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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-01-02 - Orange Coast Pilot• • -., , ,~ I. ·Oome • ? • . . ,. • • • - c -.................. Jailed • ID Eoon1y Gets ,. •5 to· Life~ Over New Year~s Murder . . DAI LY PILO T * * * 10 ' * * * . ~ ' .. ... . --· ' VOL.~7. NO. I.. saCT1bNs. 4' P'.t.GlS . -eas ens1on sun CANAi' OCCUPIED BVIPA~L SIN A I ~ Cairo l .G.YJ!tlAM ARMllS- . ~ • -' z . . ' .. ~·-,., I • North State 200 .Jailed ' ' ' :·Ut!!tUS.,£:rop. ~ ... ~.'!._~O!~~'!ops Co.<Js!.12f ''-'i~ A~re.~t_s . · ·!\fore than ~200 drunken drivers were The fina l New Year 's tally of 202 jailed in Orarrge C'A>unty during the-four-arrests brings the number of drunken EGYPT REFUSING TO WITHDRAW" SUEZ CANAL TROOPS · Xltma d day New Year's y;eekend. drivers jailed in {)range County during ---~o.~m1nds-1slNl_tulLO_uLo.l.Egyp_t&a. JLI'euitoq -t·on D California Highway Patrolmen led the th~-two fo~~ay holi~ys to 480. ( Past Years Included !""''=""""="'==,===== _ -·_ -!.7.1.~ --,-.,.-.y~. in __ flie .• craCiOown thaL.began_at __ Most_locaLJaWmen_agreed thaLJwo \VASHINGTON.r:o(AP.}~-The rn·~r:nal 4 p.m. Friday and ended at 4 p.m. factors combined to cut the New Year's l New Year 's Day with 94 arrests. All· figure below the 278 arrests recorded Re~e~ue Se~ce sa'id. tod 1 8Y .ft is re-ex- lsrael4 ~rian Troops C~h .in Golan Heights By the Associated Press Clear skies and ~Id_ ~ortherly '':inds 'viii-threaten san "JoaqwDValley citrus crops with almost certain frost overnight, the National Weather S_ervice says. The weatherman -says protection ror By the As50clate~ Pres1 _ Syrian and Israeli forces clashed twice tod3y in the G<llan Heights with machine guns and · artillery, a Syrian military communique reported. At the same time, Israeli a{ld Egyptian negotiators were , back in Gene\la for furthe r talk! on dls~gagement of their forces on the SUez front. Jn another development, I s ui e I i Defense Minister Moshe Dayan wW con- GOLDA M~IR COALITION ALLY BALKING. Story, Pogo 4. ' fer with Secn!tary or Stale Henry A. Kissinger in· Washington On Friday., the Western \Vhl\e House annoWJced today. In a -bri~{ announcement at San Clemente, a .presidential sPOkesiil~ said Dayan and Ki.ssinger would consqlt :·on the Geneva -talks with emphasis Oh the subject of disengagement of forces." Officials said with Israeli elections completed; ISrael can play a more' &ctive role in the negotiations to end the quarter the frost-threatened citrus crop \viii prob- century of ,,1lddle East tension . • ably b4i necessary tanlght and Thursday The Kissinger-Dayan J>ession was morning as temperatures plWlge well agreed to wh'en the U.S. official was below freezing at most valley points. in Israel on Dec. 17, a \\lhite House spokesman said. He said it was not The low reading this morning was contemplated that Daya~ also ~ou!d see Zl at Lemoore, with lows .overnight ex- President NiXon. who 1s cont1nu1ng a pected to range from 22 to 30. working vaclition at his California home. The extended outlook is calling for In the Golan Heigh~ fighting , one Israeli soldier was shot and several lows in the upper 20s to 30s through engineering vehicles were destroyed, the Sunday. But frost danger is expected Syrian communique said. The Syrians . to lessen by Friday morning as clouds · 'Claimed to have suffered no losses in and fog block the worst of the cold the clashes on the northern and central §ectors. winds. (n th~ first encounter, the Syrians Temperatures below 30 during the said, they fired machine guns, forced night weren't lo\v enough long enough withdra'wal of an Israeli patrol and hit to damage the valle y's orange crop, one 'soldier. officials said. But they braced for freez- The oommunique, broadcast by lng temperatures again tonight. DamascUs radio_, said in · the ·second "One night of cold usually doesn't clash the ,Syrian artillery thwarted an do ' too much " said Clyde Chuachill, Israeli attempt to consolidate defense Tulare C'A>unty 'agriculture cOrrimissioner. positiOri's in Ifie central sector-and "It's \vhen we get an early cold and destroyed some negineering vehicles. on conseCulive nights." There was no immediate ~Israeli oom-There were readings ()f 28 at Lindsay · ' ~ (Set ~EAST; Page 2) • and 29 in 'Exeter, which "isn 't bad Coun. ciJman_s_ . . . . at all." said ill Jones. chier inspeotor • '\ for Sunkist Growers. H · R l d . "It -has to get down to 26 or lower Drug, Store Hit unt e ease ·· 1or som•· lim• to start freezing th• [ruil.'" Jones said . "Tonight should be · . ' TO Await Bi.d colder, but if we're lucky, it won 't IJ! $20~ ~ttfgl~ry . 1 be ri°: ~:i~nai \Veather Se~icc says • 'LEW!SBURG, Pa. (AP)' -W~-· temperatures could dfOp to the low ·20s Enterprising burgCars . took advantage · · h of a quiet New Year's Day by, to'werlng tergate coOspirator E. Howard at some valley points to~..a· led. h. h' k Runt was released Crom a federal Jones and Churchill C1l...,_.1t t c t 1C themselves throug~Jhe skylight of Piok'.s good' .. • • Costa Mda ·Pharmiacy th 8 ·l'O and prison fann today pe~ing an ap-skins 'of oranges aruL ~ugar content stealing '20f)1 worth of · ·· •Mf\I , pe.alli:' in W~shington, 1 .. • with preventing any interior damage .. pill&. from dnJggist · Citf.,, ·Hdn 54, .was Sentenced· Nov~ "It ·takes a few hours for ·the tem- cilman Alvin Pinkley.· ,\ ;,., . 9"t 'rve. 2"-8 y~rS IJ!. l>ff~g,"~ peratute of the orange inside to get · r t.: ,~ -r He gl-ded guilty last January tO oold;" Churchill said. ''Thev were obvious y, "\ID""' .er ,_ -" t· •·• narcot16'.bul I ilifti'r1ieep wif!.miinY. ,sjx ~ of rolU!plnJCY,. burgla .. ,,T The 1973-74 orange crop, es 1m.a= h " Id :Phikfe propr~etor\\f the' • and1~ppln8 in mnneCUOD .. wifh i at 1about ·30,000 railroad cars ·here, is .~~at5f8201Ne~'Blvd .• 'the ~~e 17, 1972 bre8~ in .1t'-1, about 30 percent plCked, JOnes Sl!id. • "They !00~8.0llJe j!henobarblthlch, • the ·~'\Cratic nationuf · he~ A severe [rost deslroyfd about one·third '"' hall brolhers to .ecGnal, anil , _ quarte~·ln th~ Wat~rga~e building,~~ -of last year~~P: thu downei\. ·A Tew other d are .. ~ · A 'ft;de~al .8Ppeal1 CJ)\1rt &:f Wind machines 1n orchards ·were ac-·~one too. ~oLmy drowi""""" ' . WashiJ!~n Fri~~ .of\!ered. Iba~ , tivaled Tuesday. night to. circulate the sfi'ltJlgel)"'tmPIYt' ~~ • ' · I . gr~. If'~ '~•to;~---.old~a1r, but -growers didn"t ·~ave 10 Police are ~ eilCUy ' t!i/' , ·dtfe, . , 'S:-........ i:J.·· Barl(tti,lill~; Uk amtxlge pots, Jones !&id, liur la tooll 'Place bul believe was '" ' 'Mlanl; ·tt;1eail!ll:u~tn tlrt <'l!utf · Tcmper~ures also dropped · below 8.Jm~ahed 'al night. The Jl!!fgli!rs left • acts on their appeals. !~zing in much of No rib em Oolilornl_I! their rluhllghl and · rope heh~. this morning .• " • --\.--"'-- v.'ere booked into county jail. during the Christmas seasoo. anun1ng Pres1denl •Nl:Xon s income ta:<: Santa Ana topped }he list of ·16 other "Publicity was one of them," a CHP returns for the past''Several years. police-agencies-witli 24 arrests-in -the-officer-said-today. "We-Were-out-'--in-The----fRS-said~rejlresent8tives of. Presi- same four-day period. ·. force · during Christmas and ma ny· dent Nixon are ·cooperati!Jg fully in the Ne\vport Beach police led the field motorists who saw the reS:ulting figures probe and authorizttd disclosure of the --~ in the Orange Coast area with 10 arres"8, .got the message in time for their New action. seven of whom v.'ere booked into the Year's festivities." . . The 'IRS did not say v.·hat years would city jail and three in the county Jail. A Santa Ana patrolman attributed the be covered by the review. But there Huntington Beach jailed six inebriated rain New Year's Eve and early New has been controversy over t he. motorists, Costa Mesa booked five, Foun-Year's Day for keeping many motorists President 's returns for 1970 1971 and tain Valley two and Laguna Beach one off the rain-slickened freeways and 1972. ' in the 96-hour crackdown. roads. The President paid totcil taxes for Wife Strangled Huntington Man Given . ' 'Five to Life' in Murder ' .. these three years of less than $6.000. An IRS spokesman said in ans,ver to a questiOn that the tax agency could r~cover past taxes due for all three ol those years, , but that the statute of limitations wotild have expired for taxes due from previous years. The 11is did not disclose the reason for its probe. The agency said it arranged to ex- change information o.n the President's tax returns with the congressional Joint Committee on Internal Revenue . Tax- ation,· \Vhich agreed, at Nixon's request, 1 to review the chlef executive's tax Malcolm Smith of Huntington Beach ' term tSee TAXES, Page %) Hand {aces an identical prison ' was sent .to state prison for five years . to life tOOay for Jhe part he played last March 6 in the murder of his wife. Orange County Superior Court Judge H. Walter Steiner sentenced Smith, 41, of 6200 Edinger Ave. after denying his motion for a new trial. " .• Smith's sentencing came just two days before the scheduled Superior Court sentencing of Allen= Duane Hand, 29, who has pleadedi'uilty to second degree murder in the -killing of Mrs. Barbara Smith, 54. Coeds Cha rged In Drink Spiking HOUSTON .(UPI) .;.. University or H9uston ~s Gwsn Hartin, 'll, and Patti Tyser, 21; musr appear in ,court Jan, 9 to face ·~arges or "admlnisteririg an injurious substance." The two spiked a chocolate cake wiUi a laxative at a,ii of,fice party, authorities said, ~ -Assistant District Attorney ChArles Vottingham said at ·least two persons became-ill. including-a-4-year-okl boy, beca_use oLJhe .i'ke. Peter Williamson, attOrney for Miss Hartman, said the incident occurred Dec. 11 at ~ sociology department party. .. .. .... • • to that meted out today :o Sm'ith. Hand, of the same Edinger Avenue address, Is regarded by the prosecution as having Played the major role in the killing of Smith's wife . It was successfully alleged in Smith's trial that be attempted to strangle his wife with the · cord of his electric shaver but that she showed signs of regaining consciousnes:; after her body had been dumped in the living room of hiS apart-ment. ;_ It was alleged that Hand then stuffed a bedspread down the kicking woman ·s throat to suffocate her and later helped Smith ·carry the body to the nearby Reynolds Riding Stable. Police were called to the stable the next day by a girl who told' them she had been grooming her horse on the premises when she spotted the'dead w6man's feet protruding frotn a pile of straw. It was alleged in Smith's trial that he married . his wile .!llld_ then over the ~riod of a few months disposed of nearly $60,000 she had accunlulated· in stocks and bonds. It was testilied that, despite her' loss, Mrs. Smith trared her estranged husband down and tried to persuade him to abandon -.his homosexual relationship with' Hand and return to her.I" Her'~repeated pleas angered both men and Jed to the killing of the woman, the prosecution alleged. ~ l /' Oraage <:oast • Weatlter Those cool winds will decrease Thursday, being replaced by cloudy skie&, accordii1g to weather fore- caster Pat Rowe. Highs at the beaches are expected around 56 ri sing slightly to 62 inland. Over· night lows 3().45. · INSIDE TODAY OJiio State U1,iversity got re· venge for a 1973 Rcrse Botvl de - feat wif h a resounding 42-21 victory over use in the '74 foot· bed( classic Tuesday. For .de- tails of the game pnd other bowl tilts, se.e sports. pages 17·1.8. Al Ywr St'l'vict 1 M .. lllo• • INll11t 11 Mevlff .... L. M, Bt'll 1 M11l\Ull 1'1111111 1f C•liftf'!ll• S Ntllt1141 Ntwt .4 C.,... Ctn11r 11 ~M Covnr, 11 C'-nifltd >t·ff SYIVI• l'lf"lfl' 1t c-1a lt s""• 17·1• C,rOltwenl' 31 Or. SttlllCtO~ll 1t Dull! Ne_tl<" 11 SIK1t Merkrl• !0'11 lllll~I I' ... -,_ --1' .... lllell 14 E11t1rt11ft1M11t '4·H Tliulff1 ,..JS FINHIC• 1'·11 WMIMt 4 l'or TM ttklrd n Wo..,....,.~ Niwi 174' HOr'lt.ttH . • W011• Mtwl 4 .t.MI L•ftihl~' 1t ' - • ·------------ . ' \ - • • \ ti UAIL V PILOI By TOM BARLEY no other venllel pc>l!lblc. Of tM D•llv ,.n., '''" ~tlllard noted Jn his final argument An Orange County Superior Court jury 1hut Slatton. 41 , of Trabuco Canyoo. \\'aB urged toda y to find Robert· Carl told a r.ellow prisoner ln the-tounly ''\VhJp" Sl;1tton guilty or .. nothing Jc~ jail :tft r his iirrest lhai he had "gut lhan murder" ln the slaylrig last July •hot the ton of a bitch" if\ an obvious 10 ot an .Ortegri Hot Sprlngs trespasser. ieterence to. \ht .kllllng ef. Glahn. ·'Pr0SeCUt6i' TOO ~filfuid' fenilhOeCf"ttie "· .,,Ffe"OTtired to PlY' $500 -for a \\•i1ness jury in a hard hltHng final statemenr \\ho would testify for him," tt.lillard ·. .,hat the agg~lvt! conduct or Slatton sald. "And ti~ can bt no doubt that before and after the killing of Denn.is h~ per!uaded his 1,.'0fTlmon law v.'ife, .Ray Glahn, 21, of l..u ~tll"ada, 1nade l:>orotlly Carroll , to throw I.he revolver • Califbr11ia First • Presi.dent ~ig11:s 55-MPH Measure As California goes. so will the nation. according to a law signed today by l'resident Nixon in San Clemente. The measure will force all stales in the union to_y dopt aq energy:saving ,._ Californians Easi11g Off Gas Pedals By The A!1oclated Press • 55-mile-per-hour speed limit on all federally funded ·roadways. And if the states do not follow the sugge stion within 60 days, they will receiye no federal highway fundr"" The President, in an announcement han ded out after the signing or the ne~ lav•, said that If all s\ates cut back speed limits to the lower level, the savings in oil could amount lo 200,000 ba rrel_s a day. l{e added that he was encouraged by the large number of states which already have cut down on their speed limits. California started its new low limit New Year's Dciy. -In a somewhat reJated signing today, the PresiQen t also signed a la w setting up a flew nonprofit railroad corporation. I -~used tn·Jhe kU!lng awn. cliff." Sia II on ffrllet 1old the jury. from lhe "'ilness staud that he was nol withh1 n1lles of 1fie hot springs when (llnhn "'as gunned down arte:r he came to 1pe aid of a leJlow lreapasaer. , "Slatton said he .,.,a.s being kldnaped by three young men who repeatedly threatened to castrate him at the tltoe Glahn was shot in the stomach at the point or a .45-cellbcr Colt re\'olvcr. The Starr Ranch hand said he only ' os<ap&l mutilation by grabbing the wheel of his \'chicle 1n wl\lch he "'as being held pri$1.lncr lly his lhrcc assallaJ)ts. Slatton suid his Land Cruiser 1hen t<>pplcd over throwing its three occupants to the .gt,OUnd. Slatton testified !hat ~\·hen h e · retovere<I consciousness he \VllS riding a horse bareback under the light or a rull n1oon. lie tcstlfl~d he v•as ace<nnpanicd on his n1idnight ride by a riderless horse • I ' . . i • ""'hlch stayed close behind h1!' mount and "'hlunled JO hin1 occasionally . ~flllard d i.';n1is..~ thllt story today as "nioonshl..nc '' ant.I told the ~jul')' tttat Slattoo.'a Land Cn,1~r o v ~ r t u r n e d beef.use of lhC TllnCh h..ind'S grent-1\a.ste In Oeeing fro: mtM killing or Gluhn. The deputy district attorney reminded the jury of Slatton ·s long reeord of vlolt•nce and l1ls ignorh1g or (requenl .orders to not use firt.'lU'lllS or \\'e<tpons • or any kb.d In .dealing with hot 11>rin111 trespassers. Despite those warnings, t.tlllard · said, Slatton, "'caring his white Stetson hat and with bis .45-caliber Colt revol\'er coc.ited , l.'Oflfronted the tcespassera and shut Glahn. • Judge Robcll L. Corllna n wilt r e A d the jury lr)structlons and send ~ panel to the jury room after dcrensc 'attor~y Dave Shinn delivers his flna l statement. From Pqe I "TAXES ... ret urns for the years since he entered the \\'hite House in 1969. The President's attorneys have estimated Nixon could owe as 1nuch as $287 .ooa in back taxes if the deduc- ~ions claimed are disallo v.·cd. 49 On Dec. 8. Nixon released n rftl!s or personal finnncal data an d allowed ne"'!Qllen 10 nspect his income tax returns for the years 1969 through 1972. The n1atcrial shoy,·ed that Nixon paid a total of $78.651 in federal income ~1xes for the four years, the bulk of it In 1969. The breakdown by year: $72,682 Jn 1969 : $792 in 1970; $878 In 1971, and $4.298 in 1972. The main reason for the small tu payment during the last years was a controversial dedu ction Nixon took for donating hi!I vice pfe!lldentlal p&perS 10 the government. • Some criUai claim Nixon· failed to fulfill the legal rt'quirements for making the donation before a provision allowing such deductions expired. Nixon himself· asked the joint coni- .n1ittec to review the $500.000 in deduc- tions he loo k ror donating the viee presidential papers. !i11ost California drivers gr'teted the state's new energy-saving 55 mile per our speed limit with lots of sort Pedaling -and a few extra mi les in the gas tank. (Related story Page 3). . Deeming the new measure "an im· Portant tu rning point in 1he history or ,\meriea's railroad industry,'' the Presi- dent authOrized the formation of the corporation Primarily to revamp the freight systems of six financially ailing Oldest livitag Tlaitag? Nixori also asked the oommlttee to decide v.·hetber he \\'BS r;ght in not declaring a taxable gain on the sale of soine property in San Clen1ente 1n · 1970. But some heavy-footed motorists found themselves on the side or the road New Year's Da-y getting a lectu re, warn- ing or speeding ticket from the ever· n·atchful Calirornia Highway Patrol. Jn Northeni and Southern Callfnmia, officers who spotted groups o{ speeding cars displayed amber lights and led the cars at a legal speed for a short distance. Indi vidual speeders were often "'amed by outside bullhorns to slow down. "We are very proud of our Sou thern · California motorists." said Los Angeles - , Jligh\\'ay P~trol Inspector Glenclon Craig · after the first day of the 55 limit. "They seem to be complying volun- tarily." he said. "It has not been nece~ary to write many citations but \Ve have given warnings. ·t In the San DicgQ area, highway pq,troh11en cited only two motorists for speeding during the first eight hours or the new law ~ which took effect at 12:01 a.m. New Year's Day. "Almost everybody .seems to be co n1- plying." a spokesman said. Jn the Sacramento region ana San Francisco Bay Area , CHP headquarters also reported drivers observi~ 'the new limit. The Legislature dropped the speed limit last month from 65 mHes · an hour -and 70 n11les an hour on some free\vays -in an efo!rt to save gasoline during the energy-crunch. The 55 limit is expected to save about 300 million g_a llons of gasoline a year statewide. On the Bayshorc Freeway outside San Francisco, veteran CHP officer Bob Bowers said ·traffic which normally 1noves at close to 70 miles an hour, \\·as "averaging maybe 58.'' \Vhen a driver passed him doing at least 65, Bowers got on his loudspeaker and bawled : "Fifty·five miles! You in the white Chevy, 55 1niles!" The driver grinned sheepishly and slowed down . Forty-nine persons were killed in traf· fie .accidents in California during the four-Clay holiday, the Highway Patrol reported today. This con1pared with 43 fatalities during the thrre<lay holiday last year and 46 in 1969, the las! four:day New Year's holiday. OIAM•I COAIT IT DAILY PILOT Tl!e Or•rio• COIJI OAIL v PILOT~ wlltl wllldl fl ~IMC! 111• Nl'fl'l·Pr .. J, Is pUbllloh«I bV 1M 0!"11111• ,Coftl Pvbll1hl"1 C9-y. ~· r1t1 <ldlllo!ll 1r1 pU!lllll'lld, Motldt'I' rhroUth Frlll1y, lcrr Cot11 lo\tt.I, NtwPO•I] llHclt, Hui\llllO!On lle1ell/Fl"'"t1i1'1 V1ll1y, lA'IYM lt•cft, tr\<l,../$1ddl9btc-•nd S•n C~lt/ Sin JUln C1pltlr1no. A 1lngl1 r9115-l M iiion 11 pUblltllod S.t11rtl1y1 lflll Sund1yi. Tl>t prlncl.,_l Jlll(l!!Jll!,. ll!l ftl It 11 JJQ WHI l•v 5trff!, Cotl• M111, C1lllcr"'l1, mu.. railroads. · Th e new enllty wlll be able to borro\v $1.5 bjllion lo set up a new network of rail lines. The ne\Y law could also mean the abandonment of 'thousands of miles of outmoded rights-Of-way and the building of new ones. The President said he plam to push for even.more railroad rerorm legislation this new year. Other othan bill signings and some holiday phone calls -to congressional leaders. the President's schedule has sho"·n a li ght work load this week . The President has made no public appearances si nce last Friday's at- tendance at the "'edding of hi!_ personal physician in La Jolla. \ Since . then the •1lresident has'\spcnt most or hi s time at his residence. " His close friend. C.G. "Bebe" Rebozo arriv!!d early this week and remains in San Clemenle. Generally, when Rebozo arrives, the Presid.int takes unannounctd afternoon drives · along the South C.Owity with Rebozo at the wheel and the secret service tagging along . No such drives have yet taken place sinee Nixon· arrived late last week. The President. his aides said, watched bowl games on television Tuesday and during lulls made the calls to fello\v Republicans, offering them new year's 'greetings. From Page I MIDEAST •.. ment on the clash. Israel i's delegates ·lo lhe disengage· men! talks flew back to Geneva aboard the same El Al plane ·as Finn ish Gen . Ensio Siilasvuo. com n1tinder or th~ Cnited Nations Emergency FOrce in the l\Ii ddle East. He told new smen he did not know the first subject of today's talks or ho1v Jong they were expected to last. lsraeli l\faj. Gen. l\fordichai Gur and CoL Dov Sioo, fhe chief Israeli negotiators. declined to make any state- ment. An aide at the airport said they had been instructed to maintain silence on the talks. Officials in Tel Aviv said the talks •\\'ere eXpected to reach a substru:ilive phase next \\'etk and that Dayan wa s optimisti c that" agreement could be negoti Sted on separating lhe rival armies. .Not a Prof:-Chow Hui-yet1 or Taiwan stanrts 1'esldt!W'l'rnrt--,a,,1111ir-r-rc'tfam1"ntfi'l'sntt•s ovt!r 6,000 years Old. n1ut·h older he claims is the oldest living thing ih the \\-'Oriel. a than the General Shern1an 1'rec in California's F'ormosan Sun tree. Chow discovered the tree in a Scq1111ia Natienal Pa rk. forest 30 miles southwest of 1'aipei last Noven1be r A1ia.lieim Driver ' Erids it All For His Pinto • An Anaheim man \\·ho claimed his 1971 Pinto car had been "dying" since the day he bought it, "executed" the autt> Tuesday at· a Ford ~lotor Co. plant in Pico Rivera. ,Roger Sweitzer was aided in his demolition by about 50 people, most of whom are members of a gro up known 3s the Outraged Consumers Action Com, mittee. The chairman or the committee· is ~ddie Campson, "'ho became famous t1vo years ago for selling fire to his Lincoln Continental-f!s a protest. Sweitzer said his car has "been dying a slow death since the day I bought it and T think the only merciful thing to do is put iLout or its misery.,, He said his two-yea r search for aid from the Ford i\lotor Company proved · fruitless and a Jo~ord executive even answe red a protest letter with : "What do you wanLfor $;L_OOO_?" It took the crowd about an hour to reduce the Pinto to a pile of junk. Sweitzer is not without transportation however. He charged his fellow ex· eeutioners $1 a swing. \\'ith the 1noney he's going to buy a bicycle. A spokesman for Ford denied tha t the C<lmpany had ignored the letters. The spokesman said the oompany of· fercd on Dec. 12 to fix the Pinto at no cost to Sweitzer but Sweitzer refused the offer. The spokesinan said the car n•as flYO years old and had been driven 50.000 1niles. l(iller SmTeutle r~ San Dieg~ Wo11't P1·ess 'Deep Tl1roat' Co1nplah1t A deputy San Diego City Attom<'y said today he n·iIJ not seek a criminal com plaint for the sho...,·ing of ··Deep • Throat" by a group or Huntington Beach 1..inion High .Schoool o ·i s tr i c t ad- n1inistrators. The screenings of a video-tape copy cf 1~e' X·rated movie.Oceurred in August at a San Diego retreat attended by the lop 46 district offlci~ls. Ted Bron1field said this morning he decided not lo seek a . complaint in the case only because the circumstances ___ ,__ ·--··· - Arrested in J\1 urder COMPTON .(UPI ) -Police arrested fltcGulla l\·f. LirilbriCk. 187' Tuesday on ·. suspicion or murder after he allegedly shot to death another teenager during an argument involving a girl. Vince R. Rose', 19, was found dead on the front la wn of a home. He v.'as shot in his chest. under which tire film wns ,·iewed did not con5titutc public showing. · "There is no doybt in my mind th<1t I ha\'e probable cause to believe that the material tht>y viewed is obscenl', it is just that under California la w, the vil'\\'ing· could not be considered a public exhibition of the filn1,'' he said. District Superintendent Jack Roper publicly apolog ized for the scrccoin~ of the movie wh.ich was sho"'n on district equipment. Details of the riewing at the three-day conference v.•cre not n1adc public until October .,.,·heo-1-luntington Beach vice cfficers confiscated the fihn from a district official. Roper's statem<'nt in \vhich he took re- s1x>11si bility for the showing of the filnl in his roorh at a Sheller !_stand hoteL ended the in\'estigation of the incident conducted by distri ct trustees. floJice in lhmti(lgton Beach also tried unsuccessfully to get criminal com· plaints. Tire Orang!! County Dist rict .1~t· tomey declined To file on U1c san1e grounds Bromfield cited. Nixon said fie paid no ta ~t•·r---11- d<·al because he "'·as told tlt the lime th at he· 111ade 00 protit. But a later :1udit of the chief executive's finances, orciert'<l bv Nixon himself. concluded thar · he h8d a $117 ,370 profit on the transaction. The coniimittee agrl'('d to f'l?\.1ew Nix· on's finnnces. but ~aid it y,·ould nol limit itself to the 1 .... ·o areas he ~ tioned. :'\ixon ha!I said he \\'OUld abide by · the committee's' finding, even if he OY.'ed back taxe.s. ' The lnlemal Reven~ Servi<."e can rf-t.'xamine a taxpayer's return from any year, but can only force collection of greater la:tes for the past three years. dating from the April 15 due date Qf a return. Under these rules. the mS could seek payment of taxes for any year back to and including 1970. • Kidnap Suspect l\'loved to Jail EI.CK.E NS, S.C. (UPI ) -A bachelor house pain ter. cha rged \\'ilh the kid· naping · of i2-year-0ld Ta1nn1y Denice Haynes. "'a.s mo\'ed to a jail at an undisclosed location for security rea.90flS, of(icials disclosed toda y. The sUspcct, Vi rgil Preston Viruion, Gli . is accused of abducting the child · «>ec. 21 fro m a coin operated laundry in nearby Liberty. No traee of the gi rl has been found , but Sheriff Davi d Stone said an all-out search v•as being n1ade. • SEOUL fUP I) -A drunken South Korean military policeman 1 urn C cl himselr in to authorities today, ending a 23-hour rampage during y,•hich he kited l\\'O men in a tea house. seized four hostages and held army and police squads at bay with a carbine. Police said S. Sgt. Cho Hyo Su11 surrendered after amiy Lt. Col. Lee Kang Kav and one of Cho 's sisters entered le htea house in Taegu, .,180 miles southeast of Seoul and seiz.ed his weapons. • --ii~ 1Gll!Ql»"1Ml:' "7 - 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA-646-1 919 Ring OPEN . "' . ., CLOSID IUMDA't , ....... ..._~ .... _...,. .... ..,.e JEN NIS ANYONE? Long Sltevt Neck ACRYLIC SWEATERS Acrylic & Nylon .. TENNIS DRESSES • Mtn& Boys kobert N, Woe.I Prnlclt<lt 11"1111 Publlllllr J eck k. Cwrlt 'I' Yl<t Prf11Dtnt lftlll Glftlr•t MtMOll' Thom•• K11,a Y outli Has 6-liour Bout Witli W rencli WARM UP SUITS 219& 10 349& . TENNIS SHORTS Etllcrr Tho"'&I .A. Murp~ll11 MINOl"I l!dltor '~'~'' H. lo•1 ltich1rtl P. N1 U Anltlllll M1n10"'4 1'111fn °'"'" Oelll Mne: UI Wit! l•r ''"'~ N,rw'°r1 ll11cll : 2m NtwPOrt 811/lhl,.. .._.;.ii..:::•:::::i m,::,'::.i A=v1rl Sin Clt!Mfllt! .. Horii\ l!t C1,..ltlt ... l Ttf.,.._ .(714•• Ml-4111. C'-"'W ..... ti .. 641-1171 ''"' Clnlll ANM ...... If ~ ltldl 491.+41• ,,_ ~ OrHlf' OlliMy C.~Nln -·"' tlll'l't'liflll, I~). Oft• C.Ut ~n.ri"'9 (;tmHftf. Nt "'"'' 1Wln, llhn11'11l9ft1, .. [Wlfl 11'\tltff tr ~I""""" llONI!! _, N ••Ill«.. •ilMlft ~PKlal W • "'1t•loll et °"'r'9M ...,_, ' S-C ..... C'llH "91..f ... ti Clltl1 ..,,..., c.on1w11w.. ~..._. W u rrltr •.t11 _ ,..,...111rv1 IW m•ll Q,lf '"""""'' MllllWY •ttt"ltt.rlt nM "*''fl't• A t"een-agcd boy and the Newporl Beach fire Department are both much. happier today, following his New Year's adven1ure with a wrench. JiRl l~awley, 15, of 2024 Leeward Lane.·· stuck his finger into the round-ended wrench in the maMer you would sli11- on a ring, only the wrench did nol come off. Friends \vo rked four hours trying to get it off, then finally caflcd the Flre f.>epartmen t, but the Fire Departmnet probably wishes they hadn 't. Firemen worked for another two hou rs before they freed yOW>g Howley '• fin ger. But by that tlme. it was swollen h1lf again the slze ti hi s other index finger. _J_nsj>tcior Art Morton Sa.Id the rescue report filed by the ffremen invo v these tools: -A hacksaw. -A pair of boll cutters. -.soap. . -A pair of'slip-jaw pliers. -Cooking oil. -Two differen·t screwdrivers. -Lubricant liquid. -A flat file. -Achi~I. -Ice cubes to rcdu<."e the swelling. -A metal vllC,, to squeeze It. ''His finger was pretty s .... ·ollen," said ln!!>l!Cl3i'-Morion, adding ltml • telephone call to a doctor at Hoog ~1ernorial Hospital even f11iled to do much good. The physician told firemen he couldn't do much about the •wemng with the wrenc !UTron the vlcllm~s fihger, so they ju•t kept working. • ' l:IOODED SWEAT SHIRTS .. -~ Wilson · Ptnn • Dulop TENNIS BALLS MIN'I TENNIS SHOES . 895 • 9" 1695 -1895 , 7&&r.: LADlll' TENNIS- SHOES . 835 • 9'° • r -1695 • 18H --· -- • Mtn & Boys TENNIS SHIRTS and SOX e Wiiton, D1vl1". lancrlft, 01ral1, Y-v1m1 TENNIS RACKETS 1 1 • • c still Wa m l)uy pai J ~n vac In v:at tha coll y . COii lo a-nd bl A D our ing woo trui find as nati It • y Ha tbe as II a and any pres ·v mo! po ap 1low it• tbel 1ym for E. In ani bum or t or Viti So D Ana pbo rea ti befo we get ly and to em pro p ma d!U ... I -be and lips for a " .for pl!• Siil the 5ug" Ira ptla tnd • IAt Your _Service A Sunday, Wedaesday a.ad Fflday · Feature Of the Dally Pi101 Got a v.robten,1 Tht!n write Pat D~nn. Pat w(l' cut red tapt, get . the • atl.tWert end nction u o u tieed to -1 i?lve inequf. ies tn gov- ernment attd busjntss. Mail JI 0 u ,. qi.if£$• tian, to Par Dunn/ Al Your St1rvice, Orange Coast Dollv Pi lot, P.O. Boz 1560, Costa llle1a, t·a .. 92626. Include 11our tctepltone iiutnber. CoJ•!P"'.er .!11corrert , . • . ~ 99 Stopped. Cou,ity ·Drivers Slowing to 55 Most Oraqge County drivers appea red to be going along \Vith the new 55 mph speed limit. Califomil Highway Patrol officers stopped· 99 drivers during the first 12 For1ner UCI Aide R~turns For Research Dr. J~ck Peltason, former UC Irvine vice chancellor for academic affairs, has returned to campus as a Danforth Fellow on le ave fro~ his PQSt as chancellor of the L'rbana..Champaign campus of the University of lll inois. hours of the new year for exceeding the limit bui only 39 were given citations. "The ~t of the people Yl'e stopped were given verbal warnings and ntost of those who got tickets werf: exceeding 65," i CHP-spokesman said. "Thars even over the old limit so they were cited ." The officer said 99 speeding stops over a 12·hour period is "an unusually high number, but since so few were cited, the number is less important when determining the effect of the new speed limi t. ' "It would seem most people are goillg along 1vith it and maintaining a uniform speed,'' t h e CHP spok.esman said ... As long as they are within .a SQ..60 mph range, we're.doing real well." CHP offici als hope the new speed wi.11. serve another purpose t?esides saving crJt1cally short fuel supplies and cleaning up the air. -- ' • OPt Ttle11horo . . -... ~ .... .,..._ .......... s OAILV PILOT :J Top Official -~To County • . U11it Named \VHliR111 Olson. who 1101v direct! the Ot'tlll$!e Count y Planning Di!partment's adrn inifitrative services division has been 111>polnted rrogran1 ildn1inis lrator and principal pl 1111nl'r. Georg i! ()sborne, chief eni;:ineer of the c;<Junty l"lood Con~rot Distri~t and acting: coun!y planning d1r~tor. annoupced U1e ;1ppointn1cnt last week, effective Mon - da~·. Olson \\'ill ·succeed Richard Ramella 11'ho 1·esigned recynt ly to bccon1e pro- L(r:'.1111 adn1in is 1ralor for the Irvine plan· 111ng fl rn1 .ur Chap n1;Jn, Philli ps, Brandt and Reddi ck. llanlclll1 's resi~natlon had been !!!el for .J:in. JO but \Vas moved up because nf n 11e1v slate conflict of interest law. l\hieh bec:i mc effl'ctive Jan . I. It pro- hibit!la• public planni ng official from raking a jo6· 1\•ith a private consultin~ fl nn that has done \\"Ork for the agency for at least ty,·o years after resigning. , · DEAR PAT: I so'!d n1y rnothcr·in·lll\v's bouse in Sun Jose in Januar~'. but J'nt still havin~ proble1ns withJhe San Jose Water \!forks. f've written to the general l!lanager four times stating that the tiuyer took poss ession April . 6 and I paid the final bill on ti.1ay 17 for the J anuary-to-April period; The house \\'as vncan~ for two ·months during this period. Jn spite of this. I'm still receiving a '"-'ater bill for this property and now that it's been put in the hands of a collection agency. I'm really itiad. ll. P .. lluntiogton Beach You may rec!ei\le additional collectlon agency bJlls before you're 1taken orf .the computer list,. but 11.'llore 'tbem. San Jose Water Works Is correcting its error and· bHling J.be neW residents for . f\ayment. Records indicate thi! prop- trty's water was not shut off u n t I I JUiy 3. Then II was lurncd on again Peltason, a pclitiqtl scie ntist. is using the UC I library· f0r study of the relati ons between hig!Jcr education and the com· munity ~nd government. The Danforth Foundation grant is similar to one graljted to-UCI Chancellor Danie] G. Aldri<,-h Jr. in 1970. That grant allowed Aldrich to .complete a 90-day. round the world study tour ending !n spring,. 1971. "We are hoping the lower speed \vii i reduce the severity of accidents on the freeway," the CHP spokesman said. "Lower speeds could , mean £e\ver fata lities, bu t we'll just have to wait and see." During the 1ast hours before the ne1v speed law took effect, CHP officers were kept busy with nU.merous accidents and drunken driving arrests. PRESIDENT'S BROTHER EOWARO WITH FAMILY He's 'Off 8.eing Paid to Do Nothing,' She Says Olson. th<' new principal planner. hn~ bcC'n ~·il h the plilnning dcpartn1ent since !!Hi9. ~le w<is otiginalJy an administrative :analyst :ind taler a member or the gr0\1•th policy staff befor e being named he1uJ of the' admtnistrative serv ice~ <livision . Han1e1ta·s re signation Dec. 14 can1e little n101·c' than a . n1onth after Forest l)ickason resigned ·as plaruii ng director to join lhc Ne\Vport Beach glaruiing rirn1 of Danie!tan , 1-loon , Sampieri and Officers worked on 21 freeway mishaps on New Year's Eve, but non e ·of the 11 persons injured i'n those accidents \\'as hurt seriously. . A~-vay Jig. . , the same day. The ne"· res idents were .. contacted abou~t "'ater us.e lrom April lo July,_ but no response "·as recei\led and you got stuck "'ilh an Incorrect billing. The grants are intended to enable university chie£ administrators to s~nd time away from the pressures of runn)ng a campus while expanding their in· div id ual horizons. Patrolmen also arrested 80 persons for driving under-the-influence o-r-aJcohol or drugs hut officers said the ni::uf.e is down from 122 last year. · N~o1i's Si~r-i1i-lciiv Gripes Bamella in his ne\v position .will be prohibited front 1vorking on projects in unincorporated COWlty territory because of state law. , He said hi gher pay and a desire to 1 get '~out of public service and "face ~ a new horizon " di ctated his resignation. He had been 1vith the planning depart· 1nent for 14 yea rs . lt.is 1nost recent salary is $22,100 a year. Avorado• Oealthftlf DEAR PAT: Like most Californians, our family )o\les 8\IOCados. \\le 're think· ing about planting our O\\'fl tree and wonder ho\v Jong it ~·ould be before lruit is produced. I'm also curious to find out if a\locados are high in calories. as I've heard. an d if this tree is a native of California. T. 0., Newport Beach It usuall y takes thrre years before a young avocado tree bears fruit. The llass \'arlely rt~ns in summer and lhe Fuerte in )ate '1lnlnmn monlbs. Ex· ·perts say Ibis fruil is low in calorirs and the oil it produces is low in cbloresterol. The a\•oeado tree is a nati\'e of the \\'est Indies, Cenlral and SOuth Amerlca, but It's het'n successfull\I culUvated In Florida, Tei:as and Ha"·ail as well as• in Southern California. llerolr l'fta111h1 E DEAR PAT : How did the "youth cult .. theory ror Vitamen E get started? I ihave a friend who is a cOnstapt user of this vitamin and I've been curious about what claims are made for E and how they got started. Are tbere any' conditions for which d o c t o r s prescribe this \lilamin? · 1\1. H., Huntingtoo. Beach Vttamln E has been claimed • to pro- mote pbyslcal endurance, enhance sexual potency, prevent h~an attacks, protect against-the-effecls of-air-pollution-;-and- slow lbe aging process while alleviating its accompanying ailments.~ -Some of these claim!I are based • nn deUciency symptoms obser\led In other Spt:cies fed for loag ptriods on diets free of Vitamin E. A "·Ide distribution of this vitamin In vegetable oils, cerral grains and animal fats makes a deficlencv In bumaas very unlikely. Prematule uirants or ladl\•iduals with impaired absorption of fats may require supplemental Vltitmin E under a physician's direction. Sorial. Sec11rlty Brnnrlt Peltason served as vice chance llor of the Irvine campus Crom 1964 -the year UCI opened its doors to students -until 1967. 1 The post Peltason once · occupied will lx.>eome vacant in June with the resigna- lion of Dr. Hazard Adams "'h.o recentl y an110 unced his desire to return to teaching English. CollJege Stude11t Asse1nbly l11te.rn Progra.m: Slated College sttxtents 1\'ho want to serve an internship wit~ the California Assem- bly should pick up applications from ac· credited coll eges and universities before Feb. 28, ·according to ·Assemblyman f{obert Badham (R-Ne\\'port BeachJ. The A~scmbly intei'~nip Program pays $6.825. The interns serve. as aides to assemblymen and committees for a 10- month legislative trainidh period. Only college students u'ho will complete requirements for a four·yea r degree by Dec. t. 1974 s'1o uld apply, ·according to Badham~ "We bad rain New Year's Eve wh ich kept a_ lot of people i~ide and kept the officers too busy work.ing accidents to arrest drunks," fhe spokesman said . Rubella Tests ~ow Mandat~ry n-ef ote 'W eddmg ~ \Vomen planning on being married are being urged to plan ahead for the ne\v st ate-required rubella (Ge.rman measles) test. Brides-to-be should contacl their famil y doctor or local hea lth department about the ru bella ·test at least tvi'o y,-eeks before the wedding d~te, state health Director J. B. Stubblebine said. • County clerks wi ll .not issue a marriage \icen"se to any -woman who does not present evidence of a laboratory , test for rubell a a·ntibodies. ' Rubella is a disease which may cause birth defects if a .mother-to-be contracts the illness during pregnancy. Appli cants will be called for interviews in March based on their written air Q · plicatiQnS. Appoin1ments will be • .. " ... •.•• 2 -uail . Hunters nounced in April. says Badha m. Applications for the in ternships are also SI n~ l ~v~lable on w_.!:ilten req~e~t from 'the 101 lO .LJCal l California J\51.5em6fylnternsh1p--Pr6gra1n:----- Assembly P.O. Box ~l, State Capitol. C~lULA VISTA IUPI ) _ T~·o young Sacramento, Ca. 9581 4. San Diego men were fatally shot in ' the bac k while quail hunting in a remoti;- ea nyon just cast of here. Cot111ty W 01nan Injured in Fall PACOIMA (UPI ) -A 22·year-o!d Sa'nta Ana woman was li sted in stable condition at ~acoima Lutheran Hospita l after suf- fering only a head cut in a 75-foot fall over a cliff in the Pacoima Dani area Tuesday ... The bodie!l of James Bradshaw. -18. and Carl Anderson. 21 , 1\'ere di scov.ered in tall grass Tuesday nighl. San Diego Couilty sheriff's deputies said. A companion, whose name was not released, told deputies he beca n1e separated from the victims and later heard shots. ~le said they earlier had been approac hed by two men. ALDER\VOOD ~IANOR. \Vasb. ~UPI 1 -Mrs. EdY:ard Nixon. lhe President's sis ler·in-law. says it's difficult being left home alone with two chl\dren while her husband is "off being paid lo do nolh~. 7 t-.1rs. NiX"on ma.de the ·remarks lo new sman at the couple's home as she declined an interview about consultant fees ,her husba nd "'as pa id in conneclion 1~·ith finding a location for the proopsed t'ixon Library. .. , could tell you 1vhat be did , but Need Car Pool? . . Scut Juan City Hall's tlie Place San Juan Capistrano City Hall soon \viii become a clearing hou se for com- mut ing residents 100king for a car pool. In a p13n announced this week. spo_kesmen for the public w~rks depart.. ment pid they planned to , make _ a cool-dina ling "service a1•ailable if citizens sho\v intereSt. Under tile proposal. residents 1110.Uld be able to• phone city hall· and state their transport needs, and city aides then could correlate the Ca lls \'o'ith others and See if a pool could be formed. t Specific deta ils would be worked out among the poolers themselves city aides sa id. Thur. c:iry-emp10yes would . not have to coordina'te details such as pickup spors. lim es and other specific factor s. Resid en ts interested in finding others heading the san1c \\'ay to \1·ork each day -primarily to major employment centers of !he centr al county. cal call 493+117 1 and have their na1ne included on the \Jsr. Uni lligh Winne1·s In live parade competitiOns entered this fal l. Unive rsity ~ligh Sch90l B<i nd and Drill Team members ha\le earned I"n1 not going to.·· ~!r!i. ~i~on s..-iid on the nev.' Year's \Vcckenrl. · "l don 't \\'ant · ;u1y publicity . \\'hile he's off being paid !o do nothing . f"m· here alone." "I'm trying to teach school and I've got two.. kids. Let n1e tell you. il's tough." · Mrs. Nixon had been asked to con1· ment on a payment of $21 ,000 made to the flresident's bi~other to find out 1vhere the Nixo n famil y \\1ould like the library to. be located. The payment had been 1nade public by the Richard Nixon Founda tion in California. In declining to be inte rviewed, ?\1rs. Nixon sa id she was :·sick and tired " of news paper reports about t h e President's family. She called· the story abou t her husbahd's consullant 's feCs "'an invasion of privacy." Then. gesturing \1'ith a ham mer she · held in her hand, Mrs. Nixon told a reporter she felt ''like ·ra king ·thi s thing and l:tnock ing down our newspaper delivery boxes so l 1\·on't have to read some of the things they \Vrite. '' -Ea11 .. ard-NixOn.-3· trustee of the Richard Nixon Foungation. \\'as paid SI,500 per monlh for 14 months beginning · in December. 1970. to find a location for the Nixon Library. Mrs. Nix.on said the foundation "folded in August. Its _work \\'as done.''• . ' Chapn1an College Orchestra Plans Free Concert The Chapman College · C h a ni b e r Orchestra will perform in a special free concert Jan, 9 at the Dana Hills High School Porthole Theater. · The concert is part• of a !lerie:;· . sponsored by the Ca pistrano Unified School District and will begin at 8 p.m. Conductor John Koshak will lead the ensemble in works which \\ill include those by Bach, llandel, H a y d n . Beethoven and Stravinsky. Later in the month at the sarrie theater the district will sponsor an appearance...- by the Long Beach concert choir Iron1 CaliCornia Stale University at Full erton . Friday D/adli11e '°' For Candidates . I . Prospecti ve trustee canadiates for Surprise--lt's A Real Guitctr -saaa1ebacK -Col1ege have until s-p.m- Friday to file with the Registrar of Vot llEW YORK (U PI ) -A youih got up fro1n his scat in a subway car. placed. a guitar case on the floorr and announced ; "I'm leav- ing this behind for mankind." He ~lfen left the .car Tuesday and di sappeared into the station. · S.Uspicious passengers informed transit authorities. \\•ho in turn contacted the emergency service of the police depa rtment. Police officers took the case away and opened it. Inside was a guitar. ers for the seat ~ing vacated by re- signing trustees Michael Coll ins of NeW- port Beach. Though the new trustee wiU be elected by all vo:ters in the district, the candidate rnust reside in either Irvine or El Toro. The five candidates \vho ha ve filed so far are Steve DeLapp of Irvine. a YMCA Rssistant director:' Andre1v J\tw·ray of Irvine. a co r re c ti on a I co un selor: Gary Rasmussen of fr\·ine. a real estate in\leslor; Vera Snyder DEAR PAT : E\lcn though the Santa Ana Social Security office got a new phone number that rings and is answered -rather than the COf!sta nt busy signal reached by the old number -every time I call I "hang" Jo r a long time -befo re anyone lalks to me . When arc we in •the South Coast· area going to get more efficient servi ce ?' Social Securi· ty problems usually are quite involved and take a long tinte to settle. Tra\leling to S<inla Ana for personal attention is imJX>ssibl e for me. Margaret l\1cCoy fell while ""alking along a rain-slicked hiking trail. A 14-member Montrose search and rescue team carried her by litter for t.\\'O and a half hours to a sheriff's helicopter. Couple Tie Knot l 1i F avorit~ Bar a iotal of 13 awards for the Irvine School.l ., .. , .. ;c,G~-... E~··ii·M.iii-......... Tijmii•A•·"t''""'K;,"'"-'"""'"''"11iii ... -~ .• :-=-=:-:--:---;,--==,--,-,~;.r ('! r; K< ot Irvin e. a home economist and John Tolle of El Toro. a Saddleback student. I ' • T. W., Capistrano Beach A new Social Security branch offJce to ser\le the residents or Capistrano Beach, Dana Polnt, Laguna Beach, South Laguna, Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano Is -scheduled to open in January at 3%114 Paseo Adelanto, Saa Ju11n Capistrano. An office stiff of 13 t mpklyes should alleviate yol!i-set\lice problems. Pamphlet for Co11s11mer Two Die in Blaze · WALLA WALLA, Wash. !UPI) -The front wall of a burning ta\lem feJJ on firefighters Tuesday, leaving Fir e ~larshal Gabriel Tichi and another man dead and two others injured . They were battling an early morn ing blaze al the Downtown Tavern when the wall col- lapsed . ANN ARBOR (AP) Frank \\'ol f ~ and Judy Schweitzer were marTied in , ~. a local bar New Year's Day because, ~~ as, the bride put it, "it's been like il a home to us." ~~ TODAY by ·1 . .; After the ceremony , conducted ~Y a ~~­ minister of the Universal Life Church, a crowd of 100 ~rsons toasted the . newlyweds. The new Mrs. Wolf, 29. wore ·-' . 1 a floor·l ength eme rald green dress. 'The ~ J. c. HUMPHRIES groom . 59. w·ore black tails. ~~-.z.~a.~.JMQ.llw; A roe~ band beat out a wedding. nl.arch. NOTES ON GOLD _South Laguna Election To Decide ·Park Funds In Kyong .loo. Koreta, archeolo- gists have dug up a .cro\vn of gold 9 inches in diameter and 121h inches high. The cro,vn is reported as dating (ron1 a round 47 B.C .. is sL.ill in perfect condition, and is the seventh gold crown di scovered in the vicinity of this c;:incie nt capital. \\le hear 1nany things through Old you know the a\·erage <'Ost of maintaining a color TV 8et I~ top ron- dlHOo could cost a!I much as $100 an- m1ally after the warranty expires, or a quarter of aJI service can, would ·• be unaecellil'Y If pJug11, fuses, pilots South t.Jguna hill s residents \\'ill vote tcn.nnce services and deve lop 11ew f)nrks tnd controls were checked Hrst? '111ese March 5 on a proposed increase of in the ar~n where none ex ist today. trade sources Which deal only in facts. The latest com es from \Vash· tips and others on getting the most 8 scr\lice'" area· tax rate to provide fund s "The residents of South Laguna must for your repair d911ar are lnchtd~ In . decide if they wish to pay for new 8 .. Consumer Gulde to. Repalr Services (for emPl'.°ve.l'f'C~t of exi.stlng services parks." Caspers said. "lf they approve ington. D.C .. \\;here je\Yelers re· port that a U.S. senator has been questioning U1en1 a bout gold coins. The senator is fro1n a pro111inont ~adySeiko Baguette $·10000 Nt' 800~0'.l Y1!1ow •<>11i~u1.ri1e~s ~t~~I ~;ie~ if'1!cli1rig b1ate11t Gilt 1:1>11. ' I I ' for .ElecttQnlc ~tdpment a.nd A~ \and to develop new parks 1,11 the al'ea. the tax Increase, I wlli do everything 'pllanct•'' pamphlet. Prepared by the. . T11e ballot issue, approved by lhe in. my power to , assist in ~~1rin~ · -SCltrDepartment of ConMtmer..-Affalrt.,--~-of-£upervtsors,-'Cabs for· a max . -matchi ng fecterrtl"Te\'emle-~harln~ds state and has been on com1nittees gel!ilUl~teS\iQJQllX JIJ!llL.TnJ.WJ:Y -~----officia1 s. ----the ~mphlel I• Engll•b or SPjln1'h. also •mum tax rnte o! 50 e<nl!.' compared to help dclray park costs." •ugge1tl w•Y• to -1,·ofd dtceptlve of< to the present Service Area No. 8 rate He said cost for deve1opment of one fradlllent pr1ctlce11, gives tlpt on ·~ of a Utlle less than is cents per $l00 park on a 2.~acre · vacant lot known p111nce 11ervlce · and Usts as110Cl1Uons of a~~d valuation. 1 as MacKenzie Park has been cstlm:tted and org1rtballon1 tb8• mllbt. •••Mt co.. r~th District Superv1!t-or 1t on a l.d at $93,000. · ,umers. Req11est by sendlq .a self-ad· Caspers said the South La g un a caspers said the service area needs drttsed, stamped eD\'tlope lo Repair Homeowners Association has indicated a tax increase to just continue current Sen'tct Gulde, Box SIO,, Sacrament., that they would like to fmprove(!xlsting services eYen if development of the Cnllf. ·~· street sweeping and 18!1dscapc rnahr parks wa s not ~temp1a1cd. ' " ' • • We \VOnder \vhether he kno11's ~01nething we don't -about gold or our--currcnc)1 situation. If voJ1 , too, are interested in gold cOins. you might.!lndl t interes!ing to stop by und talk to us. We can rn'hunt yours or sell you beautifully ru oun· led coins. · "' • J.C. \ 1121 NEWPQR.T ILYO., COSTA MESA • •·~ti-. ...... :, .•• , -1io110 .. c~ ..... 'HONE t~t.)~tl • I -- -1 UAIL Y PILOT Wtdn~dlf, J1nu1ry 2,. 1974 .Jost ~ Coasting,~ J with · Tom '1rphine ~ ·we're Off -to· A Good Start SLICES QF EARL\' '74: So "'e ha ve launched the Ne\v Year. And just look at the ne"·s already: tifotorists are drlving 55 miles an hour everywhere on the Orange 'Coast - no matter what the speed zone is. This chap from Anaheim took a sledge hammer and bashed h i s 1972 Pinto to ;pieces because he said the poor ~ automobile "is dying a slo\v death." Orange County authorities· have an-~ nounced ~hat the marriage license •>usiness has fallen orr because of the measles. The weather people W<'re predicting rain and the Orange Coast came up clear and cold. The Westem White House in ~an Clemente grandly announced a govem- n1ent appointment for Pat Nixon that 1umed out to be illegal. And a gas station dealer back in Chicago got shut dq_IA1l for giving away gasoline and _selling rabbits' feet. l'ES INDEED, it surely looks hkc v.·e:'re off to a great start . Clearly, a tour'Of our coastal road\\·ays early today :Suggested th at folk s are noW driving 55 miles per hour. But there are apparently somC adjustment problems. The long arn1 of the law \.\·as making arrests everywhere. That was because the people ,.,_:re <!riving 55 miles per hour everywhere -in 45, 35. and 25 zones. th at is. '.f'he .only pla~ they slo"'t'd do1\·11 \\'(IS out in the open. TIIE ZANY ~JADE the news early this New Year when this chap named Roger T. Sweitzer of Anaheim took his 'poor· little Pinto car up to the Folli ~rotor Company 's Pico Rivera assembly plant and along with a bunch of buddies, bashed it to pieces because it was allegedly a lemon. Maybe he fi gured that was beating the fuel crisis. . So Sweitzer starts the New Year walk- ing. ... • ' /' Ul"I Ttlt,iior, Higli Wi.1·e DrutJIQ l\1an identified as Jim1ny C. \Veber. eludes l\VO poli cemen 120 feet -above upper rpad \vay .or B'l"ooklyn Bridge Tuesday. lie was finally, ~lked down.by a friend after an hour. ~~~~~~~~~~~ Winte1· Stor111 on Move; ' . Terriperat111·es 45 Below By Uniled Press lntcrnotional The fir st "·inter stonn of the NC\I' Year moved across a \'ast stretch of the ·midlands early today, pushing temperatures to 45 below zero and dump- ing ·Up to 16 inches of snow. Snow and wind swept 01·er the Rockies and into the Great Plains and east • Astronaut Carr into Arkansas. Tempera tures dropped below zero from 1he Rockie:; to the Great L.1kes and from the Canadian border to J.1jssouri and Kansas. The National Weather ·Service issued heavy show warnings today from Utah. 10 ·northern Texa s. lhrough Kansas and Oklahoma, and north through 101\·a and Nebraska. And from our Count y Seat up in Santa Ana comes the intelligence that during the .. past year, the n1arriage license 'business fell off by a few hundred • cuslomers. Cou~ly Clerk William E. St Gets Ul Latlier Up to 16 inches of SOO\\' fell Tuesday in parts of northern Ne\\' Mexico and Southern Colorado. Gamblers at Las Vegas. Nev .. got a surprise 1\·hcn fou r inches of snow fell , the largest. snowfall since 1949. John blamed this downtrend on the fact , • lhal Orange County requires brides to take tests proving they've .had Gennan About Batlt Soap· measles. Some olher counties don't .de._ . mand the lest yet. \Veil. ii might be simpler than all tha t. l\fay bc, just ''maybe, there were a few hundred less people who wanted to get married. TllEN THERE \\'AS the Western \\lhile House in business at San Clemente '"'here it was divul ged that Mrs. Nixon \\'Ould serve as chair1voman of the Volun- tary Service Advisory Council. .thus becoming eligible for a $138 consultant tee toreach day she worked. 'They canceled the appointment because it ~-ould be illegal for the Presi- dent to al'.fX)int his wife to a job like that. You hoped the \\'hite •louse would have started out the fresh year just a bit better than tha,t. Finally, there is Sam McBride or Chicago, who runs the S;outh Side Shell Service. Sain would sell you a rabbit'i; foot and a blank legal form for 10 bucks. After that. you got some gasoline free. That's !he equivalent of buying a rock from a Rose Bowl scalper. for S50 and gelling two game tickets for ~othing. TIIE FEDERALS FIGURED poor Sam \rasn't rea lly sell ing rabbits' feet but gasoline -at $2 per ga llon. So they shu t him do\\TI. HOUSTON (UPI) -CDnnnandcr Ger· aid P. Carr of Santa Ana and the other '"'o Skylab 3 astronauts today had to take !heir weekly showers, and the experience brought up one of the few chronic grumbles about U1e lengthy n1ission. Astronauts Carr. Edward G. Gibson. form erly of San Clemente, and \Villiam R. Pogue "'ere taking today off and each was given time for a weekly shower in the first device of its kind ever flown in space. Carr's gripe 1vas not about ha ving to bathe -u·hich "we do whetiler v.·e need it or not'' -but about the soap pro- vided. He thinks the family dog migh t like it a lot n1ore. "! find the shower ~ very, very satisfyi ng.'' he said r~y. "Although I think th e soap is lousy. There's got to be a better 1vay than, to gi ve us stuff that smells like dog shampoo. L just don't think that \\'as really necessary. CatT said his "'ire used the same kind of special soap at home, and hers "smells qullc pleasant." He exhorter! planners of futu re space flig hts to try to n1ake showering a little more en· joyable. llOLIDAY J\fOTO.R.lSTS in J\.Iinnesota. the nation's "ice box'' \Vith temperatures caiwn to 45 below zero at the lakeside community of McGrath , waited as long as eig ht _hours for tow true~ to star1 the ir cars. A Garland. Tex.. you th fell into a drai nage ditch and fr oze to death Tues· day and a 59-year-o ld Hot Springs. Ark .. 1nan . froi.e to dealh when he slipped on ice and lost consc iousn ess. The National \Veather Service snid the bitter storm came from a cold front "'hich ·originated in Russia and moved -into Alaska and northern ca·nada almost a week ago. 'I'Qe weather service !:aid the fro nt "'armed "a litt le" however. before it di pped into the United States. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of lhe Daily Pilot I~ 9uarantee-d Mond•r·FriO•r: If rou do no! ~••• rour P""' DY S;:IO ''"'" clll and r•ur copy "'ii! Oc br1u9h1 It ytu, ClllJ ••• 1a•1n un!ll 7:JO p,m, Sflurd•Y •nd Suftday: II YIU dcrMI "••l•t your <oPY llY t a,m, Slllurd•Y· tr I •.m. luntt•r. c•ll "'·" • <opy •Ill 111 tr1u9n1 It r•u. Calli •r• !attn unlil 10 •.m. Telephones Molt Or•nte Ctunty Ar••• H••lhwu l Mwnh,,9t•n I t.ch •nd Wtflminlltr • Like the \Vcslern \\'hite House. Sam "'It's very unpleasant stuff to use and J think id t he .future. soa p th at \I'\! ' use should ha ve some sort of pleasant odor lo it," he sai d. S~n Clementi, C•p;srr•,.. l 1llcltJ S•n Jw•n C•Pl•lraM, O•n1 PoiM, didn 't start out the New Year so hot0 either. ~tulh L"Su"•· LltU""' Klgu11 ...• •ti-UH • Storm Buffets Southland ' Motorists ·Stra1iaed • Snotv at Big Bear in Te1upertitures Alti•nv Jl.lbUQU.fQ~ llhmarck lloisr 811lt111a CMc•oo Cinch111111i C!evel•ncl 011111 Oe11ver Oei Motne1 01!ro•I FllrMl'lkS F•t sno i'itl1n1 ln<1l•n1POlll IC•11w5 City Lii VPQI\ Lovlsvlllt Mtmolth /Allw1111~te Mll'IMlll>Clll Ntw Yor~ NO<ll'I Platre Otl1110m1 C••v Om11M P1lm Sor1r191 Pnlledt!pl'!!t -Plll1l>ur111t ~11&1111, Ort, R1pl<1 (fly ·~· 11. LOvl~ )111 Ltke (oh 1PO>•l>e wi .... ,11111 --- Mith Low Jl'cp lS 16 .O' 13 11 .01 ~· .1s " . ll 10 .Ol " ' 11 • • 30 4 ,OJ H 1S 01 .(II ,01 01 -<II .in " ' " . tS l l 04 .OS 10 ~I ., JS 7S .47 '' u ,, 13 " .., ·1'1 .71 41 ,, .. " ' 01 ~1 ~ " ~ " .. ·" ... ... 21 14 •• 01 " " " ... ~ ' . , " ... 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'S00"'1!rn C11!fO'ftl1 - Ht w Ve••'• O;f,>. uprooting lttfl, t c v ~ ,.-1 n II tr1n1mlstlon llnn lm:I 011r.~,11119 11te mount11ln1 •111'1 l/IOW to !M ),$00-1001 lewtl. • St"'11t of motorl111 wire 11r1n0td •• 111 Bffr In ltlf $In le•n8•dlM<1 Moun11ln1 11nlll roads could bl c101rld of I tiK·lnch snowl1JL Winds 11ustl1111 11 60 milts per hour kickfd ~ l)llllCl!ng ttl'\d tnd du1f, forcing ll!t closlt111 of 1 »·'"llt tlrllclt of C1ll11>rni1 16 tnlfn the Rlw1r1ldt County HM lo W11tmottl1nd In lm1>trl11 Counly, Tl'W! strgog w1nd1 ti~ 1or1 ofl roofs ot lwo llOmes In Borr-eo Sprl~ fn Sin Olt90 Covnty Ind upendtd H'lt!rll rnQbl!e l'KWT\ls. Tl'le C1!ifornla Hl9f1.,.1y P1trOI lstutd tr1Hfc 1ltr11 DfclVH of. IM tlfClnlll wlncts lor wverat coin111 1tlg,,.,.1r1, Including !fie Sen Olt90 Fr-1y 'l'flm trw;itewcoo IO !ht Ortngt Cownty lint. ,\re• r1lnfell Clllf'ff!9 Ille 1tarm rlflllt(I from • 1r1c1 In m.nl trNt ra ,1 Inc"-' In oa.tnlovm • "-nrit*l 1n<1 11ttrty '"'° '"'ltlt.11 htytlwflll. Coa.tal Weatller i:-11r tod1y. Nort1t,..11itrty wlnd1 * Clay, Might lodty In 1111 .0., Co.m1tat t1m111r1turt1 rfl'lll't from •1 lo 59. · lnl1nd ltmPfr•lllrts r•nte !rorn '4 lo 5•. • • W1!rr ~temperalurt JS. • , Su11, "loon. Tides Wt:ONEIOAY ' SKOl'l(I ltlQh 2:).1 p.m. ,,f S-.:onc1 low l :ot #.m 1.1 lNUltlOA-V- Flrtt 1tr1111 ~:21 1.m. •·• Flrl! low IO!Sl •.m. 1.J SkDnd ltll>h •:1111.m, 2.1 ·~ tow fill p.m. i.o S11n rlM'I 6:Jf 1.m. $111 4:S6 p.m. MOOl'I tl1t1 ll:SJ 1:11'1. Silt Tt:ll ",m. • .. Ex-po1•t1aer _Bnlli.ng • Meir Coalition Hopes Th~eaten1ed~~ ............ in-_ -.......,...Israel • • TEL AVIV (UPI> -The major ooall· lion partner In ·~rime M.inister Goldn ,Meir1s labor alignment emerged today as the biggest obs.tacle in the way of forming a new government, poliUcal leaders said. ll could alter Israel's negotiating stance and the ~rabs at Geneva. l Df;mands on the labor alignment by the National Religious Party not to sur- render the occupied West Bank of Jordan in any pe1te settlement is the hardest' problem l\.1rs. Meir will have to solve. said Yorarq Peri, spokesman for her labor party. , "I'm afraid we'll have to pay a price to the National Religious Party," Peri -said. "The negotiations to form a coali· lion will take some weeks , but they won't affect the military talks at Geneva . They will affect the next step, but that \VOn 't be done so quickly." RETURNS THUS FAR indicated that Mrs. Meir's party had lost six of ifs 57 seats in parliament and the right-wing Likud would gain six for a tolal of 38. The National Religious Party drooped one seat to 11. Returns from soldiers said that since it was a citizen anny the voting was eX'peeted to be along lines already reported. The l\.1iddle East Peace Conference is: expected to devote its attention to peace negotiations once the troop disengagement talks between ·Israel and Egypt are completed. Tourism Minis er Moshe Kol Said• the Religious ParJy ay ch8nge its mind about the West k once concrete pro- posals for peace re made at Geneva. But he said its emands on religious vers us secula affairs may cause his own partY to drop out of the coalition. KOL IS A. MEMBER o[ I he Independent Liberal Party, another coalition parlner with a projected four seats in the !~member Kne~t (Parlia- n1ent ). The Religious Party holds a projecied 11 seats, making it the alignment's biggest partner. Kol said the problem hinged on trying to agree with the Religious Party on \Vhere future borders should be. Sites ~ Five Bomb Explosions l Rip Ireland . From \\ljre SerYJces BELFAST -Gwtmen explocled five bo1nb~ across Northern "'Ireland during the night in 1vhat could be the start of major terror offensives by both Roman Catholic and Prot~ant ex- tremists. police said today. The bombs caused no injuries. but two soldie rs · "'ere slightly ~·Ound~ in ( IN SHORT ... ·) a Belfast gunfight shortly before mid· ni ght Tuesday. Police blamed the outlawed Irish Uepublican Army (lRA) for four of th e blasts. The Protestant Ulster Freedom fighters (UFF) c I a i m-e d- responsibility for the fifth . e Five Anaerlcans Die _ TURIN, Italy -A New York~ City fan1ily of five was among the 39 persons killed in the New• Year's Day crash of an Italian airliner in Turin, police SJid today. A polfce spokesman identified the five as Robert Anthonf Breckheipier, '50; his wife Sheila. 50; their daughter, ,Jane Margaret. 19: their son Robert Anthony J r .• 23; and Joyce Bre<:kheimer, 23, wile of Robert Anth00y Jr . e Arab Plot Feared · LONOON -An IS.year-old American gi rl arrested at Heathrow airport may have been ! the courier for a band of Arab gunmen being sent to London to kill prominent Jews, police sources said. The sources broached the theory as the government ordered a maximum alert at airports throughout the country in reSponse to reports that more than 30 Arab gunmen were en route to Britain. • Death Qui:: Slated FRANKLIN, Tenn. -Officials plan to interview .more wilnesses before tak- ing any action concerning a trucker who has been taken°into custody in Uie deaths of two young C8.lifomia women. A criminal bureau agent, .said Tue~ay that Clauzell llortch, 35,.of Grove HUI, Ala .. was being held without charge in the deaths ot Nancy ·Jane Morey, 20, and Barbara Boynton, 18 o[ Petaluma. . e Tllree QtilnU Oka11 holy to Judais1n are situated oil the \Ve!lt Bank. Kol said another major problem rested on the Religious Party's demaqds for a national wtlty goven1ment that \Vould · include the Li~OO. the ali&runent 's big· UPI Ttltl'f!Olo Ladies Fair Prince Charles has been ro- mantically I i n k e d to Lady Leonora .Grosvenor. (top), 24- ye:ir-o ld daughter of the Duke of \Vestminster and Lady Jane \:Vellesley, daughter of Duke of ~ geSt challenger.· Mrs. l\1elr has said such a govem111ent would be unworkable. "\VE Wll.L N"OT enter ai\,y government if we wl\I not ha_yt lhis free possibility to fight for this biU," Ko! sald. ' \. 1 Top Chinese Co1nmanders i • • ' Reshuffled ·~·· • ~ TOKYO (AP) -China's Communist ruler$ iiavc begun 1974 with a rcshUfne or military con1mooders apparently designed to' \\'eaken tlle po.wcr b.ases of possible challt>nges to Mao Tse-tll!lg. The changes, inv,olving 11 of the coun- try's 13 military regiQns. were di sclosed today by Hsinhua, Peking's official news . agencY. in an article on New Yelll''I .military reunions. J\tost of the changes whert> shift.! of officers from one com1nand to another. There ""ere few dismissals. Slr:,'CE TifE DEA TII and disgrace in 1971 of Mao's. designated heir, Defense J\·linister Lin Piao. the preponderance f;f the military al !he apex of the Peking ·power pyramid has dwindled. But the anny has clung .to influence i1nd po.c;ition in the provinces. In August, during the 10th congress <J f the Chinese Communist party, fl.tao tightened his control on the party struc- ture by placing old associates and party veterans in key pGSIS. Now he appears lo have surrounded doubtful and possibly troublesome regiona l military rom- manders with older and more trustworthy men . Beca use of the secretiveness en· 1·cloping all politica l and military moves in China, it \\'as impossible to say \\'helhcr the shakeup resulted from a threat now to rttao, the ~y~ar-old chairman .of the Comrilunist party, or "·as made to forestall any future threat. TifERE \\'ERE FEl\' out right dis missals in the shakeup. \.11hich looked more like a game or musical chain than an effort to purge the provincial officer ranks. 1'he n1ost signiricant change Was the appointment of Ll · Teh-shen_g1_ j. litao loyalist and-one of the five vice C.bairmen of the party cent ral co mmittee, to com· · m3nd the Shenyang area of Manchuria. A fro ntier_ region fa cing nn estirrt8ted "nillion Soviet troops , it is one of the mos! critical military commands in China. Li reptnced Chen Hsi-lien. who takes command of the Peking military region. 1J'h erc he will be under the "'atchful eye cit the central leadership. Peking has been without a military commander si nce Cheng Wei-shan dropped out ~ sight during the 1966!69 Cultural RevoliJ- tion. \\'ellington. Another significant swap was the transfer of ~rsu Shih·yu , 67. a member rf the party Politburo. He was moved from Nanking, where he has been a leading figure since 1957, lo Canton. Ting Sheng. the 61-year-old Canton com· ~-n1ander, went to Nanking.· ' ' -' '""",,..'"~j_·, . 'o;:• 1-.,~e Big Stall Four Anitrak Trains Stra1id 900 · By The Associated l'ress l\1oro than 900 passengers aboard four Amtrak passenger trains f o u n d themselves at unscheduled stops as part of the New Year's holiday. A Chicago-to-Denver streamliner car· rying 400 pa ssengers 1vas delayed for more than 13 hours Mo11day ni ght and Tuesday at Ga lesbur:g, Ill .. after water was mistakenly· poured into a diesel fue l tank. The water froze in the fuel lines in near-zero weather. 11fE EXTRA STOP for :in Am1rak lurbolincr Tuesday "'EIS five mile north of No rm al, also in rcnlrat Ill inois. A dispatcher at Blooriiinglon , Ill. .. the train 's laSt scheduled stop as it headed from St. Louis to Chicago with ·90 aboard, said the train apparently ran ~out of fuel because lh& engines had been left .. running Monday night IQ keep lhem from freezing. In Missouri, 120 passengers abo.'lrd an Amtrak train en route from Kans;is City to New York were stalled for more ~ lhan 12 hours when the Missouri Pacific· locomotives pulling it .stopped . A • railroad spokesman snid th e locomotives ran out or fnel, Rpp.arenlly because of a leak. Two switch engines were sent to rescue the train and pull it into JefferSon City to await replnce-- mcnt engine, but not before the The Chicago-to-Denver streamliner, operating on the Burlington Northern tfacks. arrived in Galesburg at 7:05 p.m. ftlonday and pulled out at 8:20 a.m. Tuesday. During the wait for two locomotive rep lacements from Aurora~ about 14~ miles away. the Red Cross and Salvation Army served hot drinks and rolls to 20 passengers at the Galesburg depot. The other passengers remained in Pullman cars. with the temperature hovering near zero. · AN AMTRAK SPOKESMAN s•id U.. passengers were served complimentary meals ror the remainder of the trip,, but Capt. Raymond Briggs of the Salva· lion Army said the passengers• "main , ron1plaint was that no one seemed__ to be in authorily 3nd they were 119t told , what happened or how Jong they would be stranded." ' The Chicago-to-St. Louis turbollner operating on fllinols Cenlra Gulf tracks, was ruMing behind-acheduJe when It ground to a halt. The Bloomington dispatcher 1ald It rook about two hours to refuel the traln, v1hlch arrived In Chicago five houri l:1te. BERLIN'-Three surviving children of quintupleti born -· to-tfle -.:Wife ~ a leader of lhe Free Democratic Party were Jn good cmdltlon today, the family said. -paueogers spent several hours in ~ted".ca'Nl ln IJear-ier-0 wCather.- For Waller Schcndle, the Kl•malh Falls ~top fur the Amtrak train using -Southern Pacific rails was trouble ou ! 10p or trouble. He explained That he·hnd been •ilO•nl I another Amtr•k lraln-Whlch dorQUed I ~r Ander"'!n, Calif., 1 .. 1 Friday, In· Angelika Rasch, 30. wife d!...Walter Ruch, 31. deputy party floor ~eaders in the West Berlin House of Represm- tatlves, gave birth Dec. 29 ln the Martin Luther Ho:spital. .) • ON THE ·wEST COAST, an Amlrnk train en ro"te rrom Sacramento, to .Van· c.iuvcr. w~sh.;-with 313 abotifd. ~rakeq to an unscheduled slOp Ttresd•y at Klamath Falls, Ore., after a frclght train jumped the tracks •head . ' , Jiirlng 84 p<>rlOn!. , ' "I figured thc._same · th\n1 co1ddn't happeo !Wice, 90 I JTiade lr•ln rmrva. lions to rctum," Schendle told ncw1men . The stalled passengers eventually were sent on their way by buo ·qr air .. ' ' ' -·· r YaeaJion I Dw.e~ -1 Uicated I SP!f!NGVIU.E (AP) James Hughes ·reported the vac,tk>n ~ he was building was i)\lssing. Authorities !owld the remains ol It lJ\ the town I dump. "We found what's left ol Jt., whid:J. isn't much,'' :sberlfl' deputy Frank Wittich said Tuesday. "Just a rew old pipes ( . BRIEFS ·and end• of boards. Ul'I T1l.,,.Olf -• ' \ W!dn!sday, • Jan11ary 2, l IJ74 . Gang, Killing Violence Hits Rose Par_aJl~ PASADENA (UP!) -The JAMITE FREEMAN, IG, of gr.oup or young people hurl"<! anoual Totimament of Roses Glendate, was hospitalized in rooks and bQttles al patrolllng parade Tuesday was marred critical copdition with a crush--o£ficers. Tu•o depll)ies and one by 225 arrests, a rock-throw-ed skull. He was pronounced policeman received minor in- ing melee, a savage beating dead on arrival at • a n juriCs. and the a p:f>aren tl y un-en1ergency c·e n'ter, but An estimated 110 million provoked kilhng of a passing pa ramedics got him breathing persons ·saw the telecast of , stranger by a street gang. again. . • the two ~r parade. An estimated 1.5 mfl lion Freeman ~'as stomped-and The City of St. Uluis won people turned out along the clubbed on the head by three the sweepstakes prize for its s.s mile route, many camping men, police said, in what ap--float "Happitiess ls a overnight. pareRtly was· anot her case o! Snowflak e," bedecked. with Dennis Allen, 22. of Canoga an unprovoked attack. -10,000 flowers and the grand Park, was knifed to death Most of the arrests were prize for the best commercial nd h. broth Ra ond 31 float went to Ea s t m a'n a ts er, ym . , made Monday night and early · lized tn · Kodak's "Happiness Is Lo ve." was hosp1ta serious -Tuesday by a force o( 1,500 condition with wounds. police and sheriff's deputies RAIN FELL before dawn, Among ,fri e ce I e b r I t i es adorning the floalS were ten· nis players Bobby Riggs and J\psemary casals, track star l5Wl ght Stones, m us i c i ans Lawrence -Welk and t h e Jackson Five, and beauty queens Margarita Moran, Miss Universe, and. Amanda Jones, ~1iss USA, I B.riJJe Trial , .. DAILY PILOT U,tT ....... Iixtures are gone and wtiat with the fuel shortage, most of the good timber went pretty fast " Hughes, who lives in Lan- caster, near Los Ang~les, drove to this community-o( 1,000 persons In' the Sierra Nevada foothills to 0 work on the home. He found it missing, along with numerous pipes and beams he had stockuiled nearby. DEBRIS STREWN ALONG BEACH Remains of Cruiser in Which 3 Art Fe1red Drowned Pollce an-ested 16 juveniles who ,kept watch on the gather--drenchin g ma ny early bird and three young adults, iden-ing crowd. The charges in-spectators, but the skies were tifyi ng them ·as· members of eluded assault, a t t e m P t e d clear by the time the first a Pasadena youth gang. 0£-· burg lary, disturbing the peace floats and horse men and ficers said the Allen brothers and smok..ing marijuana. bands set out , preserving_ the were passing by the group Fifty arres ts were made tradition that it doe!! not rain on a street corner when the near Pasadena City C:Ollege. on this parade. The last time gang set on them with knives. a traditional trouble spot. A it did was in 1955. LOS ANGELES (AP) Sentencirig Ior former City of Commerce f\1ayor f\1aurice Quigley, convicted of soliciting a br ibe. has been set (of ~1arch 18. The ac1ion was taken by Super ior Court Judge David N. Fitts, \Vho ord~red Quigley, 68, to u n d e r g o psych iatric observation fer 90 days at the Chino Institu- tion £or Men. Die• iii Sleep . Rep. C h a r I e s . M. Teague, ·64, (R·Calif .), died o! a heart attack Tuesday, while visiting Ills son, Alan, the major of Santa Paula. J-le had served nearly 20 years in Congress and planned to see k re-election in Novem-. ber. He was senior member of the Veter- ans Affairs Committee. "There was nothing left but a cOupte o f pegs on the ground," Wittich said. He said the three rooms and carport whlcb Hughes had built so far were worth about '5,000. e Be's Ru11,.ln9 · LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Joseph Graham·· Davis, 31· year-old Los Angeles attorney who claim! support of some ol Calilomia's most influential and wealthy Democrats, today announced his candidacy for state treasurer. · At a sei'ies of ne~·s con- ferences schedu1ed for Los Angeles. Saii Francisco ziiid Sacramento, Davis. charged the .treasurer's office Wlder !Jicurnbe<it Republican I v y Bat.er Pri~ is "pa3Sive, tired and weak." Mrs. Priest ls expected to announce soOO she will seek a \bird tenn. ··Bing B~tter _3 Nlissing As ' Cruiser Breaks Up LOS ANGE LES ilJPll Three persons wl!re feared drowned but a fourth swam Lo safety Tuesday after tbeir 30- foot cabin cruiser capsized and broke up in rough surf . near f\.1arina Del Rey. Kerry South. 22, Simi, said he was able to swim the short distance to shore but saw no slgri of his three c.'O mpanions. Donald Drut.chas, 25, Malibu, and Frank Lu po , 22. and Leanne Tate, 18, both of Simi Valley. 'South told aqthofities the Shirley 1 left Malibu about 12:30 a.m, for Marina de! Rey, where the cruiser was b.erthed. He sa id the boat ran out of gasoline and he and his companions decided lo anchor the craft, go to sieep and seek help at day break . During the night ho.,.,.ever. a \veatherfront moved into lhe area. \Vinds gusting to 48 miles an ho1.ir capsized the boat. . Authorities said part of the wreckage was carried south IDLLSBOROUGH (UPI) - Crooner Bing Crosby, being treated at a hospital for pleurisy, thinks he can make his annual appearance this week at his $215,000 in· vitationa! golf tournament. to the beach at Playa Del ~ Rey while the rest broke up "He's· responding well to medication · and feels he is almost &ure to show up Thurs- day et Pebble Beach.'' said Alan. Fisher, the si"nger's butler. "I don't beli eve ~he's missed one yet." in the surf near the marina. A sea and air search failed to locate South's companions. Spilled Oil Spreading . ~ • w11 .. s..,im , Along Bea~h SAN FHANCISQ:I (AP) A sh Iver i n g George SAN LUIS OBISPO (API Farnsworth bas won the an--Oil · washed by high seas hual mile swlm race from from inside ,a boom area sur- Alcatraz Island to Aquatic rounding the damaged U.S. Park here. Navy cargo ship Private Mer- Famsworth. of. the SOuth rell has spread along two End Rowing Club, plowed miles or sandy' beach, the through the 50 degree water Coast Guard reports. in 52. minutes, 14 seconds Rough seas driven by strong Tuesday, deriite a strong ebb-winds caused the containing "T" . boom to hang up on the an-tide that forced contestants I · ht . to stroke two miles in order chored Merrel Monday n1g , to travel one. Seven of the allowing some oil that had · been surrounded by the boom 10 entrants made it to the to escape, said Pat O'Donnell. flnlsh. Coast Guard journalist. The gooey -ruel oil bega n washing • Girl Slain back onto the beach on Tues-• FRESNO (AP) -A Fresno high school student has been found strangled to death in the bedroom of her home here, police said. Mr. and Mrs. Royce Curb returned from a holiday trip to the coast Tuesday .to find their daughter, Deborah Lea, 17, lying dead on her bedroom floor, iz)veMJ.gators said. $1 Million Overcrossing SACRAMENTO (UPI! - A major Improvement is scheduled for Interstate 5 in Loi Anseles County In La Mirada and Santa Fe Springs, the caJl!ornia Department of Transportation reports. A two-lane overcrosstng will b«·coostructed parallel to the day afternoon, he said. There was no estimate of the amount of oil involved in the contamination~ of the beach on San Luis Obispo Bay, two miles south of Oceano .. Beacb. A 'STATE Department of Parks and Recreation ranger said he had Jound a small seabird on the beach, oov~red with oil. He sai d he cleaned ._the bird. which r«,'Overed. The Coast Guard said no other wildlife was affected and that the cleanup job wou1d be easier on sand than on a rocky beach. Leakage ·of oil from the Merrell was stopped, and an additional 1,000-root-IO!ig third 'boom was thrown around the ship Tuesday to make a trjple loop, O'Donnell said. .. exi!Ung two-lane-structure. across the Santa Ana Freeway (Interstate ~) lo serve Valley View Avenue. The 45S-toot Merrell, car.- rying a cargo of heavy equip- ment, oollided with t h e Liberian freighter Pearl Ven- ture before dawn Saturday l l miles off the ooast near Morro eay and a · Jarge bole was tom tn the stem section or the Merrell, breaking open • Bids will be opened Jan. SI In Loo .AngQles. A 1otal of fl million ls lvallable !or the pniject. • Judge ·Named- FAlRFlELD ( U P I ) -supertor Court Judge Victor M. CMtagnelto b11 besn nam- ed presiding judi• ol the Solano County SUperlor Court, succeeding Judie Raymond J. Shiiifln. fuel storage tank!: - AN .ESTWAT!D IS,~00 gallons of fuel oil spilled, creating an 11-mlle-long 011 sllck before the M~ell was towtd lrom the area ml anchored at the Union Qil dock at Avila, eouth or here . That spillage washed searird and was disper.ed during the weekend wt'lhout any ol the oil reaching the Cllalt, O'llcln- nell said. ·- • " ' • • That's just one of th.e hundreds of wa'ys Western Fed offers customers savi11gs on· financial services, entertaintnent, travel, excursions, theatre, movie and sports tickets, and the like •. If you save $1000 or more· afWestern red, you-belong to th~ Capital Club and arc eligibl~ for discounts on lots of the things you buy anyway, and some things you'd like to if they didn't cost so much. For instance, one excursion to Tijuana and Ensenada leaves here February 16 and takes advantage on every group rate available to bring every couple of mem• , · bers savings of at l~ast $68! • As you'd expcct;Western Fed pays the highest rate available or insured savings, ·so you're ''saving money while'you save · · ' money:' That's a good de'll· • , • WESTERN"·rEDEilL SAVINGS · Main ()ff'1ee1 Si11:1h &. Hill, Oo"'nto wn Low A'!l'ele11/Be\.-crly •lilb /Larchmont/lkl An10 FIN11m:ial Ct:"nter/La liabra f ashion Square/ • Nortbridce FMhion Center/Panorama City/City of Orange/Corona dd Mar/S°f:al Bncbl lnglewood/USC Office/llotlywood·Vermont ' • CORONA DEL MAR • • 2744 E·. Coast Hwy., Jim Park, Manager, Telephone: (714) 644·7255 . . F . E: A handsome full-color illustr~ted wall calendar if you'll just stop by and ask ...'QS for . .()n~. We simply want· an opp.or.t\l.ni.ty· to answer in person.any further questions you might have about how the Capital Club ·can "save you money while you save money?' • • 5%% current annual passbook rate 71h% four year,JSlOOO certificate (a substantial interest penalty is required for early withdrawal) " Q I ·' • • • , { ' . , • • • DAR~ PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE· . Channel . ·50's Potential Coast un.. Orange Coast College'• atudent new• paper, hu quedlonod tho Coast Commublty Coliege,Dis- trlct'a ownel'lh!p aDd operation or KOCE-TV (CllaMel ~OJ. Orange Cowity's only local television ·outlet. The newspaper, tn an editorial, points out lhat run· ning .the st..Uon costs the dlstr1ct about fl million a year and lhat putUn1.it into operation cost $2 mllllon. These •re funds , it lsltrgued, that should be used for direct bcnellt' or students enrolled on the cllitrtct's two Cam· puses, Orange Coast and Golden West. It is debatable if it Is the obligation ol the commu· nity college district and Its taxpayers to finance f;ubllc oervlce te[evlslon. That obligation ls not really lhe itting doma in of a tax-supported junior college system. But KOCE has a goat that goes far beyond a Cew hours or pub.lie service programming each day. It was set. UR u the ke)'. element ln .an exciting "multiversity" which would utilize the telev1Slon medium to offer the widest array of higher educational clas!os to anyone in nnge or Channel 50. Such a program Is operating successfully in Great Br1taln and the Coast district's administrators al11! trus- tees saw an excellent opportunity to copy the pfan and nlOdify it fo r this area. . • The program permits instructors to teac~ ~o anyone with a TV set . Enrollment is handled by mail if needed and students are graded on their work. It's done pro- fession<)lly and college credits are granted. ~ - The goal of Coast leaders is an ultimate offering of <:lasses that would ease the enrollment burden from the t\vo campuses and eliminate the need for a third. After all, they fi gured. if students can hear a lecture on television, they won't need to utilize already-crowded campus facilities. \\1e would agree with Coa st Lines' cm1tention that the 1,300 students now enrolled in ·Channel 50 classes ' .• ' .. don~ provide a verY Impressive sho-,,lng In numbers. But that's -overlooking' lhe fact that tbe statlon has been Jn operation only one ' year and everyone connected with the eflort agrees that most of-the Orange County public Is woefully unaware of KOCE's avlilablllly -or even of its existence . Along with the educational opportunities, KOCE ·doe• provide public service proarammlng -both local and national. Some of Uiese programs have been out· st&nding, some so·sQ and 11ome plain dull. Still, It has given Orange County Its first local television coverage or note. We must admit some disappointment 1n Channel ~O's •cceptance at this stage. It appeared Initially that both the televised classes and the public service pro- grams would be much broader In scope by this time. Still, It's very earl)', far too early, to abandon a con· cept wilh such fulfilling possibilltlos. Is There Hoarding? Federal energy chief William E. Simon says he's concerned about stories that the nation's oil industry may be sto<;kpiling -. boarding, if you will -petroleum to wait for higher prices. Simon immediately called for a full audit of re-- finers,Jl{lporters, wholesalers and u!ers of crude·oll and refined products. A force or up to 1,000 agents is being readied to check the figures. Many, IC not mos~ Americans are_ cynical enou~ to believe oil Interests are manipulating the energy crisis for their oWn bePefit. . A full prolie and revelation of the stockpiling af· fair would add a great deal ·to tbe public's confidence In the Federal Energy Office. • I ~" .. • I I I c;p I R IT Of· '7'f . Don't Listen To the Hous e · That Talks ' Wieks .~If A New Maturity Is St1rfa,cing ( ART HOPPE J Once upon a time in lhe country called \Vonderfulland. the people were 'ruled by a talking house. Th1I 11 how it came to pass: -- Long ago, the people of \VooderJulland \vere ruled by a -King who lived far •1\l:ay. The Kin g. like most klngs, llved in pomp and luxury. 11e had summer palaces and \\inter palaces and dozens or carriages and hwi- dreds or serv:mts and thousand3 or fawning courtiers. No one Was treated more royally than the King. It was pleasant living in lm:urlou1 • palaces. So the King rarely went out among his subjects. And being treated royally was very grat ifying. So he cared litJle about his subjects' liberties. WELL, the people of \Vonderfulland grew tired of being ruled by a pompou.s Kin&: and a bunch of fawoing courtiers \Vho cared little about their liberties. So they rebelled. And they made · up a new system called ';Wonderfullsm," They pi cked some citizens to makfl th e laws and some citizens to judge the laws and one citizen to carry out th e laws. BUt being fed up with kings, they made it plain this citizen was to be an ordinary citizen like every other citizen. Of course, he needed a place to live. So Lhey built him a house and painted it white. They called it, naturally, "the white house." THE CITIZEN in charge of carrying wt the laws lived comfortably, but not ae:;tentaHously, ln the white hou,,e. He -.ad a cook to cook his food. And a !Ouple of maids to sweep the floors. lnd three or four secretaries to answer f.1e-mall. Being just a plain citizen, 1hat was all he needed. For a century and more, Wonderfullsm \l'orked splendidly. \Vonder!ulland grew 'Now, Mr. Hughu .... • and prospered. In Caci, alter It triumphed In a great world war, it became the richest and mightiest country on earth. Well, now, the cltl:r.en in charge of the . richest and rnlghUest country on e..11rth certainly couldn't make do-wllh only a cook and couple ol maids and three or four secretaries. So e11ch new · citizen in charge began appolnUng asslotants and deputy asalslants and special aubtants to asstsl him. And each aS1l1tant needed a whole flock of assistants to assist him. Almost before anyone knew It, the citizen ln cllarg~ was llvlng ln pomp and lu~. He had summer white houaes and wlriter white houses and fieell of limousines and alreraft and hundred> of servints and thousands ot fawning courtiers. No one was treated more · royally than the citizen in charge. That's when the house began to talk. "THE WHITE HOUSE ssld loday that . • . " reporters would write. "The White House today ordered that ... " "The mood ol The While House ... " And the people lililtened to what The White House said and did what It ordered and worried about ita mood. How Jong the people would have put up with being ruled by a talking hou•e caMOt be said. For the fawning courtiers, vying with each other to please the clllzen in charge, were caught com- mitting crimes that showed they cared little (or the liberties or the people. "Sinilter forces" penneated the ta1k· log house. It grew confused and self-con- tradictory, if not downright paranoid. Of course, it went right on talking. But, fortunately for Wonderfulism, the people believed hardly a word it said ~any more. I'm Fine-¥ ou're Not l like to drive at a steady clip; you have a heavy foot on the gas ; he's a speed demon. ~1y son has a "learning block," your son is "a little on the slow side," his son is "ba rely a moron." ~YDNEY J.H~~ \Vhen I' feel.overdressed, J Insist that a place for everythlng ; you are a bit "clothes make the man,'' but when I strait-laced; he is a spoil-sport. fee l underdressea· 1 insist with equal The large wedding I gave my daughter ardor that "you can't tell a book by was "open-handed ''; yours was "lavish"; its cover." · bis was "ostentatious." An innovation that I favor is a 1 have 8 "hasty temper"; you are "progressi ve step," but an innovation "a lJttle irascible"; he "flies into vlalent · J disfavor Js a "dange rous experiment." ~ \Vhen J am Jn the majority, I rest rages ov~ no ... '\,)' my case upon~ "!tie wisdom o( the A "SAINT'' ls a person who has ~n people"; when l am tn the mmority, dead long enough for us to forget how J look ·with ~rh upon "the ignorance irritaUng lt would have been to live of the masses. with acmeone to tnorally and spiritually • superior to'llll. (This ~ why the world · WIIEN WI> SAY tlral a pray or novel ·11 happy only with dead llints· live is ... trUe to life 11 we mean · t 11 true Uinn ) ' to tha t particui..;r distortion of life that ones inake us sq · . . ls vts ible 10 us. Ukewise, a "caricature" I. let ~X ~g take so m•nr, liberties is IX'-nerally a criticlsm that m.akel us beclue he s almost hwnan, but you wte0mfortable. 1~ you~. ~ulge-In outrag~• c:cnduct · I admire a preltf figure: you are • btcause hes spoiled rotten. a gay old dog: he Is M aging lecher. To the ca lfo w -and e11Vious, all I think lhcrt's a prOner ·time and sophistication is "pseude>-sophistlcatlon ." . -(_ ·- • Amid Pessimism, ·the People Rise WASHINGTON-The 12 monlhs of 1973 will be remembered as the year that America's incurable optimism \Vas cured. Up to now, Americana have assumed that our future was limitless, that beyond each frontier lay greener valleys, that our abundance bad no end. In recent years, IOme untoward p r icks of fortune have let some ot the hellum out ol our national balloon, but . it remained for the slq gerlng shocks ol 1973 to all but flatten It out. . _,,.. Who·couJd have expeoted on January20, 1973, when President Nixon and Vice Presklent Agnew took the oaths of office after their overwhelming electoral vic- tory, that by year's end Nlmn would be on the verge of impeachment, sup- ported by ooly a third ol the people, and Agnew would be a convicted felon who bad vanished lilto the -status O r a nooper50D? THE CAN·DO nation was in 1973 more and more dominated by a chorus ·· of can't Do's Crom its political and business leaders. Can't stop inflation. Can't hold down government spending. Can't break the Arab oil embargo. Can't develop by 1975 antipollution devices that roreign-manufacturers have already (JACK ANDERSON) developed. Can't meet fore ign com- petition. Can't keep the railroads running without massive government bailouts. And so on. For the first tlrne, Americans have begun to look backward. There is grow· ing apprehension that we have rea ched the end of a golden age. Nostalgia is everywhere on the rise. This is renected in our popular en- tertainment. Cults have formed around movies of the '30s and '40s, and fan clubs are devoted to deceased movie stars like HumphreY Bogart. A yearning is displayed among many college youths, not for the challenge of adulthood, but' for the security. of infancy. · Buffalo Bob, host of the 1950s kids' show "Howdy Doody," was resurrected and toured campuses to rousing recep- -tions. His audieno!s of 200-pound sophomores v.•ould sing again their baby son gs and often dis.solves into tears. YET, FOR all the dizzying re verses of 1973, there was no panic among our people and no rollaps e of our in- stitutions. A new maturity seems to be surfacing as ma:re and more Americans realize there are no lastin g heroes and nO simple solutions. The forbearance of the public ln the face of the \Vatergate mes! -Its in- sistence on being fair to President Nixon at the same time demanding that the truth must rome out and crimes must be punished -has been remarkable. While the government foonders . lhe p,eople have gone about their business. As a survey by one of our nati~nal magazines reported : "There is a strong feelicg tha t ifs up to. the American people to b:Jil the country out of Hs diff icul ties brcause the leadership in government can't do lt ." Also, 1973 "'·as a good year for employ- ment. with ·85 million at work, the most in our history. The acrimony between rednecks and IQnghalrs. hard hats and stil.dents. has n1ello\ved into li\'c-and -let- livc. The mort> -exotic revolutimaries have all but disappeared, by mutual consent. for their rights have been \in. dica ted ti me and again in our court,. RACIAL STRIFE has quietly declined. Solid gains have been made by blacks, as symbolized by the election lhls year of bl<'.lck mayors in such populous cities as Los Angeles, Detroit and Atlanta. Campus turmoil has abated;'\ com- plaints of student apaUly btgin to be heard again. Yet energetic, idealistic youths are enlisting by the thousands in practical public service group!!, doing everything from investigating their stole legislature 10 providing free services for the indigen t. I~ Yt'BS feared that lalxlr, pinched by • innation and emboldened by t h e paralys is .of ~ Nixoo Administration. Yi"ould wreck the economv either throu&h intransigent strikes or lnflatlonary wapt demands. Neither happened. . \Vhat 1979 adds up to for America, I suppose is lhat Uncle Sam found out that he is not ageless, shining and Invincible. He is a paunchy fellow, unex- pectedly overtaken bv middle age. Some of his favorite certitude s have ~ exploded. Some or the dreams of youth, ~ he secs now, will never be achieved . Others. upon realiz.ation, have turned to ashes. PEOPLE he counted on have let hlm down . Succ."· has made him try loss hard and he h.., become a bit siowY· After exenioo, he feels mysterious aches and pains. He see! that thia ~ measureless strength now has Its llmlts. Suddenly he knov.'1 that he ls m«tal, wlnerable and the shadow crOl!llleS bis mind that he will not alwayl!I win. But he is still strong a1 a bull, ltil1 ahead or the field. still walrus-tough. 'two scls Of alternatives lie ahead of him . as of us all. Decline can result In a search either for scapegoaB or sell-knowledge. The collapse of 1.Jluslona can bring either panic or maturity. The fall of Idols either demoralization or resilience. Defeat can bring on a i;etreal into destructive egocentrlsm or a quest for a wider and truer communlon. ~ty ~t is that yncle 5arn'1 greate&t years he ahead. Nixon Serving Out His Sentence • WASffiNGTON -An entity calling ltsell the National Campaign lo Impeach Nixon has opened offices here. It Is promising a variety of a c t i v I t t e s thrOughout the ?<'inter including a series of February "Impeach-ins," although it is hard to believe that there can be anybody left who lan't familiar with the major elements of the case· against President Nlxon. The time for Jm· :>eachment, however, ·,, past It may come . again If President Truthful ls unable to resl!t his grosser criininal tendencies, but the best chance to get him out of there_;as lost when Congress confirmed Rep. Gerald Ford 's appointment to the Vice Presidepcy. That act having been done, actual im- peachment and conviction or Nixon's forced resignation would bring us 10 our blctntennJal with the first President In OW' hi story•electnby nobody. · The Constitutional Amendm ent Wlder which Ford got his new job was not ratified with anything like the present situation in mind. It was pesaed as a means of taking care of the 1ucceaslon In the event or a double tragedy like a corooary or an assas!lnatlon. Nobody foresaw the possibility that bcith the Presldent and the Vice Pretldcnt would be driven from office as a pair of contemptible scoundrels. Had d\!Ji\11 or physlc:.111 lncapa.ctty car- ried off Spiro Agnew and RIC!Jard Nixon we cotild accept Ford o a third aCDlctloD but one that doe1 not bre1k our tradJtlon of having the whole clllsenry elect our Presidents. If Ntxon I.I Ion»<! out, hoWever, we sha11. have these two de- posed office holders nmnlng around !he country saying that the results of the J972 election were reversed ·by a con· ( VO~ HOFFMAN J spiracy of Congressional cabalists and media malevolents. OUR DEFROCKED Vice President is already piping that tune. Thief, crook, chiseler and bum that he may be, Agnew depicts himsell as a martyr and a lot o( people believe him . A lot more will believe a Nixon 1n the same sltua- Uon. We could have tolerated 30 or 40 percent of the pop.ul1Uon thinking the ~ident was robbed oC his o f { i c e if he were succeeded by a Vice President elected in the traditional manner. That is no longer possible so thal what we would "tiie-dd\ng now by-giving Nixon the boot is lo tell a lot of people it's okay to defenestrate a Chief Ex- ecutive and replace him with the nominee of some junta. In the r.tinds or many there wiU be precious lit.tie difference between that and the way the Greeks select their milit3ry d\c.-- Dear Gloomy Gus ' IC liver I.I a...i ror )'OUl' blood, then what's tood !or your liver? -B.R. VlotmY GllS CorftfMl!h ,,.. Mllnlltftd b't ,.....,, .. • "" lleCft.Mf11Y rtflkf ltl9 "'"" .. "'' ....... w . ..... .,_ "' "'"' ft OIMmy 0... OlllY P'llf. • tators. Do \Ve want to break 200 years of self-restraint and tradition to• set such a menacing precedent? If, afte r Agnew went . we Wanted to kick Nixon out , what we should have done was to pass a quickie Constltutional . .o\mendmerit for a special election to fill out the unexpired portion of the term. Such an amendment could never have gotten ratified, which Ls anothel way or saying that, bad as Nixon m~y be. the sentiment in favor of decapitation _Mill isn't large enough lo go ahead and commit the deed. HOUNDING HIM from omco, that is, resignation. is more possible If only because a lot of con1erv1t!Ve Republicans now want to dump him to save their own hides. Unfettunately if they do get him out of there, jt lvill be the anti-Nixon people who get the blame. In fact, you CJ!l expect that the same ronservaUves who will have worked to press1.1re him lnto. an earl y San Clemente retir~ment will im- 'mediately turn arountl and accuse-the rest of us of regicide. Aaain, people will liste n to them, for OOC<l Nixon is banished , many who wanted to see him •go will fe<I guilty eno~gh about doing in the national., father figurt to look around for someone to blame. No, if the Republi cans ~ant to get rid of their liability, they should do It in the open and accept the consequences. Politically, gelling rid of Nbon 11 a tenible mistake. Illa ptc!ence in tho While House Is a spur to the Conlrtss to ffnd Its· manhood (with-apolocles to the women membera for UUs figure of speeeh). Moreover, iiixon ls to disorganized and delenalve he la givlni some ground on IS!uet that he otherwlae would hold firJll on. · · FORD, oo the otber hand, would not have to be so acromroodatlntl. He WOlll.d. enjoy an extended period or opposlifonal paralysis because you've got to give a new man a chance and the rest of that traditional baloney. In the mean- time, he would serve the same interests Nixon does. It is those Interests who now want Nixon out because he botched the Job. Nevertheless. the hatred many bear Is so ferocious they'll take thesollisks and disadvantages to chase him off In diagrace. They d0g't appreciate how fine and Ironic a punishment It Is to keep Mr. Truthful serving his sentence In the White House jail. Think of it. Here is a guy who hai cheated, Ued, double--crossed and double-dealt a whole lifetime to get and keep this job, whlcn is now a daily humiliation to him 'a1 one by one he must co}lless and explain ••ch vlllamy and then while the ·world laughs as It studies his tax returns. OIANM COAST DAILY PILOT /!obtrt N. Wud, Pt.l>U.llfr ThO!!l<ll Kt..U, Edllor Borliani Krelbkh EcUtoricl Pa~e Editor ,,,. -.. ,.,.. ot Ille Diiiy Pilot~. to tnfonn and ..Umutate ""'1tn , '1y P.-.tinr on this -divtrNlcommtntuy' on top&cw ot ~ totftl "" -ttd ..... _ • ..., ,..._, ... -.. • lonun ... rttdets' vltwt and by prtttntbw thll • newspaper's oplnJons and klN.s on Cl.llftnt.toplca., Th@ tidltotial optnkinl ~,, tht Dolly Pilot -oolt lo tM editorial eolmnn at h "9 o( tht -· Oplntono ., .. ,_ bl' U. \'Ol-........ lnd _.and lotior wrltm uttl>*ow;p and ...... .., """' 0( lhetr -"' Ult ""·~ l'llot"lilauld ... -- -W•dneaday1 Jantlll')" 2;•'197 ' I . ' . • .. -. ' • WIL'co~ MIMILWIU.t; ~ 1'fl'IC~,.,,,,n/ ,,,., """ . ,, .. "You see, it's not just lhe big clUe!." L.ltl. Boyd. SANTA ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA 'Enjoy cooking ease • with Mirro electric broiler 9 ;99 Regu larly 12.99 Mirro makes great meals a reality. Broil· man-si ze steaks or 5 medium chops in-. doors or out, ·wherever there's an -~ost of Living < - .. _ llighest in Tokyo . He started out with a paper route in the redlight dis- trict of Jackson ville, Fla . Anet his. sales soared, primarily because a lot oC fellows thereabouts bought p8pers to hide their faces behind as they left the area in the varpus con· veyances. That Is how Charles Edward Merrill reportedly put hi• first $15 together. A loog time beforehe foonded that fine financial finn now known as Merrill Lynch Piei'ce, Fenner and Smith. · ' ,, Avocado paste ln Mexico is called Hpoor man's but- ter." .... Beavers, too, ~t their winter wood in the faU. ---.i..:.. .. • ~ •. ·=';· •• -.w ' ,1 . I ' -• ' ... Nowhere else in the world are taxi · fares aS high as in .Caracas. Neither sand nor salt works as well to make traction under car wheels stuck in the snow as does that gran'- ular substance known as kitty litter. So says the Maine Autotobile Association. ·cAR PARTS Q.-"How f118DY pa.its in a car?" A. About 13,000 would be typical. outlet. With element reinoved entire· unit is' i'mmer· sible for easy clean· up. In PoPPY· Limited quantities. No mail or' phone. Housewares Special putl'.hase means-low price on Eureka upright 49.99 Special The unhappy huSband tends lo clam up, go hide, wan- der off by himself. But the unhappy wife is apt to get busier, take on new chores, become aggressive. 'Ibat's another ol. tmse several pecular differences between the male aod the female. So says sociologist M. F. Nlmkoff Two-position Dial·A·Nap® · Tokyo travel experts have published a booklet desigoed .cleans both high and low pile to educate Japanese alr tQuri!b m how to get along in • the Western w'Orld. ll advises lhein tbal they may In all carpeting. Beater bar brush good manners rtmove their jackets 1n front of other air.-· --· · - plane pa,,...gers, but not their trou .. n. gets them super clean. COSTLY TOWNS • Jts 3-position handle , None, not one, of the towns ln the United States rate among the world's 10 most expensive cities ln which to live. Experts say it costs more to gel by in Tokyo lhan. ·anywhere elle. And Jesa than anywhere else in Manila. ·statistically, lawyers, house painters and barbel'!i are llstld among those professional fellows who generally tend to drink the most liquor, it's reported. Price 1ises ol ink, paper and labor mean It now costs the Bureau of E_ngraving and Printing half again as much as tt coat two years ago to crank out currency. 1be greetliig card originated In Egypt, I'm fold, In the "Sixth Century. It was a Happy New Year wUh. Al 1 .. 