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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-19 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • nan .1es Ill aze • -- • Don Wife High Court Won!)t . S~y~ 'the_y Kilew View Nude Bar • Telephone Tapped Laws-Or Filnt _MOND!Y AFJERNOON,~ NOVEMBER J-9,_1973 VOL, M. NO. m, J SICTtotfS, # ,AOaS . . occ --R~yal Duo "' ·~ ~ • Jor,ce Wirth, a 20-year-old .business 'student from Ne~rt Beach, • aria De_linis·Sheelym·, "27,.·student ·council member (rom Huntington • Beach, )~aye football stadium ·with presents from Orange Coast Col·· i 1 lege students •• Tb~ere:ct>osen Homocoming Qileen. and Homecom- "' irig King ,Dy. popUJat.student vote. 'HOnOred as outstanding alumnus ·:~d~ring weekend b_~riie~~ng ~reJ!loilies. W'8 James Carnett, OCC ) director. o! commua1ty !jl!rv1ces. &Jld a 1~9 graduate. • . ' D,res ·in Sai ·. , Ana ,Fire .. ,-, ·.; ·' ", {~,......•, . ..,,~.~r~·-f"".~', :~ _;. ..;' .. ~ •·. '1 \• .. .. • "· ·' >t• • • ... ' • ., • •'. :'lo ••• : A 13-y,ear-old"w_oman died "!day. -eeier, Ille apartm<?it to see ii, anyone fire IJI unexplained oriiJD raoid' lbrougb -w11 .lnl1de,.acconlillg to' Judd. a Santa Ana apa· rtment ,..,,~ · •' '~lllgb)vay Patrol officers who tried • -t""... , to give their assistance also were The .,rly monull_B<life-;at 2i30 Pon-• tJie fire. Total property damage was dero5a· ·St. claimed !he hfe of Nellie . ollening the apattment. · Foran, a res~t ,of one of the -Judd said-the three other apartinCnt d,ownstairs u~ in the r~r::pJex. Oc-units received Only ~·slight damag'e in ' cUpanll~ot>sttit~llllill· ~-!lmllhoand f~ IJ\Ju __ '!I -•· ~ •. ...--t .f ··~-~.. ii'n>.AM.~ <" .. • n:a. •• ' ' • .,l "'·· ~~· ., ...... , .. , InvestigatOrs'~~ tne, 1:30· a.m. '.· . • .1, · , ' -' ., . · blaze was"touched oa by careless smok· ing, but the actual cause has not yet been 'determined. Fire. O!i~f EugelljO Judd said Mrs. Foran was louJid deai! ih•lde Hcr'bu\'lfed- out apartment Iller firelnen had put out the blaze. ' An. oil-dull' fireman from Orange who first spotted the fire was driven back by the intense heat w_hen he tried_t~ Slain in Ar~ent? ' OAKLAND (UPI) - A famlly argu· ment Sundly led to the fatal ahoo\lng of Mrs. Ora Lee Hendrix , 25, at her home In East Oakland, ,.uce said. DeleCUve SCI· John Shannahan aald the woman ll1IUOd with her huoblnd, John Hendrix, a, Olflcen were arching for Hendrix. • Choir Me~bers •J.,,.. • Have Hysteria WILMINGTON, DOI. (AP) -SI~ mem· bers of a .cliurcli. clloir got oo m11<h religion during a three:hour .revival that they bad lo be hospitalized with what doctors called "mus hyiteri1.'" Gartl#M While, ad¥lllr to the United Metbodist Churcll · }'GOih choir from Salllliurjl, Md., delcrlbed .the seizures as Hfalling out." "!l's· something """ !utt ca n .' t dacribe," be said of the Sunday • ..-. Other members bl the choir Aid "It wu ftllglon, that's all." AmlJulancel nllhed the: ..,..... to • Wiimington hospital. • • -. • • Phone~~ap Reportedly 'Security' . - The F. Donald Nixon family of Newport Beach conftnned today that they were aware President Nixon had their telephone tapped. President Nixoa disclosed Saturday night that he ordered his brofft:er's ~telephone tapped because persons in · foreign countries were "trying to get ~rum." The PreSldent declined to identify the foreign interests or what they wanted of hiJ brother. He did say he ordered the U.S. Secret Service to make the tap "fer security reasons." • • • --· -.... . . • , _Eight Killed 2 Cars Explode in Accident .. . BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Eight persons were killed and two seriously injured Sunday evening at a darkened country intersection near here in a fiery tw~vehicle crash. · The Cl!lifornia Highway Patrol said today a van driven by Le- land Stonebarger, 63, Bakersfield, was northbound on Cottonwood Road when he apparenUy ran a stop sign and siruck a 1962 model sedan carrying nine persons. Both vehicles exploded. Stonebarger, alone in his-van, was killed. . Killed in the auto were the driver, Walter Llewellyn, 30; bis step- <tdaughter, Gene Edwards, 7; two sons, Matthew, three weeks, and John, 13 ,!llOnths; Llewellyn's brother, Roger Llewellyn, 22; Rqger's wife, Sharon, 18, and their daughter, Michelle, one month. In critical ci>ndition were Walter Llewellyn's wife, Jenene, 28, and a son, Greg01')',..2. AIL.the Llew:ellyns were from Bakersfield. ~--- Supreme Court Rejects Nude Dancing Lawsuit Contacted at her Newport Beach home today; Mrs. F. 'llenald Nixon aclmowledg- ed the family knew of the tap. "Certainly, we knew about it," she From W~ Services companied the papers filtd. said. She cou1d not, boweVer, "remember WASHINGTON -The U.S. supreme . ~ut . t~ court said it wa,s without Court refused today to take a second Juri:5<1ict1011 ~ause of a sect1~n of. Ule when the phone was tapPed or for bow look ~ California regulatiotis prohibiting · Calif~ Business Code whtch gives long-. -.---. · _ , nude__dan~d other sex-oriented sole ~wer to the •Depa~ent ot "1 don't pay any atfentlon to that entert8inment in' bars. -· Al~holic ~vei:a~e. COntro~ Higher state sort ·or thing. It 90l't of comes and The action came in the fonn of a courts dt;ni~ review. • . ~ ano.c with the Lim;," she e..nlalned. brief order without opirfton. . ~ the _tune , of the Supreme Court s o ...... ~ .. r · ' . 1nJt1al rulmg, 1t was expected th at the Asked if. her conversation with the On Nov· . 5, 1972, ttie coui:t . upheld next test wOuld come when a club reporter today was being recorded, she the regul~tions . b~t Justice William H. owner's liquor license was actually lifted said, "I rather doubt that but I really ~h1l9Uist 5 opini~ noted the~ co~· ·because of employment of topless or stitutiODal problems could arise in 00· t I · alt th II d don't knoW. I'd rather you talk wtlh specific cases . lof!i ess w resses . or o er a ege husband 11 .. ,, In the · t f . d ti ¥1olation of the regulations. my . . . reques or recons1 e~a on, a ln other actions today: She said'Nlxori bad meetings scbedul¢ rughlclub own«, ~aul A .. Richter & -the court.rejected MissoUri1s search an day today and would not be available A~iat~s. Inc., d~g b~i~ess as the for a loophole in the high court's deci sion . Body 'Shop; sued m San Diego county · h 1 ht t bort' for comment until Tuesday 5 1 Court lo 1. thal "the grantmg women t e r g o a ions · uperor r a ruing d · the' fi t · lh f • Emei·gency Measin·es Outlined From Wire Se.rvlces WASIDNG TON -A natioowlde ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy.saving measures are "very real possibilities" because of the nation's energy crisis, one of President Nixon·s top energy adviser~ warned Congress . .'i . today. 1-~ Charles DiBona, the President's special•1 assistant_for fuel, 'told a joint House. Senate hear:ing that even-n>tat--rom1~-­ pliance with current con se rv a ti on measures such-as turning -~own thermostats and a 50-mile per hour speed limit-will not.be_s_U{ficient. He said that an optimistic assessment of these conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies. \viii provide only 2.3 million barrels of oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrels a day. "This means that we're going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measures?" asked Sen. WiUiam Prox- mire {D-Wis.). "Yes sir, and soon," DiBona replied. DiBona said that among the 0 very real possibiliJies" the AdQlinistrilti_on was considel'ing-w<jls.,a..ban_on Sunday driv~n.g •. __ _,_1 He -said that 2.5 percent of8 Il gaso me used in priv3te cars is consumed on weekends. Among other p~posals · being COO· siderecl. are a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft; closing public parks (See GAS BAN, Page Z) -OraDge Coast President Nixon said his brother con· ·n and . . bl ude dance unng rrs six mon s o pregn~nc). . • spec1 c invaria e n The court affirmed a three-1udge sented to the surveill~nce. the tetepbpne performances" that take Place in the district court's decision d,f c Jar i n g • ... ri~rtedly ·•as fapPed rot ~~n ~ ~ub-ue •~obaomt ·:under .. the; tei\l~..u-Mls:iourl abort1orr laws uncol\stitutional. -• ·· • -. one.year during Nixon's first term. lions. A. ~e o( the dances -ac-' Tfie ~JOwer· coun:-"bit~ed lts_,..d~slon;:;:.•· "'\- Asked during his televl.9ed appearance on Ufe Supreme' Court ruling I3st January ... -· weath er · before the Associated Press Managing AD RESPONSE that __ all_owed states to place substantial Edit 'f 't -·•· · to, ta the resltiCllOllS on abortion only durmg lasl ors .1 1 'ua\IC-~ P . . · -'three months of preghancy. teleJ>ho!:le of !'O'D~ who knew he was 'T REM ENDO LJ S' -The court decli~ to hear arguments wider s_urveillance, Ntxoo 'f'ld yes, by policewomen claiming they are denied because; 1t was not directed at bis brother an equal chance at promotions. but at "others--wh> were trylng to get Tremendous response -rented three The' high court. over the objections hiT .. ,~icularly in a fore 00 ign coun~.11 rooms immediately! That was the joyful of Justic:es WilliaJ.11 O Douglas and "There! WOI). t go be)Ukl that, Nixon said. cry of the Costa Mesa woman who William J. Brennan Jr., let stand a """' very gOOI! rcallOns and placed this Daily Pilot classified ad: New York State Court of Appeals my brother was aware of ii." ~e said CLEAN, rum. Nr. OCC. decision rejecting the class action the ,.._.. probebty -.Id be disclooed Kitchen, washer/dryer. challenge lo Nassau County police pru- aomeday. . ' Retired OK. $7~ mo. (Phone motion policies. When the Wasbinptn 1'<>11 first No.) The policewomen argued th al the dilclooed the tap . tn September, the police department and county civil Secret Service ~d its protection of A few lines of advertising may be service commbsions d lac r i m I n a t e the President's family dkl not include all it takes to get 11tremendous respoJl$e" against women by maintaining· a two- bis brother Dooald. The Post qooted for you, too. Dial the classified ad track promotion system segregated by llOUl'CeS as IO)'tng the taps were eon-department at the Dally Pilot on the sex. ducted because of Donald's financial direct line, 142-0m, to get an All-vl!or -The court. aire<d to eonsldor for a ~· pei:tlcularly with Howard to help you find oot. second time wtietber federal courts moy ug s. (See NUDE BARS, P11ge t) ,i> . ~ . . . • • Fair skies are on the agenda for Tuesday, with slightly wanner days biJt colder;nights. Higbs In the 60s, dipping into the 40s in the early morning-hours. l_NSIDE TODAY Light catamarnn and 1urf· board mentor Hobie Alter is · 1oorkit1a on a 11ew plaything for ii~ternational /till-Seekers. See stoTll on Page 8 toda11. IM!lftt· 11 L.M. hY• S C11i .. ml1 s ci.nl!IM 1W2 C9"1lc:• 1• c........... 16 Dun. Me"c:n M .. ...... , ..... ' IMwtlhlfn.ilt 11 -· M ~ ..... ~ .. .......... . ) Viejo Youtl1 Arrested \.--On Sex Rap Orange County Sherllf's offlce:rs jailed a Mission Viejo youth on kidnap and sexual molestation charges Sunday shortly after he allegedly ~·as identified as the man who molested a 13-year-old boy in the Laguna Hllls area. Investigators said Michael Alan Bean, 18, of 25192 Classic Drive, waa arrested on the basis of information supplied by three boys who allegedly were ap. proached by Bean late Sunday near El Cerro Elementary School in the Aegean Hills area. Officers a 11 e g e Bean attacked one of the boys as they left an open field near the school and made their way t owards their homes via a narrow, brush~vered gorge. Information suppUed by the boy who said he was later released by Bean led to the filing of charges· or kidnap, sexual perversion and child molesting. Sheriff's officers are contlnulng their Investigation of the incident today. They said they plan to seek a complaint against Bean from the district attorney 's office. Police Arrest 4 In Alleged NJ Homose xual R i.n(! ~ JERSEY CIT)', N.J . (UPI) -Three men and a woman allegedJy connected with a national boys group. have been arrested on charges of operating a homosexual ring involving at least nine youngsters at a rundown residential hotel. 111e Jud.90n County prosecutor's office said Bernard P. Doran, 33, John Con· nally, 40, Gerald Lynn, 33, and Heather Scala, 27, all of the Hotel Windsor were charged Saturday with impairing the morals of minors and contflbutlng to the delinquency of .minors. The four were arrested at the hotel In Jersey City following a three-month Investigation by the county prosecutor's office. The boys, ages 12 to 16, became ac- quainted with the suspects through EUiott C'belsea Nautical Cadets, Inc., a national cadet organization in· corporated Jn New York State, police said. Police said nine boys \\'ere found in an apartnient at the hotel in various states of undi'ess. Officer Sights 'UFO'-Not Front Out,er V niverse A prankster \\•ilh a nair r o r craftsmanship tried his hand at UFO construction early today, but his scale was off aomewhat. Police found the creator's "space ship" shortly after midnight along the 2500 block of South El C&mino Real while ...,lln. routine patrol. Officer Tom Haight said he. noticed a light hovering no more than 15 feet off the ground and stopped to check it ouf. He found a pair or plastic bags filled with helium hovering at the end of a string. A nashlight had been attached t.o the bottom of the two small "belloons, II The oddJty was brought to the station and now serves as a conversation piece. Convict Walks Away SAN QUENTIN (UPI ) -A convict walked away from a work area outside San Quentin Prison walls Sunday night and escaped, authorities said. He was identified as Harvey K. Pipkin, 40, Y•OO was due for parOle June 17. OU.N•t COAST st DAILY PILOT '1'1t Or11l91 Co.i t OAIL'I' l"ILOT, wlltl wllkll k eomillllfd 1111 Nt-il'rt11, 11 ll\lbll"*I 9Y tM Or1n;e C..11 il'llbl!a/ll11t Ctll'IPfP!'f, Sipe• ,.,, tdltlol\1 1r1 pu111111t8", Mo••"W thrtMJOll .. tllef, for (Ollt Mt11, NtwPOrl l11t;11, \. Hllnt11'4110n !ltKl't/FOllfli.I .. v11i.v. LIOl.l!ll 1.-dl, 1,..,IMfkdlllfM"' '"" 5111 ci.....,,11/ ..... Jlllll Clplltrlno. A llflO ll r .. IONI M lt!wl h publlillllll S1tllf'lllYI 11111 SUNl1n. TM ,,r.clPll fllllllhlllng Plllll II II DI Wnl ll'f Jl!Wf, Cotho M-. C1litor11l1, tMH. .. '. 'J;,ffrt N. W11d "'"'""' lftlll "'""lla/llf J1cli l . C11tl1v VI« il'mlMftl 111111 o.n.r1t M~r 111'"''' ic. .... 11 l'ltitr '1111"*' A. M11111lril11t ...... """"' .,1.., Ch•ifM H. Lott ltlch1r4 .,, Nill AM!t!lllt ...... 1111 1411*• -°"' MtM1 .. w.:~:.~ ''""'' ...._, 149dlt Im .ft lk<lllt\ltN ~ 1 .. ctu m ,..,.., •- ttlMflrltlM tMO: 1"71 IMdl llOlllntf'll JM! Cltfnellltl IQ Nwtrl I I Clll'll!!t ltttl , .. ,,,,., tn4t '41-4111 o .... ,, ....... '41·1611 .,._ f.MIMt.,... ....... L...-..... ........ ff ,,_ _.. .,..... t.ltilMf CflMllll!M .... , ... C..llM. '"" Or•• C..t ~ ..... ~ ..... -........ llhllllf't ..... , ..... lo! ""'"" tr Mw~1lll lllif'tlfl _, .. ·•••t'llf •"""" """"" ...,. MllllMI .. ..,rllM ....,, =--~ ....... ,-c-1 :r """""'"''" ~ ----....... t. DallY il'llot '''" il'lltl• Onward t:liristian Soldiers Rev. Jin1my Co mbs (at controls) and Rev. Russell Gordon ride Jumbo to Sunday school class at First Baptist Church of Costa 1tlesa. The elephant appeared at the church Sunday aS a treat for Sunday school youngsters who also got to ride on the pachyderm . Repo1·t of Nixon Slapping Ma11 B1~anded 'Ridiculous' KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon reportedly mistook a man for a woman in bright floodlights here and, on discovering his mistake, slapped the man lightly on the race. A White House spokesman would not discuss the report, calling it "ridicuJous ." NIXON ON WATERGATE RECOVERY DR IVE, Page 4 (United Press lnternationat said th e President's action appeared to observers as a gesture of friendship which the man may have interpreted .) Two newsmen who were part of a \Vhite House press pool covering Nixon's return here from his televi sion-radio nev.·s conference at an editors' con- vention near Orlando observed the en· counter. They reported it to colleagues "in response to many inquiries" although they said th ey thought at the time the incident ~·as insignificant and were Bciref oot Bandit Flees With •$70 From Page Boy A barefoot bandit who covered his face with a ski mask crept through the back door of a San Clemente ham- burger . startd late Sunday and robbed the business of $70. And police today surmised that the gunn1an \Yielding a sawed-off rifle is ihc same man who recently robbed the l\1ission Drive-Jn Theater and a local liquor store of similar amounts of cash. Sunday's robbery occurred at the Page Boy Burgers, 420 E. El Camino Real, shortly after 8:30 p.m. An employe told paUce the gunman quietly broke the latch on the ·rear screen door 11nd -brandlJhed the shorten- ed weapon, demanding money. At that point a customer came to the front ~'indow and the bandit ordered the male employe to serve the patran as if nothing \vcre amiss. That accomplished. the bandit resumed to his task, stuffing the cash into a paper sack and running ouJ of th_c business. Anaheim Blaze Causes """Visihle .. ·= -~ Smoke for Miles A mushroom·like pillar of black smoke was noticeable far inland from the Orange Coasl this morning as fire destroyed part of an Anaheim office building. No monetary loss ha4 yet been estimated following the blaze In the building. which was destined to be level- ed for new construction anyway, firemen said. . Fire h)speclors were still going over the rubble at IMO E. Lincoln Ave., In an effort to deterinJne the ..,.. and llnanclal lou Involved. , The pillar of smoke was clear~.:9'" for mu .. In the ralll-wuhed but f.,.men llld u major -p, . Ille Job today preseol .. oo lpoelal prollllaJI. ClrllM -,i ••i~=~n 1~t4 at the _.,.... ...... -ltljand. .-·• ' still of that opinion. The "pool report" prepared Sunday night by WUUam Eaton of the ChlcagO Daily News and Matthew Cooney of \Vfst inghouse Broadcasting Co. sald Nix- on was shaking hands with spectators along the fence at McC.oy Air 1'~orce Base near Orlando when he approached a short, balding man and a youngster who appeared to be his son. The report quoted the man as saying later that Nixon asked him, "Are you the boy's.mother or graMmother?" He was said to have replied, "Neither." "The President craned his neck for another look," said the report. "Bright floodllgbts at the airport may have af- fected his vision." The two reporters said N11on respond· ed. " 'Of course not,' " and delivered a light slap to the man's face. They said Nixon "did not appear to be angry but may 'have been flustered by the mistake in identity." Deputy White House ~ Secretary Gerald L. Warren !aid: "I'm just not going to talk about jt. I think It is ridiculous.'' FromP .. el NUDE BARS. • • reach Into~ the suburbs to desegregate predominantly black inner city schools. The court agreed to review a federal appeals ctSurt ruling that the only con- stitutional war., to desegregate Detrolt city ·schools "(as to I n c I u d e predominantly white suburban school systems in any desegregation plan. The Issue of crossing established school district and county lines in pursuit of school desegregation deadlocked the court 4-4 last tenn. No precedent ls .. tabllsbed by tie votes. 5 Rare Snakes Taken From Zoo MUNICH,.i;ermany (AP) -Five rare snakes and two lizards were stolen from l\1unich's Hellabrunn 7.oo early today by what a spokesman !ild mutt ·have been an expert. The glass panes at the zoo'• terrarium were smashed and the moat valuable reptiles -an amethyst python, a king python and . lhree AUllroliln "'° lllll<et -were _stolen. 'lbe thief · alllO '--1 a pair of emerald llzanls, polloe aald. Homecoming Queen a He DAVIS (UPI) -The new -homecomlns queen at UC Davis is Davia Moohtr. The :ZO.year .. ld Oaltland ruldent wu crowned and awarded the tradltlonal bouQuet of ,_ '"' th< weekend after !>eating oevtn coedl In a campus elect14"1. - Dullng the •cimpoi811, whlCh ........i u much.Interest u oome atudoot pt .. ldenl ·etediam, Molher ran on the platform that ••tu11t" beauty oootall for bomecomllls qu .... •bould be prollfbltodl r • ·-Secret Contacts Soviet~ Wooing Saudi Arabia? JlEIRu'f (UPI) :... The l! e i r u t newspaper An Nahar said today seeret contacts are under way aimed at atablishing diplomatic relations between Saudi Arabia and the Soviet Union. It said King Faisal accepted "in prln· clple" an invitation to visit h-foscow . An Nahar attributed the report to "lnfonned diplomatic sources" and car· rled it under a front page banner headline. Arab Press commentators treated the report with reserve in view of King Faisal's long-standing hostility to Soviet lnDuence in the Middle East. This has been baaed largely on the rejection by King 1''aisal -the main spiritual leader EGYPT PUSHES FOR PEACE TALKS NOW, Page 4 or the Islamic world -or communism's atheistic concepts, the commentators said. Russia was the first country in the world to recognize the kingdom of saudi Arabia In 19'26, but Saudi Arabia has never established dipklmatic relations with any Communist state. King Faisal has orten stated that Zionism and communism were the main eneimies of the Arabs and J\foslems. Press reports speculated he was efrective in influencing Egyptian President Anw ar Sadat to expel 15,000 Soviet military advisers from Egypt In July, 1972. Meanwhile, Arab oil producers vowed today no letup in the oil embargo .against the United States and tightened the squeeze on Japan. to get mOre Arab oll and prevent serious disruption o( its econon1y, but Arah diplomats insisted Japan must break diplomat ic relations wiJh Israel to he exempted from the oil bo)'COll. "Japan cannot help us 1nilitarily, so the second lhing to do is to cut relation~ "'ilh Israel," said Saudi Arabian oil minister Sheikh Ahmed Z. YamanJ, in. Vienna for a mee ting of the Organization · of Petroleu m Expo rting C o u n t r e i s (OPEC). Yamani said he saw no chance for a revis ion of the Arab nations' stand towards the United States. "We don't sec nny reason for such a change so far,'' he said . "But \\'C' hope the Un ited States "'ill in crease efforts for a peace settlement in the J\llddle East." F ou1id: Liz' Rare Shi litzu DEL MAR (AP) -Actress Elizabeth Taylor was rewtlted to- day with her pet dog, a rare shibttu named Daisy Ma e. After the little black and while dog was lost on the beach Sunday, Mi ss Taylor offered a $500 reward through the Del Mar Fire Depart- ment. A fire dispatcher said a couQ!e found the dog. .Fro111 Pafle l GAS BAN··· 10 auto~iles : closing service stations 011 "'eekends. and blue 1aw~ to close alt buslneses on Sunday, h.c said. ~icanwhile, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz told a Senate Corel~~ ~JatJons sul.lconimittce that the Adn11n1stratlon \\'ill .. hnvc to t<ikc :son1c sharp and decisive uctiori" to cope with the energy shortag e. Shula. wh1> suid his "Instinct 11 against" gasoline ratio ning, sa id 1he l)nited Stales \\'US Jucky the crisis had come !Xl\I' because imported fuel .supplies <ire only a small partion of American rnrrgy needs. ·'J ho]>e rationing 'vlJJ not be necessary,·· Schultz said. "My instlct is against it ... Rati oning sowtds like such an rasy anS\\'l'r but it raises such · serious problems th11t I question whether it is a rrnl anS\\'C'I'. Nevertheless, tlie problem is such that \l'C win have to take sonic sharp and decisive action." DiBona alSO'Said the Eastern seaboard and Nc\Y England could be 50 percent short of fuel !his v.·inter unless fuel USl.! is dr;1stlcall~' reduced. He said contingency plans for fuel ratiobing arc being drawn. DiBona snid the nation's fuel supply is al ready about 17 to 18 percent shoN. Estimates ;ire based on a continued Arab petroleum boycoll and a normal winter. . President Nixon said Nov. 7 the shortage could reach as blgh as 17 percent during the crisis this winter. DIBona said the National Petrolewn Council's 25 percent shortage estimates l! based on a more severe winter and Jess voluntary cooperation than th e Administration thinks it will get. He said adequate petroleum rtserves are on hand for use through the end of th e year. Despite favored treatment by the Jirabs, other countries drastically cut tilt consumption. She has checked out of nearby Scripps Clinic after a medical checkup. But he said estimatrs of a SO percent shortage during the first quarter of next year in th e Northeast and a1ona: the Atlantic coach could be realistic if 1he voluntary program falls and other cuts aren 't made no"'. Japan mounted a diplomati c offensive Miero·wave ovens make • cooking a breeze! .Out.cooks any pot.skillet. broiler. pan or oven ·FLASH! HELP BEAT THE ENERGY CRISIS MICROWAVE OVEN S USE ONLY 10% ·AS MUCH ENERGY TO COO K YOUR MEALS r:,CI O~ PERFORMANCf Of~ ~~~ * . 1.,.,, !o.~ . ~ ;'Good Housekeeping': ~~ GUARANTEES '!>~~ C/"1£~r OR REFUND 10 co'I.'> Litton's new world or niicrowave cooking is a bright new world. Where gourmet meals can be cooked quickly In co01 coiTitoit -With maximum convenience and minimum c!eanup. 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Harl and after st um ment that ptai alcies He '.the He what He the B ;.B ' I t f ' w • , "' - of. cha "[ , COunty By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tile D911Y PUet lltff For the nominal lee of $5, Orange Countlans can stockpile an the potential energy they can carry -flrcwdod from Professor Sees Light, Mystified sr. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) -Professor Harley D. Rutledge has "seen the lights" and has chased them In planes. But, after .. a seven-month study, RuUedge is stumped. "I'm not going to attempt to speculate on what these lights are," he uld. "There Is something here that C8JUIOt be eiplained. That's as far as I can go." RuUedge, chalnnan of the Southeast Missouri State Unive ... tty physics doport· ment, has since AprU 6 headed a te'1m that Investigated strange and on.ex· pl~tned lights In the' 900lheast Missouri ik1es. , He is quick to dlssociale blmself from . the term "unidentified flying object." He said It tends to Unit people with what he termed the lunatic fringe. He reported the team's f1ndinp during the weekend meettng of the American Nsociation of Physics Te ache rs Missouri region. "We have seen the lights and have photographed them," Rutledge said. "1bey are there." Rutledge's team, called Project Iden· tificatloo, Included !aoulty members. phystcs studenls, pilots, a high school science teacher and members of the Southeast Missouri Astronomy Club. On 38 of 78 nights In tho field, the team saw lights that could not be ex- plained. Team members d e bu n k e d : numerous other UFO reports, most of • which were traced to al rcraft , aiitOmobile heattli&hta or llan and : planets. Rutledge recalled he sent a team rushing to Poplar Bluff to ched< a report of 500 UFOs In formation. When the team arrived, It found tho UFOs were nothing but cottonwood. aeeds caught on a television antenna less than ~ 20 feet from the person who made the report. : But, Ruti.dge insists 70 to 80 sightings had no e1.planatkm. One case occurred ; ,May 11 while RutJed&e wu aboard a I ·Cessna 182 flying at !Oii mlles an hour ! at twilight south ol Pledmoot, Mo. Suel- l denly an ofl-color wlllte light bllnbd on at a f4klqree angle above the amall : pfane, which was at 4,00> feet. t "The light began to alt~te In- • tensities," Rutledge said. ''Then a second ~ tigM !Witched m above us. 1btn the ' lights took turns blinking. The next thing that OCCUl'Ted. was that a row of seven ' lights switched on that appeared to be ! angled toward the plane." ' The plane was unable to catch up • wtth the ligbll, which eventually dlaP' • peared. Baker Questions '..Buying Diesel fFuel Vehicles • Orange County Is Investigating the • Wisdom of purchlsing diesel powered • ~vehicles in view of the current shortage , uf the fuel. > Supervisor David L. Baker receoUy ) questioned the purchase or three trucks 1 and an air compreS90r which uses diesel 1 'fuel. He said he had just returned from • a Resources Agency meeting i n • sacramento where he learned that such ~ fuel was in very . short supply, even ) more '° than gasoline. , Baker suggested purchase of gasoline • powered vehicles and machinery during ' the current energy aqueeze. The IRl]lOl"llaor nmed that the sborlage of diesel . fuel wa ~ trash collection and landfill site opera· lions In Northern CaUfornia and that it oould well ha~ he,.. Watergate Extended WASHINGTON (AP) -The S<note puled wltboul debate today . a bill ex· tending the ur.. of.the original Watergate • grand jury. The meaaure1 passed earlier • by the Hruoe, now goes to Presidemt · Nlson for approval. I' ,. . • • Cleveland National Forest. But according to a top U.S. Forest Service olficipl in Santa Ana1 there may be a hitch to such an energy conservation ef(ort. Mot1day, NOYembtr 1q, iq7) s ' DAILY PILOT 3 Ga there.rs 'Out on Limb' "ln the first place, It's only legal to gather dead or fallen timber,"'' said Resourco Officer Bob Smart. "In the second place, you have to find a wood source and in the third p1ace, there's alm01t none to be found tn our part of Cleveland National Forttt." Smart said thre .ts a procedure wood- gatherer.1 must l!,o through before they are allowed to go to lbe -bills and" DMIY Plitt ll1H Pl11!e .pick up lhelr winter supply. "Finl !hoy have to go out and pinpoint their wood aource on 1 map and show It to us so we don't have people comlng In from UJO different dlreellons," Smart said. Alter the WOod ts located, the govern· ment charges a $5 lee that theoreUcally entlUea the Individual to baul away up to two cords ol wood r about four pickup trucks fUU. Smart lays It'• enough for a year or more In the average home. ''The problem ls that Cleveland Na- tional Forest Is mostly scrub and brush land there is almost no wood lo be found on the ground," Smart said. "Most of th ... people end up with only a tnlltk·load for their $5 and are pretty satisfled." Smart acknowledged that the U.S. Department of Agriculture ts planning to relax tta regulaUOns on wood collecting in national forests and possibly drop the fees in aorDe a'reas making wood gathering free of charge. "But I think they will leave enough latitude for us to contil)Ue charging in · mosf cases," ·smart said. "The latitude given individual districts is best illustrated ln the fact that Mon- iana \and Idaho residents can go out and cut free Christmas trees. If they did It here they'd be lined," be said. Jo"ree pennits formerly were available only to residents of national forests and Smatt said In Orange County all but the most destitute Cleveland National Forest residents were charged the $5 fee. ' ·"The application of feel varies from district to disltict depending on the individual situation," Smart said. "We have so little wood here that we have to charge fees in all but the most indigent cases." Smart uld wood-gatberlnc has been a problem In the pa.st because of aome people's lnab111ty to tell th• dlflcrence between live and dead treea. "Ourioi the winter, when JOme trees have no leaves, they look dead and people proceed to cut th em down," Smart sa.Jd. "'lben we have to fine them." c ...... ny speaking the lino for 111egal wood oollectlng ia $50. But Smart sald, "Fines don't grow new trees." Smart said the only tools needed to gather the wood •~ cutUng and pruning implements, gloves and a lot of stamina. He said a chain saw, rip saw or double- bladed timber ax are the best tools to use. Smart advised Orange C.Ountians wbo want a good aupp1y of ?t'OOd for the montbs ahead to go to another natiooaJ preserve where the fallen wood is more abundant and not waste time hunting 1 in Cleveland National Forest. </The best area nearby is up In the · San Bernardino National Forest 8l'O\Dld Big Bear and Lake Arrowhead," Smart said. ''There are big trees up there." l He said pennits have to be obtained from ranger offices in that district before . wood oollecting ts legal. ' ln another development related. to firewood, the C81ifomia Agriculture Department warned consumers that many Wl.5<:rupu1ous wood sellers are sell- ing "short-measured" cords of wood. The department said a cord should measure four feet wide, four feet high and eight feet long in a neat stack. A "tier" of wood, which is commonly advertised, Is only part of a cord, the department warned. Wood sellen who dellbentely sell C<lrds that are too small to unsuspecting buyers are subject to fines up to $500 and six monU.. In jall, !be deportment said. Cigarette Showdown Queeta atad Ber Court Lagunan to Face School Ellen Brink, 19, rei gns with her princesses as queen during Saddleback College homecoming game against Palomar College Saturday night. Saddle· back won 14-12. From left to right are Sue Sherry, • 19, Tustin; Lori Martin, 19, San Clemente; Miss Brink of San Clemente; Nancy Ronkainen, 20, Mis· sion Viejo; and Sherry Long, 19, Mission Vifljo. Trustees on Smoke Ban Where Were You -Nov. 22? By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of .. o.lty l'li.t St.ff request ol Trustee Jane Boyd, one of two non'5m0kers on the five-member.., board. ~ Lagunan Bruce Hopping has enlisted all 1 _ erperts in cancer research and law Daily Pilot Scribes Rec Horror., Ref wctions for Tuesday night'• showdown with _ Laguna Beach school trustees over Several mootha ago, trustees refused to disCUM a vel1>al request from Hopping , to ban smoking. Hopping tooli his case to the ~· : By CANDACE PEARSON Of ..._ OtllY l"llot Stfff • It is one of those few moments in history cryslalized in everyone's minds. Whatever they were doing at the time, however trivial, however urgent, is im- pressed in vivid detail in their minds. Nov. 22, 1963. It was morning in Call£omia -a bright, crisp fall day -afternoon in the. ?o.fidwest and the East. But though the time of the day and the incidents . vary, the clarity of the memories doesn't. 'Ibe assassination of President John F. Kennedy in a DeJlas motorcade' rivited the attention of all those who are now Daily Pilot staff writers and editors, 'whether prolessiooally or P1'rsonally. · "~laybe the dark green hill.s that cushioned us had left us innocent." Jan 'Vorth said of hearing the news while at high school in Warsaw, Ohio. "We cried because we though t the nightmare could never happen in America.'' "You might have expected the main newsroom to have been a scenq of bedlam since the tragic news had broken just before our deadlines. It wasn't," Managing Editor Tom M u r p h i n e remembered. "Editor Tom Keevil had moved out onto the news desk and had 'torn out the [root page' as the saying goes and was restructuring the paper to ac- commodate the asscwination stories and. pictures," Morphine described. For those who were already pro- fessional journalists, il was big news, however stunning. For those still in college, bigh school or even junior high and elementary school many of the recolleetlom are more penonal. "t'he Kennedy mystique is-was im- porta.ot' to people my age," said Weekender Editor Jacqueline Combl Lind, who was in a Paramot.mt High School U.S. History class that 'day 10 years ago. _ __ -"l'ltl>Ple In their 20s and early !!Os devtlOJied their first pollUcal oon· sckMJsness in the Camelot era of charisma and poltical activism," she added, II Reacticms of ' the staffers who were students then ran from silence to gasps ·w tears to·a daze. - _ "Nobody could think oi anytbin• worth She thought or the "lrlvolons" party i>1lOl!lnillopping. ,at ~lnnanl boa!d.niof~,. Ka! saying, but the silence huri," Tom artlcl .. planned that day. "By the time • ~a · e 05 Palmer recalled. He was in class at our fint ~~ra was. on the press," she ~:g~~!,~b~~g ~ ~~ Shawnee :Mission East High .School-In said, "the. women's pages carried no Irvine Calllomla College of Medicine Prairie. Village, Kanaas. ~~"e." about the Orange Coast social ·and Santa Ana attorney WUllam She!· Laurie Kasper, at' oar Lady of Mercy ~= High School in Rochester, New York , "He died several hours before our field. 1 prayed. Jack Chappell, Joanne Reynolds , deadllne and all the wire copy w.. The bealt!H>rlented lo u n d at on George Leidal and Terry C.Oville watdled lylng on my desk," said Sunday :Editor chalrman wants trustees to ban smoking the tragic events unfold on television AJan Dirkin, who-was assistant editor at school board meeilngs to set an sets in Anaheim, C.Orona del Mar, New of the Daily News in Greece at the example agaimt smoking for the 3,000 York' City and Columbia, Missouri. time. students in the school distrie,t. Bill Schreiber was conjugating German Dirkin took Kennedy's picture off the Hopping also believes that cigarette verbs in a class at W.T. Woodson High office wall, out of its frame to use smoking is injurious to non-emoters who in Northern Virginia· whm tbe news it in the paper. He had "everything are in the same room where smokers came through the public address system. under control." are puffing away. County Heallh Department, Air Pollution : Control District and state Deportment .of Education -all to no avail~ ! His 11101t recent move was to threaten · legal action through a aectlon of the i>enal oode wbldl makeo it '!Depl to disperse .. ...., substances. Sheffield plana to altend lhe meeting to explain the legal points. Supt Donald Woodington, a non- • smoker, aald be will make no recom- mendation to board members on whether to Impose a smoking ban. "That's ooe of the privilegOll of holding elected office," aald Woodington. •jAt first, a few .kids laughed out loud," "Jt was a time when one could call Dr. Ludwig, currently studying t he recalled, "like it was a big joke 'Stop the Presseo,' " News Editor John leukemia, said he will offer one simple Man Comes Back,; -then they cried. Many of us had Gwm said of the reaction at the News rtatistical argwnent on cigareUe smok- been to the White House recently . . . Leader in Riclt.-;-Va. Ing to trustees. 1 where we glimpsed Kennedy strolling At first small paragraphs sketching "Diseases related to tobacco kill lour uapfl Off Span on the lawn." the news were inserted. The length grew .to five times more people each y·ear ""'\"" Steve Mltcbell left C'.osta Mesa. High · in later editions to lead stories and than the automobile and theobigbw~y," t • School early !bat day and went surfing. a full biography two hours later when Ludwig explained. "We make -con· SAN DIEGO (AP) -When olllcers : "The beach was completely deserted." Gunn was "spent emotionally and siderable effort to reduce -morlallty spotted Jobn · J. Condon, 45, walking But many others, caught up in getting physically.'' he th bl. d'dn't h Ass' tant M in ~··to Richard related to the automobUe, but we ad· on the Coronado Bay Bridge, where t news to e pu 1c, 1 ave 18 anag g .i:.ul r vertiae cigarettes " ~ foot traffic is forbidden, they escorted time for quiet reflection. Nall, then working in the El Centro . "It 1.. ~bl tradiction " ' "The news staff hung to the teletype office of the San Diego Union, was /_ ,., an e COD ' him to a bus depot. macltlnes, temporarily too shocked to assigned to get local reaction to the add~ the prolesoor of pathology and Two hours later Sonday morning a · relate the Dallas events to their oc-historic moment. radiological sciences. 11 man leaped from the higbett poirit ot cupati~," K~vll said of the Pilot But he better recalls the. day following Ludwig termed cigarette smoke one the bridge, 2((1 feet above the bay, newsroom. the assassination. "A county official and of the most lethal poi.sons.'' as officers rushed to save him. Jt WM 1 "Several of us huddled with the ne~·s fellow Republican -with whom I shared Ludwig said it is "'a b 1 o I u t e I y C.Ondon. · , editor as ~e made plans a n d an a!Iinily for black humor -made necessary" for pubUc educators to He had returned on foot to become • assignments. It seeriied like every phone a joke about the President's death. refrain from smoking in public. the sixth person in l& months to die · in the room was ringing," Assistant "I told him ," Nall said, "I dJdn't 1be smoking matter was pll.ced on in a jump from the bridge wtich links Managing Editor Charles Loos continued , ;=thi:::'nlc=':::.t:::w:::as=funoy:;::;:::.':::' ===::::::::::::::::::::th:;:::e;;;7;;;:30:;:::p~.;;;m;;;. ;;;m;;;ee:;:::Ung,;;:;;;ag~end=a=a:::t ;;;the:;:::::::::;San::::;;;;;;Di:''e;;;go:::to=Corona==do=. =====f the story. 11 "t wrote the fonnal obitqary," he said. ''When I started, I was writing lt on a speculative basis, but we soon learned the story would be neede<l that day.11 Bea Anderson's late husband Nonnan was Daily Pilot wire editor at the time. The women's editor remembers her husband's "asben" face . as he read t!Je news. ' Crew Views Storn1 MIAMI ~UPI) -An Air Force recon- naissance , crew flew today .. to the 90Uthwest Caribbean to take a closer look at a tropical depression located ol! the Nicaraguan _ coast. • v •• J.. :•. --· -.!I Q,.,, Ht• ri¥tr and throu9h the woodt 1 .. Thtnk19IYl1tt dllu1•r •t 6r•MIMot\..-'• , .• Kir1ttn, with Jlbbon1 il'I hit htir, ht1 cho1•11 1 Dorh1• dr111 and K1r111 it w11rl119 1 dr••• by Fi1ch1I. Th• Chtllmtn tirl1 1tt111cl Liberty Chrittl4111 School 11'1d°ltl1y ,,, t+t1 d1119htw1 of Mr. I M". RoMrt Ch11f1111•11, •'IJ!'"'if""•{llllllil'IJtO Httbo • ".:" ht ,, •••••• ,. Monopoly Cha111pion • ... a.bl• 'f Tiri1 Rad ltl oen ltd., in Newp1tt a.ech, H1111ti11fto11 H1rbovr •nd Or•ng• . - I Los A•tgel.es Player Tops Britis1i Ace, 2 Others LIBERTY, N.Y. (AP) -Lee Bayrd of.IM Angeles baa won the first world championship Monopoly tournament. "I feel "excited," aald !be lt-yeaN>ld television writer lol!Owlng bis triumph Stllday over th,.. ~ opponents lneludlng the Monopoly champion OI G"'at Britain. "It WU very elating to · pliy people of uiis caliber." The lhreHlour pme cllmued aeveral days of seml·llnala and exhibitions at Grosslngcr's 1-t boCel In the Oocak11ts. • About 50 ~ "'1clanodoo Wiid!· ed !anxiously~ yrd took on regional •cbampions Don Lifton of Detroit, Mlclt. I• ., and George Tatz of Long Island, N. Y., along wtlh BrlUsher Brian Nuttall In tho final 11,ame. Bayn! s8ld his winplng strategy was that "I managed to get the reds - Kentucky, Indiana and Dllnols Avenues. lllloola la tho sinale moot-landed-on l'l'OP' erty by the ltallsli<s." lt was Kentucky A~ue, however, which made !be dlflerence for Bayrd's forttJnel,. - When the game was only 40 mtnules old, Lifton landed oo Kentucky, forcing hlm,tnto bankruptcy. He turned his prop- erty over to the bank rooo with dignity, adjusted bis vest ;;;;;J shook hands with ' I'.;, his opponents. Less than 'hall an hour later, NuUall landed .in the same Bayn! property and followed Lifton into Manopo!y-style oblivion. , Bayn! cllncbed the UUO, alter Tali landed twice In rapid ..-Ion ot\ Bayrd'a Boardwalk, the .,..t experuolve property in the game. Baynl was awarded a ~Y named alter Cbarlcs B. Darrow, who Invented . the game In 1933. According to Monopo!y11 manufacturer, Park e r Brothers Corp., sales of the game •.t.MOOM ISLAND .. ...., ............ TOWN • COUWTRY ~ l7'14J-- "UMTl ... TOll MU.._ <T111MMMI recen tly passed 70 million. ii.:=========================---------' -·-( [ . . • • • .f DAILY PlLOr -· H-19, 1973 , ·of ·Palace -Lon Nol Un'1urt ·iii Bombing G9od Place For a Visit Pl.AC~ TO REMEMBER: As you motor up the entrance drive, it would be easy· lO convince yourself th'at this is much like any other ordinary elemen· tary school campus in Orange Co~ty. The playground is off there to the ri~t; two multl<elorcd seals, balancing balls on their noses, guard it. There is a wide expanse or grass, the usual swings and teeter-totters, and a fake lag that the kids can crawl through. The main building is flagstone, gl0ss and aluminum trim. Two yellow school buses are parked at tbe entrance, black lettering on the sides identifying them as Santa Ana Unified School District. ·A pretty black woman attired in slacks and an orange windbreaker ·fusses around the bus. She is obviously the driver who is preparing for arrival of the school children. . -ABRliPTLY, THE FRONT door of the building swings open and you are greeted with the happy, laughing screeche3 of two girls, racing each other to the school bus door. "I won, I won, J get in fi.:St," one girl cries loudly as she reaches the bus. "Now, no~·. v.·e must be carerul,'' the pretty bus driver admonishes. "We could have had a terrible crash right here ·tf you both arrived at the same time." She was scolding the girls a bit. But not harshly. FOR TIUS WAS not a school, these were not ordinary kids and this had not been an ordinary race to the school bus like the scene you might witness near any of our campuses on a sunny aftern!X!n when the last bell rang. Theee; young girls, maybe 10 or 11 years ot~. had raced to their school bus in wheelchairs. The bus driver awarded the winner by lowering th:e rear lift , placing her wheeldiair . upon it, and motoring her up into the bus interior' first. All the time, the bus driver was laughing with the girls and smiling. Until she closed them in that bus v"ith no scats and when the kids could no longer see her. Then her face expressed the seriousness of it all. She drove away. OTHERS CA~tE TO replace them. There was much coming and going around that building. Not all of them were ,kids. The woman pushed the grey- haired gentlemen in his wheelchair;• he held his crutches upright as she pushed, like two proud bann ers. Two elderly women drove uP in a little 'Volvo. Both got out anti slowly walked inSide. There was th e_ kid in the yellow baseball cap, running, his mother grimly following. His right arm was held kind of funny . There was, through the afternoon, a constant ebb and flow or humanity into the building of flagstone and glass. And all of Uwse ,people had a good reason for visiting there. FOR THE SIGN out front by, the drive,· by the playground guarded by two colorfuJ seals, proclaimed Otis place the Ea&er Seal Society for Crippled Children and AduJts of Orange County, 1800 E. LaVeta St., in Orange. It was a good place to visit on a sunny afternoon. rt reminded you how lucky you are. PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A Cambodian air force T28 ·fighter-bomber returning from a war missl9n dropped !our bombs on the ]!WidenlJai palace Jn Phnom ' ' • Penh lodaY. ldlling ' and injuring some LON NOL palace ,..!dents but leav~# Preildent Lon f(ol unbanned. ~irst ._-ts saJd at leul three per- ..,. were killed and I 0 olhen wounded oo the attack ol the '.lwncar Mon palace grounds. Nixon Resting After Buggi ng Recovery Try KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (UPI) -Presi- dent Nixon paused today in his to rest and assess the momentum after a whirlwind week of appeals for ac· ceptance by Congress, the public and the press of evidence he says will clear him of suspicion. • ' Olnclal IOll'ces said the cl-ol the ~pound bombs f•ll within 100 y~ ol Lon Nol, who was in. his villa. on 'the palace grounds at the time ol the raid. · EYB WITNESSES Said the slngle- engine plane made two passes o• UJe_~ace a y catchin"g defenders o!f guard. 'Ibey sal<f tliiro WIS no return lino !!om the liocle antlaireraft gun about 50 yanll from the palace. . ft was the second such air raid on the palace in nill!! rnonUJs, .Last M~ Spa"nisli Bank ~ Va1i ilelil Up ·· MADRID (AP) -.A group of men armed with pistols and sulr machine guns held up a bank van and carried off $474,000, police sources said today. It was descrllr ed as the biggeSt holdup in. the city's history. Police sources said the gwimen escaped alter wounding one of the guards ·inside the van. The guards said the robbers were young and "had a foreign look." 17, 47 penono w•rt ltilled'and 50 wounded when a T2t piloted by \he -in-law of exiled Prince Nerodom Sihanouk mioa- ed the palace illell but hit a crowded refugee setUemenl and a IOidler .. bar· racks. ~tililary ......... Jdeotifled the pilot of today's ,uactc u Lt. Pech Lim Kuoo, ' a veteran mer who had taken ell earlier to bit ..i ..... -in ~ Speu Province, centered :111 ·mne. -t ol the 5"1"W . Wltne 11 es said the first bcmb slammed tnlo the paladl reception "hall, whire '. -two pe1oqj,s died and - were 'WOWlded. A second bomb struck an empty house. Lon Nol was in his residence, about 100 y~ds away. across the street from the recepUon hall, the wltnessea said. "I saw part of the palace -the southern comer -was hall brok~," he said "The roof fell down. Bricks were all over the ground. LOO Nol's house was not hit at all." Military soUrces said the 1'28 was 111E U.S. El\IBASSY is only abOut part of a two-plane mission against tn. two blocks from the palace. Guards surgent posllioo In Kompoog Speu . They clooed of! streets leading lo the paiacf, said on returning to Pochentong Airport and newlllMn .. Id Americ&1 \Jfficiols here. LL Lim Koon allowed his wingman were oo( allowed thfoUgh the-roo((bloclls.-lo land first . ·He 'then pulled " out-of A C&mbodlan government emploYe the Janding pattern and flew to at-tack who lives aboUt 400 yllrds from the the palace about seven mlles away. palace grounds said he saw the plape The source! said there were no olber swoop down twice and heard two ex· planes in the alr at that time. plosions. Egyptians Push For Peace Talks By United Pren ~rnatlonal Egypt said today lt. favors the im- mediate convening . of an Arab-Israeli peace conference under United Nations auspices without waiting for the outcome ol Israeli elections at the end of December. • The statement came from Egyptian government spokesman Ahmed Anis in Cairo as Israeli and Egyptian officers met for the fifth time tOday on the Cairo-Suez: In what co)lld be the fmal phase or their Middle East cease-fire negotiatiom. THE PRESIDENT took the time out at his home here after drawing a highly sympathetic crowd estimated at about 20,000 during a campaign-style visit Sun-. day to Macon, Ga., and getting what -one aide described as a ;'tremendous reaction" to the defense Nixon offered Saturday night in ·a nationally televised news conference. Indications were that Nixon would go on with his intensely personal bi4 .. to rebound from Watergate. with the next move coming Tuesday when he scheduled a trip to Memphis, Tenn., for a talk with Republican governors cmeeting there. Skylab Trip Cut s-,,.ort If Repair Unsuccessful ANIS WAS ASKED at a news con· ference about the Israeli suggestion the projected conference, provided for in the U.N. Security C.Ouncil's Middle East cease-.fire resolution of Oct .. 22. be put off until after the Israeli general elff.-- tions. Anis replied: "The Security COuncil resolution stipulates a peace conference be convened immediately. This is something that concerns Uie whole world U"I T._.. "We'v.e got to take 'em on," the White Hoose Chief of Staff, Alexander M. Haig Jr., told reporters traveling with the Presidnt in referring to critics of Nixon. . Presidential aides indicated t h a t further steps intended to help restore N'11oo's credibility might be decided to- day at meetings between the President and some of his top advisers, including Haig, White House Counselor Melvin R. Laird and Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. NIXON FOCUSED on national defense and c:tid not mention Watergate during a 20..minute speech in Macon Sunday where he took part in ceremonies mark· ing the 90th birtMay of·'Jqnner; Rep.. Carl M. Vinson. "(D.-Ga.)," longtime ch.aiiman of the House Armed Services Committee, and the lOOth anni.versary of Mercer University's law school. In Saturday's news conference, Nixon was questioned almost exclusively about Watergate and vigorously proclaimed time and time again that he was innocent of any wrongdoing in connection with the bugging scandal or any related ac· livities. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Space officials say that if a space staUon . cooling system cannot be revitalized, the Skylab 3 astronauts' planned record flight might havfl to be cut short. Gerald P. Carr, William R. Pogue and Edward G. Gibson brought from earth a repair kit to CUI the leaky refrigeration loop with a fluid called COOJanol. They were .to punch a hole in a service line this afternoon and attach a container of the fluid. THE SPACE agency said Saturday night that Alan B. Shepai;d, chief of the astronaut office, had reprimanded commander Carr for an attempt by the spacemen to conceal that one of them had been sick. Shepard told Carr his action was "a fairly serious error in judgment." Carr reQ!i<d , ','Oiay, I tgree. witp ~u. ·It'· was ' dUmb decisi~' • 1 ~ • For the last two days, the astronauts have ·been activating ~S~lab ~ms and moving: several" hUiidml 'jll\imds. :Ot film, reCordiDg tape "and: ·tools fronf the Apollo ferry ship into the 118-foot· long station. They also started medical experimen~ that will continue throughout their plan· ned 84-day flight to assess the effect of long-tenn space travel. GM, UA WReach Tentative Accord on New Contract DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers and General Motors Corp. reached tentative agreement on a new contract today shortly before the old pact was to expire union of£icia1s said. tlement.'' . The agreement' )¥OUld. coi:npletc na-· tional bargaining with the Uiree majo'r automakers. Agreements wete reactted earlier with Chrysler and Ford. WORD OF THE settlement was . • TONY WNE, president of Local 1112 relayed by UAW officials in Indianapolis, at the GM Vega plant in Lordstown, Ind ., Lordstown, Ohio, and PonUac and Ohio, said he received word , of the Flint, Mich. , se ttlement at 5:15 a.m. PST, less than There was no I m m e d i a t e an-two hours before the contract was to nowtcement here from negotiators, who expire. had continued contract talks through Negotiations continued through the the night. Sources said final contract 1light in an effort to reach agreement language Was being l'-"orkcd out as the ~lore 10 a.m., when a series of 10 a.m. deadline passed. "ministrikes" against individual G?\-1 "Yes, there's been a settlement," said plants was expected to begin. Dallas· Sells, UAW regional director' -in No details of the reported settlement Indianapolis. "We just got. a call, but .. were available immediately. -The UAW we don't have any det13ils of the · set) ·represents 415,000 GM Workers. THE TROUBLESOME cooling system community. So I don't see the thing _ for water, certain ·electronics and as being governed by what Jsrael says some food compartments -developed or does not say." a slow leak while the Skylab 2 crewmen A United Nations' spokesman said were aboard in August. They switched today's talks were between Egypt's Maj . to a backup loop. Gen. Mohammed Gemassy, ~rael's Maj. MissiOn Control said that if the repair Gen. Aharon Yariv and Capt. Fallen job ts unsuccessful and the secondary of Ireland, a staff officer of the U.N. JOOp fails, the mission might have to -Emergency Force (UNEF). be cut short because some food would A pool dispatch reaching Cairo said SERIOUS LY !LL-David Ben- Gurion, tbe . 87-year-old form· er Prime Minister of Israel and one of t.he founders of the Jewish state, was listed in ser· ious condiUon today after be- ing partially paralyzed by a stroke. spoil and some electronics mi~t fail . the generals had an informal discussk>n tank. The space agency also wants both on a return to the Oct. 22 cease-fire The generals had agreed last weet loops in operation so the men can use lines and that they set up a formal on several measures for consolidating water cooling instead of air cooling ·for or plenary session for Thursday in which the cease-fire. including an exchange their ·suits during space walks. Water UNEF Commander Gen. Ensil>-<Siilasvuo of war prisoner!, evacuation of wounded cooling is more efficient and enables will take part. Siilasvuo was not preseut civilians from Suez City. and the turning the astronauts to remain outside longer today.· over of Israeli checkpoints along the and work harder. Cairo-Suez road to U.N. t~. Flight Director Neil Hutchinson said EGYPT HANDED over to Israel at ImplementatJCN1 or the rest or the outdoor work scheduled for Thanksgiving Kilometer 101 the bodies or two Israeli agreement went ahead without problems. day to repair a stuck antenna &nd ehange servicemen, one a pilot of a recon-tbe Israeli command said. It said Egypt tel~ film coWd ~ be completed in naissance plane killed since the truce had returned a total of 162 Israeli one Sfi.-<i seved:b6uf space walk. and a soldJer burned to death in his priSoners since the exchanges began ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"-~~~~~-"-~.:::.: , Reg. 109,95 SUPERSTAR GIFI' BUY! · SAV E olmost ·s221· Sews on buttons, makes buttonholes, overedgcs, mends .... # all without attachments. It has hiri&ed " presser foot th<it sews o~er. pins and -~ .. ~· heavy fabrics, tension setting dial, numbered seam guidelines. With ,.----4~-'-'--~~ ha,pdso me walnut finished hardwood consble cabinet. I • c r .. • • ,. . ' . . ~ . Rain, Snow Hit Rockies .. ' SALE '144 SAVE sga Fog B lank ets Soutli !Jakota, Ne bras ka, Gul f _Co ast " to '4. 1n1.nci temptrllvres ;,11(19 trom " ID .... Wiler fem&*l'lfl,ll'I '°· S un, Moon. l'ldes , MONOAY Stcond h!Olt .... , •• .. • .!:41 p.m, 4.0 $e(gnd. • .; ~-A,.,11: . .1 Fl. tllltl \ ..• .-:..:., 5:11 1,fl\. $.I . Flnt low . , . . ....... 11:"4 1.m. 0..4 second hlth '.. . . .. . ''" p.m, '·' .. SU11 1u ..... ':" 1 "" .... ,:• p.m. Moon llMI 1:311,m. lftt.1:31 p.m. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Del~ of lhe Dai~ Pilol is 1Wf3111ted -~ .. ",. ......... .. ""' ~ ~ ......... ,.. .., .. • •·• ra c.lll ••1'*''.., 1:31,... <'---·, _ .. _,,,,. .... _ ..... ~ .... -••• l& ~-----. _ _, ; !llNI, di .. 1 Oii ii II -o OFF RE(i.PRICE • ft1:t11sntMllllllu. . :£:!.=;:~ felefMies . Ml.U!I , , • For_1toroneare1tyot1,H1llleyelfaw ff'underSEWING ACHINES •• ~C-... ·1:,,,•:;:.,_,1;.•1tr' ::.::. ":;" ""' m. We have a t,.dlt p~n dOli&ned to flt your budset and if you wish, monthly pay,,,.nts rnay be defe"ecl untM Februar-,i 1974 .. w ~-... .,...,_' ...-1 . Asmalldepoiltwillh°'d~nym1thinejlntilChristmas. ' ' ---~---~=-. . ........ ,..,.... .,,. """""' ...... ~ -..---•A Tradtm1rlt orlHf"$1~CElt COMPANY ~'.o 1973 THE SINGtR COMPANY. All Rlsf'lt1 RKtrv.ciT)vo.povt thl World. ) 1"11 ... Jitrty It , " ..... "" ....,.._ S.. ... ~ .. ,. ::: .....,, IM ""9tt· fflth todtr l.-lllil-::~~;_,;·:-' .. .;__ .... .;_·.·-·-'4411..;., ,, _ _::_ __ ..:_-;---;~_:_-' ------:' :;·-·_1_·_· ____ · ---'-·--~--'..~-------''-~·~ c .. 11 .. ~atwn ranoe fNMfl • .t l !I\ • ' ' r I ' s wi Die ' bi my it Ma ill " Iba ed dis is tiv Jett en tel ni Br !ta tel ha 10: be ... A t • • • • -I • Monday, NOYtmbtl'.llJ, l lJ7) • DAlLV PILOT a! . Susplelon of Murder I YouthHeldfor Fire LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A young-drUter-wiUt ~n anon record,-parofed only a week earlier from an A r t z o--n a reform school, baa admitted setting the deadliest atructw'al blaze ill the city's history, pollee aald S\Ulday. Michael Altenburger, ta, was being held on suspicion of murder In the Stratford Apartment fire. which killed 24 peraons late Thursday night and early Friday. Police and arson in· . vestlgators said they would bring charges against Allen· burger-today or Tuesday; Retired Roman Cat ho Ii c Clardinal John Fran c la 11'-blouome<I_ fiercely up Mcintire waa to,aay a specla1 opon stair iells, !rapping maas todsy .for the dead -residents on ul>Per floon, most ot whom were .Mexlcanr Americans ~ at a church In Some burned to death In their 1be downtown Los Angeles beda, olbers leaped to their neighborhood ol the Slratlord.. deaths on the sidewalk below. The case agalnat Alfa!. Eight ol the dead were bilrger 1 n.c.1-u de a •;pil)llleil .~J'!l;IYm msons.. evidence" In additloo to bll ,..... ln)Ured. confeaalon, tnves~iori llld. Allellburler was arrested They woilld not say what \hat aome jllllance away, near the evidence Is. UCLA campus by .. f(icera who- The fire broke out about found him aleep!ng on a bench 11 p.m. In a sofa -in the lobby at a )>us stop, and brought of the Stratford, a 114-year~ld him In !Or ~tine questioning. three-story apartment ·bcluse POiice: aald It was learned of wood frame coostrudion -then that be bad beeo paroled that housed about 140 peraoO.. Noxember 8, his 18Uiblrthday, from the State Industrial Food Strike Deadline School for Boy• at Ft. Grant, "Ariz., where he was sent after an arrest in September, 1912, GamfJleJ"s'--Speclal ' . for arson at a Tucson mobile · · d kn · · ed Crews work to right ·a bus that. skidded off Interstate 80 m the icy ar ess 1 · home lot where he liv : Sunday en route from Reno w San Francisco, inJ. uring 45 passengers,. finir · .. Shortly after his arrest by . . . Extended to Dec. 2 . -·· U~Uecl Pms laternatlonaf Teamsters, meat cutters, operaUng engineers a n d macblnista Stmday set a new strike deadline for Dec. 2 while continuing negotlatlona with the C.lilornia food hr dustry. SQme 9,000 Northern C.llfornia butchers and 16,000 Southern California u n i o n members bad set a strike deadline ol midnight SIU!day before agreeing late Saturday to continue negotiaUons. A strike woold have affected & 4 C8lifomia supennarket chains and their 1,000 outlets. 'nlere was speculation tbe strike ~as postponed after Teamster President Frank Fiti.sirmions met with union leaders. Fitz.simmons m e t with growers last week in San Diego. Government mediators are' taking part In the discussions in Los Angeles and .San F.ran· cisco between Union represen- tatives and the F o o d E'l'Jlloyers CO\UICll, Inc. The L<is Angeles talks hr volve 7,000 butchen, 6,500 Teamster drive rs and members ol aome %1 other union locals ~g eitgineera,-machinlstS ' an d watthousemen. In Northern california, the 9,000 butcbera ol t be Amalgamated Meat O!tten and Butcher Workmen, AF!.. CIO are affected. A management· spokesman said the unions are seeking a $1 an hour hike for their memben a!OQg' with' ,fringe bE!lefits. 1be cootracts ex . pired Sept. 2: 'Symbionese' Group police .Friday; be did confess seriously. It was the second northern-California bus accident of its type-m to setting the fire/' said arson two weeks. Thirteen passengers were 'killed Nov. 3 when a Greyhourid 'bus ' ' investigator Don Brian Sun· heading for the. casinos smashed into a. cOncrete underpass pillar near Sile· day. '"We've got a good case _r_a_m_e_n_to_. _______ ~-----------------bQt I can't go into too much detail at this time." -QUA.KE HITS LOS A.NGELES LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Western and coastal areas of Los Angeles were jolted by an earthquake late Saturday night but there were no reports of damage or injuries~ A spokesman at Cal .Tech said the temhl..-bad a mgnitude of 3.0 on the Richter Scale and its ~r was in West.Los Angeles. It struck. at 11:30 p.m. School Clqsfld ' Rain, Hail, S·now Storm .. . . . . Brings Death to Five ~ • • LOS, ANGELES-(UPI) -lisjon in Industry. Mickie under his house. At I~t five deaths resull!'JI NA<Ie<. 30,,.of.the .. Silver. Lake Joanne Sleiert, 40,-of -Van from rain, hail and snow district, was killed when her NuYs, was killed when· her which accompanied the first car slammed into a divider rented single-engine · P i -p-e r major .storm of ·the season · on 'tbe' 1HollywQOd Freeway. Comanehe truck power ·in Southern c!aflfornia over the -Ami Robert West, 36, of lines, plunged into ah .open weekend. Temple City, died when a car field and exploded in ·San ., 'fwq women and a man wer! , in which. he was a ~Dier _,,_· D~ma!: _ ~ .. ~ _ :ldl!ed· in separate 1tralfic· ac-. went 09\ ol 'i"'Jtrol amf craah-· Homes and bUS;messes in ~idents,! a teen-ag~ boy "!~ ed into.~ t~~ ., . Al~ena, Pomona, Claremont,,, electrocuted and a woman· FraTioscb Rilnurez, 13, of the San Fernando Valley; and died when ber light plane Los Angeles, was appa1'1!1ltly the Wilshire and Pico dislricts crashed. electrocuted when he brushed were blaaked out at varis>Us Betty, Proctor, 47, L a a wet· conduit while his knee tiines w hen . wind;"1\iipped Puente, died in a head-on· col-was in water as he played power Jin~ shorted~ . ' . . . ' -. ' '~-! ' ' Lifts Death Threat By Vandalism OAKLAND (AP) -"Sym-Richard Foster, was killed p~~n~u:1k1.;;;-.. ~ Send the ExtraToucn· -. . .. . . . . ' . bionese Liberation Army," the Nov. 6 in a ball « gunfire School was closed today due • • L. M. B!fJd· ·Garlic Helps Roses to Smell ' Another thing that assassins have in common Is itro. dous· spelling. Or so cont~nds a xholar who has investi- -gated those aouls .. He concludoa bad spelling in some -ca~. 11 i.d enough, might be the sign of a potentially Violent pe""!"allty. Surprised to bear lt My aecretary has· always seemed so pleasant. . - Let me quote f\O\V, please, out of a note from Daily . Pilot editor Tom Keevil : "Deskman we Jiad once wove • ' ' a beautiful story about the best chill ~ spot in Amarillo. Hole in the wall . . . Presidents came there • • • Bankers lunched there. Etc. A Nor-: themer came up totally without warning one afternoon, ripped loose a ~ lean-t1>-storage shed back of the chili • house. Four thousand empty dog food • cans rolled past the feet of the de- parting diners." · SECOND TERM Q. "Statistically, what are the chances that a Repub-. lican president like Richard M. Nixon will complete bis , second term?" · ~ · >.. Statistically? Two c:hances out ot 13. Grant and ,, Eisenhower completed theirs, Lincoln and McKlnley, thoug~ reejected, were assaasinated, Tedd): Roosevelt and ' Coolidge. aerved the une.pired terms ol their predeces- sors plus four years each. And service W8I .four )'ears or ~ less for · Hayes, Garfield, Arthur Benjamin Harriaon, Taft, , Harding -and-Hoover. Statistics in such a small sampling ' don't signify, however . ' Am asked if the .. rate of. violent crime in the big , cities ·was ever higher. than now. Certa1Jey was. ~)fuch hlgbef. RiKl!I after the Civil War. And higher, aiao. tight after World ·war If. NEW FOODS After 1recent experiments to find new foods, tbe· id-• l!ll&e ~'contend they'll S>Oll be able to put !G(ether gree11 cookies made out of high proudn flour 'l'hich wl)I • comefrom .:igae harvested down aroun\I the aewaga dis-• poaal plants, Have a cookie? Tbanka anyway, not rfglll now. ' · Add~ess mail to L. M. Bpyd, P.O. Ben; 1815, N,.. por.t Beacli 92660. •• mysterious group that claims as be and his chief deputy. to an estimated , 5 0 • 0 0 0 f th FT, D Th . k .• . .e,. it murdered Schools Supt. Robert Blackbum, w a 1 k'e d weekend. ' I : ..... o . e l .l ' • ~ 1'":1 . ·~j ' damage by vandals over the '• . • 'an sg· .• ,J r 1.farcus Foster, says it has ~oward their car ~ ~ ad-. Authorities said the vandals • : · · . 1 , : • ,..~•,.., _....,_ :··::~::::LI . i, lifted death warrants for other ministration building parking flooded the school's· main • • • .. ·~1 ' · · · ~1 .~:::~~1 .. ~e<J_ lo~v~i~~b~~;·.iirr;;:.~~:2 7lt'sa~spec10: way · , ~:,," were rescinded illc!lll86 Ille 1_trµck Fooler:iaiet were founa · dOnt i'ecords. . • . . , · · ' · ' · · · ~~~to·~~ ::~al:;::~::... _FLOWERS "to" be the' re. . identification carda, said a let· cause his death. by DEBRA ter the Oakland Tribune A day after the shoo"•••, • CALL received over the weekend. l.&U6'" 75 6291 two newspapers and a radio 6 • "HOWEVER. in the event station received copies, of a o. n. ,..._ .. that the fasc'"t board of letter signed by the unknown ~ 1w11 "" "Symbionese" group. education does attempt to disguise their ln!enttons and THE GROUP said II had at any time reinstates pro-targeted FOlterud Btackbum grams of Political Po1iee for "executioo by cyanide ~~ 1d:rw:I '=. bullets" because1ol their alleg• ed aupp«t "for the · Iden-and contributions to t b e titlcation cards and placing Internal W e If a re I<len-tific.ation Computer Center, police in sc~ls. th , then the Death Warrant Order Officers bel~eve e J_ctter s is to be-immediately-me--a_u_tbor W,?J mvolYed m J.he tivated without warning," the ~laying, bec~use ~t the tl~e letter said. it __ wu wnt~ inf~rin.!l~ The return address on the about the cyanide bullets bad envelope wu . the home ad· not been made public. SANTILLI E'S FLORISTS C.D • 545-945$ m1......;-. c..--..... -4'AROIJSiL • , rl . FLOWER SHQli e. 361-.L-SM It. C....> .... . 642·5070 dress of Berkeley Schools . The letter warned that. other Supt. RiChard Foster. dJSbict offlclals and school i';~~~ii:iii~~~~il Foster no relation to boa.rd members would be kill· II • ed il the plans were not aban· •• AMERICAN donecl. Last week the Oakland -BEAUTY di school b Q a rd temporarily. FLORIST$ B1·a ey shelved the id•ntmcatlon card 1111• -..... propoaal, aaying It wanted Hn•-- more time to assess com-847•ll~1 To Speak munity reaction. On Energy JEWEL WELTY • FLORIST .67Cf.L2L70 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -'s lie• • ' ~ 46 Arrest.ed .. • '"'!. '.:' Autumn nqW~rs with Sport'sman's Decoy usually aVailable for less than $.15.00' ~ ~:iar c::~~ .. ~ o · · iti1i~ . ~,:!. c;"ii':.. .... of meetinga on the eiiergy HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -'11ie1\~~5iii5:5~ii5:5iii5~I • - p(oblen1 with a radio and ~tutlon drt.. o ti RIMER'S MISSION television address Su n d a Y Hollywood and S 1'n se"t' night. . eced nted . boulevards resulted In 4,6'.~ ·FLORIST . &~~.:r.s In the unpr e move, rests during the weekend. _ . Bradley S\Ulday requested • Two W..-. were arrested • 837 "502 half 'hour of nidlo and for -" -"'~ ~•ctttng plain .. tetevlslon time . 'lbe address ~~ ;of&.s, and 31 n:U1,.af-..,1••I .. has been _tentatively set for m<a were charged w• It b - 10:30 p.m. The statlooio will aollcltlng poflcewol'lftk 'llx!~~i:iiii~M-Wiie !>e announced later. . policeWociton walhll "'l -btiiji Bra~ley said be would hold , bouleYu'ds ln ~cl<l\h.el, --eE-meetmprWI' .••• ..xirid · men~ .... .,. '"'!!It::'.: 11-•' • ,. lo111scu• tile ~ pnilllem ~ ~ for i!x are ~ .. "' ,. I . . ' Send the FTO-Th•nluglver. · · A·bouquet ·of fresh autumn-flowers. Or, a.lovely arrangement w!lh the E•tra " ' · T0ucl)..Qf. a woodgr1lh ceraru'ic Sportsman·s Oe b~all or vlslt·your FTD 'Florist !OC!ay; only : ' 1 'he can 'send the Thanksglvcr ah11.2st ~nywhere: '"'"' (M1Sst'FTD'-FIOflsts..,c~pt-m•J0"'1'"11 c..rds;) '· .-,,. - ~ -'~o ~ti~::~:.r -: ."·$]MO· . : . . ·-.. _.. ....... :::~=~?.~~··· '# .. :.~:~:~ ;l ~:::~:~:r::~ ,. ... {P . t~~~~;\~\~:. ~ ~~~~i~~~~~~f:-:::11t\\:~;,9 ''<!·.-~ •• :~;!!Ii!!;.;:;~ ........ :-: "=:=:~ • ":.! ~~;~~mf:t: \ • -': •• w I t h governmeht ~ala, SIX (emale lmpenonaton aclenUsls and bu 11 n e a • were booked for aollclt!ng, and, repreaentatlves. seven men for , a 11 e g e d The mayor aald Los homoseMl conduct • Angeles residents may have · · · to lea•e their cars at home and rely m0re estensi•ely on cor pools and buaes for usually available for less than u~.. . •A's 1n lndependent·buslnessm11', eecti fll)~mber florl't 5'ts'hls oWn prictS: 01973 Florists'Tr1ns~orktt>tlivery Anoe*"":'. · ·'"Your Exti:I! Touch Aorist" lransportatlon. · I "I think we must stsrt with ..iuatary controls but we are 'leallstlc enouah to Imow tlteY · 't work In the long nm," ·~aald. Bradley met ~Y '#!Ith. LeQJ1 Bllllngi, ~I ol sfafl ' he Senate Siibcol)unftl.et Air and Water Pollutloo. na• said that Los Anaol• d be alfecte<I by the energy crisis even tlloulh It doeo not get the cold winter 'l '. . . .FLoll1n "· . . . . ~ .. , . ....... , ... j . .. ....., __ , 546·5121 weather Which plagues · other American clUes. 11.---------•·'--------- I ,. ,Y. . - • "· l>E MIJRL · ' · F~ORIST' f • • • t Jat-M;!• .... ..... I c-. ..... ' ". I (164479 1 '' ' . . --- IJIOADWAY l'L,OWIR • • SHOP, ·INC. CAU. • e ~ -546-82~ 11H_..._ ,!_, c.... .... '• .l,AGUNA HIW ' . ,... 1..: 'f'OltO ttD.: - FLORIST sv ,.I • 1 ,.,xi•.Jr~1.,.tt-s• . 586-5800 - ~ COST'A MESA FLORISTS1 117 ....... e. 548.alll , . . • ...... ... • SEAL aEACl:l, : FLORIST ' •, .... ~, ... ........... ", 213-431·2571 .: ---· ' • tt>••-----•'4•!'11 ... ,,._, ___ . .....,.,. • t ' l • I • . , , • " .... • ' \ ' ' • ., .. . • ' • • -•• ' DAD.Y PILOT EDITORiAL PAGE > I -~ ' No Place For Politics /ffl~t;l~ I • • I ' '· • l ' • • • . .. . I I I I ·(... The Qa.nge-COunty Board ot Supervisors ,used to . be a relatively nonpartisan ~· rarely publicly reflec- ting the individual political a!lillalions of its memberi. For \he past year or more, the board hss been coming up with 3-2 splits all too clearly pointing up political differences among Democrats Robert Bai;. tin, Ralph Diedrich and Ralph Clark and Republlcans Ronald Caspers and David Baker. Clark seems able to adjust his sights fairly often, but Battin remains staunchly partisan. Unfortunately Diedrich, from whom we might liave hoped !or a better performance, is similarly inclined. The latest piece of nonsense came when Caspers produced a fairly routine list of ener~y conservation recommendations, Including a speed limit for county vehicles, reduced heating in county buildings and slmllar items reflecting national trends. · Diedrich promptly accused him of making a "polit- ical speech," Battin agreed and Clark made a snlde re- mark about "inlerences of motherhood and the Amer· ican Oag" -though he later joined CasP.ers and Baker in voting lo support the proposals. • Co unty supervisors, like city councilmen, are sup- posed to represent all the people, without regard to political party afliliations. It's past time for the crew In Santa Ana to get the message and save the politics for more appropriate arenas. More Room at the Beach Addition of 234 overnight compsites at Doheny State Beach in CapistraM Beach seems fairly assured alter a 9 to 2 vote of approval by the South Coast Re- gional Zone Conservation Commission. The commission earlier bad denied the project, on which the state is ready to expend $865,033, but WISely l(reed lo a oecond bearing lo J•I more public Input. The bearing reusured object.on wtio feared the beach would become avlilable onjy lo recreational vehicle ownen. It was confirmed that~ with all typea of vehicles, along with blcycllats and pedestrians, • will be welcome, and !bat no char&• will be made for day UH of the beach. · Residents made a valid point when ther npJalned some would have to trek up lo three miles lo reach the park's single entnlice. Tbll can be reeotved If elate parks ofllclala get busy with negotiations for additional access across the Santa Fe Rallioa.d rt1hwf-way at the _ south end of the park. . This project, while eulng the seiloua ahorbge of ~· along_lhLcoaat, appears lo be right In line with the c:outaJ commtsston'• announced ioal of Improv- ing publlc access to the beaches. .. Read the Rules! A UllO tab for dinner for seven might not startle a cily-dwelllng gowmet, but ii l90ks· awfully ·steep to a Huntington Beach couple, especially for a meal con- sisting of 16 clams. The couple and their five youngsters joined hun- dredo of other beacbgoers last week, taking advantage of low tides to dig for clams. · They had the required license, kl\ew the limit was 10 clams per person and that the clams must measure at least four and a half Inches. But Ibey didn't have the customary measuring device and they didn't guess too well because the ranger said 19 of their 35 clams were undersized. And that coqld add up to a $150 fine. Moral: When you get the fishing llceDBe, ftad. the book of rules that goes with it -and you'd better be- lieve every word of it! I r • r I 'Where am I? What's been going on here?' Ike Couldn't Dear Gloomy Gus Speaker Opposes Resignation or l1npeach11umt .. Speak Freely bout Ni.xon Albert Sees Nixon Keeping Office the President with the est "credibility" in·modem times was We opt for zero llWtll in Orange county-the new phooe -com- pletely fill our drawer. A.B. Oloomr oue c""""'"' ,,. •"'""" IW l"Mfwt 111111 .. Mt -rll"t f'lftlct "'9 "'"'" If ""' ,......,.,.. ...... ""'' "' '""' tt o.-r --. Daltr , .... . ight D. Eisenbowe~; the American ly and feeling another privately-is torate believed in what he said, not unique or perhaps even excessive .. ·he" could have said anything he in him; it is a peculiar ingrowth of' ieved to them. the whole political process, which It et, as Emmet John Hughes, an took the . Watergate scandal to ·place bower speechwriter, point.a out iri under the magnifying glass ot 1X1blic faaclnatlng new book, "The Living scrutiny. But It has always existed, 'dency," even in "good" Presidents as well u "bad" wer was tn-ones. 'ted by political THIS IS WHY Hughes speaks of "all idefations from · the masks worn and a1l the charades aklng his mind acted by tbe Republic's first 37 ly and publidy. Presidents." The Presidency, as evolved • 'Even those Pres-in our country, l! eaentially a dramatic ts most given role ; the President ii an 8Ctlar' apon : candor," writes a stage, and the best actor tends to Hughes, "commonly get elected, not necessarily the most f~l impelled to pro-competent or qualified candidate. WASHINGTON -Some times Wuhlngton ....,. like another world auted by a thousand vom o! u.... on the <l!lilde looking In. This is one of U.... limes when perceptloos of what Is g<ing on do not necessarily correspond ID reallty. Tbe pen:eption witb whldJ Washing· ton is deluged evrsy day ii of • Pr<si· c1eo1,.comered and desperite who must resi(!