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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-12-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-' -· • ' Santa Ana Freeway Fire ' . . • Causes 20-111ile Backup ·-• I er Energy Meet No Gas Ration, President Hiiils --·-· From Wire Services WASHING TON -President NixM hinted broadly today that his ad· minlstn.tion decided not to impose ga90line rationing. As photographers were recording the start of. a meeting with Energy Adviser Wllltam Simon, Nixon said to them : u1•m working rlgbt now to make certain we won't have to ration gas for you fellows." No reporters were present at the time , but the President's comment was relayed by the photognopher.1 and by White House aides standing by. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. ·- ?\feanwhile, the White House described the Arab defision to relax the embargo on oil shipmenl.!I to Japah and most of Europe as a step in the right direc- tion. The Arabs, however, are maintaining their embargo on shipments to the United States and Warren said, "This government continues to believe that OREGON SAW ENERGY ~RISIS COMING. Story, Poge 4 GAS SHORTAGE HITS HOL IDAY TRAVELERS, Story Poge 5 EUROPE LAUDS ARAB OIL NEWS, Poge 10 - ·. -. I l • DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * . WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 26, 1973 VOL. U. NO. UO, •SECTIONS, 31 PAGIS • Whit11ey Expedition ?," ~nd Tragic _. -By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 11tt D911't Pit.I Sti ff -ResOue teams returned to Mount Whitney today to remove the body of UC Irvine Mounta~neering Club President Eric Eichmann from the spot where he reu fjve days ago. Eichman, 20, and a Costa Mesa man, Don Plirrmann of 2223 Pomooa St., attempted to reach the 14,494--foot pe~ of Mt. Whitney last Thursday when a storm overtook them. Pfirrmann was helped Christmas Day from the 14,100-foot level by China Lake Mountain Rescue . Group volunteers. He remains in serious condition in Southern Inyo Hospital. Lone Pine. Piimnann is suflering Crom frostbite, 1 rescuers said today. The two were part of a six-man climb- ing party. Four attempted to climb to the top. Warren said afterward that Nixon's com- ment was not m e a n t to be an a& nouocemeut of action on rationing. 11'Ibe President's aversion to rationing ls widely known," Warren said as lie recounted AdmlnistraUon's efforts to avoid fationing by voluntary con- servation of fuel. oil shouJ4 not be used ·as an economic .weapon." . .. ..,. ...................... ~ . .4i.~ ' > • INSPECTING DAMAGE, FIREMAN LOOKS F.OR,CLUES :ro. CAUSE dF .FATAL FIRE · Peter Owen Ftickland, 21, of ~im and Sonny Lawrence of UC Riverside were said today to have reached the peak the night ol the 20th. They stayed overnight, relW'ning to find Eichmann dead and Pfirrmann in trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so went for help. Propane Gas Truck Crash Jams Freeway A p11>pane !ruck Irt1ller crashed and exploded on the Sanla Ana ~reeway loday, creating a fiery llolocauat that blochd both lanes of the busy artery for nearly an llour. FiremeA from Buena Park al\d Funertoo · doused u.! blaze ne.lr · the intersection of the Santa Ana and ruverskle freeways and e n a b 1 e d ~la }fjghway Palrolmen· to reopen lhe northbound lane after a 50-mlnule Ueup. Patrolmen "reIJOfllng to bead<iuarters from the :area said traffic· was blocked for more t.bal) 10 miles in each direction. Warren, responding to questions. term- ed the Arab announcement on Chrislma! day as "a step in the right direction and a sign of progress which we welcome." He added: ••\Ve will continue to work for solution of the Middle East problem and the oil problem." Warren l\'ouJd not expres,, either op- limism or pessimism over prospects of Arab relaxation of the U.S. embargo. Nor would be "Bay whether the United States eitpects more oil to reach the count'ry through "leakage" from cowt- tries receiving Arab supplies. Wamn reported that Administration officials are continuing to study the impact ot steep price lncreases an- nounced SwMlay by major Persian Gulf oil exporting countries. Simon ldleduled a ..,.. conference :tbursday momlng at which he was expected to anno\Ulce the administration does not plan to invoke rationing to help eue the energy shortage. In an interview with the Washington Po;st published today, Simon said, "I thiilk we can manage without raUoning (See 11.'TION, Page Z) Bur11ing Paper · _Proves Cosily Clearance of the southbound lane was delay<d wblle wrecking crews moved in to pull Iba scorched vehicle off the freeway and allow emergency oi>f!rators to drain oil the remaining propone. ' I. fl'1lllertoo firemeA .. id the ddver of Santa Claus brought the Leroy 111e llUck apparenlly escaped Injury. Kroescb ·family ol ll!olbea Island 'l'lley ·-uJd, no otltOI' .-..._-,IQ-~·· ·•~l~~1!1 !ot _l!f..P!!.~Is. Olrislmos volved In the accident. rnonung •nd It's a g"ocid thlrig lie Ollldail at CHP headquarters, -king aot back up the chimney In Ume. from ll<etcby on the 11cene report!, have Tiley ~ them around the not yet been able to delennlno the fireplace at l:Jtl ~l!Ji'sl Ave. and .,.,,.. ol the crash other tbaa to conllrm then burned tile aaUy-pattemed thot oo·'4fler vehicleo were br;oolved. wrapptna· paper, •ccordlng to the . "II !'flPNll that the vehl~.,Mcribed. NeWJ>O!I Beach Fire lleI>artment. to oa u a small petrolerie IaDter, wu • Spokesman Jim Topping 5ald a heoded IOUth when -thine· lappened fSOO fuie resulted, when sparkJ to • -ii headloq Into Ill* center from the wrapPlnc paper fiew up divider.'' 8n officer laid. · l ' , · the cl!lmhey llltl fell on the roof. "OUr llUI report lncllcateld that It ll'llat the Kl'OelCh's need now ..,-through· the dlVlder' and went' for ~ ls about 100 square on to block. !he nortllbound Ji!>e before feet of new slUniJto. it overturned 111d cauaht fire," he .. Id . . ' I ' ·' • This W11 Kitchen ind Fomlly Room of Fountain Volloy Homo Thot JJurned This Momlng " ' Fountain Valley Mom, . 2 Tots Burn· to Death By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlll o.lb' Plllt Sllff A FolDltain VaUey mother and her two small children burned to death early today when a pre-dawn· .blaze gutted their tw~story. borne i.t 9946 Thistle Ave. Authorities identified the dead woman as. Stella Dtinlap. 'Her children· were ", , • I. , . ' 1 ' . Dickey, 5, and Ttacey, 3.: Another victim whO leaped trom the second story was identified as James Stroh, 19, who suffered bums over 70 percent of his body. He is listed in crIUcal condition at the burn ward of Ora11t1e County Medical Center. The . Thistle Avenue fire broke out at about 4:30 a.m. as Fountain Valley firemen were cleaning up from anoth er costly blaze at 9092 La Linda Ave. Tile La Unda fire, whicll did an estimated $70,000 to the liome of the Phillip Landsberg family, did oot result in any i.Djllries, firemen said. Fife 9\>lef H. C. ,¥ickey 'Lawson said no cause bu been estabtlsbed for etthef ' blaze. "We are In the process o[ investigating the causes of the two fires but at this 'poln~ It doesn 't look like eiiller on:e.il related to Christmas or Christmas dea:Mil.ilom', '• be sakL La"'°" oald ute Landsbera fire might have also reoulted In Injuries ucept that the family was alerted to. the blaze by the barkhtt ol the flJl\llY clog. "As:Jt wu, a boy had to jump from a ltCOnd l\Ory' window to get out," tho cbief noted. Wheft fire units arrived at the second . - "' Thistle Avenue blaze, the house was completely en,Bulled ii1 flames. Neighbors told firemen that the fire "exploded". out ~f the second story aS Stroh leaped from in upstairs window. Chief La:Wson said firemen believe tbe1 lire smoldered somewhere downstairs tor several hours. "It flashed into flames upstairs where the heat had been building up . When· tile rm.a:n) went tftroUgb-·'fiie 7w.1ndoW',r it let in the oxygen the fire needed >.to really start burning," the chief ex- plained. Lawson 11aid Mrs. Dunlap, who . 'is separated from her husband, and Her two children, were found · upstairs ';in or nea·r their beds. ... "The bodies were quite badly burned.'' he said. ''They may have died of smoke inhalation but consKlering the way the lire flashed through the second story, it is more likely that they burneO to_ death." JJ tlRGLAltLEAVE$ CHRISTMAS CA RD CARACAS, Venezuela (UFJ) -A bwvlar broke into a home ln a l\"ell·to-do area ~ere on Christmas Eve, he1ped himseU to a drink oot of the liquor cabinet and made off with jewelry, cash 8nd eltctrical appllanceo while tbe owners were out celebrating. The thief, police said, left a Christmas card with the word31 '1Merry' Ouistinas and thinks fOr everything." - -- Fire ·Breaks Out In Second Valley Ho11se; 5 'Lu~~y' The five members of the Phillip . Landsberg family spent the day ' today silting through the Nbble of what used to be their, home, telling themselves llow lucky they aro. The famiIJ borne at 9092 La !,Inda Ave,., Fountain _Valley, was gutted in a pre-dawn fU'e this momirfg, but the parents, the three teenage children, tl'le family dog and their pet parak'eet au survived. A fire. which erupted two hours later three mll'8 lrotri the Landsberg home, claimed the lives Of a mother and her two small ·children and critically iQjured ~n9lh\'f .~ " , . , ; ,. • , . Jbe two.oldei;t Landsberg g I r 1' s !old Oierids tha\ >Jhey were awat""'1 by ~ doise .. 'beaf~and ·.'light},that ·the fire wA'. ieAeratiPli wti.n . u'J>roti4 °'It 'tin . the home!s second story at about . z~50· i .m. • , ; ' · ·.'they <'an_ aOWllJtairs. while thel1' 1~ "teaMla-brother J_wnpOd from h") i · . ; ~m 'llldow. 'lneir )>mnls had be"'1 .; ~ to\1lle dangq by ll)e !larking r' of·tfi~ fa~~" •.tt1..'. ' " ' • '·fhey did tiot' ha .. the lime fo r....,e . the parakeet and as they watched their home bum, they fea(ed lhc pet w~ dead. Firemen v.'ho went .into the home v.·ere &sired by nelghbon to di.pooe OI the blrcfs body so the family wouldn't !ee it: / According to Fire Ollef H. c. "Mickey" Lawson, one startled fireman lqund the bird, unharmed. • "He took his fl o v e off and reacbed _..,t a finger for the bird Io perd\ !See PETS, P11e I) Two others in the UCI climbing ·club observed the climbers from the East Face Lake High camp, scene of rescue operations Christmas Day and tOday. Storms blocked views of the four climbers Qn Friday and Saturday, UCI students John Mark Graham 20 of Long lle8cl> and Tom Hemkef. 19, of Villa Park, the two other members of the party, told """"""· On Chrisltnas Eve Graham and Hemker reached civilization and the Inyo County Sheriff's ,Department called in the China. Lake Mountain Rescue Group. Throe team members led by Frickland and Lawrence reclimbed the peak to reach Pfimnann who waited near (See CLIMBER, Page I) Oraage Coast • i , ,We!'-~er. :: S!lowt!rs llkel~ tooi&ht'.and Thurs· '&Y. mci(rtlng ,.according t0> the Weather service with decrea&ing clatidioeSs •Thursday afte('DfOll. Cooler 'ltays: Lows tonight-in-t.OO low SOS."Higbs In the upper 60s. 'INsm.E. TOD"AV ' t • t wo Laf/llnll Beach moth•,. who publ&h u11Clergrourtd comic books don't think theJJ are ven1 f'fnny 1J"11yntore. See 1tory on Page 8 today. -------" • I _,2 ~lll V PILOT s Wfdnnday, O«tmbff 26, 1CJ73 • " • No Progress Ill Middle East · Parley Crime Lah • • • • GENEVA (UPI) -Israell •nd Egyir tlan mlllta'l' delegallons adopted such tough bargamina; positions today at ~rt of their talks on separating forces along the SUez Cnnal that there was no proe- ....._ Each side dlsmi3sed the other's propCl&lh BJ unacceptable. Israeli soorces said their stand ls that lsrncl's troops on the •.-:est bank of the canal and 10.!lide Egypt should simply move back to the east bank, in other words switching places ¥.'ilh .Egypt's 3rd Army on the east bank, or Israeli side, of the canal. B119hes Affair Egyptian sources sald thil 111.Jhe ume position Israel took In the unsuccwful disengagement talks •t Kilometer tot on lhe Cliro-Suez Road in November and remains "tolally unacceptable." Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position iJ that Jsraeli troops should move back as far as a line from El-Arish in the north ot the Sinai to Ras--Mohammed in the south. thwi giving Egypt about t1,1,·t>-thlrds ot the Sinai. Israeli sources said this would be Nixon's Br other 'Not Involved' By L. PETER KRIEG Of the 011111 Plltt $1.tf f', Donald Nixon of Newport Beach. the Preildent11 brother, had no buslne.<1s deollnp wllh former Howard Hu~ aide John H. Meler in the Dominican Republic, aceordlng to the accountant employed by the Pr.,ldent, his brother and Meier. , "Donald Nixon wu never involved," Arthur Blech, the President's personal tax accountant. has said. Donald Nixon similarly has denied allegations by ~1eier who has told the Senate Watergate Committee that Blcch went to the Dominican Republic to "look over a deal" in y,•hich Donald Nixon was involved. Blech says he went with ~feier to look at a packing plant and while there had the idea to build a housing project. "But Donald Nixon was never involved in it," Blech said. "l would be the Nixon Greets· Red Envoy, Kissinger By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon met with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F .. Dobrynin and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger today for a general foreign poliq review. Nixon's meeting with Kissinger had been expected. But his conversation with Dobrynin came &!I something of a surprise. Reporters learned that he was in the White House only after seeing his limousine parked nearby. 1be three, meeting aJone, were ex~ pected to confer about an hour. ''They're just getting together to talk about general foreign policy matters," deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said. Warren recalled that Nixon spoke alone with Dobrynin for 40 minutes last week. Photographers were summoned to the oval office to take pictures of the Nixon- Kissipger-Dobrynin meeting. Reparters' were not allowed to cover the picture-- taking session. On Monday, Nixon and Kissinger met for more than an hour and on Christmas Day they spake by telephone for a half hour. Nixon also had an appointment today with former New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, and his successor, t.faJcom Wilson. Rockefeller, a potential candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in lf76, is one Republican leader who has oonspicuously side--stepped any sharp criticism of White House involvement in the Watergate scandal, and has main- tained his lines of conununication with Ni.ion. But Rockefeller's efforts to persuade Nixon to deal with New York City's ma5.' transit problems with !ederat aid have been unsuccessful. OIAH•I COAST ST DAILY PILOT TM 0!'•1'1119 CMll DAil Y .. llOT, Wltll wlllctl 11 _...,_. ~' N..,.._ftrftt. It ftlll~ b'f' W. Ofl ftll9 ,C:N1I .. '*li.lllnt C#INllY. ~ ,.,, Miit~ ... P\lblllfllf, """"' """"""' Prlfty, IOI' Colli Mt11, ~ lfleh. H1111t1ntl0n l ttdl/l'-11111 V1llfy,, ltollM llldl, 1""\IMl/SIOdllfMQ tnd Safi Cltmenlt / It" Jyatt C1ph1TIM. A ..... It ~*'-I Miit"" ,, ,ublllfltd .. , ....... ,.. .,,, ....... Y'f., tne ,..1nc:lpll pUt>1ltlllnt .....,. 11 11 :ta w"t llY .Slrwl, Co1t1 ,..,..., talilernll, fMM. ll;o\1rt N. W1H l"fftlfffll .,,. 11\11111..,_., J1cll •• e .... 1 • ., Vll:t .. rtt!Mlrt 11'111 Gtntt1I MIMttr Th•111•t K.1•il ..... Tll•llllf A. M•r~lttt Mfflttlfll lfdllor' Clri.d•t H. le•• "itli1r~ .,. Nill Atti1!111! M1M1Me l.lllllttl -(Mii Mna: )JD W"I .. ., 11rwl H..,.,, IMCll: :am .......... llvlt'lll'll LllUlll ltldl1 tn P'-1 A-.ie •H111111""*"'t..cl'l1 1711J I Mdl 11v1nn Slfl C..,,..._I • ...,_ II C-IM ltNI · '"•••••• en •• ..,_.u, Qu1.,... .,,,.,. I 11 '41""71 p,_c....A,....1t11'1tf ~ ....... 4tl""41t ,_ ...... o,.,.. ~ ~ -tut Cwtl'W!I, 1fti. Ofltlll Cwt! MlilflMI """"""' ... ~ ....... It""'"''-. .. itw'91 • """" If llf¥Wt!Mmtfltl ~ _, ...... .._ .. """"" ...... -.... ., Qftl'""' ...., . ,._.. ._...._ .eW .t Clltt --.11 c......... ~-... "'""' •. ~I ... 11'111 U.1f """""'"' ft'llll,llf'I' ....... N:4 GA _.,,,,, t one to know since I Was numing the project." Blech, who said he has told his account to the Watergate committee, said he thinks Meler Is trying to implicate others in an effort to ease his own problems. Aleier is being sued by Hughes and bas ,been named in an income tax in- dictment in Las Vegas. · Blech said that to his knowledge, Meier and Dooald Nixon never consummated any business deal together. He said Donald asked him to review any deals that were posed and Blech said he recommended against each one. Nixon told the Daily Pilot last v.·eek that he and ~1eier, who were friends, did go to the Cent ral American country together, but Nixon said. "l only went to see Meier get some kind of award." He said Meier had suggested many things. but he never followed through .on any of th em. Nixon said his only dealings with ~teier or Howard Hughes ca me nearly 10 years ago when he went after the rood service business at the many Hughes plants across the country. , He said he never got those contracts. And he said be never offered any favors to get them. Ble<:h also said that when he told the President's personal a t t o r n e y , Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, or the review arrangement, Kalmbach said he thought it wu a good idea to do the same for all of Donald'a business affairs. Blecb said be retailed Kalmbach saying something to the effect of "Don Nixon ls a very gullible guy, and people are trying to use his name." Kalmbach coold not be reached to confirm or deny the alleged statement. Blech said the propo!ed houalng deal fell apart after he quit as Meier's ac-- countant. Meier has con tended that the President knew of the trip. Meier, a former Newport Beach resi~ dent, left the Hughes organization to join a Salt Lake City mining firm. Hughes is suing Meier and the mining firm for $9 million to recover what he lost in purchases of allegedly valueles& mine claims. In a related development late last week, a federal judge in Los Angeles criticized justice department attorneys -and another federal judge -for trying to get a lawyer to testily about A1eier to a grand jury. U.S. District Judge Andrew Hauk issued a temparary restraining order to prevent attorney John Suckling of Los Angeles from appearing before a federal grand jury in Las Vegas that is believed to be looking into poosible true violations by Meier. ri.-teier acgued that anything Suckling told the grand jury would violate the attorney-client privilege and the judge agreed. From Page 1 RATIO N .:. ii the (voluntary} conservation program keeps going ." The Post said Simon was con- sideringproposal! to force car pooling by closing gasoline stations two days a week instead of one, and setting up a random system for keeping every car off the road at Jeast one day a week. Simon is said to favor a standby plan that would allow the government to set up all the machinery for rationing and hold it ready in case Jt becomes necessary when and if fuel supplies dip to an as-yet undetermined "cri!Ls level." The government is pushing a program of voluntary self-denial, which includes a 10-gallon·a·week buying limit. lower driving speeds and other conservation measures. The standby plan would lnclud! Jocal rationing boards, ration ·coupons and establisbjng priorlUes for who would set Ille gasoline first. From Pqe 1 BETS • • • on. The bird did, and then bit the fire- man's finger," the chief related. Accerding to friends, the family held a small reunion on the front lawn when the wow1ded fireman emerged from the home with the bird. Late this morning. the family was back at their gulled home, trying to salvage what they C'OUld from the ashes . • 11oot of the question." Th• EiYJ>lllln """"'" sald their delegation lo the military workin& llOOP on disengagement bas a fall.back position which would be for Israeli troops to rno\·e back behind the Sinai passes which are about 20 miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west of the passes whlle the United Nations \l.'OUld ac t as a buffer on th e passes themselves. A third Egy ptian proposal under con· siduatlon, the so~ said, is for the 3rd Anny to remain on the east bank With Ecpt maintaining a n .. ad- rnlnLstraUve presence" of civilians and police between Ille canal and the passes. Israeli sources said their delegaUon ls unlikely to move from the simple switching sides t:i~al until early neit year after Israel's elections ~1onday. Egyptian officials close to Foreign ~1lnlster Isn1nil Fahrni, wbo ren1a.lned In Geneva following last wee.k's fortign cninisters conference. said this wUl mean no progress can be nlade, They said Egypt !Urther will oppose Denver's S11per White CJarist11aas any negotladona on substontlal politi'*I matters until OW: dlsengagtmeot process is either completed or close to com· pletlon. JsraeU Defe113e ~1inlser ?.tosbe Dayan said Tuesday the talks have better than a 50 percent chance of succeeding. But reports In Israeli and E g y pt i a n newspapers hinted at a hardening of positions with neltber side prepared to make major concessions. At any rate, It was doubted there could be major negotiations unUI after the Israeli elec-- tions. UPI Ttll'Plllll Gets Prints .-,• • ' • • ., Off Corpse • -By JOHN VALTEllZA • Of lltt Dlll't ,lltt tt1H •! · Technician! In lhe Orange · County : Crime Laboratory todny were able to , : give San Clemente police the first toUd clues to the ldenUly of a mooU>old . : body of a murder vlctlm found late .• ; last weelt. r'lngerprlnlll lifted from the badly decomposed remalns are the atroaa:est : leads yet and .. of today au but two '.• had been taken, local dete<Uves said. .~ "Thil Is the best lnfol'"allon we have " so far on trying to find out the vlctJm's identity,11 sakl dectctive Pete Goodwin. •• He said the technlclans •loo have promised to obtain a complete dental " chart on the victim, whose remains v.>ere found Thursday morning dumped along a roadside ravine about one-half mile fro1n San Clemente High School. Officers said It ls lkely lhat the victim's prints are on file Ir he served ln the n1ilitary or had ever been arrested. But even with an identity, the job for local officers is far from over. They have only scant clues In the act ual death of the russet-hairfd man 'v.'hose general age has been set al betwet'n about 20 and 40 yea rs old. The technicians late last week "''ere able to find a fragment of a slug em· bedded In the skull ol the body. They · also noted that the cause ol death prob- ably \\·as a single shot to the head . Bui tv.·o days or p3lienl -and fruitless -searching of the area \\'here the remains were found led to nothing. -; Unexpected storm dumped 11 ~ inches of snow on Denver, Colo. and virtually tied up all traffic move- ment in the Mile High City. Nine-year-old Vincent Garcznski inspects snowbound car while Collie (be· low) attests to fact the storn1 wa sn't fit for man nor beast. Drifts piled to 10 feet in some places. Detectives usecf hoes, rake.a and metal detectors in an effort to tum any new clues. They still are operating under the theory that the victim was shot elsewhere. his pants and shoes removed and then his body driven to the remote area and dumped . Despondent Mesa Man • Shoots Self, Survives A Costa ~1esa man, despondent over his 1973 joblessness, is recovering today after going to his bedroom Christmas Eve and blasting a .32 caliber bullet completely through the left side of his chest and into a wall. Investigators said he put the \\'eapon awiy after the suicide attempt, lay down on his bed to die and when it became apparent he would not, shook hands with the policeman who arrived and marveled. at his own poor aim. The 55-year-old victim wa s li;tcd in {air condition today at Costa h-1esa Memorial Hospital, where he was taken followlng swift treabnent at his home. Police Officer Matthew Letteriello said the man's wile heard the upstairs gun Nixon. Tr avel I Still Not Se t WASHINGTON (AP) -The White llouse said today there were oo defini te plans for any holiday travel by President Nlion. The President tentativ ely scheduled a trip to his Key Bis- cayne, Fla ., horoe. (O( today bu\ remained in the White House and aides said he was working on ~1id­ dle East , energy and legislative matters. Deputy Press Secretary Ger~ld L. Warren would not say when or If the President would go to Florida. blast and found im, then called her son -his stepson -who is a \Vest County physician. Patrolman Letteriello said the 32-year- old doctor had already arrived at the scene when he got tbere and was givlng his stepfather emergency care. The automatic pistol slug made a clean hole, with little blood. "The victim appeared alert and reach- ed out and shook hands with this of· ficer," he said In a report. "How are you?" the man continued • 0 "I shot myself and missed," he added. ''I aimed for my heart, but I missed. I can't take it any more." His wife told investigators after he had been removed to the hospital Iha,! for most of the year sinCe February her husband has been unable to get a steady Job. Fo g Cu ts Short Airliner Flight NEW YORK (UPI) -The final le1 or an American Airlines flight to New York City waa canceled when the plane was turned back becallMl of fog. One passenger said •dog caused ii all. Gael McCarthy, an associate editor at the United Feature S~lcate In New York, who boarded fU I 96 In Detroit, said there was a ha f-llour delly In Syracuse wbJle crew member& tried to convince a pair of ni!ll>IY boarded passengers that their dog would have to be carried" In a box. ' Fro11t Page 1 CLIMBER ... Eichmann's body at the 14 .100 fool level . The six were spending Christmas holidays on the mount ain when the storm O\'ertook them. Eich1nann, a junior majoring in engineering. v.•as president or the UCJ l\1ountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine , he is survived by his parents, ~1r. and Mrs. Eric Ei chmann, and a brother, Donald , 12, all of Hacienda Heights. Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfirrmann is believed to be a recent graduate or UCl \vh ere he majored in chemistry. Hemk er is a sophomore majoring in biological sciences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. Inyo Sheriff's Deput y Don Cron directed the rescue effort. Ten degree temperatures and gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees below zero, rescuers said. \Vinds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop scene of the fall which is believed to havi killed Eichmann. The eight-hour res~ involved a chop- per from the Naval \\'eapons Center. China Lake, in whicb rescuers hurried to the scene. Today's effort involving an eighl·man tea1n from the Sierra ~1adre Search and Rescue squad relied on a hea\'ier helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station , a rescue unit spokesman said. Both operations require a landing at the 13.000 foot level East Face Lake High Camp and a climb over the moun· tain top to the location of the body on the west face. Al Green, 33, Bill Stron, 32. and Bob Rockwell, 29, all of the China Lake- Ridgecrest area, left their families Christmas Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack Macldul Jn tbe rescue operation. Baker sfield Man Dies BAKERSFIELD (UPI I -Donald Lee Rector, 26, or Bakersfield , died early today of a gunshot wound to the chest suffered Christmas night. Kem County sherirf's deputies said Rector and Gary James Long, 19, also of Bakersfield, got into an argument on a Bakersfield street when Long allegedly pulled a pistol. The only other piece of physlcal evidence which investigators have ii a common, faded canvas tarpaulin w I t h metal grommets v.·hich was used to partially conceal the remains. The killer's idea v1orked "''ell for about 25 da)'S, officers said. Despit e frequent passersby -primari· ly rUMers from the higb school tnct team and citizens out for cycle rides -the remairul "''ent unnoticed. Yet the body was only about 2S feet from the road's edge. Couple in 90s Freeze; Power To Home Cut Off SCHNECTADY N.Y. (UPI) -An old man and woman, both . in their 90I, tried to keep warm by huddl~ together on the cold living room flQOr of lhelr apartment after the electric company cut off their power. They were found there -frozen to death -by a grandson. Frank Baker, 93, and his wife, Katherine. 91. were d I a c overt d Christmas Eve by grancllon, Bull HeLse, home on lea ve from the military, who went to thei r home to take them to dinner Monday night. Detectives sald the couple had betn dead for about two days. A ga1 stove had been turned on in the kitchen, a detective said, but provided little warmth. Elberl Walro1'!, Scbeneclsdy County Wstrict attorney, said he wu consldertna handing the case to a grand jury. , A spokesman for lhe Nlaga~ Mohawk Power Corp., which services the area with electricity and natural gM, Aid .. !he company cut off power to the home because the couple declined to pay a five-month bill for $202. A gaa furnace in the home y,·ould have been made inoperative when electricity wu lhut off, though it would not have affected the use or a gas cooking atove. Once before, the ipokesman 11Jd, utilities were cut off, about 1lx months ago, but were reinstated when a church paid half the delinquent bill of lllO. The spokesman laid the company con· tacted the Bakers several times about their bill, but aaid the couple tt!ltlld to discuss It. ' A deputy county medlcal examiner, Dr. John Shields, said an autopoy would be made, but tentatlvely oafd --brought on by exposure. Gue rrilla Plan Ki ssin.ge r Assassi11atio11 Thwarted BRUSSELS (UPI) -The Arab guerrilla organization that killed 32 persons al Rome and Athens airports last week orll!inally planned to assassinate U.S. Secrttary of State Henry A. Klsiliiger In Btlrut a day earlier but was thwarted, military and dlplomallc sourcu aid !Oday. The sout'1'es said Libya ordered the submachlnegun and grenade atlempt on Kissinger's tile at Beirut International Afport Dec. 18 but Lebanese authoritles learned ol ii In lime and ordered Ktuln1er'1 plan diverted to Rayak Air BBJe instead.. . · Rayak Is 45 miles east or Beirut. The U.S. Embusy In the LtJI. anese capital said the Klsslpger plane went there tor security rw,. sons. A<cording lo the sout'1'es, the Libyans told the croup lo alt.ck instead at Rome where they ltilled 31 persons at Leonardo da Vinci Airport Dec. 17 berore hijacking a Lufthansa airliner and ltlllln1 on1 person during a stopover in Athens. ,, Holl Coast bri !or Moo said sales be I Th It and count to In "But said denL Al I I 0 h • • h T_, IMdw'I Jl'llttl IN LAGUNA BEACH, LONG LINES OF CHRISTMAS MOTORISTS WAITED FOR GAS '"\___ For the Few Servi ce Stations Open, It W11 1 Bonanza ind a Traffic Jam 'Bribery to Siphoning' Holida y Tr avelers Firid Goi ng Tou gh Along Coast Holiday travelers along the Orange Coast resorted to everything from bribery to siphoning to get gasoline for Chri.!tml! lrlps. l\106t service stations contacted today said Monday was one or the biggest sales day ever. (See relal<d story Page 5.) With the prospect or gas stations be- ing closed Christmas Day, motorists jam· med gas stations Christmas Eve. Travelers who djdn't get gas by seven Monday were pretty much out of luck. Some two-ear famJlles had to siphon Fat and Free Sea Lion's Fir ie; Se t Loos e Even a sea lion got a Christmas present this year. For 17-mon!Mld Charlie Chaplin III , it was the best gill of all-freedom. WHEN CBARLIE WASHED up on a San Clemente beach seven month3: ago, he was dylng of pneumonia, lung worm, and intestinal parasites. San Clemente lileguard> gave him to Laguna Beach lileguard Jim Stauf- fer, whole conaern for aid: marine mammals bas become a second career. WHEN STA\IFFER LET Qiarlie loosi Monday on Laguna's Main Beach, the animal was fat and sleelc Stauffer nursed Charlie back to health In a pool In hta backyard. All the food and medicine, \!."Orth some $80, was donated by the Friends or The Sea Lions, a volunteer Laguna group. · "He'll be tbe killg of Seal Rock ," Stauffer predicl<d. 20 Years Work El Toro Women 's Ouh Starts Saddleback Fund It took more card parties, dances and pot luck dinners than anybody can ooont to produce the $6,000 donated lo Slddleback College iast week. In fact, the college's first endowment fund, pm<nl<d by the El Toro Women's· Club, ls the re!Ult of more than 20 years work. Jt represents an abandoned dream. Etier since the club was the ladies aid ooclety of the El Toro Episcopal Olurch in the late 1800s, the members have hoped to build a clubhouse. That's why they railed the money. "But we finally decided It was useless," said Mrs. Harvey Bennett, club presi· d<nl At one ume the club owned two lot.. on El Toro Road where they hoped to put the clubhouse. Meanwhile, they spent close to $20,000 remodelln( the old El Toro Town Hall OWlled by the El Toro Land and Water CGmpany. The hall, built In 1900, was the place Bar Patr(Jns Foil Rob.bery SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) - The O!rtotmas tale begsn when a bandit entertd a bar, wavld a p1'tol and demanded money. One patron, annoyed at the interruption of the O>rlstmas party, burled a ahot claia al the would·be robber. The bandit fired a shot, bu! dlcln't hit anyone. The drinker• charged orr their stoo!J. The gunman flrtd one warn- ing ahot, turned and fled, with 1 p1ck of 1bout 1lx men on hta heels. The bartender teleplloned pollce and ofllcen caught up with the ch•ae and arrt!led David Rey, 29, on 1 eharge ol •\tempted rot> bley. , 111• crowd !rom the bar returned to Chrl1tmas drinking. • J people most often met for club meetings and dances. When the AT&SF railroad decided to build an overpa8,j through El Toro, it went direcUy across the town hall lot. The old building was tom down. "The money we put into that remodel- ing was a dead loss," Mrs. Bennett said. "That's when we decided to glve up the clubhouse idea." So they sold the two Jots. That money i.9 all the clu b retains in its treuury. "We realized all lhe development around us wu almost crowding out the original community. There are only 20 or us left, and most of us are elderly,'' she added. When ~ decision was made, the women had ·$12,000 In the bank. They gave part of it to the new El Toro High School for a acbolarship fund. Their recent contribution to Saddleback College brings their total dooaUons to the school to $9,300. "We hope our contribution will suggest to other people what tbelr money can do," Mrs. Bennett said The Saddleback trust . fund will be placed in a savings account and its· Interest used for a yearly stipend: Sad- dleback' offldab will chooee the recip- imt. Malagas y Spurns U.S. Sliip Visit WASIUNG'f()N (AP) -The Malagasy RepubUc, dependent upon Arab natinns for oU, bas rebuffed the Unlted States by abruptly cance!Jng a plannesl 'visit by U.S. warships. The island republic's olllcia!J told the U.S. embassy It did not have enough fuel or berthing apace at the port ol Diego Suarez to accommodate destroyers from a task force operating In the 'lndlsn Ocesn. llut Pentacon llOllrce$ aald Tue>day they believe the rtal ream was pollllcal -that Malagasy nmcJa!J feartd to olfend the Anbs. gas from one car to another to manage a trip and other people "'·ere forced to curtail lengthy travel plans. No service stations contacted said they ran out of gas but closed early because they had used up their daily allowance or because they wanted to give tbeir employes more time with their families. "l don't get gas a1aln until after Jan. 1," ooe m anager said, 11And I figure New Year 's Eve will be about the same." The few that stayed open to lb: or seven were plugged with cars, many waiting in line a half hour or more. "We shut down for gas service at 11 :30 a.m.," said Curby Hall, owner ol the Lake Forest Union station. "Between then and when we Je!t at 2 p.m., we turned away about 150 cars," he said. Hall sald his crew pumped l.400 galloos of gas In four hours, compared to a usual 600 gallons for the same period. 111 bad a few guys offer me extra money to give them gas," Stan Brannon, manager of the C.orona del Mar Shell station sald. "But I had to tum !hem away just like everybody-else." Brannon's station was one ol. two in Corona de! Mar open tll evening. When he closed, be had turned away some 20 cars. In Laguna Beach, North Laguna Arco manager Jack Stroman found aome JS cars waiting in line when he opened at 8 a.m. "It never let up all day,'' he said. ''J bad gas Jell at 5 p.m. but I had to clo6e down .. -. J was tired." Stroman said he turned a w a y customers from San Diego and Lo.s Angeles. "Some of them weren't too happy," he said, "But I just had to tell them politely that somebody has to get hurt. "We bad them oomlng in from all directions," Stroman Mid. "People were calling from Mission Viejo and El Toro to see if we were open." Irvine Company Wind Machines Warm Up Citrus As temperatures dip, J r vi n e homeowners who enjoy the nearness of orange grove open space may find their usually !ragnnt neighbors aren't nlce to be near. On about 10 to 15 nlghts this year, the Irvlne Company will turn on their wind machines for periOOs of Ume in the middle of the night. While the clatie< of the napping pro- pellers may seem less than symphonic to sleeping residents , to a shivering orange tree the noise ls "a nighttime melody ... our song," orchard manager Dean Buchlnger ssld. Eighty ol the machines worth $8.000 apiece are located in the firm 's orange, lemon, grapefruit and avocado groves. "To keep the cltrus crops from freez· Ing it ii essenUal that the wind machines be turned on during crillcal periods when a drop of only five degrees below the safe temperature cou1d ruin an enUre crop," Buch Inger said. Once smudge pots were used to oombat freezing temperatures. With concern about air pollution, smoke producing pots yielded to the cleaner wind machines. Each protects about eight acres, Bucblnger said. 5 Perish in Fire JOHN DAV, Ore. (UPI) -Five members ol ·a family per!Jhed -and two others escaped -Christmas morn- ing when a fire roartd through their lraller home near here. The two who escaped ran for help and the fire deparl- ment arrived el1ht minutes later, only to find the trailer's roof and walb con. sumed by the llames . Wtclntsday, Otcrmbtr 26, lQ73 s DAILY PILOT O•ltr Pilot Sltff PllOI• MISSION VIEJO STUDENTS AT WORK ,JN MEAT PROCE SSING CL ASS From Left, Sue W19n1r, Pat Auburn, Maureen Ambrose, Wendy Sturgeon ~~~~~~~~~--'-~ New County Record Set For Drunks Dn.mken drivers steered Orange Coun- ty to a new and unwanted Christmas holiday record with 278 inebriated motorists booked into county and city jails during the four-day festive season. California Highway Patrolmen set the hot pace from 4 p.m. Friday to 4 p.m. TUesday with 136 bootings of dnmken drivers registered at Orange C.OUO.ty Jall. Santa Ana police also set a new local record with 80 a.rrests of drunken drivers recorded during the same four day period. All 30 were booked into county jail. Newport Beach beaded the 1151 of Orange Coast communities with 16 drunken driving arrests, Twelve of those arrests were recorded at the city jail and four inebriated drivers were lodged in county jail. Seal Beach arrested nine, Fountain Valley jailed eight, Costa Mesa booked three and Huntington Beach jailed two drunken dQvers during the lour-day period. Other agencies high on the record-set- ting l!Jt included Orange "with 18 arrests, Anaheim with 13 bookings and the sher- rif's office with JI aITests. Berserk Woman Torches Dollars SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -Flmnen entered a burning home here over the loud protests of the woman owner who was standing in the front yard cursing President Nixon. She blamed him Tuesday for "siUing the world on fire arxl now my hou!e," firemen said. Inside, they found four separate ftres burning, eedi set with $JOO bU!s. They also found a sack with pieces of at !east 17 burned $100 bills. The woman was jailed pending a psychiatric examination. GEM TALK TODAY by JANUARY'S GEM Garnet is the gem of January, emblem of faith, tr u t h and con- stancy. The name comes from the Latin 11granatus," meaning seed- like. For centuries, garnet was believ- ed to have curative powers. Pow- dered garnet was used to relieve fever, drive away poisonous air. and to pnoserve health. Worn as a charm, the gem was thotight to pro- tect against jaundice. M an amulet, garnet was said to insure the wearer against injury and disease, and to preserve honor and health, For the traveler, it was considered protection agalnst peril. ' Today, as out natural mineral supply diminishes according to de- mand throughout the world, such natural gems left to us assume ne• importance. We would be glad to answer any questions you might have concerning your particular gem or the month, and show you interesting ways to en j o y your special stone in attractive, wearable jewelry. Hamburger, Steal\:, Roa st: Students' Topics in Viejo By JAN WORTH Of flll Dallr l"llot Sti ff When students in a unique class at Mission Viejo High School take out their cleavers and freezer paper, they're really getting to the meat of the subject. The subject is meat processing. Jn the only class of its ltind in Southern California, 30 agriculture s c i e n c e students each tenn are learning to cut up hamburger, steak, roasts, and soup bones from sides of beef and pork. They are also learning how to identify cuts of meat and how to properly wrap, freeze, and store H. Along the way, some or them learn proper cooking methods for fine meat. Though students have always done some meat pr"OeeSSing in connection with the school's livestock program where they raise their own cattle, this year iB the first time they have received credit fCJr it. Agricultural sciences teacher Arnold Troftgruben, who has been teaching meat processing procedures infonnally for his five years at the high school, sai~ the class is tops in demand. The meat used is mostly beef. Some pork and Jamb is cut, along with oo- cuionaJ venison. A small amount of the beef Is raised by students themselv ... 1lle high school maintains a feed lot on seven acres next In the football field. Now the school has four head of cattle. Jn January, some 40 more are expected as part of the district's annual cattle purchase for the agriculture department. But most of the meat used In the processing class is bought by faculty and staff members at the high school. Knowing the students need materials, teachers often buy sides of meat and let tbe students cut it for them. Many students have been placed in meat processing jobs from the ag science cla.sse.s, Troftgrnben said. But even if they don't find processing jobs, he believes the class has great value for a prospective consumer. "A lot of housewives don 't know the cuts of mea t or how to buy them," he said. "Anybody who ·doe<! a lot of cooking needs to know those basics." To Troftgruben, raising stock is only half the learning experience. "Students really should see the full cycle of butchering and proceS!ing," he said. · When it comes to the animals raised by students themselves, a local rancher does the slaughtering. The studen ts do the rest. Troftgruben said the meat the sh.dents raise cannot legally be sold unle.s.. it is USDA Inspected. 'I'h€: meat supplied by faculty members is purchased through local butchers and is inspected befor:e the students get it. Despite vocalioaal values ot: the meat processing class, Troftgruben said It is· one of the most expensive programs offered In the district. Besides maintaining a meat cooler and freezer and the cutting equJpment, the district puts up some $11,000 each year to buy cat tle. The beef shortage bas not affected the class, Troftgruben said, except for a delay in getting this year's herd from the Nevada ranch the district buys from. BRISTLY GIFT UNDER THE TREE HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (UPI) -' James H. Morgan Jr., a Cabell Colm.ty " court commissioner and Huntington businessman, gave his wife a "hairy'' Christmas present. Morgan shaved off his mustache, put it in a packail'! and placed it under the Christmas tree. 0 OMEGA First watch on It's the Omega Speedmasler chronograph . The same watch ... witho vt any modifications ... that was chosen by NASA as standard issue for all astronauts in the Apollo space program. the mooi1 ~·tlul!Ofl, •·01~1 S1>11tUMl9!ef cllrono11f"'l'I· ~•e3su1~1 •11111~ 1<>11Ntl1 ot roours. 11on111,, 1no ieco11d 1. Ttth~"'•'•• 1c111 to1 m111~r1•111 11Jeedt. 61•1nle111lt1I w111r·•t11111111 '''' W•!fl m1t,n1n~ tl•tC•l•1.. •. S2GO J.C. .J./umphriej J~woferJ 1121 NEWPOllT ILVD., COSTA MESA C0N"t(NtfN1' TtlM$ l•••A,,...;c 1'4 -Mu ... Clo••i • ,, YlA•S IN THI SAMl LOCATION tHOHI 141.J•ll • 1 ' 4 U'°'ll'I' PILOT O;regon Saw Light -c~~mon8.uts Return in Ra1ging Storm In Cri sis SALEM, Ore. (AP) -Oregon saw the energy crisis coming and inpared while other states were sUU consuming unchecked amowits or gas, oil and elec- lrlcily. 'l1le errort Is paying off. A hard-nosed conservation drive and beavy rains have averted what threaten .. ed • to be a crippling winter power shortage. And, while the state's fossil fuel s~ pUes are no greater than those of other regtons1 the early preparedness has eas- ed the trauma of shortage. LAST SUMMER lhe normally rainy Pacific Northwest, which relies on 154 hydroi!lectric dams for 9Cl percent of its power, wa.s s.weating through the worst ·11rought in its history. The Borr nevllle Power Administration (BPA) warned that massive blackouts and man- datory cuts were imminent. On Aug. 21, Gov. Tom McCall declared a statewide emergency, saying: "I am ( NEWS AN..tLYSIS J convinced that energy conservation measures must be taken immediately .. : We've gotten the idea that energy in abundance would be forever at our fingertips. We've gotten careless ... Now, the piper must be paid. Jobs are at stake -and it could be yours .... We must not wait." McCALL ORDERED A 10 pereenl cul In the -state government's power con· sumption and slowed its 4,383 publicly owned vehicles to SS miles per hour. Next day, some 24,000 workers in 150 state office buildings found air con- ditioning turned off and knobs removed from hot water faucets Jn restrooms. Half the lights along state highways were disconnected. McCall implored the public to cooperale, and published a long Usl of ways to save energy. He set up an Energy Information Office to keep score of the state's power use. Any citizen could phone, toll free, and get an up-to-the-minute feedback on his efforts. POWER CONSERVATION became a pet project. Boy Scouts canvassed neighborhoods asking each resident to turn off one additional light or appliance. Companies offered bonuses to the employe with the best power-saving Idea. Public schools ran poster contests. But there was some discord. "Why should I conserve .electricity at home, while unnecessary business lighting continues to blaze away?" a citizen wrote McCaD. On Sept. 2.1, McCall ordered a ban on at! commercial outdoor display light· ing. State p o 11 c e enforced it. Firms that refused to comply were threatened with total power cutoff. Business and industry squawked, but they obeyed. The ban proved inunensely effective in rallying public cooperation. "The outdoor signs didn't really use much energy -only sixth-tenths of one percent of the state's total con- sumption," 11.fcCall said arterward.s. "But that symbolism inherent in having them off brought hundreds of letters sup- porting the idea." It also put Oregon in the national Jimelight as a vanguard in the con· servation drive. President Nixon, in his Nov. 7 energy message to the nation, Singled out McCall's lighting ban and urged other states to emulate it. SC ROOGE STRIKES PRIEST'S HOME MANOSQUE, France (UPI ) -While the priest of this Alpine village celebrated Christmas Midnight mass, thieves broke into bis apartment and stole $60, police said today. l\'eUJ Father Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, carrying 2· year-old son Justin, arrives to visit wife and baby son born Christmas morning. He says he plans "to keep on trying" to have more children. CaIT, Pogue Take Photos of Comet In Longes t Walk SPACE CENTER, HOl1'ton (AP) -. Clues lo the history of lhe solar system may ht recorded on photos Of the comet Kohoul<k snapped by two Skylab 3 astronauts during a record seven-hour space walk. "I'm very happy with what they got ," said Dr. Mayo Greenberg of Dudley Observatory. He will he.Ip ~yze the pictures when they are returned to earth in February. Commander Gerald P. Carr of Santa Ana and William R. Pogue, wearing bulky space suits and attached to 60-foot lifelines, stepped outside the orbiting station Tuesday .for the comet observa- tions. The station was 270 miles above earth at the time. .... TIIE TlllRD CREWMAN, F.dward G. Gibson, formerly of San Clemente, re:- mained in.side to maneuver the big craft. He ran into unexpected control problems, mainly caused when Carr and Pogue scrambled around on the outside, im· parting attitude changes on the craft. This caused. the spacecraft four times to roll several degrees out of position. The correction maneuvers required more control gas than anticipated. But officials said there was no major problem and the gas overuse would not affect the mission. All three astronauts were told to sleep late and generally relax today after their strenuous Christmas. THEY WERE in the 41st day of a planned 84.<fay Oighl Carr and Pogue logged an even seven OOurs outside, breaking the old space walk mark of 6 hours 33 minutes set by Skylab 3 crewmen Thanksgiving Day. "Be it ever so htunble, there's no place like borne," said carr as he cliffib.. ed back inside the space station. 8-day Sovie t Spac e Launch Ends Safely MOSCOW (UPI) -Two Soviet Cosmonauts returned lo earth through a raging snowstonn and high winds today, ending their eight-day Soyuz 13 apace mission. • Flight commander Pyotr Kllmuk and engineer Valentine Lebedev, two 31-year- old space rookies, floated to earth in their parachute-borne spacecraft near Karaganda on lbe plains of Soviet eenlral Asia, the Tass news agency said. Tass said the cosmonau ts' only com- plaint was that they could not see their approach to earth, but not because of the weather. "It's a pity we caooot see it -the portholes have grown smudgy," Klimuk told ground com· numicators. GEN. VLADIMIR A. SHATALOV, commander of cosmonaut training, said in a tele.fision interview the landing came aftet anxious moments on the ground. He said a !llOWStorm was raging, visiblity was poor and high winds buf· feted the craft on ils descent. "We were very anxious," Shatalov said. "But the crew landed safely and successfully.'' He said the crew maintained radio coolact during lhe landing and the ground search party spotted them im- mediately at the precise spot where they were supposed to come down. The flight, the third longest in Soviet space history, was a warm up for the Soviet-American joint space flight in 1975. THE UNITED STATES holds lhe record for maMed space flight -56 kiays set by the 'Skylab 2 crew earlier this year. The crew of Skylab 3, now in space, is schedu1ed to remain in orbit 89 days. Tass said the Soyuz-13 landed at n :so am. (12:50 a.m. PST) today just three h:>urs and five minutes short of eight full days. "The state of health of the cosmonauts ... is good," Tass said. 'l1le principal mission of lbe Soyuz-13 crew was to make studies of the !W1 and stars and to test the space craft, which had to be revamped after a leaky haioh on Soyuz.11 caused lbe death of its three-man crew. 'Ibere was no .Jndi.caUon wblilther Klimuk and Lebedev also filmed the Kohoutek comet, as the American Skylab 3 crew bas done. Tass said the Soyuz..13 star studies were aimed at obtaining information of galaxies billions of light years distant from the earth, I Driver of Bus Headed for LA Knifed to Death NEW BOSTON, Tex. (UPI) -Police searched today for a man they said becaame angered about a bus ticket and stabbed the driver to death while the vehicle sped across north Texas at 60 miles an hour. The Bowie County Sheriff's Depart- ment said the bus driver, Bill Young, 40, and a passenger were arguing about the ticket when the husky young passenger suddenly stabbed Young in the neck, chest, stomach and face with a large knife. Young managed to halt the bus on the shoulder of interstate 30. "He stepped out of the bus in front of it and collapsed," said Bill Colby, a deputy sheriff. "A pas.senger ran across to a house and called the police and an ambulance. The driver told him to." Young was dead when he arrived at a hospital. James Edward Morris, 31, was cap- tured and charged with murder. Floods Hit Mississippi 100 Fami~ies Flee Homes on Cliristmas Day ' / s .... AMl ~t • -. Papal Blessitags From ce ntral loggia of St. Peter's Basilica, Pope Paul VI imparts his Urbi et Orbi blessing to the city and world Christmas Day. He criticized abortion and warned Catholics of dangers of man thinking he can set himself up as his own God. Traffic Deat1is On Holid ay Fall To 1955 Level From \\'lre Servitts The Christmas holida y traffic death toll headed toward the lowest figure since 1955 today, and the frnal count wrus expected to reach the lowest level or a preholiday estimate by the national safely council (NSC). An· NSC spokesman early today called ( IN SHORT ... ) the death rate during the four~ay holi- day period "remarkably low." "There are apparently less miles being driven this year and at slower speeds," the spokesman said. A breakdown: Traffic 51P; fire 88; plane 22; other 62; total 690. e Guerrilla A .. rested PARIS -Police announced today the arrests of 13 supporters of Palestine and Turkish guerrilla movements who were said to be preparing fo r terrorist attacks in Europe before the end of the year. Police said they seized a cache of arms and explosives, including books hollowed out for use as letter bombs. e White House Protest WASHINGTON -Six demonstrators were arrested in front of the White House Tuesday in what the Rev. Phillip Berrigan called "our way of celebrating Chr istmas." Two protesters were arrested for vaulting the black iron fence around the \Vhite House and walking toward the mansion where the President and his wife were having Oiristmas dinner. Four others who chained themselves to the fence were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. e Gerald Ford Skis VAIL, COLO. -Vice President Gerald Ford spent two hours skiing in the Colorado mountains Christmas Day then returned to his condominium to stay with his family. Ford and ski instructor Dennie Hoeger, a longtime friend , have been skiing every day since he arrived in the mountain c.ommwiity of 2,000' people early Satur· day . e llfao Tse-tung 80 TOKYO -Qiairman Mao Tse-tung Is 80 today and is reported in good health despite years of personal priva· tion, political struggle and arduous work . Mao was expected to spend the day quietly, receiving a few friends. Bowirig to his own wishes, China does not hold public celebrations or his birthday!. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otltvrry of t11e DAit, Piiot is iuarantttd MMl•v•llNn1 II "' N 1191 II•" , _ _.,.., •r J:M ,.111., t•ll •flf mr ~r •Ill k ltrtoiltfll ,. ~. C1lll •rt tillt11 "'"t 11• '·'"· 11tun1r Nill llllld•r 1 11 ,... M Mt r«•I•• """ ,.,,. ., ' '·'"· '''"""'' ., ... ,,., JVIMl•r, <111 in• 1 ttlW -'" lit •twtflt It f'I"• C1H1 1r1 t.tltfl vnlll 1t I .Ill. Ttltpl\Ollt$ M11t Oflllfl (Wiiiy A~t •..• ,; ~I Htrtll•ftl ttptlftfl911 ••H- IM Wtll'"lftll!r • ., .,., Ml-IHI llll Cll'".nt., Cl11tltlM ltltfh i111 '"'" c1,11ir..,., o""' l>Mt. )1¥1~ L8911A', Ltfllll!f "lfWtl -··· ~ 3 Viet Aircraft Dowi1ed; 9 Soldiers Die, 3 7 Hurt SAIGON (UPI) -Communist an- tiaircraft gwt5 shot do'¥1.TI three South Vietnamese aircraft in 24 hours, killing nine government soldiers and wow'lding 37 others, military sources said today. crashes in South Vietnam since the ce~fire began last Jan. 28. Heavy machine gun fire downed a jet AST Dragonny fight.er-bomber and a CHI Huey helicopter today in Quang Due Province 110 miles oorth of Saigon, the sources said. In Cambodia today. government troops <3fter a '¥1.'cek of fighting wcceeded in opening 30 miles of highYi·ay 1 southeast or Phnom Penh. the military rommand said. Earlier, CommWlist forces besieging Tong LA! Chan base camp 55 miles north of Saigon shot down a huge CH47 Chinook helicopter carTYing replacement troops to the cam p. All nine of the dead and 36 of the '¥1.'0unded were in the Chinook. Officers said ttie French-built bigh'¥1.'ay, which nms from Phnom Penh to Hanoi through saigon, now was open as far as Neak Luong, a Mekong River town accidentally destroyed last August ln a U.S. B52 strike. '.The sources said the subsonic Dragon- fly was bombing North Vietnamese troop positions near Kien Due district town, scene of heavy fighting earlier th is month. The pilot ejected and Was unhurt but the plane was destroyed, the sources said. ALONG THE 3ll miles opened loday, the two-lane asphalt road ran parallel to the h1ei:oo.g, the only overland route open to Phnom Penh from the outside \\'Orld. ABOUT TWO HOURS later, the Huey helicopter, carrying government rein- forcements to Kien Due, was hit three miles northwest of the to\\11. One crewmember was wounded and the helicopter was damaged, the sources said. On a South Vietrmmese pm-lion of highway 1 centered 330 miles north of Saigon, CommWllst forces early today blew up two bridges, the Saigon com- mand said. The destruction of the bridges bk>cked traffic between lhe pro- vincial capitals of Quang NgaJ and Tam Ky. The huge twin ·rotor CH47 Chinook chopper was making a night flight to Tong Le Chan ca mp when it was hit just after midnight Christnias Day, the sources said. Tong Le Clan was captured by North Vietnamese forces during the 1972 spring offensive, but recaptured by government troops late last year. CommWlists have ringed the camp ever since, forcing the government to send supplies in by helicopter. THE SOURCES said lhc crtppled, multlm.illion dollar helicopter made it over the Tong Le Chan perimeter after being hit, but crashed when the pilot attempted to land. The incident was one of the most costly ·Communist-caused a i r c r a f t ; -. Man Who ·Sold .Doo,m . Tickets Not Sltaken , .. . ~ McFARLAND, Wis. (IJPn -Tbe \World didn't •edti OhristmaB Day, but Edward Ben Elson, the man 'who sold tickets for a spaqe- ship ride to escape the catastrophe, was not disappointed. "I don't want to see the end or th~ world.'' he saiH today. "It's just a revelation tl;lat came to me and 1 gave voice to It." Elson gained notoriety last week when he announced the world would end Christmas Day and !hat the Comet Kohoutek would act as a spaceshi.p and rescue the selected Cew. 1 , According to his revelation, Kohoutek would mix with the earth's atmosphere, sending the world 11down in: a st?a of petroleum oil." Elson, a lawyer who has drawn headlines before for bis eccentric ways, said he was selected to chqose 1,000 persons f.or the spaceship ride. The 1,000 were \o be accompanltjl b,Y 143,000 miniature bil- mans he said he ha'd In a state or suspended .antmliUon In: bushel baskets in his base ment. , 1 ' , He had i,000 tickets pr•nted, which be sold to buY'hls Wll• Jewels to entice her aboard the ~hip. The •ale• ['abled Elson IQ recover t)/e co•I of the printin ~ b.ill. but hls w•fe re •!ned s~eptlcal or the trjp . El<ion who<ie buf:i n'e.<;.c; card~ ,;ays he t a "far olit attorney specijl- izin)? In foo nte Jaw.11 $laid bis client<; are heartened bv hJs actions. " "I have a peculiar pra.ctlce," he explained. "The people that I serve somehow are ~eartened by all of my shenanigans and eoc• pades. They thlnk that I'm one of them." -. • • ' • ) , DAILY PILOT G Holiday Travelers Return . Man , 25, Charged In Rape POW Entertains Bob .Hope at Home LOS ANGELES (AP) -Servlce said the holiday pat-The weathennan said the SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Tb.is Christmas for the first time in %5 years, Bob Hope wasn~t entertaining troops, so a former prisoner of war entertained him by telephone. HoUday travelers returning to tern of high clouds with a high in downtown LDs Angeles, their homes packed Southern litUe coastal fog and mlld which reached 65 degrees California freeways and faced tempera cures would continue Tuesday, would remain in the the added risks of an almost low 60s. OAKLAND (AP) -A 25- year-old Oakland man wa booked Christmas day for in- vestigation of raping an 81. .. year-old woman. total shutdown of gas stations _t_hro_:ug:_h_m_Id_w_ee_k_. ____________ _ 1 Palrolmeo Nathaniel Kim- ' brlllb and Robert Ellsberg ' said lbtY eolered an East Oakland lparuntnt <llrlatmaa . ' mondall • In res-t o -fer help llld found a ~ man lying on top of lft eklerly woman with ~la ' . fiilCtn Oii her throat. The WOl'r\ln was treated ahd releMod at Highland Hospital. , !'Iii'" 91\ld McRoy Mitchell • -0! Oakland wu booked !or · Jpveoiltp!,ba of rape. I Air Force Col. Q u i n c y Collin~ spending his first Christmas home after 71> y~an In North Vietnamese prison, ca m p s , telephoned Hope Tuesday to• thank him CALIFORNIA • ::,.tt:, erroru to ~otster Rock Group Collins, talking from a Fisherman's Wharf motel to S • F Hope al his Toh!Ca Lake home mg er aces . ~r !.<Is Angelei, began the "mERE 'ARE problems for tall with a concert. · many of us but there ls no-H • R . II~ played • tape or "POW replacement for freedom," he erom ap Howard Hughes, shown Hyrrm, 'to which he composed told Hope with tears in his in this 1947 photo, re-, Wblll! lmprisoned al a camp eyes. VISALIA (AP) -Charles portedly eelebrated !)is • known as the "Hanoi Ilil1"'1." The song was sung by 3 ex-After the concert b Y Johnston, lead singer of the 68th birUJ.day in a re--POWs at a rehearsal last May telephone, Hope said: "I think DooblE; Brothers s in gin g Ind chilly nighHime tem· peratures. California Hiflhway Patrol Officer Einar Andersen said a two-l}our traffic advisory was in effect Tuesday night on the Santa Ana Freeway , near vicinity of Santa Fe Springs. CHP officers also reported traffic slowing to 3 miles an hour at times on the San Diego Freeway. Movement was only a shade faster on the San Be~ardino Freeway. CHP officers and a spokesman Ior the Soothem California Au to m·o bi I e Association reported receiving • a steady stream of calls from frantic motorists wanting to know where they could fmd , •. , sort hotel in Freeport we've got the holidays mixed ~ J~,080 Bl~ in the Bahamas. ~!":. a concert at the White ~C~=tn~!· more 1 i k e ~=~iz~nc~:te;~!~ ~"':. TREY ALSO sald many cars LO~G BEACH (AP) . re 1 "I'll bet there are an awful ed with a cOmpanion for in-were abandoned after ruMi.ng ha caused an ated s daJ' F• Hi Jot of people that are happy vest i g at ion of heroin out of gas on the freewa ys =· dalnd. meapendge toent111, e 111 can lO'Jlre t this Christmas because that's possession, police said. and other surface streets. But an open gas station. · -e-all over," said the 70-year-old Officer Sal Archuletta ~:i:i there were no reports of any Telegtam. authorities aaid 1 ...... • ' veteran of 25 years of en-major accidents-or Ueups, ~.~-y t Johnston, 2.5, and Cark>s they added ·-· · j B 'D · o · d ' tertainlng troops. "It's a great · 'l)lo M·~.'!.~ a Y 'nlBl!l flr9 y rug ver ose feeling to know that you doo't Montez, 21, or Visalia, were A CHP spokesmon .said U!s deJaYflll i.. puui1cau.,n ff. the have lto go to the hospitals arrested for trespassing Mon-Angeles County con_tinued to newlPQel'.11 ~tmas Witim • • and see some of those kids day in an abandoned church lead the state in the number flTe ·lldah; o~ iiJcL '!1je LOS ~GELES (AP), -A • Pierce's lather, Harry, said who were wounded· In com· alter neighbors complained to or arreslS made for drunk paper. wiJ·~ at ~ Lost key ~J.Ol_!'e m .the lnnaence-he went to the apa.rtment bat." police cl intruders. driving, With· a Tuesday morn- Angea Tim ... ~'14esa t peddl~octJl4al whJ~l~. to Tuesday when hebeeame con· Every Christmas slnee I954, Archuletta said a search of Ing total of 800 arrests out facility. the resignation of .a top au:le ceriied after he got no answer . Hope has entertained troops the men turned up injection 0£ a statewide total of 2,609. e Gun Battle DINNER DANCE -8 P.M. Marine Restaurant & Empire Room A New Year's ~ve Party you'll never for e - gourmet dinner, choice of lobster og t Ch roast New York sirloin of beef .. ~ ampagne, favors, danc ing, everythinel $40 00 "'~ .... '~''"" • (I•• I llll~1ty l11CJ~dedj ........... , 644-1700 #533 r-- The Lido Lounge COCKTAILS • DAHCIHci TO LIVE. MUSIC FAVORS ftlR All &:30 P.M. Co"fll C~1111-$3.00 ,.... ,_... • COVELO (AP) -An Indian laborer was killed and a sherifrs sergeant serioosly wounded in an exchange of gunfire after the laborer bar- ricaded himself in.side his cabin, officers said. of U . Gov. F.d. ~euiecke was , in repeated phone calls to his overseas.' From 1948 to 19f>4 paraphernalia and a substance The cold but clear weather in s~blc conditJOn at UCLA son. The son had been Jiving his hol.klay trips abroad were thought to be heroin. They was considered by authorities Med!cal Center today after a in the West H o 11 y w o o d interspersed with entertaining were booked at the Tulare to have helped to keep holiday-possibl~ ?rug overdo:;e. . residence for several days troops at home. This year County Jail on the drug ·charge end traffic flowing smoothly, Shenff s de.put 1 es sa1d.-~w~h~ile~t~he~re~gu~lar:ten:a:•:ts~we:re'._he;~e~ne~trta~ln~ed~~at~· se:v:e:ral~~a~nd~J:o:hns:t:o•:la~te~r w:as~r:ele:a:s-_'.i~r ~slo~w:IY~·~'~_.!!.~~:.d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L, Jerome A. Pierce,. 35, was out of town. veterans' hospitals. ed. The Nationa l We at her admitted to the hospital Tues- '• A Mendocino Colinty sher· ltt's spokesman said Richard G. Willits, 67, died at a hospital In Ukiah, 80 miles south of here, two ,hours after the Incident Tuoj!day. Sgt., John Stephenson.' 35, was reported in serious condition. e Yo11tla Stabbed ALTADENA (UPI) -A 17· year~ki surrendered to authorities Tuesday in coo- nectloo wilb the sl4bbini clealh of 8 ·youth neilr th<! Jet Propulsloo Laboratory porting lol . Sberlll'• deputies said the unideotilled s~ was book· ed on "suspiCion Of ri'lurdertng ts.'year-<>ld 'i'imothy Michael Buller of·La caoada who .... borseba<:k riding In the ..... when an older youth ap- l!!O&ched him, told him to get down from the horae, and stabbed him When he refuaed. e SJ00,000 f'lre ' . day after being f o u n d un- conscious by his father on the floor <1f a borrowed apart- me11t. PIERCE IS DUE to be sentenced Jan. 8 on a con- viction on three counts of grand theft and insurance fraud stemming from a, $6,015 insurance claim. He had been convicted of grand theft once before in 1960. Earlier this year newspaper stories disclosing Pierce's link to Morris E. Currey Relnecke's executive assis- tant, forced Currey's resigna- tion. Pup Stolen For Present RIVERSIDE (UPil -"I Ml not -a professional thief.'' said the note mailed to John and Anita Hutto at their Rancho California home after the disappearance o( a puppy. The letter arrived several days ailer someone stole ooe SAN DIEGO (AP) -Fire damaged the $I00,000 borne of the David Curschmeldes in San Carlos as they opened Cllristmas gifts with their children 'I)leadaY, aulhoriiles said. of the six puppies recently ) born to their basset hound, the Huttos said. "I was looking f o r No one was hurt, but frremen said the wood shake roof of the two-story house wu destroyed. An overloaded forced-air beating system was blamed. something to sell so my two little boys could h a v e Christmas presents," l h e burglar said. But be saw the puppies and took one for bis children, he said, assuring the Huttos the dog "will have a· big yard and two Uttle children to play with." HICKORY FARMS OF OHIO Gh88&8 ~ Gbee&e .. ~I y hof1 Big favornes at Hickory Farms of-Oh io. Cheese Ball Is made from a special blend of cheese, ClletSe J.og from aged, smoked che<!,dar. Both covered with ground nuts ... deliclousl $1.98 each. ' Our S~ni I~ Loaded with Party Snacks 8t Other.Fine Foods , _,. 1··-1e~ ,.,,.,~ ~ ••. , DF(IN/tl • • • ,, WESTCLIFF PLAZA " J7tb ,, lRVlNE. NEWPORT BEACH PHONE: 642'°'72 o,.. ....., """ '111 Cloololw -Soo4oy 11·1 ---' ' ..... Intro . ·ciri.g FotomatS NoFault Foto Insurance. •A guaranty that doesn't cost you one cent extra. ·A money-backguarantyonanygoofed-up picture. •A guaranty that the refund's in cash. •A guaranty that.you're the judge of whether or not you want to keep that picture, slide, or movie.film. • From the world's largest retailer of photofinishing. Used to be when you shot a roll offilm , you might not get all your pictures printed. That's frustrating,_ beeause the picture that looks goofed-up to .the developer might be the very picture you want. At Fotomat, we keep nothing from you. You'll get back every printable picture you took. Take your pictures home, then decide. If a picture's goofed up, no matter whose fault, Fotomat will buy it back, in · cash, Or, if you prefer, we'll try to remake .the·picture, at no charge. • ' . We ask only this: that you bring the picture back to the same Fotomat store it came from within 30 days.. And that you bring back either your ~ receipt or the original Fotomat envelope in which the picture came. Qualltys a guaranty, from the picture specialist. All participating Fotomat Stores in Southern California feature our no-nonsense, no extra cost guaranty of picture quality. Check your telephone white paces for . the Fotomat store nearest you. . ' • I I • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE An Enduring llllpact The turbulent youth revolt o! the 60s was no pass· l Ing phelll)Jllenon. It is having and· will continue to have a lasting, though quieter, impact on society, and much of the impact is bene!lcial. Pulitzer Prize.winning author James Michener, in an interview In U.S. News and World Report, looks back over the youth revolution and finds a great deal that is good In those who emerged from it. Some of his views: -Good students who were involved in the campus revolutio11 have not changed their basic commitments; they have been Intelligent enough to see that they can accomplish their goals by working within more accept· able patterns. • -Goals already accomptished, or being accompllsh· ed, include termination of the Vietnam war,, improved race relations and more responsive forms of education, Mi chener points out. -Many of the former revolutionaries want to go inoo fields like Jaw and medicine where they ca n be of constructive help to society. -The Impact on the older generation has been very strong. Many middle-aged parents have begun to adapt their philosophies to the youthful ideas. They dress more boldly and they show a greatly increased awareness of the "quality o! life." They under!jjand being trapped in lifestyles and accept the possibi\ity of satisfaction in jobs that offer more opportunity for service, and less for material reward. -Though the traditional work ethic has little ap- peal for today's youth, it does not mean they want to do away with work; they do want to make work more humane. across the world, will come back into productive pat· terns. We may see a rea!flrmation o! traditional values in attitudes toward the !amily and raising children, Michener believes. Tho new sexual freedom permits young people to live together without marriage, but many want IA> establish families and there are certain baslc permanent values that lead them to marriage eventually. Michener sees the drug culture as not necessary to social revolution. It was sheer accident that both came along at the same time. The 15 percent who did become involved in the drug culture probably have to be written off. The others have led the way through a period mark· ed by the most accelerated change in life styles and attitudes in American history, and their influence will be felt for years to come. The Last Straw? The government's General Service Administration tried to order a four months' supply and came up 50 percent short. A Hilton Hotels purchasing agent says the situation is bad and will get worse. Other major hotel chains and many state agencies are worried abo ut what will happen when their present one-year contracts run out. As housewives plying the supennarket aisles may have noticed ... there's a toilet paper shortage. It seems only yeste.rday that the environmentalists were telling us to boycott colored TP and buy only white, because it's more biodegradable. -About 85 percent of the young drillers who par- ticipated in the youth revolution, then wandered o!f Now it looks as if we may have to settle for the old Christmas catalogue, colored illusirations and all -•Rt6HT NOW, SURVIV~L IS 'THE NAME OF THE ~· Resignations Thin White House Staff W ASlllNGTON -The impression · outside the White House that time is running out on President Nixon was furthered last week by the resignation of an idealistic young speechwriter, ap- parently as an act of conscience, and indications that an idea listic older speecbwriter is nearing resignation afte r being ignored for months. Jotm Andrews, a litUe-knoY .. n junior speechwriter, left to go into full-time religious work in Denver with a fare- well Jetter which scv· eral 1 White House ~ffers descri bed as "sour.'' Slmultan- oous1y, these staffers w e r e speculating 1hat Ra~end. K. Price Jr., on<e a fOP Nixon sPeeehwrlter but shelved lately, ~wld soon qu it. The two developmeots are unrelated 'but it is no cotbcidenO! that Price and Andrews arc among the few idealists on a hard-nosed White House staff domi- nated by self-styled pragmatists. Moreover, tne imminent departure of some key non-idealists means a thin line wlU remain at the White I-louse in t~ese crisis days. Apart from causing practical difficulties, this unquestionably 'viii trigger inferences rrom the outside that Mr. NLton's own men are bailing out. SO~lE PRO~tlNENT Republicans ::ire -correctly or not -dra\Ying that inference from the departure o f speechwrit er Andrews. pub I i c I y anonymous until his resignation. \Vhat broke his anonymity 'vas -4.ndre\\·s' turn- ing the routine farewell letter to his colleagues into an impassioned deelara- 1ion of principle by a lieutenant leaving his embattled President. "The steadiest star to steer by," An~ws wrote, "is Richard Nixon 's ( EVANS ·NOVAK J O\li'll 1968 statement that the presidency is preeminenUy a place of moral leadership." He added that "held to that course," the Nixon administratJon "cailnot fail to make safe port." He then continued: "Great endeavors risk great errors. as we have learned to our pain: but the forces they loose, though certain to unmake l!ie unworthy, only deepen character," . The equivoca l wording, which !Orne president ial aides viewed as subject to multiple inlirpretation, is highly unusual for such a letter. Although some president ial staffers insist Andrews im- plied no criticism, others consider it a cry of disillusionment. "The way the letter was couched," one senior aide told us, "I'd say Andrews was a bit sour." HIS FRIENDS outside the White llouse strongly confrrm that judgment. They be· lieve AndrelVS, a devou t Chrislian Scien- tist like many other Nixoo aides. could take no more o! the present White House. ·Since Andrews is a conservative admired enough by the President to take him along to the Soviet Union in 1972. his departure becomes yet another stra'v on the camel's back, in the Capitol Ifill vie\\', Price's departure is not yet certain. l\\lhC'n nsked recently by an old friend v.·hether he was quitting, Price replied crypticallt: "Not yet.") But his col- lca.ques are sure he will depart soon. The reason is not hard to find . Price, 'an editor on !he old New York l~erald Tribune. joined ri.lr. Nixon·s 1968 cam- paign early and was a principal speechwriter through mid-1973. But since helping draft the Presiden t's statement of last t.fay 22, Price has not been Dear Gloomy Gus Filty is nifty and thrifty. T.D.S. 01_., Giit _,.,....,. .,. llltlmltt.111 " reaMn 1MI N -" -rilr 1"9fltCI tlM ~ ot .,.. .............. s.MI '"' "' ,...,. to Gloomy Gus. D41ffr fl'iltt. visible. ''I just haven't seen Ray around," confides a Nixon adviser deeply involved in Watergate deliberations. LESS INDICATIVE 0£ the \Vhite House n1alaise but more damaging to opera- tional erficiency may be the return to private industry of counselor Bryce Harlow. Whereas the resignation of Melvin R. Laird as counselor was long 'ago discounted, the recent disclosure or Harlow's imminent departure was a shocker inside the White House. Who can possibly replace the smoothly efficient Harlo\v i n troubleshooting chores such as riding herd on Gerald Ford's confinnation and congressional investigation of San Clemente? There is, in truth, little chance of finding any replacement approaching Ha rlow's quality at this low point in the Nixon administration. WmLE UNABLE to recruit from the outside, the White House fa c e s restlessness within. One middle-level sta£fer, neither a liberal nor an idealist, now believes that f.fr. Nixon at best can limp lhrougb his remaining days as President. This aide doubts that he lvants to spend the next three years that way, particularly if seldom able to gain admittance to Mr. Nixon's office. Therefore, he 'is contemplating early resignation. E\'eey such resignation undercuts the President's position. \\'ith Mr. Nixon limiting regular contact to staff chief Alexander Haig and press secretary Ron Ziegler, the thinning·down suggest,, to the outside world disintegration at the While House eveft worse than actually exists. Soft Seats for Senators Taxpaye rs Fina1ice Fa1icy Up liolste ry Have you ever seen those broad-bot- toms in tJ1e State Senate? The ones with the padded scats and fancy ann rests and eleetric·blue upholstery? Four years ago 40 of those special chairs were purchased at a cost or $9200. That came to 230 bucks a piece: one for each of the august caesars or the Senate. That was the year they spent a \li"ad of your dough to redccora!e the Senate chambers. \Y h a 1 came out or that re- Curbishing was a bit o! • Barbary CoMt brothel -complete "itb marbll!d pilla1'. flocked wall.paper. red caf1JC(lng • n d brOnf.ed gas light fixtures rmd a few aplUOons. HardJy a dignified setting for a hous~ th1t legislators call home. Not quite fitting for a dellberaUve body thal. wears il3 L3tin on the "'all O\'cr the podium : ··Senatodl_ ~ Clvitatls -l,lbertatem Tlleri". niat didn't ci>me !roni. the Barbar)' Coast. That came from years a.go when senators were cilizcn·politi· ci.., wtlo guarded the people'J freedom. TDIES DO c:banie, and "' do polili· cl-Now, the Senate Rules Committee Is apondinc UOlh<r ~JOO of ll1< t••poyers •• ( RUS WALTON ) money to redesign and reupholster those 40 chairs. That's $128 per chair -one chair per Senator. It seems the chairs did not fit the Senators, <is they are constructed. John \Villiamson, executive officer for Senate Rules, exruses the SSIOO ex- penditure. He tries to justify the added expense and the extra foam rubber of those broad·bottoms. \Villiamson says that sometimes the Senators spend 20 hours straight in those chambers and those chairs. Twenty hours. Some senators have complained that at such a sitting the means don't justify their ends. The last time those birds spent 20 hours ln the Senate ctiamber1 they rammed ·through m legislative bills. lncluding 43 appropriation measures that carried a total tax tab of $J92 • JTiillion. - 1'J£E LONGER thoSe' Senatori. sit in thcir chambers the more it costs us. On Sept. 14. those soft·bottomed swivels cost us 59.6 million ~n hour. Now the" ~·ant e'en more stuffing -for their chairs. · · WhJt we should buy those Senators ' ' arc straight·back ch ai rs without cushions. Then. maybe, their ends would 1natch our means. Will iamson said the design for the remodeled chairs was calcuJated by a chiropractor to proVide more support for the spine. Some of the Senators do need a little steel in their spines but extra roam rubber will not do the trick. What's needed is not roam and plastic. What's needed is the alchemy of the Old West: less lead ln the pant. and more iron in the blood. FUty~e hwidred do 11 a r s to reupholster 40 chaiis! Indeed! That 's only a Oy speck on the 334 page, 2 pound, 3 ounce, $9.4 billion state budget. Just a jot and a ttttle of the Senate's $10 million housekeeping fund for t973-74. It's not just the money, it's the idea! NO WONDER 4S percent of California voters have a good mind to dump all officeholders -whether they b • Democrats or Republicans. At least that's what a r~ent Sl<IJ'll"l<le J>\)ll in- 1lica1ed. Small wonder folks have more con- fidence In trashmen than politicians. At least, that's what a nationwide survey reported . Tho!< fellas in the State Senate jJst don't get the message. Befare they go buying something soft to sit on Jhey should 11sc their beads. l1afiltrati o1a fro11a Banks to Boy Scouts 'Big Oil' Power Tactics W ASIIlNGTON -A growing number of congressmen believe that the rec~ess greed of the oil Industry helped bring oo the oil crisis. This has stirred talk jn the cloakrooms of putting a goven>- ment checkrein on Big Oil. The troubled legislators contend that fuel, like the postal service. rom- municatioos satel· lites and other gov· emment·industry en· terprises, is too vital to the national sec- urity to be left in irresponsible hands. 11-.e potentates of petroleum not only have put profits ahead of patriotism, but they have kept a tight hold on the facts about fuel. Oil executives must be brought into govern· ment, therefore. so the nation can deal intelligently with the energy crisis. NOT ONLY congressmen but federal officials have bad it up to the neck \\'ilh the oil and (!:as industry. The Federal Trade Commission, for example has charged Exxon. Texaco, Gui£. Mobil. Standard of California. Standard of In- diana, Shell and Atlantic Richfield with \'iolating antitrust lav.·s in contempt of the consumers. Senators Phil Hart, l}.~1ich., and James Abourez.k, D-S.D., are seeking to curb Big Oil's power by forcing the oil barons to break their hold on oil from the well to the gas pumps and to give up their interests ·in natW'al gas , co"l and related industries. SENATORS have also teamed that oilmen have quietly infiltrated the media, universities, banks, insurance companies and transportation operators, not to men· tion the Metropolitan Opera, Los Angeles Rams and Boy Scouls. Ao unpublished study, conducted by the Center for Science in the Public . Interest, shows thal directors of till 18 big oil companies hold interlocking di~torships. which give them enormous influence upon just about every facet of American life. Although the report Is under lock and key ln the Senate, we can reveal the highlights: -Exxon 's directors also sit on the boards of six banks, including lhc Federal Reserve Bank of Chica go. Their tentacles rea ch Into the Northwestern Bell System; Mayo Foundation ; Toledo, Peoria and Western Railroad : National .Poll ution Control Committee; Do w Jones; 3M; IBM; and the Comml tleo ror ·National Trade Policy. -TEXACO'S dlrectors also oerve on the bolrdl of four lnlllrance finns, nine banlm end numerous chemical, mining, drug and tobacco companies. They main- tain "interlocks" with the Metropolitan Opera, two hospitals and the Hollywood Turf Club. -Gulf, which recently pleaded gullly to making criminal political contributions for President Nixon's campaign, bas placed drectoro in the board rooms of the Mellon National Bank and Trust, General Foods, Ralston Purina. Jones Laughlln Steel, tbe University ol TWIS and elsewhere. -Mobil men sit on the boati!s of Tim<!, Inc., Princeton and Columbia Universities, American Express. Con F..d. and about 57 other varieties or firms lncludln& the H. J. Heinz Company. -DlllECl'ORS of AUaoUc RlchUeld CARCO) also have a voice In the counsels of the Boy Scout., the Ei1<nhowcr Fund. !l1< University of t'hlcqo, Pepsico, Lockbecd and the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe. Phillips, another crinlinal con- tributor to the Nl•on campaJBn· i• rep· resented at Campbell's Soup, Hallmark Cards, Sears Roebuck, United Aircrafi, Kansas University and the Falcombridgc Nickel ri.tines, just to name a rew . The pattern is the same for Standard of California, Indiana and Ohio. Shell, Continental. Sun, Union, Cities Service, Getty. hfarathon, Amarada Hess and Ashland. Their directorships range into such various enterprises as New York Life, National Broadcasti ng C.On1pany, several museums, Union Pacific, American Automobile Association, National Biscuit, Red Cross. the New York zoo, United Airlines, AT&T and American Potato. ALL TOLD-the II companleo have 460 "interlocks" including 132 at banks, 31 with insurance companies, 12 with utilities. 46 with schools, lS ln transporta- tion and 224 with large manufacturing and distributing companies:. Declares the <Enter's confidential report: ''Oil oompany directon .•. form a oozy and excl~ive club" able to take "common, if not conspiratorial ac- tion .... outsiders simpl y do not know what goes on behind the closed door." The center study (&'Ommends strict' laws to force Big Oil to take its fingers off the CQOtrol levers of competing or related industries and institutions. Remember How Great It Was in Good Old Days? "What's that rusty old heap, Grandpa. over there behind that patch of wildflowers ?'' "Why, by Goorge, honey, that's an automobile! Don't see many now, but v.·c used to have miJlions of 'em, back in The Good Old Days." "What did they do, Grandpa? \Vere they good?" "Well, I don't rightly know, honey. They made a lot or noise and smoked up the air, but'tween surise and sunset they'd take you a good 500 mil es from here to there. back in The Good Old Days." "Why did people want to go there , Grandpa'? \Vhy weren't they · happy here?" "Well, I don't rightly know, hooey. But they were kind of a miracle, like telephones. Why, a man could talk to you from a hundred miles away and sound just like next door, back in The Good Old Days." "What would he say, Grandpa?tt "Well, I don 't rightly knaw. Sometimes, he'd say, 'Sorry, I got the wrong number.' Or he'd ask for someone who wasn't there. Or he'd invite you sorfte place you didn't want to go. But that's the kind of miracles we had, back in The Good Old Days." "THE STARS are coming out t Grandpa . Did you like counting stars. back in The Good Old Days?" "Well, I don't rightly know, honey. Jt was hard to see the stars for all tho lights. We lit our homes brl&ht as day and warmed them so as you could sit around ln your shirtsleeves, back ln The Good Old 1Jay9. .. "But how could you sleep with all those lights. Grandpa! And why didn't you just put on warm clolhes and alt by the !ire?" "Well, I don't rightly know. But it was hard to sleep1 what with an the noise and worrle1. Why, just reading the P"ll"' would rile you up for hours, back In The Good ~Days." "ll'hat did the r say to rile you up?" "WELL, I don't r ghtly know, honey. II was mostly 1bout the Government But when we ran out of paper, we ran out or Government, even ~~ we had lots of Government, back m The Good Old [)ayL" "What did the Go'iemment do, ( ART HOPPE ) Grandpa?" ''\\'ell, I don't rightly know. ~Iostly is passed. around pieces or paper telling us to do this or do that or taking our money. But it protected us rrom our enemies, back ln 11le Good Old Days.'' "\Vhy did we have enemies, Grandpa?" "Well, I don't rightly know, honey. But it didn't much matter once we ran out of fuel for our weapons. Wby, we had weapons that would blow up whole mountains, back in The Good Old Days." "GRANDPA why didn't you ever jusl sit arowxl and think. the way we do?" "Well, I don't rightly know, honey. I suppose we were too busy getting from here to there, an awe r tn g telephones, making money and watching televl.sioo. Television is pictures ln a box. that11 another miracle we had, back in The Good Old Days." 1'lt 'eems to me, Grandpa, lhat walk· ing and talking anil firelight and thinking are .... " "Sl\llt tip or I'll smack you, smart.- aleck kid . You young whipper-mappers got no Idea how Rrtat lhlnp were, back <n The Good O\d Daya." OUNH COAST DAILY PILOT I F By N are s den Bap Uni re bea y tha rel " SU ha ne pa to m a f, • • QUEENIE . - By Phil lnterfandi " 0 .0.. r.-~·i.. 1911. Y..Wlftloal-..., "I 1otltforChristm.11, I suppose I'll have towearltlor a whlle. '' , Fewer Give Cl1urch' Oonations I On Upward Trend By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP l•lltlOll Wrllfl'1 NEW YORK -Fewer are giving more. That's the cvidencq or new figures sho"'ing tMt con· tribution to t h e churches. which sagged in rectnt years, are on the way up again. Several 1major denominations -Southern Baptist, United AteUxxlist, lhe ( RELIGION) United Church of Christ - report the latest 1973 statisticS bear out the upward trend. capita g1v1ng a v e r a g e d $103.33, up nearly 7 percent from the $96.74 of the previous year. The 10 denominations are: The American B a p t l s t Churches. Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Episcopal Church, Lutheran Church in America, l.Altheran Church-Misoowi S)'nod, United Presbyterian Church, Prtsbyterian Church U . S . <SciUthern ), Refonncd Church in America, United Church of Quist and United Methodist Church. THE J\.10RE conservative ! Southern Baplist Convention whose 12 mi 11 ion menr hers make it the nation's largest Protestant b o d y , YET THE GREATER D· reported contributions slightly mount, In most cases, comes over St bll).ion -rhe first from a smaller number of Protestant body to top .thQ people. billion~ollar mark. According to the neWJy ac· The Southern Baptist gain curn"!1ted broader figures, 'lvos higher than J!!Osl other Americans dropped 5.2 percent groups -up $96 million from more into church collection tbe previous year's $974 million plafes la st year than in the -a gain cX almost 10 percent. year before. The gain ~X· Southern Baptists also gained ceeded the 3.2 percent rise members, but not at the rate in living costs by nearly of the revenue increase. 2 percent. .A sampling or five smaller, The findings are ba~ on t h e o logically conservative a compilaUon by the Nationa l denominations show gains in Council or Churches of contributions at about the statistics from 39 denomina· same rate as that of the over·! tloqs, Altogel/!er. they / re-all group of 39 denominations. I ceivti'.l~M~&-tiillion in 972. about $229 million more tijan AS JN RECENT years. giv· in the previous year. ing to local or con~ejl:ational l expenses outpaced the in· THE TOTAL DOES not in· creases for national and elude revenues of many other \\·orld-wide church programs. Protestant denominations, nor ~1oney kept at home for the Roman Catholic Church. congregational f i n a n c e s Counting these. indications are amounted to about 80 percent that the sum of United States of the total, with slightly religioUs giving is approaching under 20 percent going to the $9 billion annually. "ider "''Ork of the chUrches. However, as a partial. ~t Churches which 'J)ractice substantial index to g1Vlng tit hing showed the customary habits in t h e country. the highest rate of per-capita giv- newest figures bring out the ing and the highest proportion paradoxical aspect of more of money given. to causes money coming from fewer beyond the local scene, with people. Seventh-<lay Advep~ts top- Ten major denomination~, ping the list. The1 ayeraged all showing ,50me limes .m giving $417.20 a year each. membership,. reported recetV· 70 percent of which was ing $2.6 bllhon last year -allocated to national and in· SM million more than before. temational church progl'ams. Yet their over-all mem· --------- berSnip declined 1.5 milllon- to a total or 28.3 million. KIDS LIKE TO AS A RESULT, their membership losses average about 5 percent, while their Income galoed 3.5 perooit. Per ASK ANDY ' . • ' SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA Place Mart ex Atelier • your dream setting 1n 5.99 . ·' Parasol Stripe or Rose twin percale Regularly 7.SO Parasol stripe, a fresh and exhilaro1ing paitern 1hat brighte ns the room aro.und you. Fo r a coordi-. nated look, sheets of no-iroa E>acron® polyester and cotton percale match Dacron® polyester-fill comforters. Sheets and accessories in green, yel· low, pink. Comforters, rTiulri<olor criss cross. Rose budsand blooms and ·spreads -its joy on lux- urious percales that need no tending in a blend of Dacron» polyester and cotton. Choose pink or yellow. All sheets avai labl e in flat or fitted styles. Rose and Parasol Stripe sheets, cases, comforters T"•in sheets. Reg. 7.50, 5.99 Ki~ shee rs. Rc,i.;.14.SO, 12.99 Double sheers. Reg. 8.50, 6 .99 Stet cases, pr. Reg.. ~.50, .t.49 Queen sheets. Reg.11.50, 9.99 King cases, pr. Reg. 6.50, 5.49 ·72x90" comfort«. Reg. $30, 24.99 80x90". Reg. S·!O, 34. 99 108 .. x90" comforter. Regularly S60, sale rriccJ. · ••. , 49.c)9 Parasol Stripe blanket covers and pillow shams Twin. Reg. S40 ..•... 34.99 King cover. Reg. S70, 59.99. Double. Reg. $45 ..... 39.99 Sid. sham. Reg. $1 8 .. 15.99 Queen cover. $60 ••. 4.9.99 Ki ng sham. Reg. $22 . 19.99 Parasol Suipe ptnico~ts are a dtlicate accent Twin. Reg. $45 .... 39.99 Queen ,;, •. Reg.-$65,54.99 • Bedroom Accessories • Wednesday, Dtcembfr 26, iq73 DAILY PILOT HITE ,. • Ro~e a delight ful budget salon where :bea(ttiful hair styles b'e gin .. ' · , PRiCE LIST ../ >. l•atf• 0...,. 1'1f' Leftf MM) MONDAY THRU THURSDAY Sh!!~::· !~Ju;~:~:.~.~-~~-~~-~~.~~~-~-~~~-~~~~.~bGlE~p : Permanent' W•v• ····-······························· 7.50 & •P Tl•I .............................. ·-·············-········--5,50 : •p Blt1ch Touch-up ................... : .................... 10.50 •P Frostiog ...................................................... 14.00 • up Semi Perman•nt la1ht1 ............................ 10.00 hair~ts 11~50 1695 Irvine Ave" -Coste Mesa Corner of I , 17th St.-Aboft Lo c ... R-urant 645-1050 548-9986 0,. ...,, ...... -.. _, M ... ·- Special shopping hours today; Wednesday, December 26, from 9 A.M : to 9:30 P.M. Shop Sunday 12 noon to 5 pm Bullock's Santa Ana, 1 Fashion Square, 2800 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, Telephone : 5.:\7-7211 Bullock 's South Coast Pl'aza, San Diego Freeway at Bristol, Costa Mesa, Telephpne : 556-0611 I ' ' ' ' ~ ' ... ••• •• .. • • • •• . ' n• ~ • • B U"'1L '( PILOf For the Record Births DK. 4 Mr. •nd Mr'-L•rrv ll•fm'n, 21191 Jlumoi.. El Toro. 11r1. Mr. •nd Mfl. MYr•n C•PllU•, lf»J Fyr L•nt, Hunllngton a1•cll. glrl Mr. •f'ld Mr1. John Mllllf, 5105 JUntr Av.nu., N1wPCM1 &Heh, gJrl Mr. •nd Mra. Brui::• a.la. S911 lollrdH, HU!lttnirton &Heh. glrl. Mr. "'Id .. fl!.!j,_ Gf"9QfY_ BtJKkwly, 7JU..(. NorM A_, Cot.I• Meu, "'· , O.C-llllr J Mr. •nd Mr.. John Aomm. 290l Clullhol.IM ll:o.d, Clllll• Mtll , glr1. Mr. •nd Mr•. y.,,..,. S111w, 2m ll:k hmo!'ld WIY, Cotl• ~. tioy, Mr. •nd Mr1. M•rll Fr•nd!lefl, 77SI>\ 11:•1~ StrHI, COii• Mew, glrl. Mr. •nd Mfa, TJl.oml• Cl•ncy, 1202 P•'1'ltll PIK•, Co.I• Mew, Ila¥. Mr. •nd Mra. Stan Fltld, 3«12 ~ G•rntMY", Santi An•, girt. Mr. •nd Mn. lllc"'rd C.rtton. 1i1m Slt'l'\1111 Str..t. WHlmlnsttr, glrl. -· Mt. and Mrs. W•yne M•llr1f.,1n, •m K,.,,._ Drlv., Hlintlngton e11ch. "'· Mr. •nd Mn. Cr•ll Tr•CY• m Wtsl W1lt.0n. Cott• ~. bo¥. Mr. •net Mta. O.vld Gl•m, 2315 Fran· dKO Dl1Y .. Newport ll••cll. glrl. Mr. •nd Mra. JOMf Sto•I, 17'9S Cedlr TrH Unt, lrvlnt. glrl. Mr. and Mn. G•rv Nd•u. 196·0 2'11t. SlrHI, Cll51• .V..U, girl. Other Deatlis I r ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - hmtt Inonu, 89, who played a major role In Turkey's mocltrn history and was an assocllfte-of Kemal Alaturk, founder of the Turkish republic, died Tuesday. He founded the Republican People's party and served as foreign minister, prime minister and president. CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) - Blanche Gilligan, 78. the mother of Ohio Gov. John J. Gilligan, died Tuesday in a Cincinnati nursing ho m e where she had been confined for six years. ·HANOVER, N.H. (UPI) - Mory P.K. Sachs, 91, a poet. playwright and author, died at her home · Mooday alte< a long illness. TOURNUS, France (UPI) - Aviation pioneer and automobile builder Gabriel Volsla, 93, died Tuesday at his home near here, friends s81d today. The Vosin biplane new an offrclally recorded. kilometer in 1908. Death Not~es ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY C7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 6"-4888 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME ,Cornna del ft.lar 673-9450 ' Costa ft.1esa 646-%424 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Ill Broadway, Costa .Mesa IJ S.3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd . S..Ungton lkach m.mt U4 Redondo A\'t . IAol Beach IU-..Js.1115 • lkCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'111 Lopna Canyon Rd. lH-H.15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK c.eterY ft.fortuary G'llapel -PllClftc View Drive Nowfllll -~. California ~· • l'Ult FAMILY COLONIAL "1NERAL BOMS "9 .... ... ,., ......... 5 • Wii&'S MOlt'nJ.UY ., _St. a ·=r- WtdntSday, Oe<:tmbfr 2:6, 1973 Comic By JACK CHAPPELL Ol 111• Oeltv Pllet Iliff Two Laguna Beach \\'omen who are key Southern California publishers of un· derground comic books try to relax In their Art Colony homes and talk on how they feel about their business to- day. "I've become as paranoid as a' dope dealer," Jan ad, mitted. "I'm concerned about my children.," Lyv~ said. "It distresses me at I'm pUt in the position here t must elaborately tell my kids what to do if the cops come and shove a search warrant under the door." Publishers cleaned-up Utle !or subject matter form erly in another comic. "WJ!:'YE BEEN reviewed throughout Ille country In various publications. We've, ~ listed in among other things, 1Synergy' magaiine whicil i.s a publicatioo put out by Ille San Francisco library going to offend lots of people, because you caMOt write about menstrual periods in an obviou.. wa~ without doing that," Jan said. "lT DIDN'T occur to us that we'd be In trouble. I've never done anything Illegal knowingly 1n my Ufe. I cer-- tainly didn't anUcipate having • 'I tldnk ot sHIB thfmJ• Uke, should 1 dress todo" tor getting l>u1ted?' . • Fear Arrests vious that i.sn 't ~· said. tire,'" Jan '" U they consider I t pornographic, that's the I r ~al opinion," she added. Getting started in tbe comic book publishing field is simple, the women sak!. wltll !bat. But it still Involves employell talking. You can't print Ibo number of oomic books that are printed wllbout somebody blowin8 the hom,11 Jail aatd. • PRINTED IN 20,000 lots, Ille ,)pre5S nm costs $1.400. They mEY SAID lhey decided are 90ld JQr JO cents per copy to do it, bought up i1' 1,000 Iota to a Ul8 Angeles necessary art supplies distributor. That distributor worked for 3 months crea · tben resells to a n o t b e r the content of their first book. d\sttibutor who parcels the Two "above ground" print-oomJcs out to the retail stores. ers ane used, one in Los An-They retaU for 50 cents. gele9 and one in Riverside Money from the sale of the as a resource publication for legal problems over this," she county. first comic has been put back • UP'IT ....... reference libraries. said. "It's 8 bit hard to ruld 8 into the business to finance "With 1Abortion Eve' we "Adult book stores won't printer who will print material the other two books. Pan-Netc Home? 'vent beyond underground. carry Wlderground comics. that might be considered ob-dora's J3ox has j~t recently We 're ilJ an area Qf health jectionable by some people been published. James Earl Ray, assas- COMJC BOOKS aren't so comics. I'm sure iii existed They make fun. They're because most printers print Lyvely and Jan went un-sinator of civil rights fUMy for the two women any before. I'm sure the ann~ parodies on sex and violence. ror churches, the Lions Club derground only after the ar· leader· Martin Luther I more since their book is now forces during World War 11 They put it down. U you really and supcrinarkets and others . rest of Fahrenheit 4Sl book King, may serve his 99- alleged by the Orange County did things like that. We've read those with an open mind, who would put pressure on. store owners Gordon and year sentence in a fed- 1 District Attorney's Office to gotten a lot of very good en-I think you'll find they di¥ike the printers to "Stop that kind Evelyn Wilson in Laguna eral maximum security be pornographic. couragement from th a t , ' ' violence or try to make fWl of activity. Beach recenUy after selling prison, because of pos· / -Two Laguna Beach Lyvely said, of pornography. By havfug so "If they run it at midnight, some underground comics to sible retaliatory moveS Nixon, McGovern ' Marry I ' . CHESTERFIELD, Ill. (AP} -Cnntr,;ry to th• old axl&.i that "never Ille lwaln ~II meet" Nlxon and McGovern apenl C!ui•tmu togelber. ' It wasn't a put-on, because It involved Jooepb M. Nixon . 26, and Brenda Sue Huls McGovem, 25, who were married last week. It was the second marriage t« both. Both say Ibey have been !be &uhjecl of oome good· natured joahlng about their names. But even though Brenda l\fcGovem is now a Nixon , there still is a 1t1cGovem in the lamUy: Brenda's !-year· old daughter, Angela, bf her .. previous marriage. ,, They spent the hollda)'\ at Ille Nixon family home In this 'community about lO mtlca norlh of St. Louis. merchants have been arrested. "We knew that we were much violence \t becomes ob-they can somelime.s get away a police detective. ag8.inst hi!TI. on pornography charges forl-----------------'---------''------=--"---"------------=--:---------------- selling underground comics. The District Attorney's in- vestigators apparently want to find the publishers and are searching for them. JAN AND LYVELY readily agreed to an interview with the Daily Pilot although these are not their real names. They have published three comic books. They are con· vinced the comics aren't pornography although they ad- mit one comic was given a title explicit to the femal e anatomy "to get some at- tention." Lyvely is 42 and has two children. She lives in a Laguna house with an ocean view. She says she was educated in an exclusive Eastern girls college 3nd describes her.reif as "a pillar of the com- munity." JAN IS 34. She has one child and lives in a quiet Laguna neighborhood. S h e says she has a degree in classical language from UC Irvine. Both women expect to be arrested any day. "I'm afraid to break even the most minor traffic law," Jan said "I've been making boulevard stops like you Y101.ddn 't believe. "I'm even afraid to answer the telephone." LYVELY ADDED, "I don't like living in limbo. You think something might happen but you don't know when. I think something might happen but you don't kno,w wheTl I think or silly things like, gee, should l dress .today for getting busted?" Both women strongly de- nounce the current Laguna c om i c book pornography ar- rests and allege the authorities .are passing over real crime to supress "vic- timless" crime. They maintain their comic book is a valid expression of women's viewpoints. Lyvely and Jan are strongly com- mitted to the Women's Move- ment, including some of its more radical tenets. "I believe this more than I've every believed in 8.nything in my life," Lyvely declared. "I FEEL UKE I'm living in Nazi Gennany. But you can't push people back after they've experienced. sexual freedom , legal abortion and no ceosorsbip. You can't push them back." "We characterize ourselves as being feminist-humorists. We are the first feminist· humorists of the United states -absoluteJy the first, and we know this. We sell our comic books through the u n d e r g round distribution system because It happens to be the most efficient at the moment," Jan said. The books involved include the women's first publication, "Abortion Eve," a how·f.o.do-it book on legal abortion for women with problem pregnan- cM!s and "Pandora's Box," a No Shortage LIQUORS or WINES Fer Holldoy (11tffteti• ... Dot1tes,lc or l"'porte411 10°/o OFF 1, '" e-. COAST SUPER MARKET Wt Otfl¥ef' V.., PllrtftlMI WI',_ •t cMM a ""'° ~ 673·3510 3347 E.COAST HWY. ORONA.DEL MAR • i(~i· ~~ .. ,,. •• • • .. ,, .. •• • • An SS.57 !taving ••• that's the report of one of our Capital Club mcn1bcrs '"ho u sed her car~ to take four friends to dinner and the movies; a 10% discount at a member restaurant plus S 1 ~o'ff on each movie ticket. It adds up! And there arc liter• ally ht1ndrcds of otl1cr savings our mcmhel"S take allvantai;:c <>f, includitig financial services, e ntertainment!', cxcur!'ions, and even car rentals and hotel accomn1odations out of to,,·n. All you have to do is save SlOOO or more at \Vestcrn Federal. You nor oril)' earn the l1igl1est rate no'v availal,,c on insured savini,:s, you arc a n1cmbcr of our Capital Club and eligible for all the myriad bcnefitS the Club provid<.·s.join the Club ••• ' save money 'vhilc you !'ave n1oney. ' - • ' : j ' 'I \ • • 1-flaglt E,·a 11s,Jr., Pfcsid«.•11t ··Assrts <l\'Cr SJ;\) n1illio11 WESTERN FEDE SAVINGS ' :'\loin Office: Sixth & Hill, Downtown Los Ani:clcs/Bcvcrly Hills/Larchmont /Del Amo Financial Center/ La Habra Fashion Squarc/Northridge Fashion Center/Panorama City/City of Orani:c/Coroni1.,dcl Mar/ !!cal Beach/Inglewood/USC Office/Hollywood· Vermont CORONA DEL MAB 2744 E. Coast Hwy., Jim l'urk, Mnna~er,Tclcphonc: (714) 644·7255 ' FREE: "" A l1antlson1c full .. color,illus1ra1cd '"all ca lendar if )'Ou'll ju~I sttlf' by and ask ,l!i for one. \\1c simply u·an1 an opportunity to anS \\•er in per5on'any further quc,tions yo11 mi~ht have about ho\\' the Capital Club can "save \'Ou n1oncy '"l1ilc )'olfsa\•c money!' • 5%% current annual pa!!sbook rate • . 7Yz% four rear, S 1ooo·ccrtificatr (a )juhstantial intCic!~t p~nalty is required for early \\'ithdra\Ya l) ' ~Yednesday, DKtmbfr 2b, 197J UAIL f r'l\.U I fJ IUT A NIW n IA11UN -SA'VE · AT COSTA MESA DATSUN 2145 H1'U.,ll l~D. C,M. ' ~ '410 • Conserving Energy Burglar's Blessing OVER THE COUNTER NASO ll1tlng1 for Monday, December 24, 1973 Thf1ii qug111-'0orc11 Gt Mt ''-"'""' ~ 10YI ,, l,ri11tlt Pt! wpotlM llW ,ltlt H .. lo.i.! JOfl' 1•~ 10'>•,Mi"" ''" l.,_ J1'111 ll:W $t0" lio..I ldJOC .. hOfl 0•10o~I• 01 itW. ..... Mll'INI c;, 11 1~'~ A.ch 1tc11rH!d Dt•IM',, Dutoml'I u n~ Mi-lRv Tr 11\11 ll I~"""" ... 114$ ANI olftfl (NMM'I 0 11'1 1.IOt MObl ""' ,.._ tloio:~l'lllll I" ..-0 "' O'ltr·U•·\Eulml I•\• 111/t MODI H!'l'I 111.o 1l ISc°"' t11" (Ol,lllltr · OMl•tl IO E<Ofl l.•b SI\• •'-MOW& Cp 1•V. 11\11 StontL G NCfl otlwr '' Ol1fOS Ml.I< !Ji.It 1'0. Mort• lrl tti.. 11 kflpta H CIOM (Eat .. rl'l lfl ,ISO ti 11..., MOO,.. Sol ~loo Vllo S.a Wrld lllN.I Tiii OllOI•· fl N11<al •Vo t\o Mor.-tr 61'11 )Ila Sw IMr<lt 'l ·~· •, 't.. ttl!o nw '!Vi ?l 'h .-,. ''i< ]'Wt •"• l•l'J U\~ . "' I~ S''t 111.ro 21\lo. 21Vt :ltlW J\'I • ' . 1-6'• IS\41 ,,~ 1J"" )l'lo ,.., ,,,,.. 11~ ,.~. '!" 11 \lo l 1) 11\'> .,~. 11 19 II~ 11• I~ '• JIO I', ,, n +1 11 t~ '" ll.-111 .... r. i1 tM •·J.11ijij!!.)i By SYLVIA PORTER One spin-of1 of your efforl!S to save energy by turning off your indoor and outdoor lights or ,by cutting down your Christmas lighting decorations will be an upsurge i n burglaries to the highest level ever during this ho Ji d a y period. to 10 percent hi~her than the average. for oth e r months. And this holiday period is the WOfst week of the worst ~ ....,.-, month for b u r glarics. holdups and robberle>. AGAINST THIS grim Christmas-New Year's la the top week or the entire year for burglaries. 1n previous years, burglaries d u r i n g December have averaged 8 background comes 1973 - $1,000 • • m1n1mum (2-Year Certificate_s) 5 3'1% PASSBOOK Morris ~n<> California's Largest Loan and Thritt Service 3700 Newport llvd.,·Newport Beoch Coll George Wadman, Mgr. at 673-3700 Introducing the new coast 1 ederal • savings pla.ns. We'll pay you the highest interest in coast Federal's history with rates that range from 5X% to 7Y:i%. (hoo~c r1on1 five :-<1v1n~s p!.:ins, designed 10 give you 1he bcsl retur n for your savings. ' Highest guaranteed rates ~onual Annual Min. Min. r.iite yield balance term 7.SO% 7.79% S1 ,000 4 year cert. 6.75 6.98 1,000 2'/1 year cerl. 6.50 6.72 1,000 1 yea r cert. 5~75: 5.92 1.000 90..day bonus account 5.25' 5.39 no min. Passbook accou nt Federal regula1ions require a substantial interest penalty on all certific.lte account \Vithd r.lwals prior to nlatu ri ly. 1he Insiders Club Just open ,1n•accoun1 ;i t Co;is1 for S1 ,000. ilnd you can gel speci,1 1 IO\V "lnsidl!r" pnccs ·on con~umer good$ aind se rv1ccs .. from flutomobiles, appliil{'Ces, fu rniture to trJvcl, enlertainmcnl and l}Ome decord~g. for'a Sl ,000 account, you get free travele r's check~. money orders, notary service, no1e collections. Also free, for d minimum S2.500 bala nce, a personal checki ng accounl .ll J major b<ink. and a s;i fe deposil box. saturday hours Coast offic:e5 are open Sa1urdays, 9 a.m. 10 1 p.m. Weekdays, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays ,ill of ri ces except c!own1own Los Angeles .ire operi 10 6 p.m. COAST FEDERAL SAVINGS we want your money. And we11 do more for it. A•<f'h f'lo.•·t o .... K!Ulul'I ,.,.,n~ ... e Hunllnglon It.1th Olflcir: 91 Huntington Center t714) 897·1Q.47 • l.A. ~In OUite: 91h & H1U, li2l·13S 1 Convenient Qf1lt.t$ throughout C.t liiornl.i whM we're turning off lights everywhere, creating corners of darkness within our homes and on our streets. actually beckoning to criminals to come and get us. If you think it through, the logic of it is obvious. 111ese days and evenings, gifts are scattered throufi!'hout o u r homes many of them placed w!ie~ they can be seen from the street. This ts a time of year when it's normal to leave the house on impulse, to go visiting relatives and Crlends -aod not to be on guard against burglars. This is a period when week-long trios are commonolace and tht! completely darkened house is a giveaway. I REALIZE thi11 is hardly the most cheerful tale you could read on Christmas EvP.. But bur~lary Is am<ing the most costlv, pervasive and rapidly growing crimes in the U.S., accounting for nearly half of the serious crimes reported by the FBI. And our annual losses to burglars run into the hundreds of millions. Before you leave your home to pay any holiday visits to friends and relatives, double. check all doors and windows to be sure they are securely IO<'ked. Keen unused doors locked at all times. Under no circumstances, leave any doors unlocked, even for a few minutes. ALTHOUGH brighlly wrap- ped packages arranged under a Christmas tree bring smiles to all who enter your room, don't place them . where they can be easily seen from the street. Despite the energy shortage. if you are planning to be away from heme after nightfall, ar· rani?:e to keen several indoor, low-wattage lights burning at night. If you live in a particularly vulnerable loca· tion. keep an outside floodlight burning in the main entrance to your house. Leave a radio on near the front door as well. tr you are going away until after New Year's, and if you U.ve in a house, ask the police di!Partment to check your ""house while you are away. Give a friend or neighbo r your itinerary and .a key to your house. Inform the police about this, and also tell the J'>ll~e the exact dates of your departure and return. DON'T LEAVE all your win- dow shades down -a sure signal that you're not home. Don'( leave notes on your front door which indicate you are away. And, of course, make sure there will be no clutter of newspapers or milk bottles at anv door. Be wary of s u s picious callers who actually lay be casing your house or apart· ment for burglary possibilities. and be on guard against invitations which could be designed solely to ge,t you out of your home. Don 't assume that burglars operate only at night for the re are now as many daytim e burglaries as there are night· time burglaries. Disney's Mickey In School Special to the Dally Pilot NEW YORK -Walt Disney Productions New York, has signed Mickey Mouse and its other cartoon properties to a Ucensing agreement with a school supply manufacturer, the Oakland•based Das co Division of Pax·'Y,ell C:Orp. The announcement w a s made by Vince Jefferds, vice president-merchandise . a n d promotion, and Charles G. Davis, president of Dasco, who said the agreement includes national rights to use of the cartoon characters for scb>ol suooly products !!tarting in mid-1974. . Davis said that ioillallv •1all emphasis will be on Mickey Mouse because of his con- tinued strong appeal to young people. Other Di&:ey pro- perties may be featured in subsequent years. Half and Bolf ti-• no1 1Mh'°'IE"'r9v c s s11 Mo,,1t11 llllo H\.\S..,.,,,.M' rfl•ll ,...,.\IP, ,,.._,k IEQ"lt 1 01 1-'"-1~ Miii ,,~~ 1\o t.w. 5a11tr1 UP dollWI tt commit• fQll U.L I0"1 ii 1MiKt• Cp 2•YI 21'"1 Sllof,. •lor1; tflO OD /IOl ltl\An A 14t, Ul< Moll°" 11'1 lS 1tYii\il"""SOl'I "Pl'tt.Mll •Ul.lll ••<Y l" 1\t lJ\i Molor Cl s,~ • •• ~I ....... ,"."• lrfll~(llOl'I$, £1,lr"p 10~1 1 1\'t M~ Sn'l!ll'I .. C1 --F1lr LM •>1 s~ ~I O•t• ,... II• 5o Cll!IG' -.. r F•rlOl'I fl ,. ,, ,Mi..lh.... 10• ...... 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Grllm M• s•' S• P•ui Rtv •II '• 121• US Tri< L "'14 Coll • 11 u g~:r .. ~ ,. ~ I • Prli\ C•i ,. 1 .... UnlY FO• ,,II c;, Lt 11'~ 11t'o Hitcll Cl! t•'l 1••~ P .. y N !>v i21't 12~\119M Ho All St•~t 1(1 ' 12 H•""' EW I' •• .,, PitGi& w l!'t l!l1 v .... ct Sn_ •"00 ''" 1it, o>'• H .. m•I Br 1Jl.> 1•'> !>.I H&M IJ'• 1''• VII#! Oytt; " S ' , '' P'1rO Lw 9' > 9'~ y.,, Sii.Ck 8•f•d At o l'• l ... HI" QI u,,",..-Pinlirln 1•-t.111.YltlO" St llalrd r 11'1 IJ\o H'"r~r R ' >' P•aMr W I \, t'• \/Idea S~ e..•tr er 1;1 1~, H•"'' s.c (t) u 11 , S.litr Fe 2!'• 1t'• Hlwln Fl !~ ~ Pl .. nd M~ 2'~' 46 V•W• Bilawn L , .. 11/"o H11lu;i M• J'~ ,,, Proore' •·~ 9 ivo1 s,-, Bf!ly Mlt ))>• 36\~ H~-tel C i', 9Vo PSrf C~r ·-· 1~ W•r • B.,.. Rtl tlV. 211'1 H\glll' Co Pu111 Cdp 3 1S·16 ''"' W•\11 HG B•ii.ttt F llJ.O "~· .is 1• Qu.itkr en l? 1• •W••"'" 1 B•ylei' t•~ 10 Hi""'s EL l••-> 311•.,0uttn C• T'• 8'•Wttden !Mkln co ''• ,,, Haove• 10'-, 11'• R•tnr Cp s .. ti• Wtigl WI H 1 MIO , t 1, Rar<"' 11! U• lwe!l~g M IMnllJ L' l•I• 1s>-, "" S•• S'• Raymd 11\• ll-\o Ws1cst Pl llt~I Prd l'o )'lo H1alt C >O>• 10'• RllM P•c W\ 1t1 Gs ~U L•b ll 19 HySlfr C • Fd 8obb Co 11, t •• IM!> 111\111 9:t.o 9'• •11'• 11"' Wet1r l\< )"" ''"~ 1'111 lf\11 ., •• JJ<ij •l't " ,. 11 II l'I ••• "· ., 1~ • ll ll•• SU ''• 1• 31 "'. 11 !'I t I•'• 1 ... •• • 1 "11 .. '1'• ... Q • ll'. iJ•. •••• ''• S' • \J'• ,. .. •lo •.• • • 1'' l '• ,, , 6'. $~. 6'• ... ''• 11'·• 11'. ,,, 6'. •'• )I I )' 0 ~I I 10' I 10 .. .,. . .. IS'I It>. ,.,, ,.,, ~liami resident Tom Case arrived at the Department of h-totor Vehicles last week for a safety inspectio11 of his new means of transportation-a combination of Corvair and Harley Davidson motorcycle. The machine is powered by the original Corvair engine and bas an automatic transmission. Boq Orm 9~, 10•, lllCN Wal 18''; 19'• RecoQ EQ l \o 1""1Wlllam1 I Boo MtdS l1 ,, l"d\ Nutl 21 1, n R~ 'E+K 11'• n .. Wil,r\H J Bord Sor\\ 19•, l'O'• 1nrore ~ J .. '" Reli U"lv 11. 9•1,W1nn• !>tr 811<HI Pw 31 ll\> lfl•t• LaD 11'> 1J'> Rt• Pl•\ Ji,. 4\••Wont Pl<! e1oci. ()a 11'• Ult lnlfl (rp ui 69'> Rein &A lO•) lll>Wii.c Plt Blut(" s ,, ' ••• !11ltfC E" ,. • • •• Rov•t Ml 11\< u:i.. Wood Lin BMACp 11•. 19•, ln1ml G\ 1,i, U'o R.ud E• JS'o lS ... World Sv Boll EV"\ 1Jl,, II') 1.,1 Alum • ' S'• Roorl 01\ ll'• 11 lwr.9n1 w Boolll Hp \Jl, 1J\1 In B~W .. ''• S'• Roll•"' 8 n>.. IJ>,,,•om• (p B••MO I 11:\.o 1-l'" lnter\11 1 ...... Rovse Co '"' '""1"•110 Fri Bt1n•~ In /'o l\o '"'"\ (p 7'• '"'Rowe Fl'll • •'I-< Zion• Ull'I 11 18 • ,., i • tO'• ll« n .. 13•, 11 .. ,, •• IJ' • 1• .. , •.. J \o J·~ .. ' ., ' )I ••• 11\. ll 8roc:n G\ 11 1• 11 SO UUI 11•0 11 ... Brown Ar ?:ii. l'• IWY &Co 1 1>. OTC 10 ~10111 1l rti1'f> B11<•11t 611 7\o J .. mesll I '• I'• Bll<k•J l ' 0 J\.o Jasn Em ••• ''• Stot• Keeping Faith 8ur1111 SI 11•1 13~ Johl'I\ EF 10-0.. u•.-, R ... k 0 AO 8uUtr M 1111) 11 .... Joslyn M II~ n1. Oil s.111i. C..!W1 Sv 1S 1S~, Kao.er SI U i•• > Pem Liit c .... T•'il 11 n~ ""'"'' c 2 .. J ....,,......,, BuMh Clf\Ofl Ml i~ i0!1 IC• .... n C 10"-11'" !>.N'llOol LI• cap111rt s ~ Ktarn Tk •'!Ii s1, ""' E•r••'s C•rm1n J~i l \'• Ktl!J ~· t 10Y> Nil Pl Ct" CnM!g Al 11\li 11'1. 1Ce11 COf<n $... II"' IClaol Gld M (tl'I VIP!> 11\~ ll'to ICeufl Ei• 1111 14\o Pl'!\l'I 0!11.11 That's Recvee Sales Pitcli Ctnlr" 0 It',~ l'O ICtJ 0.1.. •"1 S Lib NII Litt CFS Cntl 11\:. 1]•,, Kt1t• Fb 1~o 10"'° (nnip Pt 1'•• I ICtY Cusl ••'-•~·· NASO ~olume lodl'f J,US.500; •C1.,1nc•• Ctwnc1 A HI'!< i1•, l(ey•I 11'11 tt•, 10'> Jtoe. declirM'i .0.; urtc:h .. "9f'd 1110e; IC'!.•I CMnl Ca l\1 ! ICMS lnCI •'• S\1 l18S. MERCED (AP) The energy crisis and p u b I i c uncertainty over gasoline sup- plies have battered two ~1er~ ed. Cowity recreational vehicle manufacturers to a standstill -and a third is on the ropes. 'lbe Wilderness T r a v e I Trailer plant in Merced an- nounced a temporary shut- down earl y in' December, id!· ing SS employes. THE AUTO MATE Manufacturing plant in nearby U>s Banos, open , only two months, closed its doors at about the same time. sending 60 employ~ home for a bleak holiday ""9on. . Wilderness plant Il@laler Errol Chaney said the shut· down, ordered by it!l parent company, Fleetwood Industries. was necessary to deplete inventories. A lag in sales brought on by the energy crisis caused the increased in- ventories, he explained . But the company remains optimistic, Chaney said. "Relatively speaking, we're still strong." 11fE PLANT averaged 30 to 35 on.its a week the last two years. Bill Wyrick, ro-owner ol Auto-~1ate, said his $2 million plant was forced to close after the product stopped selling almost a month ago. The com· pany makes pickup campers and travel trailers. · "\Ve've laid off all our peo- ple in hopes by January things will pick up and we can rehire tbem," he said. Chem (p ll'r1 \~\/) KlllJI" VI 11 111' Cno B• Ir Knua~ 10', ,,., 111 1ia1;, Kooe r Pr 13'> 14'> Cai11er1 anti Loaer1 cn"s Se' Krwoer 1•, 8'' U6 lSi ltUilm El 1\o'.I l GAINEllS co11ns Vt ll lS Latltd St JI ]A I HydronP•' LI J;o.+ 1~ Up 11.1 Cltl1 U A 2S 71 Lant~>I 6'"' 1 2 Momwllnka l.11 1"1+ '°' Up ll.l Cltrli Mt 171'• lJ\, Lill(f 12 13 J NII Pale"t ov 1'4+ , .... Up 10.1 Cle•epk 7'i a•, L1,.sn Pr 21'iJ 23 • Olv Eirttl 5.t;I l + VJ Up 20.0 Cit• Trlv u:i.o u~, Ll'Wte• C 11 1'1\l:t i Rouse COmp 11/o+ 1.,. UP 11.t Clow C•p 1:... I'll L••J Boy u~, IS\IJ •Corl' 81dg Mfl 1-.+ V. Up 11.2 '·•· ''' •• , " •• , 0 >> 1 lmocko l"c H + 1\IJ Up n.1 c;,;•g ni~ a~; L~~t "pl lo IOV. I E1rl1C•lll Ind 1 + V. Up U,J COC•( LI 101\0 11 L•llf•h H I , ... IHLlllCO(l'I Fnl 1\lo+ v. Up ll,J Comm Cl U i1 Lil (hmp s S''l 10 Microw1wS JI •~1+ VI Up U,S Cml Snr9 :IOV. J2 Limld Sir \(I 11 11 P1yl1Drug .Joi I + i1 Up 11.J Cw MIG$ It 1..,..Llf\CC 8d•I J'• •'•l!lOll Sll1l1 Corl! I,._+ ~UP 11.l CmwTI P 11~ 21 ... Lion CISi p 1 p ,113 0.kwOOO Hom S + " UP II.I Cplr Auto 11 ... ll'lt LOC:l•lt l'I''' .., •• I' An••tn Mitro 11'1+ "" UP to.CL c;p1rvh '"" 1(1!.> La"" SI•• 9.,_ 9<o 0 Oll"'Or l.ogtil 11 • I .... VII t,I WYRICK COl\'TENDS the Conl'I Fcl u ""' IS'.~ Longv FD it T.c:o B•ll II""-+ I Up t.s C"l P1pr ll'o ll 111 1111 11 Ao111 $(.OIS!'l'I IV.-+ \'1 UP •. I energy crisis is not as severe con•u w1 " l'O Loe"'' co ll'" .o 11 wr 11l'l1Wm .11 JYt + v. Up 1.1 Cotdls CCI lS • MOe•m• t\o 10\• 19 Alwood0c:l'I wt t \lt + 'llo Up. I.I as \\1ashington makes it out eo."1"' " ,.~.Mad G•• u 1t'11 l.OSE1ts to be CrO$i Co l'O .... 111• Mal RllJ ?\io l 1 (OM LlllfllOI IJ\11-l Off 11.t . CN!Ch A p .. M• Ma lckl 31"" 311i. 1 Chemei!Cp .... 11'h-> ,,. .. , u.• "To this day, I have not Curt NOii II I? ""'""' c ?S 1ft'nl 3 Brllund Mlftft ] -.... U.J. Qm!.11 Oil 4>11 S Matfl Fri II,_ 111• ' Mlftitr lflCl"SlS ·~ 'Iii Oii 1•.l had a problem getting gas, °'"' 1n11 •4\i< •S Mar• Tw 11 1•\·• s Mea. S.C• Tecy '~ ,. Ott 1:i.•· Dirt Or<a 4 '"" M.lry ICV ?IV, 211.,\ t Soland Eq11Uy 11'1-V• Oil U .11 and neither has anyone I've 0.11 c;,,. JA •,. JS _ Mc Cmc k J1•,, lllv. 1 u11t•tY Home 1 -'·"' Oii 11.1 ed .1 o.1a 100 '"' 9.,.JM(owt e '"" '"' 1 e11<•er111 ·'"° w.-~ °'' 10.1 talk to. But unll the govern· o.rt" Ml lO 21 IMc.M111n ' 9 9 Frfl!llJ 1u .05 11\.-lYJ otl 10.s t · th \ Ot<lt 01 6 •"" MC:Ot.l•y 9:\0. 10\ll 10 Bt~tr Brotllrs •Vi-\io Oii 10.J men gives e peop e some Dt•lb AA 41 •l \M11,ur 1111,., ~ 11 eurr11 11"1du,1r l""->rt ott 10.i kind o{ answer l doubt if 0t1r.1 1n11 J'" '"' MeOcm '""" 1ov. 11 Berkly a1o En 1\l!-"" Ott 10.0 ' 0.IUM c ""' l3'/o Meclllr" .. ~ §0 13 Oon HlrKl'tO<l'I n-.-.... Off 10.0 thp_re will be much of a oi..m '" 9\ll 10 Mtrc11n1 11v. 1J 1• "''lderl'I Mere 4V.-'" 011 10.0 ~""'\ Oi1m Hd 61/o llt fkrvv 7•1> 2S~1 JS UldMcGll .OSI 4'h--!It Off 10.9 market for our product,'' he 'Dlwrs s.t;I J l'~·Mt~ Fr n v, 1t i6 T•m~x1c 1.l6 ssv-. S'!I. Ott •.• Sa.id. oo°",,~, 'a.' " 1\11 ''"'IMr e• c 1s"" 11o;, 11 tiorll'I ~· .010 s -Vi ott '·' Sl'I j ll) Miller HS 10 Ii 11 kus om Ellm 2'h-1"' Olf '·I And a spokesman ror a third 1 Oo11.1lctl 14 1'"' Ml!hpar ··~~ •S\· \9 Toc:om ll'ltorp 2\'i-\lo Oii t. I company, Liners Manufac-II"' ____________________ ,. turlng Co. of Los Banos, said I MUT.U AL FUNDS I t h e gasoline shortage is definitely affecting th a t Ji..------------------.. business. LINERS, WI-IlCH assembles Winnebago i>ickup campers, has not had to Jay off any of its seven workers, but the spokesman said the !inn is "on the verge" of layoffs. Many retailers also say sales have been hurt by the en ergy crisis. New Y--FOl·)DlllY FUS tilCt' HAii gtll '·1' ·1 SOkll 1J.3' 13.J..I :,c:1~i .. :u!l'\,..'f., ~~ ~: 1;:~ 1t~ JoMiln n ... 11. s•a•D Git,: tK 1111 MuW.I Drl'I l.v U .17 lS.Ot kEYST DNI!: -'d Gw l.00 •·• Functl K ol'Olfd bTI Sp lncm 111 I 1' Cu\! 81 11.!it lt.4 M Inc J.J7 l.tt llw NASO lrtc: · 3rd Cent t:u 1o:n CUii B1 lt.lll U.12 M 1111 7.11 I.SI . E&E Mu 1.98 l.'11 CUH 81 1.7' l.M C!'l'I CAP 1.)4 t.1' E19le Gr • liO I ,, (\Al 1(1 •. n 1. lllC Ff:IB S.6J 6,, Mlttdi'f · EATON & . . Cust ICJ S.26 S. Sl:ld U" •.61 S.05 Otumlltr 1•. 1t1l MOWAllD· Cuti SI lt.:l'O II.CH SIECUll:ITY FDS: 11•1" Fd . t .1' '·" CuH !>J t.iJ IOA EQUll'I' J.11 l.M ~rt F JO.II II.II C111t S3 t.90 1. ll'IW$I S.11 t .lJ •Id ""' ln(me s.•7 •. SJ CUit !>-' J.SJ J. Vil•• F '·" t.ll AOvlwr •ii , SI ~it F 6.IJ 1.0 Apollo l.06 l .•S Sl!LIECTl!O ,OS: .t.e1111 Fd 1·10 1'1• !>le-Fd 11.1111.1~ Pol••i i.n J.u Am !>hr •.tt t.tt Ml,.. I" 1J11 u ''6 EOIE So 11.ll' 11.ll' K"ltkr S.tO 1.1' ~ Fd '·" 1.11 •lllture t'Dl ico Egret Gt 11.0I 11.Qol Xnkr 0 11'1 6.4'1 1, Spl SI!<' U.:IO 11.JO AGE Fd i'6 • H EUun Tn (rl C1l l.lldmrk. t.SS 1,U Sl"llllfl 10,lt 11.0I ,,lhtalll! 1o'u 11'11 JEmer11 1.IS ),It LO Ed•t 1J.41 l•.u S."l'l' F 11 . .SO 11.SO Al(ltll Fd 10· .. 11'u EMr11y 11.1• 11.u Ltn~ Fd •.ti I.t i SMAlllEHLD Gltf' : Ame"' F 1·17 is.1F1ir1d 1.llS 1.JllLEX GltDUf': Com11 l .11 J,61 Am &lrtll f·•s 10·50.Fm Burt l .Dlo 1.06 Co Lt'Clr 1•.01 IS .... E"trpr S.'6 S.tl ""' Ovrs (ii ~ii 'Fed RR1 •.IO .•. Grwl" S.OS S.U Flet Fd l." '·» Ne,vsprint Crisis Eases; Not Over ""' EQIY Ill Ill 'IDELITY Rtitcn 11 .•Sll.61 H•rtlr 7.41 1.11 AM EXf'ltlESS GltOU f': Liie '"'" 1.« I.II "'911 L t.11 1.1' 'UNOS· 8nd deO 1.90 •.13 L!rtc: Cap S ... •.Sii P.c:e Fd t.•r 1.01 f~~· t:~ i: ~~le 1:n 10:~ ~~~J~ 11 ... 11 ... 'Fn~IOi~:~::~! 'r.t::"i· Jl 1 lll Dtsl S,92 . . . Mulu•I U .tO 13. ll'IW$I 1.11 t.U Soc:k ·11 '33 E$$1!~ 1,n •.• LORD A ~•: Sn OHn 1.11 1.17 :::: ~~1~ c~: r~: f:~rst ]~:~T n:~ ~.::''J,,, ;:;; ;:: tt~d ,J:l>s~·OI Am '""'' • '1 , 92 Puri!" 9.01 t .8S Bna llell 9.21 IO.ce C111 s.tir s.n '·"' ,.,,, Mui 1'11 , . ., Stiern F l.ll J,y Luthern 9.•S 10.33 Inv •.1910.CH AmNt Gr til til Treflel 10.Dl11.19~ullWI In 9.2310.10 Tr$1 I.I!' I.JS ANCMDR t<INANCl,,L MASS CD: V1ntur ,,,1 1.11 GltOU,. PROGR,,MS: Freem J,tt l ,.U !>miln B •.ll t.ll C•Pl•I . JlJ J IG Fi" Oyl'I (II (II lnclo F I.SO t.21 SB l&Gr •.'HI •.'6 NEW YORK (AP ) -The severe newsprint shortages of a few months ago appear to have eased, but industry ex- ecutives and publishing of· ficials s8y many newspapers across the country face con· tinuing supply problems. The picture is reported to have impro ve d noticeably since the settlement of some three-month strikes permitted resumption of full-scale opera· lion at Canadian newsprint mills, where United States papers get more than 70 per· cent of their newsprint. "THE srn.JA.TlON has im- proved a great deal since October," said a spokes~an for the Newsprint Information C.Ommittee, which represents C'l.nRdian mills. "Mnny OJi p!'r5 in bad straits six weeks ago are in J?:ood shape now." in advertising, "newsprint will be coming out of your ears," said the Newsprint Informa- tion Committee spokesman. However, if the economy doesn 't cool, wid es pread shortages of newsprint may recur because of increased de· 1 mand and the time lag in getting planned new pro- duction facilitie s built. I Production of C a n a d i a n new sprint is nearly back to prestrike levels, the Canadian Pulp and Paper Institute said. During Nove mb er pro- duction totalled 784.000 tons, compared to 584 .000 tons in September. the group said. In March and May, production of Canadian mills reached 812,000 tons. Fncl In" 6•1 1'J1 Fi" Incl (ti CO Mill F 10.61 11.M So Cit'"F Ill (I) G.-...111 .. ,. 1':19 Fin IM Iii to SS ,NCL: s-..it 1 .. ,, 6.l1 •-" lncom 6tS 1'62 Vtnl Ii) 10 MIT 10.J..I 11.:JD Sw t"v G S.16 S.SI Ytl'llur 7'31 S:o1 hlFd Ya 9.80 10.11 MIG 11.'311.tsSovr 11'1 t0.01 11.(IJ W ' ,, ,,· •• '' '' FlllST MIO n.St l),1l !>jMclrl 3 ... l.lt A'1~on. 3·Jj • INVESTOllS: MFO 11.1111.fl S&P l"O S.61 s.•1 AUC!fx F s·tl 6.ii Olit Fd •.ti S.17 MCO 0 .IJ 14.01 STATE •ND Git": AXIE . . cnn Fd 6.11 1.'3 !es I,, l.U l.U COm Fd •.11 •.tO "°UGMTDN· lncom 1.M 1.V INr 1.11 1.11 OhNtll • ... S.U Fllf'd ,, il• •tl Stock F J ,?O 7.19 ld ""' Ill U) Prog" 1.2• 4.U Ful'ICI 11 61' 1'.u ht Mulll I.SS I.SS r Fd Ill (Z) St Fr Gr (II lrl Sfoc:k J11 s'66 Flm 8.r 7.'2 1.t'l MSB F4 12 .•2 \l.'2 St Fr Int Cr ) Ill ,,. Sci l .11 i16 l'OltUM OltOU,: MU Bl>G t .M t.•1 !>lale !>Ir ]9.1S 40.00 lll.C Giii 911 10'•1 100 Fl'ld Crl Crl MIF Fd 1.31 J.91 STEADMAN '°'' 8A1Ko11 Iii 1il 101 Fnd Ill 111 IF Gra 3.IS I.OS Ml Ind J.U 1.1' ll1yroc •. 1• .... Colum 111 11) uOm Gt l ,Jt .... A.UO Fd 1.07 1,01 hyrk gr S ... •.SI lS F\ll'ICI UJ Ul ..Om f11 l.il t.lt ll'IWll l.l'O 1.20 llettn HI 1 a6 I 4f, Fdn Gr l.91 4.2'1Mul !>h" 1'.13 14.r.J Oc:••" 1.6' .... BucOll t:.o t:tO FOUNDEllS Mull Tr$ 111 fl) STEIN ,r!OE FOS: hrk1hr UJ Crl G•OU': Nat llOOll •.ot •.06 811111( lt.O'J l•.O'J BoncHI" 4.JS .... Grwth It! lr) NAT SIC l'OS: l;lplll I.ts l .ltS Bos! Fdfl t.Jl t.lt lncom Ct) CJI S..!lnc ,,Sii l.Jl Stoel>. U.311).JI Bl"OWll 1.13 l.OI F MIWll (l) 10 Bond Sr •.U S.Dlo SIS Glt0U": 8tl'lhm t SI t,il F Spec:U {II 11 Olvldl'I l .J• J.5' G""th S.SS 6.0I CAL\llN..l'UNDS ' F011rsq F t.3' l.Jt Prtl St~ S.I• •-11 lncom 7.IO I.SJ Bull Fd 11.•1 1i.50 FltANKLIM lllCO!'l'I •.l6 4.11 Smmlt I.ts I.JI Cdn Fd 20.4S 12.«l OROU,: S!otk !>r 6.16 t.'1 Tac""'I S.IS t.•1 Dov Sllr 3.1• 3.•S ONTC •.st 1.11 G""ll'l S.!• •.11 SlirvtJ F t.1' t.Sl H1twd •.OS t.91 Gwl" Sr •.3i 6.9f,NIW ENO L,: Svncro G S.•S J.tl HY Ytl'I •. IS 10.'9 Fr lncm 1.1' 1.tll fqultW 1•.1211.IJ T1 ... pl G Ill Ill CG Ful'ICI 1.16 t.•1 US Qy 5 t.IS 10.11 G""tfl t ,ll 10.0I Tr111 c .. p 1 ... I. 11 (IP Trll'I t.St 1<1.'8 Ul!lllle •.OI • ... Sidi 1'.10 U.'3 ftaYI IEq •.7110,.,. (Hit S"\ 13,10 U.32 Res C•P •.69 $, 1" NEA. Ml l .JJ l.lG ,_..._. M I0.•• 10 .... (lj,,NNING R) Eq_ty J.13 4.ll' 1 Neu Cel'll 4,38 1.ll IOI" CG J .•• J.13 ,UNOS: Fl>.I L!Eq tr) (1) Neuwlll 1.c.8 1 ... 20\1\ Cl t.OI •.•7 81lr>Cd t ... 10.M Fd Mt dp 1.71 I.II Ntwlo11 11.0113.14 Unlt!td h) fl) Bl'ICI Fd 1.80 9,6] l'UNOS tNC, Nw P.rl 1J.SI 14.IO Vnllund •. ll t.t'l: Com SI" 1.71 l.JJ GROU,: · New Wld C1l (1) UNION SIEllVICE EQIY Or 1.~ 1.1s Comm \ll l•J Hlt,,llS 11.11 H.13 OllOU'! IQ '"' f<tlJ Pr 1.13 J,(l't lm1>1c (l) I• Nett lvtr 11 ) CJ) 8rG S '" 11.01 13.lt Fnd ""' 1.1S I.fl Indus Ir Ul UJ I.It 1.01 N•tJ l"v •.• , 1.tO Grwlll •.•3 l ,M Pilot (!l (tl Ht I Id 11.06 IJ.IM U" C•pt 1.41 I.II lllC9nl 6.!7 1.11 Gat•wY S .... S,'° WU! lS.ll l~JI Whtlwt[ 11.'8 11.!.S SOtd 1.10 1.ltt GE >S P hi (rl OP .. liNHM 'O: UNITliO FU NOS: THE INSTITUTE said ship-Ventur 1.st 1.1' Gan Sec lll Ul ~ ,,.... '·" I0.2t ,,(CUm •.JI t.tl d, · CN,,SIE ·Giii FAm 3.'M '·JO 0o Fnd 6.JI 6.M BM Fd 1.1l l.oll ments of Cana 1an newsnr1nt 1osTON: Grt" 1nc1 11.•1 11.•t oo TfN s.11 ... Cont II" •·" •.st are nearly •·ck lo sprina FnO Bos 1.11 1.'5 G"'rd 11.1• 11.11 TC Sit '·°' •·• Cont '"' 1.ti '·" uo " Fror1 (p l,4t •.• I MA.MILTON Gltf': P1rart1t t.1l 6,11 1-leveJS. And a sookesman for ShTr e' '·" 1.s1! Fund u1 t•l P•vt Rtv •·" 1.11 11.•1 nn..oo • 5'1t:cl ~.fl 1.•11 G.....-m Ill Ill f>gK~ F 1.lt •. ,. Sd""' •. oo 6.SI the American Paper Institute ciwm Fd •.1, 10.00 tncorn 111 111 PtM 1111 1.tJ 1111 vil"Od l.11 s.11 'd I' h • . t . I CNA MNO •DS: 1H•Mwtl ........ P9M Sq 6.5' 6.S6 U!>AA Cl I.JO I.JO sa1 pub 1s ers 1nven or1es. l.lllfly •.SJ •.f,I H ... 1 Lv 1.•1 1.11 P1111• Fd s 6S '-1t us c;,,~s 10 (JI d I ed bee f 'JJ MIMI J tt J W' Hfdblo9 •It 1 SJ "\LGlllM G": USllPa •UMOS: epet ause o m1 Sc"us "' 1:os 1:11 .~ s:11 : .. c .. 1.r 1.'1 s.11 Acie• ,.. •.n •.ii Strl.kes have begun to in· SCl'lu so •.a 1.•,~rllge c11 111 Inc°"' 1.ll '·" a.al FNI 1.:tt t.t1 -• · TMfl ;. 1.01 l.1l1Hlx-Mt 0 1 Ill Pl19rm •.loO I.JI Com SI\ 10.lt 11.22 crease again. COLONIAL lmtorl Cp 11) (I I PflW SI t.SI t.SI YALUI' INI: "°'' •UNO!: 1•"'11 Gr \1) UJ Pl" Ttt 1.31 ••• Y•I Lnt •.67 S.IJ "Nobody is goin~ out of ,.,, ... , 1 ... ,,,, Inc '°"'"' I ... 11.01 .. IONEl!lt ,D: Y•I 11'1( l.tl I.JS bll'lness. but lhe Sl 'Juat'>on Is E1111nv 1.11 1.m ll'ICI F,,m u i r11 ~on E" ••.u t,.n L.., Gtl'I •"II s.12 F111'111 t.1110 ... jlnlitgon CU (r) ..,On Fd 10.tl I 0C \Iii $pe 1.SO i.1• "Mickey will enter our na· tlon's school right after Labor Day 1974 via the covers of a lull school supply line In· eluding wirebound composition hooks. notet-oo]t•. hlnden and binder paper." Davis S81ki. "For the occasion, we will also produce a special line n! ootehook 'Oaner to he catled Mouse paper. Every sheet will tie imprinled with a tw(l-(olor replica of Mickey Mouse In the bottom right hand comer -a first for lhe school supply industry." But Nicholas Nocella of the American Newspaper Pub· lishers A.o;socintion's Ne"·s- print division S'.lid ~ si~hle number of papers still were having to conserve on the paper product through such measures as omitting Satur- day editions or restricting use of special features and col· wnns. 1 •1Thcy are looking for new c11pacU.y tn the future." h o said . "The-situation ls still tight." Stl'JJ ti' nht ." 5a'1d ~eodore Ser-Grwltl S XI S 1' Ill 111 ... u 11.,1 14.IO Pioftr II l.t1 t.U VA~I' ~ 111 lncom t.JJ 10:1.·11\Vitf'll G '·•1 1.u Pllfll'WI .... '·" U.NOl,r!S: rill. ex-uti've director of the vt11111r 1.s• 1.111111~ co A 11.S6 ll.1J P•'•' GAo0,.1s. 11. 1" ... '' •.SJ 1.u '"" Co!Urtl G 11 ,,111.si \flv G11•4 •.lJ .. lJ G ICli It W ,,'' VS Ctm •·•' J.:tt NAlional Newsor int Associ11-COMMONWLfN 11'1v 111(!1c t.11 " ...,"' 1t. 1. s.-1 t.CH '''° 1'RUlT: ll'lv 8o!i 9 ... 10 ... Nw Er• 11?01), Y"4ftl" 1.7' •.M tion. which represents nearly A" e 1,1)4 l.u11NYlST Nw Hor '·"' . v::rc1 1 10 1.l'O ( 1.:16 1 ''COUNSEL Pro Fd Oj (1 Vtn 19'° U) tU 7,000 p:ioers. CortlP or !·~ .: .. CtP•rn •6 ... 1.n ~"4dl0 •,· ,• j· v ... 114 1 1.11 1.ss The Id I the 't CO!flfl Bd 'I "I Cloll I~ I.SCI t.t• ..... vd I ,, ,,. \11"1111 Gt I.fl ... JITOUP sa n oa. COlnll Fd II 11 Caplt Sl'I ),Ot S.51 ""'° 51P (I) \I) W1ll~J' UI tn few Weoks it hart "f'Cfi'lv .. ,. Corictd 1.19 '·"IHYl!St.tGllOU,; ',H™.•,M W•ll'I u lll.7J1•.n coni (nw t,8110.i1 10!> Gt" f.11 ... ..-N : . Wtll'lll ·--10.IS1Cl.ll .. Iv one or two cal1111 from Cntl" tw l,'HI S.•t 10$" HO !.10 S.S. eon-10.lD II.QI WILLINGTON ... CorlMI 111 1',11 J.IH 10$Pr .Sol ).M EQUl!y !·6) .. 111 OltOU,: FOR THE MONTHS ahead, c:Jl)erts say. the supoly situa8 lion depends largely on what happens to the U.S. economy. lf there h a sharp downlum ln business activity in 19?4 with an accompanying drop paneMI !tecklnP. nPW•'lrlnt. Colllry c \II Ill Ml.llw•t .I~ •,Sl Cleo I .• I ••.11 Eilp!W ll.tJ)0.11 (wt! Olli . .0 l'° Stoti. II.A• 11.'Ht Grwtti •.•r 10.l' l•tsl 7.tl .... Exoerts say the 1uonl11 [ 01,, s.11 '·" se1it<1 •t• •'Ht •M "'° 1.1~ Mor011 10.1211" '' 'tuatlon h•s 1-0 r 0 v e ,i u,, s.oz ..• "l'1it ,..., 1.10 1.n Ill• •-to •·• rruu 1o.o. 10." . ••• ,,,09 UI (I) l"""-1' 4,U l.Olo 'ftsl• , t.tl .... Wtt\IJ U.S$11'2 rt. 11 1 In !he West while o LAWAAI s 11 v..,111 •.D tt.1~ wontn •tt '°" pa IC\ ar y • G,riOU,! Otwlh l.OJ •.•S "'""' , s.i. J. WUll'lll .:°' n:c paoers in the NortheAst art' @:f!' , Z:!l ;:~ ~~f"u1 t il ·~ t:r e, 1J! .:r V:~r,,. tU ti: getting 1?nough to publish bul 0tn1 r •s> •.ts t111 "' 1,,.,,•)ttl"• t.06 t. w!fll 0t I· .. ,:~ not el\01,gh lo bul'ld ''" , .•. Ot\1"9fl 'l '' "·" ''"' ''"' 11,02 u ., 00111 •os: WI"'"' .H s ~ I' Orte! Cp ... •.it lv1 Flil'ICI •. M 6 M !l'llf Inv lr t Ill lietlft t , .. tl..S Venl.rl-. Dod<aC• "CIO 1• 00 p G .. rn •• , • '° l'illl•llC I• •• 1' • t•.0i•04irf>d .,_, 0rtHI £ It~ It! ~ f-11 ltl •• {Nt'I ' I 10: I llNV~lllllle • 11 u~u.'f ..,tl.or For the Record Births """ Mr. •nd MrL l••"' l &nNll. 227'1 ll:umbte. El Toro. o!rt. Mr. W Mtt.. M1r•r1 C•p.111•, 1'332 ,yr L•M, HuntlllOIOll ltilCll, o1rt Mr. •nd Mr1. JOlln Miiier, SlQS ll:lnet ,t,yenue, NtwPOl'T IHtll, gh1 Mr. •nd Mn. lruc:• a.ls, ffl2 Lourdfl, ~ lffch, glrl, Mr. Mid Mrs. Gregory llroc:lcw1y, 236'.C N«M ,t,.,_, COii• M111, ''" °""'""' Mr. •nd Mrs. JOl\!I Romm. 290' Clubl'lol.IM ltad, CDSll MHI, girl. Mr. •!'Id Mr•. VHIUS s111w. 2m Richmond W•r, Cost• Mew, boy. Mr. Mid Mrt.. M.rll Fr•nd .. n, 21~'h 11:11"'*' Slffff, Co.le MH9, girl. Mr. •nd Mr$. Tlloml• Cl1ncv. 1202 '•mell Pl•ce. Cosl• Mew, blw. Mr. •nd Mrs. St•" Fleld, l40'.I Soulh G1rMM"1", S•nl• ""'' olrl. Mr, Mid Mrs. Rlchlrd C1rllon, 14922 Sltnf'I Stred, Wntmlmttr, girl. -· Mr. Mid Mrs. W1vne M•llAl1•11, 9422 ICl'9PPt DrlY•, Huntington l1ech, "'· Mr. end Mrs. Cr11g Trecy, m WHI WlllOl'I. CO.II Mau, bo'f, Mr. end Mf'S. O•vkl Gl.,,,, ms Fren- ds.co DrfW, Newport leech, olrl. Mr. •!Id Mrt.. JOllf Segel, 17195 Cldar Trw L•M, lfYlllt, girl. Mr. Mid Mn. Gerv Nedffu, t•D :n11. s1,..1, co.ti MtM. girt. Otlier Deatlis ANKARA, Turkey t(AP) - lsmet Inoou, 89, who played a major rol e in Turkey's modern hlstory and was an associate of Kemal Ataturk,( founder of the Turki s h republi c, died Tuesday. He founded the Republican People's party and served as foreign minister, p r i m e minister and president. CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP) - Blanche GIUlgan, 78, the mother of Ohio Gov. John J. Gilligan, died Tuesday in a Cincinnati nursing h o m e where she had been confined for six years. HANOVER, N.H. (UPI) - May P.K. Sachs, 91, a poel. playwright and author, died at her home Monday after a long illness. TOURNUS, France (UPI) - Aviation pioneer and automobil e builder Gabriel Volslo, 93, died Tuesday at his home near here, friends said today. The Vosin biplane new an officially recorded kilometer in 1908. Death NotW,es ......... ~ Effubetfl J-De-A;e 11: rHI· G dent of Hunt!""'°" a..dl. 011t ot dntll. f O.Cembw 25, t973. SurYl¥ed bV l'lusblnd, R•Ymondl two tl1Mn. Florene• H•~r. l, of Wetaltr, Wisconsin; end Mrl. Philip ,,. Smith, of llec:INrMll, Okl1homa. Services ~ltlfll 11 Smlllls Mortuary. L•ASH H11ll 1111~ l ffsh, llf'IOYld motlt- er of H•l\I Merl• Croft. Fr•nc11 E'*" llM klfl'tmll, CarrlM Hy•lt 11111 V1ughn Frtdrldc J•IMSJ 1f11W of EU11 Moore •nd Ewnne HanlOl'I. Also S1JrvfYl'd Irr' 12 ~lldren Ind I gt'9111fr•n0cllll· df911, StT'Vket,. Thundrf, 1 PM. Chvn:h of JHUS Christ of U~r DIV S•fr1t1. 801 Dover Or., Newport Beech. 01- NC't.d by F!ll"est l.ewr1 Cyprns. FDAlf Llwn Morf\llry. •EGAN ke!Mf'Gl'I CheYn 11:.,;ian. Aoe one Vtlr, of mo W•rbl1r AYe.. Fountain V1llev. 01'9 of OHlll, Dlc1mti.r 21 , 1973. Sur- YIYM by p.9r.nfs, Mr. •nd Mr1. Rkh•rd lt1VM'I 1lsftt', L11,1rl Rtlll"· Gr•.,.sl6e _,,1c;... Thllrsdl y, 11 AM. Good Sl'llPl'llrd C.,netery, H1,111Unvton Beech. OlrKllll by Pnll F.mlty Colonl1I Funeral """'· SLEVIN JOlt'Oh F. Slnln. R1sldtnt of Legu"' NIOll'tl; deft of dnlll, Otcemblr 27, 1tn. !.urYIY'ld bV wUe. Irene 8 . Sl*1jn; ..,.,, J. Rlch1rd SleYin; d1ughlff, M1r1•,._ 111 SleYlr1, 111 of Leg11n• Nlgllt'I; brother, Jll'l'IK SltYlr11 two 111t1r1. Mrs. Mirr Slevlr1 kulll 11111 M". M1rger•I He•!v, 811 of NIW Yort. ROl•l"f" Tl'lundey, 7:.10 PM. Miu of lhe lfesurr«tlori, Frld1y, 10 AM. both •I Sr. Call'lerl11t of Sf.nnl C•lhollc Cllun:h, Lagun1 B••ch. lnllll'mtnt. AKtn$IOl'I Citmetery. OlrKled b'( McCormick LIQuna leech Moftu•rr WINGER Delle M•V Wlfl\ltr. AQe 82, 01 n Akl9nlf00d, S.91 Buch. 01re ol de1111, Decemblf' 23, 1'13. Sur.!wcl bV slsltr, Nora L .S.ndme~r, of St•I Beecll; brother, Alfr.O W. Yrn!sch, 1111110!1. SerYlces, ,_...,, Wl'dr>rs.d1v. 11 AM. Be!l ll'OMlwlV Ci'lap@I, wltll lfrY. ll:ussell CllV 111d the Retlet:ah Lodge, offltl•llng. 111mmen1, H1rbor lfe11 Memorl•I P~rk. 1111 B~IY Mortv.try, Oirector1. Wednesday, Decen1ber 26, 1973 Comic .Publishers Fear Arrests By JACK CHAPPELL Of 1111 Dtllw 'llot 111" cleaned·up tllle for subject going lo offend lots of people, vlOlll 1hal isn't ~ lire," Jan ~Ith that. But It atlll Involves matter formerly in another because you cannot write said. • • em'*'yes talking. You can't Two Laguna Beach women comic.' about menslrual P"flodl In an "II 'they consider 11 print the n11mher of comic who are key s 0 u t b e r n "WE~E BEEN reviewed obvious way without doing pomographlc, that's th e l t books that art printed without Cali£ornia publishers of u11· throughout the country ln that," Jan si.ld. ~rsonal opinion," she added . somebody blowing the horn," derground comic books try to various publications. We've. ulT DIDN'T occur to us Gettlng·started in the comic ~ID aald. relax in !heir Art Colony been !isled in among other Jhat we'd he in !rouble. I've book pub)ishin~ field ls simple PlkN'l'ID IN 2G 0001 Is th homes and talk on how they th. •s • g •--never d·-·-·••Ing Illegal the women said. ·~ • 0 ' e feel about their business to-mgs, ynergy ma azu~ """"' ..,lJ'"'' ~press nm costs $1.400. They d which ls a puhlicaUon put out knowingly In my Ille. I cer-THEY SAID !hey decided are aold lor 10 ce!lts per copy ay. by the San Francisco library lai!llY didn't anilclpale having 10 do ii, hought up the• In 1,000 !Oil to a Los Angeles "I've become as paranoid ~~ necessary art supplies and distributor. That distributor as a dope dealer,'' Jan ad· worked ror 3 months ere a Ung then resells to an o t b e r milled. 'I think of •Uly Cfaittgs like, •hould the contenl of !heir first book. ~iltlibutor who parcels the "I'm concerned about my I d d f i r. d~' co-•-out to 1he -Jail slores. res• to Gfl or geU ng .,,uste T Two ''above ground" prlnl-"~ " children," Lyvely said. "It ers ane used, one in Los An-'Ibey retail for 50 cents. distresses m.e that I'm put ~~ .............. in the position where I mwil geles and one in Riverside Money from the sale or the as a resouree publication for J..aal problems over this," she ly f. t ml h s •--n put back elaborately tell my kids what reference libraries. '"b coun · ll"S co e 8 ua: "'' Te._..... to do if the cops C{)me and said. "It's a bit hard to find a into the business to fmaDce N H 9 shove a seareh warrant under "With ~AborUon Eve' we "Adult book stores won't printer who will print material the other two books. Pan· e.., ome. the door." ~~~ l:Y:1 ar~~rg:~ carry Wlderground comics. that might be considered ob-=·sp~~~~ just recently James Earl Ray, assas· . They . make fun. They're jectionable by some people . t f I ·1 . ht COMIC BOOKS ar""en'( so comics. I'm sure its existed because m05t printers print Lyvely and Jan went un· sina or o c VI ng s funny for the two women any before. I'm sure the armed parodies on sex and violence. for churches. the Lions Club derground only after the ar-leader-Martin Luther l more since their book is now forces during World War JI They put it down. U you really and superrnarkets and others . rest of Fahrenheit 451 book King, may serve his 99~ alleged by the Orange County di~ things like that. We've read those with an open mind, who woold put pressure on store owners Gordon and year sentence in a fed·! District Attorney's Office to gotten a lot of very good en· I think you'll fmd they d~ike the printers to stop that kind. Evelyn Wilson in Laguna eral maximum security be pornographic. couragement from t h a t , ' ' Violence or try to make fun of activity. Beach recently after selling prison, becau se of pos· I Two L aguna Beach Lyvely said. of pornography. By having so "If they run it at midnight, some underground comics to sible retaliatory moves Nixon, McGovern • Marry ! I I • CHES~RFIJ!;l.D, IU. (AJ') • -Contrary to the old ax!~ that "never the twain sifll meet" Nixon and PrfcGovern spent Chrislmu totiether. I It wasn''t a put-on, because It Involved Jooeph M. Nixon. 26, and Brenda Sue Huls McGovem1 26, who were married la!t week. It was the second marriage Ice both. Both say they have been the subject ~ oom• good- natured Joahlnl ahoul their names. But even though Brenda McGovern is now a Nixon, there still is a McGovern in the family: Brenda's '}year· old daughler. Angela, bf her previous marriage. , They spent lhe holiday' at the Nixon famil y home in this commwtlty about 50 miles north ol St. Louis. merchants have been arrested "We knew that we -,vere much violence \t becomes ob-they can sometimes get away a police detective. against h~. on pornography charges forl ---------'-~------.:...------'------"--'---'------------"--·---------------- selling underground comics. The District Attorney's in· vestigators apparently want to find the publishers and are searching for them. JAN AND LYVELY readily agreed to an interview with the Daily Pilot although these are not their real names. They have published three comic books. They are con- vinced the comics aren't pornography although they ad- mit one comic was glven a title explicit to the female anatomy "to get some at- tention." Lyvely is 42 and has two children. She lives in a Laguna house with an ocean view. She says she was educated in an exclusive Eastern girls college and describes herseif as "a pillar of the com· munity." JAN JS 3'1. She has one child and lives in a quiet Laguna neighborhood . She says she has a degree in classical language from UC Irvine. Both women expect lo be arrested any day. "I'm afraid to break even the most minor traffic law," Jan said "I've been making bouleva rd · stops like you \\-OOldn't believe. ''I'm even afraid to answer the telephone." L VVEL Y ADDED, "I don't like living in limbo. You think something might happen but you don't know when. r th.ink something might happen but you don't ~w w~ I think of silly things like, gee, shoulft I dress today for getting busted?" Both women strongly de- nounce the current Laguna c o m i c book pornography ar- rests and allege the authorities .are passing over real crime to supress "vic- timless" crime. Th ey maintain their comic book is a valid expression of women's viewpoints. Lyvely and Jan are strongly com· mitted to the Women's A-tove- rnent, including some of its more radical tenets. "I believe this more than I've every believed in anything in my life," Lyvely declared. "I FEEL UKE I'm living in Nazi Germany. But you can't push people back after they've experienced sexual freedom , legal abortion and no censorship. Yoo can't push them back." An $8,57 savin~ ••. that's the report of one of our Capital C lub members '''ho used her car~ to take four friends to dinner I j \ .• ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY C7 E. 171b St., C..la Mesa "We characterize ourselves as being feminist-humorists. We are the first feminist· humorists of the United States -absol utely the first , and we know this. We sell our comic books through the u n d e r g round distribution system beca~ It happens to be the most efficient at tht. moment," Jan said. and the movies: a 10% discount at a member restaurant plus • • I '" \ " . ' • "' 4111 • BAL tz.BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corolla del Illar 613-9450 Costa Mesa 6"-Z4U • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY UI Broadway, C.Osla Ttlesa UW433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17111 Beach Blvd. lllmllngton Beach 841-7711 U4 Redondo Ave . IAq Beach Zl34.Js.1145 • Ht<:ORl\DCK LAGUN~ BEACH MORTUARY l'IW LqUI Canyon Rd. 4Jl.Ml5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK ee.e&ery ft1ortuary Chapel • PldOe View Drlve New"" leedl, CaWornla ~ • PDICFAMILY COLONIAL roNERAL HOMS 9-A .. , • '•brter ••s • ~MOllTU.UY "7 -SI. Bas'' lw ludl "- The books involved include the women's first publication . "Abortion Eve," a how· to-do-it book on }egal abortion for women with problem pregnan· cies and "Pandora's Box," a No Shortage LIQUORS or WINES For Holldoy E11t.l'fflhtl .. Dorne1tlc or l11tpol'MCI 10°/o OFF ,, the c .... COAST SUPER MARKET WI Dllllrer YMH' ,llfch111r w ... r. •1 c"91 ., row p11111t 673·3510 UO E.COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR $1 off on each movie ticket. It adds up! Ancl there are liter" ally hundreds of other savings Our memhers take advancai:c of, includiiiJ;:: fin ancial services, entertainments, cxc:ur!iions, a nd C\'cn car rc1ttals ""'' hotel accommodationii; ()Ul of to,,·n, All you have to do is ~ave S 1000 or more a t \\1estern Federal, \'ou not only earn the hi1thcst rate OO\v available on insured savings1 you arc a ntembcrof our Capital Club and e liJtiblc for all the myriad benefits the Club provides.Join the Club,,, l save mo ney '''h ilc you save nt oncy. • • Huglt E,·a11s, Jr,, Prcsidc11t ··Assets ,,,·er sJ;l' ntillio11 WESTERN FEDE ··SAVINGS ;\loin Office: Sixth & Hill,•Downtown Los.Ani:clcs/Bcvcrl): HillslLarchriionC/Dcl Amo Flhandal Center/ La Habra Fashion Squarc/Northridi:e Fa•hion Center/Panorama C ity /City of <;>range/Corona dcl ,Mar/ $cal Bcach/lnglcwooJ /USC Office/Hollywood· Vermont CORONA DEL MAB 2744 E. Coast Hwy., Jim Park , Managcr,Tclephone1 (7 f4) 644·7 Z55 • FREE: A l1an<.lsontc (ull,.color,illus1ratcd \Ya ll ca le n<.l:ir i( you'll j us1 sto"6 by and ask \1!$ for one. \Ve simply want an opportunity to anS\\.·cr in pcr!io n any further qucstionl'I )'Ou nt ijthl ha,•e nbout ho'v the Capital Club can "sa\'c yo11 n•oncy ,,·hilc you s~vc money!• ' • • 5%% current annu~ passbook rate 7¥2% lour year, 5ICl0l1'certifieatc (a sull!iitantial in1t-rcl'lt pcn3lty is required for early '''i thdra\val) . . . • • ' llAIL1 l"f\...UI ff IUT A NIW 7J DATSUN ... SA'YE AT COSTA MESA DATSUN Zl4S Hl\IJ?ft ll.'ID. C,M, l40 '41d • Conserving Energy O VER T HE COUNTER NASO Ll1tln91 for Mond1y, De<ombor 24, 1973 • Burglar's Blessing ---- MINIATu•s• t CIVIi. WA " 01.0 DOLL.• 01..D O UNt ~~ 11rr..:11::'~g::11 GI I~:?:= ~~D ,t? '~~1 ::ikr$IO~ 11-1 Ai1i0<llh0fl otll)oylfl 4;°11 il\11 t'h Mlt\Nl I 11 I~~ A6i $K~ll~ 0.•llt" Dllcomn n 12\o Mltfl¥ r 111,\ 1J $(lier ... .,, !loo°' ""° ollHI OUn-ln D I.... , .. MODI Am l"-J S(flOll In Ql,IDtwcl Dy 0111r-1,..!r•\I 1 1•~~-1-1v. MOO! Hm 11\/o n fio11 tnn («11\ .. t • tloMIHI IO •\ m ,.,,\ •IO.> MMU1 Cl 1•:¥o II.. OUiL G ffUI Olhtf II oil~~ ~·f'J 1)\-4 H'-' Mole• In 2t\11 )I j rl!IC>t H tloW l~""" p IK tl 111tt MoO,. S. J4o ... 31\lo • Wrld I MANNING'S Cou.l!CToRs , SHOP "llii'I:~ , ~~ 8LVO. a.,.. CAU~ •• ..,,,..,.,,"?"1 H••· 11-e:ao GoodDeecl l11lka the ICO!l8 Strdays By SYLVIA PORTER One spin-<>ff of your efforts lo save ene>I)' by turning off your indoor and outdoOr lights or by cutting down your Chrls!mia lighting decorations will be an upsurge i n burglaries lo the highest level ever during thla ho 11 d a y ptriod. to 10 percent higher than the average. for other months. And this holiday period is the worst week of the worst • ''-"IP'. month for .. b u r glarics. '"°11T•1t holdups and robberle~ in the l1Mlijijll1ll Christmu-New-Year:s ii the top week of the entire year for burglaries. In previous years, burglaries dur ing AGAINST nus g rim (, December have averaged 8 background comes 19'73 - $1,000 • • m1n1mum (2-Ysar Certificate.s) 5 3A% PASSBOOK Morris P.lan<> ' ' California's Largast Loan and Thritt ·Service 3700 Newport Blvd.,Newport Beoch Coll George Wodmon, Mgr. at 673 • 3700 Introducing the new coast Federal • savings plans. We'll pay you the highest interest in coast rroetal's history with rates that range from 5X% to 7Y,%. Chou~~ fron1 five ~.1v1ng~ pl.ins, clesi~ned 10 give ynu 1 he bes I rc1 urn for your ~livi ngs. ' • Highest guaranteed rates . A,onu•l Annual Min. Min. rate yield balance term ' 4 year 7.50% 7.79% 51 ,000 cert. 6.75 6.98 1,000 2'/l year cert. 6.50 6.72 1,000 1 yea r cert S.7S S.92 1,000 90-d ay bonus account S,2S S.l9 no min. Passbook accou nt Federal regulations require a subs!ant ial in terest penally on all c:er1Hic,11c account \\'ithdr awal~ prio r to nl."llU(ity. The Insiders Club Ju~! open ,1n account ;it Cq,1st fo r $1 ,000, and you cJn gel special lo \v "Insider" prices ·on con5umer ~ood~ and services. From olutomobiles, ;ipph;i~ccs, furniture to lra vcl, enlertainmcnl and home dccora1ing. For a S1 ,000 accoun1, you get free traveler 's checks, 1nont"( orders, notary ~ervice, no1e collec11on~. Al!>O free, for ii minimum S2 .SOO b.llance, J personal checkinJ.t acco unt al a rn.1jor bilnk. olnd °'safe deposit box. saturday hours Coast offices are open Saalrd.lys, 9 a.m. 10 1 p.m. Weekdays,~ a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays ;ill offices except doWnl oWn Los Angeles a1c open 10 6 p.m. COAST FEDERAL SAVINGS . . we want your money. And we11 do more for it. ..t.•<.1·1• ()w•• Ono• R1!1,.1n non~ ... Hunllngton leach Offlcir: 91 Hun lington Ctn1rr 171-1) 897·1°'47 •L.A. M.1in Office: 9th & Hiii, ~2J·11S 1 .Con~nient Olt1le5 Throughoul C.i\ii.;unl• '\ when we're tumlng off lights everywhere, creating corners of darkness within our homes and on our streets. actually beckoning to criminals lO come and get us. If you think it through, th<> logic of it is obvious. These days and evenings, gifts are scattered throup:bout o u r homes many of them plaffii where they can be seen from the street. This is a time of year when It's nonnal to leave the house on Impulse, to go visiting relatives and friends -and not to be on guard against burglars. This is a period when week-long trips are commonolace and the oompletely darkened house is a giveaway. I REALIZE this is hardly the most cheerful tale you could read on Christmas Ev~. But burglary is among the most costly, pervasive and rapidly growing crimes In the U.S., accounting for nearly half of the serious crimes reported by the FBI. And ou r annual losses to burglars run into the hundreds of millions. Before you leave your home to pay any holiday visits to friends and relatives, double- check all doors and windows to be sure they are securely Jorked. Keen unused doors locked at all times. Under DO circumstances, leave any doors unlocked, even for a few minutes. · ALmOUGH brighlly wrap- ped packages arranged under a Christmas tree bring smiles to aU who enter your · room, don't place them .where th ey can be easily seen from the street. Despite the energy shortage, if you are planning to be away from h001e after nightfall, ar· ranr?e to keeo several indoor, low-wattage lights burning at night. If you live in a par.ticularly vulnerable loca- tion, keep an outside floodlight burning ln the main entrance to your house. Leave a radio on near the front door as \veil. If you are going away until after New Year's, and if you live in. a house, ask the police . tfej)artment to check your ~use while you are away. Give a friend or neighbor your itinerary and a key to your house. Inform the police about this, and also tell the pbll~e the t!xact dates of your departure and return. DON"l' LEAVE all your win- dow shades down -a sure signal that you 're not home. Don't leave notes on your front door which indicate you are away. And, of course, make sure there will be no clutter of newspapers or milk bottles at any door. Be wary of s uspicious callers who actually lay be casing your house or apart- m e nt for burglary possibillties, and be on guard against invitations which could be designed solely to ge,t you out of your home. Don 't assume that burglars operate only at night for there are now as many da y tim e burglaries as there are night- time burglaries. Dis ney's Mickey In Sc liool Special lo tbe Dally Pllol NEW YORK -Walt Disney Productions New York, has signed Mickey Mouse and its other cartoon properties to a lictnsing agreement with a school supply manufacturer, the Oakland~ased D a s c o Division of Pax.Well Corp. The announcement w a s made by Vince Jefferds, vice president-merchandi se . a n d promotion, and Charles G. Davis, president of Dasco, who said the agreement includes national rights to use of the cartoon characters for school suooly products "tarting in mid-1974. ' Davis said that initlallv Hall emphasis will be on Mickey Mouse because of his con- tinu~ strong appeal to young people. Other Disr.ey pr~ pertles may be featured ln subsequent years. ur1 T11ti1110101 Half and Half ?.tiami resident Tom Case arrived !!.t !h~ De partment of hiotoi-Vehicles last week for a sa fety inspection of his new means of transportation-a co mbination of Corvair and Harley Davidson motorcycle. The machine is powered by the original Corvair engine and has an automatic transmission. Keeping Faith Tha t's Recvee Sales Pitcli MERCED (AP) -'The energy crisis and pub I i c uncertainty over gasoline sup- plies have battered two Merc-- ed County recreational vehicle manufacturers to a standstill -and a third is on the ropes. plant was forced to close· 3ftcr the product stopped selling almost a month ago. The com· pany makes pickup campers and travel trailers. "We've laid off all our peo- ple in hopes by January things will pick up and we can rehire them ," he said. 1lll't.I Tl'lt quote· El 1'°1 t"· t~-MOtl!ll Or •"-11'1 Sv Mlrt;/I 11-oo !WI ln(luot1EI N"'' s,. ,,;; "°'' yi ll:W. l•l'lt§'"' r11tll 1NtkUC1, ,,,.,k1~=rf: Ji iu·. 1si.. Mlt A)'°' 1-\o .-wn UP oown or (OIM'I~ E~ U.L IOV. 11 'Mo\I-Cp 2t Yt u~ " .ion: ..,.;I Oii nol Ettltn A I•\. Ullo MOlkln 1n lS 1t' fTIOiOll Flptt\1111 """'I EUCY In 1\'I 1,,. MOIOt Cl s... • "P Tolt lrtnlol(.11-. E'lrxp lO~i 11~! M~ Smit~ '"' t•~ SO Ctl WI --Fol Lnt 4~·0 Sllo MS! 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Hyatt c Sit s~. R1ymd 12\:. IJ~• W1.lcs Pl Bel• I.lb l8 J9 Hyster C 201• 70>• RotM P•c W\ K,C.s 81bb Co .~. t i" IMS lntnl 919 9•o a1J '•1Jlo,WeUt Fd Blg Orm 9~, 10•,, ln\UI w.11 18'4 19'· Ae<09 Eq 1\a ,,,. WUllmt 1 Bio M~S •2 •S Ind\ Nucl 211. 11 R~ flK 11'\ nW,WU\n H J 6irO Sons 191, 70•~ lntorta 3._ •'" Rell Unlv I~• 9' ,1w1niu S!r 81-HI Pw )1 Jl\> Instr L.iD 111, 11'1> Rea Pl•~ l• , .... 1 Wlnl Pkf Blotlo Og 11;, 12~ Intel Crp 1>8 IA'l Reyn &R JOV1 31\1 WIK PL\ BlutCll s 11, I \, lnterc En 9' .,, A!••I Ml 21'!0 t•\l.Wood Lin BMA(p 11'• 19\, lntmt G~ 10:0.: lS'o AOilO Ea 3SV. 3S ... World Sv Boa Evns \JOI;, 18,.., 1~1 .t.lum I'• S'• AoOrl 01\ 11'• 12 IW"9ht W 6oo\h Np IJ>. 13~. In 81oW A .... S'• Aalhns B 171., 13"" Xom• Cp Brenc11 1 11\0 ll'h lnttr\il 1-.. I' 1 Rouse Co I '"" Ytllo Fri Brinks 1n 1'• l:\oo lnlrst (p J>1 I~ Rowe Fnl 6 tu Zion\ U\11 Btoc:n Gs 11 20 la So Util 21 Yo n ... Brawn Ar J'.\jo J\, Ivey &Co I 1>•• BIOC•~ •~• 1 ... J•mtib I ', I>, Butloey J\1 3 ... J•sn Em 6-'ol. 1 .... SIOCk Burf\P SI lJ>o llflo JoMS EF 10 ... 11\1> Rtnlo 0 AO e ... 11tr M 11~1 11v. Jollt n M 11~ 11\.o Oit Sl!•l• C•IWt Sv 2S 2S~ K•iWr St U 10'-. PeM Lilt '""' Teg 21 l l\O K•lvilr C 2.._ J Allllell'I BuMll C...on Ml 10'11 10'-\ K.rn•n C 101• 11'" Pllnnro•I LI• c.,111r1 s ~ Ke.,.n Tk '"' SI• Am E•r'''' Caym•n J~ '"" Ktlly Ser 9 10\1> N.i P• Dev CnMt9 RI i.VJ 11\lo Ken Corin l14 6'1> Klool Gld M Ctn VIPS 11 •~ H'M Keull E\s 13;, 1••,;, Penri Oll!.11 Crntrn 0 l•V• 20 Key Oo\lil •'h S Lib Nil Litt C.l'S Cnll n >. ll'h Keyes Fb 10:\oo 10~ (M'lp Pl I'-'< 8 Key Cust ••'• •'•NASO volumt l!ICl.ly J,$1S,)(l(I, •dv1nct\ cr.anc.e A 10,',·.· ",~·· K,ey~\ ,1~1 \9\7 70'•• ltoll, OKl1nt\ .ot, IH'ICll•...,ed 1llOll, tt'!.•I Cr.anl Co M, "" •11 °5'4 119$. Clltm Cp 11llJ 19'h Kn•pe Vt 11 1111 Cni er 1r KnOO's 10"• 11'• 111 118'1> K(l9e• Pr 13'> u•~ (hfl!o 5'1'( 1Cr...e1;ter 1•, 8' 1 , 1•6 1S1 Ku~lm El 2'h J GAIHEllS Colfn!o Ut 13 7S LBCltO St 31 ll , HldronP•C LI ll'o+ ,,.. Up n .2 Cllil v A 21 27 LdllCol~t 6't. 1 1 M nnetnk• LO l V1;. ·YI Up Jl.J Clerk Mt 22\~ 2J'/• L•n'r 21 13 J Nit P•ttnt Ov 8:\ro+ ,.., Up 10.1 Clevepk 7\lt ••,; Lawsn Pr 21'h 11 • Olv Etrt~I J + V. Up 2G.O Cll!v Trlv U'lt 11~i Li1"'1er C 21 19\1> ! ~llHBIQ ~ :~: ll: ~p l~~ &': f~~ 1~~ ,;~ t:~, e~r1 UY, lSV1 ' 1mo!sco . Inc 11 + IVI u: 1S.• coourn o n i.. U\l::o L19~t Pl l~ 1~.,., I E•rlyC•!ll 1nd J ;. \lo Up 1•.l Coc1C L• 10"" 11 Liberly H 1 1"' 9 hlLlnc:oln Fnl 21'>+ "4 Up ll.l comm Cl I• 18 LH Cllmp s SY> to Mlcrow•v•S JI •VJ + Ill Up n.s Cml Sll•Q 30V. :n Umtd Str 10 11 11 P•yl10r119 .ll I + \lo Up U.l Cw MIG\ t• 1~ Linc: 80it J'o 4'4)11 Oil Sll1l1 COrp I ... + ~ Up 11.J Cm1o11TI p 21:\ro ?2l4 Lion CISll 1"' 111 lJ 0.kwoocl Hom S + 'h Up II.I Cpl• Aulo 12 .... 1:J'IO LOC:l•te 3tVJ IO'• ,. An1t1n Micro \:\t .. "" UP 10.0 The Wilderness T r a v e 1 Trailer plant in Merced an- nounced a temporary shut· down early in' December, id!· ing SS employes. Cplrvl' 9"1 10\!7 Lone St•r 9~ 9',i 1~ OllUOOt LO<;il\I 11 ;. I'll Up 9.1 WYRICK CONTENDS the Conn Fct 1•l:. 1sv. LOf19¥ Fb 1• Ttc:o Ball 111'1+ 1 Up t.S ens P1pt JI'.• 1B 111 114' 11 Aoi•I SC.otwn I'll+ \II Up 1,1 energy crisis is not as severe eoniu wt 1t 10 Lotw' co lllll 111 1t wr Ohl Wm . 11 av.+ "" VP t .1 Cordis (p lS 31 M0tr m1 9°"' 10~• 19 AtwooclOcn WI t'n+ "" Up •.• as \\'ashington makes it out couilni 16 1•i.;. Mad c.as 1• u o,-i LOSERS T ff E A U T Q M AT E to be. ','.".~~,,', "• 20'h 11'1o Mill Ally 2%. l I ' COiie L1Dr•IOI' 1)'11-J Ott 1L2 ·~ S'M •~t Ml 1_ckt 31"-JI"' 1 ClllnwdCp ,I.I 11...,_ :t Oii u .• Manufacturing plant in nearby "To this da y, I have not ~!A N0",', 11 11 Maoronr c 2s 26~• J er11unc1 Mines l -"' 0t1 u .J. "'"~' ,,,. S Marl! Fri 11~ 111\o 1 Miner lndllill ,...,_ 'It. Oii 1'.J· Los Banos, open only two had a problem getting gas. o.n1 1n11 ••'.!I •s M••k Tw 16 1•'-' s Medi sc; T•<Y ,..,_ "" 0t• n .•· ths cl I h I' O.rl Org • ·~ Mll.ry Ky 71Vt 11Vt • Sol.nd Equity 11>11-\'• Oii U.l t mon , osed its doors at and ne lher as anyone ve °"'" Gen 3''1• is . Mc cmc:t J7'r1 .,,., 1 utoertv Horne 1 -'" Ott 11., about lhe same time, sending ' talked to. But until the govern· 8:~n :i' 1:1•1~\io\1~: .. e r"' ~"' ;~.JrJ'11~·1.: ,~=1~ ~~ l::~ 60 I ho f bl k t · th j Cl<!' 0• • •Vt 1Mca...y 9'11. lO'h 10 B•ker BrolhfS ,,..,.__ ~ Oil 10.l emp OYf!S me or a ea men gives e peop e some ,Dtkl!I AR 01 •J ,Meawr 26', .. u~ 11 B11,,1, 1nd11\lr 1v.-,,.. Olt 10.1 holiday sanon. _ kind or answer, I doubt i[ g::~~r'"~ J~ ~~\:!~Win ,i""' W' 11 ~k'~i~:..!r'i. ~~ :: g~ \:·.i Wilderness plant manaifr . tqP:re will be much of a 8t"m ~~ 9V1 10 1Mrrcnn1 ,,,,., u " Modern tM•< •'h-VJ otl 10.0 Errol Chaney said the. shi.it· m·~ket for our product," he . 01:~ ScJ ;..,. ~!:.=:.~ Fr ~:~ ~~,,., l! ¥!~~~:~ ·~ si~ s~ 8:l 1i~ . ' 'd 0oc111,1 1~ 8'1-)MrdTe• c 1s:v. 16'h 11 ~orln Rs .litd 5 -~ Oil '·' down, ordered by 1t.s parent sa1 . oonr Gen s'4 Slit MUii• HS HI 11 1• 1e .. , om E1tm 2•h-11o Oii •.1 c o m p a n y , F I e e t w o o d And a spokesman for a third j l°""l'"·"-"-'·'-'0'0•0M0;0"'·"·'--"·"·'·'·''-"0T0«0•0m-·"·"·'·'--'.,._ __ "_"'_' -···' lndustcies, was necessary to company, Liners Manufac-- deplete inventories. A lag in luring Co. or Los Banos, said I M' uT·u AL FUNDS I sales brought on by the energy t he gasoline shortage is crisis caused the increased in-definitely affecting th a t. •---------------------.1 ventories, he explained. business. Hew 'l'orll -Fol-IDJll!YFUS """" • lowi119 I• I list ol1 Ot'f'f Fd 10Jl6 11.02 Hiltl gtl'I 6.16 1 SPKM ll.loi ll.M llld Miii nkeCI ptl" ~Q\'f Fd l .61 l.'3 Jollnstn 11. .. 2t Sl!AID a•r: But the company remains optimistic, Qianey said. "Relatively speaking, we're stW strong," THE PLANT averaged 30 to 35 Wlits a week the last two years. BUI Wyrick, C<K>wner of Auto-~1ate, said his $2 million LINERS, WHICH assembles Winnebago pickup campers, has not had to lay off any of its seven workers, but the spokesman said the firm is "on the verge" of layoffs. Many retailers also say sales have been hurt by the energy crisis. (fl Ofl Mul!Yt' Ory! Lv 1111notKEYSTONIE : Ad Gw (,00 •.ll Fllnlh ~ quott'd 011 S(t lfltm 1:11 1:19 Cini 81 11.~ It,( Ad !flt l .11 J.tt ~Ill NASO Inc. ' JrO (Ml '·'' 10.H Cini Bt 1'.11 21.12 Ad Ins 7,9' I.SI ........ DtumOer 24, E&E Mu 2 911 l • Cl.ISi 8.1 l ,7t l ,W Cm Ctri 4.J.-4 •.1• E191e Gr .:ao 1:,s Cini K1 t .71 7.Q Inc FdB "5.63 t .11 EATON a CUil K2 S.l t S.I SOd L"' •.•t S.OS 1'13 HOWA•O· Cini SI II.JG 21.0ol SIECUlllTY FOS: h ln FO ' '·" t.ft Cus1 Sl' t." 10.• EQ<>ily l .ll J.W GWll'I F 10.11 11.•1 C"'I S> •.to 7. ln\llU J.11 •.U 8141 AY. lnc:mt s.•I t.SJ c ..... 1 Soi l.S2 J. Ullr• F S.7• t.31 Advlwr 4 11 4 SI Speclt F t .12 I.OS ApollO '·°' O.•S SELEC'Tl!O POS: AflM Fd 1·10 1'1• Sick I'd 1121111~ Pol••' l.:n l.f2 Am stir •.If•·" ArtM In t3.Jl li'6'Eo1e Sp u:0911:091t.nlckr S.60 •.4 Opp Fd •.1• 1.1• Allllurt I .Ill im Ewrt Gt 11.08 IJ.C<I Knkr Gll'I '·" 7.0S Spf Slits IJ.30 12.JCI AGE Fd i4 •5s lEllunTrt fll Ul Lnelm•k t.SS 7,1,SrflU!WI 10.1•11.0I All\l•tr 1o':ai 11'11 Emer11 1.1s J.11LO Eole U.•l l•.•1s.n1ry F n.son.so Alpl'lt Fd 10.M 11'"3 Ene•9y 11.J• 11.1• Ltnx Fd •.•I •.•1 SHAAl!HLO G•" : Ame:~ F iu isi.IF•irfkl ,_,, l.J6 LEX GllOUr: Comll ].l l l.tl Am Birth 9'.'U 10'50 Fm llur1 1.06 l.Olo Cp Ledr 1•.0I U.'4 Entrpr s.•6 S.91 Am Ovrs Iii 1.il Fed ARs 6.80 ... ..Grw!~ S.OS 5.Sl Ftet Fd J.99 4.3' Am Eqty Ill Ill FIOIELITY Ae1rtll 11.•S 11.•1 Ht•llt r.•2 1.11 .&M EXP•l!SS GllOUr: Liie tnlv 1 .... 1.1• Leoti L 6.21 t .1' FUNDS· 6nd OrD I.to •.13 Linc: C•p S.tl-•. w Ptc:t Fd •.•I 1.W C•pt1I' 6l6 6'5 C~l•I 10.0lt10.'9 l.OOMIS IHIAllSON FDS: lncom 7'9s a·!A Conlr• 1.61 ... SAYLES: Apprc 11.SI 1'.21 1nv,1m 1·12 l'.oo Cw SSrc 6.18 •.. CtP Ov 11 .,. 11.'lt 1ncom 16.'9 11.2• Sped 6.13 1 lt Dist S.91 ... Mutu•I U .60 t3. lnlltst 1.11 t .6J stock 611 1'33 Eswx 1.11 ... LOllO All: Sii OHn 1.17 1.11 Newsp)"int Crisis Am Grtll 1i> til Eversl 10.1• 11.18 Al!llM ' 6.lt 6.10 Side Fd ... ,2 I.CM Am lnsln (I) tll Fllnd ll.91 IS.20 Am Bui 2,1) 2.te SIGMA f'UNDS: Am lnvsl ( 91 1 91 Pllrltn 9.01 t.8S 91'ld 0.0 9.22 10.Dll C•P Shr S.H 6.U Am Mui 1'11 a·,, Salem F l.31 l.61 Luthrrn 9.4S 10.U Inv t.19 10.CM AmNt Gr iii 1.!1 Trel'ld 20.lll 21.l'J~Lutlln 1n t .23 10.10 Trst I.Cit 1.IS ANCHOll FI NANCIAL MASS CO: Vt,nlur •.SI 1.11 GllOU,.. PROGltAMS: Frftm 1.69 l.'3 Smolh B 9.3l 9.33 CtPl•I' 3•1 380 Fin Oyn (I) fl) tndp F 7.SO 8.?2 S9 l&Gt 9,'16 .... Eases; Not Over NEW YORK (AP ) The severe newsprint shortages of a few months ago appear to have eased, but industry ex- ecutives and publishing of· ficials s1y many newspapers across the country face con- tinuing supply problems. The picture is reported to have impro ve d noticeably since lhe settlement of some three-month strikes permitted resumption of full-scale opera· tion at Canadian newsprint mills, where United States papers get more than 70 per· cent of their newsprint. "THE SITUATION has im· proved a great deal since October." said a spokesman for the Newsprint Information Committee, which represents C11nadian mills. "M3ny o::i.p!'~ in bad straits six weeks ago are in J!'.ood shape now." in advertising, "newsprint will be coming out of your ears," said the Newsprint Informa- tion C:Ommittee spokesman. However, if the economy doesn't cool, widespread shortages of newsprint may recur because or increased de·\' mand and the time lag in getting planned new prcr ductk>n facilities built. I Production of C a n a d i a n newsprint is nearly back to prestrike levels, the Canadian Pulp and Paper Institute said. During Nove mb er pro- duction totalled 784,000 tons , compared to 584 .000 tons in September, the group said. In March and May, production of Canadian mills reached 812,000 tons. Fnd Inv 6·67 i'J1 Fin Ind Ill Czl MISI F 10.•I H .'9 So GenF UI CtJ Gtwlll 61• 1':19 l'iro Inc 11 (fl ASS rNCL: Swst Inv 6.•7 6.'9 1rw:om 69S f6J Vent Ul Ill MIT 10.M 11.30 Sw tn-. C. S.16 S.SI Vrntur 1'11 1'01 lstFd V• 9.fO 10.11 MIG 10.9111 .9$ Sovr tn 10.01 11.0J W• " '' , ..... n 's< FlllST MIO 11.5' 11.n Spec\rl J.4 l .1'1 Astron. 3·n . INVESTORS: MFO 11.11 IJ.11 SAP lnO s.•1 S.61 AWi• I' )0 91 6~7 Oise fO •.61 S.tt~CO 11.12 ,.,01 STATE IND GRr: AXIE . . Grlll Fd •.18 1.&J tK lw I.SJ 1.SJ Corn I'd •.21 •.60 HOUGHTON : !Mom 1.6' 1.17 !tier I.JI •.11 Dl11t1ll •.tt 5.U F,..nd A , 1' •.61 Stoel< F 1.20 1." Id Am Ill !d Progrs •.14 •.6.l Fund B • ,. 1.33 ISi Multi 7.SS 1.ss1Mony Fd (0 If) SI Fr Gr Ill (II Stoc:lo s'11 S'6 Ftm Ber 7.t2 l.t21MSI Fd 12.•112.•2 St Fr Inc UI UI Ax.e Sci ]01? i2~ FORUM GllOUP: ~II 8nG I ... t .'1 St•le Sir lt.IS.0.00 BLC Giii t:1110:61 100 Fnd Ul Cf) MIF Fd • 1,32 I.ti STEADMAN l'M: hOtOll (fl (II 101 Fn<I {J) (I) IF C.ro ).1$ 6.0S Am Ind J.11 1.14 B•yroc: 6.U t .11 Colum U l CU Mu()m gt (.2'9 (.66 Asi.o Fd 1.01 1.01 Btyr-9r S.96 •.SI lS F11nd Ill Cl) Mu()m rn l .Sl 9.2• ln-.t" 1.20 1.20 Butn HI 14" 1" Fdn Gr l.t2 •.111 Mui Sl!t1 "·13 1•.'1 Ocr1n t ... ._ .. Bff<on ioo t'.oo FOUNOEllS Mull frs IJ ) C1I STEIN •OE 1'05: Btr-sllr 1i1 ci1 GllOUr: NII lndu '·°' •. Olo S.!tno 1'.0:t 1'.02 Bondstk 4,2S •.M G""lh Id (Jl NAT Sl:C ,.OS: c.p!ll l .9S 1.'5 losl Fdn I.Tl 9.W IMOOI lfl II) 8i11i1M l.W L2• SIOCk 1J.32 IJ.12 Brown 2.93 J,QI F Mtue! lrl (II ~ Sr •.tJ ,J.Olo SIS GltOU": Brnllm 'SI t.S1 F SPecil !1) tO Otvldn J.l• l .Sl Grwll1 S.SJ 6.0I CALVIN FUNDS: F0<1rtc1 F 1.3' l .lt Pr1I SUI S.I• •.21 lnc:om J.IO •I .SS 81111 Fd 11.1112.so FRANXLIN tncom ,,,. '·" ~II 1.6S I .JI coo Fo JO.•S :n.«1 GllOUP: I Stock Sr 6.t• •.n TKMI s.as 6A1 Olv Sllr J.U J.IS ONTC •.ii 7.11 C.,..,.111 J.W 6,11 5'.lr"IY F I.It t .11 N•lwd 9.0S •.ti Gwlh St •.31 ~W HEW l!NG LI': Syn,ro G S.•S J.t7 N'I' Ven •.IS 10.lt Fr ln(m 1,14 1.tl l Eqwlty 1•.2111.~ Ttmpl G lrl t1 I CG Fund 1.J. t ,'1 US Gv S t .IS 10.11 Grwlfl t .27 10.0I 1••n C~ 7.'6 1.11 c"" f rin t.St 10.• Utlhlit •.01 •.'6 Sidi U,20 1S.&J rtvl Eq •.1' 10.'7 Ctn!Shs 11.101•.l'l Rtr.Cap •.~9 S.l•jNEA Ml l .2J l . .OO flllllor H I0.•910 .... (NANNI NG A~ Eqt1 J.IJ '·°' Ntll Cenl •.:JI •.ll lOlll CG 2.(9 1.r.I l'UNOS: Fkl LIE<I (Zf (ll Ne111o11th I ... 1.'9 JOI!! Cl '·°' .o.•1 B•lncd 9.M 10.W Fd Mt dp 7,lf 1,rt Nr..,ffln 11,02 IJ,1' Urool!td Ill Ill Bnll Fd 1.80 '·62 l'UNOS INCP Nw Pert U.W 14,.:i Unll~nd •. JJ •.91 Com Slk 112 1 U GROUP: Nrw Wld (J) (ll UNION SE•VICE Eqt1 Gr 1:09 1:n Comm Cl) (11 Nlc~1n~ 11.IJ 11,13 OllOU": IQ ~'> E<1IY Pr 1.83 J.O'I lmpac (I) (I Nett lv!r CJ) U) Brtl s ... n .01 11.1• Fnd Am 1.2S 1.W tnaus Ir Ul U) 'l" I.If 1.01 N•tl Inv •.ts l .llO c,,..,.111 •.•l 4.11 PilOt 01 Ill 0 N•ll Id n.Olt IJ.Olo Un C•pt 1.42 f.11 lncom 6.~I 7.18Gate"'! S.4 S.'O Will 1S.JllJ,ll Wiii,.,.( ll.d12.S.S THE INSTITUTE Sal 'd sho·n.. SPtct 1,10 1.16 GE s. p UI lrl ,,.ENHM FO: UNITliO FUNDS: 1" Venlur I.SI t.19 Gen SK (I) (I) Op Alm • 11 10.19 At~um 6.11 •.11 l f C d, · l CHASE Git! FAm 3.tit 1 JO (lp Fno 't• 6.11 8fld Fd 7.12 1,16 mens o ana 1an newsnr1n .asToN: Grth 1na 11.•2 11.n 0o tn11 s.n .. ,. Cont 1w •·" t .se are nearl y back to spring rnc1 B°' 1.11 1.as Gu.tro 21.u 21.1• ,1Tc. Set •.O' 9• Col\l Int ,,., ,,,. frGn Co .... ··"1HA.MILTON Gllr: ,,.,,.,, .... t n lnc;oom levels. And 8 sookes man for Sl'ITr Bs ''3 I.SI F,..no (fl l1J Pt<>l Rt• • 21 •.II 11.61 lln.oo , • Sp.rel s:<n •.•1 '1 Grwtll UI UI 1!'9H,..1 F •.» •.1' SC.I-t .00 t.SI {he American Paper Institute c11tm Fd •.n 10.00 1ncom 01 cr1 P9nn M1 '·" 1 w ~ 5.11 s.n said publishers' inventories.] c~~':HG ~.~: .... 1~:,~"'tv t:t, ~:ti~ ~ t!t ::~ ~s G.:it ~i~ ~~ d I led ••• f 'ji Ml.Ml 319 lU1HedtltO •M 1.u rLLGlllM G": USLJ l'I ,UMDS: ep e ~ause o mi Sc11vs ,, 1:os 1:n ,HeaQt s:11 ••. c.p1.a1 1.n 3,n A11r.1 F •.:n •.n strikes. have begun to in· Sc111.1 Sp 6.ll 1.o1t tte•ilQt 111 ~o 1nc0ffl •·• t.1• a.i Fl'ld 1.n 1.•1 TMR A J.01 1.n lHOrtc:• (I) Ill PllG•l'I t.60 I.JI COl'n Slit 10.:tf> 11.n crease agal'n COLONIAL tmgrl Cp II) II) Pine St • SI •.SI VALUI! LIME 1'0$: ' •u"OS: 'ilmp Gr Ill <11 Pin Trt J •• ••· Viii LIW '·'' 5,11 "Nobody is goin" out of C...."N" ,,,.. •.n 111( 1C1Am n "6 11.01 r10Nf.l!ll ,o, ..,.,. inc 1.•1 •.lS E11~11~ ?.II J.03 Ind F.lm V.' In Pion Ell ••.15 6.n Liv G!h •.<IO ),It business. but the situation Is F11nc1 '·" 10.6'hnle90A r t 1r1 P10n Fd 10.• n.oo v11 spc:. 1.w t.1• "Mickey will enter our na· tion's school right after Labor Day 1974 via the covers o{ I' a full school supply line In· eluding wirebound composition books . notet-ook~. hlnde~ and binder pape r," Davis said. But Nicholas Nocella of the American Newspaper Pub- lisher3 Associ ation's Ne~-s­ print division mid ~ siz-.ohle number of papers still were having to conserve on the paper product througb such measures as omitting Satur· day editions or restricting use or special features and col- wnns. St Iii ll'•ht." sa1'd -eodore "A"'-Gr'wtll S.30 S.lt Ill 1n...,1 , ,., 11.to .,!'lonr II ........ tAl VANC• I" IU ~·-lncOffl t.n10.1tln"N"nCi J.•J l.t2'"'tnM · •.lt SANDEllS: rill, executive director of the \11n1ur t.St 1.u 11n .. eo A 11.s. n .u P,L1 GAO 10.1st 11.w 1n...,1 t SJ 1.1J Cot""' G 11.u 11.»,tn• Gu•d •.1J •.SJ lllCI llOW : vs Com t ,tJ '·" National Ncwsorint Associll· COMMONWLTH 1nv tfld1< 2.11 .. c.r-w"' 11 .1•11.1 SClltt toi '·'° TAU$l; lnw BOS t ... tO.• N.., Ere 11.to 11 Vnor1>1t J,I' ._,,. tion. which represents nea rly A"B 1,o.i t.t3 otvtst N• Hor '·"' J. v::r• '10 1.t0 c 1.:Mo I.II CIWNSll Pro fld UI (1 Viti mo ur Ill "For the ocr.11:slon. we will also produce a specie.I line nf notebook oaner to "e called Mouse paptr. Every sheet wlll ~e imprinted with a twO<t>lor replica of f\.Uckey Mouse in the bottom right hand comer -a Orst !or the school supply ind ustry." "They are looking for new e11oacity tn the future." \.on said. "The situation is still tight." FOR mE MONTHS ahead, exuerts say. the supnly sltua· tion depends largely on what happens lo the U.S. economy, lf there ls a sharp do""11tum in business activity in 19?4 with an accompanying drop 7,000 paocrs. eomo 11, $.n •·• C.•m ..... '·" Pro~oi 1.11 J, ..,.,ltd 1 1.11 1.ss The 'd I the I COll'IP II" UI (II C'.p!t 1.. f,50 1.1' f'towd GI l.•S t .u Vit.llQ Gr •.91 .,. J!'.TOUp S81 n oas CornP Fd (I) U) c..,11 Sfl '·°' S.SI Pntd. SIP Ill II) W1JISI or trl ff• fc We•" I! hari """"'lv-..1 COnttd l .1t '·"INVEST' GltOUI": UTNAM W•!.11 Mu 10.13 "·" w ll!! -.... -... 1 c;on, In¥ ._,, fO.l l IOS Gt~ r.12 ..... UNOS: ~1"'111 " IQ.IS IO.ll onlv one or two calls from '"'1n vw .,,. S.•t 10s ND s.10 s.w con....,. t0.11 ''°·" w•t.LINOtON ConMt Jn 1.04 I.CM IOSPT l.S. l .lol Eqwl!y 1.0l •.n G•OU": paners !IP.ekln2' nev.••f'lrlnl. (Olltrt c 111 10 M1,nu11 t 1~ •.l2 Gto 13.61 1•.I) £J;p1ot 1•,., ,,,,, .Ex .. 'ts .. y !he .uonl,, (w~ OIU s • .o 5.90 SIOC• 11.•• 11.'tto Grwltl •• 4110.J.! l•t1il I.ts ... C'lffl Of• S.!J j,M S.llCI •.lt • .... IM I .to I.Ii MOrtn 10.fJ 11 ti it !. h I rov· ti OIU15 I, '"VIK P•r 1.10 1.n Inv '·'° .... '"'" to •• .: .. ! ua 1on AS m n e o. .. ioo Ul (rl lftv Att '·" S.06 Vitt• F .... •• Wtltly 11.S$ U .. t2 Particularly \n the West while oELAW••• s 1: ,vo,., 9.J:I '1:1 Wtn'" '·'' '°-" ' GllOU": Gr"'~ t.01 "-'' -•" S,)4 .. ~-1tOl llQ:I n"oers In the Nort.,e!lst arr Ot<•t t.• t.to '•om •.01 •.• All'llrl 11·• ... w1n11v ~' .: .. o-' h "bi! h Ofl'lf F Lit •.11 lt11 UI ).11 ... Sette: lq ,t.i I I Wf'.I Ind t .. M 1 11 getting t noug to pu s but 0t111 ,. 4.ll '·ls T,,1 Sti ,.,,. u o:i ~11... '·°' 1. w11N °" t"M i 21 not enough lO bu\ld lip \n. ~'rCP SJ·~~·~ 1!'t Fi:;:: l~:r:! t~ t! 'f"trO~n~ll ~l~S: trl r~:• ,:: 1~~ Venlorie' OOdoC~ 1(.00 1'.00 P G1o11th I •S • oO l'•'-nt 1' ~• " , *'•·O•v•Ofnd - , brtoill ! ltl l•S ~ F!\ !fl 1• C""1 • ·t t lllN~•1l101t I t Id DAILY PILOT W!dnfsday, Dtctmbtr 26, 1973 U~IT...,..... ARABS EASE UP-Oil producing countries announce awl or Bahrain; Abdul Rahman Salem Atiqi of Ku· they will increase production by 10 percent in Jan· wait; Ezidin Mabrouk of Llbyaj and Manie Utaibah uary. Ministers meeting in Kuwait (L-R) Yusuf Sher-of Abu Dhabi. , ~--=~--~~~---'::__~~~---'-'--~~~~- Earnings Dip Sligl1tly General Motors Will Delay SAN FRANCISCO (APl - Pacific Telephone's earnings for the three months ending Nov. 30 were lower but its oet Income was higher than during the same period a year ago. the company reported. Production of Rotary Vega in big car sa1es caused, in part, by lhe fear of gasoline rationing. During the week before Christmas, GM idled 137,000 Europe Lauds Oil News·- Still Facing Ro,ugh Time BRUSSELS ( U P I ) Europe \oday praised th6 Arabs' decision to relex their oil boycott but oiH clals warn· ed that benellclal effects would not be felt for at least 1lx weeks. There we:re no an· llOIUlced plans to abolish fuel conservation measures. "This is dellnltely good news. a most welcome step in the right direction," a British oil industry spokesman said in London. "It is not easy, however; to see how Jt can lead to a slgnillcant change in the allocation system in the short tenn. '' In Brussels, an economic ministry spokesman said "our reaction is positive" but noted e\·en if full shipments from the Persian Gulf states are started now , it would take about six weeks b e f o r e deliveries reach the pre- boycott level. "So we should expect to have the Sunday driving ban in force for another six weeks, the spokesman said. Be1gium is one of a number of Euro- pean countries that banned Sunday pleasure drivtng as a means of saving gaaollne. The organization of Arab Fetroleum Exporting Coon- tries (OAPEC), after a two- day meeting ln Kuwait. said Tuesday It would flmtt It& pro- duction cuu to 15 percent of the September level Instead of the declared 15 percent Olplomatlc '°""""' said the oil· mlntJ1tts decided 10 main· tain their total oil embargo of llolland and the Uolted Slales, but agreed lo give countries "friendly" to the Arab position In the middle East their "full oil needs." '\ Europtan countr" in this category Included Br\~ e I n , Belgium, France and Spain. Government and petroleum tources who could be reachtd during the CMstmu holiday said they espected lltUe easing of fuel rationing. '"111< doc~lon ID in<.'li! ... tha production is v e r Y sallsfsctory," said RDlf Al Kl lntberg, head of tho Swedl!h Petroleum In.>Utute. "But It will be • long time before this affects 1he S wed l 1 h market _ probably not wtlll next March -and we mu.st not ease our rationing ." * * * * * * * * * Japan Happy Too,ButSays U.S. Ban Will Hurt Trade TOKYO (UPI ) - A govern-to the Arab at.ates." ment official said today Japan On the Tokyo stock market, was happy and grateful at where the Dow-Jones average of 2Z5 .. 1ected blue chips the decision of the Arab oil · soared 140 yen to 4,178 yen produ cing countries to ease in the rnomlng session today, their oil embargo on Japan the Afib decision to welcome but economists warned that Japan on the list of 0 friendly continuation of the embargo nations" also was welcomed. against the United States Oil importers cautioned that would hunt Japanses b'usine98. Arab relaUtlon on oil rtstric- Minister of International tlon1 aplnst Japan did not Trade and lndoslry Yasublro Immediai.ty mean the island Nakasone said Japan was "ex-cOtmtry could ge4. all fuel it tremely happy and grateful needed. They said oil would be mo~ expensivt lhan before and that it "'as uncertain whether mt· jor international oil companies would follow the Arab decision and comply with Japan 's de- mand for fuel needed to keep the country's lnd~stry going. Japan depend.< on the Mid· die East for more than 40 percent of Its oil supplies and moat oC it comes through big Amertcan. British and l>Jtcb oil companies. Earnings from September through November were 39 cents a common share, com- pared to 41 .:ents a share during the same months in 1972, PT&T reported. DETROIT (UPI) -General 11.totors will not bring out its rotary-engined Chevrolet Vega at the start of the 1975-model year as originally planned, a company spokesman says . Probl ~ms with fuel economy, pollution control and general belt tightening by tile "'orld's largest automaker are believed the main reasons for the delay. spending on some projeCts as a result of the slowdown in big car sales, industry sources said . The spokesman rerused to confirm reporls of further cutbacks. Chainnan Richard C. Gerstenberg ls expected to make further announcements Thursday on fu ture production plans in light of the downturn workers and cut 79,000 big ~~::;:t ~~u1°:.e~r ~: Complete Mid_ -day American Stock List cutbacks are expected to in- clude several ongoing projects L----------'\---·------------------"•------------""!' FIRE·BURGLARY ALARM SYSTEMS RES!DfNTIAl & COMMERCIAl INSTEAD OF introducing the Wankel Rotary Vega at the start of the 1975 model yea r next September, the spokesman said Introduction will "probably" come some time during the model year. It will be offered as an option as soon as it ls ready for mass production, he said . • "''·'''"" & \u.,r,L ••"·"' E>Q«·O'"'' 1••" ''' The l-l•<be• 11,,.,,, C~f o~-F~e E~~i~<>;-.. J SEA COAST AlARM SYSTEMS j,,,,,,on O• '.e< {o•'' Ill~" ~uPP'• 16 ~ 1 Plocenfia-Co)IO Mewi ~ljJ.]490 G~f later this \Yeek will an· , nounce a second round of cut- backs in prO<tuction and in - occ ?? NI.ED A TAX DEDUCTION-T? WORRIED ABOUT FUEL SHORTAGE? ? CONCERNED AIOUT YOUTH ? DONATE BOATS-CARS-AIRPLANES IOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA -~ Huntington Cenl•r · -7111 Edil'lf;cr-tf..,nt;n~ittm !le11c.h • Phone SV2.t,11-' -... 17tti • Mstol St& no-547 .. 141 Confr•ctil\l) l iceri•• 21110 CHAIN FENCE SAVE ON CHAIN LINK FABRIC PROTECT FAMILY, HOME AND PETS 500'-OFF* FAIRfC WHEN 10 INSTALLED BY WARDS cn..w v•liMf lltltflls ·~ 11111Utlti of 1llrff, ltw·m.-lntt11111Ct t•h•1nlrllf '' ••-Yln'(ko•hlll l•bric:. Wl111 l1brtc 11 Mt-dip p lv1nl1NI for 1111r1 proteclitft. •(i.atn, pom. toproll, flttl• Md l•talkrt1011 .,. •ltN ., •• , ,..111ar Jew prkes. Coll for free ntlmar. todoy! ( • WOOD AND WROUGHT IRON ALSO AYAIL.AILL Don't be impulsive with your KEOGH FUND RETIREMENT INVESTMENTS CALL NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS RIGHT NOW and learn how other investors are earning an average of 10% to 14% DON'T DELAY Get the HIGH INTEREST Retitement Fund Story From Newpon Equity TODAY [714) 644-8824 Ood vou know lh•t. Under an act of Co~ess titlll!d the Keogh Act you, "'•self employtd 11td•~1du1t. can con1rrbu1e • 1tG"l1fic1n1• por1ion of your income. before t1Kt5. 10 a retrtementpr09ram fr>r yourself I ' . • ' J/-•. Newport Equity Fund, 1n ltpOfOYtd ttc:15lleftt oJ K~ Funds. h11 designed 1 progrern ptm1ll!11\Q you to inveu 1ny .Ttount from $500 up, imrnedietfty. w11h MUf'M ~llJirog '1°" to t4%. No lo nger do W'OU hew 10 xcumut11e ,,,.,,. m~t funds tor long peuoch '' low int!l'e'L Out 1nno~ll1Yt ptOOfll'l'I 11 one of,the hrte tn Southern C.hl0fni9. --· "' wi1h Newc>Of'f Ea11ity'1 welt 1111bft~ed I~• Tru11 Olld progr.