Nr acp dlnlrw 'kttdwtl, t.a'm rm "Make ftoom. For Daddy" blt·h11. Garaa:e. S275 Mo.1,,_Ms-"'-77437-.:--=--:.-7, !. '• 3 8Jt, tam nn, ava.D Nov. I ,CI. 833-8447, lndd~ 'i,t ~( pW, &ab.I~ •••. dell! out the pra,p yearly. Broker 6'15-6700 You don't ~ • KUn to : .: -~,.. • ..... !II, , $5'.l---uatrl • fORTUE=-ruJclt; t-B~t~ wUl~.-reu. oa.r.. wm tbat junk Into caih . .l Bt-.lurn_ap to ..Junc. "Qraw Fast when ~ "'. • :o-\. • " 84&-7Ei8. Be. 3 car gar:$450. Ifnmed. Avatl t)c(: 1., m.1512 or with a Dally PUot Caalfied $190 per mo, couple or s:trls, place an· idlil1Jift:JtY .~ · . , ·~ .-. Cla.llltned Ad. : .•. ~.&t2-5678. poUeulon. ~. 615-8519 ad. Call 60'""5ITI. m-o969 att-6 Pr.1 Pilot Want Ads! C&U now M ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,. I ' ·' '1 ' -1 j I • i • I' ., ---..... -~-···· --c c -· ·----~ -~ -. •c -.. DAILY PllOl Thursday, Novrrnbtr U , lq73 R,..,,. 400 Businon Renta l .,.5 Found (froo adsl 550 Cement, Concrete H ole -ntod, M & F 711 Help won-, -& F 710 H•!e Wo nted, M ~ F 710 Matp Won\od, M & F 710 Help Wa nted, M & F 710 I ROOMS ~ wk up wlklt ·~· Faeto/y" ""' a Iri: FOUND ~~1 type bl~ CEMENT & Bl0<:k Work. """ •~ " .,,. ASSIST·•-•1 ' -JUNIOR SALESMAN l90 ··k "f. apts Child--. ll 11"/ ,......¥ j _.,.... ... ~ '"'' "anaaer, ~ : & 1 .. · • .._.. c'"'p a\fa · "" mo. In near Sprinrdale & }(el , Walls, tmllo8. lddev.·o.lkl, Trainet11, Count.er Clrls, ,--Eam •rit1.•.tn. ,_ week •-i.., ~l sect on. 2376 Ne"~ aune~Village 425 30th St.~ H.B. 'S.M).-1854. Please call etc. 8)". hr. or job. 6461915 AC(!Ountant 10 SldK f' Coo'·· n... NI D Ii 5 · d O I _,,.., ~· v•• I 81•"' CM ~ 4 8 9 7 • NB 6 "2-"M A /Co w ry ~. ~·· l•s. 8 Very-Uft ay ft y I•• aller >lcltool llltd Satur· ....... , · -., • · or v-o.uv. 8: Identity. CEJ.fEWI': Patio, drives, ccount st to Sl""' Craveyd sh.Uts open. 1\&11 _ d;f1 selling OC\'I 11ub&Crip. ~ lndu1trial Rental 450 LITI'l.E younf,, yellow kit• \Valks·RepaJrs, saw & TSr•.l•ChP~•~•',',·,,., to S16K & Pftfn1e. Apply Jack ln lions for "·o DAILY PILOT. I -~S'J'ER BR, O\Vll l3A & otAA """'° •v.. ,. 360/BAL Th Box 385 E 17th SI "' 1t, It. kit privll. Patio. ' ten, ""Wte rh n, i1tomach & wmovtt. Free est .r•'foo<l;QO Procrammer $12K e ' ' '• OF DAlLY PILOT TO CARRirfiS. RE· 1iiit hi not a ~r route ~ rd Good HARBOR. & WARNER '"''· Vic 11111 Pl. & Sant• Contflctor F/C Bookkeeper to !800 C.M. • · and "°"' not Include d,. 1 _,~ ;998 toe . 198/mo. , 1'•bol, c.M. 5'8-7488. Murkelln• S.crotary to 1700 Auto s.rvtco Dept. Men. QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE TATION llverloa oi· <:OJl•ctina. Open. ~ . ' . • 1"00 aq. u .• to 1000 .N<1. rt. F No : Setter/Retriever? CUSTOM BUlt..oER · Loan Scrv. Counslr $700 e Llne lifechanlc!'I \VAGON OR VAN . CONTACT MR. HARRY I~ ln Costa Muaa. l-~ountain , R001'T. privatt> hoine. mlnuftll 10 all free\i•a.y!I & tn1I. \V/flea t'Ollar. Vic. ]4lh Remodeling, patios. or what Sec'y/Dictaphone to $625 • New c:sr prep men. SEELEYJ 330 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA Valley and SOulh Hun= l0u"d~~t :~nlrkly'n•Sw1"°.,~~ll' o&r o.c. Ai.rpo11. St. H.B. 536-07351 (takJna h11"ve AJOU· Jay Cllbc.11.. PayJi!IYvtst/Pvt. a• Ulnesed'ca;udept:....~«hanlcsd MESA. TELEPHONE 642-4321 FOR AP· ~A~·;.h·'lAPPl.Y now by c I ~ " · · ....... Pk.1'C: UAltRE:'I,. ttEA'TY to poundl. cens1.-u & in.sured. Lie: Clui;> $600+ UI u ~ ex ... ""'ent, an POINTMENT . --w . . ttnnis. 96.1-5878 642~3.S3 "" l'~UND Golden Retrlewr, 81--281852. ~1155 _. F/C -BkkJ)r/Seeretary '600 Newport Beach Chevy · ' Equal Oppor. Employer G£N1'LEMEN, ni n st er ,..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J has been lnJIJred, Coiltn GER WICK & OON Jr. Landscaper to $600 dealer must add' 5 line / "': * KEY ENTRY iji~F~ci}~~~i J~~1~1:;h NOW LEASING r.1e11a 8.l'ea . 546-975-1 utter Blda: Contr. Addlt & Remod rc·y1Purc~s~ng to S600 :~~:· u'!~ = J::r. An Equ•I Oppor tunity Employer OPERATORS * ~Iv. ~18 Huntington Beach _:1:30. 6~tc Lie. Bl·ll4~70 .f;p~~nce. "' to J:' mt.'<!hanlca, all but the latter Do you need Otrl11tm11.1 I ~;'~:. '!:,.~~~ ,:::"& ":;:!: NEW M·I ';~~.~o fe-;,,:i~~~ .. ~··~,:. Dry w,11 Complot• Scivtce =P~~ed~cal 14~4! ;~sf.:~~ G~=•t""fn Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~i:t.:<l,,w!u ",'t:lt, •. yo~~ i' "nch. 6 73-9M5. 940 $q. Ft, & UP Jkach a c ros s Crom CALL 01UCK At'Ctni Clrk Tnie/'rype $400 new facllltles. 111 the heart COOK lt!'fl~yard shift 6 EXEC SECReTARY your own hounr. Compell· Ilanlllton & Ne1.~"1and SI· P31isades school 493-5330. 97§.-0216 Reasonable Machinists $5.5(1 hr ot -the booming ORANCE dttva 'wk. Co ..... 1d beneius. • · live snlary rotes. 129 key N CY. roo1n for working 960-1970 L JACK T •· I Ol"-Bo /M • ., """' COUNTY AIRPORT rea · ~ · "''-' Fer Paid $100 disc experience. JDC, 228l I~. lady or student • .Kit •.,..,,,...,..., ... ..,..,. ... ,..1 o1t 555 aumne, rep a r , u...v Y an ~·~hr See t a I AllKI, p/Umo Junch help, Exciting career for sharp Fairview Rd., Costa Mella, ·1 niiv. 5'1&--l22<1. S42--02Zf I ' rcmoa, add. Uc 8-1 269072. ID\m.rc: PERSONNEi. H 3ervdceC rngr. now . ]1Qnl~2Plll. Apply ln~t'llOn, penon w/Je.nd developer. S46•6080. '"'.·-st Hom• 415 1140 SQ FT & UP LOST ~ Alask;tn Malamute. ?tfy Way Co. 83S-310G. 15'.Y 11 ... ~ M~c'X:::ur : e J~,~i!oe~ Jack In The Box 1205 Baker Xln't bctle:fits. Also Fee Po. f ..:'.:'.::"":.,.,===~--1 <>-NEW M·l l'•ma '· white & gray. 3 Gardening ' SERYK:ES•AGfNCY blvd" Newport Be a c h St., CM ~ttonJ. Call Elly EIU" LABORERS ' ci>~1E see. have your parent 782 ~.P~~. c::~gMesa ~· 0~ !~~~~Tr::: s::: CAU.. TRISH HOPKINS 833-(655, 'COOK Experienced, f/tlme. 556-8505, Control Career E1n. ln1n1ed. Asslanments. Top ' qured for all you ,..,0ul<l rto 3 doors off PlacC'ntia n.eii·ard/7l4-9Gz..6907 or GARDENER of 22 yrs. ex· JERRI \VHITfEMO~ AUTO ~ Apply Zubles, 2920 E. Coast ploymcnt Agency, 3400 $$$. lAng or short term J ~lime pcl'niilt ing. 642-9278 n4-968_19~. per. v.•ho is knowledgeable 488 E 17l'h St. (at Irvine) CM H1vy., CdM 644-9884. ItV\l)n 1.llvd., N.S. C11ll 54o...4450 J. B. SAUNDERSON, & P.roud of hilio work seeks Suite 224 642~1470 New Cll.r lrnporrs needs ex· C 0 p y \V ll. IT ER-Trade 1 EXECUTIVES NE'{ER A FEE A1' TEMPO. j 642-0212 eves. ~2277 LOST blk & \l.'hite ~fate Cat 4 or 5 add n1aint jobs. _.~____....___ perience, , Association ror service TF~MPO Temporflry Help * COSTA MESA * no collar Vic l~arbo1· & Fair George Hampton. -.--v-v--• Serv ice W r iter Bus\.ne1111 needs copywriter -$15,000 fo $75,000 LACUNA Reach Live in, lov· 1300-1750-7400 sq, rt. P1·lvott! Dr., ans. to Benji, ivttite * 549-:lllS * • Lube Man to handle public relations Seild resume or call TODAY lng child care + lite \ o!liccs. Plenty of parking. diamond markings on face. PROl'~ESSIONAL gard•ne•·. ACCOUNTING • Mechanic & advertli:iing.. Probably for confidenUal NO COST housekeeping Sep Ir m , Rentals to Share 430 sJ1ARE 3 : bdrm ho1ne. ~~traight, n1alure. Student OK. 642-0323 or 551-0017 l(ner 6. R I Please, 979-7567. ... T . rt tim Se 1 & executive Interview. .,...,, -E ·t 281 . all • ~, I eat y for occupancy. t~ \votk, pruning, op 1vnge~ & co, benefits. Pll · e. nc. resume EXEClITIVE SERVICES o.;:s,r~""" x • ~ -> •£• C. ROBERT NA'ITB.ESS, &~OOPY s1nl Fem: Blue· sprinklers, cleanup jobs, CLERK Phone 646-9303, 54().9467 flna9cl11I rt'qu1ren1ents ~ to INC ' 4M-34&6 • \\lo"ANTED: t.-lale 25 + lo flare 2 BR duplex. 1 blk ijch. $115 + ~2. util. Al, il'J>.4228. RLT. point Sian1ese \~Jut> collar I ands cap in g. George, P.~. Box 1748, Sllntn Ana, 888 N. Main, Santa Ano. LANDSCAPER 1 Costa A1esa 979-6511 w/rhincstones ID tag 64&-589.l • 2 Yrs A/P & A/Tl expel'. AUTO GENERATOR Cahf. 91701, Equal Oppor. (n4) ~7·9625 Experlericed in headet'board I 4001 BIRCH, NB disappeared 11 fron; 'EUROPEAN Gardener. Good general accounting STARTER En1ployer JmtallaUon in fine grading ' 3600 sq, ft. 15 <: per sq ft \\lestclUf area. C I 64&-4ll9 Maintenance-Landscaping. background. Type 50 ,v,p.111. REBUILDER . * COUNTER GIRL for dry ~XPER Walter for fast Mex· e!Sentltil. 546-0791 between belO\v g6iug rn!c-, II. mfg. LOST Cathern'Otd, Jg 1 yr Tree Removal. very 1-lcavy \\'Ork load. lO key cleaning plant, assembling, 1can Food Re a t aura n t;. 4 & 5 pnl. • I 2 .GIRLS nce<l 1 j,till, 21·28 lb share 3 Br ·apt. NI'. beach if! NB. $100 n10. 645-6353'. WANTED, male to share lfll'iC 4 Br house & utilities, H.B. $90 rwr month. 962-8668 2 J GUYS 1vill share 3 Br. 9.ome w/pool area S.A. whsle, strg, Sawngardncr male frlsh Setter. Mich. reasonable. 642-5329 eve11. a:dder. TOP PAY, PERM, EXPER. bagging & checking t>X· r.targarlta Inn, 3 4 2 3 ,J r , \ 541-5032. tags. Vic. of 20th & Ne"•port -3fiZl \V 1 t st t:: .A perience pre/erred or will Doh en Y Park Rd, · leg1 Sec Y Tt alnn i Blvd. Reward. Call anytime COMPLETE LAWN . Call For Appl. · 8 ·• .,.... train. 6 days. Apply in Capistrano Beach. X1n't oppor. for bright lndtv. M-1 1320 sq. n. 786 Newton S4S-530f§..or 979-&lTI. 0 SERVICE Industrial Relalions V JK'l'SOn. FABRIC CUTTER, no exp. w/avg 11d\111 & desire to ! Way, CM. $200/mo, Lease. LOST l"l~AND EDGE (7l4) 49.4-940I A ON MAKES FIVE POINT CLEANERS nee. trvitlf!' area. Ask for lc~n. \VIII troln ~M pvt Call' M~2850. 8--6. Male Brown long hair L ·UPS 536--5139 _ Ci-IRISTMAS THE SEASON 18641 r..tain St., HB Patricio, S40-3684 sect for attorney. L1te ore. i Rj!'!T 600 sq. rt. SlOO/MO. puppy, black nose, black D & M GARDENING n c TO BE JOLLY * ~7-2466 * exper helpful. Gre a t ~ Randolph, CM, lShop around eyes, Reward, Los t La1vn maintenance & gen'! LONI Earn extra money (or gilts · . FEMALE SALES ~ stttrtlng sal ,it: co.' paid No. 9) Cali 675·5116. 11/10, 646-1423 clto.n-up. Very reasonable. INDUSTRIES as an AVON Representative COUNTER girl, sa.ndwlches, part tl~e wknds. Splrlls & benefits. : ~;;.,;;....::=.::::==~--I LOST black male Persian Dennis -645-6498 in your spare Ume Call· day shift, apply •n person Stuff, 25014 Del Pra.do, Jason Best Agency ' ~ •Ray 5J7-4439• FEM., 25 to ,35 share furn" 2 Br hoUSl', Cd11, 540--0960 or 67?.-8262. 800 SQ Ft. office, furn or Jong hair, gray under neck: Ex~r. Amer. Gardener 540-7041. • · at The Stal'lton Uquor, 8010 Dana Point Marina 493-8731 17'100 Brook! t F VI ; unfurn, cpts, drps, N.B. $85. los:t \Vest Balboa N.B. area ,.. Laguna 'Beach ::-c""==~-----1 \Varner Ave., Huntington FULL . rvi t ti IUl'S • • y, 646-1724 67 5-00 74 1 Mo. ~faint., Tree trim, BABYSITTER needed by Beach , t1n1e se Ct'! ii a on Suite 213 003-6775 a I 5, Reward Landscape 552-8101 Equal Oppor, Employer • tnacher w/own transp fur . ntte.ndant, ex~r pref . LF.GAL Sncretru·y Newport > StIARE n1y 2 BR ripl, 1;2 b,lk from bay, 2 blks from R_.c.•n..cl;.;•..cl•;;.'_wc..;;a;.;n;.;l•:.;d;,__..;4;:;60: I Lost gray. tan & white tabby I ;::111::11111 •::1111111::111~ 1 child, 11 mos. . Lite OOS~OLOGJST Assistant Un iforms furnished . Appl y &ach law fi1:n1 seekll cat. Lg. green eyes, !!arbor General _S9rvices Ii ii iiiiiiiiiiil housekeeping Ref's req'd. pcslhon open, 4 days, good Union Oil Stn, .26171 La Pilz S<'eretary or qua 1i r 1 e d 1 Vu , Homes area. $2 5 . ACCj)UNTING &l:t-6607 aft 5 pay, Ken Temp l e t o11s, Rd at Crisanta fl.fV ral XI klll ired ; reward. 675-5923 or 640--1329 "THINGS" by Moose. Gen'l CLERK BABYSI'ITER wanted, n\y G42-6857 N.B. S31~f.!G. . . ~e=~litynt t g~ rei~mor J;each, 838-7398 TEACHING studio big SINGLE / couple share 2 enough for two-'-Grand i)edroom hOuse $80 mqnth, pianos. Corona <lei ~tar area qlus utilities, 548-8022 J. B. ?lflddleton. ·6'73·4520, LOST Male Irisfi Setter Carpentry, Repairs, Plum· hon1e, 4 days \Veek, 9am· GENERAL LABORERS appreciated. G44-1M50 \Vearing choke collar & fie~ bing. El e c . Remodeling ' 7pm, 15mo old ch 11 d, DAY COOK c:ollar. Please 'can ~8748/ 642-5613. One year experience as bill· 962-0717 aft 1 pn1 or anytlnie * *' * 548-9774. · Hauling ing clerk, use 10 key add by \vkends. · LOST Whl --==------touch. Typing, 4~50 wpnl. 1 _B_AB________ Skilled • Unskilled -654 Via Lido Nord, Newport ~ltARE HOUSE OR AP'l'. Beach. St-VE SSS HOME·PARTNER Is '°"A"N".r"A"""H-,;~.~.t-,.-;-B_r_. -3-Ba-. : te FemaJe Afghan Excellent \vorking t'6hdltions YSITTER . tile house-P /tlme , .,. Hound. Vic. Pacific & Vic· LOCAL moving & hauling and fringe benefits. Contact; ~ping My house, Mon· Trmpornry Employment ' 836--1194, 548-1479 frplc, din rm, fan1 r1n, . toria, C~I. 642-3848. Rew. by student. Large truck. Fl'l, 7:30-5, Infant, 1\fatut'e /\pply Jn p,,.,,,,, ' Apply 6:30 AM, Mon·l''rl MACHINISTS $200 n. B "34-'o·'" Personne.I (714) 54o:4,02tl. . •=as. arry. " .1-0'W or womall, Refs, own Snackj!lop No.1 • ~. INI SWTOARRAEGHEOUSES \VANT to rent 2 Br hse. GERMAN Shepherd, male, 673~7. • AVERY transportation, call 673-4729 2305 E. Coo&t llwy.. MANPOWER~ INC. nu crpts & drps, !need yrd (213) 535-0514 aft 6 PM, (213) 31l-2966. G,arages for klnt 435 Lg yd lit'. No. 5100. Vic. 23rd & GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY BABYSITTER , Ii t e Corona del Mar, Calif. & NJ:1 t>.tove-in or Move-out p 1 'blgar, 1 have / pets. Tustin, CM. Reward. TRASH & DEBRIS. $12 PRODUCTS housekeeping . Oallv, p/t-, Equal Oppor. Emplov. er ~ ,. ,750 reerra yunun1w crets, LOAD COLLEGE , ,.,,arges. ron1 ~ . per drps, bltins. 548.1144 bef. 64;>-1208. · 2610 s. Susan Own car. 3 older cllildrcn, 0 • rnonth . 5 pm. Ask for Kris. LOST Reward, b 1 on de STUDENT, 5,18-6428 Santa Ana, Calif. ' Call M-F, 8-5PM 644-9242 DENTAL ASSISTAN't • 1nunilton & Nt>1 ... 1anrl St., HB ~=-~-'-'-=:C..---1 Cocker Spaniel n 8 med YARD. garage clea.n-ups, -B.i\BYSITl"ER. Houseket'!pcr For Periodontl~t. I/time. MACHINE ' ALLSPACE Gregory, ID tag, Vic remove dirt, ivy, driveways, an equnl opportunity O\\'ll lrarlsporlntion, Jive i; Expanded dultes, oppor. 960-1970 Newport Pier, 642-1802 stumps, grading. 847-2666 ~~·!!!•!!!m~p~lo~y~c!!r !!n!!>/!!!!!!""'" or livE> out 640_0166 V'S Exper, n<-C. Hunt. Bch. SINGLE car garage for rent I Parso~lfa 11•1 LOST while cock·a·poo type SKIPLOAOER & dump truek ACCOUNTING '615-4630. , c' , ..;96~2;;:·66;.;;7l~·,-,-~=~== 448 \V. 19th ~rttl OPERATORS S~20/month. Huntington ~;i;i;i;i;i-;i;::~~I dog.,Short hair, red collar, 11urk. Concrete, asphalt, Keypunch n.....rator & BABYSITTER for small DENTAL OFC. MGR. Costa Me11 64.S.2043 ~ch. Call 9 7 9-107 0 , Ans. lo Ba'rney. 17th & San· sawing, breaking. 846-7ll0. --,....-Balboa Island boys , Dental special is!. needs 723 N. Anahelni Blvd. 646-2687. ta Ana Ave. Vic. 645-8780. 32 IT. FURNITURE Van Payroll Trainff pefnU\llellt. 675-1998 Urgent someone \\•ho enJoys "1ork-Anaheim n .... , $25 for 10 x 20. $40 for Personals 530 LOST gray Poodle, Vic !lei! tor local furn hauls & gen'l Co. ,in Irvine Indus area BABYSiITER N eded' d ing \.\'/public to handle busy 2 • h 1· 648-1862 557 -.... needs trairiee for payroll & . e ays, ofe. Shrthnd Sc typing nee £::;: 1 x 28 1v/lO x ll high door. FULLY LICENSED & RR tracks N. HB Ans au ing. • -"i.:x;i. ·1 f d 1 Al Balboa Perun area 2 • ' GENERAL OFFl-C W Cos •· 'M '" 1763 C gen o c ut es. so, exper. i•r old boy. 613_ .. 58 • 11 •6 ., Hum. Bch. Sal. open. ' · .... esa. -* SPIRITUALIST * to harley 847-2278. Housecleaning opr on 029. Good starting s. a . TI4: 962-6671. Local R.E. firm M!tks lndlv. Spiritual readings 10 am·10 'LOST ladies diamond Omega COMPLETE CLEANING rate & fringes. B/\RMAID, Chi~t·s Quarters, D=""E:;NT_c:.:;AL::.:::.cR:;c_ce_p_t_;o-n-is-1 ~tor lo 11·ork dh·ectly wtcontrol· pnl. Advice on all matters gold \l.Tlst \\'atch. Reward! Apply 2607 Ne\\'POl'l Blvd., Ne\v. Orihodont·,, otri·-t'n Hun-ler. Must have· good lypl~ 312 N. El Camino Real, * 673-3838 * \Vindows, Floors. Rug i1 • COLEMAN SYSTEMS por~ Bea h b7f>..O'l26 ft " "" skills & son1e malh back· S ~ <"" n Paint. Free est. 64:5-3716. "' m c · a Ungton Beach / Fountain a n uemente, :r-.il36, SMALL honey colored fen1. 18842 Teller Ave. -> P · · Valley area. Should be ex· growid. Start S·ISO. Call 492-9034. • . \vi black muzzle. Short HOUSECLEANING Irvine EXP. Bab Y s i I t er IL t . perienced ln all phases, Linda Ray,-54G-fi055, Collr;tal LIFE OR DEATi-1 hair. 640-632'1 Saturdays only. No Transp. Equal Oppor. Employer m/r Hou.sckccper 5 days week; Wary open. Replies con· Personnel Agency, 2700 liar· Office Rental 440 Experienced Immediate Openings For Experienced MACHINISTS & . PRESTIGE OFFICES Fpuntain Valley, Beautl· ful new building, ground tloor, 3,000 square 1eet. \Vill divide into smaller Offices. 50c per square foot, includes carpets, drapes, all utilities, jani- tor service. Call Marilyn Stovall (Il4) 832-5440. Let ow· babies live. For al· ~~~~~~~~~~I 52·50 Hr. Relia. 642-52911 Accounting Clrk $650 AM. Refs. Cl\I area. fidential. 979-1400 IX>r Bl\•d., C~I. temo.tivcs to ABORTION, ; · EXCELLENT Housecleaning Fee Pnid. Plµsh offices. Out· _54&-__ 1488~-------ID ENT AL assis t ant, GENERAL CLERK ~.LIFE LINE 551-5522, 24 I lMtrucUon 11~ I by Day. Owo tra"'P· $22 "•ndh>g career for you! BACK offiec girl req'd for chaindde; CX]>. In a II A<oeounOng bockground help-MACHINE -!~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:~;: Day. S36-0648. Call Ann Christie, 556-8505, 08/GYN ore. Send resume pttues, expanded duties. ful. Lite typing (40 y.-.p.m.) S~ teacher 49, 5"11", M __ •..;t..;o;..n,;.ry'-------Control Cart-er Employn1ent to P.O. Box 3992, Long &1-1-092'1 rt.'<(d for this position in I • lonl•Y eed al A 3400 I · Bl d B•a J ~ '-'-~~=--==,..,,.-..-, 1-lunt. Bch. \l,'lll Lroin. "A'I ·• n g nr gency. rvinc v.. ~· 1,:i. ;>VQ\h> ·-•DIS!i-UP COOK & for appt. 842-7751. ........, my ag , sincere, start nu Schools & ALL types of brick block N.B. BARTENDER . FE"1ALE COUNTER GIRLS Pref. UNIGARD INSURANCE 2nd Shift Hie niarriage minded. PO Instructions 575 & slumpstone \\'Ork. l'rce ADULT prefd for I i t e Experienced. Apply in Person n1ature applicants. Ca ll f -~~~~:..::;<;~~:--llrd Shift OPERATORS lPM·llPM 11PM.7AM Box 1148 CG club est. 963-1855. n1anuf. Technical & manual between 11 arn & 4 pm. Spaghetti Bender, 645--0651, GENERAL OFFICE To Operate · BEST f.fASSAGE IN N.8. FOOTHllL f.1 on t es so r i Painting A dexterity desirable. \VIII 11r. Mannan, Hol iday Inn 536-.1856 Must know invoicing & be 3400 Irvine /\ve. Suite 103B School no'v en r o 11 in g P1perhangin9 train. Please p ho fl e, 3131 Bristol, Costa Mesa. '!-""'-'='-------good typist. Good figure ap- (at Bristol) Open 8 Al\t. children 2~~-6 yrs for info -:..:l0.::"°'"2~?....---•5ii43-54ii.iii35iiiioiirii~ii18-4i.iii2li;l .... iiiim I BEAlITY operator wanted litude. ~rm. F/tlme days. Miiis Chuck1r Ann. 838-1UO. AMI accred. PRO:F. wallcovering state w/some following. Full or DRAFTSMAN Apply in pc1'90n, 2 9 4 0 Engine lathe PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-lie. No. 2'm514, insur., all ADVERTISING SALES p/lime. 792 Center St, Costa College Ave., C.M. T<rrret Lethe I'd types o! paper. 7 1 4: Male & female • Great op-Mesa. 642-«>31 £ 1 ent, s Y m Pathetic I I~ 842-4386 po 1 'ty 1 1 & d' tri t D SIGUCI Girl Fri, Buena Pk to $750 N/C Drills Grinders pregnancy counselil'lg. Abor. s.mc. and rte-· ' r uni or sa es 1" c BOAT Painter·Malntenance ft'-ft tlon & adoptions ref. ~ . PROF. paintei", hooest work, managers. ~$800 ""k or Mlln, Ex ....... ienced. Phone F/C Bkkpr, F. Vly $700 Sunnen Hone ===-APCARE 642-4436 reas. In1 /ext, free estimate. mo~e, depending on ex· S48-2S92 . .--· Rel't'ptionl8t $500 ~e ~Ur~s ;:ntai~~: ALCOHOLICS Anony1nous. A Refs. 548-2Ta9, 642-391.3. perience. 64>3631. ~...c,ii~OO~K-K_E_E_P_E_R __ Draltsman urgently needed ~~·~11 ~c~~:~gel :~ = . . . . ' TOOLMAKER J, 2 & 3 Rm. spnces from Phone 542-7217 or \\Tile ccounting t:ll QUALITY, L~W $ Great local co. needs sharp ~~~~n~~~il~~~ko:1i~ ~~~ Personnel Sec'v to $600 j!~:~ ~~Pie J;~i:~:~ P.O. Box 1223, Cos!a ?IIesa. ACCOU.NTING & Lie, lns, Refs • 542-1701 A FUN PLACE self disciplined indi\'. \\.'/ cility iJl the Irvine Industrial Ex:~. St>c'y L~A.l to $700 833 _ 3 2'23 Bef. noon 0 r TAX SE RV.ICES *Wallpa,,_,. Hanger* TO WORK ~IP or college <.Ut ac1.'0unt· Complex. Background must ~~n~~~~~~er 10 = pl=2840 aft. noon. I j[gj Reasonable. ca 11 (TI4) Carl Rebko 640-2449 !ng background. Xln't start· Include 2·5 years of drA.fting Electrician $6.'"JO lost 1nd FCMMd 675-66'/G, ask for Rick. I =;1~Ni;T~~i;-==-=~~ ing salary & co. benefits for or design experience in the /EXT PAINTING :Ji~ ~ the right person. mechanicnl or facllltleii Program Ptfgr $Z2K Private Offices 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~.:~ Babysitting Free Est Jim 548-8712 / Jason Best Agency field. Excellent salary, Electronic Components Oimmon entrance to 1 thru 5 INT /EXT· PAINTING e euben 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. 1vorking conditions & bcne-~u~~:~~~~~~~ S20K offices. Harbor & Baker Found (free ads) 550 BABYSIT my home day· ES v 1 Suite Z13 963-0775 fits ---------"-n>'ght•-w--k•-". By ho"" day T: \ al pa""r 546·7887 · """lgn Engr (m-·h) to $14K area, Costa l\1esa. for in· -· " L'-'"' .,... r-t. cl BUSBOYS WANTED • ~· " forination call 54 5- 8424 F'ND: Vic of 9th & Bay or \\·eekly play room-fenced PAINT and PROTECT ? Interested applicants should Cost Al.'cnt Manuf. lo $121\ SouthCo Realtors. • Ave., Peninsula, y n g . yard. Near Eader School Reas. rates. Exp • d, • ee Apply 400 Main St. call ?llrs. Ellen Young, for Call Jesnnle Sisco smokey black long-haired 968-8005 References, Earl, 494-4201 Balboa, atrer 6 pm appointment, (TI4) 556-7601. & Sid Hottn1an EXEC. SUITE ~ri~~est:~a col~~J ~~1575, ?tfOTifER of 2 _would like Plaiter, Patch, Repair Now Hiring CARPENTER fixE'l' wanted. MCGAW p NEW~~RT Large Ocean Vieiv ofJlce & 54!1-SOlO. lo babysit 1-2 children. FNY,e Exchange rent free hon1e 1rsonn1 gency rect>pt. area in Union Bank ced ya.rd, meals. Nr N , QUALITY plastering a J J BUSBOYS 1 year for pnrt tltne pat-833 Dove r Dr., N.B. bldg, Newport Center. Avall FOUND: Mixed Shep, & Hgts. 611~7. types Rcstuceo Spanish ching 2 halves of lge home L bor to • 642.3870 tn J Samoyed, male, about 6 Carpente texture, add. We 'guar clean moved to lot. Materials G G nes •Mr'.1°~1cFarland, 644-9440 mo old; while & sand col-r & nice job. 839-5012 furnished. 6~7788. (eve HELP "ranted for beautiful OFFICE Space nr. Orange ored. Vic. S.E. Santa Ana. \VOODWORKING tea eh er * PATCH PLASTERING * DAY & NIGHT 673-13371 Division of American 11upper club. 'Ve need exper. Co. AirpoM \V / view . 5<15-80lS. \\'ill. do custom woodwork, All types. Free estimates CASHIER, exper. for coffee l!ospital Supply Corp. cocktall wa it res s es , Carpeting, drapes, air, 460 FOUND box of tools, 2 pairs cabinets, paneling, furn, & Call 54()-6825 shop. Musts be over 21. Ap- 182 . 1 Langi~ Ave. waitresses, oyster barman. t of boots & a ichalr vicinity nnlic1. & repair. reas. Steve, PlumDtng ply in person, Hotel Laguna, Irvult', Cahf. 92705 dish~asher. Fen1ale ap-r~ a~r ~5,_J9':i8 Sq. Ft. Baker St ., Costa Mesa. 548--7141. __ Apply 3·5 daily 425 So. Coast H"'Y· Lag. F.qual Oppor. Employer m/f pllcanls mWlt be a.ttractive llst 9'iift) PART.TIME Honers & Grinders (Flexible Hours) Long Tenn Employment With History Of NO LAYOFFS In Our ~anufacturing Ami • Excellent Working Conditions Company Paid Benefits SUNDAY INTERVIEWS November 1 Bth DESK space available $50 Please call & identify. CUSTOM BUlLDER L.R. OTIS PLUMBING 151 .E. Coast Hwy. Bch. & natural looking, Apply Iio. WiU provide furniture 646-1863. Ren1odeling, patios, or what Remodels & Repairs. \Valer Newpor t Beach CENSUS Enumerators. $2.10 Pishw•shers Needed at Kismet International. •t $5 mo. Answering service FND: S1nall puppy, b1uwn have you, Jay Gilbert. heaters, disposals, furnaces, per hour. City of San Juan ANCIENT MARINER 11~ r'"·Ec;>a.q~~~ N.B. From tOAM 1 tll lPM , available. 17875 Beach Blvd. w/black nose Vic. Victoria Licensed & insured. Lie; dshwashrs. 642-6263 f,f/C & Equal Oppor. Empl9yer C~api.strano. Approximately Day & Night All or r c. · lluntington Beach. 642-4321 & Continental, C.M. 2580 BI-2g7852. 646·ll55. BIA. Complete Pl\lmbing 2a enumerators are net!ded 2607 w. Coast Hwy. Hos,it1llty Hoste11 BERT EA l, 617 WESTCLIFF-NB Santa Ana Ave., C.!\1. NE\\', rt-model. repair, frame Service. Lie, 272'S.CH. AN OHIO OIL CO. offers to conduct a spcela.I census, Ne"lJOrl Beach 646-0201 Service \VHITE & Brown \Vhippet & finish, Stores, offices & AIC PLUMBING PLENTY OF !\tONEY plus bet~n Nov 27 & Dec 5. Apply 3 pm·5 pm Mon-Frt ls looking tor women to ~. 1200, 720, 540 sq. ft. greyhound. Vi c. Chrisenta homes, etc. Licensed . Repair & Contracling cash bonuses,' fr Inge Applicants must be over 18 \l."elcotnC & Interview ne\I.• ;µ~I~ ~i~~inpl~f~~· Dr., 1\1.V. ~0--0786. 962-1961.. License No. 286660. 642-1643 ~~edfi~ _to mature in· y;s fol~t ~ ~hie to ~ork residents. Salns or advcr· . u er, , . . COl DEN ' Ab CARPENTRY Pl bl PLUMBING REPAIR iv1 ua in beach area. a eas rii per .. v. DISHWASHER, f/tlme. Con· tlr;ing expet". helpful. Mu11t aFTICE '"'/beautiful vie\"' • 1 ...., 1nlx, 3 nio., • um ng. Regardless of experience, Apply San Juan Capistrano. valescent H06Pilal. have enr & typewriter. 18001 V K ~ SQ FT, Fashion Island male, tnd on Marina Ave ., All Home Repairs. 20 yrs. No job too small air niail A. r ... Read. Pres., 32400 Pasco Adelanto, City 642-0093 547•3095. Eves & wkndll, on arm1n ds:~r"°at'.dm6o40.. "11~.1Jfessjonally r~~~;1~~!a:bb6yn:at1.6~y, .;;:x~,f~_'~54~Slm~~~alfl~·joiO(b&ii)\O;iKo.ilFKre_c l ~°!'.!_"~*<!*~1642_~·-3~~'1.8~*~*~~-. I J:e~~a'baLy~~ri~~~s 4"~i' CHHallLl,DSJCCA.R49j..11n DONUT Shop, nite shilt, age 846-0004. .i';.1!2:· ~:.ll~f4 ~L" " "'-' ,. eo·-0 e ~epa r • • ;rtV • . E: Need Chris· 2545. in pel'IOn Mr. Donut, JiOUSEKEEPER ' Ofl''ICE s~ce for rent. Nblkl &I·'' tahn .:Striped Vic. nr. C Cb1!STO.M \VOOI' D\\'OR~< ROOM AddJt,·on•-R•-~•ls • AN SWERING service tian Nanny. Liv°<:'" In/out, 135 E. 11th St., CM. care "'or home & 3 children. E loOppr 133-1415 (..adit>s pref'd . Call .i\lrs. P ~1g , '" -3075. a inets, pane 1ng, patios. u1vu telephone opr. Full time nnar Calvary Ch ape 1 , 2 to 6 pm. Mon-Fri, Own qui • Employer f';i rsoh!I, 644-7570 ~ -OAU.tATION JDukke .;>_adw-ka ~~r598 Bids, ·a1or LaM bot r Ftp 1.u s day shift & week-ends, 228 Marilyn, 6 4.5-7 8 6 8 or ~P ~(ary~ia:l=,r, w~tt transportation. TUrtlr.roc1<·l':::i::l::l:::I "::l::l::;~=oj', Vir. Green Valley ac u.:rgman ~.,495 n1n er1 s. e eent>r.,. Forest, Laguna. 543--1767 days ·• • ., . • area. 979-3942 or gJ3-3893li ii CORPORATION '11" d3oo s 1 Q 9 .• FT. Costa 9611-4514. * ALL TYPES * 548-5849. -' ANSWERING 0 -rvt • CL-ERK TYPl!JT Non Fr1Smok4 <;,;; • 30mtervlews _·•:::flc..:6;.:p"m:;:,,,===~-I MACHINISTS ·pts, rps. J . rr10. B' & S all T I • i R . .'.)t!' ce, uex-Mon-:.w"">I: P . ffi"'I -' 1tsa. 646-2130 FOU KD : \\lhite C<W kapoo, igS..'.G-l~ e ev1s on ep11r Ible hrs. includes wknds. CatalOg eKp. pref'd. C of WlndOw Deslgn9 3737 Birch HOUSEKEEPER E , lath I ~ S~ITE n('Xl 10 L!ciupr Store pu ppy rlip: vie. Ogle St., COLOR TV Re . F/timc, no exper. necess. C 583 \\'. 19th $t., Costa St .. N.B. • 2 dllys a week n•1ne e ~ RC'staurant. Lrg JOO) sq. Co~ta l\11!sa. 645-294-l Carpentry, electrical, plum!> reasonable, mc:1r1.n hr~: Fash Island. 640-8032. Mesa. _ Electro.-chtulical training. Lly{\Jna Niguel · i ft . $275. R46-1:!23. FOUND: Dog mixed golden ing, fix-It. ,F & B yearly. Free estimate, H.B. N.B. ARCHlTECfURAL COMPOSER OPERATOR No expcr necessary. Good 496-09!58 --Qusiness--Rent•t~ _. 45 ~hor:t_ hair_. __ .YJ.<:. Temfilg Home Repuir, 642·140.1. & C.M. Bert Gttllen1ore, DRAF'TS!\.1AN 'vilh pn11te·UP & forms ex· bel'M!fltl, gO()(:I working con· HOUSEKEEPER wanted. No Gr'rnder· _r liITfs. Ciiguna, .iM=47'.i't:~ ~AU;~~liftY,--ciX)uM· 2783. , .·---ARCl·lrtEC11JRAL.-depa~t-_pcrlenc:e .. ..il:\dnL.area_Qtll _dl11onL..lln._7am~3:.3{!Pm S2~ __ 8Dibklng....JnUILdtl'ile.JJye1---==~---l+--- Of'FICE on Newport J Blvd. :FND: Siame!«! cat • Green-about anything around the Tiie ment Boyle Engineering 979-9821 for appt. hr to stfll1:Aiiii1Yil1lSi'C ~oiiuiit.;i67iii;~ii18ii47ii.iiii;;;;;Oii0ii;;;;.I Avail. on lease. Partially lree tract, Irvine area. Call house, etc. 536-1&48. Corp. has immed opening COOK EXPER Logan SI, Costa MeM. or • ID & QO earpeled, atr/eond. '" lden1 ;1y. 55t-2970. Car pet S1rY1<1 CERAMIC TILE NEW & far draftsman w/3 or'"°"' Good 'A "' t • call 5'0--0982 INSURANCE SALES ng. Approx. 1000 sq, F'ND Siam~sc cat , rtmodel. Free ;st. Sm jobs yt!ar!'I comrneclal oork ex· Crowga~fous':"'~tiu'=-ELECTRONIC TECH '250/mo. Warehouse also canriery Village area JO~N S Carpet & Upholttery welcome. 536-2426. per. Degree Pre 1 e rr ed · corner Pac. Cout Hwy. & BackgrOl.md dftit.\I &. ana1ot; Gear Mach1'n"15t =,:r-, Ideal for contraclOr. 673-&ltOO On Shampoo fl'ee Scotch· T S II Unlimited ad".'ancement op. Crown Valley Ptkwy. ' circuitry. DJversltied y.'Of'k No exp nee .. eGrn whtlt ,you ,. !ill~2616. . YOUNG gard (Sgil Retardants). op O por for qualified IIldlvlduttl. 32802 Pacllh:: Ctm•t ltwy load in prod. testing ot In. learn, part tJme, evn a rnR lea11e au· or J>&rt of , female Cahco c11t, Degreagers & all color Salary based on ability &. Lasn Niguel · strumentatii.m wknds, full tlme when q\I~ Gear Grinding Exper. e1115en. ! ·~ sq. tt. dlVided lnto lrg vie. l\fagnolia ,& Adams, brifhteneN1 & 10 minute * QUALTTY * ex:pt?r. Xlnt emf!.oyee ben. ina A~ Kinatlcs Toe fled. , She.ping & •lobbing cxper. IJudioA, Per 1 ec 1 for lt.B. (ll·8), 546-t183. blench Jor white carpets. * ?lfULCH & TOP SOTL * Pleuc call Mr. Schroeder COOK,. f/time. will . train. ll3l Vlct.orill.. CM ' Farmers lnAurftnce ~ deidNtble. ~ b 1 Le.. FOUND largf' nabbit. Vic Sllve yo,1r money by Mvlng 586-6930 at (714) 547-Wn for appt. Cbnvnlcsccnt ho 1P1 ta I , 646-TIG5 Ed Lani * 540-1834 • lff. 11 e: :::·a: ~ of llarbor vu Hills. Call me extra trips. Will clean _ 4120 S. Lyon _S.A. Equal. 64.Z:O.~. Equal Oppor. Emploler Steady day shift work in a 1 Newp()tt Cm 644-2776 llving rm., dining rm., & j 111 • J Oppor. Employer. COOK·FRY Cook Expu See A JANITORIAL, men: women. fine, nlOdcrn plnnt. i !h ~. · tcr. SMAlJ.. ·mate Ten-ier mix hall $15. Any nn. $'7.50, lntptt)1u1t1t f ASSEMBLERS Torn or J im, House or 'pan-EXECd S~~RE~ ~:::n Part time evenings. Bond· Please Apply At "f 1115/UP, NU •l0<es, omces, white. Vie Baycttst N.B: eouch 110. Chair 15. IS"'" I ~ --~P<•itor Mfg needs t.mal• cak'8, 3211E.17th St, CM ~ .. ~al i ~ I Co pl ab!.,....,. To $2.75. Trant-YARD NEWPORT lildiv air & beat, elevators, call ~8-4743 ':;ft_~' Iw::t:~se'ftt I-electronics (18Sflmblers. No COOK-tor chlld day ~ i:isn~n<Hv. w~• lam .!1~ ~rtAtion turnbbed. Coeta tmt Beach, HB. S.U-2834 P RESCIUPTJON bifocals Good ~r 5.11-0101 • Job Wanted Female 702 exper nect.1!'Stuj'. l''ull Um~ centet:. Year round. 5 hoUn st&rter & able to help organ-S.:.~1 area ll neceuaxy. 3324 W. Wer ner Aw. too. don't t Vic Balbo&, Bay _ "Tard ' · ' da)". Start at $1.90. 549-0241 d&y, $2. an hr. &CS-6.570 tze new o!c. Must hava Jfood ' Santi An• 545-7154 °'Draw Fl~ :ht~n ~ Freezt" 963--2789. CIJT'ent, COf'Crele NEED he!P flt home? We ASSEMBLERS. 30 hr wk. You don'& need a CUJ1 to typlna: &. Ah 111dlla. Start J~~~rt tlme !&~I Equ,J. Oppor. Employtr fn/t 1 • So. • : SI . ~ I ~ I -' DI • ,_ Fl I IY ' ii --oe M .u ,11 Lu!:·u atty'TOtJND -gtrt• bl Ir BEAt lflLRAIN.I have aides, nurses, LAdles over 25. $1.80 JK'1' "Draw Fast" when )OU $700. Also Fee Jobi. Call ._me. .ence prte · , --: -:~""Want Adi! Call riow Vic. Ne~~ ~ ~~ p 1A_ I"· dr! U ~ --1lo..u.J..t.kpn ...,,mnanions. hr. to 11...'l.rt. Apply 9-11:30 J)llce an ad In the: Dally Sally llArt, 540-&lX6, Coast.al 557'"6788 Don't atv• tl.P the 1h1pl 1 t0-6678. 6i~ C! a c • at""", "''I ...,, ves. c H o m e ma k e rs uPNuu Ar,-cotd n !\.fiiiie or-\Valrt-Adat--ean-no,.-nel .. ~,219(1-f.tap.. /tl1)'-da,y-1i=the..SES'P--DA-Y-to ....!•btstu-=ft-tn-ctutllled,-ShJp ~----- -.. · no. 256915 • Don, &f.2.8514 5'17-6681. 946 W. 17th St ., C.M. .. ~ • ,. bor Blvd., ct.1. -• run an 1dl Don't dtl&y. • ID Shore Rel\1 lt11 642-«ra • • , -I 11 • ' • t -' • " I ,, \ ' • • • . --• , -, ' • rt Thursd1y, Novembtr 151 1973 * OAILY~ILOr :J )t Help Wantoa, M & F ·110 H1lp W1ntiid, Ml F 71 0 Htlp Wonttd, M i F 7101 :F;:";:'";:;lt;;u;:r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";:O;:F:;;u;:r;:n;:lt;;ur;:•;,;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;';:l;;O • Ml1c1Uaneou1 Iii M1oc1il1noou1 " 111 Pliino1/0 r9•n• • 826 ~I MACHINE l'OIVERMochtn.Opr,exper. I• ANTIQUES: American, Alfl'OMATIC G ARAGE . PIANOS f" l'ot•MCI-I ~ 11 OPERATO R Mnlo or fem. for .. wing or SECRET ARY MODEL HOME FURNITURE SALE Chine..,, European. Pk· DOOR OPENER .• Finest L . r, Som 1 ht'I\\')' w~ht mulling .. lurtll, lrtmP'!. Kall llW, hall kno1~n brand. Ker. $200. • ORGANS I~ 1 · e ~xr.;r. n mllllnc ma· Cola;an ?itanuf, 1733 R. P.ton~ Land dcvelopmt'nf tlnn ~~ seat. ac11ln£c mnchb:ic, an-' S1»eclal fti9.95 tn a Ill I I ed FULLERTON MUSIC C1t1 152 ' l c:hlntl, atheJ & drill •pl't'lll mvla Ave CoRta ti,fca;a iittrCtary ~·/lmowledl,.oe ot Fur1tilure, lamps, accessories from the Cal-dlrorlll, Chlna cab 1n"1 , 11•/$ yr guar. 193-3577 or 1_ desirable. \Yllllna: to train PROouc:xiON mac~ In e Real £5ta.te Documentation irornia Hoines tnodels in Irvine : featu rjng bulcher block ·deikJ. pms ~1415 Our Newest Locatlon BURJ.1£.S~; Km'ENS r =.,...., 1 w~fxper. In hli:h· operator. r.1uuna: 11\8ehine & iransacUons. Subst11.nllal such quality brands as Thomasville, Brandl, back cha.in. rabies, • etc. Mlicelfineoui 1Bl9l Euclid, Fount&ln Valley o~A REGfSI'ER.E.1>. S50 UE \ l mac ne ahop. l:i.lho &. drill preu, Exper'. e:w:per. ln field of lt.E .. Jaw Prestige, etc. To be sold nt savings of up ,to 1t1odern dining table-. 8 cane· 1 BUc. No. of San Diego Ftte-*537-474f* ' Call For ,\ppi. desired, Days only, Bk> or tscro"· a nee a11lty. Typ-80'Jti . All sales final. l\1erchandi se as Is, biick chairs, alwn. table, W antR no \\'ay ut Euclid. SJAAIESE, male. u mot. okl. 1.f lnduatrtnl Refatlons Dy n a mi cs, tnc., 17542 Ing 75 w.p.m. accurate. Sh where Ls . &lau toe>. 4 chalra. KU. ORIENTAL RUGS 557""41» La~der point. $3). 30» , • Arnu:trona Ave, Irvine. . helpful, put not nece11, Xln't powped.er ta1b001e1•• if~eem m~~ed \Vin PftY 5 10 l!Y."u mon.-ihan Rentals from $5 Coolidge #6, CM aft 5. f (714) 494-'401 PROFESSIONAL tel•phooc worklnri t:011d•. & co. bone-' Sot. Nov . 17th, NOON to S P M htghe; U 9'ah N "-154 ' ROllCllor to "'Ork h-om own tits. Send rc11un1e & mltuy orpn. Skyltiht, power your ~st O ~. ::::=yl TELO.NIC home. To~commlss'-·. hllloey too. Sun. Nov, 18th, 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. aerW. 641>4656. 303 Kl"" Sb<lh,. S. M•i", S.A. e P lonos & Grands • UPPY WORLD • I -T 1 w•~ On W1ln ut ju11 off Sonia •--Frwy Rd. NB ' • 557·1212• !14~5010. Ne'" spl-•· •-m '195 P ' INDUSTR. IES <cphone 184 THE IRVINE CO ' ~~ 'V ••• ~ • ·~~ uv • E •I l 1 I Bu 11 ~o • \ betwffn CulYe r & J ff oy SCRAM LETS \ anted: young new1,. .. _.s ~ 1tyll'S Md tb1ishe1 n 1 • Rea l Estate Llcentlnt S..iO Newport Cen1er DI'. · e r ' net-'il .neo.l OLD fu rn, n!J.lti \Yurll tier Grand Straus9 Chlhuahua1, Tlny ea, Let us pay half of )!our Ii-Newport Beach, ca. 92663 • 1)!1;1ure11, dmpe!l & thl11gg Uprla;ht plaoo , ........ , $69 Am<·r: Eak CS p l t a ). ' ctnldn~ fee. \\11th our spon. Alln: Uarbart\ J;'leldcr Help Wanted, M A F 710 ~ __ •_r_n_11_u_r1 _____ 1_1_0 ANSWERS for l!t house 64>8154 \Ycavcr ~pinct ••••••••• $l•lS ~:ct~~nn,C:i!a::1a, ~ ~ Equal Oppor. Emplo)'tr »Orship $7S.OO will pay tor NO PllONE CA.W PLEASE \VAt'fRESSES day & evening 2PJECE Frultwood China Will. pey ca.sh for 4 F ld-Playcl' pianos •• , • from $999 Setter '100 MIXED 'PUPS!' ' ~·CHINE ~bt~1:°li'tc;l h 1' ~~!the Equal Oppor. En1ployer m/f 11hitts • must be fast, txpcr. Buftet Cabinet, vtty good • dleback dlnlng room chairs • 20 Grands l.n stock, Ne\\'-Stud Service Most ereedl. . , '""' &.>t '" 1----pref. but not necessary rond. $235 or be•t oUer. Solree -Wager -Baton -&/or chino. ca b I n e t . Used and rebuilt. Pric(.-d Open Eves: S3l'"5027 ! OPERATOR. in~~ ~et ~'OU,lict~~ I ~ APPLY 10 AM-6 PM 6 ·:o'13-G39=::1::.·-----~l~~v .. cr,-. co,_~ysy~·v-• In 493-2610. . f.ron1$3%. Yamaha-Knabe SCHNAUZERS H Id I I TRAINEES' .. ,.,,.e~~t'~~tat~."' w•· SECRETARY Mon·l'rl c '" w•~ uw ~ \VANTED 11 -M..,.n-llwnlin -WW'· • o ""· u .... 0 £,A " • ' 00\VN couch, coffee table, ~ l kid d comp c e 0 r r1i 0 c . -Stor~ & Clark -Christmas. Shots terms EXPERIENC VIDE • , CX>LON\' KITCHEN "'nd tabl ... ch'--n"'""' ' Twe ve 5 an broken M!t ot paum mkn 1 1. .~" tud 871 '1°"''. e:f)fll r_;.,., . ED O TRAINING • 27142 Ortega", Hwy. ., e, teW .. ,.. rpacr uR:, two old ATS. • wood chi 1 Call &\)"llrM Ka~·a1 -Stc1n1\>ay -Cable s se:rv. -o ~. _..._ : MACHINISTS . \Ytillc you $.re studying for ...To The San Ju_.~ Capistrano elect fireplace 548-193t &ft G If 645-3995 se s. ' Nelson -Klncald -Cable &ft 5 ·' Steady, non-defense work. )'OUl' llcensc you ean avM.11 Asst. Supcuintcndenf ......-1848 S pm. 0 . . -urucr.,-tn -Chickering -* DOBIES 5 wk11 AKC i Many company benefits lite yourSC"lt Of OUr <'Ontinuous Buslness Support Services WAITRESS want(:d• Exp'd EAMES chair, 2 mos. old. \VANTED: Uffd Waterbed Sohn1er. ~.how qualiiy, tem~rameni ' & medical lnlurance, 8 'paid ttcld !raining and Joan Lun1: ' Ir vine Unified good houn ·<:a.rnie1·a 628 $350. 8 ft. green · c:ouch & ""M b h• with frame. Under $75. Call • Organs bred, xlnt color & marldngg. 1 boli<!U• & vacation&. NeW l.Ut>a~-Do~~ Edw'ards S hool DI ' N. Coast ll~'Y .. Laguna .. · ~~t~~ .... nr 0 .. ~~se33a1t6. $100. em en lft Linda, 546-44?8. 100 to choose frqn1 111. pty. 5.16-9569. ..' JnS)dem facWUes. If you are Video Tra1n1ng r.ouncs. This c strict \VANTED R .,...,...,....,. • VIU"" ~ \VANT~D medium to 1~~ Ne"" Used and Tradc-ln.c; LABRADOR, blacki 3 yr. ~for a job \nth a superb n\Odem tralnlng Is Appllcations, reliiumcs & ref. therapist oUi~.c~~~ ~ UVIN~ room chalni, gold IRYINE COASI sh:e \VONDER llORSE · Optlgnn ..... ,. ••••••.•.•. ~ AKC, fem. exe. retriever, re.-,. future, ~ u1. Apply uv~lilablc 10 ~ny lict'-n!ie<: de· erences must be received In nee., lite typing, send & green $30. e11ch. Go Id COUNTRY CLUB Reasonable. CaH 492-8919 Jl~nunoz~ \\" rl1) Uun .• $695 watch dog & friend. Shot&, ' • 9-3 PM daily.1irfoodyf.iprlnk-siring to . pin our growing the Office ol Pct1i0nnel Ser-rei wne Write classified ad leaf accent table $ 3 S, · •WANTED** Kimba.Jl S\''illgt>r • .. ·" • $195 papers c1c $100 846-6819 ler Co. organizabon, Due to our ex-vl~s. 14600 Sand Canyon, N ~7 Dall PU po 586-8358 Original charter membership 2 \VllEEL \Vurlit:ter 3 Keyboard · • ~1195 , ' .· · 3020 Pullman St.' C'I pansion \.\-'e have opcn>'n•s E I vln C s~~ p lo o. ' }' ot, • . , f n '-LITY TRAILER 49"1149 Lo''Tcy llol•'d· y 1·•n.-. AKC Enghsh S p " n g er " rhro ho 1 o C · r c, a. ...,.,..,, 1· r Box 1560, Costa 1t1esa, Calif. COPPER boiler, oak Icebox no transfer ee. { 41 u 11 -11 · •••• • • • 'UJ · 11 ' u•1L CLERK ug u r:i.nge ounty. lo Nov•·n~· 20th. 92626 4"' -· 1~-'='==""-C='=""'~= Conn Caprice .......... $395 Spaniel Need good home, : ~ Colwe ll Properties, Inc. ~ ""'~ . sideboard, dresser w/mir· .,...,""'. \VLIANTEONELD OTOR AMBEURIYCAN. Tllo1n11.S i\·1 Spinet ...... $1'r.l $50. or offer 894-7613 Do Your like variety? Great tse-.i~.-. au of Equal Oppor. Employor m/( WANTED live.in housekeep-ror, gd cond 675-0178. NO LIE II d Hal I r-C IRISH Sett ( 14. ks ~l tn Irvine Leam & ..... .,. ...,.,..,;..,.,..,;.,;.,..,.,.q er for 2 adults. M"~t be in LO ES • • • • • • • FLYER TRAINS 837 9685 amJnon -t l\'ll onn er, em. w 11 .-....· ·cam. ()range Counry ) ~ -* SOF,\ & V EAT * I BUY!'. · -· \\lu1•1itzer-~'fi!y-Kinlball old. Darling puppy. 1 a Ann u-irlltle, 556-8505, CALL 833-1931 good health, tree \0 travel, Never used $149. -Music al Inst r uments 822 Yan1aha-Gulbranscn l'Mh. Purebred. 842-0WT. -, Control Career Ernployn1ent top salary. Refer. required RCCQrd player ~15. 96S-7910 FULLERTON MUSIC .. ency 3400 Irvin Bl d REAL ESTATE .SECRETARY 4=34•0 Good, tale model turniture & RENT FOR ONLY $3 ' PEMBROKE Welsh Corgl .11 "6 ' e v ·• "~ .a.a. 3 ROOMS nice turn. Xlnt appliances or sell for you~~ 12'.1 N. ~!arbor, Fullerton \\ks. Al<C. N.BMAINTENANCE SALESMEN We nre looking tor a top WHO WANTS ·ro WORK7 con<!. Reasonable, call alt MASTERS AUCTION OR BUY 11'11'11 NOTl HNG 871.llOS Call 51&-4928 E notch secretary to learn the DRIVE A CAB! 5 PM., 546-4753. 2{)75~ NC\\o'JlOI1, CM &16-8686 00_\VN. Drunl, PA'!:C, :'.lhkcs, hrs: 0)X'n Night~ 'tit 9 FOR Lcnse or saJ e Silk,y : MECHANIC am Up to ad biz. lf you take CHOOSE your hours, work 7 PC txlrm set, F1'Cnch Louis 839-0974 aft. 6 or Sunday Guitarli, Ainp~. Roe-organs Sat 'tit 5·30 Sun 12-5 Terrier female. Ca 11 ' Fb'st or 2nd shllt !ti shorthand, type fast & ac· for your.sell. be your own IV "-)Ind , Bl •t •1 & Piru1os, all brands. ' · ' · . ' v..'lth leading MFG ot';ias:ic 85% curately & would like a boss. Men or women. Can liatin\\'Ood, Xlnl cond. 0t: 1 Tony s dg. ~· at • No age lin1i1, no lllll'ent neccl-1'"'REE ORGAN LESSONS as 832-9422: or 644-6178 products for the food aervlce challenge, Reply Classified be slightly handicapped. $1.iOO. ~73·219l-COPPERTONE dbl oven, ed. OPl-.:N NIGJ l'rS TILL !), long as you like! Adults STUD 1 SERVICE • Two year ' industry. 5 yn general in· Ad no. 964 c/o Daily Pilot, N c a I-clean Appearance. 8' SOfA. Bro"'ll lenlher·likc range, $ax>. Am~g 8-~N, SAT. TIL 5:30, SUN. 12-5. \v.ek.'Ome to attend Tuesday old \Veim araner .. Ol &: , dustrtal maintenance ex-per. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. \'inyl. G90d condiUon. $150. $350. 1911 Momte guitar, Now TWO Convenient night at 7:30 PM. We want t'ielct CH, 541·58.18. ~ u~ ...... uc ex-r, lathe! • Why Work For Leal ? Ca 92626. Supplement your incoml'. 645-6384. • elec., hOllow body, $200 .• L 11 to S y everyone to learn to play 56 • ...,....... ,... W k f Th Be Drivt! a Cjlb 6 hrs or more a G S incls. hatd1vood case. 12 oca °"1 erve ou the organ! To1n Dieterich Horns 8 mUllng machine-1 & some • or or I st S t J $650 day. Apply In person, a_rage 111 812 string guitar $45. 554•2553 FULLERTON MUSIC _ in charge 642-28al. Coaat ·.::;~;:_ ____ ...:;;..::1 knOwl~ of injectkln mold· YOURSELF! u '::ue l~:eJ variety !ounllm· Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th BAYCREST ESl'ATE SALE; any hOur. [ 18191 Euclid, F'ountain Va!lf'y Music, Newport Blvd. at LOVABLE Strawbeny Roan.' ln&Camneoeyaryb ui ... Plc!~ apply * ORANGE CO. OR SAN 'ted !hi •-h job St Costa Mesa Sat • Sun 10-5. Uv Rm BARN •••·· f . . & 1 Blk. N. San Diego [r.vy. l larbor, CM. 5 yr, nlare. Gentle, well at to .. ._..., 1wl Cay, 1 oppor. s .,. I c ·• · "" s~'f> or mtenor & Euclid -. trained, ~ Tennessee walk. H.B. 847·3531. An Equal DIEGO CO. OFFICES for you. Fantastic future for YOUNG MEN, neat, to work chairs, l w I 0 t to ma n, ~xterlor use. Any amount e 557-u36 e • BUY_ a player piano for Sound & smooth. Call •• Oppty Employer. Call Ed Kasablan sharp lndi v. v111i>0me cxper. eve.s & wknds. Ake 17 to <Costs $357/$49), 6 lamps, avail. All pieces guaranteed Christn'l8S. Good selection 673--1933 "·intena• ...... Man Nltis 962-6644 & lite bkkp~ knov.·ledge. 19, $1.65 hr + bonuses, No Sterling Silver, 6 place set· & pre.cut Very cheap. 12'1 N. !-!arbor t'ullertoo ·from S).100 to $1300. David =~=-·-=-.,,-----00--l '"9 ...... No· sh neccs.