1 rePorl, seven out Of to brides held down jobs at the time of the marriage, and £our out or IO continued to hold down said jobs. Will you buy the lawman's claims that most drivers fireak a. law every five minutes on the road? Address mail to L. M. Boyd p:o. Box 1815 New- port Beach 92661. -------------------------------- makes cleaning under furniture easy. Order by mail or-phone. HOuse9(ares-• . • Pizza Settlement $35,000 BAKERSF1ELD (UPI) -A clvllsuit filed by the survivors of a man who died of food pol!Onlng alter eating a pizza in a Ridgecrest restaurant was .. tued !or $35,000. Au~. 27, 1969, tlE morning after he ate a ptua at the Miracle City Cafe. Keep bread and buns warm for Ihe whoie meal with Salton 6~99 Regularly 9.95 The Settlement Occurred dur- ing lhe tllird day or a jury trial. Melvin Soolsburg. 62, died Suit was brought against the restaurant~ lhe Nelthairt Meat Co. and the !lob divl•lon of the Fairmont Food'Corp .• both of Los ¥tgelei, by Soulsburg's wife and three children. CHAIN FENCE Co11tr1ctlf)9 ... -...... Llc111t• 21110 SAVE ON CH•IN' LINK. FAlll , . PlOTICT FAMILY, HOMI AND l'ITS . 50°/o OF~ l~~fL:": WA s CMe19 'llrlM Mfllttl 1i.4! ..-uttn « st.rfJ, ltW>nMlillttftlf\CI P•\111tlt ., 1nen vtnyt-cHltll t11nc. Wire 11wtc ti lllt•lllill .. ,.111n:.i .., i4•tr• Salton Bun Warmer with striking I colorful top make this attractive enough to grace your table. With walnut handles. Not shown :· Hot Party Server: Reg. 14 .95, 9.99 Order by mail, phone. Housewares • --• • < ·- - --- rrepare meals in ,a be-ruffled shirt-apron 7.99 _Regularly $10 • Choose·orange or green flowers on a blue striped background and look your best for mealtime. ' problem at all. .. Order by 111ail orphohe. Housewares Enjoy homemade sausage with Wagner Gourmet food kit 9 ,99 Regularly 14.95 Bologna and pork sausage are just a . few of the creations possible with the Sausage Kitchen. Included are a sausage stuffer, meat horn, c .. ing and c\l'ing compound, and instruction book. ' Order by mail or phone. Housewares Quick cooking Pre.sto 4-quart 'pressure cooker · 10.99 ReiiularlyJ2.99 · Besides tbt si>ff<l •ith·which you can cook, l'restri help1 prepare nutritional me'a!s. Enjoy fooc:b dlar retain th"eir nanual vitamins. NOJamm: ().qt. size:Reg.15 .99. nowpriceq 13,99· · • • ,, " .II ·. Special offer on practical· .Farberware broiler-rotisserie 49.99 Regularly 54.99 Crafted of stainless steel ii is easy tb clean. Parts can be immersed and · the· heating element is_ self- • cleaning. Enjoy smokeless , spatterless cooking for chicken_. chops and steaks; Orqer by mail or phone. Housewares . ,,. Sturdy Quaker she)ving for books, games and records •• , .. o. 7 29 99 <J-shelfhutch. · ~ • · Reg. 39,95 ~~ This 24"x70"xl6" unit made of rich walnut grain finish metal may be the answer to your • space problem. Reg. 39.95, 29.99 Not shown: 24"x76"x12" 6 shelf unit. Reg. 34.95, 29.99 No mail or . . phpne orders. Housewares Very economical Presto heaters at low prices 17 ~99 Regularly 19.99 Presto Jicinablt produces a wide even flow 0£.l'Jdiao1 forced electric heat. Practically enough to warm a ' whole room. Uqit is 2l"Jf6!1"s9~". Not shown: Dual control, portable heater. Reg. 29.99, 26. 99 ·order by mail' or phone. Housewares. ,,._... . . ' ~ ·:;:. ~:.r-'1i:.::t" ,.:'..!t"::.."'::.,'1"':""" "•• Shop Monday thr~ Friday, 10 :00 a.m. to 9: 30 p.m. ~Bullock's Sam.a Ana,. l Jashion Square, 2800 N. Main Street, S~nta A.na, _Telephone~ 547-72 11 WOOD AND WROUGHT llON ALIO AYAl\Al1'-, !:::::::==============='! · Saturday, 10:00 a.m=:-roc6~00_p;m,-Bullock's·.Sou.th CQaSt Plaza; San Diego ree~ay at Brist,ol, Costa Mesa, Telephonc:_5_56-_06l 1 ,, .. " . • I 'I .. • \ ' ll UPI Teltp/\alo Elderly Bike r Residents on Detroit's northwest s i d e are familiar with the sight of John Lytle and his 10-speed bike. Tha t's the way he keeps in shape -at the age of 90. - ' • Wedn,sday, January 2, l 'fj Two Vi iliti es Pu sh. for Desert ··Plant By nfO!\tAS D. ELIAS respo~ to the lastune com· there Plave been no earut Legislaturt, whicli. t'OUld ease ne refusal by .ie 'mi.s.ston a<..1Joo alio; is likely quakes at tbe Vi<tal Junction re q u i r e rp en t s of the Coastal Coilservation Coln· to be a desert~---site bljSJKIO-yea:ts: The"Pil nvtronmenfil Q\181.itf ACtO f misson to allow Southern The San Diego Colµlty utility Verde Valley tias ·been 1910, the utilities could move California's two I a r g est is known to favor a site in similarly stable. fairly quickly to bu i Id priva tely-owned utilities to e1-· the PalO Verde Valley near 'this is a .viral consl~eraUC?D facilities. pand their nuciear generating Blythe, while ~dison re.iected for l'he uhl!Ues, which will 'Edison, for instance, has plant at San Onofre may.have several other potential desert have to fight their way . as much irllpact 200 miles spots before settling 00 Vidii.t through -years o f en· c 0 n tr.~ ct e d Wl~h, . the. away in the desert as it w~I Junction. vironmental and safely bear· Metropolitan Water D1str1ct 9f along the coast. . ..1.. Earthquake faults are one ings before they 'tan build Southern CalifQJ;,nlaJor_up to. That's because the South'm reaS(ln for the emphasis on any new plants. 100,000 acre-feet of water an- California Edison Co. bas While there ls no Inland nually to cool deSert nuclear already chosen a remote area agency with· powers similar . pQWer plants if they are built near Vidal Junction between SOUTHERN to those of tl1e coast.al com-near the district's Colorado Blythe and Needles as the: CALIFORNIA missions there has been River Aqueduct. ' site of its second atom· FOCUS strOng • ~ition from en-· tt has also ·already awarded powered electrical generating vironrilentalists w h e n e v e r contracts for the turbine facility.' "J • •: power plants have been pro-generators .its nuclear plant desert areas instead of at-posed in the desert. would require. THAT PLANT was original-tempts to find neW coastal ly planned for comPI~ In locations. , FOR EXAMPLE, construe· the mid·I980s, with Its power tion on • F..dison's proposed to supply needs created by th!! PAClflC GAS & Electric. ciil and coal-burning gen- growth Edison exects in its which serves mos t of Northern erating sta t i on irl the ·IO-county service area. California, has been plagued. Lucerne Valley near Vic· Now, however, cojppany o!· by ~arthquake hazards ~ t torville has been delayed more ficials indicate that the energy I both its actual ~nd potential than a year in a dispute ovC;r criSts~ coastal com-nuclear plant sites, all along ttie firm's-envirOnmental im- mission action will compel the coast. pact report. .them to 1lasten their work PG&E \vas shocked last Unless the energy crunch at Vidal Junction unless they month to learn o( two prOOuces legislation to grease can · work out a compromise previoUsly·und etected faults' the skids for suCh. projects, with the commission for a on the ocean floor within two any desert nuclear power mutually-acceptable expansion to three miles or its almost-plants are at )east four years plan at Sao Onofre. complete $665 m'i 11 io n away. EVEiq IF THERE is a speedup, however, Edison will need more than two years longer to getS its desert plant ready than it would have need· ed to add two units at San Onofre. • . But the coastal commisson· - action makes it ~clear that the emphasis in choosing futu~e sites for major i)'ldustri2I facilities like power plants will be on the largely-unpopulated desert, • rather than th e coastline where they have traditionally been located. "The only way we could Diablo Canyon generating But with blackouts threaten- logically go without a com-facility near San Luis-Obispo. · ed throughout S 0 u th e r n l -----,-,.,,-,.,-,.7,.-,~-. ,-,,----1 promise would be to expedite Earlier, the utility was fore-California, it's safe to say Do Thts If our work at Vidal," one com-ed to delay indefinitely plans ·--the-power crompanies will push f.'ALSE TEETH p8ny spokesman said. for a nuclear power plant at for a s~up· in the -lead K WHILE SAN Diego Gas & Electric, Edison's' partner in the San Onofre plant between Oceanside and. ~ Clemente, hasn't yet chosen a definite spot for the nuclear plant it plans for the desert, its Bodega Bay north o~ San time needed for new. plants. Francisco and to cancel plans to build another one atop the San Andreas Fault near Point Arena in Mendocino County. BY CONTRAST, Edi s on says its geological study found • IF A SPEEDUP is granted either by 1l:!f! federal Atomic En,ergy Commission -which regulates au· safety-related matters in nuclear power plants or by th e Drop Al Tho Wrong Time Afraid r.i. teeth will drop at thlt 'WfOlll Ume1' A denllU'fl adbM!ni Call help. FASTEETH• Powder ri"81 dentu..._ • lo11pr, finne'I', •ti!adler bold. Wby6eembanuted.1'Form0f'I see11ri~y and comfort . uae FAS~ TEETH Denture Adhesive Powder. Dentuns that At aN eD!Dti&l to hfflth. ~ your deat:iat ~ly. ... 'where thrift is always in style . . BR.AS BRIEF·s · CUT32%! CUT 60c to 89c Were $1.47 ·99c . Control Bri~fs . 99c Were$1.59to$1.88_ eacl;\· CVT 23o/o on 2 2 for $3 Were $1.97 CVT 76c to $2.76 on 2 CVT 32o/o on 3 3 for $5 Panty Girdles , Were $2.4 7 ·Were $2.88 ••• to $3.88 2 for s5 i -SLIPS • Briefs and Bikinis YOUR CHOICE ' • L . . - Se~rs ........ ..;. . ( CUT 88c! Wer e $1.87 99 Full Slips____ ~ach CVT $2.74 on 2 FaJihioil Panty Hose Wert: $2 .87 2 $3 Full Slips___ . for ONLY! • • · . ·- ' Costa Mesa 3333 Bri stol St. Phone 54-0-3333 .. J . ' ;' ~~~',..""'"'-"""M• ........ ~ • BuenaJ?ark 8 150 La Palma Ave. _Orange ,2100 N. Tu•tin Ave. Phone 1128-4400 Phone 637-2100 - Slorr Hourft Mond~y thru S•turda 9:30 A.M. to 9130 P.M •• Sund1y 12 Noon tn 5 P.M. •\ •• • r , Thisis - -SAFE SINCE 1885 ? *Capital and-reserves-over twice_ . . · legal requirements. *ASSETS OVER $4 BILLION STRONG ' . . Ol 70 .. .% . ANNUAL RATE ANNUAL YIELD* 71 f.20/o 7· 790/o .. '' PERANNUM EARNS • . ** 6 314°10 6 98% 7l PER ANNUM EARNS • . ** 611.2°10 . 6' 72% '/.; PER AHNUM EARNS • ** 53/40/0 5 920/o 7l PEA ANNUM EARNS • ** -i YEARS. $1000 OR MORE. 21h YEARS OR MORE', $1000 OR MORE. 1 YEAR OR MoRE. SIOOO OR MORE. 90 DAYS. $500 MINIMUM • 5114°/o EARNS ·5 39°1o o•v1N -o•vour 'f ii! PER ANNUM . • . _ _ PASSBOOK. SS MIHlMUM. •ln.ter~st compounded daily earns indic,.ted annual yield when m1intained for o ne year. ** Federal Regulations require • substantial interest penally for early withdrawal, -SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES • TRAVELERS CHECKS ; M ONEY ORDERS NOTARY SERVICES .• TRUST DEED AND. NOTE COLLECTION • TAX-SHELTERED RETIREMENT PLANS CHECK·A·MONTH PLANS• SAVE-BY·MAIL SERVICE INSURANCE TO $280,000. Ask for details AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Member: Federal Home Loan Bank System Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Co rporation Att.nlate: First Charter Financial Corporation Garden Grove • · Buena Park ' 8231 La Palma Ave •• 12141 Garden Grove Blvd. at ·Harbor Blvd. 534-8690 across from Buena Park Center 522-2801 Huntington Beach 7830 Edinger Ave. aq;tuntington Center 842-9311 Costa Mesa 3110 Bristol St. In White Front Cent~r • 979·9800 • i--{ : OPE ~ SATURDAYS : · · . . · . Con¥enlent office! '!rvlng SOutllem ind Northern C1lffoml1! Including: ALHAMBRA • AZUSA.· ¥\'EFl.V HILLS •puENA PARK· CO~A MESA • GAROEN GROVE. Gl:END"'-E HPWTHORNE • HOU'l'WOOD • HUf.l!NGTON BEACH: LAKEWOOD· LANCASTER'· LA, PUENTE LOS. ANGELES. WK. SH IA~ c·eNTER. MANHA.TTAN BE.AcH --~ONTCLAIR~ MONTROSE ·.NORWAtK. PALMDALE PALh~ l/E~DES ESTATES · REDONDO BfA~H •SANTA MONICA· SHERMAN OAK$• ~ &AV. ~EHTat TEMPLE CITY. WHlnlEA·lPTOWN. WHlnlEA·EAST • El. CAJON.SAN 01e·do ALIO IN: SAN FRANCISCO· OA~fJr!. ~ERKELEV ·SAN JOSE •'SACRAME~O •DALY CITY-WESTUICI • ·SAN· MATEO . REDWOOD crn· ..... ~F~EL. MONTEREY. El CEAAITO • RIC~. YIN.NUT ClilEEAC SAN BRUNO• VAU.EJO ·LOS GAT S • $UNNYVAl£ • fRFIAONT • ''"'>l•RO ·SAN l.EANDflO """. --·--r . • ' ... , ---· • • ' • Lavender V ,-Iiom~xua1-only • I · 'School' Formed --. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -pllcant be a homosexual. ----7be..._only_allm.Ls s I o n re--__:_The new school is scheduled qulrement for most of the ·to open this month and ~ui:-ses . ~1t L a v e ~ d eJ organizers say prospective WU.Yers1ty l~. that the ap--students·have·grabbed up 3,ooo· "::.:.!~~-~ ·~=~~~'.'."."/ll~~_:co~,"'~&e catalogues and flooded ;""' _ · switchboard with in-A-Plant quiries. For Jackie ·Top Tale •'THERE ARE very few places where gays can go to meet other gays exce,pt bars," said Jill Gribin, 27, an organizer:-"This fills a dif· ferent kind of need . It's a way to meet people around a specific interest you have in common." Ul'I Telfflloto Cla'rbtmas Gflt • James DeMuth, 18, of Crete, Ill., is fitted with special pair of glasSes· which enable him to see well enough to drive. Glasses h ave inch -long telescopes · mounted over lenses., BURLINGTON, Wis. (AP) -u Aristotle Onassis is plan- ning to get Jackie a small plant for Christmas. The name· of the_ plant · is General Motors " That . WaS the· winning tale In the 1973 World Champion Liar contest, sponsored by the Burlington Liars Club. The winner was .. Melvin Cohen of Mi}_waukee. ' Thus, Lavender U. offers no degrees and has no cam- pus. Instead, it will,,..._ofrer courses proposed by Persons with a specialtY they want to Share, Miss Gribin said. Courses to be offered in- clude Greek literature, female -- identified metaphysics, photo workshop, opera apprecia~ion, ""1!~~"""""""""!!1!!1""...._ modern danc~ p !! r .s o_n al .:: J ewelry ' making, counselirig Rare Chali~e work shop and hiking. FEES WILL BE established by the instructors and classes often held in 'the teachers' homes. 'In Memory of Marilyn' She said some of, the in- structors are _ pr-0fessors ·and From Wire Services Hipple presented the · folio, gr~dua~e. ~tudents . f r o m Children at the S a n t a . ~rioted in London in 1685, to . u~1vers1t1f:!s in the San Fran- Catarina Roman C a t h o I i c school in Belem, Brazil are too young to remember .Marilyn Monroe, but they see her name ·every morning at Mass. Th.e silver chalice, used by the priest in the cefemOny. is engraved "In Memory of · Marilyn Monroe." · · ~ he . . , J ·E c1sco Bay area. t uruvers1ty s ames . "People seem .very in· Morrow Library, where he terested in specific e<>urses once stacked books to earn and think the school's a fan· money ror college expenses. tastic idea, but the women He is a lecturer and market are not as enthusiastic a£J the Consultant who residfs in men ," Miss Gribin said. McLean, Va .... l "Women are more into the *' women 's 'movement' than gay A horie na~ Comedy of things because the gay move- Errors won the 1 r i s h ment is mostly a men's move- Sweepstakes and $120,000 for ment," she said. a Vallejo insurance un- ·derwriter. · 'Ibe chalice was brought there · in 1964 by a Visiting American . p r i e s t rrom Chicago, aulhorities said, but Bonn.le Martin, 28, held one ---------. of the 12 \tinning ,tickets for ( JI ·_ the post-Christmas running of , SHE SAID Lav'ender U. will offer 30 courses, ,some· of which will be separate classes for male.and female homosex· uals. PEOPLE the famed race at • • Leopardstown, Ireland. ,.==========.! · itrs. Martin wasn 't certain what she and her husband, an employe of Standard Oil of California, an! going to do with what remains of lhel money after-taxes a r e deducted. other than that they knew nothing or its origin. • Mary Ann Maler, com- plaining that her husband had become "married to his job," was granted a divorce from mayor Henry !\taler o f Milw~kee. "He really lives for his job," sbe testified. "I think he is a great ma'yor." ' Mrs. Maier, 53, had been married 32 years to the former Democratic legislator, 55. • G. Worilllngtoa Hipple has given Marshall University a Shakespeare Fourth Fol i·o valued at $10,000. . "l thought, why give it to one;. of those fat cats like PrinCeton where my son-in- law goes?" said Hiwte. • . I .Saying her Jack of qualifica- tions fit the lack of duties for the offi~e~ Margar.e &· &lenlleld of Columbus, Ill}< nounced she will be a write-in candidate forJ ·ieutenant governor of Ohio in 1974. A lobbyist for the League of Women Voters. Mrs. Rosen- field said sbe decided to aeek the office because it will pay $30,000 next term. • "I ain experienced .in sitting through long meetings. So I can learn to pr~side over tl)e .Senate," she said. "That is MODEL OR REIVIOD8.. • Putlt All Together For Fun. Popularlty. Confidence ' John Robeif Powen IChOOI• of~ l"'lll••tftMl!l 1or.....,,._. ORAN$( • J Tow• & C••fltrJ' PlloH 547 .. JZJ the only duty of. the lieutenant LONG-IEACH•50l E. lrooclway governor required by the PllOM: 416-4221 '.Constitution." CHILDREN'S ..... .... .... ... ,... . " • Wtdnesday.. January 2, 1974 OAJL Y PILOT 9 < • Perma.Stor Foods is .giving away a_ one year Dinner Insurance Policy. You might witLa~one year's supply of delicious Redi-Reserve Food, absolutely FREE!!! -Just·filI out"this coupon and drop it in the J>arrel at our store before 6 pm Friday, January 4 when the big draw·• ing wilt be held. There'S no purchase necessary, but while you're ill the store, you 'll wanr to pick up on.some of the great bargains on our low- moisture foods. of GET ACQUAINTED \OtS . . ~PECIALS JANUARY 4, ~pm APl'LIANCES & TELEVISION •• Frigidaire! · 17cu.ft. One Vear Adule F000 SUPPLY Plus Eight Other Priics 6:00 P.ft1 . Friday, January 4, 1974- Address ____________ _ CifY--~--St.a.le Zip -'~- -i\1UST BE P-RESENT ·ro \VIN -'\: no purchase necessary --1 I~~, -~ PERMA·STOR FOODS 2960 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA, CA. 92626 9.6 MOH. THRU So\T. J 71A) 556·7290 Refrigerator and Fr.,eezer '···· Adntlral. 25 Solarcoloi' TV INCH Incredible .Value! ·$298 100"'.. Fft>Sl·Proof. Ackl-On Automa1;c Ice Maker mav be \mlallell "°""or 1a1er al e•tra chi!rge. Re:.ersft-OoOfS Ill~ 1or rignHir·le!t.iland o~uig. Smoolt>-glldi! Roller~ ma~e II ea~v 1co mo:-e· 19''•;ogonal Portable COLOR TV 100°/o. .Solid M""" WP""''" St&'te. No dNl5>1s lubes to bum wt or fa!ll Wlltl IMIMlt Plcllll"e and Sound, 1m1a. Malle CO\Qi' Tuning. Mal•ht·Bnslh! Pklu•e Tut)t, Pk.Ill-In Circuit Modulfl.. 7lkllltnnel0 Ulif' delenl "'"Ing, Chassis Pedestal Base Included Yllfifll-- .w!at-$398 Buy! r. -,..,. Admirat . 'Frigidaire · · -. -GREAT VALUES -~~1-9!' COLOSSAL LIMIT·ED TIME Family-Size Refrig-Freezer DISH--Witti1ce-Maker ' -ALL SALES' FINAL Buster Brown .... Dilesco Keds ... ·. Clogs Special Orthopedic Group ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK REG. TO $20. • ' DOORS OPEN 10 A.M. THURSDAY • JU FAS ION ISLAND • NEWPORT llACH ' -i;;;;;;=-=-m~__,;;=-~~;;.....~~1· -· I - • • . . ·~------ • Compo ct- • DioVOnGI 1 OOo/o Solid.State Chassis LIMITED QUANTITIES! HURRY tH TODAY NOW _s149aa _ ONLY _ ,~,-"" -tyteapedes a ~, •' early Amerlca~:g Maple color stand in niatc _1 OFFER ADMIRAL " 19 11coLOR diagonal -Mai;lel 19T761 TV s299 -. WASHER $,299- _, s1 •9 ""···-' . DU'l434 .. fKl:t1S1AU . Frigidaire Auto. WASH Rec_eiver • 4 Speakers &· · Player QUADRASONIC s13s J.MtFM INCLUOES ll:ECOllD CHANGER~ SPEAKERS TELEDYNI PA(ICARD BELL Ask about our ;l'J'fl'J!..~":.~. '90·DAY CREDIT .-·8-TRACK STEREO . TAPE DECK :"''NOW $2·1 ff 69 oNLY CRrDIT? YISI WITH NO •CARRYING CHAR~E {O.A.C.) WARRANTY. Ask-abqut Fauntaln Valley's Exclusiv.e Warranties on l\p~liallces and TV's. " ' I • ·7 OUNTAIN ~LLE.Y APPLIANCES & TELEVISION HOUllS1 #Mot. '""' Jrl. ·• tll f , • ·~"!9 t tO 7 ••• Su.,.ic.y-fll •• . ' '· . - .. • . ' • ' • , • •• . .. • • f(} DAILi PILDf Wtdnesday, January 2, 197'1 b" BU Keane ~ Burlesque Tlieater Closes "Oo I HAFTA weor it to school? Everybody'll say, 'Ha, "", Ho , I know what you got for Christmas!'" ---------- SANTIAGO (UPI) ->,. 26- year tradition came to an end here when the st.nlesque daD· ·cing glrls of the famous Bim Barn Bum hung up ·their G· st rings for the last time. The aomewhat dingy but l'ndmark downtown burlesque theater folded because of the nightly ll p.m. curfew the Chilean capital has lived under !or nearly four months. • OWNER EDUARDO Felix Pena said attendance had not been suf(lcient at early shows necess itated by the curfew. "It' hurt me deeply to have to make this decision . I don't think Santiago deserves It bot the circumstances can't be_ altered 11.nd the revue will not continue," Pena said. "'Vhen the curfew is lifted, we hope to reopen," he added. There is still no indication, however, of when that might happen. The curfew has been in effect . since President Some of the girls s~d they would go . to work a s secretaries while others would go back to being housewives. But stJll others whose only li!e Js show· business had no plans at all. TIIE BIM BAM Bum be-. comes the latest in a serle!\ of theaters that have closed since the Septemllfr coup . Another, the Tap Room, shut down nearly three months ago. It was famous for Its wild d o w n-t~the-bu£f striptease acts. The Bim Barn Bum was started in 195.1 and was the oldest or Santiilgoki burlesque houses . Hundred or striklnaly beautifti.I Chilean girls who got their first break there have gone on to bigger and better shows in other Latin American countries and Europe. S~kes, Drinks l(.illing Friend Salvador Allende 's regime was --------- By DR. STEl~~ROllN toppled ·Sept. 11. • ROSITA SALAVERRYA, the diminutive but curvy star of the show, said, "To be sincere, I wtderstand the Pro- he read my booklet, "How blems of the company. But Dear Dr. Steincrohn: My To Stop Killing Yourself," it is a shame that this source best friend is 45. l~e bas been which he may not realize he of enjoyment has to close." hospitalized twice for angina is doing. j.,,. copy may be Closure of the Bim Barn pectoris. He has diabetes also secured by vmt~g me at this Bum, the most famous of San.. and takes insulin. He drinks ti ago 's girlie hot.ises, throws paper enclosing 35 cents in heavily and-smokes at lea'it some 80 dancers, comics. three packs of king-sized coin an a stamped, self-ad-musicians and backs lag e TOM T01l'IS REPLACE GUN KINSHASA, Zaire (AP) - The government of Zaire has ordered that the beat, beat. beat of t h e tom lorn will replace the 21-gun salute for visiting chiefs of st.ate. Regional officials have been asked to recruit perm.anent tom tom beaters. cigarettes a day. dressed envelope. persoMel out of work. He feels that by the ingestionljOii ________ ;;;;;;;i;;; ____________ ;;;;i:;;;:;;----.· of vitamins and min~als like vitamin E , lecithin, yeast, and -f .I h T :t h ~~~~.;~~:c~~:i: d::;, ... I•~ -trne, e1e-nra_p_ - ing, smoking and die tary in· r · ~ p ' :I' discretions. ' 0 I have just about lost his T · II M. •1b , fr iendship .In suggesting . that . r · e ·a·· II OX. he give up smol&\g entirely! • and cut down oo .hJs allrotilil'I consumption. Perhaps a word from yau on this daal problem will be helpful . ...: Mr. B. COMMENT: One word? A lecture? I th.ink you know as ~·ell as I that any .im-· provem~nt will come from the DOCTOR IN T HE HOUSE inside. and not from oul!ide hel p. Nevertheless, it ls worth trying -even though your friend is old enough to know -better. · Loss or fr iendship will be a greater hardship on him than on you. It ·Is 'llllfortunate that often the human being rejects advice from those who are closest -and try most Jo be helpful. • Let's get this out. of the v.·ay first : Taking organic foods and all sorts or vilamin s upplements will not neutralize his bad habits. Diabetes and heart disease deserve .all the help they can get .. We know, beyond any doubt , that tobacco is an enemy of arteries and heart. A L READY-SUFFERING "3 ~ ---- £0 l-~-from---Biiglil3. he Is \nvltlng a serious sttack of coronary thrombosis by smoking so much. Indirectly, so Is his drinking. Drinking a Jot of alcohJI is detrimental to pro- per management of h _i s diabetes. And we know that ~'orsening diabetes w i I I further weaken his arteries. Your friend is still young enough· to · benefit from your concern and my advice - and, presumably his doctor's, too. Un1ess he somehow fortifies his will po~·er; unless he quits smoking and drinks much less the qdds are In fa vor of a shortened lifespan . Doesn't he care? Then there's little you , I, or anyone else can do to save him from himself. Show him this column. On e never ca n tell. You and I may have combined to be the s6lulion. At least. we have tried. It might help also if .,. Specicil Tapi1igs. B UDAPESf, llungery (UPI I -The Hungarian ~tinistry or Justice i~ 1ak- ing' no chances of . a flungerian ''Watergate '' I Ul pe-erasing incident. The· ministry had ruled that from Jan. l , I stenographers be replaced ' [ at trials by tape recorders . . But following protests th1t recordings of legal proceedings c o u I d ac- cidentally 6e erased. the ministry ordered that only special eraae·proof mflchines be u~ tn court. To. be meani~OI, ideas have to be distributed. The most e.ffcient distri bution system for ide11s in this community is the Daily Pilot. And its "M11ilbox" is 11s close 11s your m11il- box. Write 11 letter to the editor next time you get 11 gre11t ide11. • To appe11r in the "M11ilbox" section of the D11ily Pilot's Editor i11I Page letters need only be written in good t11ste , fre e of libelous content and not more than 300 words in length. Names can be withheld on request, but all submis- sions must include signature and ma iling 11ddress of· the author. ' ' Let your neighbors get your ide11 -tell it to 11 m11ilbox ••• the Daily Pilot "Mailbox" · Stveral Tlm11 WHkty • DAILY PILOT Edlto~lal Page ' , .. ' .. • • • on Heal.th and Beauty aids . • CR ESt , ~~ TOOTttPAST E /Ji .AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY nLwt13oz. 'f ~ ;:i f / ~i i» 0 MYlANTA . LIQUID 121L ... gge nL wt. 7 oz. I I j i \' 1 I l I 1 I 1 I I Ii DRISTAN COLD TABLETS 24'$ -79e • GILL ETTE THE DRY LOOK HAIR SPRAY nL wt 7 oz. • . ' • • • • ®C •. SCOP E EXCEDRIN TAB~~ 100'• · MOUTHWASH g ' 18 IL oz. 79¢ ARRID :\RRlll EXTRA DRY l\TR..\ I>Ill ANTI· lnti·pt!SJ'~· ~Pl'IY PERSPIRANT nt. wt. 9 or. -age BRECK SHAMPOO • 15 ti. oz. ,_,1121 ~ °"a.a.rs.-.. -, ... _ --·-·-.. ·----··· VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE LOTION 15 fl. oz. gge I· i , I • .· • I -' .. .. -l -...f"~ ~ ,,., .... ·---"" , ·- I· &r----IQllll-. 1 Mayo1· of Tust~ Eyes .LAFC Suit' Wednt$dat, January 2 •. iq74 DAILY PILOT II Rapist Who Valle_y Case Other ' Deatlis Fell Asleep County W idoiver Sentenced · · -. SANTA ANA - A rapist SAN MATEO (UPI) - Goor1e I::. MootJ0111"1, 711, pruldent ol the Kern County Land Co. from 1954 to t9S9, " dieil Tuesday at M l ll 1 Memorisl Hoep!tal. 'He had · been board cbainnan of the giant (inn from 195~ until 1967 when Jt wa1 merged with Ten· neco, Inc. . 'SANTA ANA -Local Agen- , • cy Fonnatlon "CoinmlHion Ex· j ecutlve Officer R I c h a rd Turner has derued tllat the · COITlll\1ulon acted Illegally when It removed the Marine ' 1 Helicopter FaclUtY I r o m Sa 1tere J1 i urged "'ho fell asleep in his victim's • reconalderaUon by the I.AFC and lhreatened that the city bed hes been sentenced to was "prepared to go to court a state prison tenn ot not to have them rescind the less than three ·years. removal action Ii necessary." ORANGE COUNTY~ Orange Cowity s u p,e r i 0 r ~DEC. 12 dedslon by the • Court Judge J•mes Tulner Suing Murderer ' " Sl\NTA AN!\ =--A..Jl'.illow~.!L.l.talo.l'J'json_\<t.IUM_fiyt,XW• Fountain Valley man has sucO to !Ue for the slaying or the the t'Onvictcd killer of his wife cockta il waitress. and the fi rm thal ·cmpl991td hin1 as a security guard for $18 million in damages. POST STATES In hl!laws ut that Wallace ,,..·as on duty for the Burns agency at the time •' LAFC reversed a rullng <>! "'---------' ordered the prison term for two years ago and also block-Harold Combs, 31, Anaheifn. Tultln'1 1J1)1ere of innuence. PITl'SBURGH. '(UPI) Fwleral 8ervJces will be held , ti"rlday for Sharon Thtmas, 17, daughter of f o rm e r PlttabW'flh, Pirate 1 I u g g er Frank Tho mas. Sharon died Tuesday alter foiling :i; feet. down an elevator shaft when she attempt~d to make a rive- /oot leap to snfety fr~n · a LE ADS AT'f<>RNEYS Huntlngton'1 Bonfa Tustin Mayor Do n al d Saltarelli claimed the 'action was Illegal becauae Jegal notice had not been given and " a publl c hearing was not held on the llsue. ed. Santa Ana's desire to in-after the burly cab drlver elude the t,583-acre helicopter Fullerton pleaded guilty to raping his base on Red Hill Road in next .door neighbor. its !phere. Police said Combs took ad· Saltarelli argued th at Bids to Open vantage or 'ru s neighbor's DAVID POS'f, 10079 Quail of the killing and that the Court, nnmes Bu rns lnternn-secu rity fir1n is responsible lional Security Se rvice s ol for hls acti()ns. Anaheiin as princi pal defen-· lie points out tha t Wallace dant and ~l~rine Corps Sgt. used a· Bums auto in the kid~ Jared Alh1n \\fal\ace, 26. as n a p in g and that lie co·defcndant in his Orange 1·epresented himself as a <(aunty Su perior Court lawsui t. security officer to bis-victim. because the LAFC was con-absence on a camping trip C t • G sidering Santa Ana's sphere • last Aug. 16 to enfer the home H • OUD 18ll els on Dec. 12 it could not sulr FULLERTON. -Bids lo about midiilght and rape the untington tract from Tustin'• sphere construct two new butldlogs man's wife . Portland Post without calling for a new hear-will be opened in January at Officers said Combs and his M, H d ing on the matter. Cal State Fullerton. wife had earlier 'hosted the OUNTCIN an ea s PORTLAND. Ore . (UPI) -However, Executive Ofll cer J8.incs B. Sharp, associate woman at a dinner party. 11.ulh v. ounton.. 11.11111tnt °' NtwPGrl Brad L. Fry, e:!l'.ecutive direc~ Turner said the commission vice president for · facili'" · They e. ffe. cted his arrest when I NCi!: d•T• of dffill'I, 01e1mber 31, v h ked f 1t n . ·survived w 11111aN1, a. 1urtwom Aid G tot of th e Muckenthaler has the au t ho r l t y to pla nnin g and operations, said l e v1chm ran na rom ~r1~ :.:id J1~11n0~~r::11·c·=~~~ e f0Up Cultural Center, Fullerton, periodically review and revise that. bids for a seven·floOr, fhe home to seek the aid of l(MOs111, WIK011tln. sa1ti·B•re1ro~ Fu-Calif., bas been chosen as the sphere of influence and is not $4.9 million,classroom building ne ighbors. 11er1I Home. <or-dtl INr, Forw1rd• 1119 01rtttor•. Don Bonfa, city attorney for flrst e~utlve dlrector ot the required by law to publish and the-three-four, $6.4 million Police found Combs, also . stalled elevator. Dea th Notl~e• Post also nan1cs h i sr=---~ chiltlr e11 . !)avid. 7. and Shan-TH non. 5, as ci.rplaintiffs in tht.>I E EARL'S Prum1M111, H•lflltl Air C11'111. action. Ht• states they \\'Crc rendered motherl ess ~ n d deprived of suppo rt when their\ 111other, NanncttP. 27. \\ilS\ n1urdered h.. \\lallace last T1m1 s11rts. "l •t vourllMr f'cb. 9. L1gun1-s1ddl•btc• A"°""" ''""' L. Gom•~~~1'*'1 01 L6911111 • Hun tington Beach, has been city-county arts commission legal notices or hold public Student Union have been naked, fa st asleep in the vic- Hl11s1 d•rt ot dMfh, 0tc«n11tr ». here. hearings on such matters. advertised. . tim's bed. 1t13. s unl'ffd by wltt. M1bt1 M. G«nt11 elected pre·'dent of t he"---------------"---------------------'--'--'-:._------1wo brOll'l.,.s, Attar! F., ti SKrlr'!lfl'llOI °" •. :1 \\'a llacc is no\\' st>r,_·i1_1g_"___'-::=:''::"::·::••:;0'::1==='::"::·:::'':'"::':= 11:11w1rd 11:. eom. •• &1111• c11r1! 11v1 Orange County City Attorney 's •l$lers, Mf"!I. Al'l'l•ll• II . ll:lflO, cl Sun• 11yv1111 Mrs. H91tn Rogtrs, 51n J1»1; Associati on while Fountai n Mr1, Ettl Je1n Osl ... bt'1, S1r11too1, • ' c11tlorn1&1 1.011111 Nt1tt1t1, Sunnvw-1111 Valley City Attorney Tom l!l11nor ltCll""'' Aub1,1rn, C•lllornl11 \\'oodruff will be the group's l'untrll Mrvlttl. Thurilday, 2 PM. . McCormick l11un1 IHch C"'-"'· with treasu rer. _..... · llf't. M1rk W. Or111 .. Unllff MttlWldl1I Church of l t4Ufll Hlll1, off!clttlllfl. lfll1r-mtlll, !:I Tcwor Ceme!try. McCormick l11Ufll BtlCfl M<lf"!uerv, Director&. MAYl!S f 1ny1 L. H~ylH. t11fanr d•UOllTer cl Mr. Ind M•s. Lelend A:. Haves Jr. ol' l llOUfl.I MH1J, Dllt of dHth, DMlm• btf' J), 1973. AIKI wnlWd bv ,aiernal 9randte1'!\tl'", Mr. Lelafld II: H•'1ft Sr., of P"-11lx; 111lernal fl'lndrncitl'lfr', Mr1. H.tltfl L Fllr>g of Tvcttlfl. Or1'1ft10t ...-VICIH, Tflurildey, 11 '"'· Atetr11lcn CtmeltrV. McCormick L19una Stach Mortuary, Directors. MEYEll Merion ~yer, A~ 751 rflldet1! of H11mlnvt011 811ch. D1i. of deam, De· c•mbllr ll, 1'73. sUn l'ffd by son. JCPhn A Mf!Ytr, of $1. Charltt, MIU<:HtrL Volunteer WOl1t,,,. 11 Huntlnvton !ie•ch Llbr•rv1 M""W of Sllv,,,. J.n.chllr Av•· ll1ry, Huntlrlfl"' 1nlt>r.C01111t'1Urlf!y ..,,_ pllal. 5,,,.v1cn, Tll\lndty, t PM, Slt'llt'l'I c~. 1ni.rrntr1t. Good "*""""'!! Ctll'I .. 1 ... v. sm11111 ~...,., Dlrteton. • OUllMIN Abbl'f E. Qut1111ln. Ao• 1); resldt11! of L19ufl1 Beach. Diie ol detlll, l>ee«nbfor 77, 1t11 Sur.vi* by J)llrtlll>. Mr. 1nd Mrl.. Frank W. Qu119t11, llfl."I e..m; two ll'''"' Anflt end l ttl11 ""'.,"'' grarldmothlr, Mrs. AJUc• M. 01gQJ, W1sfl!nglcn D.C. FuMrll Mnllcet w..-e htld Mondev, Otctmber )I, ~lcCormltk L&11un1 k•ch Ch11111I, wllh Rf't. Roberf llonlllll of SI. George's ED· ISCOl>ll crwrch of l .011111 .,0111. ~•· flcl1llfl0. McCormitk La11un1 lle«fl Mo!"!uary, OlrtdcA. llOUlt: A. Ru»tll ROUM. Resident of t:19o1na Hlll1 Dall of dealh, Dectl'l'lber lO, 1m . Survived by wlte, Alvin.a: d11UQl'lltr. Mrs. J01nne R. BotlO, Georola; l'ft'o 11r1ndct>ildr1M, l ynile alld D1v1d BlllXI; t.an~t1-l1w, Richard c. BObo: ,r11tr, M1r!e P1yne, Lagu11a Hll1s. SMv~1 Wiii bl tlf'ld Thur...Sey, i PM, Pa(ltit View C!wpef. 11111rmtr11. Paclnc .,.,..,,.. MtmerllL P1rk. PtcUlc Vltw MorltrY. Dlrtclotl. SANJIORO-- • BOTJT MEN will serve for . 1974. Other officers recently elected include: vice presi· dent, Alan Watts, Anaheim : secretary, Eric Lau t er er , Gard<n Grove. Bonfa, ·45, hes been head of the Huntington Beach legal department since J uly, 1968. J1e previoualy pr a c t l c e d privately in the ctiy and before that was a deputy city . attorney in Glendale. He holds a law degree from the University of Michigan, WOODRIJl'F, 35, hll! been Fountain Valley city attorney since October 1969. Beiore that he waa an mistant city attorney In Newport Beach. He holds a law degree from the University of California's llastings COiiege ol Law. Coast Man -- Ordered To Trial · o-;11111 L S1t1tcwd. All e4, of 1•11 Florld• Ave., Hu11ll11o9tofl 9Htll. Dell 01 d1111'1. Otctmlltf l1 , 1m. svr"J:"' •r. si.tcr, Edllh S1nlord. of l r111 Ive n ecn at>d 11ve fllPl\IWI.. sltr'llcn . s ,ur-SANTA ANA - A Fountain dfly, Jenu•,..,. ,, 11 AM. Bt'll Bnad· II -· h -bee id' " / wfv chapei. l'r1.,.11 1n11rmen1. '111 ·Va ey man as n o ercu ··=·-=='='=M="'=~="=' =o=''=K:;;'~;;'=-:===, to face trial Jan. 21 on charges r ~of anned--ry, kldnaplng ARBUCKLE • SON WESTCIJFF MORTUARY ~ 117 E. 11111 SL, C.Ota &loll 1111111 • BAL'J'Z.BERGERQN FUNEJIAL HOME . Corona del Mar, 17MIA Costa Mna !If.WI • BELL BROADWAY MORTUAR)' 110 BroadU'li.C:ta Mooa • DILDAY BROTllEllS MORTUARIES ~ 17111 Beach Blvd. BDDtlagtoa Beach 84%-7171 t44 RedoDdO Ave. Long Belch ~1115 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Lepu Cuyoa Rd. 49f.lllS • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Cbapel , 3500 Pacific View Drive ~:-Newport Btacb, CaIHornla_ 14f.1700 • PEEK FA&ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7181 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 8t3-3U5 • S&UTR'S MORTUARY If! Mala St. HDDt1•.,.a Beach ~ and aS.ault wilh a deadly weapon,... Orange County Su pe rl o r Court Judge James Turner set the trial date for Glenn ti.1ichael Miller, 18. of 15893 Logan Court, and onlered th• youth returned Jan. 4 for a pretrial bearing . Mill er was arrested in Foun- tain Valley June 25 after being identifred as one of -two men who were given a lift by two local resldenta and then beat up their benefaCton. Police said the vieums turn- ed on their abductors and sub- dued them after the car allegedly oommandeertd by Miller and his companion struck another auto. Probation officials s a i d Miller is a Crow Indian who is known to his tribe as Phillip Plentyhawk Jr. ~tiller was awaiting Kern Countl court action for an alleged bufklary at the time or his Fountain Valley arresl PIJBUC NO'nCE l'ICTITIOUI IUllNll S NAMI STATIMINT T"-fOllOWlnfil perf«I I• llclflll bu•lMU Iii Kl ll lC.'S MEAT$, 1511 S. l"lowtr, 51nt1 Anll, Ct llf, SlletdOll DI Wlrr Klrk1>1trlck, 41 8ro.dw1y, Cotlt Met1, Cell!. t.16.21 JHM Klrllp1trlck, •'' 8rotdw1y, Cc1l1 Mn1, 92627 _ Tl\11 bu1lnes1 11 COflChKttd by I n tldlvldu11. , 1 • J1tr1 Klrk1>1trlck Thlt 1111emont wet flltd with '"' <oUnl'f Clerk cl Or•no• County on ~ecember 2t, ltn . '=================='! ..... • Publl1hed Ortl'IQI Co.ti Delly Pllol, PUBIJC NOTICE f•nt.11rv 2. t , 16, 7J, 1t1• 3tll-1l l'ICTITIOUI l\ISINISS NAMI. I TATIMl.NT PUBLIC-NOTICE The follOWlllll ptnCr'I I• doing but!nn l i : ~Al CONSTA.UCTION CO., ... 0911.1. -x~-.-,CT-IT-IO_U_S_l_U_Sl_N_ll_S __ Street, (Oltl M'kt, C1. nm I NAMI. fTATIMl lfT e:dward A, 811oOh, • Ool• ti. Tht follow!119 per•on It doll'IO bVll11n 1 Ccslt M"'' C.I. f2U7 11; Thli bU•lnlll Lt cOlldutltd bY I Hlll.IEll.T HAWKINS REAt.TOll.S, lndlvld1111. • 10231 Sliter Avtflllf, 'ou11t1l11 Vllll'I' EdWtrd A, l lklfh f'210I Thlt 1t11tmtfll w11 1111411 wUl'I Jol'lr'I I'. Trwllt, ,.., Ntplilll'lfllt County Cler• of Ortnclt Coilflty A.,.,, 1"ount1ln V11111. Ct llf, '210f Otcembfr 21. 1m , , Tl'lls bu&lnm 11 cOflducltO w tt1 l:ltdl Mlvldual. PubUalled Or•nte cc11t Danv Plhit,::; Jofln pt; Trcpl11 Je11111ry 1. t, 16, 2J, 1'74 "22"1~ 1 Thh l lllttMlll wtl ftll'll with tht ,;,::,;;:_:_,--:::-:::-':::-::==---,JCounty (!Orie of Of•ll9e CouMIY Oil PUBUC NOTICE 1 hnri'!blf ta. 1'71 ,JOU1 Plibllthtd Drlnot COftf Dtlly ,llol, l'ICTITIOU& •USIHlll I 1111111ry 2 ,, ''· n. ,.,. ~7l NAMI I TATlMINT JI;_::=.:._;;.'.;;,..;;,.::;_'-"--_;;,::,;, TPlt tt14lcwl1111 perJOM trt do~ IMl~T·~~E'E INTERNATIONAL, PUBLIC NO'nCE Vl1!a llj'I Or., ~ I HCh. _.Clitl;jl :1--.:.,,===-,.,==--~ P.O. 80ll til, Cotti "' JllCTITIOUS •utlflllll C•lll. '2'11 • Pett'f P, P1llt01'ino. 355 Vltll 81 , ~ NAMI STATIMI T brlvt, Nt wricrt BtK h Ctlll. PIMO TM followl!'il ll*t'IOft I• dOlllO Ml'llltH Judllll Al"'-P1ll111rll"O; 3SJ VII tt~ ' BIYI Orlvt, . Newport 811ch, Cell RANCHO AL ISO. 200 Wfttcl1fl Drive. t16'0 _ NOWPOl't ltKh, C1l1 kim/1. ,,._ O•m••n Fr1ncl1 PtllfOf(no;" 3S~ VI•, ltlch•rd v. Jord•t1 (Otlltll'l l "''"''')· Blyl Otl.... NIWJ'Ort Bnch, •Ctr 111 ' AbtlCnt1 l tlbcl l1l111d, C1Htorn!1 t1&t0 fl'W.2 Thi• blJ1lne1s 1• tcnclutltd bY Thi• t1V1h1ttt It . btlllO UlndW.lld bV 1111lnc:.Ol"PCf'1ltilf-I SlOC:lltlOtl olfllt' lfl•fl I l tmlftd l'trtnl!'llfl lp ptrlneflhlp. RICl\fl"d V. Jord•ll p111r Ptul l't li.tJflfll Thlt lllltll'ltfll flltd with 11'11 (ovnly Thlt •lt ltrl'llfll 'Wit. fl~ wflh I CllrlC °' QrtMOI COUll•Y on OK. 31, COllfllY c11rlt cl Or•flll• co11111v 1'71 w11111m 1. St Jol'ln, county Cltn Olct!T'Mf 21, 1'73. ~ ey Tl'ltl'ttl M. W•rd• tlt911ly. • • 1JI • '*" l'ubli.htd Orl!IOf Cott i Ot11'f l"lt • l'Ubllll'led Ort~ (OIJt 01lly Pilot, J1,.,.,., i. t. ,., It lfU, ans. .11nu.,., t. ,, 1•, m, "'' ,,,._,, • • • ----- e .. -• • ' CO .OUR EASt:. ' " Celebrate the Year of the Tiger (4672) with a FF!EE taste of the Orient at Anaheim Savin gs! Drop in January 2-12. Find exotic treats and marvelous curiosities all in the ~hinese tradition! Chu n King joins with Anahei m Savings to pr~sent a fascinating Chinese New _Year's Celebration. • Sample Chun King's tantalizing Chinese dinners! • • FREE recipes to make you a Chinese gourmet-be prepared for a fabulous surprise! • See our dazzling 35-foot-long paper Tiger...;, a jolly monster which can be your~! •· Reward friends and chlldren with "lucky money" in authentic Ch inese New.Year's •packets! • Try your hand at chop sticks! • • Learn the age-old fable of Buddha's creation of New Year 's-told In a un iquely beautiful folder! I ALL FREE whe n you come Into Anaheim Savings a nd di scuss your savings Qoals. ' ' • Be a Tiger with your .savings in 1974! In the Year of the Tiger, .. ~·:-.: according to Ci1inese ... • • ~ :::·~: wisemen, you will aim .··'""·,.·, • ~~ straight for your goals ··~ ·~-~:·\ • • ,,, ,· .... , ,~. . .. ··'· with great courage! • '• .... ·,:-. .,·.-........... ' .,. .. ..~ ..... Follow their sage advice ...... ''•·1 ,. •\10:1'•· • .,, •. , •• . ... ..·.·t ····\::.,·· · · ·• ,_. c·... · resc 0 . • .... ~ • ' • .,. ~ .. . !Je y ur savin gs •' 1, 1'•• • • •• •,(1, 1 • ··" ... '• ?\"•'''),'"·'~,.. ...... ..! ., ... ,. from the money i·ungle. • ·' · -~-\....,.,_ --·' -~._.. .~ ... ---·~·· . St t "th ~ .. -...; ... ;. .... ~.·:'.· ,, \t'"'~' ''1 '1·~lj'''~· ar yournew~ear w1 an ,, • ,,•!•'t•:•·'•.'' ···r 4-\.~.~L.-~ '• account at Anaheim Savings. · · ·-'\·.•' .:., •. "•\ ~,. ···~:;·1°1• ·'\:l.:_·~,':'l·'· -~ ~ Your savings eern higher lntereat-Stii o/o at Artahelm SavlnQs. •. '~ •, And just a $SOO'account gives you all these fre8 services: Checking account, money orders, safe deposit box, travelers checks, trust deed collection, photqcopies, notary pu blic service, income tax pleparatio n (wi th add itio nal qualil ications) all FREE . • • FREE individual lnco!ll• Tax Pre paration. Learn how you can qualify. Come in thia week. Appointm ents are now being made for 1973 f ederal and State income tax returns. . ,-..__. q ung Hoy Fet Toy. ,Bring a fri 0J1d .. , bri ng. the family! ANAl-IEl'M SAVl·NGS. and Loan AS&ocla\ion / ,~3 y'ears ot service lo Southern Ca!Uornla In Hun lington Beach ~1 41 1 Main St., 536-6591 Olllcea In Anaheim, Bre a, Escondido, Hemet, Huntington Beach, Pasadone, Rlver11dt. ' ' - ( ' • ' --~ ' .. • _,_ . ' ' Wednt$d1y, January 2, 1974 . Catali1J11 lsla11;__d Race · Announced The Los Angeles Yacht Club has announced the schedule of Its 1974 \Vhilney Serles or offshore sailing races starting \\'ifb the tridilioMl Midwinter Catalina Island race Feb. 23. It will begin the second decade ol the Whitn ey Series which started in 19M with the ded lcallon of a trophy by then Commodore Lewis J. \Vhitney Jr. to encourage local offshore racing .. There has been oo ap- preciable change in format of the Whitney Series for 1974. Following the 6 8 - m i 1 e Catalina Island race (leaving the island to poffl, the second race of lhe series will be l\larcb 9 with the 87-mile San- ta · Bat bar a Island race·. leav- ing Santa Barbara and Sutll islands to porti ..The others islands to port. T+l-lsland Rare, Mareh 22, leaving S {l n ta Barbara Island, Sutil Island and San Clemente IsJand to port: -the 100.mile San Nicolas Island race, April 19,' leaving Beggs Rock. and San Nicolas Island either to port or starboard. The Stewart Trophy Race. fo.1ay. 18, is inother 68-mlle circuit o{ Catalina Island to port, and the final ract Is the 128-mile San Clemente Island race, leaving the island to port. The overall winner or Ute series is computed on the best rive of the six r.:1;ces. v Shmv N11ff • • , . ' Energy Bill. Back.ed -Boat Fr.tel Allotments Affected • Boating'e prospects for 1!174 took a sudden turn for the better when ttie Ho u s e Interstate and Foreign Com- merce C.Ommittee voted its version of the Energy Bill. The panel adopted by volce amendments of Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. (R. Calif.), and Rep. Fred Roooey (D. Pa.), * * * Bill P1islied ' By Boaters to require the Prtsldent, II allocation of fuel for boating, he allocates petroleum or elec-recreatlon~ vehicle an d trlclty, to do so ln an equ.itable private flying will be given manner. The two congressmen pertinent material, including said this \fould protect in~ procedures for letting their dustries threatened with large desires, be known to, their con· fuel cutbacks, notably the gresslonal representatives. BOATING general aviation and recrea-The Ei:po will feature nearly '---------' tloo ind\IStrles. 200 ~f the latest 1 9 7 4 '!lie bill thereby guarantees trallerable boals ranging irom Resource Post fuel supplies for boating and tiny foldboats to11shing boats, SACRAMENTO ( A p ) _ personal use of automobiles, baM boats speedboat for John Maga, execuUVe officer recreation vehicles a'n d water skiing and self.con-of the California Air aircrafJ. The bill now moves. tained cruisers which, sleeping Resources Board, has been h ~-s'x can double as ' travel named to a deputy secretary to the House floor w ere qui\;11, 1 • ' trailers for inland vacationing post in the Reagan ad- pasSage is expected. From as well as navigating on ocean minis tration's R eso urces Boat 0 w n er s ~social~ ther:e it goes to a Senate-House and inl~nd waters. Agency. T~eth~r, a Cal 1f o.rn1 a coliference commltlee. ·,i~.:i~i;;ii~~----;;;;ii;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ij leg1slatlve group operating un-. . . 11 der the initials BOAT ·Inc., ,. ln hne wtth th Is, the ''JH-.AD SHE BLOWS" is urging all ils members to. Boating lncjustr)' Association, ft' . write to their respective con-composed of the eight leading gcessmen urging support of U.S. manufacturers, w i 11 WHALE HUNTS-WEEKENDS ONLY an amendment to t lre sponsor an exhibit at the 15th Lake Erie 'Frostbite Regatta' Attracts 22 Emergency Petrolewn Act ual . 1 . Spo Sterti"""' Dec. 29-9 a.m. i1nd 1 p.m. • Queen Jody Hermans sounds an optimistic which would establish equity ann lntemationa rts ··• she plugs for viewers at the nation's first boat show in fuel allocations. Vacation and Travel Expo · at the of the new year, the 32nd annual San Francisco The amendnient to HR 11450 which runs Jan. 4-t3 at the DANA WHARF SPORJSflSHING \Vas sponsored by Rep. Barry Los Angeles Convent Ion 25102 DEL PRADO, DANAuPOINT, CALIF. Sports a nd Boat Show, which opens at the Cow Goldwater Jr., and Rep. Center. CLEVELAND (UPI) -Jim Frijouf of the Lakeside Yacht ... Club decided sailni; dinghies was so much fun it ought to be tried on Lake Erie even in the middle of winter, so he set up a "Frostbi~ Regat- ta" for New Year'( Day - and figured uo one would come. Palace Jan. 11. The show may be the first indiCji;lor Fred Rooney and \vould assure Showgoers Interested In Please Call For R1Hrv1tlon,s of What is in store for the boating industry for 1974 that pleasure boating would get boating and inform ation as to (714) 496-5794 831-1850 invi ewoftheenergycrisIBj:·~·-:;:::::::::::::::::::~i~ts~r~ai~r~sh~a~re~of~f~ue~l~a~lloc~a~ti?£1~·~h~ow~~to~h~cl~p~ce~rt~i~fy~a~fa~~~================:i:=:=::::::::::~:::~~ 10 .,,, ,,, ,.., "' He was wrong. 'l\venty-two dieh?rd sailors brought 11 mirror dinghies to the Icy lakefront for the t .... ·o-race e1'e,nL The boats,· lightweight 10-foot craft come in do -it - ytiurself kit form fr o m England. Frijouf happily acknowledg- • ed. that the idea of racing dingies in 2~egree weather was "moronic." "What a way to celebrate the new year -crazy, huh?" he said. 3~Newpo11 · Boats Top Sho'v Field ' Tree Ne\.\'J>Ort Beach-built yachts-including botft power . and sitil .-are being billed as the stars of the New York Boat · Show which opens at the Coliseum Jait.-1! and runs through Jan. 20. " "' ,.. ... ,,, """ ,,...,_ The sailors agreed. H\Ve're nuts," said one as he rigged his craft ln the club's lagoon, "but I love sailing." The water temperature was All three of the locally built yachts a re from the Whittaker Corp. boat division-Columbia 37 degrees. Safety crews stood Yac~t~, Coronado Yachts and by in two inflatable rafts s.ince 1t1end1an Yachts: . @ a dunking in~ater_U1at_cold~. The 48-~oot Mer1d1~n ~w!er wou1d cause unconsciousness 1s only UiCJies shorter tfian in about ID minutes, Frijouf t~e biggest entry in the show, __ .said.~ the 48 foot nine inche yacht 10 .,,, IOO .,,, But the day's only mishap.! teras. \Vere blamed on rocks jutting 'nJe largest sailboat entries Crom the breakwall n·eat the in the sho\v are Q>lumbia45 race area. Holes were punched and the Q>ronado-45 motor- in three boats, forcing the sailers both from \Vh ittakers withdrawal or two. Newport Plant. SARTY MAKIES A HAPPY SHIP The owner of the third, Don · The 64th National Boat Show Bartels of Solon, c8me in sec-\\'iii feature houseboats, big ood in the first race. Then cruisers and large saiJing au>.:- he pulled his b!>at out of the iliaries in addition to the usual \\'ater, patched it with tape display of outboard runabout- and finished third in the series. and small cruisers. 'JfOMJ''l':WJS; by Capt. &b. SAVE\ENERGY ieoATING There has been a lot.of misinformation alld confusion · regarding the use of fuel for recreational boating during the current "energy crunch."Before you nish out and put your boat on blocks, take )ust a few minutes to separate these FACT! • FACTI FACTI FACT! FACTI -FINAL FACTI FACTS/ram ACTION. . . Although boating is America's number one family recreation sport. all of the pleasure boa ts in the U.S. consum~ only 1/2 of I per cent of th e fuel used nationall y. Al the same time, recreational boating is a clean. healthful. family activity enjoyed by 40 million middl e income Americans. Recreational boating.is.a $4 billi~n indu stry directly employing 500.000 persons. plus providing imponant support for thousands of other firm s. No responsible government could conceivably think of seriously damaging an ind ustry that has such a· profound impact on ou r nation·s economy and people. By far: the ·overwhelming percentage of recreation boats in the U.S. ar e small (average 16 feet) with low hbrsepower engines (40 per cent under 20 horse · power)-NOT ihe large luxury yachts featured in fiction. Wh en you spend the day boaiing wilh your famil y: you probably are using LESS energ y lhan if you stayed at home. You're savi ng energy because you're not running several !Vs or hi·fi's. The air conditioning or heat can be turned off. You're not burn \ng lights. Your wife is not using the range. hair dryer. vacuum cleaner. or other energy consuming appliances. You're also not burning up fu el in your car shopping. visiting friends-or fuming in a freeway.t_raffic jam. Boaiing is a close·al·home sport fat Southern Califo[llian~ You are jusl a short fu el·easy drive to many excellent waler recreati on areas.! • Boaiing 'is Important lo millions of A,nericans. And to A~erica. It is a·heal1hy way for you And you r family )o get away from it alf-and get together. On lot> of all this. boating can actually helpy<>11 SAVE ENERGY. Think aboui ii. -• • • now! mo:re ways you save/ . when you save at a LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS . . . family cial center ~~~~~-free · Income Tax Preparation Let a professional prepare your personal tax r eturns at no cost, in private, \Vith all i nfonnation held in strictest confi- dence. Required: $5,000 or more .iiJ.! any savings account (ex- cept 7'/:>% Certificates, 'Vhich mu'St be $10,000 or more). If you \\·aiit to transfer your account f rom another institution, \\'e'JJ handle the details for you. It you have a Certificate of Deposit, \ve'll arrange your tax appointment now and trans- fer your Certificate at maturity with no loss of interest. Safe Dep0$it Box Join The Informed Buyers "Club" Get all the inside information without having to fill out any "club" application (your Los Angeles Federal Savin1r5 ac- count for $1000 or more automaticall~· entitles you to use or s pecial direct phone line for.discount sour<25). Impartial t.est reports, best b111•s in 1974 cars, camerasi fishing, camping equipment, home appliances, tools, etc. Pim travel bargains: charters, group and individual tours. Personal Checking Account Do yo u have one? You should. Paying for one? You shouldn ·~. If you have a savings account of $1000 or more, a safe depos1b box is yours free. Note: if the branch where you keep your savings doesn't have safe deposit boxes (some of the offices under construction do not, yet) you can have your box at another branch. There's probably one near \\'here you shop \Vh y 'pay a service charge to have a checl:ing'account? You can have one free ........;.. including your first omef oc. personalized checks..-at a cooperating state,vide commercial bank. Re- quit't'd": a Los Angeles Federal Savings Account of $2500 or more. v--..::or:..,::\\'.Ork. . I Income Tax Preparation • Personal Checking Accounts • Informed ~ ~\. e Life Insurance • Date Reminder Service • Travel • RTD Exact Fare ::~~~~--:::.:;;:;;~~ p ns· Buyers' "Clu b" • Paperback Book Exchan'ge • OVER-the-COUNTER .~ Tokens & Schedules • Los Angeles Federal Savings Quarterly Magazine ~-.... """'.' ~ Safe Deposi t Boxes. • -Travelers Cheeks • lil oney 'Orders • Notary =~C ~ Service • Personal Document Copying Service • Buy or Ca!h in U.S. • -~ Savinl?S Bonds • Note and Trust Deed CoUeetion • Special Tax Defer-::=-ment Savings Accounts • 'CHECK-A-~ONTH• Jncome • Passbook Loans • Payroll Savings •. Piggy Banks • Cift Checks • Postage-Paid =-Save·by-~fail Envel9pes • Funeral Expense Protection • Free Parking• orne taz Extra Hours -Open to 6 on Fridays ' . ' tnc ration prepa ---··· -~~;.:.:. .. :.~ OM .. ~.:: •••• "=-'··-......... !'::-:. ~:.:::·~~-":::-'.:'--:::o;; '"=' .: .. ·-,;,;;~: :::·. -· ,";;;;., -:: .'~·ii#:.~:=-.;~:.:=. ..... • . Most Important Service at each Los Angeles Federal Savings Family financial Center, or course, is • -highest interest, year after year, on insured savings You also get the valuable assistance of the Los Angeles Federal Savings Counselor, who is trained to · r -traiislate the sometimes baffling lang\iaeP of finance into plain ~nglish (and sometimes even plain Spanish, Japanese, Chi- nese and other languages). -handle all the details for you '''hen you ,.ant to transfer your ftccou~t to Los Angeles Federal Savings, -help you decide which account, or combination or savings ac- counts, \Viii give you the highest income on insured savings and the best protection for your estate. START YOUR LOS ANGELES FEDER·AL SAVINGS ACCOUNT TODAY. ONE MINUTE AND ONE SIGNATURE IS ALL IT TAKES • .. ANNUAL I NTEREST RATF.S ON INSl]REIJ SAVINGS I '5X% ,,,,_.. KCOllllf: llO """''"'"" baiallt.'J iftl11'" <IM!IPOUnd d1Ur1 •llM•,., '"' • """ wllflOuf CH of l~!tftll. Of llolO la< '"' "" 1i..i rl•" of 5.39% .. - Al interesl compounded daily 5%% 6~% 6%% . 4 ' 7~ ' Ctr1lllut1 Cli1!!1c$ C1!llllt 11t 90·&;& 'c(Ollnl1 of 0tiiv111: et Ot.W '°Cco.onl, ll. °'"'°'!! i i.ooo or lllOflt 11.000 Of !fl $1 ,000 •• ~··· 111111111 co= td 1 felf 11\lfUfl!Y; 2Vi 1'1111 ~YI . ""'""'' ttltr fer t ld ol h101111 cc':t:CllGt11 lntutll co'" H IOt Jltlt 91· t 11tr lor r tld ol • ••llr for r ' o• • 5.92% 6.72% I 6.98% 7.79% . ' ' WILSHIRE FINANCIAL DIS11ICT1 6S0o WllUiirc 81Yd. at San Vicenk • 6Sl·7l60 CRENSHAW CENTER: 3690 W. San1a Barbara at Marltm • 295·2621 . SUNSET VINE TOWER -HOU. VWOOD1 • 6290 Sunset Blvd. at Vint St. • 4~·6'411 VALLEY PLAZA TOWE~ -S,i.N FERNANDO VALUVt .12160Y.ktof11 Blvd. niar 4urc1 4anyon • 9114·2)56 CElllllTO$ CENTER1 I lllS South SI. at Gridley Rd.• 4·5-'llll NEWPORT IEAOll1 • ll2l Newport Bt•d.·• (7t•l 67l~ 00 (Ac:rott the RI•t fr0tn City Hall~j ~ -HEADOmCE-DOWNTOW , One Wilshlrc BuUdin1. Wilshire . d. at Gnuwhl ~·t ·• Los'Anada, Calir. 90011 • 61S·7J41 ot Zcnlt TY~ ·- ---- J . . •· ----... ---• • -.. . . . . .. ,., Wtdn~sdily, J,lnuary 2, JC)74 OAILY PILOT J :J THE BR.0 .ADWAY . . - • How to Quit· Smoking? By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) -I see by the papers that a psychiatric i n s t i t u t e tn Germany is offering a cor· rcspondence course in how to quit smoking. A course lik e that ought to go ovCr big in this COWllry, too -particularly if it is one or those corresponde nce schools tha t advertise on l)apcr matchbooks·. BETTER YET, American co rrespondence schools could offer lwo courses: one for beginners and ooe for ad- vanced sn1okers who have tried to quite ~several tim c.s before. The former n1 ight be listed in the curriculum as Elt~men­ tary Nicotine Abstention 110; fhe other "''ould appear in the l'atalog as Suicide ii t I. There's a possi bility, of course, that the . corresP.On--·-de~e melhOO might not \.\;01'k In America, our postal se rvice be ing what it is. A STUDENT n1ight be able lo stop sn1oking by lhe end of the third lesson. Bul by 1hi ti me the fourth lesson ar· ri\'ed. he alread)• v.·ould have forgotten \\'hat he learned and "'ould be back in lhe habit ag ain. Or lesson· five would arrive before lesson four, throu·ing the \.li·hole program .out or whack. Nevertheless, it could be. v.·orth a try .. Here are a few lesson outlin es to help get lhe class organized: -Lesson one -oriengation. Before oilc can learn to quit snwki ng, one mus1-ramilia rrze one's self v.·ith the various "'ays to avoid s mo k i n g . Ge nerall y 'spea_king, there are lhree options open: 1. One does not smoke be· cause one has no cigarettes. 2. One does not smoke because one has no ll)atchcs. 3. One does not smoke because it is too windy or raining too hard to tight up. .• ~lave the studen t evaluate each of these techn iques and indicate his preie'rence. -Lesson one -orientation. Once the student learns the ways to avoid smoking and has selected the mcist suitable 1ncthod, he or she is ready to draw up a plan of action. If. for example, he chooses No. I. have him complle a ~ list of places -iCebergs, cranberry bogs, grottoes, etc. -where cigarettes a r e unavailable. Then have him go µiere imn1 ediate\y. -Lesson three -substllu · · lion. Assuming tlUs lesson reaches twn ,' it will fand the stud ent in the throes of withdrawal and in ba'd need or a smoking substitute. Sinco.llllOldni primarily in- . voiveS thetnhalatiOn process, the student should devtlop counlcr·hablts that req\!h'e a great deal of exhaling. 1 Ploying the trombone Is an excellent cigarette substitute. Blowing up air mattresses ts another ••. -Le""" four -repeat lesson one only this time have the student pick a method "' 1 'tl'lat has some chance of wdtk· ing,- KlD S LfKE ·TO . 'ASK ANDY !__:___- • • , ' - ~ ~ ·\ BOYS' SUPER ' PANTS SALE 3.99-5 .99 6.40-'1.00 volues. Boys' penis, dress y !ooks•ond jeens ot o tremendous sovings. Meny different styles ond colors to choos e from , including cotton corduroys, fi ores and more . Boys' Clothi 9, 98 - ANAHEIM ' 444 N •. Euclld 17141 Sl.i-1121 , • --· - ' ~. BOYS' WARM SKI SWEATERS 6.99 Reg . $10. Choose fr om ou r own lobel mock turtle s or pottern ed ski knits ; Some hove mot chi ng cops! Great colors , sizes 8-18 in wo rm bulky knit acrylic. Boys' Furnishings, 26 ' • • . -; ·~ r ' . ': ! ·I! i • \ PANTS & TOPS FOR THE COLLEGE CROWD • SAVE 40%-50 % Reg. $20-$30 Swe eter bono nzo includes bulky. cabled knits, ski styles, fishe rm an knits , ~mbs;yools and mof hine-wosh oble woo1cshet lands. 1 1.99-14.~9. Re g. $9-$14 Famous mo ke r jeons ond dress pents, some with cuffs, 2.99-5.99 . $15 volue Acrylic tu rtlen ecks , long sleeves, fashion colors, 7.99. Reg. $17-$21 'Dou blehiit flares , some with cuffs, ossorled, 9.99-11.99. Un iversity Shop , 53 ·Pont Shop, 94 • SPECIAL MEN'S SWEATER EVENT 10.99-12.29 A ~uge selection of clo ssic pullovers from famous mo kers .... or bold cobled looks ond fishe rman kn itS. Greo t colors, patterned ski swea t;rs and many more. Come see them oll! •M en's Sportswear, 50 .. .. , - • NEWPOAT •7 f e•lllo11J1le11G 1'71 41 64 4.(212 HUNTINGTON I EACH 7777 Ed iru11•r A¥•nw• 17 1•1192.)l l l ORANGE, MALL OF-OltANGE 2l00 N. T1111/11 Sh ••f 171 41 991.1111 ' CERRITOS SOO Loi C•rr ilo1 M•ll 12111 160-IMll SHO' 10 A.M. TO 9:00 WEDNESDAY THROUGH..fRIDAY .SAT URDA Y 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M •• SU N.D-'Y t l NOON TO S ,.M. ' ' . • • - \ I ' i • . . • ·. j . OAILV PILOT WedntSday , January 2. 1974 ·P~li ce R eform's Working Vatlcrua O.rder Mass for Cliild1·en Pushed \\'ASlllNGTON j UPI l · Fra1iklin' s Love Life lrt Course ... • Me 1ilo Park Cliief Pnts Respect 'Qack in La·w11ien. 1'he Vutt.ca'n has issued dircc· tions ror IQ. the children. adnpling the ?i.111s.i; understanding o r A ne\\' "Directory for ~lasses \\'Hh Chi 1 'trt. n '' 1>ernlits extensi,•e adaptalion and ·si1nplific<1tion to en- coural?e children to share in n 1\lass scaled lo their level or understanding,, the U.S. Co.Hholit Confl'rrnce~re1>0rt.s. Suggested -changes appi)' to ~1asses "'ith groups 0 r children and to the ordinary Sunrlay 1\Iass "''ll.r.re adulls ~nd children are present. "Priests are given guidelines. on their 1nanner of speaking a n d gesturing and adaptation of prayers. participation by the children through singing, p I u y i n g n1uslcal instruments. making pictures to Ulustrate the homi- ly or other parts of the tt1as.s and reading from the Bible. 'rhe directives tressed, howe\•er, that much of the NE\VPOllT. iR.l. (AP) -Tidbits of information on Berijan1in Franklin's love lite and the fare ln 16th century taverns will be offered in a college COw:sf geared to the na· tion's bicentennial. • Christian Scie·nce .Afonitor Service MENLO PARK -\Vho eter heard ol a policC chier who "'ould abolish his O\\'n Police force? Well, four years iigo when Victor I. \0 100 bi:::1 b\ 21 percent In the city last year. • L>uring the past three yeara while burglary rates \Vere souring fn Other Anlcrlcan-cl_tics by ap average of S9 • pci·cent. lh.e rate dropped_ 8 percent 111 ~lento Park. . , " .; 'ltf 111f1ke 11/,0ilej'help peqpl~ Emphasis is placed on • i\fass be acl'I In its originul form to. CflCOUrage 1rariSition by the-. children into the parish as ad4lls. Morris Plan o California's Largest Loan and Thrift Service • 3700 Newport Blvd., New port Beoch Coll George Wodmon, Mgr. at 6 73-3700 Salve Regina College, a small liberal arts school, is promoting the course Cizanckas becante chief or police in this co1nmunity of 30,obO just south <1f San Francisco, that v.·as the first thing he did. - Y.ith a bunch of posters FROJl.f 1'0P TO bottom he eliminated that depict Franklin wear· the traditional polic.e · bureaucracy. ing a sheepish grin. Among a list of irmovations, he put green "Next to Ben Franklin. ~lenry Kissinger is a choir blazers on his men instead of ·the tradi- boy," the ad copy .says. tional dark uniforms, dida"Way witfi cap- •·tn addition to being a tains, lieutenants, and sergeants, estab-- statesman, diplomat, in-lished operational "teams," started a ventor, etc .. Ben was a lso quite a c h. a r m e r • "ride a1on8" program for the public, and somt>thiRg like a Henry ...1--<un ed a police "force" into a police K. · · "se vice." 1ss1nger 1n g r a n glasses." The results have been a little short of astonishing. The police bureaucratic • Vigilante Group Eyes Carvin as . ~ HIVERSIDE UP[) -A vigilante group has been form· ed to protect endangered desert carvings made ., by California Indians some 5,000 years ago. In recent years, according to st;ite and federctl range·rs. some or the 1.000 known hislorical sites have been marred by Va ndals. ln some cases, thieves have carted off and sold entire boulders et- ched with tribal markings. --isaac-E3.Stvold , a former consultant to the federal Bureau of Land Management. ·said th.e vigilante group was formed to prtvenl further ,.·~ndalism and pillage . Eas\vold said that at sites ,.,,here the Indian etchings are especially valuable, members Y.'ould keep "'atch on them through field glasses during tlaylong shift s. Not ai r tQe vigilantes will be cit y d\vellers. though . Eastvold ~d. Some "''ill be miners and desert prospectors. "structure has to go because the evidence is in," says the burly, 3ffable Cizanckas. "It doe-sn·t work anywhere." NOW HIS controversial innovation5 are being ci ted by police reformers and ex. perts as the candle in the dark for law enforcement. "Our resulLs indicate "that such a pro- gram· goes a long way tow3rd having the community say 'our' police and not 'the' police." says Cizanckas. irenlo Park r.tayor Ira Bonde says. "At. first when Cizanckas changed "the system there \\"ere a lot of questions and comments. No\v I hear nothing but complimentary remarks. \Ve r:ealize that not every city cOuld do this, but \\·e ar~ very glad it happened here." CITY ~tANAGER Michael Bed\ve\1 chose Cizanckas to be chief and pro- moted hi m over seven more senior officers. Why? Because Cizanckas had demonstrated uncanny skill and tact dur- ing a riot in 1967 in Menlo Par.k's black community. \Vhat little criticism of ch i e f Cizanckas's i1U1ovations there is L'Omes from traditionalisLs in the community. Says a Menlo Park busineS:sinan. '"a policeman ought to look like a policeman." He says pg,licemen should not be social workers, but ··symbols of authority." Another critic says the green-blazercd police1nen are "too friendly." OJtA\\'ING ON ideas includL'CI in the . 1967 rcix>rl fro1n the President's Con1- 1nission on Law Enforcement" and the Administration of Justice, and ideas fron1 Dr. Abra ham i\ilaslow, a 1nanagt.'- mcnt psychologist. chief Cizt.inckas thinks that th.e "dichoton1v between social \\'Ork and ix>lice work -has lo be resolved because a policen1an spends 80 iw.rccnt of hfs time oo social service. The poliecn1an of 'the future \\"ill nol he a specialist; he "'ill be a professional generalist." By eliminating, captains. Jicutenanis. and sergeants. "role playing" \\'as elimin3.ted. "\Ve did 11way with 4the parent-child relationship thiit plagues the inner \\'Ork· ings of police depurtments.'' says the ehil'f. Operations n1anagen---were-created \l"ilh patrol "ltains'' and plenty o[ op- tions available. like patrohnen being pern1itted to conduct their O\'UI in· . \'C'Stigations. JNS'r EAO OF delt>etivcs. ~lcnlo Park operates \\'ilh "crime specific units.". Burglary. \\'h.ich accounts for 55 percent · of lhe crime in i\1cnlo Park. \\'as cut "-'\\'e call it ·target hardenu,g, says {.:ii<inckas. slunding be.fore a ~ap .of ~trnlu P<irk dotted wdh n1ult1colored pins. "\Ve'll go to a !1<>me a~ tell the O\VUer how_ to secure 1t eronom1cally. \Ve"Jt n1nrk his , appliances and other valuables for idenlification. We'll give hiin a checklist o( "'hat lo do when he goes on vacation. "IF TllE llO~lE is burglarized we'll scod out a team .to 3.Jlalyze "'hy. We call it llallern analysis. Not loo long <tgo y,·e did this so well that we were actually on the scene when the burglars arrived." , . Three weeks ago. after a thrce-monUt investig~1lon utilizing R key . undercover 'agent . the i\·J~nlo _Park Police Depart· in!·nt \\'as responsible for catching 31 pcf~ns during a raid _ on a burglary ring. . . 1'o irnprove relations \Vlth Menlo Park's Brack comrnunity, chief Cizanckas launched a ''Tldc along" program. A(tcr a son1c\\•hat h.11lting start, b I a c k teennagers are volunteering to spend lhl'f'e or four hour:;: y,•i\h policemen on the job in pntrol cars. ~~ollO\\'·Up stud.les indicate th<1t the youths are coming a1vay 1\•\th lasting fuvorable i1npressions. l;'!IPJ:E~t ENTING such broad reform , chirf Cizanckas s11ys, vras not easy. "Half the department resigned in the first l\\"O years." h.e said. ''But those y,·ho stayed and those \Ve attracted are bright. caµ.ible pt."()ple \\"ho . thrive on this approaeh. '' Ke thanks 1\1enlo Park's ''en1ightened city governn1e nt"' for allowing him. a 10-°year veteran qf the police department, to launch !his 11pproach. • ~ ,. "i_Qi:t IT TO ,v.·ork in 0th.er ei.He~ .. he says. '"there has to be a pof!t1cal 111andotc to ctian~. Too often the in- grainL'<i political system is the roadblock . ··1...:1\\' cnforcen1cnt is really a 1nisnomer," he says. "I've never en- forced a lav.· Jn my life. Policcn1en only start the process. It is the courts \\'hich inforac lav.'S," Try Satu rd&y's .News Q";Ji We Da re Y ou GORILLA GOT HUMAN lfELP SYDI\'EY, Australia (AP) - Iiuman bl~ plasma was u!>Cd in an operation amputating the right leg of a 16-year-old female gorilla at Sydney's Taronga Zoologica l Park, the zoo director said . et your ree" ne aver-• ALL ABOARDI Sears BIG 8'' x 1 O'' .LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT • NOW ONLY GENUINE FULL NATU RAL COLOR PQRTRAITS! Not the old style hnled or painted black & white photos. Child age f1m1t. 1wee~to12 years . GROUPS PHOTOGRAPHED al an add11tonal 99c per sub1ect. ADULT PORTRAI TS LIMITED OFFER! One per subiect, two per fami ly. Couples. parents, g_randparefits, ' lamlly groups are welcome. Groups This ref'J spec/1/ otter 11pre.sented11"1n ' at 99c per additional subject. erpre11Jon of our1h1nlr1 for-your p1tron19e. . - . Pl'lotographer available during normal retall store hours, . Thursda·y, January 3 t~ru Sunday, January 6. . . . ' ~ ... Buena Park Co1l1 M111 - OP AT SEARS AND SAVE Sears · c1r1on Covina . '°" 0....,..111ttd °' Yow-},f4ft"'J _Da,c• Ctrrtlo1 L1gun1 Hill• • II.US, flOUUCI AHO CO. • 2 95 . lor ind1vidu111 ,. ' . Orin.gt Torrence S1nt1 Fo Sprl ng1 It's rhe little things \VC all do that h~lp solve tht• hig problcn1~- So, Imperial Sa,·ings crt•a tcd this handy "Encrgy-St1\cr-\\lht·cl." IT'S FREE! Dial it for helpful hints"on ho\v to save on c·lcclricity. gas, oil. and the food ~·Uu buy. Ask ft:tr a free "Encrgy-S~l\·t·r-\Vhcc l" at your nl:!arcst ln1pcrial olfice today. And learn ahout lhc hi gh interest on insured savings.Fro1n .~,:;,.,"' S.2S~U on passbook accounts and up to 7 .501!-0 per annu1n on lern1" accou nts-cun1pou ndcd daily for additional interest."' Get the must fur your .-.::ivi ng" at l tnpcri~I. •Althou~t. lcdcr,.I rrg11l,1t1fll1• "'IJUH< 'ubst~11t131 ;.,tert•sl pc•n.1111~· 1u1 •.. •11<· "othdr~" ~1 "" 1~h11 ~· ,·uu11 l•. ln111'."t •.ol,,h~~ •""'on~' r>l .. n ithl righ~ lor '"'"' 11<"al' •'' EDDIE ALBERT . A lmAERIA~ SAVlnGS -· -Flan-fQi;· All People . Do .. •ntown Los Angel~. Claremont · East Pasadena • Glendora• Ne~porrBeach •Newport Ceottr ·Pasadena · Redlands • Sierra ~fad re, Topanga Canyon. Weot "Covina· Westwood Village · Whittler• 'X'oodlaod Hills. plus 16 other Sourhcrn California offices. ·~·~-O~~f/llM"Rl•911.llQlllll;lllOll...,lllOl ~•·•oo~ unm • -..... -----------• .. ' - OP!ON SATURDAYS Special I lours in Most omCCI. ' • .~ ... • PtLOT-AOVERTISER Secretary Disputes 'Av€rage' , By JOYCE I.. KENNEDY • DEAR JOYCE: 1 read your colwnn abou\ what secretaries earn (averages r a n g c d betw"'n $7,347 and $9,51!3) wllh h\lmor. l would like to know where ·you find jobs like that? J am 53 , have worked in an orflce since 1937, and reel I ani quite a good secretary -not the best. but good. I have v•orked in a one-girl office for thnec years, and do the following : Handle the work for TWO companies t y p 1.n g , shorthand and filing; take packages lo the post office for malling, including those (Career Corner) one boss brings from home ; do the cleriCBl work for one bosa·'& wife-who is active in polltlcs~ do typing for a civic poet the other boss holds: run an offset printing machine and also do other miscellaneous chores. None or the extra work was mentioned v.·hen l was hired. I have asked for a raise since I have a IOll starting college , but the employers said they do nOt have the money . 1 make the big sum o( $100 a week . I would ·be satisfied with an additional $25 a week. The good part Is thnt I work close to home and work from 8-4 (5 days a week). However, 1 tel very few holidays orr. I would llkc an answer as to · how you received the figures you did because I am paid the amouf'!l lower than the lov.·est stenographer. - B.L, l'hlladelpbia, P1. STENO OR SECR·E:l'~RY, v.1hen It comes to signing a payroll check. your employers have <t terrihJe impediment --- 12 01. IONUS SIU Ultra Ban DEODORANTS I ' I OZ. PLUS I 4 OZ. FREE ' 1.29 SPUNTEX Mattress Pads ELASTIC ANCHOR BANDS Luxurious comlort! W1U 1etain ~1le and fit al ter repeated washings. fULl 4 47 SIZE • Popular colo1s in 3 79 polyester with latex backs. • PURON Bed· Pillows . Polyester "foam core" lilied Sleeping pillow. ....._ STANDARD SIU KING SIZE . ·2:5.00 2i 7 .00 17x23" Bed Pillow ·Foam filled wilh 2:5 00 ,,_ .... printed cover. I • r ' YARN RUGS -IOD% Acj1llc, 4 plJ ' I. r1rn in colors & white. .... 77~. 3. 79 .. I •• . "NO-IRON" WHITE SHEETS bJ CANNON MONTICELLO _, Blended cotton alid pclye5!er. Tape • selvages for reinforcement. ·TWIN SIZE . f l1l or Fitted ' .. Denim Royal SHEETS PEQUOJ ·A [E Place To Shop! State Fair SHEETS Daisy · Delight SHEETS bJ CANNON MONllCELLO All -over gingham pattern in• vibrant colors teamed with white. Polyester and cotton. .- TWIN SIZE 2.99 flit or Fitted • FULL SIZE :f.69 fl1I or fitted PILLOW 2:2.49 CASES bJ CANNON MONTI CELLO Multi-colored •.. bright and fresh as a breath of country. - TWIN SIZE f li t or fitt ed FULL SIZE fl1I or fitted PILLOW CASES 2.99 3.99 2:2.49 ,-..:...~ PEQUOT ' -~~~. Rambling Rose TOWELS ~~. ·• • flo;JI 'print on a bone background~ bloom colorfoJly in ··~~fl~ ~~u~:atlhroo4m.9 BATH 2 49 WASH 59c l . TOWEL • TOWEL • CLOTH •• DAILV' PILOT J :i • 45c 4~~ SUfllt lOW fliKl Dish Cloths CANNON MONTICELLO 97 Asst'd solid colors in terrJ. C . • PAK Ofl Dish Towel CANNON MONJICELLD 1 17 IJ«y checks w/lringed ends. PAK Of 3 • Dish Cloth CANNON MONTICELLO 1 17 Multi co!or waffle weave. PAKOf5 • TERRY CANNON MONTICELLO ColGrful terry with various designs . PORT·ABU Room . Heaters Instant radiant ribbon heat. Fan forced air circulation. Automatic . temperature contro!. 132D Witts, !5 B.T.U. 1650 Wills, 56318.T.U. ' 1 31H2510~88 #3DH2612.88 ~-k -"<lart.r°I ..a•. ".I. <Gr ~ I,•> Q WO i ........ ~ Faucet Queen jn their reach. Rewarding yoor performance at $2.86 per hour ls disgraceful. They prob- ably assume your age makes you afraid to look for another ~ job. I . .. .. . . MONTICELLO ··~•· •••·~---~ --, If you're fed up with being ~ an underpaid y.·orkhorse, you have two options. The first, , getting a raise, has already been turned down once. But i It's worth making a sea>nd C try becawe you seem to like p the hours and convenience or :. location. Your other choice would be to seriously consider other employm ent. ·Money magazine ran on ex- cel lent article in December, "How the Raise ls Won ." As a special courtesy to readers cJ. this column, a reprint is available. To obtain a s~le copy, send 10 cents (for po9tage handling) to me at this newspaper. Write "RaiS<'" in . corner of your outside envelope and allow several ~·eeks for delivery . . As n1r earlier c o ~ u m n s!Ated, the figures quoted were gathered from payroll records by the Bureau or Labor statistics and are na- tionwide averages. Pa,y varies by location M well as by 1 employer. To illustrate. Jay Engle, head or the executive compen.saUon service at. the American Ma na ge m ent AssoclaUons, says a secretary to a. chief execuuve officer can expect $2UI a week If she work1 In Chicago's Loop, $189 In the northern suburb& and $184 In th e southern suburbs. In Tulsa her .sal1ry would dip to $t7S. but ln Loo Anw,ies tt would go up to $211. FOR ADVERTISING IN OUT '.N~ ABOUT PHONE NORM -STANLE ' ' 642 -4321 • Cutlery Tray ' . • ' RUBBER ~AID ~ ~·· f!fil . , !iM.11 I Slip· on wilh .ie1ible bellows neck. Fits alt faucets. I ' - -SI• compartments ••• tor all standard drawers. Solid no-iron blue luxury muslin with accent piping. r LADIES' & MEN'S GLOVES ,• "Ve n11s" for ladies in assorted 99c colors and "Orion" !or men in black vinyl: PR. • •• • TWIN SIZE Fli t or Fitted FULL SIZE Fl i t or f illed PILLOW CASES .. Aloha Towels b1 CANNON "ADJUSTO" ' ' Th w"k1Ny I Island charm ... beauliful !lowers on velura backgrounds .. ; 22 DI. Sprayer ! an OU ! HAND 1 27 BATH 1 77 WASH 57c '. • ~ . NOTES TOWEL • JOWEL • CLOTH ; ' j MONTICELLO Adiusls tor ~ > , S iet ~oarse ~ ~ Soft1e TOWEL b1 CANNON I or m11t , ... An extravaganza of dramatic soj id colo1s in riCh Co tton velura. HAND 1 27 BATH 1 77 WASH 57c 1 TOWE'• , TOWEL • CLOTH MONTIC ELLO Melody TOWELS b1 CANNON Solid bright colors in cotton to mix or match with printed patterns. HAND ·57c BATH 97c WAS~ 3: 97c TO WEL TOWEL CLOTH • spray: c 1 SIGNATURE ' ' ,. ' Ass'd Stiles ; 28 Noles & .1 Envelopes. " .,.,.._,..,,...,Wl,WiiiM---r- Greell plastic with ~··· 3 89 bore. IO·YEIR GUARANTEE! • Freeze-Flex 1 ' ' • • I DAILY PILOT . \;, maste~ '¢~arge ·~1 '"U11&A,.• r .ar ' I .MSC.I -~-·--~ SAi llllAllllO SAi FUIAIDO "'·--·-1410111MM11tr..t'-. ...... ..~c...,.. ... • SAITA AIA ......... ....... • • . -- .. < ·--.. ·APPLY FOR WEDNES D~Y;JllURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, JAN. 2.3.4.5, 1974 y BELLFLOWE R 104001-"" .... '°' ,..._., FULLEITOI '1t)ON ......... 19M, e!T..WU... MOITCLAll - •400 c.flfttil "-... ...... ~ .. SAITA Ff SPlll'5 .,,,,,.....,.. ...... ,,,.. !"OM C IMlf CYSIOMll !:j - lll lff O• AMll KA TODAY! tlflppy . . -. ',. f'· tJaw1 _ . i•'" ' f\\.fAS DEVELOPING & PRINTING-. OF 12 EXPOSURE COLOR PRINT BEAUTIFUL NEW BORDERLESS SILK FINISH COLOR PRINTS FILM DEVELOPING OF KODA(HROME 36 . EXPOSURE COLOR SLIDE -FILM 99 COLOR PRINT FILM .·. SLIDE OR MOVIE FIL'M · DEVELOPING & PRINTING ' OF 20 EXPOSURE COLOR PRINll' FILM IN EITHER GLOSSY FINISH OR NEW SILK FINISH PRINTS . . ' . ' - DI NO FOREIGN FILM .. ·'.;' ' CARTRIDGE 110 COLOR PRINT FILM ·DEVELOPING & PRINTING OF12EXPOSURECOLOR PRINT FILM SIZE l 10 ,,.-- FOR POCKET INSTAMATICS IN SILK FINISH. • IUEl A PARI IUEIAPAll SllSU!iwl11A"' ' 1301 hlidllW. • v...,v-...... ~ ...... 'LEIDAil HAllOIOTY ,,,,.,...,.,.....M. .. ~°'· IO. HOLLYWOOD IOITHllD" , ... ..__.., t1tliW IHOO"""-A-, -•c.tloi11 SIMI VALLEY • SO. LOS Al ,ELES ' COSTAMHA ---..... UITllGTOI llACH lt101 ...... ........ OIAIGI ' ltJJ N. , ....... ft ... THOUSAll OAKS 20-EXP. KODACHROME · • STANDARD 8 MM OR SUPER I MM DEVELOPING OF c KODACHROME 20 EXPOSURE SLIDE FILM OR COLOR MOVIE FILM. ,, . . . . . ' . . CARTRIDGE 110 ., SLIDE FILM • ~ DEVELOPING OF DI KODACHROME 20 ' EXPOSURE SLIDE FILM SIZE 110 FOR POCKET INSTAMATICS. ~ ' . ~ • COIOIA COVllA EAST LOS Al,lLIS IL TOIO 10SN • ...-&t. 1 t•a N. °""" J7'04~1ML ntt1ar ..... ~-..... ..c..w.. ...... ............... -............. llDUSTIY" LAIWTU UlllG llUCI MOllOWIA .t»S. ........ M. ll ttw .. A-J, ..,.o-., ..... . 721""' -v -2 11ecbl.ef~f'lwf· ~ .. c. ......... .... .._i..-....,. OXIARD llALTO llVllSIDE llVUSIDI 1J4J a-.1 w-t' UOI. ........... JOOl lewe SMtf "" . .... •V---................ -v" TOBAICI VALEICIA .Vll TU RA wisr•1sru llJ01kW"""' J1J ....,,.Nr.1-i ''"°~ ........ 2Jl21V._.lt...&. Int s.wtll ~ '-, ............ •11.n-.1...-·~aw .. .. .-..,,......., v ··-•1-ltOlh ,., 11'1.Y._.._ ' ' ' ¥.' , __ .....___ ~ -·--~-- ' • • • I " --' .. ---~ •• .. ' -. . .. , ... Wtdu'esd<1y, January 2. 1974 DAILY PILOT } ' Ohio ·State Throw-s ' Trojans fOr a Lo-ss, 42-21 '. ....., + .. !lf4!4.. Better Team ·Won, McKay Exclaims By ROGER CAIU.'!ON Of tht D;illv Piiot Slt ff PASADENA -A deadly combination was 1nost respoOsible for the Universily of Southern Calirornia's demise ·!n the 60tb ~ilion of the Rose Bowl football grune, according to SC ' coach John McKuy. His 0\1·n tca1_11·~ ina_hilitx._ to +l'11t::h ~on tG the offerings o( ·quarterback Pat liadcn ~nd Ohio State's ability to click through the air. Those were the t1vo main irritation points for McKay as he surveyed the wreckage or his 42-21 loss to Ohio State Tuesday. Ohio State's fi rst pass attempt was intercepted early and some observers thought that might be the end of Ohio State 's aerial game. But it wasn't. .-"If-Ohio State had done-that (stopped .throwing) we would have won," venture<:! McKa y. ;'The passes set • up their touchdowns. [ don't want to take anything away from Woody Hayes and his team. but we weren't fooled by their passing game at all. • "\Ve worked hard on it dt.ll'iDg practice and we tried to stop them. But they executed and made it work." Southern Cal's aerial thrusts were con- 1inually stymied by a tbree-man rush with the emphasis paid. to double coverage in the secondary. "We just didn't do what 've \vante<I to do," said McKay. "We dropped the ball a lot. Pat Haden got the ball there but we just didn't catch ii. "I thought Haden did a phenomenal 1 job and my son.; John. pl{lyed well. We just got beat by a better team." McKay1 whose Trojans lost to Notre Dame and tied Oklahoma, confirmed his earlier statement that OhiO State was the best team his eleven played this season. Mc'Kay 's Trojaru; featured 14 un- derclassmen among their starting 22. but McKay said you th was no deterrent. -"We weren't too young to win ... we just weren't good enough." Anthon y Davis, SC's No. 1 running thre1tt. was thwarted most ·ol the af- ternoon , by Ohio state's massive line. but McKay refused to rap his Spict3cular junior. -''He-Just~aidn't carry-tliellan~uiiir many times. He ran and blocked \\'ell." Someone suggested use 1·ould have been better orf to have played !Michigan. "Atichigan? Majbe they 'd hav~ beaten us worse,'_'._ suggested the SC men tor. Today We're • Best in Nation, . I Haye~ Claims By STEVE BRAND 01 tllt Dtlly PUot Sltrt PASADENA -WoOdy Hayes lxnvlerl over the entire Rose Bowl press corps Tuesday evening. Th~re v.·on•t be any law suits against the Ohio State coach this year, however, as his weapons were kind words and congeniality normally reserved for . am- bassadors. Woody the ogre aever made an ap- pearance, 6ut a smiliug \Voody answered every question tossed his way after a IO.minute SJ)eeCh praising everyone. 'Ibis. of course, followed his team's 60-minute display or outstanding football in stopping the Univeflity of Southern California-in-the Rose-Bowl, 42·21 . "'Ibis is th e greatest victory I've. no. make that we've .bad," said affable Woody, the grimting coach from Ohio. "I figured 28 would be enough J.o win but I don 't mind the frosting. We worked 15 days on passing. We worked, and worked, and ·workl'd ." · Buckeyes quarterback Co r n e I i u s Greene threw eight passes and completed ltix for 129 yards. That success was totally unexpected. "USC •stopped running teams 1ike UCLA~and Oklahoma," expJained·Woody. ''And since we are a nmning team, we had to do something different." Since Ohlo :State had stayed atop the national polls .ror most or the season, Hayes was asked if the win, which gives Ohio State a record of lD-0-l, made his club No. t again. "You know what I think," he said, flashini a wide smile. '1But then ;1gairt l 'm bhised. f'll ~y th is, today we were certainly the best." Woody, known»s a sludent of history and war, revealed he got a litUe help on this one. "I talked to Ara Parseghian o! Notre Dame (the only other team to beat IJSCJ and he said we had to' control ~ Ute imu. I think fie accomplished that,'' .Hayes ,.Id. And what abOul when Woody waved bis hal to the crowd )11$1 . belore the · ha1£? was this 5ubtle s;o·casm? "'Just wanted our poople (Q!lio State • __ _.ans) to J<now I a pr«:late all their aupport, .. he sala. I' • USC 'S ANTHONY DAVIS LEAPS TOWARD THE OHIO STATE GOAL LINE FOR. A TOUCHDOWN .. BRIAN BASCHNAGEL LATCHES ON TO A KEY GSU AERIAL . Texas Ma11l1anclletl Switch of Quarterbacks Puts' Nebraska in Gear DALLAS (AP1 _, Nebraska defcnsivC back Bob Thornton said Tuesday follo\11-· ing the Cornhuskers' 19·3 victory over Texas in the Cotton Bowl that an un- derthrown _pass by Longhorns quarterback Marty Akins '·saved my_ Ute" and made hin1 n hero instead of a possible goat Tcx:as appeared to be driving lo n go ahead touchdown at the Nebraska 22 at the stprt of the third quar.ter when Thornton came back to intercept · the pass from Akins. "The pass was real shOrt, and th8t . saved my Hr~" _said Thornton of the interception which maintained a 3-3 deadlock. "He (longhorns hnlfback Lon- nie Bennett) had a step Q.n me. but I came back for th boll when it came iJl.soort." Hoving IW'!led ba<k !ho Longhorns with the defcl'lsi~ intcrccptiol'I, Thornton later proVided Nebraska on olfensive spark with a 41 ·yard field golll return. The return gave the Cornhuskers a fie.Id position that v.•as lurned into Nebraska's eventual winning totJthdown 1 a 12-yord run by Rich 8"h<._ "We noticed on fllrn thnt Texas w~ attemp 1ng a 0 or ITffiJ gootS rron) lhc 40 and 50 ·yard lines. and the'f' ,~·ere turning\..out as good as a punt." T'hOmton said. "So we figured "'e could rw1 them bnck since field goals arc lower tban..s>unts." Tony Davis. Nebraska sophomore halfback \Vho led all ru shers \vilh 106 b'ards in 28 carries said Steve Runly, \vl10 replaced starter Dave Humn1 at quarterback in the second ha!J, ''J\ilade thin¥s click for us. Dave .did a good job m the. first hair. but \Ve just didn't get it in the .tnd zone." , Nl'!braska coach~ Tom Osbcrne S<ltd his ·team 'WOUid have 'von the· -g'arhe even it he had not 1nridt'. the ouartcrback change. "I don't feel the change made lhat much· difference." he ~id. "The key to the . game WtlS tht1t we just kept coming at 'em. '\Ye \\'etc playing too aggressive not to win the game. But that interception w<as certalnJy 'the turning µoinl." Osborne said he changed his goal line offense tactics at halftime tifter Texas stopped Nebraska on four pla)l.S from lhc ooo-yard line. • Nt~q---=-' ,,__,_l TtxM 0 0 G--J l11terception The Big Pia)', Longhorns Say DALLAS (AP) -"Texas quarterback J\1arty Akins. accepted much of ..,the l:;lamc for the Longhorns' 19-3 Cotton BO\\•I Jess to Nebraska Tuesday but otherv•ise the Steers could not explain the lopsided setback. Riding the momentum of a great gonl- line stand just before halftime, the eighth-ranked Longhorns appeared stun- ned by ayass interception on the opening drive of .the secoiid half. '·\\'e should have scored, and T thought \.\'e \\'~re going to," said Akins. the sophomore "'ho guided Jexas to Jhe •NcbrasRa 22· before-·he threw . a pass '"hich '"as iiltercCpted in the end zone by Cornh usker safety Bob Thornton. "\ think the turning point \\'ftS \.\'hen ,,.e didn't get in and score then :" Akins .'laid. '·f thought I thre\v it harder. I \vasn't passing l\'ell today." Texas coach Dan·ell Roynl said· he felt the I.urning point of the game ca1ne on the interception of the Akins pass, \rhich \Vas intended for halfback L-Onnie Benne!t. · "\Ve "'ere soundly defeated. There'.s no question about that. . .But if r had to single out one big play, it w<is !he interception ... " - ··1 thought possibly \Ve !night have h:id ·an edge on the defend er. \Ve hung the ball in the air too long into the \Vind. The defensive man had ti me to recover .and intercept.'' ·~itean\\'hile, Akins said he-did-not cleliberate!,v \vithhold the ball fro1n ace running back Roosevelt Le a ks , \vho played with an injured knee but gained only 45 yards on 12 trips. "We gave Roosevelt the ball \vhen \\'e should have."' he sa id . "A.nd J. thi nk \\"C ran on them pretty \veil. bet,veen the 20 yard lines. but "'e couldn't ge t it ill. And that's the name of the game."' Several LonghQrns players res-ponding to questions. could not explain the upset loss lo the 12th-ranked Cornhuskers. "I don 't kr.o\V. 1nan." said Lc~ks, \\'ho had averaged 141 yards per game this year. Lealc! also could not ex plain \\•hat happened on a second-period fumble that led. to Nebraska's tying field goal. Leaks \'las banged loose from the ·ball and Nebraska end Steve J\Ianstedt tucked it in and lun1bered 65 yiirds to the Jexas cight·yard line. 1 In the Cilnfusion. the officiuls disagreed over whether the ball touched lhc ground, then ruled it had not. The fumbled ball apparenlly hit Leaks' foot and squi rted into Manst.edt's ar1ns. "I don't kno\.\' what. happened. n1an ," Leaks said. "I didn't even see it." Baseball S tar's Daughter Killed PITTSBURGH (AP) --S h a r on Thomas1 the 17-yea.r-old daughter of forn1er Pittsburgh Pirates baseball star Frank Thomas,. was fatally injured \\'hen -she fell 35 feet down an elevator shaft.. auUtorities said. ~tiss Thom8.s was in lln eleVator 1hot had stop~ between lhc_ second and third ' floors at the Shera,tou Motor Inn in suburban Ross 'J'bwn.shi1> and .she apparently lost her balance '1 hen she tried to jump to the lower noo r' o(ficials said. ·Investigators said th ere "'ere IO persons trapped in the elevak>r. Someone pried the door open and a ntan jumped 10 lbe second floor before l\.1iss Thon1as .1nad'Chcr attempt. police sakt--:- • .... ' • .JJ&. -... + JJ,fJ... Big T en's S·econd Best Bombs S putte1·ing~Troy · By GLENN \\'HITE · 01 •ht D•llw Pilot s1,11 PASADENA. -The Big Ten sent ir.') second best tean1 ,to rhe Rose Bo\\•] but it \V<IS the Trojans of the Universit~' of Southern California \vho cnn1e out second l>cst on !he st'O rcboard 'l'uesday uf1emoon, 42·21. ., A chilled throng of 105.267 11•atchcd the unbeaten but once-ti('cf Ohio State Buckeyes thro1v u fe\v surprises. literally, \vhilc USC d~1naged i1s c·ause \\'ith poor pu.rsuit. a IC'aky p;.iss defense and a sputtering offensC'. Two ·lethal offside p(•nallies cost the .'.f'rojans 14 poillls as they gav(' Ohio State a touehdo\vn \Vith one and c·o!'t themselves a 4-0-yard scorin{: pass \\•ifh another infraction. Ohio State, reputedly a !ran1 un<Hvarc or a weaPon ct.lied fhe for>vard pass, threw effectively, cotnp lcting six of eight throws for 129 yards. That une~pectcd thro\ving accuracy helped loosen un already \vavering: Soulhern ('al de!"t·nst~ as Buckeyes backs repeatedly 1ore off huge gains. ' Operating on SC's rushing defense like a surgeon n1aking deep and precision iricisions. the Buckeyes sliced USC to pieces. -explodiog for 15 points in the final quarter to ice the victory. It \Vas the n1ost points a Big Ten representative had ~ racked up in the RoSe Bowl since l\1ichigan demolished USC,t49-0, in 1948 and many observers had o feel th e Big Ten \\'as n1erciful in .v ting to keep Big Ten co-chan11l t\1ictrigan hon1e this time around. Coach Woody ~!ayes' m as t e r f u I Buckeyes had 329 yards on th e ground as Archie Griffin. the htfty wphooJorc. accounted for 149 in, 22 carries. And freshman wonder fullback Pete Johnson cha lked up 94 in 21 carries to go \vilh the three touchdowns he sco red. · .. It \Vas amazing to watch Ohio Sta1e's offense moving for t o u c h d ow n s every time USC regained the lead c.r scored . And it was even more amazing to observe USC's vaunted pass ing gan1c sputter. \Vith almost no pressure ,fron1 Ohio State's defense; Trojans quarterback Pnt Haden \Vas still un able to make usc·s aerial attack the potent thre at it \vas expected to be Tuesday. . .Haden had two bugaboos lo' fight - his receivers dropping eight passes and his O\.\n tenP,ency to thrO\.\' high or \o\v \Vhen the receive.rs were Qpen. And the USC rushing game was <"IS inconsistent as the overhead assault \Vith heralded Anthony Davis able to get <111•ay for gains of HI. 14. 22 and 7 \'rtrds 1\'it h !ht\ rt•st of his 16 carries (1dding up 10 only 12 yards net. The 1'rojans put on a rathe r dis111al shc1v ttftcr th£' 14-all hal!tin1e break. \l'ith the exception of two drives. The first c11me···roflo11•ing SC's recovery or :1 Buckevcs bobble at the USC· 16 as !he Trojans blitzed 84 yards in 14 plays ro tnkc a 21-14 lead "'ith 6:22 to go Jn the third quarter. Davis scored fron1 a ya rd out and Chris l.itnahelu. 11•ho kicked field goals uf .t7 and 42 ~~ards. converted~ Ho11·l'vcr. SC could not contain a dC'ter1ninecl Buckeyes offense as Ohio State took the ensuing kickofr and mnrche<t G7 vards for a touchdown to trail 21-20 nf\Cr·the PAT kick-Was block- ed by ('h;.irles Phillips. . Then Ohio State scored <igain the next I iine it got the ba ll. thanks largely !11 a 56-ynrd punt return by junior Nea l Colt.ie lo SC't the ball at USC's $. Sophon1ore quarterback Co rn e I i us C/reenc \rent. the final yard .to make it 27·21 ~rirh 2·: 12 to go in the third stanza. OhiO'-Siate packed victory away for certain 1vhen Greene directed a.-'53-yard scoring assault early in the l fourth quarter. lhe big play a 25-yard pass completion. ~- That 1nade it 35-21. folldwing a f\\IO- t>oi nt conversion run by Greene. with !0:3fl to play. use later Jost the 49-yard sc.'t'lring .throw _on the offside play. But it diQn't 1natter by .then. Earlier a USC offside infraction on a missed Ohio State field goal .try gave OSU a fourth and one situation. The Buckeyes, given ne1v life. u·ent for the yard, made it. and eventually '.'CCred to fake a 7-3 lead. Ohio Stall" 7 1 13 lS-•11 Sovmern Callfornl11 J 11 1 G--21 USC-FG L;m<Mlelu 47 OSU-Johnson 1 n1n Cor1Way klek use -Mel(ay 10 pas• frt.>m Davis IMCl(il'I' Pil•s from Hade<1J OSU -:-Johnsl)ll 1 run CConwlly ldr ~} USC --Davis 1 run CUmahelu ~lc"'l OSU -John~on • run !kick l~tlo:d) OSU --Groene 1 run (Conway kitkl OSU -Eli11 1 run «Grttne run) osu -Grillin 47 run tCo~1<1y kic~J Oh;o SI. USC Fir~t downs 2D ~I l<uiheli•yard' 5~·l20 -~·161 Pc~slng vdrds 119 2~ Return yards 7( 73 Pcs<es 6-8·1 n~.i Pu,,1s 2-41 ,_,. Fumbles·l(nt 1..(J 1·1 Pena1t1es-vards 7.59 6-40 INDIVIDUAL LEA DERS RUSHING -Ohio S.t111e, Grlflln 12·149, John'"" 21·94, Greene 1·45, Elia 8·27; Sou1hern Cal, Davis ll>-74, Moore ~~2, McNelil $·'6. RECEIVING -OnJo Slale, Pogae 4.S9, Ha1~1 1.1~ _6a1'Do.ll_gC_L .\=2.iJ_ Sou.l!a'm...J.a!, )AcKoy_H J, Swann ).47, McNel\I 4.39, Obradovich 2·28. PASSINC. -Ohio Slale, Grttn~ ~8·1, l'l'I yard5; Sw!hern C.11, Haden ll·J~..0, :n</, Davis l·l.O, rn. -~ DEAN LIGENFELTER REFLECTS usc"s ROSE BOWL PLIGHT . Crosby Tourriey Opens Pro Golf Tour for '7 4 PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (l\P I -The 1974 pro golf tour opens Thursday beset by a m'ullitude of challenges and changes 6l1t anctioreci by one solid. unshaken constant factor -the dominance of Jack Nicklaus. The trimmed-<iown tour begins Thurs- day with the $215,000 Bing Crosby Na- tional Pro-Am. for three decades a fix- ture on i'he schedule but serving as the kickorr tournament for the rirst thn~ many years. . And; (or the first lime. there's the chance that the old groaner \\•ill miss his · own touman1cnt. Crosby was hospitalized fl.1onday suffering rron1 'pleurisy. A1nong lhe challenges and cha11gcs: shortage of gasoline 1nay have on this event 125 nlilcs south of San Frantis<!o. A reduced schedule ror the $8.5-million tour. one which endS in earlv Nove mber :iS opposed ro the 12.monih schedul~ · ~ lh11t has prevailed in recent years. • Reduced plnying schedules ror such · stars :is Arnold Palmer., Billy Caspir ttncl possibly To1n Weiskopf. Palmer is skipping this old event for · one of the few ti1nes in his storied career. Casper a I.so plans a reduction in appearances and \V'eiskopf ill planning no more than 2U starts this seaSnn. , · The 111unit)~ of former pla yer Dcahc : Beman lo succL'ed Joe Day as golf's l'Ommissioner. But '4'ith the changes. t.ht~re's still the lormidable figure ol' Ntcklaus as lh'c game's dominant factor. I Thtl Golden Bear has won this touma· •• r The energy crisis lhot thrc.a1ens1·10 produce considerable complications in · lhe._trav.cl_plans ob-th lr.ins--1 and the ns yet undctennincd e.frt-ct !he . ~-·~. ment for Ute last two years and closed out--anoltier.-~nne.r---&eason in 1974-'Wil'"---'"' v!ol.oriC's in his last \\VO siarts. • I \ • •• I DAILY PILOT WH!nfsdi.y, Janu.,ry 2. 1q74 Ba8eball Paterno N()t Conceding Grid ·Title Pirates, Pasadena CAliAC1\S -l\1al'k \Vee1ns. 11 22-yl'nr-old · pitcher in lhe Ratthnore Orioles organiw- tion. drownt..>d Sund<iy \\'hllc S\1•im1ning :-11 a beach on the central coast or Venezuela. \\IC'cnts. y,·eJl-lulov.·n i n l>r;inge County b a s e b a 11 circles, disappeared 11• hi I e· sv.imm.ing ~t P at a n em o Beach, 100 miles \l'CSl of Caracas, and rescue workers still had not recovered his body. He \Vas playing V.'ilh Magallanes of the Venezuelan Winter league and is from Azusa. An Orioles' spokesman in Baltimore said Weems had co1npiled a 9-7 record and a 3.91 earned run average last season with ROchester of the International League. Co1111ors U'h1s ~IELBOU RNE. Australia - Jimmy Connt'rs captured the n1en's sinr,les' cro1vn in the Austral ian Open tenn is Cha1n- piooohip, defeating Ph i I Dent of Australia. 7-5, 6·4, 4~. 6-3, Tuesday. 85,000 Damage MIAflll (AP) -Pen n State's Joe Paterno isn·t con- cedillg the. nalional collegiate footbnll ch&nlpionshlp to Notre Onme, Ohio State, Oklaho1na or any other pretender to the throne. Paterno spoke hi s piece after J>enn State be a t l.ou.isiana State 16·9 New Yea r's ... night in the Oran~c Bowl~o-co1nplete n 12-0 season for the sixth·rankL"d Nittany Lions. . Paten10 ~·as greeted in the sweltering Penn S!att' locker room with a chorus of "now v.•ho's No. I Joe~" \\'hllc the Lions' successful Griese, Unitas Compared r-.1TA~1f (AP) -Don Shula coacl)ed one of pro football':; premiere quarterbacks when he 11,•as with the Baltimore Colts. Now, \Vi th 1he Miami Dolphins. he"s got another great one. "Johnny Unitas was a great quarterback for. a lQOg period of time." Shula says. "He led- LOS A~GELES -A fire teams lo championships.· He caused an eslimated $5,000 certainly did a good job of damage Tuesday at th e calling a game. And I'm just Hollyv.'ood 11ills ho me of Los very pleased 'A'ith Bob Griese Angeles Lakers forward Bill and what he's done for _our Bridges, aUthorities said. foot.ball learn. The way he City fire informa tion office r runs the sho'v on the field Ed Castle . said Bridges and is exceptional. his family. we re away from""· "They're different in the home when the fire began sense that Unitas was strictly just before noo n. The cause a poc ket passer. The thing or the fire was under in-that made John a great vestigation. quarterback \Vas hi s own con- Vtah U'h1s SALT LAKE CITY coach -he's the winniflicst in the nation over the p.ast clghl years -refust.'<i to con- cede the title, he didn't claim lt either. I le said the cl1am1>ionShlp v.·asv't decided in the Sugl\t Bowl, \vhcre third .ranked Notre Dume edged toir-rated Alaba1na 24·23 in ;.1 ~arne bill· rd tis a national tltlc con· l'rontation. "l don·l knO'A' \\'ho is No. 1.'' Patcn10 dcclarL-d. ''l don't know where they (sports 1\'ritcrs) will put us. I do know that we have as much right ps anybody to be No. I." L . . J>itemo 'continued : "All I know ii that we're 12.0. \Ve've been under great pressure and we bore up. Al.sb. this l!! the best team I've ever coached. I'm not going to say we're better .than anybody else. That 's silly, llul if anyone is belter they'll have. to prove · it by beating us." The Peru1 State CO<ICh COil• eluded the rankin~ disc.'Usi,lon by safing he held 'the Pater-™ Poll '' in the Jock er room arter the LSU game. "My players voted unanimously for Penn Slate for No. I." Penn State 1\'0und up with a net yardage rushing o! 28 ! •·· Ir •-led I s~ -.y oJ11tn yards, but Pa emo chose to cuse, uut 1ucY \Van o io,1111 s111t , u o 0-1• I II ·--r 1 1 It Le11.1hl•11& s•••• 1 o , o-• give LSU's swarmlng defense· nstn n"' a our Pace 1.:iu _ 1100.,, J tu11 {J1ck"3!'i the credit , rather than use WQUld be over rey dead body. 1r.i~~ _ FO '•"''" tho wtt Poly Turt as an ex· ·1 don't llke it. I don't think <:.~ kic~d n ~·· lrom 5~umen ' P$ -C1~Utlll 1 r1t1r> (~le~ 11U1dl cuse fo r his usually ef(ccUve the players like It." 4 Lsu _ ~,,,., M•n111 oowr>ttJ 1n runners. including 11eisman \Vha t happened to Cap-· ·~ :.on:i.l11 1'toQhy winner John Cap-pclletti, who nverajll.'Cl 5.1 STATISTICS ios Ls u nnJletti. Cappelletti rraincd . yards per game? ~F]r,t down' ' • .'.-. ,,.~·. •• • I \ l • A:\/$1\tl•"flrCh ""' •• •v only 50 yards on 26 cnn-ies. · ''I thought Capp c et 1 P•111n~ y1rd• u 1 &t Both • Paterno and Cup-played n hell or a fine ga1ne," ':i~'~::, r•n11 !~1.1 •. ~.\ pe.lletti, however, said the turf Paterno· Insisted even in !he Pu1111 1.s5 •-o F11mblti·lOll !4 3·1 was a problem. Cappelletti, -face of the statistics. "He had P•n1nlH·r•rd1 l"'l7 l·.» "'ho slld ang slippt.-d. several very little running room. but A:us~~t?~v~uP~n t.~~~~~~e111 times. described ,the suriace when he got room he gained 1wo. N19lt ,.,., Lsu. O•vr~ 1t·1<l, Roblitle 11).J.1, MU1y 1'•41 as the worst he had ever yardage. L.SU 's llneb1;1ckers R£ce1v1NG -P..,n s111e. H•vm••, Played on. played very light and they ).U. H..-d 1.21. C•11Ptllen1 1..0: Lsu, D1Yll .. 2(1, 9oyd 1·21 , Jtom611'1 1·1S. "Look. we both played on read all Cappy's good plays P.t.ss1 NG -"''"" s1a1e. ShurnA" .. ,1.1. 1S1 v•rdSI LSU, MllfY •. , •. ,~ the same field, so It's no ex-so well." 1J. Tennis Merger lmn1inent? Tangle Orange Coast Co l lege 's basketball teu m bids for vie· tory No. 13 of the season tonight when it hos l s Pasadena City College at ~ o'clock , A victory tonight by c:ooch Herb· Llvsey's Pirates would give OC'C one more win than it hnd all of la.!t soason. And it would be the most victories by an OCC team since the 1967-68 contingent won 23 times . The Bucs have lost just four gan1es t'his season. Bob Manker, a 6-6 transfer from IJrake University, leads the Pirates. l·le was chosen the most valuable player in the l\firaCosta tournament, v.·hich OCC won Saturday by defeating Cuesta. ?.·Tanker, 1vho scored 64. points in the three tourney tilts. has !allied 278 points this season -a 17.4 average. Jlrn \Vorthy is the Pirates' .BALTI?o.fORE (Afl l -A set'Ond le<iding scorerr 11,·ith 227 merger between La m a r points,'u 14.2 average. Other llunt's \Vorld Ch3mplonship totals and av~rages includ e: Tennis and the ne1v World .Rod Snook (195, 12.2), Tom Tean1 Tenni!i league is "im-Crunk {171. 10.7). Bruce Miller minenl," an inCormed source (l2fl, 6.0) and Dean BogJl.an sa id Tuesday. (116, 7.3). · According to the source, Crunk \ras also selected to negotia tions are aimed at set-1hc. ~1 i r a C o s t a all-tourney ting up an office in Dallas team. to run all professional tennis Orange Coast has just events, including the WIT tonight's ~ame and Saturday v.·hirh plans to open com· night's tilt against invading petition this year. Pierce be.lore opening South \V1T v.·ould pay a $160.000 Coas~ Conferen ce a·c t Jon aru1ual fee fO llunt , president against lough Cerritos next of the Dallas-based \Vf:."T \Vednesday. Tl}t?"circuit opener circuit, lo be11d tbe. <:.QID.b.i.Oe.d. is.,5el for the f alc.ons' ®JJrt , operation, tht source said. l;;i ______ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-;; "Negotiations arc ve ry serious. I'd say an· ag rec rnent is imminent ," the source said. Ernerald Bay r eside nt George McCall is the \VTT commissioner. Any merger bct\\·ecn 1h.e. W'rT. with. its list of1 stars including Billie Jean King, and the \VCT, 'A'ilh its $1 million tour. would affect the United Slates Lawn Tennis Associa- tion. Sophomore guard L u t h e r Burden pumped in a 24-foot jump shot ~ith lwo seconds remaining Tuesday to push Utah to an 87-35 nonconference basketball victory o ver Purdue. fidence in his ability to throw the football. lle'd stand in the pocket and stand in lhc. pocket : . . and sta·nd in the pocket . . . and somctilnes he'd get nailed but other limes he'd get the ball off in the last possible instant. And he very rarely scra~bled. '"Griese has worked hard LSU QUARTERBACK MIKE MILEY STRETCHES FOR U I" I Ttl..itola EXTRA YARDAGE IN ORANGE BOWL GAME . The USLTA., the United St ates· ann of the lnterna• Purdue forv.