-n, you will btfltt11 lrom IOUrtd~1 ind CMtfully•~IS OIV! Y~)':F. ~HIGH !lm~CttO!tt" FOR YOUA KEOGH ~ND$1llll YI.All ••• ..... DflJO"' ,.,., ""~· ......... ~ . 'Newport Equity Tunds as well as actual production. What Crisis? Christmas Sales Heavy for State By The Associated Prtss Santa Claus wa sn't slo,ved down in Californi a by the energy crisis. A check of leading stores in major cities just before Christmas showed that buying was generally heavy. "SALES nns year are at an all-time high in the San Joaquin Valley," said Ger8ld Blwn, general manager of B1·ookl yn Charges $1 For F11el NEW YORK (APl Christmas was more a headache lhan a holiday for motorists in the New York area who had to cope with scarce supplies, long lines and sky-high prices at gasoline stations. One station in Brooklyn "'as selling gasoline for 99.9 . cents a gallon -until it ran out. At another Brooklyn gas sta- tion, cars were lined up !or five blocks in each direction. "It's outright chaos," said Harvey Sta shower, a Brooklyn station owner. He s a id motorists had been getting in- to repeated quarrels over their place in line. The 99.9 cents per gallon price was charged by a station in Brooklyn. Another Brooklyn station charged 89.9 cen~ a gallon. Resignation was mixed wi th anger among patrons. Robert Broadie, of Brooklyn, wes inceosed. "How can you charge that mu ch 'for gas? It's gotta be iilegal," he said. "I was going to go out tonight, but at 99 cents a gallon, I'll buy two gallons and go back home." ll'lcDONNELL CONTRACTED WASHINGTON {UPll The Air Force has announced it awarded a Sl 7.8 million con- tract to l\lcDonnell Dou glas Corp. of St. Louis, Mo. for three VfP planes. The bid for three "essen- ll•fly Off·lhc-ohelf" IJC9'11Js bettered an offer by BOeing Co. of Seattle. Wa•h., for 1371, the Air Force said. Jt said the new planes, to. be delivered In 1915, would replace six prooc.ller~rtvcn Cl!8s and C131s, afl more than 20')'tars old, which are now In the executive fleet used to ferry VIP:s. Gottschalk's store in Fresno. "The energy crisis hasn 't put the slightest damper o n business. Almost every retailer I've spoken to is bav· ing a fantastic year." Another FresllO s t o r e manager, Marvin' Herman or Welnstock's Fashion F a i ·r shopping center, commented, "People are just going a\oog as they normally would. I don't think the energy crisis has had any effect o n Christmas business.'' fN LOS ANGELES, the Broadway department store chain reported that buying 'vas a little ahead of last year and that business at the new Broadway Plaza store which opened Nov. 17 was "beyo nd our expectations." "There is a trend on heaters and this is a big fashion year for sweaters but it's hard to say whether this is due to the energy crisis,'' a Broadway spokesman said. "We're still doing well on recycled jeans and corduroys. Fake and fun furs are popular." An official ot the May Co. deparbnent store chain in Los Angeles said there was some sales resistance, and ex- pressed the opinion that it was essentially due to concern about the economy in the im- mediate future. He said there was a "fan- tastic" demand for deck and pooket calculators, and th at sweater sales, probably boost• ed by the fuel shortage, were strong. Smog Device Employes Laid Off SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) - Smog control device manufac- turers are laying oU workers and stowing away thousands or the mechanisms in- defulltely . • The cutbacks follow a decision by the state Air Resources Board to delay for at least ooo year the man· datory installation of devices on some 5 mUlion 1966-70 mod el cars In C.llfornla. "J11St a couple of monlhi ago, we alarted an assembly line in Los Angeles ," a spokesman for \Ve s t e r n Automotive Controls, I n c . satd: "Last week we had to lay oll 40 employcs." Dana Corp. of Whittler in· veslcd $2 million and had 300,000 devices ready t o market ne1t month, said \V .C. 11.fcCullough, sales manager. "Now we've stopped pro- duction and laid off 40 cmpl oyes." : Vol. .... VIII. Ntt • :vo1. lffl ' V•I. Htt Vol. • ... , Vol. .... . • last Cl'lg. UM c,,., l.111 Cflt. LAil CAI. U SI er.a. . Ult. c~ . --A A-· · !E,..' °'" 11 IV.+ v. FSI "u" Inv 11 J'4-.,. 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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 delive.rs-seven days a week. Want to order? Phone 642-4321 or the Daily Pilot office in your neighborhood. ) .. . .... DAILY PILO T • • • • • l • I I I I I ' • ' \ ' 1 ' JZ ,!JAILY PILUI • . · B k I ' c· ,., ---!:t 'M. ll ' --··· e1~ e .e-p-.1ty-\.IOUllCll -e O~S-U'I T......,_ San Diego Bay Refuge Proposed Clltl1llM l d -1 Mel!iMr Strvk1 BERKELEY -Rerkel ey is still fWtcllonlng. Nearly four years after the first three "radicals" -or now l\\'O depending on defini- tion -\\'ere elected to the Berkeley City Council . the "'heel s of cil'ic govemmcnl in this city of 115,000 ha ve not been j:unmcd w i t h ideological scre~·drivers. IF AN YT 111 NG . lhe marathon City Co u n c i I se~ions e\•ery Tuesday night i~ the packed chamber hall have resulted in city govern- ment that is being considered carefull y do\vn to the last street li ght and paper clip. So the progress of city go\•ern- ment is slo¥led. IN FAC'r, a recall move- ment or a few months ago removed from ornce the most rM.ical "radical," Yale-train- ed lawyer O' Anny Bailey. and replaced him with a "liberal,'' \Villiam Rumford Jr. Bailey was recalled because he had been a vocal and disruptive council member. He charged that the rfi.call movement was "racist." Both Bailey and Rumford are black. Currently, the council is composed of Mayor Warren \Videner, a young lawyer with statewide political ambitions; \Vilmont Sweeney, a lawyer and 12-year veteran of the council : llooa Hancock, wife of a Berkeley-attorney and mother of two; Ying Lee Kelley, history teacher in the Berkeley scbooh1; lra Sim-~fissing from the delibera- tions are political rhetoric and ·1he. intense public alignment mons, a lawyer; H e n r y IN A TBtE OF environment Ramsey, a law professor at concerns and "no irowth" the university ; Edward tendencies, Berkeley is little Kallgren, a lawyer; and Rum· different from olher com- A r e ft 0 I I 1110 .,e. ford a part time phannacisl munities. . .... and security officer. Even Mayor Widener, who 111e11t re11aoved the advocates ending the city tttost radi~al, 'rnrf··l";;;T;;H;;E;;;£THN;;,;;;.,;;;;;'C;;.;;;';;;';;xu;;;a;;;l,;;;;an;;;d;;;;;;ma;;;;na;;g;;;e;;;r ;;'•.,rm;;;;o;;f;;;g;;ov;;;e;;m;;m;;;en~t,I icol.' \\'ith intcn1ational and national causes which to a large degree prompted the election of the ·•radicals." LQ(i)K TO mal&e'.1 FOR THE Now the nine-member coun- cil grapples with such home- gro"·n issues as the flow or neighborhood traffic, the pro- liferation or street vendors, city taxes, pennilling or de- nying a parking Jot for a bank. deciding who should be the next city manage r and in- fluencing the choice or a police chief. NEW YEAR! THE TUESDAY night sessions are models of the democraUc process in adciltion to being nonnally boisterous and -dotted with hurled in- vectives from the audience. "They are also fascinatingly boring," said a long-time Berkeley resident who attends faithfully into the small OOurs of the morning to "watch the elephant take a step or two." The media may have made the nam e Berkele y! synonymous with "political radicalism" -which many Berkeleyites dislike -but in truth the. city Is quiet, preoc- cupied with itself. and never shaken nny more by the demonstrations and conflicts 100% HUMAN HAii CASCADES ::~. NOW ~URA WIGS U.TIST STYLI CA•LISS . --;;::;::: NOW REGULAR 45.00 •••••••••••••••••• ~~~l~::·~,L~S .................... NOW REGULA• CA• NOW ELURA w1•s •••••••••••••.•••••••• WE HAVE EXPERT STYLISTS TO SERVE YOUR EVERY NEED 12" 31" 22'0 1800 WIG AND BEAUTY SALON of four or five yea rs ago. 2500 E11t 17th.Strut 548-3446 ~ when University of California students and hange rs-on pro-Hilgren Squ1r1, Co1t1 Me11 _it:e~Sl~cd~in~t~h~c~s~tr~ec~l~s.~~--~~~~~".'.'."'~~~~~~".'.'."'~~~~~~~~ YEAR-END CLOSEOUT OPEN 7 DAYS PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 31st ]EWEIJ ·y CL<;£ARA Specia l Group of Jewelry PEN OANIS IN CU LT. PEARL. f1ER1 OPAL. & DIAMOND . EARRINGS IN DIAM OND. CUL T. PEARL & OIH[R PRECIOUS 'STONES • MANY OUTST ANDING SOLID GOLD BRACELET S • NUMERO US COCKTAIL RINGS IN DIAM OND. RUBY. SAPPH IRE. OPAL. CU LT. PEAR L. & OTHER STONES · MANY MEN 'S RINGS ALL TYPES Of STONf S AVAILABLE· LIM ITED SELE CTIO N Of CUffLIN KS ·DIAM OND WEDDING SETS ARE IN · CL UDED • A LIMIT[O SELECT IO N Of flNE CULT URED PEAR L STRANDS • A fEW UN USU AL BROOC HE S ARE IN CLUDED . ALL ITEMS ARE 14 OR ISK GOLD fROM DUR REGUL AR STOCK. \IAl Ul S TO S l~U l ~LUl S 10 Sl90 VALUt S 10 S240 VALU ES 10 SJlO NOW NOW NOW NOW · 39.99 59.99 79.99 99.99 REDUCED TO CLEAR RE1*UCED TO CLEAR All lOOSE STONES All ART OBJECTS Co••~ X>de & 1!01oe 0....0.11 Bl"" !:.111t X.p11lo"t'-fi•r Op.JI, Q,,~nirtl Jn<i•• It><>>'" (,,11 Pt·o•I, Blot·~ :.'<~ ~041ph.r t•> (u• l~>,.ro1'1 25 % OFF MAR KEO PRICE ALL OTHER JEWELRY IN STOCK INCLUDING: D·u..,~nd• Rub•"\ -Soppt."'"' (., .. ,.,. .. d Pt01h ·-Wtdao"9 ~·• C.f'ICll'm1-Coc~•ool ll""11"-e1c. f,gu.,ne\-Cor •ed l•?:t (lo1}Qnn" Vo\t\-PO;( n "'"" ..,nq• u•uluol "~ HUGE REDUCTIONS .. 2oz 011 our usual ~ low discount prices ! DD ~fll fl - 5 MAlttlt CHAllGl • IANIC AMllllCAID • IOI CllDlf •LAN SHOP NIGHT S 'Ti l 1 o "~f LONG BEACH, C31 3 All11n1lc Avt. WHITTIER , 12918 Ptuladel!lhia 51. M • SANTA AN A, 2015 Jl · Main REDONOO BEACH . Soulh Bay Cen1er TORRANCE , 24455 HawthOf~ Bhld. TORRANCE. Dtl AmO Fashon SQuare ~ ~· j, ~EWPORT BE~CH, FW!ion lsbnd ORANGE, Thi Mttl of Orange ,~ ANAHEIM , ANh•M-fl PiNa LOS ANGE LES, Arto Pbz1 Sears ... where thrift is always in style Located on the Lower Level YEAR END BIG BUYS Misses' and Half-Size Pant S11its Sears Lo"· Prier.! 644 Whice fl ocking on so li d color tunic wich n1acch in g pa ne s, t lasci cized waist. Ace tace, ny· Ion ... machint:·\\1as hable . Color choice. 1n i\1i ssts· and H alf sizes. Long SleeYe Knit Tops S("ar!I Lo1'1· Price! 244 1'\'ylon fl .ll .ind ri bbcJ jersey tops. Turtle, moc k turtle, or her necklines. BJsic, cJsual. c:Jsr-Lare s1ylin.i;. Assorted pastels, 'vhite. S1zt:s S.1'1.1- One-size Panty Hose low t'ricW! 39~ .. lil1rJ-Shl·er m1cr•J mes h l.nir in nylon. Rc 1nfo rcl·J 1111.: with JO up.1quc p.1n1 ~·-!':cw colors. One size I its I 00 10 150 lbs. Sears Costa Mesa .33.J3 Briotol St. Phone 540-.3333 Long Gowns of Nylon Tricot. Sears Price: 222 As.sorted feminine .style s, trims and neck li~cs. Pink, blue, navy, yellow. 5;~1,L. Priers Effective 1hrou,_h Saturday, December 29 U•e Sear• Ret:olvingCharge Buena Park 8130 La Palma A•e. Phone 828-4400 "· .. j " ' I ·I'- ' · Orange · 2100 N. Tlrelin A•e • Phone 637·2100 ' ' ' '\ . . S1on. Houn1 MCHMitiJ lhN 5•1•rd•7 9130 A;.'9· 10 ~130 P.M .. ,S.,..7 12 Neo. 10 Sf.M. • • . • ' j We're Stronger Now, USC Weaker-Griffin PASADENA (A P) -Archie Griffin, the n .. t and powcr!Ul Ohio Stote running back, believes his Rose Bowl team is ·better thi! year. "Last year it was kind of emban:assing to get beat 42-17," the !if.year-old 50pbomore star said. 0 We don't want to have that kind of game again." Comparing thls year's So u L h e r n California team that he's about to fa'ce and !he me that beat OSU !ut Jan. I, Griffin said, "I think they have a good , ll'!Uad; but 1-.&Q'~ think it is as goOd as last year."· Ardlle Ind teammate B r i a n Basclir\OJel, a wlngback, and linebacker Vic Koegel' all agreod !he Buckeyes are stronger lhis year and could win $10,000 ~etback ' with their best game. Coach Woody Hayes, in a somewhat sw-prising move, brought the three players to a news conference Christmas Eve and they freely answered questions. Earlier Hayes had said there y,•ould be no player interviews. • Griffin referred to the vote in the Big Ten that brought Ohio State to the Pasadeoa classic instead of co-dlamp 'Michigan after they tW!d 1~10. "1 feel the athletic dlrectors picked us with a purpose. . .If we play our 'best game, we can win.'' , Asked if he had ptegame jitters before ·the 1973 Rose Bo\111, the 182-poond runner · declared , · "I had preg"IPC jitters in the Rose Bowl 'and in all to gaines • \Ve played this year." • ,,,.. Koegel , a 216-pound senior who missed last year'5 Role Bowl with a knf!e injury, said the defense was better this year because of • more experienced players and a more tightly knit group over-all. Hayes Interjected, "Don't forget !hat Vic was not playing here last lime." Of Griffin , the coaCh commented, "We like to think he's tbe best tailback in the country. He gained more than 100 yards in 10 straight games including 246 in one at Iowa." Koegel was asked to compare the Ohio Stale linehackera with thore at USC led' by Ali·Am<:rican Richard Wood. "I "don't know mlich about the USC linebackers," he answered, "but the two fellas I play with a·re two of the best in the country. and two of the nicest fellas you 'd want to meet." He referred to All-American Randy Gradishar and Rick Middleton . Football P)ayoff ·Lo se r s Koegel and Baschnagel each·were ask· ed about the Big Ten's four-game losing streak in the Bowl game and how it might influence the Buckeyes. Koegel answered , "I'm not thinking or any four game streak. I'm thinking of the challenge to our ball club." Reall y Lose Financia¥y Baschnagel added. "I feel about the sam'e way. We lost last year, which makes you \Vant some sort or revenge, but what we really want is to finish the season with a victory." ' BLOOMINGTON, MiM. (AP) Tackle Grady A1derman1 the only member of Ille original 'Mimeoota Vi- kings still on Ille 'team, didn't need his Cerlilied Pul>lic Accountant degreo to tell him that "this game coming up Ls the big money game." Aldennan, the Vikings' offensive cap- tain, wu refcnil)c to Sunday's game against the Dalla.I Cowboys in Texas Stadium for the National Football Coclerence U!le and a l>uper Bowl berth. From strictly a financial standpoint, the II-year veteraa ezplained that the piayen' pocketbooka would be much slimmer by losing Sunday ~Uter than in the Super Bowl Jan. 13. Each playfll' On the winning Super J,lowl team will get 115,lltlt, Wfule the losers each -up with 1~~· At 30, ~ ~-t;!tt aren't many seaiiiii J<ft for hinl~l!i'National Football ~ • nd he ~lain- ed ~r i. • • •• "The loaer !n '°1is game geja_ fS,500 per playor, the winner gels '8,IOO, ·'!be •inner gets to play in the Super Bowl, which guat¥teel $7 ,IOO to each member of the los!ni team." ''Tberefo~; the dilferenlial in this game betweeen whm.ing and io.,mg, when you awkier the Super Bowl minimum. Miami Sticks To Routine For Raiders ~flAMI (AP) -The Miami Dolphins held a light workout Christmas Day ·as coach Don Shula began what he clilUed "a normal week of preparation" for SWtday's American Football con •. ference litle gam9 against the Oe.kland Raiders in the Orange Bowl. The workout was closed, but the Dolphins reportedly stuck to their normal 'I\tesday routine of reviewing scouting reports and noo-<00toct drills. Shula scoffed at the idea that Qaldand quarterback Ken Stabler could mnfuse the Miami defente llecaUJe he throws lefthanded and pointed, to the lacl the Dolphins drilled wilh b a c k-u p quarterback Jim Del Gaizo, a southpaw, for three years. Del Gal1.o was traded to Green Bay earlier lhls year. "When Del Gaizo was here, we never ialked aboul his being left-handed," said Shilla. "He never talked about it, our rec:elvers never talked about it. lit was just not mentioned. "We talked 'about a specific quarterback but never a iefthanded quar1erbed<. Besides, Slabler can roll out both ways. He's Ci>ing it now as be did it at Alabama." The Raiders beat the Dolphins 11-7 II\ tho aecond game of the ,....., ·on lour George Blanda field gool1, with • Doryle Lamonica playing quarterback. is in excess of $10,000." "If we lose we get $5.500. If we The players said as far as they were Y.in, we're gua ranteed at least $16.000," concerned there was just a one-game added Ald erman, who was among 36 players drafted from other NFL teams losing streak, the loss to USC a year when the ?\finn€sota Cranchise was form-/ ago. Although a talented r u n n e r , ed in 1961. Baschnagel's usual contribution is to Each player in the first round of block for a running mate. Asked who the playoffs last week received one-four-the· toughest to block has been tttis teenth or his annual salary, which rall, he ansewered, 'I said it before amounted to $2,000 for a player earning ... our own second-team defensive end $28,000. Pat Curto. He's the toughest." So the purse this Sunday represents Tn Buckeyes practice sessions, the first big bonus money for most players. offensive team works against the second Alderman and the Vikings have col-team defenders. lected playoff money in five of the It was pointed out the first team de- past seven years. Their biggest payda y fense gave up only ty,•o toochdowns this came in 1969 when lhey advanced to season and Hayes declared that unit is the Super Bowl, but were beaten by the best he has had in 23 sea.sons. the Kansas City Chiefs 23-7. "Not any doubt about it." he y,·cnt on. "Look at the record. Three shutouts The Vikings broke a team tradition in a row. Our record on defense has of not looking past the immediate goal been exceptiooal, no doubt." of .a .division title last summer during The Buckeyes worked out Monday then training camp, when they vowed to go had a Christmas party ·and Christmas all the \\''1Y lo the s.~ _ Bo~l, to dat___Q{f befort reswni.ng drills. Coach ~tone for a disappointing 7.7 se~hn A1cKay of USC gave fiis squad m 1972. , . a longer vacation for the holiday and They cqualitd a team reco~ w1lh a four fewer days practice overall. 12-2 regular season record this season Hayes, queried about the difference and beat the Washington Redskins 27-20 commented, "Ours is a ruMing te,rD. last Saturday, moving a step closer primarily and it takes more work on to the Super Bowl. Dallas advanced timing to get your running going. With with a 27·16 victory ovtr the Los An· a passing game, you can do it more geles Rams. quickly." U,I TtlWftelt SOUTH QB MARK HARMON GETS HIT AS .HE PASSES OFF THE BALL. • ' Wtdnt!day, DKmbtr 26, iq73 DAIL V PILOT 13 UPI Tt """'9 WOOOY HAYES TALKS _OVER GAME PLAN WITH QUA RTERBACK CORNEL IUS GREENE. Sports in Brief USC in ·Tourne y Tilt; Kings Battle Chicago OKLAHOMA CITY -The University of Southern California bids for its sixth basketball victory in a row tonight against South\\'cstem College o f Georgetown, Tex., in the opening round of the All-college basketball tournament, here. The game is on radio station KABC 171!1) at 6 o'clock. .,.~1.U '~ jets past Southwestern, it . ~ .Plit~ Friday in the1 semifinals againlt the w~er of ThUl'Sday's tilt betw~-.Rutgers and Oklahoma City, • E,tpoA ito Tougl1 c.mcAGO -The Los Angeles Kings face the tough Ch icago Black llawks tonight, here. hoping to score their first goat_ agalnst Tony Esposito. • ' Lakers Clash With Seattle After Loss SEAITLE -After handing Phoenix a nifty Christmas present. you wonder ir the Los Angeles takers have anything to give away tonight. The Lakers battle Seattle's SoperSonics here (8 o'clock, KFI, 610) in hopes o( regaining the momentum which in a week's lime had catapulted-them into a two-game lead in the Natioc:ial Basket· ball Association's western division . The coach Bill Shannan.Jess club look- ed llke anything but a division champ Tuesday night. Santa Claus \\wld be more tike it. Committing 26 turnovers, the Lakers dropped a 135-100 decision to the host Phoenix Suns as Sharman stayed home to attend to his wife who h'as a back ailment. Jerry \V est didn't make the game. either, but he didn 't miss much as Pat Riley, who didn 't even start, \\•as the Lakers' leading scorer with 17. LH ArtlelU (IOI) Pllotnl• 11lSI . ' T • ' T Goodrlcll • .. " S(Glt 10 , .. " Price • ,, 10 V11nArsdalt ' , .. " Smltfl 5 2-l " Wall!: ••• " Hairston 2 5.7 t Bant(lm • ,., " Hawltlns ' •• , Erick.on s 2·2 :: BrlO(Jes ' » " C1lllcun I l·S Counli • •• • Cllrl1tr11nllll'! II 2-2 , H1wtl\Orn ' , .. ' Green ' ,., , Love • •• • H15~lns , .. • Rlt~ . ,, " Mtl<hinn 3 •·• 10 W11 ln910f'I 1 .. , -· ' , .. ' Tot1ts .(I n-21 100 Totali .$-' 27-lldl:i Los Anvt\IS " ., " 11-100 P'-111• Favled oul : N-. "' ., ~ ,.._,u Tot1I loul1: Los A•lt$ 26, Phoenfs 21. ... -,,U). Esposito, the Chicago goalie, has scorOO two 3-0 shutout victories over the Kings in the two previous games. He's tbe ma111 reason the Black Hawks are only two points behind the first place Philadelphia Flyers in the National Hockey League's Western Division. Tonight's game is on_ radio station l KFI (610) at 5:30. , e KorlJ11 t Sef!Oltd 1iIOSCOW -Lyudmila Turischcheva has been named Soviet ·woman gymnast of the yea r over diminutive Olga Korbut, the winrfer or three gold medals at the Olym pic Games in 1i1unich, the Tass news agency said today. Coaches. referees and journalists voted in the poll to determine the woman gymnast Of the year Which \V3S C<Jn· ducted by the US.SR gymnastics federa· tion. e Couc h Dies TRQY, N.Y. -Marlin J. B. h1cDonagh, "'ho coached at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for 50 years, died Sunday at the age of 87. McDonagh retired from the Troy col· lege in 1966 after coaching lacrosse, cross country, football and sy,•imming. He al~o was a physica l therapist in RPI's physical education department. During the early part of the century. the .Troy-area man was a record-setting runner. e .Job R ejected NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Tennessee State University's John Merritt said he would remain as head coach of the No. 1 ranked Tigers football team de.spite an attractive offer rrom Wichita State. "Even though I feel it is a great honor . . . and the financial returns from such a position Certainly made it very worth while," l\1erTitt said, "I solemenly feel that obligations to Ten· nessee State which gave me opportunity for much growth are such that 1 must in£orm offficials at Wichita State University that 1 cannot acce~t .. .'' e Race Fn1Jo rites LEOPARDSTOWN. Ireland -Comedy of Errors and Captain Christy are con- sidered the top tv"o horses for the Irish Sweeps Hurdle at Leopardstown, near Dublin. Thursday. Cotnedy of Errors, England's cham- pion hurdler, is the 11·10 favorite. Cap- tain · Christy. last yea r's winner, is the second choice at 2-1. · The winning horse \Viii earn a first prize of $36,686. But those who have dra\vn him In the SY"ecpstakes will collec t $120,000 each . JAMES McALISTER Bruins Star Co1npared Witl1 Ex-Santa Anan SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Running back James McAlister of UCLA has a Jot in common with fonner Santa Ana High star Isaac Curtis, the speedy wide receiver who played in the Shrine East-West Game a year ago. To start with, both are extremely talented and versatile athletes. Curtis. n-0w with the Cincinnati Bengals of the National Football League. \\'as a high school and college sprint 1 champion in track, and McAlister is a world class long jum.per. The UCLA player, a member of the \Vest team preparing for Saturday's 49th East-West Game, played only two seasons of college football because or a recruiting violation by UCLA which caused him to be declared ineligible as a sophomore. Curtis was declared ineligible at the University • or California in another recruiting violation case. He transferred to San Diego State and represented that school in the East-Y.'est Game. The Bengals chose him in the first round of the college draft and he was one of the NFL's top rookies this season. ~cAlister, recalling t h e disap- pointment he felt when unable lo play football as a sophomore, said Tuesday , •·r 'used to retaliate against myseU. Now I overlook those thi ngs. accept y,·hat is.there and take it in stride ." The 212-pound back will probably go quickly in next month's NFL draft, even though pro scouts haven't seen as much of him as they'd like. SbWa called the Raiden a vuily dif- fs-ent team now becallSe "Stabler bas really opeoed up their olfeme." stabler ended the regular aea90n u the AFC's l<eding puscr with 113 com- pletlooa for I ,997 yards and I 4 toudldowM. He completed nearly 63 per- cent of hil throws. UCLA's Allen Stars in Shrine Game "I had nagging injuries duri11g my two years: the Injuries stopped me from gaining 1.000 yards. I pJayed only 17 out of 22 games, and I don't think I've really proved myselr,'' he said. The East-\Vest Game Y.ill give him that oPportunily, l\lcAlistcr added, "and t like the cause. the Shrincrs HospitaJ for crippled children ." Shula said he expected defenaiv. tactie Manny Fernandez, sidelined fur two g-meo witll a torn bamslring muacle, to be ready'lor oaklanil. I r AllO ezpected to retum were cor-- nerbock Tim Foley, who_ bu been sideillled 1 lllOl1lh with a shoulder _..uon, and lilht tnd Merv Fleming, who hla lldaood three pmeo .11eco ... of a thlch tlljury. Fl.,,,..... mum.Jiu 1-1 tnlde ""'!" Important becaUJe of the b<*!n Iii! hand sullered by Jim Mondlcb qaJnst ClnclMail. Mandich, howewr, Is aefledu~ ed to have a caat on the hand ftlllOved berore game ·time and his band taped '90 he ~· play, ?.!!AMI -Jimmy Allen, a corncrback at UCLA during the past season, was named most valuable player for the South as the Rebels dercated the Norjh, 26-71 in the Shrine All .. tor (oot1¥>ll game at 'Ille Orange Bowl berore a ~Im crowd of 10,m, Tuesday night. All<n intorcepted one pus and broke up ,.veral others and explained his reooiving the oward In tllls fashion : "This type or game allow> each pll,)'Cr to. perform on hi• °""· Al UCLA I wam't always able to perform freely . We played a lot of zones and I had to lay off receivers." The competing tcanu ooly had limited time to prepare for the game v.·lth practice starting Friday. "ln this game. t could just play the man and take a lot ol chances," he added. "We didn'~ have time to put In a Joi of defenses and I am basically a man--!or·man defender." Gmld 'nnker of Kent Stale, who caught tllreo passes for 41 yards, return- ed 1wo.punis 22 yards and four kickoffs 811 yards, Wa& the North's MVP. I The South capitalized on a North fumble to llruk open a dull game · In the final quarter. After Frank Lemaster of Kcntu~ky recevere<l lhe fumble by J. J. Jennings or Rutgers , quarterback Don Woods of New ?.1elico threw a 29-yard pass to Jack Ettinger of Arkansas 011 the North one-yard line. After a sack of 2-t yards and a run by Woods back lo the one, Willie Burden of North Carolina State weot over to make it 20-8. Mark Harmon or UCLA marched !he South to Its first touchdo•nl movlns the team 71 yards In 13 p a;. with Aijred Thompson toking a pltchout and sweeping lert end !or the score. Harmon's 12-yard pag to Ettinger or Arkansas and his own 15-yard scramble were lhc big plays \n the drive. The East-West game squads both prac- ticed Monday at candlestick Park, where the game \\'ill be played. They ~'Orked Tuesday in Palo Alto, where they got logether for the annual p I a y e r 1 ' Christmas dinner. 8aske thaU Ratings • ' ' ' I f4 D•l~V PILDT ' .• • Plltl• llr 1rr1nt Gr111IN AU-tourney Athretes Alami~os Racing Entries • Los Alamitos Racing Result,s l'tr TvtlftY Mr. ArrMll'IMr• lrtlldt'I Jft, W, Cltilr & 1'11t GoWr. , •• ,T I A.CE -400 v•rft. I yHr SIXTH -s.tt Y•rdl. ,, .,,,, oldt olds. C.111 -Wed. Cltlmlng, P\1"'9 S14 Incl 1111. $!1r11n t l ..... 11\Ct. 1'"'1'M 01n11v 0111 tW111onl l•.60 1.» J,.O suaa ,., T"'ltlll Ge Noe Ge (Ort'ltl'I 11.to •• 11) Come On Otct CINr • l'ttf, l'l'"'I l'ftt 11U Mtclt'I MoOriclJ'OOO IC,..gerl ll.10 !Cltfl1"I 10,IO l.IO 1# $1 ·~tcl11 et1 l'l"I 111e.1 Tlmt -20,61 . ltpl1 Llllll1 llrook1l 21.to 7,llO tS l •1ct11 e11 6111, 1111 1nd t111 AllO r1n -Molth<t 2. S1199rM111, MY RQmln lndl1n (A.Clllr) 2.llO c1111 Al EVIi'· Fr11110 Ot<k Ch11g1, Time -11.14. ,-llllST RACE -'4iClO y1rd1. 3 Yt!lr Wlllhtwood, 01nclr'1 fllJl(HI, Goldin Alao r1n -Miid Flep, Otckl blf, oldt. Cl1lml119. l"u!'M Sl:IOO. Cl1tmlng llunnr. Thlrll Copr, "!Go hlJ1, A1'111 fht • prk • nsoo. Rim. ,....., A. Orllt. HI Cllff. Cllkll<O 'Too (G1rl1l llt 12 IXACTA O·DIMY Diii W ).0t Sl IXACTA llMttM 01t DtC11 1• Andy Done ti CNlcoclltlWtl lf: Ntll Oil ,,. ... tUe.ot. ).l,IJl1 L.11111111 .... IJtt.• EcllO Too (H1rl) SICOHD -:lSO y1rd1. 3 y"r old savlMTM --y1r~u • .l11 191L ~~~~1ir.,:.n1l..l/~.dl l~ tl!ll11 ll'ld m1r11. Cl1iml119. Pllrll Purll Sl0,000 lddld. Tiit SI. N](flOI M M00!1 F111 (Cr0&byl 11' UllOO. E•pr111 ISkOftd Dlvlllon) Non SfoJlif !SmllnJ lit Hill lltlll (DrtYer) S.olO 2,olO 2 . .0 Plunder llY Cl1bln90 IR lctwordl) llt Copy Walen (Adtlr) 2.40 2.20 CTrHWtl) 11:00 '·'° 3 ~ Ttrl Co• {K1nll) • 116 lltockln' L&d't' ll,..llllfl l 2.llO TW.IYtl f l,,. {LLpNml i.MJ 3.00 Top'I Gil tMorrl1) llt Tll'l'll -\I.DO AMY Go CH1rH 4.tO AllO r1n -Skr RJwr, Jln90 Girl, TllM _ IS.Sf. s •CDND ••<• -350 Ylrdl. 2 PlllM Conllnut. A1IO r1n -Jodr Qwtf, R11br y11r Did tn1ldtnl. PllrM Ill!». THIRD -11'0 v1rd1. 3 Ytlr old1 l'90f'l1, Chic P1t, Go ,Ifft 'COVf• Chic Y•IYll (5l•PI, llt end "" Cl1lmlno. Purw Sl.00. Thym\11 Jet, An"'-Miit . := ~1l!:.r~~tmlllon) ::: Yo Qult ro {Ad1lr) S.IO :J.20 2.60 •tOHTH -)SO 111rd1. ) 'l"lf oldll. I'm l(tpty IC•r11oul l it Mld+clUN CMrlt1J 3.1'0 J.20 Allo\llllK•· 1"11rM moo. Llmll'I Clndrroclt IM11$l.ldll llt JllCIY'• Man CL1phlm) J,60 Al, Cot!• V•\ylftl UJD s.• :uo PllQuln (Alclllrdt) ln TllM -".AS, Jutt Lllt1 "' CJtlctllrft) 160 2.-IO Clwof'91 Dirt. Roc~ll {W1laon) 122 AJllO ren -Vend1 Lindi, Sllv1r $j)f'ld ktnl (Tr11111r1J !.?0 IN. MoOn Spl11h (Ad1lr) 1'22 D loy, Mldw•r Torn. C1p11ln Kl•, Time -11.12. Mldltlr1 (~f'lll l lt H1y1k11. Al'° ren -S~mlll, ktnf of Lime, Al1mlloe P1r1d1 (T,..••Url) 122 "OUlltTH _ t~ rardl, l Yttr O..p Mitt, J•I Comm1ncltr1 Celor •I<• o·• ·-. Cl1ltn!"", Pur11 1:1000. M1 Pini!, Mitt Glod l lrd. MIU Olncly THIRD tlACI -'4iClO r••d1. s y11r .... ..... "• ' I Oldl. Al'°""'anc1. PurM S1000 W1ldl Mt Tr•wl 1pr · Whlll 0.11,.. fKplghll 11' IOrtvtrl S.60 3,60 J,00 If llCACTA (;:;;;;' ClllM 1114 I-~ Stormln fTr1i11ur1) 119 C111 For AcH (G•ri1J S.20 3.IO . i super call (Acl1lrl lit l 1rtlno IH•rtl •.20 J111U1t11"1 .-Ml 11 ... i .. · Mrr1'1 COPY (Pa1111 11t Tim• -~-73. ' •• High Flyer !Llplwom) llt Aho r1n -Clluclt\'1 ll-, Fill NIMTH -«IO y11'd1, Yllr 1 Or!H Ml" (ll1llou) Ht Eddie, GrODYY Grumpy, Step N. F1!ch I ncl 11p. Cl1lmln.o. P11r11 SUOO. ;; Sh1rp Lulu (DHy1rl lit 11. S.ndv v1nn1. !Loml 12.60 t.olO 5.-IO ; ••••T• •••• _ "' !.::'''· , "l"TH -lO!l yards. All 1ge1, M1ontCl'1 Miki •(t1le111t01J Jt20 10.40 ) .. 'TM SI. Nlcholat ElprllJ (Flrll l \lcl liYI (Cl1rl111I P• Viar Old1. Allow1nc1. P11r11 J2 · Dlvl1lonJ. Purtl SI0,000. Timi -20.U. John't Red Lindi 3 (Hlrl) 11t IMrlMJ 1l.«l 1.00 1IO Also rtn -Trl!lll ('.. Trvty, OelldY GrtY Devil (Rfch1rd1l llf Mystery Moon Good llir, wild Copy. Doolin'• 'T imi, S1o•r Sav1nn1h (Myl11) 11' MoOl•h OI•-··"' {Hir!) 12'0 100 ltoyel Taa 11r, S1Hor't Clwlrg1, 01111llc111 Win (~t•llCl•I 11f l1-N • • M-·1 ,, • Ch1r11ln Chick fAdelr) tlt Mr. Mldl1nd (TrH111rt) 1.60 _,.I l'f'· 01111 Ml11 !Or111trJ llt Timi -IS.4. Moon Chic Go lll1llou) 116 Also r1n -l ight Siii w ... NtllO IS IJU.CTA l .. Jl:IYll l'lrw h<klt J et't Rockttlt CClrdolll 11, Ft NHlo, Al•mltos Sulil1, Ml11 Olvrll, 111111 Nifff"frl MlltlJ ,.1111 QM.II. To 111 (W1t110r>) llt I r~;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;..;-;;-;;-;-;;-;;-;-;;:-;-;:-;-;~:;;.;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;:;;;; MlH Rocktl (Tre1wrtl 119 I I , The recently completed Sunset-Irvine invitational at Estancia ll.igh featured these outstanding wrestlers who earned all-tourne9 hon- ors. Kneeling (from left)-Dave Sowa and Steve Bufe (Corona del Mar), Wayne Plata (Estancia), Aaron Thomas (SA Valley). Mark Miller (Estancia), Tony Maddocks (Weslmmster). Standing-Pat Wilburem (El Modena), Paul Wilson {El Modena), Dane Muhlig (Newport Harbor), Doug Diez (CdM), Jim Davis (Costa Mesa), Craig Foster (Los Alamitos) and the late John Gust (Newport Harbor). 01:~'1" :,~c~ .. lmi:'. Y~~~ 3 st= DOES YOUR CAR IDLE ROUGH? WE Cl1lmlng price UOOO. START HAR,O? el B ~=:1.:,.•ige,;. 1c~~.1,11,,1 ::: GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN Hu.r £~1~?~~bY, iJf THE .... ' C.,A,,.R, .~.~!TU• .,.0,. R •HOP Clwo!nld Rocktl (Ada.Ir ) l lt ... --~ ...,11.: ' , .. ' • ·• • El Toro Standouts On All-CIF Squad Van Liew, Green Get 1-A Honors Prep Cage Tottrneys Resmning JC CAGERS FACE FOES J11f1r1 (K11lo;ih!) 1lt:1:~~~~~~·~·~·: ... ~~-~·~·~-~~·~~-~-~Mi~ .. ~~~:ii~~ Ll<1htnlnt11 8111 (W1rd) lit Tiny Witch Bound (Uplllm) 11' SIXTH RAC~.-110 y1•dt. J Ylllr oldt a. UP (ll lmlng. Pll•ll $lliOCI. Cl1lmt1111 prk 1 S2'00CI. C'r0lden West and Saddleback colleges face rugged foes in JC basketball tournament ac· tion ton ight and Thursday. A three-day holiday cessa-GWC's Rustlers take on tion of prep basketball action e11ds tonight as five South Ri verside City College at 8:40 Coast area teams open tourna· tonight in the opening salvo EtrltY Ch1•111 ISl111t) 120 Wlr PllCll (K1nl1) Ht Finey Wiilow CRICt!lrdll lit PhOlbl"I ll•uc• <Smith) lit Scooper Sport (Knl11htl IH Dl1rnorwl ''" CG1r11J lit 0111 lrtndY (Tr11111rt) U2 Roy1I lllKk Chick ((r11g11J lit S~V•NTH JtAC• -110 y1rd1. 1 ve•r old• I. up. c111m1no. Plll"ll S'UDO. Cl•lmlno prlet '5000. TM L• Jolt1. M~ndell• (L!Dlllm) lit Andy'"1 Rocket IDr..,.rJ 111 F ifty Gr•nd {Ad1lr) llt Oorth'('I P11!110 IG1ri1l no Cl111v Rocket (C•~Go11 ) lit HDl•IY Ven ll1r !Wrlthl) 122 Chill 11r 1sm11111 1n of the Kiverside tournament ment play. . •u»HTH t1Ac• -a v•""· , Costa Mesa and Marina are of ch<tmpions. It follows a mrm1~d~t<~·~~~-1"111'11 SlJOO. entered in the Orange tourna· 7 o'clock game between ~ J.~111.~ot'J.r~n1> ~~ ment where Costa l\1esa faces Fullerton and Pasadena. ~:., Z:.':t ,~.,.~~•d1J l~ Savanna at 5 and 'lar;·a \Vin or lose, the Rustlers suro °" Dtck !l"aoei n t 1> u• Dinowldltty (L.lphlml "' takes on La }fa bra at 8:30 will be idle until Friday ~ T== 1~~~~0 ~~ I * PREVIEW OPENING * FRIDAY • DECEMBER 28th HARBOR BASEBALL BAmNG RANGE THE NATION'S MOST MODERN AUTOMATED BATTING RANGE because of two other first s11m1w1v 1c1r0o111 11t h at Orange High. · Flotrt.n Chic 1cro.11y1 n t El Toro Hig 's Chuck Van round games Thursday"nighl High Gron 1Nlcodlm1111 1n Liew and the guard who was . Dana Hills challenges host Fido 1c11r1u11 n• .. l DAILY PRIZE DRAWING I '1 h'I Saddleback Pick O' l tr <Dr•v•rl lit responsible for much of the Artesia at 8:30 in the nightcap " ea n w 1 e. Tr1,1e-11n Ano•t l Myl•ll 122 yardage he chal ked up during of the Artesia tournament and treks to Palm Desert Thurs-MtNTH RAca ~ r•rd•· j l"l•r • Hours 9 A.tjl. to 9 P .M. ..• . ' the 1973 football campaign University is pa ired against day to meet El Catnino at ~T:imfno ';:1c.c~1:_no. PurM '1300• have been awarded All-CIF Ontario at 9 in the Chino 4 o'clock in the opening round Mr. Stwodr 1P111•l 122 . I t Ed1n1 Folly (Hlrtl. 117 1-A berths. ournamen . or the College or the Desert c1111 chu Bob' fS111111 nt V L. h I I bl d San Clemente's Tritons will Llnl1 Sten (Smtih) n: 1., ,. Phone 646-3996 380 W. Wilson, Cosio Mesa an iew, w 0 a 50 c ou c face host.Katella in the annual Classic. Orange Coast met. ~~~·k~:11~~"!(:~~11~G•rt•l 11• as the Chargers' defensive K t II t t 1 .• , t San Diego \his afternoon in the Aqu1pou11 Tr111ur11 nt stalward at linebacker, was a e a oumamen on1 i:;. .. t a Rov••'s Requnl 1Noc.o111mu1) 11• 1 •• I ~rfttty MllHll tile H.,.,_ ll.,,1 .. c..twJ 1· CHUCK VAN Ll~W All.CIF JEFF GREEN All-CIF named to the first team _9_in_f_ir_st_rou_n_d_a_c_t_ioo_. ____ M_ir_a_Co_s_1_a_1ou_rn_a_m_e_nt_. __ 1 _!!~~··~·;-~~~·~:,~",~':!.~'i'~~"~t~~·'~·~~·1 __ _::~~~ .......................................................................................................................................... ~ defense by the Citizens Sav· .. 1· Football ' All-CIF 1-A Tea1n ' J-A Fint Offense Pos. Player School Oass B-Dobls, Big Bear Sr. B-Stephens, Imperial Sr. B-Gravel, Ea g I e r.-roun· tain Sr. B-.Holmes, Paso Robles Jr. E-Garibay, Carpinteria Sr. E-Clough, Tehachapi Sr. T-Taylor, Paso Robles Sr. T-Jones. Kern Valley · Sr. G-Weaver, Imperial Sr. I G-Burritt, Bishop Sr. [ C--Gahan, Carpinteria Sr. i~· PK-Bradley, Imperial Sr. r~ 1-A First Defense B-Small Desert Sr. ~• B-Marquez, Paso Robes Sr. • B-Petcrsen, Santa Ynez Sr. ;1 LB-Bisi, Imperial Sr. t11 LB-Zakem, \Vebb Sr .· • ~Farrand, Big Bear Sr. T-Hook. Sonora Sr. G-Jacobs, North Riv e r s ide Sr. Sr. G-Thcis. Yucaipa C-Chambers, Rowland Sr. PK-Barcena , Bell Gardens 2-A First Defense 8-Parrish, \Valnut Sr. B-Rochford, Rio ti.fesa Sr. B-Brown, Palm Springs Sr. LB-Beamon, San Bernardino Sr. LB-Campbell, Agoura Sr. LB-Laffin, Duarte Sr. LB-Edwards. Temple City Sr. Line-Malinoski, Temp I e City Sr. Line-Svientek, Neff Sr. Line-Betchel. Royal Oak Sr. Line -Van Ribbink, Ri o fllesa Sr. 1r1il'-~ LB-Van IJew, El Toro Jr. fci1 Line -Young, Lutheran Sr. Second Team ~;,. Line-Paolo, Santa Ynez Jr. B-Christensen , Ro.val ~f · ~~!~~~~i~t. Bona.~~: O~-Howard, Charter Oak ~~: ~ ~ 1-A Second Team B-Harris. Indio Sr. r I •B-Gonzales. Carpinteria Sr. B-Hart, Sonora • Sr. B---Hooks, Perrfs Sr. E-l'ugh.Rive r s id e B-Williams. Bret.hem Sr. North Sr. ings CIF board. And Jerr Green, an unsung interior offensive li neman, was named to the second team. Player or the year laurel£ J!'O to Imperial Hi~h·s Larry Stephens while simil ar honors in 2-A action go to Temple City's Rick Brown. Van Liew carried the ball 170 times in El Toro's 9·1 season for 1,251 yards. Among his 16 touchdowns were jaunts of 88, 72, 65, 44 , 43, and 34 yards. Green, in addition to his blocking ~t guard and tackle, \Vas credited with 71 tackles and 60 assists defensively dur- ing the season. GWC Honors Polo Team Kurt Wester re Id was selected the most valuable player and Jim l\1 cAdams was named the Rustler of the year at Golden West College's re- cent water polo awards ban· quet. The most improved award went to Keith Colton while Frank Browne was selected the team captain. Prep Soccer r .,. B-Ide, LA Baplist Jr. E-Wysong, Mayfair ·sr. , '· E-Jones, Perris Sr. T-Cox, Antelope Valley Sr. seum \"'!~'::' Tour h &-Kelley, Villanova Sr. T-Kemmer. Agoura Sr. P11os Verd" 1. Foun11rn v1111r o .. T-Garza, Needles Sr. G-l'outz, Alla Loma Sr. Fo11n111n V1!ll'I' I, P111den1 i. 1 Fountlln V1lley KOrln;: Mol'l'llOll. M. ,.· • T-Osberg, LA Baptist Jr. G--Sides. Lawndale Jr. Klfll>lllY 2, e111son 1. • r r El T I Sr Ed!IOl'I Korlno: Dttnne , 1 .. ......-iireen, oro , r. C-Ortega, Colton . Jllelw v1l'li1y ~ •• -.. G-Lindbcrg, Paso Robl_cs LB-Zures, El Dorado Sr. Pih,. v1rd11 o, Foun11ln v1lltY o P111der11 1. FOVl'lleln V1llev 0 :sr. LB-Balazs. Northview Sr. Kennedy 1. Edi.on a J C-,Dodson, Tehachapi Sr. 1 --------------------------1 •· h8-Anderson, Net'dlcs Sr.1~--------------------1 .... " ''°: • ' I;~, ' . • • • • IM l ,-. ,,_ " LB-Quuney, Desert Sr. 1 Z.A , Finl Olfense I Pel. f'larer School Cl;ur;i: B-Brown, Temple City Sr. B--Costello, Nefr Sr. 1 B-SIYtr'St Norte Vista Sr. B-Jonea, Riverside North ~r . E-Torret, Nell Sr . .E-.Mueller, Temple Cily Sr. I T-Blankenbaker, Te1nple City Sr. I Kam·cha(ka • l ' Pre~~s~~all I c:.... ... .., •• cn1 • """'°' MM tt7 fl Clll Cr110 ~ Otl pi !LO , kftWeltlt al9dl flJI C (17) Wlt'O DI ..... l•I 0 (71 ... !!~ u.raM tt l G CMI -• ~ ... '11« laf'fllt "*: Tiit .. N....-i L ,......n H~ tc91'Wlll tt*: ,......,. a, c..... .. \'I Odtfibul.td 11y Tlle ,1.11.,11 i! .... , C°"'o"" • 10 "~ • 1001'. Qn;. tHutrll Solrlla Httnt!M le.ore 1 . ...... . Another exciting 'thorovghbred racing season is off a"nd running ot Santo Anito Thursday, December 27. And we're offering special discounts (some over SCf,~} on eight models of fine Bushnell binocvlors to everyone who comes out to the races Opening Doy! First race is at 12:30 p.m. General Admission is only $2.25. Club House is $4.00, and luncheon tobles on the terrace may be reserved for no odditionol chorge by 'lolling Santo Anita at 213/681 ·7401. Every doy th is weik is o racing doy ot Son to Anito, including Satu«loy, Sunday. Monday, and Tuesday (New Year's~). ' . · Remember-Opening Doy is Binocvlor'S Doy at Santo Anita, with discount prices on Bushnell binoculars tha t you'll find hard to believe. I SantaAnita ~ Opens Thurs., Dec. Tl Tlllo __ __,,tool SKIERS Hurry to Sears Sears Ski Sale BHU Park. c"" M«1 a_.Ora11r 11omnly. Prices effective tbru Sunday, Dec. :W, 1973 Men's and Women's DOWN JACKETS \Vere $SO 29ss Assorted colors & sizes. SI% Men's & Women's Wind Shirto•G SAVE 59%! Alumin.um Ski Poles Reg. $9.99 499 Nylon Ski Parkas Wa• S30to$70 NOW $15 to '35 Assorted colors and sites. Ask Aboll SrlN CNVftllrnt CrMh Pl1a1 5-BUCKLE FOAM LINED SAN MARCO SKI BOOTS 49ss Were SlS HIGH BACK HINGED SAVE50%! OS 200SKIIS Reg. $26 $S! S3S.99 Tryol11 Step·!• Blndln1 2411 CUT $23.031 Men 's & Women's wereSlt Ski Pants Men's & Women's 100% Wool Ski Sweaters assorted sizes & colors.1395 Reg. $23.95 assorted 'izes & colors -697 ~~~~~~~~~~~-+~"T:e~1 ~1t~er:'r.n-rr::::'ur ~l~S~HO""'P~N~ow...,.F~or-A,._---4 COMPLETE RENTAL FREE CIFT TICKET AT PROGRAM . JUNEMOUNTAINSKIRE$0RT •All new skis. booll, & poles fone per store> ' Rent is low as '4 per day •All registrations must "" In before • loo/, discount to any ski club Qecember 2?. !973 , member •Winners will be .posted and notified COSTA MESA. ORANGE ONLY S..rs emplo ee1 and their families not all ble Sears $fAaJ,aOll UCK AWDCO. Buena Park..:.8150 La Palma Ave. Costa Mesa-3.133 .Bristol St . Orange-2100 N. TustinAve . ' Odd Names ~ig • ID West Virginia HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -Would you da,. 1e11d mall to Letter Gap, W, Va! Should )'Oil bring pocket chAnge to Toll Bridge? !Jke all rural slates, West Virginia is rich in unusual c ommunity names. At least one fam.lly w know has made a game of It .. " "IF YOU'RE ln a hurry, vlalt Quick -Kanawha 3ounty. 0 0oes anyone sand up In Duck -Clay?" Some of the town names bring the kidding upon themselves . F Ii pp Ing lhrough the pages ol your tour guide brochure, would you CONider •J"!nding the weekend In Mud, Sod, Dingy, Oink, Droop, Gip, Gad, Cave or C r a b Orchard? Would you ••er tal<e the effort to rind Lost City, Lost Creek or Lost River? 1pend the rtSl ol your Ule, .owns like Tw i li gh t , · ::inderella, ll a rm on y, F'rlendly, Romance and Rosedale might catch your ~ye. But what a b o u t Looneyvllle, Bozoo, Clem, Clio, Odd or Omps? Could you ever tell someone to run right at Left Hand'! Would you seek employ- rnent at Job? Should you look for trou- ble in CulU!J5? FOR SOME rea so n . naming their t o w n s . Hence, we have B I g :hlmney , Big Creek, Big Isaac, Big Otter, Big Run , Big Sandy and ll I g 3prlngs. Noting the infonnalily or Mountaineer living, a s m'any nrst names as last are testimonials. We have !owns like Adolph, Bud, Cora, Frank, Rita. and Raymond. Ralelglt s o ~1 E communities must have been naml'd in ' hurry . You hear names Ike Six McDowell :OUnty -or Plnk - Calhoun -and ask $Uc or Pink what? u rinding yoursclr In iowntown Annamorlah or Hcpzibah some day, take 1eart. You cou ld be ln HookersVille. Wtdntsdaiy, Ot't tmbtr 26, 1973 DAJLY PILOr .R:i PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICW:: PUBUC NOTICE a lHI SU'·»I l•tl 220.41 '9MI ~ Mtrtl'I WOt'O'" MOTICI TO c•IOITO•S Sllf'l•IOI: cou•T 0 11' TMI w.-t '90.00 tMt "' • to111t Ol'I ""' SUPlllO• COUl'T' 011' TMI .... ,. Ofl CALlfllOltlfl• 11101 Nor111 ..... .,1w llM " .-kl lot t• ITATI 0, C.\1.1,.0ltlflA fllOll TMI COUMT't OP ~MGI Mid pool11t """' Mor9" Jt•1rr •••I TMI CCKIMTY Oft OIAMOI Me. A•rtUl •lontil lllf Norltt11 ... ~l't llM ff .... Mf. A 1*f NOTtcl OP MIAlllfO 011' ll'llTITIOlf Loi I•, • lllt!fllCe ol !20..M fM4 Estelf of G. AOOl.11' GlllM. 0.CNSfd. POI ll'IOaATI OP WILL AlfD lllOlt .~,!: ............. ,.~ •• ~. "'11f:!'.-,,.! NOTIC! 11 HlllllY 011/I M to Ille LllTTlll TISTAMllfT.U'f ,_.., .... -'"" ,. ¢1Wllor1 ot tM •M¥• 1111....S o.c-....1 Ellllf of EOWAltO WES-T .tMISttALL.. Lot I• kvlll )t'snt"" Wflt DOJ& 111111 •II P9flOM Mi'fll'll clalmt ttAlritl 0.CHMd. fMt fV the point ol' -..Ollllllf\9, Ille Mlcl ffcedftlt 1r• nqulr.0 lo flit NOTIC! IS HEltE&Y GIVE N 'fltl Tiie ll:loYe Mk"ll«I prOPfrtY COllWllM 11'1tm. wlltl "" -MN -"',., 111 llUTH 60\.ES M.AasttALL 1141• llltd llet• I.Ml 1cr••· the o«kt of Ille clerk of file •boll• 111 • pttlllOtt for """*" of Wiii •1111 Prtta1f«I tit': t11lltltd covrt. « to prfltfll 11\itm, wtllt ior 15-Mt ot Lttltr• T"1imt11l•rv Frtd w. Ht111lrt•, LS mt 111t nKffNrY \IOl.ICllW" to IM vn• to nw PfllllOMf', rtltt"'°"' lo wlllcft E.lfttOll A clft1lontd II IANK 0111 AMElllCA NA• !• m1M !or f11rtllff P1rtlclll1r .. ,,., ll'AICIL II TIONAL TRUST ANO SAVIN 0 S lilt! ttw tll'ftl 111d· plltf of 11e..-l119 LIOAL OIUIUl"TIDlf 011' ASSOC:IATION, TltUST Ofll'ARTMENT, fM N"" hit -.11 itl !or J•ll• 1, HOll"TNllt ILIMllfTAllY SCNOOI. IOI Noflft Mtltl St'"9, S.1111 Alll , lt7•, •t t :OO i .f!'I., In Ille covrtroom IUILDIMO llTI C•lllorllll 12101, wtl!Cll 11 llM pll(f ot OtpttlrMl\I No. J of uld courf, (l"OllTIOlf TO al COlfVIYID • o1 blnllltl~ of Ille 11n<ltl'•IOnld t11 111 II 700 Civic Cf!lll• O•IYI W•tl, In TO CITY 0 111 llVINI ll'Olt ll'ARK Snll mltlttf pert1f11l119 lo t11t ••!•I• ot Ill Ctlv ot s1n11 An•, C1llfor1111. l1lno I ~Ion ot Loi 2U Ill llock ulcl clt<tdHll, ""111\in io..ir tnonl"-1tter Oltld Ole. 1,, 1t73. IO:J ol lrvlnt I SubGlvl1lon, 111 lf\t CllV IM flrtl 1>11bllc•tl011 OI' tlll• l'IOlltf. WILLIAM I . SI .IOHlf, ot l111lM, COIHll\' ot or ...... S"lll of 01tld O.ClmlMr' 7, 1'7l COlllllY Clffk C:1llf0f11l1, 11 11\0Wfl Oii I l'NP recordld 8•11k ot A"""k l N1tlontl ICllfDIL ANO AlfOlllSOlf 111 DOOi< I , P"'9 II t i Mlte1ll1neo11.t 'frutl 1nd S.vl1191 ANOC. IY' CMI Mllcllfll M•Pt-• 111 llM otllc• ol llWI Couttty Ludll• 8. EM ii 1m N .. •l"MCllW•'t l\~corffr ol Nlcl C::0\1111¥, ClfKtlbotd ., E1UKvtor QI ""'Wiii ol s111t• ....... C•IH. nm lollo'wt: !hf •bollt nlll'llll IMc:ldl'lll {714) J!ot-1117 l!lfQln11!n9 11 Ille moil Nortl'lotrtY Hutfff, W1t1tr. w.i1111.u. ArtOf'IM't• ttri Petto-corner ol LOI ue or Tr.ct Ho. 7.,.1 MlnlN a Klltll P\ltlllllle<I OrtnO• c::oait O•llY Piiot, 11 '"°""" on • ..,.P rec0td9d I" • L1w C°""rttl,.. Otc•mblr If, to. 26. 1973 »?J·71 f!l.ook 2'1. IHlllS 1 Jllrou1111 S of 1• Ctt1tvry P•rt; l:ftf Ne. .. Ml&e•U1111fOUS MIPll 111 lfll otflc• ol ' L• ..........._ C• ,..., PUBUC NOTIC.... Uld COlillty llecordtri IMllCe ~ono UI)) eJM.111'1 '°" IM 5ou11>e11l•rl'( HM of 111d Tr11ct AllonM'f'• .... l•toCVIW No. , ... 1 Horth •ir.12" £•11 111 . .0 Pvbll111td Ori ..... COlll 0.llY 1"11al, STA·ll U fHt 10 lh.t $Mll-1Mrhr llM af ttlll l!'ll•11:•111111l•111.., .... ,.,n., ............ ., ... .,, ............ ..,:.-. ............. _ .... o.t.lll .. ll!. .... C,,, .. ,..a ....... ,.'"' .. '"'"' .. "" .................. .:::1•lllo.c.,..,111r n. ''· ,., 1rn tllCI J111111"" HOTICIE o• TllUSTl!l'i S•l l 1•1111CGllYl}'MI10"" '°""""II C11ftornl1 1. lf,4 :1156-7:1 T.S. No. 2M-7J Edlton Com!Hnv, • COflHll'•llllt'l, lly On J•nutrv ''· ,,1,, II 11 :00 A.M.. dfld di ltd J11N1rv 10, ttn. 1!\Cf West Virginians like to think PoSitively w h e n Jt's interesting to note that roUts in Grant Coonly >nee were a bit more rormal than Raleigh coun- lians. In Grant, there's Arthur -but it's Artie in One could say West Virginians have an affinity tor strange placenames, but we wouldn't want to >fend the resldtn.IS or Af- finity, Well'itcr Cowity. "Is l:lico -Fayette Coonly -half lhe •11.e of Hix -SL.Ltnmers? IF YOU were tired of e>ig city life and looking for a peaceful home to l ..... El ............ .,, .... !llllllll .. .,, .. .,, ................................... ~::>l!llimtc<Jll!;i::; ............................ 1:.J: ... ICO••Elll""IKi"'""lll•l-~~·~P~UB;;:;.IJC NQTJCE TITLE IHSUAAN CE ANO TRUST COM· recOf'd«I In look IMOJ, Jll9I' ff7 PANY, 11. clul'I Wblllhllecl Tr\1$1" 111\der of Ofllcl•I Ate-I of Or11n0t C0\11111; 11nd wri.u.nt lo Ot«I of Trust rKorded t1M11c1 •1°"'9 M1cl 5ou'f11W'Hlf(IY llM FICTtTIOUS •USIMllS O.Citmbl• 17, 1'70. I t 5'!11. No. 1'61l, Sou!h !il)O(WU" E11.t JJO.tl !t1l1 lhentt ~oast Area Vital Statisties NAMI STATeMIENT 111 !look IM ptgf t l. of Offlcl11 Records PtrlollM wHf\ 1111 SovtMISterly llM Tiie l<lllowln{I P"°'°"' ''' dolr19 111 ttMI Cllflc e ot Ille Cou11ty RKordtr of 1tlcl Tr1ct Ne. 7"'1 Sovlll 3''57'32" lxlflll•tt 11: ol Or1n91 CounlY, C1lltornl11, WILL SELL Wttl 271.2S 1911; IMll<f 111r1Uel with UNITED STATES CAA P 0 0 l AT PUBLIC AUCTION 'TO HIGHEST llle SCllllllwttlffly llM of u ld 111111 SERVICE, '2'2 C•lllPlll Ori,,., Sulit BIOOElt FOR CASH (pay1bll 11 llm1 CllrlVrlld lo Ille SO\llller11 C1tlfornl1 l·C, Newoart Buell. C1. '2"60 of ••I• In l1wful ...,,..., or ltlf U111!1d Edl1on Compa11v North '°'00'43" Wn t Gl!bfrl W. ttlle. 16712 S1wt1rook l111t, Slit") 11 Ille SOVl!I tront 1ntr1nc1 "6."3 feet 10 • palllt °"Ille Sovtf\ettlerty Hunlll\lllOll at.ch, C1. t'26"9 to 1111 Old Orllllllf C°""'IY Courlhovu Unt ot 11ld LOI 131; tlltllc• •IOll9 S•mll'll J , Flowers. 510J Comlt90, 1oc:1lfil In Ille 200 l!lloc:k ol W••' S111l1 lh• $0!Jllle1slfl'IY lln1 ol w!cl lot ' ...... Jlllil0E311111Dl•llllil0ll~l:'."'•1111111"'<ll""'"'"''"'"'"'"'"""'~!1J;r.&3U•ll;.or!'>"'""'°";.""-... tl<'•'d':'"CCIOl: ... S 'C .. ::0 .. l!E""::ll"" .. """""'"""'"""'G~ Loul1vllt•. Kv. "°205 Ana a1111ltv1rd, lorl'!'ltrly Wt tl 1111 Slf"t, 131 Nortn )9'S7'W' E1$1 t0.00 t"I ~• Thls bll1l111u . I• Conclucltd bl' • ge111r1I Santi Ao•. C1ll!Mnla, 111 rl9M, tllte to IM ITlOll E11l1rly cor111r ol u !d 51'1'11111, s111dr1 and Mllrtt11 £. All!!rnalhy, Aldrew v . 11nd ROblrta Cole, Sa11dra LIM encl Robert EC1W1rcl perhMnlllp. Ind J11ttf'fl l Cllt'lYtYld io 111<1 now held Loi !JI/ thl!ICI 110n9 tllf Norlht1Jtff11' Births Mr. •nd Mra. Manti Y•ndtrv<ork, fOO Al'tlOf SI .. COlll Mftl, Ol•I Velcltrrelt1, Mergo Sue and A\~erl F. L&Gr1nue. Olan1 L. and Lovls S, Gii H!lt fl ... \lllllll Ill tlY II undc-r-111ld Died of Tru1I In lint ol s1ld Loi 1:111 Nor1h 50'02'21" D •• 'd .. • Th~rrie. W•vlll o. al'l<I Lu-ei lll 'fhls S11l•m1111 w•s • tlWI prope•IY tltuetld 111 Uld CC111nty w111 290.00 '"' to tht ··•111 ol G11t!errei. 0111!1• e obtrt 0 . Swltk. Dorwitd Melv/11 I nd M••OVl<'lle Counl'I Cll•k ol Drll\91 Coun!v on •ncl Slit• clncrlbtd 1•: DIOlnnln{I. ""' MOAe MIMOlllA\. NOS,.ITAL De~,., lt71 Mr. •nd Mrs. J•clt O.Lor•111, llOll A-Tr" LIM Irvine, bOY Mr .. •ncl Mr•. M.Orrl1 P••k••· lSI Wllnllf Slrllll, NIWPOl'I 8t•cll, boY Mr. !Ind Mr1. John Cllr!1tl1n~, IUl A111otl11 Sir"'.<. COlll MIM, boll Dc,..r n , ltn Mt, llld Mrs. ttlc hlrd KUl\Jf• \ ... •vl111'• Drift, Cost• ~1 elr Mr. IMld Mr'I. Tllornl1 wtl.-, 3Dl1 Hlrclll'll Wey, (~II MIN, 11lrl Mr, llld Mrs. J1ffrrr Harn, JDt·A LI JoU1. H._t 811Clt olrl M!;: _ •1111 Mr1, L"llY Suth*J1nd[ •Of uery l"l1efi.!!lwrtDOrt a.•di. Oft OCt*r •• ,,. Mf. Ind Mrt, Thon'lll Collin•. llin H•Yf(forcl, ltYlnt. ,1r1 NOVtmW ti Mr. •nd Mfl, Mlth•ll Mcfolllll, ''01 Dorc11t1ltr l:otd, CorOlll det Mir, "" Mr. 111<1 MA. 01vlcl Mal1yny. K)I A.lbKOft, Hunlln{llllt'l 8HCll, llOV• Mr. Ind Mr .. O-ld Pfftdlt10ll. Sl' e.,1111n1. C!:*tl ,,...., 91rt. Nfolll\lltltr tt Ni.-. fl'ld Mt1. JfY Wl11Wr, '1JJl6 VI• St!\ NJOW{. L1011n1 \'fUls, olrl, Grant, Ron1ld Eclwlrcl 100 Pairlcl• Cetllrv11 November 30, lf73 Thi E•!.I 1J2 fffl ot Ille SOVth Tiii 1boY1 dtKtlbld proptrfv c0r1l1!ns Lynn Aydf+olte, M•rv Cl1!r1 Ind Oouolas ,ttflJ orie-h.111 of Loi 3" o1 "FAIRVIEW 1 Cohtn. Fr1nkll11 S. ind 1!11rb1«1 S. Garcia. Joe end Sllel"yl "· s Francll I PubllM'led Or•no• Calif Dllll' Pl1o!, FARMS " '' $hOWll on 1 MIP recorded ."61 ~,r,':,;rtd b¥~ Gamai. Jr., JL1in ind Mery Ann Culver, C::h.ltlei. A. end Marci• Elnor l~~~'tn C•IMI' nt1 A"ll ;,nd Jlme1; Oectmber S, l:Z. lt, J6, lf7J M S.'3 In B~ I 1"'111 n af Ml1'C1ll1""""1 Fred W, Ht,,.lrklOll, LS »SI Mealier, Gl!nn Lorell ind Hazel tt1tton. aeverlv Ann •nd TIK>mlls M•~· records ol 0r•n9• COllnf'I', l"AllK IXCMANOS 8111nt, Darien• E. and 6trl !I. Elll&be!ll Frank C1lltornla. EXCEPT It. Wl\f 50 fffl AGllll!IMIEMT •IETW'lt!N 8ui•"· C::.rf J. ind Ml•Cll 1. Heid, Prind• J. •Old Utmer L., Sr. McCullOllClh. MorQa11 11\d Mvrtle PUBUC NOTICE of 1111 Sovtll ISO feet ti-.al. THI! lltl/llfE UNllllllEO SCHOOL Cirlln, Gltllcl ind Mirv GQodarfn, (1thy M 11'1<1 Johll J . V~t111i11, Mel•nle C. 111cl Anlllonv TIM 1tretl 1adrHI lni::t ol~ common DISTlllCT AND TN• CITY O• llYiNe Kennev. Oon1lcl Kenneu1 •ml Andrta ca:rer, l!lene J. and John G. llllCTITIOUS •USIMESS de1lon1tlon, If 111y, of 11'11 r••I proptrty 1. P•rtlfl. Pltk. J11n11 RoOerl Ind Sh1rlv11 Mle St ..... arl, Pilnlll K. •nd ROQer NAME STATIMENT de!.(flbld •bave 11 f)l.lro«lfil lo bl: Tll!I AOrttmflll 11 lflltrld Into ~ A1'1t1ft.I Wrlollt, L. June incl 01rreU G. Ek1trom, Ja~t L. Ind Al•11 Cral<1 TM foUOWl"9 Plf'IOn• 1r1 dolno SJ2 HA.Mil TON, COSTA ME S A • Ind bllwttll Ille CITY OF IAVINE, Llpperl, JCMn L1111IM •nd Rolland Nltllols, Olin• J. •nd Alll'h J, Sw111n, Otborlh Porter and Phl!Uo bui.(,....s is: C::ALIFORH IA 1 m\Hllcl~I corpor1Uon (hfrtllllll!tr Mlurlt1 .:'.:1>ristm11, Jam11 S. •nd K1r 0 , V111 Nnl A .. M ENTERPRISES. 23161 Sin Tl>t lllldffllOneG T...,11ee dl&e11lmt lllY reflf'rld lo •s lhll "CllY"l i ncl Ille Rodo•ri, Brucl Arnold Jr. Ind Dllr>e De-Merla, Mllrgle •nd 8rul'O Fl~. Sus.an M. and Mirk S. Eilebtn. Minion Vlt lo. C1I. t267S llabllily lor 1ny IMorrect11n1 OI Ille IRVINE UNIFIED SCHOOL • OISTlll.ICf Clerk• n...-1 M <I 1 R M0tton, Diane B. 1na l!lernl• G. $ E ""' lddn 1 1ncl other common Lll'l'lbe!'I, Aile• Marl• Ind Dovie Calvlll ......... IS, i t'f a,. Ind 00.rl Ar-. Pl!'CKIY Ann llld Fl .. Vl'> Torres L••rv 0.1n Rloos. tl771 Ill 11.t)lll. • ... , '' ,,· ·-·-'··•1A Cto...lln1ltlr metl'9d lo 15 IM "SChool o. "' Jimmie Mr. l lld Mn. Ctll riff l:•fftMY Jr., 411 F1lr Orlve, Apt. 101. C"tl Miii, bOY Mr. end Ml'I. T'-lf1 G•l"blf', Zl10 Mr. 11111 Mrs. OoM!d Cr•1o. :!06\'I £1.t OCHt1 Fron!, BllbOI, bO\'. """"'Mr u Mr tncl Mts. Em•nllll Gor11, lt..i Flderll, CW• Mtsa girt. Flied Navm1btr 21 WOGd.,..,,rd, Jr. fl11lclllil1s. l(lm Eileen end ROO.rl Ltt Mission \11110. C11lf. 9267S 11n• on, 8n1 ........... ,.., ,,. Olstrltl"l. LindOU•S1. Johll L. Incl JIM L ~·-y, M1rle ~ Arcnle G • Roet< o. Mi nt. 737•2 El Etltbfn, S1!d w l• wlll bl mtde. llut wllllolll 2. lltcll•••· ::g:i·tt?ir:!r~"M1~!~~h =II ~3ri~~cl~.lle~~r:• o~:~' ind M1rlhn .. :'.a~:~~~:r.,1 J~':n J= LOavld ~~s:t!s~~!:· ,~·~~'J:~ ~ • llmltld ~":'::1~ or ;j,j~:•nl~==· °"~I:! cc!!.:,T":r C~~~ 911~1~~ ".!'; JAM 1111 E Mulnelm, Arl!M! Nadine and C•rl Meldrum iurtnerilllp. cum11r1nce1, to PIY Ille r1m1l11l119 prlll· nlCts•••Y munlcl,.i put'pOfM pi.rnvint $1o1tl• AM AVllllll, C"ll MIM. elrl "-'· •1111 Mrs. Stvtrl O•I•. ll tlS AIClnf , lfYIM, 9lrl Mr. Ind MrJ,. Ed!Jfrcla Urllof1111, 120 WHI Vlc:lwl•, C11tt1 Mfl'i lrOY Mr. •nd Mt•. ltOll" Bllllnft 732 ~I 20111 Slrrl, Cotti Mii•. olrt Odtltltr JI, lt1 Mt. •net Mrt. Cfl•rle1 L.,...1,, 177S1 S,.IMr. Hunlln91on &eecll, lrOY Mr. llld Mr1. Jolln G. l"vrvl1. 1002 Scruff! HllfOI\, S1nll All!t bOY Mr. Ind Mrt. Mkhlll t:dWlrdt, 1$21 E11I PIM LanwKK bO[ Mr. Ind Mr~1 D1l1 11narum, MIS W..1 Colum111111. Stnt• ... ,,., girl Mr. ll'ICI M,.. lll lchlrd SC:f'lvlllrt, 3101 C:.."" Vllw L•n., Apt. e-C, lrvlM, .. ......,,,.., 1, Im Mr. tnd Mrs. Mlchlll ,.,.,.,., Ar1111 l"t<tllc ColllOf, Box .ffJ/Jl, A.!1111, M~ 11"1d Mrt. llll•Y~ P•Wloskl, 2'0fl Ak1m1 Av~, L.aCIUlll NIQ\ltl, olrt Mr. e11c1 Mr•. s••-Ellrdfno. 12101 Adri•n 5tr"'· A111. c. Gtrdt!I Grow. olrl f#,r. ll'ld fNI. J1me1 Jl<Obt. 1'361 GU1r•ll•r A-..-. lr...mt, 1lrf /ol r. IMld Mrs. Jlml'I G. luc1tort1, ~ Cl•Y Slreet. NIWPOl'I l!l•Kll. Mr. I nd Mr-1. WUll.m Erk klOtl, Ul61 Cl•I••· T111!111, lrOY lf--1. 1rn Mr. •nr:I Mr1. Btnl1mln 1C1tNl•11I. 110 E1tt ttth Slrw', Cotti Mf1.I. "" Mr. Ind MrJ. 8i,wloll Yl ltr 1C0. PnclOOf Ori"" H-1 l!lff.C!I. bOY Mr. 1nd Mr1. G111c1a Ort<IML 31'"8 ll'llDl1r. LI0\1111 l!l••Cft, 11r1 Mr. 1nd Mrl. Doll C"'lslfllltfl, 25'1 Yf le Plf~I. CO.II Ml-M, boV N•"""*" ~ lt1' Mr. •nd Mr•. tf{Ull1m llfulhi.. 1tS0 POt! 811hoo ,.lKe. HtWPOrl B••cl' .. olrt Mr. 11\d Mrs. lrl•11 Llttl•, 6202 W1rT11tr, HunUno•on Be1cll, qlrl Mr. 1t<!C1 M•l. WUll1m Nlck•...on. 151'01 T111.1i11 Vlll l"' Wey, 'fu1tl11, bOy Mr. Ind Mrs. GIMll FoWl•r. '" YI• Orvltlo, N__.I a.111:1'1, olrl Mr. 1nd Mr1. llOlllf' tt1rrl1, 926 Wt•I .Slit Sir"!, AO!, 1, COl'on1, IKIY .,,,......,..,4, 1tn Mr. Ind Mrl. 01Yld M1z1, •V flollltr!Ofl A.... Hewoorl BHCh, boY Mr. ll'ICI Mrl. V..11t11m V1t, 2301 CllY Sir"'· Nt-1 81Kll, tloY Mr. Ind Mr1. James Ptnklol, Ulll H•...,, ~ll<I• NIWPOrl 911Cll. bO'f ... _..r l, Im Mr. and Mr$. Slwe!'I JtltlMlfl, 2COO W. GlfllOlkS, ADI. )f, Allllhillm, "" M~ Mra. J1mt1 Hoonlf', lfO Aft .. Cost1 MIU, lrOY Mr. 111d Ml. Wllll•m Vin Cltve, 1U31 Oed•r SlrMI, Fou"l•lll V1J11y, "'" Mr. Ind Mrs. C"'"'9 K.1mmer1r, )OU Fl1mtnoa Orfw. COii. MfU, bOy. If-Mr 24 Mr. •nd Mrs. OOyll Forlll, )OIJ F1rn11t1lh l•n•, Ca1111 M•••· girl, Mt. 111<1 Mrl. G9011~Y WHllty, 1'2541 C1plt1I 111."f C::O\lrl, Founat111 V•]ler. oJrl, Mr. •I'd Mt1. Lult1v1P!, t1' 01k Strtet, Cent• Miiii•, twl11 11lrls. HIVl mMr u Mr. ind Mr" Lowell Lindsay, :UI Ctd1r St., NtwJIOl1 &ffcn, bOy. Mr. •lld Mri. M1111ln C1rr. 2711 Mall••d, CO$l1 ~''' girl. W . 11111 Mtl. JCIMI Allt11, 2'0fol SlllW -LIM· Huntl!19IOll &each. ot•L Mr, lll'ld Mrt. Jol'lll ll'ltkltt, 9~2 c::nu.,.11 OI' .. Hunlll'ICllOll &•Kii. M~.nd Mrf. JoM Fll.Slmtnont. 2421 Ekloll Apt. e. coi.11 Mttt. 01r1. N.-lllf' U ~. llftd Mn. Gulllerrno MOt1t11. JOI W. A.-ot.00 Apl. 23. COSll MIM• "'' IN. incl Mt•. Eric RuUllUlll, 3'01 P1rfl.vlfW LIM No. 2•-0, lrv1N!, olrl • Mr. 11111 Mrl. Wllllll'l'I J111Nikl, IJ711 Cllerrv St .. W111mlntlfr. glrl. Mr, fnd Mr1. R•m1sl'I SN ll. :J269 C.tlfor1'111, Coste Mew. bOV· Mr. Ind N#t. MlchHI Tlf(!>e"ll. 7661 G1rtl11d, Apt. 17, Hlll'llln91on BeKl'I, Twin~. Mr. •fld M,.s •• GregOtV Gtlsll, 21U L1wllt, COlll M11•. bol'· NavtmMr V Mr • .., Mrs. CT\'1'I Mlnlllt. &207 Unori Av•.• Gf(dfll Grove, 11lr!, Mr. •nd Mr1. ltotlerl Ohon, 106 Porl Wfybrlllgl. Nrwp«I 8Ht ll, offl. Mr. 11111 Mrs. 8rl1n TllOmP!Oll. im New York A ...... Cost• Miii, boV· Mr. Ind Mn.. Jack Cl1nlot1, 2322' lcl11!111 PIK•· Coil• Meuo, bOY. Mr. •nd Mri. L1rry Ovr11t1, l l63 Qf11f'Clo, S111 M1rc0t, 11lrl. Mr. end Mr1. M•rk voorlll1. 160 Wtll WllJon, ,\pl. 12, C::ostl MtU, ''" Dissolutions Of Marriage Mr. •1111 Mn. SlfpM!I Gllbtrt, US'-11 lllllCl'ltller, COJI• MIN, bO'f Mr. Md Mn.. Clltrlff Whltn.'t. 116 Fl ... ....,_1111' 17 J7t11 Strwt. Newport 8"cll. olrf ()llOll, Ells-Ill lt lc:hlltd llld Cllll'yl Mr. i nd Mr1. 1!11rrT 01111tlatn, 1623 Marlt Ihlen, Col'-Mell. bo</' Alclllrd:I. Mtrr 5ut111 1nd Terry Mr. 1nd Mr*-Dl'Y1d t.rdlll, Mlt GI"""• Clo!" El1ln1 .nd Mtrrlou1 Atdwood """''· lnrlM , tlrf Smllll Mr. tnd Mrl. Bob Ell'll. lta "1Mllelm. W.011, $Inell 0 111'11 111d G•rv IC1rl C0t•• MIN. girt l'.llff, l"trrllls Mff 11111 tt1rolcl Edw1rcl Mr. •nd Mrl. Allr,,..,,, •fl'llO•J. mt Unruh, Don,,. JH lllll Ind M1111lft FlorlM 51r"', Apt. 8, HunllnatOll J1""9 •iech. boy ttolm. C1lllerlM P. •1111 Dile Georo• ,._"' t. 1'71 l!lrown, 8tl!Y J. Ind E11911'11 H. Mr. 111111 Mrt, Tl'lomll Avdlft, 14)61 Holmtl. Oorotl'ly Ann and Biiiy N111e Mlftll•11 L•M. ttunllJ19!on ltlCll, W11cte11. Dollllcl M. 1nd tt•lln G. glrf Ll1Chenl>flr0, M1rlly11 L. I nd Al1n Mr. •nd Mrs. CeorOI' Gl over, l6t K. T•-Strwt, COlll Malt, glrl SMllon. O. Monl 111d ttowerO P. Mr. I nd M••· Mktllll 0111•, 274 Cobb, Etlabtr!I All,_ Incl Rlcll1 rcl E. 70111 StrMI, COii• MIN, ,1r1 Fr111k N..,.,,..., 1. 1m Flores. JHll H. Ind s.rvto J. Mr, 11M1 M•I. Stvart llulhlrfol'd, 17'23 Ttllea. Arll'lur Jouoh ftnd JMll M1rle CIMtW strwt. Fount•ln V•Hf't, otrl Tr1v1to. Louis 11nd Siiiy ltM Mr. •ncl Mr .. Hllf .. ¥ OU..kl11. tltl E"9fll, J\ldlth L. Ind Erllno l"olctlf' Clrdf, ttuntl119lllt'l l!ltt<ll, 111•1 Hllon. N•n<Y All Ind 11:00.rl Roy Mr. 1nd Mr .. Jolltl L.1Monl19!1f, d'-11 J on", Cerolyn A1111 Ind Kelli! Fletcher 0111111~ COl'Ollf dorl Mar. boY 81tckwell, Mlonlc• A. Ind Wllllll'l'I Mr. end Mrs. Ctno Ftrfftl, U4 Otflk tt. Clrdl , Munllnwf'OR 8Ntll, bOT Long, JCll'l11 S. Ind M1rtlll l.. Mr. 11111 Mrs. INll llolcl'I, 223' SWiii tt1tThon. O"'lt 11\11 Eiieen 1"1rk Or., s.1111 AN, bOv Kwfm111, 11-M. nd Mart< A. """"Mr 1. 1m 1 ...:'~~:::"':·c':•:•:n:::•c:.· :'"':::.~'c"c1c"c'_':· __ Mr. lllCI Mr" tt""" rom;11-3'01 ,.1rttv1-u,,., UB, 11111n1. otrl PUBUC ~OTl_CE Mr. •nd Mr1. Dtryl """'"'""'' 2017•1------------S..ntl Arlll Av1 .. Cos!•,,,...., olrl STATIEMIENT OP .t.•ANOONMENT OF Mr. •!Id Mr .. Johll F1lrbofr*t, 1114 H. us• OP Flt:TlTIOUI •USINIE55 NA.Ml! M¥erlY St .. No. 11, S111!11 Al\ll, Olrf Thll lollowlllO ptrlOM 111\ff 1ti.ndorltd Mr. " Mrl. Clllr .. t Awllll, MO\ ttw ust o1 tt>e flcfll10ll~ !lu<IMll n.une: C• NitWt*'IY Or., Hunlln{lkln OE It.Ml.A PUZA, 1'°2 Fruit SI .. .. Kii. girt Siii!• Al\ll, C11ff. f'ml1 N1oemMr f, Im Thi nctlttou. 111,nJntst 1111"" rlffrrtd to Mr. 11111 Mrt. Oll¥1d Slllck. 1.ol •boll• WIS fllld Ill or.,. County Oii D<t•I lld .. lrvt,_., 11r1 6-l._7, Mr Ind Mrs. llOlllld Sl'lurtf. 104n . F J ""' II ~ ""'° Cir H1o111tl111ton Bltcll. FIOYd · GrooYtt r.. E .. : ·• or .. Oal'1 Pol11t. C11tf. mn Mt .,.. Mr.. ttlCIOI' Cllt'lll, 1t21 Tom S11ot11. S•lll• ... "'' C1lll. w. C•rflllll. s.1111 An•. 11r1 T~tl Ml~·' WIS cOlldlldtd by I Mt tlld Mr.. IUcl'lllrd Moore, 7U lll'l'llttd pa""'"ll•D. J'oJ.M SI CGlll Mt111 boll Llovd F. GrooYtr Jr. Mr •1111 'Mrs JI~ T~t.,, nl Thi• 118~1 ..... tlltd Wllll "" i t•""'"'• Coro,.. dtl M•r• bOI' Covntv Cl,.•k nl Or1nge Cou11ly Oii Mr. 11111 M••· Jonplt M1son. ,.,. MOYe!flbtr )), ltn . ::' Sf•boUl'M Wl't• Newport 8t1Ch, Pl/blb!Md Orlno9 Mr. ind Mr•. Tl\Clll'lll C•rtY· 2$251 0.C•ml!O!r . lt. 26. .... I Coat! D111Y Piiot 1972 Ind J1111ua•Y 3173.73 HllOO lld .. Ll9\IM Nlgwl, girl 2, f , 197' Mr. ....0 Mr1, Jt<Ob Ntufttcl, tt2't -""'° , ......... , •• , COii• M•w, otrl PUBLIC NOTT"r.. Mr. 111d Mr .. G•r•ld WU.on, 1762 ·----1 tlfrnel, lrvlne, 11lrl Glue Guck At Facwry GREAT YARMOUTll , England (AP) -A vandal gave a fUrniture factory a very sticky wicket, pull· Ing the plug on a -age tank and flood!ni the place with .... or glue. PUBUC. NOTICE l'lCTtTIOUS •USINISI MAMI ITATIMllfT Tiii folkrWll'll ""°" ft dOlnt bulllltll .. , THI CLINGtNO VINE 1'1.Al'IT IOUTlQUI, 1032 .a..,.ktt DI' .. Newpot1 8Ndl, c.111. '"'° Wll.on. M•ro1rtl C-I nd W •m · Ernesl Huoi.on, G1r1ld A. Ind Doris P. L1rry O. Rl90s C1Plll tum Clf IM ll(lit(I) SKlll'ld by 10 Ille provli.Jons ol G~nmlfll Code Cru!ktlllrlk, Sh1rm Ann •ncl Donald crne1.11lr, J•ems I!. •nd Judith sue H1rtm..,n. C::h•rles Geor<ie 11 n d ThJs stiterntnl w11. fllfil w!tll the w ld Died or Trvu, to-wit : 16.0:0.21, r-11-~-1 -M ~"' -..., T. Ell h G1r1lden• i I I !Mr !did I ...,. "'' ~~ ,, .. , L19t1, Sl'ephen Wlm1ton •nd Pilrlcl• Fierro, Carlos llld 11bet Andenon. eirNr• L. •ncl 8r~e A. CounlY Clerk (71 Or111111• Cau111v on w 111 "'"" IOfl, 11 PfOY ~ of ctl-5ltlon tor !hf ptrtlc~llr pl1<• H;!:."Wendv Olinne arid Antt>onv INTEl~~e~T~!!m~f~~Ef.1 e1:~·rewLe110t• lr1H1e 111c1 Geor11e Oe<tmber lQ. 1971 lll.Jlln ,:~,na~(1l~:':"a0!:. 1~•11{~~'t'r~. i': :,o"';'J'vi~on"'';rl= b~~rni~~! Wli llem SPOrclch, JO!ln N. 111\d Lauri L. Publlilltcl Of'MOI Cots! Dilly Pllol, ch1•11es and ellp&nSH of Ille Tru1tt1 lht t •eh•noe ol 1 C!l't p1rlt .ii. fOf' LlM!SfV, Robl'rl A 111d M1roarel E PUB UC NOTICc-Oecemotr 12, It, M, ltl1 encl J1nu1rv tnc1 01 1111 I rusts • cre1ltd bv Mid otti.r l)Utlllcly..,....nfil property' Wlllcll wlll C::ll.sslntv. ThfGclore J. Ind Jolan Me-ter, Oor(ltll~ 1ric1 Ad•m JM i:. 2, 197• 37•._73 Ottd of Tr1111. be utllllld •• • 0trk 1111 wtt.n !ht l un11m, A11•lln c.eorge i ncl Myrn1 Wimmer, Bett1 J. 111\d E1rl __ Thll benellcl•"" llnder ••Id O.td ol 1wm1r Cl!¥ plrk •Ill wlll bl utlllllld K1y Sl'l'lllh, K•lllleen Jo1 ind EugeM! NOTICE OF M•RSHAL'S SAL& PUBLIC NOTICE Tru1t herl!'lolore execu!ed "'lld cl•llvered for 1 ilmllir public f)l.lrpose: bY 1 S1yre, Oe11Y1r OrYllle •nd Edna Rulh p,•,,•,•,',,, Jo•e• and 'vlncenl v. Petlflt C•ed•I E11ch1nge, P11l11tlft ...,, ta tlll imd•~onld • wrllttn Dtcl1r1tlon publlc .,..." Alteri. Ele1nor H. 111<:1 Lei.Iii J. F1r11sworth, Oelerldanl. No. 21 ~99 ot Ot-taull Ind Otmalld !\:Ir S111. •ncl 2.2 Tiit lrYine: U11lllld SC:llaol District Slump, Marie 11'1<1 Dl•VI Nlchals 011te ol Juclgm1n!: AllQust 31, 1913 FICTITIOUS IUSINl:SS I wrlttlKI Noll« ol Oel1ull 111\d Eltc;t!oo ll •U!l\Ofltld to tltCllallOI lh propttrly Fatnbf'Ollgh, JIKlllh E, •ml Cli rence PlJD[,IC NOTICt-: Bv virtue ot an e•e-culion luutcl on NANCI! STATf.Ml!NT to Srll. The u11c1trsl11ned c11u11<1 s1ld tor ptOPertY owMCI bl' •ll(lflter &111bllc M, November 30, 197l bV Ille Munlt!ptl The followlno per~ It clolno bllslntss Not!cl ol Oef1ult 11ncl Electlo11 lo Sell ... ~V nur111111I to llM provl•IGll• of Hinton. St1ve A. and Sharte11e D. c1111rt, west Ora"ll' County, Coonly ot as: . to be recordfil fl\ the co1111ty Where Educ•ll~-COde sectloo 16101 B1•l•llP• Donna Je1" encl Aon•ld 0 FICTITIOUS •UStNESS Or1ngt, St111 of C1Ulorn!a, VP011 • !\IClg· Sl(V ·SAILING PU8LICATIONS, 610 !hf real property 11 locllfil. 2 3 TM City •lld !IWI SC~ Olitrk:I L. NAME. STATEMENT men! enlwtd ln faYor ol P11clfk Credi! N•wPOrl Cenltr Drive. Suite :UO, TITLE INSURANCE Ind hl~I oetermllllel t!wl It It 111 tftt bnl ~~.r'!:,·,~: :'n:.,'K"r.:ba.';\';;'.;ong The followino person 1• doln9 buslnest E11cllan91, 11 corporo'llion 11 llKIOl'l'l•nl Newport BNCll, C•lltor1111 r.IUG TRUST CCW.PANY lnlereit Clf bolll Ptrt1 .. 1r.e1 Iller ••dlalllll M•l'ft1'0ll· Jo AM e . flld Gltnn L. 1$: 0 IJ03 W C 1 ttl h creditor arid •oal11st Fr•nces P Garclntr/Fulmtr LI tr. o 11r1 p II. A as s1lcl Tru1tff, ,.,11111 prOClll'f'I dldlcitld 10 tht CUy A~er. iuzettt Mir!t and Rlthircl COLOR AN • 11 · ots II way, F1r111wortfl 1k1 Frances P ow I r Corpor1tlllrl -Sllle ol C1llforlll•, 1332 BY ELMER W. HEINZER tor ce•l•ln otlllr proptrly owned lrY Newriort EMach, C•I · tt'6CI Farnswartll 11 IU<loment debtor. l.llGwlno Comrnonwe1lth AY-. l!llltnll P1rk, • Aulhorlild Slg,,.lytf llM Sdlool Olttrfcl Ml 11W 1 City w. Rk h&rCI I RtH. 6306 w. CCMSI I net t11l1nc1 of $1,]J,8.ll •tluallv clllt C1lltor11I• 90621 Diii: t>ec::emtler 17. 1973 k bl I blltMd ldl "" I ~~(;~:. A~1:r: s~:i,:rt J~=ll Hifhway, Newporl 8e1dl, Ctllf. '2660 on· 1.1IC1 ludomtnl on tile date ot the Thll buslr'ietl i5 condVcltCI by 1 COf• Publllllld Ofll'lllf Cotll Dl llY Pllo!, r:: $C= !.lie ".:"lllOUI clltrvp~f11111 ~ l CllllM il'lb t1usl~1 Is conductld by 1n l11u1nc• ol 1tlcl ••<'C11t lon, I Ila"' leYled pot"ltlon. Oecembff 26. 1m •lld J1nu.ry J, f, contlgullV ol' tltt &ehoof prOplf'ty Ml lncllvidual. Uj)O!I 111 Ille r1gll1, title •nd l11lwHI GARONER IFULM!lll 1974 JIS2·73 ,, ... -00 Eo"'~I """ ott-..... ·-, Wrlollt, Cl111rec• E. Ind Ethel M1e A\ch.lrd I. Rees of Mid l\ldgmeonl otb!OI' 111 Ille pr09Cf'IY l tTttOG RAPtt ot ~" """ .. II-'"" J1cki.on. P1trltl1 M•e •1111 Robert Thl1 i liltmenl ""''' flied wllh lhll 1n IN county c: Oranae, St1t1 ol Divld G Gtrdrllf Presld111! 1 llllrflort *' mutui ' •or" •• Kciw1rcl COlll'llY Clerf< DI Or•noe County on C1IUor11l1, dncr!bed 11 follows: Thl1 st1lem~r wH fnld wt"' Ille PUBUC NOTICE ,""':-1!.:.._._1 Gcie1tlno. Terrw L. ind 8rl1n J. Oe< bf' 11 1973 L t 8 2 1!112 P 2-0 " '""''""'' • Akl1co, Slllrl1r •nd Jose Lull em • . F 20212 o 35, M .. •· • ' II"· • : Covntv Clerk ol Or111119 County on . J.1 TM Cll\' q r"• lo con"'y ctrt•ln • Tr1cl 1211. COMNONLY ICNOWH AS. Hovemlllf :JO, 1t73. "'"TI<• D' NDN·Rl••DH•lll'l'Y •••I,.-, -0 oortk ·"o•IV --·1-8 frfl.tr, Wet'IOl\I D. '"° Lawre-11ce Put1Uslled Or•no• Cotll 01llr Piiot 117 Dell Grulll, San Clernenle, C1tll. P2"14 ..., .. -_... .. , ,,_ "' ...-.. """ E. December 19, 26 1973 1na J1nu1111 NOTICE IS HEA£SY GIVEN Illa! Publlllled Of'lrige C<111t l Plk> Al of NOY 21, 19n Wllll•m M. Jolvl:IOll on e:1111Jbll "C" lltl<l'lld ~to. whkll Pl!'lroff, Remv Dale Ind l!lruct A11ttion 0 r 2, ,, 197• 3121·13 on Wldnetdiy. JI"· tm, l'7•, ,1 IO:CICI OectmtMr J, 12, lf, 21. 1973 O• ly lli74-/i and OorolMI 0. Jotinton, Ull Coast w•s clfdlc:ltlo lo Ille City !GI' Pl•k Wl11m111, Frid JGMOft Jr, and l lnd o'clock A.M. 11 CO\lrtllol/u, MtrShil's ttlottw1y. L.ol 59, Ugul\I 811<11, purpoMI 1\1 tllf l111lne .U11lfltd School Glf;.'::,''":llbert Grlll<l'V ind MlrY Office, JOUJ crown Vallty Parkwiy, PUBLIC NOTICE Yitcl "" stock ol M1rtl11 Joh1111111 W•ter Ol1lrlct 11111 t11 mmldll'11tklll """*· PUBLIC NOTICE CllY ol Leou,,. Nlo11el, C::Ollnlv of Df'•l"it• • Work& SUPPl't Co. 111 11• enUrety. Tiii tl>t 11111'"' Unlflld SCtMlol Obtrlct '4rt11 Ma•o•rtr ---------------IS''" of Ci tlforma, 1 will sell 11 pr.il)tlc Putcll1ur tirlno '°"1th Of•noe Supply to convty lo tile Cltv certll11 All (Hll1on, Hlfolcl J . end J1tquellne M ' FIC'l'IOUS •USINESS llld111t'l lo llWI hl<;ihesl bidder, l« c.esll ll'ICTITIOUS •UllMIE51 Co. proptrty, mort fully dllcrlbld on Elcllltllt Oorfu, Elci.n A. 1nd Rona. J _ NAME STATEMENT Ill lewh.11 ...,_., of Ille Uni~ Stitn. NAM& STATIMIENT Wm. M. Jahi:lton 'l(ld. oortflel 0. "D" her.W. Tic•. C•rl Arthur ind B1rti.r1 L0\11!.t ,,. 1_,1_1..., ,_.son 1, dol .... 11!,islna• 111 1111 rloht, tlttt Ind illt~r•il 01 s.atd The to11<1111l119 perJ.O!I 11 dolllU M l,....• Jot\n.on will 1111 long1r '"IHTll ltllY S.! At 11/d\ tlmt It the khocll 0111nc1 H1rnbr, S""rl C11t>erlne 11nd James .... "".,._ ... ~-· ··• 1.... ...... 1 th bo de ibid 1s: re-.pontlblHty fin&Mllll « lltherwli.e tor dell....,. hr" ttte City 1 ctfllflld COflY Ed.,..•rd a1: .,...g .... nl dltbtor 11 ' 1 ve scr 0 JOHN'S SPORTING GOOOS, :12• 0011 IM corrt!lllltd opertll-Clf Marfl11 ol 1 r11oh1ll011 ~ b'( In. UMnh'nlllll W•llOll, Corl A, i nd JltfTiel L. SU·MAlt DRAPERIES. 1SS21 Com-property, or Ml muth ll!Cf'eol •s my St. A ... , "8 ", COlll MIU, Cl1ll. 92•26 Johnson WelerworlU SUJIP't Co. wit of ell llllmbtrl elld9lf or llCIP(ll11IMI Moler, Lind• Ann 1nd Akl\ard FloYd P..,le r Ln .. Hunllnglon 8t1Kl'I, C•llt. tit nece.si,Y la Mllslv uicl e~ei;utlon, Joh~· Edwlrd P1rrym111 Jr., 326 Qol1 Wm . M. Jol'llllon to Ille f0\'ff'nln9 ~ of tllf kllool "''''''' ,,,,_ '"' Mo•lorle M. '2&at wltll •tcr!led lntere11 •nd cos11. ,.8, 1 M C 111 -·"" p · .... ltl'lld Ort ......... _, Dolly Pllol DI , I I 1•-1 1'9 -.. ,., .... Ell<}Cnl &•umer, 11SS2 Mlitv Ln.. OILLAAO O. WILKIRSON SI .. Apt. '. COf I "•• I · Tn•u '"" .,,. • .,....... • s 'c Ill"'" l ,..,. Q 1'191 con-O•vls, su11n D. 1nd Dw1ln 8. Ho•ll-•-•••<h. C..lfl. t2..it Mlrlhal Orinoe County 'Tiiis t1111ln111 11 conducted by 111 Oec•mllff 20, 21 2'. 1'7:1 2"P-7l ltrnP11ted ~ hlDlttiw wlt!t proof Sarathl•, Hftnll K1rlm 1nd Judy l(av " •. ,. ~· H 5 11 0 1 lnr:tlY)cl11•I lf11t 1M rnotutton ll•s ti.fl P11bllslled Sn1rt1ll, Eclw••cl W. 11'1<1 P•lrlcll Tiiis t11.tslne1t Ii. conctucled by en By M•r1JM•I · o ' eOll 't John E. p.,rym111 Jr. •s ~lrtd b)' lllUcAllon CD kcllm A. Tndlvidu11L O•led Deetmblr 12• ~97].., Tiiis staflmt11t w11 !lied wl!h lhll PUBUC NOTICE 16203 er lea11 Ot'lC• • WNk tor lllrM Ptrmln{lton. Tommr R. 1nd 8art1ar• E119ene Brumer Di'flsioru SOlllh Or•no• 011n., (O\lnlr Clerk of Or1no• C011nty conMC ull"' -k•, • certl!IMI ~ of A. Co~~·,~ 1~1~~en~ wo:a,,:eci Co~~·~r 1~ ~~,,~~;Jr1N~~~~ .• suit• lOOI Decel'!'lber 10, 197:1. °" STATmMINT O• A•ANDONM•HT llWI rec:ordld Fl111! Order or Condtfn,,.llOn Nkolson, Orvl1l1 F. tnd 8etty Lee o--ber IO, 1973 Loi Allftlff, C•lll. toMI •401M Oii' USIE 01' Wlltrfby 1111 SC:f\oaf Ol1!rlcl 1cqulred Datltll•i., 8el!rlt• A1111 Ind J1rr.n ~~""' lll-l0l1t Plilnllll'I Allom•y P..,bll!.lled Or'l"lll Cotti 01Uy Piiot, l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS fllAMIE lltte lo lhll property dt&erlbld 111 E~lllbll unos Publishl'd Or.snge coest Dilly Piiot. Publ!slltd Or111ge Coast Dally Pllol Oecfl'!'lbef' \2, .19, 2f, 1t7l, •nd J111111ry TIM follow!no Plf'Hll 1111 •bllldontd "0" •nd • 11r1nl d..0 COllwtYll'ICI t1tt ~~', -::::;n,:; ;;;:11 J~ititr De<!'fflt>er 12. 19, 2•, 1913 incl JanulrT Ol<:eml>lr If, 26. 1973 incl J•n111rv 2, 1914. l7S0-73 !he u•• o! tile flctlllaus buslnelis ""m• proptrty cll1crlbld In E11hlbll "1>'' to ' ' '.' 371l·7) 2, 197• :'.18QS.7l VICTOR l(EMP COMPANY -COSTA lhl Cll\' ol lrv1M, !hi Clly 111111 ntll"'r SOOCrwMkl, Miry ElllHI Incl St•" ey • •· PUBUC NOTICE MESA. 11 111• Login Ave .. Unit "H", • gr..,nl died lo lhll kllool Olltrlct (Olll Miii O lltomll COllYIYl"O lhll real pr°"""' M&erlbld c5Z1 Child's t}Aagical Wolidar Bring the children to see ... Th• John Wayne Theatre transformed into a giant and magical toy shop! ·See Chuck Jon.., the Wizard of the Workshop, create storybook dolls and toys through delightful magical wonders! S•e Raggedy' Ann, the Toy Soldier. th• Snow Princess, L4jvable Whilll.._ plus mu ch more in a ,magical· live extravaganza for cbild·rell or all ages! ! Performances daily thru January6, In Knott's John Wayne Theatre Oemnber30 "81 The Hagers December 28 & 29 Davy Jones Bjlly Joe Royal llec<mbei: 26 & 27 Juuarylthnr 6 Rick Nelson and theSloneCanyCNIBand ll'ICTITIOUS •USINl!ll Tiie flcll1i-bl.lllnM.. lllmt reflr....:t 11'1 Ellhllllt "C" lo tht lf't1111 Unllltd NAM• STATll!MIElfT lo •boY• WilS !Hid 111 Or•noe Coullly ~':°'~::_ct. Thll lall-'"9 Is doll'll tlullnns on MIY 4, 1911 . II '" Plf'IOn L1111l1 AfltktW w"'°"· 1131 I .E. IN WITNESS Y(HIEREOF, Ille ptrtlts SCOTVENO, l6m OllM L•nt. Hun-Wlndi.or Lri .. i:vst111, C.sUtornl• '2680. to thll "''-' "'"' c•llMCll tllllr tlngton 8P<fl. C1tltomll t2r!o41 Ttlll INllMU Wll COlllduclld by 111 Mmtt to be flflx.0 llertfo by lhl JCll'lll Al•••llder &rCllU(lh, 1'731 Oline lndlvldual pr-ol'flcen. """"°'· Thll AorMmtnl Hvnllnglon Bllci\. C•tltarftll Louil All#JrllVI WISIOll II i.Jltllld •nd bKulld Ind WM bl l•M, ll'·Hle7 effecll"' 11'111 -d1y ol -----~J llilll I onc1 !Id b 111 Pllbl!111ed Ofl!llll Co.If OlllY Piiot, 1973. 1'11111 : I nHI I c UC y Otcembff 12, "· 2'. 191) 11111 J11111•rv CITY OF lAVINE. v dll•. 8 , 1, lf7A i 1s2•13 1 __ •_~_1<_1,._1_corpor1llon JoM rouo l!lv Tiits 11111men1 w11 lflld will! thil ATTEST: C01111tv Clerk ol Or•llOI Counl'I on PUBUC NOTICE Deeemblr ID. ltl1 lllVI N~ UNIFIED 11'4'111 llllESOLUTION Oii' THI! MtAaO Of' SCHOOL DISTRICT P11b!ill'led Ornnge Coatl OaHy Piiot, IEOUCATIOM Oii' TMI llllVINI l!lv ----- Dlclmber \2, lt, 26, 197) •nd J11111•rT Ulfll"llED SCHOOi. DISTllCT 0 1' ATTEST: •'c·_,_.,_. __________ ,_rn_.13 OllANG& COUNTY, CALIFOllNIA 1 · ~ ll. ltn Al"PAOVEO AS TO FOltM1 Oii mollon o1' Memblr OhOll. dvl'1'1------------------IMClll'ldtd •nd U1"1anlmou1ly c1rrlld 1111 CITY ATTORNEY, CITY Ofl' lltVlfllE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS lollo'llllno Rnol11lion WI$ •dol31fil: APPA.OVEO AS TO FORM : PUBIJC NOTICE NAMI! STATl!Ml!NT WHEREAS. Ille City ol lrvlM II TM following 111r1on ls Clolno buslnen ltM .-....,. <If 11111 eert1ln parcel 011 -----11: rnl property coni.J1t1119 ol 1.4" 1cr11 ORANGE COUNTY COUNSEL { l ) ORGANIZATIO N OE\/ElOP· h1rf'1111fltf' re!errl!d to •I P1rcel I l!XHl•IT "C" MENT, INC .. •llV. ..::1rr11llon Av1111,11, mor• ~rllWl•1IY clf&erlbfd 111 IE•hlbll LIOAL OISCltll"TIOlf Ofl Corona del Mar, Cl. 92615 A etlo9ched l!errlo 1nd made I part HOEl'TNI• lll!MINT•llY SCHOOL 12) O'DONNELL'S MANAGEMENT llerlOf; Ind llM l111lnt U11lfled Sdlool •UILDINO SITI! CONSULTANTS, l'.0. 8ox ol047. lrvlllf, District It !Ill OWfltr <If !11111 c1rf1l11 fPOltTIOM O• (OT l>I. IEXISTINO Clllf. '266.1 parc1I QI tetl property COMhlh'lo ol ,.ARK SITI!, TO II CONVIEYll!O TO Robert J. O'Donnell, 411'h C1r111tton l.<161 1cr.-ht..-lnattPr referred to •s lltVllfl Ulflll'lll!D SCHOOL OllT1UCT) Avenllt, cor11111 de/ Mir. C::•llfor111• P8rc•I "· mort ~-tlcularty ctescrfbld 8'1119 • portion ot Loi lll. ot Tr1d r.!61S In E~lllblt B. 1tttcl'lld Mr•lo 111\d mAdt No. 76'1 , In 1111 City ol l111fM , C1111nty This b!,11!,....1 11 condu-et!d b'( 111 • P"rl l\lreaf; and of Dr•l'tO'• Sl•I• ot C1llfornl1, •• stlow11 lndlvld111L WHEREAS. ,.1rcli I Is KlllCIHll lo on B m1p rK'Ol"clld In l!looli; 297. Plftl AOtllrl J O'Oonntll I $C.hool Ml• owned ti., Ille lrYl,_ 1 lt>rovgil 5 ol MIKllll!WllVI M1111-T~I' statemeni was flltd with the U111flrd Sd\001 Dblrlct ~nd the Ol~!rlCI In Ille olfk• ol lh• Col,r11ty R-cl•r C<MllY C1trk of Ol'1no• COl.Hlly on clell•H to 1CWlre P1rc:t1 I for I/SOI ol Mid C-ll'· dlllCrltll<f •• follows: Oe<emblt" 11, 197l 11 • pll'f9"0lll!d eontlll\IOl.lt 10 "" 899lnrt11111 •I tlll most W11terlv comtr 11'"'271 scll<lol sire; •nd ot wkl l lll 1)11 lht11c• 11°"'9 n.. Publlslled Or1na1 Col•t Dilly Piiot WHEREAS Ille cltv of l111IM whhll Scrut"-~IY lil'MI ol tlld Let 13* oecembfr 1,, 2., 1t7J ind J•nutrv to ICQlll•• P•rctl 11; •nd Sovll'I ,.,..,.,... E1st 2'0.CID fMI lo 2. '· lf74 31\t-1J WHEREAS. 1n tnaeptr<ltenl rul "lite IM matl Soulhtrly c;orlllf ot w kl "---------------l•ppr1lsal ht• bMn Plfformtd P11r111111t L(7! 1»; lt!fllC• •l«IO t1tt 1ovttte•1tetly PUBLIC NOT(CE to which e1Ch p1rcel Ills tlffn awralsed Mne (If wkl Lot 131 Nortl'I Jf"J7'l2" 1----------------1 '' a f1tr m1rkfl YllUI of W-500: • E111 m .'1 M t; ltlln(e Nor!ll .50"00''3'' NOW, T H £ft i:; F 0 A e ' 86 IT Wiii 2'11.CICI '"' lo I POllll Oii llWI 8 1247 AESOl.VEO 111111 MOl'thwt11trtv llM af Mid Lot l)e, NOTlCIE TO CftDITOllS 1. This 8Clltd •U'11'orlrtt the ol>l•lnln9 1.1lcl point bllllO Norlll WJ7'»'' E11! 5UPl:lllOll COUllT Ofll THI: ot 1"1rc_. I ti., 1M fl!<llf• lhlretor •111119 Ille Norttlwfttlrly ll!M ol Mid ITAT• 0,. CALIPOINIA ,.Olt ol Parcel ti wtlll IM Ctty af Irvine, Loi 131 1 d!Sllntf ot 220 5' !Ht THI COUNTY 0111 OltAlfQli. 1• 11! forll'I 111 111 Ao~ 11tlellld trom. 111'1 pol11I ol bfolnnl111;0 !llellct • No. A-mn tterelo •nd mark.Id E•hlllll c •nd 11111te •111119 IM Nor1hW11terty line ot 111d Esta•• ol e. Mt'::HAEL McOONALO •• ptrt "'"°'· Loi 131 sovtn )9'.SM2" WHI %20.5' ak• 8ERT MICHAEL McOONA\.0, 1k• 2. This 8oard finds and delerl'l'llllfS leet to !ht point of beolnnfn{I. 8. MICHAEL M1<00HALO, OecHsld. ltMit Ille Ptl'CICI of l111d 1re IJf lllbtl•ll· Tll1 •boYt cll1crlllld proper!\' to11l1k11 NOTICE IS ttEAEl!IY GIVE N lo 1111 tlally 1011lv,1ltnl Ylllll alld !ho'll tne 1 . ..a o'ltrt l. erldlll)rl of 1111 •bove n•mlld dlcedt11t 111th•n9• wlll 1>en1n1 !hf sthootl ol PrtHrld by: tll1t 111 pe:non1 hlvll'ICI cl•lms 10•l11sl !ht Olslr!cl o'lnd Ille l)Uplls llltreol. Frlld W. ttf111lrtd91, LS 32511 t~e said clktdltll ar1 requlrfil to fll• Tiil• AllOtul!on Pl•ll bl pvblllhecl 111 UHl•IT "i>" llltn\, wllh Ille l\ICISllrT YG11Chtr1, 111 t r>eWIJ)ilper hi ving Qel'M!f&I clrcul1t!on ll!QAL OIEICll,.TION 01' he olllct ol tlM clerk of !he Ibo"' 111 1111 OlstrlCl ontt 1 week for lllrH HOl!l"Tlfllt 11..IMINTAllY SCHOOL t11!111!d court, or fo OrtHnl llllm. Wiii! wHlls begf11nf119 an Decel'llbtr lt, 1t73. •UILDINO SITI the nec11111"" YOUChtf't. lo I~• Ull• AYES: Membef'I llwl•ncltf'. GlnstMKf, CPOllTIOft TO •• CON\llYIO TO d9rslollld 11 C/o Allrlt ld H. Premier, OIXltl. Slcoll, 5/fcello CITY 01' 1aVINI l'Oll 11'.t.•I( SITll Attomty •I L1w. 315 Witt T/\1'11 strm . NOES: N-BllllO • portion ol Loi tu In 110(11. $1nl1 Arlll, C1lllor11l1 tt7'D1. wl'lkll I• ASSENT: None llti of l111ln1'1 SllbdlVttlOll, It( t1tt City tile plKt ol bu1l11111 ol IM U111Mrsl11ned STATE OF CALIFORNIA l ot lrvtn1, (°"""' 01 Orl"'Ot 111111 of 111 •II mtfttrl Plf'lllnll'ICI la Ille •sl•lt COUNTY OF OltANGE )U C11ilornl1, It 1"-11 on • m. r«ll'dfd ot wlcl decedtlll, wlllll11 fOllr months 1, A. Oetn OllO!I, Clertl: of tM lolr'd 111 8ook 1. NII' • of MltcellllllCllR '""'Ille first pubtlc11lon ol tlll1 lloflc•. ol Educ•llllrl ot lrvl'"' U11Hlod Scllool M1ps. 111 IM otnc• ol the COIJl\f'f' Ollld DK.~ •• "'" ,1 lt7.I DOH"D ... Olitrlct ol Of•ntf Covnl\'. C•Uforftl1, Aecorftr ol 1tld COl.llltv, dflc:rlbld 11 KE TH · NI« ..,.. 1.,. lllr'tbv ~;"' thll Ille aban •nd tor~ lollow1: KENNETH II. McOONALO ll'IO !ttwlu!IOll w11 '*"Y 11111 te1111l1rlV 99gll!lllllf •I In. ll'IOlt Norlhetl'¥ ExlCvtor ot llM Wm ol IC!Oflted ov the wkl &ot•d 11 1 reoul11r c0tner of Let 1)19 ot Tree! No. ,.,., Ille •bOY• ,,.med dKldllll r<!llllllO ll'lereol l>tld on 1111! 1'11f'I d.iy .. .,_,. Oii I ~ ~ 111 IOltAlO If. l'•INNea rA Otetmtllf, ltn. Otld PIPld lrw • Boole 2t7, PJoll" 1 lttniugtl J ol :Jll W..t T111f'lll Strid 11n1nlmo11.1 volt QI $alCI l o&rd. Mite.ti_,. M•PI 111 Ille otfk• of ..... AM. Clllflnlll t2711t IN WITNESS 'MIEltlEOI". I l'lllYI Mid l;O\llll't ltl<Ofdfri , ff'llllCI •lone T1~1 Cn41 .Ml-WI h1>f'lllftt11 Ht 111Y hand •nd s.e11 this Ille S01.1111t111wty llnt ol' uold TrKt •-•• ,...,' .., ~c 1 0 -Pll 1 1"" ,..,. o1 DtcMtbef, 1m No. 1"'1 Nor111 irsrn" E.-1 '"·'° u "'"'"''" Oii l ny o • It, DMn Olton Ifft to tllf SoutllwnffflY Hne ef IM 0tc'111bet t2, 11, 26, lt73 11111 J-rT l"ublhhed 0rllflllt COii! 0.HY l"lkll l•nd COll"''f911 lo !Ill SoulMrll Cflllont\1 21 1t74 11»-n Oec,'llblf 19, -21, 1•7.1 111c1 Januery Edi-eomci-•, • COfPll'•llon,, br PUBUC NOTICE t ,.,, .,..,,, deed c111tc1 J•-rv io. 1t1J, lf'ld rKonlild 111 leoli; 10501, Hflt ,., ,AltCIL I of Dflltl•I lttcordl ot DrlllOt Counly1 l"ICTrtlOUS •USIMISS LllOAL OISCllPTIOM O• ll'lll'let 11ont Mid Sm.mtwlS!erlY lli!e NAM• ITATIMINT MOlll'Tlf11l lLIMl"".UY Kl400I. SOUit\ WOO'O" li•tt $30.~ fWI ~ Tiii .lollO'o\'11'11 pwlQM •rt clolno •UILOINO •• ,. 111r•llel ;with ""' '°""'"'..,..,. llM b\1\1.,.u. e11 lf>Ol:TtON Ott LOT UL al Mkl Trtcl Mo. 1'°'1 loull'I WS1'32'' (1)' HOLIDAY WH E!LS 0 I' ilXtSTIM• l'Allltt llTI. TO •• w.-1 m .25 flt!/ 1l'lltQ pttllllt .. AMEltlCA (2) It W SALES . CONVIYIO 10 laYtlfl tltt SOulf'lwff,.,IY Hiit ot Mid ..... OISTR19UTIC)M COM,.AMY. 11•62 UNll'llO SCHOOL 01n11cT1 COllvwed to tllf SOvftltfn c.nf!Wlll• ~.u.rl!M" ltud., lnrlM, C1lllornl1 t21l1 6•1"9 I pjrrtl~ of l ol 1•• ol Trtcl £dt•on (°"'"ny North .IO'Ol'G" Wnl ltotitrt wd ..... ton. "' Sonrlr• llotd, No. n.o. In Ille Cll'J Of 11111,.., CwnlY .O.Q '"' " I pol11t Oft ""' SOullltasltrfy produc\lon stol>!>Cd and workerl attacked the guck wltli ahoVols and wa~r 1-1. OfOclals 'of lhe Testa lurnllur• plant aald tile alue waa a atow-bmlenlnc kind Ind the .,,.. probllbly would not be c1eined up ror doyl. Wllll•m Jd\11 lltlH'IO. m klwtrd ltd., CO!'WM ftl Mir. C11l\f, t'6H T1111 IMINIS II condVC'ltd lt'f M l!ldlvldi.111 • KRDTT'S DEBBY FABY. Cotti M~· Clltlornl• ...,. ot Of•flll· 5111* (If C•t!forf\11, •• ttlowft II'"' flt Mid lot ,,., lhtflCe ..... OOn .... ,.12 Slrt111 Ori..... Hullo 0!1 1 llllP re<:Ofdld '" 8oolr; "'· ,,.cllt Ille Soll111M1t.,1y 11M ol Nld Loi IJnotO!'I 8HCl'I. C.Ulot'llll I ltlnlUOh • " MIKMlorltoln """' ,,. North )t'$1 J2" E••' ...... '"' Tllf• IMlntll 11 tolllhlcttd bY • OIM'tf J11 "" orflc. oJ !ht Co.mty lltc:ordet to 11'11 _, l •1terl't' (Oflltt .. M\41 p1r"""hlp, 1111 Mid Covnty, dHcrlblCI M k)llawl! lot 1311 llw!IC• •lonlJ Ille Norlhftlltrlv •obtlf WGl'>'ll'toll &eelnriln{I 81 Ille l'llOSI Westc-rlv tor• !Ille ol' Mid LOI' 131 Hortll so•tnr Police were ln- v,.Ugallng. Wlllltl'J! J. 8tv!ICI Ttll1 etlttfNl\I ••I llltd Wl!h tile C-'Y C..,_ Clf Or•• CovnlY m1 Dtctrr\W ts. 1tn. ..w!latlld Ot•flOt Otttmblr "· M. l-----------'""' '"' BMa Pa:rk • 0Ptft daily al tn a.m. • (-Tlt) 12'1·1771 Tltl• •l1!WMl'll Wll lllMI with Ille of Mid Loi IU : thtllCt •line 1111 Wftl 2'0.0Q t'ltl IO Ille (IOllll ol' CauntY Cltl'k ol Or•l'll• County on Soulflwei1t•I¥ lllle ot .. 1d l ot l)e blall'llll,... NOVfl'lllMr JO, ltn. Sofllh W'll2"11" E•!.I M.I» lwl 19 TM ll:IO\ff. \ttlefltltd prOplJIY COll!t h• 11'2"1• tl'll INllt SOlolttllrtr ~ of Wt! l.4M tern. lt\ltllltf'ltd OrtnOe Cotll Otlly Piiot. lot 131; fflfllCt llont tile kYIM•llerlV ~ ..... red "'I Otccmblr J, ,,, "· ... ltn ~n.n ,.... ot •Illa Loi •• N1111'1 ,..11')2" l"rH w. "'"'1fkllle· u D ' • ' 8 DAILY PILOT ,Wednesday, Dec:ember 26, 1m TV IDGHLIGHTS , . KTl'V ID 6:00 Hocus Pocus ll. Bill Dalley hosts 1pedal from Six Flags Over Georgia. Bob Newhart and David Janssen are guests. CBS II 8:00 Sonny and Cher. Howard Cosell and Chuck Connors guest. ABC D 8:00 Dick Clark presents the Rock and Roll Years. NBC D 10:00 Love Story. POW returns to find bis wife. who believes him to be dead, remarried. ABC D 11:30 Wi de World of Entertainment. Vaudeville-styled comedy lampoons life among •how people. TV DAILY LOG . .. Wednesday Evening DECEMBER 'Z1 111s ltnd unoer 1 new hom1s1u111n1 law, 1 wily fur-tripper reuults t tl'litl, 1 pickpocket ind • proslitut1 to ponray his d1u1hters. m MIN Crll11n Show al) Novel• l:GI nil&'Bx~?li\':. ..... Co11rbhlp ti EIWle'I Fltller TIM LllCJ Show I IHCW I Htcus Pocus 11 Bill 01ilty hosts this speci1I from Si• flap Ovtr Geora:i• with 1uests Bob Newhart 1nd David J1nssen. * Daily at 12:00pm Ch 9 OR . JOYCE BROTHERS in LIVING EASY co-host Enzo Stuarti 9:DOIJ (Qi(l))(j) C1 11no• "Memo From A Dead Min" (R) M1r1in Stieen guests 1s 1 young 1tto1ne1 w!lo presents cannon with ont of his str1nges1 t1ses: 1 will's proYi· sion lhat C1nnon investi11t1 the de11h of !ht lawyer's 1111 dient, 1 busin1ss tycoon. I StlfTrt- Sl•plt...U Maria Mowlt: (C) (211r) "Stilt Strucl'" (dra) '57 -Henry Fonda, Susan St11sber1. @)Hi., of Art (lhr} EB T1lrtt ..... 1:1> (I} nJJ (I) Ho1an'.s H1roe1 D Moril: (C) (90) "'We're No All· pis" (com} '5>-Humphrty Boprt, Pe ter UstinOY, Aldo R1y. "rn l~ CIJ> .... ~ Ya11 DP• Mtrw Sriffht Show • LM111 C..sy • Nml1 n..m The1tn IJttll Rl1t1ll i Thi lold On11 P'•PI Cor11011 Hof1Jwoo4 T111Yislot1 TI11atr1: Conllltb 'The Typists" (R) 9:30 fa Amerlc:ln Urtstr11 €!)LI Hien1 (0 Carnisel del M1111dl 10:001J (~@)(j)lloj 1k ''Web ol De1th" (R) Lt. Kojak joins Del. Nick Feno in the investi11aticm of 1 mur· de1 c.ast-Un1w1re that feiro is lhe min who c1lcul1tin1ly committed the crime. 0 @@ (IQ) @I) lOYI Story "A Glow ol Dyin1 Embers" Clifton Oa· 7:00 I (J) D m Nm vis stirs In this drama •bout I POW lelrfl11 ltr Dolilfl who r1turns to !Ind his wife has MIVl1: (2hr) ''Thi l lsbop't remarried bel!evin1 him de1d. Janet W"lft" (com) '43-Cary Grant, Lor· Macltchlan ind Gre1 Mo11is also etll Yount David ljiven: sta1. JtunMr (.6J Ni1ht Gallery Miit's My Line? O @@ tmO w11 M1rsll1ll 11.M LllCJ' "Onca A Lion" (R) Owen Marshall llltd Sq11M belle'les a convicted murderer is W I Drtt• of Jl1nnJ. in110Cent but the only W!J lo 1a!n biller11d1 1 new trial is to provt incompetence @ Pr1pet 111ainsl the defense attorney, an old DI frtncll CW ind close friend ol Owen's. R1lph (J)J World ti SllrvfVll Bellamy, Nn1 P1tterson 1nd Jason E l"rlllll Alter Evers 1uesl. \ ·---mmm a• ... m SpMd hctr bceft1rlo 7:JOITlltN1WDati111CI•• Woni~n "What To T!ll Children 3 Hit••'• Heroes Aboul Birth, Death, Divorce and • Wiit TIU "t'ow F1ttllr Ctb Kttnt Adopllon" "Ptrm inlve Pap,a" H1rry 1tluses to 10:30 00 Twilight Zone 1llow his d1u1hter to etteflcl 111 all· I Bill Cosby ni1ht rodr concert with a friend ind Los Asesinos (R) 1rran1e1 1 d1te for her with 1 ele•n· El Show de Walter Merud1 cut fHn11er lnste1d. Pniist tht Lord Club Kltp Thy Nel(hbor 10:45 O Bob 80J(I Show/USC laslielball I ltbbr ColdsboR Show All·Colle1a Toun11ment Troj1ns vs, C..C.ntm~n Soulhwutem UniYers1ty. Tiii New P'rict Is Rlpt 11:00 ffi 0 0 €[) m Cll Nin hwitcbtd !IJ ®) ED @ @ News (I) To TtH the Truttl , Piny Mason Ci) Hollfwtod 5q111m O Phil Donahue Stiow ( ~·,·,~~~ ... Ila Tell the Truth ~ ... ice ... rreon Grt Sm~rt • Other People, Otlltf P'1&ctt (}) Uvin1 E1sy &l Tl11 Cllout ''"I Alfred Hitchcock P'resenll 1:00 8 (9 (l)) (})Sonny ind Cher ( {!)) Tr1il1 West (R) How1nl Co.sell ind Chuck Con· 11:15 e!) Cl11em1 l4 nors 1uest. .. 11:30 O 1in @)(])CBS lit• Movie: B ID@~ m Ad•lll·12 Gifts . (C) "Tiit Crimsan Pirate" (1dv) '52 1nd Letters . (~) A former racke· -Ourt Lancaster, [va Barlok. teer's secluSIOll ~ end~~1ere4 wh!n 0 ~@®I m Johnny CtrMll 1 youn1 woma~ s su1c1de atlempl Jerry Lewis is 11uest host. and note to him. plun11e Ofllce1_1 0 @@ tm Widt World of En· Malloy ind Reed m!o ~nt of their tert.llnmerrt "Break·Up" Bern1dett1 • I •Tragie Experienees!' Lai1iie Kaza1i Fired Twice Froni Broadway By VERNON SCOTT 'HOLLYWOOD !UPI) Lainie Kazan , Brooklyn's con- tribution to the corps of sexy modem singer-actresses, has the dubious distinction or being fired from t w o 1111.M1"-••-* Broadwa y plays in a span ...,,. ....... roe...,_• of two months. ;-,.,"';~ '1 A lesser girl might have •1 LlmOll $1, s1~.1s16 attempted a half-gainer from Wh•t H•oPt119d T• J.l'.x .1 the Empire State building. EX<;f!UTl'vl! ACTIC-N !POI l'hlf • Dvsllll HDtll"Mfl "I STILL I h Lli'T!..E n:G MAN (POI carry 0 s e ii,...:;:::;:::=t-~J-~lr~awnas with me every day ," L•nc•ln A••· inie-said-on-·heMr.11"11M0- .,.;,~!.~1 Hollywood. ' ' T ho s e ex~ ,,1.•010 periences were the most "TH EN ( WENT back to ONLY 011v£.1N SHOW1NG1 tragi~ things to happen to my New York. still dreaming P1u1 N1Wm1" • RODI. ae111orc1 N I f THE STING 111G1 career. ot my i e, 111y somehow they would rehire GET CARTER !POI career. me. They never did . I decided \•11 u .... ........ " l•OG•I!~"! (So.) 9~2·2•11 SEQUEL TO DIRTY HARltYI CLINT EAnwooo 111 MAGNUM FORCE ill:l IAD MANS RIVER !Rl H"IMM II••· I Nc~::d," )Jl·l211 II. Slr1lnnd • ll:ODI. llltcllonl THE WAY WE WER! !l'OJ PIUI • M•rlo Tl\orntJ JENNEY IPOI .... ~ tl•d. So. el G•'''" G••t• '"'"'' 534·6212 ONLY DRIVE·lll SHOWING! WDOdy Allt11 e Diline Xt•lon SLE EPER IPGI COLD TU RKEY 11101 ,,.,,, .. ,., ~.1 .. · .. .... ~ '""· .......... •··•· 111·1162 Ell11belh T•ylor Htnry Fol!CI• ASH WEDNESDAY (RI HA RRAD EXl'ERIMENT IR I ""••«• .... wHtol Knolt S17·227l Ol'IN S:J0'11Aln 6:00 J.M.. WIU DISHlT'S flllULY SHOW! ROBIN HOOD tG) WHITl WILDERNESS fGl S."I• -"'>• fr...,oy•n4 51•1• Co!i.t• 551.1021 S.~l t ..... ,, ..... , ..... St•1• Colleq• s~ .. 