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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot.... ' • • ore ' I ' • .ID ' • • an eh an ODD ears of Dell~ - Guilty • ID Murder :l:_old _by IJnsband At · D~t 'Springs Of Sanna Vieti•n . DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * VOL. ,,, NO • ._ 4 SECTIONS, J6 rAGIS 1ne •• New Action Lit1ked to ~atergate ' Work Crisis U1ien1ployme1it Rate 011 l1icrease WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate moved up from 4.7 percent to 4.9 percent of the work force in December marking the second consecutive monthJy increase since the begin- ning of the energy crisis, the government reported today. 4 ----.,. By JOHN ZAILER OI .... Dilly l"ilot Sl11t --+--·--The increase a ar;ntl{] was due to the general slowdown of the economy bu ana ys or tie Bureau orLal:X>l"'Statlsttc-s-sa1d'""the . Harlan Shank surfaces from !rigid depths of Rock River in Rock- ford. Ill. He and lour others braved lO·below weather to go water skiing Jan. I. More RU:in, Wind Seen A Newport Beach source disclosed Thursday that the U.S. Department of Justice has subpoenaed records from the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach that m1:1-y shed light on the \Vatergate affair. The source also confirmed reports by Vnited Press International in Washington th at investigators from the Senate \Valer-gate Committee-have scour.¢ reco rds oC the Newport luxury hotel. -The highly reliable source indicatOO he has first·hand knowledge of the sub- poenas. Management of the Newporter Inn; however, declined either to confirm or deny reports of the subpoenas. · "We believe we have an obli gation to respect the privacy of our guests," said a spokesman for the hotel. , The investigation appeared to center on the hotel's guest list and billing accounts, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. Duriµg the 1972 presidential campaign, White House officials -including At· For Southland S t da presidential counselor John Dean -have Y tomey General John l\fitchell and a u r been reliably reported to have stayed at the Newporter. · In addition,' sworn testimon y before By STEVE MITCHELL cokl, moist unstable air ove r · the the Senate Watergate ·Committee ha s indicated that Watergate-related activity, especially during the So-called coverup phase, took place at the Newporter. 01 "" 01111 ,.11 .. 11 .. 11 • Southland. Shivering Orange Coast residents can Weather service specialist Dick Stitt prepare for more of the same Salurday, says the stationary weather front is according to weather forecasters ln Los pa~king wind gusts of up to 30 k!K>ts Angeles. . along the. Pt;lnge ·~st and 62 knot A low pressure system located 200 gusts: in' thF Newball ·area. - miles ,off the Southern caur~rnia coost . • SmaJI craft: advisories are expected is stubbornly holding on to its present ·to remain in effect througtt the weekend. position, sending out waves ·or extremely "11\e low pressure system Is just KU11iapers Pose ---- Tlireat to Santa 11 sitting ouL thm, at the present Um~. · and it looks like it plans to stay 1n the same position at least through Satu r- day morning ," Stitt reported. "By the -time-the' storm leaves-it..--5hould-have dilmped 11earty an inch of rain in the soUtbem cautomia al'ea.'' hi! said. The inV-estigatlon by the Watergate Committee st~ and the special pros-- ecutor's office of the Justice Depart· ment 8ppeared to be an attempt to corroborate that testimony. according (See INN PROBE; Page%) 2· Meri Blirid, -----u---Rob Co ector FOUND GUil TY OF MURDER Ranch Hand Slatton . Ranch Employe -Guilty in ··neath At Hot Spr!ngs Ranch hand Robert Carl "\\'hip" Slat- ton was found guihy of first degree ., murder la te Thursday in Orange County superior Court. . The jury added the ne\V "use of a ffrearm11 rider to its murder verdict and added the same Penal Code pro- vision .when it found Slatton, 41, guilty of assault with a deadly weapon last July 10 at the.Qrtega Hot Springs. If the verdict and the Penal Code provision survive defense attorney Daye Shinn's planned appeal it will mean that It will be at least 10 years before. Slatton can apply for parole. It took the jury five hours of actual deliberation to determine that Slatton act~wjth malice aforethoug!it" when he shot and killed trespasser l>erntts- Ra y Glahn, 21, oL La Mirada. YT. '1110MAS. Ky. (AP) -Santa·nap- pers who snatched a plastic version of P..tr. Claus from a front yard here last week sent a meS8age, "ll no ransom , Santa'.s ear will be cut off." The threat came Thursday in i Jetter to the Fred Otto Jr. family, whose Jlfe-sizcd Santa was splrited away Sun· ~ afe l'bod the storm will mo~e into. Nevada before Saturday afternoon, but the NaUonaI Weather Service today issued mountain snow warnings and call4 • ed 19.t_!ind and rainy skies over the Loa AngeJesDiib\through Saturday • ..___. SACRAMENTO (UPI) :-A Sac· ramento coin collector was blinlt· ed with an acid soiution and h i s wire beaten when two men robbed him of-181000.Jn· rartH."Oins,--poUce -• -' Judge Robert L. Corfman accepted both verdicts, called tor a probation report on the Starr Ranch employe and ordered Slatton returned to h i s courtroom Jan. 23 for sentencing. "Do J have-to....ai ·here.. ·and take. this?" Slatton audibly asked ShiM as bailiffs prepared to lead him back to the county jail. day night. · ' The threat apparently was based on the recent Rome kidnaping of John Paul Getty 111, grandson of the billiona1re tnd\lstrlalisl' ?oung"Getty'> ear was cul off before he was released for ransom. nie Santa·nappeni are believed. to 1"' four young boys. 1be weather ter1lce uki successive cold fronts' will keep Sautbern California in an icy grip th"rough the rest of the week, with. temperatures near freez4 ing In l(fne inland areas, but with warmer "'8ther dUtt again by SWKlay afternoon. · · Highs in the Orange Ctiast area are expected IO remain . tn the upper 40s (See s:rc>RM, Pa1e I) ' ..=.::::::::·-:::::;:-~~·~~·--:--~~-. • report. William T. ·Juchnik, S4, and his wir_e, Hid_eko, were returning home from their coin shop when the robbery occurred. Police uld the men threw 1 caustic IOlution in Juchnik11 face. ~ liquid was believed to have .. ~id base. . ' .. ·-. --. And he again audibly •dded as Judge C.Orfman glowered in his direction: "l'v~ already been locked up in the jail !of 'i1x 'tnmths for something I didn't do." . Mrs. Dorothy carroU , Slatton's com- mon law wife, broke down and sobbed !See CONVICTED, P.a1e ll • ------ lacked comp ete information to determine the effect of the fuel shortage on the jobless rate. Administration officials said previously the impact would be felt in December and even more sharply ·during the first three monlhs of 1974. According to the report, the number of people out of work in- creased by 17,000 last month to a total of 4.4 million. This followed an increase of 200,000 in Nov ember. · President Nixon's chief economic adviser, Herbert Stein, bas forecast a jobless rate reaching about 6 percent later this year. '3 Years of Hell' Sauna Victim's Mate Tells of Infidelities B>• TOM BARLEY 01 ltl• Dtllly l"Uot Sl•ff Henry "'Bud" Parson broke doi,rn and ,,·ept on the \\'itne ss stand la te Thursday as he recounted for an Orange County Superior Court jury his many vain at- tempts to prevent his wife rrom seeking sexual relationships \Yil h other men . Le\\'is claims that l\frs. Parson became three \Yomen after that ordeal: scx- hungry 1'1aria \\•ho satisfied her ex- tSee SAUNA, Page %) Parson, regarded by Maria Parson's lav;yer as a key wit ness in. the ~l million lawsuit against the Holi day Health Spa of-Orange, said he struck his wife on one occasion before he realized that she \vas not responsible for her actions. Parson, 49, testified b e f o r e Judge \Villiam }4urray called a three-day brea :.: in the trial that ~ pS"""'~t .. jrt -•• him aware or his wife's mt1ltlple personality condition. "You say you've had more than Uiree vears of hell heeau~ of-.1., • • .Orange (;oast Weather Look for continued showers and cold winds through most of Sat. urday , \Vi th a chance of clearing bv Sunday. acco-rdiflg to the weather service. The Orange Coast \von't get above 50 degrees Satur. day' and 10\vs \\'ill dip into the low '"'· INSIDE TODAY attorney 1'1Arvin Le\\'iS Sr. ("'!Jll"l'ent·~.~. ~OW--arc.. you .awe to earxy en _,1Jli_ maintain the marliage under such con-~'1ffrYCassC1tt rs the best ditions?'' known Americcui wo ma11 artist Parson looked at the jury, then at of tlie 19th Century. Slaff writer Lewis and at members or his fan1il y Condace Pearson looks at Cos- who were seated in the cro\vded satt's life and work in terms of courtroom before he quietly replied: ''I the woman's naavement i11 t.o- love my.wile and I under-stand." day's \Veeke11der. lt-ls.!&tegtd that Mrs. ears_oo's triple ~ .!... · .. 1~ • 1tc I personality condition is derived from hlltiil• ~.,. • 11 her being tra pped in the sa una room L. M. '°'" , C•llftrnl• 1 of the Orange health spa on ti.larch c11111111tt 1•.u 2 1970 COll'llCI 27 ' . ' ,,..,.-,i -,, Several patrons of the spa have 0..111 Nt111:u 1 testified thRt the sauna room door \\'8S ::=:1-'••• ,.,: defective and corroded long before ~trs. '"'' 1t1• 1t.c:fl'4I • Par90n1 491 was trapped and that health :~::.., . ~; spa personnel were never within ShoUtiag ""'"" • distance on such occasions. • . " ---..-.. -----,.--- ""'~" ,,, 21. " Mul•ll JI~ f' N•lloftlll Htwl f, lt O••n .. CtunlY I iltts!avra11tt l:J.M Sv1v11 l".,jtt t '""' ll·lt Stoc• M""ttl 1•11 Ttlt'I""' ti • Tl\Nlln U. "6, tt WNflllr 4 WfMtll't Mtwt 1). It Wtrlf P'ltwt 4, W .......... ,. .• , . .• • • -,.,.,JI • Friday, Janu11ry 41 1~7~ 'iJ.S. Fac~s 15-year Energy Drought'-Simon ' - Frt:lm Wlte Services WASJ-flNG'roN -Energy Dlre<:tor \Vifilan1 E. Simon said today the United States Is raced with an energy clroughl lasting 10 to 15 years. Nor i,•:lll the shortage be greatly eased when the Arab oll embargo is lifted, Stmon S<t!_d in on interview wllh United Press lntCl'Mtional. 1'\Ve have been a nation of energy wastrels, an d this day is over because the day of cheap energy is over," be ~aid . Ue predicted that the energy-crisis would end only when the United States developed new sources or oil and sources or power such as ~tar and geothermal power -'-'and that is 10 to 15 yea.rs jn th~ future." Meanwhile; lhe ~F~ral Energy Office decided against seeking Saturday clos- ings of gasoline stations as a way to cut fuel cons ump ton (urlher. "It is definitely out," an energy office spokesman sald Thursda y. "Saturday Ref11s11l Expected ·neadline Passes On -Nixon Tapes WASHINGTON (AP) -The deadline passed and, as expected, no truckload of While House tapes and documents was delivered today to the Senate Watergate committee. There wasn't even any word of re. Jection to the commfttee's three su~ poenas for hundreds of Items from Ute \Vhite Hou s e vaults as the 7 a.n1. PST time limit went by. They demandtd tapes of 481 pre!ident- ial conversations, and hundreds of documents including those relating to the milk fund case, the Watergate break- jn.; and cove rup and executive clemency offered to Watergate principals. One secti9n · of the subpoenas asks materials bearing on .iany relationship • between F. Donald Nixon" of Newport Beach and '44 individuals and 21 cor- porations. Donald Nixon is th e President's brother. The refusal to ComPly had been ex· peeled and the committee already has plans to accelerate a decision In U.S. District Court on an attempt to put * * * From Pagel ' INN PROBE. • • to the Newport Beach soUTCe and to UPI. UPI also reported that S e n a t e Watergate staff members had conducted interviews of Newporter: employes in an e!fort to verify testimony of former White House officiaJs. teeth into its subpoenas. Chief counsel Samuel Dash· and \Vhile House lawyer J. Fred Buzhardt met Thursday with U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica and scheduled resumption of arguments in a previous suit. That action, involving only fi ve taPes and some papers, will have a bearing on the newer and far more extensive demand for materials. According tO the plan. the committee will aritend its complaint ~Ionday and file it with the court. The While Hou se then will have 10 days to respond. Rufus Edmisten, depµt y counsel for tbe committee, said its newest subpoena will be narrowed "to tpe essential s" and that some court achon will follow. But first, he said, the original suit must be decided. The Senate Committee subpoenaed the five tape~ and documents in July , and President Nixon replied he could not comply because the materials were Private. The coinmittee went lo court seeking an order declaring its subpoena lawful .. Sirica ruled he had no jurisdiction in the case. The committee appealed. Meanwhile, Congress passed a law giv- ing tht district coort jurisdiction. The U.S. Court of Appeal then sent the case back to Sirica for decision and there the mat- ter stands until the commitee files its amendtd actioh. The latest subpoenas were served on the White House on Dec. 18 with the deadline at 7 a.m. today. From Pagel SAUNA ... However the Newport Beach source tramarital needs through males solicited -said he ·had no knowledge of-any such in bars, remorseru1-Betty V.-·ho deplored interviews. -·Marla's escapades and 'the submerged closings would just wreck recreation outlets ln the country, and it's a big · business." Simon had said a week ago t~ol the Silturda~osing move was under con· sidtrat!On. Now, he feel! the measure Is not-needed-to deal with the gasoline shortage, "'" T)le energy offic e has already askOO th e· nation's 225,000 gasoline stations to close on Sundays to cUscourage con· sumptlon. A high percentage-have com· _,,. ......... . UPI T.ieHoto Ration· Plan Oregon Gov. Tom McCall grimaces as he announces plans for statewide _gasoline rationjng. Under McCall's plan, n1otorists would purchase gas dependent upon the last digit of their license plate on a cer· t~in day of the week only. Kissinger Flies F1iendlySkies IL was lea.med a rew months ago real sell of Mrs. Parson. Of S d that Watergate investigators made a Parson .test;fied Thursday that he o~ce tewar eSSeS plied. Simon said the Sunday-<losing re- quest Will become mandatory if be gets the power from Congress. As for the government's conservation n1oves, Simon said after a ne'4'1 con· ference Thursday: "We feel we've got everything in place necessary to lick this problem." During the news conference. he and other energy officials said the respoll$e from the public on government con- servation measures hai given new hope Moves Soutla that ga*>llne rationing can be avoided. A high energy official !iSld later, however, that the Jsey lest will co1ne this month as g~Iine production Is cut. Siln'on said major oil companies agreed to encourage ~voluntary 10-gall°"'per- . customer limit on service stations sales. Company-<1wnOO stations will enforce lhal limit, he said. . He said that gasoline COMumptioo con· tll>ued lo 4e<:Ilne In Decemlier. but added the ~avlngs (ell far short of the 20 percent reduction <.'OD51dered necessary. On Feb. I, hG said, the ene.rgy offioo, will announce another gasoline price in· crease to compensate service , stations for 1helr loss of sales volwne because of the fuel shortage. By .March 1, he said, gatt01lne--prlces nationwide \YIU average 8 to 11 cenls per gallon higher than the level prevail· ing In December. The increased cost or foreign oil is a n1ajor reason for the expected rise. Snow Continues Lo11g Beach State Ma11 Sex V-{_ctim llf ~F Bay · Area The victim of what investigators describe as the seventh in a· chain ot -hon1o.scxual-mutilation-murders.haS-bccn--I identified as a 24-year-0Jd Long Beach SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The main thrust of a blus tery winter storm moved soulh today 1 but -the weather service said cold temperatures and possibie snow showers· "-'OUJd COntlnue in the itaY Afea. At least one ~r11on was "dead as a direct result of the storm . Mrs. Barbara · Knite died after a tree fell on her and buried her in snow iii the Santa Cruz Mountains Thursday. Efforts by rescue crews to iet to the scene "'ere hampered because of heavy snow on Highway 17 near Los Gatos, where more than 150 cars were stalled. About 160 students and 1 I teachers at the Valley Christian Church ·School near Saratoga were snowed in and spent the night at the school which was without power d~ue to failure. In the Qakland hills, commuters who couldn't get home· Thursday evening because of snow on the roads were given refuge in a church and then taken home by po1i<:e cars. The mercury rea.ched a low of 38 in downtown San Francisco and was in the high 20s and low 30s in many nearby areas. During the night the rain and snow stopped in the move southward and skies began to clear in Northern California. The weather sen-ice warned. however, that another storm was headed down from the Arctic and would bring , increasing clouds and a chance of more snow. Despite the cold, motorists flocked to lviount Tamalpais 'in Marin County. Rangers had ordy moderate success in keeping them off the slopes where they played in the snow. Road conditions became ~hazardous_ in the--Easr"Bilylfirit~Oaklana-police set up a taxi system for people Jiving aOOve a certain area. Residen ts were asked to park their cars at designated lots and then police drove them to their homes. Guards were posted to w~tch th~ parked auto§.. Melorologlst Clyde Holmes of the N•· tiorfal Weather Service said the snow stonn was a freak of n1ture. He said the meehanlsm thol broughl the storm from the frozen shores of ' Alaska was a rare high altitude, fast moving bubble of air called a "cold low aloft." The steady rains and gu sty winds forced postponement of Thursday·s scheduled open round of the Bing Crosby pro-am at Pebble Beach. In Sonoma County, two feet of snow closed High.,..•ay 128 between Cloverdale and Booneville. Hig~way 101 closed for a time north of Cloverdale and motorists were required to use challu. From Pgge l STORM ... today and Saturday. Overnight lows should 'dip into the low 40s. Sheriff's deputies reported snow and hail covering the 2,284-foot Castro Peak northwest of Malibu and a three-inch deep blanket of snow on toads through the Angeles Nati'onal Forest. The cold spell, which sent the mercury plunging to a low of 6 degrees in Big Bear, 17 degrees in Bakersfield, 26 degrees in El Centro, 27 degrees in Needles, 30 degrees in Jti.vendde and 28 degrees in San Bernardino. forced citrus growers to tum on smudge pots aJ!!lgth_ei:.h~atin.g_equipment_soo~ expected -and right in the midst of' a worsening fuel crisis in Southern California and the rest ol the nation. State University student. Aceord lng to San Bernardino police, the victim, Vincente Cruz ~testas, is the seventh vict im in the mutilation . murders which ave baffled police ln Orange and Los Angeles COWlties slrice December or 1972. ?i.1estas' body was found Dec. 29 in a ravine in the San Bernardino Moun· tains near stale ffigh"'ay 18. The Iden· tlflcat!on of his body was made Thursday by members o! his family. Like the previous 1nutilalion murder vicliins, the youni; n1an had been strangl· eel, sexualty muUlated and sexually assaulted . ~Iestas' hands had been eul off above the wrists and his head had been shaved. detectives said. The so-called mutilation murder chain began in December of 191i with the discovery of the body of. &!ward D. ?i.1oore in Seal Beach . He was the first to have been strangled and sexually mutilate<!. which most of the vicUn1~ have been. Since then, ther e have been lour bodies discovered in the Los Angele s llarbor area, including one which had been hack- ed inlOpiects anel put into green'"'~arb~e can bags. The bags were found throughout the harbor area and in Sunset Beach. None of the victims found in Los Angeles County have been identified. Another body was found in Seal Beach in July. The victim was Identified as Ronnie Wiebe, 21. of Fullerton. Police are still . trying to determine if_tbe____bi_cked up body__Qf an unidentified mao fowid last March in-Hlintfngfon Beach is part of the mutilation murder chain. similar inquiry into all the records of had to bring his wife back from Mexico . •----the San ClemenU:_~!l..~!!'_Jhe W,este.fo_~_a.~ter she_ sRCnt s~v~ra~ d~ys therLl:i!!l_ ___ .-LOS .. A-NGEbES-iUPI1---=-HenFY1CiS:-. - 'Wh!lelrouse wllere many of Nixon's a FullertOti st~DroKer . , . , . •• ·''BIGGEST .EVER'' • . key aides stay. They also looked for The Navy veteran also testified, und er sin.ger, rollowmg h~s ~s example, 1s names of members of <>the Howard obvious strain, that he once found his nymg on regular a1r flights these days Hughes Corp. and other possible cam-•wife kissing another man in the parking instead of private planes -but there paign contri butors on the guest list, lot of a Newport Beach resta~ant: are compcnsaUons. according to UPI. Parson ~aid he slapped his "'1fe Qn "They don't have stewardesses on Air The t ·d 1 ted · " 1 that occasion but was unable to catch , ,, .. mos w,1 e Y repo r v~1t o her date despite 3 vigorous foot race Force One , Kissinger told reporters the Newporter involved Martha Mitchell across the parking lot. at the Western White House Thur sday and her husband John who was then p 'fi d · · · · · manager of President Nixon's re-election . a.rson test1 1e '. ~s most of his, seven before boarding an Amencan Airlines camRSign. child~ hav~ tesh!t~. t~at Mrs. Parso n flight to Washington, ending a five-day Th , t di t t th today is a ~.mbie-hke creature \vho stay. "The food is better ,, too " he . ey repo r e Y were gu~ s a e watches telev1s1on all day and that she 'd ' ' ~evtporter on June 17, 1972, when the I f h h h sai · br ik . d t th De r on Y snaps out o er apal Y w en FBI and Secret Service agents prowled he~q~~rt~~~~ethe a\Vate~gate :~;I~~ sh~Thdecideshl<JSleehk out a~. elpigible mal~d· l~ro~gh the ai',l>Ort for ~n hour before . 11. h. t en s e 1g ts ·UP, arson sa1 · Ktssmger's arrival hunting for threats in as1ngon. "Sh be dt · d d ' \f tch ]] fl b k t \V h · t e CCJmes angry· e ermine an to Kissinger's safety and six carloads ,,_· .1 e 1ew a1c . 0 h_as 1~,g on, ah free and takes off in the car on her of agents surrounded his auio as he u.i) or so ater. eav1ng JS wue \lilt own No one in the v.·orld can stop · · · t!leir daughter J\·Jarty 12· his secretary h · ho . d bell was driven drrectly to the boarding . • • · • er on t se occasions an eve me LF.:e Jablonski, and a bodyguard, Steve I' tr'ed .. ra ~p .. K ve 1 • • Kissmger was also asked about reports . .nD~;,. h k h t r II ed Mr And . the Anaheim c~rpentcr fou ght he is planning to marry his longtime ,,.ring t e WCf' t a o ow . s. back his tears as the Jury \l'as shown r · d N · · k ~1Jtchell claims she ,~·as "manhandled'' be f 1 · hot h f M r1en , ancy Maginnis of New Yor . · · . a num r o co or p ograp s o rs. "I · Id ot k t n and told reporters "they st uck a needle p . wou __ n ma e any ~mmen !! . '"'' heh. d " Th ·r r h f arson, all t.aken _ ~t L1~tle Corona -Beach my personal plans " he said blushing in ... 1 1n. . e w1 e o t. e ormer by a man 1dent1f1ed 1n the courtrooin b. ' ' attorney . general also claims the as her Jover on seve ral occasions 11 it. • lclephoiie or her villa was ripped from "Is that the woman who d~ove off ~e wall while she was talking long alone from her home and whom you· distance to UJ)I reporter Helen Thomas. vainly tried .to follow so many tinies?" OIANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT ' ttM 0••"(1' .Cutt P11bll1llln0 ComP<1n"f, 5•P<I· ,,.,. "111oou ••• 1Nlll111\W, Mond•V !llro11911 • flrkl•l'· for COii• Mew, Hl'WPOrl 8Ntl'o, HllP'!llh:910n l•adl/fOllPli.1" Ytl!lt"f, La9un. lletCll, lrvl,.../SllddlMIKk •nd S.n Cle,,..,"/ S111 J11•11 (1pl1lr1110. A 111191• "tlOMI •!!loll 11 pvtilllhell S.t\Wllll" 111d S11"6•rt. f111 "'""fiP<ll M!lt1!1119 p11n1 11 11 m w .. 1 ..... .ft,..., Cott• MtM, C1lllOr11i., tlillt. Rob•rt N. w,.d Pt~I •rid Pr.lbllt.lltr /i•c.• R. c,,,1,., .. VIA ..,..,ldenl •!Id Gentr•I M~r Tlio1111t k11wll EoJllOI Tholl'.I-. A. MYrplii110 M1,...t!"11 Eflfor Clio"'""Ff, Lo:o1 ttlc.,_•-r4 .,. N1!1 Aul1!1nt .M1nt0 ..... Edlltr1 a.111 1ri1 ... : J• w..1 11v s1,..1 NfWPO't IMCll l WJ MIWPOrt toui..t~ l.""1flll e~i m ,_, Av.,,,.. H_,.ll111"""'t11t11 1 11'11 IMC.fl tou!.,.1'11 Sin (.llo'Nnttt 11111 Hotlll II C.l!llN llMI -1'9J•P•111 t7141 '41"412t CS MW ,...,...,. .. 141·16_!1· ,,.. ~...,... ....... If ....... i .. 4tJ-44JO ,_ ....... °""" '*""Y ~-.... u .. ~I, l'1&. M• c-1 flWI~ """"'"'· ... ...... • ttorl•. """'''''--.. 111Witl fM,,... ., .. """"'""""' . ...,.."' _., ... ~"" "''ll'IM .,.1111 "" mi.11tt1 .. """"""' ..,....,. Lewis asked Parson. ''lt is," Paroon said, rolling his handkerchief into a ball. "Yes, that 's the \l'Oman who calls herself Maria." Hea lth spa attorney Donald A. Ruston got in just one hour of questioning before the break Thursday but it was enough to indicate that Parson will face an intensive grilling \~:hen the trial resumes Monday. Ruston produced copies of Ohio court documents in which Parson alleged 20 years ago that his wife called him "vile and indecent names. kicked me in the privates" and threatened to ki/l herself and the two children the couple had at that · time. Parson tbld Ruston in a torrid ex· change bet ween lh!! 1.'.nryer and the \\o"itness that the statements and several others in tlie same vei n were untrue. flHH ENTERS NAVY HO SPITAL WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (J>.Minn.), • n,t e-r e d Bethesda Naval .Hospital loilay after complaining of a-stomach upset for several days. A spokesman said the former vice president entered the hospital at the ~mmendatlon or hl9 doctors and would undergo tests. • Frono Pagr l CONVICTED • • • in the front row .of the courtroom as lhe jury verdict was read. J\'lrs. Carroll \vas identified during the trial as the woman who retrieved Slat- ton 's Colt revolver from the ranch house \vhere tic sought refuge a n d threw it down a clifr. Slatton insisted from the witness stand that he was nowhere near the hot springs when Glahn was shot in the ·stomach. I-le told the jury that he was being kidnaped and threatened with castration by three young men at the time that the La Mirada man was dying from his wounds. Slatton said he recovered con-/ sciousness from repeated beating$ near the Bell Ca.!!)'on Road gate to find -flin1 self in the lronr::se&t of his owri Laild Cruiser with two or his three abductors fianklng him. The ranch hand said he grabbed the Mieel of the vehicle Milch veered off the ro8d and overturned, throwing all lout men lo the ground. j SlallOD said his nexl memory oLthe night, of July IO was that he wa1 riding a horse bareback across Starr Ran~h land with his white Stet90n hat on the J .. back of his head and his .~Uber , Coll revocyor !lung on his hip. I him a n d whinnied to him occasionally, WINTER SALE SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL· HERITAGE. HENREDON. AND MGRE ... ON SALE NOW! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WOODMARK CHAIRS AT SALE PRICES. • FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM •.• AND AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS. OREXEL-HERITA61\-HENREDON-W000MARK-KARA~tAN 7ei1.,. INTERIORS WDkDAYS & SATURDAYS t:OO to &:JO FRIDAY •ytl 9100 NEWPOR I BEACH e 1127 WESTCllFr-Dll. 6'42-2050 .LA6t1N1 BE/\CH e )45 NORTH CO,t.S1 HWY ~~<!.6&'.i ' ·1<i' r~. h1<: • '64• HAWl fl()RNf It VD I 27'1 SliCONI -.. .,........ NW 11 COIM ,.._, (111......... ...,.,,.. • ~ Clffltr ..... r!'IOl'l!M'fl ... '"'" ..,,,, ~!)'/ inltltflrf .. tlnlttlM UM ......,, Tllere was no Indication how long 11umphrey would remain Jn the hospital. ms only com.J)Mlon in a ride outlined 1 by the Ugbt or a lull moon was ·a rlder\oss' horse,whlch~s1ared close behind he leslifled. • -------------:-'---:-------------=:..... _______ _ • ( ' • ---· ., ---~---------,-_.....__, __ _ .... ___ . ' • Frld;oy, January 4, 1974 s DAILY PILOT a El Toro Ma•• I At Your Service A Sunday, Wedntaday ud Friday . feature Ol lbe Dally Pilol Got a probltm? Then write Pat Duntt. Pat will ~t red Car~away Seeks Saddlehac.k-Post- tape. get th1 , • antwer1 and action 11 o u need to ._ l 1~tve fuqu£. ies in pov- emmenl. Giid bu.sines.t. Mail !fOU T qve.t- :ions to Par Out1.n / ~t Your St•r1nctt. tJranae Coast Daily f'i/111 I' U ffo:z; J560, Costa ~fero. l..'t1 •• 92626. lncluM ~Mr tt1e11l1011e 11111nbef' llar111f11J Sleep1oear? DEAR PAT: Last year we purchased all flame-retardant sleepwear for our: ~hildren .. Thcn we were told or'a report that the pajamas contained asbestos and lbere£ore were not safe. Is this in- .. Oil 'Sutiatnits' Antaot1nced IJPI TtttPllOIO Enrl Carraway of El Toro, a fornter school adminstrator who ran in the Republican primary for Congress in 1972, · announced his candidacy for Saddleback College trustee Thursday. _Carraway, 47 , now a mortgage banker .and realfoi. lives ut 24731 Eldamar. He and his wile Patricia have t\\'O leenage children, one or whom attended Saddleback College. · A 23-year resident of Orange County, Carr~way >A·as on the Tustin Union High School board of trustees before !he uni!ication last year ~·hich formed the Irvine, Saddleback, and Tustin Unified School Districts. He said the primary issue in the campaign, for the area six seat or resigning trustee ~1 ichael Collins, is how to "get the Tustin people back in the fold ." · . -fonnatton-tru~ an·d how -iong does the flame-retardancy r c 1n a in il\ the gannents. J.11., Laglzna Beach --Secretary ol Stale Henry Kissinger meets w1lnlhe press after his news co nference at lhe \Vestern \Vhite House. Kissinger announced that President -Nixon plans-to make a personal appeal 1osome 20 - oil-producing and oil-c onsuming nations to urge a con1mon policy of price and production of oil. A .petition drive to _de_-annex Tustin from the Saddlcback College dislriCthaS -,. resulted in close to 8,000 signatures . Reside nts claim they hae too far to drive and not enough clas.5CS to choose rrom at the Mission Vi ejo two-year cam- pus. Official .Says .Pro1notion Not Linked to Nixo11 Work Gas Tn1ck Hijacked NEW YORK (AP) -The driver of a truck carrying 3.000 gallons of ~asoline was kidnaped and his truck hijacked , police reported Thursday night. Ac· cording to police. the driver. \Villiam Weber, wa s making deliveries to gasoline stations in the Sronx \''hen a man "We need to take a critical look at what's happening with these people,'! Carraway said. "One of the first things I will do if eletted is call for a complete review or the faculty, administration, and curriculum." Carra\vay has a master's degree and bachelor's degree from Cal State Long Beach· in school administration and fi- An ofHclal of the Nallonal Bareaur of Standards who helped develop the standards for flame rcsis_la.Dce says he bas never seen or heard of a1best09 being used In such products. The federal standard for child ren 's sleepwear f't>r sizes 0 to 6X requires that flame n!lan:i· ancy be erreclive through SO laund erings using a high phosphate detergent. Flame· retardant material tends to last loo1er M-ilh high phosphate detergents because of their superk>r ability to prevent the buildup of damaging calcium se.Jts. \'lrtually a.II children's sleepwea r in sizes 0 to 6X either meet the flame rttardancy standard or carry a label saying they do not. A1ost sleepwear in sir.es '1 to 14 already meets similar standards tbat have been proposed but not yet made final. WASHINGTON IAPJ - A spokesman of public buildings in the West to deputy jumped in front of the truck, forcing him to the side of the road. nance. On lhe Issue of whether trustee Alyn lleari~g Srhed11l~d DEAR PAT: I'm a fencing contractor and a friend of mine in the same line of work told me he'd heard the Contractors' State License Board is going to change our dassirication. If this is true. I'd like to find oot about it since , I haven't read anything aboot a classification change and my friend didn't know what the new classification is. for the General , Services Administration ha!! denied published repcrts suggesting that a GSA officer was advanced because of his work dealing with President Nix- on's San Clemente home. John F. Galuardi was promoted in four years from GSA regional dire<:tor Environmental Groups to Fight Coast Drilling commissioner of public buildings service 1 in Washington. D.C. He held several other GSA posts in his career up the ladder. Galuardi. a GSA employe since 1958, was transferred to Washington in December o{ 1969. Among other duties, he was placed in charge of matters involving decorations and similar space matters at San Clemente as well as those or Cabinet~officers. According to Richard Q. Vawter, GSA 's director of information, Galuardl's ad- vancement both in salary and position was completely above-board. "He is a career employe," Vawter said Thursday. "He is just a guy who's been around a hell of a long time -E.W., Fou.ntain VaJley LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -En\'iron-and he is certainly a good perfonner." No change In )'Ou r classiflcation b.as mentalists said Thursday they would Galuardi became deputy commissioner laken place but It will be proposed fight any attempt to open up 8 vast of public buildings service on July l, at a t a.m. bearing Jan. It at the 1972. He now earns $36,000 annually . RJviera HoUI and Country Cl ub, 1600 section of Pacific OCean territory off The GSA spokesman said that if N. Indian A\'e., Palm Springs. The the Southern California coast for oil Galuardi had chosen to remain in San purpose of this public hearing ls to drilling. Francisco as 1 head of public buildings determine the feaslbUlty of establishing The Interior Department announced in the West he still would, through a separate C.13 specialty classlDcation Wednesday that the first step had been normal steps in rating, have been earn- for fencing contnctors, ratber tban con-taken to open up the f.7 mlllion..acre ing $33,915 today. tlnuing under the CCI claulHcaUon now area, In acoord with a directive from According to a report publlshEid in -lded-1for-Ucemlng contrac&on -wbose President-Nixon. 111e battle.line.! began the -New York-Post, another-GSA: 10Ail.f0UR BARE RQJf FANS "'=--i~ work Is not covered by one of the forming almost immediately. employe, Richard Hathaway, said he specialty classUicaUons. In I ere' I e d "II seem> a shame that ·thi.. ad· thought his criticism of the San Clemente Our complete Spring selection of Bare Root persons may present oral or written ministration's policy seems to be that improvements_had hindered his career. T R· .. -& B h--h-• -rrl _...,, __ _ statements at the bearing. v.·e have to destroy what remains of But the GSA spokesman said Utat rees, OSeS US es ave IUSf a Ycu. · America's grandeur In order to save Hathaway had requested a tramfer io fromotfon-Dlsrontlnued~11:•-sata-;:ne..--s1ef!11l•~ns, a Iea<Ier -Phoerux·because-o~binlaughter's-healtho-5ff the-altnew-'-74-Award-winning .Roses ·plus DEAR PAT : We sent a SIS chOCk of several conservation groups and vice Vawter said that Hathaway \"Oluntarily • to Hanover House tor a vacation offer. chairman of the statewide Coastal 7.one wanted to accept a one step lower most all the favontes ... • The $1 5 was; .for registration but ac-Cooservation Commission. rating in Phoenix, the only one available <.'Ommcndations "·ere to be 100 percent She expressed concern for marine there. free with no peak season charge. Several ecology and the effect drilling platforms months later. we ~·ere notified o( would have on the esthetic appearance reservations at a motel not mentioned of the area. She said fishing grounds in the brochure and they l'.'anted $7-50 off the coast might be destroyed and per person each night for four nights added : in advance, plus a $10 depcsit. We "We are entering into a critical, asked for our money back and were worldwide protein food shortage which told to mall back the certificate, which should be considered too." \\'e did. We still don't have the $15 "The federal government has already back. given away just about everything it J.S., Newport Beacb · could." said Shirley Solomon, a represen- . llanove r llouse has re.runded your $15. tative of t he conservation group No The company no longer uses the pro-Oil Inc. ''The ocean is not theirs to motion, which included a land sales give away to the oil companies." promotJon. The Callfom la a t l o r n e y Bill Grant, Bureau of Land Manage- Just Making Tliings Worse Ow•rf & standard fruit trHs plus strawberrln, -boy:Hl'll berries. youngb•rrlts, r•spberries, asp•r•gus, rhulNrb, etc. Make your selection early while th• supply lasts. N.EW \'EARSSPE8AL:. REDWOOD SAWDU ST COMPOST ' o..ny ~Kot staff """ SEEKS TRUSTEE POST El Toro's C1rraw1y Brannon of Santa Ana, v.·ho pleaded guilty to a boo,kmaking charge, should resign, Catra\\·ay said, ''The law is clear. If he's given a felony sente nce, he'll have to leave. If he's given a 1nisde- meanor sentence, he won't." general requested Hano\'er House to stop ment administrator in charge of the using the promotion months ago because Pacific Outer Continental Shelf, said en- BRADFORD, England (UPI) - John Mills, 29, thought fast as the police patrol car was abo"t to catch up with hlm. He grabbed his girl friend's perfume and took a swig to try to conceal the ocl.or ,of alcohol on his breath. La·rge 33"x44" size bag. $4.00 value. We furnish bag. From Our HOUSE PLANT ROOM • stalt: Jaw prohibits offering a prize that vtronmental Impact studies would have can be collected ooly "POii payment-to be made and Grant said his office for goods or ser\'ices. was taking nominations from interested Paper Shortage Woea DEAR PAT: In June I sent a check to a magazine subscription service for GoOd Housekeeping for 14 months and n1y check 'A'SS cashed. Jn July I received a notice that I would soon receive the magazine. I sent a change of address and later a letter saying I >A'3nted a refund . So rar, I've received no answer or magazine. oil companies. · He estimated that it might be as long as 1 'n years before the oil oom· panics would be permitted lo bid for the drilling Site.!. But In the blood test that fol· lowed, Mills' lawyer told a court Thursday, the alcohol-base perfwne boosted· even further Ute alcohol ronlent In. Mills' blood. Mills pleaded guilly, was fined $100 and forbidden to drive for 18 months. You bag it . ' ...... . $100 $200 Start out the ·New Year with a house plant from our giant display of indoor. I plants •••. Orange Counties largest. W.O., Foun&aln Valley George Ollhoff, manager of Good llou1ekeeplng'1 customer &en1ce, &1ys Good Housekeeping, Town & Country and lloose Beaatlrul were plagued by a paper shortage at a time of unan- ticipated demand. C.rds we.re sent ID June and July telling of a delay, bat tile shortage affected the magallnes· longer than expected. Subscribers were odded to the mailing lists as magailnes became available. lie S&)'I all back order.s will be hllcd by January. You nnd others have been Informed th.It your sub~rlp!lons will start then. SporUtn.an'• Cl11b, Too DEAR PAT: I'd like lo add the American Sportsman-a Club, Inc. to the information you gave to J .S., Fountain Valley, who bad Inquired about hunting clubs In lhis area. ()Jr club has been acllV< In Southern California fo. •llllOlll two years ind ~n Colorado for more tharr seven years. We offer over ·60 unils to hunt, fish end camp In California alone and our fees are reasonable. -'N.F., Saale Ana Your club's brochure ts being milled 10 J.S. OlhtrA wishing 0ddlllooal In· formation may contact the American Sponamaa11 Club, Jnc., by writing to Norm Forrell, 1421 S. VU11ie Way1 ~Jle E., Santa Ana, Callr., mos, or paoaaug $11-1631. .. Clemente, Capistraoo Registrars Available Officials In the cliles of San Clelll"'11e and San Juan Capistruo thi.s week emphasized that voter registration tor the ·March 5 municipal elections will end Feb. 4. Registrars are available at city halls In ~ch commWlily to s.ign up new voters In ttme· for the .elections when three councilmen for each municipality will be elecled. • Cumnl figures for voter registration In eadI clly show !bat rooghly hall the tole! population ii "8Jslered 10 VOIA!. San Clemente tops the number with 1,~t eltgtblt V04en as of mld-0.C.mber. The clty'1 populalloo ..., exceecll 11,llOll pOr,ons. In San Juan; City Manager Donald, W~r said the lmheat flguJll show · a total reglstrallon of 1,173, which Is lesa thin half the -lellon figure ol 9,648 ...,ldents. , San Clemente'• City Clerk Max Berg· said tbot .since the •lectlom two years ago, rolls hav~ lncn!aaed SUbstanllally. San Clemonle Is tole! for the elecUOll! • of 1972 showed 7 ,886 eligible voters, meaning-an increase of more than 2,000 penons. Berg attributed the lion's share or the increase to the Presidential election ol 1972. The t\\·o city official.s sa.id that regiitrars a~ on duty during weekday bltSlness hours at the clvtc 'centers. . As an added opportunJty to prospective voters, regislrars are available at the San Clemente branch library during regular hours there. Any U.S. cifuen over the age of 18 and who bu lived In his precinct at least 30 daY. Is eligible io vote. ~ides being able to elect three coun· clhnen, voters in San Juao wlll be faced with three additional measures-the elictlon of a trustee In the Saddleback Community· College District, a plel>lsclte on the formatk>n or 8 local police force @cl a l5-cent·m__axim11_m tax override fot local patks. In San Clemente the ballot lte111> amount to the three c<iuncllm"ll and the college INSlte. ..... ~---.... ---·------------ -----' - We bag it ......... NEW SEED 'N START Indoor Hed starting kit, everything you need to 9row vegetables indoors. Save $1 ;00 On Three BLOOMING CALENDULAS 79c Val\'e You r Choic• of Yellow or Orange SPAGHNUM MOSS large Full Bag -~1.98 Valut , -' ., KOP·R-Oll SPRAY CONCENTRATE • House Plants 4 ~ s1 OR 29~ ea. Bonsai Pottery NOW Y2 PRICE , l'A118 Sfef' ~e4! o "" r.••·1 ':'4 collfl:tlo11 ol f;~ Po:lo Fur:iltwro. CCCOA ~ATS $4.00 •C1l11• PLl'.NT STANQS '-Sl b.D O 'l'"lce 2123 NEW!'ORT BLVD. co:;r MESA NURSi!RY 646·3925 PATIO C.42·41 03 ' • \ • , PtLOT wit la Tom arphine ......... There's No Rain Shortage SLOSHY FRIDAYS DEPT. -Out of the slate gray Orange Coast skies1 the rains fell today, sometimes in slanting streaks of wetnesa propelled bf winds of Jots of knots. January in the rain. The stUfr pooled · -and rushed on our streets. It sloshed into rubber boots of school klda, tramping up sJdewalks. It streaked the windshield or--ihe-dime stOre ritiOOn clenr-woo drove to work frowning, wonied about where her next l&;nk of gas might come from. Down it came. lt ruined President Nixon's vacation. It dampened car ·poolers, huddled and waiting on street comers for the ride to show up. It transfonnec!_ our sparkling Pacific into dull muddied waters, ·matching -the sky above. SO FOR PRESIDENTS, commuters, ribbon clerks and kids, today was the Orange Coast in the rain. It fell with equal malice for all. And as "'e sloshed along, life and our times went on too. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger held his press conference at San Clemente's Western White House. He addressed hJmself to oil and the Mideast. In those precise, articulate tones, Dr. Henry has pronounced the Arab oil em- bargo "increasingly inappropriate.'' THAT SOUNDS SO GOOD. Roll it around on your tongue. Increasingly in- appropriate ... in c re as In g ly in- .Jlppropriate. A whining complaint? An expression of hard-line negotiations to come? A veiled threat from tbe seat of govern- ment now reposing in San Clemente? Increasingly Inappropriate. Only Dr.· Henry knows. 11-feanwhile, w~ plunge off the plane of heady internationalism which prevails ~ at the southern extremity of our coastline and visi t bleary eyes upon our County Seat, up in Santa Ana, where Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers has just delivered hfs ''State of the County" address. CLEARLY, THE OUTGOING chairman or ttl! board listed many ac- complishments. Bi.It among the failures: .the frustration or not finding a happy replacement for the big jet operations of County Airport. · Ch~irman Ron tells us that sadly, the 1Jnited States Afarine Corps doesn't "'8.Dt the jets of commerce .at El Toro. Ditto the A1arines do not look happily upon contemplating a jetport at Camp Pendleton. Neither do the ~bakers and mo\·ers of San Diego County. Next stop. Ontario. Or maybe Blythe,- or Twent)nine Palms? Enough or the County Seat Look out to sea. The federals want to drill for oil. State brass then says tttis might mean offshore drilling too. Assemblyman Robert Badham speaks in Newport Beach. Chances ol coastal drilling "ex· tremely remote" he says. ROU. TIIAT ON your tongue . Ex- tremely remote. . .extremely remote. It ha s a comforting sound. And finally, \Ve have the Costa l\fesa nursery where they put out those Bunna Shave-type signs along their highway frontage. Today's message: ''These Three Things We Hope, "Will Come to Pass, "Prosperity, Health, ·'And a Tank of Gas " So it was. along ~his best of all possible coasts, Friday, in the rain. Bus Pa sse1ige r.s Get Di111e' s Worth LOS ANGELES (UPII -The dime that once didn't go very far will soon buy Jong, long bus rides in a forthcomin g daylong experiment to get people out of their cars. The Rapid Transit ~istrict reluctantly passed the minifare concept Thursda y at the insistence of city and county officials who see It helping easing the fuel shortage. The dime ride e:tperlmcnL w.ill be conducted Sunday, Jan. 20, in Los .\ngeles. Orange. \'enlura an d San Bernardino counties. Passengers will be permi!led lo go as rar on one Hne as they "'ish without further charge. DAILT Pl t OT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllttry of tht Dtilr PUot Is ;11arantetd ,.,...,.,,.,.,..._: If nu • "" It•~• ,_ ,..., ., $1)1 '-""'• <l tl .-...,..,, _<.,,, wllt h'. tr""flM .. ~ r• .. C•lt• l fl llkttl .,.Ml 7;)1 "·'"· S11V'111{ llHll S\ll!Clfl If rn .. Ml ftttlw .,..., Cl.,. ty t II.IOI, Sll11'111'1" • I l ,M. l• .... •r. <I ll 111• I llll'f will .. llf"9M " ,...,. (ltlt ire IH1t1 1111111 If 1.111. Tt ltphont\ Mlil Or11191 C .. l'tlf Attll •..•••• Ml•Ull lf~wt•I MlfflltlfttMll •••ell I.fl• Wttl,....fw ~·· •• """ ... lnl , .. , ,.._,.,., c1,it1r ... •••<It, , .. '-'" (Qlilltt-. 0-... ...... • ..... ~ ..... Ll'fllU ,,, ........ ..,..... ··-F"rlW, Ja.nuary 4, 1974 18~000 Cheer Return of Dylan . BACK FROM 19605 Bob Dylan CHICAGO (AP) -The new Bob Dylan \\'aJ grateful and fritndly; the okler Bob Dylan was hanh, mystical and somewhat obscure; the oldest Bob Dylan was rebellious. ..• · All the Bob Dylans showed up at Chicago Stadiwn 'l'bursday as the poet and singer who was the prophet fo·r the tumultuous '60s began his !irst con· cert tour in eight years be.fore a packed house of more than 18,000. --4.'..May GotLbless and keep you, may your wishes all come true, may you slay forever young," aand the 32-year-old Dylan in one of his new songs. "THERE ~IUST BE somewhere out of here, said the joker to the thief. There's too much confusion, I can't get no relief," he sang in a song from the mid 60's. "You whO" Ph11osophize disgrace, and crltlclze all fears ; take the rag away from your fact, now ain't the time for teara," he sang in tbf.I Ballad of Hallie carroU, a IK; protest IOl1( about a black maid caned to death by a rich, white Marylander. But the biggest cheer of all Crom a crowd that cllcered all night came Jn the middle of a song written in 1963 when Dylan observed:· "Even the · President of tbe United States sometimes haa to stand naked." DYLAN WAS BACKED !or most of the coocert by The Band, a group truot played behind him until becoming ooe of America's top rock groups in Its own right. And most of the concert was rock, with either The Band playing on Its own or Dylan._ playing with '!be Bancl. For five . numbers after the in- tennlsslon, Dylan changed Crom the black denim jacl<el he had betn wear"1g ln lO a white tunic. He played early Dylan, .. ooompanled only by bis '""' acoustic autar and the trademark harmonica attached IO his ne<k. He even went u ... far-back as 0 Song to Woqdy ," '~a tribute to the late songwrller and philosopher Wood Y Guthrie, Dylan'• flrat Idol whon he tnwformed hlmaelf from Robert Zlm· mennan of Hibbing, Minn. '!lie audience loved II. THE AUDIENCE reflected the Dy(an constituency. 11\eni were teen-agers there who knew him only as another rock start those in the.Ir 20!I and early 30s who see him as one ot their own; and older fans who love him for ·hl.s political views and his poetry. They even loved the Daws. All night . for example. the crowd kept yelling for one of Dylan"s biggest sellers . "Like a Rolling Stone." Dylan sang It at the end. forgot some of the words , and stlll got a standing ovalion. Earlier. he and 'The Band started another number, had the te1npo toq slow, stepped and slarted again. . Jn hls own way, Dylan maintained the privacy he has clung to during the decade he has been a public figure . Ills only spoken words came at in· tennlsslon, when he mumbled: 11Back in 'bout 15 minutes." As the crowd was filing out, promoter Bill Graham annoWlced that more scats \Vere being added for Friday night's performance and that about 500 tickets would go on sale in the morning. "rm going outside to gel in line,'' said a man in his 30s. A Jot of people sa id they wou ld join him. -•'---~ .,.::t:C!!I! 1 .. 1 .. •M"""'-'"O.·· .. -a .. •a ;..,._.....,.,,,,,~._,,. ••:· ""''""'111!""118"" ... ~ t . Nation's :t;Jig Banks Drop Prime Rate NE\Y YORK (AP) -Several 0£ the nation's biggest banks announced today they were lowering their prime lending rates from 10 to 9~ percent. The decisions followed similar moves within the past 10 days by the First National Bank or Boston and New York's Chase A1anhatlan Bank . third largest in the nation. Joining in the decrease today, among ·others, were First National City of New York, the cou ntry's second biggest bank: Bankers Tru st of New York, seventh in size, and Pittsburgh's Mellon Bank, 13th largest. T'ivo-C-ha1ices, He Kills'Se l f ROCHESTER , N.Y. (AP) While his wife and two friends looked on • .Ja~per Perry took two chances at Russian roulette. He killed himself on the sea>nd try, police said. Investigators said Perry. 54. too k the cartridges out of a .22-caliber revolver Thursday, replaced one and spun the cylinder. He then aimed the gun at his fcrehead and pulled the trigger, police said. When the weapon failed to discharge, he repeated the mo- tions and the gun fired. He died in his living room of a gunshot wound to the head. tondon Nabs -second Girl • Suspe ct Linked to Arab Arms S1nuggli1ig Inquir y LONDON (UPI) -Poli ce arrested -' a second American woman at tbt Loodon .Airport today and identified her as ''a known associate" of three other persons, one an American girl. already in deten- tion for swpected arms smuggling. Arport sources said Scotland Y a r d counterespionage agents, waiting at Heathrow Airport for three days, acted today "'hen the tall, dark-haired American woman in her early 20s ar~ rived from New York. ''A young American girl who is known aSsociate of the three people being detained at Ealing Police Station was detained when she arrived at Heathrow from Ne\V York this morning," a Scotland Yard statement said. "She is being interviewed . '1 Officials refused to amplify on the Airport authorities said the latest girl arrested was in her early 20s. They said she arrivtd aboard a Boeing 747 Jwnbo jet airliner. Customs oCficials said one of her bags was discovered to be missing when she arrived at the airport, but that her other lugg3ge was closely searched. It was not known "'helher any aml!I were found , they Said. GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS said that it may be decided today whether l\.tiss Thompson aiid two men arrcstOO 'With her should be deported-to the United States or face arn~ smuggling charges in Britain. The prime rate is the base lending rate banks charge on lonns to largest rorporate customers. If is not directly tied to consumer or small-business loans, but is a key indicator of lhe intemt and Joan situation in general. Fugitive Slain, · Holdi1i g Knife To Woma11's Neck ,.. statement. · 1\-liss Thomg.50n, and the t"-o men airest.ed "'ith her; \\'Ill be charged. \\'ith . conspiracy in relation to the possession of fireanns. police said. They "'ill ap- pear in court Saturdiiy. Money experts said the prime rate drops indicated a loosening or the na- tion's money si tuation, precipitated at least in part by recent moves by the Federal Reserve Board to ease ~'the restrictive money1 it has been following for almost a ye at. The experts noted, however, that since the prime is a base lending rate. many corporations still would be paying IO to 11 percent interest or higher for loans. Wife Beating -Suspect Jailed A Capistrano Beach man was jailed on felony ''"ife beating charges Thursday night· .after allegedly inflicting injuries that led Orange Coi.inty Sheriff's officers to rush his wife to the hospital. Deputies who booked Larry James \Villiams, 20i of 345i6 Calle Portola, Capistrano Beach. today said his wife. Connie Lynn, 17, is recovering £rom her injuries in Orange County Medical Center and is doing well. Officers said 1\-Irs. \Villiams told then1 her husband had been drinking and that a quarrel broke out between the pair. It is alleged that he struck her with such force during the dispute that her head shattered the li ving room \vindow. U.S. Weatlier T e111perut11re• Al~ny .t.lbuQutrQue An<:l'lor111e 8l1men:k 811111 8oslon Butfllo Chk~ CincJnnarl Cl1v1l11n4 0.slLils Den\•er Des Moi111s Ot'lroll Htl"11 ln<1/11n1POl1I l(•Mes Cfly LIS Vt1111s Louiswlllt Memphis ,,\!IWI Uk M Minneeoo!ls N~ York Nllrtll Plelle Okllhoml CllY Om1h11 P11lm $P!'lfl!IS Plttlburvll Pol111nlf. Mt. Portland, Ort. RIPlcl CllY ·-$!. LOI.II• Silt L1k1 City SPllklllll VlntollYI( WlnnlPl!I HID~ L.1w P'CP. 30 '' .01 11 01 n o • 10 ·11 " m l l ,, .16 27 17 ,, 11 21 'lO .'3-1 » " 11 21 IJ ·11 12 07 " .. ~5 -15 .Cl " ~ " .. n " JO n .60 JI ~· .4J ,, .,, .... JI 28 .1• -01 ·11 ~ .. " ... l & 1• JO 15 ·" 26 21 .(ll ~ " " ... " " " ~ 2• Ill " .., " ,, --0'1 _,, (Coas tal summa11f and tidal data appear today on Pa.ge 17) J UNEAU. \\'is, (UPI ) -An escaped convict~ holding a butcher k11ife to the neck or a \\'Oman hostage, has been shot and killed by a Dodge Coun_1y sharpshooter before he could make his geta"·ay in a helicopter he had bargained for with the life of his hostage. Ed\vard Joseph Quagon \\'8S shot in the head about 5 p.m. Thursday by a sheriff 's department detective as the fugi tive steppe -from the front dcor cf the F. Gerald Daley home. He had forced his way into the home about lv•o and a hall hours earlier. TllE E\'Ei\'TS began about 2:30 p.m. when Quagon bolted from a Dodge Coun· ty courthouse courtroom \\'here he \\•as a\\·ait ing sentencing for escaping from a prison farm last August. Quagon, authorities said. ran <i loog \Visconsin 26 in to"n for about a block, trying to enter several homes. One of the homes \\'as that of Dodge County jailer \Villard Liske , y;·ho "·as off duty, and who scuffled \\"ith Quagon . Quagcn then ran across the street to the Daley house and dived through a front \Vindow. , POLICE AND SHERIFF'S deputies surrolUlded the house but Quagon \\'as holding Mrs. Daley at knifcpoint inside. Nehls said. Daley, a biology teacher at Juneau High School, \\'as called hon1c and he and Nehls and district a!lorney Jan1cs Olson eotered the home to talk with Quagon. Quagon demanded $5,000 in cash. four pair of handcuffs, a revol ver and bullets, plus a helioopter and pilot. XEH.LS SAID HE and Olso n agreed . to the demands if Quagon agreed to release lvlrs. Daley. \Vhile arranging for the helicopter, Nehls also set up o£ficers \\'ith rifles to keep Quagon in ttreir sig hts as he left the Daley home. In dictment Dis1nissed • CHICAGO (AP) -Charges of violating ihe fed eral antiriot Jaw were dropped Thursday against 12 fonner leaders of the Weatherman faction of the Students ror a Democratic Society. The in- dictment, returned neQrly four years ago, was ordered dismissed by federal Judge Julius J. Hoffm an at the request of the government. Death of Queen Demolition of Fained Liner Begins • --.. ·- POLICE SOURCES said 'they learned of the girl's planned arri\'al while ques- tiOning 18-year-old Allison ThomP8(ln of Santa Barbara. Cali(. l\.1iss Thompson was detained at Heathrow o.n Saturday when she arrived on a £Ii g h t from Los Angeles "1th fi'"e pistols and 150 rounds of ammwlition hidden in a false bottom of her suitcase. ( .,-. c ..... , ... Ct l .. ~ ~ .... .. ~ :~ .. ... ~.--.... !., -· ··~·••'•"" •ti. nl 77· ~I --.. ..... ~) ~ND soMI """""'. Nl0 POWll HID SOAP •••••• w.,,.\,,. ... , '• Cl"" M'"" ()i c ...... 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"'"" P_I., l•I ...................... u, • --· SA VE 30,_ • SO% AUTO PARTS Tiii: tl"l:fff'l' !lfOST CO,_Pl.t:Tfl 00.IT•\'Oll•tt.Lt' Al'TOCl£,,'Tt:a Plltll IFllCTIYI TllU HIDAY, JUUHY 6 ~ ~ • ll·POWll FAIT FIUSI ,,. "" , .. ,, •• s, ..... O! 0 .• ' <.< ............ .. o. .. -... .. lo A(-• R.,,,. Rll."" 11' llAYY IUTY IOOITll tHLIS (,..1o y..,. 1 • ...,i 1.c ... ()I(~ ....... , •• 498 " 11-POWll I-AITI· IUIT •~ ..... . /Jiii' c ........ . Allll loo~ ... . i .. ,ST_I. , <::::~;; ...• c ...... . ......... _,, ··-~···It< 29· DllUll. 4 AMP IATTllY tHIGll o-.. .... .. g..,.. .... 1.J ""'· ~.... 1299 ;!',!.~.:: ...... 8/J PLASTIC umn 11u11 !-iii:-llAYYJ:l: . HSOllllS ""'"""' ,,.. !loo l••··"' 01 v-... ,,., ~--... 1 ... , .. 9•"" s.;""""""' ~·~ ., • ..,.,~.,Mo .... 0..11, ..... ........ ..,. Jl,OOI MILi llHI 11011 ~ 3••. ··---;. ".,. . .,._ rral1con1 l:l!"l.. 3•• ~ c.r., It.POWEi MOTOI THAT· · ·-MllT S•oo1 0.I ....... ..... ''fl><• , ...... ~ .. . ....... ,,,., .. llFITllll ClllClll ""' , ..... '" IATillY 11 '·11-" ........ 1999 ,., , .. l .. Oi , ... c.. ICYLl9R SILKOll W•lllT t<loc,..i..o.looool ... '"' ..... ......... 6'5 ,__ OI ~ ... .......... i. • -· HHllll 5'1111GS u1,_w ~~:"&!." 1 .... 1 ... . 5!~ ... ,._ ,. o."1'.:':?Q " ... c-r• ... """"""" ~ ...... o. -·~ • ' • • l • -. • •worst Dressers' Priricess, .Mr s. Or1assis on List Ne1vsma11 Shield •• Backed LOS AN<iELES (APl - Singer 'Bette ~1idler was nam- ed_ the \lOfSt dressed woman. of 1973 by de!llgner . Mr. Blackwell.. He i n c 1 u d e d Princess Anne and Jacquelin~ Onassis in his a n n u ~I outrageous list or the world's . most unfashlonable women. Of' bl is$ Midler, the designer said Thursday, "She look!! like she took pot luck in a laun- dromat." lie also accused her or making the nostalgic· look comical. BLACKWELL. WHO said his worst dressed list shows that celebrities should not ·be imitated by Am erican women in choosil!I fashi on, included a 'fnan in his list for the second time in 14 years. No. 10 worst dressed "woman" was rock singer David Bowie, whom Blackwell -~-described..as..!..'.a~crosslletw.een WASlflNGTON i /\Pl -A Joan Crawford and Marlene major!ly or news media Dietrich doing a glitter revival organizations and a 11oust of 'New Faces.' " The man Judiciary subcommittee have who made the !isl before was .reached gcnernl agreement on con1edian Milton Berle. a bill to protect-newsmen against-f0rced disclosure -Of confidential information. The worsl-drcssed list. in Qfder, cited Miss Midler;:, Prin- cess Anne. actress Racquel Welch. tennis star Billie Jean King, Mrs~ Onassis, actresses Elke Sommer and sara Miles, the Andrews SisttrS, actress Liv tnlman and Bowie. U'I TtMfflllt BIG AT SALES? Princess Anne personal wardrobe father than costuryl~ designed ror a show. .-The ~lnger, who bills herself as "the JS.st of the truly tacky ladies," affects a thrift store look on stage. In . addition to listing hi s least favorite rash\on trend· setters, Blackwell gave plaudits this year to eight v.·omen he caned "fabulous fashinn independenls." They are: Liza .h1innelll, Rose Ken· nedy, Ann-f\.1argret , Princess Caroline of Monaco. Paula Tate, r;1rs. llentY-Ford II, ~1rs. Fred llayman and ac- tress r.1arisa Berenson. !\1rs. Hayman is the wife of a Beverly llills clothing store c'vner. Some famous women ·have already earned "llfetime" !pots on the \\'Orst-dressed !i:;t. he said. including ZsOll 7.sa Anne ·~makes her mother the. fjabor. 1"'frs. Onassis and nc· queftL.look fash1onable,-"and,.,.__,1..,re,,ss Ja)'.ne Meadows. whom that takes som1! doing . . . he described 3S"alfllmum I don't know v.•ho 's dressing and Bailey Circus in a Ann. I think she gets lhings telephone booth." o·n sale so1newherc." Of f\trs. Onassis...-he Said. "I'd like to se,c her in a dress. I'm tired of-$5,000 worth of T-shirts." Racquel \Vetch . No. 1 on the worst-dressed list last year. moved to No. 3, but not because she dresses bet- ter. sa id Blackwell. C01\IP.1ENTING ON t h c fa shions of some women who didn't" make.either of his lists. Blackwell said of First Lady Pat Nixon: "!\frs. Nixon has dressed with more · dignity a n d elegance as the Pr_esldent's Wife than any · 1ady I've seen in the \Vhitc House ... They The resull of months of 'disal5Sions between the sulr committee a ·n d represeri- tallves of the press, radio and tf:levision, the a g r e e m e n t clears the way for an attempt lo push the bill through Congress in the co n1 i n g "She looks l''Orsc>. but she's become less important." B L A CK W E LL, COM-are not dramatic, exciting • !\IENTING oh his choices at clothes. but I don't think any session . a nc"'S conference in the llLACK \\'ELL SAID h e President's wife should be a drawing roo1n of his antiq ue-chose l\1iss l\lidlcr to head walking advertisement for a T 11 E SU BCOl\·1MmEE filled mansion, said Princess the list by judging her designer." originnlly approved a bill \ast 1-----~-----____ ~ _ _:._,:. ____ .c_ _________ \ .June but Chaim1an Robert \V . Kastenmcicr (0-\Vis.) delayed further action on it lo seek !he support of the media. Kastenmeler has said he will try lo move an amended \'ersion of the bill early in the year. NEWYEAR VALUES ' A.IJ agreed· to by a majority of the media representatives and subcommittee members. the bill would provide that no newsman could be required 10 disclose confidential in- fonnatlon or its source to a fedC'.ral or state grand jury or in any pretrial proct>eding. lN AN AC11JA L trial, such disclosure could be required only i£ the party seeking the information satisfied the court the information w a s in- dlspenslble to the prosecution ..... -.-:ALL-RISK INSURANCE •5 YEAR WR ITTEN GUARANTEE ANO SPEAKEFJ TRA DE BACK PLAN AVAILABLE or defense of the case__, could not be obtained from any olher source, and that there .• wa!I a compelling public in· terest ln disclosure. 1 The new version -provides . slightly more prottetion than the one approved by the su& committee last summer -the ban on pretrial disclosure. was added -but still falls short of the absolute pioteclion against disclosure originally sought. Partlcipatina: ln the negotia- tions, which have been con- dl1Cted infonnally l hr o ugh meetings, l e t t e r s and telephone calls, have been most major media organiia· tions, led by the American Newspaper P u b l ish e r s Association. IN ADDl'nON, the National Broadcasting Co., Columbia Broadcasting System. New York Times, N cw s week, SCripps-Hownrd and l h e American Newspaper Guild have taken part in the discussions. A key factor in the media's decision Jo support the new version was a federal court ruling last September that pennitted lawyers for forTQer Vice President Spiro T. Agnew to subpoena news men in an effort lo track down leab about Agnew's legal problems. Agnew's resignation Oct. 10 nullified the effort, but the incident sha r pened the media'$ realization that some protection might be better than none. The Agnew sub- poenas could not have been issued under the proposed bill. ORIGINALLY C.u.µ;Il the Newsmen's Privilege Act, it ts now the News Source and InformaUon Protection Act. Cardi1ial Hits Class WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Stefan Car d inal Wyszynakl haa attacked ,., oducatlon In Poland'• publk: echooll. -"1mtead of.-teaching yoimg pjiopJe, at their earlle1t age, how to keep HXUll ur&ea Wldeu:ontlol by their will. and mind, they are being iauaht how to. take advanlage of op- portunities, It p orl I n d I I Rmnan Cllllollc pf\mlte said. .. • I _.spECIAL VAWE (Supply Limited) Mfg'SList $ 355~5 ONL~179. Thi<! 1,.)..,,·crful 20 ¥.a ll R\IS \\'1111tuop .\,\IF\~ Strfl'O.R ... 1.:civ ... r h~.~ more thin l\l'en1y r ... a1urM> i.e .. ~lille l~1n1rol,, v1,ual habnl't' u11hca1or. 1-.\1/~~I 1nn1nJ!: n1e1er. arnt olher f,·a1urc~ fo11nll un !hi.' 1110~1 t'\pCn-iVt.: unit\ ... l'oupkll ~tth the ~arr~rll .400 K~1nl Ch3n11er wilh ha.o;e anll l11an.onJ nccJk: ... anti twu gOotJ-r.ounll1ng Xin1c 20 8-tnch two-y,·ay ~peak•''·'- -·-.. --•z.. -. ....... . . . .. '.'. • • • 1 ~ •• f '"' ·------:r---~~~-..... _ NIVER81¥Y.STERE • • ------·- . ' ,. I • ., Friday, Ja.nulr)' 4, 1'174 DAIL V Pl l,.OT § I Cargo Clearance Exceptional values on clearance items. Many specially priced home furnishings. We· need the room for new cargo! Limited quantities. ·PJ SilllH -=-tJ /1e/Jd4fvv j1 .~ {1~-.. -""'~'·' . ( ' \ ..__ __ , ~. ""--------"" SAVE SPAfE WITH A MIRROR CADDY. Rou nd 1elescopic mirro r pulls up to a height of 6''. Has a storage caddy lo co llect stray bobby pins! Orange or yello.,.,. 1.,.1.tt plastic. 4 '/l ~. x 4l/.'', closed. . . 199 NOW SilllH HANG AS HES , . Practically. or aesthetic.illy. \V1th one, or a variety of several. Cer.im 1c, \v 11h hJ nd pa1n1ed design\. .... 1,,,.4·'' HOw.99-249 Silllll • .. t l • •. ' ' STOCK UP A LITTLE NOSTALGIA. Authentic old stock certificates from defunct turn-of- 1he-cen1ury companies. Framed behind glass and ready tO hang. A touch . a.,.'·'' of a more simple past.······· 249 . HOW SM.4.CK REAL SCOTTISH FRUIT. Preserves. jellies, marmalade -century.old legacy of the Roberlson f.i.mily. Famdtis for Golden Sh red marmalade. thick as a Scot-a.,. .7t-.at lish brogue. 12 oz ........ ' ... 2/1 oo r; .. -HOW Si1l11I Paisley bedspreads on sale! JOO% collon . Loo'med in India and printed with hand- carved \VOOden blocks in traditional Ind ian p.1t1erns. lmaginc lhe delightful visions yo u'll coniure \Vilh these inexpensive spreads. You can do more lhan cover a bed! Create pillO\VS , curtains, round lablecloths. R19.4.99-5.99 199 -299 SALE PRICE ' Accent your plantation chair. Single f72x1081 Do uble spread5 (90x108) ,--- ._., Prices good for one ¥.'eek only. Arrange an exotic Buri foot stool. "Twisted crown'' design trimmed in black . Put it before {or beside) your favorite chdir. It's Buri fi ne style. lttJ.24.,, HOW 1699 SHOUl,OER THE GOATSKI N. Bola skin bags from Spain. 'G'ive one to Dad fo r picnic wines. They're lined with latex. Encircled Save on scented soap bal!sl with a rope so that they're ·a.,. 4,,, easy to tote. . . . . . . . . . . . 299 · SALf PllCf SillUI . • -u .... rtductd ""'"°'Jhoul tho ....... 2710 HARIOR ILVD. t2t4 SO. COAST HWY.• LAGUNA HACH 494-1101 . ' c ................ STOlll HOURS, COST A MISA 540·7337 M ... tin Set. t 0 lllltl t S...t0 'Ht6p .... SOt E. KATELLA AV L ANAHEIM 772-2472 ' CITY SHOPPING CENTER ORANGE 633·0995 -. . . «• ----~ .... --... .!. # --- • r -,. - .. -· ' I • - - , • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE •1 . i ~·~ . - Costly ,. Boondoggle . . • • Orange County supervisors seem to have ended Supervisor Robert Battin's latest ego trip, but they still haven't figured out how to pay the $4,Ji..OO bill for it. The money, of cours~, wlil"come out of the tax· payer's pocket. It's just a question of deciding on which page of the county ledger tbe item should be entered. The totally unnecessary expenditure was authorized by the board.at the insistence of Battin, who wanted the State Board of Equalization to check on County Assessor Jack Vallerga's assessment of the Western While House. . Vailerga appraised it at $1 .37 million. Ballin thought 11 might be worth $2 million. The state re-appraisal (which cost the county the $4,500) came in at $1.5 mil· lion. But meanwhile Vallerga's figure had been upheld by the County Assessment Appeals Board, the Grand J_ury and indeed by the state appraiser who found the figure "reasonable.·• Battin blusters that the Issue is 11far from dead" so far as he is concerned. But his fellow supervisors have made it plain they want no further part of the fantasy. The only proble91 is who pay,the bill they so thought· lessly authorized'.' · • New Planning Voice Public agencies environmental groups and planners from the Irvine Company met recently to launch a co- operative ''supe~ agency." The agency 'will involve representatives of public and private interests who will 1ook at the 11,000·acre coastal sector of the Irvine Ranch. ' pectations that increased attenUon will be paid to coaslal development, the formation of a joint study gr o up Is sound. Irvine Company o!licials look to save time by in· volving all who will have something to · say about the eventual plan early in the replanning effort. The firm deserves commendation for opening its planning P,rocess to broadly based public comment and scrutiny at a time when many developers react in knee- jerk fashion to mere mentions of open space or other environmental concerns. Good News, Bad Ne,vs Good ne,vs and bad news continue to march hand in hand, "'ilh the bad news too often cancelling out the good. For the nation's retirees, the good news ls Con- gressional approval of an 11 percent increase in Social Security benefits. The first 7 percent will be reflected -in April checks artd the r emaining 4 percent becomes effective in July . This n1eans the average monthly old-age benefit, now $167, will increase to $178 in April and to $186 in July. . Funds for the $2.3 billion increase \Viii come out of the checks of upper-and middle-income wage earners by increasing from $10,800 to $13,200 the amoufit of a n- nuaJ w~ges on which the 5.85 percent Social Security tax is paid. VY_orkers-making less 'than $10,800-a year 'vill pay the same amount as last year. Unfortunately, another piece of news promises to wipe out \the new Social Security payments to retirees. @ e rexiec@r~w~ PUKIFYING MACHINE ,,,,,..,. cf} ,, f' ' That is the pro,P<;rtY once precisely pfanned for de- velopment as a Riviera resort resid_ential-commercial village on the oceanfront and coastal bllls lying between Corona del )far and Laguna Beach. With passage of Proposition 20 and subsequent ex- An end-of-the-year survey revealed that the aver- age grocery bill had gone up 13 percent since March 1, 10 f!lOnths earlier .. \Yhich leaves the ol<Jsters 2 percent behind the cost of 11vmg before they even get their raise. 