·ard Frank Ken-lo stay in the. pocket in the --- years that I've be.en down ' • drick had tied the contesl at 85-85 on a layup wit h l :01 left. here. He docs a good job of staying in there. But if it gets to a situation where - Bob thinks it 's best for him to get out, then he's capable or getting out of the pocket Ala11iitos Alamitos Entries VANGUARDS Racloll• (J' FOR TONI GHT _ TOVRNE . .,. and scramblin• better than IN . 1. -tJiifias-. ___ .. .------""'=~--~-'~le•r & F1s1 . Firu Pott l:~S 11.m. V S? EOiHI • on Fir~! Race tcxact~unr.n1rnurtt!T R I FIR~r RACE-"'J~ y~nl•. J ye.1r · • r s t.i ll w ant t he SAN DI EGO -Sou thern California College returns to basketball nclion in the Pt. Loma tourna1nent Thursday at 3:30 against Taylor University ~ of Indiana in the fi rst round o( an eight-team event. quarterbacks to stay in there ~ and give the r eceivers lime IQ get open," Shula added. ''If a quarterback's thinking about getting out of th!'.!re, then his 'receivers, especially against tough coverages, don't get those last steps to get open. Th e quarterback's already tuck~e ball away and is leaving. So Bob has really-done-a-good job o( staying in there and waiting. And he has confidence in ou r pass protection." Jack Causey, a senior who sat out the fall semester, will make his 1974 debut with the 11-----':''""uard's in t_he tournament. Two other players, B i 11 Leavell tf-51 and Al Carlson (6-11 ) wiu join the team in two 11,•eeks. • Vikings _ Coach's Plan ~ -Avoid Battle Fatigue BL00~1IN'GTON, M i n n . (AP) -The ~1inncsota Vi- kings are getting a five-day rest before resuming drills for their Jan. 13 Super Bowl date at Houston agai nst the Miilnii Dolphins. It may be parl of coach Bud Grant's plan to avoid 11,1hat he-terms ''battle fatigue." After the 27-IQ Vikings vic- tory over ,the Dallas Cov.•boys Sunday. Grant indicated that Dallas may have been a tired team, v.·eary from loo many )P!!!Jh games in succession. The \ Vikin gs v.•on't do anything n1ore strenuous than view fil ms of ~l ian1i before a drill Saturday at the Monarchs 111 Actio11 ~tat.er Oei Iligh's ~1onarchs arc the only Orange. Coa st area prep baskelb.oll team in action.ttonight when roach Jer- ry Tardic"s qwintet hosts \Vestern in n non·lenguc till. Ti poff is Al 7. Tournament aclion Dcgins Thursday afternoon at San· Hago High where Fountain Vnlley and Buena Park tangle in a 2::l0 test. roilowed by \Vest minster and Tustin at 5. The Snnti<igo tourney con· linues Friday and Saturday. : University or Minnesota field house in Minneapolis. They plan to fly to Houston after another practice Sunday. "Dallas beat Denver when it had to. Then it beat-St. Louis to win its division and it beat a really tough Los Angeles team to get into the National Fodtball Conference finals," Grant said. "There is such a thing as battle fatigue in footba ll. You can go lo the \\1ell just so many times."' said (;rant. \Vhile Dallas n1ay have been exhausted from too n1any rough Sundays in December, the Vikings had a fA".irJy relax- ed road to the Nationa l F'oot- ba ll League playoffs. The Vi· kings clinched ·a division litlc with five gan1es rcrnaining in fhc regular season. . After ou t n1uscling. \V11shington in the first round or the pfayoffs. i\finnesola had the bctll almost exclusively in the first ~au of the game at Dallas. The Vikings ca rried a 10-0 lead into the second half -!he half the.Y had don1inated through most of their games during the year. The offensive line controlled the lfne of scrimmiige against the Dallas defense. and when the game degenerated to fumbles and interceptions in the second half. ?-.1innesota made some points out of several opportunities _ and . Dallas coaldn't. . esu ts '" "'"'"' '""' ""'· ltna Pr11fley (0. Car<l<!la) 111 /Ahs Mcllte (J, K~nisl 111 T11ttd1y, Jan111ry 1. U74 Clo11dy a F••I FIRST RACE -lSO yards. 3 year old.u>•lde"'· Cle1mlng. Pvrse Sl~ Ar>Olher Leulon (l"l1r r] 12.W 7 00 1 P' Wlfld y ~a (CardOl.t f 2S00 Tl.ill Ruterk's Van (Treasure! 10.ao Tlmt -1•.52 AIMI r•r> -Jay<11ncer, S~m Moo". K11y Char9er. Win A C:,.~h. Fl yir>g Ftn. L•<ly £l1y, Wh1'1 Front ~1l~er"• Tre~I IS. 1"re~~UfG\ 111 Brenend~ ~ (h<1rge (J. llroo~i) 11? Old•e'~ Cem (J Cre1ger) 117 Sir Rock,t t 8.tr !K. Ha1•f !n Gale.gold (J. NlcoOem11t ) 111 'tr. Cn1rg'r (L. Mylet) 1:12 Mr. Moon ~ola~h !R. A<lair> 1n Go Al.tmi1os (D Mitc!\elll 111 Alli EJ1glbl1 Retiel Sali'l !R. Ad1ir) "Two Fo Go (L. Wrlgh!) Li-.,ils Cindynx:k (J. Mahuda) Re-.11~~ Ch.1r9e CK .Harn m '" "' 111 SECOND RACE~OO y~rds. l ye~r of<ls & up. Cl.tlmong. Purse 5J,000. S2 EXACT.I. _ Another Liuan & Cl1lmlr>l1 price SS,000. , St Pere (0. Morros> 121 .'."r. K.i""~ .tJ'l.!.~~tl, ~JllS~.~~------'!C'-'IU.nl:IY Cll.lrgn (IL H.trll 1)9 .SEC:oNo ltAC E -810 v.irds. l Ye.tr 1.1;9 JNO CL. Wri9~1l 119 ' Ylon<1er l"low IC. Smith ) 119 ald!I & 1111. Clalmlnv. Pvrs~ ~11100 Moss Goo<I Sora (T. Lipll.Jm) 1\1 P!undf!" (C1rc1011l 5.10 3 40 2 20 Sttp N Felcl'I n (Sm!lh > .. -ID 2.10 Clood CO!lV !R. Adair) 111 Motov Klll•n (CrasbYl 1.60 Time -45.19 Also ran -K•y, MidYllY "Tom. Away She Got\, Dugflce Bay. Sdmol1 THIRD RACE -400 vards J y~~r al<I• & 11p. Ctalmlno. Pur~e i1&00 Chained Roclcel (AdalrJ ll.60 1 70 s.oo ~!;'L:!i~ c:;c!~hi~ani~) soo. ~-~ Tim e -70.12 · Aloo ran -Tiny Wa!CI\ Bound, Motl RoYtl, Na1rita!lon, Lynn Cee, Run Blobby Run FOURTH RACE -~'9 var<!~. 3 veer 01<11 a. llp. 51arters Allowant•. Purse 51600. My Rorn1n Indian (Adair\ S-ID li't\ 28~ OH.f<1le Digger \Stapel J.2fl ~ 70 0H•M95S A Grits !Lipham! 340 •.'!{) Time -::11.11 Also r111 -Bay War ChkO, 5il~r O Boy, L81>l1 Laiuu. T~lr<I C°"y· ~clc1Dar, Big "Truckle, M;55 Bal Bar Fll"TH RACE -3SO Ydt<lt. 3 year ol<ls. AU1>w1nc1. Pvrw SJrl)O. -Wllcl'lln' Hour !Hart l a . .io • <O l 6' MJ'' Pl11 Pig fMyte11 aoo 4 • .io Trulv Bliss (Car<1011I J . .ro Time -11.0• Also ran -Biiie S•~ Roclcer. Chk~ 8utltr, Mt~k Jr .. Sht~e M Up, Co'd 11 Be111111~1, Joe Tee. Okla Jel SlkfH RA CE -400 Vdrd:;. J year ol·'< & , . ., Cl•lmlng. Puri, i l'OOO. BIU't Rtqur..t fllph•ml 1110 11.eo s.m 1060 600 1.~o Ptl~I(~ Bob (K:8r>l1J Oobbruck's Br'! (~amittc~I 1"lmt -l'0.63 Also fdn -S!~ve The Vet, Mike Aoend.J. Jo Burr~••· Calllcrnia Smog, T&e Wrll11, Walch Eli SJ EXACT.I. 6·Sl r•w Atlo -' t Glrtf11r'1 ~1111, 11li• $U.OI MiNTH RAClli -)J.11 Y•rd1. 3 vt•• l>ldt & up.. CJ111"111!Q. Puri• J1'°°. ltocktl JOI (Ortwrl 11.00 L:iG S.IO Oy1111mo P11tro4 (Rkh11rd1 ) ~ 2fl l.llO C11•rvl"ll Ch•r1l1 !WaUon1 9.Ml Time -11.31 Ati.o ran -P111leo Rotd, Ovtltr l!.1r Boy, Ff11bDtr, Bari For luck, Klcaw Lu. T111t Ctn Fly. !111rtom111 $cr1lcllftl -P<W;~tl Rock1I, Coclcy Kid, Tiit El1mln11tor. Black Nood IS EXACT.I. 4·ROC:kll J11 a I· Dyn•mo, p1ld 1101.00 THIRD RACE-'il1 yards.' 3 ye,ir olos a. u1> AllaN.tncr. Purse il,!OD Kni~hl All11r (J. Ka11lsl "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' "' Br~e1in11 Cree~ IT. Lfpham) Midway Dandy /0. Morrltl Andy OQr>e II CJ. NlcOdf'musl Si!ngulnr"• Jel j L. Balloui i>rospfrovs Que's!!!;;. Gerial Palt~o·s Bar (J. Rl,ha•d•) Null1er Willow (0. Cardo1<1) Mr, Pow~ll (l. Myle;) Parr Oorend IL. Wrlgh:) FOU R"N'I RACE~~IO Y~'dl. 3 ye~r olds & ~p. Clalmlng. Pur:ie $3,000. Ca ge Rati11 gs lliY A NIW 71 DATSUN ANO SA~E AT COSTA .MISA DATSUN 2145 HA•toa ILYD. C.'M. 540-6410 DOES YOUR Cj\R ID.LE ROUGH? WE ;i START HARD? • . GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAfi HELP THE CARBURETOR SHOP 1Ht HAllOlll ILVO .. COSTA ,,,,"::,n.~n..,r \ ~..,.,..._.._,,.'~".,w~~ \- -----.... . . Claim•~ prlc• s•,000. 1"e••s Tracer to N:r>l9h!l UI' D•n ro. Morr11) For 0111ld (l. My\ril c1au, ROl:-e! tO. Cd•do1dl T111dy Roc~el (J . Or•Ytrl Go Oeer Co (T. L111naml "' "' '" 11~ . "' '" "' "' "' "' "' '" SIXTH JIACE--.IOO yartr1. J year ol<ls & up. C!n;mlng. Purse $2$00 Cl•lmln11 price $)J.llO. Ole CPlontl Cl. Mylas) tnm111'1 L13 T·••O (T. Li11h11111) OPl!llno G11n IS. Tra1ure) Ger Ir On (J . K•nlsl Tht Count (K. Harn LJol'l!nlng Bid (J. WtlMinl Oulc1< Rtlrtte to. Morrlst Tyt111l11m (J. Ore~trl Dupe's Nl.,.r Ill. Adeorr Hit~lllllr> !l. Wri11~tl "' "' '" '" "' "' "' "' "' "' SEVENTH llAC E-J~ y1•d1. J ye~r Pldt & up. Flllle• & m;irr1 P<1rsr S•.000. "The fluc:k"°rn. Judy's Wonder (R. Adair) Eve•f!l's Whll (J. Wa!Jon) Miu Bleck Oeck IS. 1"r•1vrt) R•bel's Queen CK. Hartl Fcr!JOtlen l11dy {l. Ballo)I) My"rl'i Copy (H. P1or~ Jlnoo Gill (1". Llph•m ) MldnlOhl Becky (J. Wa rd) All.-ghtn•r M~ (J. Craa~lr ) "' "' '" "' "' '" "' "' 1:9 EIGH1"1"1 RACE-JSO yards. l y1ar olds & uo. c11lm!ng. Purse $1,100. Cldlmlng price 12,000. Ch1rglr>g Clown (J. Kar>i1J Clo Miity Jor (S T1e8s11rel Bold Oove (0. MDrrls) Royftl P1radt !J. Rl(l\ard5J Jet Slru! ll. My!eSJ Sl1epv Charge ('r. Llphaml Nut/\rr Bunny IL. Wrlg!\11 Ooohn"1 Tlme (J. Nicodemus) Moonllgnt Bev (R. Ada!r Sp11r"5 Re<iue1r (J . Ml!IUdll "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' "' "' NINTH ltA(E-JSO v~rds. 3 yt!!dr ol(li. Clalm•r>g. Purse 51.SOO. Claim!ng price i2Y.l0. Ope11 Couniry tK. '"l~rl ) l .o Vandy Gori (J Oi"v~r) Quar1er Ber1'Ctl'r (H. Faoe) Wl1-wood (l. MyleJI ~8hrln1 Deck (l B~llOU) 1"uUy Miu (J. Ward) Fly Mee Fly Cl. Wright} Whr1!11r's Gold (0. Cardoial Bold ~na 10. Morrl!) Change 0' Pate ( 0. Knight) Pro l{es ults .· . '" "' '" '" "' "' '" "' "' "' Altitude - May Aid ' Colo111bia · tional Lav.'Tl Tennis· Fedcra- ti<ln. has been ballHng the \VCT for control of pro t('f\nis in this country for se\·eral years. The IL TF has yet 10 sanction W'rl' play. although a meeting has been scheduled Jan. 26 rcportedJy to discuss sanctioning. Both llunt -aild-Gladys Heldma n. w h o represents louring women Players, have agreements \Vith the USLTA Robert ~· W i~mor• B.OGOTA, Colornbia (AJ>\ _ not to support any unsanc-i ioned events. The Colombia n -Davis Cu p HAPPY NEW YEAR! w•w• 11NCl"ll'•L T Wl1M l:Vl:ll'YONI A P'IOSP'•R· DUS ANO MIE ALTH T lt1f... I.earn is den11nding heavily on One po ss i b I c stumbl ing ,..~ block to !he merger, the the. altitude of this cit y -source said, is the associcttion l which probably would affccl of Tennis Professiona ls, a •.• ti W<I c.111 M M lllJ' HfVk• "' y.,. •• .... <.ntlrtt y11r1 ,...., 11w1 Ml I CllL 0Yr bvi!Mhl II •-ktl the most vigorous tennis ·labor union of more than 120 1 players -and the help of of the world's best male ll'nnis . Chilean stars Jaime F'illol and players. Patricio Cornejo to be3t the . Earlier, the source said, WIGMORE INSURANCE United States team in the zone WM' and ATP had negotiated finals for the Davis Cup. a settlement under which tb'e The Amtrican team is ex-players' ·group would receive peeled tonight in Bogota, a $200,000 sanction fee fro m itsl Harhr lh'll . ..c .... w .. which is 8.660 feet above sea the league. Current negotia-level. 1 979-2555 A Colombian Tennis F'edera-lions do not incl ude the ATP, he noted. lion spokesman said I h e -;;;;~;.;~.;;;;;;;;;;;;i,;-~~· :;-~;"::;;:~~;;;~;:;:;;;;;;;;j Ainericans wilf undergo in·IJ tense training during eight days to get used to the ra re air of the capital city. The U.S. team will be able to call on Erick Van Dillen, •larold Solofll(ln, Roscoe Tan· ner. Tom Gorrnan and Charles Pasarell. The zone finals will be held at the Los Lagartos Cluh. Jan. 11-1.l The Colombian tcain is com- pascd of Ivan ~1olina, Jairo Velasco, Orlando Agudelo and Alvaro Betancourt . Colombia defeate d Venezuela 3·2 and ~1exico 4-1 for the right IQ. meet lhe United States. The Tennis F' cd e r n I i o spokesman said the Colo n1bia n tea m js trying to get the .Chileans Fillo! and Cornejo to smooth out some defective serving by the Colombians in order to equa lize the powerful serve of the Am e.r ic an players. ' . ; ANAHEIM ; • CONVENTION CENTER DOO•S Ol"IN JAN.' •t 6 'M Wlll!OAYS 'l.IM Wlll!iNO$ 11 NOON AOl.llTS 11 KIOS tt·l'llll c£on~ MIN'S SHO, e and BIG & TALL • I 20TH ANNIVERSARY SALE! I -20 'rf AI$ AT THI $AMI LOCATION- SAVINGS 25% TO 50%! f Sale Starts Thun., Jan. 3 f • Double Kn its Sizes 31·52 From SUITS tet. S7t.OO t• $110.00. SPORT COATS ~i~~1• From ·$3450 Sizes 38-52 Rog. $45.00 to $89 .50 ' I .... I ll lo u s IVY PANTS 1 ~RO~P _w~~~·N. ~~1!R $291 SIZE 27·32 Rog. $8 lo $12 DRESS SHl.RJS Lo~ho;:~ •• From .... ,. $12.00 . SPORJ-SHIRfS . L!~;'s~vo From ~411 • .... to St .06 ,. $11.00 SWEATERS ·JACKITS SAVE L.EON'S · UP TO 40%1 MEN'S SHOP •• • e · and BIG. and TALL ~227 I. 17111 SI., COSTA MISA liiiil IN MISA CINTD-1.1 a.uu --Thrflty • ......, ALL.SALIS ''"AL,..-.1L10tW ALTlltATIO" CMlillOI '• ..1 I - • •• • • ' I. ' ' . DAIL V PILOT J 9 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE ~' -onm•'s w tL "<TITIOUS aUl <Nlll --=-'------! ,IUA ....,, or ft • • OYER THE'. COUNTER NAMI tTATIMINT •••0t.UTION 01' ntl HA•D 0,. ••vnt4e UNIFIED PICTITIOUS IUllNISI ... ,.lie tollowl ne lltfMl'l• .. 1 .•.•,11<,,•,T.ION o.. .TH• --t•VlN& SCHOOl. OISTJUCf NA.Ml ''"''"'INT • IMltlnttt •~t ,,... l'IO 1c1too&. D1s:ra1CT 011 av thL to11~l!!ll-1*JM ls lllC!lot_bu;lllJ\IN H • I c B k 'itUOINTI L OflANOI C.OUlllTY, CALll'COaNIA ATTEST: ••; t t Newport eiV: l &AS ING CO., ,700 Dfct"'°" tt, 1fta SU-MAit DR4PElllE$, 1.uil ~ ow 0 u ac f'2MO. • Ntwport ltKll, Ca. On MOtlon of f.ltt~r .!>l'flfl. duty APPROVED, As'TO F61tM; !MIMf l.11,. H\11\llllOtol'I Off(h, (•II . • w~· w, ~ t l t-NC~ •llcl u~nl!T)Qllsi.y c1rtlod ll'lt '2619 • g::·~ --· ., Cltt••· Hl.lnllr'lglOfl "'1rn!,, c":1.,!,""'' '°'J:1"••'"'••lttt0lyll011 Wit lclot)ttd, CITY ATTOll,NCY. CITY Olt" IRVINE EtJOMI' ,,_, 11$11 Mi.I\' UI.. --"~b.~t.!'~. ..,_..,. 6\9 ·-Mllltr HS II ., Ao""' ftff CNrltt S. Wllltikir ~JoO N I"'-At 1111 Chy of lr11lt1t It APPll:OV£0 AS TO 'ORM, Hlll'ltintlOtl --.Ch, C1llf, t264t w JOn\ 19\lo ~. Mlnlpor SQ\4 )114 A11t-r f'll 81\ld,. Ntwporl a. .. c' ewport ,.. OWMI' ot ftllt ~l&ln Pl•<:ll of 'thl• MlnM• It <0nch1c1M by 1n ~-111t'*.i.11ori ot 00yit o• 1•2,. ',"-' Molt G•' lO\'I lO'-11:1111 Stew Thlt buslnt r ''"' ·_•1 926'0. rtlll Pl'Ollt•IY conMtllflO of 1.461 acr•i llldlllldutl. 0 u ii 0 Bill tut "· Dt•ltfs, Pli<.omn .. 1 MIM F.o Jt. •i. S... AOi. H llMnhlp N f CO!lcluelea llY I Otner•I Mr~ll•lttr rtltrr9CI to It P•rctl 1 Ofl:ANG8 COUNTY COUNSEL l!ua-llrumtt n t Ity s ~I05bv1"°p,,."/1.:W,~ ~~~ O Ira(.\ MlnNt G~ 1•'11 111 Stlitrtt woics W 11'\0f"I Pl rtlcul•rly ffKrlbtd In Exhlllll aXHlllT "C" Thlt tt.lltmllll Wit llltcl wllh thf r dfflttt 10 1~111'1 Yb ~ Ml~v·Tr "t3h "lii knoll In Tiii• Iii H09t n A llttchtcl lltr•lo •nG m.cl• • Pl•t LIOAL D•SCRll'TION 0111 Countv Clerk .of or..... CO\llll't on otr.r IS ti OS Miit i)V'o 1• ::::111 ~ .:~ .r-~=~\.I~ Coun_fi 1c1.:~"'o'., ~s !hid Wiii\ IN htrfffi •Nf '"' ''""'"' Unllltc1 4 $Chool MO•l"TNllt l!l.I MIHTAllY SCHOOL O«ernber 10. ltn • 1t.it•n1 I P1111 uv. 11~ NOilYl Co .. .., 11'h 5'flOP'> H "1ctmber31 im •not ~-ty Ol'll Ol•trlet I•""_, of l ttiet terttln IUIL.OINOllTW .,-»lie I n. ouot•·i· Nuc:tl IO"'l~Mor,. hi »lll :M k• W•kt ' ' • 1Hrc11 Of rNI PfOPtrly Contltll119 .. ttOlttlON 01! I.OT 1f'I, l )CISTlNO Pllbllthecl °"'"" CoeJt Delly f'Hot, !::&,, ~~ ...... ~~ ..... ~·1··~· .. ' J-,•,,~ N'oort SI •'II ~'" Sv .U.«" ,. r .... 1.461 ecr1t ller1ln1tlet 1tltrrtd lo 11 l"ARk SIT•, TO 11 CONVIYIO TO Dtctl'llW l\, It, U. lt1) -"" J tlMltr)' .... " .,. ..., '" MOrtn Ir 11t. I Slllflll•V Ublltlecl Oret191 CotM ~u., ,.llot, Pem l II, mort P,•llculuty cltsetlbld lltVINI UNll'll O ICHOOf. DIJTll~I 2.1t1•. 377J.73 .By SYLVIA PORTER What ls a central point is :: •. !.i (:m'.1!: f 111u', .... 'IO IO'h MDn j\I) ,. ,,'lri "'""n VP Janu•ry J, •• , .. n. 1t7c )917,13 h1 E11hlblf 8. 01•--· ....... -m·~" "'"" ....... ,,AA • ,,, 1~ •• T••<I ••• b ·11s '"" El"' t•"i U4 Ml<J ASK 6V, '"' Sl\of"tW rt.. ....,,.... '"' -N 7'"• ""'' "'" -1-uo.t 0Ul l are heading Up ,.Ol',..,,I '""'" Euc"' In 1'Mo t M1n lk Cp 21 l9 MmptOll 1 :fi rtof/ Ind o, Ml, In Ille CllV ol lrvlne, Coynly PUBUO 1'!_0J1-CE One thing la W lafnJn..lJ74; ' lf~MCllon$, E111rottp l U'o 7114 Molloa In It~ 16 W P rolt -11,JIJUO 50TICE H!Rl!AS, Parcel 1-1t ...clJi«nl-10 of Or1 •• --SI•._ of et t1kM'rll1 , •• tllown an your u"llty bill' are 8,.-What-moves Can-we m a ke? INOllSTll:IAl:S "•Ir I.ti* JV. Sl.O MOIOf Cl 6:\lo 1•t. So C1I wt ----;;;:;:;;,;::::-7',,.,,-,,,,----I• .CllOol •II• owntcf by 11\f 1r11lrwt on I m1p rtcordld In Boo11 291, ~<J" llllCTITIOUI IUSINISS U .:. v-LeJLrn h tA d ANO UTIUTll!S F11'1on El 'l" ~ Ml Sm!11l t t•i) So CnnG\ Unlllecl k llool Dltlrlct tncl ttlt Dlslr1cl I tllrOUQh S or Ml$tt1Jlneout MllOf, NAMa tTATaMINT inrt Up Sba""ly, AOther Uting -0! w !_etl your MDncllf F•rm, Ir ,.,_ IV, MSI 0.lt Ht It o $lno P•P '1NCTITIDUS IUSINISS Ott1rt• ro ~1,. -l'trc,tl I fQf UM In lhl ottlce OI !ht Co..,nty lt:KOrdtl" Thi ~lowlnt P'f'llOll It doing bl.ttl11at alaoo ls -r·taJn • In Ibis DeW, meter. 0.c•mller 3 • lt1' Ffid Ui,t 6'1. ''4 '°""n',,. 13 14 S-.tr1 AMa ITATaMINT It_ I Oli'ftl'.'OUl!d aintlOllOVI -JO IPll of Mld Count'(. $&erlbecl ff folfoW.:: II' ,. ""' Ac"'Ulnl r,~. f4tt ~~lj'J~111 .:~ 1~1'1 NU Cll~St '"' S\'I Sl•l)ldy_ t TN followl119 j)4f!IOll II OOlng llllllMll Khool 1ltt 1 llllO Bt0tnn1noo t i Ill• mot.I W•llerlr. corner . COL.MANO '* w ,_, Hlghw,l'f grim year: '"'U can hOld Mwn "" Mic~ H~ 11,.. Iii ~Pill " :w Nil L·~~ 4 • 4~· Std RtJ;:' ••: WHEREAS Ille city of '"'Int ... ,,.. of Mid L.ot 1311 ttlfnt• •lc:ii9~tlle -H port .. ..;"' cii1ri. twO • ;v v.v ALWA)'S CHECK t AOvnt Co Ill\ '"' h i MtMC 24V. 24\lo ~· ~!C• 61 "" IM s.t~• (ti (I I OltGANllATION DEVEL.OP• 10 •cq11lrt Pirc.I Ii i f.nd SouthwttlttlY 11111 ol told Lot 1311 J ri'c11erd I R'" • 631» W thole bUls and even reduce -me er Alt• Alx ttl'l 10\'0 151 T~F!n Jt\, ?0\1\ ~td~~nt ; :\t ~:NN 9~~ ~!!,T· INC .. 411\IJ Corntllon A .... iwe. WliEREAS. •n 1nclt11tncltfll ,,,, .... ,. SO\llh 5re'ft'• ,l!t tl 2'0.00 '"' lo HIOhWIY Newport k.dl c.n,·,,:=.:-•1 them if you Je am the basl" readtnaw: with the m e ter ~le· 0.1 ll'h 12 Fl• Ttlto lih 11\t ,.. ..... Co •'t• 1 !>1'tk N s r.-.":"'·I dtl Mir, Ct. 9262! lllPl'•lttl hU '-" Plt'fotmlKI pm,11ent Ille lrlOJI $wtl)erJy corn1r ot u ld 'tl'tlt e.i.i'linN It conductt<I • DY '-O"' • /co \.lld ll"-1'11. FOOd lw U l•V'I NJ NII G U~ uv, Str<Jt TK !11 O'DONNE LL'$ MANAG!MENT lo Wllleh IKl'I pe~I htl 0..n 1opr•IHCI Loi 1)11 ttllnct llont till $0UIMat.1•rly lndl lcklel In 11\0ney S8ViJl.-g nl)es. reader and Check t be m AlltQ &tv I\\ l'lt Forttt OI UV. l3'l<O NICOltl in I I $!""'!>Clo CONIUL.'fANTS, P 0. DO); AOo11, lrvlne, 1t I l1lr ~r11tl ..,,h ... of SA:J,SOOI 11111 of Mid Loi 1lt NOrtl'I 3t'S1'32" 11 11:JC11trcl I It• ., • Alire: "°' 16\1.o UV. Fr•,,. H I I ll< Nit1wn A ~·"" 2e;, •21~~ 241:. c;trf, tm4---NOW, :r tt e R .:.-po It e-. -Be--IT -Efft-no.•1-fHu tlltn(• N<W111 W'OO'W Tiii• .~.1tl'Mnf 1111,, ttltd wltti tM America's are against the bill you receive. ~ eci.t.c!~l •:~ 1~v. ~;r.'!!'d ~~ iv. e\ot N1•1"'" B '''• ?1i.o s...cier £• t i.. 1;. RObtrt J. 0'0onni:ll, •lt•h Citnellon RESOLVED !hat; w .. 1 290.0G IHI to 1 paint on !hi County Cltlil of Ot•llllt COW!IV on !he I-I'll t'n Al't'I £'apr •l ,,~, Froi FOE 1~~ 1~\\ NO•dl!r 111.\ \Ho Svntr t p 7\~ 1t. Avanl,lf, Coro~ lltl ,..,.,, C1tltorn1• 1. Thia BOll•O tUthorlIM !ht Obt•ln.frli Horttlwlfl•rtv Uni Of 11lcl Lot 111. OKtmW It ltn. ....,..., -Whenever possible, pre-...,., f llW.1 12"8 13 i:-..,11,. H 6\o , ... Nw~ NIG • I\, Tilly (Tp Ht ,~. nw Of "•rtol 1 ·bV !ht 1.-ciw~ Jtlert+or 111c1 polnl ,bell'IO Nortll :tt'S7'32'' E111 ' f'4'Dt the ne-.vest Am F1t111 21:i;. 2''1'1 Fun~ SH '"' '"'NO=~~ "!~! 't ~!~::'•w Il,,. ~w Tlllt bu.ine1s Is COllCl11<:lecl by en of P1rct1 11 wltll IN C11Y o1 lr11rn1, •lotlf lht Northwe1llrly /Int of Mid PublltMcl OtlniJ9 Cotsl Dally Piiot ,....., .. d Of !Ut'I· Vent estimated bUJlngs by Br· Am Fi>fn ~. 6\'• Wl11<11t ,',, 1•1 ••n Dr 7•V• 7S\!ii Telecm U10 •i.. lfldlllld\ltl. 11 111 forllt \n •n AO~nt etl•clled l.ol I~ • dl1t1nc1 of :UO S. fftt DK--· ''' >• tm ,,. ,,, ... ,, • ..,...., Al'l'I Gt•• :WI>\ isv. G<lrun-• e1n E; 11 11~ Ttnn1n1 l9 •1 ltobt,t J, 0'0 011ne11 h•,•lo 1nd 1M•kitc1 e xh!Dll c ind m•de ttWn 1111 PGlnt of Dtolnnlnoi llltnce 2 ,··;;;. ,.;i.73 be ranging to be. pi'esent when A.Wrc sv :t2~-. 21'• G.4>te L•J •<1. ~1. n<J• Mi 1"'-1.,,. t1r,rv en u u Thlt lflt1men1 Wll 11~ wllh Ille • "ti llertof. 110"9 11141 NorlhWHt1rlv 11111 OI Sllcl ' ' Jty ra in· the meter read r ii y ~::i ~~:: 1!\<o U~. g:ie ... Tr 6,, ··,~· ls.II L<J~ ll'Mo 11~ To f1nv SV! jt. County Cltrll. ot Ot1n111 County °" 2. This Bo•rcl tlncl1 Ind cltltrmlMt Loi 131 South 3t'S7'32" Wnt 220.56 PUBLIC NOTICE crea ses to be e c a s. OU Anl'>tuV J.1. 4!~ Gnlto, ..• ~ • • ll~y M 1t:i.. ls..I• Tofl'll' DC 6'~ 1\IJ ~0Kember It, 1913 Ille! !ht ,J)lrCl ll •ol l1nd .,.. \If 1ublt1n. t"I to IJMc point of btglnnl119, C8D a f f a Q g e .annninfme nts Ailf~Co 16 It~ Gn A_;loP :W)lo lS\;, II Co.II lSVt """ Towlt M1 110 I 1"4n11 ll•llY equlvolent v•IUI tncl the! Ille Tiie •bO'lt OtKrlbecl property <Ollt•lns granted in Yt"' AP$ Into 10 11-. ~n Bond 1 If, "~' MOlll t ,...., Trn O(en IJ\ .. l) Pul)llsl'lecl or111111e Cotti o i ur Pl'OI •«hlntt will tianellt "" -.c:hoob 01 1.'611 1cr11 I Ila • l \riih your_ utility s upplier. Aran Myl 1v, n. Gn truoe ~~ ~"'° 11t1 CNA 2:i.,, 2'14 trnon Fn • •'!1 De«mbel' 19, 2co. 1913 Incl J•nu1ry !!It District •nd Ille pupils lllereof. l"rt9ertcl by: -HO'rlCI 10-c••o•TO•t c 0 m n g "Estimated ings can lead to Arrow Hr 111.o Ult) Gnl Sll11e 10\o IOtt P!~t B~ ,t:;; 1:~· ~~f: ~~ ~'II ~~~! 2, f, 1'1• lflf·13 Thl1' ll:tsol..,tlon ~111 be p11bllJhecl In Frid W. H1nstrl*• U 3Z5a SUl"lltl!Ht COUIT 011' TH! months t 0 J Arvlcl1 6\1.o •\.o Gola SFd 16 ll''i P.lttlr JS :14 Uni C1p1 s"1 , • MWSpaper lti~lni;\ general cfrt ..,lillon LIOALUDHllSaC>RT<:TD">ON O.J STATa 011' CALlllOIHIA l'Olt ppl' ( emporary OVerpaym e nt UO tlJ ::lwG~o~~ 11\o I?"-• Grllm Ma~ l'fl I'• It C.am 1l~ lll• Union Sp! lS\• It~• PUBLIC NOTICE l'l lht Dl1lrlct one• • -·· "· ,....... .. r TH• (OUNTY 01' OllANGI! SU ters 0 an a•tual read'•g ,., ob.ta'•ed II 11 .... IJ Grip!! Sc Sh st. P•t L11m ll> )lo~. UnArl Th .,,, J~, - ... I •• "l , "'' ""'"" HOll'TNl!l-11..f.:INTAllY SCHOOt. N., A·11t77 • I • it '-.,, "' ' All Slttl 1•1lt U G••y Ac111 11, I P1n OCOI IS\ot ISl US S.UQM .a 4S .---::::::::::,,,--,,,,·"'----I s nnl11111 on Dtcllf1\ ... r 19, 1913. ~ e e C triC y \, M A-1 A"'lo Trn IS"• I •th en 11\1\ lt'h p1111 Aev 10~. 11~; us fr~ L ,,.. •'1• AYES: Mtmbtrl BOl.lllncltr, Gln~rlil• IUIL. ING llTt: Esltl• Of I . Ml :HAEL McDONALD, &a,-S ayn~ .. ru. S.!rd Alo ,,.,. J ... Halln EW 11.o 1'14 Pyl's C.~ Ii'!• 14 Unov fd\ n•. 1l l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl'.SS-Olton, Slcoll Sir<lllo (~Ol!;TION TO la CONVIYaO TO lkl 8Ell:T MICHAEL.· McOONALO, lb and gas. POITI• "Make sure m e te r readings B•lrd Wr ll1o ll\'o H•m11 !Ir ,, 11 Piv N S• 1?\.t ui.1 Vt<JM Ho 7~, 1,,, NAME STATl:MINT NOES No'.ne CITY Of' lltVIN•'l!'OR-l'AltK 11Tll B. MICHAEL MKOONALO, DKffttcl • """ a.~,. Br 6 1 Hen ~RI IJ'I. 1•~· P1Gs• w I~,. l~'h Vinti Sn .... s"" Tiit tollow!no peraon 11 dol119 ll"'llM11s ABSENT, None 8tl119 • oorllon ot !,.Ot UC In Blotk NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN to till occur every OJAI Or 60 days. 8•ktr Fe 1s;11 1•1>'1 Harper R S''" ~~ Pel HI.ti 14'1• 1S•1, Van Oyk 13'11 14'1> ••. ~ STATE OF CALIFORNIA 103 of ·~vine s s ... lldl11llior1, In tlll City crldllors Ill lh• lllO ..... Mmld dec9Cl•n1 THAT'S BECAUSE If do 't II S.ll!-l ,,. I~. H•Wlh Fl S'o M Petro Lw ." •\t. V•n s.r.t1i. • ...., s JOHN'S SPORTING GOODS, au oa11 COUNTY OF ORANGE )SI of ltvlnt, County of or111111. $111• of the! •II .,....,_ having <:l1fm' f!lllntt we you n • you WI even-6•11~ Mii '1Vo •2't. ~llh~ M~ l~. , ... P!nkrln ill u Vlc!O•I ~I I \'> .... sr Apt. "B". Coit• Mts•. c,111 n•2a 1. 11:. O.il'I oiion, Clerk of 1111 8111,d c111mn11, •• shown on • mep recorcltcl ''-.. 10 Cltc:edenl •r• r1q11lrld to Ille really get hit twice. First, tually get a bag bill that will ::~:e1~~ 21 21'1) tte~ce1 c •1. 111 Pi-• w 1~ 1~. vi0eo s vi l'-' Jo1111 Eclw•rd Pt<•Ym•n Jr .. ,,, oai. ot Elluc•llon of lrvlne Unlllld kllool '" Booll. I, peg• II of Mlsctllll'ltOUs tlltttl, wr111 •"• '*"'Mrf vouc:hers. •n we must absorb the rate hikes be hard to verify." Utilities B1y1t\s i:~ ·:~~;<Joe eel ~ ~6 Pl...,o Mk 26'i. ,, •• v1sua1 Sc • 6'• SI, Apt. "B''. C~I• Mis.. Cell! t'l626 0111r1c1 ot o r1119, Co11n1V. Cotltornlo, M1p1, In lht otllct of tlllo Couniv Ille of lie• of Ille cl••k ot tN •llove . Bekln co , 4•n "°:,~~ 12 'n 2~~ ~':'t~t :!: 1~!: ~°1, ~ t~ ;!: This 111111111u Is conduct.cs bV tn 11ere11Y cer1lty lh•t 111, •DOve •!'Id tor~ ll:tc:order of uld COV111Y. dn(rlfled •• antllltd <:ourt, or to .,,...,,, thtm. wlJh as pnmary consumers of.e)ec-have a right to back·bill you 0tn11v u u i. 1s~. Hunt M'la ,.,, 10·~ Piiin cao ti;. 4y, w1,11 NG 11,, 11~. 1noi~1c1..,.1 lll<J Re110l..,tlon was d"'IY ,1111 rlfl\lflrly klllow1: Tiie l'll!'tesH•Y 1101.1Chers. to tlll \HI· tricity and g Then t ih . 1. Best Pro 9 t~o H~•H c S't 6\t. Quakr Cit ll'l:t i•rt Wt•mn. 1 j \, ,.,,. , Johtt E. Pffrvmen J r. •clopltd 111 1111 sild eoara 11 1 rtoular 6~1nn1no "•t 111c most Nort~IY derif<Jned •I c/o RCMW11d H, Prtnn••· as. , we mus WI ~ tune unita tions 'on Bel: uo 40 41 ky~1e• c w . ,1',. °"''" ca 6\o ,~. Wltdfn • 6~. Tllh tlt ltmtnt w1, 111ec1 wltll 1111 mtttlng• lhereol lleld: on '"' \2th d•Y cor~r of Loi 138 ot Tt1ct No 76'1 Attorney •t UW, 315 W11t Third St'"'' absorb them again by paying back billings. If you do n't ge t Elillll co &~. •1• fMS 1ntr11 9\'J 10 Aalnr Cp ~ s•,. wef<Jt wt 11"1 J~. County CS.rk of Orin<J• COUii!\' on of Dtclinbe• 1973. •nd P41Sstcl b'f 1 •• thown on • rNlfl record.a In Sent• Ant, C1Utllfnl1 t"J10\, wlli<:h Is the t f . sed Bl<J Orm •~1 91• l!d• Wat it 1'lfl Ri~tm Wei In! M 91.:. io•, cec1m1>1r 10. 1tn. ... ..,n1nimous ,,0j, 01 ••Id Bol•cl Booll :m. P•llM 1 '"rouol'l s of th• pl•c• ot 1111,1""1 of tne urtc11r.i11n1c1 COS O mcrea rates a bill for six months or a g:~d~ l'IY1' '''" ino\ Nc>tl 10"1 n•, 24' 2so w11e~ Pt~· S'• •·•I• IN WITNE"'" WHEREOF I llllW MIK•ll•neou• MIP• ln tM office of In •II mellffl Ptrl•ln1ncf lo Ille "'!'' iJnnn.aAll 00 those from whom B!kHI Pw 1111 t9Vi Into••• ll• t'-Raymd IS'h 161/) W5 I(~~ 1 .... ,...,bll5hfd 0'111119 (Oii! Otlly Pilot Mrounlo Ill "?;.,, hllld •ml' llOI tllf• 11tcl COUllTY ll:ec:orderl thtnc:I olllfl\'I of H lcl dK~nl, wi thin tour "'°" h\ ~u year Ol' more, YOU are DOt Block OQ lll-• JS 11111' l.11> 14 IS AllM P1c ""' llW Wettr Fd 61/o .... Dt<"11ber 11, 19. ,., 1911, '"° J•nuarY 12,h diY 111 Ot«mber, 1tn. th• $Ol/t11ee11er1y llna of wld Traci 1110~ ',."'o"''' publlcet11~, ... of thi1 no, llct. we buy goods and services. getting free eleetr1city. The eiutCh s 1Ji! 1 : :~:!!c tE~ ~~:rt: ~=~°\11~ ,~:,: 1~~ ~::~~";: J 1~t,: 1~°" 1.1t74 l1S0.7J A Oe•n Olton No. 7UI North lt'S7'32:" E1st 1&2 • .0 11 ectn11>tr I , •~ ' In the und dabl l II I BMA Cp 11•, Ii.,., lnlmt ~ IS 1s~1 Aefl univ 1..,, '''• WlnM Str 111, u •, Pu~ll•"ecl Or•noa Cotit 0111., Piiot '"' to tlll SOl/fnWHlttlY une of thl KENNETH R. MKOONAl.D 1k1 erstan e words company even ua Y wtl catch Boll Evni 1•:• !~ 1n, A111m • 4"" Ae• Plls J\o Al o wont P•T u :.-. 1•'·• cec:emw 19 26 1913 •flcl Jan1.1iry iand convevld to 111e $0ut11ern C•lltorn1• KENNETH R. M(OONAlO of_ Theodore E. Maynard, up With you and d e mand pay-Booin No 11,," in 6kW A •'• s•, Aevn &R J111o n 1. Wlit PLt 111'1 11•. ........ 197• : • 3'(Jl.73 Edison Coml)lny, • CotPot•llon, llY EXKUIOf ol tilt Wiit of BrellCO I 111. 2~~. lnte•~ll J~ !'• R•v•I Ml ?l~• l'\-WOOd Liit 131. 13•• ---=-,=~-------' deed cl•tld J1lfllary 10, 1973, • ..cs tll• 1bove nemtcl decldtnl pre sident or National Utility ment. Brlnki ~ 8 IV. ln1•11 tp , •• llt Roao E•. JI~ 38\'; World Sv ""'" 10'' l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS .., RC I t-otes In 8oo11; 10501, p1111 9'1 IONAl,,D N. ,.ll!NNll • $e · • • J tio aJ .1. ::~".. ~ l'OV, 12'h 1• So Ul•I 1\lo ll~o Robrt Ots 13 ll"" WdQl'lt W J 3 , • NAMI STATIMENT~ ' LEGAL. O~sc:~TION 0111 of OfflCl•I ll:Kord• ol Or11t11• C01,111ty1 JIJ W11t TlllN: Stf'HI rv1ce, an m ema n ut11• S...tkbe l·'o ~t: ~~fW. a.beo ~" :. Rollln\ B 14 Ii 'f'ello Frt ,..~.to•. Tht toll-Ing ptrsons .,. clolno • HOl,.TNllt l'LIMl!NTAIY SCHOOL. tllltnc• •IOfl<J Mid SOU!hwetltrlY line S..t• ..... Cltlfol'NI ftftl ty rate consulting organization -IF YOUR home is elec-S...<kty 3.",. l\'o J~r:r. \ £m bi. 1i:! A0"'5e Co l\.'o ·~· Zoom. Ul~ 11~. 23 bullllll• ., IUILOINCO SIT• Siii.iii! ~a· Eitl 330.'3 Ifft. tllenc• T ...... , 111'' S4l-'Ul whi•h serves most of the 500 tricaliy heated, be sure you &J rnp SI 2'"· , .... JOltns EF 11 HJ.. OT'' 1~ ., • . II: • M ENTEll:P11:1$ES, n 7U S•n ll'OITION 'Of' LOT I•, par1Ue-t wflh tl'le SoulllNtltrly line Alhnle'f fir EXK•lor '-Butler M ll'I< 12~• JOl.l~n M 11 ll t... tr I' Qlll nC'll l'e Elltbln, MIHlon Vl1lo1 C•I '261S •XISTINO l'AIK SITI', TO •• ol 11ld Tract Ho, 1Ml SOUlll J9'$1'l2" Publlllllld Ora1191 Coest O•HY Piiot. toti ·corporations in the U.S. &re charged under the proper c.iwt 5v 24),;, 1S\I\ K•l$t>r SI Uh 16'.I\ SIOCk Yol- L•rrv Ot•n lt:lllOS. 73771 San Est11>en, CONVIYIO TO llVINI! Wt1t 2n 2J lffti fhlncl. 1Hr1Htl wflll C.Umbtr 12, \9, U , ltT.J Ind J1nutrv "A boost m· the electric b·i!I tional I Jn . C•m T19 13\<t l• Kllv1r C l J~. Pltnn Lile 11'1 JOO M1••1on v11fo, C•Uf, '2675 IN so1.1th1M11\terlY une of u ld 11nc1 2, 1t1c J1ss.1:i promo ra e. winter c..non Ml 105'•• 11 K•~n c 1011, 11 ~. R•nk °'" AO 11 t00 Ml~: v~flo~~t m~ El E1ttt11n. 111':!1:11,!.i,~":'tw~11~~'~,TITract ~'Jl=~oiZl~~~OO'~u;:~~ PVBUC NOTICE of a supermarket or ~depart-in most areas of the U.S. ~i~11:i 5~ ~~ ~~~n s!~ ~\o ,~:~ !~111E:;:,,~ ~'.:J Tiiis M l""' 11 conduc1ec111y1 llmllld No. 16H, rn tr11 City of lrvhw. Countv 40'3 ,.., to 1po1n1on1hl SOUfhf••llrly -ment store cannot be absorbed (November to May) your v "''" 1• ken to11n 1v• 1 M1rl111 N'cll B M.llOO P•rln.rtlllp, Q/ Ortflllt, Slllt of C•lllornl•, 11 thoWn ti -Id , ·• t• ·-... ' "c 11 !PS 11"° 11'111 kl "'I E\\ 14>,.,, ll'h Uno CiOlll Co S2,t>OO Urry D. Rina °" • m10 recorded Ip l ook 2'1, po11e• ;: :.!..,!!. I I' 11""' dt_ .... ld a L I • 1141 without having these costs usage will be higher but your cr~'"01g :;,,,.1;~ K,tv Dllli 4V1 5 Agnlto E•<Jle M SI.~ Tiils 1tat...,,..,.1 Wll lllld wllh 1111 1 t1tr111.111h s of M1Ktlllneolrl M1p1. -·-1 •r y ne •• 0 NOTIC• TO c1eoJT01tS ...,,,...,..,f -·~ the b • ki ' •ves fl) 10~. 1!\'o Coml) IOU Am Sl JOO In 1111 effict of tlMt County ll:ec:ordtr Ill North 3t"S7 l2" E1tl 90,00 feel SUl'EllOlt COU y Of' THE .,......,.,.., 00 w pu liC. 11 average COStS per •towatt ~ltmp pt 6'h I\• l('y to.n1 ,,,_ S'lo $nap On Tooli tS,100 ~~':~ 19;;.-or·~Gountv -on of 11ld C01.111fy-----:<iii(rl6ii:l-H loflovnt to-thl "'°" li••lffl</ «ltMr-ol-----Mllf --tTATtOf' CAt.IPOl:NIA-POll hoor-shotl:ld -be l 0 w e r • t~:::f' c: ·~~ 1~\11 ~m1 :~ ,~~. 2~"' Anlllu~ Bl.lith tt.~ lll·~lltt 8&11lnnlng at the moil Wn terty corner Lof 131, thtnce elong tht Northt!lillrly THE COUNTY Of' OUNGa TJIE UP p Chem Cp 11~1 19 Knipe Vt 1o•n 12 NASO Ll1tinglf.,.Monday, O.cember31, 1973 PUBLIC NOTICE • Pvlll!alled Or•ntt '°''' ~r IL If, ,., -i•n 0.11, Pl.'' of Hid Loi lll1 llltnc• 11 ...... thf line of .aid t.ot 131 North .50"02'21" No A nus s IRAL ln 1974 is Maynard cautions. c heck c.r .. Br Ir l<nud~ 1().1., lH'1 NASO VOiume toGay All~llllCfS 610; , ... -·· Wt1I 29000 fHI to IN oolnl ol • ' '' • tlll'lf~ 619, "'llChln<JtO 141. to\al 2 /J, •nd Jinu•rv Sou111wes1er1y ""' 01 ,,1d Lor 1:11 1 · . E•l•I• of G ADOLF GR!~ O.Celltd oot a new trend;-it's -an ·ae-. whether you are domg-all 1 V• 11 Ko<Jt• Pr 1 ~'n 16~, ------' 31.f6.1J :"11,,.,:;02::;111e~;1 c!:°n'..~ ~"' .. 1: 119.fti'!n~':oY'f dttcrlbecl property con11tns e..:1~!~E of1s~E:t!i!v r!!'.:N ~~ celeration of an old one. For possible to get the benefit of ~~~~ :: 15/1 i~~ ~~~erei 1~ ~.~: Gtliuer& n11dl~Oa er11 . , ----------------1 Loi 131, tlllnc• along tilt Sovttoe1sl1rly l.'611 tcrn. flllt 111 Ptr10l'll hiving clelmt "9eJnsl instance ..........i; ... ,. t h t Lltled St 32 3~ GA_INEAS PUBUC NOTICE nnt ol 1110 Loi 131 North ""S7''2" Pr~recl by: tl'le Hid ~I •r• flQl,lfr.CS to Ille ' ac ............. >&. 0 an NUS c eaper ra es . ~:~1:-u ~ 1S :\.:.o ~~~ Lonca\\ 9'1• 1(1 I Cim Brw wt~ i, ''' Up 66 I East 220 •1 iaeTJ ITltftCI North 50'00'43" Frid W. Hlflllrlclgt:, LS 32.51 lhem, wllh· thl nec.essel'Y YOIKhlrs. In SUrvey, rate increaJeS bi the -Be sure your entire house Cl•wpl< 2~11• 10 .... t!~~ Pr 12 23 ~ ~~O~<J,I Mo'.: 131 ~.;:;t:! ~: ;~ ~ ~STA1112 Wtsl 29000""' to. point on lhl PUBLIC NOTICE Ille ollk • ol""' cl•k ol Ille Ibo•• electric utility ·mdustry l and hot wale tanks Clev Tr1v I'~· 14"" •11V>ll •Con Hors<ho•n 11Jlt t 116 Up 21 • NDTIC• OP' TltUSRa'I SALi NCW1hw11t•rlv lint of .. Id Loi 1311 eritlllod court, or to Pl'ftlfll them, wltll a one r are COC· Clow Crp l:t.o l 'I> Liwt~ C 21°1>2'1 SCon1W~ln ,20b 8\S·\6 .-3-16 Up 20G r .s. Ne. U6<n solo poln1 btll\9 North at•sr:J:1" e111 thti nec: .... rv "'ouc~ to thl un-in 1970 totaled $430.5 millinn; rectly insulated for maximwn co0e Lib 16 111 l•JY 6ov n,,. 1l>M 6 L•nc.1~1co1 J2 11._,_ ~. Up 1~ 4 .O!LJ.tn11e_rv_ lJ~ 1f14,. •' 1) 00 A.M , •'°"I lhl HorthwnTerl"' Une ol 'aid f'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS dtrli<Jnecl 1t BAffK OF AMEM NA· · ....,... Cot>urn 0 14'' IS l...eldr NU 10 11 I D•• f.1rlh Sto 1 !J 16+ 1 16 Up 18 l TITLE INSURANCE A·Mo l'll:UST COM· -rpi "'~ cllst•nt'l~OI' 221156 Ifft Nl<Ml"'tt'ATIM•HT-TIONAL TAUST ANO s Av I" Gs m 197!, $802.6 million; as of reduction of the costs or your Co<.aC u 11"" 12\/t l...eQQtl Pl 91• IO'h 8 6nl11rxl Mint\ 13 16+1 16 Up 116 l'ANY duly b$111ufld T f TM lol l I I do! Ml ASSOCIATION TRUST OEPARTMENT :.emr 1m - . I ~ -ed ~--( --Comm-Cl 10~12 lol>Hly H 1 1"-9 Mell• CIAm ,U ~'1tl' .,. UP 11 • .na ~.::.,..t "°!"°'" oi T•~~ .r=: := ~:~1~rnw_::1 . .:nes: •1: ""'1111 oerson s nt ntu to1 Nor111 M.1n strtet. s.nt• An.: y$1ea3rb_illlon ra'te~ est mat--CofisumLimip~iot no energy!. d . ~:'1 JrG~ ~~ t~v. t::..ron~f. ~(! i~v. l~ ~YJ.i~~nto{ft, 4 i6~::' ~~ ~~ l! ! Dtcllf1\0tf ti, 1,10. •s ln•I. No. 1"613, Loi 1Jll SOU'lll Jt'S1'32:" w .. t 220..56 THE CLINGING VINE PL.ANT C.lllornla fVOI, ~whiclt If till pleu · u1crea.se a~ -your Use 0 f8 iallt Cmwll P 22 ll Lon< !ldst 31,, ,,,.. 11 Do("'"I torp 81>+ •o 16 • In llOllk tdl. P'llf t3. of O!ll(l•l ll:tcotCI$ ftOt lo Ille Point of btglnnl119 llOUTIQUE. IO'll ll•valdt Dr., Newport of lluslll0$J of Ille YndenlOnod In •II plicatiODS Were pending bef J t . f' d f he t (pt r Aul.o 131,, """Lion CtS. llii Ho ll Haw611Crp 40 l IS 16+1·16 :t: 1t I In !tot . otfl«' of IM (OUftty ll:ICQl'dtr Thi 1Dove \MKnbed proptrty conl1ln$ 811cll, C1HI. 92660 ll'llllltrl ~rt1inlng 10 tlMt ISlllt of ore e ec MC U'eS an aft a e rs Cptrvis 11''• ll'" Lotl•te "'" ~2 14 AmF11 rnl!r 11 ')S 9 16 .1 1• Up U 9 "Oo<•• CCM.1"tv. C•Uf0f'n11. WILL SELL 1 . .W 1cr11. Wllll•m John llruno, 433 s.1w••cl 111c1 dei:eclent, wr1111n tour mon1111 1tt1r various state regulatory 'agen-whenever possible. The s e , Conn Fo 1,,,, 1~1 1..ont si.r 9'• 9:i., u B•sk1n Rol>b•n 1 u 1•~ l 16 u 0 u, AT PUILIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST P~pe•.CStrl': ll:cl ,CoronidfiM1r.C1lll f'lW lhtllrstpub41eellonofthlsnollct. · A-.1 Cm Pipr ll 21~•l..Ongv Fo 16 6r•utral\ 12 1116•l·lt Up t1• a100ER FOii: CASH !PIY•bl• ,, Um• Fred w. HtflstrldOf, u 3251 Tiii• bu~-11 c:oncsuct9CI DY en Del.CS QKtmDtt" 1, 1m CIS; year-,;:uu ,1973 figures together with water beaters , Con!iu wt 1•'12 20~. 111 126 11 Munlmedil 1e 11 11•+l" Up 1'.ie If 1119 In llWfUI monl'f of Illa United E1hlblt A lndlvldull, 81nk of Amet'lc:e Nlllontl aren't yet in but they're up are the most expensive items ~~~~ Cp r.~. ~~ ~~rsm~o :ig,,,. ~~t! 11 MurMcllF 2Cll> 4 1 1•' I It UP IS.6 Stt*) 11 tha Soult! Iron! 1t1lr1nc• f'AICaL. 11 Wlllllm J, Bruno Trut.1 •ncl S•vi111111 Auoc, again • to run Oll electiicity in your Cro's Co 22V. 13Vo MIG G.4>s U\ot Uto 1 A!l;tnht ContrL01~~f&-1 16 :C1~ 1~1c1111e°';:'B1~':"!: ~::"~:: HOI~;::~ :~~~~:':~:; :~ooL c~1~ ·~~~~~:o;.,;.r.cs ~~ 1~ -~~~~~!·-E1/;! w111 of --""~'s no -m· t m· getting ~me-. ~~lc'Nc.1~ 1~~ '~l• :l1c~l1v ~~ t~~ ~ ~~n!rtv"',m,.• ',~ . 2!~, ~:·~ An.I BciUltv1fd;""lormoflV Will 6th Sli'hl, .IUIU>ING SITI Ote:imbii' 11, lt13. 11'11 lllO,,. nemtcl dlClcllnt 1.-nCI-,;:: t"' ,.., Omi.n Oii '~' !\', Maril'lt C '?S 1•'n 4 Grap/lit $(..,. 3 s.J;._1 It 0/1 n 1 S1nt1 ....,,, C1t!l0<nl1, 11! •l<Jhf, lltl• (f'OltTION TO Be CONVIY•D ll'.Ja19 "'""· WllUI', WllmlKk. into the arguments on both -Make the IJV)st efficient Dini ln!X. 'S'I• 46 Ma rot Fri 11 11~> s B•<J Drum .JO ·~ '. Oii 10 s ~ Jn-.rw1t (:Oll"'t'(fd lo 1flcl ,_ ht!cl TO Cl't'I Of' llVINE f'OR l"AltK SITl!I Publllhtcl Or1n<Je Coast D•11Y Pllol MllllM A Killl ' ~ f f Dart Or<J '"° S Mark Tw l•'h 11'" ' P.l!f<J etvr 1Glt 1~. ., • 011 10 O bv 11 ""°" 11to o..o Of Tru11 In B•lf111 • POl"llon ot Lot uc In Block o.ctrnw 19, 2a. 1913 anc1 J•nu1ry A uw c...,.,.tt11111 sides now. Our case as con-use 0 Your e ectrical ap-8:~~n ::.' ~.,,. ~J~· ~'t,!Yk ~~ ~~~ 1 Al!Olbm Food 2•n-.. o u 10 o tbo 11n:11*1V sill.Ill.cs In UICI COUl'lty 1~ of lrvlne's S"'lldlv!slon, In lhe Clly 2, f, 191• 3115-13 1 .. ClflhH"f 1'1111 Ehl Ht. .. 8UmefS is self~vident. The plianceS. [)o not kei!p Opening ~(15 DI 1 l•n Mc:Owl E 1v, a : rce:~~~dAl.I~ I s1~.1t:: :: g:: :,; tN1 l11t• dncrlbld •1: of lr11ln1, COunl'f of Ot~nge, Slit.I .of Lit .......... Cl ""1 Ulit and b t t · f · to ~kll> AA •9~ ~. Mc:Mllln I ' 10 ku!ilom Enrn 2\o O!f 1 1 TM E•it 132 '"' of ""' SOUth cau1orn11, •• 5hoWfl on , rn.tP r«ordecl PUBIJC NOTICE 1211) ""44ll U Y managements , ! U Ing re rigera r-o.1n1 1nu ' •~• Mc.O..,•y 10\1\ 11'1. 11 M.l!Jor Rn os1> 2,. . 0 11 1 1 -.fllll of Loi :M of "FAIRVIEW In Book 1, P"9I •• of MIKell1neout AHllnMYI for EXKllfor however, present convincing (reerer doors; turn off lights oe•u•e c )Olf'l )I ~. Ml•~..,, 21't. ,, ... ,, AmLiF•n OYI' • !>-16'-1·16 OU •• FARMS," '' $1WWn on 1 M•O rKordecl M1pi, In 1111 office of lh.f County STATIMINT DI' AaANDONMaNT Oii Pulllllhtd Or•"D' Coei;T Dilly Piiot, eVJ·dence Of soarm·~ ~-f and appliances When not need &\!;'.; ~· 9,:~ 1o, ~dt1 m 10 1"-11 CipMtglnv wl 1"1 • Ott I l i;..::-,::~':1' ofn ~.::.-1~= ~'f!~ ot w ld <.ounlY, deKrlblcl •• us• o,. 1111cnT1ous •USINESS NAMI' ~~~Dtt" 12• 1'· 26. -im •ncl J~~:~ I I and -~~ .0 ed hen king. , the • Olvrs s.ti Jit:' • ;:.:.:~t t;,,, ~"' :t ~';'::''C:u~:! ~ 1 ~16'-1 1~ ~/1 : ~ C11ffornl1, EXCEPT tht WHI so fNt 81(11111'11119 at !hi most Nor!Mrly Thi t0Howl119 """°"' "'"' 1ti.ndontcl eu genera g eqw~ : w coo tn oven, Ooculel 9,,. lG'lo fllervy ?l"• 14"1 I• JOllll\OllE F 60 11 •10-~· 011 81 of Ille Soulh l!IO IHI ll\ll'IC>f, (orntr ot Loi Ill ol Tri cl No 76'1 lhl "'"of '"' tlctlllCM.11 Mlnett noO'tf. p ...... ,, NOTICE ment. of costs of pollution cook as much as possible at =,~" 2: ... 2~~ MIY''' ~r ,i ~. 21 u Lion c1ys.l•rl i o.1 ••• ou • J Iht_l~_lddrni Ind olhlr common I S t9-n on • m•P ~ In OE ANIA PUZA. 14112 f ruit SI , "'.u&o&V Mlcfl'i C U't. 16 II Mcltllr'lld Matr l •.• Ott 1 l dtsl!ilnltlon, 11-1ny, Ofrtii r••IP'.-rtV -B«lk-m ;--Plliis-i -111r01.1<Jt1-r ·ot _$11\ta_Ana._Celif. _ _nw___ _ controls, of the need to keep the same time; tum off any dncrllltd •-• '' 11UrPOrttc1 10 111: Mltdll•nlKllltl Miii>' 1n tho otlkl' of 111e llctiti-builnns n•ma nterrtd 10 -,...~~o::;::~~:,:s---pace With--YiSilfg-demani!S for-unnecessary-lights-and-heating 1·------2 I ss2 HAMILTON, COSTA MESA , "Id c-tv ll:«Or"de•, 111enc:t 1ltl'l11 •lxllll w•• 111tc1 In °11""' C01H1ty '" T+. •1,..-1 •r• d-',, power and the--• drive appliances. MUTUAL FUNDS CALIFORNIA lhl Soufhl••l••IY llnt ol Nici Tr•cl .. 1 .. n . "' ' 1111 ptnons CH ..,... .... "' Tiii undettlllnl'cl 1'r1111ff cllKltltn• Ill~ No. 7MI Nol'lh )9<'S1'l'2" Etst lf1..0 Flovcl F. GtOOllM' Jr• ll06t El111 butlnnt •s. for eYT\.onajOll. ll1blllty tor •nY lnt0rrectn111 ot 11'11 Ifft to ff11 &CM.llh-terly lint Of lne Or .• Dane Point, C1ll l 12629 TElitRA, 347 W. Wiison No. F, Cot.II ,._..., ,·---------------------------.. '""" Mtclrta ind Olller contrnon llnCI conve'(fd to ltW souliltriii Ullfornli T0tn Shoen, S•nt1 A111. c1n1. Mae, Cllltorn11 92'27 ' --WHEN BUYING new ap-""!1111Jon: 11 •nY. sl'IOwn "-r•ln Ellh.on c..,.nY 1 cor-·t!IQ'I ..., This bl.lsln..:<1 w•• conducted by • Art-Arwi R-r. 30 W. WlllOl'I PUBIJC NOTICE lian lect models h. h ·...,,.. York -FOi.:/""Eqty Fit llO •06 KEYSTOHli: su.ao G•I": Sid Hit wlU be .""°' btll wlllloul dHd dltcl J • lO,,....l'73 '.;;dllmlttdpartnertll•P No.F,Cdlt•Meu,C•llfornl19U27 p ces, 5e W IC lowl1t9 l1 1 ll$I of Ol'ytlv U U U 92 Co.nt fU_ 116ll't.'9 Acl 'Gw fl) fl l -·--· -"'"""'' •• ,.!... _ 1_1,., --' 1, .·~~r"to••', -· •1 Lloyd F Groover Jr, Jorry Zimm«, 7751 Arlllll' Cir., Hi.m-a lUS draW' the }east current for Did lnG 1sllld prl·1 SO lntm 1.!6 l l J C\151 81""1931 11 11 Ad Inc Ill Ul .. ,,. .... ~, -.., ~"" ,,.., ,.,....,....., """' ~ •• T I I w< h t1111:1ton ltllcil. C•Ulornll Cfi on Mutwl 3rd Cent 9 Bl 10,IJ tu~I 8ol 1 11 8 SS Ad Ins (l) fl) ttQltclltllJ 011.. ooswWon. or tfl. of OfflClll ll:l«ll'(IS of Orange County; "s •l•ltmtnt WIS t led I "'' r NOTICI TO ClliDITOl:S the Jdentlcal job. "ft pays ,F ... ncts es. quolftl II~ EAE Mil l 10 3 10 ,c..s1 1(1 6 Sii 1 Sol Cm Cap (JI II) cumbtaM'l'I. lo ~v tht rffnllnl119 prln-thtnc• •long u lo SOUlllWft!w\Y 11111 ~ounl'I c1e,," I "of °''~ County on F!;.~1nF=~ .. c~1~!!:n1~mu II Aw.. SUf'l'ltlOI COUll:T 011" THll ..... I ct Ibis model 'ih 1111 NASO llW.. E.IDlf Gf' 1.03 110 o.nl 1(1 s S9 6 1J In<. Fd8 U) UI clPlll IUl'll of ltll ftolehl MClll'tcl tlY SOuth SO"CIO'O" E .. r 330.'3 tell/ """" Olltrnber • ' ' ... "-•-' RI<• ····-,,,,, STATI 0111 CAl..lf'OINIA .., se e even WI --EATON a. (U$1 SI-io 'I n ll !>00 l...e~ td II) w ld D..i of Tr111t I.wit· '6112121 •I"' 1-.. •-···· , I '>I F .... t ....-v" ....,. .... ll'Olt TNa COUNTY 011' OflANGI i.: .............. ,...J.., · " ....... ! HOWARO: Co.nt S2 \0 1~11 11 SECUll:ITY FOS, • ' ' Pl• w '" .....,. ,..,., er r 111 p bll hid 0t coast 01Uy Piiot C•mllll• Ave Fount1ln V •I I• Y N•. A·7'tll a 'll6""" .,... ._, ... se pnce, says O.c"11i:lel' l , 191l 61ln Fd •.so to 3f CiAI S3 'Jot 1 04 E"'"lt/ l J6 3 ~ wttll llllln!t'I ttier-. II ptOVld9d In of Nici Tr•CI No. 7"1 Soutl'I· 39•51•31" 0 ' ,.,' 1, ",." ''" 0_.. Janue"' C•llfornl• ·• ' M d. • .. G CllSI S4 3 7J '09 -Mid """(t ), ...... enc ... If iny, ul'ldl1' 11'11 Wnt :zn.2S '"II lllenc:I P1rt lltl wlltl > K,-,.,. , , "" --.~:,:. Thi• .... -. I• ·-•···•<d by 0 .... NEO,~T>'t'Eof >MAS HO'(ELESTOYOUTG,>V°"'E 15ecl aynar If AH wt~ F 11 10 12 79 A tk. 2 lnvt' S 9ol • SI tttm1 of -.1c1 °"" of Tr..,11, '"" 1111' ~tttrl't line of w lcl lina , • , --~·· ,..,_ ""'"""'" N to tho • AclviJef' • tt '·6l ln<.m• 6 06 6 t2 PO ' 7 'II Ull•• F 6 01 6 65 ch1rgn •nd txPtllMll of the TtuttM conveyed lo Ill• $0!/lllern C.lllornl• -et1I portntnhl~ crea11ot1 of thf llOvl n•mlll clecldfflt -U .YOU have any d<>!1~ts :!!: ~~ .~;11:': ~idF~ ,t1;,t~ l(';:j~~~' ~r, i ~s~£~i10,ir;1, •ncl of 111e tr111h er""° bY w ld Edison compenv North ¥1"0Q'G" wist -PUBIJC NOTICE Thi Ar!i" 1ouef, "'.d wHti ..... ::;:1 ,!\~ ~-111a,11:," ,.,c1~11;no,. ",,•10M1,t concerning your electricity A'""""' •'ii •'ii EDIE S'1 116s 116s Knkr G111 6 81 1 46 DP9 Fd 8.•2 1 12 Otecl of Tr11tl. .o.u flot to 1 point on tho SOllll'oll$lerly • • -wi .,,. ..... "' b .U 1. st t I I AGE Fd 4 116 • ,. E<J re1 GI 11 ts U.66 l.tlllmrk • '2 ' l6 ~ Sltn 12" 12 86 TN blM>tflcl•rv undtr . Mid OHd of tine of Mid L.ol Ill Thtnc:t t(O<'lfl (CM.Inly Cltrk of Ot•llllt County Pn them wltti IT'ii nKnM'V VOUC:hln, In l S, lT reques your OC3 AllJt1te 11 CM 1111 Ello.in Trt 1' 40 . LO Edi• 13 I I "13 Slnllnel 10 66 11 tt TrllSI htf'lfofOl't t•KV!ecl 11'1<1 iUoU,,.rld tt,. Savlhlll ltrlY II~ ol .. ld LOI NOTICll °" MAll:SHAL'S SALi Det:llf1\Dtt" l l, 1973. the offlca of !tit Cltrll; of tllt •lxllll utility to check Jf you Still Alpl\t Fcl II 30 11 » Emtr<J 3 O'I l JO ~En: :~U~ 112 • 11 Senlry F 11,% 1l 00 to Tri. undtt"ll9M0 1 wrlnen OKltrinon 131 Nortll 3t'S1"3:2" Elil to..OO fffl P1clllt Crtclll Excll•nge, f'lelnttll 111. II' *49 tnlltltcl court, or to Pffflfll them, wllll • All'l(tp F 4 32 •.l1 ~ntrf.V 1169 11 M · -SHAREHLO GRP , •I o.ftult encl O.mll'lcl for Slit, •ncl .._ ··--< ,,,,,.,, ,--, ~ ••I< F•mswortlt, Otflfld1nt No 21 5'9 PUl:lllshed OrM!Dt C:..11 Dally Piiot• lllt nKl»tl')' llQVCMfl, to the 1tno 8re not satiafied ask wu1r An) B1rtll 'I 11111 1j llrt cl I 04 f l'I ~ Lldt l•.6S 16 OS Comsl !JI Ill ~ •u ,..,,,_ • ~·"' u•~ Ote-'J>< •• •>••m J .,,,,,,-, ,..130 1·~ tl+.offl ofh~ .. • ~¥-M10vr1l.lt901FmBuni1•7 1'1 ... wth ~.-.S.91Entror (0 Ill I Wl'lftll'I Nollet of Doi•"'" Incl ElectlOfl Loi 1311 thlflc• •'°"II Ille Nortllu&lff1Y I '" <Jmln : ug.., • an1141ry .. • • • " .... M'S...... • Ct •• ltlomeYS. utihty to test the meter and An\ EQl:y • S3 •. .,. Ftd Alb 1 OI Atltch n 99 1• N Fltl Fd (0 (l/ to Siii. Tht: Ufldtril<Jnacl t•uttd Wild line of sola LOI Ill North S0'02'2I" BY vltl\11 ol 1n txtc:l,lllon lswtcl °" EOWAll:OS, EOWAll:OS, •llG ASHTON , -~•· It . ( AM lll.PltlSS l'IOILITY Ute lnhl 11• I ,5 H¥11r Ill Ill Nollet of Otfl"'I 1toc1 Ellcilon 10 Sell west 290.00 !eel lo lhl point of November 30, 19n Dy tho M"'nlclPtl PUBUC NOTICE 420 N.' l rincl Blvd., Glendale, C1tllornl1 nwu..e sure lS accurate. l FUHOS: GltOUP : Line C1p • 31 6.'M U~I L 1:1 C:l 10 111 rac:ord«I In 111, counrv whtf• Dt11lnnl1t11 court, wr11 0•1111:11 County, County ot tl203, wlllcll Is Ille l)l•c• ol busl-s you still WIS' h lo pursue 1.t C.pt11 6 10 1 32 ena <1e11 1"" t n L>AOOMYL•"• P•<• Fd cu. (I) IN rHI propll"ty It lout.CS. Thi.~ dffcrlbtcl property contilna Ot1not, Stale of C1llfornl1, WMlfl a iudll· f'ICTlTIOUS •USINEJS of the unOffslgnecl In •II m1ltor1 l)tf'· • 1nc:om I 11 116 C.pttl 10 11 1110 : SffEAIUON l'DS TITLE IN$UlltANCE •nd I '611 tern . m~I tnlerecl In l1vor of P1clllc Crldlt NAMI STATaMaNT t1lnl1t11 to Ille 111•11 of lllcl Otc:9dlnt further YOU have the right lnvt1m 1 '9 •It Conlr1 l •I Clo DY 12 6'I 12.M Apj)l:C !I It It • TRUST COMPANY PrtPlred bV • Excll1ng1. I Cllr'pOl'l!llll'I as Tudllm•nt Thi foll owing l)trson I• clol119 butlnns wllllln four monttit. anor Iha tint pub41t• to refer' ihe matter lo the ~~ r·~ ~ ~~ 5:,re t : ~ L~tg•~.~· ill 14 20 :~~~ '; T~ 1: ~ 11 •tlcl TruslM, Fl'ICI W HMll ll'idgt, LS 32.51 t rldllor Ind t111lnst Fr•M~ f' • •s· tlon of 11111 nollct ~ AllU I 6 ,5 6 98 IY El.MER w. HEINZEll f'Allk aXCNANOI FirnJwortll lk.ll_Francu~P 0 w., 'COGNtrlVE ENT£A:PR1SEl. -23'3 A -Dilld ~ •• l tn local ~ Public-Service Com· !~ .~~~ : ~ ! ;~ .:=:t 1T·J.: u 12 Am~' 2.IJ io1 ~ ~n : :1 f,~ Alllllorlrllcl Sltnel\IFt AOllEl!MaNT ll!iTWEIN F1rn1wortll 15 [ucl(imtnl detllor, llllowlng C rllon Pl-« Cosll Mne 9™7 p 0 JACk STOUT • . Wbll the , Am lnvst •5 Ot S Ot F"'ncl 14 S1 IS 11 Bnd dl!I> I JO 10 60 SIGMA PUNOS: D•le. Olctmbet 11, 1t1J TN• lllVIN• UNllllllD SCHOOi. • net belll!C'.I of Jl,:lSf.13 act1,11fly M .:)(° "672 ,,,,11;.,, C• '26"'. • . EMKV!Ot of "" wlH of rruss1on. e comiruss19n Am M"'' • OI I ti Purlln ')(110 16 Lutlllrn • 811 10 IO C•P snr • 11 • IS P"'bll.riecl Otenflt Coetl OlllY PUol, DISTllCT ANO THI CITY 0111 llV1NI: °"1,, .. ~~ !.llCIJ.~n,•,~,.~~. 1'' .. '~-of1,.!"',. ""'O•ret M. Kltfftr, ZUlo\ Clrlton •DWAa""o•, '""•.!.•'•"o's" dtcld~t is inVA.+inatina your COlll-AmNI Or I 99 2.11 Salem F l S1 3 90 Lu!M In wt 16 10 01 tnv t s-9 10 41 OKtmbtt 26. ltn '"° J1n111rv 2 9 ,. '11 ~ ....... "' ...... .... '"" .,, .,, .... . ~·'6 .. "O • .t.NCHOR Trtnd 21.:zo 1l 11 MAU CO: l•!il 1 2, 1 ti lli2 rl 1· I H. upon •II Ille rloM 1111• Incl lnter•ll PIK•. Cot!• Mtlll. u m17 AND ASHTON plaint, your .o:ervlce will not GROUf'. FINANCIAL ~Mm, ,191 •• , Vtntur •• , 1 SI 111• . •This Agl'ffmlllt I• tnlerecl lnlo l1y of w lcl jl,ld<Jmtnl .blor-/n tlMt propertv Tiii• bullMU II conduchld by 111 QI N lntll!I IMI • Grwlll 1 CM 1,72 f'ROGORAW.· IMll .9S 111 Smotn B ... '"" l llO 'Ot!Wffn !ne CITY OF lll:VINE, In !ht CCHJnly 01 Qo<inge, $lilt of !ncllvlcl"'1I. G~, Ctll""111~ fl30I be Shut Off, lntom 100 161 Fin Oyn 416 416 ""6 H F 11 0'lU!:.SB lj.Gf' 100910.0I • munlcl1>1I ?lfPOta~lon (lie,.lnefter C•lllornll . dncrlbtcl ••follows, M1rg1ret M. Kltffff AltenlWI.., enc.i1r ~"'" 10 •2 11•~ Fin Ind l 'HI l'ftl MAU FHCL: So GenF 11.G611 'il rtltrrld 1o 11 !hi 'City"), •nd lhl I.of JS M.I~ 91 2. Pgt. 4243 Tiiis sl•ltment W.lt fl ltd wlltl the Soec1r 400 •ll Fon Int xill ~ll MIT xl0 1411 14 Sw11 Inv 669 72l NOTICa 01' SALi 0111 llAL lll:VINE UNIFIED $CHOOl. DISTRICT TrKI f°JO coMN0NL. Y, KNOWN AS' Gounl'( Cl•k of Oftnge County PYDlllhtcl Or1ng1 C1111t 0111'( Piiot, Fnd Inv ~· M 1.n Vent l 9J l tl MIG 11 66 12 It SW Inv G s '' 5 t i PltOl"alt:T'I' AT l'ttlVATI IALI {hlrt1111,11tr tlltrrtd to ., the "khOOI '''"•I• G·"ll•. ,,, c•·-··· Coll• OKtmblf° 31, 1t13. on: J•rH.ltrf :l. •• 16. 2l 1t74 '931-73 W• N•ll 10,9t 12 °" hlFd VI 10 .a 11 11 MIO ~n Sl u 69 SOvr In IG SJ 11 Sl 01,1 "1 .,... '" ""'" c.o · F• Mtron ltO , ,.IAST MFO 12 •S1l61Sptttr1 Jli •OO .... A·77ffl •re• NOTICE IS HEREBY GI VEN thll PIMSI ' t Al>!Mx F •16 6 13 INVESTORS: MCD IJ ll lt.05.a.P lnO S'6 S .. In 1t1o .SUPtrlor CCM.lrl ol 1111 Slltt 2. ll:tc:llllt. on Wedl'lttd•y, J1n. tth, 1'7"-1t 10·00 Pl.lbll1htcl or•not CO.st Dilly Pllol, _.,,,. .... 0 NOTI~ un y Irm. All.E Grlh Fd (l) hl ""61el I"' I 61 1 61 STAT£ INO GRP of C1Ubnla. In tnd tor thl (OU'lt)' 2 1 Tiie City It luthol'lnd IO .. II, o'<:lock A.M. 11 Courtl'louM. Mtnl!el'I Jan..,1ry 2, ,, 16. 2l. 1974 )flS.n .-u1n4 ~ HOUGHTON ln(om U) UI ""61111r • l2' • l2 Com Fd 4 4ot •BS of Ot•llll"· con._...,. or tMtlllll<JI lls proptrty tor Olllce, 301~ c,_ V•llf'f Perkw•V• 'F"'"" A • 31 •ti Stock F Ol ti) Mid Am '13 s 11 01,,.1111 t es s JO In the Mlllll' of tilt Est•i. ol nteasMry munld Pll pul'J)Ofits pUrtutht Cll'I of Ug..,n1 Niguel, counl't of °"'""'' PUBUC NOTICE st.f'·:NI F"'l'l<I B 6 t1 1 s1 ht M"'•u 1 •1 1 ti Manv Fd 10 10 II 04 Praon 4 s1 s'93 MARCUS ELTON SKEEN. 1k1 AL. lo lht P!'OVl1IOM ol G011tfnmtnl•Cocle Sltlt o1 C•lllorni•, 1 wm aall 1t P11htlc -SUf'allDI COUttT 01' TNI J • Pl Stock SlS SIS Flm Ber t.•1 ••1 MSB Fo UOJ IJ.03st Ff Gr c11 0) SKEEN. •k• MAltCUS E. SKEEN. •k• St<:tlon ln.51 wtlen no ''"•r method 111Cilon lo the hlgt.nl blclcler. tor c••h NOTtC• 0111 NON·IUl"ONllllL'1'T STATI Of' CALlf'OllNIA f'Olt o~ an B'L~ ~~ 1~;: 1! H "i°:ur,..011:,o::P;,. ~:~ 6~ ;·: :;1 Sl Fr In<. Ill ~ Ill M. E. SKEEN. ·-· MAll:CUS SKEEN, of d1$PO,lllor tor 1111 parllc..,l1r pltce In ltwM money of tllt Unlttcl St•ln. Notli;a Is htnbr 111..,.11 llllt the "'" 111& COUNTY 0111 DIANGI 8.tDson 10 St 10 59 101 Fnd I 13 t U Ml F Gro 3 88 4 It Sl•t• Sir x.O SJ .a 90 O«Nltf. of property It prescrlbld by llW Tlllrl t ll !tie rl9hl, ""• Incl lntllflJll of 11ld Otnlgllld wlll no! Ill flSPllft$1ble f ' Ht. A·JMM . S.yroc • J2 I IJ Colo.om 1.•S 1 •S Ml!Om OI •ls • 1l STEA OMAN FOS Not let b lllflll'Y t'iVln 11111 Ille "'"° Is no provl1lon of law per!llnlng to ludgmllll debtor In 1111 1bow dlscrlbld •nv cltlllt or lltlllllllH contrtclld :; NOTICI 0111 HIAltlNO Of' f'ITITlON In J B11rk <J• 6 ll 6 t2 1S Fu"° 6 10 t 10 M"'°'" fn I SJ I 11 Am 1na 1 81 1 Iii Cl'll'tlOnecl wlll Mii •t prlv1tt Nit, lo Ille txchangt ol I City parll llltl for pniperty, or 110 mucll tllltrtol If may anYont oilier lll•l'I myMlf on or llltr _ f'OI l'ltOIATI Of' WILL (HOLD-apan Beacn HI I •1 1 '1 F'cln Gr 4 CM '41 M"'t Sllrl I' 81 14 II Al l>O Fc1 1'09 I i)i'" Ille lllthftl Ind blcf blddtr, tubflld Othtf' PllbllclV""OWnecl prOperty wlllch Wiii be nKHlll"f to 11UsfV Mid l~Kullon, this cl l ' ·~,.NICI AND f'OI LITTlllS Tl!S· Belton '•1 t •1 FOUNDlll:S '°""II Trs 11' I I' tn.,.11 1 ti 1 21 to conllrm1llon of Mid $\lplflor Court be utlllzecl •• • IMTk •11• wl)tn th• with l<Cf"'lcl lnltrHI •l'lcl COlll o.1!t'i111. 2nd d•y ol J•nu•ry 1974. TAMINl,AIY :::.~~~~ ? ~ !·:~ GF~~~I • "· 9 28 ~\ 1;:~ ,~s: t .iS s'r/1'~ lt:Ola ;'0::99 Oft or .11 ... Ille 1111 dty of F1Dru1ry. lormtr City, 111rk site Wiii Ill uTlllZtcl DILL.ARD o. WILklll:SOH c H Oth111tr • .~~,. ..... f.~.·o•,0t.,',.·.· v'o•.·•,· ...!.'.~. Bo~• Flin • °' ''t3 F SOtcll UI ll) Bllert( ., .... 1 19 B•l•nc: 1••s 19•s IP1•, •I Ille office of Thomet C. King, tor 1 s!h'll 1' pullllc puf'POll DY • M•tlll1I Ot•noe CounlV C11•i Ptuml)l119 Ce. ,....,,. ...,. vn General AutorilatiOD, JnC. of 6rown 2 M 3 11 Fo..,r,.q F I .. l.M Bond for • M t 'It C.pllr 9 .a 9 .o ESQ, Oklmtn, Klll<J • Gr..,., 901 Oovet Pllflllc '9'tf!CY· By Mar,.,.. H, Solt, Otl)UJy 12• W -!Siii SI Sptct N1) 19 Dt<ffMd. 6rnhm · 9 II t .. Fll:ANkUM Olvldri 3 lO l 61 Stock 14 1314 13 Dr\Y't, $\lflt 200, Ntwport l 11<:h, '2.2 Tiie lrlllnt Unllltcl SC:hool 0 11trlct Olfecl DK•mDtr 12, 1m Newport 11.ct: (IHI n'6o NOTICE IS HEll:EIY GIVEN thcl Anaheim &nnOUilced it has UL.VIN FUNOS: OMOUP. Prtl Slk SM •.31 SIS GltOUf'; C1llfon'll1 ~. COUnty of~or.nge. Sl1ltl Is •ulhorlled IO IMCht:rlOf ih ~rly DlvfllMI ~ °'Mii C-"f ,...,btlstlld Otll'l(lt Co.st '0111y l'llot MIRTH K. CONE het lllld l'llrlln e receiv.. approval from the eun Fd II 90 13 04 ONl C •.ts 1 •1 •ntom 4,•I •.a Grwlll 5 9) 'so of C.lltorn11. Ill thf r'lfht, 1111• and lol .,,_,.., vRntd by 1no111er,. publlt Mellllll• H. Mlhlll ' Jltl\/tl"f a. ,, '· 1t7• ..... n fftltlon for ProOete ol Wiii 'Incl for ~ C$'1 Fd 21.d "M GWlh Sr '"1 ',, Slot-St 6.lt • ,. Inc om 1..01 I 19 Intl!'"! of said detldanT In •ncl to l9'f'ICY purs..,1n1 to Ille provt1 on1 of ~ Wlttlll,.. IMI,. suii. 1• lswinc• of Lttiers Tttllfl'ltl1l•ry 10 Japanese government to forrri Div snr J 21 3 s• Fr 1ntm 1.11 1 ts Grwtlt s 11 t •2 Smrnlt 1 ll t 00 1u 1111 Cll't•ln ,.., property tltu••• Educ•llot1 Coe1t s.<:tlon 11201. 1.11 ~:;r.1n. cant, toMI · PUBUC NOTICE the Pttrlloner. ,...,._, to Wlllch 11 a venture with Koyo Elec· • ~'~en ,: ~~ :~ ;; ~~1~~e s t 'l 1: ~~ N/Q~ll~NG ,t:, 11,,7 sJ.~~,n•,. i ~~ 1i M In 1111: tounty OI' Ot•l'IOI• Slit• of 2 3 TPll CUY Ind tilt SChool Olstrkl Pleli>lll t AtlorMy mid• tor lurtlltr 1>1rtlc..,t1r1, I ncl !hit • Ind tri Co L d CG F..no t ll IO," A1 s t 6P , "8 S .-. Gfwlrt t M 10 n Syncro G S S'I 1 11 C.llfotnl1. per!lcullrlV dncrlllld es hive OtlomllntO ltlll ti Is In tilt b&ll Pl.lb11thld 0tlll90 •Coe st O•llY Piiot thf time 1na pl act of hit ring 111• TODICS US es ,, l , Op Trln 9 M 10.1S Ri Eqty J.93 ,.31 Side U 03 16 )I Tempi G 7 U I 03 follows. to-wit:, lnltrttl of boll! l)lrll•• 11111 lhtY tXd'llllll• OtcomOtf 1•. 26, 1m Ind J•nuerv l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS .. ma lies beei'I Ht for Jan. I, 1914. Tokyo Japan for the de velop-C.nt Slls u :rt "6l Fkl LfEq 10 CM 10.t7 NEA Mt I.fl.a • IO Tr en '"' 7'11 ... l oh 1• •rid 11. Block 21S of Nun-ctrt1ln properly <lldltal.CS to 11\t City ,, lt1• 3111s-n NAM• ll'AT•M•NT '' t :CIO om., In Ille tourtroom of I CKAHHING FdMt OP .. )0 130 Neu Ctnl .... •M Tr1vl Eq 1031 111• ttnoton 11t1c:ll, ,1 111\own on • "\JP tor ctr111n otMr prOOl'flY oWnld tw Thi IOI/owing per~ 11 doing bl.Ill"'" Oepertmtnt No. 3 of .. res tourt, 11 "'° ment integration and s ale of FUNDS : 'UNDS IHCP Nt1JW11t 101 .. 01 Tlldor H 10'11 10 ~ rtcorded In !took l. Ptgt U of t1Mt S<;l'lool Ob trlct to IMt I City 11. Clvlt C1t1tlf' Drive West. In Ill• CIT ' . Blln<.d t 15 10 11 GROUP · ' Ntwton 20! CG MI Keill1-1s M•PI. ll:1COtcl• of Ot•ng• ,,.,k may 111 H l•bll•htd •di•~• to PUBLIC NO'l'ICE THREE WOll:L.O~ ll:EAL.To1t:s, 21.562 of sinie ,.111, cintornl• v automated s ystems in Japan. 1n11 Fd 1 ao • 6~ comm 1.11 •'ii x12.SJ 1310 Wt: c 1 :·~! ! ;~ COUftty, Ctlllornli. Ille 1ellool slit without dl11vp!l119 1111 Broolthurtt, Hlln!lngton lkactl, C.111. Dltecl DI<:. 21, ltn rn..A T k h d Com Stk l 21 l ,:rt lmptc 1 t2 1'6 Nw Pers 1• 11 IS,42 unitlftl J.'M a.10 Mort commonly known ••1 21& • contt911ity of IN Khool proparty, •II NOTICI Df' ND ... IWtl"ONSlllLITv f2'46 WILLIAM E. SI JOttN. !ln:l rednewfl~ y olled. eKa -'~:~ ~ t~: i ~l ~'11.:ts lr ·~~ 1:·:: :#;h1:1c1 ~;:~ :~·n Vnl!lll'ld •. 46 1·06 l•tti Slr'MI, HunlhlGIOtl 9"ch, Glll+ornlt , 11 th.-II ExlllOfl HA" tltlChlcl hlttlo. Noll(t fl '*lllY gllltfl Hiii fM u"' l.oul1 S.ngarmano. tut FM!fl9rtllll Cevnty Cletll quarte u u., C8 OYO Fnd Am l.t1 1.33 Otlewy 'S. t.31 NM! lvtr 1,,,, 1•,1'9 UNION S~lt:VICI Tffmt of ,.,, Cltft In l1wtul lllCllltY Ind llltt'tlor• do mu1uoUy llltff II c!trtlonld wlll not .. r:ftPOM(blO tor Dr .. Viii• P•rk, C1tll, ,, .. 7 •ot•RTSON. HOWSllt & Miii.AND r>Ane i Au'·mat'IO Ltd Gtwth • 10 s " GE s s p ll ll .. OnlfM 9.21 1 .0 GROUP ol t11t un1i.cs ~t•lff on con11""'1tlon lollc/Wf~ • in., dtbt• or 111111111~ tontr1etec1 by 1 Thi• IMllltlS I• toncluctecl DY en 4>1f c 1"'"' D11YI \.1\: ra w n, • • ln<om • 6S 1 21 Gen Ste s 11 s I o Ntl1 1c1 n .s1 1i.s1 8rd s 1v 12/t 11" of Nit. Tlfl ~ OI' emount lllcl l Atf'MftMllt otlle tti tt ,. ndlvldlull ..,. 1211 represents the first such ven-5Pt<.1 1" 1 'M Gtll FAm ,,os • ~ OM W111 16 10 1e.10 Nau 1nv , ,. 11111 to be dtp0el1tcl wltll b4cl. ' ' l ,1 Thi CilV eflll'M$ to conVOY Clr1tln :'1~7.1. r en mYM • on or • tt' " L.aul• Slt'lgotmtnO ~ ... c ... C•llflnll• . • • . Vtnl..,, • io • " Gf'tlt Ind ,, II 11 11 Of'f'l!.NNM f'O: Un t •r' J,11 .. so .,,, °' Olftt'l to 111 In ..... 111,, tnd rHI prOOlf1V, mort pet11c..,11r1., cleKrlbtcl 0,,,. ·<hi• 11,, .,, ,. ••• -... , r1111 111i.m.nt w•• t11911 With Ille Tel: en•> ,...... -ture with a foreign m1ru-com-CHAS£ Gwrd 21 "' 11 "' Co Alm • ,, 10.n Whtna n '2 u DJ • .., " .._. ~... hi ti .,.....,,, • C-.-.. ,.... o1 -·-t ... -fi ed IOSTON: , HAMIL TOH GltP. Op Ff'd • 68 1.JO UNITlO FUNDS· wm bl rc.1....cs .1t 1111 1+oru11c1 o11•c• on Ktt1 ... 1 C" .n.c ...... ,,.,,,,,.. w ( 1m • • """"' ""....... ·• on AttwMr1fw1 htttt...... puter systems nn approv Fnd JIO!i 1.k s.>1 F11nc1 lu 121 Op Tmt 6:n 6.IO Ac:<~m 6.62 11s .. ef!Y lime ltt.r ..... !IT'ii putil(ttlon ....... dodk•IH lo ""-City tor ...pt111 ---J•mtt e Deiwllng • DK•!!lbtt 31. 1t_l'3 Pubtlllltd Of•llllt C•tl Dilly Pilaf, b y ihe Japanese M1111' •stry ol f fon Cp ,,It S.23 Grwllt 5" 6 ll> Of t Ste: ' II .... 6nCI Fd 1 1j I "' htt'90f •ncl btforl' dll• of Nit. PUrpMH to thl INlne Unlned khoO! 110t2 C1Hrwllfl° Clrclo ,.... DK'""blf° 21, 21, lt n •rid J1n..,•rv SltT• ,, 1.13 ' " 1ncom • OI •.M P•r•tTll •. 41 7.01 Con t fW , I) 10 DS ~'*' ttlf• 1111 cu.y or Oocttnlllr Olttrlcl 1nct In con1ldtr~tlon tMr•fVt. Huntington ltlcfl Ci llt itvtlll•tlod 0t1ngo Coe•t 01Uy Piiot, t, 1914 llDn Jnttmatio"al Trade 8 n d 5PKI •.19 6 e; HartMI ':w 914 P1..,1 At• • u 1,03 con• inc •.12 9 99 1tn • tht 1r...lnt' Unllllcl SChool 01tlrlct .. rHI f'ullllMlecl Otllllilt C~tl ~lly Piiot, Jlft!Nl'Y 2: t , 1,, 2', 191C ,,,,.13 Jn.lo•• ~-( Chem Fcl '6>9 1Q 'ii Hart Lv I 24 t.~-Pvffo,n F Ir) U~ ln(om U 11 ll 11 ~. H. TltESl&ll: to convtY to tl'le crty ctrtatn reel Jinuirv 2 s. 9 ·1t7• · 3'•1·13 PUBU('NOTrtt Ku~tryE,1mr1 •• I jo c~:,1~NG ~ii: Sil =:a ~~ '.'~ :!:~;: ::~ :~ ~:: ;,:; ;·~ E•«utorof INWlll pr~. mor. Nllv dncrlbtcl on Exhibit ' ' -.. LICNOTICM oyo eetron1cs s a nm. r w nM l 4 Jto 11e1ao,. 1"" 11• Pllll• Fe! J,., 1'9 ""'' ,,, ''' ''' o1 Mid d~I "0 ' htttto ...,,,. .. ..., NOTICE .-... u ~ I IUI .. 'T' ~-f' LGO TIIOMAS C. KIN• 3.2 ... , eUCh fl~ 11 ltlo khool Dl•lrlct ~ ... --.. SUl'•••att COUIT Of' TN• Japanese manufacture r and ~~~~s: ~~ ':: ~~~·Cp 1~::1:1~ ~1p11.'MG:.oo l .J2 ~~L11.~s .. u"..'~1~n Ol.DMAN, IONO .. •••N• clellvtn lo lhl City • <:ffllflld COPY '"'"*" STAT• Oft CAI.Illa.NIA lllOll ma~eter of Indus tr i a I TMll: ~ 1.« I n 1mp G• •• , I ... ll'l(Gm •.•• '28 "Pl• f '·" '·"' Attlnllln ,., •• _...,. of • ,..,iutlon edoptld DY Tiie unonlmou• • 1m SUf'lltlOI COUll:T Of' 1'HI THI COUNTY Of' CNlANo• • • • COLONl'!:L. • In<. ldAm u . If 1111 PllQrm 6 15 I ... 6'1 Fnd I )to • Oj ,. .. btlthld °''"" CM•I OtllY Piiot. "'°'' of •II mtml>lr• tl!cild or oppolnfld IUHRIDfl COU•T OP TH• STAT• Of' CALll"OINIA l"OI ' Ht.__,.,,... tele ions electronic ll n d FlJHOS! Ind FAm 3 lt J 49 PiM St • '' • ,, Com St• 10.•1 "·'' J•llUCllY '· '· ,, 1t7• '1'3-14 fo) tltt t overnlno boltd ol lllt khool STAT• 0111 CAL.lllOINIA l'O• TJt• COUNTY Of' OIAN•• • NOT1c• DI' NIAllN• DI' l'HITION aulomat1•c 'controllel'll. "",.,w,,,' •, !l •, ,." 1"•1-1,-., •• •. ~ ,',·,,',' •"•'•••'•"• ,'·.~? .. v,•,'1 U·£~ UN,•.,·~ 01,ttk1 1ull'Of'ldlll) 1111 tlldlelll:)I ton THa COUNTY DI' OIANO• IM.·~ 11'01 l"•OIAT• 01' WtLL ANO POil ·~ .. "" ....... ~·" -19!nPttltd l_ilttll'I. 16ft'hel" wtll1 proof Nt. ....,..,. N01"lcl Oft HWAAM=Ofl-HTITIOM rt.tn'Tftl-TftTAMINTAI ~A~'·g·•-GA ~de Fund' 10 11 111~ 1nwrn G 1.9' 1 "8 Pion En • '6 t .tJ V• In<. ~ ae 4 41 ~NOTICE lhll Ille riilolvllon II•• bffn pub11"*9 HOTICI OP MIHINO-oP l'ITITIOH POtt NOIATI DI' WILL AND l'otl 1El11-. of MAlt:IOf4 WINEMAlif KIM· \;\NlUUI _w .--11;;:,1 Grwlli str,l• Inv (a ~.6 11 ... u :io Pion Fd ,,~'112 SC U'\I Giii s ~ }SJ -•• ,...,,..., llY l d\lclllon Codt S.C.tlon "Dl Plt:OIAT• -WILL AND POI t.STT••• T•tYAM•NTAllY HARO, •Q MARION w. KlNNA1tD, Lawrence A. Goshorn Koyo ~'::~ ; ~ 1~:~ :~: 1~l: ; ;: ! ~ p~~ u ~.= 1:~ v~·~c~ J 60 t.tl -.-.-.-,".71•,-,,•"•7• 7L•=•"-"oc--..,,,=:--:.,o ,::, •• CT 1..,.-.i-llltl-Oll(.• • Wl*k-lof,..rin. .. L.1n••S-1'UTAM8N'f4l'I'----Eflm ot·ST!l"HEN CHWAT.-Dlcnttd. Diet• -GA-will conduct the buslness Colllln G 11 M11 . Inv Bo\ 103' 11 M flLI GRO 11 Dl t2 OS SAHOllS· --~ 'MOTtc• 1•Vt11t•• llDS conMWll\tf ..... k ••• «rlltlM copy of Elle!• of llUTH CHATTElt'tON. NOTICE IS HEll:.IBY GIVEN tltlt NOTICIE II HEltEBY OIVEN '"'' . . -COMMONWLTH INVIS't PIUCI ROW£-:--lnw.tl. •,11 1 0IO Noll~ .. ..,,.,., flvert, !NI JM '""' ""recorGlcl Jlln11 OtW of Condttn111Tlon OKHttcl. 1'1t:ANIC ll:EILl y hos lllticl hfftfll • CHAltL.ES ANTHONY· l(IMNAltO •ncl "'-the joint venture, 1mport1ng tll:UST; COUNSEL Gtwtll 1191 11 •1 vs COfl'I .... -,'ij .,t -Trust.II of 1111 '-.t•lll VIJlty wtl!lf'Otly-thl SCllOOI Dlt.,lcl l«l"'ll'ICI NOTICI! 15 HEft EtY GIVEN ltlll PlllllOl'I tor Probtft of Wiii ~ <for NANCY LOUISE KtNNAlO 111,,. tllld al\ --w•tel'll ·and m O S J At.•& I 09 I 11 C•Pam 1 o;T 169 Hw Ir• It 7t 11 7t S0t<:I •. 1• 1:H k rlOOt Olitrlet of Or•• Countv lllle to tht ptopertv cleM:rlbtcl rn E11h!blt L.L.OYO M. CHATTEll:TON Ill• flltcl ltWlnc.t of l.tllfrt Totltmll'll•ry lo ~lln • ptllllon for Prabel• of Wlll '""'""-C l.U '-" C•o11 tw 260 Ill Nw Hor 102 1.02 Vnar11n If) \'' C.llfaffle, ...,111 ,_.,,., ... ltd Olcl• u; "D''. •nd 1 or•nt cMICI con'llylfl9 the 11tr11n 1 1111111on 1or Probe ti of WIK 111t Pttlt10llll". rtft'tllCI 16 Wfllch It tncl .., lu"''"" of Ltttll"• Tat.ti!Mftl•rv periM-a1s and IOftware from Como tr • 1t· • tt C•P t Sn s l6 s,11 Pto Fca 'OI , oa Ytnl•d 1.16 .ii '° J·ot , "" ~ 1111 lOlfl dey of .,...,.,iy c1t1crlllld 1n 1.1t1!111t "D" to •ncl for 111u1nc1 of L•ll•n T .. 11ment1rr IMd9 tor l\ltltllr-,.rttcvl•rs. '"° 11111 1o tilt PtllllONn ~ to w111ch GA. ~1{ GA iii d 1 · • = :: {:~~ ,.;t ·~~1i111 °~"', =::~~ t~ ln ~~~°' 1:1~ ~.£l J-IY 1,M 111 fM Bvllnnt Of11tt f11e City' of lrlllna, lflo (.II'( al\111 rltlt,,... to Ille OtllllONt • rilfart nc. to -.hk:ll Ille tlmt Incl pl1ct of· hlfffllO lllt I• mW. for tu'111er ~rtkvlen, •ncl Oyo W eve Op, ' COnctCI I M t ,M IO!t NO i.ll S 90 Pl\ld $IP t.1' IO.lJ v1-n9 Gf' i 1i ' IS U Nici ' Knool dltJtltl, loCtllcl •I NO. o gr111t Cf01c1 to tlle k hool Olt!fkl II midi tor lurtntr p&t11C:Wl•tl, Incl llmt ht• bell\ Ml tor J•l'I. lfJA, •l lhll Ille ltmo ll'lcl~ Pllt t el l\HrlnQ ' integrate and &ell systems and Cons Inv IO.SO 11 0, 10Sf'I:' al .. t,Ql PUT NA~ W•llSI Q4' •• J,)7 I l.lfl'ttl'IOUM lAf\I: ,Ol.lnllln v,11ev, ~"'Ylllll !hi rtaJ proptrty lftterfblcl lhll Ille 11rnl tncl plac.1 of fllt rlriij t a.m., In the c:wrt1 wm Of Ooptrtrnenl ftlt -Hml llM btln Ml IOI' Jtn"'•'V sof " pl . GosL-J ,.Cluln OW S.U S.U Mlrl\Mll I M 111 FUNOI. ' Wit!\ M11 11,UlJ ll ciutornlt I comet ':I l •1 &trt 1. N•Wlind "' ._,,!bit ·1""'~'a-tM '"'"' un11111c1 "" Mn\I lies lllM'o"... lor--J-ry No. 3 or ---s1td court. " * Clvk t. 191•, .et t,00 •·"'" In t,..~ covrt,oom tware<!. e x am~ IJOf1J "'"t.onMt-tn J ts '2s $10<.• 11.16 1tn anw \&.n::1w Wt*fL•11 10, .. IQ.61_ ,1,.-1, et Wl'lkh """ .. ._ MdJ w111 kllool 0111r1ct. ~ 1•..,1., •I t:oo • m , •n.,•+. "'i• ~1~ c.,jttr or1"' w .. 1. 1" "" City "of o.otl'ln'\tl'tt No~ 4 i o4 111c1 court, "but · WUI not develop o •• t,~try f1 '•'.l'o ','~,, "••~•'•• '1·]'1 !0~ ,.~0'1' 11,r, ,•,.~ 0•,'ou•~.°' .. bt JM.lt)llcl't OPl>!*I •t'lCI ,... for Nllbtt L ~ "' •tth'ltnl No 3 .. c .......... ,.,i An&, C•llrotnll. 11 700 Clvli; Cenlff DrlY't Wt11, ln " _,, °' ' .. -"" l'f"Y """· I~ WITN ESS w.t&lt:EQF, tM pertlot al 100 Civic (tflll t Orl111 Wttl, In Dot.CS Dtc, 21, lt1J 11111 City of Slnll A~, ~lfotflll. manufacture computer&. ~.,°'• ~ ~ ) U :ns ~.'' ' 16 ), °'1M wln .:: 1tri ~~~1°' 1::~ 'ifr " All bldt .,. to bl In '"°"""" 10· lflfl AOl'HIMnl "I"' C:IUMCI llltir tM Clty-of-.Stnl•-Alll· C•lllOl'nl1. WILLIAM e. St JOHN Otlld l>ec«Jlblr 21, 1'73. DIVldQ •12 .:n Gfwtlt ',. '.. "" • OJ •.17 Mllr(ll'I t0.• 11 •• J wr~ conc!ltlol)a. lnttrvctlOl'll . I fl d llllM$ to bl all1l(tcl "'''" by 11\J Ottld Otct mber.21, lt13 -COIMl'I Cllt'-WILL.IN" •• SI JOMN, 011..A'fllARa' !l'l(O!'l'I '02 4 Jt Yhll , •.n 10.+I ln.t1ol tO,,. n S7 tPfctlletiftOM -~ -a" tYtlltlllt lllll'OPI' on1cirt rl'lfftot, Ttll1 AQrMfl'tll\t wtm1m •·St Jofln, DUIY•A. llAHDOLPH, Countv Cltt:~ KIDS LJKE TO GllOU,.~ trll UT lll •.• lklw19 tQ10.1$ 'NIU\!,-H •ll,,. tN Olt h'fC:Llutl ..... Offlct,.at ""''4drftl It &li:!'ntfl Incl I MK..,ttcl '"° •11111 llt cwmv Clll"k MALCOLM • DALY ltOlllT w. MIDl*SOlll Ot<•I 'tt 10 ,, T•~ Sii U,\S 1i ..... ,,..,. " • ) jj • 01 'Mii'" '"ll 11.Jt lll!'llOl'ort IMl'!llontd. ~ •lfKTfllO '"'' -d•" of li'ARK•a, ••••• l.010 • SOL.OW&O•L. Ull ll'•cArlhvt '""".,.. •1 •. c ........ ·~ SWiii ,.. • • Otlw , 119 t.61 bl•I ,na ,l,t<J lt,)I RI Ill rt tl.&1 ......-~ 10 '!:" 8y ONller OI "" iloettl of Trvttttt ltn. 7U SKurtl'f l!clg. • '"' Olflel ... 2Ut ,. ....... CUii. f'llll Otlta T • ,, s,, IVW fUM •.• l • 93 klK E11 ,,. 1.H Wlrw:iv • ., "" '°""'tln VII..., S('t!OOI Oltt'1cl CITY OF lllVINl1 ", ..... , .... , Cltlt.,flltl ' .. ,.....,.,... HM:-. c·~· "':" 'I I:.J!,"'.c.t.""',.."-~ ' ~sK ~NDY t :rhc, ~::;! ,1~ i.:~il: •02 •,to tttg;, .. :~.2 11 =~!::: 'ii'' Jll ltfl( hlOlft, Cllr1t ti ftlt IM!'1l • mun!Cl\!Nll (OfflOrlllon '' I 111 1'M " n.,tJI "'' ..... ,_, 'IWI ./I. ./I. OoclO(l "'' 1• U •II.ti l) •7 tntr In¥ ll It U.lt Wl'K-J.'I ,.llbllthtcl °"'"" Coot! Dall'(."''°'· -By l'vbllllltcl Ottn111 Co.1111 Di lly PHO!. PUbllllltcl Ot•lllll c .... 0111r f'lllt, •l'ub411ht0 °"'"" c .. ,, Oel!y Piiot. Drl .. I E ..... l 0 M JHtn ilh '·"J'a ... .,,(. 1)01 0 .01 llttlll' ... 11;.a. o.c.rnDtr f1, 1m Incl J.,..,., t. ATT•STt Dtal'!lbtr ti. a. ••n Incl Jlftlollll'V Dtootnlllr 21. 2a. ltn jncl J.nvorY OK~ 11 ... •m Ind J1nUJ1ry ... DRtY PU$GRf' JHen Sit 1.ao .u ~ ... t"'I ~···•~. m• JtM.n t, 1t1'" M ·11 :. tnc 3991.n t, 1t1• -.n Orf! ,. '°·" 11. JonMtn 22.M tt S..•1 it.it 2•,tt ............ 1.......,1 t. 1914 • PUBLIC NOTICE ' /, .J • I ' -~-~---'-~ . · :tu ·oAJLV PILOT Non•stop Pm1ip • lJ.mar Lindstrom, ~ew York serviCe station operator, pumps gas non·stoP for eight hours, 43 minutes A-londay to set a new record for non-stop pumping rrom one gas nozzle -~.177 gallons. He said stunt drilmatized plight or station operators .. PUBLIC NOTICE .. $1'.t.T•Mt!NT 0 1' AIANOOliiMINT 01' USlli 01" l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl'S NA.Mt! -rn. lollowln~ ptrlOfl 111, 1b1~cl !M 1111 of Ille llc!IUo..1 bv1lnru "lmt \llCTOll KEMP COMPANY -COSTA MESA, 11 1J1' Louin Ave .• v pu "~". (OSlt /N11, C1lllornl1. Ga s C1·isis Idle s Th.e t1c1l1k>u1 bv1fne11 n1m1 r.i1rrt>d IG lllOVI Wll 111911 In Of•not C<!llnly DI! MIV 4, 1t13 l ovl1 Anclrrw Weuon, I lll S.E. \'o'll'llltw LI! .. TutoUnr C1IHornl1 '76'0:-- Thl1 bll1!n1H Wll cor>ducled tlY '" J!>dlvlclutl 50,000 Workers ' Louis Andrtw W11I011 . DETROIT )UPI) -A 12· day paid Christ'mas and New Year holiday ended today for -PUBLIC-NOTICE lhe automobile .industry, but nearly 50,000 workers re- mained at 11o·me as victims "~c::J.,.T~o,~sA::~~"H•Tss of the energy crisis._ •s~rie followlnv o-rMM I• dotno 1>111ln"'' Chrysler Corp, left all Seven WILSHIRE c EH TE R DEVELOP· of ks assembly plants closed, . MEHT COMPANY, 1100 N. Mlln St., idling 38,100 workers for at Sin!& AM, C1llloml1 '2101. I .. -J.. ' ~\. 01vld P111!, 0-111 1>1rlner, 11990 east two "~· ---ccnm•m•orrTtoacr.-t:o'1 o1m11•rt.....-cin1ornrar---"""' · TPll• llu1!nt11 11 cono11ct11:1 bY l imited Partn1r1hlp M. 01vld 1>1ur G1111r•I P1rln•r TPlls 11•11<111n! w11 !!It'd with~ 1119 C1111nly CJll'f"k of Or1n,11 CounlV 11n OICI ..... ll, lf1l lr'lfftll ............ . l >h Wllllllrm elvd. LM Allfftff, CIUI. fllll UUI '51 .. Mf P11blllhed Of.not C1>11! Jtn~ry 2, f, It, 2l. ltH ,,,.., 01111 Piiot, :3941·13 PUBLIC NOTICE SU,•JllOR COURT 01' TH• STATI 0,. CAL,lf"OJIHIA ,.Ollt TH• COUNTY OF OflAMOI Ht • .A·JMM NOTIClf Ofl" HIAlltOIO Of" l"ITITION f"OR PROI AT• 0,. Will AHO ,.OJI L•TT•flS TIESTAMEHTAJIY . Ell1t1 of GEORGE A. GAY, l kl GEOllGE ALBERT GAY, ~Hiid. NOTICE 15 HEREllY Gl\IEN illl! LA NELLE GAY NEWMAN h.11 fllld htt1!n • ~ll!on for Probll1 ot Wiii •rlcl lor 1s111enc• of L1!!1rs T•1t1m..,11ry to the pe!lllo~r, reter..,ce to which FORD MOTOR Co. clo!<d plants at Chicago and Wayne, Mich . idling 8,500 workers, ·and General· Motors Corp. closed its Doroville, Ga. plailt for eight days, idling about 5,000. The product.ion cutbacks and layoffs came· as consumers WOl'Tied about -g a s o I i n e shorfages and soaring . prices stopped buying big cars. This Jed the "Big Three" auto makers, in tum. to announce \I.itches to smaller and more economical models. 2-cent Hike General Motors, the biggest of lbe car makers, announced Dec. 28 that it will close 10 of its 2S assembly plants frOm New Jersey to South Gate, Calif.fOr up to 10 days . • The shutdowns will idle 48,· 000 workers and another 38,000 face indefinite layoffs when General Motors curtails second shifts at s o m e assembly .a n d components plants. The latest layoffs follow earlier onea;{ast month, when the impact of the energy crisis and the subsequent sharp slump in big-car sales first hit auto makers hard. American ~rotors Corp., the fourth largest auto maker. announced no cutbacks. Its production already 'is mostly small car·. The layoffs began alter in· dustry forecasts showed that 1974 mode{ sales would slump by 8 to 12 percent from 1973 sales goals. Lelud .l!:. Mybre of Orange has been appointed assistant vice tM'esldent and manager of Coast Federal Savings and Loan Association's Jiuntington .Beach branch office. Pifyhre formcrly.,worked for savings an'd loan ali!l9Clatlons tn Orange County and re.al estate. lie has been ac· tlve In cham- ber of com. merce and Rotary Club activltlt:s and Is past presldent or the Brea Ro- MYHR• tary C I u b and former director of the Or· ange County O\arnbcr of Oun· rner<e. • Jostph'.. N •. Rosenfield .hll.s been elected president of Dan l\olarana and Assoclattt . Inc., Newport Beach-based con- sultants ln Health C a r e Delivery Systems. Rosenfield .has worked ex- tensively with flealth f\fain- tenance Organizations since joining the firm. • Irvine resident Jame1 F. DeVogler has been elected a vice pre sident of Calltornia Computer Products, Jttc. and -appointed -director of ad- ministration, a newly created post. DeVogler was formerly director of material at Cal Comp Centura Data division. • Shirley Callaban has been named manager of the Orange County oflice of Lynn Carol EmpJoymeat Agency located · · in the South Coast Plaza 1', lnancial Center in Costa Mesa. A IO-year veteran in the person- nel fleld, "l\·fs. Callahan CALI..AMAlf was formerly general manager and person- nel drector fo r the Arthur l\.-tur- ray Dance Studio in New York. * New officers for 1974 in tho • • December Food Bill - • • Means nnd Ulrich and Ed _.,ot"cler of Forcier O>nstnic-- \lon O>. • Up 13% Since ~arch • H1n1t1ngtm Beech resident 8111 Peterson, manager of the ~ftiln a·nd Ellis Bank of America ln Huntlngton Beach, 1narks bJs 35th year with the · bank. Peterson, who has hCaded the local office since 1962, began h Is By the A11ocl1ted P"'ll The fomlly grocery bill went up again during December, an Associa ted Press market basket-survey showed today. There were signs that the price picture for the beilnnlng of 1974 won't be much of an Improvement over 1973. career as a TJIE AP SliRV£Y showed m e s !l!nger that market basket totals in Loe: An-were nn average ot 13 percent I hJghcr at the start of the gees, Re-new year than on March l, cently chos-en as "l\·[an 10 months earlier. Rising production c o s t s , o! the Year" pushed by higher rue! prices, by the Hunt -were cited by indu!ltry soun.>cs lngton Beach as part of the reason for the Olamber of Jncreased "b.ill. Wholesale food Commerce, Peterson is a dir~ costs for some items also went ector and past president of the up. Boys Cub and active in the \.. _The AP checked the prices Rotary Club and Merchants or 15 food and nonrood items Ms9claUon. in 13 cities on March 1 and '* rechecked them at the begln- Jerrrey N. Dierks has. been ning of each s u cc e e d·l n g appointed miJl.ager or Pacific month. Flaance Loans branch office in Huntington Beach. Dierks was fo rme rl y manager or one ot the firm's Santa Ana branch offices. He resides in Costa Mesa. • E. T. Hlnsbaw,-Jr.. has-been elected chalnnan of the board of Capital Data Systems, lne. and senior vice president or The Gro\vtb Ji'und of America, Inc. and The Income Fund of America, Inc. He is currently a yice presi- dent of The Capital Group, Inc., the parent organjzation of Capital Research and Management Company, w.hlch be<:ame the funds' new Jn- vestment adviser Dec. 1. He and his family live on Lido Isle. •• H~ey F. Brush of Hun- tington Beach has been elected a director of Bechtel Po"·er Corpora tion. In additk>n, he has been named deputy g e n e r a I manager or Bechtel's thermal power.I oanization, bead· quartered n San Francisco. Brush join . he firm in 1946. 11IE SURVE\' covered Albuquerque, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, l'it.w York, P,hiladelphia, Providence, Salt Lake City and Seatlle. The check li>t included : park ch>ps, egg!, butter, cookies, chopped chuck, frozen oran~ juice, coffee, paper towels, peanut b u t t e r ' detergent, fa b r I c softener, tomato' sauce, milk, fr anks and sugar.' The latest survcv showed that during Decemt>er. 28.7 percent of the number oC items checked '4'ent up ln price, 11.8 percent went down. 48. 7 percent were unchanged and 10.8 percent were not available on one Of the check dates. Ttf_E NUMBER of items ris- ing in price was a~t the same as during both OCtober and November. But I n October, 25 percent of lhe items checked declined in price and In November, 14 percent declined. Slaples like n1ilk, !>utter and · FINANCE eggs led the list ol hJgher-pric- cd items. Bargains were hard to fi nd, but all·beel frankfurters did· decline in price In sl~ cities In the period from Dec,' 1 to Jan. 1. ' ' , The higher luel prlcu II· fe<:ted both tran1port11Jon llld mt1nufaeturlng coatl and thece wore predlcUon1 ol further In· creai;es. lterM like detergent and paper towels thlt rt· malned 1te1dy while farm prices JJlllhed up food llemo . earlier ln the year started cllniblng. THE OVER·AU. 'market basket price wu up durtna December In ll ol LI cltles checked. Increases ranced from a fractkln of a percent In Mloml to 5 pe....,.t In AUan ta, The only decline C8Tlltl in Seattle, whru:.e the market• basket price was dOwn l per- cent during Deceinber . Comparing March l and Jan. I pri .... the AP round the marktt basket we.ct up In every city. lncttaset rang- ed from 5 · percent In Salt Lake City. to 19 percont In Providence. Dark Clozids , Long Pay. Line in Britain LONDON (U PI ) ThousandJ of Britons llned up for unemployment benefits to- day In "B scene reminiscent of lhe 1930s Deprsslon. liouse\\'iveJ but food budgets and economists predicted the: situation couJd enly grow worse. It marked the first tuJI Im- pact of Britain's three-day work week and even the weather added to the gloom felt throughout this energy- starved country. WITH THE SKIES shrouded in clouds, the temperature dropped to near freezing . Out- of • ...,'Of.k" men stomped \heir feet t.o keep warm in lines ringing government employ- 1nent offices. A government spokesman said ~e than one OU! of e\'-ery five pe~ ln this n.iUoa ol 56 milllon_propte would - through the lines within the week. The crisis WU provoked by a go\'emment order restrict- ing foctorle9 to I three di,}' week to conserve coal ·~ plies. Stocks ol c:oal, the m1jor ·"""""' ol electrlcily, han been sharply · reduced by o coal miners ban on overtime. MANY FACl'ORIES. rtlJIOll· ed "by cloolng litoctther, throwing thousanda ol men out of work. Others told omployts to expect ooly eo pment ol .their nonnal pay thlJ week. Meanwhile, governmem ol· llc!Rls and the lelden of the coal miner! gathered tod.ly for a new rowld of talkl 1n •he dispute. Orange County Builder s' Association include C hu c kl·-------------------------------------------., Boniols of Arrow Glass as president. Other officers in· elude Paul Shellenbarger of JJ · Enterprises; R o b ert Complete .Mid .. day American Stock List 1s. m1d• t0t 1urth1r 111r11c111.,1. 1n11 I ,--8 O 'l It---1!!.!._llM 11m, •JKI _p11e!_ 21 h!.••ln11 _ ·-·rt ·U·Jt-.1 tilt iame h1~ blen Mf for J1n11ary I, 19''· •I t:OO I m., In lht c1111r!room ' Ilel W-ehh's Flanagan of Foster Sand and L----.... '!"!!""' ___________ ..,,.. ___ .,._,.. _____________ !!!!1""'!!"•1111! Gravel; Robert Ros-eburroogb of Roseburrough Took ; Russ Hughes of First Assurance Construction; John Kingston of Klngstcin Insulatlot1:: James WtltOn of D.C. Welton, Inc.; J ames Ray of J. Ray Construction; Dennis Malk,wski of Polar Air Con· ditiorung; Leon l\feans of \lo!. Net \lol. Net Ult Chj. 1...tst CJIQ. _, ot O~•rom1n1 No. 3 of 111ld court, 11 700 Civic c.n11r Drlv1 Wtll, 111 '!'le Cltv of S1nt1 Ana, C•llforn!1. Dt lld D9C'll'l"lber 21, IJ1J WILLIAM E. ST JON/-1, County Cl.rill Lll"l"CN.O, Ha NOlltlON & OINIMOOJI Altlf'M)'I It LIW »I Int 17111 Sir.et. Sllttt 111 • CMll ~Ml. CaNfwlll1 t2621 T91; 1114) J41.T7N "-"-T• "'' Pttll'-1" P11tll l1hed Ori~ Coatl OallY '11171, Dtctmblr 27, JI, lt7l I JKI J1n111ry 1. 191' 3tf•·1J PUBLIC NOT ICE PUBLIC NOTICE Prices Set Townehouse Sale Told NEW VORK (AP) -Sun Oil Co. announced today it was raising prices by two FRESNO (UPJl _ Sale of reents a gallon on gasoline and the 22-story Del \Ve b b .four cents 8 gallon ° 0 Townehouse Hotel here ...,.as kerosene, heating oil and announced this weekend. diesel fµe] oils. The 1.Jtah firm of Collier- American Oil Co. said today Heinz, which owns and it will raise gasoline prices by GoUl Price I ncreasl.n g 5.8 cents a gallon effective operates 23 shopping centers Thursday. It said No. 2 fuel and office complexes in the oil and No. 2 di.Sel fuel would western U.S.. announced it be increased by 6.4 cents a purchased the hotel-office LONOON (U PI ) -The gallon at the same tUne. complex from the Del Webb price of gold jwnped to a A spokesman for Sun Oil corp. of Phoenix, Ariz. for five-month high on the London ~tiose g a so I i n e jg sold an undisclosed amount. bullion market today, getting as Slllloco in the East and Newl y named manager the new year off with a jump DX in the Midwest, said the Richard Parker says the ne\v of $3 an ounce. increases reOect higher costs O\.,,ners are considering a European money marke ts, of domestic and imported skyroom cocktail loun ge on slo w to open after the new crude oil and oil products. the top floor of the liotel which year holiday, priced~ dollar The action by Sun Oil closed its doors for business marginally up. follows similar increases by last summer. The price or gold opened several other large oil com-Parker said he hopes to t year at $115.50 an ounce panies in the last few dayk. reopen the hotel segment by London, its highest figure Union Oil raised ga;iffie May 1. A new name for lhe fo five months. Today's jump prices by four cents a g Jon, hotel wa~no ealed. the culmination or a Standard Oil of Califonr· by The offi · comp ex a 'ses in gold's prices, two cents. and She~~10i\ rai~~ e hotel has remained which g ·ust be r ore Us prices by one ce~ .,., .... n. Christ Taking ' em ff 'ICTITtovs •uSINESi H ' NA/111£ ST•Tl!Mlt:HT e 4lli0l Tn1 tollewu'!I 111•IOl'I Is ctol"!I t1u1l1tt:s ~ " \ SCOT\IEND, 1~731 Diane LIM, Hun. 'ifiglnn Sttch, C•ll!orn!a 92~7 JOI\~ Ale•1ne1t• Br11119h, 1~731 0 11.,.. ._.,,., Huntln(lton B1ath. C1hto•nl1 •U•7 lhl• tlu•lntu 11 tonctui;led DY 111 imti~•dU8!, ,,,, Jo"" t rouoh TM• SID!~m•nl WIS fl!td "WI!!\ U1e Counly Clerk cf Or•nu1 CovnlY on ~emwr Ill, l"l· Jl•JO l 11 Pvt11111'!<.'d Or•nge Co111 Dally 1>11~1. Decemblr JJ, U, 26. 1911 Ind J11nuary J. lt74 l1'2·ll •Atl SILVEllt IAllS llL\1,11 IA.RI • • • • • • ~ • • • c • • • > = l111t rconllllMl•I lnY11trn1nl • Conf111n1 artolltr·O..lf'r Wllll •·•· SILVER ,., " 1!:11 Ifill Oldr1t I. L1ritur • ~ • • • > • • T-.'('I IHYISTMIWT "' C.ll .... tl1J C1tpor-111 SMrltl ;:< .,. ii M1t11r OtUYl•y Mt,......,, c ..... , Ofivt S11tr n1 : ITl'lol f'~ c...11r I """'"" 1.-Ch, C1. fJ... t '44-941 0 ~ r ' • Sii.Viii • Emissio n Gear Can Be Removed--Legall y COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The gasoline shortage haS spawned a new kind of en· terprtte in Ohio. Daniel J. Furey or Columbus says he will go into business this month removing emission control d e vi ct! s from automobiles, "IT"S HARO Ill J us t f y devices to decrease air pollu- tion which bum m o r e gasoline." he said. f."urcy hopes to get the company, called f'uel Savers. Inc.. in COllELlEASE LEASING l:l [i ,Y••,-1Jmm...A•""'*- Ct.rnelet LMll"I DMlet •• Hew '74 Y .. o Hittt~Mc• S8840 , ... MOff~M Pl111 Ta• .. L;c. o~ .\Pllr. Crtdlt 2l Mo, O.l .L. CONNILL CHRlOllT 1121 MAll OI llYD. COSTA MIU 14,·1 200 ~4tw.-~~ • • ( operation by late January or installation of emission control early February. devices is required, and manufacturers and deal ers .. ·Furey• . a m e c h 8 n i c a 1 are forbidden to tamper with engineer, said his attorney, them. Robert Vanlieyde told him the But VanHeyde said he could procedure is legal. · find nothing in U . S . Furey estimat~ 7 to 20 per· E n v i ronmental Protection cent of a car's fuel goes . to Agency regulations prohibiting feed e~ission control ~quip-a vehicle's owner from modl- mcnt. or about $2 for every !ying hls own equipment. tankful £or some molorist.s. "If you want to take it lie said a well-tuned car (anUpolluUon ·equipment ) off u·Jthout emi5S-ion cont r o I 1 your own ur,-It's perfectly causes no more pollution than legal to do .so/' VanHeyde an out-of-tune car with the said. • latest antipollution equipment. nie PA warned. ho\ve'W(r Furey claims that after that aloppy conversions: can l0,000 mJles the extra gas con· result in even greater waste sumed by omission control ol gaioUne for late model equipment causes re ai d u e cars. bolld·ups whllh a c t u ~ I I y . nega~& the effect or the. con-• 0 111IS IS NOT 11i111Ple • 11:---~· -. eCliii quC: nd r -pera&iallf woOJd" not want iny car •'UREY SAID he will charge modified by a mechanic not two rates for the conversion complt'!tely 1amillar with tbc and tune-up, $49.9$ for cars design principles of th e with early J!Opulatlon control ' emisslon-conttol 1ystem." iiald ayslems and 199 for the lat~l .Eric ·Stork, dlrector di the models. EPA's emissions laboratory at Under current federal Jaw, 6nn Ar!>or, Mich. ----- • ___,. A--C..rrltrC wl ) l'4-\Ii AA\/ Co .20 t S + ~ C.vll~Cp S 11/o+ '4 A&E Plett f 1,,..+ lo\ C D 1 Corp I 11111+ "" ''"Ml:i. • 6'-+ :tll Cll'IVIH Corn 2 . 1.\li+ '4 Action I · t )'\+-Vt Clf"Ulltd Cp I 1\-o+ .... ADM I ' 1'111 Ctf(ron •C. 1*1 ' I -lo\ .....,_OU ·, it 11\f>+ ·~ 0..dMIU ·* 1 · sv;.+ l'o Ml'OllU ll>C" ' '""+ \.'o CllmOH .<mi 121 l \!o .,, .Atnitol T~ 1 1"' . .. O.rr,a .2• 1 10 ..• Affll C.. !C a! '!'-+ Ioli Chick Un Jll · I .)-14+ V. A.IC PttMI J11 I J I'.+ .... Oil"* Mt I 6 + V. Al"'°"'9 "r I 6"°"'" :tll Oll"lllftli Co J 1!'t+ \oll .... ,,..El loll 1• JV.-~· Cl Cnv 1.M S n .... + V. Alrwltk .16 St • t ... +,.. Cl Mii -S 1\o\+ i.., Altitl Wllod$ • I 11 + ""' Clllel"-1 1\o\+ \ti A1•SQ .Alrt S · J + \o\ Otcle K .1' )0 J'-'-.... Alcoltc .tib 10 i""+ ~ OtalMG '#b 2 11,(,, ••• All Am ll'IOw , I 1\ti ••• Ch}"GIF\ JO l ,...,_ \o\ Al~Wl 1 6 +\lo CL "Incl C. 1 1"°+ \ti Al...,Alrts n S.\11 .•• O.rtito11 .14. J 1111+ 111 M"9 Air_.. J 2ltr<+ '4 O ltY Cor°' 1 1).16 ... AllltAwln 6 1 ... ~,. S S\o\+ V. Allltd Mist 11 J-.... C M • C0tD ' I'll! ... All TM 1.10 I M""+ Ii CMI In• Wb S 6 •• , AllK Corp 2S '-+ \.'f C-Cl'mll'I I tl'i+ V. Alttc C., pf J 1'4+ ""' (.off Mii .!WI 10 14h+ V. Alltc "'"' JG J.16 •.• (G4'lln Haltd 10 1l'f+ .... AmHlu WU )9 IJY,.... .... (.olt 11'111 ll>C S 2:tll+ \'I Am..__ I .1 ...... v. (.oleN.111 .u 1 I~+ .... :~~·1.m ·~ 1 ~~:.: ~ie:r~ tt ,~ .... + ~ AtroG•rd .2• 6 . ~+ -Comll fQYlp 16 1•~ "" Alnl1ru .M 11 s-wi+ \lo Cimto I.lo. 1 .M'lllo+ \It AM111rt8 .u 1 '"' •.• =-r.~ ,1 ~ ~ Am Mol Inn 1 I V. ••• AmP11n •ot • s , _.... c,u•r • '"'+ \Ii Amllll 1.llb 1J I -loll (Omp lnws 6 1 + \'Ii Am Re<Gl"p I 2~\ t \o\ Compr Mch l J + V. Am $Mtt a. 10 ,,.__ .... COnc.he .l2• 1 '"" •.. ... !'-'IWIQ 2 s + .... COl'\dk (p l 2'11 AMI Cp .O' )I '"'.,. Ii\ Conroy lllC 1 l'll +-\'Ii Anctr.1 Rid I 1"'+ .... ConSOll ~ 12 1 •.• Anli'lllllT Ind 1J .J\11+ .... Ctil'l1 Rtt .20 11 101'11+1'-A 0 ll'ICI Inc U lJ.16+ V. COl'l1yt11 Cp 1 ,,,._ '4 Aq11lllN .20 Sl 2S'lo-\r. COnt ...... WI 1 I + V. Ar911!i IC 11 IJ..16+J.16 Coot In .... .. ,..., .. "' ArzCLd ... 2 11 . '. COOpr .no I Jvo,. v. Arkl.IG I.JD 21 1-t\lo GorOOll 11111 S 1111 •.• NITllC IEl>1 IS 6°"'+ .... COrtUlb Inc ' 16111-t ¥1 Arml11 Corp J 9"'+ V. COrr&B .tit 2 16'>11 ••• Arrow Elld 7 •t\+ "' Co!icoln .lOb 2 ''it+ \ti A.I_,, C.-IP 1~+ lV. Cott Corp' I 2 , , • AsPllOQll C. I ID.._.... Co• C-IOlt ' t:W.+ 'II ASPJIO .olOIJ 1 Siii• v. Cr•lt1 Corp • 5 2 Mir.• Inc I 2~ °"' g=~~.~. l:.: ltr:...ioii At co lncl\BI 1 1\ti •.• At k0Mt9wt 12 1'--1-"' CTOU A.-0!> I 41111+\lt AllCM 1.4~ J JJ -t yO CTOWMll .«I •• 1J I +l\o\ All•tCP wls 10 1 ••• Crw CP .:lSe '171-t+* A.11911 ln .10 I JI.,.._ 1'o Cry\111 Oii 17 l't\+ ~ Aullrtl OU 11 1' .... +"' CQblc Cp.20 l Sl'I+ \lo Aub;I Svc .111 J • -v., lln1rA .nti 1 lit\+ "' Awmce .u ·• • + V. -0 0-A\IX Corptn 1 1J... •.• Ollmon .2Gh · l P\+ \oli -I ~ Oenl~lln .11 l lJ + ~ Biid ~ .Jiii 1 !'lo ... 0.1• OocJ n • 1 -1'l1!'t-YI\ llnc.rll 1.,Stl 12 , + .,.., 0.1• ~ciikt u Ji,;. ••• .,_, w1 1 .,. ....... o.1""' .10b • 111 •~+ '"" '11111r'1er LI JI 11Y1+ Ill DCl lflalrp u 7·1'+ "" tl..-ikUlll .20 I •Yt+ V. Dt1rt1nS .U S IS~ ... llai,.r I .II) S Jilt.+ V. DIH ... b .OSI> I i"°+ W Bar11n ~ I Jll6 ••• Dlltl Cor11 S 11·16 ., . Blrnw.11 In S l loli• V. OftlEr .~ a •lJ +.,. 8arryR0511 S •V.+'4 Dlrol-1 1. loll ••• Btrr,wr .12 1J ~+ "' O.Row Ind 1 1'-+ .... 8artons Old 10 1h •• , DttrPll .19" 1 J•v.-.,,. BlrllCll Foll , 1 I* • . • Dnltn JWI I ' + .., 81rwkt Ind IJ 2'h+ "'° DtteclO 111<· • 1~+ Iii 8asln Pwtrt • n 614-111 Dlwtop ep 20 l<A41+1\ti 8arnoi; .ltb s t -l'o OlvAp-1 ,:tOe J7 J-..+ '"' l'lttl llld .Cl J 1-.... Y. Dlt,,.... M 4 JO + n &li...iSUI WI 2 2"-+ V. Dil'bold \l.n 1 !'Mi &t11r111 (p 11 !Ioli+-~ Oloot1 ' lf!C 1 1~·¥f 61rO Enl lt id l\ti+ "'-Oh1•rMr,.,. J 12tli ••. e.re RI .S71:1 • 4\lt+ ~ Ol•lyn Qltp I 6'h+ .... Blr09f! arw J 2\11+ \ti DorN ,.,,.. 11 '9 +1" etrn.-1 S Jl,I)-\o\ OOl!llenr .1' 2 M + V. """ ""f 6 ' ••• ov-r .1• 2 6'h+ v. Blr\'t'l'IC .1 11 •1'1-t \It Ol"IWNllt C,. IS "'+ \ti lltlllltwll Cp I n ·, ••• Dn•U 2.1• ' 1'1-t+ \'I 11 ... r1, Ent 21 t \'i• "' Prl• "'" 1 ri.--"' 81cPw11 .11 • 1""+~ Or1,tlrA 1' •.• lltBtlf' 1.CI I 11.,.._ \to buNT1 ,IQQ S 1'1t + V. BlllJW, s .Jf J u + "" °'"'Itel' c ' l'll+ 811 OyfttmC 11 11..--Ill 0,MHEI )k 1 •'Iii• l i.n1no ·'° 1 '""• ~ --1: £-~.DI a 1"+'-' ES\'ttm .llO •1 '"'+"' BllilHl!rd in 10 t--. \Ii ~rl kll .3' t 6"'-'°" aedll\Acl A I l ift+ Vo Elrtflllil .11 10 t '4 ••• Bolt llltl"l'ltk 1t 6t't-Ill ~ .t\11' ' 1.-., ..• 8ow Ytll .IO S M +t F.:Oll.511. I •Mi-t' "'-eo-r IM Jt 22 .. ~ Frfi9ht 1 s + 1' ltlll!lf C .JI ' "9+ \Ii -OI • 2'\o\1-)\ ., .. "'°"' 1 ....... \Ii ictmM ,lJ '' 1•+ .. lrM "'"* 4S 1•1Af+I.... lflrMdl .11 6 I + Ill .,_'" f•L 21 ,.~ " 11ui (erptt1 , 2"' •.• trlWIEll , JCI If"+ Ill ll<M Cf'lem 0 ,..., ••. 5: .. __,, ..... 'Al !I ...... •-.s---.: ---; .. .. 1 lj ..• Elt<t::; 1 I~+ 141 .. ~ 16 + ... 1 1«1"" 1 20 -\'o tllf~ 1.GI 1 Ith + "-E1«t• 1 • 2\li "' rft .. 111 • .o 6 l h .,. ElllHfll.... ti "l'I·+ \' Mitt A\111t I J\11-f " El Trfll'llcl J I -~ "'"' -COM ;."__Ja\1:1-~ l:tQU~rt .. 2 S.-~ -l:dl~ ,.., Jll 1 ,... .. " "°" lJ 1J\lo+ ~ I•• A .101 , f· s .... "" • U 11~ •:t E.-C:IN .l( J!/o-t 1' ! -"" ~,__ ... -Co!Nilr I I V! .• , '•llltn A I J + ~ pbth!D 11 WI+ 111 '•W!CA.OC 1 -.-1' Oft 11~ Jill ,.. 11"11r ft• Ml" 1 ''-• )\ ~ 1(1 .:W.-1·16 ,.1, "'° .JOI • • -... C.. Hl'f .1) I fVt-\lo ~II SOd" 2 11 ..... !1Piii1.0I I tl'll ... F,_, to t-~YI Mlr__.u 2 J \11-t .... Atllw 32 ,_+ ~ .V.rtUI I s l•J6 • . • FtJlnlllt on • lJ\.'t ~IJfll' ' !Iii,+ \II ~a.: ' !tt!·: ~c..":.~''."' !1 la! e :1e ... t.."': ; ,:~:-= ntt 11 • , •• l'!lll'IC#-•• Ii •'Al ... r f'111 111111+ \At flltrOii .0111 11 I -t It .,.LIA 110 tO tllllOM '*"' 1 ,m.+ " --• • • ' • • , '- • .. ' .. • '· • • ' • • • • ' - . -• • 4 • ----. . 8 · Dai y Pilot • ••• ; . ' ' • ' • Aong the . . oast -range • ' . -. - Here's a "seven-pock" ~ou con hove delivered to. your door for only $2.65 a month anywhere in ' the Oronge .. Coo.st area. Nourishing too; .. whether you hove a taste for local sports reports; crave more news about the world of women in which you live, feel a lock of community news in your diet -or wont the variety of top cartoons, comics, columns and c"mmentoFy packaged so. they please you. The Daily Pilot delivers-seven days a week. Wont to oraer? Phone 642-4321 cir the Doily Pilot office in your neighborhood. r c --~ ·- • , ' . _......_ ____ --. ----~ ---.4 ·----- I ... • • - ( • DAILY PILOT • - . . •. . . • • . . . ' ·---. • r • •'-f -4JI>-- • ., - . ' • • ' • . . , ---·-·- . ' . - • • -· ..... ~ ... I • , . 'This -January it's y I . ·j,L I -" '1 18 & '1 11 Pit · Vacuui Balllesr By TMrmo-Serv / (. .v ..... !127 CJ.oleo . . -~ ·------- Stondoo:J ciJp or cup with ·f> ·hondle. s.amless flllef & <on't·leok e11pansion slop. pet. . 1 ' ac ea.· llandY M•.Pads Your Choice • J1S P•ck •f 10 P•lll• •4116PMkoftPM• •Sil P.ck ,t 4 P•lll• / • ' .'· Reg. •2'1 \i.-Jflti:L~ v~~ 'C' Chewable Oringe Flavort• ::~.t.t!' Big supply of 100 mg, 'Vho min C, witk ~sont Of'Ol'lgel flavor , • , s:kewoble so ift easy 10 toket Greatei4~1anlnL~. . . t,\1''· Made to sell for $14995 ~> .Sel!ing f~r $$Morel ~~ AM~FM Stereo ~ Ladies' Fl•nnel ome Entertainment Center .,......,... Gowns or PJ's Price 0 it--11i1'iil'J-8-7 Sale • AM/FM/MPX Sterea Receiver · • Built-in 8-Track Tape Player • Built-in 3-Speed Record Changer • Twin Bookshelf-Size Speakers E~citing totol stereo system n'M!Qsurn up to the bfst -sove over $30.00 now! Perlorrnonce pocked receiver ploys 8-trock co rt ridges, record1, or AM & FM stereo broodcostt. full BSR changer with dust cover, illuminoted slide.rule diol, two ki-fidelily speakers. Our lowest Price --~ .. ~\ · Sare orer '400! • Boys' fashion Rared Jeans ~'(I#' ·$12•• Deluxe Framed 37" · -i Rep~ocluctions Beautiful reproduc-tions In lel!t ured brusk ·slroke finish. Traditional and con- temporary styled mouldings. 37x37" New fashion flare-leg jeons in ossorted colors, in duroble polyester! <OltOO ~ JQO% s cotton. Detailing - found on name brand ponts selling · 22-· for dollars more! Choke of styles ~~~\ • Special P;rchose! · ~ ~\fo.\ Save up to 66%! ~~ _ L~Jles' Roll-up Slee~e ~~ Q 25' to .49' ea. , . Perma:,~ress Shirts i~o0~ Hardware ,_ coWlectioo of .. -~ Price ...... ~ ..... ~-·-­I..'::;;:;;:;.' "-~ lod~· polyester ~. ~P. DuringSaJe !;~~'':,, '0"'• s I I ~ ~ aleeves, novelty trims, variety of colors & priots. Key of Kentucky Blended Whi~key ·. Fifth Gallon 99 Imported from Scotland Scotford Scotch, Whisky Quart Assortmeot iocludts hooks, fosreners, wire, wall fostemtfs & onclior bolts, hinges, picture hangers, etc. IJ · TAR TRA M1~1 t1 S1H Slight Ir regulars of l1r Sl .H Notionolly Fomou• Ci11rs Cigarette .Resagos Cigars. -~: ... '°.'.: .=~ Id of pleasure! Ho er IOXOF"SO TronsP,arent Superb I 5e ond 25e ·2· ~or!: 1:~:0& 7JC ci90rS. S~ght irreou· 49 .nicotine ore re- • loritie1 do not affect · , moved! . · • smoi..ng quality. • • 111 24 hti111 ........... :1tc . COSTA MESA FOUNTAIN VALLEY 3l E. 17th St. COSTA MESA 2300 Hafbor at Wil$0n •• - • J406 W. Edift9er at Bristol SANTA ANA 3325 Bristol at M._cArthur 1 .. Magnolia St. at Tolbtrt FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16141, ~a rbo~ at Edinger l • 2-Pc. LDnr Sleen PJ's • Fiii Length Gawns Comfy, 100% cotton sleep f0$kions in styles cod quolity selling elWNkere lor muck more -cleoronce sole priced new! Pojomos hove pip«! collors, pockets & , cuffs, wide woistbonds. Long sleeve Gtonny 90wns with ruffle flounce. Choice of stylin and oH·OWf prints. Sizes 3~. · .~\ Save 41' each! t>-f'J"'" Reg. 98' Plastic. · . J Housewares Price · During Sale . ~\ Buy3andsave77'! t"''""'"sa• ea. 7" Cerami~ . Decorator Bowls Colorlul Ceramic bowl1 to brighten orty kitchen. Per- fect siie !Of c.reol, soup, a variety of uws. Lively colOf'I & pottems 10 chobse. C1b1 . F ·o R tr Bill . R99. •6•• Westclox s21u Arvill 4-Speecl Alarm C~ocks · Ph~niph Cubemotie or Boll· . moti< •pdng-wh•d s311 alarm clocks in bn1· • · liont • ~olors. • -·- . -.. ..- . £11pert~ tailored, teody-to-horWJ lO'" tier curtain & volonce set Col-orlul ortt1f solid colors & print fobria, no.iron,. . Price During Solo S ., •, .. ·~ '(• . Quality for ;fi~i .,. Gallery-styre 1 Pictuli ' . ' Frame:· Elegant Flofentint, s ;f(ect, Avoc~ Of Woodtone Anllque Gold finish. Ouoli· coted in molded plastic from hand wrought 'orig.inal1. ti. ..._. . 37c Hardback $)44 •oy ~= i Reproductions. · Candle Fi'u:· Fine a~t master-Y•ro.ke p«.n mounted on f Beautiful repro- pictureboard. 81tlO", duction1 of fci. 111114" .. 0f 161l2Cr. mQUI flgurin@s in ' ..sizes. . · • starttlng 'detail, • . . ... tiUNTINGTO.N BEACH HUNTINGTON BE~C 9161 Adams ·~ Brookhur1t 21131 Btiiich at. At11nt~· . EL ToRO T El Toro at Rockl itld Rd. WES~MINSTER Westrninstt r at Golden .)Vest . •• • HUNTINGTON BEACH .HUNTINGTON B~~ -· -95 Huntington Center Siil w,,,,... ' . . ,_ -·- • -. ·• .. •. • Sturdy 22-Gallon All-puT?Ose trosh con in o handy size .-for garbage Di-garden. Mode of heavy --..,_ duty plos11c that will nol br~k ·even . under heavy U5e. We've sold thot;- sonds ot our regular low pric e of $2.99. Come and ger 'em.now ot ton- , tostic tleoronce sovirogs! . .. • . ' • (i M! :L,Altillllc. TransmlSllan TYPE A ·Rold a at5~ c-9100 ·· Price During Sale R • Mascara • Pressed Powder Compacts • Nail Polish • Blushers • Lipstick • Eye Shadow • Lip Glossers • Eye Glossers • Liquid Foundation Beautiful fahsion colors in cosmetics to com· p~I and higl1!1pht any U.in torie. · Spect~uloiSavings ~\ We hought 30,0001- Duo fashion . ~ L'Oreal 'Suffrage' lashes Hair Spray ___ 6Yz oun<!..l!oodo,.nt Ravu1a1• Scented, unscontec1 The &tro.-Hold Hoic Spray,. . s109 s I n 1 ·oa1 . RegulO-r oi-UriKttited, at spe--· -· -· ·--- ciol sovings!'Holds hoir better, wi>h ,,..,.good 'oOdifoninq • "• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·benelist-130uncesize. C_ 34 Pound la• c ... me Shom:oo a· gc ~ NUTRl-TONIC; ... ~ ............. ;; . r::;;;m . •3so · -Value!- -. 8' Originally f2.SO ..... .a\\-Natio~ally . ~v~ Advertised · 97 .Deco~9 .. tantTob1... aonLE . .8168 81 DRISJANoFso ..................... · · · 8149 BARN.ES:HIND::~~~:.81 17 .• 89 -1,0unce Expecto .. nt . . . s1 38 1 TRIAMINIC .............. : ........ . Your s Choice 58 . . · · Pockof26 , ti 19 81 59 SLEEP·EZE,aa1~11 ... :.' .......... I . -_.__ __ eac . CHLO.iiASEPTIC:.'. .......... 88~ vicis~:::Ll~ ...... : ... : .. ·.2 i nc -FOUNTAIN VALL~y---E 1.;'"'f'ORO El Toro el R0ckfield Rd . 14!16 ·w. Edinger at B•lstol 'HUNTINGTON BEAClf HUNTINGTON B'EA~H Mlgnoli• St. at Talbert 9861 Adams at Brookhurst 21131 Beach at Atlanta FOUNTAIN VALLEY .'1.141 H-arbor at Edinger WESTMINSTER Westminster at Golden West. 5881 Warner . .SANTA ~NA . · 3325' Brl11o1 ~t· MacArthur -'-'.COSTA MESA · _ ; •. ·1JOO H1rbor at Wilson HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON B.EACH 95 Huntington. Center .. • ~ .. ,• • • •. --4-- ' ' ' ., . . ' . . . . --•• f I --, ~ ----~ --. ... • . • • ,, j I , __ . ' • • .. 2 I DAILY PILOT Wfdntsday, January 2r 1974 • TONIGHT'S . - TV mcm,JGHTS J ' ·~ CBS II 8:00. Sonny and Cher. Tennessee Ernie Ford and' Lyle Wagoner are guests. KTLA 0 8:00, Hockey. Kings vs., California Golden Sew. NBC 0 8:30. 'l'enafly. Tenafly ~cl.5 as seeurily ( guard during parties at wealthy homes. > ABC O 8:30. "A Brand New Ll!e." Childless !or •. 18 years. couple discover they are e"l'ecling baby. ~ CBS IJ 10:00. Kojaclc. l\ojack-alscoverSlle ·1s :. hannless to stop harassment from ex-convict he ·' sent to prison. •• .• ~--... ~~~~~~~-'=-~~...;~!!:i::::.~::;: ·~ , TV DAILY LOG Wednesday Evening JANUARY 2 1:oouoommdmm- m®:cr11rn@C1J1S(I)>"'"' O Bonania I Courtship or Eddie'• ratJMr 1111 Lucy Show Tht fllntstONS Nl1ht Cii1lle1J Slmplementt M1Jt1 Movie: (C) (Zllr) ""PMplt Will lilk" (r.om) 'Sl -Cary Grant, Jeanne Crain. EID Hodaepodat lodp m Th111 Stoo1t1 l :JO (6) @{]} Hor111'1 Hm. . 0 MIMI: (Cl (90) "llwr If M,,. lety'° (aclt) '69-Ylc Monow, C11u ' Akins, Louise Sofel. i ~~Q;J (1))-1 ~~,·:ff!;_ History 'If Art Uwin1 [Uy NO¥tlt hitrt Thutn . m Llttlt 1a1e1b 1:001mom""' Bowll11 tor Dollars • Mo.It (?hr) "Ro1111hfr Sptd: In(" (com) '45-Jlck ClrlOfl, ROii· lind Rus11!t I ~h!~?M, lin1J I Love Liiey . Mod Sq11ad 1l)@ I Dr1111 of Jeannie fl) Esme11ldJ ti~ 00 Dr11ntt ED The French Chd (20[J))_ol_ ttl U P1im1t A•or m Aaron krzer .... ffi Speed Rxer 7:30 ~The Nrw D1tin1 fj;1M1 l)Ho1an's Heroes . Wait Tin Tour F1thtf Ctb A T'I proi'.l\icer's plans to film 1 documentary on the Boyles creat!S per~onali1y changes and t11rns all lhe family into ego lreaks. • 0 Help Thy Nei11hb01 a Bobby Goldsboro Sllow O Concentr1tlon (10' T~ flew Priett h Ri&M (0 Bewitched f1113 1 ':'o Tell th• Truth · \23' '6') H'ltj'lllood Squ.111 ro sii11ehont ( 29 (i! ) folitt SvrfHn ffi Olher People, Ottltr Pl1e11 f:l) The Choul C1n1 . fD Koflywoocf TY TMalrt: Ctnllkh "Blrdb1tll" (R) m Ntvell * Daily at 12:00pm Ch 9 DR. JOYCE BROTHERS in LIVING EASY \ co-host Pat Carroll t:oo U 19 (1)1 (I) c.-"Photo finisll" Jack Cassidy fvests 1s 1n lntern1tlo1t1lly known mercen•I}' sol· dier who obtains Canlllln's services for 1 murdei l11Ytslig1tion that brin1s Cannon Into th• sirhts of • s11.11pshootin1 sniper who's deter- mintd to elimln1t1 him. · lil Mowie: (?!Ir) "'Sra•I Notti" (dr1) '3Z -JOlln Bl"Jmore, Grel1 ~Ibo. - fl) PIPI CofllOI 1:30 ID Saf•ri II Adwlltull ED W1111U1 .. Methods of Birth Con- tro" \ mu Hitft• .. ' U!)Clmml 4el MuHI • 10:00 tJ IMJ IIJ)(IJ lol" "Cop In A C111" After receivin1 thre1ts 11ainst his lire, Kojak discawers lie Is powerless fo stop the hlrassment from 1n ex-convict ht sent to prl· .... 0 @009 @L'Lov1 Storr .. Timt ta love" A youn1 man end his..t:0mmon-Jaw wife, 1i~!!J In th• frH style of today's you , lrt •II· enated by two f1dors-sh1 wanb to bring his 1randf1thtr 0111 of Ille old pi!-Ople's home to IM with them, and then discovers that she's prer· nanl Bruce D1vlson, Kay Lenz ind Dean Jauer star: ' fJ UlitI>m O••• M1r111111 "Etulle for 1 Kidnappe(' M1rsh1ll defends 1 }'O!JnJ hitchhiker who In· noctnlly picktd up 1n 1ttach1 cm fot the driver who picked him up, ind is arrested fM kidn1pplng ind murder. jamts G. Richardson, Bethel Leslie, M1rsh1!1 Thompson. Lu• Parter and Ronnil Troup cuesL omm""' Ei)bcellario EI) Vtritt "Saltsman'' (R) lD:JO I lilt Cosby · E Sltow de W11ttr Mercade · • P11ist tllt Lllfi~ Chill 11"° ;MeM ~~til·~~ 6 Pe117 M1son • Phll Dan1hu1 Sllow m CATCH rHE ACTION ON * MISSION IMPOSSIBLE! . m Mluion: lmposslbft 7:55 0 K11_1p W•')"·llP aJ MOVie: "The M1kM StrMr" 1:00 IJ 1'2ii (()((!) Sonl!f llld Cht (mys) '55 -Mthony Quinn, AnAt TenneSsee Ernie Ford 1nd l.11• Wac· B1ncrofl \... ·~ner 1u~st · -· @(I) LMn1 bsy D ~ @ .(@ @L' Ad1111-IZ "fool· I~ {l)) Tr.ill West h1!f Di~ision" The old Wiut seems ll:JCI IJ (~@)(I) Cts lite Movit: still 1hve is-Reed and ~1llor take IC) "'" T FKtor" (d ) •69 lo horstbKk lo pursue thieves. ' fJIOll . rt O ~ ki11is Hoe•ey The LA Kinp -Sugn H1mpsh1te, Stew1n Gran· vs: the California Golden Seals llora lier.~ m~ ~Joh •· o~~land. . ~ ~ ~ •nJ-IMI' fJ lill {])a) Dick Cll" frtMllb Jwt1ictl OM Ult Rod and !toll T11n tlii Ci) (E) Yfldl Wortd of fJt. 0 Million $ Morie: (C') (2'1) "'tlll ~··~ "Ro;'! S@rfin& 11 lnt~r- Sco1plo l.tttl11" (dr1) '67 -Nu 11tti0n1I Airport Pan _II An 1n- Co1d, Shirler Eaton. deptti repon ol I.he wor•.1ngs 11 Los I 'rHn Aerts Anretts lntem1t1on~I Airport, c:on· D111nel 4ucted by f1mtd wnter Rod Ser11nc. ~115:.~~'ll''°:fllll U:IO 8 lltM: "TIPtllf T1tn A Trip• ChamplonMlp W"""I (com) '39 -Roland Youn1, Con· st1nct Btnnelt. J1p1ntst ~"llU'I' Pr.-i OH Step Beyond l :lD 0 Q} @91 a;) MIC ._.....,,, hrls l1rlofl rrestnb MyslelJ -Ttnafly "Man RunnJn( MDVI•: '"file Doctor ind tht Tenaf ly is 1ssi11ned to M 1s • C1rf" (dr1) '49-Glenn Ford, Janet security guard durln1 p1rties 11 L•irh. Gloria Grahame. 111e&lthy l!omtS followinr 1 raih ol ri6' Alim Hildtcocli '1estnb bu1Klaries. Sii Mineo ind Jot C.m-l:OO (I) 0 00 ~ @ Mm panell1 guest. I o l!1J mm "c .......... ., 8 ®I m'"'"'" Mowie'. (C)(90) "A llrantl Mew Ufe'" · W111ted Detd Of AliYt (R) (dr1 ) '72 -Claris Leachman, Martin B1ts1m, M1rre Redmond, Gene Nelson, Mildred Dunnock, Wil- frid Hyde-White. A happily married 1:45 6 Morie: "Sht Couldn't Sly No• (com) '54-Robert Milthum, k~n Simmons. couple. childless for 18 years. is Z:OO m All·Mlctrt st1or. "tloucls OW. stunned to discover they 111 11· EufOllf, .. (C) "Are Dow1rlelow" pectinr 1 baby. m Merv CriHin Show ' IE Hlgb Chpanll 1 J:UI 6 Movie: wHellple" (wes) '53- Sterlin11 Hayden, ~an ltslie. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES t :OO @ (JJ ''The Man Who lost Hi111- ull" (d11) '41-Brl•n Aherna, Key Francis. lZ.«I m "Crut of the WM" (dr1) '54 --O•ne Kelly, Jeff Richards. 1:00 D "Tht Ji11in AttrlCtlon" (dra) '63 -Pat Boont, Nancy Kw1n, Mal Zat· terlinr. Z:OO IE "Undertow" (dta) '50 -John · Ruuell, Scott B1•dy. 3:00 @ (C) "~11 Gods of th1 Deep" (sci-Ii) '65--Ylnctnt Price. · 9:JO O (C) "TIM f111lnsrn1n" (wes) '6li ®) (C) "Suitid1 Cornm1ndo" (dr1) -Don Murr1y, Guy Stockwell, <Abby '6!J..