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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-30 - Orange Coast Pilot• • •· IXOll 1ve I They ·Kept Sister!'s Corpse ·at Ho111e- l DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 VOL. 66, tlO. JM, 4 Sl!CTIONS, 5C1 l"AGIS • ' ·' Death Sospe~t.s . ' ·' Tennessee Police Qriiz Three Me11 ~ UPIT ......... SUSfECTS IN SLAYING OF LAGUNA HILLS WOMAN, MUSICIAN Police in Memphis Captured ThrM Men After Motel Shootout Police in Memphis, Tenn., are ques· tioning three men -captured after a shootout-about the murder of Mildred Hazelwood of Laguna Hills and country and western guitarist J ames P. Widener in Nashville. Mrs. Hazelwood, 46, of 24252 Pike Did NlXe on , A tto.r.n ny's Road, and Widener, a musician In Hank 1 lie;.. Snow's band, were fOW'Kl shot to death in an alley Tuesday night , the apparent victims of a robbery. V e 1 -· N L ? The three suspects arrested i n wiute otary aw Memphis have not been identified by · · ·' - . : • police, who said a car belonging to By L PETE)\ KRIEG Of Ille a.Jty PMlt It.ff calitomia Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be called on to determine if President Nixon's personal lawyers violated notary Jaws when they recorded Nixon 's pre-presiden- ti&l papers as a gift to the National Archives. The President claimed a 1570,000 tax deduction for lhe gift in 1969, just before federal legislation Was enacted that cut .off tax deductions for such gifts. . Orpge Coast • Weather Those hi8h clouds will thicken tonight with light rain likely by mid-day 58.turday. Cooler temper- atures. with highs in both areas in the mkUOs dlpjling lo the fllid.a08 overnight. INSW E TODAY "The · Nutcracktr," ii fanorite Christma.r Ballet, i.J being pre- 1tnted by ttoo Ormtge C0a&i baUet groups. See infortnation ln today's Weekender. • • . ~ Widener was found ·near the motel where The St. Louis Post Dispatch eharged the three were staying. Thursday the presidenUal 1awyei: Frank The three men were arrested at the DeMarco of Los Ang~les, partner of motel in southwest Alemphis Thursday Herbert W. Kalmbach of·Newport ~a~h;---·· night by homicide detectives search· rr failed to properly record the notanzation inQ; of the gift. · for a man who attempted to buy airline DeMarco today claimed he did not tickets with a credit card belonging violate the law because he kept copies to Widener. of all the documents. The card had been blacklisted and 11 All that the law requires is that when the computer rejected it at the the notary keep a record of documents hotel ticket counte'r, the ·man fleii and notari1.ed by~him,'' Demarco said. police we;e.called. "It does not necessarily have to be Police said two of the three men in tabular form in a book. Maintaining were tricked into walking to the motel copies of documents constitutes a record. office where they were arrested.1 The Our. office has copies of all documents . t:lird man !tayed in 8 room ana ex- not8rizcd," he said. changed about 20 shots with officers Attorneys for tie california Secretary before crawling out the door after a of State's office weren't sure exactly barrage of teargas was fired . what the law requires, or IO they said. Police said five weapons were con- "'J will ta lk to the secretary of stale fiscated in the room shar(!d by the . today," said William Holden, an attorney men. A taxi driver said be took the in Brown's office. three men to the motel from a spot He told the Daily Pilot, '"I'his involves tn downtown Memphis near wh~ an interpetation of the statutes. We have Widener's car was found . not been~ called Upon before to. make Mrs. Hazelwood and her husband, who that interpetaUon." died 10 months ago of cancer, had The law states: been longtime friends of Widener. The "A notary public shall keep a record dead woman .had gone to Nashville to of all official acts dClle by him and visit her son, • who ts In the Anny a record of partie! to1 date and character at Fort Csmpbell, Ky., relatives said. of every Instrument acknowledged or Mrs. Hazelwood recently moved to approved by him." her Laguna Hills borne, where she plan- Most notaries keep a little book with ned to live· 1o1th ber son. Her husband. lSee PRESIDENI', Plge 2) a former Army officer, was allo a Blast Kills Man UNION CITY (UPI) -A gu explosion heard 10 miles •W81 rocli:ed a etrnenl company Thunday night, kil1ll1g the !uperintendent and wreck1ng o n e building. The victim, LaWT<llCe M. <l>enoweth, 61, ol Sin Leandro, was the ooly perD1 Cll d\lty wben the blast t40lt place, polleo said .. • country music writer and friends with many big !lafl of Ute mlllie world. She will be buried bookie her husband in At!lngtoo Nllional Cemetery this weekend, rolatlves said The murder of Wldeaer WU the second fatal shooting of a country music en- tertainer In recent -· David "Siring· bean" Akemm and his wife were found shot to deatb on tlieir farm near Nashville Nov. IL PolJ<e '"1 lhere Is P,robably no COllllection. (. Huntington W ODlen Draw, Jail Ter1ns For S.uhurh / . .A ~Jig Nl-.p . .., . Russ Say Woman Slept 21 Years MOSCOW (UPn -The Soviets have a modern·day Rip Van Winkle. Nadezhda A. Leliedin has awakened in the Ukraine after sleep· ing 21 ye_ars, according to the trade union newspaper Trud. It gave neither her age, family status, nor any indication that doctors knew why she finally woke up. · Trud said her problem began in.1952 when she was ill with flu . "She was absolutely immobile, not even able to open her eyes"' Trud said. She had no reaction to pain, but her internal organs kept func· tioning and she was fed 11artificially." The chief neuropathologist from the ministry of public health in the Ukraine said her eyesight has been restored, she can speak and is relearning to walk. The neuropathologist, who was not identified, diagnosed the cas as "lethargic ·sleep" and a.id it was "extremely rare." , Corpse of Woman Kept As 'Part of Family' CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -The skeleton of an elderly woman was found , in a locked-up house today, and police said . it appeared as if ber body bad been placed in 'the living room by a brother and · sister who wanted her to 11~ part of the laml!y." Their bodies were found upstairs In the bed where they died of natural. .. ..... officials said. Police said the skeleton of Cecilia Kermey, 84, was discovered on a: downstairs couch facing a television !el. They said she may have been dead as long as a year. Upstairs, police found the bodies of her 76-year..o1d sister, Grace, lying on a bed next to the brother, Roland, 72. Ttiey were thought to bave died within 'Pioneer' Faces Radiation Death MOUNTAIN VIEW (UPI) -U Pioneer 10 tneet! a sudden radiation death on., the way to its Monday encounter with the planet Jupiter, the spacecraft still will have discovered much about man's possible flight to the outer JO!ar S)lstem. Pioneer's findlilgs reported Thunday about Jupiter's magnetic field came on top of a list of discoveries during the nuclear-powered vehicle's 21-mooth trip. Pioneer Is less than l.S million miles from Jupiter, and moving at 26,200 mlies an hour. Late today, Its speed will begin to be escalated by Jupiter's gravi· ty, and !ale Monday lt will hit 81,000 miles an heur wben It makes !ts cl...,.t approach . ' the last monUt, according to officials. Det. Sgt. Bruce Russell said in his report, Hit appears that Cecilia died of natural causes and the other two dressed her and laid her on the couch so ·that she could still remain part of the family. ';Grace and Roalnd continued Jiving a normal life. Roland died around a mooth ago, and was asleep in his bed at the tin1e. Grace left him there, and tried to continue her Ji!e, but found she could not. "She lay in the same bed as Roland and died a few days or weeks later." Medical examiner Thomas Mathews said there was no evidence of foul play. The family was reclusive and shunned contact! with neighbors, authorities !aid. The di!covery was made a f t e r neighbon called the post office to report mail had been piling up in front of the house for three weeks. Post office officials not1fied police, who entered the boU!e -through a window and discovered the three bodies, along with the bodies of two pet!. A neighbor, who declined to be idcn·. tified, said , "They were very quiet peo- ple. You never heard a peep out of them.'' A police sergeant said the two-story Victorian house had not been painted on the out.side for about 30 years. and that much of the yellow paint peeled oil. "But Inside lt was very neat," he said. "11<-\>ad old fumbhlngs and a wood stove. They weren 't poor. They had a car parked ln the garage." "'ftlere was a bag of grocerlt! on the kitchen table, so they didn't starve to death /1 the sergeant said. Sins • Huntington Prostitutes Imprisoned Two of three women who pleaded guilty to prostitution charges after police discovered a house that wasri't a hom e on Capstone Drive in Huntington Beach drew jail terms Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge J"ames Turne r sent Judy Ann Klusmeyer, 251 to the county jail for the next 60 days and ord ere;d her to serve thre years probation on release. Helen Mane ?tyan. 37, drew a 45-day jail term in the brief sentencing session and also was ordered to serve three years probation on release. Carol Ann Dom.ian , 27, the third member or the statuesque trio -none is under six feet -was ordered to strve three yars probation with no jail time. All three were arrested on mullipl e prostitution and conspira cy charges after Huntington Beach police investigated reports from neighbors who became curious about the number of male visitors calling at 6762 Capstone Drive. " A Superior Court civil ruling has put the home in the "bawdy house" category under the provisions of the state's so-. called "Red Light Abatement Act." ' The capstone Drive home is currently under sheriff's surveillance, pending a Superior Court trial that could end with the ruling that the home must be sold at publlc auction. ~ DUCK ABD UCTED IN BIRMINGHAM .. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP! -Beulah Burell told police that duck rusUers struck the pond in her front yard and made off .with her pet duck, which she valued at $100. A police report described the misiing duck as "large and white." Sgt. Ollie Vance of the Crimes Against Pro perty Burea u had this comment, "COnsidering the fact that ""the duet disappeared the day before Thartksgiv~ ing, chances ot apprehend ing the truer or or recovering the duck appear to be very, very slim ." ' Indio Man Nabbed INDIO (AP) -A 26-yeaMld man was arrested Thursday in 1 n d I o Municipal Court and booked for In· vestigation of murder in the. h tr o l n overdose dea th of Charlea DeMillet, .. of Palm Springs, officials said. • I . s Frid_,, NO¥t1nbtt JO, 1973 Cultist Leary Cut· Loose Of Orange County 'Ties' By TO:\I BARLEY 01 llM O.Ur P'UOI s1at1 A Loary-weary District Attorney (.e(:il Hlcks cut Orange County's last link "'ilh the in1prlsoncd LSD cultis t Thurs- day by dropping cha rges contained 1n the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" Grand Jury indiclment against Dr. Timothy Leary. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent, the jurist whose courtroom has been assignt-d to all "Brotherhood '' cases in the past yeai. granted the m01ion made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright. "We just don't want him back here using us as a ptatrorm for his crackpot beliefs," Enright commented. ''In any event, it seems cert ai n he's going to be busy for a long time to come serving his !:itate and federal sentences." Dr. Leary, 50. \vas tra nsferred to the state's minimum SL'Curity facility at Vacaville this wee k aft er earlier in· carceration at Folsom Prison. Leary went to Folsom earlier thi s year lO resume serving the sentence o( one to 10 \'Cars tic drew in Orange ·eowity for pOssession of marijuana in Laguna Beach. That confinement \\"as interrupted when he escaped from the San Luis Obi!pO 1'.len's Colony and embarked on a globetrotting tour before being recap- tured in . .\fghanislan and shipped back to the t:nited States. lie was ser\'ing his sentence on charges initially filed 1:i Laguna when he was named as one of some 50 defendants in the Grand Jury's indictment of the "Brotherhood'" cult. Enright rommentcd Thursday that Leary faces an additional. state prison term of six months to five years on escape charges after he completes his dru g convic tion. •'J am delighted to note that arter that the high priest of the acid culture will be transferred to fl federal facility to possibly scrrc his federal conviction,'' Enright s<i1d The burly prosecu tor said Leary dre~ a 10-year sentence th ree years ago ll1 Laredo, Texas, after being ronvicted of possession of marijuana. Investigators working the Leary case Building Worker Injured 111 Fall In San Clemente A san Jacinto construction wor){er fell from the third floor of an apartment project nea r the San Clemente pier area ~;Thursday afternoon and suffered a frac- ! tured back. :~ Police an d firemen were summoned :, 10 the construction site at 423 Avenida ;: Granada shortly before 2 p.m. and ad- ; ministered first aid lo JC>Seph Carpenter, :: 36. ·;' Carpenter v.as taken by a1nbulancc ·' ~o San Clemen1e l~encral Hospital where ~he \\'as admitted . :.; Spokesmen fur the nurs;ng office said : today that Carpenter's fracture appeared ; to be-a simple injury and adde:d . that :; no paralysis \Vas expected. The_ 1nJw·ed ·) \\'Orker's condilioo v.·as desc ribed as • satisfactory. • ~ U.S. Exporting ' ~Of Fue] Soars : WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Rep. Les • Aspin (D-\Vis.), sai d today t~at des pite ... the threat of rationing, the United States -exported 493 000 barrels of gasoline, ~ 650 196 barreis of fuel oil and 628,019 : ba~rels of residual fuel oil during October. : Aspin said official government figures .' show about the same volume of exports v.·as reported in September. n1aking the (\Yo-mont.h total about 3.4 n1illion barrels. Aspin is sponsor of a !Jill to ban export of gasol.ine, fuel oil a~d propane derivatives during the dom~st1c shortage. ' ' ., ·l -. .. ' • • ~ 01.ANGI COAST ST DAILY PILOT T~f 0fll\9t (OOll O.\ILY "ILOT, wlln ""'It~ 11 combl"ed th• N-•·"•en, h publlfll"!I by tM Or11~11e (~1! PYb!lth1n<;1 Compony. ''Pl rlll l(ll!lc"1 i re P11Dll1hed, MOflCllY lh•~h Frldl,, !Of CO$lt Met•, NtW~ft Beien, Hunllnoton Bt.c:~/Fo1m111" v1111y, L•gun1 811gi, lrv1Nl5Mldl~t-...o sJr. Cle"""''' s.n J1,111n C1pfllr•""· A •1"91• ••9•Gr11I •ltloll 11 p\ICIHt lMid ~l\l•dlY1 1nd Sund1~1. f~• ,.Jncltwl pUOlltlllntl Pit"' 11 ft Jlll Wnr e..y .itrttt, Col11 Mew, C...lllor"lt , tH71 I Jtob•rt N. W11il Prftklllll 91'1111 Plllllltlll• J.clr l. C11rl1y Yl<t l"ftti119n1 11111 ~II Ml "lif! Thom1t IC11•ll !tllfOI' tn0..,.., A. M•r,liit11 M1111t!nO f.tllttl' Ckt fltt H. Lo~u "ich1 rtl ·p, Nill AHl"~I Mlflltliftt (di .... Offk• CO.II M .. : g w.;:,::,.r llrMI """""°" •HCll• »"... lovll !H,. 1.q11111 9pdlt m .. ., .. , """""' +l""'tlllfl0tl'91~1 1?11J llldl llltlnll"ll $Ill ( .... Ill )Oj i.IGl'I~ l!I C.!'lllM "Wt Ttl.,.... 17141 Ml-4111 ~ ••-"' .... '41·1•7• ,.,_ a.ft! ..,... ........... ....,_. •tldl 491-4420 Pl"Mfl .... ~ c..tv ClMtl-ltllf Mt-lltf C lflll 1'7L Onlltt C-1 f'llltlltll"'4 =-"". .... """" l llf... """''''"""· .. ,... .... =~ -:Wi.!t'"":i.1"": N • 00 ll'lltl!lol et C#'t""lf'll -'· ...... dllt ....... ,_Liii 1t Cltll /MN • ~ ,......_._ ., ~ a.61 .......,.,, 11¥ -A p ,lt l!llftfltft'I mllltwf .....,,."""' '2.61 ~. • said Thursday that British socialite Joa n- na Harcourt·Smith appears to have aban· doned what she said would be her "eternal vJgil " near wherever Leary w3s to be confined. She returned v.•ith Leary fro m Goitag Ho111e Afghanistan after the couple had •pent several months together in a tour of Near East natiorus. Jnvestlgators believe she has now returned to her native London to recover from a recent bout of hepatitis. UPI Tl ..... Less than two Weeks after his right leg was amputa~ed in a. can~er operation, Edward Kennedy, Jr., 12, leaves Georgetown Un1vers1~y Hos pital, escorted by his father, Sen. Edward Kennedy;, Doc~ors said .. after the operation that there is "an excellent chance the surgery "rrested the cancer. =::_:._~--~~~~~~~~~~- President Extends Life Of Watergate Grand Jury From Wire Services WASHINGTON -President Nixon to- day signed a bill to ·extend for as mu ch as a ye· r, if necessary, the life of the \\'aterg te· grand Jury. The grand ad bee n scheduled tu go out of business Dec. 4 -next week. The extension was requested by the Deparlment of Justice last month . The measure prov ides for one man- datory six-month extension or the grand jury's tenure an d for an a dditlonal six-month extension at the discretion of the U.S. district court. The bill pro- ,·ides that "in no event" \\'iii the term of the grand jury be extended beyond Dec. 4, 1914. ~feantlme. experts began study ing the fla wed White House Watergate tape in which an 18-minute segment of con- versation has been replaced by a buzz. The tppe was taken to an unnamed laboratory in NeW York Thursday night •.4. to be studied bv a six-man pan el agreed upon by the White House and special \Va!ergate prosecu tor Leon Jaworski. A!so shipped to New York were the electric lypc\vritcr of Miss Rose Mary \\'oods and a high intensity lamp that had been on her desk on Oct. l. Th8t v.·as the day she was transcribing a tape made June 20, 1972 that included a conversation between President Nixon and H. R. Ha\dcn1an, then White I-louse chief of staff. 1'1iss \lloods, Nixon's secretary for 23 years, told a federal court hearing tha t she accillentally pushed the record button on a tape machine when she leaned back to amwer a telephone and thereby might have caused an eruure. But she said the telephone converulioa 1asted not more than four to five mlnutes, which would not account lor the LS-minute hum lhat Is In the lal't during the Nixon-Haldeman eonveraatlon. On Thursday .Whlto House co..,..l J. Fred Buzhardt • teotlfled he was able to nearly duplicate tbe buzzing sound by depr..,slng both the start and record button on the recorder while runnln{I: ltie type writer and lamp. But be said that an eic;>ert called to the White House was not able to duplicate that 90und. In another development N 1 x o n ' 1 lawyers , headed by Buzhardt, have made "some mistakes" in bandlinl the Watergate affair and the omco ii being reorganized . acwrding to White llouae LEGAL ADVISER -Illinois Appellate Judge John Sullivan of Chicago, has JOmed Pres1· dent Nixon's 'lline·man staff of legal advisers. He was added to team because of some mis- takes in handling Watergate by other advisers, says Press SecreW'y Ron.aid Ziegler. press secretary ROnald L Zle:gler. Ziegler said nunday that Buzhardt would continue on the legal team but an Diuiois judge, John J. SUIUvah, a o..._at who is a longtime friend of the .Pmldent, haa joined the group. Zlealtr llldlcatod t b e President was ...,., oed lboul what he considered mlatal<a b7 -...St'a 1111! I n coortfoom IKtlel -.. U.S. Oiltrlct .hli' Jobo J. lbla. / ' "They've boon ~ bonl llld "''ve rr.cd! 110me ~ • tble ••ttmi'' he satd. , Buzhardt llld 1iia -111$ 'I r< with Ziegler'• commmt W '9 :w11 ovenoorked and oddod •1.,. - pretended that 1 was perfect." \ Virgin Islands Man Murdered CHARLOTJ'E AMALIE, V , 1 . (AP) - A British landowner was found stabbed to death today In · the latest in a series of violent killings In the Virgin Island•, police aald. . on the nelpboting island of St. Croix, 19 pel'IOOJ have been slain In IS months. The dead man was identified as Ian Victor Major, 54, who served u an officer in the Brlilsh marines during World War II ·and is also known for yachting exploits. FromPqe I PRESIDENT ••• spaces in them to reco rd all required information. But the St. Louis Post Dispatch claim· ed. DeMarco admitted to them that ~e had not kept proper records because they weren't in a journal. DeMarco drew the deed of Nixon's gift of bis personal papers to the Nat ional Archives. The newspaper claims "the absence of Independent notary records leave only the personal assertion by f.·lr. Nixon's lawyers to establish that the President deeded the papers to the archives before July 25, 196!, when Congress c~t ~~f generous tax deductions for ~uch gifts .. The President admitted tn a public news conference that he pa id little in- come tax in 1970 and. 1971 because of th e deduction a1lowed by the donation of the papers. Police Arrest Burglary Ring NEW YORK (UPI) -Police today announced the breakup of an Oliver Twist type burglary ring with the arrests of a 42-year-old man , his son and seven youths. . Police said members of a loosely knit group allegedly burglarized at least 12 synagogues and yeshivas ~d a number or stores ln Brooklyn the past year. A spokesman said more arrests were expe<:ted. The youths ranged in age from 16 to 19 and were charged with burglary and criminal po3session. W 111 l a m Scanlan, the alleged leader of th.e ring. also was charged with endangermg the welfare of minors. SF Dou1 e Blackened SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The City Hall dome will be blacked out f~r the first time since World War 11 ib an effort to asve energy. Mayor Joseph I,,.. Alioto said ~Thursday turning o1f the floodlights would reduce the bt/ildlng's energy consumption by 75 percent. IMwpr• Argue ' Nixon's Estate Not Undertaxed SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nix· on's Jawyen are pteparlng to arg~c that Nixon 's San Clemente estate is not undertaxed, an Orange County of- !iclal aaJd: 1belr case may include a private ap- praisal oC the Wesleru White House property, said Ted Mb r a i t i s , ad· mini.strative assistant to co u nt Y Supervisor Robert Battin. A county lax appeals board is schedul- ed to hol~ ~ry)iet[.lng Monda y on Battin'S~esl~~-:!4., a private taxpayer, to have thel" ., .. 1 property tax assessment~of the la1'd" .,, ·ev.•cd. Battin. a Democrat. ~ l'Olllended the land is Wlderassessed at the 1973-74 value or $1.31 million. If 'that is so, Battin has <9'1d1 the ownefs are not paying theft' tnlr 1\iafe of 't:0unfy prop- erty taxes. Vallerga has defended the 11.37 million figure as fair. Improvements such as presidential security should nol be con· sidered as enhancing the value of the property since ownership ol those facilities wil l remain in federal hands , he said. De Marco is a partner of Herbert Kal mbach, who form erly served as Nlx- on 's private lawyer and whl? handled the dis~ltion ol controversial Nixon campaign funds in 1972. Egil l(rogh Pleads C1iilt To B1·eak-in fi·lorail is said in a tE1.lephqne interview Thursday tllat• 'htS · ihformition can1c from Frank DeMarco of the law firm o[ Kalmbach·DeMa'rco, Knapp and Chill· ingworth. · WASHINGTON (UPl l -Egil "Bud" De1'1arco declined comment. Krogh, onetime head or the White ltouse His secretary told a newsman: "?>.1r. "Plumbers" in vestlgat i11e unit , decided DeMarco isn't talking to reporters about to pie# ad guilty today lo a felony ~barge these matters." involving the break-ln at the office of Orange C9unty Assessor Jack Vallerga Daniel Ellsbug's psychlatr~t. confirmed ~rsday~ti.at1 •t'Private ap-Krogh's attorney, Stephen N. Shulman, pralsal of ttle propirfy IS being conducted said the 34-year-old former presidential on behalf of the owners, Nixon and aide also would make "a personal state- industrialist Robert Abplanalp. ment to the court" on his dechk>r\. Vallerga said he was not certain of Krogh, a former undersecretary of the p"urpose-of the apPraisat, but be Transportation, had been scheduled to said it was-' nof f0r use at the appeal stand trial Dec. 11 on perjury charges. boa rd hearing. He was ind icted Oct. 4 on charge s Still another appraisal has been con-of lying to the \Vaterga te grand jury ducted by the State Board of Equaliza-when he denied any knowledge of trips lion under contract to the Orange County made to California In COMection with supervisors. Results of the appraisal, the break-In by G. Gt'lrdon Liddy and which included a flrstbantl inspection E. Howard Hunt, two other members of the San Clemente estate, have not of the "Plumbers." been made public. The agree ment v.·orked out with pros-- Moraitis said it will be up to the eculors provided that the perjury fi ve-member board whether the state charges be dropped, and that Krogh appraisal will be discl<>1ed. It has not tvould plead guilty to a charge involving yet been turned over ·by the state of-the break-in. ficials. 1 Krogh will be sentenced first, however, Battin had hoped to have the state unlike Watergate conspir1ton such u appraisal In hand before Mooday's Jeb S. Magruder and Frederick Larue, scheduled hearing. He may ask the board who pleaded guilty to single charges to postpone the session for two weeks, and al.so agreed to testify ln other ~'1oraltiS' said. Watergate trials, with sentencing later. He added, "No maUer what the state Krogh admitted last May in· an af. appraisal says, we're going to insist fida vi t flied with the court that he on a fuU hearing. There are too many was respomible for Hunt's and Llddy's presumptions from various sources that break-in. at the. psychiatrist's office iD indicate the property is under-assessed." Beverly Hills. ' One indication is that the official Krogh'1 attorneys ariued that be had assessment of full market value of $1.37 -been ordered to maintain seaecy about million is Jess than the $1.5 million t,fe "Plumbers': t.(Jt, an order they . purchase price paid • for the property .aid resulted in ·his testimony before · in 1969, Moraitis said. Another ~ the Watergate grand Jury. But the court. sideration is federally financed im-ruled .that Krogh's defense wu not provements to the estate s i n c e then, justifiable and ordered him to stand he said. trial. .... -.. ---------===----··.-. • re-holida~ sale 50lf &~ f-:: C ~"~A r:~~ ONE WEEK ONLY • DON'T DELAY Get Ready Far Tiie Halidays Wi1 h A New Safa or Chair Here Are Just A Few Examples Of The MGlly Excellent Values. SOFAS .... SALE 7' SOFA • • , M"'9• C....... Print $440. '379. I' SOFA , • , M""I• Canon ••• Gofd/0"""1• Ynlot $no. '599. """ 5' LOVE SIATS ••• Royal C-'o Gehl YlllYot $6ff. IA: '549 ..... Pair 7' SOfAS ••• Shenll • , • Y ... w/Gohl $5ff. IA. 1499 ..... I ' SOFA • • , Mar90 CGnoo , , , UoOI l'rlnt ~·--$570. '489. I' SOFA ••• SloorrlM Croacoot •• , Yowlot lod/lllSI $SH. '499. CHAIRS Pair CHAIRS M-.• C.-... Y ollow ., °""'tO Yolnt $279. u.. '199 ..... Slotlo CHAii • . • Woo"""'"' • • • Gr-$15'. '129. 51wtlo CHAIR • , ............ , • Top-tNlo loelftor $500. '425. r.Ir CHAIRS ••• loyol c-h , • , Pl .. VlllYot $379. IA. '289 •••. OREXEl--HERITAGi-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASlAN ) ~ -l ~J-14 "JJ,. ... ~--t ,I'.( -.., {!,_J fl., ... ,·1,~~··""'~' . ) INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH e f727 W~STC:l IF,_ bl. t4?•2050 f0,.11 SufHl•y IJ.&1JOI . pr.-r:H e l r-• '1 lfWT I<, , ~1111~ ... y 12.11:01 4f4 6511 TORR .. NC~ • wDIDAYS & SATUnDAYS 9:00 te S:JO flltDAY 'Ttl t :OO 2!64f H~W1HOllN£ ll VD. J71 '''' . ' • • -· • • , " Pa y Da II td Yu ye pa on t for o see Tor c The of a reci it. Is this count Be Minn "Cr ••• mlI, mar with • bo The Into Hi D the shell a bi and ite Ca food we aod .... a " Ca. Sa 958 s 'I I At Your Service A Sunday, ll'edaelday ud F..W.y Fe1111r1 Of Ibo Dilly Pllol Gol • PTOblnn1 T~•n wnl< Pat Dun·n. Pat wfll C"Ut rtd 14pe, gtl th• • antwer1 and action you need to -1. tolve 'nequf. tie1 fn goo- ern~nt and bUJin•11. Mail ti 0 u,. que•· "°111 lo />GI Dunn/ Al Your Sm1'ce, Orange COGIC Daily Pilot, P.O. 80% 1560, Costa Meta, f..'a., 92628. Jncludt ~our ttilephone number. Y ule Candu Recipe EAR PAT : For the past several , Betty Crocker's frosting mix ge had a candy recipe pci.nted on t box. We've used this recipe for our Christmas candies and now I see there's a new for cooking and it The old one is a of a sudden I find recipe which calls n't what we want. 'tradition" and au self without the recipe becau.se I never to copy it. Is there any way to find ou what this old recipe is? My childre are counting on me. P.C., Huntington Beach Betty CN>cker Kitchens, P.tlnaeapoUs, Ttllnn., found the recipe for your "Creamy VanUla Fondant.'' It calls for one package of creamy-type frostlng mlx, ooe-hllf cup softened butter or margarine and 1 teaspoon vanWa . Mix with fort and knead 26-30 times on a board dusted wttb confectlo11trs sugar. The candy may be colored and shaped into oue-lncb balls or any desired form. Hikes No t Olegal DEAR PAT: Can a supermarket boost the price of an item already on the shelf? I was in a hurry to get through a big shopping list prior to Thanksgiving, and only now did I notice that several items had "new" price stickers pasted over old, lower stickers. How can a store do this when it may have purchas- ed those items at lower wholesale prices than those presently prevailing? Doesn't so~ have a law against this sort of thing'? A.K., Captslr-Beach Canldl does, but we don't. Caudlan feod 11toppen mmt be more vocal tit.I n we are btaae &Ut 1ation '1 price board and melt of the ma jor food rttallen rteendy rucbed whit Wll termed I I a 11geademaa'1 agree-mart," wbtteby the ceaumer would only blve to. pay &k · lowtr price wllea tWo or more price slickers are affixed to ID Item. Euergu Salling Guide DEAR PAT: The energy cris~no" appears to be a reality instead of ust a--threat. Not being used to~• attempts at saving energy, ex for turning off unnecessary lights, I'm ook· ing for other energy conservation i . such as a booklet or pamphlet cf information. Is such a thing available at a nominal cost? T.C., Dana Point "1be Energy Savlng Gulde Boot" con- tains 135 Ups and cosb %$ cents. Tbls 11-page, Wastrated booklet, ·which prom- Dset unaal ettergy consumptJ N tosts cub of MSt U as few as aeven tips are followed, ls pabllsbed u a ptbUc service b y the Electrical fndusUies A1!10datloa of Sou~era California. Re- q1est from Electrlcal Industries Alsoc., tt55 E. Washington Blvd .. Los Angeles, Ca. 91NO, or Consumer Affaln-Energy Slvtngs, P.O. Box 310, Sacramento, Ca. 95!02. Steam V•. Shempoo DEAR PAT: l have a large area of nylon carpet badly in need of cleaning and opinions are divided over the btnefits of lhe steam cleaning method and shampooing with a detergent. Do you know which method ls preferable? C.E.W., Newport Beach The consensu1 of county carpet cleuen contacted ls that steam ckaDing It preferable. Steam Malter Carpet llellDm, Coota Meaa, does bolb lypes of dean!Dg ud wm •rrAC• for .. evallladoe of yow carpet's cleanin g: needl, If yw call Geaeva Servais at MS-UU. AD cltnen •&reed that sham· pool111 tends to clean carpet top soU aec:amalatlon, but Ult mklue embe,:lded ta ~deeper flberl tlten seUles onto tbe baclllng -almolll ltko a Hgbl DM1d -wbfcb weakeft ud deleilorlil<s bolb ti. carpet Md •aekta1 ever a period of Ume. SUmpeelag nyloa carpel tlto tendl to cause fibtn to attract new surface toll after cleanJng. Vewetables Dcmagedl' DEAR PAT: Everyone heard about the smog damage to lettuce crops in Orange County before Thankog!ving, and t W011ld like to know if other home-grown vegelables llUffered damage too. The lelvu on most Of my garden's wg•table.s look st,.... and I wooder how · the average 1ardener c a n dlstJnculsb smog damage from otber prdeo problema. C.S., Cotta Mell u ,_ ,._. leav ........ colJatli!ed ----lbe-adliie ..,_ mfaee of lbe leovet u .. u As rinal 1beea or barned .appearaaee ...... _ ...... .-.. .,.~ lbal ''""' cnMd lbe dam.,.. The U-y of Cllllonla Agrlcollanl Ex- ....... Servlee la Onqe Coualy llY• 11111 la addtttoa lo lellace • number of olblr ve,.lilblO CIV(ll and oome .... -probably also"Wen alfecled '" ..,. ,.. ... 'l' •lllOJ In eari, November. 'I I • Ul'I T1lffl!OI• Riggs Rono'red Jack Benny jokes with tennis player Bobby Riggs of Newport Beach after the latter was honored Thursday night at the 12th Annual Greater Lo s Angeles Press Club "Headliner of the Year" banquet. Circuit Breaker Blamed For County Blackout At least 60,000 sOu°them California F.disori Company customers got a first- hand feel for the energy . crisis Thursd ay when elect ric power over a wide area or Orange C.ounty railed. South county SCE representative Bob HOOges blamed the blackout on, "an accidental operation of a circuit breaker at our Santiago substation." Power was out between 10:33 and 10:40 a.n1. 'Ibe seven-minute failure affected most of the Saddleback Valley, Lagw;ia Bead!, Su11da y' s Pilot Will Take l,oo k At Wi11 e Retur1i U you're going to be looking /or "Sun- day's Best'' in the Daily Pilot. be sure to take a look at these: WINE'S COUNTY COMEBACK - Vineyards in Orange County were plen- ttful enough 100 years ago to make this California's "wine country," not that "Sanapa-noma" place up north. And the vines are coming back, according to YOU Section feature by Staff Writer Candace Pearson. STUN GUNS -Hailed as the ultimate in humane weaponry when first in· traduced . the stun gun is in wide use today. Whether it is likely to replace lawmen 's traditional .38 specials and 12 gauge shotguns is discussed by Slaf[ Writer Arthur R. Vinsel in a YOU Section report. NAMATH'S LIBERATED MOM -Six famous men pick their favorite liberated women and "Broadway Joe" Namath nominates his mother in the cover story of this Sunday's Family Weekly. HER NICHE Frrs -Nance North . school teacher, Girl Scout leader and -finally -greenbelt planner, fe els she has found her ultimate role and wonders how many others have spent years getti,ng there. She's featured in leadoff story of Women's Section in which Staff Writer Allison Deerr profiles the planner in words and photos. • Smell's E11ou gl-i l n Pot Searclr, DENVER (UPI ) -The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that Smelt alone is probable cause for searching an automobile for marijuana . 'nM! ruling came Thursday on an ap- peal by Vernon Willis Bowman Jr. A U.S. Border Patrol agent slopped Bowman at a checkpoint near Truth or Consequences, N.M., in October 1972 to ,determine citizenship. The court said agent Bruce Goard detected the odor of marijuana. Goard searched the car and found a fooUocker containing 2S bricks of marijuana. A small bag of the sub.5tance also was found in a suitcase. Strikers Wi1i Crucial Poi1 it FEATIIERSTONE, Fl n g I• n d (UPI) -Twenty construction workers ended a strike today after their employer agreed to provide restrooms at a bulldlna site. The workers complained each walk to lavatorlcs l),alf a mile away cost them 11.25 In losl wages. • lrvine and parts of Newport Beach, San Juan Capistrano and Tustin. The lights were out for alm~t two hours at Tustin High School and students were sent home before the lunch hour because the nearly windowless rooms were pitch black. Dick Verrue , SCE'S Santa Ana service manager, said the high school's power failure wasn't Edi.son's fault. "When the power came back on after seven minutes or so, the surge of current was too much for the school's own system to handle and their main breaker opened.," he said. "Nobody knew how to turn it back on again." There were scattered reports of outages longer than the seven minutes SCE is talking about but Hodges said most were probably similar to the Twtin situation. * * * PhQnes Silenced In La guna Beach Dtuing Outage The electrical ou tage that left Laguna Beach powefless for about 10 minutes Thursday also caused a minor in· terruption in telephone service. John Blac&: Laguna manag1!r for General Telephone, said a pause oc- curred between the time the power went off and the telephone company's own emergency generators kicked in. That pause affected the electrical switching equipment. The interruption was brief he said. The te lephone com- pany maintains an emergency power supply of generators and batteries. Lighted buttons on off i c e-t.y pe telephones with multiple lines were blacked out by the electrical fai lure as they are tied directly into the com· mercial power system, Black said. American, Thai Lover Shot Dead BANKOK (AP) -Police said they found the naked bodies of an American man and his Thai mistress in a rented house near Bangkok with a note warning Thai women to be "very carefu1" of foreign men. The police said Thursday night the man W?S Ralph Ingram. an empl.oye of the Western Electric Company from Neptune Beach, Fla. They said the woman, a 1.8-year-old Bangkok secretary named Kamalapas Netrvlchit , shot Ingram and then killed herseU. Relatives of the woman said the couple had been lovers for about a year. Pair Shot Down By Firing Squad LIMA, Peru (UPI) -Two convicts were executed by n firing squad here for killing a policeman and a. bank empto~• In a l'Obbtry. Police sourm said Thursday the of- ficer commanding the firing squad, who was not identified, was so nervous that be shot at a group of his soldiers, wounding one of them In tbe knto . The deeth sentences for Alejandro Lastra Villavicencio, a 3 S • y e a r • o I d fl'lo~me!T' policeman, ond Gerardo Pinto Salcahuaman, a. wm-e carried o u t ln an isolated section of the Fronton lstnnd penal cdlony six miles off lhe Peruvian coast. t r1dd.J , No~ember 31J, lii/.3 S U~Y PtLOf 3 •oon~t Overrea~1 ~· Fin~h A ddres ses A rea Lawyers on Scanda l By TQM BARLEY 01 tM Dll!y f'Uet Iliff Fonner Nixon cabinet member Robert H. Finoh warned Orange County lawyers Thursday that it would be "a grave mistake'' to indict the entire presidential system because of the Watergate scan- dal. Finch, who served for four years as President Nixon's Secretary of Health, Education and WeUare, told the Orange County Bar .Association that expansiM of the confirrilation procedure at Senate and Congressional levels "might be the much better route. Most America11s Claim Beli ef In Sighte d UFOs PRINCETON, N.J. (AP l -A majority of Amer.icans believe unidentified flying objects are real and 11 percent claim to have seen the so-called "flying saucers,'• the latest Gallup Poll reports. The survey, taken Nov. 2-5, shows the number saying they'd seen a UFO ha s more than doubled since a similar 1966 poll and those who ~lieve in in- telligent life on other planets has grown from 34 to 46 percent. The Gallup organization said its survey showel;i CFO sightings were not confined to any population group. FQr .example, college-educated persons were as likely to say they'd seen one as those with less education. · Gallup added t~t a considerably higher proportion of sightings were reported in the Midwest and South and in rural areas or small towns . The 1,550 pen;ons questioned were ask· ed il (I ) they lhought UFOs were "real or just people's imagination," (2) they'd seen ·a UFO and (3) they believed "~here are people somewhat like ourselves living on other planets." Fifty-one pen:ent said they thought "Oying saucers" were real, 28 percent considered them imaginary and 21 per- cent had no opinion. In the 1966 survey, the percentages were 4& real, 29 im- agined and 25 no opinion. P eron Ends Rest BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -President Juan D. Peron ended a nine-day rest at home today and , announced. on a natiOllW!de· l<levlsion and radio broadcast that social ,security benefits would be increased by 30 prrcent starting in 1974. The 78-year-oid general, who had been suffering from a bronchi&I infection, looked' rested encl b,.lthy during the 31).rninute address. 'uwe mustn't overreact," Finch warn· ed. "I think we already have the solution to this type or problem within the ex· isting system and we could make the appointment of all key members of the presidential circle subject to screening at Senate and Congressional level." Finch revealed before the meeting that he is less than a month away from a decision that may mean his return to political tile. "It will be either for governor of California or the Senate," Finch said. But the man who left the job of lieutenant governor to take the llEW post at PresWent Nixon 's personal re. quest made it clear that the office of governor carries the greater at- traction. Finch v.·arned bis lawyer audience that a rapidly changing society is going to put unpreced.ented str~ins on this na- tion's l~gal professio1t. "But •lwe can meet these challenges and stiU come fu> with an ordered and st.able socie~1"" he said. "Law has always. bee;O ·~ptable :and pliant and we as lawyers pius~ be ready to accept what may be s~ng changes." . ' •,•.:• DllllY "lltt Steff "llete SPEAKS TO LAWYERS Robert Finch Futut e Use of Coastline ' ·1 Stµ~i,~~ in Irvine Confab .';i ,\l;,1 ,''t "~.t ' . . The fytUre.~t!f.t.'1}8veloPment, recreation chairman of the South Coast regional and land · ~e· ... ltgi-1ation along the commission covering Orange and Los coastline will be the Wbject of a two-day Angeles counties, are l\\'O of the con- conference Mon<Jay aDd Tuesday at the ference speakers. Airporter 1 inn }ni'~ State Sen. Dennis CafPe8:ter (R- The aU-Oay sessions are sponsored Newport Beach) and L. Edwm Coate by the M~ Technology Society of a deputy administrator or the federal Los Ang~~: the University of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Southern • · ~ Grant pro gr~. are also scheduled to appear. Feature4 ·speaker'" Lnclude officia_ls Marine scie nce and goology experts from mast.al regula_rory agencies 10 . . . . Califoniia,. ~aa)1ln1t9n, Oregon , from USC, Lou1s1an~ State U~versny, Michigaii,'and lflW'\11-' " UC Berkeley, Scripps Institute of R~h;.\·;ir\Ji 4~ place from s Oceanography, San Diego Stnte College to 8 p:W. ~.at'·1he hotel, 18700 and Long Beach State College also are MacArtbUr: . · nd at 8:45 a.m. Moo· on the agenda. day. $) · li~ 125 for both days for membeNiito~~'the mUtne society and $30 for IXlll.·Inembers. A total of '11 speakers are scheduled to discuss current coastal zone legislation and activities, i.pcreasing the coastal zone carrying capacity, mooitoring re- quirements, future trends of marine recreation, the role of the courts and outlook for «;oastal development. Proposition 20, the 1972 coastal zone act passed a y~ ago by voters, created one state and' 'ix regional coastal com- missi<m in California. Joseph Bodovitz, executive director of the state cOmrnission, and Donald Bright, B1·ezhnev Flies Home NEW DELHI (AP ) -Soviet Com- munist party chief Leonid Brezhnev le£t for home today after a five-<lay visit to New Delhi during which he made repeated calls for international de~te and an Asian collective security pact. At a brief airport ceremony, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Brezhnev each expressed conf.tdeoce that growing Indian-Sovie! friendship . would help the cause of peace in the world. ;ww.w~---~~----~·~•~•••--~--~-~~~~---~---, I i I POR~ABLE MICROWAVE OVEN Pr~ .. ~ '2'299& I Th• P•ffKt °'"'""..,. tor "'"1 fl••tntl U• dertUtH tlr.nn '"' • .....,.,,. tl7tif111 llb I NlllJ Ill e ... filer •r e11 • ,.l~revtttll u rt. Hitt ''MllW'H SM 11'"1 SNClt Clll .. ,,.. , INM lfl I fNlttlf 9f fni'!wtn. FRll MICROWAVE I COOKING SCHOOL SAT., DEC . 1st I I :00 A.M. to 5:00 P;M. AT BOTH LOCATIONS " I ::.::::: .... ,. PWl-TMa..•..W ...... C.....llMff....-ctMn.MKtftMlto fof a&loUt • ._ ModtlJM5 t , . .,. Automttic Stlf·Clt1nin1·0•tn Sv111m -dt1n11nti11 owin, i11eludint 1hth"t1, inn11 doo1 al n1n, 1nd wrltct unit 11tlteto1 pins. t Rottry lnlini1' H11t $ulltct U11i1 Con11ol1 . t RtcmN CotllltP wittl Nt·Ori11 E'-C&tthn Sp1ll0¥*1S 1 A111111Mtic Ov111 Tuntr, Clock 1114 Si111tt Buirtr 1 AulMlltie l in I StMi·l•m111""Surl11:1 Uni1 1 Tt"on•t t1ttd Grid41t -..._ 1 Two Appli1ncs Out1111-0nt is timid • U1111 Mtnull 1ni Cook lo1k with Rteipts t Hut T1mpttti GI• .Dilh tnd T,t.tt ---1~. --..... -··· ---·- IAYAllA GOLDENWEST & WARNER HUNTINGTON BEAC H Sales Only 842°5596 .UNITED STOUS -----·-• t . . • • 4 DAILY PILDl JANGLED NERVES DEPT. -This energy a-Isis bas hardly even settled In yet and already I'm weary ol It. !'alee just yesterday. We had an elec- trical power outage right here on our Very own Orange Coast. It developed that out there some place ln the vast reaches of Irvine, ooe of lbe big power towers blew a fuse, or Jhorted a circuit, or who knows what? Anyway, the result was that all the lu!~ went ol.f in Corona del Mar, Irvine, ~fusion Viejo, El Toro, Laguna Beach and polnla adjacent. Some of m here In the newsroom figured this wu U. The energy doomsday. It's all over. TEN MINUTES LATER, the electrical power was back on again, hwnmin g along just like in the old days. Another crisis averted. Clearly, all ,this talk of running out of everything has folks near nervous collapse. People faint every time a Japanese llgbtbu1b bums out on them. Citizens are running out to buy locking gasoline caps and five-gaUon containers. Just last night I was visiting one Qf those old-fashioned ice cream parlors where they use the tiniest possible lighlbulbs for decoration an d al· mosphere. They .. soak up about as much energy as a paper match. The manage- ment, however, bad gone along and umaewe.d every other bulb. You just can't be too careful And the night before that, I have this friend whose electric blanket abrupUy malfun ctioned. It gave him an unscbedule.d hotfoot and burned a black, :;mouJdering hole in the covers. He figured it was Mr. Nixon getting even with him for having plugged in the thing in the first place. THUS WE SEE the temper of the times. Folks can see some aw£ul energy crisis in everything that happen.! today. You can, for e1ample, start worrying about the United States Postal Service. Will it have enough energy to get the mail through this Oiristmas? Only time will tell. As for the mail, you can believe the Implications or good stories or bad stories. I have this acquaintance, for e1ample, who has the habit of mailing in his paycheck for deposit every week. He mails it through the Costa Mesa P<>!l Office. The destination Ls a Newport Beach bank. U you are at aJJ acquainte.d with the region, you know that C.Osta Mesa ts indeed very adjacent to Newport Beach. A small lad could have been hired to hand~arry his deposit. Anywa y, he mailed it. Four days later, the bank got his money. Only by the grace of the L-Ord did he elude retribution en charges of floating worthless paper. ON TIIB OTHER HANO, I had Ibis pack~ge which I wa s most anxious to get rushed to a scenic Ca1i£omia "-'OO· derspot known as Goleta. Goleta is near Santa Barbara. Other than that, it is next to nowhere. Thus I hugged the precious package to my bosom and sallied forth to the aforementioned Costa Mesa Post Office at 4:30 p.m. There I pleaded with the nioe man to please PoSt it to Goleta in all haste. Later intelligence indicated my mailing was delivered at t h e Goleta doorstep at 7:30 a.m. the next morning. That's right, folks, The next n1oming. Well, all these in cidents just prove that in these days of crisis, you can sure hear a lot of yarns that contradict each other. If you ""-'Ork hard at it, you can find something new to worry about every da y. , V .S., Rt111la Salvaging Peace ' Up to 2 Nations By Unlled Pm• llnerulloul Egypl said today it WU recollliderinG whether to attend the Geneva peace conference because cl. the breakdown of its cease--flre talks with 18rael. Both Egypt and Israel, whose troops have been on full alert for weeb, warned that the fighting CGuld resume at any tim e. ~laj. Gen. Ii::tuio Sliluvuo, head of the U.N. emergency force, met Jn Cairo today with Egyptian War Minister Abm· ed Ismail and then new to Jerusalem to meet with Israeli govem~nt officials. There was speculaUon hr" was trying lo get the Uilks lltjlmd qain l>ut a U.N. spoke>rnan dtd not confirll) ll!IB. : . l • THE TALKS at Kllomeler 101 on the Cai~Suez road were broken off 'nl.ur&- day by Egypt because of what it c•lled Israel's intransigent posiUOP in refusing to telurn to the Oct. 22 ce&ae-nre Jines as called for by a U.·N. r.eso1ution. Egypt said it was now· up to ,\ft'.ashio~ton and j . ' '"f' ~ ! I fl..foacow 11 co-authors of the reso1ution to salvage the situation. Secretary ol Slate Henry A. Kissinger said 'nluraday the United States ls still hopeful a peace conference will get under v.·ay and said Washington had made "a major commitment to this goal." One warning ol a possible resumtion One warning of a possible resumption Cairo newspaper Al Ahram. It said Egypt and the rest of the Arab nations announced at the summit conference in Algiers their desire to have peace but "Egypt will not hesitate to resWTie the war if Israel is allowed to continue with its procrastination." ANOTHER CAME from Israeli Prime Alinlnllter Golda Meir who told a· group of visiting American Jewish leaders in Jerusalem Thursday she was not con· vinced "That shooting will not be resum· ed -I don't know, I hope not." She said the ·Arab summit conference had posed "impossible conditions" but her government would go to Geneva anyway. Three Brothers HeW .. In MltfiNt-of 4 Youths ~" ~"""~" ~ SfOUX F ALLS,;$,D. {~ . :Three brothers were • ~te4 j,lf>O murder charges today ii\~ ~~ 17 .shotgun slayings of f'!'JI" ~-~boys while they were plcnick· ·. ·~ stale park with a young girlf.. ., ~ t Authorities sai • b , all from the Sioux Falls ested last night and ea •;.a I'. · ed with l,llt -~ . ..~ -~I i,.'r-'' Moder~~' Qqa)c.e ;i . ... •• • . ·-, Shakes1»r(fled Tennessee Folks KNOXVIl.LE, Tenn . (UPI) -A "minor to moderate" earthquake sent a window-rattling, clish-breaklng jar lhrough homes in four states early today but there were no reports of injury or major damage. The trem0< along the southern Ap- palachians at 11 :50 p.m. PST measured 4.75 on the RJchter scale at the Universi· ty of Misiiss.ippi's seismol"ogical laboratory. "I consider it a minor to moderate earthquake," said the lab's director, Dr. Fred Follo\vill at Oxford, fl..tiss. Followill said the tentative center of the quake was under the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. The protessor sald any Richter reading under 5.0 was not considered strong enough to do structural damage to bu ildings and houses. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtUvtry of tht D'ilJ Pilot Is guuantttd MelllhY•l'rifQr II "" ft -~,, •. ,_ ,,,_ • .., S:M '-"'-• c•ll &!Ml ,.._, n.., wm H torlllflll ft .... (1119 I~ Nlilltfl 911fll 7:M ,.rn. S•lunl1y •"' Sul!llrt: II pw • fttlf tllCtlwi vevr <•PV by t •·"'· '"""''" tr I •·"'· Su11c11r, till 111d 1 c•n wlK h ~,...i.t " VIV. (~Ill lrl II-ell 1111111 II 1 ..... T tltphonts MOJf Ot1n11 C1unly ,..... • ...... "'-4n1 Nor111Wt11 H111111n1111n ltldl 111d wn1 ... 1n11er , . . . • • . • ........ ua $111 Cl1m11ttt, C1Jl1lr1111 ltltll, Sin Jv111 (IJhl•• .... Dllll ,..1111, JMlllll L•I-• L1111111 Nltuel •••• fn-MJI four C1lunts or murder for the apparently motiveless killings at a former Indi an burial ground in Gitchie Manitou State Park. 11IE UNIDENTIFIED IJ..year-old girl who accompanied the youths on the picnic was spared by the killers and has been in protective custody slnce the slayings. It was believed that ques- tioning of . her led authorities to the suspects. 1be brothers were identified as Allan Fryer, 29, of rural Hartford, S.O.;·Davi d Lyle Fryer~ 24, and James Ray Fryer, 21, both of Sioux Falls. 'Ibe slayings, in which authorities searched vainly for a motive, touched off an intensive two-week manhunt in- volving authorities in Iowa, South Dakota, and Minnesota. An extradition hearing was scheduled for later today but ."Iowa authorities said they expected all three · men to waive extradWOO. ·• .. " IT WAS AT an abandoned f'-!" ruthwest of here that officers got~th1:1r fUl!t fnajor break in the ·in\estigaupn. • " A vehicle for whicfl. the officen; had been searching was believed found at the fannstead. The famt house was JoCated Thursday based on a description provided by 1hc lJ..year-old girl, who was beiog held in protective custody by police as a witness to the murders or the four 1 youths -Stewart Baade, 18, his brother, Dana, 14, Roger Essen, 17, and Michael • Hadrath, 15. 1 ~~~--~~~--• 'Tango,' Linda, Redford, • Others Get 'Undue' Fete CAMBRiDGE, Mass. (AP) -Actress Linda Lovelace of "Deep Throat" fame will receive a "Wilde Oscar "from the Harvard Lampoon. The award , to be presented Saturday, is given by the undergraduate humor magazine each year "to that actor or actress most willing to flout convention and risk worldly damnation in the pursuit of arUstic fulfillment." U.S. W eatlier I She is also to accept on behalf of the makers of Deep Throat the "Pilldown Mand.Ible," awarded yearly • • f o r filmdom's most ob v Io u s l y and unabashedly spurious s c i e n t i f i c phenomenon." The magazine will also present its "worst movies" awards, to be accepted by Elmer Green, 77, curator of the Lampoon casUe, the mag I zi n e I s building. The awards : -Worst picture of the year, .. Last Tango in Parts." -Worst performance by an actor, Robert Rtdlord. -Worst perfotmance by an actress. Ali McGraw. -Worsl dtre<tor, Sam Peckinpah. -Wont film of the century and worst performance by a cast In tWl, the producers and cut or "The Poseidon Adventure." The Bosley award, for the film critic wh""' writing "oonslslently e1plores the farthiest llmlla ol bid. tutt," will go to Pauline Kael. Call Girls Arrested CHICAGO (UPI) -Five $300«-nliJ!t call girls and lbelr lO-year-<>ld modi,. who calered -Uy to rich out-ol-town bustnessmtn were armled and chorsed with prooUtutlon here Wedneodoy nl(lbt. 1, ' • U,IT~ Arrlvel at Court Alexander Butterfield,, who re- vealed secret or Presideht Nlx- oo'r !4pes last summer, said Thursday he asked Senate Wa- lergate panel not to make blm do It because "It would eni· barrass Nixon ahd be 'terribly damag in'g' to the country. • • ... Ch .. - ' · · · Save ~~50"/o-80"/o. ' ' I ·,OJ·· n '~Ii •' ••• ll Pier 1 dbtks a bookish cargo. ' . Books, books,1 and more bqpks. ,,.• Bra nd new hardcover books. Here's a sam pl e of sub)ecq:~b1ilek'j · \ ~ • pv_e~stock and reis sues from the publisher. n1agic, Shakespeare, exotl~ coOktng, "-• Orrg1nal1y $2 .98 to $15 .00. I ravel. hobbies, love, art, poems, antiques, and mo re. Com~nd t· bro\vSe in Pier l's bo~·li~ It' ) } cos t you very tittl e! ... PUZZLES FOR HOLIDAY OW~l(,LES: Whim- sical 1000 piece jigsa\v p uzz~~. Brightly col-!' ored cartoon figures. Old w~I. da,iti~el iii distr~s and more. Packed in a WbeJ1· f'P99J. Among the 1un at Pif'r I. .......... 0 100-1295 Sale " ., ICE THE HOLIDAY SH RIMP . Individual bowls.Jar keeping shrimp (or caviar!) per- fe ctly chilled. Fill the outside bowl with ice and set the shrimp's bo...y! inside . . 99{ 4Yl" diameter. . ..... , .... GIVE THEM HAPPY MORNINGS. Stoneware mugs to hold th e mo.rning's brew. Big, lit· tie , round, square. Colors to mix and match . For someone you wish 119 2 99 happy mornings to. . . . . . . . . . . - Give Me·xico. . . ' BE A WINNER QN AN ONYX CHESS SET. Onyx chess sets,.completely 11andmade in Mexico. 14" square board,~" thic~. Brown, black, or green, all with . -2988 white. Regular $39.99 ........... . • '• I · ~ive Spain. TOTE HOLIDAY SPI RITS IN GOATSKIN. Bola skin bags, handcrafted in Spain. lined with latex. Encircled with rope 50 they're easy to tote . Fill th em·wlth wine for your holiday outings. ReQ . 4.99 SALE 399 • .: • LAUNCH A GOOD-TASTING MORNING. Scotland sends Robertson's Marm1l1tle and Jams to your breakfast table. 1.~ oz. jars per.feet for bright-eyed flavor. ., Delicia.us jams from Pier 1 now t ... ,. 2 49 Qlve ·England.· BOX GOODIES IN ,ll!T)SH TIN. El ... nt QA boxes from Engl1nd. Embossed designs .:.. • :g1111ering colors! ~ts of lhapeo and olzt1l Stor.e cookies andn.n&es · the old fashion Engltth wayl ••• 99-:J'I CHRISTMAS STORE - -.. Sot.1 .. 11; -,..,, i 2710 HARaoR'llJ.VD. . ' , . { . P"NG CINTlll OllANOI . c..~·--·COSTA M&$A ~Jolt<7331 iiiii!" .. '· "' 'I <' t • sot E. KATIUA AVE. " ANAljElf'I 1n.24n . . ' . . .. • • 12" SO." COAST HWY.. LAGUNA JIEACH •• 4'Wlll ' . .. 3:1"'5 .,, "" ••• " ' aqu in las salvag sunke Doria. An : Chris · 22, of a S firm, 13 on away under shortl last J • SA Priva be re prev retire I l.Alng news that as a a Cal • co Nego to lea Red the cid -quar ' ly dea . mad •,mer. • chai mas spla with lion· Som her • A min ' vi ct pre in ·. Ube. Im Aquanaut Charged In Fraud SAN DIEGO (AP) Federal charges of fraud and embezzlement have been filed against a 1onner N a v y aquanaut who was lead diver in IMt summer's attempt to salvage treasure from the. sunken Italian llner "Andrea Doria." An : FBI spokesman said Christbpher James DeLucch!, ( BRIEFS ) 22, currently vice president of Saturation Systems Inc., a San Diego-based salvage firm, will be arraigned Dec. 13 on charges that he took away $1,370 worth of Navy . undersea elcotrlc~l equlpmellt \ shortly before his discharge last July. e Pension PlaK SACRAMENTO (AP ) Private pension plans !hould be regulated by the state to prevent workers from 108ing retirement b e n e f i t s on technicalities, s a y s the chainnan of the state Senate Committee on Business and the ProfeSs iOns. Sen. O.Orge Deukmejian (R· long Beach), told a Capitol news conference Thursday that there is "no such thing as a guarilnteed pension for a Calilomla worker." e Teacher Strike COMPTON ( U P I ) Negotiations Thursday failed to settle the Compton teachers' strike in a dispute concerning st~ent violence, poor working rondltlons and hi~wages. A teacher request f o r "round the clock" negotiation! \ll'as apparently denied when district officials said talks would resume· Monday af- ternoon. ·~·Restlq LOS •ANGELES (AP ) Doct6rs s.i~ they discovered no tumors or maQgnancies during surgerf ~on flizabeth Taylor aDd. the actress will be reJl"'sed from the hospital next week. Miss Taylor was described Thursday as ' ' s t 111 ex- periencing the U!ual amolDlt of post-operative pain." but was SJlkl to be "looking great and doing very well." e Occltrental )lit LOS ANGELES !UPI) - Red. paint was splashed in the reception area of Oc- cidental Petrolewn Co. head· . quarters Thursday, purJ)orted· .. ly as . a protest agafnst the deal! with the Soviet Union · made by Dr. Annand Ham· •, mer. the corporatio n 's chairman. Two young men wearing ski masks entered the room and splashed the paint about without a word, said reCep- tionist Mary Jo Eaposito. Some of the paint spattered her clothes and hair. e Time• Sued LOS ANGELES (UPI) A fOrmer county a.d· ministrt'tor, whO ' was con- victed J.ii. tm of perjury and preparing r._l!e ev~eoce while in office,· filed .a $2 million libOI suit Thursday against the Los· Angeles Ti mes. Baldo KriStovlcb, who was sentenced to fl!Je years' pro-baUOn .and ls 'curnn~ly ap- pealing his convldlon, claimed · he ~"libeled In an article which related. alleged prob- lems In 111e pu1illc guardian's office, a ~ he held -.1rile he Wai j>ublic administrator. \ I lntJl ~ f'ILOT :i ·"" State Welfare Plan State Challe1iges EPA Parlill1g Plan • • . Vote Session Called sut~harges on p:1rklng spuces. : SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The )e&i&J.ature will convene In apeclal aeulon Tuesday to vote on a compromise $122 mllllOll welfare plan ' ham- mered out by legislative and Regan administration negotiators. 'lbe ee ttlement would PfO: vide grant lncreues to 6001000 aged, blind and clleabled Cal~ornlans far beyaad lhooe aougbt by Gov. Rooald R0qan and also transfer ad- mlnlalrlltlon cl adult aid - grams to the !eden) """"'" ment on Jan. 1. . . Assembly Speaker Bnb . Monottl listens careful-LT. GOV. m Relnecl!e, act- ! ' In& In the ·-cl Reaf!1U1 y In a reporter s quw wlio ls on a speech making tlon during news .con-tour cl ,Au!tralia called a ference where he gro-special aeukin · ''of , t h e posed establisbmept pf .lepja\ure for noon Tuesday. s!ate energy co~"""'". . , 1Uitth and w e 1 f a re ~on empowered to 11l· Sednitary Earl Brian, wbo an- lton gas and make car nounced the.agreOjnent Thurs- pools mandatory. day evening aftet ieverat days ;:_,. "I._ ., •• of negot!atlona with assembly leaders, sa1d the bill will add $122 mllllon In state money lo current state and local welfare oosts of $487 million annually. He said it . would .not in.- a-ease or reduce county costs for blind, disabled and elderly recipient programs. Under th e compromise, average monthly granU for elderly and disabled recipients would Increase from 1212 to $235. For the blind they would rue from 1222 to 1265. of financial aid adult children must cOOtribute for the sup- port o( lhelr elderly welfare parents. Reagan strongly resisted any easlng of the so-called "Relattves Responsibility" law which was toughened by his Welfare Reform Act of 1971. The roil back would bave the effect of increasing the income level where adult children must be before they are re- quired to contribute. CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO [AP J - California A t t y. Gen. Evelle J. Younger filed three peH· lions in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court or Appeals T'.1ursday challeng ing th e validity of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency plan to r equire Pair lndicred i1i 9 Slayings, Robbery UNDElt Tiii:£ plan. anyou~ rl maintaining parking facili ties, "'ould hnve to pay the ~ surcharge en each space. and ' the fe~ would increase .in- nu ally over a three-year period. ,., The petitions to rcvi t:\V the '~ EPA plan were filed on behalf ·1 of the state, the ~ovcrnor, "! the California Air Hcsources t' Board and trU.Slt't!S of California State Univl•rsilies m and Colleges. 'ii Younger said the filing ..... as "'I. made Thursday beca ust.• or the STOCKTON (AP ) -Willie of four members of the family statutes of limitations and tht1t l REAGAN BAD sought THE l.tEASURE, put L. Steelman and Douglas E. of grocery st.ore owner \\falter further talks arc lx>mg held / payments of $221 for the aged together by Brian, Social Gretzler have been indicted parkin, 33, and five others. in hopes of resol\ ing th1• nlat· :t and disabled and $237 for the Welfare Director D a vi d .~ indictment by the grand ter without going to ll'1ill. .,1 blind. Swoap, Assembly Speaker Bob by the San Joaquin Q)t.lnty jury late \V e d n e s d a y ;- "I l\'Ouldn't exactly say be Moretti (0--Van Nu ya), Grand Jury in the slaying of ft.Ulofrultically moves the case ''\VE 00 NOT Qll\"•!ion was overjoyed," Brian told .Assemblyman John Burlon nine persons in V,Jt$r Nov.' into superior court. The t\VO EPA's goal of recluc 111g newsmen when asked about (0-San Francisco ), and 6. · ' · · "1 earlier were charged j n automobile emissions. but \\'C Reagan's reaction to the set-Ass~mblym.an William T . ' ' muD.icipal court on nine counts do not think EP A hn~ ft1ll} • tlement when informed of it Bagley, CR.San Raf a e I ), EACH MAN fa·~· 'nine · or 1 murder each..... and a considered the cconon11r i1n· " by telephone in Australia. reiresented a victory for charges of murder, nvl\·eounts ,j>reltminary hearing had been pact cf l~e plan. in rcl,L\!Ull "When presented with the Democrats. of robbery and on'~ 'cql#if ·01· s~uled for next month . to the potential re:due11 on of alternatives, be thought this 'Ibey previously fashioned a kidnaping. The rot:berJ •~ttntl auton1obile en1issions.'' said ~ waa aporooriate." Reagan-opposed b 111 to kidnap charges stem from the INDICTi\1ENT by the grand Younger. L h M de The proposal ilso prcidivdes transfer administration of the theft of aboot $3,000 from )it~ jury eliminates the need for •'\V e believe the burd•~n of Ong Beac Ur r $25 a month restaurant meal adult programs to the federal grocery store safe. .,. '> t tbe_preliminary hearing. a parking surchar~• would . . . . allowance for those unable to government and&iiDSl:intially Steelman. 28, of I,.odit ~ .~ e i r arraignment in ultimately fall on California's ., cook for themselves and giols increase grants, but the Gretzler, 22, of New York City, superior court is scheduled for consumers and employers," Ends in 4 Arrests . LONG BEACH (UPI) -parentty bad Intended to rob . four person,, were booked on the reside.rice ·where the vk- susplcion of muider 1bursday tini · Kevbr 'Skeltb, 20, was In connection with the shotgun viaitlmc frlmds. · AIJTllOIUl'IES said they slaying of a Long Beach City College student who was visiting two friends ai an , ~Ii'(• Skelth -was shot by apartment. ., the juvenlle while Vander Hoek accompanied him Inside. POUCE ALSO arrested the Tho other two were wa!Uilg victim's friends , Peter . outaide. Macisaac, ~. ~Paul .Brun· Macisaac and Bruning said ing, 20, on susp1c~!1 of illegal the juvenile and Vander Hoek cultivation d. man1uana after barged Into their apartment officers found 41 plants grow-and onlm!d them to lie on Ing In the yanl. A lllTUlil the floor. 'Ibey Aid Skeltb amount ol marijuana wu also waa shot af1<r be eWiet-refus,. found In the bouoe. ed to drop to the floor or An unideoUfted 16-year-old when be lunged at the anned boy, accoolpanied by his ·youth. · lawjer, was arrested when be Skeltb was killed by a single sw:rendered to police. blast from a U.gauge shotgun. Police later arrested Kevin Oinnlngham, 19, Jotm Vander Hoek, Zl, and Stanle y ~ lD, all ol Long Beach. ~ves said the four ap- Staged Sex Acts Land Ma:n in Jail SAN DIEGO (UPI ) -A massage parlor operator bas 1-1 arrested alter secret grand jury ~ts charg- ed him With JeYen sex offemes lot prosentatlon d. a live sex '8ct OD stage . Held In U.U of llO,llOO bail was Peter Amato, 34, San Diego, operator of t be Empress Massage Park>r and the Studio l and 2 Theaters. Also indicted were °'""' women, each charged with one count of sex perversion. Amato will be arraigned · Monday. Charges placed 'lbursday ogalnst Amato lnclucjed three qMJDta of sex perversion, one count of· paodering, ooe of participating In or exhibiting oboceoe live cooducl and two CllUDls ol oollcitlng.wunen for prostltuUon. District" Attorney Ed Miller said Amato was master of ceremooles and a participant in.live sex acts on the Theater l stage between Oct. 30 and Nov. 9. 9 lndict.ed For Porno Book Sales LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A county grand jury !ndlcted nine -00 IJOl1lQt!l'lphy charges Tbu.r1day, culminating a five-month tn- vestliatlon In which thn!e policemen opened a .. decoy" -· Olarged with oonsplraey to distribute obooene . malerial were Noel Bloom; 31, Oio Ap- pelby, 50, and -:Mohammed Rustam. ID, all cl HOUyW))Od; Rod(erS Summers, 39, Pili! Dixon, 30, and ROOert Elldm, 44, all of Los Angeles; Paul Novack, '5, and Mark Novak, 25, both cl Beverly !Dils; and Raymond Barron, 39, of Venice. Also lndlcW were American Fthn Industries, Cinema Claalcs Limited and Ca II for n ta !nlemaUooaJ Di31ributon. All !be defendants except • Bloomllllml-.d to~ Court Judge James G. lolls and mlered Innocent ploas. AuthoriUes sald the ln- dlctrneots came after three iJ\vestiptorl o p e n e d the "F'reeOOm Bookstore" on Sepulveda Boulevard a n d purdw.ed bani"'"' films and m.qulnel from aeveral cl the IUlpecls. HARRIS . @lUl~~~lm~ NEW AJ BIDWELL 'S We heve • 9te1t. neiir i ... ' lection In c~rduroys, 1oliCl1 A diff.,enl pleid1. from $14.ot Sweater V11t1 Too ; from $10.00 A 6rut 6iR Combinellon ~7 YiA UDO, NIWl'OIT llACH • •• • . ;"""4 ....... aw,. ...... a.,. .. POINSETTIAS -119 ICICLES . ..... -•hi .... 1.-C..-ilhMI .... 2tc Now •••••••••• 19C .. , ,.. $1.00 -"• Now •••••••••• 39C ,. , ,., $1.00 LIVE "' CH.llSTMAS TREES MINIATURE LITE SET • itali1n MINITURE LITES JI, ... in .. ltwlhl• MW...,. llte1 , ... ,...,,,.., re r -....... ., ''"'"' ..... •ff ... """ ·Mt .. ,.., '"' STARTING MONDAY DEC. 3 VISIT OUR TRIM-A-TREE SHOP! "-411 for all your decorating needs. Uni- que hard to find items .... Expen- sive one of a kind ... .Imports plus . • . . American made novelties. Im· ported and dome stic tree lights •... twinkle .•.. action .•.. bubble .... miniature and outdoor. Plus we also have a large selection of replacement bulbs. Have you seen our tree lops? Electric •... Ang el . ... Santa •... Snowman and more. :.~ ... 2'8 ,~ . (v:-J' 'f 1: M•e yo•r MlectioR from Greew HottM Snow ~Jih foreit et,,..._ Twe 19'crti"' to bett9t MrM foll. M•• yeor ll'IKtion frGm White Fir, 511.,., Tip, ovglos Fir, ,._taflw N.W., l'te11hrrio11 Grattd Fir, She.red Plo11totio11 .,......_, ketc• PhM, etc .•.• toble tops to 15' 'i1ANT5 . Y .. Mary .... INI .. lo your tTM. OJ' !>lclt OH of o•n to be c..,.. flecked j1t1t tM 'Woy you cltooMI f11 oay color •• , or po """ b.y ON rlMrt has olreedy bHll flockfll •• , All .. a.r'-t eltd .i ... 011 dh play ..• rulistic prlcH .•. 11tftkll Nylc~. IHOP IAILY WHILE YOU STILL HAVE A GOOD SELIC· TION TO CHOOSE FROM . 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 2123 Newport Bl vd., Costa Mesa PH 646-3925 2252 S. E. Bristol Santa Ana Heights Ph: 556-6391 I ·' •' " .. ' • ., • .. •• • •• DAD.Y .. ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Communitie·s Pitch In It is heartening to see the pitch-In-and-help reaction of local municipalities. and civic groups to the energy problems facing the nation. For examp le, both Laguna and San Clemente were well into planning for reduction of traditional Christmas decorations and in each case the town's chamber of com- merce was exercising special leadership, even before the President's o!!icial call for such measures. Beyond immediate reactions of turning down ther- mostats and turning of! lights, it is clear major changes are on the way -some of them unsettling, but these are unsettling times. Th ere is a movement in Sa n Juan Capistrano to stop issuing building permits as a step to halt growing en- ergy demands, and in Lagu na Beach, city haJI is weigh· ing a 10-hour day, four-d ay work week for non-emer- gency city operations. Cities, groups and organizations which have sacri· Iiced favorite projects in the face of energy problems both as a symbol or cooperation and for aCfual conserv· ation are commended for their actions, and encouraged to seek more areas of cooperation. Laguna Charm Feople lucky enough to live along the Orange Coast may tend to take for granted the natural attractiveness of the area. · We get accustomed to the surroundings and accept without acknowledgment much of what is unique and unusual . · To residents, a scenic street lined with weeping eucalyptus is just a street, sparkling wavea and b~~ beaches are an everyday view and fantastic red SUn-- sets silhouetting Catalina Island are taken for g~~nted. -Every once in a while it's nice to be reminded of Penitentiary Safer Than Best Jails ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Dear Gloomy Grts Until recenUy the Big Ten has had a rule prohlbit\Dg the oonlo:rence champion from going to the Rose Bowl in two successive years., in · which case the second be!lt team \1/89 always sent. So \Vhat's differ· ence this year? DIOGENES '73 G!otmr Gvs c:o.mm'"" .,.. •Mlltttcll W r••Oer1 •nd do llOI nectsnrllr rtfi.d flltl vlnn of 1~1 11twui1111r. Send ,..,, "' pe1ve lo Oleomv Gui, O•Ur l'Utt. \Vould you believe that you could tnkc a long sentence in prison better than a short stay in jail? Most Americans \.\'OU!dn'l -indeed, most don.'t even lrnO\V the difference between the two, !hough there are 4,000 jails in this coun· try, most of them unspeakable. One man who does know is Dr. Karl l\1enninger, who has looked into the problem deeply, espetially in his book of a few years ago. "The Crime of Punishment." Now, in his new book "Whatever Became of Sin?" (which i will comment on in a future· column), he repeats his indictment tn a few terse paragraphs I cannot refrain from quoting in full: in your \\'icked ways, ya u will be given the severe treatment of the slate •;mE PUBLIC refuses to abandon its pleasant fan tasy that jails are just little local lockups where miscreants and suspects may spend a night or even a week an d be the more wary or sin and police thereafter. People refuse to believe that jails are almost witho ut exception horrible, destructive, ruinous, hideous atrocities of which every citizen should be ashamed. ''l say the public refuses lo believe it in s p ite of thousands of reports, because if they did, jails would be outlawed tomorrow by public demand. If every minister would visit the local jail twice a year , and urged his con· gregation lo do so, !here would bc'a similar revolution. "mE AVERAGE citizen goes along in his thinking "'ith those ignorant, lazy, or cruel judges \\•ho say, 'A few wee ks or months in our little jail may do you some good. Then if you persist . penitentiary!' "Actually the worst penitentiary is less hannful to most young offenders than the best of jails! Jails ruin young men. Can't the public grasp this in- disputable.fa ct? How can a decent prison attempting a rehabilitation program do anything for a boy \\'ho comes to it from a jail where he has been raped, battered, vomited. and urinated upon, mauled and corrupted by some of the old-timers in the bullpen? 14EVEN WITHOUT the abuse and harassment or other inmates, lhe hor· rible confinement in hot, stuffy, crowded, dark. vermin-infested. iron cages Is a terrible experience -iiterally a form of torture. 'Vhen one considers that this js all illegal, since the law does nol stipulate these iniqu.itous ron- comitants of detention in any sentence. our sinfulness in permitting the situation to' continue in our society, and at out expense, iseems very evident and very great." Kart h1t'nninger is no "bleeding heart": he believes in moral, ru; well as lega l, responsibility for our acts, as his new book fully shows. But he is a realist, in recognizing that certain kinds of punishment are a worse crime than any they Set'm to rectify or revenge. Own-your-own Rooms? Ally day now lht' U.S. Department of the Interior n1ay add landlords to 1ls llst of cndangcrl'd species. For a 11umber of reasons, the financial in· ducemcnts to O\\'fi and manage rental property are fast eroding. As a resl.llt, much of the new residential and com· rnercial construction in this country is desi gned for condominium ownership - an arrange ment "'hereby the occupants of a building or cluster of buildings bold litle to their individual units. In a condo minium, the buyer pays lhe mortgage and property taxes on his dwelling, just as a homeowner does. And . like a home()wner . the coodominium bu~·er may deduct mortgage interest and property taxes from hi s income-tax statement . Tille to everything else in the condom inium complex is held in convnon by au residents. In most cases. tht>re i~ a monthly charge for utilitles1 mainlcnancl' and other operating costs. TKE CONDO~UM c r a t e ha s spr~ lo office buildings, too. Small businessmen in a number of cities hl\ve round that mortgage and maintenance p.1)'Ttlents, offset by the tax-deduction ad\·an11gc. make ownership of o!flce space more economical than rental Ifs not all rose., though. "The com- pany that has bought a condominium and linds that II needl men spoce ts unllkelx to be able to buy an adjoining piece.. _bf the coodomlntum," Business w .. t polnlt out. "In anticipation of this nt<d. oeveral ~en have R<Ured ..... If""" than,., -fmmedllltcly ..p will rent · out The otl>cr big I . I EDITORIAL RESEARCH drawback is that a down payment ties up a businessman's capital ." OWNERSfllP of a residential con· dominium .unit carries no guarantee of happiness, either. Some residents feel uncomfortable in an environment of en· forced togetherness. Others chafe under regulatiom that outlaw shaking of dust mops on balconies. playing of musica l In· struments late al ni ght or early in the morning, playing or working on the family" car in the parking area. Condominiwn developers, however, have fe w complaint.!. And they are nothing If not inventive. A developer on Spain's Co•ta del Sol builds apartments, sells them to execvtlves and other investors. and then rents them to tourists on behalf of the owners. The sales pitch ts a "guaranteed 12 percent oet aMual return" to the m. vestor on rentals for ZO years. The Marriotl Corp. baa found ID equally novel appn10cb. II ii oeUlng lhe l'OOINI ol Its Camelbaclc Inn near Pboen!J to lndlvldual lnv.,,tor•. MlllTiolt retains o'""'ohip of everything but lhe rooms, and charees the owners a ree w managin1 the bold. The rtntais from the rooms are !plil betwO<!I the hottl and the rocrn .owmn. 'Ibo pbrue ''a rocm or ont'• own" bu ta.ken on a new mcanlng. the area's virtues and find out that other people think the place is something special. Laguna Beach, for example, ls so attractive that Playboy magazine headquarters in Chicago sent a team of models and photographers here to photograph a year's supply of special ada with Laguna as the back· ground. It's also good to be reminded that the attraction isn't bigness but natural environment and people. Building and Energy As noted above, a San Juan Capistrano city coun- cilman takes the energy shortage so seriously that he has proposed one of the most drastic measures a city could take under such circumstances. James Thorpe wants an all-out ban on any new building permJts, at least until the full scope of the problem comes into focus. He believes that by encouraging new development the city will lure more and more new commuters and it would be required to provide added services. That would further drain energy resources. So far the council has chosen simply to consider Thorpe's suggestion, hut already some reaction is trickling in. It shows some support from the aventge resident of San Juan. But Thorpe said late this week that be hopes sup- porters of bis plan realize bis reasons are based in the need to conserve energy. He hopes supporters will not endorse the idea sim- ply because they came to the city first and w.ant no new neighbors. ~:.:::::. ~ ... ;;:::..i,,,... . At any rate, cauncilmen plan a full examination on Monday. It appears they will give the hold step •erlo1fs consideration. s ~\'It PID IT! ~E CREA1EI> A ~UYEl\s' MARKtT IN CAl>ILLACS!' Brochure Touts ~conterenee Center' Attractions . ' New Role for Western White House WASIUNGTON -President Nixon hu made a strong pitch to federal agencies to hold their conferences at the seaside lnstem White House in an apparent effort to throw an official cloak around his San Clemente extravagances. 'Ibe flight of hundreds of bureaucrats to San Clemente, of course, will add to the fuel drain and the taxpayers' bills. But it will be easier for ·the President to jusWy the millions he bu poured into the San Clemente complex if be can show lhat govern- ment agencies: are utilhing the facilitiet, The President not ooly has aent out special invitations to several agencies to make use of the Western White House, but he has included a brochure of all the available attractions. Thi• a II u r I n g bookie~ with lhe title "The Western White House" printed on a fem green cover page, touts the conference facilities at the Coast Guard station ne1t to the presldenUal com- pound. But the emphasl! is on the recreation that the officials can enjoy when they're nol tied up on official bus._.. The booklet boasts that fishing. swimming, golf, bowling, bull lights, jal-atal and many more leisure activities await them at San Clemente. Visits to Di!lleyland, a fruit orchard and the .world's biggest telescope are also offered. "Casual dress is the 1111~ in San Clemente,'' adds the White House 'booklet. "Short sleeve ahlrb, slacks or shorts for men -1 i g h t cottoM for women" are prescribed for what the booklet promises is "the world's an.year-- around finest" weather. THE PRESIDEN11AL invitations were issued earlier this year at a time when Ni1on wru; on the skillet for usjpg the Federal Aviation Admini stration, General taxpayers' money to purchase luxury Services Administration and the Labor items for the San Clemente compound... Department. The word that the Wes tern White-So far this year. 38 government and House was available for conferences civic orga nizations have accepted tho wais passed to the agencies by his President 's appealing invitation. Another military aide, Brig. Gen. B re n t 79 did so in Im. Scowcroft, who recently was given The FAA's top brass wa s planning another star and promoted to White ~ conference at San Clemente for early Hoose national security deputy. . Oecember, evrrn as th·e President was "Ibe President has asked me," wrote _9n:lering· fuel savings. Almost half of the &enefal, 1'to renew his offer of lhe 29 particiJ>ants y,i lJ wing across t~ facilities or the Western WhJte House country from Washington. for~ use of government and eertaln A SPOKESMAN explained that Uia ~~gr"::: offers generally pleasant "focus will be on general aviation, a weather in a secluded, informal set· vital conference, and the costs about .... --10 full ipped off. equalize out. Often we can get more -.... ·•= y-equ ices, con-hi ference room, private beach and bath work done outside Was ngton." house, helipad ·and excellent corn· At the White House , General Scowcrott munlcaUons system provide ideal con-said his predecessor had sent out a ference accommoda tions for up to 40 similar invitation before all the hoopla penons," he urged. over the President's San Clemente spend- ing. The purpose _of his own memo, SEVERAL . government agencies have Scowcroft said, was purely "lo tell thell1. jwnped at the opportunity to hold their there were those facilities avallable.11 meetings in balmy San Clemente. Among He denied "100 per cent" that it was them are the Justice Department, to justify the President's spending. Experts Co~ld Clear Tape Erasure To the Editor: In reference to the President's "erased tape" -working In classified aerospace projects some tllne back, we found that there Ls no way to completely erase magnetically recorded information (ex· cept with a m a t c h). A tone can be cancelled oul Even a full bandwidth sweep with a scrambler input can be decoded and neutralized. · '111ERE IS a lab over at Cal Tech thal specializes in clearing up the mooo- based. TV trammissions. Those boya wouJd love a job like th.is. So, if anyone really wants t.o know what was on that 18 minutes -wen, Dick, it was a nice try. I wonder if there are any historians who remember what prompted the cry .. millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute," in reference to the Arabs. Car Pools To the Editor: RAY BffiD I have lived in the Newport-Costa 1.fe!a area for 17 years and have 1een and felt the quality of the air change for the _... I like the !du of your new cla.uified category on car pools and hope the p e o p I e lo our area can save on gas and also clean up on air. You are helphlg Our citiea:. MRS. JULIA M. PAYNE Tl1t Daily Pilori new closri/i<d cattgory headed Auto Transporta- tion, 525, is de signed for QJf' pools - people looking for other poopte 10tth who!ll the~ oon share rid<• lo cmd fr""' work. Ed. Satufled Cltb:en To the Editor: ™re are many rea...., lor '*7lnc our Ufe In Lacuna Beocb. II ls del!lblfUI In any number of ways. Bui Juli recenily I bad ID eiperlence which aoemocl e.t• c:eptlooal which I would lll<e to ahare with others. I RAD occasion to consult with Mr. MtlJn ol Clly Hall about oome very lirious moc1· pnilllema In fnlol of "'1 house. Ho was m..,t sympatheUc and In a day or two he came to lnJpecl the ........ to .... wbal could bo -He bid his foreman with· him, ad Ibey 11udlod tha area and we lh,.. I MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally, toriters .t:hould conveu their nieuages in 300 words or Usa. The right lo "c:ondense !dkrs to/.t spoe< or eliminate libtl ia u serve . All let· ttn mm include signature and mait. ina addreu but nama mau bt with- held on request if sufficient reason is appartnt. ·Poetry will not bt pub- lished. discussed IL A shorl·llm• later, a crew of the nicest men in the world repaired the paving in a most efficient way, Then came our first heavy rain and the next day the foreman returned to make sure that an was well. And, of courae, it was! If all· of our city empJoyes are even half ru; nice and ball as competent as thooe wilh whom I dealt, Laguna BellCb Is a very spec:lal place. MRS. LAMAR COTl'EN Contrast To the Editor: The last council meeting was quite an experience for all. After Mayor Holm asked in the nicest way the highly emotional audlence to extend the courtesy to the lawyer of Nt:wport Investment to speak llllin· tenupted, it was quite curious lo listen to hi.a continwus accusations. What they had done to Newport Inves tment, topped by his remark, about the sophisticated mob audience. What a contrast to our Mayor's politeness. BE1'1'Y HECKEL Str•nge Logic To the F.dltor: LOGIC: Method of reasoning, in· ference, araumeot, elc.j especially, cor- rect and sound reasoning. The above definition is of a word I fmd totally laclcing in the decisioo to Jail a 7l·yW'<>ld woman, Mrs. Rita Hill of Lonlsbul'g, New Me1ico. I WISH som.... would explain the logic in this act. /13 I undcntand I~ Literary Companion Welllllor'• Nn World c....-lo Easll*· ... -·Lite"'-· Edited by Artbur PollaN and Asloclltc Edllor fer -Lllel'llllre Ralph Willen. SIJ ... Pqel. ' With IO many writers nowadays prone to toss off relerenct1 to their peen, -ml .-., without eclequate nplonatlon, II II aood to have aomething t.ndJ lo reflub --ledp. TU SUIUID ldlted bf Arthur Po°'!"f ml ~ W)Jlell art actua!IJ by -·-,,,. lnitiall al .u.. end ol eacb ,_ ... be checUd aplnsl a Jiit of Cllltrlbulan al lhe """'1o!OI of tho -to ........ idellllll- ""...... llplwbo!bJly, Ibo lketcbel l'lltP ID -flW, Oli English poelly lo, uy, Jobn O>eever. The brief lludltt are ceNlnl)' nol enanFJve. Nevwdlllefll, lhl main dlltt and _.. "' ............ llsled, and the wrlterl _.il1 do DOI fl!Y I (THE BOO~) from some critical appralsal, however brief. For instance, E. H. Robinson, writing on Sean O'CUey, Ill'• of tht playwrighl's departure for England: "Ullfortunatdy the move from Ireland lmpolnd Ille .,.,. of Immediacy la ltis p!Qo." .And Dr. A. J. Stead, referring to 1tatt.rine AnDI Porter's much-touted ....i, ..;:&,J! ~I•,"_ says bluntly that " tecnruque drained ber .,_....,.lltlljoc:t ol namUve trn:rgy." IT IB GOOD lo have a llimulaUng, frequenUy oonlrovenia\ reference worli al our. ~ on 'Ibo prollgonislt ol =· American l<lten for qulcic Asaoclatod Pre!! she was jailed for her refusal to allow a new multi·million dollar super highway lo be constructed on her property. I fail to see the logic, let alone the necessity, in building ye t ano ther super highway at a time when we are faced with a fuel crisis that will perhaps leave our existing highways looking like abandoned airstrips. 1 realize, of course, that the possibility ezists that the politicians have already spent the payoffs awarded for favoritism in award l n g con~ sll1.lction contracts, and thu1 It would be embarrassing to change directioos at Uli! time. Mind you, I am not making an accusation , just mulling over a few possi bllitit'S that are ever so prevalent toda y. ANOmER thought -perhaps u Mn;. Hill would have bad the log1c for defac· ing her properly e1plalned to her rather than being ordered olf her land she might not have been so reluctant to comply with lhe state'is rcquesl Or perhaps if 1he would have been givco amounts equal to what p a y of f s somethne9 amount to ..• Oh, w~ll. who are the aged, proper1y. owning taxpayers to stand Jn the way of progress) WALTER E. STEPllEY JB. OIAMM COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wctd, Pul>Usher Thamu Kee!lil, Editor Borbon> Kreibich Editorial Pago Editor ,,,. <d!torial ,Jlliy ol 9"' Dally Plbt .-.ru to lnlonn and odmu!ate -.... by .,_,.,,, ... 1hfa -dfwne/commmtary' on toplC!I Ol {&.. lent( by ~ ... coltlmNm and -·by pnMdhw • ..._ !« -vtew• and by ~1hfa ,,._.,...., oPl-and -'I' comnt topto. 'lbe edit-- ol lhl Dally Pilot -~ In lhl cd:itonal mhunn' at the tDp al the PIP• Opinions <lCpt<Md by the coi- -alld -and ietUr wrft9'I art thett own and DD clllbW- """' ol !Mir vi-by Ille Dally f'\IOt -... tnltmd. Friday, November so, 1978 II I • • c a I I •• • Frlilt, NovemOtr JO, lfl73 DAILY PILOT 7 ' TOYLAND IS OPEN • • • ., ....... ""~; ·~l1 ht1! ~~1"'~"•1111 HEAVY DUTY DRUXE UALITY PORCRAN COOKWARE OUR LOW DISCOUNT PRICES 8" FRYPAN 0 lV2 QT. 311 2V2 QT . 449 /SAUCEPAN SAUCEPAN 2V2 QT. 999 TEAKETTLE A gitt of heavy duty porcelain cookware will be appreciated . Deluxe feature s include stainle ss steel . rim s. No scouring or scrubbir.g needed. Flameguard handles. Outstanding buy . -· HOLIDAY HOUIS: MON. THIU SAT. 10 TO 10 SUNDAY 10 TO 7 :.:...u EJ mm PIUTO 4 QUART PlfmRE COOKER REG. ·13.97 gee The perte<I gift idea, espe<ially for the working woman. Just put your food on. and forget it. E~erything tastes better and vitamins are retained. DRUXE 4.·PC. CURERY SET ~UR REG. 3ee 4.99 Super sharp chef's set includes 9''carver, 7" butcher, 5" ~1tthen and 3'' parer ... mmsa SWIRL PAN OURLOW 2ee PRICE The pan that makes baking a streusel swirl cake a breeze. Originally suggested by Betty Crocker. Choice of colefs. CLOSE 'N PLAY PHONOGRAPH TALKING PHONE OR TARGET SET CANDLE KIT OR M. MOUSE GUM BANK Just close the ltd and ret ord s play. Kenner's Close 'N Play is simple enough for very young children lo operate without help. No needle to set. records can't get scra!ched. Safe, battery operated. (not incl.) 9'b PHONE Just lift the reeeiver, push the spei:ia~tiut-22 CANDLE KIT A fun, creative candlemaker sL1rter OUR g t01 and phone plays one of ten different sayings. OUR kit: Includes granulated candle wax . No cutting .or REG. · Rings when dialed. Runs on l "C" battery. (not incl.) REG. slabs required. Re-usable mold, melting pot, etc. 8. 99 ThooAltGn 1 tySEdTrtl" ta_rtghet guns havebs 1 afety 1 catches, 3 47 GUMBALL BANK Asst. gumballs,~L11 key, lock. s sae a s w1 non-remova e so t lips. • Mickey Mouse head, eyes, nose, ears. 1 eaches saving. CllR REG. TO 2.99 88 ~%¥fil&i$i1§$$fil'~~~ti$~$1$\$t:;mtliS4tiUW'&i$rl ? GIA THAT SPORT HOLIDAY SAVINGSI OUR PO DEPT. HAS THE SAVINGS SPIRITI COLEMAN LANTERN OUR REG .1199 13.97 ltms low lim' COLEMAN mVE OUR REG1419 18.97 ClllMM IUTBI . OUR REG11•• 19.99 Coleman double m~nUe lantern light burns Deluxe two burner stove features JVi pint Sale, deluxe, lightweight Coleman heater, 3500 BTU's. Two quart fuel capacity. Terrific chance to save now! #511A-700 as bright as the sun. A wide circle of light fuel capacity. The ideal gift for the camper. out, around and under the base. #220. ~~Bu one and save. #413 TRAILBLAZER PROPANE LANTERN OUR REG. 17.49 99 Double mantle propane matchless lantern in a super light, super protective carryi ng case. Simple adjustment maintains light levels in any weather or altitude. 14.1 OZ. OIS~OSABLE PROPANE TANK 89c . 5 lb. Bag of rabbit pellets contains all things a . bunny needs to stay healthy. Stock up! 11G. S9cta. Cat litter leaves kitty 's box clean. Deodorizes too. 3088 B R I ST 0 L ST. IMC COSTA MESA San Dieqo Freeway at Bri stol ATFllH SRRTlll c Re1 . lie Sturdy, colortul help· ers assure a cl ear & beautiful aquarium. TElRAMIN Rake Food 59c Rer. 89c 8 01. high protein and nutrition: floats to keep water clean. B.IPHANT NOSE ASH 444 llG. 7.99 ' Brainy Elephant Nose fish can be tra ined. Compatible. COLORRIL ROPICAL ORTA SHOW GUPPIES OUR REG. 3.97 PR. 89 PR. Perhaps the most popular trop ical fish in the world . , • these male 2uooies come in beautiful shimmerin2 red or blue hues. Choos, from the best strains . The perfect gift for the tropical fish enthusias t now at holiday savin gs ! 12.103 USf rou• CREDIT C.UD ..-. . ........_ • llSD CIMll CMI (:=_·.~ ' I ' •lllM_., C1111111Mn -( B DAIL y PILOT .. ' ' ~- • ' Friday, November 30, 1973 FOR • • \ ' . . '. ·"U \ . .. .. io·· . . .. .. . /,, ' .. J: .:~ .. ' ... .. • . .. .· . .. . .. * ,; ... " ' ~· : . ' -· .... , 1 • SAVE~ At_aJ..r&·llolllJ.8J SIVllll HAND·EMBROIDtHED .. .. ' " I . ,., ACRYLIC CARDIGANS "/~ · " ; ~ ,( ...... ~ . full·fashioned ... at this low price! Flattering white ·1~~·~" with little embroidered-flowers 1n decorative colors... 69 P«r ·· -. : . ; · ~ also, with pointelle cut-out designs or popcorn· ~ -~ 0 "-a -!"'" stitch a~cents. Sizes 34 to 40. reg. 7.99' "', •7-' ..... " A s4 savl111 i;9ht now I ~ . CORDUIOY ·LOOK PANTSCOAT' WITH FAIE·SHEARLING... .:,~-r · " ' An amazing corduroy look-alike ... actually a velvetY • 1 a . vinyl-and-cotton! Toggled style with modacryl ic· .... and-acrylic fake lamb trim ... warmly insulated. New-"'J. · est colors. Sizes 8 to 16. · reg. 19. 99 1 , ••• ~~-t · . • "t(,;•~ Here's sensational value! LACE-FRILLED . · NYLON PEIGNOIRS AND NIGHllE . ~. In a var1;ty ol styles ' Bgg1D gg. , ~' •'.' peigno11 sets with gowns • · ". in mini, wall!. or long · . ' lengths Exquisite sheers JO · · and lncots with white. •. .,, , .. ~ pastels, and black. 111 2-pc. sets · ) · · group .. Sizes: S·M·l . • • e K ~l/ Fantastic at .. J_l'lce! . ·. '-¥ LOVELY ROBll IN f~VORITE sma~ * . . . . \ Quilted nylons 01 cottons ... brushed nylon> 1 i!g g Beautiful prints .. solids. two-t1Jnes. Gr1Jup in- cludes wraps, zip-fronts. shirt -styles ... em- broidery accents. lace tnms. Ideal gilt! Sizes misses' si1es 10 to 18 . You're &@gj,IMIJ .. e but!_. SLHPWfAR IN MANY STYLES AND LENGTHS Frilled feminine styles. classic tailored styteS! 4 ·g-g Mini gowns. baby dolls, granny gowns. long lovelies. wa ltz-length nighties. Brushed nylon-cotton. nylon • , . tric ots, cotton flannels. S·M·L. _ misses s11es SPECIAL LOW PRICE! MEN'S FASHION -NEW TAPERED WESTERN-LOOK SHIRTS Just like shirts selling elsewhere for many dollars more! Permanent press polyester and cotton with the Western influence. contrast collar and cu!f lm1ng .. tapered with tails. In solids and checks. Long sle~ves, S-M-l-Xl. 4gg GREAT Giff IDUI . BOYS' NO·llON Dl~S SHIRT AND CONTllAST BOW'.'TIE sn You'd e~pect to pay 4.99 for the·shfrt' alone! Per· manent p1ess polyester a!lil r.otton In solids and pat1e1ns. bul!on plac~et front, lbng point~ coUiu , two·button culls. With 'contrast clip·on bow tie lor the perfect match! Sizes 8 to 18. .·4gg " COME AND GET 'EMI -~· FLANNR PAJAMAS FOR MfN AT EXTRA-VALUE PRICES pre-shrunk 100% co tton flan· : , Machine-washable. comlonable 4 g g ':<' nels in your choice of solids or patterns with soli~ contrast '~. trim. Long . sleeve. long leg $. style. Rush in end buy for the • A 1 c 0 . • man in the, house. •11*' · · · • ... • • ' HANDY . DRINK :- : Mix drin~s li~e ::nartender with ;:bar ter.d1ng s .·priced for sav1 : .g1h. ' ;:tll:H 1!t ·IHA ; . ~. . ! 'Put one of t I 'travel Of OV : ·~se, etc. l oth6 Side ma ' .. '• .. :, Han Sta BIO .. '· look i". t f ~ 1n~ .. ' .. • . . . . ,.. l ·l •• • •• i . • • ( .. 5 Sell- easy 561 Gii'!' Friday, No1ttmbtr 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT t)_ STORE HOURS: MON:SAT. lOAM to lOPM . SUNDAY 1 OAM to 7PM . . SHOP 'N SAVE NOW! . lfimm lilil Pr ices Good Thn Sund11. Dec. 2 DY 18 PC. ICE BUCKET 24 PIECE-111.UXE NK MIX ENSEMBLE TUMBLEl:IET 9 PIECE B.EGANT CUSTOM WINDSOR sn inks h~e UJOl~SSIO~it+­ er w1!h !111s rustom ending s~!. 8dr~.t1n for savrngs. Perlect REG, t,99 {. · REG.,4.'f 8 ea.: 91/2 01. on twe rocks, 3 1 9 788 13 Ol. beva1age,. 16 oz. cooler. Choose from aegean b1~e or . sun . gold. serve du~s with pride. · _ Your guests will be im· 311 pressed with the quality of this luxurious Windsor set Otd World elegance. NCH COSMETIC HAVING MIRROR one of these in ynur or overnight bag, , etc. I side plain, s'1de magmlr1ng. 97c . ' .. , GALS' MY ISLANDS GILLITTE COLOGNE St~ great esseoces by Gil· I 7c ene. Sl!omboli. Majorca. Skye. Mourea. Corlu, Bar· ~!las. 2~~ GI. - !<l..'W . FABERGE IRDl 70Z. SPLASH LOTION A big 7 Ot. bottle all clean smell· mg Bn.1t is just the thing for yoor man's Christmas stocking. Splash on anyt ime. 107 REG. 1.97 . HANDY HOME HELPERS AT HOLIDAY SAVINGS PROCTOR SILEX 7 SPHD BLENllR . Handr 7 speed blender comes wit~ a solid sta~ motor. 48 01. 1ar. Avocado base Bl06A GRANDI NITTI CURLING IRON l ook yotK best. .. with soft fla"er - ing curls. Teflon coated to last. , 15·11750 501. TeflllUned c•POPPER Sell-buttering PDJIJ>E!f with non-scratch. easy to clean luung. Top dallbtes server. 5614-03 ~ '\ your choice each REG. TO . 12.97 ' .. • mT WiDN I SPRAi 2'PIECE GIFT m· BllllT .33 DEl.IXE · · 2· PIECE GIFT'SET Jln oz of Brut 33 spray on lotion 13· 7· and 4 ru. of Brut JJ deodorant · spray. Both attractively wrariPt?d • logether to make a lillE! &ift set. -IEG. ·1.17 7 oz. of fabulous Brut 33 splash on lotioll & 7 oz. of Brut 33 Extra hold hiar spray. Another distingt.ished gift from Faberge. . 1!! 2.57 .PIONEER fBUR CHANNR 108 WAm. RECEIVBI Qua~ .so~nd· in now. within your budget! four arrll}liliers for true quad sound. sensitive AM/FM reception, Z ~in!ls of matrix decoders !or reprod11Ction of au the important encoded sound' sources available today including popular SQ sOOnd, discrete tape inputs signal strength meter, more. 'OUI LOW Ill. st.ts._ list• to true sleno SllUnd .at its Mst wiQ t~tS fatl'IOIS Ena- tisi ilnpcrl, Futwts llikllM· be or IUMll Pfllrllli *'°" . OUI LOW IEG. 49.tJ CllStom 1ecord cllinttt pl.lys 111 -,our lP's & •s·~ ~ ~te wit~ ~st and du$t cover. 111.lallttk: cartridgt. '%~ _:~y"' . . ,-.. ) ~~· ... ...L_. ~" . CO·STA. MESA -3088 BRISTOL ST. • San Di eqo Freeway .i t Bristol GlfT Sl;\RS ( '· • " ' BiUT 33 W•OBE 3 PIECE GIFT SET Brut JJ spalsh on lotion (7 01.J. 7 Ol. Extra hold hair control spray & 11 oz. creme shave ... all hand- somely wrapped for lucky male. 291 : REG. 3.77 ' . . •ERTS 11llEE WAY mREOSPWERS OUI LOW IEG. tt.t5,t•. Sliilet'IGI' sow!'d at an ~P· lle•IO GI rue:@. 12 If(~ wool l!f. 5 uw:-m1d·tanRe ~nd 3 uich tllleeter 11 • rtal •~lrwt cabinet. ~~49 ... 11.102 STOii HOUIS: r MOii.· SAT. t 10AMl•10PM SUll. 10AMto7PM I ' • • I. ! ' ' • ( ~ ....... 1 1-.... or Friday, Novembtr 30, 1973 • Co111et Heralds •se~ond Co111ing?" By LOUIS CASSELS Unlled Pross w.nwlonal 'nle oomet Kohoutek, which will pass near the earth during the next few weeks , la causing excitement a mo n c fun- clsmentallat Protestants. They are calling ti "The Christmas star of 1973." It has strengthened an already widely-held belief that the second coming of Christ may be near at band. 11llS BEUEF is known in theo logical Jargon as "millenlalism." It oJten comes stroogly to the fore in periods of domestic and international turmoil such as the preaent. The 'term "m.Ulenlalfsm" ls derived from the Biblical p~ mise that Christ's return will "tho Battle of Armageddon." try will light another country, darnental~t t be o Io g Y, Is firs( ctntury A. D., whcq one kingdom will a t t a c k distrlbu tinK a mo n g his ctri.aUans bad to endure ter· FUNDAMENTALISTS, who f 11 tract -~!Ued "The aoo"-........... Th will o owers 8 ign r:lble per a e cut Ion from look on the Bible as a literal wc:r ...,'6 ........ ; ere COmlng Comet," d r th -~ r God be t e r r i b I e earthquakes, Imperial Rome. recor O e wwuS 0 d Of Kohouetk, he says : On many aubsequenl oc- and therefore infallible, know famines an P 1 a g u e s •ifJbis visitor to our realm cuions, including lhe Middle that Jesus wamed his disciples everywhere; There will be cannot be part of the su~tl-Ages, the reformation era, against attempting to forecast awful things ••. " tioM of man. Jt comes with and in the 19lh century, ex· the "day and hour" of his Jesus said one ol the early a purpose, s:hd Jt speaks by pectatlQn of the mJlleniwn was proml9ed return in glory. signs of the end \\'OUld be the jts proximity to the blrthday widtspttad. But they also are well aware spectacle of Jerusalem "sur-of· the Lo.rd Jesus Christ." One n 0 t e d mllleniallst, of sever a 1 "apocajyptic rounded by annics." This Although thi1 is a time of William Miller, decided after discourses" in which Jesus passage gives the on·and-off sin, Jawlessness, despair and a study of Biblical prophecies discussed various signs that confusion, Mcintire says. that Jesus would return Oct. would herald the approach of war in the Middle East pro-"There is hope from the 22, tM4. ~ that day a~ found re:Jf,'ous slgnlllcaoce for he " · the ch f • the end or time . avens in approa o nMllched, mony. of Mi, Uer's many mi enialists. the t t ......... "''"A r -In the 21st chapter oJ Luke's 'lbe comet comes into the grea come • ~ause ~ disciples left thetr businesses, Go<pel, !or er.ample, Jesus is · ·d th sec.ond coming ol Oirist is put on white gQwn1, and picture because Jesus sa1 e being announced." gathered on roofs and Hllls. quoted as saying. end will be preceded by "signs ANTICIPATION of Chrls,t'a ll waa not until lhe sun went BATON ROUGE. LA. (UPO in the sun, the moon and -1be 1st Circuit Court of '1DON'T BE afraid when you the stars." return has waxed and waned down in perfectly normal Appeals upheld a $4,500 award hear d wars and revolutioms; azmng Christians throughout fashion that they began to to a woman who had a gauze Such things nwst ltlppen first, DR. CARL Mcintire of Coll· the 21000.year history oJ the recall Jesus' warning qainst pad. left inside her abdomen Stt your nea y LOS ANCELES ORANGE COUNTIES DGllGE DEALER! DRIER TODAY Jl.F;f..I(;J()]'f _!he:::.=en=d=ts:.:::ne:ar:..:.·~·~·=On=e~co:::::un~---='~P=o=k~e=s=m::.:•:n__:f:o:r__:r:u:~:____:It:_:w:~=•='=tro:.::::ng~d=unng:':=-:th:•:._:ol:..:l!ia=..:retum.::::::::~~~~_.:.~P=·:1"'"':::::~Cbar:::::i~ty~H=os::::::~:ta:I·~~~~~~~~~~--: ( ) but they do not mean that ingswood, N. J., an articulate churCD trying to guess the exact time during ·an operation at Huey . ' ! Saul11g En e rgy Sen. Birch Bayh, above, takes down gas lamp at home in \Vashing- ton. Professor Jurgen A. Thomas, be Io w, wears raccoo n coat in classroom at Berkshire, usher in a "millenlum" - a golden era of 1,000 years or peace on earth and good will among men . Acoording to the bQok of Revelation, this golden era will be preceded by hlltory'a climactic war, In which the forces of good floally wUI defeat the forces of evil at ·~ ?\·lass., Comn1unity Col- " lege wh ich lowered Recreation Events Se& For Teens • thermostat to 63 de· , •· grees to save fuel. .. '<-' ·'~· Coast Man Gets Kudos 'nl.e Fountain Valley Recrea· tion Department has plumed two holiday .. eots • , teenagers in the city -. December. -~J 1l The first will be a ' for seventh and e!gbth ~ ' students on Dec. II Imm 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the Fountlln Valley High School gym. Admis~on will be 25 ce!llS. Another Christmas •OllT!!i' will be a trip to Magic tin on Dec. 29 for 12 years and older. 'B leave the high school at 9 a.m. and return at 5 p.m. 1be fee for the trip ts $1.50 which includes bus fare and admission to the p a r t . Students must register at the recreation department before Dec. 21. Student A.rt Sale to Aid V all.ey High Local residents are invited to help the students at Foun- tain Valley High School buy an enlarger for t b e i r photography class by coming to the Student Art Sale Dec. 11 through Dec. H. The art sale will be held on campus and will feature students projects in a variety of mediums iocludiog photojraphy. Floyd Camaby, chairman of the art department, said the Richard A. Stuckey, 2.501 Via sale is being held to raise Marina in Newport Beach, has money for an enlarger for b een awa rd ed the the sc hool 's photography D istinguishcd Toastmasters -~';I"""';:::=·=;=;:;:=::;::=::; I Award for his work with youth. ~makesPeopl~&Lotes) The award, highest in the - Toastmasters organization, was given to Stuckey for his Fl'I tlftJIV' work with youth programs at U &;llt. I St. Joachim 's Church in Costa Mesa and at Valley High School in Santa Ana. NEWPORT CllMTJIR c in the l1Mlljijll1ll OPEN 6 NIGHTS MON.-SAT • . Sundays 12-5 .... ______ ,,._"" __ , __ _ • ) Reg. WALL UNIT Decorative go ld leaf uprights, fo{J r shelves, ideal for books or accessories $79.95 ROYAL BLUE CHAIR With pecan v1ood trim, loose cushion. Modern in slyle .............. , .. $270.00 CONTEMPORARY CHAIRS Two bright yellow chairs on white metal frame . Perfect for patio or porch .... $100.00 SALE IF YOU'VE ALREADY BEEN IN!! It will be worth your time lo come back, We've complete ly unlO<lded our warehouse. You will see m<1ny it1m1 that ho¥e n•¥•r bee n on our floor before. Reg. SALE COFFEE TABLE Country Engl ish, pecan in color, center drawer, rectangular half moon shape .. $150.00 s99's BROWN VINYL CORNER GROUP Complete with stereo speakers, serve as end ra bies, rvner in corner, very versa tlle $499.95 s399's S PC. DINETTE Heavy brushed gold base, i'Ound glass top. 4 da rk Qreen slriped velvet chairs.,. $320.00 s249'5 -~ MANSFIELD'S is consolid•ting its op•r•tion with its p•rtnt store in FULLERTON. titre's your ch1nc1 to s•ltct from on• of ttt1 fin11t u11ctlon1 of fin• qu1lity · furnitur1 in ORANGE COUNTY 1t 1r1m1ndout s1ving1. HURRY FOR BIST SU!CTION! IRING YOUR TRUCK OR TRAILER -OR WE'U DELIVIR. All 11IH final. No 11· chqts or refunds. No l1y1ways. Reg. SALE 2-PC. SECTIONAL Gold velvet, he•vv c•rvtd Sp•nfsh motif incl11de1 corner tebl•, dttk wood ,•• .$1100.00 3 PANEL DIVIDER Dark walnUt, open spindles, hinged to Iii any corner ••••.•• , .•• , •• , .$120.00 SOFA & LOVE SEAT Black·brown, white striped velvet, de ep s45995 full loose cushions, large rolled 11rm .. $600.00 LATI ARRIVALS MtJny, many sofos, sectionals & choirs In wide assortment of Herculons, Velvets & Vinyls ot HUGE DISCOUNTS! Laro• assortment of "one-of-a·kfnd" 1oble lomps, 1wag lamps & floor lamps al tremendous 1ovi~J. HURRY, THESE Will GO FAST! Reg. SALE DECORATOR COMMODES $149!~. 2 match ing commodes in Chinese Red. One w/3 drawers, one w/record cob. $229.95 DECORATOR CHAIR Velve t high·back in orange with ;old tassels on finials ............. $200.00 s11995 TUFnD IACK RECUNER Color is attractive oxblood, perfect s15995 comfort for the man of the house ... $248.95 SPANISH LOVE SEAT Dark Green velvet, wood trim in s149'5 front & back .................... $240.00 J Reg. SALE TUFTED BACK SOFA Scarlet red, three loose cush ion seals with matc hing bolsters .. , • , . $599.95 2 Barrel Chairs to .1latth above sofa .••.... , , •..... S 120.00 CAMPAIGN CHEST Three drawers, pecan wood trimmed $14995 in brass, fin e workmanship & qual ity $246.95 IF YOU HAVEN'T BEEN IN YET! Don't mi11 this opportunity to 1ov1. Hundred1 of lot• i:ir•ivol1 and our entir • wor1hou1• inventory <11e waiting for yo11. If you will ne.d fumil1Jr1 <1ny time this year , , , II will poy you to come in today! Reg. SALE 6-PC. BEDROOM Top qual ity, king size, in pecan. One of the top names in furn iture .. $1272.00 s999oo GAME SET 5 pc.-48" octagon Pedestal Table, Spanish oak formic a w/4'hi back red velvet cha irs $592.00 s299 50 • TABLE LAMPS 2 matching lamps in heavy clrved wood s79~ with "tinge" of red in wood .....•. $129.95 • • ·, . . ·l , • . . .. ~ . •• . • •• • - a.m. Fridal, Novtmbtr 30, 1973 ~ -~ --... ~~ ... Wiit.. ~ -~ ... -.. _ ....... ~ .. -.. . . -. ..... --' -:-.:. .. 'one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS •, DAIL V PILOT JJ ~ I ' JOIN THE EXCITEMENT ; . . . WHEN HE · ARRIVES . AT . . ' ~ THE GIANT SNOWMAN ' ..,, ' , atur ay, Dec. 1 ' i . • • • . . ' • • .. • • ' ' • ,• .. ' • . • ' • . LISTEN FOR THE SIREN AND BELLS ON THE BIG · NEWPORT BEACH FIRIE TRl,JCK • FREE -~CAN DY ' • FOR THE YOUNGSTERS .. Friday, Novtmber 30 , iq1J Borgnine a Ringer ·for ¥in~e Lombardi : UPI T•lellfl•to. FOOTBALL LEGEND Vince Lombardi • -. By VERNON SCO'IT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A haJrpiece, a pair of steel-rim· med glasses and a gap-toothed grin tran.sfoims Oscar winner Ernest Borgnine into a ringer for the late football coach Vince Lombardi. Nes:t month viewers will be able to see the startling resemblance between the two \\'hen the actor stars in "Legend in Granite." It unW they asked me to play this role. When the makeup people got through · with me 1 was stunned. We even have the • same deep lines in our faces just above the jaw when we grin." HORNUNG WAS technical adviser on the hour·long biography of two years in the Jlfe of Lombardi at Green Bay, beaming Dec. 14. Borgnine was shown some BORGNJNE NEVER saw footage on Lombardi taken by the dynamic coach of the the National Football League. Green Bay Packers. He's not It was wmecessary for the even a football fan. But Paul actor to carbon~py Lorn· Hornung, Lombardi's star bard.l's mannerisms and halfback, was uneasy during characteristics. They j u s t . fHming of the television show. came along naturally. ''Paul thought we looked~ "Lombardi was an ltaJian just like him. You blow your "It's as authentic as we stack and a moment later can make It. 1-lomung was all is forgiven . He WM a firs t on ~the set all the time. On generation American whose a couple oC occasions, he passion was football. I never rewrote speeches I made. even played the game as a "Paul would listen to the kid. When I was 18 years .dialogue from the script and old I only weighed 134 pounds. say, 'The coach wouldn't have "But then I spenf 10 years talked like that.' And then in the Navy and came be'd write out things that out weighing 234 pounds. That Lombardi actUally did say.'' would have been the_ time for Borgnine said a n o t h e r me to play football." Academy Award winner , Hornung coached Borgnine George C. Scott, is planning on the techniques of drilling to star in a full movie a football squad. Reserve biography of Lombardi'. But members of several NFL he isn't interested in such ·a teams doooed P a cker project himself. Wtiforms for c o n ta c t se-, quences on the show, and a "OUTSIDE OF Canada and full eight minutes of the reaL the UrUted States nobody in Packers in action will be in-the world u n d e r s t a n d s eluded in the hour. IOUDded so much alike it made too," Borgnine said. "One blln feel weird," s a i d reason I decided to do this Borgnlne. "He told me th~.fhow is because Italians are "THIS JS essentially a team used to Jtid the coach .. , erturial and fWl to pl ay. character study of a man, American football ," he said. "They aren't even interested in it. I don't think. anyone can make a successful picture \\•hich only plays in America." because he looked like me. " his di gni ty and his honor," "l never even thought~.-, !A;"l'DIPERAMENTALLY I'm Borgnine said. (iiiislim•:...-..,,..,-~lff ~· · ...... i.. .. rr "" ,,. '..,,' Organized Crime THE LOO(<·ALIKE Ernest Borgnine " .... , -----n-__ .....,I ~~'Retirees' THE PICK OF runch f· •I • ~ , PUNCH ~ • n1ngs t~J~ ~r :tJQay Climb 10 Held • in Murder Ring ~ WASHINGTON (UPI\ - The Senate has voted to in- crease to $3,000 a year the ... • • • .'rO:. ~· • . ~ COjlyriglll 197), Tatooto Sun Syndic111 ~What this country needs is 11 trans-continental motornly. • ..,.1:i.amount a retired worker may earn without sacrificing any SQcial Security benefits . ,< The proPosal wa a lac t' by an 83-1 vote ursday to bill providin an ll percent ase-i ial Security fits in two steps. Sen. Carl Curtis (R-Neb). cast th neg~tive vote. THE SENATE bill calls r , a .,.7 percent increase i HE REFERRED to the suspected informants for Jaw enforccn1ent agencies a n d p o t en t i a 1 prosecution \\'it· nesses." MINt ... TUAllS (IYIL WAit OL.O OCll..l..S 0 1..0 OU~ MANNING'S COLLECTORS SHOP WI:~ •2 .4 2 8 NltWll'0"'1' 111..VO. CCl•TA Mi.M. CAUi"',, 8"62-92151 """'•• n••:_, Pare"'t,s Sue; Body • 1~= Vanished • FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) -Wayne and t.oura Brooks say their lives were permanently damaged when a hospital IMt the body of their premature son Paul. th• pl•c• to oo for FINE WATCHES JOUll\ Cot•t plu• -cosll m1M1 dilly 10-t. t at, JIM, closed sun. ..,_ "I still have my doubts lhal \1:=========1 Paul ever died ," Mrs. Brooks told a jury this week In the coUple's damage suit against the South Broward Ho•pltal District. PAUL DIED 16 h<Jurs aflel his birth on Christmas Day, 1!171 .. ·:Q,!e .11>-pound baby,_ born ~tbs premature, was tagged and left in the hospital morgqt ... .;to be picked ,up by a !unet,li1 home, but vanished; a hos~ spokesman testi£ied. ~Mbdano1 hospital district ad~tor, said the bOdy maJ; baV'e been bumt'd in the hOspltiil incinerator . MRS, BROOKS psycholo- gist , Or, Richard Schaeffer, said the·woman would a,lways ~·111motionally affected by the eXperience. "'IJs ·the baby still alive? She's not sure. She feels cheated." Schaeffer testified. ''The scar \Viii be there forever. It's always going to be rekindled." ~ _ ~fits poo enactment and murder-for-hire adjunct to the --------------------'·tr ,, a ~}>ercent increase payable underworld whict operated in in !d'uly, ft74. The House has New York 30 years ago. ,. Hepatitis Cause Believed Found approved a bill calling for The 10 were reputedly associates of the organized-a 7 percent increase payable crime ramily led by the late in Aprll and 4 percent payable Vito Genovese. Eight of the in July. 10 are related. The Senate also approved The six-count indictment an amendment Thursday to r-----------11 lower to 55 the age at which Advff'fisemer11 a widow of a retired workeri,----------,11 NOW LEGAL I WASHINGTON (AP) Government disease detec- tives have reported they believe they've d\scovered the long-sought cause or infectious hepatitis, the liver-inflaming. jaundice-producing ma I ad y that afflicts at least 54,000 Americans yearly. The true incidence may be 10 times that figure due to unreported o r widetected cases. REPORTING disoovery - . may choose to take her ac- tuarially reduced · S o c i a I - a disease-fighting , blood , Security pension. fraction -wilich is the ~Y Under existing law, widows treatment presently available, become eligible either for a and one that is not always reduced pension at ·age 60 or run benefits at age 62. effective. FINAµ.Y, THEY said the finding mean.s that scieoce may now have pinned down the respective causes ol the two forms of s<H:alled· "viral hepatitis" that a ff Ii c t mankind. THE SENATE frequently bas voted to raise to $3,000 the amount Social Security pensioners may earn without loss of benefits. But the House, normally more fiscally conservative on Social Securi- ty funding , usually trims the Senate propo.sals. and photographic visualization .--------------------- -ol a new virils·like particle, National Institutes of Health scientists said Thursday the discovery should lead to a sure-fire method of diagnosing the elusive malady, and might eventuall y lead to develop- ment of a preventive vaccine. The vir us-like particles were found in the preserved fecal stools of some pri s oner volunteers at the Joliet, Ill. prison who were ex· perimentally infected with the disease sev~ra1 years ago by other investigators. Attempts are being made to isolate such particles. The NIH scientists said the discovery might also lead to better means of assuring the potency of "gamma globulin" Stolen Kiss Girl Has All Answers SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -When Howard Glassman, a dental student, woke up at 3 a.m. he saw a beautiful young Oriental woman standing near his bed. "Shh," she whispered, putting her finger to her lips. "I've just been wilh your roonunate. Where's the front door." Glassman smiled and gestured· toward the front door. The girl, dressed in leotards and~ a gray coat, tip- toed to his bedside, gave him a friendly kiss and left. Later, Glassman checked wilh his roommate, Fred Lamb, 23, and found that Lamb knew nothing about the beautiful visitor. He also foW1d that a checkbook and $15 in cash were mi ssing. " Don't you wish you'd joined First National's •• this time LAST year? Don't get caught short next year! You won't miss the $5 or $10 you put in each week, and next year at this tim e, you'll have a nice enough check to assure a very Merry Christmas indeed! F First National Bank~ , Win $,1,000.000 i, in State lottery · , With 5oc Chance LOS ANGELES.