'It looks complica ted but it's really quit,e siniple. Insert a key question and if you get a negative a11swer ••. ' One Lie Always Leads To Another ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Thoughts at Large: Wbat plotters and schemers rarely recognize until It is too late is that a truth is terminal, while a lie is infinite; a truth stahds where it is, and stops; a lie is a bottomless quicksand-and one deceit is as impossible as one quin· luplet. • ' • There ls only one fundamental educa- tional lesson . and if it is not learned early and deeply, no other education helps-and this is to Jeam honestly to distinguish in one's mind the: ~if·. ference between knowledge and op1n1on and prejudice, and not to confuse one with the other. • • • Recent Political events)lave proved the superiority of James Thurber's emen- dation or Lincoln's famous remark, when 'Thurber said: "You can fool too many of the people too much of tbe Urne." • ' • ~fonotony depresses the spirit, but variety depletes it; alternating periods of each are necessary to stabilizle the soul. • • • Intelligent parents quickly learn ~at punishment works best on the child Dear Gloomy Gus So the White Hoose forgot to check the legality of appointing Mrs. Nix- on •o bead a volunteer advisory council ... Forgetting to check out the legality of matters really is get· ting 10 be a bad habit around there. J.L. who needs it least ; the really recalcitrant child only becomes more embittered and impervious to harsh punishment ; can we not see that ·the same is true of "criminals" as of children? ·-. . 'The bromide that "m3rriage is a lot· tery" Is only a half-truth ; the other, and more important, half is that only a few tickets ha ve numbers printed on them; for the most, we write ~ ov.11 numbers on them after receipt, for good or for ill . • • • Speaking of sports, I think the finest riposte was made by Babe Ruth when someone poil)ted out that he earned more than President Hoover. "\Veil, hell," said Ruth, "I had a better year than he di~." • • • The chief difference ·be t we e n "cleverness" and "wisdom" is lhat cleverness is the craft of concealing ignorance, and wisdom J is the art of recognizing it. Schools Should Keep Out of Fa11aily Alf airs Let Teachers Stick to Teaching ~TO the Editor: . I am concerned to read in the Pilot (Sun. Dec. 30) that the schools have now decidOO to meddle lnto family af- fairs. It proves once again the !>Id adage, ''Education is too important lo leave lo educators." \\'ith a track record of increasingly towe' scholastic aptitude test scores, lower reading-ability of students. graduates who cannot read or spell prop- erly, the school educators in the Orange County public schools apparently turning from mediocre educational attainments, . with jheir students, now feel competent and trained to tackle family affairs! TEACHERS evidently seem unaware that the parents in many cases are as well~ucated or better educated than the teachers and are better able to handle their children, if only from the comparatively high parent-children ratio. as compared with the teachers, as well as the time spent with their children. One assistant superintendent, quoted as admitting that the teachers are not trained psychiatrists, nevertheless seems to have not any lack of confidence in probing the emotional problems in the child and in the family. Are the educators fatuous enough to believe that they have no teachers with emotional hangups, and problems? What makes them think that they are any more capable.of solving these problems without tr~fuing, than the families themselves? It is tru sion of privacy. an unwarranted in- AD~tlTIEDLY, most parents get unsettling to downright horrifying tales from their 'lhildren about goings-on in the schools and from the teachers, from lime to time. While parents discount most of these tales. taken out of context . and for the cbild's own purposes, it would seem that the teachers are perhaps not so familiar: with the in· dividual student anti tend to believe that there are home problems. tt is pointed out that the teachers use thi s exact same source of infonnaUon. A clever student with a higher IQ than the instructor can feed information lo the teacher to excuse his position. I have felt that frequently the schools a_ctually probe the _arJless _children for home and family background, under the guise that this will help the child. Perhaps in rare cases this may he so. EquallY in rare cases. students would be helped if the teachtl' was straightened out. Let the teachers stick to the job for which they are paid, teaching the subjects Oil which they have credentials. When the records prove that the students are able at least to read and write properly, and their college entrance ex· ams show improvement. and generally the students are better educated, then perhaps it will be time for the educators to start lraining for assisting in family affairs. LADISLA IV REDA Y MAILBOX Letters trom readers are welcome. Nonnall y, writers should convey their niessages ill 300 words OT Uu. T11e right to conde1ue letters to f'it space or elimmate libel is res~rved, All let· ters must include signature and mail- in g address buc names may be with- held on requesc if sufficH?nt reason is appar,,U. Poetry will not be pub· lished..,) · ~ to invade personal privacy wlU not be in anyone's best interest. Actually, ""'·elfare fraud" (how many cases in amounts under $100?) Is considerably less common than Internal Revenue Service fraud (~·hich often is reported in six figures for a single case !). Do ~'e want a welfare case-worker to ha\'e the power to searth the bank accounts. pa ycheck, employment records and social security reports of "adults .mponsible .. for aged. indigent pa.rents" or of "step-father'3 providing homes for children whose natural fathers refuse to p a y court-ordered child-support payments"? In neither situation i3: the person being investigated lhe ooe who is applying for welfare, yet the Mghts and Puccini, and not Gus Long or Fred of those who require aid. arc tied to _!lartley. the invasion of the privacy or anoth er JACK DISCLOS~ that some directors persoil -~here will ii stop? of oil companies are also directors of 3 .. IF" WE REAU. Y mean that th~ other corporations. Shocking! Maybe we -to~I economy (bu.slow, industry, labor, should replace them with labor goons. agnculture, etc.) should be able to pro· rock s!ngers or ~iropractors more vide a living Income for all who "'ant respon~1ve to the will .of ~ Peop~. to work, let us say that! A1aybe we should. nahonahze ~-~11 _ I!. we reaU_y mean that children. who Industry and rem.ab tt in tbf s!iirung constitute the majority ol AFDC should ~mage of the United Slates Postal Serv· be supported by their mothen'. many ice or the Peace C.Orps. of whom are also on AFDC th Jack qu~es an "wipubli~~ed study" will have lo make chlki-ca~ fa:lit: by. some~hing call~ the ~ter for and jobs with adequate salaries available 6c1ence 1n the Public Interest as an to v.·omen. authority for this nonsense. The best It is not enough to st 1 1 t th.in~ about ~ unpublis~ study is pe6ple out of welfare , t::!:':: ~C: a~ that 1t has remamed unpublished. an alternative eCo · · Jack further reveals that the Federal a JOB, norruc opporturnty - Trade Commission has charged several Bia~ ' . . large companles with "violating antitrust of g . and ~rasaing the v1et1ms laws in contempt of the consumers.'" economic depnvatioo will not save Is Impeachment Possible? OUBUge To the Editor: If "freedom of speech" hardly gives some idiot the right to ye!J "Fire!" in a crowded theatre just for laughs, then "freedom of the press" ·ought to He fails to add that no coovictioos moa~y or people. ' have resulted from those charges. (But MARY IV. MILLER after all, the federal bureaus, like the Trade ConunWlon, have to do something to keep busy.) Co1i.spir11q1? To the Editor; Judiciary Committee Seeks tlie Legal Answers ). ~T~~..:;.';r'~l:r:\~~tr. ~~r~ publishi.ng such banal rubbish as Jack HE ALSO tells us about "criminal political contributions for President Nix· on's campaigJ!." How about the unsavory ;>olitical activities of the labor racket, the Kennedy's, and kinky lav.yers who play tapes at cocktail partiea? Jack says the "potentates of petroleum" (Agnew would love the alliteration ) "have pu t profits ahead of patriotism ." Thi s sort or tripe might IOUDd good in a high school English paper, but hardly on the editorial -page of i responsible newspaper. IV ASHINGTON -The oountry may as well steel itself for a test ol. political wills Which will exceed in · intensity anything any of us have seen in a llietime. 'The odds diminish almost daily that President Nixon can avoid im- peachment The prospect that Nixon may be im· p,eached is t a k ~ n more seriously with the appointment of John l\l. Doa r, a for· mer assistant attor- ney general, as spe· ciaJ cowisel to the H o. u s e Judiciary Committee· which is considering im· peachment proceedings. Not that Doar is viewed as a bulldog investigator determined to bring the Preskient to justice. Quite the contrary is the case, and Doar's appointment is widely accepted as assuring a "judicious procedure commensuralt with the gtl'\'ity of the circumstances. ------------, WHEN SUCH questions are introduced Anderson 's column about the oil industry ~ ~ and made vital to the final decision~ in the Daily Pik>t Dec. 26. Old Jack WIL. SON -has certainly uncovered some wrong-RJ CHARD impeachment o! the President tends to doing in his time as . a well-paid become a political debate rather than muckraker, t;>ut this bilge about the a judicial proceedings. While Doar says oil companies deserves an Oscar for to show President Nixon b~ committed that impeachment is: not a criminal hall truths, distortion and the rest of criminal offenses as a requirement for tri,t, he also ooncede.s that the ·elements the Goebbels Nazi techniques of planting removing him from office. Some seem of falrneas of ·a trial are called for. · and then fertilizing a Big Lie. to think that a finding that the President They are, indeed, and for this reason Jack implies that some unnamed con-- had brought his oUices .Into notori~s alone the Judiciary C.Ommittee will of· gressmen are in favor of running the disrepute severely damagmg the nation fend justice if it strays far from the oil industry like the postal service. -what is sufficient to justify his removal from Constitution as it reads literally. Who a perfect way of making the oil shortage office without proof of trea!OO, bribery, . has the President biibed? What high permanent and insoluble. or other high crimes and misdemeanors. crime bas he ccmfmitted? Treason, He rambles on to lay bare the awful bl d nol ·nto the fact that oilmen have ··'infiltrated" the ... DOAK SAYS he h.. not made up p/esuma y, oes come 1 U st·on Metropolitan Opera! A. clually Texaoo has his mind on the question, and adds q e 1 • that a cons. i'derable body of legal autbori· Without answering the hard questions, sponsored µIe Sa,t.urday !Mtineelir broad· the Judiciary Committee will leave tht . casts of this venerable house f deca~, ty says that a criminal offense is not who.le House in a political quagmire. and they help to make ~ra avalla~le required to justify impeachment.. fiind N" h 1 1 ted h' once a week in sea.90&1 in every· home Those who move in this direction may It may ixon as v 0 a is in America where t!fere ls a radio. If Jack were a resident of Orange €ounty he would clearly qualify as a candidate for the Board of Supen1sors. JOSEPH M. THOMAS Welfare Blame ' To the Editor: Something should be said to rebut the propaganda tacUcs beinf 1lled to put the blame for wellare · problems on the reci pients. be n.: .. "-l.... pragmatically in terms of oath of office and failed to preserve, Texaco does insert brief, low·k•v com-.......... protect and defend the Constitution -~ I AN ''ILLEGAL" t I CongreM being able to determine what but how? By trying to coovict Daniel mercials for their product.!, bu t • . paymen may on Y is impeachable and l',.hat is not, but Ellsbergl By tai.o ..... part in a criminal otherwise the message is that of Wagner mean that the rules and regulations they are al .. advancing Into a perilous .... 16 ot the weUare code are unfairly punitive, t conspiracy to obstruct justice which C!ln.:._'_ area~ perilous; that Is, from the point be ed' -~--~~=-~---~-an<ltbat real people with real problems of view o( I.bole wbo desire NiJ:on's not prov · Wick• nuty not fit the "square holes". tm · chmetlt. -• TllESE-lURD questions may ·, C.li!oiiili 1 Welfare Re!onn ct or - IT CANNOT he denied, however, that J:. they llnJjl from the literal terms ullimatelr be judged to be beside the 1171 wu lraoldy oriented to Qlaking the Home Judiciary Commillee ii heavl· of the Constitution, they not only ooncede point, and. the view that Nixon has people ineligible by legJalaUve means. ly motivated against Nlxoo. The surm the abs<oce or convicting proof ol the dillf*ced hil office will prevail. But When these "ineltgible" J>OOple continue •Ii" cl this ls the nature ol the dilCUSSIOll Constitutionalt~ offenses bu t ii thJI bl!ppens, It ls also Ultely to , , to slarve, the countiea must offer.. sup- oo one highly important point. they bring into the balance · !bO whole happen tl1al a precedent will he created port, but this can be tmned an ''illegal 'lbll la the question o! !!hal ~-i:eoord ol.tbe.Nlxoo admlnJ.straU.O. In. wbldt any _president who o!!ends the payment" that wlll not be reimbursed · in the Oonslltutioo by the ptirase That gives rise to 1uch questions as poiltlcal sensibilitiea o! the Congrua oon· by the ·State or Federal Welfare ''lrea.son, bribery, or other high cnmes these : bu a President wh6 ta widely • trolled in sufficient strength by the op-Admtnistratlon. 'Ta:rpayers orten do not. and ml!demeanors." Upon conviction or judged to have ru\•anced the cause of pollte pariy can be remove\! without recognize . the expensive oompetitloo such of(i.... tn an Impeachment pro-world peace to its mo1t promising point COllvictlon or readlly recognized eriines bet-the different levels of tp>Vem·· ceedlnP. the Prealdent ahalt be rcmol't'd in two gen<rotiona truly brought lits and misdemeanots. lneilt with reB]>CCI to f i n a n c I 1 I from olflct. office Into such notorious disrepute That This would be a distortion of the responsibility for unpopular or costly Muc:b cl the discussion tn the Judiciary be must I>< removed! American system equally as bad as programs, but we pay et the coun1.y Committee runo In a dir<ctton which Are the offenses ol Watergate sul· or worse than that charged against Nix-level (!loanced by tbe property tax ) • -' DOI Ide tile .....,titutional-pro-!iclenUy heinous to nulllly •nd wipe -on, and would be.a consequence.allecling !But wht»VW-heard. of• for programs tliat the state legistateJ v111am Jiteroily. lloar recogniw this out the recognized achievements In other the future of the sys<em far more ad· comet called GklJlys?" or !'<gletta. -- ln uylnC t.blll tt might not be necessary areas? veraely than the Watergate break~n. 2. Using welfare Hfraud" aa an excuse . . ".. ' \Yhat if, there was a conspincy to overthrow our government. Someone more . pow~.rful than you or 1, could ever 1~ag1ne. Say they wanted the Republica~ Party out of ,o(fice and the Democratic Party to look b a a "WATERGATE". ' THE PRESIDENT lookJ bad, wouldn't you ~y. The Democrats look bad for snooping and the Repiibllcans naturally look bad. Energy Crista, food Shortage, ~ :~ge, Stock Market falls Etc, Someone bas reaUy gone to a Jot of trouble to &route: the American public I wonder who Is beJilnd all thi1? Pretty sma rt ~OUldn't you · aa:j. j Now if you were gomg to overthrow 'the government where would you startt , ' MARILYN J. EDWARDS • ' DAILY PILOT -......-• • -I -' . ------ l ' .. • .. • ~---~--..... - R e call Urged-- ... ____ _ ' Superviso1· Calls Me~her Di~grace . SAN DJECiO (AP) -IJl , a rar.e ou'tbtll'St at a-pUbtlc · •' meeting, . San Diego_ CoUflly Supervisor James Bear lilts called fellow supervisor 'Jack Walsh "a disgrace" and urged his recall. had recently purchased Thurs- day dis.cov~red the , wreckage ol a light plane 'crash in which · four persons died. Killed were Gerald McGrath, .53, owner of the piane and a· '{9rmer Se~si<;I~ city councilman; his wife Helen, 49 , James Edwards, 51,, Pacific Grove.-and his wife 50 'Pub·lic Officials Resign Over New 'Conflict' ·Law SACRAMENTO lUPll -corruption, honest of rice Nevada County suffered a California's stringent conflict -holders will suffer. raft of resignation!! because of interest law, which went ''Crooks are still crooks and of the law. In add ition to into effect Jan. l, lhas forced they'll have ways of gettjng Long, 15 members of various 111oro ·thap 50 public officials money under the-;able." said local boards and commissions to resign amid charges the Exeter Afayor Jobn Mangini, also quit, Som_e of the officials JegiSJatlon is "unreasonable," 61 , Who resigned Dee, 31 after banded together in, an attempt "discriminatory" and "nit· nearly six years in office. to get the courts to declare picking." "In a small town like this the Jaw unconstitutional. · A UPI survey Thurs(lay people serve on the city COUil--The law, according to Mos- dlsclosed resignations on local cil_ because they want to help cone, was desig~ t!> ''.P.:re- levels tOtaiea by county: 16 out the community;" he ad--vent-specJal econom-ic inter. in Nevada, six in Sacramento, ded. "I'm a little two-bit ac-ests from unduly influencing six in Shasta,. fi ve in Yuba, COWltant and the only reason elective or appointive offi- five in TUlare, five in Yolo, I served was I thought t ought C"!al~, at all levels in Califor- Bear iriterrupted Walsh at a supervisors' conference Thursday as \ValSh \vas ques- tionlng-COUnty Counsel Robert Berrey on possible conflict of interest involving Bear and SuperviSor Lee Ta YfOr. Jo Ann, 45. The Jlyan Navion .._ single-engine craft apparently went down Tuesday on a trip ; from Baja to Monterey. --Iour in Colusa, three in Sutter to make some contribution in ma. -fwo -in Kern and two in Lo~ exchli,nge for living-here." Angeles. In addition to Mangini. the \Valsh asked whether Bear's land holdin~s and Taylor's, ownership of a gasoline tanker ( r-------" .. Dlst11 lssal· Asked s la le ) . StQCKTON (UP'!) -The '--::'.:':::;-::::":::::,....-:::::'. a'ttoif.eys for acc_uscd mass _murdererS-Willie_L. _Steebnan truck \VOUld disqualify them and I>Ouglas E. Gretzler from votlng 'on a measure Thursday asked that ·their to exempt some farmers from . · . . 8 Jaw requiring reCovery of 1~u~er 1 n d 1 c t m e n t s .be gasoline vapoi's. d1sm1ssed· on grounds of 111- Bear broke in:and-sald ''I'm j Ulficient evidence. getti.ilg sick and tired' of a Steelman, 28, LOdi, and fellow supervis9r charging Gretzler, 22, New York City, ano_ther one; saying it's illegal, are charged with nine count s ~J!~~ they re ~t allowed to of murder, five counts of rob- ~· bcry ·<J.nd· one count of kid- Gooe" Beacf• SAN ·LUIS OBISPO (AP) -A second beach near here hu been coated with gooey bmker oil escaping rrom a damaged Navy transport ship, _.the Coast Guard says. naping for robbery in the ex~ ecution..style · killings 1 a st November of tv.·o families in the tiny community of Victory. Firetrap to Go LOS A)'iGELi:;s (;\!') -The About 80 galloos of oil were tossed by stormy seas over ~tratford Apartments, ~ h .e booms around the Pvt. Joseph f1re-gu1!-ed .scen.e or the city s Merull an Thursday and some ~ v.·~st fire ~n te:ms or, deaths, of It drifted onto Avila Beach. will . ~ den~ohs~ ,;at the a Coast Guard spokesman earliest Jl06Slble .time u~er said. an order by the City Council. · The cOuncil acted Thursday 4 Bodies. Fo1111d to tear down the three,.tory building v.·herc 25 persons died FJREBAUGJI (UPI) -A and 46 others were.. injured man inspecting property he ~n Nov. 15. UPI Teltpllolo TAX TROUBL ES Jack Benny Benn y's-c-'.fax Deductio11s Disallowed ' WASHlNGTON (AP ) Comedian Jack Benny claims hi s donation or show-business memorabilia to ·the-University of California at Los Angeles entitled him to a $156,000 federal tax reduction, but the Internal Revenue Ser v ice disagrees. Instead, the tax men assert, 'Benny and his wife owe $109,081 in "back taxes for 1967 and 1968. Benny's-lawyer. Lawrence S. Kart.iganer of Beverly Hills, said Thursday the claimed deduction for the charitable contribution is similar to the one President Nixon took for donating his vice presidential papers to the Nationa l Archives. Nixon's claim was accepted . The law , aulhored by Sen. vice mayor, a councilman and George Moscone (0-San Fran-planning commissioner also cisco), requires elected and quit. appointed officials to file ye8r- Film Great Hospitalized ly reports on their as~ts. The u1 DO NOT believe it ·is 'Ya tergate-spawn~ legis.Ja-anyone's business whether l hon.' _Moscone said,.~"'. as as a private citizen and part-SANTA MONICA (UP I) -~~wried tg ~oi:~~ .J!OltUc1~ns. --Lime-office,holder earn $lO,OOO Pioneer film producer Samuel to k,~ep their skirts triple or $lOO,OOO 8 year," said Goldwyn, '91,. has · tieeil. 'taken clean. Robert Long, Nevada County to St. John's Hospital, an BUT THOSE res1gn1ng most of them part·titne citizen poljtiei~ns --argue i ha!. although the Jaw may prevent Board of super vi 5 0 rs MGA1: spokesman said Thurs- chairman. day· [ Goldwyn ha s been in poor Long, former All America health since 1968. He retired lineman at UCLA who-Jater from .active participation in1· played for the Detroit Lions, the studio in 1970. The studio said the Jaw "is unclear in said he was undergoing "a Y th Kill d its meaning. It is series of tests". Friends OU e ... unreasonable, discriminatory reparted that his wifEt or 48 and pifhaps unconstitutional -years, Frances, had also been With Pistol CERRITOS (UPI) -One o( two young -brothers in- spect ing their. ·father's .38- caliber revolver died Thursday night when the loaded gun accidentally fired, sheriff's deputies -said. The. victim, Leonard Ap:- plegate Jr., 9, died seven hours after the shooting. He and his older brother, George, 11, were passing , the loaded weapon b e t w e e n themselves when it discharg~ ed. wounding the youngster in the head. as it is being interpreted." hosp\t~lized. -· 25%-50% OFF AND MORE i SAVINGS IN EVERY DEf>ARTMENT · l4i 7 YI; Udo:N"ewport ha;h - ''l·4510 (Ntxl lo Lide TllNlltl') e M.i1ler Cll'11111 ellclWell Ch•rge e l .inllAmtrk•rd - Friday, Janvary 4, 1974 DAILY PILOT 7 #63 FASHION ISLA ND NEWPORT BEACH • It's-our after·etiristmas-clean-up-on-famous brands. I\.: .. \I" ''i~ . ' .:',. ' :. 1i. . ': l i ·~ \1 . . \" . . l \ ' • • .,-•· .. : ' >:1 "' \ "11 ' • ' ~ i ' ' . .. " . JGeemei~ ' 123 458 709 0 9 . ' . .. ~!:HOMll; ·--··--. • ,CJHAAGEIT ' ~ 'f',ith your JCPenney Charge Catd. 1-11 yqudon't have &charge, · just settK>wfaslwe can · ,open up yqur new account . . . . - . ' -~-----· . . . , , .. . I • BUENA PARK -• -each •I Orangethorpe Open OIHy 9:30to1:30 p.m. Suncl1y 10 to 7 ,. . ---. ::::;::;;;;;;;; ·:;-;;· ;;;;-'-;:,·-===·=:::::!:: ORANGE City Dr. at·Garden Grove Blvd. ' Open 10-t .p.m. 01',1y Sund1y 10 to 6 ·_"I'~ ------; T"tw1 ....,;..,t •~f'lf'1tta lllf' tnO~ ,..,_... ~ tftf' J.C. p,,_,- T1mf' ,., ...... 1 Pl•" !<if llte p11<tft•H ot ltlis ''""' No rlNANCf. CHAllGI w•ll IM 11'C11<1f'<11l lflf' Nt• 81l•1'Ct " ol 11\t KCllllltl ,,,-tftf' lw1! blllt"' 1lal ....... 1tl 1nc:lii0tng 1"4! Pll<ClllH" p•!CI on l11M bf'IO<I !"-Mii billtfll dltf' tlio•n iii 111•1 S111tmt1tl Wl>en 011C11ff.O. amonlltty rlNAHCf. CHAAGf. -11 beoete•"'•<M'CI by •Pfl!Fl"9 monlll~ pettodic rtll1ol l.2' 'ANNUAl Pf.ACf.NT AGE AA TE-1t.t'"J 011 In_, ti•1t.5SOO tncl 1 ... !AHHUM. Pf.ACENTAGt A Al( 11'10lt "''' polliono•f'• S!tOO. IO tl>e • .,. • .._ 811•nce '•111\ow! ~li<•g oaytnenl$ •f>d c•~h . 'SANTAANA.· 3900 So. Bristol · t!_QJ>t So. Coast Plaza Open 10·9 p.m. Ollly SunCIO y f o to 6 ·-· ----' \\ ' j 1 r ' -- /I DAILV PILOT . .. -• I i ·Oilier Year of Moderation IO#UI KIT OFF.Ill lROM Dea ti is Marriages Doivri; Pcissports, Too FREE ··cameras et cetera RENO (U PI) -A private runeral sernce will be held in lo6 Angelts Saturday for w.1 ... Cord, pioneer aircraft and auto manu!.o.cturer, wtto developed the classic 1930s roadstt"r that bore his name. Cord, 79, died of a heart at· tack 'YOOnesday at hi.s home here. LOS ANG~LES CAP) - Funeral services are planned Saturday for Dr. O:larle1 R. Olsen, 46, an as50elate prtr rcssor at the UCLA School of ?iledicinc and chief of the medicine-diest section of the \\tadswort h Veterans Adtninlstration Hospital in Los AnAeles. Olsen died Sunday at his West'A'OOd home. </"\-- OAKLAND ( UP I ) Funeral services were held today f'or Jacques Abramowlt.sch, 70, a scholar Who "brought the rlchn<M ol the Jewi.sh tradition" to Holy Narnes College, a Roman Ca tho l"i c i n st i t·u~tlon. Abran10Y.'itsch. a linguist and patron of n1usic al llol y Names slncc 1948, died Tues· day night of a heart attack. D eath Nodce• s•OWN Ch1rl11. C1rl l rown. 0111 of dt1th, J1n111ry 'L lt71. CNPtl """1<1 1!1d lriterment, S1ture11r, 3 PM, W11!mlt1i!tr Memorl1l P1rlr. Mortwrv tlld C1mtt..-y. COUUON • El111belf'I Coul11111. Alp ... of 1111 Ollvt SI., H11t1!1119ton lllCh. 0111 of d .. 111, J1riu1rr 1, 1t74. SUorYl..ed by numt•- t11Ke1 1twt l\ePM'WI. Strvl(ll, Moflcl1y, J1n111•r 7, 10 AM. Smllhs ClltPl'L lfllt r-mlHll, 0trv1wood Cl1'ltte!'y, rtlvtr11de. Smllhl Mortu1rv, OlrKIOrt. QENOllON OOnlla Artnur GMdrOl"I. UOI Orlon. S1t1l1 At11. O.tle t • 011111, J1riu1ry 2, 1974. S11rvl11~ by wri., Lll(Ule Gefldrori; 11111t. Pet•r 11...i W!11\.tm1 10<.or gr1t1dtll!IC1ren; one bro!Mr .tnd on• 1Js!t r. S1rYkff, S1turd1y, J1t1u.1ry J, 2:00 l"M, 1 111!· Bergeron Cosro Me~1 Cll1pel. lnllfml!'lf, S1w!elle v111r11nt Ctm.lery, Wed Los "A~t11. a11ll1·8tf119ron Fu111r1I Homt, Co1r1 MHI. Ol•Klor•. • HAMILTON Thomas A. H.amllton Jr. A11• 11: rn!dtnt ol Cos1t M11.1. Dale ot detlll ,J1nu1ry 3, 1971. Survived bV p1r1nll, Mr. i nd Mrs. Tllom11 A. H1mlllon Sr .. Df Lt•· l119!on, Kenlucky. S...vltn tnd lni.rmtnt wlll bt held lri Sprlnglltld. Kentucky. It!! &r~dwly Monuary, Forwt tdlng OltKlorl HAllllM Cl1r1H1ct II. H1raln. 0•'41 of deltll'i, Jat1Ulf)' 1. 1f7~. Survlvl'd by dlvgh!er, Oorl1 Stlllld ,H1,1ntlt1Qlon B11th; '°"' Don.tld H1r1.ln, M11t1llnu1on I • • c h • Services ptndlt19 11 5mlth1 Morlutry. HOllTON C.!en T. Norton. Age 61. ol UOO E. WltrlM SI., Sp. 104, S11ni. An.t. 011t SANTA ANA -Last year was one. of moderatk>n for · Orange Coontians judging by !Jgurcs showing fev,.er people tQOk out license& to lie tho knot ol matrimony and rewer applie<t for passport.1 10 travel than during 1972. County Clerk William E. St John said his ofrlcc issued 320 fewer marriage licenses in 1973 than in 1972. "The reduction may be at- tributable to the rubella test requirement ~·hich became ef- fecth·e this year," St John ' speculated. A NE\V COUl\'TY la~· re~ Tax Dip? quires special testing ol pro- spectl\'e mates designed to head off the threat or birth defeels in children due to rubella (Cern1an measles.) "Many persons reported they acquired their marriage license In another CO.Wlty where the test y.·as not rc- qUll'ed, '' St John said. St John reported 13,tll peo- ple took out marriage licenses last yeor compared to 13,439 the year before.. Nearly as many couples fil- ed for divorce as applied to be married last year. St John s a id 13 wn "<lo- County Heading For Big S~rplus By WILLIAM L. SCHREIBER Of fM Dtllr 1"1111 Slllt SANTA ANA -Orange County Is spending money at a rate that oould result in a surplus of as much as $7.4 million by the end of the cur- rent fiscal year and a possible major cut in the tax rate. Supervisor Ronald Caspers said Th ursday. In his f inal "State or th e County Address" as chairman o( the board, Caspers said spending is already n1orc than lwo percent behind budget predictions and by the end of the year that figure could be-CJ05er to five percent. "How different that picture is than the fed e ral government's outlook for a $20 billiori deficit this coming year,'' Caspers said. T1IB SUPERVISOR SAID that if current spending trends hold true, the t'Ounty will stay .,.,en within its $3.0~ 111i!l_ion budget and have a "handsonlt! carryover" into next year. The higher the carryover. the · greater the tax rate can be cut, Caspers said. The county has cut its tax rate for t\l'O successive years with the biggest cut coming · in the curr~t fiscal year. The rate 'vas trimmed by Tl ccnfs per ~100 assessed ·valuation to a figure or $1.68 per $100. Caspers noted that pcoplt• \rant to see"tighter controls un i government spending. "AS WE ENTER next year's budget prep11ration, H would be well to remember ·the substantial margin by which Gov. Reagan's Proposi- tion One carried in Orange Countv, tellin~ us our con- stllueiits are fed up With !he gro"rinl( government and Its colossal tax bite," Caspers said. al 011111. Jonu"'" 1, lt7~. Survived Ki kb k 11.¥ wile, JetN!ll~ son. U etk _Ci.r_k;__ c · ac• dlU11hl~r. Audrev Llr.oem~n. Or1nge; two •Iller~, Elsie T .tYlor 1n<1 lt11 EW1flq, · Touching on i;ither matters. Caspers: -Stated his di sconl'agement at the Increasing size of the county bureaucrac}:. \rhich he said has grown fron1 7.200 employes ~·hen he carne on the board three years ago to 10,000 today. botn of Missouri: 1wo g•endtlllldri"t>. Service" S•lu•d•r .1 PM, Btll ll•Nllwt r D f d Cn1111e1, w1111 Rev. L.11. lornow offlcl1llt1Q. lnterml!fll, H1rbor Rt~! Memorltl Ptrk. e en ant 8111 BrOldw1r MOrtu11ry, Olrtcl0t1 "llU!:SNEll Judllh Ann l"rues~•. it.9e lA. or l fOI 1 1w.op Aue., w111mln1ltr. Oift ol' dt1!h, J1nu1ry J, 1914, Survlved by hlll!llnd, Rober!: IOl'I. Robert; daU11ht.fs, Jiii 1nd JIHlnlNr; fnQ!l>e•, Goldll i!l1r!IO: tour sl1t8!'1. Ke1hryn Ru•h, &orit1l1 Bovlln. Sll.lrOfl lloh.1nfl0n Ind BK ky Elar<k>. Ro..11ry, S1HK11y, 7:30 PM, Ptek Ftmlly Colcnl1I l'uMrt1 Homt. Miss, M01!!11y, f AM, SI. a~rblr.a'• Cothoth:: Church. S11nl.1 An.a. 01r1Cll'd by Peek Ftmllr Cotonl.11 Funer1I Home. • STOVALL ~I Stovtll. Lovlnq hu1l)1ncf of Frences illt1111rl1 ltl~r cf Rooert c .• J1ck IC., .r.amts A. tnd ICtlhlHn Slovalh Mrs. lflthtrd Pelll1, Mrs. Oon1!d 1'111!, 11nd jtl:IHll W•rner. Al•O survived by nintfffn ti••ncfthlldren. Ro11ry, ronlghL Frld111, 1:)) l"M. Funer1I Mau, S1turd1y, 1(1 AM bolPI at St Ctctll1'1 Cl!hollc Church . p'.!li1 SE Svc.amore Ave .. Tu1tlnl. Oor11-·ttiin1 io · flll Amtrlc1n Ctocllf" Society, 113lol lrvlne Blvd .. Tustin, t1610. m1r be made. C1lt1n1n Ml•slon Morlu•rv. Gorden G<ow. OJreclor:s. WIATHlllFOllD Emily W11t1c1 W1atllllrlord. Age JOI; rt1ldetil of Nl'WDOrl 81.ach. Otlt al dt1th, Janu1rr 1, lt74.. Survlvcid by Three diughter1. Addlt Wtl1tce. Elht1 Beemer 1rocl Bernice Wl'llltlordi IS gr.andch!ldrom; n tre1t11randcl'IUdrwn; 14 11r11!11r11t11r1ndthlldr1nr 2 llrtll· gr1a111r11111r1nclcllHdrtn. Stfvlces, MOn- d~y. J1nu1rr 7, 1 l"M, l1llr-Be1'91ron Co1t1 Mese Cht1>1I. lnt1rm e rit. 'o'/11tmft1sl1r MemorJ1I Pt•-· 111111- Bl!rlltron Funtr•I Home, C01!1 Me••· OlrlClofl. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St.1 Colta Meta 646-4888 ~ . BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del rttar 673-IUO Cosla l\1eaa 646--ZU• • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\feaa LI g.3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach M!-7771 %44 Redondo Ave. Long Belich 113--<.JS.l ltS • ~IcCORl\fiCK LAGU!\111. BEACH MORTUARY 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. 491.9115 • PACIFIC \lfEW MEMORIAL p,\RK Cemetery l\f,pftuary Chapel 3SOO Pacific View Drive Nel'·port Beacb, CalUornla f«..Zjll(I • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO~IE 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-35%5 • SMITH'S MORTUARY f?7 l\taio St. nun1Jngton Reach 536"53! , PUBLIC NOTICE ---,---,,CTITIOUS IUSINISI NAME ITATEMENT TN tollOWll'lll Plf'ton II dOll!ll bu1!11t11 .as: THf" HOUSE OF l"LUMl lNG, ~ t ~rlJON Lint, CCIII Mew, C.llfeml• mu Larry G $1111, 22'3 ArhOlll UM, Cot11 M•ui, C11ilorfll1 f'll24 Thi• bll~Mll rs (Ofldutlcd l>tdlVldUtl ' P,.¥cy_.G. SllU tnl1 11111men1 w1• flltd with lllt Counly Cltrk ot' Ofln;t Covn!r on 0t1;1mw lt, Im • .. Has Tests SANTA ANA -Voit Rubber Company employe J a m e s Campbell McQuaid o( Irvine has pleaded no contest to grand theft charges filed after tie allegedly a cc e p t e d kickbacks from firms anxious to obtain Voit contracts. Orange County S u p e r i o r Court Judge Kenneth Lae sent l\lcQuaid, 56. of 42.81 Escudero Drive, to the state's Chino facility for a 90-day pre- sentencing diagnostic study. l\fcQuaid ~'ill be sentenced when he returns in April. He faces a posfilble state prison term of one to 10 years. McQuaid served Voit as traffic manager tor more than four years. He was arrested last October after a check of the firm's records revealed his acceptance of a number of illegal· payments, all of them by Northern California !inns. -Urged the county to move rapidly in plaLing tight con- trols on population grov.•th, possibly through efforts of the ncv.·ly-formed lntcrgovernrnen- tal Coordinating Council. Ile said it may be necessary to ado 1> t district· b.v ·district gro .. vth rontrols !o stop lht' boom. -Hinted he u·ill press for a review of major overhauls 1 in the county govrrnmenfs organizational slructure. -Raised the possibility of givi ng each supervisorial district a $5.000 fund lo use in determining the "pblse and ·attitude of t hose we represent." He suggested survevs or newsletters rather than "reacting to "the same people who constantly appear at public hearings or to a handful of letters or pctitidns gathert.>d on a non-objectij'e basis." Inventory 25% OFF Karges Furniture AND MANY IMPORTS. PL US LAMPS & ACCESSORIES ALSO ON SALE INTERIOR DESIGNERS 400 w ... ,c .. tt """'"'· N••P•" ,'"'" - • 141·2250 -MefHf•'t Th,.11911 let1rdtiy t :J0-.5:20 ------ mestic relations 11ctions'' were filed in the co11nty com- pared to 11.243 the year bcrore:..,.. Also during 1973. more than 10.200 couples were granted fin al divorce judgnlCnls after finishing t h e k!gal waiting period. That figure was up from 9,071 the year before. UNCERTAIN GLO BAL politics and continued devalun- tion of the U.S. dollar in 'Europe and Asia also con- tributed to a decline in the number or passports1 issued by St John's office last year. SO. COAST PLAZA llllSTOI. AT SAM Dll!GO FllW't', ~HONIE tlt.Jl7J MON, TNllU ,Ill, IM SAT. 10.' SUN . 11•1 ' HONEYWELL PENTAX SP 1.000 with F.2 Takumai len s • Shutter spei ds from 110 1/10001h of• second Sup1r TakuNr 5511111 f/2.0 .. n1 Hl11111 accwate 11rou111-tbl·111u a1 po1w1 11111arln1 11111111 Cla11 tc f'1nla111~Un1 ind pc1ch1 ll1ndlln1. W•W rt nowntd Ptnt1x c1alt1m1nihlp. St John silid he has talk('d \1·ith travel agents "'h9 claim niany ~·ould-be lravelers set their sights on trips to Hal''aii or shipboard cruises where their dollars brought thctn better travel bargains. Uprrada your equlpm1nt with tl'lt Mwt1t ltOm PtnllJ. 1t'it/J: FREE $239.95 801111~ /(jf ~t John's office, which performs passport services for lht' federal government, issued just under 13,800 pern1its last yeiir con1pared to just O\'l'I" l.J.500 the prior year. . l'llEE BONUI K/1'. with pu~chase of IP 1000 Vista .AO Strobe · Velbon VE·3f Tripod ~· 1 1 11~; 'There 11'as also a decline in naturalization figures in the1 rounty during 1973. Only 4J61 persons beca1ne citizens last 1 year compared to 514 the yearJ before and 643 in 1971. 1t1cll1111bflo Nlc•d 8111111 l 'poaltlon ·shoe moun,J Bulll-ln 11c h11111 19.95 ..... ,., 11cond rec ycle . l •tcllon cllann11111s, cllp lfpt ltl lock1. H1ar1 duty pan h11d Rtv1r1lbl1 rubber and l plkt l11t • 19.95 TRADE ·INS WELCOME •• GN 40 wltli ASA 25 V1l11t j Val111 Ad1nlrol. 25 INCH -S~arco.lor TV _, NO c~:.ss;, I~< 10 bur'1 our or t~ll\ Wi•~ l"'Mr! P•t•ure ~"" ~. •~•!•· M•!it Col<>< 1""'"11• Malfi•·B•)Qnt l'•<lu•- Tut>-. Piu!H" (.orru•• M<louh••· /D.(.l..,<>nel UHF' lltt$ll ,....,1na. 19''d-I Porta1>1e COLOR TV I 00°/o Solid State Chassis Pedestal Base Included _. 1 ~ Solld·Stato Chos•I• LIMIT~D QUANTITIES! HURRY IN TODAY! NOW s44911 ONLY " , styled pedestal early ~mer•~:~ng Maple color stand 1n ma What COLOSSAL LIMITED TIME OFFER ADMIRAL l9 ••COLOR TV diagonal Model 19T761 •299 Ask obout our 90-DAY CREDIT WITH NO C~RRYING CHAllOI (O.A.C.) WARRANTY 8-TRACK STEREO TAPE DECK =oti·tiOW •21 M Aak •bout Founta!n Valley'• Elrclualva W•rrtlfltlea on Appllane., and ·TV'a. 69 0NLY C'lilDIT? Ylll ... • I Frigidaire Auto . WASH ., •• _ _.WcD .. T ' - Frigidaire Refrig-Fruur With Ice Maker Receiver 4 Speakers & Player QUADIASONIC s135 ANo/fM tMClt.iOl~ 'Rl'COllD (l4,\NGIE,!t ~ Sf''EAIC£111 APPLIANCES & TELEVISION "°""" ~ ...._ '"· ' ffl ••• ,ht¥,.,.' 1111 •• ·"'*'•r- '" s. • • - --- ' • .. - ·• Shotgun 'B.aby Doll' Sentenced OAKLAND (AP! -A 20- year .. ld shotgun toting girl known as "Baby Doll" has received a five-year-to-life sentence for selling heroin to nn Wldercove r agenl. Al4meda County Superior Court Judge Harold B. Hove said Thursday lhal Narlene Wright ol Oakland w a s "considerably i~lvedH In Oakland_beroln traffic. He also noted she was under Indictment in Monterey for simi lar of£enses. ~1iss \Vright was arrested Oct. 31 In a new CadUlac, which turned out to be stolen, by an undercover agent who said she had (just sold higt '$9,000 w-of heroin. A sawecl~ff shotgun was on the seat beside her. 'l'HI l"hl/'/lblJll, MHl1fit Air CIM, Tll'IM Stern 11 yMOr Mer latllfM·SHdlthtll AH OtMr1 495-0401 ••2· 175J • " ' • No Nudes .Allo,-ved _:__City Fig1its Bcittle ~ of 1Jeciclies . .. . SANTA BARBARA (UPI) - F.lrst It was the oil they were trying to get oil the 5anta Barbara beaches. Now it's the nudes. Jn the recent, cold snap, it's a ipoot subject but on a hot weekend an estimated 25,000 women and men bask in the buff at 25 "free" California beaches from Oregon to Mex· ico. .THAT. MAY 8~ all v~ry well for such swinging sites as Mallbu and Santa Cruz, but \vheii 600 to 700 prac- titioners of the new urestyle began doing their thing at Conservative Santa Barbara il · was too much. The county Board o f Supervisors p a s s e d an ordinance effective Jan . 15· blirring nudity in "publlc places, places open to -ihe public and places open to public view whether such places are _p@licly or erivaJe· ly owned." Ii MANNING'S CoLLECTORS SHOP 'tile 02A2B N~lltT BLVD, CO•'fA M ....... CM.I,-,. AA2.02SI H1t1t, 11-•:ae> The vole was S-2..., 800 one of the oppot;lng supervisors. Dr. Frank Fros~ a professor tit UC Santa Bar6sra -and himself a nude bather -says It will be challenged io the courts ns unconatltu.UonaL IT IS discriminatory. op· ponents say, because for one thlng _ it defines nudity as 'N u d I a ts do11't c • r r v eoncealeil tcenpo111." covering, or not covering, topless girls but pcrniils men to go barechested. Noel Young, a free-lance \Vrlte r v.•ho is doing a book on the beaches, also protests the wording, "open to public view." ''What Is public view?" asks Young. ''Is it 10 feet? Is it 100 reel? \Vhy, with binoculirs you J\.can see the Channer Islands 20 miles away." One thing that got the citizenry in an uproar was national publicity, including an article in Parade Magazine \vhich read: "CALIFORNIA BOASTS the only X-rated railroad ride in BLOOMING PRIMROSES A rainbow of color in bud and bloom healthy .an d hardy plants for con .. tainei or semi·shade garden plan· ting your choice of colors in 4 inch plastic containers A 65~ VALUE the country. Pas.sengel'1 on t11e Coast·Dayllght ttaln between Los Angeles and San Frail· cisco regularly bring along c~m·e~as and field glasses. "As the Amtrak train twi ce -daily-.· approaches a nudls~ beach south of Santa Barbara , passei:igers rush to capture the sight. In turn, the nudi sts openly \Yave at the passengers." At the open he a r i n g preceding the vote. the board chamber seating 120 was jan1· med and as many were turned away. h1aurice Duca, a beachfront home owner. said the publicity attracted ''criminal activities'' on the beaches. AN UNIDENTIFIED replied : "There are seven unsol\'ed murders in the county on clothed beaches. Nudists don't carry J~QQC:ealed w,capons_." Sheriff John Carpenter said the ordinance was necessary because the only authority his office previously had were state laws against disturbing ·the peace and indecent ex· posure and a deputy had to witness personally s u c h .. misconduct." Disne y la11d Hotel Price A1neruled BURBANK (AP ) An agreement to buy Disneyland Hotel and the adjacent Vaca- tionland recreation al vehicle park has been amended, rais- ing the sale price · by $l million , \Valt Disney Produc- tions has announced . A company s tat e qi en t Thursday said the amended agreement with Wrather Corp. of nearby Beverly Hills, calls for payment by Disney or $1.25 millio n in cash an<t. 189,366 Disney common stoci to buy the hotel-park com plex in Anaheim . The announcem£'nt said the sale is subject to a Deed of Trust securing long-tertn in- debtedness or approximately $24.l million and the approval of Wrather's shareholders. Walt Disney Productions and its subsidiaries operate Disneylan<L and Disneyworld in Orlando, F1a. L. M. Boyd ANIMAlogi<~.,..,. - • CJ .. ~ "OKAV.&.Ef"S CROSS-AND NO FA~fE.R 111A..i SO ,RE.MEMSER.* Ne'W Time Clia1ige Set Ort Su1tdllv • By United Press International Except for Hawaii. Alaska and parts of some states, Americans \\•il l go on-Daylight Saving Time this weekend. The· n1ove, effective Sunday at 2 a.m., is parl of _the Administration's efforts to save energy. The enabling legislation passed by Congress 11•ill keep DST in force until October. 1975. UN DER THE new la111, states that have two time zones n1ay exempt one of !hem to e!tablish uni(orin time throughout the state. Other state legislatures can pelition the President to ex- empt them from DST on grounds exemption would save energy or that it would con- stitute an extreme hardship. However, with the exception of Arizona, the re de r a I authorities were not expected to grant such exemptions unless the state legislatures prod_uced an overv1helming case. · ARIZONA GOV. J a c k \Villiams has asked for ex· emption for his entire state, one of 14 with split tim e 7.0nes. Williams said that Arizona js in the western part or the ~1ountain Time Zone and no energy would be saved by shi fti ng to DST. The governor said the hot- test time of the day in Arizona is in the afternoon and a time shift would n1ean changing an hour of lower energy use early in the day fflr an. hour of higher use in the ev~ing. BARER901 l Can't Fn1d Cure • FRUIT TREES Peaches. Plums. Apricots, Applts, Etc. For a Hru1gove1· • SHADE TREES Elm. Ash. Fruitless Mulberry, Bircb, Etc. OUI flllOUI CUSTOll lllOWI TIEU lllAAlllTU lAlllEl No ailment, not even the common cold, has inspired .more research with less succe53 than that condition no\v known as the hangover. Even the great Cicero once thought he had a cUre. Raw cabbage works, he said. It doesn 't. ~ ~OClUIE!Tl I PIUNll llD -E lllATED FOi MOii! Y-UI lllOWTM TERRARIUM KITS · Includes: Potting Soil, Charcoal, Decorative Rock & Plantil\Q Tools. 3.98 OPEN -7 DAYS A WEIK NEW HOUIS ·1,30 A.M.·6 P.M. ANAHEIM i 123 N. Euclid , 635-8181 TUSTIN 1050 Edinglf ·at Newport Frwy. 838-9000 -~· nu~lond ... r-------:- SMALL FRUITS VEGETABLES • U.IPIS • ISPWIUI •llllUll•AmCltOKES • JIOllOUllM • ITUWllllllll • IOllElllE!llll • lllSl'IUlllS • IUCOllllES t;LAD BULBS' Plant rtO'N tor ea1ly color. Our bfilliant llowe1ing Ca.liUora assonmenl wll l ~righJen your gar- den. 89~oz. llUllSE!IYUND'S "&RUii THUMB BUAllAllTEr 1 FUll YEARS GUARANTEE ON ALL 1 GAt. AND LARGER NURSERY STOCK •.. ONl.Y tll¢ COSTnR I.DO PURCHASE POTHOS One ol .the finest medium size house or terrarium plants. A SI.Ill Y1lttl 99~ llCH CIN. POT lllCYC\E YOUI PIAIT~ COITAll(RS FOR CNOtl .,. .... ,•c(flfl)rT .,. ' ~•i,..i;t~Si•lllf r. .......... fl.11.""-:) r•.a1 ~l·~~ , ~'"°'. A supermarket basket or identi cal grub costs more than t\vice as much in To~yo as in New York City. Arn asked the where and when of the last shot in the Civil War. That supposedly was fired at Palmetto Ranch in Texas. On May 13, 1865. It's after a woman has won a few races and knows how to pace herself that she's her most attractive. Us- ually bet\\·een the ages of 35 and 40. So believed that exj:>ert on feminine pulchritude Christian Dior. POKER PLAYER "To be a professional poker player. , you need a strong constitution and no nerves at all," says World Poker Champion Amarillo Slim. "You've also got to be an honest man." He says he has boxes of bad checks from businessmen, but he has .never received any phony paper whatsoever from professional gamblers. Peculiar thing about seagulls. Their built-in sense of lime is precise. 1. mean they can take inland trips, but then return to shore . to feed at the exact hour when the tide is right. Remarkable, no? Q. "Ho\v much edible-meat can you iCt out of a 1,000- pound choice steer? And how mu ch of that wlll be steaks and roasts?" A. About 432 pounds of edible meat. About 180 pow1ds of steaks and rOasts. ' CIGARE.'TIE BIJTI A\'erage discarded cigarette butt is precisely an inch and a quarter kln.g. You say you knew that? All right. but researchers now confinn lt'.s exact. It's commonly believed that the .phrase •;room to s\vUtg a cat" started out to mean "room tO swing a cat of nine: tails." But a language expert of some renown now says I.ARE ROSES that bit ol vernacular came Into use about 100 years before ROO T such wh ips were devised. Mr. Shakespeare !if "Mucti Ado A•iid winning bed th..· hi h bo d ""'ien~Vlrietiil.Ajl about Nothing" de)ICri a game ."'w c . w-an -arro\v ,.... 1 exputs hung a live cal ln a leather sack from a tree to ~r~·;:tn 1rr!i':~: make a ..awinglng targeL That's now thought to be the ~ pak1. mdy !or pion-origin. ~"'\ 11 "8eoU~0 ~'u~1: Almost everybOdy can name two but not three of the nrtv tummet. Sid. musical 10$l:rumcnts those · tattered soldiers play In tha.t - lttitt $1 II "~·:::• paloting called "Spirit of '76." Try IL "'-~~~I 1 u. ,0"' •---+-ll·--:M~a·1cs-jUsr come ind go In a pride of lions, those ra8" • cab, but the females stoy together !or life. . -nCltu'er Portne r. for every bloomin' thing• Address 111011 to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Bo• 1875. New-port Benell 92660. • • • l ., Friday , Janunl'}' 4, 1~74 DAIL V PILOT 9 Seasonal OVER 'l'HE COUNTER · NASO Ll1tingsforThursday, Jinuary 3, 1914 Savings Offered ,._lied by lN N+-ft\lroit t2 21 Moot.ti (:; ,,,, IN S<hltff fl•1H OllOtttlOfls ~Ill D h o t IMOill Hm 11 • U' • ~~ .&6' t.on•• A)io<l•UOI!. ot f<on uo ,.lh 40 -'-• 111 » Jl~, SU.011 111 5ft1;r1h~ Ott...-,, EDS MllC 12 IJ MOo11 !.<I 1'~) JI , koll IM llt l:UCI\ •na otllft fl Pi!'° """ !J\,,MOltll Br t>·i ''• S<otl•L G 1;1UO!tcl Cir o"'•·ll"lf· El Nu<tl I~ 10'1 MO•to\,11 1)1, ll'rt Std~ H counter clNi.•t 10 Ent•QV C: S\11 I Mlt Aut • 10 !alt WrlG HCll "'"'' ., " Eq.ul1y OI ,,,, '''" MO\tk C11 ,, )2 s • .wru1 tloM tEtttern fq.u..:UL ll _l\J., .WI-111 1) 1~ s-1ttr- ''""·' Tllll QUOll· Eth111 A 11<1to lllo MOtor CJ llo I"" StVlll VI> tlont dcl'"'tlol llld\llM E~IUI In Ho 2'· Mt ~1111 •.• 1\.o Sftot"tw ttltll mtrk1,11>, "'II•-E't/.c;p 2l 11 MSI °"'' I'• l""' ~mOIOll By SYLVIA PORTKR Thi.S is a good lime to buy oown or u'"'"'"· r11r l.M • •', Mu1t1m1 lJ'l 1 ,, Sn.Ip rois I f \Ion -•llCI CIO llOI F1•I011 El 30\~ 3t•. NII (II•~ ) )~• 5.a C•I wt costwne jewe ~ anQ toys or r•DrCs.:n1 1c1u~ ~fJ'Lt% ••~ • 10.1 LIJ)ly .~_.., ECM<• · giftSyoU know you'll be giving 1'~~~'rr'itiALs Frngrtit 1tl1" ~: -~,1~1 1~~~ ,~~! 1~1,:•P as 1974 rolls on. You'll get ANO UTILIT IES Fu 8o\tll 1S ui.. NH01'm i~ ·~ .,,.a~ I 114 At• lll C.11111 3l~l 3• ... NfWll Ca ~1..o I'' Sta Rt;l.s bargain ptices and you can A<u,11111 lJ ._ ''' ""'"c 11~, 1• NJ N•t G 11 u', Sla(ll Hm I • Ao Ml<•o 11\o 11 \t hl T1Fl11 20 1(1»., N•(llltl In 1 ... I '• SO, N Alt shop at yOUr elSUre. Al!·rnt ((I 1;, 9~1 1<11 lllfll llh II{• N<tlMn A ll~o ll\t Slk N &rw I h I 19 19 Fooa Tw IS ,.~, N•tl .. ,. 8 "lfl 1B', Stelk N S It's also an exce lent mont :::: :,~ 11 1• 11~ Fo,ttt 01 111,·. u'"' fi0•11>1r 111. 11.-. su0t T•( in which to shop for \\'Omen's z~ .. · ~~ 1~t ·~~: ~~;.,":' E: :1o :;: :!:~uNt~ ~.: ~i, ~~ 't~ dresses :inrl All!lf' Ptor ,. 11 F•,.nd le u \, u • • D.i•wd H 1 •', Sv11t, CJI Allttcl Tel \tl• I~ frOI fOE • .... Ott1n Of" U"l:i 1,"'i l1l1~ Crp h a n d bags, ...,., "P~• ,i. slt ,:"'"' 1-1 1• .. 1•. O<tAn E• 10 ... "" T1""'1i , Am E•Pf" ,.._ .O\• Funk SM I'• I~> O<nlr Ml 2'1 lW Tt,101 W men S C01lS. Am Fll'l(.I 12\t Ill. Collbrtll ''• 10 • Ol!I LQ\ "1t\• 17 ltlecm 'hi.rt• 'n d Am Fltlll lt\1 , ••• G.ltll<lk ll'· u~. 0oo1 .. , M U'• , ••• , ......... t Am Futn •'• •'•Colt• L1J •~• soi. aou co.11 11 u Terr, C11 hots ·•ocs Am r,," 1o1·1 JS'· G11ew T• 1•, •'• °'"""'' •'• Slo Tottany ' "'l • AMlrc s, 11\. f)l, Gtlco C.11 11., 9 . 011tr1 NA flo l\.o Time DC (or the en-...,., r1i. .. ,.., u•, Gn ot.ul!n JJ\'1 :u•i 01111 C•D 11.o s•. To•!• w Am Wtld I I'• Uri A11toP U U P101t 6r ll , 1~ lr11 Octn tire famil)'. At!Nu.... "'"' .... ,. 6f11 Bina lol'; ]~'· PtCCI• ll'• ll\o'J 1•111)11 fll A is•,,.,, (,o\ Cruoe tl\1 •l'• Ptc Goem lJb 13'• Trko Pl"o The post--~"'1~0 10'• "" Giii Sll•lt! 10•. 10"' Ptc li.•n 11 ... 3''> Twon Ou . Arooi Myt ''"' ·~· C.Old SFll II ll\1 Ptn OcOI 11'• 1•'• uni Ct(ll Ch r I SlllHlS A.trow Ht n ll\o Grllm ,... I l\o P1u1 Af'r lH• 11'> u111an ¥;: I ArvlO• 1"1 l't GltPl'I Sc •'• 1•, Pyl•• Ca~ l)~l u •, Uflilrt 11 sacs are on "'"' eoi• \J 1, G••r Ad• I\\ I'• "•~ N S• n1. n,, us ~· POATEA I J At\ G• Lt 12'· •)'. H•cll Cll II ' .. , , P•G1• w u•. ••« us l,. l unc anuarr Au St"'' 11~, 1, Hum E,... 9 10 ...,, H•H in. 11~. uni• Fot is th• tr'aditional 1nonth for Auto r.n 1s•, u•o Ho•n•I Sr l•'• ll '• Pi!Ho L"' t\ol•~> V•""" HO ' Btiro Ato J' 1 l'o H<on SqAI U'• 11 i... P•nkrtn 1.l 24 Vtnc1 Sn bargains in thz~ al'l'flS. B•uo wr 1i it', Harper R ~·· • • Poorie• w •'• •'• vt11 Ov• 6•~·· El• 6 ' I '> Hawlll Fl 6 .... Plano M• 11\o ,,,. VIII Sll<k Bl~tf Fe 21'• "l'I'• HelhQ M\ • •1• Pl"OQft\ 101• 10 ... Vi~J9'1 St IF YOU KNO\\' y OU '11 BllO"'n l t lo ''• >ie•Ctl C 9'' 10 • PSN C•r 10 10''1 WCWo Sy• • Btlly MIC ,,~,IS"• H•Qlle Co 1S'• 16'• P!;tn CW l'• 4~1 V"ull Sc desperately want an air-con-Bank Rtl 12,, in. HIM• EL 38 •O Ouakr c~ u" 1~·· vo1 s,._ d. . ~ B••!.o!U F 19 2ll Hoowr 11'i 11'o Outtll Ci ,., 9'• W•r E·Bk lflOflCr next SUmn1er, i.;\ly j[ Blylf\S 9'> lO 11unt Mi9 9\1 IO'• Ralnr (11 S\1 6'.o Wtsll NG before the end of fcbruari·. llekln C11 ''• s•., 11v•t1 C 1 I'• A•~cm W••mn • Eit'nlly L• 11 •. Ii\, •ysler c 11 11•, 1•5 1•9 Wetotn If )'OU'r_e planning to bu.v a Be\! Pro ''• ''·· 1MS lntnl ,., \0 R1vrno ,. .• 1/(, Welgt Wt Beti L.11:1 )'I 40 1ncia wat 19 it•,, Rl!M Pac 1l'• U'• we11ny M bicycle. also buv i1 buforC' 11,00 ea 8., 9•, 1n1h N~c1 20 • 11 Aec09 Eq 111 2<. Wl1tl Pi " · ll•Q Orm I , ~'• lnta•e• S'• s~. RoElec 1Ji., u •, Wi lt'G' February closes or wail unt il B•o Mea'i ,1,, .,., 1n\t• uo 1•'·• 1s•. ~111 .u~1 ... 9•, 10 ,...,n, Fd Set h~ 9,,0 So<lt II !ii.. n1el Cr p 91 ti'> R'• Illa\ • ''• Wl!ltml l P effiut::r. .fll~t-11 Pw J1' > JI ln1er( £11 10 IOJ, A~'{n &R JI)•' ll' / Wil\n H J Your overall cost of living 111oxk 0o;i 10·., 11~~ •nimt Gs U'• 1s•, A1~a1 M• 1l'• 1•'• w111n' Str BlutCll S 8 . S~. lnl Alum I •l.• Roto ~• Jllo Jl\a Wini PkT will be spiraling up11•ard at BIMCii 10 11 in B•w A s s•, Aoor1 P.s 1"' n•' WIK PLt !\(lb E•ns 1~~; 10', lntt•~•! I'' 8 Aolll111 B ll' • IS'• Wood Liii a terrible rate in the next Boat~ Nii 1~ u .• 1ntrs1 ca •' • t \• An11•• co ~'• 10 Wo•ld S• ft>Yo' 1nonths. and even if H't> ~:f,:: 1~ ?:"; 1; • l!e~ &ui:.1 11:; 1: =~~. fp"~ 11•, 1:~· ~;~niF~ I k I · •· 1 Broxn (,\ 11 1• JtmttD 8 8'' R~'I SIO• U'' 16' > loOf\\ UI~ pace sac ens .:rter in ,. ero-At J , J•, J•\n em •"· 1•, lherC''s no hqpc for niore than 1111c•oe •'• '" ..1a~11\ EF ,,,, 11 ()'/'(:JI) ~141111 1t r1ir1• a slackening. Both the short· ~;~•,v s1 1~ , 1~"' :;,*:,.~ ~ :~._ :: • Y•lwne :~ •:."!-c':T. llulle• M lS , 26" 1<.t1va• c. J•o l•o Am E•Ot"•l\ lfg • .00 , 1 term and \ong-tern1 outlook ~!'mw'.,'', ',',:'.1,•,:·, ~:~"1~ 1:~ 1~ •• :;~.c=•o l:.!:: ;., ~(:; '• • is for ever-rising price~. C:non' Ml tG'; 0 .. ..:euv Se• 9 10•, E1'1""1 Cp 101.IOO 1:,., 1~,.= ': But you can save in 1!174 Ca11ll••t s>o s•. Kon Cohn ''• 1 ~1~ f•olM !t~ 11. l\·~ •, C1ym111 P• si. Keull Es• 1~'• "'' .. ~ .. ' Coll 11,IOO \\o )h• "' if you learn the bas1·c mone)'· cnMtg RI 11•, 111.. Kty o.i. 1'• l '• en ' ll~ 1 C'°" VIPS 11'·• 11''1 Kt~S Fil 11'• Ill., M!Wus BllKll 13.000 ll"-~+ '-rules. And one fundamental c,111,11 0 11,,. 1,.,., Kev cui.1 •"-s ... Am Mltrto Sv• 11 . .00 2:~ 2~.~ .... CFS Cnl1 11', 11\• Key§t !111 2.• U Anglo AmSclilF 7•,000 rule is to take advantage or c11rn11 "' 1• .. 8 itMS Ind s\, 6 .., n 300 the seasonal sa\·m· gs \"h1·c11 are Cll•roce A n•. 11» itt111>e V1 I0\1 11 ~,•so Vol'j.! ioe11v .• , ' Cl\.ilnl to s• .. S\o Knu<1s 10>.o 11'• .. u111c11 ..... ava1·lable to yo u every month Cl'M!m c11 1a1, 20 Ko<Jtr Pr 1s t• Dtcilne't 175 C.l\f 5, Ir K•~tt 1' > 11 1 Ull(Nllloed 11)2 th. roughout the year. 111,, 119 Kustm e1 ,., 1i... Tat•l 1:167 C S.. l.i(ild St ll 36 11r" ( 111C1 1~~ t.1ncas1 ~ 9'~ (;ui11er11 u11d Lo11ers IF \'OU K'.01" OU JI i. c111ns UI 11111•'1' L•ntt 11'• 1l'• 1" r Y 1.;C Coto: U A 16'1 2~\1 L.Jw•n Pr 11'1 ll GAINEltS in the market for a specific ' Cia•~ Mt n •, ,,,,Lawter c. 19 JO•, , C•m erw ..ti I'•• '• Cle•tP~ 11 '• 11•, L••v Soy ll'• u •1 l o'n(lrPl'I Mllrl lt•• l ~o "' ~' M.> prOdUCl, i!'S SilJy to Wait Until Cltv Tri• l)\o 161• lea<lr tUI IG 11 l MCI Comm~lll 6 • l d d f th l od I · (lnw C•ll 8 I "' l.egQet Pl 10'• IOlo 4 Butk•,UI ,HO J + 1~ " " '" ernan or a pr uc IS Colle L•D ,.., 11•, L•o..•1v H ,,, ,., s survl••I T<~11 11 , 1~. at Hs peak and 50 are its coou•n o 1•"· 11', L11 c11mp S\• ~' • • o.1 AMPr .... 16 ~ l'" "' )1.9 "' 29.• "' ". Coc•C LA 13 1:;.,.. limlO Slr 10 11 I HJdronPtc Lt •.•• '• Prices. instead, buy the Hein Comm c1 2ll n L•nc 01:1•1 s s~. 1 G11,.,..1rr .lloO 1•,, 11' Cml Sll•Q l! Jl•1 lion C.IS.0 \•o I• 9 l.lnd esour( 2'>· '• when it's off-se2Son and you cw M1c.~,1a'1 H '•Loc1°1e J<1>,10•. ,0,...1P•ttn1 o. 11 1 ,~ 1•. "' 16.t "' 2~.o "' 2~.o may gel a bargal·n. cm .. 11 P '2'>ll'' Lo11e S!Jr 9', 9•, 11 c p T Co111 ll ~ 2\• (ptr Auto ll , 1'l, LonQ• Fb 11 Ju\! MIQ 16*1 l 'o • ~. "' 2l.) "' 11.1 "' 11.1 Here is a "Bargain Ca!en· C11trv1, ,,,, 11·• Ill 11• 11 P11e111 Mll"91 s11• 1 (Of\n Fd 11 o lS" LOl'WS Co 31 lll < 11 ACMAT Corll •!.t.~ ''" Uo 11.1 "' 21.• dar" for mai·or 1·tcms to g11itle cm. Pal)r ?'I t. :m~, M°''"" 101• 11~. n 811tek Corri 1 • I'• Coni.u WI 19"' 10<.. Mad G.J~ ll•• ll'• ,. l11lort• ln(O'P \'.. u "' n.1 "' M.O you. Because of spacC' limits , ea.a., co "'' • •1•12 Ma1 1111v J', l •· 11 M1; As\IX .20 ' • 11, . ,, (O<ISJn1 11 1/J,, Malle~! 19 40 11 Co<rC>H ,...(II 41, .• ~' "' M.O "' "·' I've had to ·sumMitr1ze c,on eo l''• 1s ,,.,.""' c 1s 16'·> 19 ttv•u Cor p 1 • ,., ·II I • · h Cr11tcll R 6'• 6'' ,...,.,.,,Fri 11"' 12'• "' '" but st1 guarantee t:iat. 1\'1\ curt NOii 10.., 11\, M.:ir~ 1 .. ,.., 11, LOSEAS · h I b I h Dms<1 0.1 ~·· \"' Ma•v Ky 10•. 11•, • Ae0tt1'on Cp • 1 its e p. you can ca t c o.ni 11111 •s~. ••'-' Mt CJnc.k 31~ J.i'" 1 MonnetnW u. 1....,-'• Off 10.0 Oil U .J · c t l 1· m· g to o.r1 Dr; •~• s /<'(°"'I E ''• a•. l Arnl•tn J.c;ob 1 -I.. surging OS 0 I\' a Dal• 100 lllo 11'• M<Milln I 9 • EOS N..Clt•r 1l -1'• Off 11.I 011 ••• spectacular degree. · DaY1n ""' ,.,, ~ McOl>.Jv n •1i.. s 11t~nn 1,,.,..,, ,.,_ '• Dtcl' DI .... , . ., ,,..,., .. r 11\o 11\-o • HI lHll lnllu\ 1\.-'• Oil '·' ... " If vou want lo buv air-ccn· 0tk11> AR i.o>. s1 ,, Meo>c.m 10 10•. 1 Ro~•tsDit 1• 11>. 1 dl.,1·0 n.ers. good months to buy 0.111, tnu ,., .,, Med•t•n loO'> ~,,, 8 1a~•·" 1 :11> Sl'.-• '"' ... 011 1.0 Otlu•e c )O•,. J1 ,..,.rtllnt ll u:o.., t BllXk0.111;1 oa 10• .. -•·· ... • •• ·1n •,re Februarv .. Jul)'. Augu-:;t: Di1m Ct' 10 1o•n Mervv ll'• , •. ,, 10 Waler' MloOC 11 ·-1 " O.tm t-111 I'> I Me yer Fr 21""' 1\lllo 11 11(0 Bell 111.o-I.. 011 . .. 011 ••• appliances. January; bicycles, o .• ,, s.tl 1~. '" Mta11. c 1s 1s'4 ii MlcootmDI Sv ''..--•,. Dotultl 11"-11 Mllllf MS ,,,,. ll'" ll Amlla\idr Go ........... ... .., 0 11 .., Janua ry, F c b r u a r y, Sep-oaur &tn s.,. s•I) M111ioo• si.>.· 11"' 11 ca.n, BI09 Mr1 1•.-'• on " 011 '-' lem"·r. Octo•·r·, blankets. eon.101 1•"' 2s1. Mi>I•. G•• 10\t l'''• is..:""°""' EU•11 l""-'• ut: uo; Oortll Gs b>,. I Mlt1n Fab l 4' > l• P•ttnb 111/lUI I'>-'• On .., J '} "•y•mb r Oow .>ans 70 11 M1n Nt Gl 11''1 10 II Skylme OllCo 1l'•>-~, anuar_v, 11' a Y • J~·.., <. !' ' Ooyle 08 t · 91, Mj1A• Tr !43o 1l1o 18 MeOo S.:I lKV S -'• 011 " 011 ••• December; building materials, Ducomn u v. IJ« MDbl Am 21 •. lh 19 SIP•v CNmk• 1·-1, 011 ••• "i~~t ; c~~~in~ar~.qu~~~~~::1 MUTUAL FUNDS s~ptember : used c a rs . F eb r uary. Nov ember,, .. ---------------------• I December: children's clothes. July. Septe1nber, November. DCt'ember. GOOD .l\10NTHS lo buy china and glassware are January, Feb r ·u a r y. Sep- tenfber. October: Christmas gifts. anytime but: clothes dryers. January. February, !\farch, April: \\·cn1en·s co:i.t~•. April. August. Nov em be r, December: men's coats, January, August: drapes and curtains. February, August: fishing equipment, October: fuel oil. Jllly: Furniture and furnishings, January, February, June. August. Good mcnth s to buy garden· ing equiPrnent, Augu st, September: handbags, Januar y'. May. July: hou se \vares . January, February, August, September: lamps. February. August, September: linens. January, l\tay: luggage. !\larch : radios. phonographs, stereo. January. Febru:!ry, April:· ranges . April. November : rerri~crators and free zers, Januar;, July. GOOD l\10NTllS to buy rugs and carpets are Jan11.,ry February, l\1ay, July; school clothes and supplies. August. October; ski equipment and skates. March ; sports\\·ear. January, February. July ; suits (men's and boys'), Aoril, November: sum mer clothes a=id fabrics. Jun£', July : TV sets, ~lay. June: tires. ~'l;iy, end of August: toys. January, Fchn12ry: \\':ishint? machines. !\'larch. April, May. June : water heaters, J a n 11 a r ~· , November. SJiaklee' s 'Conve1itiori Shaklee distributors a n d sales leaderS \\'ill meet in Balboa Jan. 13 for a ·"n1ini· convention". Conve nt io n sessions will be held at the Balboa Pavilion. Paula a.nd Gene Meigs. Shaklee supcrvlsors In Costa ~·1esa, arc cQnvention chairmen. Sh11kl<.'<!. a cllrcct sale!i. <'Or· poration. m t1 n u f.1 ct u re~: bi.ode~radablc clc.ancrs L:n household end industriol use beauty aids and cosn~etic. personal car\l ilems ror adulli .1nd lnf:tnts And natural foods . NtW Yorio: -fot·I ODOgC;r Ill 11) l•y FlJM . 1.1..1 l)J Sagft11r 1.U 2.14 IOWlllQ I• I h11 ot Ofe••I E t .Ob t .1111 JP Gwtll •.lll 10.01 5CIJODElt !ODS: o.a Ind •SkNI prt. OAEV"FUS GA P Jlllu• FO IS.•l IS.61 ln!r In• 1J.ll 1J./I tes on Mu\,...I Oryl FO 10901!9S JH111 !"' 1,)0 l.'13 Btllnt U.251).tl funos I\ qUO!ell by Eqr. FO l.a. •.ll JH1<1 ig 1.M I.SI Com 9.SI 9 ~I 'tl'M! NASO Ill(.. Or L\I 15.01 1•.1~ .Jolln•tn )J.001J.00 Sot<.tl 14.•I 11.91 --Jr Cent 10 16 !Ill ltEYSTONE : SOC! Lt• I.II S.l• •Tllundty EBE Mu ).IS l.11 C.li\I 81 11.61 lt.ta 5.ECURITY FOS: Jtn"''' ], 1911 J E19le Gt l.U B.OS Cu•I 81 lf.19 20.10 Equ1I~ l.4 l.11 lit Ai.II EATON' '""' 8-t llS i.loO 1nw11 •.ll t.n Aom &w 4.01 4.'6 KOWAAO: Cust Kl 1.9S l.loO Ulltl F •.:Mo 1.•1 Adm l!l( l.~1 l.1.S S.111 FO •.20 1~0~ C..,.,1 11.1 , •• S 6 11 SELECTED IOOS : Ad ..... ,,, •.Jl •.n G..tll" ll•Sl2.ll '""' Sl l0 . ..:11161 Am Sl\f l.•S 1.~ Aellll fd l.f>t. 8.2• lll(l'nf S.9J I.ta Cun SJ 10.21 "ll Coo FO l .S1 I .II Attlll 111 ll.l• 14."9 Sp!<ll F I.JO I 'IS Cll\t SJ 1.4 1.1!1 Si>f Sllrt ll.J.J IJ.JJ Alu1ur• 1.118 l .U Sick FO l1.6l ll.11 C.ust Sol l.fl •.1• Se11tintl 10.IJ 11.11 AGE FO IU CZ! EDIE So 11.1111.11 Apollo 1.lJ •.IS Se11lty F 12.1111.16 AH,ltlt H.ll ll.OS Eoret Gt 11 itJ !l.91 Pol1r5 l."' J.16 SttAltEMLO Gttl' : A!p/1;9 fO 11 .Ull.62 Eltun 1rL1'.61 ... Knickr l,11 •.10 Comll J.S9 J.'17 AIT\(tp f •.4 '·'° Emer9 l.ll J.21 IC.llkt GUI 1.11 1.19 E111rpr ).t.I 1,49 Am 81"1\ ·-·~ 10.IS fntriv 11.99 11 .99 l.Jldmtk 1.1!1 I II Fie! Fcl •.JO • 10 Am 0.,, l.S1 9.)() Fair! d I.JS 9.11 LO Edie ll ... U.91 H1rtH" 1.1• 1.'8 Am Eqly I.II S.1' Fm B11•e 8.60 1.60 Len• Fd SOii S.Ob L..tQoll L 6.11 7.JJ AM E)(PAESS FNI AR• 1.41 ... LEX GAOUP ; Pact FO (I) (lj FUNDS: FIDELITY (p LtOf 14.IO 1•.ll SHIEAJtSON FM: Ct11t•I 6.~ l.•J GROUP : Grwtll S.11 6.i1 A(lprc 11 . .0 2ll.JJ 1rocom 8.1• 9.01 Brnl !leb 8.91 9.80 Re"(" lJ,)1 u.•1 incom II.CM. lf.M ln•ilm I.II t.18 C111t.tl 10.1111.11 Lite 1111• '·" 1.74 lfl"'ftl 1.40 !0.11 Spe<I 7.11" 7.90 Conlrl 9.JI Linc C19 6.SI 1.1~ Sii 1>1!111 101] !0.l) SIOC:k 1.09 I.IS C• SSet l.O'I l .'ll LOOMIS S•Ot FO ~,11 l.:J.I Am Gtlh s.n 6.JI °''! I.SS ... SAYLES: . llGMA l'UNOS : Am ln•ln I.SI •.91 E~~· I.SO ... Cari Ov 1l.ll 12.11 Ctp Sllr 6SS 1.16 Am 111\IH l.ll S.ll E•e•st 11. .. 11.IS Mulutl 14.JO 1',)0 In• t 91 10.ll Am Mut 1.13 l.'19 Furld ll.IM 1•.l1 LOAD ABB: Tr\t 7.•I 8. 10 /l.rnNI Gr 2.>0 2.)() Puri!n 9.61 !O.SO Allila! 66' 1.2• v,n1ur 1.03 1,1>8 ANCHOR S.lem F 3.69 •.Ol A.m 11<.1• (J) (I ) Sm•!~ B ll) (Zl GAOUP : lttnd 11.60 J3.61 8nd oto •.•2 10.)0 Sii IBGI 10.JO to.JO Gtwtll 1.19 1.811 FINANCIAL LU1"9rll 10.ll 11 1• Sa GofnF 11 ,J() 11 8l lncom 101 l.7S PAOGAAMS: Lutnn In 9.i.1004Sw'1 Jnv 6.9'l 1 <8 RtW•• 10.42 11.42 l'i11 Oyn 1.1' •.2' MASS CO: Sw lllv C. S.M 6 10 Speclr 4.10 •.ff fin Ind •OJ •.OJ Frttrn 8.!8 1.96 5.avr 1n IC.811190 fnd In• 6.8-1 l.loO Fi11 IM ,,06 6.0to 1noo F 1.01 1.19 5.p!Klr• J.81 1.11 W• N•11 11 n 11 lO V!~l • 00 l .00 ,,...,, f 11.21 ll.11 S&P lnO •.01 6.01 ilS11"1111 3.49 l.•~ litFd V• 10,19 11.19 MASS IONCl: ST ATE BNO GltP: Audi• F 6.:M 6.•l Fl AST MIT 11.01 11.0J Corn Fii I.I\ t.9l AXE INVESTOAS: MIG 11.7J 11.12 Ol11t'H •.91 S.U HOUGHTON: O!><: Fd S.01 ~.!>& MIO 12.JJ 1J . .i l'•DQrt •.'l ~.Oto Fund A '·'° •.II Grtll Fo 1,21 l.•I MFO 11 ... U.'6 SI !Or c.r •.It •.S9 f....o B I.DI ,».10 Jnt,.om I IJ 8.41 .MCO lJ.12 U 10 St Fr 111< Lll I.SI Sloxk S.SS 01 Slock ,..-71'_1.SA" ,..."' lw 1.11 1)1 St1tJ SU lll,9'll.'12 /lQ S<I l.91 I SJ 1\1' Muno 1.1t '1.16 Mllher 1.lt 111 STEADMAN JI~: BLC Giii II ) 11) Flm 8er &19 1,79 MIO Am l .1S 1,1' Am tnO l.Ol J.~ BtMllll 10.1310.13 FORUM GAOUP : "'°II~ Fii tO.JI II.II AUa Fa 1.11 I.ti B•~•<X •. sa 1.1• 100 fnd 10.IJ 10.•l MS8 FO IJ.4111.41 ln\lt\t 1.11 1.)1 &Iv•-qr •·"' 1.04 101 Frei ..... 1.441 Mii BnG t.10 IQ.Of 0t11n 1.1'1 1.1• IM•<n HI I.IS 1.IS '°'""' I.ti 1.91 MIF ~Fo 1.• l.S2 STl:IM lllOE I'~: 8et<011 t.11 9.18 11 fund 6.21 •.11 Mlf Ciro l" •.ll Btltn< 10.12 10.11 Berk\11' l.SI l.91 F~ Gr •.02 • . .O MuQrn ,i •.•J 4.IO Ct11111 tA t.41 80llctltk •.•I •.• FOUNDERS MUOm Ill t.n .... Stock 1•.lO II.JI) Bo\! 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S.•« l CI I.OP I IQ ,_ ... ...... ····-=-~·..__ __ . __ --! .. --------·· ----..... --..,,,,=---,----~~--...,.------:---~=-· -..... -.. -.. ,. --~ ---.. --- • • J (l DAILY PILOT · 73 Sales Record For Autos DE'fROIT (U PI I -The U.S. auto industry set its ttllrd straight salc-s rL'<..'Ord in 1973 despftc a late year s I u 1n p c3used by fuel-conscious An1ericans afraid to buy big <:nrs but una ble lo gel onough gas-saving sins I\ mode ls. I ND llS'TR\' slal isticians ''"ere busv loday tallying up the final figures for Decemer, !he t~ird straight month of dcclinlng sales since 1he 1974 n1odels "·ere introduced in mid-September. The Unal 1973 results were not expeeted to be released until late in the day. Despite the late-year slump, tota l sales were expected to come in arou nd 9.6 million U.S.·built cars and about 1.6 million itnports for a new ~, ' F~day, Jonuary 4, 1974 I ' Now It's a Tune reCQrd . In 1912, U.S. auto The energy crisis has been put ·to words and music by a rock group of trip. ma kers sold 9.3 n1il!ion cars lets who eulogized energy chief \\'illian1 Simon (right). '.fhe song was dubbed and·nearly 8.7 in 19TI. 'Save Our Enefgy -That's \Vhat Simon Says.' The triplets are Oeft to right) de~~;il>e:~~tB'ece~~r 1 i'ai~! Eddie, Michael, and Dennis ~tagid of New York. The name of the rock group figure as "bad,'' saying many ___ 'T_h_e_E_n_e_rgi~·_,_er_s_: _______ ------------------ An}ericans are waiting to see v:hat happens in the fuel crisis. ··THE DECEAmER sales figures will be ·real so{t, especially on the big models," he said. - 1be slumping big car sales have already cost nearly 54 .000 auto workers lheir jobs as the industry plans J o build fewer cars this month than in any January since the 1970 recession. Brirish Rail Woes Railroad Cliiefs, llnion Agree to Talks LONDON (t.;Pf l -Ra ilroad management and u n i o n leaders today launched a new bid to end a crippling live week old rail sJOy,·down. They agreed to hold "in- formal talks" later today on resumption of full scale pay negotiations. the goVernmcnt described as the country's \\'orst industrial crisis since World Wa~ II. main industrial conflict, in the coal fields, faded. The government's pay board Thursday night refused to sanction payments to the 260,000 miners for clean up time al the end of a shift. Union officials had su~ mitted a proposal to pay the Pp~~nergy Order Said .'Not EnQugh' . . ' Ratio1i uig Plan1 ied SALEM . Ore. (UPll - A pliln to hnplement. a voluntary gas ra.tlorung system in Oregon was an· nounet."'<1 Thursday by state official:;. From Wire Services SACRAMENTO -G o v • Ronald Reagan approves of the state PubUe Utilities Com· mission's order curtailing electrical uses but a leading Democratic legislator thlnlCs It "leaves much to b e desired.'' Press Secrelary C I y d e Walthafl Thursday s a Id Reagan "approved" of the PUC order, adding "it was right In !in<" wllh lhe governor's previous pleas for reasonable energy cutbacks. BUT ASSMBLVMAN Charles Warren, author of ma· jor Democratic energy pro- posals, said the PUC cur.tail· ment order "leaves much to be d_esired." The Im Angeles Democrat said the PUC action will save the equivalent of about 3.500 to 4,000 ban:els ol oil a day. But this represents "only about 11.) percent of the daily deficit GaJjfornia faces during the next three months," he said. He estimated the da lly deficit at 300,000 barrels. W8m:n portrayed the PUC's lengthy public .hearings and action by saying, "the elephant labored mightily but-has given birth to a mouse." Warren and other prominent Democral.s have p r o p o s e d legislation that would take away some ~ the PUC's power and give it lo a state energy czar. 1be Reagan Administration has declined to FINANCE blacked out after 9 p.m. each day and businesses must shut off window and display lights 3 minut eS after closing. TllE STATE Public Utilities Commission ordered t h e drastic reductions Thursday and granted Pacific Gas & Electric Co. a $63.7 mill ion annual' electricity rate in· crease. In adopting interim Itobcrt Davis, Gov. To.in ~1cCul!ls execull ve Wl3· tant, told ti legislative eomrnittec the s Y st~~ would use tlic last d1g1t of 111110 license plates to detennint• on which day a driver could bu Y gasollnc. Gas dealers v.'ill be ask~ ed to li init purchas~s to 10 gallons and ~rivers ~ld make t"·o 1n one ~eek. Davis said. measures designed to cut the state's energy consumption by 15 percent, the commission L----------also said outdoor events in lighted stadiums -such as football and basebaU games -must lrim electrical use. endorse or oppose t h e The order leaves open whether th is be achieved _by dimn1 ing lights by 15 percent or cutting Mongolia11 Bra11cl1? measure. The PUC order says th at all lighted billboards must be back scheduled night gantes. SAN FRANCISCO ~A Pl :-- ,. ~Tolng to the Peoph~-·.s llepubli;- of ~1ongolia any lln1e soon. Tuna Boat Operators BankAmerica 1ravelcrs checks , can be cashed there no.w. . -In n1aking the an- N • T p • Off noun.cement Thu r s.d a Y. ix on rice er BankAmer ica Cor p. sa id the checks .,.1i11 be honored by the go\'ernm('nt-0"·ned Bank of SAN DIEGO (AP) Operators of the U.S. fishing fleet were adamant in forcing a fourth auction today in their efforts to raise the price for fish . The American Tuna 'Sales AssociatiQn r ejected Thursday's olfer by proc- essors of $558 a ton for yellowfin tuna. The 1973 clos- ing price was $501 . A spokesman for t h e association, which represents boat operators, said the price for frozen tuna should be about $630 a ton. 11le bo;lt owners "are reluc· tant to continue holding auc- tions until serious bidding starts. and I \\'iii tell you the same thing next month if it takes that. long ." he ssid. The traditional departure of ihe new season is New Year's Day, but this year the U.S. fishermen refused to leave. the !\1ongolion P e o p I e ' s Republic. Layoffs Se t SAN JOSE (UPI I -FMC Corp. has notified 130 cmployes in its recreational vehicle manufacturing plant Uiat thev will be laid orf as a result· or a cutback in pro- duction of luxury mo-tor· homes. Productiolf this n1 o n r h should just reach-674,000 cars, a 27 percent drop fro m last January and the lowest since 601 ,000 cars were built in January, 1970. The so-called "work to rule ." a form of s\o~·down by 29,000 locomotive eng ineers has virtually halted London's busy comn1uter services and seriously cut long distance services too. Leaders of all three railroad unions. including the drivers, agreed to hold new "informal talks" with heads or the British rail board which operates the state-run rail system. miners ror time spent chang· .. ----------------------------------------------.. ing into work clothes, riding ALL SEVEN Chrysler Corp. assembly plants "·ere closed this \\'eek and three wiJ\ re· -rrain shut through next \\'eek. General J\1otors plans a series or short shutdovms and the elimination of second shifts at big car plants while Ford and American fltotors also are trimming big cars from pro- duction schedules. IT FOLLOWED A slowdown by 260,000 coal miners that has plunged Britain into a three-day work week and \\'hat The ra il board has refused to negotiate until the slowdoy:n is ended. RAILROAD' M A N A G E • l\tENT sources said it 'vas expected to flppeal to tbe un ions to call err the slow- down to enable new full dress talks to begin. Hopes of peace in the other elevators and showering after \\'Ork in hopes for breaking a deadlock over pay demands. The failure to achieve a breakthrough sent the British pound plunging Thursday to an all-lime low of $2.27. 7 4% of Soutl1la11d Service MINERS GREETED lhe news \\'ith embittered silence as they came off the night shift at a pit near the \Velsh mining village oI caerphUIJ. "This is \Vales and you always have a lot of uninhibited singing in the shov1ers, but not tonight," said Gwilym Owen. a 20-yea r veteran of the coal pits. Stations Closi11g, Up Srn1day The pay board rejected the proposal on grounds the payments \\'Ould violate the go\•ernmenrs phase t h r e e anti-inflation program. LOS ANGELES (APJ About 74 percent Or the' sen 1ice stations in Southern California plan lo close Sun· day, an automobile c I u b survey showed. This would be about the same number that closed last Sunday. 