<s. Exp, needed. Call aft 11 tings (Costs $629/$295), -49'-2501. Moonlighten, 2986 • 871-1805 e ·r. Dupree Player Pianos, SORREL Q.H. mare, 8 yrs, Must be famUiar \Oo'/plun1b-REAL ESTAl'.r; SALES Jason Best A•tncy am, Mrs. P ... , 586-1450 other ~ilver, WORLD BOOK S. Coast Hwy '"""'"" 29-IOD Grace Ln. CM 15.3 hands, .stock potential, ' Ing I ~cal • 'I SUt'CESS CAREER • ' _ ... _ ' .........t on trails. 'Exp'd rider • • e ec... "" gen c.11r-l7-IOO Brookbw'St, F. Vly. ENCYC LOPEDIA SE:r Beach. Office Fur niture/ * CONN ORGANS * t-rr;:-3262 .• ~~tryp. Hotel 1e~perl · necc~. ~~f.;rfd~s'"t~.!elesnteedand. J~~teslhet Suite 213 963-ti755 tings. (Costs $629/$295), Equip. 824 e Immediate delivcru ' ' ~ erso1mc 1• anagcr, -• 146 ~ n1achine, picture frames, • lcm'cst prices .,, BLACK qulU1cr horse, matt .... i Balboa Bay Club ~~g n~~l:k 0!f=t: SECRETARY I llllct.dle I ~ Ch r I ift mas decorations. NEW l\tugic Chef Microwave EXEC SWVL CHRS $15/25 GOULD ~tUSIC co. !,.~~ci. Asking $600. call ~; 12n W. Const HV.')'., N.B. offices and be·come a Need for a11t leo.sinl dept. . V Dlsbe1, records, clothing, Oven. Lists for $400. SeU Sec chrs $8/24 Desks. $a>/90 2045 N. i\ilaln SA 5-17-0681 ~"""' Management Trn1 $525 n1embcr of our lolillionalre P1·evlous sccretarlnl expel'. tools, bedding, b 0 0 ks• below whof@S8.le $250. Pierce 867 W. 19, CM • 8 yr old pony. '· l-ligh1chOOI Grad. Cleancut Club. ~Julll-mllllon dollar desired. 1-"/time. ·Musl be Anti · aoo :c:,n~~P~~~remM~ * 892--1.832 * 642.-3408 Sporting Goods 830 ·~!!~er,· ! WESTCLIFF advertising program, Free allraclive & good \V/publlc. --·~Uel -N •-·tn 21>) Piano1/0r""lnl 826 o.»-V•J. ' Personnel Agency gUllrantC<'d licensing school. Typing req'd, min 60 1v.p.1n. pt Sch (Nr . .1.1 v e & t 1 DIN set, Panions table, night • RUGER Blackhawk 357 mag. T}-JOROUGHBRED Mare : (~fark Ill Center) BxceUent sales trainina. See l'ersonnel ~tanager ANTIQUES FOR SACRIFICE good Chrlat:mu stands, matching head & FACTORY w/holster, $100.; FN semi for eale--best otter or wUi ~ ! 5-12·8836 Please call 542.5689. Balboa Bay Club CHRISTMAS g!J't Items, all new. Ex· foot boa r ds, typewriter, CLEARANCE auto, 7 mm, -Mauser 100 le&M., Exp'd rider. 644-1211 1 ': 1651 E:--Edlngt'l', S.A. REAL ESTATE 1221 \Y. Coast Hv.iy., N.B. JC\Velry, silver. glass, furn· pens.tve d~etalCB dedtle<:todlrs, cookware, cat tree, window • ARTISAN 2-n1an chUT'('h rds ammo $80.: Mod 93 ' marme ra IO, ra o, V· Shade & lamp. 5.52-7496 ocJ 1 \\' 19500 N Mauser JG!, $65.; misc ~ I ~Dp·ho:l'80r!.eu~s~ SALESMEN SECRETARY-EXEC. :AC.t'obhm~tilM·PORTS in& equip., depth recorder, HERCULON or velvet sofa $~7; · ·as, · 1 oiv, ~loading componenta &: I "°"'""' ] •·:'}f :: wk. to start. 894-llOOJ. \~a~1 1?~in~~:eBe~~~ ~T~n~:xp~~. ~o s;;~~~ 1896 Harbor Blvd .. CM =~~.te~~':: j!~ & 1oveaeats, coH tbl M!ts, • ,\RTISAN 2-man lheatcr dies, 493--000. . ...,_~ . 1'.. ' 1'"""ountain Vahey. Let us this challenging position !or IPal'k in rear) winch, AC/OC port. combo. lamps, used for display only modcl \.\-rith band box and KNEISSL Blue Stars 170, ' iiiiiliiiiim : MASSAGE TECH. train you: Call Phil ~tc. dental rq>ecialist. Dental ofc. l ,..,.!!l·'!'!'~~!!'!~~~!!I TV radio, fm. & other misc PacWc Construction ·Co. bells. \\'as STJOO. NOlv, 72-73 wilh Solomon 502 bind. : -TRAINEE Naince. VILLAGE REAL exper/not nee. but must en· GOING OUT OF sporting-goods. Eves & 538-9883. $4750. ings. Only used half a Boats, General 900 1 Young lady CLS-281 wanted ESTATE.963-.\567. joy ""'orkini: "'/public. Sal. BUSINESS wknds 962.-t28J FORSale2tb.downmummy e AUSI'lN Pipe organ, 2-season. Xln 't cond. ~3341 ' t open. Hwlt Heh. n4: 962-6671 • • sleeping bag, 89" x 34", man. 12 ranks, playing after 6pm 16 . OUTBOARD, 35 . hp. • tor JegiUn1ate full time pos~ RECEPTIONIST Complete clearance thru GIANT GARAGE SALE Keeps -you warm to 10 in Vista. $3750. USED SKIS 205s Fisher ~v1nrudc, 2 gag . tanks, life -1 Uon. No exp. ntt. We send Lllc exper .. ple11.sant person· Secretary Advert, $650 . OUUST?o.1AS Sheets plwd, split rail fence, .i........._., Xlnt. cond., $«1. e NEWPORT Pipe organ, 2-Super Gl~. Ma r k er Jackels. ~vcryth.ing needed, , to school, eam whUe learn. ality, sharp appearance & Local. Good benefits. Q_uilts, oak & v.·alnut furn., Oak chrs Oak 1 tack ..... b' .. '"" 6 ranks nl lO to go 67a-6736. I "" Apply In .... -... n •nv aft or . ill S -•·e•-· a---, Sat & •ton -'·"-s Indian' & ·-tern Linda. 546-4478. nUUl, • " Y yrs. Roton\8.t bindings, $90 or · ,,_,_ ~.,, · avg typing w put you ·in WE TCLIFF ~-:'"" v...:u ' • •• • 1•uc.1. .. "' • ........ old .. $3500. ofr, 644-2547 Boatl, Malnt./ ..,1 eve. 2930 \Y. Csl. H,vy., this fai;t gro"·ing co. :\.1n't Pen;onncl Agent."' ,Ant1q~1l for lnter1ors art Indian jewelry glass LARGE borsesb:le ba r· e Empt con!Ol. k Ne\\'J>Ort Beach. starting .sal & co lx'nefits. (~lark Ill Ccntei~J 1 3545 .t:. Coast Hwy., Cdla1 sUJer, patio, potterf, ~ Formica top, stainless steel Qedali, chimes C:• kit~~ys, SKIS.~ boots, mcn:s. good Service 902 r.fEO·fANIC -expi.·r. or \\•ill J~son Best Agency ~l-8836 !-'RE.NO! 1800 Otlna O osct. light ballast, books&: much sinks, 8' long, xlnt cond.. NEWPORT ORGAN c..·orKhtion. Also ski equip. SAlliJR 24-Id S eala •-'n In ·r-n> en<! .. -,·k l14W kh F 1 Be · & -'-"" 1 m-• Nov. 16 Fri, thN Sl.50., 49'2-3197 Call days, 979-3198. . • ~· 0 · pe ...... ... .... . Broo urst, . Vly. • 651 E. E"'··-. S.A. \o"elccl. Sto.lll1'U g ass. --FOR '~ •=15.10 s .. Mamt '--·-·M Hunt. Bch. 1"7-6600 Suite 2t.:: "963-6775 Sec'ys, ~kMperl $750 '* .642-5891 Sun. 18th. lOam-4.pm. Coast LATE MODEL7BR0THERS f'-' ••·vu-NEW & UJed diving equip-~ee-Q.u1se-~:-6'M;j" MESSENGER >Girl -After. RECEPTIONIS1' tor bu i; y Come To Our New ores ~la u'Te:,8-~. to 416 ~ew~=ly & ~1;; PIANOS -ORGANS = & ~~-?811 Gr:>-5964; ~ noons only. Must have own Costa Mesa, Odropractic No Char•• To You Appllencn • 802 NUM EROUS •··xpenslve 8,. _.7. New It Used. Great selection. IS FOR SALE IS your bottom dirty? Hull. ca r. r.lileage Wlo"·ai1ce. ore. Ex-r. pre1'd, will • '"'c VUO'I C ..,..;ti · ,,_, * SKI * · 30c Call ?.Ir. Sullivan 833-1390 train. 64l-0516 Uz Reinders Agency 1''REIGI-IT DAMAGE SALE items, 2 box springs .. ~.,m~t FIREWOOD -% cord, % E~';'i,"& ~~~he ""b;:i BRAND NEW! . ~TS:~ per wate.r l for appointment Suite 402010, 0 NB8irch StreeJ.,., 0190 New Hotpoint re fr lg ' s , sets $20 (2) refrig ~· cord, tun cord. Trees cut, deals are always at: 644-2704 DEAN RECEPTJONI~ wa nt ed . .,.. ~ dlahwuhen & range 8 couch $25 sml gas range, --'·ed by Foreat Ran BOAT Owners, tired of I I MINUTE CLERK. Laguna Southern California Optical Established 1965 washers &: dcyers, ta.ctorY several this, lamps, chrl, ~-• gers WalliChs Music City TV, Rfflo, HJFI, maint. cost? Refinishing A' =c~ ~:,,~ t~u': Co.. El Toro. Call Mr grey_ needed immed. S/H, wamuity. dl8!hn-Jim,.' HBetel, • 2()Frll Sunln· GD Le'athl!!rtop desk $83. South Coast Plaza 540--28.30 Stereo 836 monthly service. 64.>-1320. ·: or Oty Councll mtttlngs, ~Lew;;;:;c''::,· ;.~""'1'°400"'°. ---typing' w/general office ex· BEACH CITY APPLIANCE anapo 11 u-t -Babyllne changing tbl $12. Boats/Marin• _ • held four times a month. RESfAURANT per to hand.le variety of 3623W. Warner, SA 54>0180 GARAGE Sale, camper 2 school deska $7 ea. HAMMOND Spinet Organ, Equip. w ! Contrnct employee $5.2; per Day Maintenance Ma n duties for sml gro.vth Co. JJ62 N. Tus~ Orange 11hell, Tab I e , Accordkm, ~1596 $500 303 Kings Rd., Newport , hr. S-H UO W p M, \ 1 Va'!!,_ed, 5 daRy>ustywk.PelnquJ11 re ¥en&in& poslContion for music stand, aurfbo&rd1, MF:I'AL detectors for sale Beach. RENTACOLOR VHF radJo, CB radio, , : ---~be 30 WPM, 3 """' n ,~rson, can, scu starter. tact ?.Ir. ''"IRLPOOL wasl'er or patterns fabrics wrought 646-4656 ---'er el-bead u~~· ,.. 2135 IV ~---1 H N.B n. ' ' or rent Com""'•"' It white's '~" ' ...... ' •' Steno exp. Apply Oty · o...uo..:. wy., · Morpn 541·9'lTl. Kenmore elec. dryer, $50 iron, Misc. items. 897-6005 Collector's Sh 0 w ca 1 e PIANO WANTED. No\v brings you a full line of & used diving equip., ; Clerk's office, Oty Hall, 505 AUTO SALESMEN S.Cur:l~nfl each. Frigidaire washer $65 10 FAMILY garage Sale, 835--9'lM WilL GO ANYWHERE. brand ne\v color television powered sleigh tor d ; FCftSl Ave, Laguna Beach. FOR SALES & _LEASING Need full or p/tlme, 21 yrs Guaranteed I: free delivery. Name It • v.·e've got it. Fri· D $125 h P.O. BOX 1685 receivers front 12" 1o 25" or for fun Eves/ • 494-ll.24 ext 244 It ls an SELL IN BOOr.flNG IRVINE or older. Uniforms & equi~ 546-8672 or 847-8115 & Sat lD-5, 1591 Bak.er, Costa ~ big 'Uf & ~eset!! STUDIO CITY, CALIF. ·with a complete free in 962-4283 : interestlne Job. COUNTRY! Newport Beach ment furn. Life in& & ho5-FREEZER. Whirlpool, 19 cu r.tesa. · ottr 1iall ~ 3 e& 6 LOWERY Organ doubl~ holl!e. service program S!tfA1:.l. 4 cyl.' ~Gray ind.'b • MODEl..S, lt10DW Chevy. dealer ""111 add · 3 pitaliz.ation after 90 days. ft, automatic defrost, $125, PACKING Thurs. must sell Pltt 543-4095-···-1 · keyboard; $350. · slarllng f_ron1 $12.45 per manne engine. Great for ; MODELS exmepcn.rleneedFo• -'°,,mboand s~-~ Hot & v.11c pay. S2 hr. •tart· Dishwasher, Kitchen Aide green crib, mat l re s s, · ' 557-3108 month. 1'.hnlmun1 lease 12 bay or sailboat. 548-3561 • WOMEN , MEN __ , • 1 ·-. -ll tng pay. Anaheim & Costa Portable, convertible, $75, feeding table play pen IRVINE Coast Country Club mos. • A new i;et every Boat p 906 , \VANTED FOR FALL :owes and ea.s1ng. Exce ent r.te111. area. Apply Costa 540-6009 -963-l064' ' membership for s al·e . Hammond Organ year . If you ha\'e good 1 • ower • FASH!ON"s~~~R AP'f! ~J'8::i ~v~tf~b; ,r.~~vlel'hicteosFt'roa ~,'.,.· 3088 Bris-LIKEimpe~-'1"'°modWel bell.'..,'~!?.!~ s:~~ G~ Sale. Thurs-?t~'ICS~~~s S400nds •. Air Call 586-~· $1SOO. ~~~:~i~~~o=~in~t9!Ji~~l DANA POI NT .. ~ the heart of the mVINE ., " . ,-~ ..... w..r Sat. Edwards & Slater area. ·•c.\,oOIU• Old Hardwood Plano Cr -. HARBOR ''"ERICAN6'15-8442BEAUTIES INDUSTRIAL CO'IP' ~·x. Equal Oppor. Employer All features. White $50. &Sn Colon Cr. HB Compressor one • HP $170 esccnt \\'ay, Anahein1, Ca. • Al.Q " .....,_,_, 842--0209 call 548-8541 S250 * Phone 642-7Zl1 R . V . S l a a t a Y a c h t ! MODELS ACADEMY Sec Sales Mgr. 00\V! HOll.'Ud SERVICE ata.Uon attendant. TREASURES galoreo 4 Brokerage. New Un.l!lltee .J 3700 EWPORT BLVD NB Chevrolet, r.facArthur & Full time, day1. Work WHIRLPOOL. permanent familiei. Sat. It Sun. 17291 2 GAS 29,000 BTU \Vall SP!NE"' piano CJbel Nelson, ZENITH, RCA & Sylvania. DeFe\'crs & Rangen. !::ma.I 1 N Jn.tnboree Blvds., Newport Islands & lube bay. Group press washer & dryer, Destry Circle, HB furnaces, 1 yeat· old. $30 $'150. Xlnt quality. TV & stereos, priced Jess or Large; Power or Sail . W( ~ MOTOR ROUTE Bench. 8.33-0555. insurance Good working white, 4 yrs old. Xlnt concl. each. ~5-5362. * 499-18-47 * than the discounters. \Vith 3 I-lave Them All. For in--1 We have an opening for a SA LES ladles are you bored conditions. Village Shell, $150 firm. 552-7323 SAT Nov l7, 12-3 734 Saint Mlscel MOUi 818 Mlscellaneoul 118 yr. picture tubes. 1 yr parts formation or to make an l moter route carrier in South v.•/y6ur job? \Ve pay CM, 541>-1745 James Pl Newe?rt Beach & service. All aviilable appt. to see boats in the lo-" Laguna • J..aiUna Niguel, hostess 10 have parties. SERVICE Station He Ip Rent Wa1her1/Dry1r1 (Clitthaven) ••••••••••••••••• models in stock & on evening, 71'1/493-5101. I November :bt. Please call Invite 3 couples into your wanted, days. Good wages. $2, \Vk .. Full malnt. King headboard Rocker, an--+------_ .-display. '73 1nodels priced 1972 Sabcr·Cralt, like new, , Hany .stt!Y, 642-43n fOr In· home & earn up 10 SlOO. Apply In pe1'90n, 300 E. 17th * 639-120'2 * Liques, etc. Frl,Sat, SUn, 1~ .. to clear. Cash 90 plan or JS.ft . hardtop, Chevy 4-cyl. ~ formation and appointment. \Ye have permanent posl·' St, Costa Mesa. COMPLETE kitchen unit, 4, 805 Via Udo Nord, Lido * FABULOUS * 1 ter ms to 36 n1os. ABC Color 160 hp in & out. TAKE i Equal Opportunity Employ. Uo111 for hostess to assist SER.VICE Sta. Employe. 1tove, oven, ref., sink, DR'\'"ER, 'IV, rugs, clothes, TVB • 902khl At11antaH, ortlngt19046 OVER PAYMENTS. Call 1 ~. our re~ in demonrtratq days. Must be exper. Arco disposal, $150. 642-3857 books, etc. 33072 Christina PUBLIC AUCTION S:o~ ~ u~2~n aft. 5 \Ykdy. !JS&.2764. ; NEED Oirlslmas money? n revolu ionary nu product. 19th & Newport, CM KENMORE elect dryer, xlnt Dr, DP. 496-2446. * * ~·!OVacIN,G & or ' '72 SKIPJACK a:I' Open 225 .; Lt. housekeeping, help with Apply ln penon 1508 S. TELLER rond, recond motor call att Household Goods 814 •• · mw;t sac. l mo OMC, SIS, tra i ler, 3 children, 9 to 13, 3 PM Grand, S.A. 10 AM .l 3 & NOTE TELLER 5 536-l23l old set w/guar/Polneer xlnt.,under 100 hours, $6500: l to 6 PM weekdays.. Nr. p.m. Mon-Fri. SHAG CARPET, 12'xl 3", FRIDAY 7 30 PM NOV 16 h Tuner Marantz Am P · 494-7901 I Broollhunl, bet. Ellil & SALESMEN wanted tor Pay Expcr. Only KENMORE dishwasher. yellow & green tones, never : ' • t Ampex cassette player S2801~--------1 Garfield. 963--3485. TV Netional Marketin,,. Co Apply In Person To Good oo.~~~'.t<l~bi*te. . used, SSH4l5 or 557-5033 &16-6406 '73 ENGLISH Dory & trailer 1 NEED mmeone to mow the • ~"" · Beth Fanner .,.,........... TRUCKLOADS OF BEAUTIFUL TOP STEREO, Pana son 1 c. 40 hp. Evinrude $1300• ~ •1 lawn. M111t have own lawn reRi1 & •women part time Personnel Department Wedgewood gaa stove with MachlMI'} 816 QUALITY FURNITURE & AM/Ffl.1 radio, 3 s Pd ~~3324-Days 6421062 Eves.. mower. Seal Bch. (713) •'knd 1 1!me. Days, eves or Security Pacific Bank griddle. $45. Good condition. APPLIANCES turntable, headset, 2 mo. o-u-· I ~ .. 1_......,,. :.... ... ~ .... ~"e..xpered. ~ 381 Forest, Lag. Beach call 557·2673. HIGH pressure grease gun l;~s1;·~6~1"-~lll64~.~~~:~I K&M Scasport. 18'. Inboard, w .w;w ~·-... ·• .... ".... o.i....i-• & 90 wt. gear dl!!penser. Flbe 1 hull Ir NOTEI =·~In&':°"~~ No g~~.~~~11...r: ~~fu"?~id~~~~ Both tor 1140. 536-5796. . BANKRUPTCIES * LIQUIDATIONS gal.~~ ..... u:::.;.,,;: RHI E1tlfe S.l11mon Call Be" Klttay, 4$2-9930. Train At Full Salacy, "62--0504 Ml1e1llaneou1 811 * STORAGE . [ 11 1 $1500. 646-J358, ' If you have a Ileen" or want SALESLADY Exp'd Womaos Benefits. M/F, 1&-34 Building Materlals 806 SOLID walnut leath" top 2 BEAUTIFUL GIGANTIC ·>L __ ,_"'_''-~_ .. _ _J 1958 CLASSIC IB' Chris Con. one, see Peg Bolln&er for Apparel needed for part Intervl_ews Now studio dnk, perfect for liv· 1 -tlnental runabout. N"o eng cenlldenllaJ Interview. Red lime Including weekends, Call Army Opportunllles e Surplut.Bulldlng Ing room or de". Cost 1591, THOMASVILLE FORMAL WOOD 3 Lines, 2 Tlm11, $2.00 .-'.$350~·=54&-o=2592=·~~~~1 ·• Carpet, 497·1761. Apply in person, Edltb Mou <TI4l 64l)..ll&3 MATERIAL. 1000's of NE\V Sacrifice $250. -Alttlque ·--------·1'16 F1BER glass 0/B 50 Smart Se t, 424 So Coul TOW TRUCK DRIVER ITEMS! Doon, lumber, ply. p e de• ta I d,.sser/chest. DINING ROOM SETS ..., Horse Johnaen w/tr&ll<r: NurHI Aides 7.3 Hwy, L.B. Experienced preferred but wood, alum sheeting, mold· rare tlnd. $ 20 o -wa In u t Wi 9 \\7EEK female puppy, $675 897-4537. S49-3061 SALESMAN &: Manager "'Ill tralq. ~pay & !rlnge Ing. windows, etc. w/marble top round lamt, 1th Larqe 4·Glass Door, housebroken & ""·ell be~av-'112.-0=..::F:.:!Bc.:::::ERG~LASS---w-/7-li-,I ., Parl'tlme. lnaerten fer Mall· male & ltm. $1125 & up be""1ta. Shell Stallen, 11th BUILDERS SURPLUS table, Lou!• XIV 1150. .. " Lighted China Cabinets, ed. blaek & wh ite markings. h.p. motor & car rack, xlnt room monthly 1uara.n . lt & Irvine, N.B. 2406 So. Main St., S.A.. Wlncheater n .. ~r~lne•~.11 4'1 H' C ba k U h I d 646-9778 oond. $195. 893-2016 '1 at the quallOed.. No exper. necess. TRAINEE. Youna, sharp in-!\Ion thru Sat 10.S magnum, ....... e.a1n -· • I ane• C p 0 Stere FREE Gernlan Shepherd, WlU. t:nlde· Newport Beach DAILY PILOT, Mr. Lee (213) '170-,8M3. staller. Stereo &: alarm nc: 546-1031 Perfect cond autumn hue h • Female. 1 yr old, has shots. property for Boat Agrnt I 330 \Y. Bay St. Sa lea L•dy Needed ~~· Ne~~ conatrucUon. Camerei A mtnk stole, Cost $1400. Chain & Captains C a1n. G5 rcat w/ kids. 5'Mi--0074 aft i 1,1167J.'!058 or Eves." 615-5487 I ......_ta Meu. ~tr·-•. mature woman. lllll"&All.-&reL V'l2-3490 Sacrifice $350. -Stag horn --~ TV 1~~rn o--•---~qul -t 108 plant 5ft . spread, perfect • * ·* . * * * * * 7 l"ee"-oi• German Boat•, Soll 909 1 Al>PIY tn·Penon. See a_. WALTAH CLARKS ~ .. ~~ -~·-· ,.. ,...... ,,, " · Sl51l. Call 613·Tl95 ""· 5. ~ · ., ~ ' .U.Ul between B-11:30 AM. 26 Fashion l•land, N.B. ~~ =.~edt = NEW! Nlkonot, lJ/W Oash, CARPET m .,.. yds bei.... Electric Organ -Heavy \Vood b edroom ~he-Pherd pup~ Fml. Nds 13' C1\Ff.~·RIGGED 86 sq 1t : 1---1--.,n-/-T.IME-5ALES S44-002'l · ~~.Ma.ln ~St.......Hunt: " SekOnlc l.."86 L/ M · wool, u.sed, ii~ per yUd: sets, all sizes -Kroe hl er hidca bed -cnced yd. ~2464 aft 6 sail. Roonzy, 1 mo old,\ Work 1 eve/wk. PartY Ales SALESLADY -part tlnlt. i...-.... ..,.Aach. Mon ••-· Fri Wcues~~~'"f'" lea th e.r "-·~ •-.. U I L f f Lo pm. ~'lust.sell. Asking S675. wor~ • -·' Sho\I N Prei .. <a ..... ac ...... vrt""••u... ~· r.ica 1er ov eseat - ots o so as -ve-TICER fem kitten, tnd 526-556.~. ,1 exper. hcl.,..... ld earn o exper. nee. ~ture 9 am to U nooo. l\11NK STOLE lllJ'Kt! $250 seats -Ch air s -Dinettes -Carree st&rvtng; m11~t find Mme . \,. $35/puty. M5-3700, Mr. Bia· vmman. 3355 Via UdO or BOLEX 8mm refiex movie · ~ u ' SU · vet'\' \'e'"" lovabl• l'l<l~ .,..,,.; 23 CORONADO ~~oop. 6h• ! alow. call: 5'l6-t93T after 6pm. • URGENTLY c&mera •. $450 or make offer. ~Jo;7 ° er. vergn:y. tables -Commodes -Che sts -Desks · · .,, .._..._..,, Evlorodc, mllin Jlb Gtnofl i Pukinir .Attendant, p/tlme, SALESPERSON, exper in s lenses loom. 64)...5891 -J."antastic leather-type recliner -O.E. \Vaaht!r w/mini basket, Sips 4, Lirlo Yacht MChorait 18 or over. Neat ,ppear. retail aUt store. Days, fvtt F ltu 810 EDISON bib)' crib, wooden Stereo/TV combination -Stereos -Eye . runs • needs soma ttpalr. $.1550, 557-0iSS aft 4:30 P~1 i MUJt have Calif. drlven lie. A wkenda. Meat have nita. NEEDED urn ra hl·chalr ~rt·a-crib. All le vel slov'e - Refrige rators -Freezers ~7817 aft 6. HOBIE 16, Sall no. 169, with. 1 &H-1100. ext 555 Bual Intematlonal, 2043 \ 8' rouCH, 6' couch. 2 1eat ln &ood • 631-317? _ \Veshers _ Lamps _ A.IJ types mat-FD, Dobe.r1nan gentle gd dolly. full C"\IT, $1475. Call 1 • Pertonnel CounMllor We1tclltt Dr., N.B. loungt!: chair. Royal blue. FRONT Throw .Ret>l, Lnwn tresses _ Lots o( Bric·a·Brac & f\ii sc. w/chlldren. 2 yrs., neros Lcin1h:1r1ll, d.1t_yi; 962-8891, ~I ' "•ha•-an lm medta•· open-SEAMSTRESS (Z5) T • !-"'um. 892-1996 c'lo-es. Mowtr, 3 HP, K1n11: 0 Lawn a good honlc. 9'79--M63. e\t'!I. 96.~·IJIS. ·• .. ~ r31Dee Co rclal $15 !143-8454 LOTS MORE too n umerous to llstl ""'=i-~~..,..---,,-..,,....1 Ing in our own office for Full time, Men &: Indies gar• Bulroom set $125. n1n1e • , . 1TE~1S SUBJECT TO PR E-St\LE. CUTE Pekapoo.poo, male. I 19 El. L\ghlning w/traUtr 1· aorneone looklna: tor better 1ncnt1, Call for appt, QOWn 673-7164 COLD carpet &. pad. Xlnt yr. old, bro\\'11, & \\'hile. Sr S.."!.119. Xlnl l'Ond. $950 Call tPn avena:e e-amlnp as otanert. &14-2512. A•••mblerS ' f!hnpe. 50 sq yd!!. ~take Of• Cute. s.1;;-sou ·s.&7-367tl well rlS job Mlh1fael.lon. SECRETARY . l..('gal· Good """" N~~i_;>! ~ttlls~uch, for. Call 673--84!19 MASTERS AUCTION FREE Kltlen::i. 1 bl!lck nuile,CA ""'L~20'-"'N-o.~lllO~l-.-,-1n-t_ce_n<l~.1 I Prefer aalt.'I oriented, aeU typing llkllls. Oranae' Coun-** 815-l250 ** F'OR sale Bell motorcycle (formerly \Vlnd y's) l bik &: white fem, 6 wklf n1t1kt' offer or trt\de IOI ii dltclplined tndlv. who en. ty Airport area. ~ per VOLT helmet SU., 400-4400 after ' • COME BROWSE AROUND old, call ntt 6, 645-5310, niotor honu'. 6'3-1933. , loYI a challenae. Exf>cr. mo.833-9031. I p I QUICK CACH 5:00pm. 1 'C£1' '-""-ur Christmas Mppy t6' Glen-L cata1n 1tra1 ~ helpful. n1ta nt er1onne ,. DISCOUNTS on -w Carpet · , 20751h Ne'vJfcrt Blvd., Costa t.1esa "M ,~ " •· 1 .a-"Whit' Elepiiants" ovu. T s.-" •THROUGH A '"' nov." 8 mo. old fcnlal~ ""/trallt'r. \\'ell tuned ~ 4 110ft -• ...,1ncy nnmJ em~ "'"' Drapes, 11oor coverlng•: 1. I (Behind ony's Bldg. Mat'ls.) Shepherd mb< .. 552-<1128 fas . 213 . 864-812!!. ', s-.~::'b Brookhunt, F'~,im !hem "e,~~'. .1:J J!~m.J:::ch " Su~~l DAILY PILOT ;,"£.1245 or !146-4478 11 ............_ • C~sta Mesa * * 6'16-8686 • PLEASE ~T mo m•I• kit· CAL ro noce oqulpt, : •--< lham-lhlll-a.J>al41 I!llot -Equal °""""~Ein~--W.A.NT .&D .Ha>~ aometht~g.11!\I w1nt to tens need good home. Haw xlnt cond \ I • aaultled Aa.i.. •.• 66-5671 clautfted adJ ,... ,... tell'!' Claaifled la• oo-1r · -•-Ulol "' 8t6 • · LoguM Btoch I I " I • • ' • . ---= --' • . -. -- \\'fANT to Rent; 25-27' S.<il Boat, I or 2 days a n1onth, year around, Dari!!. Point. 831-0769. VICTORY 21' Daysailor 1 ~ inlercst. $450. Outbrd. Inex· pensive boat slip. 673-8456. HOBIE 14 1v/trai!('I'. $1000. finu. 826-0630 or 546-0836 16' HOBIE Cat 'vith trailer, I many extras. J\1ust see. 493-0330 !Boats, Slips/Docks 910 i:, boat w 140' off short' moor. mg or-f Lido Isle. 642-500'5 Trailers, Travel 945 '63 V\V Van runs "'ell body or 645-8122 :.:,c::;;,::.:.:;c_:.;;:,;c=:_ _ _o.;:: fair, good !irci;. 18o'ats, Speed & Ski 911 '64 15' ARISTOCRAT travel 673-71 91 trailer complete w/cabana. 1965 V\V Bus. Needs engine 1 18' Unlimited Ski Boat Good cond. $550. 846--0548. \\-ork, 111ak<' off<'!'. 331 Chevv l::ngine, t1vo 4 Bar· Auto Service, Parts .949 .Sl'J-0127 reir A'fr Aircraft Fitting1'. '69 FORD Super, 6, auto, I Halcraft quick change V REPLACEr-.1ENT & aux· 3 new tires, windows, hi Drive, Adjustable Tri ni iliary ~as tanks, pick-ups, $1000 takes it. 646-2115 Plate, hi stacks. Tarndcn1 4 \\'h\ driv<'s. va11s & motor =~~~="'-c--=~= 1 Axle Nicson Trailer, Speed homes. 892-S.114 '73 ·DODG E: Trarlei.n1nn 100. high 90's, SEE IT ·ro BE· F Sal f I' d Auto, custom paint & int., LIEVE IT. ABSOLUTELY OR. e our cy in er JeC?p rin1s. Best oir 6i3·Si!)9. IMMACULATE. {G\\'8!)96) • Engine $75. Some t>Xtra Original Cos! over Si000.00 parts, call 542-5967 a(ter 6 A.utos Wanted SaJe Priced ;it $3695. ~p~m~-~~~~~~~~ I 968 l~~~c!h ~'~~i"~~ s~,'. I '""''"'''' j[~.j 842-0675 1 . Trmsportalion lr::&:l · Antiqu~s/Classics 953 . • CLASSIC '55 Doretti, needs '';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ \\'Ork. jl ~-=C=a~ll--=64~&-0c-=8=!5~a=f~t:::5'~30:__ Gampers, Sale/Rent 920 Trucks 962 CAMPER shell , icebox & I ;.,~.;;;;.-,,-----= TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FORE IG~ C1\RS Call or come in to sec us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V, Coasr Jhvy., N.B. . 642-9405 TOP CASH for ciean late n1odel car1 '70 CORTINA. slight ly damaged. Parts or ;all. 1.takc Otter! 642-8936 eves. CRICKET '72 CRICKET. 4 DOOR A u Io m a I i c transn1isslon-, railio, heater & 1la<llal tires. t940FNFl . A nice dh:. car! $1495 831-2&10 495-4949 $2495 BUENA PARK *MAZDA 7015 KNOTT. BUENA PARK 522-8750 MERCEDES BENZ JIM SLEt.10NS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AtrrHORIZED SALES & SERVICE ·n CRICKET. Automatic Jim Slemons transniission. radio, heater. lo\v 1niles. (S&1ETVt'l. s1~. Imports RTOHBEINOSDOFORRED . <We're top bYyor !or any used 1\-tercedes Benz.~ 2060 }!arbor Blvd., l?.Ol Quail Costa i\'lesa • "'&t2·0C)10 Ne\\'J)Orf Beach ___ D_A_T_S_U_N ___ 1ENTER F~1i'ii3:acARTHUR '71 DATSUN 240Z Extra Clean, Lo\V Mileage, 1507BZ\Vl. 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY PRICED TO SELL Sbatp New car BUENA Trade-ins . _· Coming In Eve ry Day Ask About Our Un ique ' Used Mercedes Lease PARK Plans · House of Imports 6862 ?ttarichcsler, Buena Park *MAZDA _""_'h_e_c\::::n::.:'·';,,;o::::Ae_na_Fn_"lf_ NOW OPEN 7015 KNOTT. BUENA PARK 522-8750 '69 DATSUN STATION WAGON Miulon Vie jo lmporta fl;':Hu•'ing MERCEDES B!NZ .. FIAT ' --· TOYOTA JUST ARRIVED '74 TOYOTAS Ne-\1' l\1odels • NC'\v C01oni S.\VF. SON Rl<:MAINING 73's & DEMOS ~W.Lemia W TOYOTA . 1966 Harboi-, C.l\f. 646-9303 LEASE '74 TOYOT~\ 1200 Corolla sedan· •.• Get 30 m.iles per gallon . . . Only $58.34 n10. ~ tnos. Opet; end lease. BILL MAXEY TO YOTA 1910 4-whl drive J e • p Wa,gonecr. Loaded. Auto. pis, p/b, air. 67!5-1084. • Orang'• County;s 2 Dr u!rdtop Coupe, Red, MAVERICK _ l...all;dau, Mags, Goodye111•1, _ tilrqest 5election <TZN875I. ·10. 2 dr. ... bit, green, clean All Mod.la & C*"• $,95 air cond, tape deck 11iiiil , ; EL DORADO, WEEKEND ONLY cash 494-tn9 · FLE~O<\'~ iii\o'-\ifHAMS MERCURY COUPES -SEDANS -CONVERTS 'IW MERC waaon, gd, shape Wlde-oclectioll.olcolon 'asking $400. See & drlve Choice or interion •n MONTE Carlo. 20.00> mi, it. 917~) W. 18th, C.M. (Tapestry & full leather) mint cond. R&:H. ps, pb, 548-16Z1. 1 Faetory air condllJoning air cond, mag whlJ, $2815 '70 MONTEGO Wagon, air, I Full ~er -chokt o!: firm no trade. 645--3034 days stereo. t11lr package, $1600. Cruistt Control 846-5201 pm • • BIB $850. cash 644-5215 ~~ 0~,f!;M ,:~1o CONTINENT AL M U STANG All tn immaculate condition 1--.,.,.,--.,-----· 1---'"''------I N b C dllla '13 CONTINENTAL Mark '72 MUSTANG. Automatic, a ers a C: IV, Sliver Mi st. Cranberry radio. heater. air cond., A~OlR1I.z.!E,.., DEA·LER velour int., Make oJfer, po\ver steel'lng. (417EAE). -~~R BL., •9'1-3113 12695 54t>-91oiFsrA ~=Sunday ·n MARK III fully equipped, -THEODORE , !4650-~oo; eves & ROBINS FORD 72 Cadillac Coupe De Ville. wknds 644-4746 2000 Jlarbor Blvd., _Gold wl":'hite vinyl tnp. CORVmE Costa Mcsn 642-0010 Fully eqwp., lo mi, steel belted radil\l tires. Top,1---...:...;.;,_ ___ :,.__ '67 MUSI'ANG, redl re<I. cond. 54&-1397 or 847-'IOOI '69 CORYmE p/s, nir cond, pwr brks, 1968 COUPE 4'!' Vill full IO\V mileage, xlnt cond, & 11 tra e, $900 $1050. Eve11 & wk n d • , ~~roor~~ s.. Conv,Ah·Cond,Stereo Ti:tpc. 673-8636 or w ork d ay• ~--'C='"''"--'--"'"'~~--! 10,000 n1iles on nc\v engine .523-1::!:!'.7-';l<le,-=· ,,.,~,,__--I ·n Coupe DeVille and trans, Extra Sharp -\VF.;'VE GOT Loaded, $2995. Pt:lvate Party. (813ESZ). ONE TOO 1'1ANY 536-1900 -$_3695 Wiii sell Mustang Mach 1. =-===~----I '70 CADILLAC conv. Good '69, 351 engine, air, powr, '69 TOYOTA Land 0-Ulser eo;nct, classics model. $2950. , BUENA f!.Uto, etc. :rein cond. $1495., 4x4 (!167AFW> $19 9 5. L='D'°'ay"-s"=='"-'02640"7~=~~ 493-2112. Theodore Robins Ford., ~ CAD '65, Only 67,000 'mi's. '67 MUSTANG Convet't. a/c, Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Beautl{ul Cond. $1000 or / · : • tape deck, Xlnt cond, Good 642-0010. reas otr. 645--6284 -' PARK buy. Sac. 494--0986 =-=-=:TR:=-l'"'U""_M=P'"'H-,----l .. 65 CAD Cpe de Ville, See, '66 MUsrANG Mechanlct ___ :.;__.:..;.,;_;_.:..;. __ . ._tJ>preciate, !-fake oUer, Special, Needs work but on- '64 TRI. R&H, wire wheels, 64:>-15.11 ly $275, 675-.1758 ' = ~~~h~tS~s.V:a;.;'.1• CAMARO *MAZDA ·~ean~u~~~n: = Gd paint $900. 551·5619. VOLKSWAGEN '61 (:AMARO. A_utomatfc, 1015 KNOTT BUENA fAm< '65 MUsrANG 4 spd, storage radio, heater, Air cond.. 522...aJSO vehicle, stock, l O\Vller, call '71 VW BUS • 4 speed, radio, heater, cus· tom paint & mag wheels with \Vide oval tires. (()69. CYV J. A nice dlr. car! power steering. (UNB406). eve 642-n48 11295·THEODORE couGAR =o.:::L::..D'"'s""M-o~B-1L~E-' ROBINS FORD ·59· Cougar Conv. XR7. Xlnt 2060 1-larbor Blvd., cond, Will trade good qua1l· Costa 1.'fe!o';a 642-0010 ty furniture, den, dining rm Salt's I: SP:v.ice OLDSMOBILE '67 CAMARO SS 396, Xlnt & bedroom. 554-2744 GMC TRUCKS 831·2{)40 495-4949 cond Must see to ap-1970 COUGAR XR7. air, HONDA CARS "-'.68C-7.VW~B=-us-.~.10,.--e""og"', :3ne"'w ~recinte, Many ~trao, Lost P/B, P/S, '""''" landau UNIVERSITY OLDS $2395 valve job & tuned, New ~~: 84~~1l, $l4SO or best top. ~ 2850 Harbor Blvd. tire!, Shag rug & curtains, DODGE Costa Mci;a $4-0-96«1 Xlnt cond. Must sell, $1400, 1967 CAMARO, 2 DR Hrdtp. , GTh-1045 Very Sharp! Low mileage. ' 69 OLDS CUtla.'18, gd cond, $1200 Call 847-4097 1971 DODGE CREST\VOOD must snc. $1050 or make '71 Wet tf1li1 Camper . . STATION \\IAGON, full y ollr. Lo miles, nr. new engine, CHEVROLET equipped including power .5.IS.2311 Ai.'1i FM stereo. Not a pop-disc braJ<es, power steering, '65 OLDS 88 pis p/b auto up. factory air, M-f /FM stereo. rad'' ' ' I 52350 * 546-1575 100 tilt steering wheel luggage trans, '°• beater, a c, table. sleeps 3, $350. Call *-SPECIAL* aft 6 Mon. thru · Thurs., anytime, Fri· Sat· S un , -~nCE camper, 6 mo *Of ·the Week and trucks~ Auto Trans, Radio, !feater, Howard Chevrolet super Clean. f639AKSl. Hur-ry on this one al only Comnlele Sa\ef: & Scn:ice . Visit Us Soon At 28701 i\largueritc Pnrk1vay r-.fission Viejo 495-1700 (USE AVER\' P\VY. EXIT) · G II G EE rack. Less than 19,Cm ac1Ual good cond. 846-.1978 alt 1 73 WESTFALIA c amper , I onl IS FR , miles. Asking $26 00 . pm. w/pop-top & tent. Orange 69 Impala Custom 644-<687. ·'10=0-LO_S_CU_tl_ ... __ Su-.-.. ~me-. !lXlO nu. on warr. $4250 t t d-••-I full GT:.>-0960 2 door .ll'f, V-8 .• aut~~tic ·73 DODGE Dart Sport. s ereo ape ~. a c, i old, comp!. cquip'd, Make '70 CAPRICE COUPE .olfer. 494·4536. , (P183) Cycles, Bikes $2399 Scooters 925 '72 TRIUMPH 'TROPHY 650 Gorgeous, immaculate. Must See to Appreciate. \VIII ac· cept your trade--in. dlr. ~0443 or 842-7781 . *BICYCLES* CHRISTi\iAS LAYA\VAYS $10. HOLDS ANY BIKE ew Hali an IO sp .••.• $59.95 Suntour Eq Colni .... S89.95 Nishiki 10 sp •... from $99.95 Used bikes • . . . . . All Types Beach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 675-7282 *BICYCLES* Raleigh Records ... $99.~ \Vhile Supplies Last Other models from $64.95. Peugeot in all sizes & colors. Christmas Jay-a-ways CYCLE \VORKS LTD 1822 Ntl'>vport Blvd., Costa Mesa. 548-5783 1973 SPORTSTER $1700 11,000 miles. Stock. Price firm. * 543-3691 * '72 DODGE t;, TON PICKUP 17733in.l $3299 '68 FORD WAGON (YID266i $2999 '73 NOVA COUPE (209HCUI $2999 '72 MALIBU COUPE ()'58) $3099 '68 VW CAMPER (h'YG877) $1999 GROTH r-.facAr!hur and Jan1boree NC\\'port Beach 833-055:> \\'}!-:PAY TOF• 00,I.LAH. FOR TOP 11SED CA!'~S U your car is e."<lra clean, see ui: first. 3 AU2P.. Bl•!CK 292;; I-lai'bol' BJvd. Costa Mesa 979.2500 \\'E HUY 11\TPOP.TED AUTOS BEST ·PRICES PAID! Dean Lewis Imports 1965 Herb01·, c.~t 646·930: CASI·! FOR YOl.il~ CAR 5'16-7070 Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO *ALFA ROMEO Best deal always! Berlinas from S37'.i5 (Ser. #0288). '72's & "i3's. Co mplete se· lection no1v, Buy or lease from Jim Parkinson's -- T!.lrL1rh ]h11p11rt~; +<)> ,)\)(, \'/ '-_,, .... , ..... " " r .. w.••' •1<·,.. · '"'' tr<"'fi ... . .. .-~ . 645-6400 or AUDI '71 AUDI 100 LS $995 ' ' . OCT OATSUN ""~ ,._ '"' ,~, ...... ,~~.~ .... , .. ALI'. ·~•o ""'"'.' ,..., .. •Tin '72 DATSUN PICKUP with camper. Fully Equipped, Loaded, \Veekend on I y ! (2'METW). $2895 OCT OATSUN '""'" , . .., .. ,. '·~··-·er..··.,, ""0 °"" j ·~·.-7 •• ,, 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 493-3375 or 831·1315 '69 DATSUN PICK UP 1970 ~IERCEDES B en z , 1 beti.utiful cond. ~lust see to appreciate, private party, 536--5006 '72 350 SL, lo mileage beauty. Come look or call Lido Shores Motel, 673-8800, Apt 50. 1966 MERCEDES Benz 250-S. Sunroof, good cond. $2500. Pvt party. 673-llfi6 transnuss10n, air cond1ti0n-10,000 mi, 340 cng. anl/fm power, lo. ml. Xlnt cond. 1969 Y'V BUS ~. pcl\\·cr steering, vinyl stereo, 1nags, $3900 or $2125. 644-5185. $1395 \v/folding ~rikSsG.8657 roor, clean & low miles! nearest ofr, 55i-4Cfil nit 5. ·~ TORONAOO. good co rxli·, (042I·IOA). '64 DODGE Polarn;--xlnl liOn, tape deck, Ai\1/FM, '61 V.W. Big swu1., reblt Only $1195 cond. New tires & brks. ~":o1r:... :::673-08="11!".-----L cng, ntl'>v tires. 'AM/FM, -$350. * 96~28 good gas mi. $450. 491-1275. ,#~ -... -~ PINTO ·73 vw 7 pass bus. European ~ ~' '63 CUSfOftf Dodge, 4 dr, 1 _____ ,;...: ___ 1 Vaca.~n ,,_ f 4 500 FORD 50,000 mi, very good car. ...., ........ on•)'· , $575. 846-8151 '71 P_INTO. ~ speed trarut· miles. Call ~8856 Is d h t (278-11 'l'IAAI M!Mi. We Cl.IMllffl FORD m ston, ra 10, ea er. '67 ·vw Fastback. Sun roof. 5)5 NOITM u. C..-0 UAL Dl?vll. $1395. New tlres. New eng. Clean! SA THEODORE MG $750. 616--!ns. "c,,_,. 4"'"17 100 ROBINS FORD ---------1 ·n V\V VAN. am/fm stereo. '72 CHM VEGA Gallons Gas FREE 2060 1-larbor Blvd .• '68 MGB, wire '"'his, new sunroof, xlnt cond. $3(0). ,69 FORD 1 'JD Costa 1.!esn 642.0010 paint. runs good. $1150. 642-6517 ,, ,, "" '72 Pinto Runabout, 200 cc. 673-4334 or 6~. '66 V\V Camper, nu tires J:4atchback C~pe 2 door H.T., V·8. 11.u1omntic 4-spd. a/c, lo miles, Xlnt. $900 RadiO, lteat~r, stick, . ,nee l:ransmis.sion, poY.'Cl' steer-cond. $2150 830-0817 MGB '66 MGB ROADSTER Extra Clean, (TSV173) ·$1295 BUENA 962-1051 VOLVO '74 VOLVO'S HERE NOW Immediate Delivery On All Mod('!s SA VE $ ON REMAINING 73's & DEMOS ~ar. Red v.·1th black inter· ing, ait• conditioning,. vinyl '72 PINTO RUNABOUT lo 101'. (OOSEPCL .roof.,\ ni<'e car! IZ!\'V841). ml $1100 494-2231 'or $1.595 Only $1395 ft3--i-1431 -1 ti. '73 Squire \\l:igon. 4 spd, .;OO# 4tl"h*i ,\.'mags, I ~t,.,.r7ack, air FORD~,-cond . Cnl 'N'~ . '69 CHEV IMPALA CUSTOM • YIAJll SIJ1¥tNO SAN CLIMINTI PLYMOUTH DOT DATSUN w • -' • ' • • • •_.n 1'1 Hl '"" 2 Door Hardtop. 350 V8, 515 MOITH fl. CAMINO REAL 100 au tomatic transmission, SAN CLEMENTI 4t2-11l 7 G II G FREE power steering, tinted glass a on1 a t 4 speed, radio, heater & new tires. (ZUS202). A nice dlr. PARK *MAZDA ~WtluN ,9 VOLVO complet~. Strttto bucket 100 '70 FURY HI seats, vmyl top. Factory air ~nd. Will sell for Kelly . Gallons Gas FREE 2 il?01.'· V·S :iutomarit!'.~· blue book wholesa l e, '69 GALAXIE 500 m>SS•O"·~dltiomog, car. $1295 831-2040 495-4949 WILL BUY YOUR DATSUN, TOYO.TA OR VOLKSWAGEN 7015 KNO'IT, BUENA PARK 522-8750 6#-4687 ()(11\'er i;tcenng, Vlnyl roof & 1966 Harbor, C.1\1. 646-9303 , 64 ....;..,..,..,~ , 2 door TIT, V·~. au1oma!ic-ll C'lean C'3r 1vhh low.miles. ·n VOLVO . 144. Fae. air, ca 0...0.Z:.V'-van. Wbed/68 traniimlssion, air condition· (U0-14). xlnt cond in & out. Gets ~aro eng, relrig. . • ing, pt)\\·cr R1eerin~. "'"· O J $1595 great mileage. 5 4 7 -7 191 cabinets, US mags, fiat Clean Si runs good f~.JFS2.'.!) n Y days, 919--4078 eves & seats, runs good. $1200. or Onl $1495 wkends. best offer. 557-9116 y .# /ut-4,tl*~.A. ODAKA 125, SIIT'et & dirt bike. O\vner transferred. Must sell or take · over pay1nents. 2 mos. ol rl . 842-84i2 CHEVROLET OPEL 'GS VOLVO, 144$, AM/FM, '12 EL Camino SS 350. P/S, t#.01# ... ,, i!!IMl.M. FORD~,.. 4 Dr, Lo\V Mileage (211CFU) A/C, steel radials, new P/B, Positractio. Stockland ~ ~ 'V1Jl~.,..r' 18211 BEACH BLVD $3795 ·n 240 Z Cust. pnt. AM/FM, '68 OPEL w/'70 eng. Needs brakes. 4 spd, $16 9 5. ~hell .$3500. ~3160 a!t~r FORD • vu11:11111:V1NO SM a.1•1NT1 PAID FOR OR NOT. Y.'ILL PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL KENT ALLEN. 540-0!42. '69 YAMAHA 250. IV/Byt kit. Ne\v tire & rim.~t3!P Firn1. 1-fint. cond. Call eves. ~1478 1968 HUSK)' 2.)0 r-.1X. Very cln. excel. cond. $:150. 847-5759 or 893-6007 p. par· ty, HUSKY 360 MX 1970, N('w eng, knobby, xlnt cond. 847-6087 549.3331 8 trk. air, mags, splrs, lo trans. work. Good tires. 4gz..7883 ' • YIAJll 11.llVINO Wt CLIMl HT• 515 NOITH a CAlllNO IW HUNTINGTON BEACH BUENA :ri. Xlnt cone!. 673-1768 aft $500 oPr ObesRt SoUCerH. 645-E 7506 .• 68 .~o. 142 tlsk, wl~i~, ~:10~~. C~F~M.r~~: !~5 NOITHC a. CAhlNO l lAL SAN CUMPfTI 4ft.11JJ 100 '73 DATSUN Cu s t 0 m , air, gvuu tires, s c ' J-W\1• buCket seats. $3800. 84&-2105 -N LIMfHTI ' 492·1137 '7'2 PLYMOtITH Satallite, G II G PREE w/many extras, a ir, wheels Pr1 Pty 499-4070 eves. --Trilone, vinyl top, 318 ct, a ons as PARK '70 PORSCHE '911 T Autos, Used 990 . 1973 FORD Gran Torino AC ps pb custom inter '69 DODGE & tires, etc. Eve 642-7148 ::::.::::!..:::::::...--~:.:; nl MC?NTE"I ear, "'1' p,,mil,ver Sport. Unbelievably immac. radial~.' XJ~t cond. Lile~ t • TON PICKUP '67 NISSAN Patrol Datsun. CLASS + ECONOMY 11 a r, viny . roo , o es, Only 16,CKXI nii. Air, fK?\I". $2995. 842-n91 r z 283 Eng., partially assembl· 5 Spd, Air Cond. Low Mile-1973 Ca . t $2900. Will take trade. AM/FM stel't'O. auto, vinyJ L·,="-'="-"==--- V8, automrttic !ransmlsslon, ed, cheap. 536-8667. age, Sharp, (607JSNI. Happy pn owner mus 96.\-105.9. roof with portholes, white 69 Roadrunner. Good cond. air conditioning and a nice *MAZDA sell car! It has everything -•73 Impala Custom Cpe. Llke ovals, pvt party. $3045 Needs body work. $400. runnin~ truck~ ( #137), MUST Sell 1973 240 Z, 8000 $5875 Red w/black luxury inter-new. Lo ml, loaded. Cost 646-38!9 9~7856 bef 5, 644-0312 eves. mi's. 6 mo's warr. Air cond, ior 4-speed 2000 ~ AM.I '72 HONDA CL J:>O, Like Only $1395 mags. $4950oro1r. 644-7300 BU. NA FM stereo 'radio. ,W., etc. $4900. Leaving for Orient. '73,FORD12passcngerSuper ·n PLYMOU'I1t On' 300 F Only 3800 miles, 1luv a Sac. $3495. 4~3702 Chatea.u Wagdn. Driven 8750 16,!M)j.. ml. R/H. $950 new. Y l 111iles. UM 4t4'#/J-7015 KN~ BUENA PARK IAT ~ mil I ••• -after -• v' '• """w" Car for $700.Jess'than '63 IMPALA ,...ean, auto, · es. Air, tu 1 pwr, take ~ .w-•u Al\.\'.8Y1' kept in garage. $.19.'i, 522-8750 ---------.. , " 59 83!>-&106. FORD AUSTIN HEALEY '67 FIAT 124 w..,,n. New PA' IK' ~7~1~tal~! k,~'~-$3500 ~~.a~:t•· good c;:;f f~ 18 a month PONTIAC 1595 ·~H~rs~ otg>· xlut cond. ,. ., .... ,u s111v1NG ,.,. CLEMENflE battery, new valve jOb, 35 AMC 1971 EL CAMINO p/1, p/b, ·n FO~O LTD 2 dr, all F-BIRO, 68. 350 Auto. v , * 642-5901 * 535 NORTH n CAMINO REAL '_67 AUSTIN Healey 3000. ~MPG::::..=..· :::$585=·..:96<>-:::::.185=1'----a/t, new tires, 350 V-8, pwr, air, stereo AM/FM. top. Radio, tape deck. PIS. SAN CLEME~ 49z.1 1l7 '\Vhite, wire wheels, Pri. JENSEN .72 GREMUN "X", a/c, $227'5. 833--8880, ex 162, bet Xlnt cond. $2200. or, oUer. Air, Xlnt. 1 owner, Pri. 1:9 ri~l~~cr.o~;g 1~~ Pty. $1500. 96:U11S ---------*MAZDA p/s, radio, bucket seats, 8 & 5, 637-7158 aft 6. 830-900l \ Pty $1250. 546--2699 aft. 4. work $100. 549-4338 aft 5. '69 FORD I ton. many ex-AUSTIN AMERICA JENSEN lmv ml, 3 spd, very sporty, FOR snlc -'62 Chev Impala '73 GRAND Torlno Sirulre 1912 ' PONT. Catalina, Lo tras: 3-1,0ClO miles. \Viii ac-INTERCEPTOR $1795, 482-(&UI, xlnt transp car gd ruMlng wagon , aml fm ste~, Al e, book, $225(1, ,Cle~! '71 HONDA>350CL, pvt party. ccpt trade. 6l4-<i451 LARGE SELECTION BUICK cond, 1350 or bst cffr, PH full power. lug me, $3900, private party, 968-"lm.~ · Must set' to appreciate .. 49 STUDEBAKER p U ·~ut:~~~ &Ai:;:. ~ OF COLORS 7015 KNOTT, BUENA PARK Slrr990'l or SJ6..1638 640-0100, 645-4061 Randy .. l9S9 CATALINA 2 dr h.t. ~66·8550"nld-a12! "-rambler beclas,sic 11 . G~0 co 10 o 25 d. $300. or cond. $!'.O). S45-4l27 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 522-8750 '•n ELECl'RA ....,an, Fact. 72 TOWNS. '~n Wagon1 II '6.!_ndFORD& fuJ;lfTDpowSeder anla'ndaa"u Air, PIS, P/B, P/W, clean . .w;i ;JI,; s o er. J't(I-• l -'='-"~~=77---FULL SERVICE '68 912 LOW LOW miles, """" Spotless, ·Io nwc&ge, u ... v • • StOOO. 8.13-3399. • $225. S42-003l a!ter 5· '68 Chev ~~ ton pickup auto BMW DEPARTMENT immac, 28MPG Sell or ta'l<'e air, full pwr, vinyl top, pwr + a/c, A/Shocks, prl top. · Jqnt cond. Must sell. T BIRD -..--1\sk for Brian t 1 1 tr d tilt whl, ~ door lock, pty .u. 7311 642.-2238 • rans. o• mi, nu tires, xlnt economy car n a e, am/fm !tereo, i m mac . • ~ · -7~~-;-;;;:-ui";;::--;:;;;-11---.:_::::::_:::_ __ , ·n HONDA T.:il. lo\\' miles, , .::'°:::"::d:.. . .::5-1:::6-4_::::054::______ ORANGE COUNTY'S 962-8640 .. nd 42 000 1 ~ Call • 6 2 IMPALA Good '71. FORD Sta Wgn, AIC. , ~ . xlnt coud. $9011 1 • 00 • • m • ...,_,, transportation· .t. .. M ..... $350 freeway miles. X1nt oond. 66 T-BittO, clean, sharp tl} , £T:J- 6317 19;)5 FORD Pickup Tnick, OLDEST '73 914 1.7, .only l{XX) mi. 546-4155 dy1, 673-5494 nights ,.._11 dnva ,,.,'>ll '..:u'.., · $1350. &t2-0l'79, aide le 01.1~ & mechan. g:alJy. Xlnt running-cond. $650 '1 1-mo--Old,-xtra.&~7846 &:41.'00kenda: '-Cl.11 ....,~u .,,.._._ AIL II ..... •~ 350 HONDA CL .. reblt eng, ~"""'7~ra~ll~846-8~27~6~~ or 494-1533 -• --~ 'e9-ualaxy 500~4 cH' HT- -pow,a:.__a -W¥V'll!i,_.-.-..1 oorKI. $400 645- 7683 ;;: •72 SKYLARK. Yellow. P/S, 1970 IMPALA, 350 eng, air, /t b air xl [• nd. eng: $7rl0. 562-8115 : .•alt._.._ 3 pm. " · 250 1-IUSKY 71-)4 $500. Best '70 (9118) Ssp am/fm mags P/B, air, 12' mo. old. Ask· power, chtrry cone!., below • • pa, P • 9_ -·~ CO • •6t""T-Bird new tires -. offer. Ne\\' top & bottom SIOO \V. Coast Hivy., N.B. Mich. recarTO seats. 9--5 Ing S2400 firm. ( 213) wholesale, ~~O Ori& ·owner. _ •;rov•'lO brakes icxxt sh pe ~ "n 125 CC DK\V, runs xlnl., end, Ne\\' haruni, 543--&454 642-9405 557-3550 S. Stuart 723--0136 days. Ask for Mike '70 NOVA. 34,i)()({nU. Good '70 LTD SqUire Wagon ale, offer. 657.7222 8 • , ...,.,, pipe, new h"b, must * 1971 GMC * ~Uent &election or pre-MA SERA Tl _ PEUGEOT or leave nome i no. late cont!. Mwot Selll $UGO/best full pwr., AM/FM •terec, ,.10 T BIRD fully equipped 1• tee to apprec. 548·5417. *· air & canopy, $3400. * price re·~aluaUon models. ---------Eves: (114) 673-4093 N.B. offer. 6tU338 • 979-1838. 1 10 paa:s. $2000 83().()817 gold· ofii owner ftm· ; '69 YAMAHA. DIRT BIKE 646'8773 DEMO $ALE .68 MASERATI vory clean, NEW PEUGEOT '10 Bwck LeSab"' 4 dr !IT. '65 CHEVY 2 dr .,ag, claaslc '69 l"ORD F'AIRLANE 1950 ~i637. • -: '* ~27lfjr * '69 EL CAJ\f!NO, &uto trans. 8tf~~~~~~tg~tl~~G 64g~ ~nd. Must sell. Call DEALER coin .J". rl~cedco40 ":'e 1~ ~s160M>rk, 6178322 'or ~:~uro, ale, pri pty, '56 T BIRD. Sell or trade P/S, radio. heater. vinyl 'Ml!IOO ~ for tn?Ck: TRIUMPH '64 -650 cc. Bon-top, 301 V-8. glaas camper ROY CARVER, Inc:. MAZDA , Co pl Sal Servi ~1826 1964 O><vy Impala Wagon '69 . LTD Sta .. Wag. full -64M498 ~ ~sti°fir:~l~~.bullt ~Jj 21 .~~:1ffil _d~";s~ or Costa ~~s:· l ith St.54()..1444 -------· ~-OOm~:ac11~~ d°~lay, ce. ·~,v~k,~~~Oa<14ro~~~e~ ~~. =·~. :£5TmXlnt \0~.4~-=-~s.Jfoo:o"d., '63 THUNDERBIRD I BONDA 1913, 750 n!Odel. On-'6"1 rnEVY PU 10 ton Good CREVIER BMW *Mazda '73 Rota ry * PACIFIC MOTOR rond, Lo "11· fle'1·ofler over •67 CHEVY Bel Alt New '16 GALAXIE 500, Runa good eond, $350, 962-00 · ly 100 ml'•· bnmac. Best hody & nms good. Stick, $66 MONTH IM"ORTS 12500-494-16:16 paint good t1ie91 • gn!at. Orig owner. VEGA Ofter. &!S-C2f4 283, u'falr. 962.-0589 'Sales e Ser\'ir.Cl e Leaidng lG !\IONTitS OPEN LEASE-Ii 1007 CAR for 1he Y~ar. ' ~26 646-8Ql4 '6ll BSA 650cc lJl69 INTERNATIONAL II 208 IV. t" .. $.A. SJ.~3"71 Will accept trade-Ins P ~UGEOT /SUBARU J:;S-4-00 ~kin& r.IOO ,, Clean l960 CHEVY. floor stlclt,l.,-ll&~~FO~RD~~C~t~ry!:!..-=-Sq-,-=-s1a-.·1:'7::2-::VE::Gn:":-_-:-4 -,-peed-::-tr-an-~I • r Flreblr4;-Setambl..-r ion p1t·kur•. air 1·o n d . USED BMW'S CALL MR. FRY S4U666 15!>7 W. Lincoln Ave., & lhtlT)'! ~7287 good tranflpoTratlon $175. Wgn. ale & tun pwr. X1nt mlllsion, radio, heater. (SI»- , 6'>-7005 Wnltco llll gate. 962-3294. Hunt ne· • ch Antthelm 533-8220 'GS SKYJMK cu<tom 2 dr. ,ro,u11 nit G om. cond. $500. 546-88'12 E!VJ . '18'5, WANTED UtUity TraO<t' ·73 F250 Fon! Rm1<or .... :~~ ~e~~~~l~OU PE • Ill a ' TIME FOR •1'._"""11. ••. nh r"""' oond. '12 VEGA GT, alr,1 rad, mo MAVERICK.-nu P'lot, THEODORE .. I· ' I I -lS".;;...~.·,·tf"-.... "''"' -·.