1012 "Being fired twice in so to stay in New York when short a time was .the end FIRED TWICE I was hlred to play the blonde o( my dream or becoming L1inie K1un bombshell in a revival of 'The a Broadway star. Women.' "Some people dream of "I'm a brUnette but t starring in movies. others by Hollywood in those two wanted to prove myself. ~1y dream of writing a great novel performances. She came contract stipulated if I didn 't or playing in the Super Bowl. West, made some movies and li ke being a blonde I could From the time I was a child became a top draw in Las quit." riding in subways, I dreamed Vegas saloons as a singer. Clare Boothe Luce, author of seeing posters with my But Broadway eluded her. of the play, never gave Lalnie name on them starring on "Then about a year ago, an opportunity to decide Broadway. right after I had my baby, whether she liked the wig or I read ~·here they were going not. ~1rs. Luce insisted the '"ANO FOR a while I got to make a musical of 'Two role be filled by a real blonde, close to ii. l was Barbra for the Seesaw.' I had played and Lainie was uncoupled Streisand's understudy in the role of Gittel ~1osca in from Broadway once more. 'Funny Girl.' She got sick one high school plays and wanted "That didn't hurt as much day and J played the matinee it more than anything else. as my first firing," she said, and the night perfonnance. • That was all . Just twice. But "BUT m E producers told _·_..:(_Se_e_LA_IN_IE_,'-Pag-=-•-1_7_l_1 it kept my dream alive." me .they hoped to get Lisa ~ Lainie was also ~iscovered Minnelli ,'' Lainie sai d . a~ -----="~'~ "'DllE Of THC ?W'S llOST EllGtOSS•G IOfl(S •. JHIOOS &CllGll,SllSmsE, llUllOl l COlllPlSSXll •. A Sl'fll·l•DlllC l'IC!Ulf:' t~u. c~-.111 "'llih tk W•• hU ' '9•11hl u,tmiH.11111 1f U1e •JI rriP'iflf ,~.et die JUI!~ bl ••• "C•l4 .. ••• PK~ ,. 11,,,.irt lhur 1! me rur!" llu l•ren '1'riUil( Ml' n 11 lxt I ii .. IM"1 rttlllllli"l 11 ~! JM rr1 t11lll ~ill ..t M Pxill ll'f· Net 11t If Ult out11•'81 ,11rtt- .,1en II ... ,.ar!" Jlt." Crill "Im ,."llUIM! I ~-·pl· Hlili• fila. McHll 1lllhcilllf1~ ,ntn.ce ii"' llllt rift!" filcfll C.., "JIMI HENDRIX" ....... ..... ...... .... lll!l ' "TH;! WAY WE W.ERI!" IP'GI 1ia • 1:40 • S:$CI • l 10I lt:lf O'OUNfAIN VAlL(l ", -:.,,.. .&..u:.na D ......-.;;c)o;-.. 0.\1 A! IQ<Nl.IA IXCLUSIVE OU.NGI CO. INGAOIMINT . TIMOTHY aonOMS . LINDSAY WAGNll ·JOHN HOUSlMAN· DAILY Islet, J :30. S:M , 7~. A·::-;;:~ Eli:zabeth Taylor ".Ash Weclnesdayft MONDAY a :40 SUN. 2,00, .5:20, 1:40 -AND- JACK LEMMON "SAVE THE TIGER" MOHDAT 7100, 10:20 U. ll4i, I 7!01 10:>0 Cljn• Easnrood H•wM<t f•••··•• ti ., • ., SI. ~•S-ll\] IL •AC.IHO SERPICO. 111 '1.US t WOOOY .llllN f"lAl If AGAIN, UM (PG) A MllAMDUNY ...... 0..0 DI LALIMN?n is Dinylt.lPPJ in Maanum Fo•ce ~ EXCLUSIVE w .......... NOW AL PACINO. ... u •• ENGAGE-loe<~ Bl•~. .. J.JS91 "SERPICO" SHOWING! MENT! ca40r llv TECHNICOLOR' SHOWING NOW! OPEN 6:45 S on Dlt•• f '"'· SAT. SUN t••'"""0 12:15 O•! ''"'" ,,. •ll·•5•5 TOP HOLIDAY SHOWt 1•~ llrf COP5 t. Rl'BB'ER5 IPG I "lt\AT n PLUS e J IMES CAIN ..... SLITHE R IPGI SAM" This time ' mos! unusu1l lnvesh11t10ns. . Peters, Dennis Allen. Bruce Davison O .@ 11.lnp Hockty K1n1s VS. Chi· and Anl hony Holland slar in this lr:==================================::::;-cago Black Hawks. vaYdeville·styled comedy. The com· ' the 0 @ I]) (ID Dlclr Cl1rk P'rt.1111ts edy lampoons virtu1lly every aspect the Rodi ind Roll Yea.rs A history of lift amon1 show people and ti! rock !nd ro~I. from lls turbulent consists of comedy sketches, musi· birth lo tis exc1!1n1 present,, cal speciallit! and bhtckouts. Q ~Jll!°n $ M~le; (2hr) Sttr1t m Allred HlltlH:ock Presenb MISSlon (1dv) U:-J1mes M~$0n, ID Morie; "B!1 HoUJe, U..U" Stewart Gr1n1er, Michie! Wild1n1. (dra) '55-Broderick Crawlcrd m Crt111 Atrn · Ii) Tiie Urrto11ch1bln "Starflce lZ:OO i Ont Step Beyon d Mob" (2hr) · Boris Klrloft P'r1sents I LI Seftor• Javen Marie: "Th• Hoity ind tllt IV)"' 8111 MOJers' .loumal (dia) 'S3-R1lph Richardson, Celit Ctl1rnpion1hip Wr1s1nn1 Johnson . J1P1n•11 L1n1u111 Provam ED Yo21 for He1rth l:lO ... '""' rTI ~ft'.'. NBC Wedrmd1r l:OO (J1 0 CJ) QI@ Newt u 08 ~ l1lfl 1:1:J " 0 ®J €?;) Tomomrw Mpllry -l1111ttk No Slone Un· 8 Hiihwiy P'•trol fumed" (R) BanKek tries lo li1ur11 • Winled Dtad or Alivt out ltow 1 three.ton, $3 million , . ,, . sculpture could dis1ppe1r from 1 1.30 m All·.~11,~I Show: N1~ht l o1t I! 111arded bu!ldini shortly before itsl D11blln. first,, Yank 1n Tolyo, u1Mitin1. Gery Loc~'lfOOd ind Dani "1lle Mwsk Bo1 Slro11d 111ut. 1:45 El Movie: "Casi A Lona Sh1dow" O !HJOO&JAIC W1d n11d1y' (w!S ) '59 -AYdi1 Murphy, Terry MMt: {C) (IO) "'Daulittf1 ol Moore . ......, C." (R) (wes) '72-8uddy J:lD fJ Motle: (C) "Raw Wind In [den" Ettltfl, Karan V1l1ntine, Slndra Ote, (adv) '58-Jeff Chandler, [slher Ltslty W1rmt. In 1 schtmt to keep W!lllams. Thursday DAmME MOVIES 12:30 m (C) "My Slster Eileen• (etim) '55 -Janet Lel1h. Betty C11relt, Jack Lemmon. 1:00 O "fill on Theim• Jord1n" (dra ) '49 -B1rb1r1 S!1nwyck, Wendell Corty. f9i!!(l}'"Sc•1•l l1r H11b111dr" (com) '39 -Rei H1rrison, Diana l :OO (I) (C) "Life Wllh f1ther" Cont!. Churchln. I (com) '47 -William Powell. l1111t t'JO D ('C) "'Tiit ~ Ml u111• Dunne. L111rel & H•rdJ luf\lretle. _,,.. (c.om) 'U-OOn bolts 'c.1011 @I ''Co!du Boy" (dr1) '39-Wil· &:.., ' liam Holden, 81rb1ra Sttnwytk. · . ~ J:lO" (I) (C) "Jo11m11 to th• Ctntff 11:11 (D ~ ..,, S:l-1'° (mill) 5 ot Time" (sci·li) '67-Scott Brldy. ~ S.l'lds. Lili ~nll•. , 4:00 IJ "Tttna1e Rebel" (drt) '56 -8 _,.. ~ (tdv) 49 -Cineer Ro11rs, Mlchael Rennie. W1nd1 Mc"'7. Gaotp Rtrm.· 14:30 rJ.:_ S11111 11 IOAM llrtln1 11:LS 9 ~ """'" (wnl 'SB -fit ([I) 'qh1 f111r Poster" P1rt I Joel McCn1. "Hut W'"" (m71J (com) '52-Ru Htrrison, Utll Ptl· '54-Alu fffcol. Hllilrv lrooU. 1 mu. KOCE TELEVISION LOG \ t1 t C!ISTt"911lll\lod ttll, ll!Wfl fllolll loht1 lrOll'I tlle l<rtncfl comlt oc.er• 111 !he orftlnal 1•1'1911•, Whlhl lflt story tl11t II Prtlll!IN 1" Engll.,,, ll:le:Moro Bonn~ ton· duc:tl lflt LorlC!Ofl Sy m p fl on y Ortflt,lro\ 7:llil Tflt lrfltt M11tw Clltr11t ICI fKOCE:I ~ Mllint Monett~, Ctc. ,._t i •·GO P M 1:00 Mfti.,,Mtc:1 Tlltllf't ICI OU fl'IS) ''T~ UllPlelll fflllUI Al Tflf lellont (IU!I" -TM OCSI morlen\ rtvHl1 1t111 c;......,,1 Fentl~n died ol Olfiltl•l '°4IOl"•fl0. ltOWrl ell• ,..ih ll'ltl "' ltu!ICI !flt lltftOt'tl'• bod~ 11111 Otl10.rAt1ly Mi OU! It conh1t11 lt.t tci11t1 111'1'14 01 cl••lfl. (t ' -1" f;te tlh MMrt' ~I ICI .. /I'll) "'Hlt l'\I lroOOft"-4.Vltlol"·IOUrl\Oht. 1111 ¥o'Ytr• ·~-" 'flt ~.i .... , ~ •"''"'°" 11\tl ••• "'tOI~ ,,,. ,._ ..... DI I~ ?t'a, t!VOV<1ft l11!MC """"" tf'lcl lnttn-1..,, IJUall ',.__ .. -s-.,, .., TodtY, DI< ,._ ai I ',,. (X. m~I CJ{riotts lJecemb<r 26 & 27 De<ttnber 28 .. 29 O.....ber 30&31 Davy Jones Billy Joe Royal The Hagers 1••••rylthru 6 Rick Nelson 111d 1h.s1 .... ean~ .. 11and KNDTT'S BERRY FARM . Buen a Part • Opu daily a' 10 L .. • (714) 827·1776 I bullets are itting pretty ' ' close to home ! I ' t --. i ' A""""°_.,,,""'. NMl I .... HAL HOLBROOK .,.,., .. "''""' ., .. ·OAVIO """"""' "'" • JIOIOT U111CM 11111C LALO ICHIAWf • Sloryltf' JOilH MIUUS ·~by JOHfrl MIUUS anti MICHAEL CIMIMO • ProO.ad by llOBT Oit.l.lY • Dht1td Iii/ TEI POST ! PNUVISIONl•TECtlllCOLOfl•· flom Wlfl'lfl 11ros. IM DlefO '""· 11 8rooktwnt Fountain V"t.v • 11:2-2411 CO.HIT "BAO MANS RIVER " Shew Storts 614'S P.M, • PLUI e IHOltT "NORMAN ROCKWELL" hll1 l!OI •~Ii • t1M 0 7Jlf & IMO P.M. --Piil, ... , .. IUflL " MON. I , ~ I 0'.'•'J\Hll'i ~ llAllGOH t 1ri.r .1t1 \ HerborloWR•d•WHlllftllrMt °?'ON MWI • Ml-Oli7J CONTINUOUS MATINIES DAILY! .. Wednesday, Otttmber 26, iq73 DAILY PILOT J 'I Co1nposers Win Yuletime . Awards LAINIE . • • • (ConUnoed From Page II) ,'The Interpreter' 011 l\.CET "beca~e It dldn't mean as much to me. "ALL TIDS · happened last EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UP!) -Irving Berlin, who wrote 0 White Christmas, n and John· spring. I couldn't function. I ny Marks, the "Rudolph the couldn't work. I relurned to Red-Nosed Reindeer" author," Hollywood and didn't want to nosed out Charles Dickens for see anyone. It was as if so- '1Spirit of Christmas" awards. meone had died in the family. Berlin and Marks were All I go~ were condolences. named by the International "I be<:ame the insecure girl Society of Santa Claus 85 the from Brobklyn agaln. I even first recipients of the society's l?st t'Onfidenc.e in the part annual awards to ,,ersons who· I d been play mg for several Actor Gillia1n's Plea Iunoce.ut SANTA MONICA (AP) -have contributed greatly to, .. ;;iy;;;ear;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Actor Stu Gilliam, slar or the the spirit or the Christmaa II television aeries 11 Roll Out," sea.son. has pleaded innocent I n The society's bewhiskered Superior Court to a charge 8,379 members picked the two t----of-assauJ&--wilh -deadJ)'-o.ver 11 othen Oil a list of weapon. possible recipients. Trial was set Thursday !or Runners.up included Charles Jan. 21. Gilliam was arrested Dickens for his "Christmas last Sept. 29 after he allegedly Carol" and Clement C. Moore swung a long-handled ax at who wrote "Twas the Night a head waiter. Before Christmas." WOODY ALLEN TAKES A NOSTALGIC LOOK ATTHE FUTURE.,; FAMILY TWIN CINEMA ' . . '• . . CINIMA I "FIDDLll ON THI lOOF" ... "MAN FROM LA MANCHA'' Special c•lldrH'• Matl11"' Dolly DOOll:S OPIN 11 NOON "SCALLAWAG" & "CHARLOnl'S WEI" CINEMA 11 "A TOUCH OF 't:LA.55" "' ''APRI L FOOLS" -•·" 1-...ui..• ClltEOO'r/£ 20 ..• .. *"" .. "-"'-'-'..II• .. • .--"•-····· ClltEOOME 21 .: ' .. , .. :: •• ".~'-11'.T.'.::..l•J "The Interpreter/' a report on the perilous progress of Ille modern pilgrim and his search for moral COW"age, will be Present_ed.on °Bill Moyers• Journal" tonight at 8 on KCET, Channel 28. Seve~al months ago, Moyers and film maker Wayne Ewlng journeyed to tile Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina to visit· Interpreter's· House, IPGI 7 l 10:21 P.M. Aod "SLITHER" !PGI 8:30 P.M. CALL.THIA.TR£ FOR SUNDAY MATINll SCHEDULI "PAPILLON" IPGI -Stevt McQueen a Dustin HoflrYYll "AMERICAN GlAFITTI" --"Pih:-'N "ti'LLIE" IPG) "THE OOH IS Ol!AO" (R) "HIGH PLAINS DRIFTElt" jR) "THE PAMILY" -an ecumenical counseling ~use's three-week sessions - cente r near Asheville. ~ recording lhe no-holds barred In the seven yea rs since scenes of men , their emotions he opened his house, Bapt ist unhinged, groping for the minfster carlyle ~1arney has truth about themselves. led thousands of clergy and KCET repeats the broadcast Jay people through an intense Saturday, at 7 p.m. and Mon search for self-understanding. day at 8 a.m. Ewing joined one Of theJr,§§§j§j§j§j§j~~~I "Charley Varrick" phis Aho "High Plains "THE NIGHT VISITOR" StonllMJ Trovor Ho ward Liv Ullmo•11 Drifter" Ticket• on 111• Convention Center Mutual & Liberty Agencies United Calf!. Banks in Orange Co. loth ht Color I PG 1 FAST FUNNY FABULOUS For Information Special Group Rates Phone: (714) 635·5000 BEAµTIFUL GIRlS •GORGEOUS COS TUMES SENSATIONA L SKATING Prices: $6.00, $5.50, $5.00, $4.50 One admission entitles you up to 6 hours skating run. ASK ABOUT SPECIAL0 GROUP RATE ICE CAPADES CHALET COSTA MESA ~1ESA VERDE SHOPPING CE NTER HAlllOlt BLVD AT ADAMS Tel : 979·1810 Ellr1btth T1ylor • "ASN WI ON•SDAY" Ja<ll L.mmon "AVANTI" Both ln Color! (PGJ Cliff GOi"man "COPS & Jl;0811 EltS" James C1nn "SLITHER" Bolh In Color! !PG ! Geor11t~I ''TOUCH Of' cuss• "LOVERS a STRANOlll:S" 8~1h ln Color! (PG) WE WI SH VOL' A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS A~D HAPPY NEW YEAR EDWARDS CINEMAS CONTINUOUS DAILY SHOWINGS T.tlis time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home!. ' 1 rftlll!l l'(...,.•>ll:M•l Voll'>!. """"'l•lDKiif .... ,...,.,.ot<Y.all·~, .. 'f' .. .,»"l ... WS ... """'n~·-·j 111'JtO•T °''If -11n:~:~ 1t.11t1t • •·~·~--• ·n :"""o'"" · r..;. .......... o• w......-......e.---·:.:1R!~-·::!.'.?:":.-::··I FIRST COUNTY ENGAGEMENT 111111' LAmllEli (PG) -RTIMll ... ~Y:,!!! Many ot hiS tetiow I officers considered l*n 1he most dangerous 1 man aU-.e-an honest cop. ,.,,._llfl.UK -OIU!UllllffQ Al. PACIND. "SERPICO". e MATINEES·OAILY e EDWARDS . (R) END ALL CRIME WAAS.!.lJ ,fll( \'#.I.US· ..... '11( iJJl I~ [I ey· ~ •• 1.1.lfO'll' Wt'~ IJ' • FR'Cffl'C flllfST llBRI flifll~ • .It \Utll"?.l· llffi Jlf.'l'l'.:S • DWlf5 Ciffl •• >SYlD.lM!l~11 .... ~!.IM\~~ AUi.Ri "':"''lloi>tM4lfltlS()(JI ..... ~ -..IWJ N-IMAN ~ .... ttN.ft ~\!':·.-.•· ~·--.. • -Af WllfllOO« ., Cl"'1 ALFRED HIT CHCOCK'S .. • • .. • . " I • ' • .. JB DAILY PILOT Wtdrttsday, Otctr11btr 26, 1973 L. M-. •oyd Bar Bill Checks Bounce Hardest Note a -new cologne on the market called '1Ebb Tide." That nomenclature must have been created by a lifelong Nebraskan. Anyone who has ever lived on the seashore knows the odor in an ebb tide is not marketable. Wait , I take t hat back. The beach when the water is out is a little like .hurt skunk downu'ind of the pigpen with a u·isp or hot tennis shoes. It has some aromatic charm, nonetheless. Not so delectable as strawberry fields, sunrise at the bakery or wood.chips in the lumberyard. But it beats the death and asphalt o( the alleys. Approximately half the rubber checks bounced nation- wide pay for liquor. Statistically. that proresstonal lady identified by some as the "housewife" is nine times n1ore apt to attempt sui- cide than the woman in any other occupation. NEW PHONES Q. "Why doesn't the telephone company invent a system whereby you can tell when on the line that someone else is trying t~caJI -you." A. The telephone company already has done so. Expect such service short· ly. Not only that. you'll be allowed to hold the first can while you take take the second. Further, you and and your conversation friend will be permitted to ring up a third person and bring him into the conversation. . And still further. if you plan to be away for awhile, you'll be able to reroute incoming calls to some other phone. The equipment iS already invented. And it's even in service here and there. Exactly $1 out or every $4 donated to charities is a bequest of a deceased person. Was none other than Sam Cleniens who said the differ· en~ ~tween the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug. PERSONAL . When I first slarted this column years ago, a usually reliable source told me earnestly that the world's first known wrist\\'atch \Vas a strip of cloth. chemically treated to change color hourly, \\'Om on the arm o'f Alexander the Great. Promptly repo;ted this fascinating fmd. Innocent, innocet1t! An editor in high glee phoned to say: Come on , lad, h~ven't you ever heard of "Alexander's Ragtin1c Band?" Heartbeats of the first and the second born children ap- pear to be somewhat faster than the heartbeats of the third and later born children of the same parents. Or So a U.S. Public Health Service doctor has claipied. There's an alarm clock out now that will stop ringing Jf you say to it: "Be quiet!" Address n1ail to L. ii:··BOyd, P. o. Box J 875 Neu;. port Beach, 92661. ' · So1ne Thoughts On Being Fired By JOYCE L. KENNEDY In my past two columns, we discussed constructive ac· lions you can take at the moment you're fired. Here are several more observations to bear in mind: BEING FIRED doe sn't mean that you're destined to be a flop. The workworld is full of people who were bounc· ed and then came back stronger than ever. If you give in ,to panic, your self- esteem is going to sag, your (Career Corner J thinking will become fu zzy, and your ability to conduct a good job hunt will be ques- tionable. As I've said before, it's a rare person who hasn't been released at least once; if it makes you fee l any bet· ter, you 've got Jots of com- pany in the "society of the Connerly fired." SUPPOSE YOU were In a state or shock during your exit interview and blew your immediate options. You can still make a "save" in one area that's critical to your future: the reference. Ask your employer for an ap- pointment and say that you were so stunned you barely remember the reasons for your release. Ask If he vrould review them again. Try to work the conversation around to the point where your Conner employer will help you verbalize a reason for leaving that doesn't damage your employment prospects. Your chances of doing this are bet- ter than you may think. At minimum. you may neutralize a bad reference. IF YOU ARE at th• ex- ecutjve le\·el, it's especially to your advantage to appear to be employed. Many people have created this iJluslon by establishing a consulting firm .,.1th letlerhud and a phone. Sophisticated employers may see th.rough the ruse. but not all employers are that aware. ANOTHER WAY to appear employed is to . simpl y omit a tenninatio" date on your Nume, explaining later that 'the resume was written before you ended your relationship. If you are certain your former mployerwi'tf-say-you were fired, it's always easier to interpret the circumstances in person rather than putting a negative fact on your resume. DON'T D\VELL on the fric- tions that caused you to lea ve you r last job. And certainly don't waste your va\iable time on petty re\'enge. Throwing lighted cigarettes down the mail chute, phoning the boss's wile with \\oild charges, steal- ing pictures and books -all this is kid stuff and utterly usel~. Satisfying thou gh reveng'e, can be, it depletes your energy froin your own future. and that's what's im- portant. Besides. the best kind of revenge ls 'A-'hen you get another job and tum the screws by beating the person who fired you at his own business. ATTEND TO YOUR finances immediately. If this means applying for unemploy· ment compensation, do it. If it means giving up a certain level of Jiving, give it up. Conserve your resources for essential things like looking l'.'ell dressed and job search expenses. GET GOING. Sotne people mistakenly lake a vacation before tackling the complex task of job hunUng. Don 't. You can 't help but lose momentum . Start working at your search full ti me, main· taining regular business hours plus ove rliril e. Remember, you 're working for yourself now. FORGET THE "tin cup" approach. Maintain y o u r dignity while you show en- thu sias1n for the job. Every employer wants to think he js hiring first·string taJent, and begging for work will destroy that image. Arrive on time for interviews, but not more than a few minutes ear· J,y. Samuel E. Webster 111121 BLINDED 80 Proof 2 eg WHISKEY '" • • Julio Gomez was 1.11 IMPORTED 80 Proof 3· 5g TEQUILA "' • MacKinnon's wu '·" BLINDED 80 Prooi 3 4g SCOTCH '" • Did Barstow was'" DRY 90 Proof 2 gg GIN "' • Grenada Bay LIGHT OR DARK RUM 80 Proof 1/2 &AL Foster Creek w•s 1.11 6 YEAR OLD 86 Proof 3 gg BOURBON Rt • Davenport . LONDON DRY J ~l"'..?:z.l GIN 80 Proof .11 WIS 3.79 3.3g Michel Girard was,., 80 Proof FRENCH 3 3g BRANDY ltl I -CHAMPAGNES--.. COLD DUCK-WHITE-PINK Choteau 1 59 Caprice ·sth • Andre 51h 1.99 , Jae Bonet Sth 1. 99 11========1 ~~~ i""' ' .... l Galliano !;So, 5.45 1 • LIQUEUR I 80 Proof 5t• 10.25 ~ PAPER TABLEWARE . FOR YOUR ~New Year's PARTY by C.A. Reed Make you1 ~Mt)' memcr- ablt w11h coklrlul d~StinS in Ille N~ Yei!.'> theme. I Tiblecroth 59c W191" 9" Plaslic Coated :;:•" 39c OFI f "C." Cell ·u.-ce11 RUM& BRANDY WAS 12.15 Henri Marchant ·coLD _ , DUCK ,,. 3.99 PILOT·ADVERTISER 6 8 OZ. UPJOHN Kaopectate.-. ----ANTIDIAR•HEAL.;;&o·iiilll· iii1;,;;;; -· - llAO·CON 111. CONCENTRITEO for C-ildreo 1.49 I. 7 OZ. FAMILY SIZE " .; ., '• .. ~ • .. '1 ""· Windsor Supreme Pepsodent . WAS 11.9~ 80 Proof CANADIAN WH!~~! ~. 5. 59 Kessler BLINDED 86 Proof Wl_S 11.39 WHISK1~~., 10 • 49 Wolfschmidt WAS l.71 80 Proof WAS9.H 86 Proof STRAIGHT BOURBON,1 6.99 ' VODKAt 11 c1L 8.99 ' Sunny Brook STRAIGHT 80 Proo! WHISKEY WAS 11.35 ' 112~. 80 Proof BLENDED WHISKY It• 3 ~ ,(• . ~ 1.00 ,,r 5gc SAY. E 75c oN PART P•10 · 1:~~~~ o~,\ l Sth ANNUAL l,NTIRNATIONAL Sports Vacation-Travel txpo JANUARY 4-13, 1974 TllE LOS ANGELES·CONYENTION CENTER ii! l:i f AM to 10 PM 7 DAYS A WllK HUH-IHGTOH llACH--Ad~m, & BrOOk.PIUfll r'.. POll" 'lllA(H-1020 lr~lr1ot, Wt1lcJlff Pl11t1 HUHTIHGTOH lllACH-SOrfrlQd,trt & fdtl'IQfr EL TOR0-2cn Rockfftlcl Rolf TOOTHPASTE TIDE Dr ip Ory Hangers (SU OF IOI Glassware for the Party Clear sparkling plastic. 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TUBE • 1 YEAR 'FREE PARTS • 1 YEA R FREE SERVICE • Free Delivery & Set Up ~~ TWO LOCATIONS TO SERV.E 9021 Atlanta St. Huntington Beach HOUIS: DAILY l0· 7 962 5559 SAT. 10·5:)0 ~L~l~N!f: Ai 19046 ·B~khur~t St.' . Huntington Beach 968 3329 • HOUU1 DAILY 10.7 SAT. 11·1:20 SUN. lZ·I • : No Finance Charges If Paid In '90 Days or Low Down & 36 Months to P·ay o.A.c. BankAmericard ·• Master Charge ··I ' I .. . • it • r • , ,. . , • .. BEA ANDERSON, Editor CARO~ MOOU, F,,..t Edlt~r w~nesc11v, DtctmlMr 11, 1m ''" 11 •· f<at~y :1:1o1ley linow ·the &yrup gets lr~t rh•n you 11\f-ke : lol lipop~. But Peter Scarpello +ekes ·a' li~k · befor.-the bate~ getl too ·warm. 1\14eft Hatfi eld stirs to dissol ve ·sugar. ', ( I I I • AkP ·H .. AB ,ET SOUPED UP • Cashier Jeff Woodruff counts out change in play money. as Byron Floyd checks out th e nutritional platter of magazine c utouts that Sigi Stanley and Ri>nn ie Livingston offer to Mrs . Richard B. Floyd at the Woodland Restaurant . ~¢t and Zucchini. CHerries and CHocolate CHips. Tea and Taffy for Twenty-Two. Learning about food phonetically can be hazardous t9 you r health. Kindergarteners don't eat everything at once, though. They 're too involved Preparing Po\vdered Pink Punch, C.oun- ting Crisp Cookies and "selling " the KaMun Chung and Janet Baddon make sure th ere will be two cookies for each classmate while Tricia di lullo 'and Chris Ferguson measure punch ingredients. food in a refrigerator c r a t e • tumed restaurant. With this kind of play they actually are teaming colors (by association with ~ ' fruits and vegetables), phonetics (from wtdersoorcd \VOrds in miniature "' cookbook s) and numbers {by measuring ingredients and counting change) . The students of sara Blatterman and Joan Connella invited parents to their \Voodland Restaurant and served plates full of ma gazine cut-outs , chosen for .., nutritional balance. Another lesson involved five naturally \.Vhite ghosts who ate strawberry, carrot. lettuce, grape juice ·and chocolate chip ' cOokies and turned red , orange, green. purple and polka dot brown. They were "cured" by drinking milk. To complete their food study. the yoUngsters prepared punch and cookies for themseJves and visited a popula,r take-out re~taurant. The switch from pla y to real restaurants gave the youngsters a chance .to show what they had learned about good manners, ordering and paying for _. meals. Each stude nt in Virginia Whitehouse's class at Pau larino School gets his or her own copy of "J;>bonovisual Party Cookbook" to help him · learn b~ the se nses while cooking on a cafeteria stove or electric skillet. Even the results arc phoneti c . ._, Lollipops are Luscious. Muffins are Marvtilous. But Yogurt's Yucky. They Migbt Make Muffins Mostly on Mondays. Jf the number for that weeki i~ four , each student stirs the batter_._ four times. · • "The children learn better when their sight, smell, touch and taste are in- volved ," Mrs. \Vhitehouse explained. "Not all the results are sweet. We ... try to give them nutritional variety. And I like to incorporate as many cook- ing medias as possible -blender, mixer,. skillet, popcorn popper.'' Even when you Fry Fish unti l Fi rm·' and Flaky or Bea.t and Bake Ba nana .._ Bread, there are ttmes when you have left-overs. The g:ilution: a meal of THis and Tilat, · • • ... >: 22 DAIL V PILOT Wtt!Msd")', Otttmbtr 26. 1973 All Men Created Equal,· But Not Treated So • • By JO OLSON or Hit Ptllr Plltt 11111 "\Ve . hold these truths to be seU~vident : that all men are created equal ." Quoting from the Preamble to the C.Onstitulion. John Da C:Orsl, attorney, told members of the Orange County Chapter or the National Organization {or Women that "all men are created equal but all men are not treated equally in our socil!:ty." He had come to discuss a suit he has filed against Los Angeles County on behalf of Horoscope Aquarius: Face Self THURSDAY DECEMBER 27 By SDYNEY OMARR ARIES (1'1arch 21-April 19): Friends and money don't make a healthy mixture at this time. Buying gifts at i bargain rates could prove less , 1. of a bargain than anticipated. 1 Stick to quality. You could offend by exchanging what ,. was given )'OU in spontaneous ' gesture of goodwill. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Behind scenes gossip could be harmful if Y(!U participate. You are strong enough to stand on evidence. You don't need intrigue to back your cause. See situation as it real· ly erists, not merely as you might wish it lo be. GEMINI (May 21-June 21!): You have ally who is unseen. Your ability to write, com- municate is enhanced. You have cha.nee to broaden horirons. Relationship is in· tensified. You may find yourself carrying e x t r a burden. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): You get action on requests. Those who were mild, in· different will now get moving. Accent is on interest on in· v"tments. ability to save and to get lo bottom of mystery. LEO (July 23-Aug. 221: What occurs is definite-lines are drawn and people choose up sid.,,. Be independent, original -and give full play to creative urges. Another Leo could play significant role. VIRGO (Aug. 23-'iept. 22): Yoar ability to teach is emphasized. You !eem able now to impart information le> penom who mean most to J'OU. Aqurtm, i..o could be featured.. Accent is on health, work. service, guidelines for clearing debris -emotional and otherwise. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 221: Relationship is intensified. No ha!l¥ay. Don't play games with emotions. Member of oP- posite sex is inquisitive - and probably has a right to be. Gem In i, Sagittarius persons couJd figure prom· inently. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Highlight maturity1 patience. U you act on impulse, you lose. What you possess is more valuable than might be inr agined. Don't sell short. SAGITrARJUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Take special care during short journeys. Tralfic. machinery a n d electricity seem to be inhabited J:>y gremlins now -vthere }'hu are in·,rolved. Open Jin" of communication. CAPRICORN (De<. 22-Jan. 11): Get money's worth . Oteck guarantees. Co u n t change. Some around you now are adhering to a "buyer beware" dictum . Show you are not naive. Speak up. 'l'ou can gaill ally by being fa ir and firm. But if too leninent, otaers are apt tO think you • fool. AQUARllJS (Jan. 2().Feb. 11): Cycle is such that you are ab&e to pinpoint what is needed, what you are capable ot oblalnlqg. You learn a valuble lesson -how lo mab tntelllgut compromise. You tho do something dif· llcult: Yoo face yourself and tee ~ and try to answer why am! here. PDCB8 (Feb. 19-March 21!1: You galD lnformltion which ;1 prt"11eged. '11111 may be the oppmfln of a bl.,,sing. y.., Clll teep a eoolldence bUt 1«ft1a weiell )Jeaviiy. ea,rl<on. ~ penon.I cooJd be involved. 11' TODAY IS VOUR 1111'111DAY 70<1 will -be IDvolved In a domelliC ad- jullt-whldl cooJd inVOl>e a ch'fC'!! ol 1'9ideDce. You are v11&111 ,_.,,,.., with tltalth. law and humanlWll(' miltJ. \~'Omen coonty employees who have claimed discrimination in hiring and promotion pra c- tices. "In 1964 Lyndon Johnson pushed through the Civil Rights Act. which was a mir· ror or the failure of our socie- ty. "ln 1972 government agen· cies became subject to the Civil Rights Act. Until then, government immunity carried over. Jn 1972 we could go after the public sector.'' HIGH PERCENTAGE Los Angeles County, Da Corsi sa id. em p Io y s ap- proximately 8,000 people and is the largest employer in the county. f'"ifty-two percent of these are \\'Omen. "There are t \Vo re- quiren1c.nts for promotion," he said, "appraisal o { pro- motability and the c iv i 1 service exam. ''The county has kept v.·omen out or top-level jobs by several me thods: tow ap- praisal, talking them out of applying and not posting the Mlices for tests." They also "'ill put a man into an "acting '' capacity then claim his experience during the "acting" period is enough to quaUJy him for the pro- motion, Da Corsl said. He added that the average salary for women is ap- proximately $250 per month less than that men earn, though in some departments there is a high percentage of females. NO WOMEN Until a >A'Oman vlas named head of the library depart· ment recently, there have been no female department heads, Da Corsi noted. The suit he has flled started because ol one "''Oman, a 2().. year-old county veteran who is a lieutenant in the Naval Reserve, Oa Corsi said. "Stle was told .she had to be given a low appraisal because they did not want to promote her. But they crossed the wrong pei-son." "right to sue" letter, a 180-day period i.s supposed to lapse. To decide i( a class action suit Is warranted, Da Corsi explained, two questions 111ust be asked ebout tile eosos: will it quaJlfy ror ·a class action suit and Is the defendant in need of preliminary lnjW>Cllve relief? cheers and applause from the chapter members, both men and \\'Omen, Da Corsi an· nouDccd tha t the proceedings tor the IA• Angeles County case will begin by Jan. 1. It will, he predicted, be a landmark case. What is the procedure for initiating a discrimination suit? The charge will be filed with lhe Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, Da Corsi said. Between the filing date and the receipt of the The "right to sue'' letter comes fro nt the Dcpartntent of Justice., he explained. "They have the right to file a Jawsuit . The EEOC now has a 400,000.case backlog in Los Angeles." TWO CRITERIA \Vhat are the criteria for a class actioo suit? "The plaintiff must represe nt the cla5' or the plaintiff must have acted in the same n1an. 11er as the class," Da Corsi said. "Discovery Is t h e next phase. You find out what the other side has." This, Da Corsi said, is determined by oral and written questions. Da Corsi was asked v.•here funding ,yas cornlng from for the ca11t since there is 110 single client to charge. NOW is being asked, he ' ansv.-er'ed, and v.·omen In coun· "Then,'' he o:iatin'Ued, ''.you either settle the case or you go to trial. At the trial you either win or lose." To the accompaniment of ty govemn1ent a r e con- trlbutJng some mooey. "Nine· ty percent is fro1n me," he t-oncluded. · Need Another Hole in Head? D&AR ANN LANDERS:· My husband and I recently returned from a trip to India and Ceylon. \Ve met some fascinating people along the way. An English v.·oman in India wore a tiny gold rin~ in her nose-v.ith a diamond ip it. I 1ust fell in Jove with the way i~ looked. I asked my husband if he would mind if l had my nose pierced He said it .... ·as all right with him. The hole would be small (like the ones in my ears) and it wouldn't show when I wasn't wearing the rfng. Wouldn't it be a great cooversalloo piece?-A.T. DEAR A.T.: Go ahead IC you ft.el like It. Anc>tber hole in your bead \\'On'l matter. But don't be surprised U nobody notlce1. What with exposed navels , see· through blouses, aDd tblgb-higb slits in skirts-very few people are looking al noses anymore. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I v.'OUld like to respond to the woman who was critical of social workers for placing children with foster parents when they should have been in mental institutions, special boarding schools or homes of correction. The vast majority of foster children are neither teenage prostitutes, drug addicts nor retarded. They are children who have been deprived of love in a -, '4• ,t411Uu ' .... normal setting. They are the victims of circumstances they could not control, parents v.·ho didn't want them, or orphans whose aunts and unlces and grandparents refused to take them. They are outcasts. Uni~ they are fortunate enough to be placed in a foster home that offers Jove and security, they will react against society. It takes a special person to be a roster parent-one v.·ho can give y:ithout always getting back, one .,.,,00 can love wiconditionally, one who is secure and 1nfinitely patient. I agree that in rare instances, some foster children DO belong in institutions. but most of them just need love. They need someone who will cure the anaWsh 0£ a bad beginning. I kno\Y, because I was a foster child. -BRIDGEWATER, N.J. DEAR N.J.: Thank you for an autobiographical account. They are always the best. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have printed several letters in your column , .. , about smokers. This one might be the best one yet. So many people continue to smoke because they figure the damage has been done . Last \veek 1 came '3CTOSS an article while wailing in my doctor's reception room. It was so encooraging I took out a pencil and v.TOte down the key sentences.. Here they are: A chest surgeon wrotft "Tho5e dirty, black, tar-filled lungs caa be restored to a new state of pink purlt): in from three weeks to three years alter the smoker quits -depending on hc>w Jong he has smoked." In other words. diseased lungs CAN and DO clear up it the smoker stops before a malignancy begins. This information will give new hope' to ttx>se \\'ho continue to srmke because they think it's too late to quit. SIGN ME -I FEEL BETTER ALREADY DEAR FEEL BETl'ER: Thant yoa for what "111 be the best news ol Utt day for a good many rtader1. And now, all )'OU backers, cougben aid polluters ·-Ute.re IS hope for you, 10 do iomethiDJ about. II. MARRIED A HALF CENTURY Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ellls Ellises Celebrate .Golden Date Marked J·c\A Celebrating their g o I d e n wedding anniversary with a chan;ipagne buffet diMer in the Village Park Clubhouse were Mr. and ~1rs. Paul Ellis or Irvine. Committee for the C:Ouncil of Irvine. and has served as in· spector at Irvine precincts during elections. ~1r, and l\trs. Alan Robnett ., Gallatin. Tenn. and i\fr. and l ~1rs. Bill Ellis of London. j They also have n inc grandchildren. , Among the 120 friends and relatives attending were the1 t . emorrs SPORTSWEAR The celebrants have two daughters and a son, who with their spouses arc ~1r. and t-lrs. Greg Turner of Houston Turners. The honored couple, v.·ho Wc9tc1ift' 'Pl1:ra, 17th and Jn-inc, were married De<:. 22, 19'23 Ncv.·port Beach,Catifornia92660 in Kansas City, Mo. have been ______________ _:_ ___ _,_ _ ___!~~~~~~~~~~~! . active in community affairs l- in Irvine. He was chainnan of the community affairs committee for the University Community Association, was elected to the association board for two years, served on the Public Safety C:Ommittec and \Vas chairman of Help Irvine Gel Hospitals. Mrs. Ellis has been active in various PTA units for almost a quarter of a century and is an honorary life member of the organization. She was a member of Irvine Committee for Education, chaired the Public Education July Rites Revealed !\Ir. and ~h's. \Villiam Tezak o{ Costa Mesa have anmunced the engagement or their daughter, ~1iss Sandie Tezak to Patrick Crimmlns. soo of Mrs. E. C. Reed of Yorba Linda. A July 'l1 ·wedding is planned in Newport Beach . Miss Te'Lak was graduated from Newport Harbol' High School and is a candidate for June graduation from San Jose State Univerity with a bachelors degree ln nursing. Her fiance earned a degree ln aeronautics from SJSU. Quality Counts NEW YORK (UPll -The most important ingredient tn a prescr1ption pharmaceutical cannot be seen. soys the P h a r maceutical r..1anufac- turer'1 A$9oc:latlon. The Ingredient: the quality of the product. A -ly manufactured drug product that cannot be relied on ls not only wonhles!I, but In some casts It can · be dangerous, sars the .~:i· tlon. 14VING A NBW YB4RS P4BTY? fmi~k©rr1 r~~m~. OF OHIO FB4TUBBS P4RTY FOODS WORLD FAMOUS BBBFSTICE · SUMMER SAUSAGE Start your New Year right with the one and only BEEF STICK Summer Sausage. Great for sandwichu, maclcJ, hors d'oeu'1'es and by itself. IUCKORY FARMS SPECIAL BLEND CBBBSB 14LL or LOG Enhance your New Year's cekbratJ.ons wil.h the Cheese Balli ind Cbcete lop. Each contains a speclll blend of che~ Snack items for 4111 & 4ll Parties Let HJci:ory Farms of Ohio tickle• your talte budl at thil Nw Year'1 puty with a wide 11eJecc:.ioa. ot -'* items. 1be&e include dellcloua Cb,.ml ailpc, W>Wi1bla Old.P1ablooed Cb-Stieb, ,,,.~pu1ar Scami Stllt, Dry Routed Peanuts and Macacllmll Nuu. ff ick~11 rcrrrms. OF 01(10 I W f STCLIFF PJ.AZA 17111 • laVJNI, NEWPORT HACH PHONI : M2-0t72 Mon.-Frl. '?ii t Sat. 'Tll 6 Sun. ~IS •• / STORE WIDE I i [11, ST ARTS THURSDAY /I' DECEMB~R 27th, 9:30 A.M. II FABULOUS FASHIONS •COATS e PANT SU ITS • SPORTS WEAR • LONG SKIRTS •DRESSES (lo ng ond shor t) e SHOES •ACCESSORIES UP TO P.S. AND MORE! Special Prices In Our Mr. Tom's Store For M~n .Too! :-1~ CREDIT CARDS WELCOME Newport Beach-3424 Via lido Strip • I I • Wednesday, December 2b, iq73 · DAILY PILOT zi • r • Hypo•allergenic beauty treatments that work! Now, for a limited time only, save on Du Barry's famous quality beauty. treatment creams and lotions. Choose from a collection of basic complexion care products for: Cleansing, stimulating, protecting, and . softening. Du BARRY vibRANcL I ~ ' ; ' Du BARRY '\I fouNdATtON LOTION ion..oz.. ' ...,, ' Du BARRY · . ClEANSINq ' CllEAM ' 7 Cleansing Cream for Ory Skin, 8 oz , ....... , .. , ........ , :Now only 2m50 Skin Firming Lotion, 10 oz ••••• .' ......................... Now only 2.50 SkinFreshener, 10oz .................................. Nowonly 2.50 Foundation Lotion, 10oz ................................ Nowonly 2.50 ~ Young Promise, 4·1.4 oz ............................. : ••• Now only 3.00 ' ' Pentetrating Cleanser, 10 oz ••••• , ••••••.••••••••••••••. Now only 2.50 ' ' Eye Cream ,~~ oz •••••••••••..•••.•••••••••. , ••••••••••. Now only 1. 7 5 All Clear Cleansing Grains, 4 oz , , , ...•.•..••••••• : •••••. Now only 1.50 Vibrance Masque, 2 oz ••••••• , ......................... Now only 2.50 ~ JCPenney We know what you're looking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 PM at the following stores: 'FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 644-2313 HUNTINGTON CENTER , Huntington Beach (714) 892-ml , .. • 2 DlllV PILOT WedntSday, Dmmbtr 26, 1973 JOY OF MOUNTAIN CAPTURED IN STEW 'Joy of Mountain' Marioram Medicinal 1\farjoram. an aromatic herb belonging to the mint family, has been called the herb of a 1000 uses. Derived from two Greek words mean- ing "joy or the mountain" it has been popular since an- cient times. The Greeks used marjoram for medicinal purposes, to cure convulsions and dropsy. The Romans were fond of it too and spread it throughout most of Europe as they con- quered the continent. In Me d ieval days, particularly, marjoram was highly prized. It was used principally as an air !reshner and for strewing with flowers and other herbs on grand oc- casions. Shakespeare praised t h e delicate flavor of marjoram. and the Elizabethan women loved to carry this fragrant herb in the nosegays because of its sweet scent. Although us use today is limited primarily to cooking, marjoram is a very versatile herb in the kltchen. Use it in soups, stews, stuf- fings and sauces. It will enhance almost any meat dish. Although It can be bought fresh in season. mar- joram is usually purchased in dried or ground form. As with all herbs, store In a cook d'ark place (not right over the stove) to preserve its delicate flavor. Veal and Artichokes is a unique stew flavored with wine and marjoram. It is simple to prepare, yet fancy enough for an intimate dinner or other special occasion. And this elegant dish is geared to good health. Veal. being lower in fat than bee( or pork. is recommended along with fish and poultry for cholesterol-lowering diets. VEAL AND ARTICHOKES 2 tablespoons corn o i I margarine 1 pound veal stew meat, CJ.It into 1-inch cubes I large clove garlic, crushed 2 envelopes (15 -ounces each ) in s tant beef flavored broth mix 1,~ teaspoon salt 1,'.z teaspoon marjoram 1 '2 cups water 1,2 cup dry white wine 2 tablespoons cornstarch 2 cans (7-ollllC<s each) artichoke hearts, drained and halved lengthwise Hot cooked rice Chopped parsley f\1elt margarine in a Dutch oven. Add veal and garlic; Remove from heat. Stir in brolh mix, sal~ marjoram, water and wine. Return to heat. Bring to Cover and cook until veal is tender. about 1 ~~ to 2 hours. Stir 2 tablespoons broth mix- ture into cornstarch. Pour into remaining mixture. Stir in artichokes. Stir and cook over low heat until slightly thicken- ed and artichokes are bot. about 5 minutes. Spoon over rice. Sprinkle with chopped parsley. Makes 4 servings. ~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ JUST A FEW OF THE MOMENTS THAT MADE .• n. .... Ent crisis,,, the iJ&fS Fri I If Y~ President •% a ••• deM1t111C1from .......... ,. ... 1 WldoryM.''11111 •d .,...,. athr ..-..i-... 1tv1ntsa1 12 111 •II; I 'd I IHI .... ;LI •lli•ll•-arr .-. "Ill WDlllD II 1913. nil 11116:.wWA I I I lllauar-·t ..... il ...... ,, ...... ... &WQ IOF ...... , ..... fl ,,,,,, ....... ...,,.. ""' ...... ----------------------------------, THE WORLD IN 1973 I O range Coast Dally Pilot : P.O.Box 66 : POUGHKEEPSIE , N.Y. 126 0 1 : I Enclosed is $ Plea se send ---1 copies of The World in 1973 al $4.95 each lo l Name I Il l Address~~~---~-~~--~- : 'c ity and State Zip No, ___ , : Send gin cerfllicale to I I I : Name I : Address j l-~~-8..~-~:~-------------:!.":~ ..... J . ' Calories Saved With Salvage Plan By BARBARA GIBBONS Ham isn't fattening, until it's a leftover! rice per person. ~1akes six servings, 198 calories each; with rice, 284 calories. Th'e question or what to do HAM PAmEs with yesterday's baked ham 1 pound lean cooked ham, seems to bring out the worst, ground calorically i P e a k i n & • in 1 cup blah protein cereal, cookbook creators. ClUlhed M a r s h ma llow1, yams, 1 111, lightly beaten m arasch ino cherrle ~cupskim milk molasses;~ sugar' honey Pinch of black pepper ... the okboo1t con-1 t bl poon epar ed fraternity app ently believe!! a es Pr mustard the only way to deal with 1 cup crushed juice-packed leftover ham ls to turn it pineapple into candy! If you have to avoid sweets 1 teaspoon arrowroot or com. starch and sugars (and what dieter Comb' ham I •"----t 1: me 1 cerea , egg, doesn't!) u-.c ... Vli.iec\.lonary milk, pepper and mustard. make-overs aren't for you. Shape into six patties and Our Slim Gourmet second place in a nonstick roasting day ham specialities rely on pan. Bake in a 350 degree the natur_al sweetness of Julee-oven u to 15 minutes. packed pmeapple for Devor: SU 1ne 1 and t r p app e arrowroo ORIENrAL HAl\I SKIU.ET together and Pout over pat- ties. Bake an additional IO minutes. 1 (66 ounce) can unsweeten· ed pineapple juice 1 tablespoon soysauce 1 If.: tablespoons arrowroot or cornstarch 1 tablespoon prepared mustard I (8 ounce) ca n pineapple chunks, including Jui~ '4 teaspoon ginger Pinch of saffron (optional) 3 tablesp:iona raisins I onion finely chopped 2 green peppers cut in strips 1 powld cooked lean barn cut in cubes Stir the ingredients into a large skillet, in the order given . Cover and slmmet over low heat five minutes, until heated through. Serve wilh II cup cooked Serves six, 179 calories each ZINGY HAM SALAD 1 cup chopped lean ham 1 teaspoon dry mustard 2 tablespoons dill pickle relish 3 tablespoons c r u she d unsweetened pineapple 3 tablespoons low-calorie mayonnaise or French dressing Stir together. Serve on thin rye or pumpernickle. Servings, 108 calories each, salad only. Q. What's a delicacy some cooks throw away? A. Chicken livers. Xarket c.3askel M.B. DISCOUNT FOODS - Or, to be more precise, "Chicken liver" ... slngular. That's the trouble. There's only one liver per chicken, too UJUe ol a good Jhlng. What do you do with one chicken liver ? If you're a Slim Gourmet cook, you save it in your deep- !reeze, packed away in a jar or Plastic bag. And you ketp adding more. chicken livers, every ti ni you buy chicken, until you :1ave enough. If you have ch1cken often (and what Jow~lorie cook doesn't) you1l soon sa\'e enough for a meal, and that's like "found money." SAUTEED CIUCKEN LIVERS IN WINE For each serving: 4 chicken livers (11• pound) 2 ounces canned mushrooms J tablespoon diet margarine 1il small onion, sliced 2 tablespoons sherry wine Cut chicken livers in half. Combine all ingredients In a nonstick skillet over moderate heat. Stir-Cry about four to five minutes, until liqWd evaporates and the contents of " Jhe 11dllet are lightly browned. Makes one serving, 226 calories. CWCKEN LIVERS IN "SOUR CREAM" FOR TWO 6 chicken livers. 1 small onion, thinly sliced l tablespoon diet margarine Salt and pepper Parsl ey nakes II cup plain yogurt 2 cups cooked rice Slice livers in half. Combine livers, onion and butter ln a nonstick skillet over moderate heat. Stir·fry until lightly browned, about four minutes. Fruit Ma c A friend has shared a special b r o i 1 e d grapefruit recipe served by Frank, a chef of great repute in the Hammon , Ontario uea, BAKED GRAPEFRUIT A LA FRANK 2 large California-Arizona grapefruit 8 teaspoons sugar V• teaspoon cinnamon l 1h tablespoons Benedictine or Grenadine 111 tablespooos Grand Stir In yogurt until lltated through. but do not boll. Season to taste. Serve over hot rice. Makes two servings, 352 caloriea each. UVER AND ONION SCRAMBLE Sllr<try d)opped c h I c k e n liver and minced Mlon in a smaU amount of oil for three to four minutes. Then add slighUy beaten egg~ and scramble over moderate heat. Makes a tas.ty high protein breaklastl Two eggs, two liven and ~ teaspoon oil: 28ilcalorlel. For m o re calorie-saving re<!lpes send a self-addressed envelope and 25 cents to SLJM GOURMET LAMB, LIVER AND PORK RECI PES, in care of Jhe Dally Pilot, 50 West Shore Trail, Sparta, N.J, 07871. Grand Marnier or Olintreau Cut grapefruit in half. With a sharp knife cut around each section to loosen "meat" from membrane. Cut o u t center core with scissors. Sprinkle each grapefruit hall with 2 teaspoons sugar. Dust lightly with cinnamon . ·eom- bine liqueurs and driZzle over halves. Place 4 to & inches from source of heat and broil (under high heat) 5 Jo I minutes, until golden bro11111. • I >.I , ' ' • Despite the current strike, ALL Market Basket sto.res are open and ready to serve your everyday food needs. We have full cases of beef, hams, pork, poultry, luncheon meats, and breakfast meats In our Meat Departments. · · You will also find a complete variety of fresh fruits and vegetables In our Produce Departments. Our liquor department Is stocked with wines and liquor for your pleasure. · Eggs, cheese, drink mixers, potato chips, dips, snack crackers, ' ' sour cream, cream cheese, cereal, baked goods, coffff, lulces, paper products, and much, much more Cir• available at Market Basket. We Invite you to bring your shopping list te Market Basket. We wlll make ewery effort .to flll It to your satisfaction at our low discount .prices·. · ~·~nk you for shopping at ••r•et las•et. Al ..... •11tet .._,.,.. ... ,_.,hr II A.M. It 7 P.&.1 111h Mii I. P ..... 1119•,, P•••111 - '21 Felr ... 1 An., S.. P••••• -1111 I , ....,. 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'".='" ... -.,, =~~.!:::I:-• -.••1•l.--:.....:;·,t-::_,."';,• :-,..';j~-• •""9uiffll:. -·--·,.•-- I ' l OAIL Y PILOT g~ Rhoda Morgenstern.Slims Down Valerie's VeQetables Noted HOILYWOOD -"I'm a na1 food hound," is the way Valerie Harper expresses her enthusiasm fo1"food. Loving vlttles is about the only thing she has In common with her famous character, Rhoda Morgenstern, the man· chaling scattel'-brain who· is Mary Ty)er Moore's next door neighbor. Valerie and Rhoda have both slimmed doWn lately since Valerie started going to Weight Watchers. Her general atUtude about dieting ls funny. 1'Recently I was having headaches and just not feeling optlmal, and four dear friends, who 1?e all <\)red·iR·the-WOOI vegetarians, t ept s a y i n g , 'You've got to stop eating meat. It's toxic. You gotta watch your nutrition , Valerie.' "Finally I said, okay, I'll try it! But instead of fran- tic a 11 y jumping into vegetarianism and instead of eating only grapes for a week or going on a watermelon fast, I deckled we'd compromise by cutting out red meats: pork, bed and lamb. 11I'm leery about making s w e e p i n g pronouncements about what I'm going to do anyway. It alwayi turns out I'm setting myself up for total · . failure." Valerie's semi-vegetarian- ism so far has been highly successful She's f e e I i n g great and her cheekbone5 are starting to show! "Aller the filth week . 1 began to n«ice subtle chang- ES: my sklo. is clearer and I'm Jess tired. l don'L feel as 'heavy' after eating. Now we slick to all kinds of fish, shellfish and chicken, sup.. plemented with cheese and eggs." Valerie's not adamant about eating organic vegetables, but she does try to eat quantities of fresh vegetables and fruits . "I find myself reading labels on bottles much m o r e . Everything. seems to be filled with sugar. Mary's secretary, who's also her stand-in, is writing a wonderful vegetarian cookbook. "She's given me some great casserole recipes that prove you don't just have to stick to steamed zucchini· everything. My husband is not as enthusiastic about food as I am." Valerie Is married to act.or- writer Dick Schaal. "I happen to adore squash and he doesn't. I'v..e found a way of filing it even Dick likes. "Just split the iucclllni down the middle, sprinkle generous- ly with grated cheese and stick it under the broiler. The cheese bubbles and browns. You CM eat it as a finger food or served on a plate as a !Ide dish." For an accompaniment or luncheon meal, Valerie likes a Cob Salad ·-tiny bit• ot vegetables tossed with im .. itatlon bacon bits. The Schaals favorite get· away pleasure is their 32-foot ketch. They love to sail to Catalina. "I take along little food package! ror us because peo- ple always get hungry on deck. I keep the sailing food simple: broiled c h I c k e n (prepared at home) and an assortment of raw vegetables.'' VALERIE HARPER'S SALMON VEGETABLE BROILER DINNER 2 tablespoons Spanish olive oil 2 tablespoons !JtJY sauce 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard 2 pounds salmon filets 2 zucchini squash 4 medium tomatoes Spanish olive oil Salt, freshly grouod black pepper Grated Romano cheese Dried dill weed SUgar Combine olive oil, soy sauce and mustard. Brush on salmon and set aside. Cut zucchini in half lengthwise. Remove cores from lops ot tx>matoes. On foil-covered broiler pan, lace zucchini and tomatoes cut side up. Brush with. oil, then sprinkle with salt and pepper. Sprinkle cheese on the zuc- chini and dill weed and sugar on tomatoes. Place filets on same broiler pan. Broil 6 inches from heat ID preheated broiler ror 15 minutes, brushing fish with any remaining soy mixture just beCore serving. Arrange on heated platter and serve at once in 4 portloos. .V ALElllE'S COB SALAD I cup thinly sliced celery 1 cup diced zucebinl I cup thinly diced cucumber 1 cup coarsely s.hredded car· rot II cup diced greenpepper o/-1 teaspoon salt v, /•aspoon freshly ground back pepper 2 tablespoons !resb lemon juice ''t cup Spanish olive oil 2 tablespoons imitation ba· con bits 2 cups large curd cottage cheese In a large bowl, m I x vegetables, salt, p e p p e r , lemon juice and olive oil. Toss to combine. Cover, refrigerate for several hours. Just before serving, combine vegetable mixture with bacon bits and cottage cheese. Serve In small bowls, garnished with sprigs of watercress. AO PR ICES GOOD 'nil'U O!CEMeER 31, 1913 . RICHARD'S WILL CLOSE AT 7 p.tft.NEW YEAR'S EVE Valerie Harper and her TV counterpart on the Mary Tyler Moore Show have lost weight, changed their image. COUPON ITEMS COOO DEC. 211hrij JAN. 2, 1974 RICHARD'S \VILL BE CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY \ Ring in the 0Nt;w Vear with Richard's ••• Special occasions can be cfror1less. l f't us cater you r party 10 suit the occasion, or choose from a selec1ion of fine win~ & liquors, 10 1 dil fcrcn t chce~s. 32 of our own fresh brcaJs, p.1strics, or a luscious cake, de.cera ted ju'it 1hc \YJY you like it. Pamper your i;:ucsls \Yith Kichard's candlrlir,ht meat-. (delicious '. •. and so easy!!) Hors d 'Oeuvrc ideas ~alore •• tiny f resh shrimp, an :ihundanl supply of olives, ).;Jrtlt'n fre~h produce (for lerrific dips!) and you 1vill find a !.election o f caviar, or we will order frl'Sh ·cavi<1r upon request, For CJSy ~r,•ing, try a Bar ~1 Tivern Ham from our meat <fepartment, or discove r the tastic~t ro;ists 10 be found ;iny\\'hcrc. Brc;ithtJ~ing flower arr.ingements and cheerful table setting~ are no problem from 1he flower shop, gif t shop, and card & party shop {Lido exclusively). Richard 's \Viii make your New Year shopping more enjoyable than ever!!! .. ·. 1/le.'flf Bar-M Tavern Hams w1io1101htr1r 2.29 lb. Jones Dairy Farm Link Sausage or Bacon 1.39 lb. Richard's Ground Beef 89c lb, Richard's Famous Meat loaf -•ueadit 1.1 9 lb. Cooked and Peeled Shrimp tiond'OWYrt lllre 1/2 lh. 2.79 A complete selec tion or Candlelight ~!eats'°' quick and e;;r;il ing New Year's dinners.. Please Do Not Hesiute To Ask For Personal Service, V-& Vegetable Juice Snow"s t.1inccd Clami Lipton Onion Soup Mix Reese Super Colossal Ripe Olive<; Nabisco Snack Cr;;ickers &fie:ry 7'.4 oz 71~ oz. ..-1ed """°" Bacon & Cheese Bread 1 lb, 63c 49c 4 5c 79c S9c Ric hjrd's 0\Vn B.iked Ham 0Me·h111 pound 1.59 99c 3forSI 89c \Vispride Chedd;ir Cheese Spread 8ol. Lascco Shrimp Cotktail •ol, Re ese Peacl:ror Pineapple Chutney 10 01. \Yashington Delicious Appl es ••fl'• 1 ... cv, medium 1<re 29c lb, Texas Grapefruit -t. luiev. n.it>v ud 6 for S 1 Red Leaf Leltuce vardtn·lr"h 1endtr 2 for 29c Spinach line '°' wlildl !rah, tnty 2 for 29c LIQUOR JJcqu es Bonet Champag ne & Cold Duck Cha tc.111 Ri,hJrd Extra Ory Champagne Ric h.1rd's Lido Brut Champagne tilth 1.99 lohh 2.70 l•fl h 4.70 PROTEIN PACKED FOR HOLIDAY BRUNCH Lemon Mefingue Pie Cheese Filled Danish 79c 1.Y8 2 for 47c Mumms Cordon Rouge Brut Champagn e Dorn Pcrignoo Champagne tilth 12.25 Layers of Goodness Cheese Tops Casserole The ~nudging aroma of Holiday Broccoli 'N.,Ham will urge everyone to the table. 'Ibere are layers and layers of deliciousness ln this protein· packed brtmch dish. A fresh fruil compote, served ln a brandy snifter, can double as a table cinterpiece. Warm. pelite .-t rolls with whip- ped butter and .mugs of hot chocolate complete lhe feast. • ' ' HOLIDAY BROCCOLI 'N HAM 2 l(knH\Ce packages cut • broccoli frozen in cheese sauce in the flavor-tight cooking pouch 6 hard·cooked eggs, quartered lenglhwise 2 cups diced ham I lO'k-ounce can condensed cheddar cheese soup / V-1 cup milk V.t cup butter, melted '1 cup water 2 cups herb seasoned sluf· fing mix Cook broccoli according to package ·directions; spread in bottom o! 9 x 12 x I 11-incll bake and serve pan. Place eggs on .broccoli; add ham. Combine scup and milk until smooth; pour over top of bi;t>C" coli, eggs and ham. Bake in a prehea!ed 400 degree oven for 15 JJ'linutes. Combine melted butter, water and stuffing mix: sprinkle over casserole. Bake an ad- ditional 15 minutes. Serves 6 to 8. Crumb Cake Donuts Co<lpon 11...,.tfOOd 12127 • 1'2114 ONE COi.WON f'fR AOUl. T C\ISTDMER 7-Up 28oz.bottle 2 9~ DP. Covpan~good 12'21· 11217• ONE COUPON PE" AOUL T CUSTOMER from Produce Department 3 Limes FREE l•l1h 22.50 RICHARD'S HARBOR VIEW 1660 MACARTHUR N.B. \\!.--,...t ..,,.~;:; 'l . ~-. 1 Coupot11tetMijOod 12n1-112l7• I ONE COUPON PE" AOUL T CUSTOME" From Grocery Oepartmcnl • 15~0FF • Chip or Snack .· With Thil Coupon ~ 01.• O.P. f •om G"xirry 0101. 11ic o!I ltlt'f Chip or Sn.ck • FROM Fashion Islan d Newport Beach STER·EO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR .· • -. ' • -. ~· .. : ,•. .. ' .. ; • ··: • • • ; ' • l . .. .. • .. I . . • •• . •' • • Cottage Cheese Solves Du a-I Di I em.mas Dunl dile1nm as ol n1eat poons butter melted and l 1 cup dairy sour cream sprink le with paprika aOC 1 cup salad oil houn or overnight. Add col· ~~ teaspoon basil prices vs. need for animal tabltsp00n flour. Stir in I cup 11h: cups shredder Cheddar bake at 350 degrees for 20 1 teaspoon paprika tage che<'Se and serve over I teaspoon sail protein have· prompted many milk and cook until thickened. cheese minutes or until bub b I y crisp salad greens. Makes '1 teaspoon \Vorccstershire ~;i cup catsup r· I I pcd · Drain. Mix tomato sauce and couage cheese, basil, salt, \\'orcestershire and onion. people to turn to collage 001TAGE CHEESE Paprika throughout. aboul three cups. 1 ., cup 1ne y c 10p on ion cheese for high~uallty protein Peet and slice potatoes; 1 ·1 cup mild vinegar QUICK COM'AGE 11 poWld Cheddar cheese, without spoonlng up th e -POTATO SCAUOP place ln a t n quart buttered COTrAGE CHEESE I tablespoon water grated calories. 6 large potatoes, cooked baking dish. Sprinkle onion, DRESSING 1 tablespoon \\'orcestershirc CHEESE .LASAGNE ~'. cup grated · Parmesan J t h 1f 3 tablespoons grated onion salt and pepper over potatoes. l 'h cups creamed cottage sauce 8 ounces broad noodles cheese us one-a cup of cottage t It Comb' ch · d h 2 I' -) •-t II cup butlered c-·d cheese fills more than 25 per-teaspoon sa me cottage eese an c eese Few drops or Tabasco uvunce cans wmll o 1.11Cc.1 Arrange alternate layers .or nood1ea, cheddar chee3e, end sauce mixtora ln 2~ quart casserole. Top with buttered bread crumbs mixed with Parn1esan cheese. t f adul • d ·1 l~ tea.spoon freshly ground sour cream; blend w i th '~ cup sugar Blend all ingredients except sauce crumbs Bake in a 350 degrees oven for about half an hour. Serves ctn ° an 1 s 31 Y re-I ed l ~--k noodles 1'n bo1'lm' g I t f t in pepper potatoes. I ~2 teaspoons sa t cottage cheese and allow to 2 cups cream co tage \.A..IU qu~;;en sa~eproi:lf~up ron---:l:c:up:co:t:ta~ge:c:he:e:se:::::::::T:op::w:llh::O!:ed:d:•:r:c:hees::;;e·:::2:lo:aspoo;;:;;;:"::'::dr:'.:y::m:u:st::•r::d:::::m::e::llo::w::i:n:r•::fr~lg::er::•l::or::s::ev::er::•l::::::ch::ee::;s•::::::::::::::::::'";;;l;;;led:::;;;wa;;;lc;;;r:::un;;;li;;;I ;;;l;;;en;;;d;;;er;;;. :::::::::::::::::::::;;;-- tains just about the same • ~amount of protein as two eggs or a medium, t~ Set'V6 ing of fish, poultry or lean meat. The protein of coLtage cheese is ronsidered "high quality" in that It contains all of the es.sentials necessary to build and malntain the hwnan body. Conversely, many vegetable proteins are incomplete, "'hich means that they don't do a fully adequate job of tissue maintenance. Yet even tho!e proteins can be used better by the bod y Vlith the addition of a source of complete protein, such as rottage cheese. While the protein of cottage cheese is high, Its calorie con- tent is Jes,, than half that oC a comparable serving of many kinds of meat. 'I11e uncreamed variety of cottage cheese. with i t s generous 19 grams of protein (dai1y re q uir e ment ror woman : 55 grams), has a !lingy 98 calories per serving. Even creamed cottage cheese, containing four percent fat , has only another 22 calories per serving. DATE U>AF 1,~ cup butter ~' cup brown sugar 2 teaspoons grt1ted orange rind 2 teaspoons grated lemon · rind % eggs l ~'z aJps creamed cottage cheese 1!1 cup oran~e juice :J cuos sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder t teaspoon soda 2 cuos dates. <'hopped or other dried frui ts Cream butter and su~r un· ti! light and fl uffy. Beat in rinds, e.1?2s and cot ta si: e cheese. Sift dry in~redients toJ!;ether and add al ternately with orange juice. Fold in dates. • This dough witl be quite stiff. Pack into 3 lo,af pans (2xh3") that have bottoms lined with double thickness of waxed paper. Bake at 350 degrees about one hour or until done. NOODLES HUNGARIAN 1 (6 ounces) package fine noodles I cup creamed coital!" cheese I cup thin white sauce (See below) 2 tablespooos fin ely chop- ped onion 1 sm all garlic -ma.shed 2 teaspoons \Vorcestershire Sauce 1 tablespoons finely chop- ped parsley Dash Tabasco Sauce Dash pepper ~~ cup grated cheddar cheese 1,~ teaspoon salt Cook noodles 'in boilln~ salted water, drain. Add seasonings to white sauce. Combine all ingredients. Bake in 350 degrees oven about 25 minul es. th c n sprinkle with grated cheese. Yields 6 servings. To make white sauce. iri small sauc.epan blend 2 tables-. 'Lamb Chop, ·seasonal Calmed tomatoes make the aauce 8KIILET LAAIB CHOPS ,. WITH VEGETABLES • 4 shoulder lamb chops I tablespoon !Jutter ' t Ii cupo chopped onion 2 cups sllced celery I ti™" pepper, seeded and chopped J cJove garlic, minced, I can (t pound! tomatoes I boY lw I tea-salt }I teaspoon pepper CUI ell fat away from ...,...i dqlL In a large Jt11Je1 moa butter: odd chopo lllld -m both sides. Add OblaD. -,., (l'Cen pepper ud prtlc. °"'"' ..i tlmmer for 15 mloutel. Add undra ine d 1om1-. ii., 1oo .... salt and pepper. • emer «clrtl7 and cook ...,uy, atJntas oocaslooally, ( n ------ • 6. •· I u • ' • 1n r ••• and we want . you, our customers, to know how much we appreciate your patronage. By your continued. loyalty, you've shown us how much . you like our way of doing business; and this is what keeps Lucky the lead.er among supermarkets. You may be sure ·.we are doing everything in our power to keep our food shelves, our ·produce bins and our meat cases stocked with the best selections of merchandise available to us . . • at everyday low prices that -mean real savings, every time you shop at Lucky. · We will always strive to bring you even greater value for your money, and make it ·even mc;>re pleasant to . shop at· Lucky -your original discount supermarket. DISCOUNT .SUPERMARKETS • ALL STORES WILL CLOSE AT 7 P.M. ON NEW YEAR'S EVE AND WILL R!MAIN Ci.OSED NEW YEAR'S DAY , . ' . 111111 IAm • ...... -30 mlnUteL ....... , bly l t~f. 1..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~..1 Matot 4 aentap. ' . Seagoing Ch~f Retires -' Movable Feast Ends By AIJNE MOSBY LE HARVE, Franoo (UPI) -One ol the great chefs ol France ls hangtng up his white cap and retiring froin what gourmets call the greatest restaurant afloat. Henri Le Huede, chef on the S.S. France, will sail from I..e Havre oo his last voyage Jan. 4, a round·tbe-world cruise. When the ship returns in April, passengers will have sampled the last Le Huede "moveable feasL •• "The retlremen t age for men at sea is 55," said the chef. now 54. "Anyway I have been at sea for 37 years, ho1ne only four months a yea r, and I started work at 12. ll is time to think of my two daughters, wife and two grandchildren." •hopping, peering Into fish eyes and pinching meat, because the secret of good cooking "Is good Ingredients. The finest Nonnandy butter and cream, very fresh fish, the best meat. Nothing can- ned, nothing froren." "l must be sure I have everything I need," said Le Huede, a small, round· shooldered man of modest manner. "A restaurant on land can send out for more bread but t cannot. You can't say to a passenger 'There isn't any more'. And it's difficu l t because you don't know how much or what they will order." GIANT KITCHEN his 71 stirring, chopping cooks After his apprenticeship in and two doien b u r r y i n g a Nantes restaurant, Le lluede waiters, Including his butchers "'orked fu the Pa r l s and bakers, he commands a restaurant. Prun!er, for a stuff of J80. year. Then he went to sea On his last voyage, Le on the Mexique, the DeGrasse, Hued& as u.sual will get up the lie de France, the Llberle at 6:30 a.m. for breakfast in and finally in 1962 the France. his sn1all stateroo m. In his \Vhen his farewell voyage adjoining tiny oftice he will ends in April, the chel will draw up the menus two days take from his cabin hls fram· in advance. ed press notices and sketches Since his diners arc a caJ>-of him made by passengers. tive audience "we never give The French line plans to give them the same menu twice hlm a medallion. on the voyage. I must make He does not plan to open different daily menus for a restaurant on land. tourist class, first class and ''At my home in Britanny !he crew. I may write a cookbook ," he "I use my own recipes or said. "I do the cooking at the recipes of lhe great cuisine home. 1.ty favorite dish ts a of France. vea l chop with slices of ham "I look in the refrigerators and cheese, covered 'l\'ith to see what merchandise we d ll have. The·n I ·gtve· the chefs· spinac_h a.nd. two __ i etJID.t sauces. the recipes for lunch. I taste, J supervise." I do the dishes, too. It's LONG DA y easy to cook for only three Henri Le Huede, c:hef on the S. S. France, is hanging up his white hat after the ship's next -globe-c:irc:lin g voyage. OAll Y PILOT 27 THE FISH MARKO WITH THIS COUl'OH WlfOL ~ STU~•EO l!AITEltN DEVILED CRAB ......... 69-··· (\hilted willl 511rlm• a. Cr•l11nNIJ We Ace•'' FeM Co11pM1 Ope11 11om10 6:00 pm Seit. 11 to S:Jo.-6-41-IJZJ 145 E. Broadway, Costa Mesa M a teslament to Le lfuede's renown, the ornate menus for the dinin g rooms on the France say In large letters, "Henri Le Hucde, Ole! des cuisines". While most chefs work in relatively small ~ itch e ns \vhere-1hey" can--keep a-close eye on the simmering sauces, Le Huede practices his art in what he says is the biggest kitchen ill the world, 10,763 square feet. During meals he stands in a special SPQt in the middle or the kitchen to issue orders like a symphony conductor through a !we ol stemn to 1 ~~~~1:·~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.::..:~c:::::....~-==--==-=-~~~~-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: In the afternoon he writes 1_ recipes for special requestsj~:::::::::::==--""7:-----i:-----:::;"?":'...----------------------1 from passengers, "Nothing ifih The New York Times once called the fi rst class dining room of I.he S.S. France "the best French restaurant in the world." French food critics temper this compliment to "the best restaurant afloat" on grounds a chef can make truly great dishes only iI he is cooking for no more th an 60 people. Le Hucde's feat is that he creates complicated French dishes for 3,000 people a day, three times a day, or around 9,000 meals. HUGE SUPPLIES For his latest 12-<lay trip to and from New York (restocking f r uit s and vegetables in New 'York,) he laid in supplies for 1,600 passengers in tourist class, 600 in firs t claM and 1,100 inw. His shopping !isl: 225 pounds of caviar. 700 pounm or foie gras tgoooe liver ), 3 , 1 2 5 pounds of lobster. 9,680 pounds or sa usages. 18.160 pounds of poultry, 58,000 eggs, 30,000 bot- tles of wine, etc. Le Hue<le supervises the New Year, Go Dutch Eggnog Shaken For Christmas or New Year entertainin g, you may be in· tcrested in a new recipe ror a spirited fruit.flavored egg· ~is nog is different from the usual variet y: it is an attractive pink color and It's so thi ck that it is served with spoons. Should any or the eggnog be left over, stir it up vigorously (there's a little separation as it stands) and tum it into an icecube tray ; freeze . The frozen nog is delighUut and useful to have on hand for an extra holiday dessert. HOIJDAY EGGNOG 6 eggs, separated 1,2 cup superfine sugar 1 can (6 OODces) frozen ever refused." At 6 p.m. he is back in the kitchen. retiring from the field of battle around 11 p.m., seven days a week. Le Huede has cooked for countless celebrities. Maurice Chevalier always asked for saddle of lamb with parsley, hearts of artichokes, black mushrooms _in cream sauce. Ernest Hemingway re- quested quail stuffed with grapes and wild rice. Americans like duck with orange or cherri es, whil e the French prefe r less sweet dishes such as stuffed fish, said the chef. Le Hue<le said he took up cooking at age 12 because "my father was a poor fisherman in Britanny and I wanted a job that would feed me. Also, I love t.o travel." Flavors Added Adding a fruit flavor to sugai: cookies is done easily -b}i using frozen fruit juice concentrate. Hawaiian punch, thawed SUGAR COOKIES 1,2 cup bourOOn 1 cup butter ~1 cup brandy l cup sugar 3 cups heavy cream, whil>'" 2 eggs ped 3 cups silted all-purpose Ground or whole nutmeg flour To assure your family oC In a small mixing bowl J teaspoon soda good health and good luck beat egg yolks until Duffy; 1 can (6 ouoCes) frozen in-1974. do what t h e gradually beat in I(, cup of pineapple or pineapple- Pennsylvania Dutch do. the sugar until thickened and orange ju.ice concentrate Their folklore has it that lemon color. thawed for good things to happen dur-Gradually sllr in the punch, Cinnamon sugar ing the year. sauerkraut must keeping smooth. Gradually Cream together the butter be on the New Year"s Day stir in bourbon and brandy. and sugar. Add eggs anit'beat diMer table. Transfer to a large chilled until light and fluffy. \Vhat is sauerkraut? It's serving bowl. Fold in whipped Sift together the flour and brined, fermented cabbage. cream. Refrigerate. soda and add aJtemately to You might say it's in the Meanwhile in a clean the creamed mixture with ¥.t pickle family of foods. And, medium mixing bowl with a cup of the frozen concentrate. although we may associate it clean beater, beat egg whit es Drop dough from a ~poon only With Gennan origim, it until foamy. 2-inches apart onto ungreased was supposedly discovered by Gradually beat in the r~ cookie sheets. the Ctinese in the third cen· maining y,. cup sugar and coo· Bake cookies in a preheated tury B. C. tinue beating until stiff; fold 400 degree F. oven about 8 Sau..traul Is a good buy, into ~ yolk mixture. Qtill minuf<s .,. until lightly brown· -it'• 'nutritious, and low in at least 1 hour. eel around edges. calories too. Place serving bowl in a Brush hot cookies lightly 1b-rters ol a cup o! large< bowl of crushed Ice. with remaining con<enlrate, kraut pnMdes about one-Laddie nog into glass mugs then sprinkle with cinnamon fourth ol the Vitamin C need· ar punch cups, stirring from sugar. Remove cookies to ed each day by adul ts. It's botlom u you do ao. cooling rack. Makes about 4 also a good source of calcium Sprinkle or grate a little dozen sma11 cookies. and phosphorom. And 1 cup nutmeg over each serving. NOTE: For variety, add 1.1 of undrained sauerkraut con· Serve with spoons -the nog cup finely chopped nuts to tsim only 33 calories. is thick. Makes about 3 quarts. batter. Good quality sauerkraut has _ .......... __ ............. ~rt p!C:a~ chn8!::.r~~ti~ ~~~~-.C-~4.7-~§ cl-isP and ruin in texture, 1 0 0 0 creamy white in color, and ORDER · , / free from specks and core . • ' / , ••ntlful material. ~ ll is available canned and , . Stlclc-on Jn refrigerated packages In YOURS ,. LABELS sizes to suit all sizes of \ lamlll .... Jn some areas. there Is al!o a scml·fresh product aold from Jo· DAY I barrels or similar contalne~. e nut befor'e you rush out to buy your g ood·luck saukerkraut, decide h o w you're going to serve It. • Either use aauerkraut as it COOICll 1n1m the can or pack- age ,.. simmer It with diced owles .,. onlon>-oc: both-end a'del brown sug•r to ta ste. . For an elegant touch, drain off the natural liquid and sub8Utute white wine for the cooldng liquid. Or, 1erve a cold uuerkraul salad. Sauerkraut is a natural with 1 pork and pork products 90 you can use your Ingenuity Ptn0nallnd • Stylilh • Effidtnt Order For YourHlf or • Frl....t Mey he used on envelop•• •• '"!turn add '!'' l-.b1ls. Also vtry h1ndy •s 1d1ntlfic1tion l1bett for m1tkin9 personal Items su ch 11 books, records, p~oto.1 1tc. l ab1l1 sticlc on 4411111 end m1y bt us1d for marking hom t c1nned focd 1t1mt. All libels are printed with .tylhh Vogue typo on flno qu•lily whit. gummed piper. here, too. Cook the 18utrkraul with .-----------------------,1 hot dogl, pork roaat.s, J>:Ol'k I ,m ... niis _,.., c11t • """ •'"' s1.a •i • pork ateak:f. 1pare rlbs, I ,.,.., P'ftllti.t '-*' oiv,. "·°" .. '"' I th Ce1M M-. CMI, tMM or am and ierve is taate I I combinatloll with m a • h e d • I polatoes for a hearty New I I Year'I meal. i Or If you pre f er I I aand;,lches, make a Reuben I . variation with pork uusage 1 J I ~ .• ":~&net 1:,: L---~!.L~!-~!~!!~~----J dmsing (U desired ) on pieces :r,. _______________ _.I o! touted 11• bread. ,. .. .. .. • To all our friends we wish happiness and success ,., All Alpha Beta markets are open regular hours to serve you. • In Monday, December 31 your Alpha Beta will be open 10:00 a.m . to 9:00 p.m. and will be closed New Year's Day . .,. r~ • ·))· YoU'll like the total better at Alp~ Beta. 1974 . I J • 1B DAILY PILOT AMBLER MUTT AND JEFF ,/E-... ·~­MI"'"'"~--.. FIGMENTS NANCY WHll'ltSd'ay, Dtctmber 26, 1973 HEY.THIS CIGAR I BOUGHT TASTES TERRIBLE I ITS Tf\E WORST CIGAR I EVER SMOKED/ I DO, BUT NOT .._._,_,_, THIS ONE PF;ANUTS by Al Smith WHAT ARE )OU KICKING ABOLIT! I GdT A WHOLE STORE FULLOF 'EMl v, r-1:,!o! ,;,; __ by Dale Hale A VETERINARIAN 15 QOOTEO DOOLEY'S WORLD H6Y! T>l~liS I ANOTH~R 60X UNDER ™E f 'TREE ·! SALLY BANANAS REAi.LY? \M.!o'S IT FOR? Ler us MeD1rare ON THe CoM1NG YeaR oF Ne/,JNess! 1.-..All..,J,Nai.. ............ &.••·Tno.!I ·~·'----"-"""'"':>...I MOON MULLINS SOAtNWAY, i .JUST THqµ<;HT I MIGHT AS WELL /<SK IF YOU'D ~IKSTOGO our, TONIGITT·· ANIMAL CRACKERS TODAY'S CROSSWORD PVZZLI AS SA~IN6 THAT D06S N<l'EUEAU.~ 6£T BOREO .. AC.ROSS 1 Nellve African vill•g• ! Mel'ehome 9 W.ar··-: Disguise onetell 14 ActorffWICO 115 Poallionof control 16 ~etocLloyd Boxer 44 Vlo!ent •peecb <45 ObtlnJC\lon "48 Pole used u a ~" 48 Provided with food a2 Settlitd 56 Light brHn er Old womanlah 58 For leer thll' 59 Fully open 17 E.ichort ea Relocates 18 RepoM 61 DUatOf'Y 19 Our: French e2 On thl br!I'!)' 20 To and -63 Containing 21 DecH~ sugar 23 Fixes ICIW'l1y 84 Hurried 25 Co!lleur'1 65 Time perlcxl aulatant ,. OwM 27 Signals 29 Container 32 AemOVtld by cutting 35 San1a-: Cal IL ..... 37 Son of Hora as Alrlcan Wiima! al Nortn~lilh river <40 Climb 41 Went Q~!ekly DOWN 1 Tobacco product 2 ~ fifll'll 3 To1onto football teatn .. Jol'rl- 6 Luetef'9 6 Mak•• warm 7 Otherwlu fl U.S.A. 9 Molests 10 Ttlolli!U-t l Ye1ttrdly'1 Puzzle .Solvtd: -lrlsh poet 11 Acolytes: 2 WOldS 12 lr41ni'an Tur!t 13 Leg joint 21 Extinct 22 Utopian 24 Pronoun 27 Halley's- 28 Secondhand 30 Relative 31 Actor Joel 32 Beyond: PrtllX 33 Seed appendage 34 Capable or oppas!llon 35 Wei weather 36. F ht.cf look ' A 38 Fascinate '42 Detest 44 Most """""""" -45 Hit wlltl 1 club '47 Martinique .... 48 Hlncluaoc:llf d!vlalon '49 Lift 60 Duck fil Alm 62 RIYW btrrfn 63 Sufllclent: Archaic 54 Troub1H 65 Tide 6i Tl'lalland t•"ll'- JUDGE PARKER ··:·· NO! THE GUARD 1 DID YOU HA"E ANY TR006LE SAID YOU'D LEFT INSTRUCTIONS FOR _,'"',HIM TO ADMIT ME! MISS PEACH ; J I ' ! • J:ltA ~AW THI> CL.ILPlfl'r WHO 1'110•ll MRt. ~IMM1$' VA~ ... HAVE YOU ANY PLAAS WHY DON'T FOR TONIGHT 1 I'D 'IOU COME SURE LIKE TO TAl<.E. OUT TO 'YOU TO DIHNER! SPENCER FARMS? WE'l.L TH~OW A STEAK ON TKE GRILL! by Mell THI! llll~T IN '!'Mii "WO!fl.0,.~111: • :r AGCIDfNTALl.V flt4<WIC> PA~ OF _MY SlfAIPI, by Chester Gould FCR WRkS l\.L-UP SCREAMING,-Hl!ARING TWAT '1CLOMIC"! • by Roger Bradfield -<E ooi::.sN1T S~EiM TQ E'E A NAME" ON n: .. By Charles Barsotti IF tJe, MePliOITe oN /.lJ,fYeaR (,j!, MIG~T SLi COMe DOWl\l &VITH cHtiis • ...----1 by Ferd Johnson .-----~"Tl-lE"NHoW ,ABDUi FnURNIN<:; MY DIME:!? ., "Well, lbt flnl lhlag ho ,.Id Is lhal you oboald tell yoor buyer to cut out the drtnktng." ···- • I A Good Re solution Salads Dressing · M9re .197 4 Menus \Vhen i nternationally renowned B r i t i s h cook Maurice Moore-Betty anived in the Unltcd States, be becam e fasc inated w i t h Americans' cnthu.si'asm for salads, and I> e g an ex- perimenting. Exponent of q u a 1 i t y , simplicity. and handsom e presentation of small three- course meal,s with a minimum of dishes for family or special occasion" Maurice Moore-Bet- ty serves salad as first or main course, side dish or dessert. Only when catering a formal banquet does he occasionally follow the European and tradi· tional Eastern approach of serving salad after the main course. Grapefruit Flavor _, Appeals ' If your salad calls for cook· ed vegetables, be sure they are cooked 0 al dente," he urges, so that they will retain a crunchiness -better for flavor, texture and retention of health-making nutrients. "Don't be afraid to ex- periment," he urges. "Left overs -vegetables, chicken, fi sh -all make fine salads with a variety of salad dress- ings on hand ." For delicious ne\v ideas and new approaches to :old favorites, write for your free copy to: Salad Recipes, P.O. Box 2145, Philadelphia, Pa . 19103. Parsley 3 radishes, thinly sliced ~ cup Russian dres&ng \-1 cup cold water Paprika 2 tablespoons plain gel atin Lettuce 1h cup boiling water Lightly, niix fish. parsley 2 tablespoons fresh lemon and dressing together until juice well combined. Arrange in Jct· I cup Thousand Island tuce lined bowl, or individual dre$ing lettuce cups. Dust with \Vatercress paprika. Simmer, in separate pots, ·Makes 4 servings as main carrots and beans about 3 dish; 6 as appetizer. tninutes; peas. 1 minute. Blend all vegetables. MOLDED VEG ET A 8 LE Measure CQld \Valer inlo 1\fEDLEV sn1all bo\vl. Sprinkle on gelatin l large carrot, diced (abou t to soften. Add bolling w~ter, stirring until ctissol ved. Shr in 1'2 cup ) lemon juice and dressing. I cup green beans, cut into Blend with vegetables. 1h inch dia gonals 1 cup peas (preferably peti ts Ch ill in refrige rator until FRESll F·JSll SALAD pois, mixture begins to congeal. 1 pou nd Jean fi sh {cod, I small white onion, thinly Spoo n into six cup ring mold. turbot, flound er, sole or sliced · Tap mold again st table to other) baked or poached, I stalk celery, stringed. die-ensure mold is evenly packed. boned, skinned and flaked, ed (about l/z cup) Chill 3 hours or longer.· or ~4 pound (2 cups) pre-1h large cucumber, scored, Unmold. Makes +6 servings cooked, lean fish10. ti(et diced (% cup) ; as first CQUrsc : 6-8. side dish ; DAILY PILOT 29 , broken into chunks. 1/2 small green Pf!i;iper, chop-or serve as luncheon main "Here's to your health" or pings in pan; sprinkle with as the French say, "Bonne sugar. Basi e sections with Santc." drippings and spoon O\'er Today's housewife is aware chicken halves. Makes 4 serv- o[ the famlly 's need rOr : , ings v.'ith rice pilaf. 1 tabl espoon finely chopped ped fine Ill cup) ~··se. NINE VEGETAB_LE_S_I_N 'S~L_A_D_L_D_o~_L_I_K_E _c_o_N_F_E_'r_r_1 __ -------_::, __ __.: ____ ,e_________________ -------- nutritoµs foods. When she serves l h i s western style chicken. she satisfies the need for protein , required for gro"''th a n d maintenance of a healthy ~m~~EJt~~~~JJJCfb body. At the same time, she 's · CLOSED providing her family with NEW YEARS DAY • • 'T IL BAR M HIC!<ORY SMOKED 9 P.M. NEW '· YEARS EVE vitamin c an!l minerals found GRADE "A" WHOLE BODIED ;r~JrlriT~~:'0~h:~f~~~ FRY. I NG ·.· sources or vitamin C? This ~:~~~i"ln ~~~~~""~st a~ CH I c ·K EN appreciable aniounts. is essen- tial to gro\\'th and · 45~ mainlenanet of your' body's connective tissue, found in FRYING skin, tendons, cartllage, blood ~~~~~~~:{e~: i~e:~ :: LEGS chicken \\'ill convince you that u•hcn there's citr;us present,. there 's great navor. too! CHICKEN _fr. 9 & THIGHl · c lb Grapefruit julC< and seclions FRYING CHICKEN complen1ent the de I i c a t e _ ' chicken meal to perfection . BREAST FRESH GRAPEFRUIT , 10~ TA VE RN WHOLE OR HAMS HALF 219 lb Ltan·n·boneless Start The New Yaer With The Finest FARMER JOHN SLICED BACON 1 1~ lb 98~ FOR THAT NEW YEARS EVE PARTY BAR M-FRESH SLICED PREMIUM QUALITY RUSSETT POTATOES 10 c:J~o 69c SWEET "N" JUICY NAVEL U.S. NO. 1 VELVET YAMS l ,ANGELOS SWEET "N" JUICY-3 CEL~LO ·~9C BAG -6 · AVOCADOS .·, ' 'I LARGE FUERT~ 29~.-- Stir It Up Quick and eas~ to ma~c. FRESH MUSHROOM SAUCE . 2 tablespoons butter . . 1.medium onion, cut 1n thin strips 1 cup thinly s liced . mushrooms J-3 cup (generous ) sour Qream Sall il1d pepper to taste Jn a'n' &-Inch sklflet melt Ihe butter; add.the on'ion and C09k gently until 1golden. Add the · mushroom$ and cook briskly, stirr(ng, until wilted. Stir 1n the soor, cream, saft and.pepper; reheat gcnUy. DAILY PILOT ••• • _,,.1----:- Pat Dunn GetS ·it QOne in · ' . ·~tYour Service ' ' '' 12 Ft. Ot. Bottle LAURA SCUDDER POTATO CHIPS . BIG JI OZ. PILLOW PACK , FOREMOST PREMIUM ICE CREAM 'h GALLON ROUND CARTON WILSHIRE CUCUMBER CHIP PICKLES 22.oz. 49~ JAi NABISCO SNACK CRACKERS TARNOFF VODKA LIGHT ABBEY SCOTCH MASCARA . IMPORTED 15:. Full Quirt 86 Proof s32s RED TABLE WINE Filth s5_2s 69~ ·s5ss WINDSOR CANADIAN WHISKY ---------- Full Qt, Reg . $6.59 Prices J;ffective: Thursday thru Tuesday December 27 ,, 28, 29, 30, 31 P~icet subject to stock ol'I haftd. WE GLADLY ACCEPT U,S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS e WHEAT THINS e BACON THINS e ONION THINS e SOCIABLES • COSTA MESA PLACENTIA l . 19th and Platentia 710 w. llbatl""1 [ l I I ' . • . - • i • • ;JO DAILY PILOT Wedne$day, Otcember 26, 197.l CRAB $249. CLAWS .. Allska Kin g Crabs for \•alue! Cocktail Crab • • .• • · s2st Claws from Alaska King crabs! Eastern Oysters •• s1 49 Eight ounce jar (\Vestem ••• l .09) Wing' ens •• _ .•••• s1°9 Hors d 'oeuvres from Elwell farms -10 oz R k. s109 uma 1 •••••• , • Au thentic flavor -Elwell farms -5Vtoz COCKTAIL $249 SHRIMP 1• Fully Cooked .•. teridei and tasty! -·- • , . . 1 ' ..,, }Jrices in effect Thur. through Mon. IJet. 27 through Dec. 31 .,. .......... Delicatessen Cream Cheese .. 35c Kudsen's ••• so smooth and creamy ••• and so many use~s in holiday menus 8 oz. pkg. _ Wispride Cheese . s1°9 Sp riadable cheddar .•. 10 ounce package. Laughing Cow · .. ~-59c French cheese spread .•. 6 oz. pkg. Sliced Swiss ..•• s1 19 }"'rom Utah's Cache Valley! 12 oz. pkg. Dofino Cheese •.• s1 49 Great center piecy! Danish •.. 1 lb. IMPORTED HAM lfOlllD 75( Cressida. sliced for party platters.4 oz. Canned Ham ••.. sg49 Dubuque of Rat h's Hickory .... 5 lb. can Sliced Salami • . . s 109 c ·alileo's true Italian style! 6 oz. pkg. Cocktail Rye •••• 45c Bay's party size, for party t rays! 16 oz. Farmer John Franks 95c Special for the small fry! 1 lb. pkg. PEPPER · CHEESE 89~ Hoffman's hot .•• party treat! 9 oz. Liquor J)ep't! Champagne .. ~ . $1 99 Jt isn't a party without champgne! Andre's -Cold Duck or Extra Dry! 5th. · s499 . Champagne r111. MASSDll ••.• Extra dry or Cold Durk .•. fift h Vodka llOUlllY'lllS ..........• s6 98 Bottled for El Rancho! Half-gallon Vermouth ..•••• s1 39 Gordon's Gin •••• s999 Paul M asson -:--Dry or S\vcet -fifth Half.ga ll on now reduced 61c! V• R s199 1nya ose ••••• El Rancho Rum · •• s3 99 · Imported \vine from Portugal -5th Choose light or dark! fifth Green Hungarian • s2 25 Ballantine's •••• s14 9s Great white wine from \Veibel! 5th A g:reat scotch -reduced 1.97! l/2 gal Royal Crest Tom'n Jerry blend! 5th 'f aste sensa tion from Smirnoffi fifth Produce that's Fresh! A voC:ados JUMBO s1zE • 3 •o~ 1 Califofnia's fin est! They'll be so well rec~ived in ,,,aJods or sandwiches! Bananas •••• 2 ... 29c Fresh Carrots •• 2 ,.,29c Central American for fin er fla\'or! l'li<• bni:: i1reserves freshness! 1 lb. Mushrooms • • •• --.--8~" -Orange Juice • , • ~9L fo)esh -and large! Great with steak! Free hl_v squee~d! No additive•! Quart FRESH PAPAYA Rushed fron1 Hawaii at flavor peak! ARCADIA: Su nset and Huntingtr·' Or 1£1 RJnch o Cen ter) ROMAJNE LETTUCE . ' Garden fresh-all green, crisp! bunch PASADENA : JZO 'ilest Coloiado Blvd. , • • • ... .... - , ·i P!LOT-AOV~RTISER f • -· ~ • •• \ • • ' ) • • • • l " ' ~ ~ ~ Fill the punch bowl. . .and your shopping cart! Celebrate the· coming of the ' -.. New Year with values from El Rancho! f ' . . . I • ' I I What heller 'vay t o welcome the New Year than with a tantalizingly lasty and tender rib roast! Naturally aged, trimmed to superlative quality! ( ~ • • 1 Your folk !'· wilf love the difference that El 'Rancho quality offers , .. the difference in hearty flav,or and juicy tenderness! And you 'll love the compliments you receive because you chose EL Rancho's standing rib! ! i Love that roast!. · It . • • SELECT SMALL END • • • • • • • • • • • • • ., • • • . ' Ground Beef mu Wll •.•••••....• :~ 1 2~ Beef Short Ribs •11ss ......... ~l'! i . Fresh! Choice of bulk or patties! ' So meaty! From U.S.D.A. Choice beef! • • : S,••llBak U.S.O.l *£. 1!151 ~ ••••• ~~ 1 'I . " • . I ~ Hearty beef goodness at it's best! Natural aging and El Rancho trim makes the difTerenct: . . Stuffed Fryer Breasts $18! Boneless, stuf£ed Cordon Bleu style! LEG o' PORK Boneless and rolled-our Iowa Roast! CUBES " · $18e of10lrll-. · -"' . Lean, boneless -for "sweet 'n' sour"! ITALIAN ~r:~SAGE $1 4!. We make it freSh, season it. right! Ill SIO<e$ .. cop! , ...... Open 9 lo 7 llew Ynr's ht ClOSID llW Yllll'S DIY Pasadena store open 8 to 5 New Year's Eve Closed New Year 's Day Stuffed Mushrooms • • -i $ ·11!. i Rib. cut-of U.S.D.A. Choice beef! RAICHERO s 119 STEAK . •:, Jumbo size -8-to 10 ~r lb. Cordon Bleu 1 • . Ham fLU~sHALF ••••• 98~; i }o'rom selected pOik legs. cUredJor El Rancho to our specifications! \ • Sliced Bacon •••• s1 19• : El Rancho's ranch style! : B P.orti· s109 utt on ••.• k El Rancho quality, smaller portion ! ' HAM $-1~ 'SLICES .. Center cut -sliced thick or regular! BONELESS s219 HAM · I~ Hormel"s Cure 81 .•• Whole or hatn ' • • • l . . • • • • • • • i G.~ocery. Values! i Fresh Egg$ =' .... -33c ; For that special breakfasl! Grade AA -El Rancho's o~ -'guaranl~d fresh! · Potato·"Chips ~C:U·s 59c Choose regular or dip chips in t he big pillq'w pack .•. and enjoy quality! • t z l l • : $ Ripe Olives .. -~n:LARGi . ·~49c ~ Planning a party? You'll "{eloOmi thi8 value ! Lindsay's ••. No. 300 can. i CanadG. ·. ~--ry -:m:• 2-9c · i • •' • 1 The bubbles last and,lallJ .29 ·"l'jR" bottles (Quinine Water. , .33e) i . . .~ ' . \ .... f ~ Snack' ·crackers .• ;:·53c . . . ' Take your pi ck of the famous Nibisco varieties .-party favorites, all! • Onion Soup Mix •• 35c · Hors d'oeuvres •• ·nc Lipton's, fo~ dips! Twin pack pkg. · , Durkee&, frozen -.10 oz .•• all varietiea! Stuffed Olivq ..... 49c ·-;...Snack · Tray ··-• .-•• 39, ~ --.~i1;;;;ne;HP:.~ • ~;~~ u~5:;! 7 ~ :z·.3;• ~--- One lb. can ta lb. can, •. 2.811) · .po pN!ferred Blqocly Muy mix! 25 oz. tlj SOUTH PASADENA: Fre mon! and Huntrnglon Dr. __ .,.. ________ • __ ...,. __ ...,. i 1 coc11a1L '79( ~MIXED 17.9, , MIXES · . . IUTS , -. ... Bartender'•· .. alt vuielieol Gin~ 12 Lau~• Scudder'••~ favorite! \8 <ii. --• , ....... HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH: .'/ ', N'W!HHl ti ,,i ... : Warn er and Al onqu1n (Buardw,ilk L• •11, 1 1 ,'"1'/, I .l"1:1lull Dr. (f.111blull '/iii II." Ccr1I• 1) I I J ; ,. ., 9 ~1L1.1 1 • .._OVERTISER Wtdnnday, Dtctmber 26, 1973 r • 1w'ed11esdi1)', Oecembtr 26, 1973 DAILY PILOT THE REAL ESTATERS BOAT SUP 3500 59. FT. \Valk to boat allp 3500 SQ. 'FT. Tree-*hlgh parqueted entry, Lush INDOOR GAtmEN. Huge llvlng room, \Valla ot glass. Extrava- gant \veil planned kitchen. Formal dining. Entertainer's family room. Spiral ·staircase. 1''0UR l?OO~·t ~·IASTER SUITE! Balcony's In & out. 2 celling high ftreplaces. Heated ocean sized pool. Custom deeklng. l\lUCH ~10RE! Call Jmmedlately! 963-6767. $201 . MO. TOTAL 6°/o ASSUMABLE 6% V.A. loan. $201. PER ?..10. TOTAL! Cov- ered entry. Texas alzed living room. Family dining. Kitchen with a. vtew. Larle bed- rooms. Red brick patio. Huge lot. Walk to shopping. Assume $19,600 -6% $201. Per mo. Total price $34,950. Call now. 963-6767. RED TILE ·SPANISH Spanish villa. Red tile I'OOt! Large lot. CMiPER PARKING. Front veranda. Dou· ble door entry. Gl&antlc living room. BAY WI N D 0 \V . Sptp.nish brick firePiace. BEAMED & VAULTED CEIUNGS. Sepa- rate de.rt. Family room. Bri&ht convenience kitchen. Party sized patio. \VALK TO BEACH! O"•ner n1ust mo~. Call today. 963~767. - 5 BEDROOMS $29,750 . J:r'S TRUE! 5 bedroom barpln -FUIL Pf{lCE ~29,750! Great. beach town location -bike to ocean. Glant living room. Family dinlng plus breakfast bar. Full-sized bed- room~ PLUS detached mother-in-law suite! TIIERE·s !\!ORE -u·ater liOftener - t.'8.m.per It trailer parking. 27 fl patio. Just $1 ,500 do"'" -95'1~ loan. llurry -963- 6767. VACANT • $19,500 2 STORY BARGAIN . E~IPIT 2 STORY. Asking $19.500. Outdoor li:;htlng. }luge living room. Convenience kircllen -INO..UDES \VASHLR 4: DR.YER! -Secluded bediooms. Veiy piivate patiO. Olympic co1nmon POOL. ASSUl\fABLE F.J-t.A. loan. 7-%%. $1852. TOTAL 00\VN! $165 per mo. Prime beach tov•n area - call now -96:>6167. • RANCH STYLE VACANT + POOL $25,000 Va.cant ranch 1tyle home. POOL. JUST $25,000! NE\V paint inside It out. NE\V shag. NE\V electrlcal le plumbing fixtures. Natural \l:ood Interior. Vaulted & beamed ceUlna:1. Family sized bedroonu. 25 ft. cov- ered pa.Uo. SPAR.h:UNG POOL. cabana. $500 ®"•n + closing. $237 per mo. ~25.000 TOTAL PIUCE. O"ner left! Call PO\\', 96J-6j67. LOOKlfolG FOR A BARGAIN? Here It is! Great landscaping. Brick plant- er.1. Thick carpets. Sunken Spanish-style family roon1. lluge bedrooms. Unbelievable value only $34,900. E-Z tc1ms. cau now. S.12-2535.- HIGH ON A HILL OCEAN VIEW $29,500!! Magnificent home on private cul-de-sac s~L·J>arkllke surroundings "'ith \•iew of Uie Pacific Ocean. Family bedrooms. Cozy,.' kitchen. Covered pa.Uo. You will be SHOCKED Cor only $29.500 with low do"'Tl peymenL HUlT)' call 842-2()35. NEW ENGLAND ,COTTAGE • NO 'DOWN! Warm paneled entry. Cozy living room. Raii ed hearth fireplace. Famlly kitchen. Frt>sh paint manicured yards. No down and low flayinents. Total price ·$28.950. Must hurry to s~! can now! 842-2535. WHY WAIT FOR TREES TO GROW! Beautiful lot "'·lth trees, including one now loaded with juicy oranges. This 3 bedroom charmlna: home is vacant and sparkllng clean. Cozy family_ area with crackling fire- place. 0 1)1y $33,500. VA, ffiA buyers ok. Better hurry on thia one., Call 847-6010 now. NEWPORT BEi\CR· 17Cll ""·'"" ...... 646-7171 • I OPEN 'TIL 9 . · 2 STORY! FOUNTAIN VALLEY UNDER $40,000 Jfnrd to match this terrific value in n prilne area. "·l!h (1-ont & rear sprinklers. Huge bedroorns -r Large lot on end of cul-dc--sac. Manicured yard private mas1er suite. Entertainers Jiving room. 1-Iurry on this one. O\vner transferred. Take ad- vantage. Call 842.2535. WATCH THE SUNSET OVER CATALINA One of the best \'i('\\'!I in liar bor Vie\v Hills. This lo\·cly honic sits out on lJ. point overlooking a green belt and v.