>, later ii nol novr:Jt a ve the oa- li<ll ""' ardeal al his remo,Ya1 lntm ofllce lhraueh the Impeachment precess. 'Ibis per<eplion Is In the atmosphere. It ia the dally fare of. newa ind ~. But IJ II real? The future as lmqined does not, In fact, c:omopond lo the rea11u .. perceived by the man wbo woold !Jucceed. President Ni.loo it be were ID mien today. unlikely event he were impeached, Albert saya, the ·Senate would not convict Presi- dent Nixon. This would be a "national disaster" which Congress would avoid on the basis of evidence now existing. The Democratic speaker even has irai9e for the President. He said he thinb N!J:m bu "shown a cood deal of steel" in his respome lo the Watergate crist1 and "bu hem a pretty stroag Prelldent. n Albert abo ii undentanding of Nilon'• problems: "The Pn!sident bas DOI been the wiseot In ldectlnl subordinates,· but wtio tn·public office llwaya !mows bow bbl aJbordluotes wlll lum out? ••• I can't equate that witb criminal conduct." 'HE CoNCLUDED the interview by saying that he ii getting a lot of "wild mail," but he will not give hi to that kind of pre81!1ure. "l'rn not pi,.-to create aoother crisis, or show cowardice by doing anything except standing pat and doing what I think is right." Doing what Is right, by Albert ., measure, does not, on the basis of present evidence, justify a vote in favor of impeachment. Is this Washington in which the Speaker of the Hoose leads his own party by consensus the real Washington? Or Is the real Washington rightly d...nbed by the stygian chorus which proclaim.! a nation in grave crisis with a disgraced President who must go skulking from office now or later'! · IF 11IE REAL Washington is the latter, Speaker Albert bu misjudged his CongreoslonaJ constituency and will be tn the unique position of a speaker overwhelmed by opposing majority sen- tlmellt In Ille House. Because few expect Carl Albert ever to be found in that position, his pereep- tJm of rulity attracts: more credibility than the lntuitions: of tbo3e who write and speak NI they wish to believe. · Speaker Albert ut his national role camot be separated from his local iden- Uty. He does come from Oklahoma. Sen. llcnr)' B<-llmon of !hat state i.~ also getting a message not to turn his back on Prcsidenl Nixon. He "·rote to the Presiden t: "Ignore the noisy turmoil . . . l do not bel~ve there is a IiKelihood that the Congress "'QU]d vote impe achment . . . remain in office until the procedures established by law have been follo~·cd." OKLAllO:\IA e ,, i d e n I I y kno\\'S something not apparent in ~l8s.5achusetts \vhere Republican Ed~·ard W. Brooke called for the Presidc>nl's resignation, nor in South Dakota whose Demoaalic Senator. George S. f\;tcGovem, ha! received the revelation that Nixon will not be in office a year hence. So long as the Speaker of the House, on the basis of present evidence, secs no reason for Nixon's resignation or impeachment. it can fairly be concluded that neither event is so imminent as predicted, suggested. or intimated. Bills of impeachment originate only in the House of Representatives. ~o a1T\O\Jnt of editorializing can change that, nor is it having much effect on Speaker Albert. !Jtss publicly what they disbelieve priv-Once cast in the leading role, be 4(.ely." He discloses that "Eisenhower is as committed to bis "script" as rtcver wholly gave up hope, during his any actor, and must subordinate bit 4ght years in oUice, that his Republlcan personal feelings and oplnions to the 11IE SPEAKER o f tbe House ol Repreoentati ... , car1 Albert of Oklahoma, does not hink NWln will resign. He does not think be. will be Impeached. He does nal think be lhauld be lmpeaehed. He does not tblnk be 1bould resign. IRS 'Friends List' Too? 41ccessor mJght be someone other than persona he presents to the ·public. Even ~ce President Ricbard--Nixon." Eisenhower, who "resented the in- ·' stitutiOb (of the Presidency) u an in-~ TRROUGROtrr his P r e s i d e n c Y , trusion a bore and a burden " felt '~es info~ us, _Eisephower obliged' to say' publicly, "this' ts a ~nously .~escnbed Nix~ to_ frl~nds 0,~ -·wonderful fnslltutlon," and •o conCeal It ii al -_IL signif:l<l!ICe tbat Speaer Albert waited ootil the flurry al ~ tion-lmpeachmnt t8li: bad reached a creocendo lo reveal lo Allen cr.mley, Wuhlngton correspondent of hil ..._ state Dewspaper, The Sunday Oklahoman, the deplll of his views. Zealous Secret Service Lacks Sense of Humor tjd~ as just not ,;residential limber his true attitude toward the .office and t a born loser. But, Hughes goes its encumbrances. WASHJNGTON -The White Iloule not only stirred up tu trouble for Presi· dent Nixon'• declared 11enemles11 but aho asked tbc Internal Revenue Service, in effect, to go euy oo such presldenUal favorites as the Rev. Billy Graham and dfl, "he oould not reasonably have been f(Sked ~o advertise this opinion before !le Republican party or the American ~ectorate." (Any more than, two fecades earlier, President Roosevelt d>uld publicly express his low opinion ff Vice President John Gamer.) ::What we perceive as Nixon's passion it' secrecy -for saying one thing public- '- REAL REFOHM must come from the public, not from the Preskleutial. akie. When we are sophisticated enough to demand , and recognize, rock-bottom sincerity in our candidates, then and only then will the actor relinquish bis role and the statesman emerge from the cocooo of secrecy. Albert speab lntm the experience al Congresllmal leadenhlp. He wu not elected Ibo first member ' of Congml 8lld succe3'ol' ID the pre1ldency because be misjudges Congressional rnoodl, but becluse be understand.< and refiecta them. ALBERT IS a Democrat, o! course, and no Nixon partisan. Even In the actor John Wayne. This ia the lmPort of the secret. sworn testimony of John Caulfield, a form er aide who Intervened ;. " ~ l Noticed Any Good Auras Laroly? W~3.~~ ~Like all enlightened folk, I have my ~11 private set"of superstitions, wti'icb of tlurse ain't anything of the sort. More ~e lovable little quirlts, say. ; Without being able to prove it ore "'ay '°another, I believe the universe ls more ~n a fortuitous collis.ion of atoms and ~sin fact some pur· ' ~ "'h1cb I don't ~- tjuly understand, ,__, .oogh I try. ! think .;. ~~am.Jl'urb ore •. l¥' ~Y about money; "~ ')...( ~ , ~ other day, btlonged to a simple-minded ~!'rs~ ~ed President'• former ba1eba1J player named Babe Ruth. counsel, John Dean, had ast.d him lo CHARLES McCABE What malru an aura great, that Is amnge tax audlta of some lndividuall . . dllUnct, la as simple as the realization of and ID give genlie treatment·to othm. --a -·· humanity. IVlten all c:onfllct Is wuhecl out, when form truly follows We recently published the results of "You know, old man, your aura bu Im-funcUon, when the person finds his an American Civil IJbertles Uni~ proved." lllltable -t, does ii well and fulfills study, which showed an unusual number 1 knew indeed that 11 had, though I blmlell In Ibo doing _ tbcn we have a cl these on .the Whtie House "enemies wouldn't have put It that way. I bad rtlul~ aun. AJ a claS> 1dmlrals and !Isl" had been 1crutlnlzed by Jatemal always known about auras. At that Ille>-old mUaic::llmi like cuaq' and _Sepia Revenue. , ment 1 became actively oonsciou~ of have.a blCh aura quotient. You mlgbt say Caulfield teslllled, for e1ample, !hat them. Now I almost snUI them like a with some accuracy -u an aura In 11171 "Dean ukec1 • • • II an audtl beagle. 1'his Is ooe or the small p1eu.treo perdl, al ""llJ< -tbat i' cood 1ura ti -could. be done op Robert G..-, an ln- +iL th&-lrli ~· 'l'f d~en. birdie · -· ,wilidl add.zest IO the.Did game. an-~-a-fulOllmentr -· ~~e ltpor!er.' l'l>o .djd a,.~ ,. Miiiiil!iii -le the bo01i cl ·Nosh.r . ' · . '6f"Cijfl<81 articles m Bebe RebOzO In (Wobster) an aura ls: "Literally a A LOT of pedplo bell..,. In bod auras. Nenlay." _.,lights, that Mor· ~ons are honest. and 11/•L the BriUsb re- ~ your privacy. I believe all man· ~r of things which have m greater sta. than articles of faith . r also believe, and dL>Cidedly, in auras. My belief in these strangt tblnp ilai1ed like many beliefs, when II was ...,, bOme. I hod bcon away from .§In WI*. ,. for a looglsh tlm•. Al ai...,., trm:ling, my oonduct a n d my king had Improved. I had made ..,.ai decidedly right moves ol a +~al nalun. la brief, I felt J was In • form. - breeie ,.. gentle current of air; but tech-This Is not •rnciug 1111 priVlte Ht of Caulfield "spoke lo Mike Acree In nically used to denote any subtle invisible superstitions. People .say al others tbat the Jatemal Revenue Service," acconling fluid supposed to fiow from a bod}'; an they <IUde evil. This 1' a liUJe too)leavy ID I aecr<I IUIDlllary of ·Caulfleld'1 effluvium, an emanation or exaltation, for me. 1 could make SI. ·Francia of USUmony, and "believes that an as tbc aroma ol Oowera, the odor or. the Ass151 e1ude .mi U l filled you to , lhe anonymous letter requeating an audit blood .. eyebai11 beforehand with bis Malla eon· -G--· 1·•--M " .. . -and tlons of ~lie -·~ w-_, ~ ..... This is something like <1erw., a n . iii the f::f'" That·~ aal . ls Aoooymous l•tlefl, appare11Uy, w•re unicorn. IL means nothinl at all U you lllnlD y. -UMd by lbe White Hoult lo ltlmulate are not a unicorn person. Bui II you Imaginary. Auru are real. tu audlil 11\thoul leavilll any trace. believe In unicorns almost'aey ddiniUon Mtlle there are no bad auru In my "' particulamatlori Is acceptable beotiary, there ii tbo aboeDoe of aura. • '11111 ii perhapa jUat u bod .......... THE YOUNG talk about vlbca. Tbal 11 There m people who and wltll lbelr dln. clooe; but really no cigar. An allra ii They _,,; alinoot u 11 Wllll tl!u1, lo be almost u palpable as a halo, U you're a holding bacl< acmelblng tbeJ do not nnt halo person. Mm al srea1 penonol ac-to let ou~ u If II ,..... a -ar a complishment usuai!y bave an aura -de -· ~ an -al the peapll 1.n Gaulle's was grandlole. Qiurcbill'1 ond tho wwld, I'm afraid . 1bey haven't cm Sandburg's "':J.l rllt Y•• -ablatopullllaDtacolblr,illanother can find aura In a Npd ,,_ .-i plirOM ol tbt ,_. lt ~ be wailing-for the ilghl to cilanp, "' a c:llap ...., and facile, to II)' thlt lml'8 ~ Wltdllng a ball game. 'Ille ~ ad ~ then II &a lllrl ICftUllnc aura al my Ume, 11 I a.tlonad Ille to set out. It'• DOI u llqle u tbt~ • Vemoa 0 Mtke" Acree, tbm the am. tant ~ al Jatemal Revenue, -head"' lbe Qa-Seryke, -io us be ellber aent or calad to be ,..t any letter on the NewadlJ reporter. But Greene, -of Nt'lrlday'1 prtae-wtnning lnftlllptJvo aquad, WU aum- moood by a New Yort atate tu a;.nt who uld the JRS bad sua<tted the atate mJcltt want to .-.Int bil tax... Be -m 111111 bll Rei- probe -... lbe tu ilrnetlpt.bl showed be """' not -peMJ. (JACK. ANDERSON) Friends of the President got the op- posite treatment. C3uliield testified that, in Seplethber 1971, Dean ruiked him to "determine whether or not Bill y Graham and John Wayne were being harassed by the Internal Revenue Service. Tax Information about com- parable Individuals was obtained . . . from Mike Acree." Acree remembered the request on Graham and Wayne but refused to- 1ay from whom it came. He called II strlctly "routine." Wont from an assls· tant director's office about harassment, however, 15 taken inside the IRS as a signal to go easy on the taxpayer under Investigation. To Acree'I credit, he balked at some of Dean's r~uests. · Caullleid recalled that "on aflotber occasion, Deal\ re- quested Iba! three or four audits be done of spec!lle IDdivlduals. and Acree was brought over ID the White Home ID cllJcuas the nmtler ... with Dean." Caul· field wa1J11'1!9"'t when "Aa'oe erpressed Htlli -i!Ol-lnolho project anll It wu- apparenUy cln/pped alter the meellng. FOOTNOTE: On at least one occulon, the Whlte House used the lRS to check oo omncone of!ering the Presl· . d"'I a gilt. Doan asked Caulfield, accortllnC to the lesllmOlly, "to de- termlno whether an Individual on the West Coast wbo wanted to give a wine cellar to the Western White llouee had any tu problems." Caulfield COMilted Acree, ·-determined tbat th• Individual .,.. not abovHtolrtl and ao the sift iru tumetl down." .Jn .. talJr.' with my .-ate LM Whit· ten, Acree remembered It "" a com-pany, DOI an Individual, ol!eriq the gill and tbat he .nported the llnD did nol have any tax problems. PROTECTING THE PRESIDENT: 1be Secret Service, In lta ,.., to pr«t<t Prelldml Nlloo , has be<n Mlling aiant· lbed ~lar biJll that pab a Ultlo ...,Ue fun at him. A stem-faced agent named Ri chard Stokes moved in on a novelty shop in U>uisville. Ky., and alarmed Its workers by conriscating huge one-by·two-- foot thre<Xlollar bills carrying Nixoo's picture. The agent's incredible justification. as attested by a copy of the rerelpt, was that they were counte rfeit ''foreign" cur· rency. About the san1e time. another agent grabbed off a bill in a Salt Lake Cit y shop, charging it resembled U.S. currency. ~fTER WE began investigating the seizures of lhe Ni&on bills, the Louisville U.S. attorney's 'tlffict and the Secret Service began point ing fingers at each other. Finally, the Secret Service In Washington admitted their case had no more value than the phony three-dollar bllls. ''We do not regard them as a viola· tion, 11 conceded a spokesman. He denied the confiscations v.·ere carried out to harass those \\'ho make fun of the Pres!· dent. DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubUsher Thomai Kcevil, Editor Barbara Krt ibich Editorial Page Editor The editonat 1~ of 1he-Dally Pilot ·fe.cka to lnronn and lrtitnulate ~trs / by Pl'n<'ntlna on this page divtrte ·~ffltary' on ~ICI 0( in. ter'l!'lt by syncpcated cohunnlrts and cartoon1ita, bY 1>r0Vldina a forum tor retiders· views and by ~nc this 1'Hl8PlPtt'• Of>fnlont and 1dtu on current toplca. '""°editorial opinSot. ol th< Dilly Pllo\ appear only tn tll~ editoNI column at .,. 10p ol llld -· Op!nioour .,......,, by !he cot{ UmrDltl aod CU10onlsta ancf letttq wrtttre are thtlr own and no ndot ~ mmt ol 1btlr vltws by U1e ofJ; Pilot -be lnf......s. I Friday, November 16, 1973 l ~ ... ,_, • -.. ( th• ort ti Ket •• to are tbat H. ; . All ·• Pa. an ma " . -.. r vi N " In w I I • • ' .. • Mondliy, November 19 , 1973 DAILY PILOT 1 Doubt Still Pers'ists Oswald Was the Sole Killer I Editor's note: Thl1 I! the si;fth i11 a series of artfcles un tlie assaiajno-~on of Pre1ide1lt John K<>111edu, lt. lmpUoau.,., at1d e//ect1 on the decade to foll<iw.) ByH. D.Qu!Q UlllW '""""' l111ltn11tltNI Ten years have not chang· ed the opinions or meny pel'l<\'1• -prolesslonats, legal experts, criminal in- vestigators, and otberwlte - who doubt that the lull 1tory or the as .... 1nauon o1 l'n!sl· dent John F. Kennedy bas come out. The TNl8t presistenl doubt of all is that just one man, Lee Harvey Oswald, wu lQ... volved In "the crime or tbe century." The War:ren eom. mlsalon con<luded that Oswald acted alone In the slaying In Dealey Plaza, Dallu on Nov. 22, 1963. MANY OF THE doubten . are more convinced than ever that the .....,lnation WU the work of at least fwo gunmen. we,. tl!en! two penons 11&-lnc the name Oswald! Lt the 1lngle-bullet theory -Its detracton say It had to be a "magic bullet" to go through two persons the way the com· mlsslan reported -nonsense? Were some facts manipulated during the ln· Ve3tigation? Many books have been writ· ten and a great number of scientific papers issued that argue against the WarTen report conclusions. THE MORE respooslble or lbe doubters are serious critics, dedicated persons who feel frustrated because of what they regard as a general public apathy about their ef. fort•. Recently there has been some new lnfonnatlon -new assel"tionS, at least -bolster· • Ing those who say the "111>- . mission went awry. T h e strongest of these are the Oat opinions of two doctors -one a noted pathologist and the other a coroner's investigator -that, based on scienttfic evidence, more tllan one gun. man was involved. They wefe the first critics of the commissi~ report to be allowed into tbe Na· · · tional Archives in Walh-- ,. ingtOn to study the Ken· .. nedy autopsy artifacts, the : · photographs and X-rays. They say these prove that the com· miuion conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the sole · / assassin is incorTect. UPI Tel111Ml1 AUTHOR MARK LANE, THE MOST PUBLICIZED OF DOUBTERS Ho S.ys Ho Now Thinks Konnody Wu Shot at From Thrff Dlroctlons .. began to decl assify various documents, she ordered every document in which Givens was mentioned. She found, she 58)11, that on assasslnatloo day he told the Dallas police and the FBI that at about noon he saw Oswald on t he Depo5itory first floor, and not on the Si.Ith. Givens stuck to that story to interviewers from Nov . 22, 1963, to April, 1964, she say" "'ben he gave sworn testimony to a commission lawyer and ''for the fll'St time mentioned going back to the sixth floor for his cigarettes and en4 countering Oswald there.'' The lawyer was aware of Givens' original story but did r.ot cross~xamine rum about the new story, she says. "Givens' original .11tatement tended to exonerate Oswald by placing him at noon on the first floor, just as three other witnesw independently also placed him there at the same time.11 He was in the Dallas motorcade. A close friend of bis recently told UPI that John.son .thought there may have been a conspiracy. · "He'd say: 'I just d<fn't see how that (one killer) could have been. There 's bound to have been somebody else in· volved. Hell, we'll never know any more than that (the War· ren Commission findings ). It's hard to believe that there wasn.'t more to it than w31 · discovered.' building from which ·Oswald is said to have shot. Dallas County District Al· tomey Henry Wade, woo pros-- ecuted Jack Ruby ror killing Oswald, says: "I don't think Lee Harvey Oswald suddenly woke up one morning and deci(ied all by hlmle1f to kill the President." He believes Oswald either was incited or had help. "I( Is a gut !eeltng. I WU in tbe room with him about five minutes and he never "IT WAS NEVER any said anything. I was going attempt on LBJ's part to try to interview hlm Swlday even· to damage the report," the lng but, as it lumed out, I friend said. "He just ques--never got the chance." tiooed it like anybody." Wade said Oswald's : ac- Leo Janos, writing In the tlviUes In New Orleanl on July Atlantic Monthly. said behalf of the fide! C.Stro that In an interview shortly government in Cuba -he betore his death Jolwoo rold was arrested th ... for getting . him he never believed Oswald into a fight while handing out acted alone, although he could pro-Olstro leaflets -"explatn accept that Oswald pulled the him about as well as anything. trigger. Sometime before that, Ken- Janos said Johnson told him neqy l1ad had that near con- that he had found that ••a fronlatlon with the Russians a.ms. ~IEAGHER says she year or ao before Kennedy's over Cuba." publishe\t an article in 1971 ~ death a ClA-backed a.saassina-,.. · '· In a Texas magazine "pointing tion team had been picked up THERE HAS always, been out the shocking manlpula-in Havana. J 0 h n 5 0 n open .skepticism i.n EUiope lions ol the facts" hero but speculated that Dallu had about the Warren Commission the general press paid no at-been a retaliation for this conctus1ons., _After publication tentm. thwarted attempt. although he · there of c:iuques by F.dward A YEAR AGO, Dr. Cyril A third new doubt-raiser is couldn't prove it." Jay ~pstem and Mark Lane, 'ded b B d I I . ed . D 11 the Tunes ol l.oodon. called •I. Wecht, coroner of prov1 y er n a r !1 ~1e~ 1n a as, on the comml.s.sion to reopen ;. Allegheny County (Pittaburgh) Fensterwald Jr., dln!ctor of retired Pohce Otlel Jesse Cur· Its Inquiry to deal with the . • Pa.. past president of he the Committee to Investigate ry -who wu in the lead lnts aised · · , American Academy of Assassinations, a Washington-ear of the Nov. 22 parade,, po ~ · .. ~ •. Forensic Sciences, university based research group. Writing ahead of President and ~irs. So :did Alistair. Cooke . it's probably too late now - so many of the witnesses gone, ph)'sicaJ evidence gone. It was the kind of event that draws a lot of sell-seeking people, and a lot of disturbed ooes. I didn't think It was good for our country to leave a lot of loose rtrings. .. , didn 't thtnk that the theory under wllich the com· mission concluded that Oswald alone fired all three .11hots was supported by the evidence. I didn't think the .. por; ex- cluded the [X16slbilily that someone in addition to Oswald was involved. "I think they did prove that Oswald was up there and shot the President. They didn'l prove to my satisfaction -that. somebody else wasn't up there -or somewhere, perhaps. As a lawyer analyzing the report, in government. Some or the authorllles laughed. But after Watergate I don't bell~..,e anyone can believe such a ·conspiracy was unlikely, Some or those people were in Dallas on Nov. 221 1963." . Lane has provided the story llne for a new movie, "Ex- ecutive Action," about the murder, .starring Burt Lan· caster and ilie late Robert Ryan, w be released on the eve of the 10th anniversary. Jim Garrison. the big ~w Orleans distri ct attorney who . was acquitted in September on • federal bribery charges, says the government is out to get him but "II they want to, I'll dance with them again and I'll beat them again." " GARRISON FAILED in a 1969 court attempt to prove • tional Trade hfart, conspired to murder Kennedy -and that the mUilary·industrinl complex and the warrare sec- tor a( the government were behind the plot. In an interview in New Orleans~ Garri90n said he believed the murders of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Martin l.Alther King, and the Kent State students were related to that of the President. '1These are all essentially >entagon~riginated murders, but nobody wanl.s to say so because the Pentagon is still the most powerful force. Hi American govemment," he said, "lt was total control of the Justice Department as a practical matter. total con· trol of the president, \\'ho is only its business agent ... '' that Clay Shaw, former head·-----· --·- of the New Orleans lnterna· Give the Gift that "Keeps on Giving" Back to YOU! • Wt "'11 bo\IM that .... lhoUld ....... ., lltttt. If yoa COltflbult to Uft WI think wt shOuld CIO tomtthln1 In rttum thtt trill aM rou back mOl't t1111 • wann fttllnl and 1 t1x dtActJon. • Now, WI MW fou11d 1 most 111m1rklallt W¥/ to nw1rd you for your 1ener0$ity. You stltl 1njoy '"' ple1sur1 or tlelplnc rour ftllow·ma111 plus the btMffis of a tu-dtductlble tilt But . , • JOU don't 11w up th• luturt tln1ncial ste11ritr you tould hlw enjoyed by keeplnf 10ur alt!:. · and the evidence to sustain it, the chances are that Oswald did do it alone, butl;:;:=========;J • going . up • As lonl as you livt -bt&lnn l111 lmmtdi•tely-wt'll pay ,.au 1 1en1rous income out of the earnlnp ol yoor contrlbulion. Thus, It btcOmn 111 investment to protect ,-our future, and !ht future of )'Our tunlly. At !ht s1mt time, JOU will be uvlnr on future milt taxes a!MI probate costs. I don't think they went to the bottom in explaining that per.suasively and con- vincingly." ·nvo ·OF THE 'more spec- tacular doubtel'1 have gone w other things but their sharp opinions ha ve not been dulled by time. th1 pl•t• to lJO for FINE DIAMONDS WUlll toa$t pl111 -totll ITlftlll d•l1't' 111-r. ut. 1G.6, closed 11,1n. - • Wllat other way can )'OU ust your Investment funds and securities to do so much for JOU In IO many ways for so loll( 1 time? Wllnt Oil CALL for FJet lnfonnllioa Without OblipliOll Te~014)64~ Exleosion 106 .... or write: Nark Lane, probably the mo0t publlcir.ed ol the wrlttng'l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 doubters, with "Rush to Judg:J1 As costs go up, so do values. An:t is the replacemtfll cost of your h<>IM rises, so dO!$ tr,e inflation GO'ler~ge ln a Sl1te firm HOfl\eOllll'lefl Polity. State f•rrn Is 111 you need to knew about Insurance. C~l me todiy, Tholl\MI K. Stadltlger Hoag M1mori1/ Hospital PTBsbytrrian rnent," has recently been roaming a South Dalccta reservation as attorney for "the Wounded Knee Legal Defense-Offense Committee." In an interview, he said there had not been a great deal of new inform a ti on developed but that there was now evidence that sbotf were fired at Kennedy simultaneously from three di!· rerent directions. In the book he Mid a mlnlmum of two. "I THINK THE President wu killed because of hil detennlnaUon to end the war In Vietnam and begin w move America in · a different direc- tion." Lane said. "Obviously It wu a massive power play that had the support of those who reprosented a segment in the military-industrial com, plex. 11In 1967 I said the con- spiracy included e I em en ti within ·the CI.A and anti-Castro CU!"W W powerful forces -~ Mnr1~ ~ ~· Mo,. S.curity WMh • FALSE TEETH While Ealliig, Talking Afrald falle u.tlri 'frill drop at the wrons time? A dMtUJ'I adt.i" eaa help. FASTEET~ Powder sl.,.. 4entutN a lonfl', Amiw, IC.lldler bold, Wby ~·m~?1'or RION ieeurity and eamfort1 u11 FAS· TEETK IMntuN Adl\esiq.P°"d«• Detlture. th1t llt ~ eeeenUal to Malth. 5" 10111 deat11i rerolwly. Wtllcllll l'I..., 17th a114 JnUie. N1wport Beach,Californla92660 847-4949 Don Crawford 17171 Boach Blvd. Huntington lloach Nowpolt Boulevard Newport Beach, CA 92660 WE .QUOTE PRICES · OYER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -C:HICI THiii sun1 SALi ·SllCIAU-s11111• ""· I o.r •el. Mt. 6ELUSIL LIQUID A11ti•tid, 12 01 ••••••••••••••••• $1.69 ST .47 CONTAC CAPSULES, 101 • •••·• ••..•••••.••. , ••. , 1.79 1.lt .Dl-INSO~'':IAIY ·SHAMK>6. 12 l/1 01 ••••••••••• , • 1.,59 1,69 )EV LON ;.;F.LEX'.'· BALSAM H1 ir Co11d. 17 a1. • • • • • • . • 1. 91 1.75 '' . ... _ $1 .lt 89< 1.29 1.3' 2700 E. Coast Hiirhwav, at Fern leaf. Corona del Mar • 644-7575 professor, and a lawyer -in the November Esquire, he Kennedy and Gov. and Mrs. longtime Amer 1 can COC· -------------- who has done 5,000 autopsies says examination of now· Connall y -said of Oswald: respondent of the Guardian. and consulted in 10,000 more declassified documents dealing "I think he might have been One of thme in the United . .. -studied the au tops y with OswaJd's trip to Mexico Influenced or helped by States wbo favored reopening .• • material . before the murder "makes it somebody. I have never been was A1ex.ander Bickel, the kh Ad "From a hard physical clear that there were at least completely satisfied that there distinguished professor of law The Broo· urst-ams evldentlary standpoint, there two Lee Harvey .Oswalds" was not somebody behind the _and legal history at Yale. was more than one person there -one •·our" Lee. the brick wall, firing that shot." •• --oth "I WAS IN favor of it at , · · • shooting,~ he. says..._: "-UC e own Adlls & llrDll•st Streets-: . ' lll1tl1&tD1 Baell ' . single-bullet theory Is absolute This jibes ~ith the theory ·-:;;Tll;:E;:· ::w;:•::I::'·..JS::::-=iw=ar=th==_e=t=he=tim~e::,'::' ==he==sa~y:::s·='=='W:e:::ll·1 ·---Mere' h-. nt-s-Ass I cau.o·n AE' . scientific nonsense. 1 ' of Richard H. Popkin in "The I -~'"ff: -"""'-- That theory. on which Dr. Second Oswald" that there I ···:.~1:~al~:c~~~urs ro~,~;~0s~a~~·~f:s: PRIJ TB .1 Nl/'~Gl 11 l-NG -. r. .. ' that, of three bullets fired, trail, leaving his gun, so that n ll 1. ll ' ·. · one of the two nonfatal bullets the second, a better shot uslng · · went through Kennedy's back a better gun, could disappear ' ·· and neck and then through -and the evidence being so J I s ,. Texas Gov. John B. Connally's confusing that "our" Oswald ewe ry . I e •• chest and right wrist and lodg-couldn't be convic~ed. • .. " ed In his thigh. "Once that theory i s THERE ARE S T I L L destroyed , \\'C must conclude doubters Ytho were on or near · · • that more than one person the scene who don't raise fired," Wecht says . logical cain with the com- During this 3 DAY SALE 1 10% Deposit will hold any ilem In lay·•·w•y until December 20th. Y9,U .wi ll be charged absolutely no lntere1t or carrying ch'1r1e. Our· st ores i re loaded with many specl1ls in addition' to those .listed below. HE AIS> SAYS that Ken-mission but st.ill ar~ he8:fd ---. ~s.,__br.aln_ and_t he .~ ~tart a~y d1scuss1on .,with ,• microscopic slides of tissues J-Jmt-don t-see-how. · ·~-H F==:;9:;0:;:M:;:U:;l~l:P:K::l:A=:=l_ . , , removed from his bullet Up to his death, former ·~ wounds are missing fr om the President Lyndon B. John$0n ', archives and nobody is saying apparently was one of these. ~· whether they were Io st ,·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;wl .• destroyed or mlsplaced . 11 Dr. E. Forrest Chapman of Detroit a general practitioner '. and tdnner deputy medical ' . examiner for Wayne COUnty, examined the material two THE EYE ANDI SEMI-PERMANENT ,EYELASHES months ago, and says : "It's just Impossible that one bullet could have hit both men. It ""'""" like. a Fpiracy. to ~ . llY il JI' " ,-._..-lh~ -~---~ An6tll6 -·-· "' .. ~ vlded by Sylvia Meagher ol New York, author of lhe 1967 "Accessories After the Fact," In research on Charles Givens, who was cited by the com- mission a.11 an lmpol1.ant witness who established the pr.sence of Oswald on the sixth floor of the Depository Building In Dallu otar the fatal wtndow about 35 mlnutn before the "IJ :30 p.m. sbootln&. WHEN. THE ARCHIVES For Weekender Advertising Phone . 6424321 IMAGINE SWIMMING, SLEEPING. SHOWER- ING OR EVEN CRYING WITH BEAUTIFUL LASHES., THESE ARI THE SAME LASHES THAT YOU W 0 U L D PAY $15 OR MORI FOR ELSEWHERE. llOW$5 -+ UP ONLY • 441 l,17Tlf COITA t .. SA 1um 1 MOll.-SAT. f·6 MZ-2180 IT ArPOINTMINT ONLY • -'UST. fltf 0'Al 'ENOAN°'T f ~,,,.,Opal, "1fyl1t, 14K YG V-'IUE S.59 $25.99 I Mll"i tolot JM1 lrott~ 5 N1llrr1! totor' h1Mct1lttll iR 14K $99 Ylf $2i0 ........ .. IONUS SPICIAL ~ t CUlTUIEO 'fAll IAlltMGS 1 01op 1tyl1 or 1lwd1. & hntr0111 ,_,11, .. 6 1tyfe"' '\Alt YG ' Y'Al\it "9 .. IA.5 -n. $16.99 -· \3 l1Mn' '•lift Solillltl '"": .. ~ •• Star•& $84 Yli 1121 •• , .............. . hr1 a,.1 ' Oi1111tM DIR•I ::·1'i.~.·~. ~·~··· : ' .... $ 5 85 l1itits' i\lli!P.l• .tool II ... :t'~~·-~'."..~~· .... " .. $4 7 \Mitt' '•lfllfl Stllt.ilrt Mt ~. ~-~~~.:1.". .. ... $81 SHOP 7 DAYS AND 6 NIGHTS ~~ USlOUICHllSTMASLAYAWAY Sl'&R ~ , • t.oN'OUACH,fllJ Alk1tUeAt; ~ ,. f ~~•SANl'AANA,·IOllN,#1111 • • TOltll:ANC•,14411 H•t"°"9t al. So . .,,,,,m••. ,,.,,,.,....,,.,,. .. ,,. I AM • NlwroAT UACff, I I,..._••· ,. • TOftltANC•t Del A,,..,_,.,... St. ~1 __ l IJ,,__J •• ~ • lt8DONDOUACH,a ... ,C•11tff' TUN ~ • OltAHOl,f'lwM•ofO,_,. • ANAHSIM, ArWl•IM Pluo . • LOI ANOll&.U, Ano Plo1• MA 111 (MAIOI • IANl&AMlllCAI• • SOI (llO(T fllAH I• CHRISTMAS. in . NOVEMBER! NOV. 28th '500 IN GIFl'.CER'I'IF'ICA'I'ES TO BE GIVEN FREE NOV. 28 TO SHOW 'OUR APPRECIATION FOR YOUR PATRON- AGE, GIFT CERTIFICATES WILL BE-NEGOTIABLE AT ANY OF THE MERCHANTS LISTED 1st PRIZE .... .'200 .2nd PRIZE .... .'100 BANK m 'OfAMERICA 4!11]~~1 ._,., ···-·· • 3rd PRIZE ..... two •so l . •tth . PRIZE .••.. ten '10 MAGIC DUU AlmTIC Ml\lllOll PAITY ' . 1 HOUI llAUTY lffOI' c~ l "1lA PtCAPIT YOUI PA&ACI PITI-, .llAUTY 1 ... ....,.,._ ,, ... !tot _ .... ~y ..... i.. MAD IHOI TllMD O' ·-MAllllT '"'"'°" ---............ -·-....... .,.rt••••r It• Ill• fe111U, ..... 1 .... HA111 JI VAUN'S SHACK WAUPAPll ...... lffOI' &S~IS Tiil DAISY PATCH -DA.--·-· JIW1tUS ........ PAULA'S Olll IHlff SIMNG ... _ ... • f1~rlc • J•lte1~ .. , ... , ... , ., I I I --------· Mt N' Mt TGIY w-VAllllTY , aon st on • -MAllA"S ....... AITtsll'f CINTH IN OILS· .. SWiii --· • PAStl't' •attn ........ '"°'" .......... • ,1 I I • • ' : • • . • ' • 1 • f' • ' ' .a;p;;;";A;ll;.V~P~_l;LO~T::::::::::::;:;-:-:::~::::M:ood::•~r ...... ~rlq, ~7;J ....................... ..,,,.. ........ i:; ... :::::;;m::::lloroii. .... .-:m:,..o.::!!l;:r;:Z11..,.;,,.,:1 .... ;:::=:::1:111 .... i== .... a::a: .................. Cll ... llll .. ~ Hobie Alter: Master ol Playthings. :· . . .. i ~ By STEVE mTCHELL I I "' The name Hobart L. Alter probably aoesn1t ring a bell with beach-oriented gle along the Orange Coast Bu~ the forma1lty frqm his first name make It Hobie, and those same le Immediately think of two tblngs urlboards ud catamarans. I The name Hobie has been associated "ith surfing since 1954 when the lightweigh t kid qtiit making surfboards tor friends and started making them for a profit. ' • , lIOBIE !L TER is still making ~rfboards at lhat same location on cific Coast Highway In Dana Point, t "I've kind of let other people run tend of the business," he say s. ( He doesn't spend much lime at his '9,000..Square foot Coast Catamaran taciLity in Irvine either -even though E owns a 26 percent interest in the iTipany. In fact, he doesn't even keep n office there any more. ; "If l had an· office at the plant I'd j>robably be expected to use it. This ~ay I have an excl1Se to break away," fie explains. ; What is the 4G-year-.old man ~'ho pakes a living out of play doing then ? 4 He's working 60 to 70 bours a week ~n his second·story V.'orkshop at home ; . on a new plaything. This time It's a remote control gUder plane that be plans to market in January. The plane bas an e,ight-fOQt wingspan and weighs only 36 0W1ces. "I TIJJNK l'U. be able to get around $125 for them," Alter says. Will the glider project be successful! "If Alter's past history of successes iJ an lndicaUon, the little plane wUI do iusl fine. T3ke .surfboard!:, for instance. When Alter. was JS, the seasooed surfers in Laguna Beach and Dana Point were riding redwood surfboards that \lt'ere 14 feet long and weighed up to 100 powlds. "Those boards weighed almost as much as I did," he recalls. "I began l1Sing a surfboard copied from the kind the late •Bob Simmons used to make, which was IO reet 4 inches long and weighed considerably less than 100 pounds." "AFTER THAT I slatted to make 30-pound boards out of balsawood for myseU and other kids my age." Pretty soon, the older surfers noticed the younger kids latching on to more rides and marveled at how they could carve up the face of a wave with a maneuverability never before seen at spots like 'l1!alla and Brooks streets In Laguna Beach. From then on. the San Juan C:nplstrano man was in business. His surfboard shops thrived In the early 1960s when many name bNyu1 surfboard manufae- turers were located up and down the coast of SOUlhem californla. Alter kept 4lbe~ of the g-gle by constanUy experimenting with surfboard design and material!. He was one of the fll"ll to begin using polyurethane "£oam" ipltead of balsa , wl)i.ch meant an even lighter surfboard. HJS. SURFBOARD business peaked in 196& wben be had 50 dealers on the East Coast, Hawaii and c.aurorrua selling 250 boards a week at an average price of $130. During the surfing era, Alter made a name for himself in tandem surfboard competition ·and still holds the world's record for the loog~t ride on a surfboard -26 miles from Long Beach to Catalina, riding the wake of a large boat. It was in the mid-60s that he began forQlulating a new ocean "toy" Jn his mind, ·ae kicied. the idel:t around for awhile and decided "the world was ready for a really fast , small catamaran that would be neat to play ' with in the surf, light enough for one guy to pull up on the beach and maintenance-free," he said. ALTER AND A business associate formed Coast catamaran, Inc. and began experimenting and evaluating catamaran hull and sail designs. "We would create two hulls of different shapes and PUt them together on one cat to see which performed better," Alter explained: --r: He finally arrived at a shape ror the sponsons . that was rounded on the inside and flat on the out.side. "Tremendous forces push at the outside surface of a catamaran hull. That's the side you drive against and tt needs to be Oat to achieve a planing effect slmllar to the action of a surfboard," he said. The finished product was a 14-footer weighing only 215 pounds. "That's what we wanted," Alter said. "A Hghtweight catamaran with a lot of strength and no centerboard." TODAY, COAST Catamaran, Inc. employs 350 persons and has more than 375 distributors throughout the United States, and in Mexico City, Japan, South Africa, France and Brazil. The company has sold more than 20,000 14-foot and lfi-.foot catamarans and about J,500 monocats -a 12-foot model developed by Alter and introduced on the market last June. Alter still surfs occasionally, but says sailing is his favorite pastime now . "Nothing beats the excitement of a catamaran regatta,'' he claims. During the 1973 nationals held last month at Key Biscayne, 50 Hobie Cat finalists \Vere forced to race in 25-30 knot winds whipped up by Hurricane Gilda. ';THE WINDS were so strong," he said , "that we had to tie the cats up to palm trees prior to race day." • ... ' .. • • • i ., .. l -.. ' ~ ' • .., O.llr Plltt S~,J,.~! .. ~~°' ... ~ Only 24 out of the 50 racers completed the race -\\ith Hobie and his wire Nancy coming in 14th. HOBIE ALTER SHOWS OFF NEW GLIDER WITH &.FOOT WINGSPAN San Juan Craftsman Works Pline by Remote Control HOBIE ASSEMBLER ROBERT FINCH TIGHTENS FITTINGS ON CATAMARAN Coast Catamaran Employes Rolled Out 5,534 Cats in 1972 for Distribution - Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List • ---... ~,• -----Ul~I Cll!il. ,,. . .,,. L•ll Ch9. Ui\t (119- -A 1ir--~ lllM. Si 1\\.-o,:. FilrftC11A .Oii II f 't-'• Je1"'11 311 1 1~ ,., """ Co .20 I s~~-"' ~ fd .1111 lO 1i.-. •. . fllmwr I/IC IS ' • . . "'"'It (p ~ It Uh+ '• A&E Pl.iolk 1 1~•-"'° !.eJIHln .l3o 11 ~ \4 FillrOY .Old • t tt-~, ..111r01'11C Ind ' tV. •.• Aber Petrol , ( 1 t-\a C.ftW .l'O ~ (\1+ I/, FIMI SB .10 I lllt • '• JoMP•ll . 16 11 11\<o-\ii Acme Haml l '"-•.. C«l\;fln .a 20 It •·· Fil!Gen .Jlle 1• 1~ \o J S lnd5 lllC t 14'-\\ Ac.llM lrd!.1 I~ •l> , • . CM tier( wl 1 l t...-\~ Fil'IGllA .JM! 1 101. •• • Jupiltr Ind J '"° .. , AdlnK Au!.I l 2\1 +-l o C..r-ol$ Dtw .• l -'·• f lDen J.2!oll 11 JHI--~ -K k - AOM lndu\1 ( \\, •.. CWl.l~AMI 1 nY,-~ f\IDtnYWI S J'r'>-h 1{1!Mtl .0Se 4J •h-\~ Allmllnll .!O 20 1t•1 .•. C.Sllelan In I llo , .• f it-I•• pf .1S 1 110 ••• Koll"'• In<. t H o A0oD. Corp • 11!1-\o Cfttlewd Ill ( 1111-1• FU S&L ... ' tl\of-\• ~""Mlll.t 7 7\o-\o MrOOeJlnc '1\o-~1 CeUu 0"'11 '' l~-'1 h tVM 1.9'tl 1114h ... K•neb ~vl 1 ll'•-h Mton<• Inc: ' l \'o-Vo CtnMpj 31-> lllXI 'l"' ... l~IV•Ml wts l t. ,.; K•lll'&llr .t lj Ii..-VJ Affll C., SI< 10 l~-t-\, Ctn~ .09fl lO 'l,_ h f'1nvk .21b 1' 11"'-1o Kew-.oil o110 1' -lh Alf H~ .20 l ,.,_ ~. Ctnlllfr 511. s ' -\1 f lKMrPt SI 111 11\.t-"' Kew Co .20 13 ,~ .... AtlUPbl .MD l n ....... CtnwiU Com u 10'.; •.• f i\I'"" ... 20 10 l~ '"-"'\'Min .lltl J ' -i . AIC Phto Sk J ' -,... CNlt!Mlll .«I I J » •·· f l19 Ind .11 6 l:O. ••• Kll..,,b .ISb 4 tt~-J.14 Aiktft lno:k/$ I J'A •• • CNnpH .G:lb 2•1 •u.-\~ Fl .. 1'1.t 0 to •11 ,,,.,,--' J•• ,. Alrtiomefr 51 '-V, CHflFt!Sk J 71 ,_\"1 J11 ,., ",., ,_. 1 Alrii.al!ISk 1 n~-t~ O.mEaJ .20 2 •llo-"° ~:~~r ~ ·,~t ~~~~k.c:: ~ 1!\'-'i,.; •,•,~,_1~-~ '', ,•,st-:~· ·St:..~ •• -~ ~~t,• •, .. +.'.·. flock 1ni1u~ ' J\1)-\'f Klrb~lnd .u ' n t·1+ 111 "........," ,.. ~· ..... ·-...... -Fl• Capital l 2"'-lo Kii Mio Co I JV.-\\ Altikl Alrl 61 1 ••• Cl Cnv 1."'111 ' IJ~._ \.'J Fii Rotk 111 1 ·~ V. Kle!Mf'I. Co 24 }\'f-"' Atbl W1lt!n I 2\11+ 1/1 c I Mto Wb IS 110 ••• Flllk•JO!I ]k 1 ,,,_ '·· Kllktot.C .w .1 , .... _ \lo -· t I 1 Al<Oll( .osc. I •v.-... Clnemli s u ll 21~+ "' F•wt191r"" ,, n v.-1 Knk•tr Tor u 11 -~· ., Alleqll A.Iris .ca Jllo ••• Clner1ma 1' 1\',_ \, Fooclr1m1 J 271'1+ Vo Knott H .ISh 1J ,,._ ~1 ·"'" All" Air .t 1 4\t • . . Clrde K .16 20 91;,-\0 Fort! C., 3' r10 lllt-1.'I Kollnvo ... 1 Ul'I , •• A!ltOAwln 6 J -'·"' Ci1infln .I~ •lt l'>-1.o FortSILb2k s ll'I+ \• -L L-Alln Tir•t.k 1 t'i ... CIUMI 1.l1b • ' 16\i ••• Fo• ~In 21 22 11 ... -:i,, u 9-oit 1n ' , •. Allit<IArtl~t 1J l\.-\.:. CltmMQ ..,,_$ S p, ... fPACrp:lO 1~ 1 -... L1t1fR.oio '24 ,;_:._;" Atkl Control S t \.1 •.. (lcirkf (;.JO 1 &>..-'• Fr•nkRI .41 1 S•o ,., LAIGlan Apr l 1\i-'·' AUTr.er1.W 1 16 ••• Cllrkl.On .16 1 t~o-\o Fr1nll~N .lJ 1 )'o , .. LllltSllrMn 1 2\.1+"\'i Alpt\I I~ l 1~. + ,,. ClitO\lat M l s• •• It frHnlllo ... J ,,, • + •1 LI MIUI .1' 1 s~ •.•.. All1mil Cp 1 ) Clo~1 .OS. l<2 l \.i •.. Frlf'f!O Froio I 1>..-~, Lltldmk U1 10 J>.o+ \"o 111 High Gear Dodge Colt Sports New Look for '7 4 Allf< Corp 1 •.;, • . • ( M r (.orp l. J\, .. '• Fri•• Ind~ 2 ,,,_ 1, L.llrRll I.Jib 2 10\lo.-"' A.llt t Cpwl ' t.16-1·1• CM! llW WU. ,, 81~-\1 Frl9ltront<. 21 lS -~. u .... Rlwt I 'n-1·1• ~::~~~"':~ I~ 1~~·~ ~~~10 . ~ ~.-.~. ,Fron•,•!fAir 1,,• ,·~--... LCA Cp .ts 1.1(1 11'4 •.• '°" "''*" 'n •·• LCA (pwh lt 2~+ Vo Am·Aoronm I J"11-"-Coll Mii .5' 111 ll\,+ '"• -G G--LIGrinC .1' 1 ·-\Ii Am811lrt .liCI l 1 -Vo Cohen KllUt! I 2l, .. \o Giobl"U In Sii 1 1•, •. . Lii lllOlll .14 5 1JV.+ .... A CnMIO wl 2 -\' Coot !nU IM 9bl 1">-to Glltxy Crp 1l 4._._ 'J LlllOlr lnll S ' , , , By CARL l:ARSTENSEN • Of IM DallY .. (IOI Sl1fl Dodge Division's 1974 Colt is anotOOr import that will ! show an all new des ign for • the coming year. .. Presenting lh~!r first com· pletely redesigned appearance :; since the nameplate was in· ' troduced in early 1971, the t ·~ Colt.swill also ha ve new equip. ·, ment options available in· ~ eluding a 2 liter engihe. ,· Chrysler-built three speed '.· Torquefl ite transmi ssion and a SJXlrty GT package. : THE COLTS, manufactured ,, in Japan and marketed in the , U.S. thro ugh Dodge, will be shipped to dealerships across the country in December in .. .. • time for their calendar year ~ introduction in January. * George Bilquc. D o d g e .• ge neral sales manager. said ~ th at the new design. "gives ~: ,. • } •. .. •• tl ~I the Colts a cleaner. more classic appearance -because of slightly longer front ends." Bilque said lbe Colts will offer brighter interiors, a completely new instrument panel, s uspen s ion im· provements. plus other options to include the new engine and transmission. "Colt has won good ac- ceptance in the-marketplace," said Bilque, "and the new models will further add to Dodge dealers across the board sa1es approach from imports to full size domestic luxury models," Bilque said. "AVAJLAllUJTY has been a drawback," said Bilque. "But Colt Is expected to im· prove its position among the top 10 imports on anticipated sales of 50,000 sales for 1974. Colt will retain its 95.l-inch wheelbase but overall length will increase to 172.2 inches ' on the interior edges of the back1ite, through the body and is emitted through "air ex- because of new b u m p e r systems and body design. Grilles and rear ends are new and the front end is intended tractors." to give the cars a changed look. New rooflines give a · Sedans and wagons will hav e rounded appearance, a n d the · hydraulic-type bumper windsh.ield.5 have more angle. system similar to U.S.·built GT package features include !<>ur~r Dodges. The system Rallye Cluster instrumentation is designed to ~cet 5 mph with a tachometer ~dded a front and rear impact and large center-console-,a-~ft-pend.alum_j m P a c . .t-stan· rim sports steering wheel wilh ~. coupes and hardtops three bri~ht spokes and steel wil! have larger rear bum~r road wheels with radial wide guards to meet 5 mph barrier oval tires. impacts. TRiii! INCLUDES spedal GT identity, side body tape stripes and rear striping treat· ment, and black interior trim with white racing stripes oa all seats. Changes for 1974 also in· elude modifications for flow· through ventilation . Air inside the car passes from passenger compartment through louvers PASSENGER restraint sys· terns will be the ignition interlock, inertia 1 o c k in g retractor types similar to other 1974 Dodges. Based on EPA test cycles the Colt gas mileage ranges from 18 to 22 miles per gallon. However, based oo other in· dependent tests mileage has been as high as 25 mpg. Am Flt 2.01b S 21 "4 , •• ColtNtU .52 11 U\\o •.. Git .. I .J.. 6 l \o+ ff Ltldlr 1-1'0 11 51Ai A Fltlt ll ., 9 2~>-~. Co!tm.an .4' ~ 10•.-~. G1r<11 Corp 11 7~1 • • . l.tl'KO wts n 2 .. Vo AtnG1r .OW> • 10"' •. . Colie9e .Ub J 1 •.. G.lyloros .10 s 2'.-.,., Lt1t11 Co .Ml ' IV.-1. Am lu ll .lflb IS ''' (.ol(oml .20 1~ 1 -h G.lynar ~" 11 , ... ,. . Ltt Ent .XI I 111'1-&t AMiin A. .ll s ·~· .. \I Colwl Co .71 " e Gtirlll Uti 1' ,,, + ~ ,,._ • "'! '·'"' 1 31 -.,. Coh•MIOWI s 1~,_·;~ Gen Bu1iori l 1•!-.,: t:: ~~ . ; ,~·" A Mot n . 10i:I 11 t' >-... Combe! 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COr Use Toll Free Number To .Call rhe DAILY PILOT Office In ·vo.ur Orang.e Coast ·Area c ·ommunityl ----'"'-- ., , . . • " • ,, . "' , • • " " ' l• ,, I • . ' • r. • • ·' . •• • . • '· " - " ... ' • .. • ' . . I . , .. , I , ' • . ' • 'ff J 0 DAILY PILOT ... .: Y ounge1· Clai1ns Prop. One . ::Went Down Due ·to Ap_;:itl_!r_ __ ,, By O.C. HUSTINGS California Attorney General Evelle Younger brought his can1paign for the Republica n' gubernatorial nomination to Orange County last week and made comments on a little Qit of everything. - pi en ts to meet the cost o! suspect for a different crime. / Ji ving rise. • His measure was defeated Democrat Richard l~anna of on the Sennle Ooor in .August Garden Grove j o in e d._b_Y_•_ll_·I_4_v_ot_e_. ~----1 Republicans Craig Hosn1er, Andrew Hinsha\Y, CI ai r J!urgener ~ Uel~aw_soQ,_in backing theIDeasure, \Yluch passed by a "91 to 20 vote. . . Of particular interest in his talk beJor.e the South Coast Republican Forum was a remark on why Proposition .l. the 'Reagan tax and spen- ding limitation proposal, failed recess. to pass Nov. 6. * The bill provides (or $2.4 billion more money to be spent and passed in the last minute rush b e l o r e Thanksgiving Though the measure was STATE SEN. D c n n i s { technically a nonpartisa n issue Carpenter (R-Ne\\'J)Ort Beac;h ) · and strongly touted as such says he'll seek rcco.nsideration on both sides, Younger said of his bi ll to modify police it failed "simply because the search and seizure regulations Republican Party didn't get · \\'hen the Leg is I a t u r c FOR DRUG PRICES ••• Call . 642-4104 • the vote out." reconvenes in Jan uary. Younger, who said he back-Carpenter's bill, \V hi ch ed the measure, referred to would bring California in line the party line vote that u•ith all the other states and defeated it and added that. the fede ral government, \YOuld "it was confusing enough but make it legal to use illegally the opponents did all they seized evidence against some- [ Ai~ . I i.11mc1it1·hoJi· l90 E. 17,tll St. 9t Tntlli' A .... N9xt"'9 1 ... 111 Mkt. Coste Mesa 642-4104 Mon. t~ru Fri, f ff t-S1t. t.to I . could to confuse it more." one other than the original * 1-,ii;~~~i;;;;;ii~~~~~~~~~~,, ROBERT H. Finch. formerlr Nixon ca binet member and Reagan lieutenant governor, \Viii be the gu est speaker at a Nov. 29 meeting of the Orange County Bar Associa· tlon. ,. * . IN ANOTHER united effort, Orange County 's ~·-Congressional contingent was : solidly behind a new Social • Security bill that boosts . benefits to 30 million aid reci· : Valley-Man . . RENT A RUG DOCTOR "STEAM" CARPET CLEANER FREE DELIVERY & PICKUP to most areas, or you pick up at our store . 10 MINUTES FREE INSTRUCTION ..... yo• ... Doctor " _,. I ...., to .,.,... -• Y'CICO•IR cleaaer, ........ or"woM11 · ca11 oparlllle tt or l'Oke '' up 011d dow11 stein. J ;. Files Plea REALLY CLE·ANS CARPET Jm ·~ ._., ltffM. Jo~. !ilrt, __ whk:h Is collected 111 tonks • d11mped dow11 dral11. ' • . ' ' -. 1 ' ' ' • • .. l l ' ' j j ' ' . ' ' ' " . , " ' • ,• I t ) ' J I f ' •• • . • j I I . ·; Of Guilty WESTMINSTER -A Foun- : tain Valley man accused of ~ hurling three butcher knives · at Police has entered a plea : of guilty to a charge of misde- ; meanor assa ult with a deadly Weapon in West Orange Coun- u-ty Judicial District Court. ·f:oR LOW RENTAL RATES CALL SAVES YOU MONEY : .. Cott 11 l'.ft•cll leu tMlli •tn .. Cat,.. Sfff• ~~. RUG DOCTOR RENTS IN ,OU.NGE COUNTY IN LOS ANGELES • Harold Eugene Lucas, 47. 1212 s. lristol, 5011,a AH 10•1 E. Artnla, l.olH) IHch of 18623 San !\1arcus St. \Vill ll~:::::.O~PE~N~l·~·~M~OiN~ .• T~H~l~U~S~A~Ti~-=~~I 17141 979-7844 121'31 . 423-0454 return to 8'1Urt Dec. 19 for se ntencint. Lucas was shot in the stOmach Aug. 23 by a con- tingent of officers called to his home by neighbors reporting a disturbance. They said Luca.!t' hid behind his front door and tossed the knives at them, so the patrolmen opened fi re with their pistlJls and a shotgun . Lucas received • o n I y superfic.ial stomach wounds. He was originally booked on a charge of (l.ssault With intent to commi t murder, but that charge \Yas reduced to assault on a peace officer \\'hen it v.·as filed in court. Tests Set For Marine SANTA ANA -Psychiatric testing \Vi!h a vie\Y to his possible certification as a mentally disordered sex of- fender has been ordered for an El Toro f\1arine accu sed of using a knife in an attack on two women at a Costa Mesa party. Orange County S u p e.r i o r Co1Jrt Judge James Turner ordefed the tests for Frank Christopher Baker. 20: of Yuma, Ariz .. and directed that the defendant be returned to his courtroom Dec. 10 for l1is ruling. Election Set SACRAME NTO I AP ) Gov. Ronald Reagan called a special elcclion for ~c. 18 to !ill the seat of {orn1er sf6!te Sen. \Villiam Combst IR· Rialto), wbo re~igpec! his sea~ ~ seven y~rs to accept a , )>ost with ih~""U$. Treasury Jli!!:lment. 6 WHY ·WEIGHT? If you care THEN DON'T:-WAIT! -.-- Lose 1 o or 12 unwanted. ugly pounds quickly _u11dar Iba _personal supervision . of .1.Jraclic· ing Physician. He's making it happ11 wltb 20, 30 and 40 pound losses, not umaal. He ca1 make it happen for you! CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT AND FREE CONSULTATION. California Medical Clinics 4 CONVENIENT WEIGHT LOSING LOCATIONS . Wl!STlllllSTl!R 13861 Beach Blvd.,. Suite # 51 . 7 A.M . 'ti! 3:30 P.M. Phone893-2449 . TUSTlll .• ··: 17541 Irvine Blvd., SuiteC 7:30 A.M. 'til 4:30 P.M. Phone 832-6525 AllAHl!lll •nd GARDl!NCIROR 1701 S. Euclid, Suite I 7:30 A.M. 'til 4:30 P.M. Phone991-1800 NEWPORT BEACH · 8:00 A.M. 'lif 4:30 P.M. Phone ey4.4-0297 .. --... • • ! ....... • • HAMS "So Good ... It Wiii ''Haunt" "(ou 'tll It's Gone" OIDE• EAILY HONEY BAKED HAMS 0 , TURKEY BREASTS FOt' yo• n.•ttl•I .. Dl•llftf ., Alla, Order Now for Chrl1tmes • : ! . e leody to Serve wltlt H.-y '• Spice Gkne e Spi,.I Sliced ffotR-Ta, to lottom . ' -. .. • '· ' e We Pockop nd Dip froM Cont to Coat • F .. n s.mco o.nc..._. e lmportff Cllfftn t111d WINI e Gift Certfflct1'" Avollftr. 3700 I . C-Hit-. C..-<lol M•-+73·ftff I l llct Wftt " S Cl"tWlll ........... • • ' ~ / • • . . 99 4/5 OT. . . s519 s11~ QUART • 'I 1 • , ~ l ,. ---T- • ·I • ·1 ' , • . . . .j DAILY PILOT f 1;. JC:Pen·ney -~ NEWPORT BEACH FASHION IS~ND ONLY SAL,E STARTS .TUES. A,\ORNING, NOV. 20-10 A.M. TREMINDOUS SAYINGS ON AL~-SMOKI AND WATER DAMAGED MERCHANDIS~ SORRY NO LAY AWAYS e ALL SALIS PINAL YO~ ·CAN'T A.FPORD TO PASS, UP THIESE SAYINGS. •· • . .. Womens Uniforms Won:wens Ja~kets . Womens Better Coats Orig. $6 to $23 NOW $3 to $12 Orig. $13 to $70 NOW . $6 to ~5 Orig. $3S to $9S NOW $9 to $25 • Asst. Styles • Pant & Street Length • Over 200 To Cho~se From . I Womel'S Ralnwear e· Leathers, Fake Fur, Piles ' • Asst. Colors & Sizes • 50 To Choose From Womens Better Pant Suits . · . • Leathers, \Vools, Fake Furs • Asst.. Lengths & Styles · e 40 Only . Coordinate Sportswear Orig.' $12 to $50 NOW $6 to ' $20 Orig. $3S to $86 NOW $6 . to $25 Orig. $3.18 to $11.00 NOW $1 to $2 • Asst. Fabrics • Water Repellent e 35 Only Misses Boucle T'ps Orig, $8 to $10 NOW $4 . • 4 Colors • Sizes S, M, L & Queen • ~60 Pcs. Jr. Smock. Tops _Orig. $6 NOW~ · • Short Style • Sizes S, ?il, I ... e 54 Only .~· · · Jr • .aus• Ou.t ilouses Orig. $It • 100% Polyester e Sizes S, M, L. • 36 Only e Two & Three Piece Weekenders · • Polyester & Wools • Misses & Jr. Sizes • Coordinating Pants, Skirts & Tops · 150 Pcs. e 45 Only . Womens Swe~shirts Jr. Layered Tops Orig. $3.50 NOW $1 Orig. $3.99 NOW $2 • 50% Cotton· 50%. Creslen • 1001; Nylon • Color White Only e Navy, Pink & Lt. Blue • S, ?.I, L · 100 Pcs. • Long Sleeve · 100 Only Group I G.roup II Group 111 Group IV ' WOMEN'S DRES ES Daytllllo or Dr-J lo P..t, Stfoot l.otlttlt, a. Loot DrOSHS Jr." M~ ~ .............................. 1,. $14 to $28 NOW s2.s4.s6 · Jt. 51 .............................................. i,. $25 to $11 NOW sa.s 10 Mi-Slan .......... ~......... .. or1,. $11 te $42 NOW s6.sa.s 10 Ml-~n ...... : ............... , .... orit· $H lo $50 NOW s15.s25 " ' . $ $ it.ff Slal ........ _ .. -.......................... :.::. .. oti<J. $14 I• $23 tit OW . 4. 6 · Hall Sino .......................................... otlt · $11 10 $31 'NOW sa.s 10 ..... Ill "'" D.y ., hte siytis Jr." Mluft Sluo ............................. ori<J. $1l te $ZS NOW sa.s 10 Jt." Mi-S1a1 ............. ~ .. : ........... ~it' iz•"' $44NOW s 15.s2 0 MISSES) TOPS Orlf. $11.00.Ut.to . $J100 MISSES BOX PW~ SKIRTS MISSES 7 GORE SKIRT JR. PLEATED SKIRTS OrlJ. $12.00 JR. GABARDINE PANTS •. JCOW ~ ·-·lyfft ..... k.""' ... !K•· JR. BLAZERS. Orlf. SU.II saoo -NOW · · • 10I% cotton cftwrey ._ ....... ..,. ... '"''- ....... 1, MISSES PANTSUIT Orit . $21.00 • $800 NOW • •-orplol4 . ......... -~16 ooly --,---- JR. BEffiR JEANS or11. f1S.to $600 NOW - ,.• lru1h4MI ffnlm .,.· ,c~UNY-20 pc't ' •. Nffj-wlllhl & -· ··-• JR. BETTER -TOPS . . Ori• s11 ,11 & Sii.ii '600 NOW · . e.L ... &-..-. • La.-M look • 45 •tr .. ' Orlf. Slt.OI $400 NOW . • ,, ... & .. 11 ... •• "· ..,1y • JR. & MISSES PANT$UIT °'"'-"' NOW , •. 00 • va.-lfyhl ·---• 65 ooly JR. DRESSY PANT SUITS Cl•'•· """ & Sft.oi . NOW '30a. '40 e Hllo- e 12 "'' .. OrJt. •t.11 s4 oo NOW • 111% ecrytlc . ...... .. _,, JR. SWIMWEAR · Orl1. 2." & J.tt '100 NOW · • • llldnl ~!ylo • lnken 111 .. • n,... WOO SLEEPWEAR Oriti. ""' ....... ' . ·NOW '200 ... .., '""' olMpilolrll, teWni · . -....... ..... ,, • $600 NOW • c-• 111"1• ·' e Prln}I & Mll41 ... , ... JR. BETTER LONG.DRESSES Oflt. tMMlllOI NOW $1500 e HI (uhlon look e lt enly WOMEHS BETTER , StEEPWEAR . Ori1. S9.00 te S1J,OO $400 NOW . •• -~ fl0lt!Mlt1 • v..-...,lto • 41ooly • Orig. $1 t.00 $£00 NOW V. e lelttcl & cllfftd • Solld• only--IO only BETTER JR. PANTS Orig. $25.00 & $27.00 • $600 NOW • 100 % wool e c""9d pl•IU • 21 ... 1, WOMENS ROBES Orig. $10.00 to $13.00 $2 00 s4 oo NOW • • Llthf'wettht f•brlc• • full •ncl. dr.U hngth • 12 only · Womens Sweaters & Capes Or ig. $13 to $24 • Acrylic Knits • Asst. Colors e 30 Only Coordinate Sportswear • 1\1isses & Jr. Sizes • Polyester -& f\crylic Fabrics -100 Pcs. . --------------- Misses Lace Cardigans Orig. $8 • 100 ~0 Polyester • Color Navy Only • S, M, L & Queen Sizes ~~~~~~~~~~~-·· Jr. Cotton Knit Tops Orig. S7 • Placket Front Print e 38 On ly Jr. Casual Tops Orig. $8 • Short Sleeve • 100% Cotton • All Sizes · 33 Only MISSES & JR. PANTS . Orig. $S.ll·St.ll . $200 NOW e Broken slzn & colors e SO only JR. BLAZERS Orig. $25.00 '600 NOW e Short 1IHV1 e Gabardine e Grey or grffn WOlllENS LOUNGEWEAR Orig. $9.00 to 517.00 s4 00 saoo NOW • , • Ono & two piece styling 9 Aut. faitrlc1 9 100 only MISSES & JR. PANTS Orig. $10.11-$13.00 '400- NOW . e Polyffter & cotton bl1ncl1 9 60 only JR. BETTER PANTS Ori9. $19.00 S600 NOW e Poly1shr1 & 1cryllc1 e Cuff fl1tes • 30 onty WOMENS KNEEHIGH SOCKS Orig. $1.25 NOW ID' • Ono 1lzo flt• 111 e Limited color1 8 1IO only Sartin . Go~s · Bae~ ·P,cks SPORYutc. GOG1JS · . $por.tin9 Go~d~ 'set of Woods • · '4 • . · Dlt'rllll.I l'l llllrt' • ' • ,.. .. .... ,._ -""* .... -~ .. ~ ... ·~ MK8fll.L 91.Ul.liliJ,.·:;. ,... . ~..... •\.r 1'°;. 'V'. -t ..... .f .. ~(l,,;... .:.i.J SPORTING GOODS ... ~or _iRONs. Sporting Goods -~ ,; • ·.-·Tennis Jacke4s & ·oresses • . ' . Orig.' $79.99 NOW $1 s . ,. ~ ~-400 . . O~lj. ~23.44 NO'W. $.12 . ·. • · ' NOW . • Lightage Frame e 12 Only , .Mens Sportlhirts Orlt-$7.H to $9.H ' Mostly Knits e Sizes S-M·I.. e 190 Only " .. • '11 aftly ., • -4'1'fl!y • • (, ' . .· ,. . . . . • 2-Woods Ahlm. Shaft · , . e 8 Sets Only. JC.Penney ' . . 24 · i'ASHIO~ ·.ISLAND NIWP91tT BEACH ONLY • ' ,. I .I -. .,_0r1t1 .. f46A4 -- NOW ,'2000 , • Alvmtnurn •h•ftl • s '"'"'. ' e 14 Mt• only ' . .. , ....... ., •. _, ••. ,..a • Best Qqality e 8 Only • ~~------...... ---~ ' · Mens Better Orig. $10.98 to $11.98 e S-M·lr XL . • Quality Knits e 137 Only Sportshirfs NOW $4 • • • . ' • • '1J DAILY P1LO• , • R'a ms' Playoff [)ream~ JN ow BeComing Reality "' . . . . . . ... ~ r • • .. . . "-_.. 1•~S ASGELES (AP). -Charlie rTiinutes of the first balf -pla ys lhe 57 yards. Anotber·25-Yard. pa.a into~lhe $tukes one of the stellar newco111ers Rams turned into 10 points on the end wne was called back by penalty.· ap, the' Los Angeles Rams, commruted scoreboard en route to their 31·13 victory. Had! received the game ball, joining ..,.ul_ct1 y "This is a team or pride and Charlie ca.me to Los Angeles this year both Jackson and Stukes on the list there is' a real togeLhcrncss. That's \vhot from Baltimore with a brie( ~lop in or awardees. Harold got his for catching ~ winners.'' 1r1inncsota. The other two stars of the four touchdown passes against 0.llas t ... 16fukes knows winners. lie was starting victory, quarterback John Hadland wide and t'har'lle's ·,was a~ t i .. week merback ""'ith the_ Baltimore Colts' receiver Harold Jackson, came !rom San ago for bis c!etense against New Orie Super 'Bo~l champions. . . Dieg'o and Philadelphia via trades. The victory over San Franc f>.Ul .. unday agaUlSt San ~rancisCf?. he 1n· Hadl and Jackson clicked on three the Ram.1' reeord at 1-2 and ;Jer \hem ..._1cr~pted tv.•o passes 1n the fmal two touchdown passes covering 25, 22 and in strOng contentiOn fof )be pla, ~ .. ~~ leading lo the Super Bowl in January. .-..! -,! ;rHE RAMS'. JIM BERTELSEN SWEEPS RIGHT END FOR A TD. : :?. ( ·J;.Ollet1inte 011tlook ,i=,. ( ;~~Nation's Hoop Powers _, .. ·~-'Led By B1·uins, NC State Coach Dick Jl{olan of San ~r3ncitco blamed failure to bear signa1 cl),anSICS hollered &y the defensive captain for t"'O of the Jackson touchdo.w.ns. YcL Jackson had his man, Bruce Taylor, \\'ell beaten. '1Th ls is as strong as J'Ve seen the Rarns at this stage of the seaso"n,'1 Nolan commented. 11They are a 'very J?ood team with a suoerb running · J?ame. But there is a way to set your de£P.nse for thetr n1n and' still stOp their bombs, if you don't gel caught in a Changing audible situation." Nolan didn't explain what ·that strategy mi<hl be. Coach Chuck Knox, Hadl and Jackson all declared the Rams' defehse gave the offensive the opportunity to get into gear. "We started slow for the second game in a row ," commented Hadl. "J started slow myself. I don't know why. No, there are no mental hangups. Fortunate- ly, we have such a great defense that it gives us time to get ~-~~ play the type of game that we want to play." Nolan went virtually all the way with young Joe Reed at quarterback . unti l he was hurt ·late in the game. On the play, the Rams were called for pass interf~rence behind the goal and the 49ers gained possession on the one. Vic Washingtqn then scored. "I never thought of using_ anybody but Joe until he was burt111 ,commented Nolan. "I don't know how bad be is." The defeat put tbe 49ers record at 3-7 and left only Atlanta to challenge the Rams in the National Football Division. .. Tl>• Falcons. f-3, plj!y · un· defeated Minnesota tonight. r ' ' The Rams su!fered no appearent serious l'ljuries. Jim Bertelsen; liho- SAN FRANCISCO'S TED KWAL!CK HAS THE BALL JARRED OUT OF HIS HANDS BY ISIAH ROBERTSON. · Vikes , Falco1ts Perfect Records L~ers Spurt To ,Outscore ' . ·rushaj. ror 59 yards and caught three 0 L • T e h passes for 64 , suffered a cut under . n 1ne· on1g t LOS ANGELES 1AP I -Los Angeles his right eye that required four stitches . outscoced Cte1·rland 11·2 in the wanillg but won't keep him out of action. moments of the fourth period Sunday - Cavs, 102·100. Defensive · caplain Merlin Ollep !Uf· night as the La )tcrs scored a namw ICI<d a dislocated finger, Pat Cumn. · • 102-100 'Natioo<ll .8""'e<boll A>soda1ltil a pincherl nenie in his neek and Jim ·· 'ATLANI'A (AP ) the· ~1innes0ta one game in the Natiooal Football ·Victory over ·the Can ners:· , Y9ungbk>Qd a hamstring ·pull. Viki.rigs, who already bf!Ve clinched a ~erence West Division title race. Min· -Gail Goodrich. who finished willl JO 491ITT • • •• g 1'? ;:~r. , ·divisfoit trtte, will be figbfing"to protect nescta ·has 'sed.ared the NFC' ~trhl points. and Happy HairsMn .. wm wculi -··2'0~-Mftltt ·..:;; 11;JS1 t a 9-0 record in a televised game tonight 0 .. 15,_ 1.1110 up \\ith 26 rebotmds, sparked the Laktn. ~~~~~~I .?:$.1tom Had! IR•v kick) -with".tli; Atl::inta Falcons, WOOS"Ef rangy:· lV ...... ' . . ----. lt was thcir ·thirrl triumph-in as-many t~=~g ~:t,";~ 17 strong-anned quarterback will be gun-"The game Is natur~lly more lm· nights and raised their record lo IU. ~ LA-Jaduon zi Pll" from H!(ll <R•r kl~) ~ ning to protect his O'VTl perfect record. JX!ri";11l ~o . A~lanta. w~1ch must keeP, The La kcrs played \l'ilhout the services ~ By Associafed J>ress Conference, is at its peak with the . ~:~~:"sl;.':~~ ~':t i'l:kkidtl The game is on Channel 7 at 6• WIIllUn~ ~f 1t 1s to get 1n the pl ayo,f.fs, or guard Jerry \\'~t or forv.·ard BUI \~o's afraid or the biS. bad \\lolfpack? talents of Tom McMi,Ucn and Len IF-v. ~·111111111001·:r; !<Mwtt kl Falcons field general Bob Lee -a • 1aid Vikings coach Bud Grant; : But Bridges. both out v.•itb inj uries. Not; UCLA. E_l~~refrancisco, last ".ear's Western RuSHIHG ~N:.~·=~.!1!o~~~~ •• ~1~bi •·14, fonner backup quarterback in tbe-Vi· : 1::us~t~~:· :t!t ailie ~U~ Cleveland had 1aken Jhe..·lead early The Bruins '''ill meet rugged North J. l hOl'IM• ,.,,, u. An9•lrs. ller1'trl~ lWP, ings camp - is undefe ated since he -q--. ~ the "fou!th quarter on Fred Fostcr"'1 Carolina State this year, not to me ntion finalist against UCLA in the NCAA M~c~~cE~N~"..:._ ~r1':i~o. ICw~Uck 3-37, look over the starting quarterback role game ~esenU to us .• ;, • you learn accurate shooting. The t:avallers led · t · regional pla yoffs, is supposedly stronger G.' w.,,,.,,,...,on :t.5'. TP!Omls J-2'1 '-ta AngelK, for Atlanta from veteran Dick Shiner. more things when you win. 89-85 ~·ith 5:17 left. a cou ple of olher nallooa powers. in this time. Returning to lhe team are J~ '.C.111, .......,. W4 Ml'CllUt•• .J.1r, u_.e has led the Falcons, now &;-3, Lee spent last season on Lbe ~ Then. came the Lakers' Ulree-minute one of the toughest basketball schedules lhe two _stars from la.st year -Kevin 11..~~s!·1~G _ s-.i F~lsco. ,..; 1~1. 111 to fi · · streak tl · Watching the Vikings' Fran Tarkenton burst that sent them Jbead 96-91 and in their recent history. Restanl and Phil Smith. The Dons are v•rds, Scxlrr1er 2·2-4, is; LOI Andi~ H.oi ·12-22-<>, a tra1ve-gilsametL-• ~~ eJ---L ,;,,,>:.._ ldaby lead Minnesota to a 7 7 thl-u.Jace h I 1 But th.-defcnd1·no nati""'ai champions 216. . , now ne ...,._·, 11J •• ' g = ~\4.lu.~ • ' • -.r"" wit 1:32 eff, 11 lookell. ike Los Angel.es c ''f":> "" favored to repeat as cham pions of the record. . -. e · might win. easily. are probably be tter ·than last year. too West Coast Athletic Confe rence. ·t. ~Sure, \\'e Pficticed .'M:~ 1-. and But Austin QuT hi~ Cle\·cland's la.st -so lft'at '"ma kes it ~wice as hard Notre Dame. Jed by John. Shumate, Charg~ ..wra.. ..... 14 \\"e know a Jot about him , said 'Viking seven points, bringing his team ex.. on the pretenders to their Jhrone. one of the tooghest centers in lhe CQ"1J}-1 ~ "·e'M 6 • safety, Paul Krause. ''But at the ~me "ith fou r rree lhrov.·s in the final ZJ ·•r m glad it was arranged,'' says · try, vt'ill have two shots at UCLA· this • . --. · . ~'-:' .. ),=!-. Ume he knows what he can d and seconds. North Ca rolina State coach.~brman SI~,~ season -home and a\Yay. The Fighting · • i · · · · · what he'd better'not <19.'' ~ , 1 • l~ 1 cr..-Mad 11111 u. ~ 11n1 ~::~~; ~~ ~~~ ~!~~~ui~~~-gt.:u~s:.,,, .• ,h ~7a~~rs~~~~i;:i::ion~r~7 1~·~~~ Tip FrlJfu. Saint,s Skir -·Ji~ =~~n=. ~~.· ~ f; l: ~:~: l H ;; Tl's the Ft_me of Pfe ye ar. all r ight. teams in the nation during the SMOnd . things counteract each other." ~;~900fl 1: !: ~ ~,,_.. 1: 1~2 ~ and could g rovidc tln early look ~t ha lf last ·year. ' Tarkenton, too, may have an idea w llklM 9 o.o 11 Lo..-1 • 4-• 12 the finalisl.I in the. "NCA1\ playoffs ~ UCLA doe$n't expect the Pacillc-8 s what his old coach is thiriking. = ;:=-1 ~! ~~ : ~::~" : ~ 1~ season. .. ) 'Conference to be any fun . either! Zeroing . pa· rks Smi"th's Ret ., .. ei .. ·Nonn Van·Brocldlo, wl)O ~~1;"' : :: ; To most 'o'bservCrS, UCLA and North fn on their eighth straigtit iPa()-8 tltlc, ''. •' urr~ .the Viking~ in ''.thcl! f~ sit:.~~ Cl~._,, G ().0 0 Carolina State arc the 1-2 teams in the Bruins face heavy artill ery from ~ 1 • '"begtnning 1n 1961, once beiMied' lSe T~~~~ri~oo...s •·15 1~ ~01111:xi r, ~~00 1= the country. · the northern and south ern fronts. scrambling Tarkenton to give a young LM An11e1n '' ;s u 2t -101 The Bruins should build on thei r glossy. ''1. think this yea r will be th e tougbest SA N DIEGO (AP) _ ~erry Moore eight starts for the Chargers, 2•7•1, a1l(l quarterback named Dob Berry a starting A - 13'"°'· 7:"i-gamc \wiilnlng s!rcak this season \\'ilh the Pac·8 has ever been." says coach picked thew. ro. ng time to .. as.k Ron Smith h f ' · f try,. ol B·11 w t K 'tb 11'.lk I e 1rst victory or Ron Waller in twp v B ""-lo Alla Ia · 1967 1hr retu rn· J •ton. Cl 1 es Ra lph Miller of Oregon State. "I mean about his punt-returning .habits. · · an roe-came n m SPORTS EDITOR and Greg Lee.8.nd the addition of Richa rd fro m top to bottom . games as a National Football .I.oagUe and brought· ;Berey with hlm,, the same \\'ashington, a 7·foot f'rcshman phenon1. "UCLA no doubt is the favorite. \Vhen . !hd eMSan Diego ~.~· kiclt returner coach. The Saints fell to 4-6. , J ' _year 7arkenton'was traded to tlE .Glan1s ON TALK Sl-/O W There's another seven-footer in the im· h f sa1 oore, an ex""\Allcago teammate "For three quarters ~e did evefytlUhg for a five-year at.int.. -~ ~ 'CLA I Ral h you ave our starters back from, a oow playing for New Orleans, crossed wrong you could do -fumbi ..... penalties, Ta·~..,, .. --> ·van . .,....:.,,~......,.,,. . Da1'ly P'ot s~. Editor Glenn Whi'-posing L: cast -.sop iomore P learn that's been undefeated for two hi n,, h d · Sunda , Saints"--~ r• mm ~"""""' ,..._ .... ~· n t""', i.c Drollinge r. yea rs and some of the best freshmen s .,...t durinkged hi y sh he ~·=fgelrs JX>?rly·t_nro~ p!!S~·-f_ dfop~ ~·" • rd· bow 'ee f'ri,enis, im5S" 's "ill be the gue8t PttSCH\Blily on KABC Thcv'll hope to add to UCLA 's cache · th 'd game an as m w Y was a r-sa id Sa~nts quarter.~ ArcbieiMannmg. ·ebcounter la "jpst· ~~ ga r11 1,'he radio 's Super Fan SMw toni ht from of NCAA titles -Se\'en in a row and ~ey'~e c~~t7~v~~es. be~~r ii:e':;;./h~ catching so many punts. "Speaking for th"e 'Wtiiile? or~~ ·We're game wtn ·• match lWG ~bf PIP f'OOtJ. 5-& pm . g nine in the fast ten years. easy for th em .. , "That helped me decide to nm back jU!t embarrassed the war~we ~~ "' <blltl'1•hottelt def~ l' "',,_, l \-~-' . .. O~n~ Otast "IM rtSkie ts \n Facing the Bruins, ,along \\'ith North Indiana, one of last year's four NCAA the next one," ~lh said. "11e •fielded "But we still W?Uld ~ve .woo if~ 1 _: ,· _.._ ·' ~ ' • 1 vited to ~ ,the" spOrts talk n sho~e Thi. C<irolina St ate, "111 be r..laryland. San f I' ts I "th UCLA lhe next New Qrleanj puni ·Ii \Is own hadn't thrown that mte~ . ..-· "~ 1 'It ---;.-Orange COUnliy ..,........ be ls 6J8 o:. 59 I inais a oog WI ' Memphis 16, surrounded by Sain~;"aldestepped With the Saints traillJJi 10-,7. early B b h · £{. -h' · · · · )IO-"'num r · ""11· Francisco an(t ffo\re Danie. And u•hi e ~!ate and Pro'9idencc. is the pick in to his right and saw ~l;; ..... but team-in the fourth quarter.,. HD\nlrd stepped a a SnO . Brp KABC lS located at 790 on the dial. tho Wolfpat:li: '..Vl I proba bly be the the Big Ten" Conference and one of '"'""''& · , toughest test for -UCLA with David the moot powerful teams in the count rv. mates lining his path t.o an -84-yard ' in front rat· Bob NeW'land et .the ·~ew . _1 •1 Thompson ai'\d Tum Bbrlcson. the others Etsewhei-e,' lhe !earns to watch ai-e• touchdown that started the . Chargers Orleans 34, picked off Manning's pass Fountain VaDey'a . Shirley Babashoff 01 • c h arc no eas1 marks. Long Beach Staie in the Pacific Coasi to a 17•14 victory. and returned to the nine, setting up swept to two mire individual swim UUes yn1p1c oac ~·l arylaqd. a tough collCllguc of Norlh Athle tic Coilf'eftJ'lce. Arizona and Arizona "It's like being in a street fight and BoQ Hqlrpe~' one-yard !Qllchdown1 . t 1 8t. the Tu:('key cl~ic swtrn i th.eet In C I. ·St t · the Atlantic Coas t St t · th w hi losing, and then seeing your buddies s1rn11 • · o o i 7rt.-1• ; "'"'•·1·on Viejo Sunday, ••"'. u..i ... "ihe 500-.-:iro 1na · · ~ c u1 . , , a c in e · estern At etic C.On· c11erv•r• o 10 o 1-11 mi-............. ,. v Ellin' ' l ferenqe ; Weber State in the Big Sky; coh. mbinlg kup t~~J{sjt~~:t said•'"-~milh of ~6~ii '?J..Tr.ciin!,'1:' yard freestyle and the 200-yard individual on • .g .. D1"es . ( '· r Texas Tech In the Southwest Conference· is oc ers. ...c:ui,, Urt\.'wx: comer s6--Ho11nn 1 nm !Wtm:ftlM kick} • medley. · . E J il d Louisville in the Missouri Valley; Kansa~ il's pretty eaSy for me tQ. 10Utrun a kl~kC)O\lnber 9 !I'll .from Ml!'il~h'lll IMcCitrcl Miss Baba.shoff clocked 5:0"4.89 in the ' X~.pl'Q _, . 8 e Slate in the Big Eight; Miami of Q1MQ.. couple of guys ." ' ~ ,~ t,. . ~~~~-11-r11Jr:•r~"11 U.~1"' iMcCl•tc1 free , 2:16.08 ~the indo and waa &econd WINSTEU, Conn.i (AP~ _:.·Emll Von _ • __ .in the Mjd·American:.-North-Curollna· AtookSmith's.secood,.qu~runback -""', · . , to Mission V10jo's Valerie"! ... (2:14.-49). w .1 State. North Carolina and Maryland in and a clutch 'fourth q'Q.lfteril\tercepUon' ~ . .-usMIN() J"~""~~.~·•:J11'!. D-4 ~ in the 200-yadl: freestyie'~ • 2:1S.tt:" E _ne, 90} ~rtnef .Qb'mptc· and New 0 D R. p the !CC; ..Kentucky in th e Southeastern by Bob ijayvard to saYe 'the Chargers' ''"''"''"' Ht1 &M DfM, En•'* if.tr, ~ MW' Lee won the XIO fly ln 2:14.49.. York UnlversJtY track aocf ~ C08Ch ~... n ~u. ga.¥-'.. a . Cofifereiice; {'urmaa .in-the Southent., .. 00, a day when " tiley were outgained. 1~~ ""~· New~ prJ~lnt, BNl~ -.,.:177;. Mi8I Babubofra 500 free.effort qualifi~ .~icd 'Sunday night ~t \Vinsted Memodal"" AUstin Peiiy in the Oh io Valley aOO" 341-Us and beat& in first downs 22-14. , ~~lldl!( J.i:i...E"::.,,1-11:'.··'-' oi..;_i:. • lier fot -an6th~ berth-th -tbq "Af.U ~ ,u-Hosp ta.. ;., - , VER:~o~ mWl!SlltP. ''N:J. fAP) ~ l·"ormer pro ba!kelbal1 player 'fbm 11oover wa-. one of foUr llleTI charged in a raid lhJI uncovcrt'd 1.730 pounds of marliuana ht•rc Sundo.v. The Record or ri.1orrls County reported. . lloovcr. 31. played for" lhc Nttlion:i.I BasketbaD Association New Yo r 'lit ·f. Knic'ks, L<ls Angeles l~kers and St. Louis lfawks befofe ending his career Jn 1967. He Is currently · employed as a New York City education official, Hoover and the otht..'f"S were charged ~turday "'il h possesslnc lht 1narljuana, . ih police said they ,found slu£fcd . ii 25 duffel bags. 1hbrlti~ csti1natcd the strctt value ' ~the marijuana at $1 8 million and the cache W¥ "the la rgest in si.te's 'hlstdry." • ver. who deals with school SC<Urlcy f~ Jolli 1.indsay's education task f.<IJlayod.001lcr. ' .. l PeM in the Ivy Leagu It lb fl --~ ... -· ·1n ...__ ,..... ,.,-.sstNO -Ntw °''""' M1t111ll'ICI -21•1-1, Z2~ 110 .... 1.. , • "'...i l ' • · e. was e . 1rst Vl"'"".1 .~ ... WU~ y1r'ili; s.,, DltQO, Ci.t'k 1-:io.l. ltl9. . J.W.Ja, .. uµn g \IS ... years at. NYU, from , • .. · ' 1911 to 1957. Von Elting coached 1111 I .. \. • L Wh • ...., h s • I h d di intercollegiate and two· ·nati(>pal track· aver 1ps ~~ee s .. 1ng e~ . an e . y ~:~elo:dma~;~~~:~t~~ms Ind MELBOURNE (AP) -Australia's !eh· nis st"arS are bOund for Cleveland Tues· day in their bid to wrest the Davis Cup rrom the United State!. And leading the contingent is 35--year- old, red·hai rcd Rod Laver who robbed Czechoslovakia in Australia's 4·1 victory in the Davis Cup.semi£inal. Laver gaiqed three of ttiose victories ln ·three days and 12 sets' of -tennl s , skill wh ich enthralled the 2 a . 0 0 0 speealatora at Kooyong grass courts." Lovet 1!.4t Wimbledon chalJ)plon Jan ltoclet in the first single$, tlWllM '\Ith ~-K'" Roeewal! 1o dele~I koiles . , , ... Born in New York Qf GCrrnan Im~ "· • 1' • ' d , • rulgranta on March 30. 1883 -.be remem-'. and Vladlmlr Ulnik fit th~ doUbles and to · i'e\llve my wanlriir rompetltlve In· rontraot prolwlonals and ' eld tlioir bered It as the day the Brookl)>n Bridge' then roJl!lded It oil by ~a Ung Jirl terest. It's done just that." top team. · · waa q>ened· ~ Von Elling joined lb" llrebce in the ,singles Sluldai· . 1 j Laver oeld : "I tljink we_ 'l'ill do very The ban aff~ Arthur Ashe and C!Uf Mohawk Athletic Club In the Bronx 111 I·~-h-' ·u~,,. "'-•t , US well against the United Slates. We all Richey who are contracted to:th• World 1903. lie became toach In 1009. .t u"t:ui::C f • w ear • "_... ~ · ., play well indoors and we_. must have Cbl:mplonship Tennis Organiialion. 1. In 1912 two of his nthletes made the' titleholder ..John Newcornl?f!' Friday.. an edge on th~·"· 1 • · · The rule has kept Amtralla'i v.uran Olympic tea1n , discus thrower Jim Dun~ .Newcombe r,evenged this with. a slralghL The Aussie team of Laver, Rosewan, 1eilhi. gleots out or cup tennll untJI can attd ·a h,igh·Jumper Leo Goehring. , 3 set win ovor Kodts Sunday ·,Jn the Newcombe, 28, Mal /u!detson, 381 Collo this year wben their contra eta up!i«I. The next yea I he moved to NYU I final match. • Dibley, 30, Cooff Masters .. 2i, 'liid~ll). JI ttas also kept Au.trail• out of the where he won ~atlonal eharnplombl~ ''I very nearly didn't accept the tn-year-old captairi-aiacn Neale Fraser Is Jina! which It 'tea1'hed tn 23 oucctsslvc · in l943 and \948, I vilation lo .Join the team,"· IAld Laver conlldent of beatln(,,Jbe Udlted States years from 1948, ~ 16 viotorl... Von Elli~ WRS an Advisory coaclt who ruu_ llvi:d jn Co_i:ooa d~ M~~ for. In the final Nov. 30:-P!c.J . ·: ' . "We 1'Bnl '19 ploy>, •. alld ~t·-;-to tho U.$, Olympic team in 1932 In the put "•Yem aaobad ioi pliyet1 Fruer ii 10 cciDftil~t that lie bao . tho best ])Olllbll-tl.S. team ,, !11111 .Los Anl!tles and w" head coech l~ in the Do,,.._,Qlp r!nce. J!ilr.~·111e11 urged the Amerlcail! to ov.rlook -the -~aser .. "Weclo110t ,wantt1tfl'1~':\~· 1943 'atlhe Olympics In St. ~lorill.· I ~ It' 1ibuld ·be ,it\11 *'!,, \blni Davis Cup NaUona agreement banning,. to have any ex..-wben , . ~. ~~·· Swfturland and l.OOdon. • -· • • s ' I t • 'I • I '/ c I ' • Denver, Browns Wins M~y, Novembtr l"· 1111..l DAILY PILOT MISSION VIEJO'S KARSMJKERS WINS Frost Top Lineman Scramble • Just Wbtn It looked like tho Pllllburch r ·-· ~--·· Ti.tie Races PtlYALLUP, Wash. AP) -Pierre Kanmal:en d Mlaaioo Viejo won the $15,000 Rainier Trans-MIA Motor Cross ~ Plzyal1up Raceway Sttnday by Virtue w IWO teeond-place ltnlshes. Steelers were bteezlng lo the ~----·1 .,..,.,.. and.Paul Wlrfleld eocb losing strut. =p lo tho "'"'" score<t louchdowns and Gero Y-'-· J·•-·--u1•·• t .J • Gerrit Wolalni: ol Holland, winner of the tint beat, finllhed second overall oo a Mak:o. Wolalnl< placed fourth In tbe seoond heat and had been ahead of Jtaramakers' Yamaha until he Jost bil drive CIJaln. SA V Dominates All-Irvine Leagu~ American Football boOled a 311-yard fleld -·· ,... Ti;'; ' w•~· va -.over rom a • Y~• Irvine League champion Santa Ana """''• Cenlral Divtlion 1 the hJJe th ""'" oot and ·then caught • 4&-yard pus Valley dominates the olficial 1973 All-Deover Broncos came Jo ton. ' nen, w • Dolphinl deleme wu, from Norm Snead for Glanta touchdowns League team as selected by the Daily Al • result the AFC Ceotrafi Jnd lmpene~rable. ' .. they overcame a 111-3 SI. Louis lead Beek Fastest Pilot. Western DlvislOOll are now up IU' grills. O.J. Slmpoon picked up 120 yards at halftime. . Denver dwnped the Sleelen· 23-13 In ruslllng lo leave hlmJell with a Ill-game St. Loob' touchdown came'on an ~ • The Falcons completed an undefeated bomPltlaburrh Swlday to-snap a, 13-jame. total ~ 1,323. Buffalo rumlng beck Jim yard pua llun Gary Keltbley lo Mel I Qu :,•1:lr ":ci~e'::~i~Ue trouble disposing e Wilmlfli atreal: for the SteelOn Braxton picked up 119 yards rushing. Gray., n alifyi•ng And combl ed with Cl · Warfield' M··-hdown Ten Falcons earned all·league honors, .n •veland's 7-3 uP.iet 8 -for Misml came NEW YORK ~ AT -~m'A11 paced by t"unior • "m"'"" whiz Myron Win over Oal:land, ll mal:es the Stee!Ors• on a 17-yard •pass, whlle Csonka scored •~•• ~M-m~ ·---. dlvillon lead just Hi gllt\\<!I. l\nd from 8 yard out. -Joe Namatb came on to rally the F Dr T tJ White, who is the back ~ the year Denver, DOW 5-3--1 for the year is very Jets in the late golna, but Cincinnati ·or ag •. e after leading Orange O>unty in scoring much alive in the AFC West. ' HOIJ8TON AT IL\NSAS'CITY -Chlela held on for a •11 victory lo stay and averaging over 10 yards per carry. Tho Broncos broke 8 ll-l3 tie In .._ quarterboc. k Mike U"'•-lon aolldlo.d close lo Pi~b In the AFC's Central Dick Hill ol Santa Ana Valley la coach fourth period with Jim Twmer'a ttJ:;i h,. place as the team•;N:"1 quarterback DiNvt.Jonth,. who • ONTARIO (AP) _ Gary Beck; the of ~2'~ after tutoring hb Falcons to earn rJtst team honors are Scott Napp at guaitl and Dao Maltby ·At tackle. I OnJy two other Orange Coast *8a players earned first team bonon. .1 Costa Mesa's Rod Plggatt was • • runaway choice in the ltCOOdary Ind Corona del Mar 'il'· Frost round oiJir llit area's elite. -Cl Santa Ana Valley's horde of blue chip- pers consist of White, Gary Tern~. Jeff Linden, Don Alaman, Jim Buanek, Ernie Boykins and Wilbur Hssllp. •. All-lnlne League ~~ Flrrt Team ; • lleld pl d !he game, and after reeover-In 1 .. dlog Kansas City lo-a 33-ll vie•-. Septemamaber ~--badahoulbee!I ~ Bince late U.S. National hot rod champion, roared lo a ~N straight league title. inc a Pittsburgh fwnble on the ~xt -J . ..