-f-·•·r2002·-iAZD utl:K_CASH_ I Pri Ptv, ~-84'-3166 AM/FM, mags. 602 Ave oY clutch, ti...., brko., ·-· ROBINS FORD ~~ nit 4. t•---"'57-BUIC K -:_ -Eslr<Jl•~al!l)', S!l, alt ~. excel <0nd. 11095. 846-')4()(). 2000 llarbot' Blvd., -n HONDA 500 K2. lo ml, '69 DATSUN PU. n .. 1. Xlot '69 l600 'THROUGH A ' M6-346l '68 CHE . lmpal• (Just, '64 FORD Galoxle 500 Xt.. Im i-·1.---> l<lnt oood. b<tlt olf..,._ rond. Nu """· S!IOO. Calf '6 67 8 2 2000 002 CA COUPE CLASSIFIED AD ll•ve "''"'thin• y<»t wont to Sport Cpe, atconil etc. Top 2 tit hrdtp St>Cil'hCoupe, The !o•le" tlraw ·tn tho Wcsl. .:,_ __ _:::67J.:::::;:"7!'::::·::.' __.._ _ _:63:;:1:;.--06=74::,. ---,,---_:__::__:::::_::::_.;::_:::::,:~~-...!.!17,!:33:!_1.,!;Be~•~ch:!!,_!B!,!:L __ SlU6Jtl soll! aa .. Hted ads do it cont!. $8!0. 8'6-<1192. $125 Bltrg•ln cail 641/1992. • •• a Dally /'11ot Cla .. lfle ' -,-' • • ~-' I -•-rl ·--> • \ • • • ' -- San Cle1nen1e Today's Final ' Capistrano E.DITION • N.Y. Stoeks • •' VOL. 66, NO, 319, 4 ·SECTIONS, 42 PAGES County Orange CoUnty residents may have to cross picket lines to shop at (ood markets next week. Predictions of a strike by four food industry unions varied today. But the Food Employers Council (FEC ) was preparing for the possibility. (See related story. page 32.) '~We're getting ready,'' Robert Voight of the FEC said. "Everybody is cranking up their strike gear." The FEC is negotiating with the Girl 1,.jured ' Braces California Food and Drug Council, which represents the teamsters, butchers, operating engineers and machinists wllons. . The labor negotiators represent about is,ooo employes from Bakersfield to San Diego. About 3, 725 Of them work in Orange County. · v The month-old talks hit a stalemate again Wednesday wheQ_ labor officials rejected a federal meCUator's request . . ' ac Clemente Holds ' Alien Motorist San Clemente police and sheriff's deputies \Yedncsday arrested an illegal alien living in San Clemente on charges of felony hit-run driving stemming from an auto-bicycle crash earlier in the day. An 8-yeer~ld San Clemente girl suf- fered moderate injuries in the 5 p.m. mis.hap at El Camino Real and El Portal. Several hoUN later police arrested. Rlmlro Ceja Ramirez, 30, of 103 La Rona, as the alleged driver of the car which struck the young cyclist. Officers said they based the aJTest on a llceme number provided by the injured girPs brother. Sindee Hayes, 8, 121 E . Escalones, suffered a cu\ knee , abrasion! and loose leelh in the collision occurring at a crosswalk of the busy intersection. Her elder brother, Brian Wayne Hayes, 14, was riding with the youngster through the intersection when a car slammed into the gCrL Police said the driver of the car stopped, emerged and checked bis auto for damage. Then it was reported the driver went over to the injured girl for a few moments to see how badly hurt she was. Then the man entered the car and drove away. Sheriff's deputies located Ramirez' car at the Intersection of . Del Obispo Road and Coast Highway in Dana Point a few hours later. The driver was returned to San Clemente where police· used a Border Patrol interpreter to help obtain a state- ment. Garbage Disposals Taken by Tltleves Brand new garbage disposals and other home accessories with a total value of moce than $1,500 were stolen Wed- ne,,day night from a San Juan Capistrano coostruction site, Orange County Sher- ill's olJicers said. Deputies said burglars broke the lock on a garage at 27573 Starrise Lane, to gain access to materials that were scheduled for installation i n con- dominiums being built by Leadership Housihg Systems in. the area: Orange C::oast • Weather The Orange Coast will be fair through Saturday ,.;th • ....,e coast· al low clouds Friday morning , ac- cording to the weather service. Highs in th<! upper 60s to low ?Os. Lows tonight upper 409 to low 50s. I NSlllll 1'0 DA \' Rapes and as1a.ults on coeds have become a ma.jor problem on the A.nation's coUege cam- pJes. olle storu, • Page 8. 9Mf... Jt .1.1111 Llnetn U L.M. Mrf t4 Meritt -.Jl Cl lffetftl• 11 M!lhlal 1'11.1'111 Jl CltPllltll 11-U NenONI Ntwl 4 cemltt tt OrflllN c""'" 11 Crtt...,. It l"TA • ot-111 NtHCH 11 J,.m ,,.,,,, . 141~11 l'Ht '°7 llKll M11'1:ftt U·H lllMftlllWMAf IHI T ... •ltltll • 1'1-t !1•11 TIIN"'1 a. JI Ptr ... •tctn1 11 Woatlltr t "' """"" J1 Wl!Mfl't' " ... U..t1 Me!-fa~ • W9rH Nawa. 4' Reports quoted Ramirez as saying he . was gripped with fear of deportation after the collision and knew that he faced forced . return to Mexico if he stayed at the scene. Officers said Ramirez would be pros.- ecuted conventionally in the ca5ey rather lhan being. remanded to immigration authorities. .., The injured youngster WPS taken by fire department ambulance to San Clemente General Hospital for treatment . of the hurts, lllen released IA> her parents. Nixon S"ee ks Out Truth --Hinshaiv President Nixon has every appearance or going · to any length to restore con-' fidence in his administration, Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) said after meeting with him today in the White House. 1'He had a glin t in his eye that said he was going to get at the truth," said Hinshaw. "I had the feeling he knows the fight is not goin·g well, but he still feels he's the fight man to be President." Hinshaw was among 78 Republican congressmen invited to the White House for a no ·-holds -barred question-and- answer session with Nixon. The President said he is considering a Personal appearance before Congress COX DOESN"T WAN T JOB BACK. Story, Pogo 4 -and even one before the Ervin com- mittee -to reveal his knowledge or such issues as Watergate, ITI', his pe.rsonaJ finances· and the firing of Archibald Cox. Hinshaw said. "Hf showed no irritation, although there were .some embarrassing questions -particularly a b o u t resignation," Hinshaw said. Reversing dramatically his previous strategy of only occasional public ap- pearances and statements during the crisis caused by the scandal , the Presl· dent ha'd a rush schedule tOday includlhg four major appearance -three with congressmen. . In addition, he will make three speeches outside Washington in a period of four to five days beginning this weekend -all iq_the South. _ ... The President also was described as planning -more televised news con- rereoces and submitting to more in- ter\'iews by botti broadcasters and (See mNSHAW, Page %) Cleme~fe'-Doctor's.11 , Aparbnent Burgled - .?urglars entered the apartment of a San Clemente ph)'lic!an Wednesday, making off with more than $400 In valuables while the man w11 making his rounds at a local hospl!al. Dr. Al ex A. Farkas called , police shorlly before midnight to report Ille loss M liquor, appliances, bedding snd c;ash from his apartment at Sii Avtnlda t---l=='--=====--===t-eanasl . • ) • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T.HURSDA Y, NOVEMBER 15; 1973 • TEN ~eNTS for Strike of Food Markets that they extend the Sunday strike deadline. W. J. Usery, director of the Federal Mediation Service, asked the union leaders early Wednesday to come to Washington , D.C. Monday to continue negotiations. His request was turned down by about 200 un1on officials at ari emergency meeting, at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. I A labo'r repres~atative said today that . -' moving about 160 persons essential to the negotiations to \Vashington, D.C. \vould be expa..nsive, would be a drain on the energy. shortage and would in- terrupt the progress of negotiations. Union officials said today they want Usery to come to Los Angeles. "His help Is urgently needed." Negotiations are continuing· while Usery detennines his response to the union plea. Union of8cials differed in their eSUmatlons of the possibility of a walkout after Sunday. Meat Cutters lJnion vice president Jack Boyd said there 's a 95 percent chance. but Teamsters negotiator Jerry Vercruse cut that down to five percent, but added he C<1uld be wrong. If a strike is called, it is expected to last more than n month. But the. FEC's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about not getting food. ·~we plan to keep all. stores in opera· . • lion during the strike," he said. Labor unions originally said the strike may be against one wholesaler only, but Voight sai d a strike ag~inst one is a strike against all. "We're a unified industry ,'' he said, promising a lockout of workers by the FEC. FEC preparations for a strike include: stockpiling the back rooms of sto res with food : getting extra orders in now ; (See STRIKE, Page Z) • • • • ' 0 ron· OID ': • •. ' O.ltr l'Utt l"Mflt ... LM 1'1r11t ' Airlines :funding 'Legal' By L. PETER KRIEG Of ltM b.itr l"ll•t S'9ff Sources close to Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President Ni.Ion's personal attorney, confirmed today that he. did solicit $100,000 from American Airlines but "he had no idea they would • make illegal contributions." "He did not ask for corporate funds or for cash and the point iJ absolutely clear on that/' the sources .1aij1. They did, however, desCfibe how Kalmbach approached American Airlines presidenf George A. Spater in the fall of 1971. Spater bad testified on the contribution before the Senate Watergate committee today. "Kalmbach met twice with Spater and the seC<lnd time he asked the executives of the airlines to take on a ·$100,000 .. goat "Spatcr agreed but said· ,he figured the best theY could probably do was between $70,000 cr.d $75,000," the sources said. FROM THE HALLS OF MONTE:WMA TO THE SHORES OF CAMP PENDLETON'S RED BEACH "He told them whatever t h. e y cou1d do would be appreciated." #Mrines Stormed Ashora 1500 St rong Thi1 Morn ing To C1pture Mythic1I Country, Test Wu pons ~~~~~~·~~~~~ ' . Official Sees Power Prod11ced .~ ·' .• ! j . From Reactors SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Chairman . Dixy Lee Ray of the Atomic Energy Commission forecasts commercial elee- tric power production by breeder nuclear reactors before 1990. ' Marines Storm Ashore In P eridl'3ton Exercise ' . A· wave of 1,500 Marines stormed ashore at Camp Pendletob early today to "save" a tiny oCcupied island of "J\1argaritas", and despite a few stuck jeeps and a couple landing craft, their mission appeared to be a roaring sue· cess. fashion from Navy ships offshore and the ll.t~ Marine Amphibious" Unit used the vessels and helicopters to reach land. Spater today testified that American Airlines did contribute $75,000 but $55,000 of· it wa's corporate funds written off on a phony invoice for used airplane! from a Lebanese company. Kalmbach never saw Spater after that. second meeting , thi:= sources said, adding that when he was later infonned the. contributions were in cash and part of them were C<1rp9rate funds he wu totally surprised. The sources said Kalmbach bad no way of knowing the contributions would be illegal. "Spater is the former general Counsel for American Airlines and donations of corporate runru; are clearly illegal and Spat er knew it," the sources said. Sbe addressed the Atomic Industrial Forum Wednesday after signing a $90 million contract for the nuclear portion of the nation's first demonstration The mock war, the first major exercise involving regular Marines in months, is dubbed "Operation Bell Bango". breeder reactor electric power plant at It is calculared to give the leathernecks Oak Ridge, 1'enn. :--.practice at knocking out enemy gun A few of the bulky vessels failed to make it off t h e beach on their own power and a-pair of jeeps operating on· the soft sand found the going a bit rough as well. ~lock bombardments of shore locatiooS also were slaged by Navy vessels and some units were ordered to seek out an enemy missile boat base which had been "threatening international sea lanes." "It never occurred to him to say that they can't be corporate fundS because everfbody knows that." Sources said that Kalmbach had ex- pected that the many executives with the big ,airline would all chip in to get the donation up. The contract for the Clinch River emplacements on hilltops above the "JJ a large enough number of tbem paid $3,000 each, you'd get up there," (See KALMBACH, Poge %) • breeder reactor plant was awarded to Westinihous:e Electric Corp. as the lead contractor for · the project involving an over-all government -. industry in- vestment of $700 million. As the new generation of ·nuclear power generators. a, breeder reactor will produce . more nuclear fuel than It uses while it generates electricily. They will be 30 times more efficient than present nuclear reactors in utilizing uranium fuel , she said. Tbey will assure a fuel supply lasting for centuries, said Miss Ray. "The commission is totally committed to follow through on the breeder pro- gram1" she said. "We can _project w~th a very high degree of confidence that liquid metal fut breeder reacton with short doubling times -less than 10 years -can be ready for lnlt1>duclion into the power grid on a commercial basis by the m1d·1980s," llhe. said. . A breeder reactor's doubling time is !hit required for It to produce new nuclear fuel to continue its own power 1eneratioo and IA> fuel lllOlher reador generatA>r of equal capedty, Miss Ray said lllat the present genera- Uon or flstilon generators, however, must he spe<oded up to belp met! th<! ru1tlon's energy crisis. I Addressing the forum's llllllual con· fercnce banquet, Miss Ray read a message from President Nixon stredlng Lhe emergency need to complete nuclear po we liiiti iffiaer "CODStrifctton. reservation's Red Beach. The strand usually serves as the private haunt of President Nixon on his trips to th.e South Coast. But this morning it bec~me a bat· tleground with landing craft and Marines swar1nlng over the sands. The craft were launched in traditional County Transit O'f ficial,s See -Crisis Easi ng * * . * American Airline s Chief Says l\.almbacl1 Solicited WASHfNGTON (UPI) -The former that a req~st for $100,000 by campaign chief . execu tive officer of Ameri can finance chairman . Mau ct S t a n s Airlines said today .. that ar contribution bordered on extortion. by the corporation to President Nixon's The money. he said, came from a re-election campaign w.as sollciled by subsidiary company's Swiss bank fC- By JACK BROBACK Nixon's personal attorney. Herbert W. count because ''It doesn't ex c i le Of-. o.it; '""" sr.tf Kalmbach of Newport Beach. anybody's curiosity." Orange County .:transit District of· Geo rge A. Spater, testifying before c:uu Oil Corp. Vice President Claude ficlal s were optimJstic but still worried the . Senate Watergate Commitce. said C. \Vi ld Jr .. said he res~ to a today about a diesel fuel shortage which KalU'\bach asked for a contribution of request from fund raiser Nunn for could halt all bUs operation in December. $100,000 In the fall of 1971 and the " SIOO.CNXl and forwarded the from "The sltU1llon ls easing som ewhat," airline eventuall y donated $75,000, In· Gul f subsidiaries in the Bahamas. said district General ?.tanager Gordon eluding $55.000 Jn corporate funds. \\'ild also testified that Gull contributed "Pete'1 Fielding. '\Thtre is great con· Spater said the '55,000 was N1ised $15,000 to the campaign for Rep. WllbuJ!. fusion over the fuel situation, Out we through a ·phony invoice to a Lebanese ~iills ([)..Ark. I, and •10.000 to the carn- have hopes lhat our efforts will result fi rm for the sale of used Aircraft. The paign of Sen . llCnry ~f. Jackson (D. In a special allocation for December." cash was paid to the Nixon Re-election \Ya~.). · The district currently has only two ' Committee in Washington, he said . But they denied that Stans or any thirds of its needs in diesel fuel on Executives of two oil companies also oiher Nixon ca1npalgn offlctaJ ever of- ha~ or promised. . :iccused of Illegal contributions told the fered favors In return lor the illicit t The December allocation so far is only committee \Yednesday the money wus funds . ' 1.122:1 iallons. less thnn one fourth of donated rrom lhelr rtrrns• foreign bank "He didn't make any comment on what .J.he district needs. b recent ruling account:s . 1rherc lhP-nwney should come from, of the Office ol. Petroleum AllocaUon Ashland 0 11 Co. Chairman Orin T bu< in my mind It could oaly coma SO.-BUS&!;l'op Ii M~lns Ola hOWlltergate-Commltt~ ~.fRblNES, Pop l\o-----f • • ~I • . . ' • ' l'"U .. -.1 lhursdy, Nowtmbtr 15, 1')1,, I ~llr Plltt St•H ~ Storming Ashore . -' - College Transfers Get Okay • Tru!tees of the Coast Community College District Monday night accepted the transfer of 400 residents from the Saddleback Community College District into their district. The .fOO residents live in Harbor View Homes tract or Newport Beach, an area whJcb for eight years was bisected by the boundary line of the two college districts. Vice Chancellor Corellan Thompson in· formed board members that the 80-acre transfer carries an assessed valuation ol 12.9 milllon. It was a paying P"'P' ositJon for the Coast Community college District, he assured them. The transfer plan, already accepted by the Saddleback board, now goes to the County Jloard of Education for decision. A public hearing for the transfer ts scheduled for 2 p.m. Dec. 6. u the county panel agrees, the transfer would become legal in July, 1971. ' For residents In the affected area the boundary change means that they. will be able to attend classes at nearby Orange Coast College and tt satellite .evening cimpus at Corona del Mar High SchoOI l!!stead of Saddleback College in Mission Viejo. <9Bought Land' Nixon Laru!s ReriJ Estat,e Buy WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon sa1a today jle proved ha faltb In "America's real estate" by Nlltni ht.. stocks and bonds in 1968Ao finance the purchase of property in California and Flor- ida. Addressing 4,000 members of the National Association of Real· tors, Nixon made an oblique reference to his acquisition of. homes at San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. Some presidential critics have questioned Nixon's financing metbnds to buy the properties. Nixon said in the speech that he sold his securities five years ago to in"vest in real' estate. He fiaid the securities transactions were aimed al eliminating any questions that he would benefit would he assume the presidency in January, 1969. • , "I bought a house in California, my mother's house In Cali· fornia, and I bought two pieces of properly In Florida -one of which I sold," .Nixon said. "That's what l own. I believe in America. I believe in ~merlca's real estate." • S<;in Diego LJ,tility Sets Electric ·Cu-tback Plans • San Diego Gas and Electric Company Translated into / homeowner's terms, announced today it will "take immediate that would mean a resident's share would steps" to inform its South Coast amount to switching off two 75-watt customers on methods of reducing their bulbs over a l~hour period. consumption· of electrical energy. ZjUau said the utility presently bas The promise Ip fully inform patrons enough fuel on cont?act to meet .tts Massive landing craft stood ollshore at Camp Pen-. dleton this morning as 1,500 Marines landed in sim· ulated battle conditions that involved capturing an enemy country. The exercise, that also gave Ma· .. rines a chance to test weapons, will contilfue through the 'weekend. Tooay's landing was gener· ·ally successful with exception of a few vehicles that became stuck. of methods of eesing the energy crunch needs lhroogh 1976. came a day after the Calllornla Public By then the 'utility plans to · start Utilities Commission (PUC) ordered all up its ovm Jow-su1ph\D' refinery tn utilities to persuade rustomers to cut northern San Diego County to assure From Pagel KALMBACH. Frotn Page I STRIKE .•. • arranging deliveries with independent lrucking companies; recruiting non·union personnel willing to wol'k under strike oonditions; alerting management to get ready to work overtime and asking the retail clerks union not to honor the picket lines. The clerks union, although not involved in the negotiations. has been represented by the Food and Drug council an'd is being requested by the other union.s to support their effort. Although union officials said today there bas been progress in the talks, Voight said Wednesday that there are too many i~ues "left on the table" oh which there has been little agreement. _ They include union control over pro- duction standards and work a~ignments, ~ual opportunity for women and a guaranleed elgtif-l!bur work day. Fro~P!ife I BUSES •.. has complicated the issue by allowing transit districts to draw on December 'suppli es to make up for November shortages. This obviously doesn't help the situa· tion ..-for the coming months, Fielding observed. " Fiefding said today: "Our hurried negotiations with officials in San Fran· cisco, Sacramento and Washington' D.C. seem to be bearing fruit. We are hopeful, , but not at all certain if we will get enough fuel f o r December and later months." The situation is especially critical for the bus lines serving Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, and UC Irvine from Santa Ana, Fielding said. The South Coast Transit Company which operates those lines under contract for the district needs 33,000 gallons of fuel : a month , ibut has a December allocation ·of only about 8.000 gallons. "Tha t would be a 75 percent· reduction and for all practical purposes it means a shutdown of service," the manager warned. The South Coast Transit .Company has its own allocation based on the amount used in the same month last year. DW'ing the past year service to the coast cities has increased three to four times, Fielding explained making the 8,000 gallon allocation inadequate. DAILY PILOT Tiit Ortftge Coe1t OAIL Y PILO'f, wllfl llWfltcfl IJ combll'ltO tl\t ,...,.Prtu, 11 lll.lbll"*I &r lh• 0!'111111 Coe11 Pubtlstllng co...-11v, k-1» r1i. fdllion1 ,,. Jlllbll1hllll, MOO!d1v lhrougll Frid•~. lor Cost• M..-, NtwllOM auct" Hunlk>;lon Bt.c:h/l'OV..llln Vtlley, 1..tgun1 BH(h, ll'VIM/S-l!'Dl(ll; n S111 Cltfrltr>tt/ St11 J11111 Ctplatr.no. A 111'911 l'tglorwil· eo:llOcm It •lllll'llll St!IITTll'f'a w ~n. TM prlnclMI pUtlliflllng !>ltnl r. I I Ult Wtal 81t Sir .. !, Coi.11 Mt11, Ctlllllmlti: t»)li, Robtrl N, Weed Prnlcltllf tftf PUCIH1lltr J1ck JI. Curley o Viet Preaillent -tftf G«!trtl Mllitttr Tho11111 Ke1vil Edi!O!' Thom11 A. MurpJtl11• Mtntgi"'il Edl!O!' Ch1rltt H. Looi Jticlit~ P. Nill AuhltM Mtntllln; Edlton. s. c1 ... ,. OMc. JO$ N•rth El C1mi110 Jte,I, f267l °""' °""" '°'" M_, a w .. 1 ,.., s~"' Nf'tllll*' IHcll: nlJ NtwpOrt "°"'ltvtrt Hl.lnlinl""" lead!: lntJ -&ttCll '°""".,. LltVnt ... di; 122 ForMI A't'etlut Ttl ...... C114J '4Z-4JJI a.MM A'-tl .. '41·1671 S. ca. .. 11a An D1pa:1w1f1t • • down. fuel ror the rest of the decade . . -- South Coast City Council Hopefuls Can .File Dec. 6 the sources said. SDG and E plans to mail detailed 1'l 'm sure that the customers we serve "Or if you get one or t~o directors suggestions in the next billing .and in will recognize that just because we have to go into it together, that's how you the meantime has ordered fie1d represen· enough fuel, it is no reason to waste get to it," they said. "' tatives to call on the Jargest Consumers it," Zitlau said . Kalmbach and Spater also 0 laugbed Besides urging cutbacks by i t s about the fact that one of Kalmbach's lg the syste m ·-industries and customers, Zitlau said the utility already major clients ls United Airlines, one busihe$men. has done the same in its own "house." of American's chief competitors. The field aides plan to Implement Last spring the !inn ended all "Spater knew that and Kalmbach programs of reducing power coo-decorative lighting at its buildings. 8""Ured him there would be DO conruct.'' sumption. -And last week a 50 m.p.h. speed The political season - a month early this year because of a change in election dates -will open officially in two South C~t cities .Dec. 6. Potential candidates interested in three seats on councils of both San C1emente and San Juan Capistrano can obtain their nomination papers starting on that day . ~ They will have until Dec. '!1 to return the completed documents. Election Day is March 5. City clerks in both cities today em· phas~ed that beside3 advancing the Sleepy Boy, 4, Misses Bus Stop, Prompts Search Four • year • old Sean Ricks is a sleepyhead and because of that Santa Ana police and about 150 volunteer searchers spent an anxious five hours Wednesday looking for him. The search began when Sean's mother, Mrs. Linda Ricks of. 362? Crystal Lane in Soutlrwest salita Ana, called police to report that the little boy had not returned home from nursery school. "It's dark now and· I can't imagine what happened to him," she told officers. The intensive search of t h e neighborhood and the school bus route began at 8 p.m. The school bus driver, Mrs. Lillian Shoen, joined in the hunt. It was she who solved the problem . Sean's teacher at Newhope School tolsf Mrs. Shoen that the little boy has a habit of falling 'asleep in class. The bus driver hurried to the school district's bus yard in nearby Garden Grove. There she found Sean sound asleep on the rear seat of the bus. Officers sa id he didn't really wake up Wltil they took him home. From Page I HINSHAW. • • newspaper reporters. The breakfast session with the second group of House GOP members preceded a speech to a realtors convention - Nixon's first such appearance in nearly two months. It_ was to be followed by lunch with a· group of Democratic con· gressmen and an eai'ly evening session with the last one-third of the GOP senators. At the realtors convention, Nixon told an audience of 4,000, "l Was elected "lo 'do a job. I'm not going to walk away until I get that job done." . Speaking at the convention of the Na· tional Association of Realtors at the Sheraton-Park Hotet, Nixon was in· terrupted six times for applause during a 3~minute appearance. . Mostly, he reviewE!d his 1973 ac. cornplishrnents in both the domestic and foreign fields.i and turned to Watergate only toward the end. Some mistakes w~made by "oveneatous people" in · ball during '> the 1972 presidential camp gn, he said. "Mistakes ·Were made, mistakeJ I would n~t haxe approved of, rnjslakes I would not have tolerated but mistakes for which I must accept responsibility." sched~e by 8 month, the new state .the sources said. • Although the utility bas often insisted limit was imposed on alt company cars laws also have affected changes in the its stores of oil for genera ting plants -1,900 of them. Unnecessary lighting nuts and bolts of the filing procedure. . are in better shape than mqst other was banned and thermostats reset in Smoke-filled Casino utilities, the move to conserve energy the buildings. · 'lbe new nomination papers require is still critical because other California "If We don't all pull together, roore the signature of no less than 20, nor LAS VEGAS (AP) _ A smlu but entities might need to share some of drastic measures will have to be con- more than 30 registered voters in the smoky fire forced gamblers from the the fuel. sidered by the PUC and ot h e r affected city. casino at the Sahara Hotel here Wed· Utility President Walter Zitlau said authorities. Previously the maximum bad been nesday, hotel officials said. A spokesman he has set a goal for December calling "When the power goes off it means 10 signatures. said the blaze started in a construction for the saving of 67 million kilowatt great suffering for tflousands of our No voter may sign more than one area at the north side of the .building. hours throughout the system. fellow citizens," Zitlau said. petition -thus they are restricted to , -----------.::-------'---------------------- the ollldal endorsement of a single candidate. Neither city bas a !IUng fee. San Juan two weeks ago ttied ~ enact a '25 fee for each candidate, but the measure failed to win the required votes. Among other leglil requirements are an affidavit by the circulator of the nominatiqg petition as well as a ~ statemen{ by tbe candidate .. that he ac- cepts the csndldacy. II the carididate wishes, he also may fi1e a 20().word statement of quallfica· tions. Alter the 5 p.m. Dec. 'l1 deadline for filing, the candidates launch their campaigns. At city balls, the work goes on as well . Among the procedures will be the legal· advertising .of the election and . listing of each candidate; the designation of polling places and election officers and the windup of voter registration. The last day for voter registration will be Feb. 3. Absentee ballots can be cast from Feb. 4 to Feb. 26. San Clemente traditionally brings forth the largest number of candidates for council positions. Two years ago, 16 aspirants sought election to two council positions. That set an all-time record. Positions In San Clemente up for filling in the March election are those held by C1ifton Myers, Dr. Wade Lower and Thomas O'Keefe. None of those officials has yet announced whether he will seek reelection. In Sa)l Juan, the pools held by Jam .. Thorpe, Josh Gammell and Edward Chermak are to be filled in the spring elections. .,. The same is true in San Juan. No one has yet declai'ed himself a candidate. Frotn Page I AIRLINES • • • from corporate funds because it would be impractical to raise It any other way," Atkins said. Ashland and Gull pleaded guilty Tues- day and were fined $5,000 each for the illegaJ Nixon contribution$'. The two officers were fined $1,000 each. Atkins said he w a s Clllled by Stans, who suggested the $100,000 figure as an appropriate contribution. .istans never left _you much option about making a contribution, did he?" Chairman Sam J. Ervin asked . -• 11No, I never felt I bad an option," At~ins replied. "Borders on extortion ~·t it?" Ervin asked. "Yes sir," Atkins said. WINE HA.D TllA.T EXTRA. TA.NG ' GENOA, Italy (UPI) -Bruno . ~ Wolida -. . . lY 'VWivWWier-CSale FOR ONLY $1.00 MORE We will make a· nqrmal re· placement instaliation of any standard undercounter dish- washer. YES , ONLY $1. MORE! The~ stainless steel dishwasher. • -· ·• • ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL·GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING• RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST-GUARANTEE AVAILABLE • ACT NOWlll . SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 ·······••••11-11- : NOBODY SELLS : ,. WASTEKING ·• ,. DISHWASHERS • , ,.•FOR LESS THAN• ,. DUNLAPS' " t .. **********·**• ..... _Why Waste King Universal is 5 ways better ~IJVl.U,llJJJlll!ll lllJIJI. ~ 20 . l¥FAR I STAINLESS ~ STEEL ~ ~ GUARANTEE ~ 'it V.\~IJJ.l.W.Ul.l.W.\WJJ.tW.'fl fi 5 :§ > -< ~;vi;' .... R ~ ~ .~-nn: s EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTIOll SAFE, SANITARY DRYlllS RUGGtll BASKETS, RAllDOM LOADING ~ ~'"'" ~ l.,,.,""""''"'"''""~ §.parts guarantee 00"1 ~ the molor, pump,:: ?'tim er. wa ste~ ·g dlstrlbUtlon system.:.: ; heater 11nd pushbut-:.: ::.· tons on 800 and 900.:: ; series dishwashers. ~ > ,, Zf',tl'ff!'!~Mlt!1m\'(ffiYffil~ 90DAYSCASH . ' - T1lsp•s• 4tZ'44JO ~t, lrl:t. °'•"" C.11 l"ubllll>lflt .. , 1 • -~ ntw1 •lo!'lft., rr11111r•t••· _, .. ... ......... '-" '*""' He declared. "As far as the President of the Uniied States is concetned, he has not violated his trust and he is not going to violate It." Marocco was pouring wine at hmch in a restauranf when a ak·lnch lizard plopped from the boltlo into his glass. . WITH APPROVED CRE.DIT "'" ...... ~ = ...... "" ~ , .... --,.., -Coll• """ .... ,..,,...,, ~"""" -. , ~ a.U -.. lfllf/ .. fnafl u.u _._,.., llllllfary• ''-"-WM "*91111'11. Pollee .said Wodnelday be ....,t to a hospital to have hll 1tomach pumped for fear the chlmelon might have contaminated the wine. -. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788 He Is to appear Satµrday at the annual convention or the AJ&oclaled Preu Managing Editors AMociatlon in Orlan· do, and Sunday at Mercer Law School lc--~~=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::=::_~1~n ~M~acon~:- 11 ' ' ' . -• . . • • , \ ' I, • A AM• ....... ••• ·-""' Am< A""' A .. A"" Amo Amie A Andi A .... A-Anwl AoK AO<O A AP L A ... ... Arc•! .. , "' ""' A"• .. ,1. o\rk 8i ..., .... 1 • • .. A>m A Aom Arm• ·~ c Arvin ASA • • ••• . "' .. _ " Afl( .. uc ... 1m:=- All•• AT.O .,, .,, .,~ ·-~ Avco A• Avlt AvMf A .,~ .. ..., ..1 .. , ""'1 'I l& " .. '" l . ,J " ll ~ U N ". "T ". " u ~ " t: (; NI "w '"' "' Em m I 1 Thursday{s Closing Pr~es J . . I 1 • .... • ThursdJJ', Novtmbtr 15, iq13 SC OAILV PILOT NEW , YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • • -Year's High-Lows Appear Eve ry Saturday . Stocks Fn1ally Black Finish • Ill • • I • .. . : I • ·I " . I ' •' r-. rtf DAILY PILOT Thursday, Novtmbtr 15, 1973 f'emlltr Circus by Bil Keene ID \ ·''Daddy's feelin' a lot better, Mr. Horton, but you . can't talk to him right now 'cause he's ploying golf." , L. M . Boyd .. Tomato Ranlied Top Vegetable Nevermin<Lthat ancient argument as to \VhetQcr a to- 1 mato is a vegetable, a fruit or a berry. Point here is that J the pollsters asked cilizens nationwide to name their fav-l ori tc veegtable. And the tomato ranked No. I with more votes than all other candidates combined. Onions ranked 1 No. 2. Odd. isn't it? Corn on !be cob, blackcyed peas and ' ' hashbrown potatoes certainly should have come out ahead ' 1 of those dumb lomaloes. I 'I ... ,) .. . . it's liveliness in time, too. Old steel is brittle. Ne w steel is resilient . That's why the' OOy1 at the Berlin Technical University contend a ne\v car is twice as safe in a smashup as is an old car. Student Hal Holloway of Texas Tech at Lubbock is reported by re- liable witnesses to have taken one un- interrupted shower bath that lasted seven days ont; hour. MARTINI Q. "How do you mix a Cannibal Martini?" A. You .must refer to old Fred Allen·s recipe. Pre- scribed he:~ "Take a third vermouth. fwo lh.irds gtn, and into this drop a small girl named Olive." Name of that fox terrid" with ear cocked to the rec- ord-player in that famous Victor advertisement of yes- teryear. I'm now told , was Nipper. Nor do many souls realize the No. I definition of the \\'Ord "extinct" is "no longer burning." CHARACTER Ignatius Trebitsch was born a Hungarian Je\Y in 1879. Al age 18, he leaped off to Germany where he "'as bap- tised a Lutheran. Then he sailed to England to become a Quaker. There, also, he was elected to · Parliament, but a forgery conviction sent bim to prison. After release. he appeared on the scene as an Anglican curate for awhile, served some time also as a German spy, and wound up as a Presbyterian missionary to Canada. Wait, there's more. He returned lo Germany after World War I. hop- ing to boost the rqilitarists back to power. They didn't need him. So he fled to the Far East, took his vows as a Bud· dhist monk, traveled worldwide to win converts. and fi. nally retired to a Shanghai monastery. He died in 1943. Unique character, what? Statistically, the '¥\'idow "ilo reweds soon is far more likely to enjoy a happy second marriage than is the widow u•ho waits many years before she reweds, co ntend the matrimonial experts. Sir. it has been proven re~atedly that orange peels make excellent fish bait, remember that. Address 111ail to L. 1\1. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beach 92660. Huge Settlement Reached for Girl • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A $1.3 million settlement has been reached in a damage suit on behaJf of a 13-year~ld girl, who suffered permanent and massive brain damage while being treated for a bicy- cle accident.· Kimbe rly Gerringer was 7 and riding tandem on a bike • - • • Soc1.p Bar R-elUflfi!cl \\•hen it collided with a car ori Sept. 28, 1968. She was lreatcd by Dr. Gordon Runiiels at Arcade General Hospital for a "V"-shaped gash on her leg. THE GIRL'S attorney said she went into convulsions [or nearly a half-hour during the treatment, cau'sing b r a i n damage so severe t h e youngster had to learn to walk and talk all over again . The atto01ey said the girl will .. never be normal. ,,, The settlement was an. noun~ed this week during opening courtroom arguments in the suit. .. ., .. ' \ NASHVILLE . Tenn . (UPI l -An Ohio woman relurned a small bar of ·soap to a Nashville motel with a letter of apalogy saying she had no in- tention of stealtng it. · "Enclosed you will find this bar of Ji08p," wrote ~lrs. Ida Valentine of Ironton, "I found it in my purse. I put it in my purse by mistake. Please forgi ve me." II cost the 54-year-old widow ~ cenlS postage to return Jhe soap. It cost the Atatador Motor loo less than two cents. Agreeing to pay various sums from $550.0IJI) to $20.000 were Pharmaceutical Inc.· Bischoff'~urgical H o u s e . Inc.; Walter Kidde .and Co.· Arcade Hospital: Runnets an( l\\'O former partners'. ... THE...ElRMS. manufacture .. .or dislribnted drugs or equ1~ ment used to treat the younqster. Rtfnnels, · former chief r f staff at . .\rcade, Is now work- ing at Camarillo St ate Hospital, his attorneys said. The doctor sat in t h e courtroom di.Iring arguments and cried quieiiy. · ~ ... • . . . . . .. • • . .. .. . - Kerm Rima • Brightens · Your Day ~ith Big, Big · S.avings! Double Swag Lamp Fixtures • Exquisite design for any room! • 2 mult i-faceted crystal cylinders • Gold-tone accents and ~ardware • Everything you need to hang them 88 CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY, NOV. 22nd .. ' • SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE NOV. 21st __ ,,~·· ~~~C;::ne"1 ,, J.; ,,, HandsdomeS aag t: · , · c ylin er VI · del111\1n9 • f'op1,1h1r <111e . b\elld' • Aillotli1e s1vl1MJ ,,. with onl' dttol ! \ . _. • 1,tlvdes ho1dwo1• i t I \\. . . ~Mi,; . t 0 88 ·,,, . .t ' 249 ·[f'-· ·fi'~.,·:: ·'::'~~=::-11r~-~~~ __:__ -· ,,. 1.-~~--"4'-Tree Pruner " Wiss ,, Steel ~ and Saw Set --< Grass Shears • • (o..;plttily os~embled ond ieody • u .. ri119 •1c11l1 aclio11 <uh Gravity Type Gate Latch • Yowr gote will lo1k, 1wtry1im1! • • Simple lo vse lot<h dtes dose elli1i111lly. every time • l:osy lo movnl Clear-All Drain Cleaner • 11111 slrt119lh l11111vle • Und .. 1d11in.J,111ts.1J11p1 • U11 '" <11s,01ls, ltpli< tonks 88 01. • -I I • 10 11stl I ~ •w111 lht tovghtst griss • R1,1d·itsistonl b 0 ti • Hard1111tl 1vlltrw site/ • 6 _88 = ' • I ,11 -'~ . ---= <')}Or::::H} .. \ ' WIDE ·. Mo10111c ·;. . ..· ~ ~~-~ 17"x2S" Siie Bulletin Board • Unfinishtd w1od lromts • l i1 '"d ••sr 11 ho11g .• .ld1m _,_ i !tr kitthtn or <hild's room <-.! • Add y1vr 1wn pe1,0llCll tov<hts! - 129 Peerless Batti Faucet --- • (111111111 mMtl with 1iflil1 k_. • GIHmin1 lvdt1 with,.,_., 1ss1mbly lndvtltd • losy to i1"t1ll, o<Ot1111tl<1l t1ol blades. 111 Peerless K,itchen Faucet • Ouolily·mode, du1oble fov1tl 11t • • l 11i1olfy eosy It in,tol\ • Copp11 tubing for lottger Iii• 1411 -Imperial ~II Dishmaster • Su1p1s, woshts •itd rinses • We1ks.,. dishes,,.,, 1n!l ,.ns • S1f1ind1onit1ry, llt1111 1in\1 3 .311 .. - I I ' -·- 1f4" Variable Speed Drill • All.pvrpos1, vtilty drill • A 1p11il l11 ''''' it b! • Mollel .-7104 1299 Loma 32-Gallon Trash Can -. ·• • DwHI• ,le11ic c1n • ltcbi111 lld ,, ••• , 11111 -_,.., ...... "' "''"" iltf-- . ..... Adom• COi Tl MESA . , • 399 IANTA ANA • I ·1 I I I ' t 7 ·- v to Ill in F p s of u ol 0 cl K p of r • a d 0 t • Lagu11a Ileaeh • ED ITI ON • Today's F ina l N.Y . Stock.Iii • VOL 66, NO. 31 9, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ' ' I . . .. . County· Brac~s Orange COunty residents may bave to cross picket lines lo shop at food n1arkets next week. PredlcUons of a strike by four food ind as try uftioos varled tt>day. But the Food Employers Council (FEC) was preparing for the possibility. (See related story, Page 32.) "We're getting ready,'' Robert Voighr of the f'.EC said. "Everybody is cranking up their strike gear." 'Ibe FEC Is negotiating with the l?lifornia Food and Drug Council, which 'represents the teamsters, butchers, o~aling ;igineers and maf inists wuons. .. ·The labor negotiators represent about 28,000 employes from Bakersfield to San Diego. About 3,725 of them work ·m Orange County. The month-Old talks hit a stalemate again Wednesday when labor offiC:ials rejected a federal mediator's request ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 TEN CENTS l for Strike of Food . Marl{ets ;1 th at they extend the Sunday strike deadline. 'Ji, J. Usery, director of the Federal lifediation SerYice, asked the .union leaders early Wednesday lo come lo Washington, O.C. Monday to continue ne~otiations. .. His request was turned doWn by about 2ob union officials at an e1nergency meeting at the Biltmore 1'1otel in Los Angeles. A labor representative said today that .• moving aoout 160 persom essential to the. negotiations to \Vashington, D.C. would be expensive, would be a drain · on the energy shortage and would in- terrupt the progr_ess of negotiations. Union officials safd today tbeY want U!lery to come to Los Angeles. "His hel p is urgently· needed." Negotiations are continuing while Usery detennines his response to the union plea. Union officials differed in their eslimation:r of the possibility of .,,.. a walkout after Sunday. Meat Cutters Union vice president Jack Boyd said there's a 95 percent chance. but Teamsters negotiator Jerry Vercruse cut that down to five percent , but added he could be wrong. If a strike is called, ii is expected to last more than <1 month. But the FEC's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about not getting food . "We plan to k'Ccp all stot'es in opera- " I I tion duringJhe strike," he said. 1 Labor unions originally said the strike may be against one \Yhole.saler only, but Voight said a stri ke agairist one . is a strike-against all. l "We're a unified industry," he said, promising a lockout of workers by the FEC. I FEC·preparations for a strike include: \ stockpiling the back rooms of stores with food : getting extra orders in oow; ' (See STRIKE1 Page Z) • 1 ' ,J ' eac Ul KalmlHlclt Case Illegal Airline Request ·Denied · .. By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. o.llY ..... ''"' Sources close to Herbert W. Kalmbach of. Newport Beach, Pre:1ident Nixon's personal attorney, confirmed today that he did solicit $100.000 from American Airlines but "he had no idea they would make illegal o:xttributioru." "He did not ask for corporate runds or for cash and the point is abeolulely clear on that," the sources said. They did, however. describe how Kalmbach appn>1ched American Airlines p,..idenl Geol'JO A. Spater in the fall of IWI. &paler hid lelWled .., lhe conlriliutlari ,bofore the Senat. Waterpte committee today. 1 uKabnhlch met twice with Spater and the second time he aslled the executives of the airlines to take on a $100,000 goal. "Spater agreed but said he figured the best they could probably do was between $70,900 snd $75,CKX>," the sources said. "He !old them whatever they could do would be appreciated." Spater today testified that .