·ith a rort·\·er 180 degree view of ocean and Catalina. Very sharp 4 bed.room - family ruom -3 bath, 3 cn r g:a1·ag:c -sparkling H & r pool -Fit·c ring and many 1nore extras to nut.kc Indoor-ou tdoor living: at its best. Call 110\V 673-8550. Old Corona dcl ?itar, delighUul 2 bedroom den OFF SEASON SPECIAL 4 BEDROOMS • POOL Take advantage. Buy a pool at ba!'gain prices. Jog to beach. Quiet cul-de-sac only 2 yeal's young. Custoen interior kingslze bedrooms. Fan-' tastic pool, totally enclosed for safety. Prlccd at S45,950. Excellent fin,ancing. Call 8'12-2535. MESA VERDE 4 BEDROOM PEACH 51/4•/o ASSUMABLE LOAN Fine Executi\'e home loadl'<i \\•Ith features: • 4 spacious bedrooins • Formal dining roon1 e Exquisitely decorated throughout • Really nice landscaping: \\'ilh Jiroduclng fruit trees e 514 rt,,·ASSUMABLE LOAN e Tl'ansferred o\vner sez "i\iove it for $46,950! !.' Call 546-2313 for Inspection. MESA VERDE $35,950 M me. crispy sharp and Lull or cha.1:m. Plus Z . ., . ' . bedroom unit over garage. South ot H\vy -"'8.lk Sec tins ., bedroom home located Jn Costa l\Iesa s to privatr-bay beach + vim,·. }"irst time adver-top residential area. Redecorated and ready for Used. $79,500. Ca ll 646-7171. the holidays. Call 646-7171. ELEGANT MEREDITH GARDENS Beaulll'ul "Galleria 1ifodel." l\1ajestic formal Hv. ing boas11 broad stairway to·gall<'ry. Enormous formal dining room. Sepe,rate family fu n room or..ens to custom pool. 4 spacious bedrooms. Pt6- tige neighborhood close to ~chools, park. tennis courts and beach. Priced to sell fast -call 546- 2313. VACANT & READY FOR CHRISTMAS! This charming 3 bedroom home is \\·aiting for you! Only $28,950, and VA, FJ-IA terms consid- erro. This is a great slartcr home, so "'hy not quit collecting rent 1-cC'C'ipts and O\\TI your o,,·n home no\\·. Take advantage by calli ng 847-6010. . AUTUMN LEAVES rloat ovrr this ci 1-cular cnlry. DoulJlr doors. Tile enu·y. Enlel'tainl'ns livini; rOQln. Raisf'd hl'arth fll'eplace. Eloquent banquet room. Giant kitch{'ll. Nc\v giant fl'C<'·for111 pool. Elcetronlc lightinK throughottl. ;\Ssun11· this VA h)a 11 nu\\'! Call 842·2:>3J. DON'T MAKE 'EM LIKE THIS ANYMORE One or Santa Ana's fine older homes racing the 1>ark for your ··01x•n spaC<'., pleasure. The grand· ('Ur of the tv.·cntiei and con\-cnience of the seven- lirs. Glin1merin!( oak floors. Enorn1ous living room \vith \\'in ding \\'ood · banislcred stail'\,·ay. Banquet size formal dining room. ConvC'nii>nc~ kitchen "·i1 h latest fi•ra1nic 111£> and built-in BBQ -Full bascrnent with launtll'y and built-in cabinets. Four s1iacious bC'drooms and 4 baths. Fascinating home for large fa111ily or interest office space. Call 546-2313. ·-.VERY RARE MONTEGO MODEL ln Harbor ViP\V Homes. Onl y one of these for !<ale. A real :,;harp 4 bedroom house. Dramatic tile entry. Living 1wm and formal dining room carr.ieted "'ith new ,gold carpeting. Big family room ":ith shuttered windo\vS. Dream kitchen, Qv.·ner moving to Oh io this month. Price re- duced -call to sec -673-8550. " • OWNER TRANSFERRED! and \\'llllts to sell before leaving arcn. Sharp, sharp 4 bedroom home close to schools & shop. ping. V.A., FHA ter1n!I availnble. Priced 'at only $36,950. T!lke advantag~ of this great buy. Call 847·6010 nO\V. CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS PRIC.E REDUCTION DUPLEX • 49 x 118 LOT South or High"~Y charmers. 2 sepe,rale houses on oversized lot. Bot h good rental units. Lovely garden setting -complete p1•ivacy. can 00\\' for more infonnalion. 673-8550.:-marvelous investment. WHY NOT UVE A unu? In this executive mansion. Triple car garage. Almost 3000' ot 1paclous llvln&. Arched Span- l11h entry. Huge formal Jiving room. Formay dining. Giant fiesta room. E.'1'.ce.llent area. Take advantage. Call 847·6010 now. · FANTASTIC FOUR! Bcsl 4 bedroom buy in The Bluffs at ~,500. Clse to schools and shopping. Fresh paint and new fi replace. l\love in condition. Vacant. Call now 673-8550. NEW DUPLEX OLD CORONA· REDUCED $4,000 Great floor plan -3 bedroom lo\\•er unil + 2 bedroom u11per unit. South or highway in 0>1'0nl\ del ?.1ar. Near beach. school and park. Carpeted and draped. Now the lowest priced new duplex In 1own. Excellent in"·estment . • HUNTINGTON •EACH . . CUSTOM BUILT CORONA DEL MAR ~o olh<'r home like it. Extra features ga- lorP. Huge living room \\·Ith ocean vlc\v. D1·eam kitchen. Huge family 1·oom \\'ilh separate St'\\ing roo1n. Cozy study \Vith built-in desks and dark room. Four bed- rooms. Oversized garage. Storage for boat. Call 673-8550. CORONA DEL MAR PRIVATE BEACH • $58,950 Unbelievable amongst $80..100.000 propertlf'l!. Just blocks from PRIVATE BEACH. Quiel tree lined street. Uvlng room "'ith shut ter!! and crackling fireplace. Spacious oak p:rn-~h>d ranll\y roon1 \\'Ith fireplace. 3 bedrooms -2 baths. Expandable yard -c11JI 6734GSO. roSTi\ MESA 27'0 ........... ' 146-1111 17'11 I_., llYd.· '61·6767 6014 Wantor An . CORON,\ DEL ~IA R J32 M•t uerltt 142·251 5 21 0JO -·-1474 010 ,73 .. 550 " • ., - BAYCREST $59,500 Lan;c living room, formal dining. Large kitchen and fan1il y room. nl?\v carpets and point. 4 bc:.-drooms plus rumpus 1w n1. Easy c.-are yard. room for pool. Fol' a rare \'O.iue call 64()..717J. CUTE & COlY! ($23,500) :! bedroom startrr ho1nc. Or, could be i;rrat invesunent. So cute and pretty )'OU \Vlll \\·1u1t il the n1\nutc you soo this ho1ne. f t"atu1-cs drive-thru garage to pnrk JOur boat & fiesta sized red\\'ood cuverl'd patiu. A n1ust-sce hon1c. Call now 847-6010. JUST REDUCED $1 ,000 Least C'.'1'.JIC'nsiv£> bayshore's condo. on thr n1arkct ! 1\\'0 slOIJ' 2 bedroon1 s priced for fa st ,;ale at S22.950. Nice p1·lvate patio and lovely comn1unity J)O(ll arra. Vacant & rea- dy for rou to n10\'P bc(<•l't' Xrna.s. Better h tU"IJ', call 8,17·6010 nO\V, REPOSSESSED $750 DOWN Just repossessed! S750 TOTAL DO\VN + closing. 1\e\\' paint out & in. Large livh\&'. room. Cheery kitc_hen. DI NING ALCOVE. Utility room. Well planned bedrooQJs. Lots of room for trailer parking. TCYI'AL PRICE S23,000! Take advantage! 963-6767. $750 DOWN BEACH 4 BEDROOMS 57.30 TOT&\L DO\VN! % to beach. 4 large bcdiwms. Brick lined \\'aik. Benuti[ul pla.ntcrs. Big kitchen with bay wtndo\\·. Large Jivin q roo1n \\'lth VAULTED CEIL- JNGS. NE\V PAI NT. IN & OUT. $750 total do1vn! $235.00 month. $'..!3,250 TOTAL PRICE! Hurry 963-6767. HUGE YARD ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN Add to thl' abovr: a very neat and clean 4 bedroon1 home situated on a quiet c.ul- de-sac in a lovely neighborhood. Available for nnsseMion--tn Janwu;-1974 and Pliced 10 st!ll quickly at $37,500. Need more Info? Please phone 546-2313 but better hurcy! MOVE INTO MESA VERDE FOR $1,B50 81.850 do"·n \viii put you into a ITI06t de- slreable l\1esa Verde area. Stately lrtts. quiet neighborhood. 3 bedt·ooms that \von't cramp! Family room oft of cuisine center kitchen. Fireplace. Intercom. Large palio -squeaky clean VACANT -move In! Call 546-2313. PINE TREES & BEAMED CEILINGS and onl)• 1 % blocks to lhe surf. One block to a huge pool, recreation roon1. One of. the most upgraded 3 bedroom homes In Ne"1>0rt Shores. Ju.st listed al $48,500. To see is to appreciate. Call 646+7171. 5 BEDROOM • 31/l BATH $29,750! JOG TO BEACH Unbelievable but true! Prime beach art'a location. Family sized bedrooms. Separate J\·Iother-in·La\\"s quarters. Secluded vege- table garden. LOW-LOW DO\VN PAY· l\lE:\T. Take advantage. Call now! 842-2535. 1 STORY CONDO $26,900 Immaculate 3 Br condominium "'ith gour- n1et kitchen private enclosed patio. 2 car garage. Red til<' roof, community J)O(l], trailer or 19oat storage. Assume FHA loan $184 per n10. includes principal, inter est, taxes and in::;urance. CaJl 546-2313. RATED "G" For a GREAT BUY -~ bedrooms, Ea!t sidf'. Costa 1\lesa, S25,0CXl. Call now 646· 7171. CANYON VIEW AND CUL-DE·SAC STREET Quiet Costa 1-tesa neighborhood t oo! A great 3 bedroom home neu·ly painted in - side and out. All for only $1.370.00 dO\\'n. Fot• information, call 646-7171. I NVESTMENTS 18662 MocA-llYd., Soito 101 lmow IJJ.JJOS ··AIL Y PILOT Tutsday, Dt<tmbtr 25, 1973 .,_-.--.--.---~ Annoonccmetm .••••• SOO • Sl-4 The Biggest Marketplace on the· OnJn1e Coast Mobilt ....... i... l<>if • • '1:15 • 149 At.ltotnobiln • • • • • • . • 9$0 -990 loat• & Marine Equipment 900 -914 f~nt .• , ••••• 100 .m DAILY PILOT Cl.ASS1,tED ADS p,,...,.1.. • • • , • , , , • ns · ..-i i>.ts ond s.,..pp/iM • 1 , • • • ISO • t99 Real f5k.t. Gtnttol: • • , • 1$0 " 199 J~ial , .. , , , • •'.~·m ~~c!'ct~" ~~··:,~~~~ :d ( 642-5678 j .-. "'9 ltentol ••••••••• ' - HoiiMI '°' Sole • • • • • . 100 -124 Lost & Jwnd • • -•• sso -574 Mttthandlse . • • • • . . • . 800 -8A9 One C811· . service Fast Credit Approval $c:~ ond .IMl11,1Ctiorl , , .'575 • -m S.r•ktt ond Repoiri • • • • 600 • f:R9 Tron~totion. · • • • • • • 915 -949 ~~ Gener1I Gen ::s ra l General Gtner•I Genaral Ventral E RR ORS,_ Ad.vertls1r1 lbould_ ch_eck f heir 1;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1---------1;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;. :1.;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. •ds dilly & report trrors immtdletely. The WATCH ·THE START THE HO HO HO ~~r~~ll~~•~ti:u:i;. li•billty for the first NOW HEAR TH IS! SUCNASTETAUONVAER New Year Right Ho!Ats for Salt Houses IOf' SJle A U"'llVUI: tJClMI: IN CORONA DEL MAR-45' Jt.2 lot -'12 block to ocean. 2 bedrooms and den. Fully stressed for second floor. Fantastic view from second level. Space for 4 cars. Favor- able financing available at interest rates under curr ent market. A $1081500 invest- ment. A listing o! Bert Reedy. UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 645-6500 1649 Wes,cllff Orive;-Newport Beac~ General General PRICE REDUCED-OWNER ANXIOUS Lovely Harbor View home . 3 BR + bonus rm w/separate BR & bath. Pool, jacuzzi. Vu from mstr BR. Priced to sell. By appt. WESLEY .N. TAYLOR 2111 ·son Jo1quin Hills Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General . , General 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;; HUGE YARD ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN if you ire in fht m1rket for 1 new execuflvt home SEE THESE OUTSTANDING ••••• CUSTOMIZED HOMES by Frank H. Ayres & Son/Since' 1905 • Enjoy tht Cool Ocean Breezes • 4 & 5 Bedrooms • 2350 to nearly 3000 sq. ft. Block wall fencing, landscaping & extra carpeting. 2 & 3 Car garages, concrete driveways, trash compactors , auto gar door ofeners, continuous cleaning ovens. Start a $52,900. La Cuesta By The Sea Modtls at Brookhurst & Atlanta, H.B. 968-2929 e 968-1338, 10 AM to 6 PM If >OU need room le< in-laws, One of the best views in family, or just to rent out Harbor View Hills. Thia tor Income, try this 3 lovely home sits out on a bedroom plus family room. point overlooking a green home. Formal dining, 2 belt and with a forever 180 baths with an attached one degree view of ocean and bedroom apartment. Rent- Catalina. Very sharp 4 Ing nt $180. a n1onth. bedroon1 -ran1ily roon1 -Assunl<' 7'fr VA loan ''"ith 3 bath, 3 car garage -$341, as toial payment. sparkling H & F pool -Great C'ul-<lc-sac street. fire ring and ninny n1ore Eastside location. extras ro make indoor-out· door living at Its best. Call 00\'I 673-8560. OPEN 1/L 8 • IT'S t:UN 10 BE NICE/ ~ ~ MOBILE HOME FOR SALE: co: Ts · WALLACE REALTORS -546--4141- (Qp•n Evenings) NEED A !~~1i~c~5!~ FAMILY HOME 20' x 53• 2 BD 2 BA, carp., Just 2 blocks from elemen· draped, bll·ins., refrig., tary school \\:asher & elec. dryer, wired Just 3 blo<:ks Jrom J r. HI. for 220 air cond.. kitch. Just 4 blocks lrom ?tlar1neI'3 clock, storage shed, land-Park scaped patio. Three yrs. old Need 4 bedroonu1 .. 3 baths I~""""'!"'"""""""""""""!!""""".""""""""""""" I -like nu. Located in ne1v Need a large fart}1ly room Gene ral General adult pk. a~\'ay fron1 noisy Like an upstairs master MERRY CHRISTMAS! HARRIE'M' ANDRESON GORDON HANEY PAT LANE RANDY PARKER CAROL WILKINSON ESTATE REALTY 1303 AVOCADO DR. NEWPORT CENTER 640-1120 BIG CANYON FAIRWAY lOTS St. One--half bl. !i'Oin club-~room, den and . ba~h. General house. ns.995. Call EVES. Llke a secludPd. pat10 '"'i.th 213-6S4-4690 lots of trees. Like a quiet The Apple Tree Pie rs in the rear yard or this sharp 3 Br. l\-1esa \lerde home, but the most i1n· porlant th'lng is "the home \1·ith it's sha...I{ carpet, fan1ily rooin. low traffic pride of ownership street & park like front and rear yal'd only $38,500 CALL P.S. the tree provides the apples, you make the pie. .. . . ' 11' 4 Bedroom hoine (huge master BRJ + family room + den, 3 baths, n1any ex- ' tra.s. Quiet street. $57,000. * C·2 Zone _ 1-larbor Blvd. 100 x 350, inco1ne $9;,(}, $175,000. CAN BE. SEEN AT: neighbo1:111'.>0Q. :ou_ can get CRESTMONT all 01 this fol' $55,750 ESTATES, 1051 Site Dr., Bl't'o. Central Ave. across from Brea Comn1. Hosp.) Lot #46. CONTACT RAY, PK. 1\-IGR. ltlr shc11ving. TO OUR CLIENTS ANO FRIENDS Best holiday grHfings * 6 UNITS* Nearly new 2 Br., 2 ba. deluxe unlls on oceanfront in Balboa! Elec. ft'Plcs. heavy shag carp., blt.ns; sundeck or balcony w/each unit: 1 cov'd carports p I U-5 1.-parking s~. $3&1,000. Call: 673-'.366.1 979-4190 Eves T"'O Ideal side by side sites for custom homes in New· port's newest and most ele- gant re:;identlal area. Each overlooks the fairways and brteens of Big Canyon CoWl· try Club. $69,500 each. Need space? Incredibly large yard ! Add 10 the above: a very neat and clean 4 bedroom home sltuated on a qu;.i cul-<le-sac ;n • lov•· ESTA TE REAL TY * 6 UNITS -Eastsidc, Costa l\'lesa $i2,500. lnc:o1nc $760. * 59' x 290' LOT. C·l zone. $32,500. E·Z Tefn1s. associated ly neighborhood. Available BROKERS -RE AL TORS 11'.'l~ W Bolboc 671 l6tl frir possession in January 640_1120 Roy McCardle Realtor 1974 and Priced to i;ell 1810 N Bl d C 1\1 quickly at $.17,500. Need e$4£"772f ., · ' more 111!0'? Please phone1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~i '"""""""""""""""""~I ,---........ --, -~--1 • Wik °"""""""""·'° .. NICE' HUNTINGTON l'M DREAMING a er &Lee EXCLUSIVE I ~ HARBOUR OF A WHITE "" """ BIG CANYON 54.'l-9491 Opt!n eves. A condom;nlum on a •wmy ' -ADDRESS CHRISTMAS AGAIN NEWPORT BEACH comer of tMs elogant, gnted with your own private pool. USE YOUR VA 3333 ~;'.!j6~ Blvd. commWlity -3 bdrms., 2 ----------I Large 3 bedroom home. 2 with fireplace all aglow In baths, spacious Jiving rm. RAISE TROUT? fireplaces. Fonnal dining. this family room·, 3 cozy VETER.ANS · loans now HUNTINGTON BEACH w/firplc., formal dining HUGE master s u i 1 e. bedrooms, 1% baths. on tree avail up to $125,000. Even 17875 Beach Blvd. rm. Breakfast area in You can ..,11i!h this home! 11 SPACIOUS family room. lined street. Nice spot with if you have already usecl 540_1220 ~tchen o..,..ns to garden h the JO. y o( Chriotma• Only your VA •nt•'tl•m•nt you ,.. ,,_ ed as been custom decorated You O\ve it to you-rseU to · " " .. patio. Never occupi -va-like an old Spanish Mission. see this. Only $7'1,500. ·call SJJ,500. Yiilh VA-FHA terms may be eligible for an ad· LAGUNA BEACH cant -not leasehold. $91,875. Lge cor lot. Features _ 30x: now 847-00lO. available. F'ast possession! dltional loan without rein· 222 Forest Ave. C F Colesworthy 14 fi h d 2 f · 2 Cal! now 847-6010. statement or dO\vn pymt. 494·9466 • • s pon . ountains. 5,"'( OPEN TIL'. "'S FUN 10 BE NICE! OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE' Herbert Hawkins Realtors Re1ltors 64~20 13 heated pool, 3 patios, ~ ~ ~ ~ 8J9.1GOO or 963·5681 SAN CLEMENTE grape arbor, 2 story, 3 Bel, l iiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•ll 305 N. El Camino Real 3 Bdrms & Den-$27,950 2 Ba, den, fireplace. 2 BBQ's · 492_4420 Lovely country 3 bedroom + gas BL Must see to be-_ NEEDED with family kitchen, den. Cliev11e! RNearlt Lak1e 1'~orestt! _,,__ Carffr minded salesmen and NORTH COUNTY Extensive ~ of rich v.·QOd a ea or or app ·1;;;;;;;a;;;;ii1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;101 salesv.u.men to sell Orange dial free 540-1220 ~;:~·~vlna'.::~;'e;;.:;;'.'/~; 64~66,.. FIXER UPPER .,. ....... , ro"'-K~E-"'""_A._R_R.,.-0..,il'i"'_H,.EA_ .. -~D ... _ MeoAunNty AproGpeEnyM. ENT CLASSIFIED Jand~aping. tall 54(}..1720. "~•ake Rooni For Daddy" NE\VPORT JTEIGHTS -Big. LAI ft DEADLINES TARBELL R4altors · · · clean out the. garage big bargain! 2300 Sq. ft. FUTURE Deadline for copy & kills .' ... turn that junk into cash 2~ baths, 3 BR's, fant rm, Great tor year round living is 5:30 p.m. the day be- 1 .1l.! 1:~stcs, uraw In the \Vest. j with a Daily Pilot Classified fplc, dble gar., boa t storage. & close to the village. 3 Experience r:iot neQ?ssary. fore publication. except . , .a Dnily P!\01 CIHs~llle<I ad. Call 642-5678. Bring your paint and pnper, .yr old Bavarian style 3 level Good attitude LS. Send for Sunday & Monday Gene ral I G gneral yo u'll ha,·e a ball! No1v home with open beam ceil-resume to: ReUtil Depart· F.ditions when deadline MACNAB IRVINE MAY PEACE BE YOUR GIFT AT CHRISTMAS Our Sincerest Thanks For Your Friendship. John Macnab rutd Associates BAYCREST BEAUTY Magnifi cent 3400 sq. ft., on huge estate sized lot. Sparkling waterfall & 2 reflec- tion pools . Brancf new on· market - fll4,900. Joyce Edlund 642-8235 (Z3-0) BAYSHORES PERSONALITY Charming & vivacious 2 BR , FR -bay wind ows & a gingham kitchen. $67,500. Martha Macnab 642-8235 (Z l8) PALERMO WITH A VIEW vacant. ings thru-0ut, 3 br 2 ba ment. P. 0 . Box 45TI, Ana· is Saturday, 12 noon. C II "'" ~~" o E + completely finii.hed hase· heim 92803. • ~'-pen ·"'· 1 :====~===:11 CLASSIFIED ment for playrm or shop. Lndry facilities. $36.500. REGULATIONS .n~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS f2U') 451-3898 after 6pm or Near Harbor High ERRORS : Advertisers anytime weekends. Immecillate, large 2 bedrm., shou ld check their ads __.,.~ 1 bath home. Oversized liv· daily & report-errora l/""'!T'!A~X~S~H'\'!!E'!'L'!!T~E~R~S"""'/ LOCATIF1o"N"c"o'UNTS ~~in~~·ea~itr.a~:P::~~ gn~~ia~iioT ass~e~ A -5 Units on oceanfront for entertaining. II b'lit f th "-ti 25% down -PRICE $182,500. \Valking distance to \Vestcliff P rofcssionally decoraled. a 1 Y or e .u.&• n· B • 4 Large homes on 112 shopping, 'Mariners School, New cpts & drps. Dble _gar. correct insertion only. Acre in \V. Costa l\-1esa . pal'k, tennis c:ts. · 4 Bdrn1s., 646-3928 or Eve, 645-2968 CANCEILATIONS: $69.500. den, 2~ baths; quiet Ne\v-When killing· an. ad be C -10 yr. old large clouble port Beach fam ily neighbor sure to make a record in CM. Try $39,500. TER1\1S. hood. Call for ap•"t. to see. of the KILL NUMBER D -POOL -FORECLOSURE $59,500. given you by your ad $43.000. C F Colesworthy taker as ,..ceipt of your QUlNTARD REALTY • • cancellation. Thia kill -__ _;64!£2-;299~1 ___ _;._;:R;;•;;a;;l;,;to~r,;•==,,,;64;;;0-002:;_;;;;:0.Jl~~~~~~~~~'l f number must be pre-sented by the advertiser jmfSTAR GAZER'~~ 1-'~~-':-T"---Br CLAY!l POLLAN:---,----! ARllS H y O 'I ~ , ...... '-' ~ llllA "4Alt. 21 "'Y" O!lr a1 Y ,.ct, .. tty ..... ive ~ SffT. Zl m_ Af#. U A.ccarcling to th• Start. ocf. 11~t~ • Jl.16-1 To develop mes50gl! for WedNSda'(, 4-lS.-29 34 :e; '8-58-63 reod words corresponding to numbers 2.5J..87° of your Zodiac birth sign, 1 Call Jl Calltd 61 Hur>e.hu 2Mam!f'G J2E~ 62Md 3 You 33 M 63 Doy <I l(eep 3• Coll«f'e4 6' Fri.,d 5 H•de 35 Ideal 65 Of 6 Can 36 Tokd ~ ,1..ui~lonc• 7 You 37 Doy 67 Good 8 Fr:rvor1 JI Conlodl 68 D••likn 9 Your 39 Got 69 5,.,p.1wc TO M01 <10 F:>t' 70 For 11 [lclrri A! Yavr 71 Al!«liof\ 12 f>ortifC A2Whn• 72 Frltndl 13 81 .fl PriVOT•, 7 J LO'!'f I• F•l'lOnt.. ""Some 7A Svrl'Ol.&'ld l!Colfft ~PIH~ 751"ttr.m, 160r .ofdWIH 76Fill 17 llOft'lGN:e •7 c rrci. 17 Or in case of a dla_pute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORRECTION OF NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: ~very effort la made to kill or correct a new ad that has be-en ordered, but wc cannot guaran- tee to do so until the ad has appeared In th e pnpcr. DL\1E-A-UNE ADS : These ads are strictly cash in advance by mall or at any one or our of· fices . NO phone orders, Dea1line: 3 p.m. Friday, Costa Mesa office 12 hoon -all branch Of· fice911 BLUFFS CONDO Ukc new -popular .. Dolores" plan, Move-in cond. Vac:ant. Quick po$Sess. 3 Bdrms. - 21iii baths, very shnrp! Shol\'S like a model. Only $64,!MIO. • PLEASE CALL 675-3000 fH llA\' & 111:.\fll Move Into th is 4 bedrm, 2 bath ho1ne Oeforc Otrlstma~. Locatud on a huge corner lot. Ne\v carpeting & dee· orated for your pleasure. VA Appraisul and sales prlt:e jus~ $28,500 2~&!itn Sun/Eves. 546-4171 *SUPER BUYS* Laguna Bt1ch lot $8500 2 BR duplex $34,950 "'========:I Beech Cottage $49,950 • --· --5 br Nwpt Hghts $63,500 MESA VERDE 1 Income Units $59,500 LEASE OPTION Beach Duplex $11 9,500 Call for additional ;010 Can purchase this 5 bedroom, &12-1771 3 bath home for today's 1797 Orange Ave., C.r.t. price of ™,500. \Vilh $1500. lease option money. And Ontu pay $450. a month rent until II/' you are ready to complete "'21 the sale. Submit you1· terms. ~ Ov.·ner has moved business north and is an:'iious! ! co: Ts · WALLACE REALTORS -546--4141- !0pon Evenings) .,~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS SOME THING SPECIAL! Is this exceptional 3 BR 2 BA Harbor View Homes Carmel Plan, y;ith beautifully de- veloped front and rear yards featuring literally tons of masonry, open beam patio covers and sun decks. It's on the gl'eenbelt. A stone's throw from clubhouse and pool. \\'ell priced el $71,500. Fee. CALL 644-7211 /Jn NIGEL llAILEY & ASSlJCIATES PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW One third acre beautifully 1 a n cl scapl!:d surrounding spacious VIP residence with 4 decks and 180 ft. view front.age. Newly introduced to the market. $79,500. 646-7111 -Open eves. -2043 Westcllf! Dr. Walker &Lee tllf.t.L llf.t.fl Buy Beach Property NOW!! ON WATER 2 Bedrm, 2 ba, new dock for 28' boat. $75,000. Newport Shores PlctW'esque, large 4 bedrm Oialet type, will tease op- tlon. $48,500, 400 E.171 I FOR ALL C.M. • • • 1aU1 ---CHRiSTMAS- OREETINGS TO ALL OUR FRIENDS FROM THE SALES STAFF · OF . OUT OF THIS WORLD Ovtrlooking !he ocean spucious for cnll't1aining. 3 bdrn1s, dining l'OOln & family 1'00n1. A nn1!'.t sec for discrin1inat ing huyet'li & prit.'t'd to sell. Best buy un· der $100,IXXl. HARBOR GET A 'CHARGE' out of your DAILY PILOT WANT AD ·NOW HONORING Master Charge and BankAmericanl • of sparkling lights at nite. Crystal chande- liers hi ghlight lovely blue decor. 2 Fire- places & "'et bar. Owner bought another ~ants to sell, Jane Fraze~ 642-~ (Zl7) [Irvine I _180\lldi.tn_ .Al.tr!Qt11M 71T~ 19Rely -A9'GCIY • 79n.'- 20 Gifn 30 Pltowit IO Alhng 21 C<rwlott ~l ~11v11ia II At 22 °" 52 UDon 12 Eldtt TllE DAILY PILOT ,.. serves the right to <:lat· tlf¥r•edlt~...-cent0r or·re-- rusc an.Y advtrtilement, and to change lta rates &: regu lations without prior notlct. . COLDWltLL, IANKIR REALTORS • 644-17118 2161 San Joaquin HUJ1 Rd. DIAL 101 Do¥tt0rlve 142-1235 1144 ·~ 114'·1l00 ' 2J Cualcf"t Sl'T'he 13 You 24 Etilortt .54 Lli..n 14 NOit 25 °" ~ '°' as ,,....., 26Soclal S6MOtlf!'f MAi1· v y-57 Of 87 Botti• Allli lJ 28 £~"'0 53 Your 88 You 1 • 29 NwJ 59 Ol'd t9 Rogn Sfn'. ~ 30P1r)Of>QI 60Ald 90Now . ..@Good @Ad-()i./~ ' CLASSl~IED MAILING ADDRESS P. 0. Box 1560, ,.... Costa fifes& 92626 ' NtwDOrt Bee.ch *LANDMARK* A l It 2-at;y. commerc, ~ldg. in The Cannery VJUage area. $175,000- UDO REAITY \l \,, 1.' " *u7J 7Joo• \ 642.:5678 ctasslf\e~ INDEX Actier1111ng Rt1lht1tefors11e [tel HO\IMI Nr lllt ......... ,.,., 1M M01111t1r/,,...l11llf Hlmff • · •• 111 MNlll HIJftt• l"tr Siii ...... 111 Acr1191 ttr 1.t.le ........ , •• . lit .t.ita1111111111 tor 1111 .......... 1 IWllrtlH rroJ1t<rfY ............ 11 (-••••"' L.011/Crr,11 "... ... IU Comm1rcl•I 1"ro111rty ...... , • IM Condomlnl11m1 for 1111 ..... , . , 1" D11PLf.lt1/Urtlll Milo. ......... 1'2 HallM• II H nllVlf . ., " . " · " 164 lncoint Pl'Oplflf ....... · .. · .. • 16' 1nd111lrl1I f'Nplnf • ··, ·, ,, ·•• 161 Loh tor Sile ................. 111 MHllt HlllM/Tr•U•r ....... • • 1n Mwfll•ln, 0""1, Jltffllrt ... • 171 or•• C:t. Prt"'1r , ......... 111 0111 ol Sltll Prtplrlf ........ 111 llllM~"' firm" Oro•n ... ,. lM 111 ... 1 111111 E11ch1"" ..... ,,. l•t ltNI 1!!•1111 Wl rtlM ........... 1M __ ._ .... _1"~'~ 8111ln111 OPPOrluMIY •.•.•..••• 2tO •11111111• Wint"° ........•.. ,., 111 1n~ttlm1nl OppWtunlfY . . . . . • 1:21 ln~ttlmelll W1nled ..•........• 2)0 MOn•r 11 loin ·····-····· .•. 240 MOntY Wirt led ................ Ut M11'19.t.911, Tr111I OHd• •..•.• UI .___ •• _, .. _,. __,j[..a j HOUHI 11.1rru1h.., .. ' ......• ' •.• '" M111111 11nl11rn. • ...... ,. ...... , J1$ Moult• turn, •r vnt11111 •.•.•.. JIG Condomlnl11m1 ftro. • •. , .• , .. , J1S Colt0omlnl11m1 vafum. . . . • . •• • :nt Con-.. 111111. 1r 11nl11rn •• , ...•. , JU townhl11M lum. ., . .. .. .. . . . . . »I town1M11111 11nf11rn •.. , .....• , •• J:U TownlMluM, 111rn, 1r llllfum. • , Jtl 011plex•• tum. • . . .. .. .. .... • .. '45 DllPl~ll "'°Ill flt, ...••.•••••••• , !II 011pt1~•" f11m. or INlfum .•.•. UJ ApH. l11m. . ............•.. ., .. Me Apl. 11nf11m ..... , ... , .......... J45 Apl1., turn. or 11nl11rn .•.•...•. S10 RGOmi ....• · ···· ............ .. RMITI & IOlrd .••• , ........... 4411 H1t1I .. Mo!tla .................. I ll 011111 "'"'' ........ " .••.•.•.•• l lJ S11mJY11r R1n!ll• ..•...•.....• , at Vt ctllot1 Re11t11t ..... -....•.• , CJ Rtnllli II $1!1r1 ............... 4.IO t)1r11t1 191' lltfOI ••....•...•.• , .t.JJ Otllc:• J1te11111 ...•.•.••...•...•. 4oto llldw1trl.t.I Rtnll l .•....•.....•.• 4SO s1or1g1 .••.............•..•••. 415 lll1nt111 WtnllCI ................ .... Ml1e1ll1n10lll llttf'llllt .•.•.•.• 4'I Aull lrlnljll011tllon ..•........• SU ,,,..,. ......................... uo Soclil Cllll>• •.•.•••...•.•.•..... m Tr1wol ,. ..... ,. ..... MO Lott ... '"""' l[SJ F"""41 UrM Hll .. .. • . • .. . • . Sii Lo~I ,......................... IP h t-' lff!l Schlol1 & IMln1CllMl1 •..•.... S71 Tl!Mlrlc1t .............. , .. ... [-. ... -.]~ S1f\llc:O Olr11Cary •......•.•...• • JOll Wln!ICI, Miit . ,. ...... ., . 1W Jo.If WtnlH, F•m••· ... ' ...... JG J•" WIR!M, M&lll , .••.. , ., 7M Http w1n1..,, M&lll . . . . . . • . •• ne .__·--~· I~ An.,q11111 ................. .. APIM!tMn •.•. , .. -...•.....•. lff A!KllO• •..... , .. , • . • . .. . • . ••• . • 914 B11llcll"I M•ltf'ltlt . . . . . . . . . . . . * C1mtr•1 & ElllliPmllll ••.•.... , , .. F11m1!1r1 .•.•.......•...•....•. Ill ~, .... S.t.lt .................. lit H-..iMliltld 0...1 •.•...••.•••. , 114 J ... ll"J ......................... Ill M-.chhillT ...................... 11• Mltctlltllll\lf .•.•.•....••.••.•. 111 MIKllllnM\11 Wini.., •. ,, •... m Mlflktl l11trvme1111 .•.•.....• m otlkt lll11ml1V,..l£1l11lp, .•.•...• ft( Plll'IOl/Ofllrtl .. , ............. 1U S•wlne M•clllllft ....... , ...... m $POrtlne Otecl1 ...•. , .•.••.• , . , g $1tr1, k"1111r.t."l, Sir •...•.•• Ill SW1p$ ...•...•.... ···•····•••• •M TV. RldlD. H~fl. S11,... •.•.•• U1 11 .... .:.._. ]~ Prll, Gtn1r1I ................. , ... tit• . . . . ... . . . . . . . . , ..... , ISJ 51,:..·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··::::. iii l.IVlltlcli: . , . • • ........... , .. I ....::o~-t I~ 0"'1r1I . . . • . • . • . . , .•. , .•.. , .• "° 10111, Mtlnl./S1rvk1 . • . . . . • . H2 1101tstM1rln• 1:1urp, .....•.•. , tM •..... , ... , ................ ' ,.. :•i!t, Ren1/Ch1rt1r ..•.•..... ,. Olh, Sail ...................... "' B••lt, SllPS/0.Clu .••.•.•. , • . • •11 ...... , ...... Ski ............ f11 jN"T,:::~;I~ ·· 11•i Airer.it ........................ flS C1m1111r1, Stle/llllll'lt ....... ,., nt CJ'cltl, &tlln, kel!trt .. , ..... ,. lltctrk C.t.,.. ................. t» Mlllll• Mtm1t ....... , •....•• : ,. Mltor Hlrllll ................ ,. '4i "Trllltn, Tr••l'I ................ '41 •Tr•ll•rt, Ullllty , ............. t"1 11to S•r•kt & 1"1rn, ...•.•.. Mt Autoo~Uo 1§1 °""''' ..... " " .. ' ....... "... .. ArtlW!-/Cll•tkl ... ;, ,, , ..... , ~ o-••Ill .................. '" s,.m., RHt. llM• ,. " ..... , tn Tntekt ..• ., ....... "" ...... ,, Ml \11111 ........................ Ml !llf!. ~Ntlllt .............. ,,',,' ff4 A Ult rvlff & l"l"t • " ,, • " "' A 'lllOI Wttlhtl , .. ,. .... ., • ,, .. , HI •"=' l"'P9ntd ....... , ....... '" •"' ....................... ... _,.,, UMCI .................... '" ' ............. ~ For Classified Ad ACTIQN c.u \\ DAILT PILOT AD-YISOI 641-16711 • • • ' ~ ' c • PllOf·ADVERTISER DAILY PILOT -;<-:-----...,.--...,,-"'-Tutsdiy, Ott:tmbtr 25, lCJ73 1;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~·•~r~o~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ;G;;';";;";;';;•;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;';;"';;;;r •;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J ;B;u;;•;;";";;;P;;•;;rk;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;B;;u;e;;n;;•;,;P;;;;o;;r k;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; J ~ un • Beach San C I em1nt1 nee me p r~r>t rty 166 Gov'T OWNED AND VACANT LUXURY LIVING HI' own<e, 2 """"" on one 2 BEACH DUPLEXES . lot. Bollr 2 UH wffX'{!.UI 7Vl•J. LOANS Wodntl<!A1 , Otc•ntbtr 26, 1973 Hove A Unique Christmas Doy VETERANS ADMINISTRATION RESALE ~ Pnvat•y & ~llullrut J\tt. \•le"'· Cptd & nt.'\\'ly painted. THAT'S RIG•IT' 2 Ou I Vll,!V.•I(: ·I lw::lrrl11J., 71, blllhA. l ncoml' srio l\\111 p..'\y 01 . • p tXf'I Anyone can buy -super value 3 bed.rm.. Joud\"'li \i•lth luxury rrnturr8 beyeN C03lS. or 7,.. de by 1t.lde. Walk lo l)e11•·ti, 11f, baths. Dinin g room, dble. garage and •hruout. Pro!f·~lonully 11.1.n<I· VA loan 'w11oi;:Su':,"'.; Ct1n bt' sold 1¥''*r or fl!'P- 1 'th f 'lt All f $26900 \V'lh $900 scape{! prnttl1·nll'-' a lllJ .,,...950 I'""1 .~1 ,1 I ftrately. TAKE OVElt tX· poo w1 1 er. or , . 1 . nutinti-nan<"' yard ... On• or Cli ~ .... • · ar po.~ tSTlNG 1•,»<:r t.OANS. lkAI dO\\'n. Needs so1ne fix UJ>. Just released. Bids SPACIOUS LUXURY u-.e nlctllt homf's In J.lonarch :\ · t.uy In towo ar $3il,Wl l!D.cb closesoon. llurry! CALL 540..1151 . Over 7000 s ci fl in this vie\\· & pool res idence Bay Terrace. S81'.500. Sant• Ana BE flB.Sl' TO SEl';l 'oll COMFY cozy above Buena Park's Los Coyotes c.c: Per-Mo 1 _ -LAST Chnn«•! NEo\R THE '"'"''1114) 87().6500 ANO A LITTLE OCEAN ,VIEW _ See lhis feet for large family. QuaJily thruoul. VTO/lk-rv ~f.\))~· f'lllVATE: ooly absolulely charming custom h ome in Newport $2SS,OOO. REAL ESTATE laSI 'i II~;,., relea!<e '"' qu lcl< ronson Heights. 2 BR. & large den. Dining area, 21f.:. GRUBB & ELLIS CO 1190 Clf'nneyi-c s1. !!ale 10 1h1• adull buyer. BA .. 2 frplcs., beamed ceilings, dble. gara~e, • <9·,9113 '1!10316 11.6:.l mo""' yoo In dght Realty & lnvostmont1 l h k f E , . . . I ~~~=~=~-'-==! away, pritc lr11;ludes 2J ~R. 905 S. EUCLI D 1eavy s a e roo . nJoy a nl1n1-v1ew or t e REAL TORS 675~7080 UNIQUEL y . . . 21L\ 1•nr10~ gnrlt):r'. <h·1))1;. r u LLEH TO N sparkling blue tlncific. Our exclusive al l ~~..,..,~~~'"''"''"'~'"''"'""l~'!'!''"''"''"'""I· .. dei;lgucd: !lpJ!t.Je\'cl prl P8tio 11·/ slab .. 11i1· •• ov1•1· H ous_e_+-6 u-'N~~1 T~S~1 $56,500.CALL540..1151. Corona del Mar Corona del Mar ho111c, J 1a1~·i· bclrrn~ .• 1v,.,.,, l,000 ~11· fr. HU RRY. to N 1 2637 El ·' --.. Ope n Jlou11c &it. & ~un. cw u~ I!' .'~I ·I ,, uen. <·llI"pet & R vie1v of 1he t'OO!ll· 615 Soulti i.:uclld tit f\l<•l-""n.<I· Cf\f. l!il use• 11 200 .r 1vrlte line all !ht 1•t11y lo 1~a1oa ' ol! r .. 11 fl U I • 6'"4'14 d~n. ~llll\ Ana. 774-1450 · ""' II ( (', ....,.. -. · Vei'Cleli. s:;;i,900. fu1·lhcr inf(1111111!1011, bkr ROO:\f'\" Duplex, l Br, ca. U~IVU~ tl()M~i ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARKET WtTH THE I r--------------------.1 NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, fi76-6000 • MESA VERDE. 546-5990 • NEWPORT BEACH. 645-6500 • CALL US General General BIG CANYON-"BOROEAUX"-$119,lOO Luxurious & Spac. condo. CuslQm draped, cptd & VanLuit wallpapers. Comp!. ldscped, cov. patio. 3 BR, 3 ba, DR & beaut. kitchen. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd: NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General SAVE YOUR ENERGY .•..•• FOR THE CRISIS & YOURSELF! \Valking distance to Fashion Island, Irvine Financial Center, Bi~ Canyon Golf Course, & the Newport Tenn1s Clu b. Spend your va- cation at the community pool. Your car needn't leave its 3 car garage & you can stretch out & enjoy this beaut. 5 BR., formal din. rm. Harbor View home. Sensibly priced at $119,500. CORBIN-MARTIN Realtors Coll Anytime 644-7662 Gener•I General ERITAGE REALTORS General AND ASSDCIAHS REALTORS TRIPLEX AND A VIEW TOO! One block to Corona dcl l\1ar beach. Pride of ownership property in high rental area. All units have a view. Asking ~132,500. ,\ listing or Ed Nelson. CALL 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar ,.or.:-;::c;;;;;r-::w=ec-:c7•~•-H~E=L•.iv~o~uli1~u~v~.-.--111!1'1 SELL, OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IH THI NATION General General * Balboa Bay Properties * OCEAN FRONT Buy, Leue, Option Ne'v triplex, wil l trade! $225,000. 675-7060 Best Newport Hts. loc. Immed. occupancy. 3 BR; lg. de11, form. din rm., !rplc. $45,500. 642-7491. V I S A H · h .. --garages, y11rd. $2.JO inc. ~o"a~ ~ na eig ts $22,95 0 /of [e r . 01\'nr '11.-' LOW tax ··county'' ret'<'nt , ss.2,-::::5"'3:=·:-----~~ I REAL ESTATE •~m 10,tnbl• , B" • ••n. ~ots !or Sale 110 PRICE REDUCED U!IO Glenntyr~· ~I . 3 Ha. 2 i-t.v hon1c Ill ~ncl .f91·9'17'.i !!1~0316 of cul-d<'-!l!.C. Drl1'f' intn 2· B.·2 LOTS. 60x l40, Hun t. llill"k ~r•t, :? ear i.:ar llnrbor an•a. ('a\! AM " 1·11l>in<'l1' ,'I., benl'ht·.~. f"ool 8-12·0691, eves ;ilf;.1;,:i!l hkr. rn1 \\/shuulanl sz tbl.:. n1a~· Mountain Desert Grab this end-of-year bargain! 4 Bedroont "Palermo'' Harbor View Home. Great land- scape, raised d~ck + inuch more. *Merry Christmas *Happy New Year 1·111•t·y loan at ]P~s 1'' If ' 174 <111n!1!1C'd huycr pays do1\'ll i--'R;_•:;;1;.:0c,r.;..t ______ I GRUBB & ELLIS co_ tn loan. S\:J,000 011'1\l'f 1j61 LAKE AR P.O\VllF.:\I) 1~''~"~111~'·~5~1~·'>-~"~16~9 !!!!~!!!\Grent for year murifl li\·inc; I' & ('\ose lo the 1·\!lage. 3 r --l~ yr old Bavariiu1 s1ylC' :l \C'vel MobD• Hom•• liilP hon1c 1vith Opt'll bc:1n1 ceil· _ . ings 1h111-oul, 3 hi' 2 bat t'Oznplclely tlnishC'!I base· rnent !or 11111) r1n o l' 11·01·ksho11. ! Jlc!ry f a c . * * 1''or )"Ou 1· P.EAL t-.:STATE .-;untington Beach I nrl'ds -cnll a prorL•ss\onal I B Red Carpet, Realtors 2 drm. + Pool 492-9700 or 497-1761 $24,495 1 ..... .,.. .... .,....,. ... ...,.,Mobile Homes 675-7080 REALTORS Corona del Mar RATED X • EPTIONAL I -4BDRM-+ VIEW F°' Sale 12S Old Corona de\ J\t a r, ! 2 l~drn1 L1H1do., desirable -----------de\i~htfuJ 2 lil'choon1 den ! ground level floor plar:. 1!~ Finely cl'll fl L'Ci houie l1ffci'li MOBILE HOME S36.;){K). 1 :?1~\l 1~.1-'.\.-:9s after 6 pn1 01· a11ylin 11• 11Trkr11d!!. llOLIDA'\'' rrnhil N. Shorr! l..ake An"011•heacl. L a k C view, Con1fortab!e :~37-1106 honie. Crispy sha1'fl ;.uuJ full years nciv. Freshly Painted !he finest h1 C'onternporary r I 2 .. living. Just 21:: ,1·s. old. FOR SALE : o chHl'lll , 11 us · lx•u1uon1 \\'ilh tasterully panC'lcd and unit over gara);e. Sour.II of 1 ntirrored living rooin, plu sh 1 Den, Urcpla<·f~ & ~01u·n1r1 SIL VERCREST lilgl11l'11y -il'alk !o pri~.nte l\::tlJpapered dining area, I kitchen. ·n1i(·k sh;1).( l'Hrpcl· MOBILE HOME bay beach +.a v1c11•._r 1r~t J shag caI'Jl{'ts & custonl in_g. Patio .i:.: ri~·h ''l•lvct 20· x :J.1', 2 BO 2 BA, CR rp., tune 11dvrrt1scd. $1'.J,500. drapes, oversized pantry greenery on a ~r~ict CL'.l-ile· dra1)C{I, bll-ins.. relrig., I I[ •I Call &16-7171. area, near schools, 1A·a1king I sac st l'cel. Sli ,500. Ca I I 1vashel' & 1.•le<:I. dryer, ,1,ired ):Nncial OPEN TIL ll • IT-S FUN TO BE NICE/ dislancc lo H u n tin g l 0 n 49-1-3003. IOI' 220 11.h· l.'Ond.. kitch .11;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-Crntcr, S11iniming pool anrl TARBELL, Realtor5 l'lock, slornge shed. land· 1nttny park areas. FOR 1920 S. C0<1sl lhl'y., L.J{. i><·aix-'<l p;ilio. Thl'ec yrs. old . THE REAL ESTATERS SALE BY O\\'NER . Asking EMERALD-BAY--· like nu. fJll·ated in nc11· Business only S2.t,·l!ll call today i\ charnting 3 hclnn., 2 1~ adult Jik. ;nvay fJ."Om noisy Opportunity 847-3095. bath split level honic ivilh St. One·hnlf bL front clul>- THE BEST ROOM Rn ocean view. An open house. $15,995. Call EVES. Distributor ' I 1 11 1 213-f!l4-16~. MUSICAL oor pan, 1e extens \'e use CAN BE SEEN AT·. POOL IS THE of wood lhruout moke th;, GREETING CARDS one of the most nn1·. buys CRESTMONT Makes all others obsolete $26,900 ELBOW ROOM ut Emoc•ld Bay $107.500. ESTATES cam• tor every occas;oo \\'0\\1! Cute Jlttlc 1"Cposi;esscd Jler<''s the honte \Vilh enough TURNER ASSOC. "' !O::i1 Sit e Dr., Brea. !Central \1•ith approprlttte tune for 3 lilt , 1 'fi balh pool home elllo1v roon1 for everybody. 1105 N. Coast I l\\'v., l..i1i;u11n Ave. aerosi> fron1 Brea each Mid thi-J !'Cl.ai l stores \\'Ith a beginners pl'lce. Just :~ quern-sized bedroonis, 494-11 77 l'on1n1. flosp .) Lot #46. e!ltablished comonny. Dlstrl· $900. Dol\'11 and $650. Closing .,.,·ilh da1.zllng bath. Country Lido Isle CONTACT RA\", Pl\. l\1Glt ., butor dellvC!rs & collec ts costs. $248. pet· n1onth pays i;tyle kitchen overlooking ----'-:-::-::-----1.~""'":...'~:~~~~w";n!!;g;_. ----~I cash. If you i:un :;tart !m- cverylhing! Siluuted on a lhis huge back yard. Submit , LIDO NE\V custoni hit !.MJauty in med. & make cash invest o/ nice big lot \\'ilh 1'00111 for your 0\1·11 ternts. Seller is BAYFRONT udult pal'k 00 the bay. $1990. up depending on No. MESA VERDE eve1yth1ng. Better hurry it's flexlb!e. P1iced.at $29,900. SlS,500. 675-0723. of accts. Write incl ph no. WE'RE PLAYING MESA VERDE vacant nnd \1·on't last long. Pier & slip: 'l Bf{., 2 ba.; I ~~~~~~~~~ Federal lndustric!t, Box S T DUPLEX Country Club Bkr 002-551\. just reduced to $249,;,ofJ. i\, 2TI6, Anaheim, Ca. 9"180.t or SANTA CLAUS E TA E 11th Green is right at MESA VERDE [JI) caU Mr. Slt•ldon . 1-'-~;..:;;.~~~~~I • :) bedrooms -shnrp con· On a large ilTegular shaped Newport Shores your back door. 3 BR. Walker & lee R&'n~~~~lt, 714/533-1500 dltlon Jot in n .. sha?l' •·p.ridc-0!· Fee simple. Xlnl rent· 3 ha. home \V/pool. 3 15 Bedroon1 o:. 4 bedroom \ ~r•l 111.,1 AAA. • 2 story -2200 sq .. ft. O\\'TI('rshlp IO\\' trafhl' fam· al 0 n I y •59 000 c ~79 500 + forn1al d1n1ng + den . ,. in /B ln 0 rt e terra7.0 entry Hy neighborhood, a bcaull· 67 ·3- 7420 "? ' • a r gar· Y • • + family rn1. Interior 54;>-t»6:i BEST BUY LIDO Acreage for sale 150 vestment Ul'l css ppo · e lush shog Ca.Jl>f'I fully mainlain<'d 3 BR I 5~8800 atriu1n w/y,·otl'rfall . Huge 1 4 Br 3 Ba + Bay View 88' $40K ·yearly return • cumom drapes 1\ n d "'Pac('!;('!ler'·' home \\'ith m master be<lrm l\"ilh r11l c & I ~ I to bch. 42;, Via Lido Nord. BEAUTIFUL hillside pro-No risk • Solid bul'line!l!C l\'allpapcr dinin;.c area, ;11ldcd l.t x ~»o m REALTORS 3 car gar. Only $&1,9;i0. Call ~ t $1 32,500. 67;>.7414 Bkr. pe1:1y 20 milc.s f~m i:en11ie Long ter1n high & fa.<;t profits e screened lall3i 111sulatl'fl fltrn1ly roon1, se11-I S.15-8424 SouthCo Realtors. 1 --I Newport Beach Ar1zon~._ fascinating ,·1e".'' of 120~~ secured &: guar. by e 6%7r AS."Ui\IAIJLE LOA.1"'* nrall' C'h1lclrt'ns piny ya rd 4 Local Offices to Serve You Fountain Valley \ NEW HOME liUJICl':'l1t1on n1ounIa1 n s assets, C!Qully & deed of ·e ('hoice Costa ~tesa loca· arwl Jargl' Jl.>110 Pl.US lots of \ GRAND O.,ENING overlooking the City of trusts. tion r xtra s1mt-c fnr :i ponl, boar Gener•I General Don't Presume-Pi·it-c 1x>duced for year end Newport B•y Towers PhocnL"l. For n1ore in· CAU. ~231.l v.·on't last storage or ,1·hatc\•er. sule on last of 19 NE\V 1 & 2 BEDROO:\l for n1 a t i o n Call Al.I '''ill L'Onslder partnership ar- 10 fJ£ HICEI Only 5"6.950 Assume This VA 11a.rhour !l?mes. 4 B«lrm. CONDO:\llNIUrif H0i\1ES =~IAN collect (602> ranging & will share profits. ~(ffN11L I • tr'S nm ' • I M.111\CALL 644-n11 /l. I (J /) 70;0 Interest APR rf:n~: &di~~~s i;:mSsI:;· Baylront }-Jomes Prine. Only. Call anytime day oLido J~{e · · ' · Boat Slips Commercial or nite or over h0lldayi1. Jay 1vith a loa n balance of HUNTINGTON HARBOUR Full Security Highrise Prop9'ty 158 (n4> 638-7~/{n41 530-7271 1 s • . $23,500. The payment or $202 St I & t u hiC LIDO \Valerfront. 3 Bdrm. & Jge. family rm., per/1110. includes Pl TI. Rf.AllY P~ate ~:i~":ii~sconi,truc on NEWPORT BEACH 17th Street or 5 bdrrns., with 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec-Sparkling 3 bdrm nilddle l i214 COAST H\VY. 2 garage spaet!s per unit . Prinie Bayfront Site Close 10 new Mont clair PlazA. Pride of 01\'t1Cn>hl11 unils in high rental demnnd Rrea. Show5 l:'!Xccllent SPf'ndablc. \\'ill trade d01vn or ('Qn.'lldcr flny reRSOMble 1cm1s. Of· lered for $170,!XXI. Call Col· well 6"6-0Ci55. "l.Iake ftoom For Daddy" . • . cll.'an out the garai;c ••. tun1 that junk inlo cai.ti v,11h a Dally P1l .. t Class1Ued ad. Call &j2-;£78, General MOVE INTO MESA VERDE FOR $1,850 $1,R:'..O do11·n .,.,,ill put you into a 1·ery ile-sirable J\fl•:<:a Vt'rfln nr~n. Stall']y U"el'fi, quiet ncif!h horhood. 3 bl.'drooms lhRt won'! C'ta1np · family roon1 llfl t"uisinc ct'nter kit· t·hcn. 1'"in!place. lntert'On1. Lt•rgc patio. Squeaky clean · 1 acant · mo\·e in! Ca 11 ~16-231J. OP!.'V T.l ~ • IT'S FON TO BE NCEI 11a ~'\>."· THE REAL ESTATERS ,\ go11d 11·;~1t ad ls a 1?,ood l l· ... ·cstn1ent. Gen!ral lacular V'·ew'. \Vaterfronl 11·v1ng rm. with of the blocker "'ith big back 7111: 816-1384 & 113: """·28·1,· Roof top sundcck Commercial y11rd ond lo!s of privacy. ""r. For boat repair & sales s tep--down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000. Hd11o·d noon1 with new shag Q i;ni""ll "";'-•• •• <.~t-ONS UnllSlla! Opportunity 10 Pur· Bill Grunrly Rltr 67~161 Excellent Mom and Pop. * * * I ,,a;,·w-~i.-o6 chase Baytront Proper'.y in Se 16 T k 11 · -• * carpeting. Huge kitchen 1 f 1 Newport n-a"h. T\\'0 adjoin· ing ;nrome pro-al!! . a e out un nutcu. R OT 0 !Do NORD I · 5 · h or n orn1.~: or and location uo:: ... o Juli 115 500 F \V . ..\TERF ONT L N L v•ilh bu! t-1ns. ubn11t \V lit 310 F ndo R·' N 8 n<>rties C()nter C""'ta M~sa. range us. · · or I I I d I n: \' "~c !·If·' !'-"IA homes, erna u .-~ ' "" 11 I TRI !!ARBOR 30'xl05'. Magnificent ViC\V! $165.000 ens i you 1a1'e or o.,.,·n r.I. 675.&551 ., · · 01vner. 645-2020/642-6560 pai cuars ~ · ~ BILL GRUNDY REALTOR payment let sell.er carry the REALTORS, 400 E. 11th St., 1 balarn.oe. Everyone <IUHlil\es. Kt\SA~!AN $197,500 MANSION Condominium s C.M. 646-325.5. 341 &aysido Dr., Suitt 1, N.B. 675-6161 Call f>.l.S..9-a91 Open eves. R'?al Estate 962-6644 Palatial thruout. 4 BR, 12 for sole 160 u1str. suitcsl. 3 c11r gar Money to ~Olin 240 General HARBOR VIEW The best five IX'fh'OiJn1 l\vo ~tury fanlily hornc in the area. Choice loc·.illon · ne11r school, pools <Jll!I g"l'l.'('nhelt. Good condition. !'l"icc land· si:apin!(. F~ land. Asking $>;1.500. LcJse option pos· sitilc. General START New Year in Business! C-2 Zoned on Tustin SL. sign 1-i:i:ib!e from 17th Street. Convcrlible building p J u s pai·l;:int;. Easlside Cos t a i\lcsn. 60 Ft cornei· Jot: l ·blk. to BY Chvner-2 sty ri.tonbcellol ;;.;:::.;:!,."::_~c:;;--~"°1 To1\·nhouse. lmmacuJate 31 t TD L beaclt. g,, J ;; Balhs. Pdvate S oa ns ---GEM-patio. Custon1 drapes. !\Jany 120-F Tustin A1·e., N.B. cx1ras. $27,500. 5 4 9 -2 7 4 5 UP TO 90% ... • REALTO RS 612--1623 bt\\·n 10.5. · 109 Gcorgeto\\·n 8\4% INTEREST Immediate Occupancy HH * l BEDROOMS * Ln. c.~1. 2 d TD L Sh•"• 3 BR. 2·, Bath ~ n oans Tibur o n rondon1iniun1. -Oen, dining area. 3 Ba, clean Income Property 166 ll\1onterey f.lorlel 1 \\'ith lots spacious 1-story, Cliffhaven. or e.-.:tras. Subn1it )'OUr Vacant. f.1ay lease. S79,500. INTERESTED? Lowest rates Orange Co. tenns, or 11ssun1e 'fl'.lr'. f-""HA HUNTINGTON HAR.BOUR GEM S•ttler Mtg. Co. loan \vith total payments REALTY l2().F T ·f A , NB r~our·ple.'C in .good . Costa 642·2171 54>0611 of $275 a n10nlh. It's \'t\cant 1i2\4 COAST H\VY. REAL TO~ in \e., &12-4623 l\!esa area'. Priced right at Serving Harbor area 2-1 yrs. and the owner SHY¥ sell i14: S.16-1384 & 21~: 59'l--2845 about 8.5 tin1es gross, Ask· DON'T BOR-ROW- 11ow!! ~~""'""'""'"""'""'""' FAST POSSESS. h>< 162.500. , FULLER REAL TY Irvine 11a1·bor Vlc1v Carn1e1 mode l. . . . . TIL YOU CALL USI 546-0014 unytin1e ! . __ ,_,____ 3 BR., 2 ba., tan1 ity rnt., l\'111gn1f1cent. new dup.lex 1n Bon'Ow on your home equity lots or extras. Price reduced Lltr,'llrut . i1•1th fantastic lea· lor any good purpose. Ser.i- }-funtington Harbour Merry Christmas Balboa Pe ninsula I Huntington Beach CHRISTMAS BONUS to $67,950 Including land. lures: .g:1an1 roonis. massive Ing Los Angeles County for M Ac NAB -----~----Cllrl help you buy this fi'E!~h· CORBIN-MARTIN lml4·onlCS and root ga~en over 20 years and NO\V In Vi\CANT. 4 BR .. 1 .. ,n. tm., $1250 Total Down ly paintcd 2 bath hon1e \\·ith REALTORS ,..7662 areas , and outstanding Orange Countv! " . . _.... cx.·e11.. 11 \·ie1v. _!\lolivatcd seller ~GNAL MOR.TGAGE CO. lg:e. kit. 2-Sty. SS7,500 ,.\nd only $775. rlo!tin g 1,.'0Sls ni ce private yard. It's lo-----~~---o• l\ll1r:;ha ll R('al!y 6i5--1600 buys this big l'oomy .t BR cutcd in Un iversity Jlark BLUFFS CONDO asking $136,;,oo. (714) 556-0106 I RV IN E CUSTOM BUILT 2 B1\ hon1c. Nc1v carpets and priced nt onJy $38.500. Vu lol. nu 3 br, fam rrn, 2!¥ Build "·hatevcr ~'OU l\'ent on 4500 Campus DriVl', N.B. CORONA DEL Corona del Mar and all the 111.lest '"fixtures ." CALL 552-7500 b11, din mi, ncutrll l knraslnn Ulis l'hoicc Corona de! fllar Mortgages, $189 Per n1onth pays every-VIS IQ N crpt, 1 many upgrades. be-conimercial lot . parking T ust Deeds ~ 260 - --------• MAR Corona de( Mar thlng including 1axes1 Better 10,v market S61.:AXI. \VIit lse for 14 cars and a 3500, build·l;;;;;;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.J hum» jui;t repo11sessed and opt. -~Y anxious o\\·ncr. ing ore de\'elopment pos-1• IRVINE TERRACE No othrr home like it. F:xtrn Duplex \1'011't IHst Jong! BKR 640-lOi:i. sibilities. PUT YOUR MONEY Extra ,vide Jot in prin1e location. 3 BR's, 2 features Rfliorc. ll UJ;c living _:%=.~'"°'::;II::.·______ e red hjJI BAYF'RONT . . TO WORK FOR YOUI baths. $79,500. Ron Sherman 642-8235. lZ36) roon1 with OC{'at1 vie"'· Price Reduction DEAL FEU. THROUGH . 6 BRNR<CHBAANNEL ENT. O~mt ,:1; on\1·111,h;~e~PIP•,.tn.,;:,.on: Earn 10% or more on i1·e11. Dream kitchen. llu~f' raml· If )'OU ill"(' even vaguely in· E."lccuitve home back on REALTY REALTO.RS . , + ~auna, ne1v 'ro .. L>I "'"'. ' secured 2nd Trust Deeds on HILL TOP HI DE AWAY 1y room \l'ilh ~p<trate sew-le1'('s!cd In an exceptionally 1narket. Huge custom pool Univ. Park Center, In1ne ~st furn .. 1n& gn If I cent tcr .. Additional btul~ing area Orange County real ~ate. with vie\v of Bay & Ocean. Quaint custom Ing roont. Cozy study wilh 1wll designC!d 3 Bit 2 BA. "·ith elcct i;lc i;1vecp +child Vleiv, huge deck, lg boat ava ilable : long his.tory of SIGNAL i\lORTGAGE co 2 BR/FR in model condition. ~~,900. Lois built-in desks and dark ground floor o11·ne.rs unit safe play yard, all framtd Comfy, Co:rv dock, S3:l'1,000. Art Shapiro rent grossing approx1n1ately . (71.i) 556·0106 . Mill 642 MSS (Z37) "l'V"I' room . i.~our bedrooms . l\'ilh a $200/mo garage apl . by lush private grounds. -r Co. 645-3120 $12,~ a year. i\ s k In i 4500 C Dr N.B er -o"' • Oversized garage. Storage In 1111 excellent corner Jo-Elegant master, private Condo $99,500. ampus ·· · for bo.1t. Call 67J.-S550. ,. k ··ou 1 d ·r kit h PALERMO BLUFFS ON A BUOGETI ca ion ncur a par ·. ,_ s u y, 1v1 e-Aaver · c en, Call 6';)-722. ,· S:l,.200 1st for $30,73)·, -·• Ow 11 1 3 BR b I $4 9 500 CAN'T 1\1-'FORD TO OVER· and garden \•lew dining. \Valnut Square Condo, super S512 a nio incl l!Y/a 'Tn"t; ner says se . eau y at , ! LOOK TlllS PROPERTY! 0\,·ner must have fast , upgraded, 2 BR & den "'A" •I BR, fam nn, super clean! \\-ell-secured by 32 acres L<rmaint. area. Immediate occupancy! Reduc.'tXI 10 $84,500 fast sale. Assume \01v in· fllod cl. Better than neiv, $76,900 ,.;:....,.I abutting Inten;:!atc 10 nr Jack Ho,vell 644-6200. {Z38) 644-7211 t1ehrcst 1 loon orR~u dnan11c ~~:~~~t. 5;1:ir11~ c as~~~~~ BROKER 833-0780 Desc1·t Center, Ri\'ersldc e erms. ._.,_,11ce o l '"""'!~~'l"!'~~'""'"'"I Cnty: .,.,·ater available. Bx &UYERS CHECKLIST elm $39.500. Bkr 002-0011 13!,000. 64!'>-'llOO. MONACO $63;90o-3 Apple • V•llcy !714 1 14 Bedrooms /Large family 1 ' ""'"'· 3 ~12-'1« /Formal dining room • • ' ' ' • CONDO SPECIALISTS " T BH. 2 BA. super clenn. room /Gourmet st'ze Waterfront! . • HA\'E ONE TO SELL? '· E. fl0\t'8.rd & Co. Delightful df'COI'. 1831 Porl INVf:STORS \\'l\llletl to n1ake e \\'E CAN DO !Tl a ~~~~""~';._~,~·-~·;;;.~ Kln1he1·ly. 6"-1·83TI or buy trust deeds. 638-5()15 /In Newport ~ch kitchen Mountain View! c d I Ma WANNA BUY ONB? • BEACH Uvlno. I ~lk. lro m OUPLEX-$39,900 Maje"k Mortgage c.,0 ·_..1 1 $69,500 GREAT NEIGHBORllOOD . OfOftQ 8 r \Vt--:·v~: GOTTEM! e OUR wate1·. 3 BR : 2 BA. conv. Garden Apart1nents {ti 2 BR Cookie Allison 642-823S (Z23) Channing 3 bedroom home, Bachelor Pad SALESM!;N ARE BONDED. NICE ANO NEW 10 huge m'"" BR w •lrplc .. I Bath Ill l BR . I I must see to appreciate its larwin realty inc. Tt'l'llZZO entry, formal dining, Blt·lns. 2 car gar. on alley. Ba1h, prlv111e paUo!t, en· !ten~. LINDA ISLE nu1ny asnel!!. With Pool 96&-440S * (24 hr.1} lRrge mv..ter suite '''Ith By 01vner $4 2.500. 642·3400. closed gara~s. built·ins.l '·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii:\ Custom home by Rulon Hodges, desi~ed PETE BARRETT On ft ~ntroos 60xl00 lot Equul Housing Oppty. double doolo tis. Noy,· under lNVEST In Coastal Prop. Quiet street. E:<cf;'llent con· I ~ . by Herb Bro,vnell. Panelled LR, DR & FR. In "'alk·lo-privnte com· construct 11 50 you can add Newport Crest new 1750 sq. dltlon. Houses Furn ished 300 Lg. master suite w /fireplace & dressing . -REALTOR-muoity tre1tch Coron11 STORY BOO K RtlSTtC ON ~~fioopel'SOnul tou c h es. tt. condo. Below nu·kt. G room. 2 Family size BR's & large work 642-5200 1-llghland~. a \1·ell decorated LARGE LOT. Shake roof · 'c · LL s 6 9 . 9 so/or t e 1·. 011·nr eneral room. $255,000. Evelyn Gray 642·8235. ll l! .. ~-!!!-~!!!-!!!-~!!!-!!!-~-!!!~-~-~-~-!!!4~I 2 Br, 2 Ba ho1ne \vith and ,1·hltr "'OOCI i;lding. L.ot1t' A 552·7500 64~. ---------1 fornlal dining. 5pa.e iou i; of dl'C'Oralor 1v11llpaper and VISION VIEW·VIEW·VIEW-$110 • Urfl pd. Nlt't ~ch. HARBOR VIEW MONTE GO THREE BEDROOM ma!'ter 11ulte. l"('Ar ya1"(1 1vll h poUsh l'rt J>nnellng .. S<t~ate k JNV~i"i\t~NTS garage I: pool, Corona del Largest 1 -slor. floor plan w /• BR's. Nt'cel& $ O p._'\tlo sun d<'ck 11.nd large CAndlellghl dinln&:. ro,'\rlng 1-1411rbor Vlf:l\\'. rww i\fontriro (71•) 17~SOO r..111.r. " _ 26,. 00 tree foi·rn pool $69,500 fll"t'!pl,'lct In Jiving roont 011.• • d h I [ Br, flun rn1, l'r\nu: \'le\1·. oo; E. EUCLIO Sl'Wl • 1 Br. lite cooking, prl decorated w shUllers. custom drapes CALL 644-7211 ly 133.950 end""'' c8n bu.v re j loc. STI.!!00. G I SimpA<>n. F"", "!!TON y111'd, tn!t'!ii, child/pet, La· l. $7S 000 J C1,1n't bc•t this cxcPllent .. V M B-k r.• ... ....,..,., ·\.IL.ML ~ush Karastan carre Ulg. ' • oyce e.tlB it flllV\\'ll" )'OU like! Bkr IV er. ;t;)J'.•IOIVU. ~runa. value ln ne1\', fast gro•Nl lli: . "· " 4 UNIT APT BLDG $185 &yl 1 l B b ii I dlund 64,2..8235 (Z28 · beautllul 11.Tea. l.A!ss u1un "962..,~l l REALT'i' REi\LTORS 2 BR. hon1e on quiet St. . • • · ron r. u t· n!I, \ 1 , • Univ. Park Center, Jrvll\I' Dbl. gar. Paved alley. ~tart your mvestmt'nt pro-prlv tic:h, chlldlptt, &lbOll. "1" 2 ynt. old nncl ha• 2 bllths. t t ABANDONED 3 BR'S Fortin Co. Rll r!!. 642-5000 gram today .,.,·ith lhLs -l uni! NU~VIEW RENTALS --~--~----------..., double ~~ltlp, bu 11 t ·I n bldg • Bil Ch G t s-··~ ,. kl d d d / Ne•• r-n11··• Pork. •·nmll~ BROAD?ilOOR, Turtle Rock DUPL'":X , .,..., -.""' ' " · o~• · rca 1.i-'>\NU or 494-3248 I lrvl I tchen an upg111 e w w ... ~ •u . ,. "" nr ocean, ...,.,......., Jocallon ~ta ~1esa Inc nl M11Nll--INlf'll"9eHyCllmP1rtr carpcth1'J llnd drape s. INVEST NOWI size llvt~ 1'00m with brtc New Plan 3. 3 BR .• fl\tn . l\1ile11 Lanon Realtor s7140 vr. ll)'"fi> On SG5 000 · l BR cott~e. $110, C.M. Also ~eteran!I, No Down. othr>l'!I This l0vtly dup)cx -charm· fire.pince . Step-uver kll ehen, nn. 2 ~i ha. Sel('Cl your 613-8563 wtsleY N 1-yior Co w11.lk to bea,.h, N.B. SlSO . • need SI.JOO down. 64&-77ll Ing j' BR., 2 .ba., "-'OOCI ('Ol'n('r lot for .1n1~1cy. 11.fove. color corp. Pi·lme loc. '-"UICK ·CASH REALTORS • & . Bachelor un!l N.B. ~ • Open eves. burning lrplc + br11.nl'.I ~ In condllJon! S-12,50(). Ce.U ~1:· David 0 . Ca&k~ ,.. 2111 San Joaquin Hill!I Rd . ulll pd. Ag!. Fee. 979-3430 IOI Otrrtr Dt'IV. 141·12JS 11U llooAt1lltlr .u-uoo N...,.rt ... ch, Callfornle IHIS Walker & Let •t•~ .,,.,, deluxe 2 BR.' unit wflh nr~ Tht RHI Ellale Fair THROUGH A Nowport C•nier &IH910 Bolboa lsl1nd patio. NO\v"t the time to 536-1551 You don"l l'lffd a gun 10 _ buy & mnko mon<yl "nr.w F8't" when you DAILY PILOT TAX TIME BOY 4 BR. ""'" early Jan. 4; MORGAN REAL TY place 11.n ad ln the Daily Prl!patd lntut!l down. 7 b:lk to bay. l..fJ' BR't. 67:1-6~l 675-4459 CLASS SEW! -642-W Pilot Wnnt Ads! Call now CLASSIFIED AD I Unlt ... NEW. 1'1 U<t'r. E"t STUDENTS WELCOME. • 6-12--567!. -0.f. $ll.9J 82, ft\6•4114. 213-289-8366 l'V't'I. --____ ..., I ' ' . l DAILY PtlOT· ·) JONATHAN'S FLIGHT CLUB ... ,..~ . .'~ '~ • For Young People Seriously Interested In Flying. Instruction In All Phases Of Flight. NO FEES Call Captain Rex Bixby I 714 I 557-2978 EBRONIX TUTORING CLINIC READING ~MATH SPELLING DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) Your Child Will Receive Guaranteed 1-to-1 Instruction • At EBRONIX-Where Reading Is Enjoyable 2750 Harbor Suite 7B C.M. 979-1626 JAPAN KARATE FED. 325 No. Newport Blvd., •s N.B. Niles 642-8387, Days 551-3683 ·SPECIAL . CHRISTMAS RATES 20% OFF KAAA1£ Founded in Orange County in 1960 by Dan Ivan. Director Japan champion Fumio Demura. Chi ef Instructor of Newport Gary Hallenbeck. NO CONtRACTS NO GIMMICKS In b~ach area seven years Houses Furnished 300 0 n •ra l ~--~--~~ . ~ , • Schouls an(I Instructions j · Interested In ·· A Real Estate .Career? IN SIX WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR 1 • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers r _, e Ern;1loyment Assistance For -' I . Graduates With / Leading Brokers. , • Day And Evening Classes • Broker Exam Testing • $110-Full Course ' For Information-Brochure FrH Guest Lecture Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Si nce 1964 ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A Newport Air Associates Flight School & F~ing Club LEARN TO F~ Y $550 * FAA APil»ROYl'iD * Course Includes: 35 Hours flight time i 1 Cessna I SO's with 20 hours dua l instructio11. Clu b membership. 3 Month's free dues. Ind ividual instruction, tailored te YOUR ability. 15 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RilTES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to ffy now - -and have fun I * Fly Mexico & Can.da * Special Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Complete Details Call NOW 979-1155 ' G>e1l!t@~?ae~~ Anna's DAY SCHOOL Kindergarten thru 3rd Grade REGISTER HOW , Ages 2 thru 3rd Grade • Full LearJ1ing Program e Phonics Stressed e Arts & Crafts • Music e Reading Specialty • Sports Activities 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Mesa Ph: 646-1444 fbi11 va riety of fin e schools could introduce vou to a new tomorrow. , For further Information regarding placement of advertising in tl)e Daily Pij9t Schools and Instruction Olrec!!ory ' j l CALL 642-5678. E,XT. 325 PILOT:AOVERTIS ER 12 ouNt nfum. 305 Newport ShorM WALK tO llEACH •• , . . club, tennts & pools. We have 3 &: 4 en. homes trom $350 tno., yearly Call today! Tht!y iro tMt CAYWOOD REAL TY *· 548-1190 * San Clemente •---------------.. 11r-----------::;:::::;::--,12 BR , rangt" & O\'lll), cpts W4t..'\."-ii & drps, ocean view, newly You ... i_, = $11>. 146 M,arlpc""" MEN & WOMEN OF ALL AGES MEDICAL ELECTRONICS INHALATION THERAPY SURGICAL TECHNICIAN MEDICAL & DENTAL ASSISTANTS MEDICAL OFFICE MANAGEMENT • An Exciting & Rewarding 8~ · Professional Career .Awaits . M. .. o'' You · .. CLASSES STARTING SOON, DAY OR EVENING ••• Deferred Payments PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE BLAIR COLLEGE 1801 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA CALL 645-2922 FOR A FREE BROCHURE txperience mate:J tlie Be:Jt :Jeacher:J The MTI faculty draws up· on over I 00 yrs of accumu~ lated business and teaching experience to make each class more than just another text-book course in the fields of: Accounting-Bookkeeping Data Processing Secret aria 1-C le r ica I Business Administration -Day a11d E.eal11q ClasHt Flnoiteinq olld f'toc•me11r As1ilto111ee Approved for Veterans MTJ Business College 2100 NORTH MAIN STREET SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA 92706 Phone 541-2673 Firehouse Gallery SCHOOL OF ARTS & CRAFTS DAY & EVENING CLASSES CHILDREN & ADULTS Tole & Decorative Painting, 3-D Decoupage, Pottery & Ceramic Classes, Lost Wax. Oil Painting For Children & Adults, Corn Husk Dolls, Apple People, Figure Draping, Print Transfer, Sculpey, Reverse Glass Painting, Macrame. New Craft of The Month, Each Month 17211 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (Between Warner & Slater 847-5588 II ·-tousel Furn. or Unfurn. 310 Want just a job or • II ' I I I General An Exciting CarH rl "' , .. Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL today to see if you qualify for a position in the · AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. Day · or evening classes can prepare you for a position as • Reservations Agent • Ticket Agent • Air Freight Agent • Travel Agent • Tour Escort Tuition financing also available. I Pacific Travel School 610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana . ' 543-6655 Approved for Veterans' Training JOYFUL NOISES PRE-SCHOOL Now Enrolling EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH 1912 Florida, Huntington Beach (Near Beach & Adams) 536-0123 or 536-2651 PRIVATE SCHOOL Late Registration Being Taken KINOERGARIEN THRU FIFTH GRADE 9 A.M. TO 3 P.M. • Phonetic Reading • Arithmetic e American 1"Iistory • Castilian Spanish & French • Bible History • Large Grounds & Pools From $4.00 a Day Plus Extended Day Care Phone 646-1170 261 MONTE VISTA COSTA MESA ' 3 Bdrm£., 2 b;\., turn. yearly .••....•• · · • • $300 3 BR .• 2 ba., unf. new -;;arp, drapes, decor, yrly. $325. Waterfront 2 BR, 1 ba. year- ly. Uni. $300. 1 BR. 1 ba. Yrly. Unt Can· nery lire&. $185. 2 BR., 2 ba. furn, l•.'inter SJ<MI. associated BROKERS -11 EAL TORS ir25 w Bolbo" 1>71 11>tl Newport BHch·--- BAY Ave. yrJy.Yacht club & bch: Ocean I blk away. 2 br & den, 2 ba. cov. patio, firplc, all bltins, gar, Lend to lhe charm &f this prestige setting. Ready to move in. For appnt 67"J..l~. 673--0149 or n+zri-0455. Condominiums Unfurn. 320 Huntington Be•ch UlG ne\v 2 br studio. -greenbelts. pool, nt frwy .i:.: bch. Child ok. S!l:l. 82'1-'52; Newport Beach $80,000 CONDOS Live in luxury, "''ith l BR .. 3 ba. + ocean \'i<'\\'! Nev.'port Beach. Rents fronl $400 Month. GT:>-6050 SHARP l sty Bluf.ts condo. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Vacant. $450/mo. Sale by O\\'J\er, $5-1,995. \Vil! take 2nd. &n-8035 EXCITING Bluffs 3 br. 21 ~ ba, nr tennis club. Lse S550 mo. Sale by O\\'ner $74,995. \Viii take 2nd. 833-8635. NE\VPORT CRESr CONDO. 2 BR, 2 BA. Wet bar, frpl, near pool, teniis. Drps, ex- tras. $425/nX>. 552--0175. -----NEW '3 BR, 3 BA, din. rn1 .. frptc, dbl gar., cpts, drps. many qual. exlras. pool , ten- nis, sauna $450. S.W--3M9 San Juan Capistrano FOR LEASE L'Ondo-3 hr. 2 ba, 2 car gar. Di5. 493-1007 dys, 496-6.qfj() eves. Dupl•x•• Fum. 345 Corona d1I ·Mar + SPAC newer 3 br.2 ba, scrv porch. WaJk shop. 516 Iris. $300/mo. Lse. 644--6682 Nswport Beach . LUXURIOUS OCEAN- FRONT 3 Br. 2 Ba, fr. pie, closed garage. $450 Winter. 673-9499 or 982-4214. Duplexes Unfurn. Ci rona de1 Mar 3SO 12 BR, frplc. $285 mo inclding I util. Stove & refrig. Crpt~ r'ru out, GT:.>-2572 eves. N'!wport Beach FABULOUS V I E W, OCEANFRONT 2 Br, stove, refrig, closed garage. $300. Yearly. 673-9499 or 982-4214 ~Fi);;,-360 llalboa 1-;land ·-----! !Jr! Apt avail for 6 mos or yrly. 1,~ blk to bay. ST t:nF.NT'S \VEl.COME, c-all 213·2AA-8:"165 eves. Balboa Peninsula $35 WEEK & UP S Sleeping Rooms • Housekeeping Rooms • Ocean Vie\\' Apt• BALBOA INN 105 Main Street 1)75-8740 3 BR, 2 ba, \\'inter. frplC: 2 houses fronl sand, $25(1. lo June 28th, 67~131 . Costa Mesa "" 305 Houses Unlurn. · 305 HouHs Unfurn. 305 Unbtllevably Btalillful 305 Houses Unfurn. 305 Houses Unfurn. Houses Unfurn. 305 Houses Unfurn. ---'--'==;__.....c.;;;; ALA RENTALS Irvine TENNIS BUFFS v_;;,~,p,·isE,!E .,';::."•,;~:; 9 i •. \GUNA ·.Brand ne\v three h10_S OK 2 BR TO\vnhousc condo, 1 NEW HOMES NE\V 3 & 4 BR homes -,0 Only ste_ps to tennis court, everywhere. Stream & ~ Huntington Beach Irvine rtuntington Beach Gen~ral Costa Mesa S :i -Singll'S ol:. B:11· .,,l'•r' WI \.PICIALlll IN Utvicr 11_ ha N H bo R I I I I NEIV t f I p d All .1 1 beU1"<J0~1. ,; b:lllis, spect11c-3 Bdrn1, 2 ba, freshly pntd. r; , .r ar ur, _en Turtlerock, walk to pool, sw mmtng poo rom wa er a I, 45' pool. Rec. 11 · 1111 pu. ulur \'ie"·s rroin inassivl' New cpls & drapes stove or lse-opt1on to responsible 2 Bil, den, 2 ba •••••••• $4~ . & hl °''Zl08 l bedroom. (or 2 & den I, Rm. Sauna. Sgl.s 1·1 Bdr:m, Homefinders 547-9641 f fii't .,."°",'.ES · ' 122' · Id 3 BR 2 bat"" '·'35 tennis sc !I. o.l-U" • ! I di · fl I If F U f _ -h:1lcon1cs • S.1:J5. .~ refrig. Near schools. party. J 1no inc ' '"' • .... •• • .., onna ntng, rep ate. se um-n w11. 1Q'.lnl $142. Lagu na Niguel I • L OU,lS. Corona 1lcl ]\far -Beautiful I \Vilson & Placentia. Fenced 1naintenancc & pool. (2131 3 BR, tam rm •• 2 bll ··.•· $450 Laguna Beach cleanm,goven, beautiftil Can-SEE rr: 2000' 'Parsons --:->Jl:1riuus, south of hii:hil"ay, yard, fruit trees. $275. 439-0969. 4 BR, fam rrh, 2% bR. • $475 . • yon vic\vl!llg!".t lighls. Con· 642-8670. • ' 3 Bfl, 2 ha , romp. furn.P'i-1 NEW'Oll a. U.1' c.M, •42·1JIJ thrt.>e b1:.•(huon1, 111o balh. ~i7-3850. $l85 . 3 Br Mobile llomc. NEARLY NEW , $160 -Util ·pd, Small 1 Br, st.ruction will be completed $30 WE&k & UP crptiona!ly nice. Be au t 1 J>l'IV \TC: "'~ M· 1 Only $42.'i. D P . Kids/petsls.ingles 2 BR. l~ baths ...... $235 steps to beach. Deck. . by the t st of Jan. l.p::ated •St di • view, 493-21 •11 or <l\J2-:.:l4j , I ; ' k· -"""''u a .urcl , :\c1\ ixw, Ueaeh -Buyrront ana o1nt H ef'nder , . 547-9641 2 BR, 1 bath ... -•...••• $300 $2ro -2 Br. Ocean view h\gh on the hills of ~rbor u. Or.: l J5R AP,ta. . ~ eves. Treasure Hcaltv. '1 ~ t~ .ini;. Lii • P81' • 1o\vnhouse _ piivfl!e ,,,., fo•· om 1 S 3 BR fam rm 2~ ba •380 Apt. Nr. beach, lrg dcc.k. View Hills. t;;IVI per nth. • 'J!V l MaJd. SerViCe Avail. !-'---~-~~· _ 1 DU PLl·.X 1 hr, Lil Aval! ~-· ' · NE\V ocean Harbor Forever . ' ' ··"" J325 -3 Br, 3 Ba, new 644-4687. ..,,,., • P hone Service~ Kt<f. Pool Lido Isle CtrJsc in, sn111H rct ok. ....> boat · three IX'droorn, Vlev" 4 or 5 BR 3 Ba 3 BR, Condo lO blks fro} 3 BR, 2 balhll • • · •· ·' • J: rrpts. dros, ded<. heaut vu! ~ • Chflclren i: Pet Section Os \'.".'\TElt ~ tor. $150 rurn. ~-'95balh • below n1arkc1 at Fam. rm FP Cpts dps' 2oc13-e°{'62 S:2 n10. Adults on 'I ~ ~~· :n· 2 ba 2 ba 142!1 NU-VIEW RENTALS $1~ -2 Br. Cottage. "',~ blk 2376 Newport Blvd ... CM WINTER leaw. beau1. So. l,;lil fl'lid·Xol\'-B:ilboa P!'n·· .,.. · only m' mo.irent. ~r seli -· eves. -' nus rm, ·' a 673-40.W or 494-3248 ~ach & b8:y, Balboe..~ • 548-9755 or 66-3967 baylronl home; 4 BR., 5 ONLY 2 on lot, :t br ~175 $79,500 675-7414 Irvine $250 -2 Br, bltns, bile yard1 (Ad good for $5 on rent) ba., beaut. furn. Sandy bch. Fnc:d \\' Rar. ret ,(0 sn~I o::. ~i1 ·ion Vit io gar, Ne,vport Helght.i~ Pier & float $1650 l\To. FAMILY uni1 :: hr SJS.'i l-IARBOR view, All I a r g e 3 5 $285 -Util Pd. Comp! redec. LBGIE FULLY FURN. !2 BR Bill Grundy Rl11·. 675-6161 Bltns, c· d. :->n1. f'lt'I , n.r1tlo. elaborate house. extras, 2 BR., l bath $225/ I FOR LEASE: 4 BR, 2 BA, 2 BR, frple. gar. yrui:t;~CdM .. tns, pool, bellm cell. NICB 3 2 ,. $350. lse. 496-91461496-3548. ~BR. 2 ba, den, a le S2'i5 tam. rm., lush cpts. drps, NU-VIEW RENTlLS Ad1,1lt.s Cintant ok) no pet.a. 3 BR. 2 BA, nr. tenni s ' ·· · br, · ba S2'l~ MO Hunl'•ngton •-ac.. 3 BR., 2 be.th~ . $38.5/425/45i0 fantas. tic view. Water ..... id. 673-4"'" or ~, .. '"uo S:180. 642--95Xl. crts It beaeh. $350/l\fO. 6 J'\1ove Bl!ns, c 11, fned w/2 · ·.::.=='-"--"-~.;.;_;.;."_ 211 ha h "75 .,... """ .. ~6'W .,,, C'I --3 BR, t II ..... ' "" "0JNCE 1"'6" Avail. now. $335 m 0. * SUNNY ·~s . I'OOL --t.ase ""' "''"9 ' · ·' · BR 2" •· ""141:1' ~ '" B"'ND I I ty 1800 ~' • """"' • .,..'-""'lilV 1101\tE'i' 3 br, 2 ba S~Ji 118 Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA cul de.sac, 4 • n ,,.,Ill" • · ~ "" l!iil \Vcstc:m Bo.nk Bldg. 837-7309 '"'' nu 8 ng e s ' • Adults Poolside $150 Up HoUMS Unfurn. 305 1Ml 10 hth. hR~ u all'· s1reet, Ref/R&O. lg fncd CALL 552-7500 Univet":;lt~ Park, lrvlne . Newport Beach SQF, 4 h Br 2 Ba, lrg • A190 Children's Section E·SIDE •I hr. 2 h.' 1"• No"' 433 W.111hCOSTAMESA lot, dbl gar. $260. ask for Days 552·7000 N'.J.ts Fam/k2ilc en. fol'!'" di!!, 171-E 22nd St CM 642-364" ' ,,....., ., ~-I 962 '4n VISION 'V'' lrplc, car gar. pr1v tennlS . · . · ,, Frpl1'. hltns 11 "" g1irdcner. Corona del Mar Dae-, ""' · QUIET. secludod ma, but & swim c1ub. $495 mo. 1 BR, !ipaClous, 6 unit l'.:XEC. ;, br, hui;.:e fUJu rm --~· ----S~ • l Br. Rea!_ Nlce Gar-_ 2 BR Condo , •• , f.l25 Mo/I ~hort ·walk lo all servi~s. 6445686 . eves & wkeJJds bl4ing, Hke new Jiarage.1.. LANDl:ORDS! spoo~ 2 f11llC!1, 3 l"l\I', \V/&d, 2 en.-den, din. nn. 2~ age. • d h"ll 2 BR Condo ~ •••. $245 Mo/lse -111¢1. S""wttn & ntl. -3 Br: 642:ml.5 !'.lays SIGG, AdltR:; I)() pers~ We SptciallU h'I N~·pon BA. laun. FP. tatio11, 1800' Homeflnder1 547·9641 re I 3 BR Home •••• $295 moflse 2 Ba.$330/mo.PM, 673-1417. NEW exec 4 BR. 3 BA w/1BO EJtlen , 640-1512 aH 6 • General :6~ C4~~-R~~t~Sl'~ lll'R!n~~l;l$t, ~~~~; ~~.Y~~ 5· 409 Cold· 3 BR, l ~BA, bltns, dr!t~';::; r.EAt.. TY REALTORS ~ :~ ~~~: • I: ;::J: "';;;~!-F~~~t:1~ ,!.bu~~s degree v1ew, ten-Us &_ pool ~RG~ Bachelor, $125/mo. ,, \Ii(» It riu::E to You· r,; Costa Mesa ~~· a;:;pln:-· s: 2 9 0. iJ .. lv. P~r1< C.nnfm", lrvint' 4 BA. Home $300 l)lO~se ~ nR' .. 21At 0 b:i. $400 Mn.' . L~1m0• Eves & ~knds, ;1!t e&f°~t/I· no Nu.v,·ew.• $ LANDLORDS $ ----~nor -·~ --4 Bl\ Home $425 mo « , -. now<! Arrt. 644 -0134 n•. !--. S150 -Slo•lt~ Ok. 2 Bl\. ~· -NEW 3 BR, l•mily rm .. RANCH REALTY 561•2000 ;; 2 !ledroom 2 Bath, NU-VIEW RINTALS !.~·1 ..,,; r1.'.1i ..... t 1,r.,perlie$. F'ournlex:Nl'\v crpt 1,,r : Bedrm, l bath, bltns, large , TUrtlerock Avail Feb. lit· tw -b -2-ha !l Ji 0:'. C'"f:!f:"l1VI? \•ic ' N .'Jwpor ~ H1lghts ~~ CrY1tid yrly $.125 ·mo. 673-4030 or "9"-3248 \,(' &C'rvi\'l' rdl lhe beadi Homeflnders 547 .. 9641 Jot, dble gar .. S22S mo. 1450 Mo ' · · N 3 r, , bltlnt, hnn1e, te.nnls, pool, ram rm, _ 'l 4'\.~~ qr O) 728-27.f9 3 BR house, C.M .. nso. 2 Si~~s .'": in!1111rl Qrungc Co. Ask for Da1e, 962·447i CArl80n, 'rutr tu-929.1 tco'"m'hm copamrpk, "", tpoo'' 1 """'Nr' dln nn, $800 owner. 6*).-0008 RUSM'" 8· ro~ :' • r .,. Y-· ..... ,,.t ~ mm I Br. •'Ilk to beach a.Jbon. F1':i:: f'ttEE. Stivr Time t.t. S$ Don't give up the 1nipl OCEAN View house above . ! UCI ~ .. ~ &~~1 · '>UPER 4' BR, 2\ol_,ba, lam ~ ' ' .. ..-UI' ,._.. • ,,_. 0 flSs. 2 BR heachfrollt, H.B. $ALA RENTALS$ "List" II In classmed. Ship ~---. $160. ht .i. last Have 10mcth•ng you wanl to , '~~ rm, dining, club w/pool & ~•l·r.u11~' ~ti <lrps, "l)nw J'ui'• ......, JOU Agt. Fee. 97MOO Ne!"'pon & Bay, Ci\T M2-~3 to Shore Retu.lls! 642~. h'i;);;n\·s rtnt. 536-0321. aeU! Clll&'llfled ads do lt-~-mLS -6(2;:£78 lCMIS, $470. 644 .. 4186 ton, ~:;MRI~ J~~ 'f>t~ ~~Ad~! ~ t:: • . • '• • '' :~ • ,• • ' I • , I :I :I ' . ' ' .-- ,..~ar~ADVERTISElt WtdnrsdaY, Otctmber 2b, iq73 -·, !::~p-_t_s_.-~~~-u-_r-n::.:::::::::::::~-~~A~p-t-.~u~n~l""ur""n...,_;_;__..:.36;;,,5-'A-pt. Unturn. :l65 Apts., Bu,lneu Renta l 445" 1 Lost 355 Housecleaning D•n! Point Costa Mew ,· Newport Beach Furn. or Unfurn. 370 "TllE F"aclOry" has a lrg LOST; Siamese se~t ln1 -'Ded--lc_a_t_ed_c"'1-ea_n_l_n_g _ liii~"ijji!ijiijjiiiij~iiiiii 1-----"';-----;.;.:.;;,,;;;;;,,;..;:;,;,;:.::,:___ Costa Mesa shop aVaU. Sl8S/1no. In male, 9 mos, no fl.ea coi\tar, • WE DO EVERYTIUNO • D 1• S d O I Tuesday, Ote~btr 25, 1.973 OA!LY PILOT Relp Wanted, M & F 710Aefp Wonted, M & F Yfo "' ' ' t ., ' ' MM In £ Cannery Village 425 30tb St., Vic. of !BOO Blk St>nll•ao Refs. !'re• e<t , 646-2839 e 1very-un ay n y ~~~ uw all new Dana LlJXURY' Lrg 2.aR. ad1111•, NB. 642--1960. Dt. In Dover Shores, Point llarbor at the '• bltln$, pool, nr s:hopp'"" I d 1 I R 1 ,50 Newport Bcacb, on 12/16. Painting & beaulltul MARINA lNN D c.-enter & hi.IA, 1941 Ponw~8. ~r 1 enta ~ If yau have intor of where· Ptperhangl"!_.U ___ 1 OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- Motel. 3490'I Del O~lspo St. llie ~ bo I ll "'" "169 --QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION C491M353), Ki!c h e u, Ef-' Newport BHch *COSTA MESA* ~-·~a"roP . .,., ca ~ PROF. PAINTER flciencies A Ai>artmenlo. 680 s ~ -~-~ 1,.. '"" S O K WAGON OR VAN, CONTACT MR. BENTON Ilea1«1 pool, dlt'OCI diQI -Bachelor Furn $20S 1300 s'.'r. UPrlv~;;; ~i-, REWARD. Xtl'a lrg blk male HONE T w . R Wlr.tlAMS,-SW WEST BAY STREET, cos- ·---t •-·1 ion ~ cat ll5 poun•·1 h't h' d Reru;, Jnti't'xt, tree estimate. TA MESA TELEPHONE 642 '321 FOR AP P°'-"K"S, e""v s ~ sauna BIG' Ocean View. Yc11irly lease. plenty of parking. "" w 1 e in . .., • bath, 1 a un d'r ~ ra.clUtles, Heated Pool. Adult~ Only. Larger unlt11 available. feet , neck shaved beeause I ~R;:•;:fs::·..:548-::::27~59::·~64::2:::-39=13::·--PO INTMENT. "'' « .,. , • "'" ru A NB c ROBERT NA'ITRESS He. No. 279514, insur., I qua pportun1ty mp oytr Come play in o ur MJ~ Calre:.u.~ ' REALTOR . Vic YourktO\\'n & Ward, types of paper. 71 4 : I ~~----~· -~=---=---~~=c' !),!'<emtlengnle~mLa, gut ... na ae'oaSach". PLllVNEESCtRU~J:K ~ LAS BRISAS APTS. Ready for oc-cupancy. oafte"""nee<1"'o'furgmed''Y,.,·a1d"'atpatenr-. PROF'. wallcovering staalte An E I 0 . E I •portliohiJt<, shopping & TO ITS E ' • from 400 Cost. Mesa 979-6.5n 968-5788. 842-4386. >ielp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 re&talU'ants. SSO week&: Up. Over 500 t tree& Rooms l{ELP, Lost brownish blonde EDDIE Pfgz o e co rat Ing ;;n~~~frsta!ee~·,r::l-:e and 10 s "nia with OCEANFRONT lovely pvt NOW LEASING long haired cock·a-poo,ans Secvice. Reasonable rates. BABYSIITER & li te EXECUTIVES waterfalls ate a $11·60 ..room &: bath._w/ldt privgg Huntington Be•ch ~ .... ~~. ba, $10 neward, Neat work. 49'2-3630. housework, 2-5Plff. !\lust $15,000 to $75,000 l~•!!!!!!J!!!ll!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l I relaxing sQtting for 1.I for college age non-smoker, NEW M-1 '100-0"°" INT/ EXT PAINTING ~!'!v~ ......... &a.fteber 5 PreM•pon. sible . Send ~ume or call TODAY Huntington S..ch Your spacibus new 1-or female. $12S. 64£>-0668 U'>ST: \Vhite poodle, 12/23, ~" for confidential NO COST ---''--;...;,.;;.;.;.;..._ 2-bedroom lfl;J)(U1:mcnt. Small At Oakwood Garden Aparl· •~~=~=='-"=---• 940 Sq. Ft. & UP blind, needs medication. Free Est Jlm 675-3559 BABYSI'ITER/Housekecper , executive interview. $15,S..$165 pets ok. FfPrn $170. FumJlure moots ATTRAC room, kitchen priv Hamillo,. '· Nro"·land SI. vie. Nwpt Hgts. "" "'16, Plaster, Patch, R_epalr Live in, Call 8.10-3348 After EX~CUTIVE SERVICES, BACHE a II bib Offi 9 00 GREAT RECREATION: swim· Laguna Hills area. 960-1970 Q'tQ-Vt LOR & 1 BR. Patios, va a · ce open : 1 h •~ 64S-4M4 * PATCH PLASTERING * .6:,_P=";:,'·7",..---~~~ INC frpl c's, prlv. garages • Di· to 6:00. ~ Fairview Rd., mbl ~g .• ~aunas .. ea!lh clubs, l~'--.-2!-~24-09~--~-l""~~~~~~~!!!!•Ji;]ii~~;;;--;;;:;;;;--;;<:;;-= ~ R ID 888 N. l\Ialn, Santa Ana Yided batb & lols of· closets. Costa Me:nl, Phone: 545-2300. !liar s, 1enn1s, pro & pro R t I t Sh 430 4001 BIRCH NB LOST: Lrg. male Irish Set-All types. Free estimates BA f.1A . \Vnn!t'd , The (n4) •"7-962·, shop, golf driving ranne, pany en a S O are ' ter, also \\'bl fem. mt'xed ~-'I ~A,. """" Reef N1tes only No phone ..,.. Rec. hall, pool & pool tables, Park-Like , 3600 Sq Ft Spr1· k]--> Lt ""'11 ~a · · --=~-+.--..,.-.-room etc · · n ~1'-"1.1· • terrler. 12/21 o• Balboa jij;;;;;j;f,;~'-"'~"-~-1~~1~0~~~\~V:C~~h~~·~~~·~-E S I G ' I .. u"" batl••· See for ~u-S d · · WANTED Roo t W k Mf Wh t st Ba " · "• o.:;u • ·• '' · xper. a es 1r ·-,, ,. I FUN ACT IVITIES· F"ll t'•me ' mmae. or · • se. ora••e. um· Pen>'o. Rewa-1!! 673'"23 Plumbo'ng 00Jf. 17301 Keel••n Ln. Cl urroun ngs · u • In I d 55 I 0 " ~ BOOKKEEPER F/time. Exclusive \\'omen's --DELUX" 1 .. 2 BR A director, tree Sunday brunch. g a y, • w sh::s to share @rdner, 541-5032. !boa 1 1 blk. W. of Beach, 1 blk N. • ~ "' · pts. BBO's, irip s, part ies, and 3 Rm. apt. with same for ~!i,l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii~~I GREY"" eat, male, elderly, ,L.R. OTIS PLUMBING TRAINEE .,.,ear store. Ba s and. o! Slater). ' Also J.lfl'O Bachelor. more! rent. $50 & % light & ga~I deaf, bent ear, vie \Vest c;lill Remodels & Repairs. \Vatcr Local co. seeks sin<-'t're in-_C_•_11_67s._2870 __ . -----' 142.7848' Pvt P tlo<> * Htd Pool BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: lpe~r~m~ondth~·~N."co~t~d~e~Ju~x~e,:bu~t.l;'~~-~~~~o~ls~il~~iJ;l~l 1 _'-Pl..,;u'-· "-"'-R'-'e'-w-'a"r"d.c.5'::1=.8·.::864:.:c::1._ heaters. disposals, furnaces, (!iv. \v/good skills & desire t~ACTORY help needed. No RETIRE~ people, clean, Nr, Sho~lg * Adults only. Slngles, 1 & 2 bedrooms. clean, comfon able and reas· . . dshwashrs. 64U263 l\1/C & to learn. Lite ofc expcr. expcr necessary. Opening quiet apls. at 'the beach. Mart,tnique Apts. Furn. & unlurn. With an the onable. 2079 Thurin Ave., B/A. Complete P!un1bing helpful. Great srarting !lJ{ll· on nu 3 shifts. Apply in $$ ~., Im Sr.Ht.a Ana Ave., CM exHas. Models open 10 10 7. C.M. Avail Jan 1st. I l~' Service. Lie. 272694. ary. Xln't oppo1·. for ad· per~ns. Reeves Rubber. 415 .,.-Sor"', no peis or children, 'Announcements 500 ·-~-and R-~ I A P•'co San Clr meote 536-7006 Mgr Apt 113 fi46.55.12 ·J SHARE comfortable home -__..__ .._.. PLUMBING REPAIR vancen1ent. ve. • · · L Bu $180 • LOVELY & Immac. Oakwood with responsible person. · . No job too small Jason Best. Agency G ENERAL OF-FICE-agu~ en 2. Br., 1~ ba. Nr. trwys, Garden Apartments ~vet~• yardft ,· 2 car gar. FREE· SHOWING ** 642-31~ * * sl'.',t0021"31'ookht1l'SI, r'.963Vl6y7.7~ Employer pays fee. Start jOUI' SI'UDfO. "partly furnished. Walk 111 schls & shops. B1wn vt<r '"" 11 pm. All kinrls of c 5 · /Alf t" ui e . · ·1 New Year w/this moving Oceanside of ll'Ary., at Vic-Baker& Fairview. No pets. Newport Be•ch/North PARK Newport townhouse HORSES FOR SALE arpenter ewing er.l ions CASHlER·FEMALE, part -~storage co. Xln 't starting toria Beach. Cedar panel-Move in Jan. 1st. Call hv.ne and 161~ 64&-0SSO shr. w/2 fem. pool & tennis. Sunday, Dee. 30th, IOAM,., * All types * Big & small. EXPERTISE • Alter. Ladies llme, for Retail Nursery. salary, co. benefits for ing! pathway leads to 540-63.38. New port Beach/South 64~167l C9to de Caza, Stano. & Mens. Pick UP & delivery . Apply 'in person only at bright indiv. w/avg typing, beach, close by. Avail. Jan. iiiiiii"i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim 161h a1 11v1n11 &•2-1170 Garages for Rent 435 Trabuco Canyon 536-1648 548-TI97 after 6 2'211 Fairvie\v Road, Costa 10 key & lite expel'. Also 1st. $l55 Per month, all _..a~~-nu· a) So. on San Diego Fwy, to El T I · • R ·r ~':::"=':::'=~----~-Fee Jobs. utilltle11 1>4id. ~.....,.. lit MINI WAREHOUSES Toro, inland on El Toro Rd., ~arpet Service e ev111on epa1 CASl1IER/counter g i r· 1. Jason Best Agency MISSION REALTY 494--0731 2 BRiil BA Unfurn $195 PARK NEWPORT STORAGE follow signs past O'Neil JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery COLOR TV Repair, expei1, J\1ust be able-to \vork grill. 17-tOO Brookhurst, F. Vly. EFFJC, apts lrom $5(1 wk 151 E. 21st .St., CM No i 1ove-in or Move-0ut Park to Coto de Caza. Info: Dri Shampoo, (Soil Retard· reasonable, n1ost in honie. Hrs 7-3 :30 J\.tonday-Frld ay. Suite 213 ~775 or S170 1no. Pool,· maid, ;t 646-8666 * APARTMENTS charges. From $7.50 per Dee Harvey, 838-6975, Max ants). Degreasers & Antenna service also. Bert Call 833-8691 GENERAL OFFICE ph, ldry, Village Inn "''!!!''!!!'~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!" Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooms month. l-'Bo-"-nhoc•c.mcc'-'586--"-0~7~61~.----I all color brighteners & 10 Gallemore, 968-2783. --CHECKER Xln't starting salary & re- 494-9436 NEW ADULT LIVING . and Townhouses 1-lamllton & No>wlann st., HB LEARN Hydroponic vcge-minute bleach for white Tile AUTO PARTS imbursed fee for sharp in. 1 bdrm, view, Victoria Beach I BR &: I BR w/ loft. Frplc, Fr. $194.50 Open 9·6 Daily ALLSPACE table gardening. Save food carpets. Save yaur money need parts man to start im· div. \v/avg typing & lite area. s218. 497.1841 ar beam ceil, patio .& pool, Spa Pools Tennis 9~1970 $$$. Costa Mesa Womans by saving me extra trips. CERAMIC TILE NE\V & mediately. Full time in fast exper. Lots of PR & friendly 494_2354 before 2:00: bltns~& retrig avl. Starting Across from Fashion Island Club. 610 W. 18. De<:. 27, Will clean living rm., dining remodel. Free est. Sm jobs growing auto parts chain. atmosphere. Fee Jobs Also. $180 I pd. Adults, no pelS. at Jamboree on San Joaqum FOR Motor Homes, Boats, 7 Pl\1. Coup!., $5.00. SinoJes rm & hall $15 An I 5"2426 Jason Best Agency Newport Beach 393 amillo,, 645-4411 Hills Road. ~-o ·• • Y rm. "'e come. -xr-• 111 E. 19th St., Cf.1. Furniture, etc. 1652 Newportt~$3~.~00~.~~~~~~~ $7.50, <-'Ouch $10. Chair $5. Top Soil 645-8264. an Equal Oppty. 17400 Brookhurst, F. Viv. $35 per wk & up. 1 BR, 2 Br le bech's. Color TV, maid serv, pool. THE MESA, 415 N. Newport Blvd., NB. 646-9681 2 BR. 1 ba, bltins, crpt, (714) 644-1900 Blvd, Costa Mesa. 548-9766 15 yrs. exp. is what counts .;.:.:;_:,cc;_ _____ , _,E"m"p"IO::,Yc:'"'"'=-----I Suite 213 963.6775 drps, $150. mo. 1st & last eONE MONrifF.REE Office Rentel not method. I do work *QUALITY * 1· + dep. See n1gr, 2244C Ca· ''"' myself. Good rer. 531-0101. CLERICAL D all 0 ,. 22 NEW 3 & 4 BR, 2 bas, frplc, PvsoBals * MULCH & TOP SOIL * Immed. Assignments. Top nyon I'., or c ~14 patio, plush cpts & drps, 1 DIBERNARDO & Sons -* $$$. Long or sho11 term GUAlµNTEED skill !rai ning. plus! Today's ARMY has 300 job opportunities. 2 BR, S200 ~·Inter or S250 yearly incl util. 1019 W. Bay Ave. 673-1674. eves. Blk to beach, 3{W & 304~ carpet sales -installation 586-6930 2 BR-2 aA. Dble. garage. E. Balboa Blvd., Lease yrly and repair. 963-2639 '!!!!!!!~i!!!!!!~~I N~~~-IWEc AT 'fEh1PO. Avail.. immediately, l yr. $360 & $425. mo. 642-2800. Personals 530 Cement Co t = ll i J] TE!\IPO Ten•por'11'Y llrtp least. No small children/ •----------1 ncre e Photte_Cll.4) 6'1!;-J!63. pets. $275 mo. 318-16th Pl. ~~1:1°'Ad~1t:3"'•0;,~ 1:; BEST MASSAGE IN N.B. PATIOS, walks, drives, con-'iiifli,,..ioiji"'ji"'jj'"iii~~~I COMMERCIAL $120-1 Br dplx, marr. epic, pets. 1'128 Bedford Ln. 3400 Irvine Ave. Suite 1038 crete pumping. Llc. no. 1 TELLER * GUARDS * San Clemente Resident Hotel non•moken. no pets. Qrpt, $250/mo, 548-T:»J. ~. B~.rgb~Open 8 AM. 255915 DOn 60-8514 Job Wanted, f-emale 702 OPENTNGS NOW San Clemen•• $79.50 Per Mont h ~rp·1 7 RheSf. C& dep req. 954 NEW DUPLEX 3 BR, 2 BA, FIRST mo. rent free. Dlx. CEMENT: Patio, drives, Experienced FULL & PART TIME Quiet _ Secure · t t. l\f 548-03.58 Winter. $250/mo. Day s offices nr. airport. 1,2 & ALCOHOLICS Anonymo_us walks-Repairs, saw & NEED help at home? \Ve • Retired ok Fum-utll _ walking distance NE\\'LY DECORATED 979-316.1; Sat & S un , 3 Rm. spaces from $135 Mo. Phone 542-7217 or write remove. Free est. 544-8998. have aides, nurses, UNITED • Xlnt Opportunity College to everything 2 Br w/carport, $145.. Wtr 645-0232 Janitorial serv. & ample P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. ho u s ekprs, companions. CALIFORNIA BANK Students SAN CLEMENTE pd. 2194 Placentia Ave, "E" parking. 833-3223 Bel. noon * PALM & CARD READER Contractor Ho memakers Upjohn •Car & Phone rt!q. C ll b 1 & 5 LARGE deluxe 3 Br. 2, Ba, ---------------2301 S ~ • Time & 1h for over 40 hrs. HOTEL a twn , G:"sG-4120 l blk to ocean. $260/MO. or 833-2840 Aft. noon ad w/reductlon. 10831 Beach GERWICK & SON 5117-6681. . .,-fain Street UNIVERSAL e 114 DEL MAR, S.C. e 2 BR. 1 ba & 3 Br, 1% lo June. 202 42nd St., NE\V Deluxe Office Space Blvd, Stanton. 527-3406 Bldg Contr. Addit & Remod Help Wanted, M & F 710 Santa Ana PROTEC'rION SERVICE Apt. Unfurn. 365 • ba. bltn range, drps, crpt, upstairs. Vacant !168-4i767. For lease in Choice Mission FULLY LICENSED State Lie. Bl-ll4321 (547-9581) 403 No. Harbor Blvd., 1---------.,.--' poclc u' cluAbrm,.e.~~· 2212 2 Bedroom, blw, DW, near ~Jo Af~:O Plaza. Good Sp' * alSPIRITadinUAUSTIO * 10 673-6041 !>49-2170 Account'ong Clerical Equal Opportunity Santa Ana oege ve . ............,.. Hoag Hosp .. Adults,$220per "'"'Y ouamp at Avery ll'ltu re gs a.m.-JACK T 1 · E I 5.54-1433 Ge-ral Park Call O p J Ad . ll tt au ane, r e pa 1 r • RUTH RYAi" AG,.NCY l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!m~p~o;,yc!!,.!!!!!!!!""' ----------t ... 2 & 3 BR, ba, crpt/drps, ma 642-4387 way. wner, au pm. vice on a ma ers remod dd LI B-1 269072 , -,... poo. Is playgrnd $150 Call . ' Brazeau 'a'JI-1400 312 N. El Camino Real, M W • "c · ,,.,.c.A 1793 Newport, C.M. 646-4854 l·IANDYMAN/ Janitor with 2 Br, ]1,Ji Baths. foreed air • · up. BAYFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba w/ Sa a t f t all Y ay o. D'U-'t703. 17931 Beach, H.B. 847·9617 COOK pool exp.full time, for Com· heat, dishwasher. 411 14th :64-C5-0~l-'-40C.,...~---~-lrg patio, priv beach & pier. DESK \Viflace ~4ble ·= 49:r.9~~:9-:00-: app c · DON MAIER CON!rr. co . ..,..,..,..,...,.,.,.. ........ 1Exper. in nursing home cook· inunity As soc ia t ion , St, H.B, 536-0869 or 1190 2 BR. Adults, no pelS. BAY $..'">.'JO/mo. 979-0631, 644-4510 mo._ prov f'. urru . Also catering to parties. Major remod. Lie 285692 ADMITTING CLERK Ing. Bayvie\v Conv. Hospital, ~3319, 646-5768, 645-2389 P.1EAOOWS AP'1'S 387 \" at S5 mo. Ans>A·enng service --~-~-~-~ ••7 2336 11 -· • 08 '''"'"~ 1'1 . A C 'I Balboa Peninsula Bay St., CM . .e .• .e h...73. "· 2 BR, 2 BA, near Hoag available. 17875 Beach Blvd. PROBLEM Pregnancy, Con-""· or > £.Y-rVl · Hospital exper. n m~•st . .ov.'l:J iurin ve., "' · HELICOPTER U'fO""VV Hosp, $190 mo. All electric. Huntington Beach. 64.2-4321 f i d e n t , s y qi pathetic Electrical & General PACI FICA HOSPITAL J,5:;:4c;,0-;,56:;00:::.·~~-~-~ J MAINTENANCE 2 BR,.11$ ba, balcony, enclsd ~untingto'1._Bta~h_ * 642-4721 * _ . . ~regnancy counseling. Abor-Lic'd. 842--0731, 645--0357 Huntingt_on Beach _ COOKS · To train for ussis-No exper. req'd. WU!· train. :~·r~~~°r~{t· J~5c!ii ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~:::;;;;;;;;;;;;l ~ewport Heights P!1~ru:isl~~e:~ ~~doptiOnsl-ef.~-Gardening \ Mo.n~ooh:~~~~ PM ~~ir\ 6~~r.;,.k.G~0~e~~ ~~IT;~~ ~Y _1521 ,,.,. _.. UNDER NEW Beach, 861 SQF, to 2,350 ::c:cc::.:;:.:.;'-"'------~==='--=-="----1 benefits. Jack In The Box, benefits. Now interviewing. ,,,._... ar '1't0"""1' •i MANAGE * PLEASANT & DESIR· ~F ... i;-,,...., or uniup:J. Reply LIFE , OR DEATil ·• EUROPEAN ~ d ' l BR be il t b MENT ABLE 2 Bt· pool 4gar , ... it_~:.;.. .. , C.M· .·~. Let OOr babies ''live. For -ar. e n.er·. Adv"'ert"1s"1n· g 1205 Baker, Costa Mesa. ARMY Opportunities, cn4 • am ce • roman u • 2 BR. Bit-Ins. Ne....·ly dee· : ' ' · nox UV'I """"'° · Maintenance -Landscaping. 0 ENT AL Ass 1· 8 ta. t 0&1~;.,,100163".'------~ 1 .$1~. >'ncl utJl. " p :.->.·g. Adults, no pets. $180. 548-49'12 alternatives to ABORTION " °'"' """ .. " orated. Encl gsrage•. "-au-SHARE exee ocean view Tree Removal. V e r y Jl • SinglH only &l+-0997 = A t call LIFE LINE 551-5522 c 1 Chalrside, min 1 yr exp, HIG ·-commissions,-cable · tiful landscapiog. • -play P s., suite & sec. in Union Bank ' reasonable. t:.t?_o;.').?Q eves. d• t TV bs 'be Sal Sa ~. I 370 24 hrs ~ oor 1na or some eve hours, desirable SU en r es, n OCEAN VIEW • Spac 2 BR, area, a child's drean1. Close Furn. or Un urn. Bldg, Newport Center · MOW & EDGE Orange County Location. Clemente Area. Call Mr. f.rplc,gar, sub-lease $250 mo lo shopping & schools . 644-!»40 SCORPIO - I love you & CLEAN UPS 54~ aft llam Tompkins, bt\Yll 8-5 pm. 673-8300 or eves, 673-9105 C1Jlldren \1•elcomr. Costa Mesa -1617. WESTCLIFF-NB miss you. · · MERRY e 554--0657 e ORANGE !\Ion thru Fri. 492-6350 Corona del Mar Call 842-0.180 TI'E EX'CITING 2300, lnO, !200, 720 sq. ft . CHRISTMAS LEO_. COUNTY DENTAL ll eccptionist, "-''="-'-"""'o-==''==""--1 .,_ General St,rvices Laguna Hills, El Toro area. H 0 US E K EEPER·live-in: 21fii. dup. downstairs, Sl50 PALM MESA APTS. 55c per sq ft. Ample prk'g. Exper. Salary open. Replies routine cleaning & lndry. mo. Ocean \'ti. 119 Hun-l\11NlITES TO NPT. BCH. Utll. Baumgardner, 541·5032. [ l[gj "THINGS" by \loose. Gen'! PUBLISHER confidential. 830-1130. assist lv/cooking, mus I tington Ave. at Baltimore FURN. OR UN1'"\JRN. Ollice "'/beaut view, 565 Sq. Lost Ind foud Carpentry, Repairs, Plum· Complete kno\\•ledge of print liiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiii.. drive, Priv bdrm, bath, col· & n:unting1on Ave. Call Bob Unbelievably large apts., ft. Newport C.enter. $425mo.1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~.:~1 bing. EI e c , Remodeling material, placement & bill-ELEC. TECH or TV. Refs. req'd. call !\.!eyer, oUice &W-65.'i() qr huge pool, Jacuzzi, elect bit-Professionally decorated. II .642-=-'560013=-. -------I ing. Respansibilities Include Min. 1.2 yrs exper. in elec-,-~~5~123~ji;;;;;~ji;;;;;;;ij (Sk~~ TOWNHOUSE home, 546-3110. ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna Estate Really, 646-1120. Fou d (I ad ) 550 c AR PENTRY, eleetrlcal preparauon1s of1 '1Chededwte'·a1& tronic test & measuring _,,,..,... '1fr . t 2 etc. Adults, no pels. Ofc suite, 1000 ft. Suitable n rH s plumbing, fix-it. F & B contracts .. nvo ves . 1 oi;i equip, bread board assem· BR, cpts, drps. bltns, SINGLES Fro 1150 R · ... & production coord1nauon bl I & d' · I · 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private patios, continental break· fast. Spacious grounds, near shopr!.:-.z !: tine beach. Fur- nished or unfurnished, from $250. Corona del lotar, carports, nr. frwys, shon. 1 BEDRM. Fromm $l6.5 fGorarddoctor~.~1u323n t Ing t o n FND. Retriever puppy, male. Home epair, O'Ur'-1403. I . y, ana og · igita C'll'· ,.. cn<r plus agency & chent tele-cuitry. Fee Paid; Also fee ping & schls. l child OK. 2 BEDRM, From $lS5 ens, · 6 wks. Bet. Modjeska Canyon Hauling phone contact. Send resume Positions. No pets. 646-3786 or 545--0760 Unfurn Apts Avail from SlO Business Rental 445 Rd. & El Toro Rd., near ----------to: Lynn ee··la, CBS Pub-HELEN SCHAFFER .... WALK TO BEACH to S15 LESS. Irvine Park. Call any time, LOCAL moving &: hauling lications, PO Box 1757, New-PERSONN EL AGENCY 2 & 3 Br, Cpts, drps, bltns, You're right, they're under· OAFF~CEt on 1NewpoPrtarti~1~?·.1-548_-4050 __ . _______ , by student. Large truck. port Beach. 4262 Campus Dr., B-4, N.B. 644-26U. 'J gar. 308 16th St. 536-8548/ priced~ 1561 Mesa Dr. vai · on ease . a Y FOUND male German Reas. Barry. 534-1846 or 5.57-2711 S47-3957. (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) furnkln. earpeA ted, a1•000r/cond. Shorthair, liver & white, 673-0647. * Admin Sec'y 1:-:::::zz:z=:::::::=:::::::: 1 -~---=----1 "'°·"""n ;>at g. pprox. sq. do•k Costa Me•a area 3 BR 2 Ba nd • • WALK TO BEACH 1 ----~-'~----f $250/ w ho al ' . 0 ' GET ruo OF UNSIGHTLY grou i1oor t. mo. are use so 642-0411 Career Oppor. for highly ENGR duplex. Sgl car garage Brund nu I, 2, & 3 Br, cpts, THE EXCJ'l'ING avail. Ideal for CQntractor.l,VE'°"R""'Y=fl~~.--b~l-k-mal-TRASH to DEBRIS~ skilled administrator. Must ID\nNE PERSONNEL across from tennis & park. drps, bltns, gar, 22116th St. PALM MES"A APTS. 548-2616. 1• h~tiOnate e ·LOAD.,, • ., .e.!LE28 GE • have exper. in: ELECTRONICS 11'\.VI AvaU. 12/26 $325 mo to 1147-3957. ttINUTES TO NP'l'. BCH. B " R I 445 cat w w tie spot on neck. _D::E""N.:.T.:~::::C-"'"-----./ lnterfactlng w/all levels SERYJC •Ar'<•V"V .,,72ll A t us1ness enra Vic Irvine Town Center. Ph uJ of ma"•-meot. BSEE, 3-5 "'""' exper. de-ES•"""-'U"I\-1 mo.'"'"" g • 2· BR I BA Bit · t Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $150 LOCAL moving & ha ing ·--.~·· .,.- OlARMING new 3 Bil, 2 drps,' 1 blk ·to be1:'h c/iri Adults, No Pels. NEWPORT SHORES 1 "'6""':,0:.:1=39::·~~---~ by student. Large truck. I Meeting & conference in-signing for CQmmel'('ial Of>'" BA apt. Convenient CdM 1561 Mesa Dr. 600 To 1600 Sq. ft. spaces, 2 GREY Sch_nauzers, male Reas. B81T)'. 534-1846 ar vol vement. eration. \Vork on team rle-Happy & Safe Holidays location. -per mo. !Utr mo. 645-3().)3, 5&1-1336. (5 blks from Ne.,.,,port Blvd.) ava•·I ,·mmed>'atel ' 62od & & female. Vic Arch Beacb6 ·e.:73-064.:'.::o'.:::.:1:... ------• Supervision velopi ng a· syst~m. Di?,ilal See our Jan. 1st Ad ..,,., NE\V AplS, walk to beach, · Y· -~ IBM E & rd or analog ba~und help.. .488 E. 17th SL (at Irvine) CM 644-7270 I, 2 & 3 BR avail. 546-9860 Pacific Coast Hwy., Newport Hts area, Laguna. on Sun SKIPLOADER & dump truck .... xec. mag ca Iul. Fee Paid/Also Fee Jobs. Suite 224 642-1470 2 BR 1 BA ' d """.e""' * CASA VICI'ORIA * Beach. For office use, bar-12123 Call 499-2109. "'ork. Concrete, asphalt, machine helpful . HELEN SCHAFFER • • carpe s, rapes, ..... ,.,...t..179 ./ Delegation of work load · · fireplace, pool. 