'l'he Automobile Club or Southern California said a survey or 206 stations in Southern California indica ted that 25 percent would close this weekend, do"·n from 26 percent last Sunday, and that Ohio Firm I perc~nt wer_e undecided . "ft appears that many sta· lions are beginning to ta.ke a more conservative approach in order to mak e gasoJin·e sup- plies last through the month." the club said in its ~·eekly report. "Many station operators were caught short and had to close several days at the end or December. ln order to conserve, more and n1ore stations are beginning to allocate pure ha se s to customers with the majority of those allov.'ing 10 gallons per customer." The survey sho\red that gasoline continued to be easier to obtain on the open road than in the-large city or n1etropolitan areas. Because so much of the ir business dep e nd s on y.·eekend mo1orisLs. station s in the more remote areas are more likely to continue Sunday operations. the club said. Dollar Sti ll .Grapeleaf Pest Still A Prohlen1 Capitol N~ws Strvlce U.S. Financial Asks Clinibing 01i Market SACRA~IE!\11'0 -It ha s taken 3even years -a n d S900,oo:>. but the "'estern grapeleaf skeletonizer h a s been sent packing in four c.en- tral California c o u n t i e s . Sacramento, Yolo, Placer and El Doradoo-- Ho\.\·ever, the pest -which destroys grape vines and some ornamental plants -continues t-0 munch through half a dozen other spots in California while eradication programs a r e under way. • 01( to Sell Com pan)' LONDON (UPI) -World money markets c a I m e d somev.•hat today after spec· tacular changes Thursday, but the U.S. dollar remained strong. SAN DIEGO (AP1 -U.S. r·inancial. Inc .. trying to cut iLs operations dO\\'n an·d stay In business. has asked a b ankru pt cy judge for f>(!rmi ssion fo sell ~tosser Construction . In c .. of Ohio. U.S. Financial. once a na· lional leader in assets a1nong housi ng finance firn1 s. filed for reorganization u n d e r bankruptcy lay.·s last Jul y. TllE CO~fPA!';Y reportedly has proposed to sell its 13 subsidiaries, use th e money to pay some or 1 it s heavy debts, and condul::t business on a far smaller scale as a lending and title com pany. Officials said its assets "'ould total about $5 million. If creditors rejeCt tbe plan. U.S. Financial v>ould be forced into receiver ship, and a court· appointed trust~ w o u 1 d distribule the co mpany 's assets. Ne\\' U S F' management already has cut the eon1pany 's San Diego staff rr0m 1.710 to 98 employes and resfuced ' . I office space to t11,·o. from 14 floors MOSSER CONSTI!UCTION or Fremont. Ohio was ac-. quired Dec. 29, 1970 for U.S. F'inancial stock then worth $10 million. A USF attorney prcr posed Thursday to sell J\1osser for S2.3 million to a group of the constru ction firm's employes. Federal bankruptcy Judge Herbert Katz said he \.\.'Ol.dd rule on the sale in a few days. U.S. Financial and i t S' former officers face an array of lawsuits stemming from The dollar opened higher in Frankfurt. but slipped back in most other currency -ex· changes. The price. or gold fell substantially. The dollar's open i-n g F'rankfurt rate of 2.772 marks v.•as 3n overnight rise front 2.765. But in Zurich, the dotlar opened at 3.3175 Swiss francs compared with Thursday's 3.325. Jn Brussels the dollar. dropped overn ight from 41.95 Belgian francs to 41.80 today, and in London. it opened unchanged at Thursday's $2.285 to lhe pound. LARGEST INFESTATION is in San Jose, \\ilere results of pesticide treatment \\•ill not be known for se\•eral years. Other outbreaks have been noted in far north Siskiyou County and in Fresno. San Diego and Orange counties. The tenacious little pest re- quires a th~year bom- bardment with pesticides or biological control agents -or both -after the year in which it is first brought under total ·control. If sunreys the follow· ing three years show nq tra<'" of the skeletonizer, tt is con· sidered gone. past financial dealings. The "''*""'"'""'"'""""Sl""'lllll!Oll'l!m•GJ....,.a..,wme,.Mlllll•••• company has asked a court for permission to sue former management, and a fed eral grand jury is investigating possible criminal violations. TllE SUITS aceusc fonncr officers or ronducting paper tra nsactions "'ith subsidiaries and nonexistent third parties to posL innated earnings and ficlilious profits. LEASING Edison Boost? 20% Rate Hike Asked LOS Al'/GELES (APJ -The SOuthem Calilor· nia Edison Company has asked, the Calllomia Public Utilities Con1mission feir pe rmission to raise its rates to consumers by 20 percent. Jack K. Horton, board chairman and chi•! ex~Uve officer, said Thursday that the hlke wu ,necessary because foreign oil suppllen have in- creased their prices by 70 percent. He said that Ed .son's luel trul has Increased from $22 mlJllon ,.;, ..,,..., A"""•bod in 1972 to an expected $816 million this year. · Ctt..nol•t ';°""' O..~r Edison's 2.5 million customers in 14 counties Mow '7' v,.. Ho,.hbO<k will pay aboµt $2.40 more per month if the lncreue S6840 ,.1.1t.MONtM Is granted. On Wednesday Edison asked the Federal Power Plu• 18• 2~ ~~: :E~L~·, t•-011 Commis.~ioh for a 21 r.rceot increase in rates to COMMILL CHIVIOLrT six Southern CalJfom • dUes wl!fcH by Edison'• "" K•Pol ILJD. power wholesale !or their own jurisdicUon-. 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Seundlf 10 12 l \o-t ~ W•l>MtJ ·•o I I V.-lo "'"'"•'"" l ,•.~+ ~ t!!i-~2: lJ •,•,>0+ •,~ Sl110Ylll4°ln t1 l l• ••. W«kll 1t 6 1'0 ... Hotllv .lib • .. • ........ 11, .,., "'' ... • 5'11itlt inc. l04 3l~ i.. W•lnoco on » •li4 1 ~Oll)lln .10il 6 II• ... \.I Milt'-L.tM 1 Iii ··-SC:!>llllr 11111 J l "--t-t.t W1r41!Hw1 J ~1 l•lt HlvWVI .n 1 s~ ''1 NE Nut .OJO •• , ... , ~ W••cl,C .IOI! ' 71\-1. "°""'°" 00 .. )l'lo-'-Not"'Me•.Ar I Oatt-"6-5tltnlH<NI J-n).+-lo W•rllPtC.DS 10 l'•+ lit tl\lbllll! l.l'O l 3j\.'l-t '' NfWPlfk It lt )(...-It SCOlkl (p 1' l'l• h WI Po~l ,.t(I I it' ,, ttllllPll ''° 1 SJ',,.,. n Nciw Pr ,$ U •t.; V. Stoun I .oi; 2 ••~ \'I Wl~RI I JD ) 1Ht+ \• tl\ldlyOI .IO 1 •P 1+.11oi NYllme .ltll it If + l1 S<r'-1' .Ji J 1'-• ""' W41KO Inc: t J t-1. HVNfl'Hl..,ti)ll M l!t+ n 1"'1tF•5·.l• l J"°t "' Stutrw ftlll'I 11 "'1 I •• Wllm.'11 Co ' ) H1111I ~.lot 6 a , ., NJlf fl' 2.lSll I ioo;, ••• ll•Contr .lO . 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"9 II .ttl> t0 12l~ ... 50 $tc ,J10 U '"' ·.. WUV!lrt Ml, Ht 7 .. '""'°' ·~ I '"' • "' •·• dll> 10 -1\.'i Sl>twl!'t4 ,«I 1 1! • " ~1tt1 .... JO 10 l 'lo-\\ ~Cf 1 t V.-.,_ _.., ll J\\ + i,. 51111trlb ·".1 1' ~ t V. llVI Co .IO 11 lj",·•· , .. _, ~ j"'° •. Mii I ''°'~ \.\ IMftCOt•"' l 4\t."f 'ill It fll .2• l( " ,._ '"'""" t +'it "'·* 1 ?h+ ~ ~OllCP1 ~, ,"~ ~ wo1w,1n.n • ''-• 16 1 ... .-..... It '4 •·· llOll!d '° ''°'""' =>1Df1~ 4..,...,, Wllld!ndjl 't~+~ "",_i t l .1, 1;1-,JO ! t ,. IN '.wcl Mtd o' 'IYI.+ !! Wo'tftlfl' C I M + lflll,l.IN'I . 2J l l'O ,,. "*°' ,t 'h-)li ,t(I I '4+.,.. WO•lWr .tO J 7 .... t 1~1 Gin, 4 IU1o1.. rl!f0\12 I ll'h-llto Iii:'' P .11 J t ~ Wl'•lhtr ~ ll 6~\•I ll'ltl'fto'l ,MI ft,_ " "Alflll'I "a~•t-1'1 . l'nllfl•jlt; ti J\lt-\i 'Wl'IOM Hf'Q 21 J> Ii l!llfltrtl<il I ~Olit~, ,.__ Cp .10 1 .4 •" W1C,4.lr .TO 1\-\o lfll.5'f'l .19&t2to04t .,. l"(lf~l.OI 12~~1 Sll'l'l-lll_IPI ,'° 'o 1,,"''~ Wl,lllfl(.IO 6 ,.,,_._ !fllit~ t. I 1)\.-.." ~{(i Eof J 1 1•~•-+ 1~ Slmotil.!i!O I ,.. W1lt 1..11»'~ 10 J -lo o~tc..l'I• t ji'' ,,, l"OI t~I 1 U t \\ $lll'lplt1nSIC l • .., ••• W'j'N'!I \Piii II l"I.• \o !MIVAl.IO 11 t.+.Hl P'OV 1\.l '16\'t ~"'° $11yClltS511. 11 •tt+ \\ W'f'Otlftt ,~ I 11•• \'t 111v v t .t5 11 ~ ,., '°I -.1i... 2 ,. t t. ,.w~__l!ld,..• .,i ?.'!-1ti. 'Wjofnl.ttc. 1 • lfl~Pt11 .U• 1 1Jit ~ '" 6 11\16 ••• 1....,., .... • -XY1-.11Wfllt 1.AI• J 1 . -t-~u.11 .... not )6 -+I Sorfl'l .Ga I fh+-'lllf.•I,... ~ \t'I'- --'- -' ' . ' Thursday's " Closing Prices I ·NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE • -. --~ ---- January lW4 51 DAllV fJILOr Year's lfigh-Lows. Appear Every Saturday Marliet Spurts On 'Good News' I I (· • J 2 OAIL Y PI LOT Ul'I Ttl11tl11I• EASY R'iflER -Ke,vi n Clark of Spokane says trick isn't so difficult- "anybody can do it as long as" there's sno\v .'' Syria11s ' ' Sciluted J. By Nixon t~rorp \\'ire Servtccs President Nixon S('nt a cable congratul!1ting Syrian Presi-1 dent llafaz Assail on the oc- casion <;f the rour-<la y holiday of Id al Adha. the biggest ~1oslem feast of the year, Rad io Damascus reported. Nixon's cable included a message "from the American people to the Syrian people! ( PEOPLE J for the prosperity of Syria and the whole ~1 iddle East area." the broadcast said. This was the first time such a ~esturc had been received • from a U.S. president since Syr ia broke diplomatic rela· ti0ons \\'ilh the United States after the 1967 J\1iddle East * !\ovelist Erskine Cald"·e\1 is in Rochester. r.1inn. for a physical· checl.1.1p at the Mayo Clinic. Caldwell, 69. of Dunedin. Fla., \\'as accompanied by hi s \\'ife, Virginia. Caldwell's novrls ha\'e sold SO million copies. Among them a~e ''Tobacco Road" and "God's Little Acre." * The "hostess v.•ith t h e mostess'' is Oklahoma-bound. The \Vashington-Star News says Per>e !\leslu has h~d trouble recovering from a htp operation and \1•ant s to take advantage of the warm , dry climate of Oklahoma City. Her brother lives there. But to.1rs. !\·Jesta. v.•hose p encha nt f or. l av ish Washington parties w. as celebrated in the musical "Call t\-1e ?o.fadam.'' is not deserting the nation's capital. She'll keep a small apartment as a headquarters for the spring and fall social seasons. * i't1amie Elsenhon·cr. the ii· vear-old \\'idov,r o1 President Dwight D. Eis enho'4·er. is in ' 'Valier Reed Hospital for v.·ha l the hospital says is a routine 1 checkup. . . I A spokesman said he did 1 not know how long she \1·ould stay in the hospital. * Coleman A. Younc. the first black mayor or Detroit. said it 's time for the cri1ninal cle· menl in the 1.1otor City to "h.\l the road." • l issue open "'arning lo all dope pushers._ all rip-<iff artists, all muggers." Young said in his · inaugural speech. I "I don't give a damn if they're black or white. if they \\'ear 1 1 super-ny suits . or b 1 ~ uniforms with silver badges. tt's tin\e to leave Detroit, hit 111e road... • I Sen. J . \\', Fulhrl'!ht i«: ofr and running again. Th e A r k an s 3 s Democrat ic an- nounced he \Vill seek a sixth term next fall. Fulbright is ch~it·1n;i n of 1'1" Scnat~ fOrelgn R e I a t i o n s Committee and ·has been a member of the Senate since l!H.1, • !led Steelworker.i off America Pres1 ent I. IV. Ali<ll wifl receive the City of Hope'! spirit of ~ire-_ aw~r~ Mar.ch ! e; for adiv1ty -!D ClVlC ~aff~trsl and pnrtlcipabon on .various f!'.Ovemment and p r 1 v a t c boards and cOmmlssioos. I ,. FrldaJ, January 4, 1q74 • • ' .JC·Penney • NEWPORT BEACtl ' Fashion Island Store Only SA~E ST ARTS SATU Rl)A¥ MORNING ~ 10 A.M. _ Women's Accessories Ori9. · D 400 only L•die1 Genuin1 L11ther Wallets .99 0 SO only Cool Cepl11s Wi91, some Elvra D 22 o_nly Pierced Earring Tree 14.88-1 6.88 2.00 O I 35 only Pearl Pierced Look Eerr in9s 2.00 0 300 only Assorted 'Eerrin9s, Bac elets, Necklaces . 99-3.00 0 40 only Multi Compartment Handb19s 6.00 D I 00 6nly Assorted Totes & ladies Handbags Sleepwear & Lingerie Orig. O 62 o_nly ~oft Denim long Lou!lger I 5.00 {] 37 only Long Print Quilt'lounger 17.00 0 18 only long Peignoir & Night Gown 30.00 D 43 only Junior Nylon Tricot Lounger 16.00 O 30 . on ly Solid Top Print & Pl•id Skirt Lounger 20 .00 Dress Dept Orig. O 30 ooly Womens Dresses & Pant Suits, Missy, Junior, Helf Sizes Better Wool & ~ Pant Suit 59.00-79.00 o· D D D D 25 only 18 only 20 only 18 only 18 only Pastel Pant ·Suit, Missy Sii:e 30.00 Poly Knit Pent Suit 27 .00 Poly Knit Pent Sui t 22 .00 Knit Half Sii:e Pant Su it 15.00 Profess ional Uniform Smock I 0.00 Bridal Dept. D D D D D I only Bridal Gown, Size t 0 I only Bridal Gown, Size 8 2 only Bridal Gown, Siz~ 8 and 12 only -Bridal Gown, Size 14 on ly Bridal Gown, Size 8 Coat Dept. D 30 only Fake Fur Coat D b only Boot Length Coat, fur trim O 18 only Pant Length Pile Coat D 48 only Wool Blezer, Tweed & Solid Women's Sportswear Orig. 95.00 140.00 95,00 95,00 120.00 Orig. 55.00 95,00 58,00 25.00 Orig. D 40 only Misses Better P•nt Tops 15.00 O 30 only Misses Print Pant Tops 1 '1.00-15.00 D 25 only Contemporary Miss N.OW .44 7.88·1.88 .88 .so .44-1.22 2.88 Z.81-4.88 NOW 9.88 8.88 18.88 7.88 11.88 NOW Men's Clothing Orig. 0 241 only Casu•I. Slacks b.98 -20.00 0 60 only Nove lty Slacks, Broken Sizes D 24 only Fall Jackel s 17.98-19.98 O 14 only All Weather Coats, Zip Out li ning 45.00-55.00 0 25 only Rancher Style LeatJ,er Jacket 55.00 0 5 only Sport Coats, Asst, Sizes 0 15 only All Wool Sport Coats D 10 only Mens Su its , Broken Sites 0 15 only Better Leather Jackets 0 47 on ly, Mens Suit Clearance Girls' Dept. D bO only Schoolage G irls Dresses, 57.95 115.00 80.00 S[ies 7-14 2.88-14.00 0 40 ~nlY Sc ho olage Girls Pant Sets , Sites 7-.14 4.88-12.00 D 40 only Preschoolage Girl s.-Oresses , Sites 4-6X 3.88-9.50 0 20 only Preschoolage Girls Pant Setf, , s;,., 4-6X 1.00.10.00 D 30 only Schoolage Outerwear, Sizes 8-14 0 Preschoolage Girls Outerwear, Sizes 4-6X · 7.88-34.00 2.88-17.50 36.99 24 88 D 120 only Assorted Schoolage Girls ,lt:aa .. _ _ Tops, Sites ~-b.X 4.00-5:79 1 S 88 0-50 only Scho-c>lage Girls Sle-epwear, ·-- • Sizes 7-14 3.98-b.98 11 .88 O 20 only Peal)uts Character Bank s 4.00 5.00 D 120 ooly Belts, 24".JO" 3.00-4.00 NOW 16.88 42.88 14.88 16.88 16.88 NOW 29.88 72.88 29.88 12.88 NOW 8.88 1.88°9.88 0 70 only Girls Hand~s. 3-14 .bb-4.29 D :1:0 only Preschool ~Is Sk irt s, Sites 4-bX 4.00-5.00 . D 40 onl y $choolage Girls Sk irts, Sites 8-12 5.00-8.00 HALF NOW 4.8* 1.81 6.99 39.99 39.99 19.99 29.99 29.99 79.99 64.00 NOW 1.88°10.88 2.88-9.88 1.88-7.88 4.88-7.88 4.18-19.88 .88-10.88 1.88-2.88 1.88-l.88 1.18 .88-1 .88 .10·1.~ 2.88 2.18-4.88 Coordinates 18.00-44.00 10.H-29.88 SALE! 0 40 only Miss es Cuffed I 00 ~. D D Polyester Pants 12 only Better Bodysh irts I b only Patterned I 00 ·;. Polyester Pants Junior Shop D 12 only Lure x Sweiter Sets D 15 only Embro idered Pr in ts 0 -8 only Lure x Halters O I 0 only Satin Jeans D JO only Velvet Jeans D 20 only Shirred Waist Blouses Angore S/S Tops D 30 only Long Better Dresses & 13.00 10.00 13 .00 Orig. 31.00 2 LOO 16.00 19.00 23.00 9.00 10.00 Jump Suits 54.00-100.00 D 28 only Embroidered Sweater Tops .8.00 D 9 only Helter Sweater $ets . 24.00 D 15 only Sweater with Lurex Flowers 9.00 Shoe Dept. Oricj. D 200 only Pr. Tennis Shoes, Womans & Girls 3.99-7.99 D 200 only Pr. Tennis Shoes, Mens & Boys 4.99-6.60 D I 00 only Boys Shoes, Sites 11/3 to 6 9.99 -12.99 0 75 only Pr. Girls Shoes, Broken Sizes b.99-9.99 0 200 only Pr. Wo~ans C/09s, Mostly white 8.99 D 75 only Pr .. Girls Boo ts, Broken Sizes 0 50 only Pr Mens Shoes, • Broken Sizes 14.99-18.99 0 100 only Pr. Slippers, Men s, Womens · & G;rls 2.99-9.99 0 200 only Pr. Womans Fla ts & c .. uels 7.99-10.99 Men's Furnishing Orig. . D 38 on ly Short Sleeve· fashion Sport Shirts 10.98 0 40 011 ly Long Slee ve layer-look Sets 9.98 D 60 on ly 100 "/. Acrilan Acrylic Vests 5.00 0 300 only Yellow or Blue Socks 5/1.99 D 7-0 on l'y Wallace Beery Sportshirts 2.99 0 81 only Better Dress Shirts 11 .98-12.91 .. D 120 only . Bulky Crewnec-k Sweo1ters Sizes M. l · ll.75 ·USE YOUR ' 6.99 7.88 10.88 NOW 15.88 12'.88 7.88 12.88 11 .88 4.'88 4.99 27.88-47.88 S.88 19.88 6.88 NOW 1.88 2.88 3.88 2.88 3.88 1.44 t.88 1.88-4.88 4.88 NOW 5.88 4.88 2.88 5/.9' 1.88 S.8' 7.81 PENNEY CHARGE CARD Women's Travel Accessories' & Notions by Celebrity" • Tissue Cases • Novelty Soaps • Cosmetic Caddies • Hair Dryers • Lingerie Cases • Cosmetic Cases • Fragrance Sachets • Makeup Purses • Light Up Mirrors • Travel Totes Many More To Choose From-Huge Selection ALL HALF PRICE Boys' Dept. 0 200 only Schoolage Qoys Sh irt Yests, Orig. Sites M-XL 3.50 0 40 only Schoolage Boys Shirt/Vest, Sites 10-20 7.98 0 200 only Schoolage Boys Knit Shirls, S;1es I 0-20 1.25-5. 98 0 I 00 only School age Boys Woven Shirts, s;,., 8-16 2.98-3 .50 0 30 only Schoolage Boys Lightweight Pa jamas, Site M 2.88 D 15 only Prescl-iool•ge Boys Hooded Pl~id Pile Jacket, Sii:es M-L 13.98 0 15 only Preschool•ge Soys Pile Lined Denim Jacket, Sites M·L 12.~8 0 20 ooly Preschoolage Boys Safety Stripe Jackets, Sixes M-L 12.98 0 12 only Schoolage Boys Down Look Jackets, Sites M-L lb.CO 0 IS only Schoolage Boys Plaid Rencher· Jeck.+, Sii:es M-l 16.98 ' 0 _.5 only School•9• Boy• Denim Ranch9r Joeket, s;,., M-XL 16.98 NOW .88 3.88 .88-3.81 .aa.1.88 1.88 7.99 7.99 7.99 15.99 '·" '·" JCPenney 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT-BEA H roy Dept. D 40 only Fisher-Price Airport O b only Magnus Electric Cord Org•n O 9 only Family Shufl-bowl D 21 onry Matchbox.® Mall Play Set D I 0 only Fisher-Price Action G•me D 72 only Christmas Colorin9 Books Yardage and. Notions Orig. 13.99 35.99 9.99 7.88 I 1.99 .39 Orig. O 80 only yds. Polyester and Acrylic nKits 2.22 D 50 only yds. Cotton/Poly Terry J,,9 D 28 only yds. Print Quilt 1.98 0 40 only yds. I 00 Y. Polyaster ~ Sp•rkle Knits D bQ only yds. Metallic Plai~s O 38 Only yds. Acrylic Hawaiian Prints O 42 only Electric Sc issors D 8 only Embroidery Kit Gifts '. O 20 only Cordless Electric Clock D b only Electric IKtc:hen Clock 0 I only Eer ly American Lamp 0 . 2 only Rockwell Prin ts - Housewares / ' D 20 only Soda Pop Kit EJ -"8 only lrC·r•uset Skillet 0 9 only Texas N•tive Nutcr•c:ker D 15 only Cherry Wine lngredi~nt Kit Camera Dept. " 6.99 J,99 l .12 I l.99 7.99 Orig. 11 .88 J,99 46.98 45.00 Orig . 9.99 7.95 5.99 4.99 Orig. D D D 5 only Kodak 30 lnstamatic Carner• 33.88 2 only Penncrest 888 Pro[ector 77 .75 5 only Keystone 60 Sec Cameras b,,,5 Sporting .Goods Orig. D 15 only Official Red/white & Blue Football 5.99 D 10 .only Boys Football Uniform Kit 11 ,,9 D .2 only Double Camping Cots 2'1,,CJ D 8 only Adirond•ck 8 Seater Tobbagon 22 .95 D I 0 only Nordic• Ski Ou~fit "48.00 D l_O only Nordic• Ski Boot 28.00 0 60 only Speci•I Purchase Mens/Womens Ski Wermup Pants Hardware Dept Orig. D b only Cos Hearth Logs 24"·30" 64.99 O 50 only Rubber Door Mats D 12 only 17" Furniture Legs l.9CJ D 120 only Durifltime Fireplace logs D 5 only ft •l V•riable ·Speed DriU 34.99 Furniture D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D Orig. I only ·Double Bunk Bed , Oak Wood 106.00 I only 53" Loveseat, Avoc•do 189 .00 2 only Sets Bunk Mattress, Red PlaJd 50.00 I only Game Table, White & Yellow 9CJ .9S '1 only Dining Chair, Cene Ba ck 52.50 I only Dining Arm Chair, Cane B•ck 64.00 I only Ea rly American love Seat, Brown 229.00 1 only Easy Upholstered Chair, Gold t 0·'1.00 I only End Table, Parquet Top 71 .00 2 only Donut Ch•ir, N•vy Denim b9:CJ5 I only 53"x73" Mattress, Coil Spring "46.00 I only CJ Pc. Corner Group, C•mp•iqn Bed s 32 2.00 I only Full or Queen Heedboard 42.00 I only Dinette Table w/I leaf .. 9.00 I only Drop Leaf T •ble '1 t .50 I only Dinette T eble " 25 .00 2 only Dinette Chairs 11.25 Home Electronic) D D D D ·o 0 D D D 2 ooly 22" B&W TV w/stood 2 ooly 18 '" ·Color TV 2 ooly 9" AC/DC 8&W TV 3 ooly 12" B&W TV 14 only··a Tra'Ck-St ... eo 60 on1¥ Solid State AM R•dio I b only AM/FM Digit•! Clock Ra·dio 4 on ly Psychedelic Exten,ion Li9hts I only E•rly American TV-Stereo Orig. 179.95 129.95 109,95 94,9S 64,9~ 12.88 54.95 l4,95 Theatre 9'15.00 Major Appliances D D only 5000 BTU Air Conditioner only 8000 BTU Air_ Conditioner Floor Coverings ) Orig. I 19.9S 199.95 .· Ori9. D 12 only 6'x9' Are• Rugs, Ass't. Colors 27.00 0 12 only 9'x 12' Area Rugs, Ass't. Colors 48.88 D I only 5'9"x8'6'" Ar•• Rugs, Or•nge 18.00 0 I only 6'ic9' A~a Rug, Orang ~ 18.00 Curtains and Draperies NOW 8.8' 21 .81 2.11 3.81 6.t6 .11 NOW .81 2.9' 1.66 3.18 2.18 1.44 2.88 2.88 NOW 4.81 2.81 36.18 24.H NOW 2.81 4.81 2.88 2.66 NOW lt.00 49.00 39.00 NOW 3.81 ,6.88 12.88 .12.99 11.9' 10.9' 10.~ NOW 39.tt .ll 1.81 .66 24.tt NOW 48.00 91.00 25.00 4t.OO 25.00 32.00 122.00 41.00 20.00 38.00 15.00 258.00 20.00 2t.OO 20.00 15.00 6.00 NOW 104.00 258.00 74.00 64.00 39.8~ 7.88 44.00 18.88 744.00 NOW 58.00 98.00 NOW ll.8' 24.18 '·" t.18 O 196 only fr. Novelty Curtains 0 l]l only Aitt. Val 1nce1 Orig. NOW 4.79-5.98 1.8' 2.19-3 .19 .88 O 47 only pr. Custom Or•p•s O 50 only A1st. Decor~tive Pillows SaH to IO% 3.50-4.00 Z.11 STORE HOURS~: _ Mon; and Friday 10 .a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Tun.; )¥.ed., ~10 o.m.Jo-9 p.m. Sit., 1 If a.m. to 6 ,P.m. Suiiday T2ti 5 p.m City Of liop3 is a oitional r -ian pilo ' 'call center" with pioneer Jpregra.msl In ruoarch«ducatiOn and pa· !lent cart. , ..................................................................................................... .l. ..................................... ...,,.. ... .,....,.,. .... ..i ·-. . I • -·--. ' • • ' -· - • ' , . . . .. '· ··'. ,"J",o; .. ' Group -Eami y Re~ations • 1ps ' " By ALLISON DEERR ot Ille Otlty Plltt IMl.!t_ Marti Malterre sat on the ~ge of the chair, one foot tu~~ w1der, and contemplated her new lifestyle. ' 1lt was really hard to give up being the bossi:_said th e lluntlngtoo Beach mofher or two. 0 And it takes a lot more energy to keep quiet than to yell at your children." Mrs. Mallerrc, who holds bachelors degrees in psycho lQgy and ele1nentary educatkln fro1n Freme State College and a masters In education with a specia lty in counseling, is a charter member of the Family Study Group or Orange County. Based oo the individual psychology principles 0£ Dr . Alfred Adle r brought to this country by Dr. Rudolf Dreikurs of the Chicago Medical School the group's objective is to teach ralruJies to llve harmoniously lo a d¢mocratlc atmo»pher~ . ' A prime tenet of the Family Study Group is the worth or the Individual, no ntatter what age, inc luding the age4 and the infant. • This can mean,sggie drastic changes. NO TRAINING •. • Mrs. Malterre note'd tha l 1 '.th e television rel>ainTtan get' {Il()re training to fix the TV than we get lo be parents. Every other important job requires licensi ng and training. "Many ~of us get no training for parenthood. \Ve parent-as our parents did, feeling parents arc the boss, no questions asked." Under Dr. Drei_kurs teachin~s, in .his book "Children: The Challenge, ' parents must give up the role of boss. The opinlo~ and feeling s of the child are considered as well. ''Parents don't think of their children as people," she asserted. 11Would you talk about an adult the way' you do your children, behind their backs and when they are present ?-How would you feel if your mother talked about how well ~ were toilet trained? That has to be embatrasS&lg for the child," she said. NOT PER~USS!VE Dreikurs, she added, has been accused of being .per1nissive. But, there is discipline in the democratic household . Family decisions are n1ade at fan1 ily coyoci.Js. Children participate at a very young age -even to doing household · chores, "Children like having jobs, ha\·· ing responsibilities, a feeling of self· \\'Orth. ;'Too· many people won't let go or their ·children, because they gain their O\l'n self-worth througlt their children 's ' Three Family Study Group families get together to make cookies (above). At right, Vic ki Cernok with Jonathon and Brian. Left, 1 Marti Malte rre with son Tom. Da ily Pilot Photos by Patrick O'Donnell accomplishtucnts: A p;ircnt can'I do that. l ·feel you nu.1st be a mother , but first a person. Too often mothers of young children lose their Jdentfty as people." ~he hopes that he; children will lie independent by age 10 "becau,11e \1'e're Jetting go a little bit at a time, as they sho1v they arc capa ble, rather than 1valtlng until they are 18 11nct-then shov- ing them out on their own ." STUDY GROUP The FSG of Orange County 11·as of- ficia lly chartered in October or 1972. and now lists an active mc1nbership of 100 famili es. ?fll'S. ti.,talterre added that · 41nore than 41),) fa1nilies have been in· volved .. Informally. the group began wilh discussions on parenting and child-rc11r· ing for !he F'ountain Valley-\Vestminslcr Branch of AAU\Y and the Long Beach VA \\"ives. Soon she had eight groups going each 11·~k. and lhe:n she \\'Ss training co- lender.; who 1x~gan 1nore i::roups. .. It 11•as str1ctly \1ord·or·n1outh µubllcl · ty. ramifies~ thu t had lx.'tn invoJ\·cd !old other famllles or 1vant«t more ·clusscs after seeing the transfor1nation1' in Hicir O\\'ll hornes.'' The group now offer~ lhree . separat.c but co1nplcrne11lnry progran1s -parent study groups. \\'Orkshops and lht' F'a1 nll y Edueatlo n Center. 1'hc Fa1nily Education Ccn lf'r. loca11'd al c;isler School in llu111ington Bench . is open froin 10 ;1 .111. to noon e\'cr~ Sat urday except school holidays. J ~TER\1IE\\1 EO Each 11·eck one fami ly is intel'\'iC\\'Cd delailing their speci fic problcins "·ith chi ldren. Educa tor·co unselors n1 '1 k c recommendations and th ere is in· teruclion with other parents in the au· dirnce. "\\'e trace 11•hat the (an1i ly dol'S from 1vhl't1 th~ gel up in the mornin~ . to 11hen 1tiey go 10 J)l._'<I. Often. f;in11l1es don't rcaliic 11•h;it problcn1s they ha\'c:· :-.!rs. :O.Jalterrc explai11ccl. She cited th e l'X<ltnj)lc or reeding pruh· len1s. Some f:1n1lics. she s:1icl. <lon·1 l'()alizc 1hat eating and food ure :ill thcv discuss at !He dinner 1;iblc. ,:It's 'just one mor e bite· or '!hal'll nlakc you big nnd strong' throu!{hout the 11•hole 1ncal. It's hard to eo1i\1inec . n1any parents. but children \\ill cat if left alone." Parcnja"'int.crested in the group n1ight allend a Saturday rnorning session at the center. she said. to :ier ho11· the group opera tes. BLUES PEHSPECTJ\'E Fan1ilics inter\'ic11·ed arl· 1·oluntrcrs and mu st ha\'c at tended at lrast 111·0 sessions Qeforc being inlcrl'iC11"rd, gi..: noted. · "These ure ordinary fa milies wit h ordinary children . It often helps to kno11· that you aren't the onl y one 1l'ho has a certain problem. It can give you a helter sense of hun1or or at !e<i st a lighter feeling 8bout ycur problcnts. And many are soluble.'' 'the center operates on an eight·Wt.'Ck ryrlc. th(' next Oll'J beginning Jan. 12. In hctwet:n each series is an all!da y - Sa1urday works.hop dealin g with a s1>t'Ciflc arc<1 of family relationships. Parent study gro ups meet for 10 \Vee ks , basing thei r studies on "Children: Thr Cha llenge." , "Parents help the1nsclves and each oth1;r in group study, reallzing lhAt through shnrlng ideas and experiences thf'y arc not <1lonc In their dllemn1a. "Behav1or11l and learning problems can be pre\·ented. uod if already es!ab Ushed, can bt' corrected. Fan1ily relationships cnn b<.' impro\·cd: scri6US conflict situn· ricns c:-in be avoi ded. \IUTU.\L RI-:SPl<:CT "'.\lutu:il res1>ect can be ma1n1a1ncd ... '.\lrs. ~lalterre noted that there are :iimila r groups throughout the United Statt~s and the \l'Otld. lla11·:iii and Mjn. nl'so!a have hnd groups since the 1950s, shC' sa id. She hopes i11dividu<•I µsycho!og,v and parent study soon can be ineludl'd in erer~ school district currieulu1n. ")'ou c;in see the cliffrrcncc in ii nf'ighborhond 1vhe'f'c p;rrents have been ir the study groups. 'rhc ch ildren don't tur n to :O.·toniiny to talt!c or rcfe rct' their rights. They learn they can handle their 011•n problems . ''It 'is hairl a! ~first nor to just take !he easy 11•ay out. Yell at the children . Repeat son1ething 01·er and over bu t not do anything ... :\!rs .• \lal!er rc. "had to s!op being lhC' boss. Instead. I ;i111 a facilitator. guide. a leader.'' She int,rod.uced her son. Ton1. ahnos1 1hrec. and this repor1rr as she 11·ould anv t\1'0 -adults. His mother-did ootl---1 1alk about him as he played in another part of the house 1vith a three·ycar--0\d neighbor girl. ThC'y played noiSily. ris children do. but were left to settle thei r O\\'n dispu tes. ··vou find." sa id ~!rs. ti.lullerre. ··you hal'c tin1c to do more than n1other."' Double Your Pleasure, Stop Chewing Gum On lhe face o{ the CO\\:. . DEAR ANN · LANDERS: I laughed wh~ I read lhe letter from the fellow who couldn't stand 1he "dumtil>ell look',_ on his ex-girl's face when she chewed gum. He .said it waa the thing· that -A WARREN. OHIO, ANN FAN DEAR FAN: Jf tbat's not enongb to keep gum out of a· girl's mouth I don't know 1wbat ls! Mr. Wrigley Is going to ~ate Jta! ?.l•.t~ T,. • broke up their romance. ..... That Jetter reminded. me of a little This situation has weighed heavily on ditty our nlnth·grade-4eaMer made ""--DEAR-ANN LANDERS:-An old Dnm0--:--my mind. Now-that I an1 older l'reaHze mcmor-i ze when we were ca,,,,gh~ ~ewlng (and I do ll1£lln old) sent \\'Ord .th11t how thoughtl ess and unkind I was. t gym in her clasa. I ho~ you will be is going lilind and ' wants .to see Although I have been hap_py in my • '"" t 'I me one mooe-, llnte bclore complete marriage I still feel that I owe this ' I ,,..n I . , The gum-chewing student b!Jndness comes. ·1nan from my past the dece ncy to gra nt And cud-chewing cow I was deeply Involved wllh him 37 him lhls fa vor. · • Look quite alike -years ago. He is 1\0\Y 7$. 1 an1 57. Should I tell 1ny husband? Should _ But they're different, sorflehow. He never married and has said I ruined I keep quiet and st.ay home? 'Please, ~ And whol ls lh• difference? nis urc uooacslroyca his lallb-111 11 <\lin,Ineed your ai!ViceO.fore ~nrkncss J see II all now-• women wheo I ran oul on him allil falls. • ' II'• lhe lnlelllgcnt look married a mueh )'OU!lgtlr mau. -THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDEN • -· • -·'·------------~·~ • '" ' .... , DEAR EVE: Tell your husband-arKi 10. ll you don 't, 'you might regret it forever. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 om lhe secretary for a welt-known professor ..at o well-known university. \Ve rccclvl' 11 great 1nany long~lstance calls and most of them arc Jtation·lo-!!tation. Frequently th e caller asks that 11·e call back when the boss is in-no n1entio11 that we .shouJd call collect. Some of -------, these pt'Ople \\'C know ~'t'll. others are strang,rs. My questions: Do I have the right to be annoyed by such requests? \\'hy should \ve JXIY to retufn calls origin:ited on the other end? usually, when I call back person-to-person. collect, the callers are irritated t>Ocause i~ costs lhem more. i\.ly 1>oss flhall y said. ''Let's nol call collect any n1orc. 11 creates too much ill \\·ill. \\'c'll just consider the calls office expense." I don 't lhU1k this ls fair to hiln. The phon e bills since his instructio ns have been very high. I resent il although Um-1none-y doesn'.t Ct?me out of ri'ly pocket. \Ve'd appreci:itc )~Our viewS, Ann . .:... • JRRIT.\TED Bl"T C'Pf:'\-\11.'iDED OE,\R I Ht,;T t)-:'\1: ~lure ~·our boss has asked you tu rl·l11rn rbe long-distance call~ nt his rxpe nllc.' 1t•1 ""· You art. correct, tho11gh, in bE>li<'\ in!.( that the callrr. lr he ran 't leav(' 11 11 ·operator num ber. should lt<t\'C 1\'l\rd 10 rtturo his call collect. Don't flunk )1.1t1r chi.:1n1~:ry test. Love !!f_morc tl1:11l Oil:! :,,ct Jt "hutJs cuUing lo :uwt hrr, r i · yc1u h:1\ (' IJ'Oubli· making a db,tl!1rtiv·1 you n:-cd \nn··, bookle t, "Lov1t or St>x .1-·d l!O\\' 10 1·-q ihc Olffercncc." senJ a long, sclt-adilrehl-d.-stamped envelope \\·ith )·our request a1}d 35 cent.I in coin lo the Dally l>i.lot. l ' • • J I dt.11. V PILOT * FrldlJ, January 4, 1974 Ancient <:raft Kept A .live SloQ 1nd Pll0"9 by JO OLSON Of ... Dell}' '41-' ''•" One of the moat dellghtfUI things in life to Ray King, a Navajo silversmith, is to see ~ne wearing with ap- prtciation a bracelet, ring or squash blossom neckJact he has made. · '.'Jf people like it, the more i like it too," he said during a break fron1 his demonstraUon at the third annua1 Nl\18jo Arts and Crafts Show sponsored by the Capistrano Trading Post. The young silvcrsnlith is happy that Indian sllverwork has beoome so popular in the United St~tes because he wanlS to see this an~ other Jnd ian crafts kept alive . He laments only the bad v;ork done by a few Indians who are anxious to capital.ize on the resurgence of Interest to make aJ ast dollar. SCHOOL COURSE • King, a rtsidcrtl or Fort Wingate, ?j.Ptt , an area just outside Gallup, learn-· e4 the basics ot his tr&de at Fort· Wingate High School, then began to study and work on his own. He at first was n1~lng jewelry as a hobby, but t}len found that he was :ruccessful and was enjoying the work. Now, he has a studio in his home where he does custon1 work and repairs as well as creating ~ items for retaif' sale. 'Only one other member or his family, which includes four sisters , t"'·o brothers and his mother, is a silversmith. King saJd that in most Na\·ajo houses today there iS a silversmith, and nearly every student \\'ho atterlds Fort Wingate .High School takes a class in some phase or Navajo crafts including weaving, pot- tery and wood carving. MAKES BEADS King does his own lapidary work, n1akes beads and fab ricates everything else he needs, such as bezels, in his New Mexico shop. Ray King .works on custom bracelet. Steps include I clockwise) cutting -sheet silver, checkin g accuracy of lines, pounding bracelet flat after basic design has been put on and soldering on besel to hold stone. June Ceremony Jiis biggest projects lo date have been making two silver punch bol'•ls wilh matching cups, for a price tag of nearly $2,IXXI per set lie also has mnde large sliver decorall \•e pieces. He does some worlt In the Zuni style, whero stonework is more hnportant than the sl h•erv.·ork, and uses abalone shells, chrysocolla and jel In addition to 1ur- quoise ror hls settings. Good turquoise, he added, is "pretty hard to get ROI''." King likes to wear sl\verwork by other craftsm~ because he likes to have "the feeling that someone n1ade It."' He admits to being a1nused at the lavish use of turquoise and silver je\rclry by the avid collettors, v.1ho sonl'e.timcs wear an annful of bracelels, a necklace or tY;o, earrings, several rings and a turquoise watchband at the sante time. ' ' , ·RARE USE -lifost Navajos, he com1nented, onlv \\'ear jev.·elry on special occasions or for ccreinonies. The soft·s poken N,avajo "''ould like to move to Southern California some day and \\'ould travel abroatl if he were inv iled to display his \\'Ork. But for n<ll'', he is content to \\'Ork in· hi s sho p and con1e lo California for special sho\vs (this is his second appearance in San Juan Capistrano and he worked in the Bay Area last sum· mer). · He plays basketball and 'lro-"'\,- horseback ridi ng for recreation and reads about jewelry malting and ex- periments with new silver items for relaxation. Is Indian jewelry just a passing fad in the United States? King doesn't think so. "It. " .. ill kee p on being popular," he predicted, a state· ment he is happy to be able to make. Proceeds from the Aris and Crafts show, which was sponsored by Sue Di l\faio, will go to the Manuelito Navajo Children 's liome in Gallup, N.J\1 .• residence of son1c 70 children. i ...... Harborite to Marry Peering Around ?.fr." and ~trs. R i c ha r d Afarowiiz of Newport Beach have announced the engage-- ment of their daughter, Teri Lynn l\farol'•ilz to David Richard Suding, son of the Richard SUdlngs or sant• Barbor a. Misa Marowitz is a graduate or Corona de\ Mar High School and will receive her BA ill liberal arts from Loyol•MBp'lllOUlll Unlvenity in June. Her fiancf:, .an alumnus ?' B~hop Diego High SchQol m Santa Barbara, wJll eam a BS In mechanical fDgine<ring in June from Loyola Unlversl- IJ'. . -Tiiey ire pl•nnl"I to marry --June 11 1n the ·Slcred Hearl ai.pel on the Loyola C1111Jllll, M•r1DI de\ Rly. TERI MAROWITZ - - , Sl r\GJNG Fon the Los Angeles Jewish Hon1e for the aged "°'ill be Irvine lyric soprano Ellie David Berliner. The performanCe is scheduled ror 2 p.m. Sonday, Jan. 6. TWO ORANGE Co u n.t y women , Mrs: Helen Hindson and Mrs. Mona Dyer, both members o! the Insurance Women of Orange County, hnve earned the Certified Professional 1 n s u r a n c e .woman certificate from the National A!.10claUon ol lnsur- ance Women. -T I ' I f J, t \ ' . ,·.,·~ tt. I Women Sought Beeausc pitifully fel'' v.-omcn are administrators in schools today . Cal Stale Fullerton will present a four-week course \\·hich y,·il\ address i~lf to women educators. Dr. Walter F. Beckman, professor of education -at the campus, believes that the time has come to promote the cause of women in public education. Some of the questi<m to be considered are why there are so fc"'' "·omen administra- tors:· how sex discrimina- tion manifests itseU and OOw "'-omen administratoni can cope y,·ith lt, and how men \'iew women administratw.. The three-unlt course. ot- fered exclusively to women, will begin Tuesday. Jan. a. and will run for Jhz-ee weeks each Tuttday and Thursday from 4 to 9:45 p.m. Group Opens Nominations Groups and organizations are invited to nominate can· didates for the 1974 selection of California Mot.her-o!-the- year. Any person may send in a n&Jlle through the recom- mendation of a recognized organization. according to the spoosoring committee, the American . Mothers of California. Miner . Shafts . Bad Luck ·Story • Points of eligibility include: -Mother's youngest child must be more than 15 years of age. -Not only must the mother be a "3)man of achievement, her children also must be. -She must be a member and be In regular attendance at her church or synagogue. NATURITA . Colo. (AP I - \Vhen 19-yca r-old V i c k i Randolph eloped last ~1;1 ~1 In niarry a uranium mi ner. ii ne ver occurred 10 her lhat four months later she"d be working 3 ,600 feet undS?rground b e !I. i d e h e r husband . Gary, operating a shusher and trammcr. I . hire a \voman crC\\'." Kelley is Vicki's father. ';l just tan't find a miner to hire.'' Kelley said one night al the family dinner table. Since the n1ill in Uravan curtuiled opcroi.tions. -1.h_c__ skilled miners . moved out. Mo.st of the old timers around are too ill to work, be said. So Vicki bought a Iunchbox and went to woi:l She was the only miner to wear mak~up. "Hey," Gary said, ''you're not going to a bcau~y contest. It's dark down there. No one will know what you look like." '·f'IJ know,'' Vicki said. The n1inc . the Rajah 30J -· . "Women in a mine are bad luck," old ti.me miners said One told Yicki : "A woman's place-is in t~ home, and I'm going to give you all the hard stuff to do so that you'I go home and stay there." uHe was just kidding," Ear Kelley said. Kelley opera\es the Rajah 30 Union Carbkle u r a n i u m-vanadium mine 1--RUFFELL'S-1r\A cmotrs ti!Klcr conffiia: "She's doing all right. AJ • maller or fact, l just might UPHOLSTERY- WhMt Y•• Wmt -SPORTSWEAR -,,.. ... 1•21 H.,._ IW. WesCelitr P1ata. 17th and Jrvine, CesM ..... -141 .. 25, Newport Beach,Clllfomia92660 I I. , ---________ ...:._.. .. ---- ' I I I is in John Brown Canyon , a long way from Naturita. The nliners li\'e in campers and go home on "'·eekends. - Nomination forms are available from Mrs. Phyllis Roberts, 1075e Camarillo St., No1111 Hollywood 9111JJ2. --- SALE! SALE! SALE! SAVE 25°/o. 51°/o & MORE .. ~ . -FABULOUS SAYINGS -IN l!YERY DEPARTM~NT -·- --~J,... M•..,C .... = ...._._ .. BIDTIQUE -. . i4'7 "9 U., N..,,... .._. , ...... U4e ,........, 4n·4111 ' • • • .. , ' ,. " ~' I . . , • L I 1Frlday, January 4, 1974 DAILY PILOT How to K.eep the ·Gelcden , Years Glowi ng lly CAROL MOORE chairman of calilornla's COm· CH • D9ft ... ~°'" 11an mission on Aging and Bernard caution: Old Age Ahead -Nash. executive director or • People try to avoid the ~gns AJn~rican AssociaUon . o f until they pass their 65lh Rcttred. Persons and National birthday and run into Wl-Retired Jfeachers Associa tion, certainty. outlined how agencies could But personal preparation, make th~· world of the elderly governmental asslst1111.ce and more enjOyable. organized private support can NA1'10NAL MEET maj<.e a big dirference in later Dr. Hastings, prof e sa or year" agreed five speakers emeritus at Harvard and at the UCI Extension course, University of California at San Aging : Origins, Effects and Diego has been very in· Control. strumental in White House My World and Welcome to • Conferences on Aging. lit seemed to be the theme He noted that topics there of activists: Dr. Ba i rd were education, employment · Ha.stings, •:7a going on 20," and retitement, niental and Vera Fox, "73 on Christmas," physical health, housiog, in- and Sylvia Bogen, "youngest come, spil'itual well-being and on the panel." "thanks to California's in- Dr. Bonnie Russe 11, sistence, transportation ." • ~~~~~o;"'-<!~(i"'~ To avoid disappointment. prospective brides are reminded tb have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one week before the Wedding. Pictures received aft.er that time will not be used. For engagement announcements iL is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, he sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise iL wil l not be published. To help fill requiren1ents on both \\'Cd· din~ and engagement sLories. forms are ava1ila ble in all the DAILY PILOT offices. 1'Urther qu·estions wi ll be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-432 1. ·vour Horoscope Virgo: Speculation Should Be Avoided SATURDAY JANUARY 5 By SYDNEY OMARR Astrology and celebrities~ Capricorn who should know better : Cary Grant . capricoms who do know: hiarlene Dietrich and Henry Miller. Sagittarian who k n ow s nothing: John Dav i d son . Libran who pret~ to know : · Dr. Joyce Brothers. Llbran who does know'. and i s charming in letting us know: Jayne Meadows. Gemini who knows: Jane Russell Cancer who Poes understand: A-1erv Griffin. ARIES (March %!-April 19): Some concepts, ideal need time to develop. Express yourseJf: make impact. Get green light or "development money." You have chance to impress and persuade : lhose who pull strin(S will be recep- tive. Outline plltential. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Cycle is such that you make inroads by conserving, prepar- ing .and being aware of budget requirements. One who taught you in past could make reap- .pearanc:e. Be receptive. Op- portunity comes Crom unor- thodox source. play significant roles. Ap- parent opposition I a ck s subslance. LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Much that occurs could be obscured by clouds or decep- tion, lntentio118l or otherwise. Pisces, Virgo could be in pic· lure. You don't get im mediate action, but potential is ex· cellent Know it; plan and prepare. Perfect m e t h o d s , techniques. Member of op-' posite sex could be bending trulh. SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov.21): Now you can organize , manage and m a k e con- structive assault toward goal. Steady pace leads to achieve- ment Nothing h a p p e n s ba:lfway now -It is all or nothing . Don't delegate duties. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21:) Time remains an ally. Sludy SCorplo message for valid hint. Qo mor plan· ning. Perceive trends, cycles. One you are attracted to may have unusual ideas. Keep balance. Live ror present and future , not what could ha'r'e been in past. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Eolightment is due, bu! not with thunder or flashing lights. Truth becomes evident in slow,-engulfmg_manner.You become sensitive, aware. You know what should be done. GEMINI (May %!-June 201: Separate fad from fancy: see AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-FeJ» in light of reality. Applies 18 ): Natural abilities surface. especially to joint efforts, You know where to go, when partnerSlip marriage-.. 1.,mprove ~o be there and tiow to respond public relations. Jn BOCial con-when you arrive. S tu d y tacts, be sure you are cor· Capricorn message. Some of rectly quoted. One who is Your desires lack base of careless, not malU::lous, may reality. You now may discover . create problem. what ia valid and what is based on 'fantasy . The lesson CANCER (June 21.July 22 1: ·will be valuable. Highlight excellency. -strive · . !0< quality. You are ~p-PISCES (Feb. !_&-March 20): redaled. one behind the • what had ·been, settled gets ~nes ml)'. be "keepliig $haken. our oWn posiliOn is • 9e0re." Know 'it ·and act ac-. nexlble. R i de lvith · tide. cordingly. ' Memorandum or call could , creale switdl of ~sslgnments. LEO (July 23-Aug •• 22): Be SqitlarlU', Gemlni persooi ready for dlanii travel, a f could ftllll'e ' In important varlely or---in·J ways. Cbooo8 poih lea<ling 10 eluding intenalned relationship expanaion. wUh member of -lie leXj.. • Gemlll, Vlrp penons ,couJ4 Ir TODAY JS Y 0 U • flgur< prominently. Revile BIRTHDAY you are in- ' wiahes wblch are loo U • qullltlYe, fond ~ change and pamlv• -!'.\"~~~ , t,.....1 i ulul'll reporlcr. You lor-currenl.nuuww>•-..Ul pin more recognition thlt t 11 • ton'JCNI~· , J18f, and Augus could be -4 VIRGO (A\111. ~pt. 22): }'OU[ most significant month Get on llllld jp'OUDCI. Leate ell 1974. GemlJll and Virgo , i IPfClllatlon to othert. Primai'y perlOlll aeem atlracted to you . ' concern now --lhoutd be Your cont rt but i o n·s are : bullcUnJ, _ relaforcina, 11r)9ul, taSt1ng. You are» •trenelblftinl iiulc llMICltn. -lo contend ith -,._, !An ,.._ cdllld 7"11 are due to lea¥t a mark. ,. . . As he pul IL, "Older pereons toUla At home." don't need special care. It'• SIJe reccmmended people amazing how the body adapts prepare for old age by making to keep up with physical in-younger friends, keeping In- sults. We just don't wnnt to volved Mtb a cheery disposl- be treated different.'' tion and not worrying about PSEUDO DEATH tlie inevitable. Mrs. l<,ox, founder of tlie_ PLE~ TO 00 .Ethel Perey Andrus Gero11o-r'There'1-lots of thing!t-to tology ~nter's auxiliary, was do on the way downhill~ The ll{OSt concerned about the 2.5 trouble comes when middle milllon of the 20 million age, pe~ are so eager to persons over 65 who are com-acquire that they b u r n pletely isolated, trapped in ·the~lves Out." dreary rooms by meager l\frs! Fox_ iamented young finances, enduring death folk 's seeming impatience before death. with the.older generation: "Why should we devek>p "Why should this be? Older ways to live longer if we persons a r e n ' t competing. can't be happy an d healthy They can talk Y.'ith you in those extra years?." she honestly with ease and con· asked. fidence. They've been through "We spend $2.38 billion a most of life and have a Jot year in foreign aid for pl~ces of helpfulness to share." "·e sometimes hardly know Mrs. Bogen, a parent educa- or that ~on't appreciate it4. tion lecturer in the Harbor Think or what $J..J;1Jllion of Area. contended that nothin g that could do for·4ll'ne~lonely prepares you for old age but little, unsaid things make the difference. HALF THE BAm.El "Sel1-image is foremost. At· titude Is half the battle. You need the gut! to go plus curiosity," she said. · She descrlbed the Ideal old age as having your mate, good health, nutriUonal affluence. some money In addition lo Social Security and at least two persons who like you. Her other recommendations were to live with mixed generations, stretch the mind by continuing daytime and evening classes, re1ninisce in writing and retain a "giving" position by joining-volunteer groups such as Retired Seniors Volunteer ~rogram (RSVP). Dr. Russell noted l ha t C81ifomia has 10 percent of. the United States seniors and spends seven times more for them in slate funds than two years ago and receives $4 million compared to $500,000 in federal money. SENIORS UNITE She"-urged seniors -''the integrated ma1ure, armored actives, passive dependents and unhappy upsets" -to unite for advocacy of the services they need a n d portability f£ pensions. "California has the most multi-purpose senior centers in the nation, providing food . education, essential linkages and in some ca9Cs, self-employ- ment seven days a week," she said. Some 27 Planping a n d P'riority Service Areas are aimed at more directness in getting tile needed services to seniors fast when they need the.Jn . Dr. Russell described the state agency's job as in· f!uencing the federa l govern· ment to help the person at home for a n10re fulfilled last quarter of life. SENIOR BOO~t Nash referred to the "senior boon1," 820 new old-persons every day. (F'lguring 4,000 al· taln their 65th birthday and 3,180 die .) ~Jc re,'iewed ho\v h i s organizations were the first to obtain a group health policy in 1954 and noted the in- c re a Bing f und s £o r degenerative diseases "so our faculties can be extended or enjoyed in old age." ltecalling the •effect last minute Social SCcurity lei!L!-Ja- tions had on the last three Presidential elections, Nash predicted ttµil a· national heallh insurance plan 1vould be more critical t h a n \Vatergate next tin1e. WEALTH OF ADVICE "Organizations such a s AARP (with 6 mi 11 ion members l have the resources and numbers to set -. priorities°." ht said. "Fifty peccent of stock.! and savlnp: belong to people over 60 and adve rtisers are beginnlng to recognize this power. shifting-I from their youth appeal." •.J As part of wising up to ,, , old age. he cautioned that ~ - retirement. under some con·,,_ tracts these days comes 111 early as 51, leaving less time l'!.1 in which to earn mooey ta 11 live longer. · ~ And the fastest growing_, group of elders are those over = 85 mostly woinen, the pro-' tective ca tegory that needs ,! every kind of help. \•~ Cla iming that senior ci tizens ·. want to serve, not be served, ' Nash credited senior centers 1 for alleviating the "poverty 1 of. not necessarily means, OOt ~ nl'eaning. f· "Prople shouldn 't be faced · with built~in obsolescence. t They always need Jove, securi-(. t.y, status, acceptance and ' fhallenge at any age ." ~ t~ ---------------------1.· .. G\anua~· STOREWIDE SAI,E • Aud iophile answer-the anraclive way to enjoy your slereo. Available m Teak. 3 Units 72" long x 18" deep $119.00 2 Units 48" long x 18" deep $89.00 Sideboard sancluary-for your. treasu red china. Classical desig n in leak. 54" x 17" x 30: Ava ilable in teak $159.00 Bu ild a beautiful nest wilh elegant si mplic11y. Start wilh !his hand rubbed teak platform bed . complete with headboard and nigh! stands. Th en Brighten your lile with this George Kovacs floor lamp ...... 57" high. ' Assorted colors $26.00 ea. or 2 for $49.00 Chrome sljghUy higher. ' Dine comloqably with these beau· tiful chairs wilh rich black vinyl cush- ions and rosewood. teak or walnut lrames. Teak $59.00 Rosewood or walnut slightly higher. ' Comfort in corduroy. with leather sling a·rm s. chrome fram e and cushions in orange or dark brown corduroy. Only 579.00 · linish your nesl wilh this classical teak dresser. Platform Bed (Complete) Dresser $199.00 (Teak only) Queen size $299.00 (Teak only) Also available in King Size-slightly higher D1stinc11vely con1emporary ... d~s1g ned by Milo Baughman,. crafted by Thayer Cogg in. Available 1n earlhlone velvels and neutral !weed. 6EVERYTHING ISON~ALE Big savings on all furniture. Sofa $349.00 Matching chair $169.00 MASTERC HARGE & BANKAME RICARD OPEN DAILY 10-6 FRIDAY UNTIL 9 SUNDAY t2 TO 5 ~·Be at ease-in the classical cross- tlow chair. Avail~b le In J1Ja.cl\,_ brown or terra colta lealher-with rosewood or oak frame. .Rugs, wall decor and accessories reduced 20%. , ON -THE-DOCKS/SAN PEDRO Huge bargains on fl9or samples, save up to 50%. 2so East 22nd s 1raet c213J 831-1235 ---11.BEVERLYd:ULLS, ___ ~-- -• ~ -oiilfS199.00 Rosewood $219.00 . . . - -· • 9244 Wilshire Blvd (2t3J 274-0613 -) ., '• ' '\ ' ' r • \ 16 DAILY PILOT .. Friday, January 4, iq74 283~pouitd :Mayor Sets Out to • rim Fat SENATE OKS COUNCII,S DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) - \Veighing in at 283 pounds ns "he began his 33rd year as mayor of Dearbom, Orville' L. llubard promptly p u t -himself and the rest QJ the city aCbniri1stration on a diet. \\'eig h·in at City llall. ll UBUAHO, \\'HO stands 5 rcet 11 and· "''eighed as much as 327 pounds in the late1960S. told the admJniatratofl_ 1hey had until Jan. 15 -the dale reapportionments are due - to 1neet weight loss goals or fro1n 2 to. 10 pounds. suspended without pa v for .. fatness ," the 1naybr said. '"The rat guys around here d01!'t dq much,'' said Hubbard, the United States mayor with the.longest continuous service. "They eat too n1uch and get drowsy and then drink a beer . for lunch and it's att over.' ... during hls 15th mayoral can1· suspend himself. Jn 1950 he set up a govern-on top on eleeti~n dn.y slncr paign last fall that he \\'a! ··1 will tell You Ibis,·" he ment . in exile across the he took over at Dearborn. ~1EXICO CITY (UPI) pm.ting back much or the · added. "lf 1 am alive M ~· Detroit River 1n Canada In In Nov'ember he took 8Z per· The Seoate approved a law weight he lost Qn a rice diet. 31 1974 I will be 75 pounds an attempt to thw_art _a libeL. cent of 'the v-Ot~... establishing . ••tha'chlng t'Gun- ln 1970, after that early ef-ltihter t'ban I ain today .'' Tulf. Late~, he beat back a ITS h. cils" instead of ]'u v en i I e fort at caloric. re'stralnt, Hub-recall effort and an attempt HUBBARD CRED is IN POIJTICS as in dieting, to have the governor remove succen to efficiency in nuts· coorl!, marklng the treatment bard sold his _specially made him from ofUce. In 1964 he and-bolts public services, but of delinquents as •ttiwnan 1 king-sized suit s to anyone wtJo Hubbard has had his ups and survived i federal civil rights he's charmed the people. or beings" who · should be could fill th em. downs sln.ce h.e took ov.er •.• prosecution. Dearborn with more than. 1us.1 De bo hi l 1~ readapted to society instead This_Jime ~ said he'd I~ ar rn s c e exeeuttve m DespUe'. all the fuss , Hu~ sewers and bullding pro1ecu. ~ "You have to lose \veight if you want to work here," the 70-year--d.d mayor told 19 city department beads at a Those w~ fail will -be---.JIUBBARD. COAlP.i...,.lNE·D · seven pounds by-Jan. 15 or ·---~-·-·-bard ha1·""1itways come-·o.urii:!-£.quesuon-or-stylc. ~=~olt·~~lsh~~--~~-~~~~ Prices Eff.ective Jan.uary 5 · & ,January. 6, 1973 ' t 25% OFF CANE LAMPS 11.98 to f 18.73 ' ' ' Reg. 15.97 to 24.97 t t ---.... ·--· ---~------111111 Save $2 Soucie top · Reg.$8 HAVE A COFFEE . BREAK En1oy t reomy delicious cherry cheese coke ond cof- fee. Cofe1erio. • • • FROM Fash ion lslana Newport Beach -__ __, J ------- -· • SAVE .09 ACE . Oil Fil TER FITS MOST AMERICAN CARS 99c Reg. L29 • SAVE .42 FURNACE Fil TER .INCLUDES POPULAR SIZE . 14x2Sx1 to10x25x1 Reg. 47 u . BUENA PARK -·-~ ~If·~" oj;.ily S. SundoJ 94010 \0o"' SAVE 2.00 DENIM -CUFFED JEAN ' SOO/o POL VESTER SOO/o COTTON 5.00 " Siniil•r Ta llh1,tr•ti11tl SAVE 3.00 · RELl-A·RIDE BATTERY 3 YR1 GUARANTEE - --1 YR. UNCONDITIONAL 1S.9:i Reg. 18.97 36 Mont h Gvoro ntee ? . ~ ····--····· ~----.... -·-···--·--····-------·--·,·-· -----------------.. Save 1.49 Men's nylon bike jackets Ideal for sports. 2. 50 ' J, .. .• .4.'I' 1:.i,• Reg. 3.99 f' ' ,~( ·~A :, ~ f¥i ' ' ORANGE t•r o.. "'~a.-6"" Oii~n Oo•l!I & Sundoy 10 om.!~ IQ p.m. SANTA ANA 1'00'9. -""" "'~t-...... Ope~ 0o,1y & 5""dov 10 o.m. 10 10 pm . .- ' •• --- 0 SAVE 4.96. 6 DIGIT CALCULATOR Battery.operated unit fits in palm or-pock-et 24.99 Reg •. 29.95 . . . I ! I ·1 • JCPerlnej 123 45& 189 0 9 . 1K1r.r~t1 • Sll("l;.~r" . , ... ~ .... ,.-.... ~ ......... CHARGE IT ., .j 1 ' I l I with your JCPenney Charge Card. If you don·1 have a charge, ' 1ust see how fas! we can open up yqur neW account. .· \ • -s-:TE"R£o~socoN-t>cs .JOF,.-THE HARBOR -. ----------- --"-' --• ' ' • - ,. • Welcome Aboard By ALMO~ LOCKAllY . ' . • • •• i Frida,, J .. uwy 4, 1974 DAILY PILOT J7 1 ' . ' PUBLIC NOTlCE • -PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLICN~CE PIJBUC 11.0TICJE ,.~~Ll~H~,~~~r :~ii :~tt.,~g Ntmcl TO c:.=... ... I UUC "~:J!~0~:~::A~":I( . ' • ":'1:~04/:,.::~·:::· ltOTICI ~~i~.DtJOll ·~JI~0.u.,s,.:~':::· COMMISSION AT THI CITY HAL&.. Ta.ud••• A•D OP INTIN1ION TO ,,.. folloWir.i .--11 '°'"' blhlntt• Tllo i.lloWll'lf ,.,. I• cloln• bUlll'lfU lUf'llllOll COUflT 01' ,... ' Tr.. l11llowl~O ptrlon It dOI.,. ~.,,... 11 f'Allt • DIUVI, (OITA MIA, TllAMIPll Al.Cotl(>LIC •IYlllA•I is: 1 1111 STATI D, U.LIPOll .. IA ll'OI: Iii CALl,.OJlHIA. •t-•1• l".M. Oil ... , LICIMll , ........... ,., u.c.c .• ,,.,., ALO 1NDUST1t(1s. 31" ll:td H111 Aw.. l lAUTl.OUA•D JAltlTOll.lA,L St IV· THI C®"1Y o .. o•ANOI DATA TIC, ~IU S•l•tl• Drlvt. SOON Al POSSllL8 lHflllEAll'Tlll: ~ I A Pl. . (CMll M_, c;1lll. ICll, ~I Kltlllll'ld Clrclo, Hur1ll119ton .... A•7IUI lrvlM, CA ~70> OH MONDAY. JA.NUAllY 14 1t14. NOTICI IS Hl!lll!lY 01\llN .. IM All~Y L. CNcf\f Jr., ,... Ft ltwf91W ·~"· CtllflfrW• f'U.'1 '"'''of UUM c. HUNT ING. Otto•.. 0.!'1111 c. Lorll. 41fl lllKll Of, lltNil'df .. Tfle ........... 1,.iiuttont: Cr..il-• tf DONALO 'llL.Dt+OUSI Mid or., Vltlt. Ct llt.,.,., Wll*' I , (llJdl Oltlltr, Jr., 6.MI N, ' ''"'"'' C•l· '1705 '· •tlOlll ,ntfMltl NO. ll.JML ..., WALT.ill KeNHV fOClll SKur1ty N.. Tiil• MJ-. It condllCttd .., •n l(Jf1(l1,1nd Clrcl.. )illfttlnofOfl lttel'I. NOTICI 1& Hllt.EIY OIViN .. ""' llll• i-i·•-,, cOfld\ICttd "" Ill C""9 MtM ,..,.,.,.. Cemr!llMMn. l".0. ~· Ind I~ '"IN<f1\l'llV, IN:lloMlltl. CtUfior"Nt f'.16oi1 credt-. flf rfll IMW ntrntd dtctdtnl IMll'tldi.111. •oat 1-. . ~~~~1Ctllf.. for ,,.,...,.,or '""' L.ken .... ""*' M!lltff A. L. Dvc:l'll Tiil• ""''""' ,, Mint c~ttd • .., ""' '" .,...... IMIYNll ctt•-.. 111111 Otn\fl c . L.orll "'""'"'°" .,. ,._ ~ .._ II 1M52 LM \Mlt, 111 tllt ™• 1t1i.-t ....... nltd 'WfTlt tllt .,. lllCllYkl\MI. • lllt .. ia ~ •r• ,..,lrtf .. fllt Tlllt 1i.t1f'nflll .... t!ltcl W\111 lllt 11'1 tllt lltf'tltlri _ ._,,._ 1111 * City .,, Gel'Mft GfWI, tol,lnty ., Ort .. Ciuntf Cltrll o1 Ortlllt tll#flt'I' M W. (111111 DI....,. t11tm. 1'iltll t11t llKHMf'V -Mrt, In C_..ty Cl1rti flf Ot111t1 COllnty • ,.,..,. .. lf"ll ~ 1W ~ llYd,. Sltll ol C1H..,,.l1, lhtf I !will lr11 .. ,_,., Jan111ry t, ltn. llllt ttt!tmtnf fl!M Wiii\ nw. CflolntY tM offk9 of nw. OO• of tttt ·~· Dlc:flnlttf" 12, ltn. """°" ll'ld,. Vktorlt St., tnd W, Ill l bollt to be mlM .. 1..AW"!NCt p.-a Cl«• of. Orllllt ~ty Oii NMt!IW tntllt.f Ctllrf, Ill' 10 pr1Mnl IMm, wllll , ... 1"11 !.'1 -,,.,. a . A,, . 9od "t ~ ~l'llL.ON. SOC\•' a.cwrlly No. 0$1·1W"9, Plllllltllld Ot•ne-, .. ,, O.tty P'll••· ,,, 1m WlL.L.IAM '· ST JOt4N, COUNTY '"" ..... ,., -.idler•. ,, tM llfto l'Vblltl\ed Or•noe c ... , 0•!11 l'llot. ll:t, ~,. IU<P, 11:.H:P, A.-.CI", Tr1111...... .,... lllterMIM Trtnlftt ... J1n1,11ry '· 11, 11, u. ,,,, 1+74 CLlaK, I Y ltllr-M. w ..... o....rn. flf"fft1ild ,, c-. l(lrw:lti .. A""''°"· ~..nlMr ''· 21, ,., 197l •nd J•lllU•,., Cl.(P, '""'C2-CI". ' ....,.. lt\IJI~ Mel""' I• 1111 °"'"'' ,.2tlf1 \O'JO ""'" ll"OMW•Y· S•nl• AN, '· 1t7~ l1»n One never ceases to wonder about w·•·t -·•cs "ne-0 1. ••1°"'1 '"ITIT•O• NO. ll:.J'41, une. '" .,. c11y • COil• MtM. ct1io111ty UB C NOT!".,,. ,,,.,1.,..., ore~ c1111 o1ny ,1101, c1111wn11 nm. w111c11 11 1111 pl•c• lied 1.1.9 1ua& .w .. 'r-rfw•Cotte MIN l'IMW!lnt tolflrnl.-l~ ot Ot•ntl• SJl_fl flf (tfff'orllll mu. p U vu Jtn\ltry 4 11, U, 2S.1'7C -t '74 OI' bu1l11Mt of !111 ulldtrlkllltll 111 111 rVBUC.?i0TIC£ A Un . Pfess-t.nlernat!Crbiil stOrv with ~evec-••, , F1111 .... ~1,,,._c..ee IMtl-Cailtou~ •• _Tl'IL.Pf'°'*1V tt. dtte;rlbfo;I 111 ""'''-1 m111t,-1 pe,-t1ll'llnt to 111-r-111111 01 Ohio dateline t to r1 \tie"' an.. ,lot lllfml11lon i. r1aon1 11r11t1111y 11: All 1toc1t l1ttrfd., 1l1!1io1rff, e.wlllili\Tnt--NOTIC rTo t"OlifTll:ACTOll:S said dKtdlflf, w1111r11 '°"' f'l'!Oflttlt 1ntr -------------' wen ln g re a J detail, ihcludlng many !f'Crll:lld In tt:w Pltltlon, and lot•Md •Ml elOd wUI of • certain bllr' 11Y1rn CAt.L.l,.O ftOll: llot ' l'l.lnt:A:rN&n'CE tn.-flf1niJti1lc1t1orrof tnb noflu. i----r1CTITt0U1--au11,..1I•--------~ quotes, about a. Frostbite Regatta th a·t wu held New. 1 ''1' W•ll•a _.a.ve., Cotti Miii. 11111111111 t.ll1l'#tl •• QW1T1 PUS •ncl kllool 0 I •tr 1 ct : Hf.WllOlT-MeSA __ oeted ~ .. , n, 1m. "AM• 1T.1.TIM•NT 'Year'• day OD Lake Er1'e. a. ':'!'ii= ·n:.:1,:rc:o • ltc•tld It IJG H.wporl lllll1v1...i In UNlllllO SCHOOL DISTJl:ICT , .... , ••• " COUll:T OJI CALll'OlM'A 'I"" Ntf!Oflll ••uk Tiii fllllowlng ptffOn 11 dolnt """""t I"' , • •lMI. tfll CllV of C•I• M-. C0\1111\1 ol lid o..dll111• 11 •0ii o'tfeck 1 m. .,. COUMTY 011 OltANe• 91' Or1""9 COl.lllty 11: · fOf' 1,,1t1 Joht"'*IOrl, t./o ia 1Mnt Of'lntt. '1111 or C1iltornl•, •NI frltllfef thl illtl ~ or Jiniiu,. HJ• . 1'I CIW Clflfrlt DftWo w .. 1, IUWIOf 01 the Wiii KAllJM,N ANSWEIUHG J l!'llVICl , THE EVENT DREW 22 sallo • 111 I"""" The AWllllll. H ..... ttKr.. C-'lf .. for thl folloWlflt l lCtftollc ._ ... lie-Pltct .., lld 1t1C11.t· ,.u l'l1C*'tl1 ..... AM. CtlfflnU "°' tM IDIYI "'""' lllllttdtnl 2"1 Or1<1 L.1111. COITI MIM f'U2• rt m 00 ........ es. ptnnlttlOll to ,..lOM ., ... ,.., ..... lor ilctM11): ~I• ·-LlctnM A""" c .. ,. Mitt C1i1fltt111 CHt ,. .. AD 11111 . JAMii •. WILHll.M Elhll IC1mi1n, l11• COllllllY ClilO temperature on Lake Erle was 24 degrees. ~· ,lf'n1AM~l'll":~1 c:•: .. MIU. -iflllld .. , , • "',. •• lottflld Pro!Kt llSltilltlc.11i'on Hllfll; SwlmmJne CfTATION •WAQOf'TION .. ICIMHL. ANDlll:.SOll Or .. Cm!• MMI, Ctlll. '262' Maybe it was the quo•-s fro the and I ,• ._,!·-1 ,__ • 1 • '"' -'' 1u2 H.....,,.,.. aoliolll'11r1111 tot tM ,ool llep.1lr • l!ittncl• Hllh k'-1 In thl Mllltf' 111 t111 ~ l"lllttONr MM ...,. lftllllllwtY Tiil• bllllln111 11 COl'ldllcttd lrJ "' K m sponsor • ew : ti ...... It!~~...' ~on.$ • Ill pl"ln'lllll loc•lld ,, 15'2 Ntw1JC111 f"llCI r11n1 .,. "" 1"111: 1•J1 llltctnll• Ill' NOEL CHAil.LES OlllSE. A60clll119 S•I• .... C1Wflflll1 ttttl " Ll•cllVld .. I. • of the saJk)rs that cau~ scores of n ewspapers _ includ. tOP (t -· -... or c lolioll•v•rd In 1111'Cltv o1 HIWJIClll Blkl'I, Avtt11io11 Cett• M1S1 c ellfffnl• ,_,flt!, Tth (11u pa.rm , &:11111 ic1rt111n in.g lhe Dally Pilot and the ,...._ Angeles Tim'"_ pl\11 ra-:11111 =co,,°' }'1 Pl=''"' c°':r1::::, Coun!Y °'or.,,.., s11te ot t111torn11. "or1CE 1s HE~EIY aiveN ititt Te: 1111cH.1.11:0 l:AllL. KING, 11. ,,, AttlrMY•"' •Ill(•'"'· Thlt at•temtnt w11 flied wi111 "" ~ c:nl•. ! • r w. .. • llltt I/II •fflllilfll ol Pl.H'(ll•M price "" ilibovl-"'""' SCl!lol Dlttrkt .. ICft111WlclM. 0.11••· Tn•• Pwbllthtd °"'"'' CNtl D•lli 111111 CO\lflty Cl•rt ol Ort!IQI CouMy Oft dlO llaliODI ACl'OSS the COUOlnt 10 feature tbe slory, COSTA MESA' II' COll~lllan In COMICllOll Wlftl 11ld Ort• tOllftly Ct tlfomlt Kll"ll W IY Ol'cllt of ftllt Court, VOii 1r1 Olc:lfl'ltiw 14. tl, 2t, ltD t N:I 1nu1rv Dettmblr U. ltn. --l .. ~ ' tr1n1t1r ol .. 11111 11c:enM IOI' llcenu.1) incl ""°"811 '1t• Oowr~lflll ... ,... Nr.OV clttd •M r-.ulrld to ._,.,, .. 1'7' 3712.11 ,.,n '1"' ~la ta sponsor sald: "The idea was moronic_ ~L.A_,"N:&,cf~111110N 11'1d '''" bu1ln••· ln;tllldf1111 tM •t•m•ttd htfelntftlr rlflfrld 1o •• "DISTllllCT"' jllf'Ml'llllY C'Ol'IClrnlno ""' _..1"' ., l"ubll•hRI Or111g• '°''' DMtr l'l!ot". but what a way to celebrate the New Year-er•-'Uhl" w·11.l1AM i.: ou~:"'secrt1•rY l1Wentory, 11 thl wm " 111.soo.oo W111 rlClln up ''· but not ''""' """ RICHAll:D l:ARL KIHO. 111 •M Jiil· -·a OTI • Ott1mblr .,, 21, 2•. i'n •nc:t J1n1io11rY Saki f _,_, " DI .. l"I • I wtllc.h COl\11111 II the lotllM'lllGI! ltll •MY• 1t1tellll time, M•ltd Md• ,., l"ll:CY At.AN ICIHO. MllWN't. ...,.,, I/II I ___ ·..:...~_u-=c:,.,",,...-C~E----1 'c· -"c'_' -~-------==-'-'_n_.,, one 0 the partic ipanta: "We're nuts. But I iove • rklor i nti"' Clllck• -(11111•• 1JOO.OO ni. •-1111 .., • contr•ct tor !tit llloW JudOI ol ... Cturt '" Jiii CWnlV -- •<>Jling." 1"1,1bll1hlcl Or1nt1 CMfl 0•11f 1"11?'· I ~romluory nolH, dtmtnd note to Ill',.... llllllec:t.-. ·--If Or•,..., Stitt of C•lllol'nl•, If the • 1n1 PUBLIC NOTl(fE ..,.. Jtiwery .t. lt74 411-' pltttd with ~sh thnl ti.crow ll00.00 Blct1 Wll .. Wd lti fM ,it(;t ~ If 01p1rtmtnt 17, Jet Cl-Ac J101'1C• TO Cll:IOITOll So what's new? . 1 Tl1t9IMI ~ ln1t1lltn1nt not• .. ldenllffM:t •llow, •nllll 911111 bl IPIMllll tll\t9f' Orlv1 W"'· ''"'' ....... Ct lltornl• SOlllllOI: COUll:1' °" THI Arthur J. (Arlie) Knapp, an a&in& Nelf York" stock brok· PUBUO N'O'l'IOI: • I ~.:i:~~or,:'.;:rion .:-=~~ !::'1.r:r,:~ ":!J.IMI •t .,_ •boW %'.M. "':c':,..:.t. d•~';4tt.:,I _:is ~lee,! ·::~•c:lfc::-::~~,tN~~"- er and one or the world's bett known saQlng Rip~ •OMIMllS ftOll: ll:UILIC Ofl~tt•'*' '"' •111t1on •• IYldlncilf b'( (II. lfllrlo wlH bl • N/A llllltci&11 AQlilhW WW CfUM1 It arw. wllr Mlllll tdOCltlM ... A•1DU rlCTltlOVI IUllNlll NAMI! STATIMIHT Thi lollowlna perton I• clolflll bl.l1ln1u must have ''froze'' when he sa-all ··-hulla"-"-a""·'t' NOTICE fl HERlli•V OIViH "'-' ITllnllll I/\ hcrow 3,J00.00 for llCtl Ml If bkl docvnwtllt to tllould not bl f'llll«I eccerdll'lll to .... of ltUTH Y. GOODMAN, ••1 OOA NURSERY 9311 Bolu ... _ .. Utl: muw IJlllN IM frollowll'IO ,.,.... "'..,. b •• fl All ottw bc.nll'lllJ "'""' •M llllldr•••• 111<1rlfltll lhl ~ 111 •• condition "" """°" Ofl fll• hll'tltt. \.-0.Cffllld, I c urOr I '2413 3 single "frostbiting rtgatta." \ nom111111c1 for "" offlcfl lllrll111fflf' 11111111 9Y "" Trt ntflrOI' wllllffl 11\rM wltll'!lli NIA cllYI '"" lfll 11141 (lpeftlnt It Ytlt wl.rr. ti .. 11. .... ICl'll11 If NOT1ce: IS H!llEIY 01VEN to ltlt w:;-1'" "'1~ • ,~r . K nwlct Drl'll mentlO!lld to be tll!M 11 1111 G1n1t•I YMfl 1111 P•t to ... llf. 11 known 10 d111. • ~ •n 11tw111y 111 ttllt """"• you _tMl/kl crldltl'• Cf 1111 1b0w n•,,,.._ llllectd•'ll vm''j:' k ~· lllornl• • • ARTIE Is th I thet f hat · ~clpel Eltc!IOl'I to ti. hlld In 1111' trll Ttlflll#ll trl NO~! Each bid m1io11I CO!lforin · 111$ IN d6 to Pl'OITlllflY to 11111 YIM.I wlll bl 11111 I ll flll'torll lltv1 ng Cl•\'"' 1111lfld 1 1 •r ' 1 I !Id e a 0 W ii known in Eist Coast Cll\I of ,OUl'lll ln ValllY Oft Tt.>Hd1y, Th1t II Nit· b11n ,;.:· Mlwll!I rnpo111f,,. to the cantract llllocllfMtllL .,.,..,IV t..,,..lliilld It tlll tlNrlflt, I/II .. Id dlCICllfll 1r1 req11 rtd to "1111 1,,:;r I~ ~§llfll 1 ecndilc bV 1" Yachl••• circles .... ~-bltltt• " He .~-ed II .,. k I -till dJY' .., Muctl. '"" Mlllll 'lltltl.... •ftd Int lr111•llrff E•Ch llld tlMll "" ICComptnlld ...., D41ttch OKtmMr l.t. 1971. """"'· with '"' llltllllf'V vouchlr1. In v "'~. r.,. .. '6 lnMl --e· iw-\ .,.c n ,or Mlmlllr of City couMU •• required by S.c. 24014 11'11 Bw•l"'1t 1111 1tcvrl1Y rllferrld I• In I/II contract llE.fil.I 1111 lfflce If 1111 Cltrlr. otr 1111 abov• Thi• ~:;t'Znen: w•• ll!td wnll fll• J932 On Long JS)and S(lund -Wbert jt aJSO gets cold 1n Vote fir J and ~r .... 1lon1 Cede, 111111 ~ COtl· "ocunw1tl.1 Ind by 1111 1111 of prOPOMllll WILLIAM I . II JOHN, enttttld court, or to ~In! t1'11m, wllll County Cl~rk af Orang1 County 1111 ·--ter and •-s been al 1·1 ever since He • In hi Al HOlllncltn 11nc1,1mb11tll lldtf't tlon tor lh• tr1n1,., of ••Id t11J1111111 111ixontr1ctor1. • Coutity Cltr,k 1111 nec:111•rY vovchlr1, 10 lh•., vn· 0 ,. ,, '''' wui -IUI • l! DOW S Ellll.,,,.l'd E. J1io11t (tncwmM!ltl •nd tr1tiff1r Of 11ld llclflu 11 to bl Mr. J•mH M. H1l1t1nd, Olrector, Artl'l1,1r I!. K"'ll•"• OIPUIY d.,.l•llH '' 1t11 01nc1 of 1111 •!lorn•~•· ec•m ' ' · ft•>llM seventies -and SUll 'frostbJllng." G1or01 I , 5coft llnc"'"1t»nll Ptl" otily tfltr Mid trtnlllf 1111 1111n Sthaol FtcllltlH, M1ll'il11t111C1 •111111 Ope,-.. Oll:llNllll:O, IMACTlll:, MclCl!HNA, l"ITTING &. l'INCH. 231&! Publl•llld Or1ng1 Coe1t Otlly Piiot, There is even a Frostbite Yacht Club on ... En-',......... J11111 s. •O)'l(ln IPPf"OWd bV ukl 90Ptrt1T11nt If AlcDllol1c tlon1. wHI mllf Wltll "'°" ""'°M ••••• YITIS -El Toro ll:Old, $1,11!1 l(W, El Tora. Dlc•mber 1• 21 , ... 117) •!'Id Jtl)Ul r"f I.lit: <U' """"°' 'Cl1rlflCI 0 . Ct.... I~ Cofllrol, llltM•ltd I/\ tourlnt the tllt t i t111 all WlllMr9 lwlWlf'd C1llfor1tl1 l'UlD, wtilch Is file pt1c1 ' 1914 ' ' l7'J..73 -.n organiiatkwl~:·-qe in ya .. M.1 ... annala. u il bu '.W Htrtilrl L. Gtrwr Tiii! • Mlt. trtntllr etid 11~1nment Ett•lld• High School. 1ac1te1111 11 2m...,. ri1 °' bvt11111t ot !I'll 1io1N11,,laned in 111 c'-·-----~-------........ Ol>lld-Ottlkl of fl.!I .,....,.11111 tl1lcll /11 tnct., fhc!Ul'llo l'ltc.-itl1 A,,.,, COii• Meta"; t t IO:IO M¥lftr Miii&. C1flf9rl;l1 ttlll "''""' ,.,,•lnlne to ftJI estate o1 • dues , no usets, no no g," says Artie. Jonn F •. K111y ecru1'"""' •!\d foollll ...it1 .. Mld_IMI_ ••"'·• J_,, 11. ,,,.,_ ~ . T~ tri•> ..,.1, M.kl """"''' w11111n four ~111 1fllf PUBLIC NOTICE In bis recenUy re.n.....,;i book "Race youf Boat 1>1 ...... ," • ...,. ll. 111111on wfN • ,.,...., •NI t111 COM1c11t111on T,.-,,1sT11:1a ,....,..... "" rltfd to 'Alfwlln .... ,..,._ ""-11"1...w«e111on-M tlll• 1101lc1. --------------~,.-.-....... ~ •w1rn H Gr!,,. t....-...r ........ r l(llti !Ml contldlr•lkll'I riled .,.., ... •II' bid• Ill' to welve llvlfllltNd or11111J:Mlf D•llY ,,let, Dlltd Dlclfl'llllr 11. Tt7l. l"IC1'11'10US IUSlllllSS Artie tells ol many mldwlnter repUu on tbe Sound when Ottwtr-Clfr Clerk for "" frlfllllilr llld IMlal'lmtnl of lnY 1~1.. ... lrlfw1MMtlll lft Dlclmblr ,., ,.,,.......,., Jtm.11ry .. n, WIU.IAM A. GOODMAN NAM• ITAT•M•"T ice hid 10 be .,........_,. away to the mboats Jn the wa•-. 1J! City of Fcillifilii VtHl'f 1'111 llorlllld llC9ftll (W lfctnMI) 11 1ny bldl or lfl .,_ b1Ml11g, • II, lrll *J.73 EJCIClllor ol tl'll WIU ot T1'11 ~klwlng Plf'-. " dolfll M l11tt1 ._.. .. ,....... "'"' Dltlcl; Jtl'IC,ll('f ... '"' to -con~ttlll on or .,,.,. tlll Thi OIUll:ICT "'' dofWmlllld !'hi "" lboft 11111\11111 lllllC~lt'lt ·-= the Jan. 1, 1973 Frostbite Regatta he u.iled with b1s nine-l'vll'lllMd °'""'" Coell 0•11)' ,1111, • llll•Y. ol "*'"''"'" 1'7 .. It the Merow etnet•I ll(lv1111,... ''" °' ,.... llllltM --· ·c NOTlCE MclCINlllA. ftJTIINO. ,llllCM E .•. s. ILECTll:ICAI. En1MATINO 4.a JtllVlry 4 11, 1'74 •74 """"*"' o1 l"lllOf"EISIOMAl llCll:OW w ... lfl ftll llttllty lfl wtllch .,_ ru~ nen 91 Ttrl .._...._ lfll. IM SERVICE. JCll3 Rwal P11m Of4v., ·year-old grandson cu crew. -S!AVtCIS, 11 17m 1rv1111 loufl'lo•rd '*1lft I• 10 be perlenMllll ..,. Nell •11'-. c1111. tMil co"• M1s1, Clllfornlt 921.2• 1-----VBLl----OTl-cCE-,---lsw1i. •• In "" City Of T1io111tn, Ceunty tr•lt .. type-of wkm1n MIChd lo ,ICTITIOUS IVSllllll Tlh cn•J...... Lois w. McElrn, 301l Roy1I Plln'I JN THE ITrJI regatta In 1151 Artie saJ.led. with a f~ P C N oi Or•""• s1111 °' c111tornl1, provld..:I ••tcvt. t111 centrect. Tllltl rat" 1r1 NAMI ITA1'1MINT Att.nM<t fir ••M...,. o~ .. Cost• Mffl, c1ntort111 '2'26 1 ------~~-------111111 ,,.. 0.Plrftnlnl ol Alctbollc OR Hit II '"' Pl•c111IJ1 A....n111, co.hi Tiii tollowlftf ""°"It"'"' bcltlnlh l'wbll•llld Or•ng• Cotll D1llY l"tlol Thi• bu•ln"• 11 canductlllll by l lt year Old, "whose father crtwed with rDe in JMl).41 .'' I 11111 l•VMl(ll Ctnlrol "'' IPl>fOVtd .. ld MIM. Copln rntY bl t blt lltlll Ofl r~I. It: Dl<lmblr 21, 2t, 1t1) Inc:! J1nu1ry lndlvldlltl Say. Artie In the C•·p•·-on Fr~b,·11..... NOTICI 0, IALI OP AIAL. ,,.n..., ol .. ,. llClfl••· ... ~ ol """ r•fll 111111 ... ,olliiil ~Ottt!:CTOll:S' COttNl!'ll:, :111& Soutll '· 11. 