(Speclal)- You can be come a· "millionaire over night" with a ~ per week gamble in a legalized eastern state spon- sored lottery no matter Wh'ere you now live. · 20,000 WINNERS EACH WEEKI Your chances are· great! There are on an a\lerage of 20,000 WINNERS EACH WEEK ranging from $40, $400, $4,000 to $50,000. You also have a cha nce to win the "Millionaire" Grand Prize which is drawn once every six weeks. Winners, who now come from all over the country, are promptl}I,. notifi ed and automatically paid by the State Treasury .throu~h a computerized system. It s ab- solutely legal, State Go'vern- ment sponsored, certified and honest. Take a chance! You may win a fortune! ENTRY BLANKS AVAILABLE TO All Everybody ca n participate no matter where you live. To get yo ur simple entry blank and full details send 3.00, cash , check or m.o. to WEEKLY FORTUNES, Oepl.43 , 4266 Los Angeles Av., Simi Valley, Calli. 93063 REMOTE CONTROL 0 i on v Early American console with brilliant new Chromacolor picture. Over 90% sqlid·state Titan 101 chassis. Chromatic one-button tuning. Solid· State YideQ Range Tuner, AfC. Space Command 500 adjusb volume to three levels, turns sat oo or off, changes VHF channels in both directions. 25" (~llOMA(OlORII' DIAGONAL 100"9 SOLID-STATE Instant Plctt111! lasllllt Souadl Solid-State Super Gold Video Guard Tuner. AFC. 30,000 volts of picture power (design averagei Zenith Power Sentry System. Chromatic one-butfon tuning. Price includes choice of Swivel Base or Roll-AI>out.Standl $59888 • 100°/o SOLID-STAR 25" CHROMA<OlORII' DIAGONAL Instant Plcturel ln1tant Souncll Modern styled console with new brilliant Chromacolor picture . Solid-Sta" S\Jper Video Range Tuner. AFC. 3-0,000 volts of plctwe power (design average], Power Sentry System. Chrom~ic' onetbutton tun in a:. See These And Many More At Your Nearest Zenith Dealer's Store ALL AVAILABLE ZENITHS IN STOCK & CN DISPLAY WHY BUY AT ABC? e No Fhtonce Chorte' If po14 In 90 doys or Low Dow• 011d 36 moflth• to f'•y lo.o.c.~ e 1 Teer Frff f'orPt e I Yeor Ftff Semc• • J y.., Pie,.,• Tuff Warra1ty e FrM Dellftfy a11d s.t .. Up e e lafl•Amerlcard/MnMr Cho'1• e We s.Mce what •• Sell e W• •llOw 011r Product httlde Old Out • No Commlttlo• s.i..,...n, ·Our Warranty Is Not Pro-Rated! 9011 ATLANTA ST. cAt M•onoll') HUNTINGTON GEACH HOURS: MON •• FR I. 10.7 SATURDAY 10·~~30 ,CLOSEti SUNOAY Of'IN THUksDAY 'TIL 9 962-5559 .. 19.046 IROOKHURST ST. HUNTINGTON llACH HOUR.Si DAILY'·ro.7 ov ... . ' SATURDfY IO·l :JO SUNQ;.Y 12·5 .~ _, 968~3329 ... ' 1 • • ' . ,-_ f . ' ~ ' :: • " i ' ' ,. :: ' f • • ~ } (. ... .· " •' ,. ,• .. ,. ,• " • '• •• .. ' • . ;. " ' ' ' .. •• " •' " • ' ' . • . • • •• ,. I I . • -~Moa_, •• _~•m_ ... _~·-"'-J~~~··=JLY=PILU~l~J3 1 . • THE STRIKE IS OVER! .. ' 1 • ., ' ! ' . ·~. .. .. . . ~ ·:fAKE YOUR OW.N I ' OUR EVERYDAY LOW. DISCOUNT PRICES ON > EXCEPT IT!MS •EYOND OUR CONTROL ••• (LIQUOR & FAIR TRADR-MERCHANPISE A"D PROFESSIONAL SERVICES) ' ' Remember This 10 o 'Off Also Applies ' ' To All Specials Advertised This Week! /' ' · .. . Do ALL Your Christmas Shopping Now i-. -.. • • •, l• ! ' ' . • • ' • ' . ! I I l .. . . . . . . • • • • SALE ENDS TUES., DIC. 4 • COSTA MESA SANTA ANA FOUNTAIN VALLEY . EL TORO HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH -- 233 E. 17th St. · 1406 W. Edinger •t Bristol Magnoli• St .. •t T•lbort El Toro at Rockfield Rd. 9861 Adams at Brookhurst 21131 Beach at Atlanta . COSTA MESA SANTA ANA · FOUNTAIN VALLEY WESTMINSTER HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH UlllNrWotWll-3325 llri1tol at MacArthur 16141 Harbor at Edinger Wntminster at Golden West 9S Huntingto..i Center S881 W•rner - ' -J I i • ~· -·-• • ' ·" ' -- J 4 DAIL V PILOT Other Deaths SAN DIEGO (AP) Memorial Services !or Capt. Bnce V. Leamd', 75, a retired Navy medical officer and fonner teacher at the UCLA medical school, are scheduled Saturday at Balboa Naval Ho.spit.al. Leamer, died here Nov. 14. TUCSON, Ari~ (UPI) - Russian-born tympanist Sam Borodtln, 81, once praised by mnductor Arturo Toscanini as the "best percussionist in the ~'Orld" died Tuesday at the age ol. 81. He spent 32 years with Toscanini and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra and another 14 with the NBC Symphony. Death Notic'• ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St., Cotta lt1esa MM881 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 173-MSI Costa Mesa ... UM • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa ltfesa l.J ~ • DllDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beaclt Blvd. llwltlogton Bea<h IC-'1'711 !44 Redondo Ave. Loog Beach %l:l-->Jl.llU • MeCOR~UCK LAGUN~ BEACH MORTUARY 1708 Laguna Canyon Rd. 191-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3580 PacWc View Drive Newport Beach, cautornJa 144-1700 ' l • PEEK FMULY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME ?IOI BoJsa Ave. Westmln1ttt ff3..35!S • smm·s MORlARY m Mam t. Hantlngt.oa ch - f Frld.v, Novtmbtt 30, 1973 Daylig ht, Savings Boosted By 0. C. HUSTINGS Of *t o.llY 'llof Iliff • • Ae1ion on Gas Vapor Traps Delayed , SANTA ANA -Amend· tatlves of oil companies sald They tvere advised that, u.i Angeles County's Air slated. ments to Orange Oxm-devices to catch vapors wttlch although prototype devices Polluilon C.Ontrol Di.strict ha.1 OlL COl\!PANY represcn- ty's air pollutloo control rules escape at service station were being used for such trap-adopted a role ~ulrtng the tatlves said the prototype have been approved with the pumps and at bulk 1oadlng ping, manufacturers would oot hose traps by May 1, 1975. vapor trapping equipment exception of two applying to depots could save several be able to produce them in In addition tQ the lack of could recover as much as 90 escaplng vapors from pumped million gaJJons of gasoline a quantity for at least a year. equipment, Supervisor Ralph ~rcent of the fumes but ga!Oline. The County Boord Ot year and lessen air pollutlon. San Diego County h a s Diedrich poinled out that there emphasized that it ls not Supcrvison decided the latter adopted similar rules with an are 1,700 service stations ln available ln quantities yet. OPEN SUNDAY 11 a.m. to S p.m. needed more study· IN NOT A O O P T I N G enforcement deadline of Jan. Orange County and that ac· Dale Secord, spokesman for Fifteen o.Uler minor rule changes in rules 61 and 65 1, 1974, but testimony ln-ceptab}e equipment could cost the Or an g e Co unt Y t9l2 HARBOR BLVD. changes were approved. the supervisors put ofl setting dicated the deadline may be each station as much. as Environmental Coalition urged Ai P II ti Co I olr. ll•nkAm.,.lc•rcl M .. 11r Ch1r1t Orange Co u n t y's Con· gressional delegation w n ~ solidly in support of the liouse bill ordering reinstatement of daylight savings time for two years as an energy con- servation measure . r o u on ntro · 1cer a deadline for Installation or extended because of the lack $10,000. HThere Is an econom ic adoption of the Jan. 1, 1974, Costo Mtsa 11•7141 ••2·3177 William Filchcn and represeir ~th~e'_v~a~po~r:_tr~a~p~•·:._ ___ _'o~f_<:e~qu~lp~m~e~n:;t. _____ _'.'fa'."c~to"..r.!:pr~e~se:_rn~t~h~er~e_'a'."lso,~"_'h~e_'d~c~ad~li'.'.'.ne:;. ___ • ___ _11~~~~~~~~~~ The House voted 331 to 88 on the measure and another such bill in the Senate will face a possible vote next week. The Senate bill has been burdened with scores o f amendments and may take longer to pass, however. Talks Set On Mer ger Of District Republicans Del Clawson, • Clair Burgener, Andrew GARDEN GR 0 VE Hinshaw and Cr.Ilg Hosmer Trustees of lhe Coast Com- joined Democrat Richard Han-munity C.Ollege District have na in voting for the House agreed t.o. discuss the possibili· version, which calls f 0 r ty of a merger with Garden Daylight Savings to be In-Grove school officials. stituted 15 days after the final They set Dec. 6 as the date bill is signed. -for preliminary talks oo the Year-round daylight savings Inclusion of the Garden Grove time has been the pet project Unified School District in the of Hosmer over the past rew Coast Community Co 11 e g e District. years and he was a coa uthor of the House bill. · That means junior college students from Garden Grove * high schools would attend HOSMER also has co-either Golden West or Oran:;e sponsored a bill that would O>ast College instead of being authorize the U.S. Department given the choice of attending of Trarsportation to help any .tm>year college in businesses and industries Orange County. acro.ss the nation to start com-Garden Grove is the only puterized .car pools to cut school system in the county gasoline consumption. which is not presently within Hosmer, whose Long Beach-the boundaries of a ccrn- based district includes por· munity college district. tions of western Orange Coun-'I1le meeting with Garden ty, claims increasing car pools Grove school officials will take from 1.3 to 2.3 persons per place at 7:30 p.m. in the board car would save 780,000 barrels room of the Garden Grove oJ gas each day. Unified School District, 10331 * Stanford Ave., Garden Grove. STATE SEN. James Whet-Coast trustees have twice more (R-Buena Park) will before rejected overtures of move his district office from annexation from G a r d e n Garden Grove to Anaheim. Grove. Forecasts ol a sharp For years, Whetmore has increa!lle in student population had both his district office and low · tax returns from and Jaw office in the same Garden Grove were t he building but the ~'.;;f."' i~d-eter_'!'fln'-'1--g'-fa-cto_rs_. __ _ sparked s o m e con · earli er this year . Whetmore will continue to practice law from his Garden Grove office and the new district office will be located at 300 N. Harbor Blvd., Suite 312. * OPEN SAT. & SUN. II .IOAMJ06PM ffi MON.-FRI. 9 TO 9 PM 2110 W. LINCOLN ANAHEIM• 772-8113 DuPONT 501 NYLON EXTU THICK SHAG HIGH LOW SHAG REG. $12.95 SQ. YD. c.;.,1e1.1, lut911..r wltlo hlnit ...... _.., 99 SQ. YD. SPECIAL · MILL PURCHASE CARPET 4 ROOMS MAXIMUM 40 YDS. 1-DoPOtlT HlOlt (NOKI Of COLOIS 199® (•111Jlrt1ly IR111nri1 witlt •Ivie rvi.Mr ,.4ili111. 5AVf$'j;9.00 . HOW: AISO INSIDE . LIN BROOK HARDWARE AT FOUNTAIN·· VALLEY 17200 Brookhurst • INSIDE HARDWARE STOll 968-8541 BRUCE Nestande, who ran unsuccessfully two times in an effort to unseat Democratic Congressman Richard Hanna of Garden Grove, has resi~ from. the Orange County !!<publican Central Committee as a member from the 3rd district. SPACE DYED CA DON EXTllAHEAVY Nestande no longer lives in the district. ' * 11IE NEXT deadline for fiJ. ing applications for civil service summer job testing is Dec. 28, Congressman Clair W. Burgener CR-Rancho Santa Fe) has announced. " Those who fill out the forms nlust be at least 16 years 01a and a high school graduate. , l ·;.' --I l ·_..~.., I ~~1st \ Vt' 1{)~~/). \ ~a:i.~ \ '6-•~ ~ ----------------- TWEEDS NYLON DuPONT SOI BYWAITUS BY HOUYTEX 'IY MAND See your neor y 99 99 99 LOS ANGELES OIANGE · COUNTIES SQ. SQ. SQ. DDIGE IEALERI YD. YD. YD . OllEI TDIAY REG. REG •. REG. 7.99 10.99 9.99 Completely lnstaDn with Complete y lnstoUed with Complete y lnstolled wit~ Deluxe Rubber Pocldin1 Deluxe Rubber Padding Deluxe Rubber Podding I . CUMMl::M()l!ATl~f3 Tlit: f3l!A~[) LAU~Clil~f3 ur= Tlit: 13A~I\ ur= ~t:WV()l!T C()l!()~A [)f::L MAl! ur=r=1cr:: FEATURING WORLD CLASS 77,000 CUBIC FOOT HOT AIR BALLOONS ~ BANK OF NEWPORT HOT AIR BALLOON RACE <WEATHER PERMITTING> PICK THE WINNER AND WIN A PRIZE 1ST PRIZE -FOLDING ADULT BICYCLE 2ND PRIZE-ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR 250 3RD .PRIZES -BANK OF NEWPORT COLORING BOOKS ~ INVITATIONAL SAND CASTLE COMPETITlONS WITH PRIZES FOR THE WINNERS. ~ BICYCLE DECORATING COMPETITION FOR KIDS OF ALL AGES. ALL ENTRIES RECEIVE . A PRIZE. ~ FREE HOT DOGS AND PEPSI. ~ SPECIAL ANCHOR ACCOUNTS FOR THE 'FIRST 1,000 NEW CHECKING ACCOUNTS ... ~iE~~:i~TI~EB~~~~~AL CHECKING ... ~ ATTENDANCE PRIZE DRAWING 1ST PRIZE -HOBIE CAT 14 FOOT SAILBOAT 2ND PRIZE -TEN·SPEED SCHWINN BICYCLE 3RD THRU STH PRIZE -TWO ROUND TRIP TICKETS TO ANY AIR CALIFORNIA DESTINATION ~ MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT. WE'VE PLANNED A GREAT DAY OF FUN AND ... IT'S ALL f;REE ... WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU SATURDAY. bECEMBER 1.ST COAST HIGHWAY NEAR MACARTHUR FESTIVITIES FROM 10:00 AM to 2:00 PM of Newport CORONA DEL MAR OFFICE: COAST HIGHWAY NEAR MACARTHUR 645·SSSO f • • • H~NDREDs · GF ROLLS ·oN DISPLAY MOHAWIC PHILADELPHI A HOt.lmEX ARMSTRONG CA.SIN CRARS (AllAWAY aEAnlE BARWICK ALDON MAGEE ™!TH ROYAL WEAVE LEES ' i . , I .. . ' ,, • ~ ':.ii 1 • ' . • • . • r • .. • • Fa ''Thi s M (UP Ro deteri fUm a dee He ca to r porn the st "A lhal "I ing 0 mate s N' Anu or! top! Doda Serv the and 80 tire ., • • . " • .. • ' ' Fn.!11, N°"mber 30, 197l DAILY PILOT Famll11 Clreus the portables 11 This should quiet them down . I confiKat.ed their-# • weopons." Movie Downt all Saddem Reagan M E LBOURNE, Australia Hollywood under the guise o1 (UPK) -Calliomla Gov. motion pictures," be said. Ronald Reagan says the deteriQl'ltk>n of Hollywood's REAGAN IS v i I i t i n g film Industry left him with Melbourne with his wile; Nan- a deep reeJlng or shame. cy, to ralae fUnds ror the He said here Thursday Red Cross and as a special caillornlans were also starting pmldentlal trade envoy. " to react against the flood ol. Shouts of "Yankee Go pornography emanating from Home" and "\\'hat About the state during recent years. Watergate, Ron?" greettd ·NORELCO 5QVI P SHA VER "AS FAR AS I'm concerned, Reagan from a group of about ai .99 that reaction can't come soon 15 students demoMtrators as . enough," he told 400 Red he. entered the hall. Three fl ootmg rotary heods for dose Cross volunteer wo.rkers at the Police and security men 011d comfortable shaves. Ea sy-g rip sha pe, Dallu Brooks Hall. kept the demo-atori rrom I 20v and 220v. selection. Cord an d 'lbe formtr film star, 62, the couple. die · d I t I who has been California's .. FOr ss use, comes 1n e uxe rave go .. rnor since 1967, said he WEDNESDAY NI G H<T, case. Charger included. wu not proud of the way about 50 demonstrators also Ho 11 y wood films had jeer«! -Reagan when he ar-SUNBEAM TWO WAY deteriorated. rived for a fund-raising dinner - "I mysell have a deep feel-at lhe National Gallery. SHA VER ing of shame at some of the mslertal c·omlnt !rom~------~1 37.49 Carol Doda Dazzles r ·Strongman SAN FRANCISCXJ CUPO - Nicar:•IUM . s l r o n g m a n AnuLulo Somoza shrugged oll Watergate, but found topleas.flollomless queen carol Doda "outstanding." Somou OOlllllM!llted that 0 Watergates happen in Latin America every day, and we laugh at them." Dancer 'Defamed' SAN FRANCISCO (UPli -Gsil ·Doney has sued . a North Beadl nightclub for $4.8 million because her .employ'es to o k pbotograplts ol her danc- ing nude and the ~ure1 appeared In a national girlie map%lne. The suit sale! lhe pic- tures "defamed b e r personal and s o c i a l reputation." . She said the pbolol were coly supposed to he posted In lhe club. IDS REMARK came rlurlng a question 5elSlon follow ing the general's spe<eh to the,~~~~~~~~~;1 Commonwealth Club. Somou,l 1 a 194f w .. 1 Point graduate; uld he wu a "friend and admirer" of President Nixon and urged support for blm despite the Watergate 1ean· dais. Somoza paid an unexpected visit to the eo.-Nightclub In North Beach Wednesday evening as seven llmoUAlnes pulled ~ before startled park- ing attendants. About two dozen U.S. Secret Service agents accompanied the general's party of nine and euarded each door. SOMOZA WATCHED an en- tire show by the naked Miss Doda, whose silicone-enriched 44-lnch bosom first brought f4me to lhe North Beach slrlp clubs a decade ago. He sent word backstage as he departed that he considered 1ler perfonnance 0 most out· atandlng.'' The management picked up the ~ for the party · and nobody fell a tip. SPECIAL LECTURE ON MIND CONTROL® AND New shape and comfort handle. Slant head with over · 1700 slots that stand whiskers up for o clean, close cut. ~rd ond cordless operation, Comes in a rich travel cese with recherging unit. Comoros, Shovers 13 Moil ond phone orders welcomed. • " • • REMINGTON CORDLESS MK-4 41 .9 9 New com fo rt head shoving system that hos super sharp reploceoble blades. Dial for individua l facial ,settings. • Three big h~ods. Rec harges on I 20v or 220v. AC for international US"- Comes in handsome mirrored carrying case. HOLIDAY TRAVELLERS LEEDS GRAN LARGO LUGGAGE Lux urious continental style luggoge with durable cushioned vinyl, nylon bocked surfoce. Exclusive flexi·frame returns to its original shape through oil kinds of rtovel lumps ond bumps. In tobocco brown and honey omber, eoch with color coordinated cut velvet center panel. Shoulder Tote 28.00; 21" Weekender 33.00; 24" Jr. Pullmon 39.00; 26" Pullman 46.00; 29" Overseas Pullmon 52.00 Luggoge, 33 COME.SE! FOil YOU~SELF ·CLASSES NOW FORMINO LICTUll TUITION TWO DOUAIS • IAM CLIMIMTI IMM tAN CLIMalfTI ntl MILTON IMM U ••. 1-t AT LA PAI THE BRO.ADWAV CIUITOS ' "-J· ' I 1 ,, " l • ·' ' , " ''"t -· "?i "'' ... ....... ~ ..... " .. , ~.,,., ,.,,,, . .., .. •' -, .. .. "'" " ••• " ' '·' •>' •• ••• :·~ .,, .•.: ,.,. I ~'" ... ~-1•t. .• , •-' .,,.,, ~· .., I r ' . • . ' • . • ' l ·' ' ·' . ~ r " l " •• " , ~ ~ .. ' " ·' ' " • i i 5 .J Sun. Dec. 2 Man. lllC.3 2:00 l 8:00 pm 8:00 Ill MllSIOM YllUO --If ANAHllll 444 H. lnlld l714J 111.1121 N&WPOIT HUNTINGTON IEACH OlAN$E, MALL OF OIAN&E hlen4 1114} M4·1212 1111 Eilh191t A¥111111 11141 lt2-llll 2100 N. Tntln Str••t 1114) ttt-1111 100 Loi C,nlt11 Mell !1111 tM-041t SHOP 91JO A.M. ,. t :lO P.M. MONDAY th ru. SATURDAY, SUNDAY NleHT to 4 P.M • ' I ' r • f ' ' r • ' . ' I • DAILY PILOT Frid~, NOYemMr .30, 1CJ73 BR·AND .NEW 1974 FIREBIRD 6 CYL. Economy Model Tinted glass, roof dr.i p moulding, recessed wipers, console, accent stripe, power disc brakes, Turbo Hydrametic trans., Rally II wheels, white t ires elec· tric clock, radio, heater, bucket sea ts, protective un· dercoating, BRAND NEW 197~, .·~EMANS CPE G A. s s A v E R s A T B 0 B L 0 N G p R 6 CYL. Economy;· M.~el ; · $29.5 Tinted glass, vinyl trim, accent stripes, power dis.c DOWN brakes, Turbo Hydramatic trans., power steering, sn7 ·' , E Raly II wheels, ~hito sidewalls, elect.i5 c\P.~,k·J~~io,\. , 7 IMM·EDIATE heater, front and rear bumper guards, re1<t1sse , wip-·" MONTH • • ., 1'.J .l'I. ' •, i s .... ,20J7D4Z1'4n0 ~:n:,:pr:ol:cl:ove:u:n:de:r:co:•l:m:g,:::::::::::':'~l:1':/o:l;·i:~11:,:'":<~::~~ti~:::'"="~"='~""=·":~:•:~;:,,::...,....,.-.:~ELIVERY • t1i: & He, Delft"Allf ,arm1111 prlct ii tff7.00 wlltl SZfS dtWll NM• Oii ... montlltr '""'"' "'R Is 11.'8 • Bob Longpre's Exclusive 3 Year or .. ~6,000 "'ile Warranty Available On All New Pontlacs PREVIOUSLY OWNED GAS SAVERS! ' 5295oowN 599 MONTH S.r. •n47D4Nl1J151 Cfl/I 1.i11n9 ,..let 15 $4NJ IMl!Jdillt ti • & tk. o.1~ pmt. lltkt 11 SJ12t willl 12'1 lk/W• Nied 01t 41 monthly pm11. Al'R II U.61 •• .,. "~" . ~ 6 en. Economy f.ioei,1 !I". 1" • . - ' ,,, .i ''~ Tinted 9l1111ss, window 'i'~e1.!r9s, •f.C•nt stripes, power disc brakes T'!rbp Hy~ •in•- tic trans., power st .. eril\f, whit• sid.~ls, . I ' ,. ' ' radio, heater, front·&. rear burripir vuetd.1, protective underco~tinq. A GAS SAVER NO DOWN -WHEH YOU LEASE 1·974 VENTURA· II COUPE 1'vlly ~67 . factory 9f(ul,,..i. Order In ,11 . • ' ' Y061r Choice of (91...._ MO. · SPECIAL TY TYPES!. \ :..,: ' . " Mo. o.~,u .. " ' ' . ' '1973 MAZDA BX:.! Coure. Rotary. Auto. trans., radio, heater, liandau top, mag \\'heels. · Sunflre Orange, Black interior, Radial tires. (855JFE) 1,000 MILES 1973 GRAND 'PRIX V.S, auto. tran•., facto~ ale ;.,;.(&ojng, . $AV·., E ' . full power, power steering, PO:Wer (dl.C) • brakes, power windows. radio,~ Heater, whit.ewall tires. vinyl roof,' Untea glass, · vinyl interior. Rally II wheels. (9'2GJV) ' 1970 'MA·VERICK Coupe. 6 <yl., auto. trans., fa<tory air condi tioning, power steer· ing, radio, heater, Custom exterior. (847BEY>. COMFORT PLUS ECONOMY ' '19,7. 3 CHEV' co· RVETTE Hd. Top. Coupe, v.s, automatic, power windows, fact'Ocy; atr conditjoning, white wall tires, AM.I F' MStereo, tilt wheel, Ucensc ·688HRE.· I 1 I I f ;·I ._:·: . .::., . ALMOST N!jW 1973 PINTO ' Runabout. Automatic, radio, heater, Roof rack. Forest Grff'n with gold inter- ior. Serial No..7!ll946. · ALMOST NEW 1970 DART SWINGER V-8, auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater, 1-----------------------------1 • ,,·hitwall tires, tinted glass, Landau top. (632GBEJ 1973 CAMARO Type LT. V-8, auto. trans., factory air condiJioning, full pD\\.W, JlO"'cr _,-WM !tf ... ll'IScnl ISL steering, power brakes, radio, beater, wbiteWall tires, tinted glass, , Rally Wheels. (371HGO), Liii THAN, ... MJLU. 1972 AMC GREMLIN 6 cyl., 3-specd, factory air conditioning, heater. (360 FNBJ. Local One Owner. ECONOMY PLUS COMP'ORT 1969 DODGE V AN vs, automatic, Mai wheels Custom lnterlo;. Uccnsc 736660. ·1971 TOYOTA 1972 DATSUN ?.1K II \Vagon. 4 11peed, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, white- \Vall tires. (435CRL). FAMILY TYPE GAS SAVER 510 Coupe. auto. trans .. factory air condiUoning, radio, heater, 'vhite- "-all tires. (347HES). LESS THAN 15,000 MILi! • 1971 DODGE VAN V·8, automatic. to:,thc sportsrninded Hunter or cai_nper. Ucel\MI 76255J. . • 1972 FORD VAN V-8, automatic, radio, heater. N:ag 0 whecls, ~tbrh Paint & Inter· " ior. License 57053K. OPEN DAI.LY• 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M. - I 'llWY. SALES PRICES IN EFFECT THIS WEEK-END ONLY FllWY, -• \ r m !al II' H de m t I s ' (' I ' h .. ' ' • Lie ong Goes U.p 1n. Smo e ' • By BEA ANDERSON ......... ••i.r Driving to Orange for my first trectt· meb.I; 1 was nervous, apprehensive, am:· lout. 1 wanted to quit smoking, but I had failed so Often . I Wasn't convinced lhe Schick J>rQ- gram would be any better than othe<J. However, 1 was committe4' and I was determlned to ... it thlough. While waiting for my at>P,91ntmeut, my urge for a cigarette "'8 atronger than I can ever remember. Resisti.Qg, I decided It '-''as now or never. ' The {Jn\ 1seSs1:0 began with ~ techni- cian explaioiilg v.•hat lo expect iu in- dividual tbe'rapy rooms. We were assured the electrical Impulses we'd be receiving v.·env'harmlesa, that they would only be annoying and that the level of im- pulse. set by our own tolerance, would not chang• during treatment... / and hO\V I felt about sn1oking 1 eceiving ~leclro-sthn•tlus. DEGRADING while It was degrading w.atchlng myself in lhe mirror breathing smoke and CJ~tch.ing each tin1e 1 received an impUlse . I was disgusted with ntyself for not having the will ''°"''er to stop the habit on , n1y O'A'll .••• that I had lo be wired to succeed. · Jn the Ulerapy room J was sea ted at q table covered. with ciga1'lle butts and in the center was an .ashtray that b8d never beeh c)eaoed. Behind the I.dor)~t believe the impulses were near:- tabtti \Vas a mirror suirounded by ly as effective as that image in the clgru:ctte ads. nlirrof. It was the first time I had I was told to concentrate on the ads '?ever realized how awful I looked"'Smok- ing. I . ' .... • . , . ~ '• . . I • I ' I was told to purr faster. As I did, I flinched harder. My n1outh began to burn. I saw nothing glamorous · about SR¥>king as the ads implied. Before the treatment ended I was asked to follow a program that included: , Destroying all cigarettes, breathing del ply HfOr five niinutCs, every five 1ninutes or the l day," chunging habit pat~erns and exercising . HF;LPFUL PRQ!lRAM Other requests and reasons for them were drinking at least eight ounces or • \Yater dally to help the detOxi!ication process, increasing calcium to relie~·e tensions, minin1lzing_ supur ard starch intake to avoid \vei,g~t g~in , and the fluctuation of the bltJ04 fl.J~ar )evCJ. . Stressed wos Increasing p r o t e i i1 , especially at breakfa st, to help the body rebuild tissue that has been destroyed by s1nok1ftg. It also maintains a proper t-lood s~pr level , the tedmician said, explaining that the yooyo ·~rect causes craving$ ··• I was 2assured this .prOirain was suc· cessful , that thousands before me found it useful. I decided to follo\v it to the letter. That eveni ng I had no craving to s1noke . Howe\•er, I. did not sleep ~'ell and the next dav I felt very irritable. Interestingly, I did nQt crave a cigarette. SECOND ·SESSION ·The leeond treatment is comn1only referre4 fo as the "green room" session, as mosl):bccome nauseated or sick. We \\.-ere taken into a small roonl and seated around a tub, rilled with sand and cigarette butts. , , .. ~m .... .. ,...,, ... ._._ .. 1'11 ·~~; i t::-· Aversion Seated in front of a mirror surrounded by ads, the client se'es himself as a smoker and begins to realize springtime will come eve n .without smoking. ' Best Frie~d Alters Wedding DEAR ANN LANDERS: I pi~ my wile'• broUter up last night to drive him to a lod1e ·meeting. W•'·ve i-i bucldtea olnce we played °" the high ochool basketball team together'. When be noticed • a big dent In the rear of my car he 1llled what blppened. I told him ,.me creep hit me rrom bohlnd .nd I haven't lo<Jnd time to lake tllO car Into tllO ,91!oP. fl~ llQI q.-' ' DEAR AN\'I LANDERS: I'm In my WUl'1 plldbli? "'°1'1 OK? U you area't , .. , ,.. Jteed some Hip. It'• •nU.ble bl llM . betklelt "N'°kloc ind Pelllq-WUt A1' Ille Limlll?" l\llJI ,..... "'laell to AH Llndtrl, P.O. Box 1111, Ill W. -Or., CMeop, IU. 11114 ........ , -w ·-In ... •od .... ,, stamped, .u ......... 19nJope. ... • I • ,. ·1 • l ( • • • • 'The room ·reeked. 1 had a hard time breathing. \Ve were given lhrec cigarettes, 1natches and a plastic bag in case we got sick. \Ve w,ere told we could lea~e the room ~t any Ume we didn't feel Wl!ll. Every six seconds we were given the command 10 inhale and as soon as one cigarette was finished we were to light the nc1t Immediately. Aboul balf·way; through the first one, I got dizzy but deci<,led to continue. By the tim,f \\'e were smoking our se· cond, everyone but me was coughing. Their eyes watered. Towards the end, one had lo leave the room. REVERSE EFFECT I had none of those reactions. \Vhen I finished 1ny thil'd cigarette I was ready for a )lice, relaxing smoke. Instead, r was taken to the therapy room, g~ven 1 \j1ree !'lore cigarettes and "''as aslmd I01~Putf ~ast without inhaling while rC<f\¥1'tel¢lrical impulses. By the ~JR;Cf ttjat hour, my mouth burned and my l~at was sore. I was g!ad to .'.li!. :j a.ill id, and breathe £resh air. '-I r ·~ .') t: 10 r1 J03 ! That nlghl I alept well, and I ... med less nervous and tense the next day. The next two treatments were similar ; to the first, fnd the final one began • like the rest. t ' With my :i:' two cigarettes I was / told ~o bend , er lhe ashtray and puff as· cast as I uld. I began coughing. 111y eyes watered. 111y mouth and throat burned. Aversion therapy had taken effect. NO MORE At that n1oment I thought l would never want a cigarette again. llowever, I was wrong . Cravings ha v.e come and gone, but today 1 rarely think about smoking. I find the smell offensive and the idea + distasteful. Becaus.e I followed the program, J have not gained weight for which 1 a1n grateful . I can't say I feel any better Physically. At least l'.m not aware of any remarkable change. However, I do know 1 have bettered my health. Wliat I do feel Is good. . . .good abOul myself because of my ac· complishment. I've gained self-estee1n. _,,,~""'y Filtered The s red !in QUIT." . It's rmtY ir. \\'ears ii \\'ifh pride. r pin , with a' y slates, '11 I lhe O\Yiler •• . To n~~e\~i~ D:is / ,:;'~~tgem;~tfr~®,: conques ( i 1 . It's h. shi to the alumni of permane~fs~JWokjlri, . . The pin is earned b1 successful etim· pletion of a nine.week stop smoking pro~am at a Schiek •Center. . J 1 • ~,. Wiiy do these P'.9Ple •k speclal treat· ment? Why . ndt cjull •1Collt: turkey?" Those enrolled11n' the 'cehter's program share c~in characteristics, accorJing to a sun1ey cf "graduates." What rale of 1uccen does thil proo'ant have'! Allhough figures are based on a relaUvely short period, (the firsl center ooly opened in April. 1971), about 95 percent stop smoking after Ute first hOUr of treatment. · At the Orange center, "'hich opened a year ago, more than 2,000 smokers have enrolled. Of those who ccmpleted the run nine weeks, the success rate has been 100 percent. Wby Is lbe prosram so 1acceufulf The major reason, a center therapist will say, is the unique treatment known as aversion therapy . But there are other reasons too, they claim. For instance. they all have tried lo · quit te£ore but were unsucceSsfuL 'nley also \Vere skeptical about seCking pro-- fessional help. For imtance, the service ls offered for a full year. Clients agree that it's comforting to know that for a \vhoJe year someone will be there to help you through the rough Umes. The study also found . 'fhal these smokers: ... ' . -Smoke an average o(. 3.1 cigarette• a day.' 1:. J' .....;......,, t -Average 44 yi!ars in age. •. -Have a cough. .,.... l,.. -Have· ·'tried ' ti) qyit?lllJOldng , it least three times. . " ~ -Are increasingly ne'rvoUll the· mo.M cigare ttes -smoked. . ~ - . -/lave been sniokjng since t\le aiit· ar 17. . df those polled, 10 fCrcent "'.ere -ad- vised by their doctors'1.o stop smoking. The remainder enta-ed the program because "lhey were just plain sick Ind tired or smoking." ~bese generally con. sidered themselves nicotine addictst-and \\'ere seeking hel p so they could quit once end for all. I •• "' ; • They al"' feel II iJ lmportaol that pe.rsomel is interested in your progress. A ~check ls made once a mooth, and for'those needing it, enCOtD"agement and • further treatment are gjven. Another uset Ji weJit!i1 ""11rol, Milek appeajl to bolb aues bul ls ...,.cwly bpporiant to women, acconlln& to a ·eenter attldy. It wat-learned that more • ·wqmen /have a dllflcult time quitting and ~I more . return to the hapt • because of weight gain . ! Wllat Js 1verdon llterapy? The client Is counter-conditioned to associate negative feelihgs wilh snioking. oUring the.rapy, the sub cons c i o u. s r<ceives cueS which help It comect llllOking with Very mild dlscomlort. When the conscious mind begins the aS!Oclation, the deslre to smoke fades. f 1be treatment Ls a series of hannless electric impulses administered to lhe smoker's foreann each time he ·picks up and puffs a cigarette. AltOOugh the eJectro-stimulus is mild, it ls . irritating · enough to make Ute smoker mioomlort· BblO. .., . . ' ' 'Iberapy is 1 given in one-hour treat· ments for five days. During this period technicians also discus,, proper nutrition, deep breathing and exerciles, topics which are detailed for the next eight· weeks' in foUow-on sessions. Follow-om serve as a rein!Ol't'en1ent of the new habit because the positive side of becoming a OOIHJl'IOker is discussed and encouragement i1 given to tboie itJll struggling. How wu tbe pnsram developed?. Patrick J. Frawley Jr., chalnnan 01 the boaql, Shick Laboratories Inc., ended his addi(:tion to alcohol by using aversiott Uterapy. His <urioslly aboot the relatlonshlJ> ol nicotine and alcohol addiction led to the formation or the corporation and the eig>endjture of six million dollars for reiearcb. . ' After · 18 months of developing treat.. ment, the program was ready to be tested on volwiteers, and shortly thereafter the first center was opened In SeatUe. Centers now are located In three western states and Fort Worth wtlh. future plllll!I calling for Datloowide ... pansloo. I I Each is asked to destroy all cigarettes by ... running water over them. I ' ' • I ' JI DAILY PILOT MANUFACTURERS' SALE! EVENING WEAR & HOLIDAY DRESSES e Oritl!Mll • OnHf..t.·Klflilll e AT lllLOW WHOLESALE! D01l91'tr Fabrics At Cost! Frid.,, N-JD, 1'173 ·Citizens Stri~ke Out· Against Disease .. D RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY W1r1e11 Yo• Wellt ........ 1922 Hlftw ..... c .... M ... -~st • • " •.• As soon U$ several t11habl· ta11t3 of the United Sta tes llgvt taken up an opinic»l or a fe eling wliich theu wi1li to promot~ .. in the world, they look ou£ f or mutual assistance: and as soo.n as t1'ey have foroul each other out, tl1e11 combh1e. "From tllat morr1e11t they tire 110 lo11ger isolated mett, but a po1ver see n f'rom afar, whose actions serve for mt example, a11cl whose language is liste1ted to ... " -Alezis De Tocqueville f 1835 > "Democracy in Ame·rico" Stories by JO OLSON Of tlle ru.u.,. ~llol II.ti This phenomenon observed by the French social commentator in 183;; is happening in America again. and the feel ing this lin1e is that alcoholism. drug abuse. dental disease and venereal disease have got to be eradicated from the state of Calirornia. These four social and health problems were discussed at a day-long conference called Strik e Force by representati ves of 25 volunteer organizations, under leadership of California's Department of Health . Education and Welfare. It was the hist of five conferences which were staged throughout the state as a 'preparation for Strike Daiy ~. 81 when inform ation on the rour probl~ will be dlspenS<d to born'" lhroughoul California. KEYNOTE Giving the keynote speech to the more than 400 Lo!: Angeles area residents gathered in the Hacienda Hotel, E1 Segundo, was Earl Brian, MD, Calilornla ::iecretary of HEW. lie said he hoped lhe <Olllerl!llCI"' would "eslablish a lasting relalloolbfp between the'volunteer organizations. "We hope ii will be the beginning or a boon to health care in catifornJa. This is a crusade by both those in the publlc and private sector. · "The fi ght will not be eaSy. No family is safe fron1 these diseases, but they are easily prevented." Dr. Brian said that for the 11th year in California, venereal disease-is the top communicable disease. "One in five high school students wilt have venereal disease before they have their diploma in their hand," he L'Ommented. HALF; OF DEATHS Alcoholism, he added, affects one in 10 adults at a $400 million per year cost. "One-hail of our highway deaths are related lo alcohol, but only five percenl of akobollcs are In Skid Row," he added. Iw-dllcussing denla\ di...,. he said, H~ "). ant few people are aware of a dlseaso. lfull II ollen pas!ed over llihUy. ''Ninety.five percent of the· people in California have ·tooth decay." Th trqedy of, lit"" lour problems. Dr. Brian noted,-~ that 11all are treatable and ~V!llW>le. We have !he moo\ capable physicians, bul we need an In· formed public. "We need a cmcerted action by a concerned people. One effort will no\ solve the problem , but It will be a good measuring stick." DffiECTOR TALKS Preftenting introductory remarks was Ustoo A. Wllherill , director pl lhe department of health services ror the Counly or Los Angeles. "He said many of Qalifornia's beallh and social problems are caused by "the stress of trying to cope. "As more people crowd into urban spaces, the stressl'S will increase." He touched on all rour problems, saying that three million Calirorn1ans have lost all their teeth, that SO to 70 percent never receive dental care and thal Los Angeles does not have nuoridated water. There alao Is a need tor more denllsi., Wllherlll slressed. About alcoho1Js1n he said , "In Los Angeles County !here are 5111),0llO al~I abusers and 90,000 arrests amually. FAMILY MAN The average alooholic Is a man halween lhe ages ol 3S and 55 wllh • lomlly and job. Wllberlll said, ,"and the major job is ·getting hlm to reallte he needs heJp." nie goal is a single system of·care with many entry points. CQmmenting on drug abme Wttherill noled !hat "young people seem ID be decreasing their drug use while in- creasing their use of alcohol.'' Venereal disease has ' 're ~ c bed ~pidemic proportioos in the last 15 years." with a ''four-fold increase in gonorrhea and a IQ.fold increase in syphlUs, Wllherill said. Why has this happened ? "Public health funding hu decreased, the gonorrhea genn may have become more resistant to penicill.ln and the pill is thought to bring changes in women, making them more susceptible." And, "Society is more pennissive. . "These problems involve nil or us and the way we live. Let's make Strike Day a day lo remember in Cali fo rnia 's history,'' Withcrill coRcluded. Soci9I, Medical I Pr~qt~ms Costly • Four specialists donated thei r time to speak on the four health issues chosen by Strike Foree initiators as crucial in California. First to speak was Loran Archer, program director in the Office of Alcohol Program Management for the State of California. "Most people can stop drinking when the?.· choose," Archer said. "AlcohOlicS have lost their power of choice. Alcohol is the most abused drug. , "One in six aduJts has a problem. CalUornia ·has more alcoholics than any other state." National cost is $100 million annually, Archer said, which is spent on arrests. california cities with the highest number of arrests are Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento and Fresno 1• . , EIGHT PERCENT He noted that 60 percent of highway deaths are related to alcohol, but that only eJght percent of all alcoholics ·aeek help. Discussing dental disease was Dan Corrigan, DDS, chief of the Dental Health Unit for the Caliromia Department of Health. He said that more than 65 percent or all children participating in a recent survey needed dental work. Dental disease, he noted, is caused by plaque, a sticky mass which grows on teeth and whldl lo caused largely by sugar. "Genetics has an effect on loolh heallh," Dr. Coqigan added, "u wen as nutrition.'' FBI CONCEPT He advocated the FBI oC good denial heallh: flossing, brushing and irrigation. F1ouridation can increase resistance to disease, he ad· d\!d. • "Strike Force is the 'glue pot' ror community pro- grams," Dr. Archer said. He predicted a 1975 cost ot drug disease of nearly $2.S million for cavities and '125 million tor gum disease. The third speaker was John • Olsen. special consultant for venereal disease is actually -fuse. We coiltinue to look to the State Office of Narcotics fi ve diseases. not just the two you to assist us, in getting and Drug Abuse. . ;•"' ~ . usuallJ considered. 'l1le less lhe job done." , 0 The best mariju,ani la Aom COllUllOn ones are f o u n d Mexico," he said, Ill= pdlnaiily in bot IJ"Opical Anyone withing further in· lhe problem U.S. olfi cllniales. lormalioo aboul Stry<e Force in patrolling the U.S.·Jf . tsinplicatioo of syphilis, or local penom· t& contact border. ,. clmiter said, include bliiidness. may write to ~ State of Marijuana also iJ tabh hunJty, heart disease and Calif<!rnia t{ealth and Welfare · da h ln!I All'flC)', t!S Capllol Ma 11, orally in tea and f~~ . mue tot e cen nervous Room 200, Sacramento 95814. as cookies, Olson ·lald IY-*'!"· heroin is !he most 'lar i.4RGE SUM drug with addicts. f • Nationally, $54 million is Jimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..iiiiiiiOiiii'"""i MANY FRONTS 4 I • Speol in mainlaining lhe Ammg trealmenl ~ > 'iypldlilic .insane. In c.Jilomia, are methadon e ~ · ~ ilum 1&.$3.I million. Synanoo. Project DA.RE and jl ,_Lmt year, syphilis was other clinics and hotlines. responsible for 260 congenital "Service C1ubs can supply birth defects in California. skills," he advocated. G 0 n o r r h e a p r oduces Discussing veuereal disease arthritis. blindness and pelvic was D. L. Gunter, chief of inflamation that often leads the Venereal Disease Control to hysterectomies, he con4 Unit for the state Department tinued. of Health. "Venereal disease h'u.r ts "Where did the disease everyone -in the pocketbook originate?" he asked. "It too. dates back to the G1rden ol "The total cost is $32 million Eden. Not the apple in the per year. The means of attack tree but the pair on the is prevention, f i n d i n g the ground," he quipped. cases and getting them More seriously, he said treated . We now have a little Acr\llk -~M'ft•ltr -Tlfhlt -VtlWtlffn Open 7 D•ys A WMk 'Tll Xrn.1 -9 AM to 5 PM WAR I HOUS(, cmorrs SPORTSWEAR Horoscope: Future Bright for Taurus IMAGINE SWIMMING, SLEEPING, SHOWER- ING OR EVEN bRYING WITH 8 EA IJ>T t F UL 'LASHES. THESE ARE THE SAME LASHES THAT YOU WOULD PAY $15 OR MORE FOR ELSEWHERE .' 729 W. 16111 St. ( Wtatelilf Plu:a. 17th and lrvi~~ Newport Bcach,C.ii!omia926601 SATURDAY DECEMBER I CCKta Mesa e °"""''' Sm11rt a. ll'IMI e What a wonderful way t<\ say m~\~ By SYDNEY OMARR The joys of remembrance are part of Scorpio's love heritage. Scorpio does not forget the tender words of endearment nor gesture of af- fection. Recalling h a p p y moments, S co r p i o can transform periods of solitude Into enchanting reveries. ARIES (March 2l·April 19 ): Chl!ck job procedures. Take no\hlng for granted. Plan a wa}lfpg game of love. Control temptation to splurge on items wit1'>ul value. Review in· sunmce policie!. Sagittarius can play a vital part. Newport Nursery • 1500 e11 t ce e1 t "''"""'Y r1 •wpert •••tl'I , c1 11 t1rr1l 1 t 1 11 ,h1"1 (714} 67a·165.Z Your Living Christmas Tree Cente r ., ' \ * Uvtni ud C.l Tre'" * Wrealbs * Gortana * Colorful Gift Planb Pbo .. l'IJ.155!, Place Your Ordu, Wt Wiii De!IYtr FREE la The Harbor Area \ AMUNG -A name in C.IUomJa Horllcullurc slnct 11121) \ \ , \ \ TAURUS (April 20.May 20 ): Don't short -circ uit aims by listening to distracting stories. The paSt is past and the im- mediate fllture looks bright. By a!king, you receive useful an5'\'ef'S. One in authority watches and listens. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Lay the groundwork for job promotion. Listen to iomeone who inspires you. Check with one who has returned from afar. A new look at a legal· cash question is imPortant. Someone whispers ,,we e t nothings. CANCER !June 21.July 221: Find practical use for special knowledge. \Vhat appears to be serious opposition could be mere bluff. While goss ips are busy, work ind ustriously. Tolerance wi ns admi ration. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your basic judgment is on \arget. You will discern what to do and wben to act. Keep spe ech sweet, generous. Efficiency enhances reputa tion. Brier change of scene. ~lappiness found in small matters. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl.' 221: Utilize lessons I c a r J1 e d recently. Come to terms with Leo. Engineer new ideas into constructive grooves. Check work before it leaves your hands. Don't be stirred up by things of no concern to you. LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0cl. 221: Renew confidence where there have been misunderstandings. Do your own lalking. "It pays lo advertise," so pep up and step up. Litigation veers toward a sUccessful ending. Capricorn is in the picture. · SCORPIO (Oc!. 2J.Nov. 21 ): What appears to be serious could become a laughing mat· ter. Make plans which can yield job benefits. Bu y at· tractive clothes. Concentrate on a hobby or other form of acti vity which pleases. SAGITrAR!US (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Bold, swift decisions best. Offer to help someone in authority. Fears prove groundless. Others show keen interest in what you say. Personal magnetism attracts. Contact Aries. • • ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Full sleam ahead. Gel going o n revenue-yielding ideas. The opposition you {eared is in your corner. Cacer individual can make life brighter. Wear attractive · clothes. Welcome ~ inr responsibility -you. possess drive a n d detennination. Emotional happiness, social popularity and increased in- come are indicated . Prominent m on t h 1 are .February, July, October and December. •ow$5 ONLY 441 t .17TM· COSTA MISA sum 1 MON.•SAT. f-6 642·2110. UP IY APPOINTMIHT ONLY mediate future . ·-:piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~i:iiii:iii~i:iii~~~ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. J 18): Obtaln accurate direc- tions before attempting something unfaml!Jar. Be diplomatic and courteou s despite a contrary mood. Con· trol ufge to offer unasked-for ad vice. Heallh offers a challenge ; guard it well. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Steady toil rather than in· spirational impulses leads to progress. Bhmt speech brings acute regret. Utilize a lesson learned recent!)'. FI ash Ing eyes lead to a romantic rendezvous. IF TODAY IS YOUR BTRTHDAY you attract people end inspire their confidence. You are capable of handling 1111111 GUY LIVINGSTON 14 fASHION SOVA.If $ANTA ANA • $47·634~ OUR FtANNEL BLAZER, ARGYLE SWEATER VE5T AND SUEDE LOAFERS ••• T~E PERFECT HOLIDAY COMBINATION. .~ .. A FULL COLOR ·sx7 PORTRAIT . • No aee limit , babies, children, adults e GrQUps $1 .00 per additional subJKt e lndlvld\lal*-$1 .00 8$Ch additional subject • c NO EXTRA CH~RGES Choose From A Variety MARKETS 310 E. 17th Stree~ Costa Mesa 24167 Paseo de V)lencja, Lapna Hills 6942 Wamer be .. Hantinl!on Bead! SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Dec.2 Dec. 3 Dec. 4 Of Poses II• Appoiltlleat H•clWIJ ' • • •• • ,,. • J I • • t Center of Warmth Mrs. Ruby Beggs stocks .a rack at a Spokarie coat bank 'center where µsed win- ter coats are being distributed to needy children ·and1!adults. A warm coat means much more than a hand ou~ Mrs. Beggs says. ri Clubs ' .. Decor 'Contest Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce, Women'S Division will p r e s e n t the annual Christmas centerpiece contest and hstcheon Wednesday, Dee. 5, in the Newporter Inn. Entrants from the busine!s community, civic and charitable organizations may compete in various classifica- tions, 9JCh as children's in- t erna tional, handcrafted, humorous and religious. Professionals will judge on color, composition, symmetry and adherence to the tbeinc. Panhellenic ' LagW1a Beach High School Chorale, under the-direction of Fred Stoufer, will entertain the Panbellertic during a Ouistmas luljCheoo. Tiie group will gather at 11 :30 a.m. .for a social hour on Wednesday, Dec. 5, in the Hotel Laguna. Also on the agenda will be . a ta lk on foreign travel by Phyllis Stroud. SC Club A program of songs and Friday, NOYember 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT JI} Favor Christmas Theme dances has teen arranged for the Wednesday, Dec. 5 , luncheon meeting of the Soulh eoaSt; Club or Laguna Beach at li:30 a.m. in Irvine Coast Country Club. Entertaining will be Tony and Nedra , known as the Swias and the Miss. Tony Hart, a native of Switzerland, sings and plays a Swiss button accordion, an instrument rarely heard · in this. country. Nedra Anthony of Los Angeles sings and danctfs. Her selections range from folk ballads and legends to traditional songs. NH BPW A Student's View oC Russia will be discussed al a dinner meeting of the ·N e w p o r t Harbor Business and Profess.ional Women's Club. Speaking will be David L. Hill, a graduate of UC . lrvtne who also attended t h e University of Massachusetts, Amherst College a nd the Univcrsite de Bordeaux. He ·has a BA in comparative Cultures and French. The club will meet for a social at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, ' . Dec. 6. in Mesa Verde Counu·y Club. Junior League Christmas Punch Bowl is the Iheme of the holiday meeting of the JLmior League, Newport llarbor at 9:30 a.m. 'Thursday, Dec. 6, in the Costa Mesa Country Club. Spe:iker will be Dr. Jonah Kliewer, director or the Laguna Concert C h o r a I e , director of lll\lSiC at St. Andrew 's Pres by t er i an Church, Newport Beach· and associate conductor of the Irvine l\1aster Chorale. Audiology Acupuncture and its rela- tionship to hearing problems \viii be part of a panel discussion arranged b§ tht: Audiology Center ol Newport Beach. Speaking will be ~1. Barke, MD, medical direct.ow: Ol West Billings, PhD, assista11t direc-Father Coughlin Boys Cho1r. tor of audiology cent e r , The event, which .benefits Redlands who will review the county Legal Aid Society. early identification <:udio.. will take place Frida)', Dec. metry and w. Q\vsley, ?.-tD,1_7_, in_th.,.e_D_a_lbo_a_Ba_y_C_l_ub_._ otolaryngok>gist, y.•ho will talk abou t the )~test developments in oiology_ The session will begin at 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 6, in the Hoog h1emorial Hospital conference center. GOP Keynoting an a 11 -d a y meeting of lhe Orange County Federation o f Republican Women will be Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke. Also speaking will be Mrs. John T. Salmon of Tucson; national secretary of the women's federation. The county group will con- vene at 10 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 6, in the Airporter Inn. Lawyers' Wives Coast Acupuncture Clinics and The annual dinner dance, H. Platt, MD, medical director1 presented by the Lawyers' of West C.OSst Acupuncture~ ;-\Vives of Orange County, will Research Institute. ~ be an old-fashioned Christmas Also ·speaking will be, 8, ·Ball, including caroling by the Prices ~ffective Saturday, December 1st and Sunday, eec:-·2nd, 1973 Save $9 Commodore calculator 8.-0 igil Add, subtract, dlvi(je. multiply. 49.88 Reg. 59.99 Save58¢ Women'• cotton blklnl1 · Bright prlnta. S, M, L. 2/$1 Reg.~, ... " HAVE A COFFEE BREAK Enjoy creamy delicious ch,rry chtele coke and cof· fee. Cafeteria. • i I • I ~ Ace Oil Filter Reg. 1.29 Prolong' life of your car& en- gine. Fits most American cars. Save $1 Women's turtleneck 100% acryl ic. Great colors. Sizes S, M, L •. • BUENA PARK Beech et Ot\ng-°"" Diiiy f:IO to'l :IO p.m . ._, 10 to 1 I ' • • 3900 So. Bristol °"" IQ.Ip. Save54¢ Photo albums 2~magnetic pages. No paste. dustfree. , 2/$3 Reg. 1.77 ea. Save4.09 Bowling ball 14 lb. bl1ck rubber ball. 12.88 Reg.16.97 AANA .. . No. ol So. Coast Plaza Dolly Sundly 10 to ' City Of. at Garden. Grove Blvd: °'*' 11H p.m. Dally Sundly1 10 to I ' ' I • l Our Low Price .. Mini•wheel Ages 1 Y.z to 3. Sturdy blo-molded plastic. • 6.97 • I Save 7.09 G.E. digital clock radio • AM/FM compact ~1h's1eep switch. (#4315)• " JCPerre,t 1134511890·9 ~,~,.,~'"" ...... -.-.... -.... CHARGE IT with your JCPenney Charge Card. lfyoo don 't have a charge. just see haw last we can open up YQlH new account. l • I • • • • -. l!O DAILY PILOT Friday, Nowembtf JO, 1'13 Will ·Darknes·s Envelop Sports World Activity? By Alooclaled Prtt1 The nation's energy crlals doesn't sJop at your neighborhood gas station or your living room thumostat. It'• IUWy to reach beyond righl Into your recreation time and your occupation wllh the -Id of sports. • For eumple, wllh guollne in short supply, )'OU mlibl choose 14 uae your q-for more lmportat1t lrips !ban a ride out to the ball perk to watdl the local learn play. '!'bat possiblllly hasn't beel lost on sporls administrators and t.be subject ia being studied on several fronts. It is due for at least a cursory euminatioo at the baseball meetings in Houstoo next week. Baseball, of course, could be dlttctly affected because so many garnet are played each seaaon at night wllh artlfidal llghls. The California Angels annowiced ·tbat they would reduce the number-of games playod under the lights in Anaheim by 12.3 percent next sea!OD. "If they tell us we can't play night ball becauae of the electrical power drain, we can't exist," said Calv~ Grif. filh, president of the Minnesota Twins. "From a business standpoint, we sim· ply cannot play during the day. We couldn't even pay oor hospital inluraDCe with what we'd draw with all-day baseball." There i! also the maUer of air travel ' ond the cutbacb ol flights because ol lhe fuel shortage. Baseball is mnsldering returning to tnin transportation for lilon trips. Trains provided the main source or transportation for clubs before ex- pansloo to the West Coast in · 1958. Planes, of course, ·woold still be uaed for Cl'OIH'Ountry travel . ''What we have to do is plan now and prepare our optlona, 11 said Bob Holbrook, executive us!stant to American League president Joe O'onin. Bolding Does It Holbrook handleo achedullnc 10< the AL. Football Isn't as .directly conoerned becaUISe there is less rrequent travel and most games are played during the day. "Because or our once-a-week nature, we don't lmmedlately aee any ser1oua elfects," said Jim Kensil, executive director ol the National Foolball Leque. "But we've just begun to examine tllia and we don't koow where It will lead." The goll drallt depend> heavily on air travel for players to get from tooma- ment to tournamen~ ~!any expressed o:ncern over the problem. "I'm afraid it's going lo get awfully .Ucky tryinf to get from one tournament Jo another," uld Bobby Nichols. "It «>Uld have a r<al bad effect m the tour." There are between 250 and 300 golfers on the toui' which covers some 50,000 mil .. -)'<181', The! Is •·lot ol flights and wllh the airlines. cancelling some, ccnnectiClllll could beco,me troublesome. . Basketball and hockey teams also do a majority ol tbetr travel on charter ~ and !ho cutlla<ks have time aporls worried too. • .,,,...e woold be some very crlUcal problems wiUt our schedule if air charters were' cut drut.ically,'' said Don Ruck, vlce -1deol ol the National Stewart Triumphs LA joLLA -Top-oeeded Hugh Stewart and second-ranked S v e n Davidson swept to 1traigtl:t-1et victories 'lbunday and readied °" quarterflllals o[ die Natlooal &mlor .lfarckourt tennis championships. Stewart, ol Newport !leach, beat Roller! Bonlcl, f.I, f.2. DOYldson, of SWlden aod Arcodja, ·~ Gleon llip-Pllllllal, 6-1, w. ' • Hoc.key League. "There is not much fiexlbility to change the schedule around · even 11 you wanted to," said Ruck. Like baseball, hockey plays virtually its entire schedule at night with artlfical lighting aOd Is dependent on power su~ plieo to keep Ice sUrlaces refrigerated. Considerable attenUoo has be e n directed at auto ncing where, after all, the chief attraction la can chasing around motor raceway tracks, bumJng fuel. John Cooper, e:xecutive secretary of the Natiooal Motorsports Committee, bristles at the criticism. The committee commlssiooed a study ol [Uel usage and Cooper claimed the results showed that fuel consumption by all mass-entertainment ~po r t s represents only "a drop in the bucket," when compared to leisure Ume usage in general. "We do bum fuel;'' said Cooper, ."but ... it is insignificant compared to lhe total consumptioo. "It may be that there wlll be regula- tions specifically directed at 61JOl"ts if the crisis continues," added C<q>er. "All we in auto racing want is ·an even break with the others." The National Association or Engine and Boat Manufacturers claims that recnatiooal boating coosumes less lhan half of me percent ol the nalloo's l4tal petroleum consumption. A spokosman added that lhe industry provides employment for nearly half a million persons and adds rour billion dollars annually to the Gross National Prod~. Beoatl!e it takes gas to reach slopes most ski resorts are likely to feel the energy pinch earliest. 'J'.he Sunday ban on the aale of gas particularly irked resort owners. There are plans being drawn up in the Northeast and Wes1 to arrange for car pools so skiers can still reach their destinations. The LA Kings' Barry Long (right) holds Buffalo's Rick Dudley in his attempt at the Ki n gs goal Thursday ni ght. It cost Long a two-minute penalty and the Sabres scored quickly. Buffalo went on to post a 2·1 victory. It was LA's ninth straight !Q6s. Same Old Tale; Shed a Tear for MSU Buys a Horse, Destroy Horse MIAMI (APJ -"What have I done wrong to deserve such luck." asked Les Austfn, a Miami bar owner, after buying his second dead horse or the year in a claiming.A.ct at Calder Race Track. Austin claimed La Cimas Court. a >-year-old, for $3,500 before the start of the toth race Wednesday. He said he watched the horse lead the field and thought to hirru1elf. "The only way this horse can lose is to break a leg." La Cimas Court broke his left leg with 7() yards to go and had to be destroyed . Under Florida thoroughbred racing rules. horses belong to claimers as soon as races begin, although fonner owners keep any purses from the claiming race. Last June, owner-trainer Austin claim· ed Alias Mr. Rolh for 17.500. 'lbe horse fell in the second race , fractured a shoulder and had to be deStroyed. An otflcial sald only Austin's two horaes -among 567 claimed at calder this y .. r -have had to be deoln>)'ed. "I've never been lucky anyway," said Aualin. He aaJd he dldn~ tell his wife, Chane<y, 1boul buying another dead ho"'•· bocauae "My wile and her [int husband wen' broke in racing, ao ahe doesn't like m)I being in it. "I've won J3 races and more than $33.000 In punm dlla ,...., .. he aald, adding a poolUve.note. "I love r•clDi." ' I ! • When It Face~ Michigan Hopefully, for Michigan State Universi: ty, the petrol. shortage will be '° acute by next ran that the Spartans will be · unable to obtain transportation for their football date in Ann Arbor. Otherwise, MSU will have lo carry out its scheduled football game Y"ilh WHITE WASH It is no secret that MSU aj,hletic director Burt Smith cast a vote which kept Michigan out or the 1974 Rose Bowl game after UofM and Ohro St4te hao a natural tie for the Big . Ten championship. • Michigan dominated play againll Ohio State but the two unbeaten forces 1ettled for a 10.10 tie, which called ftJr' R vote to determine which would to u.. Roee Bowl. . Had Smilh balloted for Michlga · the Wolverines would have gotten th~ id. l\.fichigan followers were rurther dis s- ed to learn that Smith hadn't watched the nationally telev game, ye! be voted for Ohio State. I 1"'1 a man Is entitled · 14 he-. ~ tbe Unlvenity of Mlcltlpn. Stich Pl"'; BUI I'd hope In a mailer ol pect i. definitely blood chllllng. inoPtude that the w1or -~ w•ot-11 you thouiht Notre Dame had a ter ID!onned than Smith appears to vendetta for u~ this peat grid _,. -- wait tu Michlpn pl&11 Mlcli!gan State \ For ,_ lhe matter la clooed. in 14. It Is ridiculous that some die-hards It'll be like letvlng a slave alone trYtnl to go through the courts wllh a whip and a cruel master. It'll the llooe Bowl repreaentaUon v be oomparable to auttinf a man'• leg reverted. • and then. throwUlc him lnto.j>lranba-li>-• I think Michl~ was had fesled waten. -· Bui I don t think any or I'd sooner' see a fenclnl match be-fUbUc ~re lbould' bt to tween Israel and EIYJll or a wret!llnl -te that vote. . match between an invalid and a lrodlai: \ ilJchlpn will aet Its cbance for bear. • I~ word on the field 0( btltle Michigan will be rnon up f..-Mlcbl,pll ""' And wl1l!n that day or , reek State than !he RUlliam -. for the copa, llrlnk ldnd tltoulbll for GennanJ and what trlnspira on Ole jloil' ladt from MlchlpJi ~te. I football lleld may make war a_. ~ need all the belp thry an humane. \ get l ( I .. .. " , DPIT ....... Surprising Lakers Try • I KC Tonight I L06 ANGJ:IES (AP) -~ player dlutl• and lnqwies tlte . IM Ans .... Labrs have boon wlllnlntl dlll -and Gall Goodrich, the team's leodlng _..,, admits he'1 llOllleWh1t aurPrlsed. I Will Qwnberlaln left tlte club and : Keltb Eridtlon and Jlm MoMllllln _,, I traded by the Libra, ...... _.iret1 Conni•HawltlM and Elmtn Bmlib. In -, Jerry Welt bu juat r«Lim· ed flUll ., Injury that tddelinod him loi seven games and Bill Bridpl has been hampred by back trouble. "I guess y o u might say · we have r<ally played pretty well considering the !njuri,. and die fact tbal everybody 11 ntber new to eedl other/' llld Goodrich. ' 'lbe Laken lead lhe National Buket· ball Association 's P&i:Uic Division with a t>-7 record and hol~ lhe Kansa.s City· Omaha Kinp tonight. \ 111 don't· believe we really have everything t1>1ether yet,'' said Gpodrich, averaging better than 2$ poinll a game to lead the I.alters in scoring for a third straight seaaon. 1 ,. . Former Champ Dies " "We're going to have our up& and downs." be said. "'Ibere are going to be games when we play pretty well, mainly because we have a SOOd talent, and there are J gol'ng to be other games when we get blown out." Fred Apostoli, who won New York state recognition as world middl .. weight champion, suffered a fatal heart attack·lh'hhl office Tburs- ?ay. He retlr~d from boxing in 1948 and h11. fnquegUy .been seen in the ring as a referee. • UCLA Cites Klost~~ili~; 'lbe Laters won five fl. the seven games Chey played wllhout West, but Goodrich AYS the Liken need their •tar guard. "I tblnt we have to have Jerry West healthy to play qalnlt die really lop teams," Goodrich said. Giants' Bonds sted. "He ls jull ouch an outatandlnc player and be'a 10 smart on tbe bllketball coort d!at I don't thlnl: we can af!ord to lolt him and reall)' compele against lhe !lip teama In the leque." be uld. Fomter Laguna Beach High standout Steve Klosterman walked away with two honors Thursday night at the UCLA football awards dinner. · Klosterman, an ofr~sive guard, had the highest grade poirlt average among seniors (3.4 out of 4.0) and was also chosen the team's top offensive lineman. A political science major, Klmtennan earned second team All-Pacific Coast honors this week. Rwming back Kermit Johnson was· selected Bruins most valuable player and Fulton Kuykendall was named the oulstanding defensive player. e Second Arrest SAN MATEO -S tt n Francisco Giants' rightlielder Bobby Boods .must ~appear in court here Dec. 11 on a charge of interfering with police who tried lo give his brother a speeding ticket. Bonds, 11, was arrested early Thursday and brought in hando.ifrs to San Mateo police headquarters along with his , brother Robert Vernon Bonds Jr., 32. They were later released on their own recognizances. It was the star outfielder's aecond arrest this year -Ile first coming last Aug. 11 when the California Highway Patrol cited him for alleged drunk driv- ing following a collision. He has pleaded innocent to that charge and will appear at a pretrial bearing in the case Dec. 10. The latest incident occurred when police from San Mateo chased a car lhey said was ~ into D2Jahboring Belmont Officers wd both Dnxberi argued with police and bad to be !Ubdued and handcuffed. e Big Ten Bid LANSING, .Mich. -Two Michiga"' legislators have introduced a resolution in the stale House calling on the Big Ten to allow all conference teams to accept post-season bowl bids. The resolution, SJ>OO.'Ored by Rep. Gary Owen, D-Ypsilanti, and Raymond Kehres, D-Monroe, is a resulC of the tumult over the Big Ten vote which sent Ohio State, and nol Michigan, to the Rose Bowl alter they tied, 10.10, last Saturday. It calls upon lhe conference to change its rules and permit other than the Rose Bowl representative to go lo bowl games. e Witch Doctor JOHANNESBURG, S,oulh Africa -A black woman witch doctor prcdlds Pi· e~ Fow1e wiU w in his world liaht· heavyweight title fight againat American• titleholder Bob Foster· in the !Dlh or 11th round. 'lbe championship bout is scheduled Saturday. 'lbe witch doctor -called a "Sangoma" -viaiteOFourie's training camp thls week to adminilter a treat- ment described as 11an ointment." Boxing '°""""' said Fourie was ad; vised to take lhe treatment by hli manager, Alan Toweel, and African '1 ? ced ' liltn it would 'lbe SaIJli , i.. Vivian Khlha, WOl'e a red knee-leiillb aldrt with beads and cowrie shells hanging from her matted hair for the viSJf.' · •· eF•llotaDle• EASTON, Mia. -Frank Falloo, 77. a Boston SPQrtscaster, died of a heart attack Thursday at bis home. Fallon 1 broadcast many events, in- cluding hockey, boxing, wrestling and college •ports. during bl.s Clln!er. He abo was the public address 81lDOUDcer tor many years for the Boston Red Sox and Bolton Garden game& involving lhe Bruina, Celtics and otben. . ' Hopmata's Views Goodrich uld loaJng W~ and. Bridg.., added an extra burden on tbe Lakera. n.e neW· Laken players means changes in tbe war the tum plays and 11making IUdden ldJUlt:mentl in your atyle ol play Is kind ol dllllcult," said Goodrich. "You may be uaed to getling the ball at a certain Ume at a certain position on the court. "Maybe you get it a foot or two feet further out. That makes a big diUerence, or perhaps you're not used to handling a certain kind of pew. It'• bard to uodentand but It takes time to get tt wortdDtl togelher," Goodrich uld. Goodrldl and coach Bill Shanntul said lhey elpect the Laken lo ....... to bnprove, I .-• I ' Ex-Davis Cup Capt~in A .Lost, Lonely Figure I CLEVELAND (AP) -Tbey called him "Captain Bllgh." If< w.,, the toughest, mo5t controversial yet most successful .d. all Davis Cup capt.aim. But he appeared to be a lost, lonely figure aa Australia began its challenge ol the United Statea \odlY for the moat c$erlshed trophy in lellllls. . "I don't want to get in the way," Harry Hopman said, retiring to a reroote c .. ntiel 28 •t 9 scheduled Saturday, Smith teaming wllh ti.year-old Erik Van Dillen against Newcombe and possibly Roeewall. 'lbe final lllnales Sunday revene the opening day polrings, wllh Gormap playing Newoombe and Smilh meeting Lave!'. .. Nlll:urally, I mi for Australia," Hoi>- mm Aid. "BIA, a•!llklg the matd!es objectively, [ have to give Australia a slight edge - a very slight one, undentand, but an edge, nevertheless. "I believe "'*'Ila lhould ~ the advantage in both ma~ . !l'ainst Gorman. The other three matches - baloooy seel In !lie public audll<lrium, Smith'• two singles and the doubles site of the first -matcbeo In the -aro !o.60. They could go elllior way. eup•s-hlstory. "fllhltb la a muveloua player wllh 'lbe Aa.tnliatll -from 39-year-dd mt outstanding nl<Xll'd. He has to be Ken Roaewall to 29-year-old John conceded 111 even chance m matter Newcombe -are all Hop's boys, bu! who be II playing." tllia Is one lhey11 have to wlll on lheli llopmen oaptalned the Amtralian own aod with the belp of their new Davia CUp teama in 193Wt and from captain, ~ Fruer. . liliO through 11189. During that period "Neele lioo done a aplmdld joti," Harry bis i.am. won the challent1e round 17 added, ruming a finger tbroup bis -· dominating the game In the 1950s thinning copper-colored hair. "I llllnl< and - Australia \lbould win." ' . lie wu a Item dilclp!Dri11L He Hopman, ..,, lo bis .is and director -Pi rulea mt! cur!ew. lie woold ol the Port Wlllllnllon, 11.Y., Tettnla tine plajs's fer plcldnlr 11p tlte wroog Academy, was juat -~!er fortt at cllmor or !a!llng ID wear a -probably ien. than ---jacllll to a reception. Yet be wu reprd- bl.s ton-protep Ne.....,,.,. wa1 ed 11 a Dllller at relllal a learn meeting America'• top-ranloed Stan lo a peak for the bl« matdL Smllh In !lie opening singles match !<> "I'm IRft I've learned a lot from clay. 'lfcp nl, while I am opentlnc on my The llOOOlld malcb today involved own. I'm probably -Y in- perhapo the old -·· -i Jqlil, corpontJnc -of bis methods," Corona de! Mar real,dml Rod La..,, ll'raler, a former U.S: and Wimbledon now an aging 35 and -0( tw<Y Utieldder lald. major crown in the -1ame, ~Jin& "But there is no way I eould handle America'• No. Z "'!'• . Tom Goiman, tllls t-. Ille way lloppy did. 'lbey're %1.. ' all --pros. Coit!d you Imagine The' doubles --inf u lhe k.ey me tllclatlng their habits or tuddng 11atc11 ii> the I>esl#.flve sen. -II u.n llllo bed at Ngltt?" I ' 'Bruins Ope~ 'C~e Season ,. , Can UCLA IDtl Its center, Bill WalJon, I'( 11!.Y betllrT . Much , to the dllmay of his !Mm'I ...,...,is, Bntllll eoacb JllllD WootleD ltdnita Ille --to ~ tplll-1• ~· .• ' Walton la iOIQa 10 be bttlir~ year," Woodm 1111 umd bl'ft dcplh lhan ... ·ve ha4 In~ ,...n." The 1"111111 ol UCLA's~ •bmlttc 11reak betlnl !Onl,.. with tllt llhdna hooting ~ Md then loarth ranbtl Mnryland Saturday night. l The blc qU811UtJD .lo ~ C!ln·• petftcl Ieun IIIle UCLA 10 lmn llart7 w-. 111* the Brulnl' lulleourt -"Is a llltlo baiter now thul at tbll 'U... ~and I bti""9 f '1110 be -Jut year. '1111bi It'• • l*-171 tbe II unden&IDd ll I 111111 -and are more ~ to plllJ' tt." • And ol ,WalJon, the "'*-Ii - wt1i •IMI; 1'!fl' -Player ol Ille Y•, Woodlll llld -..... aaoa.Jar Ua.A r ..... • 1 ' • .,,,...., no question lhat in the last ,..,. 8111 bu lmPIOYed (ftatiy," Wooden llld. '•11111 peyslcal ablllly 11 lbotlt UM aune, but Jie ,has blcome more maiur. tn ..... waya." . Mleyland would love the Pl'•Uc• ot belnl Illa team to finally lollPle UM . INlnl, but Tt'l'I coach Lefty. brl...- •YI Ila -·t want to be uuund U UCLA loaaa lol!IPI· "I'd blto lo catdl UCLA on the r~ bouad." DriMeU llid. "I don1t M catdllnc them -they're rat." 1 • • I \ ' ''· • I Friday, November JO, l!J lJ DAfL V PILOT '> { Prep Stars Sailors Attack St. Paul Defense Tonight BURDICK RAY Newport--OffenM liRIK ESCHER Ntwport-OoffnM CLYDE BIRCHARD El Toro-OfftnM CHUCK VAN LIEW El Toro-DtftnM Boes Face Rugged Compton Newport liartior lllcl>'• Ir• ...-1ble •If-and tho lllyleldlac defeue ol St. Paul !lab'•-... collide toolght II orange c 0 a • I College In the quarttrflnllt of the CIF 4-A football depend ................ cWense wllb middle pardlan Martin, ·-lliltn Kl...-tnd -.. btek Lou Rumlola leading the way. of ap1nler Brian ,,_t tnd tbe Jl)UlldJno up tbe mlcldle by boirty lullliecb Pete Brown and Tam Slltlc. playoffs. I KJcirort la aet for 1 end tn overflow crowd II expectecl at lhe site whlcb ac. commocla!M f,IOO f .... BllCltlng this defensive Jue· B<maut la Ne\vport's veraalile attac:I:, led by quarterback steve Buklc:b. Tborlol bu come mi stroni In tbe latler ..... ol tbe campalp, running fer 157 yarcll and eight -AID011I hil 85 caniea In the .... three cames. Coach .lfarlJllo Anclch'• Aoplua i.._c ba m pl on Swor~, undefeated lhrouih 10 pmea t D d po11euon ol, l!Ytll shutouts, ~ a&-1,~er, bas NII fer 10 louchdoWD,11 tnd ~ fer IS Till. Hts lbwtte tar1et, Vinnie Mulroy, hu caUJbt seven ol thoae IClOl'lna aerials. 1be lulll>tcka are averaclnl 10 pocka per 1ame lately. Buklcb'• nmnlng totals !Delude 1114 yardl mi m carries tnd be Is partlcularly·elfec:tlve on lhe-i>. Newport's offense alao In- cludes the quick ninnlnl lltabl 1be -llOlla -to • Girls' CIF Tenn~ Playoffs Featu~es ·Only lndivUluals ''I.· :\' ~ . CIF champlonaliipo ' ,'~\imnfs will le-playoff berlll. be •tapd on .. ~ oa1y Ibis ne Pleree -wtD be • foar·leam aeaaon with a Bocid ~ •. (!lat team affair lmlead ol tis u l'ft"l•IJ -.i. play will take over next yNr: ..... • "Yoa need at leMt m teams I• a decent 'Ibat'a the word from the CIF otfice and tnrumut," Jolmale Bnob, COldl at OCC '1lrla conunlasloner of albletlcs Phyllla Bia!:. 1111. uEacb school will be allowed to enter Miu Brooks, a long-time member of tbe ooe llnglea Player and 0.. doubles com-Oraaa• c-ty btonl o1 wome•'• offlclala, blnatlon," Miia Bia!: iay1. "There will be llala1 beeo euell;y bappy wllla olllclalllc no team acortn1 this year but we hope la _. ol ber teom'• -tldl -· · to have team play In tbe future ." "When we played P'nllerloll tbe flnl time, Aetliin In the CIF compelltlon gell under oor deleaa bad to 1et oat of lbe way way nell Sltun!ay at Marina tnd Fountain aad lei !Mm .-.__ of trybtc to HOWARp ., HANDY Valley high ochooll and the llrll will play to the quarterllnall. 'lbe quarterllnala, temls and llnala will be held at UC Irvine Iha followlnll Saturday. Goldea Wen aad Oruc• Clotlt Golloce clrlt botlratNll -lllll !Ian a 1MI · al a SoolMn Callfonll pla,.il -- --'lie !or ... lll1e al Pler<o Oollep Dec.llaadH. hllerloeleadlllle,.S-•7-2- --by LA 8arW (f.Z), GoW.. W•I (W) ud Orup Ooall (M). Goldea Wen l'la1I -Mtoolay aad dlwdrlltlll9wl*lllleAMWld1M•11. Ormp Clllt ...,. .............. , .. -...111e- u Golda Wiii - --· It phis a pla,.if lJer6. fto -11-lar -·· occ ..i 111pe tor GolJlea il'en it -BarWudloMtellulaAaatepltJa atop &lleal," ... ,.. -llu Ille Oraaa• Coast team .... proved Ille liloet lldl ...... ? 111a 111otdq," lite U)'I wHlloat llesl&adoll. "OV defute U1 alw111 betl pod ~ut th .. 1attq: 1111 impNve4 a tile year W _...,.. ud I tlllall we can make Ille playoffs wllla a win Wednesday." Orange County may hot be the mecca · le< llrll ~In& evenls oo the high school Ievel, but II will have to do unW BOmclhing changes the· current trend. Six county schools are banded together In leaaue play and tbe balance are competing on a rqular basis In play day competition. TO further auament this situation, the first CIF championship ewnt of tbe year ,... slaged at Marina Inch (volleyball) tnd the ' lellnll pttllms will be held al Marina tnd Fountain Valley lllgb SChools with the finals II UC Irvine. Other clalfO ael by the CIF office !or girls CIF championlhlp eTenll Include: Jan. 19 and 26, lleld boc:l:ey; March 30 and April 4, basketholl, May 11 tnd 24; track and fteld; May ZI and 21, gym.naatlcl; May zs tnd June 1, ntball; May 30 and Jline 7, lwimmlng; tnd June 1 and I, bod- mtntm 1be llnrt date · la fe< prellmlnaey com· petition and the -date fer tbe cham- pionsblp llnala. Sites far tbe various com- pelllions will be ·-laler. Anteawrs C~sh With.Loyola In Cal Poly Cage Tourney· POMONA -UC Irvine Will wcrkouta thil -k. Jell Buller, a lranller fnlm open the 117H4 boakelbtll "We di-hll ottuatlon Pierce Colioge, hu had the ....... tonllhl aplllll Loyola •I lenlth ~y," 'M says. flu tnd Baker la sidelined. Ulllvenlty ol Loo Angela In "He cloclded he -1d play 11 will probably be either lint mmd action of tbe IOID'· Ibis yeor and leela he la H01'anl Hawklm or Gary tMm Cal ""'1 (-) pll)'llcally nady to 10 but Euhtnka, both ltlWmen. tournament. 1be Antolters we dmi'I went to r111h btm. Eubaoka was a 111rter at and Llona pt lhlDp under Rl&hl -we are counting auard a ysar aao. way at 7 o'clock. on btm playtnc at Pomma." In the back:cctm't, a pair Hoot Cal Poly will .,..Y BWr, i---, will not be of 1...-,...i letterman Oranae Coast c 0 11 • g e • 5 Nortbem ArUona al I with In tbe lllarllnC lineup loc the Richard Mnlulr' are VYinl fer the winners m<ellng fer the Anlellen tonl&IJI. the •I a r 11 D. berlha. Tim basketball leam figures lo run c:iwt1>1onablP Saturday at 9. Jerry Maris and Scott Tlvenan from El Modena tnd lnlo .a buzz saw lonlllht when 1be lolirl play at 7 !er third ~-mvo been named KeYln Dovla hm Rubidoux the Pirates i...1 ilelendlng _,_ to the ,_ oourt, Maru II ....... In RI -'de the atale JC champion COu¢11 ,_.UCI,, ch Tim 'M I I fcrwanl -'1*! Ind ...... vm~ are, College at 8 o'clock. ' coe 5 a-• frllbmen. All tine will eee -~~ about ..... --1-M1nu1cm at center. c-ra"· ~-Coach Jim Newman's -·~ Wlll ....... .,...., .,..un:: -..uuu. opener The other lorwanl position Loyola hu captured both Tartars come into the game .. 1 ckm•t feel we are fully 11 a qm:sUoo mark. Oji prob-previous gamea between the wilh a ll-1 tt<On!, having won prepared lo open lhll ysar. hably won't know wh> will schoola, wtan1nc lut Year, 92. the Vallev ol the SUn Classic We aren't . where we ~ start uotll loallbl," Tiii says. .. In Ibo •-· Beach louml• defensive struple and St. Paul II a four-point !1vorl1e to ClOllllnue on to t h e aemlllData •1alnst the winner ol tbe Santa Monica-Crespi ''"""· U It comes down to a kick· Ing pmc Newport backers feel their aide bas the edge with punter Gavin HedQck. field goal kicker Art Sorce tnd PAT man Bob Unvert avallaNe. Hedrlc:l:'s punting baa been conslltent all year and Is averqlng belier than 40 yards per boot. Gauchos, Rustlers Toppled MOORPARK -Saddleback College met Porterville this afternoon and Golden West batUes San Diego CC at 5 in conaolation games of the Moorpark basketball tourna- ment after both area JCs were beaten Thursday. · Saddleback's Ga u c h o s oouldn't handle Rio Hondo's 6-8 center Fred Haberecbt and fell, 88-70, while Golden West's Rustlers were ripped by Pierce, 101-77. Sorce bas IOC>d lour field 190) and running backs Ed goals -hls longest a 39-Gomez and Bob Younger. yarder. Both teams figure to rely The other side of the coin on their defenses to get them is lhe Newport defense against ln decent field position before the st. Paul offense. opening up and both like to Newport's defenders include util ize ball control offenses. tack1e Pat Millican, secondary Newport's attack Is con- standouts Erik Escher and Mark Duffy, linebackers Bill siderably more open with Mocketf and John Phipps and Bukich's passing threat to George Norris, Ken Newbery 1.1ulroy and other receivers and Don Valdez up front. such as Burdick Ray and Ton1 St. Paul's off ens I v e Bazacas. backfield revolves ar ou nd Sl. Paul's secondary has in· quarterback Bill LeNew (S..l, tercepted 15 enemy passes. NIWP«t Harkr Offttl" le -Vlrml• MUll'9V LT~ 8ue.ko $h•W LG r Mir' WllMW C -Jotln GUii RG -Jtff ICr•lllll RT -Tom Formk• RE -811'4lck Rn' Qll -Sl•vt euklcl'I T9 -Brl1n Tlltrlot FB -Tom S•ffl9 F:.. -T,,.,, 81uc1• "' '" "' "' ... '" "' '" "' ,,. '" Nl'Wl'Ort H•rMI' Dtfln11 E -P•I MUUctn 11'1 G -O.O<I Norrlli 10S G -ICen N~W 201 E -Don V•IOel It• l8 -Jotln Pl'llops 11' LB -au1 Mock~l no CB -G•11ln Htarl"k ·190 CB -Tim 8rOWl'I 17J DB -800 Un"o1rl IU 01!1 -Erik Ei.cntt :ra Dll -M•rt:. OUllV 'Ille Gauchos' Rick Bauer ' ' had a. bot shooting nigh!, fini!hlng with 30 points, in- cluding 14 field goals -most of which were fired from the 20-25-foot range. But Haberecht's board work and shooting were just too much for Sadclleback. The Roadrun- ners sophomore center chi~ ped ~ wil!J 25 poln!B. 'lbj, loss was Saddleback's thin!' straigl>L Golden West also dropped itJ dlird in a row as· Pierce comtletely dominated t h e !IOclriis. 1be Rustlers stayed close unW mid way through the secood. half when Pierce &COred 12 points in a row to take an !IH4 lead. Taras Young led the Ruallera with 26 polnls while Theo WlD!lllll8, a Long Beach .Poly !Dgh product, hit 24. Golden Well could only baa one !ollenllve .-.00 in the half a&alnsl • team similar In height. other first round games , Rlvenkle poiislled oil .( Pofterville, 104-70, and Modrpark thwnped San Diego, ff, r;loorpark faces Pierce at 7 ad Riverside tangles with RloJ.i;"f"° at 9 In the cbam· pl p semis tonight. !I the Ruatlera and Gauchos both win today, they•n · meet al S Saturday 10< the CCO· 10latlon tiUe. ' I.. . NE,WPORT HARBOR'S VINNIE MUL.R OY IS IN ',(C.'i'ION tONIGHi' AT OCC. SoCal Lo~es, 91-66 REDLANDS -Calilo"\1a Baptist Q:il!ege 0£ Riverside It was 23-8 wllb the Vanguards playing catcl>up the rest ol Top Award 'To Balch ...._ .... cm WllllllM 1't ~ '11 handed Southern California 111 College of Costa Mesa its first '" the. night. Gary Balch v.·as named Bill Skradski was high man Orange Coast Q:illcge's most for Soc.al with 14 with Kip valuabl e footba ll player for Hearron hitting l3 and Ted the 1973 season at Thursday Bergerson 11. night's awards banquet in the· = .... ·_J~ g g g defeat of the young basketball ~oi'.: il : ~ i~~. &&f ,_ 1 0 , n:.~d g g 2 21 sea.son Thul"3day night in g opening roond action of the ~ Redlands tournament, 91-66. 0 • student center. s.c•• '"'"rt 1"'11 111 r. John Dixon was selected the ' . . Andrtws 3 3 0 AnllOl'I 402 T•l•I• U 11 lP H•lftlrM: Pl•rC•, C-36 1.-....c11: L111 n ,, = 1? i, 3'f, ~00 1' , ~ I, atrnalldl• 3 ,' 13 •ll•W 12 • offrMn l 0 1 ,' ore 103 MlkkllMll 0 I ' . Mt'l'lf"I 0 I 100 Tot•lt '1 '5 H•lftlm•: llllo HOll<ID, 41.:» Pro Scores ~-.~~ i 1 i 1~ outstanding back. G rant Vanguards returned to• action ~.u):l!'l'm ~ g 1 ~ Gelker was named the top this afternoon against Los Btnier">fl s 1 1 11 lineman and Lee Joyce ac-Skr9d1k1 1 0 2 1' Angeles Baptist in a second ~~=.s ~ ~ ~ ; cepted the Bill y J e l\r,.k i n s round play of the eight·team ROH 2 i 3 .. s Memorial award as bifter of Tof1~ )) • 24 th tournament. H•Jlttm•; c.1 B•P11•1 42..Jl. e year. Other first day ,scores in-The Daily Pilot. trophy to eluded Claremont~udd 65, F the most improved. player Biola 56 ; RedlanM Bt, Los . ield Hockey went to Rich Seaberry . and Angeles Baptist 55; and Bob deLancellotti was given Azusa-Pacific 98, P a c i f i c ~-olden . wn1 2. ca1 Poly PomoM the leadership award for the Christian 65. ~ ) Cll9rv1 H1yn 1, Beckw P•1rce 1. second Straight year. After winning i first twll '-----'--'-'--"-"----------'2'.:~.=:__ _ _: J Coach Paul Peak's at Phoenix la8t -k. -. -C.Ompton fell to Yarapal. like to be ·for an opeaing ment. N~'Lt:1111ta Ar., Monday night rcund game of tbe elabt-tMm Ea I F t d The ~ under new held ,...,,, '''· •-·-c1 ... ,,_~ .. , " encounters of the ear, liOCal tell behind early against Califvmia Baptist and was never in the game. At one point SAVE $5.''0 LosAla •tos RaceCo se DISCOUNT I . . beblnd In terma Of re!inoment g e8 e e coach DoVO Benideret, have O•""' "'~.!.'.t].i!.11;,;.-,;-" Newman has just 0 n e and do1nc ·the tblnp we want a veteran lineup including four A1t11t1cv,..~;::i~o~-=1•'1111 starter back from his !972-7! to do ellectlvely," aa)'I Tift. Ellanda ID!lb'• croa COUii· returnlnl atartm. =r~~\' " outfll, but he says hll current 'lltlt hu been brWgbl on, try team wlll be fel<!d with Scott kay (f.Z) and Lutller •• :..?;~M team will be better than last In _ .. , ,_, Injuries to key ....... nl .....,,.~ 1 _.,._ ('I) .~ _,....... ·-~ • , ...,, , • club ..-• 111 a •r--awa ._.,.._ a ;i;; , ... ,.w .,.. are _..., •--· 11-vc:n itt'll!Mt'• z. Pt1ll•d•10111. ye;;: lone ;.,.rter Is g.o i)uarc1 per-1 lncludinl two-ynr the achqOI cafelerla SUnday Lloyd McMllllan (9 I) and ';ti,••'· /.':l1'.:.,!. Ernie Hall -a Compton High lettenmn Dave Baker, a W at 5 p.m. Brad ~ (U) are on tbe _~.:'=•10 z. . "1 , front court 1tarter. A pol luck dlmior will be front line aloog will! Paul ..,_ . ~'\'!~derH~ ~;a;:.i Baker's knee WU lnjlnd followed wilb the preaentatlon dtrland (W), a tnnder !fun la &-I freshman Roy Taylor In a tctlmmlp wllb Ille .-'°'"-"'IJ>Oda=;;;';.;•;.;;wardl=;;;· ____ .-tbe;;..;U"'nl""v"'er"'tl'"ty-'of;;...o!lrept.==-- hm Centennl•I freabmen aeveral -U ..., Up front, Ne,..;,.n wlll open _!'I he only returned -~ with Larry Gray (H ) and George Berry (H) 11 the forwards tnd Lerry Williams (f.9) al center. Berry and WllllamJ ara from New York City and Gray prepped al LA Jordan High. "Potentially we're belier than last year," 1 a 'f 1 Newman. "We have elgtit or nine fre shmen, but we hive more potential than we did last year. And Wf!'re quicker and bluer." ....,. M"'A" Orange Coul !ell to ICOllOMY ... MITT Cofnplop, &MO, In the opening ::! round ol tbe santa Monica ~ 0 •17 tounwra\11111....... .._ The Plralea, with a H ~ record, Will open wllb Bnice - Miller (f.2) and Tom cnmt -IY (f.2) In !he bockcourt and ... ,. • - Rod Snook (H) and Jim t~ r!!.°"ry WorlhJ (~) and Bob Man- ker (H) er Dean J!o&dtn - -M ., cs.110) up 1tonL 1'---c.•..,••.• ... -.__ .... , Ever_y man wants Black Velvet in his stocking. Smooth Canadian. LEASE DIRECT! e FMet nd Persuallncl ...... e All pop•lor MOk• con Hd Tntek1 .l e frff L..ti Cltfl e C!mperltlft Rotfl.- lockff bf ·compJe,. rans 9INI Senlce Fecllltlts lf 111'·'·'· SPECIAL '74 MUSTANG II s7520 Mo. + T&L All Smtdard f:tot11rn J6 Me11th 0 .l.L. On App. CNdlt .. ' . TICKET noox · 10 GRANDSTAND ADMISSION TICKETS $15 (Regular Price $20.00 . Save $5.00 Each Book) Order Now • Available through Dec. 12, 1973 Write: TICKETS • DEPT. G., Los Alamitos Race Courae 4961 Katella Avenue . Los Alam itos, Californ ia 90720 THE WORLD'S FASTEST HORSES RETURN! DA\' "ACING TlltM.,"""' ....... , 1Jf- lll Post 12:45 "" Dec. 8 thru Dec. 23 Presented by- • • • I • ' UA.lL. r PILU 1 Star ~our Engines! ~ Wilt-! DEKE HOULGATE ~ • lt goes without sayinl\ that auto racing will be greatly changed when the 1974 seaton opens, if Jt is .allowed to exist at au. ' • Just what will racing be \lk'e next year? WJU there be fewer events? Will attendance be up or down? Will the super &peed· ways, with their super expenses, be brought· once more to their knees financially? 1 Fans have done without nrtc:Ing before, in the name of na- tiooal emergency and presumably they can abstain again. But for bow long? These questions face the l~ers as welJ as the enthusiasts <sl the most endangered of all prts in· a sport-loving nation that suddenly, fmds itself witho\lt sufficient fuel to heat the t-nes of the poor and the old dur!N: a cold winter. ; Developments in the energy crtsis have happened so quickly, '11e after another, that there is literally panic in the halls of eovemment. The other day we wa~ a government body pass i, ban on Christmas lights in the siteets of its jurisdiction. ;. The same body deferred conside¥tion of a resolution calling 'r an eDd to motor sports for ~ dUTation of the energy crisis. Overseers of the sport had anticipa~ overreactions of this sort. They have organized their first lobby and opened ofiices in Washington, D.C. Spearheading the effort as ex.ecuuxe director of the Natio01 al Motor Sports Committee is John ~· who once seriill· as president ·ot C>ntario Motor Speedway. Under his direction, statistics have been gathered that bui~ a good case aga~~ restricting fuel usage by patrons of all ,8lds of sporting evenflt including racing. -Too Little, Too ~? : ' One woaden, however, U lbe effort is too ·little and too la'8 Tiie Natloul Molor Sports Committee bad',Jntended making Us fata pubUc in a week or so, but last week It suddenly re--. p..d tu lladlngs. _. Tbe lll'CtncY was obvious. Jack Mathe~ executive of RJv "-Ide Iat.ematioaal Raceway, sat in an office in Daytona Beach, fla., and called every newsman be could refdt, from eoa1t te 60ut wl~ the lolormatloa, while In Washin~ Cooper put llte1> !c:-Ultlcs bl the band• of every elected and,.ppolnted ofOclal Wiie could poasibly illO.uenee lhe government'i .ctecJsiom on ~ 'iColin McConnell, Costa Mesa's Nick Priest and1 teammate Mike Messinger in ~ problem. . ~... rtbe 'Irvine League cross country championships. ; Tile 1tady showed that 16 percent of all 1fll:el coa1amed ~>'"-.,>.)_'-' -•"'".,-1;.· _ _:::_ _____ ..:_ __ "---'------------- lportl or recreation use during 197% was for aCatioa traveJ.1 ~ ,,.,.J::_#'O-~ A poor second in the ·non-esseatial burning oft.fuel was non-(-'-·. ":-·-;.·;~ eChecJuled aviation, aCCOllDtiDg for 835 million Clliont, and tlt1rd ;~ • ..; ... , r' • ~as the motion picture industry, 749 mUUon ~· ' '" " Otller acdvldea in wbJcb slgaflcant a~ el foe) were ~. r •sed were football, SM million gallons; !Jaskelhall; Zll million; 'G•' ·• 1 ' . N R 1 hone raclq, '7 millloni auto racing, t3 mlllkta:...,.11 II mn. t t Uon;.bowliDc ... mllllonj major league bueball,·33 m.Ution; Ir s e esu S wr..uJng, Z7 million, aad goU, II million. Tiie tolal was l,IM , blllloo gallOas. Coast For Area Te get elllclals to ,.. .. ...,.,..tlal '1lel anre ii!; 111. pro Corona's Hunsaker Finally Finds Niche . / Serna get away from me." He knows he's found his By STEVE BRAND Saturday he gets another niche. Of tt1e otlly ""•' s1tfl' chance at the pa.Ji' in the "In baseball_. you really One year ago B r i a n CIF flru\ls at l\lt. SAC stanlng don't work that hard," he d k ·m says. uroot ball, either. ,111 Hunsaker ha to ma e. an J • at IO a.m., but don't expect track you have to work. a1.1d portant decision. • 1 any rash predlotionS from Somehow yoll can i'ust pie-. Hunsaker. , . those ·who wor~ the hardest . " reap the most rewards:" ture the scene. The then '1Serna Jafid Blume are He mentioned track and not C.Orona del Mar H l g h really great runners," he ad· cross country because he pre. sophomore stands in front of ntits. '11'11 have a different ~ rUnning around in circtcs a full-lengtll' mirror an d strategy now that I've run _ 440-yard c1rcles _over at- ponders the situation. there onCe but I really tacking hills ·and dirt paths. · At $-foot-4, 120 pounds, he woutdn't be terribly · di.sap-But he realty has not set has just finished thi! foOtball ; ~ed if 'thQrSe. two beat me times he wants to run in track season where he saw ,~ .,all, they've t>een this spring. He prefers to be action as a back a n·11~: ·~.at running a little surprised. · linebacker. The previous year longer than I have." "I kno\Y. J can run faster · he didn't even make µie ,, About \hose. vitamins~ than my best of last year baseball team but volunteered When li.msaker decided to (9 :48 for 2 -mi1es, 4:40 for to act as manag~r. run track, his grandfather,.a a mile)," says Hunsaker, Surely someth~ng else could former runner himself, gave whose 9:29 in the rain at be more rewarding. the youngster some advice. UC Irvine in the cross country "The football team had a Vitamins he said can only league finals was just six two--mile run for conditioning do you g;,oo. ' seconds off Sema's course and I beat ~veryone," recalls So now young Hunsaker record. Serna is one of the Hunsa~er. "The coach took takes 8 to 10 pills 8 day. nation's top milers and 2- me aside and sugg1e.sted far llllder,the amount wolfed milers. ~rhaps my future was m run-.• •by Bobby· Riggs but at least "I -won't set goals. though. n1ng" t' •• I · ' · When I ruri well, I'd prefer Th.e coach was a prophet. ' 8' to 16 more than most high to be happy with the time Hunsaker showed a spark ,s~l,students. instead of thinking I fell short of what was {o come wh ,, 'I take lots of vitamin E of some goal." , he finished fourth in \he Irvine ' but also all kinds of others," liiiiiiw;;;i~w;;o;;91i;;f!;fiiim League 2-mile last spring. Blit ~xplains H~ker. "I also II he really came into his oWn~, ,tak_e~·Uver pills because you this fall ~ need 11,ver and I hate to eat . :! it"' ,,.. Injuri es slowed his start b~t · ~ :. , · once healthy, Hunsaker b~· .. ~The .pills aren t the reason ed to the Irvine League ciQSs , for · Huna:iker's improvement coWltry title and then :~ )Q,sucb a short time. He trains week ran the sixth fastest lt"ard and be doesn't especially time among anyone ~•'JI~~ to. looe, CIF semifinals in f · r:~ ~ ~\ .... third in the first secti~ ,--~.(:". the 4-A race at Mt. SAC. Girls·~ olleyhall Ahead of him were Mar~·~ . , · • · Gary Blume and Loara's Ralph r ,,,., Serna. Long atKl'I dtl. Or1ng1 Coe'1 IS-t, Iha 1S.1J. ''I surprised myself in t Or1ng• CM~t dH. ctrrlror. 1$-9, race," says the 16-year-<>ld 1 sc;,~~, '°''' def, Fllllerton 1o.1s, vitamin pi11 exponent. "I just ii-J. 1s-s. ran with the leaders until the • light was the object of tbe study, but It remala1 t. ,Jae ~ ,, 112, ,..,. •• 1" v.1._1 bow mllCh effect the facts will have In what llu Medme u s11111n switchbacks and since I'd Lotlf BN<h def. 0r1ng1 c°'u 20.11, never run there befor~, I ::>-;;n~S:· coan dlf. Cerritos 15-11, · · wasn 't sure what to d on 1s-•. Tomb (Ml def. l lnd51y (El t Slelalf, Ht1l ($) Gel. M1111ar1, lktd1 0..11111 Cot$1 dM. F111U1rtan IS.ll. Viner IM) d11. Tr111t11'11111 (El H. (E) '°'· the hills. 1 let Blume and tH. Turley CMl def. Jacobwi !El e!~, Lamb, Harbin CE) def. Bell. Gatcl• -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-F;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;"¥-;;-;;;;;_;;1;;; Benner and v=:l def. M~aell$ (S~11~;!;., Slrot• I~) del. T11ko. P1r11hl' DOES YOUR CAR IDLE ROtJGl1? WE '"' o"m" '" w. · 1" 2-0. START HARD? ' . Ra~n afld H111Qt (Ml d~l1$hlm M~~r;":gt2. Slrai:cheU (E) def. ,Luhan, GIVE POOR MILEAGE? .. · , C~N · H~LP Ind Tolle' CEl ·~·. I 1 G:i~~~5:'c's1 ~~~nit !.El def. Oic~ THE CARBURETOR SHOP - -·' M•tnlY (SCJ Olf. Horunln 8-$. .. JIU CIOntroversy, = .,., Oahlslrom {SC) dri'. Lewis 1.f. " WUt will llappen? It seems likely Utat off..,,ad , 11 botla ~~~r ~t~1d~. ~,~1!·~-3. for mo&orcycles and car•, will be hit hardest. Tradl · races, smith cvi def. W1Jion a..s. like &be Indy and Davt .. 88 •milers, should go on ~ual. Llnntt.ilch 1sc1 lllf. R•• a-2. J-Flesher (FV) de!. Gonion 1'3. t1lelr eontln1ance may carry tbe clttalts of USAC, · AR, BKllmM 1Fv1 dtt. L:Jnd• 1-1. """' NBRA d JMSA f •• Ir ••rta!nm t a] 1 ~-...!-Henlrlch IFVJ dtf. Todorov 1-1, ~ an , · or ..,e. en..,. en V m,..u...-wg Gihring IFVJ dtf. 'flnn!ck 1·2. Riegel and Ritchie lM) def, Vilar. Kraw:e,, Paslrkk CE) d 111 t, j q~i. and Meisch (El f-t. ChrhlM'IOll, Malt>eri;J <SI 6·2. 1'41 HAalOa •t.VO., COSTA Mis.A .... , 1 ThomPSon and W1rncck !Ml Qt l. Klement, Baptist CS) def. Lew: AH WM'k G¥trantlld f ~,.,. -Ml* McDonald and 'Gofer th (El •·1 ,...!:'''.'.'-~oo~l•"._l ~'-''.:·_--.:_::___:::....::~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-~-~~-~-~~-~-~~·-:-::'.-~-=;~'..!..::=:::;::==::::::==::= Frleclm1n and Warnock (Ml dfl. -;;. 1 , •.c" w~r and Welherl>H (E) 1-4. tr--'1--~:::!''"':~-=:::' .. _..,...,..._.,,,,.;, a'jlOriod of,...,. auttrlty, ~ -la IOmt localltlet race tr~b may enjey bulntss .. sual, ~11~1-:'fton (SCJ Oef. Rodriguez.. 'at a Jot of tbem are destined io go oat of bas.ileu. ·' W1ts Satcldo-Tlltfraun IFVl def. Mor•t· Jtbbymg . effort, auto radnr II Art ... be feVerely c . ' • . t1:i~u..s.{FVl d9f.,~.sc• ..... • T•ylor.W.C.loctt (FVJ clef, Cal...Udll• Regel and Duncan, {Ml def. f' I"" .Ind Ellwnztmmar (E) M . Faael-tfng M•terial i• Book w · •·•· . ~ween Rauno Aaltonen and 'Paul Zuccarelli are founcl;.the ~~·R•skln 1sc1 def. auntr-s11111tan w111mlMtar ~~~~:1 cos11 ,_, ~jof.rapbiea ·of Gordi, ·e Bracken, Vincenzo Florio, Janet GD~e, · ~-H•lt (FVl def. c1er11 .. Fournlor Horton (WI de!. Frt;osl 1c1 8-5. · ...., Fleur tCJ lie!. Gecdewa1gen (W1 Guy Ligier, Johnny Servoz-Gavin and Parry Thomas. s11i11er11nd-Thomp:son cFvJ v11. L11nc1o 14• The book · nde In · (675 · · '-) Hoskin •.J Nei l !CJ def. Brummett !Wl M. , , lS po rous, llZe magazine SlZe pagWl! • Brawn-JOhtrmson {FV). "def. INN• K11hn CCI dtl. Blood IWl 14. $17.~ Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, N.J.) and Merec111h a-<1. Harris tCI 11e1. wens 1w1 •·•. ~tY. · Qr _ itS title,_ The Epcly~IQpedilJ. of Auto RacibJ!' Hu11t11111• "'~~~:_:: 111 5a11t1 Ml Heggen 1c1 d~b.~1 IW) 1. \ ts ' 1 'l-Cavendet" CSl de!. Tebbtns IH) 1-3. A.av and Lacktwirt (Wl de!. Ma5h , • • • • Hontt IS) def. Mcealllster (HI 14. 1nd Clark {C) 14. "' We Often wonder if books Of this magnitude are meant l6r W1ve1I CHI def. Tasch IS) •2. Holland and ltfelwre IC) def. Tim· other than reference libraries, but in the case of this one w' ~:~~o1i.;l ~~i !;;~~,~~ ~~· a-.4. tiii~!~~~nda~15~°::~1 c~~-def. ~weM aaoerly recommend il for the Christmas tree of the insatiable en.nee CH) def. Harjo lSI 1-<1. and s11rrnkl1 (W) a.J. ""'moto' In th . t 'lb t . I Im t dr' I CIO' !H) def. Wiid IS) 14. B11tler Ind Nelml (CJ def. r'"' . r rac g en us1as . e ma ena on a os every 1ver s , s11ou1t !HJ ~. F1e1<11 1s1 a.2. and Melland cw1 a-2. ~nating · Strachan (H) def. Armlnd1 .0. Bauemltter and Fretman IC 'de!. ' The ob', dr' • th book f T · · BtlYff (H) 6tf. Rico 15) H , Martinez ind SOmmer {WI 1.0. • vious Jvers are m e , everyone rom azio Doulllu sc11nor and weus <Cl oe1. Rav tiuvolari to the Unser brothers. What intrigues us is the detail H1u111, H111th (HI aef. Boggs, EUlot and White !Wl •·•· ~ seemingly_ intimate acquaintance that authors Bob Cutter ~i1!~i. G1t1r1e1 CHJ def. Thoner, Est•11tla 12~ S•M•c~f Bob Fendell project in dealing with some of the less obvious ~~~sl,.~~ner IHl def. Sccve, w1111. Hvman 1e 1 ittf.1~~:acho 1s1 6.i., vers included among 550 biographies. · fl•ld 1s1 t.J. · Moe CE> da1. Hltlbafd cs1 ,H. I C k Combs, Major (HJ def. HavQen, Han5on CEl def. K<1macha {SJ 6-1. i King 0 the anefJrea •• Morningstar (S ) l·l. Maedi (E) def. Swlln!lon (S) 6.S . ' Bracken, for example, was known ti the King of the Cane· H:i!~'~~) ~~~ltr fHJ def. Herrin. ~~i:le~ElE~"!·ef~e~:!n'~~Jb-i.o. I llrub He dueled at placea like Camp Foster Fla wttla the 6enckr, Ecker IHJ def, Elliot, Ar,11111e1a lSl 11ef. 5<1w1y1 tE> 6-1. ' . ' ·• Murphy {S) S-3. .. Whel&y CEl def. Kotow (SJ 6-2. r, Ilka of Hach Dison, "a turpentine maaufacturer alleged to have ac111n, Pebbtni {Hl def. H111or1n. D!Lav1 CE> dtl. Penwn (SI 9.1{ tpl.ked 1111, fuel Mtb his own product." Bracken was the un· Pf~~';::a:O:~. 'i.\urray IHl def, Jime.5. M;:ri13 ,1~~1~·~·a!:::!e~~k6-~~-1 crowned champ of the South during bis career, wblcb stretched Terr csJ t-1. Ak1n1 (El def. 1rw1n 1s1 6-0. 1 from 11!5 to World War n, interspersed with aUigator·wre1tllng F:~~~.Z1th ~~lm~~r (H) d. f. ThomPSon. K=bl(e:) dei. Falltner. JiOab: and shootouts with revenuers. 8""'°'1, Woodlodl IHI def. Fr1z1er, &rcwn csJ 6-4. l Rlctwi~1 (J) 1--0 HM!drY, Geflll CS) d~. Joll"!fn, · F'Jlrit's .bfotber "locked him away on a remote island lo MarMa iuJ 10J ldlKlll ) Br•dle~ CEl M . • ~ E t &be then %0-year-old jouth from racing tn an early town-Mott (Ml cte',1_'1,':ld CEJ 1•2• ,!ll~·rsi ~fev" 1e1 def. cr b, Wll ntee, 'die famed 1983 'Race Of Death' from Paris to CcUI~ fM) def. Erevlck CE) S·2. PC!Of. O'Ar19elo (E) del. Proven , d." Th~ . wealthy yoong Siclliait raced during the early ~1e111 \IMJ del. sc111e1e u:> M . t.arton 1s1 .i.<i. 1 , J.IOOI, dnpite his family objecUcms ,and later became one or .. \ I &be 1port'1 moet generous p_atrons. L~-Ld N d M MVP' Mt. Guthrie was an accomplished aviatrix, licensed to Hy ~ 3file eS3 , 21 different types of aircraft at age 11. She bought a Jaguar 1· CAR MIRROR XK·ut and bad to ask her 10.year~ld brother how the clutch David Lund was named Frosh.SOpb \ WOrked. Tiiis ·led to her going to a school at Ume Rock, which . . . i mrted .ber raolng career, one unique in U.S. road racing. most valuable water polo Captain: Guy ~1ko.r1an; . f.:'~n" 20&>J WEIGHTS Reg. l9c Q1>1rl 3n: 99' Eltl/IE TART/A FLU/I "''"''' r,., I"'"• r., •11 c.. •• 1 ... { ....... P,..,O.,\Jppot c,1,..,., L"'""'""" ~ ... '" 8 C\'LINDER • WIRE SET f ,,. •II ~:1:.-::-.. ··~· . ' . 299 ' SA VE 30% • 50% AUTO PARTS TMEW~.~=~~:~:l.STE PRICES EfTEt.,,VE THRU SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2 " • ..\llTe C£i\Tl:ll ~ ~fj ~ Y1 3 PIECE TUNE UP KIT 6 AMP BATTERY CHARG ER 12 FOOT llEAVY DUTY BOOSTER CABLES 498 ~ ... 1.1....i. i.-t ... oi E--'" CAR SPOT LIGHT Pl"'''"'' ,_ O,.O! .. LI,;. ... for~' 11 Voh S,.'""" •... "·" 149~ 149 BATTF.RY TER)l~ALS 0 c.. ...... ''""'"' 39~. • DEl.l'XF. CO~IPASS t.!~iFt::;·;·:,":' s.11.c-... ~ ~ ....... • '. ... -Ligler Began 1Raclng at 33 player °" O>sta Mesa High's Most Valuable: Peter Ross; • Li . ta b la ti I -•· I h varsity 'J'tiurSday evening at Most Improved· Ron Ting· CJIE CKE R CllRO~I E ll.[. , gier was as r rug Y P yer, na ona muwrcyce cam· the school's sports awards · ' 'fAPEPLAYER LIFETIME TIMINC LICllT HALI.\' l'HJ>:<:t~ll)'i ·r11 t:H~iU.\lt:rt:R Rfoa, importer, contractor, car designer and builder in Paris banquet. Most Inspirational: Mark l.1.,.1,...... BATTERY '•r-11• .. 1f,1s, 1 9,9 Who declded 'to take up racing at age 33. He was almost 36 Captain: Tom Greule: Most Sponagle. t Flh Most 199 :!,11,'::,~".::1,... 1::!10.'-.~··11 2999 ~~'t,.,1.. 1999 ~~~~. · 19 ~t.~.1. 59• when be joined the grand prix circuit, fmisbing fifth in his first Valuable : David Lund ; Most p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tl !-'~';;":,.. __ ..::,.~i..,'".;."w'·~·~·"~"~.,::;...-j~'·:;.•";;";.;".;.·_.::::~-:-:+:r:•:_.::;~::;~;;.'M'-_..;,.;..,."w· +i:";.:;"':::;:;;;:;;.:.;;."<;;•;;:,;;"---i~•;";·-."';;:.-.;;;,;;,.-1 race, at Monaco in 1966. He has become one of Europe's most Improved: Joel Monroe ; Most .I SMALL CAR . ~anding designers of. exotic equipment. He drove his Llgier Inspirational;. Greg Kane. IUY A HIW 73 DAn~N t CllROME RAMPS ·\ 12 INCH )Sl (named partly in honor of his Jate Uiend, Jo Silfert) to a Junior \ Varsity AND SAVE AT SPLASH s·f1~~ win early this year at .Montlhery, France. Captain: A)\dy Millar; Most GUARDS ~ r What ever happened to Servoz-Ga vin? 11le handsome young Valuable : Cory Ward; Most COSTA MESA DATSUN · .. ~u .. grand prix driver abandoned a going business to devote himself Improved: Lew.Is sch u 1 t z ; 1141 HAllOI II.YD. C.M, i;.... 1 ~~ to racing. As his money began to give out, he took to rooming Most lnspira.ti91l8J: Sh au n 540-6410 f:"" ;:;;;~ S'Ki'.ftA,(;K"' ~:;:: .. '· with friends and living on occasional sandwiches. In 1970 he ,-~~~la~g~~r~.:::::e_!::~~~~~~~~~~~ r.•·N.'l'.H,\TORS 301000 l\llLE @, ,, . "' -DRAKE SJJOES ..,_ .... i i.n CA HRIF.R • '" ietired. The probable reason? Blurred vision, suffered in an -=-.:.:.:"':"" ~-··"' r,. .... 11..-.i...i c .,. · tt .. eaccidentearlytbatyear. ~=· 1188 =:;~, 399 :·!r,h';;~1!;· 1999 ~&.·.~a:!tt;:' ... 1z499 199 :. Rock Cod Fishing Good ' , Rock cod fishing along the Orange Coast has been good to f~ctllent with some cow and ling cod also being taken, a check ol the three area landings reveals. Davey's Locker is operating the Tinmderbird on a rock cod Jl)eclal daily, leaving at 7 and returning between 3:30 and 5:30 Neb evening. On weekends, the Th.widerbird goes to San Cle-- 'lnente bland, leaving at midnight Friday. Also available lor local fishing are the \\-day and %-day &ats. The ~-day Westerner leaves at 8 and returns at 2 on ~ys. On Saturday and Sunday, two trips are avaiJable. u• first is from 6 to ooon and the second from 12:30 to 5:30. ' The Del Mar operates from 7 to 31 on a %-day schedule. ~ .... Del Mar will alao make shark runs on weekends with ationa a must. COMING SOON! HOUDAY . ROLUR RINK ........ OFOIA•NllllMllf ............. Ever_y man wants · Blaci Velvet in his stockiµg. ' . ' Smooth Canadian. ·~~ I llT' l.,..<1>, 11•1••• ~-t--(..-.... ,. ::.~::i.°1~: ~' "'''"1• ,.. r~i• ~-I• r;.,~1 .. , •~Cl BENDIX DISC BRAKE PADS 11 .. 1 ..... 1 .. ...... i:;... •• , ();1 ••• -... s.,..r ... , ...... "*Go""'"'' ~-· ,.,.,., .... •·:. "'" 6~ '" --150 LB. TORQUE WRENCH , ~ TllR liSH-MUf'lL£1t ' ·~--·--~-, ..... 12 FOOT STF.F.I. ~ TO'!'. CHAIN • .... ,,...,. =-"· · .. ,. '·" ~ CAM PER 'STAB IL-IZERS FULL ACRO•S l'LOOR MATS '~''-'I ri.... ... "'" ........ ..... <l>t-IM • • , ' • ' '!~ • • ~ . • Friday, Novtmbtr 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT f:J t'.:· ~~~~----------~----~~~~~-----------~- • • • • , . ni , I FRI. SA::J/UN. NOV. 30, ~I & 2 ., .. - • . ' I ·' · ~s9.§J~ .. ol!!,!2~ " CHARGE EM! " I I ' ... • , Satp rday and Sunday Only ••• firt$tOnt • 11 ii t:"'l ...... ,~..J . '. t , One Size Only • DR 78-14 Fits Vegas, Mustangs, Cougars, Gremlins, · Fairlanes, Hornets, Javelins, Chevy II, Novas, Demons, Darts, Falcons, Mavericks , . JxSV2 .. . or 14x7 ·· for . \ ' l ,., . -•. • ' ' Lugs I Caps ·Acfdltlonal $2.50 per wheel. -=im=11---.i-.. ..... ·.,zs:~ ·, · :'\!71-14 G~l·,lt H71-15 J71-15 Tht .. a,. factory Items Doos Not AH.ct Wtar or '9rformanc1t Plus 12.31 to ll.11 F.E.T. l lu1 Oii ·l• Car ;areston.e DLC1 0 RETREADS "' ltllded T,..d Dtslflll Pro.W.s Quiet Ride YOUR CHOICE "' W,;,p Around Sliould9rs GI•• It a Mew · Car Ti ro Apptaronce , ~ANY SIZE LISTED._,, SIZE [ Fill Sil£ Fill SIZE fliS 6.50-13 871·13 T.35·14 [71-14· .1.25-14 .~71·14 ,~!~~;-:~. 7.00-13 C11·11 7.75·14 f11·14 1.55·11 HJl-14 '"'·'"" 5.i0-15 111·15 7.75·15 fll-15 1.25·15 111·15 '"'1::"" i.:..!•mi:c::·:· :'·:55 ·: 15=:":7'·=15=::::::==::!._W:,:HITEWALLS, ADD '2 ·I • I • ' • .Phon ·979.7910 MESA BARRY WALLACH Presidtn& ' ............ , ... ,... '!"'•""'"'\_ ...... . •f ........... _, ......... ,. ..... ............... ~ -----. • ... t -• :· .... ~ ' :.::~ \ .,~· SAIURDAY ONLY ' ~ .11: f ' GUE.JS .l(OW.MUCH MOIEY IS FROZEI llSIDE THE .3oo POUID CAIE OF ICE . i..1 st PIJZE ~~h:1s , "'"2nd -1zE• Set of-Four Hoovy tr11 r;a • Duty Monroe Shoclc1 ,,.. 3 d .. IZE Set of 4 Standoid )I-., ,. F r... : Monroe Shock A""'orber• . . . .. . .. ' . SPECIAL PURCHASE· WHITEWALL . -, ... J. ' ' . ., , "'·· 1 -.. (' .. ,, c:.J farestone STEEL RADIAL 500 BLEMS * • DOIS NOT AFFECT WEAR OR PHfOIMANCE for •• for Large Cars.· .. Size's J~~B· t 5 Medium . Cars .•. Si2es GR70·15 HR78·15 JJ ,.,, ..... . . . LRrB·15 • Plus SJ.00 to SJ.JO F.E.T. &"TJre Off Ca~ Plus SJ.49 or SJ.48 F.E.T. & Tire Off c·ar . . ·c:: ' ftr.,,.s.tone with Raised Whi Letters ••• .. , ;; ( SIZE 16D-i3 Plus 12.00 F.U . ' Tire Off Your Car SIZE il'IC '27. 2.41 E60·14 29.00 2.52 F60-J4 31.00 2.78 H60-l4 . 34.00 3.09 G60.15 32.00 2.96 I H60·15· 35.00 3.03 . " •00es Not Affect Wear·or Performance AifPri'ces UI axes •f..I '• J'lrt$fOnt -. ' FAcTORY ~ BLEM~' for ,I. • s _/ Pin 11.41 Per tira ~ F.ll. 70 sit~ies ~ijh Raised White letters •.• ONE ·SIZE bNLY 1• E70'14 Double Belted· Fits Cougar Mustang Maverick, .t hevelle ' DOES NOT _AFFECT WEAR Ol PEUOllMANCE :,~"' c!" SHOCK ABSoaBERS Sold • l ackod by ' ' · fi stone 95 · • • ALIGNMENT " lndlldts: Wtitf!I 111bll!11!1M: (\) M- J111t alll~t1111nitr~•t.;f~ ./ ~ blr. Chetk M\1 ldlUSI S!~ MC'Or, CNc:Jo: Ind ldbllf lnlrl! .... t ••ti19S-lat tM" fw ,,.. llttrlre... "" f •••• • ,.. ' .. ' .. ' ..... : . l • •• • ' I ( ... ' I ~ ,, J: ·'' ·'" '" (' ~·1 •; ' " ' . .. i. •I . ' • ' ' . • j I • { } 1 ' • • • Record-setting Pace • The 72-foot ketch-rigged trimaran Man uereva, sailed' by lone Frenchman Alain Colas, nears Sydney Harbor to complete a voyage half-way around the world in record time. Colas left St. Malo,,France, Sept. 8. The famed 1966 voyage of the late Sir Francis Chichester from Plymouth, ,England, required 107 days. 10-meter-Boats to ·Compete ' . In Bahia Corinthian.Race Bahia Corinthian Y a c h t Club's annual Round Robin Team ~ce Saturday and Sun- day will be augmented by a three race series for the re- juvenated 10-Meter Class. The Ten Meter Sailing Association bas recently been revived and expects to be ac· live in local and Southland regattas during the next year, according to Dick Reineman, owner of Branta and chairman of the association. Reineman said the Tens are prepping for a class race in the Southern California Midwinter R e g a t t a in February. They will probably •race out of Newport. ACTIVE II-METERS al ~ present time are Bob Fisher'~ Sirius, Newport Beach; Ernie Kanzler's 5ally; Phil MWTay's Rapier, D av e callendar's Hilaria, Houston Sn id ow' s Braila, and Reineman's Bran· ta. ' Southern California YaChting Association eal8ndar for the weekend: , , Los Angeles-Long Beacb SEAL BEACH YACHT CLUB -Sunday Sailors Serles No. 3, keel classes, Sunday. Santa MonJca Bay PACIFIC MARINERS 'Early Interest' 17 Vessels Set For Acapulco -San Diego Yacht Club has 17 finn entries for the start of the Acapulco race Feb. 3 and· at least 14 more are expected to enter by the Jan. S de4dline. Harvey Chambers, general chairman, said the entry list at this time exceeds that or t.he 1972 race at the same time. "The early interest insures that Acapulco '74 promises the largest and best fleet in many yeart," said Chambers. "There is assurance there will be competition in each class and an exciting race from start to finish. CHAMBERS reiterated that the racing fl eet will have plenty of fuel for the cruise home. The starting fleet will in- clude nine new One Ton class yachts rating 27.5 and in the 35-37 foot overall length range. The One Tomers are Ambush, ss-33, Ed Perry; Crisis, Ranger.J7, Charles Hope ; Whimsey Tres, Yankee-38, Hugh Ro g e r s ; Woodsman, Yankee-38, Gordon Frost; an unanmed Tartan-37 owned by Ed Craig; and three Ranger- 37s sailed by Acapulco Yacht Club skippers. OTHER ENTRIES a r e Impact, Ericson-37, Tom Tobin, SDYC, winner of the 1972 race; Legacy, Columbia· 52, Dick Wheeler, SDYC; Invader, Ericson-46, Malin Burnham, SDYC; Swiftsure, CC-48, Nick Frazee, SDYC; Miramar, 79-foot ketch, John Scripps, SDYC; Mas Alegre, PJ-4-0, John MacAllister, SDYC; Lola, Newport-41, Whit· tier G. Davis, SDYC; Topaz, Ericson-39, Carlos R. Cardenas Jr,, Acapulco YC; Sirius II, 83-foot sloop, Bob Lynch, Newport Harbor YC. Harbor Fund Shift Sought LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The Harbor Commission here voted to ask the state to transfer funds allocated for a small boat harbor to another project, but a state official said the transfer could not be made. The commission had pro- posed that funds to the stalled fish harbor marina project be transferred to a proposed small boat harbor al Cabrlllo Beach. Introductory Special • SA VE $3300 ., M-• a Jtew n ._, ,,,. Mlfli crv111111 llM(ll. Mllftnl, llHr Md A.... A ,.,..,., Ykllt .i.....-tt lilt Dlm•llll• " 1tit ...... Hwlll s... c.n1tn1C1H .. 1...-;ft " ..... "°' ........... t QptttY Mltfl'Ulll ., ~ o.lth CtllhlMll, Al ... 11 $21,900 SAILAWAY ~~., •1tt1111, Jll allll Mfll1t11111 '111.,ill, ...,...,. l lltlln"' Oo Tt 5M PIClllfl •ff Mwcfl Mlrt, Tiit MlflllflcMI * CONTEST 31 * H .. _. ,_..., .... ,.,. 11..-..n• o,... 11 AM Tl! 0111t PR1:• SAT.• SUH • AM l y .&,..i111-r sn., u. ,. • .,,.r1 Arc:lllt Mll'1ll'lt ''""""" c""'"" 1111111 •• Y ACIIT CLUB -Holiday Series, keel classes, Saturday, Sunday. :.PALOS VERDES YACHT ~ ;-Champagne Series No. 3 .. one-design keel classes, PHRF, Sunday. NE:'Wp0rt-Ba1boa BAHIA CORINTHIAN YACIIT CLUB -Round Robin Team Races, Saturday, Sun- day. San Diego SAN DIEGO YACIIT CLUB -Adventure Series, Sotlngs, Satunlay, Sonday, North and Ial1nd ANA CAP A YACIIT CLUB - Fall Serles No. !, ocean classes, Sunday. M' . 1n1ature Display Scheduled A rare collection of .miniature ships, encompassing five centuries of ocean-going vemb -Including the Queen Mary -will be displayed Sun· day at Queen's View, a J.OOg Beach front condominium. The collection, assembled over the past 30 years by naval historian and artist George Hanft, includes over 100 models -all of the same scale. Replicas, many of which were obtained from Europe, range from a 15th century French Tr i r e rn e galley, powered by oar and sail, to the U:>ng Beach, a U.S. Navy nuclear cruiser. Robert I. Siem, principal of Goldricft.Kest, Jllrsch and Stem. developers of the newly completed condominium, ar· ranged the "mini boat show" fot' boating enthusiast.a In the area. Stem, a veteran sailor, has fedesigned three boats in the past six years. Seattle Picked Powerboat Site SEA'l'l'LE (UPI) -Sealtle has been selected as: site of the 1974 Gold Cup race for unlimited hydroplanes, the most prestigious event in the world of racing powerboat.I. Arden T. Aegerter, manag· Ing director of the city's Seafair organization, reported that Seattle won the Gold Cup race for next year with a 'bid ol $52,500. Aegerter said Seafalr sllll must find a major sponsor to help underwrite the coals of bosllng the Gold CUp race. S1111, n-, Tide• PllDAY Stc:O!!d hlll'll ....... , •• 11 ::21 • m. 4.1 SKOnd low ......... 7:12 IJ.ln. O.f U.fUltOAY First 11rg11 J:• •.111. tJ lllrtt low ... 71Clf .. fl'I, ti Sl(:olMI lllOl'I • 12:2' '·"" 4,1 l«o!lcl 1-1il1 ,,l'l'I. O.t IVND.\Y lllrsl ll l9h . ' t 1tt .,Ill 4.0 Plrll IOlll '. • . 9101 1.111. '·' $KOIJll 111111 ' . " . ' . • 1141 ,.,,., "' StcOl'lll low • ' ' 1:<41 p.m. 1.2 S1111 kite• •i• 1.m. ,_., 4:4' P.tn. MOOO'I .1 ... l•itt •• ,.,, .... 10:01 p 111. • ' . . " ' • Japanese Auto CutkeJu '"'"• ::: ':~. """ .::::,~ :.::. Chry I R al IY THI eoi'l'A MISA Pt..AHNINO jUN•IOa COUil' 011' fWI V . . COMMllSION It .. CIW H11\, '11 ,,1, ITATI 0 .. CALIPO'NIA HI lC'l"1'1rS s er eve s """' ·-...... """"'" ,, ,,,. THI COUHTY ...... .. If II.~ or •• toOI\ 11 '°'41Mt ttwM.lttr ..., _.,,,.. ' Oii Motld&'t'• DK""Mf 10. lt11. 111111 II MAI0'-0 0 U 1110\.1 IT .J' ' I • ...,.,llf ""' ...... ,l'lf •wllUnoM! IJlfHUllt.. .... kMWfl •• HAil .... S t, ..... .,..MINI .... 1·1'•1t, f~r A!tTHUJt, DKNtM. Ougl,;t QI\'* V~ 1m IH l"Rllt AVff., NOTICI 11 HIJtllY GtVIN ft ttle Plant Shutdowns .,_,,,, COlll,, "' "'"'"''' to ' '' ....... ~ .. -M""' """:.": ......,W •t dllcf1bed lrl thl Miltlen 1Mt 111 ,.,...... Mi\11"1 Clllfl\t .... I I 11Mi ioc.~ ... .., ifli fW C'Ol'IWI' ,, • fl•ll, "'* "" ...... "' t«1Ulrtlll ~· flit ~ l"l~e llMI c.-. Dtlvt, C•f• Mttl. ~ .,.... 1flt _....,., \tWdliJ'I, 111 ~uMAMOl'O, fl:" ('n) c~111GN111. "°'" Jlt _. "" ,,.,. ott1ee " "" t1 ... k of "" ........ ! f\ tu" '· ....... ........ .... •""'-.., ..,"'*' ftllltf .,. " ""'"' ....,, " Fl h c-.11 Mt.. '1•11111.. Ctn111\1 ... 0l\r 77 9"' _.. .. ,., \IOlrlClllf.. to tM VII- -remen se t e DETROIT (AP ._,,__ 1n' In tori ol ,,,, or1w . c..i1 "'4ill· c111~•· "°' ...._..,. If 41t '''' 11111 1tr111, C•t• smold•"'""" ruins ,of, the Tal•o ) -Fvuvw· grow g ven ti ="'"''WM to ,,..,.. prcapt11Y 41Mrlbed .,_., c.i•1111, w111c111 11 "",•",'• ... "'6 ' • I the footl of In lze tos GM aai" Ind '" me ~lttOl't tC:•t• M• .. ''"J '"' "" .. ,.... .,. "" UllflAt•'*' " • department st~ ·(todav for inl n teps dustry I au • "'' 1oe:1tt1t ,, S1' w. '"" 1i .. coet1 ,,,.... """"' ~i111t111 fe .-*'"'' o1 ' giant General M , 0 aourcea aald buyen were e.p-c1uforfll .. trom Rt to 1 " •· "1' ~t. W11N11 f9IH' "'°""" •"tr more vlcitms of ~ fire that 0 "' rs • pareoUy a·""-''•• 1 a C · ,,....... ,....,._ .... •·n-11, for """''' ~1e111ori" tn11. Mlle•. I Chrysler Corn bas WlCed ~.......... ar.e q.. co.11 Mhl •11nn1111 COl'llf'lll»IOl\o n P# "'-'•"'• 1 1m. kllled at lea!\ 100 non1. .,. anoo eati ..... cars ~Ule· of. tbe 111Jr Drlvt. Cetl• ~. ca111or11••· .., KlfTV,Hll.iN AkfHU• Jonn•~ plant ahutdo to ~ ....i.~1~ ottmlnltrl to rtsOM .,...,ty (let(rl... Acllftl11l1U1trl• II IM Et111'9 G4! Etght)'·six ~ were In· -J wns --e1~. 111 ,,.,. pMI~ cs1111Vrtii• ,arkl ~"" ""'•m .. "*' • .....,. Jured, Including •·~of those trim JJl'(>ductkD ol. large-size Workenf ~ more_.~ • =r.' c~~1Nm1a. c:m~1 11;~ ~·'z :~~~:-.~...:• r automobiles. year o e .. ,_.ence ,.,.-n 95 •· ...,.... ~· ..,....., who helped fight the blaze. The nation'• No, l · perceot o1 their pa• mr;ng • •-,_ .. •-ll'U· "' '" ~.Jl!", '!:7'! Thie bodle1 of holiday automaker Nid 'lbursday it the temporary a'h u't down j:T!• =. ~="'M~~!?li'.':" .: ~-~~~'~41•1 is ~nendlng the week.Jong layoffs Wldet the United Auto r.::i-;..rri~~~,~f1::: •, o:""•·i=~ 0.1"' '"''°' ( ) Christmaa: stwtdown by three Worken' cantrects with the i....i •t tM ,,.,.,_ Aw.. c.at• N 11 '· '" SJ. a. ,,,, '4U-n JN SHOW' .. • days al two plaols which tum companleo, "t'l=" ~ '".l,' ::,.., "' out large cafS. A t~rd t • <1111 ,_.... '"''""1"' 'temmi.11on. n PUBUC NOTICE which has ..___ 11.... CRRY--s~l!IMBN l'tlr Drlvt. C•1• .... c.i1t., ..,, _____ ,..,.. ____ _ 'UC!t:lll .... 'e ot.4:1A .rv-r:r:ml111o!\ ft ~ """"""' fHC:rlbtd it.I" 111 shoppers and sto~ 1emptoyes large cars wdill be closed for said the ~y clolittl of : .. tt;" .::''~,1~"':;"1:t''t~:i,.::~ iu'~~fo•. T!o8::oW~~. , , two weeks urlng converaton plants in Detroit and Orlvt. C.t• M .... '"'"·• '""" Ill aTAT•olfcAu•o• .. 1A•o• were recovered 't'l~fu holtrs to small car p 1 0 d u c .t 1 0 n , Belvedere, 'Ill., would cut to~ :.:.. '"'"'*' ... ..,.,., for THI co~':.'I.:;:ao•AN•• of t be fire ~Clay, and Chrysler spokesmen said. scheduled poduotion by 8,200 c•t• ""'' 1"1111t11111 CMW'll•MI-11 ••••t• 0, EVA KI RSTIH, O.C.•*· another body was 1..i.d today, '"""-·sler also said four large autos. A _,,._~ ol """ ,Orivt. Cotll Mffl;, C•llf., fef NOTIC£ IS HEllEIY GIVEN to ""' r:-r -..,. ... 7 ..... l.l,Jll~ permt.._ to ,....,. ~ MKrl'*I rNtlt.t• of ttMI 111ove 111mtd dtcedlot Officials said 70 otlthose killed small car assembly plants 14 000 small cars will result 111 t11t Mtlll011 (M«IM Vltw '"'"'' ""' 111 l>tflOllJ ~vino c111m1 1t1lllrt ! -·r~ would be closed three days ,..:._, ~-shutdo of pl •· •nd loi:•t9d it um w. lttll st., (ott• ~Mkl dee.cl"'' ••• rtqulrtd ta fllt were femal s 28 I uuu1 ll~ wn.s anl.O Mt-M, C•llf .. "'"' ftl ta I ' ll., t w1t11 th• MCn.,,., wudllr•. II\ e • · were .ma es . to allow a balancing of parts in Detroit and Hamtramck, c:tt:>'~ •:111 ~.,:;::,. 1; offlc. at ti. ci.r1c. ot 1t11 ·~ and two bodies ~re burned supplies with the newly con-Mich.; Windsor, Ont., and St . ..-.1, Dtlvt. coe'9 MtNi, c1111 .. for f:~~':',;. or ..:e::::.'411to~ ~ beyond recogru'tlo" 1 verted plan!. Lo .. 1a ptf'mlt•IOll to rehfll ~ fffcrltltd ..,..1,,,. 11 "'°° ci-·• °''"'· au11t ... ~. . In tilt ilefltlell .IVlft ,..i'lll Ind loC:ttld :Nol. NtwWt INCi!, :;hk111 11 tlli Pl•t• e 'Bebe's' G~t? Once the changeo~ of the •' 120D v1c1or1• 11 .. C..t• Mnt. c•111 .. °' tiutlM•• of ,,.,. 11nc1tn1illld 1,. 