-uu a ~" eepe.ration, through the quarter-mile speed trap at C.orona del Mar's Mike Frost is the k~f added an icing touchdown. Llviog:stoo pused for two touchdowns came M in the·Ooal 4:40 of. the game Ontario h.lotor Speedway in SWlday's lineman of the year. Frost was a two--Pos. Player ~e Jolwoo paxsed two yards 10 and ocrambled for another one as the and had the Jeta on the Cincinnati fastest time to make the field at the wt.I( standout r..-the Sea Kings and SE-Troxell, Edison Offea1e ,., Riley Odoms for the score. , Chl~s took • M-0 lead and coasted ooe-yard line as lime ran out. He passed MIRA Supematlonals. was a unanimous ctw:>tce at linebacker. T-~faltby, Fountain Valley ·Floyd Little alio had 8 t•y••d tot e win. Houston's LYnn Oickey passed lo Richard Cuter for two apparent Beck Edison lligh's Chargers garnered five G-Heller, L<>s Alamitos toochdown lo ~ .., 77 yards to Bob Grosham for one or louchdoWlll which ofllclala ruled JnV>Jld. • of Edmonton. Canada, was first team berths. led by quarterback G-Linders, Santa Ana VaUey run r Denver, and Teriy the Oilerl scores. · CinclnnaU rookie Chart.,_, "Boobie" clocked in 6.0'19 seconds for a speed Dave White. Others are receiver Joe G-Napp, Fouqt11n Valley Hanratty p&sM:d 42 yards to ROa Clark and Isaac Curt1J icored of 216.88 miles an hour in the rain-Troxell, tight end Jim Balch, defensive T-Alaman, Santa Ana Valley r. ~orga~!':~y soore. BAL'nMORE AT WAS8JNGTON touchdowns for the Beflials'. as they d;layedDo$177.000 event. Defending cham-nuggN Mike Bennett and lineman Jaclt TE-BalclJ, Edlaon I . :;1r. : I CUrt ~"kicked ftve field goab to jumped to a. 17-0 lead. Hont Muhlman pion n Moody or Westchester also Clark. ~Troup,_ Fountain Valley. l'il'ifr· a.EVELAND AT OAKLAND .J.,. pull out of' a peraonal alump and lead also kicked " field goals of ZS and 51 made the field, taking the 16th and The closest matdlup of the all-league ~O .. White,, Edlaon . JSS•:Sr. Clmland climbed back Into contenti.O · the Wasblngton Redskins lo a 22-11 vie-yards.lor"Uie winners. fmal qualllying berth with a time of ~icks was Dave White and bis coun· g._,M. White, Santa Ana Valley 185. In the AFC's Ea.<tem Division, and tory over the Colts. ' 1.219 and speed ol 231.17 m.p.h. terpsrt at Fountain Valley. Coaches and B--Ortlz, Los A\o.mlloo 1 knocked Olldand Into third pltce In , Kaiglit hll from 35, 11 37 4Z and PllILADELPBIA AT DAU.AS -Walt The lop eight !""ili<»s in foor sportswriters were unable to spilt a Jleieue the AFC West with a 7-S vie~ over 29 yards· out and Larry B~~ plimged Garriaon's running boosted Dallas lo categories bad been determined by rac-~ down the lni&lle and Fountain DLM-<Jlark, Edison the ,Raiders . -ooe \ yard for a touchdown for the 8 31·10 victory over Pb.iladeJphia and ing through Friday. Saturday's action Valley's Dan Troup was also named DIAf-Allison. Los Alam1tos Mib Phipps passed ")'II yards to Wldns, who stayed In llm place In the Eagles also lost quarterback &man had to be cancelled when rain hit the lo a first team berth. DIM-Beranek, s. A. VaHey Falr Hooker for the ~ touchdown the ~atlonal Football Conference's East Gabriel lo a-bruised elbow. strip. One coach summed up Troup and OLM-Main, Los Alamilos d the game and a ll'Owns defenae Dl!\Slm. Garrisonardraced cbd53 yards lo set up Leader In the lop fuel class Wa! the White' ''Troup has the great college DIM-Boykins, S.A. Valley . . led by Joe 'Turke,r'"' Jones, stopped pon Mc;Cauley ICOred . from a yard a one-y lou own pl!jlli• b Y •port's legend, Don Garlits of Sellner. potential and White has the courage." L~Frost, Corona de! Mar· 186 . the Raldert ollense, oat ~ Marty llomrft ~ lo Collon quarterbaclt Roger Staubech and also Fla., wi19 had a low time or 5.603 Others from the Fountain Valley rosier LB-Haslip, Santa Ana Valley J9tr .... George Blanda M:lied a fourth quarter Sjiey1er for !hi Other ii a It I more caught 1 two-yard loucbdown -from lleCOlld.! and a speed ol 247.25 m.p.h. ~F.ifptt, Coata·M,.. 17f'r. llt)d pl for tlie Raiders to avoid a touchdown. . Staubecb. Friday. ·~ ~TeJJJpidm. S.A. V.Uey1 l'lt~. abutout. T!w Win moved Clmland lo Gabriel bad put Pbiladelp!Jia In front Other leaden were Dori Prudhomme C' ~J p J p B Bennett, Edison -17' le. within I~ rames of Pittsburgh in the !IT. ,LOUIS AT NEW YORK GIANTS briefly by combining with dw1es Young ol Granada Hilla, in the funny car W 0 y · 0fil0ll8 ~rer-.i, Loo Almnlml l'lt llr. AFC East, with the Browns scheduled • -Ron Johnson's two late touchdowns 00 ao 11).yard loudJdown pass. category, Wayne Gapp or Blrmlngham Se<ood Team -• to 1..-. the Steelers this week. pulled the Giants to a 24-13 victory GREEN BAY AT NEW ENGLAND Mich., in the pro stock class and K.,; T • Full I1o Ofl- 'Thls was nur most solid game'-;rhlch snapped the team's seven-game -Jim Plunkett picked apart Green Veney of Torrance In the pro competition rDilS e ll WR-Tlcehurat, Looi Alalnilos I* Sr. Jelensively," said Cleveland coach Nick S.y's paas defense and brought the division. T-McDorman, Costa Mesa 211 5r. Skorlch after watching his team bold Patriots from behind t.o a 33.24 victory National Hot Rod Association officials After trailing 7-3, Ca1 Po1y Pomona G-Tesimale, Santa Ana Valley 18'.;:Jr. '" Oakland orrense which had been rated U Cl, LONG BEA CH over the Packen. cancelled Saturday's program because roared back on a nine-play sustained G-Purnell, Edlaon 1~. amoq the best In the league. Plunkett completed 18 of 32 pa,... o1 rain and moved additional qualifying drive capped by Greg Cruz's three-yarn G-Mackley; Fountain Valley t;t" fl<. Tho Raiden bove ICOred just 10 points MEET IN PL ~YOFFS for 348 yarda and two touchdowns and runs lo Sunday. They rescheduled flna1 touchdown f..-a tll-7 victory over Cal T-&hepens, Costa Meaa Jll• ll<. in thelr last twu games. 4 llQe8ked Jn a yard ·for a louchdown eliminations for this SUndsy. State (Fullerton) Sunday. WR-llaUield, F-Valley Ht~. Wltb the Yictory, the Browns are now himself u the P)trlou got OJ"3" their The victory brought Cal Poly to &-3-1. ~Fausto, Santa,,Ana VaUey lit~. '-1-l 'llhlle l'llllburJlli b &-%. LONG BEAil! -UC Irvine will play third vlcUliy of the ....... . Fullerton is &-4. It was Cal Poly's fint ~Bullerdick. Magnolia 17$ Sr. "I think we're still In poollloa lo Col Slate ('--) at I o'clock an... T\.._J!ch S kJ victory In the California Colle'"•te -~Delany, Qlsta Molla Ill Sr. control lhlnp," said Oakland coocb Joint Friday In ft~ action o1 !he an-yards wi:l."~ ~ ~ '":'11114,;; V lW par e8 Athletic Alsociatioo not only for thts ~ '11M>lr-Fountain ValleJ 111 Sr. M-. 'Ille Raiders play Kansas Clty nua1 !\'CAA water polo toumament at the Packen 1 21-9 lead 1lolore Plunkett . season but in three years. Deleue and Denver In Oakland the final twu Belmont Plaza Olympic pool, here. opened up and the Palrlota came back. -1URRANCE -Former Mission Viejo CnJL carried the ball 26 times for OLM-La Bounlette, Los Al. 170 Sr. •-eeks ol the season and In all probability "Ojher first JOOJJd pairings find the ' High ind Saddleback c 0 I\• g e 74 yards, while Fullerton's frosh fullba ck. OLM-Murphy, Mqnolla 211. Sr. -games ,will deterinine the AFC Un!......ity ~ Calilornla Bears (No. 1 DETROIT AT ClilCAGO -Ex·Yale quarterback Bob Dulich, completed 12 Jim McDonald, carried 26 times for DLM-Penoz, Costa M,.. !II ... Wet winner. seed) playing New ,_lexk:o University sta: Dick Jauron raced 95. yards with of 20 pas.ws for 220 yards and four 12l yards. The scoring was rounded Dll\1--0am, Corona del Mar 200 $1'. MLUD T BUF at f ,30: delendlng cllampion UCLA and an intercepted pass as the Lions wlilpped touchdowns Sunday, leading the oot by a 23-yord field goal by Klaus DLM-Peck, Edi.son 170 Sr. Bowl~ Doi~ will '/!ec1e15: UC Senta BsriJan play at 11:15; and the Bears 31).7:. University of San.Diego to a 61-0 football Trettin of Cal Poly and· a three-yard LB-Medina, santa.Ana Vllley'll!. $r. in&: that title in the post..seuon oleyolfs ~ f= J~ ~ 2~~i match ~cago. tJ:ailing 14-7, was Cl'I the move Victory over. Loyola at El Camino ~' ~IV~~~n's Dwa~ Sjmsi 1)-10 ~~·= d~!auM;r ·: i;~ after cUnchlng the AFC Eastern btvlslon the Anteatera ""ith tile winner ~ the ~ rookie quarterback Gary Huff College. cet St. Fulltrton o 1 o ~ 1 B-Adams, Estancia· Ill Sr. title with a l7.0 victory over the Buffalo r11er (!,..... r~. ore Jauron picked ~f ~s ftrst pas! Dulich b: ·the NCAA Division S total ~~:1!~ 11~"1~Th•nogrio 1r.rc1r.i B-T Corona ..... , :r.1-- Bu,_ ..,_, ~ state . game at 8:10 Fri· fS a pro and turned it mto bis first offense leader. c11 Jioh• crui :I run <Trettin kiclll en')', , ~ ~ . .151 St. ~-~~~~~~~'-~~~-da.....:.y_m~glrt'--.~~~~~~~~~....:::.toucbdo::=::::~n=.~~~~~~~-,.-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~··~·m=.~~~~~~~~~~~~~Dodson~--''-F~ountain~-·~v-iill_ey:___1ss-,--Sr. . - Your good credit OR!nS the door! --in '74 Monte Carlo '" lht nett few ,,..,., two out of ,,,.,., tin ,,.. cars win bl rent aftd llcenlt '"· And the monthly ptyrneftl 10" mau.wtlt lffltd, ftOI bouoht. l*MIH-N --., kin i.tps growing, a Varner/Ward tHH Is pf'l'lty much up,fO you. Ind not fortht fk:h alone. lvfJ rnlft Of'WOfMn eamlna over S750 • monlh, with a good cl'9dlt rtttng, can ..... at Yt"mt1r/Ward. A"'1 Nib ..., Ndlt, ~ " ""'••••· Anvthlng hM.a Anclprobabty llllould • ......,,. fNllng ,_ldOf.you w!tll 1 ..W Pinto to a Meroodea. top-of-U.llno °' oeonomyl llllM</Wft, c.r more o(ten, It'°"' "*'• PIYl'l*'lil. ·tlJd wtth "° Clllh with our Artat purcl'lutng power, doll thl lhopplng tw )IM. ....._Let Varner/Ward ~ It. ; doll U'll l\aoGllng. And, with our latQe llne of brtUndh. .. NI ll1p11l. NI llown ;e,w ... it. · Mt1t ..., MMt :n..r. no --™ wr1• YoU l)e ...-you can COMtoltlbly .tford, !f9w.kM'O Ir empty con""°" . ....,_ are two tecta you lhoukl know; Flm. one •flue? From alx mon1h1 ta fOitlf etgM'tnaillil Ori en.,_..., 17" oftl1ut,.ngtllt of Cir l•a""11 It 11111htiminattolflo1tlClltlonli -'--your choioo on.how-you lb IO~-. dOwTrpairntnt. Whltewtf ronn ot tllltyou ChooM. thef9 ta"° how much you w1nt to paytlclt month. Varft-'Nftrd now hlil down payment Pl°',you cin .. JlyourpttMntNrtoui-n'll OYlr 9,000 cart on Jene, making us·one, ol the fatgllt .,._ pay top dofl1r -you ttold:On to thlt cuh, too. UN 1\ fo, av~ pendent auto JeaMng comptnle9 In lhl Wiit. ChooN your car, tlon, 1·uvlng1 1Ccount, a o~per, whatever. ie.Jnp mlkn apeotfy the equipment, and on you go! tracte-jne oblotete. • · ftr .. rtot. .. rtc:Mr. If you have unllmlltd tunde., ~ Stc:ond f1ct: a·Vamer/Ward exciualvel You pay no dtpoait /allone. But If you're like rnott of us, Olftlng rlcblr ii-~. wMn you •Ian your ltlM. W. knOw of no other Htning com--matter of glltlng 'amart iboUt u•lrtg whal you hav.. ~.II pany or car deal1t1hlp that offert 1t1111u"t, no depotlt or 1111 one lhrwwd w-of updating . your flnMN.I thlnldng. lo Oii month11 teM1 d19ottt1 Witt! your good crd, like Vamtf/Ward. V1rner/WR todlY.• no·obUgation., end llt'w glvt you.., Thi only cNh requireCI I• a p~rata lhare or I'll flr1t month'• food '°' tttoughl tt a ,lch. r-~~~~~~~~~OTllPllXAllllLI~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vsner/Wlrd . Ono ol lfloOldMt ltlllnt-ita lo Cliifomll - -lo Soulflom Clllfolni• 200 W •. i<1tell1, Anaheim, (714) ~ I •·cy(. 1800 cc. overhead cam engtna has alumlnum alloy head , 5 main bearings for rigidity and strength. Strong 7-crossmemberframe, box·section rails. Courier curb weight. 2,515 ib. . ' Dual cylinder brakes ••• each wheel hasnotl , .but 2 brake cylinders for sure stops..-"' . ·;;. ~ Big coR'Sprlngs up front. Lo.ng • 104.3·in. wheelbase helps smooth the ride. Long 6·1e&I rear springs cushion load up to big l ,400 lb. I ( • Bike-bar option secures bikes and other cargo. Rear step bumper option gives easy access. Deluxe box cover option shown has crank-open jalousie windows. :::'""'1-'t!! courier offers .c. 4 different stripe kits in 4 color choices. I -· Snap!'ilown bed lineroplion forboxgivescarpeled ~""ll~!l comfort. Durable indoor-outdoor material.Well covers, side and end panels available. Roomy cab has style, visibility, insulated quiet. Foam seat. Optional afr conditioning and automatic transmission. ' All·Welded·74.5'ln. box arid I wide ' 62.2 1nches. ' " •• FORD Id COURl~ij.·: ,FORD o~s~~' • ' . . J -1 DAILY PILDT El Toro. ' Tars Gain Playoffs Newport Harbor JI I g h ' 1 Sailors have drawn the un· defeated South 11ills ltuskiea as their first round opp<>nent In the CIF 4-A football playoffs i,11hich are sla1ed Fri- day night. El Toro, the only other. Orange Coast area eleven to gain a ClF playoff bid, waa granted a home assignment against \\'ebb lligh. That game is scheduled for Mission Viejo High. Newport's confrontation with South HUis , the Sierra League champion, Is expected to be contested at Co\'ina District Stadium, where South }fills plays its home games, or at Mt. San An; tonlo College. If Newport Harbor is 5UC· <:easful against South Hills It .. "'ill meet the winner of the Compton-St. Paul g a m e . I I.JO.. undefeated s1. Paul Is the Water Polo Cha1npions C-lF's No. 1 rated team and ' is seeded No. I in the elimina-Newport Harbor High's Sailors swept to the Sunset Ke,•in Robertson. Second row-George Newland , tions. League championship again and coach Bill Bar-• Eric Elder, la1ike Dobrott. Greg Horman, Pete Har· Sunset League co-champion nett's crew is slated !or CIF playoff action. Front ris. Third row-Frank Anderson, Jeff Duyndam, Anaheim gained Its usual from left-Bill Prichard, John Dickey, Greg Fults, ~fare Kazarian, John Coneer. bome asisgnmeot ln the open-_:_:_:::::.._:::::.:~=:_:_==:.=:==:-=-=.c=.::_:_~'--'--'-'--'-'---------------------­ ing round, drawing Pasadena, a team shelled earlier by St. Paul, 35-0. Tile pairings: .. Com11tot1 •I SI f'llll Ntwl!O'I Hlrblw 11 $Pull! Hllll s.ii•• Ft er s11111 Manic• 91191'11 ti CrHl>I 1..111 .. llot 11 Stnll A.nl V1lk\I Sifyllf ti ltedlll\dl Morin Torr11M;I 11 L il Mllllkln '•lloen.t 11 An1htlm >A Davis the Big Di ff ere nee For Trojans' Polo Team a11!r wt MOl'lrO'Vll Mornl11<Ulot II S1nt1 M1rl1 Cl'llM ti VUl1 Pt•k !UH-I'll 11 Lt M1rtdl inti-11 SI. Jolln ~''" l<t nllfdY 1.1 1t1ncl'lo A •mllOI Pomon1 11 Cr~tl'lll 1111\1 Culver City ti Tt>Glllll'ICI Ot kl 2·A . e110wln Perlr 11 Tt'lll>ll City 5_,-1 ti f'1lm SptinDI Ltwnd1lo II .. n .. IOPI Yl lllY Ai.men~ 11 ltlo Miii Nt ff ti El Mll\lfW:la 1towl1NI 11 ·El Oor1da •~•1 Olk 11 Mprlll Rlv1r1lot Yvc:1 ~ 11 !ndlo •·• EMii! Mounllll! 11 f'trrl• akl 111• 11 Art1no1"' Wftlb \II El Toro 11 MIUIO!I Ylt lo Hl<1~1 mon1 11 1m111r11t f,. lori1v1nt11r1 at PllG ltoblt1 61wrt ti LU"*'"" 11r111!rtf1 ti T1111<f\ap4 Stnl• YMI ,, C1•1)1n1trl1 Pro Cage, Hockey Standings •t• •nN~ ~!flM' Att111tlc Miii I W Pc . ·~·ten " ' ·"f t.ttw Yor~ " ' ·" 11~11110 • " ·"' Pl'll11<1n>ll'll1 ' " .n• •• ' ' •• By ROGER CARLSON Of ttr.1 ~Uy ""-' Sl1ff University High 's water polo team must rank high on the all-time colu mn for Orange County athletic teams turning a nothing season Into a winner in the span of one year. Coach Chuck Morris' Tro- jans finished with a 1~ than glamorous 1-15 record in 1972. Today the Trojans are co- champions with Laguna Beach in the Orange League, have lost only l\vice in 17 games and are headed for the ClF playoffs. \\'hat a difference \\'it Davis makes lo a team. The former Foothill High star sat out last year after transfcring to University and he's the catalyst in the Trcr jans attack. "Wit has been a real in- spiration to our team," says Morris. "He's the hardest working kid I've ever had and he's extreme1y competitive. WIT DAVIS books in such items as ad- vanced Latin. and has Olym- pics aspirations (or 1976 in swimming. At 5-10. 170 pounds. he's scored 60 goals for the Trojans and does most of bis damage driving off the hole man. "We usually put Gaulter or Pat Lyons in the hole and break off them." explains ~lorris. who initiated the University water polG pro- gram after coaching a t ll.1arina High. With his speed a n d quickness Davis has had a field day pelting the Gpposition out of this system. And although Davis is an all.CIF candidate in water polo, it's swimming ~·here his future figures . , . and col- legiate time wm probably be spent at the Unive~ity of Califomla. "I anticipate him winning the CIF 100-yar d breaststroke," opines ~1orris, aware of Rick Miller at El Dorado High. But for now. Davis, along with mates Gaulter, Lyons, Cameron C06grove, Steve ll.1cCormick, Ron Swor and Jeff Hassett, will settle for competition in the CfF water polo playoffs which begin Wednesday. Ctlllrtl Dl\ltlllll •H•nl• " • (.•::.1111 • ' Hov1!11"1 ' " Cltwlend • " ••• :11: " • . 211 '" "We slarted a new program here three years ago but \Ve had no one to set the example. Bui with Wit in there he's made Bill Gaulter a better player and these two have LA Bids for '80 Olympics Wltttrw c.....,_, Ml._..I DIYltiefl Milw1ul<M lS l .tn &lteoo 14 • .111 1011 11 a .m K.C . .Om1h1 ' u .m PtcUIC Dl'tl111ft ~01 An<it lt• " • :Ill Olden Slllt • • Portland • ' S•allle ' " 1 ,.,, • ' '• made the rest of the team NE\V YORK (AP ) -The work harder. Just trying 10 nation's second largest city keep up with them has made and a northern New York the rest or the team tha t resort village have been ten- much tougher." tatlvely tabbed to represent :Bl ~ .. Phoenl• • " Davis appears to have it the U.S. in bidding for the sund1y'1 01m11 all. He has excellent speed, 1980 Olympics. ~'~~~!I 'i0f}'t111~c~11nc1 100 mobility and intelligence. Los Angeles and L a k e ~T~~:oi~"g;t'J':"l&i'' His be!t in the 20 0 Placid , N.Y., were the sole r•v'• .. _, breaststrokeL for instance, is American bidders for the No 111m..-.cPledulld ·,..-:::_-::.-.:: '-d~ O · d '""div'• 01m11 2:12." aJKJ ue s one a 1: 1.6 winter an summer game Pnotnlx 111 1 ~11110 in the 100 breast, sites. LOI A..n!lltll JI NIW YOfk Por111nd 11 c:n1c11111 He 's a 4.0 student, hits the. Los Angeles will be com· Go1c1en s1110 at Mllwauktt ·------------"'---Pl'lll•dtlohl• YI. 1(1n111o (lh·Om•h• at 1<tn111 Cl!~. ... 1111 DIY!ilO!'I "t1 l' "/ii ,, 11 :l:l Ktntll(ir;y (1•0lln1 N-York J\~~mo11l1 Vif"Qlnl1 t l? JfJ Wnt Dl'l'l1IO!I Oenv..-10 I ·f?~ Ul•l'I 10 I ..,.., lndl1n1 I t .411 Sin ..,nl;)lliO 9 'I ·"' S•n Oleqo 6 1 .:lll s1111rd1y'1 G•mt~ Ntw York 11!. Ylrolnla t1 C1rotln1 111. Utll'I f 7 Ktnhrcky 100, lndl1N1 96 ~nwr 111. Meml>l'li1 11)2 Sin Anlonlo 111, Sin Oleoo fl SU!ldlJ'I 01me Ulth IJ, Sin #.f'llonlo llO No Olm41 K lllld ""'ii;'' G1mt1 Tw ,., 01mt1 (1rolin1 11 Otn\ltr U ll~ II lndll nl NHL ••• , Dl'lltlefl •• '> ,. '" '" 1 '" • ' WLTPlt.,OPA •~:!:lo 141 1 ~ f: n ~~ MOl'!lrttl I 2 12 •1 llutft~ ~ 1 I t '5 51 ~tro?t111111r1 l I~ ~ 1~ t4l ~: 'lllKOU .... f I J 13 4 31 N.Y. lll1n111r1 I 7 11 l• )II Wtll DIYl1i.n _F!l!lltdtlPl'lll 11 J 1 ?~ ~I 1t (ldCIOO 1 • 6 '° J.0 79 ~I LOUii I ~ J ll (II J) A•ll~ll 6 • !I ·~ .U PIHi.bllrctl'I J t J lj I' 71 Los ..,notlml ~II 7 1 4" 51 Mlnr.r1ai. ......-;• 6 lj •I !', C11llornJ• ~ 11 1 I ~,. • S11nNw'l o.-.. Oetrolt ,, MN>lr11I • Nnt Yorlt "ll'llfT't 7, Pltlttwrgti 0 801ton ). All .. 111 1 c1111orm1 7, tuHftlo o T1111i.111•1 Glllltl No Olmll KMINllCI T11t1Nr"1 01'!>e1 f MOO-. 11 Mn> Yor~ llll ndlrl lot AOHlll 11 Dl!roll I peting with Moscow for the 1980 summer Ol ympics and Lake Placid will be pitted against Vancouver, B.C., for the winter conte!tS. "This designation can be rescinded by the United States Olympic Committee at any itime before they make their presentation before the International Olympic Com· rnittee next fall at its meeting in Vienna,''. he said. Football Standings For Pros Jr41li-I F~l1 , ... ~ Americ111 c111f9...1K1 •111 Oi\1111111 W l T I"<!. ,, --M!1mi • ' • .'00 1AJ ~Ulfl~ ~) \ ·~ "' I W ortl; Jt!I "' NtW ENILlnd 370..lOD '" ll•lrlmor1 ' .. . .. •• C1t1lr1I Ol'lltllOI f'l!ll.Oul'o• : l ! i "' Cl1w11nd >W ClncinMtt • • • ,. ·~"" ' t 0 .IDD "' Wlff Ol>AMM K1n11s Cllv • ' ' .. ,. "' ... ~. ' l ' .... "' r.kl1nd ' • ' ,,. lll n Olta0 ' ' ' ·"' NlliMlt CIOl"'-1 IE11I Dh1Mlll 01ll1t ' l 0 .10!! "' Wtt.h notOl'I ' ' . . ... "' SI. L<:1Ul1 1 6 l ·'" "' Pnl111Mll)lli1 1 ~ 1 .,,. •• ,,..,.. York Gl1rtt1 2 1 ,,. 1n Ctlltr1I Dl'lltllOI .. " "' "" m ., ,. m "' "' "' "' "' "' '" m '" '" ·~ X·M!MISO!t t 0 0 J,000 ltf 1!j Otlroll l S 1 AS0 :J!).ol <u Grttn 11\1 J 5 ! .«lO lll 1" Cnk eao J ' .JOO 175 11• Weit Dlwhi1111 Loi Al'>Qelr' 1 2 o .IOO ua,.,, lt? Allll'll• 6 J 0 .6J,7 ..., ll\ New or1r1n1 • 6 D .400 114 "' Sin Frands'o l 1 0 .JOO 180 131 X<iln<Mcl dlvl1lon lille S11nd1v•1 GlrnH W11hington zz. 81lllrnor1 l' Ml1ml 11, ll11lf1lo D Nrw Yori! Gl1nl1 2t, St. Loo.tit ll 0 11'1Yt!f Jl, Pllhbur<1h ll ~1':1~:l}'il'. i~0Y';~ ,:r, ~~ 0 •1111 ll. Pl\ilearlp/\11 10 l<IMel Cll\I J!J, HOUSTO!I U Oelro/r JO, Cl\ic1go 7 Cl•vrt1nd 7, 01kl.tnd l San OllCIO 11 ~ OrlNM 1• Los Angtlft 31, kn Fr111t.I-lJ Ttlll_..._.. flilnnri.o11 11 Att.,.,11 ThvrlPY W11hlno1on al Ortro/T flilt ml 1! 0111111 -·· PllllDuroll It Cllwllnd St. Lovl1 It Clr!clrtn.til. Nrw Yorlr Ol1nr1 11 PhUtdilP1'111 Butt1lo 1t 8tltll'l'IDl'9 cr.1,ICIO •I Mlnnei.ort Los Al'IQ1lrs 11 Nrw Or1r1n1 N1w Envl•nd al t-+avston l(•n111 City 11 Denver A111n1• 11 New York Jets Sin O!IOO at 01k11nd Mond•Y'I Gltnl Gre-en Bly 1t Sin Frll'l(ll(O • Rustlers Favored Over Foe WA4'Wl' -Golden w .. t, Long Beach and F'Ullertoo Colleges are upecled to have little trouble In tbe opening rourd of the Southern CalifomJa JC "'!er polo ~ 1'le9day at Mt Sin ADtonJoCOl!ege. Golden West'a RusUen. the No. 2 seeded team In the tourney. and the Southen\ Califurnla Cooference cham- pions, are big faYOritel to topple Missioo dn:uit title- winne.r Chaffey in an 11 :4S a.m.. tilt. Fullerton. the South Coast champ. should gel by Cyptt!S at I o'clock and LBcc. the Ko. I seeded tum and the Metropolitan O:Jnfereoce "in- ner, is a heavy choice to "'ft.IP Grossmont at 3:30. 1be only dole game cl the first round fl(IU<S to be the Orange Coast-Ml SAC ain- frootation at 2: 15. 1be two South coast CU> ference rivals splll In drcUit play with OCC'o ~ "In- ning tbc second round tilt. occ. the defending Southern Cal and state polo c:bampioo, finished )hint In Its confmnce behind F'UllerlOD and Mt. SAC, bul earned I berth Jn the pla)'Offs with a rouainC 1'-:2 "ictory over Grossmout Fri· day In a qualil)'ing game . Thus, OCC is a delinlti darlt hone In the playoffs. ·Second round winner's bracket ma1cbes Tuesday are expected lo !Ind Golden West (:i:Hll facing Fullertoo (l~) and Long Beacll 011-2) against the OCC-~tt. SAC winrter. CIF Polo Matchups ' Wednesday's first round of CIF water polo playoff com· petition include~ five Orange Coast area prep teams among the 32-leam elimination>. The five are: Newport Harbor. Laguna Be a ch, Corona de) ~far, Estancia and University . Laguna Beach's clash al Foothill !Dgh ;,, the featured televised game by Channel ~ It 'll be shown Sunday at 1. The pairings : Wl'I• "'" "11yefk Sin Brrn1rdlno 1t Sunny Hlns ~llCllt VtrdH II Cl'''"" llCI'"" lltltll 11 . oolttlll Lt 1«111 II Gll'Olrl Of9\'t r.=r1 ·~.'1~~· AllKlderO ti 8utfll 1ndla 11 Ltklwvod '11f\ltlr"d·1t Cvron• drt Mar 4 un1v,r1lty a! Uolal\d Lom:>ac 11 0Jnerd Lf Pu1nt1 ti A.Wlr R1'flr1 de ,ol¥ 11 Mlrt CO.I• Avl11!on t i C.-1(9nl-VjiltlY Servile ti OM "1.llOIDI N1woort H1rbor 11 llt:lwrslclt Nt>rlll ' _ .. ____ _ Mesan Wins Golf Crown Chevrolet Caprice Classic. Why look ally higher? TARZA NA Clssandra F'rccman of Co1ta Mesa won the Women's Souther n California GolJ Auoclation chaJ11POnlhlp by defoeting foul"llme defending champion Donna Travis Jn the !&-bole .nnatt •I -El Caballero Country Clubllere. Ml9 Jl'rftnmn, a member cl ~ C:...11 Country Club, N 'ti _, l llmllat lounW t'llllll Jli S... D!e91' 11111 hopes le l"'1' .......... I ID the f. .. I Our C.aprice Classic offers many ot the luxu~ and featuies of c.ars priced much higher. . Wrry pay more? • I • Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO -Spoiso"d By I DAILY PILOT $100 A WEEK IN PRIZES • • sso TOP WEEKLY PRIZE . s20 s10 For Weekly Second l'lace Winner Each ·lor Third, Fourth and Fifth., Place Winners Here's how you cen be 1 pigs.kin prop~et for profit. Weekly cash prizes are offer\_d to. w1nners of the Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo 91me. To)..w1nn•r ••ch we~k gets $50 in c11h. Second piece w"111n•r ~ets $20 in cesh end third fourth •nd fifth pl1c.• w1nner1 each get $10 in ces'h . All "c1sh" 1ctuelly k .delivered to winn•r1 in the Form of checks to be pi,i!~ up by winnert at one of the I 0 p1rticipating members of the Harbor Bouleverd of C1rs essociation. °'1•ck1 for this week 's contest will be prepared by: University Oldsmobile 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa The 10 p,•rticipating auto deelersh ips elong Coste Mese's 'f1arbor BouleY1rd of C1rs" are: Atl11 Chrysler-Plyl'l'iouth , B1uer Buick, Connell Che¥rolet, Costa Me11 Datsun, OeYe Ross Ponti1c, Johnson I Son Lincoln-Mercury, Mire.cl• Mazda , N1ber1 Cadill1c, Tiieodor• Rob ins Ford end Uni¥er1ity Old1mobile. Watch for this pl1yer's form ••ch week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle . the teem you thin k will win in eech pairing in the list of lO games end send in th e player's form entry blink or e re esonable fac. simile. Then wetch the DAILY PILOT sports p~es for ••ch week's list of fi¥e . winners. RULES 1. '""""' tllt 111try •I.In~ ....., ~ 1 r-111• t1ttlrnll1 If It 19 ......, tllt _...,, "lt-IMt ~ Is QfllllOI " IR "1111ct •""6k•l9." •""111 _. .. tlllil-Ill tht 11111 lllMM 19 ll tltiltl• fllftttll. n... Whkll •'I -'irm Wiii k •lMtNllfltd. l. S.... ii lt1 f'll.OT ''GSICIN PICIC51l00 CONTl:IT, S,.111 DtM"-'o f'.O ..... IUI, C1sl.t MtJt, CA. '262'- J. Only -lflh"'t w ,...-p1nnlftfll t•dt Mtk, Co11!11t1111t '"" lhlttf rh1t coni.11 lffici1ts tnlJ lnYUllfll• 11111111.ii .ii1ri11 1.-m 1 11ntt1 Mdttss tr tlllfll mw"pt Ind '"'' dlMtw.tlilw 1ny "fk:lfllffl namt"' 111lrlts 1111,11 dl~w•rtd. Dtc:illlll If lllllllltes In !Ills Pllrll rnu1t h I(• ceptM 11 flJlll 11,. Ill c1111t1111nh. . t. l:111riit mwl M """"""" 1111 .. .., 1111'1 Tllltdt't P,M,. tr "'"' M •111........, " Ill• DA.IL Y ,.11.0T ltlkt lly 6 P.M. Wlllll.-Y. s . P111idP•ll11t ljlOllMft Ind ltl•lr •mftlCIWtll Ind 0..11. y f'ILOT tlftll>li,...s 1111 !lltir im!TIHl111 l1mll1H •tt 1111 111111111 " m11r. '-Tll •1tl!AICl!lt •LANK MUn ae Fii.i.ED IN OJI INTJIY IS VOIO. .. --------... ENTRY BLANK I Clrcle t..m1 yeu ttihdt wffl win fhl• week'• 91mn (home fNrn 11 second on• llstMI) I I I I I I I .I No t e Thank ... qiv 1n9 Week R u ic Cha nge (Ruic 4) E n t r1 t..·s Must Be In Wednesday NY Giants vs Philadelphia Rams vs New Orleans Pittsburgh vs Cleveland Miami vs Dallas Washington vs Detroit Ala~ma vs LSU , Air Force vs Notre Dame Texas vs Texas A&M Nebraska vs Oklahoma ·use YS UCLA I ONCJon State vs Oreton J Wash_ lngton State vs Washl119ton Cal YS Stanford I Pitt vs Pen11 State Cornell vs Penn I Arizona vs · Arizana State I ~ Texas Tech vs Mansas 11 -2'~· -T SMU VI Baylor I ' Ohio State vs Michigan I Purdue vs Indiana I Tulane vs Maryland Missouri vs Kansas 1 . ~ .Florf.;,~lce: vs TCU , • ua vs Miami I Fla. I I Clemson vs South Carolina I lmnols vs Nonhwester11 Harvard -vs Yale I Colgate vs Rutgers Mlulsslppl vs Miu. State I Wisconsin vs Minnesota • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I •• I I I I I Tll llllAICllt -My ..... 111 tftt flt•I Mllllltr II Jltfllh KlfM I lft Ill lit ...... Mllld llMIYI .. -__,,_. ______ _ IN•mo I IM,.... I I C"t Zip I I . -"'~'""="'~~~~~-'-----·~·~·'----· L--------~ •t. Ti 'I'll high!' that N do da (2) LB Pu Li A -. ' Kari llr Handicap Wi nner ·Robon Sets Ekipsed Time Ma rk By ALMON LOCKABEY Of tt11 ~ """ t•ff The super-light boata fell lo the displacement boata in the Fifth Long ll<ach lo La Paz ~~ Intematlonal Race. f' Bob Grant's Cauian and CUthbertao~t Robon from Newport Harbor Yocht Club finished firat with a new elaps- ed time record !or the 1,00!>- mUe race. Corrected tlnie winner was a modified Chance--37, Dick Kelton's Kart II from Los Angeles Yachl Club. THE COLUMlllA.U Tribute, oo-11dpper..t by Jack Holleran of Long Beach Yacht Club and Diel< Blattennan and Bill Lawhorn of Balboa Yacht Club won Class A honors. A quintet of Erk:oon-46s, led by Barry ll<rkul' Warlock ol Long ll<ach Yacht Club, swept Class B; Ttnaley Light (not quite a ULDB) aldpper..t by Henry Grandin Jr., St Francil Yocht Club, wu the Cius C. winner, ml Kari II too« CIUI D. ADii where were the RUpel'- tigbt boats! ' llqttme, the a.loot aldnned out, elongated Ster boat, finl to finish tn this year'• 'rran!plc and In the lt'll La Paz nee, finished some four hours behind Robon which croaed the finish ' line with a huge placard querying "Ragtime Who?" Panache, Roderic Park's 40- foot ULDB h)< de1lgner Bill Lee. was the !&th boat to !ilillh and placed third In CIUI C dn correc1ed time . ' THOSE W E R E THE hllhligbts In a oee-uw battle tllat saw the 27-boot !leet changing places like a pme of mualcal chalrs as they bat- tled fluky winds and, et times, murderous tidal cur· rents. .... Robon. for instance, went around cape San Lucas car- ryinC -of wind In a reered roaln while others that followed drilled around the point in the usual "parkial lot" conditiom. Again, R<lllon !tnlabed at 4: 10:!0 p.m. Friday In a dying breeze that cut her -' lo three knots for tho lut 15 miles of the race. She was some 40 miles ahead of Ragtime and the other CIMs A boats who were fiehling ad\'erse currents ln the Gull o! ca!l!omia. But about ntg!llfall • bliltel'-lnc nor'welter came out ol nowhere and allowed t1io roll of the fleet to cross the llnlsh line on a rail.down beat. There were other odd!tlea in the race. Jack Hall of Newport Harbor Yacht Club hu woo several Mexlco races by oalliDg In tlght OD !be -around Cape Seit IAxm to pid< up tbe better winds and find leA currents. In previous racot he . hu bounced boots on the rocU In ll)<!olng. Thi> time he did more than bounce. He jamned Ra&doll smack 1n the center ol a nest ol. rocU near the e1pe with a gallery of spectators at the Cobo San Lucal Hotel. WllEN HAU'. dawed sails and tllrled 1111 mCIDo to beck out ol the jam, be ..... -and heud and ,.,,tetted by Roderic Par!< -.I~. Hall made a wrlltea repol1 about the mllhap and WU slapped with a lllbl penalty for the time be used his engllle. (Tilts is In """°""...., with the rules of the race .) WREN ALL BUT one boat -David Killian's 41-!oot sloop Nepllltbe -was sn11111l'd down in La PaZ Harbor !im- day ntght, here were the llnol handcaP results : OVERALL ~ (I)° Karl 11;. (2) Wvlock, Ba~ Bet!rul, LBYC; (3) Blackbird, Allen Puckett, CYC; (4) Tlnaley Light, Henry Grandin Jr., St. l"YC; (5) Robin, Car! Robln- elle. SBYC. CI;ASS A _.,,!l)~Trlbllle. Honeran, Lawllom and Blat- tennan, LBYC and BYC: (2) Spirit, Ro1>ert O'Brien, CYC; (3) Dorothy 0, Bo!> B<ouc!Wnp, Nl!YC; ( 4 ) Robon, Bo!> Grant, NHYC; (5) Raitlme, White, Puqulnl and Miller, LBYC. CLASS B -(I) Warlock: (2) Blackbird; (I) Robin: (4) Fleetwood Nlcllolas G e t g, Chlcogo YC: (I) Viva Cru>, Tony CnlZ, CYC. CLASS C -(I) Tinsley J,lght; (2) Conquest; Tom Bolstad, LBYC;J~) _ _P~ocl>e, ,Roderic Part, IU<ltl1IOl10 YC: (4) Ragdoll, John Holl, Nl!YC: (!) Yellow Jack•~ Torrence Greene, CYC. CLASS D -(I) Karl n: (S) Seuprite, L.A. Otteroon, 8FYC: (I) Aqulrlua, Jolll Holiday, LBYC; (I) Homb!awer, Jack Ste Id I, AYC; (5) Chosqu!, Dmnll • Cboato. SI BYC. O•llf Piiot Sl•ff Pl\lllo SETS RECORD-Bob Grant's CC-61 Robon !rom Newporl Harbor Yacht Club ghosts across the finish line at La Paz to set an elapsed time record for the 1,000·mile race of 6 days, 4 hours, 1 0 minutes and 30 seconds. · j • I I lltckMr PllCllO HANDICAP WINNER-Kari U, a 37-foot Chance-designed sloop. owned and skippered by Dick Kelton, !.Als Angeles Yacht Club, was the handicap win- ner in the !.Alng Beach to La Paz race. She wa s the 17th boat to finish. CLASS A WINN!ll-Tribule the Col umbla·52 sloop sailed by a three·man syndteate of Jack..Uolleran, !..Ong Beach Yacht Cl~b and Dic k Blattennan and Bill Lawhorn o( Balboa Yacht Club was the Class A winner in lhe 1,000- aile !.Alng Beach to La Paz race. t • -. "" Monday, Novtmbtr 111, 1Q7) OA!LY PflOT JS I Kenne dy's John Birch Society Chie f • R Young ~on Sp eaks .Out on W ~tergate ecov:enng ·· C1w'b".M ldMd ~ St,._I,• BELMONT, }lnss. -The Is i'im at !be helm o! an or1antzaUon which claims : WASIUNGTON ('AP) -The t2-yeaM!cl son o! Sen. Edward M. KeMedy, recovering from the re!ll<lv•I ol ht.I right leg above 'the knee, got out of bed briefly Sunday evening, according to a hospital spokesman. Edward At. Kennedy Jr., "continues to i m pr o v e satisfactorily/' the spokesman said. "The doctor says he's having some discomfort, which can be expected with this type of surgery.'' The operation was perform· ed. Saturday at Georgetown University Hospital In an at- tempt to halt the spread of bone cancer. 4 8011• Kille d SIOUX FAW, S.D. (UP!) -The bodies of four teenage boys, all believed killed by shotgun blasts, were found late Sunday In an isolated state park area. Officials declined to disclose their identities. The boys were believed to have ~n 14 lo 17 years old, and from the Sioux Falls area. '111e Gitchle Manitou State Park, where the bodies were found , b about 14 miles ea!t of here, close to t h e northwestern I~·a border. Wreckage Found PORT ISABEL, Tex. (UPI) leader of the John Bird\ The leader o! the John Birch Society, Robert Welch, bio- lleves that Watergnto, by ex- po&tng "!be cJai loot o! gov- ernment. kl the United States," will boost the society's own membership rolls. A -large American flag flap- ped in the wind outside the society's redbrick national headquar\era on Co n c o r d Avenue here. and the morqing sun glinted off a de.sk replica of tbe Statue of Liberty as Welch, in an interview, looked to the future after 15 years of "fighting the ColTll!lunist conspiracy." T H E W H I TE-HAIRED, energetic ~Welch, who !OUflded' the socie,y ln 1958, sees ad· dillonal hope In the numbers and the enthuslaSm of young people enrolling in t h e society's militantly con- servative · 1ummer y o u t h camps. Welch puts membership at between 60,000 and 100,000. Liberal critics estimate the figure at 70,00G-M,000, while recalling that Welch originally forecast an eventual mem- bership ol one million. However, critict; credit the &OCiety wiUl. what one of them calls "hard work a n d organiiaUon." mduan THE aociety pro- BIRCHER CHIEF Robe rt Welch whk:h marked the founding of the society.· The text of Welch's address has been printed in a 100-page Blue Book -the manifesto of the John Birch Society which was named after Capt. John Birch , a missionary- tumed-inlelligence officer kill· cd by Chinese communists in 1945. Today, 1~ years later,. Welch - A memberlblp of between 60,000.100,000 Americans (the society refUses to releaee ex- act flgw:es) with •bout 4,000 cl!apten spread """""' the United srates. . -Over 400 Amencan Opin- ion (the title of the group'• monthly magazine) bookstores In the United States which disseminate not only the society's propaganda opposing se1C education, lhe UN, and the super rich, but also th<' society's American h\,gtory texts and such "American classics" as "Black Beauty" and "Gulliver's Travels,'' which they sell to American high schools. -An ability to raise some $150,000 a week in con- tributions and book sales to support mass mailings and Utl· salaries of the nearly 100 paid personnel who operate out o! t h c three-building head· quarters complex here in the Boston suburb o! BelJ!lOllt. -The wreckage of a wooden ship, surrounded by six lite jackets, ' a dinghy and a number of yellow hardhats, was spotted Sunday on a desolate stretch of beach along the northern gulf coast of Mexico. No survivors were seen. tests that it never "tampers .-----------, THE BIRCH society'• mem bership is smaller in th1 Northeast than any otbe1 region in the United State: which Welch attribute! to th< high density of "institution of higher leaning." Conse quently the society maintain· duplicate headquarters In Sa1· Marino, Cslif., to aervlce 1ucl Western strongholds as Lo Angeles, Seattle, Salt Lak City, Phoenix, Ariz. and th entire state of Idaho -whlc· has the highest per capit· ratio of Birchers in the COUil try. The wreckage might be that of the Fair Morse, a 120-foot schooner that left Port Isabel Thursday carrying between 12 and 15 persons on a trip to Veracruz, Mex.ioo. The cout Guard said tt woull send two cutters and three helicopters to the wreckage, 29 miles south of the mouth of the Rio Grande, early today. Space Se sslo11 ZVYOZDNI GORODOK, USSR (UPI) -Americ;m Astronauts ard Soviet Co.5m> nauts wm will m~ in space in 1975 held their first get- together on Russian 90il to- day at the space training cen-- ler 20 miles east of Moocow. The Americana got their first closeup look at the SoyuJ. space vehicle that will dock with an American Apollo craft two years from now. They also began trying out a few "'ords of the Russian they have been learning In prepara· tion for the joint mission. with the world of politics," liberal watchdogs such as the Institute f<r A m e f i c a n DetOOCracy and G r o u p Research, Inc., say that the society's polklcal track record is "most impressive." - In the interview, Welch said that Wat<rgate confirmed his theory that there was a "consplracy" in Washington "against the American people" aimed at restricting individual freedom and pro!>" erty riKhb. Welcli predicts, however, that the society's most suc- cessful recruitment effort in · recent years has been among America's youth. In 1970, the first John Birch Society camp in Wenatchee, Wash., was attended by some 80 youths. Last summer near-- ly 1,000 youths attended camps in live states. Although many of the campers were origlnally nm-Birchers, the so c i e t y claims that 90 percent of the YOW1I people enthusiastically enrolled before they returned home. Con.spiracy Projected SPOKANE , Wash. (UPI ) -Charles R. Armour, Western regional governor of the John Birch Society, says a national and worldwide conspiracy is under way lo bring the Y.'orld Wlder a totalitarian government. Armour said in a talk here Americans are being -taught to fear global warfare with the Russians and as a result are being "conditioned to accept peace onll!_ on Communist terms." • He said he believes the C.Ommunlst rn i 1 i t a r y threat, primarily from Russia, has been created by the U.S. government through financial a n d technological aid lo the Soviet Unio11. DAVID AVERY, a 28-year-L----------' old member and former The i,nfluence of the Joh Birch Society extends fs beyond i t s card~arryin membenhlp into a networ of "front" org&nµIUons 1uc1· as Support Your Local Pollet· MOTORCEDE (MoVOl\lO"I t Restore Decency) -oppooln" "inunoral sez. educafton i schools," TRAIN (To ReoloJ . A m e r I c a n lndependenc· NOW) -against foreign a: and trade with "Communist nations, and the Blrcb Ta Reform Movement to figl personal . income tax in u· United Statea. , Welch told the Monitor tlu a "smear campaign" tn 19ti spearheaded by such "al versaries" u Prealdent NlxoP Nelson A. Rockefeller, an William F. Buckley Jr. !orce his group to 10 undergrotlll and "develop ad hoc con mittee support a m o n : · nonmembers." Tank• Patrol ATHENS (UPI\ -Troops in tanks patrolled the streets to keep the peace today and Greek police rotmded up suspects from three days of riots by workers and students demanding th<: overthrow ol President Geo r &e Papadopoulos. Marine from Nashua, N.H., attributes the s o c i e t y ' s popu]arity among youth to the "moral revvlutlon on campus" and the "growing criticism of the Establishment." Haircut or Fi ·ne ~ Dec. 81 1958, Welch, ooetlme ll<bnoot c a n d y manufacturer, began a two.- day 1',lk at a secre_t meeting of bualnessmen In Indianapolis Choice of Youth From Wire Strvtces piw> __ .. .,,~. ""''°""°"'mllEl .. -Di,......,.,,.UI_.,. Traffic Judge John Salllvan ~ ot' Peoria, 111. gave Dennh L Rutledge, 16, ht.I choice - a haircut or a $100 fine. Coed Toilets 1 Head Bett.er Than 2? Capitol News Servi ce SACRAMENTO -"0 tempora, o mores" cried the Roman statesman Cicero of the disquieting habits of his countrymen nearly a century before Christ. "Oh the times, the customs!" an amateur Latin s udent might translate. And a moderlf Cicero~might well echo those famous words today as the stale of California is on its way to providing '1unlsex" toilet facilities throughout Its patk system. ALREADY ~T THE Silverwood Lake Stale Recreation Area, nestled in the scenic San Bernar- dino Mountains near Crestline, men and women hav~ been exercising restroom functio ns in multi~ unit •facilities with no signs denoting which sex should go wher~. iPark of!icia!s say the unisex toilet facilities at Silv'erwood Laite are a pilot project for the rest of the California Stale Park System and that in- stailation at other park units t~u!4 become stand- ar~ pi:ocedure. ' • -They add t.liat few complaints have teen noted and that momentary confusion over Ute absence or gender signs soon gives way to ~th{r unconcern or heightened need by the park vtsitor. MAINTENANCE WORKERS are pleased with the new structures because. although the facilities are a bit harder to clean than the sex·separated ones , they do not have to \Vail long periods of time for the restrooms to be vacant. And !rom the user's standpoint, espetially the ·female users, waiting In line !or a tum Is a thing of the past. The either-sex rooms have a push but- ton lock system and a central drain that can be serviced at any time without customer inconven- · lence. ,. "Just how much do you value your long hair'?" asked the judge. "Gee, I don't know," said RuUedge, who admitted driv- ing without a license. "I'll give you until Dec. 18 to determine its value," said the judge. "If you return to this cow1 with a reasonably short haircut -not a middl~ aged one like mine -but ( PEOPLE reasonably short , T'U dismiss the charge. "If you re\urn as you are now, the fine will be $100." * Navy Cmdr. Raymond A. Vobden. a fonner prisoner of war, y.·as granted a diVoJce from his wife of 13 years. Vohden and iE:witness 1estified that Mr en was in love with ano n. Vohden. 43, who was held captive for eight years by the North V iet namese , testified that he learned dur- ing late tm while a captive that his wife filed for divorce in Arkansas, an action she later dropped. · He said he learned or tho suit from a newspaper clipping tacked Ito n builettn board by the North Vietnamese. • The energy short~ge in- directly caused a four-hour delay !or See. Charlea H. -~~~.;;- GIVli POOR MI LEAGI? CAN HELP IUY A N 7J DATSUN AND SAVE ,., COSTA MESA DA TSUH 1'41 HARIOI I LYD. C:.M. 540-641 0 THI CARBUROOR SHOP Perey (R-111.) during a lligl from Washington to Qllcago. Percy !cit the capital ' 7:30 a.m. on the Amert.er Airlines fiight 563 but wht. the plane arrived at O'Ha1 International Airport it w: forced to circle 30 minult because of fog. The pllot a nounced the plane was Cl rying Utile excess fuel -d1 to the energy shortage -ar would have to land somewbe; to refuel. The nearest cle; spot was St. Loui!. 300 mili southwest. Percy arrived in Chicat five hours lfter I e a v i n \Vasfiington, normally a on hour trip, ·and said, "I Imo there's an energy crisis, b1 " LEASE DIRECT! .................... .._ e All p•p•kn Melle &.n .. 11 : Tntckt ' • ,.,.. L.H. Cen . ~ ' •.c. .. ''"" ..... . . ....... ,e.., .... r.m -s.mc. ,_"'''" ' l.f.I t iJfl ! SPECIAL '74 MUSTANG II $7520 11 ... + l'L All S.....n ....... 16 Me11t• 0 .1.L O• A,,. CrMlt C:otl ... Cllff er JIM Ml .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • - t • J f OAJp PILO T Monday, Novemt>tr 19,J'f. AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS 1 • I !£11\eeU!. 1)0C11JR: A l'ROJ!'C'f iM IN 11JA11N& 5HAU. RroUl~E A SOOE Of MANUAL J,.AllOR. llE!Nfr OF A 1)fCJJ)f:D~<) Ai;S1'H!rr!C eeN'Ti I l'M LOA'ill 10 Mf:E::11HE uO!l'S PJIYSJCAl. l'flMNl'5. • sc:R1eBLe !oe.R1t>&Le ~10~1..E ftH'( SOGGf51lON5? .. ' .-----' MUTT .AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY o· o·"' '<'-o ~ y.,0' \ I I _, WELL, l GUESS THE HOL IDAY SEASON JS ALMOST HERE .• f!AVE '<Ill.I 'IRIEP Al1VER11SJNG FOR HeLP, J.D'fSA UJCK? by Dou9 Wll4ey n5""°""!W ACT"'' IN Tl4!> n-.s ~IAL -, Al..L 1 .!!Q!jj by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller THAT MAN A LWAYS PL.AYS SANTA CLAUS AT THE DEPARTMENT STORE AND HE'S PRACTJCJNG- HIS HO-HO-HOS , TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLB PEANUTS ACROSS 4-* Where Cairo ls: Abbr. 1 Telephones 45 Punch:2- 6 Tide words 10 Shopping -·· 48 Old Greek 14 A1ien city-state Saturday's Puule Solved: country 51 Bert or Ringo -r.r.+'il*- 15 Feminine 52 Cert1ln rr name colors· 18 Title of 54 Prepared for Athena a race 17 Limitation 58· One that Is 18 Row adored 19 --Spangled 69 Ending with ~~tlf~~ Banner med and com n i_, 20 U1e up 61 Tu1k mat1rl1I E c T o 22 "The 62 Irish lake T H £ H E E S E Bartered 63 Wise man Bride" 64 Taut compoaer 65 Transfer 2'4 Become propeny violenl 66 Walked 26 Brings to 67 Long narrow bear openings 21 Time keeper 30 Above: DOWN 10 Power of 38 Print of 1 control woodcut 11 Church area 39 Coun11y lo'.trr 12 Bent from the 42 Rushed venical: Brit. -violenl!y 13 "----43 Lose Theme" \italitv 46 Distant JUDGE PARKER PrefiK 31 Foremost position 21 "Mississippi 1 Phonogr•Ph record 23 Be 2 Preposition triumphant 47 CharacteristiCI 48 Caught •ig ht 32 Muscle impairment 37 Wo1k: in physics 38 Keepfrom · hlppenlryg «t US govt. ••cv .Ct Worm11nd ftlm:2 • f d . 43=~· > 3 Tennil acort: 25 Sees the 2 words world "' •.• : ••• oll 27 Musictl sign 5 Roman god 28 Air: PreflK 6 Si.tlonery 29 Barrel staves item 33 Got re- 7 Judge of established Israel 34 Shadow: B Periods of P1efi11 history 35 Othello's foe 9 Italian 36 W11n1 Gdwn che,se slowly of 49 Italian priut 50 Attuned: 2words · 53 01ntm1dt by use 55 "--· Nanette" 56 Atfirsf 57 Changes the color 60 Heve -··It it • MISS PEACH l(E~l.Yl SCHOOL. 1K1.~1 • i -~---­! ~nm>l'>.~L ! Ol'F1c~ 1(-~~ ·----" .DICK TRACY ., ® " ,, DOOl.EY'S WORL!> • SALLY BANANAS . ' · . • • AM, VES·P'LVMotnlf ROCK-ONE OF MY FA\\'.>RrlE FORMS oF /llOllfRN MUSIC! SIR, ll""-' oasr You t"1PUG/ll fVrr' STeRLING CMaRa<:TeR? t.JlillT PROOF HaveYoU?/\t6, a CHlcKeN THteF?RIDICULOVSI GORDO II· t'J MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS N!IT,..ell:, <::HliF. .IT'S " D<ll:l!.GT QJ.IOTI!.-. by Charles M. Schulz ... 81JT ·I ST"C DON'T TROST TH<IT FaST· Ta(.1(11\)G DUC>e. b Ro9er Braclflelcl ' OID 1\lE . ;UGJ.ITS .' JUSfGO DIM IN HliRE? 'fl'AM •• OUR z;AMp 01' KNoWLED6E IS SLJffl'R- ING F(l()M OVliRUlADl'P Cll'CUITS By Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola ' by Fer.d Johnson .,.,,._ __ _ -·--i.fSt..l.O, ._~ F>USSIAIJ • f'MBA!iSY? llC> ~l/<:S'TO RECOMMBND SOMl'GoaP COMMON STOCKS ... 0 by R09er Bolen 'I'M <51.AD HI; c~e~eo THAT' (.JP. _.,,.... __ Tc:..:.H:=E'-;;GIRLS . "Tbal'I llOlldac -,.. 1boold be mud Harry 11 tlte mondlg.u DENNIS THE MENACE · AB of po tnp· ·on tbt ·m Th• c dal i; 1 KC Cham mem ' l T I l:IO M!f! . -· • * b • .. .. . 1:11 ' 0 - -. • -- , · · .TONIGHT'S ' , TV· IDGlillGHTS -. ' l ABC. 8 8:00 -Monday ght Football. A pair of powen collide as the un ten Minnesota Y!t-. lnp ·tat• on Western DlvW l'WUlel'llp Atlallta on the. latter'• turf. • BY'The Auoclaled Prtia 9. STEVE MILLER Billboard'• hot reeords for The Joker, C.pltol. the week etldlng Nov. i4 ·as IO. t'!IEECI! & C \ONG they appear in next week 111 Los qocrunos, Ode. 1 i11110 of Billboard magazine: EAS.Y LISTENING .:to!' !llNdLf'.'I 1. T)IE MOST BF.AUTIPUL DAIL'/ PILO J 7_ m\'-11 •ll-•; •• i ' ~-'·~!; .. ,. ~ COltOHA DEL M•ll "OKLAHOMA CRUDE" (PG) 7 & 10:45 P.M. '.1HE REIVERS" (PGl 8:51 ·NBC D 8:00 -B.C.: The nt ThanblMng.' The comic strip charactllrs In Ir first TV spe. qat 8!' the caye men set out to. ca~ture a'tuttey.· , KCET ID 8:00 -Vintage Cinema Shorts. Charles Champlllt hosts this p0tpourr1 qt ruin, mU!lc ahd I , P'l;J !>TOGRAPH -GIRL-<1iarlie Rich, Epic. Ringo S,tarr, Apple. !. TOP' OF THE WORLD For ~:!'d!:·a:;,llff 2.-KE_F.P ON' TRUCKlN' -Qarpentcr, A&ll.1. Sched1i1le membership appeal!. · -Eddl•.~1'1. Tamla... i:;:;;;;;;;~~~~~~~I 3. TOP 01" TilE WORLD 3. WE MAY NEVER -Carpenters, A&M. PASS TIHS WAY AGAIN -,, 1;s1 4. SPACE RACE -. Billy .Seals & Crofts, W _a r n er Prest.on, A&~ . Brothers. 5. HEAR'l'B!!AT-IT'S A 4: I GOT A NAME -Jim LOVEBEAT -De Franco Croce, ABC. Family ZO Century. 5. PAPER ROSE S 6. MIDNIGHT TRAIN TO Marie Osmond, MGM. GEORGIA -Gladys Knight 6 . PH 0 TOGRAPll & the Pips, Buddah. Ringo Starr, Apple. 7. JUST YOU & ME 7. LEAVE ME ALONE - 1884 Newport Cos to Me .1 SS2 HELD OVER . Dally Fro"' 4:30 Sot./51111. Froll'I 1.Z:JO "BIG FOOT" (G) "NORTH COUNTRY" tv DAILY LOG Qlicago, Columbia. Ruby Red Dress -Helen Red-1~~~~~~~~~~"'1 8. PAPER ROSJiS dy, Capitol. 11.farie Osmond, MGM. 8. AIJ... I KNOW 9. GOODBYE YELLOW G8'lunkel. Colwnijla. BRICK ROAD -Elton John, 9: JUST YOU 'N' ME MCA. Chlcago, Columbia. 1 IO. THE LOVE I LOST IO. CORAZON -Carole ll!l-Sonae Se..Vice Par1 1 -Harold Melvin & King, Ode. t.llBCQtCIJ)(D-. lllr IOto The Blue Notes, Philadelphia COUNTRY SINGLES Mcolllll 1 IOll'·•llll._ """* Barry Primus mashes a plate or hors d'oeu~ into lntemational. ti ''"klo .... -lJr<r -the fac• of Vincent Beck as J essica Walter watches '.TOP LPS !. THE MOST BEA\JTIFUL -~M91ltlt ::,:,~'J:..il\'w1i!; lo '° In this scene from tonlgbt's·episode of.Medical Cen-I. ELTON JOHN -Good-GIRL -Charlie Rich, Epic. H~alll•-DID\!* -\er, airing at 10 o'clock, on CBS, ·channel 2. bye Yellow Brick Road , MCA. Ri~, ~~~ER ROSES lo: (CJ - -lo· 2 . THE WHO -11._,,_ -· ..,1 ~~ c..o-Quadrophenia, MCA. Marie Osmond, MGM. ; ~JI,.~~·~.::. At· ~;.ti;:~~~ An t'h c th k D 3. RINGO STARR -ii.~'7~o.G~L GO~E """J.":~-· ;."':'l~i;-...-:17'; 0 er u ac ue ~0·itJ~iNG STONES -liot?.~YRJ,:msmNE !Llf,l!J>---.-,___-----=~ . ~ , Goats Head Soµp, Rolling 5. SING ABOlll' LOVE - .. ,,.. D mK~IM NABORS . Do-1· Dick· .~a-"''e· tt Show?. Sto~":n~I CROCB -Don't Lynn And<rson, Columbia. =.''" -* GUES~ T-HT .(' ' ~ 'T 6. SA WM!LL -Mel Tillis, '.. vnN Mess Around With .nm, ABC. Monday Evenlni MARLON IRANDO "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" + AllH Fu11t's "WHAT DO YOU SAY TO A NAKED LADY?" lot!I In Color tXJ (Cl CllNI -D(Jlllo -.._ ---'d · too" 6 N=IL DIAMOND M()M. c->"C.-....,. ..,..M • ......,_ ... 41_. NEW YORK CAP!-... -; '!lldwe'reoons1 enng, . . ·~ -l[~~:•••••~ll~~~~~~~~!!~ fl h•ll•••• IMal It •ut • t11e ,.,_ ,., ..,_ producer of ABC-TV's "Dick· An ABC spokesman declined JOnattui,n Livingston ~gull, en..... be .... ti 1 ,_ w.am camt Show" says the to comment, saying negotia-Columbia.·_ ·lO 111pi•1 ...._ •l•llf .._ lit lloAa 111' rirtll -network had propOsed broad· tions WiUt the ~year"ld talk 7. ALLMAN BROTHERS l.'f~LCI),..._ ;,~:ci:,w...,:=, rx. castingCavett'slate-nighttalk show host still were in prog-B1-ND -Brothers & Sister&, FA MILY iWIN CINEM A - .. -,. i,(dr1)'IS-fr•J1kSIMtri. show only one night every reas erxl that not}?.inl 4efjnite C3p8n.·coJrIMn. CROCE. _We & _.. •• ..._ .._ ,...,. . two weeks, starting 1 n had been agreed on yet.. :2., ":':. ...., C'C) <,2tr) "'Clld' • January. ' Cavett was reported by his Times, ABC. LMll lllr CW' <-> 18 -¥mlril Cavett's crlt'.ically acclaimed office to be in Washington , Ir;;;;;;~~~~~~~~ ' . . ~ ' -. CINEMA I · "OKLAHOMA C•UDE" • -. 111':; = ""'· .but low-rated 90-mlnute show D.C., on personal business p.nd Liiie ...... bin Wit began in December 1969 as unavailable for comment. 1:lt11!1ll.. --r-(2ir) "Ir. Sii •11:1" a livHiight-a-weck program. Gilroy, who declined during lillilctw.... utl") &4 -.. C. Sc.rt. It was cut back to ttl current the negotiations to make -(Cl (llll ....... an•--one-k-a-month aletus last public Cavett's proposals to ""',;;=~-· ,. .. il!8Clll!Dh• lltl llt JanTbouari:~_, __, J h .\BC, said the network didn't ...,, lfJ u.r .,._-..De,.,..._.•~ ..-iuw s .,. ..... ucer. o n cite the show's ratings when LI Do NEWPORT BEACH lNTltANCl TO llOO ISlt b7l-8lSO "SCARECROW" (R) wltn 0-HkkmMI •!Id Ai PldM Ako "THE LAST OF SHEILA" IPGI "JUNIOR ION~EI" IPG-1 CINIMA II 1 a..a., ...,.... Illa ,..... ., -. Gilroy, described Cavett as it proposed cutting i~s number ... ..... ... M lilt•_.. ti .,. ..._. "surprised" at ABC's offer oJ appearances ~ M1DNtT1 •ocK sH w E .., "'..._, ""llliwl lloll4w. ..~........... we AA_,_,... that Nor, he "said, did ABC say TON10HT1 -wooo1TocK1" '"THE iRISTOCtAn" tGI • "SONG OF THI SOUTH" Cl)-., ·-""II ""'"-· ~-~·-I~~~~~~~ f1it:ic u. J_ l diiot 1 ........ Ml•ll. II llO'I' with the show's track record it wanted to reduce the.I= CIJ)lttt;....._... o...,.lfPwll:. for this year and the response number or shbws because or •---1 u ._ from the audience and the it.s ratings. He said the : --. ii-that this -w not hap-network told cave\t its pro-.... .._ .. a (9 Cl)) fll M141ctl c11t1r pen. posal was nlade because ABC 7:•9WMlf WwM " ..._ """ ~11 fOi" lfi"r1" ......, Wlltll "I guw we were all wanted to increase t be ·tin;.., GrlHltl, ,.. .._.,., ......, u • al &ltt ...,. lll1wl4 11.1rprised by it," he said, ad-number or separate specials ;=:::O.':!~,.....a. ::.,1111.•,:-.=-..:: ding tllat Cavett hadn't re-It now runs as part of Its i.u ..i tL -.--It. loot -"'Dr.•-· · jfcted ABC's oiler. "I woutd . "W'~ World o I , Enter-, o --fnll ~.. ID'-,..........__ ' "gy tllat counter-propo'81S tainment" !ate-hou~f°'F.l!t•ot\ ell! cMlcl IDf 111J4911s 1.•,. ...... from'OW' aide have been made which the Cavett shoW is·dne .. ....,...,.,. .. ,. .,. • ft • 1 • ...,, and that ABC ls considering segment. ' -~· t1sutr n 1 I "II• .. 1M 0.-·-;=::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:::::;;:::::;;::;;::;;::;;;;;::;;::;;::;;:;-.j .. pol -'""-·-1 "'" .... 1111 -" • -~ Ctr '1•:1 .-wMctiw ... WldlltMlde ~i:i11 f" BO.-. i:~::-r.. w.:;;~:.-ll§c~~~'Z~ .... ,,_ .... , ....... "'"-... , .... •1.'l\T!.!i~~1:...-i:: =-~ - It .. tM $lll'lal "' • ... .... ....,.., ... b ,.,.... ~ M.,.I Oi1t1 11 ........ LM 0. ; ::.,! =-:~tt u. . ....,. tf U:tl •• • 1 ;"JIM SB.C.ClrtboftSlanln ~~ *\Tho~lt*lal( ='·~=-,Jl!t..~"' LC. ::.'::.:" . ...... ........ . lll.."'"- tw l.C! llll tlf .... 11 .-...... IT\,--=.-........... _._ .., =~·~ ~ -11:11•-•-llol!IJ •-(Cl"t;;...,, 111111:11e!8tlltelllll ... -'.fi A ........... (ctm) ~ CQ 111 iiii"ffiit fllll Cl:rlllll" ... ""8.ElklSolllmtr. ~·~ l'llllwt Wll'*. v G Clly Gl'lnt Finds "The • (Cl '1111 -Mii 1111 * Gins Is G_., 1.-.J~ 'K-.""''" -•t '•-t-(Cl(lllol DQll [l)i!!l &l --............. (QOll) 'll-ctrJ Sl:M Allin b (lllSl tlost." -)Ill -~-"';;"=~-· ,, ,_,_......... ..~ IJto - ......... ""' -l ~i--, .!!. IJto lo--. ' __ ..,.,,., -~ '*'""'" - -(Cl "1111 .. ,_ .. 1111 ,., (at1 Ill -.. -(-) 'SO--UI -· ·----·-·-THl llOIT llNIATIONAL ilMU Of ANJMATtD fllMl lVlJI HfN ON THl llLVllll ICllUN AN IVY fJUI PllUENTATION "'""BUCK ROGERS ... umE RASCALS ...... , -' -... Ctll/DOM/ JO ~ . ". . ... -~ -''•• Ctll/DOM/ JI • • '' • 1. ·' ~riwtUM I ' . ,,. ,, .. , ' .. , . _ .. -. :/l~O'UM .' . ,,. ' .. , . ' ' . 7:ll & !:JI Eec• 1 ... 1 .. IUD THU.Tll Hw. lcll.~J"°tJt6 ....... 1"91S.llnd .......... ,.rd "THI WAY WI ,VERE" (PG) "'SOUND OF"'MUSIC" .... .,CHAlLOTTl'S WU" II;) •40 CAaAtt" IP~l .... ~ "IUnllFLIU ARE NEE'' t ~I "DOtf'T LOOIC IN TMf 1,t,SIMINT" "'T,t,Ll!I TMAT WITWl!SS MADNISS" "LAST NOUSI Ofil TH• L~l"T" llll "COffll" Ill ... IHI MACI"', IR) -,, n.e I Ktftll '9cbli i111N11tu11 lllb LAST TWO DAYS VILU.-On1119 .,,..... C:INIMA Vll!JO--Mlltlon VJtlO ....... Ml!SA~Mlt M-.a •1551 CINIMA WIST 11-WtslmlnJt. _, .... __ .......... -.11 ............ ,j,_,,,fe•:JtO•*>••:•• SPECt .. l LtMiTEO l!MGAGEMEHT -NO P...SSES ACtf'PTEO Hetd Ov... 2lld Wtek! "Jl!SUS "CHRIST SUPERSTAR" (G) "fAHO THE DRUM SLOWLY" (HI •' Mtll In COIOrl Hernrl "Dlft'l LOOtc: IN THE IASEMEHT" "TALES .WITHfSI MAOfilfSS" htfl II c.e.-1 Clll Julie Andrews "MAltY POPPINS" -p1u-J11111y Whitaker Ctl-51t H1lln ''TOM SAWYER" lotll Ill C:1tor1 MANN THEATRES . . 14th RECORD WEEKI w .. 1cday1 • 7:30 -t:ao Sat./51Hh • 1~30 • l ;JO 5:30 -7:30-9:10 THI WARMEST MiHT HUMAN COMEDY IN A, LONO, LONG TIME . GREAT BELLY LAUGHS loWl-Frl 7:~-t:Ci ' 10;\5 !-al •• Sun.-!:I.!. J:lO J:U-7:11D-1:«1 & 10; IS ONfMAtANO l+llL-....... -~~--6JJ.7601 m~~!.~zall ~~.nsi'""""'" IXCLUWI .. 1WO =yat:s C.t.NliilH l;lfll i r.1J>. tt;Rl>l>AA I ION "WISTWO•LD" INJ + .. IOYUNT 6111N" --o f(JIJN fAIN VA~lfl ... ~~ "Jew• Cllf'ltt $11penfot" IPQJ "il·oth.,r ~011, Sister Moo11" S,l,/S1,111, "Huclcl.O.rry ,11111" 11&2PM l•nC•I" ol.••· ... " ... •non 121·4070 VUt U 'iH!oltl e UiMU llOl.lt OK._ WESTWORLD (l'Gl SOYLENT GIEEN !PO) 1.~ o .... , ......... . ··-~ ..... JS..) 167·2•11 COPS AND IOllERS tN1 Ptus e THI GOOD GUYS & BAD GUYS (iJ'GI ,. 1 ... -... 1 ....... ' ; . ' • '::«.::~-::.,. S11 -1162 IWO ADULT MCMUt ROOM Of CHAINS Ill '"' 1111 IUNAWAY "' °""'""·-_.,._ S11-1n1 (Jj lCl---··-111 MASSAGE PAILOR Of '73 IX) PLEASURE GAME t><I N-'•-•r ·-.. S4S.Jlll T\ll 11\'MMI o MMD llCUil ...... -WESTWOIUI IN! SOYLINT GlllN"" s ... .,....,.,. . ' I C.o~lf."•.,. Off·t-'413•4$4f llOUILI tu.II & RllOll DON'T LOOK IN THE BASlMENT !') ASTHO 5 NT • n Goad Deed make the scene Sundays m the l1M!pij!!1ll ~~~-,lllJ:=...-=--••IUCUA=·~L=ll'~" !LUI'' I .. ). llfl hosts I........., of flM, ... .. lillllf ,._.. "THI 'OUTSIDI · AN" •• """'"""'"........ .... ""'Ill ...,. .... ~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~==~~=~~;;~~~~~~~::!t:~~;:::~;~~==~~=::::-------::::::::::======== I E 0111 sM , Cllll) '44 D I 01ltlfl. _,__ .. -~ -:(lllol "llolnol ...... 1•1•11•-.... {<n! '47-ht O'lrioo. ......... . 1:11 D llll (1)19 IUJll!lllJ Clio 1:11 D....., """ • llltlii I 1111 iliiili" P. L !:! ~ =• I 14 All 111IMltM a,eclal 1tl1vfltl l:U lllltlr. A ~ I 1111 c1111dhood """' _.,, ,,. c ... 1 ,,. . trlt!""'of""-1:1•-,:,~e, ...... , ... c•~> 'II . ...,.,__ --a- •• '1" Tuesday I r .... m=...;::• . I.Ml-Hit -( ... .,.._ , PW1 • A~RGARET .teM1 LOUl~IMTIGHAMT ANOll! OICIONSO~ _ -nit • "IOTLINf N" ......... •• >,,:::- .. I ()Wf\llll';<q. 1 l \I \1 \ 1 I '. 11 k .. • OUlllOI ....... , I 21td TOP MT'RACTION DEAN MANTIN '~HOWDOW~· ', tPOJ _.. •• 11 ...... ":I" \ .. - • y{l'S\·IMI • FOR I rt s111e \1ead o~ ' o · ~~·t colors. ~a~. -. 3 pc. wood ~11ing spoon ~et paper towel holder, ice cream scwp, sc1ape1s, diet scale. spoon rest. tongs :.... KING Sin SRHTS · ~:~::~[ 4ss .. 10.99 Polyester/cotron blend needs little or no ironing. large choice of prints & solids in fitted styles. All first .... quality. funny Mon•ter POITER Kit REG. 3.49 211 Includes 32 broadman Jme, quick~ dry water color markers 1n a handy palette tray with 4 large posters. . ~=~~==~;,:)~and mme! 'fa:= "v~. Pl YESHR · ¥, ~3~ . IBBfltr:'. : · 'EG .. • I I:-~.':· J.41 'i'c . J lb . .comly .,;.,!~geni~·fill for toys, ... padding chairs: quitts, com:-- forteron.i much 111Jrt. • · • llADli ... SHAMPOO . ..;..._,,. ~~:.Tr 1.33 • Your choice of 4 or. tube or· 1 01. lotion. Controls dandruff and keeps hair clean. . -, Y, hp' heavy duty. high torque motor 1 • Top dependab1hty • Fnlly encased. 1 & insulaltd polystyrene shell, 1 RR. 41• , .1~ . O.licous cat food for your fnored , feline. Comes in several tasty as- sorted flavors. fantasti.c bargain! DUI IEG. ,_ICE 4 i.c EA. FOR' The great lasting popcorn treat a tun lo read Ji\'1 oz. ·OO•. Buy several al savings. .. _ .. ,, ' . . SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK. STORE HOURS1.MONDAY'fll1"11WEDNESDAY10 AM"TO; l'M -' - . • ' 1 • • · -.•' ISi YOUR CllDIT CAI ' COSTA MES .-1 .' ~. ~88 BRISTOL' ST. · . ft · ::i'C::~ i ,_~~-· ...... ~~~~~~~-· _,......,_,_'..,...... ....... ~s-·a_n~D-ie_~_o_F_r_e_e_w_a_v_:a_t_e_r_is_t_o_,1 , l.l.J1~CI~ ... ~·===·~==~!!!.!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;~~.~~ , • . • •• • F are l ' -. . ' . • -. • Meat's e What meat the PilgrilN had for !easting depended · m the bounty from the bunt. Whether Orange Coast resJdents have turkey, game, wild fowl or 1'08$t for · Thanksgiving this year will be determin- ed more than usual by the hll!h pl'ice or the traditional bird. • ' Cranberries, used either m apple cups or a festive cake, will keep the holiday : table looking familiar. APPLE CUPS WITH SPICED CRANBERRIES 3 01ps fres h or frozen-fresh cranberries 1 cup sugar 1 cup water 3 cinnamon slicks 12 whole cloves 6 medium size red apples Combine cranberries, sugar, water and spices. Simmer 10 minutes or until cranberries are tender. Cool cranberries In syrup. Remove cranberries with a slotted spoon. ·Using a sharp knife, cut apples ·into halves lengthwise using a zig-zag cut. Remove core and place apples cut-side down into cranberry syrup in a r~­ tangular dish. Leave apples in syrup and chill until ready to serve. Remove apples and drain. Fill apples with cooked cran- ... berries. Place filled apples around meat platter. CRANBERRY FESTIVAL CAKE ~ cup butter or margarine I cup sugar 2 eggs 21.~ cups all-purpose flour t teaspoon baking powder I teaspoon baking soda , Fancy _YeQetables Relished Fancy vegetables and tangy relishes are hallmarks of the ·harvest spread. · 'lbese suggestions will make good ac-- companiment.s fur whichever meat you choose tO hlghllght the !e&l PILGRIM'S Y AMMt!NmON 2 cans (17-ounces each~ yams, drained and cut into Yz-inch slices % mediwn ripe bananas, sliced 1h cup inargarine ~1-teaspoon salt 11~ qip light corn syr,up ~ • "c0<.-on9f:i. l'.· .. .: # 2 ta~J is orange jui. . , • Air ~ 18yers of yamr and banana slices "ID a l~uart casserole ending with a laywiof yams.~ !.felt margarine. stir in salt, com syrup and oringe juice. Pour over y8m ·and ~s. Cover and bake at 375 degreea, for 30 minutes. Remove from oven. Carefully pour off some of margarine mixture into a cup. Pour Wer yams and bananas tQ baste. Sprinkle with coconut. ' Bake uncovered for about 10 minutes. or uQtil cocoout is browned. Serve in f portioCll. . • SPICED PICKLED ORANGES 6 oranges . 1 teaspoon salt \ . 2~2 cups sugar V4 cup light com syrup ~ cup water 1h cup vinegar 12 Y.ilole c10ves \\'ash oranges: place in kettle and 1 stick cinnan1on cover with boiling water. Add salt and boil 20 minutes. Drain : cover '>'ilh fresh boiling water ud boil for anoth er 20 _.,minut~ Drain well. Cut oranges into ~quarters;. · . . Combll)e sugar, corn syrup, water and vinegar; beet, stirring constantly, until·· sugar is dissolved. Add cloves and cin- namon; boil 10 minutes. Place orabge quarters in 2-quart casserole. Pour syrup over oranges, cOYer and bake in 30<klegree oven 1 '12 hours or until oranges are translucent. Store in covered 1-quart container in refrigerator. . . lit GRAPEFRUIT CHUTNEY ~Z cup cider vinegar t pound (211 cups packed) light brown sugar . 3 grapefruit 2 cloves gariic, mlnCed I cup cbopped onion 11~ cup chopped candied ginger I ~l cups raisins I teaspoon salt ¥4 teasJXlOD Tabasco peppei sauce 1 cup chopped nuts •,) cup cut dried aprirots , In large saucepan, combine vinegar and sugar. Stir over low heat until sugar,. dissolves. Peel grapefruit and wt into chun~. Add to pan with re- maining ingredients. Bring to a boil, · teduce heat and ·simmer uncovered ~for 1. hour « untft~thickened. Serve with lurkey, ham or lamb. Makes 1 qll3rt. , . VF.Gf;'.l'ARLE MELANGE 2 packages (tO ounces each) whole or cut green beans 2 tablespoons butter or margarine y, pound fresh mushrooms, sliced 6 slices bacon 2/3 cup finely chopped ooion 2 tablespoon.! nour 1 ~ teaspoons salt I ~! cups water, di vided 3 tablespoons wine or cider vinegar y, teaspoon Tabasco pepper sauce 1 can (8 ow1ces} water chestnuts, drained and sliced 2 tomatoes, cut in wedges 2 cups cooked barley Cook beans per package directions; drain and reserve. Melt butter iii large skillet; add mushrooms a,nd cook •Wltil tender. Add to beans. In the same skillet, cook bacon tm.til lightly browned. Drain bacon on paper towels, crumble and reserve. Pour bacqo ' drippings from skiliet, measure· 3; table- !IPl'QllS alid,n!lun\ lo sklll~t. Add onion, lo . drippings and 0>0k, over medium beat until 1"'1der, sl\ri'Uig frequellllY. Sprinkle with floor, "'881' and aall; ·mix until Gllion is coaled llDd floor Is moistened. Stir incl cup water, vinegar· and Tabasco; <:ook 1 over medium heat sthTing constantly, until mixture thickens and comes to-a boll . Add ·green beans, mushrooms, water, chestnuts, tomatoes and cooked barley. Add ll!maining I> cup ·water, mix lightly and heat about S minutes. Add beam. lllakes 6 to 8 servings. > Combinations of flavors epitomize the Thanksgiving buffet. Try yams with bananas, or green beans and tomatoes with barley or an exotic chutney combining grapefruit, ginger, nuts and apricots. -. ' . • c .y, teaspoon salt I cup buttennilk Grated rind of 2 medium oranges I cup fresh or frozen-fresh cranberries, chopped l cup chopped pitted dates 1 cup chopped ·walnuts Glaze: 1 cup orange juice 1 cup sugar Cream butter and sugar Wllil fluffy. Beat in eggs. Silt dry ingredients. Add dry ingredients alternately with but- termilk, beghming and endi_ng with the dry ingredients. • • Fold in orange rind ,' cranberTics . d3tes afl4 walnuts. Pour into a gr~ IOX4-, inch angel cake pan. Bake in a preheated slo\Y oven t325 degrees F.) ror J1/4 hours . Unmold cake onto a shallow pan or pie pan. l\.1ix orange juice and sugar until sugar is dissolved . Pour this mixture slowly over hot cake so that it is absorbed. Cover and let stand for 8 hours. ' Sprinkle with confectioners' · sugar. Garnish vo'ith cranberries. Ult into thi n slices and serve. if desired, with sweetened y,i'lipped cream. 6men • BEA ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor MM!MY, Mev1mtoer l,, 1'71 l"•N It • ,. • l • • -" . • Monday, Novemhtf' 19, 1973 ' . She . -Built Success on __ Average Needs • By LAUllIE KASP ER Of .. ~ PU" Stiff Adrien Arpel's s u cc cs s seema simplistic. M she explains it, her cos· meUcs firm, which sells pro- ducts In 300 stores across the country and 11 e~nndlng into ,Europe, has been bu.ilt upon lhe simple needs of the woman who is not so beautiful, or rich or talenled in buying and applying make-up ... like herself. She explained that \l'hen she graduated from high school at the age of 17. she couldn't afford to go to coUege during the day as she "·anted. Sh< needed a job (so she could go to school nights) but she didn't get one. Like many of her friends at the time, she decided tbe "right" make- up would improve h e r chances. She investigated some of the better knou11 New York cos· metic salons which offered ln· struction in the proper make- up and application for )'OUTlg women like herself. But they charged from $50 to $100. r\erl, she sought ad\·ice from sales girls at drug store cosmetic counters. But 1'1hen she found one u·ould recom· mend one color nnd kind ror her and another \\'OUld suggest the opposite, she knew this route didn't orier much help either. WHY UNAVAILABLE Why, she wondered. wasn't the needed help available to \\·omen. "There seemed to me to be 1 billion dollar lridastry and nobody was doing the service," she said. So she cashed in on it \\'ilh $400 baby-sitling money and opened a small shop selling different brands of cosmetics and allowing the customer lo "try before you buy." 'ntat quickly became sue- cessrul, especially after she 1 ~to rtured 1 ' her local newspaper for publlclty, so she aP!ll'Olched the New Jersey Hair League and asked lo put a Jmow[edgable girl in their shops to do customer's make-up. "Everyone recogriized the need to have total service," she said. Now, at the age of 18, she was into 75 stOres. But she also got married and her husband, successful . In business blmsell, didn't want his wife to work. She sold her bu s iness , . stayed heme and had a blby, who ls now her 10 year old daughter. But Miss Arpel •"Plained , she wasn't the kind who could !lay home for long. When a large ~Uc firm Offered her a job u preside!'lt, she, at the age of 20, accepted. NEEDS GUIDED And she continued lo let her own needs guide her business. She apperently wasn't great al applying make<Jp herself and she di.scovertd other women weren't either. 111 learned you don't teach a woman to be Picas.so ... You can't make her creaU,·e. You can 't make her talenled .11 JI a "'Oman puts her lipstick on straight, Miss Arpel claim- ed, !he's 11head Ot most others. So sh< created llnger- palnt make-up which merely "smears on." It was, !he said, another "immediate success.'' But neit she r ea l ize d ·American ~·omen s e e m e d more concerned "'ith covering up problems with make-up rather than clearing the m up • 'Lookers' Frustrate Salesman DEAR ANN LANDE RS: Do a lot or people a favor aOO print this. It's for those folks who are "just looking." I've been working in retail shops for 30 years. U I don 't know the score by no\v I never will. I .can tell a buyer from a "looker" a mile away. But some of the less experienced salespeople can't. friendly to e\·eryone wbo walb Into a store whether he buys or not Is going lo run a bigger book In tbe long haul but sometimes she bakes cookies for ~m. No charge. Our oldest daughter baby-sits for us and !or a young mother who recenlly 11161 her husband. Sometimes she is poid with money and other times 'vith words of appreciation,· but she doesn't feel Wlderpald either way. wit~ proper skin care. "\\-omen don't ever really lake ca_re of their skin.'' she charged. But even lltls, she Uplalned, couldn't be blamed . on the woman since . there w a 1 n ot h ing between th e dermalologlst and the skin care jar, whi~ may have two lines saying it is for dry or oily skin. So now her firm is taking the intermediate role. "l hap- pen to feel that we're the RN of the cosmetic field," 1he said. Stores carrying her line now For the womon who cores.,. also oller her facial irtatment and skln analysis by machines which help the counololocJJt detennlne which tnlk'l'/P' ore best suited !or the flldlvlduel. ' •i'lbere'a no magJo. There's just logic," sate!, Min Arpel or the machill .. which steam, bnlsh, vacuum and read· die dryness or olllneu o! the aldn. Thert's also good l>tWJ>ess In i.t. ''Women are glad to •pend money on make-up'1 she 11ld during a recent demonstration at Roblnaon'a, "u tong u they know It ii right for them." • Do Something ~nt for the Holidays! ' . f o.ke o «Mine Of JR, fot lflot nollcMbl• diH•-•· o...lop )'Ollf own IMt.id11C11lly olllll '"'Pf-"°"' OPSMOfOfl(• Ml~Y & notvroUy In o u11iq11e ... n1oflment 11io1-k1 for yOll. E"ID'f Ille ~ldoyt lfl0t• lhon • .,.rt Coll today l•r o c_,ti..,•ntory -IP' & helldoy cowie uh.dvl•. A l•owtilwl Wo1t0Go •.• John Robert Powers School• lo• Womr11 ol All A~•1. It's no crime to walk into a store and browse. Many shops encourage it. But it isn't fair to tie up a salesperson for 30 minutes trying on everything in the pla ce just to kill time. Our cruldren are richer for having learned that famil y members help each other and expect nothing in relurn. In OIANGI 3Town &Country •S47-8228 this way they learn to help others. '---------'-----== That salesperson might be on com· miss ion. While he is fooling around \\ith And .isn't this what brotherly love isJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii.;iiiiiii!~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij all about?-RICll BUT NCYr WEAL'111Y ' MRS. WELTY · you. he may be losing important com.. missions on serious customers. IN AUSTIN f ' to btlieve lbat tyiag dally chores to • IJ,r... owers Coast Couples Recite Vows So p~ase tell your readers to play fair. [[ they are "jusl lobklng," it's perfectly OK. But have the courtesy to say so.- F ALLrNG ARCHES Dear /.reb: I'm ·sure you Imo~· your busioess better than I do but some "lookers" turn lnto buyers. ~loreover, lbe 1ale1person who Is colU'teous and DEAR ANN LANDERS: I do not agree that .. ao long as children . get an allowance anyway'' they should get paid tor doing chores around the house. -The "what's in it for meu attitude is all too prevalent in our society. \Vhy should we promote it by paying a child for cleanffig up his GWn roon1? Our son \\-ollld no sooner expect to be paid for taking out the family garbage than I would expect to be paid for cooking a meal. }le doesn't expect to be paid 'for laking out the ga rbage for the elderly lady next door either, DEAR R. BUT NOT w., I bappeo 'YVl .. ..... !J Fl a child 's allowanc< Is a good way to /I rt -{] tepcb the rtlalloosblp bel\\'een "·ork, "1" responsibility and rewai ds. There are allll many things a cbild can do for ••hicb he gets nolhlng mo~ than warm lbanka. Aad every parent sbo~ld see to it th al bis child ge ts those opporlunllles . 9596 Hamilton Av•. htwttll ,, .... llflt & ...... ,4 HUNTINGTON BEACH Telephone -963-3266 Custom Tlianksgiving Floral Gifts McJNTYRE-DUNCAN Beverly Duncan and Michael Mcintyre, both of COsla Mesa, exchanged wedding vows dur· lng ceremonies in t h e Orangewood BapUst Church, Garden Grove. Their parents are f\1r. and Mrs. Dow Duncan o! Costa Mesa, Louis McJntyre and Mrs~ Eva Mac Mcintyre of Lawton, Okla. Attendants were L i n d a . Gwt, Cindy Mayhugh, ·Sarah W--afters, Diane Bunge, Christy Kesslck, D. J. Duncan, Gary Pierce, Ron Simmons, Don Roberts and Todd Simmons. The bride is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and her hu.sband was educated in Lawton. They are residing in C:Osta Mesa. WELTY-REAUME Former Lidotte, Sharon Anne Reaume was married to James JUchard Welty durtng double ring rites in Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, Ne wport Beach. Performing the ceremony were Msgr. John Dume and Rev. John J. Healy. Parents o! the newlyweds are the Arthur Reaumes of Miami who fonnerly lived on Lido .Isle .and the John Weltys of San Diego. ~!usic was pro vided by the. Mitchell Boys Singers. Brida1 attendfllits we re Miss Gaye Reaume 8nd the Mmes. oleffery CQst, .. Steven Tate, Gary Sable '19<1 Neil Bru- ington. · Jack Welty was the best mari, and ushers were Ron Cady, Bill Cheng, Larry Yost, Mike Sund, Rori and Pat Reaume. The bnde is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and California State Universi- ty, San Diego where her hus- band earned an MBA. Sbe pledged Alpha Chi Omega and he is a. member of Kappa Sigma, American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the CSlifornia State Society of CP As. Your Horoscope Fund Leo: Accent on Ideas· Drive TUESDAY, NOV. 20 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Caution, patience now are twin allies. 1Ho!d off on legal com· mitments. Look b e y o n d surface lndlcatioil.5 fOr hidden meanings. One who spins tales of romance may have ulterior motive. TAURUS (April :!).May 20 ): Stick to mainstream. Leav e sensationalism to o t h er s . Display ability to handle 1espomibllity. Older individual could open door of major op- portwtity. Maintain steady pace. GEMll'<l (May 21-June 20): What was smooth emotional sailing could run into a squaU. No one promised you a rose garden. Know that and act Opportunities may be plentiful grown-up. Member or oppOsite but you can't be everywhere Opens sex tests, wants assurance and at once. Know it and don't , y,·ould love . tq be "spoiled'.""'-~a.tter forces. M~~Y J?OW ex;·· 'fl'. o v em b er has been CANCER ('June 21.Jul y 22 ): h1b1ts. wa~ or ~h~~ awa'f. des1gna'ted National Epilepsy , . . Pull 1n f1nanc1al reUlS. Month and the Orange County Don t fear revL!llon. Pohsh LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Chapter or-the Epilepsy Foun- your work. Get rid of the You may receive unorthodox ~aUon or Am~rica is. preparing superfluous. Tear down for assig nn1ent. Scorpio person its annual drive to 1nforn1 the purpose ~f rebuilding. ~et on could be involved. Feeling ol. pu.?lic ~bout the disorder. more solid gro~. J?or1 t f~l restriction could actually be . l':lahonally, about f o u r Y?