-Aldo Riy. Dalton. l :JO O@ (C} "Traer by ttJ1 f1ir' (adv) 10:00 (JJ ''SecOftd Timt Around" (rom} -Chnstopher George, Dein J111er. '61-Debbie ReynoldS, h!Oy Griffith. 4:00 €J (C) "'Titt fne hnAIU" (mus) ~ "it-FIOM Ir~~· (-m) -1· _,,, -'59 -Danny Kare, B1rtlar1 Bel -Be!1 L11aosi. Geddes. 11:30 0 "Tw Dolli; letlol" (dr1) 'S?-4:JO 00_ S.1111 11 10.W N1tift1 John liter, Stm Brodie. "Coil' 19 I~ Cl)) ~Mysterious llllM" P1rt Ton" (com) '35--MM West I (Ki-Ii) '61-Micbatl Cf1Jr. KOCE TELEVISION LOG J:tO MhlorY ef Ar1 (C) ltllOl'I '1 "Revltw StlliOft" J J:• Mi-Int Tl1h19J. W"'11 I C I "H0111thold Smel"" Ho It 1n .. 11sw Cl"llSO win 1'191P Ofgple COPf with l:ll'obltlTla. 1urrounolng1, •lid !ooh. J:CI ll'lft9'1 llMI ¥tm0tttl (() "ftll <Ind Winter" • A tilm nv n11ure 11ho!ogr1p/'ler Jim Bonft ctltO<i!ln9 rne oe1utv or IM n11111·11 •n· vlrOl'lmtnl. •:Oii Al M•" S""1V9t 1Cl 1:et1an ,, "P1vcl!Ofller1>11v" • A PIVCllologr tovrM for COlleuf crlf(llt, l'lml..t by Dr. Matt Dlll'!Cln. ••JI 11Klr1< (911'\Plll'f (() • S1M $ttal'lt Sl"91 IC) 6:N Tiit Orw11 c--CM1111t !Cl L ... -M "PIHt 'n 11111" • ... 111111!11 Tucld;1y, J1nu.ry I, 11 ' p,1'\, • • •i• HI"°'"' of Art (() Lf'!son '1 "Review Senion·• 7tM Tiit G,...l Con1411Mf Ce11le•I !Cl Lesson 31 "Tiit Junk In Your M'edlclnt C10inet" 1110 ,.,.......<lllCI ICJ ''The MltYland B1roque Enwmble" • Jot~ Turner le1d1 11111 11Jcnl1d nutt, • l'YrPSlchofd, end bol)OOl'I tnMmblt, l:M Mlll"fl-.::1 TM1tre IC! "TIMI UM>11as1ntt'llU A.I The !lt110ft• <;jLlb" • Gtor;e tonlessn lo Ille Glf>tral't • m1,1rder, bu! WI"'"°" w'lll(IS-111•1 • 111t· ease It 1\ol yet tlowd. ' t :OCI C011t1mpor1ry Dimtn~on• (Cl JIU 11. 1llve al'>d \IH'll •mOl'l{I Unlvertlly st11clenls In 11111 country. ~-• ol lhete 11,,..,ents 1rt t•· Dtrlmtl'!l!llQ Wl!h new t.clV!!QueJ: 'f:M At Ml" ltllfl.,.. (Cl ltstoft 24 "P1ycholhef1py" • Se. todfr 11 4 p,rn. 1 Ren~appfng Topic :Of l(()CEProgi~~ Reapportionment or Orange County's Congressional districts -and how will It effect Orange Countians -is one of the topics of Koes-TV's ''Orange Co unt y in Washington," a mont~ half4 hour program itivolvinJ all six of Orange County's. congressmen, to. be broadcast over Channel 50 next Monday <it 7:ll p.m. U n de r reappoctionmcnt, Orange O>unty "'iii have four Congressional rcpresent;.ilives instead or six, as it has today. All six congressmen air their plans ror the !uturt.,. on thls program. ''Oraiige County jn \Vashlngton" will be repeated Thursc'i'ay, Jan. 10, at 6 p.m. <1nd Sunday, Jan. J3 at 6 p.m. The program ls produccQ tn Washington and played back each mOnth on Chnnnel 50. Other topics for discussion include: L'lC outlook for the nation's 'economy and the latest develop1ne.tlls orf tbe energy c ri sis from \Vashington. BDHDEB. or1TA1.1. ~URE ALM FOR 1974" .. TV 1'1ovie Jackie Gleason turns to· priest for help in scene fro1n ''Don't Driflk the Water'' on "1'he CBS 'J'hursday Night Movies," airing at 9 o'clock on thanneQT:" ·Rodney Dang·erfield Hi~s • Top 2 Different Times By HAL BOYLE NE\V )'ORK l AP) -You n1ight think that old com- edians never die: they just fade away.· But that's not true of Rodney Dangerfi"eld. he calls "a duffle bag ruu of jokes" that he can dip inlb anvtiine. He estimates that he· has ""'ritten be11,1-·ecn ' OINI RAL CINEMA CO APOIUITIO N -..ttl.LD OY~I ''THI WAY WI WIRE" tPGl 11l'tlt1 ltrelNl.wl 111111 ltM# tltcl,.,,. rOVNTAIN VAlllT CJ• D cu "OICUTIYe ACTION" • ... , "THI G!TAWAY" FAMILY TW IN CI NEM A ' ' ' . " ' . .. " ' ' ~ ' ' . ' ' ., CINEMA I A Gr1at New ramify Fiim for 1974 "WONDER OF IT ALL" CINEM~ II He'ld Ovft 2nd WMkl "FIDDLER ON THI ROOF" "MAN OF LA MANCHA" . . HELDOVERI • Geo,.. S.,ml "AlOUCHOF CLASS" IPGI ... "THE NIGHT VISITOR" Starrl .. Trevor Haward Liv Ullman A lot of people have con1c up the hard Way in show business. Bat Rodney. h n s done it twice: first as. Jack Roy. a· reasonably successful con1ic on small clab circuits. and the_!!,_ after_ n lap9~ e! 12 years, in his present na1ne as one or the most popular <.-on1edians on television. 10.000 and 15.000 jokes andl~~~~~~~~~~~ used 3.000. Nine-tenths of his]~ material is hls own. SURF HUNTINGTON BEACH 536-9396 ME.SA COSTA MESA 548-1552 FAMILY _TWIN~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY 962-1248 5011.R'I' MO PASSl!S WEEkDAYS • 5:00 • 7:00 • 9:00 SAT &: SUN °1:00 • l:OO • 5:00 • 7:00 • 9:DO Clint Eastwood n DiptyHa••r in Ma9 .. um Fo11ee SHOWING NO_W! This · time the bullets are hitting pretty close • to home! ' ' ' I A IW.PASO aiw.wr Ill.Ii· Nsa ~r.g HALHQL8ROQK Ce.staring llllTC'lll.l IYAH ·OAVll sw.. · TltTOH PEAAY · llOSEFIT l.'llCK llulc: Ula SOflf-Rlfll · StGry bit JOtlN lllllJUS . Ser~ or .otN Mll'-'S Q floOCIWt CIMlllO . f'f*t(t by ll08Elll OAl[Y . Ot!tttfd or rto POSi P.W.VISU•·TEOlffCOLOfl8. ft~ WMll!r llr115 Q A WJrlllfCotmw.rlicatiOns ~ ~RI •lfO.Crtf I . . ,_,.,._, .. ,_ .. ,,::;-· ............... CO-ttlT .. , .... ,.., •iv1r 1•1 wow nun •:ts ,,,., _ ~~11:H>r Boul!f!!il •!JVilS(\'1 Stt111 Cos11 M9M • 646-0573 D•llY AT1 12ra4-2:JM:40 710J.ti10-111ll .... .... _, "NOlMAN ltOCICWfll .. DAil 'I' AT 1:00.l:U~;XI r· ~ 10.:00 P.M. • 1 -. Rodney was • ·born i n Babylon, t\. Y., the son or HE AD/\1 ITS that it \\"as a tough rQa.d back when he · decided ta becotnc a con1l'<li;in again at age 40. 11c \\Tote for ether con1lcs. played Village spots. and. later. up-' IO\\'n clubs. At a ge 41 he "'as , 'They thre1c ttlf}t1e11. at ·tne, 11of to 110•. 'l'he height of ltl!I first rareei· ll"OS 1r#1e11 I 111ode s:J7fJ fl 1reek.' I ._,...~~~~ a vaudeville performer nan1ed playing night clubs . in the-· Phil Roy. At age 15. Jack Catskills for free and was_ em· I Roy started writing jokes and barrassed 10 use his own doing in1itations of \V.C. l''ields r.an1P. A night club owner and Charles Laughton ·in chrislent.'<i hiin Ii o d n e y' amateur ·hour shows, where lJangerfield. 111en he pcrsuad- he won prizes of SI. $2, and cd his agent to book hin1 1' $5. When he was 17 he worked on an Ed Sullivan rehearsal 2s a singing waiter at the and Sullivan signed him up , Polish Falcon in Brooklyn and • for tv.·o Sho\\'S y,·ith an option ' as a "'paid amateur" for eight fo~ fou r more. Since th~rl the ! quarters a nigl1l in a Newark ·going has been ··up for , club. Rodney. 1 •le has appeared on the ! "THEY)HR ~\V .money at n1<\ not to me," he says. "The height of my rirst career v.•as \\'hen I made $370 a week. No"' he getS $8,500 plus ex- penses for a single ap- pc<irance : "From eight quarters lo $8.500. that's some doing!" he says proudly. Betv.·ccn the quarters and the thousands was a period v.·heri Jack Roy quit the stand· up comic row-itines to ''li\'e a normal life" <is a businc55man (in paint) and collect a wife and two children. But he savs he couldn't help "thinking ·runny" and when he did, he wrote it do\vn. Now he has what L I D 0 NEWPOOT BEACH lNflANCf TO l lDO 1\1 1 &'1 AJSO The 111)9e5t Holiday Combl11atio11! , WI LLIAM HOLDEN I "BREEZY" j a1td i·-CQN " I Johnny Carson shO\\' 40 times and o'n the !Jean Martin week· ly .show as tl1e comedian· ov.·ncr of a night club. And he really docs 01vn_ a $250.000 Manhattan night c I u b. Dangerfield's "'hich he open- ed in September 1969. turned "I 00 QUITE \\'ELL in ·my own club or I'd go to Vef;3s. he said. "People have a good time at my place and I like to see people walk out: happy.'• Start Tlte New YHr Right S.. , .. ~'WONDER OF IT ALL" 5. 7, .t p.m, dolly 1, l , 5, r, t Weeliffd1,,_ ,~ ... 111 l!XC""'SIYI! ENOAOEMENTI "THE SEVEN-UPS" '" Ctlorl ,,.,, 1:09 • t :SI • 4:41 • 6::JJ • l r:N. t0:211 • CUI! Gorm11111 "(0/ll & llOllltlS" J1mQ(ll!ll "lLITMIEI" 8otll tn Colol't iPGI --- ~::mt • ( ,,_.,,, Ill-SI. \l~l\H _,., llAH'INIO 10 I.I.I.! EXECUTIVE ACTtoH !Ni "'l,IS f DUSntol llOf ..... , LtnlE llG MANjNJ THE STING !"'I CAIEY TllATlf'INT !NI !hftO..•• .......... ··--•IC'-! 961' ., ••• -.:;:i. Sl~·JJIJ .. _ SllPICO Ill ""' e WOOl'f MUN ...... ,..."~·-,- • . . • • r " \ r r .. . . . . ' ' . ;. • • '!' • ' ' Wednesday, JanutlfY 2, 1974 DAILY PILOT 2,; - TV Movie .· -· Jason Robards Stars ~Hope ~Steps ·Out Dy \XJLLJAl\1 GLOVER ,lllstorionlcs. <:raft is.director. Josc._Quintcro, NEW YO RK (AP\ -This one<> again displaying that is .;A r.loon (or the MisbegoL· AS TUE ltURAL Arnnzoq special understanding ~1ich ' - ·:of Wifely 'Role ten" nevci to be fo rgotten . \vho conceal!! yearn ings within ha8 111adc hitn the Nob1.I Three acknowledged aces at a ba1vdy, blus(cry rnanncr , playwrlght's ,maste r Jn. Interpreting the emotional Colleen DewbU rst co u n t er. tc.rprc ter. J\fore than i n points the Robards death-de-pre\~ous procluctipns of hi_s depth~ of Eugene O'Neill spa ir with mercurlul co1npas-drama by others, Quintero has drama nre rcunUed in the si2Jl tc an ending or hcnl't-found lines that spring \\'ith .· By JERRY BUCK LOS ;\NGE!,ES !Afl _- ::-ltope Lange 'has just finished ~:a TV movie In which she : :p1ays ' housewfe who leaves : 1ber husband and children. :··~It's the second time she's ; 1one virough that role: She . also walked out as housewife and mother on "The New Dick Vnn Dyke Sl1ow." It \Vas her rcn1 ark on leav- ing the •CBS series, "All -I ever do· on 'The Dick Van Dyke Shovr' is pour coffee," inspired Deanne Barkley to : cast her in the movie role. : 'Miss Barkley is ·the vice prcsi· ' Qent in charge of the ABC :: Morl!Ull the Weck . The mo'1ic. "I Love You, ,· Goodbye," will air on ABC, ~:Probably in February. " . :: .. ,.-'1SHE JUST gets fed up.'' ::..Miss Lange said , referring to :!.I.be mo vie housc1\'ife. "She's ·: a woman •.vho got married ;:·very early and got so invo.Jvcd ;; .. [n playing wire and mothc_r_. ,.._~ .· .-.' > .. ·. .. •' ... _ .. ,, NOW .. that-she' never had· time to find out who she was or what she wanted. [__JHt!li 'L·rnng_.p.t:oduction w-h i-e-h-breaking-U!ndemt:.>s..~---co1ncdy to lighten"thc script's opened this pust 11'cekend at 'rhe third old hand a~ ~'Neil~arker !ones. the Mor:osco playhou se. And ' "I think a lot of women Y"ho may not actually walk out do consider it at one time. To shake things up and say I have needs, too. ,J can un- der!itand that from the Stand- point of being a woman." to make the affair perfect, .--.... --------------,---- Miss Lange served notice several 1nonths ago that she \VOU!d not agree to a fourth season \vith the Van Dyke .... POURS COFFEE Hope Lange - a dandy circuit has been nd· ded to the tean1. After a !\Yo-year absence Jason Robards ls b ac k . portraying the slightly fic- tionalized elder hr o th e r around Whom · this deeply again unless lhe sho1v is aired. personal O'Nei ll incantation of CBS has Said it would not 11cpentance revolves. H i s seri£s: . . _. show it becauSe it is not in performance pulses wit,h fire. Beside the h!111tall?n of her the "image" of Dick • Van flashes with humor, a total role to a sympathetic house-Dyke exhibit. of superbly .. t au t Ylife, she said she's miffed _ _::.:.::::..· ------------'---~--'----! ov~ ,css• refusal to air a segment of the .series. ' THE SEGMENT in question has. the couple's daughter enter her parents', bedrooni nnd find them making love. Ca rl Reiner, the producer. defended the segment as being tastefully handled and said he v.·ould not produce ·the show - I See by Today's Want Ads e A1'¥fER lfOLIDAY SPEC- IAL on these Al\C r('g- istcrl"d Gennan Short- ' l1uin·d ·puppies. Pointers are· avnilable. e \I Ett Y CLEAN and Pl"r· nin·h1ned '69 9118 Targa Porsche. Fun to drivl". ti I SA-V: These "Old English Sheep dog puppi~s ;u·c clig:nlficll. Tht•y i1re Enc;· lish and ,\ nt e l' i l' a n chantps~ 'It's hit entertainmenti ., . .,,., and maybe . '.\<'·1 '· . . .., .,, . .,. '<;;.-' even memorable . entertainment:•· • • ~~ '~ --,~~ ·~J P~ Rick .Nelson and 'th·e Stone Canyon Band Tonight thru Sunday _ KNDTT'S BERRY FARM. .. .. SHOWING Escape Is Everything! -~. ./:"' . \ CONTINUOUS DAILY SHOWINGS This time the bullets are 'fiifffng pretty closeto home ' •' .. . . ... . · .. ·: ·: .• .. _ ·. ' . :·: ,• '• .· :· .. .. .. ·- ·~-• i· ,• .. •' ~ ·~. ,.:. .. •• ~·· •• •' ~ \ f ·ii ; pAtL.Y AT: ;.1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00-9!00 11 :00 ' Ph.1t· Waller Manhau "PET! 'N TILLll" • • ( -, tN N~RBOPI SHOPl'ING ~ElfllA • l!DWARDS HARBOR Cl~~..:.1 fflRIOR ll~D. lT 'll'ILiON $T, 14~·0P'f 141·!.ZH ..tosT& M~S" f ' I ; 1,, , • ; ' ' , • IVl~·()lJT rlll 1\11.u lil\AW i.' l fl![ GETAWAY ' . ~ ' . -·-. THE BIG HOLIDAY COMBINATIO.N-' . , .. •GETAWAY" 1:15·5:00-1:15 "EX!CUllVE ACTION" 10:1s :s:1s.1:00 • • ... "\3:' .. :'.~· Many of his f low officers considered him the lnost dangerous man alive-an honest cop. l N••MOUHT AJU&H AL. PACIND . " 0 ·"THE EXORCIST" EJ;>WARPS • 2NO llG WlEK "Sl.ITl!Efi~· 1 :20-4t4S 1:10.lltlO "COPS & AOllllS" • l :OS-6:30 9:SO ' ' (RJ . . PtUS·"'HATU~E'S SIRA~GESI CREATURES" COMl'tflE SHOWS U 10:00-1 tDD-2:09 t:DO-i.01· I :5D·9:t5 ~.:.~ -..• ~ (GJ ......... ··········· l(lCff llvtl, l t lLLIS, 111. COllT ff.,¥. I. il~ 01100 fWY. "UNTl~ITTON IUC" 19•7·•""" • 8•7·19017 ,. "fAfllL~nN" lflGJ ··~ $1fVf M(.Qlltffl\ 6 tllllli" ~OlhMll "AMERICAN GRAPlnr· ... . "PlTI 'N. TILLll" (PG) "THE DON 15 O~AO" (II:) "HIG H Pl.AIN5 DJl1 .. TEA" Ill:) "THI! !<AMIL Y" "~l!R,ICO" llt) ,,, "IADGE.371" IRJ "THE SEVE N Uf'S" Cl'GI '" ' "STEELYARD ILUES" IRI i·IDq~f J~µrr (Q~~g~-· EXClUSIV'E TIMOTHY IOTTOMS·LINDSAY WAGNIR ORANGE CO. , ·JOHN HO USl!MAH· T We~~a~y1--11)1 & f •3D l'.M. INGAGIMEN Sal/Sun/Hol-1 :JO·J:J0-5:30-7:lO·t:)ll - !-'----Glint-Eastwood -- •• Dirty Harry ,, "·MAGNUM FORCE" IRI : Dcilly 1:00 • 3:15 • 5:10 ~ 7:45 & 16 fl.M. • ..-- DA1l 'f AT IOTH Af: 12:4J·2i•S·4:•s 7: 10·9:20·1 1:~5 • I ., \ I • ' I I I • • • • .Lagunan's W ~itieli W e.sie~n.-Sty I~_-' c.A•!f..•l:f.. · C'haracters, the ranchos tac~ acres of ~grlcul~Kil land ~ley ln eronomy with words, cra~g climax during one fJt WP = : "'California' ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 11'1• O.llW 111101 Stoll SelJ.sfyled H1Crary critics In the East, who tend to treat "ritcrs fron1 west or the ~·lississlppi as though wu. do not "'ear undei:shorls aside. 1:flguna Beach author Leland F ... Lee" Coolt!y is riding high on the bestseller Hst with hls -epic : ··Cal ifornia.·· llis 607-pagc historicul no1•cl bnsed on run1ily .. i-tleords 1nl'tieulously kept s i n c e C:t lifornla 's rough-and-tun1b\e l'arlv tin1cs is 110\V in ils third holi day printing. TllE A\ION paperback original 1\ as offered. lo readers so m c \\' ha t experimentally NEWS ANALYSIS without a hardcover edition precC'ding it and was printed \1·i1h a 504.000-copy press r~n . "C:.llirornia'' is his sixth novel. \rhile Cool t'y and his \\'i fc Lre have collaborated on a numb<•r of hardcover. non· fiction books. prclly firmly establishing his ability t.o 1neel <lcad!incs wilh a t 1 g ht. rcad'r1ble story, plot. and prose or l'Xpository st r_µcturc. Jlis n\:i t novel in J95i. a sea story cqlled •·The Run F'or l1ome." 1\·on critical ac- clai1n and launched him. At~D TllUS Cooley 1nay ha\'e felt a close kinship to his Ne\\' England \'ankee sailor ancestor Steven Lewis, v.•hen he read a typical sanctin1onious cf i s m is s al pretentiously masquerading as a Time ri.tagazine re,~iew. -o.nw 111101 51•11 i"t.010 SIXTH NOVEL Laguna's Cooley Slcvcn Le\\·is. you see, lit erally ston1pcd a crude lout to death on Page 51 of "California," but it was done in a fair fight. The revie\rer a c c u s e s Cooley's narrative of wan· dering bet\\,een what he terms •·epic trash anrl a dogged replica of history.'' Unfortunately. this ls a traditional tactic by Tiiuc for those s1,·eaty cretins nmong us journalists or authors who toil in the vineyards of verbs <lnV\\'herc \\'CS! or-rh e ~1fssissippi. "TllEY JUST cut n1v ht.!ad off," fumes Cooley. whOse own h'ory to\•;er o\ierloo·ks the Pacific at 541 Alta Vista \Vay. L.1guna Beach. "They .did the same things to James Michener (Hawaii and Tales or the South Pacific) and Harold Robbins (the Carpetbaggers) not cs Coole~. who sticks by the merit of his writing: "1 think I'm 3, pretty good \\Tiler .. ' "Unhappily, yoli can get any book.abolft Callfornla publish· cd in the East as long as you pro1nlse It (~alifomia) is going to go a\vay and stop bothering the Establishment," theorizcs ·Coolcy. llE SPECIFIED '1The Last Days of the Late. Great State of _Cali fo,rhia." a c 1 e v e r putitical s'alirc sel in a cataclysn1 t11a1 sinks the Golden State into the Blue Pacific and all of us with lt. Cooley's California has ex· isled itl fact· -and in historical recQrds kept by 'his interwoven fanftly -since 1769, when a Cpl. Robles ar· rivl.'d on the Orarig~· Coast 1l'ith the Gaspar de Portola ex· pedition from fl.1exico City. Orange Coast readers will recognize n1uch of the local Southland 1n COOiey's huge compilation, including a vast ranch or grain, grazing cattle and gtittei:ing orange groves. a prototype of empire and \\"Ca\th. TllE BOUNDARI ES and long-known Orange Coast pioneer nan1cs a re ip· tentionally blurred, but only one -The Irviiie Ranch - fits his conce·pt of a Spanish land grant which becomes Anterica·s first total planned city. C'oolcv uses well the foun- 1r1in of .information which has been kept by the John Le\vis descendants who intermingled 1\'ith California famili e3 . add· ing a measure of his O\Vn l'i('\\'S. . The Californios -.a charm- ing \erm for the state's most· rightful claimants in the nanie of order and progress. and a term sadly no longer heard -arc th e closest to in· digcnous aristocracy. Still, they were hurnan. ~rf----nGt. !fooled l_)~ub.le~l.ay PO\VER, GREED,· politics. and a few oth~r pubhshe1 s. ~blood. avarice, Jove; sex and -Filters Out Background Sound ! Sears introduces the TRU-EAR Hearing Aid designed to focus on desired conversations and soften uni,i,·anted noise. If vou have a problem hearing. come in for a demonstration of the Sears directional instrument. Hearing Aids .•• Backed By a Company Yo u Can Depend On Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Sears H••rl•I Ai~• Ht "-"•!11111• u tH F'11111 .. i.1 !Wtn S•or" fllH'•• f'ark 'l'.Mnplllll• IMC "'•c• i\•t••"9c• ...... --r.l '1MI• 1;1tw1. 11,l••IHHI • l.1•••1 Hill• • ·. r .. .tc1 ... r~111 IUmp•• P1111""1 !'ol1h la•" l'lou y.,.,.~r• \'•ll•v .~ most not1ceablc and ~on· more subtle qualities conte fusing aspect. of the Time alive in his vast cast of ~tc~ct·io.b" o~ Co o _le Y ' s characters, often with great cal!fo~1a is 1hal ll ~n;i· v.·it. style and surprising, pared .1t to Clarence .Kmg. s su·spenseful twists. '·Americans and the California T' • ...1 n · N "{ork D ., not a ne1v book at -. ime s " a ·In-ew reain, disagrees. all. '·Cooley's stagehands bang COOLEY 'S IS an historical novel, v.·hile KJng's is a history history back and forth," he book and the 11,·o-items are alleges pclulan1 ly. citing this! simply two different liter<1ry single sentence: ·'Santa Ana genres and in fe1v cases could is a fool .. :· they be evaluated side·by-sidc. f\:lemo to Ne"· York: If you "I'd been exchanging cor· al'e referring to the ~lexican respondencc 1vith King for general. as we would presume. some time anyway, so I sent and not ttic Ordnge t:ount y .him a telegram s:.lying: 'I'm seat city, Santa Anna has two g1·~rd-tf-ttrey-had-trr-compare-ns.-,vhile the city has one:-- \c1nons and oranges they corn-Ile also frets that Cooley, pared il to your orange. I through his mod c r n -d a y hope he has a sense of ____ _ hu1nor." CIVIL WAP OL.D GUN$ The situation \vould scen1 M1N1,o.Tu~11:s to be that New York has oi.o oo1.1.s alw<iys been the traditional if MANNiNG'S Olympus of the literary and COLLECTORS publishing \-rorld and a bit SHOP 'VS:~ of Easte:n snobbism agains 1 2 ..,,26 N EWPORT e1.vo. f I I "( h S C09T,t. M11:a,o.. CA1..I ~ •• success u ·wes crn \VT! ers a j "',,::o.ri::>!ll H"•· 11.s:~ developed. I See by Today's Want Ads e Af"TEP. JIOLIDA \" SPEC· IAL on lhese Ah:C reg· iste1'Cd German Short- haircd puppies. Pointers arc available. e VER\" CLEAN and Pei·· nia-tuned 'ti9 9115 THrga Pori;chc. fun lo dl'ive. • I SA\": 111esc Old English Sh{'Cp rlog puppies arc diRJtified. 111ey art• Eng· lish und A n1 er i c a.JJ champs! Nearly Everyone gstens to Landers with rising coSts and dl'velop-golng Into subdivisions," ex· but a topic as big as of Orange County's bl!tcr . ; 'If nlenl, question~ the effect or plains Cooley.-''ln time -if •;California" requires verbal .)'io\ct 1969 storms and ls JU!il Ii such ro~ces as Cesar Chavez's we wanted to -· we could resources to match the state the first of these such books. , · United Farn1 \Vorkers on do with food what the Arabs and Its people. Cooley. had to · cut , 40,000 1hcm. The I ate John are doing with oil. He exerciseJ a rare fkill ~ds out, son1e of "'hictJ will > Steinbeck confronted some of "The idea for this book among modem writers, that. go into a sequel set lu the same questions in his Marted many ·years-ago .. ·." of inter-weaving a host or Northern California where his novel "East of Eden." b I t · su II a d frun1"ly's Rancho Los Nidos .llNE WOULD ~thlnk-the novel-'Writcr -as perhaps op- posed to a straight·und-a\vay newspaper reporter, for ex· ample -has an historical prerogative lo bring up what he believes or fears. Cooley also did his chores as a ne\\'Spapcrrnan as \Yell as a novelist. "I "·orry when I see 100.000 } Cooley continues, no.ting he su po s, IS es, ves 11 is this _generation's apJ!Ointed_j_{>ves throu~ the overall WMS located, then a third book. llislorian of the 200.year-old fabriCO'rfifstory with clarity bull! Will lr-~ tirne"(.'()nSu111ing clan. and fast action. His character.; projet..>t. . a1•e n1ean and smelly or noble '~It's going to be a trilogy, and just, an1ong the n1en; if the Lord spares me," jokes 'vhile Cooley's women are the 64-year-old Cooley. llIS OWN last name is a derivaUon of Kolle •. t he surname of a Swedish sailor '~·ho 1vas one of the eal'ly conlributors to the Califon1ios' unique genetic pool. ~!is trainin_g as a newspaperman c qui p p.e d • Stl'OD'1 wlly and earthy, but l~e mentions God there, '>''e bcllevable. notice. but not Time's book TJI E NOVEL'S separate parts wind neatly and tightly l»gether in to a gripping, rain· reviewer. "Califonlia." by Leland Frederick Cooley, Avo11. 607 pp. $1.95. You may. have your Federal a nd California Individual Income Tax Return s prepared by professional tax experts without charge at Mutual Savings. This free service is offered to savers with an account balance of $4,000 or more. If your savings afcOunt is not with Mutua l Savings, we will arrange f6i' trans fer of your funds (including any tenn certificates that mature during the first quarter of 1974) so YQU mayiake advantage of this valuable free offer. Visit your nearest Mutual Savings office for additional information. Income tax preparation is just one of the many valuable free services offered ·to Mutual savers. The number or. available appointments is fimited, so make yours early. The 1974 Official Associated Press Almanac · This certificate 1..:il!JcJs LI bi~ 7./9<~, Cll,lllUi.1.lfy for four ~yL1 r ,l(COlllllS of $1 ,000 contains 1,040 p ages packed \Vil~! info1mation o n a \\ide varit:-ty of subj ect s. Included arc full -color-maps of the world. vital statistics. 1najor s1Jo11s' recordsibiograJJh ies of \Vorld figures as welt as compre/1ensive information o n his torical \vorld events. Tl1is almanac is yours free cJt any Mutual Savings office~Limited quantilies-one copy per family please. Not available by mail. FREE · , . . • or 111ore. Other Mutual accounts provide high earnings with sl1orter · fermS. For n1axin1un1 flexibility. our pi1 5.;;\)Q<1k llccount in11Joses 110 restrictions on dc1Josits .. or u~thdra\.-vols and ea rn s 5! i %-n1ore interest tl1an paid by any bank! Interest is compoundecf.daily and paid • quarterly. . . I .. dera! rt'yl.Jlalions pro..'11.k· t~--il ;i.:I Cl'f11fir;;1e acrounts;1re su~ lo d 51.lb;t.,inti& 111tcl\ :.! pcrl<!lty 1 u11ds an.• v.ithdT.no.n befOl'c complc'lion ol t.mn. l\nn11i1I Ann11.J H,11,• Yield 6A0 " ,,o 6.98% 6 ~~% 6.72% 514% 5.92% 5)4% 5.39% ' ~ r . t'. ~ ' ii THE Biii M ~!111. P.!1n. l~m> Sdll•nce 30 mos. $1.000 1 year $1,000 90 days $1,00Q No min . $5.00 MUTUAL SAVINGS . lf'ld IOM ...oc:i.tion • Corona del Mar. 2867 East Coast Hlgh-/675-5010 ... • FROM Fash ion Island Newpo rt Beac n STE"REO~OU.NDS OF T'HE ·JiARBOR ' -1 • ' • . • • --•• . . . ------ .. , . ' • ' • -• .. ,, ... . ' 'On & :.-On . • -. . I ps Sou J . . - ·LONDON -( upo -or · all the pe- -culiar , ... ays peop\e. have round to keep originally had of which have matching tray!_. -many been lost Qr broken Jn ahead of_., the Joneses, glorification of -t\\'O centuries of uncaring use. a humble soup-serving bowl is among the strangest. Gampbell Soup Company searched lhe · But for a while in · the 18th century United Slates and Europe for seven The ship.shaped sliver tureen n1ade for Russia's Catherine tt1c Great is a masterpiece amo11'g the array or evwthing to do with soup -soup plares, soup ladles, soup spoons and above all, tureens. . . • • ~ Q.st.WtaiiDusl'.Y valuab)c or garishly years to acquire this-collection of -bizarre...soup tu~ ~·as a status ·sym-hom~craft, usuafui.-ondisplay in Camden, bol ol the first tank . N.J. • -Efegance is easy to see. in ·the graceful ·silver u e:U.L....bf lich......:..EAgj.i.s.h-~ .. 6J11en ., BEA ANDER SON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor WHN'ad•'I'• Ja11uan-2, ltJt -P•1t 27 • .. Ordinarily \Ve think of home- made Italian soups as taking hours to cook and develop the flavors. Not so \Vith this quickie. It's a colorful combination of both freSh and canned veg!?tables. An hour in the oven \11ith wine, butter and· appropriate Italian herbs allows plenty of time to blend ·the flavors without over· cooking the >egetables. ITALIAN OVEN CHEESE CHOWDER 1fi pound zucchll!i, sli ced 2 onions, sliced 1 {1111ii2 -ounce) can garbanzo beans 1 (I-pound) can diced tomatoes 14. cup butter 1112 ·cups dry \Vhite \\'ine 2 teaspoons salt 14 teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons minced garlic 1 : teaspoon basil I bay leaf 1 cup grated Monterey Jack cheese 1 c up grated Romano cheese 1 rup whipping cream Combine all ingredients except cheeses and cream in 3-qu.art bak· ing dish. Cover. Bake in 400-de· gree oven 1 hour. stirring once halfway through. Stir in c'heeses • then stir in cream. Bcike 10 min- utes longer. Makes 3 quarts (6 dinner.size servings). ' _ _. ' . " In the Victoria and Albert Museu1n There arC por.celain tureens fro1n there is an astonishing: collection of China and Chelsea, from J\1eisscn and •tureens -shaped ~ like rabbits, or Morrtpelier. There are-pewter iureens chickens, or cabbages with a frog on and Mexican silver tureens and Swedish top or a boar 's head with thrusting raience tureens until the mind boggles. · tusks. Most of the t'Ollection's.r~lly beautiful There are silver tureens by the most--· or really wild tureens· were made in famous silversmiths of all times and the 18th century. , I an earthenware one from Portugal "Formal dining at that time was <.'Op.· .::>hapcd like a \Voodcn barrel fi lled with ducted on a grand scale and \vith an fish. elegance that is uninatched in h ory,'' Most of these great covered bowls the 1nuseum catalog notes. silversmiths ~Paul Storr, Paul de Lamerie or Rol;>ert Garrard. The grand scale shows even in the n1ost extreme designs. And extreme many of thetn are. There are only so n1any ways to design a t plate, but a soup tureen's bulky size r l is ideal for ostent~liq_n or _experiment. · · Designers ran riot over these bowls. ~; "They ran the gamut from ship to fi sh, fO'-\'l to animals, vegetables and fruits to flowers and sometimes all of then1 al once ... quoting the caf1:11og . J-Iow cloes an elegant sou p be-· co1ne econo1nlcal·~ 11 is. \vhe)1 yo u think of llu\v little 1ne at or . . fowl you neetl to flavor a hu ge hearty pot full . Sopa de Pollo has all the main course dishes in one big tureen! Reserves can si1n1ner in the kitchen ready for refills. Sherry itnportecl frorn Spain econon1ica! too'? Yes. \vhen c:oin- pared to n1ore expensive drinks. And very, very elegant. SOPA DE POLLO 2 quarts wate1- .. 1 f3-4 pound} ste\ving or roa st· ing chicke11 . 4 tablespoons olive oi l . 2 teqspoons salt l<"res~ly grouncl black pepper 2 cloves garlic, diced finely 4 onions, finely chopped 1;:.! pound bacfltl ~ cups tomato juice 1 bay leaf 1? r up sherry l s111all eggplant 1 small zucchini, sliced 2 large green peppers, seeded and cut Into I-inch pieces l)lai:e chicken \\lld \Val er in ·a Jai·ge pot. Bring to a boil, then siintner for two ho11rs . Ren1ovc chicken fcon1 pot and let cool. Remov1_ skin and bone chicken nieat. tut c hicken n1eat •into l · inch chunks and return to broth. Cut sliced ba con 'into 1-inch J>ietcs \Vilh sc:issors. Fry until done but not crisp. Remove bacon - front skillet. Pour oii all but· 4 tablespoons 01 fat. Saute onions and garlic until softened. Add to· n1ato juice and bay leaf. Sin1mer fo r 5 1ninutes and add to-soup pol. J !)eel eggplant. cut into small cubes. _Sprihkle \Vith salt and let stalid for 10 minutes lo allow bitter juices to drain. I-Teat olive oi l it1 large skil let. Saute egg. plant. zucchini ancl green pep· pers until softened. Add to-soup pot. Sin11ner · for 30 minutes. Serves 8 to 10. • ·'. Preference Rekindled Wdod Burner ·Stove - The Slikkcr family of Costa Mesa has its energy conservation program going on all four burners -of a wood sto\'C lhey purchased originally lo h~t thei r pat i~turned·into-family room. '·Actually it heats four rooms and cuts our utility bill in half," Mrs. Slikker explained. "To do even bet ter, we use it ror cooking now. too." "'It's just like a can1p stove but you ·~an '\ take it with you." added 10-y~ar-old J:!n as he chopped the evening's kinCHing. N11·s. Slikker con1pares the high heat to .. micro\vave oven. noting that potatoes bake in a n1atter of n1inutes. ~--- Breads are \varmed equally fast. She uSes the burners· for all their home-gro\vn and canned vegetables, stews and "anything that cookl; slp\vly a!l day." Turkey soup was in progress. In the pictures. she san1ples soup \\'hile husband, Al , stacks the \\wd supply and daughter, Idelle, tends thr elevated garden that keeps plants free from frost and provides vegetables year rouncf. Slikker stokes the fire on Saturday mornings !or . camp-style breakfaslS on the griddle -hot cakes, bacon and sausage and coffee. Believing that paying $90 ror a cord -- • of wood is the sarne as burning the cash, he collects th~ir y,•ood on hunting trips or by sawing do.,.,'n old tress for friends. Originally the S!ikkers were looking for a cast iron Franklin stove but found it had lintited cooking Space and ll$Cd as much wood as a fireplace. They found their stove in Artesia. the last one in a store where it had been on display for seven yeafs. "That "''as three mo nths ago and no\V lhey'rc even harder lo find ," 1\1rs. Slik- ker said. ' Ashes fron1 the stove become mulch ·-----::-------------''--, for the "easy garden.'' so--callcd beta)J~e it"s at a handy height for picking crops and doesrr't grow weed s. ··we pla11rwllatever'Srr.0St expensive in the stores~" Mrs. Siikker ~aid. "With this 1nethod we can grow root vegetibles all year and we happen to like squash \vhich ahvays seems high priced in the supermarket. · · '·\Ve like lo barbecue meats so y,·e seldom cook in the kitchen. As soon . as 'A-'e get the le1npcrature regulated better for roasting meats. \re can use the wood stove full tin1 c."' ·- ~ I I ' . I ' I I \ \ ,. . • . • • W~dn~srl11y, Jnnu11ry 2, 1974 • Coast Couples Marry . . · CAMPBELL-POTTER . The · Newport Beach ho1ne of ,.fr. and h1rs. Albert Dalley Potter lit was the setting for the marriage of t h e i r daughter, Penelope Valentine. Potter and Argyle Campbell. • t • ' Your Horoscope ' Cancer ~ Guard Style THURSDAY JANUARY 3 Uy SYDNEY O~IAltR ARIES (March 2l·April 191: Be reudy for s (g n if i can l c.inlnge -and b anatytlcal. 'l'aurua, Libra -persons figure in i1npQrtant wsys. Lcl\V·keY approach is best -obtain vaUd hint front S c o r p i o Accent is on 1noney, personal p0ssessions. General cycle inessage. \l·arns agarnstD11y1ng "'ithOiit-SAGITTARIUS tNov. 22· s~ing. agreeing W·i thou t Dec. 21): Domestic affairs checkin.g. Key no\v is to be conlmand attention. Y o u r realistic. home and how you llv.e - TA UR US (April 20-May -these 1natters are en1phas iz.ed . 19): Favorable lunar aspect now coincides \\'ith l'reatlvity. reh1Uonships \V!th 1.p.m31tf sex. oas1c d1unge11 A<l,UARIUS 1J01. i~Feb. 18): Key now ; 11> to be' forthr.i ght, dil·cct...~uuLto lxtihl _ for future security. PISCES lf'cb. l9·Morch 201 : Yoli visit :.ind receive vlslton:;. lt'lessagt•s, calls and quick decisions arc fenturc."11. You find "1nissing link .'' Officiating at the ·single ring - ce·remony \Yas the Rev. "''illiam Aaron Dr iv e r. Parents of the bridegroom are ~lr. and .Mrs. \Vi 11 i am rCndleton eampben· or eoron3 del r.1ar. 20): Lwlar cycle is high ; CAP RICORN (Dec. 22-Jan, " ~n1ove uhc ad. 1'a ke u chance · · t.1rs. \Vil\ian1 Fitipntrick Jr. served . as matron of honor and Andrew Ro~ was the .. l best man. Ushers were John Jakosky III, Thomas Purcell. . ' Go_rdon Johnson and Robert ~ i!ld John .Potter. MRS. DUGAS MRS. ALAGARIN MRS. HENNIGER· MRS. FULTON on your own abilities . Welcon1e contacts, new st~rts. Ip;;;;;;;;;---.-..;;-;,-;;;-;;.._;;;;;;;;;;;..,·---------., Past efforts pay dividends. GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): \Vtlat t; finished is· finished ; know it and rc6pond ac- cordi ngly . \Vhat occurs "behind January Clearance LADIES' SHOES ~ The bride is a graduate of • Corona· de) Mar High School, Bradford Junior Co 11 e g e, r.t as sachuset ts~d the University of S Op•t h c r n California \Vhcre she pledged Kappa Kappa Gam.wa. DUGAS.JULIEN her husband is. _.RJEnning to \1·ork tO\\'ard~ his 1nasters-in H<i\\·aii \1•hcre they \\'ill n1akc their home: ra l·llgh School, \Vhittier. She pledged Kappa Alpha Theta and her husband affiliated "A"ith Sisma Phi _Epsilon. Ric ha rd tlennigcr and Lee "'as lhc ring bearer. the scenes is likely to set pcr1nnnenl policy. Ken! CANCER (June 21-July 22): DRESS & CASUAL SHOES . ' . • Her husband is a graduate · of Ne"A'}Xlrt Harbor High School and USC where he was an All·Amcrican sailor and af· filiated with Phi Delta Theta. GORDON -GREEN . Sts. Sirnon and J u d c Catholic Church. Huntington Beach was the setting for the double ring nuptia ls linkirlg ' Belinda Sul.anne Green and Timothy \Villiaffi Gordon, both of Huntington Becich. · The Rev. Ronald Colloty performed the ceremony for the daughter and son~of Coun· cilman and ?-.1.rs .. Jack Green of Huntington Beach and 11r. rind Mrs. William Go,rdon of NOrlh Bend ,. Ore. Attendants \Yere l\t i s s ?o.!argaret Merand.i, ~1-i s s Kathleen Robbins, Fran k ti1ott. Michael and Gerald C'-,ordon and l\ti chael Green. The newlyweds, who will live in 1-luntington Beach, are majoring in business ad- ministration at Golden \Vest College. She is a graduate of ?o.1arina High School and attended California S t a t e Universitf at Long Beach. -Her llusband is a -graduate of Mater Dei High School and served in the Navy. Estancia High School and California State Univer sity. Chico -graduates. "NanO)'o·L~1nn Julien and \Villiam · Arthur Dugas Jr. were 1nar.ried in Mesa \''erde M e tho di s t Church. Officiant "'as the Rev. Lothair Green. Parents of the nev.•lyv.·eds are l\ilr. and J\trs. Donald Julien and \\'illian1 A. Dugas, all of COsta Mesa .. Catfiy \Vard v.·as !he tnaid of "'honor; bridesn1aids \Vere Barbara Allen, Denise Zanella and Mrs. l\1ichacl LaRue , and Christine Allen v.·as the flo'h·er girl. Attending the bridegroon1 were Bill l\ilor:-in. best m;in; Richard Julien and LaRuc. u~hers. and J\'iichacl Allen, ring bearer. > .. The bride ea1'f'fcd•an elemen- tary teaching credcntial. and ALAGARIN,PRENTICE ·HENNIGER-CULLEN Joan P,renticc and Gene _, St. Catherine's Ca tho I i c Algarin. studen ts at California Church, Laguna Belich y,•as State Universit y, San Diego the setting for the double ring exchanged wedding vows in -nuptials linking Corinl).e Marie Our Lady Queen of Angels Cullen and Randy J. Henniger. -chureh. Corona del J\lar. Students" .at Saddleba.ck Their parents are. !\'lr. ard College, they are·the daughter .\1 rs. !IL f.. Prcnlic-e· of COS'!:a and son ·of !\1rs. Michael P,. 1\lesa and 1hc Louis A. 1\I-Cullen and fl1r. and Mrs. garins \\!bittier. Richard W, Henniger, all of Serving as allendants \\'~re Laguna Beach. She is also Anne Lee. Paf.l y \Vard. Sue the daughter of the late ?o.1r. l\ahll l, Linda and Jaekic Al-Michael Cullen. -garin. f.·lrs. Rob Anderst·n, Bridlll attendants "'er c Adrian Barro\1'. Louis and Dan Patricia Finegan, J u d y Algari,n. John Kostrencich and ,Thirkill. Cindy and Candy Bob Salber. Cullen and Lori Hilhnan. The bride is n graduate of ti1ichael Eubanks served as Estancia High School and her best man; ushers "A'ere John husband is a graduate of Sier· and Jet'f Ten Sf e I d t and FULTON -GRIGGS · Mr. and ~lrs. R i ch a rd Clen1son c:ri ggs' La Jolla home . was the setting for the nuptials I i n K..i n g . their daughter, Nev· a ·Katherine Griggs and John Andrew Fulton of Corona de! l\Iar. The ceremony was per· fanned by ti·lsgt. Ed,vard Creighton. Attendants \\'ere jlliss ?o.larcia Griggs ;1 n c.l Stephen Strasser. , The b:ride is a graduate of La Jolla High School and com- pleted her senlor studies at the University of San Diego. Her husband, son of the Janies Edwin Fultons of Newporl Beac~. is a graduate of Elmhurst College, lllinois. The ne'A·lvweds \\"ill reside in Corc11a de! Mar. · One for Grandma to Send -• DFJAR ANN LANDEnS: \V.henever you ' pl"int a lettet tlult puts a mother-in-hi\\' in a bad light. 1ny daughtcr·in-la\V sends it to me. No comment-just the c:olumn. Otherwise. I never receive a line fro1n her. She believes it's up to a son 10 writ e to his mother and his "'ife shouldn"t "'""' .t~ .... "take hi1n off the hook." as she puts to Uc complimcntNI. J don 't even knO\V itr ti·lv son hate;; to write so I r;irely hear from them. J envy olher grandmns her name, but if you print 1ny lclter \Vho get pictures of .the lill!e ones and I am sure she wi ll recognize . herself. nice letters to cheer lhcir lonely days. AH 'Summer long and into fall and This boy is n1y on,ly child and his \\·inter, thi s girl has had boyfriends come children are very dear to 1ne. \Vhat b.'' to visit her. One particular fellow ab&ut it. Ann? Am I expecting too muc:h? is especia lly attractive . She aJ,vays -SALINAS. KANS. DEAR S.K.: If \\'e took ;I poll I'll ·" (•ntertai1~s hin1 c:i. !he steps ... ' . -·~ bet the boy§ like her n1orc because she has such good chortirter. 1 predict one day this you(lg 1ady \\•ill marry \\'ell and be very hapiJY. Th ere will be ·no regrets to bug hc~r , and no guilt.-TEE~ ,\l.>\TCHEJt IN RICHMOND DE.\R TEE~ \\'ATC HER: \\"h.it a refreshing letter! l°\'l' ~il v.ays b..:lic\ed that teenagers ut·cd rnnc1cls-111ort..' than they need critits. So Gucrc's a nu•i:lcl Accent on what you \Yant. how to otitain it. KPy is creative independence. Your own style is right. not a • "'atered-down or r e v i s e d version. Realize it and do something to p1·otect it. Leo, Aquarius persons are in pic- ture. LEO (July 2.'!·Aug. 221: Oi> position should be regarded as challenge. Co1npetition is healthy. Your intuitive in· tellect will serve· as reliable guid e. You sense "'hat to do. Have co~rage of c_oovictions. Vl)tGO (Aug. 2.1-Sepl. 22): Good lunar aspect coincides no"' with lo!li journey. c:o~· respo~e:nce. publishing ... 9.J>- portunity. Refuse to be restricted. LIBRA (Scpl. 2J.Ckl. 221: Emphasis is on the hidden, the machinations of money and ho\Y it gets . that way. Lie low. Play waili~g game. SCORPIO (Oct ·23-~ov. 21 ): Partner, mate is in picture. I ~ FRANCIS- '\,, ORR J FI NE STATIONEHY Seml0 .t.1111uol HALF·PRICE SALE llll I ~IA lf •"NW&t f)~ 11\I tllGIA tll IAI tllfll!l11 rARl!lf -. .. . ·$ JOYCE CARE$SA BANDOUNO ITALIAN & SPANISH SHOES REGULAR TO $28.00 90 NOW EVENING SHOES ""'.t.ltGoE SELECTION Of NOfl1790 GOLD AND SILVI~ ltetulor to EVENING SHOES SZl.00 KIMAL .,,,,,. " $3'.00 NOW, ~5 90 '""'°' '° $45.00 NO:'." $2890 AMALFI , THE SHOE TREE 3410 VIA LIDO, NEWPOR·T BEACH PHONE 67l·SS21 OPEN 9:JO.S:JO bet 'h'e'd find that the j!l'cat niajority Somct1111cs they \1·alk d0\\'11. the street of letters··written to-grannies come from -a--fc\v--hundrett--fcet anrt · sit on the dau gbters-in-13\\', not sons. \1·all near th~ bus stop. \Vhy~ Because Since your son hates ro \~'tile, he her nmther \\'Orks and I presume she should pick up lhe phone-(very other has bt>cn askCd not to entcrt<iin ' for yo u, girls. 1;:::==::=====::=====::=====~=======::: Even if drinking is1 the '"in" thing -ln your cro"'d. it needu"t crowd you . o~t. Learn the facts frol")1 Ann Landers's 1 booklet, "Buozc and Vou-f'or Tecn-1 Ag'ers Only." Send 35 cents in coin an<l I a long ( self-addreSscd. stamped envelope I to Ann Landers. r.-o.~Box' 3346, 222 \V. I Sunday perhap§-and place a station-to· boyfriends in the house unless a parent .. station call just to say hello. It "'oU!d is present. be t.he rlnest gift he could give you This girl ah1'~YS appears to be h.:ivi.!1g and 1t "·ould cost very little. such a good tin1e. and so do her DEAR ANN LANDER S: I live next door to a teenage girl \\ho de serves boyfriends. They laugh a lot and have anima.fed conversations. She evidently loves and respects her parents and I'll Bank Dr., Chicago, Ill. 600j4. ' CATHLEEN TOOLEY August Date Set Thumbing Does It ORLANDO. Fla. (AP 1 Elaine S. Camfield. at 72 a con11nunications majnr a I Florida Tech. has been getting to class the past t\\'O years by thumbing an eight-mile ride every day. She never misses, says ?-.·!rs. Camfield. She stations herself Coupon THE FISH MARKET WITH THIS ·COUPON MAHI MAHI FILLETS 82~ WHITING FILLETS .... 55~ SHRIMP '"'' u""''• ... 2951b We At:c.ept Food Co11po1ts Ope11 11 om lo 6:00 pm Sor, 11 to 5:30-645-5223 145 E. Broadway, Costci Mesa I I --1 ADVANCE .· REGISTRATION ICE SK·ATING I LESSONS 1 Cathleen l\1oira Tooley and David Ernil Moeller plan to marry Aug. 10 in St. Joachim's Catholic Chmch, Costa ?o.1esa. at a busy intersection, nashes I r;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::.;;;:;;~ I \\'hat she called her best "old lady's smile,'' then, •·1 walk up to a car and requ~st a 'The bride-to-be is I he daughter of Francis L. Tooley of Newport Beach and the late Mrs. Tooley. She is a graduate of Marywood High School, attended ~1arymount College and now is a senior at Colorado State University. Her fiance, son of ?o.frs. Duard Boswell o( Whealridge, ... Colo .. is a graduate or CSU. ride." Once . a driver held a gun on her \\'hile she made her request. He refused. Another t i m e · she approached a clergyman who dido 't hold v.•ith picking up hitchhikers. But he elentcd . OUR BIG • SALE ·E.OUC.TIONS 1/3 TO 1/2 ALL ITEMS FROM REliULAR STOC:K .. Wt1kllft Pl111 9flly \7lh & lnlne-New,.,t ... ch Open Mon. & Thur. lwu. LQQKTo FOR NEW YEAR SAVINGS! .. • ALL WIGS AND HAIRPIECES 30°/o to 60°/o OFF ILURA CAPLISS WIGS ... 0 ~ " "~ NOW ONLY 22.60T0 . 100% HUMAN Hl\IR WIGS . ... ..... TO ,.~NOW . ONLY 28.96 TO 84.00 100 ~ HUMAN HAllt-Aet, 17.95 -• ~ASCADE .......... ·~ ..... ._1 2.56 100% HUMAN H.4111-Ret. ,11.tS WIGLETS ................. , . . B.36 . 100•;. HUMAN HAIA-•••· 24.tJ to 0 75.00 FALLS ............... 14. 95 to 45.00 . Wt how• l•pert Wif & Holr,lect ltylltts te lenot Your Heeth 1 Waffie~ WIG ANO. BEAUTY SALON 2500 EHi 17th StrHI 548-3446 Hllgren Squire, Co1t1 Me1_1 • Enhance your child's poise. 'and po sture. A planned program of lessons with the exjCl uilVllce Capi:Oes'8itY !earning method gives you I or your child healthy eXerclae i:n ple•sant 1upervl1ed surrouridlng1. REGISTER NOW " MISA VERDI SHOPPING CINTIR '' H•rbor & Adami, Cott• Meto • ' BARROWS GARAGE COME PARK IN OUR NEW PARKING GARAGE AND LOOK OVER SOME OF THE WONDERFUL BARGJ..INS BARROW'S ARE SELLING AT 'h TO 'Ii OFF. January Cl~rance LADIES SPORTSWEAR. .. SAVE TO 50% PANTS -SKIRTS -JACKETS -SHIRTS .ALL NATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS ALEX COLMAN KORET -CATALINA -ETC. DRESSES ........•....................... UP lO Y2 OFF GOOD SELECTION. ALL NEW STYLES AND PATTERNS. LADIES COAT5 .. . . . . '!/3 At4D Y2 OFF VISIT OUR iARGAIN TABLE SUPER BARGAINS - $1 r9-9 • $2.99 • $4.99 VALUES TO $30.00 LADIES SPORTSWEAR . . . ' . . . . . . LINGERIE • ' . ••• 3404 Via l.ido-Newp~r:t Beac~ . "One of the Lido Shops" .. • • • Tel. (714) 979-8880 IL.--------------.--~_,-...;:'------1 . ' • • • c .. .. • / .. • • I. 1 • • .. f ' I I --·-·-' ·, Wednesday, January 2, iq74 DAILY PI LOT '29 In Happiness Job Pay~ Well • WEBB VILLE, Ky. (UP[) - State trooper Jesse Fife's children callb.im ''Uncle Dad- • dy" -all 50 ol them. A few years ago this·balding law offi cer with .an eastern on a trooper's pay? "I don',t sleep a lot and myjl'ifll, !'hylis, aJIJUiw•t that ever wore shoe leather," he said. Kentuck y mountain drawl hadJ ,;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::~~~:::;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;:::;;:;:;;:;:;~ an all electric home , two shiny!: new auto.s aod "was the most dissatisfied man you ever sa w." Join th.e Fastest Growing I-lobby in the Country - . Be a Miniaturist! Then, be traded the life of . a status seeker for an old abandoned !arm house with CLASSES NOW FORMING ... six LeakS and the role of Doll J<lou:;es. l\'finiatures and Tools "Uncle Daddy" to the Corne brouise, view our unique dis plays, 111eet fellow wayward, the.. wandering and n1i11ia~-urists & JJet ne10 ideas for projects. \Ve feat·ure the forgotten children of Dremel, Exacro, Panavise, etc . others. O 8 Fde said 50 children h·a d MJNIA TUl~IA by the BAR N lived in his farm house over 185 12 leoch ll•d., H.I . Ope11 10.5 963°6662 thepastdec.ade. 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;:i~ . . ANITA EIDELSON SHOWS SHAMANISTIC SYMBOLS, KACHINA DOLLS • "Some were children theirli parents couldn't control and some just came up to t h e front porch for a visit or to Sunday dinner and decided 1 to stay," sai d Fife, 37, who has been a trooper for 17 years. Presently, there are only } four children at the Fife home -t~'O of them his ov.:n - but he is building on his prop. erty a two -story, 23 . room, $120,000 building that \VjlJ be known as "Boys Land .'' -"We are going to take in boys fro1n here and there that really need a honle and try to tum their lives around," he said. "We're not trying ~ .to 'bf.ing in criminals,-but no doubt .some "'ill have .been in jail . • 2515 f . C0ott Hwy. •t MKArthwr Coro110 HI Mor SAVE 1/3 AND MORE Starts Wed., January 2 JANUA~Y Shamanisrlt: A look • _at Its Impact "My youngest d au gh te r came to us when she was seven weeks old and noW she's five." Fife added that he is "right proud" "of one girl whO is in her freshman year at -. CLEARANCE • Perhaps ·1974 will be better Zealand, south and North if you consider Shamanism, American J.ndians. travel to other worlds and "Shamanism is a broad consult a psychopon1p. religious phenomenon in· . Anita Eidclson, anlhropolog¥ volving pra1..111ioners who de· instructor at Cypress College, pend on a super-confident will direct studies in ·this non-power th.at (ravels into dif- ordinary reality for a UCl le.rent wo rlds to rind ways Extension course , On Thursday to help his people," Mrs. evenings, starting Jan . 3. Eidelson added. The dictionary d e f·i n e.s "'\Vhen he returns, this Virginia's Lynchburg College. "\Ve tttink of albinos as gospel or lucky white deerskin which are used to teacb, Indian "Some kids have stayed biological irregularities or at-and dentalia shells." children morals or are sold kind oJ pennanently until they tribute the so-called Arctic In some societies, notably to sprf!ad the culture . and were old enough to , leave -. the Zaar of North Africa and magical J>O. wers. · . ' home, and others J'ust long hysteria to dietary deficiency . But a shamanistic cult would the Dionysian ib Greece. Mrs. E1delson will lead three enough tO get back 00 their see these chang~s as spec ial , women and peasant men Saturday worksbo~, start~ng feet," ~e said. "Many felt signs. formed peripheral cults as March 23 on American Indian · they couldn't di~cuss their outlets or retribution when Cult · th So th t d al bl 'th th · "Navajos believe 50 much ures in e u wes an person pro ems wi . e1r -DRESSES-SUITS-COATS-SPORTSWEAR Sizes 6-20 All -with Labels of Distinction ALL SALES FINAL NO RETURNS NO LAYAWAYS · in supernatural powers . that their needs weren't met by an Arizona-New ~1e~ico field parents. I have big ears and the U.S. government had to shamans. . trip the week or April 7, also have learned not to talk a Your Chirgt allow a medicine man to work Acct. Welcome 1 tioned the complex, symbolic mends Indian study as a fami· Ho.w dres Fife fmd time .- \Vith the doctors itt health des1'gns on Kachina dolls ty proJ'ect and money lo• his proJ'ecls Master Charge · · bUreaus on reservations so the · · · > shaman as "a--medicin~ man :--guardian~f souls tell s the cull a person who ~·orks with the artists w~al he has seen and supernat ura l as . both p~cst they create nU1sks, idols, and doctor '' and shamanism jev.·elry a~d lucky pieces to is "technique of ecstasy." make the message tangibl e." · The instructor also men-for UCI Extension. She recom-lot." ~ Jndians could be sure they ll ___________ ..;, _____ _;, _____________ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~'~•~"'~''~'~1·~·~-"~"~'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ were cured completely." She further noted that shamanism refers to the The course will trace the She has just returned rrom powerful psychological, social Alaska where she fo und tribes and botanical forces that "frighlened but still believing" shamans had over primitive and has travel ed extensively cultirr.~ As.ill... Euro~, Nc_!'.I i!! _ Mexico ~he~ t h e curanderos are still powertur.' ecstasy of pain and the miracle doer goes out of his v.'ay to involve the family in the-act of~curing, which might be considered a reaction against impersonal hospital Couple Plans June Nuptials Holly Ann Lockn1an and Scott Buckhammer. both of Huntington Bea'ch are plan· ning to ma rry June 1 in the First . Presbyterian Church, Westminster. Their parents are the K. Two or her friend s, Indian wontcn from the Yurok and Karok tribes of .. northern California. will lecture on the ancestoral and ·medicinal in· fluences they have seen. "A shaman must be com- pletely accepted in order to be successrul,". Mrs. Eldelson explained. "The 'Vestern mind often disnlis.ses a shaman as a schizophrenic .with abnormal visions. care. Considering the renewed in- terest in rCl!gion, study of shamanism is timely a s · another look at a basic ritual. "ti.fan is curious. He is . not satisfied that something hap- pens to hi'm and he wants to find out why ," Mrs. Eidelson said. '"He finds wa'ys to transcend ref!; lily, whether by drugs or O . ..Lockmans and the Leo Buckhammers, all or llun· tington Beach. · lp.; __________________ ;oll She is i graduate or f\larina High School and h"e is an , alumnus o! Huntington Beach High School. _. Peering Around •• ONE PERFORMANCE or lhe Lido Isle Players Club production of "Sunrise ut Campobello" was memorable for Donald Soss, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Soss, Lido Isle. Playing the part of Jim- my Roosevelt, he was com-' plimented on his role by the real Jimmy Roosevelt, who attended the performance. ;NO .... NIED Tb LUG IULKY HU.VY GROCE RY ;..: IAGS ' ' WE .DELIVER ••• whell JOM st!•, wltlli ••I · CDASt ·· SUPER MARKET 673,3510 · UO E.COAST HWY. ORONA D'EL MA .. •• BOOTERY BOOTERY GREAT REDUCTION ON WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S SHOES AT THE BOOTERY BOOTERY . ·up TO 1/2 OFF 1. AIR STEP Reg. to $23.95 .............. $14.90 l. MISS AMERICA Reg. $17.95 .......... $fl.90 3. HI BROWS Rig. $16.95 ................ $9.90 4. CALIF. COBBLERS Reg. to $18.95 ...... $12.90 5. ASST'D CHILDREN'S SHOES Reg. $16.9S ............. $9.90 6. BOY_S DECK OXFORDS .............. $4.88 7. MAGDESIAN'S. Reg. to $17.95 ..... $7.90-$9.90 8. EDWARDS ASST'D STYLES ........ 25% off 9. WOMEN'S FASHION BOOTS ....... 'h price 10. HANDBAGS Reg. to $18.95 . : .. .r~uced I/3rd FINAL CLEARANCE WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES VALUES TO $19.95 PLUS MANY, MANY MORE SPECIALS! . I ·aTBRY ··- • -. " -· 225 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 548-2778 -, --- P-lay-~lhe ~Adver-tising-1iame-lo--Wi~; With This Rule: · ., • \ \ ,., ' ' Choose The No-Lie Pie ' ' \ -\·~ .. --\ ~ ... --·-' .. , . ... --'' ·, ' .. .-· / ". ~ -~ \~···\. ·:··· .. . . ... . ~ \ -..... -\ :. . \ \ ....... . \ ' ;. • •••• ••••••• • •• ..... ·, . • • • ~ \ '\ \ equal -~ · opportuniUes With two seeminglyoequal advertising opportunities available, how would you decide which was to carry your sales messages? We have.a suggestion-take a few minutes to find out just h()W seemingly .equal they reaIJyllfe:··· · ·-·---· · Ask questions-how big Is their circulation audience? Where do re aders live? How much do they pay? And others. Then ask for proofl Ask to see a copy of their latest report from the Audit Bureau of 'c1rculatlons. . . Equal opportunities? Be AB C.sure! DAILY PILOT • ... ~- ---'---:-' -\ • • • • ( \ \ \ I . . - -. • • .. . .. • ( • I .. • I. I ' I , :)I) OAILV PILOT DELICIOUS HICKORY SMOKED FlAVOR INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL PRICE TRY IT! . . . PORK SAUSAGE . 79( FARMER JOHN• REG. OR HOT • J··lB. ROLL. ............ , \ • • 7 11 DAILY AND SUNDAY ... S£E ' A.M. TO .... STORE LOCATIONS BELQW OUE TO CONDITIONS RESULTING FROM THE LABOR DOUBLE Jw GREEN STAMPS· DISPUTE AFHCTINO THE RETAIL.FOOD INDUSTRY ... WE MAY 11MP,OURILY IE our OF SOME ADVERTISED l11MS "-::':~~WITH THIS C.OUPON AND ANY PURCHASE EXCLUDING LIQUOR, TOBACCO & FlUID MILK'PllODUCTS WE AH ADVERTISING ONLY ITEMS WE HAVE IN SUFFICIENT QUANTITY TO FULFiil NORMAL ' DEMAND. SMITH'S FOOD KING WIU CONTINUE TO DO EVERYTHING POSSIBLE TO MAINTAIN SUPPLIES. TO BEST SERVE All CUSTOMERS, IT MAY BECOME NECESSARY TO LIMIT QUANTITIES OF SOME ITEMS. FOOD KING WHITE, WHEAT, SANDWICH ELBERTA PEACHES GOLDEN ORCHARD IRREGULAR 39( PIECES IN • HEAVY SYRUP 29-0Z. CAN PEANUT BUTIER CREA;~::NCHY 49c 16-0Z. JAR I ~;COUNTYFAIR ~~,::' PRI ZE QUALITY FOODS AT ~ MONEY SAVING PRIC ES! '1'91'. AN EXO.USIVE YAU.JI AT SMITH'S FOOD klNG COUNTY FAIR BERS 25 c WHOLE O• suao . 16.()Z. CAN ..................... . COUNTY FAIR CORN · 24 c WHOLE KllNB Cl CHAM • 16.0I. CAN .....•.•..• COUNTY FAIR PEAS 25c SWEET &. TENOll • 16-0Z,CAN ...................... . !~N'"!Y.!!! 21-0I. CAN ' ' . 3 2 c ' Mfv~!~§Y,,~.,.,._ozc•N ... 55c . ru!!,!.r!.l~N!~,J-0Y.t~~ -~ ... 3 9 c • ~!Ml. J!! N§z MIN wr , EA .. .. 8 9 ( !!~o~DETY.!~~!~ Ava wr .. 63 ~e. FRUIT COCKTAIL 33c COUNTY FAii • 16-0Z. CAN ........................... . TOMATO CATSUP 45c COUNT'f FAii • llG 26-0?. IOTTLE ...•.......... ::.... . ~2~~2~~11 ............ 39C CORNED BEEF SMITH'S FOO D KING o CRY-0-V AC WR APPED BONELESS ROUND OR BRISKET ·1~9 SALE! PLASTIC · HOUSEWARES . LAUNDRY BAS'k ET OVAL• WE&&ED CONSTRUCTION 20Yi:"111S1.<"11ll '0 91/2.QT. UTILITY PAI L WlTH STRONG MET Al HANDLE lO Yi:" DIAMETER • 9" PILLSBURY BlSCUlTS REGULAR OR au11ERMILK a.oz.14( 1uaE OF 10 Xuul4en SALADS o POTATO 4giJ) o MACARON I " o CO LE SLAW 1-LB. CTN. ,, WINES 8 99 D~O~-~~~~!~-'N'"SKET 101/2.QT. DISHPAN .WITH FOOlED BASE · •CNAIUS -• BUIGUNOY .,~\: " • 'INK CHABLIS e VIN ROSE ,. PREST OFF GOLDEN QREW 9 ~'C'N~ ( ORANGES ... ~~.~;~~'.~ ... : ........ G~uil ...... 6 R•. I TANGERINES .. ~:.:.~,~~~r .... 3-:G49C 14 ~"ll2"•S l1'" RINSE '..,P RAIN TRAY O,EN MESH, S COMPARTMENTS lJV. "1110V. "•2 .. $ -F 0 R • VODKA ao-PROOF •2'1 QUART ... •3.79 ' -~~!~.~:~~~~~~~i.L 39 c ~·~!!~~~-~·~ "' """ $ 3 79 ~A,.U.!,~]! !J.~~~~~ ~ 3 99 G'ARDEN FRESH VEGETABLES ARE DELIVERED DAILY TO YOUR SMITH'S FOOD KING s~.,!1 .. 9.!.~ ....... : '1 oe r: 5~!Pso~SJ ............. 1 O!. ~ 7-DAY SALE! THURSDAY THRU WEDNESDAY• JANUARY 3-9 0 l lST SllVI All CUST .... S, WI SllVI 1111 llGMT To UlllT QUAITITIU • ANAHEIM-Kottlla A'l't., nta·, Euc.lid • •EAST' LOS ANGELES-Whltli•r. ot G1,hort • 9 LA P'IJENJl-Am•r INCi, ol ,utnte , NOIWAU(-fllerfffr, nHr"-rtnce • IAl.DWIN ,Alk-lomona Bl'ld., al Boldwln Po,~ El MONT'l-Midwoy Skopping Ctnlef •LONG IEAQt-Oron ... et Son Ant•ni• OXNAID-,Sa•l•n ld.1 01 Olannel ltlond1 ll'l'd, BEYERl Y HlllS-~onon Ofi'l'e, neo' W!l,hl,t . • El MONTf-Stot• Skopptnf Center ~ LOS ANGElfS-C,tn1how, ntot CoU1•um e OXNAID-Yentura lei., In Prnmonl Squore • BUENA 'AIK-Yaflty View, ot Uncoln FLOIENCE ( LA.)-C•mpten A•• .. at Aerentt • LOS ANGILIS-L.d•ro Sh•)lping C•nltt e ,AllAMOUNT'-Aktndro ot Dewnty A••· •II.JINA ,AIK-Dol1 St., at lo '•Imo • fONT'ANA-for'ltoM Sqwrt ~piftl C•nter •LOS ANOILl5-0lympk, ot ~'l'erlyOlen • P'ICO llYE•~-~v•flf IM•d.101 •ete1Mod COM'10N-i..no leoch Blvd., n•ot" Compton • FUllllJON-Chopmen, ot Stolt c.11.,. LOS ANGl11S-Sonto lorbaro, ot V•rmont • l!SIDA-Shtrmon WoyorHI ••••°'! lh-d. • QNOGA 'AIK-Vict•ry llvd., ot f.ollbr_oolt •GI.I.NADA HlllS-S.P. Ml11len at a.lboo •LOS NUlHIUS-Hillhunt, niar lei Felit e SAN f'ID•O-Wnt•,n, ol Coddln9ten ,. • d>STA MlSA-ln Horbo, Sh0f)pln9Center e HA#t'HQINf-Howt ..... nt, •t 1:11 St. • LYNWOOD-c-twy.llvcf:. ol l11Hl1 e SANT,,. MONICA-Unceln, ot Athfon4 - • COYINA-Otru1 A•1., ot Alttw Hwy. H<)LlYWOOD-HeAy,.e1ll, et Wnt11rn • MANMATfAH •AOt-S.,ulvedo, ot Mot"lnt • SlAl iEACH--ln IMt!Mef Shoptiln9 C:.nttr • COYINi'-S.n lefflordln• Rd., et li:winclole· • HOUYW0oo-Wttt.m, ""' S.nto Manko e MAYWOOD-AtS.ntlc tf•cl., neor londolf •STUDIO CITY-Lou,.! Conpn, ;,eo, Ventvr• lf•d ... • a.IDAHY-Atl•ntlc lfff .. In Cudohy'1010 • ltiGUWOOD-Vemh.w, at fm!Mriol • ~SstON .. US-S.put'l'tdo •nd O.v•n1hl,. e TOllANCl-Mqlc Chef, Del Ame Sheppln9 Ctnltf e DOWNtr-u.k...,"41, ot R•t•Me •LA MllADA-lmperiel at M•'ftr ., e N. ttOlLYWOOD..:WeWt A••·• ot '°nkenhlm e TOllANCl-Wnt ttoth St,.ot lftllnrMd ' T --· -~----' • TUSTIN-Irvine ll•d., n•or Newp.rt St. •YAN NUYS-Seputv•clo oncl Shtrinon Woy e WISTMINSTER-Wttlmln1ter Av•., nMr O.Wen w .. 1 • WISTWOOO-W•1twMcl Di-iv•, ot S.nte Monke lh-d. • NOCHAl•.FOI • 1ND1cATEs sToREs THAT ARE CASHING c••• OPEN -7 A.M.T o11 P.M.~ wa,...wnc::;ra DAILY AND SUNDAY ... OTHER STORES OPEii 9 a.m.· 9 Pi'!'~ 1.--' .-e11-.1t..,o..__· _ _. . -.. \' .. • ., • • •• • . .. l • • -W9-o 1 ,.., CHIVES PERK UP DIET ~~OS -Waistlines Whittled Sprinkle chopped c h i Ve s Try lowering the calories over a low calorie fole slaw in deviled eggs by mixing made with green cabbage, y0tks with mustard and a few carrots, green pepper, chop- ped celery and tossed with drops of non-~ coffee buttermilk and seasonings for . creamer· and plenty of chop- a salad dressing. ped chives. For a break(ast instead of Use those very thin rice the usual orange juice. serve or whole wheat wafer (5 to chi.lied sliced tomato sprinkled 7 calories each ) and sprinkle with chopped chives and salt . each with · a tablespoon · of - a more satisfying way to grated cheddar c h e e s e .- get that morning Vitamin-C. Sprinkle with chives and-broil Toast protein bread and top with skim .milk cottage ~ cheese. Sprinkle with celery salt and chopped chives. Use the open face sandwich to lick lhe rising calories. Canned or deh-ydrated broths .have a livelier flavor when served with a dollop of.sherry, some finely chopped cucumber and plenty of cho~ ped chives. Convnercial low calories salad dressings have a less monotonous taste w h e n freshened with a few drops of lime juice and f\(lzen chop- ped chives. , until cheese melts. Tired of the taste of cottage cheese -add sweet . pickle relish and chopped chives for --a -surprise taste -=-great with fruit salads. Dissolve low calorie lemon g_elatin. in hot brolh or r.cn· somme. Add lem·on or lime juice to taste and chopped chives. Chill until firm. Chop and serve in small bowls as an appetizer. Serve a.seafood salad mixed with plain yogurt for a · salad dressing. Use mixture to stuff whole <tom ato and dust with chopped chives. Grate raw vegetables finely • ...:... carrots, cabbage, celery, cucumber, green pe·pper·s , radishes, tomatoes. :ross with chopped chives, lemon juice, salt and freshl y ground black pepper. Keep in refrigerator for a handy snack. Sprinkle fish fillets with.salt, paprika and chopped chives. Roll up and fasten with a toothpick. Bake at 350 degrees for-20 minutes -or -until-fish becomes white and flakes easily. Save _calorie! by baking or poaching <those eggs. Drop egg -into a nest of-cornflakes ·Dr puffed cere31. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and ~hoppe4 chives. Bake at 350 Qegrees for 15 to 20 minutes or until egg ls set. Poach S~nned and boned chicken breasts in low calorie dehydrated chicken b'roth. Add chopped chives, celer)r, diced carrots, 'baby peas. Simmer i gently until Chicken is tender. 1 Serve chicken with vegetables and broth. Dust with curry powder. · JUST A FEW OF THE MOMENTS THAT MADE .. THE WORLD IN • •• • J • .. • • # .. • • ( .. >. ' -.. . ~ . . • - .Jnesday, Jofnuary 2, 1~74 By BARBARA GIBBONS Jt's a leaf.turning,. ways- mendinl, nablt-breakin8; time, the day to du!t off those well· intentioned New Year's resolu- it's left over or be<:aus~ · THE . s 'L j M nobody else will. as. tas ty as steak. RESOLVED: to keep an empty jar next to your range and fill it up with drained. oU leftover fat. ... scrupulous· Iy stripped from meats or spoo~ from sauces, soups and stews. (Each ta~lespoon is 100 calories in the jar, instead of in yo~! t ' -tions for-yet another try. As the protessional optimists say: "Today ls the first day of. the r~S! gf your life." Now, if you're starting 1974 with a_ hangover of too much party food and drink, it may not seem like such an en- couraging start on your re- maining days particularly if you can't see over your stomach to the scale below. RESOLVEQ : to stop com· peting with )'Our neighbor (sister; mother, etc.) as bread baker, Cake maker 'or the year. RESOLVED: to ,s!Qp)rying ' to buy your cb..i ldren 's (grandchildren's, husbansf's, friend s') affection with fat- tening goodies. RESOLVED: to stop trying to prove you're a better cook than y our mother-in-law .. "Better'' is a matter of opi· ttion. A cook who keeps her family healthy and sum is a blue ribbog. winner in my book! But you can sail into 1975 as a whole neW person. . . sliffi, aexy and vital. . . . if you make 1974 your year to beCome a Slim GouFmet Cook, RESOLVED: not to be Here are some resolutions · coerced into consuming un- to add to your list. needed extra calories by · .-. overweight f I'. i e n d s or RESOLVED: to. eat only overbearing hostesses. when ~ungry, Mt because it's there, beeause you paid for RESOLVED: to buy arid try it, because it's free, because one new vegetable a week. GOURMET Arid make-it interesting. RESOI.VED: to prfect one @W ~eafood dish a week; Even if it means two to th ree tries. .. RESOLVED: 'to empty out your sugar bowl and use it as a planter. Make fruit your ma in source of sweets. RESOLVED: to become a calorie f!);:pert. Invest i n calo rie charts, m e a s u r in g spoons and cups, a food· weighing scale. . .and us~ them until you really kno\V ho w many calories you're oon- su,ming. · RESOLVED: to perfect one serve) :rust as much fish and RESOLVED : to become a poultry Ss· beef. Be it further label reader. Don't patronize food-processors w h o con- resolved to learn new ways laminate their products \Vith to make, these low-cost, low-· unneeded rats, oil s, sugars. cal~rie, low~holesterol foods syrups, "'starches or fillers. Or DAILY PILOT :JJ those who Imply that their '_ product Is slimming, bul· mefuse to print the cploriel clearly on the label. ~ . RESOLVED : lo take the time to be calorie-careful. • ' • , .time for a balan_ced breakfast. Pack your Iunob. l Make ·dinner ahead,-lnstead • - of' relYing on fattenina: takt:- home Or thaw-and-serve ~ venictn~ foods. RESOLVED: to cut calories as you shop, by substituting less fattening stan(l-ins for the foods you normally buy. RESOLVED: to stop blam· ing faiiilly weight proble'!19 on "genes." · Bass Creole, Lemon Sole, Cantonese LobSter anO. mor.e! Se~food can be" sensational though slimming! For recipe1 and diet tips send ·a stam~, self-addressed envelope and-25 cents to SLIM GOURMET SEAFOOD RECIPES, in care of the Daily Pilot, 50 W~t Shore Trail, Sparta, N:J. 07871. . . • • -. eta .are • rega ar ours lo . . . ~serve .I • , .. ' . 10•9 Monday th.ru Friday 10-7 Satu_rday and Sunday \ ---------"-·------·--·-----·-··----i ~ ITHEWORLDIN1973 . . I • -'flii'MIBI 111 a11is7.. Ille -orange Coasi Dally Pilot ., -. I illlfu~ oi Vice P11~.!l P. 0 .-!lpx 66 I. Al-···* M1t1 , ... fr1• POUGHKEEPSIE , N. Y. 12601 I 1111 pllCI It• P1•1ot Enclosed is $ Plea se send I wicl.iy ... Tll•• ltid ••If •lfllr copies of Th~ World in 1973 ~I $4. 95 pach to I lf1IRllll ll•lf11t tvtlltl.. 1 _, iltHo:itlng 111t 1MI Name_ ·I· . ,lcllria Iii lili 10111 ·-·"" I Addrus' "' I "itlitito ol TH E WORLD Ill 1113, I City ~nd State Zip No. I Tlis ilMI--~ wlolc• ,_f I 1 ....... 111,.._.1 -·11 . I Send girt certificale to I Mltn.....,"""'-lllls -I Name 'I ·--of 1 low, ltw )llice If· I Address I · 9'S4.ILDrMir•""'' j Cllya.;.,·State Zip No. j ... .,. ----------·······1111·······-~-----··"' • • ' .. '· .. l ·~like the tolalbitfir-at AlphaBeta. , \ • _. ----·--------; _ _. ---------r .. . ---. . ·- ,.. • .. • . ' • • ' :1% ll/\ILV PILOT Wtdntsday, J1nuary 2, 1'174 -Home News.: Post-holida,y .. Stain Rem , -al Hints Easy to · Spot . . \ \ 1ns the day arter Christmas resistanf' finishes on fabrics tor New Year's). . • .a~od~Ak•etP-~mJ>ei.!!i quickly· there you sit loolclng at the absorbed -so that you have "gifts" the celebrators hav.c time to rWl for a cloth to with an oil-base pollsh. For F°'lowing this with a trcut-QUESTIONS WE ARE ASK· then load Jlnens lnto wi sher. and th~ Increase In price. old .!lalns use rot~en1t0!!!._w mc1u of a 1nl1tturc ot 1-3 cup t.:0: Al the....water cools overnight The industry does not have powdert..>d pumice mi1ed: to a while vinegar afid 2-3 cup the solution will form almost a large enough supp!x of the thin paste with llMced. oil Or lukewarm water. Squeeze this Q. ( had to switch to-a gel. n1e next day, dra in kind or fatiMcs that can be »ew!ng ma.chine oll. mixture on the spot, let It placemats at the last minute and spin out lhe soak solution. used for lhls slce gwear so herb. spice, or 1eat0nlni between your !lnger1 and then 11mcll. 1r the aro1na ls fresh and strong, thftt's great. I( It Isn't, replaco the Item. left for you: sop 1t up, fiub lightly in lhe direction !UQnd .for -2 or 3 -lllillU~J. for Chrl.stmas When J 'fbel\._ W@§b pie load on a full only 8 llrnlted selection O[ Plastic goop epotJ ·on the But 'If you ~don't~ wipe up upholstery; red candle wax the spill, the liquid will dry and cranberry jUice stalna on on the fabric and cause a or the grain. wipe with a Theirblot lt wlth a clean cWth. discoverid that my lin'cn cycle with hot.-water, addlrig stYlcs are be1J1g-pr0duced. · • Cloth dampened with plain oll. 111en remove the vinegar tablecloth. had turned yellow. 1nore water conditioner, and The available materllils are ,cream Soups llepcat as many times as by squeezing clear, lukewarn1 Js there any way to n1ake th!! time, chlorine bleach, but relatlvely unattractlve. And your "stain re sl 1 tan t'' stain. tablecloth; dried alcohol spot! necessary. then po Ii sh . water on the area, and biol it white again'r no detergent. little 'girls' wear has no rib-A good way to make lunches ALCOHO,L SPOTS ON Sometimes refinishing is . several times. Cover the damp · A. An appliance manufac-bons and ·lace as these 1nore nutritious Is lo use a on yt>W' coffee table ; Rnd puir py puddles here and there on the carpel. So, oo with the job ol pbst- hollday cleanup. The sooner you ,get · to work on these stains the better. 'Ibe ,1D14er the stain, the more dif~ult it is to remove. • PI..ASTIC GOOP on carpet or upholstery: Accordlng to the manufacturer, plutlc goop can be removed with rubblng alcohol. Pour a little alcohol on the spot, then rub gently. Repeat treatment if necessary. Then r e m o v e alcohol wlthclear water and a damp cloth. It's ·best to test for color change in an inconspicuous place berore us· ing aloohol u it may · cause discoloration on some fabri cs. CANDLE \VAX : Place an absorbent material such as racial tissue or paper towels above and belo\v the stain. Then press paper above stain with a warm iron. This will melt lhe wa:t and the paper: will absorb it. II a grease spot remains, remove it with a grease sol· .vent . spot remover or con- centrated de lergent a n d water. ~ CRANBERRY JUICE OR ·RED WINE : Stretdi the fabric tautly over a bowl and pOur bolling water on the stain from a height of one or two t feet. This should remove all traces of color. \VOOD:Alcoboldissolve!I necessary. ' area with paper towclS until lurer suggests this 12-hour Q. WhY is it so difficult ornaments ''caMol as yet•bc soup can full or milk wllh many finishes and causes real . it is dry so that people don 't method for re w hi I e n in g to find attractive rajamas and treated t,r flame resistance. each can of condensed soup, problems. Spills should be PUPPY PUDDLES: Urine step on it. yellowed linens: nighties for.smal children -wiped up just as quickly as sta ins should be rlnled away Dyes of wool carpeting may Fill the washer half full or and at a reasonable price? Q. Is there some "'&Y you rather than water. Make the possible. The longer they sit, i.IS quickly us poM!ble with be particularly sensitive to hot water. AOd 3 10 -, cups A . The new Jaw requlring can test a spice, herb, or soup eve n more. Jnterestlng the more finish ls dissolved. several applications of clear, urine. If you have wool detergent, 1 cup water con-that children's sleepwear be seasoning to see if it still with a garnish of sour cream, You may be able to smooth lukewarm water, follo\ved by carpeting, tlild did not tren t dllioner or sortener. and 1 manufactured from labrlcs hfui enough flavor to make whipped cream, croutons, out the finish b)' rubbing the blotting with an absorbent It immediately, your color cu p oxygen (not chlorille) which have a flame retu,rdant it worth using ? · Cr1llllbled bacon, ch o PP e d spot with a cloth moistened cloth. change may be permanent. bleach. Agitate until dissolved, finish has caused the shortage A. Just rub a bit of the chives or parsley. • ~-'-~~~~~~~~--~"-~~~~-'~~~~~~~~_;;_~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~- PllCtS lFflmVI t•IYAY, IAM. J , .. ntlSIAY, JA•. I , 1974 . ·WE HAYE A FULL SELECTION OF . FINE FOODS ·· HILLCREST suG-AR_ .;TIDE ET ER GENT COCA· COLA In c.i d.en lal l y, "stain ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I 'll\1 Age Wine With C~e Aromas Combined \Vine and cheese tasUng are a simple, ·elegant and dLstinctive way '10 entertain, -~t here is a way to co1nbinc the best oC both in \vine· fl avored cheese balls. They· not o n I y arc nomical and easy to make, can be made ahead of a"nd keep well. The Burgundy cheese ball is robust and full-bodied. The Chablis Fondue cheese bill combin es the navors of (on<tue \l(ith this crisp wine for a well-Oalanced taste. Stuffed Edam has a stronger flavo r even though it 11 blend· ed with a French Colombard 'vi ne and both provide an excit- ing and a pleesant taate ex- perience. \Vith each cheese b1H; serve the appropriate wine which gave it its flavor . Be sure to keep all ingredients at room temperature and use the wine as a melding agent. 11le9e wines and cheese balls arc jj,lst as much at home on a checkered tablecloth as candelabra-ac- cented linen. BURGUNDY CHEESE BALL 1h pouncr cheddar cheese grated ( r o o m tem- perature ) 1 1 tcaspoon..salt 12 teaspoon sage 1~ teaspoon thyme 1~ cup BurgWJ.dy 2 tablespOons m i n c e d parsley 2 tablespoons minced green onions ~1 ix all ingredients exce pt parsley and green onions. Use a blender if you \\'ish. Holl into ball shape. Coat Ydth mix- ture of parsley and green onions. \Vrap. . Refrigerate until serving. Serve with bland crackers. CHABLIS FONDUE STUFFED EDAM CJIEESE BALL 1 medium Eda1n or Gouda , . cheese (ro om tern· :.,, pound S~ss che.esc.-~ pcrature) -grated---(-r o o m tern-I/~ teaspoon. Worcestershire perature) sauce i,a tea!lpoon nutmeg 1h teaspoon caraway seeds i;, teaspoon dry ~uslard ~-cup French Colombard ~ teaspoon g_arhc salt wine '3. cue Qiabhs Cut top off cheese. Reserve. 2 ia Jespoons t o a s t e d Scoop out cheese Crom wax ~e . seeds. rind, leaving I/," 1ayer ol Mix all ingredients except cheese inside. Grate cheese. sesame seeds. Use blender if Mix all ingredients. Use a you ·wish. Roll into ball shape. blender If you wish. Put Coat with seeds. Wrap. cheese mixture baCk into Refrigerate , until serving. until serving. ,Serve with hear- Servc wlth crisp crackers. ty crackers. Along With Income Cheese Grows WA SHINGTON (AP) Every time a consumer's in· come goes up 10 percent more cheese, Agriculture Depart- ment researchers have found . And their tastes increasingly call tor foreign fla v or s , especially Italian, although Jimburger and Roquefort rans remain a stable, small, hard· core group, the studies 11how. In 1972, Americans bought a whopping 12 percent more cheese than in 1971 for a tota l of 2. 7 billion pounds, about double the annual growth rate of the previous rour years. -Correspondingly, meat con- sum ption per capita i s slackening, and the two are not unrelated, the economists say: "Higher n1eat prices have turned coosumers to cheese as· an alternative source of prOteln." Jlising incomes, a slower gain in c~ prices than during the turn-of·the Qccade years and increasingly higher demand for pizza and cheese· burgers arc 110me rea!IQC'I\'. Shifts to more exotic ·roocts using foreign c h e e s e s , "fashionable" use of cheese in other foods and retail pro- motions also have contributed to the surge. Of the 13.2 pounds of cheese theoretically eaten by each American last year, 7.8 pounds was a. domestic type. E>f the 5.4 pounds of foreign che~sc, half l'!'as un Ita1ian va riety. ~1ozzarella was the leading gainer, with a four·fold .in- crease in per capita usage since the early 1960s. Mozzarella was seCond in popularity to Ameri can ched· dar, and Swiss followed in third place. All the 1972 per . capita gain came in natural cheeses as processed spreads declined. , .t : . . · .... rll. . ~" .. . ..,·. -- ~· WESSON I I ~ OIL l - /' .. .. _,, ... _ ... _,,,,, __ =·=~':""'-:::':!"'"'--:-•. .l:::n."" ·--""!· .. -· ,. ..... .......... NIBLETS "'~CORN ~ . ·~· 1s~ '""RAY._ Hl8' DRINKS 28* Si:'Li·~-'~""'!!iii""''=='-....... • lilaio"I""'..:.-.. -............ . -~ ' 'Wtj"!E:· .. . . '" ·~­---. . ... ;.-. • -:::.=' :=: ,"L~ 16.el. mi. . ..... FROZEN TOPPING a~ • )_ FROM Fash ion Isla nd Newport Be ach ' --. ST·EREO SOUN[)S OF i:HE HAR.SOR · ·1 \ \' -. ------; • ' . • • • I I • • . ' Aida's-Peppercorns Mashea Favorite By JOHNA BLINN !IOIL YWOOD -"I bum- med arowxt Europe for a year and had a torrlllc time. I ollen ran out ol money-w!IU one day I had ~ pu1h my Skoda (1 Czechoalovaklan cnr) ln!O Rome. - 11so all I bad waa a broken- down car and a loaf of bread on the 1e1t bell.de me." Actor . AJan AJd.a w a 1 de11Crlbina what he called "!he best year of my education Jn EW'Ope." . The tall, lanky video doctor known as "Hawkeye" tow ml!Uonl ol CBS.TV "Mash" viewers, remlnlsced ab o u t Baking Together 11be1nr on my own" when he went to Parla toltUay at I~ Catholic J111tltuto o I Phllo10phy. · "All the cour11 l.'Ollaloled ol wu a prle1t reading to .two or three nuns ffom a book he had written In looghand. I didn't co111lder that very 1tlmulating." ... For the remainder of the year Alila bummed around Europe Uke a hlpple 111leeplng n my car, eating whatever and wherever I could. "Moat ol the time I didn't ~at too well. It was a pure case of rnlsmangement. I had somethlng llke $25 or '30 a week to live on, adequate if Energy Saveo j . . " " Food Prescribed you didn't eat too much!' 0 Sometimes I sprlnkle on ' 11It wun't until year• later oregano, basil, a little -eausage when I went back to France, or ground beef. d pesllel. shed pep. I found how really great "1-lorrlble chlll Is simply French food can be. I · browning the .meat, ~uring perticularly love their famous of£ the rat and thrciwliig ~In 11uces. tomato sauce and a lot of percorns In t ·sides of the steaks u g your fingers and hCel or e hand. Let s s stand at room ten1perature several hours (or 'until the meat absorbs the "I like my steak on th~ red pepper." plain side, but Steak au Polvre ii a 1reat favorite of mine, ..... and I like steak Diane, too, rhen it's made very well." flavor of the pepper ). . Alda workJ In cal!lbmla; but prefers Uvlng in a small !luburban New Jersey town, 15 minutes Crom New York. "Most of our best friends live in o u r Small town. Ar1ene 's the real cook of our family, but If I have to I can cook for myself. "I make rubbery pancakes, t10rrible chill -and that's e1actly what it ls -and 'diet' p!lla.-But, my 'thlnga d'on't interest anybody." - .Alan's "dlet"/lzza ls made from thin brea . or Ry-krlsp, mozzarella cheese, tomato juice and lots of red pepper.· Pre-heat grill. Broil steaks . 3 or 4 inches from source of heat until brown; tum and 2 pounds top-grnde steak, grill on reverse side about STEAK AU POIVRE !Pepper SleakJ cut l·inch thick 5 minute! longer for very rare 2 table!poon! peppercorns n1eat (longer for well clone _1 (black and/or black nnd steak). Transfer steak at .once white mixed ) to a heated platler. Salt SaJt meat to taste. Pour 3 tablespoons butter cooking juices from broiler l tablespoons minced fresh pan ino a small skillet, adding parsley butter, parsley, garlic, beef Few drops pressed garlic, broth and cognac. Cook over optioDal -medium heat until sauce i$ 3 tablespoonsd>ecf brQth reduced in volume by one-hair. 3 tablespoons Cognac Pour !lauce over steak. Watercress (or parsley) ~::1· Ga rn ish the. 4 portions with garnish watercress ~or parsley). Serve Dry off steaks with a paper t once. ~ served with lowel. . Crush pepperc.-orns French frie s and a cool, crisp , coarsely with a rolling pin green' salad. • • • * DAILY PILOT Alan Aida's culinary tricks rang• from rubbery pancakes to diet pizza to horrible chili to the ultimate: pepper sto•k· ' . By JEANNE LESEM over high heat, swirl a tables-I•---------------;,_-----------------------------------------, UPI Food :Editor poon or two of cooking oil , ln It to coat the surface, add NEW YORK (UPI )-J.k.alL cu.l:I![! vegetables and atlr con- tbaf aave fuel can aave work stanlly and quickly with a ·and money u well, and not lon&-llandled spoon or a pan- just on utility bills. ·It's a cake turner a few mintues. good thing to remember as Lower the heat to medium, you respond to the President's add v.. to i,i, cup of water appeal to conserve energy. or bouillon, cover tlghUy and For a start, let's return to 1team about 5 minutes, or me old-fashioned concept of-untll lhe-vegelables-are tender family meala, with everyone but still crisp. eating together. If tbe liquid hasn't Think of the fuel you save evaporated c o m p I e t e 1 y , by not having to reheat dinner thicken . it sHghtly with com- for each member of the starch dissolved in cold boulehold. And thlnk of the water, season to ta.sle and work you aave yourself by serve at once. not rurinlng a ahort-<irder Making meaUoaf? Individual .. kitchen for late arrlvals. . ones in muffin tins or miniloaf Plan complete oven meals pans bake'. in ·on1y 20 to 30 with vegetables Md dessert minutes at 3 S 0 • d e g re e 1 that can cook at lhe same fahrenheit inllead of the hour temperature and abouf the or more needed for a full-size same length of time as the loaf pan. main course. Prepare two-in-one main courses -old-fashioned sauaa&e -stuffed acorn or butternut squash halves or use leftover meat or poultry for atulling squash, green peppen; or onlona. Bread pudding !or dessert or tomorrow's breakfast can bake at the same time. Whenever possible, u s e either shallow baking dllhes or covered ones for fa!ter oven coO,klng. Cookies For Fun o For all the good times tomorrow may bring, be ready with breakfast-flavored Just· For-Fun Cookies. What coold be tastier than plump raislrul, crumbled bacon 'and golden _ flakes of corn all together in a crispy-cheW')I cooky. CUT UP FOOD . Remember that c u l • up JIOUllry cooks faster than a whole chicken or turkey. stur- llng, biked separately In a abJllow pan, not only saves time and fuel. but al!ID pro- vides plenty o( crisp brown a""mt for extra flavor . Serve them u part o( a nutritious morning meal com- bined with other favorit e breakfast foodS·, but save a Jew for later. Shorten baking time for -potatoer by-halvin_g-lhem- Jengthwlse and baking cut side down ln a lightly oiled pan. U yoilr maln course needs 40 to 60 minutes in a 350- degree oven, cook f~zen vegetables at the same time in a tightly cove'red casserole, ualng an e1tra tablespoon each ol bullel' and water, and ¥• teaspoon or salt for each 10- ounce package. Pei.a 'Jlma beans, corn and other 'vegetables in small pieces need 40 to 45 minutes, and those in larger pieces - such 11 bnissels &prouts or broccoli spears SS to llO m1"'1tes. Cooking · time can b e shortened somewhat if you first rln9e frozen vegetables in a attainer for 30 to fiO ae<Ondl under nmning hot water before cooking them. Read newspapers: books ~ maguln,. for skillet recipes -one dish meall made with macaroni products or rice that can .be cooked In a oln&le range-top pan In about i10 mlnule1 to on hour. Uae a pressure cooker lo reauce cooking time radically for freeh and many frozen vegitableo. Many cook in one to two' minutes at 15 powxll preuure. Any combtn·atlon of vesetobles !hot """" the same coOldnf time can be cooked toe:ether without any tramfer ol flavor. Many other dishes can. be pressure cooked in aboUt one third Uieir usual cookln1 time. JUST·FOR·FUN COOKIES Yo? cup regular margarine or butter, softened ;4 cup sugar g 1 cup sifted regular all· purposo flour 2 cups com flakes 'h lb. bacoo, fried crisp, well- drained. crumbled 'h cup seedless raisins Measure margarine a n d sugar into large mixing bowl ; beat until light .Bild fluffy. Add egg; beat well. Add flour; mix until thoroughly com- bined. Stir in cohi flakes, crumbled bacon and raisins. Drop by rounded measuring-tablespoon onto ungreased baking sheets. Bake in 350 degree F oven about 20 minutes or until light- ly browned. Cool oo wire racks . Makes 24. Pudding Buttered This is the perfect time for the lowly peanut to come Into its own as a provJdei of nutrients. These Uttle tubera can be eaten in a variety o(_ ways -from roasJed whole to the famous sandwich. · Children In particular should enjoy -Chocolate Peanut Butter Pudding. 'Ibis d...,.rt can tie eaten any lime' of the day and la supeNlmple to mate . Just pou>oJ cups ol milk Into I bow~ add I> cup noo- bomocenlieil nutty-g r i n d • peanut butter and one ~unce packl1e of inlWll chocolate Orlental·style sllr·frylng II puddinl mix. • another quick method fpr Bell al medlmn opeed IDltll ;::ra~es ~ten ~ki:: well mixed (a1":ua11 minute). became the veretabt• are cut Pour Into • tnc1L,. ·aervllti In small, pnllor]!1_ llltapes. dllllles and let l:htll to ie1 Even vege~ea that take (about 5 mlnu~) or un"I ·different cookln& times, such ready to serve. ' u carrota and celei:y, can To further enh~ ., li!J be sllr-fned lofethcr if you dehcloua taste, garnish with start Ille carrot> first and odd whlppod hm and finely ' • (Our shelves are rapidly filling upl) Bring . on that shopping list! ~ -Our shelves are rapidly being , -----. ----'-·--· re-stocked with. merchandise ••• . . grocery and household products, meat, prod.uce and delicatessen items. And as always, Lucky's famous everyday low prices are effective in all departments, for noticeable saving$ every time you shopf Remember -we specialize in quality, service and savings at- Lucky Discount Supermarkets. .. All Lucky stores* are now in full . . . ·operation and · returning to normal store hours. • -,. " ............. -•. s... ..... 111 ........ "" ' , . ., .... DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS the colery 1 few mlnulei later, chopped peanuts. Sublt!tuto Jmt l«>g enough to.become smooth grind peanut buliar 1..~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ ... ~~~~~--~~~~~~~-' londcr but not mushy. if preferred, and for variety, '!bo technique II simple: tty other flavors o! pudding . preheat a wide, deep ll'ucepan ml1. \ • ' • '-·----, ___ _ _,, ___ _ .· ' • ' ) • • . . • ... ~i.. ( PILOT Wtdn~sday, January 2, 1q74 - -· SERVE SP.ICY CIDER TO COOKIE BAKERS Guests Do lroni11g - Chocolate Waffled flere's a great idea for cold· weather fun times -walnut cookies ramily and guests can bake themselves on a waffle iron. Featuring that f a v o r i t e · flavor combination, chocolate and crunchy walnuts, • these goodies resemble brownies in texture and taste. They 're so easy you can whip up the batter in no time at all, especially ir the ; in· gredients are pre-measured. Have a bowlful ready when the crowd comes by, then let them · drop rounded spoonfuls on the preheated waffle iron, along with the chopped crisp California walnuts that are sprinkled ori top before bak· ing. and in 3 or , 4 minutes, the cookies are done. These attractive and tasty cookies· are just the thing to serve with hot mulled cider, hot chocolate or cold milk. WALNUT BROWNIE WAFFLE COOKIES 1h cup shortening 1 (1 OWice) square unsweetened chocolate 11.i: clip granulated sugar I egg, lightly beaten 11.i: teaspoon vanilla ;r, cup sifted all-purpose flour ¥.?teaspoon baking powder l/c teaspoon salt FACTl1 FINDER FOR • • 2 tablespons milk 1 cup £inely c h opped _ walnuts, divided ?\-felt sh.ortening and chocolate together over low . heat. Cool slightly. Add sugar, egg and vanilla· and beat well. Resift flour with baking powder and salt. Add to chocolate mixture along with milk and % cup walnuts. Stir until well mixed. · Drop by rounded teaspoon· fuls onto preheated "low" waffle iron , sprinkling each one with a few of the re- maining walnuts. Bake 3 to 4 minutes until coo!Oes are done. Eat warm or cold. Makes about 18 small cookies. THE OFFICIAL ASSOCIATED PRESS ALMAN 'AC 1173 1111 Weather Finances Space RtVIEW Foreign Relations Awards . Earth Stetu, Cities History • Industry Disasters Civil Rights Sports Labor Education .Crime Religion Leisure Transportation Wo~d Netions Fiical Affeirs Homes Health Geography Arts Science Communicatioils • .. Whatever you want to know about any of the above subjects- an·d many others-can be found in this valuabfil reference book. There are more then 1000 pages of instant information • combined under the direction of the world's largest news organization, plus a map section of the United States and Canada, a color section of flags and a complete .chronology of the Watergate scandal. It's a · big bargain at only $1.75. plus 25 cents for handling. Send for 'fOUr copy nowt r ---.S.---------.--------------i FILL OUT : AP ALMANAC 1 Orange Coast Da[ly ~ilot AND MAIL I P.O.BoxG22 _ ,#~eaneck, New Jersey 07.(166 _.J1:1 IS-HANDY I · Enclosed is . Send me COpij!S . I COUPON I of AP Almanac . I I Neme TODAY! i Addrns· I City SJa te Zip I It prr book it1(/11dr1 poJIOtf trtld h1111dli111 •• I Mukt thttk1f'rlfdblr10 Tiit A1)(1('1111N frttl • ~-------------~------------~ \. • -.. . . ' ' '· . ' - .Tast y Rump Roast • .Cut sli18 In the boneless rump roast to fill with a tasty liverwurst mixture ....... as the roas t cooks, the rilling mingles with ' the natural beef juices for-. a delectable, dlstinct.ive £1¥vor. Wrap in purr pastry and bake Until golden. BEEF TURBAN ROAST 1 (3-pound) boneless beer rump roast l teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon pepiP,er 1 (4~-ounce) can liverwurst spread I tablespoon instant minced onion 1 tablespoon brandy n tea sp oon thyme, cnunbled 1 (ID-ounce ) package frozen · patty shells, thawed Egg Wash Mushroom Sauce Trim all fat rrom beef. Make 3 deep lengthwise . cuts in top cutting down to center or roast. Sprinkle with salt and wpper. . Mix liverwurst s pr e a d , onion, brandy and thyme . Sprea·d between cuts and over top of t)ee£. Tie roast with string. Insert meat ther- mometer into center of beef, but not in filling . Roast in 375 degree oven 45 minutes. Turn off oven heat but do not open oven door. roast stand in oven l hoUr. If thermomtle[, has nol reached 130 degrees by this time; _tum oven regulator to 300 aegrees. Continue roasting , beef a few more minutes ·unttl internal temperature registers J30 degrees. Remove beef from' oven and cool. ' Stack 3 patty shells and roll out on noured board to 10..inch round. Cut several small ,decorative shapes from along one edge of round and set aside. Put remaining piece of paslry, about 10x6-incbes into lh9x2.- inch baking pan. Place roasted beef on top. Roll out remaining 3 patty shells in similar manner--. Place over roast and crimp to bottom pastry. Arrange decorative shapes on top. Br!Gh with Egg Wash. Bake ln 450 f;(egrees even 15 to · 20 minutes or until pastry is golden. Slice roast thinly. Serve with Mushroom Sauce. Makes ~ servings. Egg Wasb: Beat 1 egg yolk with 1 teaspoon milk or water. Mushroom Sauce: Saute l/.t. pound sliced mushrooms in 3 tablespoons butter about 3 minutes. Mix in 2 tablespoons flour. Add 1 cup beef broth and ~ cup red dinner wine. Heat, · stirring until it boils. Add pinch or crumbled thyme. Makes 2 cups. Coupon prices good January 3 ·January 9, 1974 • I .. thru Sacum.y, January 5. 1974 • {And we don't intend lo change!!!) We appreciate each indi vidual customer and his individual t,1stcs. Tha1's 1>.·hy we Cdrry many different brands. and products in .l v.1ri r1y of silt s!!! Yo~'ll find our checkers ~miling & cour1eou~ -and enough of then1 to r11ake check OOl$Spccdy!!~ And box boyi ·-~c try to h:ivr 011c for every checkstand -and we train them to pul the tomaloeS on top, not under a 10 lb, ~.ick or potdtoes!!! Service ma~cs ~hopping more fun !!!!! JJle.cif Our meat experts are al your service. \Ve hJve 326 yc Jrs of experience here at Richard 's Meat Departme nts to serve you. .London-Broil Cured Round Beef Stew GrolJnd Beef thick 1op round bonom round .. 11ali: lean & ltndfr ct1bn prepar1 '° many way1 Beef Li ver 1k1nned & deveined Stuffed Pork Chop~ .>ven ready Marinated Chicken \Vin gs our own 51asonlng Tangerines f1rw:v. 1we11. juicy l1alian Squash , tinder, g1rden fre5h IT oma toes red, ripe, salad 1i11 Onions wh11e, creaming or boili~ 5ize ' !£Je.fieafe55e.f1 Richard's Barbequed Ribs Ric hard 's Egg & Polato Salad Arn1enian String Cheese Jl,lb pint Yilb I 1,98 lb 1.49 lb 1.49 lb 89c lb 98c lb 1.39 lb 69c lb 39c lb 39c lb 39c lb 39c lb 1.65 59c 99c Jello Gelatin De.-.sert Mix 6 01; New General ~1ills Nature Valley Granola 1soz. Gala Towels big roll 10 01. Sego Liquid Diet FOod Ragu Spaghetti Sauce 15Y, 01, 2/49c -79c 39c 31c 53c Vienna Bread Orang_e Rolls Potato Rolls Glazed Raised Donuts , LIQUOR • 65c 6 for 49c 6 foi 43c 6 for 72c Ric hard's C_ap tai ns Choice Straight Bourbon filch 4.24 Ric h ard's~Captains Choice London Gin °f il!h 3.50 Ri chard's Captains Choice Charcoal filtered Vodka 3.43 Richard's Very Very Light Scotch \Vhiskey hhh 4.99 , • 10% Qfl By The Cit. RICHARD'S LIDO 3-IJJ VI A LIDO N.B. 0Jll'n 9·S D.ii!y , Sun. 9.7 67)-6360 RICHARD 'S HARBOR VIEW 1660 MACAR,lllUR N.B. Opt-1'119·8 D~ily, Sun. '1· 1 6-1 .. -3660 .C(Xlpon 900d 113 · 119174 . I • Co~n ;ood 19"· 119/74 ONE COUl'ON PER AOUL T cus'ro-.l£R I I ONE: COUPbN PER ADULT CUSTOMfR I' Couponoood 1f3 -1/9/74 ,ONE COUPON PER ADULT CUITOMER DOLE I I I RICHARD'S FRESH HOMEMADE Pineapple I 29c! Green --Onions t I 1-1 19~-20 oz. Crushed ·Sliced ·Chunk I WITH THIS COUPON I. BUNCH : WITH THIS COUPON • WITH THIS COUPO N ·on{buftct1 GrHn Onlom -SC I I Ont pint Rkherd'1 Fr11h·Hotflerl'lldt Soup lie • DP. . ' • , . --------·-.. -' --• . - • I Salty Sardine Satisfies Nor11·a~· s a rd 1 n es :ire particularl~· rnjoyt'fl by n1cn :nid pro\"idc a savory bast.' for 1nany easy and ccono1nie1t! ideas to scrvl' for i11- tcm1lssions·o11 'J\1 spurtscusrs. 'The easiest idi'<:i, or course. is to just 01x·n a can of sardines. packed cithi:•r in olive oil. '!0111:110 or rnustard 1 sa_uce. <~nd offeri~J.! thc111 11 tJh thick slices nf I-rl'nch or ryi• bread or ~rusty rolls. i;orncl cheese. frl'sh fruit and a favorite beverage. You'll have a good n1ur1tious me al fo1 under a dollar a can. Sardines ;ire one of the best \o"·.rost sou rces of prcr tcin food lor human <..'Oil· sunip.tion. For son1cth1ni.: a little dif· fercnl. though. there's Nordic Omt'let S:ind"·ich . It's ahnost a pi1.za 11·i!hout a crust and can be ready to cat in 15 minuteli! Serve this savor~· ri;g· chL'CSC-!Olllll\O-S!lrdine nliXIUl'l' over warm· rD!ls--or toasted English n1ufrin~ for hearty open-race sand"'ichcs. 11 's an rnsv and nutri!ious omC'lcl for "·Ct-kcnd brunches ' and n1idnighl supp<'rs. too. A r m c h a i r Quarterback Sandwiches. a ze sty fillin g tastes best "'hen il"s nv1 d(' early in the day so the fl a\'ors have a chance to mingle and n1ar.ry. ' NORDIC OMELET SAND\\' I Cit I tablespoon butler 1 large tonullo. slicL'<i Salt and peppe r 1~ teaspoon oregano S eggs, slightly bcat~n 1 can (3:1/~ oonccsl Nor\\·ay sardines. dra ined 1,2 cu p shredded cheese i mv.zarcllH, pro\'olonc. . JHckf Chopped green onions 4 buns or English n1uffins ~1elt butlrr in 9-inch skillet. Arrange tomato slices in but· tcr: season wilh sail. pepper and oregano. Pour eggs over tom"atocs: cover pan and cook over 1nt.idium·lo1\' heat 4 mifi utcs. Unro.Ylr pan and arrange sard ines spoke-fashion on c>ggs and sprinkle cheese between sardines.., Cover pan again and continue cooking 4 n1inutes longer. or unlil eggs are set in the center and cheese 1nelts. fjarnish \\'ilh green onions. S1X>On onto wu rn1 buns or toasted Engllsh murfins for open-face s:lndv1ich. ARM CHAIR QUA HTERBACK SANDWI Cll ES I can (3~~ ounces) Norw ay snrdincs. drained a n d choppt.>d 2 cups finely shr edded ca~ bag<' or 1(.•t\ucc 1~ cup thlnly slicL>d c<!lery I teaspoon' dried chives Or I chopped green onion 2 te<1spoo n hcfbCd \'lncgnr ~ Sa lt. und pcp1>er 12 slices durk bread, lightly • buUercd Lightly toss t o ge the r surdincs, ca bbage, cc I er y , chives nnd vlncga,r. Season to taste. Serve ds sa ndwich, fill · Ing on dark br.cad. ' . . . . . . Kids Like To Ask Andy 'l \I r I ., ;., _Jt " • 1!11011!£ ~AV/NC~ GRADE "A" FRYlNG --CHICKEN YOUNG-TENDER BEEF LIVER , ' EASTERN f'RESH NORTHERN PORK SPARERIBS C FILLEI 1b TURBOT _BAR M-BULK STY~E BAC,ON FINEST IN TA:TE FARMER JOHN WIENERS CAMPFIRE WIENERS 12 oz. BONELESS -LEAN STEWING BEEF BONELESS -USDA CHOICE BEEF BRISKET .. " • W~ay, January 2 t'174 DAILY PILOT 31J ... M eatloaf Hidden fo r Pqir ty ' W-ellington' s Gone Thrifty \\1ith all the elegance of a true Beer \Vellington, this 1nentloaf transforms ground beer :.uul pie pastry fron1 the ordinary· in!o the exciting - ~1eatlo11 f \\lelling19n! 'rhe 111catluaf is baked to a medium rnrc stage, th en spread "'llh liver pat <'. \~Tap­ ped in pastry, decorated "'ith 1>astry tri1nn1ings, and l'ina tly baked until lhc pastry ts golden brown. Bel'r is thl' secret fl<ivor lngredicnl here. not only in thc 1neatloaf. but :1\so in 1hc pHte and pastry. Elegant . L'conom1cal und practical. 11 can ht' baked ahead , ceolcd and 11•rapped in 1he pastry. :ind reHdy for ;i fin<1I baking half an hour before serving 1i1nc Although the recipe makes 12 'se rving s,. it can he easily inCreased to servr large"r groups. Just ren1e1nbe r to in- crease the baking li1ne ror a larger loaf. Sf19-~_ ' lb. ( 98~ MEA1'LOAt' WELLINGTON 2 cups unsi[ted nou r 1 ~ leaspoon .s<ilt :i~ l'UI) butler or mar~arinc 1 J cup ve ry cold bcei' J flOUnds ground round I cup (~ ounces) shr"dc\cd S\\·iss chet>sc 1 ~ cu11 1ni1u::cd 0111011 1 i cu 11 beer 2 eggs • i cup chopped p:ir!'ilcy I tablespoon s<1l1 1 1 teaspoon 1X'1>1>cr 3 !o 4 1ablespoo11s bet>r 1~ pound li\'Ct'I\ urst J egg yolk 1 tablespoon 1nilk C.:01nbi nc fl t:ur and sail 111 a bo1\•I. Cut in butter until 1nixturc resc1nbles l' u a r :; l' 1ncal. using pastry cuncr or ['w'.'O knives . Using a fork, graduall,v blend in 1 ~ cu1> ve ry cold beer until mix1ure lca\'Cs sides of bo\vl. Shape dough in!o !xiii and n•rap in plastic wrap. Refrhger11te for 1 hour . Jn A large bo\\•I, con1b111c. ground beef, cheese, ouion, 11 cup beer, egg s, parsley . salt and pepper ; blend "'ell. Shape Into a l2x.l4 inch loaL Place in large shallow bakiug pan. Bake in 350 deg ree oven fur 1 hou r. Hemovc frorn oven !loll out one haU on sh~ht ly :\h::an\\·hilc. blend 3 t::i ~ t a b I esp o o Q.S ~er into livcr .... ·ur st to obtain good :iprcad!ng consistency . ,_ Di\ 1cle chilled dough 111 half: return one half to refrigerator. Holl out one half on slight!~' rlourt'Cl ooard to I~ x 6 inch rl•ctanglc. · Transfer Lo Slallo\\' baking pnn . or large baking sheet. t larl' 1nra1Joaf on pastry. Spn·afl 1op and sides 11·ith livcr\1 urst n1ixture. Holl out remaining hal f of dough tu 1~ by 8 inch rl'C· tan gle. !lrapc over top of rnl'atluaf. Trin1 (.>dges Hild rl'Sl'l'VI' tri111mings. Blend l'gg yolk an<t rnilk : · use to mo1st~n edges of dough. Seal edges. Prick top pas11·y in several places to allow stea1n to escape. Roll but trimmings to about ~ 1.1 inrh thickness. Cut strips ror lattice design; place on top of pastry. Brush entire surface of pustry with egg yolk mixture .. Bake loar In hol oven (400 dt•g. ~ 30 minutes or until pastry is ~olden brO\\'n. ~1akcs 12 servi ngs . Milk !y1apled If you're looking f or so1net hing different 10 ser\·e till· ~ oungslers. try N e \1' England 1\1aple 1\lilk made by blending 4 cups of milk '>Vilh :i , cup of maple sy ru p. Pour into glasses und top with a scoop of butter peca n ice erea1n. 1'h1s rnakes 4a., cu1>s. SPINACH .YOUNG "N" TENDER LOCALLY GROWN BUNCH 10c -----.- MUS.HROOMS FRESH DAILY 69~ GRAPEFRUIT s~~~~N" 8 c:I~o 6 9c C.ARROTS ----------- GOLDEN RIPE ,BANANAS LOOSE EXTRA FANCY TURNIPS 10~ HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ~--­~ELL CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO 4mperiol Sin 1 OZ. TUIE REG. 1.99 AT SOME STORES • i_ GLEEM TOOTHPASTE 69' -~ !IAMIL Y SIZE-7 OZ. TUIE REG. 1.09 AT SOME STORES ·-----·-- DR. WEST ' SCOTTIES Kern·s \ KERNS (JNLY TOOTHBRUSHES 4/$1 TI SSUE BOX OF 200/2 PLY TISSUES DEL MONTE FRUIT COCKTAIL AJAX CLEANSER 1"0L CAN "' ARM AND HAMMl: R · •lOl CAN · BAKING SObA , "· IP• . . FACIAL TOM ATO JU ~C ~ 35~ BIG 46 Oz. can TID E DETERGEN T . -~I~; '$125 REG, $1 .53 ·DEL MONTE . . CUT ·GREEN BEANS #303 CAN z9.c ,. ...--.-. rJIE 8f~T • REG . 69c EACH ------- ULTRA IAN 5000 AN1'1·PERSPIRANT 59' 5 OZ. AE ROSOL CAN Prices Effective: Thursday thru Wednesday Jan. 3 thru Jan. 9 Prices subject to stock oa "-cl . WE GLADL ! ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS CDSTlMESA PLACENTIA 19th and Placentia 110 W. Cha11113n < ' ( • ' I . • • ,- t :JG DAILY Pl LOT Wednesday, January 2, 1974 • Grocery Specials Golden . 23c .Corn s 1 w .•••• \Vhole Kern el or Cream style-No 303 Nabisco Saltines -c[lsp soda cracker,, •• 1 lb. P.kg. Cucumber · 39c Chips .•••.. \Vilshire'? Country :i.tyle ••• 22 oz. jar MEAT PIES Stouffer's •.• -Beef, Chicken. 1'urkey -JO oz. frozen . Kidney · 2· 3-c -~ Beans ..•.•• Plump, red beans! 8 & W • No. 300 can • Hamburger4-5· .(. Booster . Globe A-1 , •• all varieties ••• 9 oz . pkg. Pril'filii in effec t Thurs., Jarr. 3 throus h Wed.; Jan. 9 .. • T omaloes -~1tw~ •• .... 29( ]{ed ripe, and put in the can field-fresh for fl avor! NO. 303 ca n Apple Sauce· s, w ••• 29c You'll love the flavor-and the value-in_ the product and the price! No. JOU gla ss C &H Sugar . Pow1R~~ oR ••• 19c :::itock up no"', at this s1>ecial price, 'cause you use them so often! l lb. tin M • SPRINGFIELD 35c argar1ne 11b. cARTON ••• J)on"t be misled by l-he price, •• here's quality you 'll be please d lo sCr\"e! Y. 1 10HNsToN·s · 4 s 1 ogur FRUIT SUNDAE • ·• • • • tor . -. • • • • PILOT-ADVERTISEP. lj --Wednesday, January 2, 1974 • Department stores aren 't tlie only.ones.who .can offer "January Sales"··.· E'l Rancho can; too! More evidence that there,really is a difference! Come in and see for yourself! . . - ' ,,,.h I ... • • • • }~resh! ••. and hand cut -not sawrl-from plump,. ki ng-sized frying chicken! (w/rib Cage} /JJgB B Tbigha ........ 71! , Fryer Wings • • .49f Chicken Livers .• s1°~- Su much 1neflty_g~ness on these! Fre1'hness makes lhe difference! 1-Hn•lnast ..... . • • }'or ;i hearty pot roa ~t ! Ypu'll love the difference in U,S.D.A. Cheice bPef! i'\lith rrhearr.v pot roa.~t .,ert"e '"Heart_v Burgundy ·· .•• (;a ua ·s •••• ~t 1-1al .••• 2.69 " FRESH TROUT From Idaho waters ... net wt. 5 oz. each, Fillet of Sole . ~ ...• s1 s~ ·Fresh English sole, 'expertly filleted! Mahi-Mahi. .•..•... ~ . 89~ '('he real thing ... from Hawaii! Pacific Whiting •••• 39~ Ski ll et sized . 6 to 8 oz . each . headless. FRESH CLAMS Cherrystones ... 79~ 0-Bone Roast . U.S.D.A. Choice beef for lla\·or Ground Beef . . . . s 1 2~ l'~xtra lenn ... bulk or J>att ics Ch·1· G .. d s119 I I rin . • . . . . • ('oar~r µ:rounil bcel-_!_l lways fresh'. Chuck Steak ·99~ Ce nter cul-U.S.D.A. Choice ~ef! Sliced Bacon . . . • s 1 1~ El Rancho's ranch style Beef-Rib Bones • ~ 792 . .- Corned Beef B~l~~T •••• s 1 o~ .· • \'ou'lt Jn\·e thC' na\·or of our spPt)<J I cure~ .•• y.•holc or point balf. Spare-1··.-b~s FRESH! .. ft,. C . LEAN! • • • • • .~ -· ' . . tvforc goud-ness, more. fl;v~r. i~ +Ea s;;;~rais;d grain red pork~ Th~r~ is a differe~ce! - -Delicatessen Bologna RATH's ... sucm............. 4 9e The sandwich favorite, .. and Rath '~ for wholesome quality! Beef or Mea t ••• 6 oz. pkg. ' Jumbo Dills . • • . . . • • 29~ Sliced American • • • 95c Two cri~p pickles per package Kraft.individually wrapped ••• 12 oz. Biscuits uYTo 1111E •• 2 1or25c Cookies CllOCOIJ11 Cll' • • • • • 49c JJills~ury or Ballard ... 8 oz. tube Pill sbur)'-ready t.o bake! 15:\A oz. pkg. Lunch MealtRATH's ... &oz. 59e '\ -· So delicious. and so good Jor you , • , and you have a choice of favorilc flavors! 8 oz. rushed from New England! )'our choice of Cotto Salami, Pickle Loaf, Th'uringer or Pizza Loaf ••• sliced! ' .. 