111 7 ABOu'r Jt,teO Ch r y s 1 e r Newark plant is completed, "::" .::.!: 1 Un. .... •·1W6. for :::~~1~~11 '~ ttlf,..:~!1'••:; MIAMI Fl (A .J) A hourly workers wUl Ile af-smaller cars will make up Cott• M111 l"laMllll c.nmlitl-. n .,.. flnt JIVtlll(•tltn If thl• nttlce. • a. Y. -fected by the ~-•·y shut· 55 t o1· Chrysl , auto 1111r 0r1w. cwe Met1.. c111t., for 09.., H""'"'"' ,, 1m k f the I -~ percen er s permlMllfl " ,__ prOMffY e..crltlild "'*' l. DelllitY Cayn n--· baa ' Anoth 5 100 ill be laid of • •oc;•ttll •I IMO l"•loll•tlM ... .,. .. c .. ,. ot "" ...... NI~ dtcldt11t spo esman or EB s-downs, ·spokesmen s a i d . production compared wttb 46 111 .,., '*'"°" ''"'"'t• , ... , .,.. E1e1t111r1i " IM w111 e PAUii. 'l er • w f percent now, the spokesmen ,..., Clllf .. fl'Otll Jtl to 16 R. IM&PUteM "· IUM••· •••• that President _NIXM , nee had dlll'iQg conversion of the said '· ••-'llltN"" 11" •• ,..,, flllr _. ,._ Dl1Yfro "" * T f' " N k ' CO.ti M... '"Mllll CW!lmlufon. JJ • ....,. IMcll, CA ,,... a $100,000.certlficat' Of deposit ll'Ifl s ewar , Del., assembly Meanwhile, GM President F11r Drive. cost• """"· c:111t., for tn•t .,..,,,. ~ they said. / his f1ml doesn't foresee any 1ac:1ttd 11 '" s-t ••· cott• "'"'· """"""""', ,. n. JO. 1tn ,.,..n in the bank owned~iend plant to small.car production, ~w~ C.Ole said Thursday ~":~°" ,..:~1C::'°r'S.:.~...:f'~ •=.: ~X::·caut Dally ,11ot. C. G. "Bebe" R, ·-, lhe r--ral Motors sald last " I eel cant., fnlnl Rl 111 1 •· ' _c;c_;,;_c,:'_.c.'..c.c:.c.---'-'--....s uql': subetanual work orce r UC-10. ll•MM l"ltl .... Mt. l·JWI. tor•~ Miami Herald said ay. week it would close 16 tion in 1974 although 8uto C•1• Mitt '''""'"' commlllkln. 17 PUBLIC NOTICE The reported diJc:. e by assembly plants tbe third industry sal~ probaNy wUl ~1,=."'io ~r!. :,..,c~1=:1 __________ _ Thomas Wakefield, bank vice week d December to cut pro-drop 10 percent from 1973'• ~ "l'oc.f:1t1:;' ~11=• ,.~~ k=~ "1f/Jl~'1:.:::i:::1 hairm duction by 79,000 large autos. reoord level of 11.8 million C•I• Miii, C:.llf.. "°"' •.t ,. I .. Tlll folloWllll pfttOll 11 •111 IWllMU c an, came at day after The declslon was forced by domestic and forelgn cars. "'· ••· Richard Gerstein, Dade r-·n· 11• ..... p .......... ••'1>2'1 "' • DIVO• co. ,011,.llHlll. '°' w. ~ CO.I• Miii PllMllll Cllt'llmltll911, ,, ()ejti11f#onl, N""port 9Md1. C.llf. t2fQ ty stale attorney, revealed he 11'1' Drlw. Cott• MIN. c.ut.. • wnu•"' o. V'ltl. • w. oe:.1n1r1111, R d r:mtltiort Ill rtlE-,,..,ty 4"cr\Md tMwp1rt ldth. C1llf .,,..1 bad subpoenaed the bank for e Rebels Capture .. """M (MM" ... , k""" "" ""'"' " .......... by " an ~-'t b d ~Uf.~ R~1:~•1 t:.·• c:1111 MIN. tlllll'll4vll y reco1UD l a on trust it....... "'""._ Me. • .,,... ,_ wnn1"' o. v ... 1 a _..,.. or sav; •• L oertifl· Cotta MIN ,11n111111 c-iu1on. n flllt '''"'"""' ••• fllld wnti ti.. ._....., ""' -f' F1lr Dtlvt, C11tll Miii, C•llt.. tw CC'VMY Cltrtl ilf <>r•• C-11Y °" cales held b yNixon and nlne p . . l c . l rnrtnl11lon IO ftlOM ,,.,.,.., ~-= .............. s. 1m Othe-. rovincia ·apita "'1i~1.~i'!s~1 (~~~II~ •I 'intlJMd Ortllfl C~t Dilly"= '" to I 6. •• NC111Mlb91° f, 16. :fl, )t, lf1S Slfll.n e Vote on Ford PHNOM PENH (UPI) - WASHINGTON (UPI) Communist rebels staging a Congressional conflhnation of l\ll'I)ll1se wet season attack una House Republican Le a d e~er cover of a heavy rocket Gerald R. Ford tq be vice itnd mortar bomlge todoy cap- presldenl comes up for final tured a provbx:lal capital 10 approval next Thursday miles fn>m ~ Penh and But the same coosti~Uonal ~=~li::ern- issue raised in the Senate · about the nomination of Sen. C a m b od1an government William B. Same to be at· figures showed dose tn 500 torney general could come up persms were missing ~ on the House floor when Ford the fall of V~ Suor, capital is vQted on. of the provmce ~ the same WASHINGTON (UPI' - The "national aecurity'' ma~ ter President Nixon wants barred from current br vestigations involves covert operations againat the Soviet Unlon, poeaibly I n c,I u d I n g "bugging" ol Soviet Party Leader Leonid Brezhnev, it \Vas reported 'lbtndly. The Sc:ripps..Howard News Service said disclosure of the operation "ulUmall!ly Wlluld endanger the IUe ol a U.S: ln- telHgence source close to the highelt Ruaalao o f fl c I a I circles." eFundLlmlts WASHlNGTON (AP) Democratic congresslona I leaders pushed today for passage of a compromlle plan for public financing o f presidential ca m p a i g n s , despite threats that President Nixon Wlluld veto the propolal. The campaign flnanclni pro. vision, tacked on to a bill to increue the national debt limit, would cover b o th general and primary prdldeo- tial campaigns. llnvelllng name. "The Conmutlats t r i e d before In the dry ......, to take Vlhear &JO< and never sreoeedecl, •• Col. Am Rong, the ClmJ>cvllan hlgb c:ommand llPOI:-aid. "'lllla time they -the wa season and we could not move in <l.lr' relnforcemeDs." Field reports estimated the O>rnnuti!t force at 1,500. Am Rong said the government garrison numbered lets than 350 men. The town had been under Communist attack for the past three mouths and had only eboljl 300 clvtlions lelt of ita original population of l,000. The retreetlng column· of 350 soldiers and 300 civilians was amho9hed a mile iouth of the capita! and by mtd-aftemoon only 130 soldiere and 20 clvililllS bad readied tafety and 50 of those ..... wounded. Government forces started a counter.attack on Vlhear suor immediately 1 bombing the town ln contJnuoua oorties of converted Tiii tninlng planes. They were trying to knock out l~ guns ·left behind by the relretlllng aovemment forces , - The capture ol Vihear SUor PUBUC NOTICE '"· ..... ''"""' ".. •·1Ml· "' -'--Cotta Miii Pt111111no c-1111.... 11 ~ not tnei8:n Ute Oxnmwtlst F11r Or1111. Co5t• MHt;, e111t.. "" rebels now have an OpeD toad: frr~-=lt~ ":~A.pr.a:'1"nt=~l------M-ll-l----- to p h n 0 m Penh, military $choal ) '°l H1rnllttll St .. Cotti """'· IUP•••OI: cou•T OP CALIPOtUUA, sources saJd, The <:;ambodiaD 9~'·•=-Jl21"~~ ·-•·7WI. t.t CDU~ ~ M~os1:,:•L.IS government of president Lon Cott• M... Pl1M1111 c'"'"'h.ie11, n ..... ~ c ... ..,.. Nol has at leut five other ~=-· ._c-=.,. ~'-"'•· :: CASI ~:=. c •111' outposts d. battalklo --i. In tM ,.mlon IWll191t k!M*) .:-;s:...,. "'91"'""'= TM• PIRllTOHI flRI • •-men ~~ ...... St .. Cotti MIU, c.llf,, """' •1 l'9 •UllER COMl"ANY fttl THI DAYTON -WU -or llKll'e utl\Ween I • tl. T1•1 .. •u•••• COM,AN't Vollhearthe M~ andruthe eostPlmomblnk C~• ··= ~~,.. •c-om:;r=.;, ';; H: .. ;:: G~ .• Eo·i.:.:·z:v~wsc.i ~ong ver. 1111r 0r1...... C•t• Mtu, c1n,.. ,., lllroull'I x !._~ is on the river's west r:'"r:'°" "''l'ii;u;1~e1:=:t1:: tMi~· ~ ~"Ji."' ,:!~:\,~om.;!:~~ VCUlA. Sc:too.ll IOU Vlctorl1 5t,, Clltt Mtll, Y9"· II YW wlM to -.no tllll ._ult, Ctlll., from Ml to lt2 to I a •. 'f'W mwt fllt lll 11'111 c_.t • wrlll"" Astronauts Begin Third Ii. ·-hi• .... •·fW'. for ,..._,.. In l"lll"Oftlt to flMI carnpl1llll c:11111 MtM 11"1111111111 c.nmlttlClll, n lot • wrltltfl fllf' or11 ,....,... 11 • f"elr Orlvt, C111t1 #Ml, C1llf., for Jlllltd Cwrtl wllllll'I JD feYt •flt!" ptrflllttloit to ,..,.. ,,.,...., dllct .... IN• --• 11 WWI an YoU· In ttMI ..,.lion ,,...._. lltnwnttrt (ll!Mnlt"' YWr ... 1111 W'I" bl lll'llertld Sc:lllOll )Oil ,.,.,._ Aw.. t•• Ml.., M .... lcltlon Wr "" "91ntlltti •rd Clllf,. from lltt to I 6 •· ttle .,,.-_., Mtw ·• ~ ,..111•1 )1. ...... ........ .... .,,,.., for yw fir .. .....,. Of .... fllfll' c.i• MeM ,11M1119 commlllllol\. n ,,_,..,.. tft 1'11 CMl!lf•lftl. 11-'r Drlvt. c-t• MMe. c.ltf.. f1W tt ¥W ...,. • .... * N'l4ct ftf Ptmlltt/111 IO r..,.. ,,..,,, ...,_.. .. ......, M ... ......,, fW ...... lfi "" •l"Olt (Hl'W 1"'-""'lf'Y .. M '""""' • _, ,_, ......... S W k klltOll CiJ E. lttti St.. c.tll Miil. H •• .., M 11111 • .... Pace ee Clttforr111, ,,_ ltl • I & 1:. O.ltll Jlllf t. 1m 11. ·--.. ........ ... CU.OINC! E, CAlll.L. Ctlli MIU fl'l•llfllllt C9IMllMlan. 11 C*'t lll1lr C>o'lvt, COlll M119, Clllf., tor IY •lllbtrt Tlblrtit. SPACE CENTER, Houston~..:'~\!''°; "'°'*"' -..:t1Mlll 1s1 \.I°"""" (AP) -As they begin their :::.._.,, MU Twtl~ == l,..'-:-:z. NAtVIY M. ft~ third week in ... ~ today e1111 .• from tl2 i. 11. •· ..., ""'*'9 •••••~,...Ult , .._..... • If. I* ·~ HM1M ... t•·n. "" .......... C ......... MM Skylab 3 1 astronauts are ad· '"" tor 1t11111 · 1t~tM111. 115 c1t.r111e 111 csm ...- juaUng well to their weigbtleu ~!" =~~. ~· .~~~nt':" ~k~"'r.: "'=3: ~ ct11t DlllY Piiat world after some early set-• c1 lOl'lt. loclfld ,, 1n ca1w111e "._,,,...,. '' , .. t1. '°· 1tn :sm.n bac'-St., Cotti Miii, Ctlll. ••· :ao. '-•• ...-"""" ... n.,. PUllJC NOrICI However Mia:aion Control .... 1w J",,.,. c. F••""'1Y· m •11t'-'-' SI,. Cotti Mtll, CMlt., fer l*'m&itlM<l-----------teports their adjustment ls tor • v1r11rict tv rldllc• ptrtr.1111 ~ 1 ''" taking sllgbUy longer than the =..tfllC~~lflr: r;:'""~"' .~.~ ,.,;:.~ "!~!!~• first two Skylab crews. Of· cm. Mffl, C1lltoml1. ITAH OI" CAL.I-MIA • ficlals blame this on a heavy .:!,11~ 1 "c~,1,:"!l:~ c:: nt• cou,.::L;:, work load assigned the crew •!'Id to ,._.., 1f11t11 s (SS UONt.Ml Ill•• " H••MA.N •OL.LA •• ,,.IN, eorly In the -•-•-n. of lht COlll MtM Mllll/clpfll C:OOI. •Ito kl'IOWlt " NC•MAN •• tllFlllN, llWNUU :ZZ. .....-C NM""9 to ~IW IM lltl --• H ••• Oltlllllll.. , 1be worF.dk loadarcl G~~ :;"~~=~ =.: ~OJ!~E of11~E.-=.Y ,:!~I~,:..= astronaut w • 01~ '"*"'"" b¥ "" tott1 ,..,,... c_,_..., lfllt •II ,.,_, 11W1111 d~ '"'.,.' to eay "Our first seven or •lldWolllfl*ll Attnc)' •• '""'1'111: w flMI MN ••1111 '"' recwiPllf io fl .. , • 11\t C1llftft1l1 1E!Wlr-.t11 0..tllty M"I tt.m, Wttll "-t llttalll'Y :£• I• eight days up here were not ., 1m •1'1111 "" c11Y ot cost• ,.,,..., ..,. .n1c1 ot ,... c11r11: of '"°'" somelhing I wou1d want to Prt!C*lll'" 1w 111 • •~tltl'111 "'""" eowt. "' '' ,,_t , wttn tl'llrlOf. trll """""ry -oi.r1, tt thl _,,.. go through again." n. o.n.i-11 1"1111 All'ltl'llllrnt111 7M4 •tl9nld 11 1111' offlc• or '""' .,ttomtY .. ~"O ,......,CIPl'Ml'll a1 111 Im, Cer1W I . flMtft, Haw1rd ~ IC1t91 U!9'D'ln'9 ~eonu .. a.~CE pl-'ttlm f*:lllllq111 ff IM OIMtll •I'd llr111tl• •· Smith, 111111 Ctll1 $1., ·~ ~DR&"VP.l"flAI.. l"llR. &Ultt 10t. 5•11 FlnlltlGo. Ctll"""'. ""11klll today on a tough schedule ~'ra1'r::' .=tt..,:;.,IM .. "':;; :: ': ".:'+:. ":!t7111& "; v;i:'!':,= shotvFUgh't thOlreyecto'rerg;!~rl .. ~{~ :_: :-: :1r"=.":' E:t:":: ~ .. :#. ==--ic::: =. :f: ,.'K:.1111 , ...u. J.Anfllt C.Ufclrft!L Dtl>ld ""''"""'' 6, ltn reported 'lbunday '"'l'1ey're H. J, WOOD. Qll/l'INll MAkY KATHl:Y'4 "''FIN ""' ~· B' .,,_. Clflll MliM ,llMl!ll Cltnfllhlllll NATH,\N KATll ~ ~ 1.u..ii:;. I ,_ Wllll""' L °"""' ._...,., •ll'ICIMrl ot fllt ~ a ma oft me." "'*'=-on:. ~o.iiy ,11.,., ••~t~:::' t .Ul'J'T.....,_ N41~ », Jm ,..,_,, llOWAllO M. KATll ... PttMtell a . IMITM ,,. , ... 11 .. ""' -PUBUC N001CE t• ,_,1111 tillr. ,,,. 1 -------~-----IA,,.,..,. "' ........ NOTIC• OP MA•SNAL'I $All PW!l.r.t Orll!ll CatJI DlllY Plitt, WEST£1tN IOAllO O,. ADJUSTl•S, N111ll11btt f, 16. U. •• lt1J SOf.1) INC .•• C1Utoml1 c:croor1non, ,lllllllfl yt, ~VIN l . ,!TEltlON, Otflfldlnl, PUBUC N011CE N" tM 15'. """""""' Oltl! 1•1:t.1). , --~~-------ly 'llrtYI of ... nlCWlkilt .... o.11-0c!Obtf ti, ttn. ~ me l!Wflld ... Cwrt, l"ICTrTtOUI IUll .. 111 loll ... ,..... .1\ICllNI Otttrtct, Celoitlfy MAM• ITATIMl .. T of lat ""'911ft, 111tt .. CtllfWlll•t Tiii ""'*'"' ........ tot111 tMI .... "'*" • ,.,,........ ....., ... ...,,., " •1 WESTlltH IOA•D OJI ADJUITlll, PO.MULA UAIOt. DS SeiOllll Ln,. INC .. I C1ll"""9 twJiJllMtM .. I.... ~I .... di, C.llforftll '* mlftt O"ldltlr W ...... , MAIYIN "Ir · llllMf, at se.eun u,., l,. l"ETllUOfr' n I..,,..,_......,,.... ~IW'Mrt ll.cll.iCnlli.t1111 ftMO. lllf • Ml hliflc:il fl $1.D ... tciWlf 11 ...... !., ........ I ~ lly an ... di.It M "9111 IVClfl'tllllt In fl'lt alt .,...._. of 11\t I.MCI If MW ftetlltltfl, I \#lctir I . lll•MI' lllvt 1W1W UfOiii •ti flll rlpt, ti"' Thi• .tl.t~ Wit ltlld Witt\ !M ltld tfltlfftt .t '°'" I""""" ...., Cwntv' C*ll ilf °'""" C-IY tn 111 1111 ~ I• t111t bulttr ., 0r.,.., Ht•MlllW .. 1m , ..... If C411fol'MI. "'°"" .. tttll'l'>i: ... ,,.., l.lf 4$,-.Mek 1, TrHt WI. holl N:=::'a.°":" CO.ti 0.llY l"llcll, iJ, ...... ,_ 11'1111 Al .. MIKftl,_. Im lflCI 0.C.....W 7, 14 MIPI al. Ottlltl Cturtty. COlrlmOl'llY -mt-JJ ~ H ,,. SIKIM L.IM, $911 c~.~·· PlJIIUC NOTICE "OTIC:I II Nlll•Y Gr/SN 11111 lll PtifW, ttlllMIW 11, 1tn. 9f 11•11!----------- a'Cltetl . A. M. fl ,..,,,.,.... tMrti.tl't PtcTITfOUI IVllMhl Offla. "1CI C:rt!Wfl. Y'!lil!" fllfttt...,., llAMI ITATIM•llT City fA UllN Ntftlll, Ctlifl!Y If Orlflllt, TM tolll'lll'lf!I ,..._, dol ~ 11119 11 C:1N~. I wlll Mii ti '"''' M1Mtt •1 •t1 Ill ~ fo fl!I ......., _,...,, fW ~ -ANTIQUES • i:r..:~ 11:-r.: ~~~i:' .:: I= ~llW1 1t1...!~!i11. ::.i AMII Avt., If ""!!' I..,,_,. In IN ....... Oii,... o.'MI •uc!IM ''· 1"1rtntr, Mlel18iM ,,..em, • M !MCI! llltrlOf ... atlt SI,, tMI l'Mro. CllN "'11 • mtr M ~ry JI 1tfltfY &114 Mtftla liMfY llllWlll i u c 11 1 ~·~ wltfl tccrlllf lltlMlt 11Mi 1'1tt11tr. * -s1.. k11 .._;,;. --. c .. 1f,fl4lt :r..lef,N~"•mlll~tn.CM!tY ~w It CMlucttd ~ • Rml,_ l 0 '1i""l'f1.K fltON, ,..,.. M. I. lw1'1111 , Otlftll ~ Tiii• 1111111101 W.• tti. W'llll tfll .....J~t.Mltlll fl, ffllllr, D.,iy C.-inf'Y Clerlt ... Orlfllt Cluftly °"' ..... .t =-No-*lr .. 1'11 ., ........ .....__ ...,. • M.lttl'IM or.,.. eo..1 o.1"' ":-. Mlffl. t....,... •• ... .,..., r. 1'-o. ao, 1m ,_..~ lllWll-...i at...,. C4lllt ·Dtll't """' ' ~&vlrnttr • .-.. ct,,.., 1. ••· __ .,0 '--1. 1m n -n .,..,..,. ~~··0. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy apd l()D, Robert F, Kennedy, Jr.:i look at muril of her late husband' during opening ceremonies of the Robert Y . Kennedy !cbool In Mah· haltan. The school is for emotionally and socially maladjusted boys. ~ . -.. T " • "' " '" • lh ~-" • '" " ... n .... w. ~·· •• "" M , .. • • ON INC .. .. , "'"' n ,.,., ... Fli'IN, .... "" "· -I Ln. .... .. "' ... " "' ·-1'11111, '· , .. )51'f.1J -• ..... ·-· I'll". ..... ....... " "" " M ,_ "'"' -n - 1 '· ..... ,. ' .\ . ' • . ,. ,. .. ' • .. • .. ,. . ' ,. • ' -....... .·~ • -1 · •• b • J • • Friday, NOVfmber JO, 1q73 DAIL V PILOT 25 Fre n eh Sweetie T u rns o n s~ri OVER THE COUNTER By TOM BARLEY CM ... o.Mf '"" tltft My 1111Wer tO the ,..rgy crisis is 1 ft.pouhd 1wutheart lrom Paris, llult Cll6t me !200 -which llhould 9ooo be back · Jn my pocket via her ZOO roliel to the pJklo C0'*111lption rate. SHE'S 111E Sole• 5,000 and the San Die8o dealer who oold me this br!ihl red belle from Gay Paroe can't cs Into Qr. 1ange <Jaunty fast , enough to meet the orders that have lltemmed l?1lm my purchaae alone. · The Solex IS an aslooishincly Ugbt bicycle that, W!Ulte any other bike I've ever ridden, responds and perloi;ns like a true. pedaled bike• under any rood and otreet oonditlqns. Comes the tlme ooe1s aged . . leg muscles sUJfen up (like arter four.fifths of a mile ln th.ls writer's case) and you kick on the power. THAT'S WHEN this gutsy little French Import really sho.wa you her paces. All )Oil oo is raise the starting lever on t h e handlebars, give her a good pe$1 or two to set your motor's starting rate and the tough little en g l n e im- mediately ""'JlOllds. She will theh give you pretty close to 25 miles an hour on her one gear and the chances are in nnelghbofhood traffic that you'll want to put the bit In her reeth via the threttfo near your right hand. ~ • -• FREEWAY DRIVJNG is Bid Awar_J .:._'9 'out, of course, but I've given . uea, my Solex a thorough grilling , 1 ~.' , on. all type.s of neighborhood C t F • ' ·•"-·• · streets and roads and found oas irm . her solid. safe and extremely ' 1• -, , easy to hand1e. r n t· e 111 gen I -Memorr II Is, obviously, idea I Systems, InC., of NeiPQr& 'J transI,>Ortatioo for the student' Beach, manufacturer~Of 'Jhlhl-.,,an'd' ·youngsters are im- dlsk memory systems lor-:' mediately attracted to the ·m In I· m le ro com pJ(t ~· peppy and pretl}'litlle bike. peripheral appllcatlon1 has an--BUt Jerdme ..,MurTay, Solei' nounced the award 41. a "$1.3 man In San Diego, tella me m I 111 on contract "f r o m that workers ~ho are willing lnlernalienal Computer 'Equip-to !91:fici lreeway drlvin( ha.-men~ Inc., San Fran¢sco tak~. · to the Solex and are based coliun\llicaUoos flrm. ' deligl)ted with the machine's make the scene Primafy elemenl.$·.1of the. perf~mance. equipment supplied lo ICE '!Ill be the disk memory 'syitems HER GAS TANK, mounted and relevant interfa~. ac-above the (root wheel, will cerdin( to KjeU Hovlk, vice hnld a gallon of regular president of mark~g. for gasoline. lt is necessary to Intelllge·nt Memory Systems. add a cag[ul or two of oil Sundays in the •·Qli1iijll1il '-• lllUNllUWll • 'TheCifl' ~~;~11LIST $17850 ONLY$109. .!OVNDF.SIGN's Model 4157 FM/AM Stereo Multiplex Rectivtr puu out 40 waus power ind 11 tolid stale wit .. reatims round on real expenliYe recrivtrL BSR 4800 Autorn11tc Tunuabk compkte wit•' hue, dut ctWer IAd •eno cutridft. A pair or JiM IOUndln&.SRL hto'O-WI)' ~ JVC Clli'iSiifiQS . '199. Close-out MFG'S LIST $32985;oNLY JVC 5501 -l6 w1tt RMS AM/FM Sttr.o Receiftt, black~t dlal with w1b11n c1bhtct, RSRlftOAX Avlonuitk RtoOfd C1tmJer wllh but, d111t "°"et end Shure m1ptlic cmfl'idae, ebo two SOUND RESEARCIC LAB S8 rwo-wey Spnk~~ M-•1 111 ... .._..., .._ '°"IWICll ,,., ---..... ,,..,. .. ____ ,_ ____ , ......... Mo. ..... VIII_,....._ llt.1711 CQftA _,,, .......... (Nt MNUt Wll1WDOOt ,_,. ..... Aw..,,,_ I ~v..,... .. ..._,._. • ' •' • to the gas whenever you reOll lhe tank. She won my heart in anotht':r field by providing me with one of the most readable brochures I've ever seen issued by any car or bike manufacturer. A! a mechanic, thJs writer would make a good ballet dancer but I quickly learned the secrets oJ Pie Solex' un- complicated' innards via some excellent descriptive literature. INCLUDED IN the 1250 "°"t is a splendid little tooJ. kit which is conveniently slotted ----- --- ------... -~ •come• the tftlU!! one'• age" le9 mu•eles stiffen up ••• atld tfOll kick on the power.' underneath the seat and a sturdy bicycle pump wblch I used on another ibke and found to be equally depen- dable. My Solex has become the darling of my teen-aged daughters who, in their turn, have found that their populari- ty has soared among • local set which seems detamined to fill the Frefich firrn' order books. So.lex dealer Mu r r a y predicts that his Orange Coun- ty dealership will . be active before lhe end of the year. "FulJ service facilities will be provided and we stand finnly behind every machine we sell," he said. Dfilh l'llol St.ti l'Mto NEIGHBOR TRIES OUT FUE'L·SAVING MACHI NE Claudia Murray, 14, Says Paris Bike's a Gas S~opping for Do111e~ Kick the Baseboard--l nflatio11's Here By SYLVIA . PORTER If you're building a house in this period, you're iii a ·double squeeze: pinched by light and cosUy · mortgage money on one side and by rapidly climbing prices of con- struction and materials on the other.· If you're buying a house, you're swallowing a double dose of inflation : First paying an inflated price for the house and then financing i~ at an inflated rate. What's more, the . prospect money may remain tig~t and expen- sive and housing costs may contin- ue to soar - ' even though our economy • ~ will ~t best a: be in a s1ow-to•T•• down and well may be in an actual downturn , brought about in part by shortages of energy. For yoo, the homebuyer or builder, it could be the worst of a)l possible worlds : inflation in a recession. Nevertheless, millions o~you haven't any acceptable alternative to buying o r building, for ~ou must provide this type of shelter for your family. Or millions of. you may be at a point in your life where you are eager to go ahead and make this big- gest single )nvestment of your lifetime. Or there simply may be no other appropriate form of shelter available in your area. sides, top to bottom. Check whether house has storms, screens installed. C b e c k number, location of hose con- nections, and w h e t h e r waterproof, grounded electric outlets 1are handy near patio , sundecK, porch. -Inslde. Layout is most important. Kitchen and living room , ideally should have southern exposure to get plen- ty of Stmlight. Note placement or wiQdows, doors, etc,, to make sure your furniture wID fit. Empty rooms can appear decep.tlvely large ; measure. -Kitchen. Probably most important and expensive single room. Check placement of stove, refrigeralor, sink and counters for efficiency. Ask whicb ' appliances come with house, how old they are. -Uvlng room. Check loca- tion of nearby coat clo.set. L~ M . Bofld Dimensiom to see if furniture win fit. In dining room, check proliJnlty to kitchen; wall outlets ... -BatllfOoms. Figure one bathroom for every two to three people. Check for leaks, test for adequate w a t e r pressure . -Bedrooms. Should be isolated from main living areas. Oleck for ceiling light fixtures. Small windows high on wall can be dangeroll.! for very yOtmg or oJd in 1 case of fJ.re. • -·-118'/olr"<Onclitlonlai. Check whether operable, economical. 'Ask to see bills 1 I frem previous wlnler/spmmer, . MUTUAL FUNDS Check age, type of heatin( syslem. A·I inallaUoo a must . .., _________________ _ Yeu ··n get •••· new guide ""' v.n; -F••· eryt Lv 14.11 u.n • ...., ,.... •.a •.a scuoo1• 11DS: """ u113 ....,.,. 11 a 1111 Ill' Sp ll'K'" •J.21 1 ... JI' G•JI 1.67 t.u 1n1r Inv ''·" 14,,. free. Write State Fann Jnsur-111111 .,... nktd ,,,. 3rd t•11t •.• 10.'M _,.,."' .-. u.n u.n Balafl( 1 .... ,...., CH llfl ~I Ea.E ...... l.11 2.IJ Miii VIII I.JI 7.lf Com t .61 t .67 aoce, 1 State Farm Plaza, B-2, fWlfl "..-... t1 !.'91• Gr 1.12 1.10 J"-" :Mt 1 . .0 1.21 SDK11 u .w2'·'° Bl-'·"'~ ID 61701 .. MAIO r11t. OllOUI' SIC· .JMtiltn tJ.3'tt..llo SIA•D Gltl': ~-· • ... --. 1'. "1l •• f ... S.Ji klYIT'OMI: ACI Gw 4.0lo 4.45 -IN All "' ,.. 1:.. , ,. Cwt 11 11.tS 1•.c Ad inc J.41 2.1• .w.lwr •.17 ,_., Com Stk 10.n 11 :11 CUit 12 lt.W 21.U All lllS '·" l.U AeNH 1411!3Glll,Am ,. '"' f:I M l .lS '·"Cm~'-'''·'° MN '" ,,:,.,,:,5 ~"' llld 1t:1. ":" •I IC! •.n ,_,, Inc: Fat S.1' '-31 ..,..,. 1.U LU G111n1 n son 5G I 1(1 S.51 6.10 Sbcl UY '-'S ,_. Ma N 4" , ... MAMLTOM G111': Yll 51 J0,$.1 tt.SI saCUlllTY ,DS: .......... 11:• 11.at ,111111 3 ... ,·.2s •1 E 10.at 11.~ f.1111111 3.30 J.61 .... ..... NI ilAa II. Gr.Ill s.• •. .n Cwt J,U 1.a 1_, 4.11 6.11 "' 4.SI 'ts l11tom 6 °' 6.U (\Ill 3.74 4-11 u"'' F 6.tllo 6.M Betty Gr able Help ed Sinatra Alfi r01 t.JJ tMf liertwtl t:" '·" A&loli. •.It 4.61 llU:CTaD ,OS: 1 1.Sl t.32 Hirt L\' 1.ot 1.ot PIMMI J.Jl J.W Am $llr 1..l1 1.31 Atft _,, 4.40 4.91 Ht*t J,00 1.U IC11kkr • S.'3 6.M 0.. FO l .ll I.SJ Xl'tlUS .... s.•• ,.,ICnkrGtl'I 6.701.M SttfVn11.ll1LJI •UllOS• Httftte 1 Sl 1 .. Ll'llll'IWt; 4AS 7.0S i 10.ll 11.2J C.W • 6M 141 HDt-11'2111.'3 ~ Fd 4,tt 4.tt ry F 11.0S 13.10 ,_ Loi 1:1s l"""'I Cp ,:a .:., L • OltDUI': ••1 "LD 0111' : tlWtlfft IO.Sl 1.n I"" or '-14 1.11 Ltdt' 14,U ,... J,Sll J,W s-1 1 °' 1 :as 1111; lllAm n .111a..• 11'1 s.n '-°' S.Sl "°' f6Kk .: .. 1'.M JPld FAm J.• 1.'7 11'<1'1 12,511t.7S N ,._., f.25 An! Grt11 J.H J,7! 1"""" 1.2' I.• UN 1111¥ 7,111 .. ,, ....., 1A t.ot 1'#ft IMlll 4.41 J,Oil Ill lll'IHt 11,15 lu:I t=..'f 4.Jt ... m L 6.1J '-70 Am l11<nl '-fl 4.tll '""'"' G JCJ.tt J,tt IAYLIS Fil ._. 7·'° Nfl '*" 1.n I.Cl l1tY CO A 12.M lUll : AlllOfil l'DI: An1N1 Of' 2.0J 2,tl '"' G411c1 ._,. 6,1' C. D¥ 12.6011.60 ~t O,t1 tt.S7 A ... 04011 tn• llldlt 2.«I ••• ...._, U,14 1•.14 llltOm 1'-• 1U0 OllOUll· Ill• &os 10.30 II.It LOflO A•a : '"""''' t.ot 0 ... The I.ate Betty Grable claimed she was the bright ~i.1 • J.11 4.14 1•v1sT Attll•t 6.21 •.11 S11 DeWI '·" 1.11· Fllll tltY J.OS 1.n CDUNllL Am lul 2.74 2 ... Sloe FG •• 61 l .14" citizen who saw to it that Fr~ Sinatra got his first big Grwt11 111 ,,. tilNfll •.n 1.St 81111 oeo '·" 10.41 SIGMA .-ufltDI: lnc:om .-,. 1 65 Clllll ,.., 1.u J.• Llill'ler11 t.11110.11 ~ s.nr •·• 1.• break. Afte~ Sinatra auditioned for trumpeter Harry Ywfltur 1: .. 1:,5 c.11 Sh s.21 5.,, L1,1111n 1,. ·~10.JJ 111... •.•s1o.n James l·n 1·~. Miss Grable -·d she told u--·. "Hire WI Kiii 11.Dl U.07 INYIST OllOUI': MAH, CO: '" '"' 1.11 1.• ~ _, • ....,.~;r Attroll J.4' 3.11 105 Gll1 '-OS ••• I~ 1.tll :·:: ~ntw J.Oil 7.M that skinny kid. He sings like Clark Gable makes Jove." M• " •.n 1-" :g~,:0 .t.J! tt Mt11 .-. 10:,. n:o1 sa 11~,C:, ,::fJ ,:::J MOUCNtTott · 111u111111 •.01 '·'° MAU I'~: so Ge11F 11.n n .ot ~-ti hereabeu'• toda weighs seven pounda ,. ,. .:. 4 67 Stock 1' ... 19.JCI •1' !O.I0 11.IO S-51 IJ'IY 6M 1.n 11n:: gen eman 1.11 Y ,-..,.,. • • n 7•32 s.1tt1 t . .o 10.u Mo it.ts 13,,. Sw '"'"' G s ... •.12 more than did his count ......... ..+ 50 yeara ....... studiM abow Mitt s:s1 .:ot v1r P•y 1.11 '·" 11110 12.7611.•5 Sovr 111 10.1f11,n · -.,....~ _.. q kl 4.11 •A'"'"' 1tt1 '·'' ~.-. MFD n.1t u.n !iotttr• •.oo 4.a that. But it's 'not because the old boy •LC Gll'I 10.44 U.-41 I ' I: • MCO 13.21 u .so SIP 1110 .. ,. t" ASSUMING You are among •• I . On the e I .. .,"'., Grlrltl , ......... '" ,... ,,, .. 1.11 ,,A,._ ... 0 .. ; nOw pu..., away more ca ones. ,_.. ''°' '"'°"' 4.IM ,_,n Mttlltr '·'' •.s1 Com Fd 4.Sl ·" these millio1U11 bow can you coolray. This latterday lack of ex-~ r:i .t:°'· ,;: l~l ~ 1i:-H H'.i;. ~.., ~ 1::~~ 1!:= ~=~ !:I ·: Protect yo~lf against ex-er•••• 15• blamed. &M«111 ~· ,, .. 1s111 Frid 21.St 21.t• s8 Fa 11.1113.11 s1 Fr Gt" •..w 4.s. ........ lltn;tllr 3'57 3 'IO UTO. & ti ltlG ••• 7 •.a st Fr Int J·• I.SO pensive errors? What are the .._111 4:JJ 4'.n ttOWA•o: M•F Fa 1.n 1.11 S1•1• str _,, 1.J.11 lotl Fdn '·" t.a S.ln FG t.ll 10,20 MI F Gro J.tl 4.)0 ST••DIM• .-~: pitfalls, whri are they, how There are more chickens on earth •-3.os J..» Gwth ,. 11.1111." ""'°'"pt .. ~ 4 ... 11.m '"' 2 ... i.• ll'lllWl'I t.tl t .J1 ln<llll 6.01 •.S1 MllOr'l'I WI 1.U t.tl Auo Fd l.I~ 1.1J qm you discover them in than any other-sort of bird, IO it's not CALVI" '""DI: 5-U , 1.u 1.11 M<ll ~' 1s..011s.01 1,...._u 1~ 1.14 Im ? An n t '" II hecom -~·~ Sllll 11111 Fd n ... 11.to Sit-Fd 11.n n ... lilkill ''' 1.16 '-" OC••11 '-SI i .11 t e exce en way 1" likely they' e i::.&wa;l, ' c .. Fe1 21.au.n EDIE s. 11.ss11.H u,';n .~. t.a '~'" llOI l'Dlo: through a carefully thought-once there were more passenger pi-Dlw Stir 11).N J.SS Egret G1 n.» 12.2' a.ltnc 7.; 1 n c ~ \•., •.oo ~ ch k th he f NelMI t.Jl 10.20 Ellun Trt I"·'° . •. 8oJ'IG s .... s' .. t . .a out u:1ecklist whi you ta e a:eons on earth an an:y ot r sort o c~v F~: 1:::t lA:;~ ~~~ 1t!: 1l!: 01 ... 1e1n' 3:n 3:~ s~~o\ou;~·1• "-1. ''· with you when you go house-btd, and they 're now extinct. Never c.., ''"' 10.tt n.n F•1rt1c1 1.tS ._., ,.,.., SI• s,tJ 4.•1 c:;,...,, s-tt, .a b .. ~.... or •eep •-Ide you • 1 ll c"'t SM 1J.n ''-" Fm 8-1.u 1.u ""lfKOf'll •-• •·•1 '"'"'" I • ...,.... • ~ l:an ,e . c"""'",... fed 1tlb 1.• ,;., •" ._1, 4.11 s,,.,,11 .• ~--you are '-··"'"·""'""· 11 NIE"E '""": P101L1T'f' Gfwtfl ·-~ 4.•1 l~""' ~ Wln=ll 1~ "' Mlltd 10.ollOts OlllOUI'• aw ING LI'. Mwy F » An extiellent U.page set of ..., Fd •• ,. .. 11n11 •b '" '" E1111ttv "-2•~·'s SY11Cr• a If you're thinking about marrying your ptece, mister, '°"' st• 1:t1 1:,. c.11111 10:42 n:ti ~:'h lt~ ' ·= ~:""" G : J' guldellnel '.in worksheet form better ge to Pennsylvania. Understand that's the only state I'*'°' 1.•1 ,_,, eon1r• •.u ... Mt.A Mt •.•s. :1.1 Tr:1'r' •I: . ' has just been put together J11'"" 2-'3 '·10 cw ss.~ '·00 •·• ,,.."' CMt ''' ••s 1..-~ 11·11 ll that will allow 1·1 under the law "'""" 1·'1 '·1' °''1 •Jt ··· Wflh .:n 112 '°"' ~· ,· by S•·le Farm' ,. ___ .,......,. . · OrW1t1 4.11 J.tt Etw• •-~ ., ,, ,, ,,.,, ,,., • ·" i. .uaw _....,.. IMOm 4.76 1,3' E .. 111 .. :ti 1!.tf "' " " 1 ru· .2• Here are some lips I pulled j Yogurt will restore a balding man's hair. No, I don't s..,• ,'-',', ,'·'.,' ~~. /",·",.· •,i-:; ,... ';:t: :ff. ll:U ~= "" ~ ' ed Vl'lhlr ' ' '""'"' ' ... (lllM U 01 13 07 U ... IOM II • out of tbe checklist to Indicate Jtielieve that. But the Persians believ l~. For centuries i:s~3 ... : ,.., .-r,:: " 2f:~ it. ,1 1..,1, u:u 15:11 0 _,.,..: What you ..... lei waldt out •· .. JI the bride •-a teenager, her chances of being F1111 1os '·" .:• "'"""c1aL ~ '·" 1,11 1re1.t , ... llUUU J.11 ''°" Cp ~ ....... s.11 l'llOOllAMS: Neil Id U.Ot II.Cit ... 11 lllY for : , divorced nm 38 out of 100 ... Still find it fascinating that SllT'r 81 •'.•1 1.51 ''" o..,,. 4.ot '·" w111 1'-101 .. 10 Uri,.,.. E ~~--Se"'"" N t ·~• ~·-thr to ~ -11..iAI, SOK1 /J.fll "'" F111 1"' '·°" .... ffl'•MttM •o: W111N1 -•~...-._... 0 e cookbooks OUl4Ql leX IAIUQ ee one ... J"VI ..... ..,us Cl'lttl'l ,I'd '·" lf.'2 Fiii lllt J, .. J,60 0. Alm t.1110.•1 U.._f!IT•o whether other homes in the reasons, numerous 90Uls in Polynesia sleep nightly with CJli\ MtM 'DI: ve111 J.n tJt °' Fllll 6-" 1 ... ~"""~ nei ... borhood are of similar their heads toward the eut •.. Am asked how that -1-~ ~ft l~ ~f::,v• '°·111 " 11 o"°c r;:_ ::~,~~ c.m.,. '·" 6'' ~u Sc:IWI P: J.Q t.11 l"YISTOl'S! P•t•mt "'" 6.IJ ~I f~ ·'·'° quality or better. Unpaved U btiary kno-..n aa Sing Slng got its name. Came from an · Sc::I s. 1.a 1.te Otte: Fa 4 ... s.JJ '"-"' .. v •.~1 1.0. 11tom -:' Street Of lack of lidewalk8, fndlan word.for &,"atony place." d.'to ... t.L 7·77 I.ft f~i:,,.F• ';~ t: ::::"'...: ;:~~ ~'.~ U~C t.: •:: tonn and •••i'tary ·--' ' 1 •Ut.M: SIOCll P 7.ll I.II PtlMI SQ 6.'4 6."4 US o-s' ~·,, ... 8 .,....., ~ .. ,...... TEETH CMiwr t.1110.lt '''·Ml.old 1.13 1,u l'til1a Fd •.i.• 7.0I V&Lui' U ' mov -·an future a··--enl1 , 1E.,.1, J.04 3.n Flm eer · 1,J1 1.J1 P1LG•1111 GP': v , , _ , ' ~ .. ~ _... Medi I -··-·-In G I Br"ta' 11.. '""" 11.0l lO ... f'OlllUM GltOVI': C•lll•l 1t4 3.SS ,,•, ~.-..... .. for lmpro\tements. II build~ ca nncw:"\U;;l;, rea I in recen..,. exam-Gi-.111 s.tt •.n ioo Ft111 •.• •.• ,,,..,"' e..o '·'° u ... G~ s."i" b. •n •.. d. • J ~ed an enom'IOU! batch of penonnel records. Besides a '"'°"' '·" tt.M 101 "'"' '·" 1.n Pitt"" .• '·" v 1 s.c 1 .. . says e pave Su~ m new . rl 1 \let'liw 1.rt J.IM co111m r.ro 1.1'11 Pi"' $1 '·" '-" v••JK1 "'"" ·" d I t 1111 writing t of other. techriical data, they turned up one pe eel y Colwn G H.JG 11.set ts Fvn11 s.ts s.tS '"'" Tr• 1,w ••• 1 : eve opmen , gc n · 1 indi ho h c;ou11QNWLTN Fon 0r '·1• ~.s1 ~0.11• PO: """'" ,,,, '" •--~ De · the . reasonable r ·nc. The group of employes w se teet TlllUSl: '°""0•1t1 P11111 En •. u 1.1J vs eem -•.• .n -~· tetmme A' 8 1,0/ ,,,. OlllOUI': "'°" FG 11.U u 3t SptCI 4.5' ,,IS ~~n·ee of lots ..,..,,re 6 • appeare:d to be In the wont condition was the same group c t.ll '·" Gtw111 s.01 s.• .... _ 11 •.u 10.n ",'""'• •,·",, •,·• -,_ f .... ho-·-~ I k 1· ff lhei J0° bs • c--l: '" 111 ~ 10.ti'U.tl 1'19l'M'ICI f ,QS '" MW.It • • am(nlng .•A sk about G em.,....~sw auu\nHnevtr oo tmeo r . c.,. .:1;1 .a ,111111191 1 .••• 11 1'\.1G•o 11.a1 1111~.,.W°'l' ~'',f h'ch could gt CMM 6.11 1.tt I' S,.CH M.1'11.1' ... ,,. llOWa: ..,•: ,._ ,·!.. .. -~ts w 1 ve ~--1n1 'I'• a fact --men get more hea.i c.t,. "" t.tt ,.,,,,., e.n .. ,, Grw.. 11m 11 tt ' ""' -.... ...,.,....,., ' \,ICIWI y, I ...... U" °"' tnY 10.fS It.ts , ....... UN """ Er• II.JI 1!.11 =~'J; J:t 151 ri&hts to use your pro-aches generally tbao do older women. But nobody yet has ~~': J:~ ::: GJ?i"°:'l: t:" 1 ... .::: F~ t:: ;::z we1H"" ""' .. Qieck the cpallty or explained wh" older women are more apt to wake up con11, c 11.es n.11 fll 5r ·ll '.5t l'row1111 J.M •.1G "'•,."•''•"°'°" I ....... 111' ft 'V CWll 0.11 S.,j •• ,. t lfl<lfl , l.'l!S Provo Gt J,I• 1.4' : ecap na:: f;YVW . I wllh headaches. Can you? lt'I true. C'lllll Olw s •• SJJ USGY I. .... 11.11 Prue! SIP .... 10.Jt E, •Olw )0,11 "''"-·be and tJ'eea Ire 1rorth • 0.Utl ~.!. ".&..: Vtllllte .. II 4.M .. !JTNAM YIM :1:'· .. ~ll "" u in -1"' 0.tk19 6.tt '-"' llH <• ._,. S.00 •UNOS: ~ """"' money, while lack of them · Typlcal lurricme expends more energy one uwiute 09u.wa11• 111 1.iv 1.ts •.:n C011wr io.11 11.11 ~'~!'"' •li.ri , 1 ... ill I and k •••• thla --·~ .... p In "'eclrt'clty during a hall a -~lltOUI': 1'111 Lfl41 '9.Sl 11.ll EOu•IY •. ., • ,, w'i:l.. w cos youmoney wor . \.I-._...._1 u ~ .. QI. o.u• •.u t ... ,,,.. •.ft1.u v.. "'4 11.» .... 11.'1 1.s Nole cendlllon o( driveway tury. Or IO contend the wcalher boys. Remarkable, if true. °''"' , •.•1 '·" Pu,.• INCi' Gt-•111 1t.o o .44 ::'11"' 11.a' .11 Otn• T 4.4' '·" OltOUI': 11'1( 1tS ... wi'"'" 11.ttl .14 ·• I"" d ho• they'll dl\ltq~ 51,,.. 51,,.. eomrn '·" 0.11 111¥ •.'l '1s 1t1e1~r .. ., f.tt auu wa u an "" Drttl c11 •• ,. •. ,. 1mpa.c ,,,. 1.10 "''" " o o ta oo w.w '·'-1nc1 t Jt t:ti affect you ln winter Weather. Address mail io L.l'AI. Boyd, P.O. Boi 1875 , New-OOC14C• "l4 "·w. 111c11,, 1r 11.u 11.t0 "°"' '·" 11.1r w""0 Ur J.k r 11 Ortortt l '" ',, l'l~ ' ... l .l) AotYltfl F '" • JO •l<Ofl\ ,,_. t tJ House exterior . port8each926e0. Dfl'''"''•• c;.""'I '" •.lt••"''' 1211 •• '1 .. tt• ,.,10 .. Systematically Ins.... a I I o..,t ,e 10 n 111C1 GI s-• ll ts ••. Sitt< £111 '" 1.35 •,, OIY'*"'l I · ,._, '------------------------'" 1E111, fCI l•t l•~ (,111 5'tl S'l J.'I ~tiff lU l.U •-~.-. ... ~ ... ·" ' ·'i • I I ' I ' I I • ZI DAllV PILOT Frld3J, No'lfmbtr 30, 1973 78% of State's Gas ~ $tations · Closing Up • By Tbe A1110Clattd Prtss Motorists aro being urged to ateor deaf' of long trips in caurornia this weekend, as spot checks Thursday showed that most gasoline stations \l.'Ould be closed between 9 p.ni. Saturday •nd midnight· Sunday. Presklent Nixon has asked station operators to close * * {( Mutual Aid voluntarily during those hours because, he says, the nation is racing a gas shorta ge. A SURVEY OF 218 stations from the Mexican border through Tulare County dlscl.,. ed that 78 pw'Cent would be closed Sunday. according to a report released Thursday by the Automobile Club of State Utility Share Plan Aid to Crisis? By Tbt Associated Preis M u t u a I aid agreements between utilities n1ay be necessary to prevent some areas of the state from being hopelessly short or electricity next 'year, a state Public UWities Com.mission official says. "We are loo ki ng into Sportcoacl1 Firm Lays ~ Off W 01·ke1·s transferring energ-; Crom the north of the state, where it is in suppl y, to the south, \\'here it is in worse supply," Vernon Sturgeon, PUC presi- dent, said Thursday in San Francisco. ENERGY MIGHT also be transferred from San Diego Gas & Electric which appears to have the best supply in the state , Sturgeon said. He suggested the idea at a series of PUC hearings in San Francisco on va"¥ous pro- posals for coping with th.e energy crisis. The PUC has scheduled 15 days of hearipgs in San Francisco and Los • Angeles. Southern California. Simi1ar prospects were reported In ibe northern se'ction ol the state. "only 18 percent of our sampling report that they will remain open Sunday, but the majority of these" will close in 'lhe late ·afternoon or early evening. the report. said. It said the remaining four per- cent was und ecided. The Automobile C1ub .is ad· vising motorists that long drives could, in some cases be risky Sunday. The report said that many stations are refusing to sell gasoline by the can "because several cases of hOarding gasoline have been reported.'' Officials also warn that gasoline in cahs creates a fi.re hazard . THE CALIFORNIA Highway Patrol said reports indicate that all stations along · 80 miles of Interstate 5 in Fresno and Kings counties will · be closed. "We're not crying 'The sky is falling' but then again we are," said Sgt. Dave HelseJ. He said the Highway Patrol surveyed gasoline stations in 10 counties~ and concluded, "G,c;i:s stations are just not going to be available." The counties surveyed were Mer· ced, fresno, Kem, Sa n t a Barbara, Ventura , Los Angeles. Orange, San Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino. Citihanks Hikes Rate Zero Economi adviser Her# bert Stei says eco- nomic gro in U.S. could slow to near zero early next year but unemployment would show only modest in- creases if Arab oil em- blrgo co ntinue s tliroughout 1974. ----- WICtoHear Beliavior Talk at Meet The Orange CoWlty chapter or the National Association of Women in CoMtruction will hear Howard We st phal! discuss hum'an behavior Tu es- da y, December l l, at 6:30 p.m. in the Santa Ana Saddle- back Inn. \Vestpha!J. vice president of .l.\V. Newman Corp. is in the "people" business • helping them to close the gap between present performance and full • Sport Light• Out PUC Tells Power Emergency Plans SAN FRANCISCO IUPI ) - 11 the power crisis hits hard, power could be blacked o u t for night baseball games on all five of the state's major league ballparks. ' each commercial and ln· dustrlal cu.stomer premise ls (lermitled one Identifying sign illuminated from dusk to the clese ol llusinen.daily. [.ii~ts On )ilie1i Off SAN DIEGO (AP) - Milsion Valley Sh<>pplng Center bad plonned a ceremony i nvol vi ng ChriJtmas llghls, a n d waan •t going to be stopped by the u~ Yule blackout. • So at 7:00 tonight 1bey'll ihrow a switch casting a dim • llabt on ICUlptured decoratlona, then an hQor later •ta&• on unllgbting certfOODY· 'Super' Artichoke Develo~d DA VIS UPI) -An in· tematlonal exchange o! plants has resulted llt a new red artidlol<e called "Mqnilico" !or Ille C.lllomla farm ln- dU$tcy, an agriculture sc!enti8t reported tod•Y· The recommendation was Included Thursday in an emergency energy plan set forth by the slaU o! the Public Utilities Commission i n to possible emergency measures to save electricity. -ALL SHOW window or promotional dlspl•Y l I g h ta turned off. L--------.....J Vln<:tnt Rubatzky, Universl· ly o! catllomia al Davis agriculture extension vegetoble spoclollst. s al d MagnlflcO was a thick, •1- leaved vpriety of artld>Ote from Italy. HEARINGS ON lhe power situation \\ill be held over the next two weeks in San Francisco and Los Angeles. The stall _.i would also darken all electrical advertising signs except one identifying sign illuminated from dusk to the close of business bours. The full set of proposals: -A 11 outdoor electrical a d ve rt isi n·g signs and billboards are off, except that -All ootdeor sporting or cultural events dependent upon electric lights canceled. -All interior or exterior lighting for Mn--resldential facilities during hours when premises are not open for use is off, exeept l<ll' mJnimlun lighting necessary for pro- tection or safety ol penons or property. -All residential interior oi" exterior' ligbtjng in rooms or areas not occupied or in \15e is shut off, except for minimum lighting necessary ror protection or safety of persons or property. Living Council Delays 197 4 Auto Price Hikes WASHINGTON (APl -The Cost or Living Council today suspended temporarily Jre>- posed new pirce increases on 1974 model autorrobiles. The council .said in a statement that it needs more time to review price proposals, which were considered at a -~bl.ie hearing last week. Cooncil director John T. Dunlop indicated the co~cil expected to have a decision on the increases by Dec. 10 at the latest. The Inc re cou ld have .gone into efect f o r American Motors today if the council had not acted to tem- poralily suspend them. Suit Vowed By CalComp Lester L. Kilpalrick, presi· deul ol catilomla Computer Products Inc,. o! Anaheim told sbarehOlders at the annual meeting this week th a t "C.IComp and others will prevail in antitrust act1oM against IBM!' CalComp's charge of an- titrust violation filed against IBM Oct. 3 was answered by IBM Nov. 19 "by a general denial and a series of coun-- terclaims against CalComp, an action which was not unex- pectedt" Kilpatrick said. Brea Company Building Begun The new variety came from one' plant Whiob survived froU\ more than 6,000 seedlings start«! with seeds obtained from Italy, he sold. '!be one aurvlving plant has been uoed to ·produce a stock o! 200 pl~ts for field t esting, ubatzky added .. RubatzkY and o111er scien- ~ have worked five years to diM!lop better articbol<e varieUes for CaU ro'mia. It is hoped MagnHico and other new varieties will be tmie disease and pest resl .. tant than present Cllilomia arllchoke "to keep this small but Important industry from ~ pushed oil coastal land8 by other, higher return vegetable crops," Rubatz.ky said. California lead! the nation in artichoke production. N .. r. Jy 12,000 acres were fultivated last year, returning a 35,500 ·FMC Corp. of Brea will ton crop. start construction of a 150,~ _:.:::__,..:._ ______ _ squore-loot facility on a 17· , acre plot it<enuy acquired !"' Kids L;ke Puente Street near Impenal " To Boulevard in Brea, it was reported here Tuesday by Robert W. Malott, chainnan of the board and president. Ask Andy CHATSWORTH (AP) Sportcoach Corp., has laid ()fr 234. of jts 389 em,ployes and halted most produ c tion because of "c urrent un- certainties" in the motor home market caused by the fuel · crisis and high interest rates, the firm said. The proposal came amid demands for stronger energy conservation ·measures and announcements by gasoline stations throughout the slate to curtail service. NE\\1 YORK (AP ) -New York's First National City Bank. the nation's second largest, announced today that it "'as raising Us prime lend- ing rate to 93n. percent, ef· tcctive A!onday. . potential. •-------------------------------------------., Westphal! was in charge of traini~ and professional education during his ' 28 years in the Marine Corps., took academic work at Emory and Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List The OlotswortM>ased firm announced Thursday that 116 employes were laid off Nov. !l and 128 more on No:v. 21 to accomplish the cutback . TN LOS ANGELES, ~tP]e general manager of the"! cj fy Department of Water and Power said the city has reach- ed the point "'here a man- datory curtailment or .powe,r to business and industry should be put into effect. Duke Universities. which lcadJ L-------------------------------------------.. to a degree from the Universi· ty of Maryland . All production ha s been .. halted on models the company ~, JlO\V has on inventory. but two ne\v models continue to be produced. the firm said. The bank, one of the few \Yhich had earlier announced a 91h percent prime. cited higher Joan demand and the rising cost or short-term credit for its increase. Construction women may at- tend the meeting by con· !acting Pat Rich, public rela· tions chairman at 556-7017 or 833-9244. • • • ' • I New! ONLY at Canyon Sands, Palm Springs NO SHARED WALLS IN • LIVING AREAS Enjoy single·family privacy ... over 100 families do! Enjoy 6 tenn is courts, heated swimming and Jacuzzi pools. saunas. putting green, cabana. No initiation fee. no dues. Park environment. freedom from exterior maintenance. 2-car garag e with eiectric automatic door opener. floor-to-ceiling wood-burning fireplace, 11 ft. vaulted ceiling. See 4 dazzling models. newly furnished byW.&J. Sloane. 3 bedrooms (or 2 and don), 2Y, balhs . 2 bedrooms, 2 baths 4 exciting tloor plans • 539,500 up BUY NOW ... IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ... ENJOY THE FULL SEASON. ;~~_,,,: ~­ Elegant. 1-story desert designs with colorful Jile roofs . . ' ~. :::Z': /\ -,,""'°' uu 11fac i ' 0 > , 0 " -i n L ~. PALM S PRIN GS ... I ·1 LAl\l:J l:.C. G!'llt CANYON ~~ SANDS C: p_,l ,tf VILLAS .......... ~. CAhroh o~. "Joo • Wid& distances between living areas. Private, walled patios. Amtac Communltin; home bultding arm Of $750 million Amt<ic. Inc. (NYSE). 11~1. JM'f'Cll"'1· All "llhlt r•tfr...-d. Didi f"lflfl9ll, lllC, r-----------------~-----------cAnyon sAn~s "11US : CANYON SANDS, Dept. P I I : -4300 E. Palm Canyon Dr .. Palm Sprin&s, C.. 92262 1 l Pleas• send me brodlure and lnlormatton. I' ------~-----~: -an Idea wh<1.'e time has come ''"' l Next to Gene.Autry Hotel -----~"'~,,.,· .. ~,.,.------,1 4300 E. Palm C.nyon Or., Palm Sprinss (714) 328·2185 1.. _________________________________ ,;.. ______ :'!::~~·!! _______ _J I • 'Vot. Net Vtlt. Net VIII. Net Last Chg. ~ii Cl'lg, latl ChQ. --A A--circle 11: .1• 11 ,,,,_ 1:. Flott ll•C11" 1l 2v.-V. A1'V Co .20 6 S"'-\o (lllMI 1.llb J 1(~-Vo Fla Aot ll In 1l 5~~-'n A&E Plastk 11 1"'-•1 CltrnMQiwts • 1'.~-'lo FlyT!~r WI. .., W -\It Abl!•Mt -~ J I CL f ind Cp s l ll•-\~ FOOdr1me 1 2.ff •.• Ac"".._ml 1 1~0 ·· Clark Cons S 11/t+ \·1 fO<"cl(l . .O. 1100 7S -1\lt Aclionlndst 1 '"' .•. Clarksori .16 is 1-....v;, Fonstl b 1• 21 2'h •·• AOObe C0<11 • 11•1::1-•.• Cl1rostt1 M , S\'t-1-. Fo1 $1~ .2t ' 10 ... Aero Flo Dy 11l J',•-V. Clery Cor~ lJ 1v.+ v. Fr..,kRI .4 S ''" •·· ~;:!11i:Z 1! l ~~ .. l'Wt c~11 ~ ~~ .. ~ ~~:~:1~~:~ 1~ ,f'~~ i~ AU 1-fOW> .;c 1 ''' ... 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Late afternoon selling came after Wall Street learned peace talks between Israeli and Egyptian military officials rollapsed. I - • • • 4_Q ., .. IL ( l'Jl0f Governor Get,s Out Longies From \Vire Services {Jtah Gov. Calvin Rampton pulled up his pant leg and re\'ealed his own personal ans"'er to the energy crisis. The governor's order that thermostats In th c st.'lte Capitol be tunied do\•;n i.o 68 degrees left many s t a t e employes shivering and curs- ing the chief executive. But Rl'mpton. undaunted by it all, told a news conference: Friday, NO¥tmbff .30, iq73 QUEENIE By Phil lnterla ndi - Laird Say He Plans . \ • . . . Hughes Hoax {r'f!ing W ill ,Get l;lotU'noy A~ks Data ' WASHINGTOl'I ' (UPI) -pa role Feb. 14 ·SACRAMENTO (AP)-The 1'1elvin R. Laird.aa.ys ht. planli , '~Ji" 1 1 cJialrman or the State Land! On Liner ' To Resfg_n to resign as President Nixon's .... Com mission has asked the chief domestic adviser after \VASHINGTON fUPI) -parole June 1:1 but the board co1n1nlssion staff to give him Rep. Gerald R. Ford gets final The U.S, Parole Board has turned him \ do\\·n ,.,.hen 1t a report next month on the congressional approval and sent Cllftord Irving. m~ter-reviewed his case Ju_ly 30. s13tus of the Queen Mary . assumes the vice presidency. mind or the literary hoax or Irving, \vho n d m it 1 c d I y the oneUn1e ocean liner that the century, an early Valen· th h H h t · t It c\i Laird, secretary or Defense wrote e p ony ug es serves as n ouris a ra on throughout Nixon's first ad· ~n~~ol~aif r:~e ~eb~r~4~ting autobiography and sold It to at .. Loi ng Beld olchlk. to f'nd l ministration, agreed to take McGraw-Hill for an advance wou e 1 ou Ir ving, 42, was sentenced I $765 000 ·11 h ugh h the Qu his present oo.sition last spring · o , , w1 step I ro w ere we are on een following the resignation or in June, 1972 to two years the gates or prison shackled Mary.'' State CQnLroller John D. Ehrlichman and other and six months for defrauding to a rockpile or an estimated Houston I. Flournoy, .a \Vh.ite House aides as 8 result AicGraw-Hlll with a fake $1 million ln debts. Republican candidate for of the Watergate scaodal. biography of bill i 0 n air e governor. said Thursday. HOYl'ard Hughes. Tl Co . f the hi 'th Questioned ThurSday about IE BOARD announced il..s nvers1on o s p Wl recurring rumors that he was decision Thursday a rt c r lhe use of tidelands oil funds ( J :~~~~~o.r!, HIS WIFE. Edith, is serving h•s "--a .. ,,, I con · PEOPLE · _ .. ___ ...;.;.,,;.;,;;,;;;;.;;;;:;:.:;.::,::.:,::;:==:=.---'.J plan,nlng to quit. J..aird said uP1 T .. _.,, a two-year sentence In a Swiss meeting behind closed doors 1" "'"""1 ~ bccet 0 th_ he thought 1 ·1 ••ould he hes"' rover.iy or years ween e " VALENTI NE GIFT prison for her part in the to consider new information II r Lo B h d th lo leave once Ford becomes h c Y o ng cac an e •'JL may be a very 1 ·mportanl 1 ·nter-offi'ce memo." · ·d Cl'ff d 1 . oax. orrercd by Irving's attorneys. Lands Conunission and vice prcs1 ent. 1 or rv1ng ln1ing bcca1ne eligible for T11;• was not d1'sclosed. Le · I t · adapt to Jo"-er temperatures." 1-----'------'---'-:C:.:='-"=.:....:=::..:::::::c::. ___ ="-'===--:-------==-:.: . .::_'.'..:.:.:::~----~.'.:'.'.".....'.'.:'.".'.'.':"'..~!".'.".'.'...~:_~~~_"'.~~~~~~--_J~!g~is~a~u'.'re::_. _____ .:.__ "I'll show you ho\v you can r \Vith that, he hiked his cuff to reveal new long underwear. * King Huueln's wife, Alla. Ls expecting her first child io May but already has an informall'y adopted baby in the palace, according to friends of the royal family. Friends say the baby was an orphan when Alia found her gravely ill in Amman Hospital and f I e w in specialists from abroad to save the child's life. She is believed to be abou.t 14 months old. Islamic law forbids formal adoption, but the young queen is said to treat the child "just like a daughter." * General Motors President Edward N. Cole broke his own order to keep speeds down to 50 miles an hour, explaining he didn't want to ~ late for a mee ting with ne\vsmen. COie's 1974 four-door blue Cadillac D ' Elegance was spott.ed "" on the I--96 freeway bet\\.-een Detroit and Lansing doing the legal speed limit ol 70 m.p.h_ GM Chainnao Richard C. Gerstenberg se\'era\ \veeks !go ordered energy.sa\ing rneasures for the world's largest auto maker, including a directive that company cars not be driven above 50 m.p.h. except in an emergency. * President Tito told a gfoup of veteran partisans he would continue at the helm of Yugoslavia as long as he was able. The 81-year-old n to was speaking in a Bosnian hill to\vn at a cjeremony com- memorating the rormation or a provisional government of Yugoslav partisans fighting against German occupation forces on Nov. 29, 1943. One partisan at the original ceremony proposed T i t o should become president for life. Tito replied: "It is very ' ~ dif!icult to be a lifelong presi-6;: dent. He must be active and it is a question of whether a man of my age can continue to satisfy the people. But 1 ~ • pledge that as long as I am able. I shall continue to lead tbe country." • " . .. • Olympic gymnast C a t h y Rigby of Garden Grove. \\•ill tour the United States, Canada • and l\1exico as Peter Pan in :.!· a new musical production. The 21-ycar-old performer ~ was the yolUlgcst member of the U.S. team in the 1968 games and later won medals 2i. in world competition. Injuries Ji:' dropped her to 10th place in J. her category in the 1972 111unich Olympics. ' •. ' NBC Entertainment Corp. said the musical ll-'Ould open Jan. 3 in San Antonio, Tex. -~~~~~_c__~~I Ki.di Liks To A.1k A.11dy ' • •' ' 6" CED AB CUPE srm:s 33:A Like fine wine and 9ood ladies, they iust get better with q:ge. {little philosophy in with ihe boards this week.) IX8 BOUliB REDWOOD ry1cE BOAUS 1 s I Foot .. 69c 10 FT BAIN GU'li'EB , ··~LENGTH 6 FT .......... '11~· ,, . " GG:l•cmlu4' sliplolnt. 1olderl91a. And. if Dr, Fbchb.a i. rl!Jht. w• got a lot oJ tha1 ••I stu.U comla!J thJ1 y1Krr. a lo•• thal gvy's •ath111ia1m. H•'• an Redwood res.isl& rot, weathers nicely, and is easy lo work with. Nail.a go in it Elick as a whistle. even the kids can help nail. Chann•I 7 11.•w1.) IN 5TP.t..\r ST""-1<'.fl l-IG- J>ULL TH E Tl2.1GCE.Jl , ONE. MANC co~Ttt.Cl. • REGULATION BASKETBALL ·BACUOAU 1797 OF 011..eR.. Palnl•d, larg•t•d, with th• hoop and nit. Dad. with that O"t"•rhang yoll could 1taad a Uttl• workout too. . ' . . ' . M' 't ,.. ., -·' I • e:·· . .,.. JORIS MUYILLE 11suuno1 377 SO SQ. FT. BATTS Got any idea how much you save on fuel if the p lace is prdPerly insulated. Alk the gas c~pany. ful-thik. foil backed tibeWJass . ' 4x5 ' WALLITE &J 19~ ' You can save the plaster and the painting with walla of thit stuff. Kil comes complete with mouldinqa. Choic'!_ o! colors. ~\ JORIS MAHVD.LE BOOFllli SHllGLES · 1277 100 FT. SQ. Getting harder to get. but we are holding to selling the best only. 15 year guarantee. heavy mineral coat, choice of colon. Lifetime tired porcelain. WHITE ONJ. Y for this price. Better design. The klda won 't haTe to use a ladder to UN this one. .. & " .COMBED mu PAUlliS 39~~ . ' CED AB SBAIES 4 4 00 I' . f~QAB -SRllCJ.ES 39°0 Shakes are thick and hand cut. shinglea are leu thick and machine cut. Dependa ii you want a fat or regular roof. Jonesy. Sur• , ' \ . .,,· mecie my little house with the hall moon on " .J; the mu look expensiTe. When the sun hits it at the right angle\ the milled grooves gi•e it a real nice texture. Alternate sections with your neighbor and you'll both like it. R•rn•mb.r. b•a111y Is 01117 1kin d••P cind th••• sur• ar• ugly. Bu.I th•y do th• job (th01• 1pot1 ar•n't conla!Jlou.1. fallr1.J Repeottd By · Popular Demand "WALLPAPERING CLASS" • The turnout lor the hul one wa1111per. Follte leomed how to do It nlcely and 1ov1 a 'i11ndl1. Cla11 runa d'>but cia hour. ,7:30 PM SOUTHGATE Dec. 4, Tu11d1y LA Mil.ADA Dtc. S, W1dnt1d1y IO" SAW Z 1-\0~SE.POWE.~ .QNL'I 9 l'OUNDS ~·c~o c I-It 5EI. 100 SQ. FT. lOO SQ. FT. " . -.. C HAIN• f>.,._--: __ ~ -:. l, • -· .. ' ~r.,t.. ,."-0 • 'I' W ,' ·- -' .- "'. . .. JORIS MUVIUE 90 LB BOLL BOOFllli 4 ?o~~ 100 SQ. n. -•, " . CIO -co O C , . ' ' -·~~t .~ .. ' . .:;.·, 0 00 12xl2 CLEO 111101 TILE 44' EA. Heavy min'ral coat. colors. sure. Adding on, aouig a patiO cover. doinq a little hideaway out in the desert, With this stuff you can make a amall room look much bigger. Adda a lot of clau. A map tq_ lay with the super •tick la,. and no m ... either. this is for you. ' FLUllMASTEB Aln·SIPBOI IALLCKl1 29' Very po6itive ahutolf.,no 1queal, no drip. no w01f9r Ion. Adjustable for tank capacity. Easy to i:n.ataU riqbt where. the old one came oul • • i 1 • .. C::.T~& Plain ....... 11 1 ~:., .Porloratod -.. I 3C ~; You see, the perforated stuff costs more because they 9ot all these 9uYJ with old golf lhoee walking all OTer the pkzin atuJf. (You roally boliovo tha1, Alic•?) l \ . ' ., .. . ~:· • •• -.. • ' •" ~~ ............................................................... ;.. " • .· . ' N ewpor.t · Bal'let ::~roup . ' ' Presents 'Nutcracker' Ori John Wayne Stage The traditional Christmas ballet, "The Nutcracker" will be performed by the Newport Ballet Association Friday, Dec. 7, in the John Wayne Theater, Knott's Berry Farm. The famous story of "The Nut- cracker.'." written by Hoffmann, corlcems a little girl who receives, as a Christmas gift. a 'A-oodcn nutcracker carved to resemble a man . In the magic of Christmas Eve. the nutcracker comes to life and eventually turns into a handsome prince, who takes the little slrl, through \he ~nd of Spow to his 1\ingdom or Candy. An' army ·of mice fiercel y battling a regiment of toy 80ldlers under the C'Omipaod of the Nutcracker General will be ap iljteresting scene, acrording 10 MW Frances.,. arµstic director of the Usocrari.on. , · ~ Fif~·Yeir~ld Sarah Loomis or Ne•rt Beach will be the prima balleMnil. She will dance the roles of the Snow Queen and the Sugar Plum Fa; .... -• '" f ' .~ ....... ....-•\,:'' , __ .... -. ~ ........ _ ... _ '~ " ( . •I ·~ ' .. Clinton Ro,thwell, assistant artistic director, will dance Snow King. Rothwell r was fonnerly with the Royal Ballet Companies in ,England. He also • was a principal daitcer with the-· Natiorlal Ballet of Holland and the NatioDat Ballet· 0£ Canada. About · 1001 young Orange CO~ty dancers lvill a p p e a r in the classic ballet. Some of the more prominent roles are being played by Becky Ad- derton, , Brenda Bailey., J e n n i f e r Richards,,~!~~ and Sally Steitz. Others ~~~~an, Tim Yuclan, Laurie ~i:!'tBms, \'Mr-a G~yer, Kathy Loomis, Wendy Dennis, La\D'ie Mittman and Kim.Feldman. · Tickets will be available at the door or can be purchased at the · National Mu.sic Stofe in Anaheim or Coast Music in Costa Mesa. For .. group rates contact ticket chairman Jane Askin, 540-6837. Tickets \vill admit purchasers to Knott's Berry Farm after 5 p:m. the day of tile' eveoL . ' .· .. .. • • ' • : .... t' B'allet Pacifica to Perform . Its Traditional Holiday Gi.ft . Pfic!fl,ca' Bell~t'1 S~ni1h dencer1 er~ Benjamin Sperl>er end Adele Cenett1 .;\io will dence in ''.The Nutorecker." · ,. ... J • • • ' ~tore than 100 dancers will appear in "111.e Nutcracker," to be presented in the Laguna MooltOn Playhouse by Ballet Pacifica (the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company). ' Four matinees and six evening perfonnances are scheduled: Friday, Dec. 14, at 8:30 p.m.; Saturday, Dec. 15, at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 16, at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m., Friday, Dec. 21. at 8:30 p.m.. Saturday, Dec. 22 , at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 23, at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. .. Those who will dan ce the role or the Nutcracker Prince in different performances are Victor Morano, who has partnered such famous ballerinas as Danilova, Tallchief and Slav~ka; Paul Maure, fonnerly of the Nouveau Ballet de l\1onte Carlo; Benjamin Sperber and Billie Pillliam. Moreno will partner Mary Han! (the Sugar Plum Fairy), who has recently returned . from a European dance tour ; Maure will dance with Joan Ross Gair, who appeared in the San Francisco Ballet Company's production of "The Nutcracker"; Sperber will partner Molly Lynch, one of the lead dancers of the Laguna-based company and Pulliam will dance with the company's baby ballerina , Cynthia Tosh. Snow Kings will be Roger Faubel, Robert P~tel ahd Benjamin Sperber. Snow Queens will be Molly Lynch, Lisa RobertsOn, Belinda Smith and Cynthia Tosh. The .role of Orosselmeyer will be playe4 by ~guna Beach actor Charles Colgan. Lead dancers in the Waltz of the Flowers· 1'e Kathy l\1ason and Mary Hanf of San Juan Capistrano. Music is 'by Tchaikov s ky ; ·chOfeograpby is by Lila Zali. Technical director is Carl Callaway. Storyteller Is DOuglas ·Reeve. Tickets are $3 for adults and $'l for children and.atudents. They are available at lhe FesUvlJ or Arts office, 650 Laguna canyOn· Road, Laguna Beach week. days between 10 a.m·. and 2 p.m. Mail orders may be sent to Sally Reeve. P.O. Box 2411 Laguna Beacb. ca. m52. Checks · should be made payable to the · Laguna Beach Civic Ballet. A sell-addressed envelope should be enclosed il tielreta are to be mailed. ·For reservaUom and information on groop rates. call 494-1148 week.f'Y' bteween .10 a.m. and 2 p.m. • • Arts/Dining Out Entertainment DAILY PllOT %9 • .. \ Friday, Novem~r .30, iq73 . Children gather eround in the party scene from 'The Nutcracker,' Newport Beecll Bellet Company's holiday offering. ~ O.IY ttflilt Dltf ..... SANTA GEORGE CUNNINGHAM AND FRAN JOHNSON MAKE PLANS • . ' . Christmas . ·Fair Swap Meet ~ 1J oins Opera A uilitioning · •• .• A combination Christmas fair swap meet and public audition with $1,00Q in cash Prizes will be held by the Lyric. Opera Association oo Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 8 and 9, at the Festival 0£ Arts grounds in Laglllla Beach. • More than 650 sellers will bave goods at the four.day fai r. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day. Auditions for the Lyric Oper8. Association's January. repertqry season will be heti lrom· 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Forum Theater on the Festival grounds. Awar<ts totaling 11,000 will be given to seven \YiMers in the auditions. Participatielt in 1the repertory program is a conditi~ ~ award . • I ·Admission to the Oiristmas fair and the ,auditions is $1, gO;Od for all four days. ' Santa Claus will be at the fair each OJJ'y ·from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and childrm may have photos taken with St. Nick for St. • Booth spaCjl at the fair Is 17.se each day. Proceeds are used to train and protn()le )'OW\g singers in Orange Collllty •. Further tnrormatl_on about booth space or auditions Is · available by calling I..yrlc Opera at 4!M-0709. ·:· I • .,. I :~: -·· . . ..... I .•_. ·~: • ' . • SU DA1LY PILOT Friday, Nowrnbtr 30, 1973 • :~'Finishing Touches' .'.:~ Opens at Ahmanson :I '• -•.I .. '" Jean Kerr's Broadway hit comedy, "Finishing Touches," starring Babara Bel Geddes nnd Robert Lansing in their original New York roles, opens Tuesday at the Ahmanson Theatre oI tlle Los Angeles f\1usic Center. The production is the second attraction in the 1973-74 season for the crG-Ahmanson. It wlll play a six-week engagement through Jan. 12. ''Finishing Touches,'' which arrives direct from its suc- cessful B r o a d w a y engage- ment, is a romantic three-act comedy set in a small New England university town, and centers about the tives of a college professor ( R o b e r t Laming). his housekeeping wife (Barbara Bel Geddes), their three sons, and the women ln their lives. . . . . . ' . ' . Concert Tonl9ht Costa Mesa High Sehool's concert choir rehearses for a per- formance it will give tonight al Ne w port Iiarbor L u l h e r a n Church. Choir will sing al 7:30 as part of the church's Christ· mas Feslival. Edward Brahams ls the choir director, Caroline Levi· ton the accompanist. Playwright Jean Ker r_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·-~~~~~~~~~ employs her renowned wit, .. .. .. .:: ; i . ·- i , ~humor, and high-spirited fun to depict this suburban family. who end up coping with marital crisis. Gene Rupert, who also is recreating his original ro.le, is featured as the neighboring law professor with an eye for Miss Bel Geddes, and Jill O'ltara portrays a passionate yo ung actress. Gary Cookson is the family 's eldest, a IIarvard senior; and Johnny Doran plays the youngest in the Cooper family. Denise Galik will again portray her Broadway role of an attractive young college studont. Sc<nery and lighting were designed by B e n Edwards, and costumes are by Jane Greenwood. "Finishing Touches" plays nightly, except Sundays, at 8:30 p.nt., with Jl)atinees on Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 Wendy Silverman: She's Funny Girl If I were to tell you that there's an 18-year~ld girl in Orange County who plays the role or Fanny Bryce in "Funny Girl" fully as well as Barbra Streisand, you'd probably (a) laugh in my face or (b) be more polite and snicker behind my back, right? Well, break .out the grins Intermission popular "Winnie the Pooh") ·~ Dec. 14, 15 and 16. .. Presents THE "NUTCRACKER Dece mber 7 - 7:30 p.m. JOHN WAYNE THEATRE KNOTI 'S BERRY FARM The Newpon Ballet Company fea1uring CLINTON ROTHWELL form erly of the Na1ional Ballet of Canada Barbara Bel Geddes and Robert Lansing :star in 'Finishing Touches' p.m. Tickets are available at '--~----~ the Ahm8rison Theatre box of- fice and most ticket agencies. 'Heading the cast will be Richard Riley (who played major roles in two adult pro- ductions earlier this year) as Christopher Robin and David Fowler as Poop. Others in the company are Ch u c k Wilkins, Sh a n n a Holladay, Scott and Ellen Cooper, Tricia Swensen, Aryn Spears, Barrie Calhoun, Ann Shepphird, Lisa Bartosick. Katherine Smith, Nancy Fowler, Nicllole Stone, Carol and Judy Baumgartner and Raebel Samue1s. under the direction of ... . \.· .. . •• •• ' ~ • • 'j l • . ~ • l • :: r -~ -~ • • -- ·= ,. :: J ' t ~ ' • ~­.... . , . ~ ;; •• ·~ ,. ~ .. ..... ·:· • ;;-.. . ... .. •• $-: .· .. :;- .. ' Meet me on 31st 5tneet .... in the heart of Old Newport's new fun shopping place .... Cannery Village ""'"°Cl N'M' ct1n$1 CAA~. ~A."'1N.c.~. t>fl,i;\IJ, Maqcii C:c\i~ ~'Y t)£(.0AA'l'ING. ' WOR't<;S'ftC>1' ""''ti -· fUll.W.\1"~'5..,.-..U. .... ..... and we'll poke and peek into all the little shops and fill ourselves right up with the Spirit of Christmas. ..... and then we'll have a bite to eat at the Cannery. .. - • CANNERY VILLAGE IS Foreiqn Intrigue Boutique • The General Mess • New Renaissance • Southern Comfort Beauty Salon • Delaney 's Sea Food Market •The Guildsmerchant • Kalico Kids Comer • Cannery Restaurant • Lido Shores Hotel • Woody Martin 's Antiques •The Needleworks • The Corner Store • The Waterfront • The Artisan's Bench• The Moment Boutique •The Factory •Elsa's • Time & Chime • The Mother Earth • Norma's Tole • The Art Affair •Small • • World Miniatures • Galloways • LeGarage • 3 lst Street • Coun~y Cupboard • Consignment Ltd . • Lenores Antiques • Ma991e Cobbs • Strawberry Fields • The Plum Tree & . Deborah • Jack Williamson • House of Atiundance • Village Sun Flower C Electronics Marine • The Top Shop •Jonathan's Antiques • The Dowry Chest • Zino's • The Stained Glass Work• • Sail lnn Motel • Linda Lee Gallery • The Bon Ton • Charles E. Smith Co., lnc. NEWPORT-LAFAVETTE·2Sth·32nd STS. OLDE NEW1'0RT BEACH • • because that's exactly what I'm telling you today. .Earlier this month, on a busman's holiday of sorts, I caught the closing performance of "Funny Girl" at Santa Ana College. It was a repeat production of SAC's sum.mer musicaJ, and 1 was there for one reason only - to see if everything I'd heard about Wendy Silvennan was true . Pati Tambellini is directing the show, which will play Dec . 14 at 8 p.m • .--Dec. 15 at 10:30 a.m. and Dec. 16 at 2:30 p.m . at the Community Recreation Center on the Orange County Fairgrounds. T i ck e t in· formation is dispensed at 556- S300. * THE FIRST PLAY to be presented in the Westminster Conununity Theater's brand new playhouse will be Woody Allen's farcial comedy "Don't Drink the Water." MONA FRAN CES TICKETS ss.oo • $3.50. $1.50 Aw1llable .. Now. 00..utllfUSICCO • ltl'INfwpon lhd .. Cooca MOM -~I l'l"ATIONALMlmCCO. IS&aro.d.·11 • ....,..._ 71'-f<lll KNOTM ID&YfilM FOf lnrormaiioll llld poup 111~. cd t'M"k<t Chaim! .. Mn. Ro1>m Alllll, ~7 r1elH M,.,iu ,...cJia.,, 10 ,_ .... rlf K-'JefiwSJ'. ... It was indeed. Wend y Silvennan is unequivocally as good as -or (perish the thought) better than -la Streisand herself. And the remarkable th ing is. thi s young lad y has never done anything on stage outside of high school. JN A PRODUCTION with far less an the usual under- graduat weaknesses, Miss Silv stood out like Ra- We Are Now In Our NEW Location 10 COMPLETE DEPARTMENTS TO SERVE YOU BETTER que \V -a Girl Scout meeting. sesses a . 1601 Newport Blvd. 1 ... h • Skl'9l11t powcrfuJ s· gin voice and the (Corner of 16th St. Nut Hoag HMpltal) 2 Paclled abilitv to bel 't out and bounCe it o back wall \Yith the aplomb of a Streisand, G a r I a n d or ~·lerman. But her talents do not stop there. Miss Silverman also has a tbat marvelous s e I f - deprecating comic a bi I i l y which helped ~1iss Streisand win her Oscar. Her timing on stage is extraordinary for one of such limited ex- perience. and her delivery ~f the impassioned "Don't Rai n on ?vly Parade" brought richly deserved cheers from a capacity throng which rose in unison to give this superb ac-ltT:~J tress a standing ovation atl.l 'V"' curtain call lime. \ti,~;,; Wen dy Silve rm an . Remember that name because f you'll be hearing more about "--1"' this lady. Starting next month \vhen she opens on Dec. 5 at Sebastian's West, the new San Clemente dinner playhouse, as Tevye's eld- est dattghler in ··Fiddler on the Roof." A star has, indeed, been born. Just wait and see. * YOUNG THESPIANS at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse Jr. are preparing a pre- Christmas production of A. A. Milne's "The House at Pooh Comer" (a sequel to the Wa90n Full of GOLDEN RIPE 5C Lb. Limit 5 Litt. .with Thl1 Coupon 10 IARRt:LS OP NEW CROP IULK NUTS YOUR 3AI CHOier 7• Lb. Llrntt 2 With Thl1 Coupon Come SH Our s200.ono FARMERS MAfKET GRAND OPENING SOON • Register for one of 1 0 trips to Las Vegas • to be given away. CLIP THIS! MONEY-SAVIN~ COUPONS CALIP. VALENCIA ORANGE JUICE "$ .. It Made" 59' qt, llrnlt Y, Gllllon Only With Thlt Ctupon ' I MARSHIU•N SALi Crisp Celery Ceno Cw1ots 3..,2sc COUPCINS IXPlll DICIMlll .5 • Glue fnllt 3 ... c...., • D.,.""'"' 4 CoMpi.t. • N11t Houw c:.- 5 NewFI• .. ..... 6.~ ... 1.=. o.,., ... 8 l_M .. • THNCI Sal ... 9 We Wlr9 • Flo-.n f .T.D. ROSES 99' You Alway• S.w 20c ICEBERG LETTUCE LARGI IOC 1a. Limit 4 With Thl1 Cou'9ft Our New Phone Numbers 6'15-0032 -~ NEWPO!!D ,~~9!~~~YIA!ILLAGE I ' , 1 • "36 Year1 of Prcxtuu KMto Uow'' ' \ 1 ........ ~Deln Ol'IN 7 DAYS A WUI I"""' te I p.111. NOW AT uo~~T II.YD. COSTA MISA IC-.t I., St.I C ..... II-. 11111"-lt I I "Whtre Qualily la I/It Ordfr o/ 'he Howe" .- / DlllY ,.Hit Ph11to1 by Rlcfl•rd KHhl•r f Mark Hutton Of Chicago stars ·as Quentin in the U.CI production of 'A fler the Fall' ? Friday, Novembtr 30, iq73 O'Nei ll on CSF Stage Eugene O'Neill's "The Great God Brown" opeM a 10 day run at Cal State Fullerton tonight. Performances of the show, directed by Dr. Alvin J. Keller, associate professor of theater and dlaJnnan of the department, will take place at 8 p.m. on Friday and Satur· day and Tuesday through 5aturday, Dec. 8. A 5 p.n1. matinee performance will take place Sunday and Dec. 9. Tickets for all performances may be reserved at the theater box office between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays or l ~ hours before performances. For ticket in- formation and reservations, telephone the box office al (714) 870-3371. "The Great God Brown" was origina11y produced in 192,6 and has had several ma· jor commercial revlvals, ln· eluding a New York pro- duction last year. The Cal State version will be presented in a futuristic setting, moving from the present day through the 1990's. Scenic design for the pro- duction is belng handled by Darrell F. Winn, assistant pnr fessor of theater, w h 11 e llgbllng e!fecls are created by Paula J. Dinkel, a graduate student from Fullerton. Cost "mes and special full-face ma11k!!: are being designed by Abel Zeballos, a graduate stu- dent in theater and part-time make.up Instructor ror the department. DAILY PILO ' 3 Urbie Green Jazz Concert On Sunday Urble Green, wor Jd'• foremoat jazz trombonbt, will be featured 10lolst In • free-ti> the-public concert by the l.oog Beach Municipal Band on Sun· day, Dec. 9, In long Beach Municipal Auditorium, Long Beach. Doors to tile auditorium will be open at 5 p.m. to ac- commodate the anUclpated crowd for the 8 p • m . performance. All 3500 auts in the Auditorium 11 Coo*n· tion Hall are abaolut.ely ...._ on a flr1l-<0m0 balls. ~ -- Green has been feai rololst with most of the : .lg- name jazz bands of the na and toured tile country :f_~ his own band in 1958 ~jl\I. 'MJ. • Miller P;fay Looks ,, at Marriage SOMETHING BEAUTIFUL FOR EVERYBODY This year give a gilt of ever-increasing value . VCI Sj«lents Stage 'A ft er the Fall' Arthur Miller's cont~~vyrsial 1 play, "Arter the Fair,· will be staged in the · e Artci Village Thc::itre ;i re Irvine al 8 p.m. Wedn ay through Saturday, Dec :>-a. Th_e &:hooL/of Flrie Arts pro-ducll~ _91-&"ire<:ted by Robert Co~r,-associate professor of d~ima . J The "fall" to 'vhich Miller refers in the tille is mankind's original fall from grace in the Garden of Eden. The cen- tral character. modern-day Quentin contemplating h ls third marria ge, is faced with what Eve brought to Adam - the terrifying fact of choice. l\fARK HUTT ER of Chicago will play the role of !he self·in· dieted Qucnlin and Jaye Wickham of Palos Verdes enacts the sex goddess, ?\1ag- gic; who was hls second wife. Jill Allison Silverman of Fresno Is his recriminating tirst wife, Louise; Cynthia Galles of Long Beach is his prospective third wife,~ Holga , and Katherine Redmon of Redding is the wistful girl, Felice. whose lov~ Quentin on- ly wants to evade. Director Robert Cohen has opted for the angular, '.stage by Gary Belshe, modern Harry Osbon, Buena Park; Bob Dunkcrly, Downey; Matt Kaplan , Palos Verdes; Kathi ~1iles, Huntington Beach, and Stanley \Vlasick, Corona dcl Mar. au tobiographical play as are all of Arthur Miller's plays. I myself am not interested in the specifics of Mr. Miller's life or ol his marriages. Other leading roles are played by Trudie Kessler. Spring Valley, N. Y.; Richard Bobb, Culver City; Mike The sets are designed by Renard , Placentia; Craig R. · Gary Belshe. Costumes are Gardner. Turlock; Bru ce by Christine Turbitt and Smith. Tho~and Oaks. and lighting is directed by "His play, on the other hand, is a presentation of a search which Interests me a great deal; the pursuit of a personal morality, a life lived 'in good faith ' in a world which seems brlmming over with political comiptlon and marital sexual warfare. Crystal \\l elhngton Van Horn. H --und San Diego. Camc~on arvey. 1 11c so OTlfERS 1N the e:ist are Farah Kotroubas, Chicago; Laura Segal, Sherman Oaks: ~tichael Cohen. Dana Point; Luther Hanson. Palm Springs; Lydia Jade Hubacker, Irvine : Dave Pearson, Pleasonton; notions of what the play is about. DIRECTOR COHEN said, . REST YOUR EYES LISTEN FOR DRAMA ~'-"~() ..-\.JRAO/Q~ TtiUTlt KAPX SAN CLEMENTE 108-Stereo 7 P,M. & 11:30 P.M . Mon, thr,11 Fri , score 1s by Barry Koron. Miller, in his forward to the published version of the drama, noted that "a work of fiction, like an accident . in the street, inevitably gives rise to many differing ac- counts." Audiences for "After the Fall" have had diverse "It is well known th<1t 'After "With relentless and unsen- timental passion, Miller finds that mere honesty is not enough; mere love is not enough: honesty can destroy and Jove can kill. In bis Ice skati n~ C\'C r~'tla~: One admission entitles you up to 6 hours skating fun. ASK ABOUT SPECIAL GROUP RATE 9AN DIEGO FWY. !CE CAPADES CHALET COSTA MESA MESA VERDE SHOPPING CE~TER HARIOlt ILYD AT ADAMS Tel; 979·1110 the Fall' Is In part an refusal 'to accept and pass on the popular panaceas of our time, Miller has shared rare wisdom on vltal matters." Tickets to the production at $3 are available from the Fine Arts Box Office, UC Irvine . For information call the Fine Aris Box Oflice (7141 113:H1617. MORE ZIP TO THE ZIPPER Mr. B, do•1n't r••llv h1v• ., lock1cf·in p1t•nt on • bett•r 1"ipp•r, but th.;, up-d1t•cf , m1ticu lou1 •p·· pro•ch to cu1lom·fittin9 in fin• m•n'1 w•1r, p1•c•1 !in comp•risonl •II oth•r m•n'1 1tor11, in th• button.fly ,, •. .._ '1NE MIN'S WI~ 36IO SO. BRISTOL ST. SANl A ANA -W.74Sol a gift from UPSTAIRS GALLERY -NEWPORT 230 Newport Center Dr.-Desig n Plaio -6-40-8410 OPEN EVERY SUNDAY AND WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY 10 to 5 WC've Got More Bhristmaslime ~ ~for You at the LIDO SHOPS We're not in a hurry. We don't plan to be part of the Christmas rush, Crowded stores -harried sales people -slow service -not at the Lido Shops . We offer everything a big shopping center oilers except the bigness, and the bustle, and the bad tempers, Window shopable, relax and stopable Lido Shops. 24 in all, Ch ristmas gift items of every variety. And everyday needs too, From groceries to· pharmaceuticals, from gas to other suitables. We've got more "Christmastime" to serve you better, and we'll stretch your ''Christmastime" so you can spend it wisely at t he Lido Shops. COMPLEMENTARY PARKING & GIFT WRAPPING, ANTHONY $H01 SEltVICE • ATtUN$0N '$ • BLACKMAN, LTD. IANK Of AMIRICA • IAIROW$ • llRKSHlltl'S • llDWElL'5 GENE IURTON • COFfEE IEAN 17 • GEMONES HAltlOI HAVEL • 1,0, HOWIS I SON • IM'lltlAl SA.VINOS KING'S UDO ARCO • HOWARD LAWSON , JR., RIAL TOR LIDO CANDY COTIAOE • LIDO FASHIONS • LIDO TIAVEL rOltT O'CAll ' RICHARD'S (M•rk.t, ,low•r Shop, Gift Shop) 51CURITY PACIFIC IANK • VIA, LIDO DRUG$ WAlMINGTON INSURANCE AGINCY • SVbNIV 2A UNIQUE SPECIALTY AND BOUTIQUE SHOPS WITH A FLAIR FOR ATTENTIVE INDIVIDUAL SERVICE •• , AT. THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISlE. NEWPORT BEACH. • FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR 1, r • ' I . • t .. Friday, Novembtr 30, 1Cl7) enver Mining <Sompany Steak trikes • Ill . • O>sta Mesa is sporting one of the Orange Coast\s brightest new dining at· ~lions. 1}'1 the Denver P.1.ilung company, on W. 19th Street, where king beef hSUmes a comn1and!ng position on the ~menu. The Denver Alining C.Ompany isn't strictly a steak house. Searood comes (11;,_ for its share of attention on the e\'Ening bill of fare too. • • ~ VOU CERTAINLY won't regret cjiiftning your initial sampling of the restaurant's wa res to the most popular of being crowded or overwhelmed. .r Before settling down to drinks and/or dinner it's edu cational and entertaining to take whut n1lgh.t be called a mini. mu sewn tour or the premises. Start, though, even as you enter by noting the authentic old mine-rail ore cars at the front door. Prepare yourself for a fine meal from beginning to end . All entrees include a choice of chilled mixed greens, "'ilted spinach salad or gazpacho, and a Joa! of specially baked bread. THE HCOi\1STOCK " on the menu spells Eastern choice prime ribs of beet. au jus, with creamed horseradish. The Out 'n . About Norman St~n'8y of all Ameri~an .meats. The steak and prime rib o'ferings here are absolutely tops. Quality isn't apt to be questioned by the most demanding or finicky beef connoisseur. And quantity bodes the pmsibility of satisfying the hWlgriest Jlliner who ever came down out" of the Rocky Mountains. The restuarant 's Victorian decor sug· gests still another link to Colorado and the lucky hard-rock miners who hi t pay dirt in the "good old days." Artifacts and household furni shings from before arid around the turn of the century gives the feeling of having stepped into the posh domicile of one of the era's silver barons. AN INCREDIBLE array of decorative objects and antiques gives an at· mospheric but al ways comfortable cast to the lounge and dining areas. Each piece bas been selected and placed with a judicious eye so there's no sense regular cut is tabbed at $6.95 while the extra thick cut costs $7.!!5. The prime rib is super b in its prepara· tion, tenderness and size of portion. The same was alJo ;true of another entree selection -F.aStem choice New York steak, $7.50. ' Other beer entrees include the top sirloin, $5.95; filet ·mignon, $7.95; and the "Claim Jumper," $4.95. This latter is choice grounci sirloin, charcoal broiled, served on an oak plank with border potato. broccoli, baby carrots and tiny whole onions. • In lhe seafood depart~ent entree choices include abalone sttak (sauteed in the English n1anner add simmered in a while wine sauce), $6.50; shrimp en brochette, $5.50; king crab legs, '6.25 : lobster $6.50. The "Mining Company," a house special, offers a range and ocean combination; fender filet mignon , . cracked crab and asparagus glazed with Eastern choice prime ribs 1of beef, au jus, \\o'ilh creamed horSffadish. The Mesa bearnaise sauce, $6.95. IT'S ALSO possi ble lo order a com- bination plate of your own devising but you 'll have 10 ask the waitress ·to quote the price. A la carte accompaniments include baked potato, 75 cents; skillet of mushrooms, $1 ; stuffed m u s h r o o m s tcrab. lcbster or shrimp), $ 2 . 9 5. Children's dinners include c hopped sirloin, $2.50, and prime rib, $3.25. Open daily for lunch too, the Denver ~Uning Company's midday menu offers a nicely ba1anced selectio n of hot en· trees, omelettes, salads and sandwiches. Omelette selections, served "'with fresh fruit on toast, extend from fresh spinach, $1.65, to shrimp Benedict, $2.75. RE PRESENTATIVE salads are shrimp or crab Louis, $2.95, and stuffed avocado (crab or shrimp), $2.95. Chopped sirloin, $2.25, is served with mushroom saUce, French fries and vegetable, and includes a choice of tossed mixed greens, V.'ilted spinach salad or gazpacho. All sandwiches are served open faced with the same salad or soup choices. These include the "49er", breast of turkey on sourdough bread, $2.25. and the "Bonanza," New York cut steak, $3.95. TH E PRAISE \VO RTHY house specialty, prime rib , turns up at iUft(h in three different form s. These are the "Boom Town" sandwich, $2.25; cold on the lo-cal plate, $2.25; and the "Quick Claim," cold English cut served with with a choice of dressing, $2.95. Happy hours, with hors d'ocuvres, prevail in the lounge from 4 to 7 p.m. weekly. And there's entertainment seven nights a week. Currently on stage, Tuesday through Saturday. is the Jason Chase Show. Charly D. & Milo hold down the en- tertairunent chores Sunday and Monday nights. The Denver Mining Company is somewhat out ol th e mainstream of other first-class restaurants like it. But you'll congratulate yourself for making the trip to 719 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. COLE'S • • • ' a f(Jr11111/ rcs la11rm1f i11 thi· classic /raditia11 714 ·673 ·0200 Ron Shy Hits the Spot and gets it together in the lounge. Lurich e Dinrier e Dancing e E11tert1inm•nt for reservations: 64 2-8293 closed Sundcrys open 'til 2 e.m. Newport Blvd. at 17th St. in Costa Mesa TUESDAY December ··11th FASHION SHOW for M E N I CAROLE EHLERT presents "What Every Man Should Buy" , •• for the wile, secretary, · sweetheart, OR ? Cloth•• Spoc l•lly Seloctecf \iy len1 LoKlleotl Show fro111 12 Noon CedMU Ho1r Show fro111 5 I'·'"· Entertainment -Hors d'oeuvres (Female Critics All o\\'ed 1 ...!~':2~!. (!~~~- ...... ,.. ~•11111'11 ·-.i-l"¥1tl1n1 •644-2030. ' DISTINCTIVE CATERING LET US PLAN YOUR HOLIDAY PA RTY Complet1 S1leclion of HOT & COLD HORS D' OEUVRES e CREATIVE BUFFETS For Information Ca!I: 645-2900 TOPS IN MEXICAN FOODS & STEAKS LUNCH ~ND DINNER 7 Days A Week .:..11 A.M. to 2 A.M. DINNER Sl'ECIALS NIGHTLY MONDAY THlU THUlSDAY 2530 W. Coast Highway HENRY'S N~:·;:rl 548-1177 Monday thru Saturday Relax and enjoy great entertainment plus great \vining and dining. Including giant drinks. Beer by the pitcher or mug. \Vine. All at reasonabl e price s. Coclttoll1 by th tle• or pftct.er N• co"', ao •l•l11t1tM. • llle1 yo1're Jiangry for good food u• tMntY for i good tille , 2750 Horbor Blvd. Costa Mesa, Calif .. • ' L \ .. . '· .. FROM LEFT: HAYES, DAVIDSON, IWMME . LEWIS, TURNOW, HUGHES S!'W onderful ~Days· Re~alled { .. , • 'I. Gersliwin Co1icert Plauiied Sunaay iii Newport By CANDACE PEA RSON Of n.1 O.lty l"Uot 51111 Now, 36 years after his death, George Gershwin is ,the subject of what may be the latest memorabilia craze . The timeless composer has always held a place in musi cal history. ''Rhapsody in Blue," "Summertime." "S'Wonderful ," "An American in Paris" have lived and will continue, long after the commemorative stilmp, records and biographies. Just in time for Christmas are three Gershwin books : Edward Jablonski"s "The Gershwin Years,'' David Ewen's "A Journey to Greatness,''.Robert Kim· ball's "The Gershwins." AND FANS or novices of Gershwin's , special blending or jazz and classical styles in this, the 75th arutiversary of his birth, can add to these experiences the "Rhapsody in Gershwin" concert ' Sunda y in New port Beach. · Re1ne1nbering Gershwin, and bis talented lyricist brother, .Jra, will be the focus or ~ two shO\~S, at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. '~41 • i Pianist F.dga?.~yes. -a band leader in the big ~~a of the 1920s and 30s, heads the~or performers. Born in Le , Keqtucky, Hayes received his traming at Fisk University and . force; U Versity. ,,~ ~· lfJS WAS THE urst ~ 'musical group with whidf 'Pearl ~it . ed as a singer and fl iS rem ng ~:gy Carmichael's "SlarduSt1'~ade the song a success. Hayes will be joined at the memorial concerts Sunday at the Whit~ Horse Inn at 3295 NewpQrt Blvd., ,Newport Beach. ·by pianist-v~sl bav~McKay; Pete Henderson of Slileslt&d H ... rson ; the Orange Coast's M'ark David50!1 Trio, \l 'lth singer Ruthie Lewis and 15 back·up s1n4ers and musictans. Da\rid'°n is organizing and arranging the shows. "I've made a good part of my if".ing ror many years playing George Ge'rsh"'in's songs,'' Davidson ex- plained. "J(~ appropriate that I do something to honor the man and his music." ' ADMISSION TO E~ of the tw .. l\Our long shows ls $3.50. Tickets are available at the White Horse IM. the Beach Ball, Alley West. Charlie's c;hlll 11111 Woody 's Wharf, all in Newport ~ Gershwin was actually born Sept. 26 in 1898 in Brooklyn. His parents -~ and Morris Gershovitz - were Russian immigrants. While grow ing up in Manhattan with his brothers Ira and Arthur and sister Frances, he studied piano, music theory and harmony. the New ~ Exj)erience ... HOLIDAY SPECTACULAR One entree at our regular price 1111, hi111er Pfice) and the second entree gmus lwMn ye.u ,_, 11111 ~w~lllll sunc11r ltlnl TIMlnlhlV1 lhrw Dee:. Ill 3901 l Coast Hfghw8y/Corona del Ma r Phone, 675-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY f/JJ¥wi"4 a . Rana~ er a Blooitf Mey ~ EGGS BENEDICT ~BLED EGGS With ,.,,,,., dtldcK livfn «' ~, STEAK & EGGS ' CREPES SUPREME °"""""'" J ddiflU/w/ """"""'"°"'· ·MONTE CRISTO A•_Ww_...,../l'f. ' • ' Now THRU NIW YEAR'S DAY· Ri~in g prices & Christmas on the w•y! Th1t'/I st•gger your imag inati on ... & poc ke tbook ! But , hera comas Kon• to the resc ue, with• "Triple Treat," a HOLIDAY SPETACULAR!fl , WOODEN NICKELS! WORTH SOc • , HOLIDAY CHEER! " d h r" in the hoppiest Seo· To keep goo c eo sl ashing pr ic.es of ' our beverage mn d•~ 0 ' ·n E rly Time s. ur "well',' brands , sue. as a Unce "well" drinks.·· over-en-o ~ r·~ just 70c!!I , DANCING & ENTERT-AINMENT Now. • ,fOf' por e41dH ,, .... ,.., , .41ncl.. ht tff Om lftw ..... ;,... ' ""'· •. PLUS •.. tk wNUr "tk• of l"'" H•l'-d ••• Mu. tlw• Set. KONA LANES 2699 Harbor, 'Costa ~tsa + ., • ' ' • • • • • . . • ' • . • . • ' . .· • I I ,. I I I Fai lecl pbQ tal JA Ma 11 UC Ca NE Por lli: co Be of ex a. N Bl 2 .. Ca gal Fri N Dr fie It ye ap A M c • I, Friday, NO¥tmber 30, 1973 IN THE GALLERIES: ~a~anese Posters a~OCC OCC UBRARY GALLERY -Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairvlew Road, Costa Mesa. Recent Japanese posters col· lected by IUchard S, Thorton. The exhibit shows high quaUty J)hotogrti.phy and unu sual printing techniques, ,combine Orien- tal aesthetics and Western industrial power. Nov. 19-Dec. 13. J~CK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona de! Mar. Paintings ~nd prints by James Rosenquist. Hours: daily , 11 a.m.-5 p.m. UC IRVINE ART GALLERY -Fine Arts Village, UCI Campus. Exhibit by !our Chicanos, through Nov. 30. NEWPORT BEACH CIVIC CENTER GALLERY -3300 New- -port Blvd., Newport Beach. Oils by Gloria Bradesoo, :!trough November. by Helen ~!IJroulh December. CROCKER ~ -South Coast Plaza, 3390 Bristol St., Costa M..., .J.• and altchery by Donna Friebertahauser though O.C.\nber: : FIRST NA~N~ BANK OF ORANGE -1650 Adams Street, C.,.: Mesa. Watereolors by Soozy West, through Deeember t UBAR -29811 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa I• by Doris Alderfer through December. BAllllr'iOF COSTA MESA -Harbor at Baker, Costa Mesa lies by Lucy Sanford throuah December. KENTWOOD SA VIN GS -1840 Adama Blvd .. Costa Mesa, OUs by Cec Coburn through December. COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -Z06 W. Wilson St.. Costa Mesa. "Buy Art for Christmas" Sale through December. COLLECTOR'S CHOICE -666 N. Coan Hwy., ~ Beach. "Nudes and Other Fine Paintings,'' a one man sbailr" of realistic oils and pastels by Leon Barnard, will be an exhibit Dec. 4-31. Hours: Tuesday through Sunday 'from 1 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -22ll W:~ COSTA MESA LIBRARY -556 center St .. Costa Mesa. Blvd., Newport Beach. Works by John Altooo, . . Various media by Pat Pembrook through December • 2. m the main gallery. An exhlbilloo ol "wall drawlnp' by DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th Street, Costa Cali!ornia artist John Stamphill is on view in the eq't:rance Mesa. Watercolors, oils, acrylics by Virginla Kling and ga~lery. Hours: Tuesday through Sunday noon-4 v.fu. and "VleWl!m the Newport Scene" oils by Sandy Kusick through Fridays, 6-9 p.m. . ~J December. NEWPORT SCHOOL OF PROTOGRAP!JY -Campul . Drive, Newport Bc~ch. Photography exhibit by ~ '/..~. ~ALE FED~RAL SAVINGS -Fashion Island, New- field and Mark Chamberlain entitled Two Vi ws of Time. port Beach. Acrylics, ~folk art by Nanci Schonthal through It is a comment on the times that shaped eir growing December. appointment. • bMita Mesa. Watercolors by Alice Block through December. y~ar~. Hours: noon-4 p.m. Saturday andt:day and by PQ:NDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd., AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Br' 1 Street, Co!ta~ \ ~i;lr:act acrylics by Linda Hudson through December. Mesa. Oils, acrylics, etch1ngs by Maree a Stanley through PARK uoo CONVALESCENT CENTER _ 466 Flagship December. \ Road , Newport Beach. Oils, watercolors by Herschel Yager CROCKER BANK -2300 Harbor d., Costa Mesa. Olis . tMlagh December. 11,..kfnt ,_ ....... Oldll•ltS Ent.-t•IMMnt ~v{E~l!HI! "OUR MEALS' ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO." • • COCKTAILS • 296 E. i 7TH ST., HILLGREN SQ. COSTA MESA • (114) 645-1626 NOW FEATU!'IN G • "THE BACHELORS" Eddie DIN'e l Gory GaNl11 T 1e1. tt.rv Sert. SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. U.NQUn FACILITIES L1111eHon • 11 ·S 317 PACIF'lc COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON llACH 536-2555 496-5773 499-2626 FAClllTJES FOR PRIVATE PARTIES. IN THE NEW GARDEN COURT llAHDll HANDON DUO, T•·•ht • .......... "' l!IHNCY LOUllGI ' LOCAL LOHTll DINNll 32802 COAST HWY. t1I C,._ VatMy . ........,, LAGUNA NIGllll. Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 lht Pl .. Newport Beech ORlolo 3-9560 o,.. T•r Ar9•114 Deily 12·12-Fri. Hd Set. 'til J •.a. The Extraordinary Mansion, on the ocean with the Zillion Dollar View. WE HAVE: .... ..• Groat Suppers .•. Untraditional late-night feaslies · ••• Rather Unique Entertainment GOl.DEN HOUI 4:30-7:30 Mon. thru Fri. Sp1,i•I E11terf•inment SUNDAY llUNC:H With Ch•mpagne 10 AM-3:00 PM 2601 W. Coal! Highway Newport Beech 645-1444 RICKS HA COCKTAIL LOUNGE ~·"' ,1\"fi . Featul'ing Exotic Tropical Drinks ' Luncheon & Dinner Deily ISM ADAMS t• Herber) COSTA MISA 540-1937 540-1923 Aacf,I• .......... 1 U01 llOOIHUIST IAt Q .. ;.., 6Ja.7tH . ~lf LfiR ·11 $Tf£JQ . LUNCH g:,,.:/.,~,.,,t;, DINNERS hom IOI --r-from SUO Mon.·F1I. 11:30 AM •• •UCOMI CNnD•IH l-1• til l :OOPM CANOELIGHT DINNERS TOP siRtolN ' STEAM Dl 1 NNE'R 195 " ' ! ' , 01 I" \ • • "' • , I I ,\, .. •I 111• '" > l f (!I '"' t •ll .. "'''' •aouND IOUNO .......... ' •• ~ : •••••• '. ,1.11 fOP tM:tOIN ltlAI., .. , ••• ; .•.• , •.. -· .••• l .JI llllW ¥011 ITIAI., •• , ••• ,.,,, •• ,,, •••• ,I.JI CAlT\IMIN ITIAI .•••.• ,,,,, , .... , , , , , • ,t .tl lflAtl ANO IOtlTll • , • , , , , ; •• ; , • , , • , ••• l.•S Ila tOOD COMllHAUON • , , •• , •• , , , , • , •• t.•t• lfl.111 N' ,,,, •••• ,, ;, , , , , , , •• , , ,, , , • , •• t .tl fltlf·llliCON w•A,,10.,, ...• • • • ,. , , ..•.. I.II IHI ll l•I .,, • • • • • • • • · · · · • • • • • · '· · • • • • ,1,11 511\0IN ITIAll IAN,Wl(N,,,,.,. • •.,,.,, .1,tl OINNllS tNClUOl1 Olllfll IAtAD, CNOl(I OP OlllllfllO, Oi\•UC lllAD. CHOICI 0, llCI "'"'' 01 '4)fAlO OUR SPECIALTY CHATEAUBRIAND St RVf S TW O s32 1 tO*DllAf w•eOAllkl .... M•MA vtllAGt "'°"''"G CINlll, HUNTINGTON IEACH 14'•61t1 '· ' . TRANSAMERICA TITLE C0.-17ll E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa Oils by Dr. Fred Olds through O.C.mber. CORON A DEL MAR UBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona dcl Mo.r. A collectlon of custom-leaded stained glass by Daryl George-and handcrarted pottery and sculpture by Orville H. Clay and his children Anna and Holden. Exhibit will run through November. Library hours Mon.-Wed. 1-9, Thurs.- Sat, 9-5. CRAWS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. Recent paintings by Jo Anne Mix and Frank M. Hamillon through Dec<mber. MARY LIVINGSTON'S GALLERY ! -1211 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. De Grazia oils and watercolors and enamels by De Grazia Guild members. Hours : daily except \Vednesday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. LESLIE B. O.MILLE GALLERY -t432 S .Coast Hwy ., La - guna Beach. Work of the Western artist Bob Wagoner. lie recently won the "Best In Oil" in the invitational show and also the "Artists' Artist Award'" at the 49er's Encampment at Death Valley. This was a repeat of last year 's perform· ance for both awards. Hours: From 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Monday and Friday. GRAND OPENING . "' LUNCHEON SERVED DAILY From 11 :00 A.M. · DINNER SERVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M . Monday and Friday #1 FASHION ISLAl\!,D NEWPORT CENTER ~ 644-2200 ._) " ' ' ..,,•I ,,. '" I 'f" '·' CAROLE SMITH & RON PIPPIN'S ALL NEW MARGARITA INN ~~~:::::::::::::==-~~'!______ ..... Tho lest Io MEXICAN FOOD i STEAKS e COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT & DANCING featurilltCJ THE MICHELES Open 7 Days -11) A.M. to 2 A.M .. 34235 DOHENY PARK ROAD CAPISTRANO BEACH • 496-9852 mITllf.I Mexican Restnurant PROUDLY PRESENTS THE CHAPTER II For Your Dining And Dancing Pleasure Playfot Nlglotly Wed. thro Sun. "Finest Mexican Food i1i Orange County" OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS 547 W. 19111 STRID C:OSTA MESA 642-9764 ' ,~ •-, _:_.~ .J I• ' T'l-iE . FIASCO'S:.. INVITING 'YOU TO AN EVENING OF EXCITING MUSIC AND SUPER ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAYS THRU SUNDAYS IN THE LOUNGE fti;\Il!J~Elm me 1timm NEWPORT BEACH -:· • OPfN.SEsAME •• = PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT .NATURAL l'OOD lUTAUlANT. Lew c•1t11'9nll M.... • • -""" Sert« - • UNLlMITID SALAD AND • • TO. WITH DINNEl • • • (Wifll tlll• C1111ponJ YlliETARIAN DINNERS FROM $2.25 French Cuisine Lunch -DinneT Closed Sun. & M011. 711 St. C~r, CMt'Cll M ... (714) 540-3641 RMEftA IU!&TAUMNT Contlnent•I Cuisine Cocktails • • · Serving Luncheon and Dinner Monday through Salul'dall. Closed Sundays- We tire k>c•t•d next to tho May Co . In South Coa1t Plau. JIJJ S. lrktel c:.... .... 140-3140 SINCE THE OLD DAYS . . . . • :' ... ,.~-.~,,~ .. , .· ~UIUAUM .:. -. . . ot . . . ' '. . . -. -... . "··.Reuben·s 10ani-2pnt 251 ~·COAST HIGHWAY >-~~ o-,,.1..-~ \~ NEWPORT BEACH ~< RESERVATION5-CALL 673-1505 • • \ ';, ' ·•'. '" " .1 .. . /. ~ i r• • -.)-.. ' 1•!, I' ~IQ ,; .; ' ' j I l l J • 1 I ' I • • . . •> I OAJLY PlLOf ,,. Friday, Novtmbtr .30, 1973 " -Miiseum Presents Vigo Film Marathon t I • i ! By JOUN STANPHILL ~tis brief career only lasted the five years from 1929 to his death at 29 in 1934. But ,hnn Vigl.l was t1onary film poet. 11 rcvolu· THE 'ALL NEW VILLAGE INN PRIME RIB • STEAKS • SEA FOOD Lunch F•om 11 :30 A.M. MON.·SAT. Dinner 7 Nights From 5 P.M. ENTERTAINMENT Tuesday Thru Sunday JIM coum COCKTAIL HOUR S TO 7 CllU1'99•• & Hon D'9"•t•• Cor.., of Port lo Mohl B/ILBOA ISLAND 673-4530 Ha·nky-Panky Catering Servi ng The Orange C ounty Area CREATIVE CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS Choi4e of Many Intriguing Selection• In Food and Beverages PERSONALIZED ESTIMATES IY APrc>INTMINT TAKE LIFE A LITILE EASIER For . .lnformation .. Ca\L. I 714 l .. 979·6809 ·-··u••• •••-••• .. ,.,,,,, ..... , .. __ , ...... ,,,,,,, ,. HAPrf HOUIS 4-11.m. W!lll! lllrs t..wes OOEllAINMlllT NIGHRY c Jason Chase Sliow .TU£S.-SAT, ('HARLEY D. & MILO SUN. & MON; Meadly Mite flltllll DENVER MINING Co. FINE FOOD AND SPIRITS he managed to complete four films. £uch of the film.! ls noted for a commanding use or film technique, fore n erge tic, unabated directness and for an ijllderstanding of t h e human consciousness i n revolt. ... 'nle four films are 'A Propos de Nice,' 'Taris.' 'L'Atalante,' and his masterpiece 'Zero de Conduite.' They will be shown Thursday evening at the Newport Harbor Art Museum in the first complete American showing of the works of Jean Vigo.. The ,!event will be a one night only film marathon. There will be two complete showings at 7:30 p.m. and ll p.m. Tickets will be $1.50 for museum members and students and $2 for non- members. 'Ille legendMy 45-minute masterpiece. "Zero de Con- dulte" centered upon the in- habitants of a French boy's boarding school , and the subsequent insurrection of the children against the tyranny <>:f the caricatured faculty. Both as microcosm and as semi-autobiographical reenactment. the film manages to penetrate the dee pest interior of an in" dividual and eoUectjve revolu· tionary awakening. WHEN Paris censors forbade the release of "Zero de Con- d uit e' ' on "corrupting" grounds, Vigo was forced lo abandon severaJ more con- troversial projects, and turn instead to the fairly safe full· length domestic d r a m a ''L'Atalante''. Even so, the rather ordinary material involving a middle a'.g(d barge captain and his young bride was transformed into an ueute study ot the elemental passio,ns, and their relationship and seml·motiva· tion in the inanimate world around them. care.rut, in· tricate detail, along with Boris Kaufman's clnematography uf the Parisian riverscape makes this Vigo 's most visually handsome film. , The films are intensely personal statemen ts. They are often filled with dream-like autobiographical passages,and . always expreued with an im,- aglnative feeling {or at- mosphere and charac· lcrization. llE WAS one of the fi rs t directors of the post-silent era to comprehend and freely make use of the technical and artistic advancements discovered in the previous decade such as slow-motion, the combination of animation with filmed sequences, mon- tage., and reversed motion. The film maker's emphasis upo,n authenticity, his use of the non-actor in major roles. and his preference for "real" as opposed to "staged" set· tings insures his reputation as an innovator, tor it pre- dates the neoreaUsm o fthe Italian cinema by more than a decade. Vigo's development as a film maker becomes easier to understand when his works are viewed in their proper context, as a marathon show· ing will allow. The sardonic s o c i a I documentary "A Propos de Nice" demonstrates his ability to capture, with great speed and vividness. many different individual characters and social types. In ''Taris", a short study of swimming SCENE FROM 'L'ATALANTE champion Jean Taris. his tendency for \V hi msi ca I absurdity shows when Vigo contrasts the swimmer 's ack\vardness on land, and his gracefulness in the water. Finally, in "Zero de Con- duitc" and "L'Atalante" both tendencies are combined, and elaborated upon. "L'Atalante" has some of the n1 o s t beautifully in trica te sequences between character and at· n1osphere ever filmed. 'Zero de Conduite ', presents -barring only the \vork of Eisenstein -film's most com- plex, Md powerful staten1ent on the human struggle for liberty. John Stanphill, coordin· ator of the Jean Vigo mar- atlton. is a West Coast artist toho currentty ha~ a1i exhibit in the Newport flarbor Art Museum. I ' .~~1"~w~·~:~·~~·~.::~:.:~=~~~-~· ~~::~ ... ~ ... ·~··~II Irvine Theater Opens With 'Garden' Rrmeniap Restaur~t ,men.•s FAMOUS SHISH K-101 IELLY DANCINCi-• n.,. -S1u1. Amat1ur Nit1 Ev1ry Thur1d1y Bring Your Codum1 Anet 0 1nc1 To Live M111ic huJrld Says: Col'lle DI• Wltti Me, DINNER ENTREES BU RG ERMEISTER STEAK ( Poc~et of Fil11f filled with m1Hhroom1 I FILET STEAK IR/b.ey• c,11 SAUERBRATEN CHAMPIGNON SCHNITZEL WI ENER SCHNITZEL COR DON BLEl: ROULADEN Imp. Wine e B11r e Wi111 Coc•t1ih Open o~t1v S lo IO-Clo11d Mond•v the BERLINER RESTAURANT 18582 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH TOWN & COUNTRY CENTER 968-5800 Open 7 Duys Wofk Do~: 11 :10 A.M. to 12 P.M. Fri. ond Sat. ll:lO A.M. to 12:30 S11t1day1: 4:00·12 MIO..IGHT COCKTAILS 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962.79 11 ' MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP . ENTERTAINMENT JOE LIGGINS The Original "Honeydrippers" BACK AT THE LARK ROOM wi th WILLIE JACKSON Wtdne&day th•u Sunday hriq111t F•ciliti11 up to '450 Ptoplt 16711 61A.H.4M .4YINUI fAt W.nift) ffUNT1N•TOH l lACtt (Jf'411'46·11 16 f21Jl lf2·1tS'4 ' ' 1 "Everything in the Garden" Mesa Civic Playhouse is this "The Would-Be Gentleman" Opening Saturday for three comedy, on stage tonight and South Coast Repertory is Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-weekends in this Irvine Com-Saturday at the Community continuing its engagement or munity 1beeter drama, play-Center auditorium on th e the Moliere comedy at 8 ----------- ing Fridays and Saturdays at Orange County Fairgrounds at o'clock Wednesdays through 8:30 in the Humanities Hall 8:30. Reservations 556-5300. Sundays in the Third Step Playhouse on the UC lrvine'r----------------------- 1363. campus. Reservations 557- 7297. "Sunrise at Campobello" Closing performances of the Lido Isle Players production will be given tonight and Saturday at 8:30 in the Lido Isle Clubhouse) 701 Via Lido Sood, Newport Beach. Reser· vations 675-0635. "A Thou.sand Clowns" Completing i t s three. weekend nm for the Costa "DAY OF THE JACKAL" Wltfl Edward Coi: + WoftM Mattia• I Corol l11rMtt loth Jo Color IPGI THE OUTSTANOIN~ FAMILY SHOW OF THE HOLIDAY SEASON! "BIG FOOT" • "NORTH COUNTRY" Continuous Sat. & Sun. From 2 Evenings From 7 MD\/IE RATINGS FOR mRENTB AND WUNOPEDPI.£ JM N/HtM ti IN"""" II".,.,.,.. ,,.,.,. .................... " ,,,...,._....,,, .... ., .... ....... ®• -IMl(J 17 ADlllTIID ~ lllfllt ,.., \'try "'wtl lill .,. .. } ' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -··-~------"" _____ ...., __ II ••• easily the best movi.e so far this year. 16th NOSTALG IC WEEK EXCLUSIVE OltANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT WH.·Motl.-Tutt. Tllurs. rt1ru S11n. 7:Jll • t ::IO 1:30 . i :lO. J::I0 -1:Jll · t:Jt u .. s.~"'""".....,~ A~-"'• ll'l·lllOI ., ' m MANN THEA~ES 16"' NOSTALGIC Wiii( W(llCDAY$: 7:30' 9:30 SAT.·SUN: I :30, 3:30, 5:30 7:30' 9:30 TWO wait Disney CLASSICS Wini.DAYS: t :l5 SAT-SUN: l:•O. 5 I t:lS ·AND· DUMBO THE FLYING ELEPHANT W(J«OA,S: 7 I IO:IS SAT·W'f. U:loO. l :40, 7, I 10:U WllkDAYS l i40 SAT.•SUN . 2100, 1120, ISi 1140 11\1 -ANO· JACK LEMMON "SAVI THI TIGER" wtllCDAYS 7!00, 10120 aAf,.JVH. Jt4l. & 7:DJ 10:10 TV DAILY LOG Friday Evening NOVEMBERlO Saturday Morning DECEMBER l loila ~c&i~Wi\i:.. lo11111u ' Cou!Wllp of f.dcll•'• ftttler Thi L•ey Show Th• fllntltt11t1 Slit Trtk 7·0011, (I)),.,,. " ... 11.... 1 • . Cl) ®I ll:l u .... . lllllfflH TUMdt tHJ m '"' ... ., rva-a..,... -= """ "",.. <d•> ·u 011ty Woollty, Arm• 8ut1r. Sl•plrl•1ntt M1ri1 • 0111111tary ""' § CtN Telttlltft Contl11uu lo 2AM. """'""i..,. . TIH'ff Sltol'I 7:!0 (QI)({)) lllJlfJI' -o.J. (I) Cl lllcll Hl&fl, Printt 1:30 (i)~(I)1tot1111'a HtfMs Mof111on T1btm1dt Cllolt O JTovit: (911) .. Adi•'•_.., {eom) Ulttl 1111 '49--Sptnclf Tr1cy, lbth11l11t He~ (lfJ (}) Yotl'& lul burn. · Wil'liif Wonder 11J m <ll!J (1)1-rnmm" \' • °""'1,. -~~II~ ~~ MtlY Crfflln Sbtw l:OG I (9 !l)} {1) SciobtDM "'418"Hlt• l.ll@l!Pdd•oo fo•I~ .. HislofJ ol Art ~II WQM Thtatrt lqln1 h SJ Mowio: ... ucbkl1 Frtlltitf' ' • MO,el• (wts) '43-Riohard Oil. . Do#rt Thom I 11ll CI!""' '""'d• 'i,RMC•I• Vlilo11 o" 7oiial (I), m)Mows ¥~<1ofTo1Jo .. "1fif"Ootllf1 ........... , Mov\e'~ (2ht) ''Wtpns 1toll It t·JO 8 flil·@ ®) €f:' ilMfltMY+4 ~llt" (d11) '4 l~umphrey Bo1art. ' • MtM: "AppOl11tmtflt Vlltb DI• (81 Mlmtl 'Norld ~· (~ra) '51-A1111 Ladd. · What's ~Ml Movie: "f1bulout WWtd ti Jultl I Ltve Lu me" {sel·fl) '61-Lou Tock. Mod Squid . t:OO I (9 (IJ) frvorttt Mtrtltns ( (])I Grt111 '( J11nn11 , 9 (j) ®)fl' Blltch Cluldy ~trakl1 "" Movie: "Opt11t1H H1rUft" ftI'.:~·~ •First of • ~v~~; ~ n. ~ two-part discussion_ o_f~ \women. IS .,,fr..,, &111t: liii'Fliiest IO Ml., seen th1ou1h me11'1 tr••· '\ 11tq in f*'•ll E PrlMlf AllOf rm:mtl 1!7J C1ty Qfp lo9I I ())) boric.I i Clrtoon Clrnlnl · , En1t. Utinn .., ilTiilflijen' Ntf~ --' I " 7:30-Dus!J'i Toll t :!O w:~~mst>rTm · 9 (1) 0 Holi,.d SfPra Mt'l'lc: "Wot111 of tht T.r Hiip Thy Nellhbtr (wes) '43--/,ltlrt Trevor. r• Elephant'°' I"" .. _ I Conctntlltlos 10: ~~) (]),,... B•IO "•ltd'ltd . 1uirm 11pu1M1 IJ)ToTollthtTNtll Qj!IW c.llol' , .... Wtll Simi Wttk ~ my n. f11vy. U11ta•td World • : "Prtfil1 of y,.,..... (mya) &.fllflt • R~~"· Ht!en Hmy, l:OOl(~~11&c:.1'"1'10lpt. i=H~"""'* 0 G) (i'l l)'j m S11tofd ' Sen ID lhlltr ClllltS Movit: (2tlr) "TM Third SWtf' 10:30 fl (fi Cl)) (I) Joslt lfll' .. (dra) '68 -Stephtn Boyd, Diane Pu~ D Family Christmas Show """' '"""'' ...,. (wt!) Clltnto, Jaell Hawkins. §'ID (i) tti €D P111k r1tthtr * Slnta Claus is Coming 9--Gtne Autry. to Town from MILTON :,",,.!'ii'-IW"""""" :;~~:1~tt~1~~\, 11oiia ~f/J, .A'W!"i:c!"* Cllua 11 CenUn1 It 1 ... A whol1 TIJ:.1111: fllftw " tlM S.llll bag of questlorts tbout S.nt1 C11us Ntws are 1nsw1 rtd in this one·hOilt musi· Snl!Ot ttrtll cal f11rt1sy, pr1sented In '1nlm11ic,' ll•JO (J) NIA Wltblll S11tltt ft. a thr1e·dlmtn1ional 1nlm1tlon tech· ' Atlinta. • niqut. It fe1turts th• YOIC.s of Frtd M D (j)@) m CO! Astaire, Keen1n Wynn, Paul Ffltl Mevlt: "Ptrtb'Np eo.....r and Jo.n Gardner. 1) '5&-Xen Lynell. Bollby Gtldabtn Shew II) Mtvlt: "'frllleis 111 tbe W I lilly Cr1U11 CfusHt m Ad UIJ Thi ltld OMt (tom) '55--0ont!d O'Connof, LI Seftor1 '°"" <9 fl)) WMll ill lnitw CIN Ttlethtn Continues la 2AM. fm Chlmpi910i' Wmtllfll tT:) W1shillfl1 w.k 11 lftlft Ill Lo "".., ••• Afternoon li) JeptMM lanp11t Pntrtli 1''°1l !f~~a:i"':1r1":..-uoii01~-w11.-. ~. btr• li(flb I Mtl'I Criffln Show 0 MtN: (t) "TIM Nlbd Dnl" Cltpttchen {R) (1dv) '56--Nthur Ktnntdy, ".... Is.. Diop "'"'"'"' Jap1l'lese Trtnl Prom• Llnctr !:001J (~ 00> (l) C1S Frid.IJ MIM: fi'l Eduutltl,•l Wtrt (C) (2hr40m) "In Cokl 1r..r · iiliter bftn Nti1hlltftlM (dr1) '67--"John ForiJ{ht. Robert 12:SO $ports Sptdll Blake Scolt Wilson, Wiii GHr, "911 Cllllk . ~,2.~.~!Dl~P1~i I tii'C.. "Acri ...... 6 Tht hid On11 SIS111t Slntt • 100111 m 1:00 MtM: "tstl11t ,,... w . 1t.,_..te11r Rod." (Ms) 'Sl-8ri1n Oonlt't'J, a en; n Pro rootb.IH It T1kt1 A Tliitl Cin..COMO en Ont Soul Tflhl : M11t1rpltu Thtlfr1 (R) Llncl tf tltl Cillltl · LI Cr11dt 8ltt1 Crlld1 (j) fltM Show J1p111ts1 Lanpep Pforr•• . =I-= t 30 1:30 tHJ rn ""' ...... " -0 ADA M'S RIB . "'"" <Cl "lld'°" 1.,. * presents •In(' (w•sl ·sz -Mauf1ta Friend of the Family O'H1rt, Alex Nico!. @ ~ m Ad••'• ltli fi311l 81•1nfi1ld Civk Tiit1trl . l• Hie111 I illitt1 Ror•n' Ntl~ ' • Roller Derby Tltl1 WMk ii Pro footNn -omm-~ ~-~-• '!!Jht G1Jliry OI C..p111 "A Hel~n1 Kind" (\l) (I) m LM An11tlu11 Style M0¥1t: "Buff1)t 11111~ (wu) '61 flrina Line -W11n• Morns. to~ '~~~~~ ao• ~,, i~~~lo ll:OO R f5 !5 !!"' flll•l•s: "Tiit S•h1ill1t. .. .., Jifn W~" Stiow/UCU IP. ltlnu• Hip Sdltol" Ulb•ll Bruins vs. Arbnsas. 2:JO !tf!f (I)) CIS Cfllldrtll'1 fl8 I i:::i.~:1:: Sh.. '!.)!.f-b\1 ....... 1 SIUMI Stntl: It To TtH 1111 Td 6i ,. Grt Stnarl i 'J) The Medic l :DO Airki!ltllrt USA ' l1 Jtnlttt 4t M1ro1M blm!Dl1 ~Cl m,,m,,,M.CM ftotMft Al1o CBN T11tthtll Conlln~u to 2AM. ,.,A1 EI!l 8iU MoYtf1' Jturntl (() tllotltcll MtlJIM TttMtro 11:15 (I'!) Cinem1 34 · IJ ....,..: (t) "'W)'Ml11 Moll" 11:)(1 t;I ~ (J) (10) m Joh11ny C.""1 (Wt$) '50--Sttphtn McNatly, I @ (1) m Dk• CMtl tJ6) Hn l•IM of the WNt Alfred Hlltllc.ot• Prestllh • Mtwlt: (C) "Dlttt11t Dn111~ Mo•lt: "I~ ti Nttb'Ml•ll,. ~1) '51-Gtry Ct169tr. • ( r)-Gemun Robles. 9 CJ) Morie: (C) "TH 11111 '* 11:40 1(1) News tit" Tc:om,I '64 -Tony Rtndlll, ( (j)) Tfills West CU T.U. 12:00 6 MO¥ft: .. Prbantr ti Ult lull-MllW1 bprs' Ntll\bertllM l " (adv) '&4-Geo11e M1rsh1!I. 9,.., B N11hvill1 Music • ChrtM111t1 Ttllthl m Mtvlt: "Alf1lr h1 Tlflldll' 3 10 hst(t T""'"' (dr1) '52-Gltnn Fo1d. ftc'\11 "DltctnlO G1rd1nt" t!:ID 0 <9 @>CS! loto Mo'1t: (C) s.,_.,. "'9n" "At1u11d Ult World Uncle1 tN Ill" Tiie filltfllh (sci,lil '66--t.loyd Bridt"' ' Zoi111I 12:30 O M~: .. lrute M111" (mp) '4 Cl)) Qukt "'9111tit11 -Tom MH1. 4·00 l itnnnldol 11:.0 m Thi """"" <9 Cll> n11 w.11 11 rr 1:00 Q ®J m Mltlnllht Spedll Proco! Ottb1n H1rum ttosl. lrnpldl g Mw\1: "The Melrtu" (drt) '49 Wiid Wiil Wtll -Ol!Ylt de H1¥!111nd, Mr. WlnN ! 9 [J) Mm "1a ol !c<iorlt>N 1:30 Ml·ft•"' S'°w: ""'"'*" .... ' l Im N1ll11I "'"'·" "Prince el fun." Ila h1qul? -"'"'""'"" \:40i!-""""" fthpttlot_..i ?:10 MM: "frtld" (dr1) '63 -""* ~ ~lflmery Clift, Susen ttoflnt1. (I') ft~ ATll'lf i:JO II Mowlt: "Din" Wtlh Mt tftlMY" Witte nns (com) '55---N*tt l Costello. Cnl• ,... KOCE TELEVISION LOG l ttt Hl•ton' et Art CCl Lttton 30 "E11rot1t 8.tort Ch•rlem119ne" J 1at Womt11 CCI "Tiit B•ttwtd Clllld" 4100 CIPT•1<.ottlllf1s fCI l llll'!Qual 11\o 1rucl!on let Mu1ttn..-.rn1rlc111 CllltClrtrl, •111 llllctrtc c-.a11y ICI 1:11 IHlrnt Slrtet CCI • 61• Tiit Grttl Ctl!MIMtr c .. '"I IC) " . <:.ton •1'111 Couth•" -con9\1mtr' t<IU tor tollt01 cr9dlt • ,,,. lHll'll 71ot Cha11-y !Cl "Stt•mH ft0tk Ht1n" ·t 1:• J11111 Ktn Tt iJ~ 11• OM1,.11 Doti to t'f'll'ltllth ,1 .. \ l•Hflf fW Tlllllt .. l\'1111 wltlt M Sffftt C•!Mttf' IC ) Tiit 90.t Cllt of !!It hi! l'IUtlcll celmtd "Gach"!!" Hr• • Visit to t r!;vlnlf ol !flt M1rfl11Wtt lild Piigrim llouMI. t r• Clllllflflt I••-• fCl oft occasion ot tht Ctnltnnltl of Arriold Ar!IOtffllm, TIHlltSlfl C ••••• ¥ltww1 111"""°11 lllt 1round In t•tl, wl11ttr, •trlr • n d IPl'll'llf. t1• Clllflkh IC) Dtblll "T ht M tf Otltln~•· S!KV Kt1ch ti• •• H•l!Olton wun S•m•nth1 ln111 '' lflt Str•111• YOr ri. 8 rn•rd a111w'• l'l•v. l •tilt ... I n1 Hind" (WU) '61 · -I~. ' -....... R1ndall, Int" Ith """" 111 Bolton ,,_, lt '° ,.,. r •tit fM on .,... Ill of flMI ... , ..... ''°"nd' llHll llfe hi M• h tllnl tl'le '"'" . ._ / " - UCI Showing Chicano Art ' -. By LA Artists, Los Cuatro. Th Art Gallery at UC Irvine is showing an exhibition of works by Los Cuat.ro, four artists from the Los Angeles Chicano community, through Dec. 9.' Tbo gallecy Is open from noon to 5 p.m. every day except Monday. AdmiMion is free. The four artists' are Gilbert (Magoo) Lujan, Frank (Dynassaur) Romero, Cllarles (Buddy ) Almarez and Robert (Belo Lizanl) de la Rocha. In. forming an association. they are pooling ideas and working together to evo1ve a style and subject matter that manifest the culture specific to the Olicano. THE E..XHJBITION is a nar· row focus on a specific idea rather than a survey of a commun ity effort that could only be done In a much larger scale, Director Hal Glicksman said, A rooperative m u r a 1 , painted especially for the ex- hibition, will be the major work OD display. 1be in- dividual artists will show smaller paintings, water col- ors, drawing and sculpture more reflective of their in· dividual personalities. liOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil\ Cosby Will Perform In Santa Ana Dec. 9 Popular comedian a n d Banet Tickets are $4 each. television-film actor Bill Cosby Revenue from the admission is coming t~ Santa Awa charged will be u.sed for black-stlldenl seholarships. College. Born in Philadelphia in 1937, FAMl l Y TWIN CIN EMA CINEMA I "EASY RIDER" CR> "DRIVE, H~ SAID"' C Rl • He will present two shows Cosby was a track and football in the main college cYm-star in high school and had nasium Sunday. Dec. 9. an athletic scholarship to CINEMA 11 1be sponsoring college stu-Temple University. He served family Show l.Aljan, who has a master's degree in art, bas been stu- dying the folk lradi)ion of Mexican religious sculpture and especially the masks and skeletons that are produced for the Day or the Dead. S.tt.g ly Ylltl Forra..t Good Island Water 7:JO • t:JO lcte• ....... ~~.!!~~ , O~ CORONA DEi. MAR "HEARTBREAK KID" IPGI 7 Ir 11 :01 ,,. Aod "SLEUTH" IPGI 1:50 , .. CALL THEA.RI FOi SUNDAY MATINlf ICHIDUU _, -"' CtNEOOMl 20 ' .. • ' .11 •••• -· -... CtNEODMl ?I ' . " .... _,. -. SIAD/UM J ·.: .. _.!.l.<"L ' t •~ • Friday, N0vtmbtr 30, iq73 ..... , ......... ................ ''THI WAY WI Wltr (Nl "SOUND Of MUSIC" CSI ••• ,"IOMIO•JUll.lr capJ "HONG KONGo CAT' Ill ••• "SLAUGHTll HOTIL" Ill "IA.ml Of THI AMAZONS" ••• "'SHANMtAI llWB" CIJ "ASH WIDNISDAY" Cll .1~ND "STIAW DOSS'" Cll "PA.I'll MOON" CPGI ••• "OKU.H6MA CIUDF' CPGI dent group is the Black Stu-time with Uncle 8am's Navy "NORTH COUNTRY" CGJ dent Union. The shows will on a destroyer then marrled "BIG FOOT' IGI "'WESTWORLD" AND "SOLVENT GREEN" be staged at 3 and 7 p.m. Camille Hanks. They have "LIVING FREF' CG) Also featured will be the three children and reside near II ==;;;;,;;~~;;,,=!L!~~~~~~~~~~ Wat ts 103 rd St r c e t Amherst, Mass. I'.: THIWAYWl lllRI --.w~-----.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii· IMPORTANT MAJOR FEATURE PREVIEW SAT. DEC. 1 I .... _:~_E:_~w_TED ...... 1 I 8: 30 I "SHANGHAI KILLERS" "II WOMEN" Of"IM'NIQHTl.Y AT l 1ff On Silken Couch or Savage Battleground No mere man could ever match their passions! CALL TH&AT.-t: "O" SHOW TIMS . . Held OYtrl 41'11 Weet:I .. JESUS CHIUST SUP'EltlTAR" "CONCERT FOlt BANGLADESH,. Botfl 111 C...I 10) "NORTH COUNTRY" »&JO FOOT" "LIVING FR.EE" All 111 C.19rt (Clll • Elltlft 0..ld HM'A'S'N" "LAST AMERICAN HERO" Both 111 Colar! (P'G) Try TMir Mlldklnll • "THI! YOUNG NURSES" "FLY Mli" Both 111 Cetwl (ltl PllMlll ~ SlhdSAND &REDFORD 10GE1HBll .... WU -·=· ~=.;,1::!!!.';t 4tfl llUCOID Wlllt .... . ,,, .. , ' N E\\. PORT ( -... .... Mon.,.ri: 7: IS t :JO S1l·S1111: 1:JO ll45 •:OO l :lS lO:lO F1d'lion ldend . N""°rt Cen11r ~n BIKh • 644·0760 Sin Diego Frwy. 11 BrooktM,nt Fount.in Vlflty • 962·2'81 ,.,, ,. ... ,. ..... ,,,rt: 011111 1 :4$ S 1t-s111u °"'" IZ:45 W1•: M1llM1 11 J:OO SUrtl 1:45 l'Othll\I' LUS • ROOOY Mc:OOWALL "UOOm Of' •L MO!dl" ION Vl•.IO ~ 'tJ Wf>~O '. I ' '.1 \ ' I I I H ' ' I • DAILY PILOT 3J M *A*S'H-,...~-.. TMCltMl...V'& ...... ---··-·-"-,.c•tc:7., Dflft.- SUPEI SWll •m MA•aGll M.VD ... I•• ... .......... ~-----Oll&lfOI ............ . .. ......... _ .. ... fftlt~ ........... .... P••ltw P•nl p, ..................... " " ---· --M1-Mtl ... ,_ 11). UODe °' Mill HOUll INI , .. CONQUllT fJWE ........ .13). ~~co.~ ""'.,,...~ ...... --WIS1WOILD '"' SOYLENT GREIN l"I • • ( '70 lnternationol TRAYEL~LL J DOOR HARDTOP VB, a utom atic, radio, heater, power 1t1trin9 & brak~s. VB, outomafie, r<1dio , healer, WSW . .tir condilionio9, At.',/ power sfeerio9. fWXMOIO) FM radio. l360AGR.l '68 TOYOTA CORONA 2 DR . HAP.DTOP 4 1p11d lr1n1mi11io11, radio, he1ter. WSW. tXOB098 1 s9 _95 I '71 v.w. FASTIACI< 4 speed tr1fl1mi11 ion, radio, ~eater, while side well tir11. l489CXZJ '68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4 D!l:. 5£0. VB. o11utom•lie, radio, h11•f•r,' power 1leerio9 · br1ke1-wifl · dow1, WSW. 1ir 'ond itiofl· ing. !V ZT220 ! $895 '70 PLYMOUTH 'DUSTER 6 cylinder en9in1, 1t1nd1 rd tr11umi1,iofl, radio. healer, white side w"H lire1. 967BEJ I ~1195 .. \ Smart Buyers • • • Now Is The Time To Ad On Real Savings ••• And We Mean Savings On All '73s In Stock -All Carry New Fadory Warranty. '69 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DR. SED. VB, 1utom11i,, r1dio, h11t1r, p ow 1 r • 1t11rin9, power br1•1s, WSW, 1ir eond., eruis1 eoofrol. 1799!BEI '67 MUSTANG VI, a11tom1fie tr1n11T1in io", radio. h11ter, vinyl top. •\ (188AQFI s995 '68 PONTIAC LE MANS 2 DOOR VB, •ulom1lie, r1dio, h1al1r, p ower steerifl9 • brakes, W S W . air toflditionin9, ~:;if 1'°9'5"'' '68 DODGE CORONET 440 VI , euloll'lelic, r.11dio. h11ler, , pow1r sl11rin9, WSW .. air 'o"d., viflyl top. tXIYl65 ) '95 • • \1lus St•r\ it••• Dt•• p u rtn11•nt "'••l- t·on11•s und llon11rs Rll ('hr ~ 11o l1•r ("t•r• pornlh•u \ t•llit•lt-.s Ht•c1uirln a.=: St•r\'lt'•' und \\urrn~t;-· "ork. ll•·~nrdlt•ss ltl' \\ ht•rt• (';ir "· .. ,.~ l'11rc•hn!0t•d . "to llonur l1us lt•r C'hurJ,!10, flunk• :\n1t•ri1•11rd. 1·ur11• 11 lu n •·ht•. .\ 111 •• ri.• t•un ~-~11r1'!0i ,O ,\nd r ltint•r,; t 'lub .... '69 PONTIAC IONNEYILLE 4 DI. H.T. VI, ""lomafie, radio, heeler, power •ieerin9 & br.,,k11, WSW, •ir eonditioni119 . IYC'11 :95 '65 CHRYSl:.Ell STATION WAGON VI, power de1ri119, pow1r brak1s, WSW !iris, 1ir eon· ditionifl9, roof raelt. • • • BRAND NEW 1973 INTERNATIONAL 1/2 TON PICKUP Se rial # 3H I COCH668988 BRAND NEW 1973 -)NTERNATIONAL SCOUT I S11ri•I Z:·lS41 SSCG025l J 11 DISC$i:Joo OFF MANUFACTURERS STICKER PRICE BRAND NEW '73 TRAVElALL Sitri•I oJHOHOCHIJUJJ l O\SCQUt.atJ $ OFF MAN<.iFAC TURER'5 STICKER PRICE '70 ·INTERNATIONAL TRAVELALL va. 111!01T11lie, radio, h11!1r, pow1r 1l11ri119 &;, brakes, whi!ftw.tll tires, 1lr COflditionln9, '""$1995 Aft t.n S"'iftt i.. ,....., S411t AH Prtl11 Pf~ T•• ncl Lk.fmt , Alt ,rltci V11N lJ11IH 11 ,.M '''""' 1~11 . . . - I • • ·oo ·HAS .. ; ' .. -~ ~. «r ·• . , . " ~-· -. • I . )":'::'.' ... ·' "" ,. · . . ' $1108 • BRAND NEW G '!