\Jn<rican Airlines did contribute $75,000 but $55,000 of ~it was corporate funds written off on a phony invoice for used airplanes from a Lebanese company. Kalmbach never saw Spater after that second meeting, the 90UJ'CeS said, adding that when be was later Informed the cootributiOD.'I were in cash and part of them were corporate funds he was totally surprised. The sources said Kalmbach bad no way of knowing the contributions would be Illegal. "Spater is the former general collll.!el for American Airlines and donations of corporate funds are clearly lilegaI and Spater knew it," the sources Sjlid. Courtesy Ticket Ends for Laguna Radar Speeders The free ride is over -Jlterally · - for speedi"g motorists stopped by the Laguna Beach Police Department's radar un1t. ·In the first llO minutes of his shift today, Patrolman A. J. Deluca had cited six motorists for speeding on Laguna canyon Road. For the past monlh, Deluca bas been issuing courtesy notices to speeders in- stead of tick.ta. ·-The caurleS]I> _ ... ,,...., port of a public relallom pll<:b. by the police department to acquaint local residents wlthCU>e new· railar-unlt. With the computerized unit moonled on hls squad car, Dduca can clock the speeds of oars ahead of him and behind him, 'regardlt11 of the direction the vehicles are traveling. Laguna canyon Road, said Deluca, "Ni• been notorlouo for speeding. Speeders ml&ht take note of the fact that a 10 mlles over the 15 mile per hour opeed limit between El Toro Road ~ Fo""t Avenue brings a 114 ticket; II miles over. a 111 ticket; 15 miles oVer, a tu Ucket, and ·20 miles ·over, a 138 ticket. Other Art 'Colony atreets Deluc:a will .,. watching lncla P~ Avenue, Temple WJJs Drive Monterey Drive, Cypresa Drive, Bluebird C.nyoa Drive aM C,oast Hlgllway. "It never ~occurred to him to say that they can't be corporate funds because everybody knows that." Sources said that Kalmbach had ex· pected that the many executives with' the big airline wouki all chip in to (See KALMBACH, Page !) Suit Delays Main Beach Decisions ' • The Laguna Beach City Counc 1 delayed any formal decisions on Main Beach Park matters Wednesday, pending outcome of a Superior Court hearing on the Gabriels' law suit Dec. 6. The court met in special session at city ball and among questions held in abeyance were awarding of construction bids. demolition of structures on the parldands, the final landscape design of the ..park, bond financing, and com- pletion' date of the. park. Laguna resident John Gabriels filed suit against the project, naming the city, the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission, and the State Co~rvation Commission. Gabriels alleges the commissions did not properly weikh the city's en- vironme}ltal impact. statement. The suit was granted a Superior Court hearing at which time the merits of the case will be argued. The superior court decisions may be appealed by either party. The city is working under a tight deadline for the start of construction first scheduled for Dec. 5. • A start then would allow completion by June 21. Each day of delay pushes finish of the park into the summer seesoo city officials have said. Summer construction has been all but ruled out by the council. The Urgency of the construction start was pointed out by Mayor Roy Holln as one of several persons wantlng lo put a Christ.mas .tree lot on the park land approached the council .• Fred Strafford, owner of the Union 7$ service station at Broadway and Coast Highway, said he was willing to pay (See ,DELAY, Page 21 Hare Krishnas . <Justed By Polic e • Memben of the Hare Krishna sect have taken their chanting and bell ringing to lhe streets near LagW"la Beach High Sc:hool to the dbmay of school officials. Wednesday marked the third day this week that the robed group appeared near the Park Avenue campus. Shortly aft<r the gr<ll\p arrived oo did Laguna Beach PoUce Sgt Norman l\abcock, who reminded members of lhe sect that loitering near 1 publi9 school facility ls Illegal. They rehictantly took t)lflr leave, Sgt. Babcock said. 1 School olfi<lals, he added .. coniplllined lhat the chanting was disrupting work in the hig~ school administration omce and the school district central o!Oco Ju~t across the street. ' I O.ltr P'llft PMN, lor LM l"lrfll ,1'ROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA TO THE SHORES OF CAMP PENDLETON'S RED BEACH I Morl-Slannod Ashore 1500 Strong This Mcirn i"9 To Capture Mythical Country, THI WHpon1 Lagunan Booked . -.. In $3,500 Sale of Heroin An alleged sale of $3,500 worth of heroin to local and st.ate narcotics agents resulted in the arrest early today of a 28-year old Laguna Beach man. Raymundo Heras Lopez was arrested just after midnight at his h9me, 539-A Catalina Street and later booked on suspicion of offering heroin for sale. The sale involved about one ounce of heroin. Detective Tony Smith said local detec- tives and state Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement agents said the case had been lQ!Cler investigStion for ·a month. L<ipei c\U'M!Uy is in police custody under $2S,OOO bail. He will be arraigned on the Charges within the next couple of days in South Orange County Municipal Court, Smith said. Marines Storm Ashore In . Pendleton Exetcise A wave of 1,500 Marines stormed ~shore at ·~p Pendleton early today to "save" a tiny occupied , island of "Margaritas," and despite' a few stuck jeeps and ~ couple landing c·raft, their mission appeared to be ·a roaring suc- cess. The mock war, the first major exercise Jnvolving regular Marines in months, is dubbed "Operation Bell Bango." It is calculated to give the leathernecks practice at knocking out enemy gun emp1acpments on hilltops above the reservation's Red Beach. The strand usually serves as the private haunt of President Nixon on , his trips to the South Coast. But this morning it became a bat· tlegt:ound with landing craft and Marines swarming over the sands. ' The crart were laUnched in tfaditiona1 fashion from NaVy ships offshore and the 11th ¥arine Amphibious Unit used th~ vessels and helicopters to reach land. A few of the bulky vessels failed to make it off t h e beach on their own pawer and a pair or jeeps operating on the soft sand rowx1 the going a bit rough as wen. Mock bombardments of shore locations also were sl.lged by Navy vessels and some units were ordered to seek out an enemy missile boat base which had been "thre8tening international sea lanes." GOP Strong S~ys Flou~noy ~ • By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tM o.llY l"lltt '"" C8lifornia Controller H o u st o n some remarb about the large field of Democrats seeking to r e p l a c e Governor Reagan in the 1976r election. The controller said he does not think Reagan Will seek a third term as governor even· though some powerful Republicans and severa1 I e a d l n g Democratic candidates think Reagan will run again. ·-_ • ~ City Curbs 0 11 · Buil~ing ,; Under Fire An attorney for 011e Arch Beach Heights developer approached t h e Laguna Beach City CoWJcil Wednesday night with a not ve ry veiled threat of legal action . unless the city lifts building restrictions there. ' Philip A. Putnam of Westminster representing SouttYCoast Pacific Corp. told the city council that the Arch Beach Heights community was subdivided in 1911 and "that certainly gives a con- siderable afJ)OIJ.tlt or time to do aome planning." . Tne council refus!!d, to amend 1he ur_gency building· ordinance despite the thre"ats. Dick '1arfield, president of South Coast Pacific CorporCJtion, said today suit would be . filed "just as soon aa I have the · attorney prepare the paperwork." At issue was an urgency ordinance enacted by the council tWo months 1ago which placed strict controls on building in the heights. ·' The ordinance, good for only four months. contains a provision limiting the building ,square footage to 50 percent of the lot size. On the..25 too} by 100 foot lots prevalent in the heights, homes built in compliance with the ordinance are lintited to 1,250 square feet. One developer called them "cracker boxes." Putman threatened the city · with · a suit alleging inverse condemnation, the taking of property rights without com· pensation, and a writ ordering the city to lift the interim urgency 'building ordinance. · Garfield acknowledged that his suit 1 probably would not even be scheduled by· the courts until the remaining two months on the ordinance have expired. "Knowing the city or Laguna Beach as I do, I'm sure this thing will be ·extended ror a.\other nine monlhs," Garfield said. He said the primary issue was the side of the size of the house permitted under the interim ordinance. · Planning director Wayne ~1oody said or the 1,700 Jots in the heights, area, seme oL10 were built upon and another 454 lots were vacant. The remainder are not CWTently classified a s - "buildable".by the city. The planning commission bas initiated. a specific plan for the area, and Moody told the council he reels it is half finished. Moody said he felt it would t not be necessary to extend the urgency (See THREAT, Page %) Orange <:out Weather Flournoy, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination next year, said today Jn Laguna Nfguel that the Republican Party Is not going to roll over and play-dead because of W ashingtoo scandal!. "They have people like Jerry Brown who has been running for governor since he was born, "and 'Joe Allot!) who could ijnance his C8JD_J>al~ out of contingency fund!, ")'loumoy srua.-' -.:'J've taJked to him penonally~ about._ this and I am certain he has no plans io run agaln.1 He knows the people of California won't elect a m·an who win quit In midterm to run for presi· dent, 1' Flournoy said. The Orange C.oast will be fair through Saturday with some coast- al k>w cloud!! Friday ll)oming, ac-~cording fo Ole weather service. lliglls lli lhe upper 60s to low 70s. Lows tonight upper 40s to low Sos. "Democrats are saying this is the year they will take over the state but I don't believe that the Republican Party will let II happen," Flournoy said. . "I don't believe It Is Impossible for RepubU<m11 to be elecled in California just btcame of a prGblem S,000 mllee away," he added. upeople want a co~ tlnuadon of strong I~ bl · this state aad il Ibey trtdlllonllly 'y 0 t e d porlJ lines RepubUcan poUti<IBns would i-by a landslide.I' • Flournoy was ~ lo the Im· balance of pony rogtstrations I n C.Ulombl in favor or the Qemocrats. Flournoy. speaking befDre a mel!tlng of the Laguna Nlgf!e\, Republican Woman'• Club ln Monarch Bay, made • .. . Flournoy said the P.:rospecl oi running against either Brown, Alioto or Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti doesn't lrigllten him. About Moretti, ·Flournoy said, "He's running aroun~ a11 over the Place making speeches and with this energy crisis he's liable to run out of gas somewhere." Flournoy corrimented alter the meeting on the · Oeld ot Republl<ans who wlll be · competing with him for a place on the election ticket. He said he expects sttong .competition lrom state Attorney General Evelle Younger. Lt. Gov. FA ' Relne<ke and former lieutenant governor Ro b er t Finch. "l certainly don't expect this to be an easy race," Flournoy said. .11 _ ' He also sakl Reagan's political future in the state of canrorrua was seriously damaged by the rauure of Propositloo l, the governor's tax and spending limitation· law which was detested at the polls Nov. 6. During bis talk,· floumoy bore down heavily on the current energy crisis and said California rieeds to begin looking seriously at programs to solve future and current problems c:all!ed by short ' suppUes of fuel Mil& electric power. "Jf we don't do something now with (See FLOURNOY. Page I) I NSllll·: '1'011 \\' Rapes and assaults on cotd$ have become a ma;or problem on the 11ation's college cam. puses. See story, Page 8. r I ' I ----) , • l.l.o.IL v P1l o1 LB Thursday, NCMtlltler 15, 1,73 .. " •nought Land' ~ -..... . • ... 4 -• .. • • • :.. : • .. ·. . . . •• . . .. . ....... ·!~ . . . . Nixon Lauds Real Estate Buy ·! • W ,\SlllNGTON (UPI) -Plesldeat Nllon lllA:I today ht prohd hla filth in "America'• rtal Nitto" by lllllng 1111 1t0<ks and boada in 1968 to finance the purchase or property la California and Pio .. ..... -....... ::· .. .-. .· -. Jd8. . I • ' • Addressing 4,000 members of Iha NatloDJI AiloclaUon of lltal. :~: • tors, Nixon made an oblique reference to bls acquisition of home• at San Clemente and Key Bis~ayne, Fla .• Some presidential critics have ~uestloned _Nixon's financing methods t~ buy the propertlea. Nixon said m Ute speech that he sold hli iBCUriUH llvo years ago to invest in real estate. ije said the securities transactions were aimed at eliminating any questions that ha would benefit would • he aSBume the presidency in January, 1969. :~ , -"I bought a house In California, my mother's house In Call· fornla, and I bought two oieces of property in Florida -one of which I sold," Nixon 1ald. nThat's what I own. I believe ln America. I believe in Amerlca's real estate." .. U .N. Assailed . . . . • ... ~~By Ex-milit~nt , . · .• A one-time black militant who now embraces the John Birch Society a~ailed the United Nations today in Newport Beach 11 the "bl1egst collection of Uart, thieves, murderers and thue ever a• sembled ln one place." And speaking to a breakfast gathering of Harbor area realtors, Charlie Smith urged the United States to withch:aw from the world organizati&n "before we find ourselves completely at their mercy." "The communU:ta behind the United Nations proless to want peace," Smith 'charged , "but they don't mean the same . County-Transit Officitib See Crisis Easing By JACK BROBACK Of tllt Olltr .,I .. lllH Oranee County Transit Dialrict of- ficials were optlmlstlc but stUI worried today about a d.ie!el fuel shortage which could ha1t all bus operation In December. "The situation Is easing 90me'9'hat," said diltr:lct General Manager Gordon "Ptte" Fielding. "There is great con· ft.11lon over the fuel 11ltuation, but we have hopes that 4llf efforts will result in a special allocation for December." • Tne dlstrlct currently has only two thirds or its needs in diesel fuel on band or prom.lied. 'l1le December allocation llO far is onJy T,9%2 gallons, leas than one fourth of what the dislrlct nMds. A recent ruling ol the Office of Petroleum Allocation has complicated the Issue by allowing transit districts to draw on December supplies to make up for November 11hort.agas. ThJs obviously d~n't help the sltua· tion tor the coming months, Fielding obe:erved. Fielding sald today : "Our hurried negotiations with officials in Ssn Fran- cisco, Sacramento and Washington D.C. seem to be bearing fruit. We are Mpetul, but not at all certain if we will get enough fuel f o r December and later months." The situation is especially critical for the bus tines serving Laguna Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, and UC Irvine from Santa Ana, Fielding said. The South Coast Transit Company which operates tho!e lines under contract for the district needs 33,000 gallons of fuel a month , but has a Dece mber allocation of only about 8,000 gallons. ''That would be a 75 percent reduction and for all pracijfal purposes It means a shutdown of service," the manager warned. The South Coast Tran.sit Company has its oWn allocation based on the amount wed In the same month last year. During the past year service to the coast cities has Increased three to four times, Fielding explained making the 8,000 gallon. allocation inadequate. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT • . . I ' \ thing when they say peace that You and I mean . "We think we hive peace When we ..... 'l n,i.11nc anybocly'" siiill!I'-,ex· plained. "But peace to the U.N. la when everyone in t h e world is so weak that they don't have the power to resist the QKrununists," he said. Smith Claimed there was an organized conspiracy in the United States to lull the Ame'rican people into a •Lief that tbe U.N. II noceuary to lnauni ra~. "And to convince people o that," . Smith 11ld, "our leaden have been creatin& wan around the world ever since tho end of World War II. "By keeping tbe,. hot apoll hot, they can then prey on our dulre tor puce by getting uo to commit lllll'IOivu more . and mtx'e deeply to tho U.N.'' Smith said. Smith 11ld that Pltoldent Nixon II juat 11 comni1tted to creation ol a totalitarian world aovunment a 1 -. Democratic Pr.,ldentlll e a n d I d a t e Geor1e McGovern, "except Nixon 1ot elected and la putUn1 the plan Into practice." Smitb llid the United Slatea In .. m. mltllnJ 1t1eU to the United Natlona chemr had fiven up the autonomy ol ill m!lllary f.....,, ma1t1n1 the U.S. Joint Chlefl ol Slaff a "auboldary ann ol lho lle<rtlartat General of the U.N." The flamboyant apeeker w11 liven an mthu1\asttc ovation by memben of the Newport Harbor-Colla M ... Board of Roaltors at their weekly bruldal\ meet1111 at the Balboa Bay Club. . Smltb llid he made tbe 1ran1ltion from the !ell-wing block movemeot to the Btn:h llociety "becau11 I am aq hQn01t liberal." He explained that he felt obll1ated to "find out about~ the movement I wu oPllOlin.I, but tn 1tudylnc the John Birch 'Society, I found myMU oonvartod to It." Throughout hi• 4'-mlnuto BPO«h, Smith referred to various documents which he said "prove that the orJ&inal CommwtiJt plan for dlurmament bl• ~n adoptod by tbe United Slalao and is now being promoted by the United States." He said all of this country's top diplomat>, includlnfl Adlai Slevenaon, Henry Klllinaer. and Richard Nlion, belong to an exclusive Inside group heavily influenced by Commun Is t ideology. .~ ,,., . ~ From Page I FLOURNOY .• ,,. an eye to the future we will end up with crash programs that win leave environmental concerns in the wake " he said. ' Among other things Flournoy said it is urgent for the 1tate to so~e the problem of nuclear power plant siting and get new atomic facUitie1 built to handle increasing electrical needs. "We've got to get oCf the dime on nuclear plant siting because the energy source of lhe future has jo be nuclear and has to go 10mewhere," he aald. Flournoy said the state haJ to develop a systematic approach to conservina: electricity and planning new source• to meet fut.ure demands. From PQfe.I THREAT .. • • ordinance. Eight pe..,.ns Including Garfield and Putnam addressed the council. Charles Brady, president of the Arch . , Beec.h fl.eiflhlll AuoclaUon said he wu ~ in favor of the ordinance and was In favor of the planning commission apeciJlc plan approach to · the problems of the area. 1 In tho end, the oounell, In' M•)'<l< Roy Holm's wonla, atp'Md that pendlnf the r«eipt of the 1peclne i>la1 b)' the planning OOmmissioo, "there la DO better solution than 10 proceed wltb tbe Interim urgency ordJnance." The oouncll did consider allowln1 two reaidences approved by Iha boml ol adjuatmont prtor to the lnlUatioll ol the ordlnanct, but the vote did not receive the required four arnrmauve votes. Mayor Roy · Holm, COuncllwoman Phyllis SWeea•y and Councilmen Cul E. Johnlon v.olad yea: Vice Mayor Petar Ostrander voted no . and OpuncUllWI Charlton Boyd wu 1bopnt. • • t ' Hinshaw: NiXonNow ··Confident President Ni'""' has rvery appear...- ol aotni to any 11ngt1t to rlftore con- fidence ln his admlnlstration1 Rep . Andrew J. Hinshaw (!\-Newport Beach) 11ld alter meeting witb him lodiy In lhe White Rouse. ' "II• had a glint In hll eye that 111d he wu ping to get at UM truth," sold ll!nshaw. "! had Ute feeling he knows tbe fight b not . aolng well, but he still ftels he's the right man to • be Preildent." Hinshaw wu atnOlli 71 Rtpubllcan COllJrOISlllen Invited to 1h1 Wblto HOUlt tor a no • holdt • blrred qlllltJon.and. answer Miiion wltb Nlxon. The l'nsldent said ht II COOliderlng a persooal appearance bofore O>ncr- COX POISN'T WANT JOB BACK. Stvry, P•1t 4 ' WINE 'RA.D THAT EXTRA T..4.NG GENOA, !tab' (UP!l --Man>cCo wu pOurtJll wine at lunch In a ...i.111111t wtien a 11.t·lncb UUnl plopped -the botUe Into hll lius . ·Pollet aid Wedltoday he went lo a llolllltal It ltave bll llomacb pumped Iv htr the cbamelon mlgtit have contaminated the wine. Coast College District OKs New Students Trlllteae ol the Coal\ O>mmunity Colltge District Mo!idoY nigh! ICCOpted the Ir ans fer of 400 1 real den II from the s.ddiebaclt Community Colle1e Dlllrlct lr1to their district. '!'be 400 reald1n!I live In Harbor View Hornet tract of Newport Beach, aq area which for eight years w11 bisected . by -and even one before the Ervin com-the boundary line of the two college mittee -to reveal bl8 knowledge of diatrlct1. such lissues as W,atergate, ITI', his Vice·ChanCellor Corellan 'Thompson ln- persooal finances and the firing of formed board members that the SO"acre Archibald Cox, Hinshaw •aid. • transfer carries ·an assessed valuation "He showed no Irritation, although of 12.t mlllioo. II was a [Jty!ng prop. there were 10me embarrualn& quutions osition for thefaoast CommUnity c.ollq:e -particularly about reslpaUon,11 Dlstrict, ht assured them .. Hlnshaw 1atd. The transfer plan, already ~·cepted ReveniJlg dramatically his provloul b)' tho Saddleback boani, now 1oes to atralegy ol only occasional public ap. the County Board of F.ducatl.on for pearances and statements 9uring the decision. A public hearing for the crisis caused by the scandal( the Presi· transfer is scheduled for ~ p.m. Dec. dent had a rush schedule today including 6. four major appearance -. tbreo with If the county panel agrees, the transfer congressmen. would become legal in July, 1974:. In addition, he will make three For residents in the affected area 1peeche1 oulalde Wlllhincton In a period tho boundary cbanl• muna .that they of lour to fivo daya betlnnlni lhll wUI bt able ti!'tllend c.iUld' at nearhy · weekend -all In tbt 6outb. Onnlt Oout CO!le1e and It 11telllte Tha Pruklent allo wu delCrlbed u evtnfnt1 campua at Corona dal Mar High planolnc more televlaod .. .,. con· School lnatead of Saddieback College fmnct1 and 1ubmlltln1 to more In· in Mlaioll Viejo. tal'viOWI by both brci\dcuten and ' ' newspaper reporten. '!'be brediut -Ion wl1h tht HC"1nd !l10llP ol llouH GOP mem&ara pnceded a apeach to 1 rtalton oonvantlon - Nixon'• lira! audt ippearanee In nearly two montht. It wu to bt followed by lwtelt with a lfOllP ol Domocratlc eon- sr111men and an u,rly IYaninl llllion with tht last oat-Ullrd of the GOP ....... 2 Smpecl8 Released NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -· Two bro&Mn: were relUIOd today after more than HVen houri of pollco queatlolllng ht ......Uon with the -Und olaylngs of G r a n d Ole Owv and "Hee H1w" comedian Dtvid "strln"'"'1" Alttman and his wife. OlllotJi allo QUOltimed and · nlealed two other ra!altvea and a strl friend. .. Alrllne F•nds Kalmbach Asked • For -$100,000 ' ' -. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The former chief executive olficer of American Airlines said todly !bat a ""'1irlhutton by the corporation to President Nixon's re-election campaign was aollclted by Nixon's personal attorney, Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, Geor1t A. Spater, teotdylng before Iha Senate Walargate Oommilao, said Kalmbach asked £or a contribution of ltl!0,000 In tbe fall ·of 1971 and the airline eventually donated m,ooo, m. eluding 156,000 In corporate tunds. Spolar llid the 155,000 wu raised throulh a phony Invoice to a Lebaneoe firm for the sale' of used aircraft. The cash was paid to the Nixon Re-elecUon Committee In Washington, he aald . Eie<:ullws of two on companies also accused of lllegal contlibuUons told the committee Wednesday the money was donated Irom tbelr firm>' foreign 'bank accounts. Aoltland 0 t I Co. Cllalrman O.ln T. Atkins told the Watergate Committee that a request for $100,000 by campaign finance chairman Maurice S t a n s bordered on extortion. The money, he said, came from a fUbsldlary company'• ilwlu bank ac- count because 1'it doesn't ex c i t-t anybodyts curiotlty.11 Senior Citizens' Meeti_!gs. Slated The Laguna Beach RecreBtlon Department's senior citizens' club, the Lagunaites, is now holding weekly meetings from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursdays at the relocated offlcu of lhe recreation department, 570 Glenneyre Street, Laguria Beach. · Activities of the club are cen\ered around tabla aames. Mott members brina a sack lunch and coffee ii pro- vkled. The new recreation department office is located in the old main post office building, .oow leased by the city u City Han Sotith. ' F'Urlher Information II available by ca!Uni 4M'IUI, ext. 231. Cull Oil Corp. Vice Prtsldent Claude C. Wtld Jr., said he responc!ecl ID a request from !Und raiser Lee Nunn for II00,000 and forwarded the lllOl\OY !rom Gull suboldiarles In the Bahamas . Wild ,.i.o lOIUlled that Gull contributed 111,ooq to the cam[Jtl1111 tor !lop. Wtlbur MUu (!).Ark.), and 110,000 to the cam· paign of Sen . Henry M. Jacluon (0. Wash.). But they denied that Stan1 or any other Nixon campaign olflclal ever of· fered favors ln return for. the UUclt funds. ''He didn't mate any comment on where lhe money should come from, but in rny mind Jt could only come from corporate funds becau~ )t would be lmfe'acllcal to raise It any other way," Aikin• 1ald. Ashland and Gull pleaded gullly Tuea· day and were lined $5,000 each for the illegal Nixon contributions. The two officers were floed $1,000 each. • Atkins said he wa s called by Stans who suggested the $100,000 figure aS , an appropriate contribution. - "Stana never left you much option I 8bout maklns a contribution, did be?" Chairman Sam J. Ervin asked . uNo, 1 never felt I had an option," Atkins replied. "Borders on extortion doesn't it?'' Ervin asked. "Yes sir," Atkins saJd. • f'rq111P9fle1 KALMBACH. • • get the donation ~p. · · · "If a large enough number or them paid $3,000 each, you'd get up there," the sources said. "Or if you get one or two directors to go inlet it together, that'• how you get to ll." they sakl. Kalmbach" and Spater also "laughed about the fact that one· of Kalmbach's major clients is United Airlines, one of American'• chief competitors. "Spater knew tti.t and Kalmbach a.ssured him there would be no conflict," the source11 said. At tht rtalton ""'1vt0tl011, Ntroe told an audltnce of •,ooo, "l wu 1ltcted to do a job. I'm not tolnl to walk away untll l 1et !bat job dOne.;• Spealdnl 1t the eonventlaa ol the Na- UOllll "-Iit!On ol Rtalton at tht 6heraton-Park Hole!, N!Jm wu bl- larnlpted ail< Umtl for appla-dartnc a Jtl.mlnuto appearanc:o. "°"Uy, he revtewtd bil 1m ... eompllahmenta In botb tht -and loreilO fioldl, and turned to Weterpte Wo/iday CfJWt~e~~e only toward the tnd. l!ome mlllalea were madt b J "ovenealoUI people" in h1I behalf durlnl tba 1172 pretldentlal campalp, be llid. I "Mlltakel were made, mlltabt I would not have approved of, milltlltl I would not hava tolentod but mllttk• for which I m111t accept rfllPOl\llbllity." He declared. "IJ far as the Pmddent of the United States is concerned, he · · hu not violated hll truat and ltc la • not 1oint1 to violate it." He is to appear Saturday at the annual convention of the Associated Press Managing Editors Association in Orlan- do, and SW>day at Mercer Law School In Macon. Fro1111'fl{lel STRIKE ... arranging deliveries with independent trucking companies; recruiting nm-union. personnel wlUlns to work wider strlke c:ondlllona: alert1n1 management ID 1et ready ID wtx'k overlll)MI and uldni the retail clerks union not to honor the · picket tines. The clulu Wlion, although not Involved In the negollations, has been repnaeotod by the Food and Dru11 Council and Is hein(I requested by the other unioM to 1Upport their et!orl. AltbouJlb IDllon ot!lclels said today there has been proife!s In the talks, Voight said Wednelday that there are .i tao many luues ''left on the table" m which there hu been little agreement. They include union ciontrol over pro- duction 1tandards and work aulgnments, equal opportunity for women and a guaranteed eight-hour work day.' )Veges -expected to be another major otumbllng block -have yol to bt !ully discu•ed. FEC officials say the unlOft.' want a $1 an hour raise, substantially more than the 46 cents an hour offered. r ..... r ... 1 DELAY. • • tbe city $500 for UH ol tho Benton'• parking lot u a u.e lot. Ma)'<l< Holm aald It would )le IDl- to 1-the lot .... for a abort lime becaltle 11when we're ln a poelUon to he able to go ahead, we'll want ID 10 rilht now." ~flocd wu one ol ell[ltt ,._,. who ha,. approodtod the city for tu11n1 the vacant areu on the beach fer Christmaa tree loll. It allo appean that the city'• luae with tbt J!'..Uval ol Arb bin aom- mtl'Cial aollvill• on the park a"' for other tban beach iocrtattan orltnted bullnasel. The city received 1111,ltlt thll YW' undar the l..Uval 1-. \ . J ' \ ' FOR ONLY $1.00 ·MOR£ We will make ·a normal re- plrcement installation of any 'standard undercounter dish- washer. YES, ONLY $1. MOR~! The stainless 'steel dishwasher. ,\1/1',lt ~ 1r1u l 1N 1Vf"f~ ,/\I • 1 . I ... " ~ '· -'I "'Jl..', ONLY WAITE KING UNIVl!RSAL GIVl!S YOU ~LL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING •RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE' AIJT Jl()Wlll ' SA~ ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 ................ "t". . " it NOBODY SELLS « • WASTEKING '" it DISHWASHERS « :-FOR LESS THAN« it DUNLAPS : *****"****·*'*. . .... EXCLUSNt H-ARM WASHINI ACTION SAFE. SANITARY . DIYll6 RIUlD IASKEll, RANDOM LOADlllG ' • • -t I 90DAYSCASH WITH A,PROYID · CllEDIT 1815 llEWPORT BLVD., Downtown. Gosta-Mesa-PhaAt 541·7788 ' 'I l I , \ r l I I I I I I I I I I I } ' I t ! 1 I ·7 I I I " · Sadillehaek '* " ' \ , ED ITION Y.O.L 66, NO. 319, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES . . ..... COµnty 'r • • .. • '• Qrang~ . Cou!ltY . resldents....rnay have to ~ss pjckt:t lines to shop at food markt?tS next week. ·PfediC.\iMs-.o'f a strike by four food lndUst\'y uilionS varied today. But the FO;Od EmplOyers Council (FEC) "'"as prep~ring for the P.05Sibllily. (See related stOry; Page· ~-) • . "We're getUng ready ." Robert Voigfit of the F~C said. "Everytlody is cranking up thejr.~1ke gear:" · The F:EC.::: is • negotiating \vith the Braces California Food and Drug Council, which represents the teamsters, butchers, ope~ating engineers and machinls~ unions. ThC ·labor negotiators 1 represent about 28,000 employes from Bakersfield to San Dieg,o. About 3,725 ·of them work in Orange County. · · · The mont~ld talks hit a stalemate ag~in \Vednesday wl:M:n labor officials rejected a federal mediafor's request ' • • • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 TEN CENTS • for St.rike of Food Markets . . that they extend the Sunday strike deadline. W. J, Usery, director of the Federal l\1ediation Service, asked the wtlon leaders early Wednesday to oorne to \Vashlngton, D.C. Monday to continue negotiations, His request was turned down by about 200 union officials at an emergency meeting at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. . . A labor representative said today•that moving about 160 persons essential to the negotiations to \Vashington, D.C. "'ould be expensive, would be a drain on \he energy shortage and would in· temipt ·the progress of negotiations. Union offlClals said today · they 'want Usery to come lo Los Angeles. "Hls he.IP is urgently neetled." Negotiations are continuing while Usery determint;s his response to , the union plea. Upion official! ·differed in their estimaUons . of the possibility of a walkout after Sunday. Meat Cutters lJnion vice president Jack Boyd said there's a 95 perCent chance . but Teamsters negotiator Jerry Vercruse cut that down to five percent, but added he could be ~TOng. If a strike is ca.Ued , it ls expected to last more than a month. But the FEC's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about not getting food. "We plan to keep all stores in opera· tion during the strike." he said. l...abor unions originally said the strike may be against one wholesaler only, but Voight said a strike against one is a strike against all. "\Ve're a unified industry,". he said, promising u lockout of workers by the FEC. FEC preparations for a strike include : stockpiling the ~ck rooms of stor~ with rood: getting extra orders in now ; (See STRIKE, Page Z) ' ;_. ,. ' Kalmbach Solicited Airline Funds By L. PETER KRIEG Of Mte CMlllW, ,.lllf St.ff Sources close lO Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President fiixon 's personal attorney, cOnflnned today thal he dkl solicit $100,000 from American Airlines but "he had no klea they would make illegal contributions." "He ·did not ask-for corpOrate funds ·or for ,cash and the point is absolute)y clear on that," the SQW"ces said. They did, ·however, ..describe bow Kalmbach approached American Airlin~ presid<nt Gtorge ·A. Spa'l.r la the fall of 1971. Spater had testified on the contribution before the Senatt: Watergate ... commiitee ioday. "Kalmbach met twice with Spater and the second tlvte he asked the executives of the airlines to take on a $100,000 goal. "Spater agreed but said he figured the best they could pi'obably do was between $'70,000 nnd $15,000," the sources said. "He told 'them whatever they could do would be appreciated." • Spater today testified that American Airlines did contribute. $75,000 but $55,000 of it wu corporate funds written off on a phony invoice for used airplanes from a Lebanese company. Kalmbach never saw Spater after that seco~ meeting, the sources said, adding D•Uw ,.I ... sitff ...... California Highway Patrol sergeant and male nurse Terry Blansett asatst injured teacher Marilyn Wior, 26, of 17301 Keelson Lane, Hun· tington Beach. Accident occurred on ~n Diego Freeway this morn· ing at Laguna Canyon Road. Miss Wio r teaches at Olivewood Elemen· tiJ;y'.SchoQl, La~e Forest. A tra.ctor 'being to,wed •fell off a trailer ·and •truck her car. She was taken to.MISSlon Community Hospital. ' J:J1nehaw Meets President; : ' • ,_,,.; • ~ ' • ' I .. ' " ' . ~ .. 'All:-tJut :£ 6r Confidence' . ··i·· . . . . ' PreSnlent. l{iion• has every !ppearance ~ he was going to . get at the truth," of going 'to M,-'ength to restore ,cOn-said Hinsb.aw. ,.I bad the feeling he fidence: :id Jl'1: • adn\IDistrauoft, Rep. knows, the fight ~ not going well, but Mic:ew-1. !8nibai l R,J'l'.!Wpan Beech) I.': ;,~Id~~. het"'the right man to said after •meeting with him today in 'Hinshaw was among 711 Republican ~-Wblte. •Boost;.. • , • congri:ssm"I! Jnvile:d to the WblJe House 'lie liiCf a ghnf lri his eye that said for a no • holds • barred quesllon-and-. ! answer sesslori with Nb:on. ioint·Limd Use I The President said he is considering f, '' ... , • ....__ I• SeMion Tonight ' ' '~ . Jty!M el~ oouncllmen and . jllanning ~ •'l!!ill meet In joint ._im at r:•g;ror cootinuOci •dltciJailon of '!be aw portion of lhe cliy 1eneral " , ~ -. City ' WUll1g1 Wollett Jr. will dlalr, l!lo ....... llhicb lncllldel illaiusl- lon' 1"11 Wiiij"""' --·· Tiie )lllllie -a1 pion Tbwn Forum Ls In be bold In dty hall, CO! Camp.cs Drive. • • I a personal appearance before Congress COX DOESN'T WANT JOll BACK, Story, Pago 4 -and even one befori tbe Ervin com- ril!ttee -;to .'reveal ht. tnowledge of 9Ucb Issues a&· Watergate, m, his personal finances and !be firing of Archibald Cox; Hinshaw said. · "He. ahowed no trlttotion, although theN were aorne emba!'l'lssing quesUgns -particularly ·• h o u t resignation} Jilnsh.. lllld. llevenlng dramaUcally his prtvlous atratea of only ocouiooal jlllhllc a1> (S.. IDNSRAW, P ... 11 . ' ., • that when be was later lnfonned the contributions were in cub and part of them were Corporate hmds be was touilly surprised. The sOurces taid KaJmbach had no way of knowing ttie ~trlbutions would be illegal:-· "Spater iS the fo'hner general t'OUnSel for American Airlines and donations of corporate funds are clearly illegal and Spater knew it," the sources said. "It never occurred to him to say thar they can't be corpotate funds becaUR everybody knows that." Sources said that Kalmbach 'had ex· peeled that the many executives with the big. airline would all chip in to (See KALMBACH, Page I) Advisory Unit Need Asked . . . • t·"'ri~ ,t. ~ • '~· fu Viej «l .. Qlliz .. A -Y to poll '!hetber' or not Mission Viejo ,..;dents want a ml!lllclpal ad- •isory e<amei1 !MAC) wu in the mails to all homes today. · 'lbe questionnaire includes a five-page brochure explaining that 1 MAC is a legally recogniud local advisory body to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. MAC members -.would be elecled by the residents ·and would help determine whit they need .• and want in the way of street maintenance, parka.and recrea· lion, .~ and zontn1, Jaw e n- fOl'Ctment, and other Jocal Juues. _ The 11-question survey was written hy a study group of tile Milaloo Viejo Homeowners' AsMlciatloii and mailed courtesy 'JJf tJ;le Minion Viejo -Cor!lpany. Pat Sdtuhert, chaifnian· of the study conunit~ oo "!AC!, said the committee members hope to have the questiOllnlllres sent hack in the po11t4ge-paid envelopes provided in two 'Weeks. Results Will lie tabulated and Pfesented , to the public in two town hall meetings. The first b the homeowners' association meeting at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 27 in La Paz Intermediate School. Date for ~ secood will t>e ani:iounced later. "This questionnaire Is in no way in- lended to Imply a vote for anything, but will lndicale the extent of oommunity interest, support, or disagreement with our ~dation.s to date," the in· troduction to the survey st•ted. The lo!issloo Viejo study group has recommended that a "smaJI MAC " or a council for Mission Viejo a1one be fonned, rather than a council ,represen- (SO. SVRVfiY, r,p I) Boy, Did This Fello.w Get a ,. r I F.Roto\ THE HALLS OF ·MONTEZUMA TO THf, SHORES OF CMIP PENOLETON'S RED BEACH \..< '' ;'Ml~}Sto~·~re i'.50C! lfi'oniil'lli• Morn Int To C1Pliir• Mythical C0untry, Tast Wupon1 ' ·, -.,,......_......_.. -- Mtit:i~s Swrm Aslwre In· Pendleton Exercise Charles Dennison ~.Of Laguna Hills Succumbs at 101 . A wave of 1,500 Marines stormed ashore at Camp Pendleton early today to "save" a· tiny oCcupied island of 0 Margaritas," a n d dt;SPite a few stuck jeeps and a couple lAnding craft, their mission appeared to be a roaring suc- cess. The mock war, the first major exercise involving regular Marines in months, is dubbed "Operation Bell Bango." It is calculated to give the leathernecks practice at knocking out enemy gun emplacefu.ents 'OD hilltops above the reservation's Red -Beach. 1be strand usually serves as the private haunt of President Nixon on his trips to the South Coast. But thiJ morning it became a bat· UeJll'OU!'d with landing craft and Marines swarming over the sands. The craft were launched in traditional fashion from Navy ships offshore and Uie 11th Mari,ne Amphibious Unit used the vessels and heUcopters to reach land. ' A few of the bulky vessels failed to make it. off t h e. beach on their own power and a pair of jeeps operating on the soft sand · found the going a bit rough as wen. Mock bombardments of shore locations also were slaged by Navy vessels and some units were ordered to seek out an enemy missile boat base which had ·been "threatening international sea lanes." The battle for the "nation" is expected to last through the weekend with even- tual success predicted sometime Mon- day. During the lengthy exercise. the mettle of the Marines as well as their latest weapons will be tested, spokesmen said. The Mjlrines particularly will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest addition to their arsenal -the hand- launched Redeye antiaircraft missile. Coast District Accepts .400 .'Potential' Students Trustee& ol. the Coast Community College District , Monday night accepted the tr1111fer~.of 400. residents from the s.ddleback Community .College District h.to their district. transrer ·carries an assessed valuation of $2.9 million. It was a paying prop- osition for the Coast Community College Df!trlct, he assured them. When Charles Dennison of Lqtma Hills 1 was a boy in Minneapolis, he earned money by lighting gas street lamps at dusk each day. Tuesday, Mr. Dennison, a former Pillsbury executive. and--auorney,. died at the age of in. t A native of New York City, Mr. J>en.. nison moved to Minneapolis as a cbild · and spent most of his life there. j He had lived iif califomla seven years with his daughter, Jeannette Wright of Laguna Hills. Other Survivors include a daughter, Carol Mayfield of Tustin, six grandchildren and Hve great· grandchildren. Mr. Dennison graduated from the University of Minnesota Law School when a college degree was a rarity. ' 1 He began his long business career , with two railroad companies as an ex-~ ecutive. ~ter, he moved to' the Pillsbury ' Flour Mills. After retiring from Pillsbury, Mr. Den- nison formed a new enterprise, the .Min- nesota lµ.ibber Company. Servicd for Mr. Dennison will be at 3 p.m.~rday at Pacific View/ Chapel, Coron I Mar. Burial will be in Minneapolis . • Orange Ceu& The 400 residents live in Hirbor View Homes tract of Newport Beach, an area A tipsy telephoner from Jrvtnt gilt which for elgbt year• was bisected by lhe ride he wu trying to call foe Wed.... the hoilndary line of the two college ------dlltricta. - Wrong Number The transfer plan, already accepted by the Saddleback board, now goes to the County Board of Educatioo for decision. A 1public hearing for the transfer is scheduled for 2 p.m. Dec. 6. ,Weather The Orange €oast-will be fair through Saturday with some coast~ al low clouds Friday morning, ac- cording to the weather service. llighs In the upper 60s lo low 70s. Lows tonight upper 40s to low 50s. day, but it was in a white Colla Mesa police car, not·• Yellow oab .• He waS ~ken into custody at a telephone booth at Newport, Boulevard and Bay Street, bued on a close desert!>' lion by wi-of a 111111 who had turned in a laloe fire emergency alarm. • , lie appornly mlatook tile fire call box wllh Its ret<ltec device for a public pay ,phone and tried lo aummqn 1 ride. Euminatioo -.. ultnviolet light ol J>Ol1te beadqalrters ..... 1ec1 both hl.s hancls. we" com.d Tith a· fiuores· oenl ~me detecthm powder aprayed Jiil Ill nre call...., Since It ~ wu nol a mallcloui !alse.alann, be wu simply booked on • dntnlc charge and allowed lo IOber up In Jall. \ ' Vice Chancellor Corellari Thompson in- fonn~ board members that. the SO.acre 3 MEN ARRESTED FOR FQWL DEEDS WOODLAND (UPI) -Three men were held here on $1,500' hood on a charge of slealina and killlng three turkeys. The tur\:eys, valued at $25 each, were taken from a turkoy fann a n d sloughlered on the sceoe, sheriff's deJ>Olfes .. Id Wednesday. Fowl ruatU.,. Is elfaified as grand theft ID CalUornla. Tf tlie counfy panel agrees, the transfer would become legal in July, 1974. For resid4!nts ln the affected area the boundary change means that they wlll be able to attend classes at nearby l.,SUH·; '1'00 \ l ' Orange Coast College and it satellite Rapes and assault.3 on coedr' evening campUJ at Corona del Mrir High \ 11000 become a ma;or problem School instead of Saddleback College " on the uation's ! coltepe cam. in Mission Vie}o. pu ses. Se~ story, Page 8. .Greek Uprising Told ATHENS, Greece (AP) -Two thousand students barricaded themselves inside the Po1y:technk Institute in downtown Athens today, set up n radio transmitter and called for the overlhrow , of President George Papadopoulos and his governmeDl. ~~-~~--.....,-~~~--'' I -• .. ' • ' J • ' • • , -· • . • • • • • • • • "' ·-• ru.!J• IS Th11™141. Nove•nbtt 15, 1971 =--------• . l ~~Wlom~noy's .. ·- • ' Airli n e Ftinds . ~ \_~ppthnistic l •nought Land~ 'Nixon Lauds 'Real Est.ate Buy Kalmbach Asked WINE HA.D THAT EXTRA. TA.NG--GENOA, Italy (UPI)' -Bnmo Marocco WU pouring Wint at lunch in a restaurant wht.n a ' tilt-Inch lilaftl plopped .from the botUe )nto ,., ; · ~~~Allo11t GOP WASHING TON (UPI) -President NlxoQ sa.id today be proved his faith In "America's real estate" by seWng bis stocl<J and bon~ ln !J!jJ8 to finance the purchase of property In caJllarnla and Flor- ida. For -$100,000 bis a!aas. • POllce aid WednoldlJ be .... 