~rself. See sUuahons, m· a test or ch a 11 e n g e . m11l1on .people. ha\·e th i s dtviduals as they· are. Indications point to successful neurological disorder. which LEO· (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Ac-conclusion or eff<?rts. can re~lt f~m head injuries cent is on development of SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): of various kinds as well as ideas. What appears a mere You could gain access to other ~owi:i an~ unknown whim could be developed into -privileged information. Key is c~uses, said V1.ola A-flller , viable concept. Aquarian is to analyze. Piece together bits d~~tor of the ~1ety. Jikely to be in picture. unti l whole picture emerges. ~wledge IS the. theme Relative who has hunch should Utilize natural ability to of Epilepsy ~1ont_h ~~is _year, be heeded. Be receptive. . analyze. and our sloga n is Epilepsy VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· :-the more you know about Dec. 21): Make peace on it, the more you want to help.' domestic front. Check Carnation Arrangement in Bud VaH Fru to 1st 50 customers with this Id. We Have. What You're Looking For • VELVET FOG HAIRSTYLING 8466 Indianapolis Ave. Huntington Beach 536-1829 -socials Fill Club Calendars possibility of remodeling. c::=:::::::::::::::::==:=:=d;===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:;;=, Make home a more com-1 r Gi~ Wrap Auxiliary volwiteers of Sad· dleback Community Hospital again will offer a Christmas gift wrap service to benefit the hoopital. Beginning f\1onday, Nov. 12, the service in Sears, Laguna Hills Mall, will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 P.'m., Monday through Saturday, and fron1 noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays. AARP The Huntington B e a c h chapter of the American Association of Retired Persons will meet at l p.m. Wed- nesday, Nov. 21, in the Murdy Community Center for election and installation of Officefs. PWP The Orange Coast Chapter o( Parents Without Partners will transform the Costa Mesa Country Club Into ·the at- mosphere of a Las Vegas casino Frklay, Nov. 23, at 7:30 p.m. Proceeds from the event will go into a scholarship fund. Farewell Meet · Job's Daughtefs of Bethel 321, Huntington Beach, will .honor Robiri Londeree, reUr- ing honored queen, at her farewell meeting Saturday, Nov. 24. Women Voters The Oranfe' coast 'League of Women Voters will diocuss fortable place. F a: m i I y member does deserve extra consideration. R e m e m b e r resO!ution about "nerves." finnative action dur ing the \veek tutor training course ii\ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. November unit meetings. teaching English as a second 19): Key now is selectivity. The Saddleback Vall ey unit language. See in light of re a 1 it y. will meet Mooday, Nov . 26, Those receiving certifica tes Overcome temptation to at 10 a.m. in Leisure WoNd were Ruth Wilson. Costa romanticize. Pisces, Virgo Clubhouse One. The evening Mesa; Anna Fouitz, l\1arjorie persons could be in picture. unit will meet the next day Horner, Liane Jansen and Joie One who holds rein of authori- at 7:30 p.m. in the offices La.Ferr. Dana Point; Kay ty is likely to be confused. of Virtue and Scheck, Newport Chinenti, El Toro; Ann Banks, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. BeaO:Wednesday, Nov. 28, the Betty Barwick, Mr. and Mrs. 18): What seems far away Irvine-Newport wtit will meet Selby Robinson and Jimmie is closer than might be a~ at the home ol .,.... Weed Faye Wimberly, Laguna parent on surface. Plan ahead and the N-~ ·w~ unit Beach; Louise Jones, Mission ; for' travel, educational project. will ""t""'·• . Viejo ; Lucienne Bowes , You could have opportunity · meet at 12:30 p.m. in f\1argaret Moulton, Carl a toued in your lap. the home o! Ginnie Gross. Polak, San Clemente; Vlrglnl.--P1ScE5-(Feb~!9'Miir<b2i!IT Co~ i::a~i~0ri;z9;,!; Kirkham and Ray J{ieman , · Finlsb rather than initiate pro} in the heme of ·se. Little San Juan C.pistrano, 8l)d ect. Study' Aquriu message. . Lucille Boman. You have chance to get ideas, ~ the Laguna · Beach urut New tralnlng Classes will be pi'Oclucls before more persons. ill meet Ill the jlome ol Helen offered In January for helping Moriey backil)g coWd come Summerell at 9.1~ l!_.m., ... ~. arealoreign born students.Im· from one close to you. Dig Tutors · P11>:e their English 181JiU8\e. ·, ·~tlh surlacy.lndlcations .. a variety of concerns tn. Certificates were presented ~·(f \ 'cludlDg housing, revenue shar-1o graduates of the Southl~~~~~=~'-iiiJ"'ijr"'fiii~"'fJf).aii,•i§i=~~~~~:ill l-.;m;· ;g,~d;•;y;car;;;e;cen;;ter;;•;an;;d;a!;·;;;Co~a;s;t ;L;i;te;;ra;cy;;;;Co;;unc;;l;l'•;;l;0-11 "•'• .,, 111 ""'" I SNIP 'N'·STITCH SHOPPE 1· .f'o!eign Jnn-igue:; Boutiqu~ UH Eost Co.sf~• CO.On• ~..i.-r ' - FRESH TURKEYS COAST Slftl MARKET . ~ Wt -...W YMr Plfdl"MI ....... -....... ,,... 173-3510 . 11411.COAIT """- ORONA OIL ? • ~. PhOn• 71-8050 ~ - SE\VER · SALE Sllur41y . -• Nov. 17th "" s~w1No o•t• 'TtL cH11srMA11 ' 'ti Cmpren tamJly and frtendl with gtfta you create rrom exciting: fabrics and trims. It's a great way t.o Saflf41Y iave !'lOney plus eaaler on ·the norvet than llghtlnf hOllday shopping ~. CONSJ.~.Y~.T IO . Nov. 24th For bit •nd ...... on' your I~~ easy to make caftans smi, 12-5 AT 2'TH IT•llT DETOUR HELP!! Due tn c:oNtnictlon on Lafqtllt 1n• 2tlh 8tNetl, "'"'" 110 tldtwalk&. p.utti1 -er blulotN tJ -tfla1iw tllt Ur. tba1 If &tiltr.U, OllT blqut alll111 IMllln. Thttdan. &lb ••tatt " 1.11i. 11114. .IAdi• sporti;w11r. drwtJ, Jtwtlt7 Mid aU'lf -mlOJ llelM 11 wllolwlt prke1. · P•rt •nJWhtl'I _,.alt -Ult mtno ,,YI Md:t Ult effort WOIUWblla. -: ~11 l•l•,.,I« fl• .... I..,_. N . .,._nff I • from Butb!rlck Patte'ma 3383 and 3384. Euy to make matching robes McCall• 3738. The '':small fry'' wlll love Fun Animalll on ·Silly Pillows made from Butterlck 3418, 3419 and G42Q. .. See you soon, Virginia P.S. The patternl boob have' many euy to make patkJ;nl li11•1iouday ,...,. and Vtrrtnla'1 bu boltl '"'1 bolli ot tabrtco to ldtct trom. • •AllKAMHICA@D e MASTlll CHARGI • ' • .. You are Cordially Invited to an Exhibition of the Works of Distinguished California Artists from the Collection of E:Gene Crain At the Newly Completed Office of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Company 2161 San Joaquin Hills Road Newport Beach, Californ ia Rodney Evans Bacon Rex Brandt A.N.A. Phil Dike NA. Nicolai fechin . . -Frank M. Hamilton Clarencel'lifikFe Joan frving George James Leonard Kaplan William Keith Joseph Kleitsch Ken Knutson Emi l J. Kosa. Jr. NA. Artists • I Roger Kuntz Maurice Logan N.A. Dan Lutz Roy Mason N.A: ...,..,B""arse"'~Mlller .!.. ---Phil Paradise A.N.A. Douglas Parshall N.A. Edgar Payne George Post A.WS. Bert Proctor Millard Sheets NA. William Wendt Bernard Zalusky . For Your Convenience the Exhibition will remain on Display In Our Offi~e Through No"1!mber 23, 1973 • 1 I , " t ! I ' I I ! .. I : . I i t f 1- • . - DAILY PILOT 2J Winter Hospitality Warmt;<) Up. , GINGERBREAD SPRITZ: NEW SUGARPLUM More Spice for Sprit,z ! Press, Please II Among the roost exquisite treats you can have for the I holidays are the g a i I y ornamental spritz cookies. These are tiny bits of but· tery rich dough, not too sweet, 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 2 '4 cups an-purpose flour Q'eam butter; gradually add sugar and continue beat- ing wiUI blended. Beat In egg and vanilla. Gradually blend in flour. Fill cookie press. By CAROL MOORE Of tlll DlllY ,1 .. 1 fllff On the 12lh day o I Christmas. start marinating mushrQoms, Thilt w11s one holiday hint offered by Sandy Krogh, gounnet lnstructor, during the final session of the Orange Coast College Cooking School, entitled W a r m Winter Hospitality. While Mrs. Krogh -ked on hot and co.ld h o r s d'ocuvres, Carol Heinz, home economist for Sou t h·e r n California Edlson Co.. sug- gestad that on the 11th day, cooks make and freeze .plenty ol pie c,rusts to be filled as needed with pecans, pumpkin or Instant pudding made with eggnog. , "Packaged pie crust mixes are really an ex~avagance when )'o.u consider they only contain flour, salt and shorten- ing available 'ln any kitchen," she said. "You still have to add the water and do the stirring so it really isn't con- venience." Instead, she recommended putting the electric mixer to work. on low speed to sift together the flour and salt and cut in the shortening. Euu -ntdown Clocked BRUNCH CRAB PIE 1Yt cupa flour, sifted 2 teaspoons baking powder ~ teaspoon salt ~cup butter y, cup milk 1 tablespoon chives, cho~ 1 cup Alaskan king crab 'or II pound lroun crab ! hard COQked eggs, chopped II cup ceh!ry, chopped 2 tablespoons green onion, minced lcup Cheddar cheese , grated 10 drOlll Tabeoco .1 cup mayonnalae I package (llMunces) c1IOP' ped broccoW, cooked and dralnad Saltand- Sirt lloor. baking powder and salt together. Cut In but- ter until mixture resembles <U mum!. Add milk and cbivee:, stirring uoW m.lxture !Q?mS a ball. Pat Into bottom and sides .. or a JO.Inch pl• plate. Drain and flake crab. Mix crab. eggs, celery, green onion, cheese, Tabasco and mayonnaise. • Distribute broceoll over bot- tom of paatry shell. Seaaon with aalt and pepper. Spoon crab mixture over top. Bake at 375 degrees for 31) ·minutes or until golden. Serve hQt or cold u entree or appetizer. TWELPTll DAY MUSllJIOOMS I pound fresh b u t t o n mushroom a 2 quarts hot water {and tht fintst turkeys, too!) 3 ta blespoons salt \; cup oil "' cup w!>lte wine vinegar 2 cloves garlic, mhlCed Zll tablespoom sugar '1 teaspoon dried c h i I e s , crushed v .. tearooon orega~ leave., crushed II teupoon ,.it Wash mushrooms. Pour into hot water mixed with 3 tables· pooos of salt and simmer 5 mlnulet. 00 NOT BOIL. Dr1ln. RIMe mushroon-. in cleatj cold water and drain well. Combine mt of ingredients. perature at 400 degrees; cook and -~Ur unUI sugar dissolves and color Is llght gold~ brown , about 5 mlnut.s. TUm control to "off:" stir In coarsely chopped almoods. Spread evenly in 15 ~ 10 x I jelly roll pan. Cool. Melt choooJate on wann heat. Spread over hardened candy and sprinkle with finely cliopped almoods. Coo I thoroughly to set. (Refrigerate or freeze lf in a hurry.) Break 1n10 pieces. Makes 2 pounds. Add nruahn>Q!M, IOISing until well coated with marinade. Chill Toss mushrooms to coat with marinade several more times. F1avor improves with ~ 1ge; best after 12 days. QU!Clt AbMOND BIUTll.E S cups sugar IA. cup butter or 'margarine t~e~g~;'.iitS:~ Dash or salt 14 cup; coafsely c h o p p e d almonds, toasted ¥..cap finel y chopped almOods . 1 poctage (&ounces) semi- sweet chQcolate chips . Place sugar. butter and saJt in electric skillet.. Set tem- I which come out of a cookie press in the magic shapes of Christmas: wr eaths, I Oiristmas trees, s t a r s , ' camels, and a very decorative Using star attachment, f~ circles <X' "S's" on coolie sheets .. , or use other press designs. Decorate with sugar CJ)'Stals, other candies or nots or leave plain. Thanksgiving-a titne for the very best! Richard 's has it all-from the finest fresh turkeys, to gourmet relishes and sumptious desserts . Even the pans to cook .it all in and flowers for the table. ESPECIALLY AT THl\!4KSGIVING YOU 'LL BE GLAD ! "S." i For decoratlng you can . be f as colorful and creative as I you like, sprinkling I.he ~kies with red and green sugar, adding chocolate bits to the wreaths, candied bUi of chu· ries, citron or. lruil peel.-lor Bake in preheated 350 de- gree Oven, 8-10 minutes. Re- move to wire rack to cool. Yielcb 8-9 dozen. the )feel. and stars. · _. Of course, before decorating there's· a gamut· of flavors for the doogh itself: almond spice, rum and nutmeg , chocolate or the very newest, a gingerbread spritz. {flgredients for a spritz d®gh are few, but good and \f"e· SPRITZ wmI VARIATIONS I cup (Z stlcks l butte!' ... cup sugar I egg Pudd·ing Proven Have you· no\iced that bread 1 pudding has gone out of style? NQWadays most cooks keep bread in the refrigerator and so there are no leftover dry slices to use up in a pudding. But bread pudding ts SIU! one ol. the most economical 1 and bQmey desserts you can make and it's worth drying bttad especially !or it. DeligbUul flavor c o.rn es from the fight molasses. -'. spices and raisins (oLliates) that intertwine with the bread and custard mixture. OLD-TIME MOLASSES . BREAD )'UDDING 1 quart milk ll cup light molasses 1,i, cup ~ugar · ~1 teaspoon cinnamon JA..teaspoon ginger . VARIATIONS· Almond.Spice: Substitute al- mond ertract tor vjUlilla; mix in 1f.i teaspoon cardamom with flour before adding to creamed mixture. Rum and Nutmeg: Substi- tute rum extract ror vanilla : mix in 1h teaspoon nutmeg with nour before adding to creamed mlxture. Chocolate: Add 1 square (1 oz.) semi-sweet chocolate, melted and cooled after van- illa. GINGERBREAD SPRll'Z I cup (2 sticks) butter v .. cup sugar ;i, cup tight molasses I egg 211.z cups all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon cinnamon ~lz teaspoon ginger I/, teaspoon cloves Cream butter; gradually add lllgar a n d continue beating until blended. Beat in molasses and egg. Sift together flour, cin- namon, ginger and cloves. Gradually blend into creamed mixture. Fill cookie press. Using star attachment, fonu circles or "S's" on cookie Sleets ... or use other press design& Dea>rate with sugar crystals, other candies or nuts or leave plain. Bake in pr ehea ted 350 degree oven, 8-10 minutes. Remove to wire rack to cool Yields 8-9 dozen. Dessert's Peachy 14 teaspoon nutmeg Creme brolee, a r l c h V• teaspoon salt cus t ar d topped with . l tablespoon butter caramelized brown 9qgar, is 4 eggs a cla ssic French desse.rt heI<t 3 cups dry bread cubes in 'high regard by epiOUl'e'!· • ~ ~ raisins or cut-up Fresh Peach Brulee is much '1f <'Y" --rKl'flitif10 MaJCe 11fli1 -• -Jn a.medium aaucepan scald the classic, with lar !ewer. ~ milk . Stir ln molasses, sugar, calories -iffer all,' a Whole cinnamon, ginger. n~tmeg, peach Is Q!l!y 38! salt and biltter until blcnilad. FRESH PJ';ACll BRULEE r In a large mixing bowl beat 6 fresh peaches I. eggs sllglltly. Gradually pour Granulated 1111gar hot milk over eggs, stirring 1/, teaspooft almond extract rapidly . · ll cup sour cream • Tum bread cubes a n d "1 cup brown supr raisins lnto a buttered 2-quart Preheat brollel" Peel 1 oblCllll glaaa baking dlsli (11'4 sllce peach~s. by 711 by 114 lnchea) or · Arrange' slices In 211.quart 1 aimUar utensil. , cas,.role. Sprinkle lightly with ~ Pour milk mixture over gr~ulated sugar, tQ taste. Stir I bread and raisins and let almond extract Into sour 1 f stand 10 to 15 minutes; "st.tr. . cream and spoon over 1 Place baiting dish In a pan peaches. Sprinkle brown llUPJ' ; or hot water and beke In a ov~r top. preheated 3$0-degrec oven un· Slide casserole Wlder broiler 1 tll knlfe-Inserted In center and broil just long enough com .. out clean -45 to so to canneli:e brown lllpt. mlnutts. Be careful not to burn. Serve ~ or cold with S<rvt Ill once In a to I por- cream or milt. ~1akes 6 to I ion with rnacarooa or butt.er I oervlngs. c••-· ti-... THERE IS A RICHARD'S -WITH ALL THE BEST, PLUS GREAT VALUES AND FRIENDLY SERVICE !!! Rambli Ro THANKSGIVING 1 knew I'd be cheerful. The doy wos so bright. I knew I'd be thonkful From morn ing till night. But I di dn't remember, If ever I knew, How soon I'd be pie-ful And turkey-ful , too. Morgoret Hiller! WORD S ARE SIMPLE WORDS ARE SWEET Whot o treot to hove you As our friends for over 25 years WE THANK YOU . We know, without you, We wourd not be . 1 Complete. Thank you for coming · Thon k you for shopping Thank you for enjoying ?ou' re ;.~nderful. ... ' Yoo'reolloo SPECIAL PEOPtE We love you and cherish you. Come this Thonk19iving We 'll soy !honks To all the wonderful folks who have Helped us stay in ' busine ss for ~5 yeers. Thehl;folks . You're the greelest. .RICHARD'S • Ad Pric•s Good Thru Wednesd1y, Nov','21 1/le:eif Rich1rd's California Grown Fresh Turkeys ly Z.clc:y Ferm• IA V1riety ·of Sizes I FRESH HEN AND TOM TURKEYS lodl•i.ally bored Come in end mike your selection of frozen turkeys 1t competitive prices. Also stuffed ' frozen turk!'ys, squ<lib, smoked turkeys ind pheasant. Long _ Island ducklin9, ••stern 9aese, stuffed cornish 9•~• h~ns end boneless turk•y r~ll1. Richard's 100 1. hre Pork SWICll• mildsage seasoning RUMP IOAST boneleu L1•ll• .on thick top round ste1k1 Gread leef Pr.epar1 so many ways k·M H-St .... • 1.19 lb. 1.H lb. 1.19 lb. 19c lb. 2.49 lb. Marin•tad Ducklings orange win• .. uce 1.)9 lb. 1.19 lb. Marinated Meat B1ll1 chili s1ls1 sauce 8eat004 Cooked & Peeled Bay Shrimp for cocktails or salad Senuina Finnin H1ddie Rici.n's H-Made Soops 11dsard·1 o. ........ """' Pillsbury Crescent Dinner Rolls French Boursin Che••• 2.59 lb. 1.29 lb, pint 49c '" lb. 1.59'• I 01. l7c 5 01. 1.19 Le1cco Shrimp Cocktail .,. 4 01. l for $1 • . ' ~· C(OSED THANKSGIVING DAY 5 lb. Spencer -Pack Stuffed qu-011 ... 7 ox. Clilffoo A11orted T.u.t T111H 2 pok ftl.._., I••• Dafe..NMt •eocl Mlz 16 ox. Snow's Cl1ms chopped or minced I oz. Hefty Scrap 8191 50 count 49c Nine Lives C.t Food 61/J oz. 2 for 29c Goldin Griddle P1nc1ke Syrup 24 oz. 0.1 Monte Fruit Cocktail Moth~r's Chocolate Chi~ Cgokies Sprin9fi•ld Ice Cre•m 17 oz. ' 11 1/J oz. Sunkist Orang• Juice Stouffen Broccoli or Cauliflower Souffle I 0 OL lrap1fndt n•w crop, sw•et, T ex11 ruby red 6 for $I ~ Northern 9rown compact tender 4 for $I s-,.+s 5 lbs. fo r $1 lb. 69c 6 for 79c S..., lolled D°""" Potato Bread each 12c. A.1sorted 01ni1h 2 for 43c , LIQUOR " Gnc•r'{ Vin ROse · Ma9num Speei•I Almaden Ch1blii:-lthine I Burgundy ' 1'2 g•llon Ch1t11u Rich1rd Edra Dry Ch1m,,.9ne. fifth Monsi•ur Henri Loir• Valley Vouvr•y fifth ' llCHAID'S LIDO MU VIA LIDO N.I. ()poo , .. Delly, S.S.. 9.7 '""'"° . llCHAID'S HAllOI VllW IUO MACARTHUR N.L ~ M -Dolly, S.. f.7 HO i ,. I l • -, • - • ) .. QUICKIE COPY OF RESTAURANT SPECIAL TY Beef Substitutes Veal Entree Varied Beef Pi cc at a , California 2 to 3 tablespoons oliVe oil ly heat to melt and scrape Style is a modified version ¥4 tup butter , drippings from bottom of pan. of the classic Italian veal en-2 tablespa:ons lemon juice Stir 1n lemon ju'ice and tree featured on restaurant 2 tablespoons rn i p. c e d parsley. Pour over beef. menus. parsley Garnish with parsley sprigs Happily .thls recipe is a Parsley sprigs and lemon wedges. Makes 4 quickie -unlike SQ ·many Lemon wedges servings. Italian di.shes which have a Have butcher slice beef very If more convenient, prepare long list ol ingredients or a thinly if possible. To slice it ahead of time. Brown beef, sauce that requires hours to yourself, partially freeze beef transfer to plate, cover wlth cook. before slicing. Pound slices foil and place in 175 degree ~ economical entree is between pieces ol waxed oven for up to in hour. with thinly sliced bee! paper or plastic wrap until Complete sauce and pour over eye of round fla.ttened. beef just before serving. Side dishes of small browned 'Dip Into floor m!Xed with To hold beef for 1 hour, potatoes and sauteed zucchini · .salt and pepper. . allow it to cool then reheat make an ea~ enjoyable meal. . H~at 51!1811 amoun~ of olive quickly in 400 degree oven 011 in skillet over high heat. just before serving. Prepare BEEF PICCATA, Fry beef briefly on each side sauce just before serving. CALIFORNIA SI'YLE in skillet, just until browned. Add small amounts of re- maining olive oil to pan as it dries out. I pound heel eye of round, oliced thinly 4 tablespoons flour I teaspoon salt Ii teaspoon pepper Transfer browned beef to plate and keep warm. Add huller to skillet. Quick· Work Scotched Holiday Buffet Outlined Add an extra touch to breakfast during the weekend or a festive bnmch by serving e v e r -so-eclsy butterscotch breakfast ring. And you don 't have to be a fancy baker to' make this delicious breakfast ring. It's 10 good and simple that you'll want to serve it often. BUTl'EllSCOTCH BREAKFAST RING 1 (6 ounces) package (I cnp) butterscotch morsels 2 tablespoons butter • For Weekender Advertising · .. 2 tablespoons flour "\\ teaspOOn salt For ho t i d a y entertaining lh cup chopped pecans serve these with romaine with 1 ( 1 O -o u n c e ) package shrimp Vinaigrette, rice pilaf, refrigerated quick cres-broiled tomato halves and cent dinner rolls chocolate torte 7 teaspoons com syrup. Preheat oven to 37& degrees MEDAWONS OF BEEF F. Melt over hot (not boiling) 8 (4<limce) heel fillets (II· water, 1h: cup butterscotch inch thick) morsels and butter : remove 2 tablespoons butter from he.3.t. With fork , mix Salt in flour, salt and peeans; set Pepper aside. ~ cup condensed beef broth Separate crescent r o 11 Y.& bay leaf triangles. On greased cookie Dash thyme sheet, arrange crescent dinner 1/.t cup white table wine rolls overlapping edges to 2 teaspoons cornstarch form a circle with a 4" Chopped parsley diameter. Long pointed ends Trim fat from fillets...Qiok - should point outwards. in I tablespoon butter tn Skillet Spread .. 2 rounded . tea-about 1 minute on each side. .spoaiifu!a ol bull<rscotch mix· Sprinkle with salt and pepper. ture • on--each-triangle. -Roll Remove to heated platter. up 'trianiles, jelly-ron fashion, -Ada rema!nlng 1 taDli!ipOOO toward center .. Slash inside buUer, broth, b a 'I leaf half of each roll . and thyme to skillet Simmer a minute or two, stirring tp ' . • • ' Even the Pastry's Fla vored Lemon's T artn .ess Takes a New Twist ' If you're interested in a new recipe for lemon pie this one may fill the bill, It uses cream ceese plus the usual Ingredients and the !llllng really 15 creamy. CREAMY LEMON PIE Lemon Pastry Shell, see below ~ cup sugar ¥• cup cornstarch l cup water 2 egg yolks 1 package (3 0W1Ces) cream cheese, cut up 1 teaspoon grated Jemon rind i,, cup lemon juJce 3 egg whltea Prepare Lemon P a s t r y Shell ; cool while preparing filling. In a 2-quart saucepan stir together the sugai; and com- slarch. Gradually stir in water, keeping smooth; whisk in egg yolks. QiolC ·over _medium heat, ·stirring ·con· stantly, until mixture Colncs to n boil and is thick and smoo!h. Stir in cl:lee$e wttil "lelted. Remove from heaL Add lemon rind and juice, stirring until thoroughly blended. Cool 10 minutes. Beaf the egg whites until sill!; genUy !old inlO lemon mixture. Tum into cool Lemon PastrY Shell. Chill until finn -about 1 hour. LEMON PASTRY SHELL 1 cup sifted flour ( \I teupooa salt Ii cup margarine I egg yolk 1 tablespoon cold ·water 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind I tsblespoon lemon juice In a medium mixing bowl stir together the floor and aall. With a pastry blender cut in margarine u n t I t particles are floe. Stir together egg yolk, water, lemon rind and juice; aprinkle over flOW' milturt while tossing to blend wt!!. Press dough firmly In to a ball with your hands; O.!ten sllghtly., • On a floured paslry cloth , with a floured . stockinette- covered rolling pin, roll dough to a 12-!ndl round; Iii looltly Into a 11-illdl pie pan. Fold edge under to form a rim; flute. Prick lhoroUghly wtth • fort. Bake in a Jll'heated 425- degree oven until lilhtly browned -about 12 minutes. THOUSANDS ._OF All SHiii WILL • CLISll TUJmSllVmt '"'· ••••••Y•Y. n l.S.l .A. l&ADI "A" UlllUTIMll llOillS1' IASIJI ·TOM '· \ fllSH J9C GLDY •••••••••••. IA . SllllLlli UOI ... LISS BEEF ROAST . " PllLADELPllA " ~ ~ ·Phone 6424321 Bake for 15 minutes. Cool. loosen browned particles. Add Melt over hot (not bolling) wine mixed with cornstarch. THESE ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD ONLY AT THE FOLLOW/NO STORES· .. Water remallllll. · g butterscotch Cook a m1'nute longer st1r' .... -............. . .. --. .... -.... ·-.. ,...,,_"'""'""' ·•-• ...... _... ·-·""""''--., .. ,~-011····-·-· r-------1 ' ' -·=.;::~·.:-:--... --=·-·-·" ·--·"""-·~· ............... -...... -...... : ...... ~·~ ,,.,_,t .......... ~ ...... _ ..... ..__ ···-::·:.-:::_ .......... ,_ 0 Se!' and n . ' t U St In ° ··-· .. ..,. __ ·--.•,..••-•~ ........ ~.,,,..._ ·•-'11'"""--·-· .. •·,"":~ ,, .. _..,...,_,.. ··-•~· '" WATClflUl"'"ltL m r cor syrup; mix rmg cons an y. ra over ·=.:<:::li',.;;:'"" .. ' .............. --. , _ _.,,, .. ,_..,., ... _~--.. ·-·-'""""·'""'M-~·-·'"'·"" ··~ ·-......... , ... ~ ·-..... ·;:~"'' -.. . ~~~~~~~~~~~~w~.u~.~o~nzz~· ~1; .. J~•~zegov~;~~in~.~~~r~·~1]~r· ~1~bw~·~~·~~1~~·LJ~'~-~:t.~ ... ~ .. ,~~-~·~::::::!:.~"~~~!~~-~::---~.-~.-::.;~; .. ~~-~~:~=~="~·.:~::~::-~-~:~· J'~::-~.::~.~~ .. i:~:.:=:~:-~-~:~::-~ ... -~-~~~.~~ .. ~·~· ~-~:::~:~:--~"~·~~··~~·§' ~~:::..~~~::~·~-~~~-~~:::.~·~•·-:.~-:~·~:::~---~-;·;·-;·;:.:.;._J •:=·.,'.:~-.,.=,.-.,..,~":,,_ •u-••,.L•--••OI-~•.., ... -~ ,,.,.,.;...,.i::'°"'"' .,.,.,..,,,.,,.,1_...,_,_,~,i••--::",-1 :;';:';::.0...., ==':.'_~_':'!._~-----·"' Makes-8-ser-vings. 1akesJ_ser~gs. :,_,...,,..,, __ • :• ...::..-:.:-• :=:o'.'~'::!:;!"l: ·:~:=.":. .. ':!:::'"'.:--::'.::.::."t:::"~..!:"' i=: ..... \:':.!.:....-;:.-==i.:.":;.:.:::: -.... =-;;.-=-.. -- .. -.. . ...... .... -~ . - -• FROM Fa shi on Islan d ' Newport :f3each.,_ , • • STEREO s ·olJNDS OE THE HARBOR -, . . I ,, .. • 'I II , .... • - sim T on or that B hav to sue pee a ri all to ~ the , ---• • ' , . ) Mond,.y, Novtmbtr l~, 1~7J • DAil Y ~llOT IJ • ~pa,,rtrnents Space ·_ t.o Sip I n .Sample -; !.:J>.._YID JORD.\N. or more varleUeo of freth lhat does eoough buslneu so chee,.., such as Umbur1er, Ing. • vaporproo( wrap for up to cb.-al1e camplemeot lbe a--• .• ,.._. -._..,. ,_ and qed natural cbeeoe ml•· cbeeoes doo'I linger on r.frigerated In •a t I g b 11 y Freellng cheeae Is normaUy 111 llQltha. 'lbaw In the -heal. -...S ....... Qllad - The a~ way ot Ille ad without heating. shelves. covered jar, nol recommended because Ille refrigerator Ind uae u IOOl1 Bui lw _.i UH, ar>-talllo -... t h ' - seems to dicta ta dome , a ~ It's soft enough to spread If poulble, buy bulk c!l<eoe Molcll that moy gn>w on lexture may be come crumbly aa poaaible. pelller -wines, or aperitifs, paalaao IW llcl*-...._ ·of entcrtaln1q1 and •partn\tnt ' and , comes in jars, rolls or at a 1tore thlt wUI give you natural cheeses are not ,or mealy, All cheese, except for the team well with a sharp cheese sacb • «Cl aml C:-... ae- peopltt itre ilways lo0k1q for links. a sam,ple, and don't hesitate harmful. Simply cut them off. However brick, cheddar, unripened varieties, should be and crackers, flavorful cheese blnatloas. simple yet ubl~ut menu... Coldpack cheese food ti to ask for one. Keep unripened cheeses, edam, gouda, muenster, port served unchilled to bring out dips or canapes. Sene ...et •e st wiDel The only p~y )'OU can bank made iri the Same manner Natural cheese should be such as co.ttage and cream du salut, Swiss, provolone, distinctive na vors and tex· A red table wine such as with a trq el ~ c'-e on drawing bittier than a -but lncludea otber dairy In· refrigerated In lta orlglna1 cheese, r.frlgera!ed and ""' mozzarella and camembett lures. This takes :JO minutes burgWldy Is compatible with ud fnllt. or a -tulln( II one gredlonta and may ~ pl· wrapper. Altar ll'o -Olli, wllbln •varal dlya. Procua may bt lro1111 In amall to an i-al room tom-obeuo main dls\les made For8'I .-- -that comblnea the two. mlentoa, frulta, veg<tables or c<iver UghUy with plasllc wrap · cheele can be kept at room amounta of a pound or less peraturo. fnim dwp, ntppy cheese. Y®'nt • rille awe I I ' fie · But the first step ls to mtata, .or have a smolced or foll and Jt will keep 11Veral te•ratures before they are ln _pieces not more than an Now fOf tht ,,me. Strangely Mild cheese casssolea are cbe1111 IUdt u ~ • 'mastar the art oJ selection. flavor. weeka. opened, but tightly wrap and Inch thick. -ch, -produced In aood partner> for a claret. lie:'-YGU'U probaliq We'll start with tha bulCI Buy your cheeoe at a store Keep at r on g .flavored refrigerate them after open-Freeze In moisture-arua Mir tho OrislA ot the For opaghettl or plna, Pftltr cold 11eet •!lot-. of cheese. ·1-~.:...:-'--~~-'--~~-'---'--~-'--.::.....~~....::.~~~~....::.~'--~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~:.:.;..~'--~~-=-~~~~~-'--'-~~--'~~.:.....~~~~~~~- Aftar milk solids a r e separated by curdling with ...... net or a bacterl1f culture, the curds may -.. Ille basis of fresh or unrt_.i cheeae, such tJ cottqe or cream cheese, Or they may bt cured and ~ged wider a vartaty of ..,.. CCI ... and become a ripened cheele such u cheddar '1t SwlsL' Both ara called ,natural chee9el. Paateurir.ed process cheese Is a blend of fresh and aged natural cheetes which have . been shredded, mtxed and heated with an emulsifklr tQ the point where no further ripening occurs. A main characteristic Is that It m~ easily. Pallourlzed process cheeM food II similar but conta1111 lesa cheese and baa nonfat dry milk powder, whey and water 1dded. Palleurtxed procm ,,_ • FROM All OF US ... WALL OF ·ya SELECT ALL YOUR FESTIVE .FOODS FROM OUR . GREATER VARIETY AT LOW EVERYDAY PRICES ' ' \ spread cont 11 mi more moisture and lesa fat than YOUNG TURKEYS . USDA Grade A • -food, and bo!b -chee>e foods and •preacll may have other ingretlient1 added to bro1den the flavor J'Mll, such as pimientos, allftl, pep.. pen, and spicea.. • Club or coldpaelt <!-" II a blend of the 1111111 or two Turkey Tempts Remember the kind ol aoup your grandmother ued to mike? With so many IDOd. Ingredients that by Ille time you llnlabed your bowl )'II! couldn't ear-another thing? And with oo much rich. lull flavor. you knew it couldn't possibly come from a can! Well, that's euctly the kind of meal you•n lttVt with Country Supper Soup. It starts out with ground turkey -either fresh or frozen -for a fao\UUc flavor at a lower pdc& Nat aoaiel ~ onion, prllc, a -llllaal - of peelad, ...... -..... a anotbtr ol nall nd....,., · Plui, 'ea*le, et arr o t 1 , celery, rice, olllclla llonflloD1 salt, pepper, • ..., 1111 .... thyme. Imagine the aroma os tt almmers on yOur atove. And. even better, Imagine the-taste when, only-lbrity minutes later, it's ready to serve! A soup fun of proteln· rich foods at prices you can allonl. And since you won't be able to eat much more, round out your menu with hot country biscuits -you can. even drop them In the llOUp, ll you like. And a salad of tooeed spinach greens. OOUNTltY SUPPER SOUP I pounc1 ground turkey 1 onion, chopped ' 1 clo\>e garlic, minced 1 3 cups Wlter 1 (I pound, IS-) can peeled whole lomatoea I (8-ounce) cillfo m n o sauce , 1 (15\\-01111ce) can small red • beam 'II bead cabbalt1 chopped 1 3 carrotl, aucea · 3 stalks celery, llllctd 3 tahleapoons rlca 12 cblckm boulllGn c:ubel : 2, teaspoons ult '" teaspocm pepper 11 bay leaf !II teaspoon thyme , Jn :I-quart heavy saucepan, cook turkey, onion and garlic until onion is tranaparent; drain excess lat ilneceuary. Add remaining llilredlmta: mix ...u . .:cover; ainUllaf 111 minutes. Makes 8 to I ..,._ ' Jngs. When lllrVln& lour, freeze hall for later. ii tllt DAILY PILOT .......... 59·co U lllCAS1'•11 fltOllll lT • .... NlilMM LI. ; .. : ..... 6 3 c • 1101•11t I tt-lf • l'OUMOI ll. SWIFT BUTIERBALL YOUNG TURKEYS USDA GRADE A FIESH FIOZIN YOUNG ~: .. 75~ • ~~~ 79! • TURKEYS CHUCK ROAST USDA GRADE A BLADE CUT- MnttlGVeM . ...... 73~ "llH TUllKITI AVAii.AW iN AU. ITOBI fOl.T .. MOUDATI COMPUfl llUCl'ION OP HOLIDAY POULTIT. HARVEST DAY & BUTTERBAU 89 C. YOUNG TURKEYS • 111 TMlll0\1911 II Lii ••• "" Li i u11co::au.v 11 C ICl llTll: Cln' .... Lii LI. SMALL SIZES • UNDER 10-LBS. .. .. ... . . "· !;~.~! ~TE'.K . "111 ~.~~~ .. ~I.E~-~·····" 12' DUCKS, Ollll. CA~I. ITUfflD TUHITI, OAMI MINS, HC. Lq,w Everyday Priced Fresh Deli Items ~ PACKAGED GOODS NABISCO CRACKERS .......... ~::: 53' ... CROUTffiES .............••. ':'::".:: 38' .,-FISHIM llKUIT MIX ., •. ,~.::55' IROWNll Milt: ................ ':'.:!: 39 ' .,-11.ILlSIUllY MIXES. .... ~~':; 57' W.-MAllSHMALLOWS .•• ~.-.:::'l: 23' .,-BAKERS COCONUT. ........ ~',\'; 59' ... DREAM WHIP. ............ ~;::-::79• ... UNCLE BEN'S RICE ....• ~~-= 64' K l::Y B UY 9PRINCELLA YAMS i"::C'36~ ... LIPTON SOUP MIX ........ :::: 39' POTATO CHIPS. •.•.•••.•••••. ~::: 54' .,-PWSONS CAND't ....... ::: 31' ltOUC.f It OLD ITlMS _.-PLASTIC WRAP. ............ "f.:.'l 25' VILLA PAPER PlATU ..... !':rJ/:;99' ... ALUMINUM FOIL .... :::::::: 44' TOP JOI CLEANER ............ ::: 75' SAFEGUARD IATH~Ae ...... \:,:l6' __ .. CAMAY IATH SOAP ............. :: 22' FROZEN FOODS ·BIROS EYE BEANS .............• :::l29' ·on ot rt!IO sm' ... VEGETABLES ..•.•• ~~~.~·,: 31' 3 ~=-"'= i"IAS I POfAlod W/CMM WICI, • BIRDS EYE COB CORN ••.... :::::: 65' lllNO'S PIZZA .............. :::'::: I .01 GERBER BABY SHAMPOO ................. ,, bolty llM "hoW, 111.01. _...~a.,1 99c ROWEAT ORESSIN rr::;4g~ FROZEN FOODS FRENCH TOAST. ............. =: 45' ... HAWAIIAN PUNCH •.•.•• ,,::: 22' TREESWEET JUICE ........... •= 28' TREESWEET.JUICI .............. :.55'. BIRDS EYE DRINK ••••••...•..• : 37' JOHNSTON PUMPKIN PIE ••• ;\'/:99 ' ' DAIRY PRODUCTS LADY LEE EGG NOG •••••.••...•• ~Jl 54·' ROD'S IMO DRESSING ..... ':o\'l: 37' LADY LEE T!>PPING. ..••••• .'::f: 52' ... MARGARINE .....•....••. ~=: 39: ... ..,... .. ·~ .... "" ... ., ...., ........ ....., ,,-lllMI ... "-" n. "Ul llT" blot 1119' 111 , lltl • .. tf Ill .... tll!I Hlltl ill IM .. ,. .......... ,.. '*'"' ••• "Ill Ill'" ...... ..,.., ........... llUTU nurut P'fllllll DAIRY PRODUCTS LADY LEE BUTTER ..•..•.... .'~.'::'g:86' LADY LEE ICE CREAM .. ~= 79' P[T FOODS KAL KAH FOR CATS~~.'.".?:'.:~ 19' RECIPE MEAT STEW ........• ::00: 33' PURINA DOG FOOD ..• ~:::2.29 CANNED rooos LADY LEE PEARS .••....•....••... ~Jl 53' FRUIT COCKTAIL •... .-........ '::::49' ... REALEMON JUICE. •.....• r,: 51' HAWAIIAN PUNCH •••• ~.~':!!99' ... MEXICORN CORN.: •.......• ~C:25' GREENWOOD'S BEETS....':!!:': 42' LADY LEE BEANS .............. ~~ 26' ... LIBBY'S PIE MIX ......... :::"0:39' ... LAWRY'S SEASON SALt .•. ~.11 83' UIDAl .... A GROUND BEEF 1 " l lCtllALbll ................ l l ~.~~.~ ,!~~~~~~ 19' ~~.~~~ .. ~.'.~~""' 1" ~~~~~Yl!~~~~.LINl 1 J:t ITMIM, lf-Ol,..tl.ltl CANNED FOODS ... LADY LEE MA YONNAI~ •• ~,: 75'. ... MUSTARD ......••• ~0::1::: lB' ... SWEET PICKLES. ••••• ~'.=59' MAXWELL HOU st:.~:.:: i , 12. ·xwErrHOUSt;,~'.'::I': b it ~HILLS BROSJ CO.Jfft, .• 'lll Bi' llKltlC I'm;, •MM, -. ... HILLS BROS.COFFEE:::l2.$5 IUC1lllC: ,... • IRUl,M .,-STUF.FED OLIVES •••.. ~'.~ 59' ... RIPE OLIVE~ ..•.• ~:.'::~39' . ... PLANTER'S PEA~UTS.~.::':99' KEY BUY • pine with 63 thlckty need1" S5 •J ... f1.mo11grffnortllldal -, tlpt . Podo.1flitte1tore. ~~~~ ~!.~~~ .. , ... 99c OUTDOOR' LIGHT SET . --' ,;,. ;. :<;ii)"~-... ' w ......... oo1,_. sr·· .... '""'"' ln..,1iideritly.. 1 l • MrOf l l -' IJ•' •' . TINSEL GARLAND 111....,,phl, .-.d.2·toM. ..... ·- $236 IND.DOR MIDGET "'Of •• . I I SPRAY SNOW for Mcof'Mlftli trHt, w1-.-39c• ....... t ,000 ICICLES 32 1 llghtwel9h1, ''°"""°°'· • ~~~1.~.~.~:::. 89' !~!!~~~ ............ 11 ;~ !~Jf!!t~, ........... 10 i,~o 79c P.!182~~ .• ~~!'Jc~~""·'""'···" 29{ ~2..~~~§., . . ' ...•• 49 ~ ClllCX Toill LUGCT PIOOUCI DlllUTMMT POil 1'0UI HOltDA Y JIUff AND YIDl'fAIU -AT LOW IY•TDAY P1ttC11. OUAU.Niln TO • THI PIUHltT ANO PINftT OUAUTY AVAILA9LI. BIVE •GIFT CERTIRCATE A tiff c.ftffl .. cet• aol\oe1 mony ,,...1.,,., It COltt ••Gelly whot y4V wont to ,_., ond II Mcome1 1Whol· ever lhe reclp- teflt -nl•. 0 '""'"· liquo< or other rnerchan- dlM. tnqulr# ot the dteckttond. ARVEST DAY R ¥3gt Cl\MM£D rooos _f>LANTER'S NUn.-:.:t~95' SOYALAC FORMULA •.• '.':::~'!!: 45' MINCE MEAT. ................. :'l:'..':69' BEVERAGE • SPIRITS HAMMS PRAFT BEER ........ .1:1 .691 LO SEAL SCOTCH.~.:::: 9 .77 LANCERS WINE. ..•.............. l\l3.98 ca••ueu "' • .,... wm U1101 WT.) lll itfVan de Komp's ii: AM OUTSTAllDlllG VUIITT Of lllSll IAl!HY GOODS $278 ......... 11 ... 1 ... "CO\/ntty.SION"' tty le .,11h •nut flmng 1w. PLASTIC ASSORTMENT . Of~ household ffernt • polll, d11hpone., clothe• l:.o.kelt, etc. '°"' 66c In .••Ml!tM co lorl. QIOICll "R>IL COOK~IE-~SH-EET-S.-"~ac·~·· ., .., DispoMbM-r0rto.~ ..... ~ 2. U ·2!E~ .. L~~-·--'· 68c WASTE BASKETS ~"'''· rion-dotterint iNo1tlc l:toake11 In a11!'d color1. . s32 "SllDE TOP STYLE ..... . RECTANGULAR s3•2 SWll"G TOP. ........... . • t • 1 • DAILY PILOT CAREFREE MENU Brunch Given, Crunch Do you think your lile has become. so busy you haven't time to entertain? Think again. Consider the pleasant custom of the weekend bnmch. liave a few friends jn, serve slmp1e but hearty fare.~ find ou.Ll!ruu•laxll!I and enleI;laiiiliig It can .be. A brunch starts with plenty of steaming hot coffee, and fresh fruit in champagne is · an elegant first course. For the main eo:urse, serve savory flam Chestnut Sai>dwiches and ·accompany them .nth Dilled Green Beans. Both 'di~ feibire an im- aginative touch Of Oriental in- gredients. Finish the meal with sweet crepes, thin rolled -dessert pancakes. HAM CHESTNUT SANDWICHES 2 cups diced cooked ham 'n cup chopped w a t e r .chestnuts 1,~ cup chopped green pepper lcup drained cr u shed pineapple 1,4 cup mayonnaise ~~ cup daiey..sour cream 1 teaspoon dry mustard 2 teaspoons soy sauce in ieaspoon onion salt 4 English .mufffus, split in ' haH and btljtered bread 'Crumbs ; Combine all ingredients ex- ce~ bread ·crumbs a n d Enillih mufrms;.--~11. Spoon-the inlxture onto the butttred English m u f f i n halVes;: spririkle the top with bultered bread crumbs. Place under the broiler until golden brown. Serve hot . . (Muffins and ham topping may. be )lttp&red in advance and referigerated; · combine and heat when ready to serv•c) Jl!LLED GREEN BEANS · ,l ·tablespoon vegetable oil .3 tablespoons Vlater .lo! 1easpoon salt l 9-ounce package frozen cut green beans . * Cl!!> bomboo shoots • --::rlililesl'OMsfiilelrcbopped . green oolODS 2 tablespooris chopped · pi· mien to 1 -tablespoon cider vinegar lh: teaspoon dill weed % teaspoon pepper . Combine oil, water and salt in a saucepan: add frozen beans. Cook: over low heat, stining often with a fOrk to separate beans. Cover and ------- ' MoodaJ, N-r 19, 1973 t .. , i I S TOA.E HOl.ll~ llOIUIU. 10 A.II. tat P JI. cook witU tender.A. ·c,ddmreri·~--f---1---.,--,,,aining-lngredients:- HgbUy, and beat. Serves!. ' ,. • K~eps WefJ Any leftover desserts will Ji:eep in the refrigerator for a ftw dafl. . VANill.A PEACH CRE~M l package (3Y• ,ounces) vanilla pudding and pie lilling ' ' l •cootalner (I ~)"COJ!l· men:ill IOUI' cream 2 c!ipo lldely chopped fresh 'or. cmaied peaches 1 tablelpooa pure vlllilla tr· ~ paddinc llCQll'dlnl to poctqe diredlcms, using m1J Ill capo milk. Liglllly ......,.. ourface with plulic .r.,; coo1. · lie.tin oour c/Um ,llllUJ. lrl'loalb. Stir In peicbol and valla. Qlll untll rMd)r lo -. Jllbl I lo • ..,...~. , . .. ' I -- • ARMOUI HLD STAI FRESH FROZEN SELF·IASTIH ' • 1 J • ... HON£YSUCKLE • BONELESS LIGHT ANO DARK MEAT TmKEY " • ,. • " · . - :im1.tm-· ROAST TURKEY ·- USDA GRADE A ~.FREsA FR0i£N BUTC!El'S PllDE • l 14 LBS.• '.c.. YOUNG HEN TURKEYS • ~~r.~~~·l~~tMDZEN SELF·IASTWS·-· ~ YOUNG11UUS CAl.fORNIA GROWN TltllSSED wmt EASY GAi* FOR CONV&IEN:E tASru rrie.f wmtCORN Oil coacN; iNsntt.cnoNs NC.Lt.an 6-INCH MUMS -'297 . ~··· ·~ '. EA:. .. ~A1~1s FREE Lemon ltal l r1otal paper Jrith purch1st of, Cllt r fow:trs at Alpha lttaM DlCGWll MUMS UI ' " . ''.·:a· 9c POMPINS . · . -· .WilllCIVING 99c . BllllQllEJS - --=ArioNs · 99~ --. • t ., , .. F.LA:"'OAR. FU ... • . .. ... . .... .L ..... .,, •• c• .T.l•I.'.' • • • ) . \ ••ll ' ' 'I I • •1 , . . . • ~ .t:. '<!!'<')( ~ : . ' ' ' " r. -. ' .. ' . ( 'tlEGlET NOOR DAIEI •'· .. ' OCEAN ·SPRAY.· "CIAllElllff PKG:' C •ILB.29 ' . ' ·- I • • • • l ' , • " '· " ' I• ~ " I' ~ ' ~ 1-1 ,. ,. ! I • r • • ,. • ; t ' I . ' I •' . I . FRESH TURKEYS YCM.1n9 USDAOfiodti A Safeway Tom Turkeys 1610 22-lbl. lb. 73~ USDAGr9cl•"A' ( 'RESH 79 . HENS S.hw•y"Undtr 16-lbt. •· . .. USDA Grade 'A' USDA Grode 'A' 16 to 20°lb1. OMS iancaster Foims I 16 to22·1bo. Floth frOHft • • • • . { Jit, ·;~... R .. ulcir ,, fresh-US · fi Government ( lns]>ected ' In 2-lb. Rolft, • • GrOiand Beef ...... m $11t •lb . .. -"' CANNED.HAM SWIFT'S IUTTIRBAU 79( HENS -........... ... 10-14 lb1. .. ~~ · ·~ 33c · 7~:i'~~ijt\~-· ,.,;__ 31• a.1-owDoluxe-..0... 95f _ 's.u..f.11 ::0 (Mince Pie 99<) Pie •• ,__ 45• . COOL WHIP · ........... ~ . ~fNl~ ~.. 59• .... ......, ~ 4 J.~ .. "IT~WBERRlll · .. Appl• Clcler ... ~k• = .:-:. 85• ~ · ·~id';.~=-,~ '~'· P-I; c· . lh...:.H . . .. . . lel'alr Buttel'llllk Waffles ~ 35c 8 1 fuif WllS "~• 39• Bel·airMixd·~eietables ,b;_69* 1---...J&!l• .. .u-111_ · . ·, ' .AJ!, ,_, i.._ . S 2I . . el:alr Brncc~1 Spears... ~. 35c ~ • . 11 ~ -~~'fnucrry . auce ·~ . t" --Cerl?lln·The·COli7"-,,, -i;t-51-1-ieo--°"" .... ,. •• ,., --.... y-"""'"''"" ........ ,.. · · 'Bel air Peas · ,,...., __ ,,., ~ · ssc l ' , ··-iJ' · 1\ 1 · ~ • . , FreshOanlenFlcwor •!'I · ·Marshmallows ':;;'." JSC. ~~!.~ ............................ ;~~.1.0.~ German Chocat1teC1kec:.1oo1o1 ~:-5 1" K,.ft M.htl,Y~ty. ) ·' MORf HOLIDAY BUYS 1 FOR HOLIDAY flXIN 'SI • . . ~ -'IA: :;::: •• :s1 •• 't!Jlil" . ~· , .. ,.. . Cont• to lafoway For Your . Boautfful Holhl•y Gift • Flowers And Pl-ti! L '· .. lb. • • Monady, November iq, 1973 USDA Choice Grade Beef loin Cut DAILV PILOT 15 lb. • PORK CHOPS . BONELESS ROAST ~large Size. Delicately Flq:vPf'9CI · ' , . . •· ... · HOLIDAY GOOD BUYSI I I I l I I ' I ' ' ,, •' Otlier Deaths L • ' • • • I • . . TO ClEAN CALL DAILY PILOT IFIED DEPT. D I A L D -- 4 ~ -5 6 1 8 \ · n. BIUnt Mll'ketpllc9 on tht Orqe Coat DAlLY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It , ·Trade It With a Want Ad ) One Cal I Service [ 642-5678 Fast Qedit Approval, 100 ,.. ....,.. ...._ • s. m .,. ...-. · · · • · · · · • ·•·.., .tzw•;a.z ''·• •••• tOO ·DI ,._.., •••••••• · • "'•'·' • ,.._.~ ~-· •• vt•ttf •i ... , , . , .tl0 ·9'0 .___ ... s.-.•.... JOO•IM ......... • • • • • ....... .US.·5"t ...__,__ _. ......... , ,600• ... ..,_ • .__~tm·9"1 Lw&'-"'.:, .... $JO ·SM ._ ................ mo .... ;....,,,,,,,,tll•M ,.,.,..,,, •... : .100·1ft' .,. ............. IOO·Ml ~'"':;G~~:-:,,~,o.~a;;~·~·~·~·~·~·~"°,;_·."'--:G~tn=t:r~a~li---~-' $42 ,900 Full Price La Paz Rtal E1tat1 ·BLUFFS LINDA $69,500 On~level 't bdrm., 2 bath condomlnil1m, an extremely· scarce lte!m in the beautiful Bluffs. Access to pools, ten- ~ & magniticen1 green- belti .. Your chance to enjoy maintenance-tree living. PLEASE CALL . 675-3000 m II\\ ~ l ff.ll'll • can·t btat this CQD\blmtion with-iup-.:.bledroemsr --2 be.tbs, built-in kitchen, dou· ble car garage. w I w carpets &: drapes. Better d)eck this one out TODAY -646-ml, Open eves. Walker&Lee llAL l l fAtl . VACANT Spacious adult ·Condo. 2 Bedml, 11i2 baths, new cpts & drps, .121,000..noso no,.;,. Seller pays closing coSts ex- cept impounds. 836-42{16. AGENT Open 9 to 5. QOICK--OASH • THROUGH A DAILY !ILOT 4~i:Otf IN CORONA DEL MAR -45' R·2 lot -~ BRING NO block to oeean. 2 bedrooms and den. Fully MONEY FIXER-stressed for second floor. F'antastic view $31 900 froin second level. Space for 4 cars. Favor· ' able financing available at interest rates ~ete~=. l,;,wNdo1\.rs-ts Lo~ under current market. A $108,500 invest-'°"' to anyone. A real men!. A listing of Bert Reedy. value. Bring mop and UNIQUE HOMES R11llor1, 645-6500 broom. -SA VE THOU· 1649 Westcllff Drive~ Newport Buch SANDS. Huge living room. I .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I Big family room. Four G.Mral General klngsize bedroo1ns. Family 1.;;..;....;.... ______ , ;:.;;;;;;;.;;;_ _____ I -size throughout. At this PRESTIGE BY super low price It'll .. fast. MESA VERDE ~';:'.~~~~":",;,.,, REPUBLIC HIGH THE SEA JUST I liiljll1tl ~;~_;~~ Walk ~;~~ SQ. .. • ........,.., ·..----Pr .. 1rtt higti parqueted en- ------ O"IGINAL BLUFFS Just listed! Well located Bonita model on wide gTttnbell, \vith ne.w_ decorator carpets & drapes 3 Bedrooms, 2 be.tbs -Many added featuttl! A real 11tiowplace That \\'On't last long at $15,700 REALTORS SlNCE1944 67>-4400 .MESA VERDE ·CONDO 71/z 0/o ASSUMABLE 9qll8te foot ';most popular ...... Lush indoor ..... ...ten. ~". Formal d'~-. "' •-· ..... _.. .. ... ,. Gtgantlc living r o o m , Enormous family room WALLS or GLASS. Ex· bouts .-et bar and cradd· travagent, \\-ell p I an n e d Ing fireplace, 1 bedroom kitchen. Formal d i n i n 1 . down, 3 Up, tip lop,conditXm Entertainer's family room. at $63,900. can · 5*-2313 Spiral staircase. F o u R toda,y! .._ ROOM MASTER. SUITE. .0Mr1ft.I .-n1UI lO~i!"'!!!>j.8841111<~ ln -.ml out. ,/h'O . UA$E OR . LEASE OPTION Pr!« reduc.d $3llllO. lo $59,950 ~ Bedroom ,pool -with pool tef'Vlce and lawn · aervice Included. Great Back Bay 'locatioo.. Im· mediate posaession: ! 2 Story and BIG!! $475 a Month, vacant and ready. ·coATS 1 -WAJ;~ACE · REALTORS -~5CN6-44.1Cl-v (~n Ev1ni"91l -•&EMM,,_·_ celling hlgh fire Plice11. Ht'aled ocean sized pool. CUstom deckin&-PRICED TO SEIL. Just lilted! Call now. 963-67G7. OPEN TIL t • IT'S FUN 10 BE MCEJ llVftillil NEAR HARBOR HI OPEN DAILY I lo 5 ISM Redlond1, C.M •• 4 Bedroom, 2 BA comp painted in Ir: out, new carpeting. R-2 lot, rm Jor another unit. Ll"g lot. Owner will help finantt. 132,500. e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3921 or Evo. 646-4543 Lachen myer Rf'.1lto1 * 59'x290' LOT * C-1 ZONE.. £..ZTE~ eJf 5678 LET'S TALK J'ti.~'flr1" A~,,~ •. "" • -' . TURKEY GAS SHOllTAGE .~p;;;";;;;::;··;· :fii-..;ijj bit you'rc kx>ktna tor a Ntw-~ 4 ~ •. 2 bath home ,, ..• ,.,."' ·, •c•••llidtf ' • -. port &ad! ........._...,-. Ill _,.,,.,, --· A . = -. 1o !Iii !!iMt>-• .,_,__.,. -c.. Ma.,. \111to1. · ·J. j exc!eUem llll!lmer/wll9!r ~ Beautiful y~. Will The bet! boy Jn beautiful rental record in the 'S84,500 te~ Vk. IM.500, Centucy Meta Verde! LOvet:y 4 ·range with a min. of onl,y 21 * , ~Tm. e vie • : bdrm.~ fanllly nn . .l IC:n!tn- 10\!I down alt(I ouper tenM ' ~ .... ·lanai. 11( BaUta elee CALL us -BUY "' BAR"" bl"'· a · ·--· .. ,·,,.; rea.i,.., talk .. . .. AINI ~"=.=' ~ "4-7211 U..-Uott --,., 3 ;w ... -,.,. the · Bl\, 2 BA, Newport "'11111 chllcm!n tu play tn_ Olleftd home, gu BI, fireplace, for '318,SOO T lam rm, ISx30 HAF· Pool, MORGAN RIAL TY 81>1' Oa 'avail. All .u,..., , .. ,,_ 67, ~· wru ,,. consld....t. o.n ,_, ....,, Realtol"'foi tnlo. 6f5..88415 •• Penln. Point , WILL :TRADE · fl. I fJ I -calll. Dl>l. -'I-lot.-. o!llcel SGV.lo< •-ooo ~ - llew illllnltl 2 BR. • i>oneled * 4000 111vaJ; model grove ol..inda JJJlfl den dw!nerr -~ -for -prope!'Y. • a--· f\i B ~ !root a...,-. Home 111 * '56 N11ra· + ..._ Cf car · ~~P.,.. 6~';1i parking. l19,!(JO beleft -I ,.,_, llr ..... .;a.HwA\t · COD: 6MsQ m.-i;-. llKll ~or 5N7aG. TltADI~ llJAT, A~N EllPSI\. Geo. COl!tr. -ldntr er Nol -to or t '11'J,OOO -...,_~ ...... hlol-V-. ,INlll\lt la occupied _. -A MILT PILOT ._!AHl;:...;=··=-;;..--~·-iiim:1o1 ..,,...... Soo = Tbt __ .. the"• 1·=:::~~~0lil7.;"':.0: ..::::i .__ .... .,.. _ _, 1------•1 .. .a DoJiJ P11o1 a..-" .. • ' ' • 1 - \ • I Onl del ~a~ $22S u Lux Ow 3B Ne for ti on c g a I· '. • • ' • • • O.n1r1 ... ,. Goner• ,. rol Gonerol ••• * BAUOA BAY PROPERTIES * OCEANFRONT •. ()nly one like it ! New deluxe trielex, 4 car parking. <;hoice Ioc. Submit trades. '225,000. 87$-7060 • UNUSUAL FIND N!lpORT HllGHTS Reduced! Spanish 3 BR., 2 ba. split-level. E xtra lge. lot. Owner extremely anxious! Call & submit 842-7491. Luxurious d U'p 1 e x. 1 NCCiMl\E • · Owner's unit 5 BR. + Two 2 Bdrm. Units 3 BR rental. Secluded Near Harbor Blvd. ~ewpofurtrth lslaninfd. Call $39,500 .or er orma· $3,500 Down tlon, 873-7420, .~ --m~ -REALTORS----m LJ::! 4 Locol Offices to S.rve You La • c;..rol General * BROADMOOR * SPANISH INFLUENCE' 1n this lge. 5 bdrm., 3 bath home. From the massive entry tbru the mm gates to the expansive redwood deck, with its unexcelled view of Ne\VpOrt Harbor. The dining rm. wall is covered with crystal mirrors; the entire house has the ele- gance you expect In Corona de! Mar. Offered at $129,950. CORBIN-MARTIN . R~ltora _ c.11 Anytlil!.. *1662 EASTSIDE HOME+ TRIPLEX COUNTRY -.:..SEmNG sl~ted on a large UOXl50 lot with towering al\ade trees, a comfortable 3 BR 2 BA home with den and front porch for your rocker PIUI lep8J'aled away from the howe a triplex with income potential or $4tl/mo. , anlf 169.9'0 for all CALL 644-7211 /.Jn NIGl I • 8111LL \ f, 115'>1J[11\l £5 SOUTH OF THE BORDER SPANISH ARCHES! URGENT NOTIC·E· EVER STOLEN Muoi ,.crltice this delightful A DUPLEX ~ Bdrm, 3 bath beach etas-Tl)>'f this: two 2 .. l;Jedroom sic. Family room, 2 fire-uni~ • double prage in- pla.ces, open beams. Step ~ or $3150 per) year. to UM! water. Under market Ask.iDa:: ~950. Try >'?'11' at $19,900. Take over low o-Nn~ -price ownerRed says Interest loan! I SEU.! Call Carpet, GRUBB & ELLIS CO.· Reallors. 645-8080. 675-7080 S1BOO DOWN -Buy• new beautiful 3 br 1 yr old MISSION VIEJO, sharp 3 . townhouse in Sandpoinle - BR., 2 ba. Barcelona )lame. burnt o~ &hags -Va· ~tom drapes, patio. cant too! Hurry! B k r Fortin Co., Rltrs. 642.5COJ 546-0022 ="'.=o,....-,-----Gener•I General • BIG CANYON BUit.:DING SITE Gorgeour view lot overlooks 50 locres of fairways and greens. Perfect for spacious, elegant .home .in Newport's exCiting new community. ~.500. · .• CAN YOU TOP THIS? 3 bedrooms, den, 3 baths, pool, tennis, great view of bay and ~ean. New carpets,-ap- pliances, all for less-than-'86;000. Fantastic mvestment. Let us show you !<>daY ! BAYSHORES WATERFRONT 501 frontage oil sbelt.ered eastside location with spectacular view of bay! Pier an~ slip for 85' boal with additional anchorage spaee. Spacious ·living. room and dining room, 4 bedroOms, deb, dark room, shop, and game tooi!L$350;000-.- FIRST TIME OFFEREO:-LIDO ISL Artistically decorated! Guest quarters with private entrance and kltclienette. 50 ft.'lot, street to s.treet: Large~south pQtio. 4 ,11!4·, .:.... rooms, 3 baths. $135,000. Iii GARDEN SPOT Secluded among towering native trees ls the setting for this highly lip-~raded 5 bed·. room 3 bath home ·01 fainily sIZe and coun- try style. $73,900.. . • . . ' • CHARMING CAPE COD +-High beamed ceiling -' country kitchen. -Panere«family~. -cus.tomcarefi''8 Ian scaplng, short ·walk to pnvate beach, Only $83,500. . ' . •• 1, 1 I I START. REAL.LV"ttlllNGL ~ Exciting 3 bedroom 2'i!i b,ath, ,Bluff coDdo near tennls cburts .. R,are ."Q" plan. COnver- sation area and firepiace. Large master suite. $74,900. -- .d BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE! ~ ... ~~w...~· .L.tb!!'-P.11~1!1:. Ing, profess1ooally 'decorated 2 bediOOm, den home. Terrazzo entry and kitchen. IJove- ly wl!llpapers-.A GEM! $55,927, ' ;.,,. i.¥E F_OREST SECLUSION ! tlve belutifl\t forest-POOi, tilllllls, ll!k•: salllilg, hqnes."Uhfqtie 4 bechwm, I bMbr 1eparate den, 'let bar, forinal dining. '113,000. CHARMING lRVlNE·TERltACE • ,1 · Vacant and ready for ~-·3 nea-" room 2. bath, ·extra. larije· llVJDg rooin. '1'bp condition !OJ lease '4i!O/month with option' to buy at $7t,500. '/ Loot<ING FOR THE B.IST? • •' ' '. Want a new lease oli -1a.? TOM RROW NIGHT · I Tuesday, Nov. 20th~: 8:0() P .~. • ' -, HEAR ~ -- . the dynamic, world-famous : s~~e~~ucator · . ' ..... JOBN LUMaLEAU .. President-, Lumbleau Real · Es.tate Schools PRESENT THE INSlD.E STO~Y Of " . : PEEK·A·BOO ·' A LITTLE OCEAN VIEW IS BETTER THAN NONE. See this absolutely charming custom home In New~rt Heights. 2 Bedrm and large den. Dirung area, 2~ baths, 2 fire- places, beamed ceilings, dble. g,rage, heavy shake roof,' enjoy a mini view o( the spark- ling blue Pacific. 0\11' ex~IJl$ive at $56,500. CALL 540-1151. ' MESA VERDE ·UST BUY . JUST LISTED -3 bedrm., 2 bath, family . room. Large patio and all the usual Mesa Verde extras. Nice quiet tree lined street. Vacant and read~.for your move. Priced at only $36.,900. CALL.54().1151. , • ERITAGE REALTORS Generol . Gonorol . . ·. FAliTASTIC VIEW. .OF BAY & OCEAN! Ciill !Oday ta see this view home in Irvine : !J'ertace. ·,Expensive new features. 3 BR, FR. 1 & DR. 3· Frplcs, beautiful pool. $182,500. ' . WESLEY N. 1TAYLOR CO., Realtors . · · · 2111 San Jooquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. ().44..4910 General ' General OCEAN FRONT -ALMOST Your best buy In Newport Beach Duplex Jusr l,i "block: from ocean front. One .t be4room and one 2 bedroom. Excellent terms lo me<!l your needs or ta..' shelff!r . Offered for $82,500. Call OOLWEW.. 6*-«5M HOME AND INCOME UNIT Walking distance to East 11th St. shopping -area. 2 bedrrom home plus Jovely 2 bedroom a p art m e n t . Heated and filtered pool. Offered for $59,500 Call COWEIL 64l>0556 LA CUESTA 2 STORY NEAR OCEAN ''CAREERS .:·IN · . ' . ~~~D~~~,.· • family room hoine is only '. . . . . REAL, ESTATE'' REALTORS .. ANO ASSOCIATES ' . , :DELUXE TRIPLEX -VIEW ·it could change ~your life·-~for the ·better! .. ·Real• pride of ownership. One block to the beilchc In high rental area. See super owner's apartment. A listing of Ed Nelson. $132,500. CALL 644-7270 WE CAN ·HELP Y9U_ 11_µ'¥_'., . . -_S;EE - ' ~-fihn . ·.~SfJJ!ation .:Qf the story · of (U;,t • I .! • .'j .. ' • •• •· • • · . . ' --' ' l. . .. ' .. the men 'and women . who can . ' . make it happen for you! ' ---- Full-Time ;.g Pir1£tim~. Oppodunities in -SELL. OR TRADE ·A HOME ·""'-"'-"'- ANYPLACE tN THE NATION - . !128 -E. Co•st Highway, Coron• dtl M-r General 0.-ol oflJo !J~/e LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rm., or 5 bdrms., with 6 baths, Lld.o ~orQ. Spec- . ·~ ' · . .~~nl!lf. ~iew !j Waterfri>nt livlnS rm. -with , · • ·• ·. ·. ~t;ip-dOW!l we~ !>ar. ~lfir·lt 1lqjit:' #15;000. ' · · WA<~RFRfNT 'tor*o1-ll1Do ~oRD aoixl05'. Magnificent View I $185,000 . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34T ~-cr:; Suite 1, N.B. . 675'611n Llt'r Bit-of HH-. Right here 'on earth in this $htµ"p 3 bdtm with dining nn,. built his, dishwasher, · 2 . baths. Family rm , m II,\\ ,\ llL\1'11 ~lire.. Fprced air heat. 0PUBLIC AUCTION PaUo. ~o down to veto;, · · )oW. dowri ·all others! $35,000 STATE OF CALIF. ' ~Intl. J.tcsldences in TARBELL' ·Realtors Corona dcl-Mar . " .' FINANCTNG AVAILABLE -~--•A goOd wai1t ad ts a gooc:t i l" .Mr. WHt 620-3708 vt!Stment; -, .... - General General New Homes-Resale Homes-fnvestment · Properties MACNAB .. IRVINE \ . ' . TRAJNING PROG.RAMS-~FOR IN~r~•J · SUCCE$S -' . . ~ ...... :--...... ' . . 8:00 .. P·.M. : ... S·O-a=-==--·p . r • •,,.._, -'-" • ·.NEWP:ORTER :Ill-··-· • • t' •• •• • CAIOUSE.L ·,ROOM-: ~ . . - 1117 Jamboree. Roa~~-Ne.Port •each •. ,.-.. - • · $99,500 ON GALAXY Pool sized yard-3 large BR's, huge den & 'family. formal dining. Big laundry & 14£r.:;in.,,,tr.r .• Bever! om~Y 642-8235 .• (U)4 '.ri, .. ,160LOF OCEAN VJEWc •. , $122,500 Incl. land. Gentle winds caress tllis 3BR Lusk Home In Ha rpor View Hills. ' Quiet cul-de-sac, close t o secluded green- belt area. Cathl'(lral ceilings-profession- , ally landscaped. Walter King 644-6200. ' (Ul6) • . . ' Ll)IE IN A PARKI ·out.standing "Portolino" located on edge of Harbor Vie\v Park. Bonus roo m &. fee land. $84,500. Lois Miller 642·8235. (U20) ' 3~S years old and it's truly in outstanding condition! You'll love the rustJe open beams and the ope n spadoiJ.sness or it. Huge I master llllile v.i th sunken tub, v.'alk in closets and an ATRIUM. It's the quality that really counts. $44,900 with easy terms available. COATS , · WAL~AC!< REALTORS _ _,5..,46...,4141- (0pon EY!flings) A-FRAME BY 'l:HE SEA -T.HE SPACE RACE Is your fanlily outgrowing your house'!' BeauUf\1.l • 5 bedroom home in prestige Harbor View H om e s neig hborhood. Formal din- • ing room, family roon1 wtth fireplace, 3 baths 6. S car g~e. Not lease l.nd. Va· cant &. read)', $81,SOO • . I· I This Is one ot the finest 4 bedroom hOmos In Corond' del Mar. Deslllfied for !U!lest ap- peal. Formal dlnlng & 1'1'1illY rodm with garden view. "17,500. ' ' . . , NO AD.MITTANCE ·CHARGE REFRESHM.ENTS C. F. Coleswotlht Rooltors _ MM02t I .. [: lrVlne 1 .... ,.::...1--ty-.. ., I ~1~ .. ~~c::c.! • • . split In two. S.. Drtw ' io1 °""'°'I" 142•123' bl" · :IH!I °""""· C · M . .. , m-ms <e-rn-tmJ. ' I'"......,_ 144·12DD ll<tlboo ...... -. ;. .. ~, --HUSBANDS ·AND WIVES INVITED ' . . • J a . 2161 5.., Jooquln Hlllf Rd., N.B. .. • Mewp$.rt liNdl, Callfcwnl• 121U ' ,.. • .;.~.;..;;~.-;~ .. ..; .. ~~~~~~~ .. ~~~~ .... ~~~.;;.~il. .. .J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~E. 4 Br, fom. I'm, 11o i ' • ~ kitch. J...Sly. $1t ,Stl Martholl RM1t)I --~...;._-t J - - .. • :-:~ Walker & lee ! ~i, • .:~::::·=·=·=·~··~·=·=··====~ ; SUPERSharp H a l ec r est ·,, Homt-. 4 BR, 1% BA. t ... ·, $34,250. 10',~ down. Open ( • House. By 0wner. Call tor I appt. 540-9512 ·~: WESTCLIFF OWNER 1 '" Spac. 2 Br, 2 Ba, lge yd. 480 Shady Dr. 645-5028. 1,, COURT SAl.E I " Drive by 2135 Thurin. I . eau Agent 538-2389 ·"' 3 BR. l~~ ba. Brick frpl, I Lg. L.R.: newly dee. $27,000. , · '• Fortin Co. Rltrs 642·5IXIO ! _ Fount•ln Vall•Y .i~ 1;· "Brand New" I~. , ~ VACANT -MOVE IN ' . I -3 · large bedrooms, 2 full . 1 baths large iamily kitchen, huge 50xl35 lol, b oa t , Ir camper gat~ easy terms. I $32,950. 54&-11M . ..., ! ~ Walker & lee RIAL llTA.TI : < i 1-::::==::::;:::;;;_;:::::=:::::'. l·-1 YA /FHA J~_ °''11cr says bring in the or- ,. fC'r. 4 Bedroom, 1~ bath. 1 6'/o VA loan. Take over ..... payments of $168.. [nclude11 )•"' PITT. Al this for only ,... $29,500. •·· WM McCABE REALTY 8740 \\'ARNER AVE. jl"' J"'OUNTAIN VAU.EY _, " * 142-4405 * I'~ l...,;;ii;;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;; I · I::. ---. " I ' • e FREE LIST REPO SS ESSIONS f • • T -,-· • -. I• I . ~ I I r ! > I • ' , ' I • ' .. Monday, November 19, 19ll DAILY PILOT f l V1c1tlon Rentals 425 lndust rlll Rental 450' Wlff nfurn. up OXH Un u rn. Aph. Fu rn. Apt. Unfurl" 36$ Apti., Apt1., Foutil1ln Volley ·.;::;.::.,;...:,....;.. ___ .:.:.; I-'---~-----Furn. o r Unfurn. 370 f urn. or Un,_. 1-..,.;;===;:....--.,....' Huntl~ INch Cost• -• ...;...;;;.;,;;..;;;...;c....;.;..;.;'-'.;...;;.--...:.~----3 8", 2 ba, <ri>i.. droo, bitu~. _...;... ______ SPAC '"' _ Hunting)on heel! Hunttntton - h'plc· ftnced yd; 1295 mo FOR .LEASE. Drnnd new newer 3 l>l\ 2 .... $1•0.•165 D ELUXE 831..eiil ; • . Har00r View Home WITH ~· ~~Wr! ~ BACllELOR'i:i BR PatJos, A P A RTME NTS , VJ!:\V! ~fonaeo n\Odel. 3 ' ' ' trplc't, prlvt pragt8 • 01. G, w cf, MufttlDfton Beach bcidroonu or 2 + den, ,2 Costa Mesa vlded bath&: Iota of clo&ebi. Air Cond . Frplc's . 3 S11'im· n~iou t't•ler . t"11t'na 370 Lrt~se.?,',.,;,,'!°~::ti!'° •Y' HAR~OR & WARNER Jlolt.1.pBL. far.-cpk-.w.L2-• --children. 3 blkl \\11llkl.11'f to 14_00 sq. ft. • to 700> K<f· ft, too,1·n, 6 blks to 1111 . Avail m111u1d 10 au fr«ll\11l)'S it . tar Christmas. 2 wt'cks. O.C. j\irpo11. ._,Rl'.r11. P.O. Bo¥ 3465 Aspen, PEtt SARRETT RE.ALT\' be.th, lu.xunou. c!a.rpots If . , nee. llall, pool I: pool table•, min.¥: Pools • lfcalth Spa • / 11 " (I 1 SllARP 4 BR. l~ Ba nr ~her up-craded feature~ JJ.()OMY, cptd, 2 BR, dble .aunt 00.tht. See tor )'OW"" Tfll!ds Courts • Gym and • • ~ A shop~ blt 1na ..,,tpa to private tennl1 pr + Mbb)' rm. Walk tq tell. J 130l Ktelson Ln. {l Billiard Room. ~ :Ji~ c m Cllklrado, or 1303) 925-3843. '42.4353 Rlnti ls to Shiro 430 NOW LE ASING Hunt ington h och NEW M-1 • .. ·pr, len<td Y?d. $270 per ~· NswEWimmloa pool, tic. lhopptng l:ii5. mo. Ag<nt bik. w. o1 Bee.eh, 1 blk N. 1 BR. i'rom 1100 t t nio. agnt 962-5319 • •·~ home will be &IS-3928, Eves: -• ot Siat.r) l BR. l< Den From 119;1 (I ~a On erreu SHARE 3 bdrm borne. WEU.. planned Town~U&C cornpfeted aometime in Dee. N • 842-'lMS t 2 BR. front $210 "ii Stra.\i:ht, n1ature . StUdenl .i BR, l'<l.dl>t•tt•cbed.1tor'. pleue phone "9W· tt wlli ewport Beoch ~--~='---•I 2 BR. Twnhlff From 1200 Lei us show you a new way of life in garden OK. ~ or 56l-<lll7 Prlv .. tlo. Beach area. be to your advantage. u BRAND . L"'""" flHcb MEDITER RANE AN settlng apartments. Fireplaces, heated pools, ~·~";!":.!6~· =,,.,..--,--..,. 940 ..SCh F't. &: UP llantilton & Ne"•lanll St ~1970 963-G43S 4 962-65U ~pe• have not bee q new upper urut, ~ • YNC straight male need~ or ,.,,_ _. n•c ponlbl• we "I· It. 3 br, 2 be, 1rp1e, OIARMJNG 1 Br. on ocean. VILLAGE putting greens & much more. Personal· mai• or rmi to ,,,.. 2 br Quiet Couple 1 Br, Cottage. could order them mutuatlY huge balCQ11Y, bltns, dshwhr, S200 Jnel. ut1l. OP P 2400 H CM' 1zed management guarantees problem·.Iree bch hse, NB $115/nlO. !'!!~~~,..~~~~I $135. Fnoc1 Y?d. Stove" retr. to Your tute. !600 pr month. I< pr. 13"1>/mo. \;early. A!bertoon'•· m Gavtota. • <-.,n•> .. m7 ~ · • living. Bring this ad & we wllhbow you what 61H83I RE;NT 600 "'' It. 110011110. H-'lndtro. 54t·9641 644-4687. Agt. 673-a>ss, eves 615-5487. 4M-1719. ~ -~ ;,:;:;=.::;·,_-,.-,-..,..,.-=:-:: 29>1 Randolph, CM. (Shop FOR LEASE:' Bralld New UPPER. dock. ~•, % BR, EFFIC. t. Deliiie h\ml $50 OPEN9·.~.R30YOAY WO really have to o(fer. Sorry-adulis only. 2 GIRLS need 1 gjri, 21·28 No. 91 Call Slii-SUS. 3 llR, family nn. lrplc, 11< , •--~ ~• __ ,. ~ ~ 6551·G WARNER AVE H 8 847 .. 526 to share 3 Br apt Nr beach ='°'"""',...:::~=~-~ Ila. crpta A drps, bltM, SIG CAN;iON Country Club w,,w crpts lo drps, bltin1, & $15 wo. ~. ,,_ ~ P o rk•Llko · • ., • ' tn NB. 1100 mo. 64~. Rent1l1 W1ntod 460 children It pet1 ok, $295. ~auty, 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, No ehildre.o or pets, Yrly ldry, Vll1age Ion;~ SlS-1036 Family Room,. Ebrm8.1 $300. 673-4921 New"'1' &e•ch . Sur~lt\fl . Apt. Unfur n. 365 •m. Unfurn. ~ SHARE my 2 BR apt, ~ii blk \Vl\NT to rent 2 B1· hse. Dining room, 3 car garage Ant ·F · 360 DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Aptr. i -='--'-"'•'--"---.._ from bay, 2 blks tron1 Lg yd1 gar, bavr pc!iS. 3 BR, 2 BA on cul-de-sac on Cul·de-sac. Overlookln"' ~·· urn. 135 ....., 'Wk .k up. 1 8 0 Alao tum Bachelor. H I •~ beach. 83.!-7398 Pi:eterrably w1run1 ,,·/crpts, nr acbools &e b e a c h • ·:-. _.. °" uni ngton ~•Ch Newport Beech $2.85/ino. Call 846-341.0, the Golt Coune. • Yearly Generll 2 Br & bacb's. Color TV, Pvt Patios * Htd Pool SHARE HOUS:E: OR APJ'. clrps, bltins. s:.18-1144 bef. Lease $950. mo. 839-!m. , ntaid iserv, •· J."°I. ~THE Nr. Shop'g * Adulta only. * 2 WEEKS FREE * SAVE $$$ HOME-PARTNER ~5~pn~"~A~s~k~!~or~K~ri~<.~~~ ' 3lrpedR .' ,:0.":f~w':"', xtr~ LA R CJ.E . New po r 1 Aitont.lon Rontorol ~8\B 41i:,;_9681 Newport Martinique Apts. UNDER 'l'IEW Vista . 'ael Mesa :....._::s:is.;~1194=·.0:5'8"=~°"479"='~ l $250 Bea.ch-Westclitt home. 4 $8Wll5. Room ideal for . • 1m Sanfa Ana Aw., CM MANAGEMENT . . WORJONG girl would like to I I~ c ean. • 96.1-3395 Bedroom.a, 3 baths, sharp,' students. C.Omn1• k 1 t ~, BfAUTlFlJL baytrpnt apt, 1 :r.tgr Apt 113 64&-5S42 2.JIB.__.BUJns~ .Ne.w..l)t. dee:. ADULT·GAltOEN 1101\tES share 2 BR condo v.·/same. ,_.,1onilt Ut'J.i~URN 3+")in Home ln ln lleCluded area. $52> per Lounge wJfrplc. Ocean vu. terrific view, .. newly orated. Encl garages. Beau· lRVIN~-AVE: AT MESA $115 mo.+ uills. ~762'2 . 1 Huntington Beach. $240/ month. CALL H ~rt tare SJ.15-il£5 Studloe incl all. redecora_ted 2 Br furn or WI ~SON GARD;ENL tilul landscaping. Lrg pla'y M~e M.t w/deJ19Sits 001¥ ·FEM., 25 to-35 share ful'n., ',;;;;;;;;;;;;•••I MO 549-4131. Realtors ·54&-6880 , Ocean!ron t. Students ok. . unfurn. ~7834 or 6'16-4750 Beautiful grounds, qwet 2 BR are, a child's dream. Oosc 2 Bedroom 2 B I Cdll "'" "960 Townho 8 " bath ts """" r K>USl", u·' .nu-v p I 5 ~1n9 4 BEDROO~· 2 BATII $14~200. 1 Br's Some, OCEANFRONT 40' llv rm, us~ • n 1• crp • lo shopping & schools. ,. ~ . or 673-8262. -ersona s 30 F&mlly nn, fonnal dlni · \\'/views, lge rms. frplcs 3 br wsbr/dry, tbnt J une drps, bit-ms, closed patios. Oilldren v.-elconle. Day & Night Security, Pool, --------..;.o I nn, private wtennis &. poolog & sundecka. Color TV's, 1 SO. $295 .. incl. util 64Jo.52il, Pool. J?-62.50/:P.10. Adults, No Call 842-o480 Fount.al~. Rec: Bldg. v.•/ G f C3S TO~IORRO\V·s Senior Citi· 2 BR., 1 bath •••• ,., ,, , $315 pr 1 v tleies $5'15/ th 0pen'-7 Days A \\'eek 548--4757 pets. 2,, blks \V. of Harbor exerctse nn, b1lllard11, col· l rllft or Kent zens: ~1atu1·c \\·on1an, a.ver·! 2'BR. 2 ba, den, ale •• $275 644-5686 ' e ·v e n'i'n :;in & BEACON RENTALS . 1 BEo n0or.t pool blk to ~~On \Vilson. Ca 11 or TV. Ea .. Apt. has dish-MINI WAREHOUSES age height & 1~·eight. n1any !'BJ\., 2'iii ·be ...... $385(400 weclcenda: 642-5135 days, (lr(PiCcaailly Circus) beach. y~...i' .• S'l55. ~1 .... 1e . • VILLA YORBA v.·asher, rel.rig, shag ~pt ~ STORAGE interest, nean ng 60, no lBR-.• 2.baths ...... l400!4Zi LUXURIOUS -an . view lill>l.AC.t. Hwy. No .. 6 •dull. ~ .. ~:.! 2696 -..-Sierra Village 7141 ... ••-Prt P8iio o; deck. 545.4855. aches or pain• ye t: Would • BR., a b6ths •••••••••• $425 .......... t.aguu Beach 41M-9491 ........ ,,...,_ . ...6'"79.U ?\o }IO\'C·ill or ~Jove-out like lo cot·l~sponcl \\•ith gen· 4 BR., 2\~ baths • ,, • Sft/475 home: 8J'and new 3 Br .. 2~t OCEANFRONT 2 BR , Small Adult Cbmplex In Lush 1, 2 le 3 Br. Unfum. BUXX to beach & bay. 2 Br., charge__§. Front $}.50 per tlema_n nC'ar the san1e age; S BR, 3 ba,' N'pt Bch .• , $515 ha~ }onnal din. frpJe, Wi'2J. ~$ _l.AN0~_9RD$ $., GARAG!; $240 ·!EARLY. F~~ Setting. Located 5 i'efrig, util incl. Moderate l·ba., frpl ., enc~. patio. Ne1v-nlOnth. Unancially independent, CALL 552-7500 everythl.ng! Pool~. tenniS, ut l)S"'rept Ult properties. 64>8908. eves It. weekends. J\.1tn • .front· Beach & Frwy. Income • Applications Wei-ly decor, caJ'1)e'led & dl;aped. llami!to·1 & Ne"1land St., HB sense of hun1or 1\'ith basic 1 sauna, jacuuf. $500. We aei;vlce nil the beach DELUXE 3 BR, 2 BA 1 2 BR, 2 BA $235. Gas & Wtr come. Yt1y. USO li.1o. ALLSPACE n1oral principles. \\'rite: VISION 'Q4(~254-Citiel & infan(J Orange' Co. blk to ocean. 968-G767 ·or Pd. I !!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..., Call: 673-3663 642-225.1 Eves. 96().1970 • Classified Ad # 16 2 BDRM -2 BA. garage FEE FREE. Save Time, & $$ 642-76tt 114 E. 20th St., C.~t. LEASE w/optlon to buy, Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560 st'eps.to beach or bay. Yea; N'$ A:LA,.~RINl~LS_ $ OCEANFRO. NT APT. 1 BR. 5.jg.0137 or 646-4095 walk to bcb, lu.'Curious 2 Br, SINGLE car garage for rent Costa ~Iesa, Calif. 926~. •. d h'll -·-~ C «•••~ 2BaCo do I $20/m ont h, Huntington re I round .. $300. 673-0440; ""t!""''. Bay, M~ Wlnterrental.$175.mo.util 2BROM, crpts, drps, bltns, n • nexcluslve~h Beach. Call 979-1070, FULLY LICENSED 642-4758 · Balbotl. lll•nd incl. 548-1930. l'ifmalil.it. pvt patio, washing w,.~ area,ul.lypoodl!'.....,saunteda, ia&· 646-268'7. '* SPIRITUALIST * 5· Cl ment ac 11es, nr. shopping. $'.175. ~. "'""'ra Spiritual readings 10 am-10 REALTY REAL~RS an • • 2 Br rum '111: Dec to J une 1 BDRM apt, atepa: to ocean. ·mo. Adults· onf).'.;373-A Ogle l~caped;,chll~ & pets ok; _._." pm. -Advice on all matten Univ. Parle Center, Irvine 908 BUENA~ Vista. on cliff SISO pe~mQ. couple or girls, Yearly. $JM. St. 6#-4.159 , -$350 per mo. Call 642-1763 0ff :.:;.;.i•:;•:...:cR::•:::n:::ll::l __ _;_c.:.;; I 312 N. El Camino Real, =====I view dec::k. ' patio. Large m..<1969 aft 5 PM • 6t'r~ * EXTRA ·Jr& 1 or ·2 BR. or aft 5 PM 536-4621. PARK NEWPORT I OFFICE PLUS -s a n Clemente. ·492-9136, I \Ve presenlly have a good 2 BR 2 BA + tam rm. &lboli Peninsula San ~~DD...... Heated pool. From $145.1 }llEW BEACH APTS.. APARTMENTS Furn. otf. space con1p, \\'/ 492-9034. selection of rentals from Veey mod~ 2 car gar. OCE "'FRONT 1 BR, be••h, Mature adults, no pets. 1887 DELUXE 3 BR OCEAN Bachelor 1 or 2,Bedrooms full secrelarlal svc., phone ms a mon th • up. ?\fay we. 62.6-2835, 623-3167. ~5 WEIK &. UP Al" ..... Afonrovia. 645-0926. VIE\V and TO'.vnhOuses ans\\'el'ing, mail sv<~ .• dicla· ~ t •• _.. . pool. Spectacular v l e w, 125 8th St th i Fr. $1.M.'so Open 9-6 Daily · · X 000 o ~·vice to you in Santi Ana Hei...ht1 e saee ... -.-a-.. -dee. utll pd, no children. •ELM GARDENS . POOL* ., near e Per. S P I T . tion equip. erox 4 . so Ying Your housing needs? . •• e Ho~~ Rooms •... e Adults Poolside $150 Up. tncluds dbl gar. ~ pa oo s eruus ' 650/mo. SANTA Ana Hei~bts, 4 BR, e Ocean View Apts No J)ets. Sl6S. ·492-21)84 e ALso .Children~s .Seotion Unfurn 2 Br, 2 Ba, drps, Across from Fasbioq · Island SCRIBES OF LIDO r I , I [ I i .II I 1·ilil -.. I : 1·1ill111' "SINCE 1946" lst Wettcm Bank Bldg. University Parle, Irvine D•y1 552·7000 Nights 3 Ba. Frptc, dm rm, tam BALBOA INN Sl!IT bachelor, lndry,, util, 177-E. 22nd St. CM SU-3645 ci'pts, closets galore. Sunny ~~~~~on San Joaqwn· 4340 Campus Dr., Suite 209 mr, nu erpts I; drps, fncd 105 Malit Street kit, maid aervict. Private. LARGE 1 Br .. Pool. NR & bright. :1-101 & cold• water C714) 644-1900 Newport Beach, Ca. 92660 yrd. 213/535-0514 aft 6 PM .. \ , 67U740 49'2-1898. shops. Adlt.s, no pets. $152 pd. ! Ch~ld, no pets. $155. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oi;;;;; (nr Orang~~y Ail'port) So ar 21h3/3L73-2966. BACll.'.a~t. $125 Mo .. yrly. Apt. Unfum. 365 util pd. 11184 Monrovia. _m~o~·~m~-<5~15~~~~-.BREATHTAKING ut 19uno incl. util. Near . beach. ~-I 548-0036. •WALK TO BEACH VIEW · PRE$TIGE SPANKING new house 3 bed. Marshall Refllt)r•6'1$.4600 -ner1 . . • . LGE I br, bltns.; CID, refrig; Brand new 1. 2 & 3 BR: Car· $240. Huge 2 Br apt. High OFFICES 2 bu + fam. dining, frplc. 1 i1:1RN apt Vet)' clean, NEW "tRl!LEX pool, lndry. Adi.ts. no pets. pea, dnlpes, bit-ins. on Back Bay Bluff w/2 Fountain Vi.Dey. Beauti- an bit ina iocl~ dlshwuber elderly , people , 4 e a r I Y Adult 2 Br, 2 Ba, Laundry, $14.'i 126 Monte Vista Mgr 221 lGth St. 84.1~1 priv8.te balcpnies, frplc, ful new b.llldJne, ooond lush shag c pt Id r a p.e·1 615--0343 patio, enclosed garage, $215. ~ ,.,.,.WALK TO BEACH heated pool, loads o( closets. floor, 3,000 square feet, private ~.uded p a t i o . C 416 Hamilton, C.M. 646-4414. 2 BR, elect blttns,. refrig., 2 BR. Carpets, drapes, bltins. 745 oo'nlingo Drive will divide tnfu smaller 2 BR Cond -M n.. Ste, P' to poOl. Dbl Pf. , 1 ottl Mell Bol~· 1·11-gar, Centerly 1 o ca t ed . 205 15th St. 960-1749 or 9~1268 Ol' 645·1260 otfic.,, SOc per -··-. o • ····-o,J;IC mi. to '-'.""'. Perm rental -_ Mature adult• only. No pets. 847-3957. 'Zz::::i:llz::::i:::EZ:::::Z:::::Z:::::Zi ~--2 BR Qindo ••••• 1245 Monoe ~,. C d O $1£0 646-4224 i . fool. includes carpets, 3 BR Hom• ..... $295 moll" $350/mo. Call eve. 499-3736. -e fO NEW '. 2 •Bil. 'ltoi .. all elec $190. Lg '. 3 b. 2 ba DOG RUN *LA 'PARISIENNE* drapes, all· utllitle•, janf. 3 BR Home •..•• $300 mo/lse Ho -' , \AU. lffllJTIES PAID blt-ins. Garaee. $275 Mo. .: dupstainbltins' r. 1 2. 2 Br, $159. Grpl./drps, pool, 2 BR ~.-& U 1 All 1 tor service. ,Call Marilyn 3 BR Home ••••• $325 mo/tse UNI rurn. or Compare before you rent yearly, Broker 6~ crp ... , rps, • poo • , gar, chi!p ok. 842-3546, .. .J'w.11. • n · e ec. Stovall ~n4> 832-M40. f BR Home ••••• saoo moJlse Unf"'"" 31 c..toui designed featuring· •• 1L •• p . . I "'ell behaved children OK. 842-4504. Fireplace, htd pool. Adults. 4 BR Home ••••• $425 mo/lse ' e ~pacioul Jdrehen with ~---•n•MU 1 ~7003/ 541)..6752 NE\V APT, adults, pets,·~~ $l9;), & Up,, 979·J.268 RANCH REALTY Sll-200> Gen.rfl • . dj,roct lighting • 2 8R • BAY VU Yrly $250. e TROPICAL POOL e mi. to bch. 2' Br, huge Al"l'On from golf ~ FOR lease. beaUt JBR, 2BA, _ _ _ • SeP.ara-te .din'g area Adults, no: pets. &U-6372 -or 2 ~ l~t Ba. Spiral 1trcae, patio/!@ced' yd, 1 stoey. 3>432 Santa Ana Ave. w/lovely yard & lrg pa'io. • • • Usme-llke storage ggr-1-.-c1• .E:o Balbo&-1-frplc; bltns, .b'g encl patio, _$221!. 84&-316§._ enciad RV stor~. crpts. 2 BR.,. 1 ba., uni, New cal'p, •·Private patios Blvd' . • . ' fncd yrd. Gaa & wtr pd. 2 BR, ta d -bttns -8TPS to OOh, lrg mod,~2· drpt, blhns, $31'5 tnclds park drapes, decor. Yrly. $Z'.i0. • Cloeed garage ,v/storage r • • • _ ~1168 Cl'J> • ?'• • br, :frplc, Jx;am eel. all bit Ll.FE OR DEATH Let our babies live. For alternatives 10 ABORTION call' LIFE LINE 551-5522, 24 hrs. BEST MASSAGE IN N.B. 3400 Irvine Ave. SuJte 103B (at Bristol) Open 8 AM. Ann. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con- fident, sympathetic pregnancy counseling. Abor· lion & adoptions ref. APCARE 64H4'.16 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Phone 542-7217 or write P .o. Box 1223, Cost ti ~. Tennis Anyone? l Patrick, Swami have mater Call Sally 488-9553 Auto Tr•nsport1tion 525 IF you_are_ interested in a car pool to aOY.Wherc call car pool servicell.t 642-6589 after. 6..P It pool privl ~ 3 BR., 2 ba., unt new carp,• Marble pullman OOWER · 2 br', I ba dup. AIL elec 2 br l ba 1 ~~rt$1.65~r.l~h~Ugd. schlk. N& ins, $225 winter $215 yrly ' drapes decor yrly SJ%i •Ki sz Bd Bltina crpt, gar, $225. ·-mo biJ • • ....... ,. • c o · o Newport Crest 3 Br 3 ba [g] NEW 3 ~· 2 Ba, bltns, 3 BR..' 2 ba: OcWitroitt • ~-. ~es • SUI'· yrly. Call 675-0496 c d ~·No pets. $175 ~ pets. 646-3186; .545--0760. pool/tennis crts, $375 I I truh oompactor. crpts, ,Fum.; winter $32;. , 'rounded with plush .land-Ciplstr•• llHch ~bert No. 7... LGE 2 •Blt.• lS..·.Ba 'SIUdio., \vinter $4'(5yriy, 6f2-3490 F'I1;tSl' mofl!h rent. tree. LOst .... ,_., 1, drpg, comm park/pool. Nr 2 BR., 2 ba. turn, winter scapjng • ., -. _ ... , .. ~ . 2 BR, 1 ~~. ,.&: :r tir-', 111.. Encl gar. Infant, OK;· ~o SPACIOUS 2 BR 2 BA DW -DellDCe toffll!e'JJ nr'" tlrport. I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~il:~I UCL 833-8447. !300. ·•• _. ,. ' Adults, No Pets. Ntw' ·aei"*e-. 2 br.:._ 2 ha, -.. 111 pets. Sl!>l.50{mo. 847-4440. .bltns, 2 patios: nr Hoai -1, 2 4-~ Jtm. spaces from I 3 BDR..\f. ''BA, fenced yd, 3 BR 2 ha Nm $300 yd)'. , 1 BDRJ\.1. $185. ,b'Pl. 2 ~~ .. $225/mo. !:;1 blr~~ ~ ** 2 Br ·new paltit, -c1oS'ed .Hosp. Adults. $220 mo. $05 per mo. Janitorial Found (fr9' 1d1) 950 bltns, community park., · 3fiS \V'. Wilson 642-19n 34592 VJa Cataliria. 496-1.9'l4. Colleg~ uA '646-6032 garage:'i:hildr& small pet ok 642.-4387 · service & ample parking. GERMAN Shepherd, mate. pool, """1'· $300. 536-941' $30 WE Ek lo UP NEW LARGE 4 BR 2 BR. .ma ve. r . ar $150. 947.st49. . 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. ~l: attBef. noon or Found Nov. lllh. Vic Coo<ta L..-. IMcb .~ e Studio A~ BR Apts. -$.a5 -~ VIE\::U..om nr occ ~cps:: ~.'°Pb: ,2_BR, ._l .BA. J31t-~. cpts, 2 BR, 2 B,\ .. BIULappllances ......... iiiii&i.' ii"°°iiiin'i;;;;;;;;;;-' MeSa,' ~ll· to j~ntily e TV A Maid. Service Avail. . . Adlts $165. 546-0'lSl. drps, 1 blk to beach $175 Pool. ~214. , Pri ate Offj _5<&1!255~~~----- SPORTY Bach $85 util pd. e Pbone Service. -Htd. Pool Cor.onl 0.1 Mir . · ·mo. 645-3<6.l, ~l336. OCEANFRONT APT . . V ' Cft FOUND Men's tortoise shell _cook, sleep~batb I; Wtave e 'CN14ren I: Pet ~k>n · · LARGE 12 BR, 2 level, l lh 2 BDRM. new tj;pt A drps, I BR. Yearly $225. mo. Util C.0-mtnon ~ntra'nce to 1 thru 5 r,rescr:lptlon glasses. Fow:id COLOR TV. 1ge &ch $156. hllloli Island 2376 l'l{ewp:irt Blvd., CM ba. $165. mo. Nr. Baker A s min. fwy A lieach. $'.140. incl 548-1930 offices. Harbor & Baker n Lagunlta full kit, util pd, avail. 548-97'">J5 or 64,;-.~967, . · · · ... -Mendoza. 637-2943. mo. ·(213) S»-1898. · area, Costa Alesa. For In· 494-'5679 .eito believe smJ pet ok. Bayf.ront Spectacular view "'' Garden Apt Pool Rec . '6" den, 2 Ba, gar. $260/mo. SouUiCo Realtors. FND Pendant on chain from NEW""palnt, 2 br'tri $195 NEW Balboa Island (&deoodforSS on rent} ~ *~NlNG 2 Br, 2 Ba QUIETnrH.i.rbournew '"° \VALK to Beach 2 er ·+ formation call 545-8424, ==------- SO. w/V'w,\\', 2 Br. $235 big .iRD BA,' U · • • Rm $1~ TIO W '~h.· ....,.. . 1 Br. frplc bltns encl gar, 6Ta!0098 or 89'J-.0691. ·~~!!'~!'!"!~!!!!~!! Curacao Vic Iris & Cout ~-k ail bl ""' ~.. 4 v Rm, den, · ,.,, · LO• "-l'L Adults $170. 5.16-0269.. H Own t · , __ ~ • tn•. •m ~.. "p dinllW. -; !am mi, ..._ ...... n9 •·I 150 'b be NEWc-3 BR, 2 BA. YRLY, Ill DOV!!R DR. N.B. ..~.:.~ er m!" '~· FANTt\STIC Vu 3 Br $340 Wields ~-ot pter, Sub leaie ~uan 6 TOWNHOUSE $cell· r, single storyil am 2 BR, 1 BA, blfils, garage. 2 Blks to heh, $295. 642-7914, 3 510..., ofc. bldg. w/view <>'ft""O<JVJ (l!Ot>everythlng, needs. TLC _ will ·acOept reu .. otter. ·l~nR. 1 BA Furn JXM> 2 Br,, fireplace, pool, private 646-9~ 0 2043r 6*-~ a a c e $145 mo. Ask for Dale, 642--3188 LuxurioU61y A P P 0 1 n t e d FOUND hand made silver bracelet vicinity O.C.C, Art Center parking lot. 548-5767 FOUND orange long haired cat. College· Park area. s.s1..:11.u Trfl.,eftl . 3 br 2 ba custom AVall._ Dec f•l.. 61$4512 or l51 •E. 21st St. O.f patios, continental break· -~ 962-MTI 1385'2 patibo. F.P .• all appls. ~ * i4i 1"6 * taat. !lpoc:ious ground~ near 2 BR. bltns, shag crptg, fresh =-------IVA'n:RFRONT apt· 2br, Suitesft 500Amsq. 1 ft. :.~1!,"!l ALA R•nt1l1 642-1313 shopp!:'.g-!: tme beach. Fur-paint, encl patio, nr OCC. Irvine newly decor. $275/mo, Utll 6J2..eiD Pe _.. .... "". A--~1on Rontorsl Condominiums nished or urdurnished, from $165/MO. 557-0350 pd. Sl.Jp avail. 