~ .. UtTfMATE LUXURY· . OltDIR YOURS'.TODA't VISIT OUR ALL NEW 30 FULL PRICE ' . . • TOYOTA MKllCP£: . ' • • DATSUN 610CPE .. IRAND·· ·1;A, 'VE~URA · · MEW " If · ·· J\1.fl ·.-. . ·' . ~·~.. ·.\,.1 ' •, . LOADE-Wlft.I .. -. -" ,j • • ... ·~·\I .QI '~\.••,I '• •} E.co·nomic•I.' 6 -~yl1~er, en9in~~~ ·turbo-hydram·atic, WSW tires, rediO~heater, r~~ '!••* speeker, del!'x• wheel covers, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted glass all windows, custom carpets~ front and rear bumper guards. f 2245 I LESS THAN. TOYOTA . - Radio, heater, powe~ ~teerin'9,\ power brakes, ledio, heatei. lSA~9'1 '· ·2 Or. H.T. R•ny sp:.rt. VS, auto., air, vinyl top, R&H, P.S., P.B., tilt wheel. IXSW992 1 .. ( r;_,.,R1 <' Fl' . • }-.t ' ' ~ ~ Executive 9 pass. Va, automatic, air cond., R&H, power steering .& brakes. (31 SGIV J ' • r " J .... 170 -. . Sport coupe. VB , automatic, air, radio, heater, power steering & brake•. ·( 75SEXY I Supreme. VB, automatic, eir cond., vi~yl top, R&H, power steering & brakes. 114 25701 1- 6281 • J\...i. .. Pickup. VS, automatic, air, ra- dio, heater, power steerin g & brakes, low mileage. I 16182L) • c .SE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . ("• .., ' ' . •' . :'7-~ -~ n """"" ., V b ... _ .... ~U i:JW 3 D~a (~.io LESS THAN _y.w • V8, automatic, air conditioning, radio, heater, power steering & brokes. l1Dl7HJR4 I 772l I ~ speed, r1d io, heeter. See fo · appreciate. (459ACl l 2 Door hardtop, VS, eutomatic, air, vinyl tor., R&H, pow. steer- in9, low mi ••9e. l51'4FPFI • ' ( J .. v... ,;.v " ·'1. :~~ y~u a~:,'-.• in C~~'9f**.i , • ~. ·~f,U '!4fwe o,.a;~ . -Jcar • If ·.,you are ne• Q'nc. f our Ioli~ • •}If you ha.. . .r "° crecf_lt • ·Drive home .. d9y In the car of your choice. I • • • Ja DAILY PILOT AMILER TUMBLEWEEDS I Mmf:l}IE MNK WAS P.0~/1!:D llONDAYl '!tl!J 60f AN AL l!'/1 SNAKE·ffi? FIGMENTS NANCY • by T 0111 K. Rya11 1HAT IS 1llE /ICS'f ~EUEVMU! S1llR'< l'VE E\lllt HEARi:> ! by Al Smith WHAT? WE'RE UP OH•HE Now OOH'TTELL ME You'RE SUPERSTITIOUS! "Tl! I RTEEN'Tll 'FLOOR! ? B OY··· Wl-IAT A SAP YOU ARE PEANUTS by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller GOING TO SCHOOL WHEN YOU DON'T HAVE TO DOOLEY'S WORLD -J SALLY BANANAS ... ·' • GORDO , ' MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS ,ra by Charles M. Schulz by Roter Bradfield By Charles larsottl by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson by ROCJer Bollen THE GIRLS OKACJ ... AUD KEEP llJ TOOOI . TDDAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ! ACROSS 41 Point Of row .Cll Drop b1Jt 1 Crude pe1Wn: &o N111tlv1 word lrifoon11 !12 Norrnlgr1tory I Mechanical bird m.n 5o4 Drir*.1 ol the 10 8. c. '• 110dl ne!gt\bor 68 Dlvlc:*f 14 Hold by llW 69 Heatlfto Of'Q~ 15 --Von eo lrl*1to( 8troti.lm 62 Ctrtlkl 1dl 11 Can. IJtOY. 65 ~ 11-m 17 Ct.00.-: 67 Gh1'1N11N Frlll'ICh 69 Tr09k:f11 tr11 no'ftli1t 70 Cornmo1lon 111 West 71 0.compoM c-dllfl river 72 ---gin 1lil Long narrow 73 WtnterGround groov1 20 ChfitUln A. -:U.S. hcr111ry 22 Cel.l()OOI 24 l.)idl,lded 21 81nget AtOen, I f l l 27 Pused on 29 Ple1aur1 trti'•l•f\. 32 TUl'f 33 Ne•Eut ""'"' 14 Vlf'lur11 M ll'llecta 40 81Y1r1g1 42 Extremely .,.,., 44 1,780prda ~ G.,,,.._, c]!y • 7 CO~ll' 74 Cobe orpeM 75 Bt lnc11Md DOWN 1 Monard!Ofll'll\ 2 Nl"OW tlllll~ ;i. Otc11t1tral .... Orli:I 4 EOQll1h hors1p!1yer 5 Rel11l1tlon El Coln or 01nm1rli: 7 P11]udic1 8 Happen 9 SubJacll 10 Par\ ot "tO be~ 11 Ml• mtlll1 • 12 Gem 13 Lo1ttied 21 a .. 1m'1 wll• 23 D1er11 l11ven11on 26 Deprive of .... 28 F1triet of Abel 29 London'1 IUbwly 30 Propels e boat 31 Seoer111 35 S1tt!n111 of eYtnlS ·37 Fum1rur1 place: 2 WDtdt 38 Intend 311 C1tendlr. lbbt. .t1 Procllldld 43 E.llhlbltl 48 P1lrl#'Ct! In G1n11!1 48 Piece of ,,_ 51 Wa lkt OYlf' ,!53 Abnclfl• 54 L1lrs 55 Cyru1--c U.S. lnwttr!1!11t Ml Fonnul1of be!lal 67 MulCUlll' pow1t 61 Costa- 63 Diving bird 6" Prop1g1tlve plant IJ&l'I ee lnterjeetlOnol W""'M .. """'"' """" JUDGE PARKER 5TIU. NO AASWER JJ SLADE RODERTS' APARTMENT? MISS PEACH IT JUST OCCURRED TO ME! W!'RE NOT SURE HE CAME 6ACK FRO/I\ CHICAGO WITH THE TEAM, ARE WE? l.::A, YOU OON'1 FleL. YOUll: PAll:ENTS L.l!C• Y"", YET YOU TILL. Ml! Tl<fY 6AY& A MAGNFU:INT PAitTY FOIC Y~ lll~TMDAY I.AST WEEK, WITM /IL.L. YDlflt F~--. • DICK TRACY ' NOW, ~llN'I' A WT' Of1 NIU TM!Nff ~AID A90UT YOU THAT NMiHT? IS TllAT WlN 'll:llJ UICI! ~'NDUST."" CHl!FY YES. , by Harold Le Doux by Men by Chester Gollld ' 1 .. Ob dear -I W8I hoping ODr new checks showing the city tkyllne la preUJ colon would make It more enjoyable." DENNIS THE MENACE 0 t • ? l • ' • ' ' l • t t I ' . " . l I ' .1 ! ! i t l I i I . • • • . • • • .. . ' i • • • ' I I • I : ' ( ' ' ! ~ • ' ' . • '- The Dai y Pilot ••• omething For Every Bo y ) ,range oast .. Here's a "seven-pack" you can have delivered to your door for only $2.65 a month anywhere in ' . the Orange Coast area. Nourishing too ... whether you have a taste for local sports reports, crave more news about the world of women in. which you live, feel a lack of community news in your diet or want the variety of top cartoons, comics, columns and commentary packaged so they please you. The Daily Pilot delivers-seven days a week. Want fo order? Phone 642-4321 or the Daily Pilot office in your rieighborhood . • • DAILY PILOT • -· \ ) -I • -. l ' 4f OA1L'f PI LOT Ftlday, Nove1nber 30, 1973 ==============:i======-=======~1 -~~·~~~~-1 ~~~~~~~~~--~~~--PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lfOflCI 0" U.LI OF 1'111$0HAL SLP•W SLl'-1,. SU,llllOlt COUllT 0, CALl,Ol:NIA. l"lt~lllTY AT l'UILIC SAL.I SUl'lllOI COUllT 01' THI SUl'lll:IOll COUltf O" CALl,.OllHIA COUNTY 0" OUHOI: IS.Ctltol Ut4 • t• el STATI Oil (ALll'"CHINI,\ fOI COUNfY 0, OllAUOG '1M (h•k C1111tr Dt1W Wuf, The l'ICTtTIDllS &llllNUI NA.Ml STATIM•NT lollowl119 Pll'SOfl t1 '°'"' 11111!"'51 Cl..41 l'f«Mll,.I ~I COUMTY 01' OllANOI No, A7Wt 111111 A111, C1IUonil1 1J: IN THI MUNICll'AL COUll:T, H11. A·7tf1t NOJICI 0' NIAlllNG ON l"STITION CAii NUMlllt T'1 TACKLE, 400 Mil" St .. l11bot, OtlANOI COUNTY HAltlOll NOTICI Ofl Hl .t.a lNG' 01' ,...,,,ION ,Oil f'Jl:Ol.ATI 01' HOLOOltAl'HI( o.Mm cent. PIM~ .IUOICIAL OISTllCT, 1'01 l'l oaATI 01' WILL AliD '011 WILL AtllD •Oii L•TTlllS 0, Al> SUMMONS llMlll lAOl.I T'-'-t 'L~ Ottr. 412 illord, COUliTY 0, OllANO•. LIETT•llS TaSTAMIJllTAa'I' MllilSTltATION WITH TH• WILL AN· In t• tilt m.rr1..iff ot Ptlll!Oflf'! Cmtt Miu, c:.tlt, "'21 ITATI 0, CALl•OINIA f-:_ t.~IAlf ol HELEiril KE NWOllTHV HIXIO JUDITH H NEUFliEll fll4 ll"fOllOtrtl: Tiil• ~ lt CGndUCl9d DY aft N .. ltuol llOGlilll, ellO k-.. u HIE.LEN I(, hi "'-Maner ol I~ .. l!t111t of CARWIN LIOKA.11 0 11 NEUFHE!lt llldl~ldl.NIL. THI WAllLEN COM,ANY,. Mlnnt':O'• llOGlillS. Df(.taMCI. !1101Altf WQl..F .... kllCIWll IS OAllWIN To lhl .... ~Ill : Tiii pttlfr--Tl!OrN• l.. Grw tGrW•llon.. Plalnllrt Q Ra~mona Rol'Nn. NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN !1111 M. WOLF, DettaMCI. ""' ffltd a ptllt>Otl corarnlng W1o1K Tlllt llt~t Wh 111911 wttll fN dtltndtfll THEODORE DARLING ROG£R5 "'' NOl"ICE 1$ HEltE9Y GIVEN tllll mairltQtt. Vov 11'\lr Ult • wrlTttn CowlV ci..-11 of °'""" COVlllY ... NOTICI IS HEllEllY GIVEN !Ml 111~ ltfrtll' I pttltlon for Probala or 11\f Ptlhl1111 of ALICli OAllLENE WOLF rtfPllllM wll1'1t11 )0 dlV. ot ll'lt Hit 1'10..,.ll'lbtl' t7, lt7). tl\t pl'Olltf'ly lll'rtl,..tttr ctei.c;rlptd $MU Wiii Incl IOI' ltwanc:l ot ltllf't for ttlt ProHte ot W!fl o4 OAAWIN 11111 !hit 1um1,10•" !t ltftltd on vou. 112tt$4 M told ti • pUDllt wlf tw (Oll\Pf!IU\'i' Tfflemtf'llll'Y 10 1ht ptlil -· '''"ff!Cf MOZART W(X.F 1lso kllOWll et CARWIN ti wou 1•11 10 lilt f wrlllt11 '"Pl!fl" Publ1tll9d Ori119t Cotti 0.lly Piiot, bidding II tht place w!llrrr 1111 pr°'""'" to wt1Jc11 11 ftltdl I« furllllf par11c:lllart, M. WOl.F, fht tboVll na""°" ~I. wflllln llKll 111111, vour Cltlault m1w Novembtr )0 •rid Otctmtltr I. u, n, I• •IOt'K. ~ wit! 1n E•11 IJ!h Slrfl'tl, Incl 11111 lhl lllM •1111 Plac:• OI llHrlng Ind tor IU1U11Kr of L'"""' of tit tnll!'tCI Ind , ... COU<1 mar .,.,., 1913 lill:zt.ll PUBIJC NOTICE c°'" MQt, C•IUomla. Slld .. ,, a.11111 , .... Mmt .,., -HI tor 'Ce<.. IL Adml11l1tr1lklll wllll 1111 Wiii l_Jll.,, I iudtll'ltl'll c:ont1ll1l119 lnl\lflCllve or ottier bt held 11 t .:111 A.NI. on Wt0nf5d•Y· lt7J, al t :GO 1.m •• In !!It c:~room ti\.,._ to Allee 01rl1rw Woll, Ptllll-r. Otclitl'I t01Klf'nl119 dlvl1ion ot orOPflty, Decemtier ~. 1t13. S111d ••I• 11 made ot O-rlmtt1t No, l ol Hkl tour!, nfer•IK• lo wl'l!ch It htttbY m.ot l(IOl.ltill 1uwor1. chlkl c:in!Ody, (Nkl purwant 'O ttw provision• ol Secllon 11 700 Clvlt Cent.,. Orlwt Wett, In tor lurllllf par1J1c:ut1r1. wlll be ri.lrd tuppOft, tllotntY'• '-• totlt, afld 1uch 11'4 of Ille COdl OI C!vU Proc:lldurt IM CUv OI S1n111,An1_, Ctlllotnl1. • 11 9:00 A.M. on Ott. II, 1'73. In DIMr rllltr ti may bt 11r1nlld br1 -------1,-,1c1,,,,----- ol 1111 Slttt OI c11ltornta. Oiled Nov. ~1, \tn. DtNrtmtnl J ot tht 11>ow 1n11111d thl '°"'"'· b All ll'IOll9Y r11lt1fd from 11141 111e WILLIAM I;. SI JOHN, Cowl 11 1111 CourlllouM 11 100 Civic If YM wllll 19 ... k tt1t Mvlce ot SV .. t:lll II COUllT o .. TH• of lht ~rlbeCI or•rtv .iia11 M t.lt9d CounlY CJ«lr. ,.,..,.,. Ot. Wttl, "' 11'11 Clly of $11111 .. '"°'"',. I• 1111$ """"°'' YOU IMllMI STAT• 0 , CALl,OllNIA '° pay lht t°'~ Of 1111 pl•!111llf Ill JAME' L~Ul•L. Jilt. Afll In 11\t •bOYt O.tlllllf!td cou111y tte 11 ll'l"Ol'lllllllV 11 111111 YWr wrlttu ,Olt THI COUNTY 0 11 ORANG• "orlno Ind 11tlll'l(I llKll pr-rly and M3t VIA RTO lfld .,.,.. ·-~ •I 111y, """' ... lllM ... ,..,, A•JllM ,,..,. blllnclf , ... ,... 111111 M ~ .. ·~w.. ••AcH. (ALI ... nut OATEO ttllt 2tlh day Of Novtrnbtr •• ...,.. NOTICI Of' MlA•IH 0 ' P •TITION In p.ymtnl OI j)l1ln111r 1 jlldgmt In-Ttl: ( 41 •n-41n \Jn. 0.lfd ,_ n. ltlt ~ Plt09AT• O« Wllo.L ANO 110• c:IWlno COlh. Any bll1nc1 1ein1lfl ... t y i.ri f'tllttelllr WIL.LIA.M Ii. SI JOHN, WILLIAM "· ST JOHN, Cll!'1t LSTT~U TDTAMIUtTAl.Y $11111 M ...iurned 10 tr.e llrtt11d1nt, PuDllthttt Ora119e Cotll Dlll\I Piiot, County CMrk ey ArNro fi, Gutv•ri, Otputy i.tlltt' ot RUTH Y. GOOOMAN, Detcr!Dld orl)Jlfrly: 1. L•Sll•Pfd Bir Nov. ]IQ 1fld Dec. 1, 7, 1'72 *3-13 •v: Watt.,. T. 1(1119 UU..OC Ot<.11Nd. 11\.'I fMI lang, peclOad: J. Froot Bir ' DtsMir1Y Cl«ll ($1!AL.) NOTICI! IS Ml!ll l!I Y OIVEN tllll 11 llM'I l(llllJ; l . J Slnkl BIClr. a.,, ••01.•• M, n A••· ,.. ,ubllthtd OrlllOt COii! Oaltr l'llot WIL.L.IAM A. GOODMAN kl• flltcl 1111'1t11 t , 4 ltU(ell for tittr Ind sort drinks; PUBLIC NOTJCB Attonirr al i...w Nowmber n, )0 I/Id Otcltl'lbtt 7, lt. I .-t!Hon for .,,_.,. of Wiii ltld S. 1S va• t111U C02: '· Hol w1ll!'I" )11111 Y""6H ... llvarc lt7J JS11·13 for 1.-1 of L.tl'ltn T"llMll'lllfY llei ter -]IQ g.11 ; I. ~ llooh; 1. ----f'.0 • ._ :tU to fht Pllll1_. ~-• to wlllcti l • ovit cockMll tllilllli t. I ~rlfil NOTICE HE,REI Y IJ GIVEN Iba! YtQI .. , ClllflrlN fUn It mac1t tor """"' 11trtl<UltrL and 11~ u· _.. U'; 10. 1 01~1<1n Ovtrlle1d • Publlc Helril\O Wiii 119 htkl bltfot• T......_1 (714) 7'7•1411 PUBUC NOTICE !Mlt 1111 1111'11 t fld piece of Mltfno llelttr; ll. Wilk. In bo• 4 doors the CHY Council of 1111 City of lrvlnt A"°'11ff Ill' l'etlffMtr 1111 1ama llat bftt1 wt fOr Okl!'l'lbtr _ 1 tin; 11. 1 so,,.11 c11a1,, 13. 00 Tuetdoy, 01e1mber ll, lt7l. et P\IOlltlWd Or•• Co.It 0111v Piiot ILP'224 11, 1m. •I f :OI) 1.m .. In IM cctUrll'OOl'l'I ~" ~r1111~11f1~~«·1r1~ 11~~:0r1s'.1"'~~i1 ~;30unr~:;·;uvorH1:~ s:'oi, ,,::.,.~~:;Nov.'° tnd Dec. 1• 7• 1113 3"2·13 su~'r~fo\ Tgo~:~o~io~~. : ~~~~' c:i°t.i:s ~v • ..i~ •• ~:''"1~ 10 wall rl<I cirpe:t !hrlHIUI; 16. $ Rooms A, S. & C, •m Campin, OrlYI, ITAT• 0.. CALll'OINIA .. 011: Ille City Of St11ta Atla, Celltornla. plttet Od<l ilud press WODCI: II, 1 lr~lne, C•lllornl1, lo contlOtr Ille lldootlon PUBUC NOTICE THI COUNT'\' 0" OIANOI Otilfd NOll'lfl'lbtr 21, 1m. door hoHdl •'IV." ll 2'4"; II. A$>llr"Oll. of IM PROPOSED GEHEllAL PLAN He. A·1llOU WIU.IA.M E. SI JOtiN, lOO empty Mer tioltl"; 19. 3 owrne1d lor !hi City ol lrvlnot, Estala ot EiltNA JOHANl(A KL£1H, COUlllY Cllrk 11 hll' 20 2 l1rgc co~ 11nk1 & empty Said GENERAL PLAN. lncllldll'IO •11 fllCTITIOUI IUSIN ISS Otce111d MC KINNA. fllnlt40 a .. IMCN ti!, 'i..Q· 21 1 imell C02 linki lhe fltceuarv eltmtftl1, 9'MrlllY, '"'" l(AMI STATIM•NT NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN lo 1111 UMl 1!1 T"' llM, 11111• JN plus 2 g~vges0; n. ' brolr.tn 1os1n tomp.1n11 an ''" rr.1'11 thl Lf'"'.111 .. T!lt ,loll~J!"Jli, ,Pjlf"IOll 11 cloln; buliflltl cr9dllor1 of IM alloYI n1m9d dac:ecltnl •1 ,...., (1111. fuat ctwlrti 2l. , stt cocklall 1.trv!ng de S.nil1go HU11 In IM Norttt.1 11\ol 11SI 0 • J, thll all person1 111¥11111 claim• 111al111t Tth 1714) ~ rafls Lr~lrit Ra nch bovtlderlft ~ the 1E11f STC.\IE't1PIOOL ~UPPL.IES, 6'I Wtsl !hi stld decldtnt are ~ulred to tilt A,..,,.,.t .... ,ttltloNr Otttd: NowmMr )I, 1973. Ind Wtll, Ind tM P1cllk 0cltlfl In ••kW~I lflslol, ~II MIU, CaJll. llllm, wllh Ille rM<euery YOUCl\lrt, In P\11111&1'\td Ora1111t Co.tit Oallr Pllot, LIPPOLD. HENDERSON Ille South, .711 1 '2'2t 1111 offlca ol 1111 clllk of "" •lloYI NOY. 30 •lld Dec. 1, 7, 1rn ~n & DINSMOOR Further 1ntormatlon rttantr,. tht Sl9Phfll ThomPtOn ll.llk1r • .., o.i-reu mfll9d couri, or to pr11MI lhlm, Wllll l---------------Sv Thorn•t W. HenderM111. J" PROPOSED GENERAL. lflLAN ,W, 1111 Street, COlll Mt11, Call!, m2' !ht lllCllSln' vo.ichcr1. to 1111 1N1o At1ornev5 for Pl1J1111n Cllf of lrvl~ t•11 bt Dblalntiii. '1rom Tiii• buslneu 11 cllllducl9d bf 1n In• dtrllgntd 11 "" office of Mtrll11 Gavit PUBUC NOTICE :llO E. 171h s1r .. 1, Sullt 11 1 the Cltv OI lrvl11e Pl-l'IO ~l!Mfll, dlvld11al~l!'°',l .;, Alkrtn. 12.SSO llrootthursl SI. Sil, J,'---=c==coo-7e==~---CO!l!a Mew, Ctlllornl;i m11 .Wl Cimpui Orlv1, SUI!• ~+."" 3""'*' Tllompt.on llvelttr Garde11 Grovt. C1. '2"'6, which It 1111r Teltphollt· UUI s.c&.1IS6 Town canter, lrvl~. c:.&Hwnl1 l ), u t.b 1 fltlfRJIJll was llled with 1111 plKa Of bVlln"I ot Iha l.lndlr'tlllMCI fllCTIT1IOUTIATIUllNISS Pur.tlihed Ori .. COlll OllJV Pllol wl)erl I copy of Mid ,1111 I on &Oi.'V 'Cltrl-of 0rll'9f CDIJn!Y Oii \11 1U mi tt.fl pt1"!1lnlng to !ht Mll ll Tht fol.: ~ ~~=T ... ..,1_ NovemMr JO, 19n 3651-T.I Ill~. -.1. _ N~ ttl 1m. o1 w lct dlelldlnt. wl lllln four rnonllll · . fl I• r~t!d tklt Plt'llOllS W1U1lll0 1'·2'1U afltr Illa r1r1t pUbUc1tl011 ot tltlt notltt ••· to comlfltnt Oii Illa ~II Pl1n ot11ver ~•f'I09 Cots! OtHy f'UOf, O.lld NovtmMr :io. 1913 ' THE llOOklfi, nll l rltlol $t •• C°'la PUBLIC NCYl'ICE 111elr commtftll to 1111 CllY~ arid Otctmbli' 1 14 21 EVELYN kLUMll Mff.1, '2626 ----'-"'--<-=~-----Ortlct bV 110 lilt( than 12 on lt7J ' J612.1j E:iretulrlll of llll WIN Jlldlll'I ill.. Gt'l'I', tt77 Hlgllllnd Vlst1 • nn Tuesdav. D1(tmri.r .t. ltll .t/14 of !ht allov• n1med dtt9dtnt Or •• Arc1<111. cant. fl006 SUl'EllllDlll COURT OF THI! they ca11 be treMm1111d to tilt! .cJQt ~ Mlrthl Oar .. AsllN1t Thll bu.a-II condudtd by an STATE 01' CAL.ll'DRNIA FOR Council •lonll with thll ~· m11tr11ri: r,,,. .. r UBLIC NOTICE 12UI •rlOICIWnl St •• Sii. J lndlYldu•I THE COUNTY OF DlllANGE C1rol J. Flrnll ' ....... OtrRll g,.. .... Ci . fU41 Judith ill, Gr1v NII. A·1n'J Clly Clark of !hi Oty ~Int ._. OllOINANCI NO 7).41 T .......... : (714} Pf.1121 Tiiis slaltmtnl W" Hiid Wltll thl HOT/CE Ofl NEAi/NG 0, .. ETITION Put>llll\ta Or1no1 Coast O.lly Pl~. AJ4 u••EHCY OlllOl)IAMce 0 .. THI ArtorMY for l!ll'tcltfr1x Cwnty Citric °' Orano-COl,lllry Ol'I l'OR 'llOI ATE 01' '#ILL ANO FOR Novtmber lO, lm illd ~.$. ~ clTY •-COUNCIL o f" TNf CITY Ofl Publlshed Ora1191 Cont Dally ,Ill!, Nl'ff!TIMr S. lfl'l LEne •s TllTAMENTAllY lt7l WJ.13 COSTA ·M•u., CALl,OllNIA. IX· NovemMr 23, :io. Ind Oetembtf 1, '"""* E,t.te ol CLAY LOWE. llSO kl'\Own T•:r,•o OlOINANCI n-u flOll A 14 1973 35n-n PuDll.nad Orlflfll C011t Dally Pl .. It CLARABELLE v. LOWE, 0Ktlt9d. PU BLIC NOTICE ! ~II I t• OD oP NIN I TY OAVI TO "lllll • Novembtf '· It. 23. 30. 1913 sm.n NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN that '.ti;;, ! ' .... T, • JEANNE ELLZAIETH SHAW 1111 !lltd ~ INr· THI! lllllCTION Ofl l lOHS - tiertln , Ptllllon t« Probate of Will FICTJT10UI •USINISS • I""' ""DUlltlNe'iYM• ,.llllOD 0" Pl•l'AI· PUBIJC NOTICE ind for l5suanc1 of Ls!llH"t Te-slamtnl1ry NAME STAT•MINT \.; • .;t~A'lit.ON·Ofl-,A Nl!W COM,lll•HENSIV• refereoce to wtlich ii fn.ldt IOI' furtlier The lollowlng ptl"llOll• II dol119 ~ llON OflD'lNANC•. , I LP.UI PUBIJC NOTICE Plr'fkylatl Ind lhil the !lm• lrld plact IS: • ' THE CITY-COUNCIL OF THE CITY MOTICI TD c•eOITOllS ,ICTITIOUS BUStN•s• DI 11e1r1nV lhl wme ll•s Miii 111 A 0 v AN c E 0 c 0 N s u L. T;I "0 bF CO!TA MESA DOES HEREllV OR-su .. ••10• COUlllT DI' TNI MAMI ITATIMIMT tor Oecember 11, 1973, at 9,00 1.m.. TECHNOlOGY, MJO(I 81rcl'I St.,~ S!Jl,14 OfilN Al•F.OlLOWS: STATt: 0 , CALl,OllNIA ,OR TM followl!lo penon1 ,,. doll'll In !ne courtroom 01 Dtper!mlnl No 113. N1Wport BeKh, CaUr. l'2t40 . $EC1,IQN 1, AUTHORl1V ANO IN· THI! COUNTY 0, OlllANO• busl11t'S 1$: 3 I Slid court 11 700 Cl~lc cenief John Y. Qui/lair & Nul'la J. Qlllhalr, TENT ~ '' No. A·7IOlli COASTAL MAINTENANCI!' CO., 2$2(11 Drl~e wet!, In ihe Cl!~ ol San!1 Ant, 10112 Jon D1y, Huntlngkln I'!'•• Ce. WHEREAS, lhe Council of Ille City E1tel1 of JEANNE G. CLEM, Otctet-Vii 0. Ania, LlllUnt Nl9uel, Cl llf, C:alltomla 92'.16 • 1.1 DI CQllft Me11 Is ch1rged wUh 11>1 ed · 92677 Dllect Novemlle!' 2$, 1913. Tn1s butLnt1l I• conducltd by Ill ,rNPOn$f!ilJ!t:' •!')d prOYJded Ille authorllV NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to 1111 J1ml6 H. Celllty, 25201 Vl1 Of> WILLIAM E. St JOHN. hldlvld~I. ID retUt•I• Oll'flrtmlw Ind off1N"rmlH crldll<M"s of !I'll lllo'<'I! nelnld dltllltnl AllU, '-"""' Nlguel, C.llf, '2'17 counlv Clerk Jol\n Y. ouaa.Jr .:J ' sl11iu l'dlhln the CJIY of Cosll MtM; ,.,., •II psr11Gns lllvi1111 cie!ms eoall'ltl Rlc:Mrd T. OCUr.111, 1NI $hldy MCKENNA, FITTIMG a FINCH Th!S Slalement WIS ttlld h lllt •nd . •· !hi Mid dec.tdllfll It• requlnd to flit Spring Dr., l urt\lllk.. Cll. tl.!04 11"1 EL T11n Rud, Sulla 2°' Cour1rv Cl1rk. ol Orltlil't C 1'1 1: ~ , w~i;~qs. proper slg11I"" Is both thlm, with thl 111teU1rr vouc:hlrs, In Tl'lb buslritu It c:onducttd bY a o-r1I II Ton. Calltornl1 t2'3I • November 2/, 1973. Metntl'Y ·~rid <1t1lra~I• tor 1111 pro-tilt ottrct Of 1111 clerk ot Ille 1bov1 par!Mrll'ltp Tll: 17141 DO-.J-.O P"912 moth111 .lpf ,comrnarca 111 1111 ~rry OI tnlflled courl, or lo prts1nt ll'llm, wllll Jamts H. C1t11ty All1tMr • for ,.tlll~r Publl1hed Oratlll Coa11 Oallr Pllol, Cost1 Mtfe; 1nd !IHI ntcessary vouc:.,.r1. to !hi vn. Thlt i ti tfmtllll wae ftltd wlltt tlll Pul>llihed 0raf19t co.isl 01U~ Piiot, Novemoer JO l l'ICI December 1, ,,, 21, , WHEREAS, sign rteul1llons lllYI d.,.s.tgl'llld al 1111 Law Offlct of RObtrt c-1'( 'Citric of Orlnot COllfllY on Hov 30 afld DIC. J, 7, 1913 3'Sl·1ll91J ,JU6-73 ''sllnlllant''!«onomlc. M>C!at and M. G1lllvari. 16'6 N. Main SI .. Sli . HOYlll"lblr S, 1913 • '"'"'"' lmpet!s uporo tht c1ry of 300. san11 A11a, eaur.. wlltth I• 1111 P.2"16 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cotfa MIU: •llCI Dl1e1 of 111Jsl11111 of 1111 Uf'ldlnl9Md Pt.lbl'lthld Oranoe Coast DallY Pl~ WHEREAS. Ille Cou11tl1 It now con-(n all m1ll1f1 Ptrtalnlng to 1111 tilate Novemblr t, 1•, ti. )0, ltT.I tJl'f.7,f ORDINANCE NO. 2111 AN OlllOINANCE ADDING AttTICLli J TO Ol'llllON I OF TITLE 1 OF TM£ CODIFIED OltOINANClS OF THE COUNTY OF OAANGE, CALIFDlllNIA ' Tiie SOlrd ot Supervl.or1 ol !Ill Ccun1y of Orange, C11ltoml1, 111111 Ol'llll/"' rouows · l SECTION 1. Artltlt S Is llertlrf adOed to Olvl1l011 I of Tiiie I of Ille tocrlllfd Onlln.aMtS of 1ne Coun•v ol Or•1111• to rNd as tolklw1: , Artie .. S REGISTltATION AND OtSCLOSUllE OF LDlllYISTS , IJOl~_IQP.,...}ll• tdOPllon of • com· of "Id declOtnl, wllllln tour montlls ·---------- preMnSIYI sign ordl111nc11 1fld eller thl flr1t publlca!lon of 11111 l'IClllce. PUBIJC NOTICE &ts, the Council arid Pl11111l1111 Oiled Nov. 20. 1m. ~ lllvt rtGelV9d M!Yeral HAARINGTON E. CLEM ----~~----r ilorls from Ille stat! Ind Admlnlstrltor of tM £t11t1·01 fllCTITIOUI •UllM•ts trnaid•l!""'f'l9 lht prttlmlnarv d111! lhl 1tiov1 nemed detfd.fnl HAM• STATWllllT Of V ~V1111slvt 1l9n ordlf'llollC:r. lllDllllT H. GAU.I VAN The tollowt1111 ""'°"' art doing SECTfPN J. SIG NS REGULA.TEO A"'"'41y 11 Lew buslnest at: .l Tiit Olrtclor of Pl1nnlng shlll Ii> u .. N. Malll SI., St.. Mt ANOEJtS~N -EL.ECTlltlC. •t ~ "'"°"' Ofllv those s19ns Wlllth conlorm SUI• Alll Cellt. nm Lido P1rk. NtwpOrt 1.-c:11. CaHt. '2'60 10 I"-1lgn reguJ1rlons Included 111 TtkplltM• cnu 141.,.. 11:..W.A. liltctrLc eom111ny, Inc. 5ec. 11 .0Jl, Otllllill0!'• 1.... 11'1 C ty 01 Oringe ine Orallllf Counrr FtOOd thl document tnlllled "'Sign Ordl11a11te, AlttmtY iw Admllllilrltor (C•lllornl1), 47 Baatl'I. Lido Park', COU NfY WU lllt""'t 1 oun ' p r1l ot I k:I fld Prellmlnary Oral!" p·-•1 ~.~ ,.._, C 1 O II Pll H..........o l llCtl. C1Hr '2660 C0111i'OI Ol1trlc1, !he Orlfllla County Hlrbori. e .. chet. and 1 ' 1 1 ' 1 SECTION J PLANN ING COl.\MISSION '"" s,..,.. ""11191 NS a ~ ot, ·-,...... " 111y ether WJKllL oi1trie11 11overn1<1 by Ille Boerd ol Su!>lfYillN'I of Ille 1..oun1y REVIEW • Novtmbtr 23, 30, 11'1d Oe«mbtr 7, Tl'll• Mll'ltl• I• Mint cOl'lducl9d br ot Ortnge 1-4. 1t1l J574-T.I I C0tpor1tloo. GOVE,RNMENTAL AOVOCATE It. dellnecl •t 1 Plf'JOO Who lhlll 9111>1ge Thi Plannlng Olrtclor 111111 submll Jt.W.A. Eltclrlc (Ofl'IPIM', Lnt. hlmsett ivr pey °' i ny con,idtralkll!, lnc lud11111 1uUti1M tmPIOYmenl of • lo 1111 . PLtnlllng Commission 1 week!v A;Dbtrt w. AndtrStft principal !or ttie purPOSe OI •llempllng lo lnUuencc Ille action on 1ny mener ?"°"" Wllldl wmtntrlzH t11t t.lgn pennJts PUBLIC NOTICE This stal1mt11I tllfd wllll IM Counrv pendfllll 't>etorl lrie Bo.rd of Superv!tort g1 !hit c.oun1y, 1nv commission or Hutd end denlld. The Comml1tlon may, Clerk of Orange CounlY on; NO'ltlNllf comm11te1 OI 1111, County, or any Oltlc.,. °' 1mployee ol 11'111 COUnly. on lls own molloo, rtvlew inr still SUPEllOll (OUlilT OF TH• ll, 197' MATTER Is dtflfled 10 Include resolullon1, motloo1, I Pfllllll, eppllc&ll0111, l clllll'I. STATI Of' CALl .. DltNIA.f'OI ....... Pllll!Ol'IS ptfmltl nomlnillons ordln1nces, 1mltndment1. conlr1ct1, pUttlllH SECTION 4. TIME PERIOO THE COUNTY 0 ., OllANff.I l'llblllhld Orlnot Col.If Daffy Plfot d r .:fld INs•' ' Thi• Ordinance 111111 tit ltf lull fore• Ne. A-mst Nov'""*"· IL 21, • 20 Mel OllcMilltr' Of eP~CUN!AltY .INTEREST shlU Include an lntlf'al In I contrld or pUrdlQI ll'ld efltcl for • period of nlntlY tfO) NOTICE 01' H•A,llltNO Ofl.PfllTION /• ltn ,.,..13 order oWllttll'llp ot Jeno af!Kled by • mailer, 1nd owntflllfp Of 1toclr. Ill • dlys. FO« "ROIATI OP WIU. ... ·-' corpo;.•Jon wtikh has 1 pac1,111Ltry lnt11est. SECTION S. URGENCY MEASUAE L•TTilllS TI STAM•JllTAlltf rv-o lJBLI PRINCIPAL Is delll'ltd a1 1 1>11i.on haYllllJ I pecuniary 11111119! In Ille Tiii Coi...,.::11 llnds Ind d«11r11 Illa! E I I of DONAS y ELLIOTT O«:ta '----,.p"°'"'""C~JWl'ICE'°"°"'°"""" __ _ out(on"ll" of 1 matter wllhln Influence « COr1trol Of !ht counly encl ll'laU TM promotion of 1111 public lnl1rnl 911 • • ' • • .. r llltludt lht t.POUSI and d'llklren and perents Ol s1ld Ptri.cn. requlrt1 11111 11111 Ordlntfltl OI tdopltd NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN tlllll lllCTrTIOOI •USUt•I• Set. II.OU. lttPOfh br Govtmm111t1t Advoc11t1. II Ill llrllll'ICY 1M11urt punu111t to M'°'RJEANNE J MATTHEY l'lll flltd NAM• !_TATaMllNT A govtrnm111lel edvoc•ta •1>11tl flit wl!h tile Citric Of Ille lloard, Dlforl Setllon 3'Q.l of 11'1• Gover11manl Cocrt. 111 1 1111 · for P llHI of Wiil Thi lollowilllll .,.,_... _,,. doll'ICI l(!lng ti Wmt 1 torm 1111lng 1111 nlnl<' and iddrtst, 1111 n•tntt and Hdreues SECTION 6. NOTIFICATIONS ri n 11 Pf on r e bu1lt'ltlt a1: 01 1111 pulOlll' cgrporallont gr organl11tioo1 repr1M11!ed by lllm. 1111 arnounl Tl'll1 Ordll'llnct 111111 ttkt effect ll'ld arid for lmia11tt o4 L.tfl"'' Ta11emtnta1Y CREST NOVEL.TIES M,G~· 1521 1 he recrlve. .Or u>mpensatk.n 1nct upenses c01Ktrni1111 Counlr m1tttfl. 1nd bt In full torcr tfld efflcl lmmectl1lety 10 1111 petl!lontr, r1M1nctcvl'° whlcll WllSI Sltle, WttlmlM!lr, Callr, Wflll e:irpeni;es ire l11ttudl<I. lhlt repe>rl $hall t lto di.Close tll glfll or cot! 1ner l!s p1sM11e, efld befor• Ille ••· 11 mede lor l'l,rrlhlr ~rl '"' tlld Anthony ()l/Ylf 8ourdOl'I. 21150 kliv- of mellll or tnttrlalnment to tountv o!llcer1 or employees by 11th 1moun1. plra!IOll DI lilleen (ISi d1y1 11Ter Its lliet lhe tlmt lfld pltc;t of hearJ1111 l1111rov1 Ln., Hunll11111tor1 •••ch, C•. deKrlptidn tnd Mme respecllvelv; provided, however, !hill otlls 1nd meals p1111ge. $hall bf publlsl'ttd onr;e In 1ue same has been set !or Dec. II, 92046 or olrier ,'ntirt•lnmmi which d•d no1 cumulltlvely eJ.celG twl!lllV·llv• dollars the Or111111 Coasl Dally Pllol, 1 newspaper 1913. at 9:00 •.m., In Ille counroorn Ariall1 C. Bourdon, 20541 kelvl"llrOYt IUSl Pfl' monlh per olfictr or emplove-e need not be Include<!. Such e rtPQrl 01 gener~1 clrculallo11 !rlnted alld pubhSll· of 01parr_ment No. 3 Of sa)d courl, Ln .. Hunllllllton lluch, Calif. 92"'6 sll•ll btr iubmirted qu1r1er1v, Oii or be-tore J1n111rv 10, April 10. Julv 10, arid ed In the tllv DI co 11 Mew, together i t 700 Civic Center O~IYt Wes!, In This business 11 conduct9d bV an Octobtr 10, Ind .tlaU 111clud1 Ill• arnounl 1111 1dvoc.1te recehed tor cornPtn-with thr nemll!s g1 IM memMr• of lne tnv of 51nr1 ,.na, Celltornl1. lndlvldual. wtiOrl conctrnlng county m1ttert. The Cl1tk or rna Boon:! s11a11 have 1v1ll1r.te tile Cou11tll voting lor and 1galnsl sarnt. 01ted N_ov. 21, 197J AnllloflY O. llourdon forms tor both 1n1 rtelslr1t1on of advocares 1nd Ille 11u1r1erJv reporls required. PASSED ANO AOOPTEO this l91h William E. SI John, Coun1y Cle1k This 1111ement w1s flied with 1111 Tllesr torrm lhtlL be m1cle 1v•ll1r.te lo the v~rlo.rs deparlments and commi$-dav ot Novemoer. 191J. lllOIEIT L.. HUMPHREYS Cou11ty Cterlr. of Orange Counly Oii tions of thl1 Counly. No tee shall be requited tor the tiling 01 1uch rtPOrts. JACIC HAMMETT, ,_ ANms. s ... 2M Nowmber 13, 1t1l. Ste. ll,ISJ. illll"rll ~y ,rllltl~11. M1y« of the Cllr Of Cost& Mew CHll Mew, Call!. '2'26 ,.ffttS A prllKIPll wllo tias emploved • goyernmentel ad~oceee and peld tuch ATTEST· Tel: 1no ~ Publl11led Or1119e COii! 01llY PlJ01 governmenltl 1dvoc1te compen1a1lcn arid e•pentlf, or t ither, In• 10111 11mo~n1 EtLEl::N. p PHINNEY A1torn1y tor: P11n1on., No~ember 16. 23. :wt 11\d December In nc"' of twenty·hve dcll1r1 (5l~l toocernlng • Cou111v 1111tler within the Cit~ Clerk O, the Cllv 01 Coitl MeSI Publl1hect Or1nee Coe$t 011!y Pllol. 1. 1973 3'11\·n pretedlng 11uarter sn111 be rt<tulrect to Ille a report prior 10 cont•ctlng trio STATE OF CALIFORNIA 1 November 19, :Ml end December 6•1--------------- BOlrd Ill SuPtrYlSOol's of this Counry, anv commlt$lOll or commlltet or lnls COUNTY OF ORANGE 1 SS 1i7l 36ol1·7l PUBLIC NOTICE coun1v, or any olllccr or e111plovee o! thll Countv, 1l1Hng tht n1me ot 1ucn CITY OF COSTA MES.A ) · 1---~c,;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;----1 ___ _'.'..:::'.'.:'.'.:'.'....'.:::'..'..'.:::'.'.. __ _ ~VOC1te allll tilt 1mounl pa.a « lo M P1id. T11!1 report 1h1H disclose all PUBIJC NOTICE 9ifll or cOlt of meals or en11r1al11ment to COUnlv ollke!s DI' employees by 1• Eii.E~N ~-l"l1•N NEY, C.!ty Clerk NOTICS: 0" MAllSMAL'S SALE Heh ernounl. dtserlption, i nd narne. re'!l«llv11v: provided, hOwev.,., 111a1 •nd ••-officio Clerk of tile CHv Council Kurt Oerttl, Pllln!lft, vs. itoeer a . g tn5 and mNls 0, otller enterlalnment wlllcl'I did 1101 cumut1rl~ely eKtted of ,.,. Cltr OI Clllll• Mesa, Mreby FICTITIDt.15 •USIN•SS Thurslon, 01/end1nt. No. 1$ lU. twenty.five dollars (W) per mcn111 per otlk1r or tmplcvee netd not bt In· terlltv In.I '"" lbO~e an<:! lore-gO!ng NA.ME STAT•MENT &y v1r'fue o4 111 necullcn on NOV1mber eluded. Tiie reporl shall be filed wlrh the c1e·~ o! !flt a~rd i nd the m,i,tter Ord0,..nc1 No. 7J..41 w1s Jntroductd 111d TM fo1low1ng per1001 are doing 1, 1973, br 1111 Mulllcl~I Courl, Orl !'IDI lfl YOfved ll'l•IJ nol be 1etect on by tn1 County of Or1n111 unlll such report l'las consldared section bV section, and butlneu 11: • Coun!Y H1rb0r Judklal Ol1trlcl, Jvdgmtnl been filed. Forrrll tor 1~sr repor!s shill bf lurnlthed bV 1111 Cll!'lr. of !!It llltrulfer paned and ldopted 11 I FOSTER AHO SONJ ROOFING CO., •nlt,ed: J1nutrv :U., 1913. CounlY Gf BOlrd of SuPtrVltors. A rtporl by 1 prl1KIP1I th•fl riot be required Wllln Ille W1>011, at 1ne r"9Ylilf m~e11nw o1 wlu 3117 Crrst1I, f'.O. BoK 313, Balbol Ofaf'l9t, 11111 or c aU11r1111. upon 1 prJ11C!P1I ha1 COllllClect OlllV llKlecl ofllclals of this C01111tr. RtPotl5 111111 llSO City CouncU l'le'd Oii the ltth dlV IJllnd, Celil. 9266Z ludllnllnf tnllf'td In ll YOI' 01 kurl ~ l'IOf be requlrld ror permits wlllch ire lssUld 11 l'\O cost. of Novernoer, 1911, oy m1 1ooiow11.., Peter T~ Foster. 307 Crvst&I, B1l001 11 ludemlnl awdltof and lll•lnst R.,... Ste. 11.IJ(, Cerllllc1t1on el Ctmplllnce. roll call vo11: lll.lrld. ~nl. n.62 • 8. Thun!Oll •• iudll'lllfll debtor, sllowblll Prior lo lflr eicecu11cn ol n contrtcl or lssUln<:e of e pUrdl111 order, tht AYE S: COUNCILMEN; Hammett. EdW1rd T. F~ltr, Sll Clerk. Cl1re-1 net btrl•l'IC• ol .1.l 216.J7 t ctuilly ctue olllcer or employee exrcutl1111 1afd p1,1rch1St ordtr or conlr~cl $11111 dete•mlne Jordan, Pln•1~, WIJi.on. 1<aciti n'KKll, 1.1nt, '1711 on said ludllme11t .,;. Illa dart of 1111 •!Id certilV 10 the Alldllor that 1111, Arllcle has bttn complied wllh, Pr011lded, NvtS: 1..0UNCILMl:N: Noni Mallhew R. Fo11er, $11 C!•rk, Cltre-lisuance of llld txecut!on 1 hlVll llVled how~1r, 1na1 111 1Uua1ion1 where the Ct11irman or• mernber of lht Board of ASSE NT: COUNCIL.MEN: NOiie mor11, 1..11it. tll11 upo11 111 !ht right tltl~ afld lntrr'tit SupervhorJ 1Jg111 the conlrtcl, It shall be 1111 dulv of the ofUcJ1I submlltlng or IN wlTNc'.SS WHc'.REOF 1 have nereoy Tnl1 bu1111e1s 11 cond1Kled by a eener•I of 1ald ludllmtnl dfblor In ,,.,. proptrlY recommending 1111 signing, r1111er 1twn tlll Cl'llllrll}ln °' wld mtimber. lo 14 1e! mv h•l'ld and alllxect thl s.t1I peru11rsn1p. In Ille Cou111, f1f o,_ngt, stilt of dtler-mlfll or CIHllfy. OI OM! C1h of 1,.0Sll M,,.,, 1111$ 20111 Peter-1. FOlllH" Callfornta. dfftrlbld •• foliOWI.! SK. II.MS. AppHca!lon ~or1m. oay ot N011rrnber, 1'13. This sl•1emen1 w11 lllect with 11\f TPll Northltsttrly rK11tr111ular llaJI All tount! 1pp1oc111011 tormt for petmlrs, lltMsn, th1nges of 1ot1r, al'ICI l::ILt:l::N P. PH INN EY. Counrv Clerlr. ot Orengt Counly on of Loi u ot Trtcl No. lOO es varl•nc~ Sii• I Include .• provitioo requiring tnt applictnt 1o slate lne namn Clly Clerk ;irld ex-officio Clerk November I], 1971. per mip t'ICordld In l oot; l.t. P.9'• Of all ptt$001 Ind Ml/1"1 he represM1s Ind 111 ~ri.on1 by whom he 11 repre-ol trla City Cou11tU ot Ille P·ttSU 11 end tJ of Mltcellinto11i, Mal)5. $1nted ln cOllnKllOll therewith. Clly ol c°''' Miu. Pur.tlshect Or11111e Col1! Dally PUol t'Kotds ot °''"""' COU(l'V• cantor111a, Set. II.OU. M9dll EKempt. Pul>lllhld Orenge C011t 01!1y Piiot, November 16. 2J, 30, 1r>d DectmDtr t lld commonly llllOWl't ,,. wi l!kJln All rmploven w!IO •r• emt>loved 11 nrw511a!h1rers, reparters, edllor!ll Novwmkl<!r :IO 191~ 36i1.J31 197~ JSIS-n Ave CHll Mtw C.lllor~t• wrltl!'l"s, comme.iltlors, Ind t1r1oonlsts ~Y n1wu111perJ.. reolo t rld lelevltiou ' ' NoTic e IS HERl!eY GIVEM flit! :~a~~ e't!.~i:::;;~ 1rom 1111 prov111on1 ct 11111 Ar11c1r w11en 1h1v art 1e111111 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Oii Frldi v, 0tc..,blr ,,, 1J13, at 2:00 kc. 11.157. P~ILc otticl•ls ano Empt0ye11 Exem1111. o'doclr. p.m. ti tront OI court'hwle, PuDlk ottklals 1ne1 employees are txempr trom lhe provisions ot Thil o.,l'IC:IAL PllDCEEOINGS OF TN£ IOAlllO Of surEIVISORS OF Orange County Harbor Judlcltl Ohttlci, Article so lO!llJ 8$ thty 1rt r1pres"1ti11g The pybl1c egency Wh/(h r~ularly OM.ANliiE COUNTY. C:ALlt'OMNIA '701 Jtmborft Road, Cl'V M NtwpCll'I emptay5 uild ofllcial~ or 1mployft':I, 111(1 ;ire receiving no additional PIV or ~nla Ana, California lle1ch, County ot Oraf'lll't, State ol nmuner1Hon tor 1uc11 repr11tnratlon. A re-gulir meellllll of thr SNrd o1 SuptrVl10r1 ol Orang1 County, Calilorn!a, alw Celllornl1, I will 1etl •I pi;bllc •11Cllon SI(. II.lit. FallYr• 11 DIKloM. sitting as Ina (,,011ernl1111 l:IOlrd ot ma Dlstucrs 90v1med Dy 111e. Bo.rd ol to 11141 hlglllll bidder, tor C•ll'I ln When It It 1llegect !hit 1 m1tter has l>IM'n •t 1ect Oii Ind 1 oowrnmenral )upervlsors wa5 neld NDYitmber 20, 1973. t i 1;30 A.M. 11'111 lollow1119 named l1wlul montY OI tht Unltld Sti les, advoc•le 1111 rtprn1111eo such mau..,. and n n1s l'ICll been dltclosed PllfJUlnt mem1>ert bf1119 pr1111tnl: Ron11fd w. C11P1r1. Cfl.llrm1111 R. w. 11111111, 01vo0 L. Ill !hi rl9'1t, 11111 al'ld lnttr1s1 o4 lo tl'llt Artlct1 pr'°!" lo Kt100 by the counry, • heating mav toe tel bV the llaktr, Raipfl A. Oledric:l'I, R1IP1'1 B', Clarlr. afld ll'le Cle<ll. "Id ludllmtnl dlOtot In t1'11 •bo.,. Bolrd Oii tl'lt l!Uffl•Oll wht'lher the penalty llereln ,111111 ~ lmpos9d. Nolle• Ordininci No, 2111 It adOptMI. Contrac11 art •warded I« c11111lructlon lobs. The lttsc:rltrtct propartv. or '° l'1'llCh llltrtot of llolCh 11urlng shtl nl or dtllvered to 1111 govtrnmental eovoc:ite end exltm•Ol'I of 1 Crlmltw1I Ju•llc.t conltect 11 approved. A Crlmln.11 J ushtr grtnl 15 m1v bl tteas .. rv to wt1sty Mid Jud't advoc:111 mey earing 1nd present evidence. JI 1111 Boord suom1u fon 11 1ulhorl11d. PropOSed anne:iral!Ol'I to Pl~centl1 llghrlllll Ols!rlct It 111 1xetu1100. wllll accrued lnlenitt al'ld dstermlne1 Ille all 1, 1r • the gcvttnmeot11 1dvoca1e shall l'\01 bl! IOl'"i he1r1ng. Swlldlvl1ion COd• Amendment, EKhlblt 1J·U, is stl lor hNrl1111. cosls. permJlled lo Ille, I t l (t ai 1uc;h, w1111 fhls Coun1v 10 the t •IM! Cerlem Ptr~ m1111r1 art 1~ed. S-11!1r~ tdhntmen1 tor the Olrecfor 01 O•led NOY1mMr l.t. 1973 permillfd bV l1w, f of five !SJ yeari 11rer llll:h dete;mlnaHort. Communltv Menlll Heallll Is' di11pproved. No l!Olrd ,,.. .. 1111111 ire 1c:h1Gwled lot OlvlslOl'I: Harb(,( Ste, 11,ISf. 1111 OecemMr 26 efld 27, 197). Bid dalt 11 Ml for wle of Cepltlrlno Unlflect Scllocrl OIL.LARD 0 . WIL.KllSON Mr c1ll1e.1 P cillrens m•v bring an tc•ion 111 1 court ot ~ Dlllrlct bonds. Tr1ttic: CornmlllH rn lnut11 art •PP~~ed. l'ropostd tOmlna!lon ol M1r1hll. Or11111e Coun!Y ~1111 lurhdld~~~;v1ot1tlons o!, or compel complianct wllh, !he pro-1 cr01ti111J gt,M1rd Ls ('Otlllnuod. Appolnlmtnls are INOI to the Me.illl He.tlth Advisory ly Ell!ll M. Elder. v111on1 or lhlJ rtlc: . I t delermll'lfld 1MI a P1rto11 Ill.$ viotalld 1 provision Boerd. A rtsOlutlOll ol 1ppr,;1a11on is ICIOPltd tor Or. Gr1en. Contracl lor u11 ol Oepvtr of lllls Arlltlt by ailing dl1clost compen.alloo or lllPtl'ldllur" rlQulrtd to 1M eounty JaH by the U.S. Mar1llll lt 1wrcv9d. Rulei ind Procedu,.. lor llAYMOND J , aOIT~ be reporlect, I ourt may ~wara to Ille prev1lll11g P1rtv or perlln damagn County ordlnanc11 art •doeilld. Louis J otepll 11 appplnted Member lo lhe AdvlMrrr 1•21 I!.,,.., SI., SltN • of lhr" llmts lhe undlstlosect ~mounh. The tourt 1hall turlhtr 1w1rd ruson-COU!lcll of Contumtr All1fr1, Week of Concl!'l"n (M1rct1 ot Olm") elld key Club ltnf• AM, catlflr'llN 91711 'el>lt •llor"ritys' ltet Ind court cos1s !o !he pr1v1ltlng PltlV or P1rtl11. WHlr. arr cirocl•I"*'· Diii• Sigma Phi Fr111rn11r 11 Calif. Stile Unlver1lly, Ful· 'l1h11Ht'I Att«Mr SECTION i.. Every PfrKH'I who violate. 1rtv provl1lon Cl thfl Ordln1M• 11 lerton, 11 commlndtd. A l udgtt T,1111ter 11 granted. Trad m1nl!'s ire 1pproved. Plltlflltlld Or•lllJI CO..t 01lty ,llol, 9UUtr of a mltdemNllOf and PUnlsha!lle bV lmprli.onmtnl '" 1111 COUlll'f 1111 not fmproyarMnls 111 ctttlln Olvisllns of Lend 1rt compl.ild ellll accepted. A11111-NO'llmbtr 16, :13, 30. 1m lt510.7) IXCl«llrle 1l:ir f'l monlh$, °' bV line not u ctedlng llv• hundrtG c111111rs (SlilXI), or men! Roll Correction• are gra"1ect. Tht lrtMll Oh;irlO's Atttrn1tlvt Transit Cor·1-------------- boll'I. rklor1 Sludy Progrt1111 RtPOrt 11 rec:elvfd. TIMI rwport on Ille P'Ol)Olld rlYlt.lon lo 1111 PUBIJC NOTICE SECTION 3. Sllolild any SKlioll or orovl1I011 of thl1 Drdh'6nct be dtcltrtCI bV 1tl>Llnd VM El"""'t ~lllJ '"ldlnll•I _,Irr 11 Mid lll!IM Novemlllr 21, tilt tOUrl'I to bt uncoru.UtutlOMI or inwetid, such dtclsJon 1111111 l'IClt 1lfecl me 197). ta11 Mtlltr:I ar• approWd, Tiie fllOtullon from lllt Cll~ of S.n '\Miii Caplslr• I---~~,__,,,,..,,,,,,,-"° __ _ Vllklllr of !hi ArHcL1 1$ 8 wlllll'· or any Plrl tlllrtof othlfl'" lh•n Illa Plr1 14 l'\O r'llanl!ng 1111 Ortl'llJI County Pla11nlng Dlptrlmenl ll rtct lv9d. AgrHmtnl lor •tCTITlo\11 IUSINISI dtcNrlct lo bt 1111c011•llTu1k>n1I or Invalid. 1cquliltlon ot Olk knoll P1rk ls •PfM'GYld. The request OI lhl City of Newport NAMI STATI MIMT S.ECTION A. Th11 Ordlritnce shall be Ot>erallvt J1nu1rr 1 1'7A BMCh ror r-.tldll'lllOll ot 1111 action ~ dlllCOllllnut lhl Prtftrent111 Jtunw•v UH Tht f'otLO)"fll'ICI Plf'WI It ctolllO bu&llllfl SECTION J. Thl1Ordlna11te1"4U II~• ettecl and be Ill 1Un rorCe tlllrty (30) dlYI Proctram 15 placed Ill Ille Otc•fl'lll'ar 4 1t7) •lltfld•, Thi mllfllfl'" or rlYISll'llJ lht a11 f!"lrn llld tltlf lls PIUIQe, Ind betort the npir1llon of flfleen IU) days alter d as.s 1pecllluitlon 01 Senior PtrlOllntl Atlllyst and recl11slflc.1ll011 or 1 p05lU011 MISS I 0 N ENTEllPRISIS, 24U'I lhl-PISlafl• thlrlOI shall be llUl>llll'lld Oflte In The Or•1111t CO.it O.Uy Piiot, a tw Iha "'"°""" Otpl, I• rtlll'rfd to 1111 Admh1islrltlV11 Olflct. '"" rtcrutst fOf V•nttla Orlw , Mlu lon Vl1lo, C.ltl, ,.....,.Pl" pvblfill'lld In lh• Counl~ of Or1111Je, Slt t1 Of Calllorllll, 111911 ....... wltll proln~I pllMli!g •nd ttlrl<* llllP fillf fht Chino HUI• T'tlll Forti Program h' '261S Tilt nlmet ot ffll nwmbert of lht 8oerd ot SuPtrwtsort voting tor end 1g1tnsi 1~!" Tiii PfOllOMd tflpl)lfltmtn1 o1 'I "-lno AUlllOl'llY Memtier ls reterrtd Wlllltm J, Stwalk. 2'Sl1 Vltl'IHM ... ,, ... ,-, to ,.,. Holltlng Authority Advhory &Olrd, A report 11 aulhorl11d "' p051lblt 1Uer-br1ue. Mission Vltloi CtlM. '217J ).I 111lt routes: to !"-.Prlm1 Dac:l'lldll C•,,,ct• di"'°5al 1llt. A rtpOrt ll 1ulhorl1ed Tills buslnn1 I• cOltd11tltd 11Y •n ( RONALD W. CASPERS on tht propolld dllSlllMllon of 11141 '°"nt'( Clerk 11 Commls1l-r-of M1rrla91. A11 lfldl~ldiHI. Ch1lrm1~ ol lht llotrd ol Super'llW• lnd"*'1dtnl 1uclll 01 tllt M9dlt1I Ctnl..,. 1ccoun1l1111 systems ls 1pproved, RlOlll ol Wllllam J. ltwtlk Cl 01"11191 Counly, C1lllorn11 Wty COfltrKI tor Sir_.. 01 11'11 Goldtn L.1n14rn Is tWOVfd, Fr11'11r. L, Hopt & Tllb lllltmtnl WIS ttltd with tht A1i.oti.tt1 Is stlKlld to perlol'm qll'lllll'"lf'lll servlcn IOI' 1111 Youtl'I Guldll'ICe COUllty Clerk ol Ortl'\Ot Coun!Y WI C:tftff' No. i.. W.11••• mitt•• .,. •W"Ovtd. All'""*'' tor PWClllst or Yorba NOYl!'l'lbtf ll. lt!J Lind• Fir• Sllliorl 111• II aporo'l4d, """' permU lo "" cur 01 Sl11110f1 tor "" l'•tnU ln111llallon of 1 flr1 h)'dr1n1 on lhl Sta111or! Library 1lte 11 Oflflltd, Amtndmenl 'ublllhlcl Or11111 C011t Dt11Y '!lot No. 2 to 11'1• tNllnff•lng •-ltu 1111rltfmfnl for TtltQr•Pl'I C111y0n Art.I! Mast.,. NOYlf'llOll' l" 22, )0, lflCI Otctmlltr Pll11 Of Dralnag• If l~'ltd, Cort'$cilont lo 1111 roll lnvolvl1111 JptC:lll IAeSll'lltnb 7, 1'73 3*-11 Ir• tPPf'OYld. EM:hlll of l.lnelllmtd OllOlllY to tht COUlll'V OI Orat'lllf 11 •PPl"Ct'lld. l ~~-----------­Tht Oecenlr•llrtd Probtllon 1"1•-• S«vltls PrOltcl AepGrj It rectlved. Ctrllln I' """ PUBIJC NOTICE Courtly COMlrucllOll IOC>s •r• C6mptt!l<I. lhl llolrd llflOVl'Md. WILLIAM £, ST JOHN Ct111r. Ol lht &olrd OI SUOtrlllwt O''ICIAL l'lllOC•t:DINOS 0 .. THE •OAllD O, SU,SltVISOltS DI' Otl:ANOI COUNTY, CALl,OlllNIA S-.1• Ml Ctllfor!ll• ... r .. r '"""no of "" BOlrd ot SUPOl"YIW, ot O••lllff County, C111h,;;;1,, •ISO 1ll1ir1111 at ll'le 00Ylt'!llfl9 eo.nt 01 Ille Dhtrl<lt (IOvtt'l'ltd ~ !hi IMl"CI Of ~ ...... 'Wtl htld Novemttw 21. 1'1'2. al f:JO A,M. Tiit 'fOllo..tllQI Mft'ltd fM!l'btrl ~ pr1M11t; Jton1kll W. Cl•P'f'. Ch.llrtN111 11, w. IAttln, Dl'lfid L.. BtMtr, illt lpll A. Oledrldt, Ralph I . Cilr1l 1/ICI 1114 Clerit. Tl'lt llllrlft; Oii tilt rtqvtlf ter clll«4l•llon 11 1111 NCllll l1ntll Afr!aJl'Urtl p,_ "',...,..' I• contlnl*I '° Dloctmblr 12. 1m 11 1o:l!IO A.M. All 11'111P•tton to OrllWI Cowlly Sll'fff Llel'ltlno MalrtllNllK• Oh!rlci No. 1 ,, .........,, Atllllllimtnl No, ' to .... M.4151• Pla11 of leglc:w11I ''1111 11 edoptld. A11t111d"""" .... ' to lhl "°'"'"'"* lllal•t•I llc~ll Pfan 11 tdoPltd. f'ral'lti; Aylltodl: .,,., ... row Mr•" ire •!*llnf'ld Dlrtclon to Ille IOYlf'ffo 'lnYOll Sanll•,., Df11r1c1 • .\ rtt01utlon rfO'rdlnQ lllt 11111 IWllllr for rtfv .. oofltc:IOl'I In Or•noe C0\1111}' I• ado9f9d, Tiii lo.trd .... _ I WILLIAM E. ST JOHN Clttt o1 1111 llolrd ot luptrvltoD Oa/ty Pl'°" Na•M._ Jt'. 191\ ** ** ** Heritage Collection IT'S BIG IN TURTLE ROCK-Private yard, spacious Bluffs Beauty cul-de-sac home. 4 Bedroopls, 21h baths, for· $69,500 ma! dining and family 'room . Massive fire -Or LNn/Optlon ~lace kitchen is a culinary's delight. Estate Excttlnl< 3 bdrm., 211 bath size scar garage. Olfered at $59 ,950. Vacant home, O.autlfully decoratod. and ready for your inspection. CALL 546-5880 Immediate occupancy avail . Allo, """' 1 .... with opt~n FIXER UPPER to ou,y. Enjoy main- tenance-free llvlnt< In the NEWPORT BEACH -Big, Big bargain , 2300 = :1ut~~h &:~: sq. ft., 2~ baths, 3 Bedrooms, family ro~m, bells. fireplace, doubl e gar .. boat storage. Bring p• c ASE -l.11 youi: paint and paper yo u'll have a ball ! Now ....,. "'" vac(nt. CALL 540-115 1. 675•30~MA'l MESA VERDE BARGAIN F}j 11.\\ ,\ III: \1"11 MESA VERD~ 2300' + PQO,I{, GOLFERS DELIGHT -steps· lo clubhouse In Mesa Verde. DlsUnctive eleg~ out. Enclosed pa1\o rfY, Co n ve n ience 11d chen1 overlooking pool a r e li. : '·PRICED RIGHT and equipped with gold 1 1 shag carpets, spacious living rm., \vith mar~le , faced fireplace, 3 neat bedrooms,. lam.Uy room is extended by enclosed patio with .. room for poo l table. Step saver kitchen has plenty of cabinets & electric builtins. Great QOOr plan & Mesa Verde localion. CALL • 5tl6-5880. IUG FAMILY SPECIAL Family entertalnnleirt fO(>m . GI a n t bedrooml°i 'Ulillly room. Shimmering 'cilitwn ' pool with Jacuzzi. -~ • care yard. See tb bellewi~ Anxious seller · at!,11 546-2313. • ... ~ 0'R~M FOR ALL -5 Big bedrooms.. over- sized fa mily room w/lplc., full blln. kitchen W;eating area, beaut ifully improved with ~x· 1cell~nt drapes & shag cpts., dble. garage ~1th · loa4s of storage. Prime Costa ~1esa location. Full price $43,950. CALL 540-1151. UME 7°/o LOAN "LOAN FEES AND EVERYONE QUALi· " ~IES -Sharp, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath pool home. ~~ 1Qu~lity features including hardwood floors, .. lcedar lined closets, shake roof, ne\Y cpts. and HARBOR V\~.:. 'much, muc h more! priced only $39,950. CALL The exclusi.., ~ 'O.O• 5-46-5880. ' tion of Harbor Vlew,!IUJai 11111..- with • opec1aculal' ~· n1:wrORT HEIGHTS CHARMER l:'~ wi-;;.w. ~':!:-.~r DE~IGHTFUL CUSTOM HOME -2 Bed- pool & fountain. OWnef r1XE1s & large den, d1n1ng area, 211.i baths, -.-. Propeny .mw 2 iireplaces, beamed ceilings, dble. gar., vac~t. move fn _befOre bea:vy shake roof. Our exclusive at $56,500 . Christmu. Priced to "lt~ CALL 540-1151 . at only $95,500. HARl!IOR ·:rrueKED AWAY IN A QUIET CORNER OF COSTA MESA neat 3 bedroo m home, on oversized lot. wi th plenty of roOm for boat , camper. etc. 2 Sepa· rate storage sheds {could be a workshop). Completely fenced and priva te. Full price only $29,000. CALL 546-5880. IRVINE ·TERRACE MESA VERDE . BEST BUY VIEW! JUST LISTED .-3 bedrm ., 2 bath, family room. Large patio and all the usual Mesa Verde extras. Nice quiet tree lined street. vacant and ready: for your move. Priced at only $36,900. CALL 540-1151. a really ditterent and fun ··-:bouae io a areat location. • UuYe llvinc room -.nth Jciveiy Oft !haded patio. 4 rbedrooms. Kitchen . a nd family room with ,a:irMr fireplace. Plwi: another patio with pool and view of the boy -Call 613-«i50. Ol'ENTII. f • rr-s AJ# TO llE NICE/ I ~ Spectacular View -BUT- "PROBLEM HOUSE"' Bargainers delight. This house has been substanUally l't'duced In price to afford a new buyer the opportunity to gain a comiderabl~ profit by ~ tt up. There are cost ntimates and expert advice free on request. Call ... PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-5200 ------~- GOLF COURSE + HARBOUR $244 MO. TOTAL PAYMENTS ASSUME 7°/o VA General F-VEL CRISIS? Beat I.he gaS .shortage with all electric heat! N~· three bedroom lor two and a den ) two story home high on a coastal hill overlooking the coast for miles and miles. Only $46,500. ALPHA BETA Older Santa Ana Shopping Center. AJpba Beta. ls n1ain tell8llt.J!>'11' adjacent stores .-s >u.000. Try $95.000. owe at B";Co. Call 675·7225 ONE YEAR NEW ASSUME 71;4°/o Total payments approx. $296 mo. Total prlC1! $50,900. So new tt sparkles! Huge dou· hie door entry. Step do\.l.·n to elegant living; formal dining. Big family roo1n with WET BAR. Four big bedrooms. TH.REE BATHS. King size k>I. Quiet hid· den area. Close to ocean. See now v.'On 't Jut! Call 847~10. **TAX REFUGE** UtUe Jewel duplex. 2 Bed· room, 1 th each. Built·in oven & r e, garb9.ge dis· posaJ., unit just painted •nd nt carpetiog. CQmer lot, te back · :vu.rd. M FOR $37,2.50, down a.nd 'ft..,. Tl E 1urne loon. ve by 751-153 btt Place, then call MIJ..3036 for • ppo nl.meol to QUICK CASH ~N~. ~~To~~~ 1-'-cl~pala-=~on)yc=:,'~~~l· ... ..,,..·""""',.....- THROUGH A !.~f!.!A! 3 Bfdroom, 2i,w be.Iba DAILY 1;ILOT Room6NL1Y\ha4~amptr Sllown by appt only WANT AD M6-mlor Evo. HI 4543 142-5171 Lochenmyer h_", , 11 ,.r • ERITAGE REALTORS General LINDA 1-LEVEL BLUFFS CONDO $69,900 Enjoy a lovely, 1naint('nance Cree condominiun1 in the hcnuUful Bluffs. l\'ilh lovely pools, lennis & n1agnifcc>nt grcenbelll>. This Linda ts a very scarce model, y,'\th 3 bdrm~. &. 2 bnlhs, all on one level. PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m llA\" ,\ 111-:.\t"ll BIKE TO BEACH 10°/o DOWN Prime bc11ch 1ov.·n location. Bike lu Ix-itch In mlnuleA. Hug" corner 101. Boat & trailer gfllc PLUS storage. Tiled entry, JJ1·lght iunny kltchrn . Queen !dle bedrooms. New appllanct'B & Mlftwaler plun1blng. L!trge cover'C'<I pntio. $30,950 buys it • don•t wait -call 546-2313. OPf.N nt t • IT$ FUN TO BE NICE/ .~ LAKE ARROWHEAD Grent tor yua.r round llvll'll( & close to the vllloae 3 yr old·Bavarlan 1tylo 3 h•ve.I homo with open ~ cell· lngs lhnt«ll, 3 br 2 bl + completelv t1nWled beea- nw:nt for pla,ynn or shop. Lndry taeUitlc!I. Sl>,500. (218') 45t-s898 llftcr 6pm or anytime wttkends.. 24 NF:W homes under oon· lltructlon in Fountain Valley. Clo.e by Ov1c Cent.rt & Mlle Square Park. Call now tor chok:e or loca· tlon A ""'""' ......,._ 839-3231. ClUllC Develop- ment Corp. l l'I a bt'eezc. • • .11eQ )'Ol.ll' lterm wtth tue. dao Da11y Pilot Clullfted. - - :·1 -· .. I ' I ' ' • ' ., I ' ·1 .. ' I • ' ,I ' .. ' ' I . ' , • " ' ' . :· :· ., " 1. • .I ,I . I ' • ' • I ' . \ Geno IN es eve 2th bar A Cu F fa 34 0 c 2 t d 4 r $ ' -' ~Fn=dal:::_,·~NOYf~m=b<.::_;c~~·=l=~~3---,...,--,,...--0A~ll~Y-P~ll~0-1 _4~J. ix-:-ne=r.,..1!...------,Gtnt=-,.,,.,.,------,r;G"'•.,...,.'"',,...11:------......,i;:::::,::.:r-----;;G::tr::,.::,.:r------;;i;.,;;:=,.::::r•:r----.. ;;o;::.,.;::;,:::i.11---Gener•I Gentrail Big Canvon NEW BROADMOOR HOMES SECURITY GUARD ON SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD WILL DIRECT YOU TO BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED MODELS AT #5 TORREY PINES LANE PRICED FROM $110,000. MACNAB-IRVINE REAL TY COMPANY un IY THE WATER In a lovely Beacon 8-Y. 3 bedroom hon1e with Iar&e patio designed for all year enjoyment. Private asaoda· Uon mainlalns green belta, beach, docks, and leMl• court. Let the rent from the cute l t>edroom apart· ment help the llnanclng. Of· fe:red for $87 ,500. Call O'.>LWELL 646-0555 !NEED A FAMILY HOME Just 2 Blocks trom elemen- tary SChooJ I Just 3 blocks trom Jr. HI. . Just 4 blocks from Marlnert .Park Need 4 bedroom&, 3 baths Need a large family room Like an upstaln muter (714) 640-1711 bedrooin, den and bath. t714) 642-8235 Like a secluded patio with (7 14) 644-6200 lots of trees. Like a quiet ~ WALK-TO NEW GOLF COURSE ENERGY CRISIS ! ! ! S -NEW $500,000 RECREATION CENTER TIRED OF COMMUTING?? AND ASSOCIATES REALTOR PRICE REDUCTION IN CORONA DEL MAR -like things new < and a patio too? See this duplet) May we show you through? A real low $77,9~0. DELUXE DUPLEX IN CORONA DEL MAR on a lovely tree- lined street. Rustic charm in front house, 2 Bedrooms, builtin kitchen, carpets & drapes, open beam celling, brick fireplace. New spa- cious income unit has 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, cozy fireplace. Located' close to everything. $95,500. Enjoy the new U!e style and live carefree In this 2 bedroom 2 bath (large master suite) air conditionlng, luxurious carpeting, drapes, electric kitchen with built-in hiij'beque. Din- ing area plus a breakfast )IOOk. Covered patio with panorarnlc view, 24 hour Security Guard. All maintenance free in the new adult com- munlty of Costa de! Sol In beautiful Mission Viejo. $-12,900 Full Price General General Thinking of Moving Closer to Work? Call our office for your FREE PICTURE . BROCHURE of Homes available ANY· WHERE in Southern California. Another EXCLUSIVE FREE SERVICE From Our Staff CALL 644°7270 11"!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l"!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!"""I neighborhood. You can get II' all of this for $57,000. General General IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CLOSE TO THE BEACH. New upper unit with large master suite. Owner's unit -re- modeled. All new with cozy frpls. OWNER WANTS OFFER! $114,900 2828 E. Coost Highw1y, Coron• "dtl Mor r/U4tbeS ~ ' •• ' A U/lllllVUl tl()Ml IN THE BLUFFS-Vintage "E" plan, rare, especially this one with fantastic views from every room. The "E'' plan has 3 bedrooms, 2'h baths. This hard to find home is also hard to see. Call for appointment. $89,000. A listing of Dorothy Johnson. UNIQUE HOME S RH llo rs, 64~ 1649 We1tcliff Driv•, Newport Beach G.,..,,.1 General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Linda 1111 Waterfront Custom 4-bdrm., 4'h bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room. . ..... $250,000 For Complete lnformttlon On All Homt1 & Lots, Pltt1t Coll: OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOON Secluded Bayshore location-2471 Bayshore Drive. 3 bedroom charmer just reduced to only 169,500. BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE Come see what JSS,927 will buy! Charming 2 bedroom and den home. Warm colors, terrazzo entry and kitchen. Worth seeing, worth owning. 426 Vista Suerte. Open Sun- day 1-5. 2 STORY SPYGLASS HOME 4 bedrooms + large bonus room + family room home on pool~sized lot. 2 cozy fire- places and cathedral ceilings. Offered at $132,500. COZY 2 BEDROOM HOME + UNIT Located on lovely tree-lined Corona de! Mar street. Red brick, fireplace, all newly painted back unit in rear. Only $69,500. STAR T REALLY LIVINGI Exciting 3 bedroom 2'h bath. Bluff condo near tennis courts. Rare "Q" plan. Con· versation area and fireplace. Large master suite. $74,900. WIDE OPEN VIEW OF HARBOR BASIN One of the most spectacular views on Linda Isle, 6 bedrooms, 5'h baths, family room, formal dining room. Pier and slip for large boat. $295,000. NEWPORT BEACH SPECIAL Looking for a good buy in a super neigh- borhood? We have it! 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room + bonus rtlj!m. Great house for growing family . $59;500. . AWARD WINNING CONDO 3 bedroom, 2'h bath. Spanking new. Graciously informal and stylishly modern. Near tennis courts, pool. Convenlent New- port Beach location. $72,500. LAKE FOREST SECLUSION Live in beautiful forest--pool, tennis, lake, sailing, horses. Unique 4 bedroom, 2 bath, separate den, wet bar, formal dining. '63,000. QUIE T STR EET '- Very clean 3 bedroom home with large family ·room, formal dining room and 2 baths. Large patio and low maintenance private yaro . $68,900. • ' NEWPORT HEIGHTS· IXPANDAILE CALL 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Hlghw1y, Coron• del Mor WE CAN HELP YOU BUY,. LIGHTS ON ••••• THEY CAN'T GO OFF ! ! .. in this 4 bdrm., 2 bath home. View of bay, ocean & city lights, for only $74,000. Move in for a bright Christmas. AND ASSDCIATlS REALTORS Gener11I e .. ral ·0io1ce location In Newport HeightR,1'Has two story, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Situated on the rear of lot, leaves room to expand with your-0wn imaginative design. New on the mttrket at $.18,500. Call C.Ol~'ell ~6--0S55 SEU. OR ;rRADt·A HOllE * 6 ~G~ ... ~~·~r.~l~~~~ ... ~~YP~LAC~~E~IN~G~~~.:~·!:~~TIO~~N~~;;;;;~l1 ;ll~~~i~·=~==·=~==r.=·=~~~36:;;~~~;';.~'i'-1"r"d":30 .. r .. 1 ... wy .. • .. ·... L~OB~l~;a Bay Pro~::~! . VIEW LOT ,;; Super clean! Extra Newport Hts . 3 BR . Gtntrol Gtntral 1 2 B 1,L b Best Joe. $43,000. lm-~utHul home-site ' on Pasatlempo golf course in Sanla ~ Approximately 1/3 acre. Plana included In price. Will sell or eK· change. Offered for $15,000. Ca.11 COLWEU. 646--0555. Congenial Growing Office LOOKING 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;I ;;;;;;;;;;:;:=:;;;;:;;;;;;;; ge., r ., r.i a., med. possess. Name frpl., patio. Fast es~ y 0 u r own terms! For Aggressive1 experienced salespeople. OFFERING Walker & Lee COUNTRY 6 BLOCKS ~ .... ~·~·~"~'~"~'~"~...:;~ I Magnific!~E':'!undings. From T~ !~~r!iahed EASTSIDE HOME View '"'"""""' trees. low GI rep o ... e IB Io n. 4 maintenance yard. Terrazo bedrooms. 2 baths, on large + UNIT entry. Formal living room. lot for only $25,250! Better Big 3 bed.rm 2 bath home Family dining area. Huge see this one quickly! Only with an attached \bedroom kitchen + great pantry. 5 $750 down!! 646-Tlll -Open apartment. Now rented at tremendous be d room s . eves. $180 a month which will help Parklike rear yard with on the totaJ payment of $370. flrepit + huge covered Loan can be assumed a• 7%. patio. Remarkable value at Walker" Lee Anyone can qualify. Seller $48,950! Call now! 842-2535. U' will help finance. Submit OPENT1t.l •~RM108ENICE/ •••'-'''"'' your offer. Room to build. !ll I J~ust reduced 10 ~~950&A~S 0. m111il1 ~~n~l=~t:~~~ ~ . -·-··-·~ beauWul Mesa Verde; bit· WALLACE Ins. [rpie .• F.A, heat. dl'11-llG wshr.: poolslu yard. Close REALTORS to all "1lopping & IChoola. --!514<46~4141-FAMILY? Only 136.SOO. . (Optn Evanlnisl Just !he right home! s MORGAN REAL TY Bedrooms + !amlly and 67U642 67U459 4 Bedrooms, 4%: Baths pool room, pier .& slip $250,000 * 673-7784 formal dining. ~ Massive fireplaces. one localed In WOW! $48, 950 master bedrm. Best hurry 1 2 SI'ORY REPUBLIC -$64,950. Call 5454424 OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 SouthCo Rlllltors. 1421 CARRIAGE DR. The faJlest dra'#' in the West. Cantrell Realty 833-2224 . .a Dally Pilot Oassilted CLASS SELl.S -&42·5678 · $©~4:1~-L&~trs· That Intriguing Worcl Game wifh a C/tucl/e -----..... i., a.AT L-o ... ,., ... -of ... --r> """ ""'"'1>1od _., bo-,.. low• fonn fo\ir lllftple won:h. I RE ELAH I 'r111r_ . ' I D A L L E I •1 \<...:l~)~~ _ r r 1 1 _ ~t-~~_, I IF. A.I T I~ FF 1· ! We sew e clewr sign on a L. -'·-'---'·-'-'-' non -franchised hamburger ' ..----,.....--.,stand recently: "We -,,.11 • I "RAHr O .R 1 I I• I I 0 """•.... .... thucklo ..-• _ _ _ _ by 1111109 hi It.. m,,."9 -~ dowlat> -.... No. 3 bokM. e r:~:.;llMERfD r r r 1· r 1· I' 1· r 1 _! .... $.t-.•:."'_l..__I _I • I I I I I I SCUM-LITS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATION 700 WEST BAY AVE. * 59'x290' LOT* 2Bdrm. home in xlnt cond. C-1 ZONE 30 x 90 Lot zoned R-2. Steps $32 500 E-Z TERMS to bay & ocean. ' _ $74,500 * 4 Bedroom· home (huge Call: 673-3663 master BR) + family room 642-2253 Eves. + den, 3 baths, many ex· associated 8ROKfR5-R£ALTORS ~~1~ W Balbcc ~ll 1~1) RED HOT!!! tras. Quiet street:' $57 ,000. * C-2 Zone • Harbor Blvd. 100 x 350; access to adjoin· ing street, $175,000. * C-2 LOT SO x 150 Newport Blvd. $38,SOO. crow 0.K. Try $71,500 642-7491. 57;.7000 WATERFRONT Ne\vport Island home. 2 BR. & den. Pier & float. Call for appoint- ment to see. 673-7420 INCOME Two 2 Bdrm. Units Near Harbor Blvd. $39,500 $3,500 Down 5~ REALTORS 4 Local Offj(91 to Serve You General General * 6 UNITS • Eutside, Costa ==;;;.... ____ _,I ";iiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. Mesa $72,SOO. Income $700. CANYON VIEW • Roy McCardlo Rultor lBlO NewPOrt Blvd., C.M. 548-1729 3 BED.ROOMS . $26,500 ALL TERMS /.Jn NIG EL UAILEY & ASSOCIATES ..., .... ...., ...... , ... ,.. ........... . ,.. :: .......... All ................ Mlew ....,. '9 ........... .,,. Mt•lf 1 D ..._ ...... I• ...., •• Drllt, Pht WANT ADS. ,..,._ ....,.,.. ................ ,.., ........ llt ...... , .. _ ......... celw ... .....,, s.t-. ., ', .... . HOUSES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOMS FAMILY RM OR DEN 426 Vista Suerte (The Bluffs) N.B. 644-1766 $55,927 (Sunday 1-5) l BEDROOMS 1418 Santanella (Irvine Terrace) C.d.M. 644-1766 $69,500 (Sun 1-5) 2471 Bayshores Drive (Bayshores) N.B, 644-1766 $69,500 (Sunday 2-5) 3 BR FAMILY RM OR DEN 545 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle, N.B. 67:Hl!23 $119,500 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 23882 Paseo de! Campo, Laguna Niguel 831-2000 $135,000 (Daily 11-4 :30) 2030 Holiday (Baycrest) N.B. 644-1766 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1411 Keel Dr. (H.V. Hills) CdM 644-1766 $99,500 (Sun 1-5) 4 BEDROOMS 755 Via Lldn Soud (Lido) N.B. 644-1766 $295,000 (Sat & SUn 1-5) 4 BR FAMILY RM OR DEN I 11 Hermitage Ln. (Big Canyon) N.B . 644-1766 $119,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1741 Irvine (Baycrest Area) N.B. 644-1766 $59,500 (Sun 1-4) *1807 Holiday (Baycrest) N.B. 644-1766 $82,500 (Sun 1-5) ttS7 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) N.B. 644-1766 (SUnday 1-5) 3812 Inlet Isle Dr., CdM 644-1544 $87,500 (Fri, Sat & SUn 1-5) 2522 Vista Drive (Bayshor~) N.B. 67;.?0eO $83,750 (Sat & Sun 1-4:30) 1742 Port Manleigh Cr., (Harbor Vu Homes) N.B. 114U249 $74,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) tt57 Linda Isle Dr., (Linda Isle) N.B. 644-1766 $295,000 (Sun 1-5) 5 BEDROOMS FAMI LY RM OR DEN 1922 Port Ptovence I ("arbor View Hills) CdM 644-1766 ~79.500 (Sun 1-5) ..... * * w· ........ ~,..,w ... *** ·-··-• ,... AND CUL-DE-SAC STREET QUIET Costa Me s a neighborhood. A great 3 bedroom home n e w I y painted inside and out. All Oceanfront Duplex $79,500 !or only S27 ,500 down. For Larg er 40• lot with information, call 646-nn.. 2 1e co~FIXE' R UPPER" oPfN Tll 9 • IT'S FUN ro BE NICEI In • ory A I ~ <.'Orne property. rea 1 1 sound "SLEEPER" at Sun. , set Beach. Who's Hrst? • ACT FAST! WON'T LAST! 2 on a lot!!! 3 BR, 2 BA + 2 BR rental!!! Make $$$ $28.300 Call 645-8400. Nowport .. FalMlw ,646-1111 ' (anytlmt) MACNAB 1·RVINE _______ .. ______ _ FINER HOMES NEW BAYFRONT -DOVER SHORES 60' on the Bay. 4BR's, 4'h baths, formal DR., FR., separate billiard room. Choose your decor. $275,000. Harriet Perry 642- 8235. (Wll) . POPULAR PORTOFINO Exciting 3BR, 2000 sq. fl, family home in Harbor View. $68,900. Joyce Edlund 642- 8235. (Wl2) OCEANFRONT -BALBOA -VIEWI Colorful -bright -sunny -newly decorated, carpeted & draped. 4 BR's, 4 baths -par- tially furnished -IMMEDIATE POSSES- SION. $169,750. G. Fay or B. Owens 642- 8235. (Wl3) NEW-HARBOR VIEW HOMES View! Ready in Jan.-choice of carpeting & colors. 3BR's, DR. & FR. $69,950. Jeanne Newman 642-8235. (Wl4) SUPER STAR Best buy on Galaxy -3 lg. BR's. w /FR. large enough for pool table. Formal dining. $99,500. Beverly Morphy 642-8235. (WIS) BLUFF'S FINEST -$89,500 Highly upgraded "Early Bluff" home. Great Upper Bay &. Dover Shores VIEW. 2BR's & den . 2 fireplaces, 3 baths. Jack Custer 642- 8235. (Wl6) ONLY ONE! Custom 2BR/FR. Newport Heights home with MINI-VIEW of Bay & Ocean. Fantas~ potential! $64,950. Lois Miller 642-8235. (W17) BAYFRONT INVESTMENT Great location & view. 2 & 3BR. units. Price Incl. pier & slip. $225,000. P. Johnston or J . Smith 642-8235 , (Wl8) .,. [Irvine 1-•m.-,~ ,.., I tOI Ooftf Drlwt M2·12)1 IMt MetArthw .W•UM Newpott ... ch, CllHetftla 1HU ' • • -, ' • • ' • ~JZ w.JLY l'ILOf -Gen.rel MOlllLE HOME FOfl SALE: SILVERCREST MOBILE HOME 21' x $1', 2 BD 2 BA, C1fl>-. draped, blil·lm., re:trta .• •Uhet l-tltct. dl)'ft', 11o'fntd for %a:l air t'Ond., ldtch. ckxil:, l lOl'll&'e at.eel, land- acapcd pa.do. 7i1n."-· yn. old • UJr.t nu. Lnt"att'd in M"4' adult pk. •-·•)' trom no&11 Sr. One-halt bl. frurn clul; h!iUlle. SB.f/.15, Gall £\'F.S. 21'w.M·4690, CAN BE S EEN AT : C RESTMONT ESTAT ES HJ.it Sitt Dr .. BtPa. IQ:ntral Ave. aCTMS trom 8l't'a Comm. JIO!ip I Lot 8 4$. CON'TAC'r H ... \Y, PK. lfGJt., for s~·lox. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 11..t:JO Cl')lf C.'O\Jrk' living near the 12th gret'n or f;I Nl~I Country Club. C.1ou to storea &: tennis cluh. ~ Pa.sec tlel Campo, Lagww. Niguel near ~n V11.Jley PA.rkwlly & flillhun:l. Brand neir.· 3 BR, den, 21 ~ BA, "uman'• dl"t'&m ~'Or'ld kitC'hen facing the falrv.·Ay. Large dining roorn "·Uh ttl(ogun1 l'hand· E'Ber. surtk~n living room It den \l'lth thml fireplace & \\'l!tbar. All l)ut one room has spe<:!acular golf coune vie"'" "'Ith oul3lde patiotl. F'anrastic UnAncing. Priced u1 $135,<XXI. $72,COO transfer· able loan at 7%%. ":CP, Broker, 831-~. -, FriNI, •-30, 1973 -~,....,.,....J'---~.,,-...,... Gwr•I I ;::C:::""""'::::.::...:::::l~Mll::::;r~--I East uff Hu•tlngton Be INVESTORS RWFFS Condo. '1rcle -1• ... NOW OPEN CLOSE ESCROW :.;;;_,,...Call~= ...!!!f., 'Qwnuo. ...... -= * * * * * * * * BEFORE '74 CHOICE Loe. S<W 3 er. Cualomixed Prestlte VILLA GRAUIJA On tbls excepuonal duplex 2~ Ba, l \4"' Jlnc. $19,500 Q.A·ner h.ad this 3 bc!droona 835 AMIGOS WAY E•1tbluff Terr•~ 4 BR. TOWNHOMES $54,500 Modol1 Opon ·D elly 00, In Corona drl Mar. l BR Townbouroe 6"-2199. atrium moatJ ex~ dur- 2 DA O<A1t'IC1' W'lll + SallJI El T lng con1tructlon. 11'1 now mo. rt>ntaL ~ear park and oro aioo n. of upen.dM lux:w-y. lt'nnls court•. lttdoc-ed LO prof~sionall)' dtcomted 6: SSS,950.c•LL H •121 1 DESPERATE!! lnndJc•pc-d. ll wlll .. u 1n. "' ..,.... hurry at $<15,800. SI) don't /Jn N!l,I L BAILLY l. A5'>1JUATE5 "IUST SELL B'i SUNDAY! y,·11iU, call 1~·! 2 BI? Condo, H.ANCHO VlEJO Lw1h Ca~ts '" drapes, alr. °""'ner/aa;ent. 124,500. 83().91'1'7 or 645-!WXt l.ogune BMch -COMME RCIAL LOT U 000 + Square le<!t C<>mer lot oo So, Coast H;_.y, 29% aown & seller will carry balance oo good terms. $130,000. . EMERALD BAY LOT gfj of the largest. nearly level building in Emerald Bay . Over 12,000 sq. It. ersbip provides access to private beach, !<!Mis courts, pools & parks. $38,500. T URNER ASSOCIATES 494-11 77 11115 No. Cooat Hlw•y, Laguna 8och View oriented, gar1le11 (.'Om· 11'll4 t'OAS1' 11\\IY; ntunlty vdlh a.JI de lu xe OPEN SAT/SUN l·S Fountiln Vall.v n~: 846--tllW & 213: 592-2845 lrvlne .. L .. una Bead\ •ppt's. family siled. rlOM! 217 MARGUERITE ., t£J all con\'l!'ni4':m~. Dif'tol.'· Huntington kAch'1 NORTH LAGUNA """" >:a<tb!uft ll<t. to "" T•~ 2 bdrm. duplex 7 1L1110 r1w1wclN6 Moat Popu!•r EYE CATCHER , Bdnn., 211 balh oe<an v1.-· .. Newport 8 Hch "CHR ISTMAS RUSH" Don't pass this one by. Quaint Bluffs condo with a great view & chann galore. Open beam ceilings & huge deck •pace lo the sun Great for plants too ! 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Laundry room. New kitchen. Large brick lireplace, Hurry & call! $59,950. Open hou•• 12..t Sund•y. 669 Vici• Bonita !The llluffa) GRUBB & EUIS CO. Vi&ta, il'.fl on OomlnK0· 10 ClOllle 10 ocean $98,500 71 /fl Mn 2 Bdrm condo., desirable Popular Plan I In Turtle home 011 OCl!M Aide of h'4y . Am~O!I "'a)'. 0 It f' r e d ground levtl noor plan. 1% Rock. 3 bdnns. or 2 and den Quiel cul oo aac loc. !nil· REAL TORS throuah. yean new, Freahly Painted In lmrnACUlato l'Olldldon. 11'1 mate ••mena. 189.r.oo.' 675.7080 EASTBLUFF •1th tutetully pe.neled and almo<t new, IW parquet VIEW HOME REAL TY ~7493 mirrored living. n;iom, pl.u.&h Door. lovely landlcaplng and An a.ttr. rontemp. with tex·l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ .. '!"'!!"'"'.'"'""'""'"i -.·allpapered d.irung area, many t!me, Sl\vin.g custom tutti of "'000, Ule I New rt Be•ch Newport Be•ch EASTSIDE shag <.~t11 . .t custom extra.a. Don t let thig one go shlnglts. S Bdrma., 2 ba.,1:;;;po;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; HOME H ti_.. leech drape!, °'·eniz.ed pantry by. ss7.soo. hand!Olllely decorated· in.I• GRAND OPENING + un =°" area, near ldlool~ .. aiking CA LL 552-7500 '"""""' loft dlnlng ' rm. SPECTACULAR Newport Bey T-.. TRIPLEX ROflt While You Buy distance 1011 •n 11 n•10 n Q SM "'1 BAY & OCEAN VIEW 1 4 i BEDROOM COUNTRY VACANT ~·~im::;.~pool~ VISI N MON. BAY TERR. New 2 BR on top floor ?I CONDOMINnJM HO~IES Jy SZ.I 495 ail today A warm & trl~ home of one of Newt>O!'f Peach a Bayfnmt llomes Sm.NG EXEC. HOME on .3095 ' ' • d h'll cl•an contemp. deslan & ne.-"'t condominium pro-Boat su,,. 847 · re I quality construction. Wood jects. 24 I-Ir. complete Full Security Jllghrl5e situated on a 13.l'Ke 130xl50 Best S. H"'Y location. ~~~~v~ ~loc~ ~ paneling thruout. 3 &Inns., security. Sun deck -pool. Steel & concrete constructJon lot , ... ith tov:ering ghade 2 BR · on huge R·2 lot. no qualifying! Extensive LL'>e * fREf LIST REALTY REALTORS conv. den, l be., awimming Boat slip a\'a.U. $700/Mo. Private Balco nies trees, a comfortable 3 BR Add n unit!!~ $62,900. o! gl•••, .. ~. & ,..... Univ. Park Center, Irvine pool. $139,500. Tom Queen &14-6~ (wl9) 2 ga.nge lf)ll.<.'Cs per unit 2 BA •· 'th d nd Call 6·1:'"R400 ...-. .. ~ u<iA EMERALD BAY f d k '"'n1" wi en n roof. Floor to ce1·1;~ roar· Gov't -~ ho Roo top sun ec fro t h 1 y ur rocker -'b ttposses,..,,, mes. UNIV PARK, OPEN HOUSE f ... • O · t Pur n pore or 0 NTIL !J ing fireplace, brdJKi new cut some have pool1, 90me no App't or Sat & Sun J.2.< l Bdnns. & 2 bH.IM,08ok Unua-..B ... PJX1''tunl'roily o... 1 • Flus V. pile carpet thruout. 4 down pymt, varloua areas French Country charm. chue ...,.ront pe, .y n scpnrat1 .. 'fl away mun the • E. Hot.an! & Co. Bednns, w/~ m aster &: pymts. No obligation. 18212 Ba.)oberry Way floors, beam <.'l'ilings, brick, Realty Company New port Beach. houl!C .!l triplex with Income "::::;;: ... ~:::-:;:;:-;;::::;:~~I suite. Auume 1% VA loan F.qual f.lowiing Ow;>rtunlr:ies Immac. l Br, 2 Ba, dbl gar. Ille & hand l'&l'\'ed v.·ood. of 642-1235 644-6200 310 Fernando rtd., N.B. potential or $440/mo. _ v.1th low down -or -you HERBF.RT HAWKINS mG BONUS ROOl\I $54,500 a quality thal Is rare today. 675-1.SSJ only $69.950 for all *OPEN SUN. ).5 name the terms!! Seller REALTORS •.963-5681 SPACE REALTY 833-11668 Ocean \•le"" Channing kl!· *OCEANFRONT* YCREST C~LL 644-nll 516-516'12 FernlH I will 1't tba rit<!>t person ---chen & terrac~. $139,r<Xl. OPEN SAT/SUN l·S IA LET'S TALK DUPLEX, SD. of H..,.. Older "rent .. hile tboy buy." Call GEORGIAN Lotun• Beoch Ji!!. 1511 W. OcHnf""'I $57 ,500 2 BR., 1 ba., elec. bit-In ~568ii the detail5. Bkr COLONIAL PRIVATE SE'CTING Duplex • l'!°t aufficient spact' Large llvlna" room. bma1 TURKEY kitch. Nower 2 BR.. 1 ba. iiiiiiil .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I Be h In thl5 cbarming 2 bdrm .. 2 ~ to descnbe thb profe.... dlnlng. u.,,.. kitchen and ir you're looldng for a New. ~!.:..!.\'eBrlngr lge~~~~ DOCTOR'S 5 ~m. ~c ~;h,· fariiny ba.th home with planked fir. -~·-ultra·plushy, de<.~led du· family room, oow carpet.I a--~ in den, ocean vie"'· Z.story Re•ltt»w plex. Ov.·ner i unit has 4 BR. and paint. 4 bedl'OOml plua po11 Beach duplex only 6 make offer. Askin:;:: S89.500 PRESCRIPTION ~ize llv nn "'.'brick tplc., dining area "ith bookshel\·es 1105N.C-Hwy •-una & l ba.U1s + a furn . .t BR.. room.. Easy care door.t to the beach v.·hh an B•lbo. Peninsula JEFF BRIE RY Rx • 5mog tree lfuntlngton spacioUll faro nn, hospitality to the celling. 2 Frplcs. Red· 494 1177 .. --. 3 bu. rental unit: less than ~room for pool t'or exc.'elJent summer/winter I -~-------· I REAL TOR 675-1337 Beach. Mint condition l bed· ki!chen. Ne"•ly painted thnr "'OOCI decks & &atden patio. -2 )TS. old. 2 Blk.~. fron1 Y ' al call 6-16-ii7L rental rt'COrd In the SM.500 OPEN SUN. 1·5 rni, l-?i bath, cozy fireplace. O\Jt. A BIG OPPORTUNITY! Will trade in bea<'h area for L NI I grammar school. Prim! be-a ,:art v ue range with a min. of only 2100 SEVILLE CALLING ALL block walled yanl, nit.-e Cuti fixer-upper house or unlts. -eun. I• lO"A' cost replact'ment at OP£NT/l.l•"'SFVH108fl«EI 10':o down and 5uper terms Penin. Polnl; very charmi~ HOBBYISTS neighborhood, all tertn11 . The Real E s tate F•lr S65 coo $1.86 500 i I "·e·re reatrn~1f Z:i:r~.-re~~+ °:en~ v:i=t>2 !~~1cc!~~;1~ e.t~· Call /or more de· 1'""'""'""5"36-"'"255""'1""'""'""''1°" • R";~~: ~=ting 2 o~ Na :a.~ Roa~~~F BRI E~r1J37 , . 11~,illl~ 1-Blk. trom bay, boat hobby room v.1lh bath. Be-l•rwin re•lty Inc. bdnn. & den home '\\'ith 2 beach side. 5 BR + den, NEWPORT HTS ~ --·-••••::ti" launching ramp & ocean. low Coast Hiway. 961 4405 * (24 hrs) SPANISH HACIENDA ltplca. $65.000. beaut lndscpd. Wlk to heh • /.Jn NILEL DAILEY & ASSUCIAl[S Listed at $79,500. Only 17,000 down Equal Howdng Oppty. TlllS IS IT & rec center w/mm pool 3 B<fnn. dream •~me. 4:e. Oce•nfront Lot The thing 10 do Is call I :::::=::::=~=~=: I _, I ~1ajestic coastline view from & jacuzzi. tennis cu. Guard· family nn. "·ith "'et bar, Newport Heights One oi the last prime ocean-I• He•twu/Flltertd Poo this modern l BR. 2 ba. ed cornmunlly. Fee land. well de<.'Orated. front Jots left, with an old University Realty BUYI 1 Front veranda, Spanish tlle home. Lo'l\·er 3rd, lge. 496-812'l Buy, LNse, Option HORSES OKI duplex to t.'lUTY the lood, 3001 E. Cit. Hu'}'. 673-6510 *POOL enh')', 11unken llv rm, lae bdrm. has .,·et bar w/same -158".'-300=. '--s.-a--.T-•_r_r_a-ce Befit Ne14-port llt1. Joe. Im· Great area for the kids! This which Is ah11ays rented. Try DOLL Heme, old CdM R.-2. $26,500 fam rm + den. 2 Span great vit>w. S73,500. Townhouse for sale, rent JONES med. occupanc)'. J BR, lg. country 3 br:h1ll Is on ~~ to beat this one, priced at 2 BR, l BA, pragc, yard. 2 Genl'rous size hednns. Lge fpl r.s, 4 lge BR's, 2lA. bi\, NEW ENGLAND or lease option. Most popular REALTY lNC. den, fonn. din. rm., 1rplc. acre or lovely countrygldt>. $99,500 WJW cpl&, drps, trplc. family room w;bar ~ndsi~· fonn din nn. i\'love-ln con-... in Laguna. Lge., beamed model, 3 BR. 2 dory, ocean £St""6 s.is.500. Nicely rlecoralefl home with JEFF BR.I ERV $63,900. Owner, 61.:>"-8125. direct lighting, poo e dition. Motivated 11el l er cell. Uv. rm. wlbr1ck floor. view. lmmed. occupaiicy. BALBOA BAY PROP. 2 hathii. Dining rm• Realtor 675-1337 HARBOR Vlf'IV Hills, 4 Br, dressing rm. Don't miu out, leaving area Immediately. Lge. used brick frplc., a for-Get In before the price goes I (714) 87:s.e210 * 642·7491 * homemaker's k It ch c n. 2 Ba •·-F , __ .. call today. .E'le.xlble terms & price. ever coastline view. 2 Bd· 493-04.'.iQ BAY VIEW ' MUii rm. ee MIU .... Tht Re•I E1t•te Fair BRASHEAR REALTY rms .. den can be used as ~u"p"'. ==cc·=-----2001 W • ..._lrlrd. New__.. Shorn Fireplace, Patio. $49,950. $87,500. OWner 644-1544. .r:•.1. .. .r:.r:i 968-ll78 formal dining nn. 169,700. Lido ltle """POrta.dt·~026IO P""' ~1720 5 BR. 2~1 BA roomy, older ~..._ ELDS H TARBELL. RHllora horn• ;n best location. ~lo Mo.. SHI OPEN SAT/SUN 1..t HARBOR Viow SUmmenel, WALK TO BEAC 112 rm YA-FHA EX9UISrTE REAL mA...., ; Br 3 Ba. 2 frplcs, .... Large1t l·llY. A·Franie ~~~n·~~ !ttes;:u' ~ p.~if1c Properti91 MESA VERDE 4 BR La~ 4 BR, new carpet and 1.-.SU VI• Lklo Nord bar, custom decorated & l Bdrms., 2 hfnhs; patio, 6T~112 or ~1632 OPEN SAT/SUN l·S. new paint in and out. Close (Fonne~ly Englund R.E.l Fabulous comer home. Great upgraded.. Land!IC8.ped "·/?6 2 car garage. place an ad In the Daily --'-'-'-"'--'-----1 ~ BALEARIC DR. ~ Lateft_prices t,.. OC<'an. Assumable 7';1: 318 Thalia .it!»-8093 for entertaining. Sp11.clous lrg trees. green hse. 2 CAMYUWSTOOOSELLR! EAl44.900LTY Pilot \Vant Ada! Call now The fastest draw ln the West Spa.ciou.s Fam Rm, adjoins WM. McCABE · " living . gan1e af'eft . dining decks, oomer \'ie"' lot. -642-5678. • •. a Dally Pilot Clullt&ed beaut 1-l!F pool. LRG For-REAL TY loan. $31,950. OPEN HOUSE arrangement. r.tuter Bed· aub/pool, 1 )T o Id . * 541-l290 * A OONY9IOfT ~MIO IEWIHC GUIDE. fOll: T1'1£ GALON THE CO. For an .tel In WOffl1n~1 ~orld Cell Mory Beth 642-5671, ext. 330 Pakmo Pantdress Knit A Cape! mal din rm. Nu elecl bltin I' SUNDAY, DEC. 2 room do"'"· 2 Bedrooms up. Tnul&fered must sell. Priv ldtchen. Exclusive cpts & 8740 WAR."iER AVE. 12 NOON 10 4. PM 3-clll' garage. Bay view. pty. 19 lall Port Carlow S.n Juan C•plttr•no drpg, Central A/C. holirrored FOUNTAIN VAU.EY ••Z""447l ( :;:~) 546-llOl $77,500 . $119,500. Open Sat-Sun 10-5 Roman BA & Sauna adjoin * 842..t405 * lJ HORSE PROPERTY M. BR. ?.flnt model cond. 1 ...,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~IAmerican South~:estem! Piffffvlll...--n ...... rtn WATERFRONT 2 Br ...... ··-onthlllaldeacre, BY Owner. 2 bl.ks to beach. S Lovely Tiutt Arch Bay .... , ... .,,.,_.,,.Ate&,~ DUPLEX ,..,...,.., Owner leavlni: area. Only 2 &tory. Formal din rm. REPOSSESSION home and a forever 180° FEAl.J't:Rs fellC'ed for honn $38.500. :i~Re!?t~~ :1~4. J im sep fam rm. 2,400 IQ. fl :"or lnfomlaUon and k>catk>n ocean vi&ta. Flnt floor has PIER & FLOAT ~% dwn, HD, ITI4J 968-3563. Crpt.e, CU5lotn drps. Assume ol thea FHA 4 VA bomet, large den or family nn with ........... 6;;7Ui&lii2i;30iiiiii•I $115,000 ?ifUST SELL. 3 BR, lam. $24,500 7% loan. Pymnts $3Z> per conJact • fireplace plus one btdroom OPEN SUN. 12-4 rm., bltnJJ, 1 mi. to beach. R·2 LOT mo. Sale price ii9.cw. $4<m KASABIAN & bath. Upper l1oor haa ABANDONED 3210 MARCUS under $40,000. Make oiler. WITH On. Owner will~~ e IP cozy living room with fire. NEWPORT BEACH No realtors, 496-0894. Older 2 BR Home finance. •33 -llv~ or RHI Eatete MU644 place,large"""terbedroom UDO ! ! REALTY 675-1642 South Laguna RIVIERA REALTY 839-TI45. Huntington Herbour 2"' L~~-~dL_r,ohr, .'..hpalldreratne Prestli=e!!!! 2 BR, 2 BA, • DOWN CHEAP & QUIET u.:w·nlll "' ..,... ""' trplc, 11ensatlonal <.'Onclltlon. DUPLEX 10 r. BY O\\ner $3.!,500. Ocean 149 Broadway, C.M. laundry room next to pleu-Pro! d ~ o. 1 1 1 d ·•-.. 1 bdrm lrg Iv nn. 642.7007 645-5609 E $27 000 eco"'•~. ~· • an WALK TO BEACH ·~-. . . . VH. • WATERFRONT ant brlkttcban .thadt 1 '!!""' to focatlon. Hwry!! 169,"'1. "'"""'""'"· l blk to BCll. GAS SHORTAGE? 2 Bednn, under 2 mll es to red ck patio, nmg area Call Joyce Chapman, Completely redecorated l .e.t.J651; 1-839-4830 ocean with 2 car garage. with sunny outlook. 2 car 645-8400 . Lovely 4 BR. 2 BA. Bike Carpel5 &-drapes &: recent· BEAUTY garage plus lots of slorage. · bedroom and 2 bedroom SunHt Beach to South Coast Plaza. ly painted. 32256 Stonington Rd. units. One block to aandy Beautlfu1 yard. Go VA oo RED CARPET, REALTORS $180,000 PRIME beach. Huny, won't lut! SPACIOUS Oceantront home down $33 900 BR boa dock Lido Oppor tunity Only $16,500. Panorama viewa Catal ina 2 C. ENTU' . RY 21 536-8836 open 'til 9 PM 4 ' t • Prestige by the sea! Ocean For small famUy, about to CENTURY 21.642-1n1 sty pn1d, rdwd l!v rm. din MUCH IN on main channel. front \I ac.. lot. Thl• one· --~ &15-'l221 Eves: 548-8594 OPEN SUNDAY 12-5 of-a-kind view from lovely be completed, .all new 2HARBOR VU'S Spanish den,3 3 Br,-Ml Bal' 11= AND 16661 CAROUSEL ···" "" ak ... A_, bdrm., I am 1 I Y n n .: Po-ar•-except. w/m• .. v rm. gar, f>"n P8 IO, COSTA MESA GI! aJOO sq DEM ~~Y '°" •·~ m e •~ Ch air. " ·-.. _, COASTAL PERMIT. In add h., l br, 2 ha.th -dining Po-·'•• 4 BR. 2\! '·th home. COASTLINE 53'-lm site for a king size home. Z...tories. aracter ady extras & upgrading. 4 br, duptx. + space lepl tot room • family room • VU'<" ...... 1 MARION MILNE din. YouS79c~ your own + bonus rm, by o v.·ner , Triplex. make olfr. Owner Prestige 1800 mode v.1th REAL ESTATE ecor. .~ 644-49-16 or drive by 1804 C2l!I ~ ~u BKRS WLC!tl sunken living room. NO sunken living nn & fonnal Irvine Ne-.1>0rt Hills Dr East ~ o>:1v-~ DOWN $36.000 and In fine dl 618 S. O:iast H'A'Y. T t ' n rm 4944.5511 La Be h see for your sell. UI 1n condition! Bkr. 546-0562. J. L: Young RHlty YOU'LL LOVE rr ! ! guna •• ~'-'------1 FOR Sale by owner, 3BR, 142-8540 Walnut Square Condo, "'per CUSTOM IUILT WATERFRONT BY owner. Peacock Hill. 4 2BA, xtra lrg lam rm, xlnt ! ....................... ;m l UPi'f'aded. 2 BR & den "A" We have a number of 2 & 3 * $191,500 * PIER & FLOAT =~In~:~.~!:;: concl. Eastside kx:., lot 60 * Perfect Marriage ~1oclel. Better than new, bdrm. homes available. 4 BDRMS. Plus maid's. 4 $19,500, dittoned. POOL. lara;e lot, x l•MI, S46.500. 548-5.331. By of home and location. Quality qul'llily carpets, shutters Most with ocean & coaslal Ba. Elegance pef'80Jlilied! BROKER 833-07'0 fruit trees. S78.<W Ne.Ill' appointment only, No IUtr& constructed v.1th harth"-ood tln,~ut. Super Io C 8 t Ion · vie"·11, where you can still Brand new. Cftll today! Hydt> Park. 11182 Wlckford or agen1&. tloon, 4 BR, tam rm, for-S32.500. 645.-8400. pick the finishing touches. ---GEM FAST POSSESS. Dr. ~2-1£m. Open Sat I: BY OWNER n1al dining, near private 1 Tl!. Easy tenns available. From S\1n 11 to 5 4 BR, 2 yrs old, 1'1esa \Voods, park & beaches. Prime lo. • V.!;, !.'--..._-~ & Co. $38~,500 to'()S62/..950~~ 1.2().F Tustln Ave., J'!~B~ Harbor View Carme~ modcl. As.qumc 7~0 GI, $43,900. cation. Make an appointment ;:::-.ni REALTORS ~~ 3 BR., 2 ba., family rm .. 5.57-1.246. today, call BEST BUY LIDO lol5 of em:aa. Price reduced Th R I E I I F • to $68,950 including land m,oco 3 LOVELY Br, din e e• I a e •tr 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay View. CORBIN MARTIN rm, beaut Joe. In C.M. agent 536-2551 TURTLEROCK REAL ESTATE 88' lO beh 425 Via Udo • Gluui Nustala., 642-7328 or •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' 4 br, l atory, upgraded & Nord. $U7,5oo. 675-1414 Bkt'. REAL TORS 644-7662 546-9521. • OPEN Sunday 2-4. By o">ner, spotless, lg cor. lot, tu' U90 Gle!U'leyTe St. UDO ISLE -CharmJ.ng 3 HARBOR View Home • Mobile Homes 1 5BR ..... _ ts d co mm pool &. park. Agnt. 494-"!M73 549-0316 ••---Bea titu1 3 BR. 2 For Sale 125 3 BR., 1!~ ba. Brlck fl'p , new , .>l>d, crp , rps, 6 BR., 3 BA, DR, lge. patio, """~· u 1 _.;.;;c:...;:.::;.:;_ __ ...;c;;;;1 i... t..R.; newly dee. 127.000 $l2.r<Xl Low i nt, 2 o 4 11 Call 833-841 · PANORAMIC VIEW 133 Via Wazlers. IKl ,900 BA. dining room. lrg. patio, MOBILE HOME Fortin Co. Rltn1 . 642-5000 Brentstone, ~1323 WALNUT SQ. CONDO Exquisite 3 bdrm home with 640--8146 quick sale prtee $57,500. FOR SALE: D-::.•n::•:....:P..:•::in:::•~----$2600 Dn. 4 Br, 2 Ba. $328 nlr cond., 2 Br & den, below 00wn"'""r,am1c I n°-~~na n ... _ ~ M __ 1._._1._n_v_1."'1 .. • ____ , 50peP~C. bouseBy owne~.1YIJIOf0PoAMn· SILVERCREST -total pyments. 1% GI Ln. market, a 1teal! 644-4881. own _........ ~..,w. 11 * OCEAN VIEW* Prtnc. only. 1«1-1104 or U Pool ~Rd yaro, beautifully RETIREMENT HOME :;""'&J-OJi~J!j 644-lWI MOBILE HOME 1 2 BR 2 bath ho "'6-9'r>1 eYe1. COUNTRY CL B l"""""ped,Dlnlng rm, built -=-=°""c::::;~;......-->'.)' x 5.1', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., ------· I~ -- mWmtthalc. lkl .. di I f lemne,. 1" BLKS from -V•~ LIVING ins, dishwasher. Family nn, NEW Golt Course, new * BLUFFS * draped, bll-11111., retrta., 7091 n "'" ng 9 • 0 e · ~ · ...... .,an. ~, fireplace. Patio. Move in $.""J00,000 recreation t-en ter ·9 w118her I elect. drytt, wired school. Estate .1a.le & priced livable 3 BR older home. Split level 4 BR, 3 BA, ram. condition! Owner will con· with.in wa1Jclng distance EST BUYl l for 2'lO llir cond., kltcb. f,q r\n 13 right. Broker CO-Op Invited. Under $30,0X>. O"'n 'agt. rm., game rm., fonnal ctin· sider leasing. S 51, 0 0 0 . from OU. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, Charming 3 bdrm. elock. 11torage ahed, land· Ht.let. Melli $38,500. Call Peggy 673-1420 67:'r3963 Ing, 2 trplcs. plus priv. pool 49.t-8003. air cond., I u x u r Io u a 2~1 Be.tbs. View 11 ICllped P*UO. ThJ'ft yn. old OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 SHARP! Vacant 3 BR, 2 B.!l lrpe.tlo. $58.000. Call 645-3400 TARBELL, Rteltor1 carpeting, ell'ctric kitchen Ted Hubert & ~-• Hke nu. Loctted In new Always on the go? You'll "841 CHULA VISTA w/FP. Blt·inl!I. Lg. cor. lot. lOFFICES SERVING'tOUI QPENm.s 193J g, Coast Hwy, L.B. with bullt·in barbeque . * 67$-8:iOO adult pk. away fi'Om-nol,ay love this handson1e cape. Wttkdaya call 67>7711 Enc. yard. RV Ii boe.t gate 1---------Dlnin& area p!W! breakfast BLUFrS TIU-LEVEL OON· St. One-halt bl . from chih- Cables radU!te from the Don't give ur, Iba chip! $33.750. 1146-0932 V. E. Ho.rud & Co.I OPl!N SAT/SUN 1-5 nook .. Covered patio wtth oo. J br, 2 ba, cathedral house. 1!5.9!11. Coll EVES. shoulden of this swinging "List" It tn c a.cslHed, Ship The "YelllJW P.11.ges" ot IW..., w-p 707 PEARL . panol'llmlc view. 24 hr. beam ceUings, pool, wallting 21~"690. cape. Knit of -.·ors!ed In a tto~Shoro~~""~'~ul~ll~l~642~-5678~~· }~c~la~"~lft~ed~. ;;,:. ~·'4~2~-00'1\I~~· ,,,,;:r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Modern redwood &: ifa.u, security guard. All distance lo schls, churches. CAN BE SEEN AT: hrlghl or basic color for all-:::: on v1ew estate, reached only malnteM.nce tree in the new Eut mutt Village I: tennis CRESTMONT S\'"'"""P REGAU..Y into a year versatility. Pattern !>r private drive. Ottered at adult community of Crui ta club. $52,500. By owner. Aft l!STATl!S l'O()m,LlnL this marvelous, slim· 7091: 1ites 10.20 Included. $16rl,!XXI. de! Sol $42,900. La Paz Real 7pm, ~ Rl:Vf:.'TY·nY1< CENTS STAR G.A:"'E'11>~1t~ VISION Estalo 83!>0700. HARBOR VIEW/ 1051 Sile Dr .. Bre•. Cc.ntral mJng palaz:zo pantdress! Sew for each ptttlern -add 2$ .IU ~ • .,. W Go" CARMEL A\'e, tl.Cl'Oll1 from Bret. II In fluid crepe. nylon jertlC)' cent.It for each pattern for JltCLATlt.PO NE u Course, ne'v Comm. llO@p,l Lot •48. lo wear belled or not. Send! Air itail and Special llarwn. Ji.. Yowo..ltJ.di"*tGuilM Ji.. V ic St u•rt Realty $500,(0) recreaUon center l BR, 2 BA, Fam/Rm, Din CONTACT RAY, PK. l\1CR., Printed Pattern 9 4 ~ 2 ; Ing ·, othe-"'*" ... ,_, -··-_.. ..__ S 1 --· within waJklng d Is t Rn c e Xlnt cond, Beaut. yd, ;: tot J.bowt ..... .. ~ ..,, 38 • ........ u•ln.K'-..D .Accorvl"' I• •-toB. 1945 Glenneyre, ~ ... na fro thl 2 bed 2 ha.th I ;iii;i&iii"o;; .. lili,._,&;al Women's Sizes .7'1, .10, • • delivery will take tllf'M' To dtwlop message for Soturdoy, 4947531 546-7674 m 1 room, • araded, owner, $69, • r, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Slie 36 weeQ or mort. Send to _ _..--'-COl•_,.,,,,d.....,torurbws air cond., luxurtou 1 844-6480.172J.PortAshleyPI. (bu'' 40 1 takes l" yards Al Broo" the DAILY nuu ~ .......,.... ".. carptUng, electric k.llchen 1 "' ., of ,_Zodlocb1'1hs1SJO. CUSTOM BUILT with built-In barb e q u •. HARBOR Vu llomt MOil .... A private 5 allr adult con>o 6().~~:E~~~~~A-1~ CENTI ~;reoic~. Ci~ ~~ ~~~ :1~ EXEC. HOME ~In& ~IUJpa~ald~ !...~~·~111:Munl~pr1~;: munlty. 1150 Whtttter Ave., tor each pattern • add~ Statton, Nno York, N.Y. J Sl'qt 3JStill 6J Edft 4 bdrm. den, torm d.ln. nn .... ~-i-... -w. •• hr. 7.""" Ln. nu unit C.M. bu .11.valltlblt • 2'h9I -n•· <or each pattern .,,,.. lOOU Pri t • A-'.... 3AMd 6' Dlup; >iirt + h"-bon•.... -"'""" ..--.. ui.n.: v.., -n11 Kev w.,t 118,000. •· a 2lx40 ... "' ...o ndl · ""'ame, ' s~ lS Rtbc 6$Wlltl ---..... ,..... .curt"• "U &rd. All *Gil Slmpeon 552-?riOO * ~ s Air •tail and Special Ka • Elp, Patt.em N111nber. ,At J6WOllL '6'-'olity !""=°" beam ceilinp, Unted glU8, OJ • Lancer, Both ln beluL PILOT, "2, Paltttn Dept., N EE 0 L ECRAFJ' '721 7 A 37 MM u ~ lncomp&table view $148,000. ltlt.lnt'""nce h"ee In the f.ew BIG Can.Yon, new Dover <.'On· rond.::...._ Jwit like n • w , tna"; othenriae thlrd-clall Crochet, knit, etc. Fret •Dtsttor 11,_.. "'"'°"""'• Ll"fO Reel.E.lf'•M adulSolt mmmunt2900 ty of CosR alla do open 1.'.4, 11 Rue Fon--.-tW09amto6pm. delivery will take tbret directions, SOc. 90kl J'To fflt...-494-81l16 · t.99-1397 dtl !!~La Pa.% e talnbleau. By ownr. Wlll I """"""""'""'"" ..... !!!!!ti lvteka or more. 5end to 1.Mtaat !llacnmf' Jloet. l?~~ !?$:',.. ~?~M Estate IWV'V•vu. lf.11.~. 493-2328, $3S25. NEW 2 BR, 1 BA. llvinJ Marian Martin, the DAILY Buie, lancy knoll. pat. 12Alfl"ldrlll 42.Nuld 12 Jn-hhip ~~""'""t VILLAGE AUSO VWt. 3 hr 2 ba. condo. NEWPORT ~res home. 3 nn. Adult P&fk w/l)tlvate Z2 West lBUlioo:, p':; ttmt. $1.00. ::~ :;::_ ~!~ ATMOSPHERE Upgraded, premium 1ot. Br, 2 Ba. $47,900. By owner. beach • fl8,500. ~3'72. !~.11·!0·011...;. wt~ •~by~--. Pat. J'-,._ ,,,,,_ '"-1heVillag10We lnone 58&-0079orJm.2'!Hm4 645-4599or!G-2ri63. CABAllAl2tc33,-·~.1n1. ZW.sttE a.nd~snti ,_. .. 1.li:I ---· -• 6"-.-""'~ ?&Felt 72 units. Enjoy income Newport IMch TRADE Newport Bea c h COit $.WOO, will11':U-saoo. Nt1MU:R. :.ta int..t Gift BM l~~:.. ~e-_ ~~= from olher. Ocean View, HARBOR VIEW llOME Prop. for ~t~·,:own Prop. U-move. 6'5-4530. SEE t.fORE Q al C II • mare thin 100 clfll -1tYw "''~ 7tHll walk to beach. Potential 3 . Bier. TI4/61~. 2 BR dbl wide. Lo dn. A"'"9 J'uhk>nl Md c~ one Sl.00. ~tr :ln::'""° :':= unit.I, Brok.tr 4t'1·1'161. 4 Br, one-r1tory, upgradl'd DUPLEX nr ocean $62,500 pyme11ts. Dix IA.m. Prk:. SU ~ h'N from wr Ola .. •.. AtPu Btok • 22,,,., s:z Nico 12 i..-& •potlea1. lmmed. Ot.'Cup. Miles t.ar.:>n RUJtor Juan Otpo. 493-ma lit 8. &mm.,. Cateloc. All fl.• """ ,,v., .,v., SPACIOUS Poll. Owner 644-6249. -_mal lllCE Jr tralltr hl><l• ~~ ~ BOOK 1' llllT •II 8Mka • 50e. i;~odof ~~= t •=::-.,,..... FAMILY HOME NEWPORT Crest Condo di" DUPLEX -prime loc. Step1 rea1011able ,;)61 N~ ""~01 • ._. ., U ,..... Ala.._ 26 a. ~ ltfttourer.t a.s u. Wt.lk to Vtctort& Beach 3 d,,..,bl ~!>"· bed11~!"'·ma3 J'.t'L· to ocean It i.y. Owntr ll'DC· Blvd., c.M. or 648-1119 MW today, RU llOIDllWIOW. 50c. vtlOO 27 M\llt 51 ~ 17 ~ • ..., .,.. '"11:; 875-2812 493-1181 'l,,ST•-F 'SHIO~ ...... t .. 16patleml. ...... ,, 21B"'t sap.,.;*"' II~ bdrm,splltlevtl,chllnnlng '69950dwner642-6583 b.11.Agt. . BESI' buy Lido Yach t f '"' "'~' A * !A,...., 7'Yl"l!,1119 59u.61 89 SpanU1h 1tylt kH/w/ftplc. · ' · · · OUPLEX Wi bik" t.rom bch. J Harilor, double wide, patio, BOOK • Rundreda o •I q.ot lloot 1 .. 'IC~sm.11 JOMaJnt• 60m 90~ S79.~. • Ft.t Prodt IJ attt.lntd when bl' A: 2 'or. Frplt, sun tfec*, pool, prqe. snr,o. t'IS-8DJ • --SL ... j~71 ,,,,@Cool. @A-{)N:,..:.i Lingo RH I E1t1t• ytlll ~~ ~.!JJ:; S8'1,!iGO. -AJJ1..., la tbl BEST .DAY .. 1--·t!El-'·8-·----1··--_,...,. __ . _ ....... __ . L---=========-----------·1· .... -.................. -.... 00... ~ ~ • a.ASSIFIED wtll 1111 M! • NI .. llll Don't tle!Q, • GREENLEAF • ' J ' • loca qui · C<)ll 4 s C<>m h fi I Tri· 'ove jac gar at • ava Sat. , Zll • :J46. : I :. Litt I 7.5 \\'h M wl fu NE ful ,.. Th c to at $52, Lo N to .. $52. of lo .. 163 on 10 m 11 m 0 Fo th o. ~ p e1 c 4 • • • . N 0 0 • - - -___ ____..._ --• -------6 • -l - 7 "-;;::;;::;:-o;:;:::::::;:;--;;:r;~:::::~""""""'.....,""'""'""'""".,...,...,,,,,.---.::.-Tr--.,..... ..... --.... ...,...--......, ..... ---.,,....,,.. .... -....,,,......-~~Fn~d~~~·~N~~~em~b<r~JO~.!l<rl~)-~~~~~20.ll~LY!...!'.:Pl~LO~T~43 Income P!?f!rly 1U Hou-Furnllhid 3iiO Hou~• tlnl\i".'!!i." 305 Ho-UilfUrn, 36$ i'fOuMt Cfnlurn. • 36!5 buplexH Furn. '345 Apt1. Furn. 3'0 Apt. Un/urn. 3i'5 [ ~~'' J rAJ * * TAX REFUGE * * Gonorol Corono dtl Mor Irvin• Newport llNch ;:;Bo;:;l:;,boa="'p'"•'-n"1."',u1"'-.-...;.;; Cotti Mo..G -.:.,-.. -,-.-, ----l!·iiiiiiiiiiiiii·j~iii llJIUe Jc""' dupl"" 2 Bed-I -'-=;.;.;;;:.....____ "'-----11 room, 1 batl• each. Built-In $ LANDLORDS $ USED llRICK TENNIS BUFFS CRAJUUNG l<>wtr 2 Br .. l c-de Oro NEW TRIPLEX ovtn & tafllO, prba.re dl'J• Let US iTnt UR propertJl.'I, A.ND &hake root charmer In \Ve presenUy have a aood bft \Yr;r/dryr gar. Mila PQtW,.I. l wtlt just pajntt'd We servl<.-e all lbe btll.ch old 001. s BR, 2 BA, comp! il!lection ol rental• lro1n Only 'tepa to teimll oourt, izio. s1'3--0838,'492--049t. · ALL t.mUTIES PAID AdUlt 2 Br, 2 Ba. Laundry, Cemetery Lot1/Crye!s 1~ ACfflC VIEW MEMORJAL Masonic lleCtion, 2 lo!JI;, xlnt locotlon. $225 ea. For cub quic·k sale. Save $1~. Ph coll«t. 714: 487-Dm. and new carpe:Una-. Comer Cillets & lnla.nd Orange Co. redec bltnl k>ta r 1 S235 a month • up. May we gy,•\mml111 pool from NEW Compare before you rent patio, e:ncloled garage. $21$. lot , ten<.'td back ya. $37,250. FEE .E'R£E . Save Tlme 1; $$ lfl&', 0'(,en ~. fp~c ri:~ be ot llttVi<ll to )'OU ln 3 bedroom. (or 2 l: dt:n), Duplexn Unfurn. 350 CUitom designed, lte.tw1ne: 416 Hamilton, C.t.1. 6*-4414. Sll500down •nd ... umo loan. $ ALA RENTALS $ moro. Only $350 mo. lncldl oolvtna yOW' hoUtlng needi' rorm•l dlnlna, !lroplace • ..U c;,.;.n• do! Ml;--• Spack>ut ldtcnen wl•h In· Balboa l1lond Drive by 'lSl·'lS.l Scott Place, Nowport It Bay CM &42-8l83 wate.r It ea.rdener. Yeo.r cleaning oyen, beautiful Can-dl~ lighting 1---------- Ci\t, then call 548-3036 for ' Jeaae. s_tt1p1 _to beach & yoo vtaw/~t ll&:ht•. Con-SPAC newer 3 br, 2 ha, • Sepo.ratc dln'a are• UtG 3BR, 2 be. ate., klna ttppolntnicnt to IK.'C, DO NOT B11ltiol l1l1ftd li':Ohoiip?pg"i: . .:.644"8567:.:,:;::.::..· -=-,,.,.. •truetion "'ii be compltled aerv. porch. Walk el.A .. , 516 e lf(llJ\t-llke 11orage aize llv rm, yrly, ~ SPACES, FoMt Cemetery, Covina 557-0086 , ·wn DlSI'URB TENANTS. By BALBOA 10,. uo JEWEL b)' lhc lat of Jan. J..Qcated .. ..,... e Private paUos mo Inc. uOl. 644--9279 ..-Owner.-'Principals only OiarmJt11 l'BR. 2 itory, 2 BR. den, din. rm. 2~ BA, hl.gh on the hills of ltarbot lrl.i. $325/mo. J...se. 644-6682 • CIOitMxl gan.ac w/storngc B.tlboa Peniniul• plea~. nlcc.ly turn. 5, 2 _ 2 2 2 2 , ~',;;.: !~:.· C75~4tJ~ld~ View Hilla. $500 per month.C ·c:o::::•;;l•:o...:M::•:;•::•:....----I • Marble pull man Lots for Sile 170 54().-0995 or 644-1295. rod 675-6900. 644-4687. -: ~-•.:i: 1lf~·es • sur-BRAND new upper unll, 1600 Commercial B IL.--•-"Sll'lCE 1946'' $175 l nr •. ctmnnel.tl'ont. Car-BEAUT 2 br, 1 w/lrplc & "'""" sq. It. 3 br, 2 b&, trplc, , __ P_ro""pa'"-r_.ly'---"'-1C::5.:Bl l 1,400 gq It, Jt-4, Ealltside a-. Pen-..U.. NEAR new 3 BR .. 3 bathl, lit Wntem Bank Blclg. port. t.rg patio. Chlld/pet. benm ce.Ufn&:s $175., 1 w/prl rotmdl'd wUh pluah land-huge balcony, bltna, dshwhr, ,-Costa Melia, Level, reo.dy frplc., patio; bl t ·ina, Unlvtnlty l)ark, I.rvlne $285 . 2 Br. Alone on huge patio, nu lndscpd yd, gar, iJCaplna & gar. $315/mo.:.J~~f--- OCEANSIDE to build, M ft tronlage Sl.t5 BAV1''RONT 5 BDRMS., 4 dlllhwshr~ 606 Oreb.id. D11y1 552·7000 Nights lot. Frplc. Beams. Chann. ~ur.ro children, no pftt1, AdultabNo P'l1.I Agt .. 67J.l>58, eves 5-5487. C--1 Beach 30,600 gq, ft. sq ft, 1-~xilling l Bit. home BATHS. Pier, float, Winter Scenic Properties 675-5726 Cd.M. l B RM. $185. BAY VlEW-2 BR l'"'ronts 3 st:eet.s, alley bet to make your pymls. Bkr. or yearly. 6'13-3l39. * 2 BR, 1 bA, fireplace, $300 -LrR 2 Br. across from :lBR. crpl!, drps, bltlnJ, 365 \V. Wilson 642-l 9 n Nu drp11, quiet area, clote Flnanciul district. W/lobl of 642-6851. BAY Vu 5 Bt, 3 Ba, 2 huge yard-trees. $285/mo, 2 BR., 1 bath •·•••••••• $315 OCCftn. Ctlrport.~Uo. washlne 1ae, nr shopping, $30 WEEk A UP to t0\~1n, can furn. Adults, pnrking. Sell CMh, terms M-."'-=o,1-~~-~---story Jlouse. Frplc, dlhwhr. loci wtr-a:ardener. 833-8974 2 BR, 2 ba, den, ale·· 1275 NU·VIEW RENTALS $175 mo, 313 A Ogle St. e Studio & 1 BR Apts. Yrly $250. 1003 E. Balboe. or lea.sehold ount• n, .-Hrt Yearly. 53&-106S 3 BR, 2 BA, gar. $350 mo. 23 BRBR.,22ba~.:-• ••••••••• 11225425 673-4030 or 494-32486 -.;,"~'359=------•TV & Ma.id Service Avail. Blvd. 673-6372. OVERALL LAND co. RHorl 174 1-;ic===d;:..;.I ::::M7----·~ N . " ·~ ...... $4Xl 2~ Br I I l d • Pho-s.-·-Hid Pool 46--0889 Eicondido oron1 e •r gw arc.wua 4 BR, 2~ ~ths • ,, • $'125/'50 REAL deal 1 br dplx $135. w 1 ng e gar, a ults '"' ,-v, .. -.: -· I Br. Bram ceil, roman tub. 0 LAKE ARROWHEAD 2 BR house In old Corona ,,...,,..-'~-"-=:c::•r:...:.~:::..:='--5 BR 3 ba N'pt Bch $575 utll pd, ~~ blk to ocean. only. Newly tt.'Clee. Ca.II • .£.hll6 droN n & PeBlt vdSect~~I , SI~ tncl utll. & park'g, NEWP RT BEACH GreM tor year round Uvlng 2 Br, rrp1c, den, dining, tarm c' AL'L 552.7500· " UNBELIEVABLE vu 2 br .:.-:::..:1839=------~; owport " ~ Slngl" only. 644-0997. Prime bayfront site & close to the village. 3 dcl Mnr, c 0 m P1 et.el y kitchen, 31"' Hellolro~. UX> paved alley, d~r. pet 2 br crpu •-bltlna t 548-9'155 or fl45-.l967 to boa' Ir • fornlsbcd, Including grand ' ~ VISION ... 2 0~. 4 br " ba • · -~· , enc· (Ad~ torr-on -t) 4 BR, 3 BA. garoge, Brand r 'RI':: °' Wes ...... old &vartan style 3 ·'"5 -"""".. u... CA,.r.,,;> • _ ... uo-1 gar 00 ... $....... r;uuu ~ ..... B G ,. piano -p tub "-_._._ ........ VI............ eu ~... • s. MN• lM!'\\' .. .,.,,.. ....-ry lse Soe~ 111 rundy 1r 675--6161 level home with open beam · ..... · "" ~ ... \ver, SHARP 2 br I.: den, So or $360 trpl, a:yu·11, pet/child. Avail 12/15. 552--0118 ;D~o~n~•iiiiiP~o~ln~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii h~to~bay5·~·i;';~;'j~~·;rn~s-ms~·~-·- TWO adjoining Income pro-:illng& thru~~iy 3 ~ ~~l ~1 arguer 1 t c' Hwy. for Jse. $350. call agnt. • d h'll ALA Rent• 1 642..a383 N1wport S.ac:h I C11pistr1no Beach pertle1, center Costa Mesa. ..-~-+ ~tp e l 6 MO. Rental, tum or ....... -. 644-8599. re J l B.r. 2 Ba, crptd, w/bltln.s ;;;'-"':;.;;c:,..::.;:::::;;____ LIVE ln tht all new Dana Owner. 645-:ll20/&12-{i56(1 uuacmen or P ayrm or .., ..... ., quiet area, v.·lk to sandy UPPER. 2 Br, \V/\V cpts, 2 BR d I wtirkshop. Lndry fa c . 2 Br. 1 Ba, beaut ocean 4 BED, 3BA, adults, no pet.I, be ch Qi d b!Uns doc il Point Harbor at the up ex, $175 mo. OICE C-I .tr. C--2 improved $36,500. (213) 451-3898 after & hlllakle view. 2 blks from Lcue, $350, 424 Poi.naetUa, REALTY REALTORS ud •Sh anneln~/ 4. ~i • t k $ a2v7a"' • beautiful MARINA lNN Incldlng Trash &: water, 1 corners in Costa hfesa. Call 6 pm. or anytime weekends. ocean. 242 Poppy, 673-7769. 67>5218 or 558-9683 Univ. Park Center, IJVlne 0 ppng, vo.."· 1/1 7 • a s, no ;res, "• Motel . 34902 Del Obispo St. crpted & drped. 34535 V\a Oanin Realty Co., 6--12--6560 ..,..,..,..,..,..,;,.,..!!~I $330 per mo. day 675-8733, 17673-1"7-:::92'1:;.,_•.:._ __ ~~ (496-23531-Kl t c be n, Ef-Verde. :Condominiums Ranches, F11rm1, Costa Mell Costa Mes11 L~un• S.Hh ="~"e=6'13-~1-'~"=~----iApts. Furn. 360 Dciencies & Apartments. NE\V 2 br dup. 2 ba, shag. for ule l60 Groves 180 EASTSIDE, compl turn, 4 ESIDE Bach $110 Now A OCEAN VIEW CONDOG -'---1=---..::..;;,;. Heated pool, direet dial dshwshr, patlO, gar. $225. lNVESTORS I NTEREST BR, fam rm, ~ffice, adults, singles, utll pd. gar $10 ttentfon Renters I Spacious new 2 Br., 2% ba, ;;,;;•,;.;n;;;•;,.ro;;,;..______ baphothne, si a ute~edvlsrlyont'acu'fttel.l'i, Eves. 536--446.<J, 493-2590. DOWN Orange Co. ntgged 1 !bl ~ • re Hou.sing Needs. \"e Have dbl "ar. w/vi'cw or pool, Attention R•nter_.I meeting room, close to San i~o;r~o~n~'ii"~iiiiil~riiiiiiiiiiiil BLUFFS 110 pets, avail Dec 17th to NEAT ., br 1170 stv/ t See Us First for All Your sunken LR., formal OR., C d I M · ild 1 Apri or poss y July. working sngl & pet, gar. • " "":!' Cl 11 canyon scenic,"'-' ife, yet Agent 64.6-32i5 VACANT 2 hr tri SliiO bltns, Homes--Apts or Condo's In tenn. els, jac. & OCEAN. $85-$115, Roon1 lden.1' for emente & Laguna Beach. only min, to Tustin. ldeal ,:;~~"'"'::='----C/D h'•ld k Lag Bch • Msn Viejo • Lag $360. 5.52-7098. studenlll. Comm'. let t ., Come play In our • ('c"IO"Y ·church pr;v 8""' SINGLES & Students. l Br. • c o • gar. N" I D p Lo /trpl Oc V 'pol'lliRh'•g shopping & A fine 3 Bedroon1 , 2 Bath ·V ,., • • • • ...,. ?o.fobile l-fome. SUO all utll PARENTS & pet 3 Br 4-plex Jgue -ana t &: San 4 BEDROOM 2 BAnt unge w c, ean u. ... • i J~;-;k:1~~. E;l~~~~~.~d~ ~a~~~lla ::b'. ~~~ ~ pd. 547-9641 i1~L~~· ~ce&: ~~ Cleme~~EN 7 DAYS ~am~ri~C !::1 k~ ~:to~s~en~k~ all. =ur~~· :f w&kre~Yi~ jal<ent to pool nrett. Double $250M, ~1. aft. 6PM ~H~o~m=of=i~nd~er'-'1'=='-,...._ now famUy hm w/frpl & BEACON RENTALS privileges . S495/month. $135-$100. 1 Br's Some SSoilonfirstweek'srent garage. Rca\lstkally priced VACANT l Br. $125. All utll 2car (In Plcadllly Clrcua) 644-5686 evenings &: w/vlews, lge rms, frplcs at $48,500. 90',k Jo'inancing Real E1tate pd. Kids Ok. SPACIOUS 4 br 2 ba $.17S 1854 S. est. Hwy. No. 6 weekends; 642-5'135 days. & sundecks. Color TV's. INDIVIDUAL Villas -1 Br w/Vlew $165. also 1 BR, $145. ~2379 or 493-7925 'avallnble. Exchllnge 182 Home.finders 547·9641 gracloua living, grdnr incl. Laguna Beach 494--9491. BEAUT. 3 BR. on N.B.'s B~~(:6~aksEAN~Ats ' OPEN HOUSE xfn LL~.-n-u""'n~e~Bo'"•...;c~h-'""'-""'-" ON Lake 4 br 3 be. $450 $165 • 1 Br. near beach. Bltna, only lake. Mt. resort at-Sal. & Sun, lJ A1'1 10 DRrk. 95 Ac Escondido, . t tor --L-everything incl w/D See crpt.s, drps, carport. mosphere. Great place to (In Piccadilly Circus) , 2316 Vista J-lognr. O\\·ner avocado tre(!S, ad.J. to 450 LRG 1 bdrm flUJl ocean fron now. $250 -Utll Pd. A1most ocean-spend holidays. $450 Mo. 1854 S. Cst. Hwy. No. 6 -346-2'153. ~~~ ~~f°~C:d::-8'~~r =~ apt, vi<!'M-' deck,Swedlsh frpl. ALA Rentals 642-1313 front. Frplc, view, patio. J. Carey rurr-. 646-7414 Laguna BeaCh ~1 ; NE\\'PORT HlVJERA or property in Big canyon, $350. yearly incl u t 11. SPARKLING EXEC l!OME $310 - 3 Br. 2~~ Ba. New N _ $ LANDLORDS j Gracious 3 Br, 2~~ Ba. fpl, Linda Isle or Lido Isle. 494-6.122 4 BR Id h drp t crpts, dt'ps. Beaut. View. ewport Heights Let US rent UR propertlt11. 2 • go 1 ag, s, am Deck \Ve se-"--all the beach . tam nn. C'nr gar. ln1ml'd. Eves. ~ Prine only. Lido Isle rm w/solar:lum ''""1c self · RUSTIC & 2 b ba •v~~ Po 132000 c"n I ' ... .,. ' . NU-VIEW RENTALS rozy r, 1 • Cities & inland Orang• Co. '.'av:ft To' inspecr \ anc~ft COMMUTING TO L.A. I . clean oven. D/W, patio, 673-4030 494-3248 Beaut. yd, Gar, crpts drps FEE FREE. Save Timi! & $$ H Ba WINTER ease, beaut. So. shake roof, fncd yard. Walk or $215. w/util. Gary Jdtmson'. $ ALA RENTALS $ ,&U--9002. ave lge 5 Br, 4 home baytront home; 4 BR., 5 to So. Coast Plaza. $375. OCEAN View Bach •oc., -le ., .. ~25 or ..... ~ '~ ' iri airport area. \Vilt take ba be l t Sand L .L "" "~8 ~ .... ., U'lo,r""V<I ''"" vi.>--'-"'lJ Newport & Bay CM 642 ·-• c9RNEn Condo. 2 Bedroom. Orani;te Co. trade. Agent, ., au . um. Y uu1. U'W"'IJlll or 548--6611. eat, sleep, bath &: shave. N rt 1 I nd •--a.JO.) , ~ew cpts, drapes, D\V, 644_5742 eves. Pier & !loat. $1650 Mo. _ SHAR P 4 BR or 3 & den On HUI 1 hr $190 wtporch ewpo 1 a 2 BR., Condo, KJds OK. 1275 ; (lreplat.-e, patio, pool . Adults Bill Grundy Rltr 675-6161 3 bas + ram rm, patio: view, redec, stv/ref. Now. 3 BR. 2 ea. Not crptd. Fenc-mo. brk. Call Marll)'TI owr 15, $23,000. 548-7898 lS.·I Real Estate Wanted 184 COLORFUL contemp 3 hr, 2 gar &: pool, Harbor HI DREAM home 3 br 2 be ed yd. 4 car pr!Utg. S28S Copley ~1. tm :' !Tom 1Sa.nta Isabel, CM den 3 ba, bltns. $475. dist, I pet ok, call 548-1.266 $340 nice vu, frpl, fncd, mo lit & last + $250 Nehrbas &i'CHi060 Duplexes/ Units '~:~ M~11:~r ~.c~U:fo~ Winter. 114/675-4923, IM.MEO. Occpy • 4 Br., 2 ll.A Rentals 642 "383 secictn dep 675-8140 BEAUTIFUL furnl3hed 1 Bt 1 sile 162 G24-n09 Ba, Hall of Fame. $325. -q apt near beach. $185 ln-~~t.or,I!ide~i~ot1:n~al~~: Newport Be1ich Option possible. Bkr eves, $280. New 2 BR. wtvlew San Clemente ~udes uti~ .• ~~p l oyed . : ••TAX REFUGE•• 0,vne:rs only. S.t9-1Zn 838-634L $250. New I-BR. w/vlew guna. 4~ Linle Je:\\·t'-l duplrx. 2 Bed-BEAUT. 2 BR house next 3 BEDROOM, -21Ai bath $300. Newer 3 BR, 2 ba. ~ BR house ocean view, LARGE, attracUve bachelor 1 roon 1 , l bllth eai·h. Built-in to heh. W/D, Dishwasher, Townhouse. Family room, PLACE REALTY 494-91M retrig, range, cptd, newly apt. Furn .. utll pd. Huntington Beach LOW WEEKLY RATES E xecutlv• Suites 727 Yorktown Blvd. Beach Blvd. st Yorktowc 536.0411 STUDIOS & 1 BR'1. e Full kitchen e Hearec:t pool • Laundry taclllties • Free utilities • Free linens • T.V. &: maid serv. avail. e Ba.r-B-Que • Phone service • l Mlle to ocean re~;~~ TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, fireplace, pool, pr'vate patios, continental break- fast. Spackru1 ground11, near shopr!r.r -l tine beach. Fur- nished or unfumlshed, from SZJO. Corona del Mar, 644-2611. ROO~fY one bedroom duplex - unit aCl'OSI! from park and tennis • corner .separate en· trance • garage $200/mo. 644-7211 Agt. SUB-.l.M--2 Br, 2 Ba, lit Ooor, lg llv rm, din rm., kitchen, patio, gar. 1 blk from heh. $275. mo • 526-4098. * 2 BR. 1 ba, balcony I pool. Walk to beach. Cbrolido. $225/MO. 833-165.1 or 833-11974. PARTIAU.Y furn. 1 BR, quiet sec'ld ocean view, trplc, PX) PreL bach. 673-0797 )civcn & l'llfl),74!, v.arbRi:e rils· 1 II• I $2SO mo. 109 39th SI. llttplace, pool. $325/MO. OCEANFRONT-POOL palntod. Water pd. $175. 673-5156 . posal. 1 unit ;tu,;t pninll'd n..ncw 673-366:) or 673~289 645--6610. Dramatic &: Luxurious 4 l4G'n Mariposa, 894--4284. B11lboa Island and new carpeting. Corner·i~;;;;;;;;;;;m;:;~~ 3 BR 1v Ba _, - 1 BDRM. 3 BA, home yearly. FABULOUS panoramic vu l 101, fcllC<'d bat k yard.I .H;;o:;U:,:-;::._;;:U~n~f;:;u;;rnc:;•c__:30::;5 lg !~n~ yd' .;/j;;.tio~.,J; 494-0015. Exclusive neighborhood, 4 COMP~,. turp.,..iirrv. $37,250. $6500 doY:n nnd as-B . ~ SC Pl $300. L Hiii enormous Br, with private owned apt.' ·1'8.l'Lli:I!~ A~I 5wnc lo:in. Drivl• by 75-1-75.1 us1ness Gener•I s4io445. aza. m 0 -•puna s bahta &: patios $295. 492-6989 to mature woman Ot' couple, $155-$165 BACHELOR & l BR. Patios, frpl.c's, priv_ garages • Di- vided bath & lots of closell . Rec. hall, pool &: pool tables, sauna baths. See for your. sell. 17301 Keelson Ln. (1 2 BR, I BA, crpll, drps, blk. W. of Bee.ch, 1 blk N. trplc, Poot. $ 2 2 5 / M 0 . ol Slater). _67=>006>-="-'·------ 842-""-' Scott Plare, C1if, then cRll Opportunity 200 3 BR Duplex, $200. Fncd yrd. HIGH on a bluff, beaut ON the golf course, GREAT later Dec, tbru Jan '74. MS-3036 for Appointn1ent to DRAPERY l"orkroo t Gar. Fanu'ly Welcome. view: secluded, adult area; OCEAN VIEW, 2 BR. 1% Refs req. 67l-0134 before A~. small beach hotel. gee_ DO NOT DJ!,i'URB '~ m or 3 B0 2 ... ~ l ~ 9AM wk.i·-sale or machines separate Homefinders 547.a.1:_.1 • .., """'• -sty. condo. BA, -·· 493-7227 ~~=~°""··~-~~-Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apts. TEN1\NTS. By O\\'ner. Prin· . -,,_ All. elec., air-cond., prtv. Santi Ana EXCLUSIVE, 1 ...... 1 BR, w/ $95 per month. 536-7056. 2BR, 1 ba, crpts, drpl, frplc, stove, xtnt loc, $240, :yearly, >'3-5306 Costa Mesa t•ln.'11• only, please. 4 1L, ·~~.mgl'r/Grand area, TNHSE ~ 3 b 2 ba t •~-· Dbl "• ,-"""'"",,.... u.,ti-'" r, , pa Kl, ........ J. area. . gar. frplc, open beam ceilinis. L1igun• Beac:h GRE~NTR~E RESTAURANT, "-:I. prop-dbl gar, patio, nr. So. c.oa.s:t $275. SBR, 3BA. w/ b It ins, $250 per mo. uW11 incl. ;:.:==...:;;;;;.::::.;.... __ _ Duplex & :rriplcx un!ts unck'r erty, 1 blk to bity, Ne...,'POrl Plaza. $265. 552-TI.33. 586-8075 644--7662 children & pets wanted. Nr 675-7285 EFFIC. & Deluxe from $50 2 BR, 1 Ba single story, constructiCln. F'rplc S, hl'run Beach A.gt 6T:>-5aXI w.11,h COfTAllllA BRAND NU 3 br, 2 ba, plush LEISURE WORLD, LEASE schl.1 & South Coast Plaza, FURN studio w/kitchen. Sill. • $15 wk. Pool, maid, pb, new Bhag apt, drpa, bled eel!. From $63,500. Builder. I . 1 · . s~ I B tu . 11 l exec home. Lge fam rm, OR SALE, New 2 BR, 2 BA, ~. 549-1343 mo. 2311h Aaate. 675-0785. li:lry, Village Inn, 4M-S436 pall~o, ~ .. a_:nEldcell, trplc, PJ'No. 646-4414 nve1tmen "-'· r m co age, grea $345. Wells, 979-1533/991-1450 Casa Vista, upper balcony Westminster eves. '"· M1't't en Apt · I P 166 Opoortunity 220 for single guy or gal. 3 B" 1 1 G view, no steps, 830-1651 Newport Beech C, 537--3125. ncome roperty c $130. 1 Br, part furn apt, uW ·~ ge ot. real fer B11lboe Peni~ula ""-===;,....~--~~1 RED CARPET ANTIQUE bus. , for sale. pd. Eastslde. kid•. 1st/Last + $50. $250. L1igun• Niguel 1(~~ ~~A¥~ ·•1 i: WE~K" UP $35 per wk & up. 1 BR, ~e~poo~ ~~ 2 ~: 'fake ovt>r lease of unique $165. 2 Br unfum View apt. mo. Agent 546-0ll4 HOME •""" on.t At!M ~ c 2 Br & bach's Color TV M ture adults ,_ 11 ked I h"d Ok rd E 3 Br !" ba ·~· w tso 3 BDRMS/ 2 ba. screened -_..., ~ e Sleep•·· •-mi · • a , no pell • ..__. shop, fu y 5tCIC . Prime c · gar Y · · . , ""' , .w.w a n. uor; swu maid setv pool THE Monrovia a•c """" l..9g. Bch. \ocatkln. Call side C~1 $275. per nx>. Kingaard RE, patio w/window inserts, e Housekeeping Rooml ' · ' ~...,. 4!.14--0666 daysl 494--8197 eve. $200. lovely 2 Br, unfum apt 642--2222 se1 oredp. ~.bDlkbl g,ar., sklhooesl HoUuH1• Furn. or 310 •Ocean View Apt.I ~NB~~ Newport *ELM GARDENS. POOL• 1-T:i6-339l nnytime child, pet, gar, yrd, view, 4 Bedroom, large f a m 11 y e · 0 SC • n urn. BALBOA INN eAdults Poolalde $150 U9. NB. Crpts, ~ bltna, ct.bwhr, JOO Main Street LARGE deluxe: 3 bl', 2 ha, eAl9o Children'• Section: T.5% interest is all you pay Investment $22.5. house 3 Br unfurn, kids, room, large back yard, $275 painted. Yard care Incl. General 0 ...,. ,,..40 1 blk to cx:ean, $260/MO 11l·E-22nd St. CM 60--36'5 EXCLUSIVES \\'hen you buy this Colila W•nted 230 ,_ rd & mo. Call 838-1157. $.100 Meyer 49.5-4496 rt'9 v,,_, to June. 3)2 ~ st, ?vlesa fou ..... Jex 011 l'Onlrncl ' -""-==----...::'°' pets, u-g y ' gar. ~"-•942' 4 ' ., 2 BR I bar bl •·•-9 6 • 6 T T e HOME Ant:QSPU1"D,... • .,.. 1• S2ill hse 3 br, unfurn, trplc, DELUXE :2 bedroom, 2 bath, ~ • Frp c, , ttn.. UJ>Al,O..LI•. o-or ........ _ ...,,ilh $13,850 down . S59. 750 tSK req. for new electron se--dbl gar, lrg ynt. townhouse. Pool, 2 car gar $325 4 BR, 2 baa 1 3 Bdrm. 2-story home Lrg balcony. l house 1m1n stZ-76n Dix 2 &: 3 Br. Sl 70 up. Rental N !Eullwprkv"E· ~1EN~ tl curity device for expan $375 -Hl!C. 4 Br, l Ba, lrplc, $225. mo. 645-6610 dbl. gar all Utll.s pd ~iii ¥~R·2 ·~···un1·. $400 yearly oceanfront. No peta. $1!6. FURN 1 room priv entry, ~ioM J09'j Mace Ave. JN ;,1:• (• -Bcn.u -cycli.? market un1td. market bring kids, horse&:: other Fount11in V1ll•y Monte ' Verde, Mtke, dra.::., deco''r, .;,.lynew. $325carp. ,· 673--fi055, l~. priv gar, _priv be, very ~.~TR~O·------ ful new 4-plex ~a.cant R!ld ready now hi •;'o for silent .,..... .J• qui t 64.5-{i95.l ~1460 PICAL POOL e ready for that first Cl\\'ncr. ""'rlncr paten!s. Write to pets. 7IH95-5066. 3 BR., 2 ba. Oceanfront. OCEANFRONT ye a r 1 Y • e · or 2 BR 11\ Ba. s lral This ·1 is 1 ted 1 ~ LANDLORDS FREE ~RENT-$325.00 SEA Torrace garden homo, Furn.; winier 1325, !BR. $225 por mo. UW pd. uk Mr. Gates. trpl • bl ,_P ""'°"· um ocn n A clu.ss. Rri No. 986 c/o Daily 3 2 bath 2 2 phone 673-1531 NEWPORT Towers 8lh .,_ c, tns, ... a eocl paUo, choice rental area and ready Pilot Box No. 1560 Costa ALA RENTALS m, -home. 3 BR. 2 bas, Assoc. prlv. BR., ba. tum, ,.,inter .. on Bay, sllp avail'' " BR~ ~~llyrd. Gas &: wtr pd. to appreciate. Prit.'ed to sell ~tcsa'.. ' Large 8-.De:llghtful! Call $500. mo 644-1751. 493--0136, $300. 1 &: 2 Br turn Baytrorrt apt. 41 ___.. 68 nt $'78,000. M 1 L wt WKWIH ""wtva 962-0642 aner 3:30 pm. 847--8583 yearly. util tum, $225 &: $325. 2 be. $500 will lease, $52,950. Beach Tr I P I ex . oney o Olin 240 f Huntington Buch 4 BR, 2 BA, !am rm, trplc, Call ~91. 646-8316 or 60-8931 'Bb~~ G&S:,en ~~pl~ Lowest priced triplex In DON'T BORROW fiit HOUSH ---'"----,;._--1 view, prtv rec center, 2 BR, view nr shops &: SPECTACULAR 3' BR, 21Ai pajnt $200. 673-8364 bet. 9 aft Newport Beach and ~1' block 'T YOU CALL US I I .vrs. 3 BR, family nn, frplc, 1% guarded gate. 49G-lnl. bchs, $235 furn $225 unf. BA. 2 11ty llv. rm., ocean 5 or wkends to beach. Great for ill· IL I DU,LS. ba. crpts &: drpa, bltns, I ~L~o'd~0=1~,1~.="-'==::...-Utils Incl. 643-3519. vtew. 1 blk to bay or beach. ""''='='=::...,---- vesbnent, appreciation and Borrow on your home equity .~ CM 642 1313 children & pets ok. $295. l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I•'!"""!""!\"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.;,, C d I M SJSOhm. Winter. 675-1456. EASTSIDE duptex a Pt. owner u11r too. ...--for any good purpose. Serv. •""""' 'U.Y, • . -5J6..7036 orona • •r FURl'flSHED beachtront 2 CU.tom 3 Br, 1"' Ba, $275. $52,950. Fourplex. Only 2 left ing Los Angeles Counry for SINGLE on lot 1 br $100 2 R ho / ard FOR LEASE Condominiums 1 B Wint y •·• Ev Enclosed gar,. wet her, of these 2 lxlr. l ha. over 20 years and NO\V in Iota trees, pet &: Infant. B me w Y -Needs Unfurn. 320 $190 -De uxe spac furn sngl r. er--ear..,. es, frplc, agent 615-6900 1...S PM fourplexes. l O"k Down. Will Orange County! ClITE Bach Sll5. Avail now some: repair. Rent HOME ON LIDO non-smoker exec gentleman 213 I 943-2615 -wknds or Eve55&-1745. sell contract or con-SIGNAL MORTf]AGE CO. lrg enuif for 2-Huny reasonable. Responsible old-l Bdrms., 2 baths, Ige. patio, 2 BR., built-Ins, rec. center. frpl, quiet, S. hwy. Avl ,c.7;ol41:;.64~i...s5=19;c;,· ~--~~ ~MAKE"-o='"r==,=,--1-. - vcntional. Ren!s on way 10 (U4) 556-0106 BEACli unit 2 br $155 wntr er couple wanted. 847-2715 $525, month. Better hwTy! kids OK. $225 mo. Brk. Call 12/7_ 675-4859. OCEANFRONT 2 BR, 1 & 2 unb:,U ri'.:ma1:r 1~ Sfi(XI. per month. 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. basic furn, util pd. A deal 3 BR, 2 BA $200. Crpts, drps. Wont last. Call today. MarlJyn Copley 832-5440 or Costa Me111 GARAGE, $240 YEARLY. Pool, rec. hall & gall $175,000. East.side 12 Unlts.1 TD L NE\V Decor 2 br $.225 HB Kids/pets ok. HARBOR: Tom Nehrbas 8.'l0--6060 64l>-8908. eves &:: weekends. Bar-B-Ques. Call 642-4470 Attractive complex with st 08 ns child & cat--blg lot. Homefind1r1 547-9641 Huntington Beach Unbeliev11bly B1eutlful 1 BDRM apt, 1teps to ocean. pool. T'A·o owner apt.s. \Valk-lRVlNE's best 2 Br $275 2 BR, l Blk 'from Lake Park. VAL D'lSERE Garden Apts. Yearly. $I65. CLEAN 2 Br, l% Ba, 1.ngdi.stancetoshoppingand UP TO 9()% frplc, bltns, D/W, cl-gar. sm mo. lst & last mo. BRAND New 2 BR, Adults_ no pets. Flowen 6'13-26Tl. garage & patio for older bus services. ~ IN ES DANA Pt 3 br FM $300 Spa 1_,. 1 . us t bu! everywhere. Stream Ii: S Cl couple. No _ pets or children. 163,000. Eastslde 4 houses BY..% TER T all appli'a, patio, F.P., gar. 962-3533 or 53&-0321. COMP'ANY rec:=eai'k:n.ux~ or a2 s~ waterfall, 45' pool. Rec. Rm. :;•::;n::.,;;;.:•:;"'";;o"::le;o... ___ eail ~after 8 am. on a large lot l()"Ai •n 2nd TD Loans OVERLOOKS Harbor ~ Br 3 Br. 2 ba twnhlle. trplc, REAJ."roRS MC:l\' ti.CO 'l.f'rJ Sauna. Sgl.s 1-2 Bdrm, ~~ .. , Vl'ew 2 BR, I BA 3 BR, 2 BA twnhse wtfrplc, 10% 2nd, 80~ f mmu'. libr ~. everything for shag crpt, drps, pri patio, SINCE 1944 L-~N :• I Fum-Unfurn. trom $142. ~,to shopping Wtr & nu •ppln11 &: crpl3, 2 car ment recel\·ed. Income comfort. pools&: rec area. 962-1674 67).4400 aguna 1gue SEE IT: 200) Parsom, trash PD. No pe't.s. $170., gar. $325 • .Aft 6 (213) $7,956. and rcn!s \\'AY be\o\\' lowest rites Oren9e Co. WE have what you need WALK to beach, 3BR, 2BA, .,,,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~( 1 642-8670. 160 w Pal12ada, No. 2 or 477-3743 market. Each house ha11 S11ttler Mtg. Co. Or we'll find , it -CALL fam rm, bltins, trplc, crpts, Lido Nord B•yfront FOR Rent or ease 1 . yr2 ="-"BR"'-"1~-~~--own a:~e &: yard. . 642 _ 21 71 54S-06ll us. .ot.-., $285, 847_3248_ , "-e 4 bdrm •u bath old 3 br. 2 ba., upstairs, Sl~~IGANT1C1 •11br, undturner 492---7577 eve, 499-4000 day , ha & 3 Br, l~S ~ d tailed I f t ALA R t I 642-1313 ..... .,.. .__.6 •• ""n s, on 9th hole of El Niguel pni...:u. comp e e Y · Apt. Unfurn. 365 ba, bltn range, drps, crpt, t':ese e: and ot~":°i~nc:~ Serving ltarbor area 24 yrs. en 11 s 3 BR, srio. 2 patios, trplc, family J?Om· Best area. Country aub. $350/400/mo Lawns, covered gar, adults, pool, clubnn, carport. 2212 Red Carpet, Re a 1t 0 rs LOANS available, any type, LANDLORDS! 20401 Newland St., No yng Pier & shp. $llDJ Mo/ll!aae Call 547-91jl7 before 5 PM no pets. ~ Fullerton Ave. Gener•! College Ave, 646--6032 - 2550 .. ~ llarbor Blvd.. anywhere, any size, $20,000 childreD See Sat & Sun Agt. 644-9(1;() 673-0149 I blk East of Newport Ave., -"'==------LRG 2 Br 11\ Ba. 2 1-.,,~ ~ We Specialize in NewPOrt ' . ' atARMJNG 3 BR, 3 BA, Newport Blllch l blk So of Bay, CM 642"69(1 --' 5 v•;r Costa Meaa. up. Mr. Jones (1021 882-2132 Beach • Corona del 6 •· 4 BR. 2 BA. patio, avail lg apt., gar, $175. 3 0 l 6 2 DUPLEXES Mortgigtt, & Laguna. O\lr Rental Ser· Do<: 16th, Children ok ;no DR., · patio, 133 Via BRAND new 3 BR, 211 Ba, 1 Br "1<. $150 & $140 T.,. Ftllmott, apt. No. 147. T t Deed 260 vice i-9 FREE to You! Tr)' mo. call 846-2000 Warlen $490 Open 1-5 deluxe condo. N ~or t race. Ideal for bachelors. 8. 4~90. PRLCE REDUCED rus I Nu·V;ew! POOL. • Br. Loose I'm mo, 64().8146 Crost, pool, • • Adults. 1993 Church. t~e 2 Br, I ba, bltlna, pr\. back Owner "'Y' sell these nd· PUT YOUR MONEY NU-VIEW RENTALS Sell 136.500. Assume GI MoH d•I Mor . courtyard setting • q les ~-:;::,:::::=:,,....-----yd. meld gar, 22098 673-4030 494-324.8 Avail no\v ~ or 'family SSOO/mo. uni. * EUf GARDENS -POOL American Ave, $160 mo Joh lning 1 2 DR duplexes on TO WORK FOR YOU! or I • ' ' 5 BR, 3 BA, w/pool, lease $600/nio tum. 644-72t., Agt. e Adults Poolsldl! .,""Up Water pd. 963-5636. uge ots. Only JIY'/o Down. C d-' Ma rv1ne I $400 -Price reduced to $34 950 Earn 10% or more on welJ. orona .. r year y, . per n10., phone Cl!ARMING 3 BR, 2% ba., • Al90 Children's Section BIG' $175. LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba eAch. ' bl'Ctlred 2nd 'Prust Deeds on 6 bedroom Hil.ltop .••• $750 2 BR Condo ••••• ms Mo/lse 540--STO:r art 6:30 pm. Blufis corxlo tn choice loc. 177-E. 22nd St. CM 642'-3645 aean Cl'pt/drps, adults, no CENTURY 21*642-1771 Orange County resl estate. 4 bedroom greenbelt .• $525 2 BR Condo ••••• $245 ldo/lse Mil~sion Vleio Has everything but nlee l BR, spacious, 6 unit bld.g, • pets. 765 Shalimar, 547-1155. l•OiiOiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;..,..,..i;;;il SIGNArn~~o~~E co. 3 Bedroom Bayfront ••• $t50 ~ B~ ~omc ..... f: mo~ :f Br 2 ba ndo ts =~e ~75livM0in ~Y F°.{ llke new, gar, $160 • Adulll, 2 BR, crpll, drps, bit-ins, NEW TRIPLEXES 4500 Cam D NB 3 Bedroom 1..8.guna 3 B ome ••••. $325 mot se drps' bltln co s265 crp , Beach Rlty • 6T:>-3CKXl no pets, 2'.llO Elden, 646-1512 garage, adults, no pets. AND DUPLEXES pus r., . . oceanvlew •••.••• $495 BR HHome ••••• mo/lse 586-0o79 0 f~) 259--0934mo. cflfo:lo,6::,_______ fron' $110/!.IO. 646--6983 Agent 675-1225 4 BR ome ,,, •• $300 mo/lae r BLUFFS Plaza Condo. 2 Br, LGE FUU.Y fl!RN, 2 BR . .a. 2BR 155,1))) to $67,500 TO n1ake, buy er sell a 2 BR, Condo, kid• OK $225. 4 BR Home ••••. $425 moflR Newoart Be•ch den, corner loc. on Blt.ns, pool, beani cell. $~GO · lmmac, hJesa Verde Wilson ot Pl1icentla Av1 Trust Deed, any amount, mo. brk. Call M&rltyn RANOI REALTY 551-m> ~ greenbelt. $340. avail 12115. Adults (Infant ok) no pets. W~dlta, no pets, Jt4S, COSTA MESA anylhn•, "'" 638-501S Ma· Copley 832-114<0 or Tom ENERGY SAVER EXCITING 3 BR, 211 Ba. 645-2900, eve 83J.8148. $180 64"-!IS20 PHONE 547-6791 AGT. jesUc Mortgage Co Nehrbaa, S»Q)6(1, Nu 3 br home ln Turtlerock. Bluffs Omdo nr tennis club. NEWPORT Cmt O:lndo 2 .,"". !BR , Al Oakwood Ga~•n Apon· NE\V delux:i!! 2 Br apt, adults N Lease $550/?ilO Sale By b 2 ha I . •~ near Maylalr "' only, no pets 2028 Fullekon $90 l Br utll pd. 2 Br, $12> r. UCT, lndust complex, Owner. 