1 to a hospital to haft bis stomach pumped for fear the cham<lon might have contamlnited the wine. I .. ·. " ·. ·. . • By WU.LIAM SCHREIBER 01 tM Dally PllOI Sttrt Ca\irornla Controller !·Io u st on :F'loun1ox, R t"and\date ror the Republican gubt'n1a lorial nomination next year, said today in Laguna Niguel that the Republican Party is not going to roll over and play dead because of Washington scandals. "Democrats ar'c saying this ls the year they will take over the state but I don't believe that the Republican Party will let it happen," floumoy said. Addtesslng 4,000 members of the National Association of Reil· tors, Nixon made an oblique reference to his acquisition of homes al Sa n Clemente and Key Biscayne. Fla. Some presidential critics ha'ole questioned Nixon 's financine methods to buy the properties. Nixon said In the speech that be sold his securities f!ve years apo to invest in real estate. He said the securities transactio~ were aimed at eliminating any '.juestions that he would benefit would he assume the presidency in anuary, 1969. "I bought a house in California, my mother's house in Cali· fornia, and I bought two pieces or property in Florida -one of which I sold," Nixon sa id. "That's what I own. I believe in America. I believe in An1erica's real es~ate." WASHINGTON (UPI) -The former chie f executive officer of American Airlines said today that a contribution by lhe corporation to President Nixon's re-election campaign was totlclted by Nixon's personal attorney, Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport lleach. count because ,0 lt doesn' e 1 c It e , anybody's curiosity." · .. Gull OU Corp. VIC<! President Claude C. WUd Jr., said He responded to a request from fund raiser Lee NLmD for 1100,000 and forwarded the 1DOllOl' lrom GuU suboldlarles in the Bai1amal. ' Wild 1lao testified that Gull contrlbuled $15,000 to the campaign for Rep. Wilbur Mills (0.Ark.), and lt0,000 to the cam- paign of Sen. Henry M. Jack>On (0. Wash.). ' Slee py Bo y, 4, ' Misse s Bus S19p, Prompts Search "I don't believe it is impossible for ~ jlepublicans lo be elected in California • ~t because of a problem 3,000 miles . eway," he added. "People want a con· :· tinliation of strong JeadCrship in this : atate and if they traditionally v o t e d :-: i>arty lines Republican politicians would ::-lose by a landslide." R adical-turned-Bircher • Assail s U.N. in Talk George A. Spater, testliylng before the "Senate Watergate Commltee, ·said Kalmbach asked for a contribution of $100,000 in the fall of 1971 and the airline eventually donated $75,000, in· eluding $55,000 In corporate funds. Spater srud the $55,000 was raised through a phony invoi~ to a Lebanese firm for the sale of used aircraft. The cash was paid to the Nixon Re-election Committee in Washington, he said . · Executives of two oil companies also accused of Illegal conUibuUons told the ronunittee Wednesday the money was donated from their firms' foreign bank accountsJ But they denied that Stans or any other Nixon campaign oUiclal ever of· tered favors in return for the Illicit funds . 11He didn't make any comment on \\'here the money should come from, but in my mind it could only come from corporate funds because It would be impractical to raise It any other ~ way," Atkins said. Four -yea• •· old Sean Rlcl<a Is a sleepyhead and because ol that Sotita Ana police and about 150 volunteer searcben spent, an anxioUs five hours Wedne!day looking for hlnl. The search began when Sean's' mother, Mrs . Linda Ricks of S622 Crystal Lane in Southwest Santa Ana, called police to report that the Utile boy had not returned home from nursery JChool. .. > ~ . • - • . .. Flournoy was referring to the im· balance of party registratiops in California in favor of the Democ~ts. Flournoy, speaking before a meeting of the Laguna Niguel Republican \Voman's Club in ,,_1oriarch Bay, made some remarks aOOut the large field of Democrats seeking to r e p I a c e Governor Rea gan in the 19-16 election. "They have people like Jerry Brown who has been running foi' governor since he was born, and Joe Alioto who could finiln.Ce his campaign out or contingency fund§~' Flournoy said. Flournoy said the prospect oi running against either Brown, Alioto or Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti doesn't frighten him. About Moretti, Flournoy said, "He's running around all over the place making speeches and with this energy crisis he's liable to run out of gas somewhere." Flournoy commented after the meeting on the field of Republicans who will be competing with him for a place on the election ticket. He said he expects strong competition from state Attorney General Evelle Younger, Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke and former lieutenant governor R o b e r t Finch. . 111 certainly don 't expect this to be an easy rllce ," Flournoy said. From Pn.ge J HINSHAW. • • A one-tiine bl ack milititnt v:ho now embraces the John Bi rch Society assailed the United Nations toda y in Newpo rt Beach as the "bigegst collec tion of liars, thieves, murderers and thugs ever as- sembled in one place." And speaking to a breakfast gathering of Harbo r area real tors, Charlie Smith • urged the United States to withdraw from the world organiza tion "before we find ourselves completely at their mercy." "The communists behind the United Na tions profess lo . want peace," Smith charged, "but they don't mean the same thing when they say peace that you. and I mean. "We think \Ve have peace when we From Page J STRIKE • • • arranging deliveries with independent trucking companies ; recruiting non-union personnel willing to work under strike conditions ; alerting management to get ready to work overtime and asking the retail clerks union not to honor the picket lilies. The clerks union, although not involved in the negotiations, has been represented by the Food and Drug Council and is being requested by the other unions to support their effort. pearances and statements during the Although union offi cials said today crisis caused by the scandal, the Presi-thete has been progress in the talks, dent had a rush schedule today in cluding Voight said Wednesday that there are ·four major appearance -three with too many iss ues "left on the table" . congressmen. on which there has been little agreement. They include union control over pro- ln addition , he will make three duclion standards and work assignments, speeches outside \Vashington in a period eq"Uai opportunity for \\'Omen and a or four to five days beginning this guaranteed eight-hour work day. . weekend -all in the South. \Vages -expected to be another major The President also was described as s~umbling .block -have ye t to be fully discussed. planning more televised ne\VS con-( FEC officials say the unions \\'ant ferences and submitting lo more in-' a $1 an hour raise, substantially more terviews by both broadcasters and than the 46 cents an hour offe"ed. newspaper reporters. Labor officials mad~ no conunent to- The breakfa~t session wi!h the second day on the wa~e question . . group of House GOP members preceded " · Teamster drivers currentl.Y. are p~1d . $5.57 an hour. FE'C off1c1als said, a,. s~cch. to a realtors conv~nt1on -\Varehouse wor kers get $5.28 and office Nixon s first such appearance 1n nearly \\'Orkers get $5.08. two months. It was to be followed by lwich with a group of Democratic con- gressmen and an ea rly evening sess.ion with the las t one-third of the GOP senators. At the realto rs convention, Nixon told an audience of 4.000. "I was elected to do a job. I'm not going to "''alk a\.\·ay until J get that job done." I1·vine Officials See City's Open Spaces Irvine Councilmen. planning and com- munitv services conunissioners today toumt?d the city's open spaces aS'R.~t or the general planning effort. Consultants \Vilsey and Ham scheduled the caravan tour to familiarize city off~ials with specific areas of lhc city to be considered for open space preservation. • OU.NG! COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiie Or•nv• CNll OAILY PILOT, will! whlci'I 11 COIN!lned flle Nt-PrHt. II outill"'td f)y lllC' 0••"9e Co.11 Pu11111111ng Com11tnr. s.p.. r6~e tdl!lant ert yvtoll1lltd. MoNUr 111ro1111h Frldtr. for C01t1 Mew, N1w1X1rl 11e1c11. ljllfllh'l91on lleKlllf °""lf•n v.1111r, L1guna •..o.. lrYlnt /Sadlll.twc-aM Sin Cltnwnlt/ 51., Ju.M C1pi11r.1no. " 1f»vle reeionll edition f1 llUlllhMd $111vrd1rt t<ld sunc1er1. tr. lll'IM<p,tl P\lblltlllnv p11nt ~ ii lJO wnt B•r Sr1n t, '°''' Mtw, C1h11>rt1i1. ttt1'6. Rob11I N. Weed PrQ ioUfll 1M t.u11111n1r Jet.Ir R. Cvrl1v Vice p,..lldt nl tM G~ntrll M1n1ttr Thotl\11 Ktt•il_,, Eo;ll>' ,r Tho""'' A. Mvrphin1 M1n19l119 Eo•lor Clt1rt11 H. l oot Rich 1rd P. N i ll l 1'•111tnt M1Mgir.g EOJIO•I OHk" CMll Mttl' U0 WH! llar $1•ttl I Ntwriort lttt l'I: nu New111t1 8011le~1nl L1t11M lltsdl: m For111 ,.....,..,. Kllf'llffltlOll l ff<ll: 1111s llttc~ 11ou1..,.,.a $an Cit'"""': )OJ ND<tll [! CtlOl!"O lllttl • T ......... (7141 642 .... J21 C .... lfW A'""'""" •42.·5•71 s.. c~ All hpo11-11ttr T...,..•• 4f2-44ZO CffYT'9"1, 1ftl, ¢r~llQe tout l'\llllltfllnO C:-...11r. He MW'I 1!0•11-!.. n11111r1111M, ..i11or111 ,,...".., Of 16¥trll-tl ""'"' ,....., .. ,._llCllll wi...,.t lllld61 _... 111i.t* -~·-· llttl'd Ci.ti IOll~ Mid I! Co.11 Mftl. ~lllOnllll, ~litfl tno <enlr, t f 65 111et1tl'll11 lw llMJI ll.U """"'l\'1 mlHtt rr .... 1M11o11t ·I~ ... fllOlllt!IY. ' • • • Cou 1ity Transi t Officials See Crisis Easing By JACK BROBACK Of th• D•l~r not 11111 Orange County nsit District of- ficials were optimis ic but still worried today about a diesel luel shortage which could halt all bus operation in December. "The situation is ea sing somewhat," said district General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding. "There is great con· fusion over the fu el situation, but we have hopes that our effort! will result in a special alloca tion for December." The dis tri ct currently has only two thirds of its needs in diesel fuel on hand or promised. The December allocation so far is only 7.922 gallons, Jess than one fourth of 11•hat the district needs. A recent ruling of the Office of Petroleum Allocation has complicated the issue by allowing transit districts to draw on December supplies to make up for November shortages. Thls obviously doesn't help the situa· tion for the coming months, Fielding observed. Fielding said today : "Our hurried negotiations with officials in San Fran- cisco, Sacramento and Washjngton D.C. seen1 to be bearing fruit. We are hopeful, but not at all certain if we will get enough fuel for December and later months." The situation is especially critical for the bus lines serving Laguna Beach. Ncwµort Beach, Costa Mesa, and UC Irvine from Santa Ana , Fielding sa id. The South Coast Transit Company which operates those lines under contract for the district needs 33,000 gallor\S ot fuel a month, but has a December allocation of only about 8.000 gallons. "That would be a 75 percent reduction and for all practical purposes It means a shutdown of service," the manager warned. · The South Coast Transit Company has Its own allocation based on the amount used In the same month last year. During the past ·yea r service to We coast cltH?s has increased three to four linles, Fielding explained ma king the 8.0001 gallon altOcatlon Inadequate: • aren't fighting anybody," Smith ex- plained. · "But peace to the U.N. is when everyone in t h e world Ls so weak that they don't .have the power to resi st the Communists," he said. • Smith claimed there was an organized conspiracy in ~he United States to lull the Americall' people into a· belief that Ashland O i I Co. Chairman Orin T. Atkins told the Watergate Committee that a request for $100,000 by campaign finance chairman Maurice S t a n s - bordered on extortion. The money, be said, came from a subsidiary company's Swiss bank ac-- the U.N. is necessary to insure peace. 11 E F "And to convince people of that," tl.lll all _ ar f0fil Smith said, "our leaders have been creating _wars around the world ever 'Li H ' since· the end of . World War II. 0 ving UID8ll "By keeping tbese hot spots hot, tl\•Y · can then prey on our desire for peaCe ROME (UPI) _ The human ear mail· by getting us to commJt ourselves more and more deeply to the U.N." Smith et! to a Rome newspaper and purported said. . to belong lo missing J. P11ul Getty Smith said that President '°'ixon is Ill probably ·,vas cut from a Hve person just as committed to creation of a and not a corpse as originally suspected, totalitarian world government a s Democratic Presidential c a n d I d a t e police say· George McGovern, "except Nixon got "We ar:e almost certain the ear was elected and is putting the plan into cu.t from a live person as we feared . practice/' We are not 100 percent certain but Smith said the United States in com-tests indicate this is the probable mitting itself to the United Nations answer,.. Domenico Scali; chief of the charter had given up the autonomy of its military forces, making the U.S. Rome Flying Squad, said Wednesday. Joint Chiefs of StafJ a "subsidary arm The ear was received by the newspaper of the Sectetariat General of the U.N." Ill Messaggero Nov. 10 along with a The flatpboyant speaker was given cansom note identifying it as being taken an enthusiastic ovation by members of from Getty, 17 year~ld grandson -0f Ashland and Gulf pleaded gullty Tues- day and ~ fin~ $5,000 each for the illc'gal i o contributions. The two officers w fined $1,000 each. Alkins said he w a s called by stam, who suggested the $100,000 llgure. as an appropriate contribution. "Stans never left ~u m~ optlen about making a contr1bUUon, did be?" Chairman Sam J. Ervin asked. "No, I never fel~had an option," Atkins replied. "Borders on extort! n doesn't it?" Ervin asked. "Yes sir," Atkins said. From PGfle l KALMBACH .... get the donation up. "lf a large enough number of them paid $3,000 each, yould get up there," the sources said. --....:., "Or If you 'get one or ~wo directors to go into it together, that's bow you get to it," they said. Kalmbach and Spater also "laughed about the fact that one of Kalmbach's major clients Is United Airlines, one of American's cblef competitors . "Spater knew that and Kalmbach assured him.there would be no conflict," the sources said. "It's dark now and I can't imaglM what happened to him," she told officers. The intensive seareb of t h e neighborhood and the school bµs route began at 8 p.m. The school bus driver, Mn. Lillian Shoen , joined in the bunt. It Was she w b o -solv~ the problem. Sean's teacher at NewhOpe School to?d Mrs. Slioen !bat the ll!Ue boy has a habit of falling asleep in class. The bus driver hurried to the school district's bus yard in nearby Garden Grove. There she found Se<fn sound asleep on the rear seat of the bus, Officers said he didn't really wake up wttil they took hlm home. Las Vegas Seeks End to Sexy Ads , LAS VEGAS !UPI)· -A p'°posed ordinance has been presented to the City Com'mlssion here aimed a l eliminating sexy advertisements. The proposed law said Wednesday the ciy realize<! "its unique image and na· tional reputation and likewise 115 economic dependence upon its reoown for tourism. '1 But the proposed ordinance said sex· ually oriented advertisements "substan· tlally detracted from such attraction lo tourists." the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board , oil magnate J. Paul Geo/· I of Realtors at their weekly breakfast 1 ~;:.;;~;;;;:;:;;;~-~;;;::;:;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;:;:,;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;;--meeUng at the Balboa Bay Club. Smith said he made the transition from the left.wing black movement to the Birch Society "because I am an .--I-----------"'1111' honest liberal." ~ . olida;y_,__ ___ .- lie explained that he felt obligated to "find out about the movement I was opposing, but in studying the John Birch Societ y, I found myself ronverted to it ." Throughout his 45-minute speech, Smith referred to various documents whi ch he said "prove that Ute original Communist plan for disarmament has been adopted by the United States and is now being promoted by the United States." He said all of this C0W1try's top diplomats , Including Adlai Stevenson, Henry Kissinger, and Richard Nixon, belong to an exclusive inside group heavily influenced by C o m m u n i s t ideology. Smith charged that our whole govern- ment is full of "Communists and Com· munist stooges." fie said America's only , hope for survival is to withdraw from the UN before its "peace-keeping force gets so big that it puts the \\'hole world in slavery." From Page J SU RVEY .•. ting the entire Saddleback Valley. <:JJW,,w1fsher CSale The stainless deel ' dishwasher. .·.r. ·1 ~ •.,, ·ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES • If r e s u l t s show substantial support for the MC proposals, the study com· mittee wil l reconunend to the homeowners ' association that it spon30r a petition drive to begin proceedings to form a MAC. At least 10 percent of'registered voters in Mission Viejo must sign petitions approving the MAC before the concept can be considered by the Board of FOR ONLY $1 .00 MORE ·CLEANE R WASHING •RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOM E DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE* Supervisors. · If they approve the MAC for Mission Viejo and set one up , a community-wide el ection "-'Oultl be held to choose the locaJ council representatives. The !-1AC would cost an estimated $10,006 for its f i rs t year, paid for by the residents within the boundary . Timetable Set ( . For All-year ~ School Deeision We will make a norma l re- placement 'installation of any standa rd undercoun ter dish - washer. YES , ONLY $1. MOR E! I ACT NOWlll . SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 . Why Waste King Universal is 5 ways better ~l).t)llllllJ.U)!!I! fl1h11, . 20 . .. .......•.. ,,.. ,. . ... ,. NOBODY SELLS • • WASTEKING . ., ,. DISHWASHERS • :-FOR LESS THAN 4 ,. DUNLAPS : ** ** *. ** **·*'* •. . . . . . . ~1,!JJ.tJJ.WJ.UUW.W,U.U.tU€ -. < ~ 5 -; ; -[YEAR ~ ~ .•. 'S S. parts cuarantet on~ ::.1he motor, pump,'.; ·• ;:·t 11mer, waste~ ~ diMributlon system.~ 5. heater 1nd p~hbut-:: Superintendent A. stanley Corey said this week he will make public a "time. table for decision making" on al!·year schools In the Irvine Unified School DI,. trict within the nelt month. EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTION SAFE , SANITARY ~YllQ RUGGED BASKETS, RANDOM LOADING :.· toM on IOO and 900,; ~aerie• dishwaahers. ~ , ~ tf ;:ct1Yl11'fl 11 !1l)'f1fn'l'lfr'lt'~ Corey said the 1lmetable would Include requirements for study and coosultatJon w1th parent.! that need to be rmished berore the di strict can make any decision concerning aJJ.year schools. Corey said that prior to malting such studies, the dl,trict U>uldn't make proper decisions either to continue the existing all·year program et Et Camino Real School or to add new all-year programs at other schools. l:j>rey said be expected truste<s of the district to he In a posUlon to oct on his timetable at their Nov.18 meeting. • • l • I 900AYSCASH WITll APP.llOY I D CRE DIT , 18lS NEWPORT BLVD~ . llewntown Costa Mesa--l'~ane 548-7788' ' . • • i ) ) 7 I ' . • • Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks , ' ' VOL. 66, NO. 319, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'oRNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 TEN CENTS ' Yule E~ents to _Go On~Despite ~risisi • By TERRY COVILLE Of .. o.11¥ ~ .... ltltf 1'te Huntington Harbour Olristmas light show will go on thls year despite the energy crises. , So wlD the Huntington B e a c h ChristmM decoration contest, sponsored by the women's division of the Chamber of CommerCe. Both groups have refi.ised to bow to the President's call for dimmer holiday lights, but say t!>ey aren't in the dark about lt. "We are asking everyone to turn orf their inside Ughts while the Christmas lights are on," says Mrs. Edwin Sud· darth, ~ubticity chalnnan for the Hun· tington Harbour affair. Last year more than 1,000 homes lining the water channels of Huntingµ>n Harbour in north Huntington Beach were de<orated with Christmas tights. ' The show, called the "Cruise of Lights," Is sponsored by !be Huntington · Haflxlur Philharmonic Committee. It has 11 nights of boat tours (Dec. 13-23) through 12 miles of brightly tit channels. "We were quite concerned ' about the energy crises," explains Mrs. Suddarth. "So we studied the problem and found that compared to Inside lights, the Christmas bulbs draw very little power." In a press release, the philharmonic Illegality Denied Kalm.bac h Solicit ed Airline Funds By L, PETER KRIEG Of .... Dalh' ~ lf•ff Sources close to Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President Niion's personal attorney, confinned today that he did solicit . $100,000 frorit Americ8.D Airlines but "he. bad no idea they would ·make illegal contributions." "He did not ask for corporate funds or for cash and the point is absolutely clear on that," the sources said. They did, however, describe how Kalmbach approached American Airlines president Geol"ge A. Spater in the fall of 1971. Spater had ttistified on the contribution before the Senatt: _Watergate 'Not Jusdfled' committee today. "Kalmbach met twice with Spater and the second time he asked the executives of the air!ines to take on a $100,000 goal. .. _ , ~ "Spater agreed but said he figured the best they could probably do was between $70,000 ;:.nd $'75,000," the sources said. "He told them whatever they could do wouJd be appreciated." Spater today testified that American Airlines did contribute $75,000 but $55,00J of it was corporate funds written off on a phony invoice for used airplanes from a Lebanese company. Kalmbach never saw Spater after that second meeting, the sources said, adding .Ford-Recognizes-Nixon· • • Credibility 'Damaged' WASHINGTON (AP) V l c e Pr<!ldeat-deslgnate Gerald R. Fon! laid today he· bu urged President .Nixon to hold more newi amferencis and broaden public conlacts in an effort - to restore his credibility. Ford. WKler question!ng by a House Judiciary Committee examining his qualifications to be vice president. said he recognized that Nixon's credibility has been damaged by the Watergate affair. (Related stories Page 3.) "I don't believe It is joatl.fled ... he said, "but there is significant evidence that it has been." Ford said he bas been working with Nixon and h i s advisers to ~P methods the President can use to counterattack this trend of public opi·· nlon. Nixon's decision to release the White House tapes and to meet with memben or the House and Senate, as be is doing, were among the steps he pro- posed, Ford said. The questioning of Ford began on a jarring note with Rep. John Conyers ' Jr. ([).Mich.), objecting to the committee proceeding with the confirmation hear· logs before acting on impeachment resolutions before it. !he committee's fonnal opening pro-- ceedings stressed the historical nature of the firat conflnnatlon hearings .by t.l,j Hotise and the bonds of friendship between Ford and the committee nlemben: fonne<I during Ford 's 25 years as a congressman. Just as F o r d Was about .to deliver liis · opening statement, Conyers broke' in with "a point of personll privilege. 11 Ford proceeded to make' his statement without teferrtng to Conyers' remarks. Oraage Cou t , • , He said he was offering his reputation for truth, fairness and friendship u quaJities that could serve the nation if be became vice president. "This 11 not a spectaacular role for the next three years but it ls one 1 believe to be needed , and to which I can bring a certain amount of e1· perience," FQrd said. . Huntington Man Ge~ 6 Months In Auto' Death A Huntington Beach man, accused on arrest of drunken driving and later book· ed on manslaughter charges when a retired school official struck by his car died, was sentenced Wednesday to seven months in Orange County Jail. ... Superior' Court Judge James Turner ordered the jail tenn and three years probation for Burl Cecil Harrison. '35, of 15531 Alden Lane. Harrison had plead· ed no contest to charges of vehicular manslaughter rather than face his scheduled trial. C8Womia Highway Patrol officers ar· rested Harrison ·last April 14 on the San Diego Freeway in the Garden Grove ·area shortly after a collision in which Leland WilUams, 65, of Doivney, suffered fatal tnjuri ... Officers said Harrison , who had been seen driving erratically, struck a car parked at the side of the freeway . 1'1le impact led to another collision in which , Williams , was stru'ct and thrown for about 30 feet. .. ,. 'lbe injured man, who was ac- companied at the,Jcene by hlk 93-year-old father, died in hospital 19 days later. ' that when he was ti'ter informed the contributions were in cash and part , of t)\em were corporate funds he · was totally surprised. The sources said Kalmbach had no way of knowing the contributions would be illegal. "Spater is the former general counsel for American Airlines and donations of corporate funds are clearly illegal and Spater knew it," the sources said. "It never occurred to him to say that they can't be corporate funds because t!Verybody knows that." Sources said that Kalmbach had ex· peeled that the many executives with the big airline would all chip in to '(See KALMBACH, Page !) * * * ormer Airline · . f'-'&&.L~ ef Claims· ·· · Funds Asked WASllJNGTON (UPI) -The former chief executive officer of American Airllnel &aid today that a cootrlbution by !be corporation to President Nixon's JMlecUoo cunpaign wu solicited by NlxDn'• penonal .attorney, Herbert w. Kalmbach of Newport Beach. • George A. Spater, testifying· before ·the Senate Watergate Commitee, said Kalmbach asked for a conirlootion of $100,000 In the fall or, !971 and the airline eventually donatea $75,000, in· eluding $55,000 in corporate funds. Spoter 'said the $55,000 was raised lhrouib a phony lnVoice to a Lebanese firm for the sale of tiaed aircraft. The cash was paid to the Nixon Re-election Committee in Washington,-he said. Executives of'"two oil companiJ!S also accused of illegal contributions told the comm.itlee Wednesday the money was donated from their firms'-..foreign bank accounts. Ashland 0 i I Co. Olainnan Orin T. Attim told the Watergate Committee that a request for $100,000 by campaign finance chairman Maurice S t a n s bordered on extortion. The money, he saicf, came from a subsidiary company's Swiss bank ac- count because '1it doesn't excite anyj)ody's curiosity." G"ulf Oil Corp. Vice President Claude C. Wild Jr., said he responded to a request front fund raiser Lee Nunn for $100,000. and forwarded the money from Gulf subsidiaries in the Bahamas. Wild also testified that Gulf contributed $15,000 to the campoign for Rep. Wilbur Mills ([).Ark.), and $10,000 to the cam- paign of Sen. Henry M. Jackson ([). Wash.). But they denied that Stans or any other Nixon campaign official ever of· fered favors in return for the illicit funds, "He didn't make any comment on where the money should come from, but in my mind it could only come (See AIRLINES, Page ZI committee polnts out tha.t ari electric dryer, or a skillet, a toaster or an iron, Wies as much power as five to seven strings of Christmas lights. Paul Richardson, district manager for Southern California . Edison, says the company has "taken a position of absolute neutrality on Christma& lights." He added, however, ''there won't be any Christmas lig~ts on any Edi.son facilities." f ' Be's Got Wlieels One string of 15 Christm8s bulbs would have to bum about 4,000 hours to use a full barrel of oil, Edison officials estimate. A.__string of the holiday lights Is roughly eqU81 to one 150-watt or 200- watt indoor bulb. Mrs. Suddarth said, based -on that information , the philharmonic society is asking all participants to be <klubly sure to tum off indoor lighting when the Christmas decorations are on. Some changes in the chamber of com· merce contest have been made to ac- commodate the energy crunch, says. Mamie Seltzer, co-chainnan of the event On e daytime category has been added, which can ~ entered in thls year's· Orange coast "40 l\1iles of Christmu· Smiles." Officials of that decorating~ test are suggesllng daylight displays. "The night events will also be judge& more on their theme and artistic quality; rather than the amount of lights,"'aay& l\1rs. Seltzer. . ~ _,. Butch Fennell, gas· station attendant_ at Smyrna, Ga., makes orie trip take the place of four. He says -he gets less tired out that way. But what happens Jf the front tire gets away? .Supervisors Submit Plan For Limit 011 Population By JACK BROBACK 01 thl Diii, Pllol lllff A proposed Orange County growth policy whicb would limit ·population to 2.9 million by 2020 has been sent to the 11 e d g I i n g · Intergovernmental Coordinating Councn (!CC) by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. On a (.I vote, supervisor's asked the ICC to report back on the planning document in 90 days, but they failed to make their own recommendation on it. Board Chairman Ronald Caspers of N~wport Beach was the lone hold-out, contending that the delay was "passing the buck. We should be providing a new direction for county growth, not a 'no direction' stance." The action Wednesday came on a motion by Second Dis,trict Supervisor David Baker, who objected to the coun· ty's adoption of a limited growth policy without concurrence of the cityies. "1 don't think lbis has been thought through enough," Baker said. "The pro-- ponents haven't ,asked. labor, business, industry or the cities fo; their lfiput." The 82·page .county planplng depart· ment · report bas been the subject .or several public 'hearings by the Planning Commission and---the-<;itizens Direction Finding Commission. f!Oth comml!sions recommended ap- proval of it with some conditions. Formed le!! than a year ago, the ICC Is composed of representatives of cities and the supervisors. So far it has accomplished little, spcndlng most of its time in organizational procedures. Its purpose is to serve as liaison between county government and the various city councils. The growth policy proposes slowing the county's population increases to . 35,000 to 40,000 i year, compared ·lo the current 65,000. Planner Al Bell has projected that this would work out lo an ultimate population of 2.9 million in 2020, about twice the present population. Previous projections have said the county could boom to four million residents by that time. The plan proposes restrictioru; on growth in some areas, including a quo~ (Ste LIMIT, Page I) · ... 3 MEN A RRESTED F OR FOWL DEEDS WOODIJAND (UPI) -Three men were held here on $1.500 bond on a charge of stealing and ldlling three turke)'3. The turkeys, Valued at $25 each, were taken from a tutkey farm a n d slaughter ed <Jn the scene, sheriff's deputies sa'id \Yednesday. Fowl rustling Is cla~ified as grand theft in Califor:nia. -. Huntin gton Man Hu rt in Auto Gas Tank Blast A clgar·smoking Costa Mesa car lo& employe suffered 'burns over his ~r body Wedne§day, when he started to unload an apoarently leaking acetyleDC gas tank and it exploded in his lace. . -i.. The spectacular fire that result.ecrtrom the blast at Harbor Boulevari:I · mid Hamilton Sfreet destroyed bis delivery vehicle anti sent up a pillar of smoke visible for block!. Damage in the 3:30 p.m. blast and.· , blaze was about $1 ,000. accordirig--do . Fire Department Battalion auer llOb McClelland. • Peter R. Kirkup. 47, of 5082 Edinbr ' Ave .. Huntington Beach, still came oUt of the experience in better shape than be might have. The Marcus Motors employe was taten to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital with second and third degree bums on h1s • face and arms, but was treated and released. 1'1le smafi Japanese pickup truck driven by Kirkup when he went 'to get the gas container at a Placentia Avenue finn was Immediately and totaJ!y e. guHed by f1ames. · Battallion Chief McClelland todq declined to speculate whether Kirkup11 cigar caused the leaking tank to ignite. He did say it would be rather unusual, considering__ lhe relt!_tjyely small asl1 .flame of a cigar and lhe dissipati~ , of the acetylene fumes ii, the open, air. Cause of the spectacular accident to- day remained officiaJly undetermined,,. according to flremen. . · -·I ~ We .. The Oranie Coast ·will be fair through $ajurday wfth_som~ coast· al low clouds Friday morning, ac- oordlng •to the weather oervlce. Highs In the. upper IOI to low 'l1ls. Lows tonlgbt·~pper ~·to low 50s. Coast Food Market Strike Looms Nixon to Sig1i ·: Pipeli1ie Bill • INSIDE TODAY t<'Jtdpt1 ond aa1Cttltl on coeds · have become a "l".ior problem on tht Mtion's c0Uege1 cam· pu.se1: Set !tort/, Pope B. · • Orange County residents may have Diego.· About 3,725 of them work in to cross picket lines to shop at food , Orange County. markets next week. nte month-old talks hit a stalemate Predictions of a strtke by four food again Wednesday when labor officials Industry wilons varied today. But the 1 rejected' a federal mediator's request Food Employers Council (FEC) waa !bat they utend . the Sunday strike preparing for the possibility, (See related deadline. l1Alry, Page .SI.) W. J. Usery, director of the Federal "We're getling ready," Robert Voight. M.edlatlnn Service, asked the union of tlle FEC laid. "Everybody Is ct'llll<lnl . 1 .. ders early Wedneaday to come to up their strike gear." • Washington, D.C, Monday to continue The FEC is negotiating wl the neJIOlfatioM. · • _calllornla Food, and Dnlg COuncil, wlllcb His ,..._ waa turned down by about ~Lt the teamsters, butchers, 200 union officiala at an emergency oPeralill& engineers and machinists meeting at the Biltmore Hotel In Los unions. Angeles.· The labor negoUa\ors represent about A labor re~tanve ,.Id today !bat 28,000. employes from 8akcrslield, to san moving about 160 persons wenUal to the negotiations to \Va shiugton , D.C. would be expensive, would be a drain on the energy shortage and would in· tefrupt the progress of negotiations. Union officials said \Oday they want Usery to cOme to Los Angeles. "His help is urgenUy nee~ed." Negotiations are continuing while Usery determines hiS response to the union plea. Union cfflclals differed in their estlmoUon• ol the possibility of a walkout alter Sunday. Meat Cutten Union vice president Jack Boyd said there's a 1 95 pereent chance, but Teamsters negotiator Jerry Vercruse 1cut tftat down to live percent, but added he could be wroilg. If a strike is called, it is expected to last more than a month. -But the FEC's Voight said today that consumers don 't have to worry about not gclli<lg food. "\Ye plan to keep all stores In ope.ra- tion during the strike." he said. La bor unions originalfy-sald the strike may be· against one wholesaler only. but Voight said a strike against one Is a strike against all . "We're a unified industry," he said. promising a )ockout o! workqs by the FEC. FiEC preparations for a strike lnclude.: st~kPiling the back rooms of stores • with food : getlin~ extra orders in now; • (See STl\JKE, Page I) 1 :- ' WASlfiNGTON (AP) ·-Pm!· dent Nixon said today he will stp Friday a blll authorizing .,... struction of an oil -pipeline across Alaska despite what he said were: objectionable features of the bill. "I will~ of course, sign .the bill," Nixon said in a speeclt to tlll ' National Association of Realtors. However. Nixon said he would ask Congress later to ttmove cer· lain amendments attached to tbe bill In the Sen1te. n-,,..t broad regulatory powers to the Fodera! Trade Commission. l ·~ I o ( • .-~-'---:---r---_J:__~...;..'~---' . ' ' ' I I I .J ' l ( - ; l , 2 OAJL V PILOT " Thursday, Novtmbtr 15, 1973 Newport Clai111 Gunshot Victim Seeks $250,000 A man accidentally shot by Newport Beach poli ce as he was being held hostage by a kldnaper today has on file a $250.000 claim against the city. Attorneys for\.iarco de Silva, 20. allege police intentionally shot the youth and claim the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment is "too prone to the use or violence." City officials have routine ly denied Jhe claim, clearing the way for the claimant to file a lawsuit. · De Silva was one or two persons held captive in an Orchid Hills Drive borne on Sept. 12 by Roland Dal e Cnwfcrd, 29, ot Huntington Beach, when police closed In. In an exchange of gunfire, de Silva and Qawford's second hostage. Denine Baeseman, 17, were both struck by police bul)et.s. Mis.s Baeseman has not yet filed a claim aJthough the owner of the house, Howard Feichtmarm, is seeking about $1,000 for repair of structural damage. Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas, who admitted after the lnrident pniper police procedures wore generally followed, -but mlslakes had been made -was wiavailable for comment today. IDs adjutant, Lt. Ed Cibbarelll, d'nied the charge that police shot de Sliva m purpoae. "We have conducted an investigation and we have admitted that we made certain tactical errors," Cibbarelli said, ''but there was no intention by police 'to do any harm to Innocent persons. "OUr main concern at all times was the safety of the hostages," Cibbarelli aald. 'lbe claim filed by attorney GrTge McDonald also contends "the lllY negligently failed to communicati -.d. or to commWlicate accurately a ducrip- Uon of the s u s p e c t to tbe officers 'in the field." Mcllooald said that resulted lo "the inability of the · police officers In the field to distinguish belween C..imant who was a victim and the kidnaper." De Silva was hit twice by police bullets. Miss Baeseman apparently was struck once, with the slug tearing 'througb one lung. ' De Silva's attorney claims that Newport Beach w as also "negligent in retalnlng" the officers on tfie police force becau.se it had knowledge of the "Jropensity ... for violence." Slavas, in his explanation of the 2 Auto Salesmen T~ );Je Senwnced . In Theft Trial Two car salesmen accused on arrest of grand theft and conspiracy after they allegedly bilked used car buyers at a Costa Mesa dealership have pleaded no contest to lt?Mer charges in Orange County Superior Court. Judge H. Warren Knight accepted the pleas of brothers Robert Lee "Buck" ROdgers, 40. 0£ 6122 Sydney St., Hun- tington Beach, and Andrew Harrison Rodgers, 39, of 8312 Carnegie Ave., Westminster. and ordered the pair to return to· his counroom Nov. 28 for sentencing. Both men offered the plea to charges or being an accessory , the younger Rodgers at felony level and his brother at misdemeanor level. , Judge Knight dismissed all charges against their co-defendant, Elizabeth Cameron, 38, of Garden Grove. • The trio was arrested by Costa Mesa police and state agents after in- vestigation into complaints filed by coun· ty residents who bought cars at Credit Motors, 1941 Harbor Blvd., and were later forced to return the cars to the Sellers. , It was alleged that the firm , through lraudulent sales tactics. a c c e p t e d lleposits from car buy~rs wjth the prom- ;ise that the balance owirt would be ;llnanced. . DAILY PILOT Tht Orlflllt COit! DAILY PILOT "llh '""1(:11 It c-11'1..:l·*'-N......,·Prtn, "'Mlllhm..., 1M OttllQf Coat! Plltlll1Mn; C1mpfny. S.... rile -llle<1s 1r1 pulllltllta, MonOly fllrovtll Frld1y, lor Coet1 Mtll, NtwOOrt lrldl, ~ ._..HVl'lllfllllon lltKN~Ollr!111n Vtllty, lqUM ~ hKf'I, 1 ..... 1rie/SlddltMck 1,.,(s.n Cllmenl'fl ltn J111n C1p1t1r1no, A t lntlt! revklnll fllllll"" It ll\lllli•htd Sll\/rdlys tnd ~'f't. TM llf"ll>cip.I Mlllhln9 pl.In! 11 ti JJO Wtsl llf llrtll, '°'II 11\bt, 'tlttonl!I, '2i». . ' . ' • • ' ' • ftob1 rt N. W11d Prnldlnt 1nd PVl)!l•h•r • -'!1ck R. Cu1!1y Vkt Prt'"*"' -Gtntr•I M1111t ... Tho"''' l(,,,.;1 • [Cl(!M Tiioffl•• 14.. MM1phi110 "''""''"1 l!ll•tOt Ct.art" H. Looi Rich 1rd P. N1U A11ll11111 Mt~t;!l'lf £Cllk>f1 r.,,., c • ...;11, W•t Ori"" C.....1, Editor H_.. .. a..llOMce 11111 ltlC~ loMlt¥1\'4 Mtlll11i A .. dto111 P.O. 101 7tO, tt641 --· L..-e lllUl1 :IZJ ~ ... nt A"9ftut C.lt 111. ... 1 i. Wfl1 lty lntll ........... lffefl: UU N~ IOl>l1t'll~ .. n CietNntt: ~Noni! Cl Cimino 1t .. 1 ,.,,,.,., C7141 MJ-4hl CluslflMI .......... MZ·l67t ,,_ ..... Of'ltllt (M!!IY ~ill 14t-1110 C:""11f111, ,.,,. °'"'" C:-t 11'\jltlltf'rlftt ~. ... -""'""· il!Ytlletllnt. tlllMfW -nr tr #w~ lllrllll _.,. bl ,,,. °""""' ""'"""' tMCltl ..... ~ .. ~--· ~ dMI ,..., ... "'"' .. c .. 11 Mtw. Ctlllill'l'lll . ~IM• lit' Wl'ltf IUJ _.,..,.,, W NII lllf fl'llfttfl1¥1 111111""' ... IMlllM GM IMft!lllY. ' shooting at a press conference ear:ly last month, said police were forced to open f i r e 85 Miss Baeseman ducked to give police a shot as de Silva struggled with the abductor. Officer Al Doom fired the first police shot which struck a light switch beslde crawford's head, Glavas explained. Crawford then tried to shoot, Glavas said but his gun misfired. Police opened fire frt>m about JO feet away, he said, and as Crawford drcr,>ped for cover slugs from a police gun ripped into de Silva and Miss Baeseman. "Obviously their aim was not as good as it could have been,·,, Chief Glavas said at the time. · Both victims were taI:cen to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and were released a few days later, but are still convaleScing. Crawford is ln Orange County Jail on $100,000 bond facing 12 felony counts In connection with the kidnaping , with a court appearance due this month. From Page I LIMIT ... on new building permits to anow a maximwn nwnbq of new homes to be built each year. The idea, Bell said, 1. ls to balance available public services with growth. The county now hM a de facto po!Jcy which has no set guidelines or controls which Belt and oth~ speakers Wed· nesday say allows unchecked growth, wffh l""'ibleJ<SUlting harm to the quality of life. , During the four-hour hearing, the main support for the policy. came from the county Grand Jury, the direction finding commission, lhe League of Wome11; Voters and the Orange County Enviroomeotal Coalition. Leading the opposition were the Orange County Cbamber ·of Commerce, labor organizations and Gilbert Ferguson of . the Orange County Council for Environment,• Employment, Economy and Development (CEEED). Michael Keyes, chairman of the dlrec~ tion finding commission, said a survey taken by that group of 1,400 per.... showed that 76 percent of them favored a formal growth policy. Bllt Ferguson attacked Keyes' con- tentioo , charging instead that he "used a biased list to get the answers you wanted ." J Ferguson opposed the idea of building penni~ qu<itas, pllin_g !hem '!"'"9'Jlically an<llspclaUy unreaS<ildble. • ·Speaking for locally originated policies, Robert Snyder, president of the Environ· mental Coalition, said, "This county is big enough to exert leadership to avoid disruptions in our economy." He warned that land use and growth controls may be forthcoming frcm state and federal levels. Several labor speakers said the restric- tions could hurt the construction in- dustry. Others said cutting bacl: on sewer, water and other public services v.'On 't stop the influx of people. Bart Spendlove, an Orange COunly planning commissioner from Mission Viejo, said the details of the plan aren't that significant now. "The nwnbers are the important thing ," he said, urging the policy's adoption .. "All the rest is subservient to that ." Da ve Goldberg of Weslminster, who proclaimed he represented "the people who work ," gave the most spirited talk. "What kind of an age are we living in?" he questioned. "Does anybody con· side r the workl!tg s~ff? You don't listen to us." Goldberg wanted to know, "What are we going to do about our children. Thousands will graduate in June and 84 percent will get married. Where are they going to live if you stop building of apartments?