1f74 . ll.s.1·73 L.OIS Mc:ELREE u• ~ .. , .... llAOftlll:TY AT rll:IYATI SAi.i Dti.:t 0-.:lfl'ltllt' •• 1m ., Ille lob 1111. l"llll Drive. Santi Ant , Ctl. tmW Tllll ,, ... .,,'"' Wll Ill~ wl!h , .... "Starting more or less as a joke in the 'bathtub gin' .... A"1.. OONAL.D ,IEL.DHOUSE TM '°'9QOll'IO Kllldliolll ol' PIC" 11111111'1'1 MlrlllTI L. Cyrlltn, 1m1 Cypt'HI PUBIJC NOTICE County ci.rk ol Or1ng1 CountY on of th 1930s · t din h '•• · kJ beca · In !'No SllOlflor Court ti 1111 Sllll Tftn1f1ttr tncl lletn5" WI ... It blitld upon t wort.Int dt y TrM l,.n., lrvlnt.,Cll, t2U' DK•mbtr lt, 1t1) ear c , win er g Y rac""6 qwc Y me of C1Uforlll1, for 111e Counl'f of Or•n;• WAL. TER .:eNNY of 111111 ltl !lour•. TN r1t1 for holk11y T1111 bu•ln•• 11 concllldtd tir ,,. ·• ,,.. r.att1 nicknamed "Frostbiting" and the name has stuek and '" !he Mtttlt' o1 1111 E111t1 o1 Mvr1l• Tren•t•or •f'lll L\c11t1t1 1nc1 , overtlnw work W M be 11 IM1t 1nc11v11111u11. lllOTIC• TO CllDITOll:S l"wbll•llld Of"anci• co11t Dilly l"llot, ·---Hh the ~ It h ·-I E. Htl!Mf, Dl<:Mltd \!AWllEHCI! SCANLON 111'111 •ncl -.hill. Mlrltl'll L. CYBJn IUl"lll:IOI COUll:T Oft T"I 0.Ctmbtl' 21, 21, ltn I ncl JtflliollN 111:\.vme synonymous w ~ •• as ~n my p eaa-Notice 11 hereby OIYtn '""' Ille Uft-Tr•"''"" Inc:! I n I . It d • d II lhlll .,. l'nln411arr llPOll 1111 CON· Thlt tllltmtnt .... tflld witll the STA.Tl 01' CALlftOll:NIA 11"01. A, 11, lrl• an..n ure and good fortun~ to have beeD actively and constantly dersiaftld wlH $ell 11 l"rlv1te 1111, Tr1Mfll'M TRACTOll to w111m the contr1et 1, county Cl•k of Or•l'IO• counl'I' "" THI COUNTY OJI Oll:ANOI engaged ID• ..n .. •Ar di'nghy sallm' ; on Long Island Sound 10 ttw 1111111t:si •nd blst bldcl«. 111blect l'IO,lSltOMAt. ncaow s11v;c1s •w•rdlcl, •nd uPOfl 1ny .u~ontr.ctor Jtfl\lll'Y 1, 1914 N., A·nm PUBUC NOTICE .. udc I lo connrmatlon ol Hid lliolptrlor CO!.ll'f, P.O. IOX m · lllWler 1111'11, to P9'1' not le11 ll'l•n tile '·ihll Ell 1 of DENNIS WIL.FREO kEAJIY '---------==-- and elsewhere since that wet. cold, mo...v day titer New 1111 or '""'"" """ city of Jl nu•rv TlllTllll, CAllftOl.NIA ""' Slid IOIClllld r1t11 '' alt worlllMn PllMIMlllll Or•ng• Co.ti Olllv l"Uat. o.c.:~. 'I' ftlCTITIOUI IUSIN•Ss ~J 1'7.4 II rfll oll'lcl ol UllC#ll HllMI •ICl'W .... n.1,...S 1mptoytd try !him In 11'11 U:ICIJllOl'I Jtnuary .. 11, 11. 21. lf14 1f·1• NOTICE IS HEllEI Y GIVEN to lhl NAM• STAT•MINT Year's Day 1932." •"""'nm P11111 0t v11111tl1, l....,.. ..._,lllltlltcl Or•nee '°''' 0 111¥ Piiot ol tM tllfltr1c1. creditor• or 1111 111ov1 n1m11C1 dec:edlnl Tiii totlow4ne perton• art doino In 1973 Artie was the only one of the or'"'••) band HI"" C...,IY If <>rlfllll, '''" of Jen1,1ery " lt74 lf.7~ No lflldflr m•Y wlllldrtw 111' llld for PUBUC NO'nCE lh•t •II ""'°"' lltYlng d•lm1 •Q•lnst blJ1lnt1t 11: '6"',.. C1HlornJ1, Ill lhl right. 11111 I nd lllttr"I ' I P1rlod of forty·llw ('5l lllllYI lllM 11'11 Mid dtc9Cltnl 1r1 r11111lred lo Ht1 CAROL 1"•S GOODSO• ll:EVtlW w ho raced in that jna111n11•al nee who is still more or leu of 111c1 eec.eaud 11 111t 11me ot ... .,, PIJBLIC NOTICE '"' 11111i. 1111 w 1111 °""'"" or "''.. "" --•IMf •II tlMI ritht~ !tilt Ind lntlretl A PIYrMnf bol'ld Incl • oertoi-mtnc:I Norte• °' Tlurr••·s IALI ~~~1!'1 ~Ill 11'11 lllCci!~ry ol ~:bo-!: ~~~~: c."iTtor!1'::=-t s 1 ' •• I , 3CtiveJy racing. • !NI "'9 "'"' ti Mid CllCltud 1111 llll,...ITl-'I IUllNlll bonllll 111111 be re.wlrtlll prior lo t11ICllll01t T .I. Ill, 1fll·N tintltllcl co1irl or to °""'"' them wltll Jonetllan M, Goodton, t 1 ~rid by tpll"llkll'I of law or oflMotwl.. ... ,,... of "" centrtct. TM PIYl'Mnl b..cJ On JANUAll:Y """· 191 .. II 1&:00"" • "' I I • II(., "AND JT JS STllL fun for me," he sa-of'*' tht11 w Ht tdllllltlln to 1tllll of .. AM. S1'Af.IMlll1' .twill ae In !hi fom! Mt frort11 lti A.No.. REL.IAJL.I: TITLf: COMl"AHV M nec1111ry Y1IUC ri ' ~ "'"" C1lltor1tl1 Corpor1tl1111, IOO Sroot111,1r1t ·J-..... c111tcM1M. .. tne fl-« -.tll. Tiit lol ...... lfll Pll'Hlll ar• lllloll'IO lf'll ctfltl'KI Mvfnlrlh. dllt'I ll'Plhlt.cli Tl'llllll Uncllf' Incl dtnJiltld t i the offlc1 of M1rk fl. SlrMI, An1htlm. C1lltor1tl1 t2I04 To lh>se who ask Artie if it lan'I cold out there In thole in •nllll to ,11 "" (M!aln ,...1 ~ w.1-. u : Ge-...mlfll '-"' ..,.._111 to DMllll of Tl'lllt C'l<en6111 klllll l!!Ufln' •· Wt !IOl'I). 10001 c,_ lhlt bu1ln111 11 (.onc:111ci.d bY • cor• I. ti boats ""-11t1,11tlcl Ill tM COlllll\I of Of"tnOI SI•"' J.J EHTEllPll:ISES, 103W L.• l y ~ H1,......,·r1wr Ocfotllll' , .. lt12, • I I N 1'"7 Vtllly 1'1rt1;w1y, 1..1(111111 Nl111ttl. Ct. n.n. portllOl'I ll e ' •<IC says: I of CtUfOl'Tll1. ,P1r1ICV11rly cllKrli.cJ .. Dl&penu ... ..,... Ft111tlt11'1 Vt lfey, Ct . ''*a...... 1)(..,.. .CMll OtllY l"Hot, In Mok 'IOJn. ,.0: :..· • Cl-Qffl(lt i Wlllcl'i It 1111 pllCI ol l!ClllnH• of the JONATHAN M. GOOOSOH. INC. "SUre It's COid, but probably DO cokler than lkling or 1oti-.. t.wlt: . '210l J•11¥1"1' 4 tflllll l\, lt74 2f.7• 1-4• In rt11 eHke .t !I'll COlll'llV ""4lll'altl'll In 111 ""'"'" Plrlllnlng JOfltrflen M. Gmdton, ''"111111111 Pirc:tl I: °'"4111'111 Ulllt J.O lti Jt mH V. L.JllY, 15'0 El /l<rf'fl'lo llllCOl'dlll' of Orlltll Ctunlv, $li te ot '-1'M "'''-of U ld dtced1nt, wlltll11 This 1!1tlmlnl WIS fllRI wltll tnit ice-boating." -. 11,111111111 No. Ulf, •• 1111111 Unit 11 Aw., Founttln v1nw, CtlJI. '21Gt PUBLIC NOTICE Ctllfornle, WILL. SELL. AT l"UILIC ~~1"*':1 i tter 1111 ""' pwl)llttllon C011nly Cl.,k Oil Of"1ng1 c-iv .. {f you are going to be 00 the EaJt Coa.tt and plan to 111-Incl dlfl'IWICI an Iha!. cerftln G«tld f . H1191W .. )0364 l .1 Ol1P111u AU~TION TO HIGHEST llDDElt FOil Oll~no~~blr II, ltn Janutry 1. 1'74 try h d t "~-bill ., ...._ ._ __ ,. to f ArtJ , Condominium 1"l11t 1t11ched to 1fld Av1 .. Foun!tln Vt UI'(, C11ifornl1 t:l1CI CASH (Pl'flbll 11 111'!11 ol' ult In -GAil ANNE LEAitY your an a lru:it ng, ..... 1111%\J tome O e s n'ltdl 1 pert or tn.t c1rt11n Dtc.l1r111on llll• bu"ne•1 It btln; cafld11etec1 by • '°' t1wtu1 """"' of tM unn1c1 s11tttl Admlnhtr"'rl• of th• 1 tat suggestions 00 clothing: of c-n11. CC1nc1llkln1 1nc1 l.11trlc· • 11t'tntr111lp, • IUl'lllOll cou11:T Of' TNt ,, th• Nortll front l'nlr,1nc• to 11w of 1111 •bov• narnlllll c~s: 1 Publlthtd Of"lfllt Ct11! JtnUl'Y ~. 11, II, 25, 1974 ·-Dilly ,ltot 11·1' !Ions recordtd .a.11111,111 14, Ifft In Jt tnff V. L.lllV ITATI Oii (Al.lllOINIA 11011: Qt>1ng1 COliolnlY Co1,1rll'louM IOC:llld 11 MAllC A SMITH · n 0 Wlth several pairl Of WOOi tocks Under gil\oshes (no book 9051, Piii ZI• ti OIHcltl Atcord•, Thl1 Allllmlftt f119CI wllll I/II Ct1io1nlr TM• COUNTY 01' OlllANOI 100 CIV!c -c1t1t1r Orlw W•t ll"ormerly Mell ,,.,;,.... Vellly l"trtwlf shoes inside) 0t thermal IOCkl dacton underwear WOOi In 1111 offlc• of IM Cfl.lfllY llKorllll•r Clri' of Ort,,.. COVl'lty on Jtnw•f"t' 1, Ne: A·JIMt W. 1111 St.I In tlll C1ty of S1n11 Le NI I Ct '2•1' PUBLIC NOTICE • ' of Or111119 Count¥, Ct !lltrnll, end en 1t14. NOTICl OF HIARING 01' PITITION Ant •II r!ilht, tlltl tlld ln!Mtll COflVl'l'ld 1'..:S.r"rn:.) m.-SUlllll:IOll: COUIT Or 1'N• troUJerl and shirt; swea1er and mme kind of ayloa, wind-llf'ldlvldld 1/Utth '"""'"' hi •l'lcl 111 "·•Ml FOil l"ROIATE °'" WILL ANO ,011: to •nc:I -hllcl .,., It IJncllr ••Id AltlrMY "' ... 1111 lrlt I STAT• or CAL.lrOll:NIA f'Oll: breaker Or .licker' OD. ---·'t be t'Old." 111 11111 portion If L.91' 1 .., Tr•cl l"ublh lltd o,.,... Cffil Dtlly l"Hot. L.IETTEll:S OF ADMtNISTllATIOH Dllllll ol Trv1t ln "" prCIClff'ly tltuated '""''IMd 0r':,.: ,~:, D II Piiot 1'H• couwrv-o .. Oll:ANGI ~ Ho. ""' I t '1IOWl'I Ofl t Mtp tlCOf'dtd J1n1,11ry 4, \l, 11, U. 1f74 11·14 WITH THE WIU ANNEXED In 11\ol CtunlY I NI 11111 dn.crlblllll Dlc:....,btr 14. 21 ti ltn 1 : ~inwt,.; "e. -.,.1UM Artie admlts fhe water ia cilM if one loel overboard, hi book tst, ,..... 41 11'11111 .. °' Ell•"' If • HENll:Y I Ell:Tot.OTTI: ••:.. - . ·-..• '-·1'74 • • n l111·1l llOTICI, Cl" l:l•AJl:llr(G 0" '"tflON •1...--_....._ ---..... 11· by . MltetlllMOUI Mllpt. rlCOl'dl "' Or•• PUBLIC NO'nCE Dectutd . Loi 1W ... Tr•ct Ne. un ••• thowll POI l"llDIAT• Of' WILi. ANO ftOll: but explains that u.ir;.1'11:' are UUEI" _ .. .,.,, il".tg near -County. C•lftornit , "'°""'" .,.. "8Md .•. NOT-ICE-IS HlllllY •GIVEN tlltl -by ,..... en _fl ... J11 book ... "'" PtJJ) arUl£ L.ITT••I T•STAMllfTAaY including cruh boa~ -Ind. it ii IQllDd.aMry that M)'ODI! 11 "Com~ -'rtl". on "'-....,. lllC1'1TtOUI IUllM•ll RIVWINll MAl.10 MICH Jiff fl*I lltre{n :It, Jt lflilll al« Ml1c.H1_--,,,,_fll, -LION E1!1t1 t\-MYAOM M . MOit.iii, rlflll'rlof " Conclomlnlum l'lttl. • ..,.. ITA1'•M•NT • """"' 1ar ~,...,, °' 'Mii -rec.Nil .. Or•Mt '-"'· C1lltorn11. DK••ttd. In the neighborhood of an OYertumed bolt go to their.. L.:·c,.·~,.l=~ :z. ':"~ .. ~ .... filllow1ng "''°" 11 dOI,... ~Mlltu :tll!a;;::n:M°'•= t ~~ ~.::.:.-:::.-:.-=::;;:;; IUP••IOll ~== ... Oft TM• J~a:1c:. ~O\..~~=E~!. c:i•;::N"'!.'i'~ sislance. • • -Ol'I • Mii' ,...,...... In bloll us. 'Ill Modem Upholll•fY lnlfltvl1 (2) rellf'lllCI to wllldl 11 mMI' ..,. """"""deecrlblcf •bovl It """°"" to lfll: ITATI Of' CALll'OllllA ilOll: • petition tor Pr"Obll• °' Wiii Incl ••. ··········-_ ................. L ,.... 17 tncl It of Mhc:llll-Allfo U(ll'loll,.,., lnitll!Jfl (JI Clllflrn Pll'f!.Cllllrt, Incl 11111 t111 ttrT11 t NI pi.1;:9 ":!Olt _Mwrrty L.1ne, C1tt1 Melt, Ct lttornl1 TN• COUNTY OP OIAlllO• far l111io11nc• o! L.111,rt Tt lllml'ltllry "TO AtY .KNOWLEDGE, DO CIGe bal ever Sot pneu-MaPS. t««dl .., Drtl'IDI C-IY. OtclrtllOfl IMlllul• !41 c Iii • I 0"' ol l'lllrll!CI 1111 Ml'nl 1111 """' Mt "'2'-.... A·,... 10 !hi petitioner r1t1rlflC1 lo wl'lldi morua• and there are (elf -~ ... ,)t!out front I "'-"'••," C.11!llmlt , lllk>llllne Mid lot I, Ort"" lt1llllvle UJ C 11 t1 • in for J111U11Y ·22, 197.t. 11 9;00 •.rn., Tiii 1io1ndlll'lllf'lllf Tf\flfw "ltc/1!me 111r NOT/Cl! Oft' HEA"IHG OF PETITION 11 madl for fl.rrtn.r ,_r11cu1ir1, incl ll>VIU9 -. u~ Allo uctpllne from 1114 L.of 1 'r•l'nlC,.fl«t !•I r•brl<raff.,.. (1) 111 1111 courtroom If IH-ptrtmlnl No IJlblllty for •hY lnccwreclneu of fht 1'011: PAOSATE OF WlL.L. AND '0111. 11111 1t11 t1m1 incl pltcl tt hlltl"f says Artie. 1n tA•· on. ll'l'llllroc:1r11ons, m1111r1l1 C•rllt' •ncf Crilt Trtlnlnci lntirl'llflOllll, l or 11ld C011rt, 11 100 Civic cen1ir slrnt lddr111 •!Id other common L.ETTElll:S t!ITAMENTARY 1111 111M 1111 bllft 111 for' J11t1io1trY So What's new 10• Cleveland'. t nd olllOI' IUlfllll-lyl"I ....... I 1205 W. ltrkll'f, 0t1nt1. C1tllwnl1 Orlve West, In flll City ,of Santi Ana, dl1lgM1tlon, II 1ny, tllown h1rel11. E1tll1 o, IAR8AJIA W, ACl<El.MAN, 15, lf14, at t :OO 1,m., 111 tfll courtroom e11pfl'I of 500 fNI, Wt wlfllolll Ille f'.16# CiUfor!'lll . S.11111 u lt wll1 bl rnld1, but without AKA IAJllAllA JIEAN ACKIRMA"I, Of Oep1rtmlnt Ho. S Of 11ld court And to those yscht clubl )n Loi Angtltt Harbor and rttlll lo 911Mt llPO!I tM Miff.Cl II' Harvey El'lllr1&11 EriltrprlM• Inc Da!RI DICtmblr 31, 1t7l cove1111tl or w1rr11'11Y, ••Prell Of" lmplltd, PlcMslcl. ti 100 Civic Ctn!« Drive Weit, In Marina de) u-whJ~ -·-·-•y ~~-& "~-bi''"' -.. .W.11rfKI ol tfll pr°""" l bovl 1 1 C..Jlfor'llll CGf'P)l'lllon. nm W lirii'. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN rtGll'dlng 11111, pot.U.Hlon, OI' -NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIV!N tll1t !tit City of ht\11 Ana, C1lll«nl1. • • .,,., QI .. IUUAll _.YCI'--UV.• M< o..-cMif'fll ot D Met for IJ'l'f p1,1r~ ii)' OrlllOI C tlfor I n+4J ' County C .. rk Clll'l'lllrt l'ICl'I, ~ blY 1111 rtM1lt1!nt Pfin• OEOll:GE II. ACK•JtMA.H hes flied /llf'llR D1ltd OOC.mblr 2f, 1113. gatta'" sometime du..n.11 the winter, Artie'• advice ml.... lllMI-••• rt...-..cl In "" Dllllll Tiii~ bwllll~ I~ c:m~. llY I cor• McKllllNA. ''"'NO ANO lllNCM clptl tum °' thl "'"!•) MC1io1r9CI try • petition tor l"roti..!_~· of Wlll •NI WILLIAM •• SI JO""· ·-.... ~ from r im W'Mll'l'I link •Ml Tl'llll •llon Uln 111 ... .,. .-. '"''-.. ulllll DllCI • TMI, wl!ll 1111 .... fhlAolt. for luu•RC• °' Lllfirl T"''"'*"''',., Ccillnty CIMll well be: , CM111111y, rkordtd OlotmW .. 1"1 por MAJl:Vl!Y EMllllSON 11 Tll'I. CUJf. tM11 11 Pf'OYldRI 111 1111111 nef1(1), ac!v.!Kll, to tlll "'l!IOllll' ~rtnet lo wlllcPI 04.•NDON 1'11:11MAllll, JONlll W. IM•NIC "Better .......... e the Dllllt -or bitter yet, ..._et It'' 11'1 Meir. "''· ,.,. .. "' Offld•I ENTEllP"llE.5 INC. T .. : fn4) ~ If .,..,. lll'llllllf t/11 ""1nl ol u ld Oeld I• mlllll• for """"" p1rtlc\/l1r1, Incl AND DAii L STll:OUD .......... -· -...1eon11, 1nd ,...llC8nllc:I Dlclll'l'lblf' C. W Mtrtift. Gtn. Ntlt A~ tw fllf!HMll" of Tn1tt, 1-. dlwfll tnllll .. lllf!Mt tl\.ll ftll tllTll I nd piece of PIH fll'lll ... 1"'111 CNIVI S,,...t, SlllN 1414 -unlw the temperature ii In tDe 1ow tblrtifa « cokler. 11, 1"1 ln 6ollll ,.,,, ,... -'>' of Thie e111..intn1 w11 ttllll :,,.111 "" Pl.lbl'llMd °''"" c1111 Ollly P'llot of tlll Tr"'* •111111 .,, ,,.. tr""9 cnlt9d 1111 "'"' 111.• """ Sit "" J1n1io11N L" ... .....,. ,.......,, fll14 -I Oflltl•I llllCOl'ft. 1flCI 111 Dllllll ffllt'I CounlY cw,. of Or County Oft J•flll•f'V.,, 11 1,7, 1s.7~ b'( 1111111 DMllll of Tru.t; tt. 1t7.t. 11 t .oo 1.111 .. In Ille courtroom Tll: 1t111 m -nn It-c.,.,.,1tton l'ICOrdtd Jwly Ole •llP ' ' Thi btnlflcl•ry under ulcl Oeld of ol DIPlrlfMrif No. l of .st/1111 court, A"'"""• "'t 1'1HH- J\, Ifft In booll, f«17, 119tt tOt If llTltlW It , 1tn. I" llDJ ~ TrUlt l'llreloHlre execlllld •nd deHvtrtd 11 100 Civic Ctrller Orlv1 Wist, In 1'11:·717 , Otflcltl ltecor"t. '""""*' ort CHst Dally Piiot PUBUC NOTICE to 1111 undMtllltld • wr11t1111 Didarlflon thf Cll'f of S1nt1 A1t1, C1llfortil1. l'ubllshtd OrtflQI to1rt D1llY Pilot, l"lte:ll !: Non-acl1io11lve HI~ O.C.,..,. 21 ~ lt1J tnd Jlllll•,.Y of Dllll.!11 Ind ~mind lor Sall, t ricl Dtllcl J•1tlill'Y 2, 1,74. I DKetnblr 21, 2', 1,n tnd Jlnlllr'f for lnor11• Ind .. ,.... publlc vtllltltt. ... 11 • .,.,,, • ' 31G73 rlCTITIOUS IUllNlll • wrllflt'I Not1 c1 of Olf1111t t ncl Elldlon Wllll•m E. SI Jolln, ,, 1t7i ~.,, --ll'id for •II "'"'° ... lnclctentet • NAMI ITATIMINT to SIU. Tiii und•r•lgltld t •l.llH .. Id ClliolMl'f Cllrt. • ,...,..to. lncllHlll'lll but nor llmltld " -Tl'le followlng ,__ 1r1 doing Nollet of Olf11,1tl tNI Elecllon to .... l.t.llN•I. ICNAe, PUBLIC NOTICE !hi canstrvctleri, lntl1!l1llCll\. r~ PUBLIC NO'nCB b11sln1U ••: lo bl recorded In the CO\ll'lty Whlrl1 .IOMNIOll & ICINN•OY menf, rtp1!r, lflllntllllnc .. eperlttll'I TANAKA MOWEI. SALES f. the •Ml Pflplrly II !oc.11911. 4111 MHAntiw St¥1111., P.O, IN: I"" and UM of •II nece.try or llll11lrtt111 N•Wl"OIT~llA SEl.VICI! EQUI PMENT REHTAL.S, D1t1: Dlc1mblr 19, lttl. Hl'lr!llt"9 .IMll, Ctllf. n.U l"ICTITIOUI IUSlllllll t'Olltwft'I, tldew•tu. and condlllt• -u111r11D SCHOOi. DllTllCT 20302 BllCh BIVd .. Hunlfnaton 8e1cll, ll:!!L.1AIL.E TITLE COMl'ANY Ttl( Int),,,.,,.. MA.Ml ITATM•NT dOI"' IN l•nd dllcrlllld In ..... m 2 If NlllW hwltllll •• c.ntom11 ftW •• Mlllll Tnnlff, Aftlrtleyl ... ""'"""" Tiii followlf'IO person• .,. Weekend Calendar Second Race Slated that clrt1ln Died "' 0.kta'#l'I H°'""' NOTICI IS HEll:l:I Y GIVEN 11111 "J.D," EpperMl'i. 1"'1 Normtndy By Cflrl1 TlllocMroH l"llblltlled OrlnQI Coe1t Oellr f'llot, bvll~.:,.;~ G'l'M _MINI GYM, ,,0. I S k . s . Inc .• I CtHforlllt torJIOf•llon, recordtoll tf11 l otnl et EClllCtllon of !hi NfWll'lrl· L.n, Hunltng!Oll ltMll. Call!. Allltlorlhd Slgntli.or1 J111e,11ry .. S, 11, 1'14 SS.7• l ox ISO, ltll lrvlne, Ctlllomlt txS0 n Un J.I Qt er'I £>.O Ji.ity l'I, ltff In 11ook f«l7, 111tt Mell Ullllled kllool Ol11rlcl of 0!"1""' Lllyd T. T1ntQ, IOlll l"atedlUfl'I A1Jlt111'11 Vice l'rlllillll1ril l"riKlllt A. Htontr. ISll! Jllne Cir., "" ~ IClll of ()ffl(ltl l lCOl'df. c-tv C1tllor1tt1 will TICllVI ... rid Ww. G•~ o...-. C•tlfornlt '1...0 l'"2 ~c NOTICE lrvlnt. CMlflnll• n105 more commonly known 11: m. YI• Wd• ,'.,, -1o i·ori p.m "' 1111 11•1 This 111111111u I• conducled lly 1 .. ner1I llublllhld Orange Coa•t Delly l"Hot, 111111 N. Griuelll, 5091 1...,.,.. Cl•· , MlrlPOH E11t, A!llr1mtl'll S.O, L.191,1111 ·~ of Jtnul,;,_, 1t7t' el fhe oHICll PlrfMfll'llp. -Olc•mblf 21, lf7J l'ld Jtl'llllN .t. 1_11 I ·-~ ' -, Balboa Yacht Club will launch the lint compedUve sailing actioo ol the new ,.ar SatUrday and Sw>day with tbe seaind race of the Slalkisl Serl~. • Dinghy classes will sail on Saturday and keelboats will aee action Sunday. 001er yachting activity ill Southern Cjllllornia I b II weekend will Include the lint salloff for .the 1174 Congress.lonal qJp wttb the competition at l.<lllJ Bolch Yacbl~ub to-detmnlM .mo will repr<oent the bolt dub. Wlndjammen1 YllCIJI O<m at M~ del Rey will In- augurate • Its Mac Comeroo Jooes Series In oonj1lnctloa with the Winter Series oo $1>- day. There Js no· Kbeduled .lc- tlvlly In the San ~ ... Lor Aqela-1--LONG BEAQI YACHT CLUB--Olngreoliooo C,u p sailoll, Saturday, SUnday. Santa Moaleo Bay ' WINDJAMMERS Y A C H T CLUB-Winter Sel1ol No. I, l\1ac Cameron Jones Sedea No. I, all cJ-..Sllnday. N __. ··--HIAt. C1!1for11l1 nm. ot ..... kht:ol Dlllfrlcl loc•lld et 11$1 J.O. EPlll"""' lt74 ltOf·T.J ... d1. lrvlnt, C1llfornl1 t21'1S f-..r-o·um-Tlfm• of u ll c11ll ln ltwlul "*"l'I' l"llCll'lttl A,,_, Cotti' Mau, Ct Hfornll , Tiii• Jlltlnllnl Wit Hltd wltll 1111 NOTIC I TO C IDtTOll TNs bulllltU I• COflchKIRI tlY I Olfllflf BA L & O A y A C HT of 1111 Unlltd Sti r., Ol'I conflrm1tlon 11 wftldl tltM .. 111 bid• Will bl ,wflcly COIJl'ily Clll'k o1 Of"•nvt Countv on PUBLIC NOTICE :u,.•,•,••g: c~t~:l.:i. l"o•' P•rlMr•;i,rtclll• A. H1C1n•r rt 110 _ a. ... 1.~ f1' u te, or oert e1111 lnllll bliltllCI IPlflloll encl r"4 tor· D1«mblr io, lf7l ..__.~t Serles No. 2, IYllllllnctd .,., "°'' llCUrtd br MOrtcr••• 1 Q•• OPerllld. Combln•llon Sl•m . ,...,,. THI COUNTY 011 011:.1.1101 111-H. Gr11MIU T "'' °'" lht r1 llWll "" or c t D ,... ,.II I ......... • •• A.JltM Tl!!• .,,,_, .,,.. filed wllll Ill• Al • .t..les s.turday keelboata or r '"" P'•"'I' M C11("1>1rlm9l'lt teoker •nllll Sl••rn I '"'' tit ••• o, NOTICI TO CAIOITOIS •••• -.. •O••· o .... L •• o-...... Countv Cl«k of 0r ..... County ~ --.-5.__.... ' IOlllll. Ttn Plf'Clnl of l n'IOll!ll bl" I• Jtcktltlll l(llfle, •f'lll 1 G11 lllllng December 21, 21, 1f7J 1111111 J1nu1ry '"' ... ..... y. bl ~111111 VJllPI bid. Slltlltl, Ind rood llrvlce Speed L.1111 4, II, 1t74 ' JMJ.73 IUllllllOI cou•T or '"' NOTICE IS HEJIEBY GIVEN to , .... DKlmblr ,,, 1t7l • -l ldti ., etf«I 111 bl In writing 11\d E'l"lpintnt ST.I.Tl Of' CAL.lftO.NIA l"Oll t rldllott II lhl t boVI t11tntd llllecedll'll • Wiii bl rtctlv-.1 •I, thf: 1for1uld offlc• A1 bid' 1,1 to tit In tctordtnce PUBUC NOTICE THI COUlllTY Oft Oll:AHH ltl1t 111 Plf"-• "'vlflll d al""' 111lfllt l"Wlltlllcl OrtnQI Co.ti 01111 l"llot, 11 t ny tlmt en..-the ""'' publlc1tton wttll Condlllont lnilrUl;flani 1 11 1111 N., A·1*f tlll 1111111 dlttc11nt ''' AQulrH to fll• Dtcfn'lber 21, 21, lt7l encl J 1n1io11ry lltreol tfld bl'°" ltttl ol HI•. s Ille tlon """ Pl Ill • IW S:1t1to °' DAIWtN MOV.ll:T. WOL.,, ltllfl'\, wllll !hi lll(tts•rv Voucl'ltrl, I" " 11. 197• 3':J0.1l Dtttill 11111 20111 41'1' of Olctmblr, 1,.""'thl 'off!! ol ~ •;=,:il'lll onAfln~ llOTIC• 0,. SAL• 01" ll:•Al •Ito known II DAJl:WIN M. WOLi", !hi office of Ille cllrll of the t DOvl l------------- 1tn. " ,.111 khtol Dlllrld llS1 l"ltc'"ll• l"IOl'•ITY AT l'llVATI SAL.I DlcH1td. lfllllltd ct1io1rt, or to fl'Htnl IMrn. with PUBLIC NOTICE • w•rrtfl H Htlnwr ' A....., NOTICI IS H•llEIY GIVEN to t11• ~ ..... ,., V011Cher1."' 1111 IHICIKt lllflfd Allllmtnlllfr.tw If ,,... AWf\111. comi Mitt. C•lllol'nli. In "" S11p1rltr CMKt ol "" St•• trtdllott ol the •boVI l'lllPlld lllllCMont II "" """' "'""""""' .. tfll SECUll:ITY(------,,c:-,,,,,,.----- N E "'''° If u lllll OICtdlnl. In E,•: ='°'mu,'' =!:t ·:~.4.,.'f.:.1: of Ctllllrf111, 111 •nd ,.,. !hi COl,lnty lfllt 111 Pt<"•-"'Vlfll Cllltnl ... Ind l"AC11"1C HAllOHAL. I.I.NI(, ... o. l o• SUl"IAIOftllfo': 011 1'M• ew ntry W.,,_ M. Mel-Cl'lecll bl t to fl of 0nl'lll. 11'11 1111111 cMctlil.-it Ire ,...,ired ,. fll1 11"1 ... NortPI Mein Sfrlll, Stnle AN, ""'"°" r,. P• "j I 1111 lloncl eque .,. In Ille Metttr or 1111 ltllll of liltlC 11\M!, wlll'I IM MCIUlry YO\ICl\ml, lti Ctll!Ol'nll '17111, 1tlll'ltlt11: LO. GllOW STAT• Oft CALlflO"lllA 'Oil . -.,.,, ~ .... :;co:, '~~Y-=• "':. ':;:'"!.:: L.iVOll.A ind l"IAH L•VOAA,. MlllOl'I. "" """ ol tllt dtrk of ""' trio¥• Wlllcll l• "" "•c• of 111111111•• OI TMI cou:v::.. CNtAlll•I , .... Y .... , ........ CA fltf4 of 11'11 ' .-.... -. U ltltd kl'lool Nollc1 11 hlf.t>v llVlfl 11'1111 tM ""' lflfllltcl ct11rl, .,. lo """°"' llltrn, wllll tM liolncllrtlglllllll lti tit mttlk1 ,.rltltilflll A• I R Mlllllll 0r.,.. C.Mll O.lly 'lltt .......... ,......_ fl cHr tlfl'lld wllt .. 11 It ptl\1111 1111 ti "" llk'IMllY vouctitn. to "" ...,.... to "" ttltto of Uhl decedll'lt within NOTICI Dll Hua1111• Oft PITITIO,. , n acmg• ~ ·ti. 2'. ltn 11'1111 Jin. i, ~:,1~:. :!':r.:'111': :-;:.. 'Oi',~rlc": TIMI h!11h11t Incl bis! blllllder1 s11bt1C1 WH .... "'Jot ~-· L.twy Ofltl ":..i-t,-... four tftonlht t f1tr 1111 first ""'lc1tlon ~=:'T'iT:: • .:;.i.t~YANO rCNt lt7• JJOe-13 IR IM .., 1 of I !I , lo •nler I to It conflrT111tlon or said SwolrlOf' C6\/r1 • Sftrr. r.. llCI Pl ·-.. 1'.tl, of ft!I• notfce. _ 1ucll conl~I. 1111' %11 •11rn the~ Oii or •1;1'9r 1111 14111 di~ Ill' J•t11io11ry, lolf ». Yuc•hM. C•llf,, ~h II 1111 ' 0.lld Oldn\blr 2•. 1m. 1!11111 ol H. DAL.I llATHEJt, Dec"s- 'lbe new Yankee-.. .___ • .__ fY~ NOTJVll ::1~ ,,,.~11ttd to 11ld School Dl1tr1ct ~~~J ~tt~::.J' ~ct,:. to 't~~M li:t r~·~~I ~.,:.~":,,,~1:' to~"== :!~YC:lr ::~~IC ' "'NoTICE IS Hl!ll:lllY G!Vl!N It.It #lfJ n;vu' II.ft: "°' Ollflly, "~ S\111'1 "'-,.....,.,.. C1lifwnl ol Mier lllllCld*flt, wllllll'I .,,.,,. l'l'llll!M N ttOMI I tlltl • Anoe! I DALE L.IE.I • fll:ATHEll, •Ito k-•• deal-board ol Spar.._ __ and IU,llMMI COUIT ., TMI N:..::-.. ""Y .:11M'i~ hJ~ llkl ~ fllOI, Ill ~.11t. 11111 •flllll' lntwltl ; ll'llr Ille flrtl .-illllClllon" ft'llt not1e•. ' 1 't.. 0 GROw"' '1 en OAL.E L. ll:ATHER Iii• nlld herein ... ..,._.. ITATI 011'"-CAU .... Naa NI • "°"Y' VI _,, I flf Mlcl mlnon In end to 111 ltil cft'ttln Ottld Dtc11nller 1•. Im A:ilit~ frvsl Offk er I ,.illlon fl!' l"rOIMtt of WUI l nllll StetiJen.s and built In Santa "''COUNTY w OUltM ni;.::..:.: ::C:.-"1"!, =-:.w.-t. r•I flfOplfly 1ltuel4 lti ""' City ., ALICE °""L.INE WOLfl IE•lcvtor"' Ille Wiii " for 111111nc1 of L.itlll'I T•ltmonttry N0TK Oii' Niii. "':"w ITf'h M-. Ufiiflld ktlool °bltlticl --l ltilol, COUl1fy o1 Ortfllt, Stitt o1 Ellecllfrlx of !tit Wiii !tit abovl-lllfl'llllll llll1eM:11nt ~ 1111 pellll-r, rlf-c• 111 W'flh:ll Ana ii Yankee Y1cbt'1 entry 11.•,11:oeAT~~, wiu. :... \.::_ ""~f'IOM ., ·,... .,..., • .w 1rr1•. ::i1~rrt1cv11r1y llll•KHHllll ...... ~ :';':18 .. ~~.• 11111et1111111 c0t.0N1L N1111:101.. "•A••L.•N ~.,m= :rm. "':1:' p1:~C::1'~-..::;:: Into the "°""'-'f'on "''"'" T ... CW ADMl .. llft&110ll . ..,.... llflll not ,._.,tty KCIPll !tit lowlll ' Miit Yl'Ol 11¥1S. S. I , lntl Street, Siii .. N tM Mini 1N1 ""'1 Mt for Jtn 22 ....... ..... ra ..... '6 TM ....... A•"93CID -~ Mvt• llld. .,.. " -iw 111'1' lnform.llty ... Lot s "' liock 3 ol l•lbH Tr•cl p 0 •• ..... c .... lMlt. , •••• ""1 lf7'-•I t ·OO I "' lti "" caurt'~ OHO -mu>· ....... -, _ .. a#I ... _ _. •• 1111' "'" r--.r In l oot " · · Tll1 cn41 .... nu · · ·• ICene I • \. 1,,.....,_,ty m Inf 114 .--..vtd. ,... 11 111 Mleclll•_,. Mt,. of Y«ltH, Ctllf, '"" ... .....,. fW 1--. ol 09'1'1"""""1 Ho. l o1 uid cGclrl, : l:lttfli flf JOHN 0. SNANAH. O..Uill. NIWl"Oll:.ToMl.L'. Ortllll iountv Ctlltornll T .. 1 Intl ,,,..... p 11 M Civic Ctnlll' Dr1ve WMt, In It ia touted by lta bullden ~OTICI IS HUllY . OIYl.N ""' UHlllllD SCHOOL OISTll:ICT tMt9' COll'llt'lll'llY 'klllWfl ••: AtllrrMy .., ••ec'-111• o.:::i1~n.°':,~· .~,,.~· Dtll'I' 1"1111 ""CJty of,..,,.""'· C•Htoml1. be • .:... ....... Toa Ollt=:t~ •.-::.. -.. ~ ""9111 ~ Orenoe tovntt. C1llforlll1 • .,,, H1Nlnt Sll'lflf, •• , .... Ct ll'°""• llWlllllMd ortnoe CHI! n.11y ,u ... 1• 1f71 ll'lll•IY :;,~:, Ot!W Ji n. t. 1t74. If --·-Quarter L I ... ,__ .. -""-· 11111 y OOrlHly Hll'VW ftllt'llr Term• .. 1111 cMfl '" llwtvt ltlOfll')I .. Died<'-21. ,.,, •nllll J1n1.r1ry .. II, ' WILLIAM E. SI JOHN. -"" ._ .... .._ "' ~ .t.eenl tlll u.nlttcl si.111 "" cont'lrm1tl011 f11t 11, lt74 ,...,,, _,_ • Ceunty Clltll boat en tile mark~ today, wltll-l'hl:wlll 1-.i (Wiii 111-. ,lllltl '45-llo& Nit. II' ,.rt uill tncl Nlince IVlllllll'ICtd ..-.., ..... o NOTICE ICINDI~ ANC!' ANDIAIOll ""'lltlidl II "" .........,. rellNftct '*I.,.. OrWnle c-.. Diiiy l"lhl • ..., .... """ .., """""" t OTI • ., CAAi. M,ITCM•L.L ('lbe 1erm Quarter Ton bu "wtllcll 11,,..... fW ....... ~,., JlflUlry .. 11, lf14 , .. ,. OMd • ti("" ,,......,.., M .:.. T':! PUBUC N CE Plc:TITIOUS ......... 1..I ........... " -'-Uon It , lllil fhtl t111 llMI ... '!.wlell • ""'1nl JIOl"Cllllt If •IMlllll Md " lfll ....,.,._ ..... ITATIMIMT ...... AM. Cltlf. mt! GO nu. tbe bolt 1 lbe "" .. ,,. "'' """ *-"' J1111i11rv • PUBUC NO'nCE w1111 llld n. """"" to .,. Mid rtcT•TJOUS 1us1N1s1 TM ""INWll ,.,...,.. .,.. fOlfll ,,,., •mr OI' wtf&ht. but to ftl band"-U, lf14 11 91• 1'"'"' Ill tlll C'llilrlrltl\'I " • II\ lfl .. i, cerncllt""-MAMI S1'ATIMIMT Ml-It! A""""9 fW l"etttlllllf' •"••) .......,. : =rrtlll,,,,.11111 ~ J ~ ---· .,; ......... coun °" CAL.1 ...... IA. .... ., ....,.. .... Ill Wl'ltl,... Incl Tl'll flllew'llltl "'"" ,, 6tlfll IMI,.... Ill CAT CL.INIC, U) IAVINI!. """'tMllll Or•• Cotti Otll'I' '""'· r--. . --_,_, . couwn .. ....... ""' .. t'MllVld .. 1111 11'11"11111111 office .. l UNIV1"11:SITY ,...... A,. I MAL. Jt"'*Y .. s. II, 1'74 27.7, • 111111.._._ ol "-Yank-• *'cJ:!; f ..... (.":J...~· . N CMc C...."""...... of .ef!Y flrM tfMt N flrtl pcdcttf., OC..UN SHIP, '701 W, CIClll HI~. ~!JT,AL_. '•"'-·--• ......,,... Wllll """'"' ~"a .,, . ._,,... ~ rww.,.,....,...,. .. ""· Newwt 1ttch, c111tem1• .,... _,,, • •· PUBLIC NOTICE lnc:o~-tbe latest dea1p ~ ~ JOHN CAM-•UMlll •nm Oetlf ,!tilt .,.. !Sly .. l>lctnllllt, •tvc:• VOl'I L.lN:lenblrv. 2101 w. CMll N•..,,.,.,, Cenlll' ""''"" ~t, lUI . -- I -'-• '-• PHii.iP II. ....... 1u-..1 (MAl:llMI> !PN. Ml1hw1y, HIWllOl'I l llCl'lo C1tlfwt1l1 ... vte:Hlri. N-..ort lllcll, Ufornl1 OCIAlll VllW SCHOOL. OISTll:IC1' o a'-'llleft a ..,.,. em ........, , .,_ . ,,. ,. • ""'rMll "' l'etltlonw• Alllrt 11. L.-• ri:u&. .,... ~ nn •• ,,..,. """"" w1t.ertlne llltlfJrlnd large Nil .., ....1 .... IM .. """ ,. ;~~.... =••~,!"l~w: ~ f . ~n1T!."!' .. 1tt* i~r~~"'t.~1111111 '• ewuc1111 by ·'" • ~~~i!:r!~,!: •• :i'.'9 C'O!WWllll ·bf N""""'* ... di. ctlfflr'lll• mcJ Yankee-26 plan, featurlnC·• hlgh upect ;:-= :ri-scon~.tMtt..tOH · wtUIAM •· '°" ' l r11C• ven Llndtnblra JMltl a . ll:lcPI. l"r•~ , . 1..1••1. NOT1c1 Co .. ·-· ...,e_4 ... -r ratio rig . a..... IW'I ........ Tt_ll'it JtltCIOfldilnl : . • All•=t• .. Lll• • Tiil• •l•l•rntnt .... ~, flied wlll'I th• Thi• •t•ll!'lllnl llltt wlll'I Ille C•unly NOTIC~OT~I ~~:1~~· ~:~: .. 111•1 ..... tT ~ • _ -l'-..il..W. , ""-': Clltl Dilly l'llot, Tiii f!lttlntr Mt llltd t petlt!Ott :.:. "'r..=:'t,~~11 W" ~ty bl Cl~;~ .. rs Ol'tntl Ceuntv on f~:'~t: :·~:,.~aun,!~ :.rd'*= 1111 lottd of Tru11"1 Of" 1111 0«1" l"trtly c._,.., 11111111 ~ Interior llCCOlll:ml)d1Uont pro-JtlWllfY J. 4 * WN , · ...,, rw-"""' -'fWf ll'llt'rl.,.. You """' ""' ml\ ....... 1m ' • ' • ''*" CIU!ll't Cllrlt. ' View sc11oo1 orttr1c1_ o1 Ortnoe CM\ty, ~~~ 11::;. =~ vlde lleeptita ftdl1Ue1 for five PIJalC NOTICE ~. •"' ~~ .::-:= ni1.'hf!:iin;';'-' ......,... ~ c'"' 0e1w ~oet, ,..,~ Dr•"" ce.11 011fy '"''°'' :i:~eut1n1 1• ~":'o;...~;:~ ~~~~:!:· :.: = IClllllr to •••••ift lt " • ~ with lft optlonl1 .atb btrth, -II ....... Oii Y'Wo If Ytll fell fl "1111 ...,.,,, I. 4"' IW.4 .>Z-.....n DNI"'!-1.t. 21, it. 1t1S 1111111 Jt!Wlt'Y ·~ .. :,~II.,. (..... 1 rntnl.'. l ldt wl!I M rectll'td 1111 .. 111 .,._.,.... ""Y ""' .,,..,.,1 -_.. ~ ... '<TWUUI 1Wlt1as • Wr1~,..,... ~IN" """ """' PUILIC NOTICE 4 lt74 '""" A 1• 11 L..w t :oo ~m.. J111111,., 24. 1t1" 11 '"' Klr." f'6rM¥•& 1...--.. .. ~ w-a1'WI --IMTIJllllT ~ !MY lllil ........ IM tM ... ,,,,,.,·~·........ Adtnl!'ll ttrlllOl'I . OMtl ol Mid ~ '"Ill i.ii.,..1M• ,.,.. l'NM a ,i......_ -~ -wftll Ice Tiie .......... ii' tetni M1w ...... ~ ........ _. !""""""" _.., $Cliitllil ......... -PUBIJC NOJ'I~ Nfi1 ..... a. Otstrk l. 1'72 W1m1r Awn111, ""'"'I"""' a i. .fl. _: -r •-.r _..... •1 ,..,_ ....... •· .,.,. .. _....... llW "A':'WT ~ • ..,..., llltft iii. 9"c:ll. C.Ntornl•. 11 wtlltll """' ~ l11Jlnllll ...... , ... ~···T ;:::1 .. _'llt. Jl.talloDfor = ~ =--= ltrnM8 ..... :.w:-cw::.,~::-· .. ::r'..;::;....:::.. '="""' ~ .... ·~z:-w:,::~::I r.,_a;e=.,., I ..., ·-::.::: : :=.·":n111t'"E'Qlll':1:.~ ilO "JO. -lplCI I ' .!._IOIM ........... at Hf• fWI. ~ Mllll a.id! lffW rttltf • •OAMt AllOCIATIL M1 ...,._ TM ttllOW'lflO itertM 11 llllllnt llr!.ltlw 1 · , ...... 111 eccordeflee Wltb f9Kllkt11ont -s ....... ,~ .ftl ltUfltJI V4b1P14 wfdl r~~ewc:"'IW 111 "Tl.;::=:~:':.~ ....... -. =...a: 1111" .... ln'fl'lll.•~l) PltCIMONTOll:Y ltOINT Y.t.Ci;fT PIA\ ..... Onntl (;tiff W, H1t.'"r:~r:.:::.~,~llllltoDl:U~1tw , ..... ,. ·~ ..,,.... ---.............. ' : ~ -':!rt"'· ,.. = , ........ ·-~ 1'1'11111 '"""''"" CLUll l,,.,Cl1'1I 'llOMOf'ITOtlY IAY ~;;irer , .. 21• ,., im 11'11111 J= .. ~ltlMll 11114-•n t ltttftltl .. == 1':!' {;:::: :.1 1aun11n1. -· ':....~· =" " .... Wltlt tltl,...:... " ..,';"'" c-" .... :ri: .. ·c~i~r ... :-s:.·i: ~ ~~ 1r~1,~~1~:·=ti --•u.,,-.-. -:lr'Tt':! •• ...,,.,.. 11\rqh fN•"' .... TUll:OAY The "held" «iirnPIJUIMlll lt = CW1I ., °""" c.tv ., """'-J lrvlnt. C.llftml•..... Mn 'f'HkllH "'" N"""" ... Cl\, .. "--... Vl"-4".I "''" c.oinply ~~ Oovtrtimllll Cicio ,1nt llllft l:lt i .M. • 1 . --1t, tm. , 0.• Jtllf 1'o "tm. llllt ....,.... It ~ iw I· n"lllM ea. ..... . $1Cllen• 4.lCIM304. =~· lilt jl..M. .... , pllCld aft Diii' tbe .a-1 . ,....,. WILLIAM •• ST JOHN, • "'1Mrlfllll 1:. M. P'tMlvkh, Ult Mlrlll\All'lfli.lf. ...nc1 OI' lfOMooll:llllOMSlllt.n'I' TPll Ctll'-11 ..... llJI wlM "' 11'1 ..._ ·1:A ,,,.... a1 -..w.w1 v 'Jbe torw..S caWR 1 ,....,.. Ol'lfltl cOMt •• l"n.t. • CWlltt C1ll'tl fll111nc111 11:...it" tM ,....,. c11Y. c;111"'1111 ...,. "6t4kti 11 11«ett ti• 11'111 "" ""' Miiii"" 1o "" iwit" QUI,.., ,...,,, !;----' a-.... .Jew _ -,...._, opll1• t-~I ............... i'""""' Dii l 1-J11 .-. :lfn lftf_J1nUtry • IY P1o¥ Rty, 0tpvty lflwtllt'lll'lt .~ 'fl'llil Mlnhl I• CWuct1ri11 M> ff..,......, wlH not .. rltMM!bll tw l•clM lt1 l•lfl'llflofl Clrtlt\~tot wlll -,-~ ......,;; -• t M:Ya .--... --I .. 11, "'' ·~ ---.. ... n IH~L1 --i J"'M-.-C. Ollfll~ -... ·-~L '!"I ..it er 111.in".. lll'ltrtc:IW .., " ""911~ It ·~lc:•blt, ;r,: = •, c::. t! double upper and ... ~. Kins' LIKE "'0 t.:i.:·~TID Tl'lll:...rw:1WMflwl ... tM(lllflty ~ ~~--= lltwl ""'"' IM:::-... ~ flllll '"" •• u . lfl or ~ r1:: "'aoe,.,IC:' .,.:"'=' .:.ew,.:-:: ....... ... a.-, ct 'Daire 18 fift Ifft, eilht _ .> 11WI 1•1..,. (I.,., tit Ofll'IOt tWl!ly Ofl Dtctmbtr COlll'lfy 0«ti of °"'1\1'1 C..,.., OI) Oettf 11111 :tnc1 dlY of Janvery, 1'74. .. welve 111'1' ln...,.tttll'f ll'ltrtll'l. ...... ..., .-. f'A t 11toom below wltb cabin ASK 'm'•'"• ,., .,~ c111ftrflll1 nw ,,, 1m _ o.ctm111r 11, ,.,,_ .., "''"" .~!!,,Yeu11t, oca ·~~ v,1~ sc" H100l 01t1~1a SVll rl!ll l :ff l .m. ·~Ill"'-11 1111~ ~NOY 4 MP•1 r-•lt M I ..... ,......,.~ L YI ...,.. 1,,.., • l u.t' _jlwloft , .... ,.,. """"' Scltl l tll a.M. c:elllnC upholstered In viJ\yl • .II. ~ .. ., .... , ·,.,_lllhed Orll!OI C:OI-' Delly P'Uol. l"vtlllll'llllll °"""' Clli! OlfW ,u... • \'111 NvyL Clllf. tltlN Clf/lftt "' "" IOIA ot ''"'"" - -' -with .... 11o ......... 1 • ...__.,11lon"~ -·-f"WI....., Ortnti co111 Dally l'itot, DtcttnW '" n . tt, 1•n~•M ,,nue,.., o.-w 1 .. ,,, a. ,,n w J11M11rv ''*'"'" °"""' eo.,, 0tl1Y l'ltot, '""''..,.. Or•"9' C..•t D•ll'f ,..IOI, .. -..-~w llAW • J111V1rf.t..,1';'1..-1s.1 •1 -+14 1,. 1•1 31'!1!.,.ti !!74 3J1t..n JtfWM'Y "S. n , 1t1• 7>74 J111111ry '· 11, ltl• lt-f• -- • . ----• ---• '• •• • I 8 DAILY PI LOT Friday, January 4, l'l74 Ducks Grid -Emo's Power. Too Mu.ch for MV Gal Aide Named F.UG F.NE, Ore. -Dick Enrighl, head football coach at the University of Oregon JOrthe paSI lY.'O years;-was fired toda y and replaced by assistant coach Don Reed- Enright's teams had compiled a 6-16 record in his two seasons as head coa ch. Athletic director Norvol Ritchey made the announcement. e Knox f1011orell NEW YORK -Chuck Knox , anolher In a -line o(_assislant coaches who was lifted out of ob5curily by Carroll Ro6cnbloom, Thursday was selected the 1973 United Press International National FootbaJI Cooference coach of the year. Knox, who was an assistant with the Detroit Lions last year, was hired by Rosenbloom last winter to take over th e Rams and he piloted a club that finished tmder .500 last season to a 12-2 record and the • NFC Western Division title. e 49ers Bree:::e LONG BE . .\Ct1 -Freshman Clifton Pondexter scored 20 points and led ninth- ranked Cal St.ate (Long Beach) to. an easy 93-76 Pacific Coast Athletic Associa- tion basketball victory over Cal State (Los Angeles) Thursday night. DAL.LAS (AP ) -To \lalerie Z1rgen· fuss the sensalio n was somc1hing similar 1o a :silent movie where the heroine iS tied to the railway tracks and watches a steaming locomotive approaching. .. , n1lshnndlcd his po\vcr all night." she sai d, "even "'hen I knew he \1'3S co ming at me. I could try to go lert or rjgbt. it didn 't n1attcr. Before I could move. ·he would OOTight on-me:-'-' The slightly stuniled termis player was referring to Newport Beach's' Roy Emerson~ wboSe hard serves and smashing volleys. aiJtlcd mui11ly Miss ' ZiegenfU$S' "'aY. enabled him and part· ncr \Veody Overton of Ormond Beach, f in .. to advance to the semifinals ot the $60,000 Spald ing lntemllllonal mixed doubles tennis championship.!1. 1'he E: mer s on -O v er t on teo1n O\'e.rpowered ri.·Uss Ziegcr\fuss· of Mission \litijo and Britain's ltogcr Taylor 6-2. 6_:~, .!n ,_T.h~~'!aY.;:::.n..:!g::.h_r '_s ope n i n g quartt:.rftnal rnateh. When f\1ar1 y Riessen and Rosemary Casals, also tca1ncd · to oust Frank F'roehling and Kris Kemmer, 6-4. &-I. the pre-tournament consensus among • Pondexter, a ~foot-8 center, pulled down seven rebounds arid hit on nine - of 14 shots from the Door as the 49ers .. v.oo their loth game against just 'one loss. I.m Angeles is 5-C. · e Vlrdo11 riired · NEW YORK -Don't try to tell Bill VirOOn he's an interim manag~r for the New Yor k )'ankees. He just doesn 't see it that y,·ay. "As far as I'm concerned," said Vinion, "I'm the manager of the New York Yankees and I like it that way. J'm not concerned about .Dick Williams." Virdon, ex-tikippcr of the Pittsburgh Pirates, was named to the Yankee job Thursday, ending the three-month tug of war tbat the New York club had been waging with Oak.Jand owner Charles 0 . Finley over Williams. e Dnle11 Dies NEW YORK -·Arthur Daley. Pulitzer Prize.winning sports column ist of the Ne\v York Times, died of an apparent heart attack Thursday. He was 69. He collapsed on the street while walk· ing to the Times' office from Grand Central Station and died at 11 :35 a.m. Daley's. last column appeared in Thursday's Times. Jn it he made an appeal for the consideration of Pitchers in the voting for baseball's Hall of Fame. e Asher Ellnahuded ALA.fl1EDA -.Gary l\1age. a 27-year· old Seattle Jett-hander, took lhe lead in the $100.000 Midas open bowling tournament arter the first round of match play Thursday night but Costa Mesa's southpaw, Barry Asher, failed to surviVe the cut. Asher was eliminated after three qua!i· fying rounds. e E11erg11 Slnsl• WASHINGTON -Major Le a g u e baseball pledged Thursday to cut its energy consumption by at least 25 J>:Cr· cen t in the coming season by reducing its use of charter air transportatio n and electricity. Commi ssioner Bowie Kuhn armounced a five-point program £ollowing a meeting of federal energy officials \\lith more than 30 members of virtually every sports and recreation al group in 'the country. Kuhn snid that in the coming year. the 2.f major league teams plan to reduce charter fli ghts by one-half or perhaps n1ore by using regularly schedul- ed commercial flights. e UCJ,A lo Poss? LOS ANGELES -UCLA. a run-mind· rd \vishbone-1 team the past t\vO seasons, bas hired a pass-orirnte d offensive coo rdinator, Rod Dcl\vho":cr. . Dowho wer. 29. \\'as named to the posi· lion Thursday by J.D. Morga n, UCLA alh leti c director. He c o a ch e d quarterbacks and receivers at San Diego State iJc\ore moving with Coach [)Jn Coryell to th e St. Louis Cardinals of the National Fciotb<ill League la st season. e 1(1111:1111111 R e l e 11se1f 01\'TARIO -l~ace d r i ,. e r Lee Kunzman. injured Dec. I l in a r.rash at On tario J\1otor Spee<h\lay. has been releas ed from a hospital but has l!Ol ~fully recovered from hi.s inju ries. ... I The 29·ycar-0ld Kunzman, \Vho return· ed. \Vednesday to his Guttenberg. Iowa, home. slill ha~ "son1e slight double vision·' from the ,concussion U1al kept him at San Antonio Commun ity l~ospital in nea rby UpliijJd for 21 days. eSlnde Die~ LONG BEACH -Gordon Leigh "Oskie" Slade. 69. an infielder for the Brooklyn Dodgers. St. Louis Cardinals and Cinci nnali Reds in the 1930s. died Wednesday night of a heart attack a( his home. ,,. Slade, a nalive of Sall La ke Ci ty and Jong-time resident of Long B:each_, had a .'157 major league batting average, playing l930-J2 at Brooklyn, 1933 at St. Louis and 1934-35 at CinciMati . He also played In the Pacific Cq;Jst 1eague and Southern Association. e Trl•I Date Ser SANTO OOMINGO, D.R. A UPI Teleptiala Faces B1·i1i1is. To1iiglit Bruce Rudoff of St. Louis University, shown falling on Brown Uni - versity foe , will be in action tonight when the Billikens fa ce . UCLA in the NCAA soccer championships at the Sugar BowJ in Miami. St. Louis will be seeking its 10th NCAA crown in 15 years. :W-eather, E11ergy Crisis C_ausi11g C1·osby Dilemma PEBBLE BEACH ,(API -The Bing Crosby National Pro-An1 had a serond n1ajor worry -besides the weather -y,•hen the gol!' tournament opened. "\Ve want to assure people who corne do111n here that there is an adequat e sup(Jly of gasoline.'' Larry Crosby said Thursday. "Ad vance ticket sales were down about JO percent this year. and I think the gasolin e short age is one reason.·• Larry Crosby, Bing's older brother. is interi m tournan1ent hos! in place of the singer who is hMpita lized near San Francisco with pleurisy, a chest congestion. The raiii.storm which washed ou t Thursday's round, forciog tourn&- ment officia ls to schedule a makeup round on ~1onday, increased Bing's chances or attending the event. The 33-year-old tourna1nenl draws many of its spectators from the &in Fran cisco area , 125 rnltes to th<> nor th . and fron1 San Jose. abou t 75 miles away. How many of those gallery regu lars would shO\\' up this weekend remained a question today. "But ·we'll have gas available here," promised Frank Zabrowski, a Crosby tournament worker and also chief o[ police in the Monterey Peninsula area community of Del Rey Oaks. 1'he golf tournament provides an an· nual 1vin1crtime bonanza for the area which considers tourism its most im· po rtant industry. Last month several organizations In ~1onterey and Carmel fonned nn "Emergency Energy Crisis Action C.om· miltee" and approved a $20,~a-mooth special advertising budget. '1The first ads appeared mostly in the San Francisco area. Just before Christmas. and reminded people that theY' need only a tankful of gas for a round.trip to Monte rey ," said Tom.- Gaskill, general manager or tile Del Monte l·lya tt !·louse, biggest OOtel on the peninsula wi th its 420 roo1ns. I·lc added that the Hyatt liousc "'as virtually booked solid for the Crosby w~kend . ~ have gasoline, and most plan to stay open th is Sunday," he said. "\\'e·re usually sold out in advance for !he weekend, and th is )'ear \11c're onl y about half fuH so far." reported Chris Voelker. n1anagcr of the 70-roon1 Irela nd's Park Crest Mot.el. ··\\1e're sold out for the weekend,'' reported Li nda Van Arsdall , rese rvations manager at the 200-room Royal Inn. "But ,.,..e didn't have the usual nood of phooe calls after we sold ou t." -·--,,-,-4+.;r~-'--'~ • pla)'i!rs appeared validated -that lhe man who cootrols the mat<h and "'Oman who .holds her own on .court Y.'Ould prove a formidable combination. "A lot or people are excited about the tournament"--from the aspect ol the mtin·wom an rhutchup,'1 said ~ts. Casals. "P00ple arc coming out to see if a won1rui can return a man's serve and serve adequately in return." Casals and Overton "'ere able to do just that. 1\1eanwhile, Riessen · and · Emerson dominated their respective mate~· tempo$ with oear-Oawlem serv,. Ana volleying. A crowd or s,soo twned out at Southern , llletllodi31 Unlve,,lty'1 Moody Qlll14!Um. Sellout crowds of almost 81000 are an- ticipated for the llnal three nlghll . Neither Emerson-Overton nor Riessen.. CaBals sufJered a service break. Misl Ziegenfuss lost her serve twice in the !Ir.it-set of-the llrst nflltdi;-lnclud·- tbe decisive eighth game. Then she oou.ld n6t handle two Emel'SQfl volleys which allowed a service break of partner Taylor in the second game or the seoond act. and Emenon-Overton coo31ed to 'their win. . UI 11le two Thursday night wtMers w meet Saturday artemoort. iD 0 n e semifinal. The last two quarterf~~s will be played tonight pa.lrlng B1.U1e Jean King and Owen Davidson against Cliff Drysdale and ~·rancolse Durr ~d Corona del Mar's Rod Laver with Leslie llunt aga..iMt Cliff nlchcy and Nancy Richey Gbnfe1".~ - The championship match will be played Sunday with the winners splltUng $20,oo:I in the richest mixl'd doubles payoff on record. ' UCI Tests Tough Hawks A1itedters Bid for Sixt/~ Straiglit Victory J St. Joseph's College of Pelll'}Sylvania, a pereMial basketball power along the eastern seabord, will conclude a gruel· ing 17-day ho,liday trip (that began Pefore Chri stmas) tonight (8) in Crawford Hall as the UC Irvine Anteaters (6-2 ) play host lo the Hawks. St. Joseph 's will come to UCI \vith a 7-4 record afte r Wednesday night's 67-65 loss· to San Jose State-in Northern California. UCI \vill be seeking its sixth straight "'in against two defeats .. The Hawks, ranked as high as 18th in the major college Poll (university division ) a year ago, have suffered all or their losses since leaving home Dec. 19. -----Santa Clara University and the University of San r~rancisco beat them New Reputation in !he Cable Car Classic. 'I1lC University ot Hawaii, Wlde!eated this year, handed -them a loss in the. Rainbow Classic semifinals last weeE in Hawaii and San Jose St. beat them Wednesday night. Victories have been 1'0Ver Arrhy. \Vashington State University, Hofstra, Philadelphia Textile and SUbPac. Jack McKinney's Hawks ha v'e participated in the NCAA ~ regiona l tournament five o( the last eight )'eart and last season wen the Mid-Atlantic Conference. Providence College, UCl's Joe a \\'eek fro m Saturday, defeated the Hawks last year in the university division playoffs. Leading the Hawks in scoring i.s Ron Right.er, a ~7 junior for\vard with a 13.3 average. He is also grabbing nine Parseghian's Gamble Ref ires Irish Traditions NE\V YORK (AP ) -i'l'olrc Dame's dramatic 24-23 victory over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl foo tball game on New Year 's Eve has buried two canard6 that threatened to haunt Coach Ara Parseghian for the rest of his successful career. One of these fantasies \\'as that Ara was afraid to gamble -that he was loo conservative in a crisis. The other was ''Ara can't win the big ones." The doe-eyed Armenian Protestant who has becorne the new idol of the old Catholic institution not only proved he could win !he big one -it "'as one of the biggest of all·time -but he won it with the boldness of a river boat gambler. Never agai n can anyone doubt the cold nerve of the man from South Bend who has refired the gre at traditions of the late Knute Rockne and Frank Leahy. Parseghian·s rep1,1talion for blow· ing important de c i s'i on s first took root "'hen he "·as at Northwestern -and th en \\'idened at Notre Dame where the Fighting Iris h showed an inclination to taper off at the end of the season. In 1964. his first year und er the golden dome. Parseghian carried a 9-0 · record into the Southern Ca lifornia ga me and lost 20-!7. -A loss to Michigan State and a lie with Miami in the final games spoiled th e 1965 campaign. 'l'be Irish sa w a perfect record spoiled by Southern Ca l in 1970 and good seasons marred · by last game losses in 1971 and 1972 to Louisiana State and Southern Cal. res~tively. The Fighting Irish finished atrociously in 1972, looing to the Trojans 45-23 and to Ne braska in the Orange Bowl 4{).6, Son1e critics said the late season declines were the resul t or Ara 's emo- tional coaching methods. ·."He drains ev e rything out of his team and it has nothing left for the big one observer said. game.·· In 1966, Parseghian was roundly criticized when his national cham· pionship team, having fought back to ~ie Michigan State 10..10 in one of college football 's great classics, chose to run out the clock in final seoonds rather than go rec:k1essly !or a victory. "It "'ould have been an injustice to my boys to risk frittering away tbe game on a gamble after they had played so hard." the Noire Dame coach said. Parseghian showed no absence of Sleel when faced \l.'ilh similarly critical decisions in last Monday niiht's sutar: Bowl game. He went for the two-poinl conversion atter Notre Dame's second touchdown, L'Ompensatirig for the rUmbled snap on the first extra point try. The pass click· ed . and it subsequently proved very important. Energy C~sis Causes Forfeit PETERSBURG, Va. (AP) -Because or the energy crisis. Virginia State's basltetball team Thursday picked up its seventh victory in eight starts. Officials at Virginia State said Thurs- day night's s,cheduled game at home against North \Carolina Wesleyan had been forfeited to the Trojans by the North Carolina school. N. C. \\1esleyan officials infonned Virginia State their team would not be able to make the trip because classes will not reconvene until later this month due to tbe energy shortage. ' V'IT ....... rebounds a game and is a transfer from Duke University this year. .J Gene Prybelln, &.s rorward, and J\~Ke Moody, a 6-3 guard, are both ,averag1ng JO points a game with the other guard . Jim O'Brian, ,getting nine. . Dave Baker is leading the UCf sco~ing parade with a 17.9 average after eight games. Jerry r..taras, his front-court run·- ning mate, is second wit h a 16.3 norm . Others among the tw fight inclu~e , S<Xllt Magnuson ( I0.7). Gary Eubanks (10.4-), Kevin Davis (9.2), Tim Tivenan (8.1), Richard 1\1raule lS.8) and Jeff Butler (5.4). Coach Tim Tift will probably start frestun40~ guards Davis and Tivenan aJong with Maras. Baker and Eubanks on the front line. t..1agnuson. Butler and f\:lraule will complement th is lineup. Staggering Lakers Face Golden State ~ JNGLE\VOOD (AP) -\\'hen a pro- fessional basketball team goes through a month with six victories in 17 games, it doesn't fi gure to wind up still lead ing it.s division. That's just wha t happened lo the l,ios Angeles Lak ers in December, however. The second-place team in the Pacific Division of the National Basketball As.sOciation. the· Golden Stale Warrioi's. lost nine ol lhcir last 16 game s. Thus when the two teams clash this evening it'll be a battle or incon,,tstent clubl, the Warriors a veteran organiza- tion with personnel problems and the Lakers loadl'd with rookies plus a few veterans with ailmenls. "Our poor performance Is worse th an What the Lakers are doing," says old pro Warrior forward Rick Barry. "\Ve have experienced personnel v.·ho have played together. You can't expect the Lakers to play like th ey have in the past with !JO many new payers like Elmore Smith and Connie Hawkins. L'Oupled \\'ilh the loss ot Jim McMillian and \'lilt Chamberla in and the injury to Jerry \Ves t." . That about says it all. What Barry was attempting to say he then said: "With a makeshift lineup all the time, you can't erpect much consistency. In essence. the Lakers are doing a pretty decent job because they're still in first." The Warriors' only triumph in their last ten games was a two-pointer over the La kers. And Barry admits his team doesn't have the uexcuse" or tn- ei:perience that the Lakers do. The starting Golden State center is experienced Nate Thurmond. Forwards Barry and Cazzie Russell are two of• ,the more dominant scoring threats in the NBA. Jeff Mullit)s. Butch Baird and Jlm Barnett represent a line trio of guards. "The majority of our gu ys are-In a slump,'' Sa rry explained. "We haven't been playing .smart basketball and sometimes that becomes contagious '1Vllen things were going bad ~fore someone would come off the bench and get the job done. But we're not getting bench help now. It's a L'Ombination· of about everythin g," For the record. Les Angeles Is :z2..IB and leads the 17-18 Warriors by 21h games but the teams are even-in the Joss column. The Warriors have failed to play two games because of wet arena floors. PACIFIC-8 TEAMS . LAUNCH PLAY By THE AS.SOCIA TED PRESS That . part or the college basketbell season that• coach John Wooden sa ys is ~he main concern of his nationally top-1'1111«<1 UCLA Bruin; llegiQS this weekend -the Paclfio.1 Conferen<e ~hedWe. In tonlpt's ol>enen, Oregon State (Wl lj'"af;'Callfomi. ($-5) and Oregon (M l Is at Stan!Ord (M). · UCLA gets its league start at Washington. 7·3, Saturday after Southci;n ~ 9-1, l>lays a realonally-teltvised -- anemoon !°'" at Washliigton Star. Domini can judge Thursday set Jan. 14 (Or the beginning of the involuajar1 111anslaughter tclaf of Houston Astros star outfielder Cesar Cedm>. 22, charged with the 0ee. II pistol slay ing or a lady fr iend . "We've had a few cancellations, but I think the weather will be more of a factor than the gilsoline situation. I've checked several stations. They all DESPITE WIND AND RAIN TOM WEISKOPF DRIVES SHOT TOWARD 'IVENTH GREIN. .f.8. Orego moves to Csllfomhi and \ Oregcn St to Stanford for Satuni,, night gamCJ, • .. -----· • I ' •• • • ·-F_•,_da-'-y,c..J_.,_,_.,,.c_,_c' _l_97_• ________ ;:_o~:..:.:ILV Pll.OT 19 FV Marina Tabbed t~ Capture Semifinafs . . AVOID CllOSSlllQ OVOI HANDS ON SAND SllOTS Cuttln1 too deeply Into the sand on $hots from bunkers often occurs because the aotfer •110111 hi~ right hand to Hcrtiwl'' _lJYer his left too soon °" hi• follow-through (SH "Incorrect'' portion of illu1trotion). Actually this crowllng over la merely an lndicaUon that the' player was starting to clo .. his clubfact while the clubheed WIS moving through the sand. The closed face cuts too dHply; weakshots result. Mter Win Sunset League Hoop Title ~---~:;.~· ~ 4-~ ,. ~ /7 0 ,,,, ... _/' <:>----· The next time you practice sand shots, consciously try to retain your hands' impact po. sltio" well into your follow· through. Keep your right hand facing the target until tht ball Is well on its way. This wiJI keep your clubface square ·to the target line and a· tlilnner cut of sand'wlll result. I would suggest, however, that golfers who already consistently' hit their sand shots past the target disregard this advice·. INCORRECT -·· Los Alamitos Racing Entr~s Ttflltlll'• Enlrl" CIMr & .. 111. "l"I f' .. t l:tt fl m. 11 E•1tt1 111 l'lrtl ll•ct 11 E11cl11 M Uh. Ith I"" "" l"llST IACE -..:.0 v11re11. 3 yt~r Oldl, Cl1lmh1g. f'ur11 11100. (l1!mlng j.<f•(I ll.500. Ori Tiit Hou11 !W1rdl V11ty Ft"' 611u lL.•ph1mi HabOh> !8 rool11l l1•1c~tl Oe<:k (011verJ MiJ Clemtnllne CH<lr!l Ala11ritos • ' Results CllVdr & flt1I TllUrMtr, Jt-ry J, \f'I' "' '" '" 11J '" l'lJIST •ACt: -•OO r1rd1. l vttr okl1 I. UP. Cl1lml11g. f'ur1111500. CO<ty Kid IAd1lrl f.!O 4.to l.IO Tl'le EU"'lfltlor CSmllFll •.to i.10 Al'l!llll iurt Miki IC1r0o11) 10.70 Time -'l'0.9'. Aho r1n -Bl•111t1. 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Tr11wrtl 115 l lOHTM llACI -lJD yl rdL. 3 re1r old llllltt 1nd ~H. c11fml11C1. PVtN '3000. Cl1lmlno prk 1 $JOOO. I Ruby 81QOfll• IJ. Wen:t) I 1 Coor Wirch CR. Ad1lr) 11! •1v•~ Oollr CJ. Ktnilil 12 A.' s.111111 IT. Ll~1m) 111 M JS IOl'l W111e (L. MytH) 11 s-r Riv..-IJ. 11:1cri1,..,•1 11t lt0<kln' Ltdr <S. TrttlUftl llf By !\OG ER CARLSON Ol 1M Dally •11et ., ... Fountaln Valley H I jt h 's Barons are In the semifinals or the championship bracket of tlie S•nt(iigo High Holiday basketball tournam~nt tonight aqnlnst liuntin'(ton Be a ch Dl11trlct rival Wt".stmi nster. Tipoff Is set for 7 o'clock wilh the winner guaranteed a spot ln the finals Saturday night. ~ Coach Da\'C Brown's soJid Barons qualified for the semis ~·Ith l\n easy, 68--45, rout of Free\\'BV League' rf"presen- tative Buena Park Thursday afternoon. The cosiest task of the ""'eek for sportswriters Is tabbing the two teams most likely to fight It out for the Sunse{ League b a tk e t b a 11 chan1- pionship. Undefeated Marina ( 12-0) and lightning fast HuntingtoJl Beach (J0-1), ""'ho else? The t""'O Huntingto n Beach District teams are rated one- two in Orange County and both figurt as ~~Ins ror CJF 4·A playoff competition as the l\VO best represen- tatives 'from the circuit. The question is can either team win at the other's home court? Loop activity gets under "'av Wednesday evening. Here's ho_w the Dally Pilot sees the Sunset race: There wasn't much doubt as to the filial outcome once Bro\vn's crew turned it on ln Jhe third quarter lo break lolisc .. a--32-26 . halltlme situa- tion . Steve Dorsett. Tim Hi!T and J. Marina. Super balance, 111nlane connected from !he sensational outside shooting field at the outset of the lie-and :i. tough defense ma!.:e cond half to give the Barons Jin1 Stephens' Vikings the nar- a 38-26 lead and Buena Park roY.' choice over Huntington "'as not to cut the margin Beach. lo les.s than eight points arter T\\'o-time all-Orange CountY that. player Bob I.osner (6-5) can , The Barons burned Buena · dominate inside with hi! re- Park, a team that came In wit h bounding, yet take a taller a 5-2 record, on several oc-foe outside with his outside casion in the first half \\'ith shootinl!' ability. a 1-2-1-1 zooe press: Guards Byron KGSick and And combined \\'ith near-SO sophomore Rich Br a n n i n g percent shooting fro1n the field transfonn the \'i!<:es into t1n there .... ·asn't much chance for al'llost unbeatable outfit. the losing Covotes. The win-Bill Fick and Keith Koeller ners hit Z8 of 59 shots from nnerate at fo"Wards while the field . Kevin Lan9gtaf adds another 1t1alane, Fountain Valley1s dimension as a sixth starter. 6 -5 All -Irvine Le ague Kosick connected on 13 in returnee, cashed in for 21 a ·ro\v from the field in one point& with nine field goals game and Fick was J<>-for-10 and three free throws. from the field and five-for-five The southpaw moved out.side from the free throw line in of the Buena Park ume and another outing. connected from the .12-foot range for the most part. Guard John Lodestein .... "8s the onl y other Barons player to hit in double figures. can- . ni ng 10 points in the balanced Fountain Valley attack. Buena Park. ""'hich entered the game .... ·ith th ree players averaging in double figures, could connect on only 18 of 46 from the floor and was guilty of 17 turno\•ers. Fountain \'alley 's biggest problem ""'ith turoovers 't\'as in fryi ng to ·penetrate thf: Buena Park" zone through the key . l'tollllllln V11l1y latl s:;nz Hiii l'" Jcll1r od11'9ln M1!1111 TrctWP Tol1l1 " ff ,, 11 l 1 °) I , . . ' ' ' ' ' 0 l 8 s 0 0 10 ' J 0 21 1 2 • ' 71 11 11 61 lrtn It}' 0Wlr11f'I Ft11 V1lltv, 11 'j 'I ,,,_.. l Vlftl ,,,. U I 11~$ JCs Begill Loop Play Z. Huntington Beacb . The Oilers 0£ coach Elmer Combs present an awesome fast break and crushing press. Retuming All-Sunset League choice Raul r,ontreras keys the fast break with unreal ouickness and a fine shooting touch from any point on the court. , And he's not the on!~· threat 1 In the Oilers arsenal . Versatile Scott Rankin bums the opposition from outside and down the baseline. Doug Rabe is an excellent outside shooter, "Rocky Ci are 11 i, usuallv the plavmaker. is con- sistent from 30 rcet and 6-4 Jif"l"I Weir is stead.'\.' inside. ll 11 n ti n gt o n 's major weakness is board strength. But when the Oilers are hof from the fioor ("'hich is almost. every Ume o.ut) ""'ho needs rebounding? 3. Westminster. The Lions of coach Doug Stockham have· the fastest team in \\"estminster High h i st or \' . And .,, .. ilh 6-4 Linn \\'ilson, 6-6 Dale Parker and 6-4 Dave 'ralsh it ma'' also be the best team in \\'estminster history. Unfortunately tilorina and liuntington Beach happen to be playing In the same league. If southpaw Ed Jlrges (6-6 ) co1ne5 through at forward the Lions co\J ld" qualify for a Cit-""' playoff berth .,..·i th a strong season. '· Loara. Curt Kondrack, Da\•e \Valker and Kim Froh· ling make the Saxons a definte lhreat every lime out. Kondrack is U1e tallest Loara player. hO\\'ever. and at 6-3 he 's going to ha ve trou- ble dominating the boards . 5. Anaheim . Coach Emil Neeme has four returning starters to work \\'ith and whe.n the Colonists are playing smoothlv it's Brian Platt (6-4 ); F'rank A1orales (6-4) and Gil Ayon (6-2) doing most of the \\'Ork. Little (5-'1 Jim ValVerde is the fourth rctUm- ~ng starter. 1. Newport Harb-Or. 'Phe Sailors of coach Dale Hage,v lost five of their last six games and are the puz.zzle of the Sunset League. Returning all-league guard Brian O'Flahertv, 6-8 Dave Seymour, sharpshooting Frans Van Der Aa and dependable 6-4 !orv•ard 1'fatt Spangler could blend their talents to rv.,ake lhe ' Tars title con- tenders. The Sctilors are t he darkhorse contender. b ut losses by 15. 22·. 36 and 41 points after a 4-0 start dampens lhe outlook. i. Western . cOach Marv BlC.Jr.ker's Pioneers are thin in experience and depth. But the Pioneers gave MaJer Dei a tlJugh time at the latter's gym and figure to beat out Santa Ana in the race to escape the cella r. Leading \Vestern are se niors Da\'e Thomason (6-21 and ?• Ke vin Madsen (6-3). I. Santa Ana. Coach ]\like Thornton's Santa Ana Saints have no one over 6-2. and figure to be h u r t oo the boards every time out. This Week's • Trout Pla11t -The following Southern MARINA'S BILL FICK GOES FOR TWO. Californ ia lakes and streams. --------- listed by county. are scheduled for restocking this u1eek u-·ith catchable-size rainbow trout: LOS ANGELES -Castaic Lake, El Dorado Park. Hansen Dam Lake, Legg Lake , Pud- dingstone Lake, San Din1as Lake. San Gabriel River (East and \Vest Forks). SAN BERNARD INO -Glen Helen Park Lake, Lytle Creek (~fiddle and North Forks). San Vicente Lake . Silverwood Lake. · Sea l(ings, Jordan Top Area Cage Play four. three and r"'o to Los Alamitos. \\farren. Sunny Hills and Ne1vpart Harbor. il'lil'TH llACI -S.ft y1rdl. l ye1r old1 a. llf!. Cl111Jll111 1llow111Ct. ,.urM ..... 11111 Ct nvon (Ad1lr) 4.!0 3.ml 1.10 Olckey 8111<1 l oy (K1nl•J S.10 l.00 J tllt Mr (J. ll r-1) lj• Pletst (011!111ut {J. Ortytrl I 1 AIUft Allfll (D. (tfdOZI) llf H1"TH llACI -a r ••dr. 3 !"' °'l 1fld up. C•1lmlna. Pur11 i 600. CllHT•lm!ce $'.@. Golden Weot and Saddl•back colleges hope to start the new year off right tonight as they launch conference basketball play. UCI Crew Schedttle Tall and talented Long Beach Jordan invades the qrange Goa.st area tonight as non-league basketball actioo .,..·inds do"TI before league hostilities n~xt u-·eek. Jordan, with U Larry Hudson and 6-6 James llardy, clashes with the host Sea Kings of Corona del Mar in the featured prep game or the night. Beller performances al the free throw line could turn the Sea Ki·ngs' season around . Jit{l Sy.·ain has averaged 16.5 points per outing for Costa ~1esa and coach Hob Scr- cnscn's Mesa cre\\' 'is a solid favorite to make r.1ission Viejo ils eighth victin1 in 10 starts. Vin.win (NICOdtmU!I l.20 Tlnw. -11.S1. .. llO •to -Mr. ROif\ M1n, 1 KllOWI' T~tl Girl, I M•I< AftlCk, JllllJk1 P•. RICI Crili;igtt 111•, Ne~t• N1ppl11g, GU RNOY. SIXTH llACE -l!oO r1rd1. l Yttr olcr1. Allow1nc1. Purot IJJOO. J•tOUI Str1w (Httll 12.tO J.20 t . ., l 'HIUI II (Nltodtmu11 4.20 7.~n F!ett'• DUOI rw1rwn1 3.IO Tlmt -11.27. .,lso rtn -Cll1r111riunorld, ll:o•r• Rock111t. Ml11 l~r Lot11, Cf>4r1tt' Jel, Lllllt Oujll, Wondtr L111, Jtl'I ll:ockttt.!. M 1ucl1 -W•<-W llntw & 4·1 H111I II, f'•HI MO.Sf. tlVl"TN llACI -llO v1ra• J v11r old1 & up. Cl111llftl 1llow1nce. f'unt s.t()(I), Tiii ldrltwfld. IMOllFI Ollrnotlll IMtrl) s.io 2 . ., J.111 RIX'kr DenutOo CT•r•1ur1J '·'° 1.l>i! F!llKtl! Moon IK11l!lhll 1.00 Tl11t1 -1•.1s. AJIO flf\ -Pl'lotbl'I Llmll, Ml ll:ocktt, Ltd"f'tlvV'• Cn•r111. Fin1 snvt· fie, CC!Jntry C1rou1tl. llGMTH ltACI -110 y1rd1. l rt•r ohh '' 119-Clllt'!llno. Pur1e .... Sl'lll'Y V1111111FI (Hlcodlmu1) 7.20 '.00 J.tO Ctlll«nl1 S11'>dt (Llph1rnJ •.to 3.60 P1rr Cl1P1>4tr (Tr11sur1) 2.IO Time ·-'-'·"· Abo r111 -E1r11, Cn1r91, Wtlc~ Mt Tr1vel, Hthtoet!vt, Mr. Acitllu1t11, Suri Al Al. SI ••1clt -l•s.M'f Vlfltlltl & •<tlltlnll• ,.,.. ....... 111•~· Nl"TH llACI -U0 y1n1 .. i YHr ' olclf " up. Cl1lml!'IQ. f'ur11 S20DO. C1lcut11 2 1.Mllr ~ 4 . .i> J.llO 2.20 Mr. Dlll'Nltld Miion 4.to 2.60 B•ft(lf\ Bid (Srnttnl t.to Tl,,,. -11.2J. A!io ''" -DoM Mt 1r, lutllr Cutt a1r, Flrl<ht<Of, (nmlc, Dtrid¥'1 Jel, cn1nc• At, llld Who. U •••cit -lM:t lurllt 2 ' f.Mr, DlllftMlll MIM, P•I• 111,M. ' 011\dv ll1r (W. SllDt) llt S!1m1w•Y D. C1rOOlll 119 C:1lltor11!1 moq (H. Cra-DYI 121 R1r mond l~tr llov {J. Wero) 1:11 Rob111lt fJ. rooltjl lit '"r:l •l'O'/ .I.\ kt : . lllihtrdsl l" 'Sal or'I !ltr;e (L. WrlQFl!l :t2 '!' ~'• Wt t Ch111t (D. Morrill llf Ar how IS. TrHIU,.) 111 Sir 1mtil1r IK. C!1rl111l 119 Vanguards Fall, 75-62 Golden \\•est 's Rustlers host Santa 1'-fonica City College In the Southern Ca l i rorn i a Conference opener "'bile Sad- dleback meets invading Citrus at San Clemente High in the ~1issk>n inaugural. B o t h games begin at 8 o'clock. Coach Dick Strick! in 's Golden West team has posted an g..7 non-conference record and is guided by sophomore PT. LO'-fA -SOuthem guard Taras Young who is California College of Costa averaging over 21 paints a 1'-1esa dropped a 7$-62 opening game. decision to Taylor University Center Brian Sanders car- or Indiana Thursday afternoon ries the Rustlers' rebounding in opening round action or hopes. the Pt. Loma basketball Santa ~ionica (8-7) is paced tournament here. by 6-7 so·phomore center Bob The Vanguards, a bit stale Zeilstra and guard Ron Fugle , from a llklay layoff during a freshman . The energy crisis may not have had anything tlJ do with it but the UC Irvine ere\\' will remain on Mme waters in Newpnrt Bay on five regular season \Veekends dur- ing the 1974 season. Coad\ Bob Ern s t 's Anteaters will not journey a .... ·.ay from ho1ne \vaters until the Western Sprints are staged in Vancouver h1ay 17-18. March 2 -Cal Stat< (Long Beach) al Newport. April 6 -LoyOla and UC, Santa Barbara at Newport. ! April 13 -UCLA and San the Chrtstinas holidays, fell . Saddleback bas 'l''On just tlne e ,.... ud hne1MllM4 behind early and never caught of 12 tries thus far , but Roy LNwt up. Ted Bergerson had 11 field Stevens' Ga uchos figure to . goals for 22 points to lead match up weir with Citrus • All ,e,.1., ""*• cen -' the soorlng. (3-9). ,..,., SoCal returned to action this .--"c:::;;,_ ______ --:--1 1 e "" L ... Cen afternOOl'I against Bethany Nazarene of Oklahoma In con· 8th ANNUAL • c • ..,....,,. 1'"' 90lati0n round ection. .. ..... c ..................................... , leclted 1ty c."', .. ,. '•"' ..cit '""" !tt) !{ WESTERN MATOIM. ~. j · eM S.-..co 1-eclllriM l~~ ·I! 1 ~;.'I. Ill ~·I.,~ 1n 1 s• Skrtdlkl a 4 t ~ --~o.~~'~"' .,:ii~ii.;ii·;~;;;·.,, ;;;";i;""-";;;•v.,fiiOiliiOi,iiiOii~li ll:l 1'*01 1, '74 !~~~~~G II M .. ttt, W;•11"1 CllV-<>m"!Ntll s1~-7ft---- ltJ IUY A ....-n••• ) ""f .;rmv ~·· + T~ ~~~et: ~·.··I AMI SAYE AT i .. ~.,.~ .. :..... . ........... ;...... AR ,, .. ~.4 ..... ,.. • ~1fcr.ic:, n._ .,JOA l&IL41J ' COSTA MISA llA11UN u II-' -,...,., ·-' .IANUAllY 2t o.u . o. .. ,.. ....., JJllll.....,..1 4 Hew Yon a.,.,. t H41 HAUOI kn. C.M, In Htw Yort , ... ,.,.,. i. V'1rttOll'IW 3 MO ... ,. C.11 -;;~:n:~.~~r~. ~t~~~i=~ ... ~";r~·;;;;;;;;;;~·~~:;;:;;;;~~~;;s~~:I ...., .... Cllff ....... ,...., I • PllRUAAY I DOIS YOUR CAR IDLI 'ROUGH' W£ == :r::~=~ltlAOEt CAN-HnP ... -Jr4 THI CARIURnOR SHOP He MAltlOlt ILVD.. COSTA Mii.A ....,. A• '"" ,...,..,,., ... •MM. or .. Mlltt Diego State at Neitfoort. April 20 -Cal State (Long &>ach) at Ne\Vport. r.1ay 4. -Ne.,..'pclrt Regatta (UCI. Orange C-Oas1, Santa Clara, California. Loyola. CS Lon~ llcacti. UCLA '. h1ay 17-18 -\Ve s t er n Sprints at \'ancouver . June 13-15 -Invitational Intercollegiate championships at Seattle. .o\ll hon1e (i\1ewport) races start at 8 a.n1. • t Other 8 o'clock tiffs include Costa ~lcsa at Mission Viejo, La Quinta at Estancia, Notre · Danlt! at Mater Dei, Edison at Beverly llills and El Toro at Sha-man Indian Institute. Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona del ~1 ar Sea Kings have \\' ;n only once in seven starts, but their \oSS('s ha\'C been by t\\·o, ... ~ Tllll TllllllS _CllA111'5 .,. \ Coach Pat Roberls' Missicn Vi ejo quifitet is on a (\\·o-gan1e \\'in streBk. l~stancia coach D a v e Carlisle will be trying tlJ get another solid perfonnance from his five similar to the one that was respon.slble for an 80-31 trouncing er Valencia recently. NIWl Y 11'ANOIO · lARGIST IN THI WIST! Lions Sail .h1to Se111is; Roll,65-59 Uy R<lN" t:VANS 01 lfll O.Ur f'lllf tt1lf \\'estmlnster lllgh's Lions ovcr~amc a :sluggish first hair spiced by a barrage of technica l (nuls and lane viola· !Ion'> 1'hursdny evening at the. S:intingo lligh Holiday basket- ball tournament to post their seventh victory in 10 starts. Coach Dou g Stockham's Sunset Lca~ue repre.scntatlvcs turned back Tu.~Hn for the ~1·1·ond tin1c in tourney play. 65-59. to qualify for a scn1 ilinals clash with Fountain V:1lley tonight <Jl 7. Tht• Lions. who had "'hipprd Tustin by 30 earlier, had their hnnds full \\'ith a foe that kl'pl the pressure on ~g thr first half. \\lestn1 inster didn't sain the lead for good until 2:58 re- n1ainl'd in the lhird period \1 hen Dale Park1'r co nnectl'd on ;l layup to give his rnatcs ;1 .in-:l!I lead. ()nee !he Lion s got the ad- \'antagc they n10\'L'(i out to :1 st.'c1ningly comfortablC' 1n.'.lrJ:!in -obtaining a 57.45 !cad 1\·ilh 5:28 to go b~fOrc i·uslin made one last rll71 a1 the Lions. . Tustin sliced the n1argin to 63-59 \Yith I :03 10 go and had the ball again 1\•ith 35 seconds left. But Dave \ll alsh. \\'ho scorrd 2.i for lhe winners. stepped in at th.al point. intercepted a 1mss and was eventually fouled under the Tu s t in basket. lie hit both end s of a one a1Kl-ooe siluA lion-ro sc3\ the verdict with 2.f seconds to go. F'irst half action includl'{f three~ lechnical fouls o n \\lestminster, including t1vo on Stockham when he protested <1n obvious goal-tending play !hat went unnoticed by of- ficials Larry Arason and ·Bob Reeves. At that point Tustin \Vas lea<lini;i:, 30-25. and \\•ith thr help or the technical touls and a t"GUp!e Of lane violations on Tustin free throws. the Tillers moved out to a 33-:W lead. But \\'esttninstcr reversed an l 1-for-29 first h a I r pc rforn1u ncc ""'ith 17 for 29 tn the second half to tllrn things around. Tustin hit only 10 of 311 atlcn1pts from lhe field in the second half in th c so1ne.,..·ha1 sloppily p I a y c d g;u11c. W111mln1r1r 16JJ " • •' " E:no~ll ' ' , ; Ac~am•fldO -· I __ (I. -'---'-w11sn " ' • Par~er ' , ' Wiison ' • • "~ • •• ' H1lvtf1ion ' ' , ., Tol1l1 " " " Tu1U11 (Jt) ,, " ~ Lilly • ' ' C.w.irTt ' • ' Holll1101wor111 , ' , p.,~ • .-' ' ' M1!" • , ' 0 ,,, ' ' • G" ' ., ' Goldllone • • , Tollli " " " Scwt ., Qvlrleo •.Ytttmln1t1r li 11 11 11-43 Tvs!ln Ii II 10 16-51 Cage Scores HIGH SCHOOL Lo.11ra 61, s ... 1111~110 .a K1"nedy to, lolH Gr1tldl at COLLEGE " "· ,., • ' ,; " " • ' • " • • • " Cal St1t1 fLBI 93, Cal Sf111 {lAJ 1• F rt~llO S!, "'· ColOl"ldO 10 !<. cf 51<1 OleQO ro. BIOLA •t Cal Poly (SLO) S2, UC Oovls J~ A·llon1 9l, Wycmlng n . Colortdo SI. 1•. Ari1G<1a SI. n N-M••1Co St. 71. Wlct>Jta SI., "3 Pt n·Amtrlcan 16. Air Fore• 19 Ce"''"l•Y 91, Ar~'""' 96 Ok!1Flom1 101, UC San!1 81rblr1 7~ Crelo'1lot1 'lt. St n Oleao sr. 61 SI. lo.;Jl1 J1, S. Floridt Sl Mcrn11nl1 S!. II. Br10lty 16 COT I LtllQ 1111no u. tJ, Hohtrt •• Sli!lllOll: •OWL TOUllNIV S. Al1ei.m1 1•, Ml1i.ourl t.1 (Chll•" ~lo"•hl11) s. Mlul11lppl .,,, AUlillll Pe•r IS (ctnlol1t1on1 POINT LOMA CLASSIC 1'I1t11 P1clllt H, Ollvtl 71 Now THRU JAN. SUN. 13 · • I '• ' ) I L r , UAILV PJLOr . • Fridlty, Janu,1ry 4, lli74 , .. ' • IRS Seeks $800,000 Tirne . Gives · Life Life Exani Pro ves El de 1·l y Pa~r I From. Robe r t Vesco .Die d of Expo su re· -i n II orne NEW YORK (AP) Life 1nagazine is to reap- pear next year as a SC E .d D Robe··t J l'OQlll floor of their rriln1e WASHING'l'ON iAPl -The Internal Revenue Service is trying to collect 1nore than inclu"ding federal indiettnen ts- lor fruud . tonspirMCY and obstruction of juslice. monthly, the staff of the H N.~ C1'ADY. N.Y. posure, SHI r. . • I that they owe anolher $775,310 parent Time Inc. was told~ ~U PIL-_ .rnc Schen~chld_y· Sullivan. medical c.K.andner {or hou~l' fuur duy' aflcr th~ C cc- in taxes 11tus penalty of Thul'sday. Co~ty mcd1cal exam In er th ~1, · 11e said the con~ 1riclty \11t1s cut off for nun-pay· S d Th sd Id I e coun ). . I Th N' $"8 765 ·. a1 ur ay an e er y 1 r a l>tl e 1tigara " , · The weekly Life folded couple froze 10 death be· clusions \\•ere bas1..'t.I on tox-n11·11 ° ' · . . · 5800;000 in back taxes from ind icted financier l{obcrt L. Vesco. The IRS attached the !!i per-a, y~r ago.. . . cause ol exposure ·aft er elec· icology tests. ... ~·loha\Yk Po\1·er Corp. said it IRS ltECOHDS filed \1·ith cent pcna\ty because the agen· Tune editor 1n. eh1er. tricity for their house was The deaths. dis covered on hud .1nuclc reix·~tcd e~forts 10 the ·court shO\\' that Veseo cy "deler1nined that part 6f fledley Donovan, disc losed disc.onnected for nonpayment Christn1as Eve. have spurred ohhun ut lcn~t par tia l pay- reporlcd a tuxable incon1e of the underpayment of tax !he publishing . plan at a of bills. -· · 8tate and federal. le!::(:;lutors "'('Ill bl'forc 11 shu t off the AP Plloto Bor is Re ady A Jan. 14 opening date has been set for elim· ination <:_h.ess 1natch bet,veen Boris Spassky . the Soviet cha1np and U.S. champion Robert Byrne. Finals later on \Viii determine w h o will challenge Bobb)' Fischer for 1975 world title. · U.S. Subs, ·Spying On Red s \\1 ASHI NG TON ! UPI \ United Stales submarines arc spying on Russia from \\'ilhin the three 1nile territorial li mit of the Soviet l!nion. the \Vashington Post reported to· da y. -_The_ _story quo I e d '·in- telli~ence sources \vith access to documents describing the spying operations.'~ It said the submarine opera- tions. code-named ' ' H o l y Stone," are the 1110s! covert of all U.S. electronic eavesdropping e f f o r t s . in- cluding spvlng from satellites and airplanes. e POU' J'rode SAIGON, South Vietnam 1AP 1-The South Vietnan1rse government and the Viet Cong agreed in princ iple ioday to res un1c the exchange o f ci vilian and 1nilitary _prisonirs I -c IN SHORT .. ·)\ before the Tet celebration or rhe lunar ne\v year <lll Jnn. 23. The decision \1'as reached at a meeting of the Joint ri.1ititary Commiss ion in Sa i go n . Spokes1ncn said me e I i n ~ s would con1inue to \\"Ork out details of the exchange. in· eluding the number to be trad- ed. e Sl.:glob C1·isis SPACE ('.E:\IER. liouston L.