673-2182 ,,,...., 2 BR. M adults $250 Corona d l M "YEARLY HO:ME":.2 br; 2 NEW deluxe office space for Stoeo Us f'lnt for All Your Unfurn. -320 garage. -•ture '· · e ar, NE\V 1ge deluxe 2 .Br. Good 2 BR., 2 Ba. Walnut Square. blk.from heh t..bay. Only lease in Choice Mission Vle-_;.;c.;.;;;.c.;;.. ___ ~;;::1 no children or ·pell .. Nr. 644-2611. toe. No pets. Adu1ts only. $225/n10. Avail Nov. Ztb. Housing Needs. We Have shopping centers. 2 2 ~ 0 2028 Fullerton. 644-IS69 Call M2-2>;>"'7. .$220. utll pd. 673-lfe. Jo· Auto "" Plaza. Goo d Homea-Apts or Condo's in .lack Bly Rutgers Dr Apt B CM NEW " bea~•" 2 Br 1 2 BR ""-·-freeway o!f rtlIIJ.P at Avery '_. .. Bch -Mm VieJo • _, '"' -•• • · uu.1"' • ·• close to heh . .J' "'11 or Parkw Call ....._ ___ p u1 N!Pe1-0ana Pt A $;::; BEA.UT. 4 BR. 3 BA, + 6U-6035. Ba. Huge master Br, beam D•nl Point L19un1 a..t'h unfum. Yrly or ·wmter.· ay. vwno::,-. a Qemente. fam. rm., 2-car pr. &: LGE: 2. BR, IWi.'Ul'Y apt. clngs, ~ top view. $300. I 613-6640 Brazeau, ·83l-l400. Lost 555 OPEN 7 DAYS psUo, OYOr!ooldng ·beeut. Bitns, .quiet. heai.d pool. mo. 673 1658 2;::ics ...::.e.3. ~ '°.•%qu~ .. i: * F~NGT ·*· San Juon Copistrono D!,~ wlr."'...:...ftt\a~O: .--------1 • .BEACON RENTALS """· Xlnt cond. Harbor_ru ~.~ }9(1 .Pomona. BACllEl:.OR I< carpofl priv •-•· " 2 DD 1 BA . at K....,,...~---oervlce 'I.OST Alaskan Malamute, FOUND ntale Irish Setter. Glendale Lie. Vic. C.~f. 548-7041 fl n .F'icadllly Circus) District. $375. ,mo. Call _,.... · eptrance A: yrd, nice for .... .,.... · on., • l~Bdrm. apt. by Pottery Lrg. new duplex, 2-BR: 2 ~ AUD~J.IJ5 Female, \vhite & gray, 3 :tssrr.C.iit:""HW)'. No. 6.. ~lS before 9: or aft. 1 }:b'Jr'r, $150 _& $1~-T~ lad.Y. blk from bcb. 675-3110. Spacious new units includes 5liack; walk to beach A BA, z.car gar., f n c d aVall;able. 17875 Beach Blvd. yrs, 80 lbs, Name Siska, LaaUna Beach 494--9491. 4 PM. race .. Ider&! for l:ia:Chelon. Ln:G -1Ddl\ridual -2 .... er,t~ba -bltns, patio, lndry & everything. Hdwd. · f 1 r s. b/yard. Xtras. 493-1337 or Huntington Beach. 642-(32'1 FV or surrounding area. I i=· _, 1 BR near beach, big Huntington INch Adults.· 1993 Oturch •. house. Frplc, gar; sttrage enaosea-gar. 496-4920 for ocean-w:-tncludes-11:ove 495-0112;--1617 WESlCLIFF-NB Reward/n4-962-6907 ar ,:!........t ·--' child/.-'\\'el· 548-9633,. area , fncd )'d. $2£6 mo. appolnbnent. &: refrig. $3X> ~ofab· · NE\V riever been lived in 2300, 1200, '00, 540 SQ. ft. .~n:.:~~::...::=·-----1 ~;J ,_.,, -~ UIXURY nu 3 Br., 2 Ba NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Sep '673-8403. -PAN 0 R AM IC OCEAN li..1ISSION REAL1 :i 494-0731 2 BR, 1 Ba. w/gar, laun<ir? 55c per sq ft. Ample prk'g, LOST black & beige Jong $210 • 2 Br ocean Vle\V apt, condo. Elect·bltins. washer, by.pra.ges. Employed-.clult 2 BR, I BA, crpts, drps, VI EW. Lrg 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 & 3 BR; ocean view~ New. room, A ocean view. $250. Util. Baumgardner, 541-5032. hair tabby cat. AnS\\'('l'S to "1<.dcck, sml pet ok. . dryer, mature ad u 1 t a . oves:.30,,no pets. 548-1021 trplc. Pool. s 2 2'5./ J\.i o , zr liv rm, bltn kitchen. $240 to $.m. ~2339 or mo. 493-9676. OFFICE w/beautiful view Nina. Re\vard. No questions e'21n . 3 Br, 2'',S be, J'le\V erptg, 962-1973. COMPI.El'ELY furn 1 BR. 675-0062 ' 2 Unit bldg, 1 yr old. 494-3383' 565 SQ FT, Filshlon Island asked. 557-2323 e ves ·1 d;1. d k Be ut ean I lh $130. 131 Flow St CM bl $310/AID. Adults. 493-?557. Lido Isl• Apts., $425 per mo. Professionally 835-1514 ext 212 days. vnr'1 ec . a . oc rv • Adults, no ~ts. ~7883 ' 2 no~is. ;i::' /:°J'e Adults, CUTE. clean 1 BR apt, Up-'· MME OCCU Furn. or Unfurn. 370 decorated 64l)..1120 LRG Blk Lab approx 80 lbs, MANY OTl-tERS AVAIL! 2 ·BR, 2 BA' \Va.lnut Square $1'15 ':.i BR.-l ;' ha, patio SEMPLE R.E. 673-6445 per.' Avail Dec. 1st, Refs., 1 BR APT, I D • ' · LARGE furnished or un· blk col, NB Uc. Rabies\ ~U:VIEW RENTALS , $2Zlmo. Avail Nov. m garage, crPts, • • 2 BR.. Walk to beach $175. mo. 4M--6220 PANCY (213) 281-8406 OR Coste M.u . tumlshcd, crptd, drped, tag, no ll93. "Chester" ap-1 6'BA030 or $3248 CalJ.642--~. call 833-87ll 1 $21.0 To $225. Yeari.. 675-8565. N.B. Ind. area. $ 8 5. prox 4 yrs. Re \Var d. N....._.. Beach a.as H;E 64j 1848 Eost Bluff THE EXCITING S<&-1724. 1)16.WO. 6<&-29!>4. NO. Laguna Bell. Walk to •wo-• • • . • ADUbT irg 2 s.., pool. qUJet, 0ranae . 1 · Mosa Vo-PALM MESA APTS. 300 SQ FT LOST: G>rman Shepherd bcjl.'2 Bf!,.den.-~.!,_~ D D•"" -..acJll\. %% Ba; super clean, bltns. $100 .. No Coll• Pork •DELUXE• """""""$ TO NPT .. _BCH. Crpts, drps • ..;., mo', Costa male, black w/red A ..,; custom. S450 mo.~~.wo -·"'?.',., ----pets-"ca.u -~4 · . 3 BR 2 BA,...,. ....... lease e HOME ATMOSPHERE-~:_;:i .. 1~ 2 BR. ~n~ -cr·6'>-l075 deluxe condo. Newpo rt , .. , · · NEWLARGE~J-:mt-• -_... ..... ..,. · Dlx 2 & 3 Br, S170 up . .--. &: """',..._ Mesa. 646-2130 trim, left ear \\'on't stand . 3 . drps Oett, pOol, ' temda • Jl.ft. Furn. Adull& onl)o. Rec Good 'Locatloo Incld·apac-.--.mutei'.suite,__din Reiit:il Ofc.~-Maee-Ave. Adulta,,_NQ..PJ.tl.__ s·~ ne-· to""quor St--~llE~! ~ or 3 BR, BAB, crp~, . ......t»htard .-.a-• ..1 .... 1e, ltnl. POOi. Good toe. Avail • rm I:. dbl garage. Auto door • · 1561 Mesa Dr u alc. ,.. .... v•"' 924 an·...i..-;,. wi.lk to beach + view. $380 ;;":~--mo.~~ now. 645-0632.. $21,5 mo * 831-G'1T3 opener avail. ~I & Recrea· 546-1034. · Blvd. &-Restaurant Lri 1000 sq '""'"'' 1 D>O.wrly. 4&H6&JBR, 00 · · .. · -1mo·1Um;•6!4--'' "-·SM ..... ,~ ..... =•'"J=""a-'u'"t Cost•·-.............. . tlonBea ............................ "!Vhito El'l>IJ"lllll" °"°" (;bib lrolilt.~ ) ft. 111;. 846-J32:i. ' MALE Iliad< & silver shag. . ~ ........ ,.....,.. "'6.. ft&"',l ~ U":I' U II • $297 • "iunnJn~"' your muae:;"nlrii ..... ......... . ' , ··-~·-,.,.... " • ••gy.•poodlervie-· of··Adam• ••··--" ~i\lfrpic~ centntl 1:: Si ft Clemente' • =-~ ~cJ,,125, ci.{ •4 1 hl E/SJDE altrac 2 br. 1~~ ba. 865.Amlgos Way, NB them :iito "Cub'' · aeU * CASA VICOC>RIA * lvsineu ltentat 445 & Bush&rd. Family pet 'for fnkl. yd, $350. mo 494-62al OC:EAN vieW on Golf coune · crpt/drp,bltn11 dwhr, encl f\.fanaged by thern thru a oall; 0 Pilot' 1• 2 &: 3 BR.. ·Fum &t Unf. 7 yrs, 962-3.ffi. oc:i:AN View l bed . 2 ba 2 BR.,l;i· JiA. dlwhr, pool. De.,a "Int gar, no pell. 646-04.74. WILLIAM WALTERS CO. classified ad! Carpe~I drtpessJl~r·~ omCE on Newport Blvd. LOST Reward, b I 0 n d (' Pr. Jrplc 30671. ?itarllyn $200., ~lm. . .'. · ... . . a.· pt. Unfvn:t.·,, · 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 ~I.at Hart!~· CM.~ ::O· !'~:f· ~= ~ker Spaniel nam t;d ~o:11494-0077 . -• rl AskahootourspecialMove .... ~ ...... A~ , 1000 . Gregory, .10 tag, V1c .open -· · Sall Juon Coplitrono UXE .1\' ~ new Ila\'& CMta -'' Colto Mnl· COii• -in A!lo...,..,, lt;;;;\'imo.Pw,;.;house J! Newport .Pier. S4Z.l802 L•auna H1H1 · POint . H at t Ii e · , ........, LOST small male blk mixed ~ roR . Le:ate: Condo 3 BJl, bee., utiful MARINA . INN . ~ .... 1' • I \ • ' • . Huntln--h avail. Ideal tor contractor. 2 ba LR. DR Id-•-DW •·-·· ... -s Olihuahua. Vic. l\'t es a 'BR, tam rm, lease option, • , I,\;.!"'"• .J Motel.: 34902 IHI' Obispo St. r•••N•••••••·•••• ... • ... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••M•• .,._.4111.1 ' Verde. 979-~ 6r 646-5357. $350 a10. I $36,900. Av.all Stove, ref. Pool accea. (~. Kl t ch en I Ef. • n;ot-in~i.:JIDkP o· "" t Adult Livin' : o ri.UXE adult p 0 0 I a Ide "THE Factory" bas a lrg !~~~~:!~~~~ OOw. ·2.,yn~o1d, Fncd yrd, '93-1001' daya, ews, 496=6980. . naeitciel • ~ : ~iaw.&.u...w v~.Y l.ueren · g .. , ~' ': garden Wngalow, nr 'octan, !!hop av.a.ii. 'JlS?fmo. In 613-M6 Qlvner/Aot 2BR, mm, 3. ba; ~. poo~ -pool, , tllnct dial • , · • lrpl, lrg "tlo, 6 pools, CMnery-VU!a'ie 425 30tlt'St;' I · I~" -t ....... N!juel by-aoif t. tenlill; 1800 ''" ~ .. ~~~: , IA!=l!llOI AP.IS'« l'IRAPTS.w/IOfTS From $155 ·: saiina,·ienru.. -· NB'. 642·1960.' • """""'°" ~ ,.....,..... " . . ft, aclltl o(!.7, 493-4T.ll .!" ~ 1'~d.rf "to SUI . . I "'· -: '<d J.-. • • . ,.. ' -• • . l)lso,1BJ;.From$1,35-,_,. )'~&.ili.l!;·.loc•liO>) -. • . $12'/MO I BR.""'~1.frPl.~1 'l)!iil,$lllO •mor i;""....:=;.~.~Be8Cli.•-,,.'-. ·•·~ ~ •·-· . · •ti 2'BJI. Mature adults, Busme'5 su1te SIS 1.I. J bltJnl':»WJl'lfWa~ ·A»~ ~-;;;;;;;.,Ill -·----.. ~__;;;:: ~· .... -"!.. ·~-ir.:.o.:.:.-: ... ~~.-. • ~· • id' ' .. older: Ai.n..a--ok. 961).1126 I J"·~~.. N' "" -..... • ~· Nr.. crown Valley" .. aww;1-__... Oiilii • our u~-f~ .. < -· -'l4C+~ ""'-•· ~ "·'.. ~-• :· ,.....,..~,. -~~ ·L •. "':"" ' •"'.119·• Schools lo ' ?!like: 4 95-5066 1~ *'PPin8 le ... '!-.~·' i#t.. . , , ...... _ . ,. t:', • aft 6, or Jqlie, Q,l;J" iv.iv P . t,y. I I 575 · • ' . HUntf~ ·IMch restaurutl..~'Wftk •Up. !' 1'f~~ :'..:~. , ~.. ~· ~: ,,,! "''~I · ~UP~ NU 1to:1es, offices, nstruct on• 2 ~·~~y R°~ 2 ~ 2 BA 1 tty Adults; BlilW -tbltc 9it A receive • · .' • ' · "3 Hamifton · ~ GARDEN , Apts. 2 A 1 br, iJ¥11v air & heftt, elevators, P IANO INSTRUCTION ~ · -es t A 0 •All • .attlel. $$off• ftl'lti~1.J'int. i >. ~ ·, C... Meea.Co.92627 furn & unturn. No children 17301 Beach. HB. s.12-2834 ALL AGES -Bt•gtnncn on up · MO N r 3 BR. 2 -lr.'i.eo... ~ · . , • · · . t 7'14)t45•4411 "' P':tl. 19822 Brookburst, 1736 Anab•im Clll. Nt. frwy. . up.. . till home. 1il:1 facilttlel N -'lleatl!· . """"~ ~ : Newport lloich 600 &re. Ft. Ground F!OOT. Mi'. Rosso 614-5377 an 6 .. ·~~ .. '!.,;TY 49fa9'704 s.oew_. ·' _.__ ~ • "''/ parkina:. sns. 673-263:1. P~ ~ SPLIT level 3 s.. 1 bl: L"" Q•Kl;Y RAftS : Bocholor fum $105 lndustrl1I llont1l 450 ~ Newport Beoclt 2 Car pr. "'1oL mfu., ~ • .Elltli:uttW Suites : . 2 B.R Uilfiirn. $235 I --..,.. I his <ik. 2 BA $2311. Jlct drpt>.; (eflla. Adult ""!Pit p , Yo~ Blvd. · : ·:Ocean View., year1y lcue. *COSTA MESA* I'~·=· iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij~;m;; , Ok. Nr. Ocean. only. $300. l'lllr. 642-.a.133 BeaCh Bl · Yorlrtown : -..;: : Heated Pooi. Adults Only. 13tlO-l~l:tOO Ml· ft. Private ._.,,,.,. 541'·"41 S.nt1 Ana . 11 • >-: .LAS ,BRISAS APTS, o!lices. Plenty or parking. 1;:;;;;,:;;;::;'=:::,.-,0.=;-· , . S'l;UDIOS l 1 Bil's. : ·!(la: RMr Ave., NB Rudy !or occupancy. Ac~ HARBOJl VIE\\'.~-~,.· .:.J DELUXE ')'ownlllt,,3 tlf.,~~ • NI ldtdlOn ~ • c.u 642-:1566 c. ROBERT N>\TTRESS, Ace~ 'NTINO " BR, 2~ .BA. 1~~ ,.... Ba, ~drpo, ,..._ ~. e Heatod PlOi • ,, S,n Clo..,...to RLT. "" • 1 1't'MI. $SIO mo. 644-11!6 i::!.ftio , dbl 1:4'.·,.. So. e Llundry<IOcUIU.. : e • . : · Cllsta Mesa m.s;n . TAX SERVICES 1 1 Blach 4 Br, flun nn. Pl.i. . '1111 or e rr.. utilldoc • •· LOVELY OCEAN Vu. nr. _1 BIRCH NB , R.....,.ble. Call (~ ~s a.. :le, ~ Pool, 551,..mt • Free l\MN : , N. Beach. l:, 2 or s 'BR, wv · ' -6i>86'ii, uk for Rid. I. -i.. mo.Ml-Uilll. ~..-l'u"" lll•!~~~~!1doerv.avall. '; no5Clpeto,~~ Vista. ~-"!·_!!:.l$crat•pl!l'i• l<lml!} B1bplttl,. ! -· ·5 BR t.' llm . •.~.........,,. . >.' · em.~·~ ~ ...... " ' •· -..;...-=----•! I rm. Termll, jUunl, pool ......... ,........,.. • Phone telvk.'te1 • '"'I l ooms 400 "'"hale, $U'&. Baumgardner BABYSIT ~ home day> ·' S.bmltonl ..... 144-4114 ' c.. e 1Mlk>toocct.n ii-,r,\ I':>· MM032. nlch .. ....i...od.lly-dor SllA!IP-Vaco.nt 3 s.. 21i be.' QIARMING lower 2 Br. l Mt!'.' mall bolcb hottl. ~~ · • · ' LIV& at the l!each $25 M-1 1320 oq. n . '116 N....., or Wftllly JliQ ....,,.- aJMD. -· ' I bl: 1".l</tlt7r' pr; Acifti ·Rqomo 121 !tl per·wk A • • • ' '' ' c ·'·' wit. Pine Knott -i. !!!!'! Wf11, Cl\!. -mo. Leuo. 1'11<1. Nett bdt,. Pool It yard· Mll~L Lf'ue SJ150. e~'~t.: 1 $93 per m0nth. p-.S · •ti• ••••••••••• ·w.-o.-.ntwy, NB: 6!:>=V't!J ··can .. &~. ~ ·---------..- \ I + f 'I' • ••• • , - DAlLY PilOT Meodoj, -19, 1973 'Hint P ••ter, Petch, Repelr " ~~iii:iliiiiiiiiii ~~~iiiiii:1~::e.,;=~~~:.!!:!..!!'!!P~W!!!'"~'"'~· !!!.!~'.!!!1~~=~;;;~;;;o;;;;•l~P~W;;•;;nttc1;;•;;M;;1;iil;;f;i;o1 or 2 "'°')id ilk• QUAUTY ptuterin• • 11 ACCOUNT ~ ~ L' to babysit l •2 chlldn>n. Fen-type1 R.estucco Spantllh TRAINEE lNw ~'"RKS -=. >V<l,-meab. Nr Npt. texture, add. We' suu clean ALL POSITIONS Great oPP<>'· to le""' ac· · D II MOTOR. . ROUTE · ~1· & nice job. 83MQ12 .... 11ng. Typo •t , .... 45 e very-Sunday Only erpenter ~ PlumD•nt at word$ per min. accurat ely.i ..._. -------Advancement according to OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- CUSTOM BUILDER L.R. OTIS PLUMBING your ability, lO Key adding e • a/ QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATIOl'f rDodeling, patlot, oc wi..t Remo<!<!•" Rei><ln· Water much helplui. Good·Co. Ben. oa •f WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY ·have ~)'OU. J~ GU~rt. heater•, dlspouls, furnace., AAME& Apply NaUono.l Systems I a i!,icented It !noured. Lie; dahwa.<hn. -MIC A 4361 Bln!h, NB. SEELEY, 330 WEST BAY STR EET, COSTA Bl·:l8m2' 646-1156. BIA, Complete Plumblna Accounting Clrk $650 MESA. TELEPHONE 642-1821 FOR AP- -EW:remodPI, re ... lr, trame. Serv1ce. · Lie. ~ Fee Paid. PIUAb oWces. Out· \. POlNTMENT. The Dally Pilot has an opening for a driver to deliver papers to carriers In Laguna Beacb- South Laguna Monday through Friday after· noons and Sunday morning. Salary plus auto allowance. Pbooe Harry Seeley, 642-4321, for apeotntment. An equal opportunity employer '" ··1c -UMBIN ,.,... 91 ,,.,...""'.. 1•-••-ftnl.lb, Sloret, ottice11 & n. ru G · "!"IUW6 ~I;' fQ\' _ Yol.I! hom~ etc. Lt c e n s e d . Repair & Contractln& CoOill Ann 01i11Ue, 55Rsc.ri,' p.· · 1 982-UllJ.L Llcel'll@ No. 286660. &U-164.l 1 00'% ntrol Career Employnlent . f An Equal Opportuni ty Employer A RPENTRY, Plumbing. PLUMBING REPAIR ~'."''Y, 3400 ll'vln• Blvd., er&onne H•lp Wantod, M .. p 710 Holp Wantod, M & p 710 l ::p.H~~~tt:; N:f~o;:» o. AIRCRAFT Sales, lmmed Ho lpWanted,-MIF710 HolpWintod,M&F-710 HOUSEKEEPER *KEY IN'l'.RY .... 541-<IOO. Romoclol " R..,.1. -~~lnpper!ull ,;;~ partpote".,m,·a1·.· COMMERCIAL DRAPERY lnltaller, cult r o! home. 3 children. OPERATORS* ALL types carpe.ntty, fix just FREE Re _A exp., aalaey, ' da.Y week, to 6 pm, Mono-Fri, Own Do )'(!U need QuiAtma• ebout anything around the ROOM Addltklnl-Rcmodel1 • • . A.trc"~ ~~d~l~~· TELLER Non Smoker, !nlerview1 =~ 0;!"111~ Money! We need yoa; • lboute, etq. 536-1648. 'Bld5 or Labor p 1 u a pilots lie. req. Call for appt. 'til!nC'J ~1on-Frl 4:»-S:Xl p . m. aft 6 pm weekend.I, all shifts name '<•rpet Servke !1;!~.·· Mel Fleener, AIRCRAFT MU LT Ip LE if -Window De'"'"' 3137 llircl1 , your own houn. cOmpetl· l! ~-LISTINGS E xporl-od !;t., N.B. HOOSE keeper, childcare, 2 tlve aalacy l'tllci. 129 key ~·s carpet" Uphobtery Sowlng/Altoratlon• <n<l 55S-6990 UNITED EIC<tro mechanical tralnin& children, live In, oome Ehli· disc . experience. !DC, 2283 . Ori Shampoo !roe Scotch· · _IS YOUR PRESENT ARCHITECTURAL CALIFORNIA BANK No expe• nece""')'. Good llab ,,... N.B. 642·:i049. Fairview Rd., COila Men, 'Prd !Soll Rcwdantol. A LTERA110NS, reotylina JOB A ,.. 'DRAl'"I'SMAN benetiu, &<>od working ron• INSURANCE ~-=~·====,.--! =--.,.;! : J1' m'f:::':! ~~nabi:."~eneed ARClllTrenJRAL depart· 31~~!;;';:jt /ia~Y· ~~t~@';flP.~ -!!!SJ.Q.§ SALES LANDSCAPER 'bleach for white carpets. T1l1vl1lon Re~lr TURKEY? ment Boyle Engineering 673-9240 Logan St 'eosta Meaa or EmJ1oyer Paya Fee. F'lnftn· Exj)erttnced ln headetboatd ~ve your m!>ney by SAving ~----.:.~---Corp. has lmmed opening fRE£ JOBS ·call 54<>-0982 · cl tnstitutkln • e e k I n a tn11allation and line grading ane extra tnp« Will clean -lor draftsman w/3 or more Equal Oppor. Entplo>~• ml! outaotna: aalea oriented In-essential. 546--0791 between _ljvlng rm., dililng rm., & COLOR bTV Repair, expert, years commercial work ex-1~~!'"'!"oo"'!'~~!!!l-I FOUR weeks or bard work div. wlcoUea:e back&foond _4:..:;&.::S~p::m;;,·~,--,=-~-•hall S15 Any rm 1150 reasona le, most In home. per. Dearee pre r or red . 1; aro yours upon phoning, A lite aalea exper. Fanuotlo , '<=ch $!0 Chair 15 · 15 Y,.' Free estlmate, H.B. N.B. Thon Chock With Unlimited advancement op-COOK· tar <hikl day care Number 5, 613-m9 N.B. oppor, !or indlv. Interested Log1I Sec y Trol-1 •~. 1 ,· what ...... :-~ ...... t· & CM. Bert Gallemore, Tho Horn Of Plonty por for qualified lndlvklual. C"enttt. Ye-tLr round. 5 hours in career opening, Fee Jobs Xln't oppor. for brlght tndtv. ........ "'vwu.o "" 968--Sal ba-~ 5 day, SZ. an b.r. s.i5-6510 •--UU. time aer.vlce 1tatlon Also. wlavg 8ki/l1 & •es•-to method. I do work myself. ""'"•=•~::.· ------ary xu on ablllty It t1ti1 tica l Typist tt nc1 t r " = Good r 531-0 1 fll exper. Xlnt employee hen. COOK. gn.wyanl shift, 6 • ; an• exper p re · Ja-lle1t Agonc learn. Will train u pvt 1 re . lD • --''--------AT AAMES Please call Mr. Schroeder $575 d11...vs -.·k. Co. paid benefits. un!normsou s~n· T ~pply 17400 Brookburat F. t)'. sec'y for attomey. Lite ofc. ' Ca'r.t CIHnlng CERAldlC n LE NEW & pt <n<l 547-44n tor appt. Abo, plUme lunch help, M 1 '&;;., ~ ~ Suite 213 ' //63-0175 exper /lelp!ul. Great Floor. aro I Wlndow1 remod•i. l'ree est. Sm jobs 412 S. Lyon, S.A. Equal BeauU!ui modem o!c located llam-2pm. Apply In p<l'SOn, 831-:..d •· · ~'.al'tingne!l~. &al It co. pa.ld · ''butch MaJnt. Serv. 537-1~ welcome. 5.Yr2426. Oppor. Employer. fu. Newport Beach. Great Jack 1n The Bax 1200 Balrer \ ii ... i;li••••ili;;;;;,j ~ •• ~!t~-"' ... ~:tto~ Top Soll Trev1I Instructor $600 ";;,!fu":,' Co~~.~a'/,~f,· =· Jlncludlng pro!. ~;"~perlonced , !/time. GENERAL LABORERS INSPECTORS 11:":"~:::.~":. ·anc1 repair. 963-2639 *QUALITY* B.K. Socty. $600 Fry Cooiu. Days, Niles: Apply Zublo" 29ll E. Coast ' Suite :nl 963"6715 r t C t * MtJLCH & TOP oon. * Graveyd sbl!t• open. Full Hwy., CdM (;11.988'. VARIAN DATA MACll!NES, LEGAL Secretacy .. Ne-rt , ~-• oncro • 586-ellO Lolsuro Seely. $600 " p/Umo. Apply Jack In Koypunch Dperelor COOK • Breakfast needed Skilled & Un1klllod ll>• big '°-"" In amoll Beach law firm ;.;; ... I ~: Pltlo, dRves, _ -()fc;-, u..r. $ 750 The Box, 385 E. 17th St., imnied. Must be e.'<per. for Temporary Employment computers, hu an lm-1ecretary or qua 11 fie d • l !ialkl·Repairs, saw & rm ••"V -C--;M.-$575 fast operation. ~'\04. Apply 6:30 Al\I, Mon-Fri mediate opening on 2nd trainee. Xlnt akills required. ~-"" -11 J shift tor an in-process in-Peraona1lt)' &: """""' humor / remow.,•='"·-F/C BKPR, $700 AVON MAKES Nationally kMwn!lnn with COPYWRITER-Trade MANPOWER-INC specton. TWo yean ex-appreciated.~ 1 t:ontr.ctot CHRISTMAS THE SEASON new ofcs. Great benefits Association "or Ser v Jc e 1 • perlence in the 11--'"'n l .iiiliiii;iiiiiiiii;;iiii.iili ... iiiil I ; Aul1t Secty $525 TO BE J OLLY 1 Yr exper. on keytape. · Business ~eds copywritor or circuit board ...;;;;bi';,, 1 ' '. CUSTOM BUILDER Job Earn· extra money !or guts to handle public n>la1lon1 cablo, chassis, etc. II you MACHINE 1 Ung, patios, or what W•ntecl, Male 700 RE Sedy. $550 as an AVON Representative & advertising. Probably 0 nleet these qualilicaUons ~OPERATOR 1 -have you. Jay Gilbert. in )'()Ur spare time. Call: Exec. Secretary part-time. Send reswne & and are look:lng for a posl· Some exper. 1n milling ma· -, :;~2.~,.-ll55 .--Lie; -SCRAM-LETS Stat. Typltt $550 540-7041. flnanci11l requirements to tion with a growlni. Orange chinff. lathes 4 drill press '<="~'~ ~ BABYSITrER eed $700 P.O. Box 1148, SantA Ana, County rompany that ol-deatrable. Willing to train J CERWICK & SoN ANSWE Med. Sacty --$600 teacher w/own n~. 1~ Calif. 92701. Equal Oppor. ten: t0meone w/exper. tn high· I l !llclgStaCotntr!J. AdBdlt & Remod RS Ins. Sacty. $600 ~--chklld, 11 mos. Lite ~-firm,. lsoceeaktlngs , tn-lrvinet h COEmUNTplQ)'.Eer . -448_W. 19th Street * fl.tODERN FACILmES IChool machine •hop. . e c. 1-114321 . •~" eeplng Ref's ""'d. "~ " op "'c R g>rl, sandwiches, Coste Moae 64S.2043 * C 0 MP ET IT IVE Coll For Appt. I . I 5*-2110 Snugly -Amuse -Madly -Cashlor $475 &14-6001 all 5 secreUU'y who " s' Ir day shl!t, apply in person m N Anah I Bl,.,. SALARIES Industrial llela- , !fACK Taulane, re p a Ir, Outfit • FAULTS BABYSITTER, 111 e startor. at Tho Station Liquor, 6010 An h ; em 774.ioD0 * BASIC MA J 0 R remod, add. Lie 11'1 l690'12. II must be wonclerlui to Gel Friday $500 housekeeping Dally, p/t, Warner Ave., Huntington • oom MEDICAL (714) MMOI 1'{yWayCo.835-3705. have a family with a teen-OW~ car. 3 older children W L-·· Beach GENERAL CLERK *TllAOo/.L·o.SHIFT DIFFER.EN· •rdenlnt ager In It. How eiae ••uld Riter $5SO Call M·F, s.SPM 644-9242 ' •rt~" Trainee TILONIC you get to know your B b I W .,.,. DAY COOK Accounting background help. * 12 DAYS A YEAR PAID INDUS I LAWN SERVICE 1F7A'iUL~~::;S?,__~~--Koypunch !Dey1) $480 • ys lier entod ~ rut. Llte typing (IO w.p.m,) VACATION TR ES -r1e Job Wented p--1 702 Aft & eves call Kathy Du req'd• lor thts position in * ONE WEEK CHRJSTMAS ""~.~ ¥ft'~inf. · · • -·-• Koypunch l•vH) $525 644-2285 e 10 promotion from Hunt. Sch. Will train. Cali SHUTDOWN La9UN1 Beech ,Mow. Edge, Cleanu p New .NEE·o-·he1P .. ai -hoine1· ·we ~ ... --·-··--B.A .. -K .. E·R·S =~ c1i!~~t eir; P /tlme for appt. 842-1151. Pl l In .Lawna, Sprlnk1 e-!•• homea, have aldew, n ur ses' ADMINISTRATIVE dlvidual Vl"" . Applf In Pel'tlOn UNICARD INSURANCE eaae,actapBp YKraltkaperton . or Equal Oppor. Employer •• -h o u' ekp pan! to help run shi~ S k Sh GENERAL con : . apts • eommet'Cial. Depen· H n. com ono. ping & receiving dept. nee op No. I Ollie<. Good MACHINE dable. ReM, ratea. Prompt om em a k e" Upjohn HELPER 2305 E. Cout Hwy., typist, Knowledge o! air, v M Free Ettlmates. 534--314' or! ,:54c;1:;:-<l681::;,'-·-~~~~~I ACCT. Corona del Mar, Calif. a/p. Postin& to journal&. D OPERATOR ' 1 SU-tt81 Holp W1ntod,M Ip 710 CONTROu.ER: $1£K+ SelH Rop Equal Oppor. Employer Call 5411-55ll Mrs. Malter. TRAINEES I GARDENER or 22 yn. ex· MBA-BS Degree. Computer "EXPERIENCED ,per. who is kMwiedaoable ACCOUNTING exp. or educatkm. Outgo;,,g Expor. Not Noce11. $.700 . . Delivery Man ~~!,FrlSec, Breu~ena Pk t'oo !!~ MACHINISTS l ie.Proud ol h1a work seeks permnallty. S u pervi.se '31.l ~ VARIA D 4 5 add main jo BUSINESS personnel or • or 5 In A/P Call Wayne 979-0541 Leading food finn seeks Pick up and deliver new Gid,Frl (Ora l to $650 N ATA Steady, not>de!ente ..,..k. ~.Hampton. 1 bi. ·AUDIT AIR. 31' m. aales vol. Musi degreed Individual. Great car.aervice customers, some Exec. Sec'y L.A. to $100 MACHINES Many rompany berw!lu, ll!e ·• * 549--W * • commute. f AR WEST future & good benefits. JCUUlQr work also. Apply In File Supervlsor $500 7i22 Mlchelaon Drive &: medical lnsurancf' 8 paid INSPECTOR pen;on only, see Mr. Lo!liB Claims Exiuninor to $650 Irvine, c.tttomia holidays A vacatloM. New PROFESSIONAL gudcner; . . or Bob Terry. Electrlcbn ·$650 modem !aciliti ... II you are ;~ worlt, p runing, Acct. to $12K SERVICES INC TERRY BUICK Program Mgr !2'lK An equal opportunity looking loc a job will> a l!prinklen, cleanup jobs, Huntington Beach Degree + kMwledge ol all t • 5th & Walnut, Hunt. Sch. Electronic Componenu emplOyor m/! real future, see us. Apply ~~,. n .. ~.c a pt n g. Georg<; phasea of oil. Abie to design DELIVERY Product Llne Manager $20K 9-3 PM daily. Moody Sprink· ~ Hinh School District implements + mo n l t or 16-R ynold FEE JOBS man for early Data CommunicaUons ler Co. ·• atand + job ~ •• O S Ave. morn. newspaper home De . E INSURANCE SAL -Pull SL CM PEAN Carde n e r , "'v.>• sys. 5 delivery \n N.B. 11ust be S1811 ngr (mechl to f14}{ ES -men • Maintenance_ Landscaping. ls Accepting Appllcationt !or Knowled"" oC EDP.,... anla Ano 18 & h . Purchu Supv (Boat.) $13K MAINTENANCE · 2'ree Removal. very bu•inen audit lnapector. . ave msured. depen-Cost Accnt Man..t. to $12K ' ~ .. .reasonable. 642'-5329 eves. Startl.Dg Salary $819 Mo. + Acct. to $13K Equal Oppcir. Employer dabte car. S200 per mo. & Call Jeannie Sisco No exp nee., earn whllo you MECHANIC xln't benefits. Application bonua. Call LA Time• & Sid Hollman learn, part tlm<, .,.. A First or 2nd lhllt m.ttlon EXCHANGE new v e Ive t deadUne Nowmber 30th. Degree, 3 yn. exp. analysis B1nquet Busboyi Toilor &12-4800 NEWPORT witndl, lull Ume when quan. with loading MJ'G-or rc>1:k ~r landscaping, yU'd Phone 536-9331., ext 2ll. of prod. budgeting + sys. Prefer exper. or will train. DELIVERY, part time, early Personnel •-ncy • fted, plastic products for the food "" · ALL9'19-1525. Equa l O pport u nity Knowledge of romputers Must be over 21. Apply In To $500 a.m. pape• route. Costa 833 .... Fannera Wunl)ce Group "'rvice Industry. 5 "'"' Expor. Amer. Gardener Employer m/!. belp!ul 10 tel up I n pen«, a.Iler Tues 111r M•sa area. No collection. Dovor Dr., N.B. Ed W I * 54().1834 general Industrial main- , Mo. Maint., Tree trtm. ' I .. !!'!i~~~""""'""'""" I ..........,.. a""ckb. M3000esa Verde CountrY Growtk'n~_ .. ~ependent bank ~ur car. LA Times, 642·3170 tenance exper. Hydrallilc el:· pe 552. 8101 ACCOUNTING u , Clubhouse Rd see s il~vidual with some · .....,.... Y• a y. , pe•, latl>ea • milling mach· General SarvlCff Koypunch ()porator & F/C Bookkeeper: to $SK Cos!A Mesa. ' recent exp<r. DENTAL Recoptionist. GIRL DeUvecy Driver 19-25 '"" " some knowledge or Payroll Trainee All dutios plus pulling finan. BEAUTICIAN with follow· Bored? Unappreciated! Yrs old. Overseas 'Motor Injection molding necnwy. dal statements. uig, The Appian \Vay Beau· Intelligent, ch arming P~$. 1990 Harbor Blvd., Pleue apply at Cl.mbftl Co. In Irvine Indus area ty Salon, 164'71 Bolsa Cblca, Drlvor motivated individual wanted CM. M!g., 1601 Clay, H.B. needs trainee lw payroll & Cost & Audi! Clerk: $'I.SK H.B. 84&-9342. call Kim. !or last growing Costa Mesa * GUARDS * 841-3531. An Equal Oppty. I gen'l ofc duties. Aleo, expcr. BEAUTY operator 'wanted To $550 office. Experienced. Late OPENINGS NO\V _E;;;m,;p;,loyer;<;;;i;';:;:-..,-,=--,_..,= opr on 029. Good t ta.rting Sr. Eng. EE Degree Some I I 20's-40's, hours 7-3. Salary FULL & PART TIME MACHINISTS or Tech ~"b -te , ~--s. bkkg. background. Prod. w some allowing. Full or l Ton Oat bed truck. Regular open, 979-6510. e R•tired ok . ! -•• ~ u•~· root pl 1 1 In p/Ume. 192 Center St, Costa Ii b t good or lite man..t. Will train j Apply Work i:;' h,°':,:r' ex. P= Mesa. &l:Hl531 .:.-::: u dri~ DENTAL OFC. MGR. • Xlnt Opport1jnlty COllege !or our production pco. COLEMAN SYSTEMS pany. Good advancemenL BELLMAN aver 21 yn old. Dental •peclallst needs Studen" . tD\lii..IC nm"""'"'ICI cedur<1. Mature a d ult l 18842 Toller Ave. Contact front o f!lce , someone who enjoys worlt. •Car & Phone ieq. """'c '"""'-"'"LL pnord. Pleue Coll !i48-M3S AL moving & h.>uling Equal Oppo~~plover mi r Sr. Eng. EE Degree: $850 + ~r i.a:;;. H~~ infi~n Electrlcien Trelnoe ~1~. w~d ~ =~ ':," • Time~Jt~%,~ 40 hrs SERYICES•AGENCY :;.:-'2~~ted, exp un-;.".~ stud~t. Large truck. I ii~ioiijiiliiiliii!~a:::i:i I Electro. Mechan1cal knowJ· IM $6S2 Hunt. Sch. Sal. open: PROTECTION SERVICE Accountant to $l 4 K neceuary. Full time. Apply ~~7~· S34-Dl6 or ADMINISTRATIVE edge of sheet metal. ·BOOKKEEPER TI4:"962-6671. 403 N~:~ Blvd., SrA~t!_<f_!t to~ 6266W t Wlnestminster Ave · Only lite e I e ctr l ca I DENTA L ass 1st ant • 55t-l4.33 · '-neuua~ to $16K ,;:; .. ;=;;;m=•:::l•~r-----1 YreAmoRDv,ed~~i driclean-ups, CLE K Jr.Eng.EE""""-: -+ ~i.:_ellatdloc,. ail l?>ed· need! di' sharp/ knowledge. Eam goo d chairside; exp. in a l i H -~l'OCt!'Ulng, 360/BAL MALE or female _ _._ ---.....,. vy, veways, R V>"&~""· "'"" ""' SC P in n v. w wages while), .. ,...,,...,. 8 <W"W'Vf phases, expanded duties. ELP Wanted for beauWul • •vg ... mmer $12K yourseU ~'" .. Wll' •tumpa, gndlng. 841-2666 Electro-M •c h a n lea!. AIP or eoiiege ..,, accoiint· trade ~·-~ •-... -supper club. wo need••-. Exec. Secretary S'ISO ~--· Build up YoUt' own Research & development. ing backgro d XI 't • Q"IT"Vil.., cocktail ...._... M k ti Secre cu.1.a dellvery route in N.B. l l SKIP LOADER & dump truck Knowledgt of metal & ing salary &un_,· ben"efitsstartfn; *DISH-UP C 0 0 K &: -"-wait re s • e • ' , _a:_ e ng -tary to $700 We turn advertlstng. Must .work. Concrete, asphalt w ha 1 '" -~ w~""'eo, oyster barman -·Sen>. Counslr $'100 have own car ... wing, breaking. 84&-11JO. • . ' ve an immediate open· P utlcs. the rlght person.·-~uNTER GIRLS Pref. dlshw..hor. Female aP: Sec'y/Dictaphone to $650 w. Balboa Blvd' NApply 500 mg in our Order Service JHon Best Agoncy Accounting Clork mature applicants. Ca I I pUcanb must be attractive Payrl/'l'yplrt/Pvt. • .8 . I .l2 FT. FURNITURE Van & Billing Departments for Jr. 11 echan 1 ca 1 Eng. 17400 Brookhurst, F . \'ly. 536-Spag3856hetll Bend~r, 66--0651, & natural lookln&. ·Apply Oub $00)+ Mgmt Trainee to $9000 for local fum hauls & gen'I an expcr. Oerk. Design: $l2K Sultc 2l3 963 ........., $433 at Kismet International, F/C, Bkkpr/Secre• .. -· 1111:1r1 Lrg nationwide ........... seek'•• ' hauling. 548-1862. 561-2136. ~ .. , 1100 w Se 1~·-_, -sh --·· ... ProoeSling or Government & Degree or 1 or 2 yrs, .ip. BUSBOYS WANTED Local manul. finn. Llte ex-· Coast Hwy, N.B. c Y ,~,haling to l600 arp ...-ive l n d Iv HAULING $12 a load, small commercial c 0 n tr a c 1 s Apply 400 Main St. per. in A/P & AIR. Also, Dlshwashon Noodod Ask !or Erle. 645"619. Insurance Oorlt $550 w/o!c exper. l/w BA .1l't'e removtng. 7 days a background prefd. Typing Adm. Credit Trnee· _ Balboa 1 6 some gen'l ofc duties. ANCIENT MA, RINER HOSTESS EXPER. "fypist to $550 d~ in bus. ad· week. Call ~2948 50 1 tri .,.,.,., • a ter pm FULL' TIME Back Ofc Medical •.t<M:.+ m1nlstraUon to train r- w.p.m. e ec c type. Degree 1 finsn · " Day & Night ACCln Clrk ~ - CLEANMING -UHAP,ULINTRGEE pTRIIlro 1 1 . Miter. '""· In ;kg, end, or a~: CAR LOT MAN L S N 2601rt WBe. Cchout H~;0201 · • BLUE DOLPHIN e CAJi 'l'IU~~ 'li':."if~U'e':tt 1•,vedv'·~tloen"t' · · mp Ex credi' egal ec'y Trne ewpo a .,.~ 3355 Via L1do NB JERRI · -~ .... reuonable 847-8125. ' cellent working .condltkms. .. A-.1 3 5 ... ' WHITl'EMORE potential. Fantastic co Good co. paid benefit• & Experienc< prelerred, steady .,M .,...y pm· pm .. !on·Fri Have aomt!thl1'4< you want to 488 E 17th St. (at Irvine) CM benefits. Xln't •-•·•·· _: TRASH HAULING salary Eng. , • job, good houn n le' ..,... sellt ClaJlllled ads dO it Sulto 224 642-1470 gnm, u--• ~- -n~.e~P ~~~t APPL y Circular design exp. .,..n ~r~':!;.., ro~~\~~·• .... APJ.:;; Local attorney will train you CLASSmED-wlll ... 1-111 -weU+call NOW MHm. """" .,_.. .,_.. Jason Best Agency Niel"n In this wclnatlng !leid ol Help Wantod, M & F 710 .'Holp Wantod, MI I' 710 -0ll"1l Brookhunt, F:-Viy; --· ..... ~fHnl!19 .. _., · BERTE·A· Il<ld.S<t'.\'!.,.: ... J open TERRY BUICK law. Must h.>ve good typing JANITOR!Al. -" :nl ~ ;. ~~~~~~~ * Td~cai 0/'\~~1~· -;,:,:r:;•u•;., ~u:~· c~h;, & a~~''· ... EXECUTIYES=MANAGlRS THE--BROADWAY ~.;!Ji'1'::ST~::ic. 1 L. TIOt!FrF":.:: Rell Free est &16-2S3 9 CO,ORATION Know peripheral I< CPU.SE Wa!)led. Professional abill-FASHI~ ISLAND i -· · ty, own equlpt !or Evangel· ISK, ZSK, 75K "'" P•nol\llt'l Aaency • MalOll!Y istic Mini•try 536-8161 Gary SAU.RIIS. NEGOTIAILI NEWPORT BEACH <Mark 111 Cent~rl I 11001 Von Karmen Software Support:-1 open A Y U I d N -A Y S k' 54:M836 • I Ap- 11 • um~-"'· bwori~k.k ~~ lrvi-, Cell!. Degree 1n math or computer re ou ntmp1oy•.. ow re ou •• 1ng Now Hiring 11)1 E. Edln&et", S.A. -• ""'-.:<:" ... science Pf'Oiil'&lll. Customer CHRISTMAS e A Ch1n91 -Worried About Your A9• -MA 4 . ·est.---· . 833-1424, oxt 294 contAct. l 1 n red of ·Broken Promisss-Undtcided Al To FuU Tiana' I I NAGER . P.alnt!ng..& or 133-1425 _ Oadta _ A Pt~llJIL..C.<>uA•.J>f...A~,,,i"!o "'-=---or artt apartm•nt complex I p 119 Equal-Opp. Employor sat"'™' $ .,..;-DEPA_R~:sTO -ARE YOU UNliER PAID? PORTERS :;:_ ~i:l\:l4re~~l.-pe11 STOJ\£ FRONTS. ROOMS 11 -~ !:;.~ & aalea exp. "SANT AS" p. If You C:.. AM-Tiie fallow("' CG111orf11 Coll •~1.168. ,l .JIU>GS. =~RING. , ,A FUN-PLACl ~ · / In Tho Afflrmatlvo, Wo'd Uh Ni llltir.low ~i.J:-...,. :n .q ~~~. . To-WORK suk ~·~~' ro i1ooci .•• :c:NEEOED NO\Y-. e~ onne -, . . .WJtli Yoo J~P~~:" "11. to start-=· $125 i All IYjtes. Free ettimat" Knowted"" gen. pre" e, $561.50 monll>. we train & •IF YOUR /INSWW cARl_ tJUTHPUL • Monday th 6ay -MASllAGI Tl.,.., · .. -NCaUG --In -,, ..:... "-ul· :Ji~ ~ t 111pv. 12 in dept Relocated provide co<twnes at no ree. · ;.;... WE CAN HILP YOU -£<11ltil 0ppor. ·Et!tplojff m/I ' ..;, .. TUINll "!" • ~~ •• ~· n.. _ to Oregon. Apply 203 Pine, Long Beach. _A ; A. Do you h•v• •tro111 voc•tfo11 •I ~,11111 7 Younc J•A.. (I"~) e eu e (213 ) 432-09n -•1 t ~nC'J • D h • FOOD P" ~ kitchen clean ~ "fl~ -WMted • Ire. me!nt Wbat-ha ... you. n . ~ ec. . 0 , ..... , ••• "'"" ,,,.111,., .. 1 ~.. •vr Umato lull limo->. I .No job too big o. iml. 20 , Telctype--Oper. $500+ C. Do Y•• f11i '"ffld'"H' motlnto4 to uhlovol up. -t. beglnnlnr 5:30-tlon. o exp. --We ;,;i )'I'S exper. Re.._.. rates. c. ofe WESTERN GIRL D. Do you h•v• tht -•bllity'to M•k• tl•clilofl•7 6 pm, Located S&nta An& to IChool, earn while Mam . 66-<J3S3 or 60-5079 Aft 5 . Need heavy exp, Prefer SANTA DMSION E. Ar• you r••tlv to ••t • r••liltlc 1,,1., ol>j•ctl••f area neat Main l MacArtJl. Apply tn penon M1 aft of t i' nonnro_ _ 11 _..,_ state , ~ Brolrerage back!P'O"ncl· But An equal oppty e 1 F. If ''" wo.-""''""d tt.ot holp ,.,. "•I oilla, WMW ur. Call 511-6232 , 01it. :li:W w . Cit. H,;.,, r~•. w~-. .,. ~ not ""'· mp 0Yff Y.• ••upt It wltt..,t 4oloYI Mr. Rlchatdo Newport Beach. "' ' 1 lie. NO. 11151~ .-,, all YOU SHOULD KNOW JUNIOR .,.,.. ol -· 11': Now Hiring •-·t Editor 1 CLER!~" 2790 ff bo B • h SALllMAN: MEDICAi. Recept/onbt 21.; fQ..C3aii '\IN> ' : open ....,..... ar r lvd T ~ .,1fJ1r Joli• •t• "of 1tlY•rtl1 HI Earn $2).$40 per weet wot'k· 30. Some experience. and I p·~~c; BUSBOYS Trade Mag. eXJ>. Assume all EXPERIENCED .•# Thlr«I p•rtv prof1t1lo111t l11fl11onu i• •OMtilm•• tna a.lttr school and Satur. ~lleae. 80-9377 betwn 9 ' ~ "" • INT/EXT. duties. • '"'""' . days aelllna ..., aubtcrli>' • 5. ! ~. ~~· TRANSCRIBER • '$o!Hnt tlo •lght """ ,,.,, •t 'tho •lthl /no/ ,.. llonl tor tile DAILY PJLOT, l;MESSEN~i;;;;::;G::;ER;;;:-"'G:-u'l,-_-.-M_ I ' PROo. -'-'-, -~. All Positions List.cl (At 1.1-) • ~~lr••,t•chnlqt.t•I • Thi.I 1' not a 1 PQtr route noons only. Must haV:. .... .:!: ~ . ...-.n-, -· nay • N.-r -.~ pocut1¥• , .. 1tio111 .,. fill•~ tht1u9h offeufl~ In· and doe• not '--Ju .... d hr Ml! -· .. .. . · ,,_ llt!/ed,-*-aldmaie. • • 1111 At a.th Olflcos Typing speed a).~nsf.Jll, .., t.rvl•w• ' • -liveri .. or eol~.o;,.:: · Cali 1111'. :..;= t Rm. -. tct,3913. Will be trained on • "I Mo",....,. motnn9, h ••• o totoi ... w.. tnp In Coita 11 ... , f'owitlln for •mtntment. · 1 HI QUALITY, rLOW $ Appy S-5 daltJ IN COSTA MESA Al>PIY In the -SrDlllCES, DIC. = and.Sol>tl> H11nUnrton MOD~ llODEI.s pc, I•, -e 1542-11VI ISi a "-~ 270o\ Harbor llvd. Penonnel Dept ~1111 • Appl)< -bl< coUin1 MODll:LI • · ..._. Hwy. 5 I 207 M01'-Wed, SAM-U Noon M9J ..... Ai AMwor Por Y•I &48-!013. WOMJ:N KEN INT/EXT ,..AINTING ... ..,..,. llNdi u le . .. ... Ro .. .,. o, Coll To4oy l!<jual Oppor. E111p1oytr WANT-·• rott. FALL I Froo Ell ltm 5'M7l2 r-• ......__, r-~'--C111 556-1100 PACIFIC MUTUAL _,,,_ JounMll1t Wrlhr A 171NTER INT/EXT P'AINTING .,.._.,,..... ~...-,., 'IOO Newport Oenier Dr 548-6155 · 1!0 COIT D/ICUTIVI INTUYllW \ll> to $10,000 Yeor. J'ea FASllJONS. CAtt-FOJ\APl'l 1 EST: Wallpapft 1111-18111 Yoo -~ -• ia fo IN ANAHEIM Newport Bcod> IXICUTIYI SERYICIS INCOllPORA11D Paid. &xcit~ p~ -lol' '15'31'2 I I SEJl:MU:mu:o palnler. 110 "Dmr, ....... --600 Nor!h Euclid Equal Oppor. EmJlojcr mil • ··-N. MAIN '~; ... ~,0,1101,,0,'!.',~,· -IAllTA ANA .N .. p1B.n, ~-~ !'!:'!l.,cn ~ftrAcBftJ'"ESMY • '"" .,. ......U. 21 rrf' "" = a otl 1B die c'.;.: C•ll,77' •1.. , • ' .,. " , ' --·· ~·~ '· . -~ ,..,·~-...., .. n ' ~•Ito 702 • -· C1on1ro1 ca-1IOO NEWPORT BLVD NB ....,._ RM ..,. n ' Want Adil Call -No«I. "Pad"T p).~ .. odl !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!~" .............. ·;•H;:ONI;;~· ~·7~1~4~) ~14::7·~·=~~·~ .... ..;..!""!111~;;pl~-;~·t~Aatrlncy~, ~3«Xl~ Any "'tho l:IUI' DAY iO Irvine mvd. N.S.. J ru11 "" ! Don't delay •• • I I . I I \ • • • - .. ' O.lllY l'ILaT ./ . • • 3· •An.Y ~ILUI MOl'ICl.\y, NOYl!motr l'f,'" l'lfl>_,,,,......,....,..--=""'..,..-.,-.--:-...--=,.,..,,...,-..,..-....,...,..--=,.,.,,_,........,.-.....,,....,--,,,,,,::--:--::·:.·.-~·~· ---:=::-:=~-;-;::::;---;;;;;-:.::;;::-u;;1:--~"°"° .·'cil'yc!t.,.los.:::, ~8,;,ik,;.o:.:1,;.,;. __ ...,..,Tr"uc:c"kl:--'-"'--..9~ t.utOs Wontod Mt Autos, lmportod 970 AulH, lmpo m Auto., mportod _:i:A::."'°':::::!•..:U::;ltod;::: ___ 990:.:..: Autos, Utod 990 Autos, Utod •. ,_Scoo_t•_,. ___ 92_5 , _*_S_P_E_C_l_A_l _*_ TOP DOLLAR PAID . DATSUN OPEL VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC CONTINENTAL '. MUSTANCi * BICYCLES * IMMEDIATELY ' ~:.1frb~~~A:~~s ~,~.~'t.;,:i~,::i~N..;~.s 1973 DATSUNS '~°!'o~'.ta~ ~tJI.'..: .'71 YW POPTOP CADILLACS '?v. w~.~~"d;..~~ 6 :i=~~tansbi Now Italian JO ....... 159.93 *Of the Week ALL MODELS ...... Lugg. nck ........ ~ . velour Int., Mak• 011"· ---'-==-~~1 ' s.n"''" E<t eoioi .... S89.M •10 CAPRICE COUPE IN STOCK '""' f(OOd. 1695· 645-7'00. CAMPER Oran«Je County's $.llll OLDSMOBILE NlahJJcllo '" .... ho"' 199·95 PORSCHE " , •---t ,..lectlon '!\.~. ..!!'~~1•1 ~~£"'&··1 ---~-....,:-I Uoed bUcet ...... All Type• ' (Pl83) BARWICK IMPORTS With '""' .,,..-'" ~ ~ ' Beach Bicycle., 800 E. Bal"°' $2399 1·~ ~1'i'."'· ~ clean. All Modol1 & Colors wknds 614-4746 '70 CUTLASS Blvd .. Balboa 6J;.7282 33375 Ctunloo CIJ>l•t1'81\0 '70 PORSCHE 911 T ~ 00 I HODAKA l2S, ,,,..., "'"" llOO,W. ~,:SW)' .. N.B. 8:i,~0~~~ $2875 CP't DE~'??F:~ CORVETTE Su1;rcme.'vs, auto- ' bike. Owner >can.,em!d. '71 FORD '!> TON 5 Spd, Ak Con<!, Low Mil.. *BUENA ~'LEE:rWOOD BROUGHAMS '69 COAYETIE matlc, alr oond .. ra· : Must sell or take over PICKUP .Autos, lmporlod 970 JENSEN age, Sh•ss' 8 1607 75 ,SN). COUPES -SEDANS -::~e:wheot:, b~~:. : payment1. 2 n1os. old. (22.I02K) ---------· CONVERTS 1 1 842-8472 $3199 ALFA ROMEO JENSEN Wide selectmn ol colon Co-" St T ~ tllli28 · *BUENA * Cl>ol<O ol lnterlon Coov, Air •w. creo a~. 1968 HUSKY 250 f\fX. \rery . INTERCEPTOR . . PARK (Tapesll'y & tull leather) . 10,000 .nilles on new engine $1595 ' ,. cln. exCcl. rond. ~. * ALFA ROMEO LARGE SELEX:TION Factory air conditioning and trans, Extra ShEU'P I 847-.5159 or 893--6007 p. par· CORVEn 01'' COWRS -FuU.-nnwer _choice of: (S43ESZ). 2480 l!arbor Blvd. ty. '69 E Bes! deal al"•ay1! Berlinas IM!<.fEDlATE DEUVERY Crul r-Cont I $~695 Co&til Meu. J He~~ki:b~ x~~O, C:,~ $3999(001AUK) ~$3!~· ~~~~=!~ ~~~'A~~~~~~ *PARK *MAZDA ~~ ~~~;!k> * UENA Al~~~ 1 $595 ~ 1 All in immaculate condiUon ---1' '70 uus~"°:"x1~1 0000, '73 NOVA COUPE Jim Porklniiii • -. MAZ-DA-7015 KNO'l'T. BUENA PARK -Nabers-Cadillac· I '$600 or bst our (209HCUJ · C11ll Mr. Wayne 5226'750 AUTllORIZED DEALER *PARK * 642-5901 * $2999 2600 llARBOR BL., ·n HONDA 350CL, pvl party. ... ·n v.w. BUG. Radio and COSTA ~ 1'1ust i;ee to appreciate. 3100 \V, Coast Hwy., N.B. 7'115 KNO'M\ BUENA PARK ~ rlo, 4 6 Peed s.ro-9tOO n SwuiAy 1971 OLDS ta CO.llPE l S42S. 551-1278. •n MALIBU COUPE 645-"400 0 , 64.>MOG ___ 64_2·944-'-5 __ • Call Mr. Woyno s22.a1so THEOOORE '69 COUPE DE VILLE *MAZDA ' ''6 Hoooa 305 Scrambler CP58l =='---"=----===1 KARMANN GHlA '6!1 912 LOW LOW mlleo, ROBINS FORD · $225. 642-6031 aftcr S. $3099 ---~A~U~D~l---I::;:-;.;;;;;;;~:;-:::.:;:--;::= immac, 28MPG Sell or take 2000 Harbor Blvd Full power, factory air con- Faclory •Ir condition~. full l PQWtr, beaU\ltul Olympic · 1 brorne· "''l11l vl,nyl 11op • A 1 vinyl 'intflim', mt whet\'.. ! ; .~~,,:A,::•::k.o.fo'Cr,OB"rl"'an"-~-,70 KARMANN Ghia Conv. economy car In trade, Costa Mesa Gi2--0010 ditionlng, vinyl top, full ! ·n HONDA T,O, low milo., '71 AUDI 100 LS AM/FM 1 ... 962~ leather interlo,, <16,4.51 one . xlnt rond. $900. ' owner, ...... nt '54 PORSCHE reblt su r-1969 VW Fast~~· eng, front owner ntlles, Immaculate. : 675-6317 '68 VW CAMPER cond. $2500. 'M2-9700 90 In " brldgepc end, transmission, x Int New Volvo tradt>. {759AJV) 350 HONDA CL., reblt ens:. · good concl., S·IOO. 645-768.1 aft 3 pin. ·Mobile Hom•$ 935 8>:35 + 8' acldcd roon1, ,\dults only, El l\1orro Park, Laguna 4M-4738 Motor Homes Sale/Rent e SALt:S e 940 • SERVICE • ~ RENTALS-~-· EXPLORER ", HUNTINGTON BEACH '61)01 ~(,,(H ~LVll t-•1] tJ.ll()! r1vl'ojl1r--.u1or-. t.!A{f1 ~-MASERATI eng e, new cond. fbody damaged) $600. $2277 IXY"'°' •) 14 Dr, Lo\v 1'flleage (2UCFU) · stones, new p11lnt. Owned 645-1909, aft 6 & wkcnds $1999 $3795 by mechanic. 548-fl618 646-1237 *BUENA '68 MASERATI very cl~j '70 (911S) Ssp a..rn/fm nlags. ·65=·.:o:B::us"'.-,,.-w-·-71-,-ng-;-n,-. ~ l • ~nd. Must sell. 1'1'ich. rccarm scats. 9-5 outside oil cooler, roblt -8Aot 1A11i4 GROTJi 557-.1550 S. Stuart • trans & camper set-up. ~ , MAZDA PEUGEOT Gem-ge'• VW, 548-6618 YOLYQ *PARK '73 WESTFAUA camper . -'72 MAZDA NEW PEUGEOT w/pop.top & t•nt. a ...... 1966 "''"'"· ·c.M. ~9303 CHEVROLET 9000 mi. on warr. $42.50 '72 Cadillac Coupe De Ville. • DEALER 675-0060 Gold w/white vinyl top. * "RX 2 COUPE" I.., VIV BUS Fully cqu;p., lo ml, ""' MA.ZDA -c.omplete Sales iu_id Service. \\.'/folding b k belted radial tlreA. Top 18211 BEACH BLVD Air Cood, Rad;,,, Low ,rn.. P5"AcocmiF"1'c on Md>SoplayT.OR. $1395 ~ 556-8657 cooo. ;1;.1397 or 847-700l 7~ 549-3331 • age, original o"·ner, (401· '73 V\V 7 pass bus. European CAD '70 4 door, full P\.\'r, HUNTINGTON BEACH 7015 KNOTI". BUENA PARK l'"NBl. IMPORTS \'&Cation ~ only. 4,500 A~1/F~1 11tc1-co t-adio, nu '72 DODGE Call Mr. Wayne 5226'750 S2495 PEUGEOT/SUBARU rrilles. Call 548-8856 tii~ll, beaut oond , ?nly $2900, •• , . 'T.? V\V VAN, am ·int sicreo, pnv O\\onet'. 6ID-11a7. '!J TON AUSTIN HEALEY bo7 \\' Lincoln A,.., 'Sunroof, xlot oond, $3000. '70 CADILLAC conv. Good Pickup·. Air cond., ·*BUENA Anahcim 533-8220 St2-W17 cond, clJ!.S!ICS model. $2950. automatic. po \Ve r D 833-2640 steering & bnikcs. '67 AUSTIN Healey 3000. SAAi '66-VW-Can1per, nu tires ays R&H, \Vest Coast \Vhile, \\ire \\'heels, Pri. $900 '65 CAD Cpe de VUle, See, 7015 KNOTT, BUENA PARK sterl'OI doot' lockl, etc: l· Call Mr, Wiyno 572::1750 t!IOIBZN) ' . $2999 COUGAR over so Flo< Used Con to nrvORCE FORCES SALE! Of popular '73 n1odcl Cnpri \Vith only -3800 mi. Ju.st 3 ino. old. Red \\'/blk int. lt!>i. <lcL'Or, 4-spd. A r.1 I F1\-t stereo. 2000 eng. air, SACRIFICE $3475. Call 551-8151 aft. 5 \\'kcnds. DODGE .'65 CORONET 2 -Door. VS, 4 speed transmission, radio ~) h~'l!"l" (YCP· $395 Select F1'0m. . Nabers Cadillac AUTHORIZED DEALER 2600. llARBOR .BLVD. COSTA l\tESA 540--9100 Open Sunday '70 Ol.DS14-4·2 2 Dr. H.T. Automa· ttc, V8, air, vinyl top, R&H. pov.·er steering Ii: bnkes, klw miles. I 3448700) $1175 2480 llarbor .B~vd. Costa i\lesa At Fair Drive -17 * FOR RENT * Tlifil82t) low miles. Pty. $1500 .. 9S-6ll5 , *PARK * SAAB V96'!-0tm;·V-70 appreciat~~1~! otter, 24SO Harbor Blvd. 1973 EL DORADO P.1otor-BMW Best deal always. Con1pJete Costa r.tcsa home, 18·fl., tape deck, T.V., $AVE selection no1v. Buy or lease CHEVROLET At f.aJr80D17rlve Sales a.-:-•-:.~··~~.Zn~.•leep• 4 Call 24., H""'" 81,.d. CREVIER BMW *MA·ZDA lrojlm Parkinson'• '74 VOLVO'S ~ OLDSMOBILE FOR rent Holldny ,..dal Co•<a "'" Sal"• Sm'vice • r..as;og HERE NOW 1973 CHEV. OHOMNCDT,.RUCCAKRSS 27· Pace Ai·row sleeps 10, At Fair Drive 208 \V, 1st., S.A. 835-3~71 I • ...: MONTE CARLO " . ''"'· h ee I>"" ra"" !WG-"'17 USED BMW'S · "'o~~A~l1~'1~~'"' 1971 DODGE CRESTWOOD UNIVERSITY OL. DS 548-4037 ur 540-7796 '73 3.0 CSA DEMO 7015 KNOTT, BUENA PARK SAVE S OlN RE Less thnn 7.000 n1iles. Lan-""'AT!ON l"AGON f ll 1'-1-AINING · i'lau cab1·iolct · vinyl rool, .,, ''" • u Y 2S50 Harbor Blvd \VILL trade Nc"·pc}rt Beach ~~~~~~~~~ ,73 l .O SA DEMO Call Mr. Wayne 522.8750 _ 73's & DE~lOS equipped-including poWe:r O>sta M6a si>,u Property for Mo!or 1-lonie = '71 BAVARIA * M11Ula '73 Rotary * 645-6400 or , 645-6400 ':DUJLL • ~~:.~~'Y stair. conditioning. disc brake8, power steering, . ... .... '. .673-2058. Agt •. E~:ei:i ... ti.7}~, .. 1973 .. 1L .. 'l'ON·Pl"K·UP· .. ,70 ~-CS .. ·· ir:u. aal'\NTH :J'"'YOTA . -.. llllil brake' 1",,,."",0•:, PJnotei''.,.'0.' ftllactory 8:ir, A?\t/Fl\t 1tereo, TOequtROpNt AOOlo mlll .... 971. 1ru 11 y jm'-25' r.1crroR Hom es, e 4 WHEEL oRtvE ,70 2002 36 ·iiONrns ~~ L~:.W: .. ···-.v · . . .. · ·-:·-· . YQL::'"'-auto~~~ t 1c .tranSnlissio~'.1··ra~k~~1~!~~ir),= -·~ 'pri~ pt)' • .::,u~· Superior, Lifrtlme & Open e AM/FM STEREO '69 2002 \Vill accept trade-ins JUST ARRIVED ,tU ~dio, heater, \Vhlte n1iles. Asking $260"0. ~ Road. Ken \Velsh. 639-2981. ,68 2002 CAU.. r.-m.. FIRY 842-li666 1966 Harbor, c.~J. 646-9.".03 sidewalls. f106GIV) 644-4687. PINTO •Dal•'• Mo<o' Homo Rootal• • AIR COND 1 H t B h '74 TOYOTAS $4333 "°"'-------! e 4 SPEED --un eac '69 VOLVO J<WS AM/FM ·n DODGE Dart Sport, i, · '73 23-26' 1'1.H. & ?\finis $80 & ';fake over paymen!s ()RANGE COUNTY'S • Ne>.1• r.1odels · New Colors A/C, steei rad,ia1s. nev.: Over 80 Fine U&ed Cars to 10,(0) mJ, 340 eng, am/fn1 '19 Squire \\'agan. 4 11pd, Free miles 9 ti! 9. 838--0900 548-0869 OLDEST SAVE S ON RE?i1AINING brakes. 4 spd, S 16 9 5 . Select From. stereo, mags, S3!n) or 'jt'/mags, root rack, a Ir ,...,!'a~~ 1~ntal PRIVATE PARTY 0 MAZDA 73'• & DEMOS 492-7883 Naben Cadillac nea""' ofr. 557"""' an 5. COnd.>Call S5!.o&l7. Bureau. (714l 842-9922 HANDY? Hertz '6S GMC 1_,_ Autos, Used 990 AUTHORIZED DEALER RREBIRD '1! p~ ~a~~·~ 'Tl Shasta n101or home. T PU, V6, 4-SPD, nu socks i 1\dlllat La1..:1 ~ H>\RBOR BLVD. 646-2839 ' comp. self conL \Vinter ren. & n1uf!ler, air conlpressor I !733! Beach Bl. 8-12-6E:Ai -c.u.t\ UlllO AMC . 9 COSTA ~J ES.A '67 FIP.EBIRO 400, xlnt tal. 979--0379 & lank, runs good. RT DR E.xcellent scleclton or pl-e-MERCEDES BENZ JOYOJA ----~----.»>-. 100 Oprn Sunday rood, p/1, p/b, J'IC\Y paint ,.._ PONTIAC ' T\\'O Nc\v r.totor Hom(' sn1ashcd. Best offer O\'er price re-evaluation iuodels. '69 Antbassador SST \Vagon. job, <enl<. Paid $165 ca. Sell $600. >akc. ;,, 83.'H!ISS. DEMO $ALE JIM "'LEMONS 1966 Harbor, C.•1. &16-9Jn1 Has '"'"'llilng, Gd cond. '71 CAMARO ---,::.64&-:::_:7384=-~- $75 ench. S48-L173. Vans 963 SALESSERVICE·LEASING . ~ . • LEASE '7.f TOYOTA .talO $99";. 846-3006 &C)IJD _ Trailers, Yravel 945 ---------OVERSEAS DELIVERY ii'· IMPCtRTS Corolla sedan ..• Get 30 BUICK VS, automatic, vinyl ----"""--''---- ,72 STARCRAF1' Gala.xic 6 ·iru~~E~ M~ ROY CARVER, Inc. MERCEDES BENZ ~.~~ ~o.ga~n n;~,-~~~ ---'--''--';.:.:---1 ;~1:~·erra:d;~c1:~;tt•~ ·~ ~TO·ir:~·e.'<~i~~i lent trailer. thernlostac· V·S, unheard-0l value (QBZ· 234 E. 17th SL AUI110RIZED end leue. 197.1 BUICK 225 brakca. (687DDY) condition. Cl18DIM) 11395 Costa Mesa 546-4444 'SALES & SERVICE ELEC CSTM ticaUy controUod heat0<, 093). , SI ' • THEODORE porta-pott;, wardrobo, 2 $3989 BMW '6!1. 54.000 mlles. Good J1m l!ROn$ I door harotop. Brnugham $1495 R0"1"'$·,r()RD butane lank!!. Sep battery GUSTAFSON tires. FM. M8J'OOn. Leaving ~I rts Interior. dual comfort seats, m"::H~ 81 d for elect systeni. used only country, must sell 494-18fi6 mpo · full pcw.·cr, factory air con-.,,.,,.. Ila<~ Blv". C · v " d Lincoln-Mercury (\\' . 1 b 1 diUoning, tilt ,vheel, door ~ uu.-u osla·l\tesa &12-0010 3 \\'kends. Perfect con . lGSOO Beach at \Varner CAPRI ere op uyer or any Costa P.fcsa 4H3-9:ll0 11 .. "tin"'on Beach used M~~~.Je;l nz.) I locks. R.B. radio, \\'hite Al ,. . D . 1973 FORD Gran Torino .... ....,.,, "'""' sklewa1ls. fully equipped, ,. ~1';,,,17l'lve, Sport: ·UnbeUeV&bly lntmat•;'" Auto S11rvice, Parts 949 842-8&44 * (213\ 592-sa-H DIVORCE FORCES SALE! Newport Beach · '70 TOYOTA O>rona 2Dr. very lo~' n1ilcs. P.tint ron· ~ Only 16,000 • mi. A i r, REPLACE1'tENT & au.x· "llomc o! the Viking" Of popular '73 model Capri 833-9300 H.T. Radio, heater, 4 speed dihon. (580DDNl AM/FM stereo, auto, vinyl ' .1,·a-gas tnnks, ,·,ck-ups, '65 Dodge \vilh onJy 3800 ml. Just 3 E!'ITER FRO?tf ltfacARTI-IUR transmission. ( 92 3 B Q E) $3333 ~!~~~ 1 ti roor ll.i th pot'thole1, white ., Window Von mo. old. Red w/blk lnt ... 1::.:.=:.:..0-=~"""== $1595 , oval•, pvt party. $3045. , 4 \\•hi dlives. vans & motor lu.x. decor, 4-apd, AM/nit 50 USED THEODORE Over 8' Fine Used Cars to &$6-3819 homes. 892-8314 Good inechanical cond. i\lake stereo. 2000 eng. fl i r. Select Fro '63 CHM II NOYA m• •• oUer. Call 641><927. MERCEDES , ROBINS FORD m. FOR Sale four cylinder Jeep SACRIFICE S.'HT.i. Ca 11 1 ~ Harbor Blvd., Nabers Cadillac Engine $75. Some f'Xlra ORIGINAL OWNER 557-8151 aft. 5 & \\·kcnds. ON DISPLAY Costs.Mesa 642-0010 AUTI:IORIZED DEALER llardtop coupe. Automatic, '65 FORD convertible, 287, V-8, power lop I steering. SW!dard Trans. Nice car. $395. 642--0762 pa>1', call 542-5967 al<e< 6 '72 Dodge Van. I< ton. 318 CORTINA pm. auto. R/1-1. Ex. cond. Only Sharp New Car '69 TOYCYrA Land Cruiser 2600 HARBOR BLVD. po\\--er steering, radio. SZT;iO. ~. ---------Tr c:Je..' 4XA (967AFW) J 19 9 5. COSTA MESA heater. 79,700 original 1 Autos for Sale !tecreatlona1 Vehicles l§J 956 •71 OODGE con t e ni p 0 '70 CORTINA, 1 I i g h t I y ;· a ms TheodOtt Robins Ford .. 20fio 540-9100 Open Sunday O\\ner miJeg. (OKP591} camper van, raised roof, damaged. Parts or all. Coming In Eyery D1iy Harbor Blvd., Colta Mesa. 'Tl SKYLARK. ·Yellow. PIS, $577 1'1AVERIC< Grabber. '72, 6 cyl, alr, auto, lo mileage, Xlnt cond. Prl.. Ply. 12*JO, 63&-0040 full ·equipt, sac for ba.l due, l\lake Oller! 642-8936 eves. Ask About Our Unique &12--0010. P/B, air, ·12 mo. old. Ask· . $2890. Ph' &!5--0806 DATSUN Usod Mercodos LHso TRIUMPH Ing $2400 firm. I 21 3 l '69 Galaxy 500, 1 dr, HT. STEAL •69 VW Van 9 pass. P.l11n1 723-0136 days. Ask for l\likc 1\ai .... liirkl sit, ps, pb, air xJnt cond. Xlnl rood. $550. & take OVO>' '71 DATSUN 240Z House of !mP-OrtS ·n TRIUMPH s p lt f;" O< le.ave name & no. lat• -lUUA _.. o,1g owner. !J79.6748 pmu. 960-2117. Call aft. 6 rOL' .. lif ch I B p k roadster R&JI 4 speed I Eves.~<n4l 61:b4093 N.B. TOYOTA . '7\ ~fORD [;T-D 2 dr, 1'111 p.1n. oow; an cs er, uena ar sexy or~gc. ( 36 4 HD Ai ''11: ELECTR.i\ ~an. Fae! •• power, air, stereo. Al\1/FM, '70 SCOUT. 4 \vhl. drive. c,65~00-DG-E_V_AN-. -R-u0-,-good-. Extra Clean, Luiv l\11leage, l)ll the Santa Ana Fl'\\')' $1695 · air, full pwr, VInyl top, tilt .. · Xlnt cond., 83Q-9001 V-8. auto, po\1·er brakes. ~ 0.1· best offer. Call (507BZWJ. sn.7250 THEODORE "'hi, power .door lock, l.966 Harbor, C.r.f. 646-9303 '69 l!'ORD FAIRLANE $950 R/H. Good '~"d;t;oo $2lOO flomao, 645-6927 PRICED TO SELL NOW OPEN ROBINS FORD am/Im"""'°• >mmac oond. '69 CHEV IMPALA CUSJ'OM p/• AUTO a / l t : or Offer 893-6'460 $42,000 mi, $3333. Call 2 Door Hardtop. 350 V8, 847~2933 ' c, pr p y, , '62 Scout 4X4, $550 * 1972 G~IC * '*BUENA Mission Vieio Imports ' 2000 Harbor Blvd., 546-4155 dys, 673-5494 night auto mat 1 c tr&Mmlssion ~. air & canopy fP'ltiu·ing Costa Mesa 642-0010 & weekends. power steering tlnled gl~ FOR. Sale, '69 LTD, S875 497·lfJ64 aft 6 & "•knds * 646-8773 * MERCEDES BENZ TRIUMPH TR4, xJnt mech. ·10 Buick LeSabre 4 ctr HT. complete. Straio bucket 6266 Westminster Av c · • "'frl~ ~l.~H&il'A) A-~ llftlceCoot. Hwryl docs not lnc1. hold back or refund, 2480 Harbor 81\·d. Ca&ta Mesa At Fair Drive 546-8017 '10 GRAND PRIX Lo mileage. Extras. Telephone: k'>-1044 · '67. PONTIAC WA60N 9 paascni::cr. VS. au· toDlallc, air cond., radio, hetter. poWt'r steering &. brakes. CWCZ485~ $3'5 2480 llarbor Blvd. Costa l\fesa At Fair Drive :l4(i.8() l 7 1 ~ruck1 962 ·12 t"'ORD EconoHnc, 6 cyl, ~ & cond~ Culton1~! Beaut!· Jn perf~ cond. ps, air !iCats, vinyl top. Factory air 0l;V:::•llm=lns=l:::erc,,..-~-~ 3 spd, 1 yr old, Xlnt cond. *PARK FIAT ~~t sell! Best ofler cond, Priced to sell . concl. Wiii sell tor Kelly '00 FORD Ctry. Sq, Sta. '69 Grand Prbc. Excepdona) 4 WHEEL DRIVES 70 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER $2400. 4~ anylin1e Complete Sale<! & service 640-1826 blue book "'ho I e 118. I c , Wp. a/c & tull J>'"T. Xlnt COR!~ Mooerate mileage. All 3 mo. old ''cr Chevy 10 vao. Visit U1 Soon,At VOLKSWAGEN '72 SKYLARK, 4 dr, H:T. 644-4687. cooo. !650, * !W6-8872. :•=cc=""'=-·~· 'cl!J50r.-·i:·-;673-169°"';:;1;;.,_,.1 5600 1ni. r.tany xtras. llnmac 28 . Silver, A/C, loaded, Perfect '67 CAMARO. Radio, heater, JEEP '73 &IAND ' anltop. Radio, h c a t e r , Warn hubs, sharp. (4HASP) $2677 ... . . -' ... '72 JEEPSTER WAGON VB, aufomatic, air cond .. power stcel'ing, AM/FM, Warn hull:i, 141634 n11lcs. Uke new. $4177 '72 GMC JIMMY Custom wagon. Automatic, p11Wer 111eer:lng. r a d.i o, h.eal~r . air cond., Outstan- d!nii cootii\;oo.-!'19.'!FGXJ -· $3977 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 ·=~O!~S~~n. n1any ex· *MAZDA (U~s£~a;uM~JG~~.~ay.IT) ·~a:'!his~1:~~.r: s=.1:'94-'T6Js Beat oiler over ;,:~~~~=~~er 1970 4-whl drive Jeep :.V~':' a~W:. tras. 34.000 n1iles. \Vill ac· malts. 58>-5443 '69 SKYLARK custom 2 dr, \Vagoneer. Loaded. Auto. 11,lr cond., roof rack. cept trade. &W--6W7 . , ·~ Bug, L blue, R/H, 4 air cOnd, ps, pb Good oond. ROBINS FORD p/s, p/b, alr. 67a-1M-J. full J>O"'er, cruise Auto Loasirtg 964 7015 KNOTT, BUENA PARK . nu tires, Irdnt cooo, d'>" Prl Ply. $1400. 34&-31'6 2'l6ll ""'""' Bl142..oo MA~Rl"K control, tut whl., Call Mr. Woyno 522.a750 '68 MGB. w;re wh1', now 644-1437 eve• 499-1961 CADILLAC ea.ta M... lJl ,. AM/FM ~'-low LEASE NEW ~t: DATSUN paint. runs good. $1150. 1968 BUG , radio new Lires '64 CTIEVY Van. w/'68 1970,E,xcellent cond. Feet air. •mUellf. (114tttJJ) ·I · "197 ... PONTIAC ... I . . • · -P.ICK .... · 6n..<!3<-0r.6r..si;oo..... ..... · · &'b1'0l< .. : S950:'· • ........ · m -coUPE'""ll v ·u1.-; -Camaro-e..,,-,.frig OOd, ·-GOOil "iils-mi:-SUSOC"Ca1l __ _5AYI GRAND PRIX UP MGB 6444127 Hal'Ve•I yellow natur al cabmets, US mags, fiat aft 6 613--· l ..... ~ ~ ~L'MI • seals, runs good. $1200. or "'-"'''-r ~pm;;;,, ~~"~"~-0 s 2480 Harbot-Blvd. ' Costa Meaa $109.60 Mo. 4 •peed transm;,. "Weed lt & R.ap" ""'"· ~· ••~~. host olfer. 5'7-9ll6 -MERCURY slon, radio and heat-'67 M'GB. Xlnt cond. Nu From treasures to trash VERY CLEAN '65 Cad. Cpe . 1 At talr Drive 36 mo. O.E.,L. O.A'...C. A.~k about OUI'.. .MON6Y BACN lease plan. 2480 HarlMJr Blvd. Costa ~J('sa Al 1-~ir Dl'i\·(' ~17 r.lacArtbW' and Jamboree er. Io w mileage. trans, much more. $1300. Turn them. Into cash j DeVille. $650. or reasonable 19n EL CAMINO p/s, p/b, -'-'--------(YZM507) or best oUer. 494-7673' CALL Dally Pilot t-offer.· 833-0617 · a/t, new tires, 350 v...g, '69 '.MERC ~Is, 9 pin, -7 5 PONTIAC $Avt Z-180 "Harbor Blvd. •Cn!ta Mfisa At Fp.ir Olive 5'6-3017 1 $1295 -.. $2'175. 833-8880, ex 162, bet Stn Wag, ~r cond, ~to 8 & 5, 637-7158 aft 6. ,lnml.· p/j;,p/b, R/I!, !990 J"i:::;~~l?;°:::;::-:;;::--:;:--:::;:;:::;;::;;;~\J l' "12 MON~ Carlo.· Powe< l,!' ~ ~ .j?in &14-<U89 m . , STAR GAZ EK~~ ~.v~ui'°":ak!0 ;'~!'. '72 Cougar ~7. Black, atr ~ UMl!-ER ==--- . -llf CLAY J. l'O • . U'"• ~1059. oo..t, "'"'° ~pc. ~ tlreo, '68' AMBASSADOR, C ""' . )/... YOW"o.l'-Ac#MfyGciicN )'of ••-,,~,~ FOR sale-'62 ())c.v1mpaia All extras.I, Make ~ oU~r. P/B P~S, u .. ~ Al , ·-'', 'V' ... xlnt transp' gd rwlitlng 551-1687. ' .... , oiler. • f; AtttJr,i1ts lo f~• StOt'I'. oct n m.M4 .:.i", ·•0 '-~1 .. --,...1 .. T .... ..i.... • cond, $350 bst otJr,PH '67 MERCURY, PIS, 0 /B,· 'L . ,ti.I ·. P. 1 ' Un'9 ..... ' ..... ~ 111-2S3f 5J6.:9002 '1C3:9 • "' -•t ~ ~,....'°'t,di!~.:'°~ ~~ .. n roW.:;. fut1on wagon .vc. ~~· T RD·- ,....,_ ~ 31 •-61 .... _. -, C'nnf( I u full -ST 2 ;,-;;--,,;;;:;-'" .,;;:;;:, """ ~-•"· 0 m eage, . MU A~G.. '!"1 T·llRD LANDAU 3 A. 33 nm. 6.1 CM HM. JI pwr + a/c, A/Shocks, prl -4 t\b)r hardtop, factory air A A .J4 Y-"'• pt)', 644-73ll. DIVORCE FORCES SALE!'. ~ .. hill power, vtnyt ~ :=.. g:~ ~= '62 IMPALA . Good Of pirpular r13 model C..pri idtor, tUt wheel, steno, 7 Duy 37 And 67 Hett transportation. Asking $35(), wit6 ~ 3Pt mi. JUlt \°W Jock1, all CltJuxe G· :;: :r.:ultlotl ::e¥ Call da.)'1536-2829 mo1 old. red w/blk ' lht., 'tJi.t .• (~Vl '°''""' "°"""' 70C-"' '70 NQYA. 34,000 ml. Good l,,., deCOI', 4-lpd, AM/FM ' $2888 · 11 • .u 1,; 71 Rct-llOtlOI\ cond. Must ~I! $1500/best I~. -12000 q. at r , 12.ut A2C-W n.,,.,,;;;-;:::..ai~~,.,.ll.I orrer. 644-8338. ,979-,1838. SAClAr1tlE' ~. C-ill Uc'°r Fine tl'ltd Can to 1J~ AJl"ofnlol 73" ii:::i: GTO ~ ~ lllO 557'4151 att s a: wkencts. •~rom, . Newport Beach 8.l1·W-10 495-4949 '69 EL CAMINO, aulo tran<. 833-0355 WILL BUY YOUR _ PIS. f'161k>, heater, vinyl ~;?,::'ts !;~ ~~=-~belt oft= wo." REukAfrilio • intlit sen 1 = Cadlllac 16 Patllblt A6 Today 76COUM &.11·2212 '67 Mlllltang. Btst ·ofter. ' ORlzebi 'JJt.•Y - )7S-,, A7Stlrllulatlna 77Tht 6'"·-"TOJ. 89s.:.3)_28 Cot ~--n. 11 ~ 41 Wiii 711~-•ipaw•'---'65 a-tEVY 2 dr ~aa, clusle •.-ru • .,._eve .11M1 ~RDOR BLVD.._ ~~ ~~o .~:r_,,.. F,1iii;;;~ ~work. ~1Hlf -or ~~. -;mu:.~.~~ A-~Stlnd• .. 21 t,.JW, .SI To 11 A W--" r-/1 ~ .._, ;:20.. .S2Dim 12Wlth '68 •CHEVY. Blue 4'"dr. Bis-icu-<>lln ""'' ' '72.l'·BDlDloaded, tull .pc)M!r, ~::-i!~.ro1 :! ~::: Cl\Yllt· v..a eas. Orta. O\Yn-'68 Mi.II~ Vl8. •Uk>. A/C, =-... ta. ~· \'bntl, top, ;m V-8, rl1S1 cifuP'r ll'f'·l 'riY TOP DOLLAR DATSUN, •TOYOTA "1ell. 894-<W ·-or FOR TOI' USED CAnS OR VOLKSWAGEN ~. ext 361 ~y1. Tf your car ls extra clean. I PAil> FOR OR NOT. WJLL '64 QI.EV Plclrup!_ ~ UI ttrst. PAY TOP DOU.AR.. CALL 6 eyl, automatic ss:l5 BAUER BUICK KENT AU.EN 540-0442. 548-3351 29lii -Bini. . . 84$...'+04 • CoJla Mesa· • 919.2500 1970 2-lOff;, Aluminum ma(:s, '• ,8TtJDEBAlCER. p U I:::=="""'"""=~=-= n1odtfied exhaust. k on I daak. Good cond. $300-. or \VE St.1Y 11hot ks. O\'e.1"11ited 1'1lct>eUns, ...... .,., 51t-JO:IS, IMPORTED Al)TOS 1:1265, ~10-08&t. ' 1911 INTERN~TIONAL lt lllT flRICSS P'AIDI 1°" plclrup. air co" d • Doon ...,.,, Imports '67 NIS..~N Patrol D81sun. ·283 Eng .• partially .uaentlll· cd, Clle!ttp. 5$-8667. 251'1D sswn1 15Todov er. 557-3746. Pis l dllC brkt, vinyl to1>1 ~ ' ....._," ndiala. :26 For 56 e. 116 l/JIPtr '67 eHEVY JI. Tranlporta· xbn aMf S975.at6-3535 IWl-l3IR. • . • -• . ~=-~=" ii~:, Uon car. iTOai1 d'nly. l2ll5. 'CIO MIJllJAlfG, H!T,•6 cyl, 'AJ TJfU.att'iiRD Waltco 1111 p ... 90-329<. 19116 Harbor, CM. 646-930: '1l Fll50 Ford llenr8' ._,, CASH FOR --· ••2!111. '$3H.1l8 YOUR CAR . ~ .... ..... 546-7071> ' AIUS'T Sell 19'13 240 Z, 800) nti'a, 6 n10'1 "'arr. Air cond, map. Sl9.JO or olr. 644-7300 ' """ .,_ """' Call !3Ul3I Ulo, r I b, aJr, :11,,M.P.G.. ioo!I t;and..liil.'la.1844 30~ .,,_ 'ot• '°""" '88 aa:v. Impala Cust. oaresau.$!00.Pb.8C-925j "IV Tl-ll!!tD, fully equipped, -"®!;,G=;Ooi"""®=M=-==()=N=l.='~===~!..._ __ J_!i~port'.!!!:..:ep.!!:'..!a/!;oond~tle.;..__Top The -tlnur bl the We1t. toldj orto owner. Sltll. ==~ = Cond. $15(), IM&-319'1. • •• a Dally Pilot Cualll<d -"53&-"-"'•Jm=. ----- ' I ' ' . • • l , I' • • In could trans The for a trans with b., I • ~ .. , ' iJ F F ' p 7, the -to 'In Inv • • ' Pl• . ' • all II> ... di to '/ .. • . -, • San ·~·lemenie Today's Final • EDITION . ' 'tPL· 116; NO. 323, :if SECTIONS, <IO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1973 TEN CENTS CUSD , I · '€apistrano Unifled School District· trustees tonight will come to grips with a projected drastic diesel fuel criail in ,coming months -_a scarcity which could spark severe cutbacks i n transportation services, The board will hear recommendations for a majJ>r austerity program ln the transportation fuoetions of the cjistrict, with the ·possible e1imination of special bup trips ·and extension of the d.istance • Trus.tees Study Fllel=-- which some children will have to walk to school. Assistant Superlntindent for. Business Sam ehicas told trustees by memo in recent days that the district faces a cutback in fuel allocations by one-third and that dozens of attempts to win relief from the U.S. Interior ne.J:;tment have failed miserably. '< "Either their phones are tied up, or they refuse to answer them," Chicas said. As a result, the district's transportation staff has been working one or several alternatives. Among the options which the district can exercise are: . -Adoption of a new program which would conserve the greatest amOlDlt of fuel possl'l_le. ' -Contacts with legal representatives in an effort to win a new policy Placing schools transportation high on the 1151 for fuel allocation. -"Constant application o! pressure" to the appropriate federal agencies in an effort to win allocation increases. -Drastic curtailment of student field trips,· using only existing spare district funds in the budget, setting a 40-mile, fcur-hour limit on such student jaunts • * .JI * * * • • un r1v1n • ;' ~·Found: Liz' · · Laws Vpheld Rare Shihtzu . El:~.~M~~J".!'k .... n1~'i:! Top·· Court Nix es day wi'th. bet pet dog, a rare shihtzu named Da!Sy Mae. ~~~.i:iu~eu!I~~~~;~ N d B s d ~:;~:ier::~=·········· _ u e ..... ar ....... tu __ y ment. A fire dispatcher said a • · · ·iJ· ·· couple found tl)e dog. She bas checked out of nearby Scripps Clinic after a medical From' Win Services WASHINGTON -The U.S. Supreme ~ checkup. ---~ -eourt-refused today to take a second L.------------' 1oo1c at 'California regulations prohibiiing i\ nude 48ncing and other sex-oriented naref oot Bandit •ntertainmen.t 1n bars. . TI1c;~Jhe form of a ,.,,_ w· .~1 ~~ brtff·•·,~~-.. we8 it1,, ,4 I U ·• Oo Nov. 5, 11172, the .court upheld lbe replationl bot JUJtice William H. llehnquilt's opinion notod Iha! COD· - stitutional problems could arise in specific caSes. "'A barefoot blallit who i::overed his In the request for reconsideration, a 'face with · a ikl muk mpt through nightclub owner, Paul A.. Richter & ·the back door of 1 Sen Clemente ham-Associates, Inc., doing business as the .~. nd bbed Body Shop, sued in San Diego County burger stand late s-y a "' Superior Court !or a ruling that "the the bualnw of fnl, b d •·· And .;;;;;.uce today iUi1nlsed that -the specific and invarla le nu e . uauce yuu performances" that take place iD the .gunman wielding a sawed-off rifle is club are not obscene under the regula· the same man who recently robbed the tions. A movie of the dances ac- Mission Driv~In Theater and a local · companied the papers filtd. liquor store of similar amounti of cash. But the court said it was without · . Sunday's robberY occurred at the Page jurisdiction because of a section of the Boy Bulgen, 420 E. El C8mlno Real, .California Business Code which gives 'shortly after 1:30 p.m. sole power to the Department of From Page Boy service commissions d i s c r i m i n a t e against women by maintaining a two-- track pro(IJ9tion system segregated by sex. _ -The court agreed to consider for a second time whether federal courts mt1y · re.sch .iPtq-the suburbl to desegregate ·p•-•~'iiiilii;oitysdfrz ·,. , The Cl1Urt agreed to review a .uderal . appealo sour! ruling that the Ciaiy c:on- stitutioaal way -io deoegregate Dl!lroit city echooll .., was to .inc l u d e predominantly white suburban school systems in any desegregation plan. The issue of crossing established school district and county lines in punuil of school desegregation dead!~ the. court 4-4 last term. No precedent is establisl!ed by tie votes. San Juan Capo's-., City Oerk -- Crisis Solution and lhe use of charter buses when -possible. Although the gasoline situation is not as severe, C,hicas has predicted a 21>-per- cent cutback in that fuel and be already ha s ordered strong conservation measures for gasoline: The officials said he has imposed a 50 m.p.h. speed limit on vehicles; cut- tiaclts in vehicle 11se because of their possible function to shuttle some students to and from sc hool ; and reduction of warehouse delive ry schedules. The issue faces the board at the end of tonighfs 7 o'clock session. The nleeting, marked by a relatlvety light agenda, also includes the awarding of construction bids for the new junior hig h school in Laguna Niguel as well as conshfrration of stipends for trust~s . * * * ear? Emergency Measures Outlined From Wire Services WASHINGTON -A nalionwide,, ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy·saving meas~ are "very real possibilities" because of the nation's energy 'crisis, one of President Nixon's top energy advisers warned· Congress today. -~· -- Charles DiBona, the President'il special assistant for fuel, told a joint House.. Senate hearing that even total com- -plianCe with cU!Terit con S .. e rv-a tl-on --- measures such as turning do w n thennostats and a 50-mile per hour speed limit will not be sufficient. . He said that an optimistic assessment of these conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies, will provide only 2.3 million barrels of oil a day while the shortage Ls about · 3 million barrels a day. "This means that we're going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measures?" asked Sen. William Prox- mire <D-Wis.). "Yes sir, and soon," DiBona replied. Di.Bona said that among the "very real possibilities" the Administration was considering was a ban on Sunday di'iving. He said that 25 percent of all gasoline used in private cars is consumed on . :qu~u:":..io:: ~~=-~~ ..!'~~!!'~!~trot. Higher state ·screen dcor and brandished the shot'telr At · the time of the Supreme court's To-Qm~ost LihedtiieD~ ~=~~.,,~"'·eekend1s...---- ed •eapqn, detilllldlng -· iniUal ruling, it •Was expected that the '·' At that point a customer came to next test woukl come when a club ihe front windo• and the bandit ordered owner's liquor .license was actually lilted 1tbe m4Ie employe to serve the patron because of employment or topless or as-if-nothing-Were amiss. bottomless waitresses or other alleged • That accomplished, the bandit resumed violation of the regulations. ·19 liis task, stuffing the cash into a In other actions today: paper sack and nlJllling out of the -The court rejected Missouri's search buliness. for a loophole in the high court's decision , granting women the right to abortions ' during the first six months of pregnancy. P l . A st 4 The court arnrmed a three-judge 0 ice rre dlstricf C.'OUrt's decision d e c I a r in g J. · Missouri abortion laws uncorutitutional. 1 Alle d NJ The lower courj. based Its decision ll ge on the Supreme COurt ruling lasl January that allowed states to place sub.5~tial ~Homosexual Ri.rt/{ =0.::S~nor'~':~~~Y during tast --The court declined to bear arguments ;~JERSEY CITY, N.J. (UPI) -Three by pg!!_cowomen claiming they are denlerl men and a woman allegedl)r connected an equalCbance at ptomotions. wtth a naUonal boys group have been The h18h court, over lhe objections arrested on charges of opirating a of Jusilces, William 0 Douglas _and "'"'-X1lll ring IDwMpg II least nine William ~. Brennan Jr., let stand a youngsters at a rundown reoijlentlal New York State . Court of Appeals hotel. decisioo rejecting the class acuon The Jltdson county pl'OleCtllor's office cltallenge to Nassau COunty police pr<> uld .lles'naril P. Doran, 113, JciliDCOl>'-l!IOllillrpllbdtr.-·---- 'nally, !O, G<rald L)nn, 113, and Heather The poU~omen argued that the Scala, fl, all of the 'Hotel ·-polke ~en! and county civil ...,.. cbarl'd Saturday with tmpolrtng the morals !JI .1111tior1 l"!I contributing 'to the delinquency ol mlnOrs. . 'The lour were arrmted at the hotel 'In Jeney City following a ttu.e.mooth investlplicn..ey the <:!l\!1111. IJl'OllS?'lol''s office. • ~ ~·· -l A.D RESPONSE ' • ~TREMENDOUS' ' Tremendous ..._. ,... rented tltTe<l toomJ lmmedlatelrl That was the joyful "1'-of-the. Costa Mesa woman who placed this Dally Pilot ciwlfted Id: •· CtEAN . flllll. Nr. pee, > . K Helie n, wuher/dfJIOI', • • Rellred OK. 175 mo. (Pboae No.) . A few Unes of advertistn( may be .u )t takes to cet 41l~endoul ~II ~r you, too. Dial the .clllllifted ad department at tl!e Dally Pllof on the direct line, ~. to pl &D ~ to help you find out. ' • ' . Officer Sights 'UFO' ~Not· From . . 0ut£r Uni vers e • A,., pranbter • with a flair r o r craftsmonahlp tried his hand at UFO cons\nlctlon early today, but his scale wasoffoomewhal. Police found the creator's "space ship" shortly alter midnllht along ihe 2IOO block ol South El Camltlo Real while on routine patrol. . O!lfcer Tom Haight aakl he notlcod a IJ8bl hovering ~ men than It feet oil the ground and 1topped to checl< It out. He found a pair of plllllc bop ftlled with helium hovering at the end of a 1trlng. A Oashllght had -a~ to the' boltom ol the two -u u~." The oddity WU brouChl to the .. u ... and now: serve~.., a convenaUon piece • I San Juan C8pistrano.City Clerk Wanda Anderson has submit~ her resignation effective Nov. 30 to assume a similar post with the city of Lakewood . Miss Anderson, who assumed the post in the summer of 1972, will be replaced temporarily by City Manager Donald Weidner, who has beld the appointment of. deputy clerk since he assumed the top administrative role at city hall. Weidner announced the resignation to- day and said he planned to reconunend recruitment of a-replacement to city councilmen when they meet next Mon- day. · He said the loss .of a clerk comes at a critical period beeause the filing season for candidates to two city council seats opens Dec. a. "I supp:ise I'll have to do the duties until we find a new cletk," he said. Slam in Argument? OAKLAND (UPI) -A family argu· !llen!_~~~ led' to Q>e ~?tal shootin ofMr•. Ora-U.-ir.oonx, 25;ar··~er horiie in East Oakland, police sai<L Detective Sgt. John Shannahan said the woman argued With her husband. John Hen<trlx, 25, Officers were searching for Hendrix.• Ellen Brink, 19, of San Clemente, was obviously elated at the rrews. And well she might have been; the attractive brunette bad just been pronounced homecoming queen of Saddleback College. Additional ,picture of queen and her court is on page S. Chairman of AE.C Urges Turn to Atomic Power \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Atomic the AEC, said it. was too late for nuclear Energj Commission Cbainnan Dixie Lee power. to ea.Se the ·current energy crisis, Ray· says the nation is wasting oil and bUt that it woUld be a niajor source natural gas_by using it to produce elec-of electricity in the futµr e. trlcity----ani: must instead turn more to "Nuclear plants now supply something nuclear power. . . . aPProadling '5 Percent of the electricity "~ere ls, r. beheve, a g;ow1ng r~gni-for this cou"ntry with the 'SI units in tion that fossil fuel supplies are hm1ted, operation-And we're hopeful that that nuclear power can be used to pro-· . . . i!Uceeleoffll!tty;•~Mrs:·Ray·saro-sunc1ay,··-another-21..plants-wilLgo_onJine_durmg .. It is @ waste to use either· natural the next 12 .months." gas or oil -: . . tp . ~ under a boiler She gave the assessment in an in- to prod.uce eleclr1cny when one has terview with U.S. News and World alternatives." · Mrs. Ray the first woman to head Report. ' While acknowl&lging delays and in· r---------------------------., creased ., construction costs, Mrs. Ray .Eig1it Killed -·~ 2 Cars Explode in At;cident said ,she, was optimistic the, Jime could be reduced .for brinBing ~tomic plants into operation. "The President has suggested that this time be cut from 10 years to six years, and we think It can be done," she said. "Our present projections can BAKERSFIELD (UP.I)_-Eight persons were killed and ·two !or about 1,000 nuclear power plants seriously injllr'ed .Sunday evening at.a, darkened country intersection -lo be operaUnifbf Ute year~." near hJ!re In a fi•X}' ~vehicle era$h, . · • ~Slie said-Iran's minlster'<ll water and The Callfqmia Highway Ptrtrol said today a van driven by Le-. power-expressed a g1tat Interest In lalll!I Stoneblr&W, 63,. BakenfM!ld, was northbound on Cottonwood nuclear pow.°re4 plants on a recent visit ~ w1*1 ~• apparenUy ran a stop sign ·and struck a 1962 model lo the United Stale•. sedan carrylng·11iae penons. Both vehicles exploded. Stonebarger, alone In his van, -ldllid. "Why, in Iran, with all the oil you Killed In the auto ftl'll the driver, Walter Llewellyn, 30; his stel" have; are you going to build nOclear daugh!A!r, O.ne ldwards, 1; two sons, Matthew, three weeks, and power plants to generate electrlcily !", John, 13 months; Uqellyn's brother, Roger Llewellyn, 22; Roger's she inquir . wife, Sharon, 18, and their da.ughtet, Mlchefle, one mon\b. He replied, she said: " ..• beeause In critical Clliidlt!on '"re. V(1/ter µ'"U)'ll'S wll!!1. J'!llene, ~nd _. '-"Jt"'e~consider petroleum lar too valulble a son, Gregory, 2 •. AU lht UtRllyu were lromlluerifleld. sunplj to priiduce·hi!it fonna1t1ng elec- tricity.'' -·~I .... ~- Among other proposals being con- sidered are a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft; cI.,mg public parks to automobiles ; closing service stations on weekends, and blue Jaws to close all busineses on Sunday, he said . Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz told a Senate foreign relations subcommittee that lhe Administration will "have to take some sharp and decisive action" to cope with the energy shortage. Shultz, who said his "instinct is against" gasoline rationing, said the United States was lucky the Crisis had come now because imported fuel supplies are only a small portion of Americari energy needs. ur hope rationing y.•jll 'not be necessary," Sctiultz said. "My inslict is against it ... Rationing sotmds like such an easy answer but it raises such serious problems that I question whether it is a· real answer'. Nevertheless, the problem is such that we will have to take sOme sharp -and decisive action." DiBona al!o said· th'e Eastern seaboard and New England oould be 50 percent short or fuel this winter unless fuel (See EMERGf;i".iCY, Pu~~----! Oruge • Fair side~ are# on ftie-agend'a l°" ...... , Tuesday, with sllghUy warmer days but colder nights. Highs in the 60s , dipping into the !Os in the early morning hours. ~SIDE TODAY ·4' Ligltt catamaran. 011d -surf· board mentor Hobie Alter is working on o new plaything for iilternationol fu~ieekcrs. Sec story on PGQt 8 todoy. - :l llAiL Y PILOI ;c King Faisal . __ _May _Seek_ Ru ss Linl{ • Mondly, N°""'bff 19, 1973 • • . - . Nixons Aware of Tap Wife of P-resident's Brother Comments The F. Donald Nixon fam ily ol Newport Beach conllrmed loday that they tiere aware President Nixon had their-telephone tappedt,, ~---­ P,..idenl Nixon disclosed Saturday when the phone was tapped or for ho'I•/ long. "I don't pay any attention to that sort of thing. lt sort of conlCS and goes with the tide." she eXplalncd. B..EIRUT (UPI ! -The Be i r u l newspaper An Nahar said today secret contacts are under way ai med at establishing diplo1nalic relations between Saudi Arabia and the Soviet Union. -~ Asked If hm-conversation with the reporter today was being recorded, she said, "I rather doubt that but I rea lly don't know. J'd rather you talk \\'ith my husband ." belore !he Associated Pre!!!S l\-lanaglng E4itors if I~ made sense to top the telephone of someone ,.,.ho knew he v.·as under surveillance, Nix.on said yes. because it was not directed at ~Is brother but at "othen: who were tryrng to get him ... pa rticularly in a ror~!gn _countr>:·" "I \\'On't go beyond that, Nixon said. •·There were very good reasons and . my brother was aware of it." He said~ the reasons probably ~·ould be disclosed It said King Faisal accepted "in prin· ciple" an invitation to visit 1'-1oscow. An Naha r atlribu ted the report to "infonned diplo maljc sourc.!s'' and car· ried it under a front page banner headline. Arab Press commentators treated the report with reserve in view of King Faisal's long-standln_g hostility to Soviet influence in the Middle East. This has been based largely ()fl the rejection by King Faisal -the main spiritual leader EGYPT PUSHES FOR PEACE TALKS NOW, P190 4 of the Islamic world -of communism's atheistic concepts, the commentators said. Rusala was , the first country In the world to recognize the kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1926, but Saudi Arabia bas -never established-diplomatic -relations•---'----===----=-'-----------= Dlltr ;iiif '''" ,.11.M - with ant eommunisl state. Ontvard Chi•istiaii Sold·iers King Faisal has often slated that Zionism and oomfnunism v.·ere the mai n eneimies or the Arabs and Moslems. Press reports speculated he was effective in innuencing Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to expel 15,000 Soviet military advisers from Egy pt in July. 1972. l\.1eanv.•hile, Ara b oil producers vowed today no letup in the oil embargo against the United Stales and tightened the squeeze on Japan. Despite favored treatment by the Arabs, other countries drastically cut oil consumption. Japan mounted a diplomatic offensive to get more Ar~b oil and preYent serious disruption of its economy, but Arab diplomats insisted Japan must break diplomati c rela tions with Israel to be exempted from the oil boycott. "Japan cannot help us militarily, so the second thin g lo do is to cut i'e!aUons witl} Israel," said Saudi Arabian oil minister Sheikh Ahmed Z. Yamani, in Vienna for a meeting of the Organization of Petn:>leum Exporting C o u n t r e i s (OPEC). Yamani. said he saw no chance for a revision. of the Arab nations' stand towards the United States. 