-Back with their parents." "The won't Jet us live in Emerald Bay but when their plumbing goes haywire who do they call? The working stiff, that's who," he concluded . Col. Ken Dykes, representing the Rossmoor COrporalion, builders of Leisure World agreed that plaMlng was eSM?ntial but that restrlctions on growth were unrealistic. "Oregon tried to halt growth and cut out utility service to many areas and const.ructkm of power plants," he argued. "The result has been brownouts and probably later blackouts." - Pete Remrnel, secretary of the Orange County Cenlnll.. Labor Council, topped the discussion °bff with, "I am glad I am not on the Board of Supervisors. You're damn ed i! you do and damned if you don't." From Page I AIRLINES . • • from corporate funds because it would be impractical to raise it any other way," Alkins said. Ashland and Gulf pleaded guilty Tues· day and were fined $5;000 each for the illegal Nixon contrlblltlons. The two officers were fined $1.000 each. Atkins said he w a 1 called by Stans. who suggested the $100,000 figure as an appropriate contribution. "Stans never left you much opUon about making a contribution, did he ?" Chairman Sam J. Ervin asked. "No.~ never felt I bad an opUon 1" Alkins replied. "Borders on extortion doesn't :t?" Ervin asked. "Yes slr/' Atkins sald. U.N. Assailed By Ex-militapt Otorge McGovern, uezcept Nixon got elected and is putting the plan Into practice." A one-time black mllitant who now embraces the John Blreh Society assailffj . the United Nations today In Newport Beach as the "blgegat coUeotloo of !Iara, thieves, murderers and tbup ever as-· &embled In ooe place." Smlth-aald the United Stall!• In com- mitting ltWf . IQ tl)e "l/nltOd Nattons • charter bad given up, tl)e autonomy of Aid Rendered And speaking to a breakfast gathering of Harbor area real.ton, Charlie Smith urged the United States to withdraw from tho world organization "before we find ounelves completely at theli4 mercy." "The communists behind the United Nations profess to want peace," Smith charged, "but they don't mean the same thing when they say peace that you and I mean. · "We think we have peace when we aren't fighting anybody,'' Smith ex- plained. "But peace to lhe U.N. is when everyone in t h e world is so weak that they don't have the power to resist the Communists," he said. Smith claimed there was an organized conspiracy in the United States to lull the American people into· a belief that the U.N. is necessary io insure peace, Its mllllary loroes, making the U.S. Jotnl Chiefs of Stall a "sub<ldary Inn of tile ~tarlat Genin!' of the 11.N." The flaniboyll)! .~ker was given an enthuiiaatlc ovation ,by members of the Newport Harbor.COsta . M... Board of Realtors at their weekly breakfast meeting at the Balboa.Bay Club. Smith said he made the transition from the left.wing black. movement to the Birch Society ••because I am an honest liberal." He explained that he felt obligated to "find out aboot the movement I was opposing, but In studyiog the Jolm Birch Society, I found myself converted to It." ~ Califo~la Highway Patrol sergeant and male nurse Terry Blansett assist injured teacb~r Marilyn Wior, 26, of 1 ?301 Keelson La~e, Hun· tington Beach. Accident occurred on San D16\:o Freeway this mom· ing. at Laguna Canyon Road. Miss \Vior teaches at Olivewood Elemen- -tary School, Lake Forest. A tractor being towed fell off a trailer and struck .hi( car. She was taken to Mission Community Hospital. "And to convince people of that," Smith said, "our leaders have been creating wars around the world ever aince the end of World War JI. "By keeping these hot spots hot, they can then prey on our desire for peace by getting us to commit oufselves more and more deeply to the U.N." Smith said. Tbroughout his IS-minute speech, Smith referred to var!oua documents . Which he said "prove that the original Communist plan for disannament has been adopted by the United States and is now being promoted by the Vnited States." He said all of this country's top diplomats , including Adlai Stevenson, Henry Kissinger, and Richard Nixon. belong lo an exclusive Inside group heavily influenced by Comm u n·i st, idoology. • - From Page I STRIKE • • • arranging dellverie3 wlth independent trucking companies; recruiting non-union personqel willing to work under strike conditions; alerting management to get ready to work overtime and asking the retail clerks union ·not to honor the picket lines. 'nte clerks union, although not Involved 1n the negdtiations, has been represented by the Food and Drug. council and is being requested by the other unions to support their effort. Although union officials said today there bas been progress 41 the talks, Voight said Wednesday that there are too many is.mes "left on the table" on which there bas been little agreement. They include union control over pro- duction standards and work assignments, equal opportunity for women and a guaranteed eight-hour work day. Wages -e1pected to be another major stumbling block -have yet to be ftllly dilCUSSed. FEC officials say the unions want a $1 an hOW' raise, substantially more than the 46 cents an hour offered. Labor officials made no comment to- day on the wage question. Teamster Qrivers currently are paid $5.57 ab. hour, FEC officials said, warehouse workers get $5.28 and office' workers gel $5.08. Union butchers are paid $5.47 an hour, while meat wrappers get $4 .44. About 1,725 meat cutters in Orange County are represented by Butchers Union Local Mil in Artesia. Franchise Sued By Disgruntled Huntington Man A Huntington Beach resident who claims he was assured be could make as much as $50,000 a year by operating a franchised personnel agentj in his area has sued the New York franchiser !or $1 .3 million. James R. ~ Evans of 16956 Edgewater Lane states in his Orange County Superior Court fraud action that he has actually incurred nearly $58,000 in losses after working for four years without pay. Evam names Staff Builders Jntema· tional, Inc., of New York. as defendants and alleges he paid the firm $13.500 four years ago for the Long Beach area franchise. In that time, he states; he has paid the franchise holder $96,000' in royalties but has been compeUed to seek loans from them after repeatedly being in "dire financial straits." Human Ear From 'Living Human' ROME (UPI ) -The human ear mail· ed to a Rome newspaper and purported to belong lo missing J. Paul Getty Ill probably was cut from a live person and not a COri>Je as originally suspected, police say. . "We are almost certain the ear was cut from a live penon as we feared. We are not 100 perctnt certain but tests indicate this is the probable answer," Domenico Scali, Chief of the Rome Flying Squad, said Wednesday. 'l1le ear was received by the newspaper Ill Messaggero Nov. 10 along wltp a ransom note idenUfylng it as being taken from Getty, 17 year-old gtandson of oil magnate J. Paul Getty . Smoke-filled Casino LAS VEGAS (AP) -A small but smoky fire forced gamblers from the casino at the Sahara Hotel here Wed· nesday, hotel officials said. A spokesman '8ld the blau started In a construction areo at the north side of the building. 'Operation ID' Set in Huntin·gton About 400 homes near the intersectioh of Springdale Street and Slater Avenue will be the target of Huntington Beach police Saturday. Officers, Explorers and Cadets will be going door to door In the area rrom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Operation ID to help residents mark their valuables as a deterrent to burglaries. They will also be offering home security inspection to point out the homes' vulnerable areas. According lo Police Chie.f Earl Robitaille, the program Is being con- ducted as part of · a citywide study of crime prevention. , Smith said that President Nixon Ls ju.st as committed to aeation of a totalitarian world government a s Democratic Presidential c a n d i d a t e • F,.....Pagel KALMBAOI. • • get the donation up. "ll a large enough nwnber of them paid $3,000 each , you'd get up there," the sources' said .. "Or if you get one or two directors to go into it together, that's how you get to it," they saki. Kalmbach and Spater also "laughed about the fact· that one of Kalmbach's major clients is United Airlines, one of American'• chtel oompeUtors. "Spater mew that and Kalmbach assured bJm there would be oo conflict,'' the sources said. Woman Injured In Head-on Crasl1 Barbara Walsh, a 36-year-old Hun· tingtoo.' Beach woman, was h>spitallied Wednesday after a he.ad-on collision between her car and a trash truck at the intersection of Edinger Avenue and Graham Street. Officials at Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital declined to discuss the extent of. Mrs. Walsh's lnjuries today, but described her oondiUoo as "~·" Huntington BeacR police said Mrs. Walsh, 5001 Dovewood Drive, was driving west on Edinger when the 9:30 a.m. accident took place. The truck driver, Jorge M. Gonzales, 25, of Huntington Beach, was not injured, .. according to police, who are still investigating the cause of the crash. I I• • ! • ' . • i 1 ~ t• ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU All THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES FOR ONLY $1.00 MORE •CLEANER WASHING •RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUJ\RANTEE AVAILABLE • We will make a normal re- placement installation of any standard .Jj.lldercounter dish - washe r:iES, ONLY $1. MORE! •. ACT NOWlll ' SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 ' .............. ,,.. .. * • NOBODY SELLS " • WASTEKING '" • DISHWASHERS " ••FOR LESS THAN" • • nuNLAPS " .. ... " Why Waste ling Universal is 5 ways better ·······~~~·~-·. ~~!VIJl,IW.UlW.W.U.W.Wf iY r~@ ii I STAINLESS I sun ll ~ ~· ·1.!JJ,t.W..CJ.\U,l\ALW.Wrg ; 5 , =· ·= ~ ~-YEAR •~ ~ ·= ~ •· ..;: EXCLUSM: H·ARM WASHING ACTION SAFE , SANrfARY DRYllG RUCGED BASKETS, RANDOM LOADING l, GUARANTEE ~ • ~ ~tim·rtn'1"01olmnrmi ~ part.I guarantee on~ ~the motor, pump.:: ~timer. w aste~ ~ di1lrlbu1ion system.:.: :. heater and pushbut.·: s IOM on 800 •nd 900.:; ; series dishwashers. ~ ~ '= /;'f, ;'fl! I)) I(, I! :1ri'1\ OTl'fl'r.l ~ • 90 DAYS CA.SH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPOiT BLVD., . De~wn CD$ Mesa-Pllone 541-7788 ' • . . l I • FROM THE HALLS OF MONTEZUMA TO THE SHORES OF CAMP PENDLETON'S RED BEACH Marines .Storm'9d Ath.ore 1,500 Strong This Morn Ing To Capture Mythical Country, Test Weapons • ,,.. Israel , Egypt -Prisoners Going Home Marines Storm Ashore In Pendleton Exercise By The Associated. Press Prisoners of war came home to Israel and Egypt today . Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan. on hand to \\'Clcome re turnees to Tel Aviv. declared: "At least ~'e have arranged things by talks, like human beings, instead or by tank. fire and exploding grenades.'' The first Red Cross planes carried \\'ounded prisoners, some walking and some on stretchers. The International ~ed Cross said it expected the full exchange to take about a v•cek . J\1eanwhi~. in Cairo, i nfo rm ants reported a major shakeup in UJe Egyp- tian military high command following Israel's lightning break through Egypt's Suez line in the last 10 d' y s of the October war. They said the military calamity, which left the Egyptian 3rd Army cut off in the Sinai Desert . resulted in the firing of at least one army chief and A \\'ave of 1,500 Marines stor med ashore at Camp Pendleton early loday to "sav&' a tiny occupied island of ''Afargaritas, '' and despite a fe\v stuck jeeps and a couple landing craft. their 1nission appeared to be a roaring suc- cess. The mock war. the first major exercise involving regula r Marines in months, is dubbed ··~ration Bell }lango." It is calculated to give the leathernecks practic~ at knocking out enemy gun emplacements on hilltops above the reser.vation's Red Beach. The strand usually serv:.es as the private haunt of President Nixon on his trips to the South Coast. But this morning it became a bat· tleground with landing craft and Marines swarming ove r the sands. The craft were launched in traditional fashion from Navy fillips offshore and the Jlth Marine Amphibious Unit used - the vfssels and helicopters to reach land. A few of the bulky vessels failed to .make it off t h e beach on their own power and a pair of jeeps operating on the soft sand found the going a bit rough as well. Mock·bombardrnents of shore locations also were stage&: by Navy vessels and some units were ordered to seek out an enemy missile boat base which bad been "threatening international sea Janes." The batUe for the "nation" is expected to last through the weekend with even- tual success predicted sometime Mon- day. During the lengthy exerc.ise the mettle of the Marines as weU as their latest weapons will be tested, spokesmen said. The Marines particularly will be able to familiarize themselves with the latest addition to their arsenal -the hand- launched Redeye antiaircraft missile. creation of a new (;eld "°~.mand I Still worried Observers foresaw the poss~ of .. court-martial trials in the wa,.~~ lh'"e;. ... :. . ~ • . ._. -"' , • ; • . .:~~~=~:::: ;: ;:i::H:;~d:: r:: · Couiity·' ' Transit '.Officials the publ.ic and officially unconfi~ed. is an Egyptian counterparj. to complaints in Israel that the Jsraeli armed forces s F I Sh E • ~~';t.;::r~~eedw:~~ the Oct. 6 attack .ee ue ortage . asmg As part of the PO\V exchange. Israel FAISAL-STAUNCH FRIEND OR FOE? Story, Pogo 17 agreed to turn over to U.N. forces its control of the highway from · Cairo to Suez. This gives Egypt access to the city of Suez and the isolated 3rd Anny without going through Israeli con- trols for the first time since final stages of the October war. · The deal, "'·orked out by Egyptian and Israeli generals under the agreement sponsored by U.S. Secretary of S t a .t e Henry A. Ki ssinger, finn~e cease-hre on the Suez front. But on the Syrian fron t. Damascus reported an artillery duel in the Golao !~eights. the fifth truce breakdown io 10 days. The Damascus communique did not say how long the exchange of fire lasted but said an Israeli bulldozer bad been destroyed. Prisoners retu'l'ing from Egypt to l srael were u•elcomed by a large sign on the tannac reading, "Welcome, Heroes of 1srael," In emotion-packed scenes the m e n were welcomed home with bouquets, tears and cheering crowds. In contrast the first POW plane to reach Cairo was unloaded at a quiet and remote corner of th e tannac. A· senior Official said it had been impossible to plan a large public "'elcome with the men's families present. He did not explain why. ' By JACK BROBACK 0 1 ltle Diiiy Plitt Slrif Orange County Transit District of. ficials were optimistic but still worried today about a diesel tuel shortage which could ha1t all bus operation in December. "The sttuation is easing somewhat," said district General 1'-1anager Gordon "Pete" Fielding. "There is great con- fusion over the fuel situation . but we have hopes that our efforts will result in a special allocation for December." The district currently has only two thirds of its needs in diesel fuel on hand or promised. Th e December allocation so far is only 7.922 g~llons. less than one fourth of ,. WINE HAD TIIAT ·EXTRA TANG GE NOA, Italy (UPI) -Brunei itarocco Was pouring wine at lunch in a restaurant when a six~incb lizard plopped from the bottle into his glass. Police said' Wednesday he went to a hospital to haxe his stomach pumped for fear . the chamelon might have contaminated the wine. , Gets to t lae Tr.,.tla i what the district needs. A recent ruling of the Office of Petroleum Allocation has complicated the issue by al1owing transit districts to draw on December supplie& to make up for November shortages. This obviously doesn't help the situa~ lion for the coj· g montM, Fielding observed. Fielding said today : "Our hurried negotiations with officials in $an Fran· cisco, Sacramento and Washington D.C. seem to be bearing fruit. We are hopeful, but not at all certain if we wiU get eooµ.gh fuel f o r December and later months." The si tuation is especially critical for the bus lines serving Laguna Beach, Newpart Beach. Costa Mesa , and UC Irvine from Santa Ana, Fielding said. The South Coast Transit Company which operates those lines under contract for lhe district needs 33.000 gallons of fuel a ·month, but has a December allocation of only about 8,000 ganons. "That would be a 75 percent reduction and for all practical purposes it means a shutdown of service," the manager fi'a rned . The South Coast Transit Company has ils own allocation based on the amount used in lhe same month last year. During the past year service to the coast cities _has increased three to four tiT11es. Fielding explained making the 8,000 ga llon a1Jocation i11adeq~te. Hinshaw: Nixon Confident Rresident Nixon has every appearance of going to any length to restore cQll-.. fidence in his administraUon, Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw (R·Newport Beach) a:aid alter meeting with him today in the White House. "lie Kiid{ a glint in Ms eye that said h• was going to ge t at the truth," said Hinshaw. "I had the lcellng he COX DOESN'T WANT JOB BACK. Story, Pop 4 . . knows· the fight is not going well, but he still feels he's · the right man to be Pres.I dent.'' 1 Hinshaw was among 78 Republican congressmen invited to the White House for a no ·'holds • barred questloo-and- answer session with Nixon. • Tllo President Sllid he ls i:onslderlng a pcrsonar appearance before -Congress ' - -and even one before the Ervin ·com· mittee -to reveal his knowledge or such issues as Waterga te, JTT, his persona) finances and the firing or Archibald Cox, Hinshaw said. "He showed no Irritation, although there were some embarrassing questions -particularly a b o u ·1 resignation," Hinshaw said. Reversing dramatically his previous strategy of only occasional public ;ap- ~arances and Statements during lhe crisis · caused by the scandal, the Presi· dent had a rush schedule today inclUding tour major appearance -three with congr~men. • In biddition, he wfll make three speeches outside Washington in a pettod of fo~r to five days beginning thi; wockend -all in the Soulh . The Presldent also wa~ described as planning-more tclevised -m!m-con· {erences and submitting to more in- terviews by both broadcasters and newspaper reporters. The breakfast s"sion with the second group Of House GOP members preceded a speech to a realtors convention - Nijton's firstSu~appearance in nearly two months. Jt was to be foUowed by lunch with a group of Democratic con- sressmen and an early evening session with the last onewthird of the GOP senators. At the rcal tors convention. Nix.on .told an audienee of 4,000. YI was elected to do a job. J'm not going to wa1k away until I get that job done.'' -speakii1g at the convention of the Na· tional Association of Realtors at the Sheraton·Parl• Hotel. Nixon was , in· terrupted six times for applo.use during a 3Q..minute appearance. • ' / • • Thursd&y, NOYtmbtr IS, iJ13 H DAil V PILOT :J Flournoy Det;lares ----y·. State GOP 'Not Dead' By WILU:MI SCHREIBER Of ._ o.ltr Pitel Sttft California Controller Hou st o n Floumoy, a caitdldate lor the Republlcan gubernatorial nomination next year, said todlly in Laguna Niguel that the Republican Party is not going to roll over and play dead because of Washington scandals. "Democrats are saying this is the year they will take over the state but I don't believe that the Republican Party will let it happen," Flournoy said. ·~1 don't believe it is. hnpossible for Republicans to be elected in C&lifornia just because of a problem 3,000 miles away," he added. "People want a con- tinuation of strong leadershi p in this st.ate and if they tradition ally v o I e d party Jines Republican politicians v.·ould . lose by a landslide." ..... Flournoy was referring to the Im- balance of P{lrty registrations i IL Califomia in favor of the Democrats. Flournoy, speaking before a meeting of the Laguna Niguel Republioan \Voman's Club in Monarch Bay, made some remarks about tl1&-lal'g field 'Bought Land!' Nixo11 Lauds Real Estate Buy WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon said today he proved his faith in '.'Ameri~& teal-estate" by selling his s.tock~ and bonds in 1968 to fmance the purchase o! property m Calilorma and Flor· ida. , " .. .. . Addressing 4,0-00 meml>Ors ol the National Association ol Real· tors. Nixon made an oblique reference' to his acquis'ition of homes at San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. Some presidential critics have questioned Nixon's financing methods to buy ·the properties. Nixon said in the speech that he sold his securities five ·years ago to invest in real estate. He '6aid the securities transactio~s were aimed at eliminating any questions that he would benefit would he assume the presidency in January, 1969. 1 · "I lk>ught a house in California, my mother's house in Cali· fornia, and I MUght two pie~s of property in Florida -one or which I sold," Nixon Said. "That's what I own. I believe in America. I believe in America's real estate." • Virginia Rules ·'Devil In Miss Jones' Obscene • RICHMOND. Va. (UPI) -Crrcu;t Qiurt Judge James Lumpkin h&.s ruled that the controversial "pomi>ehic'' movie "The Devil in J\fiss Jones" violates Virginia's anti-Obscenity Jaws. Lumpkin issued his ruling on the film \Vednesday after hearing testimony last month and this month. The movie played at lhe Biograph Theater last summer for nine d:ryS, attracting near capacity audiences, before Lumpkin issued a tem- porary order shutting it down. l.Almpkin's written opinion called the film "lowdown, commQn trash" and said ''you'v e got to $ee it to b e 1 i e v e ·.it ... that such matters are publicly ex· hibited." He said 70 to 75 percent of the movie was a "sex marathon" and said it proves that "given the righ t' audience, any depraved spectacle may provide entertainment." 'J'he trial was conducted under civil statues and no penalty was im~ed on the theater's management. Com· monwealth's attorney, Aubrey f\<l. Davis Jr., however, said that future obscenity cases will be tried under criminal statutes. • of Democrats seeking to r e p I a c e Governor Reagan in the 1976 election. "They hitve people like Jerry Brown who has been running for governor since he was born, and Joe Alioto who could finiince hl.!1 campaign out of contingencY funds ," Flournoy said. - Flournoy :;aid the prospect of running against .either Boown , Alioto or Assembl:r: Speaker Bob Moretti doesn 't frighten him . About !\foretti. Flournoy said, "He'S running around all over lhe place making speeches and with this energy crisis he's liable lo run out of gas somewhe re ." Flournoy commented after the meeting on !he field of Repllblicans \Yho wl!l be competing with hin1 for a place on the el~tion ti cket He said he expects strong competition from state AUomey General Evell~ Younger. LL Gov. Ed Reinecke and former lieutenant governor R o b e r t i.~inch. "I certainly don 't expect this to be an easy race ." Flournoy said. The controller said he does not think Reagan will seek a third term &.'i governor even though some powerfut Republicans and several I e a d i n g Democratic candidates th ink Reagan will rwt again. "I've talked to him personally 'about !his and I am certain he has no plan~ to run again. He kno"'S the people of California won't elect a man who will quit in ni.idterm 10 run ror presi- dent." l<'IOurnoy said. lie also said Reagan's political future in 'the state of California was seriousl y damaged by the ·failure Of Proposition I. th e governor's tax and spending limitation Jaw .,vhich was defeated at the polls Nov. 6. During his talk. Flournoy bore down heavily on the CtJrrent energy crisis and said Ca\ifornia needs to begin looking seriously at programs to solve future· and current problems caused by short ·supplies of fuel and electric power. "If we don't do something nbw with an eye to the future we will end up \Vith crash programs that will leave environmental conc~rns in the wake." he said. Among other things Flournoy said it is urge nt for the state to solve the problem of nuclear power plant siting and get new atomic facilities built to handle increasing electrical needs. "We've got to get off the dime on nuclear plant siting beca use the energy souilce of the future has to be nuclear and has to go somewhere," he said : "" Flournoy-said the state has 1o develop a systematic approach to conserving electricity and planning new sources to meet future demands. * * ·* Jury n eadlocked STP for Autos-Not Road ! . ' Over 'Deep Throat' HOUS'roN (UPI} -Five women and seven men deliberated the artistic merits of the motion picture "Deep Throat" for 14 hours and reparted they were hopelessly deadlocked. Judge Garth BaJ~s scheduled, a second obscenity 'riat for Dec. 4. ; "They are hung up," BateS said Wednesday. "I don't know on what. J\1aybe in the next trial we can rmc1 out. This needs to ~ disposed of." Andy Granatelli's famous goo known as STP is the so-railed Racer's Edge, according to the singing commercial but in Marana, ArizT, today, it forced one monumental pit stop for a11 drivers -on Interstate 10, authoriti~s said. A big freight rig manned by Gar~en Grove truck drivers Henry Gonzales, 21, and Michael Player, 19, overturned a fe\ft miles north of Mara.D9, spilling 9,600 cans of the engine oil tfeatment. Nearly every can broke when it hit the highway, flooding 200 feet of the busy thoroughfare with the gooey stuff . ' that may do \vonders for engines bi.tt causes horiors on highways. "It started eating up the asphalt," said Arizona Highway Patrol spukesman David \Vright, explaining STP causes a chemical reaction similar to mixinl gasoline and asphalt. . · The Granatelli goo that dissolves gwn in your carburetor' began dissolving all 200 feet or U.S. H,ighway 10, .until ~·orkmen scattered sand to 50ak it up. ~ The road through the little farm towtl WCl;S reopened several hours later. Sofa Bed Floor Sample Clearance Reductio ns of $50 to $100 on all Floor Samples. • ·' • Open as bed Queen and diial • size • Thtst •re vtry comfort1blt sofa beds sittin9 end sltepin9 .• Reversible b<1cks end sett cushions. e S9vtrtl styles to choose from. Your fa.voritt inter ior designer will be happy to assist uou ... H.J.GARRETT fU~NlTURE ~ PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mo..n., Thurs. & Fri. Eves. 22t6 •HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ME SA, CALIF. • ' .j DAILV PILOT Porno Probe • • A Puzzlement • • , - 1HE MYSTERY PROBE: Huntington Bhch school authorities apparently con- tiiDJe to have difficulty in sweeping under tht public rug their mini-scandal wherein ttie •,rorld's most famous sex movie \\'as screened privately by district ad· mtnistrators. 1_ An this occurred way back last August '"lien certain administrators of the ~un· tington Beach Union High School District gaihered for a conference in San Diego. Having eihausted themselves i n di*:ussion of profound educational topics. they broke out a videotaped version or "the Big' X movie "Deep Throat'' and played it a touple of times. Huntington Beach vice co~ got in to the act some time later, apparently when they were tipped that a district employe had the videotape and it rbay have been illegally reproduced by uSe of district equipment. This later ap-- parently proved false. But the vice cops kept the videotape which they had con- fiscated from the employe's domicile anyway. AFTER THAT, the official Huntington Beach police posture seemed to be that !heir role had ceased. The whole scene was "an internal matter" to be solved by the school district and its trustees. Then just the other night, the school board had another session where some 200 folks showed up. Some argued that District Superintendent Jack Roper should have been dispatched from employment because of his role in the "Deep Throat" screening. Others defended the board action in simply having Roper apologize. Get on with the business of education, they urged. THE ONLY REAL action the Hun- tington trustees took , however, was to authorize their attorney from the Orange County Counsel's Office to turn over all his findings in the case to the Huntington Beach Police Department. This action strongly suggests tbat Hun- tington's law enforcers are going to continue an investigation into the sexy movie incident. You have to see this as a ·bit of a · puzzle. What's left to be probed anyw{ly?. ... The school board apparently has shut the door on the whole business. For this, they drew. praise from Fountain Valley Mayor George Scott. AND WHILE JDS very own police department is apparently gearing up an additional investigation . Huntiogton Beach Mayor Jerry fl.1atney was telling newspaper people to cool it on "Deep Throat." Quit printing all that .em- barrassing stuff. YOu're giving the town a bad public image. So you have lhe police probing on the one hand and lhe mayor saying forget it on the other. Puzzling. What Will the Huntington Beach police find? That "Deep Throat" is a pornographic movie? Well, ma~. But that's a question many courts are split on right now. And regardless of your personal views, it should be noted that this skin nick has enjoyed wide screening in public, sit-down theaters across the nation. WAS IT ALL some sort of · misap- propriation of taxpayers' equipment or funds ? You wouldn't need the Huntington Beach police to investigate that. The trustees themselves and their attorney could handle those questions . Puzzling. It sure leaves you wondering what's going on behind the creen doors. Oh, excuse me. That's a different movie. Japan Pressures ·Kissinger Ove~r Oil VUitnam Repulses Red Tanks SAIGON -Government tooop! today repulsed a North Vietnamese tank artjJlery and infantry assault near the Cambodian border, killing 100 Com- munist troops and knocking out two tan ks. but taking heavy c.osualtles, the Saigon command said. The North Vi etnamese attack came against a government defense line five ( JN SHORT ... ") miles south or the abandoned government can1p at-Bu Prang, about 120 miles northeast of Saigon, the command said. Forty government soldiers w .c r e reported missing. tt Holtlnrd Hughes Deni? fl1ANAGUA, Nicaragua -American billionaire Howard Hughes has sold a 50 percent interest ira the Nicaraguan Airline Lanica (Liea.s Aereas d e Nicaragua), according tD sources in the company. Hughes spent several hectic, secretive w~eks in Managua in 1972,. visiting Nicaraguan Leader Anastasio Somoza Jr.~ I_n. Los Angeles, Dick HaMa, Hughes' official spokesman, denied the report. He said Hughes did obtain a 25 percent jnterest in ~nica in 1972 in exchange for several convair 880 jetliners. e ltlllitn11t Killed NEW YORK (UPI) - A black libera- tion army Jeader wanted in connection with the shc»tings r>l at least eight po- licemen "'as killed in a shootout Wed- nesday night "breaking the back" oC the black leader4 ihip. Two detectives. an FBI agent a n d a passerby w e r e wounded in the gunbattle with Twymon ~1yers, one of the FBI's most v•anted' fugitives~ outside a south Bronx grocery; none senoosly. e Prt.on ltlelee Ends . HONOLULU (AP) -· A one~ay disorder at the Hawaii State Prison bas ended without bloodshed and amidst calls for prison reform. The disturbance, which began late Tuesday when an estimated 150 inmates took control of the pri3on's main cellblock, ended late Wednesday when the inmates returned to their cells. e Daughter Released MUNICH, Germany CAP) -Kidnapers released the 22-year-old daughter of Wienerwald restaurant m a g n a t e Friederich Jahn early today after a friend of Jahn handed over 3 million marks -$1,154,000 -on a rainy h1unich street. police said. Evelyn Jahn was freed Wlhurt at 4 a.m. after being held for about 30 hours. the police said. They suspected that she had been held by four or five persons. at least two or them in their early 30s and armed. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtliYtl')' of tht D11l1y Piiot is 9u11raQtttd Mt11t11<111'ritl1r: II ''u H 1111 1111111 rwr ,.,... "'f J;• p.m., Clll 1"4 YIW' Cltl'I' Wiii k ''"''"' II 'ftl. Clllt 1r• tel'°" 111tu 1:)1 p.m. S1twrt1y •I'll l1M1y: 11 .,.., ft ,.., r1c1l111 Y"' Ctit\' l 'f I 1.m, t111rtll'• If I 1,m, S1111tl'f, Cl lt tilt t (f111' will k lrHfl!I .. y111, C1lll trl 11-tR f'ltll II 1.m. T tltphonts Miff Ori..,_ CMlftll' .tr111 Nt111!•1tl M1111tl"1lt11 l tnll 111• Wttlmlflt ltr •..••••• StR Clefll.l11ll, C1•ltlrll!t ltt<ll, 1111 J11111 CtpltlrlM, 01111 Ptltll, SMllll L1111111, L1111111 Nlflltl •••• tt2><141' Talks on Middle East End on Note of. Gloom TOKYO (UPI) -~etary of State Henry A. Kissinger today heard anxious pleas from Japanese leaders for a quick settl=t to the Middle Ea.st contllct and resumption of normal oll supplies. ' Aichi described the meeting, u a "friendly and lnlortnal" exchange of views without any specific neeollaUons. Tanaka's cabinet decided Wednetda~ _ to aet up a special headquarters to carry out a nationwide Qil saving cam~ paign in the face ol poulble Arab cut· backs. · Qbaervers said his round or talks with Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka and three other cabinet minlsten ended with the Japanese gloomy because Kissinger was __ unable to assure them of prompt relief frpm oil cutbacks. Japan Imports 99.6 percent of its oil. 40 percent of it from Arab l\8tlons \\'ho have cut back productioit as a bargaining lever against Israel. It faces a serious economic slowdown if nonnal d~liveries are not resumed soon, senior Japanese officials said. KISSINGER SEES . ,t I UPI Ttltll'llOll It's That Tinae ' l\1rs. Patricia Nixon receives turkey fro m National Turkey Federa- tion at ceremonies at Wh ite House. Presenfation is annual event. ~ Though Dismissal Illegal, Cox Won't Seek Job Back WASHINGTON (AP) -Archibald Cox says he won't -try to get back bis job as Watergate special prosecutor even though a court has ruled he was fired illegally at PreSident Nixon's direction . "For me to make any legal claims under (the decision) would only divert attention from getting the job done,'' Cox said in a terse statement shortly a{te r the ruling Wednesday. The action by U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell prompted new im- peachment demands from two of the three Democratic congressmen who had sought the ruling. THE DECISION also made clear it was intended to protect the independence of Cox's successor, Leon Javiorski. and discourage. legislation to create a new, court-appointed prosecutor. The White House declined to comment on the ruling, referring requests to the Justice Department where acting Atty. .Gen. Robert H. Bork said he had not yet decided whether to appeal. It was Bork who fired Cox after Aty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson and depu- ty Atty. Gen. William S. Ruckelshaus refused tO carry out Nixon's directive and r~ign~. Bork, as solicitor general, was third 1n command at the time. BORK WAS SAID to be upset b}: the judicial slap but-uneertain about the wisdom of appealing an order that had no actual impact. Gesell declared that Cox's firing v.·as illegal but stopped short ot ordering hi1n reinstated or any other ac:tion t<iken. Bork, meanwhile. testified W~nesday that Jaworski is going ahead· with all th~ investigations Cox had under way. He also told the Senate Jtxliciary Com- mittee he had not been anxious to fire Cox, but ca rried out the President's directive because he thought it \Vas the proper thing to do. The committee is investigating Cox's dismissal. I I IN IDS DECISION, Gesell noted that J~orski, as with Cox. can only be dismis.sed ~or extraordinary impropriety under the regulations establishing his office -regulations he said Nixon's dismissal of Cox violated. "It is therefore particularly desirable to enunciate the rule or law applicable if attempts are made to discharge (Jaworski )," he said. Reps. Bella S. Abzug (D-N.Y.). and Jerome R. Waldie (R-Calif.), two plain- tiffs in the suit that produced Wednes- day's ruling, said at a :joint news conference _that the ruling made im· peachment of Nixon more imperative. Princess, Groom Fly To Island Honeymoon • LONDON (AP) -Britain's royal newlyweds, Princess Anne and Capt. l\fark Phillips, Oew to· Barbados today -.for the start of an 18-day honeymoon cruise aboard the royal yacht Britannia. KISSINGER MET today with Finance Minister Kiichi Aichi, Tanaka and Ya suhiro Nakasone, minister of in- ternational trade and industry. Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohlra, who talked 1~·ith Kissinger for t"'O hours Wednesday, attended the meeting with Tanaka. Stat e Department Spokesman Robert h1cCloskey refused to reveal specific ... contents or _t.he talks, including whether Japan was edging toward a diplomatic break v.•ittl Israel. Reports from the h1iddle East thls y.•eek said the Arabs were demanding such a break as a price for resumption of run oil deliveries. trThe Japanese \\'ere more forthright. Nakasone, the 5'{0ngest voice in the government for a pro-Arab policy, told a nev.·s conference fter his meeting \\'ith Kissinger that Israel 's 'l\'ithdrawal to its 1967 borders should be the basis fir a setUement . ---ri--f JAPANE~E DA N__<;E '1; TOKYO (AP) -Foreign Minister Masayoshi Oh!ra gave a banquet for / Secretary of State Henry A. Kisslnaer at a leading geisha restaurant Wed- nesday night and did a Japanese dance for his guests, local newsmen reported today. • They said Kissinger ·was so delighted he told <?hlra he would ha ve to learn an Amer1~an folk dance to entertain him \Vith the next tin1e he came to \Vashington. · The newsmen said the iinpromptu entertainment arso jncluded harmonii::a solos by U.S. Ambassador Robert Ingersoll. ·--... --.. House Voting On 11% Hike In Benefits FOREIGN l\UNISTER Ohira d~fd the United States had made any demands regarding the future course of Japan's WASHINGTON (AP) -The HOU9e !\fiddle East policy. is comlderlng a ty.•o-stage, JJ percent Kissinger, arrived in Tokyo Wednesday cost~f-living increase in Social security from Peking where be reached agree-benefits that would bring an additional ment for continued efforts to promote ~.4 billion to about 30 million person.! 1he normalization or Sino-American ties next year: . -blocked so far by America's ~I The le~slat1on, to be voted on today. to break ~ with Taiwan. ~so provides a speed-up plus a boost Kissinger, scheduled to fly to Seo~1n welfare pa1ments lo several millioo -the last stop of his 1 round:the-world poor, aged, b!ln~ and crippled people trip -on Friday worked out plans under ~ .nall?Jl s. new so.called 5UJ>' during his China stay to expand liaison plementwecunty income program next Officers in Peking and Washington. year. . . . . Aichi, following his 55-minute meeting If signed mto la"'· the Social Security with Kissinger, said the two men discuss· measure would ~ake the place of a ed the secretary of state's visit to the 5.9 percent benefit boost approved last Middle East and China, "but it was July and due to become errective from agreed we would keep tlfese· con-J~ 1974 through December 1974. That 7: lidential." · ·-.. t¥,ke had been enacted as an ad~ ,·: •. payment on -Part or an autamatlc ·«ll&-of"' 1°' "Mlt. KISSINGER eipreUed un-,. living inct:eate In benefits-due to 6*i ~: derstandlng and concern 'on Our· pro-in January 1975. -i blem," Aichi said. 11He sat d it was of 1 concern not only to Japan but to America TIIE NEW legislation would crant ~. and va rious European countries in Social Security benefit boOlt.s of 7 per-!- greater Or less degree." cent start1og with nen April'• ctieckJ :· President Tells Senators 1970 Income Tax Sum WASHlNGTON f AP) -President Nlx- oo has told a group of. senators how much he paid in federal income taxes in 1970. and one senator said it was "a substantial figure impressive to any taxpayer." But Sen. Charles · H. Percy (R-llt ). who reported the President's disclosure, would not divulge the figure . Percy said, "l would rather the President do it. .. Percy indicated. Nixon offered the figure in discussing ne'Vi:I arUcles sug- gesting he paid little tax in 1971 and 1972. The White House has said only that Nixon paid taxes those two years refu sing to confinn or deny an Octobe; report by the Providence Joumal-Bulletin that Nixon 's federal income tax payments £or those two yean totaled $1,670. Percy. said Nixon did not give a figure for those t\\'O years, only for the year "just prior" to those two years. followed by another 4 percent ~ •: beginning in July's checb. 'Jberufter. :: C<>St-ol-llvtng raiseo in beneftts 'll'IXlld • automatically oome each June rather •. than JatWary. Along with the benefits, the bill Cills for financing by widening -Ole present $10,tlOO Social Security payroll tax wqe :. base to $13,200 effe<live Jan. · t, while :- the CWTent 5.85 percent tu rate would : not change• next year. ' THE REVISIONS would mean the average old.age benefit each DlClltb for a single recipient would rise from the existing $167 to $178 in April and $1115 in July, while the one for a oouple would go from $277 at presenl to-'311 in April and $3t0 in July. • Meanwhile, the financing formula : would mean a worker a,gcl--hi9 · boss '! who each paid a top $63t in Social Security taxes this year would be paying $'172 eaoh in 1974 7 a 22 percent booat in the maximum tax. Fcrthennore, the legislation would pro- vide a pair ol cost-of-living increUel in the payments under the sUpplemental security ineome program for. &he elderly, blind and· di!abled recipients o( public aid . Fair Skies Over Nation The couple left Heathrow Airport as regular first~lass passengers aboard a scheduled British Airways Boeing 707 flight. It's a nine-hour trip to the Com4 monwealth nation, an island ofr the northern coast of South America. '1f those three years were added up and put in balance, it would be substan- tially Jarger than any figure we have heard," Percy said. The While House, asked about Percy's statement, bad no immediate comment. • Northern Sierra Nevada Mountains Get Heavy Snow • llOINO ____ ., ,, .. IAllC l;~j~lt'OW P7"':'l ...... ~MIOWttl llOW Anne and Mark had spent their wed - ·ding night at the country hOme of one of Anne's cousins. The royal couple, the last to board the plane, were dri ven across the tannac in a maroon~ RoU.