\Pl -Skylab 3's flig ht con· 1 \rollers are keeping close \1•atch on a n1isbeharing gyroscope. If ii fails. the' mission migh t ha\·c to be f shortened. • 1 The proble1n is not a ne11· I one. It ha s been \vith the astronaut s sin ce earlv in the fiight. But suddenl y t~e gyro I has become 1nore erratic. e De 11tl1 Term 1 1 D 0 N A LSO~V ILLE . Ga. (AP) -The attorney for Carl "Isaacs Jr. says he \l'ill appeal the death · sentence t h c ri.1aryland prison cs ca pee received for his convicticn in the slaying of six nlembers of a Geof~ia farm family . Bobby Hill of Savannal1 said after Isaacs' conviction and sentencing Thursday that ht• \\'ill carrv an apoeal a\l 1he \l"ay to ·the U.S. Supreme Court if necessarv to overturn 1he statc"s ne\\· c;pitol uunish- mcnt la1v. on lh~ grounds it· is uncon sii tuticna\. e Golf Co11r.•e \\"ASH l !\'"G1'0~ fUPI 1 -A. U.S. Army captain laid out nn 18-hole private golf cou r~c in Germany in 1972 and, under 1hc guise of a fivc.-day ''field exercise." got a battalion of combat enf:ineers to bulld it. according to a General Ac- counting Office tG ,\01 rep:::irt. ·, The report. released Thurs- day by Sen. \Villiain Pro:.:. n1ire. (0-\\"is.). s.:1icl lhe cap- tain \V3S paid !!l,SOll German marks, or $7.234 at cu rrent exchange rates. to dra\\. up the plans and bring in a 600- 1nan engineer battalion and 137 pieces of earlh-moving equipment to d.o the j(!b. e POU' Solo11? . SIOUX FALLS. S.D. iAPI -Leo~K. Thorsness, a retired Air Force officer y;ho SJ>(!nt six years as a prisoner of ihe 'North Vietnan1esc, an- nounced today he will run for th• U.S. Senate iil 1971. -1bo~. <t i said he \Vlll enter the Statc'SRepubllca11. primary in a bid !or t~ Senate 3e&t now held by Democrat George McGovern. •• The claim v.·as di sclosed "'hen Vesco and his \\•ifc: ap- pealrd the IRS verdict 10 the U.S. Tax Court. \1esco"s · 1:.ix. troubles <.'Onie on top of H long string of legal probleins. Sl 11.712 for 1971 and paid . . is due 10 negligen~ and ;t aff reception. t.o study possible legis\:i!ion \J011'l'}"; • !-: $52,441 iu taxes. But the IRS intentional disregard of rules The form at and en1-J.~RANK A f'\ D Cathorine 111acing stricter con1rols on the Al 1 llOUUll TH . Baker \ contends thal the Vescos ac· and regulations.". >hasis on photos \Vill be Baker. both in their 90s. diod way utilities cut off serrirr. l1r111l' 11"1~ he;~~~~ "'1~h a gas tuall y had a tuxable incon1e 1'he Vescos denied the .he same as the old Life. r r 0 111 circul atory collapse. Thr Bakers were found J1ud· funi:icr. clcct11tity ii as need· or n101'C than Sl.2 niillion and._c::h::":_"C'.'.:'::':_· ---------'='=========='-_'."'.'.h'.'.'.ic:'.h~is associated with _•_x·_d_Jcd toi;cthcr on lhL" lil'iU~ l'tl 10 po wer tho~tr~ ~· CU PE VI NES Plant them all over the~pJace and-in about three yea15 call Gallo, ("Hello Mr. ·c, how's your stock Jor Ripple?") 6 7' BABE BOOT FRUIT T.BEES r Pea r. Plum, Peach, Apple. _ Apricot, and Nectarine (A ripe nectarine is worth two peaches anytime.) 197 • BARE ROOT ROSES field Grown, healthi and itching to go. Names you'll remember, Names your mother will be proud of. Come summer you 'II swim. in blossoms. VILLAGE BLACKSMITH POLE PRUNER DWARF FRUIT THEES I \I A two section deal. Keep yourself on the ground and reach the high limbs. Safer and I know you'll feel better. 567 What makes thAm cost more is that they give full size fr uit in a much smaller tree. (Had to say something.quick. that lady was looking funny at me.) ~~ -Bonus "'"""'"'"'""' SCOTTS SUPER BONUS 3 97 $2.00 OFF 10 95 REG. 12.95 Why doesn't your dichondra do well? Do you give it a good meal and knock ofJ the bluegrass and such at the same time? ThiS wilt do 2500 sq. It. (or 1250 sq. ft. twice.) --.-SCOTTS .SPREADER 1995 The dandy on e with a ll the features. Rust resistant, shut olt lever so you don't waste. visi.ble spreading ga uge. Soft handles and wheels( and a little soft sell from the guy too.I masler c !'1,1 ·qe .., .. \' ' VILLAGE BLACKSMITH POLE PIUNEI for a buck more you get the sharp saw with-• adjustable angle. WITH SAW scans CRASS SEED IO'}fo mUND WITH BOX TOP Buy any Scott's Lawn Seed. send them the box top, and 9 et a refund o{ l 0~11 on the purchase price. Not bad. _ (Ask them Jor their monthly Lawn Caie boOk too. It's really helpful. Free} KELLOGG'S RmOBUMUS 1•9 2 cu. ft 100~0 Organic. (YouS ciy a thing like that and everybody goes. Oooh . Ahhh. What doe1 that really mean?). Uae to mulch etc:- • . -r 697 scans SUPEB HALTS • ..... -.... PLUS Sl.00 OFF I \ , ..... __ -~LrsB 895 •••~:~:~·~•u . REG. 9.95 Now lor grass la wns this really qoe1 to \pwn on weeds. (You can see thOse little qranules whopping old Ned out of things.) Feeds at the same time. Covers 2500 sq. It. CElfTBAL LAD , SPREADER ;t 7 597 i It works. What more can I say (say more, or you're fired, ti~ed the Bou.) Adjuatable rat4'. metal bin, doesn't really rnist rust. It ju.t ri.eq9ti11te.J with it. '· "WHAT'S IN A NAME THAT WHICH WE CALL A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME WOULD I • SMELL AS SWEET." STOP TBANSPLAllT SBOCI VITAMIN B·I Not for humans (even my brother-in-law who ia closer to a c;joriller), hut the plants need it. Use some for your bare root stock and take out a little insurance. STBAWIEBBIES, BHUBAll, ASPARAGUS, BOYSENIEBBIES AID ABnCBOIE You get a .bc!ch in each carton. Raise them right ... - and you can go down to the supermarket and stick your tongue out at the produce manager. I VEGETABLE SEEDS All kinds and it isn't too early for some· varieties. (Wouldn't it b e funny ii the produce manager planted these and stuck his tongUe out right back at you.) 5' PAK SHORT HANDLED GARDEN TOOLS Choice ol trowel. cultivator. hand hoe, and something _ J.,ftover from Spartacus. They all work if you do. "SULLIVAN STAB" U.S. MADE LONli HAULED seom, BAKE OB BOE We are excited over thia line (can you ima9ine -a pa Ck of adults excited o'"va=r-- a shovel. They're sick.) Strong, well made. nicct balance. Good yankee tools. ~97 EA. ' . . ' CALL Ir A RUTABAGA. _ss.t HO.W MANY -wt·i.r-- SELL •• • • • • • ' . . ' • • ' Cassatt:-Early By CANDICE PEARSON 01 th• oanv ,11o1 St•ll In Sandy Orgel's "Linen Clcset.'' a female manncquinn stunds nude on the shelf, bety,·ecn the sheets. syn1bolically and literally trapped by domesticity. Jn ?o.1ary Cassatt 's "The Bath." the nominees takes a dirfercnt turn as mother bathes child and the c<>nvas glows with ~ the illuminafion o t brushstrokcs and an unstated hun1 an trust. " - THE ?o.1EDIA, t~ssages ure dif-, ferent. Yet Orgel and Cussatf arc bound by more than is superficially evident. l\.1any artists today perhaps especially feminists \v ho nre fight ing for recognition in a still mal£Xiomin<1tcd v .. orld -see art as a political state1ne nt. The style of many of the wo1nen art ists js hru·shly rcallstic. often _at:istract, the \\'Omen portrayed are doing, not being. Mary Cassatt. considered by many 10 be A1nerica'S roren1osl wo1nan painter and one or its leading 19th Century impressionists, may setm w or Id' s removed fron1 those attitudes. StlE HAS been accused on a number or fronts of dealing \\'ith ''do1nestic" subjects only, in a kind or vaugc put- doy,•n \vay. "Her subject 1natter could not have been more traditional or in fact. more ladylike," writes Davi d Lowe in a recent issue of "America'n Heritage" magazine. EVen the organizers of her ~lmpressi:.:e sho\v at the Ne\vport llarbor Art l\1useum in Newport Beach consign Cassatt to q restricted ro le in \\.Tiiing : ··she "'as thoroughly domestic in her subject matter _,women at the milliner or dressmaker's. "·omen in the home . .. • Sttokes perfoiming household tasks, women and their children." Such comments confine Cassatt to a singular vision and make her work seem less in1portant than it is. \\!hen male artists concentrate on madonnas and passive "'Omen subjects, arc they similarly assigned a ''household" label., does their sex bring forth charges oi F'rcudian infJuenL-es? Ol course not. . And' yet , ~1ne critics seem un\.11illing to go beyond Cassatt's major use of wo men subjects to see her exciting abili- ty to portray the mysterious of human tics, the feeling in t \VO people touching. Cassatt brings to her w o m e n a freedom, a dignity and self-purpose . Their fa!:es,. the.. confident posture or (See CASSATI, Page 2-1) BREAKFAST IN BED, 1897; OIL ON CANVAS -( of . . . Arts I Dining Out Entertainment Feminism YOUNG MOTHER SEWING, 1902; OIL ON CANVAS DAILY PILOT 2 J Friday, January 4, 1974 Volunteer Program Paints • ' Art as Colorful, Exciting I O.Mr Plltt St_.1 Pho!• ART VOLUNTEER ROS.EMARY BUCK t EY INSTRUCTS FIFTH GRADERS .. By Hil.ARY KA \'E Of !tie D•ilJ ~1191 St•fl "A painting was just a painting before 'w\'C heard these art lectures," remarked Julie Brown, 10. "No\v, a painting really means something." Julie, and the res t of the. fifth grade class at Eader School in ll untington Beach, were listening to a new lecture on itexiean artist Diego Rivera. "We try to tie in our presentations v"ith the class's curriculum,'' explained volunteer lecturer Rosemar-y Buckley. ''This class was studying Mexico llQ\I. so \~'"C decided to do Rivera.'' TIIE PROGRA?o.l began al Eader School five years ago. \Vith help fron1 the Junior League and the Ne\\port Harbor Art l\.tuscum . NO\\', the lectures have expanded to all schools in the Huntington Beach City School District, and involve all grades, not jU$t fifth graders. There are close to 400 voluntCi!r lec- turers In the Art Appreciatiop Program -each one attending u \'lo.iksha,1 r t the Newport Harbor Art ~:u"'111.1n! to learn how to describe th~ artists un:t ~paintings. Depending on the gra~ level and curriculum, the kit s usctl by the · volunteer! include palntlngs and/ot' slides on Japanese £olk art. Cali romia/lndian art, Eskimo art, landscapes, and many from the great masters . --• --~ --'. Slides of Andre\v \Vyeth "'ill be used next sernester, and fi fth grader~ \\•ill see kits on Picasso and Va n Gogh. Junior High students will also have a program called "Art in the City." One lec1ure th;;it was a big hit with the fifth graders this year was l\.trs. Buckley's presentation on the Laguna · Beach Pageant of the Masters. "It looked like rea l paintings, not people," commented Jeff Trotter. 10, still amazed over the slides i\lrs. Buckley showed the cla ss. "1 thought jt \\'as better than e.ven seeing oil pa lnlings. ·: agreed Julie . "The one \\"ith the children by the seashore really looked like children in the \Yater. You cou ld just i1nagine it." OURL'\'G TllE I e c tu r e on the i\lexicun artist, i\frs . .Buckley told t.he children about the artist. and analyzed why he used the te<itutlques he usedi Soon, the children ,,·~re able to spot the similarities betwfen the ·five pai nt· ings . by Rivera she displayed, They t:tlked about the clothes t:1e .. e:iolc \7Cre i"l nbi"tinl!~ and ho\V the painted peo;:ile4 prob•bly fell. "Tllt,>rc's no wron~ way to e11joy 11 nai ~!in!!," ?vlr". P•1c!:1cv told : h1• c":ilC:rrn. "Everybody secs somethln.1 rl~ in a pnintin~·. and Hk~s it for th:il particul ar rcaS{)n." Presently. there are only about Clgll't 3:1 minute sessions each year for the chi ldren, But ~1rs. Buckley hopes before long there will be an art lecture each month. "After these program s I can. look at a painting and sometimes know who painted It," said Jeff, pleased with ~:himself. The other children agreed that when they see paintings now, it means a lot more than before. and they often know who the artist is and what he did during his lifet ime. "We really didn't think about art that much before,'' Julie said. "The paintings were just there, kind of separate." jjPEOPLE DON'T give kids credit for appteciating art" re1narked ri.1 rs . Buckley, "But they really do like to learn about it. and they get excited over most of the programs. Even the k.indergartners. I brought sonic sLides of North American Indian art to the kindergarten class, and they "·ere en· ~hantcd," The program has --been financed until now by the individuiil PTA's. Last year. the district contributed $450. Some of the money is still left for purchasing kit!'. but most or it is used by the junior ~h schools, since-the elernenta:ry school PTA's are better able to -raise ·run"'s. al'C'Ordlng to. i,rs. Buckley. · "None of us volunteers are art historians. but we all love art." explained ~!rs. Buckley. "Teachers Just don't seem to have the ti me to leach this , and y,•e vol on tee.rs-gerback.. Much more tban - we give, in watching the · kids lea 111 to love art." . .. ---·.;__· -'-7'~ • I ' • • : :l2 DAILY PiLOT _, • SUNDAY CONCERT - The Span is h lutanist -Rodrigo de Zayas and his \l.'iCe, t-he French n1ezzo- soprano Anne Perret wlll present their offe1·ing of flenaissance' and baroque lute-song mu sic at 3 p.ni. Sunday in the Chaprnan College Auditoriu1n , Glas· sell a1id Sycamore Streets, 0 ran g e. The eve nt is sponsored by the Orange County G·uitar Ci rcle. T(ckets, at $3.50. are available at the door. I Renaissance Family "Tour~ U.S.A, Lyric .Opera Winners Perform Nine final ists; in the recent Lyric Opera Association of Orange Co unty auditions will parliclpate in J an u a r y Jlepertory C o m p a n v pro· ductions of "Don Pas{ruale" and "la Boheme." Winners of top awards were Joan Zajac of Los Angel es: Wayne Eikenberry of Glen- dora, and Barbara Wilkinson, a former Fresno resident now residing in Hollywood. Also nan1ed by jurors \\'ere Eileen Duffy of North Hollywood; Terry Bowers of Los Angeles ; Susan Smith or Northridge; Riilph Bassett of Hwllington Beach; Doug Bol- nick of llollyv.'ood. and Thomas Oberjat of Va n Nuys. '"\\'inners of the $1 ,000 in prizes. as well as the majority ot the 48 contestants. were highly qualified.'. according to Lyric Opera execu tive direc- to r Veln1a Sun." Each of the win@ers studied under a dif· ferent voice coach." Carmel Bach Festival. Eikenberry, second plru..'t' winner, siudled with r-.hirtiul Sanger of the Sanl a linrb:.1r:1 Acade1ny ol the \Yest. \\1hile third place winner t.1 I s s \\'ilkinson was a rinnlisl 1n the reg i o n a I i\lclro1:w>lllnn competition and the i\lerola San • Francisco Opcrn nud· iUons. FinaJ!sts "'ill participate in six perrorn1onces of "Don Pasquale" and "La l3ohcn1e" scheduled ror the v.·cckends oC Jan. 18 and 25 at the Fon1111 1beater in Irvine 130\1 l in Laguna Be'ach. J\1iehi\el Kurk· jian will provide 1nusical direction wjth slage dirt>elion by David \V. Scott of UC Northridge and Peggy Feury of Actor's Studio. Tickets at S3 are available bv call ing the oPera office at 4fM.0709_ \ "' ~ ~ .., I .. .:.... . Sing 011t Spaniard a1id W ife Bri1i g Lute-so1ig Music to Chapma1i College First place \vinner Miss 1.a· jac has \Yon the \YGN Radio Chicago contest as well as a Young fl1usicials Foundation of Los Angeles 8\\'ard and r has been a so'oist with tfie Three Filin~ HOLLYWOOD IUPll Richard Zanuck announcC'd his company will produce three films in Europe this year, the first of v.·hich 'viii be "Drabble," in England. Irvine resident E 11 i e David Berliner, a pro- fe ssional entertainer since she was s eve n and currently a student in l·lebrew Union Col· lege's sacred n1usic de· pa)t1nent. will perforn1 ;1t 2 p.m. Sunday in the J.os Angeles Jewi s h Home for th~ Aged, 325 S. Boyle Heights Ave., Los Angeles. She will sing Yiddish songs . operatic select.ions and 1nusical co1nedy rou- tines. By THOR ECKERT JR. CIWlstMlfl SdtMI Monitor S1nilc1 \Vhen the de Zayases travel, il is no small affair. Thry ·,take eight scats on an airplane: one each for tl1r. and Mrs. de Zayas and six foi-the··rest of-the-family - seven or eight vihuelas ! lfilh- century guitar), Jules, guitars. and a theorbo. Santiago Rodrigo de Zayas Enrjquez y Harrison Uo give his full name) and his wife, Anne Perret. have been in the United States on their first recital tour of this counu·y. They've been traveling quite a bit. And almost evcryv;herc they've gone they h a \' e performed to "sold-oul-p!us" 'houses. (They are performing Sunday at Chapinan· College, see above.) . He plays and she si nss Renaissance and Baro q u e 1nusic - a musical era that a few years ago would hav e drawn a mere handful of listeners. The de Zayases arc not forces. and gone to law never overpower t h e in- s:.irprised. It is logical. they school1. de Zayas b egan strument accompanying it" - say beeause the "old" n1usic research in g forgotten it becomes merely another is the closest to the current performance techniques and "choir" of the instrun1enl in folk music thal the ··clas~ica\" styles in most. of the major the performance of n1any of \vorld has yet produced -1nusic libraries in the \Vestern the songs. folk-n1usic's gr eat grand-v.·orld. In concert the de Z·iy:is ct~d<!)r_,_ as it were. This search led to a precise family is striking. b o t h And the de Za)'ases perrorm--Know1cage-or sr:v1c;-pnt~ihg.-visua11y-= this handsome cou· it well. and fingering for all the in-pie surrounded by t.h c.i r In fac-t. the number of "old" struments he plays. · remark3ble instrw11cnts - instrwnents Rodrigo de Zayas He first heard Anne Perret and aurally -the combination plays is staggering. lie plucks in 1968. She had been signed of a vibrant mezzo-soprano some 150 different strings in on at the t>.1arsci1Je Oper1-1 with the firm yet delicate lute 'any given concert: anythins art~r winning fi rst prize in or vihuela and the ripe from the 5 ch6ir (10 string) voice at the Nation a I theorbo. The end . product is a lute or vihuela much like that played rour centuries ago. H"o\rcver. in order tot~ heard in a concert hall. t he ~oundboard mef!tS n1odern specifications for resonance and carrying power. THE A10ST impressive ex· ample of the quality of sowid is in the monstrous theorbo. · \\'ith its 27 strings. The sound is rich and covers a n -unusually \\•ide range much li ke an organ. \1·hich it resembles on a smaller volun1t' Baroque guitar to the 13 choir Conservatory in A ix· on - !25 string) Baroque lute to Provence, France. !he 14 choir 127 stringl He recognized in her voice theorbo. (A choir is a "voict','' the quality he was looking or vrhat \vould be one string for. NOT ALL of a recital in· scale. volves si nging. however. D~ Zayas does solos. The most Df Zayas spends 8 to !} interesting are his Bach selec· hours with his various in· lion s: he is the only pc rforn1-struments. kerping his fingers ing lutenist today to play the · riimble. and sharpening tht• music on the. instrument it set of inslinctivc reflexes each was specifically \vrittcn for separale instrument dl'tnands. -the 13-choir Baroque lute. i\·Jrs. de Zayas \\'orks \\'ith on .-. modern guitar. In all She v.·as totally enchanted of these early inst rum ents ·wi!h lhe n1usir he played. every string except l h e highesl·pilchcd one was doubl· ed .) Each involves a different playing technique. TllE'\1 decided on a music31 partnership 1v.·hich a short v.·hile later became a mar· riage partnership as well ). ~!is instrumenls are n1ade her husband at different tin1cs by · the Vera Brothers in during 1hc day perfecting llladrid. None arc copies -synchroniza tion and rhythm. "just as no vk!Hns made today Othenvise she \'ocalize.:; about are copies of a Stradivarius. t\\·o hours \rilh her electric ~ c IlUT NOW. a Renaissance -~·renaissance " is taking place. AFTER STUDY ING a rt history and harmony in Paris ~before that he had studied virtuoso guitar. taught ii· literates in the Spanish armed It meant J\1iss Perret had to be ·•retrained,'' for the o peratic voice is n1eant to carry over a large orchestra. The Renaissance voice "must They are creations in cypress organ. and rosewood." de Zayas says.1================:-:---:::-----:======--=-=-=--===-:::..:.=====---:::--:=-::==== Judges N a1ned for Contest· .• • 'hree internallonally knO\\'n 1\•i ll be a\1·urded a $500 con· :; pianists and piano 1eachers tract to pe"rfonn a rec!ttil in .: have been selected to judge the Golden \Vest conm1unily .J (;olden \\'est College's "Young , theatl'r. ; Pianists Competition,"' April 1'hc competilion is open to ; 6-7. pianists 18 years old and , Judges \\·ill bC' Bc\-.:?riclgc under. J\·lany cun1pelitions <11'e • \Vebster. Juilliard Scnool ·or :l\"a'!lab1e ro· .... ar1ists in their . : ;\lusic. ~e\v York Citv; Sidnl'y 20s. Giles sa id but fc\v for ! Foster, University of Indiana those younger. ' : School of :\lusic: <ind lkonid ··£\·cry yow1g ni u s i c: i a n : I1 a1nbro, California Institute serious about his career 11'ill : of the Arts in Valencia. be studying at his peak during ,. \Vinn er of lhe 1veckend event his high school and college years, and the Golden \\lest event provi des an opportunity for the young musician !o try his "\\-'ings in a larger arena beyond . the immediate corn- rnunity.'' said Allen Giles. a 0111 professor and eon· test ad1 istrator. Addition informalion and applica!ion n s inay be ob- tained by 11•riling:· Youn g Pianisls Competition. Golden \Vcsl Co 11 e g c. lluntington Beach. 92647. '011 Cowartl' ' At tl1e Ta1J er '·Oh, Co\\'ard!'" will move to the ~"fusic Center's ~lar k Taper Forum for a three-\vcek engagement with the originiil Ne\v York cast. beginning Jan. 22 through Feb. 10. The confection. cmplorin~ 1vords and n1usic by Noel Coward. and dc\'iscd and ·directed by Roderick Cook. \1·i1J star Cook. Barbara Cason and Jamie Ross. JAN. JAN. JAN. JAN.· JAN. JAN. We invite you to ottend our spectacular January Sale. Each year at this time, we offer our regular stock of imported and domestic Chandeliers, hanging lamps, wall sconces and table lamps at fabulous reductions. A once a year opportu- nity to purchase carefully selected items from the most com- pre hensive colle cti on of truly fine Liejhting Fixtures in the Harbor area at reduced prices. Sale continues thru entire month of January. JAN. JAN. JAN. JAN. J AN. JAN. SAVINGS FROM 50o/o to 70o/o AND MORE ON ALL OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FAMOUS IMPORTED & DOMESTIC I CHANDE Ll~As 11 HANGING L~MPs.11 WALL FIXTURES I ~~ON CES I FINE TABL E_ LA MPS I • . OR USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY P.LAN Phone 646-3737 646-8194 222 Victoria St ree t, Costa Mesa · ELECTRK & LIGHTING • 2 l _,,, -"' ·!·: ... >-f .... - IN TWO WEEKS JANUARY 19-20, 1974 10 FREE TRIPS TO LAS VEGAS PLUS: • LU•urltuli Air Canel. Room5 lor 2 Nl91!t1 • Cll•mpa9ne IS•••kl11t • llult•I lruncll e Gturmll Dfnnfr • MIG111c;rlll SllOw l11th1dtt Ctc:kllll • 10 LIKkY Nfct111 • 5 Fret P11y ''''"° ClllPli e Ont ICHnO Ticlo:el • Fret C~lmlk'JQM Pacty 0.Uy e Frn T.,nls e Souver1lrs e AU Taxtt anct Gralultftt Inch.Idell CHAMBER OF COMMERCE RIBBON cunlNG BY NEWPORT'S ANDY DEVINE F~d Expertly Prepared by Chef GR19e, formerly chef at the White House! It's all Free! Jan. 19-20 at "Newpon Produce," "Flowers.By Debra ." DELICIOUS START YOUR DIET GRAPEFRUIT 6C Each I ' I EXTRA LARGE ICEBERG LmUCE I SC Each I ' I ii OUR FAMOUS r' FRESH SQUEEZED ,~ f ORANGE JUICE '" 6J 59c 91. ,~ Limit Y2 G•I. ':/.-. With Th l1 Coupon ~1 JI ·1 ENJOY THESE NOW I' i 11 I DISTRJIUTOR~ YOUR CHOICE C~L .. RY OR CARROTS '. Phone 645-0032 'F'/ Tossed Salads ,/}· 5 ~ 95c Jr.:-. Limit 2 1•11 Servn 20 · ;.I ~ With Thl1 Coupon IOC TANGERINES I oc Lb. COUPONS EXPIRE WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 91h THESE RESTAURANTS DEMAND THE IEST FOR TH!ill CUSTOMERS. . THAT'S WHY TH~Y IU'I'. N!Wl'O.RT PRODUCE! Ylkl•91, Colla Mesa: s,...;httfr l••dtr, Nowr::--1..,-ch: Victor Huto I••, L ..... Dil!-ftl, Balboa: YolYtr Turtle, Fash on Island. Patroolzo Thom! O,IN 7 DAYS A WUK ( • ··'"· t• ., .,. IONDID •RUIT' SHIPPllll •OR U YIAllll "36 Years •· '°"'' "Whtrt ;~;;o;;~~;. Now At U e@'il NewFe>rl . mlvcl. th~"0~~;·.1 (Across from Grtenhaven Nursery) courtesy to Builders ·and Interior (Nnr Hoat Ho1pltal) · (Corner of 16th It.) tht Houst" ~4~~-"'~~~4~~1W'11~ • ' . . ' . • r-- • ---: . -• • ·. a r f q e s u s r a a s b v s r b s 0 h . -, • • . . . . . . . . .. -• .) ' . ,. , Friday;.. January 4, iq74 DAILY PILOT !:J Potpourri' of Restaurants Open Along Coast . . . -By NORMAN STANLEY Of tl1t Dallt t'lltt SllH A potpourri of items merits attention ror the effect each will have on the South Coast restaurant scene as the New Year unfolds. The energy crisis and its related problems aside, the business of keeping the public fed and entertained holds· to a steady and eventful, albe.it sometimes bumpy, course. New trends and dining spots -together With the tLSual quota of changes in older established placc.!I -show no si_gns of abating in the im· mediate future. ts it only a matter of time before Orange County takes up the latest vogue in Palnf Springs? 1£ so, long-suffering diners who resent cigarrlte smoke from adjoining tables won't have to fre t anymore. AS OF LAST month, 20 of the desert resort's popular mooera:te• lo gourmet . dining houses, including posh dining rooms in five quality hotels, -' ' a r e providing nonsmoking dured by dln I · areas. Such racilitles are now en ers, part cular~ Wedding . March from Lohen- strictly off.Jlmits to tobacco Jy senior citizens, chil dren and · grin are echoing through the users of any stripe. those suffering from em· ~ining ha\ls of the Five Crowns certificate from the manage- ment for a complimentary dinner on their first an- niversary. The program "'as initiated ptiyserria. . in C'iorona del Mar the~e days. by the Ealm Springs C'ion· --...Palm-Springs-is-on~·-ot-thc_Mana.e;er..~blJar~--1~ vention and Visitors Bureau, rirst cities in the United States us ma,ny br~des are f1 rnhng which isn't opposed: to to inaugurate such a prograni the old English decor of t.he smokers per se but which alTd clai1ns to be the first. restaurant a roma n ~ 1 c believes abstainers and guilt· As part of the cooperative backgi:ound ror ~ \vcdd1ng. ridden SlflOkers alike will effort. the visitor's bureau An~ since the ~1v~ Cr~wns b e n t f i l. Restauranteurs bas printed colorful orauge does nol open Wllil d1nnert1me. participating in the program and yellow display cards ror M~nda~ through Sa.turday. agree the health of their each·dining facility which ad-pr1~ate groupq are lLStng. the patrons was a prime con-vises patrons: "Yes, We Have enure r~taurant for weddings Now consider w h e t h e r there's a futufe drit'ttoward such places as drive through f\1iddle Eastern, RtLSsian or Brazilian restaurants. Because precedent has already been set by a unique Orange County enterprise. sideration when they joined a No Smoking Section." or rece.pt1ons b~fore 4 p.m. the campaign. Harris and his staff arrange lt is Chick-Teri, the world's first and only Japanese drive· through restaurant, located on TlLStin Avenue in Orcinge. The bureau says it is aware NOW CONSIDER a develop-for flowers, cakes ~ n d of the business community's rnent wherein one coastal refreshments, and there ts no interests. including. tobac-restaurant is proving you can charge for use of th c con is ts, and isn't trying to indeed experience. as the old restaurant. . . Cortail their profits. It ·only song says, "June in January." Coupl~ m~rr1ed at ~e F1ye hopes to alleviate the stress Because .the strains o( the Crowns receive a weddmg gift THIS SPOT opened several n1onths ago and features Oriental specialities made from a traditional -Japanese B,...,.kt.sl ,_ CHAIPAGIE ~J~::.,.,, SUIDAY BRUICH 10 A.M. • 3 P.M. DINNER IS.SERVED FR~~!.Mm.2no . vAirporterGJnn WoteJ: 11100MAc ARTHUR BLVD. TEMPLE GARDENS QHNS:S:S Resta11ra11t RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE Luncheon & Dinner Daily ISOO·ADAMS let H9'bor1 COSTA MISA ~,,,.!\"AF .· 540-1'37 540-192] f'raturing Exotic l'l'cp;cal Drinks Aftd, t1 G .... GfoYe 12201 llOOIHUIST (At CH,...J 631·7020 • Open 7 Duvs W ... hrt: 11:30 A.M. te 12 P.M. M . _,Set. 11:30A.M. te 12:l0 S.l!Myt: 4:00.12 MIDNIGHT COCKTAILS '909l E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962·7911 The Ertr1ordin1ry Mansion, on the wUh-the 2:iUion 'Dollar-View. ocean . WE HAVE .•... , -___ .~~ •. ~t-Su11par~ _ ••• Untr1dition1l Iott-night feasties •••. Rather Unique Entert1inment GOLDEN HOUR ' · SUNDAY 'taUNCH 4;l0-7:l0 With Ch1mp19no Mon. thru Fri. 10 AM-l:OO PM -sp.•ci1I Enl•rt•lnMt111t 2601 w. Coal! Hl9hw1y Newport Buch 645·8«4 - ._1-. --------. ' The New O"t'ners of t he VltLA-GE-tNN - Invite You to R1o discover the Quaintne5s and Charm of the Hippiest Cocktail Lounge on Balbo• Island 496-5773 featuring: · RED SNAPPER HUACHINANGO $4.50· CorHr of Port & Moin BALBOA ISLAND 673-4530 ' 499-2626 FACILITIES FOR PRIVATE PART!ES IN THE NEW GARDEN COURT BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T1.10.·S1t. Appe1rlng In th• REGENCY LOUNGE 12802 COAST HWY. (If C...wn Y.1lltt t'lrllWl't) LAG.UNA NIGUEL LON CREOl'ir SERVED DAlCT From 11 :00 A.M. DINNER SERVED UN Tlt-8:00 P.M M\)nday arid Frid ay -. #1 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644·2200 ---·· •,-------- • • -· . ' • .. BIG CHANGE -One. of New- port Beach's oldest waterfront ~ restaurants, Berkshire's, has been sold and will reopen next summer as the \Varehouse, to be managed by the owners of the popular Marina de! Rey steakhouse of the same name. Newpo1t Beach restauranteur Jiin Berkshire opened his .res· t'aurant on Via Oporto son1e 15 years ago. He said his decision to sell cante because he wanted to spend 1nore time with his fan1ily. The restauran1 will un· dergo extensive remodeling. • blend or old-world herbs, seasonings and spices. The Chick·Teri operation in place_ on the receiving end got under \\'ay "'ith colorful Orange augments the first of a llke nuni.ber of kudos 'd Chick-Teri is not only the restatLrant's name, but also the_ nan-it: of !Is main _menu i1~1n. An unusual dish for the Westernized pa late, it is an entire chicken leg and thigh broiled in teriyaki sauce. kitchen, which opened on 171h cere1nonies pres1 ed over by St. in Costa Mesa earlier last is Papa Pio's, 34294 Coast !\'Ir. Albert Andre\v Ernst Year: Food at ~e l~tter. spot Highway, Dana Point. Franklin, British Cons u J. can be ordered to go bul r;·ver-expanding South Coast General at Los Angeles. !here·s no drive through facili · Village, opposite South Coast Yet another ne\V addition ty . Plaza on Sunflower Ave., holds to the loca l dining scene Ts The bill o( fare -from \vhich patrons can order to dine on the premises as well as to take out -includes a variation of Chick-Teri call· ed Chick--a·Bob, pieces or broiled te riyaki chicken on a skewer with slices of onion, breen pepper and mushrooms. The menu also features sukiya'ki, shrimp tempura, t'!riyaki hamburgers and Japanese side dishes. There are also two Ita lian promise of many new dining the Velvet Turtle, a house restaurants, both apparently adventures during the year. specializing in continental. having acquired a host of ad· Two establishments that have beef and seafood dishes, 4t mirers during the relatively only just open~ their doors 59 Fashion Island, Newport short time th · bee · are a new Mexican restaurant Center Drive West, Newport . ey ve_ . n in called ·cisco's, and one that Be ch operation on the SOutli C<>ast. -beckons by name. alone_, the ~-~ i~ the latest edition of THE FIRST OF these two spats called to our attentiop in a series of rave recom- mendation is the Stuft Noo- dle. 215 Riverside Drive, Newport Beach. The other Belgian Warne Shop. a high1y· reg·afded -·c ti a ilf Another Village restaurant · operating 1ike--named spots in that's only been open for a Los Angeles, WeSt L os month or so is the Rose ·and Angeles, South Qate, U:ing Cro'.''n. patterned after an old Beach, Redondo Be a ch , English inn and pub. Openin~ Fullerton, Pasadena and Tor- day activities, we \Vere told, ranee. -·11.=:_-=--· =-=============== Real Cantonese Food eat here or take ~ome STAG CHINESE CASINO Ill 21st Pl .,. Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 Open YHr Arouitd Doil,-12·12 -Fri. ond Sot. 'tll l o.m. mITllf.I Mexica1i Restaurant PROUDLY PRESENTS THE .. - CHAPTER II For Your Dining f " And Dancing i::ieasurc t;. Playing Nightly Wed. thru Sun. "F-inest ll-fexican f'oOd in Orange County" OPEN 7 DAYS •COCKTAILS 547 W. 19th STREET COSTA .MESA 642°9764 -TO INTRODUCE ' . theNew ~~ Experierlf,e •.•• fwri.rt you llf9Mllf tllis <OUpon-Yali• Stit!Hy tl'l,.-TllV,,Uy tl'IN .lllJ. UI 3901 E. Coast Highway/Corona del Mar Phone. 575.0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY • ------· • . --• -- DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB ORANGE COUNTY'S TOP . ENTERTAINMENT JOE LIGGINS Ttte Or iginal "Honeydrippers" BACK AT THE LARK ROOM with . WILLIE JACKSON Wednesday thru Sunday B•nqu•t F•ciliti•i 11p to '450 P.opl• 16712 GRAHAM AVENUE (At WorMTJ HUNTINGTON llACH (714) 846·1116 (21)1 192·1954 1 ~ -~··....__ ·~ THE FIASCO'S-INVITIN YOJJ JO AN~EYENING _Q _ EXCITING MUSl·C AN SUPER ENTERTAINMEN TUESDAYS THAU S.UNOAYS 'IN THE LOUNG lTlil> lW n l!lil> ~ a !l\'l ~ 'l!l:'l ~~~~~ma ~a ~D NEW PORT BEACH -· , , -~- ,. ' -. • I • • I = • .. , .. • DAIL V PILOT .. Friday, Jinuary 4, 19'14 f/{elaj witlt a'. Ramos Fiu or a Bloody Miry ~ ' ' EGGS BENEDICT SCRAMBLED EGGS With IM"', dtidrrlt Hvm or sawugt. S'rgAK & EGGS CREPES SUPREME "'-'""" J d<Jigl<tfw""";"""°"'· MONTE CRISTO A1t txciting ~ ¥«Jdlty. IN THE GALLERIES . UCI Siudent ·Shows Work at Glenn and George Post. Hours: Wednesday-Sunday rrom JI 1.m. to 5 p.m. · . JACK GLENN GAJJ.ERY -2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del ~1ar. Flr.st one-man show by Ned Evans, 8. UC lrvlne stu· dent His paintings. and drawings will be on exhibit through Jan. 31. Hours : dally lrom 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. JACK GLENN GALLERY -South Coast Village, Sanla Ana. .i;>rints by Claes Oldenburg. Hours: l\fonday-8aturclay · NOW FIA.TURIN;. '<'"THE BACHELORS" ldd'e Dore "Ir G.,y Chrwh1 Tw••· tflr11 S•t. ·SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. 'IAN,9UIT FACILITIES Di ... r Serwd FreM I P.M. J17 ,AClllC COA~T HWY. HUNTING-TON llACH 536-2555 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sundays.from noon to 6 p.m. -ORANGE ·COAST COLLECGE LIBRARY -2701 Fall'Vlew~ Road, Co&ta Mesi . A traveling photographic extUblt, spon- sored by George Eastman House, is cntlUed "West of the Rockies" and includes the work of Alexander Gardner, An- sel Adams, William Bell , Eadweard Muybridge, William Jackson, and Edward and Brett Weston. Hours: Monday- Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.11). and Saturday and SWlday ~from noon to 4 p.m. Through Feb. 3. CHALLIS GALLERIES -t390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach. Paintings by C8lifornia artists Phil Dike, Douglass Parshall Hanky-Panky Catering S•rving The Oraing• County Ar•• CREATIVE CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol SI., Cos!• Mesa. OUs by Clara Miller through January. BANK OF ·COSTA MESA -Harbor at Haker Streels, Coala · Mesa. Acrylics by Lucy Sanford through January. CAUFORNIA THRwr & LOAN .co. -170 E. 171h SI., Costa lt1esa. Olis by Dr. ~red Olds through January. . COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -206 w. Wiison - St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Alice Block, Dani. !\1aggle Moore. Helen Patzer through January. CROCKER BANK -2300 i·larbor Blvd., Costa h1esa . Oils by Viola Morrison through January. CROCKER BANK -South Coast Plaza. 3390 Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. Water colors by Beulah Treadway through January . oo"wNEv SAVINGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St .. Cosla Mesa. Oils by Jackie Lowrie through Jnnuary. Choi•• of Many Intriguing Selections In Food and Bev~ragei F.IRST ·NATIONAL BANK OF OHANGE -1650 Adan1s St.. Cmita Mes8. Oils by Cec Coburn through Janua ~y . 'llSONALIZID ISTIMATIS IT AP,OINTMINT GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -Fashion lslawt,. 500 ----__ ·-· __ TAKE LIFE A LITILE EASIER Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Oils by Gert rud e r - - - -..-.-.-------.-.---. For .. lnform•tion .. Call..171_.l .. 979-6809 •Mattocks through January A Chinese Cuisine 1111 ===================-~i · I fk ' GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2.300 Harbor Blvd .. ""' Ol'!"H DAILY 11 AM · n PM I O;lsta Mesa. Oils by Ann Routledge through January . • .... ,, • CLOSl:D "':OH~AY ~ _ -~ I !A-.a "FOR J\·IEALS MESA. VERDE'.LIBRARY -2969 l\1esa Verde Drive, Costa TEIJl&CE PREP.A.RED \VJTH-,...Mesa. Oils and acrylics by Virginia Kling through January. I 1f'. 11ARTICULAR CARE" ~ PARK LIDO CONVELESCENT CENTER -466 Flagship I J Oriental Cocktail Loungt' Road, Newport , Beach. Oils and watercolors by"" Herschel Si:!:~~O:::_Jrn1---~1: Fmtmrng Tropical D•inks ~~;;J~;;;~;;i~'Jon~~ l~h St. Cosla M~a . I NE\VPORT H1\RBOR ART J\1USEUJ\I -2211 \V. Balboa ~~~d::J:~5~ "]:::;::::::,,,..!;;;::!~ Blvd., Newport Beach. The first Wt'St Coast exhibition or !I '-L oils, pastels and prints by the l\merican artist Mary Cassatt uEating out" is not ~ ne~essarily dining! Dining at !he Newporter Inn 's Marine Restaurant is a total!y pleasurable experience. Excellent cuisine, ra nging from our superb Rack of l amb to Salmon Steak in Salsa Verde, painstakingly prepared by our European- trained chefs. A wine Jisl of distinction 10 complement your entree. And . in an atmosphere of continental elegance unma ched-for relaxed enjoyment. 251 E. COAST HIGHW~ >O~ "'-./--= \'-1'-NEWPORT BEACH ~ !lESERVATIONS-CALL 67.3-1505 /I-CllSli FAMILY MEXICAN RESTAURANT ~OVAL STEAK-0.BOB C11bt1 •I fllet Mi!lllOfl 1111 Sk1-with PiM•ppl1. MllSlll'Mms, Grffft Ptp"" •11• TonYlots, ltict Conthl""lfl, SllH:I lonltf.lllse hlPHll wllll •Hl'Nhl AMONG 20 SILICT DINNll ENTlllS V1NA HARMER DUO Ent•rtaining Continental Cuisine Cocktaiils Senlfng Lunch eon and vtnncr Mo ndny through Saturrla11 Closed--Sund3ys We are locateod next to the M.1y Co. in South Coast Plat• JJJJ s ilrht .. Good Deed make the scene Sundays 540-1140 in the f,f.Uijijll1ll .'%e C?'t'tJzne;;y fJlf'J ktrt1't't)1I ENTERTAINMENT I-.,,., NIGHTLY , • JAZZ ON SUNDAY /1 .J'{l /0 ffit.rfty,,/le, '-:-~'-. • /lr1¢1:.1!.l-2deac/L..tU7....iI -J7//.. on exhibit through Jan. 11. An exhibition of wall drawings by California artist John Stamphill is on view in the en- trance gallety. H<1µrs : Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 4 p.fu. and Fridavs from 6 to 9 p.m. . . ------.-·-------.- :· • li'PrN·srsJM'E. • !' ·••TUlAL FOOD llSTAUlANT. CASSA TT .... LeW ClleS.."'91 "'"" • • -HeortS.....-tFrom Pai:e Zl) • UNLIMITID SALAD AND • TIA WITH DINNll • their bodies: their . quiet • IWllll 1111• (tvllOR) I.• VEGn-.-.-1.,. .;.-,.-.-,., • strength and her re!pE!Ct for '" • them is eviden t in the paintings FROM S2.2S -.-------· • and paste.ls in the museum • onH DAILY .._,._,. h h J 20 I• 5:00 t• 11 :00 P.M. • ~ ......... '6 .. t rottg an. · -2440-W..--G.--ttwy;,-::--.h~A~11r;1~·s1s or both sexes can I• Newi*f looc)i . ,.,.1011 . eapt rrom-cassatt't-often-··-r • • • • 8 • • • • •• b r i 11 i a n I irnpressionlstlc r.=--------....:. ___________ _:_.:_.:_:_::_::::::....:;::;::;:::;~I technique: her use or light · and composition: the sllading or colors.· CCAKING HER cro DINNER? She'll love I ereperie the vnly Orange County restaurant servi ng a wide choice of crepe ent'rees and desserls for lun ch, dinner and supper TRY BEEF BOURGUIGNON Tender chunks of beef. prepared Bourguignon. 1n a delicious wine sa uce, folded in a c1epe and topped with mushroom sauce. OPEN OAtLV 11:00 AJ.'o Tel. 556-1225 SOvth Col•l .... 11-Cot11 M••• ,_,,.., .............. __ iko.«o11 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS ' . Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious p@inl·hOtPizzas to your door in minutes. For prompt service phone 646·7136 (Newport Beach/Costa Meia-l~th and TL1stin) or 847·1214 (Huntington Beach-Beach and Hiel). .'E~ ~ ~~ ~ --~~ ......... Get the Pizza with Pizza0..3~ 'lnG·~ I . . ~ __ -1 A~ .. . . \ Women rind especia ll y v.•omcn artists do benefit from her · successful battle with a worfd that round it dlrficult \as it still doei toda y) to accept a woman' as a .seriow artist. "( DO NOT admit that a \\'Oman can draw like -that ." Edgar Degas said when he sa\\' one or Cas.satri pictures. Later. they met, innuenced...., ·each other and became life.long rriends. Cassatt v.·as born Jn Allegheny. Pa. in 1844, the daughler of a wealthy banker who two years later would become mayor ol Allegheny. In 1866, when Cassatt an· nounced her intent\on to go to Europe to stud)" painlfng, he r father supposedly said, "l .,~:ould almost rather see you dead ." Her mother, Katherine, who loved Europe when the fam ily lived bricOy in Paris, sup110rted the move. CAS.SA TT had bee n studying at the Pennsy lvania Academy of F'ine Arts in Philadelphia, her.e-life--was-t;0-traditlonal-- that when a display o! sculpture from the Louvre ar- rived, one day a week \Vas set aside for female visitors and the Ugures were modestly dressed in sheets. A few yean later in Paris, Cassatt studied at the studio of portrait painter Charles Chaplin. 'Illere she and other students copied nudes daily except Sunday, a routine Cassatt found too ronfinlng. As she began developing her o\vn style, she discOvered Degas and the other then r e be· l I i o u s ilnpressionisls who se use of bold brushstrokes and t e x t u r e d surfaces agreed with her. --BETWEEN 1877 and 1111 she exhibited In elghl ol the impressionlsUc shows .. In · Paris. AllhouCh she hid found her place In ari and -oen- lng well enoup to oupport . hmelf, and often her ]111'11111, she still llllffmd at Um .. the sting ot d~mlnallon. OUR MEALS ARE1ltRIP-T.Olt1EXICO~Hi~'l Durlllf ona ohow fJf posters by lhc lmpl'Olllonlsll, Cassatt and her lr!end and fellow arllsl Berthe MorlsoLre!~ o s gn r names to their works AO critics wouldn't lam- ball the .,.ure •lhlblt becou• lJ Jndlldld women. ---. "Y OUR BIG PARTY IS OUR BIG PLEASURE" ' • 296 E. 17th STREET•· lfJLLCREN SQ. COSTA MESA l'HONE 645-7626 I • COCKTAILS • • ' •- 11 · , f IN THE-COCKTAIL~COUNCE - C. -• ~ ~ ""' D~N~INO . I ' Oii the ·whole, Cwatt WU whare lht wanted Jo be. "I btted: coovmtlonaLart," t+.. eald. ~ •ht •tepped Into her aew 11)11, • added, "I beiU Jo JM." HEil MlllJlflN la the 1111 world c:orrled lllrou1h Jo lier prJVlll llfL ·-~ 111oua.. ISet illlr70-llt, ..... 111 • • • • •• I 1 1 • I " JO II I I I 1:00 , .. Tumjng on Scott Manchester TV DAILY LOG ---,- Friday Evenjng JAHUAR.Y 4 Saturday Marning - JANUARY 5 Double -Pleasure -(Jn-'-ln--€oncert' • tM .... TuNt ,.._ • u • I h J:OOl9(1)lflGll.lavl161 Followers o[ KLOS.-FM's "lo hi~ wife Mary. \Vere the ri rst ~ @rn hp 1411., '-'Uncert Series make a note. n1otorists to trave t e newly Ctwbtll, el £Mi'• fltMf TY a caw.. The next one starts toni!Ult o p c n e d Tr anspeninsular n. LllcJ D• Mtwlt: ....._ tf tilt lrM" at 11:30 o'clock. So turn your . ~Iighv;ay. which .stretches the Tltt FU11b11Mt · dr•> '49 -frtnk Lov1Joy, lloJI tv set to channel 7 and 951n . length' of Baja California .• flll&llt hlltlJ ' Brid,IS, Sltvt Brodl1. , .. plt111111tt M1ri• I fltMt Im on your FM dlal and ·r ou'll As a result or their ex- ~: (C) (nr> "EUI •f ~ .... 7:30 (J)S..rill s....ttr have a v is u a I -audio ex-periences and observations. C r•) '5S-J-.m11 De1n, Julie H1t· ID (I) Qi ID A1Na1111 F111i1J perience. Pierce was able to put rb. Mor11,. l11Mratdt CllOir KFl's Paul Compton, who together an apsorbing t~ree l;':;':~~~M" ~;:ar, IMc has been described as Frank 'part progran1 series special •·.!OCIJIHl r."-'•·-"'~ -Sinatra's "favorite disc titled: "Baja -Follow the Dlltwtt'f (C) (IO) "Sllwtf w -c..WMiiak -jockey," put together a 12· Brave New Road," v.·hich ! (w1s) '5l~mond O'Brien, Y'tOftlll 1:00 (~ ) ({)TM FWltnl1111 hour tribute to Sinatra. It was aired last weekend. · DeCl1lo. · · ! 9i £!:'1111CJ' + 4 a comW.ete musical documen-The station is being deluged OriJCetfl(J))Ntn 11 W.,.. tary Of Sinatra's life and fo r requests for free copies llfd; Tu .,U Mmt: "f.Ut , 11 Ult 1iW' Min Criffln ""* r1) •40;£.JOhn Garfield. career. It was so great that of Pierce's "Answers to the MlfJ lrlfftttt • M !fl()) Supti' fri1nds maybe Biggie Nevins. pro-10 Most Asked Questions - ti.•• : "M•. '-" (d") '4& -. ht be B h ... , ,... gram manager, 1n1g com-about -aja," w ich 1 s ~L El9' 61'°~.:!~·r:ia !ldney. pelled to repeat? Send your available b~ "'ritin,I? to KMPC Dtlltt TIM•trt S.11•1 Strttt cards and letters to Biggie. at 5R5R Stlnset Boulevard, um. lucab l :JO (/ffj (I)}~ l•ilty's C11111b KHJ is to be t.'Ongra tulated ~Iolly\vood 90028. 7:00J. ~'e. N'" ~ (})@) m IMll Hi&ll rri-for the way it brought in KLAC ls ready in~ to broad- . Dlll1ra cr::..:"OMSkptttllll"(tdw) the Ne w Year with 37 solid cast the \\linston \Vestern 500 , : (2hr) "Advt11l11m If ~Ty H•rcli~. R!1$!!no Briu:i. hours of the greatest songS NASCAR Stock Ca r Race from · 1,~.~~u~·,~v) 'l~JJ Coop-m ·liliiwlt:-.. 1"9-A Vltliit Mile" -or ·1973, Counting baclf fiom ""Rl Ve is i tl'e 1ff(erntitiona1 .w.11 Wor14 (Wes)'57-JohnApr. 100 to 1. That was KHJ's Racewav. Jan. 20. Station's -Wlltt'•-M' UNI 9:001-~~ Sc:-;'S::,111 _ Way..-of-wi&hing-its-listencrS-.i:acing_:team, ... :Jay~La~en1cei1== I LM lMJ ·t'n: ~-y1N 1.,._ a_ Happy One . ..__ -_ (3-7 p.m.) and .Jim ~Jea\y, ~I 5:.:4. tf Jelllllie tier" (mrs) '52~r Romero. YOU CAN bet that Pastor . director or sports, will be .---------~ 6iwnldt • Oii (I) Lllllt'• 1tucM ...... James Middleton was happy mike-side for coverage both MOVIE RATINGS ~llll f).t:i=•=•.iati....._. with bis New Year's Day. He bef~te an~. after.the race. The r of lft•~~:o:.:~~~tt~m': l:J019 (1ltl6l"IDPIU,....... had a pair of complementary sto~1on Will again carry auto R!IR PARENTS-AND plus reports en loc•I conditions. Movirl: "fil"'lil'I" (d11) 'S2-Rose Bowl tickets for ,.cor: r~c1ng ·-throughout th!~ year 5Y0UNG PEOPLE --ir: m)·AIMricH""".... ~1otttr,_C4Jlf(..Romtro. 1 ectly--ealling--th USC-UCI;A---Vl~lhe.. Moto and--1Jruvcrsal 'Jllto OO/ter~·-~·1ft171ling111-1<f"iilt6'm-1 tlrii1111 Alllf • fl Jrow11~~:~.~ld football game for "Sportstalk" Racing Networ_ks, with a com-,..,.111,.11ou,,,,._,.11i111,01 [\ltttls Lltillltl J: II l' b th Scott KABC.Sunda y host . Tommy plcte 1.974 racin~ schedule of mr;. COll'9111 IQI ~1""'9 o, lh11t cftildtM , Speed Rtc1r u-1 u: S:,. . Hawkins. an estimated 22 races to be 7:30 " .. "'·".':Iii" »ow 10:00 ~ rTJ> r.., rl\llrib M1rtiln1 K'IPC N b h h released soon. · 111 1 *1 (I) 9 mJ Stir Tr•• 1• • ews roug t t e VOU \VON'T go \Vrong if you ~1p~11r~J:'°' 5t1w11n (1)1~ KW• Ne\v y~ar in by explor!ng and follow KNAC's "An Evening l'.llpllint.., --:::0o:~a.t:~_idr1) expla1n1n~ several major ne_w \Vith " c 0 n c er 1 series Coauatrltltl &J INpll JuWIM la\v~ w.hich . take effect in th roughout next year. It 's four -~T~~ll ""TMll tliMr.4 H1tc11cMti Prt111b Callforn~a this year. The ~ro-hours \V i thou I commercial W... 1111 w.r c.-gra~ included the re-im-messages and fea(ures the · 11 ~"" l~lO fl(~ flJ) ~ """' pos t on I th d th penaft · Ulil.e~ W•rlll IDOO~~mhtdl ~ . 11 0 e ea . Y world's greatest rock st3rs. bcl111nt Mftll· Htltr lltMlt _.. in the. st~te, new maiumum Time is 8 p.m.-midnight and TIM IMW 1•111 ~) ·u:..t.Jnc11 D1m1ll. spee_d. hnuts, and sevf7al other the dial position is 105.5, FM. l:OIB(a(J)>(J)R~tl 01111 A l@ (J)G!I...._: MIOt s1gn1f~cant law~ with far· During the past ten years t11rtlned 111klt Cltlles 111 1111111-Mist.r m• ............ reaching effects • pecltd twist in 1111. s1111 of 1ffaln ll:OO (MJ (I)) S'"4 hm · the FCC has been deluged fll C(ll. "Swt1t" W1llluns. , fj)@ fm 11'1• kt1111f That station's \Vink ~lartin· . with applications -19 in all I~@®) m S11fof4 l Sii • f!IuHI: W'lftdft ti ttM s... dale rod!! on the City of - for the fa cili ties 0 r """:air) "tam Ker..._ fl (ft)(f}EIJ.UC '°"'*..... Arcadia's float in the annual Pasadena's KRLA which lost •·•· _.p I (~~iol) 10'58-Vlrtlnil it,..!'Lost.)ft°-Splct" Toumatilent or Roses Par.ade. ~ its li cense in 1962 ' to operate a t17J 00 m lrldy llllldl "Thi blllf ..... es .a ormer res1 en ~ but has remained on the air -------------------- ............................ .u a~ -oo ,..~ ..... ~ . !W$ ... <Ql 0<1.., -""'"'"' tQ .... "" ............. . ...... nn• 111 ,,., •• . I"'"' H ' f .d I f . &iii, Kids ' fh• Br1dy's n•w llll&h· . IHI• Strttt Arcadia · and he emcees l~e1r ne vertheless until _ ~Qe F.CC. -----bofs-thl-Klllyi....dtcidl-.to......__. ll:JO. ..(fjj (1)1 (!) ~ ~ ~ ,_. . --~-ual queen p~geant. W1~k could render a decision. The ~-=~------- F'rl!1ay, January 4, 1974 I· I I • • DAILY PILOT :A 1UHf1ic Cnt 'fherc's a magic cat on television tonight. lfe only talks in rhymes. You ca n see .. 0-r. Seuss' Tlle Ca t in lhe Hat" if you fu rn to Channel Two at 8 o'clock. The animated s p e c: i a I is ba s e.d on Dr.--Seuss Ceisel's v.1ord-teachin g hildren's books. " = -~ --:-- ' -·~-~~ -0 1 Whale watch Cruises Be~nning Jan. G I I Leaving Fro1n the BALBM PAVILIDft \\'eel.ends. 9 an1 and I pin -See by lodij'-s - 1 __ddults 53, Children $1.. CALL 673·5245 Want Ads e A !\IUS!Cli\N'S INS'f/{l,"- \IEr-:T on SHI<': thnt's this Yan1aha ebony upright. It l1as a 45" full kcyboarfl. Alrnost half price. e l\lUST SELL this ch1u'111- 1ng 1957 Studcbakel'. J\lake an offl'l'. I1 hns fl l'l?·bullt n1otor and ne1\' !ires. WA.l1A'1\ HOLDEN KAY LENZ BREEZY 1Rl FRENZY <RI MOH -fR:, OP EN 6 s,t,T, & !KIN, 12 NOON ~TMaAT .. a• DlllV•·IN SUPER SWAP MEETS HAReDlll •LVD. Drhr•·I" s111.a-Sv11..-•.•"' to '""°' ORANG• Orhre·ln 1 & I F•i.. S.t. & S!Jo.·S Im 10 " pm ,, ...... ~......,..11 ...... Stllli .. F•mily Fun! l'rofll•l ••r••'"• Qelof'o! llrftdJ1n4Ken8erry11.1tSl -ITlftil"IO! b d · !-----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~ lroJ 1nd tnd up will\ thrff. BrooU ~ 1s one or the nicest guys 1n decision is in. tt's Western Cl...._ $ Mtvit: (C} (nl) 11:vi.~ "'fluJ111:1Martii" (dri) .,1 roa casting. Broadcast Corp., whose pr in---- ..._. Ille s,ln AN" (1dv) ·16'-wri Scott Dorothy MiloM.. KMPC newsman P a u I cipal owners include Bob Hope David NNtn. Fr1ncoi" DorMK. • M u~ ' "Panther" Pierce. along with and Art Linkletter. l lltllllNC&Mn.M• 1i11Vit: "SclrflCI M1b" (drl) ·--- Df1pt · ~obert,Stack. Ke!ntn Wynn. lo:.".:::'.t11'1.ok1B,,. w.. IE"'•"'1' • ...,.., r. .. ;O;-.~K.;;--:G;;;;AN~;G;-,~H;;:;E;R;;;E;;:'S;;--;;A:--;M;;;O~V;;;l ;;E;-il ""'1;....,,,... .... • -. Afternoon TO SEE__. •• _DNB ·OF TllE llilosT Lo-Ill"" IZ:OO fJ (Qt(l))CIJ huyth;••'• Blf.JOYABLE AND SATISFYING J•OIAftl Tmtl rrtm• Ardllt 1:!0 <~rn>m11AADar.,,_. .,,..,,,...w,-. llOVIBS THAT I H AVE S E E N Cat ~ 1111 Hit (R) D Mtwle: wr111111t C.wilf .... . . ~ . 111 oo ~m••t """' "' .... ,..,, '"-G"" Auto. IN .A LONG T IME . IN EVERY ~~Jif,1~"'"'1' 8 f'.,.9(",:"'~:"= W AY .'TB I: PAPE R ~fB ASE' TM UntouWbln D1upttfn (w1s) '54 -Jim DIVis. STACKS lJ'PI '' . : .. · Cltywll<M• 1'""" ~----"• ~c-TVTodavBho• , NMl1 Llnctr """""'V9IH' DUaoU., n.u .,, \i ..,. llnc••I' ,,.,,... (i) Wlflll II Wtndff 1:00 ( ())) (]) CIS fridlr NI* Mliter hr•ra' Jltti&.,.._ ( ( r)...,,,, lllfM'·(dr1) '69 ......,. hdflc -a11rt t.alltllltr, o.boraJI K«r. 12:11 ca oo> ([I rat Alkrt (j) "" ltld .... """ " tM 111111 Q IHl ID m -m A ...., _ -!!-:=:-"--Apte'"-~ l:rl't sl11dilnt Shocb_tltl...Jt~ Ind . StrMl . lltr lither wltln •-foi....-tht-fOTC -""" -U -NMr-- 1s • me1ns of"""'' 1 "*"-· l:CIO (9((})(J)CIS Cllillr•11'1 ship to medlttl school. Fiii rliilill .. Goshi, the Circu1 a .. C.lllO '" ti• lltr" I. .._,ni!ta ~-D OPie 11a11•1 rrano at . Lt Cride llt11 CriM1 lone Blach Stlte Unlmsity......---- ~lllM L.111111111 P"f'l9 (j) Mowil: "llaUNr (4r•) 'Sl- 1:30 (Ill (J) El) LM hlricn .,.. 01111 Cl1rl, Bt!ind1 lee. Slf"1 to Mvtntlltt O @(I)U'JWi41 Werll et • LI Mltna Sptrts The Hui• Bowl livt rr.· O Al•IUll• Honolulu St1dlum, H1w1ii'. 10:00 p m·ma -J"""' llir't 1111111 lalMI If thl Cillta fblq U.. (iJ F-.._ lO:JO T9'11&fll ZIM fiiW.S.Wr llM lo"1 · --, ___ LOCI Y11dtz 1:30 ....... : "Olitiii6 If Mir ftlt" ' .....,..-U<f" WBT'Sz=AMl"lam;-.... 11:00 8-~ltl II-'"""~""'"' Mlttillll. (II CIJ -@ ''"'" (t) ..,,,. ti -Twin · ill" COlll) '64-hmlll i\Lldln. 6 Piny M•11 ~1st1r ... ,.. ~ • hlllf l1111u · ~ USA m ATCH THE ACTION ON 1:00 (Q!J (l))i mew I n .... * IM'~=-::o..:'BLEl ~(~~r= . Hernr Tll:tltrl ft Tlka A 1'ltf (3) Uwhf [Uy llftlt• "TiiM C..rMn" (dra) Afffff Hltclletd: '1ulltt • btrt Youna. Robert T1rlor. ())) !nills Wftt m MM Clmlct• Repe1t ol 11·30 11:15 Clntlll 34 . . ll:JO ll(fiil (l))CIS Lii• M••lr. EAM ='·""" "M"*rs Ill till 1111 · MerPI" .......... "'J. ... _..... Ml (1T111) '71-J•son R•rds. -~ :;::..,.:."""""'' • I QJ-~,e.,-Cl-ZllO~-'""iWllt ~ al 11 C.11e1it C11ests llllM: "IWI A Villllt Miii" clLMfl S.ill 1114 Crofts. ~ w•sJ '57-JolHt A&•r. Colln Youn1. Eddie K1ndrlc:kt 4ICI J:OO, -.,,.. w111~ H;!~ ·-,f,e'i_ ........ -usc-=tt &- u:oo ~ :::,., "ti'• .......... ,_, ......... Stll1 "'"'""'· ~-~~ ~'l,:;1111 Al1tn, Jack Bniir. Cl)..-,..... r-,:_:-:.:mlr:. ~--·- m ..... ""' [-.... (dfl) ·-· (t) -ti ... -"""' .. e '51--St•~nc--. A1a11-. {Wiil '!11-Ga<y eooow. lllil ""' -..:. .&-111 ....i CIT.-.... ~ 12.11 111~ :::---~~· .. Lri -~eit ... ~ton 1:11.iiiif_..,.._ llfll-:!31':'•"' ' incliii. Hit late nm Crool, Or. .... (•) ' lie lrlllt ill - H°'* Pd till MHldnt Shi!<, El· - -............ • -::::..: U~ G." •• ,, ...... 1.1 Q'"ft· Glldys KnltM ..... · ---· --ee~nP. JPGI 1nd ltll'~. Louin• 1nd M"""' l:JI lellll .. C111 It F• 1 ;,-- C11rti. MIJ'fltld, 1nd th1 Solllllfrt. ~ -...i..i-" ""'' liil, ll-. 11'9, 11J1, .,. BMM: "Die S.•Mf tf..... ~,,__.. ~ ACAOIM'AWAID ...... TIDIMOll'IUIJKTl"ntl'10GSTOaY" -(d") 'SZ-Ulil -"') ~• -D 11 -Holt "";t E...ti ..., -· lo "'ICOIMI Jchlln Prilll •Ml Alu MW• 4:111 ........ 1 1:41:l·---.11-"' Ml••I' -:;'\l:,.m_•~:Jt;;:s:;o:<11:;'5o~ .. ;:l;i:~=~~~;;;=;==~ 111;:~_,-==-i-> ·s1 -c.~ a ..... -im (J) lilt ~-"f• II 1 " ·' !:II • .,.... --.,,.. lliio I .......... -.. ~~~ I ;rt.:_:i"""7 .... tf 0W Mnnft lit...... - ... ;.~~1~~~--r · ~=": , Clint Eastwood r..> '$2-lllrtl aw...-... " ... ,... ... ._--' ~ . . .. ~-~:_.D!!'fy Harry. --- 1. 50MAGN UM FORCEs: tu Deity l ift· 1:11•l:IO·1:41110 P~M. --...... l ~early .Everyone ~· stens to_ Lande.rs_ I ---'--" ·;;_;;.. . -· ·~ Cl.~nt 5astwood • -~~Hap17jn Nasnum ,. Fo•ce SH OW ING NOW ! --------~- This ;..:.. -"r the bullets are hittin pretty close ' to home! A 111.AL)o\SO COMl'~Y FilM ·.~iw Slarnng HAL HOLBROOK C.·Slaloog MITCttll~ lYAN • OAVIO SOOL • f£LlON F'tAAY · ROBE~T lJJHC:tt IMIC:LALO SCl!lff\IN . SIOl't' llY JOHN MILIUS . Sc~y by JO!ttl MIL!\/S ~ncl NICMEL CIMINO • ~bf PI08EAT D-'l.f¥ . DNectH lly rro l'OSr -MMVISION9•TE~OR•· from Wainer 8!111.0 ~ wirfltf Commlll'llC&llOlll Company -f'i'iT-Oii'"'iiO-, ' -S•n Dilfo l'rvry. 1t lll'OOlthu,,t fount1in V1l11y • 962·2481 C°"'IT "UO MAN'S lllVtl" !I ) • tttoW stun ~s '.M. ... • • •Cost1 Mtt1• 646-0573 ' DAILY AT"! 111»·2:.ao.A:•o 1!0S·fll0-11:2S l,M, -· ~-· ~NOlMAN lOCICWIL L" 0.\!1.Y AT 1 OOl,l~S'XI 1 lS l ro ".v, • ' OMU' D«IVl·IN ~NG! ·--•.aMl'lllDl"QIO THE STING IPGl CAREY TREATMENT !PGI $•ft~ ••• .......... ··-"~'"!~<>I 961?48 1 ""'"' ••·d ' .. <;::~.~ !>JI· 1 21 l s. .. °"'''" t .... c .... , •• .,. l'm-··-•• ,.,,.s WHAT MA,,IHID TO J,f.lt? lXECU11Vl ACTION tr !4) Pl••WtlllAMltOIOlll ~ _!!_VIMG E•s ~PG) " . - '";- ~-~ ~~ i j I~ ; :.~ ·• ' ~~;: ~ 1! ,:J ' ' • ~· ' ' I I , I " rr· l:t. I I :-~q .· -I ' 1: ' I ' .1 . ' • ' " " .id • Friday, ~anuarJ 4, lq74 Roel~ 011t 1\ rocK concert will take place Sunday from 7 to 11 p.m. in the J·luntington Cen· ter Alall. 7777 Jo~dinger Ave .. 11untington Beach. Four bands will perform - l\'ledulla. Tree Frog. Shadows and Earendil Star. Above, left to right, are Jeff Newell , 1'erry Meikle, Stanford Phipps and Curtis \.Vilson me1nbers of Tree Frog. Fi lm clips of the Beatles in performance also will be s~ow·n . Adm i.SS"ion · is $1 to the concert sponsored by the Huntington Beach Junior· \Vomen's Club. MARY CASSATT. • • ' • ,,;":J JOUNTAIN VAlLIY "'~~~I ....,.;oo;;.v.;-, Al1g,;GU HELD OVElll "THE WAY WE WE~E" IPGI B•rbr• StrtlWnd t nd R•rt Rtdlord /':) fOUNTAIN VALliY ~.t,~~D ,.._,sAoC;;;u";\, A i'i'D.:'Gra "EXECUTIVE ACTION .. • IPGI • \ Children to Tl'avel by Music f~ ....... :,::.:~ "f'or Away Places" i• the dan.<e from G 1 n as t c r a• 1 will be "'lected for display E _ • •• ~r. . ., . theme of the Los AngeJes "Es\ancia." on the basis of crea11v1ty, • :::=-'· ~,0~110HA ot:L MA• J> hilharmonic's Sy mphonies One part of the event will arllsUe merit and reflecUon .:~ ~ ror Youth concert at JO a.m. be an exhibit of ele~ary o! the "Far Away Places"i! ''WONDER OF • Philharmonic t'OOCCrlmaster students' art work carrylng • • assocatc .condUctor Sidiiey out tll<>~'Far Away Places" tbcn1'. -'f IT ALL" (PGl· ; Harth· leads the orchestra on its theme. Los Angeles elemen-_ Tickets for the unrescrvedlt l 1nusical journey to exotic ports tary school students have been sea ting is $1 and tickets nr • w eekday• -5-7-t • of call thnt include Beethoven's invited to sub1nit their art avnilublo at the Philhar1nooicl; Sat/S11n.-1·l·5·.7·f : Turkish !\1arch from "The v.·ork for this exhibit. Entries Box Office in the Music ~nter.I" , .... _.,.,,..,. ...... ~ Ruins or Athens;• lbert's ---"4-••••~ :~:=:.:.:.:.:...:.:...:.-­ ' •T un is-Nefia," Schuller's "Arab Village" and the fin_al HELD °JVERI G.or99 Segal "A TOUCH OF CLASS" IPGl ••• "THE NIGHT VISITOR" Starri•t Trevar Howard Liv Ullmon Cassatt remaine d in-impressive display of Cassa It 's "THE GETAWAY" dependent (.-'Libifty is the JaP3nese innuencfid drypoifft ~--llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~'-!:===========I lFron1 J,a.e;e 'l·t) social pressures would have dictated thi s. and though she had-seria:us suilors. She was a suffragette and devoted to friends like Degas and lo art first good in the "·orld," she aqua tints, \V h i ch also point -=- once saitll though her-art was up her a~ilily to draw the hu-Matinees infiuenced by-those she ad-man body wit h remarkable f\u- mired and by her own un-idity, to give f/e s_h to flat fig· Why Cassatt a\•oided mar- riage_isn't clear. Other women artisls -like Lee Kra sner -~--ha'ile found it a death lrap for creali\'itv. Krasner. \\'hen a leading co"nlcmporary a rtist on her O\'.'n. m;1 rrit:'cl J~ckson PoJla Ck in l!J-15 and remai ned in his shadov.· for ,\·cars after his 1956 death. Only recently has she returned to her 01vn dramatically ab'stract line, aJ>- 'pal'ently finnlly free to paint her self. ' .. .. • t.! j . ' ' I Stort Th• Now Ye~r Rl9ht See ••. derstanding. · ures. Of the works at the Newport Cassatt died. blind ffarbor Art Museum. •;The diabetic. in 1926. But her Bath." "Young f\1olher Sew· ,,·orks remain 10 tell us as ing." "~1other and Child in n1uch of a limitless artist as Boat." "Breakfast in Bed ." they do or art and 19th Cen- "Portrait of Lydia Cassatt" tury life. In Cassatt. one can "lleine LefebvrC and ~1argot'' sense a huinanity of \Yo1nen and ''Portrait or You n g that femi nist artists are at- \\'oman in Blac!C perhaps tcn1pting to portray in their sho\Y best her talent, line and ~0\\'11 v.·ays today. paUern, for infusing a bril-li" _____ ..;. ____ _, 1 1/ liancc onto canvas. The exhibition also has an LIDO N!WPOOT SEA CH lNTiANCf lQ UDO ISl l 6 'J IUSD The IJ9ge1t Holiday Co111bi11otia11! WILLIAM HOLDEN "BREEZY" FAMILY TWIN CINEMA ~O~"' "'' ~ '"', '•· /U "'' '' lo • '""' ; '>•o" '°' '" , t•~·" l 1~b•w• ""'~"'~'' CINEMA I A Great New Family Film for 1974 "WONDER OF IT All" SHO.,..N AY l·l-1·,·t fGI CINEMA II "WONDER OF IT ALL" a• I lWIW!B i Helrt Over lnd WMkl "FIDDLER ON THE ROOF" 1:41 & 1J:M (GI "MAN OF l4 M4NCHA" U:ll • 1:40 -IO:SI IGI NOW SHOWING Escape Is Everything! _,,;-----~, ( / \ J. .,. STEVE DUSTIO mcQUEEO HOFFl8 f~Ar.~11NJ~CHM I NLR 1 1---PAPILLDD-t~-!JJ·:::.,.,-,• •.. ,VIC!Off)L•~1 {i \u~~ik O:~!HOi1~l!.f'Bl,., ~~-TlDRICHMONO CONTINUOUS DAILY SHOWINGS Th is time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home ! ,. UA :!~f!~:::::··g:i~ SOll!h • 11•• PM Cont Paul Newm.in ROOerl Rfdford Robert ~haw • "THE STING" 12:45 ]:00 -5: 1$ 7:l0-9:4S 1n Color I (PG) • Exclvslva En11.ioe,.,..,t1 W. Marth•u .. Bruc1 Dern "LAUGNtNG .-f"OLIClMAN" 1-J-5 7-t PM In Color I (R) Exclusi~e Enllltgemenl! w. Ma!rhau Brue• Dern • "LAUGHING POLICEMAN" l :l0-l:30 5:30 -7:30 9:31) In Color! (R) .. ~'"1'1'"p'~~~,~~~·~·~"•"•'~'·g'~'''~" ... Mo~ ... Dilly lll~~C~f5f!~(llf GG &5.J f'tW'f ,n.1111 -Anthony Quinn ElliftMlh Tftyfor ''THE DOH IS DEAD" • "AS H WEONESOAY" "HIGH PLAINS J.itk L•mmon DRIFTER" "it.VANTI" ' BcilltlnColor!<RI BollllnColcir! IPGJ Cliff Gc•~n "COPS & ROBIERS" Jftmes C•nn ''SLITHER" Botti In Cotorl (l'GI G'°"'" S1r9•I ''TOUCH OF CLASS" "LOVE•S -& STRANGERS" Both In CC!lor l (PG I lllEEllNDS-fRO ll 11:• ~ ~.'.· .')( ... Many of his fellow officers considered him the most dangerous man aHve-an honest cop. 'fl -·_,. •fl.IAll -Ol UUlllNI .. ~ u~t • r [!,l~t r,•AM: 1 ; •1.~uN 1. SCI-Alf N£R .... , [,~[ !( ~ 1~u·1~a. 1 t»-Pen ~[~IP!.[ jr • Hf~~I CHAf1R1(RE ALPACINO AM<I•• J(;v•-"'' ~ '.1·,··· ,HALrlOLBROOK "" • .t •W,.;,.:c."oS (R) :i~'~Y GL"' !! :·: ~;1 r~~· ,, ' 1 '/ J SCHA.Fflol q P~f.~.1S!Ulf Tl CH,\ICQL DAILY IL 1:30 -4:15-7: 15-10:00 ... . . \ OH f .. l Wt•tMi .. 111• C l .. IP.• (CB1 ..,,.,,.,,. .. ,,.. ••oot o,.,. ... ,.,.. 1nWl£at!:no~:'.':.·rw~: 1•1 ••tJ DAILY Al: 1:00•J:OO-s':oo 7:00-1:00 11:00 • • _ ............... ~. ---- : ,,.,,,. SlAOOUlil ~ DRl~l l~•I ""'' Wltl ll!r Malfh,iiu "PITI 'N Till!!" • IUllT UllCAITEI (PG) ROIERr Biii .,.~!!_!!! • EJEGUnVE MJIDI • "GElAWAr 1:1S·S:CJO.t:•S 'fXECllTIVE ACTION" 10:45 3:15·7:00 ' , • .. COMING-"TllE EXORCIST" E DWAR-us~~ 2ND BIG WflK .'..'SLITUJ::R:' - 1:2M:•s 1:10-11!30 "CMS &. IOllllS" 3:0W:30 t 1SO BARGAIN MATINEE SAT./SUN, 1flL2:30P.M. •LNEATS Sl.00 2nd HIT "BADGE 373" ., ' STAE_ISAND 8REGFORD TOGETHER I • ' THE ·WAY WE DAIL 1' AT IOTH Al: 12:4S0 2:4S-4:•S 7:lO-t:20-1 l:lS , • • '. ! I I. I I • t . l MIXED Sl"GLES . ' MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS .... __ NANCY I'M COLLECTIN(; FOR THE RECYCLING MOVEMENT---DO 'r'OU HAVE ANY SODA B OT TLES '? __ ; by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Ca550n I DON'T HAVE ANY SODA 60TTLES (}.] .~' ':.~ ----= J'lt,-f ( PEANUTS . by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller HOW ABOUT YOUR VINEGAR BOTTLES ? ' . TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZL I ACROSS .t I C.1gvy wtnt 43 Met! DI the Yeittrday's Punle Solved: t l!libl!cal cloth lallllr .. , ThM P•rtodl 6 FemlnlM 45 Hom lound Nme 48 Fb: I Huan:la 49 Showa •19fm 14 Com.di..,. for ·-· Hlne1 63 Be 15 Noted 64 Hl.'19 to .... y111 55 --l \tll .... 18 lrww. Anll se Klnd ol lhraacl 17 Sign 57 Lind bOdy 18 f9fl'lll a dtlt' 68 Important 18 l lltol lltMry worl c.ndldlt.. 59 Hana• •round 20 Doi.lg. 80 Not chimp 22 Frt~i.n.d e I Furniture a:3 Wlflout: · piece ""' 24 Ftolal -21 Wualth• ~·· 28 Omlnetll 32 Notofltils ......, 33 """' DOWN 1 ~'IP""' 2 Coln 3 •you aid 1u~ 4 Clnldltn """"'' :W fff..0t~A member member 15 P19PQ9llion 35 El'ldur9 8 Type 31 Fin.-7 V«Y 1m1.11 orwlned 1ock a PoeHued · 17 8pffch: · once PNIX SI Atpeil 311 Be Incorrect 10 AWl'f from the 3t O.O.ner's ~ ,._ 12 Femlnl• n!dtn1m9 13 Coaster 21 Morlgage, e.;. n L1dd rel• ~· Sl'liciplng conl•lner 25 Young \1\1 2fl AWlk• 27 Crownlik• hudpiec• 28 Spaic• In • !Of't!lt 29 Lyric Comp(lllflon 30 PINdl 31 A•1tona .... , 33 FIOWfl: -oa w_. 40 Clplltf1 I 2 I 4 11 Molt llr'1)0rllot _, "'-""""' ,.....,.... ..... ,,.. 17 • 39 Pb1l•1 <40 F1mtet'1 '°"''m '42 Cont91TrPl!bly ""'" 43 AdYlrtlling medium 45 Nlkot1-: AC OlvelCJC*' 49 Etectrlcll untla 47 Wordona '"'" -48 Cltyol Europ• 49 Dodge 50 Garment $1 8u11balt ·-52 """""' . , .. 54 HlllWIY 11 " 12 1;a ~ - JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH F"ANCIN£ .JU~T PAINTIO A CCNT,.OVIJr-llAL. PORTl'A IT OF M,., 6RIMM!+ ... • DICK TRACY l ... "l-17'1 • ROLV, TH15 IS 61..-"0E.! DID YO\J eET THAT ~75,000 t GAVE YOU? l'M NOT LEAVING! -·--- ' I DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANA~AS GORDO · MOON MULLINS • I I l ! Friday, Jan uary 4, iq74 • • • - • DAILY PILOT 27 by Roger Bradfield By Charles Ba_rsotti by ·Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson ... OR BUY SOME NO· FAUL. T INSURANCE. AL.PHABE'T s oup ,AL.L OVER ME 1!Z's IN MY l'OC!(HS~ K's IN MY ~P.,RS 1 you CAL.L r-• ~~- E'~-<' '/OURSEL.F A,,------W~fR??,. . ANIMAL C~ACKERS .· " .• .. · by Charles M. Schulz THE~ Milfl AAVE HAP A GREAT TEAM •• IF 'IOU HUll'T HER --.OU'LL HP.VETO 1-llfRl'- ME NO, HE MAS A TEAAl&L.E MEMDR«' ! by Harold Le Doux ARE YOU KIODIN'? NO WAY! ,____., • ' ' < , I .' ' by Mell Mi N~ITMER. ~"'' LIFT O\AT .ILL. YOIA R our.It tAa>L. INe~ • '\' '1 ![: . . , ... -.. -·.' by Chester Go11ld . •i=tr;:=.- • t I I by Roger Bollen THE GIRLS ll"M I-"" "The report from tbe commttte on reaching a mutual understanding regarding our school problems ll111 be delayed as they simply cannot agree on when to meet" • ~ 'l WAS PIAVIK' MO< HERE AN' I FELL ASLEEP.~ WNEl?£ WE 6"N'? • . • ' I ,• , • .. ' .~ • -28 DAl~V PILOT ___ , _____ r_,_ld..;•Y"-' _J'-"-"'...:'Y:.....;4'..;1_9_74 < WHAT TO DO . Sports, Travel Show Gets Under Way . ' "' . JAN . l • I! -SPORTS SllO\V --The Southern Calitornla Sports, Vacallon • and Recrea1ional Vehicle Show takes place Jan. 4·13 at the Anaheim Convenlion Center. It features !ravel films, campers , trailers, n1otorhomes, and casllng ponds. Children under six \vill be udmitted rree. · THROUGll .JAN. S LAS POSADAS-Padua Ii.ills Theatre, Claremont. Annual pres- entation of Christmas in J\·Iexico takes place al 8:30 p.m. \Vedncsday and Saturday. Tickets are $3.25. Also dinner is sc r\'ed at 6 and 8:30 p.m. _ J'liROJJGll JML 6 . \llill perform at 8 p.m. F'riday, Jan. 18, in the Fln<' Arts • VIiiage Theat.Cir. Tickets. at $3 .75 Friday, Jan. 18, In Ute Fine Arts box office, UC Irvine. For informnt1on. call 833·6617. JAN . 19 ORClfESTRA CONCERT -The Los Angeles Philharroonic , Orchestra, directed by Josef Krips, will perform at UC Irvine Saturday, Jan. 19. The 8 p.m. performance in Craw- ford Hall is spon!IOred by the (>ran·geCounty Phllharmonic Orchestra. Por ticketinfo;mat.ion , call the society at 646'-6411. JAN . II -I! DANCE "'ORKSIIOP -UC Irvine graduate dance students -.-., \YIU perform at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Jan. 11·12 in lhe Fine Arts Village Studio Theatre, UCl. Admission, 75 cents .... JAN. I! • II • 'DRAA1A \VORKSllOP -"An Evening ol Autuism/' an or- iginal play by UC Irvine drama majors Gary Kirkwood and Reggie Brown , will be presented at 8 p.1n. Friday and Saturday, Jan. 18-19, in the Fine Arts Studio Theatre, UCL Admission, 75 cents. THROUGH JAN. It DRA~tA -41Championship Season." Shubert Theatre, Los Ange·les. Tuesday-saturday 8:30 p.m.; Sunday 7:30 p.m.:- \Vednesday and Saturday 2:30 p.m. Tickets $3-8.50. Forrest Tucker stars in award winning drama reuniting a champion- ship high school basketball team aL their coach's house. \finner of Tony Award, Ne\v York Drama Critics A\vard, Pulitzer Prize for Best Drama. ASTRONOJ\1Y -The California Museu1n of Science and Industry is celebrating the 500th anniversary of the birth of the fat her of modern astronomy, Copernicus. Displays include photos or histpric sites in Poland, ancient sky cha rts, ea rl y as1ronomical instrument s end books. Sale Prices Honored Through Sun., Jan. 6 THROUGH JAN. 6 HOLIDAY FESTIVAL -Lake Arrowhead \1illage presents ils \\linter Holiday Festival, decorated like a European 'illage. Free admission. THRO UG H JAN. It • Ml\ 1 INtES SATUf1DAY & SUNU/IY ·--"'·''' SIAU/U.l/·l :•: ..... u. '-'l.-:t.1.1'1' !J -·"'-"' SIADIUM •I ~ '~·u1to.i.:..tJ.ll.<.:::!.'~ "PAPILLON" lrG I --___ 1 ...... MfQllNll' ENitlll ""'"'" "AMERICAN GRAFITTI" ... "l'ETE 'N TILLIE" ll'Gl "SElll'ICO" IRI ... "IAOGl 171" (Al "THE SEVIN UPS" ll'GI ... "STEELYARD ILUES" IRI .:-... COi\IED\' -··Finishing Tout.11es. ' Ahmanson Theatre. l\fu. sic Center. bos Angeles . J\1onday-Satu rd ay 8:30 p.m.: Thurs- day and Saturday 1natinees 2:30 p.m. Tickets: $:1·9.50. Jean Kerr comedy about marital crisi~ in suburbia sta rring Bar- ~ara Bel Geddes and Robert ,Lansing. JAN.Jl-13 { v LADDERS -· • l\1US1CAL COi\tEDY -"A Funny Thing Happened on t,he Way to the Forum," a musical comedy, \Viii be presented by heari ng im paired students from lhe Silent Rustlers Drama Club of Colden \Yest College. It \Viii be sung for ·the hear- ing audience-and done in sign language for the deaf. Per- formances are at 8 p.1n. Jan. I J. 12 and at 3 p.m. Jan. 13. in the Community Theater, Colden West College. Tickets, Sl.75. JAN. 13 VOICE CONCERT -Pat Lacy , a UC Irvine voice major, \viii give a voice recital. accompanied by Barry Traylor, oboist. and Jason \Vineinger, cellist. It \viii take pl~ce at-8 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 18, in the Fine Arts Village Concert Hall, UC Irvine. JAN. 18 CLASSIC GUITAR -Andres Segovia \.Vill perform in con~ cer( at 8:30 p.m. on Jan. 18 in the Dorothy Chandl er Pavil- ion. Los Angeles Music center. Tickets are $3.50-7.SO. JAN. 20 NE\V \'EAR CONCERT -The Golden \Vest Singers and J\1adrigals u·iU join the Orange Coast College Choir in a concert at 9 p.m. Jan. 20 in the Community Theater, Go!Oen \Vest College. free admiss ion . -JAN. !O 1\110-\\'INTER CO/llifERT -The Orange Coast College Chorale and Chamber Singers \Viii perform in concert at 8 8 p.m. Jan. 20 in the OCC auditorium. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa i\·Iesa. free admiss'ion. · JAi\'. 18 CllA!\lBER J\JUSIC -The ContemJX>rary Chamber Ensemble ''It's hit entertainment, andmaybe ' even memorable entertainment:' , -PAIJLINE KAEl N,.,,, YOIAtr THE WAY . WE WERE .. BORDER ~ Or ITAi.i. "GREAT NEW NATURE FILM FoR 1974,. 11111:"-1....,., .. ,i:;1 .,.1ti, .• 1·lr.~1 .. ~,,.,.r ,I'll\. •F·r NOW SHOWING ~---ONE-WEEK ONrv·---~~ SURF H1t11tlng to11 ..... 5l6·flf4 WESTllOOK WHt111 i111r1tt. SJ0-4401 MIS.A Cotto MtlO S•l.'.1 5S·z FAMILY TWIN Fo1111f'fllft Yolle-y t62-1241 POlT _Coro1te1 dfl Mor 67l·l260 SOltltY NO l'ASSES WEEKDAYS · 5:00 • t:OO • 9:00 5AT I-SUN • 1 :00 • l :OO • 1:00 • 7:00 -9:00 -• r • .!- ,_ ' - Knotty Pine .... ,, ..... .. , "' .~ ,., ' ...... 4 DRAWER CHEST • l't.aly el 111'11 sflrogt1,111 l1r •nw '""'· • Slftfflt!ty so11d1tl 1h15' i1 '14" wiilt 1 14" d11p 1 J'J.7 /I" high -reodJ I• finish.· RIG. '23.99 ' s1999 ' ' "for Safety's Sake -Step Up To Tfte Best Ladder Made!" 16 Foot Aluminum EXTENSION LADDER ' "Great For Outside Painting Jobs!" • Strong 2Yt inch "I" beam conslru<lion. • l ¥o " flat steps for comfort and safety. • Cast aluminum lock holds tight. • Base supported with tubular truss for extra strength. REG. s21.99 6 FT. STEP LADDER • Full 3 inch safety rail and step -double 'riveted construction for stability. ' • Tubular truss base for extra strength both front ond back. ~ • Heavy extruded top, paint and tool shelf. REG. 516.99 Super One Coat WALL PAINT • 5 year guarantee. • Great for plaster walls and ceilings - most any interior surface ... covers in one easy-<<1at. • Easy lo opply flat finish , deans up with waler. /, IJIJ REG. ~ flfl 55.99 13 Oz . Can~ SPRAY PAINT SALE' ENAMEL • Htn·llJi1 , it11ick 4ry, 1osy It ~·· • Chai11el111ars. Genuine American Standard -00- REG. 59c If• UN-RUST STAINLESS STEEL SINK I '·' " • C1rrosi111 I p11l11ti11111si,l1tt1t -91101for1111door l11r11ilu11, ltikts. RIG. 99c 11.49 I i ~ .1!.:.1 ,...:_ ~--.._ ..,___;:: ___ ;;;j,,_ --= • ·--.