1 ' j . . j' Super Fresh Produce! Pineapple ......... I I! J\ectar sweet, ~cause they're maturity fruit, from Hawaii's lush fields and rushed here ••. fresh! • BAllANA 8 SQUASH . --cib GoldeQ meat -. fine for baking. Fresh Celem:v~-· ~~ ... ~-.. ~ 19~ Crisp and tender ••. generous sized stalks with the flavor you get only when they're fresh! .. Grapefruit Juice.: .• 49~ Fresh squeezed f1J>n1 Texas Pinks . . Solid heads, crisp "tender leaves. . . , Bean Sprouts ••••. ,' 19f They're fresh and deliciously tender! ' _ ERESH ~ . 3 .t$1 PAPAYAS ' -r Luscious fruit, fresh from Haw8ii. All items subject t.o availability due to current labor disputes Open daily 9:00 AM-9:00 PM S unday 10:00 AM-7:00 PM No sales to dealers! -. • · ·Liquor Dep't .. ' SAVE $1. GIN"° s3 49 More economy in the half·g~llon! El Rancho Scotch • ~s19 Bouled in Scotland-5th (Qt, •• , 6.891 .El.Rancho .Rum •• s319 Choose ljght or-dark ..• fiftli_ 'Scotch llUIYTllS •••• 549' · • Bottled for El Rancho! Quart . . HOLIAY . . ilf!IS -: s..3••· VODKA • • . Blends so well. priced so lo"!! Qt._ • ARCADIA: PASADEN A: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACH: 1727 Ne•pOI! Blvd Je d Sun1et and Huntington Or (El Rancho Center) 310 Vle1J Colorado Blvd . Fremont and Hunl1nglo r Or Warner and Alr,onqU1n (Boardwalk Crnle1) 155\ 1'11 ~·1 ,,11 Dr (E a·Jblu!f Village Center) I -. ~ .. • ,.,,~ , r ·~ ' i~ '· ' ., • I • I ~------1 , __ _ . ' • • - l '' ' • ' • I , 8 PILOT-AOVERTISER ... BOAT SLIP . 3500 SCj). FT • • \Vnlk to boat slip 3500 SQ. FT. Tree high pitl'quetcd ~t1:y. Lush INDOOR GARDEN, .Hu'--e living l'Oom. Wslls of glass. Extrava- ga~t v.·cll planned kitchen. Fo1mal din.ing, Ente.1·talncr'11 fan1Jly room. Spiral stalrcru;c. f'OUR 'ROO t•ol MASTER SUITE! Balcony's in & out 2 ceiling high flrepla~. Heated • ocean olzcd pool. Custom decking. A1UCII lo;IORE? Call imn1edlately! 96J.6767. • $201. MQ. TOTAL 6°/o ASSUMABLE (ii,u V.A. loan". $201. PER ~10. TOTAL! Cov- . e1·ed entry. Texas-s ized living room. Fan1Uy diniJll:. Kitchen \~·Ith a vil!\v. LBrs:::e bed- rooms. Red brick patio. I-luge lot. Walk to shoppin>:. Assu1ne $19,600 -6q~ .$201. per n10, Totnl (.lril .. •c\$34,950. Call no\v. 963-6767. RE!> TILE SPANISH Spnnish villa. l!ed tile roof! Large lot. CAti1PER PAKKL!\/G. Front veranda. Dou- ble door tontry. Gigantlc'llvjng room. BAY . \VI N D 0 \(/ . S1ianl1:1h brick fireplace, BE1\MEO & VAUL'rED CEil.JNGS. Sepa- rtttc den. Family room. Bright convenience klt.ch1'11. Parly sized patlu. WALK TO BEACI-1 ! O\vner must n1ove. CaJI toda)•. 963·6767. _5 _BEDRO.OMS _ $29,750 IT'S TRUE! 5 bPdroom bttrgain -FUU.. PHJCE Si9.750! Great twach lO\\'n location -bike to ocean. Gi(lnl llvinK room, Fa1nlly dining plus breakfast hart Full-sized bed- rooms PLUS detached mother-in-lav.· sUitc! THERE'S !\·!ORE -water softener - camper & trailer parking. -27 ft. patio. Just $1,500 d\nvn -95•,;, loan. liurry -96J: 6767. VACANT • $19,500 2 STORY BARGAIN E.:\IPTY 2 STORY. Asking Sl9,500. Outdoor lighting. tfuge living room. Convenienl.-e kitchen -lNCLUDES \\'ASHEH & DRYER? Secluded bedl"OOfns. Very ,,rivate patio. Olympic cununon POOL ASSUJ\lABLE F.H.A. loon. 7-l2'"-i. S1852. 1UfAL OOW1''"! -$165 µc1· mo. Pri111e beach tuu·n area - call now' -~i-6767. RANCH STYLE VACANT + POOL $25,000 Viiconl ranch Sf5~ llffi'i\c. POOL. JUST S25.000! NE'\V puint ilndde & out NE\V shag. NEW clC'Ctricfll & pluniblng fixtures. Nalut<tl u·ood interior. Vaulted & heamcd et•llin gs. Family sized bedrooms. 25 ft. cov- en>d patio. SPAJtKUNG POOL. Cabana. S500 do\\'n + eloslng. $237 per mo. SZ.'l,000 TOTAL PRlCE. Owflf!r J('ft! CD11 n9v.•. 963-6767. SMALL INVESTOR'S D~UGHT \ hen he sees these 2 units~ Zoncd....R'4...J..ot- !'!ize Is gj•.-x-9T'iliTiiete arell;--Owner will finance at 8% interest Total price Is only $29,500. Toke advantage. all 847~10 now. HIGH_ON A HILL OCEAN VIEW $29,500U l\Io.gnlficcnt home on 11rlval(' cul-de-sac ittreet. Parklike sul'roundlngs with vlC\v 'ot the Pacific Ocean. Family bedrooms. Cozy kitchen. Covered l>Rtio. You will be SHOCKED for-only $29,5oo with low down payment. Hurry call 842-2535. NEW ENGLAND COTTAGE • NO DOWN! A \Varm paneled eutry. Cozy living room. Raised hearth fireplnCt'. Family kitchen. Fl'f'Sh pa.Int manicured Yards. N"O down and lolv poyment.s. Total pl'iee $28.QSO. J\tust hurry to see! Call now! 842-2535. " PERFECT FOR THE LARGE FAMILY!! Located on cul-de-sac street. Close to schools. shopping & freeway. Beautiful 2- story, 5 bcdroon1. 3 bath home! Designed for family living. Sale priced at ouly $44,- 950. Call 847-6010 no'v to take advantage! BREAD 'N BUTTER · UNITS $64,950 e 4 &pamtc Houses on R-2 Lot : ~f{~~s~;;tr!~~ school . , ~ Can·y thc1nselves-f;ome spendable • Call 546-2313 · NEWPORT BEACH 11QO ""'pott ..... ~7171 '• . . .. \0edrltiday, Jauuary 2. 1974 OAILY PILOT 37 2 STORY! FOUNTAIN VALLEY UNDER $40,000 Hal'd lo n1alch this tl'rritic value Jn a 1n·im(' ar~a. \\•Ith rrout & l'Cflr spl'inklt"rs. tlu~t· bl.>druoms - Lari,lt.> lot Qn end of cul-dt.•·sac. !'vlonicu.red yard private niasl.cr suitt'. Enter111iners Jiving room. Jfurry on this one. Ov.'ner lransfcr1'l'd. Tak!' ad- vantage. Call 842-2535. WATCH THE SUNSET OYER CAT AUNA OFF SEASON SPECIAL 4 BEDROOMS : POO!. Takl' ndl'atllag:('. ·our a 110UI 111 hntl.!<1111 l>l'icer;. Jn•,.: to beach. Quiet cul·di.:-..~ac only 2 yt.'ars youn);{. Custom lntcriol' kingsizl' bt•c!"ion1'\. Fan- t.Rsli,c JXIOI, lolally t·nc;lused for safvly. l'rii·l'd at $45,950. Excellent fina1u.;in g. Cull H42·25J:>. IF I COULD WOULD YOU? ----·-· ----·---·-~,----,.--... -. ·-· -- OnC' of lhe best vie"'s in Hal'bor Vi e\\' 1-lills. 'f'his 11'~ I COULD sho\1· you a lo\•ely 'I IM•droon1, 1% lovely hoine .sits oul un a point ovel'looking a . . . . g1-c1:11 bell and 1vlth a fo1·l'ver liiO dl'gree vlt.•1v Or bath hon1c, 11·1th lal'l::C' s\1·1n1m 1ng-pool 1>1'1ced at ocean and C&ta lina. Very sharp •I lx'Clrooni - . . . farriily room_ 3 bath, 3 car. garagt· _sparkling nnly $37,500 "'h1ch may bC" purchased \Vlth noth. f-1 & F .pool -Fii-c rin~ ~d many n1ore extras to 1 inK du"'" VA. \VOULD YOU call 817-GOIO toda)'! ma.k(' indoor-outdoor hv1nJ.: at \Ls lx>st. Call nmv • 673-8550. . Old Col'IJl\U <,lcl !\Jal'. dt_•lighlful '2 IJ<'d1·uon1 dPn hon1!'. Cl'lspy sharp nnd full of cha1·rn. Plus 2 ~'Cll'VOm unit ·over g11rag~. Soulh ur l!"'Y -\\'alk lo privatl' bay bc1u·h vie\\'. Fil'sl time adVC'I'· tised. $79.500. Call 646-7171. .__......._ ____ _ -ELE~ANT MEREDITH · GARDENS · Beau1iful "GAiieria fo.Iodcl." J\lajl'stic rormal liv. jng boasts IJroad slair\.,,·ay lo gallery. I:normous formal dining roon1. Separate family fun roon1 opens lo custom (JOO!. 4 sp,'\cious bed1·oon1s. Prf>S- tigc> neighborhood· close to schuols, 1.tark. tennis cou.rt.s and bc11.ch. Prlct'.'d to st.'11 fast -call 546- 2313. - _ _mESA_y_ERDE $35,950 SP1· this:.: bed1·001n hun1c liJt:atcd in Costa !\1 csa's l llJI 1·r·sidcnlial art'a. HC'dN.'.Vl'atl'd and N.'ady for thL' holid:iys. Call &Ui-7lil. ' • ATTENTIO.N ALL TY FOOTBALL WIDOWS This ho1ne has so rnuny places to hide your hus· band 1\•hile he \1•atchc» football that you could <'ntertarn and not know TV v.·as on. Nearly 3,000 sq. ft. of gracious living in this l'X<'ClltiV(' home. 4 lx'droorns. 3 baths. Fornial dining. Bonus roon1. :; car garage. \Vo\1'! Coll no"·! 847-GOIO. AUTUMN LEAVES · Float Ul'f'I' rhi,. t·irtular entry. Ooubll' duo1·~. Till' entr). Ent(•l'tain('rs lhiu:: 1·oon1. llai1'1·rl ht•arth fh'l'plar1'. EltJ(Jlll'nl bflnqU(•I roon\. Ci<111t kitchen. Nt'\I' giont f'ree·forrn p1111I. El<'1·1r·tn1it· lighting tliruuJ:h\lllt. 4'iume this VA ].,an llO\I'! Call s.i2.2s3."J. . HUGE YARD • ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN !\'ctd Sl)acl'~ lncrcdilJly large' yard! Add \o the abov1•: a vt'l'Y -neut-· alldclean ,1 Ge<lro1;1~1/iornc siluatcd un n quiet cul-dt•-sac in a lovely n<'lJ.:h- borhood. Availabk· for posscssio"n in January 19i.i and prit·Pd to sell quickly at S37.500. N1~ n1orct info? Please phone 5!16-Z313--1iut better hurry! ' -··-·'···-··· .. - ·VERY RARE MOi...TEG(fMOD~C- 111 Ha1·bor Vielv Hon1es. Only OllC' of these for . ;;ale. r\ re1t l s har11 .i beilruunl h•1U~C'. Drama1iC tile entry. Living roon1 1111d formal dining i-00111 cru-i:1c1C'd \\'ilh new gold catl>eling-. Big family room \\'ith shutterC'd ~vindoy.·s. Drcan1 kitchen. 0.vncr 1no1•ing to Ohio this n1onth. Price re-· dti.ced -call to see -673-8550. WHAT DO YOU THINK THIS HOUSE IS WORTH? . . It's 11·cJI luco.tt-d. Has 4 large. Ucdroon1s and 3 bathi;. Super y.·et bar in family rooin. Cozy kitcht>n. Frinnal dining. LAHGE in·eg-ular lot and only 1 year ne11-. Thf' low a sking p1ice "·ill sur- prise you. Call no1\·! 8-17-6010. , CORONA · DEL MAR SELECTIONS BARGAIN IN THE BLUFFS Charming 4 bedr~~ll baths condo in pr!n1c Blu ff location. Low leasehold and la.'Ccs. Fr~shly painted, carpet yC'ar old \Vitti ne\I' firt'place. Vacsnt and just listed at S52.500. Call today 673-8550. . WHY NOT LIVE A LITTLE? Jn this exl'Cutivc n1ansion. ™pie car garag-r. .Altno!>t :«>00• of-SJJflcious living. Arched Span- ish enlry. I-luge formal living t'001n. Fol'lnay ,iihlng. Ciunt fiesta room. Exbcllcnl area. Take odv~tagc. Cn11 847;s{)L0 now. RELAX ON TERRACE A most unusual four bt.>droom ho111c in Corona del ~1ar. Oversized pool for family 1•11joyn1cnt, lovely lnrgc trees. 2 patios, son1e liny vit'\I'. corner fireplace in family roon1 and additional fireplace in spacious living roo1n. Priced at ·$89.~lvith exccll('nt lerms. 673-8550. NEW DUPLEX OLD CORONA· REDUCED $4,000 Grca1 floor 11lan -3 bearoo1n lower unit.+ 2 bi•d1·oom upj)(•r unlL South or highwuy in Corona dcl J\:lar. Near beach. school Rnd JXl.rk. Cn11~ted and dra1x.>d. No"' the lo11·est pricf'd nCl\' duplex in to\,'11. E.'ccUent Investment. HUNTINGTON BEACH CUSTOM BUILT CORONA DEL MAR No o1hl'r ho111e like it. Extra fl.'atures ga- lo1·l•. Iiu.1.:c living roum \vilh oeean vie\\'. Dreani kitchen. Huge family room v.·ith separate sewing roorn. Cozy study 11·ith built-in desks and dark room. Four tx.'<1- r oom)'. Oversized garage. Sto1·agl.' for boat. Call 673-8550. • CORONA DEL MAR PRIVATE BEACH • $5B,950 Unbclle\'ablc amongst sBo-100,ooO pl'vpertiei;. Just bloCks f1'Qm PRIVATE BEACH. Qui1•1 t1·l'I! lined street. 1.ivh1g roon1 1\•ith shutte1·~ nnd cr11ckllng n rcplacc. Spacious oo.k paneled · f11.ntil)• roonl 11•ith fireJjlnC'e. 3 l>t.'<lro0n11' -i baths. ExpandablC" yard -cell 673-8550. COSTA ~SA l1'0 ...... llYd. -, 546-2111 ·17931 · ..... io Blvd. • 14;r:zn5 . ,U.6767 21010 -~ ... , 6014 Warner Ave. 847 .. 810~ CORONA DEL ~IAR ll2 ...... .,;, • • 673;'550 ' . I -, . ' ~· < . . • r BAYCREST $59,500 - ' Large Jh lfli;: !'0(11u. tonnnl dining. Large kit<:hl-'11 11.1ld fn1nily roo1n, ncu• carpels and l'lilint. ·I bedrooms plus rumpus 1·oom. Ea.~y c.i.rc yard. rotJtn !or J>val. fv1· n. rare value call 6·16-7171 THROW . AWAY . YOUR PAPER! THIS IS IT! . lier~·~ a honry of a house! 2 bedroo1ns, 1 l>;1lh. So clean it squt'flki>. Great for your fir:.t ho111t·! :l 1·ur gan1gc lvith drlvt'-thru lioa1 i;tttL'. Oul.1' S23,300. Call llO\V! 847-60ffi. SUBURBIA PARK 5 BR $54 .900 . OWNER TRANSFERRED You'll Sl'<' th<' vailJC instantly~! Very at· 11•n1·t1 v•• tu•ighhorhnud ,,f fine hon1 es -d(·H~ht fully la11dscaped -ideally situated clns•· 1u f'liH'k. !Pnnis courts, and elemen- lary s1·huol. f'an1ily hon1e features family nM.•TTI, l',,rrnnl dinin~ roo111, 2~ baths and hed!'oun1:> gnlol'l'. Call 5·16-2313 !or appoint- n11:n1 -IJut quickly. REPOSSESSED $75'0 DOWN Just 1"o..'l~•s.sl's.sed~ S750 TOTAL 00\VN · + clo~ing. ;\'ey.· paint out & in. Lllri.;-e Ji1·ina: 1"00nt. ChflC'ry kitchen. DINING ALCOVE. Utility roum. \Vcll plann('d bedroon1s. Lots nf;""QOm for·trai!l'r parkin~: TfYrn:L-PRlCE- :S:l:.1,POO! Take lld\'Unlage! 963-ll767. $750 DOWN BEACH 4 BED~OOMS $750 TOTAL DO\VN! ~~ to beuch. 4 large bcdrooins. Brick lined \1•alk. Beautiful plHnte1·s. Big ki1 che11 \Vith bay \l'indo,v. Large llvinR roo1n \1·ith V1\ULTED CE1L- INGS. NE\V PAINT, lN & OUT. $750 total dOll'll ! ~2:15.00 1110111 h. $25,250 TOT AL PRICE! I-furry 9G3·6767. Ir HUGE YARD ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN Add to th" nbovc: a' l'<'l'Y neat and clean -I bedruon1 hun11' situa'tecl on a quiet cul- de6S!lC in a lovely neighborhood. Available for possession in January 1974 and Priced to s('ll 11uickly nl $37.500. Nt'Cd more info? Please · phone 5:16-2313 but lx:ltcr hurry! NEWPORT HEIGHTS VICINITY 3 1Jo..>d.roon1s, large patio aud boat storage. t\l'I\' paint and (•fU'pCt -lmniediate poa--;. :>elision. $37,950. Call 646-7171. PINE TREES & BEAMED CEILINGS and only 1 ~!a blocks to thC' surf. One block lo a huge pool. l'l'Cl'eation roon1. Qne of the n1ost upgraded 3 bed1·oun1 ho1nes in Ne,vport Shores. Just listed at S-iS,500. To· .see is to appreciate. Call 646·7171. 5 BEDRGOM • 3112 BATH $29,750! JOG TO BEACH UnbelievalJlc but lrue! Prim(' beach area location. Family sized bcdroonis. Separate · J\lother-in-La1v·s quarters. Secluded vege- table garden. LO\V-LO\V DO\VN PAY- :l\1ENT. Take advantage. Call nowt 842-2535. 1 STORY CONDO $26,900 ln1~aculat(' 3 Br condomlnlum \1 ilh gour- n1et kitchen IJriva.te t'nclosed patio. 2 car 'garage. R<'d tile roof, co1nmunity pool, trailer or boat 9torag('. Assume 1''F-1A Joan $184 ~r rlJO. includes principal. inlerest, taxes and hu;urance. Call 546-2313. 1 STORY CONDO $26,900 Immaculate :\ br. condominium uith gour- met kitchrn. pri\ate enclosed patio. 2 car garage. Hld lilc roof, community pool, trailef µarlciui; space. Assume FtlA loan $184 per nio. includes princlpol, Interest, taxes and insurunce. Call 546-2313. ~ CANYON ]JEW AND CUL-DE-SAC STREET Quiet Costn i\1esa neighborhood too! A g_rcat :\ bl•dro(Jnl home ne1vly pn'\nted j,n .I' side and out. All for only $1.370.00 dO\~ll. F\tr inronnation, call 646-7171. WES'!'.CLIFF $39,950 It':. near llbrtu·y, tennis oourts & \Vestcliff i;hopµing. '}. bt..>droo1ns, lnL·gc 1~1nelcd Oen, Brighi klfchen, laUJ1dry 1-00111. Bolll g:a tcs gahHi>. But lt's in Cbsla i'\1c!.a. Cull 6·16-7171. INVES1'~1ENTS ¥662 Ma<Arlhur Blvd., Suite 1 Ol • lnloe 83l..Jl05 ; ' • , •• ·~- • ' 38 DAILY PILOT MIXED SINGLES, by Wm. F. Brown and Mel C05son IJOaJ ! f lilJ<$ A IQf OF i%61NNIN6 SK1~~5 MUST USt fH15 lRAIL ! TUMBLEWL!!1D · 11\1.L ASLEEP ON LOOl'DUT i:>OTY ONE MORE 1lME1 FELLA! AND l'LL Fl!EP '«KJ1l>1lll!Alt1Sl D G? ~ElTGI'. KEEP THOSE ME'Y MJWNS WIDE WIPE Of'l!H! NOW, E'ACK 10 YOUF'-POST! HAPPY NEW YEAR! ---IT'LL TAKE UG ONLY TeN MINUTES FIGMENTS ! ' I . •L ·NANCY NANCY PL EASE STOP -..__SLURPING YOUR MILK SHAKE --" I CAN'T STAND THAT AWFUL S.OUND TODAY'S CBDSSWDBD PUZZLI ACROSS 1 y"""" children 8 LOIAt'l'llelee problem 10 Tenle 14 Knoek.d for 15 Worry 115 Leeve one'• bod 17 Ao.rt 18 Certain 9Kllml: 2 w'"'• 20 Egyptlen eotlon 21 ····1Jld crat11 23 Spartan 1ef1 24 Ont1rio end Mlehlg1n 26 Insects 28 S111ehed blindly 30 KlnCI ot look 31 Mtu ourl or 'M.lekenz<e 12 Wlnd·biown su spray 36 Berlenele• s nece11r..ty 37 "Rah'I Of 38 Recent lo"" •Preli.t 39 C1u1mg de1tru c1.on I 2 ' " 11 20 \~•. ,, 21 " " l6 . ' "' . .. " " •• . ~ " . N N -· "2 BIJl"dMecl 44 Bak".,y . prodUct .. 5 Oe11rv11 .t6 Spa1 •9 Klod or boom &> 8111ilhrntnl Yulerday'I P~ Solwed: S C A I\ 51 Dispatch ".j!H'/,j.j,. 52 Chu rch ~•sael " 1!5 Unotfict1t poll: 2 worO. 58 Go In 60 W1111 1!tow1nce 61 Ory 62 Come home to 63 Rational 64 Conservallve, in Canada 65 Wander ebout DOWN 1 Fann aoi.~ds 2 ···-breve 2 2 !Ima 3 Avid 1eado· ::! 4 T1r--e :-~··ci :;iP01 f ~,.;:i " G·Plt I:!• 'A 1 n~tove'!. 7 P!arat • R !.\au1hs An; I • I' • I " " -· " l2 " )!. " , .• ' ' . -' . . "' " .. . •• • ~" 5( I'(. " ~l" 1 E " E II 0 N A A R ' ' 0 ll'-l>l,~., E R E D ·r1 Kind or lilbt!e 12 JOM J. ··-·· 13 Prevails over 19 A b1se 22 Color 25 Forest animal 26 Cause slla1p oam 27 Piece of glass 28 Golter·s hrst con<: em ?9 Cer1111 grass ..,0 Part o!tne body :.:.2 Leg parts 33 Meler 34 Length units 35 We1gh1 umcs 37 Photograph ·\O Seo1ra11 !tom others • 'I" ~ 16 " .,. ,._, lJ ' . 41 Fastener 42 Benks, e.g. 43 Jackle'a husband 45 C111lendll 1bbr. 46 Musical 1ymt10l1 47 AUematlve worlcer 48 Enticing female 49 SQUalld 51 Move arouncf. 53 Kind ol hltl 54 Boheml1n 56 Contl l!W 57 Goldin Toledo 59 Neg11Uve word ' II ,,, " &> " 21 ,. M -~ ., ' .. .. H " 1::" " . 525.JU "I:·-·--.. " TO GET HOME OKAY, OKAY ••• ,. PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER Ae&EY, I 'M GOING TO TALK TO 'l'OU AS '!'OUR ATTORNEY! MISS PEACH 1'MIY'ltl SlillVIN6 ,ATT~~ FOOOS .-.MIN ! l GAN'T AFFOICO ALL Tl-iO~ CALOl'llS ! DICK TRACY ' ® T.L.JONES MJJ. NolCT [)()(;TO~ 25 Milo$ 'NIGHT! by Dale Hale · by Ernie Bushmiller ' ......... ·-···--~ ...... ,_,_,_ .... • • • !F THE WORLD COM~S TO AN E1\l.D1 WHAT 6000 Will. IT DO TO HAVE A SACK OVER '<OVR HEAD ? fOOl"f ! ,.I-if -SAIA'-~ ON Ti-i lS MfAT I~ FATTIN1N•. T~ll.l ,.~K . "ND TMiY PIA,. lllATTlll O"N ,.HJ .-.~PAll'A61A~. . ~-------,,. , ------- • DOOLEY'S WORLD Dr. SMOCK GORDO MOON-MUltlNS------···-·· ···--· · by Roger lraclfleld by George Lemont l'tm~~cm: ~-'~ ~ ~ .& "7,' .:tPitL ~~---"'T" , by Gus Arriola -· ·· ··----···----··-by-Ferd JohnsO!(" ,-..,..,,..--~=="°"' HOW MUCH t>o YO!.I Wf>.NT? ANIMAL CRACKERS .. .'5TA<; Tl)JED FOR EXERCISES \IJllH JOCK LA LAME •. • i ~ •• i ! 11 •! ~ ... ·by Charles M. Schulz '"'·"'"-""'· .. ~ .. ·"'-=----~ ·-·---~ I HATE GUESnc:l'S LtKE THAT! ; G l"'---1; \---1 ' / by Harold Le Doux ... 1·2 \T ISN 'T IF IT HAS AN'l'TH!NG lO 00 SOMETHING WITH SLA.DE'5 GETTING I CAN INTO OE6T WITH A KNOWN DISCUSS! -,,. RACKETEER ... HE NO 1#000, NO 6000. 1.00K AT TMIS PIAPDIN6. JT'~ IN~TANT FAT 1 TO Mf. IA6LY POIAN051 INGHlj.WGoM!! t 'All'f f;AT THIS 'STUFF .1! TOLD ME ALL A&OUT IT! by Mell PIOPl.f aN DltTS SHOIALON'T IJI ALLOWIO ,.0 MINiliLI ~O"ALLY ... by Chester Gould GRANDMA! I by Ro9er Bollen THE GIRLS "I gave Herb a merchandise order foi chrlstmn! and we'n shopping round for sometblilg for· him." . • • DENNIS THE MENACE • • ~ --- . . • ••• • -. .. DAILY PILOT T11Uday, January 1974 . . • ' • . .. Wtdntsday, J.tn11atyo_;2':_1_q_74 ______ P_;ILOT -ADVERTISE-9 Tho Blcc11t Morbtpioce on thl 0.qo Cout DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS -~-!neral Gen•raf •• ·-·-l General G•neral General CORBIN · MARTIN REALTORS i:. ~ ~ lt ,Wantflnd Adlt, ( 642 •5678 J One Call Service a Fast Cntdlt Approval ! We Wdli :lo .Aff .A .JJap;'J new '/jea1· * Balboa Bay LIDO SANOS Deluxe condit ion. 3 B.R., 2· ba . $57,500. Prope~es * I Buy, Lease, Optlo~ _ Best Newport Hts. loc . lmmed. occupa.ncy. 3 HR, lg: den, forrn . AND A$$DCIAllS REALTORS DELUXE DUPLEX Corner lot. 2 Bdrm., bean1ed ceiling. Cozy fireplace. Remodeled 1 bedrm. rear u1tit. Expandable. NEW. New, new!! Onl y $74,500 A listing ol Glen O'Bryan. · CALL 644-7270 . 2828 E. Coast Highway, Coron.i del Ma r WE CAN HELP YOU IUY, l!LL, 0111 TRADE A HOME ANY,LACE tN THE NATION· 1 STORY CONDO $26,900 . MACNAB IRV-INE -~-~--~•·-:::;::::::;;:;:::::=::-= ARCHITECT'S HOME· 3 BR'S. DR., FR & spacious landscaped yard. Sharp! Central location in Coll ege Park. $43,900. Helen Wood 644-6200. (A24) . HAPPY NEW YEAAI ... and it will be in this lush,"2-story, 3 BR + bonus pool room borne located on th~ park. A hurry on! $84,500. Lois Miller 642-8235 ( A26) LOCATION IS EVERYTHING Spectacular view -lights, bay & hillsides. 4 BR's, DR -in exclusive Dove r Sho res Area. Access ·to private beach. $120,000. Beverly Morphy 642-8235. (A38 ) • 'I' [Irvine I Moc•1b·I;,, .. ""11,c.mp•nr I IOI Dover Dflve 142·1235 JM4 MacArtmu' 144·1200 Nawporl leech, C.llfoml• 12113 Want to l•t KID of •o••tltinf fastr For Oassified Ad ACTION Call A Deity Pilot Ad·vitof' 642-5671 BIG FAMILY SPECIAL noori.1 FOR ALL -5 hit btdroo1n1. 11v~11d1.t.>d fa1nlly roon1 w/frplc .. full bltin kit· chet1 w/tutlll,I( l'l.n?~, 1.><'<iu· ~o .#:.. HERITAGE . • REALTORS -.--.-----UN I~~ see thb hornl! bt>fo1-e iUI too late. l..ight, brlio:hl 3 Br's. & den, qulete!ll plat~ since don't knov.· when. PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- ' ·642·5200 1 ~ 1 PERFECT CONO. 3 BR., 2 ba. home on Point. Clo~ to ocean. J\1uny ex- tras. Bring offers! $79,flOO Call: 673-366.1 6JJ...6688 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS lllJS W Balboa 6JJ-l66J Our desire -to match good people to good property and a house thal ,is a home. CORBIN-MARTIN Realtors 644-7662 HARBOR VIEW HOLDOUTS BAY AVE . R·2 Lot 30x90. 675-7060. DUPLEX Newport Shore1 F'ee sin1ple. Xlnt rent· al. O .n 1 y $59)000. din rm., !tplc. $45,500. ti42-749J. MESA VERDE Country Club ;G;";";';'';l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;G;e;n;e;r•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I • 61:;.7420 llth Creon Is right at ·your back door. 3 BR . 3 ba. home w/pool. 3 C ar gar. $79,500. 556-8800 CUTE MONACO Cute a.s a bug! Thnt 'ii; lhl' only way lo descrlhe lhls neat Two Bedroom home. ll has 8 dc.n with built-in sheJv. ing, formal dining l'091n, lush landscaping and is dt.'· lightiully dt'(-oruted. It's the bes! J.1onaco on the nuu·ket. $69.500. ESTATE REAL TY I 303 AVOCADO DR. NEWPORT CENTER 640·1 120 Newport Heigh.ts Immaculate, large 2 bcd1111., 1 bath home. Ovcrsil.ed liv· ing . 1oon1 \Vilh fireplriec. 'billing urra. Large p<ilio for entcr!ainin~. P rofession· ally dec.-orated. Ne\v cpts & Ur1Js. Obie gar on 111lcy. CALL ANYTIME W..3928 or Eve~64S.2986 A CARMEL-The popul ar 3 bedroom model.J just comj)leted and ready tor sale at si x 111onths ago prices. 168' dee p lot, 1,659 sq . rt. and an under $60 .000 sales price. A PALERMO -The 4 bedroom. 3 bulb. 2 story model thaL is close to proposed swim and tennis club. 2.259 sq. ft. and a $74,500 sales price. Maybe less'? - UNIQUE HOMES Realto" 675°6000 Harbor View Hills 2443 E, Coast Hwy. Corona def Mar· l'ilK'Ctacular vie w ho1ne -on lhc: s:anyon . ove.tiooking lhl"l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!'""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'J oc"Can. 3 Bdr1ns., ramily 1111.1 .G;;;en;;e;r;;•;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;e;ne;;r;•;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;; I & formal dining rm .. · 1• Co1npletc "Kh htd. & fil!c>red pool. Ov.•nc1· trans. 1S7,;oo. BLUFFS CONDO Llkt> uc\v. 1'011ular "Dolores" plan: 1novc·in cond. Vacant. quick poss{'sS. 3 Hdnns., 2 1~.: 1.Jflths · Vl?l'Y Shlll'JJ • shows I ikc ·a n1odel. $64,900. LIDO waterfront. 3 J3drm. & lge: ra1nily rm .• or 5 bdrms., \vith. 6 baths. Lido Nord. Spec- tacular vie\v! \Vaterfront living rm. \Vith step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000. * * * * WATERFRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD 30'xl05'. Magnificent View ! $165.000 REALTORS 4 Local Offices to Serve You General Gener at ONE STORY MODELS-THE BLUFFS Beaut. greenbelt~ many extras. Brand New End unit. 3 BR, DR ··LJnda" model. $74,950 LJeaut. 3 bdrn1, F'ft "Paula" model. $74,950 ( 'orner :3 bdrm. DR "Linda" model. $781500 iOi l I ISTA UMBROSA . DAILY 1·5 WESLEY N. TAYLOR .GO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Rd. · NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 PLEASE CALL 675-3000 · BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR General 'Gener'al 1 ~:..;;..c..;..._ __ _ fB HA\" & llE.lCll 341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. _....jJ,6-6161 General t!eneral "NEW YEAR'S SPECIALS" PENIN POINT'S BEST! GREAT 5 BEDROOM l lOMJ-: on Seville. !fas eve1')'hting! lncl ucling blllinrd room, \vet lmr. !>eP.arute [an1ily 11n., niaid rm--::-On 1ruict strc.-et SAVE 1 Q0/0 ON near. ocean, bay & tennis MESA VERDE Lachenmyer SUBURBIA PARK 5 BR .. $54;900 .OWN.ER TRANSFERRED Br:in1l ne1\· 1hree bedrooni. two hath hi lltop hon1e v.•ilh Ol·ean \·ic11· (ron1 Cron! IHltl ha1·k nnd n1il{"S arn:t n1ilt.'5 of 1.ri'Ct!n hills. 81.,',r finan< .. i11g:. Only S•IG,500. Realtor c1"•· 1119.:.xJ. BEACH UNITS CALL s.ID-ll51 Open Eves. ESTATE t.i:t,, "l."ou'll ~ff' lh!' \~<;1.Juc ins1anl· ':!;~:J .. ltftl 1'cii :t ly~ ~ V1.·1')' aiu·acth·c neigh· . h... b()l'hOOI of fine hOllil'S -d(" "l:=:i=:i:::::O:::i:::::=::::::::: I NC\vport Beach duplex, one ii ---------On a lar~c irregular shaped 4 bedroo~1 ~~ll one 2 bed- ---;~ COATS I lot in n shfll'p ··prit.l~f· l"OOJlt _unlt_ .2 b~k fron1 ~'Y,,,. HERITAGE ..• REALTORS .. *-.. hg:htrully tandS1.·,1[)('(f & O\\JlCJ';;hip" low lraffic ram-Ocell!1 front. Just redU('ed ily neighborhood, a bcnuli-to S7a,000._!!_urry! ! Call Col-* 15 UNITS * WA~LACE 'fully maintained 3 BR \vell 646-()555. 1 nnd 2 Bdrn1s. Unfurn.1· REALTORS "Pacesellel'" home 1vilh WANT TO , ..iilfill.Jy__ .situat~ diisP to park, tennis courts, a1ur ~·IL•· 1nent11ry school. 1''11n1ily home fe1ttw-es faintly 1"00n1. fo11nal dining 1"0001, ~1 ~ haths anrl brdroon1s galnn•. Call 516-23\'.{ for apJJo.Jinl· ml'nt -bu! 11uickly. All tenns u\'~il:.blt> on thi..s sparkling four l>ctlroo111 thfN' b..1th Mission Viep .honl(> only 11 :1 years oil]. Asking $49, 7JO. . S1m1·ious four bcdroon1 21.!; bath fumily oriented hon1e in L"entcr of Irvine Ranch. \\'itll tcnnis ··ou1·t.-;, pool and pai·ks ne11rb~·. Assun1able 7'~';. loan ...... orrered al ~~.750. • Bl tns. Carports. Near i;hop. -546--4141-dining area, added 14 x 20 REMODEL ping. Loan avnil. $175,000. . (Op E • l in.'iulatcd faniily 1·00111, scp----GEM-~ venings arnh• c:hildrens play yard This 3 bedt'OOnl, 2 bath, 111·0 IRVINE TERR. #4 · A hlend of Califo111ia & Spanish Kancho . 111-oui:::ht iron gates & S1>anlsh tilC' in !20-F 1\1'lin Am. N.B. -$1,.000 DOWN REALTORS 61\2-4623 a nd large patio PLUS lots or story honoe siluated on reur ''xtra space ror a pool, Uoat of lot in c·hoiee location or i>IOl'lli(C OJ' "''h<ttCvcr. Ne1vport l-leights has lots of lrarric areas, pl'Ol'i1tc ll [:IS· OPEN TIL 9 . IT'S FUN ro Bt. NICE• cinntlng ll.lrnosph(.'.n.• in lhit< ,..,-.:' THE REAL ESTATERS -Just Say 'Charge It' WHEN PLACING A WANT AD IN THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT JUST· DIAL 642-5678 Newl)f painted thruout,-th.is 3 bedroorn, 2 ba1h with dou· hie car giu·a~e for only S26.f'>OO requirf'd being srcn NO\V! ! 646-77ll Opt>n eves. Onl y $·16,950 l'OOOl to expand . .Just Hs!ell CALL 644.7211 at S3R,500. Call Colwell like new home. 1'hel'e are 1 , 3 lge. bdrms., forn1nl din· '.' 111 l31·:i nd Ill'.'\\' hro hcdroon1, t1'0 liuth "Old Corona" IO\'illc house. Brau!.iful \vooded ,-;1•0in~. \\'alk to )Jcaeh. Be· Ji}.,1· 1he prt1,.'f" of ow· "DING- BATS" a t $62,500. THE REAL ESTATERS COUNTRY LIVING 64(i.-0;)5.j, Walker &Lee ing rni., den ,"(. 'vet bar. ,_ ~ Approx. 3,000 sq. ft. of living I:':::::;::;::;":~~=== ,Sp';lce. All this l~LUS 110 ex· -4 BEDROOM citing panoramic vll:'\v of 1~•h U>e bay & "'"""· $1 850 DOWN Sl49,500. I • • PLEASE CALL 675-3000 . Spacious family hon1e l\'ith brand new W/1v carpeting & drapes throughout. Nev.ly 11ainll'C! and shines and s11arkles. Prin1c Costa l\1esa area on quie1, dead end 1 Nc\\'t>Ort's best bayrront buv. ~parklin~. like ne\v thre('j' lx'rlroom, 21 ~ h11!h to\vn· hou!'le. L.11~e privute slip .. Below n1arket at $77,500.J Call 675-7:..'25. fB DA\" & 111:.lfll street. 646-m 1 -Open ever;. 1 ~...-::;,, BEACH GIANT 5 + DEN $25,950 Spacious greenlx>hs, bicyclc1 _.:::==::;';";';:':;:';";:;'::;';=='....I ll'ails, tennis cts. & sY"im-!· m;ng ,..1 "'"'•Y DELUXE B.Al\IBLING RANCH ncsll l'rl ·near sandy beach. 5 Bed· t'OOn1s; step do\vn den. f'or- n1al dining. Pa11y roon1. Ilea! count.Iy kitchen. /_..tu'J:('. J;rounds. Ente11ainers pa1io. '. l~ffi'TER f!URRY! Callj Bkr. 645-0303. _ r-* 4 Bedroo1n home (huge master BRl + family room + den, 3 baths, many t!X· tras. Quiet street. $55, T;i(I. Roy Mccardle Realtor ll:lD Newport BIVd., C.J.1. beautiful, large 5 bdrm., 3 MESA VERDE bath<: l•mily ""'· w, !i·plc .. forn1al dining rm. & Enjoy the cozy con1fo11 and : "'"'!S!!O'!"'M~E~T~H~l'"N'"G~""lyou can with this home! It SEA FEYER spacioU$ living rm. v.'/lrplc. security of )"Our o\vn home has been custom dc>rora1ed One year old. Fee land, this winter. J.todel home SPECIAL' lik Id Span'sh '-1' · Spiral staircase lo -----cfeckli: below. Sea faring charm. This abandoned ship in Newport Heights needs a Captain and a crew. Just a few pieces of eight gets· you on boarti. Don't delciy -she ~sail B\Vay! ! &1~m1 -Open eves. 54'-7n9 in Ne"''J>Ol1 Beach. $81.500. condition, co mp I et e I y • 4: ':r 0 Jot. Fe~·tures~1~~ Owner will consider lease redecorated. 4 s p acio u s Is this exeeptional 3 BR 2 BA 14 fish pond, 2 fountains, 25x \vith option lo purchase. bedrooms and a huge fan1 Uy lla1·bor View Hon1es Carmel 13 heated pool, 3 patios, "Weed If & Reap.. C. f . Colesworthy ??Om. A n1assive brick Pinn, with beautifully de-grape arbor, 2 story, 3 Bd, From treasures to trash !u-epla~c enhancei; the Uv· veloped lront !Uld rear yards 2 Ba, den, fil'ep!Rce, 2 BBQ's Turn them into ca.sh Realtors 640-0020 ing roon1. l\Iust see to featuring literally tons of + gas BL J\·lust see to bc- CAt:.L D.iily Pilot believe ONLY $42.400. mason1)'. open beam -palio lieve!-Near Lake-Forest! General Call Red ·Carpet. Realtors L'Overs and sun decks. It's Call Realtor for appt. General 546-8640 or 645.8080. · on U1e greenbelt. A stone's 645-6646. li~~~ijiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil=PPEOR~F~E~C~Tf!FOOiRit :~~ """' c1"•"'"" and .:.N:::,R;o.~s::.,o~. ~c~s=T~P~L~A~ZA~'-Walker &Lee (j FAMILY Well priced 11t $71,500. Fee. <I Bdrm~ 2 bath, frplc, for· CALL 644 7211 mat tlm nn, b'k!" nn. 111 .. l •• ,.,. JUST REDUCED MACNAB IRVIN·E CUSTOM HOME -I YR. OLD Spacious 3BR family bome w/lg. FR, form! DR, & brklst area. Newly carpeted & drap- ed. Harbor High)ii:hpo!. $69,500. Beverly Morphy 642-8235. {!\'§) EXECUTIVE ESTATE Large 3400 sq. ll. home on huge lot in Bay. crest. 4 roomy BR's, triple garage & pres- tige cul.de-sac locatton. $114,900, incl land. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (A46) BLUFFS MOST EL!iJ;ANT Super up graded 3 BR, 3 bath cond ominium fo r sale or lease. 89,500. Barbara Gothard 642-8235 . (A47) SHORECLIFFS Custom. o'vner·designed redwood & glass home. f\ilaster suite w /sitting room -& fire- place -children's wing designed around playroom. Private beach $175,000. Beverly .Morphy 642-8235. (A48) HURRY ON THIS ONE Charp 3 BR, 21'.i bath + den. Large heated & filtered pool -in Harbor Highlands - immediate occupancy. $57 ,500. Bill Burt 644-6200. (A20) • HARBOR VIEW CARMEL ~ block from elementary sch<>ol -darling 3 BR home -decorator touches w /waJf. . paper & drapes, Large brick patio. $65,000 mcl. land. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (/\35) • Irvine IOI Dowr Drive 142·12:15 1144 rM1cArthur 144·1200 Newpotl leech, Cellfornl1 12111 • ·- No other home like it in • country kit + t am 11n, µrilf Corona dcl l\.1ar. Custo1n landscaped. · $1 800 · ' built \\'ith extra features .. • 4 ?\to new Only S.'i5,T:i0. I • • galore. Huge living room S , e 969 Dahlia, CostR i\lcsa OwncJ'S arc Rltxiot1s? Charn1 with ocean view. Dream ~~ • South of SunU01\'er ing J::aslsi!lc 2 bt>droono L'Ot·\ kitchen. Extra Jarg~ fun1ily ~ • East of Fairviev.• tagc. Extrenicly l:u'ge yardi; rooni v.·ith separate sewing ----~ _ 646-3928 or Eve. MS-2986 -.1·itl1 lnnds uf fruit bearin~[ room. Cozy study with buill· '" I TiKE ... AR-RO-WH-£AD...., lrel's. C~ to shopping ll!lcll in desks and dark room. UU bu" S("l'\o'Lcc. ONLY $28,950. Four bedrooms. Oversized -Call Red Carpet Realto!"-- garage. Storage for boat. Great for year round living &i~SO or :.4G-8640. Call 673-8550. & close lo the village. 3 * LANOr,\ARK * OPENTIL g • rr'S FUH ro BE NICE! yr old Bavarian slyle 3 level l ===::::~cr=;'='=='= A 1 & 2·!i'ly. t.'Otnn1erc. bid;;. i 1 , ! =e 1~~~i113 hj,~m 2 ~~ TIMI FOR , i1o175Th000e.canne1'Y Village area + I I ',. FOB ACTIO" N .. comp ;•• y ""'"'"" ba"' " . , , , menc '"' pl~ynn "' '~P· CLA. SSIFIED ADS LIDO REALTY Lndry f1tc1ltties. $36,500. ! ............................... I m:n. 451-38'~ alt" Gpm "' 642 5678 NEEDED 1tnvtim!._ Y..!!_ke~ . .l.... _ • ii'"\,, 1 .. 1 .. \II *673-7300* """'------G;;-en-e-ra'°'l-----1 General Career minded salesmen and 1 -;;;;;';';"~;;~~~~·1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.! sales\\o'Omen to sell Ol'ange BUILDERS ATTN. County prope1ty. MANAGEMENT FUTURE ... Experience not nl'Cessary. Good altitude is. &n<l rei;ume 10: Retail Depart· nient, P. 0 . Box 4571, An1t· heim 92803. 4 Bdrms & Den-$36,SDO associated BROKERS -REAL TORS 7025 W 8albaa 67l·lt.tl No down G.I.! spaciou11 -- hOmc wUh family 1m, COLLEGE PARK fireplace. Dining r n1' DIRTY BARGAIN ltitcheo bwlt in.. Fo""" ai' heat. Shuke roof. spr inklers. 3 and n .ten or 4 ~droo1ns, Ideal for the large family! 2 1Ucd l.iaths. 2 brick 'Call ~1720 tireplact.'5. Could ewitjly be TARBELL, Realtors tlw 11iet>!<ct. houS(' on the W ATERFRONT ''""'· Vnc>nl. oot of "" ,., ov.•ncr ll('('<ls quick sale,. $220,000 ' HUl'I')' this unc \\'on"t lastl Ciill fl.I'd Carpet. Realtors TI1is spacious cu"tom family l •;•"•"'-"'..,.01~· ':S<i'i:...,..,;;r-.· __ hon1e otre:rs the epitonw ol • CASH gracious llvtng. BeautHul FOR YOUR HOME \1C\v of ttw? bay. Our cxclu· 11lve. appt. only 646-771 l _ Guarantttd to ttell in 30 doi) Open eves .-2().t3 \\'cMellf' or huy Yottr f'QUlty. Call tor l)r. fi'E!e appral11al. 962-2456 1ll~ge Re~I Estate WIOE OPEN .VIEW OF HARBOR BASIN -one of the,1nost spectacular views on Linda isle, 6 b~~rooms. 51h baths. family room, formal d1n00ft room. Pier and slip for large boat. $295. • BIG CANYON BUILDING SITE Gorgeous view lot overlooks 50 acres or· fairways and greens; Pel'fect for spacious, elegant ho1ne in Newport's exciting new community. $69.500: SUNNY DREAM HOME 3 bedroom'-2 baths, large light ki tchen. Like new condition. Fas~ escro\v. Only $54,900. 644-1766 :~. ColdweQ,B8nker ·~ 2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd., N.B. i -.:::W=a=,l=h!=e'="~="=Le=e::::. I! Ad•m•" M..,.,11,, 11B CLA~ SELLS -6-12·.li'Tll ~n~'''.:SS~S~E:L:1.s~-:_:&12~·~56~78'._I:~============== ?.---· ... :.. --=------- -. • • ' • -.-' I I 1J PILOT ·ADVERTISER G eneret Wedntsday, January 2, 1~)4 DAILY PILOT 166 G1n1r•I ;C;;;;os:t;•;;M;•;s;';;;;;;;;;;;;::;;C;o;•;t•;;Mt;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Huntington Bt1ch 2 Bdrm. + Pool •ch (, HIGH ON A PINE TRHS & IEAMED CEIUNGS VIEW·VIEW·Vl &W Harbor View, MW, t.tonteao 4 Br, fl.m rm. Pflme view, loc. $7T,900. GU Slmpaon, llroker. 55i-'7500. 1NT£RESnD? Have a Unique New Year 1974 U,_.IVUI: ti()Ml:i ON TQPOF THE REAi. ESTATE MARKET WITH TNE NICEST ,.EOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST MOUES CORONA DEL MAI. 675·8000 • ~URA VU0£. 546-69BO • '9E90AT 8EACl1, 859iOI • CAL\. US General IRVINE TERRACE -VIEW -$1 74,500 Fantastic vu of bay_. ocean & Catalina!, Cus· 101n quality Jge 3 BR home \'I /FR. formal dining, a baths, 3 frplcs &. beautiful pool. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CE~TER, N.B. 644-4910 General General \ e-linJa Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 70 Linda 1111 Drive Prime 45 ft. lagoon lot -$150,000 Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4-bdrm., 4111 .bath home on l agoon. Full); equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room, billiard room ........ $250,000 For Complete Information·· ... On All Homes & lots, Pleoso Coll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boysido Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 A CONVEHJOO SHOpPINC ANO Sf.WING CUJOE FOR THE _.j .. ~i::, .CAL ON THE CO. ~;(t~ ,, ) \ For 1n Id In Woman~s 'World Call Mary Both 642-5678, ext. 330 Sl!mming! Cj)uick to Crochet! 9166 SIZES 10Y,.20Y, ' 7 3 6 3 . 1.., ' I , . I bqfl<k'B,..£ ! In a Dash be ready to dash in fashionable capes! i.., 1lf ,.,.;-1lfc..1' ... INSf ANT CROCHET -use a big hook, cozy worsted. Go places together In matching ripp!e des I gn LUCI ''' YOU fi r 8 capes. Patttrn 7363: child's \ :i. nc ing . sizes 2-U misses' sizes 10-18 dres.'i as sllmmtng as thtct . 1 ded In Ume for that ln_iport7nt Ul~~VEiiTV-Jl'l'VI: cf.:NTS meeting or party you ve l~cn I ·for each pattern -add 25 =i~nr.ote veM.lcal flo'v c~its f?r each ·P<'l.'.lcl'n for Printed Pattern 9166: llalf Ai_r 1i-1a1l and. Spec~al 11an-s·· 101.2 12lh 141 ' 16~ dhng; otbenv1se th1rd-class 18~~s :1r11'' s· · 14i%' fb ~i delivery \1:ill take three 37) lak '2i% 1~ w.~ hus I weeks or more. Send to '' 'V!N'' • l'IVY .. ~ c"','.N;rs Alice Brooks, the DAILY ~ ,.. T • · "" -~ ·-PILOT, 105 Nredlecralt .for each paltem -add 25 Ilt'pL, Box i6J, Old Chelsea <:~nls for each pa_ttcm for Station, Nev.• Yo"'rk, N.Y. ~Jr ;\iall and. S(>t!Cl!d Hand-10011. Print Nanie. Addn11J1, ltng; otherNlSC lhlrci·class Zip 1'11.Uem Nwnber delivery wlll take three NEE o I:. ECRAFT • '72! "'·reks or more. Send to Crochet knit etc Free J\l<1ri11 n AfRrtin, t~ DAILY directions 50c' • PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., lniifant 'l't•~•nlf) Book. 232 \Ve-st 18th St., New Baste rancy knots ·pat• Y~rk .• N. Y 111111. P. r I ~ ! lt:l't\S.' Sl.00. ' NA~lE. ADDRESS \\•1th ln~t.11nt C.'roofl~t Book - ZIP. SIZE and STl'l.E Le.lm by pictures! Pal· NL"M.BER. terns $1 00 SE~ '-IORE Q u i c k eom'p1efe i.n11ta.nl Gift Book Fuluon..s and choose one _ more than 100 gtfll -pt1ltern tree from our Sl 00 Spring-Summer C&tAlog. All c),,.;plele Afghan Boo~ - size1! Only SOc. -. SliOO • INSTANT SEWING BOOK 16 .ilf!.r Rug Book!i ·· 50c. ,..~w today, wenr tomorrow. · l~k of u 11rt.r.e Ali:han11. SI. ""-LNSTANT FASHION ..ivi.:. BOOK _ llunclreds 0 f :'llt Book 1 -16 patterns. IRShk>a fact.a. Jl. Ttf~um Quilt Book I - nlt! futl'lt draw th the Wtst. OOc. -•• .a •Orally PUot Ou&Wtd Quilt~ ~w Todayla 1J\'I ..... Ad. &l)o&81'I. 15 beaullful patterns. 50c. · $24,495 ·. ·· HILL 2 Bdrm condo., desirable Stancbl tht& llPUkllng ron-ft'OWld level noor plan, l 'il te1npora.ry-.atyle h 0 me. yean new, Fl'elhly Painted Delailed exterior of \\'OOd, ':!t~l ~~a\: San Clement•· Four-plex in p>d COlta Melll area .. prl(.'ed rlabl at about S.5 timtt gtoll. -Alk· 1nC 18',llOO. NEWPORT HEIGHTS BUILDERS with tastefully p.lrlelcd aod llU(.'CO, AU. BLENDED n1lrron!d living room plush TOGE:ntER IN fAMED wallpapert'<I dlnloi ' area, LAGUNA RIVIERA SET· llhq carpets & custom TINC.·LOCATED ON DOU- dl'1tpet, 0\'l'l'lized pantry BLE LDT. WJ1'1l A SCENIC area., nea.r achoola. walking VJE\V OF 1'H!: OCEAN. dl.\ita.nce to H u n t 1 n a to o Unique 2 bdrm. Coot plan, Ccnlet· Swlmmlng pool and &ervk.'ed by l~ balha. nu111y ' pal'k areu. FOR Spacious, rnodemlstlc llv. SAi.£.: 13\' O\VNER. Asking r1n., has WOOD PANELED only U4,49S c111l , today WALLS, UL TRA CON· ~. recrea.Uon room and "Private tennis. One or tile moo llPKI"aded 3 bedroon1 hornet In Newport $horet. Just lllted at $48,500. To eee is: to apprtcl&te. Call 1 acre Ocean blu.U. Breath taking view + SDIJliah IU'le home A: &'Ue&l hoU I e • $1&9,Cn>. $mAll dwn OK. lifasntncent new duplex ln IAauna with •MtutJC lea· 1ure1: jiant room1, 11).J.U!ve balconJH fl.nd roof 14rden areu, and ou~ln;: ocean view. Motivated seller Uldnl lll6,500. t 4 consecutive-duplex lots .on a quiet heighls street. 200 ft. fronlage will accommodale 8 units. Don't wait tiJ nex t year. ~-' 646-nn. OIENnt. •. rrs FUN m BE NiCEI ( ..,... ...... GRUBB & ELLIS CO: Build whalevtr you want on • thll cholct Corona del Mar cotnmercial lot•· parking tor 1t~can and a·550'.I' tn1lld· inJi are development pos- 1lbllltle1. I REALTORS General BEACON BAY Lo\~Y 3 bedroom hon1e plus l Nxlroorn 8pW1ment . Jw;l ~!cps hwo piivate beach, do..·ks, lQUDis oow1 . Largt! (IUJ.lo rw~ lor ye1tr· ronod r.njoyml'l'M. De6\gned for a co.re.free Califorula lifc..t.'tyle. 0 ff ere d for ~.~.Coll Col"'t!ll 616-<6.'l."l CHOICE CORNER ·NEWPORT HEIGHTS Cozy 2 Uedroom home, ex- <~llt>nt l0<·Rtion, firepl at'(', shingle roof. newly paintt.'tl, nl'\v t."<>ppcr plumbing. Nl'\V on n111rkct $18,500. Cull Colwell 646-0Sf>.1. 67$-7080 General MOBILE HOME FOR SALE : SILVE RCREST MOB ILE HOME ro· x 53· 2 no 2 U•\, <·arp., dr&pe9, l)lt·lns., re.frig., washer & elec. d ryer, "'ired for 22D ;1ir l.'Otld,. kitch. clock, storage ~hed, land· scapcd patio. ·r111·ee 3'rs. old -like nu. Localed in nC\\• adult pk. 01,·ay from noisy St. One-half bl. fron1 club- house. Sl5,99S. Call EVES. 213-G!J.l-4G90. CAN BE SEEN AT: CRESTMONT ESTATES, 1oa1 Site 01· .• Brc:l. Centro! Ave. ac1-osi; fi.un1 lil'cu Cumin. 1-Iosp. I Lot JJ46. CONTACT RA\', Pl\. l\tGR. for sllO\\'ing. .Happy ~17-J-095. TEMPORARY SWEDISH F IREPLACE W /BLACK 5 DORM'S TUBULAR Sl'ACK. Loed• ol glass opens to Jae, 1W1 2 STORY ~-/A VIEW OF TRE Step-savel' kitchen ha• lm1nedlale possession BILT-IN RANGE Ir: available 011 this eleis.nt OVEN, GARB. DlSP., home just redeooni.ted. A ETC. This custom built beautllul Huntington Beach home hu rich w I w area. Indoor BBQ, large clil'peting & . d r a p e s separate family roo1n, plus thl"U--Out. It's llnmaculate le 1nuch more. Phone 897--0321 neat as a_pi.11. We have \\'alker & lee Ill•~ •• ,.,. it "'PRICED TO SELL'' ror Only •... $46,5Da" FULL PRICE 1-IURRY ON THIS ONE! MISSION REAL TY 985 So. Cost Hwy., Laauna $37,500 Phono (714) 494-0731 NEARLY llC\\'! ~lg fan\ily 3 UNITS rooin w/crRcklmg stone . . fireplat.'f! & mantle. French Fantastic mvesbnent oppor· kitchen 111 J decorated in! tunity, North end La&:µna : '"SunshblC'" (."<>lors + a big absolutely never a vacancy. pant1·yl Private liv rm Eas_y walk lo downtown & w/cathedl'al cellini;s. 4 beaches. $79,500. fan1lly sized bdrn1's. Plush ~/ia.~ carpet tlu'U~ut this very unique floor plan. Terms [11'1tl1HI 0 Mobllo Homos · '""" = -For Solo 125 SUPER SHARP CoMpletcl,y remodeled 2 BR beach cottqe. Jlua:e ft..2 lot. Add I unit WALK TO UDO SHOPS MOlllLE HOME ,OR SALE: SllVERCREST MOBILE HOME Owner ..... :al' x 5.1', 2 BO ~ B.. carp., draped, blt·ins., refrta:., \Vasher & elect. dl')'Cl', wired will carry lat trust tor m air (.'Ond., kltch. Ov.'J\Cr will carry lat. T.D. at 8% on this ahopplna ctn· ter, Add.ltiunal buOdlug area available • Jona: Jiletoty of mit groulng approximately $12.000 a year. A1klng $99,500. Call 675-72'25 clock. stonige i;hed, ltlnd· $49, 900 soaped patio. Three yrs. old !:::;-... 646-671.0 &IS.8-IOO • like nu. Locatt.'CI. ln new ,-or 1tdult pk. a\\•ay from noby ' 't!~:U.lfl!l!!llll!lll!.fl~"-!JU,9 St. One.half bl. from club-r house. Jl5,995. cail EVE.S. v. E. U..vd & Co. ... .__ GRAND' O~ENING Newport Bay Tow.rs 1 &: 2 BEDROOl\f CONOOMINWl\I HOMES B.\ytront Homes Boat Slips Full Se<:urlly HI&hrlse Steel &:: concrete constr\tcllon Prlvate Balconlca 213-694-4600. CAN BE SEEN AT: CRESTMONT ESTATES '' 1051 Site Dr .. Bl'ta. (Central Ave. 8.Cl'OSS fron1 Brea Comm. Hosp.) Lot #46. CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., for sho\vlng. • NEW custom bit aCl.ult park on $181500. 675-07'l3, beauty ln the bay. OCEAN BREEZES OU PL EX Large 2 Bedroom · unil.3 !11 cool, •mog-free area. Live In one, rcnl the other. Try $3,650. down FHA or VA. rorason lo •ull. Bkc. 96~11. REAL ESTATE -NEW TWO STORY 1100 Glenneyre St. LAST ONE 4M·M73 ' 549-0316 GIANT fnmUy home. 4 BR7, NEW HOME WATERFRONT • I New Year $220,000 ESTATE REALTY 2 garaa:e spacc1 per wtlL Roof top 1undeck Unusual Opportunity to Pur- chase Bayftunt .Proper'.,y ln Newport Beach. 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. '75-ISSI v• •, r. & INVESTMENTS (714) 17().6500 !kJ5 E. EUCl.;10 Jo'ULLERTON ThlK spacious custon1 fa niily home offers the cpiton1t> of gl'aclous living. BcauUful vle\y of !he bay. Our exclu- sive, appt. only &1tt.n11 - Open eves. -2().13 \\'estcliff Dr. Lee _I The Apple Pie .Tree Is in the re"ar yal'd of this sharp 3 B1·. 11csa Verde home, but the most in1-portant thing is the hon1c v.·ith il'5 shag carpet. fRn1ily room. low traffic pride of j o\vnershi11 stJ-,:et & park like front Rnd rear yard only 1.18.500 CALL 644-7211 P .S. the tree lJl'O''irlcs tht• ·apples, ~u make U1c 11ie. ~NIGEL EJAILEY Ii, ASSllCIATES Happy .New Yeor l\1ovc into this 4 Br .. :! Ba. hon1e ·located on n huge cer- FDR. fain rm \\'Ith \vet bar, 640-1120 huge bonus rm. $63,800, Sparkling three bedroom, 2 10'1! do1,·11, l~; TD, 8~% bath tv.u story. home high * * * --------~-· Acr••u• for s•le 150 4 UNIT APT. BLDG. Start your ln\>estn1ent pro- gram today with thla 4 unit bldg. 2 BR ea. Great loc. Costa l\lcM. Inc. $7,740 )T. Try 10"7~ dn. '65,IXXI , Wtsloy N. Toylor Co. Ba lboa Pe ninsula VACANT . 4 BR.. fam. r n1., lgc. kit. 2-Sty. $87,500 ritarshRll Realty 6T.>-4600 Corona del Mar loan. flurry for reduced on a hill overlooking mlles DON A. LEE prlce. of green hills a.nd extra· HUNTINGTON 1-IAR.BOUR o~;"n .... view. of the coast 1653 Superior A~. "·~l.184 ............. ,, Costa Meaa REALTY ,,....... and downtown Laguna. -You a.re the winner of START SMART Asking $46•500· -"'IUi an 2 ticketl to the \V ith this 2 BR to\\rnhouse anx1?11s owner who \\1ll , SPORTS &: Near the beach. Step saver consider your offer. RFCREATIONAL kitchen, liv rm w/Swed~h NEW DUPLEX VEHICLE SHO\V Corona del Mar frplc, overlooks community '-Iagnificent three bedroom at the JX>Ol. Only S25,!IOO. Call & three bath and t1,1"0 bed· ANAHEl '-1 Duplex The Rt al Estate Fair room and two bath units CONVENTION CENTER P ' Red • 536-2551 \\'Ith giant roof garden and J anuary 4-13 rrce UCtlOn bhlconles. Ou t s tan d In g Ple~se call 642-{)678, ext 333 If you are even vaguely in-REPOSSl:SSIONS ocean view. Walk to all the to claim your tlclcelil. tercsted in an exceptionally :-or lnlormation and location shops and beach. Top quail· (North County toll free \\'Cl! rlesi!{ned 3 BR 2 BA. of these F1IA &: VA homes, ty l.'OllStruction. Very moll· number Is 54()...1220.) i;round floor ov.•ners unit 1 t vated '011,'ller wants a n offer. * * * will> a S2fl0/mo garage apl. '"'" nKc A. SA. BIAN May we show thi• In )'OU __ B_A_Y_C_R_E_S_T __ in an excellent L-orner Jo-\\'illwut quoting hi$ asking cation near a park, )'OU Re•I Est1te 962~. price? Call ~ ......,~ · $57,500 CAN'T AFFORD TO OVER-tHor1~..., LOOK THIS PROPERTY! ll;;rv;;;ln;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ Reduced to ~.500 644-7211 START THE YEAR It::~ by milking a.n invesln1ent in ' ' ' this Universily Park 2 lxl· rm. twnhse. It's been re- • derorated, has alr·condition· ' ' ing and a large plivale yard. Only $38,500. \_...¥;;;::;::~~~~'._. j CALL 552-7500 Large living room, 1orn1al dining. Large kitchen and family room, new carpels a.nd paint. 4 bedrooms plua rumpus room. Easy care yard, room for PQ91. For a rare value. ca?I ~nn. BEAUTIFUL , hillslde p~ perty 20 mllea !rom Tempe ArizonA, fascinating view of superstition m o u n t a I n s overlooking the City of Phoenix. For mol'e in- form at 1 on Call AU R.AID.1ATL\N coll~t (0021 948-ll61 . Commerci1I Proporty 158 Commercial Land & Loh $26.IXXI -C3, 50' x 118', Down· town Hunt. Beach, Tem1!l. $27.500 -C-1, 100' x 125', po- tentlal R-4, Clear. REALTORS- 2111 San Joaquin lllll1 Rd. Newport Center 64-&-4910 DUPLEX-$39,900 Garden Apartment1 (11 2 BR • 1 Bath (1) 1 BR • I Bath, private patlol, en- cl05ed a:aragt1, built-ins. Quiet 1treet. Excellent con- dition. ror.son .. ' ' $28,500 • C·l, 43' x DJ',·Q>.~ta &: INVESTMENTS 1\Tesa, submit. (714) 170-6500 $32,Klll -C-2, 90' x l:m', ~lid· 905 E. l!;UCUD way City, terms. FULLERTON $34,000. C-2. oo· x !Ill", Co<1a INVESTMENT Mesa. submit. $39.500-c-1. 100· x 2.10·, \\'eat· MINDED? minster, submit. . PRIDE OF O\VNERSHlP f\'£\V duplex, by o\vner. 3 .~2 -,..2&2.Ga:iap­ plianCes. cust. inter. Choice Joe. i 73-1691 or 673--0207. VISION $57,500 -C-1. n.a· x 101', Costa reneeted U1rouah-0ut this M~a. submit. 4-plet. ~·t be beat fo1· $63,000 -C·l, 16,600 sq. ft., nppt.'Kta11ce le location. Call romer, Hunt Beach, Submit The Rial Ett•ta F•ir BeeuUfully decorated home $68,000. C2,alta' x 110', \\'ar-Uf..6133 fa1~Y!ul~~~l~re~~ce~1 -~~'ooo· Hunte. 28ea21""000· subn,u,t. .... ;;:_;;-;o;;:_;;-;o;;;_;;-;o;;;_;;-;o,;;_;;-;o;;:_;;_;o Costa Mesa ncr lot. New carpeting i11 ---------~ most areas .. Assun1e.ble VA I loan of $20,100. VA appraisal & price just $28,500. e red hill baths. Kitchen has every. New L1"st"1ng ~n1eH·ar~r'B1vd.1C:.uo~: DISTRESS SALE thing: Oversized patio "ith O\\'ner \\'ill flnant.<e. Income prolJ(!rly hy priv par- Al.SO VA assumable 3 Br. 2 Bn in Collcf,:l' Park. Slt!IOO. Call 5.:>1"·1263 eves & Sund11y~ 221l'"!_twport Bl. Costa Mesa 646~~811 Sun/Eves. 546-4871 WALK TO WEST.CLIFF SHOPS ::; BR. 2 BA, huf;c !01. de- tat.:hcd dbl. garage, alley al'ce.;;s. Harrlwood floor!!, sha~ carpeting, frplc, S.19,500 CALL 6~710 or 645-8400 . REALTORS BBQ. P~s950sion8;!?ft, lan?.: CLOSE TO $87.500 -AP-CP, 36.540+ sq. t;y, 22 rl'ntRl hoUliel, 12 , REALTY ,.._ scapeg . ...,.,, · ~ na: ~ BAY & BEACH ft.. prime Costa llfesa Joc11· Bl?'sJ, glll'agell, all oceup~I Univ. Park ...-:nter, .lrvine.. loving! Call 494-8000. ti --........-= a-vn?ant -·n;it.-WIU. TA BELL R l ho .1 t on, cuuuvuS. Po'"" R , fl tors Solid 2 BR use, li e roo $98,500 . C·4, 123' x 447', AUCTION Jan 3, For info, Comfy, Co-rv 1920 S. C"Oast Hwy., L.B. w/1 BR apt oH garage. On Beach Blvd., ov.11er v.ill ti-c.all Carl P ike 213-679--2591 -1 ONARCH BAY 45 ft. lot. ~mpletely re· nance at 8%, has income. ~ Condo M painted. SO'"Ai hnancln;; a\•all· Sl26.~ _ C-1. 65,340 aq. ft ., \Val t Square Condo super TERR. able. S83.9CIO. Call .,~,, oAnn near fwy., arudout, 1ubm lt. nu • , . ., 5 Bdnns. & a den in one 646-6710 or ,ll"W'O'NU $132,000 . C·l. 170' x 310', upgraded, 2 BR & den A of the Laguna areas best Mod~!. Belter than new, neighborhoods. Open bea.m 7 " Founlain Valley, prtme acre- quahty carpets, sh~l ters ceilings, lae. yard, great \' E llc$unl & Co age. thruout. Super Io c at ton. Ur. plan for a fanilly. Ocean • • • $182,00J -C-4. 13.'i' x 225', $31,000. 645-MOO. vie,v. Walk 10 shopping "&:: ... '-......._ Beach. Blvd., ov.'ner v.·111 fl. ·HOUSE + 6 UNITS New units at 2837 Elden, C!\f. 1st llM'r \V/Dl'i~ write ort. Ci.II Bulliler 646-4414. •.Jmn:!.fBi!!lll.l!l!.'LQ!(l!J':U.' restaurants. $120,CXXI naRl-e .. " TU NED ASSOC FANTASTIC lt!IS.ooo · C-<. 245' x 412" * • * HORSE \'. E. Ho.vd & Co. R " ' B<aeh Blvd., .,...,.., may ANTHONY PALOMBO l .~~~""~'-~•;;:•;;:··~~Ju-o;_·NNiC.ii"°"'~~'i"inwy" Laguna FIXER ,...,,, 8% loan. TAX TIME BUY Prepaid tntel'e.st down. 7 Unil~W. 1st Ueer. East C!\I. 833-'91.821 646-4414. lnc!ustrlol Property 168 21702 In1pala Lane PROPERTY -1700 1 c 2 16 000 lluntington Beach. Ca. Paint & profit. 3 BR, 2 BA, ·., 100G ead'tA· · · • d You are the ,.,i.nncr of 2 BR qua int fixer. Large 101. MONARCH BAY split level, huge llvlng rm, sq. ••·• ran ''e., groun WESTSIDE INDUSTRIAL 2 tickets to the incl uding eorrals. o,•,,ner LOTS OF GLASS 4 Bdrms .. 2Y.r baths; loaded fl'plc & bean1s. leue_onl~ND i\fUCll SPORTS & \viii carry financing. $28,000. brings the outside in to this v.·ith all the luxury features. WALK TO 1\fORE! RECREATIONAL Cal l 64G-6710 or &IS.8400 bcautirully upgraded 3 bd-Feel like yoo're living in 83J-330S \7EHJCLE SHO\V 1 FF!• R'.IJNO !CY'ENTIL 9 rm .. 2 bath home with fami· a palace, but without the UDO SH'OPS INVESTMENT DIVISION, 120' x 140' Al $2.50/Sq. fl . Small office bulldin&. Jack llOYt'.ell 644 6200 (A29) ANAHEii\1 \1 • E. Hcm11nl & Co. u1n, sprinklers and a loca-~.Jiii' Of'ENTILI . "'S flMTO BE NICE/ Macnab -Irvine at the " ly room, lots of closets, atri· expense. $87.51)) $59,500 CONVENTION CENTER iwi:-:.~ tion near park and pool. ...,,,,O/l/lh,, 646-6710 or ! I p:ia .. "{~~·6~:: :kL;;l MEsA vERDE io9.~ALL 552.75~ REAL ESTATE ~ · ll~liii'!I ,.64..,2..,-12 ... ~ ... f .. t ... • .. = .... ~ ....... ~1 : {North County toll free 5 Bedroom or 4 bedroom VISJQN U!lO Glenneyre St. l! --·-····~ Mount•ln, Desert nuntbcr is 540.1220.) -+-formal dining + den 494-9473 st9--0316 NEWPORT BEACH Resort 174 • * * + family rm. lnlcrior • d h · 11 BE AC H ENG LISH . ntriun\ w1waterfall. Huge re I Lapuna Hills NEWPORT SHORES, 3 BR., Prime Baytront Site LAKE ARROWHEAD master bedrm v,lith fplc & ( M l bu, com~ty Swim pool, For boat repair & aales > ,_ nd II , Presllgious location i n 3 0 1 16, 950 C 11 BEAUTIFUi,. View o oun· tennis & Pl~rnd, Bill G ...1 .. Rltr 6?5-6l6l Grea1 wr year rou \·1ng Newport Beach. Park-like · car gar. n Y · · R REi~LTY REAL~RS ta Jn s . Ex qu is ite I y ru • .....,. · & close lo the vitlq:e. ::I gounds. 5 bedrooms, 3 545-8424 SouthCo Realtors. Univ. Park Center. lrv1ne decorated, room for pool. Great· ror youn(!:llers. alk 'l'\l.'O adjoining income pro-yr old Bavarian ilyle 3 level halhs. Formal dining. Coun-1.IESA Vcn:le, 38R, 2BA, 3 BR, 2 BA. in desirable to ocean. Eltt kltch, auto perlies, center Costa Mesa. home ~ith open beam cell· I I h ·u· L Bo h \\'aler softener, cu11tom llghl 0 ... -1 ... ·~ b 2 •-+ try kitchen. Game room. moc e omc, nc'v crp ng, anuna ac Laguna Highland!! area. 1,·ner. .,,__ ~ 1 .. ,..s thru-out, 3 r Uil · n · -..::J!•c::;:::..::.::::.:;;:,_ ___ I fixtures, encl kilch, Vacant -.. '5 NEAR BE AC H ! BK R drps, kitch oor, paint, ... $38,500. Call for appt. Wallt-Conclomlnluma completely linlahed base· 645-0303 landscp~g, Himmai. ~ New Yea r & New House er & Lee, 646-77ll. ~L.;:;..~ln...::0500· JONES for ule 160 ment for pla.yrm or 2 BR Oupl1x $34,950 ~;n~p,,p1.r:~se _un, c SPACIOUS open design cus-3 BR, 2 BA. condo. Duplex -~F~A~S~T~P~O~S~S~E=S~S-. -_...;..;_.;..; ____ ..;.;;c; workshop. Lndry fa c . tom. App~x. 2800 sq ft on model. Near pool . Assum-BY Owner-2 sty Monticello $36.500. 1213') 451-3.!)8 after BEAOI Cottage $49,9'30 OCEAN VIEW p AR i< huge prestige lot. 1\1onarch able 7~S% loan" $27.900. Harbor View Carmel model. Townhouse. Immaculate 3 6 pm or flll1lme \\ttkends. Ca7971IO for addlAlionalci~n,10 $46.950. 4 BR. 3 BA, modern Terrace. 8 roo1ns, all con-Capri Realty. 644-7525. 3 BR.. 2 ba., family rm., Br, 1% Baths, Private pa.Ho. You don't need lL £.""tm to I range ve., ·" · 2 yr old Buccola home, love-venicnces. lots of extras, Price reduced c d M "Draw Fut'' when )'OU CENTURY 21 642-1771 ly park Cul-de-sac & corner Red Ca rpet, Rtaltors Lido Isle to $61,!f'JO lnc\udlnJ lnnd. ~~t.0$n.s&l~~27~5Ybt~~ place an ad in the Dall.Y NE\VPORT Heights, 2BR lot. 1853 Parkvista 642-1000 1 ___ _:<9;::1;:;·1.::76::1 ___ i;;..;;.;;_;_l_l_D_O____ CORBIN·MARTIN 10-5. 109 Georgetown Ln, Pilot Want Ads! Call JIO\v house. dbl g11.rage, Fortin MESi\ VERDE No RT H "Whi~e Elcpuantll" over· BAY FRONT i ;;R;,;E;,;A;;l;T;,O;R;;;S==';4~4.,;7;,;66;;2;,:_.~C~.>~t.====·===.!:.:-=64H678=:;;·::======I Company, Realtor, 6'12-500) 4 BR .. 2 Ba., fam . m1. & running your house? Tum p; & " , 4 BR 2 '·" -•1 t t 1· -rot la d""a them loin "C8'h" ll er sup, ·• ....... Have som.,ur n~ you wan o scp. 1 in • "'• P · n "'-P-• • • M! i'ust reduced to $249,500, sell! Classified ads do It ed. art ntrium, prin. only. them thru a Daily Pilot well -call NOW 642-5678. $48,000. Phone 5.57-2775 classified a.V! Lll U UIT.~ ocT. 1z '3-10.12· .... 31-60-7.5 -LIDO REALTY • \I ,, I ' '-!! *673-7300 * * $191,500 * ·1 BORMS. Plus maid's. 4 Ba. Elegance personified! Brand new. Call today! --GEMM-- 1:»-F Tustin Ave., N.B. REALTORS 642-4623 BEST BUY LIDO 4 Br 3 Ba + Bay View. 88' to bch. 425 Via Lido Nortl. $132,500. G?~ 7414 Bia. Newport Buch . BAITRONT NR OIANNEL ENT. 6 BR. 4 BA, + £auna, new eust furn., ma gn l f I c en t view, hll8< deck, lg boat dock, $3Zi,IXXI. Art Shapiro Co. 645-al.20 "'PALERMO 4 on, lam nn. ·~ Clean! · $76~9UO . BROKER . m.o7IO DUPl..E'X nr occari, 162,500 ~tiles Lal'flOn Realtor • srJ-8563 · , ' ' . .SCC\\.~1vl ~ J6 'E~S ~ That 1ntrlguing Word Gome with o Chucl/e -----""" '1 CLAY L P01LAH 11 1l I 0 t i RI ~ITGE j ' I LJ _l_J J _I~ t' I V E Y H A I i Used lo be thet somo motols I I' I I ch1rged extro for tho locttlon . . . . of roomo, Now they cltaltl• .--::~..,,...,...,,..,=-....,-more for TVo that 1how -1 S 0 X P E E I movln, ,,.. 1-. ...., .... , .... , ~, ...;,~, .~ .. c..,..i.t. "1• d<ucll• ....,. L_ -1.-1. . ...L . ....J.'-... _.--V by fliilog ..... --d -'I"' dmlop ,,.,,, ~ !'"':,~ bo~. ·-· • PRINT NUM8!R EO l!TIER S IN THES! !QUAR!S .. UNSCRAM8t! LETTERS TO I W GET ANSW!R r1·r1·rr1 1-l I I I I I . Tue 1a.t1est <1raw"' !he west. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 l!!! .... l!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~-·~·~·~··~Dall:==y~Pilo::..=t~Oe~•~ll1ed ·_.::.;.::::=::::.:=..:.;:.....:::.:.:=.:.:..:::.:.::...~......:.~~~~-~~~- ' • • • ·- • . " " • " " " • , ' r I ' 7 ' " l ,. + r r • ,. • • .. .. .. •• . ,. .I I , 1 I ,, ...,,,__ ~ "' -. -• uAd .. '1' PILOT Tuesday, Janu:ary 1'174 "' Wtdntsdat. January 2, 1974 PllOT.AOVE RTISER JJ u lat•t• •• ·• Houw F..ur"i · 00 HOVfit U_nfurn. 305 Hous11 Unfvrn. ous.a.1 FUrn. or Duplexes Un fur~. 359 1 Apt1. Furn. ·--.3"'60""Airp=t•."lu'tn;O;fu.:· t,n:-.---3°'6"5'A"p"t-. 'l'ur:n"fu"r::n=-.----".im ~~~h~":Y In Lux.,: Co1t1 M;;. BayihorH Irvine G~::~~n. 310 -~-o-.1t_1_M_o_ .. -,-~--"' LatunT INd\ Ni~;,;t: &~ch Nt~~rt Buch condo In l>lllftl Spring• •• WESTSIDE hnmac s BR MUOI' .. crlll<e, "••Ith .... I BR. <;rp!O,. drp•. 1'3112•, 1-~vii1ccTTOORR1.IALJBiiEiiAuc:iH:t::-l;~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Mllllono.Jre mounta~ lot. 1 BA. ?itoiure.. c,pl, 'no Chilli quires 1no\I\', r $395/nio. 4 NEW HOMES re~IQ'., enclo11ed a:ar!P· . 1-'{klnn., tum. frar1ltUn trµL,I r------------------, ba,at, ao.U or power or or pell. Nr. lbopetns:. $2$5 BR. 3 -BA, nr. bench, Ilk(' 2 en. ~en, 2 bn ........ $425 3 Btl{m11., 2 ba., furn. $155/mo. 6'14.QOJD, deck \\1th O<.'t.an view! Lota FREE RENT alrcratt, 5e-0194 oft &pm rno. l11e. U> '92-~ _-new . .2.t:rZff..3640, 3 !lit, 2 00.tlul. .••••.•• $415 yearJ.y •••·•· ....... $300 I Huntingtoa IHch or Olde t.a.au111\ churm. TRADE Newpo;t n h (o ona dtl Ma 3 BR', fam nn, 2 ba ,. ... S450 3 BR., 2 be.., unt. 11ew • • .lrp, Pt1U1w!U' Jaad1 to Drach. ~ Prop-1-for· out-dt-W:ne a c 3 Br, crpta:, dl'l>91-·W A D. ~ r , r 4 BR. lam rm, 2~' ba. $475 dro.Pt.'a.. del.'Or, yrt.y. $325. 3 en 2 btt1 blt·lnl cpt $2'l5 ooo .. all utiliUl'11 paid, .Bk:r •• n4/6tJ... e ~Pi R 1 6 S.t1ts!l~ a:ur. Older * 2 BR, l bcl,, tit-cplace, NEARL. Y NEW " Wot~r:tront 2 BR. l bu. year-dr1,11.' 2 Bl.kl "to Beach, Ati AJISSION REALTY 49(.-0731 67>5487 cp P'"' · 'nua< yard-In! ... l300/mo. 2 BR. l\I baths ...... 1235 IY· Uod. $300. 6. 536-8614. 'BEACON RENTALS Nwpt, HJ:ht1 .. 2 bed., den, leo with least!. 833-8974. ' 2 Brt, 1 bath ...••.•.••• $3001 BR. l bll. Y~. Unt. Can· J upfexet, La& 8 h 494-9491 $295. Kld11/pet1. Bc&uty. ( t M 3 BR, tam r111, 2\.i ~ •• $380 ne.ry ti.rt&. $1 , · U L.. •iiR una ~ac Hom1fJ11d1rs 547·9641 °1 • eia 3 BR, 2 butlul ........ $390 2 art., 2 ba. turn, wlnttr Furn. or nrvm. ~ Hewett ~each • Hunt~ngt!n a .. eh POOL, kJdJ OK. 11 e ar 2 BR, den. 2 ~ ..... ::. S400 ~. B1lboa Peninsula $35 pe1· wk & up. 1 BR, l~~::i~!i~~;i1 -. school!;, 4 Bdnn, 2 Ba, 3 BR, bonua rm, 2 ba •• S425 2 Br & bach'•· Color TV, ,j~ Walk to bch. BacbJ. pad $110. J~~ room. ~shwi>hr &. 2 BR, 1 btl. nr. l\tarket maid serv,-pooT. THE -•u1 111 ·Pool, pvr.:--mtt. itil\'c, bl gar, 00\Y'rtt patio, Brulket, Yrly, $225. 212~ MESA, 415 N. Nev11>0rt fo r one month 1 brings your a11erage riionthlv rent to OT'llv $293 ~r month. If you are now paying S400 to $500 monthly fof an apt, here's your chance to switch to this deh.nte 2·bdrm. 2Y, bath in deslreable EASTBLUFF setting • t:oland'°'1'\e-car.pets, dr1pes, fireplace, all built-ins; pool,-enelosed patio, closed dbl garage. First month free, $320 per month therea fter. Adults. 5&6·6880. 0 200 Homefii'nders 547·9641 boat spar.'<!. 5 min to beach 30th st , 644-0386 Bl d NB 6'"9681 pportunity "!; shopping. $300, 557-7008 =v-= .. ~-·---~-~-1 1-->"--..,,,,..,. __ ::;;~ Laguna N igu•I or 6454407 ~pts. Furn. 360 \\riNTER rental to June 29,1 ,'-~ -,,.,-.-"I-'!'-'!! -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-'!!-"I_"!_""_°"_°"_°"_"" _"I_""_~-,.-,;,.-,.-,.-,.-.,-,.-~ -''!'!I * * * .. * * * turn 2 Br .. 1 Sa, bltni,$225 r 65 RICHARD LONG KIDS OK "SINCE 1946.. · · General or 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, $375. Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 A_pt. Unturn. ~ 37 Balboa Coi~s 3 BR. 2 bu , comp, furn.ex· PAT JOHNSON -------. --n•I"' •~ -------;;....;._...;.. ____ I N ... ceptlorihlly nice. Be au t 3 Blinn, 2 ha, freshly pntd. lit \Vestern Bank Bldg. 1942 Oran Ave S 11 1 1 1 -~00 C M N B ch ewport Beach view, '°'2141 or ·~ '145 New cpta & drape•. Rtnve U I I p k I I ge · SllS. ma c<>zy lac ie or. COZY 2 B J t osta •5• ewport ••-You ere the winner ot ...,.,,... ...,.~ n vers tiY ar , rv ne Costa Mesa Near beach. For 1 yaung r, c u11e o occan,1 __________ 1.;..;.;;c:.:::.;:;..:....::..;,;=;...---1 2 Uckets to the eves. Treasure Really. ~ll~~tr1g.Pl:1C:~[ia. y~c!,d Days 55,.7000 Nights You are the winner of busy person. f..,'l. guna ,' Im.med. p08$, Car. Ll_'g liv PARK NE.WPORT SPORTS & Lido Isle yard. flllil lt~s. $275. f. llcket!I to the 19·\-4200 rm & din rm. 213/943·:.!928. APARTMENTS RECREATIONAL 557 'J~ 'SPORTS & B Ibo I I d 2BR, tront duplx, fUm/unfurn Ba~·ht•lor 1 or 2 ~edrooms VElUCLE SHOW "'--~c...;~·--,o-.,-"'""co--2 Bit, 1 baUl • ..... $225/315 RFX'REATIONAL I I I In 1 blki;ocean; $210 avail 11011i' a ud 'fownhouses -at the WlNb I~~ \hoease, ~auBtR-. So5. Cozy home, 1'l'plc, hltin1, 2 BR, 2 ba, den, ale $275 . 1 V£HJCLE SHOW 1 BR Apt ai,all !or '6 mos 128 46 St, SHAG, 644·4340. 1 .• ,., 5194.50 Open 9-6 Dally ayu"""-me; 4 " brand nu crpts thru-out, 4 -3 BR., 2 baths • · $385/425/•150 at the ANAHElf.1 bu beaut' ful'n Sandy bch ! 2B $'2S I I 3 BR 211 bath $375 AN HEIM 01' yrly. ~'I! blk to bay. ON BAY nr Lido shoppin", S1i11. Pooh; TCll.l'\i8 CONVENTION CENTER . " · · • · I 1·, a, per n10 nc. , s · .. ·· · · · A "' .,, d i;>1e1• & float. $1650 Mo. •gardner. 962-6644, c v e £ 4 BR, 2~ baUiii •••• $42.1/450 CON\J'tNTtON CENTER S TUDENTS \VELCOJ\1E, 613 36tb st, no pets, 01· A~·roi;s fron1 r:J11tk>n In..nn • Ja.ouary +U Bill Grundy Rltr. 67"'"""6161 962...5319 • CALL 552•7500 JanU""" 4-t3 l'Uil 213·289-8366 eves. chlldl'en. ut Jan1borec on San Joaquin Plea.se call l!A<>-~, ext "' -, ll•'lls Roa1I v•.v-.....,io -.-, Please call 642-S678, ext 333 DELUXE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, BAOIELOR apt ~ii blk fro1n ' 11~ ~~.your tickets. 3 BR, 2 BA. Ill.'. t e nni s 2 BR ~U f'LEX, bltns, d~11!_!1 VISION to claim your tickets, 216 Crystal yrly $325 mo. bch. Sl.25 mo, utll pd, 121 PINECREEK (714) 644-1900 ort ""11rrty toll free crts &: beach. $350/MO. 6 rni., cp. gar., scp, 11 • {North Cowity toll free 67~7178 or (1) 728-2749 24th St. NB, 673-3137 LIVES UP CHANNEL lt'~F 2 Dr 2 number ls 540--1220.J n1os U!ase. ~9 yrd .. children OK. Walk to .:.l:. * * * beach. 645-:6952, 968-4347 • d L '11 -nwnbcr is 540-t220.) 8 1lbo1 Penlnsul1 Newport Heights TO ITS NAM E Ba Bayfront condo, t1llp, Houses Unfurn. 305 re n I * * * pool, rurn svail. NeW in- * COFFEE SHOP * Vacant 28R house, Sl4S, Also Corona del Mar $35 WEEK l ' UP CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adults, O\'cr 500 tall trees '''rior. $450 lse. Owner G 2BR HB, $145, Sgls, Kids, ',;.;.c..;_..;;_;;.;;.;..;...;;;.;..._ __ I ·7 8074 ~, ~ en1ral F -979-8430 REALTY REALTORS'· e Sleeping Rooms no peta. Lge kit. $1~$160. and 10 strean1s \\'Ith ti 5-·, 01-r-"'""' ---·----2pe~ls,_, .:;Agt""-.-'-'"'"''""~=--Univ Park Center Irvine LOVELY 3BR, 2BA, swim· e llousekeeping Rooms 2421 E. 16th St .. NB 646-1801 waterfalls crottte u EAST-BLUFF Back Ba y GOOD PRICE GOOD TERMS RIVIERA REALTY 149 Broadway, c.~. 642°7007 645-5609 Eves. ALA l.ENTALS 3 Br, 2 ba, lam, liv. game · ' ming pool, Irvine Terrace, e Ocean View At>ts San Clemente rel11..'<ing s~U ing for V\ey," Stunning 2 Br, 2 Ba r111, fncd/ lrplc, gard. incld. 2 BR Condo , •••• fJ25 Mo/lse .. year lease, approx $600{1'10, BALBOA INN yo ur spacious ne\V 1· or I IO\Vnhouse. t"rplc. Lg e wt W((J ... lllf It.I u•vKI $345. ru n $385. 545-..1182.· 2 BR Condo ••••• $245 Mo/Jse 675-3173 105 Md! Street San Clemente Resident Hotel 2·~h'OOm 1:1pa11.!11e1~1. s.n1all ratio. Adults, no pets. $330. 1-BDH.M. front duplex. Cati>., 3 BR Home .•••• $295 mo/lse Condominiums 675-8740 $79.50 Per l\1onth pet~ uk, Fl'om ~\10. F urn1turl· !Ho--0349 f fiit HOUSlS drps., bll ·ins, garage. $140 3 BR Home • • $300 mo/lse U I 320 Quiet -Secure a.va1.lahte,. Off1r.:_e o1.K'11 9:00 I "N°'E"'1v~D.;.U"P~LE=x·""3"""s"R,.,""2=--BA=.·1 ---.,,, ••. n urn 3 BR, 2· O", "'intor, lrpl•, I 6 00 2300 ,. l ' Rd I J DU•••'. Month. &12-0409 Aft. 6 PM. 3 BR Home ..••• $32.5 mo/lse1 -----· -----2 houses ;:,.m" sand, $'50 .... Fur!Hltil -walking distance Co : ,,.' Ph • ""54'~ 23,..,;· \\'inter $250/mo oa y s -----2 BR tlo bo ·1 '4 BR Home $300 monse F I I v II uv to everythl11\ est,. n1esa, one: :i-.,,.,., {,1"<"3165·~.. Sat &0 Sun , • pa • open am ce1 • · ·' '· oun a n a ey to June 28th, 675-8531 :r NAri6'ifil~~'i'll~PHAS OPENING ~IWPCHT•IAr.c.M.6'42•13Sl i!f4o Adults only, no pets. 4 BR Home ···· $125 mo/lse1 -------"----I------~-= SAN CLEMEN E Park-Like 645--0232 GENTLEMAN nice Bach $80 Refs ~8-9652 RANCH REALTY 551-2000 Short Term Rental $150 l Br, uW paid, no kids. HOTEL Surroundings ~LC:A'oRO"G~E::,.,,J..,B"R:--."2"'a"A'" .• -cp::a:-:tl;:o-.1 ·In thl1 area. Invest' $1 ,~ $3,500 Earn $500 part-Hn1e $2,000 full-time STUDENT Buch $8fJ ulil pd E·Sidc, 2 br., 1 ba. dplx . .tAN. Rental. Braud nu 2 Tiburon 3 Br, 2'Aa ba, condo, ~~7pe11l~~ 401r7 6E7~ ~33 Balboa. • 114 DEL MAR, S.C. • DELUXE t & 2 Bn . Apt.~. 1 Blk to ocean. $300/mo: NEEDS TLC 1 Br dplx $120 $175. Kids okay. sty 4 Br. Turtle Rock Home $275. nio. .... . "" ,,..,.. · Al f B I I d S NB non-smokcI'll, good area. Homeflnders 547·9641 w/ view. 2· 1h Ba, pool. FUL(ER REAL TY Coron• del Mar Apt. Unfurn. 365 Pvt ~at~~~* 8~t:~ ~~l ~·:r;J"~. 2$!c!~. ~767 · Call collect Mr. Bond (404) 435-3881 ASSOCIATF; needed to assist ln ~ of profitable autO parts busl.ness. 5-18-15~ STUDIO, New S165 Laguna. din rin, con1 pacter, upgrad· 546-0814 anytime 8 Ibo I I d 'Nr Shop'g * Adults onlv D P I I C • a • an M. rt" • A ts.· San ClemeriTe Blg clol'let & kit, gas/wtr pd. 1na o n etJ rugs, drps, nr u I, High H 1• B h OCEAN 2 blks, 1 BR, incl ·a inique p PAlNT f.,lJ? ~ Br. $135, Now. ~lil. Elementary Sch un 1ngton eac Ut ils $170 Adults no pet11 · • huge yard. fenced, pet ok NE\V OC'ean-Harbor"Torever 833-1354 675-4174 -,-, ' LRG 3 Br, 2 Ba, apt, king 1777 Santa Ana A\'e .. Ct.1 2 BR, 2 BA, child .O.K. Cpts/ FOR· Real 2 Br & Den $250 View. 4 or 5 BR 3 BA, __________ 1LRG newr--2 br studio, size Uy rm. Yrly,$400 per Mgr Ap't 113 s46-5Yl2 drps, ds\vshr, lnclry. 4 blks Mone! to Loon 240 E.C.?tf. & Balboo.-See Now. Fam. m:i, FP, Cpts, dps, BEAUT. Princeton model 3 greenbelts, ~I. nr frwy _c_o_u_a_M_•_•_• _____ ~m~·~-.;ln~c:_l~u~ll~l.~SJ4..:!':9:;m~_..;·~1 -~"i'ii'.;:;:::-;.u;:;:::--· 1 to pier, $200. n10. 492.1934 ROOl\1Y 3 Br $175 Move In Only $385 mo./rent. or sell Br, 2 Ba, lrg Uv & din & ~~· Child ok. $229. LOW WEEKLY RATES Balbo~ Peninsula ' Sierra Village ..:al::•:::•:...'::.5.:.P.::>:;.l. _____ 1 1st TD ·Loans fncd wJ patio on E/side. $79,500 675-7414 area, BBQ & palio. XJnt 827-852::i -• , Sntull l\d_ult ""mplex In Lush Apts., U I Prk I .,,. H Executlvl SUit9s 2 BR 11' ba •·· 1 d · '"" AVAILABLE 4 Br 2 Ba $225 Fountain Valley n "'.· ; oc. .,.,..;i/lno. unt1ngton t1arbour • 11 • U<Uf.'ony, enc s 1''orest SettJng. Locate<! ;i FUrn. or Onfurn. 370 Elv, c;;..rpets, fncd, gar. Ava il Feb 1st. 552-7355. 2080 NewpOrl Blvd. patio, $225 .monthly. 315 E. l\>lin. front Beach & 1''r1v:-,'. UP T'O 909' occ ai:ea 3 Br 2 Ba sm BRAND New IT i bur 0 n ----------12 BR, 2~ ba, on , ... aterlront. Costa Mesi Bay, Inquire at Aot C. Call l Br, $175. 2 Br, 1%. Ba $195. General 814% INTEREST nice home, hrlng family. Townhouse, tu ly crpt'd, Laguna Hiiis New interior, crpts, drps, 642-2611 673-1521 or 548-77TI · Gas & Water Paid. ;:.,,:c.;.:,;..:;;._ _____ _ 2 d TD L _ G1\ME Rm 3 Br 2 Ba $.350. drp'd, self cle~n ove11 &: SH--AR·P 3 BR 2 BA Vl-EW bltins, frplc, adults, no pets. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S 1 BR, beam cell, romn.n tub, 114 E. 20th St.; C.J\'I, $1-1.J -Small cozy Bachelor. n Oa ns •~ all • BBQ 2 dsh hr w h • d • • • $495 lse. Owner. 846-4712 al· "'S 0137 6'" 4095 he 1 F 1 ... .,.c, app s. , car. w . as er ...: rycr. e FREE Linens $185 Incl utll . !-Park'g. .... · or ...,. Near ac 1. or Young LIDO B Isl .. ~ H bo 3 BR 2,. BA ., 1 xlnt cpts & drps, ale, lawn 1er s p.m: "' b L · • · a.i,.., ar r. • ~ · "us er I l $275 ~-'-"""'""'~~--= •FREE Utilities Singles only. 644-0997 JUST like a house. This usy person. a gun a · lcJwed retes Or1nge Co. I-lgts Dana Pt, NB Hghts, BR Overlooks pool & ~ poo use, " Lagun1 Niguel e Full Kitchen --------~-1 ~bedroon1, 2-hath apart-~'=-944'-"'200=,~------I Sattler Mtg, Co. Lagu~a & HB , clubhouse. $330/MO. Call e He ated Pool 2 BR, 'vet ba.r, pa!lo; bltns, ment has private patio, , Costa Mesa '42-ilJl ~ll All islzes &: prices -call 962·6666 Y.'kdays befr 5 Laguna Niguel 2 BR, 2 bath Condo on I e Laundry Facilities near beach. $275 Mo/yrly dish\vasher, f j r e p [a c e , ;;;;.;.;;:...;,;,;,:;:;,;:. _____ ! ~ us. pm. or 494-4196 eves & El Niguel golf course, $275. e TV & maid serv avail. ~larshall Realty 675-4600 E:vate gatage. Nf"w drapes. THE EXCITING 8'TvtnC flarbor orea 24 YI"· ALA Rental• 642 •313 wknd• · I Vill I l ct k 1 TS -.. ... · LUX. Sea Terrace garden mo., tnc a g o e Phone SeNice Coron• del Mir cate near par , schoo, PALM MESA AP • DON'T BOR-ROW ALA "'"NTALS Huntington Beach home, 3BR Short or long membership. call Liz, $30 WEEk & UP iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil In l\1e11a _Verde a1-ea. Only MINUTE!;' TO NPT. BCH. 'TIL YOU CALL USI &.11 lellse owner 551--0668 wkdys. 544-4230, Eves & . 5250. Call 54()..2279 alter 5 FURN. OR UNFUR..'l. wt SNCWlll.-IN 511\tlOI I br ' . v.·knds 548-3512 e Studio & 1 BR Apts. pm ,_ Borrow on your home equltY LOVELY ne ghborhood 4 • Me .. Verde N. rt B · h e TV & :r.-tald Service Avail. -· · Unbelievably ~large ap~ .. for any good purpose. Serv· 2 ba, lai-ge lot, dbl g11 r, ewpo eac e Phone Setvice _ Htd. Pool ~b"''lt' hUge pool, Jacuzzi, elect bit· ing Lo& Angeles County for fl fiil HOllSlS bltins, super condition. $32.i 3 BR, 2 bas, Fan1 rm, shag e Children & Pet Section 21'* We&liB.AU 21 ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna over .~r years and NOW in W l AP'TS. Rent or lse. Ask tor Dale, cpt, frplc, beaut patio 2376 Newport Blvd., CM t.trts etc. Adults, no pets; Orange County! DUJLS. 962-4471 covered yd w/blt-ln BBQ. BLUFFS 548-9755 or 64&-.3967 TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l BA Unfurn $195 SINCLES Furn From $157 SICNAL MORTGAGE CO. NIWP'Oir & IA'f, c.M. 642•1313 LRG 2 Bi· 2-sty Studio $325; Lease incl gard'nr, Sparkling clean 4 BR .. 21,S (Ad good for $5 on rent} 2 B 151 E. Zlst St .. CM 1 BEDRM. Unf. From $157 tn4) 556-0106 Townhou~. 1 ~i Ba. Nr. 830-:i&iO Ol' $42-6549 bath. Immediate occupancy. 1 BR Sl60 & Sl50 ALSO 2 r, fireplace, pool, prftvate * 646-8666 * 2 B~DRM. Unt 1''rom $172 4500 campus Drive, N.B. * HAPPY * Hnrbour. Rent or lse-option. Midway' City $450/mo. Gladys Russell BR n95 New cpl . xtra lge fpatto, 's' C?ntinen.tal d break· I"'~~~~~".'!!~~ .. Ypoun·c'>:,,rir~1,. MUl.:>",'"or". ndel'· $225/mo. lncld maintenance S42·8'l35. (A18) · • · as . pac1ous groun s, near NE\V ADULT LIVING .,... wu ..... Mortpge1, NEW YEAR• & pool. (2'131 A'Jn.nnl!9 JI Pro 3 Br 2 ba $250 Adults, Ideal ror Bachelors. shopri:ll i: fine beach. Fur· I BR & l 8R ¥.'/ loft. Frplc, (5 bllcs from Newport Blvd.) TrVlt DMds 260 * * ~ one p. ·• · · 1993 Chw·ch, 548-9633 nl~ed or unturntshed, from beam ceil, patio &__ poo~ 546·9860 -• Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA cul de sac, Gar., fcn('(!d yard. LGE FUU.Y FURN 2 BR $250. C.Orona -del Mar. bltns & refrig avl. Starting· •-·1 Rel/R'·n lg !nod Homefinders 547·9641 * CASA VICTORIA * Have An Enjoyable i'loHday! Su..:.:-' .... -v, Realty C.Ompa.ny . bltns, pool, bm ceil,adlts 644-.2611. $180 util pd. Adults, no peL~. 1, 2 & 3 BR. furn &: unf PUT YOUR MONEY We'll be open a.gain Jo.11. 2nd. Jot, dbl gar. $260. ask tor Mission Vleio 642·8235 644-6200 642(inf_an9520t ok) no -pets $180. 393 Hamilto,, 645-44ll Carpe d DJW TV TO WORK FOR YOU! ALA Rentals 642-8383 Dale, 962.+ITI. -NEW luxury townbouse-1300 2 BDRM. DUPLEX ant. :001, :r.s525 v1ctona Earn 10% or more on ...,,ell· SHARP 3 BR 2 sty FOR LEASE: 4 BR, 2 BA, * SUNNY APTS -POOL sq. ft. • gas frpl. 2 BR., Crpts, drps, bltns, lge Jenced St, ·at Harbor CM. 642-8970 i;ecured 2nd Tnist Deeds on Corona del f.Iar -Spacious Tov.nhOusc, all appliances, fam. 1'!11" .lush cpls, dl'J?s, $80 000 CONDOS e Adults Poolside $150 up 2 ba. Extra lge. gar. l Blk. yd for children & pets. Pvt Orange County RaJ estate. 3 bedroom, 2 OOth in I & I bh ",.,.,.. fantastic \'lew. Water paid. . . ' . e Al Child • •··ti· to bea h """ M I SIGNAL MORTGAGE co: spotless condition. \\'\tlk to poo ··cu se, no """"' no Avail. now. $335 m 0 , Live-in luxury, with 3 BR., so ren s """' ons c · """"' o., year 'J. gar, $170. SU P aularino, ,.,, .. 1 ~_J\tO'l beach. $425. water bedii, $250. 846-3410. 837_7309 3 ba. + ocean view! 177 E , 22nd St, CM 642-3645 Realtor 642-2668 C.M. 540-8150. --.-.--uu~-:e,-'Ni?WJ)(lrt-Bel\'ch~';'-sparkltng NE\V 3 BR. 2 bar,-frp!t;" Newport Beach. Rents from BEAUT Fll!J:.N 1 Br-lots of ·CHi\RMINa· ·new 3 BR, 2 l & 2 BR .. Sl35 To $165 4500 Campui Dr., N. ' 3 bedroom, 2 bath cpt & d~s, bit-ins, beamed FOR lease 4 br, .2 ba., lam $400 Month. 675-6050 bltins, pool, walk to shop-BA apt. Convenient Cdl\f plus $75 deposit. No pets, ownh th ha eel.II ble ~ 1330 mo rm ·crptJdrps view. Water In . ~ '·h ~~ location 1375 Rltr I INVESTORS wanted to make new t ouse ·on e y • ng, · · ,, ~ • il • $300 SHARP 1 sty Bluffs condo'. p ig, nu uvm ""' <Ji.Al mo. · :> per mo. chi dren O.K. 646-7829 LUXl!~Y Lrg._2 BR, adulll!, bltlns, pool, nr shopp1hg .center & bua, 19U Pomona. THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. or buy trust deeds. 638-5015 -large private . slip. On1y I ,c536-=""'~'~' ,,•=v7"~",_'kn_dsc.,.,...,-~_;-~~ now. n10. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Vacant. 931 W. 19th St. 548-0492. 2641-BRmloBA ts dra. Huntington Beach f.fajestic Mortgage Co. $450. 3 BR, 1 ~;,BA, bltns, dshwhr, N .,_ $450/mo. Sale by owner, 1 BR, .spacious, 6 unit . , carpe , pes,J ··;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I "!!!!!I Lagunn -bfagnilicent 3 crpts, dtps, nr. Marina ewport u.aclt $54,995. Will ta1t'e 2nd. biding, like new, gantge, tireplaCI!, pool. I• ~ bedl'oom, 3 bath • g la n t l1igh, shopping. $ 2 9 0 . 833-8635 • $160, Adlts, no pets, mo $225/MO. 675--0562 UNDER ·NEW MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. Bach, 1 &. 2BR. from $157 Adults, No Pets. ·1561.Mesa Dr. -lr,il ~~~~8:.:n b !i~ 0 _n \~Jk 828.56n or 828-5200 TENNIS BUFFS PROF. Decorated condo, nr Elden • 646-1512 aft 6 1 BR, REAR UPPER, .MANAGEMENT . ~ to shops $395. AVAILABLE new, 4 BR, 2 Only steps tQ tennis court, Hoag, 3BR. 2BA, washer 1 BR upper, turn. Htd pool. GARAGE, NO PETS.. 2 BR.. Bll·ins. Newly dec- 15 blks fl'Om Newport Blvd.) >46-9860 ---____ , Newport Baaeh. Bkr. 675-7225 bas. W·W cpt, drps, rrplc, sv.·immin& pool trom• NEW & dryer, pool, frplc, elect $155 + $50 security. Call 675-4952 orated. Encl g_arages. Beau- (ncd ytl & patio, blt·ins, 3 bedroom, (or 2 & den), gar opener, $350 per mo, -548-9548. NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, deluxe. titul la11d~apm~. Ltg play . dble gar, $260. 897-2482 fonnal dining, fireplace, sell 673-5700 ~vecytl:!!!tg )'9U want. No area, a cbil<l·s dream. Close Hou111 Fvrnf1hed 300 2 Bedtm, 1 bath, bltns, large cleaning oven, beautiful Can· EXCITING BluUs 3 br 2¥..i NICE lBR,' duplex, Quiet. leue. CiU 673-4691 --ta ahowtng & schools. l I dbl $225 · •I . ..,.., II hts Co • ba I · I b '. ;•=; Sep. by gar. Employed adlts -' Children welcome. o , e gar.. , mo. Yofl v~e.11i , ?Us.,, g . n , nr enrus c u . ~e NJV "A"I""' Costa ••-sa Call "" ••-Ask for Dale, 962-4471 strucuon will be completed mo. Sale by owner $74 995. over 30. no pets, .....,... 1UJ. m. -~~ \ NEAT Bach's HB $90. CM HouHI * Apt1. Ne\.\' !BR honle, kn<.'ed yrd, by the lat of Jan. Located Will take 2nd. 833-863.5. ' Huntington Beach 1 BR, rt 1 If no answer 847·7331 ~G~~~ ~,' :~~il~fuil * 145 .. 0111 *· bllins, dbl pr, nr beach, ~ii~~ 0~iJ~e ~s~~ ~~~~ NE\V 3 BR, 3 BA, din. rm., ResNew :drp~. p~l ':1~~: 1 MO. FREE RENT k. 1 1 pool $295 mo. ph 642-3216 6444687 · · frplc, dbl gar .. cpts, drps, $155-$165 p. acllts only. No BRAND New 1 & 2'Br Ap~. it., c oee n, · l '-~~=~==~~-1 3 Br, 2 ba, crpt/drps. Bltns. · . n1any qual. extras. pool, ten-BAOIELOR &: 1 BR. Patios, chl!d/pets or water beds. Pool. Bltlns, D/\V. Drps & ON Ocean 2 Br $~ View. LANDLORDS' Nr schls & heh. $300 mo. NEW . LARGE Spamsb style nls, sawia $450. 544-3049 frplc's, prlv. garages • Di· $135. 548-1322. Crpts. From $175. 2006 En~~ ~~:Pf~~· $290 • lJa)'s 6.17-3470, E~es 968--0777 -4 bedroom home located in vided baUl &: lot1 of closets. 2 Br untum. Ow, pool, shag Florida, 1 blk W. of Beach, W~ Specialize in Newport hills ~~ve Newport .. Spilt NEWPORT CREST CONDO, Rec. hall, pool & pool tables,, crpt, gar, bbq, refrig. All 1 blk N. of Adams. 96().1769. 2f~ur3 w~:.ish;s·ia cas?s:J Beach e Corona del Mar e 3 or 4 BR.s4o 1tf· Frplc, level h"'.ing ~formal dtrung 2 BR, 2 BA. Wet bar, frpl,. ~::f.a17~\llsK!i;o~ori1,°(i util pd. Children/sm. pels J BDRMS 2 i. ba newlv yrly decl<, fncd 'N/patio, & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· encl patio.&lfr~ 0. room with fireplace & large near pool, te1U1is, Drps, ex-welcome. ~$230. 1838 redecorat~. 165o sq' rt, all vice Is FREE to You! Try ==.,-,;=-:cc=-=.,,...-c-I beam cathedral ceµlnP,. tras. $425/mo. 552--0175. blk. W. of Beach, l blk N. Placentia 0.f bl. 1 .... , . h 1 pet ok. SEE OR CAU. US Nu-View~ Vacant 2BR house $145, also Gold shag carpel. CUstom -of Slater). -' llns, ori.=i air 1· trp c. FOR MORE! NU-VIEW RENTALS 28R c ~1 , Sl4S, Sgls, Kids, drapes. Huge country style Townhouse Unfurn. 335 842·7848 WALK/BIKE to \\'Ork or closed gar, fncd yr.cf, Clse ALA Rentals 642-1313 1 Agt F 979-8430 step saver kitchen/ family . d 1 · shops, pvt 2 BR trl·plex, to bch, $290 mo, no pets, 673-4030 or 494-3248 1 -f-pe...,..•.~~· _,.~·----·I room. Private tennis · & Huntington Beaeh lBR, fni rn apt, au ts, no garden, qulet st. bltns, encl. 963-7027 a.rt 5pm COTfAGE $80, kids, pets, B Ibo 1 I d Irvine pets, Nice quiet place for dlta or'lNI 642-0247 alao gar wUt Balboa SUO, _!_I I In -· l'iwim club. $4~ mo11th. 2 BR, ii,s BA wJlrplc. a ni ce ,,,.orking cple, good gar. a · .,_,, or 2 Bdrm $150, Avail for_ im- lBR HOUSE HB, ' $125, $275 YEAR.ROUND 2 BR 4 BR, 2 BA Spanish style 644·5tf86 or 642·57" washer/dryer 'hook-up; 2 ref, no gnr, Sl35mo, Clean 673-8364 -med occup, Wik to store~. 2BR· $165 Agt. Fee, 979-$430 duplex, stv, ref, cpts, hon1e. Frpjc, family room. HARBOR VIC\v Homes, new children. $200 962-3727 Security fee $6.':i, O\vner lives 3BR-21/J BATH clrps, cpts. bltins, cor. Elhs Biibo I I d Top ll'\'ine location. Immed. Portofino 3 br, 4 ba plus on premises. 536-1731 Redecorated. Near So. Coast & Delaware, Own e r:., 1 s an ~~ec., plenty ,liarking, . occupancy. Brown shag delached bonus rm. Ten· Duplexes Unfurn. 350 RETIRED people, clean, Plaza. Adults. No pets. 675--4869 l\~ eves & 4 BR. avail early .ran. ~!i c.rpt'g lbl'U-0ul, c u s 1 0 m nls/pool prlvil. $.590 mo. Balboa Penin ul1 quiet aplS. at the beach. 642-0461, ~ wkends. 842-blk to bay. Lrg BR's. $300 MO. yrly, Steps to draperies. Te11nls courts & Capri Realty, 644-1:>25. 1 $95 mo., $220 Lo\•ely 3 hr, 3 ba, e WALK TO BEACH STUDENTS WELCOME. ~~~~· 2 Bus, 2 car pool. $395 per mo. Min . 1 NE\V exec 4 BR, 3 BA wJ180 BEACH & Bay. 3 Br,.2 Ba. 53&:7056 Jmmac nr frwys, walk to Brand nu 1 & 2 br. crpts, 213--289-83fi6 eve111• year lease. Must. nave degree vifv." tennis & pool Frplc, beam ceil, gar, com· Lanuna Beach sho~ & schls. No pets. 540-drps. bltns, gnr. 221 16th Balboa Peninsula refer enc~ s. Ho I· SfiOO mo. Eves & wknds. pare price S300 per mo. ., 6338. St. 536--0063 or 847-3957 3' D~~0~' ~~I ~·o ~ PENIN. Point, ~~ blk to ~979-l~; Ron' 714 ~1791 96!Hi.503 EFFIC. apts lrom $50 wk SPACIOUS nc.w. 2 Br-.-2 .Bn, ,,.... WALK TO BEACH Adults, no pets, 67J..8340 oct!an or bay. New wJw * EXECUTIVE View 5 Br Corona ciel Mar or $170 ·mo. Pool, 'maid, bltriS-, drps, caroeling, pool , 2 & 3 BR, Crpts Drps, Bltm. Vacanctei COil money! Rfnt crpt, treshly painted, 3 BR. You don't need • gun to H.V., hni, Fan1 rm, din rm, $285-~; ~lry, Village Inn lrplc, gar. Adult111, no pets. garage. 308 16th SI. 536-2165 your house. apt., store 2~ Ba, trplc. No p et s "Draw Fast" when you ~~~n~ .. pool. $500. Owne.r. 2 BtlRI. 5fr1p k, & mlri~ inccldtn1g ~ 376 \V. Bay St, CM. ~°'~84_7_~395_7_. ____ _ bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot Yrly rent $395. mo. Owner. place an ad in the t ..l1y ""'""""""° u · ove re g, rps OCEANFRONT· 1 and 2 PR 2.·Br, 1 ba & 3 br, l ~ ba, 2 BR, cpt.t, drps, bltns, Oasslfled Ad. , (213) 889--0590. Pilot Want Ads! Call now 3 BR, tam nn.. 2 BA. Harbor thru out, 675-2672 eves. frplc .. deck, TV, winter only bltn range, drps, crpt, ~l. carports, nr. trwys, shop. View •Homes. Newpor t SPAC newer 3 br,2 ba, serv. 494-5~2 clubrm, carport. 2212 C.01-ping & schls. I child OK. S@\\~~~~t.~S" That Intriguing Word Gcrme with er Chuckle ------141t•• ~ .. C\AY I. Pou.AN . Schls. ·$450. 833·3894 porch. \Valk shop. 516 Iris. FURN stud io, c 1 o s e -in, lege Ave. 646-6032. No pets. 646-3786 or 545-0760 LEASE. 3BR family 3BA $300/mo. Lse. 644-6682 _adu.!ts,_ tlQ ~tl!t Yr l Y, NEWLY DECORATED 2 BR, l BA, blti115, gll.l'age, double garage. East Bluff Apt1. Furn. 360 S150Jinc, util . 494-7413 2 Br wfcarport, $145. Wtr $145. Ask for Dale. atea. $500. 644-5175 pd. 2194 Placentia A\·e, "E" , 9624471 • SUPER 4 BR, 2% ba, ram ~01ta Mesa Costa Mesa Call bhvn 1 & 5, 636-4120 2 BR, 1 BA. Bll·lns, cpts. rm, dinl(lg, clu b w/pool & 2 BR, $160, crpts. drps, drps, 1 blk to beach $175 tennis, $470. 644~186 bltins, Sgl story, beam ~ii· mo. 64~3053, 5.3ll-I3.16. N Sh ing. Selected pet ok, 2D43 NE\ A tk he 1wport ores Wallace 646-9243 646-8S82 v pts. wa to ach, • ' · 1, 2 & 3 BR avail. WALK TO BEACH • • NICE 1 BR ,.1. All urns. 536-2579 , , . club; te11nis & pools. pd., pr!". patio, bit-in stove LRG .2BR, 28~.-.-,-rp-ts-. ~drps-. \Ve hnve 3 & 4 BR. homes le refng, S150 ~112. patio, encld 1tar, no pets, from $350 mo., yearly St3-l5I7. $165 mo, 536-1575. Call toda,v! They JtO fa!tt 2B'R Triplex NG pets. nelU' 2 d . . CAYWOOD REAL TY shopping center, :i:100 2243 C ~R. cpts, rps, bu1IU11s, * 54S..1290 * . Rutgers St. 640-&S23 ?.~~ !J8,t0~~a~ pets. 1503 $.lU(), YEAR lease, 3 BR. 2 bas, Fam·nn, blt·ins, new <;pts. drps. Walk. to beach. Community pool , Great for children. 250 62nd St, 644- 7391 San Clemente 2 BR, rarige & oven, crpts, oceM vt8w, newly pAinted. $175. 146 Mariposa, 894-4234 South Laguna 2...BR, den. 2 ha. home. All blt .. lns, • oc-ean v I e w, 1315/mo· 499-1482 B~AND NEW Weekly Rate for Single Apartment LARGE 2 Br, triplox P'lv N•wporl Beach pe.Uo, crpt1, drps, bltns. No·i------------1 Special !ilove-ln Rate * Pirrnlst.ed Sl11tln '* Air C9"1tlellff * p,.. UtU1t5" * W•Mn I Or,.,. * lltc"9 fotlllfl" * RecrHtl .. lltoo• * Llfte. Purnl-'H * AMple P~l111 -'k-Meld s.nrce * .JllClllll 1\ii~r I.eel * ""'" ,,., .. M.-tl ....... Wat~r Falls-Lagoons-Fountalits Stay A Day, Week, Month or Whatever . . DAILY_' RA'!'Ef~OM.$9.00 pets. $165. 557-Sl& \VESTO.IFF 2 BR, 1 ~' bn. 1 & 2 BR. $135-$155. Stove, townhou!!e;-Adultll only, oo ttf, crpt/drps, hid nool. pets. 1728 Bedford Ln. $2001 Adults, oo.pets. 645-8965. Mo. 548·7533 REDUCED Re.nt for lite 2 Bedroom, bHns, D!\7..1... nt'ar _d1.1Ue1, 3BR. 2BA. ·~ts. Hoag Hoso. Adults. u.ro per dl'f". bltln" 51().g752-. • mo. 642-4381. - 2 -3 BR, ba, crpt/drps BAYFRONT ~Br, 2 Ba "'' pools. pl&YJO"OUlld. $150 up. Int patio, nrtv ht-'lch .\ nlfll' Call 645-0140 . lSOOlrn•. ~7!>,003\. '4j;4510 I, BDRM, erpts, drps. UtJJ DUPLEX 3BR, 2BA, 1111 incl. Ideal 1or sU,a;le. 2515 bltln1, blk to beArh, lrg Elden, C.M. $155. 642-4413 yrd; )'Ml' round. 1-817-2382 live BIG! ftom $160 Al Oak1vood Garden Apan- nients GREAT RECREATION: swim- ming. sau nas, health clubs. billiards. tennis-, pro & pro shop, golf driving range, pany room, e1c. FU N ACTIVITIES: Full-lime direclor, !ree Sunday brunch, BBQ's, 1r1p~. parties, and n101e I BEAUTIFUL APART MENTS: srngJes, 1 & 2 bedrooms. Furn. & unfurn. Wi1h all the extras; Models open 10 to 7, Sorry, no pets or children. Oakwood Ga.rde.n Apartments Newport Beach/North Ir.in~ an" 161h M$-(l!i!IO Niwport Beach/South 16th 11 hvifle 6(2-8170 I BR's. From $185. $225 · Bachelor FUTn $205 Ocean View. YearJ,y -lease. Heated Poc>l. Adults Only. LAS BRISAS APTS. .. 5515 River Ave., NB Call 642-2566 • * * CAROL JORGESON 191 Morrlsto\vn Lane Costa ?--Iesa You are the winl'K'r of g llckets to the " SPORTS.~ Ra:REATIONAL VEHICLE SHO\V Rt the AN,\HE~t CONVENTION CEN'l'ER • Januat)'J.13-I Please call &U-6G78; ext 333 to claim your tlCktt&. 1 IN,..J"f'\ Cc'llmtY toll fftit 1ltlrnber Is &f0-1220.) ,. . * • * Room• 400 PRINT NUMBERED lETTfiS IN !HES! SQUAIES i ~~~~RM&ll 1011 ' I I I I 'LIKE I I I I SCRAM·LETS AN\;WERS IN .CLASSIFICAllON 700 Urilvonl\y P ark SPACIOUS 3 Br. 3 bn twnbsc; W/fam rm. 2000 sq n.. Avnll unuary. $375. mo lsk:. llil HARBOR BlVO COSTA MfSA en j~l·)h DUPLEX 1 BR: Unf\:irn, Z....BR., frnlt, rlros k trit. LIVE at the Beach. $25 Wk, garage, qulet, no doRI. cats, Adul t!! no pets. $225. mo. Pine l\1iOu J\fotel, 6302 W. or motont)'clet, 548-~. 645-6506 call art 5:30 COff.JJt ttwy, NB. 6'f3..0440 ----------'-------------------~--·-=;..;:=:::•:..... _____ _ I , • . . 6~5 -~R40 ' • NEW 2BR. 2BA, crpts. drps, AT-t"ie be11:h. ~ Br. S'M LOVELY-Roof'l in home. dlshwaaher, laund tac, no yearl.Y. $225. wintrr. CHU , \Veil loctotcd. SUO/mo. Cull """· sm, M;-7755 an l?pm _ ~·--· 1 e«;.1502 __ • ' ) J • • ' ! • • I • • • • . ' • • ' • ' i I • • .1 ! -' . • • • J.:l PllOT -ADVERTISER l'(tdn<sdly, JanUMJ 2, 1974 TT~,-~~· ;Jan~IJll1~::::;~19~~i4r&Flf'fii!HOJPW.iiii~M"[lrJ'tO] Rooms 400 O flu Rontol 8u1lnon Ront11 44~ Ponon1l1 ' 530 Loit • ~b MolOlll"f Holp Wonted, M & "710 Hop ;;.;:;•n~='-'--F_l_O :;H:•:!:P~:;;;.::;:;;.;.;:::..;~'.'"I tBR llachelorctl• looking out NEWPORT BEACH NEWPORT SHORES • !'ULLY LICENSJ:."D 1.0!;"1; Sia,,_, S<>alpolnt Brlck-Block-Stono l iiim:iiiiiiiiiil~~iiiiiiiii~IBABYSf!TER 'SPtM ~:~~ ~ET~ t~~ on Tropk!bl petJo A Netr.tpotl MEDICAL OFFICE 600 To tf«XI Sq. 11. &PtlC , * SPJRl1'UAUST * \ male, 9 mo1., no Oea oollar, * 64s-82G6 * hO~, '""'.Ii" • 4 dayt 'It. t·J> 10 llff.y, Jacu.ut. lauod prlnll. avaJl .. ln1ml'dlately! 62nd &: Spiritual readinM:s 10 a.m. V1c. of 1800 Blk Santiago ~~.,_;,'-'~=c.:;,---1 drlvf It be responsible. ·to ~ w dtl ·Mar p1i t•nli....,~ fl.nd. 6TJ...2193 Nf'ar l~ong Hpsplta.I: 1700 ~. P!lcific Coa•t 1-lwy., NewJ)Ort -10 pm. Advice on au Or, tn Dovtt Sh o.r c.1 • P1lnttn1 & 5'&-S002 after 5 PM. ~ ~t~ pbone £:. or STh-&l:fl (answerin& 111!1'-ft. garden·l)lpt' office; lots St>ach. for offlC't uset bar-matten SU N. £l f;amino Newport Beach, on 12/16. P1perh1nglng ALL I ,.. vice). of parking. 4 l.o.l'l:e rx1tm.. L-r "~P or ""u h .. ,1Jle'6S, Reel, &n Clemente, for U )'(>U have .lnfor. of • BABYSITl'ER.. Llve 1 n, itock. XJNnt ~.i m,~1".. .. -n11t'!le stn., receptlon, buSI· UC' """ ..... ,, """ -. ....... 136 •-~.,. 1 .,. ca 11 PROF. waUcoveti.na" 1tate CH-kee-•) need Unmed. qulttd. o s11,,...ell 1 t'""'~· ..... Root.ts S20 wk up W/klt. ocu ofc., X·t'tlY & dark rm., Rent• very reuonabte; appt call ~'°"9(1\4, 4:r"""" ::!."',.~!~ ...... ll'dP e lie. No. ~4, lruiur., all C.M.-area~1832 Call Mn Adami 644-~15 $30 wk up apt1. Children pr"h>ate d0<.:lor·3 otflce: 2 month to monlh or lease. BEST ~tASSAGE IN N.B. U'W"V.wil' n,or:;w • .typts of paper. 714 : s & pct aecUon. 2378 Newport I m;t roonts, air-rood. Tdeftl ' ) 3400 Irvine Ave. Sulle 1038 REWARD • Xtra Irr blk 84)-4386. POSITION Bh-d CM. ~ or ror 0,,bopedl"· $765 )'er ' 675-'050 Cat Bri,,ol lOpen 8 AM. male cat ns J)Oundil white INT/EXT PAINTIN,G BARNAID, relief ahlft. Ai> ply tn-perton, Flame Room. 19th I. MtJJYOvia, CM, or call 646-5544, ask tor Donna. COMMERCIAL TELLER 64>-3967. mo. Ann . 557~. • hind feet, neck shaved ._ l'llMWIT Q,,&. • PALM-& CARD READER becaw;e of recent 1u..raeey, Free F.ll .. Jim flS..3559 l\IOD furn prl baU\, k1tch 601 Dover Or., Suite 3 ad \¥/reduction. 10831 Beach detparate ~ of niedical WALL COVERING 100% prlv. Congenial S22 wk. NE\\'PORT BEACH Blvd, Stanton. 527-3406 attn. Vic. Yorictown &. 1Jc. No. 2.63683. Ins. All work COior TV clOM! to UCJ W--' Ma .,_ ...... .i ..... -.. c.4'!" ,,._ 552-8l50 lndu1triaf Rental 450 • * * _ a.1u, _.....,og,--guarani~. Vr>!t-......-rn... . _ BEAUTICIANS. Styll.st, w foUo.,_ving or without. Apply at. 3J.U Newport Blvd., NB Exporloncod UNITED CALIFORNIA .BANK -~ DON Al.LU'! Painting Done Neatly, OCEANFnONT lovely pvt roon1 & bath wJkll priv, for college age lemale, 6~1705 * COSTA. MESA * " LOST·Owner oHerlng $100. 1923 F'ederal A\lfilnue Reward for retw11 ol white Quickly & Reasonably FREE 680 S.t"'. 220 pov.-er $115. Costa Mestt callco female cat neutered. 1 ~=~STE~VE~-~~-0~~ 1300 S.F. Priv:i.te otflce, You are the winner of No front claws, wearing ,eol. PROF p'.ainter, honest work, plenty or parking. 2 tickets lo the lar, idenllficatlon. Vic. 1363 reas. fnttext, tree estlmale. B-0 OK kE E PER-exp. . pt-Ume to 1tart . w/1mall · dynamic Co. Work Into full time. ~2lll Newport Beech. 2301 s. Main Street Santa Ana (547°9511) * * * Largder wlih1 available. SPORTS & • 'Galaxy J:>r., NB on U?/29. Reta. 548-2759, 642-3913. ltea y lor occupancy, RECREATIONAL Please call 642.9&:16 DONALD FINLEY c. ROBERT NATTRESS VEHICLE SHOW Plaster, P•tch, Rep1ir 28'!9r!'.'1aRMlo ... Clrcle REALTOR at the LOST, English Springer *PATCH PLASTERING* .....,,, Cosio. f\fesa. 979-65TI ANAHEIM Spaniel, vie Ogle St, C.M. You sre the winner ol CONVENTION CENTER Liver It White, White feet All types. FNe estimates 2 tlckel!I lo the NOW LEASING January 4-13 & legs Ir: spot on nose. Call MG-6825 ntt~~~O~AL Huntlrtgton Beach Please call 642-5678, ext 333 Please bold her. Lie No .• Plumbing VEHit'Ll:l SHO\\I NEW M-1 10 claim your tickets. 7806, Ans. to Dasha. Call ---------·I al th. mo. rent free. Dlx. (North County toll free 64&-1700 Reward. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING offices nr. airport. 1,2 & 940 Sq. t,t. & UP number is 540-1220.J ANAHEB1 3 Rn\. spaces fro.m Sl3S f.lo. H'amilto11 .l!t: Nt""land St. ._ * * LOST wlld scarlet Macaw. Remodels Ir: Repairs, Water CONYENTJON CENTER Janitorial serv. & ample ~1970 ~!ii~!ii!ii!ii!ii~~~l 12/29. Laat seen !lying heaters, disposaJ.s., furnaces, J1tnuary 4-13 parking, 833--3223 Bet-noon !!!!!!!!!! ... '""!!!!!'""'""'""~ ;: North out of Eme111ld Bay. dshwashrs. 642-6263 MIC & Please call ki-5678, ext 333 or-833-2840 Aft. noon . , RENT f\l·l, roo sq. ft, 2944 . I~ Any lnlo leading to capture B/A. Complete Plumbing to claim your · tickels. I"\£'._..,. I RnndOlph, No. 10, c.~t. loll and .fourilL of blnt, please contact; Service. Uc. 273394. • !North County toll free ~" \ ~pace ~vallu.ble $50 $100/MO. 675-5116, 673·7039. 4%-mlS collect. . PLUMBING REPAIR number Is ~1220.) mo._ V1ll proVJd~ furn!~ 4001 BIRCH_N_B__ LOST MALE Irish Setter. • No job too small * * * at S5 mo. Answering service • Found (frff ads) 550 lost since Dec. 21. Has red ** 642-3128 •• Guest Home 415 available. 17875 Beach Blvd. 3600 sq. fl. 541·5032 collar and flea collar . .:.;;,.c:.;...;,..o.__;.____ l"lu11tin1.>ton Beach._~~321 Rentals Wantef 460 FND: MALE red Irish Set· Owner heartbroken. Call Sewing/Alter.Jtions AVAIL. Jan. 1st. Pvt or BAYFRONT OFFICES ter, large, ,v/Oea collar. Marti 543-1730. semi-pvt, good food, xlnt Prestige area. 740, 550, 330 ARTIST needs quiet live In vie. o.c. Fairground. Go to EXPERTISE • Alter. Ladies 24 hr care. Loi$ ol lreedoin. sq ft. 3700 Ne\vport Blvd., Sludlo, beach area. o.c. Pound on t-.lanc hester & Mens. Pick up & dellvery. Homey ~ almosphere .. cen--N.B. s1:r-1220 53lr9900 in Orange. I 11~1 · 54S-TI97 after 6 .. trally located on 2 bus hncs. ' "==-o,,-----"" '!ii!ii~ • ~•lructlon ' Call 8924193 an¥time. I PRIME olfice space, avail ; FOUND De<;:. 30, Male Television Repair • at Fashion Island, Newpo11 I[ J/fl4 \ Golden Retriever n r .l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiili NEW concept in living for Beach, 861 SQF, lo 2,350 AnncM.lncement• Harbor View Honl~.s. Npt.I~ COLOR TV Repair, expert, Sr. Citizens. Sec lo ap-SQF. Furn or unfurn. Reply I Beach. Call to identify Sc~ools &. ' reasonable, most in home. pttcjale, 642--9278 PO Box 12G4,_C.M_:.__'4l2626. _ 644--0722. 1nstruct1on1 575· Antenna service also. Bert Vac,.tion Rentals 425 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB Announce'm1nt1 500 FOUND; sm. mixed Bassett Gallemore, 968-278.1. Al AAri1ES Bureau, of Employment Agency Stir! '74 With An Exciting Ch1llonglng New CerHrl Equal Opportunity Employer * * * A. E. BROWN Controller TrMI $30K 652 Cove St. Mlnl computert. 30 mil '74 Costa Mesa Jr. Account1nt $12K You are the winner of ~ 2 tickets to the Liz Relnden ~e.DC)' SPORTS & . 4020 Birch Sti'fft RECREATIONAL. Suite lM, NB 83.l-8LOO VEHICLE SHOW Establilhed 1965 al !he ANAHEmt: COOKS & CONVENTION CENTER DISHWASHERS January 4-13 Please call ~._ext 333 Days/Niles, no exoer nee. to claim )'OU' tic""· ANCIENT MARINER (North County toll tree 2607 \\/. Coast Hwy. number is 540-1220.>' Newport Beach · 646-0'101 --~*~~*=-'*"="--Apply 3 pm·5 om Mon·Fri CAMPERS. COOKS . To """' for ....... H 'UNTERS tant manager. Graveyard •hUI 6 days wk. Co. paid tngonulty: $700 FISHERMEN 1>onen ... Jack rn The aox. Great chance for the lndlv. 1 need several qualified In-1205 Baker, Coata Meaa. who can organize & make divlduals who are outdoor COURTESY BOY, muat be changd. 2 Dynan:tlc men minded 4: would like tD available betwn 8 am & wbo have .a ra.p1dly ex· make SlOOO. to $1500. per 5 pm dally. Neat in ap- pancllng co, need a together mo. This may be your pearance, will train. Ca J 1 indiv .. who can get thei:n chance to become ~ part 644-2060. '?rganized In their or;:_ ThLS pf one of the Nalion's CREDIT CLERK IS . a, cha!lce 10 dO yoor fastest growing o u tdoor RE,..EPT/TRAINEE ' l~~iiii~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~I & Beagle. Lt. brown wflots PIANO lessons exp tch new II · ~· ri!~lO~ 1f~A~~e S:~k·~: ~ . * • of grey. Vic s.D. Fnvy nr In area .238.S2 Wardlow Cir. _T_il_• _______ _ LIVE in the all new Dana UliJ . ..Baumgardner, 541·5032. GEORGE COKAS -Brookhurst. 548--4005 'o r Lag Ni.g 4~ Elaine CERAMIC TILE NEW & PoinJ, lfarbor at I he 1612 Santiago D1ive 833--0730 ask for Dee. Pelck beautiful 1\-tARTNA INN Office iv/beaut vie\v, 565 Sq. Newport Beach FNO: \vt1ite Samoyed, vie. ~~~~~. ~2::.' Sm jobs Uung. Variety & challenge. recreatton companies. Not "'" Xlnl op~r. for bright lndiv.! _ Poise & Charm: $800 land sales. Call Mr. Wayne w/llttle or no f'KJ)er. Avg. Act as personal sec'y & adrii lO to 1 or 5 to 7 • 5,58-8636 ttping & wllllngness to leam l\totel, 34002 Del Obispo St. rt. Newport Center. $425 mo. You are the winner of 0 C F irground Chok I l~ (-496-2353), KI t ch en, Ef-Professionally decorated. 2 tickets to the chain. C:, to O.C. six>und o! SerWtes MCI~ Top Soil flciencies & Apartments. Estate Realty, 640-ll20. SPQRTS & 1\1 he t . --'-------- Healed pool, dire<:! -dial SHARE exec -ocean view RF.cREATIONAL enc s er. 1 "iiiiiiiiiiiilliiiil * QUALr&Y * ·asslst to VIP. Travel, meet Cham!Ser of Commerce \\'ill do It. 1',antaatlc start· top execs. ln So. Calif. Act Needs male or fe"male help, 1ng salary & co. benefits.· as hostess at Co. en-over 16 for local .. dvertlsing J1son Bat Agency tertainment !unctiofl!I, CQ.01-program. Telephone V.'Ork. 17AOO Brookhu~t. t ". Vly. phones, television, ·sauna suite & sec. in Union Bank VEllICLE SHO\V FOUND; IrlShset'tei', mile B b • -, bath, I au n dry facilities, Bldg, Newport ~enter at the Vic 2600 Blk of Orange,_•_Y_•_•tt-lng _____ _ mWlicate w/entertalners at S2 hr + bonllSe:s. Cillln~ Sul1e 213 963-6775 gro und b r eaking fromourofc.?ickyourown * MULCH & TOP SOIL * meeting room, close to San 644-9440 ANAHEif.f . Ave., Costa Mesa, ~1.8971 CONVENTION CENTER aft 6 LICENSED OIJLD CARE ceremonies. Unbelievable shift 10am·3pr.i or 3pm·8pm. DELIY.ERY Man, for early oppor. for person who has Apply in person morning L A Time• home * 586""130 ClCoc~ente ptayLag~ Be:~~ ~-Sq. Ft. Furn or January 4.13 . FO~D; sm. fem. puppy. MY HOf\fE. NR. so. COAST Unfurn. \Viii sublease all 78 333 Blk w/wht marking•, on PLAZA. 557·8656 sporttishlng, shopping & or part. Airport area. 831-Please call 642-56 , ext no family ties & is free Jan 2nd ONLY delivery route, must have I I 1·= 1 to travel. Secy' skills a CJ<. Advertising economical car, ovtt 25yn ttStaurants. S5() week & Up. u . to claim your tickets. Golden West Ave. nr stables BABYSlTTING -my hon1e. Bring this ad & receive 3: O. · !North County toll !i"ee 968-5789 By the hour or day. . f must. 315 3rd St, SUite E old,, 2t,; hrs daily, no 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ J Huntington Beac_h__ soliciting, no -collecting, S5 off on first week's rent. OFrICE \Y/ storage, panl'd number Is 540-12'20. I FOUND: Male Gern1an Short • 675-1706 • walls, shag crp!, air cond, * • • C • Stability: $650 1---good supplementary lnoome, A flue to this great .position AUCTHOECSTKOERRES \,es1mln11ter, GG, JIB area, Job W1ntod, Molo 700 430 WANTED, Roommilte. \Vork- ing lady, 55, v.'ish::!s ·10 share 3 Rm. apt. with same for ~Ii rent. S50 & 'h light & gas per month. Not deluxe, but clean, comforta61e and reas- onable. 2079 Thorin Ave., C.M. Avail Jan ls.t. MALE to share turn. 3BR condo, $150, San Clcn1ente, 4~7438 llam·3pm GIRL..,roon::i,matt.. "''alJUXi to share 2 BR hse. $75 mo., Newpon Beach 642-81&1 PARK Newport toy,•nhouse. Want Girl to shr. wl2 feni. pool & tennis .. 640-1673. G•rages for Rent 435 MINI WAREHOUSES STORAGE No Move-in or Move-0ut charges. r·rom $7.50 per month. Hamilton &' N.-,vlnnrl St., HB ALLSPACE 960-1970 re(r/sin~, stall shwr. 1652 haired Pointer, vie. Irvine ,.rpenter Ne\\'J)Ort Slvd, CM. 548-9766 Legal Notices 510 & 195h; Call & identify -~-------979-2251. • • • Ofc suite, 1000 ft. Suitable NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR FOUND: Great Dan e, P. SHEFFLE'ITE for doctor. Hunt l n g t on ANY DEBTS BUT MAY female; fawn color. Vic. 339'jJ Ca.lie de Bonanza Gardens, 846-1323. 0\1/N. l\1ARGARET .. Back Bay area, N'pt., Costa San Juan Capistrano Business Rental 445 Sl\11111 r-.1esa vie. 979-3522 You are the winner of SCRAM-LETS ' ANSWERS 2 tickets to the 2000 or 4COO W· ft. building FOUND: Blue Parakeet ban-SPORTS Ir: • ··-·--~tur-!'oWoflM ~ for lease. AValr-·-upprox. Jl'1J _•_od_v_1c_._25_1_22nd __ St_ .• _c_os_1a_ 1 RECREATIONAL ~ March 1. n....,..,ntly -,pied '-nonltl f\fesa. Call 646-0089 VEHICLE SHO\\I YOU. ·, • • "'"" ..,._.,, Personal noti~ in a n~·s- by f\1ar Vac Electronics. 'Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ii~ FOUND, Cat "Koko" vie. at the paper: "George, please come 1829 NC\\'J)Ort Blvd., O.!. • Irvine & 16th, Newport. ANAHEIM home. The lawn needs mow· !',':"3280ne . Deno V a cc her ,p __ .,_,._n_•_l• _____ s_30_ , ____ 646--0 __ 1_09_. ____ 1 CON~= 4~~R ing and the garden needs a .N\r 1 • WORM like YOU. Mabel." "'PHE--Faetory" has--a lrg-P~BLEf..1 ~gnancy. ~ FOUND,smalLwhite Roodle, Pie~ call 64!-5678, ext~333¥!F.~'iic="~"';'='=o"':::= I shop avail. $185.(]no. In f 1 dent, s y m.p a thet1c fem. Meado\.\•lark area H.B. to claim your U c ets. Job w.nied, l-tm11l1 702 Cannery Village 4251mh st. pregnancy counseling. Abor· 846-94ZJ. {North Couniy toll free NB. 642-1960. · ' lion &: adoptions ref. Lost 555 number*~ 54<>-*1220.*) NEED help at home? We 1736 ANAHE lf.1, C. l\·1 . Ground floor office Sll5. n10. 600 sq ft, 673-26.54 TIME FOR. QUICK CASH TliROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD APCARE 642-4436 have aides, n u r s e s , h 0 u s ekprs. companions. Homemakers Upjohn 541-i. LirE OR DEATH Let our babies live. For alternatives to ABORTION call LIFE LINE 551-5522, 24 hrs. LOST Dec. 28th, 10 mo old FRED THE CARPENTER fen1. Sealpoint Siamese, 22 yrs e}Cperience .cos.tom Blue eyes, Vic. 53rd & River work rough or f 1 n 1 s h Ave, N.B. Reward, 645-0280 carpentry. Large or small jobs 639-9873. MIXEJ?"Shep ma _blk w/Wht Cirpet Service EXPER nurse to care tor elderly in their home M5-<Yl6ll '1olp Wantod, M & F 710 A LCOHOLICS Anonymous markings wearing San ·-~------­ Phont:: 54~7217 or 'vrite Bernardino lisc. Reward JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. _552-1450 Ori Shampoo, (Soil "Retard· ACCOUNTING · '2 ants). Degreasers & BILLING CLERK TRNE \Voman lo meet · la!! m~n IRlSH setters. ~th ll all color brighteners &: 10 Great co. has career open· over 30 for comparuonship. mos. Lost 12-.24. Vic 23rd minute bleach for white ls that person who 1s leav· 63&-292·1 1ng {only for personal Jsofferi.ngexceptlonaloppor. DENTAL Assistant, reasons! has been there for tO women interested in 1-e. Otalnide. 4 handed ail 12 yrs. },antastic 1.-'0·V.'Orkers . tail eareen. We have open· down dentistry. Able to take & co. benefits. This lirm I n g s for managen1en1 good x-ra.yg. ~tin. 1 yr ex· wants. the next person to trainees. Rapid advance-per, t.a»;una NI g u e 1. stay longer.' Your own pvt ment, xlnt't benefits. ill £. 49&-4245. ofc & supervision of 1 other 19th St., C.M. 645-8264. 0 EN T-A~L-.-,-,~1 ,-t,-nc1t gal. Need lndiv. \\'ho can Equal Oppor. Employer Chalrslde, min. 1 yr exp, do A/J_t & A/P up to T/B. CLERICAL some eve houri, desirable Type little. Immed. Assignments. Top Oragge CoWlty Local!on, Debit/Credit: $575 $SS. Long or short tenn 548-6638 aft llarn . Largest co. of Its kind In Call 540-4450. DrifrAL--A-S-Seol~S~T~A~N~T the world needs sharp NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO. Chalrside, capable Ir: exp. capable ga.l _w..bc.I n • t TEMPO Temporary Help jn all aspecta of &meral background doing A/P. Top . dentistry. Call 644-0922. benefits Ir: x1n't chances for CLERK ad v'a ncement. Beautllul DENTAL Recept. desk only. 1 .. -c r ti O 1 yr. dental exper. nee. P """' 0 cs near a range TYPIST Fringe beneUts. Some. Sall, Co. freeways. H.B. area. '846-3540. Gal In Whito: $575 . R!Dh, this busy doctor 's ofc \Ve have • an opening for a needs you oow. Doctor will shaty. hlg:tily capable Cler~ train you In back ofc duties Typist v.·_1th minimum 5.5 If you know front ofc. wpm. typing for o.ur blllly Personable & trlendly to Credit and Collections De- work w/patients. Hrs .are ~ent. A_ typical day only 9-5, M-F. ~111 mcl.ude heavy lyplng, 0 E N T A L R eceptionist, Laguna Hills, El Toro aree. Exper. Salary open. Replies confldenlial. 83G-ll30. DIETARY Aid e &: h o u sekee per . Deluxe residential villa. 