114,995_. Will take r, , eec. gar., tenrus market. 1662 Newport. No monts ~1869 4 PLD\ In Pomona 2 Br I ""''* II &j kld•/pell. 3 Br, H.B., $185 tchit, •hppng. i.m. mo. 2nd 833-8635 & swim. 1395/MO. 646-0147 pel& or children GREAT RECREATION:swlm- ea . 5 Yl'l> old, very gd In· ,,.. Plus Jtone Ranch w/ ~I Many super teaturcS. SHARP. 1 ~~. 81 ..... Condo Townhouie Unfum. 335 1 B~. pool. Adi•• no pctll. ming. saunas, health clubs. come $41,500 Trade for · qtl'I, $165 Agt. Fee. 9'l9-.a430 833-2.883 •v ~ ..., bil1iatds, tennis, pro & pro ~'"'; •vf. """~<l~i HouH• Furnl1hJ YOO Balboa l1!1nd ~~,!~T,"').:tul ':· .~: l.so~o. 2i 1 ... iiy vo:'; Cost• Mn1 ~.~;:"~26 Mont• :::::~.'.'::.•ri•no ""''·"'"Y NastafA, 546-9621. G BAYFftONT, nu 3 Br, fam enclald RV storage, crpts, 154.~. Wiii take 2nd. NEW Townhouse 2 BR Nr ADULT lrg 2 hr, pool, quiet, FUN ACTIVITIES: Fu1l·11me FOURPLEX _ North ,.,~11 ener•I rm, 2 ,,~, -arly, •-u1-drps, blrtns. $.11S inclds park 83l-8635. pool, ~ Bn.dfonl Place super clean, bltns. $160. No d8;8,oe0:or. l1ee Sunday brunch, M Al b'-~ .. ~ 400 "'J .,~ """" ... It pool pt1 I 552..f1058 WATERFRONT 3 BR. 2 ba. 551-1112 peta. call 6461974 a, trips , parlies. and esa. &Umll .,, r o.n loan Sl.10 • Utll Prt. Qulct & nice S. Bayfront No. 5. v • Walk moral -no lotln fees. Annual In· Bach. Pool ,(,: gar. CdM. B.llbo. PenlntUlll NEW 3 br, 2 1>8, bltiN, )y to ocean. ~ Mo. Huntington 8e1ch 1 BR~· lpt. Gu 6: water BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: eome S7~0.. sale 11rice $115 _ Ulll Pd. 'Bflch. 1 blk truh comp, crptl, drps, L ..... H ., .. "-"otA pd. • mo. 979-"1832 all Singles, 1 & 2 bedrooms. S64.,500. Sale subject to In· bench. ll..'\lboA. ShAg crrits." 2 BR & fAm r;m, 2 car comm. park &: p00I. Nr .-.v.,.. • ...,-owie V'lr.JOill/ 3 Rr, l \t hi\ town Blt:ns. ~5~pm;;:,· ,.--.,--,~--Fum, & unturn. With 111 1he ~pecllon, et1Crow to CIOICI Jan New kit. gar, on the Point. yrly lie. UCI. 833-11447 l BR home Udo Isle, newly crpt, drps & 1348 sq. rt. NEWLY redec. sludkl apt. ext11s. Models open 10 lo 7. 14. C1dl 545-8424, SouthCo Sl4S • ~Bnch. Nicely furn $.1.15. mo. 67&-4003. 3 BR 2 ba \; decor & land~r pvt Xtrn clean $200. 839-7313. Frplc, utll lncl'd, $ll5 mo. Sorry. no pets or children. •·-•ton I " ., car gar. "-I Gtt =• Call "" -n.etU • w 0nr ilUnR B w lled •-· 'd 1.11; is. 1.....,,.,,,.., • Newport 8a11ch. ~-· o-L..--• HOUSE + 6 UNITS 1225". Aurac. i 'sr. on ronr iythor.i a '""' cov ' .,;:::~=;=~~--~w~ 'patio; lrplc. $375. Mo. Good BA YFRONT, prlv bcb, lrg $95 Mo. Over 35. No pets. G&rdtn. Apartments New unll1 at 2637 Elden, or lot. Frplc. Pool. G&.rA&t-LOVELY newly dtc0rated tt.E. 494-7518 deluxe yearly, 2 Br, $4'15, TENNIS BUFFS 2037 Westminster Ave. ln-CM. !St wter w1200,;, write CdM. home • BR, 3 BA, 1 close $2'l5 MONTH, 2 BR, l~ ba, 3 Br, Sin> 673-0640. 3 BR, 2'Ai BA townhouse quln! 240 Slerkl St. Off, 0.11Bullder64l>4414. NU-VIEW RENTALS to prtv. heh. $525 tumm<l' condo. Walnut Squatt. HARBOR 0 VIEW 2· tory • overlooking tennis courts" ~u1cK CASH DUPLEX in Cosla Mesa 2-2 673-4030 or 494-3248 lncl'd. Long tmn \le. Avail. ~•1 BR, 2\oii BA, 1enn1; A Poot pool. S4'l5. Holly 979-l&'n T llR Amom• VA Joan, I.ow $90 l BR House. Also Hntg. 213: 244-3640 TURTLEROCK 4 Br ''<I 81 prlvl&. l550 mo. 644-41!6 Soni• An1 THROUGH A ,,.wport lle10h/Ncwth !MM tlld 11111 .. UUQ N..,orl lle.cf'l/Sou1ft 16111 ., 1 ..... ,,. .-2 .. 110 $150. 2 br, lin&li!! atory, beam celling. 3M3 W a 11 a c e 646-.iml or &46--8882 3 BR, 1!1 ba In 4 pltx $185. fM, + dep. Nr. bus, schl.s. ?>ec. ht. M9--G25. l & 2 BR. ~ Stave, ret, crpl/drpa, hid pool. Adults, no pet1. 6U--8965. •STUNNtNG 2 Br, 2 Ba Garden Aplt. Pool. Rt<: Rm. '!10 W. 18th St., OJ. ADULTS only, 2 br, nu w/w c1-pt, nu drpll, neY.'b' df'C, b11tn1, mo. tm-733f I BDRM. $135. 2 Bi'iRi(, "'>15 · hdr l1 l'lnly, pool: 325 E. 17th Place. , -3': ... crptldrll9, . ;:-id SlSO up. Ca1i d6wn, Day• 831-2600, i:v.s Bach ll.50 1inJd<1. 3 BR. 3 br, 2 ba, 2 cor pr, 1m. 3 c,,. pr, no peb, $425'. HVH 4 Br, ox<CUllVI view DELUXE Townhse 3 Br l~ DAILY PILOT 567-1487 f f1m rm, Sl.SS'. Walk to ptr mo. Avall lmmedlate1y. Vacant. 5'5--06!0 aft 6 PM. hOme, tennis, pool, tam rm, Ba, crpVdrp1, bltna,' lra "Wood It & Resp" bcacft. Kldt/peu. Agt. let. C.11 m.&403 My day It the BEST DAY IO din rm, SOOO o""'r. 64G--OOOll pr1 polio, dbl gar, nr So. WANT AD From tttuu,... to tnsh 97Hl30. The !attest draw In tho Well. nut 111 ad! Don't delay. Tho tutecl draw in the WetL Coul Plam. 644-18111 or CALL 642-5678 '?urn them tnto cash Whtta Elephant Din>e-A·Une ••• a Dtl9' Pilot OulWed call todQ 6().087L , .. 1 DailY Pilot Cla.saltltd 557-1531. C4S-Ol40 • " 2 Bdr. 1tovt, ref r I g. ·I F'-..'\lde Attrtct-.~,~br-,-bl_=i_ dl1h\\·ather. ctn,, no peta. dsh"'lhr, crpt, c.trps,"' $1i0. S3M7a pr. No ptt.a. $46-M4 • , 44 DAl lY Pl \01 Apt. Unturn. PINECREEK LIVES UP \. TO !TS NAME ... VILLA PAULA 10 UNIT BLDG. 2 BR. 2 BA. from $115 mo. to mo. Heat, 1..ookin~, .. ~1aler l)llld. Ol.shv.'asi1c1'1i, clot;(!(! garage. patio, sh~_ carpets. 1 BEAUTIFUL 622 Hanlilton, C.M. r>4S.2062 See l\tgr. Mr. & l\1rs. Hoban NEW TRIPLEXES 3 Bdrm .. . . $265 2 Bdrm .... $210 l Bdrm .... $170 WJllOf'I at Plac1ntl1 CM Phono 547-6791 Agt. I & 2 BR APTS. Dlsh .... ·ashers. Bit-Ins * UTILITIES PAID * Pool. Closed Garagc>s. \\'ash- inr: Facll. \Valk to shopping. Adults, no pets. 6424378 CUTE, clean 1 BR apt. Up. per. Avail Dec lirt, Rc(s., $)75. JTIO. 4M-fi22() 2 BDRl\IS, bltns, 2 yrs old. Avail. Dec. 15th. Call *37ti6 after 5 Huntington Beach 2 BR .. charming older Hpl. Near stores. $140 li1o. R.ealonomics, Bkn. GTJ-6700 2 BR, New carpel~. drapes, 5 mlnutes freew11y/beach, $140 TIJO 213-53(}..1767 % BR Unlum. Fr. $2ll CO\•ett<l Parl<lm:. t. Ii r g 1:1 Heated Pool:, Saunas and Recrea1lon Room. HUNTINGTON. PACIRC ill OCEAN A\>e., 11.B. lTI41 536-1481 Ofc. o~ 10 arn-6 pn1 Dally \\1IU.IAltt WAL1'ERS CO. OCEAN Vi~w. above Hun- tington Ha1·bour, dlx. new 2 BR, 2 BA, bltns, cpts, drps, frplc. $225 213:592-1091 CLEAN, quiet 2 BR, nearly new bldg. \\i'tr, gas pd. Olild OK, no pets. $155 & $lii0. 842-1652. LGE 2 BR, 11h Ba Studio. Encl gar. Inlant OK. No pets. $157.50/mo. 847'4440. 1 BR. apt w/refrig & stove, ocean view, yard. No children or pets. $190. 673-4156. 1 BR. ApL Close Jn. Utll Paid. No children, no Pets. Jl85/Mo. 49.1-5838 eves. Office R9nr11 fi • ) DRIVEWAYS· PATIOS SIDEWALKS JESS ANZAWUA 969-9799 PATIOS, walks, drives, con- crete pumping. Uc. m. 255915 Don &12--8514 CEI\IENT: Patio, drives, waJks-Repalrs, saw & remove. Fn.-e est. 544-8998 .. vicinity Child Care * PATCH PLASTERING * All lypes. Free estimates Call 54l).<;82S Dryv.'&11 & Plaster Repairs Acoustical ceilings sprayed Call Mike * 492-1643 Plumbing LR. OTIS PLUMBING Remodels &: Repairs. \Slater heaters, disposals, furnaces, dshwashrs. ~ l\I/C & B/ A. Complete Plumbing Service. Uc. 272694. PLUMBING REPAIR No job too small * •642-3128• * Roofing The Balboa Bay Cub Is seeking a Barber &/or halr Jtyllst \\•ho la lnteruted ln settlng up a thop ln the club. l\f~t be of high caliber & have xln't character, refs. For particulars see person· nel manager. Balboa Boy Club 1221 W. Coast H"'Y·· N.B. BArulAJD, night shift The Knotty Keg · 2125 Harbor, CM 64&-9910 , BEERTENDER.. WANTED L Female. No experience re- qui....,, 496--9023. Dave BOAT Assemblers, exper. only. Apply Cal I tom la Boats, 1665 s. Claudina Wa:y, ROOFING-ex.pert ~pairs & Anahelm. 956-9%50 re-roofing Free con. sultation/estimates. Bay *Bkkpr, Constr $1000 Roofing Specialists. 646-0219 Liz Relhden Agency • 4oa> Bin.it Street Sew1ng/Alter.1tlons StJ!te 104, NB m.8190 ALTERATIONS, re.rytlng Dool A Job 13i.cl155 ladies .. -ear, experienced No Charge To You reuooable. 96J..5806 ~tablished 1965 BOOKKE ' Television Ran.air EPER I Secretary, -r-Some errands. starting *QUALITY* * MULCH &: TOP SOIL * -l[Il] Job Wantod, Molo 700 SCRAM"LETS ANSWERf HOUSESITTTNC -''M1lllft couple. Impeccable. Rertr- ences. 23 yn, local tta:ldent.s 64+1582. salary $."i60. per mo. Call Mrs. Scholbe, 963-6746 Village Real E s t a t e : Brookhlll'$l/Garticld, H.B. B 0 OKKEEPER, P/time, retail store merchandising. ll·IS hn per v.•k. Mature, l'l'fs. Buggs International, 2043 WestcUU Dr. NB BOYS wanted, 14 to 17, for part time "-'Ork after school. Easy work &: good money, call Josh Bradbury, 645--0770 BUS Boya & Waitresses AM Shift/6:30. Mu11t be exp. Contact J. Westbrook Mon thru Fri only 49-i-657.t ·· • CHILD Care, p/I, J.ll p.m ., 3 yr. old. AlllO need lranap. temp. to & from Mll'k. 54S--41S2 an 5. CLERK TYPISI' -No Exper. Nece11U1 'J'raln Al Full Salary, Benefits, m/f, 18-26 INTERVIEWS NOW Call Army Opportunltleo (114) 61;.1163 COMBINATION welder, arc &. heliarc experience. Tralneea for rna11 1hoP1. Mechanical ability, Apply at El'lckaon Y achll, -i t 3 1 Doore, Santa Ana. Connercial TeRer ExporlOftCtd • Cansumer Loan Processar UNITED CALIFORNIA IANK 3141 K. Cout Hwy. 'CoroN clol Mor •1>-mo COOKS<ounter Men t women. NU concept In Mex· Ice" fut foodii, all lhlttl aVlll. FllU .. part thru!. O>ot owr 18, counter over 2l. • Apply Bob Bunw Root Eilahlon ldAnll ll}J °'""'" Ill 11 AM. ACCOUNTING CLERK Ute 10 k•Y. cypo -WPM, xlnt worklna: cond., A com· pany benefttt. Grtat op. portunlty to J e 1 r n ac-counttna, A: for ad· <X>OKS wanled In Wt bid vancement, Nr Or an c e holall. 9om1 exp. 1kde11ed O>w!ty Airport. Apply NI• but '111 lrlln. llt Lido Uonal Syitems Corp. 4361 Dr., NB. See OM!. Bird! St., N.,._ Beach. Any daJ 11 Ibo BDIT DAll' ID ~13!0 run an ••II Don't d<Uy. • ' Hop H w to th en s :1 ·~ S' Holp 1 D t t ,. r:'r1day, Novembtr 30, 1973 DAILY PILOT ~i.i~~iiiiii~~~~~~~iiiil~iiiii~Olffiiiil~p~W~a~n~tod~,~M~~~i.l;lff~IJl~W~ .... ~"'~·~M~ .. ~F?.7~10 Help W an t M F 71 0 tip Wonted, M .. F 710 Antiques 100 t1quH 100 C.mor11 a I' NW11Ca' ~ Equipment IOI INSURANCE SALES RN·LVN-AIDE SECRETARY ~JIJl!Rt llASSEUlLAD 500C w/xlr& ENGINEERS Hydraullc llA!searcb, one of the Nation's top !luld handling bard· ware manufacturers, Is expanding in the area of night controls and systemf. U you are a sell starter and a strong runner, cap- able of handllng a project from the conceptual proposal to the finished product, we offer above average salaries with great opportunltles for professional growth and career advancement. TECHNl.CAL SPECIALIST-STRESS Requlres 8 years experience with hydraulic !light control actua- tors, pres~ure vessels and computer programming. Addltlonally, the capability to, train and, supervise others is desirable. MS in engineering or math preferred. SENIOR PROJECT ENGINEEFIESIGN •• Requires BSME plus approx. 8 years experi!"'~·wilh-comElex hy· draullc !light control actuators and related. l!fo'\;\ct . ~icular emphasis will be placed on the capability to work with the custom- er , conceive and design readily manufacturable·hal'aw&re and supervise other engineers. 1 '1 " ¥ DESIGN ENGIN_EER Prefer 2 years college plus AA degree and five years hydraulic component design experience. Besides designing and 'developing servovalves and actuators, will use digital computers for methods analysis. ; ll·T &. other ah.ift1. Top pvt. we n.re 1~ tor a top ba.ck 90 df&l'ff view tinder. No exp nee., earn while you duty PIY· Jmmed. pay for notch ltCrela.ry to leun the ANTIQUE AUCTION llaht mete.r, pip, rnten. karo, part time, eves 1 floor duty. Countywlde ad bit. u you t ake Morns '-til 9, eve• ~T pm, - wkndl, full Ume when quali-Jntrvw1. A1on-fo'li S.5, ahorth&nd, type fut A ac-67S-8995~~·-==-~~ fl<d. • !:-'>"lie N'ilf'' R~try, C\ll'lltely & would W.. a LOCATION : Ora ... County Folrgroundo MINOLTA SR1101. 1. T, f'annm Insurance, Croup 351 Hospital ,, NB< bby cha.Lle11ie. Reply Oa.asifted In the Youth Building, w/135 mm lense le ~teler Ed Lant•• 540-1~ ~~Udo Bltfa:) 642·9955• ~d0 00Bo!64~0 8::,::. II Fair Drlv.-Cost1 'Mt11, Cal. ~ ::>2--&ttuh· Must sell . Nsu CE uaJ NURSES . • 1 d 8 ,. "--. cit SU. ' ' (Enter at main gate on F•lr Or. pl••••> ;;:=~·=--=----1 I RAN cu ty agen-n """' ?ttATOllNC 161n.m camera, cy girl. OWce 1n Corona vaJesCent liolp. OPP'Jl:'· fur DATE: Sunday Afternoon-Dec. 2nd-l :OO P.M. sound projector, .tripod, dfll Mar. E;xpu. J)ltf. Good womert o'1"tr 30, 60-0098. SERVICE Sta. needs ex;per Uibt.meter. Volt Ian d e r &alllJ'Y. Part·tlnte. Hours o F F·I CE· c LE AN ING n1&11 tor days. SdUY &: We are selling at auction 3 Cull containers of 4M-19'l7 fl~xtble. Call 545--3165 or P/time. Newpert -Coilta oomm. Union Oil, 393 E-fine quality antiques. This Is a nother portion o"L"Y:::M::P:;.U_S_O_M_·l-.-n-.-,-,-.-.,.' 675'-6444 .Mf!Sll Areas. £)(per. eounle 17th st .. Costa Mes11. l h t h e•~Jng ,.,. w/•lrop, 4 mo. Ont.v Fine Detal1 \Y ;k. To SrITER ln church nursery o t e huge inven ory of antiques we ave ,,__.,, . JANITOR p • cai1 21S/9'ZT--OJ:s · op been commissioned to liquidate. old. 1215• 615-<SlO. Newport OUice, Part tlme, ay. from 9:30-ll :30 AM. Swtday 32 PIECE Lelca lilt outfit. late PM or evening, call ONLY Dtpendable. 645-3453 PARTIAL LISTING: Roll top desks • carved All Mint or new. Sacrifice 644<5461 betwn S.S. Mon-Fri. TODAY'S ARMY SOM' water dealer needs sideboards • brass bed • tea caddys • secre-.673--0734=="-------I JANITOR part t1me & lull OFFERS teleph>ne solicitor. Thia Is -• · a l!•edy permanent posl-tary/bookcases • pump organs • fern stands ~-~nee preferred. You• 2·Y••r 1nli1tm1nt Uon, Start at $3. per hour • coal boxes. ·armoires ·carved tables· game 557 with a choice + commission + borws. · h · ~,:_kSalope";'""w .wlant t'eedn. Call Coll.ct Call 51.9-0598, Mr. Logan tablbes ll. rocstkersd • hdall trefes ·t sd1dekc airs b. •""' ....... • • (714) SSl-2'65 u 00 ans.,.,·er, Call 645-0297 um re a an s • rop ron es s • pu agreement. Call 831..Q300 Leave name & phone num· chairs. glass front bookcases · mirrors· glass- 9:30 to 5:00. PBX operator, afternoons A: ber. ware and 'bric·a-brar.-Also a fine selection of LABORERS = :,Tifilprefettd. will STORE MANAGER clocks. Jmmed. Assignments. Top Female. Mature. Ladles re-$$$. Long or short term PERM part time, 7·ll Food tail swimwear. F/time. Ap-INSPECTION: Saturday-Dec. 1st· 10:00 A .M. NEVERCfk~TEMPO. ~·~1:1~cen~rA:eoo ply In person, ThUl'!I, Fri, till 3:00 P.M. Sunday. 10:00 A.?11. till Sale Furniture 110 PRIV PrY must sell houle full of nr new Mediter- ranean tum. Thomasville formal din nn set; run & queen hide-a·bedr. cotfee & end commodes; king 1lze BR set: chairB; stereo, &' velvet sofa &: loveaeat; Laml>•. plctures t t c . Sacrifice Please c a 11 496-5979. TEMPO Temporary Help prefen-cd. APPlY tn penon. Sat. Bea Dyke Swimwear, Time. I :~390~E~.~1~7t~h~S~t.~, ~Coo~t~~,M::esa~.1 LAW ENFORCEMENT PERM p/t girl-Ina.} .. oJDce For lnlormotion • (714) 628.0516 "MIWNG RO." King u -No Exper. Necessary Writo a ... Wed A4 •546. WEST <lOAST 'AUCTION COMPANY hoedboard 1125, Tortol,. fin. Train At Full Salary, Daily Pilot, P.O. BOx 1560, 1t * * * Li 'd ish entry shelves $50, Fruit Benefits, mtf, 18-26 Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Appr1l.Mrl • qui atort wood leather top desk by 1N1'ERV1EWS NOW Photo Touch Trainees TR,AINEES Aucflonnrs "Slich" $.150. antique green Call Antty Opportunities c4 .People) $2 hr to start. ~-~ i!'n;fl:ft!i!iMVllllWIJ "Davis" reproduction (TI4) 645-1163 Will be taught to work ~~ ~ French Armolre '300. Fri, LEGAL Secretary for one w/mlcro.scope. This ta a sit· I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;\ Sat & Sun 9-5, at 300 Rialto, man oUlce in Newport Bch. ting job for someone who MACHINE I; II~· I Appliances 802 NB aero" from bridge, Exper. in real estate, dis-enjoys tnterestlng work &: •dw« 1 Ne.,.,•port Island 675-8583. aolution, probate, estate raises, of course. SHOP ..i, FREIGHT DAMAGE SALE HERCULON &: velvet 90fas planning, wills. Min 5 yrs ECHO JOB AGENCY New Holpoint refrig's., & Ioveseat1, 3 pc coffee exper. No sh. Exper on, or 315 3rd St., Suite 203 dlshwasliers & r a n ges, tbl set, hlde..a.·bed&. din. willing to learn auto type-Huntington Beach 536-1439 Antiquel 800 washers & dryers, factory sets, lamps, chllds 110fa etc. writer. No lxlokkeepi.ng. Hrs. pR.E-6QtOOL teacher warranty. Used Jor display only. 9AM-5PA1, l'h hr lunch. wanted !mmed. Exp'd &Jar Wehav~lmmediate ope~ ANTIQUES,..r;GR BEACH CITY APPLIANCE PacifleConstructlon, Bay view. Present secretary E.C. clas.ue!I pret Call for tramees on our 2nd shift CHRISTMAS . 3623 W, Warner, SA 545-0780 ~"3&-=;e,9883"'-------on job (or 11 ""'· eft1A-• ,,.,,, ~,_, ·-,..... 1.,..= 3 PP.f·ll PM. ... :1162 N. Tustin, Orange KING SIZE n~-m .... open. Boss nol--a ~V.:: u•Ol-"IV-, e .... 111,)-.1.'""" Round ~tlsskln·oak tbl., 998-5656 oc:u1vu driver. Call Barbara, PRE.SCHOOL AfuCli~ts must have the 5 chrs. Queen Annt tbl.. ELF.Cl'. GE range, -~lf s:·~;1~ed~~nu~~ 67J.-.4172. ' TEACHER OWUlg: Dropleaf, Walnut. commode cleaning, double ove n. lamp & gold swag lamp Legal Sec'y Tr•inM ExJ>"d 831·1.860 e 1-2 Yrs m 1 achinti B~K~~ ~'!~·~TS white, lots of extras. ltl $15 ea. 548-5754. Local attorney will train nr.o.t ESrA·i·.t: SALES shop, mata thop (Park brfte.r -lb. HatpOint washer · BITTERSWEET dining set Pl b 't d l h ' to lnte · will be U>div. w/good skills or Ute -SUCCESS CAREER In hl•h school, col· · WostlnghncSe gas <!eyer. oval tbl "' x •• 3 fl11-ease su m1 resume an sa ary is ry. rv1ews · conducted legal. Family type atmc;.;. • 998-5037 ' -· ~-. In the Orange County area by appointment. Ompmaloskeptics Need Not phere. Salary to ssoo. Call :<ew or experienced. Join "" logo or military GOING OUT OF G.E. w ~sh er, Frigidaire l,~~,;s~ck clu's. 1325 FIRM. Apply Helen Mason, 540·6055, World's lar&elt and futesl nrvic1. BUSl.NESS l washer, Norge electric • • r Coastal Personnel Agency, growing resale organization e Mutt be able to Complete clearance thru dryer. Your choice, $45. CUSTOM couch from 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM. ~a ne~rk ~over 500 read micrometer. ~ISThL\S. Free delivery & goaranteed, ~I~~ 9 '· ~ ~ LOR"NZO'S ~m~ of our ~nau! e Also read simple Quilts, oak & wal'nt1t ,Juryi., 546-8672 or 847-8115 d · ~ &' n I HYDRAULIC RESEARCH & 'FG. CO. '" dollar bl I Jewelry. Closed. Sa~. Ii Mon, R W h /D ecor. · Edinger At The Club. Multi-million uepr ntl. Antiques for lnt1rlor·l f' ent as ert rytrt FOR sale maple chairs & Newport Freeway advertising ~· Free e Mechanic•lly In-3545 E. Coa.St JfWy1, CdM ' $2. Wk. Full malnt. tables from restaurant. Call 25200 w. Rye Conyqn ~Oocl 2101 I!:. Edinger, SA guaranteed 1 nsi.D& school. clintd. SEE -·· nctstandlng -J. * G39-l202 * 968-5800 after ll am Mon-Apply In person Excellent sale1 tralnlna;. ~ ...... ~ FREE Pick up. Refrig appl days excluded Fri. 3 PM·S PM Please call 542-5689. Rate Range lection of antique clocks, &: & scrap metal. 6'?r5258, call -="""===-----* Valenc:la, CA. 91355 805-259-1954 WAITRESSES & REAL .ESTATE $2.97-$3.58 =::;;:;ny..,,r'!!,'!:, : anytime. · ~U<;.~ ~·\:::::-.= HOSTESSES SALESMEN ,-Depending UP!'" Expor. arutmao. SEARS Kenmore .ew mach. glaM top sofa tbl Antique an oqual -rtunlty employer I" - Why not work in the hottest Plus 10c Shift Bonus TIME'N CHIME ~QUES Excel cond, does everything loveseat. 846-4861 1-----~---area · HuntingtOn Beach · 4Z5 nh St, Newport Beach $150. 213-592-3179 CUSTOM Quilted Gold ~ •vaJenc"!-a planned community, located among rolling bills in the Santa Clarita Valley. Clean, fresh air; countryside living •• , • llA!creation? We have boating, fishing, motorcycle riding, Magic Mountain P ark, and horseback riding. All this and just 30 miles north of downtown Los Angeles. MACHINIST Fountain Valley. Let "' Company Paid 675-4271. ---· -USED Kelvinator Refrlg. (ional, Beauttlul, apprx 5 train you. call Phil Mc-Benefi... GARAGE lid!AJJ fl ti ii's Smooth rurming. $35. x 10, Cameo Sh 0 re •• Namee. VllJ.AGE REAL I~ from Laguna Antiqqe sbbp-: Call 548--6657 675-4539 Turret Lathe Mach. Abo, Machine Shop Trainee Lok- Fast, Inc. 864 W. 16th St., N.B. ~ATE. 963-4567. Tables, chain, paintings, ~.:::.,so;::::FA:....,"_W~VESEA~=~T-.-*ll LICENSEE Well EstabUshed tools, baskets, I< much Auction I04 Never uaed, e Very gd. qua!. MACHINISJ' General for Mill. Ask for Mr. Hanson, H A N S 0 N INDUSfRIAL PRODUCTS, 17845 Sk;ypark to manage on premises small unit complex with pool, and show to sell. Free apt. and performance bonus. Also bonus if sold. 642-2221 (msg. 646-96661 Bkr. Non-Un"ion more. Thurs, Fri. Sat only. $149. U•ually home. 968-TSIO. Con1'I' Scenle A ht, So. * AUCTION * MAPLE br .... xlnt o..i Company Lqune. FAIRVIEW dbl bd dreuu nlle tbl ... OVER collected! PrhnUivea STATE HOSPITAL drws mlrr. $250 Sfil-6940 Holp Wanl9d, M .. P 710 Htlp Wanttd, M .. F 710 lttlp Wantod, M .. F 710 ~rn~'.'"!:O:::~ter­Apply In Person :P..1on-Fri 8 am-4:30 pm Saturday Interviews Dec. l.5t, 8 am-12 noon country store & kitchen 2501 Harbor Blvd. MEDIT. living rm turn, ..ra items. Fri &: Sat. 92.81 Oma Costa Mesa tbls, occ. chr &: lamp, xlnt COOK Eltctronic AIHmblert GIRL FRIDAY esting lite mMuf. No prod. Day •hilt. Apply, Pal Elec-\Ve &iced a young but mature =!:~ta Mesa. tronles, 6391 Westminster person, good w/figures · REAL ESTATE SALES Well established office, with experienced staH, bu open- ing for two salespeople. BERT EA Pl, Garden Grove 539-3700. Will offer for sale at Auction cond. $195. 846-0415. ANTIQUE &. collectoc dishes. ltenu, SUrplus to their BEAUTIFUli blue flowered trunk, velvet painting, other needs. Items will include: 7• bed divan $250 value misc. 557-90lf Used TV sets, Phonographs, sacrifice ms $4o.o.m ' ANTIQUE clocks, pvt party. Radios, blenders, & other · · Co!fee Shop. Fry Cook Breakf.ast, Lunch &: Dl'nner Ave., Westminster. 894-3301. likes detail, variety, hard MAID fol' 1 week. ENGINEERS work & types accurately. ' References. $2. hr. Balboa CONTACT Unique Grandfathers &: wall Misc. items. CUSTOM made twin u box eloclai 646-1~ Thne 9 am. Sat., Dee. 1st bed w/2 lg. dra~ Nu -No Ex.per. Necessary ~e offer you an lnterestlng:1 .=lnn=~=='°:..----- Traln At Full Salary b w/an xln t future. $450, MAINT. Utility Man Benefits, m/f, tB-2fi 54o-114.1. mechanica.Uy inclined, Apply In Person Paul MartiJ\..or Bud Corbin 64'.f.7662 Corbin-:P..1artln Realtors Main Store Room $125. Sell $50. 962-5691. 8' by 6' dbl front doon, Items may be Inspected 8 AM MAPLE dinette set w/4 pre Ovil ~ ~· UOO. The day of the Auction chairs. Provenclal Call a.ft CORPORATION Real Estate Sa1esman 18001 Von Karmen u,.,..._..... 968--~ LIC'D lndustrlal Real Estate A 11-•"" -4pm, 1 ,)o,)Q Sa1esman wanted. Com-lrvlnt, C•lif. PP .. nce1 _, Builcllng M•terlo1l1 IOI TWIN BEDS w/sprlngs &: mission only. Industrial 83~1424, ext 2M WALKERr-SCOTI' cheat mattresses, nlte stand. Xlnt lNTERVIEWS NOW Gtru.S WANTED capable, minor carpentry, Call Am\Y OpportWlities Have fun and gel paid for plu!llbing &: elee. Call Mon {U4J ~1163 It! We are mw taking ap--Fri 8am-3pm 644-7120 ENGINEER plicatlon1 .fOT' oor escorting MAINTENANCE & a.EAN· Oeslpr·Structural service. Girls must be·neat ING New boat dealer & M t be perl ced in Struc and presentable. Jobs for brokerage. Yachting Assoc. t:::..i ~. e:ooo benefits: Msfi:ng tour guide.s and con-C.orp. 646--055L Commercial Properties. or 833-1425 freezer, runs very &OOd e Surplu1.BulkUnt-cond. $150. 675-4696. 833-8265 E I Opp E I $125. 96:1-295L MATERIAi. • IOOO's Of NEW MET. Octogonal puey tbl, Salary open. Call Ruthrpff '1. ventions now avail. Call Jor MANICURIST • rnentele Receptionist $525 qua • mp oyer FREEZER. lg, upright Se!ll11 ITEMS! Doon, lumber, ply. 1100 Combo eouch pool ti Fee PaJd. start a new ca-1 ::::;;:~;;::::1:~eo~1d~spo:•~S50~. i .... r~"°:""~-: wood, aium sbeetini, mold· 1100 xlnt cond, 540-6427 16 Fashion l1land Newport Beach Betwn 9& Uamor3 &5 pm Equal Oppor. Employer Englekirk N.B. 546-8581. appt. 675-8442 available, lmmediately, 1n ' .GIRL Delivery Driver, 19-25 tine salon, Wed-Sat. Ken reer! Great co. In housing 962-5998 Ing, ~ etc. C U STOM-Made Furnitun! In Irvme. l.Jte typing. great TRAINEES BUILDER• SURPLUS High quality, your desJ&n yn old. overseas Motor Templeton, 842-0857 Exec. Secretary 1700 Parts, 1ll90 Harbor Blvd .. MGR TRAINEE $500 clients. Also Fee Positions. 2406 So. Main St., S.A. or mine. 67l-6839. Call Elly Ellis, 556-8505, Con-Mon thru Sat lG-5 MUST SELL entire contents of 2 BR apt. Refrlg. -· couch, etc. 2524 Ocean. O:IM Secretary, S. Ana S650 ™· While trainiflt, Xln't File Supervisor $500 w trol Career Employment n4: 546-1031 Agency, 3400 Irvine Blvd., CLASS SELLS -642-'~"678=~. ax>KS -No Exper. Necessary Train Al Full Salacy. Benefit.a. m/I ~ INTERVIEWS NOW Claims Examiner . to $650 HELP anted Part Time Oppol'. Future security. Electrician S650 Laundry. No experienc< WESTCLI FF ~ m 110 . Sec'y Legal Orange $600 necessary. ~to $3 per hour. Personnel Agency Ofc Mgr Dental, F.V. lo $&K1 Call 979-7382 (Mark ID Center) Dental Asst, F. Vly to $500 HOUSEKEEPER. Mon-Frl, 542--8836 }'/C Bkpr, B. Park $650 morns .. 2 hrl. d11.ily, care 1651 E. Edµlger, S.A. Call Jeannie Sisco for handicapped gentleman MARRIED person over 21 . DENTAL Assist, for busy & Sid Hottman Balboa Coves Mn. Bailey Car & phooe necess. $125 Hunt. Beh ofc 6 mos exp.. NEWPORT 213: 498-2210. wk. to stµ1. 894-800), Call Army Opportunltlett (n4) 64>1163 RELIEF Cook, middle aged pref'd. Hosp. exper. Good working hr!I & f r l n g e benefits. B a y v i e w Con· valescent Hospital, 2 0 5 5 Thurin St., Costa Mesa. 'itn~ X-Ray Uc. FMtasUc fringe Ptraonnt·I •-ency HOUSEKEEPER MASSAGE TECH. To act as security guard, Newport Office, Part UmC TRAINEE p/tlme Jor back entrance In late pm or evening. Call Young lady (18-28) wanted duties. Good health essen-l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!,..I benefits, 4 day work week, row 847"'507 133 Dover Dr., N.B. DENTAL ~ptlonbt, desk 1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!64!!!!!!!2·,.38 .. 70 .... !!!!!!!!!!! only • Al least l yr exper-. I ! Some Sall. Fringe•beneOta. H.B. area. 846-3540 anytime. DENTAL • Front Office. Acctg A: ins. exp, Estbl'd office in xlnt k>caUon. 644-5461 .betw g.s Mon-Fri. for legitimate full time posi-Ual. See Peraonnel Manager, BIL--B Cl b TEXAS OIL COMPANY H o u s e k e 't! per , own tion. No exp. nee. We send I uua ay U needs good man over 40 EXECUTIVES transportation, live 1n or to school, earn while learn. 1-!!_1 !.:._ ~st...!.!_Wl'.:.:._ N..!_. for short trips surrounding live out. 640-0166 eves, Apply in person any aft. or --~-----beach area, Cont a c t 6'15--t6lJ, eve. 2930 W. Cst. Hwy., SAIL Hardware Jnstallation. customers. We train. Air $15,000 to $75,000 SeDd resume or call TODAY for confidential , NO 'COST executive Interview. EXECUTIVE SERVICES, HOUSEKEEPER. Part time Newport Beach. No exper. neceu, Ask for ell AH o· k ~ • . m . . 1c erson, r-1~1 .. $30 week, xtra for occasional MATURE v.-oman to care for Mr. Cununlns, 540-3684. So u thwestem Petroleum full days. Happy home in 3 children, ages ~11 from I ;iilrvlneiiii' ii;iarei;iia.i;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiio Corp., Ft \Vorth, Tex. 64&-3481 INC. DEPARTMENT Sl'ORE TAILOR 888 N. Main, Santa Ana (n4) 547.9625 Irvine, 552-7045 3:30 pm to 10:00 pm Mon. I' TYPIST for accounting dep. HOUSEKEEPER. 5 da3ts wk. thru Fri. Also must be SALES Insurance agency. 4PM-9PM. Unda Isle. Own available toa: some THE BROADJAY 548-ll83 . EXP Saleslildy, Apply in person, Jackies, Huntington For M9n1 Wear Center, Huntington Beach BROADWAY EXPERIENCED ta!eo bclp transp nee. 675-7030 O'lelTllght ·wurk while male HOUSEKEEP~. full time, f::to~ ::i:.f Jd::S~·;;o';! NEWPOR URGENTLY in small nursing home, call the vicinity of Harper l& lUrlng n~ tor appt. School, il ,.,ur home ls to Extro On-Call HOUSEKEEPER part time be utili7.ed unless you are NEEDED near Santa lsotiel le Elden. 11.ble ,., pick children up Sales Help NEWPORT NEW GIFr SHOP Apply Personnel Dept. San Clemente $.8200 Phone tW6-8304 aft 6PM. lrom BChool oach day. 213 (25)' Tra1'nee H I S .... _._ 552-1705 between 8:30 am for Chrl1tm11 Equal Opper. Employer FEMALE ware.house girl, l!!!!~~~,...~~"'I JIOC)d .driver,· Ml ,time, DISHWASHER wanted. Exp. penpanent, no ~dents, non lftf. Good hn, Cannel'I smokers, 5 mlys, 6: 30am- t2:8 N. Cout ~wy .. Laguna 3:3'0pm, $1.'lS an·hr to start. Beach. 1 Inter. 3-5 pm, Window DRAFTSMAN. for a shop-Oealgns, 3737 Birch St., ping center deVeloper, Jr. Newport Beach OUHW Yll JVU9ntl and 6:00 pm. Monday thru Counter girls wanted Mon·, ~Frl=day~ . .,......,,....,....,,__.,....,~ Apply 3rd Floor A ble Fri. 11·2, 12 per hr .. l&S-8919, 1 MED CAL ff l H Personnel Department Ssem rs Fargo Sandwich Co. Ai k for 1 0 · n unt. Beh. 10-12. 2-4 ""Ion lhru Fri Laurie. 548-2936 aft 5 pm, Back o~ce gt.rt, Apply C/O • Int. Call Tom Puree 11 • FOREIGN ear mechanic n~. wanted. Costa Mesa area. Dally Pilot Class Box No Fashion Island, N .B. HOUSE work. 'rues & Frl. JO, Daily 'Pilot, P.o. aoX Equal Oppor. Employer O w n tr an s po r tatk>n. 1500, Costa fl,tesa. References. Call 644--814& MEDICAL lab technologist, IMPORT Auto dealer. Need Cal.it. lie. Exper. l·part exper auto line mechanics. tlme PM. l·part time days. 5 d8¥9, 43 hrs. Per wk. Top Incl. wknds, Contact pay for top men. . Call 8U-OOll ext. m VOLT Instant Peraonntl D 1' A P ER Y monulacturer 642-5133. . need& exp• r I en e ed or Gener•' Ofc .. $600 trainee•, no. end, tattling EMPLOYER PAYS FEE. le machlne operators. 'Goocl Immediate opening for pey, holldays A: vacations. depeDdable Ind iv l du a 1 Beach Drapery Service, 900 w/good skills In ropldly W. 11th St., C.M. growing ele<trlcaf firm. DRAPERY experienced ll!W· Good co. benefits. Kno\vl· ln& machine op e rat or • edgt of engineering rePort euotom only. 'Small lhop, l>efplul. ALSO FEE JOBS. N-rt Beech. Co It Joson But Agency Otapery, 642-02'10 17400 Brookhurst, F.V. DRAJ>i:RY ......... hooking, Suitt 213 ~ fold111i, •tc. Colt Drapery GENERAL office. Ex per. Qeanen. 170'.I New Port ptnnanent, lite t y pl n g, BlYd, C. M. ~ bookkeeping, weekly payroll, EU:Cl'RONICS no lhorthand, 1 girl oftlce. -No Expu. ~sury S dJ,YI ~ week, llalary open~ Train At Full SaJory, -Benefit-_, mlf. 18-26 G EN E RA L maintenance, INTERVIEWS NOW man f'rldJY, mature ha:n· COii Army Opportunlllel t1Yman W/PIJl exp. Full (n4) 16-116! , or part dme. Ti4: 494-8075 ~NlCS Tech. Pro-.:;fDr::..,:l'.l'.Pt:P':.· ----- ductkm tttt. QC communlca· GENERAL oftlce Ute typ-llono equipment to 30 MHZ. ..,, _,...ping, bondable, Pal EJtctronlca. 6391 Wal· l~ K, Sk,ypAnC Circle, =Aw., Weatmlr,.ter. lrvlne. Apply ~11 am. Rive llOmt1hinc you want to Tatl'D 11114 lt m a·-oell! a..-odl tlo K SALES SEOlETARY, Yacht 3M8 T::ir~. ~~ lOO sales & brokerage on the be.y. 5 days, Sun thru Thurs. Nt:wport Beach 546-4741 Yachting Auoc. Corp. Phone Equal ()pp:ir. Employer 646-0551. WAITRESS-part time, alto, 557-2132 btwn. 8 am & 6. NEW CAR Dli"T'AIL MAN pm Aton-Fri. Ask for Roger. We're lookingt"for YOU!! .,_., ¥• r ¥sn J ita YES you .,,,ho can take pride 1n his \\'Ork and get results! SALESMAN & ~tanager, counter help part time, hrs• male &: fem. $825 & up 11-.1.PM Coaches Comer monthly g: u a r-a n . If Restaurant, So. C 0 a 1 t qual.Wed. No exper. neceu. Plua. Mr. Lee (213) 'rnhl543 I 'w°'AITRESS"'="==ES.~-d~Inne-r--r. SALES: Mature. exper in gr:aveylll'd shifta. Full or retail gift s tor e . part time. Odie's Restau- Be sure to 1ee the service Mor. HOWARD CHEV MAeArthur and Jamboree Blvd . Newport Beach. Enler from MacArthur. EVea/wknds. Must have t 1400 p cifi ~ •• refs. Buggs Intema.uooal, ran ' a c ,,_.,.t Hwy, 2043.Westclill Dr., NB ~. full ~ part/time SALESGIRL employees !or retell sales NOTE TELLER Full time for 811.varlan apply in penon Music Land, Expcrlenc<cl Only Bakery, 658 El camlno Real, Laguno Hilla, Mall. Appl.>' ln Penon _Tu&=ti::n"-.-=~--~ WHO WANTS TU WORK? SECURITY SEAMSTRESS • Part or full DRIVE A CABI PACIFIC BANK time. $2.50 per hr &tart. CHOOSE iYO"' houn, wortc 381 Fotnt Ave lndu1frlal m ac h l n t •. tor )l'OUl'lelf, be )'OU!' own SEE OUR taauno BellCh I 557,sm 1sk !or Mr. Ban-bou. Men or women. Con SUNDAY LISTING Equal ()ppor. Employer .::nl>o:':;:;"~· ==-==;;---b& •l~Uy hondl<apped. CAU. TRlSll HOPKINS Nl/RSES Al4les ~-3 IUJl or SECURITY GUARD ~~.• ~tt.:'.' ~~ .TERRI WlUTTEMORE plrt-Umt E Exper. Utlme. Contact Mt. SU 1 ~ 488 E. llth St. (al lrvine) CM ~ •. 'tnterv.!: M~n-~ Ford, Sec. surmct·ua Oifvetl:'C:~ 6~ or more i Sull9 D4 '42·1410 8 am-4 om. 14,.. Verd< BALBOA B y dll/. Aooly In -· I Conv. Hoop. tll1 Center SI., 1.221 w. CoaJt Hwy .. N.B. Yellow cab eo.. U6 E. 16th ...... orJtt a 5A w C.M. ~ Oaailled Ad• • • ••.• Ml-567l Sl, O?lt* Mtsa. , $600.000 MODEL HOME FURNITURE SALE Uquidation of 2 stores forc:es us to sell this beau· tlful furniture. Appllanc:es, bedspreads, pillows, c:arpets & decorator items at BELOW UQUIDA·. TION PRICES, at any of our 3 loc:atioM in OrallCJe County. • SALE IS FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 33413 San Juan Creek Roa~ San Juan Capistrano 5830 Garden Grove Blvd., Westminster 1236Heach Blvd., Stantan t 2 4• DAILY PILOT o ..... $111 ·-'----., .. tor 925 S.11/ Roni -940 MUST SELL I ,:;;;;;;;::,;:::,;:;;;;;;;;;;1;;;;~~~Mm>Mf:'. i...ded, '13 Trojan F2S, oil I• RENT A MOTOR HOME - -·---· -~~--· Pianos/ 82 la, Ill TRUCK SPECIALS --c~E g ~2. s~~-9,,! * PUBLIC FU RNITUrtE AUCTION * 1 wh!to tufted Nauah. '°"'" * DEAL ERS WELCOME , * I lJv nn. or den unlt. 10' 00!3, armleu love 1<at, ill' F RIDAY 7:30 P.M., NOV. 30th. ..,!ANOS Fl .t"IRGANS F ULLERTON MUSIC Our Pffwttt L~tlorl ata11. Sleeps 4 wh.h full IN COSTA MESA 1'11NI HOME .OR VAN a•ll•y, •laJJd •P head, teak CONVERSION,~ AS 19 deckl, ealls, I • c k .. • . ORANGE COUNTY p<r °"" " Sc mile. · 68 CHEVY $ .... ISO ottoman. 3 pcs, $XO. Antq. New, N1•r·ntw & Pr~wned ·~It• Fr. Prov BR S<t. WW PARTIAL LISTING: Exquisite galley glass- tcll •• set or separately. top game table & leather chairs -Bassett Dreutng tble I stool, $50. Tall ~ d"T cbe•t $60. Lgc dining table & chairs -Cape Cod Kroehler ctrew:r w/mirror $1 ~. sofa & loveseat -lt1any styles sofas & Iove- ' l9l E ,.llr'. fount111 Vt11lct)' 8!'~. No. of S'1\ Oler,o •'ltt- 1 ay at f"~l1" 5.17-4136 Rentals from $5 C!uyoler 215 hp, ooundor, RESERVE YO TODAY compua, 12 ch 25 waU J94..334l. VHF, bait tank, outrtq:cn, SUZUKl-BULJACO CAMPER Bus, sltepe 7, 10 & much """"· T h I • ml p<r aal. at 50 ml p<r beautlful boat coat $11,<XXI. hr, $11SO or hl;t oftr bctore ln April. Must Sa.crttlce. end at year, ~69 ' 'f• TON P.U. 3 1poed & radio (3808!Cl 68 GMC· P.U. MS Ataple spin wheel floor seats of all materials &: designs -Dinettes -=· sB~te w~~h1 ~ Rockers -Recliners -Small pool table -• Pl1no1 & Gr1nd1 han&lng lamp,. red velvet Heavy designed wood Spanish bar & stools -New spinell trom S495 ANIMALS "R" US JoTte lllltl'llte.. w /purchue ot cage, lrH c a a e w/purch.se ot Canat)', Baby Keel.I, CockatielB, Flncht11 pui)pits. SmJ T. C\lp Poodlt1. Shept. Oepoa.it will bold. 8l!Hl520 KOi r~ ~n:gtr~kep~: (Johns Racing C)ictn:> Tr1ller1; Traw( or write 4034 Emerald St. I No. 323. Torrance 9Cl503'. Prlvale party. 0 .C.'s NowHI S...Uk l CARDINAL 12·, ~po 2. ni:b·lg. propane stv le floor rumace. ToUet. 110 an1ps-l2 vo.11 s.y1tem. Plenty of clolM!t ¥J TON P .U. Au ta ru a ~I c ttanlintll.Wn. radio &. cMiper (78686H L ahade $25. IDk. & v.'hite All styles lamps -Bedroom sets -Chests 5 styles and nni&hea lined open "''eave drape• 1· -Loads of rnattresses -Desks -PIECE DE Wurllt:cer Grand Strauss \\1de X 84" length, New £tESISTANCE, Coffee table & end tables, Upright piano ...... S69 frplc tcretn, $15. Aaaorttd gl SS & gold W/4 model Ships & Weaver Spinet . . .. $145 Items, Llnens, bed d tn a:, a maps -Player pianos from $999 plllo"'·s, towel&, rugs, lamps, Color TV -Stereos -Refrigerators-Wash-e :r> Grands In stock~~ew- Larae or small • Plain or fancy Eve or Weekends By Appointment 2.1682 Dune ~tear Rd. El Toro, Ce . 58&5343 plcturea, kiL ltenis, lug· ers -Lots of ?i1lsc. -LOADS STILL ARRIV· U&ed alld rebuUL Ynced gage, jt'\\-elry, purses, like ING '.'·'· from 9 76l., Yamaha -Knabe 8 MO. old fem. raccoon ~. lo ......, \Ylll hnld untll Christ.mu. new, & W'S, many nc"''· 9-Chair Beauty Sho~/late model e'jl'ipment -r.1uon -Hamlin -Wur-494-5376 handke.rchitfs, s ca r v e s , ll!ier -Storey & Clarie -1-~~~------ s!c:iles, somt Lad 1 e H 1\1aster Charge & nkAmericard onored Kawai _ stelnw&.¥ -Cable Cits clothing, ai 10. r.1en's shl~. ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRE-SALE Nelson -Kincaid -Cable, ________ 8_5_2 med. few men'• sul" & MASTERS AUCTION B-'dw1 c~• k rl -,... n-.ruce ng-HIMALAYAN kltten11 , llPOl"l coats. PLUS ONE Soh BO Ir l W. d • ) · mer. beautllul Seal •~ BI u e LARGE x OF NE\V ormer y 1.n y s • 0 ~ GlfT ITEMS. COLOGNES, COME BROWSE AROUND rgans Points. Shots & pap<n PURFUMES SOAPS • 100 to .:hoosE" from $75/$ro!l. 831-1807. ETC FOR JcMAs GIITS, 20751h Ne\Vport Blvd., Costa Mesa New. Use<! and Trade· Ins * BURMESE KITTENS * 2.181 Mesa Dr., Santa Ana (Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls.) Optlgan ·· ··-· · · · · .. $99 CFA reg. Shots Champion H '" ~ C ta M * * .cA.:.o o.:.ootl Jlammond w/rhythm .. $695 ' ghts., ~1 os esa U'tV"ouou Kimball Swinger • , . $'195 lines, 893-7011 BUTOIER baK:k, fonnica, -\\lurlltier 3 keyboard , • ~ll:l5 SIAMD:E Kittens, 8 wks, reed, )'licker, tools, carpets, Miscellaneous 111 ~lscell.....,. Ill I.Dwrey Holiday ....••.. $495 reg'd w/shots, stud service clothes. S59 E.10th, c .r.1. Conn Caprice ..•.... S395 avail 536-7962 HOT Wh .. •--k __ _. • NE\V cru~ch~ $15. t.1an!I dla-SOLD MY \\llG B::>UTIQUE Thomas A·l Spinet .. _. $l19 854 ee ...... miu com mood nng $40. J eans si HUMAN HAIR, wiglets, $2, nnn plete Sizzler accessories, 5-7 Lrg Brocade eve stole Cascades s::.is. Short tails Hammond-Baldwin-CoM ::.:.!1 child's pool table, misc. $s.' Boys dress jacket •·Navy $2.SO. Elura \Vlgs, $8, \\'urlltzer-1.oY.Tey-Kimball games, 1969 B.rldgestone GX" $5. Jewelry items box· Wiglets $5, Dyne) Wigs $1 Yumaha-Gulbransen • PUPPY WORLD • motorcycle. 549-4338 after ed for Christmas $3.00 EA. & $3, Display Heads & fix-Free Organ Lessons Bull Dob"· Chihuihuas, Tiny 5 or Sal 551-5683 tures for sale, 846-2230 Phone 557·4839 Poodles, Labs, Great Da ne, ==""'~~=,:,:::::,...--1 FULLERTON MUSIC Amer. Esk, Pit Bulls, Bull MINT CONDITION 19$9 18' OU'ls Craft UUI &y Boat. Comp. resto~. 1 of the last dbl planked mahogany boat bit. See in the ..,.aler, Vista del Udo, fill Udo Park Dr. Or Ph: 673-1144. $.1500. Will take trust deeds. 1 2 ' FIBERGLAM Trad!· tlonal. Utility boat. Brome hardware, Brass eagle on Ttansom. Orig price $1l00. Price $500. 6 HP Johnlon O/B, xlnt. Remote tank $'l50. 675-all1'l BOAT for sale. Xlnt cond. 40 HP Mere mini sport con· tact 10 am-5:30 pm. Oay, 67>-2216. Bo1t1, Slil 909 18' PACIFIC Catamaran, all f I be rglass v.•/aluminum spflfS. Comp! rigged incl. t.rlr. Never launched. $3000. value, priced at $2500. 831-0047 dealer '74 HERE NOW & stor&Jte spaoe. Oom-5 fortable & efflclent. $550 or Offi.ISTMAS LAYAWAY USED SPEc;w.-'l beat offer. 646--3170 1m PROWL.ER 22' Self Q(ln· t!ltned, Reese hitch & rtabilb:~ ban incld. Xlnt • '73 350 Pursang cond. $2.~. 536-6330 , (demoJ ••··•••••••• $005 TRAVEL Trailer, Prowler, * 73 125 ?ur&anf • • · •• · $550 20' 19'l'l SelJ cont Motoroh1 * '.72 250 Matador • .. " • Sb95 23°\ eoior TV, 1both xlnt * 169 250 Pursang •••• $295 cond $4!}.rtl57 * 68 250 Pursang ..•• $3501.;:=,.:..:'-"7C=---= * '72 250 Suzuki X·6 ...• $450 Trailers, Util ity 947 * '71115 Kawa.said •••• $295 . ' * '70 250 Husky.-., , •• , $395 4 x 7 UTILITY' Trailer $100. • •n SJ...350 Honda ••.• $595 Honda 160 Scrambler, $111Cl * '68 OA50 Honda .... 1495 ~9'.l-4=::966::_~-~-= OPEN MON-SAT Auto S1rvico, Ports 949 REPLACEMENT & aux· 9-6 lllary gas tanks, pick·up~. 4 whl drive!, vans & n'IOlor 2255 Herbor Blvd., C.M. homes. 892-8314 • <Harbor at Wilson) 646-2428 or 646-4655 BL.AZER owners 4 -g a t e s 10rl5 tires, tubes, wheels, used t\\'O trips $roll tinn 5-11Hil87. HOSANNA Pottery WffiDlNG Dress sz 11 'A' DRUM SET ' Terrier, Cockapoo, lrlsh Cal-29 ''Sequoya'C, Fully Cllristmas sale, Un I q u e line, full sleev~s. pe~led 12'.' N. HA_rbnr. Fullerton Setter. 100 MIXED PUPS!! equip for racing &: cruising. BEAT GAS Hand crafted stoneware lace bodice. chaoel, train & Gold, Sir Charles, Full 4 pc. 171·1805 Stud Service Most Breeds. $15,950. Days 644--3457 Eves SHORTAGE ! * AUTOS RERAIRED * All Work Guaranteed Call 4SZ.-1932 after 6P?>.f Pottery at. very reasonable match. Vt'il . $150 or best set w/hi-hat & cynibal. Xln't hrs· Open Nights 'til 9 Open Eves: s:n-fi027 !:0540:-S-86127.0""=-.o---.,..--c,-, GAS WlLL BE 5(k 10 $1. a prices:. This Sat & SUn. 10 otter 213--692-3179 condltlon. 2 Prs sticks, a pr Sa!. 'til 5: 30. Sun. 12-5 23• WOOD Sl. k 1 GAL. DON'T be caught with· to 5 pm at 384 University :::=• .::::,.:::::..:::=---of steel brushes & stool. $150. GRAND OPEN I NG I LABRADOR Retriever pups oop, deep ee ' out ·--oportatlon M I Dr CM 642-7515 BUFFET.Contemporary, C II o:~n....,...A YEI.LOW AKC. Xlnt o/b, head, sips 2, Terminal .. ,...,. · oor-·• · · · 64" 1.()" light walnut, like a ......,...>0.,... *SALE* breeding. r.j'ewport Beach, I&land Marina, $950, cycles n1ay become scarce. GIANTltu C 00 arage Sa I e, new $150. Spinet organ, Atrro?>.IATIC GAR AGE Coa st Music 642-0«4. 7lt·S2&-2479. Buy now and take advan--Furn re, u s e wa r e s , Auto chords, asking $250, DOOR OPENER. Finest tage of our year-end clenn-1 holpital beds & . art work. 2879 Ballow Ln CM: 557_7203 known brand. Reg. $200. No1olv has 2 locations to serve DAU1 MAT11IANb S, beaut. mark· LIDO 14 No. 127'5, all racing an<--e sale. Christmas lay· Sat/Sun 1().5, 5512 River • Special $00.95 ·tn s ta 11 ed a your musical needs. ec, \\'e red pups, "''On-gear. Ne1v CB, sails, com· away on mini bikes. CloSl'!d e BUYING A CAR? e Oieck It before you buy. Call 492-1932 after 6 PM Autos for Sale ]§] Ave, NB. Tum right ofl BEAUTIFUL Christn1as gift, w/5 yr guar. 893-35n or New}X)rt at Harbor, Cr.I llerful Christn1as gills. $35 pass. Trailer. $11.$. 494-0747 Sunday & Monll!lf. 47th st. from Pacific Coast Wallace Sterling Si1yer. 530-1415 * 642-2851 * 1 up. 53&-4009. Bus. 4~2458 res. HARLEY.DAVIDSON Rec:rHtlon1I Hwy. ~w':'eva'lu+e !~. pc,.'11 In11·~ SACRIFICE nu packaged BlkBSrooBkh.,.,kht & TSa!Dbe.;:.. l M~l-N_lA_T_URE ___ POO __ D_l_,E_s, l.fOBlE·l6 • 1 year old excel of Westminster V•hlcles 956 Super Patio Sale call 613-4812"""" -.JV custom fit bras,. &ir'dles &I · !°°~ * ri wy. Perfect Apricot, Male & cond, fully equip for raclng 1 9300 Bolsa. Westminster 1--0.;;...;;.;.;.;.'----- Toys, baby things, furn, [,8;;RA~D;.B~UR=='Y0--0-,il,.-.,.l-,,1 .,-5-,,0-. , nlte gowns, mixed sizes, $15 fem, 6 wks, $40, without 548--9551 Betwn Brookhunt & Magnolia 1962 INT'L Scout, 4 cyl, 4 ~· w1ng --~-I to $35 value $6 to $10 ca PIANOS_ ORGANS J>Rpers, ~7619 21 ' FIG Sloop 4 .bks. Inc. 893-6274 531-6440 whl drive, Stagared block a.,... 1, 1e iu•''-'"'• too s, Brandt Watercolor ~250., •-215 •1 v· ~-,J_._,.... Little bit 0 f Pl Lltho $1~ •D 1. great for gifts. 551..s683 New & u--". Great select,·on. POODLES AKC, T-0.ip, & head. 5 ft. fixed keel. Make * BICYCLES * lu.,s. , onle 1Sta, ....,,.ta 70 FORD $ .... Vi TON P .U. S speed, radio A lhe.U t9'l260El 72 TOYOTA $ .... HI LUX 4 Apetd, radio, camper ahell & wide rear tires (889liSUJ 73 GMC % TON $ ...• CUSTOM 2500 v.s. automaUc transmission, rittllo, JlO\\'tr stctrlttg & renr bumper. t3982SNJ. ;t) ltA»i& _.,OLYO 1966 Harbor, C.1'f. 646-930.1 '72 G1',C \ii Ton PU w/rnck-alr cond. xlnt co11d . $2800 or best otter, 5'18-MJS. '69 DATSUN Pick up, Cab- over Shell, will separate. j $1500 for both 962-4778 V1ns 963 '66 Chevy Van All custon1 lntt rior. Econon1y 6 cylinder engine:. A real cutle! $1095 .....,....,16· casso · .....,,, al liO::'ll U " TO"S also T-0.ip stud otter. 497-1690. C""ISfMAS , "YAWAvS ?aicsa, ~2546 ~. Sat & SUn, 10-S. Utho. $250.. others. Pvt The most beautiful Competitive prices. Open n,, " ' nn ...... 4 241 Vlrglnia Pl, C.M. Party, 535-5595 ORIENTAL R~GS Eves.&: Swldays. The best ~ priv, pty. ANH 16' HOBIECAT. Race equip. $10. HOLDS ANY BIKE '66 JEEP. Wagoneer $800.' will sell cheap and \Yhat deals l\re always at: Xlnt cond. including trBller. New Italian 10 sp .... , $59.95 Will consider trade of V\Y NEWPORT IMPORTS GARAGE Sale, O>ntemp SOFA & chair $65. Recliner ,..__._tm , W II h C DOBERMAN puppies, 6 11195. or best offer. 644-2902 Suoto"" Eq Colo•· .•.• $89.""' or anything of va I u e . Walnut Bookcase divider, $30, hl·rl stereo $395! Refr\g, 11 ""'11 ~6 .... ~~resent. a ic s Music ity -" "" '°"1 alt 6 $70, 6x6 gold &: blk shag $100, dbl bed $65, 19" tv ,.,.JO"" wks., AKC, male/female GREAT family boat. 13' Nlshild 10 sp •..• from $99.95 -=-==~'-""-''-----I ...... $4 • Port stereo $7.50, $50; picnic table, lamps & FIREPLACE Fender, South Coa.!I Plaza 54()..2830 $100 & up. l block no. of fiberglass (Kite) Mint rond. BeUsed bikes ••..•• AIJ Types Truck• 3100 W. 64C""'2 !.~swy., N,B. js~ wht louvered door, $20, other Items. Call 549-0040 Andirons, logs, rug 4 x 6'. \Varner -l68G2 Sims, ll.B. Pvt. ply Lido Isle 6'f3.9109 ach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa 962 =~=~=-~~~==-,, Miac. 2715 Canary Dr, CM. IMPRINTING machine for ::,:·~~~. t•:::,/ ,~.~; Sport ing ~· 830 Gso~~~N old~'g:,;:P tr~ HOBIE 14' wttraller xlnt B~v~C~i.;OR~S ~":il --4~W"'H"'E"£L,.....,,O"'RIY=E'": -12 DODGE ~ TON YAN MOVING Sale, Must go! 45 Christmas Card$, I e It er tal . "A""~"" lines AKC, $150. 836-81:39. cond. 111ust sell new lamps, swags, . yarn, goods, etc. 2 Sets of letters. '""""'::•c..::"""=::.• -.:~:::::=o.· __ SKIS, Headmasters 215 01 645-5611 Bicycles Sales & Servlc..>e ail colon, 20c, lamp parts. $2'15. 642--0596 BASSETT dinette $45.: ARAI w/Nevada. bdgs -& Head G OCL 1?.._E N ~lneRIEVERS, 16' SLOOP w/trlr, nav * RALEIGH dothlne, books. furniture ornCE calculalor, swiVt!I ta~ deck $60.; Goll bag C.Ompelitions 210 CM w/ ~eeb!i~.P=~406~· shots, lights, canvas cover. xlnt * PEUGEOT 22685 JubUo. El Toro, chair, golf clubl, ofc aup.. "~::...;.W.;;:;;::..,@:='-' .::483-5409=:o:=·c__ g:kcr Bdgs. 968-7112 -.;.,,::,;:::::.,=..::.::..:.::::::.__~ cond, Make oUer. 962-0057 * STEYR 137-0084 plies, Movie camera, flood 1 GREAT Dane puppies AKC. Ouistmas Special Ericson Christmu La.y·A·Ways LANDCRUISER H.T. 2 Coln operated slate pool Ughts, tripod. 673-8300 Miwelli.deou1 SKIS & boots, men 's. good ~1!~:::1t~~m;::.~i: Tl. J ib, main, galley, sips 1822 Ne\vport Blvd., Co.ta Radio&. v.·am huba (444ASPI tabln, $290 ea firm. Juke CIVIL \Var Items wanted for Int 120 ~~ri~ion. Also ski equip. 5. Ouysler 4.4, 6750 675-1393 Mesa. 548-5783 or 6'7>1700. box, Datsun Rd11tr seats, private coUection. Guns, OR ays, 979-3!98. loilNI Doxie Puppies, AMC, NAPLES Sabot. Like new, SCHWINN Heavy duty bike 72 JIMMY CUSTOM Olds irta wq. Lots more. swords, pictures, etc. IENTAL RUGS SKI BARGAIN 7 wks, will hold for Fiberglass. $150. Call with carrier, black, very 1l15 Broadway C M ,..,007 WJU pay 5 to 10% more than U••d l··•-·ctor equipment Christmas. 962-7818 ="9158 good -"'t" <o< •--•-t • Sun' • • ;J'fl7""fV'I-:;~..,,'-.,.,---;:;--,,,,-; "'" ·~u.u · .sJv-couw 100 ..,.:.;, cost new V·8, ·automatic" transmission, O'tl1"'1.-J. .-.-:":: yoor highest offer, Shah N * 673-3756 * HELP! 12 German ••ephe~ 1~ 89' """ all 6 P"l SADDLE Stubben Siegfried, S1iah a:l3Q S Main s A .:it• iu 11%' KITE Sailboat with ""· J"VflW " or radio, (>O\\'et steering, air NEWPORT :'ORES AS[t'1 Eng 171,i" complete w/fit· 557.tlt2, 545-rxho. ' .. WANT to buy used skis \\'ith =les $10. each, to help trailer. Good corxi. Sat-Sun. (.'Ond.itioning & wide wheels ='AI.Co UM M& ~ tings &. fuzzy pads $315 Wanted: young newlyweds bindings 160-165 cm. under rost. 493-t44l (213) 848-l;iiO '72 TRIUMPH Daytona. Show with hi·DO titts. C493FGXI. ~•e·, at~mm~-•N club Aft. 6, 548-79'74/54S-979o. l!f!d t OLD I $75. Call Linda 546-4478. MINI Schnauzer pups, AKC, 8%' SAIUNG di"""'" Room rond. Low, low mi. "........ ...... wu.,, n. nea um, rugs HEAD 215 GS Sirls, w/Mill-will held !or~~----. Call ... ,. • .,, .. .,,,,. "A"J030 alt 6 ... ' 5ll ~---• SI., •-t, SPANISH Freighter model p1ctutt1 .. _ & th'-.,. yu-~•"Ulll n1.n-1us, good con d . """"'· '"""' or • ~~ -!or •-t ..:....~~ 0154 ·~· blndlngs. ~. Don ... ~·· .84"'-7-4183-=::,-~---~-~. 556-0263 Sun, !st A 2nd, 1Clam-4pm. boat. Hand made ln Spain. ~ .,.,...,... ~ ...... _........,..,., ~ Trailer avail. 213-848-1550. =~=·~~-~-~ EXCERCYCLE By Sears, 2 3 fl. long Fragata Espanola USED wheel chair wanted, or 592·1815· XMgift~f ~~~r/'. !,!,.~~-Boats, Sllp1/0ock1 910 TRIUMPH .. 650 Bonneville, Commander \Vagon. Loaded ~,, lorwa-rd • $100. 645--5743. in ~ dlllo Call ~ .. ----re-bit engine, A-1 condlUon, & extra clean. Moat Bee! "t'"'""" • """" con n TV R di H "F I Pupp" shots. $15.00 496-7234 I 11 OU ·~ -backwards, Program cy. ASTRON011ICAL Telescope, 494-6325 ' a o, I , " SLIP for rent, can take 40 ow m eage, er ~ 1278GBL). 70 TOYOTA 72 JEEP Auto Trans, Air Cond, r.lttg Wheels, Super Ti.t-ei:i, llurry on this one. $3296 COT DATSUN . . . ' . . -· . . ... "'""'' ·~··'"" '69 CHEVY SHORT VAN 6 cyt., stlek, radio. (20074E) ' $1499 Connell Chevrolet 2828 I:larbor Bl\-d. C.M. 546--laKI cled. Cost new $35(1, Will sell 6" reflector, Heavy steel .Stereo 136 TRAINED Alaskan Malamute ft cruiser, elec & water, aft 6 & wknds. for UM) or offer Xlnt oond. equatorial stand, Assorted ~~lngE~:l~~ cs~ undwi!hr pups. Must Sacrifice! $25 slip only, no over night 250 cc, F-4 Kawasaki, dirt, 72 TOYOTA 67J...7:l52 eye pieces, $50. 897-1413 ZENITII, RCA & Sylvanla TV each. 546-3189 sleeping aboard. $5() mo, many extras, super clean '73 CHEV VAN N .,..., Elect. "--r 115. Slot GRANOFATIIER Clocks. 1 $75. ,can Llnila 546-4-478 & slereoa, priced Jess than ----~----Balboa coves, 673-GEm Avail & fut, Must see $325. Call Land-·' W BUBBLE TOP c~" track ..,~ bf o v le Black Walnut, 1 Chenywood, MuJlcal 1nstru-t1 ._ the discounters. With 3 yr. Fish 855 12/1/73 837-3980 ~wser agon. Warn V~ Wlheard.(lf value (QBZ· both fW ·-•-~t h' ...... ._ picture tubes. 1 yr parts ;.;.;;;;_ ______ = NEED to rent boat slip In 1972 BULTACXl o.,_, ...... , 350 hubs. {S88f'TMJ. ), camera $40. Lots of toys w esu.1w"' er c imes. & service. All available 26 &: 45 gal all gl&.8!1 ~ .......... "& $3989 etc. 9001 Chevy Owe Dr., For details call 548-ffiSl. RENT FOR ONLY $3 models In stock & on aquarium's 3101 s. Bristol Newport Harbor for 35' CX:, 4 hrs on blke total. 73 TOYOTA GUSTAFSON H.B. Sat. & Sun. SAT.·SUN. Trundle bed, OR BUY MTH NOT:.JING display. '73 models priced Apt 220, Santa Ana. ::~ in4J 526-l.541. ~w, take OVt!r, pymts, Llncoln-Mercury REFRIG, brown, apt-like, refrlg, a pp 11 c , odds-ends. 00\VN, Drum. PA's, Mikr.s, I to clear. Cash 90 plan or ~~~------sailbo t slip for 2 8 ' MINI _,1 50 C 2 cl Landcrulser soft-top. Radio, I 16800 Beach at Warner new, $50. 2pc couch, good £67&-5731) 229 Carnation Guitars, Amps, Roe-organs tenns to 36 mos. ABC Color Hor .. , 156 a · ~•<ll. c, cy e, roll bar, warn hubs & only , 1-luntington Beach • $25. BBQ $10. twin bed, new, 1 _:C:::.d:::.M:::;,. =~~-~-~ &: Planos, all brands. TV, 9021 Atlanta, or 19046 1 ~.;;;:.;;.;:.:._ _____ = Ca11979-8Gt0 eves rotary valve eng. 4 spd, 2 IXX> miles! Like new' (548-&42-8844 • 1213) 592..ss+I $2). chair $5. 26.58 Santa Alfl'HENTIC Patch work No age limit, nv parent n<'ed· Bro o khun;t, Hunttn.gton % • MORGAN type 8 yr. Botts, Speed & Ski 911 ligh!Js, horn, etc., Llke HYO} ' .. llome of thi! Viking" Ana 548-8450 quilt old fashion style. ll2" ed. OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9, Beach, 968-3329 e:r 962-5559. gelding. Spirited but eager I ::.=;.,_==:_;;;c..:;.;;.:...;...;..; new $l65. 642-8495. · '69 FORD HATQI cover tbl, parrot x 90" hand made $400. SAT. TIL ·:30. SUN. 12·f. COLOR RCA 21 walnut con-to please. G Y m khan a 18' Unlimited Ski Boat 'TI Suzuki TS.00, xlnt cond . -f\8AM l•1.:a cages, alum ro 0 f i 0 & , 644-8049 Now TWO Conven ient sole. \Vorks great H&s oriented. $375/ offer. Days 331 Otevy Engine, two 4 Bar· Lo ml, never raced, street lU~ WID 2 \1fINOO\V VAN hardware cloth, TV, Mlsc.l·CH""EV"'"Y='83=.~v~8-e-n-g-.~1~1=75. Locations to Serve You remote ii you want to fix . 892-8155, Eves, 842-2840 rcls, All Aircraft Fittings, ~7incl. & xtras. $280. TOYOTA Near perfect! <•2411) wrought iron & Misc. 20202 ctupped bfinl bike 3 speed FULLERTON MUSIC $150. 64H996. A.Q.H.A. Buckskin gelding, Halcraft quick change V $1999 Orchid, SA Hghts. 557-1417 $15. VW sea!Js $5. each'. 13191 Euclid, Fountain Valley SONY Model S'I'ft.6(EO, not 8 yn, excellent western OriVt!, Adjustable Tr Im 'n HONDA St.350. Xlnt cond. ~ WE BUY USED CARS! ANTIQUES 1849. 2 new snow m-1930. 1 Blk. N, San Diego Frwy. Stereo, FM/AM Receiver. show. Gentle, $11XX>lotter. Plate, tri stacks, Tamdem ~N~ev~er~rl~d~d~e~o~ln~dlrt:~· ~1525:·1 il966iii~H~ar~bo~r,~C~.~M~.!!i!646-~i9303il tires & ch~ 8 x 15, 14"1WHIRLPOO,=c,::=,:,~l.,-!9~cu-.~ft-. ~.t~de &. Euclid. Never used, in orig. 00x.1 ,c:56=2--0280:...:::::::,.---~~~ Axle Nieson Trailer, Speed ~iG-4300 Ah. 5 PM + pipe fittings, contour by side frosttree refrlg. 21 ~ • 557~ e $nt. 642-5003 or 642-3603. T.B. Lbestnut geld. 16.3 ti£\,~rsfr~~L~n:8L~ '68 HONDA '69 CHEVY I ch8;lr. 630 Ran1ona Dr. yrs. old. $300. Liv mi. 122 N. Harbor F ullerton RCA Victor color console, hunter prospect. 552-8089 or IMMACULATE. (GW89!16) 305 ~~· Perteet concl. 1f1 TON P.U. Inme Terr. chairs, blue Sl5 ea. 644-2440. • 871·1805 e walnut. 21'' color TV, ~003-!!!121!!!6~1tf~t~6~.!!!!!!~~! 1 Original Cost over $700'.l.OO $295. ;rtO-VO'" v.a. stick, radio (7I09ID) *1971 FORD VAN* GARAGE SALE Fri & Sat, BLAZERS owners 4-gates TRUMPET-~lak:::e::.._B<>u::.._c_h_ar_d. ant/fin ss radio, tumtbl. Sale Priced at $3695. 3SO SL. 69 % HondL A REAL Go0D BUY Short whec!lbasc, heavy duty, Baby ilems, furn It u re, lOxlS tires, tubes, wheels, Xlnt cond. 1 st $60. Good cond. $200. 6Ta-7013. I 1 ~ SEA & SUN R y New eng Ex cond $ small 18 mpg V·S J.!lpd dishwasher & misc. m.4 used two trips $200 firm. ~~-~9'=2=--6=364=---AM/FM short-wave Grund\g loltstnd ,.,e • • $400.? * 64&-1n9 1499 Magg, carpeted. , - Anaheln1 Ave., CM 64&-5259 548-&87. Office furnlTure/ radio table model SJS. cash. Mrite Equipment le. 17555 Bearh Blvrt, Hunt. Bch. ·70 125 suzuta. Xlnt rood. Connell Chevrolet Perfect Inside 1.nd Out ! 18 Beacon Bay, Sat & Sun 0 ~:.:R::.YER="sz'-.-Air~-condl-~tl-0-n-er, Equip. H.B. 536-3498 !~~~84~2~-06~7~5~~~~ Dirt or street legal. lo mi. $2,495 * 837-6722 aft 5 i 1-3. Beds, v.·~ter !IOltener, 23'.}v $150. Storage cablne!Js 124 RCA color console TV. $75, B011ts, Gener1I 900 Call 962--2073. CM 2828 Harbor Blv~1200 'TI Ford bubble top Van, : dining t~I , chairs, desk, pie-$15 ea. Misc. Goodies! 2933 OEJUR Grandie Stenorette. B&W TV $15. Both need --'---'-----'71 BMW. Good condition. · • stove, lee box, hi back ; tures. misc. Baker St. Sat-Sun, S.5 llsed 10 hrs. retails 450, tubes. 546-1452 AVON Redcrest 8' raft T~ l["'J .$400 & take over payments -aeall, am-fm &ttreo tape, : JCI bike & lug rack ~· NATURAL Ranch Mink Cape 88.C :m all Extras inc. COMP stereo w / am / fm I floorboards, C02 cylinder, 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~; I Call 60-9711 . 66 INTERNATIONAL cpt'd, draped, 41),(XXI mi, t 9x9 umb. tent $35, ~lisc. Stole, Prime cond. Ideal rift "6<>-:,::,..:1077='-~-----radio, tape deck turn table oars, 2 HP Johnson OB, 1 · 10 SPEED PEGASUS Bley· · · Mu.st sell, ~· 8_3l·n>ll 'Or • berxal alns.DrSa_!....9a.m·, 2549 or investment. Cost $1300, PVT. PTY. has personal ex· etc. Complete. 557-7966. used 10 times, $ 4 5 0 . C S I /R 920 cle. Uke new. $100. 64Z-S.938 TRAVEL ALL 837 " 5118 MIHIOfl Viejo. t F rway ' .... ,~,. Asking $350, 548--0337 ecutive ofiiee f u rn i tu re t'OLOR 1V Console, 20" 830-9824. amper1, I • ant or 642-3603 aft 5. • 'li6 FORD Econo Line, xtm • CHRJSTi11fAS Bazaar. Beautl-$ CASH $ grouping. Excellent quality walnut finish. Thlnk big-22 HP 4cyl Palmer marine DELUXE Q>Kart In carton. V·8, 4 speed, pov.-er 1teerlnR. long bed, 4 mag "''hlA, i ful handmade items. 9892 f f It & 1· 1 5.58-3090 great gift. $100. 644-6682 engine. Perl. cond. $200. 8' CAB$800over camper. Like Value $300 Sell $200 radio & heattr £STV506J. Cablc~.Hi Jacken, nu • Spinnaker olf Brookhurst. or un\ ure app iances. =--------;~~~~~~;;:~ 673-6400 eves. new. . Call."~""""", t1177 ~~1"-~.,1 .. ~ little work $1550 ' H.B. Sat. & Sun. P!tte or houseful, 01cy or EXEC SWVL CHRS $15/25 Call 893-7072 Q'U-.u.u if ..., .-..i ~ GARAGE Sale Nov 29 -Dec. night, 548-7147. . ~~r~~rs {1{24 W~sTs, Pim _B_o_•l;.;•.;.,_P_oc,w_e;;;r ___ ..;90..;.;6 "·n""""'v"'w"""Satarl::;::.;::C;'.'a"m~per'-,~18~.=ID.l '69 y AMAHA 125 $225 '71 G~fC IVand.ura, 350 VS, ~ 3. 34672 Camino Capistrano, FIREWOOD, Oak &. Pine 64.2-3408 Ii 35. Owerui Sedan, immac. mi's. Immaculate. Ca 11 ••• 613-2757 ••• auto, Poll·lrnctlon, panelled, ; CB, 493-5409. Clothes, furn, stacked & <lei. Trees cut, • ___ ,,.. __ ••_¥_,. _ _J live aboard. Galley, salon, 552--3862 Mobile Homes 935 1\•1111 I a :...!; bed, heavy duty su.spension, : games, misc. marked by us Forest m~1 Executive typewriter, -. head w/shower, sips 6, lots Cycles, Bikes -WA Lana Ul>O. Te:ny, 541-2285 or ? SAT g.5 Sun 1-5. TV's, Br Service 494-l866. C. lo'fodel, 5 years old, 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 of mahog. or will consider Scooters 925 MOBILE HOME Vftl 'YO ,:.61,c),.0~7!JS~. ~----- , set. Honda chopper frames, BEAUTIFUL Western Sbo\Y Sacrifice $200. 673-6870. trade' on lrg. motor home. FOR SALE : IUI. COMPlEI'E parts to build r 1 urn, m 0 re. 19 4 0 2 Saddle plus misc. itP"1.S. $200 IBl\f Selectric Typewriter. 84&-8173 •n TiltuMPH 650, good SILVERCREST 1966 Harbor, C.M. 669ll3 Authentic 1917 ''T'' Touri~ f Brookhurst, H.B. or best offer. 54()-().l28. Runs ~at. Been on maint. FREE to good horne. ~~ 1962 CHRIS Craft 2 8' cond. $6.50. Comp 1 e t e I y MOBILE HOME Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii I + extru. lnc rt!bll eng ' BENEFIT Bazaar Girl Scout POOL TJ\BLE, Delta, 1 pc, contract. $350. 833-8084 Gordon Setter & ~~ Lapstrake ski skiff, Dy stock, 499-1764. 'WI• .,..,, 2 D 2 BA It tr.ns on stand. $1000 tor •" 1 t 1 t Ex 1 Pl1no1/0-826 y • w x ~ · 8 · c.rp., '71 CHEVY au. 116-3169 ·~ troup Chrlstmaa gift, ,.. s H <', \\'a nu , _ ce . .,-ns \Yeimaraner. 6 wks old. All bridge, radio, covers, twlri 100 Al~1AHA Enduro _. _ _,. bit•---~g • ;;;;--:=="'"'~~~-- ! ~nts Sat Dec. 1111 t-5 cond w/equlp. 846-5835. males. All colors. CaU 185 hp, juat overhauled & $200. or Best Offer ~;;;;.: &: el~~diyer:~~ 'V2 TON P.U. 1 '73Ctt DODGE Van 318 Auto. ~Ult\ $anh"""" Dover Shore!i. MAPEL bed set, kitchen set, REHEARSAL PlANISI' 645-7500 or 645-1850. painted, new uphol. Beaut. i==•:o-:•c,•;;!12~·c:;l7;,68=-'e:;•:;--.,-f --•· nd kit h V • sUck ••-(-) 11· Paneling. l.Jtr. Kvy -'"'!'ii" Let me help You improve ""~o;:;;=,.;:"-"=--$70C(I MS--0223 or ~ ..,.. co ·• c · -o, ' rauw, 0""'"' duty Ausp. R--100 $3400. ' TOYS, appllc, clolhing, Dbl. canopy bed. bunk bed , your singing, dancing rou-SHEPl.fERD/Terrier, good · or 645--4325. '65 BSA, 500, 4500 orig. ml. clock, 11torage shed, land· $2199 G73--0087 water skiJ, etc, Sat & Sun, Retrig. & stove. 543--0436 tin F de with chUdren, needs home 1972 17' SEA RAY Tri 'hull, $650. AL.SO, Mini Bike scaped patio. Three yrs, old .~;:,,;:;::;,~------1 Dtc. ht & 2nd. g.5 Plot, ACCORDIAN, tile cabinet, Ro:i. ~i1:;.,c~~ h1r. lmmed. ~2690. 140 HP I/O Mere Crulaer, 499-3966. -adlullke .. ~u. Located In new Connell Chevrolet '72Std~;!RD SuPp</Pr Van, E-200, l 10362 Monitor Dr., HB. \\'Ork bench. lg. book case, COLORED Garden Rocks a: Full canvas, under 50 hrs, SCHWINN Sttn ...... v "Fair t t"'· away from noisy 3828 Hafbo Bl d .. ans. 'SI B, V-8 eng -•-•-Aft 6 a .... °"""" BUY a p•··-r piano terr Walls_.,..,.. trailer, 9A1N\ or ·..--.. St. One-half bl. from club-r v .._ Excel cond. one owner' SALE, at the Thrift Shop. uklU~. er pm, ~ Chrlstmas . .....,Gooo selection brokll ~~t ""4 oocre~ A"!~ haul, best ;u';~ 833-0139 ....,_yy Lady" &frls model good house. $15,995. Call EVES. C.M. 5t6-12IO 557..Q)86, • '• S.St,t,~la Mb.,.t, 120 East 19th POOL TABLE from $1100 to $1300. Dav\d ca iu : ' v1il"'WJ<I. condition. $Z). C&ll 96J..8769. 21~ ~ T. Dupree p1n ..... r Pianos, DElJGlfTFUL kittens. Well FOR SALE Near new high .. 10 TRIUMPH 500cc, decent CAN BE. SEEN AT : ·n FORD F-100. 10.5 x 16.S Om~ V' ~..:_nll.:...V;.~~"'tt:!.,~ f PATIO sale Udo Sat. 1st , New, custom made, solid 2$400 Grace ~'"01 trained German Shepherd IO pert. '73 Nova 25' perfect rond. Runs well. $575 bHt S tlftl: 4 t1peed dio k1w _.. ,... ... ~ n.u .-~--. lo to 5. -Via o-•t'eto, n1ahogany. 551-5277. good he 541L1!'1"'1'7 cond. Save $2,500 See at o''er. o.u! 1......,, CRE TMONT mil · I"· • !!._! looks good. 675--2404, uk 1or ~ " PIANO WANTED. me ~"' N~rt P dfl B t "' ~ ·~ ESTATES es, Ul~ •• ~33w67. "~~ _S_teve_~s:ml~~· ----- Bonsai, atria bike, misc. 5 PC Dinette $20. \Vf'OUKhl 64~ 3 c oa 1 '69 OSSA 250 Pioneer Dlrt "- GARAGE SALE l50lron 6~!,~se $20. Chandler WILLP.8? ~RE. ~Lf:.E~ ~3.t~~~~ 24, SKIPJACK •n V..., Bike, gd cond. $350. l~~ Sit~:~!! ~~Ce~1::;! 1971 GMC ¥Jck Up, 7flOO ·~~atS~r6 V!l, ~~~t Sat., Dec. 1st, 9-4. '-';;c·c.;:'""'~-:=--.,..-,,.-_,. !mJDIO CITY, CAUF. honli? lmmed. 644-8621 • e.,, 56-3169 . . · OV\Y 25 000 milts 4 1M • ' ~ ' s CM •i.,rc OONTR clean. Flying brtdae. f\Jlly Conun. Hosp.) Lot •46. Set ior • -· ma.KS. $2100, &42-3143 evc1 649 Cove t., ' · · has discounts \\!Al.NUT bl\by grand xlnt COu.IE Shep. Fem, 6 mo. equip. $8500. Tr a. I I er . 2 SCHWINN O:>ntinentals $75 CONTACT RAY. PK. AtGR-, 535-Ufi ~per, _.,.,. •13 FORD E-100 2Cm mllei. I 815 onTll C::J" 12 t. 45 Dra~!· •• 18 F loor cond. all new lmldtt. Mwt to a loving home. 837...J54S. each .. .! .,!~~mans 5 speed for lhow'inr· • · MUST S ~I sJGoo or make , ... ry . e. ~ or.,_....,.., · 1ee $1800 or make ottier. 536-7900 23• SLla«:RAFt' SS 23.5 $65, Q'fQ'"'.>Q"W SS' 1 Br. ba. new awnlna '72 FORD '9 T Pick Up offtr. 557-.6*>9 ~~~~ n dPla~~.lrvl;::~~,.:~:;fi;7733;,;;:s;,:;,m,_tbenhl-CD11n-•_1ry~eau-a~~~ KS:-c':; ~ Comolla, T~ ~~ rn:~e dJi~" 17 ~st 12 atr· =· ri'~~: ~~~5: Xlnt oond, ~ ~ ~t~ o~ =:: ~· :f:t C::. ~~~ :=·1e~~~t :fr~: p6eces &:. Contemporaryr: . Spanish waxed Oak, Uke 540-0428 494--0815. Wilton Sp No. 5. PXIO. ewa Call 5519-2405 aft 4 pm. 11,yle Indian Jewtlr)'. Please ~680MPT01 ~SI encyclopedia new, must ICC to ap-SMALL black puppy, 9 mos l3' BOS'roN Wbalt r. Wf'J5 ltfUST SEU. 19'10 Suzukt TS Motor Home~ 'a> Ford ~ ton PU W/ 'f, DODGE AlOO, 8 doon, call for dlrectiona 556-1729 sch ~ t., 2-1 book 1et pn,'Ciate:, 962--7818 otd. Loves children. Has hp elect start Evlnrudt. 250, Xlnt ~ & xlras. r.•-/R ..., tamper. $650. 1100 Xln call $11., Dec. 1 OnlY. Pvt. pty. Lido Isle, 67H109 YAMAHA Baby or and lhot.1 & llctnM S.3603 Running lights, A cowr. -"$1e;.75:;Sa;crl:_;;:Gce~o;n,,,er~._,,m-'-'-'381o;!'8~ [ -----'"..-..-•n_1 ______ ll=,.-,='iCa;:;l,_1 .:;13Hl616:;,;::=:::-:;--,. -· ~=5 ~ Cant °'11.mond rblJ, 80• SHOP&\!Tnl, Mark/ V , top Plano, 3 yrtJ old, Ebony VERY atrec. 7 mo old, male Xlnt cond. $850. 6'4-2002 '70 YAMAHA. 250, dirt r"P.ady. WILL trade Newport Beech 1958 FORD Pickup, 6 eyl, FORD N..•teau w.111 ...... , 12 pre.lied wJu $650. Make of· cond, J igsaw & other xtras, t!nl1h 5·2". Xlnt cond. $1900. Tiger kitty, shot s, box train· BOSroN Whaler 16', 55 llP. Xln't oond. $3~ Cl\ 11 Property for Motor Home $400. 60-198l, oJter S, .... ..,, -.v•• lu. -· Cort~. aell $350. 673--013:! 644-1211. ed will alter 644--0139 Bcarcat tqUipL $2750· _~008-3='"0!¥00-:,,-----~ 1 673-2058 Atrl Em, 6'r.>5487. &42-35!19. -a..=c· fllll-"-"' 818 F'OR S.le ·lull Memben,lo llAMMOND Chord Orpn. BLACK toy pond!•, ad tdt 547-9485 SUZUKI 90 Stttet & Dirt 20'~' MC1l'OR Hom ea, '60 GMC Panel Tluc:k, I~ f<utoa \Vonto4 HI lrvlnt O>ast Country Oub $100. maJt, shots, hlebrkn, lov· BOAT motor 14', 4 hp rnerc Bike. Less than 1600 mµe1. Superior, U~tlme ' ()pm bed. G eyl, x1nt oond., $750, -... _____ ,,__...;.; WALLPAPER S&Ie. Below ~.-.:.::40;_~~---Call ~139 Ing. 673-7897 alter 6 pm Oal futtom. 64&-2503 t am-! ~-5U-6181J, Road. Kon W'1"1, &S-l!l81. 58&-711114 , _ ~ti.I.AR COil-Bob Mllchell VanLult 5 CA.l... Binks tpn,)' pot, Pu.YER PiaM, Baldwin,! JRJSH SEITER, malt, Ilk.et pm John HONDA CL 90 wllh tame ...... le'~ 1 r.,""' Hof"'e r'~'·J · '69 FOIUhPl,.'c ltP, new ~na:, ~r l:'I CAttS a $ttlclkwells. llSl Valencia., w/rauau. BHl ofttr. eltt., auto, Guaranteed, Prt chlldttn, Ca.po Beach. "Mab koor1\ FOi' OAlfdy'" utraa. DJrt ot' 1treet. M . -' '· ·-·1 M ' new lire!". Xlnt r 1r1n1na, t•lnra cka HB. NT.-n.G. * 833-Xl5 * Pty, 64~. 49'3-6789 cl ... 132-«Xll f' ... I' ,... I,. I'\ 'I -,r,ri &t&4055. j ••• ean out luc pnie ----~ CJ)PY 1i1AQ11NE • l"9l for BDGE Sofa, HI f1 eablncl STEINWAY BEAUT rem. calico 2 yr, ••• turn that junk lnlo ca.sh HONDA "Q 350 CD. Lo ml, FREE -wiDc£ND 'a Qev T with "-Olp. a.\U£R BUICK omoe. Off*. &SS-3CS'1 dayl, A nit& lbl & thr. 2 hand BABY CR.AND PIANO old house cat. Has all QUI. wHtl a Datly _)>I~ ClultOed $500 or bt11 otter. R6creatJona.l Vehicle ltan&al R&H. lir, l'/S, l'IB, aaddl• ml llarbor Blvd. 11>1484 .-, "1tnd1. ma"" qu ll11. etc. 6_. 12500 * &G-1311 to ,.,..t ttome. 548-7611 ad. Call 64:Hm. 6$)tn.!:I Btnau. (THI 14M1121 tanka. call~ Colla ltl-mZ1111l ~lll.11 q11t!• ltl111I11~. l,llU'I I. •• I ,:. I "~' I for c and Ha * Best ""' I s9530 PR MONTH ONLY 5195DOWN NEW ROTARY MAZDA RX3 COUPE I Cheapest Gas AwtoMetlc trollMlh1lo•, AM tffJ., I t al. t-. .-clal wo1 & polWI, S .,.., 10,000 ... 11. ..,...1c. polky. Power fro•t dltc broltH, olec, clM•. tear whtdow e'9c., defOIJCJer, rocUal tll'ff, fall wltMI coffft, tocho,.....,, tripedo,.....r, ~Jh1l1t9 fro•t buckot Maf1, tlitted tlou, hill 11ylon car- petl ... cJtorette ll9htor, tool kit, ..._..., defroster, flow thr• YHrllo· tlo•, teckl'"J fwel filter dCMM', 1i.b •ro stortl•t devke. IS124A1 41· 542) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Dtterred p.1ymen1 price 1"119 . .:. lndWl11g tex. llttnit end tln•nct ctwirgn on 1pprovld credit. Fun price lrict. I•• & lk, 1118&. $1t5 10111 down and us.JO mo, tor 4 mo. Ant1uttl !lel'Cfflllgt r11te U.81. Frid~. Ncwtmbtr 30, 1973 ' DAllY PILOT QUALITY USED CAR BARGAINS . ' '61 PLYMOUTH FURY II A grul ~ lround tar. SINll Vt lll (,I, qlM, POW9r ''"ring, tuto lrtn1ml11lon t/'ld 1vtn IKtory 1lr CIWllllllM!na. (WUN6lll $995 '69 PONT. VENT. IXNJ7'8J Thll Cir W .. I owned by i IJllll old INll who tioughl II new 11111 now only h11 )9,350 mllft. A grHt OPPOr1unlly to mekt 1 ;OOCI buy and 1!'1 i.o.ded wttl'I 9e1ulp1Mnl. MAKE OFFER '69 PONT. IONN. WAGON Auto lr•rttmiu lon, lfciory 1rr condlllonfnct, f ~ ,., .. Power stefl'lftll, POWI< IM'lkh. Prkfd to Mii. llll1 weeklrld only -aeiow Ktll•Y wflol-le book (VQH6.UI $1195 ~ > ~ -• ~ ~ ~ ~ , '69 DART IZLK5501 '69 CHRYS. NPT. IYWN 2231 '69 LEMANS WGN. 1487HOU I '71 PONTIAC CATALINA A grNI economy cir. Beautlful radl•nt or•l'ISle wl1'11 ..,, Here 11 1 11rut O!lllOrtun!ly to own 1 ore•! h1•ury c•r A great mid s111 wa11D11 IMI has Ju" the right 1mount Tnl11 one has It 111. Ful !power, faclory air condUlonlnQ, e«iny vlnVI top 1/id lnl«lor lo rnatdl 911ulpped wllt'I 1111 J~d9CI wl!h eqt;!ppml!flt. A beautiful Sea Foam liillff'n or room vet 11 ff•V to park. H11 1mau VI, 1utom11k cordo111 tor,. Low M\le111.._ae1ow K"ley Blua Book. t1n111t1c sl1n1 .ix, 1u10 lr1n1... 1lr, power steul119. with rnatcl'llno interior only trans .• r.Olo, power :itrg. 11r1<1 lac. air cond. Special. Special Th 1 We1'kMd Only. ("32EAEJ $1395 '68 DATSUN '67 LEMANS IYCU5881 Tr11ly Mrd lo find Ind lflfl -Is 11111'!" '1\lrp, A dlfl> lwlil"d'I' •ltfl lwory ln!trlor. Equipped .. un 111rom111c 1r1111., f'owtr 11,g., R~lo, vrnyl top, 11c, 1lr cont. MAKE OFFER ~ . ~ j $995 '69 JAG XKE llR404471 Thl1 11 • Maullful •od rere sllfilllV silver bHuty wllh ebony lnt1 rlo1 , • spe«I lr•llS .. 1m-lm 11erto, end 1lr ""'" MUST SEE '70 G.P. IZDY0181 A grnl d••~c •nd f\111 of s!ylt. A Tnily 1u•ury sports car Loeded with equlpn'lfllf lncludlftll AM·FM slfreo radio, tic. 1lr, power windows elc. GofV«>us, $2195 '73 GM_C YAN 1630HGCI A be.11111llul orange •nd ~ded, s ..... u VI, 1uto 1r1ns., "°'"'' 1trg .• me11 wheels wkit ov11 tires 1nd custom Interior. '73 DODGE DART If you ••• looklno for In ec:-..i1U1 II wtn IS ii comtort•bl• llt!Le car-4TOP-l00k no l•r11'1f'P"-We've gor Ill Thl1 beautiful lores! grfffl 2.doaf' li.s auto !rans., 1lr Qlrld., 1 vinyl lop •nd low low mlln . This one won't l•1l long. 1150HRO) LIKE NEW! '73 DATSUN11J8JURI A really cute one. A lleilutlfut radlf!ll Ol'll'l!le wllfl R1Uye 1trl11" •nd ITlll!I wheel1. GrHI tconomy ind good loolt.1 lo boot. Only Ms 5000 rnll• on 11. LIKE NEW '71 DODGE CHARGER 500 A bNullful burnt ar1nif •rid loeded with eq11lpm«lf. Auto lr1n1, pow., 1tttrln11. pOwel" br1kn, vinyl i-. F1cto., •Ir/con. Radl•I Ores, priced to s.e+lt Y•11 mui;f fft this ci r lo rnl1y llP9f'Killf It. (21KlF) HURRY! $1695 '71 CHEY. EL CAMINO Truly hlrd to find 1nd 111ls r.no Is llke brand new. Power 11 .. rlllg, pow1r br1kn, conlov1 lop, l1clory •Ir con.dlllonl119, 1111 sleerlllg wf'lff!, mll!I whe-eh, wide oval lln11, 111r thocks, lon~u cover. Must ne 11111 ~ (:u&llOICJ • HURRY! '71 DATSUN CPE. 19608CjlTJ Lookl"'11 for • ur lo Dffl the 1111 shorlage? We hive one In wr mlts th•t will do llM Irick. RNllY cul• llld nteds • llomt. $1895 '61 CHEVY 'I• TON PICKUP Hirr• Is • 11r .. 1 di•oc• to plcli: 11p 1 r .. Uy elfin plcil.UO 1rld camper comblna!lon. C•mper Ufll! only °"' yNr old Ind .qulpptd wllh bu11nt1 !lo~e. let bo~, etc. Truck hos o.,....slzed tires aod wheels, Oll!on'Wlllc tr1n1., power lie.ting Ind r•dlo. A 1'111111 to Sff. {22IOIC) SHARP 2001 E. First St.. Santa An (Santa Ana Fwy. at First St.) (714) 558-7871 Mi.W•nted 961 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 -TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR AIL FOREIGN CARS Call or come in to .see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS 1100 W. Coe.st HW)'., N.B. 642-9405 TOP CASH AUDI 1972 AUDI, bel~, 2 0,000 miles, auto, xlnt condition SJ:!(JO. 6#.-062! da y s , 4~aft6PM. AUBURN '32 Auburn 8 cyl, 2 dr brougham. Rest o red. $17,500. 556-1240 or 839-5919 AUSTIN HEALEY tor clean late model can UST!N H I and trucks! '67 A ea ey 3000. Prl. Howard Chevrolet White, w1re woeei •• Ply. $1500. ~ MacArthur and Jamboree Newport Beach 833-0555 WE HllY IMPORTED AtrI'OS BEST PRICES PAIDI De•n Lewis I mport1 1966 Harbor, C.J\f. 646-930C JUNK WANTED. Autos . trucks. Jruitant cash, bodies, scrap iron hauled away free. 'Ed Sto~ 5J6..4876 CASH FOR YOUR CAR 546-7070 Autos, Imported 970 BENnEY 0Dl S2 "F1ylng Spur" Sedan. Air cond, aluminum body, Only 60 made. 1wlint cond. $16,500. 556~1740 or ~5919., BMW ORANG!< COUNTY'S OLDEST 0 DATSUN '71 DATSUN 240Z Extra Clean, Lew Mileage, t50!BZW). $3995 *BUENA *PARK *MAZDA 7015 KNOTI', BUENA PARK Coll Mr. Wayne 522-8750 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS J.1375 CamlDo Cll.plltrano San Juan Cap!.trano 493-3375 or 831-1315 JENSEN JENSEN INTERCEPTOR LARGE SELEX:TION OF COLORS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 LAMBORGHINI '68 LAMBORGINI GT 400, 47,IXKI orig. mi Xlnt cond. Must Sell! Zl3: 84&4761. MASERATI '68 MASERATI very clean, good cond. Must sell. Call 644-6886 MAZDA * Mozd• '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH ER CEDES BENZ 1 ;A.:.;u;,;,t•:.:•;,.• ;.:clmC!po:.;;..;rt.;;.ed:..........:.9:..::70 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, New 980Autos, New '71 RCEDES BENZ PORSCHE TOYOTA Sedan. Air nd, Auto Trans, Power Steer , Faun Exler· '70 PORSCHE 911 T ·70 TOYOTA ior, with Bro\\ Leather In· 5 Spd. Lew :r.tUeage, Sharp. terior. A FINE XAMPLE {607JSN) OF A WELL KE MOTOR $5875 CAR. '$5795 *BUENA *BUEN *PARK *PAR~ *MAID *MAZDA !ffi5 KNOIT, BUENA p 7015 KNOTT. BUENA P ARK Call Mr. Wayne 522-8750 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AtrrHORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports Call Mr. Wayne 52 50 * 1972 PORSCHE 914* f>.spd, radio, Radials Blue and like new $4,095 • 837-6722 alt 5 1963 PORSClfE 90 coupe whitC-mint cond. -restored $3450., 493-2011, 496-3185 PEUGEOT NEW PEUGEOT MARK IU 4 door. Automatic transmis· sion, rad1o & heater. Econ- omy & luxury combined! (!96BQC). $1477 ~wlf.Wi& W TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. LEASE '74 TOYOTA 1200 Corolla sedan . . . Get 30 mile!! per gallon . . . Only $58.34 mo. 36 mos. oper. end leue. . BILL• MAXEY .. TOYOTA • • • '67 TOYOTA CORONA DELUXE NEW CAR SPECIALS 1974 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL - ALFA ROMEO *ALFA ROMEO Best deal a.lWay!I! Berllna1 from $3795 (Ser. •0288). '72's &: '73's, Complete se- lection now. Buy or lease !rom Excellent selection of pre. price re-evaluation models. DEMO SALE SALES.SERVICE-LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY WILL BUY YOUR DATSUN, TOYOTA OR VOLKSWAGEN PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL PAY TOP 001.J..AR. CALL KENT ALI.EN, 54().-0442. PRIVATE PARTY mu at sacrifice '72 DATSUN UlO Fastback Cpe, Radio, Heater, Landau Top. Ex- tras. Super Low Miles, Call 963-3012, 6 PM-10 PM. 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE Will accept trade-ins CAU.. MR. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach (We're top buyer for any used l\.1ercedes Benz.) 1301 Quall Newport Beach 8.13-9300 DEALER Complete Sales and Service. 50 compacts on display. PACIFIC MOTOR IMPORTS PEUGEOT /SUBARU 1557 W. Llncoln Ave., A u I o m a t i c transmission, radio, heater, air cond1Uon- ing' &: bucket seats. A nice dlr car! (055JDL). $695 831-2040 • 495-4949 l '69 TOYOTA Land Crui.!ler ' 4x4 l967AFWJ SI 9 9 5. Theodore Robins Ford., 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Z..tesa. 64~10. E~;2;'::1, c.... s7212 ISTKltl2J Jim P•rklnson'1 ~;r.irh ]l111p11rl~i +• ..... • • j. or ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 5464444 CREVIER BMW Sales • Service • Leasing 3)8 u5Eb"'im'n '73 3.0 CSA DEMO '73 3.0 SA DEMO '7:1 ALPHA Romeo, Dueto '71 BAVARIA Veloce ml/cc, I 0 , 0 O 0 '70 2IOO CS original miles Xlnt cond. ,70 2002 . lJJce New. 213: 846-4761 ,69 2002 ·n SPIDER. Nu paint, '61 2002 '66 DATSUN 4 apd, 4 dr sedan, runs good] New tires, $3CXI. &f6...7994 or 548-5182 '73 DATSUN Pickup. Low mi. Excellent cond. Student must sell. 225 E. Wil!Oll, C.M. 545-4348. '11 DATSUN 240Z Air. ex-tra.a. clean. $3650. Call 644-4)931, overhauled $3800. or belt I~="""=-=,-...,:-:--, oiler. Laving co u n t r Y . BMW '68, 1600. Good cond. FERRARI MAZDA 11331 Beach Bl. 842.fif!ll MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car Trade-ins Coml119 In Evory D•y Ask About Our Unique Used Morcodes LHH ENTER FROM MacARTl-IUR NOW OPEN Mission Viejo Imports fe:u.zr1ng MERCEDES BENZ & FIAT 1 Complete Sales & Sen.rice Visit Us Soon At 28701 Marguerile Parlnvay Mission Viejo 495-1700 <USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT) M.B. '72 280SE 4·5 15,000 mi. Full pwr. Maroon. Im· mac. Loaded. P r I P t y (\Vaer) 646-2673 aft 5PM Anaheim 533-8220 SAAB *SAAB Best dcaJ always. Complete selection now. Buy or lease from Jim Parkinson~• TH1-;1rh Jh11p1111~i f->. 1,'0,J "· '' "~, • '" ., ... ' . ' ' ' ' . . .. - AUDI CAPRI -· Radlab, nu pahl~ 54,1111 ml. --------FM. Ofter! 494-1866 Pion• MG f __ _;c;.;..:_ ___ l&l5-<400 or -FERRARI GTC4 ·1:1 cw,1om House o Imports - Metallic blue, 4,<XX> ml, Mint 6862 Manchester, Buena Park '52 l\.1GTD. Part In I\ y SINGER --eond. $20,500. 566-1240 or .. n the Santa Ana Frwy restored, running cone!. $000 --------- '72 CAPRI, »)() enK!ne, 4 _839-~591~9_. ------523-7250 or n'l8ke off<'r. 644-2902 SINGER Gazelle 1960, load spd, AM/FM, vtnYl top, FIAT IVAN'l'ED M--·• ~ SL 1954 ?.1GTS Classic, restored gas mileage , '1 Or, Low Mtleage (2llCFU) Decor Group. Xlnt cond. ~--------t:l'-'1:UeS """' to xlnt cond, Must see lhis 54&-8945 $3395 ..... 35 •-5 .... -Coupe, auto trans, white, be 12500 644 0427 ---~:..::::::,,, __ _ -~ •·-:w '69 Flat 124 1pt cpe, 25 MPG, silver, or red wAo ml, outy, ' · · TOYOTA * U NA DATSUN new tlret, brlts, & vslve 646--0136 MGB B E .)ob, a.can, Aak'a $l495. B42-1·""1o=M:.:·B:::...280 __ SL_. -,..,--ro-s-tr. ---------'74 10YOTAS '12 • '2G, ONLY 17,000 mi. _95~1l________ Metallic Gold/drk brwn, '67 MGB Dr. green. good 4 spd. AM/FM radlo. Air, JAGUAR auto. air, AM·l"M , 2 tops, mech. """ & mileage. orig LEASE or BUY '71 AUDI 100 LS '73 TOYOTA Celie& Landau top, mag wheels, 4 spd, 1 $.1395, 7,000 mi, TI4-842-2617 I TRIUMPH 59 TRIUMPH ROADSTER 4 sp<'!.'d & radio. Excellent condition? (PW 655). $677 Dw lt.wi& -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. SALE or Tratru, Clauic '58 TRlA Rdstr, Rd. eng, trans, tires. Overdrive, 30 • mpg. $325/tr.ade for VW bug or van. 646-3'116 an;titn<. MARI IV CLEARANCE ... ,, ....... 141111,,.ct. F11ll Po..,, Air Coff. (Ser. •3Y~tA920l45) SS289 FORD MERCURY OWNERS TAKE NOTICE F.REE 511109 E111!11lo11 P.C.'I. 'lol•• ' Wltfl All T111M111pl WHEEL ALIGNMENT SPl!CIAL ........ $8.40 Clltck c•1IM', Cltnbfr' •nd l*ln1 cwrKI fl l'tCl,lfl'.cf, ...... Ml.,. c•n M1l'f, SHOCK ABSORBERS Buy 3 get 1 FREE Passenge r C•rs Only. ,011.D LINCOLN, & MEll.CUll.Y 1'11.0DUCTS OHl.'r Al l l'.ARTS EXTRA IP HfEOIO S"•Cl~l "II.ICES IN l!ll!PECT THll.U HOV. Jt, lt1J -Pl lSINT THIS AD - • '73 240Z Green auto air 1966 CLASSIC Jaiuar !.8 '64 MERCEDES 220. Clean, work S1250. Aft 5 646-8607. at *PARK map MlOO. 540-2949. priv pty, 675--7715 owner. Need some body New Models· New Colon ·• m'aga, AM-FM,' 6,<n>' ml: Scdall, auto, amlfm rad\o, air, 20 ml. to gAI. Days : OPEL ·10 TRIUMPH, CT 6• Wood dash, lo mileage, ne\Y tires. lmmac cond. 673· 7284 eves. 18100 RACH II.VD, HUNTINGTON BEACH l'H.142·H•• . Perfect cond. 644--0100 wire whttl1, xlnt cond. 832-8660 Nights: 644-lm. *MAmA DATSUN 4 door '66 VttY $29:(1 or otter. prl pty, ':i! MERCEDES 190. Xlnl •"" •. ~~· ~1ca1 .' reaU· 1 =~1J..""!252=;=-----condlt ls,.54":e~rea.. . for what 1m5 KNOIT, BIJENKPARK C•ll Mr. W•yne 522-1750 Have ~ )VU want to ..Ut cra.Ulod ads do It "".~I _. ""=U..:.Nc::rJW"'-'-=-='- bit _,., ~ ·n Jag XJ6, white w/riaturaJ O'"'O\IOO '72 DATSUN, 4 dr. Sedan. int. loadedaJ::o flnn. 'fl& MB 3Xl, cu, Reblt eng Low mileage. Ex. cond. 10 Gt trans. Sl.350. !pd racing bike &42-1195 JAG '61'. Rolld1ter, lo ml, body Call 544-1348 I , "---· ,, mech xlnt win wheels, c:=: t I a -· • • .teu your ... u ;FM •u ,996 lt'a a 111:'C'lt'«:. • • tell you• --~-~-.~---~-~ Piiot Clautlled. 60-:16111. CLASS SELLS -642-56'111 Pilot CIASotfled. 6<2 ·stW '68 OPEL Kadt>ttc \Vagoo. Lug,:tage rack. Good lntt>rior & tlrea. Call 645-7500 OPEL '70 GT. one owner. Excel cond, ~lust see to apprc<!, 6-1~ 1260 ~., f".l!IC'!ll ilraw In the W1·at. " r>nlly Pllol Claulfied .. , !\il1S. ---- nm f.Wi& 8 TOYOTA 1966 llarbor. C.M. 646-930.1 Fal Prof~tained -when you sell throoRh result"'lf!I· Ung DaUy Pilot Clusl1Jed i\ds. 6t2-S67S • '69 TR6, conv W/!!poke whl!, burgundy r: blk . ..,1 r"Ond, $1!XX> or bst oftr. 673--0216 ·71t SPITFIRE, good cond .. 35 MpG. Best offer, &ft. s, 5.11-oo;G. '57 TRIUMPH 3 $300 or best oUtt Xtro pnrta. M'l-mT ' ...... r ' . .. BEST • ,. • . ' • .fl DAILY PILOT "1day, Novemw lO, 1973 ~'--1 .. ~. T:1m::-po=:rti:Od':r---.,.,7•0 '°'A'-u,.10::,:-, 71m=.:po:;rt:..Od::r.:.=,,.,7;..:D~A;i;u:i10::,:-, T1m=:::po::rt:;:•:::;d;-"'Jiffii'o~·AA.u::'01::.,:-.•1=m::po::rt=:-•::d;-019'ijNIT'AA'.u1:::::.,:-,Tui:stc1:::0--...,99000i'ii;A<;;u<.10;;1,:'"'Uti;;;J;;;f---·1J;Oiiii;Au1os, 0Hd 990 Autos, OM<l . 990 Autos, Ustd MERCURY ""';...;.;.:...;...;;.:;.,;.;.;.;;..;.___ 1--"'--'-----~;;;;:::...;:~;__-....;....;c1 ·--'------ VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOL KSWAGE N v·OLKS~GEN *SPECIAL*· BUICK CADILLAC CORVElTE *VOLKS WAGEN *Of the Week 1 _w_H_o_LE_s_A_LE_1 _HA-~u-A~-1 sBOU-ELL-,N-D-'69 CORVETTE '69 VOLK'S AUTO • RADIO $1200 675-5768 aft 4 pm '71 \'\\' Co11v. Auto-1tick, '63 \IW Campet-, prtnl' nice. radial•. 11,000 mi. Uke new. 2",00) ml. on rtH eng. Come $1695. 494-7880 lift 5 see 2537 We1tmlnAter Ave., BUS, reblt engine. Runs good, $600 Firm. C a 11 S«-0243 or 968-2879. '60 VW Ghia e,oope, rebutlt I '°"C•"!'-,. ~=~~=­ eng. Good cond. thruout. '66 V\Y euc. Reblt eng. $675. 646-1355 New i.:hrome whls, tires & '62 VW, Ex1.:ellent cond, 30 ?i1PG, Pr\v party. brki;. Good cond. $650. 962-8129 $525. 551.1m '72 V\Y BUS, AM/FM atereo, --="-""-'-=---sunroof, Z.be<t. X In t - Nred a "Parf .. ~ }'J.,l'e an ad! cond. $2850. 64.2o6517. Autos, New 980 1 Autos, New '74 OPELS ON DISPLAY NOW See and Drive General Motors German Import. Get 20 or more MILES - PER GALLON. !-4igh (j)uolity . Sporty Automobile. '7 4 BUICK._S GREAT SAYINGS-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Most Models Including The All New Riviera •• NEW '73 BUIC~S PICK FROM OVER 20 ..... 9IO llAND NIW 1f1J Rl"IEIA (Ser. SH56t4t) $1663°5 $1706°5 $1335°5 Wlitdow Stick• IRA.ND NIW 1t7J ELECTRA LIMITED IS.r. #HJl 7110) IRA.ND NIW 1971 LESAIRI 15". #C12271M J h low Window Sticker J ~ 1 ailow '"9ow Stklt., IRA.ND NEW 1 f7J REGAL :;J .. , $10294 .,,., ''" IS.r. #ZI S,1191 , Wh1dow 0:r1c1t., IMMEDIATE DELIVERY-NEW '73 10PEL. "1° 1 . 4 197! RIVIERA IXEC. CAR NeMr hthlwred. (Ser, #H406f6tl 1f7J REGAL DIC. CAR 'N....-let'"-"· CS.r. #Z1JJ42fl TERRY $4789 ~ ,;~~''' BUICK *CLEARANCE SALE* * BUSES (4 TO CHOOSE) * SQUAR EBAC KS (2 TO CY.GOSE> * BUGS !4 TO CHOOSE) *SUPER BUGS (3 TO OtOOSE) * EXA.\fPLE '69 BUG $1095 Very low miles. O ean. Good Selection! Hurry! NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V, Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 '71 VW POPTOP CAMPER \Vith tent, Extra clean. (600-Cl l ). $2795 *BUENA '71 FORD o/4 TON PICKUP Camper Special 122l02K> $3199 '71 TOYOTA CELICIA l002DSM) $2499 '68 CHEV. 9 PASS. WAGON (YUN'188) $1699 '73 NOVA COUPE (20\lHCU) $2999 '72 MALIBU COUPE !P159) $3099 '73 NOVA COUPE (029HCU) $2999 PRICES •n ELDORADO CONY. Conv, Alt Con<!, Ste,.. T•pe. All Art lmmacvlatt .7028C:uri:~e:·~T. 10,(XXI mllea on new e11glne Take A look .... OOJ u •. --.u.11 and tnuts, Extra Sharp -· m ea, ~<JON ("'ESZ) MAKE OFFER See al Costa M,.. Ou' Wash ~ • * '69 DODGE VAN m Harbor Blvd., C.M. $3695 * '68 COUGAR &ts.-0281 or 536-5824 (res.) '71 COMET t'YI., automatic tn.rwut.. slon air condlt.lonlllJ & low 19 cOO ntlles. <•0089). ' $2499 BUY US£0 CARS! £390356CI ·••••••••• $U25 Phone Andy Brown *BUENA (126AEK) .......... $1100 "12 CdV. Aboolutely pel'fe<t. * •n COUGAR New tirM. Gold. Under '68 Mere MonteKQ ?.1X I 1392DSHI • .. · ••·•• • $2300 wholesale • $<i 295. Dave *PARK Wagon. P/s, p/b, air cond. * '72 T·BIRO {200EHZ) 494-0015 • ' ' P,Pced WJder blue book. Fri. Lo mll•• .......... $3675 , C MARO Ply. Call 1'44-014~ • ·n FORD LID A 068 co!DIY Park wagon. <463DBNJ • ·• •••• •• • $1700 --------1 loaded, Better mil~ & • ~V&~i~ ~~ ..... $2425 ·~~~· eTs~"O~u::~ *MAZDA ~~~hen new • ·n MARQUIS cyl, lo mileage, Mu s t . (815BTNJ ..•..••••• $1675 Sacrifice. $925 or ofr. or '67 Ja.1erc Sta Wgn. FUily * '70 CONTINENTAL trade for Sports Car. 7015 KNOTI', BUENA PARK equip, alt, gOOd oond. $700. (003A52) • ........... $1100 541)-2824 Call Mr. Wayne 522-8750 =C;::a1::.1 ;540-6-5"-158~.,,....=== CORT FOX '70 CAMARO. Au-. p/a, p/b, •n CORVE'ITE. ye 11 0 w, ·n MARQUIS Broughadm am/bn, Nu paint. $2200. brown int., 350 eng., 4 spd, 30,tm mi. Xlnt con • Dealer or best oUer. 494-3661 P/W, S, B, air cond, AM /FM $2700/best offer 556--0709 C.J\.f. ·n CAMARO 350 P IS, stereo, tilt whl, steel belt P/B, air cond, lo miles, radials ''"/soo\v chains & MUSTANG • 2586 Newport Blvd., 645-3661 Daily Sunday 644-2950 $2700 or best offer. 64&-000 1kl rack. $G500. 548-42U. --------·n ELECTRA Sedan. Fact '67 FASTBACK, ah·, P/S, FOR sale '66 Mustang, conv. air, full P\\'r, vinyl top, tiltltiiii~C~Hi;iiiE~V~R~Oii;;iiLiJiET, m;:wi AM/FM , 4 •pd, disc brk11. nu top. tires, runs xlnt, $650 842-4887 Wed·Sun 8-4.. whl ., power door lock, $Ui00. 642~746 ~7"''---""""'~-= I amJfm stereo, immac cond. '68 Mustang V18, auto, A/C, 42,00J ml, $2999. Call '71 IM•Ah" , COUGAR P/a & disc brks, vinyl top, 546-4155 dys, 673-5494 night r Wiil xlnt oond $975.846-8535 & "-'eC:kends. 4 DR SEDAN ·n COUGAR XR7, xlnt cond. '65 MUSfANG, PIB, P/S, V-8 (reg. gas), automatic lac air, vinyl tap, tilt wheel auto trans, new~ $595. CADILLAC transmlaalon, power "eer· 84&-5630 ...,...-----~-1 ing, power brakes & air 20,000 miles, caU 546-4156 . 2 • 4 pd ·-. conditioning. t542DVEJ. days, ~l-5755 eves & '65 MUSTANG +._ 1 . Cadl'llac '73s $1499 weekend,, $2,950 Relruill*302.=·r '68 COUGAR, 289 engifl('. Cpe De Villts, WHAT A BARGAINI Economical. Auto, fact air, '68 1'1USfANG *PARK GROTH ~~~=d~·i:i.. coi:se1~":'~"'1et ~~~··~~l""l'l',fo'. l!eM=;=.4 ,~. every car fully equipped ln-C.M. '# 546-1200 351 eng. 57,000 mi, new *MAZDA CHEVROLET ~~:~~rt~:~~~= '71 Monte Carlo ' ___ D_O_D_G_E ___ ·~re;;iJ~~N~a~=. s C}'l, xtra.s. (ser. 158602). Loaded, 15,IXXI low miles, gc~r i!!,_"J1,.,, EL, all around 7015 KNOTT, BUENA PARK Call Mr, Wayne 522-8750 18211 BEACH Bl VD 847-6087 549-3331 $5999 (#<'55). $299f 11. -~,- WE BUY USED CARS! OLDSMOBILE · And Up HUNTINGTON BEACH over so Fine Used cars to Select From '68 VW Bus, '70 cng, xlnt cone.I . New tires, muffler, asking $1400, wil l tTade for vw Squru-cback. ca I( BUICK 6 75-lMS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Nabers Cadillac 19TI V\V Xlnt rond. New AUTHORIZED DEALER brak" & "'" Mags, '71 BUICK -~fi_~VD. '73 IMPALA ~=s~ ~lrr:::.ts~~ CENTURIAN 541).9100 Open Sunday 9 PASS WAeoN 4 door tcdan, low m11.,,, vinyl CADILLACS V-8 (reg. gaa), ai< condition-, '69 Y\V. Nc\v eng, clutch, mag11 & radial tires. Many extras. $1200. 645-3593 aft 4:30. top, air conclitlonlng, power mg, power steering:, Jpowee \\'indows. A really nice car. brakes. (Kelly Blue Book (Kelly Blue Book wholesale Orange County's wholesale price: S3225). prieeo $2450). La Sel , OUR PRICE : VOLVO OUR PRICE : rgest ection $3299 $2299 All ~~o:l~lors CanneU Chevrolet '74 VOLVO'S Connell Chevrolet CPE. DE V1Il.ES 2828 Harbor Blvd. HERE NOW 2828 Harbor Blvd. FLEETWOOD BROUGHAMS C.M. Immediate Delivery CM 546--1200 COUPES -SEDANS -l!!!!~~i!!!!!!'l!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!il!'l!J!!~ UOny All ModLEel• SE . . Wide scl~~~~~ors MUST SACRIFICE. '69 Chev B or A '72 LE SABRE CUstom Cpe, Otolce of interiors Impala 2 dr hardtop custom l chrm whls. other extras. {Tapestry & full leather ) coupe, automatic trans fioor lUUIA ~-Make oUer. 846-3051. • Full power -: choice of: po~-er steering. Vinyl roof YOLVQ '69 SKYLARK custom delux. Cruise Control air cone.I Red with white Sales I: ~:'Vlce OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 -Blvd. Costa Mesa SC0.9611 '70 Olds Cutia• Supreme Lo 1nileage. F'ull power. Air. Stereo tape deck, Xlnt cond. sn;o, 644-0185 OLDS '71 Vista Oiliser \\"RgOn, All power, AJC, ne\I.' tires. xint cond .. f,l;(Xl 6n-1642 - 1"\ftl'IM 111..:t Xlnl cond. Whol~e $2575. Factory air conditioning shift, strato bUcket seats, 5th & Walnut, ·Huntington Beach. 536-6588 air. p/•, p/b, good cond, Stereo AM/FM radio -·0~•·_644-4687 _____ _ !!!!!!!!~""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 1966 J.larbor, C.M. 646-9303 $1350 or best offer. 846-3166. Truck opener more 12 TOWNRESDSUCEO lik -990 ---~----990~ I A U--• 990 All in Immaculate condition ' I ta wag, e 1971 OODGE Crest\l.'Ood sta· PRIV Pty wanrs to seU ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii990iiiiiiAiiuiiloii1~, iiuii...,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii990iiiiiAiiuii1iio1~,iiU~s~tdiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiAiiiiu1iio~s,iiU~s~ediiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"ii'•~•~· iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Nabers Cad"1llac nu, lo mi, air cond & t •-·-7 PINTO LOW BLUE BOOK SALE! SALE PRICES GOOD THRU NOV. 30, 1973 We Have an OutstandinCJ Selection of Extra Clean Used. Cars •that We Are Offerin9 The Last Days of November at Low Kelley Blue Book (no additions or de- ductions for milea9e). We Are Overstocked and Must Reduce Our Inventory Immediately. Listed Are Some of These OutstandinCJ Bar9ains! Lincolns Mercurys Fords '71 LINCOLN COUPE '71 MAR(j)UIS BROUGHAM '68 FORD WAGON 1292CYGI Coupe. I IJ6CXVl Counlr'f Squire, IXEU757J LOW BLUE $3500 LOW BLUE $2450 LOW BLUE $775 BOOK BOOK BOOK '69 MARK Ill '69 MAR(j)UIS COUPE '68 THUNDERBIRD !061HDCJ fZKV707) Coup•. !XOJ4221 LOW BLUE $3225 LOW BLUE $1325 LOW BLUE $975 BOOK BOOK BOOK '69 LINCOLN 4 DOOR '69 CO°LONY PARK '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 !XSSl671 • Wegon. IZVRl941 2 Door Herdtop, (I IJIQHI LOW BLUE $1950 LOW BLUE $1475 LOW BLUE $1475 BOOK BOOK BOOK ' Cadillacs and other Fine Cars '68 CADILLAC '71 CADILLAC . '69 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE Seden OeVille !ZLK961 l Sedan De Ville. 161 OCXV I Sedan. l 5402Al LOW BLUE $1275 LOW BLUE $3675 LOW BLUE $1050 BOOK BOOK BOOK "Ora11gt Count~'.s Fomi:V oj Fint Cori" ohnson& son • ' '~' - l 1 1;((ll \. 2626 Harbor Blvd. of Cars • Costa Mesa 540-5630 .. lion wa~n. Power steering anyone o t11 ... _.: ' 4 Pinto sOOcks. $2775. Pvt. pty. & broker, a.lr cond. AM/F1'f \Vagon, 4,(1® mi , sticker AUTHORlZED DEALER 644-WU 302 2600 HARBOR BL I=~==~=~-radio, luggage rack, tilt S3. . Sell for $3150. '73 COSTA MESA .• '70 MONTE CARLO, aulo slcering "-'heel, only 15,000 Vega Hatchbck GT, S0,00) 540-9100 Open Stmday trans, A_/C, PIS, p/b, bckt niiles. like ne\\'. 644-4687 nii, 12.000 on new e:ng. Cadl'llac '72s :~~i~;~t:.1i~~::S: '72 ooocE eo1t wagon, ~s~.p~r·"~it':"·:~.~ 2'lnpg. Auto. RIH. Carpet. s....i stick, extra1, 495-4729 '68 SUPER Sport Chevelle, l..o\v miles. $2000. Ne·w =~~~=="""""""7 Cpe D. Vl'lles El $850. 'TI Oicvy 9 pa s s . brakE'!I, 557-8944. '72 RUNABOUT, auto, air, D d Sed ' . I Kings\vood \\'gn. ?tfichelin .73 DART Sport, Pav off delU>\e int & ext. 9900 mi. ora oj, . De Vil e, radials, $2850. 6T:Ml662. S.3200 & clean pick uP for $2450, or best ofr. 545-0148. F eetwood~ MUST sell '72 Oievelle: equity, .507....xm 'Tl PINTO BroY.'ft 2 dt', 4 ever>'. car fully e:qwpJ>C?_ In· l\1alibu 350 Sport Coupe like '63 OODGE 383 built nu spd. Dix. 14,IXO. I...i.ke new. eluding factory air cond1t10n· nu, NC, fully equipt, lo enge $400,' ' ' 1 ~ mpg: Sl895. 6T~2llt. Ing, full power & loaded "'Ith mi, 5.1,-2265 nia ny other deluxe xtras.l"'c=-'"'-c=~~~~ 540-0673 PLYMOUTH (ser. 179010). FOR sale '65 El Camino, '72 DART Swinger, 12,000 ,-----~--$3999 p/s, p/b, air cond., auto miles, like nev.', 20 MPG, V·8. nu tires niag "-'his, GAS SAVER, mint '66 Bur-$100). ~3358. -'S"21cc00:...546-5566=-==----racuda 6 cyl. stick w/only And Up '65 CHEVELLE Mal i bu ' 31,00) mi, nu tires, shock,,, Over 80 Fine Used Cars to yellow w/blk int, 32'7, good FIREBIRD battery, priv ply; will •c· Select From corxl. Needs brks, ~---~-----cept bst cash offr 842-2821 Nabers Cadillac 846-4053 1970 FIREBIRD Fonnuta 1973 Plymouth Barracuda 400. full power, xlnt rond. Sport Coupe run rvw.·er •'-AUTHORIZED DEALER WILL talce 1 carat, 2 carat, 67~ ' ,....... ' ....... ' 3 di d I de v. top, 13,000 mi, Good 2600 HARBOR BLVD. carat an10n n on tra mile.age, lo bk, S 2 8 7 5, COSTA MESA for new car. 892-4444. FORD 846-0ll>8 540-9100 Open Sunday SHARP looking '5.5 Chevy. :::,70'""°'P"'L°"YM=oun;=~f'l!Yo---p/"'s, C'ADUJ.AC 73 Eldondo, G?tf Grei!t t ngm1"fr~~· $400. ·i~ll~A~~~~ped~~2~Jt~: A/C, $1350. 48%J;s River. executive owned, emaculate or s o er. Prlvale part•. 6~.2871 or ~N=.B,._.,.,64>-4868""=~=· ~~~-condition, low m i I e a g e ~ ,.,_ ~ Private pa<ty. 54H.136 ,71 CORVmE &1<>-1250 1971 SATELLITE Sebrin g '73 Cad Eldorado, fully load· MAVERICK Grabbe r. '72, 6 14·000 actual mUes, perfect ed, black on black. Must 350 cu .. lry. V.S. automatic cyl, air, auto, lo mileage, =-=o,· ='$"'10"=.'='644--04""'"'27'-'-~~­ sell! Make otter. 644-5382 ~ransm1Ss1on, power steer· xlnl cond. Pri. Ply. Best DESPERATE Must sell '66 Priv ""'""" mg, & radio, (114HEO J. offer. 636-0640 Sports Fury. Make Offer!~ ' ~ .,. WILL TRAD.E 642-0510 or 557-2492 ..... Cadillac '70s Connell Chevrolet ~;?,';:0r~ns~~ PONTIAC Cpe De Ville, Seel 0. 2828 Harbor Blvd. 548-565.1 SUPER Trani!. Car '64 GTO Vllles, El Doradot , C.M. 546-1200 '68 FAIRLANE 500 Sta. \Vag. 12.000 ml. on reblt e:ng. Nu & Convertibles 8 pass. ;M)2 V8, R/H. nlr brakes, p/s, air, auto trans, every car fully equipped In· '67 CHEVY Impala wag. 396 cond, PIS, auto trans, gd nu mufficrs, Scars steel eluding factory air condi· eng. a/c, bst ofr over $550. '°'co='nd"'-'S°'ll°'95'=, -'-54"'!>-4233"""---belted radials. See to ap- tlonlng, full power & loaded 1.~673-~~2635=. =----1969 FORD Wagon, orig prec. $550. ~ with many other deluxe '72 CAPRICE. low mileage, owner, air, rec ent '69 Grand Prix, Excel cond, xtras. (816BSR). fully equipped. Xlnt cond. overhaul, must !!ell, asking? moderate mileage, vinyl $2699 Call Eves: 644-66ll sa&-5m. 536-2300. top, nev." steel belted radial _.. tlre1, rally whls, 12 to 4 ·n Impala. Blue 2 dr, 45,000 FORD '66 Country -.-uan MPG, $250 below Blue book .. And Up mi. Perfect cond, Nu SfW 75,000 miles, 1nlnl Orig owner, 673-4691 O·-r 80 ~--u--• r--to tires. $1595. 644-4307. cond. No power steering or -c:::O:--:,-c--7-=~~- v.. :r ""' ao;u .....,., " brakes "~ ~7-4141 * '72 Grand Prix, lm-·c. Sel-1 From '70 OIEV IMPALA, 4 doo< -7'=-,..-~..,· 0::::-'..,· -;c-;c: "-., '"69 Gal 500 4 dr !IT Silver w/ blk Landau top. Nabers Cadillac banltop. power, air, orig ' axy • • , Xlnt coo.i. Fully equlpt. owner. $1250, 54&--1151 s/t, ps, pb, air xlnt cond. Many xtru, orig owner. A~=Ro:~R 1960 CHEVY, floor stick. ~Orig~"owne=""'r_. m67':-'--;48~-,.. 552-9412. COSTA MESA • Good !ramportation $175. ·n LID 4 dr, V-8, aulo, '.::o=.T.,61:;.P"ON=T"'l"A"C;--I 54G-9100 Open Sunday Call 960-ll31 lift.'6 p.m. =l'l'~;11°pJ:,~ like LEMANS '64 CAD Fltwd 4 d Full '68 CllEV Bel Air, all xtras, Phone 831-<Xli7 · · r. Y a/c, xlnt cond. Must sell. 'n-4 DR Ford Galaxle 500. equip!. Good tires. needs Beat otte<. 6'15-3158 Air. PS/PB Aulo. Low book RAMBLER ~ ~~ $250. Good .-=,9=,Ki.:cng=i;wooc1=-=9o=-=----. $1750. sell $1099. 6f5.0060 ,62 c:W XI t nd $250 A/C, p/s, pt b. Good miles. 1966 FORD Country Squtre, '64 RAMBLER Amb stn wag. n co · · after 6 M&-1244 '70 engine. Gmlt for A/c, p/1, p/b, r/b. S600. ~':'~ or u oo CHRYSLER -nla. $2)(). soi.ms· M;cl)eHna, Arr. 557-96111 '66 MUsrANG, 6 cyl, ltlck, AMERICAN MOTORS '69 CADILLAC Sedan de --------$400. 642--l.981 or alt 6, '63 RAMBLER CLASSIC Ville, tnunaculate, Loaded, '70 Chrysler New Yorker, 642-8599 $250 * 1>4&414! Be•I Oller. 543-0408 X!nt oond. All extno•. $2400. T·BIRD -="~o='=":"'---;::=,.-552-0591/5.52-9109 1972 GRAND Torino 4 dr Cadl"llaC '69s 11962 CHRYSLER • dr. sroan, run power, tac •Ir, l;jjiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-P/steering, /brakes, runs' 14.0CIO miles. $2800. 962....&7 II I Cpo Do V!llt, Sod Dt good, $150. &n 641>-7395. ·:.!ii~/ord Wagon. Good 72 Tllallllni~ Vlllts, El Dorodo1, 19'8 CHRY. straight 6 Fluid Call '842-7042 FIHtwoodt drl$75ve4&7 ~90 hltt needs work '66 FORD Fa.irlane 500 XL. Only 25,761 m11", tun power, e.w:ry car Cully equipped I~· · -• · Re-bit motor, ~ trans, alr condi~, vlhyl top eluding ractocy air "'""I' CONTINENTAL Cl••• $800 64;-56.17 (818El!A). (Kii BIUI! Book tlonlng, full power A l<>1d«t wbole.ale: 1.1 ) • ..., with many other deiuxc 1972 MARK IV lrnmotc.local INTERNATIO.,iAL OUR PRICE: xtrai . 1 .. r. YNE0811). car, all equipm1ml. M"'t $3199 , $1799 ,.u, Mak• orrcr. 557-9349 )9671.~;". l"t.=11ona1 Connell Ckr-' '64 LINCOLN 4 dr con-ScfNt. 22,000 miles, xlnt rnn And Up vertlble, nu eng & trans, mech.iuUcal co n d I t 1 o n , 21121 Harber Blvd. Qv<r 80 Fine UllCd Cars to $450. --or 5411-1870 ·$500/oUer. ~ C.M. · 546-:ra>o Se~ CcicllUac , __ c_o_R_V_A_IR__ JEEP AUTllQRlzri:D DEAL.'m '65 CORV AlR •uto, fC.'OrKlm· 2600 HARBOR BLVD. !<at lraNpo. Sl.25. OOST A MESA 545-31611 540-9100 Open SUndy Have aome\hlflk >VJ want to An.v day I• llw! IQ!' DAY to .. u1 Cluat!led ..is do II run an Id! Don't d!!!y •• Wfll • snH NOW '!ft "' . • ; '87 WAGONEER do-4, many extrU, $1350. or btll oriw call alter 10 pm wkdays m-8616 Or ~ma to comer of Ball 4 Anahcll'a Blvd., Anilhelm. • ' • T·BiflD '62, oond, tn- IJ!de.ou~ llOO dwn., ....... S29 mo pyml, call I/I 6 pm. 548-5637. • ' • f . . ' I Frld~y, November 30, 1CJ73 DAILY PILOT 4 FINAL '73 CLEARANC·E SALE! 36,,0QO MIL·E WARRANTY AVAILABLE ' ALL NEW 197 4 197 4 CUTLASS ,, Immediate Delivery OMEGA · FULLY ECj)UIPPED ORDER NOW! $ s177 TOTAL . P:~~~T s72s2 M~~~~~y PAYMENT . ~ 77:~~-.. ;., I .. For 48 m'nths on ·approved credit, incl• tax & license. $3672.36 deferred pqyment incl. .all finance charg~ .,, ' ANNUAL 0/o RATE 14.35°/o " Tinted Glass, Side Mouldin9s, Viny l Top, Air Conditioning, Power Disc Brakes, White Sidewall Tires, & Radio. 1•00181 7 r ' $177 ii. 'tot1I down payment. S97 is tot1I monthly p1yment in-: MONTH\· eludin g t1x & lie. i nd 111 c1rryln9 ch1r9•!. on 1pp. credit for 41 ~ , , . ,zos. Def1rr1d p1yment price $5011. Total c11h price $4032. { 9nu•I p1rcenl191 r1!1 11 .83 ';i~. I -~ t •••• . . . . . . IN ORANGE COUNTY ~ TAKE YOUR ·cHOICE 1969 BUICK 1969 1969 $ $ ·l Electra. Tilt wheel, vinyl roof, air cond., lull power. I YPK520 I G.M.C. TRUCK CENTER '63 BRAND NEW '74 GMC PICKUP '68 Fully foc~ory equipped: Guoges, disc brokes. (506026) '67 $ 7 7 '6·5 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '67 See Our Huge Selection '69 Of 1974 GMC Vans & 414 Jimmy's '74 ''Magic Bus'' Van . 1009813) '70 '3977 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '69 ~ S41 t.tll 61, !IMI, $41 tell! .... (lll'llt. lllCI. Id, Ne., 4 Ill c.ltrYf"I ChtS. j' L.S. Tilt whl., vinyl roof stereo, full Coupe. Cruise control, vinyl roof, Load. on •w. Cl'Mlt"' M "*' ~111 11rmt. "1C• •1i"i(ii Incl. ta:.." lie. ~ power, a ir, loaded. (ZMU77 I) ed, full power, air. 12 I 9EQDI ANNUAL ll'•1tc•NTAGI llATli 1i.tnL •1111 thh·,..k• plu1 ' & I. ~ FORD 112 TON $577 LEASE jBrand New '7 4 p;ckup truck . 1207lbGI CUTLASS .. 1.. .. . .. .. • • ONLY $8911 MO. ' CHRYS . NEW YORKER $577 Ful ly equ;pped. IVVEt121 OLDS 88 ............ ONLY •12666 MO. OLDS 98 $777 OLDS 98 ............ ONLY .$13852 MO. Convert. Automatic, powe r · steering. (VHD716 l TORO.NADO ........ ONLY '15766 MO. MUSTANG $677 VS, Automatic Transmission ORDER NOW IPBR28 41 $977· FOR EARLY DELIVERY T-BIRD Power and air conditionin9. 36 MONTH OPIN l!ND LEASE ON APPIOYl!D Cll!DrT IWOG4471 BUICK LESABRE $877 Weather Proof . Special P.S., P.B., tilt wheel, air cond., ' rad ;o, I 10963 8) Complete Undersea! Job MERCURY $977 s1911 FULL P.S., vinc!I top, radio, heater. PRICE . l410AG. I ' ·Any Model Automobile CHRYSLER $977 Wllfl Tiiis M , M ..... ,,....,. •I"'"' ........ .,,,,., .... "'"' nt•ni. . SEIYICE I. PARTS DEPT. Ol'lll MON.-SAT. 7:30-5:30 P.S., P.B., eir cond., radio, vinyl For C0111plot1 lody I. Metal R~ Sonlcos CaU 540.n65 lop. l770A0Zl • ' ' . .. -• ' • I • • I ' 1· I 74 PINTO Includes: •II vinyl bucket se1t1, manuel front disc brakes, 2300cc 2V .. cylin- der engine, C..lifornia emission equipment, .. speed m•nuar transmis- sion, five A78x 13 wsw tires, passenger compartment' cerpet- ing, front bumper guards, reer bumper guards, a.cCent group. Ser. #4RIOYl23849. IStk. #442 1 \ - ' • . BACKED BY 52 YEARS OF SUPER SERVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY . $195 plu1 t1x lie. i1 tot1I d11. pyrnt, $111 .75 i1 fot1I mo. pymt. i11c:l.,t1x, lic:1n11 I 111 c:1rryi119, ch1r9111011 1ppr. c:ttdlt for 41 mo1. D1f1rr1d pymt. $1307,27 incl , t1x & Ile:. AN. NUAL PERCENJAGE II.ATE j0.97~. Tot11I c:11h pric1 $2711.64. $ 78 EVERY 'NEW CAR & TRUCK IN OUR INVENTORY READY .. , FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY r~~··1 'I '7 2 DOOR HARDTOP ~ .. , f "Pll "-a!:J MONTH $\95 plu1 lo• f,, Uc. i1 totol dn, 'yll'll. $102.91 11 lolol 11111, py1111. incl. Ill• a. lie. a. oH corryl119 chorg11 on opp!'. cr1dit let 41 11101. Del1ir•d py1111. $.5371.11 i11ct. lox I. lie, ANNUAL Pft· CfNTAGf IATE 10.97%. Tolol co1ll pritt 54414.4.S • 3-l . I Pll ~'--MONTH Sl95 plu1 lo• f. Uc. \1 tolol dn. IJYlllf, 510.54 11 !alal 110. pymt. ind. toll, lie. .. •ll C'Ofrylt'lg ct.Clrfl'I 01I opPf', Cl'1dil let'41 -. Dlf11r1d l''t•I. price $4240.57 ind. liol & "'· AN· NUAl Pft(fNTAGf tATf 10,97%. Tolol c Cl 1 h prif1 $l494.21 h1dudh•t• (rullH•lllatlc trlft1111t .. 1i1111, powlt' fro11! diK bf'ok11, pow. 1r 1t•1ri119, vl11'fl·in11rt body.kit 111ldg1,, rocker ponel 111oldlng1, tllCo Ifie. doc:k, 1!Hl·b1lt14 rod;el lira. 400 v.111191111, ColifC11"11io ••ill'- 1qulp1111nt, H71al.5 be!11d Wlw'lirll, ,_ bu111p1r guord1, 1tl1dolrs •Ir condiliot'ltr, 4uol •lllf' 111111,..,nr .. radio, lint.d g1on, l•fthand ,. .... control 111in'Or, Ugh! ftoUJlo _,. ... coven, vi11yl lOllr. $er, #4J62$109· 911, !Stk. F.99} includes: VS, G78x 1 S tires, aulo. trans., tool stow box, solid state ignition. Ser. 'F10YRS84884 !Sik. 'T201l OUR FINANCE EXPERTS AU HERE TO HELP YOU! -~ , . •' HARDTOP \..,,, • "" J MONTH J SlfJ ,tu1 tar I. lie. Is totol ~dowll pylllt, $90,2 1 ii 101111 lllOo py111t. Ind, 1111, lie. &. oil co•ry• ing chorge1 011 opp!'. cr1dit lot •I 1110.. Oeftn'ed py1111. prlc1 -$47ll.44 i11cl. "l!X a, Ii(. ,u.I. NIMl tEICUl'TAGf IATf 10.97%. To I o I co1h p•ic1 $ll9.S.S4, lndud111 3$1 (ID V·I I tylindlf lt'l9i111, b1oulilul M1lcallic polrit. ,.;,.,'fl roof, 1idt .. o1111119, CoUlort1 io 111inillfl1 1qwip1111nt, SOUO STATE IGNITION, Hied 1hift, Crui11+ 111otk tro111111luloti, H71xl4 b1lt.d wllit.wall tlr11, pow1r 1t11rln9, car- pe11d car91 cir111, l'OWEt disc brok11, fro11I tnd r111r liu111p1r gvorch, Alt CONOITIONEt.Stl•cl· oire, dtlwx• AM ,..,1hbulf011 rgdio. 1i11ted glou to111p1tlt, d1lu11 whpl COVlrt 011d 111or1I Stock ~Ol4. S.r- iol .=4H2.SH10 1949. ECONOMY PICKUP • ' ... ' MONTH $195 p!v1 to • a. lie. i• lolol d11. py111t. $/J.O.S 11 lotol 1110. pym t. ind. to•, lic1ni1' &. oll corryi119 rhor911 on oppr, rredil let 41 11101. O.lerred pym!. SJ.473.06 Ind, lei• a, Uc, ANNUAL PER· CENTAGE tATf 10.97%. Total co1h pric1 $2161.91 lncludtu WSW Tires. cro11k 4ow11 !"°'' ti11, h11 idc hood rtlto11, tool kit, 60 0111p1rt ho11r liott1ry, 3.S 0111p ollltllOlor, 11<111 r11ls, outo. mlO'lic 1ron1•iuion, wo1i.r11 11irf0tt:, AM nio;., lin11d glou, Ser. ~srr. ANllJ640 (Slk. #T269.S) Our supply of new 1973 "leftover Cars" Is dwindling fast. But, while they lost, you can ''Steal" a modern new car at a real old fashioned price. GRAB ONE NOW & $AVEI HIEO DORE ROBINS LE ASING CO. Complet1 lec1e program, All moiff. Oaily rentals: $6 per doy 6c per mile CCIII lt'lNNnH CLI••. l.1otln9 ........ 642 00, 0 JIM MIWA,, L1t1h19 Spedelin • ·~ '74 ~ VE. ICK ·1' • · 2 DOOR SEDAN • ;·•.' 80 ' h1c:lud11: color-k1y1d c:1rp1tin9, PEl 250 CID IV 6 c.ylh1dtr 1ngi11e, ~..f MONTH Celif~ir11i 1 •tni11io111 equiprn•nt,• ~195 plus t1x & lie. i1 1111id 1t1t1 i911itlo11, 11l1ct.1hift fo!1I d<~· pyrnt. $10.10 i1, crui1•·o·rn1tic, fiv1 C71xl4 w1w ~. 'Y.11 ~I "'e";tPYln1 1 1· incl. t.••, tir11 , pow•r 1t11ri119, r•1r \lli•n11 }' I 1 c1rry1n9 , ch1r1e1 ~ll 1 1ppr. cridil ,.bumper 9uerd1, front burnp1r for , 48 l'llOI. 01f1rr1d .,... gu1rd1, 1 i r co..ditioning , l''tl!lt,--<$421t.54 incl. I•• AM r" d i o ti11t1d ql111 -.., A<> ·;.t111UAL PE" c;Eff'l'Alf'lATE 10.91•;. compl1t•. Sir. #4K91Ltl214t.. 'tot1I ~1ttl price $]501.99. !Stk. #381 ) .New · '7 4 Thunderbird 2 Dobr Hardtop . . $19.S phu to1 & lie. i1 totol d", ,.,.1. $163.14 11 total 110. pyr111, iML .... rteft1111 &. ell co,,yin9 1hwtt1 "' op,,. ·cred;1 for '' ...... _......,. ,y1111. $IJl1.2J ~-.J. ... •& lie.. ANNUAl •ft. CfNT-RATE 10.97%. Tola! ..... ,,1c. "'"'' Cfu!1e·o-111otic kon1111iu l1111, paw1r 1leerin9 I brol11 I wl11dowo, 1/111· btl11d rcidiol WSW 1i111, op111 wi11dow1 a. winyl roal, AM •ctdio, delu•• beltt, whe•I CO••'" 1;n1cd gl1111, au10111otic 11111 bock rel1111c, "'•!allic ,oinl, leoth•• trim, w;11yl •ool, CoLifornio ,.,iu ion• •qwip· "''"'• d1r<1I td•ou1t, con•e11ienc1 91111p, pawtr 110-0 "'D'f' driwer only, det.ue bu111fl"• 1•oup, AM/ fM ,,., .. radio, ,ll91't gr pup, paw. •• lock t •o.,p. Se•6 =4fl7Al11· 917. (Stk. =-1JSI NO EASIER TERMS ANYWHERE CH~EONEOF THESE US}D SPECIALS '72 MUSTANG _. Ooor. VS, outomotic, radio, heater, power steering & brok11, oir conditioning, vinyl roof. IXXZ869) { ... Month SltS It Ith! ff. '""'' Ut.lt II ltl•I '"' ....... !lid. II•, lie-a 111 carrri"t ck1r1u " ''IM' crrilt !tr 24 MM httf'T"1 " .. price S!IM.U lilcl. tu, nc-. MltlV.U PE•tEtlTAGI Lt.Tl 11.U%. Teltl '"" ,,ice 11147.71. TOYOTA Corolle St1tion W1911n. R1di11, h11ler, eutom•li,, t058AKT I DATSUN 4 dr. R1di11, he1t1r, 1utorn1tie. !040DZP J vw 7 p111. bw1. Redio, ht1ler, 1wtom1lic, feet. 1ir. IZ8N05S l VEGA S111ion w1qon. 2.) litt r en9., 4 'pe1d, r1dio, htaler, l;ke n1w. ( f: 1011701 · MUSTANG 102 V.I, red io, h11t1r, 1ulom11ic, 1ir cond., powtr 1tt1ring & brtk11, f062GIVI .. , .. ·B • t ..., I • I I I _. •P•td transmission, radio ond heoter. 1185HDCI J ' ' '" Month SltJ 11 lttal ~ •• ''"''· S••.11 i1 t1t1t 1111. t1111t. 1•11, tar, lie & 111 <tnyl•t C~llltl t• Ifft. lrt•it fir )• nlll. hie.rt• --'· ,.>ct SIN4.A ifld. 111 a lie. Atltl\IAl •1•CUllAGt ..,, 14.J4%. ltl1J , ... ••ic.! 11J72.7J. . " FORD 2 DR. H.T. 1/.8, 1ulom1tie, power 1leer<n9, radio, h11t1r, 1ir eond., power windows. (642A'v'I ) FALCON WAGON Smell I cyl., r1dio, ll11ltr, 1utometic, pow1r 1t1•ring. ITXU500) CAMARO 6 cyl., 1f1nd1rd tr1n1., r1dio, h11ter, !WXE097) Automatic, tadio, heater, power 1leering, broke, & windows. low milesl (,.I 7EAE) 7 71 '" Month Cu11om. City car. Automatic, pow•r tleering, power brokei, 11.S08,9) 1 Slt5 i1 •tlll '" fYllll, »7.71 11 !1hl 111..,t~ly ,.,.1. l•<t .. 111, lie. 4 1tl ur..,i•t t~lrtH " ,,,.. •rt•lt !tr '' !l\H, hftn'H tJllll. "Oct $»12.N illcl. t1a f,, lie. ANtll.IA~ Pllt• (ltlTAfl lATI 13.11%,. Ttltl ufll .,ict S21n.7J s1t1 ii '"'' ... """· us.n 11 f.tt11 i... "'"' 1.<t. .., He. a tll u<ryi•t 1M11n .. •ttr. cr"111 ftr q "'"' l1flfiMt "'"· ,.11, $Ito.A Ille!. I•• & lie. Atld.U HHltlT .... liH l).Jl"llo. 1'11~ t1No !Wk• tlUt.71. $ CHEV. EL CAMINO '6 4 • v.a, r1dio, h11!1r, 1utom1tic, !N94497! $7 TOYOTA '69 "4 WM1l1r." R1die I h11ter, xlnl. cond. 1967AFNI FORD WINDOW VAN $ 6 cyl. St111d1rd tr1ns.1 redio I h11ltr. !ZXROJ9l r ·~~.~ •• ~~~~~~·~0~'"'·'1'"'·· $1 495 '72 xh1t concl. IZTXSOSI MAVERICK 2 DR. 6 cyl., 1uhtm1tic:, 1ir cond., r1dio, h11fer, pow1r 1t.trint. 1142FYWI s2495 '73 FORD l/4 TON Picllup.14 1peM, V-1, h11t.r. IJ9064NI ---- " • 7 'I tlo a H Sn in I t be cu Ca a ad co ea 50 at HI II, • • s._n Cle1nenie · Capistrano • EDITION • • Today's Final N.'I'.". Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 TEN CENTS -• Three Held in Death of Laguna Hills Woman Police in 1i1cmp~, Tenn., are ques- tioning three men -captured after a shootout-about the murder of Mildred Hazelwood or Laguna Hills and country and western guitarist James P. Widener in Nashville. ~1rs. Hazelwood, 46, of 24252 Pike Road, and Widener, a musician in Hank Snow's band, were found shot to death in an alley Tuesday night, the apparent '· victilll! ol a robbery. 1be three suspects arrested I n Memphis have not been identified by police, whD said a car belonging to Widener was found near lbe motel where the three were staying. 'nle three men were arrested at the motel in soulhwest Memphis Tbunday night by homicide detectives searching for a man who attempted to buy airline tickets with a credit card belonging to Widener. '11le cam bad been blackliSted and when the computer rejected it J!il the hotel ticket counter, the man fled and police were called.· Police said two of the three men were tricked into walking ttr the motel office where they were arrested. The t'.lird man stayed in a room and ex- . changed about 20 shots with officers before crawling out the door after a barrage of teargas was fired. Police said five weapons were con- fiscated in the room shared by the men. A taxl driver said he took. the three ~en to the motel from a spot in downtown Memphis near where Widener's car was found. Mrs. Hazelwood and her husband, who died 10 months ago of cancer, had been longtime friends of Widener. The (See S SUSPECTS, Page %1 ··Nixon's Ar.chive Gift ·Tax Write-off Probed ., O.Hy Pli.t Staff l"tlott Dark Decor Gill' employe in San Clemente is shown erecting municipal decorations over El Camino Real. They will be different this year, dark because of the en- ergy shortage. In previous years businesses have provided hookups for the ligthing but city council- men ruled that out this year. Capo District Sets Cutbacks In Electricity Students, district employes, evening tennis bulls and even the fish will all be affected by a series of 18 proposed cutbacks in electrical uses in the Cspistrano Unified School District. Trustees meeting Monday night will act on the proposals made by the disµ-lct administration to cut back the district's use of electricity by 10 percent. .M09t of the reductions are of the average variety such as removing some light buJbs, and urging employes to use less energy and resetting thermostats. 'Ibe more severe measures call for: -Total elimination of tennis play on courts after dark. -Cutting the district sta[f's lunch hour -hence the work day -by 15 minutes each day . -Reduction of parking lot lighting by 50 percent. -Elimination of all nighttime events at the district's stadium at San Clemente High and setting them for daytime, lnlte&d. -Elimination of all o r n a m e n t a I lighting. Th• other measures suggested by diltrict administrators even affect the live 1aboratory specimens in high school &elenct areas. Principals will be on oroers to closely monitor the use of power in anlmal·keep- ing areas and aquaria and each room will be evahU1ied Irr terlll! of required iae o! current. The entire pr081'911l, ll truslets acotpl It, would 10 into efled Dec. ). • I SanDiegoPowerCompany ' . To Make Up, Fuel Losses By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" Dlftr Pl._ ll•H This week's sudden cancellation or a fuel contract between San Diego Gas and Electric Company and one or four major oil-companies means that th e utility will have to make up about 2.5 days' production from other sources. The Department of Defense ordered the reduction under its 23-year-old powers to comtnaQdeer fue l if it is needed. The enabling act forces fuel suppliers to cancel contracts made with other customers if need be. Union reduced its delivery to SDG and Eby 30 percent. Welti termed the reduction of Union fuel relatively minor in the total scope or December production and said that it could probably be made up rather That was the opinion today of chief utility SPokesman Carl Welti after the firm announced Thursday that the Union Oil Company had been forced to cut its delivery of generatpr oil to the utility by 130,000 barlels for the month of December. easily. .. He explaineC:I that the Union cutback amounts to 65,000 megawatt hours of (Ste POWER, Pqe II '· A Long Nap Russ Say Woman Slept 21 Years MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets have a mOdenl-day Rip Van Wlllkle. , Nadezhda A. Lebedin h.., awakened in the Ukraine after sleep- ing 21 years, according to the trade union newspaper Trud. It gave neither her age, family status, nor any indication that doctors knew why she finally woke up. • Thud said her problem began in 1952 when she was ill 'l'ith flu . ushe was absolutely immobile, not even able to open her eyes.'' · Trud said~ , 1 ' She had.no reaction to pain, but her internat.organs·bpt func- tioning and she was fed 11artlflctally." · • The chief neuropatholollist from the ministry of public health in the Uknlne said her eyesight has been restored, she can speak and is relearning to walk. The neuropathologlst, wbo wu not identified, diagnosed the case as·"letharglc sleep" and said It· was "Ntremely rare." ' ( ••• Pat Brown Sets Study Of Papers By L. PETER KRIEG Of IM EN!ly Plitt Shoff California Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be called on to determine if President Nixon's personal !awl'orl violated mtary laws wben they' reeonl«I Nixon's pre.j>resillllh- lial papers u a gift to tl>e National Archives. .:. !" ·, 1be PrOiident cl4imed a $5'111,0tll tu: deduct!!. r the gift in llllt; jult belore · federal iJ!atm wu enacted that Cll! off tax d uctioos for such gilt!. , The St. Louis Post Dispatch charged Thursday the presidential lawyer Frank DeMarco of Loo Angeles, partner of Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, failed to properly reairo the notarization of the gm. DeMarco today claimed be did not violate the law because be kept copies of all the doo.unents. "All that the law requires Is that the notary keep a record of documents notarized by him,'' Demarco said. "It does not necessarily have to be in tabular form in a book. Maintaining copies of documents constitutes a record. Our office has copies of all documents notarized ," he said. Attorneys for the California Secretary of State's offi~ weren't sure euctly what the law requires, or so they said. "I will talk to the secretary of state today," said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's office. He told the Daily Pilot, "This involves an interpetation of the 'statutes. We have not been called upon before to ·make that interpetation." The law states: "A notary public shall keep a record of all official acts done by him and a record of parties to, date and character of every instrument acknowledged or approved by him." Most notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all reqpired information. But the St. Louis Post Dispatch claim· ed DeMarco admitted to them that he had not kept proper records because they weren't in a journal. OeMarco dre~ the deed of Nixon's gilt of his personal papers to the National Archives. The neWspaper claims "the absence ·!~ PRESIDENT,. Page %) •, .. Building Worker Injured in Fall In San Oemente ~ -A San Jacinto constructioo worker fell from the thlro floor of an apartment project near the San Clemente pier aru Thursday afternoon and suffettd a frac- tured back. Police and firemen were summoned to the construction slte at 423 Avenida Granada shortly before 2 p.m. and ad- mlnislerl!d ,firsr aid to Jooeph Carpenter, 36. C"'1M!1ter was ·taken by .ambu)ance :0 San tlemente General Hoopital where he .... admitted. " Spolmomen lor the nursing olfice said today that Ctrpenter's fracture appemd to bl • olllllJle "1JurY llld addod that no ~Ills wu espected. Tbo lnj1lltd worbf'I ~ ~ WU delcribed U aalilflctofy. If' • • • ~. UPI T•""""' SUSPECT~ IN SLAYING OF LAGUNA HfLLS WOMAN, MUSICIAN Poilc• l'r{Momphl1 C1ptured Threo Mon After Motol Shootout Corps~ of Woman Kept As '!Parf of Family' y • CONCORD, NJ" (AP) -· '11le skeleton of ap elderly woman wu found in a 1oollirk; -todiy' and po11ce· aid it appeared · as If her body bad been Jl!looed In the H.tar nom by a bnJlher yd ---lier to "remain jOri Iii tile family .... 'l'belr · bodies were found upolairs In the bed where ,they died ol natural ca111e1, officials aald. Police sald the skeleton of Cecilia Kenney, 84, was discovered on a downstairs couch facing a television set. They said she may have betn dead as long as a year. Upstairs, police found the bodies of her 76-year-old sister, Grace, lying on a bed next to the brother, Roland, 71. They were thought to have died within the last month, according to officials. Del. Sgt. Bruce Russell said in his report, "It appears that Cecilia died ~~e:!iur~r c=~ai~er°! ~er oo~~ so that she could still remain pa,-t of the lamily. · "Grace and Roatnd continued living a normal life. Roland died. around a month ago, and was asleep in his bed at the tlme. Grace left !Um there, and tried to continue her life, but found sbe eould not. "Sbe lay In the same bed as Roland and died a few days or weeks later." Medical examiner Thomas Mathews said there waS no e't'.idence of foul play. 