0 We don't see any reason for ·such a change so far," he said. "But .we hope the United States will increase efforts for a peace settlement in the Middle-East." From Pqe l EMERGENCY. • • use is drastically reduced . He said contingency plans for fuel raUoning are being drawn. DiBma said the nation's fuel supply is already about 17 to 18 percent short. Estimates are based on a continued Arab petroleum boycott and a normal winter. President Nixon said Nov. 7 the shortage could reach as high as 17 percent during the crisis this winter. DiBona said the National Petroleum Council's 25 percent shortage estimates is based on a more severe winter and less voluntary cooperation than the Administration thinks it will get. He said adequate petroleum reserves are on band for use through the end of the year. But he said estimates of a 50 percent shortage durin g the first quarter of next year in the Northeast and along the Atlantic coach could be realistic if the voluntary program fails and other cuts aren't made now. OUN•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT ,,,_ OI' ...... CNll OAILY PILOT. wllll .. Id! Rev. Jimmy Combs <at controls) and Rev. Russell Gordon ride Jumbo to Sunday school class at First Baptist Church of Costa r.-tesa. The elephant appeared at the church Sunday as a treat for Sunday school youngsters who also got to ride on the pachyderm. . ' Elderly County Woman Dks in Sarita Ana Fire A 63·year-<1ld woman died today when fire of unexplained origln .raced through n Santa Ana apartment Wlit. The early morning fire at 2430 Pon- derosa St. claimed the life of Nell ie For'an, a resident of one of the downstairs units in the four-plex. Oc· cu2anta of the other units were not injured. Investigators theorize the 6:30 a.m. blaze was touched off by careless smok· ing, bttt the actual cause has not yet been determined. Fire Chief Eugene Judd said Mrs. Foran was found dead inside her burned- out apartment after firemen had put out the blaze. An off-duty fireman from Orange who first spotted the fire was driven back • bf the intens'e heat when he tried to enter the apartment . to see ir anyone was inside, acoording to Judd. Two Highway Patrol officers v.·ho tried to give their assistance also were the fire . Total property damage was opening the apartment. Several Inmates Called Suspects l1i Jail Death O@l'!ge (9unty Sheriff's offi cers today revealed they have several suspects in the slayin g of ~ co unt y jail prisoner v.•ho \\.'as stabbed. Friday while en route to a branch jail. "\Ve're not prepared to say more than that at this moment ," sheriff's C{l.pl. James Broadbel t said today. "'But I hope we'll soon be in a position to go to the district attorney." Interrogation of about 50 prisoners who were with Jose Zatarain, 22, at the time the Santa Ana man was stabbed y,·ent on throu ghout th e week~nd. Investigators who stated Friday they had been unable to locate the weaoon used to deliver the fatal wound today declined to reveal if they had now located Judd said the three other apartment units received only slight da mage In prevented by the smoke and fire from estimated at $15,000. . President Slaps GI 'By Mistake' Wife Insists ORLANDO. Fla. {UPI) -President Nixon lightly slapped an Air Force master sergeant Qn the cheek Saturday night, and the man's wile called it a gesture of friendship. The incident occurred at McCoy Air Force Base as Nixon was returning from an hour-long news conference at Disney World. ~f. Sgt Edward Kleizo and bls son were among a group of about 60 persona on hand to see the President off. Ac- NIXON ON WATERGATE RECOVERY DRIVE, P1go 4 cord ing to reporters with the President, Nixon approached Kleizo and had the following exchange: "Are you the boy's mother or grandmother?" "Neither," the man replied. "Of course not," Nixon said and lightly slapped the man's faace. The incid ent was interpreted by some as an indication of anger on the President's part. but acCording to the sergeant's wile, KJei.ro has no such feel· in gs. "I don't know how they got that,'' she said. ';He just mi stook him because the light waS so bad. It was blinding the President's eyes. "He couldn't see the croY,.d. lie was just reaching out for everyone, 1 guess ," r.-trs. Kleizo said. "He mlstdok my husband for my !J<>n's mother ·or grandmother and when he said 'No,' it was just a gesture -just like anyone reaching out to pat lilm on the shoulder or the cheek and say ·r•m sorry.' " II ~ntd flit ,,....,..pr ... h Ollblldwlll ~ 11----l -w-0r•liiT'C6iirl"ubll1llliifl:Of'iiPel!y ..... r•I• "'111on1 ''' pu11111t1..,. Mond1Y r~•NOh frlsl•r, for C11tt• Mtw, Ntw00rl ltadl, Hunlll'llton 811eh/Fovnt1ln V1 llfr, L•OllM J.M(rl, lrvif11/Sll(WltMdl ...., $In C'"""t•/ IM Jutn C1plllr1nt. A l lP!flt ntlollal ........ II ,ybllll\ld l1t111l .. YI er1111 ~tyl. T1w lll'"lnc:IMI pi,llllfllinl ·1111n1 II •t uo Wnt a.r llntl, COt.11 M111. C.ruoml1, tUM. --the··knife:-.. -Oemente P-ar-k~ • ~0!11rt H. Wied Prw-.. •f'lll Pl*ILU\w ... --J,a It. C11rl1v \'kl' P'91111Mt .... ~ """'"" n,,....m...,.11 ~ n.-•• A. M'i!tph!111 ..,,.. ... hlfw CJi•rl" H. L.11 licJ.1ri '· Nill .... , ..... MIMllrll h l!Ort s.. Ck:, .... Offlctl JOS Ni,.._ fl C.1t1i"' Attl, t267Z --Cteflo ~1 ut w.. ••v sr,.., H"""'1 hldl1 '81 Newptrt hultlfl•t """'"""" atldli 1"11J •ttef'I lovltY•"' L'lllN llldli • fllf'lft ,._ ,.,,,, ·a 11141 '4t~a21 Cl•NW .W.•lftl I '41·1171 S. Cle 1c1s Al Dar• h••8ft.I Tll ;I I 4f1....n C"""'1flt, •m. Orlntl 0...1 llW!hllf'!t ~. trM """ 1wi., lllwllr•lllitlt. ..... -nw ., ~ ........ ~ _., .... ,.. ................ .-Ill ,.. ....... CW\'i1'M ...... . ___ ,..M_'lr:i ~::1,=.~.:=-~, -:....,~ • .,,-.................. ' Zataraln \Vas being transferred to the county's Theo ·La cy branch jail in Orange , Friday to serve a 31klay jail term .. Surf er lnJltred . when he was stabbed by one of his companions in a cro"·dcd jail tank, A f 1 r.-An Diego suf· deputies said young .sur er rom o>tt He was ru~hed to the Orongc County ~ered apparently minor ~bd~ ln-~tedical Center but Y(ilS dead on arrival. JUQ.es Stu1day during a spill in the surf of San Clemente State Park. r ife departmenl persoMel look Bobby. Harbor Area's Suit Dela yed A further seven-mont h delay was ordered today In the Orange County Superior Court trial of • 123 million lawsuit filed by 905 Harbor Area homeowners who blame the county (or mounting jet noise and pollution in the vicinity or county airport. Pres(dlng Judge Bruce Sumner set June 17 as the new trial date._ Both sld" said they needed more time to complete their preparations -lot wha~ll expocted to be a i<ltilbY lrial. l'~rancis Egan , 13, to San Clemente Generi'll Hospital for treatment of the hurts .. Egan was wiped out on a wave 11.t a!>ool ti :30 a.m. at the park and rangers summoned help. The youth was rele.oed after eme11e1>- cy ireatmenl. Action Approved PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) -Eighty percenl of those surveyed In the latest Gallup Poll approve of COOl'""lional limits on a president'• power to •ncl U.S. lroop• Into overs,.. 1ct1Gn. The Gallup 011anizaUon 11id tho poll WU taken Nov. U , before Cong,_ wted Nov. 7 to overrlae Prelident Nlltan'• veto-of a btll-~ pc-l to explain ODY act of war to eon,... within ·48 hours. nlghl that he ordered his brother's telephone tapped becauae pe.rsoM in forelgn countries were "tr)'\ng to get him.'' The President declined to identify the foreign interests or what they wanted of his brother. He did say he ordered the U.S. Secret Service to make the tap "for security reasons." Contacted at her NeY.'port Beach home today, Mrs. F. Donald Nixon acknowledg- ed the family knew 'of the tap. "Ce.rt.ainly, we knew about it." she said. She could not, hoy,·ever , "remember Boy, 9, Armed; ·After Officer Ml.V.11 BEACH (AP) -A 9-year-<1ld boy cl'.lrrying a loaded gun \\.'alked into a restaura nt and informed a waitress he was going to "kill a cop," po lice say. The waitress took the .38 caliber revolver from the youth, unloaded it, and gave the gun back to him, police said Sunday. Police said the gun had been stolen Saturday from Miami Beach Mayor Chuck Hall's car parked behind a city convention hall. The youth's nt\ffie was withheld because he is a juvenile. She said Nixon had meetings schedul ed all day today and would not be.ava ilable for comm ent until Tuesday. President Nixon said his brother con- sented to the surveillance. The telephone reportedly was tapped for more than one year during Nixon's Ur st term. Asked during his televised appearance so1neday. f' \\'hen the \\!ashington Post 1rst disclosed the tap in September, the Secret Service said its . protec~lon of the President's family did not include his brot her Donald. The Post quoted sources as saying the tapJ were con- clucted because of Donald's financial dealings, pa rticularly wit h Howard Jlughes. f't. South Coast · Gets Sample · . ~! Of Electricity Failures The first significant rainstorm since spring dropped nearly an inch of rain on the Orange Coast-ovet the v-·eekend and sparked dozens of minor accidents. several poy,•er failures and numerous other minor irritations. The U.S. \Veather Service is predicting mostly sunny days for the rest of the v.·eek including the Thanksgiving holiday. Some scattered clouds may move in 'Vednesday evening, but they shouldn't keep the stm from heating things up to the 70s, the weatherman says . The Orange County Harbor Depart- ment said today its gauges recorded 0.84 of an inch of rain between Friday evening. and early Sunday morning. The storm brought the season's total to 0.87 inches, still far behind the same date la st rear y,•hen 3.2 inches had fallen.· · The Soulhern Ca\Uornia Edison Com- ~any reported scattered pov.•er failures all over the county. The rain caused some lines to short out. Several circuits also failed , blacking out portions of San Juan Capistrano Saturday night and part of Fountain Valley and f{untington Beach on Friday. Ediso n officials reported. M®t of the ~rouble was cleared up within an hour. The rain clouds were blown '&way early Sunday by a chill wind that was clocked at nearl y 4{) knots at the Harbor Department ollic.s in Newport Beach during some perts o( the day. Micro•waveuovens·make ··· cooking a breeze! Outcooks any pot,skiUet. broiler. pan or oven FLASH! HELP BEAT THE ENERGY CRISIS MICROWAVE OVENS USEONLY10% AS MUCH ENERGY TO COOK YOUR MEALS ~C1 OR PERFORMANCE DE;. ~<+.~D * . Et>~ " ~ ; Good Housekeeping • ~1:,. GUARANTEES "-""~ C(t.f(NT OR REFUND 10 co .. ~ Litton's new '.'10rld of.microwave cooking is a bright new worl d. Where gourmet meals ca n be cooked quickly in cool co mfort -with maximum convenience and minimum cleanup. Ntw [ltton Mlcromatrcr' m[crow Vt'Ting~ . The ultimate ' -" -· · Who else but Litto·n would combine the best of both worlds: the speed of the most advanced microwave oven -you save 75o/o of your cooking time and yet havo the versatlllty ol conventional cooking . Start your gourmet meals to a qulc~ finish In th~ · eye.hive! microwave oven, cook complementary foods In the continuous·cleaning electrl.c oven ... fun foods on the easy·to-clean smooth ceramic cooktop. • { ~ THANKSGMNG ·SPECIAL! *FREE 11 PC. MICROWAVE COOKWARE KIT ~~~~, -~'--" 'FREE COOKBOOK ~f ~---- An exciting new world of MICROWAVE COOKING from Litton -168 pages -300 recipes. SS.95 value . Every1hing fr om simple dishes to gourme t entrl!es. The most comprehensive cookboo k ol its kind anywhere. •BOTH WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER LITTON MICROWAV~ UN IT SHOWN HERE. Microwave cooking comes of age wlth the Litton Mlnutemaster4 counterlop microwave ovens Lllton provid es more in !he most ad vanced cooking appliances tod ay -!or the many cooks ln you. M crowave tountenoo over,1 !rom s349S5 Come in for. a demonstration of !he difference Litton mekea. , FREE-'DEMONStRA~ION '-"ANYTIM£. ·;...: [E LITTON Utton Microwave Ranges Nobodr ktlOwt fllON •MMll Jl'llOPOWl'lt cooltll!I lflll'I Lhton. Nobodj. LOW PRICES ARE BORN.HERE RAISED ELSl\l:WHERE 90DAYSC~SH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD~ ' .--.-~ ro•··· ;[~ l. ~ .. ,,,1 ~.J -Dewntnn-.Costa Mm-"•ne 541·7788 • ., I ., ,.. l \ ' \ l \ I .. " .. A A ~ A • A A A : 1 A A A A A • • •• ' Monday's Closing Price& • • • • • NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE I • • • Year's H.igh•Lows Appear Every Saturday • • ' .,~~·~l~o~·_.:o~•l~L~V~P~IL~O-T~~~~~~~M-ond__;~~·-N_ov_•"""~·-·-19_._19~)~ • ·Younger Cl~1nsPr.op: 9n~ . .~Went Do~n Due to Apathy ,, By O.C. HUSTINGS California Attorney General z.ene Younger brought his eampalgn for the Republican gubernatorial no1nination to Orange County last week and made comments on a little -~·i~t "'of everything_._ picnts to meet the cost of suspect for a different crime. living rise. Ills measure wes defeated Democrat Rich1'rd HaMa of on the Senote fioor in Auguet Garden Grove joined by a 17-14 vote. Republicans Craig Hos~er,ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Andrew JJinshaw, Cl a i fli B!lrgener and Del Clawson in backing the measure, which passed by a 391 to 20 vote. The bill provides for $2.4 billion rr.ore money to be spent and passed in the last minute rush· b e f o r e Thanksgiving MiNIA.TU .. &• OLO OOU...• MANNING'S 1Co~ SHOP "&:¢. ·2 .. aa N~ 8LVd,. ,. ' li:"O•TA M&aA, CALI ..... ... -east H..,., 11-•:ao recess. Of particular interest in his talk before the South Coast : Republican Forum "'as a remark on 'vhy PropQSition J.. the Reagan tax and spen· . ding limJtation proposal, railed 'to pass Nov. 6. * • Though the measure 'vas STATE SEN. Denn i s FOR technically a nonpartisan issue Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) DRUG ,and strongly touted as sur.:h says he 'll seek reconsideration on both sides, Younger said or !iis bill ·to mod!Cy police PRICES • • • W Jt failed "simply because the search and seizure regulations Call J Republican Party didn't get wken Jhe Leg is I a I u re 642·4104.,. r tfle .vote out." reconvenes in January. .edYothunger, who said he back· Carpenter's bill, 'v h i ch [ A-w)-~ . 1· · e measure, referred to v.·ould bring California in line · · ' ' the party line vote 1ha1 wilh a11 1he other states and MElllClllE . O~ defeated it and added that, the federal government, would 3t0 1. 11.tti St .. • T,.,U Aw;e~. I .. it was confusing enough but make it legal to use illegally Ne.t to lalpU M•t. -lfl the opponents did all they seized evidence against some· Colt9 Mno '42""4104 t: could to confuse it more." one other than the· original Mon. t1tru 'rl: ' '' '-... , .. ' to,a ·a *. ·~~~~~~~~·~~:;;;;;~~~~~! 0 ROB ERT H. Finch. forml!f lr I Nixon cabinet member and Reagan 1ieutenanl governor, II \yill be the guest speaker at RENT A RUG DOCTOR ~!, "STEAM" CARPET CLEANER t a Nov. 29 meeting of the • Orange County Bar Associa· L--~-·on. FREE DELIVERY & PICKUP to most areas, or you pick up at ou r storl!f; , l I l ' . • * ,. JN ANOTHER united effort, Qrange County's j ·· Qongressional contingent was .Z 90Jidly behind a new Social Security bill -that b 0 0 st s benefits to 30 million aid reci· ~ . a i s < Valley Man ~ Files ~ ~ . j Of Guilty • WESTMINSTER -A Foun-~ tain Va11ey man accused of J burling three butcher knives i at police bas entered a plea j of guilty to a charge of misde- ~ · meanor assault with a deadly ' ·Weapon in West Orange Coun· • ty Judicial District Court. FOR LOW RENTAL RATES CALL 10 MINUTES ·FREE I NSTRUC110N Hows yo11 I.. Doctor is Ml• Ir ••Y to epercrte as • Ycte•11m cleoHt", OM mn or w•lllO• co• operate It or hike It up 9'fd . dow• 1teirs. REALLY CLEANS CARPET Jets of wot ''""' loOMM.·dlrt, ·, whkh 11 collected 111 toali1 & d11fllp.d dow• droh1. SAVES .YOU MONEY . Cost 11 muclt less ttio11 ltirl119 Ccirpet Stecuw Cle011er. RUG DOCTOR RENTS IN ORANGE COUNTY IN LOS ANGELES 17141 979.7944 12131 423-0454 ~ Harold Eugene Lucas, 47, 1232 s. lristal, Soito A•• 1061 1. A~. Lff9 leoch ! of 1~ .san Maz:~ St. wi1l:11~:=~~~~·-~~li~w~-;--~M~O~N.~T~H~·~·~,s~:.~·=:===~1 I return to court Dec. 19 for sentencing. Lucas was shot in the \. ' i t t ! ' l • • l I • ' ' stomach Aug. 23 by a con· tingent o( officers called to his borne by neighbors reporting a disturbance. They said Lucas hid behind his front door and tossed the knives at them , so t.he patrolmen opened fire with their pistols and a shotgun. Lucas received on I y superficial stomach "'·ounds. He was originally booked on a charge of assault with intent to commit murder; but that charge was reduced to assault on a peace officer W~en it was filed in court. Tests Set For Marine . SANTA ANA -Psychiatric t~ting with a view to his nOssible certification as a nientally disordered sex of· fender has been ord ered for ail. El Toni ?-.1arine accused Of using a knife in an attack 09 tv.·o women at a Costa Mesa party. ·Orange County Superior cOurt Judge James Turner ordered the tests for Frank ¢mstopher Baker, 20, of "Xuma, Ariz .. and directed that I · the defendant be returned to \ his courtroom Dec. 10 for his ·····ru1mg. ·· Election Set , ·SACRAMENTO {AP ) Gov. Ronald Reagari colle~ I' special election for Dec. ' ie to fill the seat of former 'state Sen. William Combs, (R· Rialto), who resigned ills seat of seven years to accept a . '.]16st'·With ~ 'U.s..::i;easury ' Departmenl. • WHY WEIGHT? _. , If you car,e ·. THEN DON'T WAIT! Lose 1 O or 12 unwa11td, ugly ;111•s ·•tly uader lh1 personal supervision of 1 J'ractlc· · lag Physician. Ha's making It bappea wit~ 20, .. 30 al!d 40 pou11l.losses, not anus11I. fft·Cll-. 11ake ii happen for you! CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT AND FREE CONSULTATION~- 0...California 'O Medical Cini~ 4 CONVENIENT WEIGHT LOSING_ LO!;ATJOllS . W•STMtllST•R , I • 13861 Beach Blvd., Suite # 5 . 7 A.M • .'tiJ 3:3 0 P.M. ~hone 89.3,2449 TUSTlll 1754·1 Irvine Blvd ., Suite\;. 7:30 A.M. 'Iii 4:30 P.M. Phone 832-6525 . ' ~ AllAHEIM -GARD•ll GROYI; 1701 S. Euclid, Suite I · 7:30 A.M. '111 4:30 P.M. Phone 991·1800 ll•WPORT B•ACH 8:00 A.M. 1il 4 :30 P.M. Phone 644-0297 • HAMS • . . "So Good ... It \Viii • "Haunt" You 'ti! It's Gone" , OIDll lAILY HONEY BAKED HAMS •• TURKEY BREASTS F... ya1r T111111•19lvl .. DIHerl Also, Order·Now for CltrJstMm e -1..,,-.. Serve wlttl HOHY '• Spice G'-e Splrel Sllud fre111 To, to lotto"' • w. , • ..,. • u1, 1r ... e ... , •• c .. ,, •. hll Service hlkeNIMfl e l..,.m4 Clteaet Ul1 WIHI -' .!!!'-~~-~ -,.,, .. I. C...ltlth.,. c;.;.& ..... -67J·t000 1 lllldl Wftl " S (,.....t •tl!Hfflll IW S ...... ...,, .. WI Ill., A..._ 625·2461 ( ·, -.. • . . • 99 4/5 QT. s519 s·119.9 QUART HALF GALLON ' ... . " • .• I •'- l a ·ab! The Id •t h leld elf a r ent. The tg; ta • • ·s ' all • ' .,. .. , . ..-.,.-.... ,.~ .. -.. ,. • • • • • Lag11••a B~aeh • • EDI TION Today's Flnal -- N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 323, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY;,NOVEMBER 19, 1973 TEN CENTS , - State Collrt Ruling May Speed Welfare Cuts SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state ap-gram of weUare.to 500,llOO aged, diaabled . 'colll'I ruled today the Reagan .ad· and blind OalifOmians Jan. I. jWstrat~n cannot implement new , The state ls faced with the loss of eral welfare regulations without new -·$600 million µr-federal -Medi-Cal -aid te legislation, raising the possibility lJ!l}ess it properly implements the pro- a cutback In aid tQ 500,000 aged, gram by Jan. 1. abled and blind recipients. DemocraUc-sponsored legislation to do The 3rd District State Court of Appeal that was defeated in the Legislature id Reagan administration offiCials do in September after Republican Gov. t have authority on their own to Ronald Reagan's representatives opposed teld administration of the state adult it on grounds it was too costly. - . ellare programs to the federaJ govern· Reagan promised . the change.over ent. would be accomplished by administrative The federal goverment is scheduled regulation without jeopardizing payments i take over administration of the pro-to the. recipients: • Don Nixons • F ouna: Liz' Ra-,e Shihtzu The suit ~as brought ,by a number brought the ant against the ad· of groups, including the C&lifomia League ministration. . of SenlOr Citlzem and the Callfornia-niis would have given the Legislature Weliare Rigbls Organization_ tlrneJo...jct QD..J!le i~ue after it· ret~ Reagan''s press office said the ruling to Sacramento in early January. v,;outd be appealed to the California "Courts are powerless to allow even Supreme Court. · temporarUy, unlawful conduct by "The administration's attorneys are litigants -least of all, public officers," studying the ruling to see what it means. the court said in its . unanimous ·3-0. Any comments we would make now decision. would be premature," said Clyde ·Walthall said it would be premature \\Taltball, Reagan's press secretary. to speculate on the need or a' spe(;ial 1be court said it could not delay legislative sesson between now and J8n. the effect of its ruUng unUI after 1 on the issue. ' · February, as requested by those who Reagan had said he would :lnc~· • • r1v1 Court Nixes .. . aid to the aged, disabled and blind while implementing the transfer to federal control·of the program. The current average monthly payment for those categories is $212. Reagan said there would be a new across-the- board rate of $221 for Ule aged and disabled and $237 for the blind. (>fmocrats sought higher incrtases in legislation that .got deadlocked at the end of the 1973 session. Without any implementing mechanics at the 'state level, the payments could fall to $131l a month, the federal floor for such welfare recipients. The change in administering the .. --• wellare progr,a.m for the aged, blind and disabled came in HR I, the federal welfare, refonn act passed .bY~WSS last year. Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger argued that the Reagan administration had authority to implement the change "''ithout legislation because the benefit levels proposed complied with federal requirements. "However, the real issue at thls point is not whether California is in compliance with federal law, bul whether, Wlder the proposed regulations, the state would be in compliance with its own laws," .the court said. ear? Emergency Measm·e s • I ' • ' . ' Knew About \ DEL MAR (AP) -Actress Elizabeth Taylor was reunited to-. ,_ .. day with her pet dog, a rare shibtzu named Daisy Mae. New Study Of NUdity -Outlined -·· ................. j Phone Taps "!be F. Donald Nixon lanuly o1 Newport Beach confirmed today that they 11i·ere aware President Nixon had their teleplione tapped. .President Nixon disclosed. Saturday nliht that he ordefed hll' brother's telephone tapped becaUJe. perlOl1S in foreign countries v.·ere ''trying to get him·" I "'l'he President dee~ ldeotlly the foreign interesta or w they wanted of hi• brother. He di say he ordered the u.s. secre~t SerYlce to make the tap ••re.-security s." Contacted at Newport Beach home today, Mra. F. lj<inald Nixon acimowJedg. ed lhe lanilly Plew ol the tap. •"Certainl~we knew about it," she taid. ~ not, however, "remember When the;flhone was tapped or !or how long. / .. "I dm't pay any attenUGO. to that sdrt 61 ihing. It 90rt or comes and ~ wllh the tide," she .. plained." ..rAsked If her conversation with the ~ter today was being recorded, she ,.Id, "! rather doubt that but l really dim't know. I'd rather you talk with my busband." . .-'She said Nixon had meetings scheduled all day today and would not be avaihtble lot comment until 1\lesday. "'l>resldeot Nixon said his brother con- sented to the 9Urveillance. The .teJephone reportedly was tapped for more than one year during Nixon's first term. Asked during his televi!Jed appearance .before the Associated Press Managing ltditors II It made aeme to tap the telephohe of SOttieone who knew he was Wider Surveillance, Nixon said yes, (See DON NIXONS, ·Pare. Z) Laguna Woman • • 'St.,mck, Killed I • •· After the litUe black and white dog. was lost on the beach Sunday, Miss Taylor offered a $500 reward lhrougli the Del Mar Fire Depart· ment. A fire dispatcher said a couple found the dog. She has checked out ol nearby Scripps CDnic after a medical checkup. . Lagunan Los~ $4,000 Worth . Of-Home Items A rash 1 of weekend burglaries in Laguna Beach included theft ol more than ft,00> ·WOrth of items from Dennis C. Daly, 590 N. C<>ast Highway. Daly said the loss included custom leaLher suits, 39 pieces of men's jewelry, a stereo set and $100 cash. The burglary happened late Friday or early Saturday. Daly bad left the residence unlocked. A $500 silver necklace owned by Bonita B. Howard , an Air California stewardess, was reported stolen from her residence at 231 Cajon Street, Laguna Beach Satur· day. Family heirlooms, tools and an electric typewriter were reported stolen from the residence of Arthur R. Theile and Michael E. Ross, 1496 Catalina Street. There was no price listed for the heirlooms, the other valuables were pric· ed at $511. The theft was reported to police Sunday. Power tools and other construction equJpment valued at $337 were reported stolen from Shoreline Construction Com· pany from . a building site at 553 Lorn· bard,Y Sunday. The thert is believed tO hive occurred late Saturday or early $unday.' • . ' ~"' Wire Servka WASffiNGTON -The U.S. Supreme Court refused today to take a second lool< ot Caliloroil' 'i"8fllil!om probiljitiag t · ~ode danciqg and oUJe{ ses-9fient.i;.d -. entertainment in'.)ars. .. · The actioo. came in the ·form 'of a brief order, withaUt opinion. On NOY. 5, 1972, the court upheld the regulations but JllsUce William H. Rehnquist's opiniOn ooted that <'OO- stitutional problems could arise in specific cases. . 1n the r,equest for reconsideration, a nightclub owner, Paul A. Hichter & Associates, Inc., doing business. u the , · Body Shop, iued in San' Diego County . SuperJor Court for a ruling that "the specific and invariable nude dance performances" that take place in the club are not obscene under the ngula· IS.. NUDE BARS, Pqe Z) ' -. Project Okayed For 4 Laguna Tennis Courts Liked. the Declrion From Wire Services WASHINGTON -A nationwide ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy.saving measures are "very real possibilities" because of the nation's energy crisis, one of .President Nixon's top energy advisers ·warned Gongress today . Charles Di&na, the President's special assistant for fuel, told a joint ffouse. Senate bearing that even total com- pliance with current c on s e r·v a t lo 'n measures such as turning do w n thermostats and a SO.mile per hour speed limit will not be sufficient. .He said that an oPtimlstic as-sessrnenf of these conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies, will provide only 2.3 million barreJs of oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrels a day. "This means that we're going ,to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measure9?lLasked-Sen. William-Prox~ mire (l)..Wis.). "Yes sir, and soon," DiBona re plied . DiBona said that-among -the "very reaJ possibilities" the Administration was considering was a bail on.Sunday..drjving. He said that 25 percent of all gasoline used in private cars is consmned on weekends. Among oth~ proposals being con-o sidered are a ban on fuels for private Ellen Brink, 19, of San Clement~, was obviously elated at the news. boats and aircraft; closing public parks . A $50,000 project to add four new And well she might have been; the attractive brunette had just been to automobiles; closing service stations CODCTete tennis courts at-Laguna Beach d h . f S ddl ba k C II , Add 'ti . 1 on weekends, and blue 1aws to close ffigh School' will be under way within pronounce omeconurig queen o a e c . o ege. 1 ona all busineses on Sunday' he said. a weet with the new courts to be pi~ture of queen and hfr,~ourt is on page 3. -Meanwhile. Treasury Secretary George ready by Feb. 1. P. Shultz told a Senate. foreign relations The project received the green-light subcommi ttee that the. Administration from the l..agu:ia Beach Board or Ad· R h D lo s will "have to take some sharp and justme11t last week. anc ' . .. eve pm· ent et decisive action" to cope with lhe energy The courts will be ronstructed on ....... -shortage. a portion of the high school "north Shultz, who said his ''instinct is campus" now occupied · by a two-room against" gasoline rationing, ~id the temporary classroom building. F -R • • L ' United States was lucky the crisis had Demolition of the aging structure will ·or ev•ew in a· guna come now because imported fuel supplies begin Monday. bids for the project will fl , _ \r are only a small portion of. American be opened in December with construction energy needs. to begin in January. "I hope rationing will not be "'·Elear\or IJ. Kaabe, 51,0I 115 Lagunlla, A burglary attempt at the Festival IAguna Beach was idtatllled today by of 'Arla stage area apparently ended Jn addition to .. the .. lour .new . courts ......... rJ~ .... ~~~l for development of city limits in the Tup' of the World necess~ry,''. Schultz ~d. "My instict two existing courts on the site will Moulton ltilncb flirids"8i:lji:ii:!Cnt-[0L~gtJna:···· .. arid 'Mcll'Belicf1Hi!ights·area·:·· .................... 1s .aga1nst--it·..-······Rati~.so~ . .Uke ......... ,_ •. _ .. be resurfaced with concrete. Beach will be revie~ed by .designer The EIR also sees the extension of sue~ an easy answer but 1t .raises · such The project ,includes replacement of John Chapman for ctty officials and "senous problems that I question whether Jbe Orange C:..,ty Con>ner'1 alllc:e . u Without Joa as the thief was frightened lbe person kiDed Sat~y nltdit·whm by an alano. Police said the breakin -u-ti)'a--.ar-qr;Padlk.-Cout;-occurred-Saturday night. 'l!Wnray ..... her home. lbe two classrooms with a modular unit the public in a presentation at 7:30 Alta Laguna Boulevard ~m l'op or it is a real answer. Nev~less, the on Manzani1'. Drive. • p.m. Tuesday at city hail chambers. the World to Arch Beach Heights. (See EMERGENCY, Page Z) Participants In the $50,(M)() project lit-An envlronfnental impact report su~ A new Alta Laguna is also drawn ·, eo~·· iktes sal<tllile. died ol mulU- ple injuries when • 1truct by II.. Jeep driven by Diana Tuclcer, 11; ol Laguna ,Beach and wai throwri -Into the _.ue l •traffic lane where she was struck by ,,.. !eCOl1d car. lln .• -~ <li!od"'1 the ...... . suoi.ved bJ.ber._~,_, .... AD RESJ'ONSE 'TREMENDOUS' ·Tremendous ,...ponae -rented three rooms lmmediatelyl That was the joyful cry ol the Costa Mesa woman who pllcod1bls DoilY Pilol cluollifcl ad : ' . . CLEAN1 !um. Nr. . ®c. .KJtcnen, waShe.r/dryer. ReUred OK. 175.mo. (Pllaae No.) ~ Laguna Beach's First DoWllpour -€~uses-llbO<Js: w - ·The f1111t real l'aln of the .sca90n dumped I.II inches ol water on Laguna Beath caUling some minor Oooding, mud slJckl and power outages' over the weekend. No oertous Incidents were reported to city agencies as :rain -whipped by lllill winds htt Laguna. The 1'inds , Ollimated at :Ill, miles · per ~-w•,i:(.., ... to \etlm t..iay 'and .tJli!< ~ Lti11N , Beach lifeguards Ilic!. ' BJll Shields ol Laguna Beach Hardware recorded the rainlall wtddl he ,.id Wil the ftnt llgnificant 1-t ....iV<d • .A 1.,,, lines ol -rtl•lng may be Jhll year. Lalt year by lhll dala, tbe all It lakes to get "tremendous...._,, town bad received 4.21 inchet of rain, for you, too. Dial the cteallled ad Shields llicl. • elude Orange CountY; $25,000: City of milted for the development of 10,000 to extend northerly to a proposed routing Laguna Beach, •t0,000; Laguna Beach Moulton acres calls for medium to low of Oso Parkway scenic corridor from Unlfied School Di!b'ict; IUl,000, ailll Ten-density • housing (2. t to 3.5 units an the Laguna Niguel area to Newport nts Now, $5,000. acte) in lands adjacent to Laguna Beach ·Beach. Or u ge Coot • A large portion of the high density <•s!denUal-~vek>PJ!lC!lt wl1'!Jd beJoc~ -,.-. ",', _ .. _...,:__ .. .._ .. __ ": _ on Oso Parlwa~route near the prescpt ....,l... .~ .. .,....:;.; .. -· . • Eight ~ Killed"" -... 2 Cars Ex plode ilt · A.ccident . - intersection of La Paz Road and .Avila Road. ~ Total population proposed for the Chapman plan is 57 ,000 mU&h of which would be centered in the Laguna Niguel area .along Oso Parkway. Conlrovl!V er)lpte<l last year in ~,~·ewer• ~djjnenciauoo Jot: ~·ot.t.114 taauna.JC<)ll> '!'OP of tl\e. woi1<1 io Atcll·)leilcb;l!el&Jtts, ·' • 'Chapmin ol the l'i'iine ",o(-Cba'p- man, Plilllips;--1ld Brand ~. fU"st ftve~ his , ptoposal for . 4evt.f0Pment <'! the n<lw YI~ 111\d-ln .r..... . . Fair skies are on Ule agenda for Tuesday, with aligbtly warmer days but colder oigllll. Highs In the 60s , dip)lial la10 the 40s in the early mo~ hours. INSm E TODAY Light catmnaran and surf· board mentor Hobie Alh~,. is working on a new pla11thing for n1t......,t~~,,.,..-s.. ·no'll '"' i'<1Q1. .. l!todofl. , • ,.... LMftt'• ,. .... 11 --. -c-" ""'" lt-14 .... Mmllh .. ' T,........ tr departpient at the Dally Pilot on the Runoff water from lbe city .storm dJrect llne, 61Hf11, 1t-1et-an-Ad-vllor--.rs-cut·1way-portlonHl-lhe-heachtl~ to help )'OU find ou~ when the ..,..... empty at Broadway, Cleo and In the Victoria Beach area, The planning Is being done-ljr several ·landowners including the Moullart'frusts1 llossm<ior Corporation, R o c k w e I Joteroatlonal. and Cbap111t1D Collqe. ., l:nM> projec\ -Id be COM!rucled Qver IS years, according to the Ohapi!\an -" w-. .__.. ,...,, , .. 1t w............ ·~ t • • ) • \ I " • ( ' ' l EIR. • • - ' - _, , I it ~ ...... t'JL.UI L8 -- Ge 1teral Pia•• M eet S. County_A~~~ . To Face Review Publlc hearings Oil the Land Use Ele- ment of . the Orange County General Plan as it relates to Mission Viejo. Iaguna Niguel, Laguna HUis, El Toro and Lake Forest \1.'lll begin at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Crown Valley Elemen· tary School, Laguna Niguel. A second hearing on the element, recommended for approval last summer by the Orange County Planning Conl· mission, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 27 at Mission Viejo Hlgh School Commissioners unanimously approved the element, projecting an increase of 500,000 more residents In Orange County by 1983. Much of that growth would occur in the Saddleback Valley, where a greater percentag< or land remains undeveloped than in northern Orange .County. · The element calls for development of 941000 of the remaining 291,000 un· developed acres left under county jwisd.iclion. • Four areas of the Southern half of the county were given exemption under President Slaps GI 'By Mi stake' Wife Insists ORLA~DO. Fla. (UPI ) ~ President Nixon lightl y slapped an Air Force master se rgeant on lhc cheek Saturday night, and the man's wife calle.d it a gesture of friendship. The iOcidcnt occurred al ~1cCoy Air Force Base as Nixon was returning from an hour-long news conference at Disn ey \Vorld. M. Sgt Edward Kleizo and his son were among a group of about 60 persons .. on .. hand . tr,.see. the .President .. off .. Ac- NIXON ON WATERGATE RECOVERY ORIVE, Page 4 cording to reporters "'ilh the President, Nixon approached Kleizo and had the following exchange : "Are you the boy's mother or grandmother?" · "Neither," the man replied. "Of course not." Nixon said and lightly slapped the man's faacc . ~ ""d- The incident was interpreted by some as an indication of anger on the President's pa[(t, but according to the sergeant's wife, Kleizo has no such feel- lngs. "I don't know how they got that,'' she said. "He . jusJ J!list90Jc bi.m ~Cl!US~ ~~ light was so bad. It was blinding the President's eyes. "He couldn't see the crowd . He was just reaching out for everyone, 1 guess ," l\.1rs. K1eizo said. "He mistook my husband for my son's mother or grandmother and v.•hen he said 'No,' it was just a gesture -just like anyone reaching out to pat him on the shoulder or the cheek a~ say 'I'm sorry.'" From Page I DON NIXONS. • • because it was not directed at his brother but at "others who were trying to get him ... ~articularly in a foreign country.'' "I won't go beyond that," Nixon said. "There were very good reasons and my brother was aware of It." He said the reasons probably would be disclosed someday. When the Washington Post first disclosed the tap in September, the Secret Service said its protection of the President 's family did not include hi.1 brother Donald. The Post quoted sources as saying the taps were con- ducted betause of Donald 's financfal dealings, particularly ll:ilh Ho"l:'.ard Hughes. · OIAH•ICOAJT LI DAILY PILOT 1"' Or•not CMtt OAILY PILOT, with Whlcll 11 combined ,,.. Ht-PrtH, h ll\lbll"*I by 'Ille OrlflM CO.II PWt11lllna Comp\n'f, ltN· the element because developmnt is pend- ing there. These include the 10,006-acre Moulton Ranch; 1,500 acres In North Dana Point; 7 .200 acres in El Toro {Whiting Ranch and Canada Foothills; and 4.000 acres in the southerly part of Irvine Ranch. PlaMlng department spokesmen re- quested that any Statements to be made at the hearings be submitted In Y.•riting before hand. The final ded1lon on the land use element rests with the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Harbor Area's Suit Dela yed A further seven-month delay was ordered today In the Orange County Superior C.OUrt trial of a $28 million lawsuit filed by 905 Harbor Area homeowners who blame the county for mounting jel noise and pollution in the vicinity of county airport. · Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set June 17 as the ne\v trial date. Both sides said they needed more time to complete their preparations ror what Is expected to be a lengthy trial. From Page I NUDE BARS. • • tions. A movie of the dances ac· companied the papers ftltd. But the court said. it was without jurisdiction because of a section of the California Business Code which gives sole ... power .. to·· the '"Department · ·of Alcoholic Beverage Control. Higher state courts denied review . · At the time of the Supreme Court's initial ruling, it was expected that the next test would come when a club owner's liquor llcense was actually lifted because of employment of topless or bottomless waltresaes or other alleged violation of the regulations. in other actions tod ay: -The court rejected Missouri's aearch for a loophole in the high court's decision granting women the right to abortions during the first six mon ths of pregnancy. The court affirmed a three-judge district court's declslon d e c 1 a r Ing. ~JfSSOUri ab0rti611 la'<v~s ·unconstltutional. · The lower court based its decision on the Supreme Court rullng last January that allowed states to place substantial restrictions on _abortion only during last three months o( pregnancy. -The court declined to hear arguments by policewomen claiming they are denied an equal chance at promotions. The high court, O\'er the objections of Justices William 0 Douglas and \Yjlliam J, Brennan Jr., let 1tand a New York State Court of Appeals decision rejecting the chmi action challei1ge to Nassau County police pro- motion policieJ. · The policewomen argued that the police department and county cJvll service commissions d i s c r i m i n a t e against \\'omen by maintaining 3 t\VO· track promotion sys ten1 segregated by sex. -The court agreed to consider for a second time whether federal courts may reach into the suburb.s to desegregate predo1ninantly black inner cily schools. The court agreed to review a federal appeals court ruling that the only c-on- stitutional way to desegregate Detroit cit y schools was to i n c I u d e predominantly \vhite suburban school systems in any desegregation plan. The issue of crossing established school district and county line1 in pursuit of school desegregation deadlocked the court 4--4 last term. No precedent is eSt8tiliSbed bY lie votes. Lagu1iaEmployes Get Early Gift -• ri le td/1..., •,.._..llUbllahtd, M-tY ~rlllltll Fr!Ga'f, lw Ce111 Meu. NtWpetrl "•tCll, H1111tlnglon · ltll(fllfl'avnl1!n V•llty, 'l~unt IMdl, 1,..lnt/kdclleto.c-11\d s.." C~!tl S.Jt J.,.n r1pl .. rtl'ICI. A 1l"Olt retlDIMI Klllon 11 pu1>1la.Md S.lurdtys mil So.lndtrt;. • <' r11t1 P<111t:ie.t1 M lltnlflf ""' 11 11 no wut Santa Claus in the form of the Laguna .,., "'"'· eo.11 "'"'· c.111o,"11, ri'"· Beach City Council s"·oopcd inte> city Jtob.rt N. W eed hall a little early this year and granted ·..r.-:..--!1..•~ "'I!'.!~~ ..... _ . , _ cit~--... empjoyea an e:.:tra paid holk&l.y J1ck l.~f,., ' -the day before Chrlsfma;' · v"'' "'11llHflTh '........ ~11 Mtntw l\fayor Roy Holm sa id it f\·as the -·· ten . .,. •• f th kl he plo ,.._ counc1 .s _.ay o an ng I em yes Th""'' A. M1tr,+i111 for their loyally and good \\-Ork during M:IMtlilt 0 1w -a period of revenue constraints In the Cli1rl11 H. Lett Rklri1N I". Ni ll city. = "': :,;:• · Atay~~ Holr;i a!~o indlcate:i th:! holiday 222 foN•t A•e11111 was a one-lime present. 11'1111111 AJJ,.11t P.O. a.a 666, 92651 ..__ ,0.11 Mtt11 • 1:':!,,::.r'''"' .==: IMc:ttt aw hllltv1r• .,, •nett: ow• t MC'll ....,...,..,111 ... °""* .. : ~...,. •1 ~ ""• tt'IJI•• fft4t MMJ2t a .,,. .....,...., 441.1•11 ....... .._.Al IQUtn•ru ,,, ....... ..... ~ tin. °'""' c..t ...... ""'"' ~. ,.. -,..,..., 1t11111r"1t111, ........ ..... ... MWrt""""'" """"' ....,. .... ,,,,,, wtfllM .._ .. , ,.,. ................. ~. ..... -== Hiii • Cit!• MtM, ~~:;sf,, :..z;,11rlflll~ .......... ... ...... I No Turkey Da y Trash Pic~ups . '111e,.. will be no rel111e c:ollectlon in La(WI& Beach on '111uraday, 11JanbCMng Day. Trash pick up nonnally ocheduled for 'lbunday will bo Friday. C<lllectlon aonnally made Fridays will ba on Sa(urdly • ' I lt 'Was .Just Too ll'et Nanci Allison and Susan Stein didn't quite fini sh the first lap in the annual 50 mile hike that began in Laguna Beach Saturday morning. It was just too darn damp. The girls attend Laguna Beach High o.llJ l"ltol Sllfl Pll1le School. Annual fitness hike is sponsored and run' by Laguna Beach Search and Rescue Explorer Post 717 . • King Faisal • May Seek Ru ss Link BEIRUT (.UPI ) -The Be Ir u t newspaper An Nnhar said today secret contacts are under way aimed at establishing dlpl,omatic relations between Saudi Arabia and the Soviet Union. It said Klng Faisal accepted "In prln· ciple" an in vitation to visit Moscow. An Na har attributed the report to "inrormcd diplomatic souro!S" and car- ried it under a front page banner headline. Arab Press commf!ntators treated tbe report \vith rescr\'C in view of King Fais81's long-standing hostility to Soviet Influence ·in the Middle East. This has been based largely on the rejection by King Faisal -the maifi spiritual leader EGYPT PUSHES FOR PEACE TALKS NOW,' Page 4 of the Islamic world -of conununlsm'a atheistic concepts, the commentators said. Russia was the first country Jn the "·orld to recognize the kingdom of Saudi Arabia in J9'l6, but Saudi Arabia has never established diplomatic relatiom \vilh any Communist state. Edison Urge s Cuthaoo King Faisal bas often stated that Zionism and communism were the main eneimies of the Arabs and Moslems. Press reports speculated be was effective in influencing Egyptl,n President Anwar Ba nk Chief Miss ing Sadat to expel ts.ooo Soviet military advisers from Egypt In July, 1972. BUENOS AIRES (AP) -The regional l\leanwhile, Arab oil producers vowed manager of the Bank ol London and today no letup in the oil embargo agalnst By RUDI NIEDZIEL•KJ Do 't h t 1 th 1 So th A · ted . . the United States and tigh tened the , -n ea your poo more a1 u mer1ca was repor missrng J of "" 0.11.,. P11et s11tt squeeze on apan. you have to. Don't heat it at all in by bank spokesmeti here tOOay. but Despite favored treatment by tht Electricity users on the Ora~e Coast months when you don 't use ii and when th ey said they were not sure he had Arabs, other co un tries d,rastically cu\ today were urged by the SOuthem you go aw ay for vacaliC>n. been kidnaped as reported. ·1 -sum· pt'on California Edison Company to begin 1 ~;;:;:~.-.~t!~-~·~;-.-~;-;~~~~~:;:;:;;;~;:;;;;:~;;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;~Ol~w~u~~t ~· ~~~~~;:;;:;=! voiuotary cutbacks ln use otpower. Jack K. Horton, chairman of Southern ~ •r. . make . C1<mo..-n1·a .. Edlson;··asked ·the 1.s·mimon· · · · · ,~,-.. ..... ··-nllCrO-wave· ~'IS· -· people in the Edison ne t\\'Ork to cut •d~~--~.!ra~ their current use back to 90 percent lll0..1t-cook1119· ..... ee· e' of what they used during the same a 1111 • L. month last year. ll I The 10 percent reduction v.·as rec.om-I l Dute ks pot killet mended by the California Public Utilities 1 I 00 any s commission last year to ronaerve energy \l1il ·~~.! • I I during the shortage. '~«!I~~· broiler. pan or H;~~.fully support this objective," said ~~ I oven He diaclosed !hat Edison had been abl.e to cut its own Use of electricity by 14 percent after evaluating company operations. Some suggestm•rw reducing the con- sumption of energy from a convervatton booklet available from the Edison Com- pany on request are: -Shield outdoor air conditioning equip- ment from sunlight and keep heating and cooling units clean. -Clean or replace heating and cooling filters regularly and set thermostats to heat or cool less than you are ao. customed to. -Set thermostats to off position when a\\o·ay for more thari 24 houn and do not heat rooms. not in use. -Close fireplace da mpers a n d draperies and use \\'eather stripping to cut down drafts. -Turn off unn<ceasary lights and try to use more efficient fluorescent lamps wherever possible. -Operate washers, dryers a n d dishwashers with full load to conserve energy. -Open refrigerator doors only when necessary and pre-heat the oven only ror baked goods requiring precise oven temperature al the start of the cooking cycle. -Check temperature controls on hot water beaters. Generally, 140 to 150 degrees are recommended for laundry, 110 to 120 degrees for baths. Turn down or of! v.·ben on vacation. From Page I EMERGENCY •.. problem is sucll' that we win have to take some sfiarp 'and decisive action." DiBona·also said the Ea.stern seaboard and New England could be 50 percent short of fuel this winter unless fuel use is drastically reduced. He sakl contingency plans for fuel rationing are being drawn. DIBona said the nation'1 fuel supply is Already about 17 to 18 percent short. Estlmates are based on a continued Arab petroleum boycott and a nonnll winter. FLASH ! HELP BEAT THE ENERGY CRISIS r.ll CR OWAVE OVENS USE ONLY 10% AS MUCH ENE RGY TO COO K YOUR M EALS . ~C1 OR PER FORMANCE Of~ <t,..,~ * . Ee?,-" ~ Good_Hous.e.keep.ing ':_ ~~ GUARANTEES ~.f l:f41£Nr OR REFUNO 10 co"-' Litton's new world of m1crov1ave cooking is a brigh ! new world. Where gourmet meals can be cooked quickly in cool comfort -v;i\h maximum convenience and minimum cleanup. • ~ THANKSGM.NG ·SPECJAL! *FREE 11 PC. MICROWAVE COOKWARE KIT ~'y ·~ Fl. _ .. _ ''---'-.h · ""'~-~ '-----~ .. ".:---3 ,r~ ~ ---- 'FREE COO_KBOOK An exciting new world of MICROWAVE COOKING from Litton -168 pages -300 recipes . $6.95 value. Everylhing from simple dishes to gourmet entrees. The · most comprehensive cookbook of its kind anywhere. • 801'.H WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER LI TTON MICROWAVE UNIT 5HOWN HERE. M!crowave cooking comes of age with the Lltto M1nutemaster' counterlop microwave oveni n Li~lon provides more in lhe most advanced cooking appliances today -for the many cook s in you . Mic rowave C011111crtop ove111 from $ 34915 Come in tor a demonstretlon of the difference l:Uton makes. President Nixon said Nov. 1 the shortage._--"Ould.J:ea~ aa high~ as 17 per~nt.during the eris.is th!! ff!nter. , D1Bona said the National Pelrolewn Council's 25 percent shortage estimates is based on a more severe winter and less voluntary cooper8tion than the ~dministratlon thinltl lt will get. New Litton MlcrornaticT11 microwave range : The ulllmate ~--~:-~P.....:;:::rocRE:r-:IE1)iiiEMiiii~N~STRD'iiATNiiilONr-7iAiiiii~YTm;IM:r.:::E =-..._J_,. He said adequate petroleum reserve& are C!l1 hand for u..e through the end . of the year. But be said eatlrnal .. or a 50 percent shortage during the first quArter of next year In the Nortbeut aDll along lhe AUantk coach <ould • bo realJJllc II lhp voluntary program lalll and olher cuts aren't made now.' Stab Death Probed · CAIRO (AP) -Eayptlan po11C,. 11kl today they ~ imletUgallng the Ila~ clealh of a pnlllinent Amdican • m ancient art who wu found In bla apartment here Wedno*1. Who else but Lilton would combine the best of both worlds~ the speed of the most advanced microwave oven -you save 75 o/o of your cooking time and yet have the versatility of conventional cooki ng . Start your gourmet meals to a quick llnlsh ln tl'le eye.level microwave oven, cook complemenlary foods In the continuous-cleaning etectrlc oven ... fun foods on the easy-to-clean smooth ceramic c;ooktop. .. ' " [8 LITTON Litton . Microwave -Ranges Ho«iod1 know• more 1boul 111lcrow1-. cookln1 ui111 LIUOFI. Nol)ody • LOW PRICES ARE BOR~ HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE 90 DAYS C.ASH WITH APPROVEO CllEOt'l' 1815 NEWPORT BLVD~ Downtown Cw ·Mesa-Plllae 541.7711 · ' f I I VO . Ra tions Dist 00 gene Fi el Fi 1¥tw nece _, • Ne th the ni le pl al lo de di lo • • • Sadlllebaek • EDITION 1 ~ VOL. liO, NO. 323, '4 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDAY, NOVEMBER _l9, 19n -• Teday's Final. N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS I • OCTD 'Ignored' • Ill Needed Fuel Allocations By JACK BROBACK Of ""' Deity "'"' '''" • . , . Rapidly~xpanding public bus ope.ra- tions lik e the Orange County Transit District have been 1eft Out in the cold on allocation Of needed fuel , OCTD general manager Gordon • ' P e t e ' ' Fielding said today. Fielding: said he was confident. however, that the district will get ri,eeesaary fuel to support its fast-growing bus operations in coming montb.!I. Currently, the district has been given permission by the government agencies to borrow from its Oecembe11 allocat\on in order to operate for the balance of November, "We currently operate only -48 buses to serve a population of 1.& million," Fielding stated.' .. No other major W'b4D area has so little public tr3nsportation. It Seems highly inconsistent for the I government to provide funds r 0 r purchase or additional bll3es and then not allocate sufficient fuel to operate them." The district will take delivery of 63 new buses in February and hopes to have them in operation by April. These buses will provide much needed service to the South Coastal area of the coWlty as well as Mission Viejo, El Toro, aJM! Laguna Hilb. Thoy will; that Is ii !he district gets the fuel allocation it ls requesting. Obviously, Fielding pointed out, such a system of borrowing ahead will not work in the long run. The Board of Directors or the district approved a resolution today outlining OCTO's desperate situation to Orange County's congressional delegaUon and to various other government agencies. The district currently Uses more than 30,IKM> gallons of diesel fuel a month. lt had received only 20,000 gallons for November operations. ·Borrowing from December's skimpy all91=ation of about 8,000 gallons solved the situation • temporarily. But unless governm~nt agencies provide inuch high- er allocations for December and the fol- lowing monlhs, the transit district will be in trouble. The district's problems regarding its rapid expansion stem from government edicts basing curre nt fuel supplies OI\ a parlion of the amount used one year ago. Fielding pointed out that the district is now using at least ~ percent more fuel than it did in November of 1972. In the resolution and in contacts with federal and state agencies, the distrjPt: will point out that it provides most of the transit service in Orange CoWlty. Sunday Driving Ban? Emerg~ncy Measu t es Cited as ~Real Possibility' Rain €asualty • Coupty Fire Department rescue workers lrom Irvine station .gen~ly move Valentine Grivcoff, .19 , onto back support .board followmg in- dustrial accident Sunday. Victim suffered back mJur1es when-!ork- lift he was operating overturned in w~~ earth at Inter-Continent Mold Company building under construction al 1211 McGaw. Sl., Ir- vine. Grivcoff, of S~nta Ana, was treated at Tustin Community Hos- pital and released. Mrs. Don:ald JV'ixon: -~·Aivare of Tapping' From Wlre Services WASH!NGTON-=-A-nationwide ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy-saving measures are "Very real possibilities" because or the nation's energy crlsis, one of President Nixon's top energy advisers warned C.Ongr,ess today. Char1es DiBona, the President's special assistant for fuel, told a joint House- Senate hearing that ev.en total com- . plianc:e with current c o n s e r v a t i o ~ measures such as turning d o w n thermostats and a ~mile Per hour speed Hmit will not be sufficien , He said that an optimistic assessment ot these conservattw meuures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies, will provide only 2.3 millioo barrels of oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrelJ a day. "Thls means that we're going to have . ·-. ~PJ.W:S?~een As Cutback For Welfare SACRAMENTO (APJ -A state a~ peals court ruled today the Reagan ad- ministration cannot implement new federal welfare regulations: without new state legislation, raising the possibility or a cutback in aid to 500,000 aged, disabled and blind recipienb. The3nl District State Court of Appeal said Reagan administration officials do not have lauthority on thei!"'own to yield administration of the state adult welfare programs to · the federal goverq- 'l1lC F. Donald Nlxon family cf Newport Beach confirmed today that they were aware President Nixon h8d their telephone tapped. t ment. foreign countries were "trying 10 ge Tbe federal governient is scheduled him." to take over administrati01l, of the pro= The .President declined to identify the gram of weUare to 500,000 aged, disabled foreign interests or what they wanted and blind Californians Jan. I. of his brother. He did say he ordered The state is faced with the loss of President Nixon disc1oscd Saturday night that he ordered his brother's telephone tapped. because persons irr the u .S. Secret Service to make lhe $600 million in federal Medi.Cat aid unless lt properly implements the pro-tap "for security reasons." gram by Jan. l. Contacted at her Newport Beach home Democratic-sponsored legislation to do AD RESPONSE · today, Mrs. F. Donald Nixon acknowledg~ that was defeated in the Legislat,ure ed the family knew of the tap. in September after Republican Gov. , "Certainly, we knew about it," 'She Ronald Reagan's representatives op)»Sed said. She could not, however, "remember it on grounds it was too costly. when the phone WB!i tapped or for how Reagan promised the c~~ge-o~er ' loog. / would be accunpli.sbed by administrative 'TREMENDOUS' Tremendous response -rented three "I don't pay any at~ention ~o that gulatio 'tbout ·eopard· · vm.:onts roo. -· immediately! That was the io· yful -·~ of ·thing. It sort of comes and re n WI l wng pa,, .. _. u"" -\ to the recipients. cry of the Costa Mesa woman who goes with the tide," she explained. The suit was brought by a number plac;ed thb Daily Pilot classilied ad: Asked if her conversation with the .~.llll!IJIS,Jncludlng.tbe California l,eague . , ... : .... tt.EXN·--·rom: ·-Nr-:-··occ: .. ··-·· ·· -... ::~~· =~ w:;,~:~h~tr~dlec;~ti;·· of Senior ·Citizens and the California Kl t eh e-n, washt!'./dryer. don't know. l'd rather you talk with Welfare Rights Organization . ~tlred OK. flS mo. (Phone my husband ." Reagan's J>reSS office said the ruling No.) She said Nixon had meetings scheduled wOuld be appealed to the California A few lines of advertising may be all day ,today and would not be available Supreme Court. all it takes. to get "tremendous respor.se.11 for corninent until Tuesday. . · for · you, too. Dial. the -classified ad President Nixon said his brother con- department at the Daily Pilot on the sented to the Surveillance. The telephone direct line, 842-5878, to get an Ad-vii;or reportedly wa! tapped for more than to help you find oul (See DON NIXONS, Page %) -~ -'-Eiglii Killed --. -' .J - 2 Cars Explode iri Accident __, BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Eight persons were ,killed Jnd two seriously injured Sunday evening·at a darkened country intersection near here In a Clery two-vehicle crash. • · The California Highway Patrol said today a·van driven by Le- land Stonebarger, 63, llakersfield, was northbound on Cottonwood Road when he apparentty ran a stop sign and struck a 1962 '1iodel sedan carrying nine . P,•rsons. Both vehicles exploded. stonebargei', alone In his.van, was killed . -· ICllled In the auto were the driver. Walter Ueweltyn, 30;· his step- daughter Gebo Edwards, 7; two sons, Matthew, three .weeks, and John , is' mon!hs; L1ewellyn's brother, Roger Llewellyn, 22; Roger's wife, Sharon, 18, and their daughter, Michelle, ohe _month . In critical condition were Walter UeweUyn't wife, Jenene, 28, and a son, Gregory, 2. AU the Uewellyns were from Bakers!ield. .. ,. . City of Irvine Tu Get Rebate The city ol Irvine is to receive a $134,711 rebate of comty buUding and safety department fees collected over cosls for Providing CXIDtract service to the new city, during the 1972-73 fiscal year. Filth District SUpervbo< R o n a I d Caspers said the excess revenues resulted fron\ efficiency, and cost con- tainment In the county btllldlng ' and Hlety deportm~ combined w I t h revenue from ~ pen:Dit fees ex- .soedlnrl· "~ Tile city-<OUnty" OOl>lfact provldel for the Jsauance of ._.14lng and grtdlng pennlta and ~dlent of bodldlng, plumbing, e~cal. 11111 .,.. orcllnances. Tho dty-coomty 'contract provtdts !or \he Jw of bollldloa .... gradln& pennl!a· and enlatcommt .or bilikling, pNml*'I, ~·ind UM ordJnances. The current -.ct .,... to 1'71, ~,s1kL to have stronger, strict mandatory measures?" asked Sen. William Prox- mire (D-Wis. ). "Yes sir, and soon," DiBona replied. DiBona said that·. among the "very real possibilities" the Administration was considering was a ban on Sunday driving. He said that 2S percent of all gasoline used in priV.ate cars · is consumed on weekends. Among other proposals being con- sidered are a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft: closing public parks to automobiles; closing service stations on weekend~, and blue laws to close all busineses on Sunday, he said. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz toki a Senate foreign re1ations subcommittee that the Administration will "have to take some ~sharp and decisive action" to cope with the energy shortage_. Shultz, \Vho said his "instinct is against" gasoline rationing, Said the United States was lucky the crisis had come now because imported fuel supplies are only a small portion of American energy needs. "I hope rationing will not be necessary," Schultz said. "My instict is against it ... Rationing sounds like such an easy answer but it raises such serious problems that I question whether it is a real answer. Nevertheless, the problem is such that we will have to take some sharp and decisive action." DiBooa also said the Eastern seaboard and New England could be 50 percent short of fuel this winter unless fuel use is drastically reduced. He said contingency plans for fuel rationing are being drawn. ,DiBol}a said the nation's. fuel supply J:lked the J1ecist'on · El\en Brink, 19, of San Clemenle, was obviously elated at the new s. And well she might have been; the attractive brunette had juSt been pronounced homecoming queen of Sad~lel>ack College. Additional picture of queen and her court is on page 3:'V" Supreme Court Rejects • • • -Nuile -Da~ci~g la~~ui'i From Wlre Services specific and Invariable nude dance WASHINGTON -The U.S. Supreme performances" that ta~e place in the Court retuaed today to take a seconi! ,club .are not obscene under the regula- loolt· a~ Ca!Uornia, .litioDS prohibltfnl' lioos. A movie ol the dances ao- nude 1 ~ , and other sex.Oriented S"!"panled the papers filtd . entirtafiiiDent in bars. ... .. , ..... "· t But the court said it wa~ without The acUon ·came in the ·fond or a jurisdiction because of a section of the brief order, wit.bout opinion. ,· • ...... · CalitOfnla Business Code which gives ()Q Nov. S, 19721 the cwrt upheld -sole power to the Department cf tho regulations bu! Justice \!lllUam II. it.Icoholic Beverage Control. Hlgh<r state Rehnquist'• opinion noted· that ccit· l;ourts dmied review. 1Ututlonal problems could arise 'In At the time of the Supreme Court's apecllic c..... . tial rullng , it was e>pected that the In the requeat for reconslder&Uon, •Jt test would come when a club nightclub owner, Paul A. Rlchlor Ii Wilt"• liquor license w,. actually llfttd ~Mt Inc., doing businelS • 'the be•• of employment of topless or Body' Shop, IUOd in San Diego· County • bottomiesa waitresses or other alleged Superior Court !or a ruling. that "the (See NUDE BARS, P•1• lJ is already about 17 to 18 percent short. Estimates are based on a continued Arab petroleum boycott and a normal winter. President Nixon said Nov. 7 the shortage rould reach as high as 17 percent du ring the crisis this winter. DiBona said the National Petroleum Council's 25 percent shortage estimates is based on a more severe winter and less voluntary cooperation than the Administration thinks it will get. · He said adequate petroleum reserves are on hand for use through the end of the year. -But he said estimates of a 50 percent shortage during the first quarter of next year in the Northeast and along the Atlantic coach OJU.ld be realistic if the voluntary program fails and other cuts aren 't made now. "' . 2nd Quigley Hits Irvine · Space Plan Another lrvine councilman named Quigley today attapked a general plan operation that would reserve for open space 50 percent of the city's square mile planning area. Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr. criticized the general plan proposed by Wilsey and Ham last week, suggesting the city would be confiscating property to accomplish the open space objectives. Today, Councilman Henry Quigley at4 tacked the plan option as "a straw man plan." "To plan half the 100 square mites as open space is to guarantee that the city, which is now only 41 square miles, could never annex and thus not control the land uses of the 59 square miles rrot yet in th e city,'' Henry Quigley said. "' "No landowner in his right mind would allow annexation if we show the land as open space on our general plan." Tbe Wilsey and Ham option for a future city of on1y 218,000 people within the city's planning area was unveiled last week as an alternative to an earlier plan ior a city of 550,000 on the same amount of land. Councilman Ray Quigley immediately attacked the concept at a Thursday meeting of the South Coast Republican Forum. Ray Quigley left the genera l plan session to attend the GOP meeting . Mayor John Burton, president of the organization of Republican precinct y,·orkers who were active in the Com4 mittee to Re-elect the ~sklent, did tSee PLAN, Pa&< l! • Orange C.ut • · Weliilller. Fair skies are on the agenda for Tuesday, with slightly warmer days but colder D!,bts. Highs in the 60s, dipping into the 40s in the early morning hours. INSIDE TODAY Lig ht catamorall and JUrf· board me ntor Hobie Alter i.T working on a fU?W plaything for inteNl4tional /1t11°seekers. See story on Page B today. t ..... LllNw• ,. iliWl'MI 1J JQtllMI ..... f ar..c..rr 11 -.... lfrldl *""' ' • T......_ 1r -" ·-. ........... ""' ..,,. .... 4 . • - • ~;::,__"".c'.:.-_' _,_,L:_:Q:__• ___ ,_:_~ ___ __:_Monda,y, Novrmbtr .ll, .. .., .. Viejo Youth Arrested· v 011 Sex Rap Orange County Sheriff's offi,cers jailed a Mission Viejo youth on kidnap and sexual molestation charges Sunday shortly after he allegedly \lo'as identified as the man v.•ho molested a 13-year-old ~Y in the Laguna Hills area. Inve stigators said Michael Alan Bean, 18, of 25192 Classic Drive, was arrested on the basis of information sujlplied by three boys v.·ho allegedly were ap- proached by Bean late Sunday near El Cerro Elementary School in the Aegean Hills area. Officers a 11 e g e Bean attacked one of the boys as they left an open -field near the school and made their wa)'. t gwards the ir homes via a narrow, brush-covered gorge . lnfonnation supplied by the boy who said he was later released by Bean led to the filing of charges of kidnap, sexual perversion and child molesting. Sheriff's officers are continuing -their investigation of the incident today. They said they plan to seek a complaint against Bean from the district attorney's office . From Page 1 ' PLAN ... not attend the city coWlcil-planning com- mission study session on the general plan. Dilly Piiot 5110 l"llOt1 ~ntvard (;Jaristia1i Soldiers Rev. Jitnmy Combs (at controls) and Rev . Russell Gordon ride Jumbo to Sunday sc hool class at First Baptist Church of Costa 1'-fesa. The elephant appeared at the church Sunday as a treat for Sunday school youngsters \Vho Jl so got to ride on the pachydern1. ~~~=----=-~~~~~~~~- General Pl.an Meet Harbor Area's Suit' Dela yed S. -~uuntf-Area - A further sevcn·montb delay ~s orcler<d today In the Orange County Superior Courl trial of a 128 mlltlon lawsuit fitod by 905 Harbor Area hoineowners who blame the county for n1ountin~ 'et noise and pollution in the vlci.ru ty of county airport. l To Face Review Public hea rings on the Land Use Ele- ment of the Orange County General Plan as it relates to Mission Viejo. Iaguna Niguel; uaguna Hilts, El Toro President ·Slaps GI ~By Mistake' Wife Insists ORLANDO, !'la. (UP!) -p....,ident Nixon lightly slapped an Air Force U?aster serge.ant on the cheek Saturday night, and the man's wife called it a gesture of friendship. The Incident occurred at McCoy Air Force Base as Nixo n was ret urning from an hQUr-long nev."s conference at Disney World. M. S~ Edward Kl eizo and his son were among a group of about 60 persons on hand to see the President off. Ac· NIXON ON WATERGATE RECOVERY DRIVE, Page 4 cording to reporters "'ith the President Nixon approached Klelzo and had th~ fo1l olving exchange: "Are you the boy's mother or grandmother?'' "Neither," the man replied. "Of course not ,•• Nixon said and lightly slapped the man's faa cc. and Lake Forest will btgin at 7 :30 p.m. Tuesdar at Crown Valley Elemcn~ tary School, Laguna Niguel. A second hearing on the clement, recommended for approval last summer by the-Orange County PlaMlng Coli\· mission , will ~ held at 7:30 p.m1 Nov. 21 at Mission Viejo High School. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set June 17 as the new trial date. Roth sides said they needed more time to complete their preparations ror what ls ·expected to be a lengthy trial. . ' ' Commissioners uilanlmously-api>rovcd -F,.0111 Page 1 the element, projecting an increase or f , 500,000 more residents In Orange County NU DE BARS ~ by 1963. · ' _ ' . • v·' ,·_, Much of that growth would occur 'in • the Saddleback Valley, where a greater violation of the regulations. · :~ percentage of land remains un<leveklpe-d In other actions today: ~. ··r· ... than .in north.em OraJige County. -The court rejected Missouri's search i The element calls for development for a loophole in the high court's decision ' of 94,000 of the remalnlnJ 291,000 un· developed acres left under county · granting y.·omen the right to abortions 1 jurlsdjction. during the first six months of pregnancy. · Four areas of the .Southern half of The court affi rmed a three-judge ~ the county were given exemption under district court's decision de c I a ring : the element bceause developmnt is pend· 1'-1issouri abortion laws unconstitutional. • ing there.. 1 d · · i Thes~ include the 10,ooo-a<ire Moulton The lov.·er court based ts eclS1on ! Ranch; 1,500 acre11•ln North Dana Point : on the Supreme Court ruling last January 7 .200 acr,es In El Toro (Whiting Ranch that allowed states to place subltanUal I and Canada Foothills ; and 4,000 acres restrictions on abortion only during last 1 in the southerly part of Irvine Ranch. three months of pregnancy. . Planning department spokesmen re---The court declined to hear arguments · quested that any statements to be made by policev.·omen claiming they are deniecl at the ~hearings be submitted in Ylriting an equal chance at promotioM. before hand. · The high court, over the objections The final decl!ion on the land use of Justices William 0 Douglas and element ·reals with the Orange County William J. Brennan Jr., let stand a Board ol SUpervtsors. New York State Court ol Appeals decision rejec:ting the class acUon Stab Death Probed • challenge to Nassau County police pro- motion policies. Vice Mayor Henry Ouigley said toda v lie \\'as most bothered by the possible confusion betwetn his views on the suh· ject of open space and those of Ray Quigley. "This is not a prooertv ri~hts issue. El • • c b k :;i~ a planning issue," Henry Quigley ectricity ut ac s The incident was interpreted by some· as an indication of anger on the President's part, but according to the sergeant's wife, Kleizo has no such feel- ings. CAIRO (AP ) -Egyptian police aaid today they are lnvestlgatlng the stabblng death of a prominent American expert on ancient art who was found dead in his apartment here Wednesday. The policew.omen argued that the police department and county dvil service commissions d i s c r i m l n a t e against women by maintalnlng a tw~ track promotion system segregated by .. "I'm alarmed at the situation that th e good name Quigley is ~oing to be besmirched by someone ~oing around LT d f c v the city caying we don't want open rge or oast sers space," Henry. Quigley said.. . ..... ,., "As I judge the voters of Irvine, .... · · · · · · · · .. · .. · · · ........ · ........ · .. · · · ·" .. · .... ·· ...... · .. "· · ... · .... · · · · · they do want open space preserved. "Providing for fUtu re development and at the same time preserving some ade- quate amount of open space creates a problem for the leaders of government in this city," he added. · "The problem is to find a Y.'ay to plan for open space without abridging the righls of property owners. I think a way can be found to do that," Henry Quigley concluded. · At the time Bay Quigley revealed his opposition to the general plan alternative, he formally announced his candidacy for the City Council. In March , Irvine voters ""ill select fi ve councilmen from a field of can- didates including, for sure, both Quigleys. Mayor Burton has been less definite about his council , election plans, sug- gesting he is mulling running against incumbent Fifth District Supei"ViSor Ronald Casper:i. Councilwoman Ga.brielle Pryer and Councilman William Fischbach have yet to announce their plans. More Tlia11 lncl1 Of Rain Falls Ily R~JOI N1~0"1F.l.~KJ 01 the DlllY l"ilOI Si.ll .. ElecLricity users on th <:! O:ange Coast today were urg~d by the Southern California Ejison Company to begin voluntary cutbacks in use of power. Jack K. llorton~ chairman of Southern California Edison, asked the 7.5 million people in the Edison nel\\·ork to cut their current use back to 90 percent of what they used during the same month last year. The ' 10 percent reduction was recom· mended by the California Public Utilities Commission last year to conserve ene rgy during the'.shortage. Designer Views Moulton Ranch Development "\Ve fully support this objective," said Horton. He disclosed that Edison had been able to cut its own use of electricity by 14 percent after evaluating company operations. Some suggestions for reducing the con· sumption of energy from a convervation booklet avai lable from the Edison Com· pany en request a're: -Shield_ outd90r .3:1r co~ditioning equip- ment from sunlight and keep beating and cooling units clean. -Clean or replace heatin& and cootlng filters regularly and set thermostats to heat or cool less than you are ac- customed to. -Set thermostats to oil poe!tton when away for more than 24 hours and do not heat rooms not 'in use. -Close fireplace dampers an d draperies and use weather stripping to cut down drafts. -Turn oil unnecessary lights ,and try to use more efficient fluorescent lamps wherever possible. -Operate washers. dryers and dishwashers with full load to conserve energy. , In Saddleback The proposal for development of Moulton Ranch lands adjacent to Laguna Beach will be reviewed by designer -John Chapman for city officials and the public in a presentation at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at city hail chambers. -Open refrigerator doors only when necessary and pre-heat the oven only for baked goods requiring precise oven temperature at the start of the cooking cycle. -Check temperature controls on bot water heaters. Generally, 140 to 150 degrees are recommended for laundry, 110 to 120 degrees for baths. Tum down or off when on vacation. 'Though more than an inch of rain fell over the weekend in the Saddleback Valley, local firemen reported no erosion problems or other rain-related incidents. At the El Toro station of the Orange CoWlty Fire Department, l.25 inches fell. '" Laguna Niguel firemen-recorded 1.43 .inches, and the Trabuco Fire Station reported 1.20. A scarcity of serious bru sh fires in the Saddleback Valley during August, September, and October may have prevented some erosion damage during 1the weekend stonn, one fireman said . 1 Erosion is a greater danger when peavy fains follow a brush fire, he .said. .•• OlANGl .. COAST. !f .. DAILY PILOT T1W Ori"" COlll OAILV PILOT, with whl(~ It ·~"*'-"'• Ntwt-Pr81, -Ii fM.llills~·H-b\' th9 0•1"91 COIJI Pul>l!Jhlnt Comllillnv, $epa. r1i. adlUont •r• P\l~llsllld, MOndJY tl1'0U9" Frld1y, fo r Cot-11 Mtw, Newparl BftCh, Hunf1119ton Bfa<:~IFOUfltll" VIiify, L•ovn• IMC!>, lrvloM/S.dclltblc~ am Si n tiement1/ S.11 JIOM C1ril1!t1fl0. A •lngl1 r19lor11I «111• It M 01Md $tturd1y1 incl Sll"dlfl. ,,,. prlfl(ll)ll PU~llthl"ll ol1nl l• II Jl) W~I It}' 't•HI, C1»11 MIW, Callforn!1, 9U1,, An environmental impact report sub- mitted for the development of 10,000 Moulton a'cres calls for medium to low density housing (2.1 to 3.5 units an acre ) in lands adjacent to Laguna Beach city limits in the Top of the World and Arch Beach Heighls area. The EIR alS-O sees the extension of Alta Laguna Boulevard frpm Top the World to Arch Beach Heights. of -;.Don't heat your pool more than you have to . !>on't heat it at all in months when you don 't use it and when you go away for vas:ation. Doris DuBridge A new Alta Laguna is also drawn to extend northerly to a proposed routing of Oso Parkway scenic corridor Crom · Ri p d' the Laguna Niguel area to Newport tes en mg Beach. A large portion of the high density Funeral services are i>ending for Doris residential dev. elopment would be located DuBridge of. Laguna Hills, wife of former presidential science advtsor Le e on Oso Parkway route near the present DuBridge. She died Sunday at age 73 . · · intersection··of · ·L:a -Par· Road ·-and· -Avila···· ·----Mrs:· DuBl'ldge -and· he11 husband,. pres\ .... Road. bent of Cal Tech for z.i:· years, lived Total PoPUlation proposed for the Chapman plan is 57 ,000 much of whi ch v.·ould-be l!enrered Irr th~ taguna Niguel area a!ong Oso Parkway. Controversy erupted last year ,. fii' Laguna Beach O\'er a rerommendation for ci<tcnsion of Alta Laguna from Top of the World to Arch Beach Heigh ts. . in Leisure World . A native af Iowa, Mrs . DuBridge is survived by her widower: a !Ot1 Richard ofVii'glnia: a daughter Barbara McLeod of Canoga Park, and five grandchildren. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary is handling arrangemenlS. Fr1>n1 PQ{le J "I don't know how .they got that," she said. .. •. Micro-wave ovet1Smake · cooking a breeze' Out.Cooks any pat.skillet. brmler. pan or Ol8n . FLASH! HELP BEAT THE) ENERGY CRISIS 1\1\ICROWAVE OVENS USEONLY10% AS MUCH ENERGY TO COOK YO UR MEALS ~C1 O~ PERFORMANCE Dl ~"'~ * !ff?, ~'{, . ~ ;-Good Housekeeping': ~~ GUARANTEES '-.j C(flr£Nr OR RHUNO 10 co¥o'> Linon's new \vorld of micro~ave cooking is a bright new world . Wh ere gourmet mea!s can be cooked quickly in coot comfort -with max imum convenience and minimum cleanup . ~ THANKSGMNG SPECIAL! *_FREE 11 PC. MICROWAVE COOKWARE KIT 3'\j.:? r/ ~. hl~ ·.::,~~ -~~ .. ~_i.--. ~-~ *FREE COOKBOOK . -. An exciting new world ol MICROWAVE COOKING from Litton -168 pages -300 rec ipes. $6.95 value Everything !rem si~ple dishes to gourmel entrees. Th8 most compretiens1ve cookbook of its kind anywhere. •BOTH WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER ~ITTON MICROWAVE UN IT SHOWN HERE . Microwave cooking comes of age wilh the Litt Mlnutemastef"'I counlertop microwave ovens on ll~ton provides more in the most advanced cooking apphances today -!or the many cooks in you. M•trow1ve covn1e1to~ ovens from S 34915 Come In for a demonstration of the difference Litton makes. ~- Rob•rf N. W1•d ---i. ;iii~ •M-'uaffit>tr !l••k It, Curley Vk~ Pn.if!ltrit ll!d' ~e"trll M1n19rr Chapman of the Irvine firm of Chap- man , Phillips , and Brand Planning. first .reve.aled~his pqiposal • .for .. ·dq~~ept of the now virgin land in June. The planning is being done for several landowners including the fi.toulton trusts Rossmoor COrpcration, Ro c k w e 1 l International, and Chapm an COiiege. -DON NIXQ_NS ,._ •• ,, - , Nt.;j,~l::i'm~;~romatle"' m1crowaw11ng1~ h ·---1....0-=:!:-~REL~D~EMONS~~~IRA~~~JOtl~,==:::·~A~N~~l:M!