'N '=E=\v~D~u-p7le"·. -. "w"a~lk-to-lK~·h, 1, 2 & 3 BR furn & unf ber shop ' or any business. FND: Long haired, beaut. sawing, breaking. 846-7110. _1 H•'n'ng & f>'n'ng · PERSONNEL AGENCY 1225/MO. 675-0562 ·• Carpets, drapes, 01\V, TV Rents very reai;onable; grey Persian. Very lovable. .... · 4262 Ca l'·g 2 o• 3 BR bltns DIW G YARD, garage clean-ups Fee Pa>'d/AJ00 Fee P-ltionc rnpus Dr .. B-4, N .B. · • • • , ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria month to month or lease. Vic. Meredith ardens, rm ,........, dirt I "" "" " 557 2711 Fat Profit U attal1'ed when NEW 3 br, 2 ba, deluxe. cpls, drps, frplc. !)4~9722 C • ~ ~o 2204 remove 1.4<=!1, • vy, HELEN SCHAFFER · Everything you want. No St, at Harbor f.t M~-:i70 67 & O ) .......,... · driveways, stumps, 847-2666 PERSONNEL AGENCY }'OU sell through result-get· I se Call 6~ .. 91 2 Br unfurn $140. storage 2 WEEKS FRE~ RENT 5 .. 05 FND: Dalmatian puppy (?I FT -="ITURE V 4262 C D 'B, NB • h f , t d · th W t t>'ng Daily Pilot Classified ea · •.:i-tt1 • S3l d t' 979-1070 32 . r ul"l.I, an ampus r.. -., . . l e as cs raw in e es . LGE 1 BR Bl gar · ay ime 1 Br furn, util pd. $140. mo. .... ••••-Cl llfC about 6 wks, Vic Paularino for local furn hauls & "en'l I 557.2711 .. a Daily Pilot Classiried Ads. 642-5678 · • apt. UlS, gar. or 536-0764 L 2 B unf t pd $155 _, '• • "-'-hool, C.M. '" •729 " $250 'I 1 i --~~~-----G' r, • wa er •1 • • = <HU-V hauling 548-1862 557 2736 •• o., year y. 3 BR ••L B p • 5= 0-601 Dover Dr su·,, 3 . ' -' Help Wanted M & F 710 u. •lo Want~, M & F 710 Scenic ProJ)e'r'tles 67>5726 , ,.,~ a. at10 l.rJ0\11.1, NE\VPORT 8EArn YNG. Siamese cat, lite taffy HAULING $10 & up. Big APARTMENT Mana. g er, ·li~iiiiiiiiiiii~' iii~iiiiiiii•'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Costa MeN 2 blks to beach. 536-6663 The fastest draw tn the West. color, fem. Oea coller vie. fla t bed truck & Garage older couple, expenenced, I ----------1 Laguna Beach . , .a Daily Pilot Cla_<(Sified Need a "?aC!"':' Pl:~:c nn 1-1"" Del Mar Ave., Cf.f 546-1182 Cleanup. 642-4032. 27 units, Hunt. Bch. 846-3166 UNFURN 1 & 2 Br. Garden Industrial Rental 450 Industrial Rental 4SO CHILD'S Prescri pt ion Housecleaning ASSEMBLER Apt.s. Fl'PIC, DI .. /. priv LARGE ocean view Studio, '-~·iiiiiiijiiijjjjijjjijiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. I ~lasses vie. M11lewood & Exper. & mature \voman, paUo. $170-$195. 557·2841. On(! blk to beach, frplc, I Redwood, C.M. 546-2826. HOUSE OF-CLEAN commercial e I e ctr on i c l BR, 11Ai ba. spacio11.1 apt. ~ec~iil~ewyrf~: {L~ S195 c N IFND. Sm. fem. miniature floors: ca·rpets "indO\VS & assembler for wiring & 'Child ok. $175 nio. 646-3572 1 • ' -MA AB Coll ie Shellie. Vic 20th & wall~. Free est, 642-6824 I soldering. 548-2622 or 757 Shalimar. iPACIOUS studio, 1 blk to 'Walla~, C:M, 548-5149 --HOUSEdEANil'lG · _548'-=_,2635=:..· ------ 2 Br ~ Ba, l child ok. cpts, main bch, cpts, drps,. $165 -Fnd .. -frish Setter-$23 n Day. O\·;n transporta-Fn""t re~;;lts .i.re ]:isl a Ph" th;>s, gar, $170. lfJ63 B. mo. 644-8478 or 494-4791 * 548-5946 * lion. Call 541·0467. . .. ,. . &12 5678. CoriMder Dr. CM . ri57·8150. llave something you want to L.ARGE 2, Br, triplex priv sell? Classified ads do it pa.yo, ·crpts, drps, bltns. No Wt'IJ • call NOW 642-5678._ pets. $165. S57-5080 · Apts. Furn. 360 1 Costa Mela Costa Mesa COSTA MESA AM BASSADOR INN $32.50 BRAN!> NEW . Weekly Rate for:'Slngle Apartment Specia1 Move-In Rate * hnllillted S ... ltt ;t Att Cndltlelled • ,... "'"""" * w-.,. & Dry9Tt * Cits.... ......... ' • l"'""" .... * U... .......... * A,,.,i.. h,.I~ * Mlf~..,...0 '• * ........ .......,,~! * ....... '"' T M ...... .... Water Falls-Lagoons-Fountains Stay A Day, Week, Month or Whatever . DAILY lATES FROM $9.00 .':ii HnRBOR BliO l'll\i.1 MfSn c~ ~!h .'I• 6~5 ~8~0 IRVINE INDUSTRIAL FOR LEASE Approx, 26,000 sq. ft, iilt-up warehouse/ mfg. bldg., 24-00 sq. (t , deluxe office, 50 car Vkg. Close to &an Diego ;t Newport Frwy>. tn Irvine Industrial Comp ex. Available 4/74 on short or lbng term lease. Gene Kermin. (ZSO) STUOIO OR OFFICE SPACE for lease in exceptional 'building in Design Plaza, Newport Cen\er,. SIIU!:ture & P iaza provide a stimulating I Jnlormal environ- ment for design pnlf!'Jsloital & buslness executiv e. Suites a vailable f;om 400 sq . ft. to 3600 sq. it. Page Noll. (ZSl) INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR LEASE Quality air-condiUooed office, 3000 sq, ft. with 2400 sq. ft. warehouse (part of larger bldg.) w/separate address, identity & park· ing: Choice Irvlne Industrial Complex loca- tion. Page Noll. (Z52) INDUSTRIAL.COMMERCIAL DIVISION Irvine 901 'DOVER DRIVE 642-2757 Newpo!'f Be•ch, C•li!Ornl• 92663 S©~~~-lt~trs· That Intriguing Word Game with a Ghuckle ltl~t4 .. y CU.Y I. ,OllAN 0 RIOrrono• letter• of the four scrambled words bf. low to form four simple ~ds. I SOCAMI I I 11 I' I I I OUGIE I; ' I I I I . I t_,T,,_T,....s..,v.,,....R.,....-;1 1 No wonder• nerc:ollcs ogent I I II I • and a gardener ha ve $0 much L-L-L-L-L....J. in common. Both are trying to ---------cut down on the -.tJ.·h.- 1 I~ El lt1 Bl I IL I' I e eo...,1 ... tho <huckl• qvolOd . . by mu .. lo th• ....... wont• I Yo.I d ..... lop from Slt:P No. 3 btloW. A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETIERS V lQ GET ANSWER SCRAM·LETS-ANSW.ERS IN CLA551FICATION 800 EXECUTIVES-MANAGERS "JOB OPPORTUNITIES" $12M·$75M Range SALARIES·NEGOTIAILE Ate You Unemployed Now-Ate You Seelcin9 A Ch1n9e -Worried About Yo ut AC)ot-Tired of Broken Prom isei- Undacided As To A Proper C-. .. r111 of Actio n- ARE YOU UNDER PA101 If You Col' AMwer Tlte Following Ccrtegorltt, 11 TM Afflnttotlff, We•d Like A• l1tt.nlew W!lh Yo111 IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do you ha ve 1frong voealiontl drive? B. Do you h<1vi good native intelligence? C Do yo1,1 feel 111f:icientlv moli'fated to achit"Ye1 0. Do you ha-Yo lhe ab:litv to n1<1ke d•ci•ion1 E. I ra ye11 ready to 5et 11 raali1fic c1reer obiectiwe1 F, (f you we r<! coivinctd that help we•-•v•il•l>l•..wo1.1lc:l- you acc•p~ ii, wilhout d~l 1v1 YOU SHOULD KNOW e The better jobt •tt not J1 d..,erti1ed e Tilird p•rty profettion•I Influence ;, 1ometime1 nece1• 1•rv • e GtHing !he rii;ht doo1t open, ti ihe right levtl !e• q11ir11t techniqut. (I Eiree.iHve po1ition1 are filled lhtough ••ec1.1ll"Ye iRttr· view1. e M ~n retull'le M•ilin9, it nOt • tot•I •n1wer. SEND RESUME OR CALL TODAY -FOR- .NO COST EXECUTIVE INTERVl~W ux:~!JTIV'.! S'.'!f!VI~ ·S, 1110. -HOME OFFICE - (714) 547-9625 888 N. Moln St. Soni• AN ISECUR lTY BANK BUILDING StJlTC 7011 .J J.5 PILOT ·ADVERl'ISER Tuesday, December 25, 1973 DAILY PILOT 19 Pets, Gener1 15 Cyc e1, I " Autos, lm~rted 970 Autos, lmeertod 970 _A_ut_o_1,_lm~po_r1_oc1 ___ 9_70.,Auto1, U 990 Auro1, U 990 Aulot, UMCI 900 Autos, 990 POODLE PUPPY BMW SALE 5 •Jld Beys S<bwinn. Xlnt1"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA CADILLAC Scooters 925 OLDSMOBILE CORVETTE FORD AU breed Kroomin& &: conctlHqn. $3.S. CaJl 11 bovdlna KtnneJ. M&-2848. 5ll6-alllll THE RED BARON'S 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY LEASE '74 TOYOTA 1200 CAO '70, COY, turq w/ Cl-lfUSTA1AS &harp, stock '70 FORD LTD Counll')' St.kt'~ CoroUa sedan ..• Gel 30 white vinyl top~ white If.hr '62 Corvette SB99 aee at Squire waaon, tully equJ~ OLDSMOBILE *Security Pot l'oocl* ill" C~l• S<bwlnn Bicycle, CHOICE Beef by 27c lb; Cotl cb load condition, S years old, tA0'1h.._ miles per eallon , .. Only lnt, beaut oond. pvt pty, Unk>n 76 Golden \\'est In "ped=',;;l"J.550'=='.,;642-ttiOO.="-~"""~-OMC TRUCKS $58.34 mo. 36 moe. oper. ~54"8-'-5856'="==,...,,~=-_wc."='mc.lc,.n';.,'•:.:r~~~--69 FORD WAGON HONDA CARS t5c lb. An Kennel 1uppllff $20. $5Z-7762 d:im..t.-.P -547•3977, 1418 Wtllhlre, S.A. SCHWINN, Red, apple crate, ~~ Factory At1thoriz~ DlstribU· tor for all Mercede$ 11roduclS New can · Pl\rtl • Se~ce A1k About Our Un"'uo Used Mtrcedes L••H ... i..... CHEVROLET COUGAR ~0~'!1~ UNIVERSITY OLDS ,l\1UST SACRIFICE. '69 Chev ·n COUGAR • .XR·7. -~ V·i --=~-~~JE~~~~=-foma~ -Blv~9640 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA SHETLAND PONlES REG very good cond, $ 5 0 . KITTENS, AKC TINY roY 96).-0149 art 5 & wknds. , POODLES, DUCKS, BAN· BOYS 20"• 5 speed Rodd· TYS, PET CAGES. 546-1224. n1uter. Good QOndlUon. $30. ~LI FOR Sa.le: C h I n ch 111 a 1 Call 96M2.l3 IXCllJ.eH1° ~ b~en, pets or enure ran· 250 YAMAHA $175. ch. Call 642w1579 Call 646-(NJ15 l~C I Cats 852 m '69 HONPA 90, $175, • ll!MALAYAN kitten, 8 wkR., U~~;xt;t~ms· ~ CFA, pure white, long, long '70 YAMAHA1 175ce good hair, copper eye1, very al· cond (Dirt bike ~s for 28402 Marguerite Parkway fectionate, $7$. 892-2970. II.~ lej:al)J "95. 833-8690 Mlsslon Viejo SOMETHING DlHermt! Rex 831·2040 C 495-4949 Curley haired cat1, neuten, Mobil• Hornet 935 USE AVERY PWY. EXIT Pl1ns House of Imports 6862 Manchester, Buena Park on the Sanla Ana Frwy. 523-7250 NOW OPEN Ml11lon Viejo Imports fl"!lt:trins: MERCEDES BENZ & '" '74 TOYOTAS LEASE or BUY New Models • New Colors " DUA lfJli& -TOYOTA lmpala 2 dr hardtop custorn ronv. One owner, 36,000 ml, _ coupe, automatic trans noor new tires. tune u.p. AM·FM ,55 JEEP Station Wgn. 4 1965 Olda. New tlres. just ahUt, strato bucket seat•. ster~. full pwr, alr, $3500. whl drlve, Chevy ena. Wide tuned, Cood tnmportallon power steering. Vinyl roof 644-6303 tires. Call 847-7720 S:.n::I. 548-3523 alr cond Red with whlte "·n""""co""u°"c"'"A"a""x"'n"1"s"1"",ooo"'""m...,.1. ~--P-INT--0----t tDp. 644--4687 P/Brl<. P/S "''· pdvate MUSTANG '72 TO\VNS I Sla wag, like party $2500 497-2286 '72 PINTO Runabout, 4 spd. '67 ~IVSTANC 1 Fastback. air, 16,!XXI 1nl, clel u.'<e ext Low niileage, eXCf'llent run· 1 _&_1n_1._1_ms_._6_7!>4_1_1s_. __ 1 nu, lo n1i, air cond & •hock" sms, pvt pty. DODGE 644-7311. w·=ILL""°"°tak"°e....,.l_cara_""(.'"2,..-car-.,.at, 1971 DODGE Crestwood sta. 3 carat diamond in on trade tion wagon. ~wer steering ror new car. 892-4444. & broker. air cond. AM/Fl\f 1969 CTIEVELLE ?,1allbu 307 radio, luggage ni.ck, till steering wheel, only 15,000 ning condition. New paint. PLYMOUTH mags and tires. $1000. I---------541>-2083 '71 Cricket 4 door, auto, 2.j+ MPG, $1490' 540-7215 brffdere:, pet &: &how quality , kitten•. 515-<522. MOBILE HOME ORANGE COUNTY S FIAT Complete SaJes &: Service Vlllt U1 Soon At 28701 Marguerite Parkway Mission Viejo 495-1700 (USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) V-8, air, &ti!'k. Very cleM. miles. like new. &14-4687 1966 Harbor, C.AI. 646-9303 $800. call ~3367. MUSTANG 'ti7 , V·8, auto, air, PS/J)'A'r disc brks, R&H, Xlnt cond, priv ply, $995. 536-9953 T-BIRD Dov• 154 FOR •SALE : OLDEST '13 CORONA 4 D,. Wag. Lug. '71 Impala. 8lue 2 <I!", 45,000 FIREBIRD . rack, 8900 mi. New cone!. ml. Perfect cond, Ii u --------- .65 MUSTANG Fstbk. 32,000 ml . Steel rad. tires. New e PUPPY WORLD e MOBILE HOME SILVERCREST & $3300 or befit . 968-6767. tl.rell. $1395. 644-4307. '68 FIREBIRD 400, Good paint. Xlnt cond. $800 NICE OIRJSTMAS GIFI Bull Dogs, Chihuahuas, Tiny 20' x 53'. 2 BO 2 BA, carp., Poodles, Shih Tsu, Amer. draped, bll·lns., refrig .. JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ 1964 Corv1ir $75 VOLKSWAGEN * 962-3098 * cond, very nice l'ar, nulo, 6-15-0729 att 4:30. Sha.rn original '56 green \\1ilh ="~~c.c.~~~--1 \\'hite hard lop, continental -'S'-tl'-00'-. -'s;;~·'-"~86_2 ____ '73 r-.1ACl-f I 3.11 <'id, auto. kit. XJnt motor, drive trt1.in Esk:i~, Pit Bulls, Bu 11 washer ~ elect. dryer, wired Excellent seleclion of pre- Temer, O>ckapoo, lrlsh for m air cond kUch · mod I Setter. 100 MIXED PUPS!! clock, stol'age shed, land: price re-evaluation es. stud Setvice ~toat Breeds. acnpect patlo. Thtte yrs, old oe,MO SALE Open Eves: 531-5027 • like nu. Located In new SAI..Eg.SERVICE-LEASlNG GREAT Pyrenee1. Snow adult pk. away from noisy OVERSEAS DELIVERY white. AKC Male pup. Show So One-hall bl. from club-ROY CARVER, Inc; & pet. Reuonable. 7 weeks. house. $15;9!J5. Call EVES. 234 E. 17th St. S.U-1'19T 213-694-4690. Costa Mei;a 546-4444 AKITA pupo xlnt family CAN BE SEEN AT : CREVIER BMW guard dog. AKC, """"'' CR EST MONT X·Rayed clear, prlv ply, ESTATES Sales • Service e Leasing 6@..2803 1051 Site Dr .. Brea. (Central 008 W. ls!., S.A. 8J5.3•71 St. Benwd. rem. AKC Ave. ·=" from Brea USED BMW'S rcg'd, Grand champ stock, Comm. Hosp.) Lot #46 '73 3 0 CSA 'DEMO never' bred. $150. Bargain. CONTACT RAY, PK. ~tGR., , • 642-8264 tor showing. 73 3.0 SA DEMO AKC reg. Silky Terrier pup-'71 BAVARIA pie1. Male &: female. s wk• Motor Homes '70 2800 CS old. Good Christmas pres· S11le/ Rent 940 '70 2002 enta. 830-2545. RENT A 1'lOT6R HOME _ '69 2002 GIVE a Great Pyrenees pup. MINI 1-101'tE OR VAN '68 2002 PY for gnat all Ytar love. CONVERSION, LOW AS 19·1-'-'-'-D-A_T_S_U_N __ Gttat Family 'Doc· l.l,fartin· per D11y & 6c per mile. crest Kennel, 546-0989. RESERVE YOURS TODAYl--------- AKC 8'>1-334L DA TSU NS, Irish Setter puppies. 20· -25· t.lotor llomC'5. NEW '74s Call MS-3177 SUperlor, Liletime & Open SOINAUZER, mini, 3 mo. Road. Ken We1'h 63!>-2981 NOW IN STOCK sholl, crop, BIS &I.red n1ate. BankAn1cr,J.c11.rd & Master IMMEDIATE S.P. 837-5460 Chnr;:e-nccPptl'd. DOG OBEDrENCE· Spon. by e Dale's l\'lotor Home Rentall DELIVERY Parka & Rcrr. For inlo. '73 23-26' M.H. & Mlnls B210's thru 260Z models AtrrHORJZEO SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons lmpolts (\Ve're top buyer for any used Mercedes Benz.) 1301 Quail Newport Beach 833·9300 EiVfF.R FROl\1 MacARTHUR '73 280/8, $4700 Buy back. 28 mo'a at $180 per nto. or sell at $8200 w/ :JO day guarn. Xlnt cond. Pvt ply. 640-003. '73 450 SL aJUPE $10, TJO owner aft 7 P~t ~ M·B ·n, 450 SL. lully equip- ped Ork Blue, Seil or lease, by owner, 551-4267 MG '54 MG TF, restored to mint cond, sec to appreciate, 1400 Outrigger, ... OM. 644-6680. MGB 541-3914 673-3180 556J.J300 FrC'C mil.es 9 Iii 9, ~ Ov('r 100 nev• & used German 'Shep pu~ple" r ., ECONOMY CARS MCB '71. 26 MPG. an•wen Blk ~ Tan, champ ,1,e<i 1 II ~ J ON DISPLAY gas crl•1', 10,000 miles, lush 5.1&-1314, 833-5858 1AuttsforW. _ $2580, Phone 644-0048 TOY Poodle•, 3 •liver & I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~ PEUGEOT white, AKC, \\'Ill hold for • HARBOUR ' v.w. Can Solve Your Economy Car Needs OVER 80 USED GAS SAVERS IN STOCK HARBOUR vw Clui"mu. 962-<IOJI r_r_u_ck_• _____ 96_2 NEW PEUGEOT POODLE pups. Blk std, 0011" TOYOTA .69, 112 T. · k 18711 -Beach Bl. 842-4435 3 wk• old, 1151l ea. Uun1. 25 MPG o. bl pie WILL BUY YOUR DEALER HUNTINGTON BEACH Bch 96~:1> up. '. ' ·~· 1 eng, DATSUN TOYOTA • n(>\\' t1res & brks, Goocl , ' Complete Sales and Service. WILL BUY YOUR HOl'MI 156 rond. $1250/bot o II" OR VOLKSWAGEN 50 compacts on d1'play. GAS SAVER 494-2'<10 PAID FOR OR NO'l". WILL PACIFIC MOTOR FREE SHOWING '62 au:v .P/U. 6' Utility PAY TOP 00,LLAR CALL IMPORTS PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL ALL KrNDS OF hed. 6 cyl. stick. Buckets KENT ALLEN. 540-0442. PAY TOP DOLLAR. CAU. HORSES FOR SALE & con,.>ie. $1110. Aft 6, 1971 2lOZ PEUGEOT /SUBARU KENT ALLEN. 54M442. SUN, DEC 30th lOAr>.I on . . Sf.6-Trl6. LOADED 1557 W. Lincoln Av~, '69 VW, perfect cond1 Coto de Caza, Tnl.buco Qin· 'til Ford Falcon Pick.up 61 __ Pri~·-va~•-' ~P~art~y,~67>.J808~=-i •·~nc:ah:.:e:.:i;;;mc..,,-~-:.:5.13-82'0o.:.:o:.: S950 979-3898 yon. So. on San Dre&o r"'Y cyl, bu_;:~~!'!'ats·good shape JENSEN SAAB '-.13-V\~1-•.-1-,,.,.--s-"'-.-12-,000- to El Toro, inland on El S:n5. s:~ nti. dlx inter., $385().. Like T~ Rd., follooN stgn1' past ,:,.o:,::;CH='=E'°'v'°'y"•'°'.-Tu~n-. -nu-283=.1 ___ J_E_N_S_E_N___ *·SA ... B ne~', priv party, 557-9TJCI 0 Nell Park to Colo ctr nu pilinl, xln1 buy. -"""' Cua. Info' Dee llal'Vey, 640-0269 INTERCEPTOR s..t doal alway•. Complete VOLVO 838-6975, Max Bonhain, ·54 ~"ORD Pick Up. Rebuilt LARGE SELECTION selection now, Buy or lease 58&-0751. · Good bbe $500 OF'COLORS from '74 VOLVO'S Child's En&llsh Saddle ~j;u-4960. ru r. . IMJ\-1EDIATE DEUVERY Jim Parkinson's Flt• Hor,. o' Pony $80 FULL. SERVICE HERE NOW 1,,,,.,,.-•""'64>-8869,.._,cc,,•~--,-Vans 963 DEPARTMENT Immediate Delivery 3~i Yr. old Buckskin. quartr.r ---------On All Model!! Hone, Celdln•, ..,nue. Best '65 DODGE Panel 42.000 orig BUY or LEASE otter. ~alter 6PM ml. U.S. map, ~now tires, , ADORABLE ~ Arab pony, ~nt _ $1COJ. 54.)..4677 or tf\8AM la1.:t English trained -Jumps.,=546-4565--"·----~-t TOYOTA ---,...,. ~ ... taek. 557-UOI '61 l'onl Van. Reblt '65 .... 3100 IV. eo ... Hwy., N.B. YOLYO I !!!!!!~l~I ~~II ;:~~:"';:/~1. N:;'pe t dk e & 642"9405 73 LANDCRUIS£R 1966 Hacbo,, CM 64<1-9303 -"'t=-.i • ,e •peal<•" suoo. 494-36'6. MAZDA Auto1, U1od 990 ll . .:=~=~;:.JJ;"-~~1·n DODGE Van. % Ton,1---------SOFT TOP Ii "'°rtle, lac air, Pi•, p/b, * Mazdo '73 Rotory * - 900 1tereo, 360 eng, mags Xtra $66 MONTH Boah, Gonoral nice S.1650. 546-58S9 36 l<fONTHS OPEN LEASE NEED A TAX OED.UC· '68 CHEVY VAN, custom Int. Will accept trade-Ins TtON! Donate your boat & ext Trophy "'inner. Call CAIL ~fR. FRY 842-6666 B.S.A. Informat ion: a.nytimeMl-6387 H t e· h >l&-4990. Autoo Wanted 961 UR • eac Only 2,COJ miles (548HY0} $3977 DeGll lW!i& -TOYOTA BUICK '69 BUICK Skylark, new steel belt radial, lo mileage, 1 owner, good cond, 979-7517 CADILLAC CORVETTE FORD '72 CORVETI'E, air, PS, ~1·. 1913 llfD B r o u g ha 01. 4 11pd, very clean, 673-8031 A!\l/Fr-.I. ll"'r sents, \1'ln· aft 1 pm t!O\\'s, 12,000 ntl. 644-1147. Autos, Imported 9:70 I Autos, Imported 970 trnns. lull p1vr. · A!lol/Fh1 & interior, nu tires. b'OOd St~ro radio, many extras. milea,C{e. 6 7 s-6 7 l 2 or Cull 5-16-336i. 548--8796 'li6 1\IUSI'A.i'JC, 6 cyl, ex. 1.'C'll!'nt 1:ond, ST:il. 846-4509 ..• n 0Allv Pilol Class\lled Hunt. Brh Ad. &12-5611. ~,....,-~ Autos, Import•~ 970 Auto5, Imported 970 OWNERS REPORT UP TO 35 MILES PER GALLON 22 NEW .SUBARU'S IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '59 Ford Pickup & Camper . Shell V-8, •tick s~ift, Excellent condition, I 89 l 73M I •7,95 '68 Olds Vista Cruiser V-8, Auto Tr1n1, Factory Air Cond, R•dio, Heit· er, I 779FT Al •995 '69 VW Bus 18' Unlimited Ski Boat ]] I Ch•vy Engine, two 4 Berrel1, All Airer•ft Fitlf1191, H•l- cr11ft quick Ch•nge V Drive, Adju1t•bl• Trim Pl1le, tri 1l1ck1, T •nd•m Axl• Ni•1on Tr•il•r, Sp••d high 90'1, SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT. ABSOLUTELY IMMACULATE. IGW· 89961 o'i'3'1'9'5 •• Boats, POWlt' 906 TOP DOLLAR PAID M DA· 1973 CADILLAC Eldo,ado. CHRIS 32' Slcllt Lapstrake, IMMEDIATEL y · AZ Fully loaded, Black on Black '64, T\Vl'.10, FB, AP, OF, FOR AU. rOREIGN CARS ~rust sell , Excellent cond .. Winch, radio remote, out.rig· Call or come in to see us. 1966 Harbor. C.l\'J'. 646-9303 dlr (600GWWl $6995. 892-44441 ~;;~;;;;~~i!!!i!!!i!!!"":iii!i'i!'!i!!!~i!!!i!!!i!!!!!!!~;?!~!!!;~!!!"'"!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!'!!l!l!!!!!!!l!!!l!!!J!!!~I gers, brl11tol, 387 hr a, 17331 Beach Bl. 842.-6£:8 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, New 9IO $16,500, M+-0343 eve11. 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;,:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 eoa11, sin 909 NEWPORT IMPORTS 50' MOTOR-5811, Cabin sleep 10, new Cerilat diesel en· gine, boat In La Paz, $9,995, 3100 \I(. Coast Hwy., N.B. con1lder trade or Invest· 642-9405 m•nts, m-2733. -~T~O~P~c""A~S"'H,.,.-- l[ij tor clean late model can Ill and lrUckS! iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiil Howard Chevrolet ~t&cArthur and Jamboree Ca!!!f!rs. Salo/Roni ~ Ne~~ach $FACTORY DIRECT$ \\'E PAY TOP OOLLAR Shell t<?PI for Imports & FOR TOP USED CARS domestic trucks at low low prices. Call today. 894-ffi95 If your ~ar Is extra clean. i-'-7--..... .,...-~---J SC(? us f1n;I. Cycles, Blku BAUER BUICK Scoot•rs 925 2925 Harbor Blvd. !---------Costa Mesa 979-2500 * BICYCLES * WE 11UY $10. 1-lOLDS ANY BIKE IMPORTED Atrro~ Life Guar1n1H On: BEST PRICES PAIDI Nlshild 10 sp from •••• $99.95 Dean Lewis lmport1 Suntour ~q C.Olol •••••• $89.95 1£66 Hc.rbor, C.M. 646·93o: ALSO -CASH FOR New ltalb ·• 10 t.p ••.• $59.95 YOU!\ CAR Used Blke1 ..... All types 54&-1'070 Beach Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 67!>7282 Auto., lmpomd 970 VESPA motor scooter .. 72 (ICAl'ce a1 hens teeth) 6."i.1 FORD Courier, good con· milet per ,hour. 85 miles ditlon. St~. Call 557-3499 pe\' pllon. 3300 mu ... $695. alt" 5 -kif· '74 lice"" paid "S. .. Gu! -ALFA ROMEO Buy Sat-rlde Sww1a.Y tor 1 ________ _ pennyo. dlJI I" 60-l002. * ALFA ROM 0 1970 Honda •MJnl Trail 70cc E $15/ofler. Hodak& 9 O , Belt deal alway1! Berllnas recently overhauled $175. fl'Om $.1195 (Ser, #0283). 1002 ~ Meytn, CM 548-2428 ''n'1 A 'Tl 's. O>mpleie se. 1970 a.. 3.50 H~ riew =~ now, Buy or lease •name. SUU· 3•000 ml, 0' Jim Pork'"-'• 90 d&,YI. xlnt «ind. $400, 537-1157 or .w!-2167 '73 • m cc Bult1co, Punana ALSO '12 • 125 CC, Bultaco -IJ83.2l1S ' 10 SPD, Blkt'. Xlnt wnd., 66-&tOO ot 666111 11'. . c.n Mike -ASTON MARTIN ·n HONDA 350 SL. Runs Aston Martin DB-6 ~ gn1t, UlO. Mtllt .. u. c.i1 1..<nera vanlap en(. Ewn- an)ltimt ~. aC'CHI. Immac. 1966. $8900 Mini Biko $75 or trade tor CS BMw. Diil'•, 113.~Mil 54().3440. Eveo, ~78. •I 19n MALIBU COUPE (Plff'J $2699 1972 CHEVROLET CUSTOM COUPE !l•EKR) $2099 1974 FORD LTD (7W$C) $3799 1961 PLYMOUTH WAGON s1299 · (1140ll) $3099 1970. PLYMOUTH COUPE !•'2CCIJ $1699 1'73 PINTO STATION WAGON (WJEP) 1971 FORD PICKUP .. ,... 1n1°'1t1 S2899 NEW CAR DEPT. i 4 er•. O/H C•m. Eflf, t7" Wllttl .... flllll Coll SV$flfMl911 • llt!Mled Al, HMltr • llildt.t kltt • Oflc: Dntl'I lr1kh : Pelllled Dlslt DtNI W/5 Wlpen 52538 $199 $71.51 DOWN Pll MO. sm1.to 11 tlle lol1I cllh 11tic. tfw:I.~ l '14 lie ..... Ottwrtd ""'"" ,,._ II ·-1.• IMllll!lng flX & ?4 lk. fMt • IM C'Wfylllf CIM..... for 4 montM M .Yl"tltOVo\L .. • your c.rtcllt, ANNUAL l'E~NTA9« RATI IS,,.,., . ORDER YOUll,J TODAY • '74 MONTii Cati~ \111 ~111111 whltww1111, tun1anydr11m1tk, pow- er Jlffrt119, PCIWtr dlK brlkfl, !lnled ··-Piii: MONTH sn '74 Mallb11 Claulc PoWlf' 11-1no, paWtl" dlK fll'lkK, U) VI, Nrboflydrtmttlc. wheel covert, bllltd whlttw1ll1 I 1 n I• d Ill•»· 1'111: MONTH s99 '74 VEGA Htchb!t. turtiallydrem1tlc, , .. ••i " c•niellna. wl'll" Wiii. Piii: MONTH s13 '7~ Impala Cw1rorn VI, Mlttd, whltew1111, lurbof'lydr•IMllC, pOW• "'S'-1119, power dlK 111'•11•, tinted cteu. Piil MOMTHs109 '74 CA.MARO P-st..,.1119, ~wer dlK t1r11~... 250 \II, turbclhydr11Ml!t1 """"" covers, blllle11 wl'l!ltw1U1, tint.ct OltU. l'lll MONTH s99 '74 CHEV. Pldivp IA tan. \II enllLM, ~ speed trensmlulon. Piil MONTH s79 DON'T UNDllSTAN D LEASING7 PHONI: t47·'087 at IMlltll 0,. 111111 ....... °""' Y.-. T~ M;e .,._ ....,.... '-"""" • W• wtn •wr Y•r ,.,.., Cir " Tr'ldr AH Crtfff __. h ~ ..... Tu CLOllD CHRl51MA5 DAY NEW TRUCK DEPT. e "'I T1111 Pkll11p • llllMlillll l'ltkllP Mic : I !"I .... . '"'·528 0 S99 S85.55 D?WN PIR MO. UI !I '0 ho 11'19 lol1I c.1111 prlc• lrw:I. t1x & '7• 11<. !Hs. DrlilrAd 11ymt. ~ke It. MIOS.40 lncludl'IO tu & ?4 lie. I• & •II c.tn"ylll9 dltrgtt tor .. mot1ttl1 an APPltO\IAL of Y'OVf" cr.dll. o\NNUAL ,.IR.Ct:NTAQE RATI lS.~ ORDER YOURS TODAY ' Priced For Quick Sale 12l IMPALA Cato• Co•p• •••• S3299 2ll IJfrAU. CntoM Coope •• , ,$J29t 277 IMPALA Cntelft Co11pe , ••• SJ2f9 82 IMPALA Cnrom Co11pe , .•• $]299 JJS IMPALA C11stotn Coupe • ,, .SJ29f JJZ IMPALA' C•ltolft Ce•pe • ,, .S32tt 331 IMPALA CintoM Ce11pe •.• ;SJ2tf 321 IMPALA Cntom Cou~ •• , .$32ff 219 IMPALA C11sto1t1 COllpe •.•• SJ2ff 109 CAPRICI c..,. ..... ,. ,, .Sllff SJ IMPALA Cutont Co•,. • , •• SJlff 16 IMPALA C•ltOnt Co•,. • , , .SJJff 189 CAf'RICI c..,. ...... , , , , SJ,tff ' 125 CAPRICI Sp•" SM. ... , , • SJ4ff 124 CAPRICI Ce11,. ••. , • , , , , • Sllff 72 CArllCI 4 .._, Se4-• , , .$Jiff llf CAPllCI W.,.. , • , , ••• , , .SJ7ft 345 MONTI C'All:LO ~. , ••• SJ7ff 1156 MONTI CAll:LO ~' ,,, ,$Jttt - \ • • 38 DAIL V PILOT Wf'dnesda~. Dectrnber 26, 1~7 3 BUY ANY . NEW FORD TRUCK AND WE WILL SELL YOU A CAMPER AT 50% DISCOUNT. BRAND NEW FULL· PRICE IMMIDIATE DILIYEIY 4 speed. heater, whitewall Tires. vinyl interior, toOI kit. SGTANK35ll9 wie NEW '74 PINTO 2 DOOR "THI ORIGINAL GAS SAVll .. , 545 TOTAL DOWI l .. ol ~ """'' 1. IMJI !fo.I If>'"< D.'fr•N .,,_, ""'' ioocl.111 '"'-'~!or lJ ,,.,,.os lJl•.is -.•• •1.ll' ... -<rtcfol. Ol'o!tr '°"" IOGIY. 2300Eng;.. 4 Spttd Trans Olx......,GtGo, Vinyl '1twior 92 ''* MOITM FULL PRICE ~~ND •74 MUSTA NG .•• FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HARDTOP "A TRUE GAS SAVER" lOADID INCL. Auto, 2.3 litre, bucket seats, carpeting, radio, heater, linfed glass. 'FO'.!Yl•l~~ BRAND NEW '74 LTD 2 DOOR HT VI, 91Jto tr.sns .• ••ctory air, oower steering, oower disc brakes, heater. radial whitewalls, tint!d glass. vlnvl M!ll lrlm. (AJ62SlllS2.Sl FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • . I < • -~ ' , . • '6 9 Facro'Y •fr <ondiHonlng, lull powe' fZLH•SI $ 94·9 '6 8 $ l 15 0 '7 0 4 ;.., •. "did.''"" '8Sl21E $ l ·6 7 5·, '7 0 r.~~=~~:;:~~~f~,!~~•"<ondlllonlng. ""0' $14 7 9 ' 7 0 ~;~:~~~ ''' <ondl!iooing, lull~" •inyl , .. , $ l 0 7 5 '6 9 ~~ro<v '" <ondilionlng, lull pow•'• HSJ831 $ 8 9 7 '71 f.~!,~,:,f~~~~!·,,~~~d~~~I061CYY $1889 '70 ra<~o!y~,~~T,~,;.~;,,~~~"dlo, $1197 heater. /"42JBUK '72 ~~~.~ fo~~y~,~~!ltioni ng t95IOVZ $217 9 '72 ~;!;,~:,,!fi.~~!.~~te"lng,,.dio, $219 7. heater, Landou toci. #081EKR -,--7....;;;;2"-::!~""'~R,..,.'"!._ 9, ..... ''"°'' ,,, <•ndifonino. $15 8 8 '71 fu~~,~ •• ~.~.;, ~~!~!1 ... pow" $16 7 5 ~= ;::;~1':e,!~ brakes, radio, heater, steering, radio, heater. #76JGAO ,70 CHEV Caprice $997 '71 MAZDA ...... $ ... 2 .... 2 ..... 9 ..... 7 .... . Factory air conditioning, full power . .i735AKS . RX2, Rotary • .t spttd. radio, heater, vinyl roof. Rebuilt engine. License No. JJOUHJ · '71 ~~0.~E.,.~~.~ . .,~.~~"'°"'"""'"10 .. $1 J J 7 '71 &.P2~~,.f.0,!!!~ ,,, <ond1t1on1no. $ l 2 8 8 heater. #S520SM power steering, radio, heater, vinyl roof. J11603Cllc '73 ~.~ ~~G~~e . Wagon :$3397 '71 ~~.~~•A•~ .• ~?.~!,,,;,"nd"••· $1579 ing, radio, heater. Lie. no. <'87-FBH) ' 71 !u~~~.!A,..~~ •• !~ .~;p~on $ l fi 9 7.. '7 J ~~Y~ .. ~~~.:~~~~,,·~1~;1 :~;.•;;.:~ $ 2991 _.;;......;;....-==-=---....,.,,:------_;....-,_;....;;..'+---...ll;:l•:;:,;.ss, vlnvl inferior, buck-.".-"-'.-1"-'-"-'G._X_•--....,..=--""" '70 r.~.~~:,!~~n~!~u~ll~~"#507CEL $1097 '70 ~u~ t~n~. ~to~'" <Ondilioning. pow" $845 ' steering. pcwer brakes. radfo, heater, etc. • · Llcfftse No. 138-BJ -,:--7""'"2-=F~DR:;::-;D:-:L:-:-.T.-::-D. ~2 0::-r ::-:'.Hdt:--op.------$1_8_9.,,..7-t-,-7-1---5'e .. '"'.: ,,~~.~~~'~i!,~~•nd"°"'""· $1497 Fa<t..-y ''' <ondilioning. '""pow". •570EBM · power steering, power brakes, power win- dows, radio, heater, tinted glass. 1825CXV '7 0 ~~.~~~~~ndil~~~. ful l 00W"· 15S8CPM $. n 7 9 '·7· .2 ~!!~,~~.~ ... ~~~~ lnf"i°'.9980UL. $14 7 7 .\J GAS SAVING 4 CYL. • ' 71 ~'~ ~~.o.~~~ ~;..,H $19 8 8 ' 7 0 ~~!1?!! .. !~~,? !.ilonlno. ,..,.. $ l 7 9· 9 heater,(RT781°'3J2).Gas s111Ving family wagorl: 11219·. ,'68' E~~~"'~~'"'''l'<ond;toq;ng,ratf.o, ~1·097' healer. License: NO. (YQw.901) , I , .-..,. FORD Squire Wagon V·!I, l•Ctory air conditioning. IXNM744 .. I • 7 I v I r· WA WI niJtls lll!OI "' start Wiiii ''l'rri •• lello No butt by H De gr Ka Ch ho a w d' b p wi th 0 ' San -Clemente . Capistrano ED IT l·O N ' ' ·-' Today's--Fln a l • N.Y. Stoc~ • VOL. 66, NO. 360, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEM BER 26, 1973 TEN Cf,NTS !!resident Hints Against Gasoline Rationing I f' From Wire Services WASHINGTON -President Nixon linted broadly today that hiJ ad· :ninistration decided not to impose 1uoline rationing. As photographers were recording the start of a meeting with .Energy Adviser Wllllam Simon, Nixon said to them : "I'm working right now to make certain we won't have to ration gas for you reuows." No reporfe rs were present at the time, but the President's comn1ent was relayed by lhe photographers and by White House aides standing by. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. Murder Trial Slatton's \Varren said afterward that Ni1on1s com· matt was not m e a n t to be an an- nouncement of action on rationing. "The President's aversion to rationing is widely ).Down," WJl!T'tn said u he recounted Administration's efforts to avoid rationing by voluntary corr servation of fuel. Meanwhile, the White Ho1.1..se described tho? Arab decision to relax the embargo on oil shipments to Japan and most of Europe as a s~p in the right direc- tion. The Arab!, however, are maintaining their embargo on shipments to the United States and Warren said, "This Lawyer Closes Defense By TO~I BARLEY Of ""' DlftJ ...... ,,.,, earl Robert "Whip" Slatton's lawyer closed the ranch hand's delense to murder alleHatlonl today without calling on additional witnel&el to bacll. Slallon"s testimony. Slatton, 41. came oU an Orange County SUperior Court witnesa .stnad after a long grilling Iron proseallor Ted Millard in which be repeatedly denied · firing ~ Ibo\ that llilled lrelpa&ler llonnll · Glahn last' July JO at the Ortega Hot Sprillp. Milllnl loday told Judge Robert L. Corfman he. has been able to contact lour more witnesses and that he will be ready for closloi argumenta after they have testified. · oil a6'ould not be u.sed as an ecoftomic weapon." Warren, respopding to questioM, term· government oontinoes to believe that OREGON SAV( ENERGY CRISIS COMING. Story, P1ge 4 GAS SHORTAGE HITS HOLIDAY TRAVELERS, Story P1ge S • EUROPE LAUDS ARAB 'QIL NEWS, P1ge 10 ed the Arab announcement on Christmas day as "a step in the right direction and a • sign of progress which we weloome.11 .. -- He added : "We will continue to work for solution of the 1'~iddle East problem and the oil problem." Warren would not erpresa either op- timism or pesaimdm over prospects of Arab relaxation of the U.S. embargo. Nor would he say whether the , United States expecl.9 more oil to reach the country through "leakage" from coun· lrles receiving Arab supplies . Warren reported that fi.dministration officials are continuing to study the impact of steep price increases an· nounced Sunday by major Persian GUif oil exporting countries. . Simon scheduled. a news contel'ence . • Thursday morning at which he \V,.as expected to announce the administration does not plan to invoke rationing to help ease the energy shortage. In an Interview with the Washington Post pUbtished today, Simon said, "I think we can manage without rationing if the (volunt ary) conservation program keeps going." The Post said Simon \Vas con- sideringproposals to force car pooling by closing gasoline stations two days a week instead or one and selling up a r~ndom system for keeping every car off the road at least one day a weei<. 1e . Simon is said to favor a standby plan that would allow the government to set up all the machinery for rationing and hold it ready in case it becomes necessary when and U fuel supplies dip to an as-yet undetermined. "crisis level." The government is pushing a program of voluntary sell-denial, which includes a Il}.gallon-a-wee k buying limit, lower driVing speeds and other conservation measures. The standby plan would incl ud e local rafion ing boards, ration coupons and establishing priorities for who would set the gasoline first. • ues Crime Lah Gives Police Fingerprints By JOHN VALTERZA Of t11e o.Nr '"1111 s11n Technicians in the Orange County Crime Laboratory today were able to give San Clemente police the tint solid clues to the iden\!tY of a_ month~ld body of a murder victim found late Wt week. , Fingerprints lifted lrom the badly decomposed remains are the strongest Jellilj -yet and as ol 1oday all but two had been taken, local detectives said. "This is the best Information we have so far on trying to find out the victim's identity," said dectctive Pete Goodwin. lltilit~ l:llts Power; Poor Pair Freeze SCHNECTADY N.Y. (UPI) -An old man and · woman, both in their 90s, tried to keep warm by huddling together on the coki living room floor of their apartment after the electric company cut oU ·their power. They were found there -frozen to death -by a grandaon. MiDard ' said he wm tell the jury in his final staement that there can be no doubt that Slatton was the man who coolronted a group of trespassers at the water hole and killed Glahn, !I, after an argument with the gi-oup. INSPECTING DAMAGE, FIREMAN LOOKS FOR C~UES TO CAUSE OF FATAL FIRE This W11 Kitchen and F1mlly R_,, of Fou nt1ln V~!.y Home.Thi! Burnod Thi• Morning He said the technicians also hav~ promised to obtain a complete dental chart on the victim, whose remains were found Thursday morning dumped a1ong a roadside ravine about one-hair mile from San C1emente High School. Officers said it is lkely that the victim's prints are on file if he served in the military or had ever been arrested. Frank Baker. 93. and his wile, Katherine , 91, were d l s co v e re d Christmas Eve by grandson, Basil Heise, home on leave from the milltaey, who went to their home to take them Jo dinner Monday night. . Detectives said the couple had been dead for about two days. A gas stove bad been turned on in the kitchen, a detective said, but provided little warmth. Elbert Watrous. Schenectady County district attorney, said he was 9005ideriog handing the cue to a grand jury. A spokesman for the Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., which services the area with electrldty and natural gas, said the company cut off power to the home because the couple declined to pay a five-month bill for $202. A gu furnace in the borne woukl have been made inoperative when electricity was shut off, tholl8h it would ... 1 have affected the 111< ol a gu cooking at<we. Once before, the spokesman said, uUllU .. were cut olf, about six months ago, but nre relnltaled when a church paid ball the delinquent bill ol !250. The spokeaman aald the company con- tacted the Bakers several times about their bill. but said !he couple refused to clllcuu ll ,A deputy county medical examlaer, Dr. John Shlelds, aald an autoply w<iu1d be made, but tentatively Aid deoth WU brought on by expooure. ' Services Slated For Mrs. Organ Bndgtd Mary Orpn, -. by many lrielldl in San Clemente u ·:lirldey", died In C8pblrano Beach Sunday. 'l'be JZ.year mldenl 11. the ane wu '19. Slatton claimed from the witness stand that he waJ being attacked and kid· naiied at the thne of the shooting by three men who beat him and threaten· ed to caatrate him. Slatton told the jury that be was driven off In hb own vehicle by hiJ attad<ta and only saved himsell from mutilation by grabbing the wheel of the vehicle which then overturned and threw ita lour occupanta to the growld. The Starr Ranch employe testified (See SLATl'ON, l'll1e Z) World War I Vet Dies in Oemente Clifton Claude McClintock, a veteran of World War I and a Sooth Orange Cotmty resident for nearly four years, died Saturday· in Sao Clemente. He was 75. . 1'1r. McClintock, an active member of the Veterans ol World War I, South Oi'ange Coan • Bamcb lll6, li•ed at 26.000 A...Uda Aeropueno, space Iii: He leaves hiJ widow, Gertrude, of the home. \ Roman Catholic rites were condticted at 11 a.m. today al·SI. Edward"• Catholic Church in Dana Point. Burial followe!I in Ascensim Cemetery,. El Toro. Leoneekl Mortuary ol San Clemente waa in charge ol a!T8lliementa. Tempo Picks Up " For Candidates In. South Count)'· . . . City. cleru .in San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano reported a steady 'al'" pearance of··cornpleted nomination peti- tions being filed today by persons seeking a shot at three council ·seats open in each city. The. d<;adline lor filing as an official candidate is noon Thursday. Eariy today, Sao . Clemente led with six official candidates. San Juan's list showed. fou r men returning docunieois thus far. San C1emente's slate or officia1 aspirants In the March 5 elections shows .{amea: StraUJ, E. L "Ris" Risley, Rooald Steelman, Richard Brocius. Howard Austin and Tony DiGlovanni. SiX other residents still have s:aperw outltandini. including twa .incu,Pbents a"-fy declared as candidate& • lft•'8an JUIJ!,' lour p\!nons already .... Olracial-candidates. They are ;J.""'1 c. Glboon, Kenneth E. Vise, Robert C. Roark and Gerald J. Horton. Spotesmen there said Ibey expected a rum of ftlers late today and early (See PAPERS, Page Z)· Guerrilla Plan Kissinger Ass.assination Thwart,ed ' . BRUSSELS (UPI) -The Anb guerrilla organization that killed 32 persons at Rome and Athens ailwr\S·lut -It ori~ally planned to ISSllsslnate U.S. SecretlrJ of State Heiiry A. Ki.sling"' in Beirut a dAy earlier but was \lnrarted, military ~ diplomatic sourtes said MiJa Organ, a resident ol 511 N.' A"'1lda dt la Eatrella. leaves two • b..,U,.11. Mlchioel L. and John P. Oma of San Clemente, and a ll1ter-, ABce- Mackin, alto of Sao Cleti1enll. IOdalJi.e 'soun:es said lllbya ordered the ""btnachlneiun and pnade attempt on KISlinger's life at Beirut' llitemitionll Afport Dec:. 16 but Lebanese authorltles learned of It In time and ordered KIJSinger's plan diverted lo Rayak Air Bue Instead. • . Rayalt Is 45 miles east of Belnlt. The 'U.S.' Em~ In the Leb- •nese ·capital said the Klsslnpr plane' went there for security rel· .SCllll. Visitation !'ill lit !Onishi at Lesneski Mortuary with recitalloa ol the Roall'l' and the Mua or Oirlltlan burial '11mra- day at 11 a.m. Burial wlll lollow the services at Eternal HIU. Memorial Part Jn Oceanside. ' • l Accordliig to the so1Ul'9s, the Ubyans told the group to attack" . Instead at Rome, where they killed 31 persons at Leonardo da Vinci Aill>ort Die. 17 before h!Jackl•i a Lultbansa airliner and killing one person daring a stopover lo Athens. I ., •• \ -. . . . F ountaili Valley Mom, 2 Tots Burn to Death . ~ . . . . By JOANNE . REYNOLDS Of .... Dollfy '"""' '"" A Fountain ·valley · mother 3D\I her two small chiidreri burned. to death early today when a pre-dawn. blaze. gutted their two-story home at 9946 'Tbist1"' Kve. Authorities identified the dead woman as Stella Dunlap. Her children were Dickey. 5, and Tracey, 3. Another victim ·who leaped from the second st()ry was identified as· James really start burning," the diief ex· plained. Law·son said Mrs. Dunla·p, who is separated from her husband , and her two children, were found upstairs in or near their beds. "1be bodJes were quite badly burned," he said. "They may have died of smoke inhalation but considering the way the lire flashed through the second story. it is more likely that they burned to death ." " Stroh, 19, who suffered burm over 70 W d K 'Us perceot ol his body. He Is liSted in 00 smari f, criUcal condition at the bum ward of Orange County Med ical Center.' '. so· utl• Orange. the Thistle Avenue lire ' l>roke out " at about 4:30 a.m. t11 'FOUotain Valley ur-n were c1e .. int up f1'>ln inOther c01.,,t Po·ver cosily blaze at 9092 La IJnda Ave. U0 a. The La Linda fire, which did an - e>Umated . $70,000 to the home of the Phillip Landsberg family, did not result lri ~ injuries, firemen said. Fire Chief H. C. Mickey Lawson said no cause baa been established for either blaze. "We are in the process of invesUgating the causes of the two Otes but · at this point, it doesn't look like either one II related to Cbristmas or Christmas decoratiom, '' he said. Lawson said the LandsberJ fire· might have also reswted in Injuries except that the family Wll• alerted to the bl""' by the barking of the family dog. "Al It was, a boy had to jwnp rrom a seconc;I story window to get out," the chief noted. When fire units arrived at the second Thlatle Avenue blue, the house was completely eugul!ed in llam<s. Nclghllorl told firemen that . the rare 0 e1ploded:1 out of the second story u Stri>h leaped from an upotain window. . Chief Ljlwton said flreinet> belh!ve the fire smoldered somewhere downstairs ror ,..era! hotn. "II flalbecl Into !lllllOI upetairs where the h<a~ had been building up. When the man went through the window, it let in the oxygen the fire nooded to ' Someone felled a tree along San Juan Capistrano's Ortega Highway on Christmas Eve and caused a major blackout along the South Coast. The outage, which lasted nearly an hour, hit at midday and affected several hundred households in the mission cem· munity, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. Crews repaired a sev~ main line lel'Ving San Diego Gas and Electric Company's system after moving the fallen tree a mile east ol the San Diego Freeway. A mystery remain.!, however, as to wbJ! the tree was chopped down. "Our crews finally found tbe "'ur<:e ol the outage. but the tree was all there," said SDG and E Manager Bili Webb. , The embarrassed woodsman had fled. Inmates Feast Too SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -Inmates at San Qutotin Prison enjoyed a traditional Christmas roast turkey dlnnor despite a tMnt!Hong acneraJ lock-up because ol prison vlolcnco. Candy and peanuts were Unded out Christmas Eve. • But even with an identity, the job for local officers is far from over. They have only scant clues in the ' actual death of the nmet-halred man ' whose gineral 'age has been set as between about 20 and to years old. The technicians late laat week were able to find a fragment of a slug em· bedded in the ·skull of the body. They also noted that the cause or death prob- ably was a single shot to the head. But two days of paUent -8nd frui tl ess -searching of the area where the remains were found led to nothing. Detectives used hoes, rakes and met.iii detectors in an effort to tum any new clues. They still are operating under the theory that the victim was shot elsewhere, his pants and shoes removed and then his body driven to the remote area and dumped. The only other piece of physical evjdence which investigators have is a common, faded canvas 'tarpaulin w i t h metal grommets which was used to partially conceal the remail15. The killer's idea worked well for about 25 days, officers said. · Despite frequent pa.Mersby -primal'.\~ ly runners lrom the high school track team and citizen,, out fo r cycle rides CS.. PRINTS, Page I) • Weli.dler Showers likely tonight and Thurs· day morning according to the weather servico with decreasing cloudiness Thursday afternoon. Cooler days. Lo"' tonight in the low 50s. Highs in the upper IOs. INSIDE TODAY Two Laguna Btach mothtrt toho pubU..h vnd•l'llrOUnd comic book1 don't think they a~ vtru funn-u onvmore. See 1toru on Page 8 toda~. ...... 1J AMI L ..... '1 ' 9 1:.M. 1e1f II IMwltt 1 ... 17 ' ' c.......... ' ~ """* t Cltt.JI'*' J1.a NlltlilNI ,..._. 4 C-lu • or.... CWlllY I ==-': =_!trtlr ,,.,: .. ...,... ..... • ,.....,_ 1•1r ··~ ,..,, ......, 4 fll..ct J.11 ., ...... Ntwt .... '""' ......... ,. ..,.. ..... 4 ........ 12 ; • • - )t DAILY PILOT SC Wtdl'!Hday , Otctmbtr 26. 1973 U{;I-Mountaineer· • Ill Nixon Travel Still Not Set WASHlNGTON iAPl -The \Vhite House said today there were no definite plans for any holiday travel by President NixOtJ. The President tentatlve ly scheduled a trip to hls Key Bis· cayne, Fla., home for today but remained in the White House and aldes bid he was work..ing on Mid· dlc East, energy and legislative ntatters. . , Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren would not say when or if the President would go to Florida. Propane Gas .. Truck Crash Jams Freeway A propane truck trailer crashed and exploded on the. Santa Ana FreewaY, today, creating a fiery holocaust that blocked both Janes of the busy artery for nearly an hour. Firemen from Buena Park and Fullerton doused the blaze near the intersection of the Santa Ana and Riverside freeways and en a b I e d California Hi ghway Patrolmen to reopen the northbound lane after a 50-minute tieup. Patrolmen reporting tG headquarters from the area said traffic was blocked for more than 10 miles in e·ach direction. Clearance of the southbound lane was delayed while wrecking crews moved In to pull the scorched vehicle off the freeway and allow emergency operators to draj,n off the remaining propane. Fullerton fi remen said the driver of the truck apparently escaped injury. They said no other vehicles were in- \'olved in the accident. Officials at CHP beadquarters, working from sketchy on the scene reports, have not yet been able to determine the cause of the crash other than to confirm that no other vehicles were involved. "It appears that the vehicle, described to WI as a small petrolene tanker, was headed south when something ha ppened to send it head!.;ng into the center divider," an officer said. "Our nert report indicated that it smashed through the divider and went on to block the northbound lane before Jt overturned and caught fire ," he said. 1he driver or the 270-gallon tanker told patrolmen that the frame of his trailer buckled while he was driving south and be lost control and .. .,,ent th.rough center divider and into north lane. Firemen's main worry was explosion from the heat but U?at didn't happen. Kids Find Bod)' Of Nude Woman , TITUSVILLE, Fla. (UPI} -The nude lxldy of a yoWlg \Voman was found by a group of children playing near a trailer park at Mims north of here. It was the · third female body found in the are in six weeks. ~revard County Sheriff Leigh Wilson said Tuesday night the identity and cause of death had not been determined. He said the bound body was badly decomposed. Deputies were back in the area today seeking clues. The sheriff said the body was bound in a fashion similar to that of Paula Hamric, Z2, whose body was founft in the same general area of the county Nov. 25. The body of Nancy Gerry was found earlier this month. OLt.NG-ICOlST IC DAILY PILOT 'Tiit Ora!llM CO.SI DAit.if ,It.OT,"'"' Wiii(!\ IJ <Omelnlld Ille ,,. ... ,., ... , lt llUl•IJPI• lly Ille Or~ , .. ,, '"*''""lltO Com,Mny, ..... ,.._ MlllOM ,,. lll*lblMll, Mondlr 11!~ frljl•r. for CO.I• M-, HtwpOrt 11ut11. H\111111'111'°" a1.chJfoun"1n "''""· u""" -..ctt, 11"11~/Saddletoec:k ..:I S.n Clttmt~lt/ $'11 JWtr ~plllr11111. A. 11ft911> '"'°'iort•I edlllon Iii P\*llsMcf· S.!vf"111ya Md Su~1y1, Tiie Jll'lllc .. I pi;Dllttiifll Pltlll II •I SZI W,_. l•Y Stri~, Co.111 Mt$41, · C.nloml1, flllH. Robtrt N. Wttd ~•nllltlle Ml f'~llMltr J 11k l . Curl.y Vkt ~ttlldtnt 9!10 Gtnif"tl M""'"' 'Thtm•• KttYll """ Ttiom11 A. Mur,hl11t Manlllnll l!dltw C:h1rl11 H. IA" IUcJi1r1' P. Nill AMlt1111t Mfflltllll Eclltior• S.. Cl••••• Offke JOI North El C1ml1to 11:111, •2672 -oi1.-c:o.•1 M .... : U11 Wftt I•\' lll'ffl = e.cfl: im 111....-rf huleYlrG .... "" a.di: 1Jt1S ••di IO\lltv1rd UllM tftdl: m ,.,.., ,.,..._ ,..., ••• f7141 '4J..fJl1 Qui ~ Alh«lltf S '41·1671 .. ,01 ... •• •• ,, ••.a ,. ••••••• 4fl..+411 c.,,.,....,. 1'fl. Ot.,,.. "°'•' ,....,ltlllflf """"""· ,.. -1wJtt, 1nw1rtt"9ftt, ..... .......,. ., .. .,.,,11.-.. """' ~f' ... ,......., 'll'lfNvf ID«lll ,..,. ...... .,.._. ..... , .. ............... Pllil I f Cofll fHM; (llM'tN. ....,.._.,. W urrltr Q,U .....,.,., ... "' t.),IJ "'*"""'' l'tllllftrr •••11111•1 .... ...........,_ Irvine Man Saddleback Candidate Stephen .DeLapp, 24, a former media liaison worker with the city of Irvine, today became the fourth person to file as a Saddleback College trustee can· djdate. DeLapp, of 14627 Kazan St. in Irvine, ran for Irvine City Council two years ago and is chairman o( the general plan housing subcommittee. He attended Saddleback College and v.·orks for the Santa Ana-Tustin YMCA \Vhile attending Long Beach State. "I don't believe Irvine really has ever had representation on the board." DcLapp said. Michael Collins, the trustee whose resignation vacates the area six ( Jrvine- EI Turo) past, was not "an Irvine-type person," DcLapp said. Collins lives in Harbor View Homes, a secti~n of Newport Beach recently de-annexed from the Saddleback district. "If the district doesn't respond to the needs of Irvine, it could become another Tustin," DeLapp said. Some 8.000 Tustin residents have sign- ed petitiOt'l.5 to de-annex from the Sad· dleback district because they feel they have too far to drive and not enough courses to choose from . DeLapp said lf he is elected to the board, "I would tend to be a little more liberal'' than most of the present trustees. "But I fee l I have the ability to get along with people. Head-butting is n~productive. I could bring some new ideas to the district -not as a repel or a radical but as someone who has a great interest in what happens." DeLapp said he believes Trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana, who pleaded guilty to bookmaking ·charges last week, should resign. Other issues DeLapp said he will stress are better extended campw offerings and a commuter system for the Mission \"iejo campus. From Pagel SLATION • • • that when he recoYered consciousness he was riding a stallion bareback across the ranch1and under a full moon with his white Stetson hat on the back of his head and his Colt .45-callber revolver slung on his hip. Slattoh said he sought refuge in a ranch house after noting that he had been accompanied on his ride to safety by a riderl ess horse which stayed close behind him and whinnied to him oc- casionally during the midnight gallop. r-.-tillard claims that the Colt revolver \Vas used to gun down Glahn and that Slatton had a long record of violence in dealing with Starr Ranch trespassers to the point that he had been ordered to contain himself by su~ervisory person· nel. J\1illard claims that Slatton was alone in his vehicle when it overturned and that the accident was due to high speed 1vhen he drove from the scene of the shooting. From Pagel ' P1\.PERS • • • Thursda Y'. San Clemente's two incumbents who have said they will seek reelection are Dr. Wade Lower and Thomas O'Keefe. Still another councilman whose term expires next year -Clifton Myers - an nounced late last week that he will bov1 out at the end of this term, his first. Denuer's Super White Christtnas Unexpected storm dumped 11 'h inches of sno\v on Denver, Colo. and virtually tied up all traffic move- ment in the Mile Hi gh City. Nine-year-old Vincent Garcznski inspects snowbound car while Collie tbe- Jow) attests to fact the storm wasn't fit for lJ1an nor beast. Drifts piled to 10 feet in some places. New York's Yule 'Violent' NE\V \'ORK (UPI ) -The Christmas season was not a tinle of peace in the precincts or the nation's largest city. "Christmas is a very bad day all U1c time," sa id one harried detective. "l don't know what it is -eil her the drink or too much merriment. A day like thls has something like a full moon effect. l t never fails. E\·erything seems to go to hell." Here are examples from the police blotter: -Detectives Ronald K\voczka and \Villiam McDevitt were in a small store in Queens CIU°istmas Eve. po!ing as receivers of stolen property. In came two n1en, who i;obbed them of $500. In the ensuing exchange of gunfire, both robbers were killed and K\\·oczka, 31 . was wounded. -In t1anhattan , two men entered a • clothing store and ordered the owner, t1icbael Schuman, f>!I, and an employe into the stor eroom and demanded money. \Vhen Schuman refused, they shot and killed him and severely wounded the employe, l\1ark lloUander. 68. -Angel Ortero, 14, was shot by anothe r teen-ager \\'bile riding in the elevator or a housing project Monday night. -David Wade, 52, who has a history of mental problems. \\'as critically wounded by a grocer who shot him after he poked into the cellar of a store to look for a woman he believed was hiding there. -There were five bank holdups 1.fon· day, one of them a sophisticated opera· tion complete with blow torches. Officials of the Chase Manhattan Bank estimated mo re than $160,000 was taken from the night deposit box. No Progress In Mideast Peace Tall\s GENEVA (UPI ) -Israeli an d Egyp- tian n1ilifary delegations adopted such tough bargaining positions today at start of their talks on se parating forces along the Suez Cana l that there \Vas no prog- ress. Each side dismissed the other's proposals as unacceptable. Israeli sources said their stand is that Israel's troops on the west bank of the canal and inside Egy pt should simply n1ove back to the east bank, in other words switching places with Egypt's 3rd Anny on !he east bank, or Isra eli side. of the canal . Egyptian sources said this is the san1e position Israel took in the unsuccessrul disengagement lalks at Kilometer IOI on the Cairo-Suez Road in Noven1ber and remains "totally unacceptable.'' Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position is that Israeli troops should move back as far as a line from El-Arish in the north of the Sinai to Ras-~Iohammed in the south . thuS-giving Egypt about two-thirds of the Sinai. Israeli sources said this would be •·out of the question."' The Eg;rpJian soUrCi!s said their delegation to' the military working group on disengagement has a fall -back position Y.'hich would be for Israeli troops to move back behind the Sinai :passes which are about 20 miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west of the passes white the United Nations would act as a buffer on the passes themselves. A third Egyptian proposal under. con- sideration, the sources said , is for the 3rd Anny to remain on .the east bank with Egyp t maintaining an "ad· ministralive presence" of civilians and police between the canal and the passes. Israeli sources said their delegation is unlikely to move from the simple switching sides proposal until early next year after Israel's elections Monday. < Fro1n Page J PRINTS • • • -the remains went unnoticed. Yet· the body was only about 25 feet from the road's edge. The discovery finally came when. an off-Outy fire captain working in L<Js Angeles noticed his dog was roll ing on someUiing. The animal had made the grim discovery. Hughes' Tie to Don Nixon Refuted By L. PETER Ktt!EG Of ltlt Diiiy ,lilt Sllff F. Donald Nixon or Newport Beach, !he Pres ident's brothe r, had no business dealings with former Howard Hughes aide John Ii. f..1eier in the Dominican Republic, according to the accountant employed by the President, his brother and 1\-teier. "Donald Nixon v.·as never involved ,'' Arthur Blech , the President's personal tax accountant, has said. Donald Nixon similarly has denied allegations by Meier who has told the Senate· Watergate Committee that Blech wenl to tht Dominican Republic to "look over a deal" in which Donald Nixon was involved. Blech says he went with f\1eier to look 01 a packing plant and while there hnd the idea to build a housing project. "But Donald Nixon was never involved in ii." Blech said. "l would be the one to know since I was running the project." Blech, who said he has told his account to the \Vatergate committee li&ld he thinks Meier is trying to Implicate others In an effort lo ease his own problems. Meier is being sued by Hughes and I .has been named in an income tax in- dictment in Las Vegas. Blech said that to his knowledge, Meier and Donald Nixon never consummated any business deal together. He said Donald asked him to review any deals that were posed and Blech said he recommended against each one. Nixon told the Dally Pilot last week that he and Meier, who were friends, did go to the Central American country together, but Nixon said, "l only went to see Meier gel some kind of award." He said Meier had suggested many thlngs, but he never followed through on any of them. Nixon said his only dcallngs with f\.fel~r or Howard Hughes came nearly 10 years ago when lfe went after the food service bU5lnell,! at the meny Hughes plenl! ocross the counlry. lie said ha never got ~ contracts. And he said he never offeted any favors to get them. Ble<b aloo said that when he told the President's personal a t t o r n e y • Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach. of the review arrangement, Kalmbach said he thought It was a good Idea to do the same ror all of Donald's business affairs. Blech said he recalled Kalmbach saying something to the effect of "Don Nixon is a very gullible guy, and people are trying to use his name." Kalmbach could not be reached to confirm or deny the aUeged statement. Blech said the proposed housing deal fell apart after he quit as Meier's a~ countant. Meier has contended that the Pre&dent knew of t~e trip. Meier, a former Newport Beach rcsi· dent, left the Hughes organl%8Uon to join a Salt Lake City mi{ling firm. HU&hes Is suing 'Meler and the mining firm for $9 mllllon to recover what he lost in purch .. es ol allegedly valueless mine claims. ln a related development late la.s:t week, a federal Judge In l.41 Angeles criticized . justice department attorneys -and another federal judge -for trying to get a lawyer to tesllly about Moler to a grand jury. U.S. District Judge· Andrew Hauk l'8ued a temporary restraining order to. prevent attorney John Suckling of Los Angeles from appearing before a - federal grand jury in Las Vegas that is believed to be looking into possible tax violations by Meier. Meier argued that anything Suckllng told the grand jury would violate the at torney-client privil ege and the judgP. agreed. Hauck said tbe manner in which ~ federal prosecutors in Las ·Vegas ob· talned an order there against Sucklin g from U.S. District Judge Roger Foley Jr. "was a rotten thing to do." ''And you tell Foley that,'' ~tauk added. The judge wrus angered by the failure of federal ·prosecutors In Lns Vegas to warn l\.1eier's ~urrcnt lawyer that they Intended Jo bring his former at· tomey before the grand jury. "Why didn't those spooks down there serve him notice?" the judge asked government lawyers . He auggested that Suckling be asked, "What have they promi~ you -not to Indict you. u you'll 1quawk? ril just bet they did." Judge llauk said he thinks Sueklrng 11could be ·disbarred" U it Is shown he violllted the trUSt ol a former clrent In exchange !or Immllnity from yro&- eeution himself. Fall . Death Mm·s Whitney Expedition By GEOttOE LEIDAL Ot 1M Diii\' Plltt' $1tff Ttcscue tei:uns returned to Mount Whitney today , to remove the body or UC lrvine Mountaineering Club President Eri c F;ichmann from the spat where he felJ five days ago. Eichman, 20, and a Costa lwtesa man. Don Pfirrmann of 2223 Pomona St .. att empted to reach the 14,494-foot peak of t1t. Whitney last Thursday when a storm overtook them . • . Pfirrrnann was helped Christmas Day fron1 the lf,100-!oot level by China Lake Mountain Rescue Group volunteers. He ren1ains in serious condition in southern 1.nyo Hospital, Lone Pinc. Pfirm1ann is suftering (rom frostbite, rescuers said today. The t1vo were part of a six-man climb- ing party. 1'""our ;1tt empted to climb to the top. Peter Owen Fricklanc.1, 21, of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrence of UC Riverside \\·ere suid today to have reached the peak the night of the 20th. They stayed overn ight . rtturning 10 find EichmaM dead and Pfirrma1m in trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so "'en! for help. 'J\1·0 others in the UCI climbing club observed the cl inlbcrs from the East 1''ace 1..ake High Camp, scene of 'rescue operJtions Christmas Day and today. Stor ms blocked views or the four climbers on Friday and Saturday, UCI students John Alark Graham, 20, of Long Beach and Tom Hemker. 19, of Villa Park. the t\110 other members o( the party. told rescuers. On Christt11as Eve Graham an:d llemker reached civili1.alion and.the Inyo County" Sheriff's Department called in the China Lake l\1ountain Rescue Group. Three team members Jed bv Frickland and La'"·rence reclimbed the peak to reach Pri rrn1ann who wai ted near f~iclun:lnn 's body aL the 14 ,100 foot level. 11Ie six were spending Christ mas holidays on the mountain when the stonn overtook them. Eichmann, a junior majoring In engineering, ·was ptes1dent of the UCI ~Tountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine, he is survived by his parents, l\1r. and Mrs. Eric Eichmann, and a brother, Donald, 12, all of llacienda Heights. Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfirnnann is believed to be a recent graduate of UCI where he majored in chemistry. Hemk er is a sophomore majoring in biological sci ences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. Inyo Sheriff's Deputy Don Cron directed the rescue effort . Ten degree temperatures and gµsting 'vinds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees below zero, rescuers said. Winds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop scene of the fall Which is believed to have killed Efhmann. The etght-hour rescue involved a chop- per fro m the Na val \Veapons Center, China Lake, in which rescuers hurried to the scene. Today's effort involving an eight-man team from the Sierra Madre Search and Rescue squad relied on a heavier helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station, a rescue unit spokesman said. &th operations require a landing at the 13,000 foot level Eas t Face Lake High Camp and a climb over the moun- tain top to the locat ion of the body on U1e west' face . · Al Green, 38, BUI Siron, 32. and Bob Rockwell, 29, all of the China Lake- Ridgecrest area, left their families Christmas Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack Macldul in the rescue operation. Bakersfield Man Dies BAKERSFIELD (UPI ) -Donald Lee Rector, 26, of Bakersfield, died early today or a gunshot wound to the chest suffered Christmas night. Kem Q>unty sheriff's deputies said Rector and Gary Jam~s Long, 19, also of Bakenfleld, got into an argument on a Bakersfield slreet when l<>ng allegedly pulled a pistol . . -· Burning Paper Proves Costly Santa Claus brought tbe Leroy Kroesch lamlly or Balboa Island a whole lot of presents Christmas morning and it's a good thing he got back up the chimney In time. They opened U1em around the lircplact at 126 Amethyst Ave. and then burned the gally·patteroed wrapping paper, aecordlt\g to .the Newport Beach· Fire 0.partmenL Spokesman Jim Toppins said ~ !500 (ine resulted, wbeh llpatka rrom the wrapploi piper O.w . up the chimney and fell oo the roof. Whal the 1Kroueh'1 . need oow !or Chn1tmas Is about 100' 1quano feet ot new lhloiles. .. 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Low u1• c~ I .. • ,- • -' \ Year's High-Low s ~ Appear Every Saturday _NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ,., tr..,, Htol'I 1.N 1.•11 c.'t'.i••·-------ll!llD:•---------.i Stocks Rebound .On Easing of Oil • I JJ OAILY filLUI 'fi'asci1anti1tf/lfl Bo1•i119' . Be1·keley's City Council 'Mellows Sfln Diego Bay Refuge ·Proposed f BERKELEY -Berkeley is still functioning. IN FACT, a recall move-racial composition reMects to and is considered a "liberal/' Taz C'laln• ment of a few monlhs ago a large degree the social COii· said once. "\Vhen we get in-'1 oh n Kenneth Ga1- removed from office the mosl radical "radical," Yale-train-sciousness of the community . \·olved in a con!rontaUon with braith, Harvard econo-SACRAMENTO (UPI} _ ed lawyerO' Army Bailey, and There are five blacks, three a neighborhood and the com-mi st, said he took a Proposals to save threal«f1ed replaced him wkh a •1Uberal ." women, and one ''hit e , mercial interests I vole with $4,~00 income tax de-fish and wildlife in the d'fihdl- Wllllam Rumfo~d Jr. Bailey 1nlddle-class male. r.11 s s the neighborhoods:. ,'1 duction for personal pa-ing marshes ot San DiegO Bay was recalJed because he had Kelley is of Chinese anceatry. As the council as a whole ~rs be donated to the have been unveiled by the The steps are necessary because 90 percent of the salt marshes and ball of the mudflats have bffn de1troyeCI by san Diego fill' projects/ Nearly four years after the first three "radlcals" -or now t"·o depending on defini· lion -\\'Pre elected to lhe Berkeley City Council. the v.·heels ol civic goVemment in this city of 115,000 have not been jammed w i t h ideological screv!'drivers. been a vocal and disrupll ve Although Simmons and ,.,1rs. drifts toward neighborhood ennedy Memorial Li· state Department of Fish and council member. •tc charged 1-fancock are the remaining concerns -reflected .in a city brary in 1966. Game. · the department added. that the. recall_ movc1nent 'WllS so-called "radicals" on the budget v.·ilh increased money Jn a special report, the The report aftlo called for "racist." Both Balley and council, the connotations the se for health ca re, neighborhood d e partment recomnteoded . preservation 9f publicly owned Rumford' are black. days are virtually mean-studies·:·serv1ce·l>~&t'b.YnS .. for creation of a wildlife r~uge lands along~ ~Iver Strand, TF ANYTllJNG , !he marathon Cit y Co u n c i I sessions every Tuesday night in tilt packed chamber hall have resulted in city govern- ment that is being considered carefully down to the last street light and paper clip. So the progress of city go\'ern. ment is slowed. Currently, the council is ingless. the elderly, and the like -in the southern part of the a sand bar between the. bay composed of Mayor Wllrren \Vith few except.ions, notably such new allocations of city bay and new laws granting and. the ocean, and control \\lidener, a young lawyer with from Sweeney and Kallgren, funds have led to resignations protection of the bay's natural of future dredging and filling statewide political ambitions; the decisions made by the' _o~f_'k«!•!_Y_"C~ity~pe~rs~o~n~nc~l:_. ---'~~':::::.:::~~~~~~-----------''«!'~'°"~rce=•~·--------'in~th~~e~ba~y.:_ ____ _ \Vilmont Sweeriey, a lawyer council renect a slow tumin@'1. and 12-year veteran of the a"•ay from the inOuence of council : Ilona Hancock. wife lhe business-oriented com- or a Berkeley attorney and 1nunity to'''ard concern for mother ot t\\'Oi Ying Lee social issues and neighborhood Kelley, history teacher in the causes. Berkeley schools; Ira Sim-1.lissing from the delibera· tions are political rhetoric and 'jhe intense. public alignment mons, a lawyer; Henr y JN A TBIE OF environment Ramsey, a law professor at concerns and "no growth" the university: Edward tendencies. Berkeley Is little ~ Kallgren, a lawyer; and Rum-different from other com- A I l ford a parttime pharmacist munities. re r a •nove• and security officer. Even Mayor Widene r, who 111e11t re1t1oved ihe · · advocates ending the city 111ost -radlcnl 'rnd· -~~T~I~~· _s~~~l~~-~a~~!r~~~~· lcal . .' ':'"'1;"'-.. :. .. ;;;"':"':"'1~ .. n:"'1-.. :nd"'~"'7"';:"'1;--.. n;";111 LQQK TO ma!Ae '.1 causes which to a large degree prompted the election of the "radicals." FOR ' THE Now the nine-member coun- cil grapples \Vith such home- grown issues as the flow or neighborhood traffic, the p~ li!eration or street vendors, city taxes, permitting or de- nying a parking lot for a bank, deciding who should be the next city manager and in- nuencing the choice of a police NEW YEAR! chi er. THE TUESDAY night sessions are models of the democratic process in addition to being normally boisterous and dotted with hurled in- vectives from the audience. "They are also fascinatingly boring," said a long-time Berkeley resident \\'ho attends faithfully into the small hours of the morning to "watch the elephant take a step or two." The media may have l"tade the nam e Berkel eyl synonymous with "political radicalism'' -which many 100% HUMAN HAUi CASCADES IEG 17.95 NOW CAPLESS ELURA WIGS LATEST STYLE CA.PLESS NOW REGULAR 45.00 • , , ••••••••••••.•• :~:: ... L\:,~:~ ..................... NOW WE HAVE EXPERT STYLISTS TO SERVE YOUR EVERY NEED 12" 31" 1800 WIG AND BEAUTY SALON 2500 East l7th'Stfe"•t 548·3446- Hilgren Square, Costa Mesa Berkeleyites dislike -but in truth the city is quiet, preoc· cupied with itself. and neve r shaken any more by the demon strations and confl icts of fou r or five years ago, \vhe n Unive rsity of California students and hangers-on pro- tested in the streets. [~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'! YEAR-END CLOSEOUT Ul'tN 7 DAYS PRICES GOOD THRU DEC. 31st ]EWEB Y CL<T;ARA CE Special Group of Je\velry PENDANTS IN CULi. PEARL. f lERY OPAL. & DIAM OND · EARR INGS IN DIAM OND. CULi. PEARL & OIHER PRE CIOUS SIONES . MANY OUISIANOIN G SOLID GOLD BRACELEIS • NUMEROUS COCKTl.IL RINGS IN Dl lMON D. RUBY. SAPPH IRE. OPAL. CULi. PEARL. & OIH ER STONES · MANY MEN"S RINGS ALL IYPE S Of SIO NfS AVAILABLE · LIM llE D SELE Cl lO N Of CUffllNKS . DIAM OND WEDD ING SU S ARE IN - CLUOED • A LI MllED SELE CTION Of FINE CU LI URED PEARL SIRAN DS • A fEW UNUSUAL BROOCHES ARE INCLUDED · ALL llEMS AR E 14 OR !SK GOLD fR OM OUR RE GULAR STOCK. VALUtS TO SIZO VALUES 10 $190 VAlUi S TO $240 VALUES 10 SjfQ NOW NOW NOW NOW 39.99 59.99 79.99 99.99 REDUCED TO CLEAR REDUCED TO CLEAR ALL LOOSE STONES All ART OBJECTS 11.,., S1or S®pi.".,,_,,,., Qpo;il. (.,.•ed Jnde & Ro,., O"°''' ''G""'fle'-Cor•ed lvo•'f' Oto•~·nl Jud~> l ou1e Cul• f' .. .,..1. Clo"O'W'<' \l o•ot•-Por<elo•" Bloc~ St<ll' ~<>P1>l-m1t• Cut E"'""~<1 I''>•) "'"~• uo.i.~I •'""'' 25 % OFF MARKED PRICE HUGE REDUCTIONS • :, . ALL OT~NEs~o:,EWEL'Y INCLUDING 1J'°""o"<"-k..r..~. SPJ:>i>I>··~, (.1141.,,~d P~orl< WP<l<i·"9 Se•1 . / .J 0D t9 ~~ 0 StARiM· -so IA "f'-~ SHOP NIGHT S 'Til 1 o LOf!.IG BEACH .. ~13..A\laolit..A.vt. WH IU IEA; 1291&·Pk~1lpht. S1. SANTA ANA. 2015 f'· Main REDONDO BE7'CH, Snu1h Bav Centi r TORRANCE , 244!>5 HMthornt Blvd. TORR ANCE, Dtl Amo fash ion SQuare NEWP ORT BEACH, FaW11on tsla nd ORANGE, TM Mall of 0111'1!11 ANAHEIM, AN!heim Plau LOS ANGELES, Aun Plal1 • Sears _ ... where thrift is always ·in style Located on the Lower Level I I • VEAR END BIG BUYS Misses' and Half.;Size Pant Suits Sears Low Price! 644 \X'hi(e fl oc king o n sol id colo r runic wich matching panes, tlasticizeJ v.1aisr. Acetate, ny- lun ... n1achin C·\\1ashable. Color choice. In ~ti sses· and Half sizes .. • I . Long Sleeve Knit Tops Scar~ [,ov. Price:· 244 Nylon tl.it :i.nJ ribbed jerSt'}' 1ops. Turtle. mock 1urr !l'. utht·r ne ckli nes. Basic, casual. eJS}'-c,1re stvling. Assorted p,1.stcls, '"'hire. SJll:S ~.~I. L. 011e·size Pauly Hose Low Prir.t"d ! ' UhrJ.·Shct'.r mic ro mes h knit 1n nylon. Rl."1nforccJ toe: V>'irh al) opaquc: p:lnl}'· New colors. One?-' 100 ''' ISO lbs. · I : ·Sears C~osta Mesa 3333 Bri•lol"St. Phone 540-3333 ,,.,.. ' ~ ,, Long Gowns of Ny lon Tricot Sears Price! 222 Assorted feminine.styles, 1rims and neckli nes. ~ink, blue , navy, yellow. S,i\f,L Prices Erfective tlirou1h Saturday, Decernber 29 U1eSear1 Revolving Charge Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Phone 82844-00 .. • . ' , ' ~i<} . ' /, '(' l' \<\ ,, .. "' .. '' ' '. ~ . I ' , ' . .. ' .-=~~ :.. . . ' ' \ I _Orange 2100 N. T111tin i\\'e;" Phone 63i-2100 ' ' ' • ~ Stott "'"'"l MoMt1 th"' s ••• rc1.,. 9t30 .M. ,. ~130 P.M •• ..S•nd.1 ti N ... ,. s r.". 1 4 • I I \ l I VO ga,. As start WWI SC man tried r A was pend deve child proj II Real Al firm be g of $50, G WO buy' G vid the w to be vie A Bea M the and Th F to Lu ' • • Laguna, Ueaeh EDITION ... Today's f.lnal N.Y. Stocks • VOL 66, NO. 360, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS President 'Hints Against ·Gasoline Rationing FroJ? Wire ~rvtce1 , WASHINGTON -President Nixon hinted broadly today that his ad· mhWtration decldcd not to impose gasoline ra,tloning. As photographers were recording the start of a 1Deeting with Energy Adviser Wllliam Sitnon, Nixon said to them: 0 l'm working right now to make certain we .won't have to ration gas for you fellows." \Varren said afterward that Nixon's com· menl \Vas not m e a n t to be an· an· nounctment of action on rationing. "The President's aversion to rationing is widely known," Warren said as he recoqnted Admini stration's efforts to avoid rationing by voluntary con- servation of fuel. . No reporters were present at the time, but the President's comment was relayed by the photographers and by White , House aideS standing by. Meanwhile, the White House described th.! Arab decision to relax the embargo on' oil shipments to Japan and most of Europe as a step in the right direc- tion, The Arabs, however, are maintaining' their -embargo on shipments to the United States and Warren said, ·1'This Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. Heat Cut Off Couple, 90, Freeze to Deatli SCHNECTADY N. Y. (UPI) -An old man and woman , both in their 90s, tried to keep warm by .huddling together on the cold living room floor of their apartment after the electric company cut off their power. They were found there -frozen to death by a grandson. Frank. Baker, 93, and bis wife, Lagul\a B.oa,rd 'lo Take Look At 34 Units Katherine. 91, were discovered Christmas Eve by grandson, Basil Heise, home on leave from the military, who went to their home to take them to dinner Monday night. Detectives said the couple had been dead for about two days. A gas stove had been turned on in the kitchen, a detective said, but provided little _warmth. -· Elbert Watrou.s, Schenectady Cowity district attorney, said be wu considering handing the case to a grand jury. A apo-lot the Niagara Hahaw- Poftf C<rp., which ,aervlce1 the area with electricity aOO natural gas, said ···· ·the company--cut··off -power to the ·home because the couple declined to pay a five-month bill for S2D2.. A gas furnace in the home would have been made inoperative when electricity was shut off, though it would _not have affected the use of a gas cooking stove. oil should not be used as an economic weapon." Wamn, responding to questions, tcrm- govemment continues to believe that OREGON SAW ENERGY CRISIS COMING. Story, P1go 4 GAS~ SHORTAGE HtTS HOLIDAY TRAVELERS, Story P1go 5 EUROPE LAUDS ARAB OIL NEWS, P1go 10 ed the Arab announcement on Christmas day as "a step in the right direction and a sign of progress which we welcome.'' He added: "We will continue to work for solution of the M:iddle East problem and the oil problem. 11 Warren would not express either op- timism or pessimism over prospects of Arab relaxation of the U.S. embargo. Nor would he say whether the United States-expects-more oil to reach the country through "leakage" from coun- tries receiving Arab supplies. Warren rePQrted that Administration · officials are continuing td study the impact of steep price increases an- nounced Sunday by major Persian Gulf oil exporting countries. Simon scheduled a news conference ' --a ' -s--• > - ' . Thursday morning at \vblch he \Vas expected to aMounce the administration does not plan to invoke rationing to help ease the energy shortage. In an interview with the \Vashington Post published today, Simon said, "I think we can manage without rationing if the (voluntary) conservation program keeps going." The Post sa'id Simon was ,con- sideringproposals to force car pooling by closing gasoline stations tv.•o days a week in.stead of one and setting up a random system for keep ing every car off the road at least one day a lveek. Simon is said to favor a standby plan that \vould allow the government to set up all the machinery for rationing and hold it ready in case it becomes necessary v.:fien and if fuel supplies dip to an as-yet undetermined "crisis level." -The government is pushin.g a ·program of volun tary self-denial, which includes a IG-gallon-a-\veek buying linlit , lower driving speeds and other conservation measures. Tl}e standby plan would include local rationing boards, ration coupons and establishing' priorities for who would set · the gasoline first. ea Loss Mars-- Whit11ey Expedition By GEORGE LEIDAL OP 1111 DlllY Pllet SllH Rescue teams returned to Mount Whitney today to remove the body of UC Irvine Mountaineering Club President Eric Eichmann from 'lhe····spot Where · he fell five days ago. Eichman, 20, and a Costa Mesa fnan, ll<>n-Pfimnami of =-Pomona St., attempted to reach the i-f,f!H-foot peat of Mt. Whitney last Thursday when a storm · overtook them. PfirrrnaM was helped Christmas Day from the 14,l~foot level by China Lake Mountain Rescue Group volunteers. He remains in serious condition in Southern Inyo Hospital, Lone Pine. The Laguna Beach Board or Ad- justment -Thursday-night will take a second look at a 34-unit condominium project earmarked for an established resident area along North C o a s t Highway. Once before, the spokesman said, utilities were cut off, 1about six months ago, but were reinstated when a church _ pail! ball the delinquent bill of $250. . • D.ttr f!11o1 ""'° n a1ct11n11 KM111tr Pftrrmann is suftering Crom frostbite, rescuers said today . A request to approve the development was continued by the· board last '!eek, pending more infonnation from the developer on the number of scbOol age children and the amount of traffic the project would generate. If approved, the three-story complex would be built on four Jots at the In- tersection of North Coast Highway and Myrtle Street. Eight existing units on the site would be demolished. Request for api)roval to develop tl}e condominiums is from Tramcontinental Realty ,of Los Angeles. Alan Greenberg, an executive tor the firm, said the condominium units wouJd be geared to retired persons. 111.e price of individual units could range from $00,000 to $80,000, he said. Greensberg declined to disclose total worth of the project or the cost of buying the four parcels. Grtenberg said parking would be pro- vided in an underground lot beneath the project. The first and second stories would be devoted to multi-l evel townhouse units. The third level would be more expensive units with ocean views, he·sald. Architect for the project is Laguna Beach Councilman Peter Ostrander. More information on the impact of the development on the school system and 190al traffic will be proyldlld at. Thuroday's hearing, Greenberg aald. FcSur board members will be pfesent to consider the project. Board member Lu Jllurphine will lie absent - Bur11ing Paper ~roves Costly Santa Clau.s brought the Leroy Kroesch famlly or Balboa hland - ·• whole lot o! presents Christmas -momlni and It'• a good thiing be got back up the chimnty In time. They opened them around the ~lace at 1111 Amethyst Ave. and thOrl burned the gaily-patterned mPl'lnc paper, according to tbe Newport Beach Fire Deparlm«lt. Spokesman Jim Topping said a $il(IO ftre resulted, w!ien """"' lnlnl the wrapping l>lllO< flew .up the chimney and fell m the roof. Whit the Kroeach'1 need now for Christmas 11 about 100 square feet of new shingles. INSPECTll'!G DAMAGE, FIREMAN .LOOKS FOR CLUES TO CAUSE OF FATAL FIRE Thia W11 ·Kitchen ind F1mlly Room.of Fou nt1ln ,V1lloy Home That !!urned This Morning The two were pan of a six-man climb- ing party. Four attempted to climb · to the top. The spokesman said the company oon· tacted lhe Bakers several times about their bill, but said the couple refused to discus!: it. A deputy county medical examiner, Dr. John Shields, said an autol"'Y would be made, but tentatively said Cleath was brought on by exposure. Ex-basketbalwr In Laguna High Division Post Fountain Valley Moni, 2 'tots · Burn to -Death-- By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1M DMIY Pllft Stiff A Fountain Valley mother and her two small children burned to death early today when a pr~awn blaze gutted Phillip Landsberg family, did not result in .any injuries, ftremen said. Fire Chief H. C. Mickey Lawson said no · cause has been established for either blaze. Christopher Appel, a former basketball their two-story home at 9946 Thistle star af the University of Southern Ave . "We are i9-.C process of investigating the causes of the two fires but at this point, it doesn't look like either one is related to Christmas or Christmas decorations," he said. California, has been emplOyed as a Authorities identified the dead woman division administrator at Laguna Beach as Stella Dunlap. Her children were Jligb School 331. ti . . 1 . Dickey, 5, and Tracey, 3. Appe , , curren y is a socta science instructor at Arcadia High School. He Another victim who leaped from ·the will join the Laguna staff in about second story 'was i~entified as James Lawson said the Landsberg fire might have also resulted in injuries except that the family was alerted·to the blaze by the barking of the famil y dog. two weeks. • S~rqh, 19, who sufferp:i bums over · 70 Appel will coordinate social science, percent of his body. He is listed ·in English and foreign language instruction critical condition at the burn ward of at the high school. Orange CoWlty Medical Center. "As it was, a 'boy had .to jump from a second story window to get out," the chief noted. Appel has worked as a sports specialist . The ThisUe Avenue fire broke out with the U.S .. State Department in at about 4:30 a.m. as Fountain Valley When fire units arrived at the second Thistle Avenue blaze, the house was completely engulfed In names. Taiwan and Africa. He also has worked firemen were cleaning up from another !fs.!_.~t~l!~~_!'ith .~! ~i~ .. ~oun~~on·-···· c~~JY.. ~l~,;~ .. ~J-9992 l.a Linda ~~e~. J y oau r cuiu.wu-. . The La Unda fire, which dia an Appel was selected from a field of estimated $70,000 to the home of the Neighbofs_ told Jir.emen that the fire "exploded" out of the second story as (See DEATHS, Page %) nine Cflldldates for the L!lguna lll&I! pool, ac<ording to scllool ollieials. Scotland Yard Warns of Bombs LONDON (AP) -SeoUand Ylinl wam- ed ·toiey It tlq>OOted · more bombings followlnll a Christmas Day lull Jn a ~ campaign that bas killed three -and Injured more than 100 ln London a..i Northern Ireland In nine daJI. l"""1oo pollco kept bomb disposal ex- porta oo dnty today, which is Boxing Dey, 1 Brllllb holiday. A special watdl over movie theaters also was ordered. One recent bomb exl)loded inside a theater. The only casualty reported o n Christmas Day was a 63·yaar .. ld Belfist woman. She was shot in the mouth wben. she got caught iii a crosallre between sunmen mi BrlUsh troop.s In the lloman C.tbolle New Lodge district. • , Guerrilla Plan Kissinger As.s._assinatiQ11 Thwarted BRUSSELS (Ufl) -Tb&-Arab guerrilla organization that killed 32 persons at.Rome and Alben~ airports last week ,orleinaµy planned to uuaalnate U.S .. Secrelary of State Henry A. Kissfnger in Beirut a day earller but wu thwarted, military and diplomatic sources said today. ' . · The 10urcet aaid Ubya ordered the submachinegun and grenade atlempl on !Qlslri~'s life at Beirut lnternaUonal Aiport Dec.16 but Lebariese authorities learned of it in lime and ordered Kissinger's plan diverted to 1\ayak Air llase instead. Rayak is 45 miles ·east of Beirut. The U.S. Embassy in the Leb- anese capital 'i'i .. the Kissinger plane went there for security rea· sons. According to the soum:s. the Libyans told .the group to at.lack instead at Rome , where they killed 31 persdns at Leonardo da Vinci Airport Dec. 17 before hijacking a· Lufthansa airliner and killing one person during a stopover In Athens: Laguna 'Trustees Approve ·Low Bid -For-Classrooms Peter Owen Frickland, 21 , of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrence of UC Riverside were said today to have reached the peak the night of the 29th. They stayed overnight, rtturning to find Eichmann dead and Pfirrmann in trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so went for help. Two others . in .the UCI-climbing-etub observed the climbers from the East Face Lake High Camp, scene of rescue Laguna Beach school trustees ~ve operations Christmas Day and today. approved a low bid of $118,185 for four Storms blocked views of the ' four new portable classrooms. climbers on Friday and Saturday, UCI Three of the new classrooms will be students John Mark Graham, 20, of Long Beach and Tom Hemker, 19, of placed ·on the Laguna Beach High School Villa Park, the two other members of .cnortb" campus and one unit will be the party, told rescuers. added "to Aliso Elementary School. On Christinas Eve Graham and Hemker reached civilization and the Inyo The school district will pay for the County Sheriff's Department called in new classrooms in seven a n n u a 1 the China Lake Mountain Rescue Group. payments of $16,883. The first installment Three team members led by Frickland is iibout $3,000 less than what was and Lawrence reclimbed the peak to budgeted for the classrooms la.st year. reach Pfirrmann who waited near Eichmann's body at the 14,100 foot level. The low bidder was Aurora Modular The six were spending Christmas ln<!'Jstries of Riverside. , holidays on the mountain when the storm 1 The new .Oigh school classrooms will overtook tfiem. · replace an old temporary classroom Eichmann, a junior majOring in building sitting on the north campus engineering, was president of the UCl playing field. The field will soon l>e Mountaineering Club. A resident of developed into new tennis courts through Irvine, he is survived by ·his parents, a joint venture of the school district, (See CLl!\fBER, Page .%) the -city and-Tennis Now, -a private-·~·-"------;;....;·--·'----'--~ organization. The new unit at A1iso School will house the Early Childhood Education program, funded by the state. In a separate action, t1'Ustees voted to reject all bids for construction of a utility building at the maintenance yard in Laguna canyon. The lowest bid for · the project came l-in $5,000 over the $13,000 budgeted rOr tbe building. Business Manager Clyde Lovelady told trustees that the buil<ijng dimension s will be reduced to lower the cost and the project· will be rebid. Satellite Launched Red Communications . . MOSCOW (UPf) -The Soviet Union announced today It launched another in its series of Molnia-2 communications satellites. The Tass News Agency said the sattelite was Jaunched Christmas Da y fbr telephone ind ·telegraph com· munleaUon and for rel!lYlng television programs to outlying parts or the Soviet Union . Oruge Coast • Weather Showers likely tonight and Thurs· day morning according to the we<1:ther service with decreasing cloudiness Thursday afternoon. Cooler days. lA>\>.'S tonight in the low 50s. Highs in the upper !Os. INSIDE TODAY Two Laguna Beacb motliers who publish 1t11derground con1ic boo ks dan'i think the: comics are Vtl'fl funny anymore. See story 0 11 Page 8 toda11. INlllll ll L.M.. tey• 11 C .. ltttlll1 s C!aJilfltd .n.a Ctmlu • c,......,. • 0.•111 NOlktt I e-•none1 ,... • •11i.rt•l11"'••• '"'' Flllfl~Ct P.11 .. .,. ......... ,Ji ·--.. - % DAIL~ PILOT u Nixon. 'f ravel Still Not Set WASHINGTON (AP) -The \\'hlte HOU3e said today there were no definite plans for any holiday travel by President Nixon. 111e President lenta t lvely 5chcduled a trip to his Key Bis- cayne, Fla., ~me for loday but remained in the White llouse and aides sakl he was working on ~1id· die East, energy and legislative matters. Deputy Press secretary Gerald L. \\'arren v:ould not Bay when or Ir the President "'ould go to Florlda. Propane Gas Truck Crasli Jams Freeway A propane truck trailer crashed and exploded on the . Santa Ana Freeway today, creating a fiery holocall!lt that blocked bolh lanes or the busy artery for nearly an hour. Firemen from Buena Park and Fullerton doused the blaze near the intersection of the Santa Ana and Riverside freeways and e n a b l e d California Highway Patrolmen to reopen the northbound lane after a SG-minute tieup. Patrolmen reporting to headquarters from the area said traffic was blocked for more than 10 miles in each direction. Clearance of the southbound lane was delayed while wrecking crews moved in to pull the scorched vehicle oU the freeway and allow emergency operators lo drain oU the remaining propane. Fullerton firemen said the driver of the truck apparently escaped injury. They said no other vehicles were in- volved in the accident. ·OfCicials at CHP headquarters, working from sketchy on the scene reports, have not yet been able to detennine the cause of the crash other than ·to confirm that no other vehicles were involved. "It appears that the vehicle, described to lLS as a small petrolene tanker, was headed south when something happened to send it headlong into the center divider,'' an officer said. "Our next report indicated that it ~ through the divider aod went on to block the northbound Jane. before it overturned and caught fire," he said. 1be driver of the 270-gallon tanker told patrolmen that the frame of his tralJer buckJed while he was driving south and he lost ooatrol and went through cenler divider and into DOrlh lane. Firemen's main ~'Orry was explosion from the heat but that didn't happen. From Page l CLIMBER .•. :P.tr. and Mrs. Eric Eichmann, and a brother, Donald, 12, all of Hacienda Heights. Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfimnann is believed to be a recent graduate of UCI wht:re he majored in chtmlstry. Hemker is a sophomort: majoring in biological sciences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. lnYo Sheriff's Deputy Don Cron directed the rescue effort. Ten degree ·temperatures and· gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees below zero, rescuers said. Winds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop scene of the fall which is believed to have killed Eichmann. 'Jbe eigh~hour rescue involved a chofl'" per from the Naval Weapons Center, China LaRe, in which rescuers hurried 1 to the .scene. Today's effort 'involving an eight-man team from the Sierra Madre Search and Rescue squad relied on a heavier helicopter from the l\tarine Corps Air Station, a rescue unit spokesman said. OIAJilelCOAST LI DAILY PILOT Tiie or.,.. C-1 ~IL'f "ILOT, WllPI ... Jell ........... ,,,. ~ It ,...,.... bf .. 0r.,... C.Ut li'Wllllllllt ~ .... ~· ...._ ..iHJoN .,, Ml,.,_, """'*t tf1r9W11 ,.,...... "" c.11 .... ........... kid\, Hllnfl1111M ' ltktt/itounn.111 V1llly, L1ouN '•Md!, 1"""-llMllr.tltdl """ S.ft C:llmtntt/ SM JllMI <'•Mir-. 