'Ibe family was reclusive and shunned . contacts with neighbors, authorities said. 'lbe discovery was. made a f t e r neigbbon called the poet office to report mail bad been piling up In front of the house for thrte weeks. Post office olficials notified police, who entered the house through a w-w and discovettd the thr<e bodies, 'l)ong with the bodies of two pets. A neighbor, who declined to be iden- tified, said, "They were very quiet ~ New War Power Law to .Allow New Bombings WASlllNGToN (AP) -Defense Secret&ry Jame.s .R. Schlesinger said lXlday war powers ieglslaUon pOsaed by the Congress may make It possible ,for President Nlxoo to onier n.,. bombing in Indochina tn the event of a new major North VieUlamese ollenaiv~ in Sooth Vietnam. 'rhough' indicating be would lik OJ> pose the ijlta, Schlesinger .Ja\d the State Department is examinlJlg' llJ!ti a posaiblilty. . • The war powers legi•la\iOn he rel'*"ed to would give Nixon tlie authorl~ to aend U.S. forces Into combat ab(oad for., days before con1retslonal authorlzaUoil bad tO be obtained, 1be bill became law over Prtaldeott Nixon's veto this month. - Some Slate Department 1 e g a I specialists apJ)ll'ellll.y belle•• that law ~ eorller Jeclalallon barring the ~introcb:tion ol any 11.S. lorcu, fn. cludlrlc 1111 bomllera Into lndochlna. ' . pie. You never beard a peep out of them •. " A police sergeant said the tw.,..tory Vrctorian house bad not been painted on the outside IOI' about 30 years, and that '10uch ol the ,.no.. paint peeled cilf. • "But inside it "Was very neat," he said. ..It bad old furnishings and a wood stove. They weren't poor. They had a car parked in the garage." "There · was a bag of groceries on the kitchen table, so they didn't starve to death," the sergeant said. Metal Craftsman Joseph F. Car'ter Dies in San Juan Joseph Frank William Carter, a 46- year-old coppersmith from San Juan Capistrano, died Wednesday at Mission Community Hoapital . Mr. Carter, an 18-year resident of the Capistrano Bay area, had been a craftsman for many years for Gregorian Copper in San Clemente. He lived with bis family at 32142 Alipaz St. He leaves his widow, Bertha G. Carter; a son, Thomas Ray Powell; a daughter, Lisa Ann Powell; bis mother, Gretchen Carter oI Tampa Fla.; two brothers, PauJ Carter of San Juan and John Carter of Hermosa Beach, and two sisters, Marie Linden of Florida and J~ Eaton of Big Bear Lake. Rosary will he recited at 7:30 o'clock tonight and Requiem Mass will be celebrited ·at a a.m. Saturday. Both services1 will be in. Serra Qiapel of Oki Mlssion San' Juan Clpistrano. Burial will follow In Alcen!im Cemetery, El Toro. Lesneski Mortuary In S a n Clemente· · in charge of arrangements. , Oraal(e C:.ut • • Weather Those bigb clouds will thicken tonight with light rain likely by mid-day Saturday. Cooler temper- aturea with highs in both ireas in the mi~ dipping to the mid-IOI ovemighL INSIDE TODAY "The Nutcracker,"' a. favori~ Christnw:s Ballet, is being pre· .!ented by two Orange Coast ballet "roups. See' in.fo rmatUni in today's Weekendu. ' • t I .. Y· SC DUCK ABDJJCTED IN BIRl't11NGHAM BIRMINGllAM, Ala . (A P) -ileulah Burell told police that due~ rustlers st ruck the pond tn her front yard and made off with her pet duck, whlch she valued at $100. A police reporl deacrlbed the mi•ing •duck as "large and white." Sgt . Ollie Vance of th e Crimes Against Property Bureau had this comment, "Considering the fMcl lhat the duck dlsap1>eared the day before Thanksgiv· ing, chances of apprehending !he thief or of rerovcrlnK the duck appear to be very, very slim." . Fuel Shortage . ~Under Study , By Schools Discussion. of bus a n d heating fuel shortages between specific school chlefs and State Superintendent WU.son Riles today is only one in a series of study sessions, Riles' press secretary aid. No one district was e x c l u d e d purposefully from the meeting in Sacramento, Win Griffith said. Rather, the 12 invited, including Los Angele City School District, were meant to be a representative sampling. "We're not going to sit down and at 11 :55 a.m. come up with a 12-point plan to keep the· kids wann and the buses running," Griffin said late Thurs· day. Instead, the meeting -by no means the last -is intended to "get the State Department of Education .in the position so it can offer advice to loca1 districts," he said. Riles plans on more such "ex· ploratory" meetings in upco~ing w~ks , afer which a report of the best ideas and alternatives" for meeting lhe energy shortages will be prepared, Griffin said. The State Department Of Education plans to include any information on the future of fuel supplies it can gather from federal sourcees. No Orange County school districts were invited to today's meeting. Three newly -unified districts in the county -Irvine. Sadd1eback Valley and Tustin -have an unusual bus fuel problem. Allocations are based on how nwch fuel was used at the same time last year . when , technically, the three districts didn't exist. . They have petitioned state and federal legislators for help in remedying the situation. 'Pioneer' Faces Radiation Death .. ; MOUNTAIN VIEW (UP!) -If Pioneer : Jo meets a sudden radiation death on : ihe way to its ~1onday encounter with ; the planet Jupiter, the spacecraft still : Will have discovered much about man's • jlossible flight to the outer solar syste~. Pioneer's findings reported Thursday about Jupiter's magnetic field came on . top of a list of discoveries during the .. nu clear-powered vehicle's 21-month trip. Pioneer is less than 2.5 million miles : from Jupiter, and moving at 26,200 miles .: an hour. Late today, its speed will : begin to be escalated by Jupiter's gravi- -ty. and late fo.1onday it will hit 81 ,000 rniles an hour \Vhen it mak es its closest approach. Plane Bomb Threat ST. LOUIS (UP I\ -Some 86 passengers were taken off a Frontier Airlines plan headed for Las Vegas. Nev. Thursd ay whe n the airline received v.•ord that a bomb was in a piece of . luggage aboard . No bomb y,·as found in a search by police and security personnel. O•ANll COAST K DAILY PILOT -. 1'M Or ..... Cot11t DAILY PILOT, wllfl ,.~ldl If cy:ionbl"41d It•• H.-i.PrMl, h l'Ublhlltd by .,,. 0rMO• CO.•! PwbU1Jll119 (OmSNnY. $e!N r•lt edllloN 1r1 P\lllllt,,ld, Mondty 111""1g,, Fri;.)''. fer Cotl1 M111, 1"t•PO•I llndl, H1111t/11910n lltKl'l/Fo11ru11r1 Vtl!ey, LIOll'la a.ell, ll'YIM/kdd!tNcll 1roit $1n C~tt/ SM! Jll.ll'I C.pl•lr-. A 11...,11 ~loNI •r11on i. ptll!Hlhecl .. ,......,,,., 1n11 Sund•-,.. fJM prlM: .... I -'lflllnl plent It 11 YD W..1 .. ., 11,...i, eo.i. M-. ~llfoml1, t2f.)I . .· . :· • • ' ' - • . • • ' • • . • • • • • • ., • ~olNrt H. Weed '°'"llNfll lfMI PUD!lthtr J•ck A. C1rl.., \l'lq ,.,.ldMI .... r..-11 ......... Th'"''' K1e¥il ·-l'NM•• A. M111rplHn1 MIMtlrll 1411W C~•tl11 H. L..1 Aldt•rcf '· Nill """""" MeMtlftt 14ntn s-c1 ..... Offkre JOI N•rltl El C1Mht• lt1•I, t2672 --"''' MeM1 Ja W-1 a.y IWtel ~ lwcft1 »ZI .. ..,..,.. ..... ~,. ........... '-di( ll'WS e-11 11\flrllM L..-l..ctt: .. ,..,..., ,._ .,..., •• ,. 17t4t '4J-4JJI a-... A.4111111' •• , '42·1•71 S. Cl•••••• Al 1.,1:1m•11 J1I 1t I I 4tl<44H ~-. 1m,' ~ c..i """'""'"" ei-.-1. ... -........ lllllttrtflMJ,, """"'' ,,.,,... .... Mv1rt-.in.11t .,.,.Ill ..., .. 0¥ ··~ Wllfllul ....cit/ Oii" ...... " .,.,. ......... . .... ct. ...... ,.,,, It Ct111 MtM, ~ I a Ill""' w m'""' n.u ~L" .,.. ta.ti ,.....~, ""'"""' .... , ........ ........, . , I , • Frld41, Nowml>tr 30, 1~73 Laqers Argwe Nixon's Estate ' Not Undertaxed SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nix· on's lawyers are preparing to argue that Nixon's San Clemente estote is nol undertaxed, an Orange County of· fictal said. Their case may include a priv4te ap- praisal of the Westem White House property, said Ted 1\1 o r a i t I s , ad· ministrative assistant lo county Supervisor Robert Battin. A COl.lDfy las: appeals board is schedul- ed to hold a preliminary hearing Monday on Battin's request, filed as a private taxpayer, to have the official property tax as.sessment of the land reviewed. Battin, a Democrat, has contended the land is underasscssed at the 1973-74 value of $1.37 million. If that ls so, Battin has said, the owners are not paying tbelr fair share of county prop- erty taxes. MoraiUs said in .a telephone lnterview Thursday that his information came from Frank DeMaFco:: o( the law flnn or Kalmbach·DeMarco, Knapp and Chlll· ingworth. DeMarco declined comment. His secretary .t~ ;.8 .riawfm.an: "Mr. DeMarco isn't talklng ·tO ieiX>rt'ers about these matters." ; Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga confirmed Th1"'5<1ay that a private ap- praisal.of the proper~1s '~ conducted on behalf of 1 the ii~t; ~xon and industrialist Robert Abplanalp. Vallerga said he was not certain of the purpose of the appraisal, but he said it was not tor use at the appeal board hearing. , Still another appr.aisal. ~as been con- ducted by the State" Board of Equaliza· tion under contract lo ·the Orange County supervisors. ResuJts of tne appraisal, which included a. firsthand inspection of the San Clemente estate, have not been made public. Moraitis said it will be up to the five-member board whether the state · appraisal will be disclosed. It has not yet been turned over. by ··the state of- ficials . From Pqe I · POWER • • • energy p~~ion. ,. Catcui~fjitg the average wmter d'ay's consumption at 24,000 megawatt hours, be said the loss amowited to the 2.5-day figure. Allhough the firs! use of the Depart· ment of Defense's commandeering powtrs proved minor to the utll1ty which serves portiOfl!I of the South Coatt, Welti relayed the utility's fears that future actfom by the federal agency could indeed affect the firm's power output in 1974. "We're just not sure if this will happen in the next quarter when the Defense Department might do the same to another of our suppliers," he said. Originally the utility believed it had ironclad contracts for fuel deliveries through the year 1976 from its four oil sources. Those pact.! led spokesmen for SDG and ~ lo proclaim that it enjoyed a remarkably healthy outlook in light or the national crisis. But the recent Union Oil cancellation and drastic proposals now being con- sidered by the California Public Utilities Commmion could end the bllsl at SOG and E. Hearings began late th1s week before the PUC on a share-the-wealth proposal · whereby more fortunate utilities would have to share power with others in the state hard est hit by the fuel crisis. If that move succeeds, SDG and E's fuel might be used to help light homes and industries rar out of the service . area. In the meantime, the utility, like every other one in the nation, has lal.Ulched a conservation program with Jts custo- mers. Welti said that his utility's largest customer is the 11th Naval District, and brass from that entity met Thursday vi"ith utility executives lo begin working out solid plans ror major conservation efforts. Householders as well have been urged to cut back heavily In their use of power. "We sense a strong spirit of coopera- tion from everyone \VC've tlllked to, and judging from the calls our offices arc receiving, household customers are concerned and willing to help,'' he added . 2 Post Offices Open Saturday In South, Coast Two post office branches serving San Oemente and Capistrano Beach wJJI open Saturday for the first time and remain so throughout the Christmas season in an effort to expedite the crush of holiday mail. Pootrnaster Octavio Luna said the 0.1 P.tar windows in San Cletttente and lhe Capistrano Beach branch on Doheny Park Road will open from 3:30 a.m. to noon for the nes:t three Saturdays. Becau,. of the energy problems, Luna said that it ls bnperaUve that cmtomers mail all parcels and cards at the earliest possible time to assure delivery before the holiday. ' Battin had hoped to have the state appraisal in hand before Monday 's scheduled hearing. He may uk the board to postpone the .... 1oa for two w..U, Moraitis sOld. He added, "No maUor what the ttate apprai sal says, we're going to insist on a rull bearing. There are too many presumptions from various toUtCeS that indicate the property II unde!'asaessod." One indlcatlon II that the offlclal assessment of full martet value of $1.37 million l.s less than the $1.5 million purchase price paid for the property in 1969, Moraitis said. Another c:on- sideraUon is federally financed im- provemenls to the estate 1 la c e then, he said. Vallerga has defended the $1.37 million figure as fair. Improvements such as presidential security ahouJd not be con- sidered as enhancing the value of the property since ownership of those facilities will remain in federal hands, he said. De Marco is a partner of Herbert Kalmbach, who formerly senred aa Nix· on 's private lawyer and who handled the disposition of cootroversial Nixon campaign funds In 1972. Frot11 P .. el PRESIDENT. • • of independent notary records leave only the personal assertion by l\fr. Nixon's lawyers to establish that lhe President deeded the papers to the archives before July 25, 1969, when Congress cut off generous tax deduc:tiom for such gifts." The President admitted ln a public news conferen~e that he paid little in- come tax in 1970 and 1971 because of the deduction allowed by the donation of the papers. Sullivan was eipected to take an in· creasingly dominant role in directing the President's courtroom campaign and Ziegler added that former Treasury Undersecretary H. <l>apman Rooe of Cleveland and Philadelphia attorn<y Kenneth W. Gemmill have volunteered to help slrengthen the President's legal team. * * * Federal Probe Of .. Nixon Gift Sought by Solon WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. Edward Mezvinsky (!>-Iowa) asked the bead of the General Services AdminJJtratlon (GSA) Friday for amwers to a llst of questions about President Nixon's 1969 gift or viCe presidential papers to the National Archives. Mezvinsky sent a letter to Arthur Sampson. GSA administrator, asking specifically whether the papers were donated prior to JuJy 25, 1989, the date when the Internal Revenue Service changed its regulations reducing the amount of charitable tas: deductlona for papers. Nixoo reportedly toolt a $510,000 deduc- tion on his income taxes after donating papers Crom his days as vice president to the archives. Mezvins\ty said be also would like to study the papers himself to see "what the public received ln exchange for the President's tax deduction!." "The suspicions surrounding the gift and the taxes have become another festering wound, gnawing at t h e diminish1lig faith in the president," l\1eivinsky said in a floor speech. "Despuite the Operation Candor project, the nagging and unanswered questions seem to intensify almost daily." Transit 'District Coordination Set By Two Groups Orange Cowtty Transit District and the Southern California Rapid Transit District agreed ThlJ!'sday night to make every effort to coordinate each diltrlct't separate rapid transit piaDI. A resolution to thal effect was adopted at a first ever joint meeting o! the two dlstrlcts' board of dlrectora In Anaheim. OCTO Chalnnan Ralph Clark l'<OOltlf complained that the RTO routes outlined In that agency's $8.S bUllon plan did not create a logical traffic flow lnto Orange Colinty from the metropolls. The reaolutlon should now mU:e cer- tain that plans, currenlly belni developed by both agencies,_ will relate to the common transportation ,needl o! both <Ollllll... . . . Clsrk praised the clocumeol opprwed 'lburaday and said It ~ lead to greater c:Ooperotloo between the two large transit dlatrlcts. 'l11e meeting was arranged to uclwlse ldeu between dlrectora and omc!ola of the two •&en· cl es. Both dillr1cts •rt expected to have He added thal even Ihouab the flrat· cluo Items bavt been suggested for mailing beto,. Dec. t5, "It would be even better for CU11tomers to man them earller than that" c:ompleted 1 PttllmbWY rapid ~car· ridor pion 'by nut · Mlrdl. No . declaim bu -mode by either •• ... whether ran Or bul trlMpCll'll will be emphaslaed. ' • UPI Tel111hoto MONORAIL-EQUIPPED tANDING CRAFT TO BE LAUNCHED Marines to Get Latest in Ame rlcan Know-How, Technology ------------ From Pagel Modern Assault Vessel 3 SUSPECTS • • • dead woman had gone to Nashville to vlsli her Son, who is in the Anny at Fort Campbell, Ky., relatives said. ttfrs. Hazelwood recently moved to her Laguna Hills home. \Vhere she plan- ned to live with her son. Her husband , a former Army officer, was also a country music writer and friends \Vith many big stars of the music world. Launching Set Saturd~y She will be burled beside her husband in Arlington National Cemetery this lli'eetend, relatives said. The murder of Widener was the second fatal shooting of a country music en- tertainer in recent weeks. David "String- bean" Akeman and his wife were found shot . to death on their farm near Nashville Nov. 11. Police say there is probably no connection. Yorty Dealings Eyed LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A cily council committee Thursday told former 1.fayor Sam Yorty be must produce records of his dealings in the Occidental oil drilling case or face a subpoena for them. The governmental efficiency com· mlttee .is investigating dealings between the city ,and the Occldental Oil Corp. by whlch Occidental oblained an oil drilling site in P~cific Palisades. WASHING'l'ON (UPl i° -'A new kind of Marine a,;au!t 'ship, complete y,•ith a monorail train operating inside and a 78-foot back door opening into the sea, will be launched Saturday. The ship, to be called the Tarawa , is the first of five planned LHA's - a new class or vessel combining four different types or ships now used when the Marines go ashore in an amphibious assault. On the Tarawa the P.iarines will board landing boats insk1e the "mother ship. . When the landing time is at hand. the Interior of the Tawara will be flooded , the 78-foot wide backdoor will open and the landing craft will sail out onto sea and up to the bea ches. The Tara9.·a Y..'.ill~ be. as hlrge as the largest World \Var II carriers and. at 39,300 tons, .. ..-ill be th e .second biggest class of warship ip the world today. In a departure from past designs. Marines about to hit the beaches v..·ill be separated from the casualties being brought back to the Tarawa "in order to ease apprehensions," a manu!ac· turer's brochure says. . The five ship& are being built by Litton Industries at a new shipyard in Pascagoula, l\liss. There have been problems from the very beginning of the ship's contra ct. The General Accounting Office said last summer the Tarawa was two years behind schedule. The GAO said the Navy and Litton "substantially undersetimated the prob- lems" involved in starling a new yard but since its merger with another Litton yard across the river the riew manage- ment begaq to get the problems under control. ~. Inside, the Tarawa looks more like a shop than a ship. Fork lift trucks and conveyor belts shift cargo about. There is even a monorail train to pick up cargo from a wharf and set it down inside the landing craft. · SF Dome Blackened SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The City Hall dome v.ill be blacked out for the ... first time since World War 11 in an effort to asve1 energy. Mayor Joeepb L. ·Alioto said Thursday tumlng off the floodlights would reduce the building's energy consumption by 75 percent. re-holidall sale .. SOf :~~ £:: C ~:';A l ~S ONE WEEK ONLY • DON'T DELAY Get Ready For The Holidays \'/ith A ~~cw Sofa or Chair Here Are Just A Few Examples Of The Many Excellent Values. SOFAS 7• SOFA I' SOFA Mor<Jt Canon Prlot M•t• CGl'10fl ••• fhld/O...,.t Ymtt Pair 5• LOVI SU.TS ..• Royal C-h Gold Ymtt Pair 7' SOFAS •• , Sllerrlll •.• Yellow/Gold 8' SOFA • • • M•t• Canon • . • LlnOft Print G,_ I' SOFA ••• Shrrlll cr-tftt ••• v .. 1tt Rtd/luot CHAIRS ~EG. $440. $770. $6ff. EA. $5'9. EA. $570. $599. hlr CHAIRS Mor<J• C4t100 • , • Yellow or Oroot• Yolnt $17t. EA. Slltlo CHAIR • • • Woodmark • • • Gr"" Siotlo CHAIR .•• Fllotr!dgo ..• TaNralo foathor Polr CHAIRS ••• Royal C-h •• , PIH Yomt $159. $500. $379. EA. SALE '379. '599. •54' 9. IA. '499, IA. 'll89. '499. 5199, IA. 5129. '425. '289. ••• DREXEL-HERITAG6-H~REoON-WOOOMARK-t<ARASlAN \ INTERIORS WtlXDATS & SATUr.OATS t:OO la 5:30 FRIDAY 'TIL t :OO .. 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Bild en11G Bl G1 "::J .. l'"" '"" B•M B'' Bink B1nk '" R'o c " Bal c Basl 81111 ft''' •m BIVI 81•1 .. w .... , BUO BK B-... B•I "' B• Bell Beml • ''"" '"' B•"' B•..C .. ... ""' '" ~" "' " " " •w " , I G ' . , .. 11 A " c '" I• " lt M " " '" 2\L ,,. ... " __ ,,. .,~ "K ... 81111 f"4 . ., '"' •• ..,, ... Today's ' Closing Prices • • • Frfday, NCl'Yfmbrr 30, 1973 SC DAILY PILOT ~ • ' . . NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ' ' \ :\ , Year's High-Low Appear Ev e ry Saturday ieMS 1 '$ , S''· ~'VZEZ Mideast News Depresses Stocks NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks fell sharply Fri· day on the New York Stock Ex.change m moderate radmg. A report of renewed fighting m the Middle a&t led to stepped-up sellmg toward the close. The Dow Jones lndustnal average had dropped 12 94 pornts to 822 17 a few mmules before lhe close The widely followed index was drifting around 8 pomts lower, but selling picked up when Wall Street learned of sonle skirmishes near the Suez Canal between Israeli and Egyptan forces. C!osmg volume totaled about 15,500,000 shares, compared with Thursday's 18,870,000 shares. Trad- ing was fairly slow prior to the news from the Mid- dle Easl I ' ' • • ' • ' • ' \ ' ... ~ . , ~~'-'-'-'-''-"-'~~~~~~~-'-''-"..:.:..''·-"-"'~m_bf_,~30..:.:.,_1_97-'--3 · Governor -Gets Out Longies From Wire Servlcn Utah Gov. COivin Rampton pulled up his pant leg and revealed his O\vtl personal answer to the energy crisis. 1lle governor's order that thennostats in t h e st.ite Capitol be turned down to 68 degrees left many s t a I e employes shivering and curs- ing the chief execullve . But Rampton, undaunted by it all, told a news oonference : ''I'll show you how you can QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Laird Says He Plans .... :r o Re$ign WASHINGTON (UPI) h1elvin R. Laird says he plans la resign as President Nixon's chief domestic adviser arter Rep. Gerald R. Ford gets firol congrtssional approval and assumes the vice presidency. Laird, secrebry of Defense throughout Nixon's first ad- ministration, agreed to lake· his present po,tjlion last spring following the resignation of John D. Ehrllchman and other \Vhlte House aides as a result of lhe Watergate scandal. Questioned Thursday about Hughes Hoax l1viiig~ Wi~l :Gt:t • ' ' Parol,e F e·b.14 .. WASHINGTON iUPl l - The U.S. Parole Board has sent Cli£tord Irving. master- mind or the literary hoax of the centw1. an early Valen- tine's Day card by granting a parote efrective Feb. 14. Irving, 42, was sentenced in June, 1972 to two years and six month! ror defrauding McGraw-Hill with a fake biography of bi 11 1 on air e Howard Hughes. parole June 'lT but the board turned him down when 1t reviewed his case July 30. Irving. who ad mi~ t ed I y wrote the phony Hughes autobiography and sold It to McGraw-Hill for an advance of $765,000, will step through the gates or prison shackled lo a rockpile of an estimated $1 million in debts . • Flournoy Asks Data "On Ji,iner ' ··sACRA~NTO CAP) -The chairman of the State Lands Commission has asked the commission stall to a_ive him a report next month on the status of the Queen Mary, the onetime ocean liner tbat ser\•es as a tourist attraction at Long Beach. u1 would Uke to find out where we are on the Queen Mary," State Co.ntroller Houston 1. Fiournoy, 11 Republican candidate f o r governor, said Thursday. recurring rumors that he was llIS WIFE, Edith. is serving ( ________ _,]· ~-------;...-;....;;;;;.;;.;;.;;::;:;;==:::::;...---' planning to quit. Laird said Ul"I Tt1.-i• a two-year sentence jn a Swiss PEOPLE he thought it would be best VALENTINE GIFT prison for her part in the to leave once Ford becomes hoax. 41Jt may be a very important inter--of!ice memo." vice president. Clifford Irving Irving becanie eligible for THE ISQARD announced itS decision Thursday a f t e r meeting behind closed doors to consider ne\v inforn1ation offered by Irving's attorneys. This was not disclosed. Conversion. or the shi p with the use of tidelunds on funds has been a source of con· lrover.sy for ye11rs between the city or Long Beach and the Lands CO,rrunission a n d Legislature. adapt lo lo"-er temperatures." \Vilh that, he hlkcd his cuff to reveal new Jong underwear. * King llusseln's wire . Alia, is expecting her firs! chlld in f\.fay but already has an infornially adopte;d baby in the palace. according to friends or the royal family. Friends say the baby was an orphan when Alia founci her gravely ill in Amman Hospital and f I e w in specialists from abroad to save the child's life. She is believed to be about 14 months old. Islamic law forbids formal adoption , but the young queen is said to treat the child "just like a daughter." * General f\..fotors President Edward N. Cole broke his own order to keep speeds down to 50 miles an hour, explaining he didn 't \vant to be late for a meeting \Yith ne\vsmen. Cole's t97.i four-door blue cad.iliac D •Elegance was spott.ed on the 1-96 freeway between Detroit and Lansing doing the legal ~ limit of. 70 m.p.h. Gf.f Chairman Richard C. Gerstenberg several weeks ago ordered energy-saving measures ·for the world's largest auto maker. including a directive that company cars not be-driven above 50 rn.p.h. except in an emergency. * President Tito told a group of veteran partisans he would continue at the helm or Yugoslavia as long as he was able. The 81-vear-old Tito '\'al' speaking ·in a Bosnian hill lo\\ll at a ceremony com- memorating the formation or a provisional government of Yugoslav partisans fighting against German occupation forces on Nov. 29, 1943. One partisan at the original ceremony proposed T i to should become president for life. Tito replied: "It is very difficult to be a lifelong presi- dent. He must be active and it is a question of whether a man of my age can continue to satisfy the people. But I pled ge that as long as I am able, I shall continue to lead the country." * Olympic gymnast C a l b y Rigby of Gnrden Gro,1e, n'ill tour the United States. Canada and Mexico as Peter Pan in a new musical production . The 21-year--0ld perlormcr was the youngest member or the U.S. team in the 1968 games and later won medals in ~·orld competition. Injuries dropped her te Ioth place in her category in the 1972 Munich Olympics. NBC Entertainment Corp. said the IDusicaJ \\·ould open Jan. 3 in San Antonio. Tex . KitU Li/re To A.1k Andy ~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~--~~~~--''--~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~- &n mu ~BAPE STAIES 33:A Like Jine wine and good ladies. they iusl get better with age. (little philosophy in with lhe boards this week.) 10 ";,' BAii IXI BOUGH REDWOOD FEICE llUDS ' GUtm ~ ......... 69' lie .... 6 FT .........• 89• . ·.,LEN~~ " ' . Gal'rCUI~ • .UP~ told•rt.11. And. u Dr. Filclil:leck'll rlglit. •• tot a lot ot that w.I sNfl comlnw ddl J'Kt. ' U loT• that 9111'• eali)awlaam,..~·· on Redwood resists rot, weathen nicely. and is easy to work with. Nails go in it rlick as a whialle. even the kids can help nail. Cli11Z111el 7 a•ws.) ; ....1· .. , ' I N~TIWI Slll.11.Tt t.IG- PULL 1HE. TC2.tGGER. ()Ne. t-1.AN c cot-1.-m.01- 0F 01 1...eR.. • REGULATION ' BASntlW. IACUOUD 1797 I Painted. torg•l•d. with th• hoop and neL Dod, with that OT•rhanw J'D• c0talcl stand a llttl• workout too. JOOS MAIVDJ.E 11suuno1 311 50 SQ. FT.BATTS Got any idea how much you 1av1 on fuel il the place is properly inaulated. Ask tbe gas company. Ful·thik. foil backed tiberglau. • 4x5 WALLITE You can save the plaster and the painting with wctl.la ol this aluff. lit comes complete with mouldings. Choice of colo~. ..... , ~\ JOOS MAIVDJ.E IOOFllG SBllGLES 1277 100 FT. SQ. Getting harder to get, but we are holding to selling th• bnt only. 15 year guarantee. hea"T mineraJ coat. choioe of colon. WESTED f.O.IOY TOD.ET --~~49'' J.Uetime fired porcelain. WHITE ONLY for Ibis price. Better deaign. TU kids won't have to UN a ladder lo uae th!. one. I , '" .COIBF.D mu PALllCS . 39~. When the aun hits it at the right angle the milled groov~a qive it a real nice texture. Alternate sections with your neighbor and you'll both like it. • 7- ' CEDAR SBAIES ' .. 4. 4 00 ~~'. ' FT. tDAI SHIIGI.ES 39°0 i~ Shakea are thick and hand cul, ahi.ngl ea are leu thick and machine cut. Depends if you want a fat or regular roof. Jonesy. Sure m~d• my little house with the hall moon on !he hill look expensive. ft•~aled ly Popular Demand "W AUPAPERING CLASS" Th• turnout !or th• last one wo11u1>9r. Folll1 I-med how to do II nkely on.d IOTe o bun.die. Cla11 tun.a al,out an hour. ,"30 PM SOUTHGATE Dec. 4, Tu11d1y lA MIRADA Dec. S, Wedtlfslhiy IO"SAW HD~SE.POUIE.~ • ONL'/ 9 t'OUNOS • I, .· ~ICRo CHISEL ' ' \ ,. ••• ~ .... JOOS .llAIVDJ.E .90 LI IOU IDOFll.G 4 ?o?ns 100 SQ. n. HeayY mineral coat, colors. sure. Adding on, doing a patio cover. doinq a litO• hideaway out in the deserl, thia is: for you. numwm U'n·SIPBOI llllCOCI 2'7 Very positive aliutoft oo sq\leaL no drip, no water I01L Adjuslable for tank capacity. Easy to install ri9ht wber• the old one came oul I I CM.A~,._.~ ,. ' • ~· . ' , ·'o ~ ' ' ' ·~I •• " '• , ·' ' • • .. ' ,. ' . ' oc O:> co 00 00 J 12xl2 CJ.Eb DIDI mE 44~. With this atuff you can make a amall room look much bigger. AdcU a lot of cloas. A snap to lay with the super stick tabs. and no meN either. • UllSTBOIG CEOJIG TltE Plain ......• 11' ~: Perforated ... 13 C ~: ' • You HO, th• perforated 1tuff COiis more laca U1e they qol all thn• 9uy1 with old qolf abon walking all over the plain alufl (You really belie" that. Alice>?) I I I l ' I I I I I hair a c I :i •' I on I vi the by I !or to to ot pl ei " B " 0 a } • '· r Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks . .VOL. 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 TEN CENTS . ., to a Policenaon~ Sag Explorers, By JACK CHAPPEU. Of ... Dllit1 ,.._. Slaff 'lbe young lady with the loog black hair and big smile might have been a cheerleader, but she wasn't. She step- ped into the intersection past the wreck- ed cars and waved t.he gawking motorists on \Vhile behind her, pollceg>.en dealt "'Ith the injured. . 'IWo high school students hopped out of the police jeep, walked around the vacaJ)t house and looked carefully for any signs of fo\\i.i enlry.>,Spottlng a slashed screen, tbe~dloed !or a police unlt. ln both instances, the young men and women are Laguna Beach Police Ex- plorers. Scouts these days do a lot more than helping Uttle old dadies across the street. Sea Explorers and· Search and Rescue Explorer groupe are wen.known scouting activities. \~ ~·, Lesser knowri -,.lhe;<otlier explorer ~ t . activities such as Police Explorers, In- dian Dancing Explorers, Chime Ringer Explorers and many others. In Laguna Beach, the police depart- ment has an active Police Explorer post. . They ride with on-duty patrolmen , learn investigative techniques .. assist the department with records "bureau work. help at accident scenes by directing traffic and setting flare patterns, and conduct checks oC Muses whose vaca- tioning residents have asked for a speeial lookout. The post adviser is Police Sgt. Norm Babcock. Assistant advisor is Detective Ca rlene Ambrose, juvenile officer. Age range for the explorer program is 15 to 21 years or age. High school freshmen are also eligible even if under 15. Two Police Explorers, Maile MccMur- ray, 17, and Kirk Oberholtzer, 17, said they got into the police department pro- (See LAGUNA'S, Page 2) Nixon's ' Archive Gift • Tax Write-off Pr·ohed EPA Ruling Under Fire In .Laguna Laguna Beach ,.1ayor Roy Holm has charged before lhe Chamb« .of Com- m~ that parking tu regulations pr .. Jiooed by the federal Eo>irorunental Prot<ctloo Acf!tlC'/ (EPA) ore unfair, counlel'pl'DdUctlve and lmi-!ble to ad- -· (Rela!'l'\ lltory, Page 5.) ..,,,. -lo grul, lldt they mud be "" tbere In ... 1...,. -90nleWhere,'' Mayor .ffolm sald, ad- dres.<iing Chamber directors. Chamher directors quickly voted Tueo- day to express opposition to lhe pr_.i parking surcharges and to urge all olher communlty group! and lndlviduall to do likewise. The EPA's regulalioos arc designed to discourage individual vehicle use by economic pressures. By reducing the numbers of vehicles on the road!:, the air quality of the basins designated by the agency would improve. Orange County is in the same air basin a.s Los Angeles. Economic structures suggested by the EPA include a !kent hourly surtbarge m metered spaces and commeh::i.al garages Imposed by July 1, 1!!76' and for cities under 100,000 'petpUlation in- creasing to 25 cents by July 1976. Commercial parking such .as that pro- vided at shopping centers would cost the merchant providing It $450 annually by July I, 1976. . In addition, EPA regulatiODI wou ld force employers in certain categories to pay' for employe use of mass transportation, give prtferred parking to car pool employes apd charge for other empk>ye parking. Mayor Holm said the proposals ap. plying to employers, Wl\lch includes cities v.-i>uld be impossible to adminiiter. He ' said it would play havoc with the city's tourist industry a.!ld placed one more stumblin~ block in the <:?n- sideration of build111g a city parking .stlucture system. Chamber reaction was quick. ••Just on the face of it, it appears monstrous," said Director Cy Nugent. The board voted to expreS! ill op. position to the plan in a letter to t~ EPA regional admlniltrator. A pubhc hearing on the propooed parking regula- tloos will be held Dec. 11 In addition to writing directly to the EPA, the board sugge1ted citizens write to legislators and expre911 opposition. C«nrnunlcatlons may be sent to: "EPA Regional Administrator, 1 O O California St., San i:-ranclsco, CA, 94111." * * * Shoe Sole Shortage Faces U.S. Hoofers 'ii 11te obvious answer to gaaoline ra· llooing and shortages ii !or people .to wait more. But, Laguna Beacb -store owner Bill Axllne_J!l!inled out one problem with that -a ilioO 10lif ililffilge. Milne said because of the oil ahortage, pelroleum-ba!ed chemical ooleo -111 moot 9hocs -Me In short supply. Big Reward Offered . SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'l'be Pacific Gu lk Electric Co. ottered a U,000 reward for arTelt and · conviction of whoever blew Up I power IUbltetlon at CUpertino Tuelday. Dlllr Pilot Sllfl ,.,..,0 Brief Encounter ' Laguna Beach's Winifred Poster, 5, ..end her dad, Mark, met this friendly fellow in a red suit with a long white beard while strolling. 'tbursday near the Balboa Pavilion in Ne\vport B~ach. Winifrd rec- ognized him immediately. Corpse of Woman Kept As 'Part of F aniily' CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -'lbe skeleton of an elderly woman was found in a IQl'ked·up. bouse today, and police . 'i&id It appeared as U her body ha~ been n l • I placed In the livlng ·lwm by a brother and sister who wanted her to "remain part of the family ." Their bodies were. found upstairs in the bed where they died or natural causes, officials said. Police said the skeleton of Cecilia KenneY, 84, was discovered on a downstairs couch facing a television set. They said she may have been dead as loilg as a year. Upstairs1 police round the bodies of her 76-year~ld sister, Grace, lying un a bed next to the brother , Roland, 72. Brown Jr. Sets Study >Of Papers By L. PETER KRIEG Of 1M o.&ll'( Pilot Sl1ff California Secretary of State Edmwid G. Brown, Jr. today will be 'called on to determine if President Nixon"s personal lawyers violated notary laws when they ~Nix..\!• P! .. Preliid"l· tial papcr11, as a gl!! lb tie National :Archives . 'lbe Pnilident claimed a $510,090 tax deduction for the gift in 1969, just berore federal legislation was enacted that cut off tax deduciions for such gifts. The St. Louis Post Dispatch charged Thursday the presidential lawyer Frank DeMarco of Los Angeles, partner of Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, failed to properly reCord the notari1.ation of the girt. DeMarco toda y claimed he did not violate the law because he kept copies of all the documents. "All that the law requires is that the notary keep a record of documents notari.7.ed by him," Demarco said. "It does not necessarily have .to be in tabular form in a book. Maintaining copies of documents constitutes a record. Our office has copies of all documents notarized ," he said. Attorneys for the California Secretary of . State's office weren 't sure exactly what the law requires, or so they said. "I will talk to the secretary of state today," said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's office. He told the Daily Pilot, "This involves · an interpetation of the statutes. We h11ve not been called· upon before to make that interpetation." The law states: ··A notary public shall keep a record of all official acts done by him and a record of parties lo, date and character of every instrument acknowledged or approved by him." l\1os t notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all required information. But the St. Louis Post Dispatch claim· ed DeMarco admittl'd to them that !le had not kept proper records because they weren 't in a journal. DeMarco drew the del'd of Nixon's gilt of his personal papers lo the National Archives. The newspaper claims "the absence or independent nota ry records leave only the personal as:sertion by Mr. Ni.ion's lawyers lo establish that the President deedl'd the papers to the archives before July 25, 1969,~hcn Congress cut off &enerous tax decIDctions·for such gifts~" Three ,,en Held In La guna Hills Woman's Slaying They were thought to have died within El.de l G , the last month, acomling to omcials. r y . iven \Police in Memphis,· Tenn.,· are· ques.-Det. • s.~t. Bruce Russell sa~. in ~is tiqnlng three men _ captui:cd alter • report, II appears that c.ectha died • B p • C t a 'shootout-about the murder of Mildred of natural causes . and the other two US rice U • Haelwood of Laguoa Hills and .country dres!ed ~er a!!d laid her oo the ccuch • aM western guitarist Jamea P. Widener 90 ttiat ~e could still remam part Bus fares for senior citizens have in-l'jallMlle. of the family. ' been reduced from 25 cents to Mn. Hazelwood. ~24252 Pike Grace lloalnd ccn uoollvlng -:ts centsoy acUon ol the Laguna Road, and w~ m.'!iclan •in Hank · a normal life. Roland died . aro~ a ' Beach ·City C"A>uncU. SnoW's bend . were found' shot to death month ago, alMi ;;was asleep in his bed • A folU'-month--trial program was in> an i.tley Tueacsay night, the apparent at. '\he time. ~rate left him there, and authori1.ed this week by the council. victims of. a robbery. • tr1~ to contJJIUe her .11re, but found Persons 65 years of age or more 'Ibe, three sus~tl; 1 arrested I n , she could not. • may citl1er obtain tbe reduced fare ll{emphll have not bten ldentllled by . "She lay in Ille <ame bed as Roland by prcsontlng • Medicare card It~ poUce, who said a car belonging to and died a few days or weeks tater." t~ driver at the t.ime of boarding; Widener wu found near the motel where Medical examiner Thomas ltlathews or lack:In~ a med1care ca!d, may the three were 111.Yial_.. said the.rt was no evidence of £ou1 play. go to Laguna Beac~ Cit~ Hall The three mtf' 1"tt'e arrested al the The family "81 reclusive aJ!d shl.VU1ed ... where a special pass will be issued. (Set 1. S'USP!t1!, Paa• 11 (Set sr.ELETON, Page 11 /1wz------------' r • ' • Dallr Pllet Sllff Phelt TRY TALKING TO A POLICEMAN; THEY SEE A LOT OF LIFE Laguna Police Explorers Maile McMurray, Kirk Oberholtzer Andrew! Served 15 Years ·Board ch~·irman Resigns At South Co~st Hospital Victor C. Andrews. whose affiliation with South Coast Community Hospital South Laguna has sparmed 15 years. Thursday resigned as chairman of the board . Board members accepted Andrews' resignation with regret and voled unanimously to make him an honorary member and chairman emeritus. No reason was given by hospital of· ficials today for Andrews' sudden resignation. Andrews could not be re~ch- • Plump Housewife Cements Mouth To Stop Eating CARLTON, England (AP) -Roly poly housewife Shirley Turner, jealous of the wolf whistles her bikini-cl8d daughters attract on the beach, has got her teeth into a new slimming diet. She's had surgeons cement her jaws together lo stop her eating. The 35-year-0ld housewife, a hefty 238 pounds, chuckled through clenched teeth and said : "I've lost 15 pounds in two weeks and my teeth will stay locked together until 1'm down to 125 pounds." Al this rate, she won't be able to open her mouth until June. Mrs. Turner's trouble is tbat she's a compulsive eater and nothing could make her stop. So doctors at nearby Nottingham General Hospital decided the only way to get her lo kick the · habit was a cement muzzle. They applied cement to her upper and lower leech and screwed a silver split in the cement on each side of her mouth. ·"It was painful at first, but now it (eels better and the gnawing hunger pangs have gone.'' she muttered. "What really made me decide to have this treatment was that t I o v e fa shionable clothes, but 1 just couldn't get any to fit me.'1 The clincher came last summer when wolf·whlstllng beach boys giving her two teen-age daughters the eye made her feel embarrassed about her bulk. _'1lt was awru1:"Mrs ... ~r groaned. •·r·)tls\ cculdn'l-put my blkil11 \!II :and face i.t:., .. · . ' , "But if lhls trealmen( WO?b, 1·n be wearing a bikini ~nd 'tnictisklrls next summer. licing fat Is tefriblc." She cail't open.ht:r niouth tt !\II, •iJ•m living entirely' on tea, coffee and. tomato lbup Splced with plenty 4 o! sail, pepper and vinegar." t>oc:tors keep a close check oo Mrs. 1\irner because mechanical loct}aw isn 't (See LOCKJAW, Page II ,f. ed for comment. Tristan E. G. Krogius, president or the hospital, praised Andrews for his many contributions to the hospital. "The hospital and the community o~ .' an enormous debt of gratitude to Mr. Andrews," said Krogius. "He un- doubtedly has devoted more time and effort to our hospital than any other · single individual. "He played the major role in organiz- ing and raising ·money · for the hospital at the outset. "As president during the planning and construction stages, he brought th.esJ! two tasks to a successful conclusion , and was the drivin g force behind two successive expansion programs which have created th e fine institution we have today , representing an inves tment· of more than $15 million. '1We regret Mr. Andrews' decision to withdraw from active participation ,in the affairs or the hospital. But we are assured of hts continued interest in the organization. and we are c&fident he will be available for counsel and advice if called upon," Krogius said. I Andrews was president of the hospital.. from its opening in 1959 to January of this year., Since January Andre,q had served as chairman of the hospital's Board of Directors. He was sUCceeded by William I: Mann of Emerald Bay as president. Mann later resigned due to business pressures and was replaced by Krogius. Orange • Weather Those high clouds will thicken tonight with light rain likely by mid-day Saturday. Cooler temper- atures with highs in both areas in the mid-60s dipping to the mid·SOs overnight. INSIDE TODAY r'The Nutcrack.tr,'~ a favorite Chri.stm<J$ Ballet, is tmno pre- sented by two Orange Coast ballet groups. See information in today's, Wee1'ender. ' • . . . . . . • • ' ' ' £ot1ncll Aets Swimming Pool. Gets Big Boost " What's i•• a Name? Laguna Beach's Rick Campbell, a sixth grade teacher at Rea School in Costa l\1esa, has more than his name going for him in current school co ntest to collect Campbell soup labels. He has a lot of hard working students. They've collected more than 500 of 1,000 labels c~lected at Rea so far. Soup company has promised to redeem la- bels with audio-visual equipment which Rea students plan to donate to a school in Michigan they have adopted. FrotnPoge l LAGUNA'S EXPLO~ERS • • • gran1 for essentially the same reasons people choose a career in la\\' en- forcemt!nt -a desire to pcrfonn com· munit y service and excitement. "One of the neatest things is being ·able to help. Just little things like helping ~·a litlle kid who's Jost, make Jt all :worth while," ~1aile, a pert high school senior said. "It's actually helped me a lot with :just plain dealing with people," she :said. ; "When you sec people being booked, •you see how human or inhuman people Zcan be," she added. : Oberholtzer, captain of the post. said ;.he originally got invol\'ed in the progra1n ~just for the fun of ii. but, that a :personal tragedy suddenly Sho\.\'ed him ;.it was more than · just fun . came forv.•arcf"·to offei:: support. One of lhe men · told him that if he ever needed somebody just to talk to. to call any time sven in the v.ree hours of the morning. "If you really need a friend - somebody who knows about life -need somebody to talk to, it's a policeman be<:ause they sure sec a lot of it " Maile said. ' She said the explorer past \Vas "something you can really put yo urself into." i\e\\·comers <ire ahvays \velcome. Oberholtzer said. The next meeling vdll be held at 7 p.m. Dec. 10 at the police dcpartn1ent headquarters. 505 Forest A\'enuc. And . \vhen the explorers aren't v1orking on police matters, what do Lhey do? They go camping together. .. \~1e try to leave police \\-'Ork behind,'' ~Iai!e s.1 id. The Laguna Beach City Council has tak· tn a first step in what may become u combined city, school and citizen effort to raise funds for a new community swimming pool. The present pool at the Laguna Beach 11igh School is unsafe and has been dubbed "the cesspool" by members of the school's aquatic teams, Walter Otto, aquatics coach told the council. .. I don't think the pool is a cesspoaj though," Otto told the council. However. .he said the pool doe~ not meet recreation and safety standards. Mayor Roy Holm supported the student's characterization. "l frankly don't go swimming in the pool during the summer because it's either over chlorinated or goopy . "l agree with the kids even if you don't. 1 think it's a cesspool ," the mayor said. The city recreation program includes use of the pool for swimming and diving lessons dµring the summer. The poOI was first built in 1956 with funds raised through a community-wide program . Otto said two steps could be token to improve the faci lity, both costing between $200,000 and $300.000. He said the school district has land avai lable near 'Thurston Intermediate School "'here a modern, new fa cilit y could be built from scratch. Another option would be to dig out the old pool and put in a new one. While both would cost about the same. the first option would enable the present pool to be upgraded and used for less intensive activities, Otto said. One problem with the pool is that it is sinking on the shallow end. This means the pool does not skim hair and other floating matter from the top of the water properly and it just stays on the pool rather than being filtered out, Otto said. The school district has authorized an Frotn Page l SKELETON. • • contacts wilh neighbors, authorities said. The discovery. was made a f t e r neighbors called the post office to report mail had been piling up in front of the house for three weeks. Post office officials notified police, who entered the house through a window and discovered the three bodies, along with the bodies of two pets. 1 A ~ighbor, who declined to be Iden- tified, said, "They were very quiet peo- ple. You never heard a peep out of them." A police sergeant said the two-story Victorian house had not been t>ainted on the outside for about 30 years, and that much of the yellow paint peeled off. "But inside it was very neat," he said. "It had old furnishings and a wood' stove. They u•eren't poor. They had a car parked in the garage." "There was a bag of groceries on the kitchen table, so they didn't starve to death," the sergeant said. :: A high school senior also, Oberholtzer ~ V.'as invol\·ed in a traffic accident in "Which one of the passengers in his ··dune buggy "·as fatally injured. : He said the officers of the department " , Saddleback College Board • From Page.I ;LOCl(JAW ... Okays lnsu1~ance P!ogram : the easiest way to lose weight. " ''It could be done only under strict supervision," a medical expert said. The Guinness Book of Records lists ~the longest fast of this kind as 382 . tla ys. Jt was n1ade by a 33-year-old Scot named Angus Barbieri who kept his mouth shut to sl im down from a gargantuan 462 i:\unds tG a slim 168 eight year's ago. ~ l~e did it by sipping tea . coffee, soda \\'a ter and water wit h \'ilam ins in a Dundee hos pital. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT By JAN \VORTll 01 1111 011fy Pllol Stiff Saddleback College trustees appro ved a ne\v health life insurance program Thursday ght for them selves and district e lo s which will cost tax· payers $5 . r person per month . The p , for, $36 ,000 li!e insurance from l'i Life and health and dental expc s with a lifetime limit of $300.000. fr Blue Shield, is $16 per month g er than a previous plan. rustees had to decide on a new gram when the previous insu rer, Republic National Life, announced it \vas cancelling the school's coverage 0£'C. l . r~ o"l>O• eoA" o.1.1Lv PILOT, w'"' wtiicn Republic officials said Saddleback I• coonb'""' tn• N••1 p,,11, 1, _,1911..i b claims were running at an unprofitable ' i ' .- "'' 0•1r1111 c~a" P.m11,h1"9 c~mlM"Y. 149 percent. They also said for trustees ~11• eoii1on, ••• wb11•~f!CI. 1.10.,,,•v 1~ to be receiving life insurance was con- F•kl1y, lot Co1·~ M••~. ,..,Wf'Or! •t~. Hu"11ngton B•oleh'"o•mMln viiitv. aii-sidered a legal "gray :irca" by the B.act>. 1rv1ntl510<11•t.ot~ """ san '•"""'" company's contracts division. s1" Ju•n rar!•uano 11 11n; 'f!9'o""' The new insuring eompany wa s \\'illi ng ..in1on 1• pu11i.v..., s11u<0•" """ Svnc1•r1. to provide life iruJurance for trustees. Tne prfndpol llUllll•nln; ~l•n• II ao uo Wei t "-Bor 5,, .. ,, eo.11 Mn.i. 0 1,10,n,1, •HM ~,·era] other school distri cts in Orange Coun ty also provide life insurance for Robert N. W11d Pr111d1111 1n11 P..01;,,,.1 trustees and most offer them health Jeck It Curler plans as \\1ell . Vic' "'"kl"'' •rid Gmer.1 Mine;• , The life insurance costs 34 cents per Tho'":;1.!••~il thousand dollars of the employt's salary. Tho"'•• A. Murphine In the case of. the trustees, who are .v..,...1ri1 l!d11ot not paid, the figllre it !fased on the Ch1rl11 H. Lo111 Rlch1rd P. N•ll average safary of a school superin· AA111t1n1 Nl•MV'"9 Edltw• tendent. u, ....... OPfke .,.__ Donna he 222 for•it A'''""' ,.,..,tee Berry cast t ooly M1 ilint Ad•r•u: P.Q. 101 666, ,2652 no llote against the plan. She said she did not feel trustees""Should receive fringe OtHt ~ benefits at the laxpayers' expense. Col•• Min:~ W•t ••~Strott T ·n 1•~ ~ th Nr.1111•1 a1iic11: u.u Newport .eov._ ... ,. axpayers w1 pay '!Wi.a~ per mon ~":;':;:::.,~:~~~ ~~::,, W~m':"R:' total to insure the seven trustees under the new plan. Tll.,.•u f7141 MJ-4221 CIMlflM ..... ,., .. '42·1671 ....... a..c.. All D111•1I_,. .. , T ......... 4f4-t4'6 tlrl•""'· 1'71. Ot-•nt• CO.ti ~tt11""5 ~. Nf -. •11t... tr1Wlr1t11M, .. i.w .. 1 1n11ttr °" ldvtrthtmenh ll«tln lftf¥ .. ~ .. ~ ...... , ""' .,..... ot c..,,-iellt o-, '°""' tins -· ....... '-'' w ... c.11....,,,, lllblaW!lo!I " Uffltt 12 ... l'IM1Mt-1 w m111 u.11 "*'"'"'' m1ut...., "'""'""'"' u" "'°"""!¥. I I SF Do SAN FRAN<t500 ~-\l'J. '-The City Hall dome will'be ~aci\ed oul ,lor the lirsl time sinei Wotld 'Wir' I In an effort. to asve~ energy . MafOr. Jotepb L. Alioto said ~llday turnlll& off lbe Oood!Jghts woul reduce the 'l>llldiog's energy consum1> onDt'I$ j>etCei!L J. L. Blackman , Blue Shield's group manager for school district accounts, pointed out to the board Lhat because of the school's past histo ry of claims, their rates would go up no matter which plan they chose. The trustees also deferred action on appointing a broker to handle the Blue Shield coverage. They did not rehire Gerald Mack, president of the Sad- dleback Insurance Association, to do the job. Trustee Patrtck Backus said he believ· ed Mack shou1d have kept the board better apprised of Repu~s dlssattsfac- tion with lhe claim rate at Saddleback. "ll there were things that were illegal about our previous policy it was your fault not mine," Backus told Mack. "I'm very irritated and I question the lack of rommunication or our agents in this. tlting," he said. Republic representatives said they lost $50,000 last year from Saddleback Co llege. . ··~epublic made a spectacle of the board ," Trustee Hans Vogel of Tustin said. "But let's get this into perspective. They didn 't lose $50,000 just on the board.'.' The health aod dental plan ill $50 deduc tible over one calendar year. Payments on the base plan, including in-patient hospital care, surgery, and accident expenses, are 100 percent. Payments on the major medical por-- tion of the plan, including routine home and office villt.1, outpatient X·ray Jnd lab work, &nd prescription dnlgs, are 80 percent re-tmbarsed alter the firs! $50. A maternity benefit of $50 for Ille physician and $50 for hospital costs on a normal birth is Included. The Blioe Shield plan was chosen from a field of five. The top lour welt Blue Shield, Blue Croa, Crown Lile, 'and Teledyne • The d<dslon wu m1do followinl a ,.r1., of meetings with three 'boaNI members and a &tall commlU.. lleoded by George oehny. ~I attempt lo jack \Ip the sinking end, but even if the effort is success!ul, the pool does not qualify for some sports activities. Otto said Laguna Beach IBgh School water sports teamS may be barred rrom holding home league ga1nes by the league becatlSe the poor facilities present unlair competiUon to the visiting teams. Safety hazards include a too-shallow deep end to allow diving from the high (3 meter) diving board . and a dangerous decking area, Otto said. Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney, who brought the sad condition or the pool to the council's attention, said that the town's water polo team was highly suc- cessful this year despite the poor con· ditions to which it \Vas subjected. •• .,. ... ' ~ 1 •~ .... The televised championship game • which it \VOn had to be played away from ho tne becpuse of the !XXJr fa cilities in Laguna , she noted. SUSPECTS IN SLAYING OF LAGUNA HILLS WOMAN, MUSICIAN - Police in lf'\tmphfli C1ptured Three Men After Motel Shootout ' . . . l District Attorney Cuts .) Last Link With Leary By TO~t BAR LEY 01 t11t C.ily Pllol $1~11 A Leary·\\'eary District Atlomey Cecil Hicks cut Orange County 's last link with the imprisoned LSD cultist Thurs· day by dropping charges contained in the "Brotherhood of Eternal Love" Grand Jury indictment against Dr. Timothy Leary. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent, the jurist whose courtroom has been assigned to all "Brotherhood" cases in the past year, granted the motion made by Chief Deputy Distri~t Attorney James Enright. "We just don't want hlm back here using us as a plaUorm for his crackpot beliefs," Enright commented. "In any event, it seems certain he's going to be busy for a long time to come serving his state and federal sentences. n I ·- Dr. Leary, 50, was transferred to the state's mi.nimwn security facility at Vacaville this week after earlier in- carceration at Folsom Prison. Leary went to Folsom earlier this year to resume serving the sentence of one to 10 years he drew in Orange Coqnty for ~ion of marijuana in . Laguna Beacht otf ' 1 l That confiriement was interrupted when he escaped from the San Luis ' Obispo !\ten's Colony and embarked on a globetrotting tour before being recap- tured in Afghanistan and shipped back to the United States. 11e was serving hls sentence on charges initially filed in Laguna when he was named as one of some 50 defendants in the Grand Jury's indictmeot of the "Brotherhood" cult. Enright oommented Thursday that Leary faces an additional Mate prtson term of six months to five years on escape charges after he completes hls drug coovictlon. "I am delighted to note that after that the high priest of the acid culture will be transferred to a federal facility to possibly serve his federal conviction,'' Enright said . The burly prosecutor said Leary drew a l~year sentence three years ago ln Laredo, Texas, after being convicted of possession of marijuana. Investigators worklog the Leary cue said Thursday that Brilisb llOcialile Joan- na Harcourt.sm.Ith appears to have aban- dooed what she said would be her "eternal vigil'' near wherever Leery was to be confined. Sbe returned wtlh , Iµry. fr~ m Afghanistan after the oouple bad spent several montm together in a tour of Near East nations. Fron1 Pa11e 1 3 SUSPECTS • • • ,. ' .< > motel in southwest r-.temphis '111.ur3d ay nigh t by homicide detectives searching for a man who attempted to buy airline tickets with a credit card belonging to Widener. The card had been blacklisted and when the computer rejected it at the hotel ticket counter, the man fled and police were called. Police said two of the three n1en were tricked into walking to the motel office wh~re they were arrested. The t:ilrd man stayed In a room and e1· changed about 20 t hots with officers before crawling out the door after a barrage of teargas was fired. Police said five weapons were con· r;sca~ in the room shared by the men. A taxi driver said he took the three men to the mo tel from a spot in downtown Memphis near where \\'idener's ca r was found . ~1rs. Hazelwood and her husband, who died 10 months ago of cancer, had been longtime friends or Widener. The dead woman had gone. to Nashville to visit her sen. who is in the Army at Fort Cam~bell, Ky., relaUves said. Mrs. Hazelwood recently moved to her Laguna Hills home. where ahe pim- ned to live with her son. Her husband, a former Anny officer, wu allo a country muslo writer and frleoda with maJll' big &tMt pl Ille mialc world. She will be burled beside her 'husband in Arlington National Cemetery tbls weekend, relatives said. I -holldall sale re • • SOFAS & CHA~RS ONE WEEK ONLY • DON'T DELAY Get R£ady For Tiie Holidays Wilh A New Sofa or Chair Here Are Just A Few Examples Of The Many Exctlllllt Values. SOFAS .... SALj 7' SOFA . • • Mort• c..._ Prlot 8' SOFA ••• M""l• C.... ... lhldl°"""• Ynlot Pair 5' LOY! SEATS ••• loyal C-'o Gold YolYot Pair 7' SOFAS ••• Sltorrll ..• Yellow/Gold 8' SOFA . • Margo Car'°" • • • LIHo l'rlot Gr- I' SOFA • • Sherril Crncoot •.• Vmot lod/ .. st ' CHAIRS Pelr CHAllS M .. • C.-... Y-• 0Note V.mt 510910 CRAii ••• w..-... tm. 510910 CHAil ••• l'llntrfdto ••• Tlfl ;ralo -., ~elr CHAIRS • • • Roycl C-'i • • • PIH YolYot , $440. '379. $170. $6'9. IA. $H9. IA. $110. • $SH. sin. IA. $15'. $500. $17'. IA. 1599. '549, IA. 1499. IA. '489. 1499. 1199. IA. 1129. '425. G'"'89 J • u . DREXEl.-HERITAGl>--HENREOON-WOODMARK-+'RAS'1AN 7tJ 11111 "" ·:·11/i! Ir '" INTERIORS WllXDAYS I SATURDAYS 9:0t le 1:10 FlllDAY 'TIL 9.00 \ NEWPORT IEACH e 1727 WESTCllFf. DI.. '42·2010 I0,•11 S11114•y 12·11101 LAGUNA IEACH e 2tl NORTH ,CO.AST HWY IOpt11 S11itcl1y 12°11101 494·6111 · TORRANCE e 2J'4t HAwtHOINf llYD. J71 -111f • .. " "' - Road Soow in a vtctl Th I T ll "I! I " • j Saddlehaek , T oday's Final N.Y. Stocks 1, VOL 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 TEN CENTS Three Held in Deal!! of Laguna · Hills Woman ' ~ .I Police in ·Memphis, Tenn., are quea-- tiontng three· men -captured alter a abootout--<1bout the murder of Mildred Hazelwood of Laguna !Dlls and country and western guitarist James P. Widener In Naahville. Mem~ have not been identified by hotel Ucket counter, th e man .fled "and...__ three men to the motel from a spot i• police, who said' a car belonging to police were called. · "'il.1 downtown Memphis near where Mrs. Hazelwood, 46, "Of 24252 Pike Road, ·and Widener, a musician in Hank Snow's band, were found shot to death in an alley·Tuesday night, the apparent victims of a robbery. The three suspects arrested i n Widener was found near the motel where Police said two of th e three men Widener's car was found, the three were staying. were tricked into walking to the motel M~elwood and her husband, who 'Ibe three men were arrested at the office where they were arrested. The died .10 ~tbs ago of cancer. had motel In s0uthwe11t Mem·phis Thursday C.lird' man' stayed in a room and ex· been longtilri&:-.!riends of Widener. The night by homicide detectives searching changed about 20 shots with officers. dead woman Md....gone to Nashville to for a man who attempted to buy airline before crawling out the door after a visit her son, who... is in the Anny tickets with a credit card belonging barrage of teargas was fired. at Fort Campbell, Ky .;relatives said. to Widener. Police said five weapons were con-Mrs. Hazelw~ rece'h~ moved to The · card had been blacklisted and fiscated in lhe room shared by the her Laguna Hills home, w~e she plan- wh<n, the computer rejected it at the men. A taxi driver said he took the (See I SUSPE,, Page~ Nixon's Archive Gift \ • Tax .· Write-Off Probed Pinn Shows Bid Delay In Project To""<n Center, the human.scaled com- mercial and residential development near UC Irvine being pl~ by the city for a . year, won't be built unUI 1980 to 1985, the city's general plan suggests. .A dev.lopmenl pilllllng plan unveiled Thursday nllht by WU..y and Hllll, ceneral p I an ClOll!Ultants, ._... a delay in tbe development univenl!J Gi- fidals have sought since 1965. • Base Zlllling planll lot tbe mixed ~'a!l&fl>nent-sb)gle family bomHhopptng cenltt are oo ffie with the city. Hearings are to begin this in December. ' Town Center has been a priority ol. the city and was the first c:ommunity plan to be "'bjoct to numerous public (See TOWN, Pap I) Turtle Rock's Anthony Pla ns Council Run Turtle Rock resident Art Anthony has formally annowiced plans to run for tho Jrioine City Council tn March. Anthony, 43, of 18691 Via Palatino, b1 President Homes, is president of hil community 8380Clalon and beaded the campalgn for the succes!Jlul '50 million school bond issue. . 1be measure drew support of IO per- (!tl)t of the voters in the Irvine Unified , Sdiool District a year ago. The retired Marine corp. pilot and veteran cl more then 100 missioos in Vietnam recently completed h I 1 badlelor's degree al cal State Fullerton, majoring In communications. Anthony said he is running becallOe he feels "the city of lrvil1e needs leadership I can provide." lie sees a need for unity of eflorl 11if we are to make this a beUer city." Oraage • Weadler Tll09e high clouds will thicken tonight with light rain likely by mid-day Saturday. Cooler temper- atures with highs in both areas in the mld-«lo dipping to the mlcl-!08 overnight. UP'I Ttit!ttlOhl GOfng lf,f!llle . . Less· than hf~. Weeks atter his right leg was amputated in a cancer opei:ation, EdWard' Kennedy, Jr., 12, leaves Georgetown University Hospital, esc<irted by his father, Sen. Edward Kennedy. Doctors said aft~r the operation that there is "an excellent chance" the surgery arrested the cancer. She Means It Woman Locks Ja ws to Lose We iglit · . CAllLTON, Englanil (AP) -Roly poly bousewlfe Sltlrley Turner, jealous of the wolf whistles her biklni-elad daughters attract on the beach, has got her teeth Into a n.w slimming diet.· She's had surgeona cement her jaws together to atop her eating. · · it ;eels better and the gnawing hunger pangs have gone," she muttered. "What really made me decide to have this trealment was that 1 1 o v e (See IAJCKJAW, Page ZI Brown Jr. Sets Study Of Papers By L. PETER KRIEG Of the O.Hr Piiot SllH California Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be called on to determine if President ~IXon 's personal lawyers violated notary Jaws when they recorded Nixon's pre-presiden- tial papers ai a gift to Jbe. N~t-1 A"rchives. · ' ' The President claimed a f510~000 tax deduction for the gift in 1969, just before federal legislation was enacted that cut off tax deductions for such gilts. The St. Louis Post Dispatcll charged Thursday the presidential lawyer Frank DeMarco of Los Angeles, partner of Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, failed to properly record the notari?.ation of the gilt. DeMarco today claimed he~d not violate the law because .he kept copies of all the documents. "All that the law rewiires is lhat the notary keep a record of documents notari1.ed by him,'' Demarco said.. "lt does not necessarily have to be ·m-tabiilar ·ronn in a book. Mainlaiiiing copies of documents coostitutes a record. Our office has copies of all documents notarized," he said. . Attorneys for the California Secretary of State's office weren't sure exactly what the law requires, or so they said. .. l will talk to the secretary of state today," said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's office. He told the Daily Pilot, "This involves an interpetation of the statutes. We have bot been called upoo before to make that interpetation." ) • The law states: "A notary public shall keep a record of all official acts done by him and (See PRESIDENT, Page ZI I rvin.e Sc outs To Aid lndia1is Irvine Cub Scout Pack 675 will combine education with good deeds Sunday when they travel to the Morongo l n d i a n Reservation near Banning. _ Cubmaster Ron Jackson, Den Mother Sharon Jackson, both of Culverdale and Bill Baumer, of the Colony will lead the contingent of lll CUbs. A trailer load of food and clothing will be brought to lhe Indians and Scouts will visit an Indian museum as well. ' • • ' j UPI T.....,.,.. SUSPECTS IN SLAYING OF LAGUNA HILLS WOMAN, MUSICIAN l Police in Memphis C1ptured ThrH Men After Motel Shootout 'Corpse of Woman Kept As 'Part of Family' CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -'rile skeleton of an elderly woman was fowld in a lock¢-up h(\.use tod"'-' ~ pollce said it appearid' .. ii &it !>Ody ·fiad "tieto:. placed in the living room by a brother and sis~1· who wanted her to "remain part of the family." Their bodies were found upstairs in the bed where they died of natural causes, officials said. Police said the skeleton of Cecilia Kenney, 84, was discovered on a <lownstalrs couch facing a television set. They said she may have been dead as long as a year. Upstairs, police found the bodies of her 76-year-old sister, Grace, lying un a bed next to the brother, Roland, 72. They were thought to have died within. the last month, according to officials. Del. Sgt. Bnlce.Russell said In his report, "It appears that Cecilia died of natural causes and the other two dressed her and laid her on the couch so · that she could still remain part of the family . "Grace and Roalnd continued living a normal life. Roland died-around a month ago, and was asleep in his bed at the time. Grace left him there, and tried to continue her life, but found she could noL ~ "She lay in the same bed u ·Roland arid died a few days or weeks later." . Medical examiner TbOmas Mathews DUCK ABDUCTED IN BIRMINGHAM BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -Beulah Burell told police that duck rustlers struck the pond in her fri>nt yard and made off with her pet duck, which she valued at $100 . A police report deScribed the mll:liing duck as "large and white." Sgt. Ollie Vance of the Crimes Agaimt Property Bureau had lhis comment, "Considering the fact that the duck disappeared the day before 'lllanksgiv- . ing, chance, or apprehending the lh.ief or of recovering the duck appear to be very, very slim." said there was no evidence of foul play. The family wu reclulive and ablDllld contacta 11"ith .. ..,......, -:lliOI-. The discovery wu made af t er neighbors called the post office to report mail had betn piling up in front of the house for three weeks. Post office officials notified police, who entered the house through a window and discovered the three bodies, along with the bodieJ of two pets. A neighbor, who declined to be iden~ tified, said, .. They were very quiet peo- ple. You never heard a peep out of them." A police sergeant said the two-story Victorian house had not been painted .I on the outside for about 30 years, and that much .oL th• .. yellow __ painLpeeled off. "But inside it was very neat. n be- said. "It had old furnishings and a wood stove. They weren't poor. 'Ibey . had a car parked in the garage." "There was a bag of groceries Gn the kitchen table, so they didn't starie , ~:;:s·:::t . j • Three Irvine i · Boys in Theft Clever police work in matching one tip with other bits ol information led police to arrest three yotmg-boys. from Jrvine's Univenity Park 'lbursday, recovering $1,000 worth of equlpment stolen in an elementary achool burglary. Officer Bob Berg and Detective Beb Lennert were credited with crac~ the recent University Elementary Scbo9J break·in, according to Sgt. Bob Ballinger. He said questioning of a principal suspect led to implication of two others in connection with the school burglary. Assorted pieces or equipment such as tape recorders, stereo equipment and m a s t e r keys to school doors were recovered at the home of one suspect, police said . 'Ibe boys, two 15 and the other tz. face juvenile court hearings on burglary charges, ' • INSm E 'mDAY "The Nutcracker,'" o /aooTite Chrism.a. B.U.t, ii being prt- ,.nted b~ two Orange Coast bolltl group•. Stt infonnation i• todays Wet~r. 'Fhe, ~year-old hq,.wi(e, a hefty. 238 pound$, chuckled through clencbed teeth and said : "l 've l<11t 15 pounds in two weeks and my teeth wlll stay locked lofether until f'm down to 125 pounds." Saddlehack ·Has 'Parasite Image' .. At this rate, she won't be able to open lier mouth unUI June. ' Mrs. Turner'• trouble is lhat she 's k co1npuls!W eater and nothing eoold make her olo!>> .SO doctors at nearby · lloltlnli!am G«lioral -Ital decided lhe oo1Y way to nt her to kick the habit ..... ~ ctmtnl' jftuzzle. 1'lloy aP.i)llecl cement lo her -r and )Qwer leech and acrewed a silver opllt In Ibo ~"'1 on etch side GI her UMMh. • • "ll -poialUI' at !Int, ·but · n0w By JAN WORTH Of .. o.ity '"''°' Stiff The Saddleback Valley faces an urgent need to charlie Crom . a "bedroom com- munity" to a seJ£.sufficient, productive community. I That was 'the message of B a r t Spondlove, filth district county planning commlmlooer, to the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce today. "Right now we are aU parasites obi bare. We u .. hett, bu~ taice our pro- ductivity elsew'bere. Now is the time to start lobbying for local industry," Spendlove said1 He said a· glaring wealmeM in the Valley is in JH'Oviding ancillary services including plumbers, machine shops, auto repair, and air..conditioning repair. "We simply have to leave the valley to get aenice In these artas, 11 he pointed out. • Sllendl°""; fonnerly president of· the Saddlebacf Area Coordinating Counctl, also q,id state intervention in local government 1is oow the· key iuue racing planners and will become more crucial · in the future. 11The grea'test pressltres resulting from state intervention fall on unincorporated areas," Spendlove said. "With 27 cities, Orange Cow!ly has more jlt-c<ntralilat!oo \ban almoot any other county In the nation," he IBld . "Decentralitatlon-poor planning. • And what becomes of local governmtnt .. then?" • • He said that is why he favors propoMJs for an areawkle form of local I0*1>- ment made by the coordinating COliiclt rather than a separate klcal pem1n111t body for each Saddleback Valley ...,. munity. The Mi!sion Viejo Homeowners Association voted this -k to • steps toward 1 mulltclpol advilorT - (See SADDLEBAC1t, Pqo I) · ' • '• ' . . . • ·I _.! UAlll PILO I IS Frld,JJ, Nowmbtr 30,,1973 Disa·ict's Tax Base Emphasized Councilman Henry Quigley wants Irvine's new general plan to pay more · attention to providing a solid ta:.; base for the Irvine Unified School District. "'W~ haven't really consldeied lhls problem and I thinlt we should," Quigley said at Wednesday's meeting ol the Irvine Unilied School Board. :· The issue was raised after Dave King :· and John Rajcic, lhe district's two fLSCal :; plaMers, explained that the district's :: welllh will be steadily -eel unless :· measures are taken to conserve IL :· "U t.rtnds continue," King said, "we :7 could end up aa poor as Garden Grove :: .moots." :: Quigley spoke out JWll-alter King com· ·: plained that the sdlool dlstric'-.wasn't :• getting any tax revenue from the ll"vine Industrial Complex because t b e manufacturing district ls in other school distrlcl!. Quigley acknowledged it is too late to change school boundaries, but said the city council should try to encourage future industrial and co m m er c I a I development within boundaries of the Irvine school district. "I would very much like to cooperate with the school district on this and I 8J11 sure the re5l of the council would too," Quigley said. "It seems the city ought to take a careful look at school boWKlaries to see where we can build something besides houses," the councilman said. At present, Irvine Unified School District has about $16,000 in taxable wealth per student. But lf the district continues to add homes without adding any commercial development, this figure will slip to $9,000 w!t!ili> ten years, King said. Irvine Mayor John Burton has 'asked . the city committee to study ·lhe possibilities for forming an Irvine city school district that would Include all ' commercial develop ment in the city. King said this wtluld be "next to . impossible" bcca~ "the three school ' districts that now have sUtkes in the Irvine Industrial Complex will not be willing to give them up." Frona Page 1 SADDLEBACK • • di fo r Mission Viejo alone. Whether Individual or area-wide, the council would provide input to the county m local issues of traffic and circulation, Jaw enforcement, and parks and recrea· tion. "Anything we can do to avoid more fragmentation will hel!" Spendlove ·asserted. ~ · The blgg,.t headache professional ~ ~Janners ls a lack of overall policy from : 'poltticaj. planners on issues of population • .limits, population mix and housing price ..: )evels and open space. he said. . • "We have not been able to convince ' political planners that 'A·e need an -.verall policy. It's like trying to plan a party when you don't tnow how many people are invited." Soendlove also c r i l i c i z e d en- virOnmentalist.s who believe that limiting 8el'Vices llke sewa&e facilities, water supply, and roads will limit how many people come to an area . ''That won't stop people from coming. • It's better to decide how many people · · we should hav e first and then plan :.' ;for the services needed to provide for ' :·.them," he said. ,. .. "· .. .. 4-day School Week? SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The chair· man of the Assembly Education Committee Thursday proposed legislation to cut the public school week from five to four days to help ease the energy crunch. "You can't meet a crisis without ae<:epting major changes," Assemblyman Leroy F. Greene (0. Sacramento), said. OUNel COAST IS DAILY PILOT TIM Or1nue Col•! DAILY PILOT, wfl!l wllldl It comllln_.j ftlt N.-ws·Prn1, 1, P\fblltl't4id by lfll Df"lllQ'e CO.ti PllttllthlnO ComP9n¥. s.p.. r.te edlliont 1,-. l!Wiltked. Mond1w It!~ f"rld1y, lor CO.ti Mn1. Nwwperl le•d!. H11ntt,.ton l~hll<ount11n Y•ll•w, lt011N1 hid!, l"'IMlleddltMdl. -.Id Sin Clt'""1141/ Sin J\1#1 C1111.it1no, A •1111111 Alllonal edl!ll!! 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'"""'*· ' Yule Synabol Deco1·ated 0:.111' Pllol STiii Photo • Mission Viejo's community Ch ri st1nas tree is decorated by ~like Roney. It is sprayed with styrofoan1 to sin1ulate snow. Li ghts on the tree at Chrisanta and La Paz Road will be turned on at 6 p.111. Sun- day for the "First Night of Christmas" celebration. Santa Claus is to arrive and both a Marine Corps band and the ~fission \1iejo High UCI Building. Outlined ' $43 Million in Construction Now in Works uc Irvine wUI complete 143 mUUon worth of con.'ltruetlon on campus between now and 1976, Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich said Thursday. The !owxl.ing chancellor of the Irvine campus told an Orange County Chamber Frottt Page l • TOWN ... planning discussions with the Irvine Company. Since architect ".illiam Pereira first laid out the UC! campus and focused its attention tOtA'ard the pastureland desllned to accommodate a "com· muni\•ersity" town center, the campus community ha s a\vaited provision or shops and services and I o w • co s t residences nearby the isolated campus. Larry Morrison. director of the Wilsey and Ham consultant team, said today '·it is possible \Ve may change the phas- ing priority for Town Cente r after further talks ~·ith the university." l\1orrison said the priority assignment pushing fo!'ward five to 13 years the To\m Center development \Vas arrived at follov .. ing rneetings with the campus planning comn1ittee and \Villiam \Vatt. Irvine Company planner who is in charge of TO\l.'11 Center development. fi.1orrison said \\'alt is anxious t ::i pro:- eccd . Ho11·evcr, the phasing schedule releas- l'd today ranks the Town Center develo~ 1nen l behind \VoodbMdge Village and l'ompletion of Turtle Rock Village. "I think tha t is a crucial error in judgment.'' \Vesley J\larx said today. "TO\\n Center is our only immediate of Commerce audlence the bulk of the new const ruction will provide clinical nnd teaching facllltles for the Csllfomla College of Medicine. A teaching hospital and basic scltnct clwroom buildings are being plaMed now and will open ln 1976, Dr. Aldrich said. Bonds passed, nearly" two years ago in a st1tewide UC health 1cleDCtS bond Jssue will pay !or the bulldlnp wblch will be th e first permailent home for the UCI-CCM since the medical school moved to Irvine from Los Angeles in 1007. Aldrich described the medical s¢tool as the most recent ma}Qr addition to the educational and research goals set for UCI in 1962.. The campus opened in 1915 with pro- grams In biological, physical and social sciences, humanities and fine arts end Schools of Englne~rlng and Administration. Aldri ch recalled. Programs in computer science, 90Cial ecology and. comparative culture have been added as th e campus progressed from 1,585 students and 1()4 faculty the first year to a wtiversity with 8,500 students and 400 faculty this year. Since the beginning, Aldrich said, UCI has been dedicated to excellence in teaching and research. A limely example of how university research serves the public, Aldri ch said, is working being done by the physicists gathered at UCI. Study or nuclear fus ion methods of producing energy may ln time produce answers the nation needs to meet demands for energy. "The finest concentratlon of ex· perlmentnl physicist! dealing with the subject of fusion as can be found anywhere in the country Is now at work at lrv'll•·" Aldric!\ said. Their work Is part of the Ill million of government supported research proj· ects -some 300 of them ' -which are underway a,t UCI. ~ Such granls, th• chan~r observed •. are the "fuel to keep grad1late In· st ruction golng." Of the $40 million spent annually to operate UCI, $50 mllllon is devoted to salaries. he noted. . Hall the UC! budget -as rompared to one third for the entire UC system -comes from state sources. '11ie rest comes from federal grants and private foundations and donations of dividends. Aldrich did not emphasize a current UCI FoUJXtation fundrn!Bing effort - the first Jn campus history -in which private gifts to support a variety of student and faculty project! is being sought. He emphasized, however, that scaled down growth projections for the campll.! leading to 15.000 students belng enrolled at UC! In the late 1980s, do not mean a cutback in quality. . '111e new campus size set for 1990 is· sufficient "to allow us to fulfill the objectives we set in 1962." That was the yea r the soils professor from UC Davis was named chancellor of the Irvine campus. Next June, when the chancellor of the Santa Cruz campus retires, Dr. Aldrich will become the senior chancellor of the nine-campus system. School Band and Drill Team will perform. ---------hope for th~ provision or any moderate cost housing." District Attorney Cuts ,Last Link With Leary i ~larx \1·as a member of the city's Upper Newport ··lit B Fl "\ rirst planning commission which launch· ay ap cd lhe discussion sessions t h a t have resulted in the zone plan recently filed 1vith the city. Arises Over Quarqntine By JOllN ZALLElt 01 1111 ~Uy PllOJ Siii! An Orange County heal!P. officer found himself in hot wate r Thursday when he said Upper Nzw port Bay should not be quarantined even though i t "cor.sistently fail s" to 1neel norn1al health standards. Robert Stone, county director of en- vironmental health, told Newport Beach planning commissioners that when state standards are violated it is "an in- dication that the area may be hazardous . but it does not mean it actually is hazarrlous." The water ski area and the shellfish- gatbering area are the two parts of the Upper Bay that norn1ally exceed allowtible standards for a certain kind of bacteria, Stone said. Commissioner Jackie Heather \l'as the first to question Stone, saying that he seemed to be •·abrogating you r duty" in not posting quarantine signs in those areas . "Yo ur report ·says the violations art a cause for concern." J\lrs. Heather said, "and so I "''onder what should be done." Stone responded : "\Ve are concerned, but v•e are not alarmed by the violations. :·11 depends on the sources of the contamination. If it comes from human sewage, we would be alarmed," Stone said . "But every indication W1! have is that the heavy bacteria counts result from agricultural runoffs that flow into the Upper Bay through San Diego Creek and the Santa Ana DC!hi channel," he said. Commissioner Joseph Rosener then commented that "if the standards have any meaning, I don't see why you haven't gone ahead and posted the quarantine signs." Stone responded that the standards are based on the concentration of col- iform bacteria. "That is a very common bacteria Y•hich occurs both in ani mals and in humans ," Stone said. Rosener then asked if there was any Y.'ay of distinguishing the type of bacteria that occurs in human waste from that which occurs in animal wastes. Stone replied that there are dif- ferences, but that it is very difficult to pin them down in the laboratory. .. Ou r normal procedure is to try to find out all possible sou rces of human sewage," Stone said. "\Ve have done this and found that the sewage proc- essing plants that empty into San Diego Creek are doing an excellent job. "The problen1 does not con1e from them, but from runoff fron1 agricultural operations which drain into those two channels." The bacteria counts could originate dlrecliv from animal excrcn1ent , or fro1n animai n1anure used on crops. Ir vine Burglnr y Losses Stutlied Orange County Sheriff's offietrs and school officials are today tryln~ to determine the total loss inflicted hy burglars wbo broke into Irvine Elemen- tary School, 14736 Sand Canyon Ave. Deputies said intruders who broke into the school Wednesday via a side door removed at least one bu.,iness machine whUe ransacking offices and deski- throughout the admtnlstratlon area. Officers said the Intruders also broke lnto a number of automatic vending machlnes in the tuchers' lounge area and mracted an unknown quantity o! change. '·Peo ple have been living \Vilh animal manure for years, and \vhile it can be dangerous , it is not a cause for alarm." Stone said. Rosener \Vas particularly disturbed \vhcn Stone said that tests made on sh;!Utish showed they had higher than allowable contaminations. "If you look at a shellfish and it has contamination in it, then it is con- taminated." Rosener asserted. Stone again said that the: forms of cont.amination were simply indicators of trouble and not dangerous in th cn1selves. "If the wa ter becomes dangerous, 'l\:e'll be the first to tell you," St.one said. "But right now, we don't have reason to believe it is," he said. Stone said he is seeking fundin g from the Orange County Board of Supervisors for a research project to find out more definitely what the nature of the health problem in the bay really is. Frorn Page 1 PRESIDENT . • • a record of parties to, date and·character of every instrument acknowledged or approved by him." Most notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all required information. 'But the St. Louis Post Dispatch claim- ed DeMarco admitted to them that ~e had not kept proper records because they weren't in a journal. DeMarco drew the deed of Nixon's gift of his personal papers to the National Archives. The newspa per claims ''the absence of independent notary records leave only the personal assertion by Mr. Nixon's· Jay,•yers to establish that the President deeded the papers to the archives before July 25, 1969, 'i'lhen Congress cut off i;enerous tax deductions for such gifts." Front Page l 3 SUSPECTS • • • ned to live with her son. Her husband, a former Army officer. was also n country music writer and friends \Vith many big stars of the music world. She will be buried beside her husband in Arlington National Cemetery this ~·eekend, relatives said. The murder cf Widener was the second fatal shooting of a country music en- tertainer in recent wee ks. David "String- bcan" Akeman and his wife were found shot to death on their farm near !\ashville Nov. 11. Po1ice say there is probably no connection. f'rom Page I LOCl(JAW • • • fashionable clothes, but I just couldn't get any to fit me." The clincher came last summer when wolf-whistling beach boys giving her two teen·age daughters the eye made her feel embarrassed about her bulk. "It was awful," Mrs. Turner groaned . "I just couldn 't put my bikini on and race It. "But ii this trtatment wo>ks, !'II be wearing a bikini and miniskirts next summer. Being fat 11 terrible-." She can't open her mouth at ail. ott•m Jiving entirely on tea, cof(ee and tomato aoup 'spiced wUh plenty of salt, pepper and vinegar." Councilman Henry Quigley similarly opposed the priority listing and said he would work to rearrange some of them, inl'lud ing phasing designations for development of the coastal secto r. should the city annex that land some day. By TOM BAl\L.EY Gf IN 0.llY Plllf ShlH A Leary-weary District Attorney Cecil Hicks cut Orange County's last link \Vith the imprisoned LSD cultist Thurs- day by dropping charges contained in the ''Brothe rhood of Eternal Love" Grand Jury indictment against Or. Timothy Leary. going to be busy for a long time to co me serving his state and federal ' sffitences." '1 r.....,. Three Break Window ln Chm·ch Burglary Dr. Leary, 50, was transferred to the state·s minimum security facility at \'acaville this week after earlier in- carceration at Folsom Prison. Leary went to Folsom earlier this year to resume serving the sentence of one to IO years he drew in Orange County for possession of marijuana in Laguna Beach. Thieves who broke a window to gain entry to a Laguna Hills church Thursday night left the premises with a tape cassette valued at $30, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the breakin v.·as reported by officials at the Christian Science Church, 24481 Moulton Par~ay. They said the casse tte was taken from the reading room. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent, the jurist whose courtroom bas been assigned to all "Brotherhood'' cases in the past year, granted the motion made by Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright. "\Ve just don't want him back here using us as a platform for bis crackpot beliefs," Enright commented. "In any event, It seems certain he's That confinement was interrupted when he escaped from the San Luis Obispo Men·s Colony and embarked on a globetrotting tour before being recap- tured In Afghanistan and shipped beck to the United States. • re-holidall sale SOFAS & CHAIR S ONE W~EK ONLY • DON1' DELAY Get Ready For The Holidays With A New Sofa or Chair Here Are Just A Few Examples Of Tiie Many Excellent Values. SOFAS SALE llG. 7' SOFA 8' SOFA Marge Catsot1 ••• Gold/0"""1• Vevlet Pair 5' LOVE SEATS • , • Royal Coac• liold Volyet Pair 7' SOFAS • , • Shmlfl •. , Yellaw/liald 8' SOFA • • Marge Canao .• : Uo• !'riot GrtH 8' SOFA • • S .. .,IQ Cresc .. t ••. Yevlet ltd/lmt CHAIRS "'40. $770. $6H. IA. $5H. IA. $570. $SH. '379 • '599. '549 .... '499 .... '489. '499. Pair CHAIRS Marve C:-... Yelow « °"'"t• Velvet $27'. IA. 1199 ..... Slogle CHAIR ••• Woo-k ••• ..,_ Siogte CHAIR ••• Flllltrhlt• ••• T•Hrolo ,_., Pair CHAIRS .•• Royal Coacl! ••• Piil Yet.et $159. $1GO. pn. IA. '129. '425. '289 ..... VREXEL-HERITAGE-HENRECON-WOOCMARK-l<ARA51AN -~------- ·, NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WtSTCllF~ Ol.. ' 642.\oso co,.ft SuMl1y ll·f1JOI LA&UNA IEACH e J4~ NORTH COAST HWY IOpa,. S111it41y 12.11JOI 4t4 6!i51 .. fORRANCt e 2JMf HAWTHO"Nf l&YD. J11d21t ( • • I· .t • ' -J I D AD .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • Density Li mi t . Land use policies and actions which bar broad county areas to certain classes of people either by'racial or economic stricture$ are Improper. A recent call by representatives of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council for a blanket of low-density (higher-cost) housing two miles and more from the San Diego Freeway stems from understandable concern, As SACC leaders stated, high density housing could become "The ghetto of the future." Unless adequate controls guarantee permanence to the greenbelts now required around many 11clustered" high density proj- ects, they could •omeday be appropriated for other uses -like more high density units crammed shoulder to ' shoulder. Furthermore, low-cost housing, if it materializes, might be low cost only on its first sale. Unless price controls of some kind are devised, demand for housing in Orange County likely will drive "low-cost" prices right out of the average family 's reach on the first re-sale. But the SACC suggestion -slapping a blanket density limit on south Orange County -is not a reason- able alternative. The result of such an action, however well-intended to keep so uth Orange County clean and attractive, will only isolate us from people the community needs if it is to function. ; ' industries, and government agencies must commute here from areas where they can afford to live. With growing fuel shortages and pollution, no path leading to commuting distances, and inflationary prices makes sense. The need for low-cost housing is urgent and real. Creative so lutions lo the attendant problems must have top priority. Problem into Asset City staff and community services comm1ss1oners were miffed over a Daily Pilot photograph they felt misstated the city's attempts to improve Ranch Park. That 7racre city park originally was built to county standards . .It has been considered a problem area since the earliest days of cityhood by staff and by the new commission. The purpose of the photograph was not to deni- grate the efforts of the city to improve the park. Rather the intent was to illu strate the scope of the problem the city had inherited from the county. It is welcome news to learn that the city has com- mitted more than $65,000 to improve the conditions. Dead trees are being replaced. Much new turf al- ready is in place. Retaining walls, new trees and tot lot amenities will do much to improve Ranch Park. . ' • --.....-..... ._~ ...... -. ---. Already many of those people who provide vital services to the community in our schools, our stores and The city effort will turn a problem park into a rec- reational asse t. SB ''.wt ~I D IT! WE CREATt !> A GU YERs' MA~Kt.T IN CAPI LLACS!' Penitentiary Safer Than Best Jails ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ \Vould you believe that you could take a long sentence in prison better than a sllort stay in jail? Most Americans wouldn't -indeed, most don't even know the difference between the two, though there are 4,000 jails in this coon- .try, most of them unspeakable. One man who does know is Dr. Karl Menninger, who has looked into the problem deeply, especially in his book of a few. years ago. "The Crime ol Punishment." Now, in his new bool:, "Whatever Became of Sin?" (which I will comment on in a future column), he repeats his indictment in a few . terse paragraphs I cannot refrain from quoting in full : Dear Gloomy Gus Let'• keep lhe bull in Irvine! In the general pl.an, let's leave 110me land !or cattle grazing. M.0.0. In your wicked ways, you will be giv~ the severe treatment o{ the state penitentiary!' "Actually the worst penitentiary is less harmful to most young offenders than the best of jails! Jails ruin young men. can't the public grasp Ibis In- disputable fact? How can a decent prison attempting a rehabllltation program do anything for a boy wl\o comes to it from a jail where he has been raped, "THE PUBUC refuses to abandon battered, vomited and urinated upon , its pleasant fantasy that jaUs are just mauled and corrupted by aome of the little local lockups where miscrant.s old-timers in the bullpen? and suspects may spend a night or "EVEN WITHOtrr the abuse and even a week and be the more wary of sin and police thereafter. People harassment of other Inmates, lhe hor- rcfuse to believe that jails ,are almost rlble t'Ollfinement ln hot, stuffy, crowded, without exception horrible, destructive, dark, vermin-infested iron cages is a hid . . of ·..a..'""' tenible experience -literally a fonn ruinous, · eous atl"OCJties wwu.i every of torture. When one considers that citizen should be ashamed. "l say the public refuses to believe this is all illegal, since lhe Jaw does not stipulate these iniquitoll! con-it in s p i t e of thousands of r e Po r t s, com!t.anU of detention ht any sentence, hecllU>e if they did, jails would be oor sinfu1neS1 In permitting the situation outlawed tomorrow by public demand. to continue in our society, and at our lf every minister would visit t~ local es:pense zeems very eVident and very jail twice a year. and urged his con-great .. ' gregatioo to do so, there would be a ..._ v.:1 M . . "bleedin · il ol. uon "-n.cu ennmger is no g sim ar rev u · be-art"; he believes In moral, as well "THE A VERA GE citizen goes along as legal, responsibility for our acts, as in his thin.king with those ignorant, lazy, his new book fully shows. But be ls or cruel judges wbo say, 'A few weeks a realist, in recognizing that certain or months in our little jail may do kinds of. punishment are a worse crime you some good. Then if you persist than any they seem to rectify or revenge. I Own-your-own Rooms .?. • Any day now the U.S. Department of the Interior may , add landJords to its list of eudang~red species. For a number of reasons, the financial in- ducements to own and manage rental property are fast eroding. As a result, EDITORIAL RESEARCH · much of the new residential and com-drawback is that a down payment ties mercial construction in this country is up a buslnessman'a capital." designed for condominium ownership -• an arrangement whereby the OC<:Upanta OWNEBSID:i: of a residenllal con- ol a building or cluster of building> . domlnlum unit b,'rries no guarantee or hold Utle to !heir Individual units. bapplnesl, either. Some residents feel In a condominium, the buyer pays uncomfortable in an environment of en- the mortgage and property tas:es on forced tocethemell. Others chafe under rus dwelling, juat as a homeowner does. regulatlom that ouUaw shaking of dust And, like a homeowner, the condominium mops on balcontes, playing of musical in- buyer may deduct mortgage interest struments late at night or early in and property ta. .. 1rom his lnco!n..tax the morning, ptayjng 'or working on statement. Title lo everything else in the family car In the parking area. the condominium complex Is held In Coodomlnhnn devetopen, however, common by all residents. tn most cases. have rew complaints. And they are there Is a monthly charge for utilliles, nothing if not lnvenUve. A developer maintenance and other operating costs. on Spain's Costa do! Sol builcls apartments, sel11 them to executives THE CONDOMINIUM c r a• e has and other Investors, and then ren1' them spread lo office buildings, too. Small to tourlsta on behall of the 01'1!0l'I· bwilnessmen lo a number of cities have The sales pitch fJ al"guaratlleed a round that mortcage and malnteoance percent nt1 annual re urn" to lhe i... payments, ollset bi the .tu-dedllctlon vestor on reotals !or 20 7ears. advantage, make ownership or office The Morriotl Corp. bas found an ;pace more eooaomlcal lhaD rental eql!llly novel ' approach. It fJ selllnl It's not all !'Oles, !hough. "The com-lhe rooms ol Its Camelbaek Inn near pany thst has bought e ·condominium PhOtnlx to lttdlv1dual lnveston. Marriott and llndJ, tl!lt,I -. more llP8CO la retalltl .-.hip of ever)llbllta but unllkely to lie able to bey •~ adjoining the rooma, and charges the ownera a piece or the condominium," Business lee !or managtna the hotel. The reota'f Weck point.I out. "In antlelpaUon of !tom lhe roonu are spilt between the lhll need, severll btiyerl have aecul'!d hotel and lhe room ownm. The pbruo more apace than they oeed Immetllataly "a room ol one'• own" has taken on and will rent ll out. The other big 1 new meaning . • ' Brochure Tote ts 'Conf ere nee Cente r' A ttracti ons New Role for Western White .House WASHINGTON -President Nixon has made a strong pitch to federal agencies to hold their conferences at the seaside Western White House in an apparent effort to throw an official cloak around his San Clemente extravagances. The night of hundreds of bureaucrats to San Clemente , of course, will add to the fuel drain and the taxpayers' bills. But it-will be easier for the President to justify the millions he baJ poured into the Sao Clemente complex: if he can show that govern- ment agencies are utilizing the facilities . 1be President not only has sent out special invitations to several agencies to make use of the Western White House. but be has included a brochure of all the available attractions. 'Ibis a 11 u r i n g booklet, with the title "The \Vestern While House" printed on a fem green cover page, touts the [JACK ANDERSON) conference facilities at the Coast Guard station next to the presidential com- pound. But the en1phasis is on tQe recreation that the officials can enjoy when they're not tied up on official business. The booklet boasts that fishing, swimming, golf, bowling, bull fights, jai-alai and many more leisure activities await them at San Clemente. Visits to Disneyland, a fruit orchard and the world 's biggest telescope are also offered. "Casual dress is the rule in San Clemente," adds the White House booklet. "Short sleeve shirt.S, slacks or shorts for men -l l g h t cottons for women" are prescribed for what the booklet promises is "the world's all-year- around finest" weather. TJIE PRESIDENTIAL invitations were issued earlier this year at a time when Nixon was on the skillet for using the taxpayers' money to purchase luxury items for the San Clemente compound. The word that the Western White House was available for rooferences was passed to the agencies by his militarY aide, Brig. Gen. B r e n t Scowcroft, who recently was given another star and promoted to White House national security deputy. "The President has asked me," wrote the general, "to renew his offer of the facilities or the Western White House for the use of government aod certain other grwps. "The area offers generally pleasant weather in a secluded, informal set- ting. , • The JO fully.equipped ol!ices, ooa- ference room, private beach and bath house, helipad and excellent com- munications system provide ideal con- ference accommodations for up to 40 persons," he urged. SEVERAL government ageocles have jumped at the opportunity to hold their meetings in balmy San Clemente. Among them are the Justice Department, Federal Aviation Adminlstration1 General Services Administration and the Labor Department. So rar this year' 38 government and civic organizations have accepted the President's appealing invitation. Another 79 did so in 1972. The FAA's top brass was planning a conference at San Clemente for early December, even as the Presldent was . ordering fuel savings. Almost half of the 29 participants will wing across country from Washington. A SPOltESMAN exp!Jtlned lbat the "focus will be on general aviation, a vital conference, and the OOsts about equalize out. Often we can &et more work done oulJJde Wu~." · At the White llouoe, Generlll Seowcrolt said his pre(lecessor had seot out a similar lnvltatfon before all lhe hoopla over lhe Presldeot's San Clemente~ Ing. The purpoee or bis °"" ii)emo, Scowcroft said, »1BS purely uto tell them there were those facilities available." He denied 0 100 per cent" that it .was ' to justify the President's spending. Experts Could Clear Tape Erasure To the Editor : In reCerence to the President's "erased tape" -working in classified aerospace projects some time back, we found that there is no way to completely erase magnetically recorded information (ex- cept with a match). A tone can be cancelled out. Even a full bandwidth sweep with a scrambler input can be decoded and neutralized. THERE IS a lab over at cal Tech that specializes in clearing up the moon- based TV transmissions. Those boys would love a job like this. So, if anyone really wants to know what was on that 18 minutes -well , Dick, it was a nice try. I wonder if there are any historians who remember what prompted the cry '4millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute," in reference to the Arabs. Car Poob To the Editor: RAY BIBO I hay~ lived in the ' Newport-COSta Mesa area-for 17 years and have seen and felt the quality of lhe air change for the worse. I like the idea o( your new ctaulfied category on car pools and hope the people in our area can save on gas and also clean up on air. You are helping our cities. --{. MRS. JULIA M. PAYNE The DaiLt1 Pilot's new classified cotegort1 headed Auto TTt1J!$p0rta- «on, 525, la designed for cor pools - people looking for otlter p<opl• with tohom theu can sho're f'UUs to and from work. Ed. The Red Crbl1 To lhe Editor: Every -k tbere ls a new crisis; one week It's lhe prioe of food, anolher week It'• the Micldle East. Then, It 's the energy crisis. But, there Isn't a trlJls In lhJa whole world that can 11uue11 from tbe m1ndl of the Amertcun people -mJaainJ, or accldcotally erued tapes, and Ute lhter deceit ot thl1! administration a n d Its moot un- popular leader, Mr. RI chant Nixon. 11IE FACT remaloll, the people really can't get lntmstoo lo any recom- mendallon lhal Mr. Nil<on might have I MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally, writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit ipace or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters m1tSt include signature and mail· ing addresa .but names may be with· held on reqUest if svfficient reason is 'apparent. Poet1'1J will ·not be pub· llshed. on a crisis (trumped-up or legitimate) as long as he refuses to come forward and "Face the Nation" on the erasing of evidence in the tapes. Plowever, that's one crisis that J\.tr. Nixon isn't up 10 because of the weak nature and character of the man. The real crisis is that we are actually without leadership. And, though we a~ pear to be floundering around in a sea (!f despair, some very · good men are at work striving to maintain our democracy. So, take heart in the fact that o'ur nation is far stronger than any one leader -especially ao unpopular one who is living under the delusion that he is "king." WEBSTER'S definition of the word crisis is interesting; there are three. Number two is this ; a paroxysmal attack of pain, distress , or disordered function . . .That's it! That's what p e op I e felt as they watched and listened to the President BERNY BAKER • Strange Logie To the Editor: LOGIC: Method of reasoning, in- ference , argument, etc.; especially, cor- rect and sowld reasoning. 111e above definition ls of a word I find totally lacking In the decision to jail a 71-year-old woman, Mrs. Rita Hill of Lordsburg, New Mexico. I WISH someone would explain the logic in Ws act. As I undentand Jt, she was jailed for her refusal to allow a new multi-million dollar super hlghway Literary Companion Webster's New World Compantoa to EngUah and American Llteratare. Ediled by Arthur Pollard and Associate Editor !or Amerie8JI Literature Ralph Willett. 115. 850 PalI~ With so many writers nowadays prone to toss off references to their peers, ancient and modern, without adequate explanation, It ts good to have something handy to refresh our knowledge. 11IE SllETCllES edited by Arthur Pollard and Ralph Willett are actually by many hands. The in!Uals at the end of each Item can be cheeked against a list of oontributors at the be:glnnlng , or the hook to ettabllsb Identifications. Art'anged llphabellcllly, the sketche1 range in Ume lrom Old English poetry to, say, John Cheever. ' The brief studies ore certainly not t.Xbaustive. NeVt.rtbelea, the main dates and wotils of a given author are listed, ond the writers generally do not shy (THE BOOKMAN J (rom some critical appraisal, however brief. For Instance, E. H. Robinson, writing on-Sean O'Casey, says of the pla ywright's departure for England: "Unrortunately the move from Ireland Impaired lhe sense or Immediacy In bl!.i plays." And Dr. A. J. Stead, referring to Katherine Anne Porter's much-touted oovel, ••shlp Of Fool1," says bluntly that "ahort·ficUon technique drained her panaram.ic 1Ubject of namtlve 'nergy." IT IS GOOD to have a sUmulallng. frequently conlroverslal reference work al our elbows on the protagonists of Engllsh and American letters !or quick consultaUon. Associated Press I to be constructed on her property. I fail to see the logic, let alone the necessity, in building yet another super hlghway at a time when we are faced wilh a luel crisis !hat will perllaps leave our es:lsting highways looking like abandoned airstrips. I realize, or course, that the possibility es:ists that the politicians ·have already spent Ule payoffs awarded f o r favoritism in a w a rd I n g con- struction contracts, and thUI it would be embarrassing to change directions at this time. Mind you, I am not making an aceusalion, just mulling over a few possibilities that are ever so prevalent today. ANOTHER lhought -perhaps if Mrs. Hill would have had the logic !or defa<> Ing her property explained to her rather lhaD being onlered off her land lhe might oot have been so reluctant to comply wtlh lhe stale'• req-. Or perhaps II she would have beeo llYeD amounts equal to what p a y o I lo sometimes amount to .•• Oh, well, who are the aged, property. owning taxpsyers to stand In the w111 ol progress I WALTER E. SIEPllEV JR. OIANM COAR DAILY PILOT llokrl N. Wer~ Nl!Jtfl<t Th...., KHVi~ Editor Barbaro. Kreibidt. Editorial Pogc Editor \ Tho tdltorlal '-ol tho 0.UJ Pilot ~k· to lnfOrm ud .tb.wu. rtfld~ by prnml:q CID tlUI .... diwrwlcommentary·Clfl topks-'OI: a. ttftSt'by iyndjcatfd ~ ... cartoonlsts, by PftMdiqc • fDrwD. ... readers' views and by pi ' .. 1'11 -·-.... --cu:nut topic&. The edHorilJ 11 '11 I -~ ol ... D&l\y Pilot -..., Ila ... edltodal column It the 1Dp al .. ...... ___ .., __ _ """""""""..---writtn are 1btit' own ad • t • m<ntollllelr-1ir910i,.., Pllot-.idbo- Fl'fday, November 30, 19'8 • ' • •• ' •, DAIL V PtLDT 5 Aquanaut Charged In Fraud State Welfare P lan State Challenges EPA Parking Plan '.'. Vo t e Sess ion Cal led r surcharges on parking spaces., SAN DIEGO (AP ) Federal charges or fraud and embezzlement have been filed against a former N a v y aquanaut who was Jead diver in Jast summer's attempt to salvage treasure from the sunken Italian liner "Andrea Dorla." An FBI spokesman said Cluistopher James OeLucchl, ·( BRIEFS ) 22, currently vice president of Saturation Systems Inc., a San Diego-baaed salvage rum, will be <-• ..gned Dec. 13 on charges that be took away $1,370 worth of Navy undersea electrical equipment shortly before his discharge last July. e Pension Plan SACRAMENTO (AP) Private pension plans should be regulated by the state to prevent workers from 1osing retirement b e n e f J t s on technicalities, s a y s the cbai.mlan of the state~Senate Committee,,on Business and the ProfesSions. Sen. George Deukmejian (R· Long Beach ), told a Capitol news conference Thursday that there is "no such thing as a guaranteed pension for a California worker." e TetU:her Str lke COMPl'ON ( U P I ) Negotiations Thursday failed to seUle the Compton teachers' strike in a dispute concerning student violence, poor working conditions and higher wages. A teacher request f or "round the clock" negotiations was apparently denied when di!trict officials said talks would resume Monday af- ternoon. e U:-Resting LOS ANGELES (AP) Doctqrs say they discovered no tumors or malignancies during surgery on Elizabeth Taylor and the actress will be released from tbe hospi!al next week. Miss Taylor was described Thursday as ' 'st i 11 ex- periencing the usual amount of post-operative pain," but WB!! said to be ''looking great and doing very well." e Occidental Hit LOS ANGELES !UPI) - Red paint was splashed in the reception area of Oc- cidental Petroleum Co . head- quarters Thursday, pW1JOrled- ly as a protest against the deals with the Soviet Union made by Dr. Annand Ham- mer, the corporation 's chairman. Two young men wearing ski masks entered the room and splashed the paint about "without a word, said recep- tio11ist ?-.1a ry Jo Esposito. Some of the paint spattered her clothes and hair. e Tlmes S11e d LOS ANGELES (UPI ) A fonner county ad- ministrator, who was con- victed in 1972 of perjury and preparing false evidence while in office, filed a $2 million libel si.tlt Thursday against the Los Angeles Times. Baldo Kristovich , who was sentenced lo five years' pro- bation and is currently ap- Uftl T....,._lt Welghs An s wer Assembly Speaker Bob ?ttoretti listens careful- ly to a reporter's ques- tion during news con- ference where he pro- posed establishment of state energy commis-- sion empowered to ra- tion gas and make car pools mandatory. SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The legislature will convene in specl;ol ....ion Tuesday to vote on a compromlse fl22 million wellare plan ham- mered out by legislative and Regan administration negotiators. The settlement would pro- vide grant increases to1SOO,OOO aged, blind and dlsabled Calilornians lar beyond those sought by Gov. Ronald Reagan and also transfer ad- rnlnlstratlon ol adult aid pro- grams to the federal jOVern- ment on Jan. 1. LT. GOV. ED Reinecke, act- ing in tbe ebsence ol Reagan who is on a speech making tour of Australia, called a special session of the legislature for noon Tuesday. Health and We II a r e Secretary Earl Brian, who an- nounced the agreement Thurs- day evening after several days Long Beach Mu,.der Ends in 4 Arrests LONG BEACH (UPI) - Four persons were booked on suspicion of murder Thursday in connection with the shotgun slaying of a Long Beach City College student who was visiting two friends at an apartment. POUCE .ru;o arrested the victim's friends, Peter Macisaac, 23, and Paul Brun- ing, 20, on suspicion of illegal cultivation of marijuana after officers found 41 plants grow- ing in the yard. A small amount of marijuana was also found in the house. An unidentified 16-year-old boy, accompanied by his lawyer, was arrested when he surrendered I<> police. Police l<1ter arrested Kevin Cunningham, 19, John Vander Hoek, 21, and Stanley Hinrichsen, 2ll, all ol Loog Beach. Detectives said the fou?ep- Staged Sex Acts Land Man in Jail SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A massage parlor operator has been arrested alter secret grand jury indictments charg- ed rum with seven ·sex offenses :for presentation oC a live sex iact oo stage. Held in lieu ol $50,000 bail was Peter Amato, 34, San Diego, operat.or of t h e Empress Massage Parlor and the Studio 1 and 2 Theaters. Also indicted were three women, each charged with one count or sex perversion. Amato will be arraigned Monday. Clwges placed Thursday against Amato included three counts of sex perversion, one coont of pandering, one of participating in or exhibiting obscene live conduct and two counts of soliciting women for prostitution. District Attorney Ed Miller said Amato was master of ceremonies and a participant in live sex acts on the 'Theater 2 stage between Oct. 30 and Nov. 9. parenlly had intended to rob the residence where the vic- tim, Kevin Skeith, 20, was visiting friends. AUTIIORITIES said they believe Skeith was shot by the juvenile while Vander Hoek accompanied him inside. The other two were waiting out.side. Macisaac and Brwling said the juvenile and Vander Hoek barged int.o their apartment and ordered them to lie on the noor. They said Skeith was shot after he either refus. ed. to drop to the floor or when he lunged at the armed youth. Skelth was killed by a single blast from a 12-gauge sOOtgun. 9 l ndicwd Fo r Porno Book Saks LOS ANGELES (UPI) A oounty grand jury indicted nine persons on pornography cha r ges T hu r s d ay, culminating a five-month m. vestigalion in which three policemen opened a "decoy" bookstore. Owged with conspiracy to distribute obscene material were Noel Bloom, 31, Illo Ap- pelby, 50, and Mohammed Rustam. 40, ail ol Hollywood ; Rodgers Summers, 39, Phil Dixon, 30, and Robert Elkins, 44, all of Los Angeles; Paul Novack, 45, and Mark Novak , 25, both ol Beverly Hills; and Raymond Barron, 39, of Venice. Al.so i n dicted were American Film Industries, Cinema Classics Limited and C a I i f o r n i a International Distributors. All the defendants ettept · Bloom surrendered to Superior Court Judge James G. Lolls and entered innocent pleas. pealing his conviction. claimed liiiiiiiijiii be wu libeled in an article 11 Authorities said the m. dictments came after three investigators. o p e n e d the ''Freedom Bookstore'' on Sepulveda BouJevard a n d purchased hardro<e films and magazines from several of the suspects. which· related aileged prob-lerot: iD the public guardian's olftoe, a post he held "1lile he was public.administrator. -. , I HARRIS @~~~~~~ NEW AT BIDWELL'S We have a 9reat, new sa~ lect i9n in corcluroyi, 1oli d1 & different pl1ids. From $14.00 Sweater V111t 1 Too From $10.00 A Greet G i~ Combin etion f ltl l CUSTOM GIFT WIAP J4'7 VIA LIDO, NIWPOl:t llACH • ·--~. ·-"'""". -a- I or linandal aid adult children must contribute for the su~ port of their elderly "'-elfare parents. Reagan strongly resisted CALIFORNIA of negotlatlons with assembly leaders, said th• bill will add 1122 million In state money to current state and local welfare costs of ~? million annually. He said it would not in· crease or reduce county costs !or blind. disabled and elderly any easing of the so-called '---------...J "Relative.a Responsibility" law SAN l'RANCISCO (AP ) - Calilornla Atty. Gen. Evell e J. Younger liled three pell- tlons In the 9th U.S. Clmilt C.ourt of Appeals Thursday challenging the valldlty of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency pl311 to r e q u I re • UNDER THE plan, anyont maintaining parking laciUU..13 would have to pay the 4 sw-charge oo each space and_ • the fee would increase an-: nuaUy over a three-yeU• 1 period. 