6U-5861. DISHWASHER, 269 8 Newport Blvd, Costa Mesa, 543-4501 Call Mary ~79 &Santa Ana, CM. 642-83TI carpe•-. Sa·-~ .. -·•y ing for sharp indiv. w/avg "" ... J~~ .. ..,., typing & good math apti- Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 i Autos, Imported 970 by saving me extra "trips. tulle. Employer Pays 1o·ee1 1;;;;;;,:;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,,j Will clean living rm., dining Also Fee Jobs. Oppodunity: $500 Just the spol for beginner who has Sh & types. Will train to become exec. Sec·y. Gorgeous o fll ces in beautiful Fashlon Island. filing, phones a"d operation of office machines. If vari· ety'S )'Qur thing, this is your job. Apply in person or call: 808 CAMPBELL (TI4J 54().SIXXJ, EAi. 250 DISHWASHERS l\lust be ove.r 18 Nile work ADplv in nerson GAS RAT·IONING? I 0 GALLONS PER WEEK? WITH A ' SUBARU YOU W~fi l. B~Ar&i.E TO DRIVE 300 MitEs--PER-WEEK s; THE RIGH T CAR! s; AT THE R IGHT PRICE! s; AT THE R IGHT TIME! . DON'T WAIT! BUY NOW! WHILE WE HAVE THEM TO DELIVER '72 NOVA Coupe '69 FORD LTD 2 Door ·Auto. FUZI trans., Air Cond. Power Steering ·•2195 '68 Cpe. de Ville 1179. Auto. tr1ns. Power ,teering, Power brakes, Air cond. 1891 -AGFI $699 ) Air Cond. Pow er Steering. Power Brakes. 3861 $699~ IZRC- '70 CADILLAC 4 .Dr. Auto. trans. Air c:ond. Power Steering, e,.k .. I PO 14457 I •1599 Power rm., & hall SIS. Any rm. Jason Best Agency $7.50, couch $10. Chair $5. 17400 "-kh 1 ,. Vl 15 yrs. exp. is what counts g.1uu urs • r · Y· not method. I do work Suite 213 963-6775 "SPECIALS" myself. Good ref. 531-0101. ACCI'G CLERK; rapidly Secretary $650 Hl'UND LABORATORIES • S CROWNS lfl>t 8 . Coast Hwy., CdM DIBERNAROO & Sons _ growing, nafl Sa11 boat Repro Typist $650 3300 Hyland Ave. carpet sales _ installation mlgr hiring for head ofc. Loan Service $550 Costa Mesa, Cali!. 92626 * * * J. DAWSON and repair. 963-2639 Payroll expr necess. A/R, LeRBI Sei:='y $650 An equal opportunity --~~-----·I A/P pfd. type 50 WPM. Gal Friday S600 employer male1female. 21061 Amberwlck Lane Hunling1on Beach You are the winner of 2 Hckell to the. Cement, Conc_ro_I_•__ For further info call 642-0542 Recept/Sec'y S575I'-!!...!!...~.,.-----... ,. EqUal Oppty Employer l\fedical S450 CLERK TYPIST CEl\1ENT: Patio, drives, I•._ ___ ,..____ Teller $450 Employer Pays Fee. Fan- walks-Repairs, saw & Accounting Cleri_cal · SPORTS Ir: RECREAUONAL VEH1CLE SHOW • atthe · remove. Free est. 544-899S. RUTH RV• .• AG•Ncv Accounting: to$12K tas~ic oppor. t..ary:e co. will .,ni, ... • . . train sharp indiv. w/avg. Contr1dor 1793 Newport, C.M. 646-4854 5 Yrs. min. exper. in man typing & lite exper. in ac· 17931Beach,H.B. 847-9617 acct .. Assume . all counting dept. Xln't 00• GERWICK & SON i:sponsiblllty. Supervise 2 benefits. 10 Key helpful : ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Bldg Contr. Addit & Remod ADVERTIS-!NG--,-ales--& bill elks. Laguna area. Also Fee Jobs. ~1e Lie. Bl-ll~~2170 managers. Orange County's F /C Bkkpr to $12K Jason Best Agency January 4-U Please call &12-5678, ext m to claim your tickets. !North County toll tree number is 544)..1220.J fastest growing magazine. Mature. Work In equipment 1~400 Brookhurst, r·. Vly. JACK Taulane, repair , Pros only.:___~--repair. Tuslln area. Swte Zl3 963-6775 remod, add. Lie. B-1 269072 AIDES-ORDERLIES. Age no Cl.ERK W t U i Of My Way Co 642-4703 barTler. Special lralnlng Acct to $14K ' es ern non · ·• .. • • 1~ • Mln lice 9:00-5:30, 44 hrs/wk. Electrical & General class on Jan. 7. Apply '""'hree. 3 yts, exper . Typing 50 WPM 4 paid ·rhe fastest dra..v In~ West. Llc'd. 842.()7JI, 645--0357 Park Lido Healthcare, 466 . theory Ir: ays. aast. to con-holidays sick leave 494--2513 , .a Daily Pilot Cluslfitod F1ag&hip Rd., N.B. troller. Compton area. H 1 W , F <& Eloctrical t·AN~~Olll~O~O~IL~C0~.-0~u.n-' • • P antoo,M. 710 HolpW1ntod,M~F710 11---------Toc:hnical Eng: to$20K =w-iiiiiiiiiiii~"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiii~iiiiii~-~iiiiiil e ELECTRICIAN e PLENTY OF l\tONEY plus Exper. in design or land r Lie. #156310 cash bonuses, f.rlnge mobile radio trans. •• ·~ !"" •• benefits to mature in· Knowl~ r ~~ ~ dt'vld---' ;" .._ach area. ....ge o trans&: anten-~. d • uw "' "'"" nas. 75 MHZ to 450 MHZ. ""r en1ng Regardless of experience, Build Ir: debug prototype EUROPEAN Gardener. airmal1 G. F. Read, Pres., equip: O>sta Mesa area. Am.erli::an UibrlcantJ Co., Maintenance -Landscaping. Box 696. Dayton, Ohlo 4540L Tree Removal. V e r y reasonable. 642-5329 eves. APARTMENT Manager, older couple, experienced, MOW & EDGE 27 units, Hunt. Sch. 846-3166 CLEAN UPS -• 554--0657 e ARTIST ex~r. in film 11,,.--=.,.7-~,....~--1 anlrilallOn or art studenf In· General Services terestid in I ear n ing. N...unnrt Beach. 675-4271 "THINGS" by M00&e. Gen'l .. ~,... Carpentry, Repairs, Plum· during day. bing. E l e c . Remod'eiing ASSEMBLERS & MOLDERS 642-fi613. For fast growing fiberglass boat company. Apply at CARPENTRY, electrical Clipper Marine Corp. 1919 plumbing, fix-It. F & B E. Occidental, SA Home -.,pa1r, 64l-l403. AUTO LOT'"MA=~N- H1ulin'9, For one of Orange County's LOCAL moving &: hauling largest Ford Dea1enihlpii. Experienced prefe?Ted , Ai> by student. Large truck. ply in person to Mr. Don Reas. Ban')'. 534-1846_ or ,._ · 673-0647. _ \,,U;Vler. THEODORE ROBINS GET RID OF UNS!Glrrl.Y FORD TRASH & DEBRIS $12 ~· H bor Bl LOAD: COLLEGE SfU· .wiJU eos% f.lesa vd., DENT 54M4JS. UTO A parts, 2 men needed, SKIPLOADER &: dump truck exper. only, Young ex· work. Concrete, :hhalt, paneling co. Apply 3621 w. sawioa, breakhJ. 846--JO. Isl, S&nta Ana. YARD, garage clean-u1>1 AVON remove trees, dirt, ivy, CHRISTMAS MAY driveways, stumps, 847-2666 IE OVER J.2, FT. FURNITURE Van B t E Still for local rum hauls A gen'l u , veryon. h8"1lng. 548-1862, S!i7-2736. Nffd1 Avon Product1. Ho I I v ... AVOl'i dally core P"" UMC Mr\ ng . ducla &: cosmetlcs sell year Dedlcohld Clunl"I 8'0Wld, & now is the porlect dme to become a . Rtflre-* WE DO E!VERYTHJNO *" 1ento.tlve. You can make Rell. f"No est. 646-2839 n10ney at yoor own pace & VACANT ap&.nmenta by meet new people in your unit. References. ... community, too, Far more Eng. Incl: to $14K Degree & exper. Bills of malerlal & contract adm. Costa Mesa area. s.1 .. R•p: lo $14K I Exper'. only In outside sales of art supplies & materials. J..S ys. exper. dealing w/art dealers. L.A. area. SalH Rop: lo $15K Expcr. in computer sales or graphic arts. Soft o r hardwares helpful. "SPECIALS" Sales Outside Buyer Calms Exam Safety Insp Traffic Clrk Serv. Tech Prod Art Mgr Co. Attorney 10 $12K ISOO l600 $10K+ i6ilO l650 116K l12K All Po1lllon1 Ll1hld At Both Offlct1 IN COST,4 MESA 2706 Harbor Bl¥d • Sulto 207 Coll 556-1100 IN ANAHEIM 600 Nortlt E ucl Id Coll nMt20 ~16-15.'il dotell•, Call: 5<0-7011 . t ·-------· ----r EIECUTIYES-IAJCAllERS "JOB 'OPPORTUNITIES" $12M·$75M Ran9t SALAlllS-Nl•OTIAILI Art Yo~ Un•tnployff No-A~• Yo11 S111kin1 A Ch1t191 -__.Worr11d About '!our ~1~J1r1d of Brok 111 Promi••- Undt cidtd At T-o A Proptr C ... r11 of Aclio,n-- ARE YOU UNDER. PAID? If Yo• c ... A•ww 1\e f.tlewl .. c.te,wtet, I• T1le .t.•Rr ... ttw., W•'d Lao Alt l•tet•n W1tt1 Yo• IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do vou ht¥t 1ho119 ¥OCtfiD111I drlvt7 I, Da yoll htl't good ntl!Yt inl1tli91nc11 C Do you f11l••11fflcl111fly rnoti,eltd lo 1chl1 ... 1? D. Do yo1,1 h.t"t tht t bility to 1111•1 dtci1ian1 E. Aft yo11 r11dv to 11! • t••li1tit t•tttt obiec1Jwe1 ~. If you wet• convinc:ecl th•t help we1 eveil•ble would you •c:.cept it, without deloy1 __ YOU SHOULD KNOW e Th• b.tte; join Oft not •dwerli1td _ e Th:rd p1rty prole11lonel influtnc• h 1o"'etlme1 nee••· .. ,., e Getting tho rlgt.t cloor1 ope11, •I tho right l•w•I ,,. quirtt tot~nique. e E1ttutiw• po1Hion1 ire filled through ••ecullw• Inter • -•iOWI --e Me11 ro1um1 m~illn9, it not• lot•l •n1wer. SEND RESUME OR CALL TODAY ' -FOR- -NO COST EXECUTIVE· INTERVIEW El~OUTIYE SERVICES. INC. ..., Hgr.~ ~:.:~ & -• 181 N. Main St. S1nt1 Ano tSECUr.IT'f D:Nr. IUILPlNG .. to,-· ~021 ·. • • ~ • ) • -• • • • ' ' . -• -11·~ri1D\Yiiftt;ii4f.~ili'7ioTA;;r.;\1r.;;;;;;::;r1:;~~~1;;,97.4;:o:~r-;::..--v:r;::;;:;:::,,,.,.,,,,,,.,.,;::,.,.:;:;;:;,;,,""'"""~'7:'.,.:::;;.:;::;;:r.;:;::;:;;;:::;;:~~~r:ii'i"irr;.-:-;:,,.,,.~"'.'.':'"..,-'l':-.-.W~t~d~oe~Jda~y~,;J~M~""~'~2~,~1~97~4~·...,.,..,.,,.-,~P~JL~O~l·~A~OV~E~R~T~~E~R~JJ liiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~I ont • Ho\p Want 10 • p Wani.d, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Ht p Went , M & F 710 AntiquH iiO II DISHWASHER wa"ttd, .8u lNSUltANCE STENOGRAPHER Typ!Jt for lnsurouct prtml· SCRA M LETS ahllta, Apply ln perfOn Jim· New, A&'ncy lb Orange Coon-. C1au A, t/tlft\e, SR. SYSilMS ?i.1iut hitve good typing abll· TEMPO'S um at.'l."Ounll~ fle•)t. llf'l\r • J>q'J, 3050_-<:ou W'/. 1.¥.--U-alrport, needs g;lrl Ste ~I M~er tty .& Ute lh. O,C. Airport. Cull ~1argat'et, 2'JenniJ ·& .:JJenn~ corona dtl Mar. exp In pel"IOnal & com-Balboa -Bay Club 833-8450, . ANSW ERS WJLL15f~.?,'.i,\,g ~~rt;;,':!~ mi w. eou1 Hwy, N.a. , ANALYST c;:~c~Pr.;::"S:fth D'ial-A-Job.I 'rvP1sr·"". -g,-.-0~1c-, -.m-p71oYoe. MINSTER. tor the r1pt a1rl +uaual PART·TIME or F/time AVCO want~ Jan-Aprll, ctown1own DRY ~~'''ING, Count-lrtnae benefit•. Call male or female tor lite Openij\I: exl.sts In Newporl WUDAAC$:1' oltice. 497-2'j&ll '-''-'LIU' -=• nf-833-2261 Oll Wed, Jan ctellvery work. Good DA•c •·--• financial · ~. TE?ttPO·offers a lruly unique TYPIST-Clerk for nun.ln!;l Driven -Eight -JicaVy -Ex--X·RATEO. V$C<I to be that i;orne mr tt ls-charged extra tor the lt.-:ation ut rooms. Now they charge n1ore for TV• that s.llOIY X·RATEO rnov!.et. "'511111181 Agency M~ lull .:--"'--~ .... -..!: • led u.; ~ ....... It tiino &II.Vi""' Op"""""uo.ily ., ,, ... , ... ,..,, """t"-4~ 2nd, bet 9 &--5, Jor ..... now ..... of C.M. arc. ..._ ---•-r •-•ems ···"-• I ~-·-o ...,.. rt('(lrds .~ suppl" .. ordrrs. pref, ~2221 • polntment _,.. helpful. A-txwe aV& eamtna11. ~im"b:.~t 4Y,.. e~';.'"~ • F:ine~saQOrvlct for skilled . . . • • Call 6'12-2410. . ' ~ JR S RETA V Paid dally: Pick )'OllJ' own lltedeslgn&lmpl•mtotatl0t1 -KEYPUNCH *Engr Electronic $16K • EC R hn from 9tlm·9pm, Your ol casualty &/or credit Ille Equal Oppor. Emt>l.,..r SECRETARIES VETERAN 'S *Mlchinitt hr $4.52 1 Fee Paid. Exceptional co. own transp. Apply in & disability systems. Pro-'!!!!!!~~ ... .,...;,!!!!i!!!!!! [\Vbo \vanl UJ.unlflt:(I & · Irvine Apipllances tO:a; *Tech E'-dr $IOO aeekl brllht lndlv. w/COOd peraon, Jan, 2nd ONLY: liciency In 370 OS environ· STOCK GIRL stimulating long o~ shon l!EY 'l'tJRKEY: l'.1tcreslNl 111 * C Sec' t e:.1.c" typing .t lh. Terr If l c C.K. -Advertlalng ment & ANS:COBOL man-. F.Jtime, Exchalve women's term assignments . re-.v l'Olle~? No! \\'ell U1cn, In· DOUOL~ elcctnc oven:.,t: orrM. Y O ~ coworker&, xln't benellts &. 315 3rd St, Suite E datory · "'°'car store. BaJboa ISland. days, couple week.' or law ten.'slcd in moncy1! Coz'i 1 ~- *Adm Sec:rtt1ry $900 areat chance I o r ad· Huntington Beach Excelle~t beocllts, \vorldng Call 675-287Q. months • )OU decide! Nov.• lo'.'11•t : $00~~k 000i:!,~io~is" only Sal•c• ~~ + Boto $1SK *Rect,t/P. Tim• $250 vancement. Sitlary to $500. PBX OJ)er.. relief lhUI. conds & advancement po-STOCK ROOM & yo1\ tan . . . . . Vc1criin's Arfalrs Oft1('C: $35. phone 557-2010 0. ""'ar n u1 *Mlrk,,tlngS.C'y $675 Alao Fee Jobe. caII Sally ~ aervlce exp. tenUal. Please submit APPLY' BY PHONE Oran':f> rn .. cit f"nl\ege a--~"ooPald. w/NYSE *Rik.pt/Typist $450 ~~..!.ncyc o• a;~; J pref. Frt, H.B. a.r ea resume .w~recent Wary INVENTOA\~ CONTROL Cp,IJ 540-.4400-&: Let us Jeno\\' * 5~5853 * Rent Washers~~~rl ':.. -lor talent~indiv. Ftrm *S.Cret07iLPR • $700 Harbor Blvd7'CM ~ history to.: Some exper, pret'd. Ca:ll for what your sJ..ills are. No j S2. \\lk. Full ">O-UJL In da1a p-1..... """-. *1 Girl fico $S20 .____ PBX ()peratuT, answering appt, 642-8961. need.I Lo mholc i~_pe.r!I011~llyh; \Vnhi~l"('SI '• Acxpe,r. OMdo:ni?g * 639--1.202 * ..__ ·--~ ~ -• pd Part 1im CAROL S'llT Unt'I we ave tu.: 'Just rig t ' s 1 t. pp y 1 e !I \VHIRLP001 Elec ...,.,,..,r, dllllve tmitory x l n 't ..... p $700 KEYPUl'!ICH , .. ,.ce ex · e, •P' " H T I phone u 2 s ~ ' ~ y to rtl to -ply 65T West 19th St, Suite e c answer lg serv. spot for you? I Restaurant, 12 E. 17th t, t yr old, needs mliYJr bmeftts lncludina proftt HELEN SCHAFFER OPR H 0. M &42·1403 AVCO Full or p/time. J::xper NEVER A FEE AT TE~fPO. ~1. 6-16-4303. repair, $15. 962-6347 •hartna· ,Alm Fee-Jobi PERSONNEL AGENCY • ' ta esa, • . Fo'nancial Sorvlcos pref'd but not nee. S. A.· Ttmpo Temporary Help \VlfO \VA..~TS TO \VOllli? \\'ASl lER & "-~r. ~ Call Burt Lona 833-2700 j""" ,.. .. -o " , N.B Ml 1 yr e pe 029 • PRE-SCHOOL teacher, ex.· Anaheim 8.rea. 540-1962 ...,.,,~ .,Co ........ ""°" .._..,pus r., ~. · n. x r. on "' per. Garden Grove area. 620 Newport Center Dr. -·-----DRIVE A CAB? cond, $100. for both. P-551'.·2111 059. Day lilillt. hr Call .,...j-~ncn Newport' Be h ~allf The UnlVersity or ·Calltomla, TYPISTS. OIOOSE. your hours, \\'Ork pertonc,:re!r!Jt_Si15. 557-4990 Sllu lfepTrnt $750 ['"!!'!"""""'"l:"~""l!~""''I • ·S2.25 ·_, -~· ac' l,.: • Irvine, seeks 1 part-time SECRETARIES f¢r yoursei'f, be your own ~Kenmore Gas Dryer Fee Paid Exper. Siles .Girl For ~lntment Equal Oppor . .Employer (50'/h) Specialist for a pfo;. Ii.take your new ,74 a good bosS. t.1en or-111)men. Can $40. * 64.2-30'17 Natkmally known Stmdrles F/time. Exclusive Yt"Omen's Cont•Ct arol Smith PROGRAMMER cct on undergraduate In. year for you!! \\'e can help be slightly h:'.1.ndiC'1'ppcd . _ manut. seeks career wear store. Balboa Iidand. SERVICE Sta. 2 island men struction from Jan. _thru you clean up bills, ,,.;ve you Neat • Clean Appearance. Building Materials t06 mo tJ v ·a t e d Ind Iv, Call 675-2870. AVCO,! ANALYST I/time days,. Arco 19th &. Ju~ 1974.,tradua~n ~'1: an opjX)rtunlty 1~· grow Vts ., retired. A~c 25 to 70. di w/peraona)lty \ft d r Ive! r--=------~ .. -Newport, CM co cge w egree 90Cla thro11gh expos"·-to ,,.,.,·ou' Supplen1ent your inf!ome. e Surplus Bull ng F ··-• ~ lit& J ludl FA RY help needed. No 1 --~~------I or behavioral s c I enc es ....... o I b 6 • NEW IJll&ltuC .ui::ne nc ng Fo'nanciol <-rvict SEWING M h1 0 types of \\'Ork & speelal as-r vc a ca u1:s or more" MATERIAL. lOIJO's of co. car I: expenses. Also exper nc&ua.ry. Opening ' -Opening t:xists ln Newport . ac ~ perator, preferred; ability to write signments In different L'Olll· d~y. Apply in per.;on, ITE,\1S! Doors, lumber, ply. Fee Jobe. on all 3 shifts. Apply In 644 SIOO Beach based financial co. Ladies v.-eai: single needle, and prepare anal Y t I ca I parues. We ·~rk for & wo'th "\ellmv Cab Co., 186 E. 161h ' \\O'XI, alum sheeting;, mold- Call Sam Rider SJ3..2700 persons. Reeves Rubber, 415 Equal ()ppor. Employer for 370 ANS.COBOL pro-1733 Monrovia, CM 64!>-1529 reports req'd. Familiarity you tow .... :.'" your ~·Is. -St .. Costa 1'.1'es~. ing, \Vindows, etc. Ave. Pico, San Clemente. al t A r w I que s t I pnnaire con-a.iu .. -RS SURPLUS grammer an YB · PP icanl SHARP GAL struclion & co m p u t er s Best of nil, we don't charge BU IL DE Oahn1 Adjuster Trainee $8000 New YHr, New St1rtl FUU. TIME sales help LANDSCAPE ~':!~.ha: ~~~L Yr;,_ To m~e v,ery active preferred.· Monthly salary: you for It. Call today. J\lake 2·106 So. Nlain St., S.A. wanted, apply 230 Newport Maintenance Superintendant; OS. Mus( ha\le ability to womens boutique. Must $377. Applications from all us your first new (riend in Merdw1dist 1'.1on thru ·sa, 10-$ Fee PaJd Center Dr., Tat'a Inc. bet. expanding ~anagement d . -• & . 1 have exper. & be able to qualified candidafes are 197<1. · TI4: 546-1031 10 AM·6 PM. company ollenng employ. esign, ~Vue, .test im~ e-take c~ of f u 11 welcome; minorities & Office OVerload furniture --.~1~0 National co. seeks career moUv&.ted ind.iv, for top trainee program. FantasUc benellll & opjX)r, Al80 F'ee JObs, • Call Sam ruder m.2100 Accountant toS14K Start ti.. Now V oor rlghtl Established medical facility seeks sincere lndiv. for computer bkkpng. X I n ' t bene:fita & great oppor! Call Barbara J.tac 833-2700 Accnt Rt>p Tme GENER.AL OFFICE ment in Orange C.ounty ~or me~t ~ci~l/ac:unt~g responsibllith:s. Xln't oppor. women !],re encOuragcd to 557-0061 Fantastic s,,.,.., .... w2 ..., for alert, progressive. man m-.. sys~· ce ent ne s, for right person who is in-anoly. Or. Susan Bruant, 37'Z3 Birch St., ........ oe. -.1 terestcd in supervision of working co~s & advQD(.-e-tcrested in a perm. f/tilne Office of Academic Affairs, 1--,-====o--o-- Antiques N.B . 800 FRIGIDAIRE REF R 1 G. Like new $145. Washer/dry: er $85. Green velvet sofa & loveseat $75. 1'.tarble lbl & chrs $45. Lrg J....shaped bar $75. Sn1all old retrlg. $15. Misc plants and rugs, 960-0025. !!j7ppe~/~e~vg~~ landscape maintenance. m~nt potential. Please sub-position. U you qualify, call · University of Callf. Irvine, * TYPISTS * •.1..--Prefer 2 yrs. experience In ~~·tt re•wnto e w/recent ~ary for appt Irvine, Ca 92664. Phone: ing. Duties to include work· · 1 ,._.., ory · · Ing w/foreign 11tudents. Lite m11.111tenan~ or re ated ' CAROL SMITH THE LOOK 833-5837. exper. helpful. field. Horticulture degree AVCO 644-6500 ._ __ ..,..,..,..,..,..,ii j J •--t A desirable, but not necessary. - --..---• JRAIN£ES 1oon -goncy Call TIU4<>-0313: 7:3(>8,00 .. F inancial S.rvices SHARP GAL 17400 Brookhurst, !i'. Vly. A.M., or 3:J0.4:00 P.M., 620 ~ewport <.:enter ur. To assist manager in a very Suite 213 96J.6775 Mon .. Thurs., F'ri. or send Newport Beach, Calif. active boutique. Must have Wdl train dependable people GENER.AL OFFIC·E-resume to H.I.C., Inc. 2841 boutique selling exper. & to become plastic Injection Entry level posllion for bright E. Coast Hwy., CdM, Ca.. Equal Oppor. Employer looking for a perm. f/tlme molding oprs. MuSI be able begi Ll 92625. job w/an oppor. to grow to stand entire shift if nner. tc accurate ~ * Grtat Opportunity w/an expanding bus. If you necessary. Openings on 1st ing & able •to deal weU...w/ LEGAL SECRETARY New or experienced real qua!Uy;call for appt. shift 1$1.95 to start) 2nd the public. Call Linda Ray. SHARP Career minded sec· estate people. YoUr own THE LOOK Shift ($2.08 to start) 3rd 541).6()5.5, Coastal Personnel retary for perm. job as private desk & phone, good 644-6500 Shift ($2.23 to startl. Raise Register for a temporary job today lntervws: 9·l2 We Need All Office Skills F,qual Oppor. Emplol er Male & Female . Wettern G irl Inc. 4667 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach 54().-0325 F,qual Oppor. En1ployer . Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., paralegal Mag Card exp. or walk-Ins tree advertising!---~-~--.,--in 30 days & 90 days. CM willing to learn, -Fashion -same toc&.tioril.8 yrs. eati SPAG!-JETTI Bender has "White Eleohants" over. GENERAL OFFICE, typing Island, 640-8510. tor interview operungs for salad/maker, Apply 1 PM-4 PM running youi-house! Tum req'd, meet public, bus9 ofc, LIQUOR market. Exper. prf. w . .t;. J..ACHENMYER Cashier, Wine Girl, over 21. * 0range Coast Plastics * them into "Cash" ... sell Permanent. . but not nee. Wine knowledge 646-3928or Eva. 673-4577 & Wa..!tress, call 536-3856 ° 85Q West 18th St. them thru a Daily Pilot * SUPER SALE * UP TO V2 OFF II JE\VELRY -20',f, OF1'~ 2nd, 3rd & 4th HOURS 11·5 * BACl<DOOR 11'.1PORTS * 1896 1-larbor Blvd. 01 VELVET sofa &. love aeat, B of A .r... J\1as ter Chnrgc Nr ncw,/Tl'IUSt sac. Also ANTIQU•E CLOSE·OUT HerculoJ(hide-a-be d , Bargains wheel & deal. 673---0275 or 673-9559. ·':.A1ichael Angel" 213 Ocean, 1----------1.aguna 3 Pc modem. bedroom.Queen bed, like n~. Inclds mat· ANTIQUE Church Pe11:s, 2, u-esses, sheets, covers, pil· Dark Oak lows, spread. ~all 6444.lil . Call 494-4384 VICTORIAN ladies dresser. Valu~d $450. sell/trade. 640-8688 oxk \\Ill\ MOVING. Refrig.; power ffiowcr, furniture & misc. 19781 Sea Canyon Clr-,HB. 536--7982 74 Ye1r End 81l1nc1I \Vlll be ln the + column when you join·-this ex-pandlnJ tinn. Career oppor. tor brl&ht ind.Iv. Xln't tralnlna I: ·advancement. Call Kim Carle 833-2700 Johansen & Christensen helpful. Days or nites. Apply -• -, --or 64.!Hl651. Costa rtesa, Calif. c.Las.c:ifled ad! lti691 Milliken Ave, In person. JO.U s. Briatol., Product.on Artist 1'R~..,-r-911~11-o-n-al~----,,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,... Recreational .Recreational Recreational Irvine f>56.I003 Santa Ana. 557·3282. F~nl'!;.~· :~~-~~~: Vehicles · 956 : C1 .ASSl1'·1Ef> will !lei.I If! Vehicles 956 ! Vehicles 956 Vehicles 956 O>ntract Stc'y Rtceptlonl" GIRL FRIDAY "<>MACHINISTS order type, camera Yt"Ork &L:;;~~~;;;;;~~~=~=~~==~==~~======~==i:=================~I Extra sharp person, male or PENINGS I fema1e, required with' solid * lite illustration. Salary to experience in all oltice Progressive Irvine corp. has $750. Also Fee Jobs. Ca 11 Benofits golort in '74 Front ofc of national firm ·has exciting benef lls package ful' a..!erl -ind iv. w/head for figures. Call "Sue Knott 833.-2700 ki I immed. operunp for~gen'J 88.lly Hart, 54G-fi055, Coastal s I s: good typing, lnven· machlnlsta, milling mach. , Personnel Agf!ncy, 2700 Har· tory control, knowledge of opn_ & pn:llile mill oprs. · bor Blvd .. ,_CM_~·~~~-procuring ~ & services, --= bookkeeping, telephone Scheduled overtime on a 5 REAL ESTATE handling & patience. Short· ~~ bas~. ~~ b~~ SALESMEN hand to your' advantage. employment. P/time open-Why nof\ wor~ in _the hottest ~rsement Clerk Trainee Should be of office manager i~~ from 6 PM -10 PM area • Huntington Beach • , 4 n i calibre. Salary ran&e $6QO "16" F lain v u Let o---'-1· -r;rom Ml -ioS1:mo;-aependirig-on-e • also....a.vailahle -.Apply__oo or oun a ey. us To bt • v1nt• yurl pcrience. Submit resume to. after Jan. 2nc1: 1974. -train you. c.au Phil Mc- International firm seeks P.O. Box 1594, Newport COLEMAN SYSTEMS Namee, -VILl....!'-GE REAL eager lndlv. for trainee Beach, Ca.. 92663. 18842 Teller-Ave. ESTATE, 963-4567. po.tnetlon!lts.! No typing! Greol ·GIRLS _ GUYS Irvine m.1810 REAL ESTATE ben1 After SPM 833-l811 Three full time, 95o/o COMM. Ctll I.ynn Manch 833-270il TRAVEL -... ._..., ... ..., ....... , Exp'd oruy, E.iab. Newport rue Oerk Trainee You'll ABC-Love ill rufla: the bell in '74 when you join thia renowned firm that promotes only from within. Friendly lndiv. v.·ill love congenial group? Call Li.z Blake 833-2700 MACHINIST, R----,;-D -EX-ofc., ML.5, Refs. req'd. 213 OYER 18 perienced, days on1y. ~ -331-1001 . . Dynamics, Inc. 1 7 5 4 2 RESPONSIBLE w o m an FREE to ·travel Hawali, Mex· Armstrong Ave, ·Irvine. needed for occas. eve com· 1co O ty & major cities. -----panJo 12 Id · l P.fust be neal &-single. No MAID, live-in, ideal "'Orking n to yr o gll' • conditions, priv. room &:[iii64&-8252iiii"""""'!~""""""""ll exper. necessary. All trans-portation . furnished w/2 bath, color TVJ Must drive, _ week expense p&.id training 1 well behaved chil d, 7. SAL£S program. For appt for per· Call weekdays 64o-8150, eves sonat lnlerview, Call Miss & wlplds 001567. Secretary to $6.10 Sands, tTI4) T74--8097, lOAM· MAID, full time. Newport A Glimorous D-inning 5 PM ?a-ton thru Fri. Parents Beach Travel Lodge. BULLOCK'S So. Coast Plaza ...._ welcome at interview. Call 642-8252 Fee Paid.. l ~=C=--'-o~c===~-~~==~~=~~-Start f)le' New Year right GIRLS WANTED: New MA I NT EN AN CE Men, ln plush ofc of famous corp! massage parlor opening in {/time for pvt country club Indiv. w/Oalr &: persona.lily H.B. ~2357 or 963-1247.. ln N.B. F.qulpment Opr &: ls Now lntervJelwng for FULL TIME CHI LOREN'S SHOES · will enjoy super benefits in-HAIRSTYLIST wanted for &l'ttnsman, exper. .Ca I.I eluding bonus. Al!k> Fee busy salon. Niguel Hair 644-7120 betwn 7:30AM &. Joba ....,..,.. Fashlom, So. La & una • 2PM. ,, Experience Required Call L,ynn Manch g:o....,,...., 496-5728 or 499-2221. MARRIED penon over Zl .=.o...:cc;H~EL~IC:CO'O=Pl'=:ER=---Car & phone neces.s:. $125 Apply Penonncl Ole 10 ".\J,tJ to 12 Noon Telet~ $550 Hotwlre of '74 Renowned financial tihn needs sharp operator to keep ke;Ys OOpplng! Benclita include profit sharing! c.au Marion Mann 833-2700 Order Deak It Poys To Ttlk In 74 Keep clients happy in thla fun position that r e q..' s friendly pbOne persona.Illy. Great benefits. Call Marion Mann 83.1-2700 MAINTENANCE wk. to start. 894-&KXI Equal QpjX)r. Emplqyer No exper. req'd. Will train. MASSiGETE:CC~Hi:.-1 •. ...:::::::::...:;::::;_.::::;~;_11 Ages 17-34. 1326 mo · -TRAINEE SalH, Pharm. $725++ Starting salary + many Yowig lady 118-28) wanted Prefer degree. Some sales benefits. Now interviewing. for legitimate full time post· exper. + enthll$Wlm. ARMY Opportunities, (TI4 tlon. No exp. nee. We send 1'~ee Paid/Also F"ce Jobs 645-1163. to school, earn while learn. WESTCLIEF H 0 USE K EEPER·live-in; Apply In person any aft. or Personnel Agency routine cleaning & lndry. eve. 2930 W. Cst. Hwy.. 11\-tark III CentcrJ assist w/cooking, must Newport Beach. 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. ,drive, Priv bdrm, bath, col· MATURE Y.'Omen·for nursing 542-8836 or TV. Refs. req'd. cilll care or housekeeping. We Sehl bus drivers He. prefered 644-512.1 lraln. Call 642-2410. xlnt working cond & pay. HOUSEKEEPER, 7-3 : 3 0 MECHANIC-WANTED 832--01!61 Mon lhru Fri. The Hun-tington, l885l Florida St, Lie. Preferred. Toi;> pa.y for Sec'y~Exciting Project HB. S4Z-T188 . Right Man. Apply in person. -Our client says "I will meet Penonnel Dept Sec'y H OUSEKEEPER reliable. 74 A Rocflottor YNrl good with chlldren. Needed 300 E. 17th St., CM. or beat the present fai..l!.!Y MEDICAL Specialist re-for the right person." 'YOO quires mature pe.nnanent will be an integral part of career oriented lady. Initial this fascil;lating lle'N project. responsibility insurance bill-Work w/intellige nt vlgorous ing . preparatory to general people. Plush ofcs. Xln't off!~ · mana g e men t . Denefita. Abigail Abbot Per· A b s o I u t e requirements, sonnel Agency, 230 W. War- !I up e ~ experience, ner Ave., SUite 209, S.A. Famous co. acekl articulate immed. Xlnt benefits. Mn. hldlv-:-ro?ke~tlon. Lots· Prentiu 540-2719 or 646-8824 of variety. Fabulous ofcs. HOUSEKEEPER, live-in, Call J.4mn Marsch 833-2700 own b'ans. Student OK. &tO-Olr.6 or 675-4630 Rtcept/14ftl to $500 HOUSEWIVES • part time, work close to hOme, Avg. $40. per wk doing del_,__ & sales for the Fuller Brush Co. For: info call 542-0242 mana gement capability, 557-6122. Dmllng 74 CorHrt Awali.-sparldlng indlvtdual! Super attorney, beautiful ofca. fun le relaxed at· Jn08phere! Wonderful benellts. English spelling, typing,l·_-_""S'"E"C"~V'°'T=RA"'°"'IN"E=e= _-_-II Only !ilg}ily quallfied apply This employer seeks bubbly ~Dorothy .639-4901 indiv. w/avg. typing who .-.,... ,,...... 1fls• NEED licensed nurses who enjoys lots of public con: enjoy older people.., Call tact. Ute expcr. helpful. Call Barbara Mac 833-2100 Secretary, Ex~ to $MlO • 74 Smorgosbord Variety !oven dream po&i· Uon awaits multi-faceted CaftC:l' minded indlv! Xln't ~m Oarlt 833-2700 642-2410 or 64Z-8044. F'antastic st81'ling salary. Newspaper Delivery Sh pref'd., but.not a n1ust. Early n10m.· l\-1ust have car. J•son. Bast Agency Over-21. Pay approx. $200 17400 Brookhurst, 1'". Vly. mo. Hunt. Bch area. 847·2300 Suite 213 !16.HT15 bef. 10 am. Secretary, Legal NURSES AID::. &: orderlies. Corp. exper. $725 All shifts. Call 642-8:>« or Top sh & typing skills 64>-2410. WESTCLIFF ftlMNE PERSQNNB. OFFICE MANAGER l'<n;onnel Agency Sec'y, Legal Trainee to $625 CCD\/lf"C~_,•rc~ll"'V Fee Paid. 8 Hr, 3 day wk. (Mark Ill Cent.cl Ovtst1ftcUng Attornty .AIV~ ~....,_, ~Sharp peraon to blend w/ 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Seeks &harp trainee WhO Acrountant to $14K decor of new ofc. Also Fee 542-8836 deslrff to join elite staff.I Accnt/RE-EDP to Sl2K Positions. .eau Control *Sec'ys, Bookknpers aever lndlv. will sna~ this Teleprocessing 360/BAL Careers Empl.oyment Liz Reindel'!! Agency oppor. up &: make .74 a Proif8.mrner to $12K_ Agency, 3400 Irvmc Blvd., -4020 Birch Street recoro--yel.f! Te r r 11 1 c CONtr loan Procelabr $850 NJJ. · siiltet04 Nii· -~8190 ~~!Knott 833-2100 Sec~yst/Mari"arketlng to !150 ORAL ""i"')' assist. :11-35 Dial A ' Job 13Ul55 . to$700 yrs., attrac,9aggre58tve, ln-No Ch1r9a To You I • Markedng Rep $150 telligent. Dental exper or Est bl"Wd l965 MedJcal Back A Front Ole Superviaor/Retall 17f ttCbooling nee. HB area1 1=~,;::;::;8o:::;'=;;:""'="-,,.-, Oreemy Doctor IBM Composer!Layout 842-2521 SE CRE:I'ARY-EXecu_Uve, see kl capable uat. to start & Puteup Sli50 Ntwporf Beach County tlr1ll •74 on the + lldel Beautttul Girl Friday St'm • " needs peraonable people new ore Sec')I Order-Desk $6C)O TIME FOR o rt en t ed secretary, Call S\Je .Knott 833-2700 Pa,yroll/EOP to $515. -1tatllt1cal typing, 10 key ad- A/Payable Clerk to $S50 de'r, atarts $600+, 640-133S. 2881 9Jtiilsan Dr. lnine ' ~::.'" Clerkl'fype 't= QUICK CASH SERVICE .Sia. http wanted ~'NVl'yp~i\x Mpm , $400 THROUGH ' A -~lt!'.t P~:!;'~ l&ply, 9911 ~~ptltude $2.75 hr Service Station tfclp • CALL Tl\ISH troPKJNS need1. Apply in penon. 300 JERl\I WWITTEMORE WANT AD E. 17th St. CM 488 E.17th SL (ttJrvine) CM $ERV. Sta Mechanic Oau DICK WILSON'S SEA &. SUN R.V. BRAND NEW 1974 NEW~ORiii!R VAIM CAMPER $- IRU1 80888i '13"-ELOORADO ·1 a·· ... MINl-MOTOR~iOME s- " e. AUTO TRANS. e POWER STEERING e AIR COND. ~73"GOU ' ' . FULL PRICE FlllLL PRICE BRAND NEW 1973 ESCAPADE 20' MOTOR HOME $ • ' FULL PRICE ·EL .,ORADO 18, BRAND NEW 1973 BRAND NEW 1973 SPORTSCOACH 5th WHEEL 25' M~r. Home ) Gtnft"etor/Alr Compl1ttlr Stir Ccint1I~ $13,995 FULL PRICE $3,595 FULL PRICE B llNEw-1974 ___ --BRAN D NEW 1974 NEWPCRTER . SURFER VAN AMER!CAM ROAD FORD CAMPE 1248241 Sel~-Conta ined ~3,495 ~3#7 FULL PRICE FULL PRICE B"A ND N5\Y. 1974 '10 FORD % TOI IRAND NEW 1974 PERRIS VALLEY w1a• OPEii ROAD 8' Cabover Camper '18 FOOT CAB OVER CAMPER TRAVEL $1495 l2414i I 17b71Gi TRAILER _· ·$2,295 $795 IMMI DIATI DILIY!IT FUU PRICE FUU PRICE - Suite 214 642-M70 642_5678 A Ucenae. F /lime. Top pay • ..... Arco 19th &: NewporC, CM. "'ft:!!' ~·· ~· ;il]~~jij~~~'.:'.~~!!!!~~;;!~~;!~~!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!::!:~~~!!!~~!!:~~~~!!!!~!:!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!J fut result& an' Juat a phOOe 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11•!!!!!!!11~ a.ASS SELLS -SC.567f , call •wtY • -. 5 833-2708 " --' --~-• ' • I \ - -' • .. • • • .. • DAILY PILOT , J.{ PILOT·ADllERTISER . .. WednrsdaJ, J11111ar1 2, 1974 FREE PASSES Find ou-r--Name_ You Could I• On• of ~oday's WIM•rs 10 Pairs of $2 Tickets Given Dally FOR H. WERNER BUCK'S 'SUPER SHOW' • II y--• h lltto4 ·la a ~lal ..i -II c..W .,,_ .... ., _, clcllllflcatloo, 00 look at,...., all pbH 642·5611, EltOMloo 114, "2 tw-t a.m. aH., 1 p.m. to mah ....,...., .. ,. to pick •p. yow "" ,lliow tlckots at aay ·convooloot DAILY PILOT offlco. F'urnlture 110 Pl•no1/0r91n1 826 . '61 -------- J-.,.fF,S* rnit. e PIANOS 2G:m Via Logrono •• ORGANS You !!.l:S~~ ~!~~rot FULLERTON MUSIC Ant19uos/Cl111lu 953 Autos W1ntod '5i1 BUICK SPEC. ALL TOP DOLLAR PAID ORIG! Straight 8, very lo IMMEDIATELY . ml. Xlnt oond. $775. 673-1256 J.~R ALL 'FOREICN" CARS 2 tickets to the Our Ntwest Locatl9n Recreatlon11 Call or COJne in to iee ua. Vohiclos 954 SPORTS & 18191 Euclid, F'ountaln Valley ' REJCREATIONAL 1 Blk. No. ot San Oleg<> Fwy '70 SCOUT VEHICLE SHO\V 557-4836 4 .,.,•heel cir. V-8. Automotte. NEWPOR T IMPORTS Ill the Rentals from $5 Very clean. 1'1any exlta.S! ANAHEI?i.f $1995. 893-S460 after 6 Pl\f. 't 3.IOO W. Cout Hwf., N.B. OJNVENTION Cf;NIER 642 9405 January 4-13 e Plenos & Grands Trucks 962 __ __::=.·==--- Ptense call 642·5678t ext 333 ALL MAJOR BRANDS ''------------------~-------------...;;..;,.;..:,.:;..;....11 TOP CASH I to claim your tickets. 1-*196CtDOOGE TRUCK <Nort h County toll free Used & rebuilt pianos also ~-~'------•;;.;5;..:4 Cycl111 Siket Mobile Homes " 935 Mobile Homes 935 Motor Hornes 8' BED (or clean late ¥model c111 nWl1ber Is 540-1220.1 ~P~~ts f~m .......... ,fJ • Scooters 925 ---------Sale/Rent 940 ••• 492-0963 ••• -and trucks! · * * * Pr .. .......... PUPPY WORLD • MOBILE HOME 40·, s· PAN·AM. "°''"1 :10· ·54 GMc ll ton pkp. Xlnt Howard Chevrolet 0\'AL Frultwood o in Ing G~ " '··''""'''' !: Bull Dogs, Chlhuahuaa, Tiny FOR SALE : 4lu1n patio, alum storage '73 OPEN ROAD. n1inl cond. best oiler. b1isc items table, Brau tMm, 3 leaves. e Orn.an~····"····· Poodles, Shih Tsu, .Amer. SILVERCREST shed, skirted, ne\\' sliag inotor home ~ ,cy Cu for sale also 493-4437 ?.facArthN-~~ndn~aamchbor« "'""ls 10 $75 Bb:.!:/'ir Pool • ·Eskimo, Pit Bulls, Bull O cpfg, new fonnica kitchen in p/A p/b dual propane .... _..DC -,.·ble • ..;. >lo.ta! frn--, ALL MAJOR BRANDS Tenier, ~-kapoo, lrlah M Bl LE HOME & lek II 1· j 1 · · ' • '64 GMC • V'6, ~ti T. Pick 833-0555 -.. ~. 0 Ilg ~-~ 974 s , a app U\ncet us 4 burnen, gl111f door oven, up G4,COO orig nll, $750. ----===-----h\.•in 111z. $10 pr. 4%-3143 P an · · .. den10 . • .. $195 .x:Uer. 100 J\tlXED PUPS! I *** 1 · *** 20' =< 53', 2 BD 2 BA, <!flrP., re. f inilshed. Coppe11one,' d11.sh air , 6cu fl glass SJ3-2S46 \VE JJA y TOP OOlJ..A.R Spinet ..... , neY: .•...• S199 Stud Service J\1ost Breeds. GRAND PRIX draped, bl.l·ln11., ref rig., ~. Call anytime &12-1002 i!lect rcfrii:, 11pacenlas1er1.,::::::..:=----~= F'OI~ TOP USED CARS Dun_can Phyfe din rm iiet. Frff Organ Lessons Open Eve1: 531-5027 washer & ele<-t. dryer, v.•ired Motor Homts shower,· hot water 27 gal Vans ' 963 I sohd rnahog dbl pedestal Phone 557-48.19 AKC ,,.,,I •-tt I 250CZ for 220 air cond., kitdl, 940 water heater. Dual •-1.I---------If your car Is extra c ean, tbl, 5 side chrs + host. FULLERTON MUSIC 1 <)\! er puppes, c'lock, ·storage shed, land-Salt/Rent Uf\ '69 FORD Vaii s ""' ma's sec U!I r!rat. 1ttatch buffet, .SJ:mD or bst fihots, .$75 to .$125. Call JS HERE!!! ---'-------terles 10 n1pg no down • ... ~ • · BAUER BUICK ._ u11. . .i11u 122 N, HarOOr, Fullerton !"i:-12·1239. SUPPLY IS LIMITED ,scapcd patio. Three yrs. old paym~nt, TO ' paymeots. side piprs, paneled & 2925 Harbor Blvd. 011. ~· 871•1805 • like nu. Located ln 11cw 2{)' • 25' Motor ijomes, .,.,1 •• 38 c•pted, $1700. good cond ..,. ...-..JVO. Hor •• ' 856 PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW dul k f · s Llfet· e & o~n v.i -ou CoslR Mesa 9ur-.-N K1NG--slze water bed In-AT COAST a t P . away rom np1sy uperior, im ,.. RENT A >tOTOR HOME -892-9434 I d •· tt JI hn: Orn Nights 'Ill 9 St. One-half bl. from elu" Road. J<en \Velsh 639-2981 u..v cu es uanie, nia · ner S ' I 5 30 S 2 ll YR tho MOTO CYCLE '" MlNI HOME OR VAN 1970 FORD E·-·-llne 200 \VE .uv.L nd tt ~'1682 11.t: t : , un. l ·5 · roUlhbred mare house . .$15,995. Call EVES. &nkAme11card ~ Master .... .,...., IMPORTED A'~.• 8 ma 'Cl>.),)-• '-..;iiii;;iii;i;ii;ii;;ii ... i;i;i-.j t I RJ h >' CONVERSION, LOW AS,.._ \V!ndow Van. warranly, v •v» l-"'~="'-'"'-="----1 • ou o gt oollsh by Ton1 2334 NEWPORT BLVD. 213-694-4690. Charge accepted. .., 12100 ~· ~•• kd ST PRICES PAIDI Gar•ae S•le 112 PIANOS -ORGANS Fool. XJnt con!onnatlon, no CAN BE SEEN AT: 1 e Dale's Me>tor Home Rentall per Day & 6c per mile. •eves o;n-o.1.;r"t, w ays BE 1--~s~------New&: Used. Great selection. foal last year. $1!i00. 673-2472 COSTA MESA R S MON RESERVE YOURS TODAY,2::;1::,>-,o12.>-S32:::..:o=l~----De•n Lewis lmportt. * * * Competitive prices. Open alter 7 pm 645-8008 C E~TlTES T Fr~3 ;z;:· rt~.9~ ~ 894-33·11. 1~67GMC VAN nr nu eng, 1966 llcrbor, C.f\I. 646-930C "'J,!.lo.~AA~~I.00 Eves.~ SUndays. The best -;CC,,hO,ild:C..O-,"iE'=n"g1:::,.:-h-:Sa"°'dd"le-VESPA motor !I Cooter. "'-'ou don't need.• gun to RENT the best, •73 Ex~ nVtgs, paneling & moi-e. CAS!l Jo"DR .,.,.,.., .x:asnw-.:: r. deals are always at: Fit• llor•• or Pony $80 ,, ... _ as he•• teetllJ ... 1 I05l Site Dr., Brea. (Central i ""' · lo.lust llCll 837-5713 YOUR CAR N rt Be h "" ............ '"' Ave. across from Brea "Draw Fast" wJ:ien you tt'utive 25' all xtras, free You ~he wi!~er or Wallichs Music City •645-8869• miles per hour. 85 miles Comm. Hosp. 1 Lot •46 place an ad in the Daily 1nlles, 979--90CJ6, 5-Spm. FORD Van 1969 Club \Vagon, , 548-ro70 2 tickets to the South Coast Plaza 540-2830 3!~ Yr. old Buckskin, quarter f>"74r1~allon. pal2300d '!f's."'" G$695; CONTACT RAY, PK. l\IGR., Pilot \Vant Ada! Call now ---------bS1nialhool Vk·S,497au2697to trans4,.. :,0!~ Put a lUtle "loot" 111 your SPORTS &: Horse, Gelding, gentle. Best 1cense ve as. tor shcnvin.g. _ 641-5678. fi.10TOR llome for sale, 25'. ue ' -• ~ Levis-sell those b..Lubles tOI' REX:REATIONAL Sporting Goods 830 offer. 542--5967 after 6PJ\f Buy Sat-ride Sunday for!-""-'=="-----below ll>'hsle. Pvt pty. Xbft '69 FORD Van. 6 cyl, good "bucks". Call Cl•Mitled VEHICLE SHO\V · ADORABLE ~ Arab pony, pennies a day!" 642·l002. CLAS.S SEUS -642-5678 Need a "Pad":' Pl:.ce .:in 11.'1' cond. 97~1614. cond. $1300. Call 646-5538. &U-5678. at the SKI OUTFIT English traJned ... Jump11. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New MO CONVE~tbW%NTER 210C1'1 Head 360's; s+ .9 lange ~me tack. 557 -ll<M ~;;;;;:;;;;;:;======;;;===============;;.:,;;;;;;;;;;;;=======================;;;1 January 4-13 -bool!! & poles, 642-452 . · Please call 642-{i678, ext 333 SHOTGUN, 12 gauge, Brown-I ...,.,.. 11~ lP J lo claim your tickets. -lng Auto. 5, $175 or best ....._Eqilip"*'t t(.. THERE (~orth County toll free ofter. 4M-9694 · number 111 540-1220.l * •· * Store, Rest•ur•nt, Boats, General 900 Mlscollanoous 118 Bar 832 * * * MAY BE A BETTER TIME . . * * * JAY GREER 1207 N. iJiYfront Balboa Island You are the winner of 2 ticket• to the -SPORTS &:: 1 RECREATIONAL VEHICLE SHOW at the • A."IAHEJJ\f GOOD, USED SKIP WATSON RESTAURANT • 23402 Via Bun-Jana EQUIPMENT M1,.1on Viejo Oiicken b roaster. Cres You are the winner o( Cor food warmer. Taylor 2 tickets to the soft !reeze. I1amil!on Sch. • SPORTS &: malt machine. Blender. Ra-RECREATIONAL VEHICLE · SHO\V dar oven. Ell'c. cooking h counter area 12 ft. \Vill sell at 1 e ANAHEL'I individually. Best offer. CONVENTION CENTER TO BUY A LUXURY CAR B.UT . I DOUBT IT! ' 642-0090. · January 4-13 TV, RBd1o;·H1Fr;····,·· Piease ·cau·~.·ext -333" ···········-· Stereo 136 to claim your tickets. CONVENTION CENTER Januacy 4-13 Please call 642-5678, ext 333 to claim your tickets. tNorth County toll tree number is 541}-~.) * * * I BUY!! (North County toll free ZENITH ReA &: Sylv11.nia nu1nber is 540-1220.) 1V & stett<>s, priced less * * * than the discounters. With NEED A TAX DEDUC- 3 yr. picture tubes. 1 yr TION? Donate ·yom· ix>at parts. & service. All B.S.A. Info rmation: avail~le models in stock 54&-4990. &: on display. '73 modelsl;--:--=.-.----- Good, used furniture &: prit.-ed to clear. Cash 90 Boats/Marin• appliances or \\-ill sell for you. plan or terms tC> 36 mos., __ E_.gu_l.,.p_. _____ 904.;...; MASTERS AUCTION ABC Color TV, 9021 Atlanta,1 -. 2075¥.i Newport, CM 646-8686 or 19046 Brookhurst, Hun· '72 Mercury 20 1-lP outOOard, 839-0974 aft. 6 or Sunday tingfon Beacfi 968-3329 or runs good, $200. C a 11 Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l. 962-5559. ' 64~ eve11 ask for Ken. FROM LAPP LAND RICE '~ TV SERVICE Boats, Powor 906 Beautiful Reindeer Hlde. (fonnerlr, in Pantry .s Cntr) CHRIS 32. SkiU Lapstrake, Perfect for a throw rug, * Holiday Special * '64, 11V2lO. F'B, AP, OF, or hang, on the wall, many Used & Color TV sets· \Vhile Winch radio remQte outrlg· decorator uses. For the they last!! Color from $65 gen ' bristol 387 ' J'i r s ~~cat~~al ~ 1 ! ~:~: !n~m $35 up. }'or .$16,500, 64-1--0343 eves. ' wildefness appearance. $50. 546-0002 or 546-6003 Boats, Sail 909 644--4st7 1375 Logan Ave., Clo.'! \\!ASHING mach. Kenmore. I ii&.O.& ... .O.&Oiim;,j16' Lone Star sail boat 8 .,....... old. Xl.n't cond. $95. COLOR TV w/trlr, motor, cover, salls, ,.. 1 4 etc., $995. ALSO Falrliner Convt SC>fa, blk viny · yrs REPAIR s· dinghy, s100. 963-5487 old. Barely used $50. GE elec. range & dbl oven corn-Expert, reasonable service. 16' V e n•t u r e Catarnarran ho $195. fo.1ove necessitates J\~ost in home. Antent111. ser-w/trlr. All rigging. Used vice also. wi ~::.~ "·'·' ""'·'S sale. G46-853a BERT GALLEfi.10RE TV t .. ce. _..,..,, Vi'r""" or BOARDING stable ha Ii * 968-2783 * 1,,:C&l::cZ.,::.9;::ll::;6·~~~=~~ fertilizer for your garden, ~~~~~~~~~~I LIOO 14 for sale •2816 with llring vour truck & haul boat cover, $750. it av.·1iy. Alo.1 best time. 675-TI98 '37--0701 , , 111 Boats, Slips/Docks 910 MODIGLIANI Etching $75. Frtt to You J{enoir ET. $8.1. Laurencin "--------' \VANTED: slip for 36 ft. ET. $9.i Dnli ET. ~65. Prlv 3 Lints, 2 Times, $2.00 Pacemaker. Ne,vport only. l'ty. 535-5595 Call: 714: 838-4003 I ~'IRE\\1000 -Oak. Orange. * * * Delivered & stacked lree. LOUISE BUDVITIS J.tikC • * 49&2618 2462 S.E. Bristol SELLING Hardy Boys Books. Great savings. Xlnl cond. call ;;z:2123 l:ZO Santa Ana You are the winner ot 2 tickets to th~ Cycles, Bikes SPQjTS & S ootors 925 RECR£ATIONAL --'------- VEIUCLE SHOW * BICYCLES * \V,\NTED TO BUY LIONEL ArSA:f!!L,f .$10. HOLDS ANY BIKE OR Al\1ER1CAN .ft'LYER CONVENTION CENTER _LI~· Gu•ranfH On: TRAINS. 837--9685. January 4.13 N1sh11d 10 sp from .•.• $99.9~ \\l,\NTED! Complete set of Please call 642--5678, ext 333 Suntour Eq Colo!' ...... $89.95 II to claim your tickets. . Al.SO ~~~~ ltobert Ingerso . fNorth County toll free Ne\\I ItahT"" 10 :.p •.•• $59.95 nun1ber is !'>40-1220.J Used Bikes ······ All types Musical Instruments 822 * * *, Beach Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa 1---------"!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Blvd., Balboa · 675-7282 RENT FOR ONLY $3 ~1 11 ~11 957 Harley Davidson, OU. BUY \\'ITll NOTHING Pet1 and Supplin very good cond, Ridged 00\VN. Drun1, PA's. lo.likes, Frame chopper, 74 pan Gu!tar, An1ps, Roc-orgn.ns head, $1200 , 839-5534 & Piano, all brands. '7l 350 CC But Pu No a"• limit. no nn 1·ent nred· Pets General 850 · laCO, na.ng ... ,. ' ALSO '72 ... 125 CC, Bultaco crt..o r>EN NIGi-ITS TILL 9, 12 • *Security Pet Food* puraang 96:1-2725 • SAT. 1'1LL 5:3'}, SUN. ·J . Xl d Now TWO Convenient Beel by 27c lb. Cott. ·ch 10 SPD, Bike. nt con ., I S Y l:X: lb. All Kennel supplies $75. Locat ons to ervt ou :l'l7 ... 3977, J418 \Vilshirc, S.A. Call J\like 6(2...fi(l24 FULLERTON MUSIC 18191 Euclid, Fountain Valley Cats 852 '72 HONDA 350 SL. RWlS ---------1 great, $450. lt1ust sell. CaU l Blk. N. San Diego rt\\'}'. SO'.\lETHlNG p1Ut>renl! Rex a.nytirne 646-S898. & Euclid. curley haired cats, neu!e!'8, 5 spd Boys SChwinn. Xlnt • 557-4836 • b~eeders, ~I~ sho1v quality condition. $35. Call !'.?! N. Harbor 1-'uJlerton killens. 545-4522. 586-G688 • 871·1 805 • Dogs 854 BOYS 20"· 5 •peed Rood· llA~1l\1 0ND SP I Nl>~l' ndtlon $30 ORGAN, $550. 303 Kings WANTED:Tibelia~-·:rerricr, lfl"UUJr. Good co 1 ~ .- Road, NC"\\'port, 646-4656 med. 11ize rag-mop type. Call 968-8233 Office Furniture/ lbvable, calm disposition, 1m ijonda Scrambler 350cc, 67S-898!1 5,(0) mC: X1nt cond, $500, 40 Equip. 124 St. Bernard:-fem. AKC MPG, 645-1408. EXi1C S\VVL CllRS $15125 reg'd. Grand Champ stock, 250 cc Bultaco Purtan&. Sec clin $.il/2-1, dki. Pierce never bred. $150. ~aln, Good condition $775. 867 w. 19. CJ\( 642-3408 642--3264 494-4747 Plinos/Ornans 826 5rnNAVZER. mini, 3 mo. 1960 YA~1AllA. 360 Enduro, • 11hot1, crop, BIS aired male. good cond, $395. 'GRAND OPENING *SALE* C01st Music Now has 2 Jooatlonl to ~ Jll )'Out n\utlcal needli. Newport al Korbbr. 01 • &U-~1 * . , Brookhurat i: Talbert Bile s, nroW<hun<, SD Frwy. • !ls3-rn3 * S.P. 837-5460 963-1826 DOG OBEDIENCE· Spon. by OUT OF SIGHT 500 KAW. Pirks Ir: Rttr. For ln(o, Ou1t. paint&: seat , Io mi's. 541-3914, 673-3180, 556-5300 $4!i0. ~2. ARC lriah Setter puppies. 3l" CiJ1s Schwinn Bicycle,· 1 fem, 3 males, 8 wkl. good oondlf\on, 3 yun old, Call 548-3l77. $20. SSZ.7762 DOG obe<dlence clais to start SCII\VINN, Red, apple crate, in the Newport·lrvlne are.a. '.v.!ry Rood cond, $50. ~ 962--014' aft 5 & wknds . -Just some of om· Luxury Cars /at an ECONOMICAL PRICE! MARK IV'S 5 2000 off $2000 off Window Sticker Price. 3 TO CHOOSE FROM LINCOLN'S '2000 off $2000 off Window Sticker Price. 8 ro CHOOSE FROM B~:D '73 MERCURY BROUGHAM'S 51500 off . $1500 off Window Sticker Price. A GOOD SELECTION BRAND 173 •NEW COLONY PARK W'AGONS • 51500 off $1500 off Window Sticker Price. 2''TO CHOOSE FROM This just could he th~ Best Car Buy you'll ever make at anytime!!! Home 01 The New Car , , , "Gold.,.. 1'1n1cll" " SEE ·us TODAY ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER TO RECEIVE THE "Distinguished Service Award" for outstanding Service after Sale. • ANo .·soN • . 2626 "HARBOR BL VD. of CARS '' Costa ·Mesa .. • • • 540-5630 · ' - --< • • ... , , DAILY Pl.LOT ' Tuesday, January 7 tli. ;ii_ulctoi11-;, Tim~po~riteiif-"fflli;;ti;;;,,;=~~~:,:~..;·1~9 q·o::==.,--..,=..,-=-,.-:-,-----.;:;,,-,....,,-:--;-;:-:-.---:=..,..,-o--'7'-,.---::=...,...,........,..,.... _ _,__:.Wednesday, Jana.vy 2, )974 r=~~~i=::::~~=u~··~·~l~m~po~rt~td~~~1~·~'·~·~·~1;m~po~rt~1d~:::::9~7~0~A~~~t·~·~· ~u~.td~;·;~~990~~Agu~to~•~· ~U~·~·d~;;;;~990~. I Autos, ~s.ed 990 1 AtJtos, Used 990 Autos, Used .990 PILOT-ADVERTISER I§_ utos, Used 990 ALLEN CAOILLAC--OLDSMOBILE. 1 __ T_o _Yo __ T_A_,73 CADfLLAC ELtORADO ' $6895i CHEY.ROLEY DODGE .MUSTANG MPORT SPECIALS 72 MUST SACRtrlCE. '69 Ch<v I um l)(JOCf; c .... , .. wd ~.. • • • • PLYMOUTH 69 PONTIAC ~ __ _, TOYOTA Full power, fac. A/C.1 AJ\.1/F~1 stereo \V/lapc, h11pal1t 2 dr hardtop Cll.lll<lm 1ian wnxoo. PO\\t'r ,.:tN>rin'l'. Al.AN SQ-l\\7AIJ3F. 73 MERCEDES 28 • 0 split seats, sunroof. (# 1010 coupe, automattc trana floor & brpker, air rond. AJ.1/FM 2tit'fO Alta \rts1a Drive SAYE LA, NDCRUISER 1hlll, 1tralo bucket 5eats. rRdlo. IOio:•r• rock. lilt Newport Beooh 73 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD . ·$6695 pow<r " .. """· Vinyl roof •l"'ri"" "'"""'· only 15,000 You are U1e winner of lrir .cond Red wtlh white rnlles, like ne11.•. G4 l-'ct68=7'--I 2 tickrts 10 the Bonneville · Wagon 10 Pass .. full PIX''tr, factory While wllh Saddle Interior, lull power lac air condllloning. Like New! ' · 73 AUDI 1 DOLS $529S Flrenilsl Brown wtlh Beige Interior lull pow· er, sun rool, lac. A/C., AM/FM. ' Sin Diego Frffw1y At ' Avtry P1rkw1y L1gun1 Niguel 495·0800 831-0800 • 4 wheel dl1ve • Full equip1nent • 13,000 miles __J3595 _~ ,-···~ Allen l ' i 1-( Oldsmobile J.'..-J Cadillac San Die!JQ Frwy at Avery Pkwy:, Le.a:una Niguel. 495-0800 '131..00 73 LANDCRUISER lop. G44-4G8'7 '65 DODGE \\'agon, new RPORTS & Brougham De Elegance. Full power, fac. A/C.1 .69 CllEVROLET Bel Air ores. rurui ivcll, niust sell, RF'..CREATIONAL AM/FM stereo low miles. ( #970) auto, radio, heater. atr: $250 or bei;t otlt>r, ~7-().IOO VEl-llCL£ SJ-10\V o alr (.'(lndltlonlna, k>&dal! (no. 10191 $1295 at !he 70 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE $2595. G".~"' mit•"r· l!02' FORD CONVE~~~J'~NTER NE\V '73 l\1onte Carlo, eleet * Ver)! Clean .72 Forcl Ltd • January 4·ll tl1J Allen Full pow~r, tac. A/C., leather Interior. (#980) •UJU'Oof, cab top, radials Ple1U1e call 64.2-567!1, ext l1.1 delux•. 11 mo '"a""· Offer. Brougham. Lo nil 's. 2 dr 1 1 . 1 k $1195 5.5"'1010 • •• hrdtp. CUst. Inter. Aut(I o c aim yow-I c et$. ..;::::..'-':c:;::,----~~ 1 trans,. pis. dl!c brk8, Vlln-(North County toll free '71 ll\1PALA Blue Sports dows, nlr, am/fm stct'eO. number is 5'10-1220.) J Oldsmobile Cadillac 65 CADILLAC SEDAN Full power, £actory air conditioning. {#1012) Coupe, 45,000 ml, Perfect Twin ,;cats, t!ntcd glass, * * *,... San Diego F1·wy' at Avery cond, Nu tlrc11, S 119 5, w/sidewalls, vinyl roof. OLDSMOBILE Pkw, Lnguna Nlguel. San Diego FrHway 644-4307 $2450 Call Carol Niles, \Ved _ _:..;;:.:;;.:;.;.:.:..;:..::,;;::;_ 495-0800 831..Q800 At ·~ CHEV El Camino, auto, aft 9 a1n, 979-2600 Sllles &: SP!"Ylce '72 PLYMOUTH Satclllto Avery Parkway tape deck. Q:io<t cond. Best "ro r-URD L1'D Country OLDSMOBILE Sf'hrlng, 35,000 Actua l offer, call 646-5574 Squire wagon, fully equip· GMC TRUCKS 1nlll's, or!¥ owner, mW'I Laguna Niguel CORVAIR pcd, $1550. &t2-reoo. HONDA CARS """f;ee. Make offer, Autos, lmeo~•d 970 SOFT-TOP '70 ~1/\VERICJ< Xlllt cond. 5-19-3719 CVl-'S 831-0800 '63 Corvalr van. rebll cog. G"'nt mll•o•e. H <'YL SH99 UNIVERSITY OLDS '°'·1""1 °"R~otc.•d"nu"",.,.,=-,-. ~340~.~, -,~pd. Autos, Imported '70 ALFA ROMEO MERCEDES BENZ Onlv 2,(0) miles ("'.'"HYO), l~~l!!!!!'!!~l!i!!!!!!!!!!!!]~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ii!!i~iij![i!!!~ \VIII trade for cycle 500 cc's c'"'"c:.-1:::858=------2850 llarbor Blvd. • fr'l.lnt disc brM, a/cone!. ' ~ & Call Bob 64" 2507 •71 LTD 2 Costa Mei,;a ~·9640 Xln'! cond. S2500 or bst ofr. 50 -USED ·$3977 A\llo.•. u...i 9C10 CHEVROLET "•cORVETIE · Mu" ,.,u"c••~'~_,._ .. _"· MUST SACRIF ICE-_556-_i_m_._o;_.,_ .. _m_. ___ , a.st deat a1wo,.• Berllnu MERCEDE.S CADILLA'C · MUSTANG ·10 rn<t, cui'"" s"""""· PONTIAC from $37!15 (Se~. #0288). t\ _ l • ·n l\10NTE Carlo, all extras, ------~. --air, sterro i :ipt• fleck, full *ALFA ROMEO ;~·t'to: ;!1· B~m~eti &e· ON DISPLAY -toJI. tW\& 1973 CADILLAC Eldorado. ~3~~ pv.•r, Like new, ·~2 ~~~;;J;ie:' ~~i '73 f\tUSTANCi, en(•. v.s. JJWI', 39.ooo nil. si7oo ... ~6S~>'~IR~E-B_IR_O-.-lo_w_m_L_E_,_ from ' ,Y · ease Factory Aulhorit.ed Dl1tt1bu-. TOYOTA Fullyloaded,BlackonBJack -.6-7-c-A_P_R_IC_E_w_og_o_n-good-~a~fl~7~p~m~-----auto, air, rull 1J\1T, Lt. Hlul', &l.J-:i l&'i. t•el cond .. :tSO. 2 BrTI , l Jim Parkinson' tor for all 11ercedes product• fl.1ust sell, Excellent cond.. cond best offer A/A PIS •72 CORVE'ITE, air, PS, P..i•, \\'hltc vinyl tor "''l .. lrr '63 OLDS only • 65.000 n1i. Convert. J !lpd bl:l-6087 1 New can • Part. • Service dlr (600GW\V) $6995. 892-4444 P/B 847_7697 4 spd, very clean. holes. Less rhun ~.<XXl. ini, ·1 dr scrl11n. radio/heater T-BIRD i!h\trh J1t11i11111~; +·~ •" ' '' 11>; '" ' Ask About Our Unique 1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303 SACRIFICE, Estate sale>, •73 ===~-=-~ 673-8031 $:i49J. 673·'.'182ii .. '. ____ •c::'200::.:::.· ,,:494-"--'l:::3'6:::... ___ _ '72CHEV.CAPRICE,equlp'd --~~c,.=~=---,.I"'-Old N · · --~------Used Mercedes .Lease LEASE '74 TOYOTA 1200 F iremist Blue Cadillac, all low ml, One owner, 5'18-6U5 COUGAR !\IUST;\NG . '67 , \'->l. auto, .....,:i s, 1 c11· t1rf'~. Jnsl Plans Corolla 11edan ..• Get 30 ei.:tnll. CB.II 979-0539 to see. air, l'S 1111'r (lio;c b!'!<s. tuned. Good u·anspoi·talion 172 T-BIRD r-.tag 11'heels. 6'16-120.1 H f I mllcs per gallon ... Only Fat Profit ts attain~ wtien R&ll, Xlnr <'Ond, priv ply, ..:S=200:::·_:'"c:i<-:,:3:::5T.I::::· ___ _ ~~~-,2.0lt_~645-~6406~ OUH 0 mports $58.34 mo. 36 n1os. oper, '65 CAO, Sed de Ville, Exel•! you sell tlu'Ough result-get-* '68 COUGAR * $995. 536-99::;3 · t•·d :i "l'llrf"~ 1-'1<•l't~ un ad! Any day i:; the BE~ DA\" to r &1162 Manchester, Buena Park end lease. condition, $495. ting Dally Pilot Classified Refrigeration, Good Sell the old stuff Buy the nf'\I' ru11 an ad! Don't delay .• ASTON MARTIN on the Santa Anu Io"rwy. 979-4575 Ads. 6'12.:5678 * * 492·0963 * * CLASS SELLS -.6.tt·~iR_ 117,,="'.c.f·~·~---""= 1 ~'-"-"-"-"'~•Y~Gl_2-~56~78~·-~ '• "'' • I j ' l, l\}' .. . •• 523-7250 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, N ew · ... 980 Autos, N ew 980 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA JIMSLEMONS ·=.o:...;..;.:."--~....:.:.:c...:.:.:=.o..:.:.:.::_,__.::::_.::::.:;:.::..:.:::.::_~__:_::::.::::::.:~:.::_-~'..:.:::~::::::.----'..:::.::.!.=.::~~-~~ Aston Martin DB-6, Super Lewera vantllie ena. l'."tlery access. ltnmac. 1966. S89CKI or trade for CS BMW. Days, ~. Eves, 675-5."178. BMW AUTM. OUtP ro1 ~MOTOR i ~ ~- THE RED BARON'S CHOICE SAW. LEASING & EXCELLENT SERVICE 284a.l ~1arauerl1e Parn·ay P.11ulon Viejo 8.11·!)4() • 495-4949 USE AVERY P\VY EXIT. ORaNOE COUNTY'S OLDEST & Excd~t selection of pre. price re-4'Valuatlon models. DEMO $ALE SALES.SERVICE·LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVER\" ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 E. 17th St. Costa ~teu. 546-4#1 CREVIER BMW IMPORTS ' j I I " I l i ' 1 • , , MERCEDES BENZ ----~ 111 ', I , ,1 , : 1 • \ I. 11 ! I VOLKSWAGEN AtrrnORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports (\Ve're top buyer for any used ~1ercede1 Benz.) 1101 Quall Newport Beach 833-9300 ENTF.R FROP.t 1.facARTIIDR NOW OPEN Mission Viejo Imports fe~turing MERCEDES BENZ & FIAT _J;sn1plete SalesJ& Service Vl1lt Us Soon At ~701 ~krguerlte' Parkway · Mission Viejo 495-1700 (USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) '73 450 SL COUPE $10,750 O\\'Tler alt 1 PP..1 54&-0tl>! 'i3 MERCEDES, 450 SL, Cocoa Brown, Helge lthr In· terlor, Imrnac cood, Make (lfftt; 642-3910 PEUGEOT NEW PEUGEOT DEALER Complete Sales and Service. 50 compa"1s on display. PACIFIC MOTOR HARBOUR V.W. Can Solve v,ur Economy ·Car Needs OVER . ·80 USED GAS SAVERS IN STOCK HARBOUR • , IMPORTS VW . PEUGEOT/SUBARU ·11711 Botch Bl B4l-44lS An4~imw. Ui>roln As.;'3:8220 HUNTINGTON BEACH SAAi w11:1.1AM* PA~N Newport Beach * SAAB 7107 Santiago Dr. Sales e Service • Le.a.sin& Best deal always. Complete You are the winner o! ""' Wu. 51.IE!.D, ·s.A•Mw"';'"l"s 71 selection now. Buy ()l' lea11e 2 ~~\~0 &tile D lromJI p kl 1 RD:REATIONAL '73 3.0 CSA DEMO m er ..... I VEHICLE SHOW 173 3.0 SA DEMO AN~~~M '71 BAVARIA CONVENTION CENTER '70 HOO CS January 4.13 '70 2002 Pleue call 642-5678, l'Xt 333 '69 2002 ~ or M5-6406 to claim )'Our llckets. "61 2002 TOYOTA tNorth County tot1 rree nwnber is M0-12'10.) DATSUN ONL y 2 LEFTI * * * WILL BUY YOUR DATSUNS, NEW 1973A~OYOTA'S GAS SAVER NEW '74s BIG DISCOUNTS PAID FOR oR Nor. w1LL PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL NOW IN STOCK LANDCRUISER KENT ALLEN, 540-0442 . IMt,IEDIATE WAGON VW '13 Beetle. Ye llow, dnt DELIVERY cond, IP u r c h , New 8210'• !Ml 260Z models 4 wheel drive (#5238) ?11,2/73). $2395 -S500 under over 100 new & used PICK.UP TRU.CK ~~~54i~ ~fle\l!~'P~!i ECONOMY CARS Au tom a I ; e transmt.,;on '66 vw Dune Buggy, roll ON DISPLA y f•8'150J. bar, spec. tire•. surrey top. $750 pvt ply, 536-7678 ~111.u q111" ll\11!111". W.0" 1 JG~I L r OCT ~TS!Jl\I ·" '' ' "'. '"" • • • WILL BUY YOUR KENNETll KRAMER DATSUN, TOYOTA 9168 El Colorado OR VOLKSWAO!'N FoonWn Valley PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL You are the winner or PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL 2 tickets to the ENT .. ~ ... M42 SPORTS & K Awa...c.N, .,...,..,.., . RECREATIONAL . '70 DATSUN Pickup, lo ~ICLE SHOW miles, xlnt cond. at the '67 VW Bus. l'C'blt '70 eng, Good (.'(Ind. $700. Call 645-3160 VOLVO '74 VOLVO'S HERE NOW Immediate Delivery On All ~1oclel1 BUY or LEASE 536-6982 ANAHEIM 41\ l • · Jl!NsEN coNvr..;r= wm 9'Wl tAN __ ;.;Jl;.;N.;.S;.;E_N __ Please call 642-5678, Cl\l 33.1 ¥0LYO to claim r yc1ur tickets. INTERCEPTOR !North County toll . tree 1966 Harbor, c.M. 6'6-9303 LARGE SELEX:TION number 11 54()..lDJ.) · 1969 • DR V t -• * * * '' ow Sll.'u!ln, & OF C8LORS -wkdaya 546-6232, aft 7pm IMMEDIATE OELI)l.El\Y: '74 TOYOfA'S-&wkend..,9~9366 uk for l'UL~. SERVrCE Gall · DIPARTMENT LEASE or BUY Au~o, UHd New ModelJ -New Colors a l 990 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Cout HW)'., N.B. 641-MOS MAZDA * Mollie '7J Rot1ry * ... MONTH ml.W TOYOTA 19f!6 Harbor, C.M. 64&-9303 69 LANDCRUISER Hard--top. SUperb condition! Will Lr8de. 831-3)1) or 49t1--1919Dlr. CADILLAC • • • RAY OVERTURF • %JOO NeW)Xlrt Blvd. Costa Mesa You are the winner of , 2 tlckttl to the SPORTS A Rn'.:REATIONAL VEH.ICLE SHOW at the 36 MONTH.8 OPEN Ll1ASE WW acctpt tradf..lnl 69 TOYCfl'A Corolla Wagon. CALL. MR. F,RY &12.ell8 4 Speed, super . economy! ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January 4.13 Hunt. Be11ch_ I c~=·=0::..:"if":::.:.1r·_· 831----°' . ~ lea• call MJ..S678, ext 333 to claim , your tlcket1. (NOrth Cbunty toll b'f!f number ls M')..1220.) MAZDA 17331 BHCh 81. MU!ll Aa.·~ Pilot auatned "Make Room for Dadd)'" * * "* , •• clean out .. the IU'IP 1973 CAD CDV' 11,000 ml'1 . • • • turn that junk into tub Best otr ovl"r $5500. 894-8<XX> WSU\ a~ Owlfted or 83&-1851 ew1 ad. Call Da1J¥ PiiOt· Want Adi havt )•rpt,.pi.... '74 TORONAD0,1143 $1 .577 Off Window Stl,ker '74. DELTA 88,1239 . . $1 '077 Off Window Stlclt;er '7 4 ·98 LS. #1209 '7 4 CUTLASS Supreme #12SJ ~-$-1~2iiiii.iii7~7_. o_rtw-indow-Sti---!cker~ $877 Used Car Clearance!! FULL PklCE Off Window Sticker • '74 OMEGA $2677 ' • ORDER NOW · '67 .CHEV Camaro(UKF821 ) ............................ $917 '69 PONTIAC: fireb;: .. fl\J J735) .......... ~ $1 077 '71 DATSUN Plckupw/shell .................. $1777 Real nice. (246BQI) · '69 QLDSvtstaCrulserWagon .. t ........... ...,.$1277 Auto., air, rad io, heater, Ra1:k • '72 MAZDARotary(87LflP) ................. M,$1977 Almost 100 Fine Trade-Ins reduced like this until Jan. 1. ' • - l ) , ... I ~~-• 46 D41LY PILOT \\ltdotsd.11, January 2. 1974 < • ~BUY ANY ~ NEW FORD TRUCK AND WE WILL SELL YOU A CAMPER AT 50% DIS-COUNT. BRAND NEW FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Aulo. 1rans ... heater: \\hirewalt tires, vinyl interior. tool kiL SGTANKJ6801 IOTH UNITS BRAND NEW '74 PltnO 2 DOOR "THE ORJGINAL GAS SAVER" TOTAL DOWll , .. : •. ,.~,.,.,, •• ~~., ,.,1 :;.-.o:p'' ,.·. •<«!...,,.,,...,,.,..tort!""" n \J..O ·l •P~ '1~ ... _.,,W' ('"". °'"" '""" l-c.., 2300 Engine 4 Speed Trons Dix. Bumper Group Vinyl Interior -92 PE I MONTH ~:,No '74 MA YIRICK ~~Cl~ 4000• ~ "A REAL GAS SAVfJI" FULL PRICE lOMllll ... , '\ Auto. trans., while side walls, convenience Qroup, POwer sFeering, tinted glass. light grQIJp, radio. Jl<91L141070. BRAND .-NEW '74 MUSTANG II FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HARDTOl' "A TRUE GAS SAVER'" $ LOADED INCL. J.uto. trans.r power brake~.13 hlrfl. buc:O.et seals. carpe1ng, radio, heater, linled glass. ~1"0241981 7> BRAND NEW '74 LTD 2 DOOR HT ' VI, auto trans.. •dCIOfy air, POwer steering, power disc brakes. heater, radial whitewalls, tintl!d glass. vinyl sca t !rim. (AJ6251 1•82~l _• -FULL PRICE $- IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -~ --, . . , ' { PILOT-~DVERTJSER Wtdrwid•y, J11rt1WY 2, 1974. 1!!, l • ~69 '70 '70 '71 '69 '67 '70 '72 '72 '70 '70 '69 -.. • ). • - Factory air conditioning, full power. l'ZLH4Sl E200 Window Van 4 speed, radio, heater. "8Sl21E FOR L D 4 Dr. Factory air conditioning, full power, v inyl roor. •23JCIE PL YM. Cust. Sub wagon ' Auto..ll:a(lS., factory c1ir ~onditioning. 106\CYY IMPERIAL Fnctorv air conditioning, lull power. 1'XHSJ7'1 BUICK Skylark Power steering, radio, t1ea1er. Jl'976GNN PONT•AC LeMans Factory air conditioning, lull power. ~S96BTP BUICK Skylark Full power. tactory air conditioning . .-.9:;1ovz. TORINO V-8, auto. tr<1ns .. tactory air condil o11i1lfJ, power !>leering, pawer brakes. raoio, heater, tin leCI glass . .-225EMV CHRYSLER New Yorker Factory air conditioning, full power. •272EMR CHRYSLER Newport • 69JAQN CHEV ·caprice Faclory air cond itioning, lull power. f735AKS FORD q_ gn. V·8, auto. trans .. tactory air condition1nq, pov1er steering. power (disc) brakes. radio. heater. tinted qlass". roof rack. 690EKZ $849 '68 $1675 ·'70 $1075 '69· $1889 '73 $1297. '73 $4 49 '69 $1-297 '68 $2179 '72 $1588 '71 $24 97 '71 $9 79 '67 $1 097 '71 ' Stick shill, power steering, radio, healer. ,,Q98799 FORO Squire V-8. auto. trans\, laciory air conditio ning, radio, healer. N667A BU MER ar top Factory air condition°lng, full power. -"ZSJ881 FORD Gal. 5 0 V-8, auto. trans.;.. tactory air conditioning, power steer ing, power (disc) brakes, radio •. heater, whifewalt tires. tinted glass.IOOJSA GRAN TORINO Spt_ V-8, .:ivto. trans .. lacrory air condllioninQ, power sleering, pow.er (disc> brakes. radio, healer. whitewall lircs lin'ted las .lOJJ A BUICK Electra Factory air conditioning, full power~ 4VUTJ86 L.T.D. Brougham Fac!ory air condi1ioning, power steering, radio, heater. L.andou IOP. •081EK R FORD Sta. Wagon Auto. tran1> .• factory air concr itlonino. power !>teerlng, radio, oea1wr. •76JG~O MAZDA 4 r. . 4 cyl .. duto. rran!. .. ai r condilioning, raC110, heater. 40JET J PONTIAC Bonne. Wagon ' . I Factory air conditionirig. radio, he,1lcr. "\11\181" DODGE Polara -v.s, .!Iulo. trilns., t<tttory .!lir concJi tioninq, power steering, radio. healer, vinyl rool. •60JCUC -170-FORD LTD-Brougham. \1 ·8, i!Ulo. trans .. factory a ir conditioning, power steering, r<1dio., heater, whitewall tires. tinted 111ss. 1YX737 MAZDA 4 D9or 616 SEDAN, .s cyl .. dulo. lrans .. aircondilon- (ng1 radio, he<11er. l •c . 110. !987·FBH) $.157'9· '71 J speed, radio. heater. runs like ne1n . Lie. 91 3 8 8 '7 3 Peru~~ C~~~tc~I. auto. trans .. air ..!297CPE! I" I conaiti()(ling, radio, heater, vlf'l yl roof, tinted qtass. vinvl 1nlerior. bucket seats, 1141GXA CHEV . VEGA -,-_7-0--r-.?..,. .. ..,.~"'~,..,-,-,.,,,~-d~-;~-,~-,~-. ~..,,~.,.,.1 ~,..~-.-•. -.,.-,-c-EL_$_1_0_9_7__,t-,-7-0-. ""~"',~"" .. "~"~.s~,~~ .{ ""'o;i;.,,""_ pow" s teering, power brakes, radio, healer, eii:. Licenst? No. !138-ABJJ • , 72 FORD L.T.D. 2 Dr Hdtop . $1897 , 71 rP~!-"~?~~~,~ig~•"";'•";"•· Fdclory air conditioning. lull power. #570EBM power "Steering, power -brakes, power win· dO\'JS. radio, heater. tinted glass. *82SCJCV '71 ~~~"~ '~~n~~~' ~;~; ,.d;o. $21 88 '.72 healer, 25804H PINTO 2 Door J speed, raC110, healer, vinyl interior. 998DU L. GAS SAVING A CYL. $1477 '7 0 ~.?..~, ~;; ,!!.~;!?n~ pow" ,,,.,;og . rnd;o, s 12 7.9 '6 8 heater. ,-'9S4DTC '7 3 f p~~-,1!~1"tl;,Td;• wod;Hoo;ng. $2-9 9 7 '.7 2 power sleering, power {di~c l brakes, radio, healer, whitewall I ires. tinl'?d glass. 747F WL FIREBIRD Pontiac 6 cyl., stick shift, radio, he.!lter, •<ZL1'075). Gas saving 6 cyJ .' · TD I V·B, auto. trans., fa ctory air conditio ning, powei:: slcerlng, radio, hca1e0 whitewall tires. tinted" Qldss. wheel covers. 882BZW COUGAR Aulo. trans., factory air condiloning, radio, heater. l icense No. ( YQW-901 l M C. Mont. Wgn. \1·8, auto. !rans., factory air conditioning, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, linled lass, 10 <1 ss. 6 N $fi79 FDRD Ranch Wagon $797 '72 CDUGAR ',6 9 · V·8, auto. trans., factory air conditioning, V-8. •olo "'""· toclo'y ,;, <ono;uon;og. '22/BEP power 5lecrlng, µowe r brakes, heater, vinyl roof, linled g1aSs. 885DTS $26'79 ' ~~~--,,,-,-,,.,.,..,.--=~~-,--,,-~~~~~~~~~~t-~~~"="' -'6 ·9 PLYM. Fury 4-Dr. c;sa-a-'7 l_f l -. --Factory air coJ\dilioning, power.s1eerin9. ~ZKJ808 • .p A speed, radio, healer. jusl overhauled. Lie. ... (21 AATY) -'•$14&8: • ' FORD • ---· . .. .. . ~ • --.. - • • • • • : -- • ' • j San Clemente ' Capistrano EDITION ~ ' I • • '· ' r '• • Today's Flnal.: . ., .. ~ N.Y. Steeks -·· • VOL b}, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFoRNIA WEONESDAY, JANUARY1, 1974 ' TEN CENTS .. Jury Urged to Find Slatton Guilty of Murder By TOM BARLEY ot tht D611y ,Uet llllf An Orange County Superior Court jury wa~ urged · today to find Robert Carl "\\1hip" Slatton guilty of "nothing less than murPer" in the slaying last July · 10 of an Ortega Hot Springs tre spasser. Prosecutor Ted Millard reminded the jury In a ·hard hitting final statement that the aggressive conduct or Slatton before and after the killing of Dennis Ray Glahn, 21, of La Mirada, made no other verdict' possible. . ·Millard noted in his final argument that Slatton, 41, of Trabuco Canyon, told a fellow prisoner in the county jail after hls arrest that he hitd "gut ShQt the son of a bitch" ln an obvious reference to the killing of Glahn. , "He offered to pay $500 for a witness "'ho would testify for him," MiUard said. "And there can be no doubt that. he persuaded his common law wife, Dorothy Carroll, to throw the revolver - he used in .the killing down a cliff." Slatton .earlier told the jury from the witness stand that he was not within miles of the hot springS when G_lahn was gunned down -after he · came to the aid of a fellow trespasser. SlatfA?n said he was being kldnaped by three-young men . who repeatedly threatened to castrate him at the time Glahn was shot ln the stomach at the point of a .45-caliber Colt revolver. The Starr Ranch hand Said he only ~ro. Cr.estlite ' Showdown?· ' ' Hearing Set Tonight .in San -Clemente A sliowdo\VD brewing for more than a year faces San Clemente city coun- cilmen toJ}.ight as they sit In judgment of complaints by neighbors that t he C~stlite Aggregate Products plant is a public nu isan.ce. _ _ And compounding tonigh t's problems v"ill be details of the latest flunking of air ·pollution control tests by the plant at . the end of Camino · de los Mares. . Although the plant's new dust-contrOI devices passed some initial tests in Novemberf recent monitoring by ,the Air Pollution Control District assertedly showed that dust levels \Vere not as · good as . they should be. - Since the la tter series in late President Orde1~s 55 MPH '· .. " , Fo1~ AB States~~Or Else • December, the .plant his shut down once again. City councilmen have been far. !rom unanimous-in their decisions relating . to 'tonigtlt's public he@. rings. The panel set the hearing late last year' by a slim, 3-2 vote marked by heavy debate over the need for such a function. Crestlite President Kenneth Teal urged councilmen not to set ·the hearing; asserting that "harassment". by some nearby residents bad been more than sufficient. t , ,-• IUt tlliifgbt•; 'sellfon was set 111jltayf and delegates from, the air poUutiOg agency, 11..,,ers fol-·11ie 11nn;·de!Ogat~ !"!Ill ·Ille Dillrict Attorney's office and lpOUsmep tor lwndrOds of . reild<nU plan' to attend.' · :· · ' . · escaped mutilatton by grabbing the wheel of his vehicle in Which ·he f"as being held prisoner by his three a.ssailarlts. Slatton said his Land Cruiser tben toppled over tlu-owing its three occupants to the groWld. Slatton testified that when h ~ recovered consciousness be was riding a horse -bareback under the light of a full moon. He testified he was accompanied · on his midnight ride by a riderless horse • z EGYP .T Cairo ' ! : .. -i~:,,·,,~ l ~:·­ -..... : '· ' ........ ·which stayed close behind his mount apd whinnied to hin1 occasionally. · M~lard dismissed that story today as "moonshine" and -told the jury that Slatton's-Land Cruiser o v e r t u r n e d betause of the ranch hand's great haste in fleeing fro mthe killing of Glahn. The deputy district attcirney r!'!minded . the jury of Slatton's long ~rd o( violence and his Ignoring of freQuent or~ers to not use fireanns or weapons \ sun CANAL m ' . OCCUPIED '•YtMA~L SIN A I ' of any kind in dealing with hot 1prings trespassers. Despite those warnings, htillar.cl said, Slatton, wearing his white Stetson hat and With his .4Xaliber C.Olt revolver cocked, conl'fonted, the jrespassers and shot Glahn. Judge Robclt i.. Corfman v.·ill re~ d the jury instructions a[ld send the panel to the jury room after defense attorney Dave Shinn del~vers his fina l statemenf. Paid. $6,000 ln3 Years · • WASHINGTON (AP) -The In~'m•l Revenue Service said today it is re:fx: aminiilg President Nixon's int'Orne ti x returns for the ·p<Uit sever.ii years-:-_..___ The IRS said representatives of Presi- dent Nixon are cooperating fully in -the probe and ·authorized disclosure of the action. ' ' ' Th .. IRS did not say what jears WOttld be covered · by the · review. But. tlere ~ · beeq. .l>JC!tro~ .oyt1r lite ~.ldent's "'turns for 1970, 1'71.aful 1972. /· ·The· President . paid · Iota! tues · for these three)"""' of less than 18,000.' • A!)..JRS ._ said In. answer, jo As California goes, so will the .nation, according to a law signed today by President Nixon in San Clemente. The measw:e will force all states in the union to adopt an energy:Saving SS-mile-per-hour speed limit on all fed erally funded roadways . And if the mates do not follow the suggestion within 60 days, they .will recei ve no federal highway funds . The President. in an announcement handed out after the signing of the new IB'W', said that if all states cut back speed limits to the lower level, the · savings Jn oil could amount to 200,000 barrels a day. He added that he was .encouraged by the: Jarg monber of states which already have cut down on their speed limits. California started its new low limit New Year's Day. In a somewhat related signing today, the President also signed a law setting up a new nonprofit railroad corporation. Deeming the new measure "an im- portant turning poiQt in the history of America's railroad industry," the Pre~­ dent authorized the formation of the corporation primarily to revamp the freight systems 9f six financially ailing railroads. Noise a~-frequent emissiohs of a fine red dJJSt f!<)m the !inn's kilns aad shipping trucks are the prime fac- tors in the years-old dispute. . 1be firm mines shale from inland hills, presses the mineral into pellets and bakes the bits to create a lightweight component for concrete. Other items on the COlDlcil's pMt-boli- day agenda include: -Selection of a new planning com- missioner to replace Grorge Bowles. who resigned recently after 10 years on the Israeli,· Syrian Troops Clash in Golan HeightS -~ Q\ltSllOlf; ~t the t~ a&ellCY: coi1!4 recover palt~: · , ·due for all three of those y 1 • that the statote of limitations Wo ...,.have expired . for taxes due' from previous years . The IRS did riot disclose the reasOn for its probe. · :· :: . The'. agency said it-arr.anged to e1 .. change information on the PresidenCI tax· returns with the congi:essional Joittt Corilmittee on Internal Revenue Tax- ation, which agreed. at Nixon's request~ to review the chief executive's tax returns for the years since he entered Cqeds Charged In Cake Spiking HOUSTON (UPI) -University of HoW1ton coeds Gwen Hartin, 2:1, and Patti Tyser, 21, must appear in court Jan. 9 to race .charges of "administering . an injuriOU! substance." The two spiked a chocolate c.tke with a laxative at an office party, authorities said. Assistant District Attorney Charles Cottingham said at least two persons became iJI, inchKlinK a 4-year-old boy, because of the cake.'\ Peter Williamson, attorney for ~1iss Hartman, said the incident occurred Dec 14 at a sociology department party. Oraage <:out .We~er Those cool ·winds will decrease -.Thursday, b.o:i!Ji.m>lac.d by cloudy skies, according to weat6er fOre- caster Pat Rowe. Highs at the beaches ;\re expected around 56 rising slightly .to 62 inland. Over- night I,qws :J0..45. 1 -· -~-INSWE TODA\:' . Ohio State University. got re· ven"e fof' a 1973 Rose Bowl de· /6ac with. a resoundi'1lg 42·:11 victory over use.no t}w '14 foo~ . boll clauic Tuesday. For d<!· tail! of the',game atld otheT bowl 'Ultl, see sport., •fXIOel 11·18. ' ' • \ The new entity will be able to borrow $1.5 billion to set up a new network of rail lines. The new law could also mean the abapdonment of tQousan<ls of miles. of outmoded rights-of.Way and the building of new one~. The President said be plans to push for even more railroad reform legislation this new year. · other than bill signings and some holiday phone cal!s to congressional (See 15-MPH, Page Z) advisory panet · -Consideration of an atU)ual request for · increases in city contract payment& to the San Clemente Commercial Com- pany. The finn picks up all or the trash in the city. -Colllinll!ld deliberation .or a. request by residenls along East Avenida Chidoba _ where the Ki~anis Club has planned to develop a surplus freeway lot into a view park.; Residents assert the park wquld . destroy privacy · in t h e neighborhood and ·1.ure too much traffic along1 the narrow, dead-eQd streeL Near Mission Viejo County to Accept,~arcel By the AtiOClatf:d . Prus Syrlan arut' Israeli for.ces, clashed tv.•ice today in the Golan Heights with machine guns and artillery, a Syrtan military communique reported. A·t the same· time, Israeli and Egyptian negotiators )Vere back in Geneva for fw1her talks ._on disengagemeni of their forces on_ t~ Suez frprtt. "' In another development, I s r a e 1 i Defense Mini$ter Moshe Dayaq will oon- GOLDA M~l]t COALITION ALLY BALKING. Story, Page 4. fer with Secretary of.,. State Henry A. KJssinger in Washington on Frttjay, the Western White Holl5e announced today. · In a brief announcement at San Clemente, a presid~nUaJ spokeSnlan sai~ Dayan and Kissinger would. consult "on the Geneva talks with emphasis on the subject of disengagement of fo rces.'' · Officials said with Israeli elections completed, Israel can play a more""aeti~e role Ut.tbe·negotiaUons to etld the quarter century of Middle East tension. The Kissinger~Dayari · session was agreed to when the U.S. official was in Israel on Dec. 17, a 'Vhite ·House spokesman said. He said it was not contemplated .that 1Dayan also would see Pr,esi~\ft~ . who is continuing a worktng~vacGtiOQ:,~his California home. In ih<i '{;-01Jin. iflghts flghtmg, one Israeli spldier ~w;is . shot -and several engineering vehicles were destroyed, the Syrian commun~ue said. ·The Syrians d~med to }1ave ,suff\?red no losses in the clashes on the northern and central sectors. In the ·first erit'Ounter, the Syrians said, they fired machine guns, forced withdrawal of an Israeli patrol and hit one soldier. The cOmmunique, broadcast by Damascus radio, said in the second clash the Syrian 'tlrtillerx thwarted an Israeli attempt · to consofidate defense .. positions in the central sector and the White House in 1969. · · ~e-Pre'sident's. attorneys h ~ v .e estimated Nixon could owe as nluch as $267,000 in back ·taxes if the deduO' tions claimed are disallowed. · On Dec. 8. Nixon released a mm of personal fmancal data and all~'ed newsmen to ~pect his income tax returns for the years 1969 through 1972. · ' The material showed that Nixon pa.id a total of $78_.651 In federal incoit)~ iaxes for the four years, the OOUi :Of it in 1969. The breakdown by year : $72,682 in 1969; $79'1 in 1970; $878 in !WI, and 14,298 in 1972. . . ' The main reaSon for the small tax payment during. ;he' last years was a controversial deduction Nit.Orf took for donating his vice presidential pape~ to the government. , ' Of Wild,eJness 1rrp~rty Pilar G. &iii~liez, · destroyed ·som-e negineel'ing vehicles. Some critics claim Nixon .failed -to ~Ifill the legal requirements for making tne donati(Hl before a· provision alloWirik (Set T~, Page il : By WILUMI SCHREIBER Of tflt Ditty , .... Slaff Orange eoun·ty superVtaors voted unanimously ~ay to accept a gift of 232 acres of rolling wilderness land next to O'Neill Park in the hills above Mission Viejo. _ The county will take over the property "from , the-Vedanta Society, • religious group -~~ch operates the Ramakrishna Jilfonastery · over~king .Oso Creek and Uve Oak Canyon Road. • It will cost' the county !20.11111 in back property ·taxes owed by the -Vedanta monks. Hinshaw Meets With· f.ouncilmen U1JI.' Rep. Andtew. J. ~w will meet , flth members <Jf' 'Ille San Juan .caplmano City ·OolaiclJ 'ftnlnday 1n· a· • opec(Jll dinner ,..,Ion celled to dlJcusl several Issues. · City Managtr Donald Weidner said the 6 p.m,-oesslon at the EI AO.be restaurant will focus on ·issues of mau transit, regulations Issued by the. Environmental Protection Agency and shifts-In grant profll'am ground rules. .,, CoUnty Real Property Services Dire<> tor Stanley Krause said the cost is less than 10 perceat of the fair market value for the land. Pioneer Resident Of San Juan, Dies The Vedanta Society wilt retain half of the mineral rights on the land and .has plac.d-restrictlons in the deed bei\lg Rooary .will be recited tonight in Old given to the county. ~ission Church In San Juan Capistrano Among-other: things, the county, cannot for Pilar G. Sanchez, a lon_gtime local penpit any noisy recreational activity resldent-and"-former hfission ca·retake . •· • • ·"·· L• 1 · He died SUnday at the age of 93. 11.., mot0rcy,,.;.,. or vemc e c•mpmg. Mr. Sanchez, who lived at 3231 I The Krisl\na monies .want the land used only for hiking and similar' ac-Avenida Padre, leaves his widow, Mrs. tlvities and . have asked ·the c6unty to . Esther Sanchez: five sons. Raymond build a fence. along the boundary with Md A"l'ando Saiicliez .of Dana Point, 41 acres belng retained around the Al!ol\!O, Jesus Md Alfred ·Sanchez of mon .. tery' buildings. San Juan; • .three dau.,ters, ~mestine 111" morilla ;will also keef a road . \'.elasquez of San .Juan1 ancl LU)lO c. ~uement ·~ a. l'Ol'Der~O the land . ;:rv~ntes1 a~a ~ H~1 ~ froin the1llOllO!le()' to Live .Olk-ClnyOn. \)l<;:~W:Vfvors I n c f u d e. 42 ~board 1190 •Psmwtd 1 ~y'OI gra·ndcllll,dr~n .ind--:!\ treat· an .,....ment to buy an addlt!Ooal 12 gnndchlldren. acres frooijnc Uve Oak Csn)'On Rood Mr. Sanchez first settled in ·tbO valley from the rnona.tery. ·• -· In · 19311 and !or 35 y~~ the,.a!ter Krauoe told the board that pareel worked on the ml!slon gl'Olln\b. He was has been IPP!'lised at about 111,000 on • member of th~ church'• ,Holy· Name • ""' becJme it... Is so convenient to Socletr. • • • the 1111ln rou. • . ViajtatiOO Is scheduled, for· fO!iiJ!ht at • .,,.., Yedlnta Society fdt 11>at this Lj(tntSld Mo11uary, and Requiem i.e ... 12 acres was · far more valuable than ~ be celebrated at the mission Tbur,.. the remainder of the !ind and decided day lit I a.m. Burial wlli 'follow In •they 1lftded 'to· 11k fair ma!1ltl ~ • Old:Mlni<!L,E:eln,ttery,.the retilng place (~ LAIRD, J!'aC• I) . or Ojher .. rly settlen or the valley. "' -' ._,_.__.,, ~ -· --. . - .~ ' .... "t'j " * * ' . . ~. Njxtl)l's ·State TaxAftorney, ' . Promises Full Disclosme :: ' ' . -~ .&A€RAMENT (AP) --J>r<slttent-Thli view wos challenged by Democrat ·Nixon's California ' tax ·attorney said Willlant' M., Bennett, a member' of . the today full details of Nlx9fi's state income Franchise Tax Board which ·administers tax status will be made public. ·. the state ipcome tax . At his request, "Someplace along the line \\'e're going the board staff launched a revi~w ~to to have a complete dfsclOsure or anything detenn1ne whether Nixon had any stat~ and everything that anybody wants to tax liabili~y. .!. kn:Ow," said Dean S. Butler of Los The ·board also requested Nixon 'to Angeles. , waive his' tight Rf cooliilefftiality · tlr•I . Butler also said the California State has prohibited board officials fron\ Fran~se -Tax Boa,!_d . 'Yill be given commenting go the -Nixon case. - aulhoritY:: \o discuss facts conc.eming Butler sai<I he has been given powet t~.PreSi~t's'state incoine tix n·a~1IftY of attorney to execute the waivefl: fof or lack of it. . 'Nixon. ' ... '.'There's no questioo at all on th,at ." "I have the waiver here.'' ButJtr•llld Butler said. "lt's just a question of in a telephone interview. "It's just .... when." matter of expedition. It's not a quesuot ' Tbe White House disclosed i n of policy as to .whether: it will: bi! December that Nixon paid no state executed. It wUI." ··~1 income tax while president. Butler said ~ rCm wants to determ'!ni . -'l'he lengthy -statement about Nixon '.s the best way 111.·whlch lhe ~ldtnt't 1 finances Included a lettet from his tax infonnation would be assembled and' California advisers which contended Ulat presented to the Franchise Tix Board.1 the President wu not a California This presumably would include NlXQl\'j. reskjent for income tn purposes. \See DISCLOSUl\E, Paa• %) • .. ' r ·, ·~ .. ..,..~-• - •• ~· 1 '.\IL. 'r ~1~0 1 ·-;>-SC • • • / Oldest Livitag Tlaita9'1 Prof Chow llui·yen ~( Taiwan stanCls beside what forest 3.0 mi.l~s southwest of Taipei lasl No~e~~r he ciaims is the oldest llvin~ thing idn-t1hhe ·twort~. =-~~!~~~:'5G1~~e.~a~erS~e~~a~ea;:e:1~n m~~lifoorni~~ f'o.rn1os{ln Sun tree. Chow d1 sco vere e ree i.n North State's Citrus Crop Anaheirn Driver Ends it All Threatened by Fro~t For His Pi11to By the Associated Press Clear skies and cold northerly "'inds will threaten San Joaquin Valley citrus crops with almost c~~~'.n r r o s t o~ernight, the National W~her Service saY!i· The weathennan says prote<:tion for the frost·threatened citrus crop will prob. ably be necessary tonight and Thursday morning as temperatures plunge well below freezing at most vallf:y Points. the low reading this morning was 'Ii at Lemoore, with lows overnight Cl.· pectcd to range from 22 to 30. the extended outlook is calling for lows in the upper 20s l<t_ 30s lh'rough Swlday. But frost danger is expected tO lessen by Friday morning as clouds and fog block the worst of the cold wi,nds. Temperatures below 30 during !he night weren't low enough long enough to · damage the valley1s. orange trop, officials. said. But they braced for freez· ing temperatures again tonight. "One night or cold usually doe~n 't do too much ," said Clyde Churthill, Tulare County agriculture commissioner. An Anaheim man who claimed his '·It's "'hen we get an early cold 8 n d 1971 Pinto car had been "dying" since on consecutive nights." I d'...,h There were readihgs o( 28 at Lindsay the day he bought jt, "execute e and 29 in Exeter, which "isn't bad auto Tuesday at a Ford Motor Co. at all." said Al Jones, chief inspector plant in Pico Rivera. for Sunldst Growers. Roger Sweitzer was aided in his ''It has to get down to 26 or lower demolition by about 50 people, most · t t f · g the of whom are members of a group known ffor 1 ~?mJe time .J0 .~~~igh;e:~nuld be as the outraged Consumers Action 9Jm· ru1 · ones . sai ·, • . , millee The chairman of the commJttee colder, bu~. if we re lucky, it ~~.~.1 •.... ts..Eddic .campson, who became famous be too bad. . two years ago for setting fire to his The National \Vepther Service says Lincoln Continental as a protest. temperatures cou.ld drop. lo the low 20s Sweitzer said his car has "been dying at some valley porn~ torug~t. . a slow death since the day I bought Jones and Churchill credited the thick it and I think the only merciful thing skins of ora~ges and. g~ sugar content to do is put it out of its misery." with prevenhng any mter1or damage. · He said his two-yea( search for aid "It takes a fe~ hours . fo: the tern· from the Ford h~otor Company proved perature of the orange iruade to get fruitless and a Ford executive even cold." Churchill said. . answered a protest Jett~ \Yith: "\\'hat The 1973-74 orange crop, esumatcd do you want for $3,000? at about 30,000 railroad cars here . is It took the cro\vd about an hour to a~ut 30 percent \ picked, Jones said. reduce the Pinto to a pile of junk. A severe frost destroyed about one·lhird Sweitzer is not without transportation 9{ last year's crop. · however. He charged his fellow e1.· Wind machines in orchards were ac· ecutioners $1 a swing. With the money livated Tuesday night to circulate the he's going to buy a bicycle. cold air, but growers didn't have to A spokesman for Ford denied that use smudge pots, Jones said. the. company_ had~ignorcd _the Jette.rs._ Temperatures also dropped below The Spokesman said the company of· freezing in much of Northern California fered on Dee. 12 to fix the Pinto at this morning. no cost to Sweitzer but Sweitzer refused the offer. The spokesman said the car San Diego Won't P1·ess 'Deep Throat' Co1nplaiilt was two years old and had been driven 50,000 miles. Babies Boomi11.g _At Lio1i Country --500 i11 1973 A deputy San Diego City Attorney said today he will not seek a criminal complaint for the showing of ·•oeep Throat" by a group of Huntington Beach _,_!.inion High Schoool Dist r i c t ad· niinistra tors. The screenings . of a video-tape C()py of the X·rated movie oeturred in August at a San Diego retreat attended by the top 46 district offi cials. Ted Bromfield said this morning he decided not to seek a compla int in the case onlv because the circum stances under v.tiich the film v.•as viev.·ed did not constitute pOblic sho"•ing. "There is no doubt in my mind that I have probable cause to believe that the ma1erial th<!y viewed is obscene, • OlANCJE COAST " DAILY PILOT Tht Offflllt COii! DAILY PILOT. wltft wfto(ft 11 comtitnld lft1 Mtwt·P•t1o1, It 11Vbll1~td bf tllt Ot...,_ COlll Putill1~ift&I t;GmfNI"'· Stpt •t!t Mlllona '" PllblllllM. M-tJ l~•Olllfl Frij:ltJ, for COl!I Mnt, MowPOr! 81t(ft, liun!l119tor> 811d1/F""<tltln Vtllty, L/IO;lll"I a .. c11, lrvlnt/~.clalttMt'' ona Sin ti.1111n111 St n J111n Ctbi"rtno. A •l"l!lt •etlilrltl Miiiion !1 pYbll1~1tO S.1111ra1,1 ffd 511"11•n. r"* prlnclNtl pU1>lifM<19 pl•nl 11 ., "'Wnt lty Slrfft, (flit Mfll, t1l(lo"'ll, nt.H Roborl N. Weod Prno111nt ""' P11Dh1ftt r J1ck R. Curley Vlei Prt llGtnl Ind Gtno•ll Mt1111t1< Tkom11 Koo.ii fdlto< Tho,,.11 A. ~11rpkin1 Mtnot•tll EO •ltr Ch1rl11 M. Looi Ridt11I r. N1U Aultt1nl Mtn•l"'9 £01lor1 S...Cle111e1 .. Otflf.e 101 Nortk El Cil'llina 1!111, '2672 Othff OHie .. Cl1t1 Mt u UO Wt1t 11¥ $ttttt ,.,...,._, I01t11: Wl Mtwpan 90vltw•I Hllllllntr!On .,..di; .1111• •Hdl ...,......,. L•tVM ~ .. c~: m Farttr A- Tilll.,.._ 11141 641-4121 Cl ... fflH Actffnldlf 642-l_f,71 S.. Ci._, .. An. D.P••l•lth: , ••• ,.... 492-4420 C-r'9M, ltti,. 0.1,,.. C....i Plllllr.llltlf CO!ft~nf, Mt """ tlwln, l!lui.!ftlitflt, tifhtfltl ,...,,.,. If' tdvvtlfll'l'lfn11 PMl••lll "'•r br """""'~ Wllhovt tOtcl•I _.. mlulln ot ~•"1!t ,_. ..._. Cltfl -llQtt ,.)If •t C..t1 MfM, CIN,..,.11. ~1.ir.,, t\' Cf"'°' Q,U "'*'1111\t; 1¥ °""II ~.II IMftffl!fl MlllM *rilMtltM '1.6" -ll'llY. it is just that under California Jaw, the viewing could not be considered a public exhibition of !he film ," he said. · District Superintendent Jack Roper publicly apologized for the screening of the movie which was shown on district equipment. Details of lhe viewing at the lhree-day conference "-'ere not made public until October when Huntington Beach vice officers COflfiscated the film from a district official. From Page 1 TAXES ... such deductions expired. Nixon himself asked the joint com· miUee to review the $500.000 in deduc· lions he took • for donating the vice presidential papers. · . Nixon also asked the comm1Uee to decide whether he was right In not declaring a taxable ga in on the sale or some property in San Clemente in 1970. Ni:<on said he paJd no taxes on the dea l because he was told at the time that he rnade no profit. But a later audit of the chief executive's finances. ordered by Nixon himself, concluded lhat he had a $117,370 profit on fhe transaction. The comimittee agreed lo r~view Nix· on 's finances. hut sald ii 'v.'Ould not limit itself to the two areas he men- tioned. 5,000 Students Back· • In Saddleback Class Some S.000 students went . back lo school today for the first day of the Winter quarter at Saddleback College. Dan AnMtrong, college com munity relations director, saJd 542 courses are offered for the new tenn. negistrallon ls stUl Of)en tor the 27 extended campua coutses starting ?.tooday in rive area higlt schools. ~ •. -~- Babies were big business at Lion Coun· try Safari's four preserves nalionwide during 1973. • Some 500 animal birt!Js were recorded, including 24 listed as "rare and en- dangered species," according to ~arry Schus_ltq, president atfd board cha1rm~n of the--diain of African wildlife parks. Most spectacular \\'as the arrival of eight cheetahs in two litters at the Lion Countrv preserve in Georgia. The cheetah is ·threatened with extinction in its native Africa. A southern white rhinoceros, first ever born at any of the four pre serves, ar· rived at the Texas park. Olher rare and endangered births in· eluded five addax , two Persian gazelle, eight Hartmann's Mountain zebra, and orle scimitar-horned oryx. Also recorded were 148 new lion cubs, six hippos, 74 antelopes, and seven zebras. Bird hatchings totaled 113, including 64 ostrich chicks. Fr111n Pqr J 'DISCLOSURE • • • own legal op1ruons supporting his contention !hat he is not liable for state income ta xes. "The question I think Is in tenns of getting an orderly presentation. I want the Franchise Tax Board to have lhe information directly and in proper form hel0<e they start PlckinR it UP, out of the newspapers or wherever else, ' Butler said. Nixon · declared that the Di•trlct of Colwnbia wa1 hii-resldence for state and loca) tax purposes. Elected federal officials are exempt from paying D.C. income taxes. Two .Sh.01..to Death SUSANVILLE: (AP) -Murder and suicide were apparently. re•ponsible for .the gunshot· dealhs Tuesday of two brothers In a mobile home near here, ' Lw<n Counly shtriff'a dcputlta qy. • Police Seek Abandoned Girl's Mon1 _, By •'REDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of n11 O.Sly Pltot It.ff Laguna Beach police today continued thei r attcmpt.s to locate the mother or. a 2·year-old girl abandoned Sunday at the Community Presbyterian Church. A description of the girl and what police believe to be her name has been teletyped to police ag~cies throoghout California. "We're hoping for some answer but there have been no li;ads yet," _Police Lt. John Zelko said. The toddler was dropped off just before services Sunday by a red·halred young woman wearing blue jeans, a denim jacket a{Kl white blouse. She told workers at the church's nursery school that the . girl's name was ''Michelle." When the girl's mother .failed to return for the child after ·the morning service, nursery workers called police. Officers suggested the girl's mother may have been delayed and told nursery - aides to keep the child a whlle longer. Several hours later, the . nursery workers again called police and reported the mother still had r.ot shown up. Poli~ cared for the abandoned child at the statign then _!!'ansP.Qtled be[ _Ip the Sitton Home for dependent children. Aides at Sitton Home today declined to release any infonnation on t_he_ girl. · Lt. Zelko said the young girl appeared healthy and bad not suffered neglect or abuse. - Zelko !aid' tele£; aent out Jate. Sun- day. were direc ed to all city pollce, coWlty sheriff's epartments and other law enforcement agencies within the state. He speculaled tl)at the lack cl response to the teletype messages could be due to the New Year's bolklay. "Bui we're still keeping our fingers crossed," U. Zelko said. · If the mother does not return to claim the child, Michelle faces a long stay as a waif at the dependint children's home. From Pllffe 1 LAND • • • for it," Krause said. The 166,500 that would pay for lhe 12 acres would come from federal revenue sharing tunds · deaignated for- acquisition in the O'Neill Park area. The 120 100 that would pay the taxes · on the large parcel wou1d OOme from the same fwtds. Harbors,· BeacbC's and P.arb -Director KeMelh Sampson told the board there_ is another 2.6 acres "of road fronta ge land in that Immediate area that the county coold oomkler purchasing in the future. "This land woold make the entire property conti~ with oor curnnt holdings " Sampson said. "I would guess that th~ $5 000 an acre figure would pretty much hold true on thi.o land as well although we may have to take into account some improvements that h " have been made by t e two owners. The board did give approval for an in·house appraisal of the ad.d!tional 26 acres for possible future acqws1tlon with federal revenue sharing funds. The board accept,d the Vedanta Society's l(ift with little di!CWlaion. 1' HOO DID SWEAT SHIRTS. - • ' • • 200 Jailed • Newport Tops C9ast Drunk Arrests More thM 200 drunken drivers were The final New Year'• tally of 202 ~ Co t d '"" the I arrests brings the number of drunken jailed '""''~• WI Y ur... our-drivers Jailed in Orange _Cowtly durln( day New Year 1 weekend. o Oalltomla Highway Patrolmen led the the two lour.<Jay holidays to 48 ·th t two way in the aackdown that began at-Moet local lawmen egreed a , 4 p.m. Friday and ended at 4 p.m. i•ctors combined to cut the ~ew Y~~ !New Year's Day with 94 arrests. Alf Jgure below the 278 arrests reco v.·ere booked lnto county jail. du.~Puingblthlce1tyChwrais,tmo~! S:r~h!~," a CHP Santa Ana topped the list of 16 other t In !J>Ollce qenctcs wllb 24-arrests in the officer said today. "We were OU 58me four-day period. force during Christmas and many Newport Beach police led the field motorists who saw the rcsultinc fi&'ll'es in the Orange Coast area with 10 arrests, got the message in time for Jhelr New 11even of whom ¥.'ere booked into the Year's festivities." in. the t · ii A Santa Ana patrolman attributed the city jail and three coun Y Ja . . ra·1n New Year's Eve and early New lluntinglon Beach jalled six inebriated I ts motorists, Cos ta Mesa booked five , Foun· Year's· DaY for keeping many motor 1 tain Valley two and Laguna Beach one orf the rain·slickencd fre eways and in the 96-hour crackdown. roads. \. • i I . San Juan Hires Part-time Clerk For Elections • From Page 1 55-MPH • • • • fl leaders the President's schedule his shown a light work load this week, . The President has made .no ,pubhc appearances since last Fridays al· · tendance at the wedding of his personal The city of San Juan Capistrano has physician in Lil Jolla. hired a temporary city clerk to serve Since then the President has spent on a contract basis unUl the municipal most of his time at his residertce .• electioru1. llis close !riend, c.G. "Bebe" Beboro Jo Bennltt, Whose rtsignatiOn from-arrived early lhis week and remains a post ln Lakewood lured San Juan's in San Clemente. last clerk into a new job, will be paid Generally, when Rebozo arrives, the a monthly salary and living allowance President takes unannounced afterno:on during her temporary tenure in· San drives along the South County with Juan, said City Manager Don a Id Rebozo at the . Wheel and the secret \Veidner. . . service tagging along.· F.1rs. Benrult had served 20 years in No such dri\•es have yet taken place Lakewood before leaving her post Jhere. since Nixon arrived late last v.·e_ek. _ -Shortly-afterwards San Juan!s--cler:k--of---· .. :orne,presJden--r lifs-iides said, watched one year successfully competed for the bo\\'l games oh television Tuesday and same pm~tion. . during lulls made the calls to fell~ The resignation left the city staff ba~ly Republicans, offering them new years in need of a clerk to handle details greetings of a municipal election, lnel.llding extra · ballot measures. Weidner' had been perfonning the functions Wllil Mrs. Ben- nitt was found. The interim official's salary wilt be $1 ,400 per month plus an added $2QO monthly travel and living expense. The new clerk started her local duties this morning. Mean"·hile, Weidner has Jaunched a campaign to. find a permanent replace· ment. Connie Alarcon Last Rites Held Roman catholic funeral rites · were conducted at M i s s i o n San Juan Capistrano today for Mrs. CoMie L. Ala.rron of Capistrano Beach. The 30-year resident of the South Coast died Sunday In San Clemen1f. Mrs. Alarcon, ~. lived at 34571 Via Catalina. She leaves a son, Robert Alarcon of Capistrano Beach; two daughters, Irene A-forales o( San Juan and Elva . Alarcon Of Capistrano ~~ch i · --her father, Eme'st Longoria of Los AQgeles; four brothers, .Mike, Alfred and J\.fargarlto Espanoza of Corona and Ismael Barajas oC Madera; two sisters, Jennie Yepez~of Modesto and Allee Bell of Riverside. Btirlal in Evergreen C e m e t e r y , Riverside, followed today's rites at the mL!alon. Wneski ~fortuary was in charge of arrangements. Police Probe Death EL MONTE (AP) -Police here say they are seeking to determine a motive for Tuesday's slaying of a 20-year..ol.d airman on leave from Vandenberg Air Force Base. 16,000 County Resid~nts Get Check Benefits r.tore than 16,000 Orange County residents will be among the 475,000 people statewide who will be receiving welfare checks in the new federally administered aid tO the aged , blind and disabled. Peter O'Anna , district manager of the Sacramento Social Security office, said that the checks fr.om the Social Security Adminstration will be delivered to recip- ients this week. A spokesman for the Orange County Social Security office said that anyone who had been recelving aid under the • state program and who does not receive a check by the end o( the week, should call the nearest Social Stturity 9((i!:'.t. · -He Said ·-that OiO!e than ta,ooo county residents should be-receiving the gold- colored checks by Saturday. The federal government takes O\'er administration of ''adult'' we If are· categories frQm the stale under a new federal law that went lnto effect with the new year. The program is handled by the Social Security AdministraUon. O' Anna said Monday in a !Ullement .ial teams have been set up ln local SOcial Security offices lo handle calls from persons who didn't receive a check or received a check for the wrong amount. . Payments in the state's largest single welfare category. Aid to Families with Dependent Children, are not affected by the changeover. • TENNIS ANYONE? Long SIM .. Nock ACRYLIC -SWEATERS Acrylic l Nylon WARM UP SUITS 2111 ·,o 349& W!I'°" -Ptnn • Dulop TENNIS BALLS MIN~1 TENNIS· SHOES 8''~9" 16" -18'' . .._.. __ _ LADID' TENNIS SHO.ES 111 -9'° ,,,..: 18" TENNIS DRESSES •Men l Boya TENNIS SHORTS • Menl Boya TENNIS SHl~S .m SOX e WlllOll, D1vlt, 81ncroft, 01rcl•, Y oney11ft1 TDINIS RACKETS · I I A A A A A A A A A A A A ~ A A A A A A • • • • • : • • • • : • • • 1 ! I I J • • ·Wednesday's_ Closing Prices \ ~ -, .. --..----.. ~--• • ' • w-11. Jo...,, 2, 1974 SC • NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • --------- Y.ear's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday T1~ading=1!ght . _ On Wall ·St1·eet NEW YORK (UPI) -Stock prices, performing un- evenly most ol the senoin, gained• slightl,y \Vednesday on Ibo New York Stock ·Exchange. Trading was light. The Dow Jones industrial average, a bit lower much of the day. wos ahead 2.69 points to 853.00 shortly before 1he clo&ing bell The market indicator rallied from a 1913 IO\V of 788.$1 to 850.85 during December. A4 number of those stocks that performed best in December fell in profit taking \Ved· nesday. More than J,000 issues advanved, and only aboo t" 450 declined among the t,763 is.sUCJ traded. Trading was slow, totaling roughly 12.500,000 shares at the close, compared with 23,411),000 shares traded Monday. -. - ' • • • • ' ' j • ' • . • • • ' • to sell -for $J49 95 Home Entertainment Center · Price -lale 87 • AM/FM/MPX Stereo Receiver • Built·i n B-Track Tape Player ~ • Built-in 3-Speed Renri Cb111er • Twin Bookshelf-Size Speakers Excjting lotol"ltereo system meosulft up to the · best -10ve over $30.00 now! Perlormonu pocked receiver ploys 8-trock cartridges, records, or AM & FM stereo broadcasts. Full BSRchonger with dust COY~, illuminofed slide-rule diol, two hi-fidelity speokh ' • • • -. • . · 'J71 a-ti" ,.. ···-, ___ MmPads ~ ., .... Stn Your Choice ·c;..:si-21 -~2 r99c . I . I " StOl'ldord cup OI' cup with • c ·hond6e. $eomlnl filler & .,,, ............ uin't·ld. ~~1topo •••• hclt ... , .. ,,.,.. JalP11Clt.t4P .. .Selling for $$·Morel 99 • 2·Pc. L111r Sleen PJ'i • flll lengt-GDWIS ) '; Comfy, 100% cotton sleep fothiont , iii styles ond quality sell~ .IMWhm: 'fa< m.ich more-deoroncti .-priud nc;w! Pojamos hove piped collars, Pockets & cuffs, wide woi1tbanck. Long sleeYt Granny gowns with rufft. flounce. Choice of styla and ~ prim. ~zes J+..iO. .. • • . I . Rig. •2'' iiiffi :l-, vn.i'C'' ~ . Chewobl• OraRg• Flovorai • ' lottlo 01365 ' Our Lowest ·Pric~.~~ ·.· .. ·~· . . , . .,.-;;.. •• --. Ovr lowest Price Boys' Fashion ~ · SOre orer 14"1 . . pricef# to Sm$$ ' "'·~:,~~~~~i~ ,,., Quilt CoverlQ._ Rared Jean• NN fashion flore-leg ;eons in ossorted colcn, i., • durable polynt~/ <otton « 100% s cottori. Detoiliiig , tourid ori nome , . , brOl"ld po.,ts sellirig · fDf' dollars more! · Choice of styles. .22 --4 .. \ Speciol Purcltasel ~ Ladies' Roll'.'up Sleeve • Perma-Press Shirts ~~ coWlection ~f lodin' pol';flttf' & <Olton s 1hirts with roll-Up lieevt:s, novelty , trims, 'Mrfety . of colors & printi. . Key of Ke.rtueij Blended Whiskey Fifth Gallon 99 llllpDl'fed fnMn Scotland Scotford Scotch Whisky Quart ' Beautiful reproduc• lions in te1tlu;ed Lo:ge copocity.M hal full wood tranw, brush-stroke finish. T rcditionol and con-htovy chipbOO,d top & botton. heovy temporary 1tyled moult:ings. 37JC37" du hosp lock.~· s 66 ·1··-aa .Assortme.,I ,includes hooks, fosteners, wire, wolt fostemen & onchor bolts, hinges, picture horigers, etc. 73 ·1 TAR TIA _,,w Slljht lrn11litn of Iii II.II Notiooollr foo"°:' Ci1~~ . Cigarette ·Resagos C19an ~: ... '°'.: ,::; Hold _, of pl•osure! er IOXO~ , Tro.nspo;ent ' • -''tropft" kt you 7JC ~1ScoM25c s ·--hciwtors& " cigars. SNght rtregu. 241 nlcoJln• en ,.. bities do not affect • , mowdt-· smo1t• . ~ • • . -'""""" !Y· • 11114 htllb ............ , .. • • . . .fi('f)\ Sne 41 •.each! _ _."'9,. R~. 9gc Plaltic_ · Housewares Ciiio """ .... '6!',Wlltclox . ,,, Al-Clocks -' -. -. • ~.-. Pretty & proctic ol, choiceoffJoiOi.: •' _ pOcl Patterns, with pop ulor ruffled 9 ' 80" lits full Of twin beds. • ' -•.· s ~~· 7 I J 7 I ' . ...... .. . • • . -. ' • -; ' . , . VOL 67, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES· ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -r"" ~ ----- • ., . ' l WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1974 ' - . Today's · Flnl!I N~Y. ~tocks • • • TEN CENTS · Jury Urged to Find Slatton Guilty of Murder: By TOM BARLEY Of ttl• DlllJ Piiot Sl1ff An 9r~ge younty Superior Court jury was urged tOday to find Reibert Carl "Whip" Slatton guilty of "nothing less than murder" ·in the· slaying last July 10 of an Orte·ga Hot Spri]lg:S trespasser. Prosecutor Ted ~titlard reminded the jury hf a hard hitting final statement that the aggressive conduct of Slatton l;>efore and after .the killin~ of DeMi s ·Ray. Glahri , 21, of La Mirada, n1ade Hawaii Tragedy no other verdict poss ible . Millatd noted in his final argument that Slattori, 41, of ·TrabU_co Ca.pY.9n, told ~ fellow prisoner in the county jail after his arrest that ·he had •:gut shot the son· of a bitch" In an obvious reference to the killing of Glalm. "He offered to pay $500 for a witness who would testify for him," Millard said. "And there can be no doubt that he ~rsuad~ his common law "ire, Dorothy Carroll, to throw the revolver Coastal Couple Plunge to Death . Religious meditation atop. a coastal cliff high on the Hawaiian "Island .of Maui has_ended.Jn death for. .\wo_-Newport -B.each_people who walked off the edge accidentally while. holding hands and pray. ing. alo"ng with two other persons. . The victims lay scattered at the base of the sheer 250·!oot bluff for a full day and night before one of the survivors' cries for help were heard by a surfer offshore. Killed in-the accident which occu(red Saturday were Peter Whitehead. 2~. who lived on the island for the past 18 months and Christi11eJ1. Bartillooe; 2a. whose p~LjJiv~ in lh•Y,clt ~·1 Anoi.