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A.11 -lfl1¥1 11\11/flnt ................. fNifllflly. • h·vine Man ·Saddlehark Candidate S1ephen DeLapp, 24, a former media liaison worker with lhe cily of Irvine, today became the fourth person to fil e as a Saddleback College trustee can- didate. OeLapp, o! 14627 Kazan SI. in Irvine, ran for Irvine City Council tv•o years ago and is cha1nnan of the general plan housing subcommlUee. ' He attended Saddleback College and works for the Santa Ana-Tustin Yl\1CA while attending Long Beach State. · "I don't believe Irvine really has ever had representation on the board," DeLapp said. a.tichael Collins, the trustee whos.e resignation vacates the area six (Irvine- El Toro) post, was not "an Irvine-type person." DeLapp said. Collins lives in Harbor View Homes, a section of Newport Beach recently de-annexed !Tom the Saddleback district. "If the district doesn't respond to the needs of Jrvine, it could become another Tustin,'' DeLapp said. Some 8,000 Tu stin residents have sign- ed petitions to de-annex from the Sad- dleback district because they feel they have too far to drive and not enough courses to choose from. DeLapp said if he is elected to the board, "I would tend to be a little more liberal " than most of the present trustees. "But I feel I have the ability to get along with people. Head-butting is non-productive. t could bring some new ideas to the district -not as a rebel or a radical but as someone who bas a great interest in what happens." DeLapp said he believes Trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana, who pleaded guilty to bookmaking charges last week, should resign. Other issues OeLapp said he will stress are better extended campus offerings and a commuter system for the MJsslon Viejo campus. Progress 14.hsent At Pe.ace Talb On Middle East GENEVA"'(UPI) ;_:·Israeli and Ei!Y!> tian military delegations adopted such tough bargaining positkins today at st.art of their talk! on separating forces along the Suez C&Dal that there WU DQ, J>T'CI'· ress. Each side dismissed the other's proposals as unacceptable. Israeli sources said their stand is that Israel 's troops on the west bank of the· canal and inside Egypt should sim ply move back to the east bank, in other words switching places with Egypt's 3rd Anny on the east bank, or Israeli side, of the canal. Egyptian sources said thls is the same position Israel took in the unsuccessful disengagement talks at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suez Road in November and remains "totally unacceptable." Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position is that Israeli troops should move back as far as a line from EJ-Arish in the north ot the Sinai to Ras-Mohammed in the south. lhus giving Egypt about two-thirds of the-Sinai.~ Israeli sources said this would be "out of the question ." The Egyptian sources said their delegation to the military working group on disengagement has a fall-back position which would be for Israeli troops to move back behind the Sinai passes whlch are about 20 miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west or the passes while the United Nations would act as a buffer on the passes therriselves. A third Egyptian proposal under con· sideralion, the sources said , is for the 3rd Army to remain on the east bank with Egypt maintaining an "ad- ministrative presence" of civilians and police between the canal and UJre passes. Israeli sources sakl their delegation is tmlike\y to move from the simple switching sides proposal until early next year after Israel's elections Pt1onday. Israeli OefertSe Mi.nlser· Moshe Dayan said Tuesday the talks have better than a 50 percent chance of succeeding. But repo~ts in Israeli and Egyptian news·paperS hinted at a harderiing or positions with neither side prepared lo make nlajor concessions. At any ralc, it was doubted there Could be major negotiations unlil after the Israeli clec- tioos. World War I Vet Dies in Oemente Clifton Claude McClintock, a veteran of World War I and a Soolh Orange County rl'Sident for nearly four yea rs, died Saturday In San Clemente. lie v.·as 75. l\tr. PitcCtintock. an active member' of the Veterans of World War I, South Orange Coast BarTScka 1186, Jive(J at 21,000 Avenida Ae"'l"!erto, space 152. He leave.s his widow, Gertrude, of the home. Roman Catholic rites were conducted al ll a.m. today at SL Edward'• Cstholic Church In Dana Polrit. Burial followt'!I in Ascensim Cemetery, EI Toro. Lesneokl Mortuary cl San Clemente was in charge ol arnngement1. • UPI TtlffMltt Don Nixon Uninvolved, Says Aide By L. PETER KRIEG ot fill Deity ........ " F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, lhe President's brother, had no t>U.!Ines.s dealings with former Howard Hu&hefi: . aide John H. Meler in the Domlnic&J'! Ropubllc. acoonllng to the accountant employed by the Pruident, hll brother and Meler. "Donald Nixon was never Involved," Arthur Blech, the President's personal tax accouptant, ha,, said. Denver's Super White Christnaas Donald Nixon similarly has deuled allegations by ·ttfelu who has told the Senate Watergate Committee that Blech went to the Dominican Republic to "look over a deal" in which Donald Nixon was involved. Unexpected stonn dumped lllh inches of snow on Denver, Colo. and virtually tied up all traffic move- ment in the Mile High City. Nine-year-old Vincent Garcznski inspects Snowbound car while Collie (be- low) attests to fact the storm wasn't fit for man nor beast. Drifts piled to 10 feet in some places. Lawyer Ends Defense For Slatto11 Blech says h~ went with ?.1eier to look at a packing plant and while there had the idea to build a housing project. ·"But Donald Nixon was never involved in it,'' Blech said. "l would be the one to know since I was rwming the project.." Blech, who said he has told his account to the Watergate committee, said he thinks Meier is trying to implicate others in an effort to ease his own problems. h1eier ls being sued by Hughes and has been named in an income tax in- By TO~I BARLEY dictmcnt in Las Vegas. ot lh• o.i1r '"'' s1111 Blech said that to his knowledge, Pt1eier Carl Robert "Whip" Slalton's lai,-.•yer and Donald Nixon never ronsummated closed the ranch band's defense lo any business deal together. He said murder allegations today without calling Donald asked him to review any deals on addition:il witnesses to back Slatton's that y,·ere posed and Blech sa1d he testimony. recommended against each one. Nixon told the Dally Pilot last week Slallon, 41 , came off an Orange County that he and Meier, who were friends. Superior Court witness slnad after a dld go to the Central American rountry long grilling fron prosecutor Ted Millard together, but Nixon said, "I only v.·ent in which he repeatedly denied firing to see Meier get some kind of award." He said Meier had suggested many the shot that killed trespasser Q.ennis things , but he never followed through Glahn last July 10 at the Ortegci Hot on any of them. Springs. Nixon said his only dealingl'I with Meler Millard today !old Judge Robert L. or Howard Hughes came nearly 10 years Corfman he has been able to contact ago when he went after the food service four more witnesses and that he will business at the many Hughes plants be ready for closing arguments after across the cowttry. they have testified. He said be never got those contracts. Millard said he will 1ell the jury And he said he never offered any favors in his final staement that . there can lo get them . be no doubt that Slatton was the man Blech also &aid that when he told who confronted a group of trespassers the President's personal a t t o r n e y , at the water hole and killed Glahn, Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, 21, after an argument with the group, ·-· of !he_ r~view arrangemen~ .. Kalmbach said tie thOught it was a good idea· Slatton claimed from lhe witneS! stand to do the same for all of Donald's that he was being attacked and kid-busin~ affairs. naped at the lime of the s hooting Blecb said · be recalled Kalmbach by three men who beat him and threaten-saying something to the effect of "Don ed to castrate him. Nixon ts a very gullible guy, and people Slatton tolct the jury that he was are trying to use hi5 name." driven off in his own vehicle by his Kalmbach could not be reached to attackcs and only saved himself from confirm or deny the alleged statement. mutilation by grabbing the wheel of Blech said the proposed howing deal Finge.rprints Lifted From Clemente Body the vehicle which then overturned and fell apart after he quit 8"' Meler'a., ac. __!!l_rew its four ~up_ants__!g the gi:®Od.~_cou'"3nt..-...:_...:___:.::_.::__:..:_::.::_.::_:::_ __ The Starr Ranch employe testified Meier has contended that the President By JOHN VALTERZA Of lilt ~Hr "1111 Sl1ff Technicians in the Orange County Crime Laboratory today were able to give San Clemente police the first solid clues to the identity of a month-old body of a murder victim found late last y,·eek. Fingerprints lifted from !he badly decomposed r~mains are the strongest leads yet and as of today all but two had been taken, local detectives said. "This is the best information v.'e have so rar on trying to find out the victim's jdentit y, '' said dectctive Pete Goodwin. He said 1he technicians also have promised to obtain a complete dental chart on the victim , whose remains were found Thursday morning dumped along a roadside ravine about one.hair mile from San Clemente High School. Officers said it is lkely that !he victim's prints are on file if he served in the military or bad ever been arrested. But even with an identity, the Job for local officers is far Crom ove r. They have only scant clues in the Troubled Fetaf!e actual death of · the russet·haired man whose general age has been set as bell,•een a~ut 20 and 40 years old. The technicians lat~ last week were able to find a fragment of a slug em- bedded in the skull of the body. They also noted !hat the cause of death prob- ably v.·as a single shot lo the head. But two days o( patient -and fruitless -searching of the •area wber:e the remains were found led to nothing. Detectives used hoes, rakes and metal detectors in an effort to tum any new clues. They still are operating under the theory that the victim was shot elsewhere, his pants and shoes removed and then his body driven to the remote area and dumped. The onl y other piece of physical evidence which investigators have is a common . laded canvas tarpaulin w i th metal grommets which was used to partially conceal !he remains. The killer 's idea worked well for about 25 days, officers sald. that when he recovered consciousness knew of the trip .• he was riding s stallion bareback across A1eier, a former Newport Beach resi· !he ranchland under a lull moon with dent, left the Hughes organization to his white Sretson hat on the back of join a Salt Lake City mining firm. his head and his Colt .45-caliber revolver Hughes is suing Ateier and the mlnlDg , slwtg on his hip. firm for $9 million to recover what From Pagel DE!THS • • • Stroh leaped from an upstairs window. Chief Lawson said firem en believe the fire smoldered somewhere downstairs for several hours. "It flashed into Oames upstairs "'here the heat had been building up. When the man went through the window, it let in the oxygen the fire needed to really start burning," the chief ex· plained. Lawson said Mrs. Dunlap, who is separated from her husband , and her two children , were found upstairs in or near their bed s. "The bodies were quite badly burned," he said. "They may have died of smoke inhalation but considering tbe way the fire flashed through the second story, it is more likely that they burned to death ." he lost in purchas<s or allelJ<dly valueless mine claims. In a related development.. late last v.·eek, a federal judge in Los Angeles criticized justice department attorneys -and another federal judge -for trying to get a lawyer to testify about ~leier to a grand jury. U.S. District Judge Andrew Hauk issued a temporary restraining order to prevent attorney John Suckling of Los Angeles from appearina: before a federal grand jury in Las Vegas that is believed to be looking lnlo poos!ble tax vlolaUons by Meler. Meier argued that aiiylhing Suckling told the grand jury would -violate the attorney-client privilege and the judge agreed. Hauck said the manner in which federal prosecutors in Las Vegas ob- tained . an order there against Suckling from U.S. District Judge Roger Foley Jr. "was a rotten thing to do." "And you tell Foley that," Hauk added. The Judge W8'1 angered by the failure of federal prosecutors In Las Vegas to warn Meier's current lawyer that they Intended to bring hll former a~ tomey before lhe grand jury. . "Why didn't tboso spooks down lhere serve him notice?" the judge abed government lawyers . -Woodsman Kills Soutli Ora11ge Coast Power Someone felled 1 tree along San Juan Capistrano'a Ortega IDghway on ' Christmaa Eve and caused a major blackout along lhe South CoasL I The out.age, which lasted nearly an , flour, hit ot midday and alleeted -.r hundred households tn lhe mlaalm com-, munlty, Cspistrano Beach and San Clement<. I CreWJ repaired ,a severed main I ine serving San Diego Gas Ind Electrio Company's system after moving ti. fallen tree a mile east of the San · Diego Freewa.y. A mystery remains, however, a.• to why the tree was chopped down. This fence on the beach below the exclusive La- gunita residential area in Loguna Beach has been taking ll beating from both the element. and coutlly government recently. High surf washed out a por· tion of the fenell llS\ wffk. Tblll'lday, II will be the subject of a public hearing for the county Planning Commission. County ofllcW. contend the fence was extended without a pennit by Lagunlta last July, "Clur crtWI finally foond the 10w·ce ol lh• outage, bit lhe tree Wll oil lhere," said SDG and E Manager BiU Webb. The embarrasa<d woodsman had fied. t • I • I • • .. Saddlehaek To ay's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL. 66, NO. 360, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA \ ' WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS President ,Hints Against Gasoline Rationing From Wire Services WASHINGTON -President Nixon hinted broadly today that his ad- ministration decided not to impose gasoline ra.tioning. As pbotographen were recording the start of a meeting with Energy Adviser William Simon, Nixon said to them : "I'll\ working right now to make certain we won't have· to ration gas for you fellaws." No reporters were present at the time, but the President's comment was relayed by the photographers and by While House aides standing by. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. Saddlebaek \Varren said afterward that Nixon's con1- ment was not m e a n t to be an an· nouncement of 'action on rationing. 1'The President's aversion to rationing is widely known," Warren said as he recounted Administration's efforts to avoid rationing by voluntary con- servation of fuel. ?i.feanwhile, the White House described th.! Arab decision lo relax the embargo on oil shipments to Japan and most of Europe as a step in the right direc- tion . The Arabs, however, are maintaining their embargO on shipments to the United States and Warren said, "This • I Irvine's DeLapp Trustee Hopeful Stephen Del..app. 24, a former media El Toro ) post, v.·as not "an Irvine-type liaison worker with the city of Irvine. persoo," DeLapp said. today became the fourth person to file Collins lives -in Harbor View Homes, Saddl ba k Coll t a se<!tion o( Newport Beach recently as a e c ege rustec can-de-anncied from the Saddleback district. didate. "If the district doesn't respond to ~ DeLapp, of 14827 Kazan St. 1n Irvine, the needs or Irvine, it could become ran for I"1ne City Council Lwo years aoothir Tlistin," DeLapp said. ago and ii cbairman of the 1eneral Some 11~000 1"USt1n residents have sign- plan housing subcommittee. ed p<litions to-de-annex from the Sad- He attended Saddle back College and dleback district ·because they feel they v.'Orks for the Santa Ana· Tustin YMCA have too far to drive and not enough courses lO 'choose from. oil should not be used as an economic weapon." Warren, responding to questions, term- goven:unent continues to believe that OREGON SAW ENERGY CRISIS COMING. Story, Pago 4 GAS SHORTAGE HITS HOLIDAY TRAVELERS, Story Pago S EUROPE LAUDS ARAB OIL NEWS, Pago 10 ed the Arab announcement on Christmas day as "a step in the right direction and a sign ,of progress which we welcome." -_-;w~hll'}-'e~a~tt:1:endln~~g:':Lo~ng~Bea~ch~S~taLt!!ie.~~~1>:DeLa;;;;;~£Pr=said if he ts elected to the " • all bas e,·er , would-teod-lo-i>e-a-J11·, ue__~ bad reprHSIUltiun on the more liberal'' than most of the present DeLapp said. Michael Collins, the trustee whose trustees. r ... 1 ...... Uon vacates the area six (lrviJlc. "But I feel 1 have the ability to -.·-get aloog with people. Head-butting is He added; "We will continue to tvork for solution of the Middle East problem and the oil problem." Warren would not express either op- timism or pessimism over prospects of Arab relaxation of the U.S. embargo. Nor would he say whether the United States expects more oil to reach the country through "leakage" from coun- tries receiving Arab supplies. Warren reported that Administration officials are continuing to study the impact of steep price increases an- nounced Sunday by major Persian Gulf oil exporting Countries. Simo~ scheduled a news conference Thursday morning at which he was expected to announce the administration does not plan to invoke rationing to help ease the energy shortage. In an interview with the \llashington Post published today, Simon said, "I think we can manage without rationing if the (voluntary ) conservaUon program keeps going." The Post said Simon \1'3S con- sideringproposals to force ca·r pooling by closing gasoline stations two days a Yi'eek instead of one and setting up a random system for keeping every car off the road at leas t one day a week. Propane Gas Truck Crash. non-productive. l could bring some new ideas to the district -not as a rebel or a radical bul as someone who bas httr P'flft ,-... 1tr ltlcMrcl KMMlr INSPECTING DAMAGE, FIREMAN LOOKS FOR CLUES TO CAUSE OF FATAL FIRE Thia Was Kitchen arid Family R-.« Fou ntain Valley Horne Thot Burned This Morning ' ' a great interest in what happens." Delapp said •~ believes Trustee Alyn Bramon of Santa Ana, who pleaded guilty to bookmaking charges last week, SbOuJd resign. Other issues DeLapp said be will stress are better extended campus offerings and a commuter system for the Mission Yiejo ~1~~.: __ 'Wild' Viejo Fountain Val(ey Mom, 2 T ·B D h Sheep to Calm · -.:-·Ots · Uf.'!!__tO. . ... C.(lt~>-~ ~ -Beft)re ·Petting Jams F_re.e~ay A propane truck trailer crashed and exploded on the Santa ~ Freeway today,. creating a fiery holocaust that blocked hoth laoes of the bW!y artery for nearly an hour. Firemen from Buena Park and Scotland Yard Warns of Bombs "Fiil!erton aouseci the blaze '1ear the LONDON (AP) _ Sootland Yard warn- . intersection of the Santa Ana and ed today it expected more bombings Riverside freeways and en a b 1 e d following a Christmas Day lull in a caJilomia Highway Patrolmen to Teos>tO guerrilla campaign that has killed thr~ t~e northbound lane after a 50-minute persons and injured more than 100 m heup. London and Northern Ireland in nine Patrolmen reporting t? headquarters days. frqm the area said traffic was blo~ked London ~lice kept bomb disposal ex· fot more than 10 mlles·ln-eactN:tirect1on .... ·PeiiS.On ifti{}r".tocf8)'·, Whi~-1s--Boxing Clearance .of the southbound lane was Day, 8 BritiSh holiday. A special watch ~layed while wrecking ~ws moved over movie theaters also was ordered. m to pull the scorched vebjcle off the One recent homb exploded inside a freeway and allow ~ergency operator• theater. to drain oU lhe remaining propane. The only casualty reported o n Merton firemen sakl the · driver of Christmas oa'y was a 63·year~ld Belfast the truck apparently escaped injury. woman. She was shot in the mouth They said no other vehicles were in· when she got caught in a crossfire valved in the accident. · , between gwunen and British troops in Officials at CHP headquarters, workmg the Roman Catholic New Lodge distrid. from sketchy on the scene reports, have By JOANNE ,REYNOLDS Of t11e o.lh' l'llol Slaff A Fountain Valley mother and her two small children burned to death early today when a pre-dawn blaze gutted their two.story home at 9946 Thistle Ave. Authorities identified the dead woman as Stella Dunlap. Her children were Dickey, 5, and Tracey, 3. Another vicUrn whO leaped from the second story was Identified as James Stroh, 19, wbo suffered burns over 70 perCent or his body. He is listed in ~criUcal condition at the burn ward of Orange County Medical Center. · , The Thistle Avenue fire broke out at about 4:30 a.m. as Fountain V8Uey firemen were cleaning up from another costly blaze at !f092 La Linda Ave. The La Linda fire, which did an estimated $70,000 to the home or the Phillip· Landsberg•family,;-did not result in any injuries, firemen said. Fire Chief H. C. 1ilickey·Lawson said no cause has been established for either blaze. "We are in the process of jnvestigaUng the causes of the two fires but at this point, it doesn't look like either one is related to Christmas or Christmas decorations,'• he said. Lawson said the Landsberg fire might have also resulted in injuries· except that the family was alerted lO the blaze by the barking of the family dog. "As it was, a boy .had to jump Crom a second story window to ·gel out/' .the clllef ooted, , . ·Wtien fire units ' arrlved at the secOnd Thistle Avenue blaze, the house was completely engulfed in flames. Neighbors told firemen that the fire "exploded" out of the second story as . (See DEATHS, Page !) If you were one of the people upset by the prospect of wild sheep in a children 's petting zoo at O'Neill Park in Trabuco canyon, relax. The two stieep, donated by the ~1ission Viejo Activities Committee after being used in a live nativity scene last week . will ~ kept. away from children "until they calm do\vn," a ~1ission Viejo spokesman said. Obtained from SPCA Animal Shelter .in Lagllfla Beach, the sheep gave sponsors of the Christmas re-creation a wild time when they went to pick them up. F;ollowing a Daily Pilot story on the sheep chase, several readers responded with objections to the pl'!D lo donate wlld '8niriials to a children•s·zoo. An SPCA spokesman .said both sheep started out as domestic pets. One was given to the shelter when a zone change in the owners' area made possession (See SHEEP, Page !) not yet been able to detennine the cause of the crash other than to confirm that no other vehicles were involved. 11It appears that the vehicle, described to us as a small petrolene tanker, was headed south when something happened to send it headlong into tlie center Hughes' Tie to Don Nixon Refuted divider," an officer said. By L. PETER KRIEG one lo kDow since I was running the 1'0.ir next · repor$ indicated . that it Of lie Dlilr ''"' st• project!' smaahed ... tllrough Ille dlV!c!erand went F. Donald Nixon-of Newport Beach, Blech, who aaid he h8.!i told his accoont on to block' the northbound lane before the Preaklent's brother, had no business to' the Watergate committee, said be ll ...numed and caught fire," he said. dealings wt th former Howard H"'™'5 thinks l\leler Is trying to lmplicale others 'Ille• driver of the 111).gallon tanlccr aide 'John H. Meler in the Dominican in an effort to eaae his own problems. told patrolmen that the lrame of his Republic, according to the accoontsnt Meier ts being sued by Hughes and trailer -ed while he wu driving employed by the Prcsiden~ his brothel· hi• been named in an income tax in· aoulh and he lOBt cootrol and wont and Meler. 61ctment in Las Vegas. throach center divider and lnto north 0 Donald Nixon was never involved .'' Blech said that to h~ Itnowledge, Meier lane. , Arthur Blech, the President's personal and Donald Nl1on never consummated Firemen'• main worry wa1 explosion tax 1cm.mtant, has said. any business deal together. He said fronl lhe belt-bolt lha4'{idn't-ha-,1~. --10onaJd Ntxo slmilarty-hos-denled-Donald Hked him to review-any deals allegations by Meler who has told the that were poaed at>d Blech said he Inmates Feast Too SAN QUENTIN (UPl) -lnmates at San Quentin Prteon .. joyed a tradlUooal Christmas roast turkey dinner despite a month-long general lock'"P because of prllon vlolenct. Cindy arid peanuts were handed out Christmas Eve. Senate Watergate Committee that Blech recommended against each one. went to th• Dominican Republic to "look Nixon told the Dally Pilot last week over a deal" in which Donald Nixon that he and Meler, Who were friend.a, was Involved. did go to th• Central American country Bitch aays he. went with Meler to together, but Ni.Ion ~kl, "1 only went look at a packing pldnt and while there to oee Meler get aome kind ol award." had the Idea to build a housing project. He said Meler had suggested many '1But Dmald Nlxon was never Involved thlngi, but hC never followed throUgh In It," Blcch said. "I would be the on any of them. . Nixon said his only dealings ~Ith Meier countant. or HowardJlughes came·near1y 10 years ~1eier has contended that the Presid ent ago when be went after the food service knew of the trlp. business at the many Hughes .plants Meier, a former Newport Beach resi- across the country. dent, left the Hughes organization to He said be never got t.bose contracts. join a salt Lake City mining firm . And he said he never offered any favors Hughes is suJng Meier and the mining to get them. • firm for $9 million to recover what Blech also , said that when he told he lost in purchases of 81!igiilly the President's penonal attorney , valueless mine claims. Herbert W. ~Imbach of Ne'Nport Beach, In a related development late last of the review arrangement. Kalmbach week, a federal judge in Los /.flgeles said he . f"'l!iht It ns a good Idea critlci!ed justice department attorneys to do th same f6r all OI bOna!CI s -ariilino!Her· looera!Jililge ror business affairs. ·trying to get a lawyer to testily about Blecb said he recalled Kalmbach Meier to a grand jury. saying something to the efiect of "Don U.S. District Judge Andrew R•uk Jllxoo Is a very gulllble guy, and -le • issued a temporary .mtralnlng order are trying to use his name." to prevent attomey John Suckling of Kalmbadl could not be reached to Los Angeles from appearing befo,.. a· coohrm or deny the alleged stalemeot. ·federal grand jury in Las Veg•• that Blech said lbe proposed housing deal Is believed to be looking Into possible fell apart afler he qult as Meier's ac-(See DON NIXON, Page !) ). Simon is sai d to favor a standby pion that "'ould allow the government to set up all the machinery for rationing and hold it ready in case it becomes necessary "'hen and . if fuel supplies dip to an as-yet Wldetermincd "crisis level." · The government is pushing a program of voluntary self-denial. \Vhich includes a IO-gallon-a-week buying limit, low£>r driving speeds and other Conservation 1neasures. 1'he standby pla n \\'OU!d include loca l rationing boards, ration coupons and establishing priorities for n•ho ~·ould set the gasoline first. Loss Mars Whit11ey Expedition By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 l~e D•ll'I Piiot Sl•H Rescue teams returned to Mount \Vhitney today to remove the body ot UC Irvine Mountaineering Club President Eric Eichmann from tire spot ·· whert he fell five days ago. Eichman, 20, and a Costa l\1esa nian, Don Plirrmanrf of 2223 Pomona St.. attempted to reach the 14,494-foot peak of Mt. Whitney last Thursday when a storm overtpok them. Pfirrmann was helped Christmas Day from the 14.100-foot level by China Lake ~lountain-Rescue--flroup-volunteers:-fle remains in serious condition in Southern Inyo Hospital, Lone Pine. Pfirrn1ann is sut1ering from frostbite, rescuers said today. · The two were part of a six-man climb- ing part.V. Four attempted to climb to the top. Peter Owen Frickland. 21, of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrel1<.'e of UC Riverside were said today to have reached the peak the night of the 20th . They stayed overnight , r~turning to find Eichmann dead and Pfirrmann in trouble . Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so went for help. Two others in the UCI climhing._club observed the climbers from the East Face Lake High Camp. scene of rescue operations.Christmas Day and today. Storms blocked views of the four climbers on Friday and Saturday, UCI students John Mark Graham , 20, of Long Beach and Tom Hemker, 19, of Villa Park, the l\\'O other members of the party, told rescuers. On Christi11as Eve Graham and Hemker reached civilization and the Inyo County Shf>/iff's Department called in the China Lake Mountain Resc ue Group. Three team members led by Frickland and Lawrence reclimbed the pe<ik to reac h Pfirrmann who waited neat Eichmann's body.at the 14,100 foot level. The six were spending Christ mas holidays on the mountain when the storm overtook them. Eichmann, a junior majoring in engineering, was president of the UCI A-1ountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine, he is survived by his parents, (See cu~mER, Page Zl Orange Coast • Weather Showers likely .tonight and Thurs· day morning according to the weather service with detreasing cloudiness Thursday afternoon. Cooler da ys. U>ws tonight in the low 50s. llighs in the upper &Os. _Jl'WSID~E~T~Ou.uO'tLll-:--~~-1 T-wo Laguna Beach mothers tvlio publi!lt underground cmnic book-s da1t't tltit1k the comics are very funny anymore. See story on Page 8 todaU-- &Hllt'9 IJ l .M. •• ,. 11 C•lif«l'lll I CllMlll.. 11•• Cemk1 1t ,_ " DMftl Mel!Ctl I l•ltorltt ''" ' lltltl't•lllmtllt 1 ... 1, l'lll•IKt "'" l'e.r lftt ltKtr• I, II H~ltl(ffl D Allll L111den 11 Movl.. 1"11' MuhHll llllllQ t Mllllll•I *'" 4 Or'llttt CM>ltY I S'fl'ri• ...... ~ t -s...,11 11-14 lllt••-tn , .. ,, w .. ttttr " W""""'I N.WI II·· W91'1d """ 4 • -I DAILY PILOl 1s ____ W;_•c...dntsd•1. 0tc1mbtr _2~._!97~ ~- B e at Cnl Off Couple, 'JO, Freeze to Death SCHNECl'ADY N.Y. (UPI) -An old man and woman, both in thclr 90.s. tried to keep warm by buddll"I together an the cokl living room noor of their apartment ~ after the electric eompany cut ort their power. 'T'bey were found there -frozen to death -by a grandson. Frank Baker, 93, and his wife. Katherine, 91, were d ls cove r e d Christmd.S Eve by grandson, Basil Heise, home on leave from lhe military, who went to their home to take them to dinner Monday night. · Detectives •aid the couple had been dead for about tv.·o d3ys. A gas slO\'e had been turned on in the kitchen. a detective said, but provided little warmth. Elbert Watrous, Schenectady County district attorney, said he was considering handing the case to a grand jury. A spokesman for lhe Niagara !.folla"'k Power C.Orp., which services the area With electricity and natural gas, said the company cut off power to the home Burning Paper Pro ves Costl .Y ,, Santa Claus brought the Leroy Kroesch family of Balboa Jsland a whole lot of presents Chrislm!.s morning and it's a good thing he got back up the chimney in time. They opened them around the firepla ce at 126 Amethyst Ave. and then burned the gaily-patterned wrapping paper, according to the Newport Beach Fire Department. Spokesman Jim Topping said a $500 fire resulted, when sparks trom the wrapping paper flew up the chimney and fell on the roof. What the Kroesch's need now for Christmas is about 100 square feet of new shingles. F rom Pagel CLIMBER ... fl.tr. and Mr!. Eric Eichmann, and a brother, Donald. 12, all of Hacienda Heights. Funeral arrangements are pending. P!irnnann Is believed to be a recent graduate' of UCI where he majored in chemistry. Hemker is a sophomore majoring in biological sciences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. Inyo Sherill'• D e p u t y Dem Cron rurected the rescue effort. Ten degree temperatures and gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees below zero, rescuers said. Winds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop scene of the fall which ls believed to have killed EichmaM. The eight-hour rescue involved a chop- per from the Naval \\'eapons Center, China Lake, in which rescuers hurried ~o lhe scene. Today's effort involving an eight.man team from the Sierra 1.fadre Searth and Rescue squad relied on a heavier helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station, a rescue unit spokesman said. Both operations require a landing at the 13,000 foot level East Face Lake High Camp Md a climb over the moun- tain top to the location of the body on the west face. Al Green, 38, Bill Slron, 32, and BOb Rot!kwell, 29, all of the China Lake- Ridgecrest area , left their families Christmas Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack Macldul In the rescue operation. Body Found on Beach MONTEREY (AP) -Monterey County sheriff's detectives. said today they arc trying to identify the body of a teenager found shot to death on a beach near J\1onterey. Officers said two horseback riders spotted the body late Mooday. OUN .. COAST u DAILY PILOT TIM Orit'!P c-1 DAILY PILOT, ""lfl wllldl tt COf71it!ned Ille Nt.-.·l"flKJ. II l!Ublllt!R 1W tlle Or•"" c .. 11 l"vblllllllll Co'""'1y. 1.,,.. , ... Wltlon' ••1 ,wllllled, M-t'f ti!....., Frid•'• for Collt M ... , H._.,.. •ffdl. Hvl'll!llf"" llttcllJF-ltin V11i.1, LttVM 9-crl. t"'1rw1Stddl-c• incl Stn Clemtr!lt f J.tfl Ju.. C•Pll lrtflD. A 1!11911 reoior..1 edllltrl II puOlillltd Sthffi11,1 tnd Sllfldtft, Tl'lt ll"IMIPll PVt>ll .... 1119 Plt fl! 11 ti J• Writ lt'f SO•I, CIKlt M-. C.lllolnlt, t'Nll. Roli1rt N. W11d Pr1Klftm 11111 1""*111.l>rr J1ck -.. c.,1 • ., Vitt Prttilttl!t tflf Oftlfftl Ml~ Tlt0fll11 Ktt •il ··~ Th111111 A . M11P,1ti~1 Mt,..tlrlf E•Uw Cht tft• H. L1e1 fticlt•rd '· Ni ll A•l111"1 M1""'1ftt t11ltw1 C..!t Mitt· UO Wffl llW '!Twf N ...... rt •11c11: U» N1wpotti lOVlfvl rll Lit-l .. tl'>: m ,,...n l Awt111t Hllllllfltt911 lttd'I! 17111 ... ell lo.it1~1r• 1.r1 Clttl'>eflttJ JIU Horlll Et (1111,1111 lllNI ,_,.,._. Cn41 HZ-4J11 ca..lftH ............. '42·1l71 -S. C ......... Al .., .. 11111 .. t: , ........ 4tJ ... 4Jf Cffrr.,, tt7a. OrtlW# COottt "lllMlll!llflt c;""""". 1ff MW• 11orf11, lll11t!rtllll'la, •lwi.i --er lllYtrflMmtfttl ..... Ill _, .. ~... •llfltljl ~Ill .... . .,..._ If .,....,., IW'fltr, ~ C ......... 111 II C .. I, Mt&I, ttllltrfll-. ..... r.tltfl ..,. ""'"' ..... Mlfl .. l"fl IW •II Ii.IS "'*"flll.-1 ll'llllltr1 -.iilll!ltfll•llM -11111. • because lhe couple decHned to pay a flvo-month bill for !202. A gas !uma"' · in ·the home would have been made inoperative when electricity was abut oll, though It would not have 1Uected the use of a gas cooking stove. Once before, the spokesman sald, utilities were cut orf, about slx months ago, but were reinstated when a church paid half the delinquent blll of 12!0. The spokesman said the company con· tacted the Bakers several times about thei r bill, but said the couple refused to discuss ii. A deputy county medical el'aminer, Dr. John Stuelds, said an autopsy would be made, but tentatively said death was brought on by exposure. No Progress In Mideast Peace Talks GENEVA (UPI) -Israeli and Egyp- tian mllltary delegations adopted such tough bargaining positk>ns today at start of their talks on separating forces along the Suez Canal that there v.·as no prog- ress. Each side dismissed the other's proposals as unacceptable. Israeli sources ~aid their stand is that Israel 's troops on the v.·est bank or the ~anal and inside Egypt should si mply move back to the east bank, in other words switching places with Egypt's 3rd Army on the east bank, or Israeli side, of the canal. Egyptian sources said this is the same position Israel took In the unsuccessful disengagement talks at Kilometer 101 on the C3iro-Suez Road ln November and remains ""totally unacceptable." Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position ls that Israeli troops should move back as fa r as a line from El-Arlsh in the north of the Sinai to Ras-Mohammed in the south, thus giving Egypt about two-thirds of the Sinai. Israeli sources said this wouJd be "out of the question." , The EgypUan sources said their delegation to the military working group on disengagement has a fall-back posltion which would be for Israeli troops to move back behind the Sinai passes which are about 20 miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west of the passes while the United Natiom would act u a buffer m the passes themselves. A third Egyptian proposal under con- sideration, the f(>W'cea aald, ii for the 3rd Army to remain 'on the east bank with Egypt maintaining an "ad- ministrative presence" of civilians and poliee between the canal and the passe1. Israeli sources said their delegation Is wilikely to move from the simple switching sides proposal until early nezt year after Israel's election. Monday. Israeli Defer.se Miniser Moshe Dayan said Tuesday the talks have better than a 50 percent chance of succeeding. But reports in lsraeli and E g y pt i a n newspapers hinted at a hardening or positions with neither side prepared to make ma jor concessions. At any rate, it was doubted there could be major negotiations unUI after the Israeli elec- tioos. Egyptian officials close lo Foreign li-finister Ismail Fahrni, who remained in Geneva following last week's foreign ministers conference, said thi s will mean nQ progress can be made. They said Egypt further will oppose any negotiations on substantiaJ.\political matters until the disengagement process is ei ther completed or close to com- pletion. FromPqe J DEATHS • • • Stroh leaped from an upstairs window. Qlief Lawson said firemen belive the fir e smoldered somewhere downsta irs for several hours. ''It flaSled into OaJnes upstairs where the hea t bad been building up. When the man went through the window, it Jet in the oxygen the fire needed to really start burning," the chief ex· plained. Lawson said h-1.rs. Dunlap, who is separated from her husband, and her two children , were found upstairs in or near their beds. ''The bod ies \\'ere quite badly burned ,'' he !aid. "They may have died of smoke inhalation but considering the way the fire flashed through the second story, it is more likely that they burned to death." F rom Page l SHEEP. • • of farm animals illegal. The other was found deserted in Ila wt home. But in their four years at the shelter, they have become unused to contact with humans, he said. "Judging from the way they calmed down lnd let aome of our people pet 1hen1, I think they'll be okay for Jhe petting park eventually," sa1a Kerry Baicbtal, A MJsslon Viejo ActivitJca Com- m.Jttee spokesman. "To be honest wlth .. you, I don't think those two sheep will ever calm down," the SPCA spokesman said. Unlll th<y do, If ever, they'll be for "'atchlng only. ' Detav er's Super White Christuaas Unexpected storm dumped 11 ;l inches of snow on Denver, Colo. and virtually tied up all traffic move- ment in the Mile High City. Nine-year-old Vincent Garcznsld· inspects snowbound car while Collie (be- low) attests lo fact the storm was11't fit for man nor beast. Drifts piled to 10 feet in some places. New Yor~ City Christmas Anything But Peaceful NEW YORK (UPI) -The Oiristmas season was not a time of peace in the precincts of the nation 's largest city. "Christmas is a very bad day all the time," said one harried detective. "I don't know what it is -either the drink or too much merriment. A day like this has something like a fuII moon effect. ft never fails. Everything . seems to go to hell." Here are examples from the poli_ce blotter: -Detectives Ronald Kwoczka and William McDevitt were in a small store in Queens Christmas Eve. posing as receivers of stolen property. In came two men, who robbed them of $500. In the ensuing exchange or gunfire, both robbers were killed and Kwoczka, 31, was wounded. -In ?\1anhattan, two men entered a clothing store and ordered the owner, f\.1ichael Schuman, 58, and an employe into the storeroom and demanded money. When Schuman relll!ed, they shot and killed him and severely wounded the employe, li-fark Hollander, 68. -Angel Ortero, 14, was shot by another teen-ager while riding in the elevator of a housing project Monday night. -David Wade, 52, who has a history of mental problems, was critically wounded by a grocer who shot him afte r he poked into the cellar of a store to look for a woman he believed was hiding there. -There were five bank holdups ~!on­ day, one of them a so'phisUcated opera- tion complete with blow torches. Officials of the Chase Manhattan Bank estimated more than $150,000 was taken from the night deposit box: Dru g Squad Nabs 2 Suspected Opium Dealers· TEHRAN, Iran (AP ) -An anlldrug squ ad captured two smugglers today with an estimated $2 million worth of top grade opium, police reported. It was the biggest reported drug haul since May, when police said they Cllp- lured drugs •"'111 12! mlllioo. Oflieen said the opi11m oeized today was produced in Afgbani!tan and lraMporled through ·1ran to Kashan 175 miles 30Uth of Tehran, from where the smugglers were plarutlng to take it to Tehran for distribution and transforma- tion Into heroin. Under a new Iranian law, anyone caught with significant quan Uties o1 opium or other Illegal drugs will be exec uted by (iring squad after military trial. Guerrilla Plan Kissinger 4.ssassinatiori Thwarted Fingerprints Provide Clues To Dead Bodv By JORN V ALTERZA Of lllt OtllY ftlltt 51tfl .; Technicians in the Orange County Crime Laboratory today were able to give San Clemente police the first solid clues to the identity of a month~ld body of a murder victim found late last week. Fingerprints lifted from the badly decompo5ed remains are the strongest leads ye t and as of today all but two had been taken, local detectives said. "This is the best information we have so far on trying to find out the victim's identity," said dectct ive Pete Good\vin. He said the technicians also have promised to obtain a complete dental chart on the victim, whose remains were found Thursday morning dwnped along a roadside ravine about one-half mile from San Clement e High School. Officers said It is Jkely that the victim's prints are on file if he served in the military or had ever been arrested. But even with an identity. the job for loc81 officers Is far from over. They have only scant clues in the actual death of the russet-haired man whole general age has been set as between about 20 and 40 years old. The technicians late last week were able to find a fragment of a slug em- bedded In the skull or the body. They also noted that the cause of death prob- ably was a single sho t to the head. But· two days of patient -and fruitless -searching of the area where the rerriains were fowxl led to nothing. Detectives used hoes, rakes and metal detecton in an effort to tum any new clues. They still are operating under the theory that the victim was shot elsewhere, his pant.s and shoes removed and then his body driven to the remote area and dumped. The only other piece of physical evidence which lnveatigaton have is a common, faded canvas tarpaulln with metal grommet.s which. waa wed to partially conceal the remains. The killer's idea worked well tor about 25 days, officers said. Despite frequent passersby -primari- ly runners from the high school track team and citizens out tor cycle rides -the remains went unnoticed. Yet the body was only about 25 feet from the road's edge. The discovery finally came when an of!~uty fire captain working In Los Angeles noti ced his dog was rolling on .something. The animal bad made the grim discovery. Gurney to Stay On Panel--Aide WASlllNGTON (lJPI) -Sen. Edward J. Gumey's administrative aasl.ttant acknowledged today the &tto r i d a Republica n has mlSJed the last eight public sessions of the Senate Watergate 'committee, but ' said he has no intention of reslgnln& from the panel. "We don't have much comment on that story," Jim Allison Jr. told a reporter about a Washington Post report that Gurney ceased to be an active member of the eolllll)]ttee. Gurney bu acknowledged Iha! the' Juslloe Department wu lnveatlgitlng allegaliolll of a ...,..1 pollilcal fund • The fund wu allecadly utobli.sbed for Gurney by Florida builden In exchange for expected p<Olerentlal treatment from the Federal Houalni Adminlllrailon. Baker&field Mll.l,l Dies BAKERSFIELD (lJPf} -Donald Lee Rector, 21, of Baktrafleld, died early today of I ..,..n.1 W0\11111 to lbe Cb .. t IUfttred ChrlsbNla .night. Kern County ·1l!mfrf'deptitld'Jald·lledor and•Guy-" Jameo Lone, 11, also of Bakenfleld, ot Into Ill &flVmelll on • na....aeld !-wbla Long allegedly pulled a plat<i. ' 1 l Hot ~prings ·Testimony ' Concluded By TOM BARLEY 1 Of ftle Dtllly ...... lttH Carl Robert 11Whlp'' Slatton's laJYYer closed the ranch hand's defense to murder allegations today without calling on additional witnessea to back Slatton's testimony. Statton, 41, came off an Orange County Superior Cqurt witness 1tnad after a long grtlli"I Iron prosecutor Ted Miiiard ln which he rtpealedly denied firing the shot that killed trespasser Dennis Glahn last July lO al the Ortega Hot Springs. Millard today told Judge Robert L. Corfman ho has been able to contact four more witnesses and that he wilt be ready for closing arguments after they have testified. Millard said he will tell the Jury In hls final st11ement that there can be no doubt that Slatton was the man who confronted a group of tnispassers at the water hole and killed Glahn, 21, after an argument with the group. Slatton claimed from the witness stand that he was being attacked and kid- naped at tile tim e or the s h 0 0 t j n g by three men who beat him and threaten- ed 10 castrate him . Slatton told the jury that he was driven orr in-his own vehicle by his attackes and, only saved himself from mutilation by gra bbing the wheel of the vehicle which then overturned and threw its four occupant.! to the ground. The Starr Ranch employe testified that when he recovered consciousness he was riding a stallion "'reback across the ranchland under a full moon wilh his white Stetson hat on the back or his head and his Coll .4S-Caliber revolver slung on his hip. Slatton said he sought refuge in a ran ch· house after noting thai he had been acrompanied on his ride to safely by a riderle!! horse which stayed close behind him and whinnied to him oc- casionally during the midnight gallop. Millard claims that the Colt revolver was used lo gun down Glahn and thal Slatton had a long record of violence in dealing with Starr Ranch treapassers to the point that he had been ordered to contain hl~lf by supervisory person- nel. Millard claims that Slatton was alone in his vehicle when it overturned and that the accident was due to high speed when he drove from the scene of tht shooting. \ Woodsman Kills Soutli Orarige Coast Po wer Someone felled a tree along San J uan Capistrano's Ortega Highway on Christmas Eve and caused a major blackout along the South C>asL The outage, which luted nearl y an hour, bit at midday and affected several hundred households In the miuion com- munity, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. · Crews repaired a se\•ered main line serving San Diego Gas and EJectl'lc C-ompany's system after moving the fallen tree a mile east of the San Diego Freeway. A mystery remains, however, as to why the tree was chopped down. "OUr cre~·s finally found the source or the ootage. but the tree was all there," uld SDG and E Manager BUI Webb. The embarrassed woodsman had fled. FromPqeJ I I DON NIXO N ' ... ' taz violations by Meler. Meler argued that anything Suckling told the grand Jury would violate the attorney-client privilege and the judge agreed. Hauck said the manner In which federal proteCUtors in Las Vegu ob- lalned an order there agalnat Suckling from U.S. Dlalrlct Judge Roger Foley Jr. "was a rotten thing to do." "And you tell Foley that," Hauk added. The judge wu angered by the failure of federal prosei:utors in Las Vegas to warn Meier's current lawyer that they intended to bring his former at- torney before the grand jury. "Why didn't those spooks down there serve h1m noUoo ?" the judge asked government lawyers. Nixon Travel Still ·Not Set WASlllllGTON (AP) -Tho White HOUie said today there ftre no definite pl•na for llllY holiday !ravel by Pmidenl Nixon . The Prelldent tentatively scheduled· a trip to his Key Bil:' cayne, Fla., home for today but remained In the White Bouoe 111d aldea said be was working on Mtd- dlc Eaal, energy and leglslallve matters. .... Depucy.l'l:w SecreiaJ:)! ~old.I... Wamn would not say when or Jr the President would ao to Florida. ' 7 \. I , ,. • • Huntingion Beaeh Fountain ·Valley * ' , • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks YOL. 66, NO. 360, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1973 TEN CENTS • • • • am1 1.e·s Ill ire . . • . . . -..• . -.. INSPECTING DAMAGE, FIREM'.AN LOOKS FOR CLUES TO CAUSE OF FATAL FIRE This W11 Kitchen and F1mily Room of Fountain Valley Home That Burned Thi1 Morning Propane Gas Truck Crash Jams Freeway A propane truck trailer crashed and ezploded on the Sanla Ana Fnieway , 1 today, creating a ftery ~uat that blocked both lines of tbe biisy artery for nearly an hour. Firemen from Buena Park and Fullerton doused the blaze near the intersection or the Santa Ana and Rivenkle freeways and e n a b I e d California Highway Patrolmen to reopen the ~rtbbound lane after a 50-minute tieup. Patrolmen reporting to headquarters from the area said traffic wu blocked tor more lban 10 miles in each direction. OearanoooftbeaoulhOOundJanewu delayed while wrecking crews moved in lo ~I the scorched vehicle oH the freeway and allow emergency operators to drain off the remaining propane. Fullerton fU'eme.n said the driver of the truck apparently escaped injury. They said no other vehicles were in· volv\'l(l In the accident. Officials at CHP headquarters, working from sketchy on the scene reports, have not yet been able to determine the cause of the crash olher than to confll'D'.l that no other vehicles were Involved. .. It appears that the vehicle, described to. us as a small petrolene tanker, was beaded south when something happened to lelld It beadlong into the center di•kler1" an officer said. 0 0Ur next report indicated that it smaabed through the divider and went on to bloclt the northbound lane before lt overturned and caught fire, 11 be said. Tbe driver of the 27o.gallon tanker told patrolmen that tbe !rame o! his trailer , budded while be was driving south . and be loot control and went thro!lih center divider and into north Jane. 1Flrtmen1s main worry was explosion from tile beat •bot that didn 't happen. Scotland Yard Warns of Bopihs LONDON (AP) -ScoUand Yard warn- ed today It expected moro bombings loUol!inB a Christmas Dey lull in a guerrtlJA campaign .that bu killed 1hree penon1 and Jnjuttd moro than 100 in London and Northern tr.land Jn nine dayl. London J>Ollce kept bomb ~ ex· peril on duty today, which is Boxing Day, a Br!Usb bollday. A apeclal wati:h ove~ movie theaterf alsO Was ordered. One recent bomb exploded inside · a IMater. Tbe only casualty reported o n Cl)tjitmN-pafwai I ilS-yW-OJd Bellaat ~. Sha WU shot in the lllCl'lth -aho got caUibt Jn a ....Ore bet-gunmen Ind Br!Uah troopo . in ~!he Roman Catholic N"' Lodge district. FIREMEN COMPARE NOTES AFTER DOUSING FATAL BLAZE Cause of 4:30 a.m. Fount1in Valley Fire Unknown Stu~k One Hour Va~y Man Trapped iii Elevator A ·Fountain yaUe;y bu.sinesmnan was Ira~ ior an, bOur in the Union Federal Bank eleVatoi' today · tmtil he saved himself -With a Utile help. But the scene at the bank at 10744 Brooktltirst St., Fountain Valley, will WotiaJ>Jy llOVer make 'tbe movies. EVea the victim conceded his rescue was less tllan drainaUe. "I bad' my. briel<ast and I went lo work,l' said Dive Woodrulf, a manufac- turer'• rePruentative, describing how be spent part of his .morning alone between the first and second floors of tbe still llllfmisbed building. The cause of the breakdown was · a blovm fuse. Woodruff, whose office is on the second floor, said he was never worried be wooldn't get out. Fountain Valley firemen responded to tbe call, but left wben bank olficials said they ·would caJI the elevator com- pany. ''They wanted to break down tbe door, but that's too much repair work,'' an elevator company official said of lhe fireme~ F · C SJ A fire department spokes'man said og· . uts iort such action is taken only in an emcrgen· cy 111\'1 Woodruff was all right. A:rz:ner Flight · "Art you·•till in there?" a construction ~ ~ worker occaslCl!ally bellowed throogh tbe -· YOllK (UPI) -The llnal leg • doon., "~" · "Here I am," Woodruff would reply. ·ol ID American 'Airlines l\lghl to New York City was canceled when the plane u!-sk him lf he can crawl out/' ~her waa turned back becl)U!O o! fog. One woriananc yelled. But the sOluUon was pasaenger aald a dog caused It all. • mtll'h, mudt sln!Pler than that. 0 .. 1 McCarthy an associate edit-Or · Woodruff let hilDaelf -ou~ after the at the l)nitld Fea'ture Syndicate in New elevalor expert 'told him how to push Yor~ 'llho boorded night 1111 In Delrolt, tbe doors apart ltom the inside, touch ..-i there was a hal!-hour delay lh a small button and step up a lew Syracust wliue crew members tried to feet to !roedom on the second floor. coa'1nce1 a •palr ol newly boarded Could be bave eocaped •t any time? )JJlllaenpn thlt their dog would have ''SIJM!,'' said the elevator otticl.al, ''.ii to be earned Jn a box. he'd lcDown how." • " . D11tr P'll.t P't!otn llr a1c11n KMlll•r FIREMEN MOP UP AFTER BLAZE WHICH KILLED THREE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY On Thistle ~venue, Doth T1kes Mother, Two Small Children Woman, 2 Children Perish . ·~·.~sto~~,:61i~.ted ,;~ii,~'~1' ~orn,~?tg Blaze By ,JOANNE REYNOLDS .. The La Linda .. fire, which dld an Stroh lea~ from an ~lairs window. ··_.Of 119 Dlflr "'"" "llf' estimated $70,000 tQ the home -of the Chief Lawsion said firemen believe the A Fountain Valley mother and her Phillip Landsberg family, did not result fire smoldered somewhere downstairs two small children burned to death early in any injuries, firemen said. for several hours. today when a pre-dawn blaze gutted Fire Chief H. C. Mick~y Lawson said "It flashed into names upstairs 'vhere theif two-story home at 9946 Thistle nbol•~ea.use bas been established for either the heat had been building up. When .... the man went through the window, it Ave. "We are in the process of investigating Jet in the oxygen the fire needed to Authorities identified the dead woman the causes of the two fires but at really stai-t burning," the chief ex· as Stella Dunlap. Her children were this point, it doesn't look like either plained. Dickey, 5, and Tracey, 3. one is related to Chrisbnas or Christmas Lawson said Airs. Dunlap, who is 1 Another victim who leaped from the decorations ," be said. separated from her husband, and her Lawson said the Landsberg fire might two children, were fow>d upstairs in second story was identified as .James have also resulted in injW'ies except or near their beds. Stroh, 19, who suffered bums over 70 that the family was alerted to the blaze "The bodies were quite badly burned,'' percent of his body. He is listed in by lhe barking of the family dog. he said. "They may have died of smoke critical condition at the burn ward of ~·As ii was, a boy had to jump from inhalation but considering the way the .Orange County l\fedical Center. a second story window to get out," fire flashed through the second story. the chief noted. it is more likely that they burned to The Thistle Avenue fire broke out When fire units arrived at .the second death." at about C:30 a.m. as Folllltain Valley Th.i.stle Avenue blaze, the house _was ]..a~~ ~-investi&~.!9?'! ~~some firemen were cleaning up from another completely engµlfed in flames. difficulties In determining the cause of cosily blaze.at 9092 La Linda Ave. Neighbors told firetnen that the fire the fatal blaze because the house was Nixon Okays $2 .2 Billio11 Aid to Israel WASlllNGTON (AP ) -President Nil<· on signed today legislation authorizing $2.2 billion in emergency aid lo Israel. The White House said Nixon acted on the measure at midmorning, clearing the way for emergency security assis- tance sought by Israel after the outbreak of fighting in the Middle East several months ago. The 1egis1ation gives NixQn flexibility to provide the aid on a credit or a grant basis. It also authorized him to use a portion of the ftmds· to pay the U.S. share of the costs of the United Nations erilergency. force .in the Middle East. The U.S. assessment is estimated at fl7.3 million !or tile first .year. The ·President signed the measure without public comment following an hour.Jong meeting with So v i e t Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, a session arranged to apparently discuss U.S. and Soviet moves to promote a lasting l\Uddle East Peace. The ~.2 blllidn authorited by the bill was the lull amount requested by Nison. Red Communications Satellite Lawiched MOSCOW (UPI). -Tbe Soviet Uniop annoWlced today It laWIC~ed another in Its serlea of Molnla-2 commwilcatidns satellites. The Taas News Agency said the utlellte wu lluocbed Chrill6nas Day !or telephone and telegraph com- munlcaUoo and for relaying televisloo prorrams'to oudyJng parts of the Soviet . Union. · "exploded" out of the second story as so badly burned out. * * * * * * Fire Breaks Out in 2nd Valley House; 5 'Lucky' The five members of the Phillip Landsberg family spent the day today sifting through the robble of what used to be their home, ·telling themselves how lucky they are. The family hoi:ne at 9002 La Linda Ave., Fountain V~lley, was gutted in a pre-dawn fire this morning, but the parents, the· three teenage Children, the family dog and their pet parakeet all survived. A. fire which erupted two llours later th~ miles from the Landsberg home , claimed the lives of · a mother and her two small children and critic.itlly injured another man. The two oldest Landsberg g i r 1 s I-Old friends that thef were awakened by the noise, heat and light that the fire was generaUng when It broke out on the home's second story at about 2:30 a.m. They ran downstairs. wbile their 14-. yeaHld--brother jumped from b i s bedroom window. Their parents bad been alerted to tbe danger by the barking o! the lam!ly dog. ' 11ley did not have the time to rescue the parakeet and as' lbey wat~ their . home bum, they feared the' Pet -was dead. Firemep who Went into the home were , a1""'1 by neighbors lo dispoae ol the bird's , body so the family wollldli't see Jt. Acconllng to 1·1re Chief H. c. '1lfickey'" Lawson, one startled fireman found the bird, unharmed. "He took his f I o v e orf and reached out a finger for the bird to perch oo. The bird did, and then bil the fire. man's finger," the~ chier related. According to friends, the family beld a small reunion on the front lawn when the wowxled fireman emerged from the home with the' bird. Late this morning, lhe family wu back at their gutted home, trying to salvage what they could from the ashes. Oraage Coast • Weatller Showers likely tonight and Thurs· day morning according to the 'tl'eather service wilh decreasing cloudiness Thursday afternoon. Cooler days. Lows tooight In the low SOS. Highs In the upper 60s. INSmE TODAY Two Laguna Beach mothers who publish underground comic book& dm''t think tlie comics are very funny onvmore. See story 011 Page B todau. =i!:.•'*' , .. ft M11lu11 l'ltlllft t "'""'" "'"' 4 C>!'1ftH C"'9tY I l vlYI• """" t ,_,. , .. ,4 Tlllll'lrt ,.,, w-. WIMlll't NIWI tl..a --. • I DAILY PILOT H Wtdntsday, December 2b, 197:1 ~ . . President Hints Agajnst Ga·soline Rationing 1'"rom Vllre Sen·lees _ WASljlNG.TQN ---· .President Ni.ron hinted broadly today that his ad· ministra1!011 decided not to impose gasoline rationing. As photographers were recording the start of a meeting \\'ith Energy Adviser \VUllam Simon, Nixon said to them: "I'm working right now to make cer1 ain ~·e won't have to rat ion ga!i for you fellows.'' No reporters were present At the time, but the President's comment "'RS relayed by the photographers and by White House aides standing by. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. \l/1rrtn .-.Id afterward that Nixon's com· ment wu not m..e.a.n t to_))e an an~ nouncement ot action on ratlonlng.- HThe Ptel!dent'• 1venlon to ratloninc Is widely known,'' Warren said 11 he rtc0unted Adm.lnlstratlon's effort! to avoid rationing by voluntary con. servatlon of fuel. Meanwhile, the White House dc!Cribed th J Arab decision to relai the e1nbargo on oil shipments to Japan and most of Europe as a ste p in the right dlrec· tion. The Arabs, however, are maintaining their embargo on th,ipments to the United States and Warren 1aid, "This Guerrilla Plan Kissi,.iger Assassinatio1i Tliivarted • BRUSSELS (UPI) -The Arab guerrilla organization that killed 32 persons at Rome and Athens airports last week ortidnally planned to assassinate U.S. secretary of State Henry A. Kissfnger in Beirut a day earlier but was thwarted, military and diplomatic sources said today. ~ The soure<os said Libya ordered the submachinegun and grenade attempt on Kissin~er's life at Beirut International Aiport Dec. 16 but Lebanese .authorities learned of it in time and ordered Kissinger's plan diverted to Rayak Air Base instead. Rayak is 45 rniles east of Beirut. The U.S. Embassy in the Leb- anese capital said the Kissinger plane went there for security rea· sons. According to the sources, the Libyans told the group to attack instead at Rome, where they killed 31 persons at Leonardo da Vinci Airport Dec. 17 before hijacking a Luflhansa·alrliner and killing one person during a stopove.r in Athens. ·VCI Man Killed Mt. Whitney Climb Ends In C~istmas Tragedy By GEOl\GE LEIDAL Of 11'1• oanr '"" 11111 Rescue teams returned to blount Whitney today to remove the body of UC Irvine Mountaineering Club President Eric Eichmann from the apot where he fell five days ago. Eichman, 20, and a Costa Mesa man, Don Plirrmann of 2223 Pomona St.. attempted to reach the 14,494--foot peak of Mt. Whitney last Thursday when a storm overtook them. P(lmnann was belped Qristli'las Day rrom the 14,100.foot level by China Lake Mountain Rescue Group volunteers. He remains in serious condition in southern Inyo Hospital, Lone Pine. Pflrrmann is sult~rlng from frostbite, rescuers said today. The two were part or a six-man climb- ing party. Four attempted to climb to the top. Peter Owen Frickland. 21. of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrence of UC Riverside were said today to have reached the peak the night of the 2oth. They atayed overnight, r~turning to find Eichmann dead and Pflrrmann In trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so went for help. Two othera in the UCI climbing club observed the climbers from the East .rac_e Lake f;ligh Camp, scene of re,.cue operations Christmas Day and today. Storms blocked· views of the four climbers on Friday and Saturday, UCI students John Mark Graham, 20, of Long Beach and Tom Hemker, 19, of Villa Park. the two other members of the party, told rescuers. On Chrishnas Eve Graham and Hemker reached civilization and the Inyo County Sheriff's Department called in the China Lake Mountain Rescue Group. Three team members led by Frickland and Lawrence recllmbed the peak to reach Pflrrmann who waited near Eichm ann's bod y at the 14.100 foot level. The six were spending Christmas OlAN•I COAIT H• DAILY PILOT Tiit 0••1111• CO.ti DAI LY PILOT wlffl Wiiieto It <~111td .fllt Htwt•P .. tt, It Plllllllhfll bJ ll!t Ottntt CO." Publl~lllO C•rnpan'f, Stpa• ''" edlflMI t rt Pllbllil'ltd, MOtldt'f ttlrOlfOll "''°'''' !of Cl>l!t Mt11, N""POrt •ffcfl, Huntl111110o lleecto/FO<lfl!lln V~llty. u ouna htdl, lrvlMls.odltb.te~ •rod $.In Clt meri!t/ ltn Jliltll C111!1tr1no. A 1l1191t rflffol\tt tdltllln 1, publitlltd S111trder-11'1d Sundl'fl. Tnt pt1N;IJ!41! 1>Ublltllln9 11t.111 11 t i J» Wtol lltl' S!rffl, C11tlt M111, C111le•n!t, t~:I'. Rol>ttl N. WttO Ptti'ldtn! tnd Put11J1ntr Jtt~ It C111l1y \loct Prttlitetil ....i ~trel Mt llf9fl' Thot11t1 Ktt•ll Editor Tho'"'' A. M111plli~1 Mt1119111~ to11er Chtrr .. H. Lott Ri'"'''' P. Nill Au111111t M1na111111 ltl!ert ''"'f c •• 111, W"I Ottl'IOt Ct1111t1 ltilft " .................. OfRce 17171 lttch lo11lt•t'4 Mol/111; M4rtt11 ,,0 , ltt 790, f2641 --"'911M ftl<'llt )h l'ornl •~-C..11 M"1: l:IO W"1 lt'f lfr"' 1111..,,..n lttdl1 uu ,. .... ,.,., lowl.V.'11 &t1I C""""'lt! XU NOtfll II Ct'"ltlo •ht , ___ ,_ , .. .,.... (714) ,42-4111 \ Cl ....... MMtltl"'f 641·1671 ,,... .... Ot .... ,_,., ~ ... 141-1110 ' c..,rllllt, un. Ot•,.. c,,.11 P1111n1111~1 ~. ... M'WI llOt!tt, llhlllrttltnl. tlfftorllf --"' MY.,!ltt'"'91'1'1i lltttl~ llNY .. ~ wllflWI IMCltl "'' '"'"""' .. ........... """. ._... 0.. ........ 11 '1 Cctlt Mtw, (ell... .....'-!IOll llJ Wt'l'itt U..a _,lfllt'j W NII N,lf l!IO!!t!!ly1 mllltff'J ..,lftOffOM RM """'™"· holidays on the mountain when the storm overtook them. ElehmaM, a junior majoring in engineering, v.·as president 0£ the UCI fl.1ountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine, he is survived by his parents, 1'1r. and Mra. Eric Eichmann, and a brother, Donald, 12, all of Hacienda Heights. Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfirnnann is believed to be a recent graduate of UCI where he majored in chemistry. Hergker ia a sophomore maioring in biological sciences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. Inyo Sheriff's D e p u t y Don Cron directed the rescue effort. Ten degree temperatures and gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees below uro, rescuers said . Winds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop scene of the fall which is believed to have kllled Elchmenn . The eight-hour reacue involved a cho~ per from the Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, in which rescuers hurried to the scene. Today's effort involving an eight-man team from the Sierra fl.1adre Search and Rescue. squad relied on a heavier helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station, a rescue unit spokesman said . Both operations require a landing at the 13,000 foot level East Face Lake High Camp. and a climb over the moun- tain top to the location of the body on the west lace . Al Green , 38, Bill Stron, 32. and Bob Rockwell, 29. all of the China Lake-- Ridgecrest area. left their families Christma1 Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack Macldul in the rescue operation. President Meets With Kissh1gcr, Russian Envoy By HELEN mOMAS WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Nixon met with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin and Secretary or State Henry A. Kiss inger today for a general foreign policy review. Nixon's meeting with Kissinger had been expected. But his conversatlOn with Dobrynin came as t0methlng of a surprlse. Reporters learned that he was in the White House only after seeing his !Jmousine parked nearby. The three, meeting alone, were ex- pected to confer about an hour. "1'hey'rc just getting together to talk about general foreign policy maners," deputy press secrttary Gerald L. Warren said. Warren recalled that Nixon spoke alone with Dobrynln for 40 minutes last week. Photographers were aummoned lo the oval o!Oce to take pictures of the Nlxon- Kiss!nger-Dobrynin mee ting. Re))Orters V.'l're oot allowed to cover the picfure- taking seuion. On Monday, Nlion and Klsslnger met for more than an hour and on Christmas Day they spoke by telephone for a half hour. Nixon al!IO had an appoln1ment today with former New York Gov. Ne1!10n A. Rockefeller, and,, his successor, M•lcom Wllson. '· oil should '!)Qt be used u tn economic weapon." Wa?Trui;'nfipOadlng to Questioni, term- aovemment ooatirulet to believe that OREOON SAW ENIRGY CRISIS COMING. Story, Page 4 GAS SHORTAGE HITS HOLIDAY TRAVELERS, Story P191 S EUROPE LAUDS ARAB OIL NEWS, Page 10 · ed the Arab announcement on C)rjstmas day as "a step in the righ~~lon and a sign of progress wblch we welcome." He added: "We will continue to work J9~-~~~\~O!l o,f_tp~. ~~e. f;~.t._probl~m and the oU problam..11 Warn!D would not express either op- umllm or peaalm.llm over prospects of Arab reluatlon of the U.S. embargo. Nor would he stiy whether tbe UnJted State• expects more oll to reach the country through "leakaee" from coun· tries receiving Arab suppUes. \Varren reported that Administration officials are conlinuing to study the impact of steep price increase• an: nounced Sunday by major Persi_lll) Gulf oil exporting countries. SimOn scheduled • newa conference ' Denver's .Super White Christ11aas Thunday mom!ng at which he wu expected to .enno'!I'~ .. t~!!_Adm~tratlon . doea not plall to 1nvoke raUon1n( to help ease the energy shortage. tin an interview with the Washington Post published todoy, simon said, "I think we can manage without rationing it the (voluntary) conservaUon prognm keeps going." The Post said Simon was con- sideringproposals to force car pooling by closing gasoline stations ·two daya a week in.stead of one and setting up a random system tor keeping every car off lhe road at least one day a week. U'I Tt.....,_. Unexpected stonn dumped 11 'h inches of snow on Denver, Colo. and virtually tied up all traffic move- ment in the Mlle Hlgh City. Nine-year-old Vincent Garcznski in.!pects snowbound car while Collie (be- low) attests to fact the storm wasn't fit for man nor beast. Drifts piled to 10 feet in some places. New York's Yule 'Violent' NEW YORK (UPI) -The Christmas season was not a time of peace in the precincts of the nation's largest city. "Christmas ill a very bad day all the time," said one harried detective. "l don't know what it is ,..... either the drink or too much merriment. A day like this has something like a full moon effect. It nevet fails . Everything seems to go to hell." J!ere ·are examples from the police blotter : -Detectives Ronald Kwoczka and William McDevitt were In a small store in Queens Christmas Eve, posing as receivers of stolen property. In came two n1en. who robbed lhen1 of $.SOO. In !he ensuing exchange or gunfire, both robbers were killed and Kwoczka, 31, was wounded. -In Manhattan . two men entered a clothing store and ordered the owner, Michael Schuman, 58, and an employe into the storeroom and demanded.money. \Vh en ·Schuman refused. they shot and killed him and severely wounded the employe, Mark Hollonder, la. . -Angel Ortero, 14, was shot by another teen·ager whlle riding in the elevator of a hous1ng project Monday night. Heat Cut Off Couple, 90, Freeze to Death SCHNECTADY N.Y. (UPI) -An old man and woman, both In their 90!, tried to keep warm by huddling together on the cold living room floor o( their apartment after the electric company cut ott tlleir power. They were found there -frozen to death -by a grondoon. Frank Baker, 93, •nd his wife, Katherine, 91 were · diacover e d Chrl1tmd Eve b y grandaon, Basil Helac, home on leave from the mllilary, who went to thtlr home to take th<m to dinner Monday night. Oetectlvtt 111d !ht couple had been d-.t for about two days. A ga1 stove had been turned on In the kitchen, a detective· &aid, but provided little warmth. , Elbert Watrous, Schenaotady County district attorney, said he was considering banding the caae to a crand Jury. A spokesman for the Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., which services the area With electricity and natural g.,, said the company cut off power to !he borne because the couple declined to pay a five-month bill for $202. A gu fumace In the home would have been made Inoperative whtn electrlclly wu 1hut off, though II woU!d not have affected the use of a 1as cooking 1tove. once before, the 1PQkeaman uld, utlllllea· were cut otf, about 1lx months ago, but wer• rel111tated when a church paid half the delinquent bill ol !260. Nixo1i Travel Still Not Set WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House said today there were no definite plans ror any holiday travel by President Nixon. The President tentatively scheduled a trip to his Key Bil· cayne, Fla., home for today but remained in the White House and aides said he was working on Mid· dle East, energy and Jeglslatlve mattert. Deputy Pnu lle<retory Gersld L. -Warren would not 111y when or If the President would JO to Florida. 1973 Christmas Brings Terror, Uncertain Times By Tiie Associated Pren Cbristmu t973 waa a holiday ol more terrorlam, less warfare and more 8C0n001lc uncertainty for the Cbrllllan world. There also were the traditional. family reunions. leaatlng, gllt-gtv1ng a n d prayers for peace. Road travel was light and Yule lights dim In many countries because of tuel 1hortage1. "As he exists, man 11 not perfect." Pope Paul Vl told 30,000 Romana and tourllts Chrlstmu Day tn St . pe1er·s Square. "Exalt man : you wlll make more evident hls deficiency. hi1I in- completenesa, his Inner need to be $aved. We say It once and w~ say It in a word: hls need for a savior.'' (Picture, Page 4) • Thousands jammed St. Peter's Basilica for Christmas Eve and Christm&.1 Day Muaes. But feWer than 4,000 perlOl1I -the smallest crowd in years -made the pilgrimage to Bethlehem because of fean of Arab terrorist attacka. The Israeli government put a heavy aecurUy guard on the little town In occupied Arab territory, and there was no violence. It was the lint Cbrll1111U · at peace. for AmerlCiJI BO!dlerl In 12 yean, and the flrot tn freedom for ~rlean prl91>nerl of war from Indoch111•. .• The Skylab 3 utronaull walked outside their spocecraft for a better view of the comet Kohoutek and radioed to earlh their hope loc under1fandlng among all men. (Story, Pace 4) President NI••• and hll family spent tile day al tlHI Wlillt HOUie, and the Pr,.ident had a tlllephone CQ!ference with Secretary of Statt Henry A. KJa. singer about oU policy. i A shortage of gasol~ and ur&il)gs by the Nixon adtnlnl1tralkm ' for lunday and holiday clos1ngs shut down all but a scatltriag of service etatlons around the United stattt .. Stita police llld mDll ·motorists decided It 1na better to otay home ralhe< than rllk' ruruful( out of ,... Lo Cbrl.ltmal night WU peaceflJI In .. don and Northern lttland alter bomb explD1lon1 Chrlltmu Evi that kllled three men and woun4ed 4t m<n and woo::'°.Cbristmu Day, 200 Btllast demonotratora blttled polica with !iii. and rocktr-aaci • U-year-old wmuin wu shot in the mouth when •he was catJjhl bl1ween Britl•h I'°'-!_ and jiunmeo ol the lrilh Republican 11n•Y· Slmon ls slid to favor a standby plan that would allow the govemment io iei up 111 ·tlie· miChlntry for rallon1ng ind hold It re•dy in c.,. It becomes necessary when and U fuel supplies dip to an as-yet undetermined "crlsi.s level." . The a:ovemment 11 pUlhloa a program of voluntary sell-denial,\ wtilch Includes a 10..gallon-a-week buying limit, lower driving speeds and other comervatloo measures. The standby plan would Include loc•I raUonlna: boards, ration coupons and eJtablllb1ng prlorltlea for who would aet the gasol1ne first. \ No Progress Seen During Peace Talks GENEVA (UPI) -Israeli and EiYP- tlan military delegations adopted auch tough bargaining poaltlons today at 1tart of thelr talks on separating forces along the Suez1C8nal that there wu no prog-· rees. Each · ride dJsmlased the -other's proposals as unacceptable. Israeli sources said their stand is that Jsrael'a troops on the west bank of the canal Md tmlde Egypt lhould simply move back to the east blnk, in other word& ewltcttl!ig places with E1Ypl'1 3rd Army on the e111t blnk, or Iaraeli side, of the canal. EgypUan aources said tlWi ii the aame position Israel took In the W1111Cceulul disengagement talks at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suez Road In November and remains ''totally unacceptable." Egyptian officials aald privately that their opening position is that Israeli troops should move back as far as a line from El-Arish in the north of the Sinai to Ras-Mohammed in the 90Uth, thus giving Egypt about two-lblrda of the Sinai. Israeli sources said this would be "out of the question." The Egyptian aources uid their delegation to the military working group on disengagement hat a fall-back position · v.·hich wolild be for Israeli troops to move bock behind Uie Sinai passea •hlch are about 2Q miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west of the puses Yt'hile the United Nation1 would act as a buffer on the puses tbemtelves. A third Egyptian propo,.I under con- sideration, the soureet said, Is for tl>j 3rd Anny to remain on the eut bri with Egypt nlalntalning an "ad· mln istrative presence" of ctviltans and police between the canal Md tho pea .... Israell sourcea aald lh eir delegation ls unllkely to move from the almple switching sides proposal unUI early ne1t year after Israel' a elections Monday. I!raell Dererde Minlaer Moshe Dayan said Tuesday the talks have better than a 50 percent chance of aucceedlng. But reparta in Israeli and E g y p t i a n newspapers hinted at a hardening of poaltlons with neither side prepared to make major concessions. At any rate, It was doubted there oould be major negotiations witn after the Israeli elec· tloos. Kids Find Bod)' Of Nude Woman: TITIJSVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -The nude body of a young woman waa found by a group of children playing near · a trailer park at Mims north of here. It wu Uie third female body found in the area 1n six weeks ... Brevard County Sherill Leigh Wilson oald Tueaday night the ldendty and cauae of death had not been determined. He said the bound body waa badly decomposed. Deputies were back ln the. area today seeking clues. The •herlll 1aid the body was bound In a f.,hlo• almtlar to that of Paula Hamric, 22, whose body waa found in the same general area or the county Nov. 25. The body of Nanoy Cerry wao found · earller this month. The aberllf said the victim round Tue .. day wa1 definitely linked to the other ~ two 'aeatha but did not elaborate. , Bur1iing Paper Proves Costly · Banta Claus brought the Loroy Kroesch family of Balboa lalalld a •hola lot of pre1ents Chrlttmu momin1 and It'• a good thine be 101 bltk up th• chimney In tlmo. TMy opened them around the flrepllce at 116 Amethy11 Ave. and then burned the gaUy-pattarned wrapplnJ paper, ac<Mdln& to the Newport Beach ll'lte Departinent. Spokesman Jim ?Gppln1 Hid a $!00 fire ...ulted. .,.,,.. eperkl from the wrapping paper flew up the chimney and fell on the roof. Whit the Kroesch'• need now !or Chrt1tma1 11 about 100 equara · reet of naw llh!nil••· I r I I 1) IAt Your Service A Scmday, Wedfflday aid Frlda1 Feature oi lbe Da111 Pilot Gol o problrml T~m IDritf Pal Dunn. Pal IDCll cul rtd IOJ>f, gd 1M • OnltDt'TI and action 110.u need &o ._ l •olOf lncq11io ts In goo. ,,. ..... 1 ...i b.,,,. .... 11a11 v 0 u , """' llom lo Pat Dun" I Al Your smnce. Orono• coa11 Dally Ptlol, P.O. Bo.i 1550, Costa llua. <:a., 92625. Include '°"' telephont n\lmber, Droop11 Poinsettias DEAR PAT: I know loll of caJ!for- nlans manage to keep thelr Christmas poinsettias alive after the holidays, but mine alw11.ys either droop and lose their petala or don't come into full blOQm. What am I doing wrong, and is it true that poinsettias are poisonous? M.C., Capistrano Beach Droopy polnseUlas are camed by overwatertng and reticent bloomen are· gelllllg too macfl Ugbt. Allboap Ibey reqllre at · teut four boun of dlrtct •uUPI per day, lb,.e plants ollould be fl<pl In a lotally dark locaUon al nlpl and sbfekfed from drafll 11 Ill times. ~n your Q.rbtmu pol.utttla Dllllr Piiot l'Nt9 b'I SllVI Mlldltll THIS WAS CHRISTMAS EVE LINEUP AT STANDARD STATION IN CORONA DEL MAR At 4:40 p.m., Somo L11t Mlnulo Shopping 11 Co .. t Hlghw1y ind MlcArthur Boultvard ~:.. ~:-:~. :::i. 1:.~~: ::~:----'Br· 1· hery In a lllBlt)' outdoor iocatioll wbere temperatuns range from 60 to 75 _ delftel. All polasettlas produce a latex to Siphoning' (wblte, sappy substance) that may cause aome penou to b1ve an allergic reac· Uon, bat DO~ are pollonoas. Refund Claims DEAR PAT: After reading your recent column item about tax relief available to qualified ·-senror citizen renters, i'd like to know il a person can claim a refund if he llvC3 wllh his children and pays them a moderate amount of rent. It might be of interest to other senior citizens to learn or clear~t dis· qualifying factors in addition to the "qualifying" information you mentioned previously. R.T., Irvine Ia aD cues, youn U.CIDded, a penon coaot claim the tu: c r e d I t under SeD1te BID II U be lives wttb 1omeone wtto clatml him. u a depe ndent. An lndlvldul cunol qullfy U be or his 1poue receives tbe bomeowne.n' ex· emption, rent property tbat ls exempt from property tu:es ( u.aJeu tuts are pUI OD • polltllOty 1.nten:st), or rectlV· eel pobllc Ullslallce llfUb lbat laclllded u lliow111<e foe boaolng (l/l.llb credlt cu he lib• for eacb lnli llltlllb In. wb.lcb sruw were not received.) Drvg A'1u•e Agencies DEAR PAT: I know a lot of age11eles are trying to help young people who have gotten involved in drug abuse, but how do parents get up-t<><fale In· fonnaUon on all of these agencies, so they can choose one they think might be mo8t effective in dealing With a particular child's problem ? G.E., Ha.ntt.ngton Beach ne llnqe County drug program cn1nllnlllo1 office bu pablilbed a ctu.c. '°'1 of ageactes offering drac abase pregram1 avaUable to county restdents. nae free directory ls loose-leaf so up- da&ed Information can be added. Request by wr!Ung lo Hal Frank, 515 N. Sycamore, 'Santa Ana, or by phoning IU.fZS2 or IU-ZOOt Obsolete Silverware DEAR PAT: Is there any place that sells obsolete !lterJlng silver pallems? My mother never did buy all the "extra" pieces of her silverware and I know thls would be 10mething she'd appreciate since she'd never make this purdlase for herseU. . M. C., Foatlln Valley Obeolete 1ter11n1 1llver 11 avaUable at Beverly Antlqaes, 811!7 Beverly Blvd., Loi Anpleo. C.11 %1H71-8517 In advance to cbect Oft avallabWty of yoar mother's lllver. Sliver plated pit&e1111 ao '°DJer offered tll an open stoct bails may be parthued at Vroman'•, S08 E. Maln, Su JIC!Jllo (phone: 71HSM!lll. Vnemplo11ment Stats DEAR PAT: We arc now hearing dire predictions of. increased unemployment because of the energy crisis. I'd like to know how Wlelllployment statistics are obtained. ls this done on a random poll basts, and by whlch gbvernment agency? c. v., Costa Mesa Tiie main IOatCe of uoemploymeat rllUollct In the U.S. lo a Camat PopuJaUoa Sar.-e y, 1 11mple ol l!o•elooldo condacled moalbly -1111. Tiie m1terial Is collected a.a tUaloted by lh Bani• of lbe Cean1 oder -.:! wltil lbe B R re I R ti Llbor Stllu.tlct, wlllcll analys:e1 ud pmbllHtt tlte ata .. "Employmeat •• Earalap." la !Ms ,.,..,,, latervtewen obtain I• r,....tton from 1pproxl1D1tely 47 ·'°' 11mpil ltOalthtldt eadi m••tlll, ...,.....tlni Ille .. 11re dvUlu ._.... lldtalloul and -mllltory popalllloa. Oltoprteo hoclnde employed 1 n d ...,p1oyeo1, wlllcb eqaal tbe Iota! labor rw.e. Tiie ....,p1oyec1 c••llt of persons II yWI or older who did DOI work dortol Ibo 1nrvey week. Pe.-who never hid a Job ire lacladod ..,.., Ille anempleyed, 1Dd lhote wllb jobl, flat oa I l1JOU and pluiillng lo begin '!orli wllbba 1 monlb also .,.. d .. led Iii unemployed. 4 ' Holiday Travelers Find Going Tougli Along Coast Holiday travelers along the Orange Coast resorted to everything from bribery to siphoning to get gasoline !or Christmas trips. MDSt service stations contacted today said Monday was one or the biggest sales day ever. (See related story Page 5.) 278 Arrests \llith the prospect of gas stations be- ing closed Christmas Day, motorists jam· med gas stations Christmas Eve. Travelers who didn't get gas by seven ~londay were pretty much out of Juck. Some tw~r famiUes had to siphon gas from one car to another to manage a trip and other people were forced County Logs ;New High In Holiday Drunk Cases Drunken drivers steered Orange Coun. ty to a new and unwanted Christmas · ooliday record with 278 Inebriated . .-;sts booked Into oounly and city jails dW"ing the four.<fay festive season. Cslifomia Highway Patrolmen set the hot pace from 4 p.m. Friday to 4 p.m. Tuesday with 136 bookings of drunken drivers reglstered a'-Orange CoWlty Jail. Santa Ana police also set a new local record with 30 arrests of drunken drivers recorded during the same four day period. All 30 were booked into county jail. Newport Beach headed the list of Orange · COut communities With te drunken driving arrests. Twelve ol those arrests were recorded at the city jail and four inebriated drivers were lodged in county jail. Seal Beach ·arrested nine, Fountain Valley jailed eight, Costa Mesa booked three and Huntington Beach jailed two drunken dri vers during the four-day period. ~ Other agencies hi the reoord-set- ting list included oran ith 16 arrests, Anaheim with 13 bookings and the sber- rirs office with 11 arrests. Hot Springs Shooting Suspect Ends Testimony By TOM BARLEY Of rtll C>lil!J ,IMt SIMI Carl Robert "Whip" Station's lawyer closed the ranch hand 's defense to murder allegations today without calling on additional witnesses to back Slatton's testimony. Slatton, 41, came off an Orange County Superior ,Court witnes,, slnad after a long grilling Iron proseculor Ted Millard in which he repeatedly denied firing the shot that killed trespasser DeMis Glahn last July 10 at the Ortega Hot Ull'ITtl-.it Eccentric Residents of Montreal, Canada, >&re famous for their eccentric- IUes. Bob Sherman lives up' to this proud tradition by eat· Ing lee cream durlng recent snowttonn In the city. . . ' I Springs. Millard loday lold Judge Robert L. Corfman be has been able to contact four more witnesses and that he will be ready for closing arguments after they have testified. Mlllard said be will tell the jury in his final staement that there can be no doubt that Slatton was the man who confronted a group of treapassers at the water hole and killed Glahn, 21, after an argument with the group. Slatton claimed from the witness staod that he was being attacked and kkt- naped at the time of the shooting by three men who beat him and threaten- ed to castrate him. Station lold the jury that he was driven off In his own vehicle by hi!: attackes and only saved hlmself Crom mutilation by grabbing the wheel of the vehicle which then overturned and threw its four occupants to the ground. '!be Starr Ranch employe testified that when he recovered con.!ICk>usness he was riding a stallion bareback acl'OM the ranchland under a full moon with his white Stetson bat on the back of his bead and his Colt .