1be petitions to review the EPA plan were filed on behau·i,., or the state, the governor, ·~ the caJifomia Air Resource1 · J' Board and trustees of · .; Califomla State Universities ·.·; and colleges. recipient programs. 1 Under t h 3 compromise, average monthly grants for elderly and di.sabled recipients would increase from $212 to 1235. For the blind tbey would rise lrom 1222 to $265. REAGAN HAD sought payments ol $221 !or the aged and disabled and 1237 !or tbe blind. "I wouldn't exacny say he was overjOyed," Brian told newsmen when asked about Reagan's reaction to the set- tlement when informed of it by telephone in Australia. "\Vhen presented with the altenuitives, he thought this wa3 aporopriate." The proposal also prodivdes $?..5 a month restaurant meal allowance for those unable to cook for themselves and t90ls back to 1961 levels the amount which WU toughened by his \Velfare ~ Act of 1971. The roll back would have the effect of increasing the income level where adult children must be before they are re- quired to contrillute. THE MEASURE, p u t together by Brian, Social Welfare Director D a v i d Swoap, Assembly Speaker Bob 1\foretti (D-Van Nu y s ) , Assemblyman John Burton (0-San Francisco), and Assemblyman William T . Bagley, (R-San Raf a e I ) , represented a victory for Democrats. They previously fashioned a Reagan-Opposed b i 11 to transfer administration of the adult programs to the federal government and substantially increase grants, but t h e Senate killed it in September. POINSETTIAS .... ,,, ICICLES fro111 n eltl ,_.1-.d C:kritt"un ,... "' Now •••••••••• 19C ,. , "' $1.00 ,... "'Now •••.•••••• 39C · .. , '°' $1 .00 MT CHllSTMAS llVE TREES MINIATURE LITE SET 40 Mllllat'lr• lite Mt wltti replK41eble ...... u. bulbs. ........ 298 Christmas Tree Tie-Ons -29~ I Pair Indicted in 9 Slayings, Robb~ry Younger said the filing was •1i made 'lbursday because ol tbe · ll statutes of limltaUom and that .. :~ further talks are being held . in hopes of resolving the mat-,1 ter will»ut going to trial. 11, STOCKTON (AP) -Willie of lour membe<S ol the lamliy L. Steelman and Douglas E. of grocery store owner Walter Gretzler have been indicted Parkin, 33, and five others. . The indictment by tbe grand by the San . Joaqum ~unty jury late W e d n e s d a y ~rand Jury m. the . slaymg of automatically rmves the case rune persons m Victor Nov· · into superior court. The two "•h 41WE DO NOT question ,1• EPA's goal of reducing .,: automobile emissions, but,,we do not think EPA has fully, considered the ecoMmic im· .... pact <J. the plan, in relation .· .; to the potential reduction of : automobile emissions," said''' 6. earlier were charged i n municipal court on nine counts of murder each and a pl'eliminary hearing had been scheduled for next month. EACH MAN faces nine charges of murder, five counts of robbery and one count of. kidnaj)ing. The robbery and kidnap charges stem from the theft of about $3.000 from the grocery store safe. INDICTMENT by the grand jury eliminates the need for tbe preliminary hearing. ' , Younger. ,1 "We believe the burden of • a parking surcharge would'"" ultimately fall on Califontia's,-1• consumers and employers," 1 he said. :t Steelman. 23, of Lodi, and Gretzler, 22, ol New York Oty, were charged in the slaylng T h e i r arraignment in superior cowt is schedt.lled for Friday. • • STARTING MONDAY D.EC. 3 VISIT OUR TRIM-A· TREE SHOP! 'r..;e1 for all your decorating needs. Uni- que hard lo find items ••.. Expen- sive one of a kind ..• .I mports plus •••• American made novelties. Im· ported and domestic tree r.9hts .... twinkle .... action .•.. bubble •••• mi·niature and outdoor. Plus we also have a large selection of replacement bulbs. Have you seen our tree lops 7 Electric •••• Angel .•.. Santa .... Snowman and more. • M• fffl' ..tectl• h • .,... H..._ S..W ,,.... ,__ ef ,,..., , .. ._ ....... ...,., ....,. , ••• ..... ,.., ....... ,,... Wli ... ,,,, ...... Tip. ...... "'· Pl•fetlM N.W., ......,.__ 6r-4 ,,,, Slte.rH ,._..,_ D••I._, ............ etc .• , , ..... tep1 r. 11' •l.t.NT1. YH M41Y ehe lwfwt I• yeer ""' °' pkl •• ef "" .. ~ ...... flMlt.cl '"' ... ..,. , .. dtHM; .. .., c ........... ... .., IMry eM' tW hi • .,_,, ..._ fleclled • , , All ................ ..,.., ••• ,..Slttk ,..1c ..... """" ... ,.c ........ SHO, U.ILY WHILI YOU STILL HAVI A GOOD SILIC· TION TO CHOOSI NOM. 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ' 1 2123 New port Blvd., Costa Mesa PH ~3925 2252 S. E. Bristol • Santa An• Heights Ph: 5~l91 ' " " . . " "•i ... ·' .... • . ·' . ' .. .. • ' ' ' l • ·~ .. . .. • • " . '· , -I Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES , ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 TEN-eENTS • - Scho·ol District Scrambles . for Gas-Gets It By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. ~, ....... " 'nle threatened shutdown of all transportation in the Huntington Beach Union High School District was averted Thursday afternoon when the district's supplier came up with 7 ,000 gallom of fuel. District officials announced they would be able to keep their buses running "'Ith the new supply and continuing allocations until the first of the year. Brown Eyes Nixon Gift For Files By L. PETER KRIEG Of .... Daily ...... ltaff California Secretary of State F.dmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be called on to determine ii President Nixon 's personal lawyers violated notary laws when they recorded Nixon's pre-presiden- Ual papers as a gilt lo U.. National Archives. The President claimed a $570,000 tax deduction for the gift in 1969, ju,,t before federal legislation was enacted that cut oU ta1 deductions for such gifts. The Sl. Louis Post Dispalch charged Thursday the presidential lawyer Frank DeMarco of Los Angeles, partner of Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, failed to properly record the notarization of the gilt. DeMarOo today claimed he dld not violate the Jaw because be kept copies all tbe document& .. All that tbe law Jeiiidl• II IUt notary keep a ,_ at documenll ri1.ed by him," Demarco 1114. 1l does not necessarlly hive to be tabular form in a boot. Maintaining ' ies of documents ....Utulel a record. ~ r office bas copies of all documents tarized," he said. Attorneys for the C8lifomia Secretary of State's office weren't sure euctly what the law requires, or so they said. "I will talk to the secretary of state today,'' said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's office. He told the Daily Pilot, "This involves an tnterpetatlon of the statutes. We have not been caJJed upon before to make that interpr$.tion." The law states: "A notary public sban keep a record ol all official acts done by him and a record of parties to, date and character o( every instrument acknowledged or approved by him." Most notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all required lnfonnation. But the SI. Louis Post Dispatch claim- ed PeMarco admitted to them that he h~ not kept proper records because they weren't ln a journal. DeMarco drew the deed of Nixon's gill ol his personal papers to the NaUonal Archives. 'lbe newspaper claims 0 tbe absence (See PRESIDENT, Page Z) * * * (;SA Questioned On Nixo1i's Gift To U.S. Archives WASIIlNGTON (UPI) _:: Rep. Edward M...tnskf (0-lowa) asked the head ol ~ -'General Services Administration (GSA) today !or Olllftl'I, lo a !isl of questions about President 'Nixon's 1969 cm of vice presidential papers lo the NaUooal Arcltlves. Mezvinsky sent a letter to Arthur Sampson, GSA administrator. asking sPecifically whether the papers were donated prior to July 25, 1969, the date when the Internal Revenue Service ~hanged its regulations reducillk the amount of charitable tax deductloos for papers. NIIOD roportedly toot a 1570,000 deduc- tion on his Income Illes after donaling pipera !tom bis ~ys 11 'flee pn!lldent lo the archives. MeaVlnsky aald he aloo would Uke lo lludy the papera hlrntell lo ... "•hat the pobllc rocelved In ••cbanP for the frnidmt'1 tu deduc:Uona.,, . · "'!be suspicions aurrolllidlng Ille gill and the taxes have become IDOthtr 1.,terlng wound, gnawing at lb e dimlnJshlng faith in the prfttdent," Mezvjnsky said in a Door speech. '>Delt!lte lbe Operation Candor project, Ille naqing •nd unanswered quettlons seem to lntenllly alll)Oll dally." Bob M.artin, usistant superintendent far business, aald the threatened eut off of the dlslrict's gas supply was apparently the result of a "breakdown in communications." He explained that the U{lion Oil Com· pany, ~ne Of' the two firms that supplies lhe district With 20,000 gallons a month, informed Will Lewton, Director of Transportation, that they had no gas for the district because their tanks bad been dry for a day and a half. I,ewton ~ said he WM told DOt to expect anx future deliveries. 'Ibat was Wednesday mOrning. District officials spent the day frantically seeking gas supplies from all over Southern Ca1ifomia to keep the 35 buses, 26 driver training cars, 23 administrators' cars and the nearly 100 other vehicles rWl· ning. Martin said, with the plt')dges they received from local service slations and elementary school districts, officials ·estimated they would be able to go to Dec. 7 before they ran completely out. But 'Ibursday afternooon. Martin said another call came from Union Oil in- fonning the distri ct that supplies were on the way. "We were also told we wilt receive our future allocation as long as they have the gas," Martin said. "When I asked where the gas was coming from , I was infonned they bad gas in their tanks all along ." Martin said the gas crisis is going to continue for the district, however. Six of the district buses run on diesel fuel and the high school district supplies lhe diesel for four buses in Fountain Valley. Lewton said he is anticipating a severe shortage .of diesel fuel in January and February . As it is, the two men said , the district is getting only 85 percent of the gasoline they got last year and 65 percent or the diesel fuel. "You have to realize, with the extended day scheduling we've had to go to because of the crowded capmpuses. we're essentially running two high schools at each campus," Lewton said . "Even with a computer designing our bus schedules, our mileage is up 20 percent." t This year, the district is moving 4,700 - ISee WINDFALL, Page ll Huntington Brothel 2 Women Jailed Two of three women who pleaded guilty to prostitution charges after police discovered a house that wasn't a home on Capstone Drive in Huntington Beach drew 0jall tenns Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge James Turner sent Judy Ann Klusmeyer, 251 to the county jail for _ the next 60 days and ordered her to serve thre years probation on release. Helen Mme ttyan, 37, dre'w a 45-0ay jail term in the brief sentencing session and also was ordered to serve three years probation on release. Carol Ann Domian, 27, the third member of the statuesque trio -none is under six feet -was ordered to serve three years probation with no jail time. · All three were arrested on multiple prostitution and conspiracy charges after l!untington Beach police investigated reports from neighbors who became curious about the number of male visitors calling at 6762 Capstone Drive. A Superior Court civil ruling has put the home in the "bawdy house" category under the provisions of the state's • called "Red Light Abatement Act." The Capstone Drive home is currently under sheriff's surveillance pending a Superior Court trial that could end with the ruling that the home must be IOid at public auction. . Krogh . Pleads Guilty 'Plumbers' Supervisor Admits Ellsb erg Burglary . • "'.in,,. llmiae WASHINGTON (AP) -Egil Krogh Jr .. who . supervised the White House special investigation mlit known as t.qe "Plumbers;" pleaded guilty in federal court toclaY (o Ylolating tbe civil rigpts ol a Be,..ly Hills p<ydllatrlst in con- nection with· the Ellsberg burglary. The federal COOfpiracy charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine . In an agreement worked out with the SJ>C(:lal Watergate prosecutor, the J.4-.year<ild lawyer will not face further federal charges in COJUlection with the "Plwnbers' " operation to break into the offtce of Daniel Ellsberg's psychia· trist, Dr. Lewis Fielding. U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell told Krogh he will be sentenced withoul delay as soon as presenlencing pro-- cedures are complete. Less than two weeks after his right leg was amputated in a cancer ,<>W&tion, Edward Kennedy, Jr., 12, leaves Georgetown University ,HOspital,. e'~orted by his fa!Jl!lr, Sen. Edw~rct.Kennedy: Doctors ."li<I -afier the operation that there is "an excellent chance" the surger)' anested the cancer. Krogh promised "full and truthfu l disclosure of all relevant information and documents in his possession." But Krogh added an unusual condition, that he not ·be required to leStily about the "Plumbers'. " operation until after sentencing which is expected to be in about sil: or seven weeks. Orange Coast Oil Spark~ Heated · State Controversy Krogh said he wanted to be sentenced before testifyin,J, to dispel any notion that he w a s pleading guilty in ex· pectation of le'.nient treatment He said the rea¥'fl be is pleading is that he intended to assert in his defense that the break·in was designed to defend national security. But he said his oonscience will not permit him to do that. So he pleaded guilty, he said , "because I have no defense." Frem Wire Services Oil pumped oil Huntington Beach and Seal. Beach is becoming the center of controversy mvo1vfug the state Lands Com.mission, Union Oil aoo the federal Cost .of qving Council. Tbunttay in Sacramento, the Lands Commissioq vott;d to sell some of its: tidelailds oil to foor ·1nc1ei>eodenl" firms over the objections of Union Oil. The < finm offeredr to pay the state up . lo. $1.26 a barrel more th'"! ,the stale bas been re<eiving In ca!lh royalties lrom the major fl1ms that prodl!CO 9il on atate Jeases, Buch u the ones off ohore ol ·ffunllngion" Beach and Seal Beach. 'lbe aotion was origi&lly set for Oct. 25, but that day the Cost of Living Council made a preliminary ruling .that th'e state must comply wlth Phase 4 price controls in the sale of the oil. That ruling, if finalized by the council. could' have the effect of cutting the price the state gets for the oil to the anloµnt it currently receives in royatues. Stole Qmlroller HOtlllon !. Flournoy, the commillion chairman, said, 11U we Jooe'lhe.-l)lllon. wt gel '3.15. barrel rt111'1Jeea of who paya ll and who gets the oil •• , · mission disagreed with ht s inter:pretation of possible Cost of Living Council action. The commission· inaugurated a policy early this year of taking its roYalUes in oil from the major firms holding leases on state larijli rather 'than money. The state tber\ put lhe oil Out to bid. The four firms whose bids were ac- cepted Thursday were U.S. Oil & Refin- ing Co., GUstaf900 Oil C o m p a n y of California, U Sa\re Automatic Corp. and World eu Co. He said he now feels tbe break·in was a violation of constitutional rights. "I don't want to be associated with that violation any longer by attempting to defend it," he told Gesell . , Gesell allowed Krogh to remain free on bond pending sentencing and re- quested that the government, "out of ordinary, common decency," ~low Krogh to have access to his perSmal White House files . Disclosure of the Seplemher, 1971 burglary in Beverly Hills was made in federal court in Los Angeles during ·A Long Nap R uss Say Woman Slept 21 Years MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets have a modern-day Rip Van Winkle. . ' Nadezhda A, Lebedin has awakened in the Ukraine after sleep- ing 21 years, according to the trade union newspaper Trud. II gave neither her age, family status, nor any indication that doctors knew why she finally woke up. The oil aale was opposed by Georg< Bond, vtce p!Uidenl aad ge)leral counael lor Union OU. He aaid the stale could ' make mor. money If It rejected the bids since lhe price of oil is increasing d!Uy. '!The slate would be penalizing ltaell If It accepted those bids under today'• prices," Bond aakl. Trud oaid her problem began in 1952 when she was lll with flu. 0 Sbe WU absolutely Immobile, not el;eD able to ope'n her eyes, II Trud oaid. · Sb9. bad no reaction to pain, but her Internal organs kept func- tioning and she was led ''irtiflclally." · The chief neuropathologist lrom the ministry of public health in the Ukraine sald ll•t eyesight has been restored, she can speak and is relearning to wal'k. Jlloumo7 and l<pl aide• to the com- \. .. • Tite neuropa\)lologist, who was not ldentl1ied, diagnosed the case as *'lethargic sleep" and '6aid Jt was "extremely rare."' EUsberg'S trial in the Pentagon papers case. Krogh Iiad been llldlcted OD· d!orles of making · lalae dodor•lion .to the .original Waterpte ;,.,1111 jury in con- nection -1lle -.r-_.iben of the "Plumbert" adlt, Jt Howard Hunt and G. Gordcin Liddy. Both later were involved in the Watergate break-in, as well as the Ells berg burglary. Krogh worked under font"ler White House ·domestic affairs adviser John D. Ehrlichman. Ehrlicbman, Krogh and two other "Plumbers11• have been indicted. by a Los Angelei County grand jury in connection w~th the Ellsber1 break·in. They have pleaded innocent. Krogh'• atlor1ley, Stephen N. Shulman, said after bl• client ploaded guilty that the Calilomla charps agaln9t Krqlfi will be dropped _, In line - a state double jeopardy statute tflel pro- hlbils further prosecution. Slrulman said Krogh could bo cal)ed to testify' in Los Angeles as well as c:ooperating with federal prooecutora here. Corpse ·of Woman Kept As 'P~p~t of Family' CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -'lbe skeleton of an elderly woman was found in a 1ocked·up house today, and police said ii appeared as if her body had been placed in the living room by a brother and sister who wanted her to "remain part of the family ." Their bodies were found UJx.tairs in the bed where they died o~ natural causes, officials said. Police said the skeleton of Cecilla Kenney, 84, was discovered on a downstairs couch facing a television set. They said she may have been dead as long a.. a year. · Upstairs, police found the bodies of ·her 76--year-old sister, Grace, lying on a bed nex! to the brother, Roland, 72. They were thought to have died within the last month, according to officials. Del. Sgt. i<uce Russell said in his report, "It appears that Cecilia died of natural causes and the other two dressed her and laid her on Ule oouch so that she cou1d still remain part of the family. "Grace and Roalnd continued living .a normal life. Roland died around a month ago, and was asleep in his bed at the lime. Gr.ace left him there, and lried to continue her life, but found she could not. "She la y in the sarne bed as Roland and died a few days or weeks later." Medical examiner Thomas Mathews said there was no evidence of foul play. The family was reclusive and shunned contacts with neighbors, authorlUea said. The discovery wu made a f t e r Blast Kills Man UNION crfY (UPf)·-A gas e>Plooion heard 10 miles 1way rocked a c<men\ company Thursday nigh!, killing the '' superintendent .and wrecking o n e bulldln&. The victim, Lawrence M. Chenoweth, 64, of San Leandro, was the only penon on duly when the blaSI took place, police said. • neighbors called the post office to rep:>rt mail had been pilin& up Jn front ol the house for three weeks. Poet office officials notified police, wbo entered the house through a wtndow and discovered. the three bodies, along with tbe bodies of two pets. A neighbor, who declined to be iden· tified, said, "They were very quiet peo- ple. You never heard a peep out of them." A poUce sergeant said the tw~tory Victorian house had not been painted on the outside for about 30 years, and · that much of the yellow paint peeled ,1 off. "But inside it was very neat,,. he t said. "It had old furnishings and a 1\ wood stove. They weren't poor. They had a car parked in the garue." ~ "There was a bag or groceries on the kitchen table, so they didn't starve to death," the sergeant said. Or ... e C.ut • Weatller Those high clouds will thicken tonight with light rain likely by ·mid-day Saturday. Cooler temper· atures with highs in both areas in the mid.f!Os dipping to the mid.slM overnight. INSIDE TODAY "The Nutcracker,'' a. favorite ChristmtU Ballet, is being prt- sented by lwo Orang• Coasl ball<I groups. Sre lnfonnation In today'• Wrrkefl<lrr, -.. l..M..... • c.!lfwltl• ' Cl1uHIM »-a c-. " Cf'td.wti • Dt•fll ... ""' 14 1111 .... ,.,.. ' ......... _ .. ...u ,, ... llU JJ.-21 "" .. ltcw9 14 """""" It •-l~ '' -..,. • ( • • ........ , l'ILOI H / Friday, Novembtt 30, 1973 • -• Military Won't Abduct Oil for Edis~n ·Plant ' . By RUDI NIEOZll!."1.!KI °' .. Daltr ,. ..... Oil lhll'lll'"I• destined for Southern C.Ulomla Edison Company gen<rallng plant.s are not being commandeered for , military use. a ranking Edison official : l)'t>Orted today. R' Robert B. Beck, Orange County divtslOn . manager of the utility, said he bad not been Informed by any of his fuel suppllers tbat oil It b<lng divtrted to the military under the Defen.se Pnxluction Act. San Diego Gas and r~Jectric Company was advised by one or its suppller1 Wednesday tha t II can expect only 70 percent of the quantities under cantract for delivery 1n November and Dettmber. The redu ction 1,•ill short the utillly by 130,000 barrels or oil all of which \\'ill go to the military. Despite avoidlng the defense call, Beck pointed out that Edison will not com· pletely escilpe the energy shortage. He ·She Means It Woman Locks Ja ·ws to Lose W eiglit CARLTON, England (AP) -Roly poly houseWife Shirley Turner, jealous of the wolf whistles her bikini-clad daughters attract on the beach, has got her teeth into a new slimming diet. She's had surgeons cement her jaws together to stop ber eating. The 35-year-0ld housewire, a hefty Z38 pounds, chuckled through clenched teeth and said: "I've lost 15 pou-1s in two weeks · and riy teeth will '1ay locked together until I'm down to 125 pounds." At this rate, she won't be able to open her mouth until June. Mrs. Turner's trouble is that she's a compulsive eater and nothing could make her stop. So doctors at nearby Nottingham General Hospllfll decided the only way to get her to kick the habit was a cement mutile. They applied cement to her upper and lower leech and screwed a silve r split in the cement on each side of her mouth. "It was painful at first, but now it feels better and the gnawing hunger pangs have gone ," she muttered. "What really made me decide to have this treatment was that l l o v e fashionable clothes, but I just couldn't get any to fit me." The clincher came last summer when wolf-whistling beach boys giving her two teen-age daughters the eye made her feel embarrassed about her bulk. "lt was awful ," Mrs. Turner groaned. "I just couldn't put my bikini on and face it. "But if this treatment works, I'll be wearing a bikini and miniskirts next summer. Being rat is terrible." She can't open her mouth at all. "I'm living entirely on tea, coffee and tomato soup spiced with plenty of salt, pepper and vinegar." Doctors keep a close check on Mrs. Turner because mechanical lockjaw isn't the easiest way to lose weight. "It could be done only under strict supervision," a medical expert said. The Guinness Book of Record s lists the longest fast or this kind us 382 days. It was nHide by a 33·year--0ld Scot named Angus Barbieri who kept his mouth shu t to slim dov•n from a gargantuan 462 pounds to a sti1n 168 eight years ago. lle did it by sipping tea, coffee, soda "'ater and water with vitamins in a Dundee hospital . Huntington Junio1· Miss Com1letitio11 Set at GWC Nine high school girls "'ill compete Saturday night al Golden West College for the title of Hun tington Beach Junior Miss. The pageant, open to the public, will U.S. Exporting Of Fuel Soars WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les Aspln (IJ..Wis.), said today that despite the threat of rationing, the United States :exported. 493,000 barrels of gasoline. ,650,196 barrels of rue! oil and 628,019 'barrels of residual fuel oil during ~October. • Aspin said official government figures •show about the same volume of exports •was reported in September, making the two-month total about 3.4 million barrels. Aspin is sponsor of a bill to ban export of gasoline, fuel oil and propane derivatives during the domestic shortage. DUCK ABDUCTED :IN BIRMINGHA'f'fl feature talent and physical fitness routines by the contestants, and will culminate in the crowning ot the \vinner. The contest, sponsored by the Jaycees of Huntington Beach. is based on scholastics, achievem~nt. talent, poise, personality, physical fitness, and a personal interview. To quaJity. girls must have a 3.5 to 4.0 overall grade paint average - equaUJng :a B!pfu.! or A. In lhe past, two local winners - both from Marina High -have won state honors. and one girl was named the national winner. In 1969, Jackie Bennington was named number one in state competition. then captured the national tille in f\1obile. Ala. The next year. her classmate and friend Rhond a ,.,iartyn. was state cham- pion and finished third in the national co ntest. Contestants this year include Kathleen Hill, Teri Garakian, A I ex a nd r a Googooian and Jeri Crouch from ,.,_1arina ; Ronn ctte Lombardi, Lisa Bro\vn. Lauri Churchhlll , and Sul! Trester from Hu n· tington Beach High : aiid Mary J\.lullady fro.m Westminster High. The .pageant begins at 7:30 p.m., in Forum 2 at .CJi>Jden West, and tickets are available at the door. The cost is $1.50 for aduJts, and 75 cents for children . said the c:ompony has a foree8'1 shortage ol lb: mlllloll barrels of oU for 1971. "W• ....., ortalnallr 11 ml!Uon barrels slqt ,bojt we monaaed to wblUle that down to six 1>Y ftoolng more oil. We m constantly looking around the world for oil and we have muJti tude.s or con· tractt," Beck said. The six mJllion barrels represent a shortage or about 10 percent, according Jo Beck. The Defense Department Invoked the Action Set By Railroad For Signals City engineers may be Jess than a month away from clearing the ronfusion at the fivC-\\'ay intersection of ~lain Street, Gothard Street and Garfield Avenue in Huntington Beach. Bill Hartge, acting, Public Works Diret'· tor, said today Southern Pacific Railroad has decided to install wan1ing signals on the tracks whlch cross Main Street . Because railroad authorities had not decided what to do \Vith those tracks. the city had refused to turn on its brand new $85.000 set of signal lights. The lights have been fla shing red in all five directio ns, creat ing a ~ucssin~ game for motorists crossing the \1 idc intersection . The intersection has been free of ac· cidents, probably due to the caution needed to traverse it, Hartge indicated. Southern Pacific had been asked to either abandon its tracks, which run all the way to Atlanta Avenue, or put up crossing gates. Neither action will be taken, but 11artge said a feasible compromise has been reached whereby the railroad com- pany will install warning devices which will automatically tum all signa l lighl s red ~\'hen a train approaches. . Currently, the railrond on!.v runs cars over the line once a day to n1ainta 111 its right-Of-way. But if there is n1:::irc industrialization near the line, the rail tr affic could increase. Hartge said he expects Southern Pacific to install its signal hook -up in iwo to three weeks. He said the city had refused to activate lhe nonnal traf- fic signal pattern' -green, yellow and red -because engineers felt the city \.\'Ould then be liable for any trouble \vith the trains. From Page I PRESIDENT ... of indepe ndent notary records leave only the personal assertion by 1.fr. Nixon's lawy~rs to establish that the President deeded the papers to the archives before July 25, 1969 , when Congress cut off generous tax deductions for such gifts." 4-day School Week? SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The chair- man of the Assembly Education Committee Thursday proposed legislation to cut the public school week from fi ve to four days to help ease the enj?rgy crunch ... You can't meet a crisis ,1::ithout accepting major changes," Assemblyman Leroy F. Greene (D- Sucramento), said. BffiMJNGHAM, Ala. (AP) -Beulah ·Burell told police that duck rustlers ·struck the pond in her front yard and made off with her pet duck, which she vaJued at $100. A police report described the missing duck as "large and \l.•hite." • Sgt. Ollie Vance of the Crimes Against Property Bure~u had this comment, ~"Considering the 1 fact that the duck 'iisappeared the day before Thanksgiv· 'ing, chances of apprehending the thief •Dr of recovering the du ck appear to 'be very, very slim." San Diego Power Company To Mal{e Up Fuel Losses OIAJNI COAST "' DAILY PILOT TM OAng.e C.0.•f DAILY PILOT .. 1111 ....,lc!I i. C9nlb!Mlll ·""' Nfll'l·PrQt. 11 Pllbllalleo by ..... Or..._. 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A.....ialllf 642·1671 ,...... ..... °"""' a.tr C....t'l'Wltltt ~ Mf.lnt c..rrlelflt, 1m. Or•• Cotti Pl#litfl .... COiNtitnr. Ho ""' •••'--m11t1rot1Mt, tifl~ INlllP It .. 'tWflMft'llftft IMfflll -r .. ,.....,.ICIMI ~lllWI .,. .. ...,. ~ " .,..""' -· ...... < .... ,.., ... "" .. '"'' MfM, ~"""""'· ~-~ corr~ ~u ....,...,, 11¥ !Ml u .tJ mllllflll'J m111tory ......................... I By . JOUN. VAL TERZA Of tho Dilly Piiot il•ff This week 's sudden cancellation of a fuel contract between San Diego Gas and Electric Company and one of four major oil companies means that t h e utility will ha ve to make up about 2.5 days' production from other sources. That was the opinion today of chief utility spokesman Ca rl Welti after the firm announced. Thursday that the Union Oi l Company had been forced to cut its delivery or generator oil lo the utility by 130,000 barrels for the month or Dece1nbc r. The Department of Defeitsc orrlerrd ihc reduction under its 23·yea r-0ld !X>"'crs lo commandeer fuel if it is needl'd. - The enabling act forces fuel suppliers to cancel contracts made with other customers if need be. Union reduced Its delivery lo SDG and Eby 30 pe rcent. Welti termed the rl'duction of Union fu el relatively minor in the total scope of December production nnd said !hat It could probably be made up ra1her easily. He explained that the Union cutback amounts to 65,000 mega ,vatl hours of energy production. Calculating the average winter day's consumption at 24,000 megawatt hours , he said the loss amounted to the 2.5-day figure. 'Allhoogh the first use of the Depa(!· meal ol Defense's commandeering powtrs proved minor to Jhe utility which serves portlom ollhe South eo .. 1, WelO relayed the utility's fears that future actions by the federal agency could Indeed arrect the rlnn's power output i.n 1974. • "We're jurt not sure U this will happen , in the neii:t quarter \\'hen the Defense Department might do the same to another of our suppliers," he said. Originally the utility believed it had ironclad contracts for fuel delive ries through the yea r 19i6 from its four oil sources. Those pacts led spokesmen for SDG nnd E to procla im that it enjoyed a remarkably healthy outlook in light of the national crisis. aut lhe recent Union Oil cancellation and drastic proposals now being con· siclered by the California l'ublic Utilities Commission could end the bliss at SDG and E. Hearin gs began late this week before lhe PUC on a share-.the·wealth proposal whereby n1ore fortunate utilities would hav e to share power with others in the state hardest hil by the fuel crisis. If that move suCCt!eds, SDG and E's fuel might be used to help light homes and industries far out of the service area. In the meantime, the utility, like every other one in the nation, has launched a COMCrvation program with Its custcr mers. Welti said that his utility'• IArg .. t customer Is the 11th Naval District, and brass £rom that enUty met 1111JQday with utility executives to begln worllng out solid plans for major conserv~tlon. efforts. Householders as well have been urgl'd to cut back heavily in their use or power. "We sense a strong spirit or coopera· Uon from evcrycne we've t.arkcd 1L:i. and judging from th« calls our Clfflce5 are receiving, household customen are concerned and willing to help," he added. 13-ycar-old Defense Produclloo Act for the Jlrst tlme on Tuesday, ordtrtng 22 major oil companies to deliver 825.9 ntlllion gallons or gasoline and olhcr fuels by Jan. 16, L974. The act authorizes oil companies to~ break delivery conlracts with civilian customers. E:<perL<; view thr diver11ion of supplies to the mll ilal'y \\'ilh concern , especially if thef Arab embargo conUnues. The cmtwrgo has cut ofr about 300,000 barrels ol oil that would _,,,.11y reach the Defense Department each day. Edison procures most Qf its oil from Indonesia and Venezueln and only a small percentage from the Arab CO¥n· tries. "In tact it's almos t w:o." Beck said. "But the circumstances ln tbe. Middle East could still affect us," he continued. ··The Public Ulillti" Commi1Sion 11 holditi.g hearings in San Francisco right now. They're talking aboUt a mutual * * * To Visit, 11 .s. ·' asslatance program durina which all lhl! utWtles In Ibo atai.. would ohero their power and thelr supp~es. That woul~' moke those who had JiOO<J •upPlies of oll a blt worse otf and those which \\:ere really short a llttle bit better olf. It would pul everybody In the same boat." Beck said it was too early to tell whether the PUC's reque•t for a vohm· tary 10 pe.rcent cutback , Jn the use of electtlcity was havlng any clfect. Ne ·u; Mideas t Clasli Flares By lhe Associated Press Arab Oil Chiefs ' I Egyptian troops tried to advance in three positions on the west bank of the Suez Canal today, but were beaten back after exchanges of artille ry and mort~r fire, the Israeli military command said, . (EaFlier story., page ·4) · To Air P osition· No casualties were reported. The Israelis said f\.li'O exchanges \Yt're nenr Little Bitter Lake and the other near the Kilo1neter 147 past in I he Sinai area occupied by Egypt's 3rd Army. The firing followed an outbreak of fighting Thursday within earshot or Israeli and Egyptian negotia tors at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Sue~ highway . l'ro11• Page l WINDFALL. • • st udents to and from school on buses. The energy crisis already has led to !he banning of rooter buses and the limiting of field trips, athlelic, band and drill team buses. The students who ride buses to their campuses live a minimum of two miles from their schools. ,.,1artin said the biggest problem facing the district when it appeared there would be no gas was how to get the' 397 students from the Swiset-Seal Beach area to Huntington Beach High School, a distance of nine miles. "We also have a problem with the students \\'ho attend Wintf!rsburg con- tinuation and mentally retarded cla sses because they come f.rom all over the district." Martin said. Lewton said the district was also fac- ing the possibility or laying off 39 employes "'ho drive or work on the buses. , "We seem to Ile ok_.-: for ,~wt llut \.\·e just don't know-about tfle fUture ," ,.,,lartin said. BRUSSELS (UPI) -Two Arab oil 1ninislers said today they will go to the United Stales ~londay to esplain the Arab stand on the Middle East to American government officials. "We are delivering the message with which we were entrusted by the Arab cowttries," Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani , Saudi Arabian oil minister, to Id newsmen. The "message" Yamani referred to was the Arab oil embargo against coun· tries considered less than friendly to the Arab cause. Arab oil producers have cut oil deliveries to some "neutral coun- tries" and established total boycotts on "unfriendly" countries like the United States and the Netherlands. Yamani, who came here "'ith Algerian energy minister Belaid Abdesselam for talks with Belgian and Common Market officials, said he wouJd "meet govern- Virgin, lsland:S Man. Murdered CHARLOTTE AMALIE, V . I . 1AP) -A British landowner was found stabbed to death today In the ' latest in a series of violent killings in the Virgin Islands, police said. On the neighboring Island or St. Croix, 19 persons have been slain in 18 months. The dead man was Identified as Ian Victor Major, 54. who served as an officer iJ1' the BrJUsh·marines I durlni World War II IJld ·IA also known for }'achttng exploits. .i.• ' ment officials " but refused to say which ones. lie indicated he '\.\•as going on his own lnltlatlve without a U.S. government invltation, and said, "I don't know how long we \\'ill stay - for some time." Yamani, a frequent visitor to the United States -he once studied at the Harvard Business School -said the United Sta tes was classified as ''hostile" because or its aid to Israel. ··1r a country takes a hostile attitude MAJOR LEAGUE PARKS GO DARK JN EMERGENCY, Pago 26 by helping Israel," he said , "then \VC think we do not have to give them any lhing ... We do not cooperate with anybody thal does not cooperate with us." While in London, the two announced that Britain, France and Spain had been eii:empted fr om new cutbacks in Arab oil deliveries becall5e of what they described as a friend1y attitude toward !he Arab states:. They also said Ute United States. had changed it.s attitude toward Israel as a resu lt of Arab press ure, but that the cha nges were not sufficient for an ~nd to lhc oil boycott against America. At the Brussels Airport. Yamani refus- ed to comment on his talks but told ne\\'S;nen: "Lei's hope this whol e thing will soon be o\·cr and !he situation wilt change enough lo solve the whole oll supply proble1n." They tb cp rushed off to lunch with Premier Edmond Leburton and other Belg ian leaders to explain 1he Arab li!WJJOlnt "'\ lh• Middle Eut problem. Yamanl aD(l. tl\e Algerian minilter met wilh BriUs!J Prime Minister Edward Heath Thw\Sday. re-holida~ sale • SOFAS & CHAIRS ONE WEEK ON LY • DON'T DELAY Get Ready For The Holidays With A New Sofa or Chair Here Are Jusr A Few Examples Of The Many Excellent Values. SOFAS 7' SOFA •.. Mort• Canon Print 8' SOFA ••. Mar<Jo Canoo , , • Gohl70-.o YHlol Pair 5' LOVE SEATS • , , Royal C-hid YllYot Pair 7' SOFAS ••• Shrrll •• , Yolow/Gahl 8' SOFA • • • Margo C-n • • • Linen Print Gr- 8' SOFA ••. SherrlQ Cro1<0nl .1 •• Ynlot Rod/Rat CHAIRS Pair CHAIRS Margo Canon , • , YoBow or Orall90 Yolnt Slll<JI• CHAIR ••• Woadmarlc ••• Groen Sln9lo CHAIR ••• FUnlridgo • ._. r.,..,.10 ,...,., .. , ~air CHAIRS ••• Royal CMCll ••• Plok Y- INTERIORS WUllDAYS I SATURDAYS t:OO " 5:30 FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 • l l G. SALE $440, '379. $770. '599. ~n. IA. '549, IA. $5'9. IA. s499, IA. $S70. '489. $SH. '499. $279. IA, '199. IA. $159. '129. $500. '425. $379. IA. ~~ •. • ~Ar TORRANCE e 2l'4' HAWfHORNf ll\ID, J71·1J:7t If," • .. ... • t y D yea ... for ... for E 0 I • At Your Servi·ce • A Sandoy, WedaHday ud Friday Featare Of Ille Dally Pllol Goe a probt,m.1 Thm IOrite Pal Dunn. Pal will cut ml lapt, Ott lh• • cmw1r1 and activn 11 o u netd to '-l tolve t111qu£. lits In II"" trnmene and bu1ine11. llail 11 our QWS· don.1 to Pai .. Outtn I At Your Service, OTGt10t COOlt bail'tl Pilot, P.O. 80% J56(J, Co.!t.a Meta, t:a., 92628. Include 11our tctephone numbn. Yule Candy Recipe DEAR PAT : For the past several years, Betty Crocker's frosting mix package had a candy recipe printed on the box. We've used this recipe for our Christmas candles and now l eee there's a new recipe which calls for cooking and It isn't what we want. 'nle old me is a "tradition" and all of a sudden I lind myself witboul the recipe because I never bothered to copy it. Is there any way to find out what this old recipe is? My children are counting on me. P.C., Huntington Beach Betty Crocker Kltcb.ena, MlnntapoU&, Miu., fou nd tbe recipe for your "Creamy Vanlll1 Fondant." It ca.Us for one pKUg:e of creamy-type frosting: mb:, oae-balf1 cap eofttned batter or mlllpllae ud 1 ten)IOOO vaallla. Mb: wttb fort 1ad knead two times on a board dusted wltll conledlonen ng:ar. 'lbe caody may be colored ud lhaped Into one-Inch baU1 or any dednd for m. Bikes Not Illegal DEAR PAT: Can a supermarket boost the price ol an item already on the shelf? I was in a hurry to get through a 6ig shopping list prior to Thanksgiving, and only now did I notice that several itmlS had "new" price sticken pasted over old, lower stickers. How can a alare do this when it may have purchas- ed tbaee item! at lower wholesale prices !ban -presently prevailing? Doesn't someone have a law against this JOrt ti thing? A.K., CapiltraDo Betth C1aadl does, bot we don't. Caudiin foOd 1btpper1 most be more vocal tUn •·e are bec1U1C1 that nation's price board ud most of tbe major food retailers recmly reached whit ••• termed 1s a "gtademu.'1 •creemmt," wltueb)' tbe C011PUDer woald OllJ.y llaf.f to pay ttie lo-pHce wllea two or mo~ ~ce allcketl are .m .. d lo .. lieu\. ' Enern S•mlltJ Gulde DEAR PAT: The ...,.Ill' crisis now appears to be a reality Instead of jusl a threat. Not being used la serious attempts at saving energy, except for turning off WllleCeSSllry lights, 'I'm looJt. mg for other eoeri)' COOl&VatiOn id~ such as a booklet or pamphlet full of. information. Is such a t~ available at a nominal cost? T.C., Daaa PoiDI ''11te EHriY Saving Gatde Beot" e.. tam US Ups aDd costs !5 cents. ftls ..,._, lllutrated booklet, .. -pnm-mhtt unal energy coasumptl N costs C1l&t of "51 if 11 few 11 aevea tips ore followed, II pablllbed u a publlc ...-b y Ille Eleclrtcal lllldutrlet A_.lloo of Soatlient California. Re- qaest from Electrlcll lnda1trlt1 Aa oc., lt55 E.' W•1h1Dcton Blvd., Los Angeles, Cl. toNt, or Consumer Mfall'l-Energ:y Savhlp, P.O. Bo:r SlO, '11er1mento, Ca. 115141. / Steam Vs. SMimpoo DEAR PAT: I have a large atta ol nylon carpet badly in need of cleaning and opinions are divided over the benefila ol Ille steam cteanlng method and ~g with a detergent. Do )'Oil know which melhod Is profera~! C.E. W., Nnporl Beacb ,,,. -of conty carpet el 11• !n CMtaded 11 tblt steam dt811(q II preferable. Sleam Matier Carpet aenen, eo.ta Mea, Jlle• Mtll types or dlellin1 and •II mra1e fGr an e"111-ol ,.... carpet'• cleanlllg ~. If ,.. call Geneva Servais at 18-tsu. AD cteaaen •sreed thlt 1bam- pootq -to -cleao carpel top soil accmnlatloa, bat Ute resklae embedded ta ....... llben Ille• oetlles oato the baclilot --Ub I upt - ----..... -holb 1111 carpel ud bac Uas ,.., a period ti dme. !!Mm,... aylta carpel alM teadl to caue ffben to attract -·-..u after cleaaliia. ' Veireta•les Da11N19ed1 DEAR PAT: Everyone heard about the smog damage to lettuce . ~ps in Orange County before Thanksiivmg, and I would !lice to know ll olber home-grown vegetobles suffered damage too. The leaves on most of my 1arden's ~ look llll'IDce and I ...ader boir tho -,..-r ca n ~ullh -damop lrom other ..... inbJema. c.s., Olllo -u ,._, pinltl' lllWI .,_ etlq1e~ ---...... -..... ___ ,, ...... _""'" .. 11rmaJ u.a or banaed...,..,.... .... l"M9 tlllae, e•••Cfli .are pod tloal • .,.. ....... Ille ....... 'lbe U.1-.111 " Caltlonlla Acrlnltor•I El· --II Onole C-ry 11y1 tllal Ill oddltlol to letl8ce a umber " -..... Ille ...,. ud -....... , ........ .,. ......... affected ' ..,. ... "'"" -S.1111)1 No-. I ' Light Vp the Sky Rocket trail from another mi ssile launch at Van~ denberg Air Force Base near Santa Maria made this pattern over the Orange Coast Thursday eve- ning. Tightlipped officials of the Air Force Space and Missile Test Center said merely that a research re-entry vehicle was launched from Vandenberg at 5 p.m. A modified Minuteman I propelled the ve- hicle down the Vandenberg range, they added. • .- Su,.ida y's Pilot Will Take [,ook At Wine Return If you're going to be looking for "Sun- day's Best" in the Daily Pilot, be sure to take a look at these: WINE'S COUNTY COMEBACK - Vineyards in Orange County were plcn· ti~ul enough 100 years ago to make this California's ''wine country," not that "Sanapa-noma" place up north. And the vines are coming back, according la YOU Sectton fealure by Staff Writer C8ndace Pearson. S1'VN GUNS -Hailed as the ultimate in humane weaponry when first · Ur troduced, tbe stun gmi is in wide use today. Whether it is likely to replace lawmen's traditional .38 specials and 12 gauge shotguns is discussed by Staff Writer Arthur R. Vinsel in a YOU Section report. ' NAMATH'S LIBERATED l\IOM -Six I famous men pick their favorite liberated women and "Broadway Joe" Namath nominates bis mother ln the cover story of this Swtday's Family We<kly. Future Use of Coastline Studied in Irvine Confab The future or development, recre ation and land use legislation along the coastline will be the subject of a two-d ay conference ~1onday and Tuesday at the Airporter Inn in Irvine. The all-day sessions are sponsored by the Marine Technology Society of Lo8 Angeles and the University of Southern California Sea Grant program. Featured speakers include officials from coastal regulatory agencies in California, Wasbingtm, 0 reg on, lllichigan and Hawaii. Registration will take place from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday "at the hotel, 18700 MacArthur Blvd. and at 8:45 a.m. Mon- day. The fee is $2.5 for both days for members of the marine soeiety and $30 for non-members. A total or 37 speakers are scheduled to discuss current coastal zone legislation and activities, increasing the coastal zone carrying capacity, monitoring re- quirements, future trends of marine recreation, the role of the courts and outlook for coastal development. Proposition 20, the 1972 coastal zone act passed a year ago by voters, created one state and six regional coastal com· missions in California. Joseph Bodovitz, executive director of the state commission, and Donald Bright, chairman of the South Coast regional commission covering Orange and Los Angelies COl.Ulties,. are two of the coo- ferenCe speakers. State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (&- Newport Beach) and L. Edwin Coate a deputy administrator of the federal Environmental Protection Agency (-EPA) are also scl>eduled to appear. ' Marine science and geology experts from USC, Louisiana State University, UC Berkeley,, Scripps fastitute of Oceanography, San Diego Stale Colie~e and Lorig Beach State1 Qolleg a,1if afe on the agenda. • ... ,, t1oweu1btr 30, 1973 H DAIL V PILOT 3 Police Nab Three Me n In Slayings Police in Memphis. Tenn., are ques- tioning three men -captured after a shootout-about the murder of Mildred Hazelwood of Laguna Hills and country and western guitarist James P. Widener in Nashville. Mrs. Hazelwood, 411, of 24252 Pike Road, and Widener, a musician in Hank Snow's band, were found shot to death in an alley Tuesday night, the apparent victims of a robbery. The three suspects arrested · i n Memphis have not been identified by poUce, who said a car belonging to Widener was found near the motel \\'here the three were staying. The three men were arrested at the motel in southwest Memphis Thursday night by homicide detectives searching for a man who attempted to buy airline tickets with a· credit card belonging to Widener. The card had been blacklisted and when the computer rejected it at the hotel ticket counter, the man fled and police were called. Police said two of the• three _men v.·ere tricked into walking to the motel office where they were arrested. The t:1ird man stayed in a room and ex· changed about 20 shots with officers before crawling out the door after a barrage of teargas was fired. Police said five . weapons were con· fiscated in the room shared by the men. A taxi driver said be took the three men to the motel from a spot in downtown Memphis near where Widener's car was found. Mrs. Hazelwood and her husband, who died 10 months ago of cancer, bad been longtime friends of Widener. The dead woman bad gone to Nashville to visit her son, who is in the Army at Fort Campbell, Ky., relatives said. Mrs. Hazelwood recenUy moved to her Laguna Hills home, where she plan· ned to live with her son. Her husband, a former Army officer, was also a country music writer and friends with many big stars of the music world. She will be buried beside her husband in Arlington NaUonal Cemetery this weekend, relatives &aid. The murder of Widener was the second fatal shooting of a count.ry music en· tertainer in recent Weeks. David "String. bean'' Akeman r and ~ ~ wwe found shot to death on their farm near Nashville Nov. 11. Police say there is probably no connection. SPEAKS TO LAWYE RS Ro bert Finch Fincli Warns Cou1it y Lawyers On, 'Reacting' By TOM BARLEY Of Ille 0.llY ,.llllf Sleff Former Nixon Cabinet member Robert H. Finch warned Orange County lawyers Thursday that it would be "a grave mistake" to indict the entire presidential · system because of the Watergate scan- dal. Finch, who ~senred for four years as President Nixon's Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, told the Orange County Bar Association that expansion of the confirmation procedure at Senate and Congressional levels "might be the much better route. "We mustn't overreact," Finch warn· ed. "I think we already have the solution to thls type of problem within the ex· isting system and we could make the appointment of all key members of the presidential circle subject to screening at Senate and Congressional level." Finch revealed before the meeting that he is less than a month away from a decision that may mean his return to political life. "ll will be either for governor of California or the Senate," Finch said. But the man who left the job of lieutenant governor to take the HEW post at President Nixon's personal re- quest made iL clear that the office of governor carries the greater at- traction. Finch warned hb lawyer audience that a rapidly changing society Is going to pul unprecedented stralna on this llf" tion's ·legal profession. , "But we can meet these chaDenges and still come up with an ordered and stable .aodfl71" ' lie Mid. "L"" hill . alwaya been adoptable and plilllll .and · we as lawyers must be ready to ac:Cept what may be ..-veeplng changes •. " BER NICHE FITS -Nance North, achool teacher, Girl Scout leader and - fmally -greenbell planner, feels she has found her ultimate role and wonders bow many otl)ers have spent yean getting there. She's featured in leadoff story of Women's Section in wbidl Staff Writer AUiloD Deerr profiles Transit District Coordination Set By Two Groups , • ._.R,,_.~~~-•--....,....mmmw...,.•••••--••......,..._...,.~.....,.•-i the planner in words and pbola6. · Phones Silenced In Laguna Beach- During Outage The electrical outage that tert Laguna BeaCh po:werless for . ,1>9ut lO . minutes Thursday also caused a minor in· terruption 1n telephone service. John Black, Laguna managt?r for General Telephone, said a pause oc- curred betJVeen the time the power went off and the telephone company's own emergency generators kicked in. That pause affected the electrtcal switching equipment. 1be interruption was brief he said. 1be telephone com· pafly maintains an emergency power supply of generators and batteries. Lighted buttons on office-type telephones with multiple lines were blac~ed out by the electrical failure as they are tied directly into the com- mercial power system, Black said. * * * Orange Cotlllty Transit District and the Southern California Rapid Transit District agreed Thursday night to make every effort to coordinate each district's separate rapid transit plans. A resolution to that effect was adopted at a first ever joint meeting of the two districts' board of directors in Anaheim. OCTD Chairman Ralph Clark recently complained that the RTD routes outlined 'in that agency's $6.6 billion plan did not create a logical traffic flow into Orange County from the metropolis. The resolution should now make cer· lain that plans, currently being developed by both agencies, will relate to the common transportation needs of both counties. Clark praised the document approved Thursday and said it would lead to greater cooperation between the two large transit districts. The meeting: was arranged to exchange ideas between directors and o£ficials of the two agen· cles. . Both districts are expected to have completed a preliminary rapid transit cor· ridor plan by next March. No firm decision bas been made by either agency on whether ran or bus transportation will be emphasized. Circuit Breaker Blamed For County Blackout At least 60,0'X> Southern California Edison Company customers got a first- hand feel for the energy crisis Thursday when electric power over a wide area of Orange County failed. South county SCE representative Bob Hodges blamed the blackout on, "an accidental operation of a' circuit breaker at Olli' Santiago substation." Power was out belwedl 10:13 and 10:40 a.m. The -ute fall1"" affected most ol tbe Saddlebact Valley, Laguna Beach, lnlne and parll ol Newport Beach, San Juan Caplaltlno and TusUn. fte ligt!tl were out for almost two hours at 'l\iotir: High School and·lludcnls ~ ... 1 bome be~ lhe hmch hour ibecaUle the nearly windowleu rooms were pitch black. Dick Vtrrue, SCE'1 Santa Ana servlco manager, laid !he high lchool'• power failure wasn't FAilon'a fauJt. "When lie powtr came back on afttr 8eftD mtmd• or eo, tbe surge of current was too much .for the school's own system.to handle and their rnain breaker opened," he said. "Nobody knew how to turn it back on again." There were scattered reports of outages longer than the seven minutes SCE Is talking about but Hodges said mosl were probably similar to the Tustin situaUoo. Brezhnev Flies Home NEW DELI!! (AP) -Soviet Com· munlst party chief Leonid Breihnev lcfl for home t.oday afler a five-day visit to New Delhi during which he made repeated calls for international detente and an A.siin colle~tlve security pact. At a brief airport ceremony, Prime Mliliattr Indira Gandhi and Brezhnev each expreoaed confidence that growing Indian-Soviet lrtllndship would help the cause of peaco In Ille world. ! ! ~ ~ B ~ I I I I ~ I I I I i I I PORTABLE MICROWAVE OVEN Prictd Sft2ftl5 From ..,. I. .,- I CM: ... , ... .............. I (J I 1l ! -·-PWI-~ w '9 Nit d••'*"-a.....11111111..-cftierl, .........,. ............. .'fRll MICROWAVE COOKING SCHOOL SAT., DEC. 1st ' 11:00 A.M. to S:OO P..M. AT BOTH LOCATIONS ModelJl45 t ,..,. Autom1dc Stll·Clt1nin1 Ovt• Sy1t1m-tk ... 11ulrt Mn, l11eh1d1n1 shtlvts, i1tMr daOt ot wt•, •nd 1Ull1t• 1tnit rthtctor,..... t Retlry lnfini• Httt Stiil-. UnifC9'1Do&s a Atetsed Caokm, wittl N•lhtJ l .. ta1Cits S,iHMt1 a Allt°""tic 0"" TMMr. Cleek Mii S..-kr:rt1 a AlltMliic J 11111 Snsi·Tem,...,.rt .. Unit • Ttt11n• c .. ltd GrW. • Tw. -.,,u, .. O•Mts-0• ii-... • U"'5 Ma1t11 .. 1M1 Ca .. IHll .it11 Rlct,n t HMt ltn1,etff Gl•.Distl tM Triwtt IAVAllA GOLDENWEST & WARNER HUNTIN,GTON BEACH Sales Only 142-5596 401 MAIN S"(R~ HUNTINCiTON BEACH s.mc. & Sales 536-7561 i > • ~ --... --..... _.,., :::...- UNITE n • ,. " I • 4 DAIL ( PtLO I t ,""'4, ••ll'h:•.,<Af A , .. ,,J I JANGLED NERVES DEPI'. -'Ibis ~«SY crllls has hardly even aetiled In 1"I and already I'm weary ol ll fate i.. yesterday. We had an ele<> ~ power outage right here on our very own Orange Coast. It deoeloped that out there some place In the vast reaches or Irvine one of lbe_ big power towers blew a 'fuse, or shorted a circuit, or who knows what? Anyway, lhe result was that all the juice went orf in Corona del Mar, Irvine ~fiMlon Viejo. El Toro , Laguna Beach and ]Xlints adjacent. Some of us here in the newsroom figured this Was it. The energy doomsday. It's all over. TEN MINUTES LATER, the electrical power was back on again, hwnmlng along just Uke in the old days. Another crisis averted. Clearly, all this talk of running out of everything has folks near nervous collapse. People faint every time a Japanese lightbulb b\lm! out on them. Ci~ are running out to buy locking gasoline caps ~ five-gallQll containers. Just last rught J was I visiting one of those old-fashioned ice cream parlors ~ere they use the tiniest possible lig'htbulbs for decoration and at- mosphere. They soa~1 up about 85 much energy as a paper match. The manage- ment, however, bad gone along and unscrewed every other bulb. You just can't be too careful. And the night before that, I have this friend whose electric blanket abrupUy malfunctioned. It gave him an unscheduled hotfoot and burned a black, &mOUJdering hole in the covers. He figured it was 11-fr. Nixon getting even with him for having plugged in the thing in the first place. mus WE SEE the teni)ler of the times. Folks can see some awful energy crisis in everything that happens today. You can, for esample, start wm')'ing about the United States Postal Service. Will it have enough energy fo get the mail through this Christmas? Only Ume will tell. As for the mail. you can believe the implications of good stories or bad stories. I have this acquaintance, !Ol' example, who has the habit of mailing in his paycheck for deposit every week. He mails it through the Coista Mesa Post OHJce. The destination js a Newport Beach bani<. U you are at all acquainted with the region, you know that Costa Mesa ls Indeed very adjilcent to Newport Beach. A small lad coold have been hired to hand-carry his deposit. Anyway, he mailed it. Four days later, the hank got his money. Only by the grace of the U>rd did he elude retMbution on charges of floating worthless paper. ON THE OTHER HAND. I had this package "'hid:i I was most anxious to get rushed to a scenic California won· derspot known as Goleta. Goleta is near Santa Barbara. Other than that, it is next to nowhere . Thus I hugged the precious package to my bosom and sallied forth to the aforementioned Costa Mesa Post Office at 4:30 p.m. There I pleaded with the niaa man to please post it to Goleta in all haste. Later inlelligence indicated my mailing was delivered at t h e Goleta doorstep at 7:30 a.m. the next morning. That's right. folks , The next morning. Well. all these incidents just prove that in these days of crisis. you can sure hear a lot of )'arns that contradict each other. If you \\'Ork .hard at it , ypu can find something new to \\'OITY about every day. IJ.S., Rnssia .Salvaging Peac~ ' Up to 2 Nations By Ull!ted Pm1 llltuutloaal. Egypt said 11>day it was reconlliderlng whether to attend the Geneva peace conference because of the breakdown of its cease-fire talks with Israel. Both Egypt and Israel. whole troops have been on full alert for weeks. warned that the fighting could reswne at any time. Maj . Gen. Enslo SU!asvuo, head of the U.N. emergency force. met in Cairo today with Egyptian War Minister Ahm· ed Ismail and then new to Jerusalem to meet with Israeli government officials. There was speculation be wu trying to gel tile talks started again hut a U.N. spokesman did not confirm this. • THE TALKS at Kilometer Jot on the Cairo-Suez road were broken off Thurs: day hy Egypt because of what It called Israel's intransigent position ln refusing to return to the Oct. 22 cease-fire lines as called for by a U.N. resolution. Egypt said it waa now up to Washington and rtf()l(.X)W as co-authors of the resolution to aalvage the situation. Secretary ol State Henry A. Kissinger said 'Ibursday the United States Is still hopeful a peace conference will get undfr way and sakl Washington had made "a .major commitment to thi3 goal.'' One warning of a possible resumtion One warning of a pc:mlble resumption Cairo newspaper Al Abram. It said Egypt and the rest of tbe Arab nations announced. at the swnmit conference in Algiers their desire to have peace but "Egypt will not hesitate to resume the war if Israel ls allowed to rontinue "ith its procrastination." ANOTHER CiltE from Israeli Prime 11-1ininster Golda Meir who told a group of visiting American Jewish leaders in Jerusalem 'Ibursday she was not· con· vlnced "That shooting will not be resum- ed -I don't know, 1 hope not." She said the Arab summit conference hi\j:I posed ,~'impossible ronditions" but her government would go to Geneva anyway. Three Brothers Held In Murder of 4 Youths . / SIOUX FALU;, S.O. (UPI)'-'I'hi'ee four counts of murder for th e apparently brothers were arrested on murder motiveless killings at a former Indian char:E"" today in the Nov. I7 shot.gun burial ground in Gitchie Manitou State slaymgs of four teen-aged boys while they were picnicking ln a state park Park. with a young girl. Authorities said the brothers, all from the Sioux Falls area. were arrested last night and each w a s charged with Moderate Quake Shakes Baffled Tennessee Folks KNOXVIU.E, Tam. (UPI) .:.. A "minor to moderate" earthquake sent a window-rat!~, dish-breaking jar through homes in lour states early today but there were no reports of. injury or major damage. • '!be tremor along the southern ·Ap- palachlam 1t 11:50 p.m. PSl"meallrid 4.7S on the Richter scale at the thi!veni· ty of Mlssiss.lppi's seismological laboratory. "I consider it a minor to moderate earthquake," said the lab's director, Dr. Fred Followill at Oxford, Miss. Followill said the tentative center of the quake was Wider the Unlvenlty of Tennessee in Knoxville. The professor said any Richter reading under 5.0 was not considered strong enough to do structural damage to buildings and houses. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllttry of lhe D•lly Pltol Is !IUll'il'lll!i!d ~"'"'"' II '" M "°" II•" ,_ ,.,., IY Sr• .. lft.. '"' •IMI .,..,,, c.,., wm H ltffflf!t .. ffl. Clllt llN Nlt11 111111 1:)f , ..... Sll11..,1y •IHI S"""IYt 11 .,..,, M Ml "'""'• .,..,. ,, • ., llr t '·""· s.,.,.,.,.,, ,, ' ,,..,, 511rid1r. Cllt 1nd I co•r wlll M II"""" It Ytll. C1ll1 1r1 !all ... llfllil If I .II\. Ttlep llonts M111 Ori"'' CIU"lr ..... , ....... '41-ml "trfilwt•I HU11!111tlt" l•H~ •nf Wt1tmin111r •.•• •n• ''" Cltmtnlt, c1,111r1n• 111ch, Un J•IR (l•l1lr1rot, Dllll ,.,lnl, lfillll L........ L...... N lfvll •..• ff2.4CJt THE UNIDENTIFIED 13-yeilr-old girl who accompanied the youths oo the picnic was spared by the killers and has been in protective custOOy since the slayings. It was believed that ques· tloning of her led authorities to the suspects. The brothers were identified as Allan Fryer, 29, of rural Hartford. S.D.; David ·Lyle Fryer, 24, and James Ray Fryer, 21, both o! Sioux Falls. The slayings, in which authorities searched vainly for a motive, touched off an intensive two-week manhunt in· volving authorities in Iowa, South Dakota, and Mirmesota. An extradition hearing was scheduled for taler today but Iowa authorities said they -exj>eded all three, ffien tO waive extradition. · ~ . Tr WAS AT an abandoned ' farm northwest of here-thal ~lficers got thilr firat major break in the investigation. A vehicle for which the officers had .. been searching was belieVed found at the fannstead. The fann house was located Thursday based m a description provided by the 13-year-<>ld girl, who was being held in protective custody by poliCe as a witness to the murders of the four youths -Stewart Baade, 18, his brother, Dana, 14, Roger Essen, 17, and Michael Hadrath, 15. • 'Tango,' Linda, Redford, Others Get 'Undue' Fete CAMBRIDGE . Mass. r AP ) -Actress Linda Lovelace of "Deep Throat" fame will receive a ""'ilde Oscar ·'from the Harvard Lampoon . The award, 19 be prese nted saturday' is given by the undergraduate humor magazine each year "to that actor or actress most willing to nout oonvention and Msk worldly damnation in the pursuit of artistic fulfillment.·• U.S. W eatlier ll.S. S•Mmar11 • She is also to accept on behalf of the maken of Deep Throat the "Piltdown Mandible," awarded yearly ' • I o r filmdom's mosl ob v Io us J y and unabashedly spurious s c i e n t 1 f 1 c phenomenon." The magazine will also present its "worst movies" awards, to be accepted by Elmer Green, 77, curator of the Lampoon casUe, the magazine's building. The awards: -Worst picture of the year, "Last Tango in Paris." -\Vorst performance by an actor, Robert lledford. -Worst performance by llll actr.so, Ali McGraw. -Won1t dit!ctor, Sant Peckinpah. -Worst fibn of the century ond worst perfDmWlce by a cast in tolo, the producers and cut of "'!be Poteidoa Adventure." '!be Bosley awanl, for the film criUc whose ""itlng "consistently exp-the farthlest linliUI of bad taste," will ao to Pauline Kiel. Call Girls Arrested · CHICAGO CUP!) -Five ••-night call lirl$ and their 20-yeaN>ld madam who catered mootly to rich out-ol-towlt~ businessmen were orrested and charged , with prosUtution here Wedneoday night. • Arri.,esatC~rt Alexander Butterfield, who re- vellid aeqet of President Nix· on's tapes last summef, aald Thunday be asked Senate Wa· tergate panel not to make him do 'ii because It woUld em· barrass Nixon and be 'terribly damaging' to the country. • I • .Ch .. ' I' Pier 1 docks a bookish cargo. Books, books, and more books . Here's a sample of subjects: black magic, Shakespeare, C)(.Otic cooking, 1ravel, hobbies, loVe, art , poems, antiques, and more. Come and browse in Pier-1's book nook. 11'11 cos0 t you very little! PUZZLES FOR HOLIDAY CHUCKLES. Whim· sical 10QO piece jigsaw puzzles. Brightly col· ored ·ca rtoon figures. Old west, damsel in d ist ress and more. Pa ckeq in a tube. 699 Among th e iun al Pi er I .. , .. _. ..... . '---~.. "' ICE THt HOLIDAY SHRIMP. Individual ~owls for keeping shrimp (or aviar!) per· (ectly chilled. fill the outside bowl wilh ice ~nd set: the shriQlp's b<>Yfl Inside. 99 4 4'h~ diamet er. . ..... , ..... ( GIVE THEM HAPPY MORNINGS. Stoneware mugs to hold"the morning's brew. Big, lit· tie , round, square. Colors to mix and match. , Brand new hardcover books. • pverstock and reissues from the publisher. • Originally S2 .98 to $15.00. 1 oo-12ss Sale ' •n• ·1 , Giv~ s·pain. . l 1on lioLibAY SPfRITS IN GOATSKIN. eo .. skin bags, handcrafted in Spain. ·Lined with latex. Encircled Ylith !OflC so they're eilsy to tote". Fill them wilh Wi'l'ie for 399 your hol iday outings. Reg. 4.99 SALE • " · ., , I t' For someone you wish 119 299' happy mornings" to. . . . . . . . . . . .,. Li.UNCH A GOOD·TASTINC MORNING. Scotland sends Robertson's Marmalade and Jams to your breakfut table.1.~ oz. J1rs pe~t for bright-eyed Ravor. Delici0;us jams from Pjer 1 now! .•.•• 2 49 ·Give Mexico. Gi.ve England. IOX COOOIES IN lllTISlf TIN. !l"B'nt tin bojtes from England. Embossed designs~ • ;glittering colors! lots of shapes and Slzftt ( ,. • BE A WINNER ON AN' Qall'X CHESS SET. Onyx chess sets1 cOmpletely handmade in Mexico . 14" square board,~· thic~. Brown , black, o~.green, au with . :2988 white. Regular 539.99 : ..• _ . , •.... Store cookies and candies · 99-3 • _. the old fashion English wayl • • • .. • S09 E. KATELLA AVE. ANAHEIM m.wi CHRISTMAS mlltl HOURS --·~i-i CITY SHOPPING c:aTllt OIWIGI 12'4 SO. ODAST HW'(.. '311111 • ' ~ .... ,= LAGUNA UACH .. 4944111 , I ' 8 D A U ,y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE - Over-zealou·s P olice A problem Is developing in Huntington Beach over police policy regarding truant high achoo! st.udents. Most policemen feel that daytime crimes such as malicious mischief and burglary have a direct correla· lion to students being out of achoo!, thus 'the local policy of trying to keep the youngsters off the street. Unfortunately In Huntington Beach, this causes a problem. Due to the overCl'llWding of the schools, some students don't st.srt classes unW as late as noon and others start quite early and .can be out at 10:30 a.m. This means that there can be teenagers on the st.reels, at the beach or In the parks at anytime during the day who have a perfect right to be there. Some officers have developed an unfortunate ap- proach that students should be on campus from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., five days a week. This tendency to want the schools to handle child care is not particularly enlight· ened, nor is it helpful in promoting communlty·police relations when it leads to the arrest of non·truant stu-, dents. The overcrowding at the. schools Is going to get worse before it gets better.· Local police should make a better effort at adjusting to the situation under which many teenagers are off campus. Up to School Board The parking problem at Fountain Valley High School has reached a point where it Is involving the city council as well as the high school district board of trus- tees. • Basically, the problem is that there are about 150 students park in !He nearby housing tract. Homeowners have complained about the teenagers usurping &tree! parking in the area and report thal the students litter their lawns and tromp through their yards. The city seems to be taking the problem seriously. A tralfJc engineer came up with a plan for remodeling the lot to produce 121 additional spaces. But the trustees don't seem to be interested in spending any money to take care of what is really their problem. The city's concern is commendable, but it is really up to the school board to solve the problem -even if the cost is $9,000 as estimated by school officials. The schoor board cannot af!ord any iU feelings from community members and the cost of altering the parklng lot seems a reasonable price for keeping the school's neighbors happy. Meeting Fan Myrtle Stinson has been properly dubbed "cru· sader rabbit" and "hell-raising grandmother" by her grandchildren. It's no wonder. At 70 Years of age, Mrs. Stinson attends an average of four civic meetings each week. Some she actively participates in. Others, such as the city council meet· ings, she just observes -each and every week. Mrs. Stinson cares about Huntington Beach. She has lived in the city since 1909, and wants to know what is happening -and why. She also wants to help wherever she can. . I ••• more cars than parking spaces in the school lot, so the • In an era when too few people demonstrate an in~ terest in anything but their personal lives, Mrs. Stinson's awareness, concern, and energy are refreshing. H ~'!l! ~ID IT! W~_ CR~ATEI> A GUYER~ MA~Kf.T IN CAl>ILLACS!9 Peniten.tiary Safer Than Best Jails Woo!d Y.O<I believe that you could take a loog aenteoce In prl90ll bette lllan a short stay in jail? Most Americans wou1dn't -indeed, most doo't even know the difference between the two, thoogh there are 4,000 jails In tbil coun- try, moot ol them unspeakable. One man who does know is Dr. Karl Menninger, who bas looked Into the problem deeply, especially In hi! boot of a few years ago. "The Crime of. Punishment." Now, in his new book "Whate\'er Became of Sin'!" (which i will axnment on in a future column), he repeats his indictment in a few terse ~agraphs 1 cannot refrain from quoting in full : "mE PUBUC refuses lo abandon its pleasant fantasy that jails are just little local lockups where miscreant! and sl.l!pects may spend a night or even a week and be the more wary of sin and police thereafter. People refuse to believe that jails are almost without ei:ception horrible, destnactlve, roinou9, hideous atrocities o1. wttidi eYf!l"f citiien sl1ould be ashamed. "I say the public refuses to believe it ins p I te ol thousands ol. reports, because if they did, jails woold be outlawed tomorrow by public demand. ![ every minister would visit the local jail twice a year, and urged his con- gregation to do so, there would be a similar revolulion. GE citizen goes aloog with those Ignorant, lazy, g who say, 'A few weeks or months l'n our little jail may do yoo some good. Then , il you penisl Dea r Gloomy Gus Unlil recently the Big Ten ha. had a rule prohibiting the conference champion from going t.o the Rose Bowl in two successive years, in which case the second tie.I team was always sent. So what's differ- ence this year? DIOGENES 73 in your wicked ways, you will be Jllven the severe treatment ol. the state penit.nUary!' "Actually the "'orst penitentiary ts less hannlul to most young offenders than the best of jails! Jails ruin young men. Can't the public grasp this In- disputable fact? How can a decent prison attempting a rehabilitation program do anything for a boy who comes to it from a jail where he bas been raped, battered, vomited and urinated upon, mauled and cornipted by aome of the. old-tlmen in the bullpen? "EVEN WITHOUT the abuoe and harassment of other inmates, the hor· rible CUl!lnement In hot, stuffy. crowded, dark, vennin-infested iron cages is a terrible ei:perience -literally a fonn of. torture. When one considers that this is all illegal, since the law docs not st1putate these iniquitous con- c:omlt3ntl ol -!loo In l""tence· oor ainluln..a In pennlttlng situation to continue in our society and at oor ei:pease, seems very evident and very great." Karl hienninger is no '1bleeding heart"; be believes in moral, as well as legal, responsibility fur our acts, as hi! new boo!< fully sho•" But be is a realist, In recognizing that certain kindJ of punislunent are a worse crime than any they seem to rectify or revenge. Own-your-.own Rooms? Any day now the U.S. Department of the Interior may add landlord& to its list of endangered species. For a number ol reasons, the flnandal iD- ducements to own. and manage rental property are fast eroding. As a result, much or the new residential and com- mercial construction in this country Is designed f0< condominium ownerahlp - an arrangement whereby the occupants of a building or cluster of bulldlngs bold Utle to their Individual units. In a condominium, the buyer pays the mortgal" and property tues .on . his dwelllng, juat as a homeowner does. And, like a t.>meowner, th! coodomllllum bllyer may !feduct mortgage .Interest and property tues from bis lncotD4>tax statement. Title to everylhing el1e in lhe condominium complei: ls held in ~n by All residents. In most cases, th~re 1, a monthly chars• fer uWitlea, maintcnllnee and other operating coots. THE OONDOMINIUM craze bas spread to office bupdlnp, too. Small businessmen In a number ol dtles have lowtd that mortpge and malnlatance payments, olfset by the tu-deductloo .advantage, make ownenNp of office spece m0ro eoonomlcal than rental. lt'1 not all .-.. thoogh. "Tile com- P<lllY that has bouJll>t a oondomlnium and finds that It needs IJIOfO .,_ fJ unlikely to be able to boy an adjoining pleoe or the c:Ql\dominium, u Buaness Week points oul "In anticipation of tbil need, -.vital boyers have 80CUJ'Od ..... --..., mod lmow!lately aod will root It oul The other big \ EDITORIAL RESEARCH drawback ls that a down payment ties up a businessman's capital." OWNERSIDP or a residential con- domlnlwn unit carrle9 no guarantee of happiness, either. Some re!idenls -feel § tfortablt In an environment of en-! , togetbemess. Others chafe under rt 1tlons that outlaw ahaking or dust on balconies, playing of musical In· otrumenl! late at night or early lo the morning, playing or working on the family car in the parking areo. Condominium developen, however, have few oompla!nts. And they are nothlnr if not inventive. A developer on Spain's Costa de! Sol bqlldl apartll'lenLS, sell1 thtm to ezecuUvee and other lnvestor11 aod then rents them to tourlll& on behalf ol the ........_ The sales pitch Is a "guaranleed IJ percent net annual return" to the In- vestor GD renta!a for JO years. The Marriot\ Corp. has found lll oquailJ novel a_.it. It IS oellloc the rvoma ol It! cametblck Ion near Phoonix to ladlvtdual lnveslcrl. Marriot\ retalml owmnhlp ol everything but the ......., and charges the owners a fee far mauclnl the llotel. The rental.I from Ibo """"" are !'1'11i between the holel and Ibo room o-rs. Tile phrue 111 room ot one.'a otm11 bu taken an a new ' meaning. • BrOC!hure Touts 'Cf)nf erence Center' A ttractions • New Role for Western White House ~ ASHINGTON -President Nixon has made a strong pitch to federal agencies to hold their conferences at the seaside Western Whlte House in flO apparent effort to throw an official cloak around bis San Clemente extravagances. The flight or hWldreds of bureaucrats to San Clemente, of course, will add to the fuel drain and the ta:.tpayers• bills. But Jt will be easier f0< the PresiQent to justify the milUOm be bu poured Into the San aemeote complex if he can show that govern· ment ageocles are utilizing the facilities. The President not only has sent out special invitations to several agencies to make use or the Western White House, but be has included a brochure of all the available attractions. This a 11 u r I n g booklet, with the title "The Western White House" printed oo. a fern green cover page, touts the conference facilities at the Coast Guard station next to the presidential com- pound. But the emphasis is on the recreation that the officials , can enjoy when they're not tied up on official business. The booklet boasts that fishing, swimming, goll, bowling, bull fights, jal-alai and many more Jeisure activities await them al San Clemente. Visits to Disneyland, a fruit orchard and the world's biggest telescope are also offered. "Casual dress is the rule in San Clemente," adds the White House booklet. "Short sleeve shirts, slacks or shorts for men -1 i g h t cottons for women" are prescribed for what the booklet promises is "the world's aU-year· around fjnest" weather. THE PRESIDENTIAL invitations were issued earlier this year at a tlme when Nixon was on the skillet for using the taxpayers' money to purchase luxury items for the San Clemente compound. The word that the Western White House was available for conferences was passed to the agencies by his military aide, Brig. Gen. B re n t Scowcro!t, who recently was given another star and promoted to White House national security deputy. "The Presiderrt has asked me," wrote the general, "to renew hi.s1 otter of the fac;JliUes ol the Western ~·Honie Jor the use of government aDd certain otbergroups .• "Tile area offers feneralfy pleuont weather in a secluded, infoi'mal let· ting .•• The 10 !Ully-equlpped offices, con- ference room, private beach. and bath house, helipad and excellent com· munications system provide ifiea1 con- rerence accommodatkm for up to 40 persons," be urged. SEVERAL govenunent ag~ have jumped at the opportunity to lio!d 'their meetings in balmy San Clemente. Among them are the Justice Departmen4 Federal Aviatioo .Administration, General Services Admlnlstration and the Labor Department. So far this year, 38 government and civic organizations have accepted the President's appealing invitation. Another 79 did so 1n 1m. The FAA's top . brass WU plannlng a conference at san Clemente for early December, even as the President was ordering fuel savings. Almoat hilt' of the 29 participants will Win& ....... country from Washington. A SPOD:llMAN •"Plained tbol the ·~ocua will be on ,.....a1 aYloll<in, a vital conference, and the costs 1bout equalize out. Often we can Pt more work done oulaide Washington." At the White J!ouse, Geoeril Scowcroft said his predecessor had sent out a similar invitatim be.Core all the hoopla over the President's San Clemente spend· Ing. The purpooe ol his owo memo, Scowcroft said, was purely "to teQ them there were those facilities .available." He denied "100 per cent" that it was to justify the Pres!dent's spending. Experts Could Clear Tape .Erasure ' To the F.dilor: In reference to the President's "erased tape" -working in classified aerospace projects some time back, we found that there is no way to completely erase magnetically recorded infonnation (ex· cept with a match). A tone can be cancelled out. Even i full bandwidth sweep with a scrambler input can be decoded and neutralized. THERE IS a Jab over at cat Tech that specializes in clearing up the moon· based TV transmissions. Those boys would love a job like this. So, if anyone really wants to know what was on that 18 minutes -well, Dick, it was a nice try. I wonder if there are any historians who remember what prompted the cry "mlllio~ for defense, but not one cent for tribute," in reference to the Arabi!. Ca r Pools To the F..d.itor: RAY BIRD I have lived In the Newport-O>sta Mesa area for 17 years and have seen and felt the quality of the air change for the worse. I llloe the idj>a of your new classified category on car pools and hope the p e o p I e ill our area can save on gas and abo clean up on air. You are heJplng our clUes. MRS. JULIA M. PAYNE The Doily Pilo~s ""'° cla.!sificd mtegory headed Auto Tromporto· tion, 525, is designed for car pooli - people looking for other people wi th ,.,,.,,. they eo11 rl14rc rides to and from work. Ed. Deplores G~tcth · Totbe ~-1 - We wish the city councll of Huntinfton Beach wvuld ltarl ~ about the beolth of the preaeni lnhabltanla of Hun- Ungtoo Beaob • • WI HA VE twice · wrttteo letters to the council deploring the frightfully fast ..,,..ilt in our cll)I; we oever received an ..._. The overcrowded hlch llchool and defeats of hood -are -.ch \o prove our point. Yet the city plans further 11;<>wth (or eloe why tho need lot upetlloo of h FAiion plant!) wltm the~ we already have are umolved. "Add more MAILBOX · Letterg from read ers are welcome . Normally, writers should conve11 their messdges in 800 words or Less. The right to condtme letters to fit .space or eliminate Ubet is reserved. AU let- ter• must include signature and mail-· ing address but name1 maJI be with· held on request if "sufficient reason i! apJ)Clrent. Poetryi !pill tt.Ot be pub· lished. •· pollution Instead ol so!Ve tbc problem." We heartily ifllb the council would start improving Ure for the present in- habitanls, by limiting growth as some other cities are doing, and by creating a Jivable environment for all of us. MJNETl'E, KEN.AND KEVIN CARTER Platie Image To the Edi tor: Wby does our cily council wont to take all the humanness. the oolor, the fun out of Huntington Beach! What blank plastic Image of a city exists in their arid minds? 'l1lcy toot away our fruit and vegetable stands; they want to lake away our garage sales; they won 't let a woman keep two chickens. If they could Datteo the ocean's wavee:, I'm sure they'd do it. JEAN BROOKHART Seiaeol Ce11eel'lls Tu the Edllb;: • !'top!• have asked me ·to write to the Dilly Pllol. I em Inclined to let people nm their business and l'D run mine. Tile radio said no ooe in Hun- tington Beach cared alloUt the leadership ol their schools. I am writing tbil letter because l care . I WAS 8llOCK1ID and dlsaPOOlntod over the San Diego CUl!ewice Md lbow· Inc ol ••1>eep nu.at." It wss an lnlult and emharTUsmeot to the H1&h SChclol District, tbe teachers, and Ifie people of Huntington Beach. , There are many fine loachen at1 H ... Unc&oD. Beach lf.1&b Scbool. l'bo d11erve better leader>hip. Whether the ad- ministration likes it or not they need to set a good exam.pie for the teachers, !he public, and f0< our youth. THE ADMINISTRATORS responsible fur this Insult io the Hwitington Beach Union !Dgh School District and its tupayers should . resign. Otherwise it becomes the respoo.siblllty ol the trustees of the Hun- tington Beach Union High School District to fire them. They should trim the administration; replace only the polit!Olll which n e e d to be replaced. Replace them not ooly with qualified adminis- trators but with worthy men we can respect. An educator musi think highly ol himself, have high ideals, be respect. able or be should not be an educator. An educator's job is a very respcmtble job. His private life b his own and I am not the one to judge it. I do not call 46 people Jrivate. 'Ibe rooms were paid for by taxpayers, the ad· ministraton were repreienting the Hun- tington Beach Union High School District The people are gou.t to remember that Mr. Logan •was tiie only trustee of the HBUHSD who wanted to In· vestigate and fll'e any wrong doers. Thank you, Mr. Logan, for yrm stand for responsible administration. I. HAVE ALWAYS supported the schools and worked as a captain for the last bond electioo. Unless we have • a dlange In admlnlstrattoo, a trimming of administraton, a trlmmilll o( waste (why go all the way to ,Saft Diego for a conference just involving the Hun- tington Beach Unloo High Scbool District?) we are going tO bavt an even more dllficult Ume bulldlnti lchools. Weed out the bed apples, lllibteo the belt, and get back Uie public's trust ond pocketbook. In the Interest ol the best education for our children. ' MRS. TYLER BRINKER St1'G"9e Leflt To the F.dllor: LOGIC: Method of reasoning, in- ference, argumen~ etc.; eopeclally, cor-roct ..., .....; rtPOlllng. The aboYe definition ts of a won! I Ond totally lacklni In the decision to Ja11 a 7l·yeaH!d, woman, Mrs. Rita lUll ol lordlbur(, New Mulco. I WISH ...,,_ would explain the logic In tbll act. A> I understand It, she was jailed for her refusal to allow a new multi-million dollar super highway to be constructed on her property. I fail to see the logic, let aJone the necessity, in building yet another super highway at a time when we are faced with a Juel crisis that will perhaps Jeave our existing highways looking like abandoned airstrips. I realize, of coll1'3e, that the posdbility erbts that the politicians have already llfJelll the payoffs awanllil Io r favoritism ln a w a r d l n g con· structtoo contracts. and thua It would be embarrassing to change directions at this time. Mind you, I atn not making an accusation, just mulling over a few possibilities that are ever so prevalent today. ANOTHER thought -perhaps il Mrs. Hill would have bad the logic for defac- ing bet prqiert;y e>J>lalned to her rather than being onlered off ber land ihe mlgbt not have been so reluctant to comply with the state's request. Or perhapo if she would have been given amoonts equal to what P. a y o f f s IOmetimes amount to • •• Ob, weU, wbo are the aged, property· owning taxpayers to stand in the way of pnigress! W ~n:R E. STEPllEY JI!. OUM .. COAST l DAILY PILOT ' I • I . • Friday, Novembff 30, 1q73 DAILY PILOT 5 1, State WeHare Plan Aquanaut Charged In Fraud Vote .Session Called State Challenges EPA Parking Plan '. ' SAN DIEGO (AP) Federal charges of fraud and embezzlement have been filed against a former N a v y aquanaut who was lead diver in last sumn1er's attempt to salvage treasure from the sunken Italian Jiner "Andrea Doria." An FBI spokesman said Christopher James DeLuccbl, ( BRIEFS ) 22, ~ently vice president of ~turation Systems Jnc., a San Diego-based salvage firm, will be arraigned Dec. 13 on charges that be took away $1,370 worth of Navy undersea· electrical equipment shortly before his discharge last July. e Penslo11 Plan SACRAMENTO (AP) Private pension plans should be regulated by the state to prevent workers from losing retirement b e n e f i t s on technicalities. says the chairman or the state Senate Committee on Business and the Professions. Sen. George Dcukmejian (R- Long Beach ), told a Capitol neY.'S conference Thursday that there is "no such thing as a guaranteed pension for a California worker." e Te.Cher Strike COMMON ( UC' I ) Negotiations Thursday failed to settle the Comp ton teachers' strike. in a dispute concerning student violence, poor working conditions and higher wages. A teacher request f o r "rowxl the clock" negotiations was apparently denied when district officials said talks would resume Monday al- ~:: Red Ing LOS ANGELES (AP) - Doctqrs . saY they dis,covei:ed no tumori or malignancies during surgery on Elizabeth Taylor and the actress will Ile released from the hospital next week. ~1.iss Taylor was described Thursday as ' 's t i 11 ex- periencing the usual amount of post<1perative pain," but was said tQ Qe "looking great and doing very well." UPI T"""'9tt -We ighs An1ieer Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti listens careful· ly to a reporter's ques· lion during news con- ference where he pro- posed establishment of state energy commis- sion empowered to ra- tion gas and make car pools mandatory. SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The legislature will convene in special session Tuesday to vote on a comj>romlse $122 million welfare plan ham- mered out by legislaUve and Regan admlniatration negotiators. The settlement would prt>- vide grant increases to 500,000 aged, blind and diaabled Calilomians far beyond those sought by Gov. Ronald Reagan and also transfer ad- ministration ol adult aid pro- grams to the federal govern- ment OD Jan. 1. LT. GOV. ED Reinecke, act- ing in the absence ol Reai>n who ls on a speech making tour of Australia, called a special session of t h e legislature for noon Tuesday. Health and Welfare Secretary Earl Brian, who an-- nounced tPe agreement 'lllurs- day evening after several days Long Beach M u,.der Ends in 4 Arrests LONG BEACH (UPI) - Four persons were booked on suspicion or murder Thursday in connection with the shotgun slaying of a Long Beach City COilege student who was visiting t\\'O friends at an apartment. POLICE AJ.'10 arrested the victim's friends, Peter Macisaac, %3, and Paul Brun- ing, 20, on suspicion of illegal cultivation of marijuana after officets found 41 plants grow- ing in the yard. A small amount of marijuana was alsoi found in the house. An unidentified l6-year<1ld boy, accompanied by his lawyer. was arrested when he sWTendered to. police. Police later arrested Kevin Cunningham, 19, John Vander Hoek, 21, and Stanley Hinrichsen, 20, all of Long Beach. Detectives said the four ap-' Staged Sex Acts Land Man in Jail parenUy had intended to rob the residence where the vic- tim, Kevin Skeith, 20, \\'as visiting friends. AUTHORITIES said they believe Skeith was shot by the juvenile while Vander Hoek accompanied him Inside. 'lbe other two were. waiting outside. Macisaac and Bruning said the juverU}e and Vander Hoek barged. into their apartment and ordered them to lie on the floor. They said Skeith •as shot after he either refus- ed to drop to the floor or when he lunged al the armed youth. Skelth was killed )>Y a single blast from a 12-gauge shotgun. 9 Indicted For Porno Book Sales LOS ANGELES (UPI) A coonty grand jury Indicted rune persons on pornography charges Thursda y, culminating a fiv~month in- vestigation in which three e Occidental Bit '• SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A policemen opened a "de<oy" LOS ANGELES (UPI) -massage parlor operator bas bookstore. Red paint was splashed in been arrested after secret Olarged with a)DSpiracy to the reception area or Oc-grand jury indictments charg· distribute obscene material cidental Petroleum Co. head-ed. him with seven Sex offenses were Noel Bloom, 31, Illo AJ>- quarters Thursday, purported· !or presentation of a live sex pelby, 50, and Mohammed Jy as a protest against the act 00 stage. Rustam, 40, all of Hollywood ; deals v.'ith the Soviet Union Held in lieu of $50,000 bail Rodgers Smnmers, 39; Phil made by Dr. Armand Ham-was Peter Amato, 34, San Dixon. 30, and Robert Elkim, mer, the corporation 's Diego, operator of the 44, all of Los Angeles; Paul chairman. Empress Massage Parlor and Novack, 45, and Mark Novak, TWo young men wearing ski the Studio 1 and 2 '!beaters. 25, both of. Beverly lfills; and masks entered the room and Also indicted were three Raymond Barron, 39, o f splashed the paint about women, each dla:rged with one Venice. without a word, said recep· count or sex perversion. Also 1 n di ct e d were tionist Mary Jo Esposito. Amato will be arraigned American Film Industries, Some of the paint spattered Monday. Cinema Classk:s Limited and her clothes and hair. Charges placed Thursday Ca Ii! or 11 i a lnternatklnal against Amato included three Dmributors. e Thnes Sned counts of sex perversioo, one All the delendanls ucept LOS ANGELES (UPI) count of pandering, one ol Bloom surrendered to Superior A form er co u n t Y. ad-participating in or exhibiting Court Judge James G. Lolts m.inistrator, ..,....ho was con· obscene live conduct and two and entered innocent pleas. victed in 1972 of perjury and counts of soliciting women for Authorities said the in- preparing false evidence while prostitutioo. dictments came after three in office, filed a $2 million District Attorney Ed Miller lnvestigato~ o p e n e d the libel suit Thursday against the sai d Amato was master of "Freedom Bookstore" on Los Angeles Times. ceremonies and a participant Sepulveda Boulevard a n d Baldo Kristovich, v.·ho v.·as in live sex acts on the Theater purchased hardcore films and sentenced to five yea rs' pro-2 stage betwee"n Oct. 30 and magazines from several cl. the bation and is cWTently ap-Nov. 9. suspects. pealing his conviction, claimed '~ jiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj he was libeled in an article rl which related all eged prob-¢) terns in the public guardian's I office, a past he held while he was public administrator. HARRIS ~M~~~~$ NEW AT BIDWlll'S We heve • 9ree+, new 1e· lectl9.'n in corduroyi, 1olid1 • & different pl•id1. From $14.00 Swe•ter Ve1+1 Too From $10.00 A Gre•+ Gift Combinefion fin cunoM •IPT WIA' I 34671 VIA UDO, ldWl'OllT llACH ·--... ·--..·--- of negotlatioll! with assembly leaders, said the bill will add $122 million in state money to current state and local welfare costs of $467 million annually. He said it would not in- crease or reduce county costs for blind, disabled and elderly recipient programs. Under t h e compromise, average monthly grants for elderly and disabled recipients would increase from $212 to $235. For the blind they ~~uld rise from $222 to $265. REAGAN HAD so u ght paymenls of 1221 for the aged and disabled and $237 for the blind. "I l\'ouldn't exactly say he was overjoyed," Brian told newsmen when asked about Reagan's reaction to the set- tlement '~hen informed of it by telephone in Australia. "\\'hen presented with the altem£tives, he thought this wa:; aporopriate." The proposal also prodivdes $25 a month restaurant meal allowance for those unable to cook for themselves and rpols back to 1961 levels the amount ol financial aid adult chUdren must contribute for the sup- port or their elderly welfare parents. Reagan strongly resisted CALIFORNIA any easing of the so-<alled '--------"' "Relatives Responsibility" law SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) Calilornia A t t >'· Gen. Eve lie J. Youilger filed tM!e petl· tlons In the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Thursday challenging the validity of the U.S. Envimlmeotal Protection Asen7 plan to requ i re "1llch was toughened by hls Welfare Reform Act of 197l The roll back would have the effect of increasing the income level where adult children must be before they are re- quirejl to contribute. Pair Indicted in 9 Slnyings, Robbery THE MEASURE, p u t STOCKTON (AP) -Willie L. Steelman and Douglas E. Gretzler have been indicted by the San Joaquin County Grand Jury in the slaying of nine persons in Viclor Nov. 6. together by Brian, Social Wellare Director D a v i d Swoap, Assembly Speaker Bob Moretli ([).Van Nu y s ) , Assemblyman John Burton lD-San Francisco), and Assemblyman William T Bagley, CR.San Rafael ): EACH ~tAN fa~s nine represented a victory for · charges of murder. five counts Democrats. • of robbery and one count or 'Ibey previously fashioned a kidnaping. The robbery and Reagan-opposed b 111 to kidnap charges stem from the transfer administratM>n of the theft or about $3,000 irom the adult programs to the federal 1 grocery store safe. government and substantially Steelman, 28, of Lodi, and increase grants, but th e Grelzler, 22, of New York Qty, Senate killed it in Seplember. were charged in the slaying of four members of the family of grocecy store owner Walter Parkin, 33, and five others. The lndlctmenl by the grand jury late Wednesday automatically moves the case into superior court. The t\VO earlier were charged in municipal court on nine counts of murder each and a preliminary hearing had been scheduled for next month. INDICTMENT by the grand jury eliminates the need for the preliminary hearing. T h e i r arraignment in superior court is scheduled for Friday. surcharges on parklng spaces. UNDER THE plan, anyone maintaining perking faclllties, \\'OUld have to pay the · surcharge on each space and the fee would !l)crease an-; nually over a three-year 1 J!el'iod. The petitions to review the.ti, EPA plan were filed on behalf ,11 of the state, the governor., 't1 the California Air Resources.,,1 Board and trustees o f .• , California Slate Universities , and Colleges. 1 . " Younger said the fiUng was "h made Thursday because ol the."1 statutes of limitations and that t. luriher talks are being held in hopes of resolving the mat·"). ter witbo1,1t going to trial. '1 1 !•d "WE DO NOT question 1U EPA 's goal of reducing ·l automobile emissions, but we do not think EPA has fully considered the economic im····t pact of the plan, u1 relation .: .. to the potential reduction ol .. , automobile emissions," said · Younger. ··, "\Ve believe the burden of "'> a parking surcharge would . '· ultimately !all on California'~ consumers and employers," ·i he said. ... '•' •• .. ' ·' "' "I .. , ., ·~ ·' STARTING ... POINS ETTIAS !<om 119 MONDAY DEC. 3 : ' . ., ·: ICICLES fr•• • •kl ,_.IOMcll Clirllhllat ,... ztc N•w .......... 19C .. , ,.. $1.00 ,....JOC"l!Ow .......... 39c .. , ... $1.00 MT CHllSTMAS LM TREES MINIATURE LITE SET 40 ... 1 ..... ,. 11 .. ... whtl ,.,._..,. .. ,, ...... lullk ........ 298 · .. ·· 35 ..._, .. ltolln MW-... llt•s, ... , ... ,proof f'e r -.Noor or IMoor .... If oH bltl't11 ........ ,... 1twy VISIT OUR ' TRIM-A· TREE SHOP! ~~ for all your decorating needs. Uni- que ha rd to find items. • , .Exl"'n· sive one of a kind .•. .Imports plus ..•. American made novelties. Im- ported and domestic ,tree lights . . . . twinkle. . • . action. . • .bubble .... miniature and outdoor. Plus we also have a large selection of replacement bulbs. Have you seen our tree tops? Electric •.•• Angel . ... Santa ••.. Snowman and more. . : ..... 298 /~ ~v:? '{ I_' M• .,.... ......_ "8fll .,... ....._ IMw ,,_. ,.,.. ef TrMI. T.-. lec9tlOM f9 Mtfiw .... yo•. M•e ,._. "'""-' h• Wllltti fir, Sh9r Tip, htlt* Plr, ,....... .. N.W., Phlllhltto• .,.... Fir,~ Pl•f•le• Do.ti.. ketcli PIN. t'k· ••• tftle tops hi 11' •IANTS. ' , .. .., .......... ,.., trM, ... pkl .. ., .. ,. .... ""'"' flech4 , ...... .., ,... , ........ ..., .. .., •• -... , •• ""°' 1MrJ •• tW .... •lf"M4y .... ftMu.il ••• All .... lei! .... -.. """"" ....... , .... ,..... ... -'"' .............. IHOP IAILY WHIU YOU STILL HA.VI A •OOD tlUC· TION TO CHOOH NOM. -. 2 LOCATIONS TO SDVE YOU r 2123 Newport Blvd., Coda Mesa .PH 6-%-3925 · - • 2252 . E. Bristol ' Santa AM Heights Ph: 556.6391 ) ·• • ... ' ' ,. '. ' ·" ., ., .. ·I . ; • .. •, . • " ' •• ' ' " \ ' ' • ' ' ' -• • • • • 1 ,, • • • "' . - ay's Final N.Y. Stoeks . . VOL 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 N TEN CENTS l(almhach Partner Pro·hed • Ill By L PETER KRIEG Of ttH1 EMlllY Pl"' Si.fl California Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be called on to dclermine if President Ni.Ion's personal lawyers violated notary laws when they recorded. Nb:on's pre--presiden- IW papers u a gift to the Natloaal /.rdlives. (Related stocy, Page I) The President claimed a $570,000 tax deduction for the gilt in 1969, just before federal legfa:lation was enacted that cut off tax deductions for such gifts. The SL Louis Post Dispatch charged Thursday' the presidential lawyer Frank DeMarco or Loo Angeles, partner of Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, laUed to. properly .......t the notarlutlon of the gi!L DeMarco today c!almed he did no! vioiate the law because be kept copies of all the document\. "All lhat the Jaw requires is that the notary keep a record of documents ootartr.ed by him," Demarco said. "It does not necessarily have to be In tabular form in a book. Maintaining copies of documents constitutes a record. Our office bas copies of all documents notarized, n be said. Attorneys for the Calllornia Secretary of State's office weren't sure exactly What the law requires, er so they said. "I will talk to the secretary or state tcday," said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's office. He told the Daily PHot, "This involves an interpetation ef the statutes. We have not been called upon before to make that interpretation." The law states: "A notary public shall keep a record .Krogh Says I Guilty wt T 7 t IS PLEADS GUILTY Etli K•Jr. New War Power . 'Law w Allow New Bombings?· :11ASHINGTON (AP) -De le n Io Si\:rotary James R. Schleslnger said llilay war powers legislation paaed by Ifie Congress may ma)ce it poes1hle for Pre!idmt Nixon to order new iJomb!ng lo Indochina in the event of a new mijor North Vietnamese olfeosl"°'J in SOuth Vietnam. :Though indi<atlng he would likely op- peiie the idea, Schlesinger .said the Sl&te ~partment is examlrung such a pessibility. . ,South Vietnamtse officials have been predicting a genreal offeoaive by ilie Nortb Vietnamese and Vlei °"'« for the dry see900 of 1974. The dry'IWIOD.beglm in late December and C90Unues thnluib June. ·Tho war powers leglslatinn be nilen'ed to· would give Nixon Ute authority to lipd U.S. forces into dlmbat abroid for 19 days before congressional alltbortzation bad to be obtained. ::.Tile bill became Jaw over Presldeot rtfxon's veto th1s mooth. Som! State Department I e ti ~r IJ)edaliats apparently belleve that 18! oupnedes esrlier leglalation ba~ Ute re-introduction of any U.S. forces, m- cludlni B5Z bombers into Indocblna. :or .. ge • Ellsberg Case Violntion Admitted WASHINGTON (AP) -EgU Krogh Ellsberg's trial in the Penl.sgoo papers , Jr., wbo superv_ised the White House case. spec!al investigatinn unit known aa Ute Krogh had been indicled on charges 11Plmnben," pJeaded ,wlty in federal of making false declaration to the court today to violating the civil rights origin8! Watergate grand jury in con· d a Beverly Hills psydtlatrl.st Jn con· · nectien with the travels of two members nection wlth tbe EU.l\trf burglary. or Ute "Plumbers" unit, E. Howard The federal complracy charge carries Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy. BoUt later a muimum penalty of 10 years in were involved in lh,e Watergate break·in, as well as the Ellsberg burglary. prison and a $10,000 fine. Krogh worked under former White In an agreement worked out with House domestic affairs adviser John D. the special Watergate prosecutor, the Ehrlichman. Ehrlichman, Krogh and two 3.f..year-old lawyer will not face further other "Plumbers" have been indicted by a Los Angeles County grand jury in connection wltb the Ellsberg break-in. They have pleaded innocent. Krogh's attorney, Stephen N. Shulman, said after rus client pleaded guilty that the California charges against Krogh will he dropped Monday in line wiUt a state double jeopardy statute that pnr bibits further prosecution. Shulman said Krogh could be called to testify in Los Angeles as wen as cooperating with federal prosecutors here. federal charges in connection with the "Plumbers' " operation to breat into the office of Daniel Elleberg's psychia- trist, Dr. Lewis Fielding. Private Beach, Move U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell told Krogh he will be sentenced without delay as aoon as presentencing pro- cedures are comp1ete. Krogh promised "loll and truthful diaclolure of all relevant information and doculllents in his poosesslon." But JCrogb odded Ill UJimual <Ollditlon, -· 1111 ile requlral> .i. teslJfy abont tbe "Plam.ben' " operation tmtU alter ~ Wllicb -la eijiected to be in about Iii: or ievea weelL K"'lh said he wanted. lo be oentenced btlln talU1lnll .to dlspel any notion that he W a I ,,....ng guilty in ex· pedatian ol lonieal ln!otmeoL He Slid Ute -be ls pleading ls that he int...ied to ..... t in bis defense that the break-in was de!igned to delend naUonal · oecurlty. Bui he said bis comdence will not permit bim to do that. So he piolded guillf, he Slid, "because 1 have no defeme. ·~ He aaid be DOW feels the brealc·in was a Violation of oonstitlltlonal rights. "! don't want to be uaociated wiUt that violation any longer by attempting to defend I~" he told GeoeU. Geoeil allowed Krogh to remain 1- on bond pending ...,1-1ng and re- queol<d that tbe (OV<1'1111lel1t, "out of ordinary, common decmcy," allow Krogh to have • ..,... to bis personal White Hoooe files . • Dlsclorue of the September, 1971 burglary In Bevesll> Hills was made In federal court In Loo Angeles during Dead Suter Sat In Front of TV For Year by Kin . CONCORD, N.IL (AP) -The skeleton of an elderly woman was found in a locked-up home todoy, and police said It appeared u II her body had been placecl in the living room by a brother and sister who wanted her to "remain part of the famUy." Lido Community Group Offers .to Pay.Newport .,.. llte"Lldo !ale Community Association (LlC.t) ii offering to P"Y Newport Beach '3.lllO a year to keep beadles on Lido private. 'lbe offer was disclosed as Vice Mayor Howard Rogers filed a committee report with city councilmen on the LICA's r~ to renew its lease to city.owned be8ches and tidelands for 25 more years. Councilmen set a public hearing ror Dec. 17 on the requesl 'Ibo current lease expire. !n 1976. The 850 lJdo Isle homeowners have beea paying the city $750 a year since the lease was last renewed in l95L lJdo JJJe residents ·have enjoyed ex· clusJve use of the beaches and street-end jiarlis since 1929. 1be report to councilmen, prepared by Rogers and City Manager Robert L. WflUlt does not make a formal recom-. mendatim on the request. It lists two alternatives -either ac~ cept the offer or be prepared to shell out $39,000 annually for beach main· tenance and lifeguard costs. The report says that the LICA now spends $31 ,000 a year to maintain the beaches, although it does not provide lifeguard. service. However, the association also receives $17 ,000 a year in rental income from the moorings, boatslips and dry storage areas that are located en parts of tile city-owned property included in the lease. 'lbe ·report points out that the rentals charged. by the LICA to its residents are below market value. If fun rates were charged, the income would total about 1311,000. The LlCA said it ls planning to spend $75,000 this fiscal year for capital · im~ provements to lts properties, 'mostly fer replacement of piers. Rogers' report. points out that there would not have to be a vote of the people on the lease extension because ongoing leases ..are exempted from elec· tions under the city charter. All new leales of city-<!wned property required. citywide votes. Involved in the lease are a total or 12.s acres of city<>wned property that (See LIDO, Page Z) Arab Oil Chiefs To Air Position On U.S. Boycott BRUSSELS (UP!) -Two Arab oil ministers said today they will go to countries," Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani , the United States Monday to exptain the Arab stand on the Middle East to American government officials. "We are delivering the message with MAJOR LEAGUE PARKS GO DARK IN EMERGENCY, Page 26 . which we were entrusted by the Arab Saudi Arabian oil minister, told newsmen. The "message" Yamani ref'errl'd to was the Arab oil embargo against coun· tries considered less than friendly to the Arab cause. Arab oil producers have cut oil deliveries to some "neutral coun· tries" and established total boycotts on "unfriendly" countries like the United States and the Netherlands. Yamani, who came here with Algerian energy minister Belaid Abdesselam for talks with Belgian and Common Market efficials, said he woWd "meet govern- ment olljf!als" but refused to say which ones. Archive·s Gift ' I ef all efficial 8.cts done by him and a record of parties to, date.and character of every instrument aclalowledged or approved by him." •. , Mo&t notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all required information. De.Marco drew the deed of Nixon•s l ' gift of his pel'80nal papers to the Natklnal j Archives. But the Sl, Louis foot Dispatch claim· eel DeMarco tdmltltd to them that lie hod "!'t k".P.Y'proper records because Utey .wereq'.J«D a journaL -.. ' The newspaper claims '1the absence J of iitdependent notary records lea~e only the personal assertion by Mr. Nixon's lawyen to establi!h that the President deeded the papers to the archives before ~uly 25, 19691 when Coogress cut off . generous tax deductions for such gifts." , { , )· . ; '"''.,....... GoJng Dome ' !Jess than two weeks alter his right leg was amputated in a cancer . op~t~t,ion,, Edw!1fd. ,Ke~nedy;, ·Jr., 12; leaves Georg~town University Hosp11al, escor!'1d by liis tather, Sen. Edward Kennedy. Doctors said alt'er the operation that there is "an excellent chance" the surgery arrested the cancer. Newport Planners· Okay Irvine .Company S~ops Newport Beach p I a n n i n g com· missieners Thursday ·decided on a '°S split vote to uphold Irvine Company ptans to build a small shopping center near ihe blulls ol Upper Newport Bay at University Drive. But in overriding strong objections from local residents, both the com- mission and the Irvine Company agreed that a more desirable use for the ]and woold be open space. "The 1rvine Company believes that it woold be beSt for this land to be public," said Larry Moore, deputy direc· tor or planning and administration for the finn. "But in the event that It camot become poblic, we ,believe there should be alternative plans," Moore ·said. WbeUter it becomes public, Moore in· dicated, wjll dei!'DI on whether . the coonty, state, l<deral, or Newport Beadi city gover.nment can come up with the money to purdiase it. · ' •• •. .. l t ' • i I ! .. . Weatller :: Those high clouds wlli thicken " tonight wlUt Jlgbt rain likely by Their bodies were found upstairs in the bed where they died or natural cau.ses, olllcials said. Police said the skeleton of Cecilia Kenbey, 14, was discovered. on a downstairs couch facing a television set . They said she ~ have been dead Upper · Newport. Bay Flap Moore also indicated there ...,uld be no pressure from the Irvine ~ to develop the land unlil the public decides wbether it wants to purchase it. 'I1he properly in question is 1ocated at ·the intersection of Irvine · Aveiue and Univenity Drive.' It ls part of. a larger parcel of undeveloped land that stretdles al<111(Irvine A....., to mid-day Saturday. Cooler temper- • otures with highs in both areas In •• Ute rnld1115 dipping to the mid& ove'll&bt. INSIDE TODA 'l' ... ''The Nutcracktr," a fat>Orik Chriltmas Baltel, 13 being prr· rented by two Orange Coast ballet groups. See Information in todav'• Weekender. ...... " • L.#1. Ifni U c......... s ,_ ,... c-la " c~• a Dt411 Httfeta \4 .. ~NIP ... I •.-:t•....... M4I ·-..... ............ 14 ......... ,, ~-L.....,.. It ~· .... • ..... , .... . ...,..... ..... .,,. Onitltit ~ 14 ........ a.M --. -----,........ . ---u• ............ ,,.,, ............ .......... , .... as long as 1 year, . Upotaln, pollce found Ute bodies or her 7S.yesr-old slster, Grace , lying on • bed -to the brother, Roland, 71. They were thqulbt to have dled within the last monUt, 1coonllng to olllc!ala. DeL Sgt. Bruco -ll said In his 'report, "It appears that Cecilla died · of natural causes and the other two droued her ml !old her on the couc!t so that sbe coWcl still rcmoin parl of the family •• "Grue and JloalDd contlnutd llving • """"'1 Ille. Roland died around • montli .... ind Wll aileep {n his tied at Ute lime. Grace left him there/ and tried to continue her me, but lound .tie could not. "Sito lay in tho ..... bed u Roland (loo llllA'GN, ... I) • Health Official Says Area Sliould Not be Quar:antined By JOllN ZAlJ.ER Ofllill ...,,. .... , .... An Oronge County health oflicer round himself in hot water Thursday when he said Upper Newport Bay should not be quarantined eten though I t "cmsi.stenUy fills" to meet normal hea!Ut standards. Roberi Stone, counly director of en- viromnenta! health,. told Newport Beach plannlng commissioners that when etate standards are violated • It is "an in· dlcatlon that the area moy be hazardous, but it does not mean it actually is ball1"tbl:s. IJ • The waler ski area and the sheUfish- pthetlng ares are the two parts ol the Upper Bay that normolly exceed allowable standords air a certain kind or boclerla, Stone sail. ' Commissioner Jackie Heather was the lint to quesUon Stone, saying that he seemed to he "abrogating your duty" in not posting quarantine signs in those areas. "Your report says the violations art a cauae for concern," Mrs. Heather said, "and so I wonder what -should be done." Stone responded : 11We are concerned, but we are not alanned by the violations. "It depends on Ute 90U1'teS of the contamination. tl It comes from human sewage, we woold be alarmed," Stone said. .''But every lndlcaUoo we have ls that the heavy bacteria COW!ts result lrom agricultural runoffs that flow Into Ute Upper Boy through San Diego Creek and the Sanla ~a Delhi channel," he said. Commissioner Joseph Rosener then coounented that .. if the standards have any meaning, I don~t see why you haven't gone ahead and posted the quarantine signs." ·Stone responded that the slandards are based on the concentration of col· llorm bacteria. "That is a very common bacteria which OCCU'Q both In animals and in humam," Stone said. Rosener then asked If there was any way or distingul!i\lng the type ol bacteria that occurs fn human waste from that whlph occurs ln anh:nal wastes. Stone replied that there are dll· rercnces, but •that It is very dillltult (See UPPER BAY, Pap I) ... below 23nl Street. . Frank RobinsQn, a county Har!lor Com· mi"'ioner and membe< of Friends ol Newport Bay, objected slrenuoullly to designation of tbe land as a commercial site. "or all the possible land uoeo around the bay, this ls the most incompollhla land use I can think of," Rabi.an said. ''This is destructive land use plan- ning." Ray Williams,• president or Frlmds of Upper N~ Bay. also urged the commJsslon to nfuse co m m e r cl a I designation <11 Ute land. .. "There muat he some other plact to put• a 0>mmercial center belidel up against a WUdlllo rtluge," WiilJaml said. , . CornmJssblor Hall Seely mode ... motion to reptal l!lo - , (See OKAY, hie I) ,j r • ' • ., Z DAILY P1L01 • Friday, NO¥tmber 30, 191.l A Long -Nap Russ Say Woman Sl.ept 21 Years MOSCOW (UPI) -Tbe Soviet.! have a modem-day Rlp Van Winkle. l j Nadeihda A. Lebedlo has awakened lo the lJkralne after aleep- lng 21 years, according lo the trade union newspaper Trud. It gave nel!