=::..~··-' Who else but Litton would combine the best of bolh [8 · • one year durlng rfiXon 'a firs t tum. Tho.,,11 K1•..-il Editor Tho111a1 A. Murph ;"' Mtllftlnp Edltw Ch1if11 H. loot ltich11cl P. Nill A11ttl6fll Mt*I"' Efltor1 CMtt M9M1 DC1 Wflt l•Y Stfltl N.-.,orl ... ct!: U» H1wp0r1 Bo~!ev1rf L .. Ul\t lffef\l ttt l'Ol'ttl A,,..,ut Hunllne!Ol'I 1..0.: 11'1$ 811Cll &oult~••d "" c"'""'": as N1m e1 t•ml"° 11e11 ,.,,,., •• 1nc1 '42-4321 <' CJ-.lkll Mwttt••I MJ·S671 S..C ....... AA hp1:r .... .m: To'r•' 111 4fl-44JO C#Yrlll:f, lt1L °"""" C.0.11 Putlo!IJ!llftt CtmPM¥. Ho lllWll tlltltt. lltllfl!'.illftl, .. llerltl 11'\ttlW tt 111...,.ia-ts 11-111 _., M ""'"*"*' wllflout ..-ci.: "'" ll!IMIM If ~IOllt -•· ~ CllN ... , ... Nkl II ~·· ,,.,..., (.111""1111, ~-.-, c.r"91' f,2,., _,,...,., ~ !'NII U .IJ "*'IMYI lllUITlfY *lflflltltllt•a .M """'""'· The project would be constrycted over 15 years, according to the «.;hapman EIR.. Coordina ting Unit. To Call Off Meeting The 5addleback Area Coordlnallng Council will have no meeUng In November,' spokesmen announcecl:Rtodaf r since the regular m .. tlng date faU. on Thanklgiving eve. The next m .. tlng wUt' be O.C. la at the Peoples Federal 5avlnp and Loan community room In the Soddleback Plaut. Asked during his televised appearanco before the Associa ted Press Managing Editors U it made sense to tap the telephone of someone who knew he was under surveillance, Nixon eald yes, because It was not directed at his brother but at "others who were trylnj to get him ... particularly In a foreign cwntry." "I won't go beyond that," NllOD aald. i.111ere were very good JUION aod my brother was aware of It." He sald the reasons probably would be dlscloaed someday. When the Washln1ton POil IIrlt disclosed the tap In September, Ille Secret-Servlee iald lta-proteclloa-ol the Presl~ent's family did not Include hi! brother Donald. The Poll quoied ~ur<e• u uylng the_lapl _were_...,. _ ducted becaUH of Donald's jbllllClaJ dealings, portlcularly with llowll'll Hugh.,, worlds: the speed of the most advanced microwave LI TlO N oven -you save 75% of your cooking lime and yet have the versatility of conventional cooking. Sian your gourmet meals to a quick finish In the eye-level microwave oven, cook comptementa,Y Litton Mier A . foods In th• contlnuous·cloanlng electric oven ' .• fun ow ave anges foods on tl'\e easy·IO·Clean smooth ceramic cooktop. H~ ll:"ow• '"0 '' •11~1·'"101ow•vt 000~111.' lhtn Lltttll'l .• Nobod'r. •• • _____ _..Q}VPRICESARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE 90-oA VS CASH Wini APPllOYEO CllEOIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Dlwntlwn Costa Mesa --: Pbone 541-7788 ··- ( ' VOL. ,.. \ ., :ii ' ' J a B le -i d d' • A t .;.i 1.job to · 1 : fro to ' cha ·pro Ste t " all ' ' de di to -• Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley • " . Today's Final -NA'. Stoeks- VOL. 616, NO. 323, 4 SECTIONS, o40 PAGES ' , ORANGE COUNTY, .CA~IFQRNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, ,,¥3 -TEN CENTS . . OCTD 'Ignored' • ID -Needed . Fuel ·Allocations 'I By JACK BROB,4.CK 01 .... o.11~ ,,....._, .... apidly-expandlng public bus operi.-~ like the Orange ·eougty !franait • trlct h~ve been left out In .lhe .eold · alloeaUon of needed fuel, OCTD erar' manaJer ~ Gordon • • P et e ' • ldlng 11ld-toaay. ~ . • • ~ leldJNi · salt! he was confideJi1, Wefer; Iha! lhe . <!iftricl will -set ... ssaQ<.luei;to lllf>llCl!:I it. fut:ero_!llJ>g ! --·~ ----.... _. -.. -'•••-·--•· ' G sc:c. ~ • ----.. ----. -·--. ------... bus operations in coming months. Currently, the district bas been given permlaioo. by the llO'o'.emmenl agencies lo borrow lrom II• Decembel' allocation - in order to operate· for the balance of Novern.ber. "We currently _OP<tate '0!1ly 48_ buse:s lo serve a populaUoo of u ntlnion." FleldiDg stated. 0 No other m~ urban are.a bas so 'tittle public transportation. It ·seems )111hlr lnCoosi&tent for the government to ·provide funds f o r purchase of additional buses and then not allocate sufficient fuel to operate them." 111.e district wm take delivery of 63 new buses In February and hopes lo have them In operation by April. c _ · These buaes will provide much needed service to the South ~utal area of the cotmty as well u Mission Viejo, El Toro, and Laguna Hiib. They will, that is if the district gets the fuel allocation it ia requesting. Obviously, Fiekllns pointed out, such a system of borrowing ahead will not work In the long l'llll- The Board of Directors of tbe dl!trict · approved a ·resolution today oUtlining- OCTD's despera{e iltuation to . Orange County 's congressional delegation and to various other government agencies. The district currently uses more than 301000 gallons of diesel fuel a month. It bad reeelved only 20,000 gallons for Novem~r operations. Borrowlns· !rOm December's skimpy allocation of about 1,000 1alloos solved the situation temporarily. But unless government a~ea proVlde much hlllh· er allocitions fol'l>eOei'nber and the fol· lowing montbs, the transit district will be In. lnluhle. . 1be district's prol>lems regarding its ' rapid expansion stem from government edicts basing current fuel supplies on a portion of the amount used one year ago. Fielding pointed out that the district is now using at least 300 percent more fuel than it did in November of 1972. In the resolution and ln·contacts with· federal and state agencies, the district will point out that it provides most ot the transit service in Orarfge Q)unty. -~ -·1' I ~-,r. Sunday Driving Ban? Emergency Measures Cited as 'Real Possibility' From Wire Services WASHINGTON -A nationwide bao on Sunday drivlng and other emergency eotrgy-saving measures are "very real possibilities" because of the nation's energy eris.is, one of President Nimn'1 top energy advisers warned Congress today. Oiarles DiBona, the President's special assistant for fuel, told a joint llouse- Senate hearing that even total com- pliance with current con s e r v a ti on mea!Ures such u turning d ow n thermostats and a 50-mile per hour speed limit will not be sulliclent._ He said that an opUmistic.-assessment of these conservation measurts, plus hope for increases In domestic supplies, will proVlde only 2.3 milllOI! barrels of ·oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrels a day. '"lb.is meabs: that we•re going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measures?" asked Sen. William ·Prox· . mire (l)..Wis.}. "Yes sir, and soon," DiBona replied . DiBona said that among the "very real possibililies1' the Administration was cooiideriag was a ban on Sunday driving. He said .that 2$ pe~nt of all gasoline usid 1n private cars is consumed. on weekends. Among other proposals being con· sidered art a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft; closing public parks to automobiles; closing service stations on· weekends, and blue 1aws to clo.se all buslneses on Sunday, he said. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Ge:orge P. Shultz told a Senate foreign relations subcommittee that the Administration will "have to take some sharp and decisive action" to cope with the energy shortage. Shultz, who said his "instinct ls against" gasoline rationing, said the United States was lucky the crisis had (S.e EMERGENCY, Page Z) - Ruling Seen As Cutback Play.ed .With Fire • * * * Coast Urged . Tot Trapped in Blaze To Cutback -' . :.Bappu R0yfi1--VO.p1e I · ' B b . Joyce Wirth, a 20.year-old busines1.-student from Newport eac , and Dennis Sheehan, 27, student coUllCil member 'from Huntington Be~cb leave football •tadium with ·presents from Orange Coast Col· Jege s\udents. They were chooen Hqmecoming Queen aud Homecom-- ._ ing King by popular student vote. Hppored as outstanding alumnus duririg weekend bomOC<>!J\inil ceremohies was James_ Carnett, OCC director of commlllllty oerv1ces and a}969 graduate. ,Ceµsus Questioil$ Elicit _ ·~or ~elfare .r ~ · . ·~ii"--.-. .. . SAC!_4.ME!'11'9 (APJ -A llate _ ·ae:_ ' pe~~Y the ReapnY z .... .....,._, ...... "x:,..""";!,""i;"": l ' -~~ ministratloo cannot implement new Tbr'ee-year..,.a Juon Myers 1i, ihft. . and llealtllY loday lfler play!Dg with federal welfare regulations without new fire. stale leglslalion, raising !be possibility He WM nearly" -trapped In his Hun- of a culback In aid -lo 500,111111 aged, lin8lon Beach home Saturday morning disabled and blind recipienls. ~ Oamea ~~ the okl wood.frame The 3rd District State Court of Appeal ~ house al Illa Vl!I Bu"" said Reagan administration offlclals do Jasi.t was ~ved by hla ~ .. _Tom not have authority on their own lo Myers, .and a nOighbor, Pail! Jones. yield adinJnlalration of tbe stale adult They ~ the window In JISCll'I welfare programs to tbe federal BOVen>-bedroom and caJled•the !>'>r to It u ment. Oames spread. thrwghoul the ho!lse,,,i<> The federal · goverment ii scheduled to take over admlnislraUm qi the pro, gram of weUare to 500,000 aged, disabled and blind Californians Jl!I. I. -Princip(lls E~e .- , . "' 'nte state i3 faced with the loss of $600 million In federal Medi.cal aid unJess it properly implements the pr1r -. Energy Crisis gram by Jan. I. · C I • t h c • t • Democratic-sponsored legislation to do .. omp _ ain S y I izens 1ha1 was defeated 1n the Legisl•.tur• in September after Republican Gov. Principals from all 24 elemenlary' schools in the Ocean View School District in Huntngton Beach will hold ~ energy crisis conference Tuesday.. afternoon with district ldmlniatrators . l Ronald Reagan's representatives opposed • , · I •--• t d"1v-1dual. None of the information is it on grounds it was too costly. -~ A list of city questions at acueu o Reagan promised the cbange-<>ver 'fpe current state census clreulating in related back to an individual name." wouJd be accomplished by administrative )untington Beach has aroused a number She $8ld the rollected information regulation without jeopardizing payments ;,i citizen complaints and considerable -Vlou1d be presented to the city as data to the reclpl~tl. lndlcaH•• trends, such as numben ol The suit was brought by a number <ion fusion. -.. "" The city questions ask residents such senior citl.zem, or I o w • i n c om e ol. gl"OQl:8, including the California League 1tems as how many dogs, cats, bicycles neighborhoods, which will help city of· of Senior Clizem and the calilomia or motorcycles in the family? flclals make lulure decisions affectlnl Welfare Right. Organlultlon. ' What b the family Income? Where such situations. Reqan's 'press office Mid the ruling llld the heed of .the llousehold move The information ·on clogs, cab and would be appealed to the CaliJornla Principals have been instructed to work out concrete proposal& for saving energy in. their Schools. Tuesday, the proposals will be outlined, and guidellnes for the district will be planned. Resulla ~ the meelin8 -will be pr....,ted lo Ocean View trustees at their nut ilo!Ird meeting. ·_ ~-~ilt~r Electricity_ _ --e By RUDI NlF.DZll!:tSKI • ... ' • • Of ""' Dliiiv ...... ·'~ .f!Un!lnglon Blill9!1ltemen: Electricity users oo ,the Orange Coast ;pet,~ shepherd,_ in the same today were urged by the Southern ""'11 Wiii! 'Jason, ,... killed by the C.lifomla Edison Company to begin lire, but the boy auffered no bums . f and · only minor amoke inhalation volWltary cutbacks muse o power. ~men lald. ' Jack K. Horton, chairman of Southern The fin! errupted about 10: 44 a.m. CaliJornia Edison, asked the 7.S million lt . ..appar:ently was started by Jason people in the Edi!On network to cut plajo1n&·wtlh malcbes In the living room, their current use back lo 90 pert<11l accordiDJ to fire de P a r t m e n t in-of what they used during the same veltigaton. th , lloth par<Dlt, Tom, and his wile Mary, mon .ast year. were ultep in their bedroom. She woke The 10 percent reduction was recom- up, · 110lli>!d tbe smote: and woke her mended by the C.lifomia Public Utilities - husband, firemen sakl. Commission last year to consenre energy 1°1"'Y tried lo leave lhrough their during the shorlage. ~_-daof, but ~smote and flames "We fully sgpport this objective " said ,.....i alrudy so heavy they ' had lo Horton -' retreat' ~h their bedroom window, · ·. . they told fiiemen. He d1SClosed that Edison had bee" Then they, seJrched for the boy and able to cut its own use ~f electricity with ·the-~ip of Jones, MY.rs s~shed by 14 ._percent afler evalualing'"almpany his aon's bedroom window and was able operations, to caU to the boy in time. Some suggestiods for reducing the o;m-.. Firemen said flames were already sumption of energy from a convervahon shooting out the windows of the three-boo klet available from the Edison Com- bed.room OOme when they alTived and pany on request are: by the time the flre was over, the ~leld outdoor air conditioning equip- bouse was 90 percent destroyed. meiit from sunlight and keep heating Most of the muse was still standing, and cooling units clean. but the inside was: gutted, firemen said. -Clean or replace heating and cooling filters regularly and set thermostats to Tugboat Floods At Oceanside heat or cool less than you are ac- customed to. -Set thermostats to off position when away for more than 24 b:>urs and do not heat rooms not in use. from ? Where. does !be head of ·the _ bley<lea will help tell the city bow supreme Court. Poisoned l>y Clams bouaehold work? ' ~ Ill licenainl programs are, says "The admlnislratloo's allomeys an! • OCEANSIDE (AP) -K llO-foot tugbost , Many ,realdenb have refuted ,to ~ cltyolnfonriatlon officer Bill Reed. stqdylng the ruling to see what It meaill. ·SARASOTA, Fla. (uPI) -A 11>-year--iat &oded with only the wheelhouse -Close fireplace dampers a n d draperies and use weather stripping to cut down draft.. -Tum off unnecessary lights and try to use more efficient Duorescent lamps whereve r possible. -. - the quesil'!"' •"t, morethe~l)!llll ~ lljlla v ..... also demed that ~ Ar/Y· comments we would 'make now old boy wis In critical cOndltloo Sunday :showing today In Oc"8oside Harbor afler ,-11.1-d .. ~Pf:Jll~~-l!> .... ~.2----~-----!Mm ~.fa.k~-~-~~h<r co_nliden _____ .l!'!\ll!!L. ~~tore," said Clyde after ealblg clama poi-' -by a . . .. _ ;Intonnatlon omce. -. • ' lofonlla..., rom nag•~"-Wiltball, Reagmii"jiie.;s secreiary; .. , 'iiiitiOtiiiiCe 'lielltb--'iiilborlu.llild"'wiil ;mll!lll(-a~ -In-heavy seas. •1 One volunteer census taker quit ·her. ••u nO _ane ls home, we leave a call The court &aid it could oot delay a "cousin'' d..· the fed 'dde. Dr. JOOn 'lbe .qwni--atpptr, ·Richard Korszig Job because''!!" said SI\"~ lnatrucled bad: no~. U they don't call us, then tbe' effect of lb ruling until af\!!r McGarry, ditocfo'r ol,1he Saraoola Coon-or LM8 Beach, his wile ~ly and to get lbe -confldel)tial . lnfonnation the -ta~er · goes lo a neighbor February u requested by thoee who ty Health ~ment banned all two crewmen got off safely Sunday nigh\. • 1 ; from neighbors if the rres1dent re~, aocf -ilks· for the number of persons · broUght 'the suit against the ad· shellfish gathering in sira!9ta waters The tug, Vivo, was valued at $160,roJ. . to answer. ~ 11~ ,ha' ,.th& home and l~ .~ges, ~t m'inistraUon. after Lonnie Long, 10, of Siesta ·Key A stern line washed overbbard first, Beverly V~, the. state official in , that• all, Miss Veress said; \Ve can,t 'Ibb would have given the Legislature and two penons suffered paralytic fouling the rudder and propeller, and cha~ge of t~ Huntlngt.On Beach ~ l'ilve IR• accurite ce?5us if ,"':"e ct:on t time to act m the issue after it returned shellfish poi!K>ning as a tesuJt of eating the poundlrig surf quickly: O~ed the proiect, says '"!"t of the _ compllllllll count_ people who aren t home. to Sacramento in early January. the cltnM: -. 'tug 25 feet off camp Del Mar Beach. • stem from confo11on over whit the whole ... 'She admitted the censu1 takers don't thlng iJ about. · , . emphasize the fact : that residents may -Oper8te washers, dryers a n d dishwashers ·with full load to conserve energy. -Open refrigerator doors only when (S.e CUTBACKS, Page ZI • Oruge 'l":!ll:~ f~~.~Tots: .Driy~~ "To start with , the information 1.s Rhswer the city questions on a voluntary confidential," she says. "The city is basis but no .one is forced or coerced ~ not Jilleresti cl" In.~ ~rOpri; as an (Ir -~. she Aid. . . -~ ' ·= ,. -n--= _ 'Iii!~ Itselt-~ ·still \md6 way, --· She t<lllld nol estimate wben it will • ,f -' Weuller ' ' ·-. Fair s1iles are on tfie agenda tor Tuesday, with slightly warmer days bul colder nights. llilhs In the &Os, dipping into tbe !Os In the early morning hours. . AD RESPONSE be!lhlahed. • -The prlmafy pu1;po1e of the census *"" S' Is to detormfne the actual population 'TREm·r.NDOU of HunUllgk!n Beodl .. 11 can reeelve lb lair '*-1loll ol state speclaJ taxes . Tromendoua responoe -rented three state ·o111c1als allow cities to add UP room• Immediately! That was !be joyful lo 10 quea\1009 ol their own .design cry of the Costa Meaa woman who ti> the censua ·to help with future plan. placed thl! Dally Piiot classified ad : , ninl In the community. " CLEANh fum. Nr. <XX:. · ·git c en, washer/dryer. Retired OK. 17> mo. (Phone Slain in Argument? • J'io.) . OAltLAND (\)Pl) -k lam1ly argu- A, few llnel of advertising may be ment SUnday led to the btal -Ung ~au tt takes to pt"tremendom r,._."-.i Mrs. Ora~. a, II her for you, too. Dial Uie cluslfied ad home In East Oakland, pollco aald. department at -tlle Dally Pllol 111 the Detective Sit-John Shanna~ oald thO di feet tine, 142'6m, lo 11et ·on Alkloor WCllllP a._i wllh her hus\Jind, John lo help you llnd oat. Hendril, 15, OOJcers ,..... searcblna for lfendril. > Ma~ines' Annwd, Program · to · S14rt Tu.e~day · The 8nj1Ual Marine Corp1 Reserves . :Mqnt 'tllii. :$loo wwlb 'of new.' loys Toys for Tota drive will start 'Neaday )\fl•• ,alresldy, been donated. to the cause at the Huntlnaton Center Mall iit 111111-by the lay n!ln\llactuma who exblblted tinlton Beach. • · their new, produc;ts , the put -.nc1 _ fn the for 1111 <:OllectJon of new the , first -Orlntle Comlly Toys An e¥ tall bin will be staliontd In the ·aunttnpm Cenler Matt durinl lc!rl and -loyt. for Tola T!r/· Show. 'More 11111 com-itJ cqanlza· HowVd 'l!billker, 1eneral manager tloos wlJI also -apoolal aellvltlea or the shopplna center, said IDOi\ of In lbe mall fl'Olll new *WCII a.titmas !be companies ddiialed their ~re In -wltll tile 'flirt tor Toll. boolbi of dmQciiillratloo,toya and'--~.,;; iron: Co~2ncl --~-at-•°1'rr=~-~.,. ..... ~. P<ll' la Ion,~ u~-, :r· ' Div'"""'•, ' ' of ~-•'-n-...., _._ ........ ·aram ·Jniar Tioop • ._ ..... ~.-· stallClled at tbe NIV Weapoos statloo Beach allo ...... I -band puj1p<ll In . Seal B.each. will colled the \o7S they mallt the-Ms. '""' glrla .... and dbtribute them where needed. five _ and lil-r-olcb. -- 1l9me of the events ICbeduled for the hollclays al HunUucton Center include: --Five ehOwa ICheduled Friday at I p.in., J~p.m., S p;m.1 4 'p.m. •nd 1:30 P.Pl-o by the Mitchell r,larionettes. -'Ille community Cbrlstmas tree · 1~ -ceremooy at 7 p.m. followed by a ' CCll<!!rl pfesenltd• 11)\ the Marine CiJrpl band lroin El Toro. '-Jlundredl of Gtri Scouts • will peck the mall-Dec: I for !heir annual "sin& .__,, . ., -.A Taylllhon; !eaturln1 Ro o a I d Mcbonald, the Wlzanl of Maalc MDllll- taln, and a gtisba girl from Jspanne -(See lfOYS, Pa&e ZI INSWE TODAY Lig!J& catamara" and &Ur/· board mentor Hobie Alter is 1corkinQ On a new playtlJ.ittQ 1or tniernaiional fun-..seekers. See story on' Page 8 toda11. IMllq 11 L.M. .. W41 S c.....-..i. s CLllMl!Mll 11W2 c-la 11 , __ ,. DMttl ~ It ......... ,... ' ·~-" 'I .. , ,... •Kwf :Ml Mt! llUU I Jt _,,l:,__••_•_·_• -'-''-"-'---•-• ____ Monday, No't'tmber ~-1 •• .,._ Viejo Y out~~ Arrested On Sex Rap Orange County Sheriff's offlctrs jailed a Mission Viejo youth on kidnap and sexual molestation charges Sunday shortly after he allegedly was idenlificO as the man ~·ho molested a 13-year-old boy in the Laguna Hills area. InvesUgators said MJchael Alan Bean, 18, of 25192 Classic Drive, was arrested on the b'asis of information supplied by three boys "''ho allegedly were ap- proached by Bean late Sunday near El Cerro Elementary School In the Aegean Hills area. Officers a 11 e g e Be1tn attacked ooe Of " the boys as they left an open field near the.. school and made their way towards their homes via a narro,v, brus~overed gorge . Infonnation supplied by the boy who said he was later released by Bean led to the filing of charges of kidnap, sexual perversion and child molesting. Sheriff's officers are continuing their 'irivestigation of the incident today. They said they plan to seek a complaint against Bean from the district attorney's office. From Page 1 • ·• OlllY Piiot Sl11! P'holt PLAN ... not attend the city council-planning com- mission study session on the general plan. Onward Cl1ristin11 Soldiers Vice Mayor Henry Quigley said toda v he was most bothered by the possible confusion belwetn his views on the suh-- Ject or open spa·ce and those of Ray Qui~ley. "This is not a property rii::hts issue. It is a planning issue," llenry-Quig\ey said. ''I'm alarmed at the situation that the good name Quigley is going to be besmirched by someone i::oing arQund the city !:lying we don't want open space," Henry Quigley said. "As I judge the voters of Irvine, they do want open space preserved. '.'Providing for fUture development and at the same time preserving some ade. quate amount of open space creates a problem for the leaders of government in this city,'· he added. "The problem is to find a v.·ay to plan for open space without abridl!ing the rights of properly owners. 1 think a way can be found to do that," Henry ,Quigley concluded. · Al the tirn e Ray Quigley revealed his opposition to the general plan alternative, he formally announced his candidacy for the City Council. In March, lrvinc voters will select fiv e councilmen from a field of can· didates including, for sure, both Quigleys. Mayor Burton has been less definite about his council election plans, sug- gesting he is mulling running against incumbent Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers. Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryer and Councilman Wiiliam Fischbach have yet to announce the ir plans. More Tl1a11 Incl1 Of Rain Falls In Saddlehack Rev. Jimmy Combs (at controls) and Rev. Russell Gordon ride Jumbo to Sunday sc hool class at First Baptist Church of Costa Mesa. The elephant appeared at the church Sunday as a treat for Sunday sc hool youngster'i \vho =11so got to ride on the pachyderm. -~~-'---'-~~----~-- Electrici ty Cutbacks Urged for Coast Users D~· R'!.101 N!Ji'.J)"IF.l,1;:KI Electricity users on th~ O:angc Coast today \\•ere urged by the Southern \.alifomia Elison Company to begin voluntary cutbacks in use of p:.wer. Jack K. 1-lorton, chairman of Southern California Edison, asked the 7.5 million people in the Edison net\\'Ork to cul their current use back to 9i1 perct'nt of what they used during the same month last year. The ' 10 percent reduction was recom- mended by the California Publlc \Jtilitles Commission last year to conserve energy ·during the' shortage. Designer Views Moulton Rancl1 Development The proposal for development of Moulton Ranch lands adjacent to Laguna Beach will be reviewed by designer John Chapman for city officials and the public in a presentation at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at city hail chambers. "\Ve fully suppori this objective," said Horton . He disclosed that Edison had been able to cut its own use of electricity by 14 percent after e\•aluating company operations. Some suggestions for reducing tbe con- sumption of energy from a convervation bool<Jet available from !he Edison Com- pany en request are : -Shield outdoor air conditioning equip- ment from sunlight and keep beating and cooling units clean. . -Clean or 'replace heatlna and cooling filters regularly and set thermostats to heat or cool less than you are ac- customed to. -Set thermostats to off pooltlon when away for more than 24 hours and de> not heat rooms not 'in use. ~lose fireplace dampers a n d draperies and use weather stripping to cut down drafts. -Turn off unnec<ssary lights arid try to use more efficient fluorescent lamps wherever possible. -Operate washers , dryers a n d dishwashers with full load to comerve energy. -Open refrigerator doors cnly whtn necessary and pre-heat the oven only for baked goods requiring precise oven temperature at the start of the cooking cycle. ~heck temperature controls on bot water heaters. Generally, 140 to 150 degrees are recommended for laundry, 110 to 120 degrees for baths. Turn down or off when on vacation. Though more than an inch or rain fell over the weekend in the Saddleback Valley, local firemen reported no erosion problems or other rain-related incidents. ' At the El Toro station of the Orange An environmental impact report su~ mitted for the development of 10,000 Moulton acres calls for medium to low density housing (2.1 to 3.5 uhlts an acre) in lands adjacent to Laguna Beach city limits in the Top of the World and Arch Beach Heights area. -Don 't heat your pool more than you have to . !>on't heat it at all in months when you don't use It and when you go away for vacation. , County Fire Department, l.25 inches fell. Laguna Niguel firemen recorded 1.43 inches, and 1 the Trabuco Fire Station reported 1.20. A scarcity of serious brush fires in the Saddleback Valley during August, September, and October may have prevented some erosion damage during 1tbe weekend storm, one fireman said. Erosion is a greater danger when heavy fains follow a brush fire, he said . OU.N•I COAST II DAILY PILOT The ElR also sees the extension of Alta Laguna Boulevard from Top the World to Arch Beaeh Heights. of A new Alta Laguna is also drawn to extend northerly to a proposed routing ol.1 Oso Parky,•ay scenic corridor from !he Laguna Niguel area to Newport Beach. A large portion of the high density reslilenllal development would be located on Oso Parkway route near the present intersection of f.a Paz Road and AvUa Road. Total population propcsed for the TM Ot'I.....,. Co11! OAllY PILOT, wlllo '*"f(~ Chapman plan is 57,000 IIlUCh Of Which I• combllltd "'' Ht .... ·PrtH. It P11bll1htd b'r 0 Id be t d . th La N" I 1111 o••"ll• co1t1 Publlthlng CO!Tll'tnv. S•pa· .,,, u cen ere in c guna 1gue ••ht «11t10n1 ••• Pllbll•h..,, M-~v rhro"'~ area along Oso Parkway. l'rld1y, kif CIH!I Mts•. Newparl Bt•Cfl. Con Huntll'lt!"" 1eo1d111=-"in V•ll•r, l•g...,.. troversy erupted last year in 11..ai. Jry1~1$1dt11e1Ncl 1..0 s.n-c~mente1 Laguna Beaeh over a recommendation S.n JWll C•1111"•no. .. •1"111• •111-1 for extension of Alta Lanuna from Top M ltlMI It llUll!ISllld S1h;rdtYI tnd 5UrwdtVI, ti r"" pr1MiPt1 P111>ll1"'"9 DI•"' 1i 11 uo we.r of the \\1orld to Arch Bca{'h Heights. e1v '''"'· C1111• ""'"'· c11.1o•n11, •i.H. C,bapman of the Irvine firm of Chap- Robir+ N. w,,d ~. Phillips . and Brand a ning , first Pr•IMll -s Pu1111t111• ::;... --. l ·revealed his pfoposal tor <rcvelopment J1clr R. Cvrt1, _ of the now virgin land In June. va """*"' 11111 Gt<wi'11 AYn•tt• The planning is being done for several Tho1't11 Ktevil landownerS including the i\1oulton trusts 1•11ot Rossmoor Corporation, Rock we Ii Thom•• A, Mvrphin1 Jnternational, and Chapman Coll'"'c. Mt~fl'lt ElfllOf "b C"1d11 H. loo1 Rich i rJ '· Nell The project would be constrpcted over Att1111r111MM11nt E•ii... 15 years, according to the c..;hapman Offk• EIR. ,.,.,.... rn41 '4J-4J21 Ca-11*1 ,y,.,, ... '42°1671 S. C......_ Al ..,...,,.."": f1l1,a 111 49J-44JO u....-...... ,.,.... °"91191 Ciiif "*l'~""' ~. He -•ltfltl. '""""'''"""'· ...... ". ,,..,,.,. ... ..,....,,IMrl'ltrl" '""""" _,, .. ~ "'"'*" '1«111 -· MIHltn "•_.,..""' -· ......... CllH ....... 1111(11 II tall Mtt.I, Ctll..,.,11. '4itilal11t1111 W wrlff U.61 -""h>1 l'Y 1t1tll U.IS "*""""l "llllltrY .WINtlOlll • U.61 ,_!Nr. Coordinating Unit To Call Off Meeting The Saddleback Area CoordlnaUng CoWlcil will have no meeting 1D November, 11pokesmen announced today, sinct \he regulnr meeting date r..111 on ThankJglvlng eve. • The nut meeting will be Dec. II at \he Peoples Federal Savlngl and !Aan communlly rdlim In the Saddfeback Plaza. Doris DuBridge Rites Pending Funeral services are pending for Doris DuBrldge of Laguna Hills, wtfe of fonner presidential ·science advisor Le e DuBrldge. Sbe died Sunday at age 73. ~1rs.-ouBrtdge and her husband, pr61·· bent of Cal Tech for 22 years, lived in Leisure World. A native of towa , Mrs. DuBridge is survived by her widower ; a 900 Richard of Virginia: a daughter Ba:-bara McLeod of CAnoga Park, and five grandchildren. McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary ls handling arrangemenls. · Front Page J DO.N NIXONS ·-·. one year during Nixon's tint tum. A•ked dur(ng his televised appearance before the Associated Presa Managing Editors if it made sense to tap the telephone of someone who knew ht was under sun-tlllance, Nixon . said yes, because It was not directed at hla brother but at "others who were trylnl to 1et him ... particularly Jn a foreign counlry." ~·1 won't go·be}'O(ld th1t," Nlzon Ilk!. "There were very good realOhl and my .brother .was aware of It." He taid the reasons probably would be dlfJ'looed someday. When the Washlnpm Post first dllclnsed the . top In September, Ille S<cret Service uld Its protection of \he President's family did not Include his brother Donald. The Poot qiioted IOurctl U llYittc the loptl wtrt -duded beclUH • of• Donlld 'I ftiionctal delllngs, pertlculariy with Ho••rd l!ughes. I • G~Plmaltleet Hatbor Area's Suit Delayed S. County Area A further scven·month delay was ordtred today In tho Orange C.wity SUl>'PIOr Court trial of a 128 milUon lawsuit filed by 905 HarbOr Arta homeowners who blame the county for moWlting jet noise and pollution in the vicinity of county airport. - . To Face Review Public hearings on the Land Use Ele- ment of the Orange County-General Plan as it relates to Mission Viejo, laSUlll Niguel, Laguna llllb, El TO<o President Slaps GI 'By Mistake' Wife Insists. ORLANDO, Fla. •(UPI) -President Nlxon lightly slapped an Air Force master sergeant on the cheek Saturday night, and the man's wife called it a gesture of friendship . The incident occurred at McCoy Air Force Base a, Nixon was returning from an hQur·long ney,·s conference at Disney World. M. St:t Edward Kleizo and his son were among a group of about 60 persons on hand to see the President oft· Ae--NIXON ON WATERGATE RECOVERY ORIVE, Pago 4 cording to reporters ~·ith lhe President, Nixon approached Kleizo and had the foUo\vi ng exchange: "Are you the boy's mother or grandmothe r?" · "Neither," the man replied. "Of course oot," Nixon said and lightly :slapped the man's faace; The incident wu Interpreted by some ~s an indication of anger on the President's part, but according to th e sergeant's y,·lfe, Kleizo has no such feel· in gs. "I don't know how they got that," she said. · and Lake Forest will begin at 1:30 p.m. TUe:sday at Ctown Valley Elemen· tary School, Laguna Ni'kuel. A secood hearing on the......clement, recommended for approval last summer by tho Oran1e County Planning Com· mission , wU1 be held 1t 7:30 p:m1 ·Nov. 27 at Mission Viejo High School. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set June 17 as the new trial date. Both sides said they neOO.ed ~ore time lo complete their preparations ror what ls expected to be a lengthy trial. Commissloners unanimously approv ed f'rotn Page 1 . the element, projecting an Increase or I 500,000 more residents In Orange County NU DE BARS > by 1983. . • • • ·~ M·ueh of that lf'OWlh would oceur in thpere 0 Saendtad 8 leebaofcl<lavndalley, ~~nda gereloa~ violation of the regulations. ~ .. '.. '~ rem11.11~ u ev .,..... In other actions tod1f: than in northern Orange .County~ ---·-· -Tlfe coun rejected-Missouri's &earch i The element calls for development for a loophole in the high court's decision ' of 94,CIOO of the remalnlnJ 291,000 un-developed acres left under county · granting \\'omen the right to abortions 1 jurisdiction. during the first slx months of pregna ncy. Four areas of the Southern half of The court affirmed n three-judge ~ the county were given exemption under district court's de cision de c 1 a r Ing 1 !he element because deve!Opmnt is peed· Missouri abortion )a\\'S unconstitutional. '. 1ng therrc. ed 1 d 1 · I These Include the 10,0QO.aCre Moulton The lower court bas ts ec s1on i Ranch; lJOO acres1in North Dana Point ; on the Supreme Court ruling last January 7.200 acres In El Tc>ro (Wh!Ung Ranch"-that allowed states le> place substantial l and Canada Foothills; and 4,000 acres restrictions on abortion only during last 1 in the southerly part of Irvine Ranch. three months of pregnancy. . Planning department spok~men re--'!be court dec:llnf$1 to hear argument.! · quested that any statements to be made by policev.·omen claiming they are denied • at the hearings be submitted in writing an equal chance at promotiol\S. before hand. The high court, over the objections The final decision on the land use of Justices WUliam 0 Douglas and element rests with the Orange County WiWam J. Brennan Jr., let stand • Board of Supenrisol'!. New York State Court of Appeals: decision rejecting the class action Stab Death Probed CAIRO (AP) -Egyptian pcllce said today they are invesllgallng the stabbing death of a prominent American eipert on ancient art who was found dead in his apartment here Wedriesdi.y. challenge .to Nassau Cowity police pro- motion policies. The policewomen argued that the pollce deportment ond county civil service commls!ions d i s c r I m I n a t e against women by mainta,lnina:. a .two- track promotion system segregated by .. •. Micro-wave ove1• make cooki1g a breeze! Out.cooks any pot.skillet. bnnler. pan or onn . FLASH! HELP BE.AT THE ENERGY CRISIS MICROWAVE OVENS USE ONLY 10% AS MUCH ENERGY TO COOK YOUR MEALS ~C1 O~ PERFORMANCE Ot ,~~o * . 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M1CrOwav1 COullttrtOD ovtllS trom s349a Come In tor a demonstration of the difference Llllon makes. ·, .. • "Ra pi trdns O!strlct OIJ. all geheral l!J!ldlng :'.tlel !ii!\ve•er -· • :ua J Joy an Be • leg ing du dir " New Litton Micromallc.,,. mtci"rowave r1nge : The ultimate · --FREE-OEMONST~ATION ~ ANYTIME ----.-.11 -•. ...Jll)JIOlk-t1 Who erae but Litton would combine the best of both wortda: the speed or 1he most advanced mtc::rowave oven-you save 75% of your cooking time end yet have the versaliltly ol cdnvenlional cooking. Start your gourmet meals 10 a quick finish In th~ eye-level microwave oven, cook complementary foods In the continuous-cleaning electric oven ... fun foods on the easy·to·clean srriooth ceramic cooktop. ' [E LITTON Litton Microwave Range s Nobody lirlowe 1'tort •bovt mlctoWt'lt coo~Jno !fl'" Llnon. Nobody. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE 90DAYSCASH WITll ollPPllOV I O CRIDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD~ Dlntlwn Costa Mesa -: PMne 54l-1i11 I , . ' ,. • Huntington. Beaeh Fonntafu ·Valley VOL. bl>, NO. 323, -4 SECTtONS, -40 PAGES .... ORANGE COUNT'(, .CA~IFO RNIA ' • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1973 TEN CENTS ~ • Ill Ne eded.· Fuel Allocations CTD 'Ignored' 'r By JACK BROBACK Of Ille o.llY ,llot ,Stt« fl'ftapid!y-expandlng public bus operA- !Ons like lhe Orange · CoW)ly ll'ranalt ,strict ha,ve beert"\eft out. in...,tbe !!()ld allocation of needed fUel, OCTD eraf manager-Gordon· -P e-t·e_u_ ldlng aiid to&y. · . ' -, :'.tleldlfl& said · he ·was confideli~ · weYer; that t~ djgtrlcl .will . get ~!ueltp ·~ ll§Jalt:sro!"lng .I ·-.. _ -~. ' -h bu.s operations in coming months. government to provide funds f o r Currently, the district has been given purchase of additional buses and then permlaion by the government .-gencies not allocate sufficient futl to operate to boffi>W'miiii11BOeeiiiillei' all.Catton them.'' --- in order to operate" for the balance The district wm take delivery of 63 of November. new buse! in February 'and hopes to .!!We -c:urreiltty .,,....te ·only 48 buses-.have.themJn.operalic'!IJ>)tApril -"--• to serve a population of I.I mllllon," These buses Will provide much needed Fielding stated. "No olher major urban service to !he Soulh Coastal aret1 o! area bas so 11tUe public transportation. the county as well aa Mission Viejo, It seems J>ilhlY inconsistent for the El Toro, and Laguna Hills. They will, .,. - that is if the district g~ts the fuel 30,000 gallons of diesel fuel a month. allocation it ls requesting. It had recei11,ed only 20,000 gallons for Obvlou1!ly, Fielding pointed out, such Nov1m1>er operations. a system of tiorrowing ahead will not Borrowing· from December's ekimpy work in the long hm. . allocation of about a,ooo gallons solved The Board ol Directors of !he dislrict the situation temporarily. But uni..., apl>tOl'ed.. a~resolutlon today_oiillining_ gvvemment.qencies provide much high· OCTD's desperate situation to Orange er allocations lor Decembe!' and the fol· County 's congressional delegation and lowinc months, !he lratlalt district will be to various other government agencies. in trouble. · 'IJle district currently uses more than The district•s pr~lernS regarding its Sunday Driving rapid expansion stem · from government edicts basing current fuel supplies on a portion of the amount used one year ago. Fielding pointed out that the district is now using at least 300 percent more fuel than it did in November of im . In the resolution and in contacts with federal and state agencies, the district will point out that it provides moat of the transit service in Orange County. .-~ "' ..... "'It I -:~• ~ I Ban? Emergency Measures Cited as 'Real Possibility' • • • "' ' ~· Dellr 'I"' Sti ff ~ UaJ)py Royal Couple J . ' • Joyce Wlr\h •• -2o=yur-old blis!ness student from; Newport Beach, and Dennis Sheehan, 27, student cotlllCil member from Huntington BellCh leave football stadium with:presents from Orange Coast Col' lege atudent.. Tbey we~ choaen Hqmecoming Queen and Homecom· ing King JIY popular student vote. Hpnored as outstanding alumnus during )"eekend homecoming ce~monies was J~mes Carnett, .occ director of community 'l'rvices and a,19'19, graduate. :census Questions Elicit ' From Wire Servleea WASHINGTON -A nationwide ban on Sunday driving and.olher emergency energy-saving meuures are "very real poaaibilities" because of · the nation's energy crisis, one of President Nixon '• top energy advisers wamed ·Congress today. Charles DiBona, the President's special assistant for· fuel, told a joint ffouse.. Senate hearing that even total com: pliance with current c o n s e r v a t i o n Ruling Seen As Cutback ·For .w.Ifare :.. . ... ·SACRAMENTO .(A.~) -A atate . •!!:. pe~rul&15biy the Reqan'W ministration canitol implement new federal welfare regulations without new State ,Jeglslation, raising the pouibllity of a cutba~k In aid to 500,0oo ' aged, disabled and hllnd recipients. The 3"I Dlslrict state Court or Appeal said Reagan administration of!ldals do not have authority on their own to yield adinlnlstratfon of '!he state ldult welfare progr11111 to tbe federal govern- ment. The federal goverment ill scheduled to take over administration qi !he pro. gram of wellare to 500,000 aged, disabled Ind blind Calilomians Jan. L The state is laced wilh the toes of $600 million in federal Medi.cal aid unless it properly implements the pr~ gram by Jan. l. · C I • t h c • t• Democratic-sponsored legislation to do Omp aln S Y I JZeDS that was defeated m the Legislature ~-in September after Republican Gov. ~ Ronald Reagap's representatives opposed " ··~ t d'1v'1dual. None of the information is it on._grounds it was too costly. ,. A list or city questions attacueu o Reagan promised the change-over jlte current state ceMUS circulating in related back to an individual name." would be accomplished by administrative iJluntington Beach has aroused a number She said the collected informaUon regulation without jeopardizing payments (llJl. citir.en complaints and oonsiderable \\'ould be presented to the city as data to the red~. lndlcating •-·do, such as numbers of The suit WU brought by a number ilOOfUSioo. "~ ., 'Ibe city questions ask residents such senior citizens, or 1 o w • i n co me ol graupe, includlng the califomia League 'Items · as how many dogs, cats, bicycles neighborhoods, which will help city of-of Senior Qtb:enl and the California 'ir motorcycles in !he famlly! Dclals make future 'cledslons a!fecllng Welfare Rl2hts Organization. ' Wliat ls llte family income! Wile<• such situations. Reag.,;;,.lpress office liald lhe ruling did tlte head of .!he bouseltold move '!be fnfonnation on dogs, cab and would be appealed to !he California from! Where does lhe heacl ol lhe bleycl.. wm help tell the city bow Supreme Court. household wort? · elftc:*ive lta~l~aing ~rams are, says. "!Jbe "administratim'i attorneys are , Many ~·have refused ,II> IJllWOI' city.Information officer Bill Reed. sllldylng the ruling to see what it meabs. !he questions and more ,than 100 .. ,.. Iii!" v ..... also denied that census Ar/II' comments we would make now ...llhoned...comi>l•ln\f . ..l!>~il!!..!'!.17)~c faken.-.as~ed .. 11> galher c:oajidential ... wOuld_be_prematm:e,'.~ ... Said Clyde ''.Information 'office. ' , •· lulonllatlon from neighbors. · wlitflall. Reqan's press secretary. ·' 6ne volunteer census tater quit ·her ."If· no me ·is home, we leave a call niO court . sail\ it could not delay 'job because' she said she :was instructed~ J:>act note. U .they 4on't call US: ~n the1 effect of Jta ruling until after measures such as turning do w n thennoatab and a 50-mlle per hour speed limit will not be sufficient. He said that an optimisUc assessment of these -conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies, will provide only 2.3 mlllioo harrela of oil a day while the shortage i.s about 3 million-b~rrels a day. "'Ibis means that we're going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measures!" asked Sen. William ·Proi:· . mire (0-Wis. ). "Yea: air, and soon," DiBona replied. DiBona said that among the "very real possibilities" the Administration was cooiidering was a ban on Sunday driving. He ~1 1that 25 percent of all gasoline used ln private cars is consumed on weekends. Among other proposals being con- sidered are a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft: closing public parks . to automobiles; closing service statioQs Played .With Fh'e . ' . ' ~ Tot Trapped -in ·Blaze ~lr-,..Jn ~;~~ and lielltliy ioday Iller pliytni . .tlh fire. He :was nearly ·trapped in his Hun-· tington Beach home Satuntay morning as names engulfed !he old 'fl'O!ld-lrame 1iugl [ P«J hoUle at 179U Yan Buren St. • • ' JasOa was spved by his ~. TO!p Myers, ,and a ne;ghbor, Paul Jones. 'Ibey hrote !he window in JISCl!'I bedroom and called• !he boy to It .. names l)ll'Ud. lhroiJgltout !he' bopae,..b Principals EY.te , ... • Energy Crisis Principals from all 21 elementarY schools in the Ocean yiew School District in Huntngton Beach will bold an energy crisis conference Tuesday afternoon with district administrators. Principals have been irultructed to work out concrete proposals for -aaving energy In !heir schools •. Tuesday, lhe propooals will be outlined, and guidelines for !he dislrict will be planned. . Resulta from lhe meettnc will be presented to Ocean View trualees at tlieir next llo!lrd meeting. , ~i#,Mbr YJ:.~:-"·d.~~nre"~"'me"' .. ""n.me ropdi ·Wiili 'Jason, WU killed by the fire, but !he hoy suffered no burns and · only minor. smoke inhalation, fi'!'meD laid. '!be !Ire errupted about 10:44 a.m. It .=-rentJy WU atartecf by JU>lll ~.,;1lh matches In !he living room, a to ·fire d epartment in. v..Upton. ll!>lh parents, Tom, and his wife Mary, weie asleep in !heir bedroom. She woke up; nOtlCed the smoke: and ·woke her husbat!d. fil'emen Bille!. 'Ibey lried to leave through their ~ doOf, but !he smolle and names '1'VC.alrud~-so .. lteavy-lhey had-to retreat through lheir bedroom window, lhet tOld !iiemen. ' Then !he,>:...-for .the hoy, and wilh the-help of Jones, )!)"rs smashed his son's bedroom window and was able to caU to the boy in time. Firemen said flames were already shooting out the windows of the thr~ bedroom home when they arrived and by the Ume the fire was over, the muse was 90 percent destroyec;t. Most of the muse was still standing, but !he Inside was gutled, firemen said. T~ghoat Floods At Oceanside Poisoned by Clarps , ' OCEANSIDE (AP) -A llO-foot tugboat SARASOTA, Fla. (UPI) -. A 10.)"ll'-iat f!Ooded wilh only lite wb<tlhouse old boy WU in aitlcal Clll!Clltion SUnday :abowina today In Oceanside Harbor afler · ~ti';!,;i~a~:' aid by;;~ rUnnfui '~ iJfheivy leas. - on weekends, and blue 1aws to close all busineses on Sunday. he said. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Geor~ P. Shultz told a Senate foreign relations subcommittee that the Administration will "have to take some sharp and decisive action" lo cope with the energy shortage. Shultz, who said his "instinct is against" gasoline rationing, said the United States was lucky the crisis had (See EMERGENCY, Page!) * * * Coast Urged To Cutback Electricity By RUDI NIF.Dm:tmtl Of tM ~.ly """ .'!-':' Electricity users on ,the Orange Coast today were urged by the Southern California Edison Company ·to begin voluntary cut~cks in use of power. Jack K. Horton, chairman of Southern California Edison, asked !he 7.5 millioo people in the Edi!Oll network to cut their current use back to 90 percmt of what they used during the same month last year. The 10 percent reduction was recom· mended by the California Public Utilities Commission last year to conserve enerp during the shortage. " :e..Iully_suppor.t_lhis_o.bject.ive," said Horton . He disclosed that Edison had been able to cut its own use ol electricity by 14 percent after evaluating· company operations, ..... Some suggestions for reducing. the con. su mption or energy from a convervation booklet available from the Edison Com· pany on request ar~: -Shield outdoor air conditioning equip- ment from sunlight and keep heating and cooling units clean. ~ean or replace heating and cooling filters regularly and set thennostats to heat or cool Jess than you are ..._ customed to. -set thermostats to off position when away for more than 24 h!;>urs and do not heat rooms not in use. -Close fireplace dampers a n d draperies and use weather stripping to cut down drafts. -Turn off unnecessary lights and try to use more efficient fluorescent lamps wherever possible. -=Operate ·-washer!, dryers a n d dishwashers ·with full load to ~nserve energy. ~n refrigerator doors only when 'to get the !:cunflclcnttai" infom\ltlQn lbli-~ ta~e1" goes to a ne1ghb0r ,February, •19 requested by those who ''from .nelg,hbors it the resident refueed Ull,\,_-..U ~for the. number of persons ·brought the suit against the ad-- •to answer.· " , 1lvin&1'.m" the. home· and the ages, bUt ministration.· _ a "eou>in" of the r'ed tide. llr. John The :.qwner.stJpper, •Richard KDmig McGarry, dln!Clor ol lhe sirUota CouJ1. of La!ll Beach, his wife Bev~rly and ty Health Dopartmeot, banned • ~II lwo crewmen got oftsalely S!'llday,nigl!t. shellfish gathermg iri Sa~Ja waters The ·wg; VIVo, was' VMUed al $160,000. after "'Lonnie Long, 10, of Siesta· Key~ A. stern line was~ overbbard fir st. and two per90l'IS suffered paralytic fouling the rudder ahd propeller, and • ...,,..~ {See''CUTBACKS,..Page .%) ... - ' Beverly Veress, the.. 'state offlcia) in ~'•'alJ," Miss Veress sai~. "\Ve can:t '1111.s would have given tft'e Legislature • charge of the Huntington Bead! census· han an 1ccur8~ -ce?sus if ,':'e tt:on t time to act m the issue after it returned project, says most or · lhe complaints coun( peopJe who .aren t home. to Sacramento in early January. shellfish poisoning as a tesult of eating the ~Ing surf quickly flooded lhe the clarili. · . 'tug :is feet off Cla,mp Del Mar Beach. stem from confution over -what the whole 'She admitteihthe census takers don't 1hing is a6out. • , . emphasize the fact l that residents . may "To start with, tbe . information i.s answer the city questions on a voluntary confidential," ·she says. 1·~ cltf is ~but no .one ie forced or coetctd · " ~ •• an •in-, llllo riijiQtdc ll!t 11111. ' " I 1 ' ' ·'nae. censUs itself' is Still-undefway. · · ' 'She could llO\ estllnate when it will . A.D RESPONSE be flniibed. · • • • . The prtmaty pw;po1e of !he census • '~ - . • ~ . •_To~S. .. lor~. J:ots~ _·D .. j.¥~· • • • • j • _.. ~ M OUS' is to determine the actual population 'T RE EN D of Hunllngt6n Beadl ao It can receive , Marines' Annual · Progra~ to· Stqr:t Tuesda y . . . . .. • Oruge Coast . .. -w "'""" ~ ~"', - -ea.-er J . ~- Fair skies are on the agenda for Tuesday, wlth slightly ·wanner days but colder nights. Highs in the 60s, dipping into the 40s in !he early morning bours. its fair ,,_u.n rtl atate apeclal ta .. s. The 8llllUll Marine Col'pl Reserves Tremendous responae -rented three State o!fldals allow dUes to add up Toys !or Tots drive will start 'l'llet4ay rooms immediately! That wu tbe joyful to 10 ~ o1 lhelr own design at lhe HimUngton Center Mall In Hun- ~me ot lhe events scheduled for !he holidays at ilunllDgton Center include: • INSm E TODA. y C!Y of .the Costa Mesa wohtan who· Iii the ·cemus · to help with future plan-tington Beaclt. •• -Five ebows acheduled Friday at 1 Light catamoTati and surf· • ·• 4 · nd • 30 board m1ntor Hobie Alter ii -- plic.d llils Dally Pilot dassllled ~d: , ninl in !he commlllljty. An ellhl·foot tall bin will be llaUontd •' ' · ·• .l. In lh6 111111 for Ille colltction of new ' CLEAN furn. Nr. ou;. to~ and f:4 med ""'" . • p.m., • p.m., oJ p.m., p.m. 8 v: working on a ntw plaything ftir . p:yq:;-bj tha· Mitchell Marionettes;-. --r11Ctnfatio11aI }un--se-eWs. Stt --- -'llte communily Chrlstmaa trte story on Poge 8 todoy. K 1 t ch• n, washer/dryer. SI • • A -t? ,. _,. = Retired OK. 175 mo. (Phone .am lll .tU·gumen • More t 100 com.-lty aniza· ' N lions wlll alao spotl80!' fpoclal vltles ~ o.) o~ND (UPI) -A lomlly argu-hi the mall from now t1soiJC11 t'brlitmaa j.-.o..A,,.lll!•.Jlnel of advertising may be ment SUnday led to lhe Iota! abootlnc in coonectton wl1ll 'litlt 'l'o1" for Tola 11111 tak., to pt "tremendous response" of Mra. O{a Lee Henclrl%, 1$, •t her · .,benefit. · • i 'for you, too. Dial the clasBlfled ltd home 1n "East oikllncl, polk:o aaid. Marines lrom .COft'41111t r, bl Bat- deportment at 'Uie Tully Pilot on Ille Detecflve Sit· John Shannaltap aald the' lallon, l3rd Mlrlllea, O)llrlne IJlvillM, direct line, MWm, tO get ·4<1-~ -a.....,s wilh her husband, John ata-at tlte Nani ~eapocis Slatkin to help you ftnd out. , Hendrix. IS, Olflcer• ""'° aurchln1 In Seal Beach, wU\ collect tlte toJ3 ------------for Hendltt. and dl!llrlbute !hem where needed. 'lighting aeremony .at ' 1 p.m. followe4 by • """'1't po;eaentad· b)o, lhe Marine Col'J!I band from 'El TON. 41-of Girl ll<oul1 • will pack tlte· mall Dec. I tor their aMual "sins .adt." • ' -A Tayatbon, ·1eatur1n1 Ro n a I d McDonald, Ute Wizard ot: Magic MOUJ>- tain, and a gtlsha girl from Japanese (See TOYS, Pace %1 IMllM 11 L.M. 1m1-I C11fftn111 I ClllllHM !W2 c-iu ,. <,......... , • Dt1Hlll ~ M 1411tlriat ,,.. ' 1""'1tilMMM Ir '~-..C. •. , .,... Ill •tc«W ,. ...,..... ,. I . AM ll....,I ti Mtvltt 11 Mitt.Ml .....,. 4 0r..,.. c-" lt ,..,.., .,.,. ...... ......... .. . l ...... ,_ It ,......,.. ,, ·-. W-Wt ..... 1 ... 11 "'"'·"-. "I • . , I • -. . ' • " Monday, NO'(tmbtr J.-1, ~.,. -- 0.llY Piiot 11•11 l"IHllt ,.., ....... i TOYS ••• Deer Part. will be held Doo. 15. -A 1*tly.U!Hbe ~ fan- tasy vUlap will be --Dee. II by otudoetl ,_ t...i ochool dlllricll. Toys will be coUec:ted . 11 lllo - u.r.up Dee. IO. Wbltabr Mid the Mulnt1 do DOI hive Ille manpower lo fix up broken toys as they did In yean put, ao items dcmled ahould be either new or In good condition. Fro.PepJ CUTBACKS. •• nectSSllJI and pre-belt the oven mly for ball.ed good& requiring preclae oven temperabn at tbe lllrt of tbe coolling cycle . -Oiod< tempen-controla on hot Wiler bealell. Gtnlrally, 110 to lilO degroes are,_,,-for laundry, 110 to 120 ~ ,... balhl. Turn down or off wb«t an v1caUoa. -Don't heat your pool m°"' than you have to. Don't beat It al all In months when you don't use It and when you go away for vacation. Fl'Olll Pqe I . EMERGENCY •.• come now because imported fuel supplies are only 1 small portion of American energy needs. Onward Christinia Soldiers "I hope taUoning will not be nectSSlry," Scliultz Mid. "My lnsHct Is ag.tlnst It ••• RaUoning aounds like such an easy answer but lt raises such serious problems that l question whether It la a real antWer. Nevertheless, the problem Is such that we wilt have to take some sharp and dtclsive action." Rev . Jimmy Combs (at cont.rols) and Rev . Russell Gordon rlde Jumbo to Sunday school class at First Baptist Chu rch of Costa Mesa. The elephant appeared at the church Sunday as a treat for Sunday school youngsters who also got to ride on the pachyderm . ~~-'-------'-~~~~~~~ Chairnian of AEC Urges Dmona also llld the Eutem eaboard and New England could be ilO per .. nt ahort of luel thla winter uni,.. fuel use la drastl..ily reduced. Ht said contingency plans for luel raUonlng are being drawn. . Turn to Atomic Power· DIBona said the nallon'• fuel aupply Is alnlady aboul 17 to 18 perctnl 1hort. Estimates are hued m a continued. Arab petroleum boycott and a nonn 11 winter. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ato mic Energy Commission Chairman Dixie Lee Ray says the nation is \Vasl ing oil and natural gas by using it to produce elec- tricity and mus t inslead !urn more to nuclea r power. "There is. I believe . a gro'>''ing recogni· lion that fossil rue! suppl_ics are limilcd, that nuclear power can be used to pr.r duce elcctricily," Mrs. Ray said Sunday. "Jt Is a waste ID use either natural gas or oil . . . to bum under a boile r to produce electri city when .one has alternatives." Mrs. Ray, the first woman Jo head the AEC, said It was too late for nuclea r power to ease the current energy crisis , "' but that It would be a major source of electricity ln the future. • ••Nuclear plants now supply something approaching S percent of the t lectricity for this country v.•i1h the 37 units in operation. And we're hopeful thai another 21 plants will go on line during the next 12 months ." She gave the assessment In an in- terview with. U.S. NcY:s and \\'orld Report While aclmowledglng delays and in· creased construction costs, Mrs. Ray said she \\'Its op!hnislic the time could be reduced for bringing atomic plant s into operation. "The Pr('sid('nl has suggested that this time be cut from 10 years to six years, and we think it cao be done," she said. "Our present projections can for about 1,000 nuclear power plants to be ope.ratlng by the year 2000. '' She said Iran 's minister of water and power expressed a great interest in nuclear powered plants on a recent visit to the United Statts. "\Vhy, in lrah . v.·ith all the oil you have. are you going lo build nuclear OIAN•I COAST "' DAILY PILOT Tiit 0 •4nD• Co-u OAlll' PllOl .. 11~ w~k!I It con'lll•~l'd "'' '"'"' Pr•u . 11 r><i~li111ec1 t'f IN O•l "lt Cout P~bll,~["0 com111ny l 1pa. r111 ftl!.,, A•t ~v11•11~oe1 • .l11r1<11r ·~"Oonn .. r!iltt. It• (<!\!I ~ln1. N""''Tlflf! $t1;~, Munllllt"'4'1 llt•<~ f M,>ft'A·" V•lltr. l~9~ tMdl, l••f"' S1dd•t ti.1oc• '"" Sin cir..,.n1t/ I•"' Jl>t~ C1111t1•1M _. ••"Olt •ftoe,..I tlfl'*' If pOl!llltMG '1tv•a1 ... IMI 5U'Olll Y,,. TM p lrw.llNI Plll:th'11'111 lll•n1 " It JJ) Wn1 l1r ltrftlr ( .. ll Mn•, (Jll!O•nll , t:ti.. po"'Cr plants to generate electricity?" she inquired. !·le replied, sh~ said, ''. _ . because we consider petro1ewn far too valuable simply to produce heat for making elec- tricity." F otmtain Valley Fountain Plan Eyed by Council Plans for a new fountain to be built in fronl of the Fountain Valley City Hall \\'ill be Wlveiled Tuesday night at the cltY C()uncll meeting. The construction of the fountain will mark the final phase of the dty 911 improvements which were begun two years ago. Ar:chitect Dale Ransom will appear et the 8 p.m. meeting to show councilmen his proposal for the fountain. The civic center complex baa an ex· !sting fOWltaln which is In front of !be community center -the building di rl'ctly behind city hall. Homecoming Queen a He DA VIS (UPI) -The new homecoming queen 11 UC DIY!s is David h1osher. The :ZO.year-old Oaltland rtSldent y,·as crowned and awarded the traditional bouquet of roses on the weekend after beating seven coeds in a campus election. During the campaign, whlch aroused as much interest as some 5t udent president electlom , Moshe.r ran on lhe platform that ".texl.rt" beauty contests for homecoming queens should be prohibited . Prttklent Nimn. said Nov. 7 the 1bortage could reach as high u 17 percent during the crtats this winter. DIBona said tho National Ptlroleum Council's ~ perctDI ahorflia estimates is baaed on a men severe winter and le!S volW1lary cooperation than the Administration thinks it will get. He said adequate petrolewn reserves are on ltaod for use t1lroqb the end of the year. _ But he 11tld estimates ol a 118 perctnt s~rtage during the f\r1\ quarter of next year In the Northeut and along the AUanUc oooch could be realistic II the voluntary program falls and other cub aren't made now. Fountain Valley Will Be Given Special Census _, The state Departmenl ol Fioance will be conductlnf a special ...,.. In Foun- tain Valley beginning Nov. 2t to 1et an accurate population figure for tho city. City officials explained that tho city has grown ,. last that the olflclal 1970 population figure of 19,500 Is no longer aC'CW'ate for computing the city's share of state taxes on gas, liquor and ct11r- ettes. Officials estimate tho cumnl popula· tion to be as hl&h as 55,IJIO which could mean an addlUonal IJ1D1lal Income to tho city ol 1119,7'0. People to take tho ......, 'tn! blllt( '°"'ht for the project. 'lbt worlt will be lor aboul two weeks lrom five to a1z boura a day Including oomt Salltrdaya and evenings. Appllcanta, who must be over 11 years of 1ge, can apply at Ute cll1 hall. Bank ·Chief Missmg BUENOS AIRES (AP) -The rqlonal manacor ol th< Bank or London and South ,..,..er1.. was roported m1ss1nc by bank apokesmen here tod•Y. but th<Y .. Id lh<y -. not sur< he had been lddnaped 8S repor1ed. 'C .. pid!'s Helper Roli •rf N. w,,c1 ,,.......,_ ....i Nin.,.., Joe.~ I. C*'rlev \fkl P'tftiflftt ..... °"'4otOI Mi n"" n.-11 Ko1•1l ·County Clerk to-P.erform Mtirriages?- ~·!I• T'lt....-11 A. MWt,lli111 M...,.iotJ l•r"" C\1rl" H. L..01 l !th1r4 P. No ll "661111111 ,,,..,.,.!no •• , .... T1rrv C1rill1 Wiii 0...,... C-rr El•llf ffallqlw .._. OMce I 117l l11c.h 111111•1"4 M1lll1f Alhlr11u P.0 , 101 7•0. tz••a --UflilM aMCJ11 · m ,.,.,., "- c.1i. #.tM; ,. W.:'-lff Slfffl N""911"1 ... cfro; »l) H hwlfVt ... $011 t:~-.1 * "'°'"' I Ct"'lno l:MI , ........ f7\41 64J-4JJ1 Ci•llf*I ............. f MJ·llft ... --.,... o-i., c:..o ........ 14t-lut c...io'911i. Ith. °"*"91 C..t! ~ ~' N• ...... IWll:i, illwlft*'-o ...,.it! _.,.. .. ...,..,~ ..... ~ N •Wi i JU t# ........ ....-+ ... ..._ .. ~ ...... . ......... ---"' (111!1 ,,...... ~ .-etiit• • ~ .... .......... i ft ww1 U .11 -"llYI trol""'1Y .......... ., ti -""'· • Onng• County Clerk Wllllam E. St ....., mmled lor :12 yea::. aald ... John h31 a new and imallldal title .... u...., woulll be 1111 Mdt ·day around lhc Oranp County t<IUrthouse -lor lllCh muTilgol If the ...,.17 llolrd loday -"Cupid's little h<lper." ~~U:.: ~·their ._ on Ile got It lrom his stall wlMn )llord lhe .....,. l1oor 11111 we'll be ~ got around that St Jofln •i ll Id ....,1y le llWT)' them OD 1 ldpo. Door, ' supervlaon Tue.day lor pennllllocl to be .. Id. perform marriage cmmonl.. that "ll'U be jull lib ..... up 111 llomsl," hitherto have been limited to Judget. C.'Ommmlod an 111111Md ll4e. St John Will tell the board that a St Jolin lb MUI Iha\ lllt 11<111 '10 ""' 1•• enacted thl• yeor ai.oda ceremGll)' will be ae ._ dlp!Qed er the privilege or perlonnlnc civil "'"" ltpl than ti.t petlwmtd bJ ,..... rlage ctremonlet to the "°'"11)' clark Wlto oltao wblp tllreuCll lllo <WI r..,. and d,.lgnated m1mben ol hil 111111. d1l'lnl 1 hlneh -or "'-St John atalel Ille prlvll... wlU be ...nnmt ..,.,.,..,ta. a GodlOltd to Ille dcizen or. ao aiup1,. 'Jbe COltr1IJ elert -,.;.,... lodl7 who e1•ery ,.,.k aro ''lrtually compelled ol uu 1IDOllldal Cllllee lhlp ijlJt et to tour the Sonia Ana C.'01llVioule loKlr1( "QlpN'a Utile llttpor." for a Judi• w1n1og or able 111 ,.,.,. m "I pnler wllll lllt bttr4 ftli,bl 4edlrt the brief ..,..,_,. me lo be -the CllllllJ'I ~ St Jobn. a dovout Catholic who has ol IMITi-," SI. .Jolin dlllUl"'lled. I It . . " • Eight Killed 2 ·Cars Explode in Acciµerit BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Eight person. were lcllled and two oerlotllly Injured Sunday evening at a darkened country Intersection 1111ar here In a ftery two-vehicle crash. • The California Highway Patrol said today a van driven by Le· land Stonebarger, 63, Bakersfield, was northbound on Cottonwood Road when he apparently ran a stop sl~n and struck a 1962 model eedan carrying nine persons. Both vehicles exploded. Stonebarger. alone ln his van, was killed. Sm~y Skies P·redicted The first significant rainstorm since spring dropped nea rl y nn Inch or rain · oo the Oran...ce Coast over !he weekend and SParkcd dozens. of minor accid ents, se\'ernl power failur es and numerous other minor irritations. Killed in the auto were the driver, Walter Llewellyn, 30; his step. daughter, Gene Edwards, 7; two sons, Matthew, t)lree weeks, and John, 13 months; Llewellyn's brother. Roger Llewellyn, 22; Roger's wife, Sharon, 18, and their daughter, Michelle, one month. In critical condition were \Valter l~leweltyn's wife, Jenene, 28 , and a son, Gregory, 2. All the ·uewellyns were-from Bakersfield. Handicapped Youngsters May Get Extended Year The U.S. \Veather service is predicling n1ostly sunf!Y duy s for the rest of !he week including the Thanksgiving holiday_ Some scattered clouds may move in \Vednesdny evening, but they shou1dn't ; keep the sun from heating things up 1 to the 70s, the weat herm an says. ; The Orange County Harbor Depart~ I ment said today its gauges recorded 0.84 or an inch of ra in between Friday j evening. and early Sunday morning. ) Tt!e 78 handicapped and retarded students in the Ocean Vie\\' School . DI.strict ma y begin an extended school year. ,,·ith classes ending July 31. instead of in June, if di.strict trustees approve tonight. According to a di strict spokesman, these special education children require repetition and longer periods of in- struction, and would benefit by the ex· tended school year. The apectal education school, housed at Lark View School in Huntington Beach, will acmnmodate all 78 children by the time a new addition is completed in. tho aprinf. Presently, some of ·the children are at Glen View School. Special education chlldren lltdude tho trainable mentally retarded (TMR), th< deef·bllnd, tho multl·handicapped, and tho prHChool aphasic. Surveys were sent to the 71 familles involved, asking whether the extended . ~chool year \\'Onld be preferable. Sixty families responded with 42 indicating they y,·ould prefer the new schedule. Eight families indicated their children \Vould not attend the additional 31 days. but school ofJlclats erplalned that since ihele children's schedule$ are individual, this would not ~Uy affect their educa· tion. - The school woold be closed on July 4 and 5, and durlnc the mooth ol August. Teacben at tho -wwld be emplo)'!d on an ll·maoth cootract. 'lbt d~trict apotmnan said both teachers and adm!nlltntive staff at tbe school are -rtlng tho m.nded- schedule. No additional cort will reault lor the district with tho exlended year, Ille apokearnan added. Trusletl will act on the propoaal tonight at tho~ regular meeting scltedul· ed for· 7:30 p.m., in district offices, 7972 Warner Ave . The storm brought the season's tot al to 0.87 inches. sli!I far behind lhe same ! date last year \\'hen 3.2 inches had 1 fall en. ·~ The Southern California Edison com~1 pany reported scattered power lailures , all over the county. The rain caused.J some lines to short out. ~ Several circuits also failed , blacking out portions of San Juan Capistrano • saturday night · and port ol Fountain Valley and !lUDtington Beach OD Friday. Ediaoo officials reported . Moot ol the trouble wu cleared up within an hour . The rain ciouda ""'" blown away early Sunday by a chill wind that wu clocked at nearly 40 knota at tho Harbor Department . ol!lcei In Newport Bead! du<ilt( oome porll ol the day. · _ A Harbor Patrol official said ~t sail· on 1tayed In tho~ docks during lhe cool, windy day and the few who ventured out didn't get i.n any serloUs troU.ble. Sevt!!fal small sailboats capsized but were rlghled by their damp, otherwise unhurt crews, the patrol spoke11man said. Mero-wave ovens make cooD1g a br'eze! ' .Dutploks any pot.skillet. broiler. pan or •n FL.4.Sfl! HELP BEAT THE ENERGY CRISIS r/llCROWAVEOVENS USEONLY10% AS MUCH ENERGY TO COOK YOUR MEALS Litton's nev" \•1orld of microwave cooking is a bright new world. Where gourmet meals can be cooked quickly in cool comlort - wilh max imum convenience and minimum cleanup. -.,#. ~ _,, NlwllttOn MICromaticTlll microwave range: • TM uttlmate . • Who else but Litton wo uld combine lhe best of both workSa: lht speed of the most advanced microwave oven-you save 75% of you r cooking time and yet Hlvt the versatility of conventional cooking . 811rt your gourme t meals to a quick finish In the tye.ltvtl microwave oven, cook complamenta,Y foodt In the contlnuous·cleenlng eleclrlc oven ..• fun foods on the easy·lo .. c1ean smooth ceramic cooklop. ~ THANKSGMNG ·SPECIAL! *FREE 11 PC. MICROWAVE COOKWARE KIT (\~'1_~ @...~ _, ~~--'-: ~l~- i . "FREE COOKBOOK MIC:AOWAVF. COOKING 'i.···· ~-1,1~ . • - h ,.,. ~ .. ' . ' . -·. ~. •·· "' ll! !UN An exciting new world of MICROWAVE COOKING from Litton -168 pages -300 recipes. S6.95 va lue. Everything lrom s1mple dishes to gpurmet entrees. The most comprehensive cookbook of its kind anywhere. •BOTH WITH THE PURCHASE OF EITHER LITTON MICROWAVE UNIT SHOWN HERE. Microwave cooking comes of age with the L11ton Mlnutemaste,. countertop microwave ovens l it1Q.n provides more in lhe most aavanced cooking appliances today -for the many cooks in you . M1C•OWIVtl t0uf\10rt0P OVtlr\I from s349a Come in for 1 dtmon1trat1on of the difference Litton m1ke1 . • ·~FREE DEMONSlRATTON -ANYTtlME .lE LITTON µtt<M Microwave Ranges Nt!M47 kttoWt "ION lbOUt fl'llCt•M Ctolllflt 111111 ll~Oll. Hobedy. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEW!fERE • 90-DA VS CASH WITH APPllOVl!D CREDIT ~ r-,_-. ....:_ .,. I - ~_.J 1115 llWPOIT BLVD., . \ ll111n1 Ctsta Mesi-PMn 541.7791 ' ' I I I/ ' . .. ' • • • • • < • • .. .. • • •• 1 J • ' ' , l i: , j ~ ' ' I ' • ' . ' c I· r • I l. '· • • ·--...... • f)4onday, Nowrnbfr t~. 11>7' H DAILY PILOT 3 Alternatives-Proposed for Coast Commission · By CANDACE PEARSON 01 ti.. O.llY Plltt Steff A plea for legislative action to allow the use of. alternalet pl the State and Sou!h Coast Regional Coastal Com· missions· was made today by Melvin Lane, chairman of lhe state panel. "I don't think they'll have eOOU1b commission hours to do both planning and permits,'' Lane safd today in Los Angeles. He was testifying at a hearing of tlie Assembly Select Committee on ooutal zone reaourctS, chaired by Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (!).Beverly Hills). In tile Los Angeles County Board o! SUpervlaors bearing room. , The committee Is atudylng the effects of the 1&'12 coattal zone act, bow tile commissions it.created are working and what funding may be needed. Lane propoOed that at·leest the county· supervisors and city offici.als on the· two comml!Slons he able to nominate al· temaUves. · Under Lane's suggeolioa, a supe<Vlsor could appoint a county staff merri>er "' replace him during """"' .... ions. A city councilman would appoint another member of a city council. All nominations would have I<> be rl_ltified by the same group which selected tho original commissioner. The Soulh Coast Commission whjcb covers Orange and Los Angeles COtmties have been the busiest o! lbe at. regional panels. "I Ullnk It's urgent that aomethlng be done to increase comml$siOD time tD aUow for planning." Lane said. He added Uiat Uie system bas been tried on a similar ·organtzauon, the San Franci!IOO Bay Conservation an d Development Commialon. Two suggestions to alleviate the work _load pf llJll Soutb Qoast'a Commission have also been made.· · South Coast Commissioner ~ Caspers of Newport Beach wants Orange County to have Its own coaatal com· mlsslon.· · Commissioner -.i Rooney of Hun· tingron Beach has •OW.Sled tl\41 Uie U.member commission split Into• two committees when consldei:ing permits and come together tor planning. · Lane said he didn't like lhooe Jdeas bc(ause, "The two counties need to lillve coorillnalecf plaiUiliig and ·the hest education ef planning Is the proceulng of the permits," . Lane also told the committee that the commissions wW need one l)llllton dollars more addli!onal funds this year and at least m: mlllim dollars .... , Uie next Uiree yeara. Unless that money comes from Uie federal government, where expected CWlds have been-impounded-by. President Nixon, it will have to come from the state, Lane Said.- Supreme Court Won't See It Nude Bar lssue Nixed . - .. • Football Fan Secretary of State Henry Kissinger chats with Nancy 1'1aGinnes, a frequent companion, as they attend Washington Redskin·Ballimore Colt football game. Kissinger recently returned from 12 days of round-the-world diplomacy in Middle East and China, ' ~ Presiderit Slaps ; GI 'By Mistake' Sonets Woo IGng Faisal; From Wire SerVlces " WASHINGTON -'(he U.S. Supreme CoW't refused today to take a second look at California regulatiOns prOhibiting nude dancing and other sex~riented entertainment in bars. The action came in the form o[ a brief order, without opinion. On Nov. 5, 1972, the court upheld the regulations bµt Justice William H. Rehnquist's opinion noted that con· stitutional problems could arise in specilic cases. In the request for reconsideration, a night.club owner, Paul A. I.Uchter & Associates, Inc., doing business as the Body Shop, sued in San Diego county Superior Court for a ruling. that "the specific,, and invariable nude dance perfonnances" that take place , in the club are riot oti6cene under tb~ regula· tlon.s. A movie of the dances ac· companied the papers filtd. But the court said it wU without jurisdidion becauSe or a· section of the California Business COde which gives sole power to the Department of Alcoholic Beverage O>ntrol. Higher state courts denied review. At the time of the Supreme Court's initial ruling, it was expected that the next test would come when a club Officer Sights 'DFO'-Not From Out-er .'flniverse ~ Wife Explaim Moscow Visit in Futitre? k , •. j '• ~~:=~=~ ~~~ ~~ ] . ORLANDO, Fla. (UPll -Presidtat -BEIRtrr (UPf) -The Be Ir u t ; eneliiiies of tbe Arabe and Moslems. · -.. n-". ·on _..., today, oot,JliJ scale 'Nlson lightly s!llP!>id .an A1r Force . · ..,.. • .,.. • ..,,.., · + master sergeant :on tbe 'cbeei: 'Slturday newspaper Al\ Nabar said tOday 1eCret Prekj repdrts speculated be wureftecttve · • wq·Clfti;fOID811hak. ' '' ~J" '''"'" I night, and the-man's wife called it contacts are under way aimed at In inOuendng Egyptian Presldeol Anwar · · 'Police flllmcfthe 'Creator's "ipoce ship" • a gesture el friendlhip. establlshhig diplomatic relations between . Sadat "' expel 15,000 Soviet, inilitary ~=Y 01a1:11:ru~'~e ~::: J The incldeot occurred at McCoy Alt Saudi Arabia ai.d Uie Soviet Union. d •--fro E · Jul ' F n. · N t ~ a v~. m gypt m y, 1972. on routine patrol. orce ueo.se &S axon was re Ul'DJ ~. Jt· id"Kin F · I ted ... · M bil Ara il • from an hour-long ne~·s .conference a . sa . ~ aisa accep in pnn-eanw e, . b o· producers vo:'ed Officer Tom Haight said he noticed Disney World. c1ple" ari'~v1tation to, visit Mosco'.1". today~ letup m the oil embargo against a light hovering no more than 15 feet ~ M. Sgt Edward Kleizo and his son An , Nahar attributed the report to the United States and tightened Uie off the 'ground and sl<>pped I<> clie<:k , were among a group of about IO persons . t1infonned cliplomaUc sourctS" and car-squeeJt; 00 Japan. it oaf. · · i on hand to see the President off. Ac-riecl it under a front page banner :f>e!P1te favored ~tatment by the He found a pair of plastic bags filled ~abs, otbe~ countries drastically cut with helium hovering at the· end of j,. NIXON ON WATERGATE • lieadllne. -c-------oil consumptlOll, • a tri' g A fiaablight had, been' ttached ... · ' • Aral>. Press commentatora treated the Japan mounted ~ diplomaUc. offensive to s J:. · bottilm ct Uie iv: small ~ RECOVERY DRlV.E, P•Vo 4 , report with reserve in vielf of King to get more Arab oil and prevent serious "bolloons." oi '°rdlng to roportel'I with the President, ' Falaal's tong-standing hostility to Soviet disruption .01 Its economy, but Ara~ The oddity was brought I<> the staUon ~ Nlxm. approached Kleizo and had the influence in the Middle East. This has d!ploma~ msis~ Japan must break and now serves as a conversation piece. d1ptoma.tic relations with Israel to be I following exchange: been based largely on tbe rejecUon by exempted from the oil boycott. • "m you Uie boy'i • molher or King Faisal -Uie _!!lain spiritual leader "Japan cannot ""'"'"•mili'tarlly, so _'. grandinother'!'' ---. .......-. ~ .. I':! the second thing to do is to cut rela"·ns "neltller," Uie man replied. E1GYPT PUSHES FOR PEACE -with Israel," said Saudi Arabian oil "Of course pot ," Nison said and lightly 'niinister Sheikh Ahmed slapped the man's faace. TALKS NOW, Pall" 4 Z. Yamani, in Vienna for a meeting of the Organization • 'Ihe incldent was interpreted by some of the Jslamlc world -of cOmmunism's of Petroleum Exporting co u n t r e i s '" as an indication of anger on the atheistic concepts, the commentators (OPEC). ~ Presklent's part, but according to the said. Yamani said he saw no chance for !• sergeant's wife, K!eizo has no such feel· Russia was the ftrst country in the a revision of the Arab nations' stand r ings. • WQl'ld I<> recognize the kingdom of Saudi !<>wards the United States. "I don't know bow µtey got that ," Arabia in 1926, but Saudi Arabia has "We don't see any reason for such 1 she said. never established diplomatic relations .a change ao far," he said. "But we "He just mistook him because the with any Communist state. . hope the United States will increase light was so bad. It was blinding the King Faisal has often stated that ·~forts for a peace settlement in the Pltrlident's eyes. Zionism and comiiiunism were the m&in Middle East." ' .. Wood Gatherers Briefed forest Service Tells Problems of Efforts By WIWAM flC!IRElllER · triml'lOid for Uieir $5 and are pretiy • Generally' spee°king the line for ill~ °'"" DlllJl'nil ~. • • ia~~.11 wood collectll'lg is $50. But Smart satd, For Uie nominal t.e .of 15, Orange : •. ~· acknowledged Uiat Uie U.S. "Fines dotl~ gro,.·new trees." , Countians can stockpile aD .'Uie potenlla). DOPir!o\eat of Agriculture Is plannil)g Smart sald '.Ule only l<>ols needed I<> energy Uiey C¥ll carry -firewood 'from l<>#.lu Its regulations on wood collect!Jig "J&ther.'lhe',wood are cutting and pruning Cleveland NaUonll! Fores~ •• :· • in D8tj9oal forests and possibly drop implements, jkWes and. a lot of stamina. But according tO Ii top ~ .. S. Forest_ tbe ,;f,.._in jome areas making wood He~~~~ saw, rip saw or double- Service official in Santa Ana. there may ga~ free of charge. ~ bladed tuJ\ber ax are the ~st tools be a hitch to auch an e!?ergy conservation • ~uC I think they will leave enough to use. ,_ . Man Comes Back, Leaps Off Span SAN DIEGO (AP) -When officers spotted John J, . Condon, 45, walking on Uie Coronado Bay Bridge, where loot traffic iJ forbidden, they escorted him to a bus depot. Two hours later SUnday morning a man leaped from the highest point of Uie bridge, 21-0 feet above Uie bay, as Officers nWMid to save him. It was 'Condon. ' ' effort. latitude (or us to continue charging in . SmarJ .. adVJsed Orange CounUans who "In U)e fint place, it's only legal most cases" Smart said. want a g~ supply of wood for the · to gather dead or fallen timber," Aid "The iaulme given individual distr.cts months ahelid· to go to another national lleaource Officer Bob Smart. "In the Is best ill tr led Ui f 1 pretervt'Where the fallen wood ls more • ·~ pla"!', you have to find a :W~ taaa and ~.W., ~d:.1a•:;,.