-Reyce belonging to Queen Elitabeth TT, Anne's mother. The princess, 23, wore a blue coat over a nower-printed. cream silk shirtwaist. drf.ss. Her 2$-year-old husband wore a dark suit. Also aboard for the 4,300-mile night were Sir Winston Scott, the governor general of Barbados, and Lady S<olt. They had been in Lont!Qn for Wed· nesday 'a wedding c e r em o n y in Westminster Abbey. As ·the1 reached the cabin door. Prince~• Anne and Phillips turned and waved smilingly to the 300 well·wlshers gathered to see them off. The princess preceded her husband Into the small first-class section where nine of the It rtmafnlng scats were reported booked by journalists. British Airways ollicials said no special arrangements had been made for the couple. , . ) Court Out to Halter Wendy, Topless Act CHlCAGO (UPI)--An •rrest warrant was ' issued in Chica50. Wednesday for Wendy Berlowltz, 25, when she failed to appear in women's court on <:barges she took oil heT halt... in public Oct. 25 be!ore a noontime crowd o( Z,500. Mn. Berlowltz, on • cr......,...(ry protest campaign against tho nation's nudity laws, was released from jail· without ball shortly after heT 11Test In the civic center plaza, "-eart of Chicago's loop. Marshal Probe LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Ang•les County Grand Jury h8S launched what was termed a full1C1ie in· veatlgation Into an alleged 11varlety of misconduct" by the county marshal's omc., o!!iclals said Wednetday. Bruce Campbell. an aide to Di1L Ally. Joseph Busch, confirming the probe. - Bair·letl Linda Lovelace has been ex· cused from teslilyiOg In Tuc- son, Ariz., court !or her lilm "Deep Throat." She had just wa<hed her hair and it was ·SW! wet. ' ' I /1 I I I • j ' ' I ' ' I ) I ) I • l ) • ( 7 I • I ) I • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 66, NO. 319, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 19n \. N Newport Mana,ger .. Nixe-s Mesa Halftime S~o·w By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ot t1tt1 Dlllr , .... 1111f Newport City . Manager Robert Wynn today canceled the participation or hi! city's fire and police equipment in a Friday night football halftime show at Davidson Field FridlU'. The show, called "Emergency Services In Action," was conceived by C.OSta Mesa Hlgh School band director Earl Treichel and was to have been performed to band music. · ~ 'Not .J11stified' 0 1be use of i»lice and firemen in a halftime entertainment setting is im- proper and is di.sallowed,,, Wynn said today. He added that be had informed the fire and police departments of his decision by memorandum this morning. Wynn said further that the fire and . police equipment was pW'Chaaed to pro-- tect the residents Of the city a n d that its diversion· for halftime,entertainnient "would impair the ability of the city to perform its emergency function." Ford Recognizes Credibility Dip WASHINGTON (AP ) Vice Presi~ent-desimiate G~ R. Ford said JP<!ay he has urged PreSident Nixon to hold . more news conferences and broaden public contacts in an effort to restore his credibility. Ford, under questioning by a House Judiciary Committee examining his qualifications to be vice president, said ' 11 Wounded Coast Hostage Suing Newport Police A man accidentally shot by Newport Beach police as he was being held hostage by a kidnaper today has on file a $250,000 claim against the city. Attorneys for MarC9'de Silva, 20, allege police Intentionally ibot the youth and claim the Newport Beach Police Depart· ment ls "too P.rone to the use of violence.'' ( City officials h"'°e routinely denied the claim, clearing the way for the claimant to fUe a lawsuit. De Silva was one or two persons held captive in an Orchid Hills Drive home on Sept . 12 by Roland Dale crawford, 29, or Huntington Beach, when police closed In. In an exchange or gunfire, de Silva and Crawford's second hostage, Denine Baeseman, 17, were both struck by police bullets. Miss Baesem·an has not yet filed a claim although the owner of the house , . Howard Feichtmann, Is seeking about $1 ,000 for repair of Structural damage. -Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas , who admitted after the lnrldent proper police procedures were generally followed, -but mistakes bad been made -was unavailable for comment today. His adjutant, Lt. Ed Cibbarelli, denied the charge that police shot de Silva on purpose. "We have conducted an investigation and we have admitted that we made certain tact.ical erron," Cibbarelll said, "but there was no intention by pollce to do any harm to irmocent persons. "Our main concern at all times was the safety of the OOstagis, h Cibbarelll said. l The claim flied by attorney George McDonald also contends "the city negllg"'Uy failed to communicate and or to communicate accurately a descr~ (See CLAIM, ~e Z) he recognized that Nixon's credibility has been damaged by the Watergate affai r. (Related stories Page 3.) "I don't believe it is justified ," be said, "but there is significant evidence that it ti.u been. " Ford said he bas been working with N'ixon and h i~s advisers to develop methods the ' eot can me . to a~ i; '11fk,.... 'f//. public .. · nloo. Nixon's decision to release Uie White Houst tapot and to meet with memben o1 till Hause and Senate, ., he 1a doing, were among the steps . he. pro- posed, Ford 13.id. 'lbe questioning of Ford began on a jarring note wifb Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Micb.), objecting to the comrttittee proceeding with the confirmation bear- ings before acting on impeachment resoluUons before it. The committee's fonpal opening pro- ceedings ~stressed the historical nature . of the ftrSt confinnation bearings by the House and the bonds of friendship between , Ford and the commlttee members fonned during Ford's 25 years as a oongressman. Just u Ford was about to deliver his opening statement, Cooyers broke in with "a point of personal privilege." Ford proceeded to make his statement without referring to Conyers' rem.irks. He said he was ofrering his reputation for truth, fairness and friendship as qualities that could serve the nation ii he became vice president. "Thil is not a spectaacular role for the next three years but it is one I believe to be needed, and to which I can bring a certain amount of ex· perience," Ford said. ·- Ford had given a similar message to the Senate, which opened bearings on bis confirmation two weeks ago. This is the start of similar proceedings in tl.e House. -3 MEN ARRESTED FOR FOWL DEEDS WOODLAND (UPI) -Three men were held here on $~,SOO bond on a charge of stealing and killing three turkeys. The turkeys, valued at $25 each, were taken from a turkey · fann a n d slaµghtered on the scene, sheriff's deputies said Wednesday. Fowl rustling is claul,!ied as grand theft in california. ·. Friday night's show at the Costa Mesa- Fountain Valley game wu to have in- volved several fu:e trucks, police cars, motorcycles, and ambulance and a police helicopter in a demonstration. The demonstration· was to have been conducted while the band played such S<'ngs as "Light My Fire," "Up, Up and Away," and the theme from Hawaii Five-0. Wynn said the full-scale use of all types of "equipment for football eq-,. . • • ' ' CITED BY LAWMEN H1rbor Hi9h'1 Collins Heights Youth Gets Citation Of :Peace Officers A convicted se:x offender iJ!I confined at Atascadero State Hospital today and a Harbor Area boy is in Palm Springs, being honored for his role in helping put tbe. man there. William Collins, 14, of Santa Ana Heights, is one of six recipients of special commendation certificates from California Attorney General EveUe J. Younger. He is the only non-adult scheduled to be so honored during' a meeting of the California Peace Officers Associa· lion in-Palm Springs today. Four of the six recipients are from Orange County. Police Chief B. James Glavas, past president of the Jawmen's group nominated the Newport Harbor High School freshman. Collins was singled out for intervening in a dangerous situation, one in which he did not ·knew wti_ether bis own life or safety might be threatened. Young Collins was riding bis motorcy· cle May 15 in, a seculded area oft ,Back Bay Drive near Upper Newport Bay when he heard a young girl's screams in a clwnp of bushes. A man later identified as stat~ registered sex o£fender Paul H. Vezina, 28, who • lived in the area, emerged from the ~141bes and Collins went to confront him. Vezina was briefly questioned , but (See COLLINS, Pqe I) tertainment was improper although he believes there is nothing wrong with the loaning of a ftre truck to a school for the purpose of taking a Homecoming queen around the field, The Newport Beach city manager said he had been unaware until Wednesday afternoon that fire and police officers were rehearsing the progratn. He apologized for the lateness of the can· cellation notice. Robert Packer, principal at Costa Mesa High School, said the school ap-- pealed to \Vynn lo change his mind but t~at the attempt was unsuccessful. "There was no e rr o r on our part. We started plann ing this with the Newport Beach· education officer and other city officials last spring," said Packer. "But they. apparently did not inform their city manager." Packer said the show will be altered but that he does not know how it will be presented. "I feel bad for the kids who have worked on this so long," h~e said. ~-layor Jack Hamm ett of Costa ~1esa said he was surprised at Wynn 's decision because "it see ms like ii would have been good public relations.·• lfowever. he explained that he cou1d not save the show for the Costa h-1esa · youngsters without the permission or '. - Cit y Manager Fred Sorsabal. Sorsabal I is away in New York on city business. Costa Mesa officials earlier declined J to participat~ in the demonstration ex· J ercise. according lo band .director Treichel. • ron 010 ICC .Gets Population Limit Plan By JACK BROBACK Of Ille Dallr l'lltt Slaff A proposed Orange County growth policy which would~ limit "population to 2.9 million by 2020 has been sent to the f I e d g 1 i n g Inter.governmental Coordinating Council (ICC) by the 9range County Board of Supervisors. i~ t~ ~~ba~il\>l"~e 1"4..it document in 90 days. but. they falle!I to make the& own ·reoopllneod4tion on It. Board Chairman Ronald Cospers of Newport Beach was the 'lone hold-out, contending that the d~lay was "passing the buCt. We should be providing a new direction for county growth, not a 'no direction' stance." The action Wednesday came on a motion by Second District Supervisor David Bater, who objected to the coun-- ty's adoptioo of a limited groWth policy without concurrence of the cityles. "I don't think this bas· been thought through enough," Baker Sf.id. "The pro- ponents haven't asked labor, business, industry or the cities for their input." The ~page county planning depart· ment report has been the subject of several public bearings by the Planning Commission -and the Citizens Direction Finding Commission. Both commissions recommended ap- proval of it with some conditions. Formed less than a year ago, the ICC is composed of representatives of cities and the supervisors. So far it has accompl~ed little, spending most of its time in organizational procedures. Its pW'pOSe is to serve as liaison between county government and the various city councils. 1 The growth policy proposes slowing the county's population increases to 35,000 to 40,000 a year, compared to the cUrrent 65,000. Planner Al Bell has projected that this would work out to an ultimate population of 2.9 million in 2020, about twice the present population. Previous projections have said the county could boom to four million residents by that time. The plan proposes restrictions on growth in some areas, including a guota on new building permits to anow a maximwn number of new homes to be built each year. The idea, Bell said, is to balance available public services' with growth. , The county now has a de facto policy which bas no set guidelines or controls (See IJMIT, Page I) • Airlines Funding ''Legal' By L. PETER KRIEG Of Ille Dell~ "llol Sl11f Sources close to Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Bejch, President Nixon's ; personal attorney, confirrrled today that I he did ~licit $100,000 from American i . .... Airlines .but "he bad no idea they would 1 make il!~(ai con 'butions." : MEDAL OF VALOR \lllNNER Officer Mike Sullivan Coast Officer~s Heroics ·Earn Him Valor Medal Newport Beach policeman M i k e Sullivan probably will never forget Jan. / 9; Jan. 11 and Nov. 15, 1973. There Was a house on fire Jan. 9. 'There were two elderly people inside. Sullivan broke a window with bis flashlight and da'shed inside, braying the heat and choking on the thick smoke. He emerged moments later "with an elderly woman. Firemen arrived and together they went back in alter her husband . He later <lied, but she is ali ve because of Sullivan. So, probably, is a y o u n g man Of~'cer Sullivan observed on :.he beach at alboa last Jan, 11. He was ~ng there al the wrong end or . a gun police said was bein~ held by a mentally disturbed juvenile. Sullivan managed to disarm the youth without a shot being fired . Officer Sullivan today was honored for those acts of bravery. He was awarded the Newport Harbor Chamber Of Commerce Medal of Valor award at the third annual Police Awards Luncheon at the Newporter Inn. He was one of f<iur .officers receiving awards. Sgt. Don Picker and Detective Ken Smith received Awards of Merit for reviving an unconscious man they found fl oating in a swimming pool. An Award or Merit was also g ive n Officer Scott Cade for the dramatic off-duty arrest of a jewelry store robber (See SUWVAN, Page 2) "He di · or corporate funds \ or for c the point is absolutely \ clear on that," the aources said. i They 'did, however, describe bow i Kalmbach approached American Airline! ~ president George A. Spater in the fall ' of 1971. Spater had testified on the 1 contribution before the Scnatt: Watergate 'committee today. , "Kalmbach met tw ice with Spater and the second time he asked the executives 1 of the airlines to take on a $100,000 I goal. i ''Spater agreed but said he fii'ured J the best they could probably do was l between $70,000 ;:r.d $75,000," the sources , said. 1 "He told them whatever t hey could ; do would be appreciated." I Spater today testi fied that American 1 Airlines did contribute $75,000 but $55,000 I of it was corporate fund.! written off on a phony invoice for used airplanes l from a Lebaneie company. Kalmbflch never saw Spater after that '. second meeling, the sources said, adding l that when he was later informed. the ' contributions were in cash and part I or them were corporate funds he was i totally surprised. '. The sources said Kalmbach had 'Jto,.· way ·of knowing the contributions would be illegal. "Spater is the former general counsel for American Airlines and donations of corporate fund!.. are clearly illegal and Spater knew it." the sources said. "It never occurred to him to say that they can 't be corporate funds because everybody knows that." Sources said that Kalmbach had ex· pected that the many executives wi th the big airline would all chip in to get the dondtlOn up. "If a large enough num ber or them paid $.1,000 each, you'd get up '.lhete," the sources said. 110r if you get one or lwo directors to go into it together, that's bow you get to it," they said. Kalmbach and Spater also "laughed (See KAL~ACH, Page Zl (;oast Orange • ,.. lVeather . . Nixon to Sig1i Pipeline' Bill Coast ·Food .Market Strike · Looni.s The Orange Coast will be fair through Saturday with some coasl· al low clouds Friday morning, ac- cording to the weather service. Highs in the upper 60s lo low 70s. Lows tonight upper 40s to low 50s. WASIDNGTON (o\P) -Pr<sJ. dent Nl>on said loday he will sign Friday a bill authorit.ing con- struction of an oll pipeline across Ala1k1 despite what he 11ld were objection1blt features of the bill. "J wJlt, of course, sign the bill," Nixon said In 4' speech to the Natiooal A-latlon of Rultors .. However, NlxOn llkt he would \ ask Congress laler to remove ~ loin amendmentlo attached lO the bill In the Sen1te. 'lbe9e fflnl broad r<gulatory powtrs to the f'ederal Trade Commission. - I , • Orange County reaidents may have Diego. About 3,725 of them work In to cross picket lines to shop at food Orange County. markets next week. 'lbe montb-<lld talks hit a stalemate Predictions of a strike by four food again \Vednesday when labor oflicials Industry unions varied today. But the rejected a federal mediator's request Food Employen COuncil (FEC) waa that they extend. the Sunday strike preparing for lhe possibility. (Set r<lated deadline. story, l'l&e :i!I.) • W. J. Usery, director of the Federal "We're getting ready," Robtrt Voljbl MediaUon Service, asked the Wlion of the FEC laid. "Everybody la crantlng leaden ear.ly Wednesda)" to come to up their strike gear." Wal!IJJlllon, D.C. Monday to continue The FEG 11 negotlltln1 with ;.tlle negoliatiOlll. caU!oml• Focid .. d Drug Cound~ which His request WU tumed down by about repreeents the teamsters, butcben, 20Q union offlcialt it an emergency oper16"' engineers . and machinists meeUn1 at the Biltmore llolel In Los unions. An el ... Tb< labor JltlOJlator.rr<present lboul. -~ la'bor representaUve laid today that 28,000 •mPlofea from BUersfield _to san moving about 160 peHOnS essential to - " the negotiatiorl5t to Washington, D.C. \l'Ould be expenSive, wQU]d be a drain on the energy shortage and would in· terrupt· the progress of negotiations. Union officials said today they want Usery to corne to Los Angeles. "S ia help la urgeQtly needed." Negotiations are continuing while Usery determines his response to the union plea. Union officials differed in their eslimaUons of the possibility of a walkout after Sunday. Meat Cutters Union vice president Jack Boyd said there's a 15 pen:ent chance, but Teamsten negotiator Jerry VercruJe cutJbaLdoWD..to nve percent, but added he could be wrong. I If a strike is called , it is expeclcd1 to last more than a month. But the FEC's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about not getting food, "We plan to keep all stores i11 opera· tion during the strike." be said. Labor unions originally said the strike may be against one wholesaler only. hut 'Voight said a strike against on e Is a strike against all. "We're a unified industry," he -SD.id, promising a lockout or workers by the FEC. FEC preparaUons for a strike include: stockpiling the back rooms of stores with food : getting extra orders in OOU'; . !See.STRIKE, Page !l ' l :\Sllll·: T ODA\' Ropes and assault.! Oll coeds have become a major .problem on the natio1l's college cam· ruses. See story, Page 8. lNltllt -;;:::::: Allll L..... ii L.M. l •H 14 MIVf" »It Celllorllll S1 Mutv•I .... ,... 11 Cl111ltlM JJ-0 Hltl .. al N.wti <II Comln n Or•llM cw11ty II ("'°11-1! 2' l'TA • DHlll NlllC" 11 IWtl ~ 111111r111 '••• .. , ti.c. Mll'llttl n.u lillhf1111mt11t )NI T_..,ltllfl • fll.....U 11•U Tittllln a. JI fltr 1M •tc•N 11 WMIW 4 Hr 01l"4tMr JI Wemtfl't Mtwt ll-11 .... tt<Wt • WtrW '""' J.. 4 ' • • -u .. 1.. PILOI • Thursday, Novembrr 15, l'i7J From PGfl~ I LIMIT FOR COUNTY • • • ) which Ben and other speakers Wt-.d-But Ferguaon attacked Keyes' con- nesd.ay say allows unchecked grov.·th, tentloo. charging In.stead lhat he "used • with poeslble resuJting harm to theAuality a blaed list to get I.ha answer1 yolt of life. wanted ." During the four·hour heilring , the main FergUIOl1 opposed the Idea or building support for the pollcy cam e from the permit 9uo1as, calling 1hem economlcalJy county Grand Jury, the direction finding and socially unreaeonable. commission, the ~ague ol Women Voters Speaking for locally orlalnated policies, and the Orange County Environmental Robert Soyder, president of the Envlron· Coalition. mental Coalition, said, "This county Is . Leading the opposition \\'ert' the big enough to exert leadership to avoid Orange Count y Chamber or Com1nerce, disruptions In our economy." labor organizations nnd Giibert Ferguson He y,•arncd that land use and growth pf the Or ange County Councll for controls may be forthcoming from slate Env ironment, Employ1ncnt. Econon1y and fede ral levels. . ,ahd De velopntent tC EE EO). 1J . Several labor speakers said the restr1c- l\fichae l Keyes . chairman of the direc· t1ons could hurt the cor_1structlon In- ti.on findlni commission. said a survey dustry. Others said cutting. back on ~taken by that group of 1.400 pe rsons sewer, wa ter and other publtc xrvlces s!;lowed that 7& percent or them fa\'o red v.·on't stop !he influx ol people. a form al growt h polic\. Bart Spendlov.e,. an Orange C~u~ty · · planning comm1ss1oner fro m ~t1ss1on .Former Airli ne . Chief Claims Funds Asked WASHINGTON (UPI I -The Conner .chief executive officer of American Airlines said today th'!!it a contribution 'by the corporation to President Nixon's -re-election campaign was solicited by ,Nixon's personal attorney, Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach. .George A. Spater, testifying bef'Ore tbe Senate Watergate Commitee, said Kalmbach asked for a contribution of • Si00,000 In the !all of 1971 and lh< airline eventually donated $7S,000, in- cluding $55,000 in corporate funds. Spater said the $55,000 was ra ised through a phony Invoice to a Lebanese firm for the sale of used aircraft . The cash was paid to the Nixon Re-election Committee in .Washington, he said. Executives of two oil companies also ~ accused of illegal contributions told the conunittee Wednesday the money was dgnated from their firms' foreign bank accounts. Ashland O i-1 Co. Olainnan Orin T. Atkins told the Watergate Committee that a request for $100.000 by campaign finance chairman Maurice S t a n s bordered on extortion. The money, he said, came from a subsidiary company's Swiss bank ac- count because "It doesn't ex cj t e ~ a_pybody's curiosity." Gui£ Oil Corp. Vice President Claude C. Wild Jr., said he responded to a request from fund raiser Lee Nunn for $100,000 and forwarded the money from Gull subsidiaries ln the Bahamas. Wild also testified that Gull contributed $15,000 to the campaign for Rep. Wilbur Mills (l).Ark.), and $10,000 to the cam· paign of Sen. Henry M. Jackson (0.. Wash .). . But they .denied that Stans or any other Nixon campaign official ever of- fered favors in return for the Jllicit funds. ';He didn 't make any comment on where the money should come Crom, but in my mind it could only come from corporate funds because· it wouJd be impractical to raise it any other v:ay," Atkins said. Ashland and Gull pleaded gullly Tues- day and were fined $S,000 each for the illegal Nixon contributions. The two officers were fined $1 ,000 each. Atkins said he was called by Stans, who suggested the $100,000. figure as an appropfiate contribution. . "Stans ne ver left you much ophon about making a contribution, did he?" Chairman Sam J. Ervin asked. "No, 1 never felt 1 had an option,'' Atkins replied. "Borders on extortion doesn't ;t?" Ervin asked. "Yes sir," Atkins said . From Page I KALMBACH. •• :about the fact that one or Kalmbach's :major cl\/!nts is United Airllnes, one of .Ameri can's chief competitors. · . "Spater knew that and Kalmbach ·assured him there would be no ronflict," : the sources sa id. ·,.....~~~~~~~~~~~.., OU.NGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiii ,Ort~t Cot'! DAil V PllOT. wlltl Wlllell I• comolMd the N•ws·P•tH, It OUOl! ... ed b'I' ""-O••nv• CG.Ill P""lflfllne C°""*'V· '-· rtte 11111!'°'11 1rf PVOH1hftl, Mondt'I' tll1"0119h Frldty, tor COl!I M1111, NttWport Be11;h, , ' Hunllr.g!on Bctch/FOl/n!lln V1ll1y. ltgun1 : • r Bc1cll, lrYll"f5-llblt• •NI $en CIM!m!tf : &tn Juan C•Pl1tr1r• A 11~1• fl9lon1I ' t 911/Uon II publlsl!td S.hllll•l'I •n<I ~Un<ltyi.. • ' T"-: pr!MIPll! pUbll1lllnt plt nl 11 11 lJIO WHI ••'I' Strn t, Cot11 Mesi, Ctllfornlt, tl62'. Robtrl N. W1.cl Pruilllftll tflCI PMOJithlr J1c• R. C11rl•¥ Viet Prnklrnl t l'ld ""''''' M.IMQf{ Thor!111 IC11 .. 1t Editor Thof!ltl A. M11rphin1 Mtn1gl"' Edll<lr l. P1lt r Kri14 H.-rl 8eKfl CllY l!!dltt• Nnpert hech Offk• )])) Ntwporl l o11l1v1rd ' " Maillnt A4'Jr1u: ,.0 . l o• 1175, f266J •. """' """• (Otfl M-; UIJ WH1 lt'I' 111"1 ~ 8Hc.ll: m """"'Av- 1' "'-'""""" .. .:fl: l,.IS 8Hd'> IOulft'tr• ,_,,. CM~lt: al N1r#I I I Cltf!l ll'lt lllMI -T ........ f7141 '42AJ21 a..tlW ..... ,, .. '42·5671 c~t. 1ni. °''"'' eo..i """"""" ~-Ht -1i.rlft. lll111trttlerol., --~ fNlflwr .,. acl...,.l!Hmt11t1 ""'•ln ""'I' M r~ w1ttleut IPIClll "" .,... . ..., "' """""""' ·-· hefNI deN ,... ... Miii II C11t1 Mui, Ctll ...... le, 9lllilKrll>llofo .... t ..,_ler llU • i ""°"""''' tr INH Q.U ~lltt1 l'llllhry .... ""'""" ..... !Mflflll.,. - Viejo, said the 1.iel{tils of the plan aren •t that significant now. '"The numbers are the important thing ," he said, urging the policy 's adoption . "All the rest is subse rvient to that." Dave Goldberg of .Westminster, who proclaimed he represented "the people lA'hO work ," gave the most spirited talk. "What kind of an age arc we living in?" he questioned. "Does anybody con- sider the working stiff? You don't lisjen to us." Goldberg wanted to know, "What are we going to do about our children. Thousands will graduate in June and 84 percent will get married . Where are they going to live if you stop . building of apartments? Back with their parents." "The won't let us live in Emerald Bay but when their plumbing soes . haywire who do they call? The working stiff, that's who," he concluded. Col. Ken Dykes, representing the Rossmoor corporation, builders of Leisure World agreed that planning-"Was es.sential but. that restrictions on growth were unrealistic. "Oregon tried to halt growth and cut out utility service to many areas and construction of power plants," he argued. 'The result has ~n brownouts ancj probably later blackOuts ." . Pete Remmel, secretary of the orange Counly Central Labor COOncil, topped the discussion off with, "I am glad I am not on the Board 'Of Supervisors. You're damned. il yoo do and damned if you don't." '" From.'Page I COLLlNS ... suddenly turned and fled, at which time a 12-year-old girl emerged from the brus~ in·near-bysteria, saying she had been molested. Police called to the setne said the victim was not seriously injured, but with her rescuer's ald a composite ln<1en· ti·kit mug shot of the deviate was developed. Aboul a monlb later, the ColllM youlh was again riding in lhe Back Bay area when he •Potled the su.pect, ni>IUied pollce and then followed the man. He guided patrolmen lO Vezina's Joca- tion, leading to arrest of the suspect who had previously been confined for the same offenses. A week ago today, Vezina, fonnerly of 2485 Irvine Ave., was committed to an .,indefinite term at Atascadero State Hospital as a mentally disordered ser. offende.r. "William's keen sense of observation and high level of community &pirit were directly responsible for Ole arrest of a dangerous individual ,'' Chief Glavas said. "I-lis actions reflett favorably on young people throughout the com- munity." Similar work by William-A. Duncan, or Brea , was also to be honored among the six California contributors to police pr,otection or the public. Brea Police Chief Robert Wassennan nominated Duncan for his role in helping arrange the capture of a suspect charged with more than 20 rapes reported in Orange, Riverside, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties. ·La Palma Police Department patrolmen Thomas Powers and David Barr were to be honored for heroic action in rescuing a traffic accident victim injured and trapped in a blazing car. Neiv port Eying-- Warnin gs Over Parkin g Fin es Newport Beach may start w a r n l n g motorists of the fines they face for not dropping coins in parking meters. City Manager Robert L. Wynn is stu· dying ways to Indicate the amount of fines for overtime parking following a request by Councilman Richard Croul. -·erou1 s<ildllC~d receivetr a letter from a local yacht broker complaining that he'd lost the sal e or a boat to a customer who got mad when he got a $10 parking ticket while in the broker's office. • "People should be forewarned 0£ what they race if they don 't drop money in the slot,'' Croul suggestl'd. "If you're going to shoot somebody with a $10 fin e, you ought.a at least let them know.'; ' Croul said confusion exists primarily in beach areas where some meters carry a $2 fine 'l''hile others carry $10 fines. S1uoke-filled Casino l..AS VEGAS r AP ) -A small but smoky flre forced gamblrr~ from the casino at Lh~ SaharA llotel here Wed- nesday. hotel offichi ls said. A spokesman said the blate stnrtfd In a construction area at lire north side or the building. CITED FOR MER IT Officer Scott C1cM From Page I SULLIVA N ... In Santa Ana . Officer Sullivan, 30, has been wiOt the Newport Beach Police Department only three years. He is currently assign- ed to the Detective Bureau as a burglary investigator. · -Olde, 21, joined the depertmenl only three months ago. He is still undergoing training at the Los Angeles Police Academy. Sgt. Picker, 41, is a 13-year veteran who is currently in charge of the juvenile section or the detective bureau. Officer Smith, 40, joined the depart- ment in 1962. He is an auto-theft in- vestigator in the detective bureau. From Page I CLAIM • • • tlon of the s u s p e c t to the officers in the field.'! McDonald said that resulted tn "the inability of the police officers in the field to distinguish between claimant who was a victim and the kidnaper." De Silva was hit twice by police bullets. Miss Baeseman apparently was struck once, with the slug tearing through one lung. • De Silva's attorney claims that Newport Beach w a s also 0 negligent In retaining" the officeNi on the police force .because it had knowledge of the " · +.. · f violen " propens\..,.-. . . or ce. Glavas, in his explanation of the shooting at a press conference early last month, said police were forced to open f i r e as Miss Baeseman ducked to give police a shot as de Silva struggled with the abductor. Officer Al Daum fired the first police shot which struck a light switch-freSide Crawford's head, Glavas explained. Crawford then trie:d to shoot , Glavas said but bis gun misfired. Police opened fire from about 10 feet away, he said, and as Crawford dro;>Ped for cover slugs from a police gun ripped into de Silva and Miss Baeseman. "Obviously their aim was not as good 1 as it could have been," Chief Glavas · said at the time. Both victims were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and were released a few days later, but are still convalescing. Crawford is in Orange County Jail on $100,000 bond facing 12 felony counts in connection with the kidnaping, with a court appearance due this month . From Pagel STRIKE arranging deliveries with independent trucking companies; recruiting~non-unlon personnel willing to work uooer strike rondltlons ; alerting management to get read y to work overtime and asking the retail clerks utiion not to honor the picket lines. r The clerks union , although not Involved in the negotiations, has been represented by the Food and Drug Council and is being requested by the other unions to suppQrt4heir effort. • Alth9(Jgh ~ union officials said tod.8..Y there has been progress in the tal(S, Voight said Wednesday that there are t.oo many issues "left on the table" on which there has been little agreement. The.y include union control over pro- duction standards and work assignments, equal opportunity for women and a guaranteed eight·hour work day. Wages -expected to be another major stumbling block -have yet to. be fully discussed. FEC officials say lhe unloQS want a $1 an hour raise, substantially more than the 48 cents an hour offe'"fd. 4a!;>ot: offt,cials .rnpde.Jlo c:qmrnent to- day on the wage queSTIOO. Teamster drivers curreqily are paid $5.57 an hour, FEC oflicial! said , warehouSe wOrkers get $5.f8 and office workers get $5.IMI. Union butchers are paid $5.47 an hour, while meat wrappers get $4.44. About 1,725 meit cutters in Orange County are represented by Butchers Union Local 551 in Artesia. IRS Suspect Guilty . . LOS ANGELES (UPI) ~ Waller J. . . . . WINS MERIT AWARD Sgt. Don Pk kir I . MERIT AWARD WINNER Dot. Ken Smith ' I Judge Says Remington 'Truthful' By TOM )!ARLEY ' OI flll Otl.f" Pllft llllf Accused altomey Mlcha9l Kosier Rem· inglon was desc.-lbed by an Orang• Coun· ty Superior Court judge fro1n the witness stand t(ld.ay as &n h9nesi, t.ruthful lawyer wllh RD excellent reputation. "I've never heard .hlm questioned bdore. this," Judge Rl.ymood V1ncent S<.lid from his 'position immedia tely to the left of presiding Judge James F. Judge. "I had every c.'OOfidence in his le~al ab!Hty." Judge Vincent !old tbe Jury Iha! he was Involved ln a ruling on a civil action settled in his courtroom and which later figured In testimony when Remington, 33. was charged wllh ao!lc!Ilng lo commil murder. Radical'.° turned-Bircher Judge Vincenl IesllOed loday !hot lh< settlement o[ the action was amicable and that the plaintiff who sued Rem- ingtoR in a dispute of the lawyer's supply of faulty vending machines seem-• ed well satisfied with the ruling. Assails U.N. i~ Talk Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight had earlier offered almost ideQ· tical testimony when he commented on the attih.ic» of the suing parties in A one-time black militant who now embraces the John Birch Society assailed the United .Nations today in Newport Beach as the "biggest oollectim ol lian, thieves, murderers and thugs ever as· sembled in one place." And s?eaking to a breakfast gathering o( Harbor area reallors, Charlie Smith urged the United States to withdraw from the v.i>rld organization "~fore "".e find ourselves completely at their mercy." "The communists behind the United Nations profess to want peace," Smith charged, "but they don't mean the aame thing when they say peace that you and I mean.· -, _ "We think we have peace when we aren't fighting anybody," Smith ex- plained. · · , "But peace to lhe U.N. Is when everyone in t h e world is so weak that they don't have tne power to resist the Communists," he said. Smith claimed there was an organized conspiracy ln the United statts to lull the American people into a belief that the U.N. is necessary to insure peace. "And to conVlnce people or that," a lawsuit settled in his chambers. . Smith said, "our leaders have been ProlecuUon witnesses in the criminal · creating wars around the world ever · action have testified that ~mington · lhe end f w Id vi II ' hired killers to ellminale plamttlls and mnce . o or ar · · • witnesses in a number or civil action "By keeping these hot s~ts hot, they filed against him after his vending can then prey on our desire for peace machine empire collapsed. by getUng us to commit ourselves mQre Authorities allege that one Yorba Linda and more deeply to the U.N." Smith resident ls only alive today . because1 · the gunmen dispatched to hlS · home said. .,.by Remington were given the wrong Smith said that ~esident Nixon is address and . were additionally booked just as committed to creation of a for a minor traffic infraction on lhe totalitarian world government a s way. Democratic Presidential ca n d.i date Prosecution witness Gary Rollo's George McGovern, "except Nixon got claims to be ·a black belt karate expert elected and is putting the plan into were also challenged today when practice." technical dir~tor David Chow or the Smith said the United States In rom· "Kung Fu" television show told the jury milting itself to the United Nations ~ he was satisfied that the Garden Grove charter had given up the autonomy of man had DO such accomplishment in its military forces, makirig the U.S. the martial arts. Joint Chiefs of Staff a "subsidary arm Rollo, who testified that Rerr..:ngton of the Secretariat General of the U.N." was in on a plan to remove a host ile The flamboyant speaker lA'aS given "'itness whose right index finger "'as an enthusiastic ovation by members of to be delivered to the Fullerton lawyer the Newport Harbor-O>sta Mesa Board after his death ln lhe desert. has beeli of Realtors at their •weekly breakfast the principal target of the deCense in meeting a( the Balboa Bay Club. the six-week lrisl. ~ CJ/oliday · ~W,,~ef'~e - • • F-OR ONLY $1.00 MORE We will make a normal re - placement installation of any standard undercou l)ter dis h- washe r. YES , ONLY $1. MORE ! • The stainless steel .. dishwasher. • • • i i ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YO U ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES ·CLEANER WASHING• RANDOM LOADING . . ·FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVf\ILABLE • ACT NOWlll SALE ENDS NOV . 21, 1973 ............ ,... . .. • NOBODY SELLS • • WJ\STEK ING ·• • DISHWASHER S~ :·FOR LESS THAN « • DUNLAPS « **********·** .. ' .... -Why Waste King Universal is 5 wayr better SAFE , SANITARY DRYING RU8GED BASKETS, RANDOM LOADlliG 90DAYSCASH WITH APPROV e D CRE DIT 1B15 NEWPORT BLVD., " Downtown Casta Mesa -Phene 548 -7788 Loughrldge, 4.1, was convicted Wed· nost!ay of giving 11,500 lo an Intomal Revenue Service agent to have hJm me a false audit "'1ort. Loughridge, ol Long Beach, was "lbund gullly of giving the mon•y lo agent Paul Si<bert 1 . Y .. ..i.&..ii. .. .:.+~+.;;.. ... ,...i,.. ... >+.., .......... -.,. ............................ ... last Auns\ lo la!IS!y a rer>ort on hl1 • , Income llablllly In 1971. ' r -~· t •, ~ .. ,) N Thursday, Novfint>er 15, 1973 • .. ' .. ·-~··~ •• -~-. . Lawn Bowling---A 4 1 I Touch ol Class· I , Wayne Ovington or the Ponrona Lawn Bowling Club came to Newport Beach last week to participate in the fonnal opening of the Newport l' enice Project 'Social Ecology Balance' Seen in Coast Panel Okay Regional .coastal comm1ss1oners have loosened past rigid standards to allow a hig h density Venice apa rlment project that will include so1ne lo\',. income hous- ing. Six of the 17 units planned at 116 Rose Ave. in Los Angeles by William Goldy Ylill be leased to the city housing authority for rental to the elderly or band ica~. I TI!E SIERRA Club. the Friends of SOuth Bay and the Legal Aid Society · of Los Angeles -gfOUps which have opposed a number of developmenl.!I - 111 supported Goldy's project 1'Jonday before the south Coast Regional Zone Conservatioo Com1nission. 1 The den~ty of the. project is 61 dwell- Irvine_ Cove Car ... Thefts Increase A recent Orange County crime report noted that thefts from parked autos are rapidly increasing and it picked out Irvine C.Ove near Corona del Mar as one beach parking spot increasingly favored by car burglars. Maybe Deputy Mar>hal David U!on \Vilkir!OO, 28, of 57) Victoria St., C.osta A.fesa, didn't read lhe report. - He probably will now. For while the West Orange County Judicial District lawman was swimming ofr Irvine Cove Tuesday someone broke into his parked van and took $33 in cash from the marshal's wallet. Orange County Sheriff's investigators are looking into the incident. New Neighbors ing Wlits per gross acre and 72 units per net acre. Medium density in the area ls from 26 to 40 u!Uts a gross acre. The one-bedroom units v;ill be leased at $167 each per month for live years to the housing authority. which then can rene\V the lease for a second five years. TI!E HOUSING authority then rm!& the units back to low income residents at one-fourth their income. Commissioner Louis Nowell, a Los Angeles city councilman. opposed the projoct, sa~ the elderly were being put in high density the oornmlJsloo \\'OUldn't approve for anyone else. Deputy State Attorney General Dennis Antenoor . aeid the issue is similar to the forthcoming state commissJon decision on the proposed expansion of ·the San Onofre nuclear power plant three miles south of San Clemente . IN THAT CASE, the 00mmissim is being asked to balance the energy crisis - a social issue -with the en- vironmental effects of the plant. A final · ruling on the question hasn'I been reach- ed .. Commissioner Robert Rooney ol Hwt· tington Beach said the commissions shouldn't consider social faclors at all . Rooney, No\\·ell and C<trmniMiooers Rimmon C. Fay or li1arlna del Rey and Art Holmes of San Clemente voted against the high density project. VOTING FAVORABLY \\'ere Com- missioners Ron Caspers or Newport Beach, Judy Rosener or Ne~·port Beach, Don Phillips and Russ Hubley of Long Beach, Carmen Warschaw of Los Angeles, Don Wilson of Torrance and Donald Bright or La Habra . • Boys play baseball In Buffalo Hills Park in Harbor' View Homes seC>- lion of Newport Bl\i'ch as unit.'! \n thlrd phase of th• Bren develop- ment go up In the background. New homes off New MacArthur / •. Boulevard and Ford Road will be ready shortly after the first or tile ~ year, accof<ling to the Irvine Company. • • • ., Beach bowling green across the street from Lincoln School in Corona del Mar. Nattily attired in his bowling whites, Ovington proves that lawn bowling is one of those few sports you can participate in while smoking a pipe. It also requires a lot of body english . Bibl,e Peddwr Loses Pistol ' A Bible sal~man !Tom Diamond Bar complained to Costa Mesa police Tuesday that someone stole his Saturday Night Speci.a.1-style revolver while he was honey- mOOning in Denver. Kenneth Schulman, 38, who represents Royal Publishers, 2940 Grace Lane, said the loaded .32 caliber pistol was pilfered out of bis desk. drawer. He also said the thief stole a .22 caliber rifle out of bis office, making it a $l80 1,..' altogether. 'NewPort Police Explorer Post . . \ . Seeking a Bus • • Anybody got a bus they don't want? The ,Newport Beach Police Explorer · Post \Vill be glad in take it orr your hands. "WE .NEED A bus to transport our Scouts to numerous activities," explained post advisor stan' Bressler. "It's got in be in fairly good con- dition," Officer Bressler said, adding that the price has to be in fairly good condition, too, ·because the post's bank account isn't. "l suppose we could come up with $300," ·he saJd, "Jn fact, if we could get a deant bus for $300, l know we could come up with the money." But free is better, Bressler said. "IT'D BE NICE if some big company wanted to give it to us and write it off m its Income tax," be suggested. Bressler pointed out that it doesn't have' to be a real big bus. "A mediwn-size bus is what we "'·ant," he said, "we really couldn't use one ot those big ones that carries 79 people." Somewhere between 25 and 40 would be an ideal capacity. Anybody with a bus can contact Bressler at the Newport Beach Police Department Special People; Pick.