}ler her age, family status, nor any indication that doctors knew why she finally woke up. Trud said her problem began in 1952 when she was ill with flu. "She was absolutely lmmobile, not even able to open her eyes/' Trud said. l • • • · She had. no reaction to pain, but her Internal organs kept func· Uonln.g and she was fed "artlfiCially." The chief heuropathologlst from the ministry of public health in the Ukraine said her eyesight has been restored, she can speak and • is relearning to walk. ·: The neuropathologist, who was not identified. diagnosed the case as .ilethargic sleep" and said it was "extremely rare.'' President Extends Life Of Watergate G1·and Jury From Wire Services WASHINGTON -President Nixon to- day signed a bill to • extend for as much as a year, if necessary, the nre of tl>e Watergate grand jury. The grand jury had been scbaduled · to go out of business Dec. 4 -next ' week. The extension wu requested by · the Department of JusUce last month. 1be me.asure provides for one man- ._ datory siJ:·month extenskm of the grand jury's tenure a n d for an a ddiUooal . s.iz:.month e1tenslon at the dlscretion . of the U.S. district court. The bill pro- -. vides that "in no event" will the term • of the grand jury be extended beyond Dec. 4, 1174. MeanUme, expert., began studying the · · flawed White House Watergate tape In · which an 18-mlnute segment or con. .. venation ha.s been replaced by a buu:. 'lbe tppe wu taken· to an wmamed :· ~~!~~i: ~e~ J~~!!1=:i1a= •. upon by the White Houso and special . · Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski. .· Also Shipped to New York were the electric typewriter of Miss Rose Mary : · Woods and a high intensity lamp that . had been on her desk on Oct. 1. That wa.s the day she was transcribing a :. tape made June ~. 1972 that Included a conversation between President Nixon Two Huntington · Prostitutes Get .. · .. Terms in Jail :- Two ol·. three ........ wm .pleoded gullty to pl'Ollututlon charges after police :. discovered a house that wun't a home ; on Capstone Drive in Hunllngton Beach . drew jail tenns Thursday in Orange • County Superior Court. ;, Judge James Turner sent Judy Ann .: Klulmeyer, 25, to the county jail for • ~ the nut 80 days and ordered her to ... serve tbre years probation on release. '. Helen Mane ltyan, 37, drew a 45-day -:: jail term in the brief sentencing session :· and also was ordered to serve three years ! pn>baUon on rele'llae. :· Carol Ann Domlan, '11, the third -.1 member of the statuesque trio -none • -is under six feet -was ordered to serve three years probation with no jail time. ~ All th ree \Vere arrested oit multiple .. prostitution and conspiracy cha rges after Huntington Beach police investigated reports from neighbors who became curious about the nwnber of male vis itors calling at 6762 Capstone Drive. ~ A Superior C.ourt civil ·ruling has put the _home in the "bawdy house'' category under the pr ovisions of the state's » called "Red Light Abatement Act." ., The Ca pstone -Drive home is currently ., ·. .. .· .. ·: ., l· • r· .. •. • ;; under sheriff's surveillance pending a Superior Court trial that could end with the ruling thal the home must be sold at public auction. OU.NII COAST . " DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•no• CHU OAI LY P'ILOl . wllll wlllch i. cotrltofn"' lllt NIW1·P'rn1, i. lllolblllilled by trlt' Or•no1 Co.11 P110111111no CMIP<ln'!', i~· r1t1 llllllDl'll l •I 111bH1hed, Mll'ldl¥ tllto"91'1 l'rld1y, fllr Cott• Mn1, H.wp.rt 811c11. -Hllflllnoton lt1clllFovn"I" Vt llty, l.1011nt llKll, l,.._i.,./$10dlt bllt li I nd ~n Clt1• .. ntt/ Sift J1;1" Ctp!Jtrtl!O A 1lng11 r111JOMI ••llfiOll It (lolbl l11'1ed '1!11•0•Y~ ..id Svno1¥1. T~ prlrlclptl ""'llalllnf P'-n! !1 tt D Wfll• .. , l lrwf. C.lt Maw, Cllllornit , tlllt. l•b.,T N .. W111d ,.,._ ....... 11111 l'\lltli.tltr J11k I. Curlty , Vkil ~ tMI Otnwtl Maftqer ' l'ltMlt• K1•Yll ..... TliM11 A. Mvrphlftt Mwilllllt b iter l. Peter Krl1L ....,....._,.City lttr ---JJ)J HtwpM"t lewl1•1r,.I M11llllf M41n11 r.o. ••• 1111, t266J --Clllt M-..: sa1 W"' .. , Stre.t u.-~: m • .,., •...w. H•~ htclrl1 11'7J 1MC11 .....,..,.. jll! CS.-1t1 • ~ •1 ~ ... I T•1p•1a1 f714, Ml-41!1 Cl•lfle4 ...._tf1h I Ml-Un ~ .... ,. '''J. °''"" C..t ""''"""" ~.. ,.. -••'-1 lllw"""""' .......... ~ ... W\Otl1'"'"""1l ~"' -· .. ~ •llllllllt .. lel ..,. ........ .,,~, ....... . ...... ""• ........ w " c.tlt ..... c...... """""''*' .. ClrTltr ltM ........,,., .. ~ •. ,. ,......,., "'"""' Jaflc 1R1• aM fNflflt¥. • and H. R. Haldeman, then White Ho\1.St chief of staff. Miss Woods, Nixon's secretary for 2.3 years, told a fed eral court heari ng fhat . she accidentally pushed the record button on a tape machine when she leaned back to answer a telephone and theteby might have caused an erasure. But she said the telephone conversation 1asted not more than (our to five minutes, which would not account for the 18-mlnute hum that is in the tape during the Ni1on·Haldeman conversation. On Thursday White House coWlSel J. Fred Buzhardt testified he was able to nearly duplicate the buzzing sowld by depressing both the start and record button on the recorder while running the typewriter and lamp. But he said that an expert called to the White House was not able to duplicate that sound . In amther development N i x o n • s lawyers, headed by Buzhardt, have made "some mistakes" in handling the Watergate affair and the office Is being· reorganized, according to White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler said Thursday that Buzhardt would continue on the legal team but an ntinois judge, John J. Sullivan, a Democrat who is a longtime friend of the President, has joined the group. Ziegler indicated t b e President was concerned about what be considered mistakes by Buzhardt's staff i n courtroom tactics before U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica. "They've been working hard and We've made some-mistake!, in this situation,'' he said . Buzhard• said h~ would not disagree with Ziegler's commem , that he was overworked and added "I'Ve never pretended that f was perfect." Auto Salesma11 Forced to Take Walk in Undies AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Frank Carter, a rotund, midd1e-aged , a u t o m o b i l e salesman, marched do\\11 the main street of the Texas capital in nothing but bis underwear. He told police Thursday the heavily armed former menlal paUeot wm walk· ed behind him carrying a deer rifle might have been upset because he lost hi~ job at the used car lot. "lie said put your hands on your head and take your clothes off or I'm going to cut your legs off right here. I did exactly what he sa id," Carter said. Lester Culp. 50. was charged \llilh aggravated assault wit h a deadly weapon and niaking a serious threat. His at- torney said he would turn himself in to police today. The suspec~. armed with fou r different .... ·eapom, forced Carte r to undress and made him and three business associates walk two blocks down the city's main street from the used car lot where they worked. • From Pagel SKELETON ... and died a fe\v days' or weeks later ." ~Iedical cxan1incr Thomas ~!athJ\vs said there was no evidence of foul play. The family was reclusive and shUMed contacts with neighbors, authorities said. The discovery was made a f t e r neighpors called the post office to report mail had been piling up in front of the house ror three weeks. Post office official!: notified pOlice, who entered the house through a window and discovered lhe three liodles, along with the bodi., of lwo pets. A neijbbor, who declined to be Iden- tlrled, said, "They were very qutet peo.. pie. You never h'ard a petp out of them." A police oergeant said the tw<H!tory Victorian house had nol been painted on tbe outside f~ about 30 years, 1nd that much of the yellow paint peeled off. .. But inside it wu very neat,;, ·he said. "It had old furnl1hlngs and a wood stove. They werta"t poor. They bad 1 car park"1 in the garage." 0 'Ibere wu a b'ig of grocerlet on the ldtcllen tablo, ao they didn't otarve to death," the sergeant said. I t : • 'Backdating' Saved Nixon Cash-Paper 'ST. LOUIS (UPI) -The St. Louis Post·Dlspatcb today said President Nix· on'i lawyer was personalJy responsible for backdating a key· document related to the President's sale or some calltomla property. a backdating tbal saved the President some taxes. .. ·The newspaper said Los Angeles At· torney Frank DeMarco Jr. called a San Clemente land surveying firm on Je.n. 8. 1971. asking tbat a legal de!Crlptlon of the property sold by the President be backdated to Dec. 1s. 1970. The surveying ftrm bad prepared the docu· ment Dec. 29 and delivered it to DeMan:o ·!ate Dec. a1, the newspa per said. The newspaper said, 11uoder a law passed by Congreas in 111&9, the rate of tax on capital gains was d~ to increase 3 percent oo Jan. l, 1~1. Thu.s •. every $100,000 in capital gain realized by Mr. Nixon in selling 23 acres of Iand adjacent to his home in San Clemente would have cost the President $3,000 ·more in taxes if the sale was consuinmated in 1971 rather than 1970." The Post said an Aug. 27 statement from the Whi te House on the property transfer did not delve into possible capital gains aspects of the land transfer. The Post said the 23 acres were tr:u1sfer· red to Nixon's friends C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo and Robert Abp13.nalp for $1 .249,000. . • The Post quoted congressional in· \'estigators"I as saying that Rep . Jack Brooks (0-Tex.), bad questioned the White House about possible backdating of the-document involved in the sale and that special counsel Bryce N. Harlow later wrote Brooks that he was correct and the document had been backdated. The Post, which 11n1l'!day had said DeMarco was Jax in his reoord·keeping of documents involved in Nixon's dona- tion of personal papers for a $570,000 tax deduction, quoted a congressional investigator as saying, "This business of backdating seems to be a curiou s pattern with DeMarco." The Post said DeMarco refused to be interviewed about his part in either i.'.-sue. The newspaper said there is "no in- dication that Mr. Nixon knew of the way DeMarco handled his tax returns or other legal business." FromPqeJ UPPER BAY •••• DtllJ Plltt Stiff ,_.... EagleSeout Mark Hodson, 13, of !'{ewport Beach Troop 79, has become · .one of county's youngest Eagle Scouts, the highest honor in ..scouting. The son of Mr. and Mrs. G. Robert Hodson, 2401 Sierra Vista , is an eighth grader at Ca rden Hall. ... Fuel Sho1·tage Under Study By Schools • l f ' •• Nixon's Estate . . :~1 Not Undertax~d ·"·1 SACRAMENTO (AP) -President, Nix· on's lawyers are preparing to argue that · Nlxoo'1 San Clemente e~1ate Is not undcrtaxed, an Orange Cowtty of- -M:oraitis said it will be up to the five-member board wbcthCr the state ~ppraisal will be disclosed. It hes not yet been tu'rnct.I over by · the state of· ficlals. ' . ' , Bliltln ~nd hopod to have the stale ' Their case may inclµdc a private ap-appralsal in han4 before Monday's ficial said. praisal of the \Vestem White House scheduled ht?aring. fie may ask the board property, said Ted Moraitis , ad-to postpone the session for two weeks, minlstrative as.!lstant to co u n t y Moraitis said. He added . "'No matter what the stale Supgrvisor Robert Battin. appraisal says, we're going t.o iru;ist A county tax appeals board Is schedul-on a full heariog. There are too many ed to hold a preliminary bearing Monday presumptions from various sources that on Battin's request.. Died .as a private indicate the property is under·assessed." . tupay,er, to ,have. the o{fltjal property One indication is that the official , assessment of full market value of $1 .37 tax assessment ·of the land i:ev>.ewed. mllUon is less than the $1.5 million t ljatUn, a, Den)ocra.t, , bas cOntended purchase price paid for the property i the. land is underauessed ·at the 1973--74 in 1969, Moraitis said. Another con· C va!Ue 01 $f.37 'r.illtioo·. lf · that is so, sideration is federally financed im· \ Battin ha s said, the owners are not prove.ments to ·the estate si nce then, ~ . he said. l paying Utclr fai r share of county prop/ Vallerga has defended the $1.37 million ; erty ta~~s. . . . . figure as fair. Improvements such as \ f\olora11ts said 1n .a t~lephon~. interview presidential security should not be con-1 Thursday thal h.1s 1n!onnahon c~mc sidered as enhancing the value of the from Frank Oel\1arco or the law f1~ property since ownershi p of those ' ?f Kalmbach-DeMarco, Knapp and Chill-facilities will remain in federal hands, [ 1~gworth . . he said. i ~~1arco dechned comment. De Marco is a partner of Herbert 1 H1s sec~ct~ry to!d a newsman: "Mr. Kalmbach, who formerly served as Nix· i DeMarco 1sn t .~alking to reporters about on's private law)ier and who handled I these matters. the disposition Of controversial Nixon Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga campaign funds in 1972 1i confirmed Thursday that a private ap-t • ,, praisal of the property is being conducted • ·;;.. ·, on behalf of the owners, Nixon and Police Arrest .1··_ 1 'Ii industrialist Robert Abplanalp. Vallerga said he was not certain of Discussion or bus a n d beating fuel the purpose of the appraisa1, but he shortages between specific school chiefs said Jt waa not for use at the appeal and State Superintendent Wilson Riles board bearing. 3 Newport Men On Drug Count • ·'11 , today is only one in a series of study Still another appraisal has been con· sessions, Riles' press secretary aid. ducted by the State Board of Equaliza· No one district was e x c I u d e d tion under contract to the Orange County purposefully from the meeting in supervisors. Results of the appraisal, Sacramento, Win Griffith said. · which included a fl~band .impection Three Newport Beach men lnJUalty Rather, the 12 invited, including Los of the San Clemente estate, have not halted by California Highway patrolmen Angeles City School District, were meant been made public. Thursday night for what invesUgitting to be a representative sampling. officers said was erratic drlving were "We're not going to sit down and l~ter booked into Orange County Jail at 11 :55 a.m. cqme up with a 12-poinl F p l on drug charges. plan to keep the kids warm and the ·rona age SberKf's deputies called to the . scene buses running," Griffm said late Thurs· OKAY by CHP officers said they found a quan· day. • • • tity of marijuana in the car occupied Instead, the meeting - by no means i1r. by Bob Sherwood Saruwatarl, 34, of the last -is intended to •·get the designation, which was contained in the 321~ Coral St., Balboa Island, Eric State Department or Education in the existing city land use plan. Com-John Langenbach, ·1s, of 434 Tustin Ave. position so it can offer advice to local missioners Joseph Rosener and William and Jeffrey Bill Weber, 19, 61 Balboa districts:," he said. Agee supported him. Cove. Riles plans on more such "ex· Qrnmlssioners William Hattwinkel, Saruwatarl was additionally booked for ploratory" meetings in upcoming weeks, Jackie· He.aUter, James Parker and Don possession or dangerous drugs when of· 1 afer which a repart of the "best ideas Beckley op~ repeal of the com-ficers said they found tablets belleved and al ternat ives" fur meeting the energy mez;clal desianation. to be benzedrine Ln his ~on. to pin them down in the laboratory. shortages will be prepared, Griffin said. Negotiations are currently under way Officers sald'the car occupJed by the "Our normal procedure 15 to try to The State Department of Education between the Irvine Company and the ~rio was halted on Live Oak Canyon find out aJJ possible sourcea of burdao plans to include any information! on California Department r6f Fish and Game Rtied near lts intersecUon with Traboco , S h d the future of fuel supplies it can gather. to create a wildlile area .in and a.round Oaks. Officers s:ifd they also found an sewae;e," tone said. 0 We ave one from federal sourcees. · · Upper Newport Bay. open container of beer in the vehicle. this and lo!Jlld that the &el'jJge proc-1 --------~~---~-...:..: __ ...:__:_._:. _______ _::.::::_:.:::::;:::::..::..:::=:_:::..::::.:::::::::::..__ esstng plants that empty into San Dieg~ Creek are doing an excellent job. "The problem does not come from them , but from runoff from agricu1tural operations which drain into those two channels." . The bacteria counts coakl"'"" originate directly from animal excrei«ent, or from animal manure used on crops . .. People have been livi ng with animal manure ·ror years, and while it can be dangerous, it is not a cause for alarm," Stone said. Rosener was particularly disturbed when Stone said that tests made on shellfish showed they bad higher than allowable contaminations . "If you look at a shellfish and It has contamination in it, then It is con· taminated." Rosener asserted. Stone again said that the forms of contamination were simply indicators of trouble and not dangerous in themselves. "If the water becomes dangerous, we'll be the first to tell you," Stone said. "But righf now, we don't have reason to believe it is," he said. Stone said he is see.king funding from the Orange County Bo<ird of Supervisors for a research project to find out more definitely what the nature of the health problem in the bay really is. Frot11PqeJ LIDO ... includes the city tidelands, the three miles of sandy beach around the lsland, 1 t street~nd lots and Jots where the association's clubhouse and boat storage areas are located. Rogers-' report said the $3.566 proposed lease payment -which v;ould be review· ed at th~ end of f i v e years -was computed. by multiplying the oc:iginal $750 figure by the percentage lhal the assessed "Valuation of Lido Jsle has in- creased since 1951. That figures out to be almost a five- fold Increase. The propooed readjustmenta after each five-year period In the lease would be ,computed similarly. . The report points out, "U the dty ttnewed tbe lease, the city would be resolved &Gm the obllgatlon 14 provide municipal servtces\t:. Ken Jacoboen, wislant Newport Beach marine safety director, said If the beachu are opeoed to the public, two llfeguard 1talloos would be nqulred, both along· the North Udo Channel. "All other Island beaebel should be handl"1 ,. are our stre.l-tnda bonlerlng the bay elaewhere," be said. • • J acoboeo explained. Uiat llreel..ad beachM on the bey ale handled by noallng crews. · · He aald lllecu&rds would be needed at the lwo stations about Ill doJ• • year, lncludinl 10 day1 fer -Week. The tolal 1ife&ud. cool WCllild be $4,990, he sald. tJ • • - .... --------... -=a--===---·--. re-holidall sale SOFAS & 'CHAIRS ONE WEEK ONL y • DON'T DELA y Get Ready For The Holidays With A New Sofa or Chair Here Are JU$t A Few Examples Of The Many Excellent Values. SOFAS .... SALE 7' SOFA • • . M•t• Canoft Prlot I' SOFA ••• M""Jt C--... Gold/ONogt Ynltt Pair S' LOVE SEATS ••• Royal Cooch Gold Yolvet Pair 7' SOFAS ••• ShorrlU ••• Yollow/Gold I ' SOFA"'. • • M•t• C--. . . LI•• l'rlftt Gr"" I' SOFA ••• ShtrrfD CrnctOt , • , Ymet loil/Rllt $440. $770. $6n. IA. $Sn. IA. $570. ''"· CHAIRS Pair CHAIRS M""Jt c.no. .. , Ytlow er ONott Y..... $fit. IA. Silltlo CHAil •• : Woo-.•• Gr-,(tut. Sl"91o CHAil ••• Fllotrldt•· ••• Top .... '"""' Pair CHAIRS ••• ao;M-. ......... Ytlnl $500. $)7t. EA. '379. '599. '549 •••. '499 .... '489 • '499. '199 .... '129. '425. "'289 .••. DREXEL-HERITA6~ENREOON-WOODMARK-ICARAS1 AN --------- I INTERIORS WllllDAYS A IA TU~DA TS t:OO to l :IO NIDAY 'Tl~ 9:00 ' ' • I NEWPORT BEACH e 1721 WfSTCllFf DI, '42°2050 to,.,. S11M1y 12-l:JO> . l.AliiUNA IEAC{H e 1.4\ NO~fH COAST HWY • IOp•-fl S1Mrt '12·1i30) 494.4111 TORRANCE e .I 2)Mt HAW1HOlllNt llV01 171·12Jt .. • • I • I • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAi .. PAGE . City Sets Example The good sense and spirit with which Newport Beach Is accepting the energy crisis sets an example for others. The city council this week ordered every. readily available measure that cou ld ,CO}lserve energy to be taken -things such as keeping city nail dark at night, lower-• in g interior •thennostats, and banning unnecessary travel in city cars. And It took a less obvious step as well in order Ing studies to determine whether it would b.e feasible to reduce the Intensity of street lighting In order to save electricty. Likewise, the Chamber of Commerce took the pain- ful but wise step of deciding to discourage the annual Festival of Lights boat parade. The event, which has gone on without Interruption since World War ![, is a popular one. But it would require large amounts of fuel to run the boats and to bring spectators here from around the Southland. II private citizens will follow t~e example of their civic government leaders in working to conserve energy, the crisis can be handled more smoothly oyer the long run. Hospital Seeks Advice Hoag Memorial Hospital directors last week made an unusual but welcome announcement that they plan to make every effort to find ways that people believe the hospital could serve them better. Directors of the Newport Beach hospital said they are forming a "consumer committee" as one of 10 subcommittees that will report to a newly .formed long· range planning council. On the panel will be representatives of state and local government, the clergy, the school system and, Penitentiary Safer Thari Best Jails ~YDNEY J.HARRJ~ \\1ould you believe that you toold take a long sentence in prison better than a short stay in jail? l\.fost Americans \Vouldn't -indeed, most don't even know the difference between the two, !hough there are 4,000 jails in this coun· lry, most of them WlSpeakablc. One man who does know is Dr. Karl Menninger, who has looked into the problem deeply, especially in his book , >f a few years ago. "The Crime of ' Punishmerit." Now, in his new book, "Whatever Became of Sin"!" (which I "'ill comment on in a future column), he repeats his indictment in a few terse paragraphs I cannot refrain from quoting in full : i.TRE PUBLIC refuses to abandon its pleasant fantasy that jails are just little Jocal lockups where miscreants and suspects may spend a night or even a week and be the more wary of sin and police thereafter. People refuse to believe that jails are almost "'ithout exception horrible, destructive, 111inous, hideous atrocities Of which every citizen ~hould be ashamed. "I sa y lhe public re£uses to believe It in spite of thousands of reports, because if they did, jails would be outlawed tomorrow by public demand. If every minister would visit lhe local jail ty,•ice a year, and urged his con- gregation to do so, there would be a similar revolution . "THE AVERAGE citizen goes along in his thinking with those ignorant, lazy, or cruel judges who say, 'A few weeks or months in our litt le jail may do you some good. Then if you persist Dear Gloomy Gus Just how and where are the pros- pective oceupants at Proplontory Point going to park their Cads, Con· Unentals and Chris Ctaft Cruisers -especially If the city should ever ban curbside parking for such? O.D.T. in your wicked ways, you'Jill be given the severe treatment the state penitenUary!' "Actually the 'lt'orst penitentiary )s less hannful to most young oflenders than the best of jails! Jails ruin young men. Can't the public grasp this in- disputable fact ? How can a decent prison attempting a rehabilitation program do anythlrig for a boy who comeJ to it from a jail where he has been raped, battered, vomited and urinated upon, mauled and corrupted by some of the old-tlmers in the bullpen ? '1EVEN WITHOUT the abuse .and harassment of other inmates, the hor- rible confinement in hot , stuffy, crowded, dark, vermin-infested iron cages is a tenible experience -literally a form of torture . When one considers that thiJ is all illegal. since the l~w does not stipulate these iniquitous con- comitants of d~tenuoo in any sentence, our sinfulness in permitllng the situation to continue in our society, and at our expense, seems very evident and very great." Karl Menninger is no "bleeding heart"; he believes in moral, as well as legal, responsibility for our acts, as his ne"'' book fully shows. But he is a realist, in recognizing that certain kinds of punishment are a worse crime than any they seem to rectify or revenge. Own-your-own Rooms? Any day now the U.S. Department of the Interior may add la ndlords to its list of endangered species. For a number of reasons', the nnanclal in- ducements to own and manage rental property are fast eroding. A! a result, EDITORIAL RESEARCH much. of the new res.idential and com-drawback is that a down payment ties merc1al construction 1n this country .1.s ....-up a businessman 's capital." · designed.. for condominium ownership -. an arrangement whereb.y the occupants OWNERSHIP of a residential oon· of a building or cluster or buildings domlnium unit carries no guarantee of hold title to their individual units. happiness, either. Some residents feel In a condominium, lhe buyer pays the mortgage and property taxes on his dwelling, just as a homeowner does. And , like a homeowner, the condominium buyer may deduct mortgage interest and property taxes £rom his income-tax statement. Title to everything else in lhe condominium comt>lex is held in common by all residents. In most cases, there is a monthly charge for uUllties, maintenance and.other operati ng costs. THE CONDOMINIUM c raze has spread to olflce buildings, too. Small busineS-'lmcn ln a number of dtlet have found that mortgage and malntenantt payments. offset by the tax-<leductlon advantage, make ownership of office ... space more ecdnomical than rental. It's not all roses, though. "The co~ pany that has bought a condominium and' finds that lt needt more space is unlikely to be able to buy an adjoining piece of the condominium,'' BUlinelS Week points Gill. "In anttctpatton of thla netd, oeveral buyers have Be<Ured m°"' ll)JIOlJhan they need Immediately and will rent it out. The other big '.;e... • tmcomfortable 1n an environment of en· forced togetherness. Others chafe under regulations that outlaw shaking of dust mops on balconies, playing of muslca1 in· struments late. at night or early in the morning, playlng or working on the family .cat in the pafklng area. c.ondomlnium developers, however, have few complaints. And they are nothing if not inventive. A developer on Spain'• Costa de! Sol builds apartrnents1 sells them to executives and other investors, and then rents them to tourists on behalf of the owners. '!l1e sales pitch Is f "guaranteed 12 percent net annual return" to the in- vestor on rmtals for 20 years. ' , The Marriott Corp. has found an equally novel approach. It is oelllng the rooms of It• Camelhack Inn near l!hoenix to Individual investors. Marriott retains ownenblp of everything but the rooms, and Charges the owners a fee for managing 'the hotel. The' rentals from the rooms 'are split between the hotel and the ro0m ownera .. The phrase "a room of one's own'' has taken on a new meaning. ' among others, the news media. In announcing formation of the special subco m· mJttee, administrator Scott S. Parker said, "If we want to take a realistic look at the future, we can't just do il lnlemally." That's fresh and refreshing talk. ll's encour.glng because the commiUee should open some needecl1 new lines of com munication between the hospital·that's· became.an-institution and the com mun ity. · The long-range resull should be better use of com- munity resources-and better health care service for the community. Sch ools Are P1·epared It's the easiest thing in the world for public of· ficials to take the ;iltitude that "it can't happen here" with regard _tp· ·floods, earthquakes, nuclear war or other catastrophes. But any of these things could happen here, and public agencies have an obligation to be prepared for them. The Newport-Mesa Unified School District is one public agency that recognizes this and takes its emer- gency preparedness plans seriously. Each year the plans undergo a full-size review that ends with form&l re- adoption by the trustees. . The emergency plans reflect this conscientio'us at- titude. The district has food stockpile s at sc hools throughout the Harbor Area, an already-appointed civil defense organization at each of its 38 schools ready to act in an emergency, and a written outline of th e duties of each of these official s. Every year a brief re- view of the plans is conducted at each school. ~ To do much more emergency preparedness plan· ning than this might open the di strict to charges of wastefulness. But with responsibility for 26,000 chil- dren, the district would be .negligent to do less. N ~ . ·,,wt !>ID IT! WE CREATE~ A guYER~ MARKtT IN CADILLACS!' ' Brocla11re ·Touts 'Conference Center' Attractions ' New Role for Western White House WASHINGTON -President Nixon has made a strong pita to federal agencies to hold their conferences at the seaside Western \Vhite House in an apparent effort to thro'v an official cloak around his San Clemente extravagances. 1 The flight of hundreds of bureaucrats to San Clemente, of course, will add to the fuel drain and the taxpayers' bills. But it will be easier "' for the President to jusUfy the millions he ha! poured into the San Clemente comple1 if ~he can . show that govern- ment agencies are utilizing the facilities. The President not only has sent out special invitations to several agencies to make use of the \Vestern White House, but he has included a brochure of all the available attractions. This a I I u r i n g booklet, with the title "The Western White House" printed on a rem green cover page, touts the • conferenCe facilities at the Coast Guar:d station next to the presidential com- pound. But tM emphasis is on the recreation that the officials can enjoy when they're not tied up on official business. 'nle booklet boasts .that fishing, swimming, golf, bowling, bull fights, jai-alai and many more leisure activities await them at San Clemente. · Visits to Disneyland, a fruit orchard and the world's biggest telescope are also offered. "Casual dress is the rule in San Clemente," adds the White House booklet. "Short sleeve shirts, slacks or shorts for men -1 i g h t cotton! for women" are · prescribea for what the booklet promises is "the world's all-year- around finest" weather. THE PRESIDENTIAL invitatioos were issued earlier this year at a time when Nixon was on the skillet for using the Federal A'viation Administration, Genenl taxpayers' money to purchase luxury Services Administration and the Labor items for the San Clemente compound. Depcirtment. The wOrd that the Western White So ~far this year, 38 government and House was available for conferences civic organizations have accepted the was passed to the agencies by his Pre~ent's appealing invitation. Another . military aide, Brig. ~n. B re n t . '19 did. so in 1972. Scowcroft, who recently was given The FAA's top 'tirass Was planning another star and promoted to White a corlference at San Clemente for early House national security deputy. -December, even as the Presidtnt wu "The President lw asked me," wrote ordering fuel savings. Almost halt of the general, '1to renew his offer of the JI participant& will wing acroa the factlltles of tbe Western White House cowit/Y from Washington. , for tbe use of government and certain , · ~· N 1 lned that the other groups. • ~· . .. exp a "The area offers gefierally pleasmt ~ will be on general avtatloa, I weather in a secluded,---lnforlnal sett v.itah. erence, and, the ~ about ting ••• The 10 fully.equipped offices, con-equaliie out. Often [W8 can r:• ~ ference room private beach and bath work done outside Wlltdnltoa- house, hell~d and excellent com-At the White llOllle, General Scow<10!t rnunications system provide ideal con· ~1d bis. pred~llOr had tent out a ference accommodations for up to 40 sunllaJi mvltation before all the boopla persons" be urged. oYer tile Presldeut's San Clemente spend-' mg. The purpose of bis own memo, SEVERAL gnvemmeut agencies have Scowcroft aald, was purely "to tell ~ jumped at the opportunity to hold their there were , tho6e facllitlO! available." meetings in balmy San Clemente. Among He denied "100 per cent" that it was them are the Justice Department, to justify the President's spending. Expert~ Could Cl~ar Tape Erasure To the Editor: Jn reference to the President~s "erased tape" -working in classified aerospace projects some time back, we found that there is no way to completely erase magnetically recorded information (ex- cept with a mat c h). A tone can be cancelled out. Even a full bandwidth sweep with a scrambler input can be decoded and neutralized. THERE IS a lab over at Cal Tech that specializes in clearing up the moon- based TV transmiss ions. 'Those boys would love a job like this. So, if anyone really wants to know what was on that 18 minutes -wen~ Dick, it was a nice try. I wonder if there are any historians who remember what prompted the cry "millions for defense, but not one ce.nt tor tribu te," in reference to the Arabs. RAY Brno Car l'ools To the Editor : l have lived in the Newport-Costa Mesa area for 17 yea rs and have seen and felt the quality of the air change for the worse. I like the idea of your new classified category on car pools and hope the p e o p I e in our area can save on gas and also clean up on air. You are helplng our cities .. ,._ MRS. JULIA M. PAYNE The Daily Piloi's ·new classiJied category headed Auto Tran.sporta· tton, 525, is designed for COT pools - p<ople looking for oth<r p<ople with whom lhey con shore ri<Uls to and from work. Ed. T~e Reid Crbb To the Editor: Every week there ts a new crlsls ; ooe week it'• the price ol food, another week It's the Middle Ea!l Then, It's the enero eris.ls. But, t h e r e isn't a criJi.s jn this whole world that cnn •ierase".from the minds o( the Amerlctin people tboSe mi,.lng, or accidentally erased tapes, and the sheer deceit ol this adminlstratlon a n d its most un· popular leader, Mr. Richard Nixon. THE FAcr remains, the people really can't · get interested In any JJ:Q?.m· mendation that Mr. Nixon might hltve • MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normally, writers should conve y their rnessages tn 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All le&- ters must tnclude signature and mail. ing addres3 but names may be with- held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will ·not be pub· lis11ed. · on a cnsl.S (trumped-up or legitimate) as long as he refuses to come forward and "Face the Nation" on the erasing of evidence in the tapes. However, that's one crisis that Mr. Nixon isn't up to because· of the wea k nature and character of the man. The feal crisis is that we are actually \\'ithout leadership. And, though we a~ pear to be flhundering around in a sea of despair, some very gqod men are at work striving to maintain our democracy. So, take heart in the fact that our nation is far stronger than any one leader -especlally an unpopular one who is living under the delusion that he ls "king." .. WEBSTER'S definition of thd word crisis ls: interesting; there are three. Number two ls this ; a paroxysmal attack of pain, distress, or disordered function • . .That's it! That's what p e op 1 e felt as tbey watched and listened to the President. BERNY BAKER Strange Logic r: tbod of reasoning, i& t etc.; npeclally, cor· rect and .sound ning. The above delini ts of a word I find totally Jackin In the decision to jail a 71-yeaM>ld oman, Mrs. Rita Hill ol Lonlsburg, New Mexico. I WISH IOmeooe would explain the logic In this act. AJ I UDdentand it, she was jailed for ber refusal to allow a new multi-million dollar super highway Literary Companwn Webster's New World Companion to English aad Amerlc&D Literature. Edited by Arthur Pollard and Associate Editor for American Wterature Ralph Willett. fl5. 850 Pages. With so many writers nowadays prone to toss olf references to their peers, ancient and modem, wilhout adequate explanation, It is good lo hjive something bandy to re!reah our knowledge. THE SKtn .11ES edited by Arthur Pollard and Ralpb . Willett are 1etualty by many hands. The Initials at the end of each item can be checked against a list of con tributors at the begiMlng ol the book to establlsb ldenUfieatkml. Arranged 1lphabetleally, the sketches range In time from Old English poetry to, say, John Cheever. The briel studies are certainly not exhaustive. Nevertheless, lbe main dates and wnrks of • given 1utbar ere listed, and the writers generally do not shy ,• (THE BOO~ J from some critical appraisal, however brief. For Instance, E. H. Robln!On, writing on Scan o•casey, uys of the playwright'•· departure for England: "Unfortunately lhe move from Ireland Impaired tbe sense of lmm<dlacy In biD J>(ayJ," Alld Dr. A. J. Slud, merring to Katharine Anne Porter's much-touted novel, "Sldp Of Foots;• uys bluntly that "lhort-llcllon lochnlque drained her panorlllllc lllbjeet of narrative energy." tT IS GOOD to have • 1Umulating, lrequenUy controverllal reference work at our elbows on the protagooists ot English and American loiters !or quick con1ultatlOll. AJaoclated Press • to be ponstructed on her property. I fall to see the logic, Jet', alone the necessity, in building yet another -r highway at a time wbed we are faced with a fuel crisis that will perhaps leave our existing highways lookint like alJand<#ied alrstrlps. I realize, of colirse, that the poalblltty exists that the politicians have already spent the payoffs awarded f o.r favoritism in a w a rd i n g mn· struction contracts, and thus it would be embarrassing to change direcUons at thlS time. Mind you, I am not making an a~ation, just mulling over a few possibilities that are ever so prevalent today ANOTHER thought -perhaps if Mrs. Hill wciuld have bad the logic for defac· Ing ber property explained to her rather than being ordered off her land she might not have been so reluctant to comply with the state's request. Or perhaps ti she would have been given amounts equal to wbat p a y o !! s sometimes aIDO\Dlt td1 • : • Ob, well, who are the aged, property. owning taxpayers to stand in the way of prog""I · • WALTER E. STEPllEY JR. DAILY PILOT Robm N. Wc<d, PMl>U.hn T"°""" Kul>il, Editor BarborG !Crcil>ich Editorial ~ Editor """ -,,...., .. 111< D.uy Pibt .ieeks to ln.fonn and .ilma.lat~ rndtf1 by pn.untiJI& OD ttds ~ dtvenelc:ommemary·on IOpScl! OC tao. ,.,... by i;ndlcated columnlm ml ~ by prvvtdlnc • ,,.._ ~ neden' views and by prr1mtinr ttm -·-and-• current topb. Tht tdhoN1 •• o[ tho °'lily Pilot ·-oNy tn lh• editorial column at ~ 10p ol. tbt Pll•· Opinions •• ...-by u. .... ...-Md <..,.,,,...., Ulll -~Titers ar11Mlf OWll ... 9 .. mmt (I( 1helr ...... tw tbe D11J Pllol _bl_ Friday, November 30, 1171 • • • Aquanaut Charged . In Fraud -State Welfare Plan Vote Session Called SAN DIEGO CAP) Federal charges of fraud and embezzlement have been tUed against a fonner N a v y aquanaut who was lead diver ln last summer's attempt to aalvage treasure from the inmken Italian liner "Andrea Doria." An FBI spokesman said Christopher James Delucchi, SACRAMENTO (UPI) - 'Ibe legillahae will convene. in apecl.al aessk>n Tuesday to vote on a compromise $122 inllllon welfare plan ham- mered out by legislative .and ,Regan admlni1tration· negotiators. ( BRIEFS ) -' ... ·-, ______ _. We ig,,. tlaswer The setUement v;ould pr4> vtde grant Increases lo 500,000 aged, blind and diBabled camomlans far beyond those sought by Gov. Ronald Resgan and also transfe" ad- ministration of adult aid pro- grams to the federal govern- • ment on Jan. 1. 22, currently vice president of Saturation Systems Inc., a 5an Dieg<>-based salvage ru-m, will be arraigned Dec. 13 on charges that he took away $1,370 worth of Navy Wldersea eledrlcal equipment shortly before his. discharge last July. ePenal-Plaa SACRAMENTO (AP) Private pension plans should ' he regulated by the state to prevent workers ~rom losing retirement be l1W! f i t s on tedmicaliti.es, say s the chainnan of the state Senate C'.orniruuee ort 'Business and the Professions. Sb. George Deukmejian (R- Long Beach), told a Capitol news conference Thursday that there is "no such thing as a guaranteed pension for a CaJifornia worker." e TellC!Jler Strike COMPl'ON ( U PI ) Negotiations niursday failed to settle the Compton teachers' strike in a dispute concerning stqdent violence. poor working conditions and ·· higher wages. A teacher request f o r "round the clock" negotiations was apparently denied when district officials said talks would· resume Monday af- ternoon. e Liz Restlttfl LOS ANGELES (AP) Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti listens careful- ly to a reporter's ques- tion during news con- ference where be pnr posed establishment of state energy commis-- sion empowered to ra- tion gas and make car pools mandatory. LT. GOV. ED Reinecke, act- ing In the absence or Reagan who is on a speech ma.k1ng tour of Australia, called a special session of t h e legislature for noon Tuesday, Health and Welfare Secretary Earl Brian, who an- nounced the agreement Thurs- day evening after severa~ da ys Long Beach -Mu1;der Ends in 4 Arrests LONG BEACH (UPI) - Four persons were OOoked on suspicion of murder Thursday in .connection with the shotgun slaying of a Long Beach City College student who wrui: visiting two friends at ·· an apartment. · POLICE AI.50 arrested lfte vicUm's friends, Peter Macisaac, 23, and Paul Bnm- ing. 20, on suspicion of illegal cultivation of marijuana after officers found 41 plants grow- ing in the yard. A small amount of marijuana was also foll"'l In the house. An unidentified 16-year-old boy, accompanied by his lawyer, was arrested when be surrendered to police. Police later arrested Kevin Qnmlngbam, 19, JobD Vllllier Ii>et, 21, and Stanley Hinrichsen, lll, all of Long .Beach. fDetectives said the four ap- parenUy bad Intended to roh the residence where the vic- tim, Kevin· Skeith, 20, was visiting friends. AIJ'l1IOJUTIES said they believe Skeith was shot by the juvenile while Vander Hoek accompanied him inside. The other two were waiting outside. Macisaac and Bruning said the juvenile and Vander Hoek barged into their apartment and ordered them to lie on the floor. They said Skeith was shot after he either refus- ed . to drop to the floor or when he lunged at the armed youth. Skelth was killed by a single blast from a 12-gauge shotgun. of negotiations with assembly of financial aid adult chlldten leaders, said the bill will add must contribute for the SU)>' $122 mllllon In stale money port of their elderly welf8re to current atate and local welfare CMits of "67 million parents. annually. . Reagan · stronglfr resisted He said it would not in· any easing of the sc>called crease or reduce county cost.a i--''Relatives Responsibiltty'; law for .blind, disabled and elderly which was toughened by his recipient programs. 1 Welfare Reform Act of 1971. Under th e compromise, Th ll ha k Id ha the av.erage monthly grants for e ro c ":°u . ve elderly and disabled recipients effect of lncreasmg the mcome would increase from $212 to level where adult children $235. For the blind Ibey would must he before they are re- rise frorµ $m to $265. quired ~ contribute. REAGAN HAD sought payments of $221 for the aged and disabled and ·1237 for the blind. "I wouldn 't exactly say he was overjoyed," Brian told newsmen when asked about Reagan's reaction to the set~ tlement when ·infonned ot it by telephone in Australia. "When ~sented with the alternstives, he thought this waJ aporopriate." . The proposal also prodivdes $25 a month restaurant meal allowance for those unable to cook for therilselves and r90ls back to 1961 levels the amount THE 1"1EASURE, p u t together by Brian, Social Welfare Director D a v i d Swoap, Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (~Van Nu y s ) , Aasemblyman John Burton ( 0-San Francisco), a n d Assemblyman William T . Bagley, (R-S.n Raf a e I ) , represented a victory for Democrats. They previously fashioned a Reagan<ipposed b i 11 to transfer administration of Ole adult programs to the federal government and sul;istantially increase grants, but t h e Senate killed it in Septem~r. P.OINSETTIAS ..... 119 ~ ICICLES tr .. • .W ,_.1..-c •rhhMt .... .,, ....... · ...... 19c ret· Ste N•w ••• , • • • • • • 39C. .. • ,., $1.00 .. l,., $1.00 CALIFORNIA. I • DAILY PILOT $ j : 'State Challenges ·EPA Parking Plrui:: r SAN FRANCISCO (~) - ~I-At ti', Geo. ~velle J. Younger filed three peti- tions In the 9th U.S. Circuit Courj · of .\ppeals Thursday challenging the validity of the U.S. F.nvlronmental ProtectlQn Agency plari" to r e g u i r e " surcharges on parking spaces. ' . UNDER THE plan, an)'OO( malntalnlng porltlng facllltles; woold have to pay tho surcharge on each spate 11>4 the. fee would lncreaae .,.. nually over a three-)lear I period. L The petitions to revtew the•~ EPA plan were !lled on behaU ·~ P • J d • ted • 9 of the state, the governor .~ff air n ic in the Calilomla Air Rel!OUrCeS:i'I l\Ollfd and trustees o f1>1V California State Universities : Sia yin gs, Robbery ~==:~Id ;he ftllng was .~: 1 made Thursday because of U..,,~ STOCKTON (AP) -Willie L. Steelman and Douglas E. ·Gretzler have been Indicted by the San Joaquin County Grand Jury In the slaying of nine persons in Victor Nov, 6. EACH MAN faces nine charges of murder, five counts of robbery and one count ·of kidnaplng. The robbery and kidnap charges stem from the thert of about $3,000 !rom the grocery store i¢e. steelman, 23, of Lodi, and Gretzler, 22, of New York City, were charged in the slayin~ of four membenl of the !amlly statutes or limitations and t~~ of grocery store owntr Walter further talks are being he1« .. 1,f Parkin, 33, and five others. in hopes of resolving the mat~ .. ). The Indictment by the grand ter without going to trial ;.;.; jury late We d n e s d a y ''WE 00 NOT questlo.. ul auto'ma,Ucally moves the case .. rr into superior court. The two EPA's goal of reducing': earli~r were charged i Jl automobile emissions, but we .. municipal <OWt oo nine counts do not think EPA has fully' ·• of. rtwrder each and a considered lhe economic tm!'',, preliminary hearing had been pact of the 'plan, In relauoii •IA scheduled for nelt month. to t~ potential reduction fl!i."l automobile emissions," aaid1l INDICTMENT by the grand Younger. , 0 jur)' eliminates the need for . "We believe the burden of·'"" Lhe pi-eliminary hearing. a parking surcharge would "-~. Their arraignment in ultimately fall on California's·'. 1 superior court is scheduled for consumers and employers,'" :.g Friday. _ · ' ' he said. ',. f...t STARTING MONDAY DEC. 3 .~: . ··:i ~•u • ,'""I · .. •J 1·; .. .. . " . ·· .. " . " .·••1 ·~"'! . .;: .. . "" 1 .. •1 ••• •1 ·" Doctors uy they ,discovered no tumori or malignancies dtD"ing surgery on Elizabeth Taylor and the a~esa will be releesed lrorn the hospital 9 Indicred For Porno Book Saks LIVE . '. ~1 VISIT OUR ~•\ ' l next week. · MISS Taylor was described Tllursday as ' ' st i I \ ex- periencing the usual amount of post-operative pain," but was said to be "looking great and doing VefY well." e Oeeitlental Hit LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Red paint was splashed in the reception • area of Oc- cidental Petroleum Co. bead· quarters Thursday, purported- ·' ly as a protest agai.mt the deals with the Soviet Union made by Dr. Annand Ham- . mer, the corporation's · chairman. • Two young men wearing ski masks entered the room and splashed the paint about without a word, said' recep- tionist Mat)Y Jo Esposito. Some or the paint spattered her clothes and hair. e Times Sued. LOS ANGELES (UPI) A former co un ty ad- ministrator, who was con· victed in 1972 or perjury and preparing false evidence while in offK:e, flied. a $2 million libel suit Thursday against the Los Angeles Times. Baldo Kristo\'ich, who was sentenced to five years' prcr bation and is currently ap- '~Llged Sex Acts Land Man in Jail SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A massage parlor operator bas been arrested after ,....t grand jury lndidments charg- ed rum with seven sex offenses for presentation of a live sex oct oo stage. Held In lieu of $50,000 bail was Peter Amato, 34, San Diego, operator of t he Empress Massage Parlor and the Studio I ond 2 Theaters. Also indicted were • three women, each charged with one COWlt of sex perversion. Amato will be arraigned Monday. ' Charges placed Thursday against Amato included three eounls of sex perversion, one count of pandering, ooe of participating in or exlu1>iting obscene live conduct and two COWlts of soliciting women for prostitutioo. District Attorney Ed Miller said Amato was master of ceremonies and a participan~ in live sex acts on tbe Theater 2 stage between Oct. 30 and Nov. 9. LOS ANGELES (UPI) A county grand jury iodlcted nine persoos on pornography cha r ges Thur sday , culminating a fiv~mooth in- vestigation in which tlree policemen opened a "decoy" ~. Olarged wi1!! conspiracy to distribute obscene material were Noel Bloom, 31, llio AJ> pelby, 50, and Mohammed Rustam, 40, all of Hollywood; ROOgers Smnmers, 39, Phil Dixon, 30, and Robert Elkins, 44, all <i Los Angeles;, Paul Novack, 45, and Mark Novak, 25, bolh <i Beverly Hills; and Rayrriood Barron, 39, of Venice. Also indicted w e re . American Film Industries, Cinema Classics Limited and Ca 1 i f or n i a· International Distributors. All tM delendanta except · Bloom surrendered to SUperior Court Judge James G. Lolts and entered lnoocent pleas. Authorities said the in- dictments came after three investigators o p e n e d the ''Freedom Bookstore'' on Sepulveda Boulevard a n d purdwed hardoore film. and magazines from several d. the suspects. pealing his conviction, claimed == be wu libeled in' an article which related .Ueged prob- lems in the public guardian's office, • post he held while he was J>l4>lic &dmlnistrator. HARRIS @M~~~~$ NEW AT BIDWELL'S We hive 1 CJre1t, new se- lection in corduroys, solids & different pleids. From $14.00 Swe1ter Vests Too From $10.00 A Gr.at Gift Comblnetlon J ND CUSTOM •lfl' WIAP 3467 VIA UDO, NEWPOIT llActt • l ... 1•11kMI e M-., a... e ....... a... • , TREES i Ma~l'A1uRE LITE SET ~ 40 •l•lahlte llM Mt •\ wlft. replecnbM pl ... I• lt•lln. ........ 298 · JS h•t.9 ltoll• M ....... llt•1, ........ ,, ... ,., ftNMr er llldoor .... " ....... ~"' .• ,... ..., . II'-. 1911 ; .... ~··· 6.. -i~-- '· • I ' TRIM-A-TREE . , , SHOP! r,;ifJI for •~_Y.our decorating needs. Uni/. qua hard to find items. : .. Expen· · sive one of a kind .... 1.,ports plus ••.. American made novelties. Im- ported and domestic tree lights .... twinkle .... action. , .. bubble •.•. miniature and outdoor,. Plus we also have a l~rge selection of replacement bulbs. Have you -n our tree tops? Electric .... Angtl , ••. Santa ..•• Sno)¥man and more. M ... .,.., ......_ ,,.._ .,... H..._ S..W """ ....... •• Ttw. y.,. ._.,._to Mtter..,.. , ••• M• , ........... ,..._ Wllit. Plr, Mh9r np, °"t'-Ar, ptwfallw N_.., ,._,... ....... 111t .. s...... PIWl•I• i.i ~~ Piiie, 9'C •••• toWt "'9 to 11' •IANTI. '" .., .. twi.e .. '"' trae, ... ,.. .... "" .... .-... tlediM Jlllt ... wwr .,.. cltMe9 fl -.y c.aer •• , ., .,.. .., IMry ......... •""'1 ..... ~ ...•• w•WNI _, "-M ...., .•• '""-tic ,.tc• ... .-1111 --· IMO, U.ILY WH1LI YOU STILL HAYI A •OOD llLIC· noN 10 CHOOll HOM. 2 LOCATIONS TO SERlf YOU 2123 ~ewport Blvd., Costa Mesa PH 646-3925 2252 S. E. Bristol Santo Ana Heights 1 Ph: 556-6391 ·~:: . ., ... ;: "~ _., "• ·.l, .. •• ·~ ·~ II " .,, )' •I •. l . ) • •• •• • . . -1 '.f • :1 ., . " •• ;•,, ' -' ' . J ., • :~ ,, •• "• • ·-, .:o ' • .. ~, . . .,. •• ··i • ' " . ( t I .. . ' ~ ... I , Orang~ Coa8t • j VOL 66, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1973 .. , Kalmbach Partner Probed • Ill 87 L PETER KRIEG Of .. o.Hy ,, .... ..,... California Secretary of .siett Edmund G. Brown, Jr. today will be caJled on to determine if President Nixon'• personal lawyers violated not.81' laws when they recorded Nlxon's pre-preslden- ~ J>&pers as a gift to UE. National Archives. (Related story, Page 2) The President claimed a $570,000 ta. deduction for the gilt in 19119, just before federal legislation was enacted that cut off tax deductions.for such gifts. The SL Loull Poat Dispatch charged 'lbunday the presidential lawyer Frank DeMaroo of Los Angeles, partner of Herbert IV. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, failed to properly record the notarization of the gilt. · · DeMarco today claimOd .be did not Krog~ Says . . . vioiate the law because he kept copies of all the documents. · "All that the law requires is that the notary keep a record of documents notarl7.ed by him," Demarco said. "It does not necessarily have to be in tabular form In a book. Maintaining copies of documents constitutes a record. Our office has copies of all documents notarized," he said. Attorneys for the Cali!omia Secretary He's of State's office weren't sure exactly what the law requ.ires, or so they said. "I will talk to the secretary of state today," said William Holden, an attorney in Brown's' office. He to)d the Daily Pilot, "This involves an interpetation of the statutes. We have not been called upon before to make that interpretation." The law states: "A notary public shall keep a remrd Guilty El _lSberg Case Vif!latio~ Admi.tted . \\'.ASHfNGTON (AP) -Egil Krogh Jr., who supervised the White Hou.5e special investigation unit known as the "Plumbers," pleaded guilty in federal court today to violating the civil rights of a Beverly Hills psychiatr!sl in coo- qectlon with the Ellsberg burglary. 1be f~eral conspiracy charge carries a maximum penalfy of 10 years in priSon and a $10,000 fine. In an agreement worked out with the •pedal Watergate prosecutor, the ~year-oJd lawyer will not face further federal charges in cormection with the "Plumben' " opera~ion to break into the office ol Doniel Ellaberg's psychla· trist, Or. Lewis Fielding. U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Geaell · told Krogh he will be sentenced without delay as soon as presentencing pro- _cedures are complete. Krogh promi!ed "full and truthful· disclosure of all relevant information and documents in his possession." But Krogh added an unusual condition, tba\ he oot be liquired _ID testify about • • *"' the "Plumbers' '" operation untQ after ... ~ ba PLEADS GUILTY ~=~led to in Egil Krogh Jr. Krogh llid be wanted to be aenlellced ------------• ~ testHytng ~dispel an7 riotloo . that be W a S i>leaclinl guilty in e•- pectatlon of leniOnt !reatmeot. Two Huntington Prostitutes Get Terms in Jail · He said the ....-be ia pleading is that ,be inleddecl to assert in bis defeme thal the break-in .... designed to defend naliooal -.rlty. But be said his conscience will DOI permit him to do that. So be pleaded guilty, be said, "because I have no defense." He said be now feels the bn!ak-in was a violattoo of conatitutiooal rights. Ellsberg's trial in the Pentagon papers case. ·Krogh had been indicted on charges of making false declaration )o the original Watergate grand jury in con- nedl6fi with the travels of two members ot'1 the "Plumbers" unit, E. Howard Hunt arxt. G. Gordon Li<ldy. Both later were involved in the Wa(ergate bre~·in, as well as the En's berg burglary. Krogh worked under former White House domesti c aff8.irs adviser John D. Ehrlichman. Ehrlichman, Krogh and two other "Plumbers" have been indicted by a Los Angejes County grand jury in connection with the Ellsberg break·in. They have pleaded innocent. Krogh:s attorney, Stephen N. Shulman, said after his client pleaded guilty ~that the California charges against Krogh will be dropped Monday in line with a state double jeopardy !itatute that pro- hibits further prosecution. Shulman said Krogh coold be called to testify in Los Angeles as well as cooperating with federal prosecutors here. Arabs Slate Trip to U.S. Ov~r Oil BULLETIN CARACAS (UPI) c.. Venezuela, the . , ""!'l!f'• ~-largest oil ._u., ....,_ · trY, lncreaf!iil oD upolt prices this ofter· llOOl...bY an average of 50 cents P!a: .,.... rel, almost doubling the prfce Within a . year. Fuel destined for tbe ·United States rose by almost a dollar. , BRUSSELS (UPI) -Two Arab oil ministers said today they will go to the · United States h1onday to exp1ain the Arab stand on the Middle East to American government officials. "We are delivering the message with of all official acts done by him ao4 a record of parties to, date and character of every instrument acknowledged or approved by him." Most notaries keep a little book with spaces in them to record all required information. But the St. Louis Post Dispatch claim· ed. DeMarco admitted to them that ~e hlld not kept proper records because they weren't in a journal. Going-HOine ., I Today's F l•a l N.Y. Stoeks c TEN CENTS . . :j Gift t Del\1arco drew the deed of Nix.on's gift of his personalpa~ to the National ' Archives. f ~ The newspaper claims "the absence of independent notary records leave only the pel'90nal assertion by Mr. Nixon's lawyers to establish that the President , deeded! papers to lhe archives before July 969, when Congress cut off ge nerous a• deductions for such. gifts .• , ~ Two of three women who pleaded guilty to prostitution charges alter police , d1lcovered 1 house that wun't a home on Capstone Drive in Huntlngtm Belch drew jail ttl'llll' •Tbunday in <>ran,. County superior Court. "I don't wanf to be auociated with that violation any longer by attempting ID defend It," be told Geaell. Geoell allowed Krogh to remain free Clll bond pend!rig HOtencing and re- quested that the government, "out of ordinary, aimmon decency," allow Krogh lo have accesa ID bis personal White House lilee. MAJOR LEAGUE PARKS GO DARK IN EMERGENCY, Page 26 which we were entrusted by the Arab countries," Sheikh Ahmed 1.aki Yamani, Saudi Arabian oil minister, to 1 d newsmen . The "message" Yamani referred to was the Arab oil embargo against cotm· tries considered less than friendly to the Arab cause. Arab oil producers have cut oil deliveries to some "neutral coun· tries" and established total boycotts on "unfriendly" countries like the United States and the Netherlands. Less· ihali two weeks after lus right' leg was amputated in • cancer" operation, Edward. Kennedy,• Jr., 1.2, ·1eav"es Ge<>rgetoltn "Ulillersity -~ospital, escorted.by his father, Sen._Edwai:d Kennedy. Docton said . after the operation that there is 11an excellent chance" the surgery arrested the cancer. : Judge James Turner senl Judy Ann Khlai\ieyer, ~. to the COUDty jail for the next fO days and orden¥I her to serve thre yHrs probatlon on releue. Helen Mane l\yan, S7, drew a 6-day jail term in the brief lel1tenclng seulon and also wu ordered to serve three years probation on releue. Carol Ann Dornlan, 27, the third member of the statuetque trio -none is under six feet -was ordered to sene three years probation with oo jail Ume. -All three were arrested on multiple P,..t!tutlon and conspiracy charg .. Iller Huntington Beach police investigated reports from neighbors who became Curious about the number of male visitors calling at 6762 Capstone Drive. A SUperior Court civil rullng bas put the home in the "bawdy house" category under tbe provisiont al the state'• ao- qailed "Red Light Abatement Act." ' • Weatller Those bigb clouds will thicken toolgbt with light rain likely by micklay 5aturday. Cooler temper-·< atunis with highs in bolb areas in the micl«ls clipping to the -overnight. INSIDE TODi\Y ''The Nutcracker," a /avc:intt Ohmtmal Balle~ is beillg ,,,... ffnttd bu ,two Or<1719t COGlt , bollet group.s. St• hlfonnalion in todau'1 Weelwlder. ....... t4 .......... . L.M. ..,,. ts ........ ..... 4 .. c.Mflinll• I ~ c:..r l4 c .................. .... c-.. • ~...,., • Cose • • .,.,.. •ti ~ 14 .......... _.... IHr ... ,, T......_ M M4S .,..... .... ..,, ....,. 4.14 ..,,. 14 ............ t•·tt H• wt ti ~ ........ .. -L..-n IS Wiii I ... -.... I llildolure of the Seplember, 1171 burglary in Beverly Hills was made In federal court in Los Angel .. during Dead Sister Sat In Front of TV For Year by Kin CONCORD, N.J:!. (AP) -1be skeleton of an elderly woman was ~olDld in a locked-up boole today, and police said it appe8red as if ber body bad been placed in the living room by a brother and sister who wanted her to "remain part of the family." Their bodies were ·found upstain in tbe bed where tbey died of natural cauaes, offldals lald. Pollce said the skeleton ol Cecilia Kenney, M, wu d.lacovered on a downstairs couch facing 1 television set. 1bey said abe may have been dead as long as a year. Upetalrs, police found the bodies of her 76-year-old sister, Grace, .lying on a bed nut la· the brother, Roland, 72. O.lly Piiot Sl•lf ....... TESTING AUCTION ITEMS Coat• Me111'1 Meloni Smith Unclaimed Goods To Be Auctioned By Mesa Police 'lbe big swap m~t this Saturday in Costa r.1esa will be on the opposite side of Fair Drive from the Orange County Fairgrounds, where another one occurs every week. Costa Mesa Police Department person- nel will be swapping a couple of truck1oads of unclaimed property for the public's cash and checks. Bidding in the Police Auction gets underway at 10 a.m. in the parking area behind the police facility at 99 Fair Drive. Buyers are welcome to come early to browse around.· "We have good swap meet material," says Property O!llcer Bob Kredel , In what must be one or the understatements of the year, judging from his inventory 'Ibey were thought to have died within sheet. the last monui, according ID officials . . ,._ About 75 bicycles in a dazzling array Del SgL Bruce RU!8ell said In bill · ol colors and wide range of ~ons report "It appeon that Cecilia died will be offered, in addition to many ' other Items. of natural C8Ulel and tbe oth~ two Obeolete city equJpment such as office dreMed bar and laid her on the couch chairs, photography gear and. ganlening so that lbe could 1Ull remain part tools Including mowers, edgers and hand ot the famll)'. lmplemeoll will'be o{lered. "Grace IDil lloolnd coallnued living awn aan and a !lffi8ll tractor will be cleaml ool of the clllUered property a normal life. Roland died . around a room, along with a ''very used '' copying month 410, and was asleep in bis bed machine, tape recorders, tools and !ide at the Ume. G1'Ce left hlm there, and windows for an Austin·Healey Sprite. tried to continue her Ille, bul found For the girls. says Offlceo Kredel, abe coukl not. ..Bob'i Boutique" 1tocks a pair of bUdnis, "She lay in the same bed as Roland sizes a and 9, a l<J>ll -· a . dress, ~ llUl.&TON, Pqe I) two candles and nail polieb. , .. • .. • I Yemani, who came here with Algerian energy minister Belaid Abdesselam for talks with Belgian and Common Market officials, said he wouJd "meet govern- ment officials" but refused to say which ones . D~trict A.tiorney ·Cut,s L~t Link With Leary · 1 ' I I He indicated he was going on bis own initiative without a U.S. govemmeot invitation·, and said, "I don't koow bow long we will stay -for some time." Yamani , a frequent visitor to the United States -he once studied at the Harvard Business School -said the United States was classified. as "hostile" because of its aid to Israel. "If a country takes a hostile attitude by helping Israel," he said, "then we think we do not have to give them anything. . . \Ve do not cooperate with anybody that does not cooperate with us." - ' By 1'.0M IW!LEY Of•IM~l'f', ... Sraff A Leary·weary District Attorney Cecil Hicks cut Orange County's last link with the imprisoned LSD cultist Thurs- day by · dropping.' charges ·contained in the "Brotherhood 6f Eternal Love" Grand Jury !ndlctmint against Dr. Timothy Leary. Superior Court Judge Raymond Vin- cent, the jurist whoae , courtroom . Ms been asmgned ·to all "Brotherhood" cases in the past year, grlmted, the motion made by Cbief Deputy J>iatrlct Attorney James .EnrigbL . " A Long Nap Russ Say Woman S~pt · 21 Years MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets have a modem-day Rip Van Winkle. ' Nadezhda A. Lebedin has awakened in the Ukraine alter sleep· in~ 21 years, according to the trade union newspaper Trud. It gave netther her age, family status, nor any indication that doctors knew why she finally woke up. . . . Trud said her problem began in 1952 when &he was ill with Ila. , "She wa s absolutely immo.bile, not even able to open her eyes," Trud said. She bad no reaction to pain.,but her internal organs kept func- tioning and she was fed "artificially." .. The chief neuropathologist from the ministry of public health in the Ukraine said her eyesight has been restored, s~e can speak and is relearning to walk . . TM oeuropathologlst,.who was no~ldenUfled , diamosed the. case as "lethargic sleep" and -saJd it was "exttemely rare.,;-'---..I ·' .. I • ' \f •• ' ' "We just don't want him back here using us as a platform for his crackpot beliefs," Enright commented. "In any event, it seems certain he'• going to be busy for a loog time to come serving his slate and federal sentences." Dr. Leary, 50, was translerred ID the state's minimum secqrity .facllity &l Vacaville th.is week after earlier Do carceration at Folsom Prison. Leary went to Folsom earlier thil year to resume serving: the ·sentence of one to 10 years he drew in Oranp County for possesaioo of marijuana IA Laguna Beach. ~ That confinement was Interrupted when be ...,.peel from the 8F. Luii Obispo Men's C.Olony and emb8rked on a globetrolting tour before being . .....,. lured in Afghanistan and ollipped bael to the United Ststes. . · 1 He was serving his sentenee 111 cJm,.. iniUally ftled in Laguna when be was named as one of some 50 dtfend)mts . in the Grand Jury's indictment ol Ille. "Brotherhood" cult. . ' Enright commenteJ ~ tho! Leary faces an addiUonal ate ~ lenJI ol six months ID · five ~ 1 ' escape charges after be completes drug conviclioo. . "! am delighted ID nale thot a that the bigb priest ol the lldd cul will be transferred to 1 "'1en1 faclli to possibly serve ~ fedenl C011Ylclion,' Enright said. • ' The burly pNe<Utor aaJd i_,. a 11>-year sentence -y-. llD ill Laredo, Tuu, alter beinl _..,.. o1 pos"""i<x\ ol marijuana. • f • ' .. \ DAILY PILOT • c • New Mideast . Clasli Flares By tbe Assoclaled Press · EoptJan frooP.l 'lried to •dvece In UW. po1ltlons on the -bank of the Suez Canal today, but \\'ere • beat.en back aften exchanges or { artillery :ind n1ortar fire , the Jsraeli military command said. ( (Earlier story, page 41 ~ No casualties were reported. ;< 'llle Israelis said two exchange• ~ were near Little Bitter Lake and :·the other near the Kilometer 147 :· past In t h e Sinal area occupied ·:·by ESJ'Pl's 3rd Army. '.; The firing fonowed an outbreak •. of fighting Thursday within eartbot .- :; of Israeli and Egyptian negotiators ; at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suez .-highway. ' 'Backdating' Saved Nixon . Cash-Paper .:ST. LOUIS (UPI ) -The SI. Louis Post-Dispatch today said President Nix· oh'a :lawyer was personally responsible for backdating a key document related to tbe ·Presldent's sale of some California property, a backdallng that saved the Fresldent" some taxes. ·n.e newspaper said Los Angeles At- io,.,ey Frank_, T>eMarco Jr. ciilled a San Cle mente land surveying firm on Jan. a; 1971, asking that a legal ·descrlPtlon of the property sold by the Presi4ent be backdated to Dec. 15, 1910. 'Ille surveying firm had prepared the docu· ment Dec. 29 and delivered it to DeMarco !ate Dec. 31, the "rlewspaper s~ld. ~· The newspape.r said, "under a law passed · by Congress in 1969, the· rate . . . of 1a~ on capital gains Was' due to jpcrea.se' 3 percent on Jan. 1, 1971. Thus, eyery $100;000 in .capital ga:in realized by Mr. Nixon in selling 2~ ·8cres or land adjacent tti his · home ln San qlemente would have cost 'the President $3,000 more-. in taxes If the· sale was qmsummated in 1971 fat.hor thari 1970." , The Post said an Aug. 1:1 statement from the White House on the property transfer did not delve into possibl e ~apllal gains aspects of the land transfer. 'jlle Po8t !llllk1 the 23 acres were transfer- red to Nixon's' frienda C. G. "Bebe" ~bozo and' Rober\_. Abplanalp for fl,219,000. 'Ibe Poat quoted congressional in-!' f ... 1 vestlgators as saying that Rep. Jack '--, Brooks (D-Tex.), bad questioned ~he White House about possible backdating' ot the document involved. in the sale ahd that speclil counsel Bryce N. Harlow tf,ter wrote Brooks that he was correct f.Jd the document had been backdated. .: The Post, which .Th ursday had said i)eMarco was lax in his record-keeping Gl documents involved in Nixon's don a- fion of personal papers for a $570.000 tb deduction, quoted a congressional ihvestlgator as saying, "This business (if backdating seems to be a curious pattern with DeMarco." :: The Post said DeMarco refused to ~ interviewed abou.t his part in either ksue. : The newspaper said there is "nat.in· dication -that Mr. Nixon knew or the j,ay De?\-larco handled his tax returns F other legal business." . . 4-<lay School Week? . -: SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -The chair- inan of the Assembly Edu cation Committee Thursday proposed legislation Jo cut the public school \lleek from five to four days to help ease the energy crunch. "You can't meet a cri sis :Without accepting major changes." lssemblyman Leroy F. Greene (D- ·socramento ), said. . . . • . • • " • ,. • OUNGI COAIT CM DAILY PILOT Thi O•~no• Ca.11 OAIL.Y PILOT, with wlll(ll II CO"*lllld 1111 ..__Pr1n, II pUllUi.l!H ., Ille Or•no• C0.11 Pwll!l,hlnO Co!llPlllY. ••~· ,..19 1111on1 1r1 11Ullli1ll«I, Moi.o1y "'""""" Frldty, IOr Col11 M ... , NtlOport ... ,h, Hllflllf'llllWI ltKflf~0\1!1!1111 V1l l1y, l l tll!ll INCh, lrwl111/llOdl•~<k l!ld San Cltm.11111 &It! J..,.11 Clpl11tlfl0, A 111111• r19klMI 11111lorl II PV!)ll1fltd Sl!uf'CllYI 11111 1uflCl&yl. Thi ,.,l11C!Nh,..ibl!1flilll Jtfllt 11 ti ))Cl WHt ••v JtrMI, Ctll• M111, C.illotnll, t2'H. Rob1rt N. W11d Pr•ldtfll and Publl-r Jack R. Curl1y Vitt '"'kl"'t •NII C01111r•l.M1nt1w Th•ftltt k.tYil ldl!Ot Th•M•I A. Murf1hi11e M11'l•lllllf lftlftr Ch•rl11 H. loo• Rlchtrd r. N,lt .-.a11ttnl MtMllilll l•noo c ......... Offke JJO W11t ley Street Mtlll110 Adtlr11u'f1.0 , lo• 1160, •2616 --Ntwl*' ... Cll l llU H~rt lot.lltvtnl ue-1.v<tn m ,,_, A~ Hufll~ ttldlt 11'15 llkl! ltull\'ll'd .. ~ Cltfntllltl Jot Hortll II C.mlne Affl , .. _ !1141 '41"4111 • What's it• n Nnttte? 1)111~ Plklt • '"olot by Patrick O'Otll•"" .. Laguna Beach's Rick Campbell, a sixth grade teacher at Rea School in Costa Mesa, has more than his name going for him in curreu..t school contest to collect Campbell soup labels. He hls a lot of hara working students. They've collected more than 500 of 1,000 labels collected at Rea so far. Soup company has promised to redeem la· bels with audio-visual equipment which Rea students plan to donate to a school in Michigan they have adopted. ------ President Exte11ds Life Of Watergate Grand Jury From 'Vire Services WASHINGTON -Presiden t Nixon to- day signed a bill to extend for as much as a year, if necessary., the life of the Watergate grand jury. The grand jury had been scheduled to go out of business Dec. 4 -next week. The' extei:islon \Vas requested by the Departln ent of Justiee last 1nonth .. The measure provides for one man- datory six-month extension of the grand jury's tenure and for an a ddltional six-month exii;nsion at the discretion of the U.S. district court. The bill pro- vides that "i.n no event" wl\I the tern1 of the grand jury be extended beyond Dec. 4, 1974. r-.1eantime, experts began studyi ng the flav;cd \Vhilc House Vl'atergate tape in College Cre 'wme1i Will Pull O·w1i / Ours in Sales Crew members fron1 Orange Coast College \Vill finance their 1971 rov .. ing season by 9elling Chri stmas trees during the holidays. Oarsmen will begin selling the trees next Friday at the OCC boathouse, 180 1 \\'. Pacific Coast High\\•ay, next to the Bnlhoa Bay Club. They \viii deliver the trees by launeh to any v.•atcrfront home in Ne\vport Beach. All proooeds fron1 the tree sale \\'ill be used to defray the expenses of rowing competition. Last year the cre\11 compet!.!d in the Henley Royal Regatta in Englanrl and the Dublin Regatta in Ireland. Fro1n Pu11e l SKELE'l'O.N . • • and died a few duys or v.'ccks later.'' · ll-Iedical exa1niner Thom as l\'lathevis said there was no evidence of foul play. The fan1ily was rcclusivc and shunned contacts with nciighbors. authorities said. The discovery \Vas niadc a ( t c r neighbors ca lled the post ornce !o report 1nall had been piling up ln front of the house for three \\leeks. Jlost office officials not ified police. v.·ho entered Ute • house through if v.•lndow and discove red the three bodi e:i, along \Vllh the bodies ot two pets. Choir to Entertain At Bethel Towers \\'hich an 18-minute segment of con- versation has been replaced by a buzz. The tppe \vas taken to an unnamed laboratory in New York Thursday nighl to be studied by a six-man panel ag~ed upon by the White House and special \Vatergate prosecutor Leon Jav.'orski. Also shipped to New York were the electric typewriter or ~1iss Rose Marv v;oocts and a high Intensity lamp tha't had been on her desk on Oct. 1. That was the day she was ... trariscribing a tape made June 20, 1972 that Included a conversation bet\veen President Nixon and H. R. Haldeman, then White House chief of staff. Miss \\'oods, Nixon's secretary for 23 years, told a federal court hearing that she accidentally pushed the record button on a tape machine when she leaned back to answer a telephone and thereby might have caused an erasure. But she said the tel ephone conversation lasted not more than four to five minutes. which would not account for the 18·minu te hum that is Jn the tape during the Nixon-Haldeman conversation . On Thursday White House counsel J, fl'cd Buzhardt testified he was able 1o nearly dupUcate the buzzing !IOW1d by depressing both the start and record button on the recorder while rwmln g the typewriter and lamp. But he said that an expert called to the White House was not able to duplicate that sound. In another development N i x o n ' 11 lawyers, headed by Buzhardt, have made "some 1nislakes" in handling the \Vatergate affair and the office ls being reorganized. according to \Vhite Hou.!le press secretai<y Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler said Thursday th at Buzhardt .\•:ou\d con tinue on the legal team but an Illinois judge, John .J. Sullivan, a Deznocrat w:io is a longtime friend of the President. has joined th!.! group. Ziegler indicated t h e J1resident \vas concerned about wha t he considered mlstak~s by Buz:tardt's staff in rourtroon1 tac tics before U.S. District Judge John J . Sirlca. "1'hey·ve been working !:ard and we've 1n:ide ·some mistakes in this situation," he said. Buzhardt sJid he would not disal{l'ee \Vil11 .t.iegler's ccuunent that he ·was overworked and added "I've never pretended th at J was perfect." .Atithor to Talk In Mesa Mondav • An author and lecturer on matters of extrasensol')I percepUon will speak Monday in Costa Mesa under spon.IOnlhlp o! the Orange COl!st Pl)'lletlcs Foun- dation. Currently director of the Mind Science Foundation of Noitllrldae, Dr. Robert Frey recenll)I pubU.lied a book, "Con-• • ' Cl•lfttdi M11ttlillt 641·1&71 C_,,,,.llfll, ltn. Or•llll C.ti PllD!ltlllftt ~. NI ,.._, '"'*· ltluttrllltnl. ... .., ... ~ ... .-t~ ""''" fl'ltY......... . wtlfWVt IMlll ,.,.. mi..... If 19'11 .......,., $tCO!lll t1i .. .-t• 1111111 If C•lt M91t, "Mflll'ftlt, • "*'-""111'1 ..,. Ul'Tltr ti.61 '"9l'lflln't .., ""'" u .1• """""'" lflHITlrt .,,.,....._ ..... "*'91tt', SenM>r cltb;pns from Coste Mesa's stant Flow or Love" CSescrlblng hJs e1~ • BetherTowers will be entertained Dec. perlence worklna with the unlvo.sal 12 by lhe JS.voice choir from Rea • Mind. . • .. . Intermediate Schoot. . 'Ille talk ls open to the public at .'Ill• 1 p.m. pcrfonnanco In the lobby the C:O.Ul Meta Women's Club, 110 W. will consist of Christmas music. 18th Sl. at! p.m. ' .. ' ' . • Nixon's Estate Not Undertaxe~· SACRAMENTO (AP ) -President Nix· prall!al of the properly is belni conducted on's lawyers are preparing to argue on behalf Sr the owners, Nixon and that Nixon's San Clemente estate ts industrialist Rober.t Abplanalp. not W1dertaxed, an Orange Cowity of· V4Uerga said he was not certain of ficial said. the purpose of the appraisal, but he Their cose may include a pE,ivale ap-said it '\YU not for' use at tbe appeal pralaal of the Weotem White House board hearing. · property. said Ted M o r a I t I • , .•d-Still another appraisal bas been con· mtnlstrative assistant .Jo count Y ducted by the State Board Of Equaliza· Supervisor Robert Battin. tion under contract to the Orange County • • ~~ :"ta••• d r ca\et' 8 TONIGllT . , "THE MIRACLE WORKER" Newp0rt Harbor High drama dept. Auditorium, Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m. I "A THOUSAND CLOWNS" -Coeta Mesa Civic Playhmtse, Falrgrow1ds, 8:30 P·lll· Tickets 556-5300. CIF FOOTBALL PLAYOFF Newport Harbor v. St. Paul, OCC LeBard Stadium, 8 p.m. · OCC .LECTURE -"The Oceans," Phllllp Grignon, lecturer. Science. !jail, 7-9 p.m. UCI PIANO .CONCERT -ChriSloph Eschenbach phUJis~. Crawrord Hall, ·8 p.m. Tickets 13.15. Call 833.UJ1. A county tax appeals board is schedu l-supervisors. Results of the appraisal ed to hold a·preliminary hearing Monday ~hleh lnclud~ a ·firsthand tn1pectio1; on Battin's request, filed as a prlvate of the San Clemente . eatat•, have not .__taxpayer, to have the official property been made publlc. _ . · SATURDAY, DEC. 1 tax as~essmcnt of the land reviewed. . ' Moraitis sald lt will be up to the LIBRARY FILMS -Mesa Verde Baum, a Democrat, has contended five·member board whet* the sta te Branch, 2 p,m. .. the land Is underassess~d at the 197S.74 appraisal will ~ dilclOled.•lt bu not · ESTANCIA ADOBE -State lUstorical value of $1 .37 million. Jr that la so, yet been turned over by~ state of-. Landmark, Adams and Mesa Verde Dr. Battin has said, ,the owners are not ficlala. . West. sat. & Sun. I-5 p.m. ·\ paying their fair share of county pro~ "HOIJDAY HAPPEN ING" -Eslancla . ' . Ballin bad hoped to have tha otate lltg' h. School stage bend.'s annual dnnct,. erty ta.xes. . . appraisal ln hand before Monday's Morattls said m .a telephone ln~iew scheduled hearing. He may ask the board l\1esa Verde Country Club. 9 p.m.~l a.m. 1 Thursday th at tus infoMll8tlon c~me to postJX>ne the session for two weeks $2.50. Public invited. Adults only. ~ from Frank Del\1arco or the la\v fu:m .l\ioraitis said. ' UCI LECTURE/FILl\1S -,;American ~f Kalmbach·DeMarco, Knapp and Cttill· tl£ trdded, "No matter what the state Documentary as ATt Form," Social mgworth. . 1 , l t . . .¥i~all, Dec. l, 2, 3, 4. 8 p.m. l Deh-tarco declined comment.-apprrusa ~ay~. we re gong 0 insist SUNDAY, DEC. 2 · His secretary told a newsman: ''Mr. on a full hearing. The:e are too many C©AST. COMMUNITY SYMPHONY .DeMarco isn't talking to reporters about presumptlons from various sources tha.~ Q&CHESTRA -Joseph Pearlma.n con-- these matters " indica te the property la, under-assessed. ifucting, OCC Auditorium , 4 P·Pl· •t.50. . Orange Cou~ty Assessor Jack Vallerga One Indication ls that the official UCI VOICE CONCERT. -Debbie S(ru~ f. . assessment of full market value of $1.37 . con 1rmed Thursday that a private ap-million is less than the $1.S million .. ble. Fme Arts Village Concert Hall, purchase price paid for the propert:,i. ~:.a p.. ;, in 1969, Moraitis said. Another con-· , . ~. Ne ·w W lLl' Power La-iv to Alloiv WASHINGTON. (1\P) -Der. n •• Secretary James R. Schlesinger aaid today war pawers legislation passed by the Congress may make It possible for President Nixon to order new bombing in Indochina in the event of a new major North Vietnamese offensive in South Vietnam. Though Indicating he would likely op- pose the idea, Schlesinger said the State Department is examining such a possi bility. South Vietnamtse "officials have been predicting a genrea1 offensive by the· North Vietnamese and Viet C.Ong for Ute dry season of 1974. The dry stason begins in late December and continues through June. The war powers legislation he referred to would give Nixon the authority lo send U.S. forces Into combat abroad for 60 days before .congressional aulhorizatlon~to be obtained. The bill me taw over President Nixon's veto s th. sideratlon ia federally financed Im-· · .. provemanta to the estate a Inc e then , Filin ri'_ Deadline he said. , @; Vallerga has defended the $1.37 million ' figure as lair. Improvements such es For Counc1'l Joh ' presidential security should not be cOn- sldered as enhancing the value of the property since ownership of those faciliti es will remain in federal hands, be said. De Marco is a partner of Herbert Kalmbach, who f9rmerly served as Nix:· on's private lawyer and whti handled the dlspoaltlon of controvertlal Nixon campaign funds In 1912. Estancia Ba1id Will Be On TV The 12G-person Estancia High School Band and Drill team goes on television Saturday night v.·!th an on-camera perfowance of the Disne y song, "Small World."' Th2 show is a telecast of the Hun· tington Park Christm.-s Lane Parade and will air at. 7 p.m. over KCOP Channel lJ. ~ Orange Coast vie wers Ci!! expect the band to appear on the s&een betv.'een · 7:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. • Nearing~ in Mesa Are you satisfied "with t.he way things are run 1n Costa Mesa? Do you U11nk you can do a better job? Here is a way to prove It: Run for city colUlCil. It costs nothing to take out nomination papers and they can be plcked up from the Costa Meta city clerk as of 8 a.m. Dec. 6. Nomination papers must be signed by no less · t'bn 20 ~eglstered voters and no morefthan 30 registered vote111. AU must be Costa ~1esa residents. 'Ille deadline for filing nomlnaUon papers Is noon Dec. 27 .... Candidates who wlsh to have a state- 1nent of qualif ications malled out wlth slimple ballots are requJred to pay' a •· $200 deposlt . The statement of qualifica- tions is Optional. 1Tv.·o seats are slated to become vacant iii the r..1nrch S city councll election, tha~ of ~1ayor Jack Hammett and Vice J\layor \Villard T. Jordan. : A total of 34,225 COsta Mesa voters are eligible to cast ballots in tJ\e-e\ection. • \ re -holidal.I sale SOFAS . & CMA ~~~ ONE WEEK ONLY • DON~T DELAY Gl:!t R~ady For The Holidays \'lith A New $afa or Chair · Her3 Are Just A Few Examples Of The Many Excellent Values. SOFAS SALE ~· :!4'o·. 1379. 7' SOFA • • • Marge Ca.ion Print ~.\ • .. I ' SOFA •.• Mar91 Carson ••• Gald/Or ... t VHltt $770.' '599, Pair 5' LOVE SIATS ••• Royal c-~ Gold Vtlwtt -: · . ~·. ~H. IA. 1549 ..... . - Pair 7' SOFAS<: •• Sherrlll ..• Y,UOw/Gold $1H. IA. , s499 , fA . $170. . '""· . ' I' SOFA • • • Mor91 canon . . . u ......... •r- 8' SOFA •• , Shtnlll Crescent ••• VIYftt ltd/Rust $5H. 1499. r $Z79. IA. 1199 .... CHAIRS Pair CHAIRS Mar91 Como ..• Ytllow or °'""'' Vtlwtt Sln9l1 CHAIR • • , Woodmark • • • Grten $159. 1129, $100. '425. -510910 CHAIR • , • .il11tld9t ••• TfHo;,<ll.• IMthtr $37'. IA. 1~89 •••. 1alr CHAIRS • , • Royal c-h •• , Pf1k Vtlvat OREXEL-H diTAG&-1-iENREOON-WOODMARl<-l(ARASl'AN -~-'------- NEWPORT BEACH e ( INTERIORS WllllDA n a IA TUIDA ,. 9t00 .. l1IO • NIDAY 'TIL 9:00 \ 1727 WESTCLtFF DR.. &42·2050 (Op11t l1111d11 12·5iJOl LAGUNA BEACH e 14• NOPtM CO.tST HWY IOpel'I Su11cf1y • .12-11IOI '4t4·•lSI IORRANC~ e 2364fHAWlH01tNl It VD, · ~ J71·127t ;.·. > ..l •' • , •'. I I • • DAD!Y PILOT EDI'l'ORlAL .PAGE I Clear Park · Pri·QEity contained 10 troph;e~. one for each even~. Costa Mesa has more than a dozen parks in var· ious stages of development but none are as d'ear to the typical resident as good old Costa Mesa Park on 18th Street and Anahelm Avenue, in the heart of the down· town area. · The JO.acre park is so popular with residents of all ages that many consider It "the" /ark. With 28 picnic •bleo, playgrounds, baseball an softball diamonds, six handball courts and a mu!Upliclty of other recrea· tional attractions, Costa Mesa Park simply has more to offer thin most. l!iir the park is beginning to show its age. Most of all·the bleachers are termite-infe.•ted to such an extent that they have been declared unsafe and ordered re- move4. A $100,000 .fund in the current city budget ls earmarked for the construction of new ones. To use this money for expansion of existing bleach· ers at the newer Te Winkle Park, as has been suggested by Major Jack Hammett, wol!ld not seem to be doirig right by the thousands of downtown area residents who use Costa Mesa Park. . Downtown area upgrading has been much on the minds o! city councilmen. Why not get the bill rolllng with an improvement at Costa Mesa Park?. . . Long March to Victory Making their mark on history has not been easy for the members of the 'Mustangs Marching Band and Drill Team from Costa Mesa High School. It took 13 years to do it. , Never, since the school opened in 1960 ha\! their patience and effort~. been rewarded with as much 1;s one little trophy, even ·••fifth place, though the band played its heart out t9f .all those years. For Banc}:.Qlrector Earl Treichel, the winning ways of the Mustangs' meant the diligent practice finally pald oJJ and for the band ...,-Indeed the whole campus -it signaled a much improved $Choo! spirit. Costa Mesan should be proud to !have. two award winning high school bands in their •community. The · !Estancia High School band 'ls continuing with its· win· ning tradition this school year while the Costa .Mesa High band is establishing one. · Both will bring more recognition to their city whe11 they appear in the Disneyland Christmas parade - a fitting stage for their outstanding performances. • • Sc hools Are Prepared It's the easiest thing in the world for public of- ficials to take the attitude that "it can't happen here" with regard to floods, earthquakes, nuclear war or otb~r catastrophes. .... . But any or these things could happen here, and public agencies have an obligation to be .prepared for them _ The New1>9rt-Mesa Unified School District is one 'public agency tha.t recognizes this and takes its emer- gency preparedness plans seriously. Each year the plans undergo a full-size review that ends with formal re- adoption by the trustees. The emergency plans reflect this consci~ntious at· tltude. The district has food stockpiles at schools throughout the Harbor Atea, an already-appointed civil defense organization at each of its 38 schools ready to act in an emergency, and a written olltline of the d~ties of"each of these officials. Every year a brief. re- view of the plans is conducted at each school. • ' =· ........... Tpi~gs .changed ~a'li!'up!ly in 1973 when the Mus· tang ·musicians captured· .. ~ ~second at the Lobster Bake Parade in Newport BO!f.W: and kept right on 111arching to victory after victory until the school's display case . . To do much more emergency preparedness plan~ ning than this might open the di strict to charges of wastefulness. But with responsibility for 26,000 chil- dren, the di strict would be negligent to do less. c • • • <.WE l>ID IT! WE <REATEI> A guYERs' MARKtT IN CAl>llLACS!~ . !· .• ···.....----------. ,' Pen iten tia~y Safer Than· Best Jails ~~NEY J.HARlU~ \Vould you believe that you could tak~ Dear Gloo1ny Gus Until recently the Big Ten has ha:! a rule prohibiting the conference champion from going lo the Role Bowl in two successive years, fn which case the teCODd best team waa always sent. So what's dif£er-- ence this year? DIOGENES '73 a lpng sentence in pri90rt better than o'-'t ow """~ .,. ....,,.... .., a st.Jrt stay in j_ail? ?\lost AmeriC8J_IS =:-........ • .':'.~ ':' :; wouldn't -indeed, most don't even .__ _ _. __ ,. ____ •_••_"'_'"-'-"".:· __ _, know the difference between the tWo, . though there are 4,000 jails ln this ~. . . try, most of them unspeakable. . . ~ ~ in your wicked ways, you will be gtven One man who does know is Dr. K&rl' ·'.the severe treatment of. the state Menninger, who bas looked into the ' 'penitentiary!' •problem deeply, especla,¥y .in hi;! book . · "Actually the \\'Orst penitentiary is of ~ few ~~a~ ago: .1;he Cnme of; ~less harmful to most young offenders Punishment. Now, m ~, .. oeW book, .than the best of jails! Jall.s ruin young -"~hatever Becam~ of Sm . (which I inen. Can't the public grasp this ~ wdl comment .on . •n . a future. column), disputable tact? How can a decent prison he repeats his IDd1ctment Ul . a few attempting a rehabllitaUon program do terse Pl!agra~hs I cannot refrain from anything for a boy who comes to it quoting in ful l. from a jail where be has been raped, "mE PUBUC refuses lo abandon battettd, vomited and urinated upon, its pleasant fanla.Sy that jails are just mauled and corrupted by. aome of the little local lockups where miscreant.! old-timers in the bullpen? and ·suspects may spend a night or even a week and be lhe more wary of _,sin and police thereafter. People rffuse to believe that jails are almost without exception horrible, destructive, ruinous, hideous atrocities of whicb every citizen should be ashamed. "I say . the pub,ic refuses to believe it in s p ite of thousands ol reports, because ii they did, jalls would be outlawed tomorrow by public demand. rr every ·minister would visit the local jail twice. a year, and . urged his con- gregation to do so, there would be a similar revolution. "THE AVERAGE citizen goes along in his thinking with those ignorant, lazy, ·or cruel judges who say, 'A few weeks or montM in our little jail may do you llOO!e good. Then if you persist 11EVEN WITHOUT ·the abme and harassment of other inmates, the hrir- rible confinement in bot, stuffy, crowded, dark, vermin-infested iroti cages is a terrible experience -literally a fonn of torture. When· one considers that this is all illegal, since the law does aot stipulate these iniquitous con- comitants of. detention bl any sentence, our sinfuJneu in permitting the situation to continue in our society, and ' at our expente, seems very evident and very great." ,., Karl Menninger · is DO "bleeding heart": he believes in moral, as well 'as legal , responsibility for our acts, as bis new book fully shows. But be is a realist, in recognbing that certain kinds of punis'hment are a worse crime than any they s'eem to reclify or revenge. . Own-your~own Rooms? Any day now the U.S. Department of the Interior may add landlords .\o its list. of end'angered species. For a number of reasoos, the financial in-. • ~-.r·ducements to own and. manage rental property are fast eroding. M a result1 EDITORIAL RESEARCH much of the new residential and com-drawback ls that a down payment lies mercial construction in this country ls up i businessman's capllal." .. , designed for condominium ownership - an arrangement whereby the occupants OWNERSHIP of a .residential mo- ,of a building or cluster of buildings domlnlum unit ~es no guarantee of hold tl.Ue to their individual unitJ. happinea, either. Some residents feel In a condominiwn, the buyer pays 1DJ00mfortable·ln an environment of en- the nlortg•ge and ·properjy taxes on forced 1o1Jethero<'8. Others chafe under bis dwelling, just as a homeowner does. regulations that outlaw Shaking of dust AM, like a homeowner, lbe coodoml.nlum 'mops on baJcon\el, playtna: of musiCal in~ buyer may deauct mortgage int.rest atruments late •t night or early in and property taxes from his income-tax the morning, pla,ylng or • \Vorking on sta!ement. T!Ue to everything' else in the !amlly car In tbe parking area. the cmdominlum complex Is held~ ln . Condominium developers, however, coovrion by all residents. In most cases, have few complaints.· And they are there ls a monthly charge. for utilities, oot.blnj if not . invenUve. A developer maintenance and other opera'ting costs. , on Spain's Costa deJ Sol build! . · apartments, sells them to cxecutlvet THE CONllOMINlUM · c r a z • ha• and olber investors and then r-them spread to o!llce bulldloga, too. Small to touriltl on behaJt of 11\e .....,., bu•lnessmen In a number of dUes have · The salet pitch Is a "poilnleed 12 found lhat mortgage and malnUIWlce percent net annual return" to the ln- payments, offset by the tax-<lcductloo . ve1tor .., -.it !or 20 years. advantage, make ownership ol oWce The Marriott eoi;.. bas !Olllld an space mere economical than ·rental. equail)' ao..i approach.' It b -Wnc It's not all rOJCs, though. "The com-the roonu of lts Clmelback Inn near pany that bas bought a coocjomlnlwn ~ to llldlv!duaI Investors. llfonlotl and liods lbat lt needl more -is relalnl OWllOl'lblp ol everythlntl bul unlikely to be able to buy an adjoining the rooma, and charges the owners a piece ol the condominium." Buslness Ice !or manoclDI the hotel. The rtntall Week points out. "In antlcipaUon or from the rooms are 1Plit between the tbla -. oevoraI buJttt bave aecur.d bole! and the room """°"' 11'e phraae more 1p1ee tbD tbeJ need immedlatelJ 11a roc:rn of one'• own" bu takea on and will rent It out. The other big a new ~Ing. •• .Brochure Touts 'Conference Center' AUraetions New Role for Western White House WASHINGTON -President Nixon has made a strong pitch to federal agencies to bold their conferences at the seaside Western White House in an apparent effort to throw an of1icial cloak around his San Clemente extravagances. The flight of hundreds of bureaucrats to San Clemente, of ~ coune, will add to Ule fuel drain and the tu:payers' bills. But it will be easier for the Presldent to justify the millions he baa poured into the ' san Clemente complex if he can show that govern- ment agencies are utilizing the facilities. The President not only has sent out special invitations to several agencies to make use of the Western White House, but he has incl uded a brochure "of all the available attractions. This a 11 u ring booklet, with the title "The Western White House" printed on a fem green cover page, touts the. . conference facilities at the Coast Guard station next to the presidential com· pound. . · But the emphasis is on the recreation that the officials can enjoy when they're not tied uP on official business. The booklet boasts that fishing, swimming, golf, bowling, bull fights, jai-alai and many more leisure activities await them at San Clemente. Visits to Disneyland, a fruit orchard and the world's biggest telescope are also offered. "Casual dress is the ru1e in San Clemente," adds the White House booklet . "Short sleeve shirts, slacks or shorts for men -I i g h t cottoM for women" are prescribed for what the booklet promises is "the-world's all-year- around finest" weather. THE PRESIDENTIAL invitations were issued earlier this year at a time when Nixon was on the sklllet for using the taxpayers' money to purchase luxury items for the San Clemente compound. The word that the Western White House was available for conferences wa~ passed · to the agencies by his military aide, Brig. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, who recently was given another star and promoted to White House national security deputy. "Tile Pfesident has asked me," wrote the general, "to renew his offer of the facilities of the Western White House for the use of government and certaln other groups. "'.Ibe area offers generally pleasant weather in a secluded, informal set- ting ... The 10 !Ully-eql11pped olllces, con- ference room, private beach and bath house, helipad and excellent com- munications . system, provide ideal con- ference accommodationa for up to 40 persons," he urged. · .. SEVERAL govemmellP'· agencies have jumped al the opportunity to hold their meetings in balmy San Clemente. Among them are the Justice Department, Federal Aviation Administration, General Services Administration and the Labor Department. 1 ' So far this year, 38 government and civic organizations have accepted the President's appealing invitation. Another 79 did so in 1972. nie FAA's top brass was planning a conference at San Clemente for early December, even as the President wis ordering fuel savings. Almost half of the 29 partlcipants will wing aci'06s l- country from W ashlngton. I A SPOKESMAN explained that the "focus will be on general aviation, a vital conference, and · tbe costs about equalize out. Often we can &et more work done out.side Wubi.Qllon ... At the White House, General Scowcaoft said his predecessor had ll!Dt out a slmllar inv!tatton before all the boopla ?..":" the President's San Clemente spend· "-'K. The purpose of bis own memo, Scowcroft said, was purely "to tell them there were those facilities available." He denied u100 per cent" that . It was to jusU!y the President's spending. Experts Could Clear Tape Erasure To the Edilor: In reference to the President's "erased tape" -working in classified aerospace projeCts some time back, we found that there is no way to completely erase magnetically recorded information (ex- cept with a match). A. tone can be cancelled out. Even a full bandwidth sweep with a scrambler input can be decoded and neutralized. THERE IS a lab over at Cal Tech that specializ~ in clearing up the moon- based ·zy . transmWions. Those boys would love a job like this. So, if anyone really wants to know what was· on that 18 minutes -well, Dick, it was a· nice try. I wotider if there are any historians who remember what prompted the cry "millions for defense, but not one t for tribute," in reference to the Ar RAY !RD Car Pools To the Editor: I have lived in the Newport-Costa Mesa .area for 17 years and have seen and fel~quality ol the air cbange !or the • I like the idea ol your new cl ified 'category on car pools anti hope the p e o p·1 e in our. area can save on gas and also clean \IP on air. You are helping 9ur cities, MRS. JULIA M. PAYNE Tile · Dailt1 Pilot's ' new classified category headed Auto Transporta· tion, 525, is de.rigned Jot car pooLs - p<ople lookl!lfl for other peopl< with whom they oan share rides to and from work. Ed. The Jte81 C..Uls' To the Editor: Every •k there Is a new crials; one week •it's the price of food, anOlher -k It's the Middle East. Theo, It's the energy crisis. But, t h e r e Isn't a crllla In this whole world that can . "erue" from the mind.a of the Amerlcm -le those missing, or accidentally •rued tapeo, and the shetr deceit ol thlt administration a n d Its MQSl un- popular leader, Mr. Richard Nixon. ~ FACT remains, the people really can't 111 lnttrested In any recom- mendation that Mr. Nixon might have ' MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. Normall11, writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The Tight to condense letters to fit space or elimtnate libel is reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail- ing address but names may be with· held on request if sufficient reaaon is. apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. \ on a crisis (trumped-up or legitimate) as Jong as he refuses to come forward and "Face the Nation" on the erasing of evidence in the tapes. How~ver, that's one crisis that Mr. Nixon isn't up to because of the weak. ri'ature and character of the man. The ·real crisis 'is that we are actually without leadership. And, though we aJ>o pear to be floundering around in a sea of despair; some very good men • .. are at work· striving to maintain our democracy. So, lake beart ln the !act that our np.tlon is far stronger than any one leader -especlally an unpopular one who is living under the delusion that he is "king." WEBSTER'S definition of the! word crisis is interesting; there are three. Number two is this; a paroxysmal attack of pain, distress , or disordered function . . .That's it! That's what p e op 1 e. felt as they watched and listened to the President. BERNY BAKER Strange Logie To lhe F.ditor: LOGIC: Method o( reasoning, In· ference, argumen~ etc.; especially, cor- rect and sound reasoning. The above defioltlon is of a word I !ind totally lacking in the decision to jail a 71-year-old woman, Mrs. Rita Hill of Lordsburg, New Mexico. I WISH someone would explain the logic in this act. kl 1 understand It, she was jailed for her refusal to allow a new mulU-mllllon dollar super·bigbway Literary Companion Webster's New Wtrid CompanJon to English and American Uteratue. Edited by Arthur Pollard and Associate Editor !or American Literature Ralph Willett. f!S. 850 Pages. With so many writers nowadays prone to toss off references to their peers; ancient and modem, without adequate explanation, it is good to have aomelhing handy to re!ttsb our lmowledge. mE SKETCHES edited by Arth.ur Pollard and Ralph Wlllctt are actually by many hands. The Initials at the end of each item cari be' checked against a list or cootributon at the begl!mlng ol the book to establish IdenUficatJons. Arranged alphabelieally, tbe sketches ' range in time lrom Old I>nglish poetry, to, say, John Cheever. • The brief studies are certainly not exhaustive. Neverlheleu, the main dates and works of a given author are listed, and the wrllen generally do DOI shy • (THE BOOKMAN J Crom some crlUcal appraisal, however brief. For instance, E. H. Robinson, Writing on Sean 01Casey, sa,ys of the playwright's departure !or England: "Unfortunately .the move from Ireland lmpalnd the serise ol Immediacy In hb plays." Md Dr. A. J. Stead, re£errlng to Kalherine Anne Portu'1 much-touted novel, "Ship Of Fools," says bluntly that "short·ftcllon technique drained her panoramic oubjecl ol narrattve enorgy." • IT Ill GOOD to have a Slimulallng. lrequenUy controversial reference work at our elbo.. on the protagonists ol English and American llllen !or quick conaultaUoo. Associated Press .. to be constructed on her property. I fail to see the logic, let alone the necessity, in building yet another super hJghway at a time when we are faced with a ·fuel crisis that will perhaps leave our existing highways lookin( Uke abandoned airstrips. I realize, of course, that the pc:l§ibllity eXist.s tbatl the politicians have already spent the payoffs awarded f o r favoritism in a w a rd I n g coq· struction contracts. and thu.s it wodld be embarrassirig to change directions at this Ume. Mind you, I am not mating an accusation, just mulling over a few possibilities that are ever so prevalent today. · • ANOTHER thought -perhaps il Mrs. .HiP would have had the logic !or delae- ing her projJerly explained to her rather than being ordettd oil her land she might not have been so reluctant to comply With the state's request. Or perhaps if she would have been given amounts equal to what p a yo f f s sometimes amount to . • • Oh, well, who are the aged, property· owning taxpayers to stand in the way o!progreul -f"WALTER E. STEPHEY JR. OIAMM COAST DAILY PILOT Rol>m N. Weed, MU.Ml' Tllomat Kt<ujl, Editor Barbora Krtiblch JcUcoriol Page Editor The <dltorlal '-of the Daily PDot ~ to 1nfonn and sftmWat. lftden by prnefttirw: on this,.._ ~{commentary' Orl topics or ,,,.. • ..... by .;..ticat<d col-ud ~.b)'~•-lor' l'ftden' views and by pt'fttfttlJll' tNt newsp1,per'1 opilrionl and Mia cm cwnct topk:a. The tditortal *"'-ot IM Dally Pilot ......-oolj< ta Ille editOC"lll colum.n at the 1Dp ol .. pqt. Oplnkm U:Ol*<d by ...... umnistl and ~ an.a ..._. wrftm art thdr owa. Dd • ...,.. m"'t flt lh<lr vi... Ill' eto Do19 Pilot-be-.... Fridl,)', November 30, Im . • ' • - .. ' .Aquanaut Charg~ In Fraud - SAN DIEGO (AP) Federal charges of f.raud and embeu.lement have been filed aiainst a former N a v y aquanaut who was lead diver In last summer's attempt to salvage treasure from the sunken Italian liner "Andrea Doria." An FBI spokesman said Christopher JamesDeLucchl, [ __ B_RI_EF_S __,) 22, currently vice president of Saturation Systems Inc., a San Diego-based salvage finn, will be arraigned Dec. 13 oo charges that he took away $1,370 worth of Navy tmdenea electrkal equlpffient shortly ~ore bis'' discharge last July, e Pension Plan SACRAMENTO (AP) Private pension plans should be regulated by the state to prevent workers from losing retirement benefit s· on technicalities, say S' the chairman of the state Senate Committee on Business and the Professions. Sen George Deulanejian (R· Long Beach), told a Capitol news conference ThursdaY that there is "no such thing as a guaranteed pension for a California worker." e Teael'let' Strike COMPl'ON ( U P I ) - Negotiations Thursday failed to settle the Compton tea.cbers' strike in a dispute concerning student violence, poor werking conditions and blglltt wages. A teacher requeel 1 o r 11tound the clock" negoti~ons was apparently denied when district officials said talks would resume Monday at- t.mooo. • Lf% Resting LOO ANGELES (AP) Doctors say t.hey discovered no tumors or maJignancies during llW'gery on Elizabeth Taylor and the actress will be relellsed from the hospital next week. Miss Taylor was described Thursday as • • s t I 11 ex- periencin'g the usual amount of post-operative paln," but was said to be "looking great and doing very well." e Oeddental Bit LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Red paint was splashed in the reception area of Oc- cid<;i1tal Petroleum Co. head-quanen Thursday, purported- ly as a -protest against the deals with the Soviet Union made by Dr. Annand Ham· mer, the corporation's chairman. Two young men wearing ski masks entered the room and splashed the paint about without a word, said recep- tionist 1'tary Jo Esposito. Some of the paint spattered, her clothes and hair. e Times Sued LOS ANGELES (UPI) ~ A former county ad· ministrator, who was con- victed In 11172 ol perjury and preparing false evidence while in office, filed a $2 million libel suit Thursday against the Los Angeles Times. Baldd"'l<ristovich, who was sentenced to five years' pro- bation and is curreritly ap- pealing his l'Onviction, claimed be was Jlbeled in an article which related alleged prob- lems in the public guardian's office, a PoSt he held while be was public administrator • DAILY PILOT IS ' State W·elf are Plan ' State ~hallenge~ ' Vote Session Called EPA Par~g Plan: Ul"tT ....... Weig .. AIUtller Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti listens careful- ly to a reporter's ques- tion during news con· ference Where he pro- posed establishment of state : energy comm.i.5- sion empowered to ra- tion gas and make car pools mandatory. .SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The legislature will convene In special .... .., Tuesday to vote on a compromise SW million welfare plan ham- mered out by leglslallve and Rega.n t_dJJti n Is tr at I on negOt'ii'l'GFi. The setUement wooJd pro. vlcle grant Increases to 500,GOO aged. bllDd and disabled Catuomians far beyond those sought by Gov. Rooald Reagan and ~ transfer ad· mlnlstratkln ol adult aid pro. grams to the federal govern- ment on Jan. 1. LT, GOV. ED Reinecke, act- ing In the absence ol ~ who is on a speech making tour of Australia, called a special session of the legislature for noon Tuesday. Health and Wel far e Secretary Earl Brian, who an- nounced the agreement 'nlllI'S- day evening after several days Long l!Jeach M u1·der ,r ' Ends in 4 Arrests LONG BEACH (UPI) ~ Four persons were ~ed. on suspicion of murder 'Thursday in connection with the shotgun slaying of a Long Beach City College student who was visiting two friends a\_ an · apartment. ~ POUCE 'mo arrested the victim's friends, Peter Macisaac, 23, and..Paul Bnm- ing, 20, on suspicion of illegal cultivation of marijuana after off1Cers found 41 plants grow. ink In the -yard. A small ·amount of marijuana was also fotmd In .the house. An wlidentllled 16-year-old boy, accompanied by his lawyer, was arrested when be surrendered to police. Police later 8JTested Kevin Qmnlngbam, 19, Jolm Vander H~. 21, and Stanley Hinrid>sen, 20, all ol Long Beach. Detectives said the four ap- Staged Sex Acts Land Man in Jail parently had intended to rob the residence where the vic- tim, Kevin Skeith, 20, was visiting friends. AUTHORITIES said they believe Skeltb was shot by the juvenile while Vander Hoek acmmpanled h5' · kle. 1be other two were w g outside. . Macisaac and Bnming d the juvenile and Vahder Hoek barged into their apartment and ordered them to lie on the floOr. They said Skeith was shot after he either refus- ed. to drop to the floor or 1when he lunged at the anned youth. Skeith was.killed by a single blast from a 12-gauge sholgtm. 9 lndicwd · For Porno Book Saks · LOS ANGELES {UPI) - A county grand jury indicted nine persons on 1>0mography charges Thursday , culminating ·a five-month in- vestigation in which three SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A policemen opeoed a "decoy" massage parlor operator has bookstore. been errested-after secret Olarged with oonspiracy to grand jury indictments charg-distribute obocene material ed him with seven sex offenses were Noel Bloom. 31, mo Ap- for presentation of a live sex pelby, 50, and Mohammed oct on stage. Rustam, 40, all of Hollywood ; Held in lieu ol $50,000 bail Rodger~ Summers, 39, Pbll was Peter Amato, 34, San Dixon 30 and Robert Elkins Diego, operalDr ol the 44. ati oi Los ~eles; Paul Empress Massage Parlor and "Novack, 45 and Mark Novak , the Studio I and 2 Theaters. 25 both ot'Beverly Hills · and Also indicted were . three R8Y,IJ10lld Barron, 39/ of women, each dlarged with one Venice. count of sex perversion. Also i n d i c t e d w ere Amato will be arraigned American Film Industries, Monday. Cinema Classics Limited and Charges placed Thursday Ca II for n i a International against Amato lncluded ll1ree Dilitributor.I. counts of sex perversion, one All the defendants except · count of pandering, ooe o1 Bloom SWTendered w Superior parttclpating In or uhibittng Court -Ju~e James G. Loll'l obscene live conduct and two and entered innocent pleas. counf:B o~ soliciting women for Authorities said the in- prostitution. dictments came after three District Attorney Ed Miller investigators o p e n e d U1e said Amato was master of "Free00m Bookstore" on ceremonies and a participant Sepulveda Boulevard a n d in live sex acts on the Theater purchased hardcore films and 2 stage between Oct. 30 and magazines from several ci the Nov. 9. suspects. ' \ . HARRI ~ trnM~~~~~ 1 NEW AT BIDWELL'S Wu h••• 1 9ra•t1 new St· laction in corduroys, solids i& different pl•ids. From $14.00 Sweeter Vasts Too From $10.00 A Gru1t Gift Combin1tion Fiii cunoM •tffWW I 3467 YiA UDO, NIWPOIT llACH e l•k••f'k-4 e M.._ a.,. e ..... a.,. . "' of negotiations with usembly leaders, said the bill will add $121 million In state money to CWTeDt state and local weUare costs ol. $487 million of finandal aid adult cllildren must contribute for the wp- port of their elderly welfare parenl'l, CAIJOllHIA SAN FRANCISCX> (AP) - Calttomia Atty, Gen. Evtlle J. Younger filed three pell- tkills In the 9th U.S. Circuit Court ol Appeals Thunclay surdlarges on partJni d IJNDER 11IE plan, maintaining partlni la ~ -1d have to poy ~ IUl'dw1e Oil --~ the fee would mer.a.. lllto!"1 annually. · He said It would not In- crease or reduce county c.uts for blind, disabled and elderly Reagan strongly resisted any easing of · the ...,.Ued '---------' "Relatives Responsibility" law · • challenaing the validity ol the U.S. Environmental Protection Ajency plan to requir e nually OY«" • -year period. • I • • The petitions to review• tbe, ... EPA pion were filed Oil behalf .; of the . state, the IOVSDOr,• 4!' the Calllomla Air RMoun:ot , • Board -· and trus~ 0 t.: recipient irograms. ' Under t b e compromise, average monthJy if'ants for eldaiy and disabled recipients would Increase from $112 to r'23S. F0< the blind they would rise from $IZ2 to $265. which was toughened b~ • Welfare Reform Act of 1'7L air The roll back would have the lndicred in 9 Slayings, Robbery REAGAN HAO sou-gh t• payments of $121 lor the aged and disal)led and $137 for the blind. "I wouldn't exactly say he was overjoyed," Brian told newsmen when asked about Reagan's ·reaction to the set- tlement when informed of it by telephone in Australia. "When presented with the altemt.tives, he . thought this wa:.i apotopriate." The proposal also prodivdes $25 a month restaurant meal allowance ror those unable to cook for themselves and ~ls back to 1961 levels the amOunt effect of increasing the income level where adult chilchn must be before they are re- quired to cootrlbute. - THE MEASURE, put together by Brian, Social Wellare Director D a v i d Swoap, Assembly Spealcer llqb Moretti (~Van Nu y !I ) , Assemblyman Jolm Burton (D-San Francisco), and Assemblyman William T . Bagley, (R-San Raf a e 11 , represented a victory for Democrats. 'Mley previously fashioned a Reagan-opposed b 111 to transfer administration of the adult programs to the federal _government and substantially increase grants, but t b e Senate killed it In September. r POINSETIIAS .... 1 '' I ICICLES MY CHllSTMA'S LIVE TREES . MINIATURE LITE SET 40 .. 1111--. llte ... wlttt ...,._.. .. ,, ,....... t..lbt. ~-3.tl 298 • STOCKTON (AP) -Willie L. Steelman Ind Douglas E. Gretzier have beeni indicted by the San Joaquin County Grand Jury In the slaying ol nine penoos In Vlct0< Nov. B. Callfonill Stale Uni tJeo, ' . and Colleges. ~ • , .. " Younger said the lillnc wu .; · made T!Junday beeauae ol the",, ol four memb«s of the family statiltes of limitattons and thaf • of grocery slllre owner Walter further talks are being held' Parkin, 33, and ftve otbeis. In hopes ol resolving the mat'·:: The indictioeot by the grand ter without going to trial. · '• jury late Wednesday ....... automatically n»ves the case 0 WE DO NOT questioo '~ into superior cOurt. The two EPA's goal of reduclnc •: earlier were charged l n automobile emissions, but we , _ munlcipol court oo nine counts do not think EPA has fully' EACH MAN laces rune · ci murder each and a coosidered the economic Im'--: charges ol murder, five counts pr<11m1nary hearing had been pact ol the plan, In relatiod ~'. olkidnarobberyping. Theand ~~andol scheduled for nert month. to the potenttal reduction ol ~ ,.._,.... 1 automobile emissions," aaid kidnap charges stem from the INDICl'MENT-by the grand Yotmger. :• theft o1 about $.1,000 from the jury eliminates the need for "We _believe the burden of -· grocery store sale. the prelknlnary bearing. -a parking IUl'charge wmdcl .I Steelman, za, ol Lodi, and T h e I r arraignment • In ulttmately fall on Calilomla'• _c, GreU!er, 22, ol New Yett City; superior court ts ocheduled f0< COll8UITlel'S and employen," ". were charged In the slaying Friday. be said. Italian MIN ITU RE ·LITES JI l111tw ...._ ........ tit••, •=-lw4peof' fer -.. -......... --, .... ,.. ..., ... 1911 .... 4.tl 6. ·- -· I • STARTING MONDAY DEC. l VISIT OUR . TRIM-A· TREE . SHOP! 1.,.411 for aD your decorati119 noods. Uni- que hard to find items •••• Expen- sive one of a kind •••• Imports plus .•• .American made novelties. Im- ported and dorMslic trH &ghts •..• twinkle •••• action •••• bub bl. .••. miniature and outd-. Plus 'we elso have e large solection of replacement bulbs. Have you seen our tree tops? ·Ei<ic:tric •••. Angol , ••. Santa •.• .Snowman and more. ~ ii .. A YI 81 f r ~ CJ HO.,,,.M·MS>~ · ' -M• ,_, •t.c~ hilt 8ofw H.-S.W ,,.-..... •f ,,.... Twe ..................... .,... • ..... .,.. ·•·srSM ..... WW.. ,.,, ""'n,.. ...... "'· rs....._ N.W., Plw1•lw e.-1111 Plr, ...... PIWl•lw ..... .., ...................... ..,. .. 11' ••Aini. v .. .., ........... ,.., ... ., ,... .......... ... .................. ..,.,..u... ........... ., '"_.., __ ._._..-......... All ·---......... -....... ~ ...,, ....... ' JllOP UIU WMILI YOU STIU. HAn A •OOD llUC· noM TO CHOOll _ .. _ ' 2 LOCAnoNS TO SBlYI .Y~U 2123 Newport -m.:J., Coste M ... PH ~392$ 2252 5. E. Bristol S.nt1 A.. J.Wghts Ph: SSU391 • •• .. , ! • ' .. ~ ,, " ' . " " •' • ' •• • • ' - . . ' . " • "1 l ' ' ' . - . ' "' ' • • " ., • •• l ' ' •