< Of Newport ·eea1ch. ' . .,. . · ... " • -Tr Whitehead was the son of Newport Beach Realtor and former screen 'f?iter Peter Wlljtebead. Tile survivors are:lletcy Dumaill~ 20, at1d Davld Cook, also 20, both of whom are reporteilly from the orange reait ~ii\,·· · " · Police-in llaUI sa1a~t0day they did-riot Have !Wille addresses for Miss Dumaine and Cook. "both of whom are In good condition at Maul Memorial Hospital in Wailuku. Near Missima Viejo County to Accept Parcel Of Wilde1"ness Property hi used in the klllipg d0wn a c;liff." Slatton earlier told the jury from the witness stand that be' was not within rpiles of the ·hot, springs when Glahn was~ gunned do\vn after he came ·to the ald of a fellow trespasser. Slatton said he Was being kidnaped by three young men "who · repeatedly threatened to casfrate · him at the time Glahn wa s shot in the stomach at the poi_nt of ~ .4:>-ealiber COit revolver. The Starr Ranch .hand said he only Abandoned Tot's .Mom Sought By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of .... Otlly l'ikit '''" Laguna Beach police today .continued their attempts to -locate the mother .. of a 2-year-old gir1 8bandoned Sunday at the C:Ommunity Presbyterian Church. A .description of the gi'rl and what police believe tO be her name has been leletyped to police agencies lhroughou~ California. • ~·: • 'i"i '~ . theri l!ve-:6iieft·:n.-1eIM1se y t,"-PO 1.0' Lt. J_ohn_zeJko said; ._ . The tllddl er w~ droJ'I!"'' ofl:JiiSt 1>e!ort- s•rvlcos Silnday by I red·baired -young w9"11ii l~ bllle jeans, a denim . jadlef anif""'1ftl! tiloQji,. -· + -"'" She told· workers ~ at the Chfirch'~ nursery schoOI-tbit 1he girl'! name_ Wa._s "Michelle."· When the girl's mother failed to return for the child after the morning service, nursery workers· called pouCe. Officers. sµggested the girl's · mother may have been delayed and told nursery aides to keep the child a while longer. 8ever:il hours later, the nursery workers again called police and reportOO the mOthef still had r.ot shown up. Police cared· for the abandoned. child at the station then transPorted her to the Sitton Home for depell!ient children. By_ WILLIAM SCllREIB~R Aides at Sitton Home today declined to release any, informB.~ion on the girl. The Vedaqta Society will ret8in half Lt. Zelko said the young girl appeared or the mineral rights on the land and healthy and had not suffered neglect has placed restrictions in the deed being or abuse. ot IM 011ty P'iltl Sti ff Ora"nge County superv190 rs voted unanimously today to accept a gift of 232 acres of rolling wilderness land next to O'Neill Park in the hills above Mission given to the county~-_ _ ~ . ~~id telet)'.pes sent ()Ut late SUn· Viejo. Amoog other things. the county cannot day w""· dir«:ted to all elty .. police, pe~t any noisy recreational activity county sheriff's departments and other like motorcyclini .or vehicle camping. law enforcement agencies within the . ~" The Kilslma monks want tile land stale. • _ _!lie_ county _•Ill take over the ~.,,._ ·Y ,.sejl-onJrf"'1>ll<Jnrand-simtlar-ae--lle 1pe"'111m<nliat"lb-:1ac1t ol re nse fro m; tlieiu:L~~Y~,!:~ livilles and have asked ~ cotinty to ~ tbe teletype messa~ could :°due wu~~ -o.=~ Oso Creek and bWld-a-(ence:-along t!ie ~·with to tbe !lew Year'fllOliday. ~.~o\W'ca Roa9 41-acres-bemg-retalned-around-:-lhe -"But-we're-sUll ketplng-our fingers uve nyon. · _ . : . -· _lll<llUlslery_lluildlnl!S·--crossed" U Zelko lalll · It will cost tile county $20,100 in hack The monk.s will ,,1.. keer . a road If tbe mother.does noi return lo claim property taxes owed by the Vedanta ~ment across a coqaer o the land the child Michelle faces a~ long stay monk.&. . . . from the monastery .to Live 08k Canyon as a waif at Ute dependent children's County Real Property Services D1rec· Road. . home tor Stanlty KrauSe said the cost is The board also approved. a stµ.<ty of · less than 10 percent of the fair market an agree~ent to buy an ad~.tional 12 value !Or the 'land. acres fronting LIVe Oak CarlYon Road . Massage P~rlo1· Oraage . .. Wea the!' Coast Those cool winds will decrease Thursday, being repl'!ced by ~loudy skies according to weather fore--caat~ ;Pat Rowe. Highs. at the beaches are expected around 56 , rising sjighUy !o 6;l inland. OVer- nlglit :itiws 3045.~ -. ' INSIDE TODAY from the monastery. Krause told the · board that parcel haS" been appraised ,t about $5:,000 an acre IJ:e.ca~e it•"is SO" live.nient to the main road. i . , .. The Vedanta Soi!lety . 1 ·that this 12 acres was far more Wluable than the remainder of the land and decided they...,needed to ask fair market value for it," Kriluae said . The -$66,500 that would pay 12 acres. would come from (See LAND, Page l} for the federal ·Laguna Officer Hearing Slated The Laguna Beach .City. ·Councll will hold the first public hearlng tonight of an ordinance reqfilring issuance of ~ial perinit! for establ!_shmeOt,. of· new massage parlors. : The coiiditlonal use pennlt. j>rocedure I<> be Con~idertd at 7:30 p.m. has been reconunended by the elty planning .com· nllssion. '~ It WOuld make pennanent a lour mooth T B .. H ;. d urceney, 1aw enacted .bY the council after . 0 e lJnore the! ·staff· reported lhal an W\SllVOry . -~ge ,operation_ wa11..c;oO;sidering set· -• ' Wi1 u shop · Laguna ·-Special recognition • t,.-La~ Beach ' • ~.:ting ma"!..ge o~UOlll would nol Police Detective Ale.1 4imenei has been have to apPiy for the ponnlt. · · scheduled as ~·extraordinary business" · · escaped mutilation by grabbing the wheel of his .v_ehicle in which he Was being held.prisoner by his t,hree assailants. Slatton said his Land Cruiser then toi)pl~ over throwing its three bccupants to the ground. Sl"atton testified that when h e recovered consciousness he was. riding , a horse bareback under ' the light of a full moon. He testified he was accompanied on his. midnight ride 'by a riderless · horse •• ' which stayed close l}ehind his mount and whinnied to hi n1 occasionally . · Afill;J.rd dismissed 'that story today as "moonshine" and told the jury· that Slalton's Land Cruiser o v e r t u r n e d because of the ranch hanct:s great haste in flecing fro mth.e killing of Glahn . The deputy district attorney reminded the jury of Slatto)l's long record or violence and his ignoring of fre,quent orders to not use firearms or weapons IXOD . ~· . ·- / .. . ·--'' .. ' • ..(. .alii-; l'Jiif· it-11 /.Mr: With Bat-ed B~eath . Mattlie\V Augilst, !!'z"," so~·o!'¥t. anll Mrs. Frank Aug~st:6f I.agurur i Bea<'h-waited-a-long-time--0h-Bluel>ir<W'a<k+elephan4I1!1e-lor..toj.s. . He was still contemplating Ihe incline when . photogt•Rher .:eh. ay ··this lime next year, it will be~a cinch. . · • . '. · ·· ' · Big Bend Are~ !J:earings ' S·cheduled for Tonight .. Public hi~ri•P. If.ill !>e held-. at , 1;'0 tonight m a. Pl'~kl!J!e , ljlllleiaUon . ar\d zo'niilgs tar propetties· iif)..;iguqa:S ' Big Bend area along Laguna Canyon ·Road ... · The effect qf the· adoption of the zoning changes;. ·p·rezonin;g .and annexation woold be'to Change permitted ' ' Lagun!l's JJ'.i1id Dam age Minor lapd · .qses frPJ!I . res\denti_al to · light .fudUStrta l· ~d,.remove a restrictive· flood zone b-O~;,. 'piece of ~unty territo ry. The city docs not have a_ "flood ··protection" ~ne On i\S books and the · county applied zOne was Imposed on Canyon residents over their objections. The city Jimit line rlUlS in and out along properties. in the canyon -and at one time, Laguna Beach aimed at annexing all canyon property out to ' . El Toro Road. · Thal effOl't was rebuffed by voters Stiff N"ew Year's Day. winds wronChed in the annexation area1 although .the two large tree limbs to the ground but. no major wind damage "'as reported annexation of 'the contrqversial 522-acre to Laguria Beach authorities. SyC!Jm~re Hills region further out' was Public Works cr~ws Monday removed accomplished leavlng that p a r c e I Ohio State ·Universiey got re· .vengc' for a 197$. Ro,. BPWl'de· ·feat IDlth a '9\t1oundb1g 42·21 victO!'.Jl..DVcr USC in tho '74 foot· ball .cl<)Ssic Tuesday. For de- laill of the game and Qtller bowl tilll/.ite rport., pogts 17-18. for the Laguna Belch City CounCU today. Jlmen .. wu reoently nam~ chalnnan of the 19'/I Laguna Mardi or-Dimes the tree~ branch from Clift Drive at attached to Laguna by a mi1es·long Mayor Takes Oath Jasmine StreeL wlltre.ooe limb blocked .. shoestring" along Laguna Canyon Road. 1 · tfiffic lanes and the sidewalk and Regular business to be considered by _... Af Twr ltnttt -t ... ,..,~ , . n~ L, """"' 1 ca~paign. -~ . 1 • NEW· YORK (UPI} -Promising to roiilove\I a bough fro.111 .downtOwn Uguna _the'. city council starling at 1:30 p.m. ' of any kind in dealing with hot springs treSpassers. ... Despite those u•arnings, Millard said, Slatton, wearing his \\'tiite Stetson hat and with his .. 45-caliber Col t revolver cocked. confroiited t h "e trespas.sers and shot Glahn. Judge Robelt L. Corrman will read the jury instruc tions and send the panel to the jury room alter defense attorney Dave Shinn delivers his final statement. urns.: President In 3 Years WASHINGTON (AP) -The fn'·:nal ~evenue Service said today it is re-ex·- amining. President" Nixa.n's income tax return s for the past several years. ~ The IRS said representative~. of Presl· dent Nixon are cooperating fully in the probe and authorized disclosure . of the actitin. TI1e IRS did not.say wh~t years would be . covered by. the review. But th~re ~ ha1 been controversy .o.ver t 1i e - 'President's rettirns for 1~, 1971 and 1972. • The President paid totaLtaxes....1or_ these three years of less than $6,000. ·An IRS spokesman said in answer lo a question that the tax agency could recover past __ ~e!.. ~ue fot all thtee of those years, bu t that the statute of limitations ,WOUid have -expired· f0r taxes due from previous. years. . . The IRS did not disclose the reason for. its probe. , The agency said .it arranged to ex· change information on the President's tax returns with the congressional Joint Comrniitee 00 1n£cmal Revenue· Ta>.;· ation. which &greed, at Nixon's request , to review the chief executive's tax returns for .the years since he entered the White House in 1969. ' The President's attorneys have estimated Nixon could owe as much as $267,000 in back taxes if the deduc- tions claimed are Clis!UoWed. On Dec. 8, Nixon ·released a mas s of personal financal data and allowed newsmen to nspect his income tax retun1s for the years 1969 through 1972. The material showed that Nixon paid a total of $78,651 in federal income (See TAXES, Page !) * * * Nixon Tax Aide· Sa ys Sn.tte Disclosure 'Due' ; - SACRAMENTO (AP) -Presideri\ Nixon's California t.a~ attorney said today fuU .. d~etalls of Nixon's state iricome tax st~tus will be made public. 1 "Someplace along the line we're going to have a complete disclosure of anythJng and everything that anybody wants ·to know," said Dean ·s. Buller of Los • Angeles. ' Butler also said the California State Franchise T~x 898ril will be g1~n ~uthority td dis~ss fa(:~ concefhlog the President's State income tax liability or lack of it. "There's no question at all on that.:' Butler said . "It's just a questioii of when." The White House disclOM!d ' i v December thaf Nlion paid no Slit~ income tax while president. The lengthy stateQJent about Nlson's finances tncluded a letter from his Califori:Ua advisers which contended thal the President was oot a California resident for income tax purposes. That View was challenged by Democrat . \~illlam M. ·Bennett. a n1ember of Uw: c.atfntl• · s c...r c.. ts Clnel'"41 ,._4' be the cttY•a oft'.icial 0 mati:hmtker. , • on ·.Fore.st Avenue. ificludes a change in the proposed sewage wedding our ,people to their city," Laguna • nte~rds reported fio cfiarge Increases: a· staff •report on Franchise Tax Board which adminiSter:s the sta te inco111e tax, At "his rtqlleSt, tlie board staff launched a review to determine whether Nixon bad any state Clftlln , ~ ' Ct~, •• Dlafll '""'*'... 11 ,_,,._ .. The city councll's • 1¥lnoring ol-the long·llme •police olftcer was Initiated by a citizen P,etlU.O &Jen.cl 1!7, 61 "friends of Al~ Jimenez:" -... :.:. A let.ter to the <:9W'ell auded the policoman for his con\passli>n and hhuman warmth." • · .Counellwomail Phyllis S,...ney w11 M:lteduled lo make the pmenµillon, ., Abraham 'David Bea~ )l'U mm In incidents. . • I l construction of a sidewalk ak>llg the Tuesday atlhe clty'S ltlth mayor . .About j)ne report ~[ diveta 'in •\rOUble an6 eMt-.nlrof Glenneyr~ Streer between . 1,00o pe!'5CIM wllhsti>od "· cjlllly, damp yeUlng · for help of( Treasure Island ·Park Avenue and Legion: 'a request w~ther to wa.tch state Surrogate Court .... -Monday proved to"· be l ' cursing diver ,by the .. Parking and Transporta tiqn Judge Nathan R. Sobel• admlnls.ter the who was angry because he'd dropped Committee Ior sphere or influence tax liability. · 1• The board also requested Nlxol\ to waive his right of conlidenttaliiy th.It. has prohibited board officials from commenting on the Nixon case. •.tiwtl'lllffttflt • 14·1• """"'' lt•H ,.., "" •Kft n I ""''*' • A1111 i..Mtrf a 1, L...-..:-" ----.---" . . .. . . • -- oath or office JO. Beame, 67, the city's a aaak full of shell tish ,. lifeguard Capt. planning : and a p~gress report on the llraL Jewish m,Y!>r. llrµce Baird aald. · , · · Greenbelt Service Dis)rlct. Butler said he has been given powtt" (See DISCLOSURE, P11e I) . . .. . ' T -• ,. .. --...... --:-----~,. ......----- • ·~ uAILY 111L01 -LB Go ve1·nment Opens Sl1elf ·Oil A1·ea s -----\VASl-llNGTO N tUPl l -Th e Interior i:>epartmt?nt today ope-n{'(f 7.7 111il\lon oicres or California's oce an shelr. some of it just off Los Angel es, to posslblc oil and gas exploration. The department's original proposals ~·ore to offer leases only in areas outside the string of islands off the coast and up to· 110 miles offshore. But the fuel shortage brought a decision last week · to expand the area right up to the three-mile limit 0 r state-controlled waters. The possibility of oil and gas wells 50 close to shore ln the heretofore well· free Santa ~1onlca Bay and its reereation beaches and homes was expected to generate strong opposition from conservation, envi r onme nt a I and recreation groups, as _we\1 as home and property owners along the coast. Opponents were expected to cite the 1969 wt!ll blow-out in the Santa Barbara Channel to the north lhat caused extr!Jsivc fouling of befches and wildlife by the resulting oil spill . No new drillin g has been permitted in the Santa Barbara Channel since then , although production has continued from existing wells without another major spill. There already are some oil wells within the three-mile limit off Long Beach. 1be Interior Department i s s u e d a call for oil and gas companies to nominate tracts of£ the Soul.hem California coast for inclusion in an oil and gas lease sale tentatively scheduled for the spring of 1975. One official said the department would have to conduct an enviromental impact study,. consider other factors and hold public hearings before deciding which. if any, tracts in the area would be included in the lease sale . From Page 1 LAND • • • revenue sharing funds de signated for acquisition in the O'Neill Park area. 1be $20,100 that v.'OO!d pay the taxes on the large parcel v.·ould come from the same funds. · Harbors, Beaches and Parks Director Kenneth 5ampson told the boa.rd there is amther 26 acres of road frontage land in that immediate area that the county could consider purchasing in the future. "Th.is land would make the entire property contiguous with our current ~ holdings," Sampson said . "I would guess that the $5,000 an acr~ figure v.·ould pretty much hold true on this land as well although Yie may have to take into account 90me improve ments that have been made by the two owners.~ The. board did give approval for an in-house appraisal or the additional 26 acr~s for possible future acqulsition with lederal revenue sharing funds. The board 8cctpted the Vedanta Society's gift with little discussion. Hunt Released To A'wait ·Bid LEWISBURG . Pa. (AP ) -\Va· lergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt was released from a federal prison farm today pending an ap- peal filed in \Vashington. HWlt. 54, was sentenced Nov. 9 to serve 214-8 years in prison. He pleaded guilty last Jani.Jary to six counts of conspiracy, burglary and wirelapplng in connecTion with the June 17. 1972 break in at the Democratic national head· quarters in the Watergate building. A federal appeals court in Washington Friday ordered that Hunt and a second Watergate defendant, Bernard h Barker of inami, be released until the court acts on thei r appeal s. OUN&I CO.AST LI DAILY PILOT • Dtil• PHii Slltl 'lloh Laguna 1t' elco11ie ?t1rs. Elisa Roggiolani (left.) and her husband, Renzo, (right) are wel- .comed to .L:ag~na B~ach. by Guy Taylor, owner of the Village Inn. The R~g.g101an1s reside m Porto Ercole, Italy, Laguna's sister city. ~hey v1s1~ed the ~rt C~lony as part of a .holiday trip to sefi relatives 1n San Diego. The Italian couple were honored at a cocktail party Saturday hosted by Taylor. A1iaheim Drive r Ends it All For His Pi11to An Anaheim man who claimed his 1971 Pinto car had been 11dying" since the day_ .be .JlOugQt .ll. "executed" the auto Tuesday at a Ford Motor Co. pl3nt in Pico Rivera. Roger Sweitzer was aided in his demolition by about 50 people, most of whom are members or a group known as the Outraged Consumers Action Com-· mitlee. The chairman of the committee is Eddie Campson, who became famous two years ago for setting firJ!: to his Lincoln Con'tinental as a protest. Sweitzer said his car has "been dying a slo_w death since the day l bought it and I think the only merciful thing to do is put it out of its misery."1 He said his two-year search' for aid from the Ford ~otor Company 'proved ... fruitless and. a Ford executive even answered a protest letter with: "\Vhat do you want for $3,000?" It took the crowd about . an hour to reduce the Pinto to a pile of junk. Sweitzer is not without transportation ·however. He cfiarged his fellow ex- ecutioners $1 a swing. With the money he's going to buy a bicycle. A spokesman for Ford denied that the company had ignored the letters. The spokesman said the company of- fered on Dec. 12. to fix the Pintb at no cost to Sweitzer but Sweitzer refused the offer. The spokesman said the car \\'as two years old and had been driven 50,000 miles. Police Do g H11rt In Line of Dut y AT!IERTON (UPI) - A police dog which mistook an officer for a prowler and plunged 120 fe et from a rooftop is expected to be released from an animal hospital in a day or two . "He's pretty sore now," Atherton Police Olief Greg Smith said of the dog . named Nando. · Nando was chasing a scent Sunday \\'hen a policeman jumped onto the roof rrorn a fire department ladder. The dog mistook the officer's scent for that of the burglar and ran across the roof and off the edge. The dog·s fall v.·as broken by an overhang 60 feet down. His injuries con· sisted of a broken jaw and three broken lC<'th. F rmn Page 1 TAXES ... taxes for the four years, the bulk of it in 1969. The breakdo'o\'Tl by year: $72,682 in 1969 ; $792 In 1970; $878 in 1971, and $4.298 in 1972. The main reason for the small tax payme.nt during the last years was a controversial deduction Nixon took for donating his vice president ial papers to the government. • Some critics claim Nixon failed lo fulfill the legal requirements for making the donation before a provision allowing such deductions expired. Nixon himself aske'd the joint com· millee to ' review the $500.000 In deduc· lions he took for donating the vice -presidential papers--- Nixon also asked the committee to decide whether he v.·as right in not declaring a taxable gain on the sale of some property in San Clemente in 1970. Nixon said he paid no taxes on the deal because he was told at the time that he made no profit. But a later audit ()f the chief executive's finances. ordered by Nixon himself, concluded that he had a: $117,370 profit on the . transaction. The comimittee agreed to review Nix- on's finances, but said it w:ould not limit itself to the two areas he men- tioned. Fr<Jm Pagel DISCLO SU RE • • • of attorney to execute the v.·aivcr fo r Nixon. "I have the waiver here;• Butler said in a telephone intervic\v. "It's just a matter of expedition, it's not a question ()f policy as to y,·hether it will be executed. It will." Buller said he first wants to determine the best way in which the President's tax informal.ion would be assembled and presented to the Franchise Tax Board . This presumably would include Nixon 's O"'" legal opinions supporting his conte nti on that he is not liable for state income taxes. "The question I think is in terms of getting an , orderly presentation. I 1vant the Franchise Tax Board to have lhc informa.tion directly and in proper forn1 before they start picklng it up out of the newspapers or wherever else," Butler said. 2 00 Jaile d New port Tops Coast Dru1ik Arrests ?\tore than 200 drunken drivers \\'ere jailed in Orange County during the four- day New Year's weekend . California Highway PatrotmCn led the v.·ay in the crackdown lhat began at 4 p.m. F'riday and ended al 4 p.m. New Year's Day .. with 94 arrests. All v.·ere booked into·county jail. Santa Ana topped the lisr of 16 other ipolice agencies with 24 arrests In the same four-day period . Newport Beach p:llice led the field in the Orange Coast area with 10 arrests, seven of v.·hom were booked Into the .city jai.l and three in the county jail. Huntington Beach jailed six Inebriated ~rist~. Cosla Mesa booked five. F'oun- tain Valley two and Laguna Beach one in ·the 96-hour crackdown. • • The final New Year:s tally of 202 arrests brings the number of drunken drivers jailed in Orange County during the two four-Olly holiday,. to 480. MMt local lawmen agreed that-two fa ctors combined to cut the New Year's figure below the 278 arrests recorded during the Christmas season. "Publicity was one of them." a CHP officer said today. ·"We were out ln force during Christ mas and many molorists who SlfW=-the re1u1ti.ng figures .got the message In time for their New Year's festiviti es." ._;. A Santa Ana patrolman attributed the rain New Year's Eve 3nd early Ne\v Year~1 Day for keeping many motorists oU the rain·slickened freeways and roods. .. Teen-agers ·Top Lt;igutta Booze List Laguna Beach police nonnally brace for a few problems with adull5 who share a little too much holiday cheer at Ne"' Years cefebratiom. But this year. adul!s ~eren't stirring up nearly th<' trouble teenagers were. j On New Years Eve and early New Years Day, police cited 10. teenagers . for Illegal possesJlon of alcohol. During the holfday weekend others were cited for .drunken driving, driving under the influence 'Of Qtugs, and drunk in auto. Just a few minutes before the end of 1973, police rounded up five young persons along Ocean A venue and cited them foe ~ of alcohol. Each youth received a citation and was not detained. Youths oVer 18, but under 21, face a $29 fine !or the violation. Teenagers under 18 may be counseled ~· by police and the charges dtopped o a fine levied. · Five other iUegal possession citations were issued, one at Crescent Bay Beach, one in the 1200 block of Ocean Way and three in the 400 block of Cliff Dr. 'I1le first juvenile citations were issued just after 2 a.m. Saturday when police stopped a car heading north out of Laguna on Coast Highway. The driver was cited for driving · with an open container contafrung alcohol. The teen-age passenger In the car was cited for minor in possession. Police also made a number of aJTfstS involving small quantities of marijuana, amphetamines and other dangerous drugs. You Can't Speed A lorig Ca1iyo1i Road Eit1ier The neW 55-lniles· per hour maximum speed limit lidn't appear to Pose. any special problems of enf«cement for Laguna Beach police. • . Maria's D&etor: Birth Control Pills Prescribed By TOM BARLEY Lewis Sr., that he has examined ?\trs. 01 "" D•lll' i:1101 '''" • Parson wlthin the last -JO d3ys afttr Maria Parson's person'il physician more than three years or treatment today"'testified in Orange County Superior by a nwnber of psychiatrists and could Court that he prescribed bl1ih control detect no change in her condition. pills for her for the fir.st time in her Dr. Doughtery agreed wilh Lewis that Ufe §ftcr she told him of "irresistible before the alleged .sauna roo1n incident. impulses" to seek sexual relations with Mrs. Parson was a healthy, happy strangers. woman who rarely had reason to Sttk Dr. Hale E. Dougherty of Analfeim his services. ended the holiday break in the Parson Lewis claims thal Mrs. Parson bccamt ~rial b.Y testifying that the symptoms three women aftCr her ordeal: se1- unmed1ately followed Mrs. Parson's hungry h1aria who sought men in local alleged entrapment on March· 2. 1970, bars, remorseful Betty who bitterly in Ute sauna room of the Holiday Health ~ regretted h1aria 's escapades and tht Spa, Orange. '"submerged true self of Mr.s. Parson. Mrs. Parson. 49, of Anaheim, wants • ,, $1 million in damages from the health spa for the trauma allegedly created by her ordeal in the 170-degree sauna room. Californians Easing Off Gas Pedals .. . Dr. Dougherty told the jury in Judge Will iam h1urray's courtroom today that he noticed "a marked change" in f\.1rs. Parsons' personality 1vhen he exam ined her less than 24 hours after her experience in the sauna room . By 1'11e Associated Press • ' l •. I . Airs. Parson claims she wa s trapped In U:te steam room for 2.5 minutes longer than ~r usual five-minute exposure and that she collapsed when the sliding door of the room failed to open. Her claim that the door was defective and corroded has been supported by a number of fellow patrons who also testified that health spa pefsoMel were never within shouting distance on such occasions. Aiost .cauromia drivers greeted the state's new energy-saving ~ mile per our speed limit with lots of soft pedaling -and a few extra miles in Ule gas tank. lRelated story Page 3). . But some heavy-footed motorists f<Kmd themselves pn lhe .side of the road New Year's Day getting a lecture , warn- ing or speeding ticket from the ever· r watchful California Highway Patrol. l Dr. Dougherty testified that further examination of Mrs. Parson Jed him lo prescribe psychiatric treatment for what he described as her depression, listlessness and neurotic Jendencies. lie told plaintiff's attorn<'y, ?\larvin 16,000 County Residents Get Check Benefits CHP offlcer.i handed 1,393 tlcl<.U statewide Tuesday to }1l0torists exceed- . ing the 55 m.p.h. n1;:irk. A CHP spokes· man termed lhc fi gure .. remarkably lo\\'." , In Northern and Southern Cafifnrnia. . officers who spotted groups of speed in~ cars displa}'cd amber lights and led the cars at a legal speed for a short distance. Individual speeders were often V.'amed by outside bullhorns to slow doYat There's only bne short stretch of road in the city where-drivers ever could More than 16,000 Orange County drive faster than 55 mph legally. 'nlat residents will be ilmong the 475,000 people "We are very proud of our Southt>m California motorists." said Los Angeles Highway Patrol Inspector Glendon Craig alter the first day of the 55 limit. stretch is on Laguna Cariyoo Road statewide who will be receiving welfare between the city limits and the in· checks in the new federally administered tersection of El Thro Road. aid to the aged, blind and disabled. But, today and New Year's Day Peter D'Anna. district manager of the several drivers have t>een stopped and Sacramento Social SecuMty office. said cited on the shorr run. _ that the checks [rom the Social Security One of the speeders cited on New Adminstration v.•i\I be delivered to recip- Years Day told the citing officer that ients this week. after crawling along at 55 mph on the A• spokesman for the Orange County "They seem to be complying volun· larily," he said .. "It ha.s not 'been necessary to write many cijation.s but we have given warnings." Jn the San Diego area, highway patrolmen cited only tv.·o motorists for speeding during the first eight hours of the new law -which look effect at 1?:01 a.m. New Year 's Day. '·AtmoSt e\>erybody seems to be com- plying," a spokesman said. ~ree~~y, he thought that he could "open Social Security office :-;aid that anYone it up . on Laguna Ca~on Roa_c!._ _ _ __\£h.Q__~ been rec~iving aid under the · Poltee Sgt. Victor 5agen sai~-ule state program and who does not receh·e depa.rtment w~ld not be placmg a a check by the end or the week, should special empba.s15 "II the canyon road call lhe nearest Social Security olft~. Coeds--· Charge· d istretch, but .said tha t when patrol. of. He said that more than 16,000 county ricers were in the ~ea and a ~l~~t resident; should be receiving the gold· v.·as observed .exceeding the new lirriit, colored /checks by Saturday. I C k S •k• he would be cited. The fede'ra l government takes over n a e pi 1ng 5,000 Students Back In Saddlehack Class administration of "adult" we Ir are categ()ries from the state under a new ·HOUSTON (UPI) -University of federal law that went into effect with Houston coeds Gwen Hartin, TT and the new year. The program is handled Patti Tyser, 21, must appear in' court by the Social Security Administration. Jan. 9 to face charges of "administering D' Anna said Monday in a statement an injurious substance." The two spiked Some 5,000 students went back to special teams have been set up in local a ch<x:olate cake with a laxative at school today for the fllSt day of the Social Security ()ffices to handle calls an office party. authorities said. 1 winter quarter at Saddleback College. from persons who didn't receive a check Assistant 'District Attorney Charles Dan Arm.strong, college comrnwtity or received a check for the . v.TOng-Cottingham said at least lY.'O persons relations. director, said 542 courses are amount. became HI, including a 4-year-old boy, offered for the new tenn. Registration Payments in the state's largest singl e because of the cake. is still open for the 27 extended campus \\'elfare category, Aid to Families v.•ilh Peter \\'tlliamson . attorney for l\1 iss courses starting Monday in five area Dependent Children. are not affected Hartman, sa id the incident occurred Dec high schools. by the changeover. 14 at a sociology dj!partment party. r""'~:;;:;;;;;::;~~~~;;;~ii:i::=:~i:i:i:i:i:E:~::i~i:~:::::::::;:ii~~~:ii::iiii:;::~;;:::::;;;~;;;;~,~7'>iil • ' ' • J..":~. ··~...,.,.5.,.l""B""c..,E.,N.,T...,E...,R_,S..,T.,.R..,E ... E.T,-_c ... o ... s .... T ... A,..,M_E .. s A_,""646-_1..,9_19_... .. ·;;;··~-.!'-·a TENNIS ANYONE? > •• " HOODED , SWEAT SHIRTS Long SIHv• Neck ACRYLIC SWEATERS L Acrylic & Nylon WARM UP SUITS 211& 10 3411· - ,Wll...i. Penn • Dulop TENNIS . BALLS 78& per cioL TENNIS DRESSES e Men& Boys TEHNIS SHORTS •Men& Boys TEHNIS SHIRTS and SOX • MIN'I U DllS' . e W11'°'9, D•vl1, • . TENNIS TENNIS t.ncroft, G•rel•, SHOES -'SHOES · Yon1y•m• ' TENNIS 8". 9" ass. cro 16;1 .18'1 ,16"· 18" RACKETS - I l J l I I I \ ., • • • " ' I Saddlehaek ~ • Today'.s Final VOL 67, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1974 TEN CENTS County Accepts '232 Acres Near Mission Viejo By WILUAM SCHREIBER Of ... 1Wtr 'llel 1..it Orange County superv1sors voted unanimously today to accept a gift of 232 acres of rolling wllderncss land next to O'Neill Park 1n the hills above ~fission Viejo. • 1be county will take over the property from the Vedanta-. Society, a religious group which operates the Ramakrishna h-1onaatery overlooking Oso creek and Live Oak Canyon Road. It will cos,t the county $20,100 in back property taxes owed by· the Vedanta monkl. ' ·, {lawaii Trag~fl County Real Property Services Direc- tor Slanley J(rause oald lbe cost Is less than 10 percent of the fair market · value for the land. The Vedanta SOClety will retain ball of the mineral rights on the land and has placed restrictions in the deed being given to the county. .Among other things, the county cannot pen:nit any OOisy recreational acUvity like motorcycling or vehicle camping. The Krislina monks want the land used only !of hiking and similar ac- tivities and have asked the county to build a fence along tbe bowidary with 41 acres being retained around the monastery buildings. The mooks will also keer a r<iad eaaement across a comer o the land from the· monastery to Uve Qak Canyon Road. The board also approved a •tudy of an 3greeme~t to buy an' additional 12 acres fronting Llve Qak Canyon Road from the nxmastery. · Krause told .. the ·~d that parcel has been apprai~ed "ir.\bout $5,000 an acre because it is so convenient to .the rn~in road. "The Vedanta Society felt tbat thi; Moscone --..... -.... ,. Coastal Coupl·e Pulls-Out • ' • ff - Plunge -to n ·eath Of Running 12 acres was far more valuable than the remainder of the land .and decided they needed to ask fair market value for it," Krause said. · The $66,500 that would pay for the 12 acres · would come from federal revenue sharing fwids designated for acqW$ilioo in the O'Neill Park area. The $20,100 that would pay the taxes on the large parcel would come from the same funds. · Harbofll, Beaches and Parks Director Kenneth Sampsoii told the board there is iDotru!r 25 acres of ro8d frontage lan<l m U!!t immediate are4 that Qie • county could consider purchatiing in the future. · "This land would make the entire property cont iguous ~·ith our current holdings," Sampsqn said. "I would guess tQat the $5,000 an :icre figure would pretty much hqld true on this land as well although y,·e may have to take into account some improvements that hilive been'fJlade by the two owners." The board did gi~ approval for an in-house appraisal or the additional 26 acres £or possible future acquisi tion \.\'ilh federal reve nue sharing funds. ' The · bOard accepted the Vedanta ' IXOD EGYP.T Cairo • -;'. 'Ull CANAi llmallla'. ~: OCCUPIED . av l&llt~l!L SIN A I Society's gift with little discussion. . Baard Chai rman Ronald Caspers, in .\\'hqse district the property lies, said the deal is a simple matter of the society yielding to property tax pressures and wantinff the land lo remain open · space ~ ' preserye" the peace and · solitude around the monastery." Caspers also said the opportunity to acquire this much open space for· so little cost is a good deal for Uie co~ty. He also urged purchase of the ad-. ditional 12 ac res because "$5,000 an acre is certainly better than tl'le $25,000 we pay elsewhere." Paid $6,000 In 3 Years WASHINGTON (AP) -The ln<-'11al Revenue Service said. today it is re-ex- 1. · d'lati t I cliff hi h '" Ha ·· SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sell. George amining President ·Nixon's .inanne tax Re 1g1ous me 1 on atop a coas a g on ... e wauan Moscone ol San Francisoo has decided l~land of Maui has ended in death for two Newport Beach people to pull o&il c>f the tace for .the Democratic • returns for the pa.st several years. wtio walked off tbe edge accidentally while holding hands and pray-gubernatorial .oomination beeause of a r The IRS said representatives of Presi- ing along with twQ other persons. lack of money, it was learned today. _, dent Nixon are cooeer~tir)g fully in ~ The victims lay scattered at tbe base of the sheer 250-foot bluff Moscone; who recenUy completed a • prcbc and autborii.ed discioSure o1 tb.e for a full day and night before one of the survivors' cries for help e;tatewide tour of 'California to sample action. were heard by a surfer offshore. . voter sentiinent, became the first z The IRS did not say what y~ WOu1d Killed in the accident which occurred Saturday were Peter casualty in a field of seven announcet:I be cove red by the review. But tbire \Vhitehead, 29, who lived on the island for the past 18 months and and pot.ential major cmtenders for the has bien controversy over the Christine M. Bartalone, 22, whose parents live in the Back Bay Area Democn.Uc mmirlaUon. . , , o 90· . '-Li.)., President's returns for 1970, 1971 and • • oi Newport Beach. . . . . , , . Mqsccne ~ , · , .• Q!Clt~ , a~~b~ f o r 4 .. -.Mt.I· ~,.., · '..-, 1 .. ~ '-.·.:--~:l~ 1972. ' . 1--cJ1-----'\Vhjtehead~wu-the-001H>l-Newport-Beacll-JiealJor-and-fol'!ller-~'<'i11"'~.;-!'hem~;,_Jlo#~b.,.;,jjlJ:.~llls~dec!\i~1;'1·1AQi!!!!.!i!'.l!ll<>\~_1,,,,;,...,~~.:;,,,,,,;~~~;,,,,,,;,,,:,;;~~;,; ~-zj~·;=:· ::· ~-~--. The Preliden\ paid total iases !qr scree1~b"le "s!"~~~~rar~!~;"y twnaine 20 and David Cook also 20 ~ ~k· the ~tiix'i in • IeiW: iAi ' E~YP,;· REFu'~1~ :+~ WITHDRAW '1su~z . c~~~~ ~R'&;r·' th~ ~~T' ·=~~'":.~~ ~;-.ooo.,-er-.;..to~-....,1 ' I j l ' • • ' supporters · ..J." · • both or whom are reported!y from the Orange Coast area. John· .krvj';° pr..; ·aoslstant to the ' -Dlm•fiili 111\'iiol' l'yll ~., lfgypt11"n 1'.errii.ry~"'-• a question that. the tax agency could . . Police !P lo{aul said today-they did not ba~ bo.me addre51!0S for llbeial Ia~. reluaed 'to conlinn ·' , . . ' recover past laxes due .for all.Jbree Miss Dumame and Cook, both of whom II'" m good condiUon at or de11f tliat Mliocotte wu bowing out ~· ' . or those years, bul that the statute Maui Memorial Hospital in Walluku. ::i.=a~y~l!Dt" would lsr_ a_e_r:_·· :· '1 · .. ·. · .. ·_ia_· n Tro_ ._op_ s .. ' f!;:,m~~ti~':n ;:!.1oui:";:a~ for .. Re si.ld MQKOne, who showed fotirth 1-i, . . The IRS <Q.d not disclose the reuon Fm. ding of M--'-..l ~-r Urg. ed -guW..torial cmt<ndenCallfln •. • ~ . fo~s =y sald it ammged to~ .. llI'.tlt:'.: recent public opinion poll of ornia C'~~h e 'G la ~ ll o h · ,,. change in!onnalion on the President'• =ts, J!~.=~ "':!.i~ f,U3 in_: _. 0 n eig ts. . taxCo retu11rns withlnthet oongressi1 R "onal JToint Francisco iilOng with 1 possible meeting _ mm1 ee on ema evenue u:..- h H S • SI • 1'-ith newamtn in, Los Angeles. ation, which agreed, at Nixon's request, ._l ot prmgs . aymg Sources"oaid in the "era of Watergate" By the A•sactated .J'fen . to review the chief executive's tax _ N............... couldn't raise. enough money The next meeting was set for Friday . returns for the . years since he entered ._.._.,.... s·-ian and Israeli forces. clashed twice aft. · · the Whi'· H-'·· in 1969 By TOM BARLEY Of 1tM1 Dlllty l"Olt 11.tf An Ora!'lge County Superior C.Ourt jury 'as urged today to find Robert Carl 'whip" st.atton guilty of "nothtng less than murder" in the 11laying last July 10 of an Ortega Hot Springs trespasser. Prosecutor Ted Millard reminded the jury In a hard .bitting !Jnal statement that the aggressive conduct of Slatton before and after .the killing of Derµlis Ray Glahn, ll, of La Mirada, made no other verdict possible. Millard noted in his final argument that Slatton, 41, of Trabuco Canyon, told a fellow prisoner in the county jail after bis arrest that be had "gut shot the !OR of a bitch" in an obvious reference to the killing of Glalm. - '.'He offered to pay $500 for a witness • Weatlter Those cool winds will decrease Thuraday, belog"replaced ~y.cloudt sties, according to. weather fore-- cuter Pat Rowe. Highs at the beaches are expl!cted around 56 rising sllghUy to 82 inland: OVer- nlght lows 31M.1. • ·INSIDE TODAY Ohfo State U1dvtrlit11 got re· ~ uenge J!W o 1973 Roae BowL de· r-feat Wltll ci 1e1ou1Uling .f2·21 lllctOl'I/ 0t1er USC in tilt '74 foot· 1 1bal' clalsic TUesda_11. For tU· laUs ot th• game and otlttr bowl ' tills, see aports, popes J 7-18. • • who would testify for him," Ptfillard said. "And there can be no· doubt that he persuaded bis common law wife, Dorothy carroJI, to throw the revolver ht: used" In lbe kil\lng down a cliff." Slatton earlier told the jury from the Witness stand: that be was not within milea or the he\! springs when Glahn was ~ doWn after he came to the aid of ·a felloW trespasser. Sl~tton uid he was being kldnaped by three young men who repeatedly (See SLATl'ON, Page Z) 1 Doctor Reveah Ordering 'Pill' At Sauna Trial to conduct a viable primary election :1•• wt ernoon. ...;: "'"""" · cazµpaigu . . today In the Golan HeightS th machine ·Egyptian . Israeli and United Nations The President!11 attorneys b ave •1-·, who ca·lled lor the guns and artillery, a· Syrian military off1"c1·a1s refused to orive further •·•·1·1s estimated NixOn could owe as. mucll. i~~~t of President ·Nixon and &Qmmuniq\Je" reported. .. . . . . .. . . according to an ea~iler · agreerp~ to as $267,ooo· in back taxeS if the deduc-. was a leading roe of the death penalty At ·tbe_ same time, Egypt and lsr3el ----·-----"~-t~· claimf11 are disallowed. in. California, eslabllsbed campeign :;aid today in Geneva they reached "an GOLDA MEIR COALITION AL·LY Oft Dec. 8, .l\'ixon released a mass omees-:::nr. Lcmg Beach, Loe: Angeles , ~g ~~a::;:;1.toesn~gotit ~~!i~~~z seCanpaar-1 BALKING. Story, Page 4. of personal financal data and a_llowed Sacraniento and Orange C.Ounty. · front. , _ .... oi:::: ~. ne"'Smen to nspecrhls income tax return1 He-~.tokl ~UPI in a recent interview keep the troop disengagement talks for the years 1969 through 1972. Iba.I a: primary cam~gn 'budg<t ol "An Important stage.has been reached secre t. · .:;.;. _ 'fhe. maleriaLl!!l<l!Yed that Nixon paid about Sl;J • million would ''let you do in tile dl!cussioDs with bOth sid~ continu· -In aOOthe"t· aevelOpment, I s r:a ·eJ i . a total of $7~,651 in fedir31-income the kind of .thllim1 you want to do." ing their exchange of vfe,vs," a brief Defense Minister .Moshe Dayan will con-(See TAXES, Page _%) · -statement said au-generals from both fer with Seer. etary of State Henry A. • 0 -said' ........ '1llOlleY at ' a lilne ·~· _,_ _,_ ..A. W.hen·~ Callfonu''.""""'ans were con~ed about countries met for two hours and 50 min· Kissinger in Washington on Friday, the H x x }",_.. utes. Western White House aitnounced today. Watergilo -and the energy crisis "is Nix' on Tax . Aide oot·an·~ thing." M-. first elecled to the Seoate Pl co B k l l:.!i.-: = ~=·='.'°'~· ~rr~ anner ltes · ac. · grounc Says State week that "I caDDOt be espected to ·get much in the way or corporate Disclosure 'Due' :E::i!i~1:"1a~:v:;~11~~ In Bid for Irvine Council people. " RLEY "My job ls· lo keep nmi>ing and Bl ~..,B:ittt ,. " ~ stimulate the kind of fmancial support By GEORGE ·LEIDAL . ·SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nixon's California tax attorney said today full details of Nixon's state income tax status will be made public. · • ' ~lhat · I'm comfortable with ," he said Maria Parson~!! personal physician af the time. i•rm: going to keep paying Of the 0.lly PllOI St•" The fact that Irvine is the only self· governing new town in America is to former planning commission chairman Robert' West more significant than . the ...today testified in Orange l::ounty Superior ~ttention to qi:y job as senator, majority Court that he pre!!Crlbed birth control leade~ and. do my .traveling at nights pills for her fot the first time in her .and on weekends. 11 life afteT ahe tOkt him ol ;,l~lstlble Sources Indicated that Mosoone, :who • city's .size. ,, received widaprud attention Jut year Impulses-to ~k sexual relation.. with in efforta to lnCrease, aid grants for The candidate· for city council of the ljtrgest city in Orange County, In land area. believes lrvj,ge's government .n~ to eooj>etate wltb private enterprise, •trangers. ; , tJie aged , blind and t,llsabled, would seek Dr. Hale • E. Dougb_ertx or Alilh<lm reeJection to the senate. ended the holiday break in tbe Paraon trial by teotlfying that the symptoms immedialely followed Mrt. · Pmon's alleged entrapment on March 2,. 1970, in the oauni•1"00!l\ ol !lie ll011diy Roilth S2!1, Orange~ • Mfs. Panori",~ ii, of iA'nahelm, want.1 fl million Ia damages from the ,tt;ilth spo ·f., the trauma ·all~y C19led ;y herorcleal tn the -11..Segree •11!11, room. ' Dr. Dougherty told the jury In Judge Williiiit Murray"• courtroom today that he r¥>ticed ua marked change" in Mrs. P6no111' pinonallty When he examlnell her lesa than 24 hours alter her erperien~ in the aiuha room. Mra. Para0n clalm1 she was trapped In the steam room· !or 2!i minu!u lonfer than her usual ft ... mlnute expooure ind tllat she collapoed whe1r t!IC!lldlog door (See SAUNA, PllO l) .... • its citizens and other governments. West, 34. or 3572 Carmel Ave., the Colony, It' a reil estate analyst and Bu. rgwrs~ Steal on< o/ I~ candldates..JorJil'.e_seats. on the Irvine CJty Council in the March 5 elecUon. $1 600. ' H><is' t ·One· ol the first seven city plannlng ' -in-: 11:; commissioriers, West says he Is running . ' because he feels "his baCkgrolitid can .llurglan who 11!1DOVe<f the front doOr be use!ul lo the city government. ~ lo pin entry to an El Toro born~ "My trauls. to other new towns ha .. durln& the New Year's weekend cmied glven me a unique perspective on what oil jewelry, handguns and sliOtguns and : Is happening in' Irvine. '• televi1ion aet ~Ith a total value of '1As the first self-governing new town nearly •1,lllO, Orange County Sherill's .·• . "' "" an ex~rlment In what officers ·111.iih ' a democratic tbciety can btlild,,· We Dopqttn said the theft · ocatrred at should not be afraid to . Innovate, nor the ltoate ol Jerry .Webb Kittrell, 31, llllould we 'be.a!rald t<i dlseafd programs 61 2!601 OVarlake Drive; while the family and pollc~ that. do not work," West wai ~t a ·movJc. . s11d... . ,. . ·~ 'slid the lntnitlers ransacked We•t'• eampeign platfonn callt !or: tbe bedroom>-11nd den at the Kitln!ll -"Systems" approacbel lo t h e bonte In a selective bunt for their loo~ (See WEST, Pa1e l) . . . .\ I • . , . .. ---- URBAN QUALITY COUNTS Council Candidate W11t ' ' -~' "Sorilepla~ along the line we're goinC to have a complete disclosure. of anythln,g ~nd everything that anybody wants to know ," said Dean S. Butler . of Los Angeles. Butler also said, the CalifomJa State Franchise... Tax Board will ~ given • authority to discuss . facts concerning the President's state Income lax llablllty or lack o.f it. .. "There's f10 question at an· on that," Butler said. "It's just a quesUon Of when." I The · Wljlte House disclosed I ·n December that Nixon p8ld no stattJ income tax while president. I The lengthy statement about N.ison's finances included a letter (rpm b(I California advisers which contencled that! the PmidenL. was-noL.a_ · 1 resident for lncome tax purposes. That View Vi'&B challenged by Democr W'tlliam M. Bennett, a member of FranciPse Tax Board V(blcb admlnlsl .... the state Income tax. At his requeet the board staff launched a review determine whether Nixon ~ad any 1taf4 tax liability. · The board aleo reques ted Nixon .1' waive his tight or con!identlallty thaf has prohibited board otficl1L9 frc'1t !See DISCLOSURE, Pqt I) ·-•. .• • • ·~ ...... 11..i' l'JLUI .- ·.Estat·e Issue _Closed • • . Battin , Supe.rv'iftors Drop Apprdi:sql.Figh-i . • ---"'r'--- An unpaid 14,400 bill lrom ihe state speome.d !fie move !or ·a ·~ , ~ Voted t~ Ille the uate Board ot Equalization is the only thing apptallll?ol *ht: seuldt 'dll• ind tbtD teport bol took~ AO actlm cm. ttte M.400 in the way of closin~ tt.c boo~s on perlOllllly!)!ppealed the ......ment lllt ·bill ' • · !he threc·month ba ltle inside Orange month, vo eel to c!Ole the matter. • ~ -uld v..u.:.a Jiu aliudy Coun1y governmcnL over the appraisal Ile vowed as a private cltl?en, vehemently refused to . pay it out of on President Nixoi)'s -5an ClcnJ.eflte howeve , to keep ~e wue alive in his budget and it is now iD tbe oounty's estate. lhe courts. • legislative budget hopper. County Supervisorst\•oted unanimously .. 111 vote tO rc'Cc ive ana rne, om-"t Aon:.t know If the payment· sho~d today to file the state panel's value his matter is rar frorn over as rar come from Lh~ funds and Blnoe ·this estimate. which \\'as about $130 .000 ed ., B t 1· Id has been bandied about the county as I am conce~ · a t n sa · , . family we should find somenlace to higher th.an a $1.37 mil!Jon figure set Still pending is the state boards bill Nit It soon 11 Caspers said ~- by c:ounly Assessor Jack Vallerga early of $4,400 for the services ot state -,.... ' -' last year. apprailer Howard M. (,"hilds, who Even Super\'isor Robert n~uin . ""ho reexamined th e Western White House and va lued the land at $1.5 million. . Froni Page 1 TAXES .. -. taxes for the four it in 1969. years, the bulkt<>f The breakdo"''fl by year :· $72.682 in 1969: $79'l in 1970; $878 in 1971, and 14,298 in 1972. The main reason for the small tax payment during the last years was a ·controversial deduction Nixon took for donating hi s vice presidential paperS to the government. Some critics claim ;Nixon failed to Battin, in his case before the Orange O)Wlty .Assessment Appeals Board last month, contended Childs' figure ' should have included numerous improvements on the land which would bring the value of the estate closer to $2 million. The· ai)praisal .dispute began more tlian th ree months ago wlien Battin won the votes of fellow Democratic supervisors Ralph Dledr1ch. and Ralph Clark to have Vallerga's figur.es rechecked. ~ Republicans Ronald Caspers and David Baker oppMed the move, claiming it \\'as politically motivated. Saddle back ·!Joard l!opes Fziel Ample Wilh the 13,000 students or the Saddleback Valley Unified School district returning to school Monday, district administrators are keepirig trteir fingers crossed that file! supplies will hold. J.t! Delivery last week or 2,000 gaIIBns of diesel oil and 1,000 ga llons "of gasoline , • Oldest Living Thing? Prof. Chow Hui.yen of Taiwan stands -beside what he claims is the oldest living thing in the world, a Formosan Sun tree. Cho w discovered the tree in a The matter came to a head before the Assessment Appeals Boarcf where Battin's request to increase the assessmenLwas rejected anL\lallerga~s w1 llast for -tlfe -nexrtwo-weeJts•-. -----------·--- / '. • h be 1 forest 30 miles sout west of Taipei last Novem r and claims it's over 6,000 years old. much older than the General Sher1nan Tree in California. s---<fulfil l-the--legal-requi-r.emen ts for-making.- the ~tion before a provision allowing such d'eductions expired. . Nixon himseU asked • the joint com· mittee to revle"!' the $500,000 in deduc- figure was upheld. Battin said today the state board's appraisal was done for the board of supervisors and hence s~uld be acted upon separately by lhe bciard. according to Betty Manwell, acting transportation director. "We are going week-te>-w'eek, hoping that delivery won 't be cut off -but so far we haven't had any cutbacks,'' From Page 1 200 Jailed WEST •.. - , tions he took for donating the vice presidehtial papers. Nixon · also asked the committee to decide whether he was right in not decl8ring a taxable gain on the sale of some property Jn Saf) Clemente in 1970. Nixon said he paid no taxes on the deal beca use 'he was told at the time that he made no prorit. But a later audit of the chief executiVe 's finances. ordered by Nixon himself, conCluded that he had a $117,370 profit on !he transaction. - The comimittee agreed to review Nix· on's finances, but said it · v.·ould not 1iffiit itself to the tv.•o areas he men- tioned. From Pagel DISCLOSURE ••• commen ting On the Nixon case. But Caspers said the sta!e appraisal "is close enough to our own figure and the difference is not out or the ordinary fo~ thi s im,iqi,ie piece of property." u V Casper~ said the report should be received and filed and the matter closed once and for all. He was supported by Baker, who said he can "see no possible stand the board should or could take on this matter. There is no va lue to it and it is not in the best interests or anyone to pursue it further." Baker said the course of aCtion IS now betwee·n Battin as a private citizen and the courts. Russell Rouse Rites Thursday Buller said he has been given power Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. of attorney to execu te the waiver for Thursda y at Pacific Chapel for Russell Nixon. Rouse, 79. of Laguna Hills, who clied "I have the v.·aiver here,'' Butler said Sunday. Jn a telephone intervieW. "It's just 11 A nati ve of Missouri, Mr. Rouse was matter of expedition, it's not a question a-claims adjuster for the Southern of policy as to whether it will be California Automobile Club b e f o r e executed. It will." retiring to Laguna Hills Leisure World. Butler saJd he first wants to determine He is survived by his wife, Alvina; the best way in which the President's a daughter and two grandchildren in 1----<ax-i'!{onnation-wouJd-be-assembled-and-.-coorgla:affa a s1sler, ~faria Payne l>f'esented to the Franchise Tax Board. of Laguna Hills. This presumably would include Nixon's Mrs. Rouse had lived in California she said. · District ,officials have plans in hand to extend the walk-to-school radius for 1 high school students from two to three creation of government servtces and the planning of corrununity services to meet both social and economic needs. Newport To1is Coast Drunk Arrests : miles if fuel shortages worsen. she said. -Development of a city personnel "But \Ye won't do it until we have policy "which fosters profess ion al to, an~ we'll gi ve everyone ""arning," compe tence, trust and w~rking togelher she said. to accomplish, a task." - Mrs. Manwell said the recent proposal -Annual election of mayors with a by Ni:con epergy advisor, William Simon that high school students be prohibited limit-of one. year as !fiayor for each from dri ving to school to save fuel four years served on the council. could create a hardship for the district. -Establishment of a five-member "We'd probably have to put on a planning commission with member.s couple more buses to handle the serving two-year, staggered terma. increased load," she said. "But it would -Unificatio~ of the. northern ~d dec rease the numDer or cars in our southern portions of Irvine by promotion parking Jots." _.of . understanding, analysis of proposals 1.tore than 200 drunken drivers were jailed in Orange CountY during the fobr- day Ne"' Year's weekend. California lligh"·ay Patrolmen led the . way in the crackdO\\'ll that began at 4 p.m. Friday and ended at 4 p.m. New Year's Day with 94 arrests. All were booked into county jail. Santa An& tQppe4_ the list of 16 other · !J>Olice agencies with 24 arrests in the same four-day period. Newport Beach police led the field in the Orange Coast area \\'ith 10 arrests, seven of whom \\'ere booked in!o the -l\>fany students are al.read;' carpooling for impa~t. on the north, south or both, to school, she noted. . and PfOVISIOn ol equalized city servte<s Ern. es· t L. Gome!" for the entire city. -=' :...work toward reducing the total tax rate paid by city residents including ,,. the 33-<e•l rate !•vied by e it y Services Slated government and the additional taxes From Pagel SAUNA ... levied to provide services the city does not provide. · of the room failed to open. -City support of state legislation Her claim that the door \vas detective .requiring Jand dedication by developers and corroded has been supported by for schools in a manner slmllar ta a num ber of fellow patrons who also wtµlt the Quimby Act provides for parks. testified that health spa personnel were -Presrvation of land for agriculJural never. wi thin shouting distance on such use , cooperation with the school district occasions. to encourage commercial· and indWJtrlal Dr.-Oougherty-test-ified-1hat-furth~-,----tarbase-tmprovemenr&na-r,hasing of exam ination of Mrs. Parson led him development to prevent acct eraUon of to prescribe psychiatric treatment for taxation prompted by increaslng burdens what he de.scribed as bcr depression, for services. listlessness and neurotic tendencies. West and hls wile, Nina, were active F,uneral serv ices \\'ill be at 2 p.m .. Thursday at McCormick Laguna Beach fl.1or1uary for Ernest L. Gomes g_f J,..aguna HillS, who died Sunday . He was~ A native of Sacramento, f\.·lr. Gomes was a ,clothier before he retired 10 Laguna lfiUs' Leisure World ei&it years ago. He-is-survtvetloyliiS wire,-Mabel Gomes; two brothers; and five sisters. Rev. Mark Grass will officiate at the service. with bu rial at El Toro Cemetery . Mr. Gomes was a longtime member city jail and three in the county jail. , . Huntington Beach jailed six lnebriated- ·motorists. Costa J\1esa booked five, Foun~ lain Valley t\vo and Laguna Beach 011e in t~e 96-hour crackdown . The final New Year's tally of 202 , arrests brings the number of drunken . drivers jailed in Orange County during the two four-day holidays to 480. J\·tost locaJ lawmen agreed that two, factors combined to cut the New Year's figure below the 278 arrests recorded . during the Christmas season. · • "Publicity was one of them," a CHP' officer said today. "We were oot in force during Christmas · and many n1oto rists who sa'v the resulting figures .go t the message in time for th'eir New Year's festivities." A Santa Ana patrolman aftributed the: rain New Year's Eve and early New: Year's Day for keeping many motorists, off the rain-slickened freeways and· roads. Hzirst Will Head Orrni-gremmty Water Officials own legal opinions sup porting his 50 years and in Leisure \Vor\d eight contention that he is not liable for state years. in.come taxes. He told plaintiff's attorney, Marvin in the environmental action,' cUluns lrvlne Ran ch Waler District general Lewis Sr., that he has examined Mrs. forum group I rVine Tomorrow which manager \\'illiam Hurst has been of Rotary International. Article W ritteri Parson within the last 10 days after endorsed three of the five councilntf'n 5 000 S d B I elected president of Board or Directors more than three years of treatment elected ty..·o years ago, as the city ' tU entS 3C i of the Orange County \\'ater Association.' by a nwnber of psyc'hiatrists and could incorporated. Hurst will serve for the 1974 year. detect no change in her condition. West continues to work parttl!:ne for In Saddleback .. Class The .aS$9C.i~Ji9n of po_t1J.ble water: 11ge.!1:. "The question I think is in terms of getting an orderly presentation. I want the Franchise Tax Board to have the infoniiiition dir'ect.ly and in proper form before they start picking it up put of the newspapers or wherever else," Butler said. By /11,strzictor Dr. Doughtery agreed with Lewis that A. S. Development. Inc. of Newport cles in Orange County sets policies and · before the alleged salUla room inc ident Beach (formerly William Lyon) where Some 5,000 students went back to standards for the \\•ater industry, pro-2 • Mrs. Parson \Yas a healthy, happf h~ .i~ fuanager of the recreational land school today for the firs t day of the motes conservation and provides in· From Page 1 SLATTON ... threatened to castrate him a'l the time Glahn was shot in the stomach at the point of a .45-caliber Colt revolver. The Starr Ranch hand said he only escaped mutilation by grabbing the wheel of his vehicle in which he was being held prisoner by his three assailants. Slatton said his Land Cruise r then toppled over throwing its three occupants lo th e ground. Slatton testified that v.·hen h e recovered consciousness he \Vas riding a horse bareback under the light of a full moon. OR"NGI COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tiie O••""e Coos! D.AIL Y PILOt~ wlfll Wfllcfl i• ymblMd tllt Ntwt-Pru1, 11 11111:tt11hed lty ,,,. Otl"'Jt Ca111 Publl1lll"11 COmNnr. SepJ. r11e tcll!iatt1 ~•• 11Ubll111«1, Monday f11"""91'1 Frichy, far Cc1t1 MtN. NtwpOrf 9.-dl, H""llnglDf! fl tt<ltlf."ouni&ln V1Utr, LttiUN 8MCll, l'"ll~l}lt!Oltblc~ Ir.ti Sin Clt!nfo!lt/ Sin J"3fl CID!l!r•na. A •lnt lt f1ltloMI tclltlon II M !i1hld Si!U!"d•~· Ind S11nd1rt. , ... Ptlt1ei1>1I P11bll1llit>0 l)ltM 11 .i lXI Wnl l •r S!t"I, C'"'' M™· CnllJorl'l;I, '1'611. Rob1 •t N. W11d P'•nklt!'t! Ind PVD!lt1>1r J•clr It C.d,r Vte• Prt tkltnt •net" Gentt11 Mtntw Tlu1m11 l(,,~a Eo1tor Thomlt A, Murphint M1-.9jn9 Edl!ar Ch1r4et H. loot Rich1rd P, Nill AMlll•M M~nlt1t>O EOllDr• CoU• MHI: 1*I Wt1! ltY 5ttttf Nr"'llO" aeecn: JlJJ Mn.port fl""levt"CI L-11<me ftt"C~: Ht l'"ore1t Avfftut H"'"tlfltl~ 8toc~: 11115 BHCll afu1t~ff0 Stn Cl9mt.,!t1 .XIS Nori~ E! GlllllNI 11:,11 T ........ t71 4) "4Jo4JJI Ct.91f~ A~ 64f.1671 S.. C......_ All hpalw••: 1 • ...,.... 492-4411 CW(r\tflt, '''"' Ot"t!'llt Coht itvb1!1lllnf • Cllml'lny. i.io -. 1ttrtet... lllWtt"ll'-, ..i11err11 m.ntr ., Hvtrll•-tt lllfflfl mer k ·~\IC., •Llbald l!Ntlfll Pl'· 111i.1ten ot c111.1yri0h1 -Nr, kcMid cl111 -!191 Nlll 11 .... II MtM, Cllf ...... 11, lWllM:Tht!lon 1W "'""" U.li -1111•1 ~r mill tJ,1$ mot11f!lr1 rnl11t1ry •dtf.111\tllvnl U.U monfttJr. • Saddleback College instructor Dorothy L. ~tagnuson is the authOr of an article in the current issue of "Movemen t Education." woman who. ra rely had reason to.seek d1 v1s1on. _ winter quarter at Saddleback QJIJege. formation to the genera\_public on water his services. · West holds both . a bachelor's degree Dan Arm.strong, college community use --·' Lewis claims that Mrs. Parson became in economics and a master of buslneu relations clirector, saJd 542 courses are H'urst was vice president of the!· three women after her ordeal : sex-adll'llnls~ratlon degree from Stanford offered for the new term. Registration association in 197~. lie has been IRWD The article is about "the weaver," a frame covered with · chicken wire through which children pass laces back and fo rth to another person. h_ungry Maria who sought men in local University. is still open for the 27 extended campus manager since 1970. bars, remorse fu l Betty \•:ho bitterly The Wests have an adopted IOn, coorses: starting Monday in five area A graduate of the University of Denver It is designed to help children develop muscle and hand-eye coordination, regretted ~taria's escapades and the 1 __ ~1ja~tt;h;ew;;, ;2;. ~~~~~;;:::::hl:g;b;schoo:;~ls;.;~;=~j:i;iii~heijhioildisimastiieri'isfd;eg~ree;;.;;;;;;,;;~· submerged true self of Mrs. Parson. ,. Mrs. Parson's Children have testified ., that their mother adopted a "'zomble-- l_ik~" attitude t9 life after the Sj una 1nc1dent and that her depression only lifted when she went out alone for visits Mrs. Magnuson instructs preschool music at Saddleback and is also active in the Southern California Asscciation !or the Education of Young Children. to nearby bars. Californiaas Heed New Speed Limit of 55 MPH By The Associeeed Press or thC new law -which took ~ct ~tost California drivers greeted the at 12:01 a.m. New Year's Day. ---T state's new energy-saving 55 mile per "Almost everybody seems to be com- our speed limit with lots of soft pedaling pl ying." a spokeSman saki. -and a few extra miles in the gas I In the Sacramento region and San tank. (Related story Page 3). Francisco Ba y Area, CHP headguarters But some heavy.footed motorists found also reported drivers observing the new themselves on the side of the road limit. New Year's Day getting a lecture, warn· The Legislature dropped the speed ing or speeding ticket from the ever· limit last rnonth from 65 mil es an hour \vatchful California Highway Patrol. -and 70 miles an hour on some CHP oflJcers handed 1,393 tickets freeways -in an efofrt to save gasoline statewide Tuesday to motorists exceed· during th e energy-crunch. The ~ limlt ing 'the ~ m.p.h. mark. A CHP spokes· is expected to save about 300 million rnan ·termed the · figure "remarkably gallons of gasoline' a year statewide. low." On the Bay shore Freeway outside San In Northern and Southern California, Francisco , veteran CHP officer Bob officers who spotted groups of .speeding Bo\vers said traffic which normally cars displayed amber light! and led moves at Close to 70 miles an hour,. the cars at a legal speed for a short w;is ··averaging maybe 58." distance. Individual speeden were often When a driver passed. him doing ,1 warned by outside bullhorns to slow least 65, Bowers got on bis loudspeaker ·down. · and bawled : "Fifty-five miles ! You in "We are Very proud -of our ·sout.fi'ern the white Chevy, 55 miles!" --- California mot.orists.i• said Lo:s Angeles The .driver grinned sheepishly aod llighway.Patroi lllSpector Glqndon Craig slowed doM!. - after the Drst day of the 55 limit. Forty-nine persons were kJlled Jn tfi . ~ey seem . to be oomplying volun. ' fie accidents in California during ·the <arily," he said. "It has not been four-da)I holiday, the Highway Pajrol . necessary to write many citations but re parted today. we have given warnings.'' This compared with 43 fatall tiet dLlrlng In the San Diego area, highway the three-day holiday laat year and l8 patrolmen ci ted only two motorists for Jn 1969, the last four-day New Year's speeding during the first eight hou rs-· holiday: - • " •' ,. ~ f -• ' ~ OPlH t ... Jl.ill..o. . 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA-646-1919 ~.~!~ : ................................................ ..._...._,,,....,_,,, ___ -.:t: .......... ;. I I i. ~ I " ., ~ --HOODIQ SWEAT · SHIRTS •• • TENNIS ANYONE? Long SIHvt Ntck ACRYLl!f • SWEATERS I Acrylic l Nylon WARM UP SUITS 2196 .10 349& WlllOft. Ptnn • Dulop. · TENNIS BALLS MIN'S TE.NNIS SHOES • • . ' ~ . • LADllS' TENNIS ·sHOES • au."° 16" • 18" ' . TENNIS DRESSES e Mon l Boy1. TENNIS SHORTS e Mtn l ·&oy1 TENNIS SHIRTS and SOX .. Wll1qnLD1\lli, Barteroft, 'O•rcla, Y-y•ma TENNIS I RACKETS . I ,. I ;I • ' l I ' I, I \ I '( ' •. • • • • . · • • • • ·u.ntincto:O:. Beaeh· -Foontain-::Valle -~ Today's F a l N.Y.-Stoeks VOL. 67, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES . ORANGE cou~. CALIFORNIA • WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1974 TEN CENTS ' Ocean Shelf Drilling Haw a ii Tragedg Coast~l Coup'e ' Plunge to Death Religious meditation atop a coastal cliff high on the Hawaiian Island of Maui has ended in death for two. Newp~rt Beach people who walked off the edge accidentally while holding hands and praY.· ing along with two other persons. San Diego Won't Act On ''Fliroat' .. _ EGYP .T O CCUPlt:O •V tSltAEL SIN A·I U.S. Action May· Stir Hornet Ne st WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Interior Department today opened 7.7 million teYPTI AN acres of California's ocean ~helf, some A deputy San Diego City Attorney AIMlll of It jusJ off Los Angeles, to possible said today he will not seek a criminal oil and gas exploration. complaint for th.e showing of "Deep The department's original proposals Throat" by a group of Huntington Beach were to offer leases only in areas outside u I H. h Schoool DI t t t ad the, string of islands off the coast and n °11 ag s r c -up to 110 miles offshore. But the fuel ministrators. l ' l The yictims lay scattered at the base of the sheer 250-foQt bluff for a full day and night before one of the survivors' cries. for help were heard by a surfer offshore. Killed in the accident which occurred Saturday were Peter Whitehead, 29, who lived on the island for the past 18 months and Christine-M:-Bartalone;-22,-whose parents-live·in-tbe-Baek-Bay--Area shortage brought a decision last week The screenings of a video-tape copy to expand-the a:rea right up to the -· of the X-rated movie occurred in Au~ three-mile limit 0 f state-controlled of Newport Beach. • Whitehead was the son Df Newport Beach Realtor and former screen writer Peter Wbi.tehead,. . The survivor.s.,are-Mercy Dumaine, 20, and David Cook, also 20, both of whom are reportedly from the Orange co,st area. Police in Maui said today they did not have home addresses for Miss" Dumaine and Cook, both of whom are ih good condition at Maui Memorial 'Hospital in Wailuku. Wife Strangled -Hun_tington Man Given 'Five w Life' in-Murder , Malcolm Smith of Huntington Beach · murder jn the kifllni of Mn. Barbara at a San _Diego retreat attended by ' waters .. the top '6 district officials. ~ The possibility of oil and gas wells· Tea atomfie ~1dtfils momine he ~ so close to shore in the hereto(ore well- decided not to seek a complaint in free Santa Monica Bay and its recreation the case only because the circwnstancel beaches and homes was expected to tmder which the fllm was viewed dkl u'' N•-•• gfnerate strong opposition f r om not constiuite public showing. . EGYPT REFUSING TQ WITHDRAW SUEZ CANAL TROOPS conserva1ion, e nvironment a I and "There is-no doubt in mY mind that Demands l1r1e~ Pull Out of E9ypti1n Territory recreation groups, as well as home and I have probable cawie to believe that property owners .along the coast. . l.. the. matetiJl they viewed is obacene, Opponents were expected to cit~ the it is just that under California law, I z • s o T 1969 well blow-out in the Santa.Barbara the viewing could not · be, considered srae l yr .. "n roaps Channel to the north that caused a public' e•bibition of the film," be _ _ : ___ , _ . _, "--" . · -· -· -,, extensive fouling of 1>eaches and wildlife said. by the resulting oil spill. No new drilling . District Superintendent Jack Roper has been permitted in the Santa Barbara publicly aPQlogil.ed for the screening Clmk • · G la H • hts Channel since then, although production eqof Utlbep_mmenotv.le which was ~hown Qll district . c • l~ -. 0 ' lk .. eig . has continued.from existing w~lls without l 'lt another major spill. ~ Details of the viewing at the three-day Ther.e already are aome oil wells within conference were not made public unt,il . the three-mile limit off Loi;:ig Beach.· By the AtlOClMN. Presa Kissinger in \Vashington on Friday, the The 1 · De rt t · d 1· October when Huntinm...... Bea. ch vice . nter1or pa men 1 s s u e •-" Syr1·an and Jsrae" lorces -•--bed twice Western White House announced today. I f ·1 d · to off•-rs · .~~1..-1e<1 the film ~ a ~ ~ -· ca I or 01 an gas companies AA:; u.u~., uVUJ· tod ·1n the' Golan H·'•''-wi·lh lnachi'ne In a· br1'ef announc· ement . at San th ._ ... d~ .~:::,-.~.,whi ... 1i0..... CU:~ ~w. 7:~tW1 -ii!W!an' Clemeole. pr~li!l • -. id Z~~I~~ ::.~ .. for 01!c1.si:. ;-;~ s)lOnli~btty for ~.b.win;'GI d;"rJ::' Cooil\nulllque "1'""ed. , ·• Dayan and~Kisslnger iiiiUld '=~on and gu lease sale tentatively acheduled in hi5 room at-a Shelter Island hotel, At tbe ;saint time, Eapt, ud Israel the Geneva talks with emphasis on the for the spring of 1975. • .. • was sent to te ,pl'.ilOD f~ .nv.e years slnhh, ii. . . +"--to_JH the he Pla~--.faces t.ii ldenticiJ prison-term last March 6 In the mu er OlhTs 1 t•-t led t .. J_ , s 'th I ended the ln~tloQ of the incident said today ln Geneoa the)' ,..cbed "an sub-"<t of diseng~gement of for~." One official said the dePllJlm.ent wou)d ~u:'~·•:.JtrA'drM"----1~~· ,. -~~· !!!·!!!.!:'1'111· r_·"t:~~~!l~@~~=~-t-~&.~~=~~·~r":.~1~~1~· :J..~· tJi.~,~~r-11~-·~~~-~-~tion~.:L....iff..i";.to COi~ ~..:r;J,_· __ .,_ unsueonsfuDy to ·gei crbnlnal com-tnllit.~ ' , -GOLDA MEIR COALITION ALLY public hearings before deciding w!itch, I ' \ wife. o ~"" i:ne ou waay .o nu . Orange County Supt\rior Court Judge Hand, of the same Edinger Avenue ff. ·watter Steiner sentenced Smith, 41, address, is regarded by the prosecution of 8;200 Edinger Av.e. after den):ing his as having played the major rol~ iq mot~ for a new trial. . the killing or Smith's wire. Smith's sentencing came Just two days . . i beCore ,. the l!lcheduled Superior Court It was successfully alleged 1n Smit~ s sentencing of Allen Duane Hand , 29, trial that he attempted to strangle his who bas plead~ guilty to second degree wife with the Jon:1 of his electric shaver Lost Daclishund Finds a Home in Huntin gto n A miniature ' dachshund now has a new home in Huntington Beach, • and appa~tly is happily settled even though she no long~r has her litter of puppies. ... l>ut that.she showe<Lslgns_of. regainb)g consciousness after her bcxly had been dumped .~ the living room of his aparf.. ment. II was alleged lbat Hand then stuffed a bedspread down tbe kicking woman's throat to suffocate Iler and Ja~r heJped Smith carry the body to the nearby Reynolds Riding Stable. Police were called to the stable the next day by a girl who told them she had been Brocmiing her horse on the premises wPen she spotted the dead woman's feet protruding from a pile of straw. plaint&. '!be Oninge ·Olunty District At-"An importaDt staae bu lieen reached _.BALKING. Sto_ry, p099-·4-, -· if any, tracts In the area would be tomey declined to flle on the same In the dlllcusslons with botll sides conllnu· included In the lease sale. grounds Bromfield cited. ing their ••change ol ~" a brief role In the negotiations to end tbe quarter When proposed In 1971, the possible statement Safd after genei"al8 from both century Or Middle East tension. . leasing area was all to the seaward Two ~ Valley Men Hurt_in· Crash_ In Anaheim Two young Fountain Valley men were criticalJy injured when their speeding car went out of control and hit a light pole in Anaheim early Tuesdiy morning, police .. id today. , ~tries met for. t~o hours and 50 min-· The _ _Kissinger~Dayan session v.•as side of the islands of San Miguel; Santa utes. ·· agreed to . when the U.S. o~ictat was Rosa, Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, 8'8 The next meeting was ~ for Friday in Israel on Dec. 17, a White House Nicolas and San Clemente. which range altemoon. spokesman , said. He . said it .was not from 20 to more than 50 miles off ~· llraell aitd United Nations contemJ>llited that Dayan also would see the coast. O{f ____ ..,,;~1wd .. iQ_gi!e..lY~--~e.tajl~ .rt.ea.~t ·Nixon, who is ilcontinuboing a But the proposal was expanded to acoordtnl to .an earlier · ~nl to wotklng vacation at his ear omia me. include areas abutting the three-mile keep i h e troop disengaiement talk> In the . Golan Heights fighting, one limit from north of Los Angeles to se<:ret. · Israeli soldier was shot ,and several as far south as Laguna Beach. In aootber development,. I s r a e I t engi,neering vehicles were de~troyed, the nus wouia inClude the- 'San Pedro Defense ·MinisleiMoshe Dayan will con-S)Tian communique said. The Syrians jChannel and the areas to the coastal fer with SOcretary of State Henry A. (SH MIDEAST, Page Z) side of San ta Catalina Island , the only Last Several Years 'Nixon's Tax Returns inhabited island off that part of California. · · : One official said the decision was made as part of the department's efforts to speed and expedite its orfshore oil and gas . leasing program because ol. the energy crisis. . ·Interior officials said most of the 7.7 million acres lie in waters more than I ,~ feet . deep -now about the limit The UIUe dog, a reoently nursing mother, was found by Mrs. Gary Davis last week as the animal was crossing Golden West Avenue and Mansion Street in Huntington Beach. Bicycle Burglar Steals 14:Fr-0m Shop The drtver ·of the car, 21-year-old Curtis J . Foslien, 17831 Bay St., suffered a broken pelvis, internal injuries, and numerous Jac~rations in the crash which occurred sh:>rtly before 4 a.m. He is listed in critical but stable condition at Anaheim Memorial Hospital. OffiCers said Foslien was plnned in th~ wreckage of his car for nearly two hours before firqnen a n d ~amedics pried him out and rushed b1m IO the hospital. Coming Under Scrutiny for drilling with present techoology~ with · some depths extending to 6, feet in undersea troughs. However, Y.'hen Mn . .Davis discovered that the lost dog~bad left behind_ aJ ilter of puppies, sbe called the Dally Pilot for help. An article· in the newspaper failed to produce the rightful owner and !puppies, but a "very nice woman," according to Mrs. Davis phoned and safd she would be happy to take the little dog. _ "1be woman bad recently loSt her own dog, and u~seemed like she would 1nake a good home for the dog"," Mrs. Davis aaid. • "We would have had to lake the dog to tbe pound, since we already have a dog, a cat and fish, and couldn't keep another animal," she added. "Who knows whether she would have .survived the pound?'' "We plan to go visit the little dog and make sure she's okay, but it seems certain that she has found a good subltitute home, 0-~·she said. Y oo.ng Runiters To ~ie iii Valley -Fotintain Valley youths from a to, 14 will hive~ chance to demonalrat•.Jbel running skill• Saturday at a citywide c&»A coun'try "meet. ~'lllO 'r&oel begin at 1:30 ·a.m, at Mile Squtre llecJonal .Parle, wllh mlgnallon ft< all emrta (1om 9 a.m. lo 1:30 ' . -·a.m. Thore are 90ven divisions by age. l~el for both boy• and • girls. Running dillan<el rans•. from a 'half.mile. for l ._yeaMIC!t. • · 111e nm fiv~ flnl!h~i:Lm._each ~l­ villm iifll reoi<lve priiO-nDbons ·~ wlU qullil)' lo oompete' In the , CO\lnty- wlde crosa l'OUlltry meet Jan. 12, also In Mlle Squaro Park. ... ,,._. H1Dltington lleach poll<:< are JOoklng today for a burglar who broke into a bike shop New "Xear's Day and made off with 14 bicycles worth at least $900. The glasis in the front door of Huntington Beach Bike Shop al 15862 .Springdale Ave. was sma!hed to. gain entry, ·poliCe said. The bicycles, different ' model.I and ~ colors, were in a back storeroom. Police aaid the loss could run as 'high as $1.20. A ~ger in the car, Robert A. Goble, ~. of 17843 Bay st., suffered head lnjutles In the crash and ls also In critcal but stable cxmditioo In t b e intenSive ·care ward at A n a he i m Memorial. The mishap occurred at the . corner of Sycamore Street and Anaheim Avenue whep FOSlien's speeding sedan went out of coptrol bi tb.e northbound lanes of Anaheim-Avenue and rammed the light pole, police aaid. WASHINGTON (AP) -The lli":nal Revenue Service said today It is re-ex- amining President Nixon's income tax returns for the past several years. The IRS said representatives of Presi- dent Nixon are c:ooperating lully In the probe and authorized disclosure of the action: . The ms did not ,.y whit yean would be' covered · by the review. But there has been 1 cbritroversy . over t h e · Doetor Preserihed Pill - ·Sauna Juro.rs He~r Of 'lrresistibile Impulses' By TOM BARLEY ... Of .... CMlfy ,..., lfiff __ P~s~~rsonalitY.: hen he e1amined detect no chaitge in her condition. her less . than 24 hours alfer her Dr. DoughteJ'Y' agreed -with Lewis that Maria Parson's personal physician today testified Iii Orang~ Count~ ~~rlor Court that be erescribed bii'th-confii>l pills for he r for !Oe'firs time In her 1 life after she told him of , .. lmsl~tible impulses'' to .see~ sexual•,rtlatio~ with strangers. · · ·· · ~ ' Dr. ali!""E;-tlougltert)'-of-Anahelm ended the holiday break Jn the Parson trial J 1.v teottfylng that lhe symptoms hii'l'Olllatelf lollollJ~h_Mrs, Pa~'a • alleged entrap1nent· on Morch 2, !mt, . In the sauna room t>f the Holiday Health • Spa, Orange. . Mrs .. Paraon, 49, Of. Anaheim, wants $1 million In damages-from ,the bealth .spa lor the trauma allepdly crealed by her ordeal In the l~gree sauna "toom. . Dr. Dougherty toJd,·tbe jury in Judge • William Murray's courtroom today that be noUced "• marl<td change" In Mrs. • ' I experieJice in the .sauna. room. before the alleged sauna room incident, Mrs. Parson claims she was trapped Mrs. Parson was a healthy , baP.PY in tlii! steam-'toam"for·2S'l!tllllites fonger · womao who· rarely had -reason to seek tban Mr usuarrave=mmute exposure ii\il -his servfces:- thal ibe cjillai!ee(l when· Iba sliding door Lewil cjiims that Mrs .. Parson became of the room f~led to. c>pen. • • • · three women after her ordeal: sex-~ clabil that the door w,. defective blUlgry Maril who sought mett ID local and comded has been aupported by bars, retnorseful Belly who bilterly ·a nmnber of ·fellow patrons who 11.0 regretted Maria's escapades and the tesUfled· that health spa: penonnel were submerged true self of Mrs. Parson.· nevw 'wjlhlri•'!:Joutjng distance on such M!"' Paraon'• __ ~ldren have ,testmed OC<Ulene. -~ ·: -that their ~er adoptod a 'aombie-llr. bougherty testmed that Iurlher 'like" .atUtude lo lile alter the sauna examination ot Mrs: Parson led blm ·Incident and that her deprelslon only to ~be P!Ychlatrlc treatment for Im!"! when ibe went out 'alolie for visits what be described aa lJer•depreS>iun, ·to nearby ban. ,. llsll-'and neurotic tcndenclu. -. On-thole ·oa:utOm, they, t1tUfltd, she He 'fold pIOlntlfl's attorney,· Marvin • Wlllld WULIJCbt ;fOw::cot blouses, ahbrl Lewil Sr. that be has exainlned Mrs. sklrll; heavy makeup 'and a bouffant · l'lrllih irithn the ·lut le' da1• · .ii<r style for her red hair. more lhM" three· yeilrs of treatment Several of he; seven children have by a number of psych!atrlsta ·and could !Set SAUNA, Pace S) •• -~-• President's returns fOr 1970, 1971 and 1972. The President paid total taxes for these three years of less than $6,000. An IRS spokesman said io answer to a. question that the tax agency could recover past taxes due for alJ three of those years, but_ that the statute of .limitatio~ woU!<l. ha ve expired for taxes due f~p(a\llous years. The IRS .did '.not disclose the reason' for Its probe.-. The agency •Said it arranged to ex- change information on the Pre~ident's taX returns with the congressionaJ Joint Committee on In~emal ,Revenue Tax- ation wbich agreed, at Nixon's request, to Uvtew the chief ' executive's tax retuma for the 'years since he entered the White House in 1969. The President's attorneys h a v e estimated Niion . could owe as much as $267;000 in back 'taxes if the deduc-- ttona claimed are disallowed.. On Dec. 8, Nixon relefsed a mass of personal_ fmancal data and allowed newsmin to nspect his income tax returns for the years 1969 through 1972. The materbU showed that Nlxon paid a total of · $78,601 in federal income · '3xes for the1 four years, the bulk of )I-in ·1969. -. -~ TM breakdown by year: $'12,681 in 1169; $79% ilf -ll'IO; 1878 In 1971 , and $4;298 In 1972. • The-·main reason for the small tax payment during the last years was a controversial deduction Nixon took for donating his vice presidential papers to the government. Some critics claim Nixon failed to IUIH!I the l~gal requirements for making the donation before a provision allowing such deductions expired. Nixon himself asked the joint com· (SH TAXES, Pqe I) J \. ' • said oil companies are expected to improve technQ.logy to permit drilllilJ in most of the deeper areas. Two Killed by Cycle -~ EL PASO, Tex. (UPI) - A riderless police motorcycle crashed into a cro\\'d watching the Sun Carniva1 parade New Year's Day, killing a woman and a young boy and injuring 22 persons. Oruge • Weat•er Those cool winds will decrease Thursday, being' replaced by cloudy skies, according to weather fore- caster Pa.t Rowe. , Highs· at the be8ches·· are expected around 56 riSlng ~lightly to 62 inland. Over~ night lows 30-45. INSIDE TODAY Ohio State Un(versity got · re· venge for a 1973 Rose Bowl de· feat witl1 a resou11dh1g 42·21 vict-ory.. over USG--in-tl1e-'-14 /oot. ball clossic Tuesday . For de- tails of the gpme and other bowl tilts, se! ·sports, pages 11·18. -· -.. - " ' - '' 4e UAtl't PILO I St - 200 -J a iled N oflh State ~e·wport Tops Coast Drunk A~res~ Citrus Crop ~tore than 200 dnmken drivers \\'ere The r1na1 NfW Year's tally ci 202 . I • jailed in Orange County during the four· arreats brings the number of drunken J r day New Year's wee kend . drlv'rs jallea m Ora.Pie· County diaring ~· Ti:...:. d c.urornia Highway Patrolmen led the th• two rour-<1ay h!>lfd•Y• tom. 1n·eatene wax in the crackdown t~at be 1an at M06t local JaWmen _agretd that twor ·---------------p.m. ri ay an enOea a 4 p.-. actorS comlillieitW curtHeNeWYear• New Year's Day with M arrests. All figure below the 278 arrestl recorded ,,·ere ~ked U}to county jail. dupng the Christmas season. SAnta Ana topped the list or 16 other "Publicity was one of them," a CHP !POlice agencies with 24 arrests in the orrtcer said today. "We were out in same four-day period. fo rce during Christmas and many NeYiPort Beach police led the field motori sts v.·ho saw the resulting figures in the Orange coast area with'lO arrests, ·.got the message in time for their New Seven of v.·hom were booked into the Year's festivities." CjtY jail and three in the county jail. A Santa Ana patrolman attributed Ute Huntington ·Beach jailed six inebriated rain New Year's Eve and early New motorists. Costa Mesa booked ffvc, Foun-Year's Day for keeping many motorists tain Valley ttvo and Laguna Beach one off the rain-slitkened freeways and in the 96-hour crackdov•n . roads. Atvard F e b. 2 \ Si~ Vie f 01• Huntn1gto11 . Chamber's 'Ma11 of Year' • Six Jnen, including a fonner mayor and a current cotincilman, have been nominated for the Huntington Beach Chamber of commerce 1973 "Man of the Year" award . The winner will be selected by a special panel and announced at 1he chamber 's Feb. 2 installation banquet at the Sheraton Beach Inn, accord ing to Ed Sullivan, chainnan of the award committee. The nominees include: ~arles. Able, chairman and chief execiitive officer of McDonnell Douglas Astronautics COrp. Able, who was nominated by his firm , selected Huntington Beach as the site for the company headquarters and has been active in local youth achievement programs. Huntington Eyes Five Can(bJ a tes For Works. Post Huntington Beach city COWtcilmen will interview five candidates for the public v.·orks directorshiJI Thursday night. . Acting public works d irector Bill Hartage is one of the five possible new directors, accord in g ··to City -City Councilman Ted Bartlett, ~ ~ year resident and 16-year member of the council, was nominated by Roger Slates, a local realtor and former city planning commissioner, -Jack Feehan, district mana ger for Southern California Gas Company," was non1inated by the United Crusade. For lhe paSt 10 years he has been active in the crusade, the chamber and various other civic organizations. -George ri.1cCracken, the city's mayor in 1971, but no longer on the council, was nominated by the chamber for his wide variety of civic activities. -Ed Tayloe, a past master of the Masonic Lodge and a former executive with the Holly Sugar Co1npany, was suggested, by the Huntington Beach North Lions Club. Tayloe is a fonner trustee of th e· Ocean View School District. -Herb Vaughn , a chamber of director and active with many youth organizations including the Boys Club and the Y~1CA, was nominated by D3ve Garoful?, a fellow chamber director. Ariaheim Driver En.ds it All For His Pinto Administrator Dave ~wlands. An Anaheim man who claimed bis Hartge_, w~ was C!IY en~r, has 1971 Pinto car' Jiad been "dy:lhS" ain'ce ~aetin.g dtrector -smce Jun...WbeelfL_l~ay-he bought lt. "executed" the resigned, sax mo~ths ago. auto Tuesday at a Ford Motor Co. Councilmen will m~el at 6 p.m. and plant in Pico Rivera. .spen~ about 20 . minutes with each Roger Sweitzer was aided in his candidate, according to Rowlands. 'J.'he demolition, by about 50 people most administrator said he hopes a selection of whom are members of a group' known "'ill be ann~unced . at next ~londay's as the Outraged Consumers Action Com· regular COWlCil fl!eeli~g. mittee. The chairman of the com mittee 11Je five potential direct.ors have been is Eddie Campson, who became famous recommende~ ~o the.counctl by Ro~lands two years ago for setting fire to his from an 0~1g1nal hst . of 32 applicants Lincoln Continental as a protest. (o r Wheeler s vaca~ed JOb. Sweitzer said his car has "been dying Thursday's meeting, a personnel l d h . h · ill be -1 sed t the public a sow eat since t e day 1 bought session, w. c.o 0 'd • it and I think the only merc ifu1 thing and coun.c1\men Y.'J\l not C?"s1 er any to do is put it out of its misery." other actions, Rowlands said. He said his two-year search for aid Kidnap Suspec t Moved to Jail PI CKENS. S.C. (UPl) -A bachelor house painter, charged with the kid· naping of J2-f-old Tanuny Denice Haynes, ~·as Mo ved to a jail at an undisclosed location for security reasons, officials disclosed today. from t~e Ford f\.1otor Company proved fruitless and a Ford executive even answered a protest letter with": "What do you want for $3.000?" It took the crowd about an hour to reduce. the Pinto to a pile of junk. Sweitzer is not without transportation however. He charged his fellow ex- ecutioners $1 a swing. With the money b(''s going to buy a bicycle. A spokesma n for Ford denied that the company had ignored the letters. ily the Assoclatecl Press Clear skies and cold northerly winds will threaten San Joaquin Valley citrus crops with almost certain fr C! s t overnight, the National Weather Service says. The weatherman says protection" for the fi:ost·lh reatened citrus crop will prob- abl y be . necessary tonight and Thursday morning as temperatures plunge well below freezing at most vaJle)i points. The low rcadin,e this rooming was 27 at. Lemoore, with lows ovemi~ht ex- pected lo range from 22 to 30. fhe extended outlook is calling for IO\VS in the upper 20s to 30s through Sunday. But frost danger is expected to lessen by Friday morning as clouds and fog block the worst of the cold winds. Tetnperatures bclo\v 30 during the night weren't low enough long enough to damage the valley 's orange crop, officials said. But they braced for freez· ing temperatures again tonight. "One night or cold usually. doesn't do too much ," said Clyde Churchill, TuJare County agriculture commissioner. "It's when we get an early cold a n·d on consecutive nights." There were readings of 28 at Lindsay and 29, in Exeter, which "isn't bad at all ," said Al Jones, chief inspect9r for Sunki st Growers. "It ·has to gel down to 26 or lower for some time to start freezing the fruit ,''. Jones said. "Tonight should be colder , but if we're lucky, it won 't be ·too bad." The National \Veather Service says temperatures could drop to the low 20s at some vaUey points tonight. Jones and Churchill credited the thick skins of oranges and good sugar content "'ith preventing any interior damage .. "It takes a few hours for the tem- perature of the orange inside to get cold." Churchill said. The 1973·74 orange crop , estimated at about 30,000 railroad cars here, is about 30 percent picked, Jones said. A severe frost destroyed about one-third of last year's crop. \Vind machines , in orchards were ac· tivated Tuesday night to circu1ate the cold air, but growers didn't have to use smudge pots, Jones said. Temperatures also dropped below freezing. in much of Northern California this morning. Beach Council Meets Hinshaw Huntington Beach city councilmen will illSCUSSiffifional-YegiSlatrcrn F r-1-d a y morning with U.S . R~p. Andrew Hinshaw (R-Newµort Beach). · Councilmen and City Administrato r Dave Rowlands will meet informally for breakfast with .Hin.shaw at 7 :30 a.m. at the Sheraton 'Beach Inn . Rowlands said there is no specific item set for discusslon, but the tenor of the meeting will involve what Huntington Beach needs accomplished in Congress. · The breakfast .meeting was requested by Hinshaw who is attempting to meet with leaders of all the cities within his congressional district. Fr ench Ma gazin e Lauds Kiss i1ige r The suspect. Virgil Preston Vinson, 36, is accused or abducting the child Dec. 21 from a coin operated laundry in nearby Liberty. No trace of the girl has been found, but Sheriff David Sloae said an all-out PARIS (UPI ) __ The ne\.\·s magazine Le Point has named Secretary of State llenry A Kissinger as its man of the ~ar for 1973. ' 'That Henry Kissing_er has been the The spokesman .said the company of· fered on Dec. l2 to fix the Pinto at no cost to Sweitzer but Sweitzer refused the offer. The spokesman said the car v.'as two years old and had been driven 50.000 miles. search was being made. ' ' . ~ ...... . OlA.NCiE COAST "' DAILY PILOT Tltr Or1ngw C:0.1! PAILV P!LOT wilt! wlllc:lt Is comblntd' .. Ht••n ·Pr•n, !I wbl11llM bY IM Or1ng1 CDest P11blishlG11 Comptny'. Sl'l)I· r11e rdfliof,1 •rt jll/l;llilht<S, Monday lh~UQll Frld1y, for COllf Nona, H!WllOl'I ... ell. H11nll"l1IOn lltfflt/Fo1>11!•in VAlltf, l•OIJN llff(ll, lrY lmi/S..WleNct 91111 S..n Clffntnl1/ Sin Jl/•n C1oi1tr1110. A 1ing1e rtgioNI M illon h Wbli1hed ~lh.m:ll~ 1...t S"'"'91n. Ille Prln<lpfl 01/b!!tlllng P!.tnl It 11 lXI Wt1! lltf St•1-e1, Co1!1 M111, Clllfllr nl1, tu~. Rob1rt N, W11d Prn'idtM Ind P..tltilh., J1ck R. C11rl1v Vter Pr111a ... 1 1nct Ge..1r1l ,y,..,, .. ., Tho111•i ktt•il Eo.1or Ti.0,..,11 A. ~urphl11• l•"n1111na eo11or C~11l11 H. loo1 Rithard P. Ni ll •u•••~M Mtn•~i"ll EGilo•t T11ty Cowillt Wnt Or11111e Cou..rr Etllor • H...ttllft .. lffctri OHka t 1175 lt•ch lo11l•••rd 1i1.ar11 9 Addrt11 i ,,o. lo~ 710, 12'41 .. a... OMc .. u,..,,... f111tt1r m llOrt11 ..,_ Co.ti M-; »II W"l l1y Str .. I H ... ...ri ll••tllt nn N...,...t lhlt¥trf S.11 Cl9'""1fl•t * N6rlh El C1"')1\o lilt1I ~ T .. .,.._ 1714J M2o4121 Ca.,lf~ .A'-tl .... '41·1671 ·.,,..,.. fttnll or._. c-,., ~ ... 14•122:0 . " C~•IOlll, lt)J. Or•.... Co.11 P~Ollllll"I C~11t. Ho "'"" -111. m1111r111oN,. t11!!9ti1I l'Pl.IU.. •t "vtffl.-tl hlrl ll'I. ·...... bl ,...,~ •ltllwt 1peic(t1 .,....., m~1ron 01 ,COP1f"loht •-· .. • s_,,. cit•• """" """' 11 (Mt• "'""· tl!llOl'11l1, S"'"'°'h•tiefl ~ c.,rtw RM !l'!OnlM•: llr ,,.,.u u.u l'Ml'lll'll'ri mflli.ry •1J11tllonJ 11 .... 1'r'lorill'llY, • I Arres ted in Murder CO~IPTON (UPI ) -Police arrested l\ifcGulla !\ii. Limbrick, 18, Tuesday on suspicion of murder arter he allegedly sho t to death another teenager during an argumenl involving a girl. Vince R. Rose, 19 .. v.·as found dead on the front la~n of a home. He was shot in his chest. Not a man or this strange y€a r. no one can doubt," Le ' Point said. "During these 12 months he has traveled 193 r000 kilometers (120,000 miles ), or ap- proximately five times around tlie earth "Kissinger-is not only the man of the year; he is also the principal personage of thiskncertain perjod which has seen the United States Withdraw into its shell." Ring Youtli Ha s 6-liour ~out Witli W re1icli A teen·aged boy and the Newport Beach Fire Department are both much happier today, following his New Year's adventure with a wrench. Jim Hawley, 15, of 2024 Leeward Lane, st uck his finge r into the round-ended wrench ln the manner you would allp on a ring, only the wrench did not come off. Friends worked fo ur hours trying to get it olf, then finally t:alled·-Ute-Fire Department, bu t the Fire Departmnet probab ly wishes they hadn't.· _ Firemen worked for another two hours 'before they !reed Y"!"'l\ Hawley's 'finger. But by that time, It was swollen half again the size 61 his other index finger. • Inspector ·Art Morton said the rescue report filed by the firemen involved tbc.se tools: -A hacksaw. -A pair of !xllt cutters. -Soap. -A pair of slip-jaw pliers. -Cooking oil. -Two diUerent screwdrivers. -Lubricant liquid . -A Oat file. -A chisel. -Ice cubes lo reduce th< swelling. -A metal viS&, to tqueeze it. "His fjnger was pretty swollen," said Inspector. Morton, adding . tha t a telephone call to a doctor at Hoag M,emorlal H .. pital even !ailed to do rnuoh good. '!)le physician told firemen he couldn't do much ~~ut the swelling with the wrep.ch still on the victim's finger. so they Just kept worUig. • " ' Oldest Living Thin~? Prof. Chow .Hui·yen of Taiwan stands beside what he claims is the oldest livin~ thing in the world, a Formosan Sun tree. Chow discovered the tree in a forest 30 miles southwest of Taipei last November and claims it's over. 6,000 years old, much older th.a n th~ General Sherman Tree in California. F rom Page 1 TAXES •.. mittee to review the $500.000 in deduc- tions he took for donating the --vice presidential papers. · Nixon also asked the committee to dec_id.e -wheth~ l\_e was rig!'!! in JWJt declaring a taxable gain on the sa:le of some property in San Cleml!nte in 1970. , Nixon said he paid no taxes on the deal because he was told at the time that he made no profit. But a later audit of the chief executive's finances, ordered by Nixon himself, cmcluded that he had a $117 ,370 profit on the transact!On. The cornimittee agreed to review Nix· on's finances. but said it wou1d not limit itself to the two areas he men- tioned. ~ U 1iion Officials Study Support Of Food Strike LOS ANGELES (AP)...: AF L-CIO omc- ials were to decide today whether to ·wp.. port a lalxlr coalition that has struck ma- jor supermarket Chains in California since Dec. 3. Sigmund Arywitz, executive secretary of the Los -:Angeles County Federation of Labor, said over the weekend he will "ask all member unions to support the striking unions "by any means wifhin the law." lie said the unionists decide today. Mean~·hile, negotiators attempting to end the four · week strike -lockout met throughout Tuesday, without any ap- parent success on framing a new con- tract. Spokesmen · for lxltb sides aa id t~y expected the talks to continue through the night. The striking labor coalition r~presents some 25,000 members qf the mea tcutters, operating engineers, machinists and Teamsters unions . • HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS Energy Crisis Ma y Solve College Parking Problem One ~f the most perplexing problems of the coast community COllcgc District -providing adequate parking at Orange Coast and Golden wes't C.Ollege -may be solved by the energy crisis. Administrators at both campuses predict that the computerized car pool program going into effec t durin g the next semester will go a long 'vays toward easing the parking place shorlagc. · ''We feel this car pool could have a tremendous impact." said Kenn eth J\.fowrey. Orange Coast College dean or admissia,s. "It will ease traffic con· gestion, solve parking problems, save the students money and conserve much needed gasoline." "So many students come to school one to a . car. We think thi s plan will help solve that.'' Orange Coast students will sign up for the voluntary ·car pools duritlg registration . Thursday. (;olden West students are scheduled to sign up Jan. 26. " Mowrey said the Coast Community C.Ollege District map has been divided ifito several sections with each section having a number: Students will indicate their residence 1>n the map and enter the corresJM.>lkiing number. on a computer card. Killer Surrenders SEOUL (UPI) -.>, drunken South Korean milltary policeman turned himself in to authorities today. ending a 2J.hour rampage during \.\'hic h he kited twi> men in a tea house, seized four hostages an~ held army and police squads at bay with a carbine. Police said S. Sgt, Clio Hyo Sun surrendered atter army Lt. Col. Lee Kang. Kav and one of Cho's sisters entered le htea house in Taegu, 180 miles southeast ol Seoul and selz,ed his weapons. The district computer will -then print out a book listing all the students in a gi\'en ~rea who are interested in forming a car pool. Lists will be made available on both campuses on · the first day of the spring semester. Th e pool system is designed to serVc evening as well as day stU<fentS:-- Anothcr project to ease parking dif- ficulties at Orange Coost College was completed over the winter holidays. It is a 500-stall parking lot on the west . end of the campus near Merrimac \Vay ·and Harbor Boulevard. .· .Fro111 Page 1 ) MIDEAST •.. !claimed to have suffered no losses in the clashes on the northern and central sectors. In t-he fi fSt encounter , the sYrlan.s said. they fired ma chine guns, forced wi thdra \\•al of an Israeli patrol and bit one soldier. · The communique, broadcast by Damascus radio, said in the second clash the Syria n artillery th\l:ai1ed an Israe li attempt to consolidate defense positions in the central sector and destroyed some negineering vehicles. There was no lrnmediate Israeli com- ment on the clash. From Page 1 SAUNA ... testified that before March 2, 1970, she was a devout Catholic who frequently attended church and who devoted much of her time to Catholic youth, PTA and Boy Scout activi'ties. • CLOUD \!!NDAY TENNIS ·ANYONE? Long SIHve Neck ACRYLIC SWEATERS ' Acrylic & Nyl on -¥-" WARM su1rs-2·195 UP to 349& Wlloon . Penn· Dulop TENNIS BALLS MIN'I TEN~IS SHOES r •.,... 16" • 1'8" ' ' TEN 1N1s SHOES 11s • 9'~ 1695 -18'5 TENNIS DRESSES e Mo~ & Boyt TENNIS SHORTS •Men & Boys TENNIS SHIRTS aild SOX • Wil son, D1vl11 B•flcroft, Garcia, Yoney om~ TENNIS RACKETS 1 l n =:...,.t."""' .. -"'"'""-..--~-.. -...,~~ ... ~ • .-r.r-.-...;"''""'""'i::: -rn---~ ·-=~~--~ =----------r~ -W 1,. I l I ' ~I 1 I I 1 1At Your Servi.ce A SIUl4loy, W-ay ud Friday Fe1&ure Of Ibo Dally Piiot · Cot a probletn? 1'ht1' Wri.~l•l~l'- P4 """· Pal liilll e1<t ,.a ta~. oet Litt • onswtrf and action you tlte d to ·-1 J~tve intqua- ltl fn QOV- trttmtttt and bwi11.es1. Mail JI o u r quts· tio111 to Pal Outin I Ai Your ·Service , Orange Coosr /Jaily Pila<, P.O. Bo• 1560, CosUl IIe1a, <.:a .. 92626. lucludc vour Lct:eplione number. Comp11ter l11correct v • • UPI TtltPllOIO . . • ·- Wedrtesd•7, Januar7 2, }q74 H DAILY PI LOT 3 · Clemente_Legislati!ln ' ' r Nixon Orders ·55 MPH: lot. Califotnia...gocs: • ..SJ will-~atlon,-lie. 3dded I hat he was encouragOO aceording to a law signed today by by the lar~e number of stales which President Nixon in san Clemente. already ha ve cut down on their speed The measure will force a'it states In limits. Califo rnia started its new low lhe union to adopt an energy-saving limit Ne"' "r'e nr's Ony. 55-mile-per·hour speed limit ou all In a somewhat reh1ted signi ng today. federally funded roadways. And if the the President also signed a law setting states do not follow the suggestio n within up a new nonprofit railroad corpo r;,Ition. 60 days, they will receiv..e no federal Deeming the new measure "an im· highway funds. 1>0rtant turning point in the history or The President. in an announcement America's railroad industry," the Presi· handed out after the signing of the dent authorized the formati on of lhe new law, said ,that ir all states cut corporalion primarily to reva mp the back 'speed limils to the lower level, ·freight systems o! six financially ailing the savings in oil could amount to railroads. 200.IXXI barrels a day. The new entity will be able lo borrow * * * * * * Most Countians Comply -But 99 Pulled Ove1'" Most Orange Collllty drivers appeared to be going along with the OC\Y S5 mph speed limit . hours of the new yea r for exceeding the limit bu t only 39 v.·ere given citatioru:. $1.S billlonfi)se:t up ri new nelworkl of rail lines. The new law could also mean the abandonment or thousa nd; of miles of outnlOded ri ghts-of.way and the building of ne:w ones. ' . The President sa id he ph1ns lo push for even 1nore railroad rcror m legislation this ne\Y year. Othl'r than bill signings and so[(le holiday phone calls to c<>ngressional leaders. the President's scl)edule ha!! sho\\"n a light "'·ork load this v.