(5..callber revolver slung on hirblp. Slatton said he sought refuge in a ranch house alter noting that he had been accompanied on h\s ride to safety by a riderless horse which stayed clOse behind him and whinnied lo him oc- caslonalll'...durtng the midnight gallop. Millard dalms that the Colt revolver was Uled. to gun do'!'n Glahn and that Slatton had a Jong record of vlolenco in dealing with Starr Ranch trespassers lo !be point that he had been ordered to con!aln hlmseU by aupervl!ory person- nel. Miiiard claims that Slatton w11 alone In his vehicle when It overturned and that tha accld<nt was due lo high speed when be drove from the Scene of the shooting. I to curtail lengthy travel plans. No service stations cont.acted said they ran out of gas but closed early because they had used up their daily allowance or because they wanted to give their employes more time with their families. "l don't get gas again Uri:til after Jan. I," one manager said, "And I figure New Year's Eve will be about the same.". The few that stayed open to six or seven were plugged with cars, many waiting in line a half hour or more. "We shut-down for gas service at 11 :30 a.m.," said CUrby Hall, owner of the Lake Forest Union station. "Between then and when we Jeft at 2 p.m., we turned away about 150 can," he said. Hall said his crew pumped 1,400 gallons ol gas in four hours, compared to a usual 600 gallons for the same period. "I had 4, few guys oiler me extra momy lei atve them gu;'" Sta Br.nboft, manager of the Corona de! Mar She!I stati<Ml said. "But I had 'to tum them away just like everybody else." Brannon's station was one of two in Corona del Mar open til evening. When he closed, he had turned away Some 20 cars. In Laguna Beach, North Laguna Arco manager Jack Stroman found some 15 cars waiting in line when he opened at 8 a.m. "It never let up all day," he said. "I had gas left at 5 p.m. but I bad to close down ... I was tired." Stroman said he turned a w a y customers from San Diego and Lo.s Angeles. "Some of them weren't too happy," he said, "But I Just had to tell them politely that somebody has to get hurt. "We had them coming Jn from all directions," Stroman said. "People were calling from Mission Viejo and El Toro to see if we were open." GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES JANUARY'S GEM Gamet Is the gem of January, emblem of faith , tr u t b and con· stancy. The name comes from the Latin "granatus," meaning seed· like. For centuries, garnet was believ- ed to have curative powers. Pow- dered garnet was used to relieve fever, drive away poisonous air, a.nd to preserve health. Worn as a charm, the gem was thought to pro- tect against jaundice. As an amulet, garnet was said to lnsW'e the wearer against injury and disease, and to preserve honor and health. For the traveler, it was considered protection against peril. Today, as out natural mineral supply diminishes according to de- mand throughout the world, such natural gems left to us assume new importance. We would be glad to answer any questions you might have concerning your particular gem of the month, and show you Interesting ways to en i. o y your special stone In attracUve, wearable Jewelry. Wtdntsday, Otctmbtr 2f>, 1973 H DAILY PllOT Hughes Altair Nixon's Brother 'Not Involved' By L. PETER KRIEG Of -. OellY ,,,., ll•lf F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach, the P'rfdldent's brother, bad no business deollngs with fonner Howlll:d Hughes aide John H. Meier In the Dominican Republic, according to the accountant employed by the ' President, h~ brother and Meler. .. Donald Nixon was never involved." Arthur Blech, the President's personal tax IC<X>Wltan~ has said. Donald Nii:on similarly has denied allegations by Meler who has told the Senate Watergate Committee that Blech went to tht: Domin!can Republic to "look over a deal" in which Donald Nixon was involved. Blech says he went with J\1eier to look at a packing plant and while there had the Idea to build a housing project. "But Donald Nixon was never involved in it," Blech said. "I would be the one to know since I was running the project." Blech, who said he has told hls account to the Watergate committee, said he thinks Meler Is trying to implicate others in an effort to ease his own problems. Meier ls J>eing sued by Hughes and has been named In an income tax in· dictment In Las Vegas. Blech said that to his knowledge, 1',feier and Donald Nixon never consummated any business deal together. He said Donald asked him to review any deals that were posed and Blech said he recommended against each one. Nixon told the Daily Pilot last week that he and Meier, who were friends, did go to the Central American country together, but Nixon said, "I only went to aee Meier get some kind of award." He said Meler had suggested many things, but he never followed through on any of them. Nlxon said his only dealings with Meier or Howard Hughes came nearly 10 years ago when he went after the food service business at the many Hughes plants acro:ss the country. He said he never got those contracts. And he said he never offered any favors to get them. Blech also .said that when he told the President's personal a t t o r n e y , Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, of the review arrangement, Kalmbach said he thought it was a good idea to do the same for all of Donald"s business alfaln. Blech said be recalled Kalnibach saying 10methlng to .the effect o( "Don Nixon II a very gullible guy, and people are trying to use his name." Kalmbach could not be reached to confirm or -4-y \be alleged ata\emiml. Blech said the proposed housing deal fell apart alter be qUll as Meier's ac- countant. Meler has contended that the President knew of the trip. Meler, a former Newport Beach resi· dent, left the Hughes organization to join a Salt Lake City miniDg firm. BRISTLY GIFT UNDER THE TREE HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (UP!) - James H. Morgan Jr., a Cabell County court commissioner and Huntington busfnessman, gave his wife a "hairy" Christmas present. Morgan shaved OU his muslache, put it in a package and placed it under the Christmas tree. Hughes is suing Meier and the mining tlrm for $9 million to recover what he lost in purchase! of allea:edly valueless mine claims. In a related development late last wee k, a federal judge in Los Angeles criticlzed justice department attorneys -and another federal judge -for trying to ge t a lawyer to testify about J\teier to a grand jury. U.S. Dis1rict Judge Andrew Hauk issued a temporary restraining order to prevent attorney John Suckling of Los Angeles from appearing before a federal grand jury in Las Vegas that is believed to be looking into po5Slble tax violations by Meler. J\teler argued that anythlng Suckling tol4 the grand jury would violate the attorney-client privilege and the Judge agreed. Hauck said the manner In which federal prosecutors in Las Vegas ob- tained an order there against Suckling from U.S. District Judge Roger Foley Jr. "was a rotten thing to do." "And you tell Foley that," Hauk added. The judge was angered by the failure of federal prosecutors in Las Vegas to warn Meier's current lawyer that they intended to bring hls former at· tomey before the grand jury. · "Why didn't those spooks down there serve him notice?" the judge uked government lawyers. Clemente Body Reveals Prints As Solid Clues By JOHN Y AL TERZA 01 Ill• Oetlr l'lltl lttH Technicians in the Orange COunty Crime Laboratory today were able to give San Clemente police the first 10lld clues to the identity of a month-old body of a murder victim found late last week. Fingerprin~ lifted from the badly decomposed remains are the strongest lead> yet and as of today all but two bad been tal<en, local detecilves said. "Tbil is the best infonnatlon we have so far on trylng to find out the victim's idc~tity," said dectcUve Pete GoodwllL He said the techn\danl allO ba'ft : promised to obtain a complete delllal chart on the vlctfin, whole remalna were found Thursday morning dwnpnd along a roadside ravine about on&ball , mile from San aemente HJgh School. Officers said it ls lkely that the victim's 1 prints are on file if he served in the military or had ever been arrested. I But even with an identity, the job for local officers ls far from over. They have only scant clues in the 1 actual death of the russet·halred man whose general a'e has been set as between about 20 aDd 40 years old. The techniclan.t late last week were I able to find a fragment of a slug em- bedded in the skull of the body. 'Ibey · also noted that the cause ol. death prob-j ably was a single shot to the head. But two days of patient -and fndtlea -searching of the area wMre the remains were found Jed to nothing. 0 OMEGA Ftrsl \vatcll on It's the.Omega Speedmaster chronograph. The same watch ..• without any modilicatlons ... that was chosen by NASA as standard issue lor all astronauts In the Apollo space program. the rnoon :' bullon •·Ooal Sr•edma•11r cl!•onoQ••11I!. ~•~1urt11ltf!Jtd on!tr.,\11 01 llOUll m<n~!f~ eno Jteonch. r~c~>.,,fl~r 1c1le 101 .,,,,,~,,~; ltittch. S111"lu1 slttl wa111-rt1,.t•nl Cl~• w1111 m11t~ong t1•1ee!el..~1.ZOO J.C. .JJump~rie4 Jew~/.~ 1121 NEWPORT ILVD., COSTA ME.SA COHvtHlfNT TlUl1 l •n•A,.,••1•.-4 -Mui.. Ot'lt )1 rr,1,•$ IH THl lAMl LOCATION '"°"'' ., • ., .. 1 • • 4 DlllLY PILOT Oregon Saw Ligl1t Cosmonauts-Return-in Raging Storm In Crisis SALE~f. Ore. (AP) -Oregon saw the energy crisis coming and prepared while other states were still consuming WlChecked amounts or gas, oil and elec- tri city. The effort is paying off. A hard-nosed conservation drive and heavy rains have averted what thr'3ten7 ed. to be a crippling winter power shortage. And. while the state's fossil fuel sup- pl ies are no greater than those of other regions, the early preparedness has eas- ed the trauma of shortage. LAST SUMrtlER the nonnally rainy Pacific Northwest, which relies on 154 hydroelectric dams for 90 percent of its power, ~as sweating through the worst drought in its history. The Bon- neville Power Administration (B PA) warned that ma ssive blackouts and man- datory cuts were imminent. On Aug. 21, Gov. Tom McCall declared a statewide emergency, saying: "I am ( NEWS .A.NALYSIS J convinced that energy conservation measures must be taken immediately ••. We've gotten the idea that energy in abundance would be forever at our fingertips. We've gotten careless ... Now, the piper must be paid. Jobs are at stake -and it could be yours ••• We must not wait.•• McCALL ORDERED A 10 pereent cut In the state government's power con- sumption and slowed its 4,383 publicly owned vehicles to 55 miles per hour. Next day, some 24,000 workers ln 150 state office buildings found air con- ditioning turned off and knobs removed from hot water faucets in restrcioms. Half the lights along state highways were discoMectled. McCall implored the public t o cooperate, and published a long list or ways to save energy. He set up an Energy Information Office to keep 9COfe of the state's power use. Any citizen could phone, toll free, and get an up-to-the-miniite feedba ck on his eUorts. POWER CONSERVATION became a pet project. Boy Scout!: canvassed neighborhoods asking each resident to turn off one additional light or appliance. Companies offered bonuses to the erriploye with the best 1>0wer-u.'{ina idea. Public schools ran po!ter contest!:. But there was some discord. "Why should 1 'tOnserve electricity · at home, while lUUlecessar)' business lighting continues to blaze away?" a citizen wrote McCall. On Sept. 23, McCall ordered a ban oo all commercial outdoor display light- ing. State p o I i c e enforced it. Finns that refused lo comply were threatened with total power cutoff. Business and industry squawked, but they obeyed. The ban proved lnunensely effective 1n rallying public cooperation. "The outdoor signs didn't really use much energy -on1Y sixth-tenths of one percent of the state's total con- sumptio n," McCall said afterwards. "But that symbolism inherent in having them off brought hundreds of ' letters sup- porting the idea." It also put Oregon In the national Jimelight as a vangua rd in the con- servation drive. President Nixon, in his Nov. 7 energy message to the nation, singled out McCall 's lighting ban and urged other states to emulate it. SCROOGE STR.lKES PRIEST'S HOME MANOSQUE, France (UP!) -While the priest or this Alpine village celebrated Christmas Midnight mass, thieves broke into his apartment. and stole $fi0, police said today. Ut'I Ttffflto!W New Falher Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, carrying 2· year-old son Justin, arrives to visit wi!e and baby son born Christmas morning. He says he plans "to keep on trying" to have more children. Carr, Pogue Take Photos of Comet In Longest Walk SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - Clues to the history or the solar system may be recorded on photos of the comet Kohoutek snapped by two Skylab 3 astronauts during a record seven-hour -...ii.. "I'm very haPPf'with what they got," said Dr. h-1ayo Greenberg of Dudley 'Observatory. He will help analyze the pictw"es when tbey are returned to earth in February. Commander Gerald P. Carr of Santa Ana and William R. Pogue, wearing bulky space suits and attached to llO-toot lifelines, •epped outside the orbiting station Tuesday for the comet OOserva- tions. The station was 270 miles above earth at the time. TIIE TIIlRD CREWMAN, Edward G. Gibson, fonnerly or San Clemente, nt mained inside to maneuver the big craft. He ran into unexpected control problems, mainly caused when Carr and Pogue scrambled around on the outside, im- parting attitude chanfl"es on the craft. This caused the spacecraft four times to roll several degrees out of position. The correction maneuvers required more control gas than anticipated. But officials said there wa s no major problem and the gas overwe would not affect the mission. All three astronauts were told to sleep late and generally relax tod ay after their strenuous Christmas. TIIEY WERE In the 41st day of a planned 84-day flight. Carr and Pogue logged an even seven hours outside, breaking the old space walk mark of 6 hours 33 minutes set by Skylab 3 crewmen Thanksgiving Day. "Be it ever so humble, there's no place like borne," said carr as he clim~ ed back inside the space station. 8-day Soviet Space Launch JI.- Ends Safely MOSCOW (UPI) -Two Soviet Cosmonauts returned to earth through a raging SDOWSIOl'ln and high winds. today, ending their eight-day Soyuz 13 space mission. Flight commander Pyotr Klimuk and engineer Valentine ~ev, two 31-year- old space rookies, floated to earth ln their paracb.utM>orne spacecr'art near Karaganda on the plain< ol Sovlel central • Asia, the Tass news agency said. Tass said the cosmmauts' only c<rn· plaint waa that they could not see their approach to earth, but not because of the weather. "It's a pity we cannot see. it -the portholes have grown smudgy," Klimuk told growld coin- municators. GEN. VLADillUR A. SilA'i\ID)V, commander of cosmonaut training, said in a television interview the landing came after anxious moments on the ground. He said a snowstorm was raging, visiblity was poor and high winds buf· feted the craft on its descent. "We were very anxious," Shatalov said. ''But the crew landed safely and successfully.'' He said the crew maintained radio contact during the landing and the ground search party spotted them im· mediately at the precise spot where they were supposed to come dovm. The fligh~ the third longest in Soviet space history, was a warmup for the Soviet-American joint space night in 1975. THE UNITED STATES holds the record for manned space flight -56 k:l.ays set by the Skylab 2 crew earlier this year. The crew of Skylab 3, now in space, is scheduled to remain in orbit 89 days. Tass sald the Soyuz·13 landed at 11 :50 a.m. (12:50 a.m. PST) today ju.st three h>urs and five minutes short of eight full days. "The state of health of the cosmonauts ... is good," Tasi said. The pcincipal mission of the Soyuz..13 crew was to make studies of the SlU1 and stars and to test the space craft, which had to be revamped after a leaky hatch on Soyuz.II caused the death of its three-man crew. There was no indication whether Klimuk and Lebedev also filmed the Koboutek comet, as the American Skylab 3 crew bas done. Tuo laid the S.,U..13 star ....... were aimed at obtaining !information of galaxies '1iJ!ions of light.years dislant from the earlh. Driver of Bus Heculed for LA Knifed to Death NEW BOSTON, Tex. (UPI) -Police searched today !or a man they said becaarne angered about a bus ticket and stabbed the driver to death while the vehicle sped across north Texas at 60 miles an hour. The Bowie County Sheriff's Depart- ment said the bus driver, Bill Young, 40, and a passenger were arguing about the ticket when the husky young passenger suddenJy stabbed Young in the neck, chest, stomach and face with a large knife. Young managed to halt the bus on the shoulder of interstate 30. "He stepped out of the bus in front of it and collapsed ," said Bill Colby, a deputy sheriff. "A passenger ran across to a house and caUed the police and an ambulance. The driver told him to." Young was dead when he arrived at a hospital. James F.dward Morris, 31. was cap- tured and charged with murder. Floods Hit Mississippi 100 Families Flee Homes on Cliristmas Da y " ... wtAM• fototAA . .. , tvtnlno tor • to"I Of 1111111 111(1\tt for Chrl1fm11 D.•Y· the N••l-1 WNlller Storvrc1 111d. Ugh!er r1!" ••I~ l\Of"IM11fw1rd tocly lhrouoh the -Ohio \111191" Ind noMheni Alllntlc Co.11 111111, VllNtlll•O, FLI,, Ind DotMn1 Ala., bolh mfflllrl'd betwten two 1na thr" lroches of r1!n Ntly toes.¥ In 1 1b--hout Offlod, Tiie wwt -~ IVll~ Twsd1y 11!.o d•mllftltCI tilt Cllrl1tm11 1plrfl Jn other rwirt1 Of tM countrv. Free11tio r1ln COiied hlilftW•n ln !ht ~ O-rt Of '-Mk:hlQtn ffld 1111rt1 Of ltie 1t1i.11 llPOtl' ~lllWll, C.Usl"!I SCCM'el of lfl!flOf' trtttlc 1ec10tnts. Foo rtductd vl1lblll1V 10 lest lllltn -rt« of I ml!4' 11 Chktgo'1 O'Hera l11Mrnetl!INI AJ'1IO'I, 6'1.1"1111 1rrlv .. 1 1 n d d.O.rturM. Cnn•lnl Wf'nfher F1lr todf)', Llfhl Vttltlllt wll'ldl !'llQoht •!Id ll'IOl'Tllng lloUl'l lltcolTll"' 'ftll to -lt!Wftl 10 to 11 kllOll Ill 1n1rnoon1 toc1r,1 Ind TPIUl'~v. High todly ._ '°" Coe1111 lffnpewt turtt rtll9'f from 42 to ''· lflltrtd 11!'11Wthlr'1 'lllOf trom ., to tl. Wtltf fffnPtr•tvrt st.. Sun, Moon. Tide• WIDNIJDAY S«'Olld h!gll 11~.tO p.m. S.I $fCOl'ld !Ow l :Jf P.11\, ..(l,J TNUftlOAY t :S2 t m. S.J )~ft t .rn, 11 11 :41 p.m. 3.1 J :01 ... ~ ..(1,1 •1N '·"" leh 1:50 p rn. 1:11 a.m. kt1 •:M '·"'· ur1T...-.. Papal Blessings From central loggia of St. Peter's Basilica, Pope Paul VI imparts his Urbi et Orbi blessing to the city and world Christmas Day. He criticized abortion and warned Catholics of dangers of rnan thinking he can set himself up as his own God. Traffic Deaths On Holiday Fall To 1955 Level From Wire Services The Christmas holiday traffic death toll hellded Joward the lowest figure since 1955 today, and the final count was expected to reach the lowest level of a preholiday estimate by the national safety council (NSC). An NSC spokesman early today called (..__I_N_SH_o_R_T._ •• _) the death rate during the four-day holi~ day period "remarkably low." "There are apparently Jess miles being driven this year and at slower speeds," the spoke;;man said. A breakdown: . Traffic 518; fire 88; plane %2; 'other 62 ; Iota! 690. e Guerrillas Arrested PARIS -Police announced today the arrests of 13 supporters of Palestine 3 Viet Aircraft Downed; 9 Soldiers Die, 37 Hurt SAIGON (UPI) -Coommunist an· tiaircraft gtmS shot do'i'-11 three South Vietnamese aircraft in 24 hours, killing nine government soldiers and wollllding 37 others, military sources said today. Heavy machine gun fire downed a jet A:f/ Dragonfly fighter-bomber and a Llll Huey helicopter today in Quang Due Province 110 miles north of Saigon, the sources said. Earlier, Communist forces besieging Tong Le Chan baae camp 55 miles north of Saigon shot down a huge CH-47 Chinook helicopter carrying replacement troops to the camp. AU nine of the dead and 36 .of the wounded were in the Chinook. The sources said the subsonic Dragon- fly was bombing North VietBamese troop positions near Kien Due district town. scene of heavy fighting earlier this month. 1be pUot ejected and was mihurt but the plane was deslroyed, the sources said. crashes in South Vietnam since the cease-fire began last Jan. 28. In Cambodia today, government troops after a week of fighting Slcceeded 1n opening 30 miles of highway 1 90llthea3t of Phnom Penh, lite military command said. Officers said the Fr~built highway, which runs from Phnom Penh to Ham! through Saigon, now was open u far "" Neat Luong, a Mekong River tOMl accidentally destroyed last Auguot 1n a U.S. B52 strike. ALONG THE 18 miles opened today, the !,.,,.lane 8.!phalt road ran panillel to the Mekong, the only overland route open to Phnom Penh from the outside world - and Tur.kish guerrilla i:novements w~ ABOUT TWO HOURS later, the Huey were sa.id to be preparmg for terronst helicopter carrying government rein· attacks in Europe before the end of forcement'.s to Kien Due was hit three On a South Vietnamese portion ol highway 1 e<ntered 330 mile• north of Saigoo, Commwlist forces early today blew up two bridges, the Saigon com- mand said. The destruction ol tho bridges blocked traffic between the pre> vincial capitals ol Quang Nga! am Tam Ky. the year. ' miles northwest of the town. One Police said they seized a cache of aewmember was wounded and the arms and explosives, including books helicopter was damaged, the sources hollowed out for use as letter bombs. said. e White Bouse Protest WASHINGTON -Six demonstrators were arrested in front of the White House Tuesday in what the Rev. Phillip Berrigan called "our way of celebrating Christmas.'' Two protesters were arrested for vaulting the black iron fence around the White House and walking toward the mansion where the President and his wife were having Otrislmas dinner. Four others who chained themselves to the fence were arrested and charged with disord erly conduct e Gerald Ford Skis VAIL, COLO. -Vice President Gerald Ford spent two hours skiing in the Colorado mountains Christmas Day then returned to his condominium to stay with his family. Ford and ski instructor Dennie Hoeger, a longtime friend, have been skiing every day since he arrived in the molllltain community of 2,000 people early Satur· day. e ltfao Tse0 tung 80 TOKYO -Chairman' Mao Tse-tung is 00 today and is reported in good healUt despite years or personal priva- tion, political struggle and arduous work. Mao was expected to spend the day quietly, receiving a few friends. Bowing to his own wishes, China does not hold public celebrations of his birthdays. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtli•trY of u1e D•llY Piiot Is guarantttd MflMlaY·•f'Mf'l't II ""' .. Ml Ill,,. 'lwr ... "1' '1' J:)t '''"" c•H •M '"r «ttY Wiii H tf'Wtlll It f'h· C•ltt •re ti-"' """'" ,,. '·"'· ,,,...,,, 11111 '-"111 ti ,..,. ,. ltlft renotvt ~r '''1 .,. t •·"'· ''"""''' tr I ''"'' l•Mlp. <Ill Ind • c..,.,. •Ill tt .,..,.., It '"'' C•lll ,,.. 1141111 '1!111 lt 1.111. Ttltpl'lones Mttl Ori~ (IWIY ....... ''"•·· +cMHI Htrll'IWtll H111t11tlfltll11 ••"'- IM Wttl"'lllfl" "" .. •• " Mto11• S.11 C~lt~ c.,i11r-'"'"' I•~ J1111 C•Hfl-, I>-N ll'lt, Jfvtll U Pl'Ao ._.._ H~ "" ftt'4421 The huge twin-rotor CH-47 Chinook chopper was making a night flight to Tong Le Chan camp when it was hit just after midnight Christmas Day, the sources said. Tong Le Chan was captured by North Vietnamese forces during the 1972 spring offensive, but recaptw'ed by government troops late last year. Communists have ringed the camp ever since, forcing the government to send supplies in by helicopter. THE SOURCES said the crippled, multimillion dollar heUcopter made it over the Tong Le Chan perimeter after being hit, but crashed when the pilot attempted to land. The incident was one of the most costly CommWllst·caused air c r a·i t . . : ••• '1"f./Jttre la ow m;.t . pfl1C!oU6., .MU de· Gasofn..' • ' • .1; Man Who SoW Doom Tickets No.t Shaken 1 · "' McFARLAND, Wis. (UPI) -The World didn't end Ch.ristrnas Day, but Edward Ben Elson, the man ,who s~ld tickets1for. a sp~ce­ ship ride to escape the catastrophe, was not disappointed. "I don't want to see the end of the \yorld," he sa1a 0 1oday. "It's just a revelation that came to IM 11nd I gave voice to It. Elson gained notoriety last week when he announced the world would end Chrisllllu Day and that the Comet Kohoutek would act as a spaceship and rucue the selected few. • According to hb revelation,· Koh01jtek Would mix with the eartl>'s atmosphere sending lhe world ·"down In a sea or petroleuQ> oll." Elson, a lawyer who has drawn headlines before for his eccentric ways said he was selecled to choose 1,000 persons for 111'1 apacesblp ride.' The 1.000 ""re to be accompanied 1JY 1u;ooo: ml!llatu.re bu- rnans he sald ;ho had In a state of suspended anlmation. ln bushel baskets In his basement. He had 1 000 tickets printed. whlch he sola to buy hil wife j8'"ls to entice her aboard the shlp. 'The sales enabfed Elson to reeover tho cost of the printing bill, but his wife remained skeptical of the trip. Elson whose business cards says he ls a "far out attorney special· Ir.Ing In J.;,nle law," said his client.• are heartened bv hls actions. "I have a peculiar practice," he explained. "The people that I serve somehow are heartened by all of my shenanigans and esc• pades. They think that l'rn one 6f them ." ' I 7 ' 7 " • . ., Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 360, 5 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA(IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1973 N TEN CENTS President Hillts Against GasPline Rationing .. From Wlre Servlcts \VASHINGTON -President Nixon hlnled broadly today that his ad· minlstration decided not to , impose gasoline rationing. As photographers were recording the start of a meeting with Energy Adviser William Simon, Nixon said to them : ·~1·m working right now to make certain we won't have to ration gas for you fellows." 1 No 1reporters were present at the time, but the President's comment was relayed by the photograpbers end by W.hlie House aides slandiog by. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald T. Warren said afterward that Nixon's com- ment was not m e a n t to be an an- nouncement of acUon on rationing. "The Prestdent'i aversion to rationing is widely known~•· Warren said as ~e recoun·ted Administration's ef[orts to avoid . rationing by voluntary ·con-- scrv~tlon of fuel. • ,_1eanwhile, the White House de.scribed tbJ Arab decision to relu: the embargo on oil ~ents to Japan and most of Europe as a step in the right direc· lion. • The Araba:, however, a'te maintaining their embargo on shipments to the United States and Warren said, "Thi! oil should not be used as an economic weapon." Warren, responding to questions, tenn· government continues to believe that • • ed the Arab anno\U'lcement on Christt day as "a step in the righ~ direct and a sign of progress which e welcome." He added: "We will continue to work for solutiOn of the MJddle East problem and the oil problem." Warren would not express either op- timism or pessimism over prospects of Arab relaxatlor1 of the U.S. embargo. Nor would he say whether the Unifud States expects more oil to reach the country throug "leakage" from coun· trie,s receiving Arat> upplies. Warren reported th Administration officials are continuing to study the impact of steep price increases an- nounced Sunday by major Persian Gulf oil exporting countries. Simon scheduled a news conference Thursday morn ing at which he was expected to announce the administration does not plan to invoke rationing to help e8.se the energy shortage. Jn an interview with the \Vashing1on Post published today , Simon said, "t think we can manage without rationing if the (voluntary ) conservat!On program keeps going.'' The Post said Slmon \11as con- sideringproposals to force car poolin g by closing gasoline srations two da ys a week instead of one and setting up a random system for keeping every (Ste RATION, Page 2) • am I Ies Ill Ire Vice Mayor Will Seek Third Term Vice ho!ayor Howard Rogers. the senior member of the Newport Beach city council, will seek a third tenn represent· Ing the Balboa PenffiSilla iiid1:J<l0Tsl . In announcing his candidacy for the April 9 e1ection today, Rogers said he feels he can continue to serve as the mediating force between de·velopers and erivironmentalists. He said he thinks his ability "to hand in on ~ center of the ~ and balance the extremes on the development l!sue" ha! probably been hi> biggest ac· compllshment. He 11.ys he wants to follow through on Implementation of the general plan which the city has been updating the past two years. "I want to carefully watch the future growth of the city, which. is primarily the implementation or the general plan, ti Rogers said. Rogers is e1pected to have at least two challengers for his District 1 scat. Former Councilman Al Forgit and Balboa resident Joseph Gaubert have already declared their candidacies. Forgit was Rogers' 1ooe opponent four yea.rs ago and Rogers "1lD by a vote ol nearly 3-1. He deCUiled to comment on his two potential opponents. "I'll just have to wait and see if they actually take out papers and file ," Rogers said. • candidates ror the four council seats up for election in April will have to file nomination papers between Jan. 10 ..and noon on Jan. 31. There is no cost to file . Rogers, who has been vice mayor Mother, 2 . Youngsters Lose Lives By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "'-DtiilY l"li.t Stiff A Fountain Valley mother and her two small children burned to death early today when a pre-dawn blaze gutted -·-ihi ffl wc.-story hOme at 9946 "Tfiiitie Ave. .,..,, ,.., ,,.., ... HE'LL RUN AGAIN First Ol1trlct'1 Rogers since 1970, serves on several council committees and was. a liaison member o! the clti2Jens' panel that guided preparation of the new trrafic study. He also sits on the Orange County Sanitation District 7 board of directors. A ~year-old USC graduate, Rogers said a recent job promotion figured heavily in his decision to run again. M-a-salesman for the 1i!onroe Division of Llttoa Industries, Rogers said he bad been spending more and more time traveling. But be said "just a week, ago I was reaaigned and my duties wlh be limited . to· Orange County only." . Rogers is now sales manager for all Monroe products in Orange County and his office, formerly in Long Beach, will now be in santa Ana. Autborilies identified the dead woman as Stella Dunlap. Her children were Dickey, 5, and Tracey, 3. .\l>Other viM. 'l!bp leaped from ·lh• se«llld story was identified as James Stroh, 19, who sulfertd bums over 70 petce)l!. ol !pa , 1>o41,. He Is listed Jn crttlcal cooldlllOD al the burn ward of Orange C.w{ty Medical Cenler . The' Thistle Avenue fire broke out at about 4:30 a.m. as Fountain Valley firemen were cleaning up from another costly blaze at 9092 La Linda Ave. " The La Linda lire, which did an estimated $70,IXX> to the home of the Phillip Landsberg family, did not result in any injuries, firemen said. Fire Chief H. C. ~fickey Lawson said no cause has been established for either blaze. "We are in the process of investigating the causes of the two fires but at this point, it doesn't look like either one is related to Christmas or Oiristmas decorations," he said. Lawson said the Landsberg fire might have also resulted in injuries except that the family was alerted to the blaze by the barking of the family dog. "As it was, a boy had to jump from a second story window to get out," the chief noted. Propane Truck Explodes, Burns on County Freeway \Vhen fire units Drrived at the second Thistle Avenue blaze, the house was completely engulfed in flames. Neighbors told firemen that the fire "exploded" out of the second story as Stroh leaped from an upstairs window. Chief Lawson said firemen believe the fire smoldered somewhere downstairs 'for several hours. A propane truck trailer crashed and exploded on the Santa Ana Freeway today, creating a fiery holocaust that blocked both lanes of the busy artery for nearly an hour. Firemen from Buena Park and Fullerton doused the blaze near the Orpge Coast • Weather· Showen likely tonight and Thur .. day morning acconling to the weather service with decreasing clouc!U-ThUrtlday afternoon. Cooler clays. LoW> tonight in the low !Oii. Hilha In the upper &Os. INSmE TODAY Two Lag•na Broch mothers 1oho publish underground comic boo1'1 don't think the comici are t.ierv /1mn11 onumore. See 1toru on Page 8 todau. ~":. .. 11 ... ..-. n 11 _ .. , .. ,, C•lflnll• I --• ,_ n.x ·~-=. • ,_ • .. _ • ,_ • ,,.,.. """' •• ........... I .... IJ..14 .. lttNI .... • -, .. ,, ·--'"'' w-. ·-· t·n ........ ....,,.tt-a ,.., ....... t.11 w--• n .. 1111r1 • - intersection of the Santa Ana and Riverside. freeways and e n a b 1 e d California Highway Patrolmen to reopen the -northbound lane after a 50-minute tieup. , · Patrolmen -rejlOlting to headquarters from the arf:a said traffic-was blocked for more than 10 miles in each direction. Clearance of the southbound lane was delayed while wrecking crews moved in to pull the soorehed vehicle off the freeway and a11ow emergency operators to drain o(f the remaining propane. Fullerton firemen said the driver of the truck apparently escaped injury. They said no other vehicles were in- volved in the accident Officials at CHP headquarters, working from sketchy on the scene reports, have not yet been able to detennine the cause of the crash other than to conlirm that no other vehicles were involved. "It appean that the vdllcie, d-1bed lo ut u a amall petrolene tanker, was headed IOUth when aomething happened to -II headlong lnlo the cenler divider," an officer sakl. .. "Our next report Indicated that II sm-thn>uch the divider and went on 'to block' the northbound lane before lt ovtrtmned and caught fire ," he said . The driver of the 211).gallon tanker told patrolmen that the frame of his lta)Jer buckled while he was driving · IOUlb and be loot conltol and ' went through center divider and into north lane. · .. 'Firemen's main worry was explosion from the heat but that didn 't happen. 11 -' "It flaijied into flames upstairs where the heat bad been building up. When the man went through the window, it let in the oxygen the fire needed to really start burning," the chief ex· plained. Lawson said 1itrs. Dunlap, who is separated from her husband. and her two children, were found upstairs in or near their beds. "'The bodies were quite badly. burned," he said. "They may have died of smoke inhalation but considering the way the (See DEATHS, Page ZI Burnirtg Paper Proves Costly Sanla Claus brought the Leroy Kroesch family of Balboa Island a whole Jot of presents Olristmas morning and it'• a good thing he got back up the chimney in time. They opened them around the fireplace at 1211 Amethyst Ave. and then burned the gaily·pattemed wrapping paper, according to the Newport Beac)I Fire Departmenl Spokesman Jim Topping said a l500 Jlre mulled, \\ten spark> from the wrapping: paper flew up the chimney and fell on the roof . What the Kroesch's need now for Cbrbl!nas Is sbout !Qll' square feet of new shingles, I . ' " FIREMEN MOP UP AFTER BLAZE WHICH KILLED THREE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY Onf!rhistle Avenue, Doeth Tokes Mother, Two Smoll Children :} . uc1-Mounta.ineer Killed I Student Di ss Tr ying to Reach Top of Mt. Whitney .. · By GEORGE LEID Of tfM Dallr P'lt" Sl•ff Rescue teams returned to Mount Whitney today to remove the' body of UC Irvine Mountaineering CluJ:i"Fresident Eric Eichmann from the spot where he fell five days ago. Eichman , 20, and a Costa Mesa man, Don Pfirrmann of 2223 Pdnona St., attempted to reach the 14,49'-foot peak of Mt. Whitney last Thuriday when a storm overtook them. j ! Pfirrmann was helped Christmas Day from the 14,100-foot level by' China Lake h-fountain Rescue Group volunteers. He remains. in serious condition in Southern Inyo Hospital, Lone Pine. Pflrnnann is suftering ribm frostbite , rescuers said today.. , 7f . ,. · The tv."O were part of a '~·man climlr Ing party. Four altemp!ed to climb to the top. ~ Peter Owen Frlckland, 21 , of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrence of UC Riverside were said today to have reached the peak the night of the '20th. They stayed overnight, rttuming ta· find Eichmann dead and Pfirrmann in trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, 50 went for help. Two ol.hers in the UGI climbing club observed the climbers from the East Face Lake High Camp, scene of rescue operations Christmas Day and today. Storms blocked views of the four climbers on Friday and Saturday, UCI studenls Jotm Mart Graham, 2il, of Lona Beach and Tom Hemker, 19, of Villa P~rk, the two other members of the porly, told rescuers. On Chrlst.inas Eye Graham and Hemker reached civWzatlon and the Inyo County Sherm•, Department called in the China Lake Mountain Rescue Group. Three team members led by Frickland and Lawrence recliinbed the peak to reach Pfirnnann wM waited nce.r Eichmann's body afthe 14.100 foot level. The six were spending· Christmas holldays on the mountain when the storm overtook them . ElchmaM, a junior majoring in enalneertng, was president of the UCl Mountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine, he is survived by his .parents, Mr . and Mrs. Eric Eichm'ann, a'nd a brother, Doilald, 12, all of Hacienda Heights. . · Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfirrmann is believed to be a recent graduate of UCI where he majored in chemistry. Hemker is a sophomore majoring in biological sciences and Frickland is a senior chemistry major. . Inyo Sheriff's D e p u t y Don Cron directed the rescue effort. Ten degree temperatures and gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 degrees· below zero, rescuers said. Winds also· hampered u,e of helicopters as a shQrtcut to the mquntaintop scene or the fall which Is believed to haxe killed~Eiclnnann~ The eight-hour rescue involved a chop- pu from the Naval Weapons Center. China Lake, in which rescuers hurried to the scene. Today's effort involving an eight·man team from the Sierra Madre Search and Rescue 11quad relied on a heavier helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station, a rescue unit spokesman said. Both operations require a landing at the 13,000 foot level East Face Lake High C.amp and a climb over the moon- tain top to the location of the body on the west face . Al Green, 38, Bill Siron, 32, and Bob Rockwell, 29, all of the China Lake- Ridgecrest area, lefl their families Christmu Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack .Macldul in the rescue operation. :He.at Cut Off Couple, 90, Freeze to Dea;/ SCHNECTAOY N.Y. (UP]) -An old man and woman, bo,Ul in their 90s, tried to keep warm by huddling together on the cold living room floor of their apartment after the electric company cut off their power. They were found there -frozen , to death -by a grandson. Frank Baker, 93, and his wife, · Katherine, 911 were d Ls covered Christmas Eve by grandson, Basil Heise, home on leave rrom the military, who went to their home to take them to dinner Monday nlg)lt. Oelectives said the couple bad been dead fol about two days. A gas stove had been turned on In the kitchen, Blaze Kills Four GlBSONlA, Fla. (UPf ) -A burning cigarette may have ignited a predawn Chrlllmas blaze that kiiled three childttn and thell' 74-year-old grandfather In a mobile home.. fi re officials said Tuesday. a detective said, but provided little Wafl\1th. I Elberl Walrous, Schenectady County district attorney, said be was considering banding the case to a grand jury. A spokesman for the Niagara ~fohawk Power Corp., which services the area with electricity and natural gas, said the company cut off power to the home I because the coople declined to pay a J five-month bill for $202.. A gas furnace in the home would have been made j inoperative when electricity was shut' off, though it would not· hav. affected 'r· the use of a gas cooking stove. Once before, lhe spokes.man saJd. t utilities were cut off1 about six monlhl ago, but were reinstated when a cbarcb paid half the delil1quent bill of $250. ' The 1pokesrnan said the Company con· tacted the Bakers several tlmes about lheir bill, but iald the coopie .-.I- to di~ il 'A deputy county medical oumlner. Dr. John Shiolds, said an alllopaJ WOlll4 be made, buf tentaUvely aald dftth wu brought on by exposure. .. • :! OAIL V PILOT N Ba r atrons Tt•avel Light FQil RQbber).· Christmas, 1973:- \ SAN BERNARDINO (UPll The Otristmo.s tale began when • bandit entered a bar, waved a pl.Ito! and demanded monty. Ont patron, aMOyed at the interruption 9f th Christmas party, hurled a shot glass at the would·be robber. The bandit fired a sho t. but dldn 't hit anyone . Peace, Te,-rorism The drinkers charged off thclr stools. The gunman fired one warn- ing · shot, lurnt.'<I and fled, with a pack of about six men on his heels. The bartender telephoned police and officers caught up with the chase and arrested David Rey, 29. on a charge or attempted rob- bery. The crO\\'d from the bar returned to Christmas drinking . f'l'cHn Pagel i RATIO N ... car off the road at least one day a week. Simon is said to favor a standby plan that would allow the government 10 set up all the machinery for rationing and hold it ready in case it becomes OREGON SAW ENERGY CRISIS COMING. Story, Page 4 GAS SHORTAGE HITS HOLIDAY TRAVELERS, Story Page S EUROPE LAUDS ARAB OIL NEWS, Page 10 i necessary when and if fuel supplies dip to an as-yet undetermined "crisis level." The government Is pushing a program of voluntary self-denial, which includes a l~gallon-a-week buying limit, lower driving speeds and other conservation tneasures. The standby plan would include local rationing boards, ration coupons and 1 establishing ·priorities for who would set 1 the gasoline !irst. By Tbe Atsoclated Presa Ch ristmas 1973 \vas a holiday of more lcrrorism ... IC.Sii \1:1,1rfare and more economic w1ccrtainty for the Christ1a.n "'Orld. There also v.·erc lhe traditional family reunions, feasting, gift.giving· and prayers for peace. Road travel v.·as li ght and Yule lighls dim Jn many countries because of fuel shortages. "As he exists. man is not perfett," PQpe Paul VI told 30,000 Romans and tourists Christmas Day in St. Peter's Square. "Exalt man: you "'ill make more evident his deficiency, his tn .. completeness. his inner need to be saved. \\'e say il once and we say it in a v.·ord: his need for a savior." (Picture, Page 4) Thousands jam med SL Peter's Basilica for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day ~lasses. · But fev•cr than 4,000 persons -the 'sma llest crowd in yea rs -made the pilgrimage to Bethlehem because of fearS of Arab terrorist attacks. The Israeli government put a heavy security guard on the little town in occupied Arab territory, and there was no violence. It \\'as the first Christmas, at peace for American soldiers in 12 years, and the fi rst in freedo m for American prisoners of war from Indochina. The Skylab 3 as tronauts walked outside their spacecra ft for a better view of the comet Koboutek and radioed to earth their hope for understanding among all men. (Story, Page 4) Presldent Nixon and his fam ily spent the day at the White House, and the President bad a telephone conference with Secretary 0£ State Henry A. Kis· singer about oil poljcy. A shortage o( gasoline and ur gings by the Nixon administration for Sunday Guerrilla Plan Kissinger Assassination. Thwarted BRUSSELS (UPI) -The Arab guerrilla organization that killed 32 persons at Rome and Athens airports last week originally planned to assassinate U.S. Secretary of ·state Henry A. Ki ssinger in Beirut a day earlier but was thwarted, military and diplomatic sources said today. The sources said Llbya ordered the submachinegun and grenade attempt on Kissinger's life at Beirut International Aiport Dec. 16 but Lebanese authorities learned of it in time and ordered Kissinger's plan diverted to Rayak Air Base instead. . ' Rayak is 45 miles east of Beirut. The U.S. Embassy in the Lei> anese capital said the Kissinger plane went there for security rea- sons. According to lhe sources, the Libyans told the group to allack instead at 1Rome. where they killed 31 persons at Leonardo da Vinci Airport Dec. 17 before hi jacking a Lufthansa airliner and killin g one person during a stopover in Athens. Fire Breaks Oi1t in 211d Valley House; 5 'Lucl{y' The five members of the Phillip Landsberg family spent the day today sifting through the rubble of what used t.o. be. their home , telli ng themselves how lucky they are. The family home at 9092 La Linda Ave., Fountain Valley, was gutted in a pre-dav.'n fire this morning, but the parents, the three teenag e children, the family dog and their pct pa rakeet all survived. A fire which erupted two hours later three miles from the Landsberg home. claimed the lives of a mother and her two smaJI children and critically injured another man. OIAN51! COAST • DAILY PILOT Tilt Or•.-.Oe CO.It OA1LY PILOT, wol!I whl('l'I I• c1>tnOl1'td tht Ntw•P'rn.s, ;. D<tlllJlhtd oy 11\e Or•r.ot Co•tl Pultlltlllng Com~nv. 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"'"' tMriel, 1!!1111f1!11ln., _..,..,. -""' .,. ttlwtftlol-tl t!trtln _., M ~ wllhout -111 ...,. ........ ., CIMl'\'l1illlll ·-· ........ ct.t -""" NIC ti COtit Mn.I, ~II. Mt u'-"IOI• by urrll1 UAS """""'Y' ., -u .i.u """"'"''~' "'1m1,., ........ 1111MWM~· - ' The t\\'O oldest Landsberg g i r I s told fri ends that they were awakened by the noise, heat and light that the fire was generating when it broke out on the home's second story at about 2:30 a.n1. They ran dO\\'TIStairs. while their 14· year-0ld·brother jumped from h is bedroom \li'indo w. Their parents had been alerted to the danger by the barking or the family dog. They did not have the time to rescue the parakeet and as they watched their home burn, they feared the pel was dead. Firemen who v.•ent into the ho1ne were asked by neighbors to dispose of the bi rd 's body so the fa mily wouldn't sec it. According to 1· ire Chief H. c. ''?i.lickey" Lawson, one startled Uren1an found the bird, unharmed. ''He took his f Io v e of! and re<'C'hed out a finger for the· bird to perch on. The bird did. and then bit the fire- man 's finger," the chief related. According to friends, the familv held a small reunion on the front l<nvri \l'hen the wounded fireman emerged from the home 1vith !he bird. Late this rnoming, the fa 1nily 1vas bark at their gutted home, trying to salvage what !hey could fro1n the ashes. Fro111 Page l DEATHS • • • fire flashed through the second storv lt is more likely that they bW1led i~ death." La~'Son said investigators fa ce. some di£ficulties in determining the ca115c of lhe fatal blaze bteause the house was so badl y burned out. 5 Die in Ace id en I GllEr:NVILl.E. Jla. (UPI) -Five persons died Christma s Day when a car driven by a youth without a· driver's license crashed Into another auto on a rain-slickened highway. ' and holiday closings shut down all but a s~afterip_g of service stations around the United Stales .. State polico said mO!I motorists decided it ·was better to stay home rather than risk running out of g ... Christmas Dight was peaceful In Lon· don. and Norlhern Ireland after bomb explosions Christmas Eve that killed t~ men and wounded 41 men and women. On Christmas Day. 200 Belfast demonstrators battled police with fi sts and rocks, and a 63-year-0ld woman wa.S shot in the mouth when she was caught between British troops and gunmen ol the Irish Republican Army. More than 1,000 holiday skiers were trapped by snow. rain and avalanches that blocked roads and cut power lines in the French Alps. To the &0utheast. Christmas brought the fifth day of rain along the Italian Riviera and for once it was welcome : it broke a seven.month drought. filled L~ reservoirs and brought an end to 1vater rationing in Genoa and other cities. Tra ffic From West Berlin through the Berlin Wall to East (lermany was light, but offi cials expected thousands of West Berliners to cross today to visi t relatives in lhe Communist East. ·Mea nwhile. East Gennan borde r guards profited from the holiday to repai r five holes that \Vest Berliners had knocked in the wall during the year to show their anger at the barrier. Nixon Greets Red Envoy, Kissinger By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon met ~ith Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin and Secretary or State Henry A. Kissinger today !or a general foreign policy review. Nixon's meeting with Kissinger had been expected. But his conversation with Dobrynin came as something of a surprise. Reporters learned that he was in the White House only after seeing his limousine parked nearby. The three, meeting alone, were ex- pected to confer about an hour. "They're just getting together to talk about 'general foreign policy matters," deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren said. \Varren recalled that Nixon spoke alone '"it h Dohrynin for 40 minutes last week. Photographers were swnmoned to the oval offi ce to take pictures of the Nixon· Kissinger-Dobrynin mee ting. Reporters were: J19.t. .. ~.l\owe~ to.. i;qv.~r-the picture- taking sess ion. On Monday. Nixon and Kissinger met for more than an hour and on Christmas Day they spoke by telephone for a hair hour. Nixon also had an appointment toda y with former New York Gov. Nelson A. Rocke~eUer, and his successor, ~Jalcom Wilson. Rockefeller, a potential candidate !or the Republican presidential nomination in 1976, is one Republican leader wh o has conspicuously side-stepped any sharp criticism of Wh ile House involvemen t in the \Vatergate scandal, and has main- tained hi s lines or communication wit h Nixon. But Rockefeller's efforts to persuade Ni xon to deal with New York City's mass transit problems with federal aid have been unsuccessful. Nixon had not met Wilson since he took over the state house in Albany after serving 15 years as the lieutenant governor. Nixon mixed business with pleasure Chrisunas Day, spending the morning in his ova l office conferring with his chief of staff, Gen. Alexander l\.t. Haig. The President also had some family time with bis wile, two daughters and sons·irPlaw. In the late af!emoon, the Nixons gathered in the White House red room for a Christmas turkey dlrmer with a few friends, including the President's personal secretary. Rose Mary Woods. Husband IG..ll s ~[au HUNTI NGTON PARK (UPI) -A 19· year-old man allegedly shot and kJlled a man he found at the home of his estranged wife Tuesday. authorities said. Police said Gilbe rt Sanchez surrendered to authorities and admitted shooti ng Tony Reyes, 19, of Los Angeles, after an argument at his wife's borne. BURGLAR LEA VES CHRISTMAS CARD ' CARACAS, Venezuela (UPll -A burglar broke into a home in a well-to-do area here on Christmas Eve, hfllped himselt to a drink out of the liquor cabinet and mode off with jewelry, ca~h and electrical appliances while the owners were out celebraUng. Tbc thief, police said, left a Christmas card wllh the words, "Mtrry Otrlstmas and thanks for everything." •• 0.llY }'lftl lttff l'lttltl A BIG F~OPPY HAT IS HELPFUL WHEN PAINTING ALFRESCO Ruth Hynds of Newport Buch Likes to C1pture The Ch1rm of Age Ai·tist Braves Eleme11ts While Pah1ting Laguna By JACK CHAPPELL Of the Dllh' l'llet Steff 111e painter worked quickly as the west sky reddened and spread across the .,..,ater to Laguna Beach. Ruth Hynds of Newport Beach braved a stiffening onshore breeze tha t ruffled her big floppy hat and tugged at the brisllcs of her water co lor brush. The 1veather. the light. pestering passersby and time are the perils of painting alfresco. Ruth painted the old Laguna Beach Lifeguard tower. ''I heard they were going to tear it down." she said. They·re not. but it will be remodeled slightly. "I paint a lot or old things. "l 1>2inted the cannery when it was still old," she said referring to the Ne"'POrt Beach cannery, now a swank restaurant. The water colorist also has a class o{ students who come down and paint what they find in Laguna. The old houses on the ocean front bluffs were favor ites. They were remov- ed about a year ago. Another favorite spot in Laguna is the beach areas near Victor Hugo's. A new concession gazebo is planned near there. The rockJ along Laguna Canyon Road are also good subjects. A 2,0CJO.unit hous- lng development is planned in there. "I do what I like, and it sells," Ruth said as she spread the reddish-pink paint on the paper for the big red crosses on the lifeguard tower. If the weather's bad or dull, she said she ju.st wall! st home !or a sunny day. ' Despondent Mesa Man Shoot,s Self, Survives A Costa ~tesa·-maR-.··de&pondent. over .. his 1973 joblessness, is recovering today after going to his bedroom Oirlstmas Eve and blasting a .32 caliber bullet completely through the left side of his chest and in to a wall. Investiga tors said he put the weapon away after the suicide attempt, lay dow n on his bed to die and when it became apparent he would not, shook hands with the policeman who arrived and marveled at his own poor aim. The SS.yea r-0\d victim was listed in fair condition today at Costa Mesa l\temorial Hospital, where he was taken following swift treabnent at his home. Nixon Okay s $2.2 Billiori Aid to Israel WASHINGTON (AP) -Presidtnt Nix- on signed today legislation authorizing $2.2 billion in emergency aid to Israel The White House said Nlzon acted on lhe mea sure at midmo~ing, clearing the 'A'ay for emergency security ass.is· tance sought by Israel after the outbreak of fighting in the Middle East several months ago. The legislation gives Nixon flexibility lo provide the aid on a credit or a grant basis. It also authorized him to use a portion of the funds to pay the U.S. share of the costs of the United Nations emergency force in the Middle East. The U.S. assessment is estimated at $17.3 million for the first year. ·Police ·Of!icer Matthew Letteriello said· the man's wife heard the upstairs gun blast and found im, then called her son - his step.wn -who is a West County physician. Patrolman Letteriello said the 32-year· old doctor had already arrived at the scene when he got there and was giving hi s stepfather erriergency care. The automatic pistol slug made a clean hole. wi th little blood. "The victim appeared alert and reach- ed out and shook hands with this of- ficer, 1' he said in a report. "How are you?" the man continued ''l shot myself and missed." he added. "I aimed for my heart. but I missed. I can't take it any more." His wile told investigators after he had been removed to the hospital that for most of the year since February her husband has been unable to get a steady job. Gurney to Stay On Panel--Aide WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward J, Gumey's administrative wistant acknowledged today the F 1 o r l d a Republican has mlS9ed the last· eight public sesaiona of the Senate, Watergate committee, but said he has no intentlon or resigning fro m the panel. "We don't have much comment on tha t story," Jim Allison Jr. told a reporter about a Waahington fost report that Gurney ceased to be an active member of the commJttee. No P1·ogress ~ee11 During Peace Talks GENEVA (UPI) -Israeli and Egyp- tian military delegations adopted such tou;b bargaining poslllons today at start or the.Ir talks on separating rorces along the SUez Canal that there was no prog· ress. Each side dlsm{lsed the other" proposals as wiacceptabte. Israeli aourcea said their stand Is that Israel's troops on the west bank of the canal and inside Egypt should slmply move back lo the ea.st bank , in other words switching places with Egypt's 3rd Anny on the east bank, or Israell side, of the canal. Egyptian sources said this is the same position Israel took Jn the uruuccessful disengagement talks at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suet Road in November Md rem.!i.lns "totally urf.!i.CCe"pt:able." Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position is that Israeli troops should move back as fa r as a line from El·Arish in the north of the Sinai to Ras-Mohammed lo the south. thus giving Egypt about twe>-thirds of the Sinai. Israeli sources said this would be "out of the question." Tbe Egyptian sourcea said their delegation to the military working group on disengagement has a fall-back position which would be for Israeli troops· tG move back behind the Sinai passes which are about 20 miles from the canal. Egypt would remain west or the passes while the United Nalions would act '5 a buffer on the passes themselves. A third Egyptian proposal under con· sideration, the sources said, is for the 3rd Anny to ren1ain on the east bank y,·ith Egypt maintaining an "ad- ministrative presence" or civilians and police betv.·een the canal and the passes. Israeli sources said their delegation is unlikely to move from the simple switching sides proposal until early ne1t year after Israel's elections Monday. Israeli Defe11se J\.firllser Moshe Dayan said Tuesday the talk! have better than a 50 percent chance or succeeding. But reports in Isra eli and E gyp 1 i a.n newspapers hinted at a hardening or positions with neither side prepared to make major concessions . At any rate, it was doubted there could be major negotiatiom uritil after the Israeli elec- tions. Drug Squad Nabs 2 Suspected Opium Dealers TEHRAN, Iran (AP ) -An anlidrug squad captured two smugglers today with an estimated $2 million worth of top grade opium, police reported. . 11 was the biggest "IJOl"led drug haul SIJlCe May, when police said they cap- tured drugs Y.'Orth $21 million. Officers said the opium seized today "''as produced in .<\!gharUstan and transported through Iran to Kashan 275 miles south of Tehran, from where the smugglers were plaMing to lake· it to Tehran for distribution and trans!onna· tion into heroin . Under a new Iranian law, anyone caught with significant quanlities ol opium or other illegal drugs will be executed by firing squad after military trial. Kids Find Bod)r Of Nude Woman TITUSVILLE, Fla . (UPI) -The nude body or a young woman was found by ·a group of children playing near a trailer park at J\.funs north of here. II was the lhtrd female body found in the area In six weeks. Brevard Coontr Sheri!! Leigh Wilson said Tuesday night the identity and cause o! death had not been determined. He saJd the bound body was badly decomposed. DepuUes wer< back in the area today seeking clues. The sher!!! said the body was bound in a fashion similar to that of Paula Hamric, 22, whose body wa!I found In . the same general area of the oounty Nov. 15. 1 The body of Nancy Gerry was found earlier this mont~. 1'he sheriff said the vlr:llm found Tue1- day was de!lnltely linked to th'e other two deaths bill did not elaborate. Nixon Travel The President signed the measure without public conun<nl following an hour-long meeting with So v I e t Ambassador Anatoly Oobrynln, a session arranged to appartnlly dl1CUS9 U.S. and Soviet moves lo promote a lasting Middle East Peace. Gumey ha.t acknowledged that lht Justice Department was inv .. tigaUng allegallona of a aecrel poUUcal fund. --C'A!tiU 'lu"":: t S t The fund was alle1edl.Y .. t.ablilbed for ""' 110 e " '· The $U blllion aulllorized by lht bill was lht lull amount requested by Nixon. Gun Acc ident Fatal' BALDWIN PARK (UPI) -A 15-ytar· old youl h was killed Tue!day when a .22 caliber gun he and another boy were playing with acctdenlolly dllCharg· ed. Pl>lico said Michael C.IUn W11s allot once In lhe cheflt. He was pronounced dead at Quten of lht Valley Hospital in West Covina . ,.. Gurney by Florida bullden lo exchatice for upected prtfmnUal treitmenl from WASlllNG'l'ON (AP) -The the FederRl Houalng Admlniatratioo. White Hout< 11ld lo!l.ay lhert were • Northern Rain to Fnd SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rain today throughout Northern California rs ex· pected to d1S9lpate by Thurtdllf. ltaving partly cloudy skles and little temperature change. The Sacramento V a I I e y • however, may continue to cet driales through Thursday morning, says lite Na- Uonal Weathtr Service. no definite plahs l4f any hollday tnvel by Pmidant Nixon. The Prealdent tentatively 1cheduled a trip to bl1 Key Bls· cayne, Fla., home for today but r.mained in the While Houoe and aldoa lllld he was working "" Mid-. die Eaat, energy and legislaUve mat ten. Deputy Presa Secretary Gerald L. Warrtn would not HY W~r II the Pmldcnt would (0 to Florida. . \ 7 .. --: ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 360, 5 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1973 c · TEN CENtS 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ l . fo'rom \Vire Services but the Presidfnt'a comment was relayed eel the Arab announcement on Christmas country through "leakage" from coun· f I \VASHINGTON -President Nixoo by the photographers and by White -th.! Arab decision to relax the embargo day a~ "a st~ in the right direction tries receiving Arab supplies. Post published today, Simon said, "[ hi~t~ ~roadly _tOOay that hi.s ad-House aides standing by. o.n oil shipments to. Japan and most and a sigp. of progress which we Warren reported that Administration think v.·e can manage without rationins m1n1strahon decided not to impose Deputy Pre~ Secretary Gerald T. pf Europe as a step m lhe right dire<:· welcome." officiils are continuing lo study the . 1 . gasoline rationing. \Varren said afterward that Nixon's com· lion. • He added: "We will continue to ~·ork impact of steep price increases an-if the (vo untary ) conservauon program As photographers \Vere recording the ment was nor meant to be an an. The Arabs, however. are maintaining for sotuyon of the Middle East problem nounced Sunday by major Persian Gull keeps going.'' start or a meeting with Energy ·Adv~er nouncement of action on rallonlng. their embargo on shipments to the and the oll problem." · oil exporting countries. The Post said Simon vtas con- 7 ~.l,lllam S~mon: Nixon said to then:i : "The President's aversion to rationing ~nlted States aaj Warren Said, "Th~s Warren would not express either op-Simon scheduled a ne\\'S conference sideringproposals to force car pooling 1 ni w~rk1ng right no"'. to make certd1n is widely known," Warren said as. he oil shou!~ not be used as an economic timism .or pessimism over prospects ol Thursday morning at which .. he was by closing gaS<>line stations two days we wo~,t have to ra.hon gas for you recounted Administration's efforts to weapan. Arab relaxation of the U.S. embargo. expected to announce the adminis~ratlon a week instead of one and setting up fellows. . . avoid rationing by voluntary con· Warren. responding to questions, term· Nor would tte say whether the United does not plan to invoke rationing to a random system for keeping every No rcporlcrs were present ul the tune, s~rvation of futJ. government continues to be1ieve that States expects more oil to reach the help ease the energy shortage. (See RATION, Page %) • • • am1 .1es Ill . . ,. FIREME N MOP UP AFTER BLAZE WH jCH KILLED THREE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY On Thistle Avenue, Death T1ke1 Mother, Two Sma ll Children U CI Mount~ineer Killed Student Dies Tryi1~g to f eacli Top of Mt. Wliitn ey By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 the 01111 Pllo! Sl1!1 RcscUe tClims returned to A1ount Whitney today 10 remove the body of UC Irv ine ~1ountaineering Club President Eric Eichmann from the spot where he fell five days ago. Eichman, 20, and i:I Costa P-1csa man, Don Pfirrmann of 2223 Pomona SI., attempted to reach the 14.494-foot peak of Aft. WhilneY last Thursday when a storm overtook them. Pfirrmann was helped Christmas Day from ihe 14,100-foot level by China Lake Mounta in Rescue Group volunteers. He remains in serious condition in Southern Inyo Hospital, Lone Pine. Pllrrmann is sultering from frostbite, rescuers said today. The two were part of a six-man climlr ing party. Four attempted to' climb to the top. l Peter Owen frick1and. 21, of Anaheim and Sonny Lawrence of UC ruverside were said today: to have reached the peak the night of~the 20th. They stayed overnight, r~turning to find Eiclunann dead and Pfinma1n in trouble. Rescuers said the pair could not remove the body, so went for help. Two others in tbe UCI climbing club observed the clirhbers from the East Face Lake High Camp, scene or rescue operations Christmas Day and today. · Storms· blocked views of the four climbers pn Friday and Saturday, UCE Studei1ts Jolm Mark Graham, 20. of Long Beach and om Hemker, J9, af Villa Park. the tWo other members of !he pany, told ~ers. · On Chrisl.nas ~•'~e · Graham and Hemker. reached ~izaUon and the Joyo c:..ntJ S\l•rlff'• llopar1meril 'called In the Cbin8 lfike M*'ialn lle!coe .Group: Three t-· men+ers led by Frickland Heat Cut Off • • Couple, 90, Freeze to Dea tli and Lawrenee reclimbed the Peak to reach Pfirrmann who waited near Eichmann's body at the 14,100 foot level. The six were spending Christmas holidays on the moWitain when the stann overtook them. Eichmann, a junior majoring in engineering, was president of the UCI Mountaineering Club. A resident of Irvine , he is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eric Eichmann. and a brother, Donald, 12, all of Hacienda Heights. · Funeral arrangements are pending. Pfimnann is believed to be a recent graduate of UCI where be majored in c.hemistry. Hemker is a sophomore majoring in ~iological sciences and Frickland is a senior·chemistry major~ Inyo Sheriff's Deputy Don Cran din:oted !he rescue elfort. ' Ten degree temperatures and gusting winds produced a wind chill estimated at 20 ~degrees below r.ero, rescuers aald. Winds also hampered use of helicopters as a shortcut to the mountaintop ecene of tl1e fall which is believed to have killed Eichmann. , 'Ille eight-hour rescue involved a chop- per from lbe Na~al WeaPoM Center. China Lake, in which rescuen hurried to the scene. Mother, 2 Youngsters Lose Lives By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ftM ~·, ...... , .... A Fountain Valley mother and ber two small children burned to death early today 11.·hen a pre-dawn blaze gutted their two-story home at 9946 Thistle Ave. Authorities identified the dead woman as Stella Dunlap. Her children were Dicke 5 and Tracey, 3. A~'vldbii who ~~m-'!lie seeond ·story lva1 ideotilied as .James stroll li; wbo sullered ~ over 70 pcrcenl oi his bOdy. f!O.' lJ llsJed In critical condition at the burn ward a( Orange County Medical Center. Tbe Thistle Avenue fire broke aut at about 4:30 a.m. as Fountain Valley firemen were cleaning up from another costly blaze at 9092 La Linda Ave. The La Linda fire, which did an estimated 1ro.ooo to !he borne of !he Phillip Landsberg family, did DOl result in any injuries, firemen said. Fire Cbief H. C. ~fickey Lawson said no cause bas been established for either blaze. "We are in the process of investigating the causes of the two fires but at this point, it doesn't look like either one is related to Christmas or Oirisbnas decorations," he said. Lawson said the Landsberg fire might have also resulted In injuries except that the family was alerted to the blaze by !he barking of !he family dog. "As it was, a boy had to jump from a second story window to get out," !he chief DOied. When fire unit!: arrived at the second Th.lstle Avenue blaze, the bOuse was completely engulfed in Dames. Neighbors toJd firemen that the fire "exploded" out of the second story as Stroh leaped from an upstairs window. Chief Lawson said firemen believe the fire smaldered somewhere downstairs for several hours. "It fiaSled inlo Oames upstairs vmere the heat had been building up. Wben the man went through the window, it Jet in the oxygen tlie fire needed to really start burning," the chief ex- plained. Lawson said Mrs. Dunlap, who is separated from her husband, and her two children, were found upslalrs In or near their beds. "The bodies were quite badJy burned," he said. "They may have died of smoke lnbalation but considering the way !he (See DEATDS>Pqe Z) SCHNECTADY N.Y. (UPI) -An old man and woman, both in their 90s, tried to keep warm by huddling together on the cold living rQOm _Door oJ their apartment after the electric company cut orr !heir power. They were round !here -frozen lo dealh -by a grandson. handing the case to~ a grand jury. A spokesman for the Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., which services the area wllh electricily and natural gas, said the company cut off power to the home beca111e' the couple declined to pay a five-monlh bill lor ·!202. A PJ furnace in the home would have been made inoperative when electricity was shut off, thougll It would not have allected the '* of a gas coOking stove .. ;roday's' effort involving an elebt.man team from the Sierra Medre lllr<'b and lle!cue aquad relied oa a - helicopter from the Marino C«!ll A!"' , station, a rescue unit.,..._ aaW. ~- Bur1iirig Paper Proves Costl y F.rank Baker, 93, and his wife, Katherine, 91, were discovered ChrislnldS Eve by grindson, Basil J¥ise, home on leave from the military, who went to their home to take them to dinner Monday night. _: Detectives said the CQuple boa beeu dead for about two days. A ias stove had bffn turned on in the 1 kitchen, • detecllve said, but provided UIUe warmth. Elbert Watrous, Schenectady County district attorney, said he was considering Once before, the seokesman said, utilities were tcut ~. about six months ago, but were reinstated when a church paid hall the dellnqucnl bill ol 12!!). Boll! operatlooa "'l1lln a ,.... II the 13,lltlO loot levtl -,..,. ""'" High camp and a dlmb .. .,. lht --lain top to the localloa of the bod!' .. theweslface. • . 'Al G....,, 38, BW SlnJn, SI, and Bob Rockwell, 29, all ol the Clllloa Lake- Ridgecrest ma, Jell their lamillel Christmas Day to join Navy Pilot Lt. Jack Macldul In the rescue operaUon. Blaze Kills Four The apokeeman said the company con· tac\ed the Bakers teveral times about !heir hill, but Slid the co~plc refused to dlllCUSI IL GIBSONIA, Fla. (UPI! -A buminc ___A_deputy coumtf medical examiner, cigareue mty have Igriited a predawn Dr. John Slllelda, .OS an 1ulOJ"Y would Chriltmas blaze 11111 killed lhree childreh be made, but teni.llvely said dco was • an~"lliClf"14-jleit-<lld grand!athor In 1 brought on by e-. · e lio111e, fit'Hlflciala &aid Tueiday. . ' . ' • -a-brought the Leroy '-" fmnlly of Balboa Island 1 -lot of ,,._u Ouistmas ......... tt'• • load thing he Fl ""* up the chimney In time. They opeaed them around the ftreplace al 121 Ametliyst Ave. and lben burned \he gaily-patterned wrapping paper, according to the Newport Beach Fire Department. Spokesman Jim TQpping said a '500 fire ...Wied, v.1len sparks from !ht wrapping paper flew up the chimney and !ell cm the ,..,f. Whal the Kroescb'• need now !or Christmaa Is aboul 100 square [Ml ol new shingles. ., ' • ire FIREMEN COMPARE"NOTES AFTER DOUSING .FATAL BLAZE Cause of 4:30 a.m. Fountain Valley Fire Unknown Propane ·Tr.uck .Explodes, • Bmns on County Ereeway A propane truck trailer crashed; and exploded on the Santa Ana Freeway today, creating a iiery holocaust that blocked both lanes or the busy artery for nearly an hour. .• Firemen from Buena Park and Full~on doused the blaze near the intersection of the Santa Ana and Riverside freeways and e n a b I e d Cajifomia Highway Patiolmen to reopen the northbound lane after a SO-minute Ueup. Patrolmen reporting to headquarters· from the area said traffic was blocked for more than 10 miles in each direction. Clearance of the southbound lane was delayed while wrecking crews moved in to pull the scorched vehicle off the fr ttway and allow enlergency operators to drain off the remaining propane. Fullerton firemen said the driver of the truck appar€l.n!lY escaped injury. They said no other vehicles were in· volved in the accident. Officials at CHP headquarters, working from sketchy on the scene reports, have not yet been able to determine the cau.w of the crash other than to confirm Red Communi«_ations Satellite Laimcherl-' MOSCOW (UPI) -The· Soviet Union announced today It launched another in Its series af lw1olnia·2 communications satellites. The Tass News AgenCy said the sattellte was launched Christmas Day for telephone and telegraph corn- munkaUon and for relaying television programJ to ouilying parts of the Soviet . Union._ that no other vehicles were invalved. "It appears that the vehicle, described to us as a small petrolene tanker, "'as headed south -whei'I something happened to send it headlong into the center divider,'' an afficcr said. "Our next report indica~ed that it smashed through the divider and went on to block the northbound lane before it overturned and caught fire," he said. The driver al the 270-gallon tanker 1 told patrolmen that the frame of his trailer buckled while he was driving south and he lo.5t control -and went through center divider and into north lane. Firemen's main worry was explosion from lhe heat but that didn't happen. <' or ange -Coast • Weather Showers likely tonight and Thurs· day morning ~ccord.ing tg the weather service with decreasing cloudiness Thursday allernoon. Cooler da ys. Lows tonight in th{ low 50s. Highs In the upper &Os. INSW E T ODAY Two Lagu11a B~ach 11aothtr1 who publish 1utf!ergrounct comic books dan 't think the comic.s are very f1'nny anymore. See story Oil Page 8. a11tlil1 lS l .M. teyf 11 C11!Mmla S ClllMff.C Jl·JI CM1lC1 ti Cl'OU...,,. 21 O..ltl Nelltt~ t llfit.1111 ~... ' l11!M•"""'"' 16"11 ,lllMICI f.11 ,..., tM lltcenl •• '' "•""" ti ' Allll llnftrl tt Movlt• 16"11 MVIV•I """" f H111111.i Newt 4 Or1"'1 (......., I Syl\'11 "«Mr t $llOl'tl 1>1• Tllt1lt-rl 1 .. 11 ·-. Wtft'ltfl't,..... n.- W•lll ...... I c Gne1·rilla Plan Kissi1iger Assc1ssiuatio1i Tliivarted BRUSSELS (UPI) -The Arab guerrilla organization that killed 3& persons at nomc and Athens airports last week originally planned to assassinnte U.S. Secretary of State Henry A. Kissfnger in Beirut a day earlier but was thwarled, n1ilitary and diplomatic sources said today. The sources said Libya ordcrerl the s ubmachinesun and grenade at.tempt on Kissin@er's life at Beirut International A1port Dec. 16 but Leba n~se authorities lea rned of it in tin1e and ordered Kissinger's plan d1\1erted to Rayak Air Base instead. Ilaya k is 45 mjJes east of Beirut. 1'he U.S. E1nbassy in the Leb· anese capital said the Ki ssinger plane went there for security rea· sons. . According lo the sou rces, the Libyans told the group to attack instead at Rome, where they killed 31 persons at Leonardo da Vinci Airport Dec. 17 before liijacking a Lufthansa airliner and killing one person during a stopover in Athen~. Travel L i glit Christmas, 1973: Peace, Terrorism By The Associated Prtss Chr istmas 1973 was a holiday of more terrorism, • less u·arfare and more economic wicertain1y · for the Christian \\'Or)d. There also "'ere the traditional family reunions , feasting , gift-giving and prayers for peace. ' Road travel was light and Yule lights dim in many countries because of fuel shortages. "As he exists, man is not perfect," Bar Patro1is Foil Robber)· SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) - The Christmas tale began when a bandit entered a bar, waved a pistol and demanded money. One patron, annoyed at the interruption ot the Christmas party, hurled a shot glass at the would-be robber. The bandit fired a shot, but didn't hit anyone. The drinkers charged off their stools. The gunman fired one warn· ing shot, turned and fled , with a pact of about six men on his heels. The bartender 1elephoned police and officers caught up with the chase and arrested David Rey, 29, on a charge or attempted rob- bery. If The crowd from the bar returned to Christmas drinking. W oodsma1 i Kills Soutli Orange Coast Po,wer Someone felled a tree aloog San Juan Capistrano's Ortega •ligh\\'3Y o n Christmas Eve and caused a n1ajor blackout along thr South Coast. The outage. which lasted nearly an hour. hit at middt1 v and affected several hundred house hold!. in the mission cpm· inunity, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. Cre\\-'S repai red a severed main line serving San Diego Gas and Electric Company's system aft<'r moving the !alien tree a mile east of the San Diego Freeway. A mystery remains. ho1,•:ever, as to ~·hy the tree was chopped down. Pope Paul VI told 30,000 Roman s and tourists Christmas Day in St. Pet er's Square. "Exalt man : you will make more evident his deficiency. his in· completeness, his inner need 10 be saved. \Ve say it on ce and "'e say it in a l\'Ord: his need for a savior.'' (Picture, Page 4) Thoiµiands jammed St. Peter's Basilica for Christmas Eve and ChristmM Day Masses. But fewer than 4,000 persons -the ~allest crowd in years -made the pilgrimage to Bethlehem because of fears of Arab terrorist attacks. The Israeli government put a heavy· security guard on the little town in occupied Arab territory, and there was no violence. It was the first Christmas at peace ror American soldiers in 12 years, and lbe first in freedom for American prisoners of war from Indochirµt. The Skylab 3 astronauts walked outside their spacecrah for a belier view of the comet Koboutek and radioed to earth their hope for understanding among all men. (Story, Page 4) President Nii:on and his family spent the ~ay at the White House,. and the President had a telephone conference with Secretary of State Henry A. Kis· singer about oil policy. A shortage of gasoline and urgings by the Nixon administration for Stmday and holiday closings shut down all but a scattering of service stations around the United States .. State police said most motorists decided it v.•as belier to stav home rather than risk running out Or gas. Christmas night wa s peaceful in Lon· d<>n and Northern Ireland alter bomb explosions Christmas Eve that killed three men and wounded 41 men and "'omen. On Chiistmas_D_ay ..._ 200 Belfast demonstrators battled police with fists and rocks, and a IJ3.year--0ld woman \\•as shot in the mouth when she was caught between British troops and gunmen of the Irish Republican Army. More than 1,000 holiday skiers \verc trapped by snow, rain and av alanches th.at blocked .roads and cut poy,·cr lines in lhe French Alps. To the southeast. Christmas brought th.e. fifth da y of ra in along the Ita lian R1v1era and for once it was welcome · it broke a seven-month drought filled the rese rvoirs and b~ht an ~nd 10 l\'.a.ter ralionin~ t!'I {;cnoa and other cities. · 1r.aUic From \Vest Berlin through the Berlin \Va ll to East Germ any \\'as light. but officials expected thousands of \\'est Berli ners to cross today to visit relatives in the Communist East. ' U'ITe....._ Denver'~ Super lfhite Clarittmu ' Se enDming Peace Talks GENEVA (UPI) -Israeli and Egyp- tian military delegations adopted such tough bargaining poslttons today at start of their talks on separating forces along the Suez Canal that there wa.s no prog· ress. • Each side dismissed the other's proJ)0"8ls as unacceptable. Israen sources said their stand ht that Israel's troops on the v.•est bank of the canal and inside Egypt should simply nJove back to the east bank. in other words switching places with Egypt's 3rd Anny on tbe east bank, or Israeli slde, of the ca nal. Unexpected stonn dumped ll'h inches or snow on Derlver. Colo. and virtually tied up all tra!fic move- ment in the Mile High City. Nine-year-old Vincent Gareznald Impects snowbound car while Collie (be· low) attestt to fact the storm wasn't flt for man nor beast. Drifll piled to 10 feet in some places. Eg)•pUan sources snld this is the same position lsrael took In the unsuccessful disengagement talks at Kilometer 101 on the Cairo-Suez Road in November and remains "totally unacceptable." ' Ne'v York's Yule 'Violent' NE\V YORK IUPI) -The Christmas season was not d time or peace in the precincts or the nation's largest city. "Christmas is a very bad day all the time," ·said one harried detective. ··I don't know what it is -either the drink or too much merrimen t. A day like this has something like a full moon effect. It never fails . Everything seems to go to heU." Here are examples rrom the police blotter : -Detectives Ronald Kwoaka and \\'nliam fl.tcOe\'itt were in a small store in Queens Christmas Eve, posing as receivers of stolen property. In came t11:0 men, who robbed them of $500. In the ensuing exchange ol gunfire, bot h robbers were killed and KwC>C'J:ka. 31. was wounded. -In ~1anhattan. two men entered a clo thing store and ordered the owner, fl.1ichacl Schuman, 58, and an employe into the storeroom and demanded money. \Vhen Schuman refused, they shot ind killed him and severely wounded the employe, Mark Hollander. 88. -Angel Ortero, 14, was shot by another teen·ager while riding in the tlevator of a housing project Monday night. -David \Vade, 52, woo has a history of mental problems, was critlcally \\'Ounded by a grocer who shot him after he poked into the cellar of a store to look. for a woman be believed v.·as hiding there. -There were five bank boldupt ftlon- day, one of them a 10phisticated opera- tion oomplete with blow torthes. Officlall of the Chase Manhattan Bani. estimated more than $I50,cMxl waa taken Crom the night deposit box. Nixoii Travel Still Not Set Nixon Greets Red Envoy, Kissinger Egyptian officials said privately that their opening position is that Israeli troops should -move-back as far as a line from El-Ari.sh in the north of the Sinai to Ra s-Mohammed in the south, thus giving Egypt about two-thlrd1 of the Sinai. lsraeli aources said this would be "out of 1the question." The Egyptian ~ources said their delegation to the military working group on disengagement has a fall·back position By lfELEN THO~tAS Y•hich \•:ould be for Israeli troops to \VASHINGTON (UPI ) _ President ' move back behind the Sinai passes which are about 20 miles rrom the canal. Nixon met with So\•iet Ambassador Egypt would remain west of the passes Anatoly F. Dobrynin and Secretary of whJle the United Natlons would act as State Henry A. Kissinger today for a a buffer on the passes themselves. general foreign policy review. A third EgypUan proposal under con· Nlmn'a meeting with JCissinger had SideraUon, the BOurces said, ls for the been n:pected. But hiJI conversation-with 3rd Anny to remain on t~ ea.st bank Dobrynln came as something of a with Egypt maintaining a n "ad- surprile. Reporters learned that be was ministrative presence" of civilians and in the White House only after seeing pollce between the canal and the passes. his llmolllioe parked nearby. Israeli sources said their delegation 'Jbe three, meeting alone, were ex· ls unlikely to move from the simple pected to confer about an hour. switching sides proposal until early next "They're just getting together to talk year after Israel's elecU0111 Monday. about general foreign policy matters," Israell DefeiiSe Mlniser Moshe Dayan deputy press secretary Ge.raid L. warren said Tuesday the talks have better than said. . a 50 percent chance of succeeding. But Warren recalled that Nixon spake alone reporu in Israeli and Egypt I an wilh Dobrynin for 40 minutes last week newspapers hinted at a hardening or Photographers were SUDll!'IQ(led . ..to_ -~ .•• postU~ris ~th nelthe: side prepared to oval office to take pictures of the Nlxon-1Xl4ke maJor ·concessions. At any rate, K!sslnger-Dobrynln meeting. Reporters it was doubted tbere could be .major were not allowed to cover the picture-nea:oUalions until after lhe Israeli elec- taklng session tic:m. On Monday ·Nixon and lilisinger met Egyptian ofHcials close to Foreign for more ow; an hour and on Christmas Minister Ismail Fahrni . who remained Day they spoke by telephone for a in Geneva following last week's foreign half hour . ministers oonference, said this will mean Nlmi allO had an appointment today no progress can be made. , with· former New York Gov. Nelson They said Egypt further will ~ A. Rockefeller, and his succeuor, any negotiations on substantial polltiC81 Malcom Wlllon. matten tmtU the di.engagement process Rockefeller, a potential candidate for is either completed or close to conr the Republican presidential nomination pletlon. Jn If18, Is one Republican leader who bu conaptcuously olde-•tepped any sharp criticism or White House involvement in the Watergate scandal. and hi• main- tained his llnes of communication with Nixon . But Rockefeller's e(forts to persuade Nii:on to deal with New York City's mass transit problems with federal aid have been unsuccessful. Nii:on had not met Wilson since he took over the state house in Albany after serving IS years as tbe lieutenant a:overnor . Nixon Okay s $2.2 Billio1i Ai.d to Israel WASl!INGTON (AP) -President Nix· on signed today leglslallon authorizing $2 .2 billion in emergency aid to Israel. Fire Breaks Out In Second Valley House; 5 'L11cky' The !Ive members of the Phillip Landsberg family spent the day today sifting through the rubble of what used to be their hom e, telling themselves how 1uc:ky they are. Th.e famil)l' home at 9092 La Linda Ave., Fountain Valley, was gutted in a pre-dawn fire this morning, but the parents ... the three teenage children, the family dog and their pet parakeet all survived. A fire which erupted two hours later three miles from the Landsberg home. claimed the Jives 0£ a mother and her two small children and critically Injured another man . "Our crev,rs finall y found the source or the outrage, but the lrt!e "'as all there," said SDG and E hianager Bill \Vebb. The embarrassed "'oodsman had ned. OU.Niii COAIT CM Despondent Mesa Man Shoots Self, Survives WASl!INGTON (AP) -The White House said today there were no definite plans for any holiday travel by President NI.loo. The President ten t attvely scheduled a trip to hi• Key Bll- cayne, Fla., home for today but remained in the White House and aides said he was working on Mid- dle East, energy and leital&tlve matters. The White Hou.se said NiJ:on acted on the measure at midmorning, clearing the way for-emergency security assis- tanct BOUght by Israel after the outbreak of fighting In the Middle East several months ago. The teglsiatlon giv., NIIon fiuiblllty to provide the aid on a credit or a grant basis. It al!O authorized him to noe a portion ol the fund1 to pay the U.S. lhare of the cool9 o! tho United Nations emergency !orce In the Mlddie East. The U.S. asaemnent is eetlmated at $17.1 mllllon·!or the fin! year. ' The two oldest Landsberg g I r 1 s told friends that they were awakened by the ooise, heat and light that the fire was generating when it broke out on the home's second story at about 2:30 a.m. 'M'ley ran downstairs , while their 1+ t year~kl-brother jumped from his bedroom window. Their parents had been alerted to the danger by th·e barking of the family dog. DAILY PILOT 1~ 0••"9• C..11 OA/LY PILOT, wlt!'I WhJcl'I is <:-....S the .......... ,.,.,, It M ll$11ed ll'f lfte Orenoe Cotti Pv.Dlltl'llnt eomp.ny, S."° rele .Olt...,1 ire llUOllfhed, M .... y llll'Ol.llll Frld•Y· lor Cott• MIM, NNPOrt l11ch. H1111tll'l';llOfl !111ClllFOUlll<llfl Vt tley, l~I 8NCll, l•wlMISIKfdllO.C-•NI S.11 c1, ........ , Stll J\Hl'I Ct '1H•1no. A •1 .... it> r911lont1 9dlll0n II pWlll/\ld l.a•ut~¥1 9fld s......,,.,_, TM prlnciJl,ll .WlltJ'llnf 111111 ,, •I m Wnl 81y SfrMI, Cotle Mtu, C1!1tol'f\ia, tH». "011111 N. Weed ,.,. ...... ,11011 ...... Je ck It C11rley v .. , Prt1ldlrlf Miii C....rtt M.111t9tf Tho11101 ic ••• a Editor TlieMtt A. M11rphl11e "'--"" h !fOI' Ct.1,11111 H. l••• 1u,1i.,4 , • Nell Nthll11I Mefletilll !.lllllOo --..-JJO Weit le, 5tr1el Meillftt .Y4N111·,,o.1 •• 11.0, t2•Z• --,.....;,..., 1Mc:111 m1 ,.......,, IMtYI,. 1 ~'-dr n:tl'«•IA ....... ~.....-...ai: ,,.,. '"'"' ...,._,. .. 11 C"""""9l -Hl'1ll It c.tft\lfll It ... T .. 1.•101 f)141 •42-4JJI Cl21llfW .Wuo:tla'h I t 42·16 71 (..,.rlfM, 11'3. oir..... Cota! Pt,llltl!ll'I""' , c:i.m.11Y. Me ...,. tlltl'it1. 1Hwtr1tltftt, .. ,..,... --,,, ..... , .. _.. ""'"' _, ..,. •••c.wt -""""' IPICll l Mr· fl'liulwl ., ...,..,.. .-. A Costa ~lesa man, despondent over his 1973 joblessness, is recovering toda y after going to his ' bedroom Christmas Eve and blasting a .32 caliber bullet co mpletely through the left side of his Drug Squad N li bs ~ Suspected Op iu rn Deale rs TEHRAN, Ira n (AP) -An ant idrug squad captured two smugglers today with an estimated $2 million \li'orth or top grade opium. police reported. . It "'as the biggest reported drug haul ~UlCC May, when pollce said they cai>- lured drugs "-'Orth $21 mlllioo. Officers said the opium seized today "·as produced in .~f.i:hanistan and lriinsported through Tran to KA!!han 275 1nlles south of T~hran, from where the ~mugglcrs Wert planning to take It to 'l'ehr11n for disfrlbution and tran!lrorma· t1on jnto 'heroin . chest and into a wall Investigators said he put the weapon away after the suicide attemp t, lay down on his bed to die and when it became apparent he would not , shook hands with the policeman who arrived and marvelt'd at his own poor aim . The 55+year--0ld victim was listed In fa ir condition tod ay at Costa J\.fesa ~1cmorlal J~ospital. where he was taken follo,ving" swift treatment at his home. Police Officer ~1atthew Lelteriello said the man 's wife heard the upstairs gun bl ast and fo und Im, then .called her son -his stepson -who is a West County physician. Patrolman Letleriello said the 32·year- old doctor had already arrived at the l!ceyle when he got there and was giving his stepfather emergency care. The automatic pistol slug made a clean hole, with little blood . "The victim appeared alert Md reach· cd out and shook . hand• with thlo of- fi ctr." he said in a report . .. How are you?" the man continued "I shot mysell and missed." he added. "f aimed !or my heart , but l mll!OC<i. I can't take it any more." Deputy Pre11 Secretary Oertld L. Warren would not uy when or II the President would p to Florida, Kids Find Bod)r Of Nude Woman TITIJSVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -'lbe nude body of • young woman wu found by a group of childrfn pla)'lni near a tr a lier park It MlJno north of~ here. It 'lfll the third ltma11 body loand Jn the lll'H Jn llx -U, Brevard Couritr Sbortf! Lell!I W!llon Hid Tuolday nJclll tbe ideDUI)' 11111 cauae or death had not been determined. lie wd tho b6ilnd body w11 bodly decomposed. DepuUa ,..re back In tbe area today ,..king clHI. The 1ber1f! 11ld tbe body w11 bound In a fa1hlon 1lmll1r to that of Paula Hamric, 22, whole body ,was !1lUiid in the same ceneral area of the county Nov. 25. , The Pre1ldent signed the measure without public comment following an hour-long meeting • with so v le t Ambassador AnatoJy Dobrynin, a 1ession arranged to apparenUy dlacuu U.S. and soviet moves to promote a Jastlnc Middle East Peace. The $2.2 billion auibortzecl by the bllt was the full amount requested by Nixon. . . F ro•P .. el RATION .. .' 'M'ley did not have the time to rtSCUe the parakeet and as they watched their home bum, they feared the pet was dead. Firemen who went into the hOme were asked by neighbors to dispose or the bird's body so the family wou1dn't sec It. Aca>rding to I·lre Chier H. c. "Mickey" Lawson. one startled fireman found the bird, unharmed. "He took his f Io v e off and reached out a !Inger !or the bird to perch oo. The bird did, and then bit the lire· man's finger," I.he chJef related. According to !rlendo, the famlly held a small nunlon on the front lawn when the wounded fireman emerf'l! from the car o!! the rood at leul on1 day • home with tho bird. k. Late thll morning, tho !amity wu I '11..,n ii lllld to fa.,., a llondby back al their ftllted home, try!ni to plan thll would allow the go•ornmenl wvqe what they could !rom the ...... to •I up all the mlt\ll!DllY for ratlonltlc * -(( ..A.. 11111 bold It mdy ill COM it beanillli tr H OAIOON SAW ENI RGY CRISIS COMING. 119ry, P191 4 GAS SHORTAOI HITS HOLIDAY TRA VILI U , Story P191 5 I UROPI LAUDS ARAB DEATHS • • • !ire fiHhed through th~. llOCOlld •tory, • It 11 more likely that Uiey burned lo death." ' '*""' ell• ,...... .... M C•!t "'Me, Cltltwftle, ..........,.. IW CMrltt l!M ~1• .... IMll P,lJ ...... ~. lftll•tfn> tllltlfltl.. ..... ,......,... Under R new lraninn law. anyone caught \Yith signiUcant quanti ties or opium or ·01hcr illegal drugs will be executed by firing squad after military trtal. His wife told investigators arter he had be<n removed to the hospital that .for most or the yur since February beF ' husband has been ~lltlllble to get 1 steady job. The body o! Nancy Gerry w11 !ollnd eatller thl1 month. OIL NIWS, ..... 10 _,ry when 11111 U !uei llUPPlleo dip to an u -yet undetermined "crilia LawlOll aaid JnvrsU,1tors face some I ~ dU!lcultles In detennlnlng the .,. ... or The lherll! llld tho victim found "- day w.. dlllnl1"1y llnked IO tbe otMr two deal hi but did not elaborate. ,,. le•eJ." · tho !atal bl11e be<auoe the ho ... wu IO bldly burned out.