-~ '1 Special Purchase PICTURE FRAMES "S#top £.Comport -You'll Bt Amaztd At Thtst low Prices!" • • ... ,.i.r 1tylt1 •"' li11i1htt. 1"110" 99' RIG. '2.00 9"·112 .. · II" 114" REG.'1.SO 11.25 REG.'1.15 '1.39 16". 70" 10 Piece SCREWDRIVER SET • h1<lud1t l '~illi,s & J llot ur1wd1 iw111, 1uew1!11t1r, owl, ower1i1• handle ' pl1sti1 1111. ·-. ' -. - MULT1'7:oslii~'N VISE ~- .. Hslldl11 weff, 111t!tl and 'ipt - heri1Htilly 111d •trlktlly. • Swi•1l1ler11!:1 (tpod ty, ''"''''~It l11w~. .• s1tt1'""''11etittl,1°'• HWll ks.. RIG. s 1399 'II.IS , .J, '. t. • ·-., •, ~: .. . , '. : ' •• . ,. •• • • •• ·-~ .. • • . ,, •• • . • ~ • ... . , " ~: .. ~· •• •• • ~":. . ' •:O • • • . FrldJy, Januar) 4, 1974 The Biggest Marketplace on the· Oran1e Coast Announc~~ , • ·, • •• 500 -S24 Automobi'!t . • ~ • • • • • 950 • 990 loat1 & Morine Equipmer11 q()() -914 E~it . , • , , , • , 700 . 799 finontial • • • -• • • • • • 200 -299 lrAILY~ll.OT CLASSIFIED ADS ...... -... Sole • • .1'15 • 149 Pft50n0k. • • • ' • • • • • .S2S • ~ '-'s ond SYpplitt • • • ;ISO -899 Rtol E~1011 Genet-al. • . • • ISO • '99 1-kMei '°' Sale •••••• 100 -124 Lost & found • • • • ••• 5SO -574 Merchandise, , , •• , •. 100 -149 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want NJ [~42-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ...... Rtntal . • • • • • • . . ' JOO . 49Cl Sc hook ond lmll\IClion • . .S7S • 599 S.,vk~ ond ~ . . 600 • 699 Tronspot"lotion. , , . . 915 • 949 SEA VIEW VILLAS Condominiums OPEN DAILY 11 TO S ~I G!nerat [ ]~ Presented by Nolan Re•I E5tete, Inc. Great white waler vie\v fro1n each unit, over· looking Monarch Bay .. Starting at $68;!50. E arly Mediterranean styling; 2 ·BR., 2'h baths to 3 BR. plus family rm., 2'h baths; patios; fantastic amenities! Directions: on Crown Valley Pkwy., just oU of So. Coast Hwy., in Laguna Niguel. SPYGLASS HILL-$12S,000 AND ASSOCIATES REALTORS General Gener•I ** ** ** Heritage Collection ATTENTION! ATTENTION! AL L.VA BUYERS -Here is your chance to use your NO DOWN GI loan bene!lts. 4 Bed- room , 2 balh, den and pool, all on large lot. Upper Bay location. near Newport. Govern- ment appraised at $39,950. Hurry, coll S40-11S1. JUST LISTED SUPER -4 Bedroom + den or 5 bedrm. home. Great condition w/new carpets, paint and drapes. Lg. oversized dble. garage. Quite r.ul-de-sac location in the North end of Costa fttesa. \\'alk to everything. Priced only $34,250. Call S46-S880. YOUR CHOICE 4 BEDROOM or 3 + DEN -in Mesa Verde on trce·lincd cul·fle·sac . Convenient to shop· ping, schoo ls. library. co untry clu~ and golf course. Beautifully decorated family home. And available for quic:k occupancy. O\vner moving north· '''ants fas t sale. Offered at $43,950, Call S40.11 SI. ' ROOM FOR ALL FIVE BIG BEDROOMS oversized family room with frplc., full bl tin kitchen with eating area, beautifull y in1proved. \Vith excellent drapes and shag cpls., dble. garage 'vfth loads of storage. Jlrime Costa ?ilesa location. Full price $43,950. Call 546·S880. For further Information call: 496-6551 • Brand New & ready for occupa ncy. F ully ldscped & cptd. Beautiful 2 story 4 BR , F R, forma l DR + huge recreation rm. Incl land. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. . 2111 Son Jooquin Hills Rd . NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 1 ,G;;;e;"";';a;l;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;G;;;en;e;r;a;I;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;; ~~;';";"~ra~l:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;l -G-e_n_er_a_I _____ ~ ' * w A TERFRONT LOTS * COTE MONACO OWNER , 'MOVING Dl:LUXE DUPLEX Corner lot. 2 Bdrm ... bc;1rned ceiling. Cozy fireplace. l~e1nodelerl I bedr1n. rear unit. ._.Expa ndable. NE \V. Nev.·. nc\\·'.~ Only $74,500 , A list ing of Glen O'Bryan. CA LL 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona .del Mar • .,,;;;-;-;;;or-::w::•:-::c-=-.::.-:H-;;:-£LP ~.O;;:U~l;;U;;Y:-. -,11111:1111111 SELL, OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION LIDO ISLE -LIDO NORD Cu!e a::i: a bug! 1'hnt's the l\1us t sell this expanded 30'x105'. Magnificent vie\V! $165,000 only 11•ny to dcliel'ibe this Ne11•port Heigh1s home. 21 ~;;;;;:;~;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:::;:::;;: neat T1vo Bedroo111 hon1e. It be<l1'00n1s, 2 bsl.1hs, plus II!!-~-. --- 70 LINDA ISLE OR. -LINDA ISLE hn" a den \\'Ith built-In sl\clv· large tan1ily t'OOn1 lor :.1.G;;e";";';;•;;I ;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~G~e~"~e~ra~I~;;;;;~:;;:;;;;; Prime 45 fl. lagoon Jot _ $150,000 inc:-, forn1al dining 1w1n, Bcd1'001nsi. Alley ~cccss for11 lu!!h landscaping and is de-camper or boa! storage. Of· BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS HARBOR ISLAND lightfolly deco,.ted. 11'• tho krod •t !4·1,900. c' 11 * 1 * best P.1onaco on the market. Colwell 646-0555 • Prize 50' lot adjoini~g easement. $400,000 169,;oo. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ESTATE REALTY MESA VERDE Harbor View ll 1~h O\C'I' Col'onn <lei !\far, 111th fnnlfl~lic 1.~ flcgri>e o~'t'an ·to i\11. vie"•''· Brand ne\\ Portufino. 11·ilh extra i)on u'.'! rn1 ., lxlrn1 . & bath. S.«.000 Cameo Shores El1·~unl 3 lxlnn., ran1ily rn1., ~!i11i11g: rm. hon1e , 1vith sen. ~ucs1 r111. & h<tth. Spec· 1;1<·ttlat• \'1e1v of ocean & P:111.v1i11. J4:e. pool, auto . h~htin~ & ~.ii r in k I c rs . $1;)9,000 PLEASE CALL 675-3000 - 341 Bayside Dr., Suito 1, N.B. 67S-6161 i-d-•~•-•_•_•_i~~~~~-t -a;~"-''-"-1~~~~~-I 30 3 AVOCADO OR. NEWPORT CENTER Sparkling clean 5 bedroom home 'A-"ilh family room and dining room. Con1plelely finished garage like a bonus room. Easy care· landscR1>- ing-t1\'0 patios. Offered for S:;;),9.10. Cull Co I \\' e I I &16--0555 BEAUTIFUL BLUf"FS 1 Cozy living that allows leisure to enjoy step· close recreation. Sparkling Trina model o! ,1 ""-1•,,""-v•l•N•E"'-"'T•E•R•R"A""'c"'E'I 3 bdrms .. ~1h baths; on pine sheltered green· ""' MESA VERDE E.STATE ELEGANT MEREDITH 640-1120 belt. S65.ooo EXCELLENT OPEN SAT /SUN. 1·5 611 VISTA BONITA TERMS on • large ''"'""'"' •hn1>C<J GARDENS Autumn Leaves lol in a sharp "pride-of· n~a"ti!"l "Gallen·a Model." }~!oat O\'C'I' thi.'i circula. r en· 011·ner.<hin" 1011· traflic· rarn· oc t Do bl loo TI SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY .!\ dllplex opportunity in char1ning Co rona del ~1 ar. Let us shO\V you this one! $75,000 ·1 l\.1Rjestic formal living ry, ~u e ~ 1-s .. 1r.en· 1 y neighborhood, a bc;1uti· boasts broad stair>"•Y to tl'y. F.ntPrta. 1ncrs t 1 111 n g fu lly nialntaincd 3 BR ' R 1 1 1 "Jla(·csetlcr" home ,1,ith gallery. Enorn1ous forrnal I room. · 11!SC1 1c;j r 1 1 lil * 675·5930 * dining area, a dded lt x 20 dining room. Sepaf.a te fami· I ftreptarc .. FJloqucnt banquet • .~.·~~~ ·~ 36C29orEon. •CodaesltMHawry. insulated fiunlly roorn, scp-ly fun room opens to custotn 1~111· Giant kitchen. New _j~~~~~~~-I !~!-!!!•!-!"-!!-~~;:.::~::~ .. nratc cttlldrens piny )•nrd pool. 4 spacious bedrooms. g1nn_1 fr~·c-f?rm pool. Elec--.iihJJ.. , .. !.j, 11nd IArge pn lio PLUS lots or Prestige neighborhood close Ironic hgh_t1ng throughou!. to schools, parks, tennis Assun1_0, 1~1,1~ VA loan now! extra space for a pool, boa t courts and beach. Priced Call 842-2a,:;.i. The Apple P'1e General Gene ral storage or \VhRtever. o~N nt o r" FU ro "' •-1 ,;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~ Only $<16.9:i0 to sell ias1 • Cllll 546-2313. ,...~ ., ' ,, N ""' ,...£, CALL 644-nll oPCN Tll 9. 11 s FUN lo BE NICE' ,~. " Tree LARGc r~Al\JILY? 1 coLLEGE r .\P.1< BEAUTY ~® - ) 1 l( . • Is in the rear yard of "his See lhls large 5 BR. Fan1 ! Ne11· lislin.t:! .~hak~ roof, I ' ' I sharp 3 Br. l\'lesa Vc~dc Rm, 2 ~B:i. hon1e. El'llini:;-h\\"d. rloor;;. 3 Bl~. Din. Rn1., • ', , ' , , --~· _ ·. , ~ • __ IJ :, , ho1ne, but the . most •m· l'll'l!a in kitchen. Ex!"ellcnt 2 ba., F .P. · l'IC'll!l 1'1ru-0ut. -~ .~ ---= portant thing is the ho1ne al'ea. onl\• $36.500. V.A. or NC'al' O.C. Lol!ege or shop- .\ 11)(}~1 unusilnl hon1f' In ('orona dt.'I i\tnr, 4 nil'!.' llcdroon1s, lo\·cl) la r g C' lrl'f:s, 2 patios, .some Bn..v \'ie"'· 1..'()rncr firf'nh1L'i' in fuinilv 1'001TI and acldilional fi 1'l'pl9.cl' in spacious llvin~ roorn. 01\•ner l\0lll consider contract of sale with goocl inlcN'sl ratc for huycr or possibly a lease option, Call 673-8550. OPf.N TJL 9 • rrs FUN 10 8E NICE! THE REAL ESTATERS ~ ..-...-K;'-'A~R-R_O_W~H[A....._. \\·ith it's shag Cal'pet. f:unily F11A te1:nls. ping. Sl),4."iO . 11·011'1 lasr! -~F=u=E~L-cc=R"1"s""1s=7:-' 1 I Happy New \'eor LA t D "'°"'.· _10" 1"'"" prnl•_ 0' LOVELY HOME .•, ACHE ONLY su.a;o /,--------------------.I MOBILE HOME ~IO\"f.' hiio lh"s ! llr .. 2 B·1. , . . OIVllt!l~hJp sti~t & !'::k ~~e Zoned for horses · or adfl :1 Opportunity knocks but once' ~fi\.1~~~rfc"~c~:~~~~ t~: ERITAGE FOR SALE: ho111~ local\'lJ on a hu~ t-o.r-. G1.-ca_t for year ~~ living f1.u~~ an<I l'C.tl' y y ~lOre.llnits \\lcll built 3 Bl.t j ~u-e 3 B..,R . ~i:ic . ean 11!<· bt'\'.lroo1n (or 11\'0 and n den) I SILVERCREST lll'I' lot. l\'e11· l'Uf1Jt.'lln·~ Ill &. ll()S(' tu . lhc \l llaJj:c.....ll c""AL ('"' ~ . 644-7211 2 ba. hon1c. Rl'<lUyt.'(I SG.050 ) sun1c 1<11.,,,c CXUil v A loan. 1\\"0 story homr high on • niosl area~ .. \~,..umaUle \'.\ )'l" old 8!1\'al'ID.11 style :l lcv~l I . 001\' only $49,950 llurry Payn1cnl f: S20l /n10 lnl'. REA' ':TORS . MO~I LE HOME lo.1n o( S20.IUCJ. \',\ appr.dsal ~on1c 111th 01:icn. h1·an1 1..'l.•11· 1 P.S. the tt'ff' provide~ lhe on ihis! I 1a,,cs & F 1 Call 0011 ~'hc 1..~~~·~: ';~11. ~fi~oo~ L ~ x 5J 2 BO 2 BA. r.ar11 .. S: prit.'t' just '.!S 500 in;;i; lhru-out, .t br 2 ba apples. you make the pie TARBELL, Realtors n1iles. Only $46,500. drapt.'<I, hlt·ins.. retrl1:.. ' · t 1.."ompletcly fi nished base· ~ l ~==~=====~~=~====,,,.,,!I '"'17'her & c.1~1..·. dryer, 11·i':"<I ' ALSO VA :i,s,..unuihle 3 Br. 2 ! me11t for p!a)'.l~l or s~p. I , • 2955 Har~r Blvd. ALPHA BET A fo1 220 au co1ltl .. kl tch.1 s~ in Colleo~e PA.i'k. S3'l,9fl0. ln~. !acilltie:. $.36,500. . S Costa Mesa 540-1720 I-"=="-------'="'-"'--------I clOC'k, slo1:age shed. lanil· c1 u ~i·42G:.: e\es & Suncl<i)'S I 12~1 '1Jl -3898 alter 6pm or ~ ~!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'Jt'!!!!!!~l"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. I Older Santa Ana Shopping i iiiiiiil SC."npe<J patio. Three yrs. oill • anytime \\'Cekends. -G I General Center. Alpha Beta is main · like nu. Localed in llt'\r 2211 New Bl ..,,,, ...,...,~ enera tenant. Four adjacent stores a.iult .pk. '"''Y "~"' '°'"'I cos&:'~ i ----~. CANYON VIEW GREAT I "'°"' S12.000. T'Y $95,000. MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES PRESTIGIOUS BIG CANYON Sparkling new 3 BR., 3 bath -ideal \oca· . lion. $106,000, or lease at $900/mo. Barbara Gothard 642·8235. IBll) MESA -VERDE • WALK TO SHOPPING! $38,500 on choice corner, minutes to stores. Clean, bright. cheerful 3 BR. Easy to See! Jack Howell 644-6200. (812) BAYFRONT INVESTMENT Private sandy beach -2 units: One 3 BR., 2 bath, One 2 BR., l 'h bath -each w/fire- place. Storage galore. $199,000. Polly John· ston 642-8235. IBl3) LIVE IN A PARl<! Outstanding "Portofino" located on edge of Harbor Vie\v Park. Bonus roo1n + fee land. $80,000. Lois Mille r 642·8235. (Bl4 ) "BEST OF BOTH WORLDS" Baycrest/Dovcr location. 4 BR's .. FR., pool, approx. 3000 sq. ft. of luxury & comforU $110,000. Helen Wood 644-6200. (Bl5) BEGUILING BAYSHORES Succumb to the wiles o! this 2 BR., FR. charmer. Loaded \Y /\rood & imagination. $67.500. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 p.m. 2535 VIS. TA. (B I6) BLUFFS UNDER $SO.OOOlll Investors! 3 BR. beauty in lo-maint. area. Last chance! Jack Howell 644-6200. (Bl7) SPECTACULAR OCEANFRONT Rare oceanfront offering the finest in quali· ty. Elegant 4 BR. home, one-ol·a·kind pool, the privilege o( enjoyin·g 3 ·private beaches. Betty Kerr 644-6200. (BIB) CAMEO HIGHLANDS Charming 3 BR.. conv. den home • spark· Ung inside & out! Beautifully landscaped iv/ocean os backdrop. $73,95-0. Jack Custer 642·8235. (Bl9) [lrVine I • IOI Dowf Drive ••2·1235 1"4 M•cArttiur "'4· 1200 St. Onc-h111J bl. lron1 l'IUU., 646 88)) I PERFECT COND. TIME FOR O\\IC at 8?~. CALL 675-7225 I house. $15,99j, C111J EVES. I .•_ . 1 3 BR., 2 ba. homC' on Point. AND MONTEGO 213·fill.1·4G90. I 5 n/Eves Close to ocean. f\ta nv ex· •t CAN BE SEEN AT : I• u · '""'· Bdag offm•! Sl9,500 1CUL-DE·SAC MODEL CRESTMONT S46-4871 ! Cal t 6T.l·366:16T.l-66M Ev••· QUICK STREET ESTATES, l!I>l Site Dr., B1'CP. Ccntrul l BLUFFS CONDO-, Q u ie t Cos ta l\1esa ~~m .ac;::p.1 11~t 1:,~~!2 ~!~~~E d~n~~E ~'\ths./ C-ASH 3eig~::i ;~~A ~:t~ In ·Harbor Vle1v l·:ton1cs. Only one of these for sale. A rcnl sharp 4 bedroOn1 house. Dni· mnri c tile r.nh'y. Living roon1 and formal dining room car- CO/\'TACT RAY, PK. ?.!GR . Pl'inic cnl'l unit location. on painted inside a nd out. All for shol\·ing. broad }.>Wenbcolt. p I 11 sh ,,. ....... -.... ,......,!!!!!!!!~ for only Sl,370.00 do1v11. For peted \l'ilh ncl\' gold carpel· _J;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;~~~I infonnalion, call 646-n n $750 'DOWN ir"'J::.\~'.:;, s!,';~1xosses<ion l LOOKING FOR THROUGH A OP<N T><•·ITSFUNTOBE•<:EI~ BEACH C. F. Colesworthy 1 A flARGA!N? 4 BEDROOMS Realtors 64Q..0020 I Here it is! Gl'~a t landscaping. $750 ioTAL 00\\'N! '.i to * V.A. TERMS* I Btick planters. Thick l'il.I'· DAILY ing. s;g family room ""th RAISE TROUT? shullered l\'inclo1\•s. Drean1 kitchen. Owner rn11ving 10 I \'ou can in I his 30 x I<l fish Ohio this n1onth. Price re· pond! Custoin clcc.'Ot1lled lik@ dueed . call to see· 673-8.Xiel. an old Spunish P.1ission, 2 OPEN rJL 9 • IT"S FUN TO BE. MCE• I Story, 3 Br, den, 2 &. fire- ·-· place, 2 BBQ's + gas Bl. I 2 fountains, 25 x 13 heated beach. 4 largc ~roonis. Assunie this 7•;, v .:\. Joan, ~I s; Sunken Spai~~sh·Sl)'I~ pool. 3 pn1ios. J{l'flpc url;lor. Brick lined \Va lk. Bcauriful on this shurp 2 txlrnt. home: f.1n11ly rooni.. Hu,,,e hcd I planters. Big kitchen \\'Uh in beauliful 11 ... ;nf'. Elec. rooms. Unbehe\'ablc \·aluc 1 • IMMEDIATE b&y "'indow. Large ll\'lng bit-ins, nice ca.1")X'ting, dbl. I o1,1ly Sl?,900. ~E:Z ter1ns. , I hlusl sec to bclie1·c'. dnly $47,900. Ncnr Lake J.'orest! room with VAULTED CE il... garage Good size lot for the C.tll TIO\\, 842·25L. PILOT ~~ ~f~o~~~~T·,i~ ~~i~:Npl:~:~;~ck ~~· ff"SFUN 108E N/CEI~ . ~;~. PRICE! llurry 67U642 67S-64S9 lf~ ~ WANT AD . ~OCEANSIDE~ " . I • (Rental) 4 Bdrms & Den-$36,500 I 2 BR., 2 bath house, con1p. furnished. l\'ever sler>t in. No dov.'n G.J.! Spackius •Poot, cl ubhouse, beach, golf hoine \Vilh f11n1ily rn1, & shopping center. Year fi1."t"!plaC<'. Dinin~ r 111 .. 4 BEDROOM lease or by the month. k1tch('n built Ins. J.01:cc<l au· -I 548-3036 heat. Shake roor, spru1klers. $1 8-50 DOWN · · · Idoal !or lhe """ family! 1 2 BR Duplex $34,950 I Call 540-17~ Spacious family home with BEACH Cottage $49,950 TARBELL, Realtors brand ne\v \\'/\v ·carpeting Call for additlone.1 info & drapes th"""'boul. Newly 1197 Orange Ave., C.M. TIME FOR painted Mel sbines aoo CENTURY 21 642-lnl sparkles. Prime Costa l\iesa I -,,=---,.70~0----;:-c= .,.. oa qu;e1, de•d end 19T.l Mobile Home, 24x64, 1 QUICK CASH street. 646-7711 _Open eves. cnOOna, etc. Cust drps, cpts, Walker&lee lllAL llTA1'1 Don't gfve up 1he ship! "List'' It In cl11.S111fit'd, Ship to Shore Resulls! 64.2 ·5678. excel park, in Oceansi<le. 714: 548-3993 aft 3. MAKE OFFER Ne11•port Heights pool home 3 Br, 2 Ba, family room, gns Bl, fireplace.· Askin~ 545.000. Cnll Realtor 6-15-6646 NM!O a · rao··; P!,.ce 11n at:I! , THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD . . 642·5678 WE HONOR Master Charge and · BankAmericard • THE DIRECT-LINE 642-5678 POSSESSION I ~Rcaltoc fo•· appt. C"te BOO comfm·tablc -Newport Heights J oiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Newport S ho r e s . 3 .N lf bo H' 1 2 BR • 4 Bedroom home tb"-Bedroon1s & den, close to I r ar r i~. mma_c -~ beach, pool aiKI tennis. home. Overs1Zed hv 11Tl, master SRI + family room $1S.900. . lplc, din ar~ll_. lg en<'I patio, + flc11, 3 harhs, many \!X· PETE BARRETT , fo1· entl'rl!u n1ng. Obie pa r. trns. Ouirl Sll'CCl. $55,750. j 646-3928 or Eve. 645-:2986 Roy Mccardle Realtor REALTOR JSJO Nc1vnot1 Bl\•d., C.M. --S48-7729 642-5200 ~ Jt'"it'-a breeze ... sell )uur A BIG LOVEABLE l.~;~;;~~~~~ilc~m~s~'~';~1h~~~"~'e~. ~U~S<'~D~a~il=-y~-~ -·· --~---: Pilol Classif!C!d. 642-5678. VALENTINE _j_cost;-Mesa Gosta-Mesa- Near n1ile square golf course & park. '1 bed1'00n1s. 3 baU111. 3 car gnra1,-e. Only 2 years new. Super plush carpeting. Pas t e I con1· modes. Waler !Io r te n er . Automatic sprinkler syste1n. You must S('(! this hon1e! eau 847-6010. I ~i • ""~TO~ NK:E' ! i -I NEEDED Career minded salC?sn1C?11 and salcs,vomen to sell OrRnc<>e County property. MANAGEMENT FUTURE Experience not necessMy. ~ Good attitude is. Send resume to: Retail Dcpe.11- ment, P. 0 . Box <1571, Ann· heim 92803. FRONT ROW· IRVINE TERRACE _A ruston1 buil t hon1e by a builder for his D\vn use. 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 3 r.ar garage. F'inest jetty vi e\\'. ~!any custom extras . $235,000. GOURMET'S ATTENTION See this spacious 3 bedroom home 'vith gour· met kitchen -large lot -1nany custom ' reatures. $89,500 ELEGANT · ECONOMICAL -Just-right for senior t.-ouple in yo ur family. Ir bedrooms, d4!11. Co ndo1niniun1 \\'ith fine vit\\1 :ind gree nbelt in Bluffs. Priced to sell. $811,oOO OPEN SUNDAY t ·S 2021 CmU:nodore .Rd. Exclusive Bayc:resl • Q\\rners loss. yottr gairi. l\Iust sell. 3 Bedroom. 21h. ba ths, breakfast \:i r. family room & nice patio. Room !or boat Slit: ~00. • . • Dally Pilot Classlflecl . :r .. ORANGE COAST'S BEST LIDO BAYFRoti»l.)O' FRON L flllm Lid'O": u ca11f:.~. Spadous .4 bed· roo1n home with oversize living roon1 and dining roonl. 3 rar garage. Pi er iand slip for 40 loot boat. $295,000 ~ • U .I. Coldwell, Banker ( 1766 •• . ' SAUSMAN •• for Cl,..ifoed Ad ACTION 1 llllo.....!'!AlTOR ~ Ca!I ~ ' , -- • A Daily l'llot Ad·•i~or j '1:161 San· Joaquin Hlll1 Rd.; N.B. 4•t·567R --~~~~~~~~-~lllm!!!ll!!_~!!!!!!!!lllll!!!lll--------~1 • ----! ' . • '• ;J{f DA1l'1 PILO'T Frlday, Janua.ry 4, l'f74 ~~~~;~~1~~¥~~~~=~~~2~~~~~;~§§~~~;;;~§§Q~~~~;~'°r-~=~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~ Gen•;111 GeMral General e:ner411 Hunti ngton k 11ch ewpctrt 8"dt ch 8 u1lne11 1.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;= --JW Opf"!rlunlll 200 5 BEDROOMS SEA FEVER 2 l .drm. + l'ool ~ AUTO sALES ' UIOI VU( l ·J()M l S MUTT ANO JEFF OF BALBOA ISLAND MUTT-This Is no d og! It's a c ute 2 bedroom. beam ceiling cottage \vith fireplace, patio and new paint. It bas the low price of $58.500. • JEFF-This !o r the tall dog ! Top o f the line decor, 4 bedrooms, completely redecorated tor fun with Island kitchen. roomy game room, fun size patio plu s pier and slip. It · has high value at $225,000 -furniture in· cluded. UNIQUE HOMES RH ltors, 645-6500 1649 Wa1tcliff Drive, Ne wport Beach General G eneral * Balboa Bay Properties * LIDO SANDS Deluxe condition. 3 B.R ., 2 ba. $57,500. BAY AVE. R-2 Lot 30x90. 675-7060. Ol>! THE ISLAND Beautlfully appointed duplex. Owner's unit 5 BR. Call to see! 673-7420. Buy, Lease, Option Best Ne,vport Hts. Joe. Itn med. occupancy. 3 IJR, lg. den, form. din rm .• frplc . $45,500. &12-7491. OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 1811 GISLER On the golf course. 3 BR. 3 ba. home w I pool. 3 Car gar. $79,500 55&-8800 · lB REALTORS 4 Local Office5 fo Serve You Gener al Gener el $29,750 51:.fo~. '~rt.:'.= $24,495 · AND LEASING IT'S Tf\Vf:! 5 bedroom bar-ntlt abandoned sh.q) ln 2 Bdnn condo.. desirable Mobile Homtt H1rbor Blvd. Locetlon gain · 1-"ULL PRICE $29,750! Ntwp>rt UeJahll need.I a around levr:I tloor DWt. 1 ~ for S.11 12.5 lllgh nel • property incl. Grtut bt1u•h town IMation C:aptaln and a crew. :Ju!'t ·yeal'I new, P'rethl)'. Pa!nted ~ .... -S:."l':i.f.KX> • Trrms . blke IOOl:ean. Oiant llvlru,; a. few piece. or el~bt vet• with tulefully paneled IWd _M,OllL_J_Hum! R IVIERA REALTY rooru. Fn1nll)' 1tlnln~ plu11 you on board. Doh't delay mirrored Uving roon\, plush WALK OR BIKE FOR SAL : J41fllro11.tt1v~v;--C:M. bn-akfalit ~r. ruJ·1lted -iohe. may sail away!! y.•aUpapm>d dlnlng area, SILVERCRiST 64247007 64>5609 Ev11. lie<.lrooml' PLUS de111chf'd "·1'7Tll _Open ev-. ~... -, ...... ~.. ,_ ..... 1iom No more driving. Schools & shopping are a n1ot11er·ln·ht1v 5ulte! ..,.,,.. ..... drapes, .... Ov:i.t.z~ ~tr.Y block away from this 3 bedroom, 2 bath MOBILE HOME Bottle W1f1r Route 'l'llERi;;·s ~JORE · Y:&.J.ti'r ai-ea, near &elmli:, wuJkina charmer. Bright & sunny. View tool' Very ~· x $3', 2 BO 2 Bl c11rp., Own your own bottl.e water M1ftt·n1•r • ('l1111pt1· ~ lr111leir dlrtance to JI u n t \ n g I 0 n (f A ki draped, blt·tn1., refrlg., routt', \\'lll train If qualJLltd. p1u·king. 21 11. patio. Jullt Walker & lee center, SwlmmlnK pool and anxious seller will take best a er. s ng) "''u.»her & el~t. dr)'C'r, \vlre<i B<'»t Otange eo. ai't:a avail. Sl .500 t!O,vn -951,h loan. rnany park arcn•. FOR $55,500. for 220 air rood ., kHcl" \Viii adju111 route 1!1e to J.lul'ry -963-6767. "''L 1''''' SALE BY O\YNER. Askin" clock, &torage shed, land· tit yOUl' tMlt'tll. Earn S1300. Bilbo• ~eni nsula Re ndezvous .CondO Jlare opportunity to li':e on the OCt'IUlb'Ont ror less thnn $100,000. 2 Bedrtn unit c:in !Op Ooor. Sensational view. Eastside Units Security bid&. SubtetT&nean 1o:ar8,l<:e. Ele\'ator. CaJI Hazel Cholct' location. 2 ~porate Jones. 673-8110, Jlerltage 2 bcctroon1 houses i1111I a Rcallo1-s ~(} t l51. 2 IJC<11001n duplex. $770 a ,c.cco==o.cc~C"'~--- 1 ~lonth inco111c. f ull pliec ~~!'.:\~·2.~1~R$87.'~'· rm .. $i'l,00l. r.lars.hall Realty 61.>-4600 ~ COATS Corona d el Mar ·~ WALfAcE Corcino del Mar REALTORS Duplex -546-4141- (0pt• Evenings) Pric:e Reduction COUNTRY LIVING ln11)1'<'!1Sive, custom built 4 Bit, 3 BA. Everything one \vould 1vant for con1fo1111ble llvin.I{ h"On1 solid n1ahoga11y double door entry to liunkcn roman tub in luxurious master bedroom suite. Call today to see these 3 brand ne1v homes. Phone 547-6934. VISION REAL TY If you are even vaguely in· terested In an exceptionally \\'ell designed 3 BR 2 B~ ground floor owners unit \Vilh a $200/mo garage apt. In an ex~llent <.'Orner lo- cution near a pal'k, YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO OVER- LOOK THIS PROPERTY! Reduced to $84,500 644-7211 only !2U95 c•ll todny · GRUBB & ELLIS CO. scaped patio. Th"" yrs. old per mo. Poto~llal unlimited. ·8"7~. · · )Ike nu. LOcatcd In new Silver S1>rlna'B \Valer, 004 SUPER Buy I 11 REALTORS 67,7080 n.d1.1lt pk. away from nols)' N. BaU1.vl11, Orange. 1..,,...,...,~...,...,.,....,...,!"!" .... ~"l!"""'i!!'...,r...,,,1 St. One-hall bl . lrom club-17141 532·6501 Buutilul 4 BR, 3 full ba1.1~ oouse. $.15,995. Call EVES. * * * exclUne Came rm or formal Laguna Beach Newoort Beach 213-G9+4GOO. ••U£R Uv rm w/1tone frpl c, loads J..,.;. CAN BE SEEN AT : 4,~w.Gcree. nl= Lane or up-gradlng, Lge 24 x LAUNDRY · · · • BAYCREST CRISTMONT ~· 22 0.n w/cnthednll celllni: . . . & Dry c I• •n Ing !,.vino. Call!. 92661 & custom frplc. Beaut. htd Service. Ideal for couple. On $57 SOO ESTAT·ES You are lhe uinner ot pool w/jacuzii. all new busy Coast Hwy. Xlnt ' · 1051 Sile Dr., Brea. (Central 2 tickets 10 the bit-ins, Lge kitchen &: Fam return! ss.cm. Large living room. fonnal Ave. across lrom are~ SPORTS &: rn1, new ...,._w shag &: 3 BDIUltS. _ 2 BAntS dining. Large J.itchen and Comm. J-losp.) Ult •46. RECU.l:ATIONAL cuslom drpg, 3300 sq fl. Frplc., redwood & glass; family room, new carpets CONTACT RAY, PK. ?itGR., VEHICLE SllO\V custom lnodscaped, 8 Blks watch the waves ipla.shlng a!ld pal.nt. 4 ~room• plUI for 8ho\ving. Ill lhe to the beach. Priced f0r on the rocks. $82,500. rumpus room. Easy care ANAHEIJ\1 quick sale. $59.995. ""'' PRIVATE SE'ITING yanl, room for pool. ""' GREENLEAF CONVENTION CENTER sell. By owner, 963-3lo.t. • Jn this channing 2 bdrm.. a rare va.lue. Ca!! 64&n7t. Ja!IUIU')' 4-13 $37 SQO 2 bat.h home u·ith plank. ed Ol'fH 11L • • rrs FUN 70 SE NICEI A private 5 xlnr adult con1· Please c•ll IW!l-5678, ext 113 I fir, m den, ocean view, i ·~~~'!I ~I! cm::"', ty, 1750 Whittler Ave., 10 clainl your !tickets. NEARLY nev.•! B1g tamUy 2-5tory dining area with i ~ ... . has available 2 Ke)' (North County lo I tree room \V/cracldlng stone bookshelves lo the ceiling. (1 : 11'!1~,000I ':o&bll~1h~.m:,;>~ ~tthx ~,: nu111bcr*ls >.~J~) fireplace & mantle. French 2 Frplcs. Redwood decks , --·-··-·-" ·'""' kitchen al I d~iated in! & garrlt'n patio. Will trade closed porch St7,995. Must • COSTA MESA "Sunshine" colors + a big in beach area for fi xer-up-be setn to be !_~lated • pantry! Private llv .rm per house or units. $6..'>,000. GRAND Ot'ENING beautiful! 6-t&-1~m to Ea1t1lde 17th St. '"/calhedral ceilings. 4 NE\V F.NGLAND Newport Bly Towers 6 pnl. I Takt' out Ol'n,~ge Julius. Tre- fa1nlly sized._ bdnn's. Plush , . . . in Laguna. Lge., 1 & 2 BEDROO~f . n1Pndous llOtcntlal (Or am· carpet thru~ut lhis ~ry beamed ceil. !iv. r n\ , CONOOJ\1tNruM HO~lES l\10BILE Hon1c 18 nto. old. b!tious <.'Ouple. 1>1·ice $15,500. unique floor plan. Temu; w/brick floor. Lge. used Baytront Homes 2 BR, 2 BA, fa1nily rm, , A1,rent 646-32".>5. to 11uil . Bkr. 002-5511. brick frpl c., a forever Boat SJ!ps '>'-'etbfl.r, A/C, sunroom . .,;;=::...:""'=.,-_-,---I 'II · 2 Bd Fll!I Security lflKhrise uprn-uded & landscaped. BU ILD a ~usiness ln Y'?_Ur J H t. t H bo coa.s ne v1e\v. rms., ~·.. hborhood Ex I un 1ng on er "r den can be used 85 formal Steel & concrete construcUon Adult park. Open house J~n. 0 w n neig · · SHIELDS 2 garage 1pace11 per unit. space 68, Villa G~·ande, Snn-ncon1e, w Resort living at home. Jacuz· Roof top sundeck ta Ana. , cu.ston1cr se1-vlce, phone • • • BRUCE CUJ\tl\1 INGS 89-16 Tluunes River Avenue Founluin Valley, Calif. 92708 You 1n-c the V.'inrwr of Be.ch Condoml·ni"um dining rm. $69.700. PrivateBal<.'Onlc1 51h & 6th 10 to 4 pin, eel ptlona.I 0P1fh1Y f:,rt gro;'pe1~~1 ''· '°l\ey ball. ono block REAL ESTA TE Unuwal Opportunity to Pur-ON the Bay In Newport 546-1831 • ~ to beach or boat harbor. ch n ... .-. t Pro r'. I ' I t t ~~ View. $?.A,500. 318 Thalia 494-8093 ase .......,, ...... n Pf' '-Y n 15X40' Roadliner. 2 Br, 1 nve1 men _ Newport Beach. ea. 12X25 cov. pa 11 0 . Oeportunlty 220 2 tickC'l!I lo lhe SPORTS & R1'~REATIONAI. VEl-lICLE SJ~O\V FOR SALE BY O\VNER ~HARBCX.m. ~EW dHOl\~ -ba POOt!:p, 2 310Tc67~~" N.B. IJJ$1~0,~!IOO~. ~~~~.;:;_~~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;1 Harbor Vu Hills, tusk. Great RfAllY r.. ental, · · ., c., BEST' buy Lido Yacht LANO VALUE vi . beams; I Ull1 Ille nrs. •""- ocean eW; quiet cul-de-sac 17214 COAST H\\'Y. \\'/\\' ("pts. Vic\v dl"Cks, FANTASTIC Harbor, double \\;de, pntio, Appro." 17,000 sii. It. or l'{ln1· bt'auly, 4 Br, 3 ha, fam 714: 846.1384 & 213: 592.28.15 secluded lanai + J,cm sq. ~poo~I~, ~gara~~ge~.~l~19"1~-~·~675~~~Z~>'.l~I hlncd propet1if•il a\'ailable rn1. bcan1ed ceilings, 2 fl. lov.'t'l' level for easy ex· FIXER -~----1odc\'clopt'.'r. \\'ill i1Ci'OmnK>- frplc's, 3 car, fine fantily n"•ision. Far below replace· p · & r· 3 BR 2 rlntc s leg111 u111l1. Duplrx hon1e. lmmed o cc p y . Irvine .--172 500 JO"' aint piu ·11· • BA, I "' 1 E 83.'rJ300 Ext Jl0/644-l6S2. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.! ment costs, . -,o llpllt level, huge Jiving nn. • it.I' presently on <.'Ol'Tlt'r pro~ • Down or lrade for smaller Irplc & beams. o.n.t•I t>rty. All ot.'i!fln view. SOME THING A~~i1.'~1M THE ULTIMATE!!! The most livable homC' you'll find! 5 bedrooms. country kitchen, 3 car garage, beautiful pool & 1aWlll too! You . must see this to belleve! Large Ir- regular lot with boat gate. Ca.II now 847-6010. SPECIAL! CONVENTION CENTER January 4·13 Is this exceptional 3 BR 2 BA Please call 642-5678, ext 333 Harbor View Hoines Cnrn1el to claim your tickets. PIM, '>'-ilh beautifully de-CNorth County toll tree ve{oped Cron! and rear yards number Is 54Q-1220.l featuring literally tons of __ _.::*:.....__::* __ *:;__ __ masonry, open beam patio NE\V duplex, by owner. 3 Duplex That's New close-in house or condo. WALK TO Red Cerpet, Realtors & 2 + 2 & 2. Gas ap. You'll stand In aY:e as you GUN ~ Commerc1al 497.1761 pliances, cust. inter. Choice view the spaclous living and OLD LA A area, "' sy UDO SHOPS Pro-rty 158 , .... ..,..,.~...,!!!!!!!!~'!I toe. 673-4691 or 673-0207. dining rooms from the ele-2 bdrm., 2 ~·· ._frplc., lge. ,...... -- vated lera120 entry Notice dining rm., su.n!ren lfv, J'l'.l.. $59,500 ' . NEWPORT BEACH ~M.;:o;;n::•LY..;t~o.;L;;o.;•;.:• __ _;2;.:400 1 the attractive rail dividers Catalina Is. view; exquisite 646-6710 64~ 0 ·"'" L the wet bar and the atrium'. WI\\' carpet. Newer. $17,500. or .... O"IVV Prime Baylront Si te 1st TD oans 3 bdrms., 2 baths and a nice BEACHSIDE cottage; 2 7QfflC(S$UMNQ)'QUCC!fN T!t ! For boat repair & sales CO\'ers and sun decks. Jr's EASTBLUFF Ol'EN TIL i • IT'S FUN TO OE NICE/ I 1~~~·1;·~1 -:;;..,;~e ,~r::;ni:i;~h~u.~o~;~ ope2~1~f~~~~. J.s Nev.·ly painted duplex. Each 2 br, 1 ha, frple. Open house Sun 1-5. 721 Femleaf. 675-3266. Asking $72,500. qulel location. $51,900. bdrms., lge. view deck, din. I V. E. lb'IJ"d & I Bill Grund~ .Rltr. 675-6161 UP TO 90% CALL 552·7500 rn1 ., stone frplc., 3 car ._. r.-Co. TWO adjoining Income pro-S.1/4 % INTEREST Costa Mesa rt 1 1 ,r::/· priced at $71.501 fee. Su~r h~use, great vi~\\', \\'ell I~·~!§~-~-~-~-~~~-~-~·.!!!~"'~ CALL 644•7211 ma1nta1nect. 4 B<lrtns., lam· I-1 1Jy rm., pool. $73.000. USE YOUR YA AGAIN M._lllB R:,~~; A. G~~!.1s WALK TO WEST CLIFF SHOPS VISION parking. Furnished. $60,000 ______ ...... ___ perties. C<!nter Costa "''"· -Or submit,.-· Owner. 64~2020/642-6560 2nd TD Loans 494-To51 IJllMAC. e'pandable 2 BR. Condominium• 1 100 N. Coast Hwy., Lag\tna hom~ on channeltront. Pier for sale 160 Lowei t ri1t e1 Orange Co. & s~1p. $~7:500 , ~ I Sattler Mtg. to. ~ •• re~ hill VETERANS lo:in" 00,v eY. I OPEN SAT/SUN 1.5 avail up to $125,<Xll, Even ~ 2801 W. Balboe Blvd. U you have already used 4 UNITS 3 BR, 2 BA, huge lot. de· tached dbl . garJge, alley access. llard1\'ood floors. shag carpeting, fri>lc, $39,500 CALL 646-6Il0 or 645-8400 RE,\L TY REAL TORS Univ. Park Centel', Irvine 3 DELUXE unlls + o\vner s r.-t usr !jCll, 2 B:R Condo. 642_2171 545-0611 quarters, on oceanfront. $2200 or mnkr oiler. 2400 I $199,950 Elden Costa ~lesa 5-18-789!1 SPr..•lng llarbor area 2" yrS. -oldie But Goodie SAND & SEA IRVINE. Condo 2 BR. d'"· · DON'T BORROW Looking for a huge olde house REAL TY 675....alOO 2 bas. lg! patio, "! trwys, I ''TIL YOU CALL USI your VA entitlement you NE\VPORT Hejghts, 2BR 1 Blk. lo ocean, Ne"•port. may be eligible tor an ad· house, dbl garage, Fort.in Just ren1odell'd. Great in- dltional loan \\ilhout rein· Con1pany, Realtor. 642-5000 come producer. $115,000. !OPENTIL 9 to fix up? They're scarce, NEWPORT SHOR-ES Sl>,500. 551-4683 Prin. Only. 1 DorTOW on your home equity don't ntlss !hi!! one. 8 Rms. 2.-Sty. A-lrame; 3 BR., (nlstr. Duplexes/Units for any good pw-pose. Scrv- statement or do""' pymt. PAUL BALALIS V. E. lb.md & Co. ~~1!~c1!T1~7iif°~~~ns~.~ + 2 ha., serv. rm., storerm. \Y/atrium), 2 ba, IWKleck, sale 162 Ing U>e Angeles County for - _11..1 .r-_,,__ a• ' & attic. Asking $96,000, incl. bltns, brkfst area. Qub, over 20 yean ,and NO\V ln Herbert Haw~.; Realtors . _ .a Daily Pilot Classified Broker 645·0280 -mlliOO-or 963-5681 Ad. 642-5678. --·-111odcl. Beller than new, extra vie\\' lot Or Co: tv quality carpets, shu.ttcrs RUSTIC CH. ARMER tennis & pools nearby RENTAL Inconlt?, $620 per ange .tn . · ..., .... .....,. llDNctory ..... '" ........... , .. t• ............. All tti. loccrrlo• Ud9cl btklw .. ~ ,. ~ cktall by .n.rtblOI) ... .W. lo t.Hy'1 0.lly Pilot WANT ADS, f'otro• lffwt'"I .,.. IH>lrNI for Mlle or to reot ore wrged 10 rht net. h1forMOtlo11 111 tills col,.ma eec• Frldcry, Sot· .,..., "s • ...,. 2 BEDROOMS 2595 Crestvie\v !Bayshores) NB 644-1766 $58,500 (Sun 2-5) 3 BEDROOMS 426 Vista Suerte (North BluIIs) NB 644-1766 $55,927 (Sun 1-5) 133 Shoreclif!s R d (Shoreclif!s)"CdM 644-1766 $12.5,000 (Stin 1·5) 2030 Holiday R d ( Baycrest) NB 644-1766 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 2021 Commodore (Baycrest) NB &14-1766 $125,000 . (Sun 1·5) $1 ,250 BUYS fr!. N EWPORT RIVIERA $45 900 . mo. Corona del ~Iar location S1GNAL 1-fORTGAGE CO. ~1~~t; ~r~ 0 cat 1011 · Beamed cell's., wood llrs.. CAYWOOD REAL TY a S90.000. private seller, Ad-• l714> 556-0100 4 BR, 21h bath. 1800 sq. ft. .., • • · French· doors are some of * .,.1_ * dress lnqui~ p O Box 663, 4500 Campus Drive. N.B. Great rec1'Cational facilities 1 Tit the features of this 3 Bll., ~ £7V Corona Del ~lar M W tod 250 $1 ,250 TOTAL 00\VN'. Nc\v, and social amenities. .V. E. l'-anl & Co. den, 2 ba. residence. \Vood· NEWPORT SHORES, 3 BR, I p ty 166 oney an paint inside and out. Spark· $35 000 836-4206 531 5800 MW! ncome rori.ar I ·i· Sh ' · -· sy area, good sized level 2 bas, <.-ommunlty S·.~:in1 pool, r-•.m,~.. \Vll.L g,·,,e •·t TD e tone cc1 rngs. ag cal'· Village Re al Estate. s..i r-iw..r.,. 500 · Pl ~ ~ ~ pets. 1t1irrored \\'alls. Con· )'ard. $59, . tennis crt & aygmd, nn 831 acres \\'Or!h $400,000: vrnience kitchen "·irh lots ME~S_:-\1 hVerdc, 3~R. :!llBA, BEAUTIFULLY Great for yOElun"'kltens . \.\lalk LAGUNA BEACH u·ill pa)' .l(}';. int and 10 f n1uue ome, ne\~ crp ng, to ocean. ec tch. Rulo po'•ts. "'0 • a mo·. o cubinct space. Huge en· E 11 .. , ~ · closl'd patio \vith carpeting. drps, l<itch floor, pain!, LANDSCAPED water softener, custon1 light xce ent potential, 6 stores 71•1-242-3144 Ov.'ner \\'iii help finance. Jandscping, In1mac, by Turtlcrock, 3'BR, 2 ba home, fixtures, en<"I kltch, Vacant including cocktail lounge, I ~Mo~~~------ On!Y $24,500. Call noiv! owner, Open House Sun, call w/Fam rm, f I owe r ed & ready. $48,500. JONES best location. $300,CO'.l. rtgeges, 963_.,61. 1 ,,,ro::r,,:•:<Pc:Pt.,_9"'~="'=-~~~ 1 atrium, paneled ollice in RLTY, 613-6210 400 Lil.FOR f~l~ Tru1t Dood1 260 OCEAN VIE\\' p A R K garage, full sprinklers, lo\\· FAST POSSESS. I $46,950. 4 BR. 3 BA, modern maintenance, Parks & Harbo• View C&rrnel nlOdel. C.I.. A PUT YOUR MONEY 2 yr old Buccola home, Jove-)X)Ols nearby. By O\\'ner, ly park Cui-de-sac & corner -..$59;;;;-,900=-. ;,;8.1.1'0·;;;89;;;12"."'"-==ooi--,:--;-,,..7"",--,---13 ,BR.1, 2 ba.,D...lfarn~ .. rm., ~~-TO WORK FOR YOUI 1 1 o so extras, •~•ce 1..:uuced ----Earn 10% or more on "·ell-i lot . 1853 Parkvista 642-1060 UNIV. PARK TNHOUSE Colonial 4 Bedroom to $67,950 including land. • . secured 2nd Trust Deeds oni l\JESA \7ERDE NORTH lmn1ac ~sq ft, 3 Bdrni, Beautifully decorated home CORBIN·MARTIN Orange County real estate.I 4 BR., 2 Ba., fam. rn1. & 2 Ba, big ext~ room, for \\'ilh ful l dining rm. Big REALTORS 644-7662 DELUXE, BEACH SIG'.llAL MORTGAGE CO. I MUST SELL scp. din nn, prof. Jandscap-work or play. $56,000. ONR· family room. t'ireplnce. 3 4-PLEXES tn4) 5.16-0l06 O XC G ed. art atrium. prin. only, Realtor 833-8668. bitths. Kitchen has even·· * S BEDROOMS * \\'Ill consider house equity 4500 Campus Or NB R E HAN E $48,900. Phone 5.57-2775 TURTLEROCK, Broadmoor, thing. Oversized patio \\ith Den, dining area, 3 Ba, clean ln exchanl{e. Citll anvtlme. '• 1 • • Ft~11k~~ EIGfi?L~~:~ ~F~o~u-n-ta_i_n_V_a_ll~e~y~.~--1 yr ne\\·, 2U trees. 4 BR, BBQ. Professionally land· spacious 1·1tory, Cl!Uhaven. SCOTT REAL ty INVESTORS "'llllted 10 makf'I Fam rn1, 2 1,!i bas. Exel. scaped. $59,950. Seeing is V1:1cant. May lease. $79,500. 53'-7533 or buy tl'U.~I deed 638 501-1 SR1ETSESIDENATDIAJL\CENT~~ AC RTOE ASSU!t.lE 61,~'7'~ GI LOAN vie1\' & cpl'g, landscaping, loving! Call 494-8003. GEM Majeiitlc Mo ..... 11,.;· Co. -:;,, ' Lo I ho 3 BR & $65.000 Ov.·ner. 833-0793 TARBELL, Realtor• HOUSE S-·~ o-l\.IULTI 1111LLION $ BACA ve Y me -con-J.20..F Twllin Ave., N.B. · + 6 UNIT GRANDE RESORT . vert.ibli!' den, frplc, blt·ins, Laguna Beech 1920 S. Coast Hwy., L.B. REALTORS 642-4623 New uniti at 2637 Elden, HEART OF SCEN IC hro"",''th{:n:f~t b)'a:?. ~!!urryooo OPEN SAT/SUN 11 • L1-"u-n1--Hiiis-BAYFRONT CM. l~t _user w/200% wri!c SANGllE de CRISTO MTS. · .~ uy . .,.....,, · • ""' .! NR CHANNEL ENT. ott. Call Builder 1)46;4414. WILL WHOLESALE AT Bkr. !J6S.8182 847 EMERALD BAY 6 BR 4 TAX TIME BUY 132 000 FREE & CLE VERY · l s nJ h ho l Bd•m•., 2 •-i•-of ranoh 3 BR. 2 BA . condo. Duplex , BA, + sauna, new · A ll priva e pa s me. ut1 ''° model Near pool Assum CWlt tum., ma gn I f I e en t Prepaid interest dov.:n. 7 HouHs Furnished 300 1 FOR LOCAL 1 REAL 71/c V1\ loan. $49,l;i(). 3 BR, counlry· charn1. Oak Ors., ·1 · · · view, huge deck, lg boat Unit&-NEW. l!il User. East l __ ,;..;..c..;..:....cc:.c.:.:......:::; ESTATE EQUITY OR office & faniily rm. OO!H3818 beam cell's., brick tile & able 7 ,~% loan. $27·~· dock, $325,CO'.l. Art Shapiro CM. 833·9182 64&-44l4. General i\!ORTGAGF:S. O \V NE R. El Toro hand car"ed "'Ood of a Capri Realty 644·7525. Co 645-3!20 • -------- 6-15-1800: C\'e. 675·1047. quality that Is rare today! Lido Isle ' 6 UNITS In lovely resldental $110 _ Ulll Pd. Bach \\'/ .I~ ... "" * LANDMARK * OJ'EN SAT, SUN 10 to 4, Ckean vlPw: c harm Ing PALERMO area on Balboa's Peninliula garugc & pool. Coi"Ona dcl 2-1122 Dylan country kitchen & te1Tacc. LIDO I Pl. $1200 per n10 inc. 111ar. 1 & 2-sty,. corumerc.....bJ.ru::. Sl.39 500 $138 000 O\\• 548-9695 in Tiie Cannery Vil!agc area. :t-BR;---2-----bas;-'f~V?\ or · - -BAY.ERONT 4 BR, 1am rm, IQper clean! · · ~ 165 · Utll Pd. Oia.rinlng .I -3508 Sur!view Lane (HVuHills) GdM SI7S,OOO. Conventm 900 · nal;=8: .. ~t. view A 0C1 d~!-NFR~NT Pier & sUp: 4 BR .. 2 ba.: $76,900 OBURP!f:' in CosVta 1l\lesa, 2-2 18Br \Voocl '1 Cove. Le.guna. Jot. $35. , ~~-~--sec u t:u oceanuvnt estate just reducrd to $249,500. BROKER ll3-07IO · ,..,,,sume A oan. Low S a - l + Den. F'rptC'. Huntington Beach on the very tip of historic do'>'-'11. Days 831-2600. Eves Garage. 1 blk ocean Balboa ----Dana Point. 3 B d r n1 . 557-1487 Pcnln. Spanish hon1e on 3 lots, BLUFFS CONDO SHARP 2 sep. houses on $l.i0 • Util Pd. 3 Br. Channel- directly over the crashing 3 BR, U·pl11.n, trplc, $53,700. 1 lot . E/side. $460 gross. fron1. Frplc. gar. deck. N.B. •urf. ~Ilnutes to the new BEST BUY LIDO Owner. 644-4983. 138,500. Owner. 64Z-658.l NU-VIEW RENTALS Marina. $275,<m 4 Br 3 Ba + Bay View. 88' S Cl 673--4030 or 4"' "~'" MON, BAY TERR. to heh. 425 Via Lido Nord. an emente DANA POINT NEW FOUR ;N-.1_, &14-1766 ~74,950 (Sat 1-5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN 1411 Keeel (HVuHills) CdM 644-1766 $99.500 JSat & Sun 1-5) 24771 Winterwood (Lake For est) E l Toro 644-1766 S59,950 (Sun 1-5) 5 BR. LIDO REALTY 117: I 'J I ,.1. ' IL *673-7300* SACRIFICE Horses or Apts? 24582 Overlake Dr. (Lake Forest) El Toro Small but livable 2 Br house "'ith horse corral on large R-4 Jot. Can hold 12 units. Great lnl'estment. Only $36,900. Call Realtor, 645-6646. VA._CANT · Near Central Plrk. Family size Jiving room with brick !ireplal'e. Step-saver kitchen corner lot for privacy. Move·in <.'On: dition! ! $42,500. Call -fld , . , UNITS. VIEW -$73,500. roTTAGE $80. kids, pets :> nns. & a den In one Sl.32,500. 675-7414 Bkr. HOME SWEET HOME WEBB REALTY 831-2170 ol!IO gAr unit Balboa $Uo' of the Laguna arca'i best BY O\vner. 3 hr 2 ha lg 2 BR .. 2 be.., open beam cell· Mountain 0 urt IBR llOUSE 1-IB, $125'. 644-1766 $78.500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) O Reorronge lttters of the fou r xrombled words be· low to form foor si111ple word s. SE TP EL I I 11 I I K EL N A G J. l 1 j I know •-piychiatrist who's -sick. His business has been bsd lately~ He is suffering I L E y W O L I fro~ the depression ,.~f his t----.1 'c-TJ ~,....,..1 -,..1-"J ,~ O Com~lete the cfn1tkle quoted ~~. -•· -•· -•· -•· _. by fltUno in the mlulno word: yov develop from ttep No, 3 below. FttNT NUMgfll£0 LETTERS IN THESE sotJ.-..RES . The Real Estate Fair 536.2551 839-6133 VETS BY BUY NOW Rent receipts are '4'0l'thless. 3 & 4 Br's, 2 & 3 Ba's. Best areas. No down. Hurry for lo,vest interest. I' 962-4471 ( :::: ) S..-11 OJ -Reht TH Yours \o'acant Exec home 1,. just a hop lo the beach! Lols of glass and thick, thick car- pet! l\fove in now and rent lll escrow closes. Small down, assume VA loan or owner wiU help you fi.nanee. Reduced to $4.2,500. Bkr. !62·551.1. . $19,750 WALK TO'BEACl:I! Buy1 Utlll one story, one bed-rom Surf1dde Condo. SS:OTT REAL TY 53i-7SJS ne~~hborhoods. Open Ocam lam rm, 45' k>t, m:soo. lng1, \\'/W flaptone lrpl.. R I ' • 2BR· $1.65 Agt. Jo~ec. 979-8430 ce1I s., lge. yard. great fir. 6n-7379 beaut. used brick patio & esor 174 Balboa Island plnn tor a fan1lly. Ocean -·-· • BBQ \ lsod view. \\lalk to shopping & LIDO Oppor. 3 Br, 3 Ba, ; n cc scaplng, LAKE ARROWHEAD S Quiet neighborhood . 4 BR all restaunmt11. $120,000 OR, .S79.500. Open /S. TREASURE REALTY Great for year round living , av early J an. '' ,MQNARCH BAY 133 Via Wazlers, 640-8146. 493-2141 492•3145 Eves. & close to the village. 3 blk to bt\y. Lrg BR'1. A unique 4 bdrm. + den 3 BR. 2 ha, 40' gt to &I. S • yr o1d Bavarian style 3 level S TUDENTS \YELCOME. + fan1ily m1. home of many Lg. uv rm, patio & boat , an Ju1n Cap11trano home with open beam cell· 213-289-836G __ e_v_es_. ____ 1 textures .. Built al'OWld a yd. $89,500. Eves. ~2332. 4 BR 21£ ba Vlcwpol 't lngs thru-out, 3 br 2 ba+ Arin~BR. house; ftplc., pool. nus warm con-M" I y· . • 711 • n e completely finished base-patio;'\} blk. to bay. Avail. temporary built by an 111 on 1e10 bome, ocean view. FDR, ment for playrm 0 r row 10 June 15th. $250 Mo. hit t i hi ' ho by owner. $69,500. Open 1-5, workshop. Lndry f a c . Agent 673-(;900 Arc cc or "ov..n me, BY owner, 3 BR, 2 bu,' Sat/SUn. 4 93-2 3 28 or ~'K!500 ,.,~ 451 •~ ft hn.s an ocean view In this San Juan model. $41,000 499-3525 ..,.,, . "u' -._... a er Balboa Peninsula pn ... ·~le oceanfront com-25541 El Picador, 837-51114, S 6 pm or anytime weekends. mun1ty. $158,500. Newport Beach-ant• Ana Real Estate CHARMING View home. 3 Paint Brush Specials Exchange 182 Br, 2 ba, acro111 street from BLUFFS BEAUTY 2 BED 2 BATil $:11,500 • bay. Nr Ya cl\t club. $400. End unit, 3 BR. 2'i &a. bonus 615 So. Euclid, Sanl/I Ana TRADE Equity In 1tuxurlou! yr])'. 6T::i-1»1. room + pantry, upgfaded. 2 BED 1 BATll $23,9!1J ~ In Palm Spr1ngl!I on BAY vlC'w, 5 BR.., 3 batbi;, L..:~:.....J~ Near reneeUon pond. 2032 530 So. Gunther, Santa Ana Milllona~ ruountaln for lrplc .. dishwasher 1105 N.C.00.Tttwy..,loguno Vlstll Cajon. ~·~·-64~~ 3 BED tn BATif $24,000 ~ S8l~[94 ~'Sr or Yearly. S36--1068 494-1177 VIEW-VIEW·VIEW 625 so: Wood, Snnt• AM a t. 1 p•n Corona dtl Mir VI 3 SEO 1~ DATii $243'.lO TRADE Nev.,,ort Beach WHITE WATER Harbor ew, new. l.-1onttll0 2638 West Bushard ' Prop. for OUl-Of·town prop. 4 Br, fem rm, pnme v1ew, santa Ana • Bkr. TI.(/673'·XISB, eve 1 2 BR, completely n!rlec & , ... view1 are yours forever Joe. $77,900. CU Slmpeon 3 BED 2 BATH $+2S 000 fi75..-M81 tum, Incl wu11htt, dryer, from thl1 unusually fine B!Oku.~2-7500. 25011.JnKan Lane, San~ Ana Ihlen!, dllhc1, frplc, lJi.n. custom home. Al m"'t 3.000 VIEW-VIEW-VIEW 4 BED 2 BATH. $211:SOO ""-'arii¥.Eb.1in!' lllMY 1q. ft., loaded wUh quality JJl.l"bor View, new Montego 14.10 West ClrndC'n, Santa Ana I '"----•-• If 9 I ~"'!_',"'t_•_'_n: _ _!l._644-_. __ • __ 1 extraa. from lta tnuna. 4 Br, fim rm, prime vtew, 3 BED 2 BATH $29,fXX> r~ m. bdrm11. to lunken wet bAt. toe. m,900. Cill Slmp«>n, 19'l5 So. Diamond, Santa AMI ~;;;;;;;~~~ $ll5.,000 Broker. $52-7500. 4 BED 1% BATll $31',500 11 3 Br, ctpll, drpt, W &r 0. PRETTYMONTEOO-II~ No. Euonda. S.nla An• BIBlntss R" S. l;r. 2 car 1ar. Older .,_·I .H -I , 3 BED/DEN 2 BATil $33,500 I 200 cpl prof. 64>-l"IM. · .,. ~"-""" ~~~ n:c:. co0m.2ne~e~ 5~ WOfi.JJlU s""'' Ana -21'~ r·i~ tt. ____ , l 1doille (!\,:, •O;j'.jl:. !iiONS REAL ESTATI ~1149. A 1 ~~· Ttrms BPl.J.A!RL DTNERER& "'~o°"'LO;;;.R..;.FU""-L-co_n_tem""p'--3 -111"-.1 ·a:' lnlnrmrlfil" and IOC"ntlon 1190 Gl~nM)'nl St. Ol.lPtF.'X nt ~an, S62,$00 · den, 3 bft, blln1, $(75, oi l "'-" l!11> !.: 'I.\ bome•. 49f-9.173 549-0318 Miles LanOn n eaJtor To jOinL . \rt.n turo No. CAl. W I n t er. 71 4/Gr.,....923, BY owner: 2BR s. fAiWia 673-856.1 ~. cnbi.na-Don 675-5016. _su-__ 71~1111_. ___ ~-'-' i) u~~R~~s~N~~~~ UTTERS / ( \1 I j J J ~~1.:.ict . KASA61AN _s_c_R"", A~M~·~LETS __ A_N_s.,.w:-E_R_s_1_N_C.:_LA=-:.:S.:..:.S.:..:.IF.:_IC.:_A_T.:..:.l..:.O.:_N_:_ao.:_o_. R .. 1 Est1.11 "2.- horn•, b(g lot, privacy. 11"• • broezd •..•... a ~ Walker 0 Lee The W1••l drnw m the Wesl A~y d.,, .. the BFST DA.Y to W/W view, bllc to beaCh lb!m• wtlh ~l'L'!t, uae DalJy V •.. a Dally PUot ctMiU1ed nin an ad! Don't delay. , $55.<XXI no broken 499--3Ei(Xi ,Pttot CIU11llk-d. Mi-6678. · •••L ,,,._,. Ad. """'18. call todi.y lfi.r.6'18. • ~ --.. • .. -• . . lliOUMil'i;;;;iij;;;f-:liilOiM:~;;;'ll.J:':;;"~-.;..-;;:r.:::::::-n::;:;::-~-.;;<"'il:i::::-::::-Oh:i:::::--~;;;;7:lr.::7::-:o;::Y.:-:'.::~-:;;;cin;::o:::::::;;;:;:;:::~-:;inr:O.:O::OE:::::-~~~Fr~~~·1~,;J•~~~·~~~4t'~l9~7;4c--~~11l"A'.::;-TI:;D~Af~LY.'._..'.:P~fl~OT~3J l:,r7o_u_ .. _•_F;..u;;;r;.;n:;;l•;;;h;.~d:.__;3:;00:: House; Onlurn. !OS H ... ,., Unfurn. 305 Hou1H Unfurn. 305 :.::::.U:;M~•-U::.:.:nf:..:u:.:.'":.:;·:..__::30:;;1D::.:.up~l;.ax::;•::•:..U::.:.:n:..:•:.:.r:.:;n·:.._.::3:;:SO Apts. Furn. 360 ePt· Unfurn. Apt: n urn. ~ Newport h1teh G1n1ral C1pl1tr1no Beach trYlno S•n Clemfntt S..1boll Island !'fu~tin9ton Bttch Co1t1 Mesa ~~ IS~ lo~:!'. 3 ~2~ ALA ,l!NTALS 2 BR, 2 !!A. •plit 1 ... 1 oouoe. 1'1EW _HOMES 2 ~ORM, l!~O. «~'" "'""l.X $2J1H'ra.r Row11U llll.~tov., --$35 WEEKLY Costa Me11 Ame thy a L, 2U--799-485G wt W04Lllt IHltMCf .1 + frplc:, wuhbr/drytt dswhr. painted, ocean. vltw. $1-'ii>, I'll~. ci:pt!t__ .., drape11. ExKutiv. Su~tl IO"•uer) , ., Nr OOaeh, $265. mo. 493--1610 2 BR, dto. 2 bn ........ $42:5 \\11ucr •pr!. 14G MarlpoM, Rcdecoiated. Plf'nty pa.rk· 127 Y9rktown B~. * $100 OFF * 1st MONTH'S RENT or 499-2793. 3 BR, 2 btUlus •••••••• St::IS 89-l-4284 !ng:-61)-9666 Ol'"Gf!°.;-4,S.U. b ---,;, .... .,. Hou,.1 Unlurn. 30• fi fiit HOUSIS 3 lllt rnn1 rnl 2 oo s1va ~ttt'h Blvd, at YorKtO\\'n ;1 (.orona del Mar • , • 1 · •••• '"" OCEAN view, 3 BR, 2 bus., Coron• del Mir · 536-0411 W J~ .vis, -48Jl.,fiunrin,2~oo ... $475 Exclusive ncighborhood,1----------Gtnerel .. _.._._.._._.,_ ... _..,Lou,ts. cpzy, 2 Bit home: benin HEARL Y NEW UX>. LA?ase ct1l l 6.~3."',00 SPAC newer 3 br.1 ba, ~·v. STUDIOS &, 1 BR's. llou1H*Apt1. • * 145·0111 * .. 4li'N.ttthCOITAllUA $150 • A Stenl! 2 er. unfum hse, 11!11gle~ ok, or bl'ing fnmlly, $175 • 2 Br. hOU!I(), J!:llr &. fni.:d yard. Child &. pct. $225 • Spic & S1N.u1 4 B i', 2 lio., 2 1.:111· gar, yard. t-lurcy. $250 • Real Sht1rp lrg 3 Br. hse, gre11..t fol' big lt~n1ily. $270 • Im1n14.c, & Beflul home 3 Br. B1·ing the litllc [IC'Ople & pct11. $285 ·Nice 3 Br. stutllo. 2 no. Child, \Valk 10 be11ch. Yrly. $375 • Brand New 3 Br. Wl· fum dplx. nr be11t·h. Studf'nl -Or singles ok. Yrly. WB 1-lAVE MANY, t.1ANY MORI-'.:!! \;ANDLORDS FREE ~ • LEASE l.ak~nl bon1e in p1'<!ijtig<' area ot • Lake fol'Cst. !'1 bedroo1n11, 3 baths. $650.00 month. Call Cohi:ell 616-0,ja;) NIWl'OIT' U.Y,C.M. 442~W:i ~11·1 .. brtek trp\., uUI. ill· 2 BR. 11,i tmths •••••• S2M South Laguna --porch. \V11lk j))()p, 516 Iris. : :;~~~t!:ic,:1 COOi. s:ao 6acb NB..&JlB. clu<l~. S275 yearly. '.:! BR, J. buth ••• ·; ....... $300 _ ~-S300/n10. Uc. 64~ utU pd·llllrigl.es 1100! IRV!NE Tm:. S ~· vucant. 3 BR, funl t'Tll, -2.t lm •• ':'l.?l 2 BR, 'den, 2 b:t.. home. All 3 Br + dcu, 2 bo, bltruri, : i~~~\du?i'u ~;~('~Uli<'l' NEA'f l Br. Cttr 11.pt, $14~. _ S4S;;i -A1o. 641·1395/f!.M...3250 3. BJ!, 2 bu.OU! ······~· $390 bll-lns, oce-11 n vie \V, frplt» open beam cell, e Fl'i·e llnc.ru; i{fD. 11tv/ro!r w/goruge. 2 BDR?\-1 + dc11, oompJ. ~ ~~· :~U: ~~ ·2·~ ... ~: S375/n10 49'J.-.1482 crpt/drps. $425. 613-4750. e T.V. ,t: nit1Jd f4erv. avail l/010, ,brand nu S165 no~v 1-c1uodele<J, li~t'pl11.ce, deck. ' · •• Univtrsity P ark fORuase Lovely 3 BR, • Htu··Jl.Qutl dres1llng-rm 4 ba, Lagunl\, SSOO. mo. Avail now. 673-2 1~ BR Duplex r'rpl c1111 e -Phone 11ervk-e VACANT 2 Br. $145. Cl~e 7245 or 673-MOl SPt\ClOl/$ 3 Br 3 bn twnhi;e drp' 8 644-1188 ~ ' e J Mile to 0<.~•n to so. est l>laui.·Gttr. -. • . . _,.. t-;------..c--~----1 GOOD tU"e1t. 2 Br, 2 Bo. $165 NE\Y 3 Br, 2 Ba, delyxe. "'{fun1 nn. 2000 ~ rt. Avi!-11 Costa Mesi Lagun1 Beien Bltrui CID !" ·d / , Everything you ""'ant, No mid January. Sl7;i. mo lse.1 _________ _ I or 2 B cifr o oms. Be~utiful landscaped grounds. GASP AID. CASA GRANADA Apts. 400 Mtrrimac W•y. Costa Mua C11/ 979-191l 365 ' . ' ,.1,: w gat. lease Call 673-4691 552-9299 VIC 0 I '-' -I 3-65 A U-1 PRIVATE t Br. SZ50 CdP.1. . · · 2 Bt. bllinis. patio, drapc-d. T RA BEACn Ae!· Un urn. I ~ n. um. utU pd .• huge LR w/fpl. 483 MOllNING CANYON, 2 "SINCE 1946" Houses Furn. or crpt, l\dults, no 1nnglc11. l·B<lr1n .. ruru. Franklin n1)J ., -------1 GORGEOUS 2 Br. 2 Ha. BR 2 baii, frplc, gar. 11vt. liit \Vestcrn Bi1nk Bldg. Unfurn. 310 Children or pets. $180. n deck with oc-eu.n vlev•! Lots Costa -M t••C :;::o':::'.:•..:.:M;;•:::•.:•-----I $325 yr I y. 2 blki patios, $J75 mo. 6'i'3-7tl99 Univ~rslty Pflrk, t'lvirie 36:l Ogle. 642-1298. or Oldi," I.oguna char1n. bcaeh·Lnguna. Costa Mesa D•y• 552··7000 ~~s Gtneral 2 RR Tri·plcx apl w/h·pl<:, Palh\\'flY lends to l>Cuch. I OEl.UXf': 2 BR. 2 ·sA. New COUNTR.~ 4 Br, 2 & $22S ·-~ Adult11 only. Newport J.fghts $22:; niu., all utllities pni41. ci·1;fg, dt•ps. Laundry facil. 2 car. tncd tor child/pet ,PESIRABLE ----~ , a1'f:ll'. $195. n10 Eves ~tJSSION REALTY <$1.o?:~t 2 ca.i· gar. $250. Im.med . LOVELY 3 Bl', 2 Ba $275. • HOME 2 Bit., J buth ........ $225 3,IBR., -2 00, :· unI. lneiv13'2~rp, 5-18-4927, Ottys 645-3.115 OCEANl<"'RONT APT • To.bit' VO.:CUJ)lll\CY~ 646-4757 frplc oll uppl's 2 car 2 B 1 2 !lit 2 b d / $275 rupcs, ( l't.VI'. )'r Y· a. East Bluff SUN0ECK 3 Bl-2 & $300 r, 2 ia, cpl'd, drps, forcf'd , a, en, a c ·· \\'ntorfront 2 BR, t bn. yeai·· 1 B~. Crpts. drps, range, Rock South L.ne-una. 2 ;:.:;c_.;:;_;:.;.; ______ I CdM-aJI nppl'• garage 11lr heat, Garb-disp, bll-ht!i, 3 BR., 2 baths ·· $385/425/4.50 Jy. Unr. s;JOO. refrig, eJ1eloscd ga.a'!lge. . BR. 2 BA· Yei1rly rental • DELUXE e ELEGANT , &" ~? 3, Ba frplc, pntio, garage, '''l1lcr 4 BR, 2~1! h(tths · ··• $42:l/450 1 BR. 1 ba. Yrli·. Unl. Caii-$155/nio.1644.-0030. only. $GOO n1on1hly. Ref's. -• ~ fu1~ Ad It I CALL 552 7500 1=2"'! 121"1 681 "~"" 3 BR, 2 BA apt for lcai;e. $425 trplc, appl's, gal'. Irv. RA'l'E ~t~~~NA~L~ts. "' nery UI'Ca. $l85. , '\ Huntington Beach 'J;r-o..i or " -.J>J\rJ lrtl'ld spnc. 1naster suite, din EXECUTIVE 5 & FR 3 ha AC('l'oss from Country Club VISION 2 BR., 2 ba. fu111, \\'inter EFFIC. apts fron1 SOO ~l'k PINECREEK rn1 .~dbl ~·u·age. Auto door S500 3 car, tennis, appl's 275 Mesa Dr. * Ph. 548-6700 $300. $115-2 BR:"_Bltns, crpts, drps, or $170 inu. ~Old, nuurl, LIVES UP Of>t'llCl' avail. Pool & ft,ecrea· _ st>e frplc, patio, cArport -~~ lnun· µ4~;gA'~liy, Vtllagc Inn TO ITS NAME lion Rl'fil. MORE P.10RE: ?i10RE Cnll KIDS OJ{ • red h "i 11 dry facil. Couple & 1 intnnt ~ ~.,.... e $297 e ' U!I 3 Bdrm, 2 ha, freshly pntd. ok. No pets. 842·46&1 aft 5:30 OCEANFRON,'r l 3;fld 2 BR Ov~!l' 5tl0 tnli ll'('CS 86;-") An1ii;os \V<iYr NB ALA Rentals 642 .. 8313 New cpts & drapes, stove pnl. fl'plc. deck, r\r, \1·1ntC'r only unrl \II st1-c1:1rns 11·11h 1\111n1n:ed by &11,11.,re11fr&ig.PlaNeecna~ •. '"'rchnoo_!_s_; RUEALTY ftE~\LTORS 3B-R-. -2-llas., Ult-in~. c·pL 4.94.-5792 /I' ,1,aierfalls t·rcutt• n I \\"JLLIA,\I \\'ALT~:RS CO. ' T~ D. ~<XiE~ yard, frulL ll~>cs. s275'. ruv. Park Center, lrvine drps, 2 Blks to Bench, Aft 1''1JRN sturlio. e Io s P -in' rL·liLxing s~lling !ur Huntington Beach 2407 Venier \Vay 557-3850. 4 BR, 2 BA Spanish style Condominiums 6· 536-8614 · ndults, uo JX-'l s. y r I y. you1d· spnc1ous 11e11' l· 1.Jl', 11 1 '··;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ C.Osta ~lesa, Calif. l''OR laase 3 Bit., 1* Ba, home. 1''rplc, 1ainily rooni. Unfurn. ~20 Newport Shores Sl.10/lnc. ulil. 494-74J3 2·l.oc roon1 apa1·trut"nt. !)n1:1 ( • You arc tl1e Winner of lge yard, xlnt location. Top Irvine location. lmn1ed. -NEWS 1' l I S d.--pets ok. 1''t'Otll SliO. furnihu·c ON BEACH' 2 rickets to the c,,.,1d1_11 0 , •. p .. J'. $"°". per occuiia""Y· B<"'''" •1,, g Costa Mesa 3 BDR!itS., 2 ba. Patio. \Valk Pool ~it v1~~~· 1~!,.!?i,,~ip,,1. ,t:1\';tilal.J!~. Offk·r 0~11 !l :l~l • SPOR'J'S & "' '" ... '1" " u " -"'----'-'-'------1 to beach. $300 Yearly. " • · .~·''" ., c to li:OO. 2:100 fn1rvic11• ltd., f'ElC E T n10. Avail no1v. F'or appt. crpt'g tht'U-Oul, cu st o n1 2 Sty 3 BR Co11do. I '·· Pm11erty House 642-.'{Sji _fl._l'<'ll. $l_:!:i/n10._~oo __ Cost,, :\lesH . Phone: .;~:>.::'3'JU. ~ R A IONAt. i.:all . draperies. Tennis courts & ~ BEACON RENTALS VElilCLE SHOW CJS REAL ESTATE pool. $395 pe r n\o. Min. 1 BA. Pool p1ivl. Encl dble Apts. Furn. 360 1 , .. ~ ,.. Be 1 I"' 9491 Park·Li'ke at the 548-1168 year lei1se. ~lust have-gar. NI'. South Cst Plaza. -.... <t>un... at· 1 ',....._, · · - ANAHEIP.1 'eo""',-y_,bo-m'""•.""'F.';rp""'tc-, ~bl~ti-ns-.1 r cf er enc es . Ho 1-552-7712. Balboa Island N Surroundjngs CONVENTION CENTER brand nu crpls tbru-out, 4 ly, 7141979-1633; Ron '714 NE\V 2 Br. Condo, encl dbl -. ewport Beach DELUXE l & 2 Blt. Apts. Jru1uary 4-13 Br, 28a, .,~ per mo 1.n"I., ,,c'=>;-=8680~~=-~-~= gar. Nr. pool. No of South 1 BR Apt ,9:va1l for 6 mos 135 k & 1 BR Also furn Bachelor. P lc1111e call 612-5678, ext 33.'{ .,..,..., ... 1: Coast Plaza 552_7712 or yr\y. 2 blk to bay. per \\' · · up. • Jlvt Patio.;; * Htd Pool 2 Bil Unfurn. f'~,._ $245 Cove1·cd Parking. Ly g e I leated Pool. Salinas and !~creation Roon1 HUNTINGTON PACIFIC to ctai1u your tickl"ls. g,.,_•ard53ne1 1 9" 1162-6644, e v es 2 B1~.~ND01 •• • Froni $220. · s T UDENTS .\VELC0l\1E, 2 Bi· & bflch's. Color T'\1, Nr. Shop'g * Adul!s only. 711 OCEAN A\'e., 1-I.B. CORON~ <!f:J _:r..tar _ Lovely 1No1·lh Counl:y toll free -..... .,). ino. se call 213-~ eves. maii:I serv, pool. TI1E (7.141 536-1487 ifpacious three bedroom, two number Is 540-1220.l e 3 BR_ $225 :r..to fVacant 2 BR condo .••• $265. ~lo.Ilse El Toro J\1ESA, 415 N. Ne,1·port Martinique Apts. ore. opt"n 10 ani-6pni Daily Mthroon1. Spotlt>ss -Soulh , ---*--*--*----n1ove inJ, Gar., lge fncd 3 BR I-Ionic ''• $285. Mo/l sc DELUXE 2 Bedrooin 2 &th, Blvd .. NB. 6-IG-96S1. 1777 Santa Ana i\ve., Cl\t \VILLIA~I \VALTERS CO. of High,vay, $<l2S. , yd., pa Lio, BBQ, •recs. .1 BR hon1c , , , • $300. r.101lsc BftAND new. lgc 2 sty, 2 216 Crystal yr!y $'.l25 1110. ONE tiik to beach; llachc!orl!'~lg~,1~, ~A~p':t :''!:"'._· -;;;;;-~l~i·l~S.~5;:.J":!' 1 ii:::ii:::ii=:::::::::::;:::::;::i Newport • New t 1, re e Balboa Penlniula G'12·2'l2l \Ms<> 646-0066l. 4 BB. ho1ne .... $425. 1\lo/lsc BR Pool, uiz-, patio. $250. £3-7178 or <1 ) 728-274~ II '~ 2 BR S2,. U .1 . 1 ____ ;...;.....c;;.;.;.;;... __ -=~~Ci"''::-""7.7-"~-I R.ANCH REALTY :JJl-2()1.KJ 968-176.1, 5..'i7-J2.W ' Balboa Pen1'nsul1 ~.. ;JV. tl S< l!lC. s· V'll bedroom, h\·o bath 1ow n -VnCT1nt 2BR house, $145, Also \'rly. 673-{}731 lerra I age UNDER NEW • hou..~ -on 1hc! hay -large PENIN. P0int, 1.-~ blk 10 2BR JIB, $145, Sgls, Kids. L r Fountain Valley -STF.'PS io heh iiiod. 2 br S1n;lll 1\tlult Con1plcx Jn Lush MANAGEMENT private $1lip. $4;.p. ocenn or bay. New \V/W ""'IS A t r· 9~ 0•30 aguna Beach $35 WEEK & UP 11~1" all b11···,,, s10'1""::.' l''orcst Scttini!. l..nca!cd :1 ' I I Laguna Nt'W th rt' c crpt, fn..-shly 11ainted, 3 BR, ....!.:.-·' g · ee, •OHYt • . -. Short Term Rental e Sleeping Rooms ,. '"• ' OJ" ,....,, l\1' fro B •· h , r 2 Bit. Bit-ins. Ne\\' Y lei·· bedroo 1 2~1 Ba, frplc. No pets Yrly 2 BR, patio, OfK'tl beam eeil-$160 -u11.1 Pd. s.inall 1 B,r. 1'illllron 3 Br. 21;-"' ix.. condo,• Housekeeping Rooms Npt O'CS! $:fl5. S.12-2490. tn. -~"1 eac 1.& I'll')"~ orated. t:ncl gu.rages. Benu· nl. "''°' Nllh ,· • ., Adu!• o I Bl•n• d"< k st<·p· lo ~an 'BR f J I . f . ~· 1 Br, $lj;i. 2 Br, I , .. Ba $19:>. liful landscaping. Lrg pla'· glorious view -quiet Joca· rent $.195. mo. Owner. (2131 r{7;ii:: 5-18-~2 n y, no pets. Slli5 ".: Ne~· 3 "sr, 2'" &, S275. nio. e Ocean Vlc\v Apts -. ronl t up x, u1n/ 111 Gus ,'It \Vatel' Paid. urea. n child's drearn. Clo~ tton. $350. ggg.oo--"'~· ---,---·I ~""''-':::::"7:.....-,..-,.....-1 fenced yurt! privacy i,, FULLER REAL TY BALBOA INN 112bik:e;n: sN~~ av~'I-· 34(,v 114 r-: .. 20th s_i.._ c.;:1. 10 shoµping & schools. Bkr. 675-7225 $300 ~10. yrly, Steps_ to 3BR, crptcd, some drapes charm~ cany0n! " 516-0814 anytin1e 105 Main Street _ '· · : 518-01J7 01· 1i<16·4ll.IJ Children \Vcleonic. l--lJ-l;.-',"N"D'-'L-"O'-"R=D-S-1--1 ocean. 2 BR, 2 Bas, 2 car ~lost;:~ ~~5~~·de-sac st, $325 -2~~ BR. Massive stone • 675-8740 3 1:3r, 1 ha, frpl~, waterfr?~t, JUST like a house. This Call 8,1:.!-0.tlSO • gar. 54S..5m. trplc, natural cedar. Big Huntington Beach BACHELOR, 1 blk to bay ll.1t•r & . floa!. $.~25 yrly. 3600 3-bedrooni. 2-ha.th aµru·t· U no ans1ver &47·7331 \\'e Specialize In Newport B h 3 Br, 2 ba, unfum, 2 car yrd. . or ocean. Ulil incld, $9:>. Marcus, 67..-7931. n1cnt has prlvate patio, Beru!h e Corona del Mar e ays ortt gar., fncd yard. 1st &. last. NU-VIEW RENTALS LGE new 2 br studlO, mo. dishwasher, f ire p \ace, 3 BDRMS, 2 1i ba, newly & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· MUST · SZ75 mo. 646-622'1 . 6.,., .. ,.,.," or <"'32!8 greenbelts, . pool. nr frv.·y CALL 6T:>-4600 days. San Clemente private galHge. Ne\v drapes. redecorated, 1650 sq ft, all · sacriftce, health re· [ •.J""""OWV :rr & bch. 01ild ok. $229. 1· , -~ d k h 1 bltins, forced air ht, frplc, ~~vl:wfREE to You! Try quires n1ove. $395/1110. -I NICE 4 BR, 2 bath, Newly 3 BR 2 Ba Emerald Bay 827-S525 3 BR, 2 !Ja, "''inter, frplc, San Clem~nte Resident Hotel ~;:,,~<ia 1~!:°d~!~a~cO~\: closed gar. tncd yrcl, Clse NU-VIEW RENTALS BR. 3 BA, nr. beach, like ~~~= yd, gar., S28a.· area close to beach. Cpt, i 1 BR. New crpt, drps, re[lig, 2 houses from_ sa~nd, $250. $79.~ Per Month S250. Call 5-\0-2279 after 5 to bch, $290 mo, no pet~. ~ ,.,, or 494_32A., nt'w, 213-244-364Q. , >n<>>;-;--;:::-::c::--,cc;-l -'y"-1~,,,._,e,,n0;c·c.•!e"'"'-' 2494-""'7"669""-.--ii "'·ashr/dry, patio. p 0 0 1 . ~ June 28lh, 675-8531 Quiet -Secure p 111 963-7027 a ft 5pn1 .,,,,.,...,.,.. 'W "Wet'd It &. Reap" 1 3 BR., 1 1 ~ ha., nice yd. BEACH & · & ki Furn-util -\Valking distance -"-· -.,·ii~iiimmm-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The fas lest draw In the l"osl. F' N 1,.;o J\ L1911na Niguel $170. 548-1405. · p1r~ par· ng. . - -2 Bdrni $150, Avail for im· 'l' rom treasures to trash o pets. ..,; -1 lonth -t hr $180. ut1I. Adlts. 303 to everything nied occup, \Vlk to stores, ••• a Dally Pilot Cla11!1lfied • Turn them 'into cash Fortin Co. Rl1n;. &12-5000 ·PACESETTER Beauty, 3 BR Huntington Harbour E. Edge"'·ater. l-STI-2866. SAN CLEMENTE WeSliJl..All 21 drps, cpts. bltlns. cor. Ellis 2 bas., bll·lns, landscaped, 2 BR, 21~ ba~ 011 ,\'Aierfront. l BR. clean. _clo\l:nst~irs, HOTEL 2 BR, l BA Unfurn $195 & Dela11·are. Owner, fncd yd. ·liun-y, $2!10., Nci'' intelior. erpts .• drps, e~tlerly or retire'!.. 6~2~. • • ll4 DEL MAR, S.C. • 151 E. 21st St., CM 675-4869 ~1gr eves ,I!; NE\V Ocean Harbor }~orever 494--89&1 alt 3 bllins. frplc. adults, no pcls. ~\. Balhoa Blvd. 675-{).143. -Apt. Unfurn. 36S * 6.J6-8G66. * wkends, 842-2671 Vie1v. 4 or s BR 3 Ba LUX. Sea TetTace ~ardcn 1'195 Is('. 01vner. ~.W-4712 af· \\'!DE Sl"lection or apts.. e WALK TO BEACH }'am rm, FP, Cpts, dps: hon1e, 3BR Short or long ter 5 p.n1. ll'<'<'kly or n1onthly. Balboa Peninsula ··G~\BLt;s" & "SJ--:VrLLE" Brand in1 1 & 2 br, crpts, only ~J5 n10./rcn1 or sell. lt•nsc, ownrr 551-Wi.'{ Sand S.-Sea Really 675-8800 2 BH, 1 t,~ BA w/ g<ir.-a.dlls. di·(l6, bllns, gar~ 221 16th 379.500 6Ta-7414 Lido Isle Laguna Hills ON THE BA\' FOR LEASE OR SALE 'Crpts, tlrps, Ultns, fu t."CI yrd St. 536-0063 or 847-3957 =F~o-u-n-ta"i.:cn::::Valtey ---$160 w· t 1 b 926 E. BRAND NE\V Duplex, \V/\V "'!/ P!.1ti~. \\i~1· pd. 636-4.120 v WALK TO BEACH CHAR1ttlNG 3 Br, 3 tm, DR, 3 BDRMS , 2 b;tths, pool, Balboa~6~~9749 r, crpts, drps, bl!·ins, dish-2~-~9 .. '~ .. Otruigc Av ·• $1~~ BRAND Nell' Ti bur 0 n $490/nm. Open SIS. 133 'vusher/dryer, $28j. washers, garb. dis pls, f.rpl <'. 2619 E Santa Ana Av .. $lti:i 2 & 3 BR, Crpts Drps, Bttns. Dana Point For •n ad In Wom1n's World C11/ Miry Beth 642·5678, ox!. 3~0 TownhouS<', fully crpt'd, Via \\'aziers, 641).8146. 644-f>l.M Capistrano Beach Nicely appointed, very spac-NEW ADULT LIVING garage.~ 16th St. ~2165 ] drp'd, self clean O\'en & Mtsa Verde Laguna Niguel l BR trRiler. Much storage, ~l~ t~ t~!e.l.mXy'\n~rl~~~~· l .:~ 4 ~.R. wpa/~oft& Frpoopl~·. L;GiW~-39~~. Upper. Crpts. <lsh\\'hr. \\lasher & dryer. co patio s n yd in\ITlac 3 BR, 21t BA. Master 3 Br, 2 ba, ram, liv. ganie 2 BR, 2 bath Condo oil $2; 50 · ·k1 497 iisJ · 4 BR, 2 BA ....... s--125/mo bltns & rclrlg av!. Slarting drps, bltns, carports, nr Casually Perfect 9092 SIZES 8-18 r,., 11f ,....j..., 11f,.,,-r- Doll Fashions! BR Overlook• pool & 1 r _, r I rd · Id El Niguel golf rourse, ~'l75. · per"-· -3 BR, 2 BA ....... $365/mo $180 util pd. Adults, no pets. frwy &:. ehop'g.$140. No pets. "' . r n, nL"'• rp C, ga · lnc · .,. 12 RENT F"REE 393 H ilto 0 " "ll Call "0 3786 "'" ~°" t•lubhouse. $330/~10. Call $34.5. Furn $.185. 54!">-3182. 1110., incl Villa golf · IM . n10. ! am ,, 11'W""1... ~ or........u1w. 962-6666 "'kdays bcfr a' M ' . -v· . men1bership. call Liz , Corona de ar ' Call 642-2800 2 BDRM. DUPLEX l\'EW 2 BR & 3 BR Apts. pin. or 494-4196 eves & ission ie1o \vkdys. 544-4230, Eves & ELEGANTLY rurn apt, 2 2 BR, 11~ ~· balt-ony, enclsd Crpts, drps,_ bllns, Jge fenced $210 to $24-0. Adult & Fam "''knds. FOR lease 4 br, 2 ba, ram wknds 548-3512 BR. 2 bas. lge Liv. din. patio, $~ .monthly. 315 E. yd for children & pets. Pvt section, pets. Patio, fenced El Toro rm, crpt/drps, view. \\'ater Mission Viejo kitch areA, Superb vie"' of Bf!.y, Inquire at Apt C. Call gar. $170. 811 Paularino, yard, nr. beach. 846-3166. pd. Avail .no,v. SJ()() 1no. , . bay. Ideal_ for__~"<ec...cple, _6~1~ Q.r 548-771! __ _ C~ht. 540-8~: 3 Bl.KS to Ocean, 2 BR, REPUBLIC home, S -Br, '2 7;..0073. --- -3-sJt;-.2 b.'1!; ·au· cond ·Condo. -g;s50, -A.Vail-short-term. 3 BR! 2 ba;-balcony. Crpts, LRG 2 BR, 1~1-nt\. Newly -newiy---painted, di'ps;=-cpts_. ba. crpts, drpi::, frplc. $300 2 B 1,, ba C 10 Aliso Villa, Pool priv., 673-3268 drpS, block from bch. $290. 1'.'Ciec. \Valk 10 schls/ garage, No Singles, no pets. nlO inclds "'atcr. 497-2151 bltn~'. cO~·d Pat, ~'cl 7'~: 837--5360 NE\V 61ina Cove furnished mo., shops. No pets. $180. Jnq : 536-1711 Huntington Belch $250. 8?.0-5,S91. Newport Beach 1 Br. apt, up!'ltairs. Ylalk Call 673·2-198 2868 .LaSalle, Apt 1, Ct\1. ~.~R~G-2~B~R-.~,~,,~-Ba~.-S~l-ud~lo~.1 ...;.."-'-"'"-'C.C....;::.:;:.:;;.:_ __ ,N~--~~-----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,[ to nmrkct. S 3 0 0 Imo. OCEANFRONT HIDEA\VAY 549-3524 or 540-633$ encl gar. Couple, infant ok. VACAN1' 4 Bedroom, 2 ewport Beach Ntwpart't Ntwest 673-8936 Single co~y studio. 90 degree 2 BR, 1 ha sngl sty, garden $157.50/mo. A1so l Bl'. avail hlocks to beach. Exee 1ype ** NE\Y LARGE Spanish 2 BR, 2~, bal h condominium BACHELOR unit available ocean view. 1 adult yrly. unit, shag cpls, d rp s' Feb l, $125. 847-4440 hoidn•1· 1Ne1w carpe1t. F1i3rs! style 4 bedroom home slcp' to pool sauna now. Furn. $150. 67~72 or 987-1988 disll\vhr, fncd patiO', beanl 2 BR, I BA, bltins, garage, ~~r ~~n~~sI ~c:et~ i a tl~ located in hills above & tr~nis courts. $42sim~. 673-7245 or 673-9403' FRES~ PAINT cefl. trpl, gar. Ad~lts $1~. $145. Ask for Dale. possession. Bkr 962-5.::.u. Newport~ "Split level living J..eClai~'C Far n s v,._0 rt h OCEA.t~ 2 blks. 1 BR. incl I 2 Br, b~y view. Adults. No 2000 Elden, No. 0. 537-312J. 962-4471 3 BDRMS 1 ba & formal dining room wiUf 644-6200. (B20J -t:tUi::., $170. Adults, no pets, I pels. 'Yrly, 673-fil72 or-1 BR, carport, pvt patio. 2 BR, 1 BA. Blt·ins, cpto;. ·• ~~ ., bit-ins, fircplaet? & large beam 675-4174 987-1988. New crpt/drps. All elec. drps, 1 blk to beach $175 ~~~d:sh~ii-s. ca~~;, ~~~;~ c~lhedral Q!lings.dra Gold Costa Mesa 2 BR, "'·et bar-. patio: bltns, R~sp. adlls only. No mo. &15-3053, 5.)6-1336. Hig h, shopping. $Z75 Mo. ~ ag carpet. sllom pes. near beach. $275 J\Io/yrly chlld/pels or water beds. NEW Apts, waJk to beach, °"' ••11 A ft c' 6 & uge t'Ountry sty e step i>ave Realty Compeny $30 WE Ek & UP ~larshall Realty 675--4600 $135. S.IB-1322. 1, 2 & 3 BR avail. O'ro-w kitchen/ famil y r o o m . 642 8235 644-6200 , ,.:•;;;~~ke;;n::;d::s·,,_.,.,.-.-'"'°'-.-c-I P1ivatc tennis & sivint club. "" · • Studio & 1 BB. Apts. Corona del Mar 2 BDRM, ctpts, drps, bltns. 536-2579 1; $495 month. 644-5686 or ----e TV & Maid Service Avail. - - - - -~atio~ gas p~d. Laundry LRG 2BR, 2BA, crpta, drps, 1fVi!~~=h~1 4.:~·. S42-57J5. $80,000 CONDOS e Phone ServiCE> -Htd. Pool 1n1. Adults only, no pets. patio, encld gar, 00 pets, -====-====-I Live in lwcury. \Vith 3 BR., e Children & Pct Section --~~ "'~" 16th St. $170 n10. $l65_mo, ''" 1•,75: blllns, super oondition. $325. TENNIS BUFFS °r6 ~ ~~ I ~ _ lteut or be. Ask for Dale, 3 bu. + ocean vie\\'? 2376 Ne\\rport Blvd., C~"I b v . EXTRA LARGE 2 BR. 2 962-4471 Only lfteps 10 tennis rourt, Ne\\'port Beach. Rents (1'0m 548-9755 or 645-3967 Tl# .2 .&-unfurn. Ow, poo~. shag BA. Deluxe Poolside apt ni· s11,,imming pool trom NE\V $400 r-.tonth. 675-6050 (Ad good for $5 on rent) -ores crpt, gar, bbq, refng. All be h $l60 536-5882 4 Bit, 2 BA. Crpts, drps, 3 bcdroon1, (or 2 & den), SIIARP 1 sty Bluffs rondo. Furnishtd Bachelors i util pd. Children/sm. pets 1--"-'-· --·------1 gardner. Ctrild safe. Nr. formal dlmog' fireplace ·elf 3 BR 2 Ba Vacant I 8 , E • II TOWNHOUSE . \velron1e. sm.S230. 18SS Irvine Slater & E<hvards. $310 n10. ' ' s • ' · · r s xcept1ona Y 2 Br, rlreplace, pool, pr\•ate Placentia, Cl\l --------~ Call 008-WS6 ail 6 pm. t"lea.ning oven, beautilul can-$~5011!l0· ~le by owner. nice. 2110 Newport Blvd patios, rontinentat break-w--AL·K-/BIKE to , .. 01.k or j 2s?~; Condo. \Valnut Square: yon view/niw,t lights. Con-$54,99..l. \\ill take 2nd. C t .1..a--1 S 1 d ' V:ILLA-Pacitic,:_agl...sty pool-t>troollon -will -be t.·01npleted 833-8635 -OS a -1...-..sa ast. . pac ou~ groun s,riear. ---SIUJp.c;---pvt 2--BR -tri-plex-mo._ . -------.. side rondo, 2BR, 2BA, \\'/ by the L<>t or Jan. Located PROF. Decot·aied condo, nl' I BR S160 & $150 ALSO 2 si,iopp~:-;z !: fine beach. F'ur-gaJ'de~. quiet st. bltns, encl'. Call 642-2651 {rplc, pri palio, lrg dbl gar, high on the hills of llarbor Hoag, 3BR. 2BA, "'asher BR $195. New cpl, x!ra lge. ni~hed or unfurnLc;hed, from gnl". adlt11. $200 642-0247 or • B h "15 =0 1=• v· Hill $5"" .. $250. Corona dcl Mar, 67, 0~4 Laguna eac ~ , """"' """' eves. 1ew s. JIJ per n1011U1. & dryer, pool, frplc. elect AduHs, Ideal for Bachelors. Ml 2Gll .i-o.JU 2 BR Ilse nr bch, $250. mo. 644·4687. gRi opener, $350 per nio, 1993 Oturch, 548-!!£33 · · 2 Br, 1 tm & 3 br. 1~2 ba, SPACIOUS, oceM vie \v AvaU r~eb. 1st. $50. cleaning HARBOR View Homes. new 673-5700 LGE FULLY FURN 2 BR i:RG 2 BR t . 1 d bitn range, drps, crpt, pool, studio, 1 blk to beach frpl c, dep. Water & trash pd. Portofino 3 br, 4 ba + EXCITING BluUs 3 br, 21h bltns, pool, ·bm ceil,adlts ap • qwe~. sec u. · clubrni, carport. 2212 Col· dl'Ck, stove, ref rig· 536--0256. ... detached bonus rm. Ten-ba, nr tennis club. Lse $550/ finfant okJ no pets $180. ed, open beai:n ceil, patio. lege Ave. 646-0032. redecorated $215. 497-1136 Lo I 3 BR 21! I nls/pool prlvll. "500 n10. s 1 b 174 99-64'.-•,·20 Very nice. $235. Adults: only. o c EANFRONT bachelor. vey , Aculcc!lac, al ~ n10. ae Y owner , a. .,, 548-8638 or 64&-0977. NV.VLY DECORATED street, Ref/R&O, lg fnl'd Capri Re ty, 644-7525 \\'ill ta.kc 2nd. 833·8635. * SUNNY ' APTS -POOL 2 Br w/carport, $145. Wtr Kitchen unit. Private. $130. Keep a little girl bu.qy lot, dbl gar. $260. ask for NEW exec 4 BR, 3 BA \v/180 NEW 3 bR 3 BA din. rm. e Adults Poolside $150 up FRESHLY PAINTED 2 BR. pd. 2194 Placentia Ave, "E" n10. Yrly incld util. 494-5502 d1•c11~ing her 11%" teen doll. 1:)-d!e, 9624471 . degree vie\\', tennis & pool frp\c, dbl 'gar., ~pts, drps'. ~ Also Olildren's Seclions_· 1 BA. Crpts, d111s, bltns. Call bhvn 1 & 5 6Jli-4UO LOVELY 1 Bdrm. North end, S<1ve a sn"tall fortune, $600 ino. Eves & wknds, 1-1 E 22 rl St CM 642-3645 Corolido Apts. $210. 5'19-2288 ' 1 Cl'ff Dr crochet neiv, sniati fashions NE\V 3 BR, 2 bas, fJ·plc, 644-l?9l 1nany qua). extras. pool, ten· ' · n · 01• eves 557-8968. 2 BR, $160, crpts, drp.~. Q('('un v ew on 1 • of fingering yani. Pattern cpl & drps, bit-ins, be!ln1ed nis, $a.Una $450. 514-3049 J BR upper, furn. Htd pool. OIAR~!TNG 3 BR 2 ~!tins, Sgl stot-y, beam ceil-adlts onl,y, S210mo, 494-1S66 7362: pants, hotpants, ci1.y ceiling, clble gar. $3.'l0.1110., BLUFFS, view. pool. New NE~"PORT CREST CONDO. $155 + $50 9ecurity. Call new . • 111g, Selected pct ok, 2043 Lido Isle One perfeelly s i 111 p I e shorts, cape, potholder vei;i, 536-Ul:2l evcs/\\•knds lg. 3 BR., 2 1..~ ba., fam. 2 BR, 2 UA. Wet bar. frpl, 548-~. BA _apt. Convenient CdM \V11.llace 646-9213, 646-8882. ---------·/ dte 'tho t tinsel fa. • Onl 1~-th' · location. ~373 per nio. Rltr ' --o= r l •~ SS \"1 u or ncy tunic, dress, long dress, J BR, 1 % BA, bltns, dsh\l.·hr, 1 n1. Y •::> 111011 · ne:u· poo~. tennis. Drp~, ex-NICE IBR, duplex, Quiet. 644-mo NICE l BR apt. All UUls. l,o.N sq, .t. apar n1ent r'6 .. t tricks is just '\Vhat you'll shawl. crpts, drps, nr. J\larina ll.B. Dowd, Rltr. 644-0134 11·as. $425/mo. 552--017:i. Se p. by gar. Eniploycd adllS pd., priv patio, bit-in stove [ on Udo s lovely beach.; dote upon for hectic days Si-;VENTY·l1Tl'E CENTS High, shopping. S 2 9 0. BLUFFS TO\VNHOUSE,· 3 Br, 2 ~~ ba, dbl gar. over 30, no pets, 54~1021 2 ~R. 1 BA. carpets, drapes, & t'l'frig. $150 646-{)112. Frplc, elec. gar. opener. ,, ahead! Sew this bib-front .for each pattern -add 25 828-5671 or828-5200 Eleganl 4 Br, 21,.,, BA. ParkLidoai·ea.AduJLsonly, ADULT-large quiet 2 BR hreplace, pool. .s.ts-1517 Br, 3 Ba. ~lost a.ttra¢ve stePrinp-.lnted"'w.P ti 9 0 9 2 cents for each pattern for 3 BR su~-,·de Townhou••. pool, view, schls, $500. Call sa·.= n10 "'" """ pool bit Ins• super clean' $225/MO. 67'".r0562 1•~1 B.r d•lx marr eple apt. for lease on Bay. Call a em : Air Mail and Speclal Hun· •.., ""' to see, 71<H94-3973. '111 • • u-nr,,....,.,,. ' . ' ' 1 BR, REAR UPPER, u1r • ' • ' Bunster • Creely, Bk r; J\.tlsses' Sizes 8. 10, 12, 14, dllng; o11ierwise third·class 2 car gar., fplc , RIO, 0 \V, San Juan Capistrano $160. No pets. 646-6974 GARAGE. NO PETS.. non-smokers, no pets. Crp_t. ~. 