·Up Your '·-Cards at.Game "Special People" is the lhemc of Orange Coast College's 1973 Homeroming .. sa.turday night at OCC's , Le B a r d Stadium. The football game, pitti ng OCC ngainst A~t. San Antonio ,College, gets underway at 7:30 p.m. Orange Coast College Associated Students will use the game to kick off their new Special Persons Program. A table will be set up outside the entrance gate to allow local senior ciliaens lo si gn up for free Special P~ns ca~'t· available to persons 'so or older. will gain them free admission to films, lectures, plays and athletic contests. Anyone who signs up ror a card at the homecoming game "'ill be admitted free. A Special Person AlurMus Awtrd will ~ be presented to an OCC graduate during halftime · ceremonies. The crownin, of the Homecoming King and Queen will aho take place al balllime. Field Act Delay Sought SACRAMENTO (AP) -Three major California ~chool dislricts have asked Jawmakers to extend the 1975 deadline for evacuation of shcools that don't meet earthquake resistance standards. State Sen. Albert Rodda, the Sacramento Democrat who heads th e Senate Education Committee, said af- lerwards Wednesday he would push for some form' of ·extension of the deadline for compliance with the state's Field Act. ' THE EXTENSION requests cam&.from the San Francisco, Sacramento and . .t1ameda districts in testimony before Rodda and state Sen. Arlen Gregon.o, (San "'fateo.) Spokesmen !or all three districts said I ' programs to replace buildings considered dange'rous In earthquakes were under way but there was no guarantee the new classrooms would be ready by the July I, 1975 deadline. "We face chaos even though we have passed a bond issue," said Millon Reiterman, assistant superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School District. San Francisco voters approved $37 .8 mill ion in bonds Nov. 6 for replacement of schools failing to meet Field Act safety standards. . . "I'm asking for more time to relocate the students in a systematic way :while the construction is going on," Reiterman · told reporters after his testimony. J1•vi1ie Tower No. 4 Goitag Vp • - BUT THE BIGGEST ·4ict In the state, Los Angeles, report~~ere should be no extension of the deadline. Harry B. Saunders, director of school building planning in the 600,oo:l-student Los Angeles district, said it already had 5,291 pupils on double sessions 8.5 a result of building closures forced by the Field Act. He asked ho\v the district could explain an extension to the parents of the students ordered onto double sessions. Stale voters in 1972 approved $250 million in bonds for loans lo be used for replacement of unsafe school b.iildings in districts which raise match- ing !undl. I · ·I • ' ..,.. ' ,:\ ' .. : . The newest addition to Newporl Center is topped off at 16 stories by C. L. Peck Con tractors of New· port Beach. The $17 mill ion building. developed by the Irvine Co mpany. is 'scheduled for con1;l!e1 · "" in May. Workm en begin painting chores on Lhe ~Ith fl oor (bottont photo) as construction crews swing a 9.000 pound section of stone· faci ng into place \top, {lght.J The 300.000 square foot buildlrtg-is lnoated at 660 Newport Center Drive. ' • • . l I I ~ f l tJ ' I • ' ' • • : J ) I , \ • \ ' . . ' • . \ . • I ' .. \ I ' ' '• I \ I • (' { • ' : I I I ' \ J [ ) ' I ., , \ • • I fhursday , Novtmbtr 15, 1973 ' ~ing F~.isal: A BeDevolent Despot RIV ADil, Snudi A r a b I a (AP) -King Faisal of Saudi Arabia ls both the Americans' $lunches! !rlend in the Arab world and the man who cu~ off oil oupplles to I.heir roun· try. e\'erythlng but its pro.Jsrael l Atiddle East policy. HE SEES THE recovery of Arab lands occupied by Israel as his mission in life. And he is prepared to use his desert kingdom's fabulous oU wealth to get it -even at the risk of angering an energy- hungry world . Always a devout Moslem. the 6g..year~ld monarch ap. pears to be growing more religious with age. He regards himself a.s the Arabs' spiritual leader and his burning am- bition is to see an Arab flag Hying over the holy places in Jerusalem. "1'Before I die," he keeps country. He abolished slavery, plan is in J•· 11·na1 ·•·gos. 04 ma as the Sharla ls still the only' telling fore ign diplomats, "I built roads and opened 1he A l200 billion development law In the land, resulting In w 0 fanOmt taor ·?,ray ln the Mosque doors to lucrative Western in· plan is on the drawing boanl penaltieo that Westemen "°'" vestmt'nt, in exchange for foe 197HO. sfder barbaric _ chopping off AS THE MAN sitllng on American and E u r o p e a n .. the hands of thleves, stor.1ng 150 billion barrels of oil, tho technology. PLANNING Ml?<.1STER Hi-adulterers, flogging b 1 a c k world's largest known Knowing that oil Is a sham Nadir claims the in-marketeers and beheading Recently he iold the new U.S. ambassador here that hP agrees with Washington on reserves, Faisal has emerged depletable resource. the king grams will insure a mlnimwn murderers. as the leader of oil and surrounded hlmseU w I l h income for all saudi cltliens There are w o n1 e! n an· economlc policy in the Arabi-bright, young W e s t e r n • and diversify the economy to nouncers on Saudi television an PeninsuJa and the Persian educated ministers -men "provide work and food for but women are not allowed gulf. Other Arab states in. responsible for planning the all when the oil runs out." to drive cars or wear Drdervo1r ~~-~Holidav Pies llow!· . -.. Call or vlsll your House of Pies .•. Place your Order Today! 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The strict dernocraey as It is known in .. to' make the superpowers _ _:A:._..:14.::0:....:;:bi=lli=on:....:.d=ev:..:e..:lop!::met=';.,t /'.,."...:l•:..:la_ml:..:c_cod:.:._:e_o_:f_:e_:thlcs=.::kllo=wo=..:the:.:...:w..:e..:st_. ________ K ... ln...:g:_F•_i_1a...:l,_6_9_-l£ listen. ,-, p . • ~~~~Md U ~ home and abroad, Faisal has ::· . :i:,~::.'. g~t what he wanted • • fl 18 lb . e· k-® -___.,_;:% Friends. say there are two ' · Faisals -the first a polish.<! I~ ' ~. man of the world, a£ ea~ i.: ~~~~i:~~:£:'.~.~~~~ COME IN AND · PICK UP j\ ~ ride bareback, squat by a • _ .. ~~~~\!';i~~dh~a~~~:~;meat YOUR ~'MINI'' LABEL MAKER ~ DOMESTICALLY, he has ' -,. I + • • t I z led his primitive· de s ert .-----------------------, -J ,, ~~~;i:2~~ ~~~;,·t~~.i~ . I ~REE' I ~: a delicate tightrope bolween ' I ' ;: Moslem traditionalists Md a 11 11 ·~1 1f; new · gener0tion of young, • ~ ?! western-educated Saudis. 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Main St., -Santa Al!CI t443 W. 17th St. r Santa Ana (In Honor .Plan) ' 814 S. Camino Real-Saft c;le-nN 13024 Newport Blvd. -Tustin 15389 Brookhunt -Westminster • • -• 7 • • ,- • VOL,_66, NO. 319, -4 SECTIONS, -42 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1973 • • • • . Today's Final · N.Y. Stoeks I c TEN CENTS ' I Newport Manager Nixes Mesa Halftime Show~ • • By RUDI NIEDZIELSlU Of ... ~,.,.,,... ..... Frid'ay night's show at the Costa Mesa-,,.. ~pealed to \Vynn to change his mind but that the attempt was unsuccessful. "There was no e r r o r on our part. • fl.1ayor Jack Hammett of Costa ~1esa said he \\'as surprised at Wynn 's decision because "it seems like it would have Newport City Manager Robert Wynn today canceled the participation of his city's fire and police equipment in a Friday night football balftlme show at Davidson Field Friclay. "The use of police and firemen in a halftime entertainment setting is: lm- proper and is: disallowed," Wynn said today. He added that he had inlonned the Ure and police departments of his decision by memorandum this morning. Fountain Valley game was to have in- volved several fire trucks, police cars, motorcycles, and ambulance and a police helicopter in a demomtratiqn. tertalnment was improper although he believes there is nothing wrong with the loaning of a fire truck to a school for the purpose of taking a Homecoming queen around the field. We started planning this with the Ne,vport BCach education officer and other cily officials last spring," said J>acker. "'But they apparently did not infor1n !heir city rnanager." been good public relations." _. - 1be show, called "Emergency Services in ActlQn," was conceived by C.OSta Mesa High School band director Earl Treichel and was to have been performed to~d music. Wynn said fw:ther that the fire and police equipment was purchased to pfo- tect the resldenll ol the city a n d that its diversion .for halftime .entertairuilent "would impair ·the ability bf the city to perform ~ts eme,rgency.function." The demonstration was to hav.e been conducted while the band played such scngs as "Llght My Fire," "Up, Up and /:.way," and the theme from Hawaii FivjH). Wynn said the full-scale use of all types of equipment for football en- The Newport Beach city manager said he had been unaware until Wednesday afternoon that fire and police officers were reheaning the . program. He apologized for the lateness · of the can- cellation notice. Robert Packer, principal at Cosla Mesa High School, said the school ap- Packrr said the shov,r will be altered but that he docs riot kno\v how it will be presented. •·1 feel bad far the kids who ha\'e \\'Orkcd on this so long," he said. However , he explained that he could not save the show for the Costa Mesa youngsters without the permission of City Manager Fred Sorsabal. SOrsaba( is a1,1,·ay in New York on city business. · Costa Mesa officials earlier declined to participate in the demonstration ex~ ercise, according to band diredot Treichel. ICC Gets Decline in Se rvice Threatened Popu~tion Limit Pinn Postal Hike Urged By JACK BROBACK Of lfll ~tr ~ltt Sllff A proposed Orange County growth policy which would limit population to 2.9 million by 2020 has been sent to the f I e d g 1 in g Intergovernmental Coordinating Cowlcll (ICC) by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. On a f-1 vote, supervisors asked the ICC to report back oo the planning document In 90 days, but they failed to make their own recommendation on it. Board Oiairman Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach was the Jone bolcklut, contending that the delay WU "puslng the . buck. We should be providing a new directioo \for county growth, oot a 'no directioo.' stance." The action Wednesday came on a· mollan by 8emld Dillrlct 119'vlllor David Baker, wbo objoded to the coun- tj'I ldo1'1i911 of I llmlltd ~ policy w\tbout coocurrmce of the ~~ "I dm't think thla baa ~ lllaulhl thrwgh enough," Baker uld. '"11ie pro- JlOll"'ll haven't asked labor, bulineas, lndllllry or the cities for their Input." WASHINGTON (UPI) -Postmaster General E. T. Klassen said today postage rates must be increased 'll percent in January to prevent a serious deteriora- tion in service. U Klassen's appeal to the 1Cost vf Living Cowicil is granted, the eight-cent stamp wauld increase to 10 cents and other classes of pootage would rise from 13 to 150 percent. Klassen said the CLC had a simple choice in reaching a decision. He' said "either the taxpayer pays, the man who uses· t ~ e mail pays or a decline Ford Adntlts . Q:ettibilj.ty, Of Nixon Dips· BiJLLETIN • The 112-page county p!BMlng depart· men! reporl hfl been the subjecl ol several public lielrlnp by, lbe l'lanalng Commluloll and the Citizens Direction Finding O>mmmlolt. Both commissions recommended ap- proval of Jt with some cobdilions. WATTS POET OT IS SMITH VISITS COSTA MESA HIGH SCHOOL TNCher Bern1dine Neil's Ell1.1 betfa.n Garb Mlrks Ren1l111nce D1y WASmNGTON-(AP) ~ l'nlldent Nix· on clalm1 former Atty. Gelf. EUlol L. Rlthardson lied in sworn testimony about RlchaJ'tlson's role in the ouster of Water- ~ate prosecator Archibald Cox, several RepabUc:a senators aakl tbls afternoon. Tbe White H..Se dealed the President called Richardson a liar. Formed less than a year ago, the ICC II composed ol represenllUv.. of citlet and the supervisors. So far it has accompllabed little, apencting most of Ill Ume In organitaUooal ~ures. Jt.s purpOfe Is to serve u llalJoD between county givemment and the various city councill. Mesa Students He ar Watts J'rophet By GEORGE LEIDAL Of Ill• DlllY l"llot Si.ff The growth policy propoMI slowing ' tho c:ounty's populalloti lncreales to 35,000 to 40,000 a year, compared to Budding poets at Costa Mesa High the (:Urftlll 65,000. ' School-today heard an hour of readings Planner Al Bell has projected that by Watts Writing Workshop lnstructor this would work out to an ultimate and poet Otis' Smith. population of 2.9 million in 2020, about For .-,sf1 , years, Smith bas · been a twice the present populaUoo. Previous member of the Watts Prophets, a ·group projection! have said the county could of three, who perform "musical-type boom to four million residents by that poetry with drama goin' at the same Ume. time," Smith said. The plan proposes restrictions on Smith came ·to Costa Mesa High School ·growth in some areas, including a quota · today llOder a federally funded program on new building permits to• allow a placing poets in five Orange COast high mu.lmum number of new homes to schools this year1 be built each year. The idea, Bell said, lofartha Fritz, a Boston poet and b to balance available public services master of fine arts student at UC Irvine with growth. is resident poetry workshop leader at The county now hu a. de facto policy Mesa high. • which bu no set guidelines or controls Creative writers from her class and whlcb Bell and other speakers Wed-students from other humanities classes neld.ly say all9'fS t.iocheclted growth, beard Smith's work. An informal session with -1ble multlJli harm to lbe quality later allowed the Watts writer to hear of.life. , students' work and comment on il. During the four-hour bearing, the mall) Today ·was Renaissance Faiµ ~ay support for the policy came from . the for bwnanities studenll, and English 1 county Grand Jury, the dltection finding Department chalnnad Be'madine Neil commission, the League ol ~omen Voten invited the contemporary poets to join and the Orange C.Ounty Environhlental in a luncheon "medieval,. banquet.~· Coalition. · StuC!ents ind teachers · were costumed Leading the opposition were the appropriately . . Orange County Chamber of ConµnefC'l , Roger Angle, Southern California libor organizations and Gilbert FergU!IOn coordinator for the Poetry in the Schools (See Llillrr, P11e Zl -~-(PITS) pr~gram said lhe $.! o , o'o o statewide program is funded by the N8.tionat Endowment for the Arts. · The Southern California PITS program is administered through the writing prcr gram at UCI. Smith· read a variety of poems, some published and others from. a Watts Prophets album to be released in January. An obvious favorite of the stUdents ~s Smith's recoontirtg of the troubles: ol. a ghetto resident who windJp a hero when his apartment bums. Another lypcal piece involved th au· dience in the rhythm of Smith's words which included the observation on loneliness: "When you feel more conspicuous than lumps of blilck diamonds on fields of white snow ... " And, concludes wfti! a pulsing repeti· lion of "Can you feel it? can you feel it? . "Can you feel the soul?" Siudenll applauded the. reading of "Real Brother Spirit0 • Thelr enthusiasm was even more noticeable when Smith read his ecoloB1cal exhortation "Hey World." The poem notes "the situation's drastic, "All your r,een grass "Is turnin to plastic ... "Big Iron birds flyin' through your (See POE'J\ Page I) • WASmNGTON (AP) VI c e President-designate Gerald R~ Ford said ·today he -has urged .President Nixon to hold more news cowferences and broaden public contacts in an effort to restore his credibility. Ford. under questioning by a House Judiciary C.Ommittee examining hill qualifications to be vice president, said he recognized that Nixon's credibility has been damaged by the Watergate ...!j.fair. (Related stories Page 3.) "l don't believe it is justified." he said, "but there is significant evidence that it has been." Ford said he has been working with Nixon and h i s advisers to develop methods the President can use to counterattack this trend of public-opi· nion. • Nixon's decision to release the White House tapes and to meet with members of the House and Senate, as he is: doing, were among the steps be p~ pcs<d, Ford said. The questionint of Ford began on a jarring nqte with ~~ John Conyers Jr. (~Mich.), objecting to the committee proceeding with the confll'!llatioo hear· ings before acting · on impeachment resolutions before it. The committee's formal opening p~ ceedings stressed the historical nature of the fll'st con!irmation hearings by the House and the bonds of friendship between Ford and the committee members formed during Ford's 25 years as a congressman. - Just as Ford was about to deliver his opening statement, C.Onyen broke in with "a RQi.Qt of persona\.J?!iv!lege; . Coast Food Market Strike Looms Oruge j)ounty relldents ·may' have Diego. /.bout 3,7'!5 o! them work In to crou picket lines to obop at lood Orange County. • market! next -~. The montl>old talkJ hit a stalemate Pl)edjctlons of a strike by four food again Wednesday when labor officials lnd1'atry unions varied toda)'. But the rejected a federal mediator 's request Food Employers Council (FEC> was thal they extend the SUnday strike pre111rlni1 for the pos~bWty. (See related deadline. story, Pace II.) , W. J. Usery, director ol the Federal "We're a:etUng rNdy," Robert Votsht Mediation Service, asked the union of the FEC aid, "Everybody II cranking leaders early Wednesday to c:ome to up their strike gear.~ Washington, D.C. 'M~nday to contlnue The FEC Is negotiating with the negotiations. C.lilomla Food and Prug CouncU, which Hts request was turned down by about reprtsentl the teamsters, butchers, 200 union officials at an emergency OfJ.lrlling eJlilneen and machinists , mee(lng at tho Biltmore Hotel In Los 1ltil0nt. ·t.nieles. • . the negotiations to \l{ashington, D.C. 1/ a strike is called, it is: expected \vould be expensive, would be a drain to last more than a month. on the energy shortage and would in-But the FEC's Voight said today that consumers don't have to worry about terrupc the progress of negotiations. not getting food. Union Officials. said today they want '1\Ve plan to keeP. all stores in opera· Usery to come to Los Angeles. "His tion during the stri~·he said. 'help ls urgently needed." Labor unions originally said the strike Negotiations are continuing while may be against one wholesaler only, Usery determines his response to the but Voight sajd a strike against o~ union plea. Union ofnclals differed In ls a strike against all. their estimations of the possibility of " "We'fe a unified industry." be said, a walkout after Sunday. · promising a lockout of workers by the Meat cutters Union vice president 1'~EC. . Jack Boyd said there's · a 9S percent FEC preparat[ons ror a strike include:· chance, but Teamsters negoli1tor Jerry · ·stockpiling the 'back rooms of stores Vertl'UM ·cut that down to nve,,.=nr.-with food : getting elira ord•rs Jn now ; in service will result." consideration, said, "An adverse opWon He asked for the increases effective -.!-' • could prove to be disastrous." Jan. 5. ' .... fie said the council had put the poetal Representatives of mail-using in-service in its present position by BP': dustries have protested the proposed proving increases in wages, which ·he hike during two days of hearings before said account for 85 percent of coots. · the council The Direct-Mail Marketing Klassen also said business accouilts Association and the Mass Retailing for 80 percent of mall volume and should Institute said in earlier testimony today bear its portion of the expense. that the postal increases would amount The postmaster general said the postal to $1.9 billion over 18 months and have service headed off an increase in 1912 a substantial inflationary impact on the with a "strong economy move" wlilch economy. resulted in a deterioration in service But Klassen, in the final arguments that "brought an outcry from the pubJiC before the council takes the issue under and Congress." CITEO BY LAWMEN Harbor High'• Collins Coast Teen-ager Gets Her o T'i de Fo r Rescue Role A convicted sex offender is confined at Atascadero State Hospital today and a Harbor Area boy is in Palm Springs, being honored for bis role in helping pu t the man there . William Collins, 14. of Santa Ana Heights, is one of six recipients of · spe<:ial commendation certificates from Calilomia Attorney General Evelle J. Younger. He Is the only non-adult scheduled to be so honored during a meeting of the California Peace Officers Associa- tion in Palm Springs today . Four of the six recipients are from Orange Cowity.--- Pollce Chief B. James Glavas, past president of the lawmen's group nomi nated the · Newport Harbor High School freshman. . Collins was singled out for intervening In a dangerous sifuat.ion , one in which he did not know whether his own life or safety might be threatened . Young Collins was riding his motorcy- cle May 6 In a oeculded area oil Back Bay Drive near Upper Newport Bay when· he heard a young girl's screams in a clump of'bushes. - A man later Jdenti!ied as state- registered sez: offender Paul H. Veziba, 28, who lived in the area, emerged from the bushes and Collim went to conr.ront him. Vezina was briefly queslloned, but suddenly turned and fled, at which time · a 12-year-old glrl emerged fro n1 the brush In nyr-hysterla. Saying she had been molest Cd.· • ·Fund Raising By Kalmbach 'Not IDegal' By L. PETER KRIEG Of h D .. 11" ,.,.., SFlff :: Sources close to Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, President Nixon's personal ittomey, confirmed today that he did solicit '100.000 from ·American Airlines but "he had no idea they would make illegal contrlOOtioos." "He did not ask for corporite fuM., or for cash and the point is absolute}t. clear on that," the sources said. · They did, however, describe hoW Kalmbach approached American Airllneo president George A. Spater in the fall of 1971. Spater had testified on tltO contribuU6n before the ·Senatt: Watergate committee tooay. · .. "Kalmbach met twice with Spater and the second time he asked. the executives of the airlines to take on a $100,000 goal. .. Spater agreed but said he figured the best they could probably do was between $70,000 ~r.d $75,000," the &0urces said. "He t~d them whatever they could do would be appreciated." . Spaler today testified that ·American Airlines did contribute $75,000 but 155,000 of it· wu corporate funds written 9fl on a phony invoice for used airplanes ... from a Lebanese company. Kalmbach neVer saw Spater after that · Second meeting, the soutce9 said, adding that when he was later infonned the contributions were Jn cash and part of them were corporate fwxls he was totally surprised. . The ...,.,.. said Kalmbach had ao way of knowing the contributions would be Illegal. "Spater is the former general C:OtqlM!l for American Airlines and donations of (See KALMBACH, Page Z) C.Ut ' • -Weatlaer The Orange Coast will be fair through Saturday with some coast- al low cloud! Friday morning, ac· cording to the weather ser.1ice.- Highs in the upper 60s to klw 70s. Lows tonight upper 4(b to low 50s. INSIUt: 'l'ODA l' Rapes and assaults on coeds have become: a major problem on the nation's college ca~ pu.re.r. See storv, Page 8. • ·IMlllll 1t A•....._. II " L.M, ...,.. M ~ ..,\ c1111m111 n ,.._.... ,.,... n • CleHllM 11.C ........ ..... 4 , Ctlllltt n Or"'" Cllllltt 11 c,........r • '"'" . ·• OHtll ... fktt• 11 1Mm ... .... .n.1 ,... ..., .... 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Ass ailed -By_ Ex-militant A one-time black milita nt \vho no\v 1 embraces the John Birch society assail ed,_ the United Nations today in NeWport Beach as the "biggest collection of liars, thieves, murderers and thugs ever as- sembled in one place."· ~ "The communists behind the United NatiQns profess to want peace," Smith charged, "but they don't mean the same thing when they say peace that you and I mean. • - Judge Says ~Remington 'Honest' • Alrllne Funds Kalnihach Asked For 1$100,000 '!? zo:z"e:.~1E,! WASHINGTON (UPI) -The former chief executive officer .-tof American su!>sld!ary company's Swls,s bJ!~ "" count becauu 11lt doesn't .e·rclte anybody's curiolity." And speaking to a breakfast gathering of Harbor area reaitors, Charli e Smith urged the United States lo withdraw from the world organization '1before we r}nd OW"selves completely at their mercy." "We think we have peace when we aren't fighting anybo~,'' Smith ex-~ plained. ' Accused attorney Michael Kester Rem.. Airlines said today that a contrlbuUon ington was described by an Orange Coun· by the corpcraUon to President Nlxon 's ty Superior Court judge from the witness re-tlecUon ca,mp@tsn was solicited by stand today as an honest , truthful lawyer Nlx'on 's personal attorney, Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newjl!)ri Beach. with un excellent reputatlon. George A. ,Spater, testifying before Gulf Oil Corp. V!oe Presldenl Claude c. Wild Jr., said be respot1!fed to a requeBt from tund raiser Lee ·Nut111 for 1100,llOll 8lld fo..Warded the money from Gulf subsidiaries In the Bahamas. ... TONIGHT FOOTBALL -Estancia vs. Santa Ana Valley, Santa Ana Bowl , 8 p.m. GLORIA NEWMAN DANCE THEATER -DemonStration, OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. No charge. OCC LECTURE -Family Estate Planning, Eastbluff Elementary School, 7:30-9:30 p.m. "COMMUNITY '73 " -Series of sym- posiums SJX!nsored by Junior League <Jf· Newport Hamor, Room 174 Com- puter Sci~nce Bldg., UC!, 7:30 p.m. UCI DRAMA -"Cyles" presented by Survival Theater. Fine Arts Village Concert Hall, through Sat. 8 p.m. Admission $L FRIDAY, NOV. 16 uoARK OF TIIE MOON" -Estancia High Drama Department Forum, Fri. and Sar. 8 p.m. Admission $2. GLORIA NEWMAN DANCE CON· CERT -OCC Auditorium , 8:30 p.m. -A-dmiSSion $3. FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs. Foun· tain Valley, Davidson Fi~ld, ·s p.m . NeW)Xlrt Harbor at Huntington Beach, 8 p.m. OCC LEC'MJRE -"Skiing, a· Winter Way of Life", Science Hall, 7:30-9 :30 p.m. "The Restless Land" (Geology of Orange County), Science Lecture 1, 7-9 p.m. UC! DRAMA WORKSHOP -"You Know I Can't Hear You When the Welter's Rwming," Fine Arts ViUage Studio Theater, 8 p.m. Fri. and Sat. Admission 75 cents. From Page I COLLI NS ... ti-kit mug shot of the deviate was developed. . About a month later, the Collins youth y,•as a-gain riding in the Back Bay area y,•hen he spotted the suspect, notified police and then followed the man. He guided patrolmen to Vezina's Joca· tion, leading to arrest of the suspect who had previously been confined for the same offenses. A week ago today, Vezina, fonnerly of 2485 Irvine Ave., was committed to an indefinite term at Atascadero State Hospital as a mentally disordered sex offender. "William's keen sense of observation and high level of community spirit were directly responsible for the arrest of a dangerous individual ," Chief Glavas said. "His actions renect favorably on young people throughout the com· mwtity." Similar work by William A. Duncan, of Brea, was also to be honored among the six CalifOmia contributors to police protection of the public. Brea Police Chief Robert Wassennan nominated Duncan for his role i.n helping arrange the capture of a suspect charged with more than 20 rapes reported in Orange, Riverside, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties. La Palma Police Department patrolmen Thomas Powers and David Barr were to be honored for heroic action in rescUlng a traffic accident victim injured and trapped in a blazing car. OIANN COAIT CM DAILY PILOT Tri.t Or•ne• CNll OA.ILY PILOT, Wiit! Wfllch 11 combined Hi. ._. ... ,... II Plltlfl"*' 1rt ,,._ Ott"'9 CO.st l"ublllhlnt CO!nplrl,. S.. r•i. Mlllonl e,_ Mllfl'led, M .... , tlll'OU'fll Fr!d•V• tor . CO.ti Mftf, ~r1 l1K1'1, Hunll'IQlon l!leKlllFOll!lltln V11M1,, L...,.,. l!lftth, lrv(M/s.ddi.otdl elld kn C'-JW!nt./ S.n Jveit Ctphlrt1"· A ·~ "!lklMI 9Cl!tiotl !1 pvbl!JMd $th,1rda'f'S Ind Sllndl'f'S, Thi prlnclpel Plolbtl""lnt plfnl II el )JO Wat ltY $trtet,-Ctflt MtSI, C.lttoml1, fHH, Robert N. W•M l"rtJICltfll ellll P.~CW!tr Jee~ R. C11rlty VKt .. ,..,~, tnd Ot11tr1l,M1,...... Thom11 K11vi\ Editor Tllom11 A. M1i1rphi"1 MINID!nQ Ecllt..- Cfi1rlt1 H. l101 Rleh1!11 P. Ntll As1l1ll"I Mlllff!ftti E•l1tf't c ......... Offleti I lJO W11t l t y Stfttt M1lll"t Acldr1u :'l".O. 101 1560, t2626 °""°""" NIWP'l'r'I IMVI: Ula H"'POl1 lkwl•v•N l.AfWM •-h1 nt..l"'•nT "'"""" Hunt ....... •••di: 11t1J lNdl IOI.ti ........ Mfl Cllme!lft: J:U M9rtt1 ll GlllllM Awl , ........ 17141 641-4111 ca ,,,... ..,.., .... ...,. '41-1111 ~. ttn. °"'*'" C...lol l"llbllth"'9 °"""""'" ... ,..... llDrlft, Fll'lll!tlllol'll, .......... ---Mv1tt1.-i. IMl"•hll ...., ... ~ """*'' ..... ""' """""" ., °""'""' -· ...... a-""'"' .... et Ct.ti MtM, (a .......... ..._.,..,. W certlff ii:M ~JS~ l~;-"'"I llllllhfy • "But peace to the U.N. ls when evezycme _in t h e world ia &0 weak that t~ey don't have tne power to resist the C.Ommunists." he said. Smith claimed there was an organized conspiracy in the United States to lull the American people into a belief that the U.N. Is necessary to lnstire peace. "And to convince people of that," Smith said,. "our leaders have been creating wars around the world ever since the end of World War Il "By keeping these hot spots hot, they can then prey on our desire for peace "by getting us to commit ourselves more and more deeply to the U.N." Smith said . • Smith said that President Nixon is just as committed to creation. of a totalitarian world government · a s Democratic Presidential c a n d i d a t e George· McGovern, "except Nixon got elected and ·is putting the plan into practice." Smith said the United States in com· milting itself to the United Nation's charter had given up the autonomy of its military Corces, making the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff a "subsldary arm of the Secretariat General of the U.N." The flamboyant speaker was given an enthusiastic ovation by members of the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors at their weekly breakfast meeting at the Balboa Bay Club. Smith said he made th~ transition from the left-wing black mOveme~t tG the Birch Society "because I am an honest liberal." He explained that he fell obligated . to "find out about the movement 1 was opposing, but in studying the John Birch Society, I found myself converted to it." Throughout his 45-minute speech, Smith referred to various documents which he said "prove that the ·Qriginal C.Ommunist plan for disarmament has been adopted by the Uni ted States and is now being promoted by the United States." He said all of this cowitry's J top diplomats, including Adlai Stevenson, Henry Kis.singer, and Richard -Nixon, belong to an exclusive inside ·group heavily infl uenced by Co m m u n i s t ideology. OCC Instructor ' . Surprised-It Didn't Rain, • It didn't rain today. Nobody's really surprised except Orange Coast C.Oltege art instructor William Payne. Payne has made rain in 12 out of 13 tries by putting out his rain gods on the Costa Mesa college campus. To... day he couldn't wring one drop from all of his 60 Cocijo gods. Payne placed the clay replicas of the ancient Indlan rain god out into the oPen at noon Wednesday. He predicted that it would rain by noon today. "It seems that the high pressure area in Nevada has greaier anti-Cocljo strength than all the rain gods com· bined," Payne lamented. ';They're keep- ing the low pressure area off the coast." There is still hope that a current rainstorni in San Francisco can make its way down here by 10 p.m. but Payne admits its a longshot. "That's the expiration dale of 'the rain gods. If they don 't make it ,by 10 it's alt over," he said. He might be right. The weather service says it will be partly cloudy ton ight but it doesn't say anything about a drizzle. So far, the old Indian gods have 1eft poor Bill Payne high and dry. From Pagel STRIKE • • • arranging deliveries With independent trucking companies; recruiting non-union persoMel willing to work under strike conditiolis; alerting management to get ready to work overtime and asking the retail clerks union not to honor the picket lines. 'OtC clerks union, although not Involved in the negotiatiqns, has been represented by the Food and Drug Counei! and is being requested by the other "unions to support their eflort. • Although union officials said today there has been progress In the talks, Voight said Wednesday that there are too many issues "left on the table" on which thele has been !lllle agreement. They include union control over pro- duction standards and work auignments, equal opportunity for women and a guaranteed eig~t· ur work day. Wages -ex to be another major stumbling bloc -have ye! to be fully dl!Cllssed. - FEC officials say the unions want a $1 an hour raise , sub.!tantlally more than the 46 cents an hour of!e"ed. Labor ~lficials made no comment t .. day on the wage question. Teamster drivers currently are paid $5.57 an hour, FEC ofllclala said, warehouse worlters gel. .. fU8 and offico workers get $5.08 . APPLAUDED IN NEWPORT Blr<h Society's Smith From Page I LIMIT ... "I've never heard him questioned the Senate Watergate Commitee, aald before thla." Judge Raymond Vincent Kalmbach aJked for a conlrlbulion of suid from his positiGn immediately to $100,000 i.n the fall of 1971 ind the the left of presiding Judge James F. airline eventually donated $75,000, in- Judge. "l had every. confidence in his eluding SSS,000 in corporate funds. legal ability." Spater said the $55,000 was raised Judge Vincent tGld the Jury that he through a phony Invoice to a Lebanese was involved ln ·a niling on a civil action finn for the sale of used aircraft. The settled in hls courtroom and whlch later cash was paid to the Nlxon Re-election fi~red In testimony when Remington, Committee In Washington, he said. Hunting~.01i Man Hurt i1i Auto GaS Tank Blast 33. was charged with soliciting to commit Executives of two oil companies also murder. accused of Illegal contributions told the A 1 kJn ~-•t 1 t Judge Vincent testified today that the • c gar-smo g """'ta l' esa car o settlement of the action was amicable committee Wednesday the money was emoloye su!fered bums over hll upper and that the plaintiff who sued Rem· donated from their firm!' foreign bank body Wednesday' when he started to ington in a dispute of the lawyer's ac~ur~ O 11 . C.O. Chairman Orin T. unload an apparently leaklng acetylene supply ofiaulty vending machines seem-Atkins told . the Watergate Committee gas tank and it exploded ~his face. cd well satisfied with the ruling. that 8 request for $lOO,OOO by campaign The spectacular fire that resulted from of the Orange County Council ~or Superior Court Judge H. Warren rtnance chairman Maurice St ans the blast at Harbor Boulevard and Envirorunent, Employment, Economy Knight had earlier offered almost Iden-bordered on extortion. Hamilton Street destroyed his delivery and Development lCEEED). " tical testimony when he commented on The money, he" said, came from a vehicle and ser.~ up a pillar of smoke Michael Keyes~ chairman o( the direc-the attitude · of the suing parties !JI visible for blocks. lion finding commission. said a survey a lawsuit settled in his chambers . 1 tl 'f:l 1:f ~Damage in the 3:30 p.m. blast and taken by that group of 1.400 persons Prosecution witnesses in the criminal · blaze was about $1,000. according to showed that 76 percent of them favored action have testified that Remingtpn From Page J Fire Department Battalion Chief BoD 8 formal growth policy. hired killers to eliminate plaintiffs and McClelland. But Ferguson attacked Keyes' con-witnesses in a number. of civil action KALMBACH • Peter R. Kirkup, 47, of 5082 F.dinger tention. charging instead that he "used filed against him after his . vending • • Ave., Huntln~n Beach, still came out a biased !list to get the answers you machine empire collapsed. of the experience in better shape than wan~." Authorities allege that one Yorba Linda corporate funds are clearly illegal and he might have. . Ferguson opposed the idea of building resident is only alive today because Spater knew it," the sources said. , The Marcus Motors employe W!!S taken pertnit quotas, calling them economically the gunmen dispatched to his home "It never occurred to him to say to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital with and socially lUlfeasonable. by Remington w'ere given the wrong that they can't be corporate f\lllds second and third degree bums on hi! Speaking for locally originated po_licies, address and were additionally booked because everybody knows that." face' and' arms, but was treated and Robert Snyder, president of the Environ· for a minor traffic infraction on the Sources said that Kalmbach bad ex· released . mental C.Oalition, said, "Th.is county is -way. pected that the many executives with The small Japanese pickup truck big enough to exert leadership to avoid • Prosecution witness Gary Rollo's the· -big airline would all chip in to driven by Kirkup when he went to disruptions in our economy." claims to be a black belt karate expert get the dooation up. get the gas container at a Place'ntia He warned that land use and growth were also challenged today when "If a large enot.gh nw:nber of them Avenue firm was Immediately and totally controls may be fcfi'tllcOfiling from state technical · director David-:-Chow of the paid $3,000 each, you'd get up there," e .. gulfed by flames. and federal levels. "Kung Fu" television show told the jury the sources said. Battalllon Chief McClelland today Several lalx>r speakers said the restric-he was satisfied that the Garden Grove ''Or if you get one· or two directors declined to speculate whether Kirkup's lions could hurt the construction in· man had no such accomplishment ' in to go into it together, that's how you cigar caused the. leaking tank~to ignite. dustry. Others said cutting bai:k on the martial arts. get to it/' they said. He did say it would be rather unusual, sewer, water and other public services Rollo, who testified that Remington Kalmbach and Spater also "laughed consi~ering the relatively small ash won't stop the influx of people. \Vas in on a plan to remove a hostile about the fact that one of Kalmbach's flame of a cigar and the dissipation Bart Spendlove, an Orange County witness whose right index finger was major clienta ls Uolted Airlines, one of the ace~ylene fumes in the open planning commissioner from Mission to be delivered to the Fullerton lawyer of American's ehief competitors. air. Viejo, said the details of the plan aren't after his death in the desert, bas been °Spater knew that and Kalmbach cause of the spectacular accident to. that significant now. "The numbers are tbe principal target of the defense in usured him there would be ·no conflict," day·-remained officially undetermined, the important thing," he said, urging the six·week trial. the 10urces aald. according to firemen. the policy's adoption. "All the rest is ~;;;;~~;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;;:;::;:;;:;;:;::;:;;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;:;;;~;:;;:;::;:;;;:;:;:;;;:;:; .. :-subservient to that." • Dave Goldberg of Westminster, who proclaimed he represented "the people who work,'' gave the most spirited·talk. "What kind of an age are we living in?" he questioned. "Does anybody con- sider the working stiff? \'ou don't listen to us." Goldberg wanted to kno~' i "What are we goiqg t~ po about our children. Thousands will graduatg in June and 84 percent will get ma~ed. \Vhere are they going to live if you stop building 1 of apartments? Back with their parents." 1 ''The won't let us live in Emerald Bay but when their plumbing goe,s haywire who do they call? The working • stiff, that 's who," he concluded. C.01. Ken Dykes, representing the Ro.5smoor Corporation, builders o f 1 Leisure \Vorld agreed that planning was ! essential but that restrictions on growJh I were unrealistic. From Page I POETS ... sky ... "You're bein' destroyed by this thing called man ... "World. . . " • "All is Vanity" proved to be a timely I commentary. It's a poem Smith ·said will be part 0£ the \Vatts Prophets' albwn. '' ... Newspapers trying to just l f y news, "Black people trying to justify blues. . . 1 "Where are all the people trying to · justify righ~?" the poet asks, concluding: 1' "All is vanity." · Concluding the reading, Smith related in verse the thoughts of a go-go dancer, 1 mother as she ends her evening's work. ; She wonders to herself "how many rapes I've saved, how many bad marriages I saved from divorce?" A~ she dances on the anonymous tavern tabletop she ends her mugings I with the observation she is "Jus ' tryin 1 to make it; that's all." Marines Given Jail • Ill Tenns For Burglary Two Marines who admitted breaking Into a Costa Mesa store and stealing appliances valued at nearli $1,300 have been sentenced to Orange COonty Jail tenru. Superior Court Judge James Turne~ ordered a four·mooth term for Stephen Cassell, 19, of Eugene, Ore. Donald Oelshlagel. 21, of Grass Valley, Colli .. drew a three-month sentence for his part In the burglary. ' Both men had earlier ,pleaded guilty In Harbor Area muni~ipal coun. Judge -Turner set three-year probation terms for botr men , who are stationed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station . Police said the pair took radios, a color tele'lision 1et and a micro wave oven last Oct. 21 from Davis.and.Brown Appllanoes, 411 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. ., · ~ Woliday ~i#ft~~r::esaie .I ' FOR ONLY $1.00 MORE We will make a normal re- placement installation of any standard undercounter dish- washer. YES , ONLY $1 . MORE! The stainless steel dishwasher. • . ' , ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WAS HING• RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOM E DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE• ACT NPWlll . SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 .•.....•... ,.,.. 't .. " NOBODY SELLS • " WASTEKING ·• " DISHWASHERS • :'F.OR LESS THAN: " DUNLAPS ., Why Waste King U.niversal is 5 ways better * * * * •• ·---**·**. ..... EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTION SAFE , SANITARY DRYllG 't!l!J!)l.UJ!Ju ~\·!.lWJJJ.l.U.l\W.\WJ.W.U'i ~ 20 ~ 5 ~ :f ... ... ·, -IYfAR~-MrEAR ~. • ~ STAINLESS ~ ~ ~ru guarantee •• ~ if i STEEL :e "the moior, pump.-;; . J; f;time r . wasLe~ . GU. 'RANTEE g c distribution system.~ RUGGED BASKETS, RANDOM LOADING 1 " :t: ~heater and pushbut-;: ~ ·a ;:. tons on 800 and 90).: ~r-..... ;senesdls.hwashers.:; nmnlrrrr1r.i·nr1rmrl lf, 01 f11Yn'i'111 !~·r1·11 Ji1'1'lrflrl ,, ' \· 90 DAYS c ·4sH WITH APPROV liO CR EOIT ' 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa .:... Phone 548-7788 ( l