~a~0M:; abondaht lll<J. •. not wute time huntinc aource and ID _the' t!llrd )llaee, !Here I and. cilt tree ' a.i1atmas tlee$.1f iliev~ infl"'elanll ..... tlonaLForest. '" ~,. lllinost .-to be 'foill'lil tn•oar part illd tt'bite !hey'abe llnecf" he said ,., .• ..,:'.The.t_.,... a.r)!y~ ~ the of Cleveland Natloqal Forest." • · San Bernardino Natlooal -around Smart aaid tbre Is a procedure wood· Free petmlts lonnerly were available Big Bear and Lake Arrowheod," Smart gatben!rs must 10 lhroQgb before they mly to resldenls of national forests said, "There are big trees up tben!." are allowed to go to Uie bills and and Smart said In Orange <:<iunty all lie said permits have to be obtalneil pick uP Uieir winter IQPply. , • l b•I Uie moot desUtute Cleveland National from ranger olflces In Uiat district before "First Uiey bave to go out and pinpoint Forest residents ·w:ere charged Uie 15 wood collecting Is legal. their wood source on a map and show 100• . ' - . I In anolher development· related to It to ua so wo don't have ~PJ•' coming "The applleatlon of 1 ... varies from firewood , the Clllifornla Agriculture In from 100 different dlrechOns," Smart district I<> district depending on the Department warned consumera Uiat said Individual altuatlon," Smart said; '.'We many UlllClU]luloos wood aellera are sell· Arter Uie wood Is iocated, Uie govern-*have ao lltOe wood here Uiat "" 1Jave Ing "•t·measured" cords of wood. moot charges a 15 tee that Uieoretically fo charge f~ In all but Uie mm ',The department aalcl . a cord should entitles Uie individual I<> haul away up indlaent eases. , measure four feet wide, four feet high • to two .cords · of wood -about lour Smart said wood·p!tiering , hu been and eight feel loot In a neat stack. pickup trucks full. Smart says it's enough a problem lnlhc put bec$use of aome A "tier" of wood, wblch Is commonly ,. for ' a year or more ln Uie average people's Inability to tell the dlflerence advertlaed, Is only part of a c0rd, Uie · bome. betl'een live and dead flea, · , • department werned. "The problem ts tl)at Cleveland Na· "Du!lng Uie winter, W11en aome trees · 'Wood sellera wbo deliberately sell !ioqal Foreat ls mootiy acrub and brulb have no leaves, Uiey loOk dead and cords that are too amall to unsuapecting land Uiere Is almoot no• wood to be people proceed to cut · Uiem down," buyers are subject to lln.s up to l500 found on Uie ground," Smari aald. "Mool Smart said. "Then we have to fine and sis monllls In Jail, Uie department of Uiese people end up . wllh only a Uiem." said. · • I • r owner's liquor license was actually lifted because or em·ployment of topless or bottomless waitresses or other alleged violation of i)le regulations. In other actions today : • -Th.e court rejected Missouri's search for a loophole in the high court's deci sion granting women the right to abortions during the first six. months of pregnancy . The court affirmed a three-judge district court's decision de c 1 a' r i u g MiS90uri abortion laws unconstitutional. The lower court based its decision on the Supreme Court ruling last January that allowed states to place sumtantial restrictions on abortion only during last three months of pregnancy. -'Ibe court declined to hear arguments by policewomen claiming they are d.enied an equal chance at promotions. The high court, over the objections ct Justices WWiam o. Dooglas a n d Willlam J. Brennan Jr., let stand a New York State Court of Appeals decision rejecting the class action challenge to Nassau County police pro- motion policies. . . ' The policewomen argued that the police department and county civil service commiMions d i s c r i m i n a t e against women by maintaining a two· track promotion system segregated by sex. -The court agreed to coosidir fot :a. second time whether federal courts may reach into the suburbs to desegregate predominantly black inner city schools. The court agreed to review a federal appeals court ruling that the only con- stitutional way to · desegregate Detroit · city schools was to i n c I u d c predominantly white suburban school systems in any desegregation,plan. The Issue of crossing established.school district and county lines in pursuit of school desegregation deadlocked .. the court 4-4 last term. No precedent is established by tie votes. $15,000 In Damages Elderly County Woman Di-es in Santa Ana Fire A 63-year~ld woman died today when fU"e of wiexplained origin raced. through a Santa Ana apartment unit. d~~f ci:.1/'~J ~N~; Foran, a resident of one of the d--~in >Units iA ""'· f'111'J!ll'I-Qc· cuparftS ,6f the ollier tmits~ ·were riot injured. • illyestiptars theorue tbe 6:30 a.rn. Agents Arrest Two County Men Federal agents arrested two Anaheim men Friday night and seized' more than $125,000 worth of stolen merchandise from a warehouse in Orange, lnclUding trailer loads of copper, stoves, fertilizer and dog food. The goods had been stolen during the past two weeks from various truck sl<>ps in Onatario and Los Angeles and all of Uie mercbandlse was dettined for out of state delivery. Booked on suspicion of federal the.ft from interstate shipment were Patrick L.oMurphy, 35, operator of Best Trucking Co. of Santa Ana, and an employe, Robert L. Tucker, 30. FBI agents said they made the arrests and found the stolen goods at Uie trucking company's warehouse in Orange. 1be merchandise included four 40-foot trailer loads of copper, electrical wire, commercial cooking s to v e s , fertilizer. metal castings and 21 tons of boxed dog food. \ blaze was touched ofl by careless smok· ing, but Uie actual cauae ha. liot yet been determined. · w .. Fire Chief Eugene Jlldd · said -Mrs. Foran was found dead inside her bnrned·' out apartment after firemen had put OtJ~ the blaze. , ' , An off-duty fireman from Orange who first spotted the fire was driven back by the intense beat when be tried to enter the apartment to see if anyone was inside, according to Judd. Two High.way Patrot officers who tried to give ·their assistance also were lhe fll'e. Total property damage was opening the apartment. · · Judd said the three other apartment units received only slight damage in prevented by Uie smoke and fir• from estimated at '15,000. · Found: Liz' Rare Shihtzu -~ ' DEL MAR (AP) -Actress Elizabeth Taylor was reunited to- day with her pet dog, a rare shlhtzu named Daisy Mae. After the little black and white dog was Jost on the beach Stmday. Miss Taylor offered a $500 reward through Uie Del Mar Fire Deport. ment. A flte dispatcher said a couple found Uie dog. She has checked out o! nearby Scripps Clinic after a medical checkup. Over the river •nd through th• woH1 for ' n.,. •• ,,.,i"' dh1n•r •t Gr•11dmother'1 • , • Kir1te11, with ribbon• in her h•it, he1 cho1en 1 Dorita• cfret1 ind K•r•11 it we•rin9 • dre11 by Fi1~hel. lhe Ch1llm•n 9irl1 •ft111d Liblltty Chri.+ian School 1 and they •t• th, d•1uJhftir1 of Mr. & Mr1. Rob1rt Ch1llm1n, Hu11Hn9ton H•rbour. Tli1 dr.1111 •r• ..,.11.i.1 ••• ., Jh1J1d~lloon _,ltd., '111 N1wpotf'l1•cli, ;-" ,; ~ Hunti119toft Harbour ind <;>rang• • • P.uMtOM llU.NO . .....,.,. ............ TOWN & COUNTaY ~ CTI•i......, HUttTfffeTOM MA•IQUR 1714) ........ ' • • 4 1 DAILY PILOT I ' • \ / ~··., ' -11o:"'.'I . " I ' :.~·. '...:W. ' ;;:r:~: .. :\;-.ft. ' . . -~ .. :1 ' . I ". • ~ --'-~ •:Good Place I . "F 01· a Visit \ , !!LACES TO REMEMBER: Aa ,you 1 motor up the entrance drive, It would : be easy to convince your1e1r that this , is ,much like any other ordinary elemen. t tary school campus in Orange c.ounty. I 111e playground is off there to the ~·right; two mu!U-colored sealJ, balancing , balls on their nooes, guard it. There ; is a wide expanse of grass, the usual \ swings and teeter-totters, and a fake ~ log lbat lhe kids cao 'crawl through. · The main building ·is flagstone, gW.. ~and aluminum -trim. -Two-yellow school- • buses are parked at the entrance, black . lettering on the sKles identifying them • as Santa Ana Unified School Dislrict. t A pretty blade woman attired in slacks 1' and an orange windb~aker fus.fes around the bus. She is obviously the ' driver who is preparing for anival of lhe sdlool children. ABRUPTLY, mE FRONT door of the . building swings open and you are greeted wilh lhe bappy, laughing screeches of two girls, racing each other to lhe school bus door. "I won, I won, I get in first ," one girl cries loudly as ~e reaches the bus. "Now, now, we must be careful," the pretty bus driver admonishes. "We • could have had a terrible crash right .. here if you both arrived at the same time." She was scolding the girls a bit. But nol hmbly. FOR THIS_ WAS nol a school, these were not Qrdinary kids and this had not been an ordinary race to the school bus like the scene you might witness near any of our campuses on a sunny afternoon when the ta.st bell rang. These young girls. maybe 10 or 11 years old, had raced to their schOOJ bus in wheeh..ilairs. The bus driver awarded the winner by lowering the rear lift, placing her wheelchair upon it, and motoring her up into the bus interior first. All . the time, the bus driver was laughing with the girls and smiling. Until she closed them in that bus with no seats and when the kids could no longer see her. Then her face expressed the seriousness of it all. She drove away. OTIIERS CAME TO replace them. There ;.was much coming and going aroWld · that building. Not all of them were kids. The woman pushed the grey- haired gentlemen in his wheelchair ; he held his crutches upright as she pushed, like two proud banners. Two elderly women drove up in a little Volvo. Both got out and slowly walked inside. There was the kid in the yellow baseball cap, numing, his mother grinily following. His right arm was held kiod of funny. There was, through the a!ternoon, a constant ebb and flow of humanity into the building of flagslone and glass. And all of those people had a good reason for visiting there. FOR mE SIGN out front by lhe drive, by lhe playground guarded by tWo colorful seals, proclaimed this place the Easter Seal Society for Qippled Children and Adults of Orange County, 1800 E. LaVeta St., in Orange. Jt .was a good place to visit on a sunny afternoon. !I reminded you bow lucky you are. • r 7 Lon Nol . Un hu rt .in ·Bombing of Palace -PHNOM PENH (UPI) - A cambodlan air loree na fighter-bomber returning from a war mission dropped loor bombs on lhe presldenUal palace In. P!nom . hnh today. killing l!ld lniuria&'. • polaoe iesldents ~ leaving Prtsld«ll LlinNoltmllonnecl. Fir.rt -aaid ,i least 8iree - -...... ldlled·ml 10 odlen - 00 the -ol tt>e '.l\amcar Mon palace LON NOL grotmds. . Nixon Restiiig ·After Bugging Recovery Try KEY Bf SCA YNE , Fla. (UP!) -Presi· dent Nixon paused today in his to rest and assess the momentwn after a whirlwind week of appeals for ac- ceptaiia! by. Caigress, the p~l!lic and the press of evidence he says will clear him ol suspicion. Official 11011rCe1 aald the c1o1e11 of lhe 250-pound bombs !ell wllhin 100 yards of Lan Nol, who was in · tu villa on the palace .,.wx1s at the lime of the raid . . EYE W111'lESS~ oaid the aingle- e!111ine plane made two _.. OYfJt lhe palace, apparently cat c b I ng defenders off guard. 'Ibey u1d Ibero -DO retum flJ'O ·fnlm 1116 .lingle anUalrciiilC iUn allOtt llO-yards-trom the palace. It was the 5eCOOd such alr raid on the palace .in nine months. ~t MaJcll Spanisli "Bank . ' Van ·HelJ:.f.Jp , MADRID (AP ) -'A group of men armed with pistols and sul> machine gtDlS held up a bank van and carried off $474,000, police sources said today. It was descrilr ed as the biggest holdup in the city's hlstory. Police sources said the gunmen escaped after wounding one of the guards inside the van. The guards • said the robbers were young and "had a foreign look." 17, 47 persona were killed and llO WOWlded when a Tl8 piloted by the ICl>if>.law of exlled Prince Ii-Slhanook miss- ed the palace ileel! but hit a crowded refucee setUement ancf a aoldJen• bar- racks. Miljtary SOW'C""! Jdenljlled the pilot of t\>daY'• attack u u, Pech um Koon, a vtleran Dier who bad taken off earlier 'to bll rebel pooillonll in Kcimpong Speu Provlhce, centered 30 miles southwest lhe· capital. w11ne'i8.s said lhe first bomb s!iil\iiieil into ihe palace reception ball, where al -two persons died 8DCI tbrea .. . ' were wounded. A second bomb struck an emplY house. Lon Nol was in his reoldesJce: aboul 100 flrda away, across !ht stre<t !rom the rtetptlon ball, the wt.....,.. said. . . mE U.S. EMBASSY Is only about lwo blocks trvm lhe polai:e. Guards clooed of! streets leadinl to tho palace, ~ .._ u1d American olficlals we<e not aJ!Owed lhl)lUgb the roadblocks. A C'.ambodlan pvemrueot emptoye wbo -li.,.~abool-400 arda from lhe palace grounds said be l!l'W the ~ swoop down twice and heard two ex- plosions. Egypti~,ns Push I . . ' For Peace "·Talks By U•Hed ~ !Jlltrnal1onal· • EiYJ>t said today it favors the im- mediate convening .of an Arab-l&nteli peace conference under United Nations - auspices without waiting for the outcome of Israeli 'election• · et lhe end -of December. , The stateinenl came from 'Egyptian government ,spokesman Abmed Anis in C&iro aa Jsraeli l!ld Egyptian Grocers met for lhe fiflh lime today on lhe Oaily-Suei in what 1could be the final phaOe .of lheir-Middle East cea..,.iire ·negotiations. • "l saw pert ol 'lhe palace -the soUthcrU comer -was half broken," be ll!lid. ''The roof !ell down. Bricks were all o\.er the giouiid. Loo 'NOi'• house was not hJt at all." Military so~s 1&ld the '1'2S· was part of a two.plane mission against in· surgent poott;on in ~ Speu. '.'111er said '"' returning to Pochentong Airport here, u. Um Kuon.allowed his wingman to land first. He then pulled out or lhe· landing patlern and. new lo atlack the palace aboUt-seven-miles-away. The sources said there Vlere no other planes in lhe air at lhat time. mE PRESIDENT took lhe time out at his home here after drawing a highly sympathetic crowd estimated at about 20,000 during a campaign-style visit Sun· day to Maoon, Ga., and gelting wbat one aide described as a "tremendous reaction '' to the defense Nixon offered Saturday night in a nationally televised news cmference. Indications were that Nixon would .go on with his intensely personal bi~ to rebound from Watergate, with the next move coming Tuesday when be scheduled a trip to Memphis, Tenn., for a talk with Republican governors aneeUng there. Sky lnb Trip Cut Short If Repair Unsuccessful . ANIS WAS'" ASKED at a news con- ference about the Jira.ell 1uggesUon the ,projecled .cooference, proV!ded ' for in the U.N. Security ~Colplcil's Middle East cease-ftre ·resolution of Qct •. 22. be pot off until after die 'l,i:aeli generpl eleo· tions. Anis replied: "The Security Coundl • reoolutioo stipulates a peaoe coole~ be oonvened lminedtalely. This is $0methipg_tbM QOOcems the whole world "We've got to • take 'em on," the W111te House oner o1 Sfafl, AJennder M. Haig Jr., told reporters traveling with the Presidnt in referring to critics d. Nixon. Presidential aides indicated t h a t ftirther sleps intended to help restore Nixon 's O"edibility migbl be decided to- day at meetings between the President and some of his top advisers, including Haig, White Hoose Coonselor Melvin R. Laird and Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. NIXON FOCUSED on national defense ·and did oot mention Watergate during a 20-minute spoedi in Maoon SUnday where he took part in ceremonies mart· ing the 90th birthdtY ~ fGnJ>er Rep. Carl M. Vinson, (D.-Ga.), lmgtime chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and the IOOtb annivenary of Mercer University's law school. In Saturday's. news conference, Nixon was questioned almost exc111Si.vely about Watergate and vigorously proclaimed time and time again that he was innocent of any wrongdoing in cmnection with the bugging scandal or any related ac- tivities. ..J SPACE CENTER, Houslon (AP) - Space officials say that if a spac.: s~tion cooling system cannot be revitalized, lhe Skyla,l>. 3 astronauts' planned record flight' might have to be cut short. Gerald P. Garr, William R Pogue and Edward G. Gib5ol! broughl from earth a repair kit to fill the leaky refrigeration loop with a fluid called Coolanol. They were to punch a hole in a service line this afternoon and attach a containet of the fluid. mE SPACE agency said Saturday nlghl Iha! Alan B. Shepard, cbiel of the astronaut office, had reprimanded oommander Carr for "" -attempt · by the spacemen to i:mceal lhat ..,. of lhem bad been sick. Shepard told Carr his action was "a fllirly serious error in judgmenL" CarT 1s;epiied; '"Oby, I {Bgrel Wllh ,you: Ii · waS & dumb decisioft." For the _la.st two day!, the astronauts have been actlvatina\ Skylab S}'lltems and -""'• veral ~ iiO!iads ol ..,.,,-~.~ __ , ·-" ....... film, 1reconling tape a1M1 -WUMt ,.._uvm the Apollo fel'T)' ship into lhe 1111-foot· long station. They also started medical el<JterilJ>eJlls that will conlinue throughout their plan- ned Si-day fiight to a5sess the effect of long-tenn space travel. GM, UA WReach Tentative Accord on New Contract DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers and General Motors Corp. reached tentative agreement on a new contract today shortly before the old pact was to expire wlion officials said. tlernent." The agreeJ!lent would complete n:a-· lional bargaining wilh lhe l!iree major automakers. Agreements were reached earlier with Chrysler and Foret WORD OF TIIE settlement was TONY ZONE, prfsident of Local 1112 relayed by UAW officials in Indianapolis, at the Gl\-1 Vega plant irt Lordstown, Ind., Lordstown, Ohio, and Pontiac and Ohio, sa id he received word of the Flint, Mich. , , settlement at 5: 15 a.m. PST, less than There was no I m m e d i a t e an-two hours before the contract was to nounCement here from negotiators, who expire. had continued contract talks thro:ugh Negotiation,, continued ~through the the nighL Sources said final contract night in an effort to reach agreement language was being worked out as the before 10 a.m., when a series of 10 a.m. deadline passed. "ministrikes" against individual GM "Yes, there 's been a setUement," said plants was expected to begin. Dallas Sella, UAW regional direclor .in,.. No details of lhe reported setUement Indianapolis. "We just got a call, tiul •Were available Immediately, 1be UAW we doo"t. have any details ·ol. ithe set-· · represents 415,000 GM workers. . ,,, THE TROUllLEWME cooling system community. So l don't aee-ihe. thliig -for water, oerta1n electroni<:3 8nd as ]>eing governed ,by wh;il Israel saY, some food compartments -developed or does not aay." a slow leak while the Skylab 2 crewmen A Unlle!I Nations' spokesman said were aboard in August. They switched today's talks were between Egypt's Maj. to a backup loop. Gen. Mohammed Gemassy, Israel's Maj . Mission COntrol said that ii the repair Gen. Aharon Yariv and C.pl. Fallen job Is unmccessful and the secondary of Ireland, a staff officer of the U.N. loop fails, lh mission might bave to Emergency Force (UNEF ). .· .·_...-, ·---. '!'°IT~ SERIOUSLY ILL-David Ben- Gurion, the 87-year-Old form· er ertme Minister of Israel and one ·of , the founders of the Jewish state, was listed in ..,... ious condition today after· bt>- ing .partially paralyzed by a stroke. be cut short because some food would A pool dispatch reaching Cairo said Spoil and some electronics mi~t fail. the generals had an informal discussion tank. . • • The space agency also want~ both on a return to the Oct 22: cease-fire The generals had agreed Ia.st week loops in operation so the men can use lines and that they set up a formal on several measures for consolid8Ung water cooling instead of air cooling for or plenary session far Thursday in which the ceue-fll'e, includmg an ~xdwnge their suits during space WJllU. Water UNEF Commander 'Gen. Ensio StilalVoo of war prillonel'9, evacuation of wounded cooling is more efficient and enables will take part. Slilasvuo wu oot present civilians from Suez City, and the turning the astronauts to remain outside 'longer today. over ol.,. IBraeli cbeckpolnta along • the and work banter. calroSues road to U.N. troopo .. Flight Director Neil HutchiMon said EGYPT RANDED over to Jsn.el ·at Implementatlou ot the rest of tht outdoor wort scheduled for Thanksgiving Kilometer IOI the bodies of two llraeli agreemenl ftnl·aheachrithout problems, cjay to f!!pair a tt9tjt anlenna and lha!lge servicemen, one a pilot .of a recoo-lhe Israeli ""'!'lllllld aald, It said Eeypl teleo<ope fibn ioould be completed in naissance plane killed since lhe truce had returned a ·to!JI of 162 !JraeU one Six-or. seven-bou_r_Opa<'e.c_ __ w_allt..,----and--•_ao_ld_ie_r_b_um_,ed.,.....to_d-'~-ath __ in_hls_,_.;P,_ru... __ ers_,..~Ls_tnce.:.·c.,.theµ._'ex~cbang;;.· :::::::"~:..:began:.::::= - SUPERSTAR.·GIFF BUY! SAVE almost "$22! Sews on buttons, makes buttonholes, overedges, mend_s . ·, • all without attachments. ·11 has hinge~ presser foot that sews ov~r pins and '' " heavy fabrics, tension setting dial,, ----i•-:.:..:....,....., numbered seiilm guidelines. With " ... handsome walnut finished hardwood cor1soie cabinel . ' ' Rain, Snow · Hit R()~kies . . . . ~ SALE '144 SAVE '98 • I ' r I ,. ' • • Temperatures Hltlll l .... d ,, ...... Nebra$kll.,-GUlf Coast ... • to '.6c. lnl1M 1,,,....11ur11 r1ng.e lrom '1 111 ... W1ttr 1tmper11VA .0. Sun, Moon. Tides · MONDAY SKlllNI high • , ••. , , • S:'I P.'"· A.t Second low " . . ~ .w1T11e muu·· L--::...-=~ etmcl>·etltch ...... mechlne Witl!-.wlnl-SAV~ llmott $3111,Hos 6 btiilt·ln slil<hes lncludins blindstl leh, 11tt-thre>dinl t1k• up lever, and the' eMlurrvt S,.~bn . drop-in bobbin. . OFF REG.PRICE ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' I I ~ -- tio D~ "l' gen Fie ' N nl te lo hi fo of c p I d 4 I • ' , yoL. 66, NO. 323, 3 ~ECTIONS, 32 PAGES By JACK BROBACK Of tlf'I Oallr Pli.t St.II Rapidly-expanding public bus opera· lions like · the Orange CoWlty Transit District have been 1eft out in the cold "I' allocation of needed f\lel, : OCT!> ~neral n:ianager Gordon • • P e t e ' ' riekling said today. • 1 Flel~ing said he was • confident, hpwevi •-'iha . Jhe d'1"11Jct. wW &<l '¥'<"'8,al'I. Mf Jo<•~Pifilti{aiil-gr!"'.~ ......... --.. ~ •• bus operation1 In coming months. CUrrently, the district has been given permllllion by the government agencies to borrow from Its December allocation in order to operate for the balance of November. · uwe CUITently operate Only 48 buses to serve a population of 1.6 million .. " F1elding stated. "No other major Urban area bas so little public transportation. It aeerii"s highly inconsistent for the . Happy Royal C011ple Joyce Wirth, a 2Q-year-old business student from Newport Beach, and Dennis Sheehan, 27, student council member from Huntington Beacbi leave tootijill _•!ldium with piwents from Orange Coast Col- lege s~dents,.... They '!ft' chosen Homecoming Queen an~ Homecom· Ing Kiilg by popn1a1' student vote. Honored as outstanding alumnus during weekend homecoming ceremonies was James Carnett, OCC director or community oer.vices and a 1!'69 graduate. Mrs. Donald Nixon: • 'Aware of Tapping' 11le F. Donald · N·ixon family ol Newport Beach confirmed today that they were aware President Nixon had their telephone tapped. Presideot · Nixon disclosed Saturday night ·that he ordered his brother:_!! telephone tapped because penons in foreiga countries were "trying to get him.". The· President declined to Identify the foreign interests or what they wanted of his brother. He did say he ordered· . • Stocks J:>lumm~t; ·. Dow Off · 28.61 the U.S. Secret Service to make the tap "for s~ty reasons." Contacted al her Newport Beach home today, Mrs. F. Donald Nixon acknowledg· ed lbe family knew o! the tap. "Certainly, we knew about it," she said. She could not, however, "remernhfr when the phoqe was tapped or for how long. . "I don't pay any attention to that sort of thing. It sort of comes and goes. with the tide," sbe explained. Aabd if her conversation with the reporter ·today was being recorded, she lllJd,J'l .rather doubt that ool I really don't mow. I'd rather you talkH with my hulblnd. It " "Sbe 8'ld Nixon had meetings scheduled , -all day today and would not be available --;:rt0!.~~l ,;;;i\~•=~~ · ~=~~~~ ~i~,~~;· brother con· seve~I years today as.:¥&1Y,ll8 aald wr '· se11;ted to the surveWance. The telephone certainty about the natlop'l·energy crllll reportedly was tapped for more than continued to dep,... Prl"""o1·,.. d trtaJ• one yur'during Nixon's r~st term . The Dow Jones average vvJn us " ' • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1973 N TEN .CENTS ,..._N e-e~ded .-=· Fuel -Alloca ti.o·ns government to provide funds f o !" purcliase of additional buses and then not allocate sufficient fuel to operate them." The district will· take delivery ol 63 new buses in February and hopes to have them in operation by April. These buaes will proviae much needed service to tbe South Coastal area of the county as well as Mf.ssion .Viejo, El Toro, and Laguna Hills. They will, that is if the district gels the lutl aUocation it is requesting. . ObylouslyJ Fielding pointed outJ such a system of borrowing ahead will not work in the long run. The Board of Direclors o! th'1 diltrlct approved a resolution today ttuUining OCI'D's desperate situation to Orante County's congressional deJegation and to various other government agencies. The district currently uses _more than 30,000 gallons of diesel fuel a month. lt'bad received only 211,000 gallons !or Novpnber operaUo~ , Borrowing from December's skimpy allocation of about 8,000 gallons solved the -aituatlon temporarily. But Wlle'8 goffmment agencies provide much high- er ·allocations for December and the fol- lowing months, lbe transit district will be in trouble. The district's problem& regarding its rapid expansion stem from government edicts basing current· fuel supplies on a portion of the amount used one year agb. Fielding pointed out that the district is now using at Jeasl 300 percent more fuel than it did in November of 1972. In the resolution and in contacts with federal and state agencies, the district \\'iii point out that Jt provides most of the transit service in Orange County. Sunday Driving Ban? I Emergency Measures Cited as 'Real Possibility' From Wire Services WASHINGTON -A nationwide ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy-saving measures are "very real PoSsibilities" because of the nation's energy crisis, one of President Nixon's top energy advisers warned Congress today. Charles DiBona, the President's special assistant for fuel , told a joint House- Senate hearing that even total com- pliance with current c o n s e r v a t i o n measures such as turning do w n thennostats and a 50-mile per hour speed limit will not be sufficient: He said that an optimistic assessment or these conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies. will provide only 2.3 milliQn barrels of oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrels a day. "This means that we're going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory measw-es?" asked Sen. William Prox- Tustin Takeoffs mire CD-Wis.). ''Yes sir, and soon," DiBona replied. DiBona said that among the "very real possibilities" the Administration was comidering was a ban on SWlday driving. He said that 25 percent of all gasoline used in private cars is consumed on weekends. Among othet proposals being con- sidered are a ban on fuels for private boats and aircraft; cl06ing public parks to automobBes; closing service stations Coast Urged To Cut_ Back Electricity lly 1\Ullf Wt!:Dzn:LSKI ~ Supervisors to Hear ./~t~BUl .b.y Newport ,Of ... D.itf PW Sl•H Electricity ._. on the Orange Coast today were ur1ed by the Sotilhem Call!omla EdlloO company to begin voluntary cutbacks in use of power. Jack K. Horton, chairman of SOuthem ~lilomia Edison, asked the 7.5 million people in the Edison network to cut their current use back to 90 percent of what they used duriog tbe same month last :year. The 10 percent reduction was· recom- mended by lbe Cali!omia Public Utilities Commission last year to conserve energy -. Orange Cl>lmly 1Upervison 'l'lleotlay wiU··conslde< a strong plee b)' Nril\lil Beach to reinstafAo early morning j<t takeoffs over Tustin. Tbe northerly takeoffs had been uoe<I for two years under a pilot program that Airport ~ Robert Bresnahan ~ was higbly succ.ssful. W. A. Grubb, 81 Harbor Area during the shortage. V • D. "w~ 1ully.suppoiUhil-obiect1•e.'!. said_""xecutive ies Horton. I He disclosed that Edi!On had been able to Cut its own use of elettricity by 14 percent alter evaluating company operatiqns. Some suggestions for reducing the con- sumption o( energy from a convervation booklet available from the Edison Com- pany on request are: -Shield outdoor air conditioning equip- ment from sunlight and keep heating and cooling units clean. · -Clean or ~place healing and cooling filters regularly and set thermostats to heat or oool less than you are ac- customed lo. -Set thermostats to off position when away for more than 24 hours and do not heat rooms not in use. -Close fireplace dampers a n d draperies and use weather stripping to cut down drafts. -Tum off unnecessary lights and try to use more efficient fluorescent lamps wherever possible. · -Operate washers, dryers a n d dishwashers with full load to conserve energy. • -Open relrigirator doors only when necessary and pre-heat the oven only for baked goods requiring precise oven temperature at the start or the cooking cycle. • -Check temperature controls on hot (See CUl'llACKS, Page %) W. Allen Gnibb o! ·Newport Beach, who was the first person to become a life member of the American Red Cross and was active in a variety of other community affairs , died Saturday. He was 81. Sttvices will take place Wednesday at 11 i .m. at Pacific View Memorial Park in Corona del Mar. Mr. Grubb, a retired construction com· pany executive, was a former Orange County harbor commissioner a n d member of the Newport Beach Civil &:rvice Board. He was a (ounder and trustee of the Big Brothers of Orange County and was a vice president and director of the Orange County Philbannonic Society. He was a 40-year member of the Newport-Balboa Rotary Club and was a member of the Irvine Coast Country Club. . A resident of Orange Cl>unty 16 years, Mr. Grubb moved here from Portland, Ore., where be was a member of Al Kader Shrine and was active in Masonic Lodge. Mr. Grubb is survived by his widow, Alberta; a daughter, Mrs. ~1ary Jane Iseli of Newport Beach; a brother, Douglas A. Grubb o! Seatlle and a sister., Jitrs. Kathryn Ji1artin ol Con- necticut. &q:iervisars, however, cancelled the ,...,am in a split vote Oct. 9. lll1der the JllOlnlm, jets deparled pordJerly between 7 and 9 a.m. as a mea111 Of providing noise relief for Newport Beach and Santa ~eights residen.ta. Supervisor Ra1pi Clarlt pushed for cancellAlloo, arguing that the pn>Cram only lr9Dsferred jet noise !rom Newport Beach to the oortherly oommunlUes. in a ~lnrorded letter aaklng !or · recmalder'ation, Newport Beach Mayor Dooald A. Mcinnis said councilmen were disappointed that lbe board killed a prognm that Bmoalian stated has "materially reduced the total boi9' im- pact caused by jet operations !tom Orange ~A1rport:" "The Newport Beach oommlUllty is lOtally disenchanted and frustrated with coMinued evidence of in.tens.itivt!, arbitrary and unnecessary decisions dealing with the nolae J!l'Oblem al the airport," the mayor wrote: Mcinnis also charged that the airport is being operated in violation of the California Division of Aeronauticl noise standards and he pointed out lbe airport is under legal attack from Newport Beach residents because of noise disturbances. Supervisor Ronald caspen, whose Filth District include.! the airport and Newport Beach, protested Clark's move. ·caspm1 pointed out thal 80 percent of the nights were taking off over Newport Beach. "'111e balance o! the county should be willing to share the noise problems," Caspers said. Slain in Argument? OAKLAND (Ul!I) -A· family argu· menl Sunday-.led -to lbe ·fatal shooting of Mrs. Ora Lee Hendrix, ZS, at her home in East Oakland;-J)ouce said. Detective Sgt. John Shannahan said the woman argued with her husband, John Hendrb:, 15, Officers were searching !or Hendri>. on weekends, and blue laws to close all buslneses on Sunday, he said. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz told a Senate foreign relations subcommittee that the Administration will "have to take some sharp and decisive action'' to cope with the energy shortage. Shultz, who said his "instinct is against" gasoline rationing, said the United Stales was lucky the crisis had (See EMERGENCY, Page%) Harbor Area's Suit Delayed A further seven-mOOth delay was ordered today in lbe Orange Qiunty superior Court trial of a $28 million law.Wt !iled by 905 Harbor Area homeowners who blame tbe COIP\tY for mounting jet noise and . pOllut\Qn in the vicinity of county airport. Presiding ~udge Bruce Sumner set June 17 u the new trial date. Both sides said they needed more time to complete their preparations for what is expected to be a lengthy tria1. Sunny Days Forecast For Hollclay The first significant raimtonn since spring dropped nearly an inch o! rain on the Orange Coast over the weekend and sparked dozens of minor accidents, several power failures and numerotts other minor irritations. · The U.S. Weather Servjce is predicting mostly sunny days for t.ht rest of the week including the Thanksgiving holiday. Some .scattered clouds may move in Wednesday evening, but they shouldn't keep the sun !rom healing lhings up to·the 70s, the weatherman says. The Orange County Harbor Depart- ment said today its gauges recorded 0.84 of an inch of rain between Friday evening, and early Sunday morning. The storm brought the season's total to 0.87 inches, still far behind tbe. same date last year when 3.2 inches had fallen . The Southern C&lilomia EdiBon Com- pany re~rt.ed scattered power failures all over the COWlly. The ·rain came<! some lines to short out. Oraage C.ut • plunged 28.67 points to close at 1112.66, the largest daily drop ilf1he blue chip tn- dk:alo!· sinco Mar 28, .1sei, and the.lilillll largest decllile • ..,. re<'Orded (See ui6fts-;' l'aJ• t .) . ~ •• -~ .J.I~~ to Ca12ry _-.Jts : -Storr to _ Public . , . ,. .. Weadler r • Falr sides are on .. agenda for Tuesday. wilh slightly warmer days but colder nights. Highs in tbe !Os, dipping into lbe 40s in the early morning hours. ' A.:Q RESPONSE 'TREMENDOUS,. Tremendous response -rented three rooms Immediately! That was the joyful cry of the Colla Mesa woman • who placed thix Daily Pilot classified ad: -CLEAN furn. Nr. OCC. Kl t ch en, washer Id~, Retired OK. 175 mo. (f>booe No.) · By IJ. PETER KRIEG Of .. o.llY l"llet Sltff Hot(_ Memorial Hospital officials said today Ibey -plan to ask tbe~people or the Ha~ Aroa what the ho tal ought lO do to· MfW its Mure le in the community. Hoag AdmlnlstralOr Scott S. Parker announced the formation of a comumer committee that wm cooduct a leries of public bearlnis-early -yeer. He said the group is one of IO sub-hospital for things like diagnosis. commit tees of a ·newly-established long Parker stressed that the hospital starr range planning committee that will and board "is enthusiastic and sincere" determine the health care and Other abool ·the community feedback program. programs '"'hlch should form the lOtal He said the undertaking _was not service and role o! Hoag Hospital." precipitated by pending' plans !or a conr Tbe loor rang~ planning committee peUUw boepltal near UC lrVine, but Includes three 1loa&' board members, rather as part ol a new locus o! goals Ove docton. and two llaff members. • and objecllvu. Other subcoolmi-will nvlew lune-Parker aald with the comllletion o! Uonaf and dejlll1tllental aeeds in the the tower addition eel '1n April, one areu ol surgeq, lnedlctne, Pediitrtcs, majol: goal 'i!ll be reached. everything .else affect them, rather than affecting -t is going to happen," he said. "Hospitalt have to run lest lO keep up with advancta in heahh care. The advances in eqUl-t and lbe delivery ol cart cbaftie .-inely rapidly." 'lllere are five stated objecttveo that will concern lbe looi range planning committee, ltsell. They include: -Scienttrlc capabiliUes. INSIDE TODAY Light catamaran and surf· board mentor Hobie Alter U working 011 a n~ plaything for inten1ational Jutt-Jttkers. Set story 011 Poge 8 todau. IMlllll 11 A11111 L........ W l .M. ~ ..... \"!.. '' c.....,.,. • ......... ...... 4 A few lines of advertising may be The pone!, which wW llldlldo ...,,. ..... tail"" from , state and local .....,..,..,t, e<lucatioo, the .clergy ud the - media, among others, will be apect<d to file •-'IRlllen noporl ... "' 1111c11tc1.- obllelrlco-gyiiOcOlogy, mental llaalth, "It would be t¥Y IO ·sit •back and rehabUl!atioo, educatloa, medtcal IUJ>-... " Mid, "but now is lbe ' -The hospital's sixe and complexion. -The composition and general nature of lbe ~llon,Jtrved._ Clntll... ~ Or .... c"""' 11 <-~--'''----l•M-1---~I c,...._.. 1• SllMI! .._.. .. t ~alULLakeLto~'' !or you, too. D!ai the c-8ed ad deparunent at !he DtUy Pilot m the dlroct One, MUl'lt, to 1et ID A4'>loor to http }'OU llnd out. ~. ,. Parlter said the commtti.e ..,._1onnec1 becaae "lf we want,..to take a reallstic loot at the future, ,.. can't Jull do It lnterUi}J." .. port and 1!!-1Jc ....i.e. a,n.d ',.... liPo IO"lool< ahead." emerpncy services and outpatient.· " · ·'fli! loo llllD1 hospilals'-~' do Parhr Aid outpodent ,.rvlcca wUl this. allo let. tpedal allenllon i,c--~ . "Unforll.nattly, lt'I amailAa jull--bow and more people are turning 10 toe many nosp1ia11 dntt atoog and let . , . li ' -TM" slae and makeup o! the me<iic1l lllolf.' -The actual and potentlol rosotu•ces requlre<Lto provide this total .Jervice ' over the next five years. • Dff9'I fltefk" • T......... 1P ' ........ ,... . ---., ''• ...... _.... ,, ...... ,,,..... ............. ,NJ .,.,. .... f(.... .. .... ...... .• ----. • • I . ' I \ • Los~ 'Gh·l' ~eally Boy, Say Firemen A mysterious stranger, who wrongly c1almed his-name was Jones and that ht was really a li ttle girl, destroyed a tranquil Sunday morning for several Newport Beacl1 firemen. Beverly Primrose of Tustin delivered the day's first problem to nreJ1'.len of Station Three in Newport Center, after she en~ered the child toddling down Jamboree ad. The paj a a<l problem vigorously Insisted ila name wu Jones and that it was a female child. .. It was otherwise determined tater on," Fire Inspector Art Morton explained today. "He really had them going in circles,'' Inspector Morton said of the lost child who had indicated to Miu Primrose after being y picked up that he wu in- terested in seeing the fire engines at Station Three. Firemen checked their telephone direc- tories and could find no Jones family in Eastbluff or the Back Bay area to call. • .. DlllY !'1101 Sllff !'lltllt .$600 Milliota Loss Cutbacks Feared In ·welfare Aid SACRAMENTO (AP ) '-A state ap- peals court ruled today the Reagan ad: ministration c•nnot implement new federal _welfare .regulations wi.tbQut_new state leg1'la1lon. ral•lng the possibility of a cutback In aid to 500,000 aged. disabled and blind recipients. The 3rd District Sta~ Court of Appeal said Rt.agan administration officials do not have authority on their own to yield administration of the &tale adult welfare programs to the federal govern· ment; The federal goverment is scheduled to take over admlt1istralion of the pro-- gram of welfare to 500,000 aged, disabled and blind Caliromlans Jan. 1. The state is faced with the loss of $600 million In federal Medi-Cal aid .ul}le_ss i~ prq~{y iipplepieo~ the pro- cram by Jan. I. Den1ocratic·sponsorcd legislation to do that was defeated in the Legislature in September after Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan's repreaentaUves opposed . it on grounds ft wu too costly. Ru.gan promised the. · changHver \Vould be acoompll1~ by adminlstrative regulation without jeopardizing paym<nts to the recipient.I. brought th e suit agnlnst lhe ad· ministration . This ·would have given lhe Le gislatur<' time to act on the issue after It returned to Sacramento jn early January . "Courts are Powerless to ·allow even te1nporarily, unlawful conduc~ b Y, litigants _,. least of all , publl c officers. the court said In its unanimous 3-0 decisioo. \Valthall said it y,•ould be prcmat.ure to speculate on the need of a special legislative scsson b<'l\,·ccn now and Jan. I on the issue. Reagan had sa id he y,•ould Increase aid to the aged, disabled and blind while implementing the transfer 10 federal control of the program . The current average monthly payment for tho'se categories is $212. Reagan said there would be a new across-the· boacd rate of $221 for the aged and disablcd~ilnd $237 for the blind~ ' Democrats sought higher increases in legislation that got deadlocked at the end of the 1973 session. Without any implementing mechanics at the state level, the payments could fall to $130 a month, the federal floor ·for such welfare recipients. -Batlalioo Chief Billy Thomu was just letving to drive the little boy who claim- ed to be a little girl around the neighborhood to see if he could find his house, when a missing child report came over the police rado. SIMULATED CARGO GOES OVER THE SIDE AS BOSTON TEA PARTY GOES WEST " In Newport Harbor, a Pink Bikini, a Xeroxed Script and Thirsty Spectators The suit · wu ~ht by a number of groups, !ncludln1 the caltlomla Leque of Senior auuno and 1he California Welfuo ll!ihla 0raanlia11on. The change In admint.terlng lhe \jelfare program for the aged, blind and disabled came. in HR 1, the federal welfare ?dorm act passed by eonaress last year. · The des~ription flt Christopher BttWer, 2'1.i:, who had vanished from the family home at 800 Amigos Way. Inspector 1'-1orton said the youngster apparently awakened early, toddled outside and decided to go exploring after the wind slammed the door shut. Historir Protest C1iill Wi1ids Greet Balboa Pageant From PGfle 1 EMERGENCY •.• come now because Imported fuel supplies are only a small portion of American energy needs. , "I hope rationing will not be necessary," Schultz. said. "P..fy instict ls against it ... Rationing sounds like such an easy answer but it raises such serious problems that I question whether it is a real answer. Nevertheles:s. the problem is such that we will have .to take .some lharp and deelslve action." DiBona also said the Eastern aeaboard and New England could be 50 percent short of /uel this winter unle.!1 fuel me ls drasUcally reduced. He said contlngency plans for fuel ratlonlng are being drawn. D!Booa said the nation's fuel supply is already about 17 to 18 percent short. Estimates are based on a contlnued Arab petroleum boycott and a norm1l winter. President Nixon said Nov. 7 the lhortage could reach as high as 17 percent during the crisis this winter. DiBona said the National Petroleum Council's 25 percent shortage estimates is based on a more severe winter and less volWltary cooperation than the Administration thinks it will get. He saJd adequate petroleum reserves are on band for use through the end of the year. But be said estimatel of a 50 percent shortage during the first quarter of next year in the Northeast and along the AUantlc coach could be rullstlc if tbe voluntary program falls and other cut.I aren't made now . From Pqe 1 CUTBACKS ... water beaters. Generally, 140 to 150 degrees are recommended for laundry, 110 to 120 degrees for baths. Turn down or off when on vacaUon. By ARnlUR R. VINSEL Of tlle DlllV !'llol Slllf One of the Indian raiders wore a pink bikini beneath her burlap, but otherwise, the Balboa Island Sculling and Punting Society's 200th Bicentennial Re-Enactment of the Boston Tea Party of 1773 in Newport Harbor Sunday foli o'!\'· ed the old historic protest to the letter. Even the goose bumps were authen tic. as chilly winds whipped harbor waters off the BaJboa Pavilion while the \i1ily patriots decked out in warpaint paddled up to do their dirty work . A scenario had carefully been worked out in advance to guide Sea Explorer Scouts -male and female -in re-creating the historic boat raid in Boston. -They had anchored the Sea Scout training brigantine Argus in mid-channel earlier in the day. Members of the Balboa Island Scull ing and Pljntlng Society slmultaneouoly stag- ed their Patriotic Party upstairs In the Balboa Pavilion and cheered on the Tea Party. Official ·Attends Balboa Society Patriotic Event The U.S. Go vemmeni is so impressed with patriotic exercises of Ute Balboa Island Sculling and Punting Society that It officially rea>gnlzed them Sunday. Kenneth Kimes, America's Honorary Ambassador of the country's Blcen· tennial Comn1isslon. appeared at the organization's patriotic party at the Balboa Pavilion. He presented the organization which is dedicated to raising C1in and - at the same time -cash for good causes, with a special plaque. The award contalru: an engraving of a nag of each state In the union and ill given for service in reviving interest in or otherwlse~observlng U.S. history . Proceeds of Sunday's re-enachnent of the Boston Tea Party will finance Orange Coast Sea Scout work . About 700 per300S attended the festivities st $1 .50 per person to raise money for Orange Coast Sea Scouts. "It was a grand party" Sculling~and Punting Society leader Bill Veneman exulted today, adding that the total pro- ceeds for the Sea Scouts have not been tabulated. The cast ol Sea Scouts posing as oolonists posing as Indians included 20 characters \\'ho arrived in six canoes. The origlrull perpetrai<>rs back In the colonies' infancy probably did not have a written game plan \\'hen they raided the British merchantmen in Boston llarbor. A Xeroxed copy of a document cap- tured from the Red raiders of Newport Harbor disclosed just how well they planned it. The agenda read: "3:1S p.m. Bunt aboard -yell attack three or four Redcoats and fake a battle on the deck and fln.9.lly chaae them into the rigging. One or two will end up on yardarm and jump into bay. Watch out for canoes ... 3:30 Throw over the tea in a slow manner." Spectators in the Pavilion, which prc>- \'ided a free buffet, had lo repeatedly race to the bar for tension-breaking refills as they watched the patriots creep up on the Argus. The P..tusic Man Band of Huntington Beach broke into "Rule Britannia!" as the Union Jack fluttered in the breeze and the unsuspecting Redcoats lolled about with less·than-rigid gu~i'd duty discipline. Cries of terrorized Britishers' calls ~ to arms and shrieks and warwhoops rang out across the Harbor as the raiders took over the Argus . A flaming pink bikini bottom flashed in the rigging as one coed Sea Explorer Scout battled ,Jt out with a Rqicoat and the band struck up "The Star Spangled Banner" as the Union Jack come flutterlng down and Old Glory went up the halyard. Che~rs arose in the Pavilion and the assembled patriots rushed back to the bar. The sight of all that tea being thrown into the water apparently reminded them they were thirsty. -Don't heat your pool more than you hav~ to. Don't heat It at all In montha when you don 't use It and when you go away for vacation. DAILY PILOT Tlle 0••"11• CMlt OAll 'f !'tLOT, wllfl wl'llt~ i. comb!Mtl "'' HtWJ·I",..,., 1t 1111Dll~11111 •v 1111 Or•no• C0111 1'ubll1fl\"' Com11111y. ,.,.... r11t H flkln• ••• 11ut1111~td. Moroel•Y throwoh Frld1y, tor (0111 M11t, N.wi-rl •••<II, Ht111fl111tw1 •11clll'11<1"lll11 V1!11y, Ltt\1111 Ai1· Pollution Wipes Out South State Lettuce Crop . • ' 1e1c11, 1n1M1s.u1•tk 1nd $1n Cetrntft••I RIVERSIDE (AP ) -l.£ttuce crops s... J111n c11111111o» " 1111911 ..-gion1t In four Southern California counties have •111111 111 11ot1111~11o1 h tura1v1 .,.. sunc11v1. been severely damaged -in some easel TM ,..1nc11111 .-.n~1n, pl.int 11 11 uo W!11 wtped out -by a form of air pollution .. ., '''"'• Ct1t1 .Mtu. c11o1ornl1, t u11. 'i\1lich experts hilven·t identified, sci- llolterf M. Wt1d enlists rep6rted Frid ay. , rrt&lidWll ,tlW Milaf'ltr '11ley• ... told the U.S. --senate-sub-Y~ ...... ~ !. ~',l Mf,,., committee on alr •nd water polluUon th'"''' «•evil that the damage, which al90 hit other ''"" cro~ but not so devastatingly, may Tit•M•• A. M~,,.1111,, h,aev been .caused by a newr,utant Mtllllilftl l•Hor da L ,,.,, Kil•t The mage apparen 1 occurred ....,,.... lfMll c"' •n... between Thursday and Sunday last week ,...,.,, ..... Offkt -a period when smog levels wert JJJJ Ntw,11f J•wliwir4 only moderate, said Roland Oslllmt, 1r11.111.,~u r.o. h • 117,, tz••• biologist with the state Department of ~·ood and Agrlcultur.. --Orani• County Iott all of Ila maturt :::;. -=1 ~ .. --:.,::,-A•: Bolton letf lettuce crop and l\lffered """'b ... "" 1 J:::L ,_., .....,.,_ heavy dllnqe in Romalne Inf lettuce, • c......._1 • 11 c."'• .... Swtu cha.rd and table bett.I, Oshima .,.,.,, f714J M2"'4Jll said. These and other crops suttered ~ 'I., M••I "' """71 wideopread damage In porttw of )As ~· 1tn. or•,.. C4i1r rw:r.....,-1--.~a·@les, Rivnlde and San Bernlrdino ~·,.::. "': .::,~'r= ccunUes Ind may not be marketable. ;:,. • .,•= :=:' ..w• .., Officials in the four countJea aaid no ,_,. _. - _ " """ --.Y figur.. had be<n applied to c.-rM. t tyiflbl• "" ,.,,. fUi lhe damage yet. But all of them noted =:t...• ,.':IA,,=._,,..,...,,, rNlllwY lhat the amount of acruae · lnvolvtd wu very amall when comporod with the helter known lettu~cinl •- of the Salinas, lmperia: and Coachella valleys. Nevertheless , "one grower said il wu the worst damage they've ever had," said John Hauer, supervising inspector for the Los Angeles County Department of Agriculture ..... , ... " ~ .:. "This partlcullf pattern of damaae has oot betn ob9erved previ0t1s1y and tentatively suggests the presence of a new and potent phytotoxi.cant chemical poisonous to planta In our pllotocbM1lcal smog," said Dr. Jamee N. P1la Jr., director of the Statewide Air PolluUoo · Research Center baeed at 1he Unlvenlty of Callf<>mla camp.11 hero. Placing two he•cb J1' wllher.d brown- leafed lettuce on . the table u they te1Ulled before Sin, Edmund Muokle (0.Malnel. Pila and Oohlma 11ld 1he damage bore aome r.,.mblance 1o types cawied by air polluUoo Ibey have ,_,, Ill the pul but. WU diff-t In other retpecta, includlnc-....nt1'· . Edgar Stephens, a proleaor of en- vironmental aclence at UC Riverside, told reporten ·lhlt oclenlilta have known for m1111 yun !hit DOllutanta like _. and -acetyl nitrate coo damage pillnla and bm -It ~ ,....iarly in the Loa Ancel .. air basin. • Nazi to Tell Goals ~larlin Kerr of El 1\tonte, a men1ber of the American Nazi Party, will speak tonight at 8 o'clock in the little theater at Corona del Mar High School . R<agon 's pre11 office 11ld the ruling would be appealed 1o 1he ca!Uomla Supreme Court. "The administration's attorneys are studying the ruline to see whit It means. Any commentt we would make now ~·ould be premature," sald Clyde Walthall , Reagan's presa secretary. AUy. Gen . Evelle J . Younger argued that the Reagan administration had authority -to implement the change without legislation because the benefit levels propoaed complied with federal requirements. "However. the real issue at this point is not whether California is in compliance with federal law , but whether, under the proposed regulatipns, the state would be in complia nce with its own laws," the court said. The talk is open to the public. Kerr's appearance is sponsored by the high school's Political Science Club. He will speak on the goals of his patty. The court said It could not delay the effect of Its fUllng until afler February, as requested by those who Micro·wave o¥e1• make· cook81g a breeze! .Out.cooks any pot.skillet, broiler. pan or oven ·FLASH! 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Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19; 1973 c TEN CENTS 10CTD 'I-· I • • ored~ •• Ill ' N·eeU-e-d--Frrel Allocations By JACK BROBACK Of Ille Deity , .... Miff Rapidly..expanding public bus opera- tions like the Orange County Transit DiStrict have been left out in lhe cold on allocation of needed fuel, OCTD genera) manager Gordon I ' r e t e 1 I Fielding said today. • Fielding said he was confid , however, that the district will get nec<ssary Juel to support .Its laat··gi;tilwin& • ., ' . bus o tlons in· coming moptha. ~~tly~ , the dlltrtct bas been given ·~ by 1be pvernmelit agencies rrow from lb December allocaiton order .to operate for the balance of'November. , "We currendy operate only 48 buses to serve a populatlon. ,of 1.8 rhtllion1" Fleldlng staled. "No other major urban area baa ao tilUe public tranaportatlon. It -hlsbly -t for the government to provide funds f o r purcllaie of· addlUonal buses and then not: 4]locate aufflclent fuel to operate them:." • '1be district win· take delivery of 63 newr buses in February and hopes to hav.e them in operatloll by April. These buses will ....-much needed service to tbe South Coutal area of the county aa ~ aa lofisakln Viejo, El Toro, and Lag1t11a 111111. They will, that is If the district gets the fuel allocation ·it is requesting. Obviously, Fielding poinled out, such a system of borrowing ahead will not work in the long run. The Board of "Directors or the district approved. a ....resolution today outlining OCTD's desperate situation to Orange County's congressional delegation and to various other government agencies. The district currtntly uses more than 30,000 gallons of diesel fuel a month. It had received only 20,000, gallons for November operations. • Borrowing from December's skimpy allocation of about 8,000 gallons solved the situation temporarily. But unless government agencies provide much high- er allocations for December and the fol· lowing 'mODths, the transit district will be in trouble. The district's problems regard,ing its rapid expansion stem from government edicts basing current fuel supplies on a portion of the amount used one year ago. Fielding pointed out that the district is now using at least 300 percent more fuel than it did in November of 1'72. In the resolution and in contact! with federal and state agencies, the di!trict will point out that it provides most of the transit service in Orange County. • ~ . -f . • a .-. ' • • r :1v1n an ear? • • p er llse dison Urges V Qluntary .C'.uts --Emergency 1 ~ .Measm·es f~ ·.outlined -' By RUDI NIEDZIELllKI Of tM 0.llY Pltll Stefl \ Electiicity users on the Orange COast today were urged by the Sou'them tallfomia Edison Company to begin ftluntary cutbacks in use of power. • Jack K. Horton , chairman of Southern Cl11lorn1a Edlaon, asked the 7.5 million I _,ie m t11e i:<ii-ne1-t 1o ca11 I ihelr current use back. to llO percont • t'. . kwwi:r." Seen I J ~"'5 , As Cutback ~ ). For WeUare , of what they uaed <luring the same month last year. The 10 percstt reduction WU rtCOm• mended by the Ca!Hornla Public Utilities Commission last year to cortserve energy durtng1 the 'lbertqe. "We fully 1UPPDrt tlU objective," said Horton. . • m '.itrl'l'd !Mr-.... - able to cut its own lJ!r.e o/: el~ by RJ:,.reeot iller evaiuapns compony ~ ...ae... fllr riidndnc ala ...... ~er · 1rom ClOllftl'Va1i bOmlel .. a1~ U.: Edlaao eoi: plD1.., Aquesl are: ' . -&leld -air concllJionlnl equip- -from IAllll!ght and IU!ep heaUng ..... -.. Ullitl clean. ~ "' replace beaU., and cooling mten reauJarly "m! aet thennoatatl to boot cw ooo1 i-than ,... are ao- Olllomed to. .,.let lbermollats lo off posilton wben ony for more than M bOurs and do not beat rooma not In use. ! SACRAMENTO (APJ -A slate ap- poll oourt ruled today Ibo Reagan ad· ll!lnfllratlon cannot lmplemenl new ledera1 welfare regulltloos without new Jlate leglalltloo, ralltng the ~billty a cutback In a1Al to,500,000 aged, -Clole. ftreplace dampers a n d draperlis 'and !JM. weather stripping to cut down drafts. ~,,., .. \ ··!·''•• .... ,. ;, . ~. d.or~netSl•H'11tto . ~ .. .. . ... . ... ,• bitd 11111 blind recipients. • ~. '!be 11'11 illnici Slate Court of Appeal Mid Rnpn ldn)lnillralt!!n ollicials do not have autb6rtty on their own to ,)'leld aclmlnlltr1iton of the state adult • .,,welfare programl' to the1ederal govern· -Tum off uDnecessary U,bts and try to ... mare el!lclent fluorescent lamps wberewr poaible. • • •• .:EIREME CARRY'9!A~ .~!A!IC!. FJtOM .BURNED ,OUT ·C(!S'i'.A M.~SA HOME . '~ tnmtiplon B!OtM ,~n-ln .Moso VordeoA"Portable'He•flr" • .. ,_ Ii ' • -' ·-· -~· ..,.--------~ trnent. _...... ·c:~· The federal goverment is 1eheduled to lake over administration ol the pro- gram of welfare to 500,000 aged, disabled 'and blind callfomians Jan. 1. --Openite wuhers, dryt" an d d11bwaahera with lull load to conserve energy . ~ relrlaerator doors onfy when ~ and pre-heat the oveq onfy for baked goods requiring precise oven temperatur.. at the start;of the cooking cycle. .....Qaeck temperature controls on hot (S.. Clll'BACKS, Pap I) Fire Leave~··Mesan8 ' ' Homeless; Heater Cited . . 1'\ • Tb~ stlte ls faced with the ross of ·• ~ million in federal Medi-Cal aid unless it properly implements the pro-... ,.aram by Jan. 1. · ' S ks Pl A Costa Mesa family was left homel•s elsewhere in the house when-her son • Democratic-sponsor<d legislation to do toe um met; !Oday · 1n an $18,500 blaze blamed on Spencer, 9, came running to tell her c that . was defeated ln the LeglslatlD'e a portable beater placed._ too close to there was a fire in the. playroom. • , in September _after Republican Gov. D Off-28 67 c1raper1 .. : Chief Beauc~mp said she ran and Ronald Bea1an'1 repmentaUves·opposed · OW · · • F1mnos sped swlfUy through the opened the door to investigate, en- -it on 8'<!'Jllds it waa too OOll!y. ®-ta1rs of the Johri H. Hill home countering a ,oolid wall of f1anies raging r ,.::':' a:::'pl~ .~ ~J~ . NEW YORK (AP) :._ The stock market ::.;..•.:i.::.sred~ad, shortly after they in ii: ":';::· and got her da bier , ·regulation without~ po~ts =~~~a=' ,.11r ! The Interior wu_beavily involved in Sainanlba, 3, and bll'!tied the :,'; lo !be recjplenta. c . callkilJ -the nation's energy crisiJ the fire PY the Ume lire truclcs arrived to safety. The· IUlt was brvullll~ ~ · ·-to depress price<. on, !be,_._ within moments . of the Her husband and the couples two ol ppt, IDcludlng"lbe •·..-.-• 'fta.00.. JCOleS average ol 30 lndustriall ~ ilocordln& to Battalion Chief Bob older dlildren, Caroline II, and Jolm, of Senior Olbej>a .and the callfornta )lltmaiol :111.87 point& to cloee at 1112.16, Bel~ l:;,, .. n, had already left die Mesa Verd< Welfare l}llbte .Or&IDiiltlonld ruling, llW.lllpit·dally drop in the blue chip In-. l'10rence Hill and tw~ of • bome'for work and sciiiiol. a..1an • -. olllce. 11 the. rul1nfl ., dlmlllr .-May 28, 1962, and the fdl!J her children were at the home f:iremen aaid todly that damage waa would be •w.ealed tO the ~ lal10lt do!Cline ever recorded. (See tebles, when the I •.m. blaze occurred. severe throughout the ground Door of suprem~ ~ · • -. '.. ' ...Pqt·t.) ·IDVOIUgaton said Mrs. Hill was busy ~ (See HEATER, Page Z) ;'1be adlDinlJtrab"oa•s •ttome19 are ... ,"' .. . , ~ ... _ _ ~ studying lhe rulini to aee what It meana. Any ~ta we would meke now would be prenlature," said Clyde ' Walthall, Reagan!s press sebretary. The courl 'Jald It t'OUld not delay the effect of · its tuling unUl ... after , Fellnar)', aa~ by ~ who ~' broujht , the suit_ ega.inst the ad- mlnlltra'\lon. • .Iloag to C()nduct Hearings ' ·wui Ask Harbor Resi'ile nt8 ·t() LOok at Fu ture . . ' ' . . Mesa Council Agenda Features Signs, Vehicles ' Signs, ambulances and taxi~pbs occupy prominent places on the agenda for tonight's Costa Mesa City Council session. Public ~llS on eaCh Qf these three subject& hive been ·scheduled by the council during the '6:30 p.m. meeting in city council chambers, 77 Fair Drive. During the public bearing on signs the five members of the council will try to determme whether to eJ!mcl._the current emergency sign ordinance· into 1974.. .. . . ' The emergency · ordinance has been in effect 1(or a year. Councilnfen are trying to make up their minds about a permanent sign ordinance. The mayor's ...Sign Qrdinance Com· mtt\ee. 'last week recommended. adoption of the permanent ordinance which has existed in draft form slnce spring. ' AD RESPONSE 'T'REMENDOUS' BJ L. PlftR KRIEG ..... _ °' ..... ~,, ........ committees of a newly-dlabllshed long range 'planning • committee !bat will determine tho health ~ and olber prbgrama "which lhould "forn\1 lbe lelal 'aervioe and role ol Hoq Rolpltll." ftat' ordinance woWd reduce the Oftr&D number of ligns in Costa Mesa through the amortizatioa· (phaaing out) and board. 0 is enlhusiast1c and sincere" of many existing signs and by sharply about the COIMll!lity feedback program. rtduclng the size of all fulure signs. Trellltlldool mponae -noted three rooms lmmedlatelyl That wia the joyful cry ol Ille Coata Meaa ·woman who placed Ibis Daily Pllot claallled ad: Hooe liflmorlal H01pltal officials said ~ ~ plq to ask ,!be -le ol ~~AM what !be boapltsl ought lo do lo l'll1lll1 Ill future n>le in the ' ... comrQanl,,, . Hoag AdmlD!ltrator S<olt S. Parker ~ the· formation of i couumer l»IDIDlttee that wtll COllllucl • -o! publlc bur!np earlr--,..., The long range planning committee tnchldel three ·Hoa& board members, fl"' .,.. ·and IWo staff members. He uld die undertaking was not Although the committee reoonunended PndP.ltated bJ ·pending plans for 1 <Ol'\1• •doptkln with a M vote, the business ROI!~ llllpltll ne\r UC Irvine, but r rotbor ·• port of 1 new fOCUJ of goals Npreaenletives aervlDg on the panel say llld obJ4iotj..,. · the votll wai 'Iden bj!fore !be entire P~er ..id with the aimplelion of ordJnanca had been studied. M tDww ad<l!Uoa aet fn April, ooo The bustoessmen-lllve votetd their lllljor ..., will be -· . From Wire Services WASHINGTON - A nationwide ban on Sunday driving and other emergency energy-saving measures are "very real possibilities" because of the hation's ene rgy crisis, onet or President Nixon·~ top energy advisers warned Congress loday. Charles DiBona, the President's special assistant for fuel, to1d a joint House- Senate hearing that even total com- pliance with current c o.n s er vat ion measures such as turning d o w n thermostats and a 5()...mile per hour speed limit will not be sufficient. He said that an opUmlltic asseaament of these conservation measures, plus hope for increases in domestic supplies, will provide only 2.3 million barrels of oil a day while the shortage is about 3 million barrels a day. "This means that we're going to have to have stronger, strict mandatory ·measures?'~-asked Sen. William ProX-··· mire (0.Wis.). "Yes .sir, and soon," DiBona replied. DiBona said that among the "very real possibilities" the Administration was considering was a ban on Swtday driving. He said ·that 25 percent of all gasoline used. in private cars is consumed on weekends. Among ot:tier • proposals being con- siderecl are a ban on fuels for private boat& and aircrait; closing pablic parks to automobiles; closing sefVice stations on weekends, and~ blue-laws to close all busineses on Sunday. he said. Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz told a Senate foreign relations subcommittee that the Administration will ''have to take some sharp and decisive action" to cope with the energy shortage. Shultz, who said his "instinct ls against" gasoline rationing, said the United States was lucky the crisis had come now because imported fuel supplies are only a small poi'tion of American energy-needs. "I hope rationing will not be necesaary," Schultz sai51. "My instict is agJinst it ... Rationing sounds like such an easy answer but it raises such serious problew that I question whether it is a real answer. Nevertheless, the problem is such that we will have to take some sh.4J:P_and decisive action." DiBona also said the EaStern 5'aboard and New England could be SO percent short or fuel this winter unless fuel u.se is drastically reduced. Orange (;east • Weatller Fai7 ski'5 are on the igendi Tor Tuesday, with slighfly warmer days but colder nights. Highs in the 60s, dipplng into the 40s in the early morning hours. , INSIDE TODAY Light catamara1i and surf· board men.tor Hobie Alter ii working on. a 11ew plaything for international · /1.1.n-seekert. See story Ofl Page 8 today. CLEAN fum, Nr. OCC. K II c be n, wuber/dl1er. , Jlellred OK. fl5 mo. (Pbooe No.) 'l'be plllll;"111deb .. lldl!le repr- tativet llWi state_. la! .. ..,-, educatloo, lbe ....,. 11111 Utt ..... edir,-among odllll, Wiii i.. llpOCled to file • wiitiai ...,.., .... find.... . Olm'~ wlU review func. ~-~nthe lrMI of IQl'llf1, ·atries, ~ health, rehabllltatlDD, ed lld18, modleal sup- •"II would be ••ll' to sit back and dlaaPPl'O"al to Pii>villonl in th • relu,'~ ~ Parter said, "but now b the otdmance that would require tbe.m to , .. tint 1s1 L.M.. hY~ time we ,..U.y have to 1ook ahead." remove and replace· sigm for which c.,...,.. s A few · Jlllel <I ldvortistn& may be all it taka to pl·~,_ .. for ·-too. Dial Ille cl•Mllled ad ~ at tllt Dally PUol '"' the dh'ect line, 142¥11, to get ... Ad-¥bor to help you find out. ' ' Pamr aalcl Ille ""' llaa -lti:ined became "lf we want tolne a ni111tie . loot ll tltt future. we ... , Jatl .. It~.· He said the '""'11 is one ot 10 sub- ,. por\ I ~ .::g ..... ~.:; 4!i: n:~ ~.... """'" •re turning to the llolPtll for tblafi.llU ....... Parker strelled that the bospita staff .., H. aid many ~"'tc.do,,,._.,...,.,_have.jliid ancl.llo.c11.&l•en pormlts~'-i~;=-';;;:••'!";;;..-;,~: this. , .. The public hearings on ar$ulances ' , , "Unfortunately, it's amazing just how ......i'taxi cabs win ......... ,..,~"--'" for ~"":.C:. ': many hoopitels , drjlt • along and let -,. ---• .,~ ·--11 everythtnc else arrect them, nther than rate increases by Seat'.a Ambulance and ~ •tQI"• •;: affecting -t 11 goiotl to happen," he bJ Yellow cab of Newport and Coote -• • (See HOAG, !'"I• I) Mesa. ·- • ; -. J -I ·•. • • .. , •. vi t I ' ,. . -. Neeoport Pies Phone Tap -Repo rtedly 'Security' -· ·arbor Area's 3:>~t Delayed I ~ _Supervisors _Eye • A furlher 11Ven-month delay WU onlered today In the Oralige Cow>ty 5uperior Court trial Gf a Ill mJlllon Jaw1ult rued by I06 Harbor Area bomeownera who blame the com1ty for mounting jet ooi.e and pollution In the vicinity-.Of Counly airport. Je.~ Take~ffs. The F. Donald Nixon family of Newport Beach conflrmed today that they were aware Preside nt Nixon had their telephone tapped. President Nixon -disclosed Slllurday night that be ordered his brother's telephone tapped because persona In foreign countries were "lI'ying to get bi " m. The President declined to identify the foreign lnterests or 'vhat they wanted of bis brother. He did say be ordered the U.S. Secret Service lo make the tap £•for security reasons ." Contacted at her Newport Beach home today, Mrs. F. Donald Nlxon acknowledg- ed the family knew of the tap. "C.ertainly, we knew about It," she said. She could not, however, "remember when the phone was tapped or (or how long. "I don't pay any \ attention to that sort of thing . It sort of coi:nee: and goes with the tide," she explalned. Asked if her conversation with the reporter today was being recorded, she said, "I rather doubt that but I really don't know. I'd rather you talk with my husband." She said Nixon had meetings scheduled all day today and would not be available far comment until Tuesday. President Nixon said his brother con· sented to the .surveillance. The telephone reportedly was tapped for more than ooe year during Nixon's first term. Asked during bis televised appearan<e before tbe Associated Press Managing Editors If it made sense -to tap the telephone of someone who knew he was Under surveillance, Nixon said yes, because it was not directed at his-brother but at "others who were trying to get him ... particuJarly in a foreign country." "I won't go beyond that," Nixon said. "There were very good reasons and my brother was aware of 'ft." He said the reasons probably would be disclosed someday. When the Washington Post first disclosed the tap in September, the Secret Service said its protection of tbe President's family did not Include : his-brother Donald. The Post quoted ~ sources as saying the taps were oon- ducted because of Donald's financial dealings, particularly with Howard Hughes. Sunny Days Forecast For Holiday Presldlng Judge Bruce Swnner set June 17 as the new t'rlal date. Both sides said they needed more time lo complete their prep~tions tor what" IS expected tO be a ten8thy trial. From PflfJe .I HOAG •.. sald. "Hospitals have. to run fast io keep up with advances in health care. The advances 1n equipment and the delivuy of care change extremely rapidly." There are five stated objectives that Will concern 'the long range planning committee, itself. They include : -Scientific capabilities. -The OOspltal's size and complexion. -The composition and general nature of the population served, t • -The slze and makeup of the medical staff. -The actual and Potential resources reqU!red to provide this total service over the next five years. HEATER ... tbe home, with aome additional fire. smoke and water damage to the up1talts portion of Ille hou!t. fnvestigaiors slftlna throuldt I h e charred ruin> o( tbe Hlll borne !ound the beater and listed that appliance as the cause of the blaze. The device apparently ignited tbe drapery material and since the draperies ran about 20 feet acro&a one aide of tbe room the flames spread fast and with extreme heat firemen said. Frot11P.,.el CUTBACKS. • • water heaters. Generally, 140 to 150 degrees are recommended for laundry, 110 to 120 degrees fw balhs. Turn down or off when on vacation. '-Don't heat your pool moro than you have to. ·Don't beat It at all in months when you don't use it and when you go away for vacaUoo. Orange County suporv lsors Tuesday will consider a strong plea by Ne•rt Beach to reinstate early morning Jet takeoffs over Tulttn. The northerly takeolla bad been uaed for two years under ~ pllot program that Airport Direct« ll6bort Brellllban reported was highly succeulul. Supervisors, however. cancelled tbe program in a split wte Oct. 9. Under the program, J«a deported northerly between 7 and 9 a.m. aa a means of pm!~ nolae relief for Newport Beach and Santa Ana Heights residents. Supervi""' llaipb Clark pushed fw cancellation, arguing that the procram only transferred jel noloa from Newport Beach to the northerly communities. In a strong1y.,..hlecf lettet ukln( tor recooslderallon, N~ Beach Ma~r Donald A. Mclnnls iald. C()Uncilmen were disappointed that the board killed a program that Bresnahan stated ha! "materially reduced the total noise im- pact caused by jet operations fron1 Orange C.ounty Airport." "The Newport Beach community is totally disenchanted and,frustrated with continued evidence of ln.ensltlve, arbitrary and unnecexsary declslOll! dealing with the noise problem at the airport," the mayor wrote. Mcinnis also charged that the airport is being operated in violation of the California Division of Aeronautics noise standards and he pointed out the airport is under legal attack from Nevtpor t Beach residents because of oolse W. A. Grubb, BJ, Harbor Area Executive, Dies · W. Allen Grubb of Newport Baach, who waa the first person to become a me member of the American Red Cross and wu active In a nriety Gf other community affaln, dled Saturday. Hewl! IL Services will lake place Wednelda,v at 11 · a.m. at Padllc Vlew Memorial Park In COrona del Mar. Mt. Grubb, I retired cdblietlGn t'OfDoo pany uecUu.e, wu a former Onnce Cow>ty harbor ootnmllltoner and. member of tbe Newport Beach Civil s.mce Board. / He WU a founder .'and -of ' The first significant rainstorm sin<e M .H n· the Big Brothen of prange County and spring dropped nearly an inch of rain rs. . 0 Isler WU a vice pNldent and dlnetor of ' on the Orange Coast over tbe weekend the Orlnge C9tm~ Pbilharmolllc Society. .. ::!::'~"!:0~::!.m!: ::~~: .... Of N ewp.Qrt _llie~ N::~~:O.~~:..:: ! other mlrnx-Irritations. Charlotte M. Hollister, mother of a member of the lrv1ne Cout Country The U.S. Weather Service is predicting Harbor Area nurseryman Al Hollister, Club. mo.Uy sunny days for the rest of the died &mday at the age of 90. A resident of Orange County II yun, week Including the Thanksgiving holiday. Mra. Hollister, woo lived at 2311 22nd Mr. Grubb moved here fnm Porjland, Some 11C&ttered clouds may move in St., Newport Baach, f<r the put 11 Wednesday evening, but they shouldn't l"ars, will be burled TueM&y following Ore., where be wu a member of AI keep the sun from heating things up 2 p.m. services at Bell Broadway Chapel, Kader Shrine and was active .in Ma9ottlc to the 70S, the weathennan says. Costa Mesa. Lodge. • 1be Orange County Harbor Depart-Sbe is survived by sons. Al Gf Newport Mr. Grubb la survlYed by hll -· ment said today Its gauges recorded Beach: Bob of Costa Meoa, and Dick Alberta: a daughter, Mn. Mary Jane 0.84 of an inch of rain between Friday of Vallejo; a brother, Clyde H. Moore Iseli of Newport Beach; a brother, evening, and early Sunday l!!om[nl• of Oklahoma: a sister, Ruth Bliss Todd Douglas A. Grubb of Seatlle and a 'Ibe-sform brought the season's total of Cos M · dchlldren and i;ister, Mrs. Kathf"\m Martin of Oxl-to 0.87 inches. still far behind the same ta esa: nine gran ' necticut. ., .. dote last year when 3.2 inche.s had s.~ix~gr:.:•:.:•:.:t-gr~a:.:nd:.:ch:.:•:.:"1d:.:r:.:en:.:·--~· ---------------- . , fallen . The Southern California Edison Com- pany reported scattered power fallurea all over the county. The rain caused some lines to short out. Several circuits also failed , blacking out portions elf San Juan Capistrano SalllriaY night and part of Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach on Friday, Ed19on officials reported. Most o( the trouble was cleared up within an hour. The rain clouds were blown away ~ early Sunday by a cQlll wind that was :1 clocked at nearly 40 knot! at the· Harbor ' Department offices in Newport Beach r dufing sorile parts of the day. OU.N•I CO.Alf CM ' DAILY PILOT J Tl\t Or..,._ CO.ii DAILY PILOT, wlll ""'!di !1 tomttlnld !flt ,.._...p,_,1, It ll'Vf:llltlltl ..,. 11\e Or•<111e Coil! Plll>lltlllnt C~nr. s..._ r111 ldltianl ire 1>11bll)loea, MOl'ldly fl'll'OUfll ,rldt-, lllr Cotll MIJI, Ntwp011 tffell, '°'""'tln1ton 8e&C11 1F011!1!•ln Y•Oey, Lt;1.ll'll ••ell. l•YlntlS•CldleN~k •<WI $In Cl-ti!/ ltn Jiifotn C•pltl,.no. A tint!•, r11ltrl.91 td!!ioft 11 Pllttll1/!ell S1h,1•d•y1 tnd $ur10IYI• ' TM ,,1nc1~1 M 11$111nt plant It 11 l» WHI .. r sirttt. Cot•• Me", C•!!ftl'~i•, tuu. ' dioturbln<leL Supemaor Ronald Caspen, wllo.oe Flflb District lncludea the airport and Newpon -· PfOle<ted O&rk's "'°'"· Caspen pointed out that Ill pereent of the ru1hts were taklnc off over Newport Beach. "1lle hal8nee o( the county should be wllllng to shsre tbe no~e problems," ca.perk said. -11••• ..a, r ca\e1\u• __ -1 TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL ReiuJar meeting, City Hall, e:30 p.m. 00C LECTilllE -"Aviation Safety for P.Uots," AudJtorium, 7·9 p.m .. · OOC· LIBRARY Elallll1T -Rec.nt JapaneSe Posters, Nov. 19-0ec. 13. UC! LECTURES -"Shopping C<m- ters," part of aeries on Conunerical and Investment Properties, Rm. IOI 1'117>lcal Sci...,. Bldg. 7-9:30 p.m. Adm . sis. "World ol. Women'• series, Rm. 174 Computer Science Bldg. 7-10 p.m. Adm. f6. 'IUl!llDAY, NOV. It SENIOR" CITIZENS_ CLUB -CClln- m:.\i~ Center, 11 a.m...i p.m. RT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Jleiular meellnc. City Councll Cham- bel'I, 7:30 p.m. UCI LECruRE -Serles on "Aclnf• Or1sJns, Eflecta and Cootn>I," Rm. 1 1 Humanldes Hall, 7-9 p.m. Adm. is.so. C•Ur l"lltl Sltlt PMlt ,~": ' 5' .1 . .·"·, BflPP.Y Roy.DI Couple Joyce Wirth; a 20-year-old .business student from Newport Beach, · and Dennis Sheehan, 27, sttident couiicil member from ' Huntington Beach, leave footbJ,11 stadium with presents from Orange Coast Col· lege students. They were chosen Homecoming Queen an~ Homecom-~ · ing King by popular student vote. Honored as outstanding alumnus ,· during weekend homecoming ceremonies was James Carnett, OCC director of community services and a 1969 graduate. .. ,• Sheriff's Candidate Slates Talk in Mesa ~· l Brad Gates, the 34-y<aMld Sberllf's lieutenant from Capistrano Beach who is running for Orange County Sheriff, will speak to Costa Mesa Kiwanians Tuesday. His talk oo law enforcement, open to the P"blic, Is scheduled to begin at noon in the Costa Mesa Women's Club build- ing at 18th Street and Anaheim Avenue. --------·---- MCro-waVe dvellS make cooDlg a breeze! Outcaoks any pot.skillet. ·broiler. pan or Qll1 ·FLASH! 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