16, 18. Size J.2 (bust 34) delivery will take throe 2Pools/2Cl ubhouses . * EXECQJ'IVE View 5 Br TlNY tBR·, w/ garage, 675-4952 drp. Ref. & dep _req. 9M -7e'-"=~=Bea-'h,_---I takes 2 yards 00.inch. fa~lc. weeks or more. Send to· 64~. H.V. hm. Fam rm, din rn1, NEW 3 BR, 2 BA Home Eastside, for quiet over 30 W. 17th St. CM ;;48-o358. Ntwport c SEVENTr·F1VE CEl'<i"'TS Alice Brooks, the DAILY 2 Bedrm, 1 bath, bltns, large tennis pool. $500. Q\vner. Close to Dana Point MBl'ina sgl gent only $90 646-2652 1 BDRM apt, fireplace. $175. $220 LOvely 3 br, 3 bn, NE\V DUPLEX 3 BR. 2 BA, f h "•lte1i> add 25 PILOT, 105; Needfecrnft lot·, dble gar.. $225. mo. MIJ.-0008 schools & shopping. Com· H ti t '.8 , h Avail~ble now. Immnc nr frwys, "'alk to w·nt r 1•~1mo Da Y' ·~i:ator i;;.ch peilern for Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Ask for Ott.le, 962-4471 3 BR, ram r1n, 2 BA. l1arhor a:nunily pool & rec urea. un ng on tac 673-7U;;i or 673-9403 shops & schl.s. No peli>. 9~is5: &:.t &. Sun, Air Mail and Special llnnd· St11.tion, New York, N.Y. vacAnl 2BR house $145. also View Homes. Ne \V Jl or I Children & pets O.K. Lease $155~$165 2 Br, Old Cd~f. $250 mo. Avail r\01\'. 5-10-6331! 6"5-0232 ling; olhl'.1'lvlsc lhird-class ~~~~r~N:.:::be.4.r~reM, 2BR C M, $145~ Kids, Sc.his. $400. 833-3..~~ $280. JXllC~~~Ury 21 BACJ-IELOR & J BR. P&.tios. f'~ully ~rpcted l "~ 2 BR. $1:.t.i TQ $165 LARGE ;\Bil, 2 BA .; pntio. :~~ryorw~~~r:~k~n~1~ NEEDLECRAFT '7'1! "pe'=t•-··~•~•'~·-F_ce~·~·----1 1!;~~· ,!~,~~~.'o~~ i1~~ 493-ll26 ft'J>lt"s. priv. gura.i;!f's. DI· Oo I ~II 67'".r67St fl~~fdSi.5 ;r~:~ pets, 1 Blk' to -ncca1i . $300 mo. 'i Crochet, knit, etc. F"'!•cc OCF..AN view, 2 BR aOOvc ,.. T h U f 335 vided bath & lnt.~ of eloi::f'l!t s • esa c 1 ren · · Yearlv. 20:l 42nd SI .. NB. Mnrlnn lifnrtin, the DAIL dir<.'Ct1ons, 50c. glll1l.g('. $160. nw. First & are.'l. $500. 6•l<h'il7:l own outt n urn.. n~·-hall. JXlOI f: pot,)\ tttl;ilcs. 3 BR 2t~ BATH 1 ,t: 2 BR. $13.1-$155. sto\·e, Upstairs. Vttl'nnt. ~767 PILOT, 4"2lPa.ttem OcJ!t., 111111ta1nt l\laerame Book. Laslmo. 53&-0J21 a BDRMS, Vu , pool. tennis sin1nn b11th!I. ,,,-e or y11ur---~~ rc.f, 1.:1-µt..-d1'PS, htd 1>00!. BR. 1 % btt j!k,w~.'v 81%11~1.p r 1 ~\~ Basic, fancy knot!, put-Irvine jacuzzi. Avail no\v, $600. Huntlngton-Btlth self. lT'.lll Kcclson l.n. rl ncaecoralf'rl. nr ;)a. Const Arlulls, no pets. 61~S'96..l. 'i!~~~!~F ldults oriiy, 1~ Ni\~lE. ADDRESS with term. $1.00. mo. 644-4174 Slli\RP 3 nr 2 st Y blk. \\I, or lk'flt!h, l blk N. P1nzu .,l Atllts, JIO . pt·tij. 2 -3 BR, bM, crpt/~ pets. 1728 ~fol'd Ln. $250/ • SIP. SlZE and STYLE lalll•nt CrUehet BoUk -•t. lJNIV. PK 4 BR. 21,i SUPER 4 SR, .2~~ ba, ram Townhouse. all applinnceit, of Sluterl. ~ llli pools, playl(rouncl. $150 up, J\to. ~-7533 nlJMllll&--,..-,-/-Loat•,!!'·11by-pictuttSI Pat· ~ co1rnt1r,2'~hol 1.We. ~tr rm, d' ~·-~b-~vJf901 _li£ _Jl!'.lOl kJ!ll.b~~ lO dOQ:a, lBR ~ft!-.i-1 .... _ lltXf 1 ~i.--~l!!ftge,Cp.'lctov~~ Otll fitHll40 _ • BAYFRO.N'I 2-::Br;::::2--.Ba-.wl.. ___:_, SEE MORE Q u 1c1:t: L.... l.00. w--w wa 11.·--111·-o.: m , .u.1• e-tCtln.111, ..,70, O'lll""'lioo no water bedil, $"'2'3 o.. , -Imm ap , a11u ll'l. no re rtg . ..,.., c ean. "' DUPLEX 1 BR Unrum IJ.-g pa.Uo. priv beach & pler. Fashions and choo!c one Complete lnttant Gut Book .&: balcony, 1nterco1n N-rt Shores 846--3410. pett11, Nice qulut place for l'ldcrly peN1011 only. No 1 t d r.s' sa51)/mo;--g'19--0)3J, &t.....SlO !>tlttern .-tree from our--more than 100 alfts -thruout, $390. 55Z..944t. -~,.--3 BR f: 1 1 ncl A nice wotkini; cple ~ children, no pets. Rcr reQ'd. garage, qucle •no ~ca • Sbring·SiJmmer Catalog. All $1.00. BEAUT. Princeton model 3 ~ dar:;gJ• ~p'1ee pe.;.J~-'ref, no gar, Sl35mo., dean S4&--7237 . or n10torcy el!, :W . AT the beach. 3 Br, $300 sfze~! Only SOC'.. ())mplete Aflban Boot ... Br, 2 Ba., Irr llv & dln 'rlltts~a!,~~S:it-~s. !~ '$225 347-40'74 £\!es & wknds' Security fee $65, Owner lives Sll1\RP J bedim I bath. NF..'\V 2BR1 2BA . crpts, dt"ps, yearly .. $225. wlnter. Call INSTANT SEWING BOOK $'LOO, area, BBQ & patio. Xlnt ts d \Yttlk t beach · . on premises. 536-1783. duplex. Private' ISJ'&!'?:e. clishwns~er, laund tac. no 642-3021' sew todf'.Y, weft!' tomorrow. ti Jltfy R.ag Bol'lb ··SOc. Univ. Prk loc. i:}45/mo. &nk~.Y PQOI, Great tof ~'!!" Ctpittrano RETIRED people, clean, E11st1ldc Costa ~tesa, s1";iO. pets.. $215. 54.5-7755 an l~m 2 BR, trplc, drp!J & Cl'pt, adull!I no pets. $?l5/n>O. 5M·i36o or 645'-S:'lOG t$ft S. 11. F' BOOie of 1·1 rNo Afghant. Av11.ll Feb l~t. 552-'lMS. children. 250 -62nd St, 644-NEW 3 BR Frplc, Shaa cpt quiet apts. at the bench. Ptor mo. h1clrl11 all utll. Ca.II 3 RMS , SS5 mo. Adult .. '" INSTANT ASt-JJC)N ~lit Book 1 ... 18 pattcn11. NEWS Bfi hnme in Turtle 7391 bit/ins, l\i ba. pool, gar., $95 mo.·, 546-5880 J-terltag0 Rcalton. O\'er 35, no pets. Jnq, at DOOi< -Hundred& ,o f 50c. Rock. Walk to schools, ten· San Clemente 2 pe.110$. $325. 4~7210 536-7056 ~ BR. l)Un!I, crpt!I. drpg,1,,_"'=0S_i•-.r-.k•-,-,,S_1 • ..,,.=:-=-=:olNR. nu· 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, 1\11 fa:;ihlon factll. $1. MUlewn Quilt 8oGi: s ... nl!1, pool & tm. $42.i. mo. Niwport-i.ach 1 BDRM. t block. lt-oin oce~n. nr. \V. 19th St ~hQp'g cnln. 2 BR. Atlulls no pets. BA\' bltn:oc S: 2 blks ltl bch. $275. 'lile'futnt dr&V< in the \Vest. SOc. &'J...271)!! 2 BR, runac & O\'Cn, t.:rpt~. _ . R.ed0l'9ratcd, 1p:il. St:lO. 1974 \Vtl11ace •£,"CM. $165/ ~fE:AOO\VS 1\P't'S, 387 \Y . llSfl. 3ro 35th St. &\.'i--9Ml __ •. .a Dolly Pilot OAPlned Qaflb1 for Na1's Uvtng -2 BR-Condo. Walnut Square. octnn v1~'. newly p!\inted. OCEANFRONi· Beaut \Vinter !J00..2508 ino. ("rill l!:d!ly, 642·81$.l Bay St., 0 1. 9'16--0073. z BEDROOAl, bltn.~. D\V Ad.·~ 1!i bj!auutulpnttcrna .. 50c. $22.i/montn. -$175. l~f) htarlposa, 896-4284 rental 2BR. --2BA. WI frple. SeD the old stufJ Buy lh~ new da~. r""l·ll.19 eveit. f{i\'i:! !01riethil'!K )'Ott want to nt'llr Ht"'R H06p. Adul~ Olli 642--~7 CLASS SElLS -f42-5678 $300 per nm. 646-3839 atuff. CLASS SELLS -642-..'biS sell! Chtssifled ad:!i do it $185 to S?al p(!r nlO. 6C-® -. -... -..._ ;( ' ' ·' • o>.ILV PILOT Friday, .1.1~"" 4. 1974 r: M i p 716 •L L~ "'I' u.•p Wanted, M" F 710 llO!p Wanted, it\l fl 710 Mtfp W1nlod, Apt • ..., llm.· Rooms <IOO ko Roftlal 440 -· :..;a;;;~""'ng..__.._ ___ 1,,., u .. · . J[S] • -·. S"m•·· .: •• 00,.1 LOCAL _,_J .' •·uJ'-AP'"'T'-'T ~---•er, COOK· TRAINEE GENERAL HELP ....,_. llMch ll1R liAchd<>t<U• iooltlng ow NEWPORT BEACH 1M1 ~ -· ~· m -~ru •• .. -··~ ~ -.,. ~· "~' -~ • ~ ~-t ·· dcllv·~ Car r. do & N -al 9 n callar by stutten1. Large truck. plder couple, experienced, S.,lary acc.~ to exp_,-'"'~ r"' I.IP • ... ,. P..oRK ..,_,. ""'l'ropk:al pe '·und ewport MEDICAL OF/ICE mc.''o1 ';;; ~k '"Ssn"·"o Reas. •·--. 534-IJW6 or 21 uu!ts, Hwu. BdL 816-3166 ter no students. ExP"'· qu red, " """""'rORT ·:re,;:~·~ ~ Ntar ltoag Jle<pltsl: 1100 aq. J"' Or, In Dover Sho;;:, 613-00<7'.'°'" ARTm' exptt. In ftlm prel'd., liut will o.ln. Apply Ttclt, Markollltg APAR'ft..ll!!U.. . or 615-229'7 (ua"..:..-i .... let-tt,. garkfrden.1,ypel ~!~: Iott Found (free . ..W ~ Newport Beach, on 121.16. 11•·"~· 110 .. "P •r.o·'"" anlmatton f1r art student l~ betwetn 2;:.> & 4:30 ~· UOO . "''""'" v'-1. ....... o Pl l'lfl· 41.a•ai'lll ex•m.. t he tnfor al w .. ..,. """"' "1\vi • -H•mburaer lfamlet, GIRLS WANTED: New Oft the bay . ....... nune •la., reception. bu1I· F' 0 tJ ND G e r m a o ~hel:'bouta ve plede . call ~rd; a~~ ~1032ean.up, Big ~Mt~ J~ IJ a r ~ Adams, CM. Ask Jor Mr mi.ISli~ -·~-Glnr ln •·-ROOMS~ wk up w/kU, nctaofc.,X·rayltdaricrm .. Shtpherd/Colllt mix q-. ~l&9Reward. riat,.,.,.,..~ d•wlpod • 1• Hagen. J!,,B.~.:::-7-., 1 . .,,_ury •Pt.ttlntmt Uvhll P> Wk up a.pts. Children private doc1or'• offtce; 2 8ro"A'll le bl&.ck w/whlte H I I ur ng ay. .. ~ "erlook.bi2 the water. En-&: pet section. 2316 Ne"'POl'l rt5t rooms. alr-cor'ld. Ideal cheat. \Yhlle soot lo eye. LOST-Owner offer~ $100. ouuc nn nt -AiSEMBLER t'OOKS • To ll'tJ4 for au!&-HAIR"""DRESSER needed. Joy $750,000 h41atth IPI. 7 Blvd CM. MS--91.,S or tor orthopedics. $165 Per ~iJacb 4 Talbert. ~a.rd for return of M\lte DEPENDABLE w om a 11 Ex~r. & reiponalbl1t v.'Oman, tu.!'lt n~er. Cmvc~ tlu ell nte.le. 267 E. 17th !~'ini'_m~ ... poolJI, 1 Ul'libttd ~. Ncalltco 1,emlale ctll ne_ut!!redl. "'ants cleaning, $3 pt'r hr. (.'Ommel'Clal e I e ct ro n I c lhlltbene'116t•.""Jl"'ackwl~ ~ DoX., St, Co@la '1eA, 548-1311 ~nn-. ....,....,., pus m ts of OCEANFRONT 1 r o o •n MUNO G H f~ 10 .-....i o t'On c av.•af.;;weanng co. o t-··•rc'· •~1982 not bl f '·'•• ' ER bl )e ·-"· In rv reen u 'CT ....... lar. l'l•ntln••t . Vic. r-wn A<U..,, '---• .,_... ' all~nl l!r or Wuu,. Ill 1205 anker Colla ~leill. llEl.ICOPT eye ...... , Pl.lit ~-_£\ •hltf· w/refrig & bath. Util pd. Ov.'ner k:lentlty by aerlal \ ~ .... JQ.) aft 6pm soldcrlna,:. ~2622 or U<1 ' MAINTENANCE, fleboltd, croquet. Jwuor l's Ye11.rly • $90. Npt Bch. number, d11o((I & k>catlon. Galaxy Dr., NB on 12!/'n. D·,lcat·, Cloanl;:g 5"8-26:m. COUPLE l:!xp'd to nmnage, N •-'d Will tralll from $194.50 monthly; aJ90 1 6~ '"'!. Please call 6@.955ili --•.,.,=="°"=,...,.=-.-;=;;; maintain, su""rvilf. rf'fl.w. o e:ar:per. ~... · • and -2-bedroom plill.ns and ,.,,..""' lluntl.ngton -Beach .Pollee .._,i='i-"'ii"~=~--*\VE 00 EVER'iTMIN -t 'ASSE?o.1BLERS &. ?ifOLDERS t"' ·-,ttM Ages tf-34. ~ mo . 2-story tOV.'ll hou1e1. El4'C-OCEANFRONT lovt:ly pvt 1,;De?.;p;;t.-5' ~:!:-;<'"--,,,,....=~ Schooli & !\el.ii. r~ree est. 646-2839 For fast growing fibt:rgllus!J Ji'inc 1.uden &pt proJ. -Sta11lna: salary + many trie kitch<!lll. -i.-.... -..i~ room &. bath w/kJt pt·lv. Jo"OUND Dec so· r,.1 1 Instructions 575 b(>at A iy 1 • $.m n>0. plus apt. Otll•,., benents. NoW lnteIVlewtna . ..,., ..... -1.a1m t II I I" Gold · ·• ' a e HOUSECLEANJNG lad Y · company. Co!PP 19.19 phone. Permanent. 61S-806? ARMY Opportunities, tn• or balconies, carpettn,, dra-or co ege age ellll!-e, en Rotrttvel"" n r. GUITAR LESSONS·. Reliable. Reterenoes pllone CJlppe~ Marine rp. . " perln. Subtern.nean park· 675-1706. Harbor View Nonlcui Npt. 556-685S F •. Occ1dcntnl, SA CREDIT I -".64:::5-::1:::16:;:i:... ----~~ inc with elevatora. Optional ROO~f • pvt. ho111e, T.V. Beath. C.U . to identify LAWR ENCE PAUL · , ASSEMBLY Jnspecllon &. INVESTIGATOR HIGJi commtas.lona, Cable maid aervtce. Just :x>rth ol & lndry. i25. wk Nr. 19th 644--0m. DEGINN£n. -AOVANC..'F.O. Maintenance Shtpping help l'Cq'd for both Start YoW" career w/Mtlon· TV 1ub$cr1ber sale•. San E'aMkin laJaod at Jamboree & J>on)()na, -C.flt. 645-2349 FND: MALE red Irish. Set· :1-ro~~ ~t~CAL THE Oeanlng Se r v 1 c e , day· & swing 11hUts1 Cortec, ally known financial institu· Clemente a~a. Ce.U 1.fr. and San Joaquin HllJ1 Road. BACHELOR Room, cJOl:ie to ter, tarie. w/tlea <.'Ollar. =====~~---1 Crpts, Windows. .floors, 642-1877, N.B. Uon, Creat 1,.ilance for ad· Tompkins, blWll S.Sr Mon TelepOOne (n4) 64f.19fCI stores &: bus stop, CoRta 1 vie. o.c. F&ir&t'9und. Go to HYDROPONICS, f It n e 11 •, \\'aUs, 1 can does 11 all, ASSISTANT ~tanagens: to vancement. Call Llndn Ray, t.tiru Ji'rl. 49)...8350, __!2!. rental inlonnaUon ldesa, older man, 646-6497. ~'ii .... ':?~ on l\fancbe_ster ~~=']an 5 7 ° ~:i; free estimates, 615-Ql55 train, graveyard sh.lit. -6 ~y: ~s~ai!ri:.B:!:d~~ HOUSE\VIFE \VU< to sh.opp1ng, (17th & $95. Lg. furn room, Pr1. 1>3Ui .... 06 • 2-9990 ' · niles wk. C.o. pakl benefits. 04 DEL TACO Tustin ) returblsh.ed like nu & en•--. Pat~. Call FOUND black &: while nWe 61 -Pao'nto'ng & 'Jacls Jn The Box, l20S • ,,:0:;::;;r.==~-~.,..,=--I o-ng• County Airport Individual type condo. 2BR, ~ ......... .., "" cat with nea oollar. Very Thutrical • 580 Paporhango'ng Baker St, C.M. '"oEUVERY Man. I). Time11 12 '" h II' rk 11 2 A~ Alon 2BA bl · kl '"~"'°":..,.------1====~-~--ta VI·· S · v· home' delo've"" route, 3 to per r. 0 • :...,, , tin tch, frplc, nu i R.oolai v.•ith refrig, private Business Rtnt11 ... -~~! HCllll!f",..pnngBe ochew I MANAGE BANDS ATfENDANT, Feniale pl!l1 6 AM. Eco''nomical car. thru Sat. Call,.. Atr. Kenny, crpting &: drps, ebCll'd patio, entrance & bath, $75 1110. -----'-~---..,..,......., ·-wi ... '6.on a ' For evening auditions HOUSE PAINTERS tune for elderly sem•·in-O\'er 25 }Tl old. No col· _9::..,:•;::mc,·l:.:lc,,::;•mc:.:,, "-970'9-<0.JtJ'-"'=' -~I is:;;!u~4J1~i4®'. ~,~:. ~r.,o NEWPORT SHORES 1,,:0846-'563'0-='-------Call 548-4218 alter 7 p~1 NEED WORK valid femttle: Ne,vporl lec1ing, no solicill ng . HOUSEKEEPING, Room & 'J'rubo) {714) 6T~ eve &. LG. R00'-1 For rent. Pres-600 To 1600 Sq. ft . spaces, St.IL brv.'lJ & wht male dog, lnt/exl. Atany local rel Frff 548-5497 or 64f>-66t9 \Vesbninster, HB area.Call Board, aml SBlary M'I eX_. wke--'-tige area. Jin'"· Sch. Call a\'ail. immedia1ely! 62nd & h.it on Npt Blvd & cabrillo -est. To1n 494-6176. AUTO LOT MAN '-""" .,...,, clutnge for Ille hou.sek~plng ..... "b p St, 0.1'. Taken to Vet. can [ I~ ~-~ & I 3 hf aft 6 pm, 846-7311. aeific Coas1 llwy., Newport "'"A""" un"I 5,~ or --a ·~.,. _ PROF. ~·alloo\'ering state For one of Orange County" DELIVERY men per care o IC age G S Beach.. J.~or office woe, bar-.,..,._..,,.,.,. .. ~ ~Y" --J' N 279514 · 11 ·_, chlldrrn, Spanish speak ok, uest Home 41 ber shop or any bu:;lnesa. 551-0'J951orinlo. ic. o. 1 • ·tnsur,, a largest Ford Dealenililps. p/thne early " morn . 646-753G R FOUND:-lrish Setter, niale types of paper. 714 : Experienced preferred. Ap-newspaper dellv. to N.B.1-'-"-='-------1 *LA PARISIENNE* 2 BR. Furn ~ Unfum. All elect. Fireplace, htd pool . Adults. $195. & Up. 979-1268 Across b'Om golf course 20432 Santa Ana Ave. AVAIL. Jan. 1st. Pvt or ents very reasonable; Babyalttinn ' ' 842-1386. ply in person to 1t1r. Dem Romes. $200 pet-nlO. + H OUSEKEEPER-live-ln; semi-pvt, good food, xlnt nionth. to nJOnth or lease. VIC 2600 Blk 01 Orange "• Paperhanging & painting. Crevier. 642-4800 rouUne cleaning &: lndry. 21 h.r cal'e. Lots of freedom. 675 &050 '' :t~e6. 9>sta ?ttesa, 645-2891' BABYSITI'lNG -my home. 21 yrs Harbor area. Refl'I ™EOOORE ROBINS ~Doo~EN~n;;~o,~.;::;Ex~e"~.-,S'°ec'°re"t"•.,..-~.1 assist w/cooking, mu• t Homey atmosphet'e, ccn· M • ,~UNll 1 1 k By the hour or day. fu111. No. 183-281. 642-2356 FORD Expcr. in apptJ control;-~. drive, Prlv bdrnl, balh, col· trally located on 2_ bus lines. IW IW-11' Cl.· IMC. v se o · eys on e 67>1706-e PAINTlNG lntei•ior & ex· 2Q6() Harbor Blvd,, board or TV. Refs. req'd. call SEACLIF1'~ Manor Ape.., 2 call 892-5493 anytm1e. = • macramae blue key chain. Costa Mella rays, ins. & peg · 644-5123 ----------I 601 Dcn•er Dr., Suite 3 Vic. CdM, Goldenrod BABYSITTING In 1'1y 1-lonie terior. Quali1:.i wor-k.i-----~"'---Salary open, Send resunte ;::.:..::;:::_ _______ I Br, 1 ~~ Ba, St udio. SJT:i. NEW coni.-ept in living tor NE\VPORT BEACJI Cadillac keys, 6ra-3489 Costa Afesa. area, ItefeJ'· Telephone 642-0246 to Classdied Ad 989, e/o . HOUSEKEEPEH. =~·, ~~-a~~t :1°:cc~ti~ Sr. Citizens. See lo ap-2000 or 4000 sq. ft. building LONG h.aired bllc kitty, v.-·ht -"-"~-'-·~•~h-on_c_s_·•-2·-0384_.__ INT/EXT PAINTING CHRtS~~~ MAY ~~~~ ~~.-~ftf. ~500• L~:.-1~~~ N~· ::~~·s'7). Ave. 543-2682. preciate, 642-9278 for lease. Avail approx. paw,, very lovable vie Ji.la· sJ'°SAN ~~E l'"ree Est Jim ~3559 BE OVER DENTAL Ass i slll n t, wk, Eng Spea.k1ng. $240. mo. EASTBLUFF Back Bay Summer Rentals 420 l!.1arch. 1. Presently oi=cupled nyana. & Calle Real, 8an .,.,=-2 ~·•me-handed . 646-122:1. -by r.1ar Vac Electronlcti. Clemente 493-0018 aw ..,...,. ... *Wallpaper· Hanger* But, Everyone Still Oiairslde. 4 s1t 1 ,.::;:,-':::;;,:,,,==~~-~1 View. Slurinlng 2 Br, 2 Ba * OCEANSIDE * 1829 N rt Bl d C'I Huntingtoq, Beach, Calif. C. Re"ko , "" 2449 Nood1 Avon Products. down dentistry. Able to take HOUSEKEEPER •. Ex P 'd, townhouse. Frplc. Lg e eivpo v ·• " · FOUND; Fem. Genn. Shep You are the winner of u .,....... good x-rays. Min. l yr ex-tHponslble, &/or babysit-patio. Adults, no pets. $33(). 2 BR., 2 bath house, comp. 'f'J:>3~ Deno Vaccher, 19th &: Placentia, C.M. l tickets to the p,\INT no1v, pay half later Ydes, AVON da.il.Y care pro-,per. Laguna Niguel. 1er, Easlbluff area, refs 640--0349 furnished. Never slept in. """"' ~. w/fiea collar & choke SPORTS & Ex P eriencl'd references ucts ,f..:. cosme11cs .sl'U )'ear 495-424:>. f'l'Q, own lrarui, flexible hrs, Pool, clu':>house, beaeh., golf COMMERCIAL C·l chain. Call aft 5, 66-7092 REX:REATJONAL Earl 494-4201 ' ~und, & now is th.e perfecl "D::;ENT~AL""'-A~S~s""'r s=T~A~N=T ,~644-~5896=------1 & shopping center. Year 4-?5 SQ It ff' .1 ~· FOUND , _ Ce She VEHICLE Sl-IO\V ume to be<.'Ome a Repre-lease or by the n1onth. , 0 ice sui e. ,...... ; ...,.... nn. P· \VALLPAPER }la n gin g, sentatlve. You can niake Chairside, capable & exp. HOUSEKEEPER rellabl@'. * PLEASANT & DESIR-548-3036 \\ · 19th St. Nr. 1'1VB + Blk w I Br \V n markings. at the custom residential & cont· money at ~ur own paee & in all aspect& of general good 'A'ilh ch.11drtn. Nl!eded ABLE. 2 ~r. pool, gar. · 1500. sq ft Trufencedk open stor1• Male. Vic Indianapolis & CONVENTANA10HEN UCIENTER n1e-rcial Call Ted 494-3952 nieet tie\\' people 111 )'OU!' dentistry. Call·644--0922. immcd. Xlnt benefits. hlrs. Adults, no pets. $180. Vac.tion Rtntlll 425 i!.G'C urea. c accessabi • Beach Bl\.-d., H.B. 5.16-8470 1 PROF painter. honest work, con1mu11ity, too. f'or rnore DENTAi., ~ecept. desk only. Prentiss 54{)....2719 or 646-8824 548-4922 ity. Sll5. nw. 646-696!. FEJ\IALE Calico Cat, January 4•13 rcas. Int/ext, free l'SUnmte. delaih1, Call:-540-7o.&l. • tl ta! per O I I THE F I Please call 642-5678, ext 333 ._. yr. en · ex . nee. H-USEKEEPER, JV@'-n. San Clemen1'e " actory" has a rg Newport Beach. Has flea to clain1 )-'OUr tickets.1 ,,Re=r',,·->!S-~~27597''-&12-39=:-:l,,.3._71 e=AB=Y~S~it-te_r_, n-,-a-tu-,..-.~2-g~ir~ls f-linge bene.Hts. Some Salli, 011•n trans. Student OK. ----------1 LIVE in the all new Dana sChop avValllll. ll42585/mo30th.-Stin collar. Found Dec. ht. (North County toll free PROF. paperhanging. Ko job 6 & 8 yrs.n1y home or yours H.B. &'Ca. M6-3540.·~-64<H)l66 or 67j...463() 2 BR. 2 BA, ch.ild O.K. Cpls/ Point Harbor at th. e annery age ·• 494-2761 after 6pm. number is 54~1220.l too sm., no job too large. if nr Jl.fesa Verde Sch.I. l\lon Desinn. DraftSmaft, E-/M ll o u SEKEEPER/COMPA· •1-s, dswshr, lndt"'. 4 blks beautiful MARINA INN NB. &12-1960. 1 ~F~O~U~N~D~fa_t_b~l~c~k-&-.. 7h-lto * * * 842 °~•. tlo" !'-' =-~1 ••~ '• .... ., " a ·• -.wot " '' ~ ~v J...I yr11 expe1·, ti.1ust oe cap-NION, Pl.limt>, musl drive. to pier, $200. 1110. 492-1934 M14~e!:.,"~) J?el Ohbispo ESt1. ART Center, Laguna Beach, puppy with Oea collar. Vic. PAINTING & poperhanging. BABYSm'=ER~---~-,e-d-~by •"'•of ,,~rklng rrom nlaster No smokinu, 962-5224, H.B. after 5 Pl\t. ...,....~ • K 1 t c en, · sn1I shop, year lease, 1436 1 Sant J be! & Eide C .._ ....... '1.l "' u ·-. f · · & A 1 ° a sa · n, 1rpen ... r Lic'd, ins., guaranteed. hvine leacher for loving layouts as 'A'eil as perform HOUSEKEEPER ·, live out,, 2 BR' 2 BA .. lrplc' '.' ._1 1c1encies pal ments. South. Coast, $180, 494-2186 Costa Mesa Calf •·•0 "116 -~--------c II H · °'" •;ss· 2 ... Heated pool, direct dial & 805-527-9665. ' .,_..,, · FRED THE CARPENTER a arns, U'f4-'f care, boys. OY.·n trans. in all phases ol drafting no smoke, good dr1WT,r ~ "1 "', obnlksly 1$185. plus phones, television, sauna •· LOST 2 Germ.an Sheph 2'l yrs experience cuslom Plaster, Patch, Repair 502-9183. wock. Corona del Mar 6~1847 I """"post. rom ocean be.th, I a u,n d '.!', facililies, Industrial Rent11 450 Police dogs, brown ·& tan, BABYSl-ER 2 h'ld 8 Technol""y Marketinn H-ou· SEll"~•,hort ~ ...... •·/d bit 4~2318 f VI N rt CM work rough or fini s h , •• . c 1 ren, -··• •v ~ ,..,.., cp"" rps 118• "~ • meeting room, ose to San ems c· ewpo * PATCH PLASTERING * & ti ---'ed fro 2 ~1 9 1100 * COSTA MESA * 545-ilsJ a.ft 4 ' · " carpentry Large or small . · · '"""""' m :..,.... pm, •> part time counter help.i Apts., Clemente & Laguna Beach. · v.i... <''Jn ...,.,.,_ All types. Free estin1ates own trans. 979-9744; aft Doslgnor p C EIRoberto Rest F-ashlon fs I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Come play in ou r 680 SJ•~. 2'lO power $115. FOUND; White Geml Shep. ~ ~· Call 540-6825 6, 646-2687.' ask for r.farsha. ' • ' 1 Bob B Res ' •portfishing, sh.opping & 1300 S.f-'. Prlvl\te office, Yng. fem. Vic. Haven & Carpot So~I ---Exper. in tuyoul & tape-up Jnqu rr urns I .. General reslalU'allts. $50 week & Up. plenty of parking. Irvine, Newport 67i)-5818 or • ' .. ce Plumbing BABYSITTER, mature ot logic &.n1emory circuits. 644-2030. · , ' Bring thi• ad & receive Lartrer Wlits available. 0.02•"' JOHN'S Carpet & u hol t "·on1an, wkdays. 2 Srn. Technology Marketing HOUs'E\\r1vES . part tlme,1, ... ,,.._ "'lo.J P s ery LR. OTJS PLU?iIBING ch.itdren. references. $115 _ Small cozy Bachelor. $5 off on Iirst week's rent. lteady for occupancy. FOUND; Jan. lrd, German Ori Shampoo, (Sol/ Retard-Remod<?ls & Repairs. Water 6-12_701.t ====911;f-il00 ""'Ork close to home, A\'g. i Near beach. }~or 1 young C. ROBERT NAITRESS Sh 3rd St anlii). Degrease1·s & DISH\VASHER. rnature $40. pt'r 'A'k doing del. &: Rc ·\LTOR ' ep puppy. on ·• all color bro·g· hteneo• & 10 heaters. disposals, furnaces, BAB\'Sf~ER-n-~ed ,·n my I for the ~"ler B-··"1 busr persorw Laguna. ""' \Vearlng choke chain ., dsh '--"-'~:£1 ~11c & •• "'-"'-' person, 6:30un1°3p1n. Apply aaes r\11 · '""" 49H200 Rtnt1ls to Sh•r• 430 Costa l\feSA 979-6571 900-1470 n1inute bleach for "'hite ivas'""··'" •• . ' honut. 2-3 cfys a wk. 2:30pm· l\Iesa Verde Coov. Hosp, Co. For Info call 542-0'142 C""""ls. Save )'OUr money Bl1\ .. Co~plete Plumbing 6.l.1n. 551-5033. ""' c I St c•1 ·•O ~O< ~a Peninsula \~~~~~;~=!t~~'!0i!'i~ NOW LEASING 1'~~ ~~~\f.1arne~ua~ ~~~;;Ii?:t~e:n,~:r:g Se;'~~~1~;~Gzr~~AIR B~AuTY-OPERATOR ~i.;::~he0r/W:ii;;;::_:_ INSURANCE SALES i Newport Heights AIATIJRE couple only. 3 Rm. 3 ltn1. apt. with same for i,: Huntington Beach ingdale, H.B. 536-1997 rm., & hall $15. Any rm. No job loo small lRA«hi•rdlant ~·~-sllhanipoo gi1·i. Da,)-'S 642-8475 I apt. $150 Mo., utit. paid. rent. S50 & \', ""''"'t & ""'" NEW M-1 "!EN'S~-·-•· t t D" ' $7.50, couch. $10. Oiair '"'· ** 642-3128 ** ic a VU\'." ette Salon, DRAFTING . I .N earn h.11 'O j '-Yearly.~ Rcalt.Jr '--'6'' .. ~ !HO Sq Ft & UP " J"""" a Ivers 15 . ha N ~---~----1610 w. Coust H"")'., N.H. trainee. or ·o exp ne<'., w e) u per month. Not ddw.:e, but · · Cove, Beach Fri. yrs. t'Xp. 1S v.· t counts Television Repair &12-39'70. map dratting fiq:n. !\-lust learn, part tlme, t'\'H & Costa Mesa clean, comfortable and reas-l-familton & Nev.·lt1nd St. 12/29 identify 494-1288 not method. I do work have expt>r w/ink. Fu11 or wknds, full tinM! "A'hen qua11.I ----------I unable. 20~ Thwin Ave., 960-1970 FOUND. Lge male Irish Set· myself. Good ref. 531~101. COLOR TV Repair, expert, BEAUTICIANS. Stylist, 'A'/ part tinle. H. Oil.ford Thorn fied. 1 I TI-IE EXCITING C.M. Avail Jan 1st:' '"'""''""'""'""""'""'""'"""" ter. H.B. Call & describe, s TE A l\f c L E A N ! ttasonable, most in home. following or 'A'ilhout. Apply Assoc. 546-4481. I Fam1~rs Insurance Group I · PALM MESA APTS. FEl!.IALE Roomnlate t 0 RENT t.T-1, 600 sq. It, 2944 894-5297 SANITIZE! All dirt out, Antenna service also. Bert at 3341 Nev.1>0rt Bh·d .. NB :~~,i~i::;::;::;,1 ,::Ed£t.a~nl=•~54().;~!834=~ MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. sh.are 3 BR, 2 ha. apt with Randolph, ~o. 10, C.l\t. ='O.:.,::=.:~--~~~ Aladdin House of Service, Gallemore, 96.S-2783. BOAT REPAIRMAN -lllY£R I F'U&'l. OR UNF'URN. 2 'A'Orking girls. NeWpOrt SIOO/i\10. 67;i-5116, 673-7039. FOUND; Bunch ot Keya in 557-2678 =~-------Experience Preferred 0 V»• '•"""' '1ro• 9'11 Unbelievabl" large apls-. B h $lOO Bea con Ray (before1===~=~----Tile " eac , Yrly. 1no. i\t. 1 Slt6p. 1900 Blk. Placen-Christmas) 6r:>-39'"J9 DIBERNARDO & Sons -;:;::;;;;;;;::--:;;;-;--;:;;;;;;-;:!;;-B~lo~d~de~·~,~floa~t~Y~a~rd~, ~N'!'B'._ ~erag 'c;pa~u.~l.ecs!._::!~ 675-1558 lia Ave. 800 Sq. Ft. 548-U.U FOUND·, Rabbit, Blk & carpet sales -in~tallatiofl CERAi\IIC , TILE NEW_ I: B o o K KEE p ER.:. exp. An imml'dlate opening foe etc. Adults, no pels. 1o·EMALE 2430 to shw-e No Autonwtive! i\·h.lte. Bolsa Chica-Edinger, and repair. 963-2639 remodel. r n'e est. Sin }Obs pt-tlme to stai1 11·/sniall an individual to do p/tinn• SINGLES r~urn From $157 NICE apt or houlfe in 4001 BIRCH NB H 8 ~-23rd 846-81).12 Cement, Concrete 1\·elcome. 536-2426. dynruni<.' Co. \Vork Into full driving & "·ork In shipuinl! t BEDRl\.1. Unf. 1',rom $157 Newport area 'A'/ same. 3t?OO :;:q, ti. 1 :>41·5032 · · ~ · · Top Soil lime. &15-2lll Newport department. l\.1ust have good 2 BEDRM. Up f. From $172 646-8134 FOUND Vic. Orange Ave., CUSTOi\I concrete 11·ot'k. Beach. appelt.ra"nce, good driving You're right. they're under· SHARE Bluffs Condo, with. I Costa r.lesa. Appro.;;~ 7A~s? Drives, patios & Y.'alks. No * QUALITY * c ,\ FETERIA, Huntlnglon record & \'alld California priced! 1561 Mesa. Dr. female, $9511\.10. Cal I Announcwr1elrta .11...-1 Solid black, male . .....,..........., job too small. Fn!e est. * NIULCH & TOP SOIL * Beach High School Dlstiict · drivers license. (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) _ 640-8714 or 644-2361 _ . PUPPY in Mesa Verde area ~7·2942. * has opening for substitute For Appointment I 846-9860 2 BR Apt. 1 urn. Utils pd,l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillii~ Dr~. 1624 (Country~ Ou6 1 :=="1"E"'N"T,--,&,-B"1"'oc"k-W"'"°or~k. ~30 "!!!!I cl2al6C7l~[~~ ""Ort<er, Salary Cont<llC.t -C.r.ol Smith --* CASA VICTORIA * $92.50 Female roommate I ~nnouncements ..=.:"'· '---------Walls, patios, sidewalks, ~ . 11UU-r.lVJ1tten Test-.ran ~ ~ i 1, 2 & 3 BR. furn & un1 ,_w~an=•~ed=·~6'13-~~723=7-___ ,~====='--'S:;OO;;: Lost 555 etc.Byhr.orjob.~915. 1111 18· 3:30pm, Room m Hun-AVCO / Carpets, drapes, Df\V, TV FEA-1ALE to share apt in . * * * CEMENT: Patio, dri\'es, f' ti~ton Beach High School, SEJQllCES•~ ant. Pool, etc. 525 Vlcioria Newport or Balboa bch. Call JACQUELINE srARBIRD LOST, English S P r i 11 g e r v.'8.lks-Rtfpain, saw & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiii;l l..w Main St, Huntington St, at Harbor C~I. 642-8970 5!!6-J8.W 102 Schol Pl A t !"" Spaniel, vie Ogle St_, C.l\1. remove . .,.__ .,1, ... ~. Beach, An E qua I OJ>-Financl•I Service SEE OUR 1 z azn, p · ,),< Ll & Wh 't \Vh t f t r•= .,....-o""° portunity Employer. EXTRA Large 1 or 2 Br. heated pool. F'rom $145. Ala· ture adults. No pets. 1887 r..ronrovta. &15-092fi. LUXURY Lrg 2 BR. adull s, bllins, pool. nr :i;h.opping center & bus, 19-11 Pomona. Huntington Beach DELUXE adult po o I g i d e garden bungalow, nr ocean, frp\, lrg patio, 6 pools, sauna, tennis. 846--0259. Also 1 Br. From Sl3J. Newport Beach Gar1ges for Rent 435 N~~~:e,~h·wi<=:!,U:r~ & v~~gs & ~;:,t o~ e 00:. Child Care Job W•nted, t-•m•le 702 CAPTAIN or head 'A'aiter for Equal :!~mployer ~~~!~HLlll~!~~~ I MINI WAREHOUSES 2 tickets to th.e r~~A,::1~0 ~6"as~~ ~~i _V_A_C_A_T-IO_N_' -m-oth-,-,-.-11_1 _ca_re \\1Al'i"1'ED position as prac-restaurant San Clemente. JERRI V.'HIITE~IORE STORAGE SPORTS & 646-l700 Rey.·ard. • for. your honie & ehildren lical nurse/It. hskpng, 8 hrs Expe.r in good DR service. E LECTRriNIC Asse~mbler; 488 E.171h St. tat Irvine! 011• No i\Iove-in or l\fove-out P.ECRE1\TIONAL while you va ca 11 on . shirt, beach al't"a. Call Also all around cook. Good printed circuit, harnessing, Suite 224 642·1 470 1 VEHICLE SHO\V LOST wild scarlet l\Iaca'A·. R 'bl d !162-/J20 ~!rs. Anderson, working cond. \V r i t e, & inslrument assembly, charges .. From $7.50 pe1· al the 12/29. Last seen flying ccii:i'"'5:er!re~i. v~~~-after 7pm. classified ad No. 40, Daily expd pref, Orthodyne Elec· ~ '11\i• V•• t i nionth. ANAHEIM North out of En-.erald Bay. ContractOr NEED h.elp at hbnle? \\le ~ilot, P. ~-Box 1560, Costa Ironies ~7629 1 lianlil!Aii,~p~(~ St,. Im COKVENTION CENTER Any info leading to capture havC' aidl's, 11 u r s es, ~-ca~l"_.7926_26~·---.o.;;;o;.;;,;..;.;;;;..iiiiiiiiio I JANITORIAL I January 4-13 of bin:!, please contact, h 0 us ekprs. conipanions. CERAMIC decoritors pro-Exec. Secretary $700 Alaturc wo1nan, exp& prefd. 96Q.1970 Please call &12-5678, ext 333 494-fiOOS collect. GENERAL CONTRACIUH. H 0 111 em a k er s Upjohn duction work, full time 31966 Advert. Coordinator $700 Sleady & !'\'liable for nlte . lo claim your tickets. I 'LO""ST"""°"MALE~'°"""-,-7.sh,-°"Se"""-BILL KEIRSEY Ca · C I C Bookk l500 11-ork ot• bid N 8 '" SIN_GLE got-age for rent !North County toll fr-Iri tter, F · R od 11 d ~7...Q)Sl. nuno ap strano, SJ , eeper • ,. gs., .. ..., .. --.:; ram1ng, em e ng-a -....., PIT' Cl · -• ~ h Hr k .,_,. N!"" S2almonth. nun1ber Is 540-1220.) lost slnce Dec. 21· Has red ditioni;;, kltch.en specia:llst, JAPANE SE Lady-speaks CHECKER une enc... ..., r w · ..........uw. 177 E. 22nd St. CM. * * * g>~!r ~~arti::en. colJQ;t Bonded & Insured, Finan-.son1e Eng, Wishe~ to learn AUTO STORES =~is~· Ana = JANITOR.AL-part time eve~. srORAGE only. Doub I c Legal Notices SlO Marti 543--lT?.O. cing a\•allable, call collect more. Wants P/Time work, Is offering excepllonal oppor. Clerk Bookkeeper to $600 7-lOpm. Nr. OC Airport.\ garage. North-East Costa1 _ _,._ _______ ..;;.;,; ifilT:-u-;;r;tld-.;;;;.;;tt l-'1'=-2l~:k135-~·;.11~43;,..,.....=,.....-I no car, ~2188 to 'A'Omen lnt .. rested in re-Girl Friday S500 $2.25 per hr to start. Over. Jl.1esa $40 mo 642-5999 LOST, 14 wk old Bassett ..-21. Call Extra Carel · · · I ,vJIJ not be responsible for GERWICK & SON LADY-companion driver . tail careers. We have open· A/Payable to $750 Maintenance, 847--MM. ~ Offict Rental 440 any debts or other obllga· Hound, Blk & White & Bldg Contr. Addit & Ren1ocl Costa l\fesa resident. Call i n g s tor management 3 mo's commute to L.A. ! • tlons other than my own, Brown. REWARD., S.C. State Lie. Bl-114321 979-9632 alt 5:30 trainees. Rapid advance-Call Jeannie Sisco J ANITOR-LITE maintenance; B North Costa Mesa Gerald r.fcNulty, 19 6 6 74o;;~=.,;_~-,.....-~~~~1 673-IDU 549-2170 EA-PER practical nurse . ment, xlnt't benefits. 111 E. & Sid Hoffmari l\"OTk for convalescent ho&p. i 1' Jle I Sn1all pl'ofessional building 'Vallace, Costa :ri.1es:i· 2 m~~I~~: ~et~:, JACK Taulane. re pa i r, private duty. Xlnt rcrt'r. lJ!h St, C.M. 645-8264. NEWPORT 40 Hr wk \\'/fringe benefits.J :, y • 11·ith up lo 5 offices a ... ·all-Auto Transportation 525 Vic Indiana Ave. C.M. ren1od, add. Lie. B-t 269072 Costa 1oft'sa area. 54S-8257 Equal Oppor. Employer Personn,el Agenc'fs 642-35m. j l able. Ex('('llent for nledlcal, CAR POOL 5En'VICE cne.=c.·o:anlo=,. =55"-7--0739-==·=~~ ~ly Way Co. 642-4703. R ESPONSTBL.E 1'10'IHER CILulEANI .:~PA& di ell,':_cry boy, 8" ~v•r Dr., N. • JE~Y 1:oioo:-EAK j BIG' dental, accounting, etc. Best ~ :--: Electrical wants work in her h.ome ..,,n:. PP Y u• person, 642-3170 4lni Poplar \·alue! Call 5--lJ-8424 SoulhCo For Information Jl.UXED Shep ma blk w/wht 1----------Babysitting etc. 49Hi870. · 1-1 u t c ~es on' 11 at 140 Re1tltors. Call 833-2195 ~~~ wfuc~ne:8"~ i • ELECTRICJAN • "'I I W ted M & F 710 lndustnal W~y, C.M. EXECUTIVES La~nas:aJ!, ~~r':51 / • EXECUTIVE OFFICE After 6 PM 552-1450 U c. #l56310 e p an ' CLEAN, rellabe;l•-.-m-a"'ture....,., $15,000 to-$75,000 2 Uckels to the I A ·c ofice avail in pl'ofes-1:~~~~~~~:'!~ LOsr, sm. Wht fe. puppy -=-....,~•~•,...c<92-'-'1"!13'"-e'-e=---ACCfS Rec Oerk wanted woman for kitchen helper. Send resume or call TODAY SPORTS &: from. sionnl airport area sw'le. ~-rdonlng tor an O.C. 'firm. Must have Call 493--0659, aft 10 AM. for confidential NO COST R"li"V'»~ATJONAL I , ~ w/apric:ot ears. Vic . -r 2 E 1 -•~ Ne11·Jy carpeted & draped. I Garfield & Magnolia, H.B. at east . yrs exp. xce CLERICAL executive interview. VEHICl.E SHO\V $ .. 60 Heceplion & ph.one answer· p.,iiii•ii-iiiiiiii~ii~ -~~"""-'-'eC,ves.~~..,---=--EUROPEAN Gardener. hrs., benefits and oppty for lmmed. Assignment!. Top EXECUTIVE SERVICES, at the i,&: ing service included. Secy & -. ~ Maintenance -Landscaping. advancement. . Con l a ~ t $$$. Long or sh.ort term JNC. · ANAllEl~f Xerox services avail. $135. 10 MO. old Irish Setter, Tree Removal. Very Kath.y at \VoodhghUng fu. Call 540-4450. 888 N. Main, Santa Ana CONVENTION CENTER Al Oakwood Garden Apart- ments GREAT RECREATION: swim· m•ng. saunas. neal!h clubs, billiards. 1cnn l5, pro & pro stiop, go!I driv1rig rango , party roeim. f;!C. FUN ACT IVITIES: Full-tim e a1rector. free Sunday brunc~1. BBO's, lnps, parlies, and morel BEAUTIFUL APAATP..4ENTS: Singles, 1 r. 2 be drooms. r urn. t unlurn With all !he f'•lras. Models ooen 1 O 10 7. Sorry, r.o pets or children. Oakwood Garden Aputments Newport l!!leld'l/Nor'lh IMl\t end 161" M)..O~ Newporl Beech/Soulh 16111 IJ lr<!M 6'~ .. \111 per nio. Call 540-2564. Ptrson•ls 530 male, vicinity Costa l\fesa. reasonable. 642-5329 eves. lure Co for an appt, 546-2001 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO. (7141 547·9625 JRnuary 4·13 1''1RST ~Db< :..:;=c;;.;;;.;.. ____ .:;;.;: Reward! 543--0l5l l\lOW & EDGE ACCTG CLERK; ,rapidly TEMPO Temporary Help EXEC DIRECTOR/ Volunt· Please call &f2...5678, ext 333 . mo. 1'e_n . LICENSED SPIRITIJALIST LOST in Dana Point, Sable i t'I Sa"ll bo t to claim your · Ucketa. orr1ccs nr. rur . 1,2 &: S 1 it 1 d' 10 CLEAN UPS grow ng_. . na a COLLECTOR. pre v lo u s tarY Action Center, So. O.C. (North County toll 1 3 lint. space11 -fl'om $135 l\1 p 1 ua rea 1118.!I a.m, zpale Collie. Ml~ very • 554--0657 • mfgr hmng for head ofc. agency exper dee:ired but Col deg or'rel, ated bnckgrnd, rtt J . 0 · -10 pm. Advice on all much. Please call 494-7242 Payroll expr riecess AIR Su~' lull number Is 54()...J.220,) anltonal serv. &_ antple mallers 312 N. El Camino MOW & edge $15., to $20. · • 'not neccuary. Will consider Start at SlQM. uuut '* * * parking. 833-3223 Bef. noon ·Real San Clentenle for Lost: "Rpsty'~, Collarless monthly• Clean-ups & haul· A/P pf~. type 50 WPM. retail lnstilllment exper. reaume lo \ Box 103 7, 01· 83.1-2840 Alt. noon appl 'call 492-9004, 49i.f136 Male La6rad0r. Eastbluff, ir:ig, 53&-6139 For further Info call 642-0542 Start lmmed. Male or Newpoff Beach. DE-K bf "~ Dec 28 644-lil -."~-"-,"':-~~---Equal Oppty Employer female. Phone (714.J 547.3524 F /C-Bkkpr $700 :> ~pace aVlllla ! ~ PROBLEM Pre'"'""""· O>n. ' General S.rvicts ADVERTISING J & Snyd mo .• Will provide futiilture 11 den t. 1 ;mp"; thetic LOST Dalmation in vie. sa es George er. Mt'<llcal Experience at i:; mo. Answering service pregnancy C'OUJ18ellng. AlJor.. Thalia, 'Laguna Bea ch "Tl-UNGS" by Moose. Gen'! =ersgrow. O~ngange m~J!.~•liiiiiii,;;,;iiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I WESTCLIFF available. 17875 Beach Blvd. lion & adoptions ref. Reward, 4~1388/496-6111 carpentry, Repaln, Plum· Pros only. &15-3633_ "6 ....... "' COMMERCIAt Pcnoniiel Agt-ricy Huntington Beach. 642-4321 APCARE 642-4436 tRJSH Setter, female' nlND. bing. E 1 e c. Remodeling iiiii""'oii;ii;;;;i;i.o.; ...... ...,I TELLER (l\ta.rk t lI Center) BAYFRONT OFFICES LIFE OR DEATit Vic Yorkt°""" Brookhunt 642-56!3. A FUN PLACE Sl>-8836 Prestige area. 740, 550, 330 Let our babies live. For area. Call 963--3633 HANDY man Hepa.I~ by Bob Exptrlenced 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. ~ ft , 3700 Ne\\•port Blvd., altematt ... ·es lo ABORTION GOLD bracelet W/ttained Gen Carpefllry, EI e c 1-. TO WORK UNITED I ---,FRY coOK i\.B. 6/a-1220 call LtFE LINE 5.51-5522, glus di8c. Lost at S. Cou1 ~~~\~e '646-3~. th. ln g · CALIFORNIA BANK l\fature, exper, l dtpend· PRl~I!:; orrice space, avail 2-.1 hrs. Plat.a 12/29. 615--71»4 :1J ~ &ble. Apply in pe~. Surf 111 1-"aWon Island, Newport BUSINESSAIAN, 39 wants to LOST lnsh setter in lt.B. CARPENTRY, electrical 1 r/ / 2301 $. 1.faln Street il Slrloln, 5930 W. -O>asl &ach, 861 SQF' to 2,350 meet sllm &: trim com-hlother of eleven, recent plun1bl1"11. tix-lt. F &: B ks euben Santa Ana I~":,:";;:";;·:,· ""::;.B::·-,,;;::,.-:;;:::::~ I SQF. rum or unfurn. Reply palible gal 19-35. Call surgery, Rev.'8.l'd, 962--632-f Home Repair, 642-1403. · 1547-9511) GENERAL office. Mattll"e, PO Box 1264, C.l\1. 92626. ;HS.-1479. LOSI' black Lab Retriever fl {J • g'ood of fi ce skl'llt, KEYPUNCH OPR. hfln. l yr exper. on 029 & 059. Day shffl. For Appolntmont Contact Carol Smffh AVCO Flnoncfal Sorvlco 644-SIOO Equal Owor. Emplo)re.r 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB BEST MASSAGE IN ~.B. ...,. Oran&' & l9tlt SI, CM. H0~1';h,RE ~~CTION (.., o/..' Eqoa1 O~nunlcy ..,...nablo, •bf< In meet 23CO, 1710.._ 1200.~T'lO 1q. n~ 3400UV1ne~Ave. SIIUc'103B fc;!~""~an!~~~~:::;:;:::~j -9162-4S79 ~ -•~--ee _.1~!'!"'~~E~m~~er""""!""!l 'C~~;._ ~de~0 •• e:, C,:.~1~ _ WmHalf'll ftN' _, I BR's. From $115 • $U.S Bachelor Furn $20S OQ:an Vie•·. )'early leue. J(eett"(! Pool. Adulf!! Only. 55c per sq ff.Ample prk'g. (at Brlstot )Opeil 8 AM. LRG White ~ !"!"~'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j l'coMPANJON tor reUrtd ... u..:u v Kif""""" Wll Ulil. Baumgant....-. 541-5032. Ann. 557--0539. Mole ~·y, VIC: w.m.r .Houll!'j Now -Hlrl-ti u In ~ Pilot, Pc.o.~ 1S60, Colla L S --. ""-••" 1.n. ... 'a:en ema"', ve-. ........... M=-'eta;;,·::;•:;....:-;:'=,,....=;-:'-I An lmmtd. opentn1 ..,. '& 650 Sq. Ft. Furn or ALCOHOLICS Anoaymoua Ir; pr1 -euMift_..1-"'" ---"------cook. Must be go00 dnvt'r.--; ' . c·-tdete Wimln l unturn. Will subleue all PhoM 542-7217 or write MA.LE 1'1ger ltttpe. de-clnr· ..51QPLOADER &..dump f:t'uck BUSBOYS PaUl'nt.lady CS to 5S. .Good GENSRAL OFFICE, typing _,.:-;,~129:-. yr. U · or part. 11i-area. 833-P.O. Box 1223 Cbsta Meali. ed, w/Oe11. collar. Vic. Mesa work. Concrete, .uhlhall, ••)•""'. <!••9027 rcq'd, meet"J)ubllc, busy Ofc, •- • .... .,..., ' • "'' """ l;P?'T"" Pennanent. · • ' LAS BRISA$ APTS. !615 RJvcr A~~'l 1'1~ Call 642-- ON or nt:1r bf'ach; 2 &: 3 BR. No ltoe. Qdl; Proptrly liOUH GU-311,:;7 VtctnctH COil moneyt Ren1 ~ houlf., apt... •tore bid& .. ti<. """ • Dolly Pilot ausrn..i Ad. • -• -' 3.130. • Woman to meet tall map Verde, C.M. S46-<l600 11wtna, brelk:lng. 84&-· O. OJMPAff!ON, wuh, .... help Ohll.ftltn & Chrlatenaen J CAROL SMtnl OFFICE y.•/ !ltorage, panl'd over 30 for companionship. LOST nlale black puppy. Ytc. YARD, garqe clean-u_p., DAY & NIGHT tlre:s.t, cook breakta1t, lqnch 16691' MUll.lltn Ave, AVCO walls, shag crpt, air cond, Ca~a:ry 836-fi679 ot Monticello. C.M. Reward. n!mave treH, 4trt, tvy, for etdtrly __ wom&n. 6 1-lrl, IrvinC! 556-100 Ill IS.. rc:frla:lnk, stall shwr. l&a2 \'OUNG femRle college lhl· Call Soi-l!M2. drtvtwap. stumps, 347-2666 $ day1. tJX). ~S.5247. GENERAL F AC T 0 R "{, n.ncl•-.tciee Newport Blvd, CM. &i8-97GG dent s r C? k • involvement· LOST, Black pu,p, Z-mo old 32 FT. ll'1RJrfITURE Vf.R Apply~ ~.Y COOK, Convllltllci!nt II~. malurt m.tl!!, Dp'd. Apply 621'1 Newport Cttnter Dr. OFC SUiia, 100'.I fl, SultabU! ~!d~rc ntalG. SJ6..5879 male. Vlc ~ A: Del for local tum baulJ &: gen'I IPM-7:30PM, $2 per fir. 5 9 10 5 U. S. -FJl:ll!Nood ~awport Beach, Callt tor doctor. Hunt In at on EXECUTIVE, 3' to """'' liar, C.M. 54H330 houllng. 548-JB62, 557-2736. 151 E . C0.1J Hwy. D«yt. 6(Z.-059lf , eorp: ~ $tperior, N....,,.., Ot>1!9". En.pr.,... Gardens. &16-1323. sllm & !rim compatible Have aomethine )Ql want to THE Handy man-tan)' type Newport BffCh Any daY ls Che BEST DAY to I ~U..~Ch.~;...,~c-,;...;,~~~ l~~~~~~~!i"l!i"'I Fut reaullJ an: JUAt a phone ga,J 19--35. P. 0. Box. 1000,, aell? OUIUled ad8 do II R~fr A maint fl!n'ice Egual Opp-. Employer f'\U1 an adf Don't d&.Y. • Dalb' Piiot Want Ada bl.ft 11te tufelt dn.,,. la the Wiit. Clll &way. 64J..517l. Sii.nla Ana. Ca.ltf. ""'ti.I. ca.II NOW 6U-55'11. ~-~:!l1!!!6L~------':!!!!!!!! ..................... ~,,~Y!oo~·~u_.::tlnd~.'.:ll.ct~n~ouano.l~~~ b&rpJfti pJore. • -· 'nall)' PUot o~ --- •. , -- • , ' . ' \ ' Friday, January 4, 1974 FREE PASSES • .find Your Name You . Could Be Cline of Today's Winners II your -• Is listed lo a special ad -It could appoor lllldor .. y classlflcatloo, sa laali at lt11t11 all--f>llooo 642·5678, Extetllloo 314, b ... twffll f a.m. CllMf 1 p.m. to make OfT'HtfflHt1 to pick up your 2 _ 10 Polrs of $2 Tickets Glv~n Dally FOR H. WERNER BUCK'S 'SUPER SHOW' froo ... w tickets at ooy co•Ytt)ltnt DAILY ~ILOT office. · , Be The Guest ·of-the DAILY PILOT i;..;:•~P;.;_.:;;..;::;.:;;.:::.;.~:1 ~-·~ec:..::~:::::.;:.:.=...:.._:;:l ·-0~P~·~•~nt~;.;;.;~...;.c~ll KITCHEN HELP PAf\T time-help !ur doou1 *Soc'ys, Bookl<Hpon I DuAine:. diJshwashlng, chcb shop. Early moming hours. lJll Relndcn Agcnt'Y helper. A11ply in per!tOn, ~usUt o:~ !:~!.·" 4tpendable. 40'!l Birch Street SKI OUTFIT e PUPPY WORLD e 210CM Head 3GO's; sz 9 lange Bull Dogs. Chlhuahuru;, Tiny boots & pole!!, 612-4524. Poodles, Shih TJl:U, Arner. ll ·S-S--6~2-~---,.--I Eskimo, Pit Bulls. Bu I I .K. · 7· Rifle, sem"'uto.., Terrier, Cockapoo, Irish good co~~ Setter. 100 MIXED PUPS?! Newport Beach Tcrtnis Club i --..,.,~,,i;~i'i-~=~--ISulte 104, NB 833-llUKl 2'101 Eastbluf! Dc, NJl. P,AYROLL CLERK Dlol A .Job 13~55 644-0050. No Chorgo To y..., *** 1974 .*** GRANDPRIX 250CZ LANDSCAPE Malnte~nce SUJ'lf:rlntend!lnt; expandnig management co1npany offering employ- ment in Omnge Coun1y for ~lert, progrei;slve 1unn II\· terest~ in supervision o( hlndscape nlaintenan(.-e. Prefer 2 yrs. ext>el-icnc:e in nlalntenanr,e or related fJcld. J.torUculture degree desirable, but not necessary. ean n4-640-0313; 7:J0.8:00 A.M., Qr 3:3().4:00 P.M., Mon., Thu~.. f'ri. or =rend resun1e to H.I.C., Inc. 2841 E. Coast Jlwy., CdM, Ca. 92625. LEGAL SECRETARY heavy recent p1'0bate ex· 11eriencc, I n c I u d in g ac- counUng. So. Orange Coun- ly. Send t-esu1ne lo: \Vritc, Classified ad #977. Daily Pilot, P.O. 8o.'t 1560, Costa l\fesa, Calif. 92626. LEGAL TYPIST Entry Into the law field. Growing Ihm In Irvine Co1n- plex. Up to $550.-Will split fee. Call Control Careers Employment Agency, 3400 Irvine BJvd., N.B. 556-8505. LEGAL SECRETARY SHARP Caret>r n1inded sec- retary for perm. job as paralegal Mag Card exp. or \\'illing to learn, 1'~ashion IsJRDd, 640.8510. LEGAL Seely; part lime, East BluU o.rea. Exp nee. phone eves! wlmd 644-7537 Ught Warehousing, China & gift\\'tll'e importer wants RELIABtE full or part time person for sh\pplng & receiving, Fred Anderson C.Ompany, 651 · ,V. 17th St, 0.1, 641-5550 LIQUOR STOR.E CLERK Full Time.. Apply At 2072 S.E. Bristol Cncar O.C. Airport. I F/time. !ilu11t be exper, a}j!:rt 1 'iiiiii;;;E;;;s;;;ta;;;b;;;lls;;;hii""m1965 ... iiiim ll & ·liighly protlci e n1 .1· TV Rd' H' KnoW!ed&e ot pvt club, hoteJ SR. SYSTEMS I :l:'l~;;;;;:;~#i;;~~~~~~;;~ Ster:0'0' •Fi, 836 BEAGLE puppies. Pcrpelual Stud Service Most Breeds. O~n Eves: 5.11-5027 IS HERE!!? Or restaurant pay.roll i:I motion tails & soleful met~s_ pref'd, but "Cit ANALYST e p UI d ng ~;..:;.c;..;.;;;; __ _:.;;;;1 1 ZENITH RCA & Sylvania brov;n eyes. AKC r(og, SUPPLY TS LIM ITED PLACE \'OUR ORDER NO\V AT essenqai,. Some t y p Ing ...: -TV ·-• 1 Distemper vacciliatccl. J\tale nece511. WAITKESSES e Surplus. Building NEW Regina s c r u b be r . & ster~. P"'-'"" ~ss or fi-inale. $50. ea 1_. h . COAS.T MOTO CYCLE 23:1,.1 Nor Blvd, C.!\I. 645-8008 Balboa Bey Club Hiring night waitre$Seli. Must ?lfATERIAL • lOOO's of NE\V polisher. Fa b er ware than the_ d1S<.'Ollnters. \\1th. 963-l5..9-6. 0 be 21 Cocktail exp re ITEMS' Coo I be I Rotisserie, 0ee~Fryer, 3 yr. picture tubes. 1 yr-~~~-~-----VESPA n1otor scoo ter . 12'21 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. penlng exists in Ne"'port · . . . · rs, um r, PY· ... & I A 11 AKC DOBER'IAN t I k & r h th 65 I que led but t .......-d ·--.. I -• '"" Id Toaster Campi"• gear parts serv ce. " , _i ac scurce as ens tee I . P 'YROLL CLERK $600 Beach based financial co. s ' no ·~'lu1re . \~"'"-'• a um aueet .. -o, mo . ' ..., ' ·1 bl mod I . k 9 r I ~ I ·1 ... o:=: ·1 ~ Co 1 t M In 1~ .. A Secretarial typewriter hair ava1 a e es 1n stoc tan,· mos., cn1a e. 10 g00< mt es per nuur . .,.. m1 es lot• senior systen1s analyst n ac a~yer: g, \V nuvWS, etc. ' d" I '73 od I I 11~ ·497 1"9 II 2300 ·1 $69" Fee Paid. Figure your "'ay to w/min. of 4 Yn! exper. in GROUND ROUND BUILDERS SURPLUS dryer, hand carved Chess & . on 1sp ay. nl es \Qn1e. ,,.,, -,N eves.. per ga on. mi es, a, th. top C-I th & S sels, books, po", dishes, pn··• to clear. Cash 90 _o_r_l_e~"'-'e_m~cs~s_ai:•_·_~= '71 license paid "Save Gas! · ... a grow the de!:iign & iinplementatiori RE TAU RANT 2406 So Malh SI -A <..-.:u -_-chance {o a·dvance, Also Fee of c'asuaUy &/or credit Ufc 2750,llarbor Blvd., Mon .thru &tt 'io~S . pictures & misc., 10443 plan or tenns to 36 mos. St. Bernard, letn. ;\KC Buy Sat-ride Sunday for Positions. Call Ann Ch1istle, & disability 'Yslems. Pro--Costa Mesa n4: 546-1031 Slater, No 105 F.V. 968-7002 ABC Color TV, 90Zl Allan-reg'd. Grnnd champ stol'k, J>e!1nies a day!" 642-1002. "'"' "~.I\!: Cont-1 Car E -ta, or 190-\6 Brookhuf$t, ,.,, b I $150 B · -.J..11>-°""'"• '" eer m· ficienc."' in 370 OS env•-n F I BUJff 3329 n..,vcr l'ec. . 11rgn1n, * B!c vr.IES * ployment Agency, 3400 Ill~ ·J ...... -WAITRESS -No Student1'1 urnlture 810 ·•• H 0 .. u~~d!~. Beach, 968-642-8264 \'•\',JAll.' e•--,.-0 ,. upn'ght A.'-'"' I Bl d ment & ANS-COBOL man· Please. Wages~ according to ' ...,~ " ,.. vu ..., v ne v " N.B. datory. . cxper. Apply in person. MOVING-custom made all SERVICE AKC Irish ·Setter puppies. full ke)'board, a m~icians PORTERS Excellent be11ef1ts, working Hamblirger Hamlet, 1545 most ne\v rattan tbl & 4 Good, used furniture & RICE'S TV t fen1. 3 males, 8 \\'eeks, lnstrun\ent, ne\v cost $12-15 llotcl or ,£1ub exper. con~s & advancement ~ Adams Ave .. Costa 11,1esa. uphol chairs, 0 ri g i na 11 Y appliances or \Viii sell for you. (fonnerly in Pantry S Cntr) Call 54$-3177. Sac. S775. 496-4467 See Pc~nnel Manage.r tent1al. Please submit AskJor Mr. HS,Kan. ~ .. asking $300. or best MASTERS AUCTION * Holida y Special * l ·S~C~H-N_A_U_Z~E~R~.-n-,,-,.~.,-3-n-,,-. 1 9~17 Hal'ley Davidson. Balboe. Bay Club re8ume w/recent salary I------~----! offer. Matching 90" sofa 20751n Newport, CM 646-8686 Used & Color TV sets -While sh(")ts, crop, BIS sired n\a\e. ve ry good cond, Ridged ;1221 W. Coast f.lwy., N.B. history to: WAITRESS w/queen sz matt, 2 839--0974 alt. 6 or Sunday they last!! Color from $65 S.P. 837-5-160 f'l'ame chopper. 74 pan PitESS Operator wanted . I \ Exper. Dependable. l\.fature niatchlng uphol . arm chairs Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'!. Up, B & \V from $35 up. For hPad, Sl:!OO , S39--55.'l4 Expel in Multi 1250 & CAROL SMITH & Neat. Apply in person, w/ottoman, 2 end tbls, cof. FROM LAPP LAND service call: . Horses 856 l "'"""'"""~~""~"=~-I Davidson, Xlnt location & Surf & ,Sirloin, 5930 W. fee ·tbl, all pieces in Beautiful Reindeer Hide. 546-6002 or 546-6003 -'-'-------· ·n YAJ\.fAHA 360 Enduro. opportunity, Start immed, AVCO Coast Hwy., N.B. coordinating colors o f Perfect tor a throw rug, 1375 ~an Ave., Cr.1 Child's Englfsh Saddle r.t an Y ex 1 r as ! 1 8 1 6?>21:µ ifuys 551-5619 eves Financial Services 01·ange & green on white or hang on the we'll, many Fits 1-lorse or Pony SW Reasonable Offer! C 8 11 +Y . 620 Newport Center Dr. WHO WANTS TO WORK'? ·background. 640-1332. decorator uses.' For the COLOR TV e645-&~69e S48-6280. Ne"'port Beach, Calif. DRIVE A CAB! LG Danish chest & night ecology minded, thi s REPAIR 31.~ Yr. old Buckskin, quarter NE\V IO spcl (sel up) $69.95 PROGRAMMER ANALYST CHOOSE your hours, work tbl, $50. Hollywood trundle ~mestlcated animal has a Expert, reasonable service. H G Id' ti • Be t Bikes cleaned/oiled $1.JO Equal Oppor. Employer for yourself, be your own bed, interspring mattressess V.'ildemess a ppearance. $50. 1'iost in hotne. Antenna ser-of~~~'s-12!.s007g~/f:~ 6epll.f s Beach Bicycles, 800 E. Bal· boss. Men or women. Can & bolsters. I"". Antique 644-4687 vice also. boa Blvd., Balboa 675--7282 be Sllghlly handicapped .JV ADORABLE 1,~ Arab pony, SERVICE Sta. Salesman, · ladies nee bench, $150. cash. * -* * BERT GALLEMORE .TV English trained ~ J'umps. BICYCLES-NE\V-A LL Neat • Clean Appearance. """--'127 ROBERT M" ~0 * ~o 2783 * -TYPES Parts & Se-·icc, f It i me, d. a y s , 11 t e Vt rel' -ed. A 25 t 70 .,....,-tu..A..n ~ S365Some tack. 551-1104 -• v Opening cxii;lS in Newport mechanical knowledge, neat s., 11 • ge 0 · D Ph f d' 2831 Bayview Dr. 1884 Placentia, C . .\-1. Cor Beach basal financial co. appear. App ly morns, 2590 ~':.f~!e:;~~ 6Y;r':ori~:e~ !)i~an mat!oge d~f ~e!~!i Corol)a de! ~tar TURNTABLE dual 1215 \\'ith 19th. 6'15-8370. 935 for 370 A!1S-COBOJ~ pro-_Nc;;eo;;w:Cpo=rt,,.B.,l"vd~Ci'•-:1--~I <lay. Apply in person, tbl, 5 side chrs + host. You are the winner of ,_sh_"_"'~H;-"g~h~t,..~ck~cartr--id_g_•_.1 I -bJ!,~. 11.)e'l 1970 HONDA CL :GJ. xlnl grumn1er analyst. Applicant SERVICE Sta. help \\•anted Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th Match buffet, $1200 or bst -2 tickets to the •_Mint cond. 962-5849 . ~~·-.. . ~ cond. Reblt eng \V/ alJ ne\v ~~:r. ha~e ~J-CQ~JL Y1: full or p/time Apply, 990 St., <Asta Mesa. ofr. 546-48.54. RJ~i;.~otAL ~~33 Sj(X) or. best· ofr. OS. t.fust ht.ve ability to E. Coast Hwy., N.B. \VOMAN 7 am-1, Mon-Fri, 2 MAPLE step table ' both VEHICLE SHOW Boits, Power _9061----------1 design, code, test & lmple. Service Stillion Help Sl.65 hour. Winchell Do-Nut $25., Good 7' couch, needs at the 11 S Mobile Homes mcnt flnan48l/accountlng needs. Apply in person .. 300 Shop. 253 East 17th St., recovering $50. Disreputable ANAHEIM Fret to You -Q.fRIS 32• Skiff Lapstrake, sys!ems. Ex<,1.llent benefits, I ;::E"."1"7t"h'"S"'t-o. ~C-CM7-~---l·~°"'~'•~M-e_sa~·-----=-leather chair $30 .. CONVENTION CENTER '64, TW210, FB, AP, OF, MOBILE HOME working condl & advance-SEWING Machi ne Operator, a January +13 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 Winch, radio remote, outrig-FOR SALE : :rtn:.C:~~1~7r?~e~s:J: }n~i~0:~~~a~~e6:~~· 1 B~~w~;:'~~i: ~~·s.Z': ·pt~asecl~~ ~78' ~i~ke~ * * * f~rs00.=3e~Js. hr s, SILVERCREST history to: 1 ----~"'-'==c.::o:..1 -11~ .. I good condition, S75. 302 (North County toll free JAMES DAVIS NE\V 28, SkipJ'ack Sport MOBILE HOME CAROL !\MITH · SHARP GAL . V Broadway, ~-,1a Mes a , number is 540-1221>:}~ 20' x 53' 2 BD 2 BA rp VJ m Evening Star Road Fisher. Fantastic!! Will ac-• ' ca -, AVCO To manage very active 646-7363 ~ * * * <Arona del Mar, Calif 92625 cept smaller OOa.t or car :!raped, blt·ins., refrig., Financial Services \\'Omen's lxiutique. l\1ust A t'q"-800 VELVET sofa & love seat. WASHING mach. Kenmore, You are the winner of in trade. 646-596l aft 5pm·, \Vasher & eleC't. dryer, \Vired 620 have exper. & be able to n 1 -· 8 Id XI 'I d $"" <or 220 · d k't h Newport ¢enter Dl'. Nr new, must sac. Also yrs 0 • n con · ""· 2 tickets to the 646-3759 days. air con ·· 1 c · Newpory Bea' , Calif. take charge of f u I I SCRAM LETS ·Herculon hi <le_ a_ b ed, Convt sofa, blk vinyl, 4 yrs SP.ORTS & • clock, sto1"age shed, !arid· respo!1sibilities. Xln't O_PP?r. • 673--0275 or 673-95.59. old. Barely used $50. GE RECREATIONAL Boat1:, Sail 909 scaped.patio. Three yrs. old EqWLI Oppor. mployer for right person who 1s 1n-elec. range & dbl oven com-VEHICLE SHO\V • Like nu. Lo<~ated in ·ne\v t t d · f/ · MOVING Overseas-must sell •·-$195 M · d 1 k eres e in a perm. time ANSWERS ,,... . ove necessitates at the 16. v, n 1 u r. Caiamar,.an a u t p . a\\'ay from noisy pos.ition. U you qua11·1y, call hous,eful o( furniture. Piano, sale 0 ·'0 8535 • <t O h If bf fi I • • · ~ ANAHETh'I \\1/trlr. All rigging. Used ... · ne. a · 'Om c u., for appl. ~:i1Tu-J'8;;her & dryer. DRIVE WAY gates, wroUght Ct1NVENTION CENTER '"'ice. $550. 644-2648 or house. $15,995. Call EVES. !t.tAIDS wanted, part or full QUALITY time. Apply Seacliff Motel Con I-Shipping li6 c & Receiving. -~rowing co. 1 1 S. .H. Laguna Beach. needs dependf!:tle persons THE LOOK Pestle -Ankle -oOgma -iron. 6' high 11'8" wide, J anuary 4.13 642-9116. 213-694-4690. MANAGER, 2nd 11 h l ft . willing to wo~Ui quality PreYkiu.s supervisory ex-Con f r-o 1 ware use-opera· petience mandatory. We tions. Will train ~4. SHA 64+6500RP. G. AL Yel~w-a ~fc~st who's Foi~1? S::.:e~~~.~~~ .::,j~: ~th as is Sra>. Lumber Please ci;i,11 642-5678, e.xt 333 25' Au."<. Sloop. \'v' oo d . CANC~~StS.MOEENNTAT : . sick. l.fis business has been I t ncl alee ff rack" for Ford truek $50. ~ claim • your tickets,.. 1l..E>;F;, Stove, compass, 5 -D .l"- To ~SIS! m~ger ln a very bad lately. He is suffering ~ ' m o er. Call aft 4 PM. 89_!_--0792 ( orth _County toll free bags sails, yacht cond. $3800 ESTATES wm train tor •his position. REAL i:tTATE h-tacGl'l'g!Jr Yacht Corp., _,-active boutique. Must have from the depression of his p 0 BOX RENTALS number IS 54-0-1220.) 646-4!1TI msg Lynn Bowser. 1051 Site Dr., Brea. cc.entraJ boutique selling exper. & \VALLET MA'ITRESS & box spring 149G Riverside Dr, N.B. * * * A''C 21. VICTORY Sloop U. Ave. across from Brea 1631 Placentia, en ... Me'3. UCENCING MARRIED person over 21 ~ . looking for a penn. f/time · set, queen size, new & never Behind Graham Realty. GOOGe D home for n. interest $450, Marine 'toil et Comm. f.losp.) Lot #46 job w/an oppor. to grow * SUPER SALE * ~;101187· s~t. Williams nnan Shepherd, 3 yrs ~10 67'-3614 CONTACT MY; PK. MGR., Car & phone net.-css. Sl.25 \Vlth our. sponsorsh.1p $15.00 wk. to stlll't. '894-8001 l\\'hich ~s . fully reunhurse:<t upon jou11ng OlJ' fitm I IS all you pay for !Qur school- ing thro\l&h Lull\,bleau Real Estate School. 8e part of America's great1$l business - Real Estate. I w/~paijding bus. If you UP TO 1h OFFl I Miscehaneo:ut old. 549-1296 22' 'Albatross. Xlnt shape. ~to,,r..,..•h"'ow=!n,;g".~~-~~·• qu T. ca for0•0PPL JEWELRY • 20% OFF BLUE v e 1 v·e t c 0 u ch Wanted 820 ' ' Equip. S85Cl. Leave ntessage 40' x 8' PAN-AM, cov'rd 30' MASSAGE TECH. TRAINEE \'oung lady (18-28) \\'anted tor legitimate full time posi- tion. No exp; ncc. \Ve send to llCbool, earn 'vhile learn. A_ppl,y in pei'SOn any aft. or eve: ~-w; Cit~ -Hwy., Newport Be,ach. . MEQ-lANICAL-wi:tard for a wide variety of tooling, deSlgn le machine main- tenance problems. Degree not required. MacGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia, Costa Mesa. MECHANIC WANTED Uc. Preferred. Top pay for Right Mo.n. Apply in person. 300 E. 17th St., CM. MECHANIC, full time. Ma:cGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia, Costa Mesa. MEDICAL Assist. Back of· flee girl tn Hunt Bch. Repty to Class ad No. 25 c/o Oally Pilot P. O. Box 1500 Costa Mesa, 93>26. MEDICAL Assistant front office. expel only, call bet 10 &. 4, 644-0295. I NEED \\"Oman to live-in 6 day "'eek with elderly lady In n1obile hOme. L i t e hsekeeplng, sinlple cooking. Car necess. 673--2734. NEED qualified adult for nursery attendant. Call 67J..1018 NEWPORT Beach law fim1 aeeks legal trainee w/xlnt skills, good reasoning abili· ty le a sense ot humor. 644-94511, . NURSERY School teacher needed. Must have nursery school certificate. Hours 8:~ to 1, Huntington Beach, !J68..fl833 HE L~ K 2nd, 3rd & 4th w/matching chaiJ;'. Xlnt . 5 MONTI! Female cockapoo, Steve Lee: 646--4STI. Alum pa~lo, alum storagtj' 644-G[(M) ~ HOURS ll-5 cond. $50. Call 54fr7039 SILVER COINS pepper, shots, housebroken, ! shed, ¥kirted, ne\v shag, SHEET Metal Specialist, 3A * BACKIX>OR IMl>oRTS * S\VIVEL desk ch.air $20. Dbl. Paying 100% over face to loving home w/yrd, Bo'ilts Slips/Docks 910 cpl'~, -new fonn~ca kitchen I l>.fechanics. 2 Br a k e 1896 HarbOr Blvd .. O'I headboard $15. Wing back value. Ca'll 962-3646 bef Sam 963-4441 ' & sink, all apphances just: Opt'rators, 2 W. Sb"ippet B of A & Master Charge chair pert. t60-536-1367 & aft 6pm. FREE, Part Lab, Shep & WANTED: slip for 36 ft. re· finished. Coppertone,f ?~a~. 833-8660 ~Ion WOULD . the party with the SOFA, coffee table, dining 6 to 8" table saw. Colli~, Male, pup, Had Pacemaker, Ne\\'port only. S3500. Call anytin1e 642-1002 VIDEO TRAINING · . . Van Ness coverlet please rm table, 2 chairs. Good REASONABLE shots. Aft 4 & wkntls, Call : 714: 838-4003 35'. 1 Bqrm, bath , nu awning, While you are-s~-for -SHIPP-ING, Rece1V111g, & call me again Collect. (J'L1f cond. 833--0983 Call 536--0206 645-2782 MOORING: Will pay top s fum with TV. Take f.in;t your license you pnay avail ln\-entory Oerk. \~anl 6C-9453 HUGE sofa & lave seat. Fur WANTED TO Brni' LIONEL 2 TIGER cats, 6 mos . Also cash for mooting. Jmmed. .Legitimate offer. 327 W. yourself of our ix>ntinuous retired person "'1'lo can use like pile. Dark gold. $150. OR AMERICAN FLYER Cocker/Collie mJX male possess. pref'd. 549-1892 1-W-'i='"'con::..::S<;p.c,;5::: _____ 1 field training and· John sonie xtra cash • 4 hr d~y. Appliancn 802 or best offer. 642-8323. TRAINS 837-9685 dog: 2 yrs old. 548-8976 HUNTINGTON Harbor, 34 ff, Lumbleau -~las Ed-5 day wk. 1580 Monrovia, ·-· · Motor ROmes \\'ards Video T ~a In Ing N.B. 642-3472 JANUARY CLEARANCE Garage Sale 812 WANTED! Complete· set of FREE _to-good home 1 yr side tie, $60 mo. Sale/Rent cOurses. This 1 u P er b SA VE $IO $IOO books by Robert Ingersoll old ffiL"<ed lemale Schnau-846-3272 modern training is available ~~N~~cl~c~wiCo~· 1!: wa s hers, · tod r y ~rs, T\VIN BEDS Y:/wht plas 548-3036. • zer. Call 536--3249· Boats, Speed & Ski 911 '73 OPEN ROJ)..D. mini to any licensee dtslring to opening for pt-time counter dishwashers, stereos, 'IV'•, hdbd, innsp matt, box sprg FREE "Personality Plus" motor home 360 cy C'U Join our gt'0\\1ng Organiza-help. 3 hr shifts. Open btwn re:higerators. fr eeze r s , & linens. Xlnt. DRESSER Musical Instruments 822 cock·a·poo to home with NEW 16' + .Wrjedt ski boat. i11, p/s, p/b, dual propane. lion. \Ve are expanding and 10-2:30. Mon-Fri. s2.15 hr. microwave ovens & vacuum = RrCLiN~~G ~JfJt HAMM 0 ND Sp 1 NET children. 545-4009 aft 6pm. 1~ hp W~~lvo IO. Real!Y 4 burners, glass door oven, have openings throughout 833-3294 Ask for Laurie. cleane1"S. ~Iany 1 of a kind, & READING LAM p ORGAN 1550 303 K. REG:D. Lab, spayed, good s arpde. .~.3e7x9cept car tn dash air , 6cu ft glass Orange County son1e floor models All in _ • · • mgs \\·atch dog, 3 yrs old. tra · ~ 5 days,-elect re.frig, smu:ema · TELEP ll <? N E \Vo r k. A-l cond. · -TABLE. ~·r Prov mpl, gold Road, Newport, 646-4656 541)-1093 646-5961 afler 5pm.~!!~ shower, hot 1-vater 27 g COLWEI I pleasant p/l.ime from your Sears. Roebuck & Co. Herc uphls. Perl .. cond. "'ater heater. Dual ~ honlc. Hrly wage. c.r..~.. Adams at Magnolia MAPLE Boo Kc As E . Office Furniture/ CUDDLY playful pups, Ta1;1 terles, . 10 mpg, 00 do PROPERTIES, INC. H.B. areas. 646-7753, l\.largie 9S2-77Sl DANISH MODERN step tbl. Equip. 824 fem. & Black male, 540-6m Transport•tioa I~ payment, TO paymeno.;. (serving all 0·1 lG-3. LA\VN MOWER, misc or ~ms . ~ 5.11-8038 Granite Countyl Telephone answering serv. DOUB~ electric oven & garden t ools etc. 3345 EXEC ma~y office ":1111· SAVE from pound. Beaut. ;;RE="'""".,-===-==~I CALL 833.1~31 Full or p/time. Ex-per electtic cook top. Oven only California St. CM 556-0500 desk, $275, ~ t ch m _g black Lab puppies. 9 wks. 915 MI~'i A H~~R O~O~AN pref'd hut not nee. S. A.· $Ill]· The ~k top is only MOVING must sell: Maytag avocado naugh. ~wive! chair Call 645-7094 Aircraft CONVERSION, LOW AS '9 REAL ESTATE Anaheim area. ~1962 $35. phone 557-2010 $35; 2 guest cha1rs f.S ea:; I=~~~-----• washer $35. Gas Dryer $60. 2 seat beige naugh bed Shepherd Pups, 8 wks. old, CESSNA Sk;vhawk. '64. Mrk per Day & 6c per mile. SALESMEN TYPISTS Rent Wa1hers/Dryer1 Forced air heater 80,00J 'bench w/back $15. Call aft. Free to good homes. 12 & Escort no radio. E-G· RESERVE YOURS TODAY Why not work in the holftst 12 Wk Full . t B.T.U. 10 gal Aquarium SID. 5pm, 540-3624. Call 646-3015 T. X!nt cond. Approx 125 894-3.341. area • HunH .. -on Beach • • · mam · 15 gal Aquarium 110. Oscar hrs since top major. No --:20,..--..,.°'"",,.-,-~---1 ~~· * 63°1.202 * SWVL CH FREE'to good home Be I ' -25' "Iotor Homes, Fountain Valley. Let us .,... $5. G.E. 12" B&\V TV $35. EXEC RS $15/25 · age free rides, no tire kickers. train you. ('_j,JI Phil Mc-Desperate"' Needed WASHER & Dryer, good & many other items. 840 Sec chrs $8/24, dk s. Pierce & a Cock-A-Poo. Call Leslie Best offered considered. ~pe:io~ Lifetime & Open Namee, VILIIA'GE REAL 1J cond, $100. for both. Cop-Governor St.; C.M. 645-5685. 867 W. 19, CM 642-3408 after S:OO PM. £6.-.0088. 646-7833, Eves 548-5775. Ban~meri~~el~h,:!'"s~; r ESTATE, 963-=4567. pertone refrig $175. 557-4900 ESTATE Sale, BR sets, LARGE oak desk w/"cub-Cycles, Bikes 01arge accepted. REAL ESTA1'E * Repro Typists. \VASHER & DRYER, Ken-dresser, lamps, pi ct. ?.f~011Ae.,~· SlOO. 4~-946Q or I ll"'-1 Scooters 925 •Dale's Motor Home Rentall Three full tink', 95% COMM. * Exec. Typists more Coppertone, like new, frames, paintings, silver, .. ......-"tVJ eve. Pt:ts .net Supplies · •73 23-2S' M.H. & Minis Exp'cl only, Estab. Newport * Clerk Typists 846-2148 dishes, cookware, tables, Pianos/Organs-826 -'72 YAMAl-IA 100 MX. Good Free miles 9 til 9, 838--0900 ofc., MLS,rRe!s. req'd. 213 * Sr. Typists FRIGIDAIRE deluxe gas chairs, Mink S'lole, clothing, cond. Best offer. RENT the best. ,73 Ex- -331-1601 • dryer, Excel cond ., $75. (16 to 18 ) Misc. Sat & • PIANOS Pets, ~-•••• 1 850 Call 557--0489 eculive 2)' u· -1~ SALES VOLT 5111H430 Sun 2ll6lJ El RJo Cittle, C.M. • RG S .,. CC u1 a Xuus, u= 546-<436 O AN '73 • 350 B 1aco, Pursang miles, 979-9056, ~pm. Salespel"llOl1, pennanent, ex-Instant Personnel REFRIGERATOR 17 cu ft *Security-Pet Food* ALSO '72 · 125 CC, Bultaoo MOTOR Home for sale, 25 .. per, aggn!Mive & articulate. Temporary Service Frigidiare, 2 yrs, avocado. Settling Estate, Applian, new FULLERTON MUSIC Beef by 27c lb. Cott. ~h pUrsang ~2725 below ivhsle. Pvt ply. Xln't to call, on retail stores 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Xlnt cond. S160. 536-7982 dryer, linens, dishes, furn, Our Newest Location 15c lb. All Kennel supplies 10 SPD, Bike. Xlnt concl., C'Ond. !179-1614. for dlrec.t mail adverti'sing Newport Beach 546-4741 REFRIG-Freezer, N 0 r g e, clothes, interesting personal 18191 Euclid, Fountain Valley 547-3977, 1418 Wilshire, S.A. $75 co. Est. 14 Yrs in Orange Eq I o E I items, jewelry, plants, 9-4, 1 Blk N 1 S D' · Co. Qualified appt's, xlnt ua ppor. n1p oyer Coppertone, Lge sz. like Jan 5 & 6, 102 East Ocean-. o. o en iego Fwy LOST, large scarlet Macaw, .=...,OCal~l ,:Mcci"k°"e~642-E0""'""'24"=-_ comm. &: bonuses. 540-9002 TYPISTS. new $100. 962-8741 front, Balboa: R 5l57-4836f $ blue wings. If seen please '72 HON~A 350 SL. Runs 1 CLEARANCE SALE s ECRETARY, Huntington SECRETARIES ELECTRIC dryer, xlnl cond GARAGE Sale, I Din·nn set, enta s rom 5 call 494--6005 great, $450. 1'fust sell. Call '69 -12' Shf\s la $550: '71-13' M k '74 good S15 B 0 A -CONST. Columbian anytime 646-5898. Sprite w/rt'E'fer S795: Ne"· ~a:~~~ =~Is~~ y~a~ ro;,u~~~!w We c:O help 548-2397 aft~ 2:30 PM. .~~es!~1 1:~~ii~~:: e Pianos & Grands tree. 8", flawless body. Good BOYS 20''. 5 speed Road-"73-12' Papoose S795: New Trailers, Travel 945 School dJstrict in Orange you clean up bills, give you FRIGIDAIRE freezer le elec dishes, _etc. Thurs thru S_un ALL MAJOR BRANDS appetite. SGO. 673·5730. niaster. Good condition. S30. ~73--13" ,t_ 15' Fieldstream, NURSES • Morgan's Nurses County, Ls looking for an an opportunity to grow dryer, Good con cl it lo n, 10071 Signet Circle, 1'1.B. Call 968-8233 r.1<;sn Camper sales, 2036 Registry now taking ap-Executive ·s e c re tar y , through exposure to various 644--6866 GARAGE SALE-M!Ac furn, Used &-rebuilt pianos also Dog~"''~------"8.:;S4" 1250 cc Bultaco Pursang. Harbor. Costa Mesa. plicatlons for priv. duty startlng salary $769 mo + types of flork & special as-REFRIGERATOR Uprights from ••..••.•.. S69 -Good condition S275. ~ SCOTS?l-1AN 17' Slrw s: nurses, need R.N.'11 LVN's xlnt 9eneflts, Typing 70, slgnments in different com· _ • top antiques, & appllance1, 77:k> Spinets " .......... $145 MALE Pointer I yr old. 494-4i47 ... u &. P.N.'s Please ca 1 J S/H ra>, Interested A~ J)anies. We "Work for & wiUi freezer, good condition, Jwtiper #2 IOU SunflO\ver Players .. • ......... , , S995 All shoU!. $IO. 'call 979-7655 .ll:~S or elect ref".i&, stv 1..::c54S-&361::..:~-c°'=-:833-~C'23657"" ==-I pllcants report for the skills you toward your goals. clean. S45. Call 642-9282 ~t ra~~~) Santa Ana. Grand~ " • " --.•• , .•• $395 eves·& weekend. OUT OF SIGHT 500 KA\V. ~r:2n, porta-pottt, $1 195. * NURSES AIDES "lest, Sat Jan 5, at 9am, Best of all, we don't charge LIKE new Kenmore 6 cyl e Organs DOC OBEDIENCE s b Cust. paint & seat, Io mi's. ---=~~~---i Cllll S49-306l room 232, Edison High you for It. Call today. Make Di.shWasher, $125. BARGAINS GALORE! Big ALL MAJOR BRANDS Parks & Recr. -Fo~ninrt. =$450'==' =· 646-=~-'='-·~~---I '73 F'IREBAU. trailer. 22', "o"LD"· "Eft;-'::wn=,.;.ter"='""'neec1"'i:-,-,br:::i;:g;::ht' I School, 21400 Mag n 0 1 ta, u9s your f.in!t new friend in Call 963--0195 ~~,'!._ furniture, clothing, Optignn •.•• demo .••• $195 541-3914, 673--3180, 556-5300 SCH\VINN. Red. apple crate, ~~ee ~:g~9· ale, 'c'.an Hwttington Bea.ch, An 1 74. ai: .,..,,..._ One day only, $1.ln Spinet ··-··· new . ····-$499 AKC Irish Setter puppies. very good cond, S 5 0, -~Ji~Pt~g,~~ript. tt:; z; q ya I opp or tun tty OffiCe Overload Auction 804 Jan 6th. · 1424 Antigua, Frff Organ Lessons 1 fem, 3 males, 8 wks: 962-0149 aft 5 &: \,:knds. HOLIDAV-22· sclf-<.'OntrJincd location. 675--8067. Employer 557-0061 Nev._}>Ort. 9 am. . Phone 557-483.() Call 548-3177. MUST Sell 1970 Yamaha 125. sleeps 6. many extras. l ~~~==c.,...~=1--5<'Ecr.•iVy,...T'i'no-.;•1iiNiiE;-;;Ec--3723 Birch St.. N.B. **PUBLIC BABY, garoen. pi>oto cqpt. FULLERTON MUSIC I====,-.,-;-,.-,-., Dirt or mad. 1310. 13995. 962-0385. ORAL surgery assist. 2)..35 "" 1 t · 1/"1"-" DOG obedience.class to start A- r:i ..• t-.' •~5'1ve. In-Th" is employer ,..ks bubbly TYPIST/RECEPT. AUCTl'ON** oys, urn, nusc. r ..,-.,, 122 N. Hnrbor, Fuller'"n · he Call 5-'5-1840 uto Service, Parts 949 ••·· Ind! I 1 1 1...... ....... Of 1 26552 Montebello, 1.1 v _ 871 1805 "" 111 t Ne"1>0rt-I1-vlne area . .,,,;;;--;===c-:-cc--=-1 _ teent. Dental exper or v. w ave. typ ng who n grow .. '6 u..,.1ness. cs n T • ht 7 30 58&-G688 • M&-4928 1972 BULTACO Alpina 251lcc 1972 F ~ ,,1 . • . 1 ~...i..-11n .. -ne· c. RB ·-a. e .. --lots 9f --'blic 'con· Newport Bch n~_ar Airport. on19 : pm hrs·. Open Nlgl1"t• 'ti! 9 ·74 tags clean xtras $475 Ot-..1 ,,.,, engine. i...es. .................. .... .. · t'-t'• LfO. •• h 1 t I llcq I t t · 0 t · Living nn sets sotu love J I 115 Sa VIZSLA fHungaiian Pointer) ' '--· · than 100 n1Hes. $475. phone 1 842r%UL ac exper. c p u . · x 11 ypmg " ran$-• • ew. rv t: 'UI 5:30, Sun. 12-5 AL·c 12 ,_ f ho 500 u1iles, 646-5962 eves. 9~ •968 1-":::,:~o...~-~....,.....,...,. Fantaatlc starting sala..., crlbing skllls. Salary com. seals, bdrm $t!tS, chests, :.J. ,..,.... Wl'i:s em. s w, ,.,.... -k.' -;~I~~~ -~J~d.a:..1=nQt~· -ap~~=~w~ex::~~~ ~~~~~c;#:; -o:=.N:~;Ut.~;:.· ~-!!RG~~er~i~ft! ~~~l~=Q -TS:~-$75t~ ~,.~~~~!iii!!!!!!(i!~~ Reply to Clau:wect ad 978,. 17400 Brookh1.1n1, (, Vbr. PCM, Jnc. 1801 Do~ St., tbls, side by side retrig/ $435. $200/otter. ·~ wtll'Ome t6 attei T'Ue.sday pet • show, ms. Call after Autos tors.It II CA1 l J c/o DIUt Piiot, P. o. Suite 213 963-6715 ~.B. , ~ier. stove, rtfrlg,-re-Mlianineoui Ill ~ryo~ 7:;:; ~'X: ';i8!'; s pm.~ ·~ONDA lOOCL. u~11c\v. l Box 1560, CoN. Mesa, Calll. SECRETARY, "Su:ptr a.I", TYPlST--cterk for nursing chners-, la.m,ps, plcturel & the organ! Tom. Dieterich REG ch.back grounds Toy • tau 613--0065. fa626 -, N.B. publiaher needs a records A eapply orders. ~..:...8 f~!m-: & M!llter -FOR-Sale FIREWOOD, Will ··in charge 642·2851 . Coasl'~-:'ferrl &-Yo~ -l l_,_.__ _______ I "ll:t.iann" career .......... Call 6G--Ul0.. , ----•"'1' sub~t to Deliver & Stack. Music, Ne ........... Blvd. at puppies. For Info 549-1314. ·~ AJS Stormer, ~Hk.-c, Lrn:< A ntiques/Classics 95 1 ,....... Pre-M C. -"_.""""'• "'V"'' I tr XI t nd -· TIME ""'R fep ,Jo!nagrutftam MASTERS AUCTION ~~-Hor11Qr,C111. LOVABLE LA8RADOtt 0 'as, n co • •·~. 1930 MOPF.L A Ford Cou-J l--°"' · ot -dedt<:oted, """11~~ -YETEltAN'S . FIREWOOD • Oak. Orangt, FEMALE. 6 wk> 010 : 115. S!s-3968 -"'bit V-8, good b?aktiJ 9UICK CASH enthuwttc pros &xclt1ng ' ll075ll Newpo4 rt, c:M. 64641686 o.u ....... " otacked tree. PIANOS -ORGANS Call aft 5. 642-9564 2 VAM"1fl\S 125 EMI•!"' moo. or be,, offer. 84H•"' Postuon with eec~ f\ltul'e. RE''tl MJltKEYI lnteretttd In 83}091 att, 6 or Sund~ -fl.like **· 496-2618 N 1970 ('lean !ll't up for d11"t :;::i THIOUCiH' A Send tttuint to lllt a-an colli!g1!t No? Wcll the!, In· Behind Tony s Bldg. Mat I. °" & Uoed. C-selection. Gf\EAT PYRENEEll, teddy 129· 5 each. 842-0769 · 1 Trucks , 9'2 • • ., • terettrd 1n --..1 f Co"-AQUARIUM, trop t I e h , Competitive prices. Open bear like AKC nups. 3 left. DA.ILT""PILOT W,S,A .Via Lido. Nll. tact: .. _, '" You don'l need · 8 gill\ to Encyclopedla 1el, 8bq stt. Eves. & SUndaya, The bell $25M300. 5fl&.:ti6. HONDA 160. xlnt lransporli-I '61 GMC , v.e, II T. P.i<~ I WANT AD .92911), VeterM11 Atfaits OUict "Draw Fut" whe-n you-~t'I Cieograph. ~ deals art al~·at: "Weed it &: ~ 'p'' t_lon. 20,000 ntiJ(lg, \VIII take up. G4.000 o1ig rt\f, $'150. 1 SElCRETARY,, type 5&<IO Orengo Coo,i O>Uese place an ad In the DaUy i'RJGIDAIRE elec. cloth .. ,Walnch5 Mu.ic City From trtasum t: trash ~t Offer. &1()·1354_ -\~2546 __ '" 64:Z.567B •wi>m min. 1 Girl omce. * 556-SISl * PllQI Want Ad.SI Call now ~rytt, $3(1, 2 PIU'l •tcel d .. k h"'=st.Plva Sol0-2830 Turn them Into cuh 1973 Harley Sporlsttr '71 DATSUN $1750. ---'-'·===~===,;..-LL Tikt charge. MM464. -642-5678. + ofc Chair, !fQ, 847.-64!1· .tj~1 CALI.. Daily Pllot 11,000 ml. $1500. ;H3-3G~ll ~;7;1-u:no -;:-. ~·. ~· ... ' •••• \ \ ' I I , •• . , . '. -• r . r~ • • :J,f DAILY P1LOT r r1da1. Jal'luary 4, 1974 ____ :__=,,-,r.~-T~'.'::-,.,,.....,·:,.r::-,..,,..,.-.,---.-.,--=,..,...,..-;''.....=-.--:.:::--::-:--===.,.--~-.-=~;;:::::---ciOft~~;;;i.'iiii4Hl--lmi91i jtrucf<s 962 1Truck• . 962 Vans. 9fl Xuto;,..lmporttd '910 Autos, fmpo'rttd. 970A utos, lmr,!rlod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, u,td 990 Aulol, Used ' '73 GMC ~ TON , ATLAS ~01;,'0,~"'~~;,';SH~•,,~~~; ALFA ROMEO 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;;;;;;,;;;=;;;;;;;::; MERCEDES BEl'."Z 73 CADILLAC [LOORADO '"'w "'"'· cpts. pwu•ll""· * LFA RO ALLEN CADILLAC---OLOSMOBILE s $6295 PICKUP Chrysler/Plymouth '"'Ill'• •-ood paint. Exe~! · A MEO IMPORT SPECIALS 50 U ED NEW YEAR «ind. IJ:<l!O. 644-2513 Be<t deal alway•! Berllnai; • MERCEDES CLEAR-OUT SALE !910 !"ORD E<""°ll"• ''<ll from $37!5 (Ser. #0288) • Ful(power. lac. A/C .. AM/FM stere o w/tape , 73 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD $6695 • \ u I urn ll t It· lr;;ns111is.~lon, Brond Nt w 1973 \\l!ndow . Vnn, \Vftrrsnty, 'T'J's It '73'11, O>tnpiele 8C-73 MERCEDES 280 $AYE ON DISPLAY r11.1wer, io.ll'Crlrijt, Vt( CllKilli-', 2 00 894-81 d 1 • B ~~ nul"::. tJR>12."1NJ , INTERNATIONAL ·~~"'.L"',";,.,""""~ ""'~":;::;:,.,,94,..,.... ,,",,'-"...,)'!I ~=n now. uy or lease ' ' . ' factory Aulhorb:ed Dh1tribu· Brou•ham.De.Elefl'anC_e. FuU po\vcr, rac. A/C,, $3677 , . ~_l --t ror f6r All r.Ictcedcs Product~ ~ o 9 Ol 1 TR-A VELALL !'ORD van 1009 Club wn"'"" Jim Porklnoon's White Wllh_Saddlc mtenor, lull power, ac. New ""' . Par"-Se•vk~ AM /F'M stereo, low nule s. (# 7 1\ l '""""" including nic '~"· ~i'::'l,.,;',;84,i\'.'