·eek. The Presidenl has made no public a.p1:1earancc s since last Friday's al· fendance at the \vcdding of his personal physician in La Jolla . Since then lhe President has spent nlost of his time at his rc..sidenc_c . His close friend. t:.C:.,."Bebe'' Rcbozo arrivL'<i early this week and rema in~ in San Clemente . Generali\·, \\'hen Rebnzo arrives, the President ·takes tlllftllnounccd afternoon dri\·es along the South County with Rcbozo ar the \\'hee l and the Secret tank. No suc h dri ves have .vet rakcn place si nce Nixon arrived lat e last week. DEAR PAT : I sold my mother·in·la,,··s house in San Jose in January, but J'm still having problems with the San'1 Jo~ Water \Vorks. I've \vriltcn to the general manager. four tim~s stating that the buye r look 1>0sscssion April 8 and I paid the finnl bill on 1\1uy 17 for lhc January-to-April period. 1'hc house \vas va,cant for lv.'O months during this period, In spite of this, l'1n st ill rccejving a "oater blll for this properl y and no\v lhat it's been put irr the hands o( a collection agency. I'm really mad. II. P., Huntl~gton Beach Vou may rccei\·e additional l1lllection agen cy bills bcfor~ you're · taken off the co1nputer list. but i,e:nore them . San Jose Water \\'orks Is correcting its error and blllin~ the ne"' residents for reyment. Records inJHc11le Ibis prop.- erty's "'ater \\'its not !ihut off u n t i I July 3. 1'hrn ir \\':l!i turned on again the same day. ·111r nr"' res.idents \\'ert' contac;_led about ·"·ulcr use from April to July. but no rcsponSf' "as received <tnd }'OU got stuck 1r1ilh an inCorrecl billing. PRESIDENT'S BROTHER EDWARD WITH FAMILY He's 'Off Being Paid to Do Nothing,' She Says California Highway Patrol officers stopped 99 drivers during the first 12 . ' "The rest of the people \ve stopped were given verbal warnings and most of those who got tickets were exceeding 651 ": a CHP spokesman said. ·'Thafs even over lhe old limit so they "'ere cited ." The Presi dent, his aides said, watched bo\\'I ganu:s on televisio n Tuesday and during lulls made the calls to fellow', Republicans. offering thenl new year's greetings. · Away For1ner UCI Aide Returns Nixon's Sister-in~lciiv Gripes For Researc~ Avocados lleall/1f1tl. DEAR PAT : LJke most Californians, our family loves avocados. \Vc 're think· ing about planting our O\vn tree and v•onder how long ii v.·ould be before fruit is produced. 1 ·m also curious to find out if avocados are high in calories. as I've heard. and• if th is tree is a native of California. T. 0 .. Ne"·port Beach It usuall y takes three" !"Cars before a younJ?; avnc;.ido tree bears fruit The Hass variety ripens in summer and lhe Fuerte in late :1ulumn months . Ex· perts say Ibis fruil Is low in calories and the oil ii produ ces is lo"· in cbloresterol. The 8\'.J)Cado tree. is a nati,·e of lbe W~st Indies. Central and -South America. but It's bct'n succHsfuJly cultivated In Florida, TcJ111s and llawaii · .u y,·ell as in South ern California. flerolc Vitamin f; ALDER\VOOD ~IANOR. \\1ash. I UPI) -t.1rs . Edward f;.1ixon. thl' Prcsidenl 's sister·in·law. says it's difficult being left home alone with t"·o children while her husband is "off being paid to do noth.ing." h.1rs. Nixon nu1de the remarks to nev.·sman at the c"Ouplc'..s home as she declined an inter.,.·iew. about cOnsul\a111 fees her husband \\'as paid in conncc ion \\'ith finding a location for the proopscd Nixon Library. ··1 could tell you what he did. but J"nl not going to." ri.trs. Nixon said ·on the ne"' yea r's weekend. "I don·1 v.•ant any publicity. \Vh1le he 's off being paid to do nothing. I'm he~ alone."' 'I'm trying to teac h school and J'\·t• gol tv.·o kids. Let n1e tell you . it's tough." ~lrs. Nixon had lx•t•n asked to com- ment on a pay1r.e~11 vi ~I .000 madl' to the,. Presid ent's broHu•r lo find out .cost Dis1111ted \\'ht'rt' thl' Nixon familv 1vould like the !ibr~1ry to be located. The payment had teen n1ade public by the llichard Nixon Foundation in California. In cJE'\:lining !o be interviewed . f\1rs. Ni xon said she v.·as "sick and tired" of nev.•spapi!r reports about the J>residcni·s f<1mily. She called the story about her husband's · cbnsultant's fees ··an invasion or privacy."' Then. gestu'ring v.•ith a hamme r she held in her hand . Mrs. Nixon told a reporter she felt '"li ke taking th.is thing and knQCki ng down our newspaper delive ry boxes so I y,·on't ha ve to read some or the lh.ings they y,·rite ... Ed\\'arcl Nixon. a trustee of the Richard Nixon Foundation .. was pa id Sl.:>00 per month for 14 months beginning in December, 1970. to find a location for the Nixon _Li~rary. f\1rs . Nixon said the foundation "folded in Ausust. its \\'Ork 11·as done." . ' Dr. Jack Peltason, former -UC Irvine vice chancellor for academic affairs, has ret urned to campus as a Danforth Fellow on leave from . his post as chancellor or the t:rbana-Champaign ca mpus or the University. of Illinois. Peltason , a political scientist, is using the UC! library !or study of the relations between higher education and the com- munity and government. The Danforth Foundation grant is similar to one granted to UCJ Chaneellor Qaniel G .. Aldrich Jr. in 1970. That grant allov.·ed Aldr ich to complete a !JO.<iay round the world study tour ending in spring, I97t . The grants are intended lo enable university chief administrat'ors to spend time aWay from the pressures of running a campus while expanding their in· divlduaJ horizons. . · Peltason served ~ vice chancoJlor or the Irvine camJJU$ from, 11&L ...ictbe year UCI opened its doors to students -until 1961. DEAR PAT : MO\\' did lhc '·youth cult" theory for Vitamcn 1;: get slarled '.' I have a friend v.·ho is a constant user of this \'il a1nin and I've been curious about "'hat claims arc made for E and hol\' they got started. Ar c there any conditions for "'hirh d o c t o r s prescribe fhis \'ilamin~ Nix.011 Hoi11e Co11t1·ove1·sv . J The post _Feltason once.. occupied will become vacant in June with the resigna· ti on of Dr. Hai.a.rd Adams \\'ho recently anno unced his desire to return to tcacl;ling English. . . !\1. II .. llunlinglon Beach \1i&an1in E has been claimed lo pro- mete physical endurance . .:nhance Sl'Xt1al poltftC)', pre\'ent heart attacks, protect apfnst the effects of air pollution, and slow the aging proCess \\'hlie .alleviating Its accompanying ailments. Some of tbl5e claims are based on deficiel'IC)' symptoms observed In other species fed for long periods on diets free of Vitamin E. A y,·ide distribution of this \'ltamin in vegetable oils, cereal grains and animal fals mak es a deficiencv in humans very unlikely. J>remature irifants or indl\'lduals \rilh impaired absorplion 'of fats n1ay require 11upplemental Vitamin E under a plysician·s direction . ·Finally Ove1· i11 Co11nty • Surprise-· It's A Real Guitar S ocial Security B1•a11cli DEAR PAT: Even though Lhe Santa Ana SOcial Security office got a nc1v. phone number lhat rings and is ans\\'cred -rather tha n the constant busy signal reached by the old number --e\'cry time J ca ll I "hang '• for a long tilne before anyone ta lks to me. \\'hen arc we in lhe South Coast area going to get more efficient servirc? Social Securi- ly problems usually are Quite' involved and lake..a~long time to sctllc..Jrareling__ to Santa Ana for pecsonal attention is impossible ror me. T. \\I .• C11pistruno Beach A new Social _...Security branch office to ser\·e lhe l'fe~ldents of Capistrano Beach, Dona Point, Laguna Beach, South Laguna, Mission Viejo nod San J11l!!' C.pllU'Mno is scbeduled---lo---open---lD January at lZJ.%4 Pasco Adelanto, San Jun Capistrano. An office staff of 13 employes should alle\•late your sc r\'ice problems. PamplJlet for (;.Q!t«!!.lller Did you knon· the a\·erage cost of m1tutahdng 1 color TV set In lop con· dWoa could cost as m~b as $100 an- nually 1fter the warrnnty expires. or ,a 111arter ol all se rvice calls would be unnect!t1ary .... ,,.. plug1. fuse1, pUo,ts 11<1 conlrols were <'becked fifst? These tips and otlten on grttlng the most t.r )"OOr repair dollar are Included in 1 "Consumer Gulde to R.epilt-Serilce& An .unpaid $-l.400 bill fron1 the s1 111c Board of Equalization -is the Pnly thing in the y,·ay of closing t~.c books on the ttirce·n1onth battle inside Orang e County government' over the appraisal on President Nixon "s San Clcn1cntl' estate. .. County Supervisors voted unal1itnously ·tod ay lo file the state panel's value estimate. wh ich \Y<IS about $130 .000 higher than a $1.37 n1i!lion figure set by county· Assessor Jack Vallc rga early last ,Year. E!ven Supervisor Hoberi Ballin. who spearheaded t?le · mo,\te fo r a seCond appraisal of the sCasidl' \'ilia and then personally appcah.'<I !he. asscssinen l las! nionlh, \'Ota! lo close 1hc nian cr. lle vowed as n private rili7.cn. however . to ket-p lhc issue ali \·e in the courts .. "I'll vote to receive and file, but his n1aller is far fro1n ove r ns far Rubella 'fcsts . No\v l\fa nd~tlor v • Before 'V ctl<linu . ·!::' ~~·omen Janning on being tnnrricd arc being urg('d to plan uhi?ad for the' n<:w state-reguircd rube·IJa (t;crinan 111easles) test. Brkles·to.be shoul d contac l their family doctor or local heaHh dcp.1rtn1ent a\Jout the fubell a tr.;t al lt>ast lwo \\.ee.ks before _ the \\'cdding dale. state health Di rector J . B. Slubblcbine s<1id. County clerks v.i11 no! issue a n1arriagc license to any \\Oman "'ho does not present evidence of a laboratorv 1est for rubella antibodies. · Rubella is a disease \vhich may ca us<' birth defects ir a mofher·fo-bt· conlructs -.the. illness during pregnancy. T.wo Die in ·u1azc -for Electroale -...Eq•dpment aid Ap- plla'llce1" pa111phl<1,' Prtplred by lhe State Dtpartn\ent of Consumer Alfalrs1 Ille pampblel In Enlll•b or Spanl•h slid "'H••la ways to avoid dtceplive-or -~WALLA WALLI\, Wash. (UPI) -.The frtdulent practices give~ lipS on ap. fl"Qllt wall of a burning tlvern fell on pl.lance urvlC:e a~d 11111!1 assoclaLlons !ireUghters Tue~~ny •. leaving ~·.1 r c ud organliatloas tl&at mlghi a11lit con· Marshal Gabriel Tichi and another ma n •11men." Request by 1endlng a self·ad~ dead and two others lnjurcd. l They were tlr.utd, stamped eD\'elope to Repulr battling an early morning bla ie al the Senitce Gulde. BoJ 310, Sacramett10, Downto\vn Tavern when the wall col- Calll. 95!0!. lapsed . as I an1 concerned ... Battin said. Still pCnding is the state board"s bill of St400 for the services or state appraiscr Howard t\1. Childs. \\"ho rcexa1nined the \\lestern \\lhitc House and valucd ~the land at $1.5 million. Ballin. in his case before th e Orange County Assessment Appeals Board last month . ~'Ontended Childs" figure should have included numerous. imptove1nents 1 on the land \\'hlch \vou!d bring the value of the eslate close r to $2 million. The appraisal dispute began more than three months ago when Ballin won the \"Oles of fe1JO\V Democ rat ic Supervisors NEW YORK (UPI) -A youlh got up from his seat in a subway car, placed a guitar case on the floor. and announced; "I'm leav. ing this behind for mankind.'' He then left the car Tuesday and disappeared into the station. Suspicious passengers informed transit authorities. who in tum contacted the emergency service of the police departm ent. Police officers took the case away and opened it. InSide was a guitar. Halph Dit'drich and Ralph Clark to have I ji;iiii~~~~ii!~!ij~~ Va/lerga·s figures rechecked. \! Rei}ubli cans Ronald Caspers and David GEM TALK Baker opposed lhe move. claiming it h 'l.'aS politically motivated. I The matter came to a head before ~,,; !he Assessment Appeals Board where __ Battiri"s request to increase t he assessment "'as rejected and Vallerga"s I figUrc was ~pheld. TODAY ~!. i : by Hattin said today the state board 's app raisa'l Wf!S done for the bOard of superv isors and hence should be acted ~ upon separately by l he board. ii J. C. HUMPHRIES ~ lllO .. ,~ •• ,.,;;;..;;;.,iiiiiiiiiiiiz~.N~iiiii· ., .. .,.&!. \ But Qlspers said lhe sta le appraisal '·is close enottgh-to--our -o\vn figure and !he difference is not out of the ordinary for this unique piece of 1>roperty."' • Caspers said the report should be received :ind liled and the matter closed once. and for all. He was supported. by Baker. who said he can "see no possible stand lhe board ~houkl or could take on this rnauer. There is no value to it and it Is not In Ole best interests of anyone to pursue It further,}' Btlkcr said the course or aclion is now-bciwcen Battin as a private citizen '4!ld the courts. ' Supervisors .\'Otcd · to file report but took no action on bill. the state lhe 11.400 Caspers said Va\lerga has already \lehcmenlly refused to pay it out of hls-budget and it is tiow in the coun ty's leg~lalivc "budge! hopper. ' 11 don 't know ll the payment should <.'Ofl1C 'fron1 these funds and ~Ince this has been bandied altoUI the county fttml1y ""e shou14 find someplace to put it sooh." Caspers said. ' i In Kyong Joo;-Koreta; arche~lo-I gists have dug up a crown of g6ld ~· 9 inches in diameter and 12lh 1' inches hi gh. The crown is reported as dating from around 47 B.C., is still in perrect condition, and is the seventh gold cro,vn discovered in r the \'icin1t y of this ancient capital. We hear many' things Uirough i trade sources \\1hich 'deal only tn • racts. The latest comesjrom Wash· ington, D.C., where jewelers re-• port that a U.S. ·senator has been t questioning them abbut gold coins. The senator is frorii a prominent. slate and has been on committees get\ing testimony from ·Treasury officials. We wonder whether he knows somelhlng we don't -about gold or our currency situation. 1£ you, too, are interested In gold coins, you might find it inteJ'8llng to stop by and talk to us. We can mount yours or sell you beautifully moun· led coins. • -. • •,---'----.!!.. The officer said 99 speeding stops over a 12·hour period is "an unl.L';ually high number , but since so few were cited. the number is less important when determining the effect of the new speed limit "It would seem most pepple are going along with it and maintaining a uniforn1 speed," the CHP spokesman said. "As long as they are within a 50-00 m_ph range, we're doing real well." CHP officials hope the new speed will serve another purpose besides saving critically short fuel supplies and cleaning up the air. "We are hoping lhe lower speed v.·ill reduce the severity ·or accidents oo the freeway," the CHP spoke.sman ·said. "Lower speeds oould mean fe,ver fatalities, but we'll just have to "'ait and see." During the la£t hours before the ne\v speed law look effC(!t, CHP officers were kept busy wit h numerous accidents and drunken driving arrests. •Officers worked on 21 freeway mishaps on New Year's Eve. but none of the I I persona injflred in those accidents was hurt seriously. Patrolmen also arresled 80 persons for drivin~ under the influence ot alcohol or" clrud' bul of!Jcerl said !he figure is down from 122 last year. . "We had rain New Year's Eye which kept •. lot of people inside and kept the off1ccrs IOo busy working accidents to arrest dnmks ," the spokesman said. 16,000 County Residents Get · Check Benefits ... Californians Easing Off Gas Pedals By The Assnclated Prn!'I !'•lost California drivers grefi!led the state's nev.1 energy-saving 5S mile per · our speed limit with Jots of soft pedaling -and a few extra miles in the gal Servi ce tagging along. ' But some heavy.footed motorists found themselveS' on the side or the roU New Year's Doy getting a lecture. warn":. ing or · speeding ticket from the ever- v.•atchful Californ ia Highway Patrol. : CHP officers handed 1.393 ticket! statewide Tuesday to motorists exceed· ing the 55 m.p.h. mark. A CHP spokes· man tenned the figure "remarkabl y low." ln No rthern and Southern Californi a: officers who spotted groups of speeding cars displayed amber lighls and led the cars at a legal speed for ·a short distance. lndividual speeders were oftetf1 warned by outside biJllhorns lo slow down . · •,• "\Ve are very proud of our Southern California motorists." said Los Angeles Highway Patrol lns~ctor Glendon Craig after the first day of the 55 limi t., "Th ey seem to be complying volun· tarily ," he said. "It has nol been necessary to write many cita tions but we have given warnings." ln the San Diego area. higb\~·ay. patrolmen cited only lwo motorists for~ speeding during the first eight hour.1 of the new lay,· -which took effect at 12 :01 a.m. New Year's Da y. "Almost everybody seems to be com- plying." a spo kesm an said. · ' More than IIJ,000 Orange Cowity In the Sacramento region and San residents will be among the 475,000 people Francisco Bay Arca, CHP hcadqua rtera statewide who will be receiving weUare also reported drivers observing !he ·neW checks Jn the new federally administered limit. 1 • ~id to the aged, blind and disabled. ~ The Legislature dropped the speOO. Peter D'Anna, dislrt ct manager of the limi1 last month from 65 miles an houi' Sacramento Social Security office, said -and 70 mil es an hour on some that the checks fro1n the Social Security free1J.•ays -in an efo£rt to save gnsoline Admlnstration will be delivered to recip-during the energy-<.:runch. The 55 li1nit ients this week. is expected t(J save ahout 300 million A spokesman for the Orange . County gallons of gasoline a year statewide. Social Security office sa id that anyone , On the Bayshore Freeway outside San who bad been receiving aid under the Francisco, veteran CHP officer Bob state program and who does not receive Bowers said traffic which normally a check by the end of the week, should moves at close to 70 miles an hour1 call the nearest Socia l Security office. \\•as "ave raging maybe 58." ·-'-=~-==c-~-=--~~----,;-:: '". ·~ .. t ~adyse"iko Baguette -- $lQOOO • J.C. • No as<MO\I Ytllew to:1/s11 .nlt1\~ l!Gtl DK~ "'ttci'l•'li 011~1!11 Goll JJI lt2J NEWPOR.T ILVO., COSTA MfSA • CONYINllMT"rl•MS Jt TfAa S Of THt SAMl lOCATIOH ··-- ·-· ' ....... ,. • .,'•••¥ -M.,.._, C.~••tt '1-l()N( ·~•.J••1 t y i • ,r ' ·I .. • I . .j UAILV PILO T Wtdntsd~ JanllMJ 2. 1974 E~tner-B~llc..,, . . ~ Meir . Co;alition • H·ope.s .. ) Threatened ' • ID We're ·Off to A Good Stari SLICF.S OF EARLY '74: So v•e have laWlcbed the New Year. And just look at the ne"'s already: ~totorists are driving 55 miles an hour rre~·here on the Orange Coast - no matter what the speed zone is. This chap from Anaheim took a sledge hammer and bashed h ~s 1972 Pinto to ,pieces becatise he said the poor automobile ·"is dying a slow death ." ·Orange County aufhor!ties ha,·e an- nounced that the marriage license bUsincss has fallen O(f because of the meules. The weather people were predicting l'ain and the Orange Coast came up clear and cold. 1 The Western White House in ~an Clemente grandly announced a govern- ment appointment for Pat Nixon 1hat turned out to be illegal. ! ; ~_,,Ji~-·~~ ___,,;,.... __,,_).__ --.- ' ~ . ' • • TEL'AVIV (UP() -The major coali· tion partner in .Prime Minister ~ Melr's Jabor alignment emeried today as the biggest obstacle in the way _of forming a new government, piOlWcaJ leaders said. It could alter Israel's neaoJiatlng s\ance and the . Arabs at Gttneva. . Demands on the labor alignment by the National Religious Party not t.o sur- render the occup;ed West Barik'.ol-Jord>n- in any peace settlement is the ,,hardest problem Mrs. Meir will have to solve, said Yoram Peri, spokesman for her labor party. "I'm afraid we'll have to pay a price to the National Religious Party," Peri s.1id. "The negotiations to form a coali· lion \Viii take some weeks, but they \VOn't iiffect the military talks 8t Geneva. They will affect the next step, but that u·on 't be done so quickly.'' ' And a gas station .dealer back in Chicago got shut do"'1l for giving away . gasoline and selling rabbits' feet. Y~ INDEED, it surely looks like we 're orr to a great start. " RETURNS THUS FAR. indicated thit Y..·lrs. Meir"s party had lost six ol its 57 seats in parliam.ent and the right·wing Likud would gain six for · a total of 38. The National Religious Party dro~ one seat to 11. Returns from soldiers said that since it was a citizen army the voting \\'as expected to be along High Wi1•e Dra11ia i;n~:1;.:r:i;e~a':~i>eace Conference. Man identified as Jirnmy C. 'Veber. eludes two policemen 120 feet is expected to devote its attention lo Clearly. a tour of our coastal roadvtays early today 'suggeste(l that folks are now driving 55 -miles per hour . But there are apparently some adjuslmenf problems. The long arm of the law Y.'tu> making arrests everywhere. above upper roadway of Brooklyn BMdge Tuesday.-He wa s finally peace negotiations once the troop talked down by a friend after an hour. disengagement talks between lsrael and _ _: _ _: _ _:.'-.:_: ____________________ Egypt are completed. ~ That '"as because lhe people Vt!re 'driving 5.l miles per hour ·every,vhere -ip 45, 35, and 25 zones. th at is. The only pla<te they slowed down Y.'as out in the open. THE ZANY l\fADE the news early this New Vear when this chap named Winte1· Sto1~m on Move; Temperatures 45 Below Roger T. S\\•eitzer of Anaheim took bis By United Press International into Arkansas. Temperatures dropped "poor little Pinto car up to the Ford The first winter stonn of the I\'ew below zero from the Rockies to the M:otor Company's Pico Rivera assembly Year moved across a vast stretch of Great Lakes and from the ~anadian p]&nt~ and along with a .bunch of buddies. the midlands . early today, pushing border to lrtissouri and Kansas. bashed it to pieces because it was ·temperatures-to 45 below zero and dump-The National Weather Service issued allegedly a lemon. · ' · ing u9 to 16 inches of snow. heavy show warnings today from Utah , lrtaybe he figured that was beating . Sndw and wind swept over the Rockies to northern Texas, through Kansas and th~ ~~f't!.~s.starts the New Yeai walk-and into the Great Plains and ea.st Oklahoma, ·and north through Iowa and Nebraska. in~ from our County Seat ,;. ln ~-. A··· C Up to 16 inches of snow ::fell Ttiesday ;;r, t t In parts of northern New MeXlco and Ana comes the intelligencie ""'' duiflig ' S rOnaU arr Southern Colorado. Gamblers a< Las Tourism Minister Moshe Kol said the Religious Party may change ,its miild about the West Bank once concrete pro- posals for peace are made at Geneva. But he said its demands on religious versus secular affairs may cause his own party to drop out.of the coalition. ' KOL IS A l\tEl\IBER of t h e Independent Liberal Party, another Coalition partner with a projected four seats in the 120-member Knesset I Parlia- ment ). The Religious Party holds a projected ,. II seats. making it the alignment's biggest partner. Kol said the problem hinged on trying to agree v.•ith the Religious Party on where future borders should be. Sites Five Bomb the past year, the marriage license Vegas, Nev., got ~a surprise when four business felJ off by a few ~~.' · ~· · .• i' .. T _;_.a I.. inc.bes of snow fFu.. the largest soowfall E W • custDmers. Cbunty Clerk llllilils F!.r..6!-•. .' -' ,,in '1.AJ£11er , since 1949. .,"· . ' · Xp SlOnS John blamed lhls dov.'lltreftd CO';die ~ . ..,. " · , . lhat Orange County require. ,bridefto"'. • 4;,.._. HOLIDAY l\IOTORISTS in Minnesota, take tests proving they've had Germ"" Aoout Batli Soap \he nation's "ice box" with tem~ratures R;p lr-ela-nd measles. Some other J!Ollnhes don't de· dbwn 10 45 below zero at the lakeside " mand the test yet. community of McGrath, waited as long Well, it might be simpler than all HOUSTON (UPI) -Commander Ger· as eight hours for tow trucks "ta start From \Vire Services that. Maybe, just maybe, there were ald P. Carr of Santa Ana and the ()lhcr their cars. BELFAST _ G \Cid-"' f ...._ __ ,a.Jew ..bunda:d less neonJe who wanted d k . unmen exp t.'\l 1ve ' • Italy to J•daiom are sl\uated on the Weot Bank. Kol alld another major problem Tested on the Rellclous Party'• demands for a .rtaUonal unfty government that'would Include the !Jkud, the alignment's . big- . . . Isra.el .. gest challenger. · Mrs. M~ir has said such a government woUld be unworkable. "W.E WJl.L NOT ente_r any government U we will pot have this· free possibility to fight for this bill," Kot · said. ' Top Chin ese Commanders Reshuffled 1 /. ' ' ~ • TOKYO (AP) -China 's Communist rulers have begun 1974 with a reshuffle of. military commanders apparently de'Signed to weaken the power bases of possible challenges to J\.tao Tse-tung. The changes, inVolving 11 of 'the COWi· try 's 13 millt.ary regions, were disclosed today by Hsinhua , Peking's official nev.·s agency, in an article on New Year't military reunions . • Most of the chahges v.·here shirts .of officers fro~ one command to another. There were few dismissals. . SINCE TIIE DEATII and disgrace in 1971 d Mao's deslgnated heir; Defense Minister tin Piao, the preponderance of the military at the apex of the Pelting pawer pyramid has dwindled . But the army has clung to influence and pasition in the provinces. Tn August, during the 10th congress ol the Chinese Communist party, Mao tightened his control on the party slruc- ture by placing old associates and party veterans in key posts. Now he appein to have surrounded doubtful and pc155lbJy tfoublesome regional military cofn.. manders with older and m o re trust .... 'Orthy men. Because of the secretiveness en- veloping all political and military movts fn China. it was impossible to say Whether the shakeup resulted from a threat now to Mao, the 80-year~ld chairman of the Communist party. or was made to forestall any lutw-e threat. .TIIERE WERE FEW outrigh t dismissals in the shakeup, which Jook.ed more like a game of musical ~ than an . effort to :purge the proviodal officer ranks.· . 1'he most significant change was the appointment of Li Teh-sbeng, a Mao loyalist and one or the five vice chainnen of the party central committee, to com·. tmllh()n Soviet troops, • it b one of the j I I l i .ed--.-....::;;c..:.:: _ ---.:. t"-o Sqiab 3 astronauts today ha to ta e A Garland, Tex., youth fell mto a OOmbs across Northern Ireland during to ge mam · their weekly showers, and-ffieexpettence-drainage-dttt:b-amt-froze~ath·-Tues---···tne·ruglirtt'f-wh"a.t ·-~td··M--the-start"""·- mand the Shenyang area of f\1anchuria . j A frontier regwn facing an estimated most critical military commands in --Ch~.-----·------·-·------'·--·--·-···- LI replaced Chen Hsi-lien. who takes TIIEN 111ERE \\'AS the We.stern brought up one of the "' few chronic: day and a S~ye.ar-old Hot Sprmgs, _Ark.. of major terror offensives by both \Vhi.te House in business at San Clemente grumbles about the lengthy mission. 1113!1 froze 1 to deat~ when he slipped Roman Catholic and Protestant ex· where it was divulged that Mrs. Nixon r.. Ed d G G"b on ice and ost conscK1US11ess. tremists police said today command of the Peking inilitary regioo. t 'I'here he will be under' the watchful Astronauts~rr, war . 1 son. The National \Veather Service said Th bo, h.. A"' ·. · · b t \\1luld serve as chairwoman of the Volun· rot-rnerly ~f San Clemen.le, and William the bitter storm came from a cold t . e Id" m'-Q causligh~ inJ=~ u tary Service Advisory COWJcil. thus R. Pogue .were. laking tQday off and rront which originated in Ru ssi a and \\O so iers were 5 Y w in becoming eligible for a $138 consultant each was given ume for a weekly shower moved into Alaska and northern Canada ( fee for each day she worked. in the first device of its kind ever almoSt a v.·eek ago. The weather service JN SHORT ) • 'They canceled the appointment flown in space. said · •thC front wanned "a little'' . ••• because it would be illegal for the Presi-Carr's gripe \Vas not aboot having however, before it dipped into the United '------------"' dent -to ai:p>int his wile to a job like to bathe -which' "we do whether we States. th~~u ho~d the Wh.ite llouse wOuld need it or not" -but about the soap pro- have started out the fresh year just vided. He thinks the famJly dog might a bit better than that. like it ~lot more. Finally, there is Sam McBride ()f .. "l find the shower to be very, very Chicago, who runs the South Side Shell satisfying," he said recei'ttly, "Although Service. sam woold sell you a rabbit's I think the soap is lousy. There's foot and 8 blank legal fonn for 10 got to be a better way than to g1ve bucks. After thal, you got some gasoline us stuff that sme!IS like dog shampoo. f I just don't think that w a s really ree. necessary." That's the equivalent of buying a rock from a Rose Bowl scalper fur $50 and Carr said his wife used the same getting t\\·o game tickets for Dothing. · kind of special soap at home, and hers ·•smells quite pleasant." He exhorted THE FEDERAL~ FIGURED poor Sam planners of fUture space flights to try \\'asn·t really selling ra'*iits' feet but to make showering a little more en· gasoline -at $2 per gallon. So they joyable. shut him dov.11. ''It's very unpleasant stuff to use and Like the Western \\rhite House. Sam I !think in the future . soap that \1·e did n"t start out the New Year so hot use should have some sort of pleasant either. odor to it," he said . DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of the Dally Pil ot is guarantttd MtP'dlJ·l'rlOtJ' If Jtll dt 11t1 ll1v1 Vtut t•IN• •v J :H ,,m., c•tl 111d v•wr .c•pr will tt t,.11tlll i. ........ Ctll1 trt° llltll 1111111 1:lf ,.m. · S1lvrd1y '"' S111!1111v : If vtu Oo net rtctlvt Vt\lr copy ov I 1.m. Sllurdly, tr I •.m. $und1y, c1ll tr-41 • copy will tti Or..,1111 i. v•w, c1111 •rt 1tlen wnl il 1' r .m. TrleP.tiones MtSI Ortilfe-CMtnly Art11 ...... MJ·4U1 N1tllow11t M11n1m.t111 l11cll t nd Wnlmiol1ltr .• • .•• ..._,,,. S111 Cf.,,..1111, C1,;11tt,.. ltlC~. S111 J11111 C1pl11r1ne, 01111 l"tllll, ''""' L1911M, Lttvn• Nituel •.•• ftJ-4-0t . a Bellast gunfight shortly before mid· night Tuesday. Police blamed the outlawed Irish Republican Anny (lltA ) for four or the blasts. The Protestant · Ulster ·Freedom Fighters (UFF) c I aimed responsibility for the fifth. e Five A1nerlrans Die TURIN, 1\aly -A· New York City family or five was among the 39 persons killed in the New Year's Day crash of an Italian airliner in Turin, pclice said today. · A police sj>ok~n identified the five as Robert Anthony Brecldleimer, 50: his wife Sheila, 50; their daughter, Jane f\targaret, 19; their son Robert Anthony Jr.. 23 ; and Joyce Breckbeimer, 23, wife of Robert Anthony Jr. e Arab Plot Feared eye of tbe central leadenhip. Peking has been without a military commander Ladies Fair sina. Cheng we;·shon dropped -out. o1 s;ght during the 1966-69 CUiturai Reyolu· Prince Charles has been ro-lion. · mantically I i n k e d to Lady Another significant swap was the Leonora Grosvenor. (top), 24-transfer of Hsu Shih-yu, 67, a member year-old daughter of the Duke of the party Politburo. He Y{as moved of \Vestminster and Lady Jane from Nanking, where he has been a Wellesley, daughter of Duke of leading figure since 1957, to Canton. Wellington . Ting Sheng. the 61-year-old canton oom· ----"-----------mander, went to Nanklng. ' . . T-'1e Big Stall Four Amtrak Trains Stra1id 900 By Tbe Associated Press ?itore than 000 passengers aboard four Amtrak passenger · trains Io u n d themselves at unscheduled stops as part of the New Year's holiday. · The Chicago-to-Denver streamliner, operating on the Burtingt~ .Northern tracks, an-ived in Galesburg at 7:05 p.m. Mo.nday and pulled out al 8:20 a.m. ·Tuesday. Storm Buff els Southland . ' LONDON -An 18-year-old American girl arrested at Heathrow airport. may have been the courier for a band or Arab gunmen being sent to !Andon· to kill prominent Jews, police sootces said. A Chicago-to-Denver streamliner car· rying 400 passengers was delayed for more than 13 hours Monday night and Tuesday at Galesburg. Ill.. after water \Vas mistakenly poured into a diese l fuel tank. The water froze in the fuel lines in n~ar·zero weather. During the wait for two locomotive replacements from Aurora:, about 140 miles-away, the Red ~ross and Salvation , Army served hot drinks and rolls to t 20 passengers at the Galesburg depa l. Th~ .other passeh.gers remained · in Pullman cars, with the temperature hovering near zero. The sources broached the theory as Motorists_Stranded iii S1io·w at Big Bear the government ordered a maximum TIIE EXTRA STOP for an Amtrak alert at jtlrports th~out the coun!_ry tµrboliner ...Tuesday was five mile north in response to reports that more Dian of Nonna!, also in central llllnois. Tc111peratures Al ti.riv Alt>uque•qut Bl1mtrtk ,.,;~ •vfl•lo Crtk~ Clnc:lnnl!l ci.w1•no 01!111; ""'~' Oet Molnn Detro!! F1lrtMon~1 Fr1Hno 11•1-lrldi.ntPOllt Ktnws CITY l.11 Vetaf. LouhwlUt Mtmphls MUwtuk" Mln11ffpoll1 , New Yorlt • Nor Ill Plt llt' Oll:llllon!t City o~"' fttlm Sprl1191 Pl'l!ltftlphlt Pll!lburgfl Por!ltl'ld. Ort, 111.pld Cllr ·-$1. Louh sart Lt llt C11v ....... Wl1tnl1>11 • MIJll LIW P'CP SS 1• .01 n u .01 ..0.. -1.l " ' ll 10 .OJ " ' n ' '.'ID ' .OJ n " 01 -01 ,0, CJ -01 .02 " ' " . u· Jt 0-I .OS 10 -01 .. .u Jj .o ,, lj " " " ... ·1f -11 41 2f 04 ... .of 17 • .01 01 -01 .07 .. " d " )1 ,, .01 ~ ~ " ' . ' " ... " . •JI •l.S S. Calltornla A '"'~ rtMlllt 9f ltlr P.Jtt t M """"" cl,lytl~ """"'''ltll'•• •• ·~· l*IM to ''"" "'Y to ll'IOr9 tllld ' Jll.t.l!Otl.\l WIA1Kll MIVICI fOltC.Ut II 1AM 151 30,t. . .... wt,Y. '°'°""' • wt11titr ,.,...,,.. '"" "'"k•lllt In SOVtMm C1Ufoffll1. TM NllloMI Wfflllfr -S.rvlce \l id tflto lllflll l!'I lkrwntow~ Los A"'fflf• wN~lt re9(11ed 5' Tlltld1v. W~ld CU"1b 19 .. tMOuoft mlctwtta: M-WI'. nl9IU·Tlmt !t mot•ll11<t ' •re •-Pft"'<I 10 oroo ton11cr~••blr wltti ..,.. rn«<11ry f1111no 11 ,,,. l'lllcl...Oi 1n lllt lot ,ll!llt lt1 lttll'I end ro Tiit ...mt:l·20!i 111 tM nn l trNircrlrt0 • •• 30 Arab gunmen were en route to A dispatcher at Bloomington, Ill., the Bri~ traln's last schtxtuled stop as it headed e Deatla "ulz SlaUd from St. Lou;s to Chicago with 90 aboard, ~ said the train apparently fan out of FRANKLIN, Tenn. -Officials plan fuel because the engines had been left to mlerVi.W more wrtnesses-liilote tak·· 'runnlng Moilday night to leep them lng any ection concerning i trucker from· freezina . who has been 1aken into custody in In Missouri, t20 pa:;sengers aboard the deaths of two young calilomia an Amtrak "train en route from Ka~s women, City to New York were stalled for more A criminal bureau agent, said Tuesday lhan 12 hours when the Missouri Paci.fie that Cli1uzell Dortch, 35, of Grove Hill, locomotives pulling It stopped. Ala., was being he\4 without cbarge A rallrood spokffman said ~he in. the deathl of Nancy Jane. Mor:ey, locomotives ran out of fuel, appa rently Coutal Weather. · 20. •"4 . Barbara Boynton, 11 of because of ·a leak. Two switch engloes F1rr •r· Nor111wtmr1v ... ll'ld• ~ Petaluma~ were sent to rescue the train and puJJ' • # d1y. HIOl'll todtY 11'1 ""' .,. ~ tt, 1n J ff C1 I f Co.tt11 t1mPtr11vrn r-. fr«!!!! q • Th .... , •-41... to e enon ty to awa t rep ace-to St. • · ~9!' tt ... --vn;•fl -tnenr-·ename, bat not before uie ,0'1'1~;~_111!Tl9er•turn rit'lge ft.om~ BERt.lN -·Thiee aurviving. c6ildren passengers spent Several hours in W•!•r ••mper1h1r• ss. of ·qulntuplt:ll born to the wile Ol a Wlheated cars in nenr-zero we~ther . Su"1 Moon •. Tide• leaacr of the Free llemoci'atic Party i W•Dlitl•DAY' -we.re ip good,.condltlon lodl.y, tbe·famil}' steonc1 111on. t~l4 •'"· 1 t said. ~ ..,, rwurtso1o.::0t p.m 1·' · Angelika ltasch, 30, wife of Waller Frn1 111t11 J:21 1.m. 4.1 Rasch , 31, ~ deputy party floor leade'rs Flrtt low lf:S1 I.I'll. '·' I th w ···11 ff f R seconc1 l'litti 4:l' ,.111, 2.1 n e est ~ n ouse o epreaen-~1.:W •:lt •.m. ~l: ~·:~ .. ~ tallves. gave bltth Dec. 29 in the ~1artin Moor\ rlMS ll:SJ I .!!\. k ll 121.i,p . .,,_ LU\Jjer llospital. ON 111E WEST COAST, an Amtrak. train en route froril Sacramento, to Van· oouver, Wdh~. with 313 aboard 'braked to an ulischeduled stop Tuesday at Klamath Falls, Ore.. alter a freight train jumped !he tracks ahead. ..· AN AMTRALJPj).KESMAN said the pa:sSeiiR;enWere served complimentary meals for the remainder-ol the trip, but Capt. Raymond Briggs of the salva. lion Anny said the paaeni1ers• "main complaint Wn9 that no one seemed to be in authority and they were not told what happened or bow Im\& they would De atrande<I. ,,... ~ "' 1be Cbieag<>to-St. Louis turbon11,er operating on Illinois Centra Gulf tracp, was ruMlng behind schedule when 1t ground to a hall. • The Bloomington dlspa\cher said II took about two hours to reruel the tralni "'-'hlch . ariived In Chie~go ·five hours · lo\e. / For Waller Schendle, the Kilmath Falls slop 1or the Amtrak train usjng SoutMm Pacific rails w1s trouble m 1 top ol ttooble. • • ·-· - He'elQ)lalned that ho had ~n a~ another •Amtrak !rain which drilled .,..r Atider .. n, Calif., l89t Frtdar, in· jU(in( 84 penono. ' "I J!B)!l'!l!t th stme thln1 oouldn't appen Wice, so r made tr•ln reaefva.. t.lons fo return," ~hendfe told newsmen. 1be stalled pas1engers evenlually ...,. sent on their way by \J\a or ·1lr. ·- s e 0 s l ~' ~· ' ' • • VOL. 67, NO. 2, 5 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • ---· ., .• Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks , WliONE~DAY, JANUARY 2, 1974 N TEN CENTS L Park Residents ~Map -Fight for Homes By L. PETER KRIEG Of tlltl Dallr 'Ult 1111! Residents or .the three dozen bungalows still standing in the Irvine Company's Bay Shore'Trailer park in Newport beach will meet tonight to try to figure out a way to keep their homes. "We wlll go to . court to get an injunction ' If necessary," said Duval Hecht, . a . ~pokesmah for the cottage O\Vnci's. A;ll have been given notice lo deinolish their structures by Friday. Carll(ymla Won't Seek Re-election Newport. Beach COllDcilman C a r I Kymla-said today he will not w.Jk re- election to his Third District seat in April. ,The announcement leaves !he seal up for grabs. There are no. other announced candidates. Dr. Ellis Glaz.ier, president of Newport Residents United, aiid realtor Pete Bar- rett have been mentioned .as possible candidates. Kymla, 39, won his council seat four \ years ago in his first try for elective office. He is gefleral manager o( the 1 Moplton Niguel Water District. ~ • "In 1973. I accepted the positions of cbainn~p of the Orange County Water ~1anagement Agency, a countywide --.. ·-watei-mana~nt··joint-powers-·pro:--' gram. as well as a directorship represen- ting Orange County on the Metropolitan Water District or Southern California," Kymla said. '"These additional responSibilities along wilb my . management of the Moulton Niguel Water District will not pennit sufficient lime." at least for the next thre or four years. to serve the pfop!e Of Newport Beach .11 KymJa admitted that statement does leave the door open for a poSsible re-eri· try into politics sometime ln the rilture. In making bis announcement. Kymla also endorsed tbe three other incumbents on the council for rHle<:tion. "I am very pleased of the ac· compllshments this council has achieved particularly Jn the flscal affair•~ long· range management policies, the general plan and leading the county in campaign expenditures control legislation," he said. "Thtse and other accomplishments can only be achieved ·1brougb a team effort ,. of excellent city stafi and a responsible council . "For these reasons I believe any In· cumbent desiring to seek re-election should be returned by the people," ' Kymla said. I Only Vice Mayor Howard Rogers, who repre1ents District L. has decJared he . : will run again. Cow1cllinan Milan Dostal ls expected tO run again for District f . Coupdlman Ricbard1 Crout is not ex· '. l (See ~YMLA, P11e II ,. ..... ""' Sllft '""' DROPS OUT .Of RACE .. .Councilm1"' Kymlo • An Irvine Company ..spokesman said if the remaining 36 structures aren 't · do\vn by UUs weekend, the company,. \Vii i go to court to ask for eviction notices . Owners of the bungalows that have been declared ill egal and safety hazards are hoping to negotiate an ·extension . of time, but City Attorney Dennis 01Neil said Ure city is not about to .back off its order. About 10 of lhc bungalows in the park, at 112 West Coast Highway on the shore of Upper Newport Bay, have already been torn down. - But the rest of the tenants, several of them pensioners, aren't going lo move out· without a fight, said l:J.year Bay Shore resident Hal Foreman. "We're just going 10 sit tight~" Foreman said. - The Irvine Company gave notice to the bungaJow owners that they must demolish their own struclures in mid· • October, saying the company had no choice but to evict the residents because of -pressure from the Newport Beach Building Department. City building officiars say that the bungalows are illegal -there can be no permanent structures in trailer courts, according to state law -and that the structures don't Come close to meeting building codes anyway. Residents of the park argue that they've been living there, some cf them • more than 2Q years, and don't think it'_. right for the city Jo suddenly decide they should have to go. ''I just can 't understand it,'' Foreman said . "If they u•ere about to develop the property, that's fine." \\'e'd have no objections to moving out. "But the city just got together with the Irvine Company and 1nade a deal to get rid or us.·· he said. The citywide crackdown on all trailer parks began nearly two years ago v.1hen • • air 1e Ill ~ ., . , . • . . •• ........ '"" -ii,' 11 I •. ;;_;-.>·-' Wind atad Waves at lettg:.'r 'Phis is what west Newport Harbor jetty l~oked-like from Corona del· Mar Tuesday as ·winds from the west sent the sea surging against rip rap. Gusts up to 40 miles per hour got the Ne"' Year off to a whls· .. ~.,·. ~ !Ung .start, but cay~~ major c!am.',e. County Harbor ,Dop~ryment ~ersonnel respopded ~ reports_of ... .,..1 boats beln¥ blown ·1!)008 from tbelj-mooring•< F'w aall<>rs ·-.ntuted out of the. illarbdt. " • Hunt Relecised California Ocean She'lf 10 ·A.~watf Bi d.·'-, 1---6-p~n f o. r Oil Drillin_g ___ _ LEWISBURG. Pa. i AP) -Wa- tergate conspirator E. Hoy,•ard Hunt "-'3S released from a federal prison farm today pending an ap- peal filed in Washington. Hunt. 54, was sentenced Nov. 9 to serve 21,2.a yean in prison. He pleaded guilt)'. last January to six counts of conspi.racy, burglary and wiretapping in connection with the June 17, 1972 break in at the Democratic national head- quarters in the Watergate building. . A federal appeals· court in Washington· Friday ordered that Hunt-and a second Watergate defcndilnt , Bernard L. Barker or Miami, be released until the court acts on their appeals. Mayor To Seek Reconsideration Of Downzoning Mayor Donald A. MclMis said today he intends to press for reconsideration or the Coastal Commission's decision to enforce de facto downzoning in most older parts of Newport Beach. Mcinnis said he was "bothered" because the commlssion "apparently" had decide4 to BP.Ply lh.e equivalent of R-1.5 Zoning alon"g the coast without consulting the cities involved. But the mayor stopped st)ort of saying the city should oppose the new stanfards. "All I'm saying Is that the people who will be aflecl<cLby. the dcc!slon • ought to have a · chance to discuwit," ?.1clnnis said. Mcinnis. said he will ask the city council to support a ·request to the coastal commission that the doWJUOning Issue lie reopened bclore a full-n.dged , ~blic _hearing. • • Melvin Carpenter, ex"lve director of the commission, annowtcMclast month fii• sta!! has begun applyilig a new set Of . develOpment standards for an properties In developed ateas '!'lthln l,OOI! miles ol shore. . · WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Interior Department today opened 7.7 million acres of Califomia'§ ocean shell, some of it just off Los Ani;eles, to possible oil and gas exploration. The department's original proposals u1ere to offer leases only in areas outside the string of islands off the coast and up to 110 miles offshore. But the fuel shorta ge brought a decision last week to expand the area right up to the three-mile limit of state-controlled waters. The ·possibility of oil and gas wells so cloSe to shore in the heretofore well- free Santa Monica Bay and its recreation beaches and homes was expected to generate strong opPQ!ition ' f r o m conservation, environmental and recreati6n groups, as ~'ell as home and property. owners along the coast. Opponents were expected to cite the 1969 welt blow~ut in the Sai:ita Barbara Channel to the north that caused '-extensive fouling of beaches and wildlife by the resulting oil spill. No new drilling has been perniitted in the Sarl.ta Barbara Cht\Mel since, then, although production has continued from e~ting wells without anOlher major spill.' There already are some oil wens within the three-mile liro.iloff Long Beach. The Interior ·~partment is s u c d a call for oil and gas companies to nominate tracts off the Southern California coast for fuc1usion in an oil and gas lease sale tentatively scheduled for lhe spring of 1975. One official said the department would have to conduct an enviromental impact study, C011slder other facton and hold public hearings before deciding which, if any, tracts in the area wouid be included ia the lease sale. When proposed in 1971, the possilile leasing area was all to the seaward side of the islands of San Miguel, Santa Rosa, Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, San Nicolas and San Clemente, which range from '20 to more than " 50 miles off (See DRIUJNG Page ZI Police Dog Hurt In Line of Dut)· ATHERTON I UPI) -A poli'° dog which mistook an officer for a prowler and plunged 120 feet ·from a rooftop is expected to be released from an animal hospital in a day or two. "He's pretty sore mw," Atherton Police Cltief Greg; Smith said o( the dog, named Nando. Nando was chasing a scent Sunday when a policeman jumped onto the roof front a ure department ladder. The dog mistook the officer's scent for that of the burglar and ran across the roof and off the edge. The dog's fall was broken by an overhang 60 feet down. His injuries con- sisted of a broken jaw and three broken teeth. Newport Officer's Trip Bu1npy . . Newpo .. ch Polke Officer Mark Johnstoo's first assignment' ol lbe new year WQ.J tO take 1 female 'primer to the county jail, 20 miles away. . -. -' -HE GOT ABOUT a quarter the way there when be pulled up to a stop light ln <:oata Mesa and was rear-ended by a car. ~al police were catled1 lb and Johl\Ston waited with his pfisoner while afl'-actident re~rt was filled out...- Starting out again, Jo11Jlstop,pulled"bp to another stop llgh( in Santa Ana. '"'°-'e standards, which were 1 upheld by ·the oommisslon in~ sc'-'fral '.specific . cases. are the equivalent of R·l.5 zoning, according to 1:1•WJ>Ol'l Beach omclals~ ' - The guidelines _allow new 'UQll! In . duplex districts to have a noor area A car was in front of him and another was tn back of him . The car in ltont ac· cldentally backed into Johnston's vehicle, sandwiching him in betw~n the two. SANTA AN~ POLICE wtre called in and JohnStonwaitcd With hisprlsoncr or one-and-one-ha!! limes the bulldahle. .area of the Jot. IQ all areas except \See DOwNroNE Pop' II • '. ' . ,. ' ----. while officers filied out another report. • P" Johnston started out again. finally reaching the county jall lwo hOurs ,arter he had begun. The trip normally takes t~ <ninut... • ··-------- Moscone Becon1es · FirsLCJmdidate .. To Abandon Race SACRAMENTO fUPll -Sen. George holoscone of San Francisco.. bas decided to pull out' of the race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination because of a lack of money , it was lea med today. Moscone, who recently completed a statewide tour of California to sample Voter sefitirtlent, became the · first casualty in a ·field of seven announced and potential major contenders for the Democratic nomination. ,Moscone , was not available Io r comment, but it was reliably "reported that he made known his decision not to seek the nomination in a letter to suworters. .J<>IJn Jervis, press assistant lo the libefal lawmaker. refused to conflnn Ot" dehy that ~foscone was bowing out, bu( Said a "major announCement" would be rnade Tbtirsday. He said Moscone, who sho"·ed fourth among gubernatorial contenders in a recent public opinion poll of California Demcx:rats, planned ne~·s conferences Thursday in Sacramento and San Francisco along with a possible meeting with newsmen ln Los Angeles. , • Sources said in the "era or \\1atergate',. ~1oscone couldn't raise enough money to conduct a viable primary election campaign.· Moscone, who_ called for th e impeacluuent of President Nixo11 and was a leading foe of t~ death penalty in cauforf!ia , established campaign offices In Long Beach, Los Angeles, Sacramento and Orange County. He told UPI in a recent interview that a primary campaign, budiei of about Sl.2 million would ''let you do lhe k1nd of things you want to do." He said raising •fnoney at · a time when califomians... were. concerned about (See MOSCONE, Page Z) Chamber Will Elect Officers Thursd.!ly The Corona del Mar Chainbe• .or Com- merce will meet ·Thursday t() elect~ or- llcer..-!or 1974. . The 9fllcers will 'be chosen ·from seven -11ewiy-el!ttM board memiiF• ancf eight ' holdover directors. , The new directors are Johrl ·T. Bofd, David Delaney, William Kull , Hal Pinchln. Mrs. T. .Dtinc'an ' "Jerry1' Stewart. Joe Wolbers and Bob Zweber-. - Other directors are Bob Aston, Bruce Olson, Paul Pt1cCara . Grant HoWald, Dick llllllatd. Mary Pike McLaughlln, Don Wood and Clyde Zulch. a residttH or Sandy's Deluxe Trailer Park appeared before -city coun cilmen and told a starlliflg story about living coodilions in that park. \.•:hich is ou·ned by the State of California. The ·state had purchased it as right~f­ Wt.V far the• nov.··defunct Pacific Coast Freeu•ay . Bay Shore Trailer Park . too. u'as in the right~f-way and it was the forn1er lessee of that pork , Nev,oport Beach tSee BUNGALO"'S, Page 21 Meditatio11 Rites End Tragically By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM Dtilty ,llOf Stiff ·Religious meditation atop a coastal cliff l:ligh on the Hawaiian Island of· h-1aui has-ended -iii" deith-ror tu·o·Newport Beach people who walked off the edge \Vbile holding hands and praying along with t't\'O other persons. The. victims lay Sc.altered at the base ()f the· sheer bluff for a full ~ay apd night before one of the survivors' cries. for bell> were heard by a surfer offshore . • Killed in the accident Y.1hich oCcurred Saturday were Peter Whitehea'd, 29, who Jived on the_· U:laqd Sor the past Jf : months and GhrJsllne M'. BartaJone, . %2, Whose pare"ts live in t~ Eastbluft area of Newport Beach. . Whitehead \Vas the son of Newport Beach real estate man and former screen writer Peter Whitehead . .The survivors are 1'1ercy Dumaine, 20, and David Cook, also 20, both or whom are reportedly from ·the Orange Coast area . Police in Maui said today ttiey did not have home addresses fOr Miss Dumaine and Cook, both of whom are in good conditton at Maui Memor ial Hospital in Wailuku. -The fouT bad reportedl y been living in a cave on the picturesque island and went out on the high cliff to meditate Saturday morning in . a prelude to tragedy. · "What we have is that t h e y were walking around holding hands and praying with their eyes closed ,'' said DeteCtive Capt. Richard Haake, of the Maui Police Department. He said the group tumbled down the sheer. cliff which ranges from 150 to 300 feet. One of · them apparently went over the edge, dragging the rest along. "I don 't think there is any criminal involvement .'' he added . "We don 't know which one 6ut one of the survivors started calling for help. I think they were out there for about 24 hours." A .surfer beard the victim calling for hel p, C8pt. Haake said. found them and called authorities to begin the rescue operations. "Apparently death was a I most (See PLUNGE, P11e ZI . Oruge C.ut • Weather Those cool .winds will decrease Thursday. being replaced by cloud~ skies. according to weather fore. caster Pat Rolve. Highs at the beaches are expected around 56 rising slightly lo 62 inland. Ch·&· night lows J0.45. INSIDE TODAY Oll io State Univers ity got re· venge for o 1973 Rose Bowl de· feat witk a resounding 42--21 victory over use in the '74 foot- ball cfo.ssic Tue!day. For de· tails of the game a11d. other bowl tilts, see sport.s, pages 17·18. , Al Y."tw 5tl¥kt l IHlllll It L M ... ~f r C1liloml1 f Carttr C...lltf l 1 CMtMfltrf M·4' C.n1t11 • Cr"-f • O..ltl Nelktl " IEfUWltl PHI . ' lllt.i1tifll'Mlll t4-1t f'llMnct 1t-t1 ,,, Ill• •et.,. , ' M-.CIH 21 .t.11111 "'"*" :I - --,. MlllHll ' t .,. Mnln ,..,, "'"tv.i " ,......, l t Nllilllll ..... f o''"" c-t, 11 1•1¥11 Ptrffl' It s.-.. ,, .•• Dr. lttlMr.lllt 11 Shell ~rt.tb •TI , ... "..... .. Tlltlttr. -.U WMlllW , 4 ·:=·~.:."" t,~ • • ,. _;l DAILY Pll~T__ ~ Wtdntsd.1:1, Januar1 2. 1q74 Gola•• lle igh.t s , Israelis • • Syrians, Clash lll Desert By lbe Associated Jlress Syrian and Israeli forces clashed Iv.ice today in the Golan Heig hts \\•Hh machine guns and artillery, a Syrian 1nilitary commwiique reported. At tile sa me lime, Egrpt and Israel said loclay in Geneva they reached "an important stage" in negotiations on scpar· attng their annies at the Suei Canal front. "An important stage has been reached in the discussions v.•it h both sides continu· ing their exchange or V~\\'S," a brief statement said after generals from both countries met for two hours and 50 min- utts. The next meeting v.·as set for Friday afternoon. City Miss es Deadline on General Plan By JOHN ZALLEN Of rtie O•llf Pll•t Sl•lf Nev.1>0rt Beach has (ailed to meet the Jan. I slate deadline for adopting a required part of its new general plan. City Attorney Dt>nnis o·Neil conceded today that any citizen ~ishing to file suit against the city for failure to romply y,•ith the law might have the suit accepted in court. However, O'Ne il added that before any suit oould come to trial the city probably would be able to complete work on the general plan and thus no longer · be in violation of the law. The city to date has completed v.·ork on the land use, open space. recreation, and residential growth elements of the general plan, which are four of the five legally required parts. The fifth required element, that dealing with conservation of natural resources, was approved by the city planning commission on Nov. 29. It is due to come before Bie city council Jan. 14. "Naturally we are concerned that Y.'e haven't completed everything by Jan. I," said Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis. "But we felt it wouJd be betfer to take the time to consider matters carefully rather than panic i n t o accepting something quickly for the sake of.a deadline." Richard Hogan , director of community development, added that "v.·e began work on the g~ral pJan two years befQre it was required by state law. "The reason y,•e're s!lll no! finished is I.hat we had a great deal of citizen input, which has taken lime. "But we're certainly n'ot sorry that we took extra ti~ to listen to what the citizens had to say, because th e lresult of the extr.a public hearings is a plan that everyone shpuld now be able to accept." Hogan said. Hogan said there is also a question \'>'hether Nev.'JlOrt Beach, which is a charter city under the California constitution. must comply w i t h requirements or th e state Legislature. ~vhich sometime! affect only general law cities. Hogan also pointed out that the city is still officially without a housing element of the general pla·n. even thou~ "for some time we have been required to have one." Hogan said th.is was the result of an oversight, which the city is 00\V in the process of correcting. Arr es ted in Mw·der C011PTON (UP!l -Police arrested McGulla l\f. Lim brick. 18, Tuesday on suspicion of murder after he allegedly shot to death another teenager during an argument involving a girl. Vince R. Rose. 19, v.·as found dead on the front la\\·n of a home, He was shot in hi s chest. • OIANG! COAST N DAILY PILOT Tht.Or1nge Cotil DA1LV PILOl , .. 1111 "h•cll 11 comDin..:I lh1 Ntws.Prni. h PllOl!"'td Dy '"-Or•ng• to.11 Pullll1111ng co"""nv. Stpt. ••It .Olllom t r• PVDll1lltd, MOtlll1y lh~ll l'rlO•y, !Or COii• M•11. N"'l'Ot•I le1c11, Hunli"9!0~ l1KhlF•11n1t!11 V611ey, Litgun1 IHth. lrvlnt/S&ddltllfel •ncl Stn Cltm1nte1 San Ju1n C•Plt!r1no A 1lngl1 fe!l"ln.i l<l•hon It ~~111.hllll $t1urd41y1 •l'ICI Sur<11y1. 1111 ~·lnc·~I P<ilillllllflt pl1nl It II ll(I Wtsl ••r j1<1t1. CO•!• Mn1, C•lll9rn1t, tlUI. Rob.rt N. w,,J Prt•iil•nt tnd l"UDll.,_.r J1c~ R. Curl•Y V•tt "'""'"'' l l'ICI G9Mf1I M•M•tr T~ol'lt• K•tvil l!OtlOt lhol'\11 A. Murphi11• M,iMQl"IJ IE•ilw L P1t1r ICri•f N9?f*1 It.Ch (ily l•ltw New,.,, lt«ll Office lJJ) N•wp•rt Joul1v1rd M 1lllflf Mdr•n: P.O. 10 1 1171, fl46J ...... °""" C .. 11 MIH: U0 Wt1! l•Y $1!ttt • UlllM ltltfl! U2 flll!'HI A....wt ' Hlll)tlll;ti.i lffUI: mu IHdl • .., ..... ,.. SM! ci.r-tw1 lOS M1lrttl El C..rnlM llHI , • .,.... 1714) '42-4JJ1 Cl•lftM A'"""'t.,4 '42·1111 (ff~Pl•hl, ltl), Drll'tltt C.0.U l"ulllllfllflt COl!llNftf. No """""' •lorlti, lllutlr•I'-• ... ltol'l•I _ti... " ...._,llHfMlll• htrtlfl _, M f#IWIOClll "!!Nut 1otC.l<ll· ..,_ mi.•loo! " CllOWPltihl •-r. StcWMI e'-,.., ... Nld ti (Ollf Mftt, C•!lftl'flill. illtlM~-. lw <lrrltP U 4f lllfftl'lllWJ • Mell U.lt '"""'fllYJ mll11•'!'T .,.,1,.,.,...., •.M ll*lltl!Y. Egyptian. Jsracli and United Nations ofOcials refused to give further details according to an earlier agreement to keep t he troop di sengagement talks Sl'Cret. hl another development, Is r a c I i Delense l\1inister Moshe Dayan will con- fer with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in Wasjllngton on Friday. the \Vest em White House announced today. In a brief announcement at San Clemente, a presidential spokesman sakl Dayao and Kissinger wouJd consult •·on the Geneva talks with emphasis on the su bject of disengagement of forces." Officials said with Israeli elections completed, Israel can play a more active GOLDA MEIR COALITION ALLY BALKING. Story, Page 4. role in the negotiations to end the quarter century of l\1iddle East tension. The Kissinger-Dayan session vtas agreed to when the U.S. official was in Israel on DeC. 17, a White llouse spokesman said. He said it v.·as not contemplated that Dayan also would see President Nixon, who is continuing a working vacation at his Californ ia home. In the Golan Heights fig hting, one Israeli soldier was shot and several engineering vehicles were destroyed. the Syrian communique said. The Syrians <Claimed to have suffered no losses in the clashes on the northern and central sectors. · In -ure first el'icouf11C1', lhe Syrians said, they fired mach ine guns, forced withdrawal of an Israeli patrol and bil one soldier. The communique, broadcast by Damascus radio, said in the second clash the Syrian artillery thwarted an lsraeli attempt to consolidate defense positions in the ctntral sector and destroyed some n~gineering vehicles. There was no immediate Israeli com· ment on the clash. .(/ 'From Pqe l DOWNZONE • • • ' Balboa Island, Newport Beach bas been ;permitting a floor area of two times the buildable lot area. 1'-tclnnis said he felt the cily had an obligation to clear up the discrepancy between _the two "standaz:ds-a and that it ought to begin discussions with the coastal commission in order to do so. Newport Beach spent several months last year discussing a proPosal to dO\\'TlZorie older parts or the city to R·l.5, and ultimately rejected the idea after a serie•· of tflmulluous public hearings. " "In reality, wti&t the c o ast a I commission is talking about Is stricter than the idea we rejected,'' pointed out Richard Hogan, Newport Beach community development director. ''Our 1.5 zoning would have required <lnly one off.street parking ·space per unit. But the new Coastal Connnission "ersion of R-l.5 requires tv.·o spaces per unit." Hogan said. l\1clnnis and Hogan agreed that the impact of the coastal commission decision is not ye t understood by many people. "There~y,·as no notice given, and those fy,•ho didn't read about it in the paper might "ery v.·ell not have heard," said Hogan. "This is unfortunate, because it means that people have no way or expressing any opposition they might have ," Hogan said. F ro111 Pqe l KY MLA .. , pected lo seek a second term in District 6. Kymla also praised both J\1ayor and Donald l\'lclnnis and City J\.1anager IWbert L. Wynn. 1\nd he said be will be av ailable if ~ailed upon to serve on any special city comm ittees. 'A Ble11l119' Ul'I Ttlt,n.T• President Chiang Kai-shek has called for a better internation- al awareness that a stronger Taiwan is a "blessi~g to the free world." .a...-=...-----~----. -· • •.' • . " . Oldest Living Tlai119? • • U,I TIMl!tlt Nixon Tax Inquiry . UnderWa WASH!NY._TON (I.Pl -The ln'·:"111l Revenue · Sen'ice said today It Is re-ex· amining President Nixon's Income tax returns for the past several yean. The IRS said representatives of Pres!· dent Ni•on art cooperating Mly In the probe and aulhoriud disclosure o! the action. The IRS did not say what years would be covered by the review. But there has been controversy over t h e President's ·returns for 1970, 1971 and 1m. . The' President paid total taxes for these three years of less than (8,000. An IRS spok€sman said in answer to a question that tho tax ageney could recover past taxes due for .all three of those years, but that the statute or limitations v1ould have erpired for ta1es due from previous years. Prof. Chow Hui·yen of Taiwan stands beside what he claims is the oldest living thing in the world, a Formosan Sun tree. Chow discovered the tree in a forest 30 miles southwest of Taipei Ia st November and claims it's ·Over 6,000 years old, much older than the General Sherman Tree in Califoinia. The IRS did not disclose the reason for its probe. The agency said it arranged to ti· change information on the President's Not a Ring You.th Has 6-liou.r Bou.t Witli Wrencli A teen-aged boy and the Newpoi:t Beach Fire Department are both much happier today , follOWing his New Year's adventure with a wrench. Jim Hawley, 15, of 2024 Leeward Lane, stuck his tinier into the round-ended wrench in the maooer you would slip on a ring, only the wrench did not come off. Friends worked four hours trying to get it off, then. finally called the Fire Department, but the Fire Departmnet probably wishes they hadn't. Firemen worked for another two hours before they freed young Hawley's finger . But by that time.. il was swollen ·half again the1size of his other index ringer. Inspettor Art :l\forton said the rescue report filed by the firemen involved these tools : From Pagel PLUNGE •.. instantaneous," the detective remarked in the case or Whitehead and J\.1iss Bartalone. He said the victims suffered multiple fractures, head injuries and abrasions in the fall from the cliff on the "'·est side of the island, in the Lahaina District. ''They were dead when our officers got there." said Capt. Haake. J\'lemorial services are tentatively scheduled for both \Vhilchead and ti.1iss Bartalone but the lime has no,t been -set yet by the families . Whitehead, 1Wb0se parents live at 1542 Serenade Terrace, Corona de! Mar, v.·ill be cremated and have his ashes scat- tered at sea off the island or l\1aui as he always wished. says his father. "Our daughter will be buried on Maui " said J\1rs. Monique Bartalooe. ' "We're planning a memorial service." she .added, pointing out. it would be for local friends. \Vhitehead had become a devotee of yoga on a pilgrimage to India and fai!h fully followed its disciplines. Hawaii authorities said all four victims of the fall were not employ ed but \\'hitehead had been a third mate on "essels in the U.S. 1\-Ierchant t.farine. Investigators said their questioning of tf.e survivors of the bizarre cliff plunge sbOYled it happened between 9 and 10 -A hacksaw. _.. A pair of bolt ~utters. -Soap. -A pair of slip-jaw pliers. -Cooking oil. -Two different screw.drivers. -Lubricant liquid. -A nat file . -A chisel. -Ice cubes to reduce the s~·elling. -A metal vise. to squeeze it. "His finger v.·as pretty swollen," said Inspector l\1orton, adding that a telephone call to a doctor at Hoag l\1emorial j{ospital even failed to do much gooc1. The physician told firemen he couldn't do much about the swelling wifh the wrench still on the victim's finger, so they just kept v.·orking. From ·Page l DRILLING • • • the coast. But the proposa l v.·as expanded to include areas abutting the three-mile limit from north or Los Angeles to as far south as Laguna Beach. This would include the San Pedro )Channel and the areas to· the coastal side of Santa Catalina Island, the only inhabited island off that part of California. One official said the decision was made as part or the department's efforts to speed and expedite its offshore oil and gas leasing program because .}f the energy crisis. • Interior officials said most of the 7.7 million acres lie in v.·aters more than 1.500 feet deep -no\v about the Jim.it for drilling with plisent technology - with some depths extending to 6 000 feet in -undersea. troughs. However, ibe'y said oil companies are expected to improve technology to pennit drilling in most of the deeper areas. a.m. on Saturday. " -Frorn Pqe l tax returns with the congressional Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax· ation. which agreed, at Nllon'a request, to review the chief u:ecutive's tu BUNGALOWS returns for the years since he entered , , the \Vhite House in 1969. • __ _---'I'he--F-resident's -attorneys .....,... ha Ye residenl J\·larshall Duffield, \\'ho Jed the estimated Ni1on could owe as much fight to kill the freeway as $267 ,000 in back taxes if the deduc· . · tfons claimed are disalloY,.ed. The Irvine Company refused to renew On Dee. 8 Nixon released a mass Duffield's lease after the crackdown of personal imancal data and allowed began. newsmen to nspect hls income tu rttunil Newport Beach Building Director Bob ·1or the )'tars. 1969 through 1m.. . Fowler said the city has not issued The matenal showed that Nixon paid an operatipg pennit for Bay Shore a total . or $78,651 in federal income Traller Park for_l974, and .Will not 'taxes for the four years, the bulk of issue one until the cottages are it in 1969. demolished. The .breakdovm by year : $72.682 In He said about ·half of the 10 other 1969: $792 In 1970; $878 in 1971 , and · parks in the city still have not received $4.298 in 1972. their permits, either, but he said the The main reason for the small tax improvements. made t.o all of them w.ill ' pajment during the ~ast yean was a enable the city to issue the pernuts controversial deduction Nixon took for in ~e ~ar. future. . . . . donating his ~ice presidential pa~rs O Ned said !Us dec1s1on ~t 19 negotiate· to the government. for an e1tens1on of the Clty Jlrder came Some critics claim Nixon failed to after consultation with Cily Manager fulfill the Jega1 requirementa: for making Robert ~· Wynn . . the donation before a provision allowing He ~aid he has spoken with John such deductions expired. Brodenck, attorney fo.r t!!' cottage Nixon himseU asked the joint m~ ~wnen: but has told him . that there mittee to review the $500,000 in deduc-- 1s nothing I ~an come , up with to allow lions he took for donating the vice th~ ~stay in there. . presidential papers. I! 1s an illegal use and there IS Nixon also asked the commllteti to nothing we can .do but requlr:e them decide whether he was right in not to vac~!e 1 or . br1~g the buildings up declaring a taxable gain on the sale to code, O Ne~! said . . of some property in San Clemente in Hechl said i!, I h ~ ~· ""llln'!"' If 1970 ~Id firm In tfS pds~!On, their atarmey Ni.xon said he paid no taxes op the will try to gel ~ court order to stop deal because he was told at the time th~f"1 from enf?rc1ng the la~.. .. that he made no prolit. But 1 later What ~y ~tend. to do J:: unprope~. audit of the chief executive's f1nance1, Hecht said. .W.e will do eve~h.1ng ordered by Nlxon himself, coocluded :.,~ .. can to en101n them from evictmg that he had a $117,370 profit ,on the transaction. Killer Suri:enders SEOUL CUP!) -A drunken Souih Korean military policeman .turned himself in to authorities todaf, ending a 23-hour rampa'ge during which he kited tv.·o men Jn a tea ·house, seized four hostages and held army and police squads at bay with a carbine. Police- said S. Sgt. Cho Hyo Sun surrendered after ai:my Lt. Col. Lee Kang Kav and one -of Cho's sisters entered le btea house Jn Taegu, 180 miles southeast of Seoul and seiz,ed his weapons. The comimittee agreed to review Nii · on's finances, but said it would not limit itself to the two areas be men- tioned. t-;ixon has said he would. abide by the committee's finding , even if he owed back taxes. The Internal Revenue Service can 1 re-examine a ta1payer's return from MY year, but can only force mllecUon o( greater laies for the past three years, dating from the April 15 due date of a return. -Under these rules, the IRS could seek pa)'ttlent of taxes for any year back to and includlng.1970. ·11 • .. Detective Capt. Haake said it would . ~ ... -........ >.:.'-""~~~~ he impossible for passing motorists lo OP!H 538 CENTER STREET-COST A MESA have seen the victims lying whei:.e they t te 1 646-1919 CLOMI IUNDAT' fell, despite the fact traffic in tbe area is fairly busy. He said the location is a favored surfing and swimming area. From Pqe J MOSCONE. • • \Vatergate and the energy crisis "is f.. not an easy thing." ~ fro ~1oscone. first elected to !he Senate •· in 1966 and elected Democratic miljority leader two years later. told UPI last week that "I cannot be expected to _get much in the way of corporate contributions." He said he had been recelving-'~maller amounts but from larger numbers or people. .. My job is to keep running and stimulate the kind of financial support that I'm comfortable with,." be said at the time. "I'm going to keep paying attention 10 my job as senator, majodty leader and •do my traveling at nights and on week~nds." . Sources Indicated that Moscone, who received widespread attention la.st year in erroru to increase ald grants roe the aged, blind and disabled, would seek rcclection to !he .se,iate. • He 8150 is the chief author of a controversial new anti-<0nfllct of Interest law whlch requires public officials to dlsclOSt financial ..... u . --· ~· -- HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS • TENNIS ANYONE? Long SI-• Nock ~CRYLIC SWEATERS Acrylic & Nylon WARM UP SUITS-2lH 10 3481 Wll1ot1 • Penn • Dvlop TENNIS BALLS - MIN'S . TENNIS SHOES . an.9" 16" -18"· U.DllS' TENNIS SHOES au. 910 1°6"· 18" TENNIS DRESSES • Min. l lloys TENNIS . • ·SHORTS ~ ... • Mon' lloy1 TENNIS SHIRTS and ·SOX • wn .... D••••· lanerelt, °"'""'· Y~1111tl . TENlllS _. , RACKETS .. ---~ ----r--~- • • ( ' r . ' . , .. • .... ' . ' . . -Today's Flpal ' N.Y. Stocks . . VOL. 67, NO. 2, 5. SECTl9NS, 5~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1974 c TEN CENTS 1'elly Dan~ing Okayed • Mesa Class W 011't Conflict Witli 'Natal Cleft' Ban C.Osta Mesa city officials apparently have decided that mysterious and undefined "natal cleft" they outlawed ii) their anU·nudity ordinance in 1973 is not an ·umbillcus. outlaw is unclear with officiai guesses on the nature of_ the natal cleft ranging from buttocks to belly buttons. Medical dictionarlcs do not define the term . Costa ·Mesa o(ficials later admitted it "crept into" their ordin:ince as it was copied from another ordinance. Fairgfounds. The fee is $15. Miss Berg is a professional Arabian danCer who has appeared in Las Vegas , in USO shows. children's hospitals and the "1oulin Rouge . She stresses authentic styles of belly dancing and prefers the Egyptian dance method which is done to a slow beat and involves hand movements as well • • le ID • . . e Meditatio11 . Rites End Tragically By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 tllt Dllll't Pltot Stefl Religious meditation atop a coastal cliff high on lhe Hay;aiian Island of ~Iaui has ended in death ror t't\'O Newport Di~play or the navel will be allowed with the full consent of the Department ol Leisure Services which is the sponsor of a class on the ancient and honorable art,..of-belly--dancing,.... Topless and bottomless dancing were the taraet of-the anti..nudily ordinance. It outlawed display of a variety of anatomlcaJ parts including t h e controversial •·natal cleft.'' The belly dance class, to be taught by Mary Berg, is for intermediate and advanced students -in -the Arabian and Polfnesian arts. -•as uSO-of-cymbaJs.-Polynesian -danclng--. is included in her instruction because # -Beach-people who walked-off-the-edge - while holding hands and praying along wilh two other persons. . Just \\'hat city officials wanted 10 EOYP.T Coiro • z 0 20 .... Registrations will be taken on a flf'st come basis from 6 to 8 p.m. Jan. 10 and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Jan. 12 in the commooity Recreation Center near the west gate or the Orange County OCCUPIED avtatltAl:L SIN A I UPI Ntwt1"111 EGYPT REFUSING TO WITHDRAW S.l,IEZ CANAL TROOPS Dem1nd1 l1.r1el Pull Out of E9ypti1n Territory lsrael4 Syrian Troops Clash in Golan Hf},jghts • • 'I ' ' By the As!!OClated Pren ltissinger in ·w(!lhington on Friday, the $}'Tian and Israeli forces clashed twice \\7estern White House announced today. today in the G<ilan Heights with machine In a brief announcement at san guns and artillery, a Syrian military Clemente, a presidential ~pokesman said communique reported. Dayan and Kissinger would consult "on At the same time, Egypt and Israel the Geneva talks with emphasis on the said today In Geneva they reached "an subject of disengagement of forces .'.' important stage" in negotiations on separ· Officials said with Israeli elections ating their armies at the Suez canal completed, Israel can play a more active ~~ important stage has been reached GOLDA MEIR COALITION AL~ Y in the discussions with both sides continu· BACKING. Story, P1ge 4. ing their exchange of views," a brief role in the negotiations to end the quarter statement said after generals from both century of ~1.iddle East tension . countries met for two hours and SO min-The Kissinger.Dayan session was utes. agreed to when the U.S. official "''as The nexl meeting was set for Friday jn Israel on Dec. 17, a White House afternoon. spokesman said. He said it was not Egyptian, Israeli and United Natioos contemplated that Dayan a1so would see officials refused to give further details President Nixon, who Is continuing a according to an earlier agreement to working vacation at his California borne. keep t b e troop disengagement talks In the Golan Heights fighting, one ~nret~ther development, I s r a e 1 i Israeli soldier was shot and several Pefense Minister. MOshe Dayan wiU con· engineering vehicles were destroyed, the fer with 5ecretary of State Henry A. Syrian communique said. The Syrians 6 claimed to have suffered no tosses in the clashes on the northern and central • sectors. In the first encounter 1 the Syrians said, they fired machine guns, forced (See MIDEAST, Page 11 it emphasizes the gracefuJness-and poise important to belly dancers. Further infonnation about the eight- week -course -is-..available from the Department of Leisure Services, 556-5300 . Sauna T1·ial Figure Asked For 'Pill' By TOM BARLEY Of tllt Dlil't Pilot lltff ~1aria Parson's personal physician today testified in Orange County Superior Court. that' be prescribed birth control pills for her f<ir Jh• .. firSt lijne IJI ~er Ille afttt she tolj\'~ of "lirellitlb!e impulses" to seei aesual re18.Uoos with atrangera. ,, Dr. Hale E. Dougherty of Anal)eim · _ ended,,Jbie t~ m.t in the P~o trial by. tesfifff!lg lhat the symptoms immediately followed i1rs. Parson's alleged entrapment on March 2, 1970, in the sauna room of the Holiday ltealth Spa, Orange. ~1rs. Parson, 491 of Anaheim, wants $1 m._iJlion in damages from the health spa fQr.. Ute trauma allegedly created by her ordeal in the 17o-degree sauna ·room. . • · Dr. Dougherty told the jury in Judge William Murray's courtroom today that he noticed "a marked change" in ~1rs. Par300's personality when he examined her Jess than 24 hours after her experience in the sauna -room. A1rs. Pai-son claims she was trapped in the stearh room for 25 minutes longer than her usual five-minute exposure and thpt she collapsed when the sliding door of the room failed to open. Her cl~m that the door was defective B.nd corroded has been supported by a number of fellow patrons who also testified that health spa personnel were never within shouting ·distance on such occasions. Dr. Dougherty testified that further eXamination of Mrs. Parson led him to prescribe psychiatric lreatment for what be described as her depression, lisUessness and neurotic teodencies. He told plaintiff's attorney, Marvin Lewis Sr., that he has examined ~1rs. Parson within the last IO days after more than three years of treatment by a number of psychiatrists and could detect no change in her condition. Dr. Doughtery agreed with Lewis that before the alleged sauna room incident, ~1rs. Parson was a healthy, happy woman who rarely had reason to seek his services. Lewis claims that ?\1rs. Parson became three women after her ordeal : sex· -hungry Maria who spught men in local bars, remorseful Betty who bitterly regretted 'Marla's escapades and fhe submerged true sell of Mrs. Parson. Mrs. Parson's children have testified that their mother adopted a ~·zombi~ (See SAUNA, Page Z) Councilman's Dr11g Store Hit In-$?00 Btu·glary Enterprising burglars took advantage or a qulet New Year's Day by. lowering thelNOlvea through the skylight of Pink's C:O.ta Me11 Pharmacy with a rope and ;tl•alinl PllO wwth of phenobarbital and. pills from 4na\SI and City Coun· cllnWI Alvin l'lnkl•Y· -A~~ident Pron~? '"Ibey were obviously hunUng for lill'<OUcs but I don't keep that many lle'r<," laid Pinkley, ~ropo:ietor ol the store at !Ill> Newport Blvd. · "They took oome phenobarblfal which are· half brothers to seConal, reds and . other downers. A few other drugs ,are 1 •ope too. Some of my drawers 'seem !Wangely einpQt." ... Police are ilricertain eltactly When the' turslary took 'J)lad but believe It wns accomplished at night. The burglars left Oielr flashlight and rope behind. ' • Ne ·wport Officer's Trip Bu,mpy Newport Beach Police 'Officer 'Mark Johnlltm'• flrsi assiszunent of the ·new year was to take • fetriale priaoner to•the COUnty Jail, 20 mllel away. HE GOT ABOUT .a quarter the way there when he pulled up to a stop light In Costa Mesa and was rear-ended by a c•m Lo<:al police were called in and JohnstOA waited with his prisoner, wliile 8riace:laent report was filled out. · Starting out again, Johnston puUed up to another s).op light in Santa Ana. A c~r was in front of him and another was ln back oL him. The car in front ac.' eidental!Y bnckli<l lnto Johnston's vehicle, aandwtchln8 him ln'befween the two. ,_ SANTA ANA POUCE ~ eaUe<l In and .r.;hnaton waited with liis prisoner whllc officer& filled out another report. • -• Johnston started .out again, flnally "'aching the county jail two hours alter he had begun. Tbt trip norn\ally takes 15 minutes. • .. , . -. -·-_ ___,__ --v " • . .. ~·-­. • • · i _ . '0.Hw '4itt Stiff P' ' WORKMEN LAY SEWER CINE ON COSTA·MESA'S VICTORIA STREET .. Project is Reason YOu Can't Get Th.re From Here f9_r·_1 WhlJ• ~ -~ • Work on Victoria Street Will Continue for Month . . . Moto~ls ·using Victoria Street lo reach the western sectioo of CO.sta Mesa will be inconvenienced another month as excavatiOn · for a neW sewer main continues. " - The $40,000 construction _proj ect .by the Costa Mesa Sanitaey District involves an I .800 foot stretch bet\•:ecn Harbor Boulevard and l\1.iner Street. Traffic!' now is detoured along Wilson ' Street except for resid'ents living in ' ' the construction area. .. JE:$Se Green, . rngjneer: !or .th~ citr .• cit· Costa M,_~. said one Jane of traffic is being kept -.,~Pen to .accommOdate local motor~ts .. \Vork .on the project began in mid- ,.December. The nCw JG-Inch line is being ·laid because the old sewer main is inadequate, according to Green . California ·ocean Shelf Operi for Oil Drilling WASHINGTON <YPll -The interior Department today opene<I 7.7 _million acres Qf California's ocean shelf, some o(· it ·.just· otr:I.os Angeles, to pc)ssible oil '2nd gas exploration. The department's original proposals were to offer leases only in areas outside the string of islands off the coast and up to 110 miles offshore. But the fuel shortage brought a edecision last week to expand the area right up to the three--mile limit of state-controlled waters. The possibility of oil and gas v.·f;ll s so close lo shore in the heretofore well- free Santa ~·lonica Bay and its recreation beaches and homes was expected to generate strong opposition fr o.m conservation, environm e nt a I and recn!ation groups. as well as ho1ne and property owners along the coast. Opponents were expected to ·Cite the 19$9 well blow~ut iu the Santa Barbara Channel to the north lh?rt cau~ extensive fouling ·of beaches ina wildlife by ~ resulting oil spill. No n<w drilling has been permitted in !be Santa .. Barbara Channel slnae then, although productlon has continued from existing welG withmjl another major spill. . · · There already are som e oil wells wlthih 1he three-mile ltrnlt olf<LOng ll<ach: - T'Ae·· Inlerklr Department i s 9 u e d ·\ caU --for 011 and gas companies lo oomlnate traell oft the Southcrit c.Jl£omta coast for Inclusion in an oll and gu Tease sale tentatively schcdult<I ror..lhe spring ott975, . · .. -- • -' • One official said the department would have to conduct an enviromen,tal inipact study, conskler olher factors and 'hold public heaHngs before dectding which, il any, traCts In the area would be included in the lease sale. . When propased in 1971, the possible reaslng area was all to 'the-seaward 4idc of the islands of San Miguel, santa ''Rosa , Santa Cruz. Santa Barbara, San Nicolas and San Clemente, which range " (See DRILLING Page Z) " Police Dog Hurt In Line of Dut)· ATHERTON IUPll -A police dog \\'hiCh "*look an offiett for a prowler and plunged 120 feet fron1 _a rooftop is ex~ted to be released from · an animal hospital in a day or two. "He's, pretty sore now,'' Atherton Poll'ce ·Chief Greg Sinitli said of the dog, earned Nando. Nando was Chasing a sCent Sunday when a policeman jumped onto the roof Crom a· fire department ladder. The dog mistook the offlcer's scent for that of the burglar ·antt 'ran ac·l'OMI the-roof and olr the edge. The # dog 1s fall WM broken by an O\'erhang 60 jeet down. tlis Injuries coo·, sisted of a broken jaw and three broken lt>Ct~. 1 • The victims lay scattered at the base of the sheer bluff for a full day and night before one of the survivors' cri~<s for help were heard by a surfer offshore. Killed in the accident \\1hich occurred Saturday were Peter Whitehead, 29, y.oho lived on the island for the past 18 months and Christine M. Bartalone, 22, whose parents live in the East~luff area of Newport Beach. Whitehead was the son of Newport · Beach real estate man and former screen writer Peter Whitehead . The survivors are f\.1ercy Dumaine, , 20, and David Cook, a159 20. both of "'horn are reportedly from the Orange Coast area. Police in ?.1aui said today they did not ha\'e home addresses for ~1iss Dumaine and Cook, both of whom are in good condition at Maui ~1emorial Hospital in Wailuku. The four had reportedly been liv:lng in a cave on the picturesque i3land and went out on the high cUrl to meditate 'Saturday morning lit a prelude to trilgedy. "Whl:lt we have is that they "'·ere lvalting arouad holding hands and praying wfth thei'r eyes closa:I," -said Detective Capt. Richard Haake, of the MaUl:'Pollce Department. He said the group tumbled down the sheer cli ff which ranges from 150 to 300 feet. One of them apparently went over the edge. dragging the rest along. ''I don't think there is any criminal iri:volvement," be added. "We don't know which one but one of the surVivors started calling for help. . l lbink they were out there for about 24 hours." • · A surfer heard the victim calling for help, Capt. Haake said, found them and called authorities to begin the rescue operations. "Apparently death was a I m o s t instantaneous," the detective remarked in . the case of Whitehead and Miss: Bartalone. ' He said the victims su!fered multiple ' fractures, head injuries and abrasions in the fall from the cliff on the west side of the island, in the Lahaina Dis!rict. "They were dead \\'hen our officers got lhere ,"-said Capt. Haake. hfemorial services_are te ntatively scheduled for both Whitehead and l\Iis~ Bartalone but the time has not been set yet by the families. Whitehead, whose parents li ve at 1542 Serenade Terrace, Corona del Mar, \Viii be cremated and have his ashes scat. tered at sea off the island of Maui as he alwa)'s wisQ__ed, says his father. "Our daughter ~·ill be buried an h1aui '" said Afrs. Monique Bartalone. ' "\\re're planning a memc.rial service,'' . (See PLUNGE, Page %) Oruge • Weather Those cool winds will decrease Thursday, being replaced by cloudy skies, according to weather fore- qster Pat Rowe. .ffigbs at the beaches are expected aroWld 56 rising sLightly to 62 inland. Over- night ·loWs JMS.- L"SWE TODAY Ol1io State University got rc- ve11ge for a 1973 Ro.1e Bowl de· ]f'at wi th a r esounding 42-21 victory over use in t1i.e '74 foot- ball classic Tuesday. For . de- tails of tile gar~ and other bowl tilts, see sports , pages J1·l8. Al Yovr Strvkt .. 1 10111111 11 l . M. ltyd< 1 C1lift;ml1 J c.,..., t.rllff IJ Cltltllltll )Mt (11"fCI )t c,_..,.. )t Otani ,..tfcn 11 ••1twt.1 ""• ' e!'lltrt1h11M11! N•IJ '"'-· lt-ll '""' "" •tctrlll 11 "'""''" ,. AM~ri H M•lllltl 6 "W•lfl ~4-ZI M'tliMI """" It N1lle11tl """' 4 Ortntf c ... 111., II ,Syl'tll P'wt... It S~1 11-11 Ot. St.iite ..... I It tfKll Mtrtt9'1 ... ,, , .... ,.i.ii '4 ,......... ,..,, .... , ... , .. Wt-'I Ntwt tl411 W.,llf Ntwl 4 • _ _,-=~---'--· --- 1 I • ' • ,• . I I • , . -• f' -. ,_, l'llOT , c .- Abandoned Mo scone Tot's Mom Pulls Out TO~IG HT NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Sought Of Running 1 --negular-mttting, {'.os.ta-~1aaa iL)'------~------- CouncH Chambers. 7:30 p.m. By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL \ Of lllt 0111'1 l"lltt lf-'f UGI LECTURE -"Callfqrnin: ?\1yths and Realities," Rm. 178 llumanltfes Hnll, Utg una Beach police tOday continued 7-10 p.nl. Adrn. $5. their attempts to locate the mother TliURSDAY, JAN. 3 of a Z.year-old girl abandoned Sunday SENIOR CITI ZENS C L U B at the Community Presbyterian Church. Community Recreation Center. 12-3 p.m. A description of the girt and what UC1 LECTURE "Shamanism ~ police belieVe to be her name has been Studies in Nooo rd inary Reality." Rm. teletyped to police agencies throughou t 101 Physical Sciences Bid., 7-9:30 p.m. California. Adm . is.so. "We're hoping for some answer but Cou11cihnan To Challe11ge Funding L~w there-have been no tE!ads yet," Police Lt. J ohn Zelko said. The toddler was dropped of( j~st before services Sunday by a rJ!d-halred young -v.·oma n "-'Caring blue jeans. a denim jacket and white blouse. J She told "-'Orkers at the .church's nursery school that th! girl'.s name was "!\1ichelle." ·. When the girl's mother failed to return Robert l\:I. \\.itson~ city councilman for the child after the morning service, of Costa 1'-1esa, said today he is planning-nursery workers called police. 10 challenge the new state financial Officers suggested the girl's mother disclosure law. · may have been delayed and told nursery ··1 am going to fi ght this thing whether aides to keep the child a while longer. by suit or with legislation. I'm terribly Several hours later, the nursery workers again called police and reported upset over ii," he said. Wilson added he personally has nothing the mother still had not shown up. Oldest Living Thi•ig? Prof. Chow Hui-yen of Taiwan stands beside what he claims is the oldest livin~ thing in the world, a Formosan Sun tree. Chow discovered the tree in a ' forest 30 miles southwest of Taipei last November and claims it'& over 6,000 years old. much older than the General Sherman Tree in California. Nixon's Tax Returns Fro111 Pqe 1 DRILLING. • • SACRAMENTO (UPll -Sen. Georee Moscone of san Franct.soo hes decided to pull out or tHe race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination beca#use of a lack of money, it was learned tOday. fi.toscone , who recently completed • statewide tour o{ eanrornla to sample voter sentiment. became the first casualty in a field of seven announced and potential major contenders fQr the Democratle. nomination. ?tfoscone was not available f o r comment . but it was reliably reported that he made known his decision not to seek the nomjnation in a letter to supporters. John Jervis. press assis.tant to the liberal lawmaker. J.tfused lo confirm or deny that Moscone "'as bowing out. but sa id a "major announcement" y,·ould be made Thursday. · • He said Moscone. v.•ho showed fourth among gubernatorial contenders in a recent public opinion poll of California Democrats, planned news conferences Thursday in Sacramento and &In Francisco aJong with a possible meeting with newsmen in Los Angeles. Sources sald in the "era of Watergate" Moscone couldn't raise enough money to conduct a viable primary electioo campaign. ' f\loscone, who called for th e impeachment of President Nixon and to hide but tha t he feels the law is Police cared for the abandoned child · of · H id h at the station then trans rted her to -a fr m 20 to more than so ---~ ~:;-~;k~°':o~ ; ~:~~g-;.i;;,-~ty At~·--",h'-e~S~it'--to"'n~H"o"'m_Je~foc~d,,epe=nd"'•"'n"t ch~ll~dr'-•• -'.'--f'oming tln er e -c=r=u~tr.:i~n:;:;;-:;y;-~~i~i!'"""co-"a;;: -miles oll Y.'as a leading foe of the death penalty in California. established campaign o!Hces in ·Long_ Beach . Los Angeles, L- Sacramenfu-and Or8.nge COunty.--- torney Roy E. June to have the con· Aides at Sitton Home today declined '-' U But the propasal was expanded to troversial law explained a~ to find to release any informaUon on the girl. include areas abutting the three-mile a way to nullify it LL Zelko said the young girl appeared ._ _ 1 The law requires public officials, healthy and had not suffered neglect WASHINGTON (AP) -The ln'·:nal mes for the four years, the bulk of Hmlt from north of Los Nigees to · as far south as Laguna Beach. whether apPointed or elected, to make a or abuse. Revenue Service said today it is re-ex· it in 1969. This ,vould include the San Pedro full disclosure of their assets, interest:i Zelko said teletypes sent out late Sun· amining President Nlion's income tax The breakdown by yea r: $72.682 in }Channel and the areas to the coastal and debts at the time of taking office. day were directed to all city poUce, returns for the past several years_. 1969: $792 in 1970; $878 in 1971, and side of Santa Catalina Island, the only ' Wilson said it is ridiculous to have county sheri{f's departments and other The IRS said representatives of Presi· $4,298 in 1972_ inhabited island off that part of to expose financial Information to the law enforcement agencies within the California. bl. .. t I ht t I te dent '"-·n a-~ratm· g fully In the The main reason for "e small tax pu JC 1o11a one mg no even revea sta . . ftLW '" ... ,,....,.... "'1 One official said the decision "'as to member:i of the family . He speculat~ that the lack of response probe and aU\horized disclosure of the payment during the last years was a made as part of the department's efforts Assuming that the law remains un· to the teletype messages could be due action. (Related story, Pagel.) controver.Slal deduclioi:i Nixon took for to speed and expedite its offshore oil changed, it would be applied this April to the New Year'1 holiday. The ms did not say what years would donating his vice presidential papers arnf gas Jeiiing program because .Ji when voters fill two vacancies on the "But we're still keeping our fingers the energy crisis. city council. crossed," U . Zelko said. be covered by the review. But there to the government. Interior officials said moet or the 7.7 'lbe disclosures would have to be made If the mother does not return to claim has been .controversy over t h e Some critics claim NilGD failed lo million acres lie in waters more than either by. the incumbents. ~1ayor Jack the child, A1icheJle faces a long stay President's relurns for 1970, 1971 and fulfill the legal requirements for .making 1,500 feet deep -now about the limit Hammett or Vice P.1ayor Willard Jordan. as a waif at the dependent children's 1972. the donation before a provision allowing for drilling with present technology - or the candidates who take over their home. The Presiderit paid totaL taxes for such deductions expired. 'Nith some depths extending to 6,000 seats. Nixon himself asked the joint. com· feet in undersea troughs. Ho\\.·ever, they From Pagel PLU NGE ... she added, pointing out it would be for local friends. Wltltehead bad become a devotee of yoga on a pllgrlma~ lo India and faithfully followed its disciplines. Hawaii authorities said all four victims of the fall were not einployed but Whitehead had been a third mate on vessels in the U.S. Merchan t f\.1arine. Investigators said their questioning of the survivors o{ the bizarre cliff plunge showed it happened between 9 and 10 a.m. on Saturday. Detecti ve Capt. Haake said it would be im possible for passing motorists to have sl'en the victin1s lying where they fell. despite 1he facl tra ffi c in the area is fairly busy. He said the loc ation is a favored surfing and sv.1imming area. Optimists Slate Skills Con tes t The Costa ~fesa Optimists Club is sponsoring a basketball skills contest starting at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Bo ys' Club of the Harbor. Area Upper Bay Branch, 2131 Tustin Ave., C.Osta Mesa. Boys in six age groups will compe te in th ree skill areas: passing, shooting and dribbling. The ron1est is open to a·ny boy in the Jlarbor Area bct ~·een the ages of 11 and 13. DAILY PILOT Tiie Or•"" Co-sl DAil'!' l'JlOT, wlltl ..,,,lcll It COl'l'ID!nlld ,..,. N•ws·P•tH, It ~lllllM .., lf'lr O••ne• C.Otll PllllUl!llnt C..,_n,, S.C-. tt!r tdl!lon,""irt pUlllljhtd, Mor.ti•' ,,.......,.._ Fridt v, lor CG11• Meo•, NtWllClrt 81tcll, Mun!rn9!on lltachll'-Nln V•tlr(, l19UM l~f'I. l•vint/StddlrlMock ff.cl Sin ~11.._ttf Stn Ju•n Clplolf"tMt. A 1l119lc reglontl tdf!JOn ll 1111bl1'f'IH J.alw rd•l'I •NI !U!IGIVI. Tf'lt prltl<ip,il ....,b111111n9 p1•nl It •I no we11 llty $1rHt. (0!;!1 Mtst, (llltwni., tMh Uftl Ttltl'IHlll • 11 Blessh19' President Chiang Kai-shek has. called for a better internation· al awareness that a stronger Taiwan is a Hblcssin g to -the free world .. , Arso11 Suspected I11 Mesa Blaze Costa ~1esa's final fi re of the year. an arson job that caused Sl.000 damage to a boating firm~ v.·as still being in· vestigated today. The blaze at American ~tariners Industries. 194!'i Placentia Ave., was reported at just three minutes before midnight on J'liew Year's Eve. "The last fire .of the year," remarked Battalion Chief Bob Beauchamp .. He said tv.·o ~·•ilncsses saw a pajr of men fleeing the firm after their attention 1\•as attracted by the sound or breaking glass. Flames exploded within seconds. these three years of leM than $6,000. ·said oil companies are expected to An ms spokesman said in answer to mittee to review the $500,000 in deduc-improve technology to permit drilling a question that the tu agency could tions he took for donating the vtce in most of the deeper areas. t t d f U thr presidenti1l paper!: recover pas axes ue_..... or a ee .of those years, but triat the statute Nixon also asked the committet to of limitations would have expired for decide whether he was right in not taxes due from previous years. declaring a taxabl!! 'gain on the sale The IRS did not disclose the reason or some property in San Clemente in for its probe. 1970. ' Tile a1 .......... &aid it arranged to ei· Nixon said he paid no taxes on the ... .... :r deal because he was told at the time change information on the President's that he made no profit. But a later tax.. returns with the congressional Joint audit of the chief ei:ecutive's finances . Conunittee on Internal Revenue Tax· ordered by Nixon himself. concluded ation, which agreed, at Nixon's request, that he had a $117,37Pprofit on the transaction. to review the chief executive's tax The comimittee agreed to review Nix· ""returns for the years since he entered on's finances, but said i~ would not the White House in 1969. limit itseU to the two areas be men- The President's attorneys ha v e tioned . estimated Nixon could owe as much Nixon has said he would abide by the committee's finding, even if he owed as $267 ,000 in back !axes if the dedu~ back taxes. tions claimed are disallowed. The Internal Revenue Service can On Dec. 8. Nixon released a mass re-examine a taxpayer's return from of personal financal data and allowed any year, but can only force collection of greater taxes for the past three newsmen to nspect his income.tax returns years, dating from the April 15 due for the years 1969 through 1972. date of a return. ·The material showed Q'iat Nixon paid Under th~se rules, the IRS could seek a total of $78,651 in federal income pa)'rnent of taxes for any year back From Page I MIDEAST ... "'ilhdra\\.'al of an Israeli patrol and hit one soldier. to and includlng 1970. The communique, broadcast by Damascus radio. said in the second clash the Syrian artillery thy,·arted an Jsraeli auempt to consolidate defense positions in the central sector and destroyed some neginee ring vehicles. There was no immediate Israeli com-'\ ment on the clash. 1J ~:!~:~~~~ D:!~ and ~ suicide were apparently· re.!p008ible for ~; the gunshot deaths Tuesday . Of two brothers in a mobile home near here, t.assen County sheriff's deputies say. ~ Hunt Released I. FromPqel SA UN A ... ' ' like.. attitude ' to• ur. after tl{e 1adna incident and that her depression only lifted when she went out aJone for visits to rie~rby bars. On those occasions , they testified. she would wear tight low cut bloll'ies, shorl skirts, heavy makeup and · a bouffant style for her red hair. . Se\•eral of her seven children have testined that belore March 2, 1970, she was a devout Catholic who frequently attended church and "'ho devoted much of her time to Catholic you.th. PT A and Boy Scout activities. P ol ice Probe Death EL MONTE CAP) -Police here say they are seeking to detennine a motive for Tuesdaf 's slaying of a 20-year-old airman on leave !ram \'andenberg Air Force Base. Lone SlHvo.N..:k ACRYLIC SWEATERS Acrylic & Nylon He. told UPI in a recent interview that a primary campaign budget of about $1.2 million would "let you do the kind of things you want to do." He said raising money at a time when Californians were concerned about \Vatergate and the energy crisis "is not an easy thing." Moscone. first elected to the Senate in 19fi6 and elected Democratic majority leader '"'0 years later, told UPI last week that "I cannot be expected to get much io the way of corporate contributions.'' He said he had been receiving 11smaller amounts but from larger numbers of people." \ U 1iio1i Officials · Study Sztpport Of Food Strike •. ' LOS ANGELES (AP I -AFL-CIO offic- ial s v.·ere to decide today v.•hether to sup- port a labor coalition that has struck ma~ jor suPcnn8rkct chains in C81if0rnia .since Dec. 3. , · Sigmund A-ry"·iti, executive secretary or the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor. sa id over the weekend he y,·ill ask all member unions to support the striking unions "by an y means within the law," He said Jhe unionists decide today. • 1'.lean"·hile, negotiators attempting to end the four -"·eek strike -lockout met throughout Tuesday, without any ap- parent success on framing a new l'OO· tract. - Spokesmen for both sides said the y expected the talks to continue through tile night.. The striking labor coalition · represents some 25,000 members of the meatcutter.!I operating engineers, machlnim and Teamsters unions. • TENNIS DRESSES •Mon & Boyt • Rob1rt N. W1H l'rft.:ltn! tnO Plrblltn.r J1c• R. Cwrl1y Ye t "r".:I"! tnlJ GflltrtLMln•~ Tho1111t Kt1Yil ElllM Tht11111 A. Mwrphlf'lt M•"•G1"1f E1llltf The fire ~·as the 2.42lst n1n for the Cos ta ~tesa f'ire ,Department lhis year. ·Youth Injured Iii Mes a Cra sli, To Aivait Bid LEWISBURG. Pa . (AP) -Wa-, WARM UP SUITS 2196 10 341& TEHNIS ' SHORTS Ch•rl11 H. Looi ~ic'-•"' '· Htll ""16i.nt M•11911lnl Ell•• c .......... OM&. JlO W•tt l•v StT1tf M1ili11t Addttu1'P.o.1 •• t&•O, •2•26 OtMt Offk" .- ,..,..,,.,., •11C111 Ull "--' lotui.ttff ~ •tte11~ m '"""' "-H!rll!•lnt'°" •11c:f'I; 11111 aHd'I l°"""'t"' S111 Ci.n-N: :IOS Ntttfl 11:1 C.l"'lnt lt"I , ........ (7141 .642-4J21 C,_.,... A4'MliJ.t '41·1~7· Cep~r~1. lfn. °''"'' c .. ii "'*111111..,. (tm119n~. Nt ""'" ,_,let. illwtlt•U•, • tdltwi.1 "''"« er ....,,rll._,. 11tratJ1 _, 111 r9P1'ol\lcM wl!lloltl tPttltl ,_, '"l1tlti'I If «fi't"ltfll -· ~ cl•" ,..leM N~ ti CMtl MIU, C.11,.,.,,1•.-. ~-llf wrrllr •·" ll'ltflllll~1 .., flllt ll U.IJ -11\1'1'1 fl>llltlltT ... tkMli.r.t u.u -"'"'· , ( A Santa Ana tee nager got the new year off to a bad start Tue!day· when he crashed his car into a Costa Mesa JX!Wer pole, bringing down hot wire.s tha t set his vehicle op fire. .. .James P. Herrick, 17, of 20319 Lange Drive, was In satisfa ctory condition At lloag ~1emorial Hospital today, where ht: is under treatment for head injuries and lacerations. Accidcnl in.vcsli~ators sa)d tho youth "'as d'riving southbound on Santa Ana Avenue just south of 17th Street Tuesday night when his car hit the pole. ' t.ergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt was released from a federal prison farm-today pending an a~ peal Died in Washington. Hunt, 54, was sentenced Nov. t to serve 214-4 years in prison. He pleaded guilty last January to six.. cowits of conspiracy, burglary arld. wiretapping in connection with the June 17, tm break ln at the Democratic ·national head· quarters In the Watergate bulldlng. A federal appeals . court In Wuhlngton Friday ordertd lhat · Hunt and a second Watergai. " defendant, Bernard L. Barker of Miami , bt released until the court 1ct1 on their appeals. - HOODED SWEAT SillRTS · - wn ... • Pot1n • Dulop TENNIS BALLS _L - MIN'S TENNIS SHOES ,895 • 9" 16" -18'5• • U.DIU ' TENNIS ·· SHOES an. 9 10 1695 • 1895 ' • Mon & loy• TENNIS SHIRTS and SOX e Wil-, D1vl1, a.ncroft, G1rcl1, Yoney•m• TENNIS · RACKETS I .~ '