.':!!,'91~'~',;;'~ air conditioning. J,Jke New ! AUskdAMbout tdOur ULn,·.•q,u,• 70 C'OIUAC CONVERTIBLE $2595 llWlTOYOWll&TA. d i1•:·~;;~1$102co·"o"1o'm' Autos Wonttd 73-oATSUN. 240Z $AVE " ·;~.:' " --. . (#980) 968 H f I rts Full power, fac. A/C .. leather mterior. & or Yellow with Black Interior Full Factory OUSe 0 mpo • , · -.. ~off "'"'su,,.,~~t"' 1tri TOl'...D.O.LL.AR.PAJ.D 16 -''-· -'°°----64;.6~400~-~ Equlpmi!lit -Beautiful' ' 686'lManchc""".Jluena.E•u'k 65-CADIL'-1 C SEDAN· $1195 1 1.16<• ","7"2""'·CC.HM.EV'Y""'"''J INBTrEaRndNNAoTwl019N73AL FOl:~~E~:Ji~~YCARS BMW . . on !he San!~• Frwy. IJI C1tli or 1.."0n1c in 10 l«'C us. Sen DiegAt Freewiy 5:.G--_ Full power, factory air conditioning. (# 1012) I 1;, TON PICKUP I SCOUT Avery Parkwoy San Diego Freeway Eronon1i1·al r. c~·I .. uu1on1at le I Ui;tdt•d u1ch1dJnt:; ILil' 1._'()ll· l~C I 1971 MG MIDGET At 1r·onsn1ls~lo11. pl'l\\'l'r i;tc('1'· ditiol1ii1g. 1'.tSSS8CC:0330071 ,..,,.,. , au . tlC:. Liguna NigUe l 36,000 n1i. $1300 wliolesalt>, Avery Parkw1y int; arid only 17,!XKl rnlll•s, I $1400 , ~ * !)13-3691 * I t l!T3.~L I. . 495 0800' 831 0800 N' I 0 I $2795 I off 1'ti1:. sugt;eStl;'ll J)l'!CI' 3100 \V ,.~, ... ~ NB • • '69 ~IG Midget., soft & hal'd L11gun1 1gu1 n Y I Open Dnilv & Sun. '1il 10 P~I '~~405'Y·. · · AUTit. OWll FOi """"""'""""""'""""I""""""'""""~""!~~!!!!!!!!!! top, wire whls, Like new ROY CARVER, Inc. I 2929 ~;~~""~;,~:"'"· TOP CASH B MOTOR DATSUN J MAZDA . _ao_i_1P_c~.1_n_95._s1_5-41_18_t1...,.,4"'9"'5'l'."'08"'0!!!0"""'~'!'!"'~"""l~8".'3~1 ·~0:l"8"'0~0~1 HOLLS llOYC:t•: 11'1\V ' 546 1934 . A OPEL I'! :l:~ E. 171h St. I,~ • for clean late 1nodel cnrt ~ W L1':~\SE 11 diffe1·f'nt nc\v t'ar 1974 MAZDAS Autos, Imported 970 Auto1, lmf>orted 970 Cos!n rilcs:1 • 516-4-1'1·1 'j'.} CJU::V El C11111ino, <iutnt Md tt'ucks! I 0 every 12 n1onU1s for the IMMEDIATE '72 VOLVO 4DOOR' . p S I p B R I H H d Ch I t next 3 years on revolving '62 OPEL Sta. wagon. H.un.s TOYOTA -~!1~~~i~'S 1& ~·~:c1~1~,i~~-~ ~1:~,top, l2.!XXI 'nii. s3.XJO ri1~c:'h~1r and J~:i=: -,-~ ~~~c ~~~'.~~~!!,N~~c~~~~~~~ SE~~J"~~~~~E\\' ~L25n~~G. ~.0~'.1---------- Runs good. Sl•'>O. 67;.511> •lo;..!7''-I N•wport Boach NA S Affas, Audis, B M \V s . R·X4 PEUGEOT 72 TOYOTA 4 spet>(] tr11nsmlsslon, radio,• betwn fi & 7 P?-.1 963 833-0555 Capt"is, rrrl'aris, Jaguars, Vans WE PAY TOP DOLLAR THE RED BARON'S Opuls, Vol'°s. Volkswag•ns, NEW PEUGEOT LANOCRUISER heater. !856EIOL j $3577 I '67 FORD F.ronolint' Pick Up. Looks good· Huns goOO. Sharp 1\'hl'l'ls & !ire's. $675 firrn. Ph: 6·16-4929 '66 CJ-IEVY Vnn e11n1j)t'~. FOl't TOP USEn Cr\RS Toyottts, ll lso 7~·s. 72's, Tl's BOB LONGPRE Xlnl eond, Aood gas nu, If yi:iur car is extra l'il'ttn, CHOICE Lc;11se Re.turns for easy Ill'· MAZDA DEALER can Norn1 6i5-287~. see us fit'SL SALES, LEASING & Lease "'Ith No rilonC'y [)(\\\'!1 • " 11·h~l drive J::AUER BUICK EXCELLENT SERVICE 01· outrlghl 1>ui-chaSl', 100',I-l)o;'nln l'IL•iu·an<.'1! nO\v in Con1plc1e S.iles ri.nd Servi('e, e l''ull equipment ~Ult lfJi!i& W VOLVO '72 DATSUN. $2000. or IX'lit offer 546-84:)9 I '6!) FOH.D V1tn. 6 cyl, good 292;i I-larbo,J· Blvd. Financillg 0.A.C. il-1 r . progl'('SS. 50 t'On1pacts on display. e LJ,000 n1il~s 1 ~~6~.'-··i l'-l .-0-&-'ffi.-''.").)"'?,~S~~~ Cos1a Me-:E ~UY !l79-2:J{)(] i!MO'l ~~.~~~~~:·l~i'~e~~trk\\'ay 1 Slev!'ns 5.'"!6--0571 Ht (~~n\;;,~:t .~~~Y.• PACllMFIPCORMTOSTOR $3595 '6S D,\TSUN pickup. ~lags, '66 1-'0flD Supe1· Vun, 240 l~iPORTED AU'rOS S3u''18·2'>E IAOVEl'.Y.P\l'Y E~9-~J4T94. 91 ____ f_l_A_T____ San1a Ana 558·7Sit cainp!'r :;hell, crp1rl, ne\v cu in, rcbl1 eng. xlnt t'Ond! ·"' -PEUGEOT /SUBARU n111tor. $1\j(l, 8-17-2363. best offer. 64&-S882 BEST PRICES PAID! I t9i0 Fiat 850 Spyder. gold, "MERCEDES BENZ 1:>57 \\I. Lint'O!n Avt'., t!!r Allen Oldsmobile Cadillac 1966 lfarOOr. C.J\I. 646·9300 Autos, Usi<I 1971 Ford ~; ton 1ik·kup. '6S r~ORD \\'indo1v Van, (i Dean Lewis Imports 48,000 n1i. $1150 or best ol-Anaht•in1 533-8220 t 1966 Harbor , C.M. '"'16·9302 ORANGE COUNTY'S 1,., .. X'i"t ,_,,1_ '"t.7""'· AMC Good l"Ondl1ion S 1 7 0 U. cy\, stick, n1a(!s. nc1v pain . -.:i ... •• .,,, .,,,. """" d 61Z.:!1:17 af1l'r 5:30PJ\1 Xlnt cond, 6-H-?129 CASH }~OR OLDEST '71 Merce es t=~==~-·,,__ __ • '72· F IAT. 12·t Spt Cpc, 29 PORSCHE '65 DODGE, 1~ T. J>ick up, '69'DODG£ VAN 6 cyl. auto., YOU!t CAR 0 .A'1 PG, S2!X>O. Orig 0 1vner, 300 SEL 3.5 I/)\\' nii, Exl·el l..'Ollcl S77j, 1 Excel cond. Sl:?OO. 546-7070 Cdl\1, 640-Li59 A beautiful local coupe. :;~[1..-0(i:.:;.l . 968-6643 FOREIGN cars "'anted: ~·JG HI L Dark bto\vn v.·ilh cognac '59 c1il::vy El C:1n1ino. :t\110, '67 INT'L i\Tetro Sk>p Vun. TC: TD; TF nlodels &_other L MAN ' l{'alhct' interior. ftolls l·:oycc I S600 cla!;sics <TI4 l 729-0306 . tradc-i_n! (#41.50). '70 -914-6 SILVER Porsche San Diego Fl'\vy at Avery Excel cQ~d. 40,00l mi , $5500: Pkwy., Laguna Niguel. &l&-59!16 · 495-0IOO 831-0800 SAAB 73 LANOCRUISER ATLAS Chrysler/Plymouth 1969 AMC REBEL SST ta1>e deck. Good cond. Bcsl 4 1·y l'ng. . -;-. · , , 1 Excellent selection of pre. 'ti t H!Ll.J\1.AN 1-fusky, real $12 750 orr{'r. J\·lus1 s(>I). 64G_r,_,_7.i: .. _ Call 548-9314 CLASS SELLS -642-.1i78 pr ice r<:>-evaluation models. t·ute, Xlnt cond, S.":lOO. firn1 • • Autos, New 980 Au tos, New 980 Autos, New 980 , DEMO $ALE 897-7268 ROY CARVER, Inc. *SAAB SOFT-TOP VS, autonmtlc, radio, heater, po"·er stl"fring, u·hite side \\'all tires, u.lr conditioning, bucket S€:'als:, vinyl lop. (Yl-~Z3<191 ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii!iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I s .. \LES-SERVfCE-LEASJNG ~'--'~J-o-A~G=U~A~R~--I ROLLS ROYCE BMW II i OVERSEAS DElL I\tERY Roy CARVER I 13-1 E. 17th St. Bl'st d(•ai Al\\'ays. Con\fJ!etc st·lecllon 11u1\'. Buy or ll•ase h'Qm OPEL! The Best Selling Car • ID Germany Gas Mileage, Style, Comfort, Durability You Get AU With Opel BRAND NEW 1974 BUICK APOLLO $ SIX (ORDER YOURS TODAY) 91 Several New 1973 Buicks Remaining Will Be Sold At Dealer Invoice BUY NOW-SAVE BIG Terry Buick 5th & Walnut, Huntington Beach. 536-6588 I 1 ftC:. 1972 J ,\GUAR XJ-6 &d1111. Costa 1\lesa e :H6·4·1'14 Jim Parkinson's Only :l,000 1nllcs (~RllYO~ $3977 2J I E. 17th SL Loadpd incl air & sleJ-t'Q. JIM SLEMONS 1 Costa l\lesa 546-4-14-1 16 i\IPG. Local 101\' n1ill'age $895 CREVIER BMW S:i les • Service e Leasing 20S \V . .lst., S.A. S.1i'rB'71 USED BMW'S '73 3.0 CSA DEMO '70 2800 cs '71 BAVARIA '69 2SOO '70 2002 '68 2002 Closed Sundays DATSUN ' DATSUNS, NEW '74s NOW IN STOCK -IMMEDIATE DELIVERY II B210's lhru 260Z n1odels Ovl'r 100 ne,~· & used ECONOMY CARS : ON DISPLAY 1·i:i1._ J\1ust sncrifitt $7500. IMPORTS "'r"oo MERCEDES BENZ JENSEN AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE JENSEN Jim Slemons INTERCEPTOR LARGE SELECTION Imports OF COLORS (\Ve'l'e top buye1· for any 11\1ME OIATE DELIVERY used l\fercedes Benz.) FULi. SERVICE 1301 Qu•il · DEPARTMENT New-port Beach NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \\'. Coast t hvy .• N.B. 642-9-40S _MAZD~ * Mazda '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH ~'.{3-!1300 ENTJ-:R !<'ROl\'l l\"ia('ARTHllR NOW OPEN Mission Viejo Imports fe:11u1·ing MERCEDES BENZ & FIAT Con1plete ~les -& Serv ice Visit Us Soon At 28701 l\1argut rite P nrk\\·ay i\Jission Viejo 495-1700 (USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT) 01' 645-6406 SIMCA .l)mlwri& • TOYOTA 1966 Harber. C.i\I. 646-9303 '71 SIMCA, auto, radials LEASE •;4 TOYOTA 1200 26.000 n1i 30 l\1PG, $995. Corolla sedan ... Get 30 or Offer, 675-417H miles per gallon ... Only SUNBEAM '6-1 SUNBEAi\I A I p i n c llard!op. All or parts. EnK. & ll'ans a part. Call 962-87:\2. '67 SU NBEAl\I Alpine. Xlnt $58.34 nJ:J, 36 n10S. Of>C';; end lease. Bl~L MAXEY fOYOTA •, , , I ' ( L , • : I ';-' )...: I" \ , '·',I'' , 1.1 \111 1·on1!. N\•11· brks .~ tmuery. ====~~-~~ t'lc. !st t'l.'as. offer!. 5-18-6280 1973 TOY01'.1\ Celicn, yello"'- TOYOTA Open Da ily & Sun. 'Ill 10 Pht 2929 !-{arbor Blvd., Costa ri1csa 546-1934 • • • BIU.. KING 3901 l\1arcus Ne\\'Jl(lrt Beach You are the winner of 2 tl('kE'IS to the SPORTS & RECltEATIONA I. VEl-IICLE SllO\V .nt the ANAJ-il::Iri1 CONVF:NTION CENTER J1tnunry 4-13 PlcasC' cnll 642-5678, ext 333 to clain1 your tickets. (North County toll fn.~ nun1lx.•r is 540-1220. I • • • '74 TOYOTAS '71 MATADOR sta "'""· 25,00J mi., A/C. many hrov.'n btcrior. 1\/C. l\tai,:-s. \Varranl)' r ~ 1n a i_n i n g. --------- 0 I Perfect <.'Ondilion. SJ.ISO. C-.Jll 961-5462 LEASE or BUY VOLKSWA.GEN """· 11000. 9611-5767 36 ~10NTHS OPEN LEASE Will accept trade-ins CALJ.. ?.1R. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach Ne''' ~todels -Ne\\' Colors '73 J,\VELIN, 4 ipd VS, 360 \\'ANT Mercedes Benz have at WILL BUY YOUR _ eng, $2500. or best ofter. 5 acres in Laceine $7500. Call ~ Val uo 67~0252, 613·6'·13, GAS SAVER 1-==-==----I 1952 l\lERCr:oi:;s :1 0 0 s lUU&A UlllO PA y 1VP OOLLAR. CALL 6"·3302· I -1'1~ ... [e .. :1 PAJD FOR oR NOT. w1 LL BUICK Classic Couf)('. Superb & JQJQJA KENT ALLEN, 5-J().044 2. '72 BUICK WILL BUY YOUI\ pr!ee<I 10 sell! 8.1l-2040 or '73 SUPER BceUc, Mi-Fr.'I Estate wagon. Radio. heater, DATSUN' Toyoli·a 49-"'.r-49'19 Dir. 1~. 11 ~ c 'I 000 9303 1 u d • ooo · po\,·er steering, factory air. MAZDA "' 17331 Beach BJ. S.U·6Eli = arvur, ··'. ..,...,,... s ereo, n er ;,. nu., OR VOLKSWAGEN 'SS l\I ERCf.:DES Bt'nz 2...'\0 •70 TOYOTA C ORONA ol~er extras. 1 l!ke ne"·· le!'..~ than 15,000 a ctual P~\lD FOR OR NOT. \VILL * * * SL Coupe Roadster. Ot'luxl". 4 !'pet?d, xlnt gini ($.'100._ under 74 s ~ $26&:1. n1!les. (765CLS). VICKI MASCHLER -Auloniatic transmission, air m•'l""g"'· "· 3 1_2 0 4 0 oc ~2-00:jl aft 6 & wknds. J"im Slemons P~\\-TOP DOLLAR. CALL .,,916 Jero•••'mo La,,... conditioning, ).:]nt .. SacrHice! ._ .. ' ·1 l'EN1' ALLEN O':Artn••" ""' ... ~ 4•-r<•t9 Dir. V\V '13 Beetle'. Yellow, xlnt \ 1 • • .nv-<r>·.... El Toro 831"-20-10 o~9:H949 ~l_c._ td P 1 N Imports 1972 DATSUN 2-10-Z, x!nt Vou "l'e the \\''""•r of 'IB '80 SEL ' -197? '72 CAR INA llCI\'' radials COJ . ( u r c I . C'\\' • 0 " ~ ... J ... ' ' 711211.H $2395 -$500 under 1301 Quall L'Olld, fully Jwded, _maJ.:s, 2 tickets to Uie Lease $203/mo or $9500. H1.& ·H •. E;&xcclt ~~~c~76cond., ·74·5 1511 J E.-P.) pr/pty. Newport Beach Af\·J/f l\1. moclifiC'd exhaust, SPDRTS & l-21~79Hl27 ; li la-3808 ~in · OU; .~...,, 714154.8·5308 8-9. eves. Sat 833·9300 ~~1t7~Jr:~:~fi.me? r ange· ~~~~Ji.AETI~if~~ ·73 450 SL COUPE $10,7:l0 ·~ Celicn. Silver ""/ m~gs, CO NVERTIBLE .67. yello"·/ ENTER l"HO~I hlac1\RTHUR ou·ner aft 7 Pl\1 a ir, 2·1 nipg, lli,OOO nHlrs. 11 k t · t -d :i-l\1 '69 BU ICK Skylark, new '69 DATSUN pl ck u fl. al thl' ~"'' ,,,08 $3595 963-5305 i ac op, min con .• u AN,\JlE"I "'nrv• 1 • • nilles, 01ig 01\'ner, $1~. 1>teel bell radial.st full Economy & room lo haul ! "-'' I '69 T t • • d Cru""''r 4 1'akc trnd<' 8:;1-2040 or CONVENTION CENTER '72 l\t-B, 250, 10,00J nti, 1 1 ~ , oyo a . ...,,n ,.;., '. J...B. 21 3-424·97!15. Po"·er. 51,00Jrn!. 1 owner, J anuary 4-13 mos lrrt on \••a.n 'llnty, a ir, \~D. nu tires, \\'hi!', radio, •59 v \V B bod rolled Good cond. 557-4114 ~·-19-°"-l'l-l_O_D_l_c. ______ tPl!"ase cnll G42-5678, ext 333 PS. PB, $6995. 548-3397 E.'<tras. $l600. 673-1916 n1otoc & 1~{s ti; . $lJO 1969 RIVI.ERA, full power, 'GS ·I DOOR \VAGON. Clean. to cla im your ti ckets. You do"'' ,..~, .......... to '68 TCYYOTA Coupe. au!o, or btst., 675-3781 ne\V brakes, xlnt cond. Low auto, radio, heater, ··~. II "" • "" 1 ood II """" IN01·1h Countv to fret' "Draw I<'ast'' when you new n10 or, g gas n1 e-·~o VW B 9 p Book, &l&-MJ! 6~2-3490 i..~ • .,,, •1~ a 1795 494 ~!16 • us assengcr. ___ num • ...-r is ~,..,.. ",:,v. • I place an ad ln the Dally ge. · · -_..u. · • Sacrlf• ... al $1500. · '71 D t p · k U * * * I ,, C ll '64 Skylark. p/s, p/b, radio, a sun IC p Pi ot \..-ant Ads'. a now The fastest dNl\V 1n Hie \Vest. Call 494-8152 good except Ule_cna;ine. Not Autos, New 980Autos, New 980 Sl ·IOO. Call 51~-9:';14 \Vhite Elepha nt Dime-A-Line I -642-5678. I ... a Daily Pilot Classified V.W. Bug .63• 35 1\lPG, $350. running. $50. &&7094. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ~.~~!s, N!."! 980 I Autos, New ---.~o or btst or,Y.0763 CADILLAC USED. CARS '69 FORD MUSTANG P.S., R<1!1TC, Ht'.Jter, A.r, Auto, 61ue {lMX9l81 S1199 '69 FIREB IRD "· Aulo 1i01<1.1~ $999 '72 CHEVY IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE Jt~dio, Heel!•, P s, Air, A.,ro (7t'IESG) $1299 '69 CHEVY 1/2 TON PI CK UP «SS051Cl lt---'$899- ,. '66 CAPRICE COUPE P,S., R<1dio, Hto~!er Aulo (;ooFTE ! $399 '67 CHEVY IM PALA WAGON Jour~. R~ol•o. Ht~IH, P.S Air (VFJ~I S499 '6S CHEVY lm~ll Sperl COUIHI Rd~,o. 11e~1rr, 1<.,10 I>~ \TIX•llJ $399 '6S FORD FAL CON P ~ Rt.<110, HN1e-r. Auto. Air (REE716) S39t ~ ' . e • Cyl, 0/H Clm. E119. 9 '1" Wftetl 81•1 e f11H Coll S11sp1111tlllft e a 11tH1fd Air H1111r e aW(:•tr St•h • O•K O•um llr1ku e P10dtd 01tn • 01111 'w1s w1111rs ' 52538 S199 $71.51 DOWN ' WORKING MAN'S GAS SAVER LEASES '74 VEGA Htchbk. ' 1ur1JOt>y11ram•tlt, ra- dio, c11r1>11tin9, wMtt WiJIS. PER MONTH s75 '74 Malibu Classic: Power steednQ, power dlK or11ke.i.. l50 va, turboflydram;itk. Wl'+O!'f!I covers, bell«! wnnewat!s 11 n Ted glan. PER MONTH s99 '74 MONT! Carlo VI, radl•I wllllewetl5, lurbohydrtlma!ic", pow- e r $!rerinq, l)Ow91'" dfK l>r•ke,, llnll'd g!.Ul. PER M,ONTH s99 '74 NOVA Aul'o lrtni;, 6 cyJ en11, Powt!r s!ttrlr111 PER MONTH SJ.5 '74 CAMARO Power steering, power dlK brtk ~, llO va. turbol'+ydramt tlc, wheel co•eri, belled WhlltWllllS, !lnlld glitH. PER MONTH s99 '74 C'HEY. Pickup l/:o ton, 6 <vi eog!ne, 2• speed !ran1rnl,1lon: PIER MONTH s79 DON'T UNDl:lt$TANO LiASING7 PHONI: t47·6017 u MO•llll Open iina l.Hlt. Onfer Yo11r1 TOCl•Y All Cl'Mil Mu1t .. AWOYtd. ''" Tait-~ , -· ' • e V. Ton Plc*11p • flffhkl• Picku' l tll" • i Fl, ltd e ' Cyl. $2890 $99 $85.55 DOWN PlR MO. 5Jl 11.50 Is lr.e IOl•t c•sll ·prl<e ltKI. lt ll" " '1~ Uc. fffS. Oelerred pyrnt. P'ftt If 14205 . .io Including !i!lC & '14 lie. lcn & 111 c•rrylng c~rges for AB mot1!1\1 o~ APPROVAL of y0ur c.rldlt. ANNUAL. PERCENTAGE RATE ,S,fnt.. • ORDER YOURS TODAY • Priced For Quick Sale '66 V\V Dunc Buggy, t"Oll bar, &pee. lil'es, surrey lop. $750 pvt pty. 536-7678 VW '66 Bug. Grear condition! Bright red. $875. Private party. Call 548--7226 1'0V\V Squart!bnck. Xlnt. rond. hloving, niust sell. Sac. $1700 &37-9777. 1973 CADILLAC Executive and DEMONSTRATOR SALE VOLVO UNREGISTERED All fully equJpped with far· •74 VOLVO'S to')' air '~"dlllonlng. full [)O\\'er, Ult & tele11coplc HERE NOW " .. rl,, .. "''"" dooc '"''" e1 c., some \vi th dual L'Om· llnmediate Delivery fort seRts, cruise conlrol, On All Models k 1.l l"P"'. c I c $32•• BUY or LEASE trun opener, elc., etc .• all ,., ,..,_ 111 om oitp• • • • • low mlleftKe, 30CJO to 15,000 lll IMPALA Cu1tom ·Coup• , ••. $1299 niill"S. "' 1MPALA cu1om c.,,. .... 112" al}Ult lWJi4 Cpe De Yilles, El ., IMPALA c .... m c ........ s12" W YOlYO Oorados and Sedan JJ5 IMPALA Cw1tom Cou,. • •• .$JZff U1C6 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303 ii2 IMPALA c111tom coup• •••• Sl29t 1969 2 DR vo1vo seda.", De Villes wkdays 546-0232, att 7pni Jll IMPALA C•tto11t Cou,. •. •. SJ2ff & \Vkends, 493-9366 aak for i21 IMPALA custom c ... ,. ••.. si29t Gait rsER. 1$2345 5mi AR t.ow As 2.lf IMPALA c .. 1om c •• ,. ., .. .s12n '68 VOLVO 144 109 CAPRICE Cou,. •.•.•.• • · .SJJ9f Au t 0 m "t I c trnnsmiss!On, . NGberS· Cadillac S ' radio, healer, air co"dlUon· SI IM,ALA Cu ttom Co111'9 , • • · llf VTI ~ll 2600 Harbor Blvd: Ing. { """ . tJ 677 Coit• Mtsa 540-9100 16 IMPALA C111tom Coup• •• · .$Jlft f OPEN SUNDAY 119 CAPRICE Cou,. ••• ·,. • •• .$J49t 'lD Cedill11c Ci'pt"'iD~t°"V"l"llt-I 1'\ l••..:I l':u1Lpcnver, factory air. 158-121 CAPRICE Spott s.doit •••••• 1J4ff Mf41 ~WI OCE. "'CAPRICE c .............. SIS" • VOLVO $1995 u _C'At11c1 '-'••<-IHu .. ,_.u111_.~'!l~~~~!:;;~~~f-Jlm · Sltmons 1 '1006-ll-. C.M. -Imports 221 CAP11c1 w .............. sn" '71 VOLVO 4DOOR 1301 Quall 4, speed transmlalon, radio, -healer. $2ffil. ' ~w.l.W W YOLYO 1900 J·le:rbor, C.M. ~.p303 ' -·-~ -, -- Newport Beach .1133-9300 ENTF;R FROM i\1acAtt'I'HUR '12 ~ld<>rado Oinv. Fully loaded w/every access. 1 Shru.'P Lo mt 's. t Owner pvt pl)>.T.O.P. "Mr. 'Brown' Days 55&-9071., Evtl/Wknd8 838.;{)59 * '&.>Cadillac Corw. • Good ~ngi"e, new l,>atlery. Muot 1ell. 1713., 492-691$ -~ --- .,._ ·-~. . -, ' -· ~ ' ·- 1;;::::;:;-----"'."""r,;'~~C------,,=..,....,.,..'"'r---:=·°7=-:::--;----:,:::::-;-:--:--;-;-:------;::~;-J·-:-7::~---;:::;::;-:--:--;:--:---:;-.Friday, Janu~;ry 4, 1~74 DAILY PILOT :J~ General ' G•n•ra l Autos, U Autos, UHCf 990 Autos, U1ed 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used ., ~ Autos, Used 990 Autos, Ustd 990 CADILLAC JANUARY STOCK REDUCTION SAl.E CHEVROLET 'DODGE i--'--JE-EP...___ MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH --PL_Y_M_O_UT_H_ ATLAS ATLAS Chrysler7Pl ymoulh LARGE SELEC·TION OF 1974'$ TO CHOOSE FROM Brand New 1974 Chl"!sler/ Pl ymouth 1971 SATELLITE SEBRING PONTIAC 1966 Tempeliil gd ru~r, 1111. nt'W br11krs. beu, f'Xhttuat, R il H PS/Auto $425. Ofter. 64~16 "10 C1\'rAUNA. 4 01~. AJC. Stereo tllJ>I!. s..crl1ice $850. Call &1:H);.'!3 STUD~E~BA-K~E~R-1 FURY Ill 4 DOOR toac!OO---iilcludlng air con· cliti o n lng, tPll'13-J,ID-1268~l 2 DOOR HARDTOP 'j7 STUDE. Must sell Make ---1 VS, tnJtomolic, rttdio, hcnh'r, otrer. Rc·hlt 010101·. ne"' 1)()v.1·r !llCe1·ing, po1v<•r 1lr€.'s, 008-7002. brukl's, y,·llitc side \\llll 1200 off 1"1fg.-su~gf'""t~ Dl'ic._~· - Bra nd New 1974 _ t1l'C;l, .f1Jr__J:911dlllonllj£', \'illYI T BIRD to•>. "'"'rrn"i 1 __ .:.:;·-~-~~==l=:::::::=I -~-l -s 1795 i 'iO T-Bird. •I Drt ... hll extras? "13 PINTO Squire, Ttrike over l('ilse. Just been tuned up 23 AtPC ai:ow1d lov.•n, 979-147!. SATELLITE SEBRING Open Daily -~-Sun. 'Ill 10 Ptll $15-10. ('11 11 f\lr. Stanley, 2929 Harbor Blvd., 11•ork J ll-.i:l21 01· home Ch~ysler I Plymouth MANY 1974'• TO CHOOSE. FROM Brand New 1974 Chryaler I Plymouth 1968 OLDS 1972 PINTO Runabout, 35,IXXI )~d~ il~cluding air miles, ne1v steel belted d 1 I I o n 1 n g . Costa Me!ia I 552-758.~. 546°1934 72T.Bt~R~D-La_oo_1_rn_.-ne-w1 C..'On· 1973 El Dorado's (4) lo ChOOSl'. 1596GIOI As low a11 .. ATLAS I =.&6~~~·hl~. full pwT. I lire!!, gd cond. S 2 O 5 O, (RP23-J.JC-14U 74 ) . "'6-<651 $11 00 CUTLASS orr i\lfg. suggcslccl pric.-c Chrysler/Plymouth $5888 VEGA SUPREME PLYMOUTH OJ)Cn Dnlly & .!iun. 'Iii 10 Plil 1968 PONTIAC 1973 Coupe DeVilles CHRYSLER NEWPORT FIREBIRD -------1 2929 "'"""'' Bl"J.. * '73 VEGA V8, auton11\lic., radio, heater, LE MANS KAMBACK . """' "'~''''"· '" w " '72 · pi.mouth Custom 5°'4'6".' 1'9'"3."4 Loaded lncludlug air con· ALL lg ,68 ul l bi'akcs. white ~\rte· Wiill IJ 2 DOOR I Suµc r Conti fi7:">5761 'I d\tlonln". (CL4.1-T4C-l22367J or · , cream P. , ·~ $l 300 .conv.. 2 brrl, 350, sll.ck, !Ires, a ir condlllonlng, \'inyl ·n \'EGA lla1chbiu·k. racho, (10) to choose {9-l:~llAJ lUi 4G K. ml, Cragan & top, lape player. (855FYY) Suburban Wagon ·71 Roarlrunnl'r, 3·10. 4 spd, HARDTOP I .11r, nuto, 19:\fPC. 2.1,jOO mi. low as off l\1Jg:. suggetoted pri(I('. · !l1ichcllins. Sec it to believe Aulomatlc, power steering, $895 front disc brks, atcond. VS, auloniatic, radio. ht.'ilh'r, _SJ~j()_._&1_1 ·2·1~1. '111> ~ $5333 Open Daily & Sun. 'til 10 Pli11-""·.c6"'n'--<;081~==---I air C.'Onditioning, vinyl top. Open Daily & Sun. 'ti! 10 P:\'I 9 passengrr. ·Automalif', Xln't concl. $:()()(}or bst ofr. po\\'fr steering, po 11·" 1· !!Yr.! Vl'.GA llntchhack, good 1 2929Closl'a'~t1~~1vd., FORD IYNL687J. 2929 Harbor Blvd., 1xi11·cr steering, air ro11-5.'16-1923, 91l2-(i737. brakes, \vhite v.·all tires, nir i::.1-. n1ileagc, J.:l)Od collCI, 1972 El D d i• $1577 Costa Mesa ditioning, roof rack. 1750----------! condittoning, bucket scats. asking $~HOO-96$-28ol2 (12) I" "I•-"· 1 ,,02.,~ .. ~.,o~, A~fill6L01934 1m LTD Brougham, 2 dr, 546-1934 F>'H>. t913 BAIUlACUDA s,,,,, vinyl top . (WJK!<J.11 TIME FOR--" ... ""''"" ., "'"i:. ""' --1,-hlte, w/brown t 0 p, J} l $' 2377 Coupe, 13,000 n1ilcs. 14.l\1PG1 $995 IO\v as :in1tfm str.reo pv.T seats, llA• A11.:.a 1965 Olds. New 1lres, just i~Joiv ii·htsalc, $26.10, 0()f'n Daily & Sun. 'Iii 10 P:\I Q,UICK CASH $4999 v.•indo1vs, 12,000 n1i. 614-4 1'17 -WA UlllO ;~_dS4~ transportation ---------' 29'29 Harbor Bh·d., TRROUG.H A Chrysler/Plymouth '71 LTD 2 ell'. Air, xlnt 1.."0nd. ' TOYOTA 1\ll1t.• lft•i~JI "r-.Jakf' Rooni p-11, D1:1.ddy" Costa ?o.Tesa 1972 Coupe 1970 CHRYSLER Mu" 'c~'.,1·1 84•8384 "While E"'"""".. 0"•·--WA WI"' ... c1eao out the garage 546-1934 DAILY PILOT v-1966 Harbor. C.i\1. 646-9303 running your houst:? Turn TOYOTA ... turn rhr.il junk into cash WANT AD DeVilleS STATION l-,68-F_A_IRLA~-IN-E_S_t_a_l~l-o-n 1 '0o-,.-.,-.,-v,-,-.~,,,-,-,,,~,p~! them Into "Cash" · · · sell • v.1th a Daily Pilot Classified The fastest dr::nv In the \\'est. \Vagon, good 1.."0nd. $450 or "List" it in classifi ed, Ship them lhru a Dally Pilot ad Call 642-ri67&. 642 5678 (7) to chOole. (60lEAFI As low us $3999 1972 Sedan DeVilles WAGON be!!t offer 494-0161. to Shore Results! 642-5678. classified ad! Hl66 Harbor, C.!\l. 646-9303 · · j •.. a Daily Pilot Classifierl • VS, automatic •. radio. heater,l"A,-u7t0-,-.N'e-w----;9'°BO" IAutos1 New 980 Auto1, New 980 ~A~ut~o~s.~N~ew-=-'---'-"-"9·8Q \Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ~A-u~to-1,~N-ew---~9~80"1 !¥>\\'er steering, pow e ·r 1-:;:,;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 161 to i:hoo~c. 1G:!tii':!::ilJ• ""' low Hs $3888 1971 Sedan De Viii es l'"ully l'qPI. 11126FBCI $3444 brakes v.·hite side \\'alls, air 11 conditioning, power seat, pov.·rr i1•1ntlo\.\'S, roof rack. 1l50B\\"Z1 $1295 0 1JC11 Daily &_ Stui. 'Iii 10 P}.1 :?'Jl9 !!arbor Blvd., Co:-o1a ~lrsa 546-1934 -ATLAS Chrysler/ Plymouth 1969 CHRYSLER 1970 Coupe NEWPORT DeVilles 4 DOOR SEDAN (5) 10 choose. !tt3111BBJ As \'8, automatic •. radio, heater low 11s power stccruig, p owe r ' $2777 b1"Rkcs, \1•hltl' \\•ull tirf>M, air conditioning, cruise-control. t799BBE~ 1970 El Dorado's $995 (4) to (•hoos<'. Ui:i:Z,\CN 1 As Open Daily &. Sun. 'til 10 P~I 10\Y us 2929 llarbor Blvd., $2999 1970 Sedan DeVilles (6) to chOOS('. C81SBQQl As low as $2666 1969 Coupe DeVilles {6) lo choose. (010CP11 As low llS Costa ?i.tcsa 546-1934 COMET 1974 Comet Grabber 6 cyl., auton1atic t.i:ansmis- siun, pov.·er steering, Ai\1/ rr.1 stereo rarlio •,rith tnpc, uir conditioning, mag v. heels, etc. Only 200 niiles! t#5783J. Only S3995 $1777 ROY CARVER, Inc. ROLLS ROYCE BMW 1969 Sedan 234 E . 11th St. DeVilles . Costa M""' • "46-#14 (5) to choo>o, (Yl'TiOO) "'1 -C_O_N_T_l_N_E_NT_A_L_ll--l IO\V n·s- $1666 '69 MARK Ill A low milcag(' local car. 1969 C 'bles Rolls-Royce tra d e -1 n . onverti <•0:•111. (21 to ehoose. (12SBNNJ As lo\11 as • $1666 NABERS CADILLAC 2600 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540°9100 $2995 ROY CARVER, Inc. ROU.S ROYCE B~I\\' 234 E. 17th St. Costa l'llcsa e 516-4444 '69 fttARK Ill, black. saddle leather I nte ri or, orig .• owner, $2950. 644--066 CORVAIR Open Sunday '63 Cotvair Van, reblt eng. •--~---~--1 Will trade for cycle 500 cc'a ,I;:_ Uf). Cllil Bob, 645-2507. '13 El Dorado DODGE Only 18,000 miles & everyl-------- conccivablc extra tncludlng ATLAS sun roof! l~lHDV l. $7195 Chry'1er/Plymouth ,73 El• Dorado 1968 DODGE Only H 000 miles & ovory CORONET 440 concelv~ble extra except 2Door. VS, automatic, radio, IWl root. {#8801). heater, power s t ee r i n g_, $6995 white side watt tires, ..- conditioning, vinyl t o p . e CXIYJ65J '10 Coupe De Ville $595 Roll!i·Royce trade-In. While Open Daily & Sun. 'tll 10 Pi\1 w:l th white vinyl top & red 2929 Harbor Blvd., le1t.ther Interior. A nice car! O>sta Mesa 1069BNLI. 546-1934 $2595 ·55 DODGE , 3 s p d , • over drive, Excel eng., &ood ROY CARVER, Inc. cond. 20 per .a1. pr.. ROW! ROYCE BMW1~645-~"'l4~08=-----ll 234 E. 171h St. '65 DODGE wagon, new Costa Mesa • 546-4444 tires, runs well, must aell, $250 or be1t offer. 557-0409 ------1973 CADILLAC Eldorado. FOR SALE. "67" Dodge Van Fully loaded, Slack on Blacic Sportsman 100, After 5pm, Must sell, l:."'xcellent cond., MS-8137 , dlr (600G\VW) $6995. 892-4444 '61 OODGE ST AT I 0 N '65 CAD. Scd de Ville, Excel \Vagon, 3 new tires, reliable condition, $495. transporaUon, $175, 54&-ass 979-4a75 aft 6 pm Fri. IDEAL COMBINATION ·- • • • • ECONOMY Conce rned about gas mileage? Capri's the answer. Economy, Performance and outstanding European Stylin g. Dozens to choose from, LINCOLN-MERCURY'S CAPRI ECONOMY SPECIALS '70 MAVER.IC Radio and heater, 3 speed gas saving trans- mission. (148HDC) $1475 '73 COMET 2·DOOR Automatic. radio, heater, power steering, air conditioning, C-378HDE) $3375 '71 COUGAR XR7 Automatic, radio, heater, power steering & brakes, air, landau roof. (701EOJ ) $2975 -. --'72-F6RD TORINO CPE'. Air, pov.·er steer!~. pov.·er brakes & 1\·in- dows, (112GHC). Only 25,000 miles. $2875 '72 CHEV MONTE CARLO Automatic, air, full J"lO'''er, (431ETI) • $2675 '71 l\'IAZDA ROTARY 2 DR. LlKE NEW 4 speed, radio. lrolhcr luapge rack. 1No. 83116. See & drive. $2475 • • - LUXURY Never in automotive history has there been a better time to buy a luxury car. Continentals ... King of the luxury line. LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL AND MARK IV LUXUllY SPECIALS -' '69 _M_EllCURY -'71 MARQUIS -- WAGON IROUOHAM F1\Mil.Y PLEASER L\'IMACULATE 10 Pass Colony Park. Full po1,·cr. factory air, roof rack, {ZVH1941 '"" Coupe, full po\\·er, factory air, landau roor. (l36CXVJ, $1475 ' $2450 '71 CADILLAC '71 LINCOLN -COU'I ' SUPER CLEAN - ' SHARP Sedan De Ville, full lu:<ury thruout. (610· Full po\\"f'r, factory air, Al'1&Jo"l\·f, stereo, CXV). landau roof. {~2CYQJ. $3475 $3275 '69 LINCOL N -'69 <;:ORVE'ITE C DOOR STINGRAY VEl!Y CLEAN L7\lli1ACULATE Luxury thruout. full J>Ov.·cr, factory air, Automatic, factory air, power steer, .~ landau root, (XSS167). brakes, am-fm rad.lo. (S79AFZI. r..tust sec to appreciate. $1775 $ale Priced - .· ''The Best of Two · Car Worlds''· EXCELLENT SELECTION IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Rome Of The New Car • , , "Golcfett roweW• SEE US TODAY ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALER TO RECEIVE THE 11Distinguished Service Award " for outstanding Service after Sale. . ATLAS • 1973 CAD COV, ll,000 011'1. Bei l ofr ovot $5500. 894-8(0} or 638-1857 eves Chryaler I Plymou!h CHEVROLET 1968 DODGE '67Cheve~1--co'RONEl''--11-· whls, stereo tp dk, buck 2 DOOR rta, beau!Uul ""'· Only ISOO. 67S-6754~0 PIS PIB HARDTOP '~ ELR&H xlnt ' con<iS1850' V8, automatic, radio, heater, MS:-5595 or 9'l9o-W5 ' . power steerin&:, w"hlte wan • AND SON 1-:;::..:;::::,,~~~,...-..,.--1 tires, a Ir condiUonln.I, '73 MONTE CKrlo, ell extra11. bucket te&ts. (XOJ687) =,;\l.:·.68~k: :: 0"'",$;1~~~~~~IOPM 2626 ''HARBOR BL VD, e .of CARS'' .. Costa Me sa 540-5630 r. Jug, rack, White, all pwr, COila l\fcsa ., • I ~,:;4~-642."678 1~___:·5~4~6~·1~9~3~4~~1~1!!111!!!1!11!1!!!! .... ._l!!!!!!..,,,,_!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ............. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,_ • --I -.. ---·~ -• . • • • ·. I - .. 4 .. . - • \""" NEW_'74 TORINO ·FULL PRICE $ • • _,-NEW MUSTANG II · .. 2 + 2 WITHAIR CO"DITIONING s 195 o-~" fa,:. LK. • • 2.3 lifer engine, CR70>el3 wide oval radial ti'res, Al8 CONOIT10N1NG, Power 1leering and di1cs, roclio, lullury ONTH interior, tintedgla51, 4 o~the 1100!",etc. (1 2982.4)(Stk. #186) (41MONTHS) ~ _NEW '74 MAVERICK 2DR.SEDAN • • $93.11 totol mo . pylTll. inducing lo~ lie. & oll ~ chorgt1on oppr. (r.dit for '8 mon1h1. Del.rred poywwnt pric• S-4928.70 W:luding to~ & licenw. ANNU"l PERCENTAGf RATt: 10.97°0.. TolOI coili pric1 $3799.99 plu1 to.< & lic.tni.e • Air, 351-VS, Pwr. Steer. & Discs.Auto. Tron•., Rodio, Vinyl Top, Whl. Covers, Mouldings. etc . ( 101949) Stk.1/84. Buy Before Jan. 6 and beat just announced -price increases ... Get year end super discounts .. ·. ·Choose from almost 100 new 1973 and 1974 models. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. '74 STATION WAGON 10 PASS. COUNTRY SQUIRE DISCOUNTED $ 61 OFF WINDOW STICKER ( 124380) Stk.1/505 Rad io, he ater, automatic trans., air 16SOCBSI ' t ·'61·MO)MUSTANG '27°ts ~~'1195 - I 136028)Stk. #631 . . . .· ""f ·rLt1°'· UDl'IRMO; . '····s7!, ... , I •• PER MO. ,51.11 , .... 1 .... pf,,.1. h1<kHli•1 ...... r. •• ' .u •• .,,. NEW COURIER PICKUP NEW '74F-1 00 PICKUP --.-.. ..... "'"~ .-.... ~ w., . ...,-• .,~..., -$2788 35 '195 Pl•u Toa & Uc. Down '195 '""Tax & Uc.°""'" • $6699 ...... $7321 ...... l ltj ........................ , .... 1'6<! ......... _ -""~ .... ~ , .. ,.....,.., ............ _ ............ _ on. . .., ......... "'"'" s.:1679 9• ""~ ... '._ .t,toNIJJ.l 11Jl(IWIJ.Gf IJ.11 10.91 .. , .. , ......... U001' 11,,..J.. "'' &k.!%1.olJ;fl~/ Choose YOUR Model At Saving s Like These. Big SelectiorLOf New 73's At Even Greater Dis counts. COURIERS• PICKUPS• 4 WHL. D~IVE •PICKUPS• RANCHEROS • BRONCOS• ECONOLINE VANS• PARCEL DELIVERY VANS • 4 WHL DRIVE VANS • SALE ENDS JAN. 6 2 FORD F1to- $26u95 ·. " t 2000 eng., radio, heater, 1uto. trans. v.,,, rjldio, huter, ·auto. ·fr1n1., air iB84GIVI -F•nd. ITXT647) . ;., .,, .. , ............. l .. ..111 ,., 36 ...... ~, •• 0.1 ...... . .. .,"""' pi!ce S7•17lC7 l•clwdin1 !a• & lfcenM. AN• NU'°'l ,E~CftnAGE '.MTE 1•.$•"f,..-T11ot -~ .,.Ice S201).1$ i .. ci..d:n, JG• & Uc•~ ... ' '"'7,.1" ·P~N.TO .. " · ~ '72'.fORD . LTD · .. ~ '69 fORD· \i' . --.Ms .. ~?!!~--!~R~ ""-::!~r~ ,''iiii. ... --~·-·-Radio, huter, 4 speff (227DNZ) iir cond. CSl6GIT) ~ tow. '(3741Af) • 1 "'u~t .'E•.ct~t~"GE u.re111~.s!"-'· T.1.1 .... h "';,. R~i0:, Niter, 1"'9 !f'lrl-~), (12227J) ~--+-.-73_F_O-RD_M_A-,Y~E.-IC-K-+-.., Itt!r-~~7~f~lO~RD::-:-:U=D~'-1r-°~,~72~fMOAlRD~F~25~0--T,~.~~.fn.=·~l .... ::;:_a::::u•llftll,:::::a.~1. s2•xJil.s . ~-·-~,1,-,,.3j 22DQOll9. J 5.. . '~•xo~"'' '' 'IR0UGHAM2DOOR ,346"(1HH9LEI s·· '~1:3:;:r-1~9.~;;;5.~il;·~ .· ~•0."' 1eiol ,.. •. Pl'lll•. lltclwdl•1 trs•, lh. a, 111 "'""' •Y ,.. • • .PIRMO. .·~ •. ·, .... •.·a' ·,a. 00· .~ J \, i•f ch•<IH •• oPDt. cftdll fer U .... l~I. 0. .. u9'11 ;-•• ~. I.a ... • al 4 _.... Radio, heifer, 1uto. tra ns., air (140 v.a""'acHo, htlttr, 1ut1m1tic, •Ir,.... PoYl!••I .,.;,. 11760.7f l•<lwdl•1 ... 'lice• ... AN· "~' -''· .. ,, ...-. EJP) :M~t (Ol3Gl,,.V),_,... ____ • ~~~}.:;~;:r:.!~E .. !"l11~:~~.'f.. ,.,., ···~ .,r.. ·1.r.o, htr., AT, Air, P/J , P/9 (16461\1) Radio, htr., Mud & snow tire. (76316J) I~~ bnkll. (~~~· • , I ~-~I ' \ . . -~ -• t!t!j1 ------" --- ---ot-t ..... _ TM-II -,' TMIOIORi 1011111 SI. · J ' ·--A 1.-u1 DIPf. MGIUll1 I ....... ,_ ..... M .1 I .... ,_ .. " 11 .,.... pM '-'· ,,.,. Ml¥icl MOUUa , __, ,.. ...., 1 .... ""' , ....... ,.. . • \ P.tilfl ....... OM.YI I .... JIM W. \ • t-.. _:, ' " -~\: . • •. ~-·~ .. , _, 1-r-• -:;;::;i.~-~ ~t _.l • • L:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~:.._~~~~.....!.~~..:....~~..:.....~~......:.~~~"'-..:l!::"°-~~~~-=-~~-=-:__...:......:::::....:__~.:......~..:.:.=..:.:::=:~~~~.....::::.......:::_::::::=..::::::~~~~:::.:: .. '.._-=:;;:c==::~.=-~·~~...;.-""-·~·= I I I \ ., San Ciemenie Capistrano EDITION VOL. 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIO.NS, 36 PAGES -• . . • . ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA ' Today's Final ' N.Y. Stocks · FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1974 TEN CENTS More Wet, Wind Expe.cted Along Orange Coast By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlM Dilly ~llot Stiff Shiverjng Orange Coast residents can prepare for more -of the same Saturday. according to weather forecasters in Los Angeles. A low pressure system located 200 miles off the Southern California coast ls stubbornly holding on to its present PoSition, sending out waves of l!xtremely cold, moi st wistable air over the Southland. \Veather s1rvice specialist Dick Stitt says the stationary weather front is · packing wind gusts of up to 30 knot.! ak>ng the Orange Coast and 62 knot gu.sts in the Newhc1ll area. Small craft advisories are expected to remain in effect through the weekend. "The low pressure system is just sitting out there, at the present time, and it looks like It plans to stay in the same position at least through Satur- day morning," Stitt reported. "By the time the storm leaves it should have .. dumped nearly .an inch of rain in the Southern Caliromia area," he said. Chances are good the ilOnn will move into Nevada before Saturday afternoon, but the National Weather Service today issued mountain snow warnings and call- ed for wind and rainy skies over the Los Angeles basin through Saturday. The weather service said suecesslve oold fronts will keep Sauthern California in an icy grip through the rest of the week, with temperatures near freez- ing in some inland a~eas, but with • warmer weather due again by SW\day afternoon. Highs in the Orange Coast are·a are expected to remain in the upper 40s today and Saturday, Overnight lows should dip Into the low 40s. Sheriff's deputies reported snow and hail covering the 2,284-!oot Castro Peak northwest of Malibu anda.a three-inch deep blanket of snow on roads through the Angeles National Forest. The cold spell, ~hich sent the mercury plunging to a :o\v of 6 degrees in Big Bear, 17 degrees in ~kersfield, 2fi degrees in El Centro, 27 degrees in· Needles, 30 deg rees -in Riverside and 28 degrees in San Berntlrdino, forced citrus gi:owers to turn on smudge pots and other hea ting equipment sooner than expected -and right ' in the midst of a worsening fuel crisis in Southern California and the rest 'of the nation. In the Los Angeles area, already hit by an ele<!lricily s}\ortage, natural gas ·on Ul 'Mild' Flu To Affect 5% of State SACRAMEl\'TO {APJ -A new form o( influema has appeared in California and vdll probably infect 5 to 10 percent or Ille state's more than 20 million residenlS, a stale disease expert said loday. Dr. James Chin said the flu is a compar:itively mild form called Type B, which was discovered in Hong Kong in 1972. It has made: its first California appearance by striking a South San Francisco family. "Tha: meall!I there is most likely quite a lot of infection throughout C.lifornia due lo this virus," said Chin, chief of the Department of Health's infectious disease section. - He said there have been a few cases of the virus being discovered in travelers retw:ning !rom .Hoog }(ong,~t !!11!1. the South San Francisco cases are the first to his knowledge i n v o I v i n g Americans who didn 't travel to other coon tries. In 1958 California was struck y;ith a form of virus commonly called "Hong Kong flu" because it \\'as first isolated in Hong Kong, Chin said. He explained 1ha1 this new fonn of "Hong Kong flu " bears no relation to the earlier variety except that they \~·ere both first isolated in the same place. The 1968-69 nu season was the worst in recent California history in tenns of absenteei sm and deaths resulting from influeni.a and pneumonia, Chin reported. Last yea r was also a similar epidemic season but "we don't expect anything of that magnitude this season," he said. The flu season typi cally runs from December to March. He said Type B vi ru ses generally cause a milder illneM with fewer com- plications and spread--more slowly than - a stronger for m of nu virus known as Type A. The 1968 form of Hong. Kong flu was 'rype A. Anyone who oomes down with nu this year should take the age-old remedi~ of resting in bed, drinking large amounts of fluids and using aspirin to control fever, Chin advised. New Rule in Spain ho1ADRID (UPf) -Generalissimo Francisco Franco today installed a new _ government, removing rrom power ex• treme right-wingers and members ?f Opus Dei, the influential Roman Cathohc lay society. The government, formed by Premier Carlos Jrias Navarro Thurs- day, was described by political sourees as a "moderate" coalition of Franco lO)'alists and technocrats. 2 Me1i Blind, Rob Collector SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Sac- ramento coin colleclOr was bUm:k e:d with an-.cid _,iuuon "and h ~ s wife beaten when twi> men robbed him or $8,000 In rare coins, police ' rei>ort. , Wllllem T. Juchnlk, 54, •n4· his wife, Hideko, were retumlns home from their coin shop when lhe robbery occurred. Police said the men -thre.w a caustic soluUOf\ In Juchnlk's face: The liquid was believed lo havt in acid blse. -------- 0.ilY Plltt Steff Plllfl F•d Raiser ., San Clemente High School Triton Band members will hold a car wash at the First National-Bank of San Clemente-Jan. 12 (rom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Jan. 13 from noon to 5 l.m. Proceeds will buy music, lotkers and other materials. From lei to rignt are Sandy Forrester, Hblly Ertman, Marie Tucker and George Dowden. Sheriff's Officers Holll, Burgla.ry Ring, Suspects Two men linked by Orange County Sheriff's officers lO a wave of burglaries in which San Juan Capistrano stores, were frequent targets were arrested ~ ,day and booked into county jail. Sheriff's Lt. Charles Conaway iden- tified the pair as Duke Lea Lerner, 24, of Anaheim and Dale Ivan Pierce, 20, of Garden Grove. rifics, appliances and Indian jewelry found in the homes of the two men have been identified as stock lost by Mission TV and Hiatt Indian Crafts in San Juan. Both men were additionally booked - on possession of narcotics by officers who said they confiscated more than 30 pounds or marijuana, several thousand narcotic capsules and a large quantity or LSD. 'Nixon Ship' Threatened By'Bomb' The U.S. Coast Guard cutter stationed arowxt the clock off the Western \Vhile House in San Clemente. was the target of a bomb threat on New Year's Eve, it was learned today. But official sources are playing the incident extremely quietly. Reliable sources confirmed the threat to the white cutter shOrtly before mid· nigh! ~y wlta!.¥1 inloxlcatpl caller pbooed Ille Pluldenllal comPound and aaid the bomb was secreted ,llOO\ewhere within the hull · of the vessel which patrols the: spe:ciallJ marted area of ocean oil La Casa Pacifica. President Nixon_., was at bis reside~ during the incident. ' Immediately after learning of the threa~ securiJy_ ~nnel ordIB<! a thorough search of -the vessel-by a special demolition squad. That took place at Dana Harbor but it turned up nothing irregular on the vessel. Harbor patrolmen wQUld _not disucss the incident but indirectly cOnceded that the actiVity indeeed took place. "Anything relating lO the incident New Year's Eve would have to be discussed by the Coast Guard in Long O..ch,'" said a patrolman on duty today. SourceJ said that comments made by I.he calle_r gave strong indications that he was either a present or past member of the Coast Guard bee.a~ of several technical terms used during the con- versation. Official spokesmen for the Coast Guard in Long Beach promised a statement on the incident late today. Conaway said his department, working the long investigation with Anaheim police, booked Lerner for receiving stolen property and Pierce on multiple burglary charges. Hridenlirted Pierce as the bN!akin man and Lerner as the "fence" in the alleged burglary ring. Arresting officers said both men were in possession of considerable quantities of l.SD , marijuana and dangerous drugs when they were apprehended in their homes. Teachers 'Assail Proposal To l(eep Branno11 in Post AfsO recovered, officers said, was much of the loot allegedly taken in recent months from stores and shops in San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Anaheim, Garden Grove and Buena Park. -. Conaway said some or the ~tguns, Chartered Bt1ses To LA, Otl1er Areas to Begin Startini: ~fonday morning, COTUmuters living in Laguna Niguel wlll bavt lhe chance fu catch chartered bu9e! lo Lo! Angeles, Senta Ana, Fullertoo, Orange, Newport O..cb end Irvine. Commu1e11 taking lhe buses wlll be served coffee, breakfast rolls and the "morning paper during the trip to work, Best ol all, the first two weeks of the charter service are free for riders, compUments Of Avco community developers. • Ptrtollo "'°"' asked · lo 11111 up for the service between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Stturday and SW1day · al the Laguna NIJIUel Town Center at the 'lntersecllon ol Crown Valley Parkway and Niguel .Road. Five buses ai;e sc~ed lo leavt the Town Center Moncliy morning - (Ste BllSli:S, l'>p 1) U Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon retains that post despite bis conviction on a bookmaking charge, in~ structors aMert it will be creating a doubyioral standard. · , , They say a teacher even accused of the same offense would have been suspendt'd JoOg since. ... James Thorpe, a sctence instruclor and president of the Academic S-enate. sald he and other !acuity members will be meeting next week to consider a statement on the issue. Thorpe said a faculty member would be s-USpcnded as soon as a passible felony charge was levelled at him, whether or nOt he was proved guilty. is one of a · small group oC offenses which the ·judge can make either a felony or i:nlsdemeanor according to the sentence he gives.· If tbfl resu_lt 'of the judge's action Jan. 27 is a · misdemeanor sentence, Brannon could stay on the board in· definitely. His term of office expires in 1975. ' "If that happens, starting a recall might be a quieter way for those who want to get hfm out of office." Thorpe said. "Regardless. we feel it is in- equitable for the faculty to be treated (S.& BRANNON, Page I) Fire Official's · "U he was proved innocent. he would probably be reinstated and given lhe back pay he missed,'" Thorpe aald. By taw Brannon,· a charter 1rns1ee ~·Car Set Af~ .. e on theSil-year-ota. board, would be fore--.u.' ed to leave his post as soon a.s he Is senten.ced Jan. "ll -II the punishment ls for a felony. Bui et lhis point the 11Atuni of the sentence remains unsure. BookmakJng Police Find Bodies SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Pollet ••Y they have found the bodies or a woman end her ex-boyfriend, bolh kllled by a .22-callber bullet, In the woman's Noe Valier apartment htre. omcen Thurs· day ldcnttfied the victims •! Margaret Ann Barnard, 25, and 'l'bmnu BeoUey, 32. Orange County She\ifrs ollicm today identified a veltfcle: set on fire: and .llestroyed on the Ortega Highway near San Juan Capistrano as a car o.,,'Tled by Capt. Brian Watson of the Orange County Fire Prevention Bureau. Wal.Ion told deP'Hie.s lhat th_c car was take~ from U1 parking spot Q\l.ISide his Santa Ana home Wednesday by unkown Cllr thieves. Dopullet B&ld the vehicle was driven to the San Juan area and set on fire by the same UU.vts . Watson. told investigators he is at 1 '°Joa lo uplaln a motive for tht d<slruetioo o! the olllcial vehicle. .. · FOUND GUil ty OF MURD&il Ranch Hand Slatton U.S. Subpoenas N ewpQrter Inn , Guest Records By JOHN ZALLER Of JM D•lty Plllf Steff A Newport Beach aource disclosed Thursday tttat the U.S. Department o( Justice has subpoenaed records from the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach that may shed light on the Watergate , affair .. The source also confirmed reports by United Press International in Washington that investigators from the Senate Watergate Committee have scoured records of the Newport luxury hotel. The highly reliable sou?ce indicated he has first-hand knowledge of the sub- poenas. • Atanagcment of the Newporter Inn , however; declined either to confir m or deny reports of the subpoenas. "We believe we have an obligation to respect the privacy of our guests," said a SPQ.kesman for the hotel. The investigation 8 ppeared to center on the: hotel's guest list and billing accounts, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. During the 1972 presidential campaign, White House o(ficials -including At- torney General John . Mitchell and presidential ·counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have stayed at the Newporter. • In addition. sworn testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee has indicated that Watergate-related activity, especially during the so-called coverup phase, took place at the New porter. The investigation by the Watergate Committee staff and fhe special pros- ecutor's .office of the Justice Deuart- ment appeared to be an attempt to corroborate that testimony. according to the Newport Beach source and to UPL UPI also reported that Sen ate (Ste INN PROBE, Page%) Ausu·alian YouU1 Killed by Umb1·ella MELBOURNE, Australia (UPI\ - Glen Jae1Gorl 1 141 Was fiifallY stabbed in the head by a)>each umbrella at Parkdale Bctu:h , polite tllld. - \Vitncsscs said Thursday a Creak gust or wind upl"OOted an umbrell a, rolling it more than !II )'llrds along the crowd- ed beech before -ring <fie teen-ager. who was standing on-the beach. · . • ., '!-;;::------.--·------,....,. ________ --'!--- • ser\'ice v.·as cut off to hund reds of In· dustrlal. comme rcial and institutional users, all v.'ilh heating systems fired by olher types of fuel. The action was taken Lo insure gas supplies for residential customers and others v.·ithout alternate sources of heating fuel, gas utility spokesmen ex- plainl'CI . The Palmdale Radar \Veather Center warned up to six inches of snow could be expectl'CI to fall in the area as the storm continues. Faces Life • Sentence To Prison Ranch hand Robert Carl "\Vhip" Slat- ton v.·as found guilty Jf first degree murder late Thursday in Orange County _ Superior Court. The jury added the new nuse of a firearm" rider to its murder verdict and added the same Penal Code prtr . vision when it found Slatton, 41, guilty of assault with a deadly weapon last July 10 at the Ortega 'Hot Springs. If lhe verdict and the Penal Code provision survive defense attorney Daye Shinn's planned appeal it will mean that it will be at feast 10 years before: Slatton can apply for parole. It took the jury five hours of actual deliberation to determine that Slatton actl'd· "with malice aforethought" when he shot and· ldlled trespasser Dennis Ray Glahn, 21 , of La ·Mirada. Judge Robert L. Corfman accepted both verdic~ called for a probation report ori the Starr Ranch ernploye .and ordered Slatton returned to h i s courtroom Jan. 23 for sentencing. " "Do I have to sit here and take this'!"-Slatton au-dlbly 3Sked Shinn as bailiffs prepared to lead him back to the county jail. And he again audibly added as Judge Corfman glowered in his direction: "I've ' already been locked up in the jail for six months for something I didn't do." Mrs. Dorothy Carroll, Slatton's com- mon law wife. broke down and sobbed in the front row of the courtroom as the jury verdict was read. htrs. Carroll was identified during the trial as the woman who retrieved Slat- ton"s Colt revolver from the ranch house where he sought refuge a n d threw il dov.·n a cliff. Slatton insisted from the witness st.and that he was nowhere near the hot springs when Glahn was shot in the stomach. He told the jury that he was being kidn'aped and threatened with castration by three you ng men at the time that the La Mirada man was dying from his wounds .. Slatton said he r e c o v e r e d con- sciousness from repeated beatings near the Bell Canyon Road gate to find --himself in .the. front seat ot bis own ·1• (S.e CONVICTED, Page Z) Oraage Coat • Weather Look for continued showers and cold winds through n10st of Sat- urday, with a chance of clearing by Sunday, according to the \Veather service. T&c Orange Coast \\'on't get above 50 degrees Satur- day and lows will dip into the Jow 408. INSmE TODAY Mary Cmsatt is tile bts& k11oun' Anierica·n wmnan artist of tlie 19th Centll·ry. Staff toriter Candace Pearton looks at Cas- sotc's life a1td work in teTms of lhe wonian's tn oven1e11t in t<>- "day"s Weeke-11der. "' Yt\lr i1r•lc1 -t ... tlllt ,, l . M. So¥• t C1il+lnll• r Ct11~tlell lt·U CMitl JP (l"tl-· ,, Ofllll NOllCtl I lttllorlll ..... ' ,.il'llMI t•l1 l"ff thl lltctr• • ~· ,. ..,,.. Lll!Olrl lJ MllllllK ' . ' ~vi" tJ. II.• M\11\ltl P'•Rilt f NalioMll Newt 4. 1t Or•~tt t11111l)' 1.1 ll~taw1n11 I>~ S'lh'l"I Ptrltf t '"''' , .. ,, '*" Mlr'ltlll 1 .. 11 T1""l111ft • Jt TlloMIHI tS, )$, 11 Wff.._, • Wllll'tll'l liltWI IS.II Werlll..... 4, • Wttl!Mftr ti·• • • I •,#< _:.. • r>t.VI SC Frld3y, ,::r1 4, ~974 Grading Site -Probed Stone Chips Ho ld Up Dana T;aet Work A Capistrano Beach y,·oman "''Ith a · School as heavy CCiuipmcpt rearrUt\;C.I penChanf for lhe archeology of the-SOi"ith -the lan(isel!;pt.. Coast has intervened in grading on a Her only nagging concern. ho.,.,·ever, major Ilana l'olnt housing p.'oject is that the sole e~pert quall(iM 10 do because or fears that clues to early the surveying reprl!'Sents a firm \vhicb inhabitants colll<i be rutn«I. she has deemed "unprofessional" tn Its ~!rs. ri.·tarie Patterson succeeded late mapping of important sites in the county. last week in winning concessions fron:i Mrs. Patterson , an a n\ ate u r 1he developer of the Dana D'Oro tract. archeologist, became roncerned over the ullo\ving an oxpct·t archeo logist IQ survey 1radin11 becau1e of Iha pre@ence Qf s~one the JT adlng site n••r Oaqa llills lligb chips mdiconn1 that ·s11es Oil th• ~using Fo11nd i ti Hills Cleme11te Police Ready Murder Victi1n's Picture San Clemente police are about to release an artist's comPosite showing the possible facial features of a murder victim found late last month in inland hills. Detectives said today that they planned to release lhe dra\\•ing early next week if criminali1t11 from the county crime laboratory C(lllcur with the observations of artist Sandy f\.1artin. Marlin, a local retiree, is the department's expert in drawings and spenl days working wilh investigative photos of the skull of the victim, Detectives sai d that the drawµig , show· Ing three different angles, required days ? of painstaking work under a magnlCylng glass. Martin used skills in anatomy and porlraiture to re-create facial fea~ tu res from the victim '1 skull, The drawing may be the mdrit solid lead yet in· the vexing case. Thus far in ~he investigation officers have few clues to the identity of the slightly build, red-haired victim whose remains From l'AfJe 1 BRANN ON • • • one "ay and the board another." . An administration apokesman sa,d there is no written policy dictating pro- cedure on suspensions for a staff member accused of a felony. "I suppose there is a strong possibility that an instructor would be suspended in suCh a case,'' he said. ''But OT! the Ofher hand , he might not." No faculty me1nber in the school's history has bee n accused of a felony .. But according lo the st.a\~ educab~ code any teacher charged with a po1si. ble 1felony offense is &l\lpended until the action is oompleted, Joe Meler, persoMel serviOOs dlrec:tor fQJ" tlJe Orange Cowuy Department of Educatiop, said. "If the verdict ls against the teecher-, his credential iii lifted and he can1t \\'Ork as a teacher from !hen on," Meler said. ·~11 ii find• him innooent-, his back pay is returned." The first meeti ng of the quarter of the facult y Association will be 11ext Friday. Thorpe said sevf!r!'li teachf!rs want to discuss a position at that meeting on the Bra1mon issue. . . Pi.fembership in the Faculty Asaoo1a11~ is open to all instrt1ctor1. The A~Qem1c Senate is a 11maller body with one reprelienlalive elected from each divi!ilon and at large. As to Brannon, ''Jt1s a difficult {Kl!itical sitiialion," Thorpe said .. ''Pn a board that is &plit on many 1S~\le51 Brannon has a key vote. "I don't know about the legality of all 1his, '' Thorpe said. "Bl!.t in terms of fairness it seems faculty memben should-be 'innocent until pr<1ven guilty just as i~ a publjc official." . If Brannon is fore~ out of office by his sentence or resigns , he W!ll b4! replaced in the June general elec1Jon. An additional vacancy, created by the res ignation of Michael Collins Qf Ne~-port Beach, i~ up for grabs in the March 5 election . . . OIAN•I COA,St -IC DAILY PILOT 'ftl.t Qr1119e COa1t 0.-.ILY PILOT, wl• Wltldl 11 C01"1bll\wC tht NtW'l·Prnt, It PVl)lltlled by fht Or•nve Cot" Publljlolng Comp;ony. S-· rti. ltdllio<Q .,. pUllUl!'te<ot Mond•Y fhrouoll Frl!l•v, !or '""" M•t, i.iewport Buell, Hvntll!Qllln Br.c!\/F01,1r11tin VtlWV. l,.fgUllt e .. ch, ll"\';.,11$.ldclld••ck •od S..n C .. """1te/ ~n ,1.,.,. C•Plllrtn(I.' A 1!ngl1 reolonel toa!I~ If w1111~ S..turt11v1 11111 $111lf•Y•· Tiit prl11Ci,.1 Pl>lllit~lnv pl1n1 !t 11 »:> wetl •-r llr,et, to.ti M111, Cllllomi., fUH. Robert N. W11d Prt•lftnl 1"4 f'~Dlill!ff J1,k R. Cutltv Yic:f Ptt110.,,1 •ncl 6:t11tr11 Mtllfitr Thom11 Kt t>'il Edi!or Tho,.,11 A. M ~rphint ~n•t•"ll EO••or Ch11l•t H. Leo, li~t rtl P'. N1U Aul111n1 Mtnatlllll ~0110" S,.i e ......... omc. 391 North El Cimino R11I, 91.71 ~0-'°''' ~..-; "'w;.1 1-1. ,11.., lrjt'#PQfl 8NOI: )UI MH9'0tl loult'flfl HUritl1191ot1 e·uc!I: 111n eenti ~ltv•r11 1.•t-... ~, UJ Ftrt'I AW!i..-. Tel~ ffl 41 •4.1 .. 111 Cltlo1¥ ~Po<!j•.., +ll·Hlf S. .,....., AW Dep•IH+i ... I ,._,.ii! f f2"442t =~I. 1fU. ~'"" co.tr P-'*llf.~~ llif• ~; llOtlft, ill111lr1lloR•, ! II IN 11r 9f!prflltl'l'ltllltt lltr•lfl ' v ,,. .-ittiovt tl!tfltl 1111'• "'tlllii °' ' ' ~· ~ t~...cf~ ftlll ,, ~·'• ~i ~iite\•· ~-~tflf~'~• i;:,.,.:.;i~~u~ .. ,,;;fli.M ffll , .. ;;.,,. -.,. --J .------· had .lain unnoticed for almost a monlh in a gully near Avenida Pico. Criminalists have been able to obtain several good fingerprints from the decayed corpse but a full iCt is not available, makin& the proce11a or elimina- tion an extremely difficult one, in· vesllialora said. The victim was ahot once in the head. and iJlSide the cranial cavity examiners found the remaln1 of a slug, possibly a .82-ca liber, which killed the man. Dental chart s also have been made of the victiin's teeth in an effort to seek the identity. Such charts are routinely sent to de!)· tists in the area on the off-chance that they might recogni~e t~e WOf~ a& their&. T}1Qr-0µ~h searches af lhe de"ti\ sit~ yielded noihing1 detec.tive11 faid. Lon_g Beacli State Man Sex Victim The victim af · what investigators describe: as lhe seventh in a chain of hommtual mutllatiOJl murderi ha.1 been identlfi,.J .. a *~··r~rd Long ~each Sta~e lJniver1ity student. AClQOrdif'• to San Bernardtno police, the victim. VUlcente CrU¥ Mestas, is the seventh victim in the mµtiJatipn murdera which 4ve baffled polios in Orange and ~ Ang~lee OoWllies liljnce December (If \911 .. Mestas' body was found Dec. 29 In a ravine in fhe: J;an aernardino Moun- tains near state Highway 18. The \den- .tification of his body v;as made Thursday by members of his family. Like the previous mut.ilallon murder victims , the young man had been strangl- ed, sexually mutilatet,I and sexu<illy assault~. ~1estas' hands bad been cut off above the wrists and Pis head had been shaved, dete ctives said. The so-calle4 mutilation murder chain began in December of 1972 with the discovery of the boclY of Edward 0. 1ifoore in Beal Beach. He was the first to have been strangled and sel(ually mutilated , which most of the vjctin1s have been. Since then, there have been four bodies discovered i11 the LQs Angeles HarQor area, lnclucUng one which hQd been hac~­ ed into piects and put in~ green garbage can bags. The bpgs were found 1hroughout the harbor area and in Sunset Beach. None of the victims found in J..os Angeles County have been identified. Another l>ody was foimcJ in ~ea! Beach in July. The victim was iQenlified as Ronqie Wiebe, 21 , of Fullerton. Poli1;e are still trying to ~etermine if the hackeQ up bodf of an uni~entified man foWld last March in Huntington Beach ii pa11t QI the mutil~tion -murder chain. - ,..,.,.. Pllflr J CONVICTED . •• Land Cruiser with twq of his three ab<luatora flan•ing him. The >anoh hand i•id he Brabil!d th• wheel of the vehiole Which veered off tho road al)d qvertµrned , throwing •ll four men to the ground. Slatton said his ne11t m~rnnrY of the night !lf ;qJy 10 w31 lh•I he was ri4ing a horse bareback acros~ ~tarr Ra11ofl land with his While SteliOn hat on the pack of hiii head and his .• Haliber C.oll revolver slung on his hip . His only corppanion in a ri~e putlined by the -light of a full moop wa1 a riderleu horse which stayed oloae behind him a n d whinnied to him occasionally, he testified. But Deputy District ~~Qm!Y Ted f\1illard sue<:essfully argued in his final statemenl lhal ~l\<lq had a iqfll >l!C'lrd of violence and tha't he tiad been warned by hi s •mp)oyer~ m•l1)' lim~i noi to ·use weapqn~ il1 ejecting tres~<\S!ers frgrn ~tarr !lane~ Ian~. Millard \QM th• ll1fll l~at ~lat1pn "booied it up" iJl. san Jµan !;;191111•00 In lh• ho"" l!elor• \he Olal\n ~lllfng ant\ . that h• VQWO\l in lh• J!f@ietJl'e nf · ~ver~ witnesse1 to 1·aet me Of1'e ol thel1) !llflKhalrs." -.. --,·--. . -~- tt1cl ooco -were usia far loo mt na. Grpdipg had ·been set to begin C)!l th~ project by the American Housll'I& Guil!l -1!11 ~. ;a, b\ll i>et~ll!O Qf the won1an's protests It was-delayed until early this week, "I understand that the devtloper was entitled to do hi• "!Ork beca~,. h• hai CQmpliod will> oil l~ codes. llut I oUJI foll .. mpelle<j 10 d9 somethiJlc, because once -these .sites-are _graded, they are gone forever," said ?i.1rs. Patterson. lier main grievahce with the state or affair• i~ ll!Oal •1'1:hllOloaY is th~ dominance in the field of ArchaeoJO(ic:al Research Associ~teS (,\RI) of Costa Me1a. ~t entity~ tervff a1 the maln con1ultant In matters of artifao~·vers~. develQpment. "So far I haven '! been able to find out il Alli has even litlped map the deposits of the stone chips or other site8 of importan~. 11!at is supposed to be th~ basic function of a scientist, 11 she asserted. The woman e•plained that she prefet'S a ~ten1 whereby a master . map is kept current \\'ilh notations of latest discoveries. "Tllis isn't the only area that concerns me,'' J11le said. "All the Avco grading o( Salt Creek destr01i. a large amount or valuable mateMal. and there is no \\'ay to find out ita imoortance," she said. The weather ha~ put a stop to gradini temporal'ily, but Mrs. Patterson said that she will continue her vigilance as v.·ork resumes. "The procedure has not yet reached the stage where areas of prime im- portance are being exPosed. We might find something more significant after the grading start.II up again," she Sitid. • From P09e 1 IN N PROB E .•. \Vatergate staff members had conducted interviews of Newporter employes in an effort to verify testimony of forJll~r White Hgu~ officialli. However the Newport Beach source said he had no knowledge of any such interviews. It was leameq a (ew month.I ago that Watt:?rg11te invelitigators made a similar iqguiry into au the records Qf the San Clemente lnn near the Western White House where many of Nixon's key aides stay. They also lool:ced for names of members of the Howard Hughe~ Cqrp. and othei posiible cam- paign co~tributQrs on the guest list, according to UPI. The most widely reported visit to the Newporter Involved Martha Afitchell and ~er buoband ;o\lo, wtio w;i. tlieo manager of President Nixon's re-election campaign. They reportedly were gueats at the Newporter on June 17, 197i, when the break-in occurred at the Democratic headquart!!rs at the Watergate complex in Washinglon . ~·litchell -flew beck to Washincton a day or iiO lpter, leaving-his wife with tneir daughter, ~arty, 1!1 his ~etan, -Lee-Jablonski, ancJ~a bodYglJAr<t, {lteve Ki ng. Duriog the weo~ toot follgwed, Mr•- ?i.1itchell claim&: ~he was "mal!Pandlecf'' and told reporters "they iituc~ l\ needle in my behipd." The wife pf the former attorqey generill alqo ~htims t h e telephone of her villa wa~ rippe(i fr9rn 1 the wall while s)le W!lS talking long distance to UPJ reporter ttelen Thom~s. At that ~im~. she told ~ilss Thomas thal she bad given ber hy~bJm<I "an ultimat4rn" to quit th~ camIHli&n or she Y.'OUld leave hill). She made that annguncernent when ~he was asked what she thoyght of the burglary and bygging of the Watergate. Mrs. Mitchell has said that while she \Vas at the Newporter, she could not get her calls through the switcilboard and wq~ kept ip ieclusion. l\litchell 11ubseg4enlly resign~d as Ni~-, on 's campaign manager. But he re· mained in touch with the President as a political advi,.er during the carhpaign, according IQ Mrs. Mitcflell, Although Mrs. Miwhell wo"t!~ to testify before the $enate Watergate hear· ings, 1he committee did not call her. Tho · Mitchell~ ser3rale<I last Se!': tem~r as a resul_t o wai-e·rg~t~ rel~te(J problems whic~ interfered wit~ their ntarriage. Both are npw living in New York apQ Mrs. MilQh~t currently is working on her memoirs. Waldie Lau,ic1ies Ne iv_ Leg of Wcilli PUMPl\IN O~NTi:fl (VP!) -Rep. Jerome Waldie (J>.Clllf. ), underdog can- didate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, Is oll ~nd wal~ing agalf1 .. Waldi~ ii lrj'.1111 to ltjlilale tht 14~cess of politicians fn lllinois e:od Utah who won election ifter long wplks thrg,gh their slll\~. ~ SUQ111\@f, h-Wai~jd the 230 miles """1 the ·Mexican border to Santa ~rbarn. . 0.111 Piiot 11411 1'11011 GRADING EQUIPMENT R!ARRANGES DANA POINT BUT AN ARCH EOLOGtST IS NEA RBY Developer, Granted Concessions Because of Stone Chi ps That May .Indicate Toolmaking F1'0H1 Pnge 1 BUS ES • • • one to the city of Commerce and ctownt own · Los Angeles; one to Los Angeles International Airport and Bever· ly Hills; one to Fullerton. Anaheim and Orange; one to downto'vn Santa Ana. and one to NewPort Beach and the l"YIOe !nd,•tMal Cornpl11. 11, .. , h••ding for lbe IA• An1•l•• are~ will leav~ !"llPut 8!a(I a.m. 'ftlQlB doparti!lg tor Orange CQtin!Y de8tin•lion1 wi\l \e3ve aj 7: Ii a.m. Afr~ th• inllial two woek fret Jlllrlod, thit oost to commuter& wUI )>e be!Wf!el\ 18.511 and 111 per weok , d•pandins pn the ctestination of th~ ricter. Ru••• will pie~ up riden belween 4:45 anQ 5:10 p·.m. at the vi1rioy1 lnca- tions Alld return the111 to f.;a.M~HUt Niguel around fi :SO p.m. llefr .. \unenta will be served an th.e return trip. Don McMullen, Avoo's director Qf marketing, saht lhe firm hat •~nt between 11.000 •n<I !S,lltlO organi•inJ the charter service as a local effoft to help ease the energy crisis. He estimated that if all five buses are filled on a daily basis, more than JS0,000 gallons of gasoline could be saved yearly. ~ Mc)..fu11Em oaid the prog1am \• U\e first charter bus servio~ spo11sored ~Y a C()mmunily dt:ve lqper in U1@ United States. . The ofhcial nama of the service is the "Laguna Niguel Save the Fuel Pool." Refutes Project ion ,.,,, '"' .. ' . San ]uari Cit y Cen sus Shows 10,000 R es ide1its A •pe!Ci•I oily ce0Ju1 paid for by attn Juan Capililranci to refute PQ1WhHi1.1n projections by a slate agen~y lh{IW that n~rly J0,000 reajdenl• now cpll the misi!on oofTf?r11.111Uy 1u>n111; ,\nd that amoun\3 to •IY"t 1.ioo more than the State Departm.1;1nt of Finance prpjected. 1'his coqld .me'ln mQre than '40,000 per year 41 at~te revenu~ return· tut to city c0ffer1. Reliultf announced U1j11 w~"k 111eiµt tlmt for every Jl6W head counl(Sd, the pity eap~c:t& 10 receive . SIB l.lnnu1dly in e)ltl'a tax "'~tes from silil1ts, tobac{lo and other levle~ which are · retuinod lo loc11I juriadiollon. The '81000 Qenaus accompli&hed early la•t mllf!\ll w~a oaU@!I b~ ~ity OOJl!Jcllrnen after a slinging exchange of letter~ bel\\'een City Manager Donald \Veidner and state officials. \Veidner repaledly 11uuiled the state's figures as far too low. Then\ laking a cue from tho city of lrvtnQ, \Veidner sousht and won pcrmis!iion to (!Onduot the !ipecial count and to hife.part-li111e c:en&us takers. AllhOllih the la~ for the special count \Vas sbustantial, It will be mart~ up speedily by the extra money. flowing into c1ty coffer• beoause ot the official increase. 'fhe official nun1bcr srl by the special , census for the city i& 9,648 persons. \ The offici~I a1ate figure ca tcu\;ited ; on gucss\~·ork was 7,~00. Besides simply counting hc:ids, 1he special en1ployc9 hired nt minimum \1•age also asked about 10 questions· of residents. The qucri('s, still being tabulated, sought data on shopping htibits, economic ractors and other iten1s of value to clty planners who presently are drafting a new general plan. Ga rrison Bid F a il l!i NEW OH~EANS I UP rt -An appeals court sa id Thursdny Dist ri ct Attorney Jin1 GarriitOn c.:i 11119t ch~!lengc hill dl!feel in a Der. !? runoff electiQn. GarrilOll, who h111 Reen in pf(ice 12 years, said therti wtirc frll11dulen1 llr~ctioes in tl\8 cJeo1ion that. if corrected, wuuld award him the eleclion over llarry ~~. Connick, 'M'ho · won by 2.000 votes Oljl 9f a count or nl,lltlO. ..,,. ............. _ ................. -==----.... .-. . .-Wi~TER SALE • • ''BIGGEST EVER'' . SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXE L -HERITAGE. HENR EDON -AND MORE • , . ON SALE NOW! ALL Ul'HOLSTl!RY INC LUDING WOODMAIU< CHAIRS AT SA LE PRI CE S. WOODMARK FEATURE S: * LUXURIOU S 25% DOWN & 7~ % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INC LUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCE~LeNT SEL~CTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARP~D * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC *EIGHT WAY HANO TIED CHA IR BASES * ALL DOUD~e DOWL.EO HARDWOOD FRAM ES • AND MUeH, llAUCM1 MO ~E * A TEO von 1-t eM ~RT EXCLU SIVE •. : QN l,,)JSPLAY NOW ' Ile 80t off Thur&<lal fn!m Pymp~jn Cente• -pl~~ed pJl'lly .~caus@ tie "liked the name','~ --. on t~! Pl)-mill' w1tik J to 1!4~rameitto. • . ,,, _ _J ~ Fifi~ JWI11 WonutlJ . letJI I/Ill (Ill, NtWfOPl ~~ACt-l e 1121 Wl5TeLI-~ 01.. lAl·llfl lf\GUN ll l~ACl1 t 145.NO•Tjj CO•SJ HWl 01o11; I -sAN mEoo (APJ--Am~ll• l N TI R'l .0 R $ Arml>rillfri 01, w11 bumetl IQ t!eath "'"I".•••• • s•fu ~4,. '''° ... 1atf In !lie llVltll lWm Ill hCf l!omt tll• '" "'" • • ,. ... • ,. San Diego COunty Qllfllll,r'~ llff"' fald ,fKIDAY ll •1DO Tlllll'lllll'· flrt olfiQii!a Bid llll Yl~lllan L~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~ was ~"'IPi~f Qll tile OQQr ~.., a lur1111oe when oo l)J'?'i" ••"•Ill lift> ' ' · llJt\r ' NCf t J?•._. .,.AWfll(l~Nf C1"lp !Upon sUnd~v ,,.<:1:\Jt .t rt •• -...W----,,.,--== --. ---·--• . - I 'I \ •• NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Tooay'~ Cl 011lqg Prices ' --• .1L .. 1 \'ear's High.Low a Appear Eve ry 11turday I • • I ' .,.. UP I Ttlepllolt EASY RIDER -Kevin Clark of Spokane says trick isn't so difficult- "anybody can c1o it as long as there's snow." Svria11s ~ Saluted By Nixon 1',rom \\"ire Strvices _ I President Nixon sent a cable congratult:!ting Syrian Presi· dent Hafat Ass1ul on th e OC· casion of the four-day holiday of Id al Adha. the biggest ritoslcm feast of the year, Radio Damascus reported. Nixon's cable included a 111essage "from the American l people to tha Syrian people. ( PEOPLE ): for the prosoerit.v of Svria and the \\•hole ~fiddle East ~rea." the broad_cast _said. 1 This ~·as the first tu11e such a gesture had been recrivcd from a U.S. ~rcside~t since 1 Svria broke dtplor11al1c re!a· tiOns \1ith the United States after the 1967 i\1iddl c East \var. / * . I l\'ovelist Erskine Cald"'cll IS in Rochesler. ~·J inn. for a 1 physical checkup at the i\'fayo Clinic. 1 Caldv.•ell, 69, of . Dunedi~.1 fo~\a., \VaS <lCCOmpantCd by h1s 1 \\'ife. Virginia. Cald well's novels have sold , 50 million copies. Among them are ''Tobacco noact·• and '"CrOCl's Little Acre." * The "hostess \vith I h c nioste ss" is Oklahon1a·bound. The . \Vashington·Star News c:ays Per!,e l\le~l:.1 has h~d trciuble recovering from a hip ooeration and 1\·ants to takr>I advantage of the war_m, dry climate of Oklaho ma City. Her l brother lives there. But l\1rs. Mesia. \\'~ose I penchant for_ la vis h! \\1ashington parues w. as cclebraled in the musical I "Call l\'1e l\1adam." is . not deserting the ~nation's capital. 1 She"ll keep a small apartment I as a headquarters for the 1 ~pring and fall social seasons. * ~la mie Eisenho"·cr. the Ti· \"C~r-0\d \\'idO\\' of Presi_de~t ·o\\·ight" D. ElsenhO\\'tr. IS Ill \\'alter Reed ~\ospital fo r "'~at 1 the hospital says is a routine : checkup. . 1 A spokesman said he did not know ho\\' long she \\'OUld stay in the hospital. * Coleman A. ''oung, the first black mayor of Detro it. said it 's time for the criminal ele- ment in the l\Iotor City to "hit ti1e road:· "I issue open \\'arning to all dope pushers. an rip-<1ff artists. all muggers." ''oung !'aid in his inau~ural soeech. "'I don't git'~ a dnmn if they·re tlack or. \1•hite. ir the~·· "'car supcr.nv suils or b 1 u e uniforn1s 11•1!h sil\'t>r hadges. ~~·:; tl~e to lca\'C Detroit. hit the road.·· • lt>n. J. \\". Fulhrlo:hl i<:. off .end running Ag<1in. The A r k a n s a s Dcn1ocralic an· aounced he \\•j!\ seek a slx1!1 tr.rm next fall. Fulbrit!ht is ch:iirman of tht· l enale Foreign Re I at io n s j Committee and has been a :ri!"lllber o( the Senate since 1945. • • United St~lv.-orkers o f i\merlc:1 PrMlldP"I I.\\'. Ahf>I• ~·ill rece ive the City of Hooc's spirit of life . a\\·~r~ l\1ar.chl · 6 ror activity 1n c1v1c affairs and pt rticlpation on various l?Ovemment and p r i v a t e boards and commissions. aty of Ho~ is a nalional nonsectarian pilot medical cent.er" wilh pibneer prograrus in research, education and pa· ...... . ( 'JCPenney • 'NEWP.O.RT -BEACH . Fashion Island Store Only SALE STARTS SATURDAY MORNING 10 A.M. Women's Accessories , Orig. 0 '400 only Ladies Genuine leather W•llets .99 D 50 only Cool C1pless Wigs, some Elvre Pierced Earring Tree . I 4.88-16.88 2.00 2.00 Pearl Pi er~ed Look Earrin g$ Assorted Earrings, O 22 only O 135 only O JOO only Bacelets, Necklac;.es . 99 .3.00 D 40 D 100 only Multi Compartment Handba95 b.00 only Assorted Totes & Ladies Handba9s 4,50.1.00 'Sleepwear & Lingerie D b2 only Soft Denim ' l ong Lounger D 37 0:nly Long Print Quilt Lounger Q 18 'only Long Peignoir & Night Gown D 43 only Junior Nylon Tricot Lou nger D 30 only Solid Top Pririt & Plaid Sk irt lounger Dress Dept. Orig. 15.00 17.00 30.00 16.00 20.00 Orig. 0 JO only 0 25 only O 18 only O 20 only 0 18 only 0 18 only Womens Dresse s & Pant Suits, Missy·, Junior, Half Sizes Better Wool & Poly Pant Sud 59.00.79.00 Pa stel Pant Su it , Missy Size 30.00 Poly Knit Pant Suit 27 .00 Poly Knit Pant Suit 22.00 Knit Ha lf Site Pant Su it I S.00 ProfessiOn al Uniform Smock I 0.00 Bridal Dept. D only Bridal Gown, Siz:e 10 D only Bridal Gown, Size 8 D 2 only Brid al Gown, Size 8 and 12 D only Bridal Gown, Size 14 D only Brid al Gown, Size 8 •· Coat Dept. D 30 only Fake Fur Coat D 6 on ly Boot Length Coat, fur trim D 18 on ly Pant Length Pile Coat D 48 only Wool Blazer, Tweed & Solid Women's Sportswear Orig. 95.00 140.00 95 .00 95 .00 120.00 Orig. 55.00 95.00 58,00 25.00 Orig. O 40 only Misses Better Pant Tops 15.00 O 30 only Misses Print Pant Tops 14.00-15.00 D 25 only Contemporary Miss NOW .... 7.88·8.88 .is .50 .44-1.22 2.88 2.88-4.88 NOW 9.88 8.88 1~.88 7.8.8 11.88 NOW 36.99 24.88 19.88 15.88 11.88 5.00 NOW 16.88 42.88 14.88 16.88 16.88 NOW 29.88 72.88 29.88 12.88 NOW 8.18 8.88-9.88 Coordin ates 18.00-44.00 10.88-29.88 0 40 only Misses Cuffed I 00 "I. D D Polyester Pants 12 only Better Bodys hirts 16 only Pa tterned..1.0.0 Y. Polyester Pants Junior Shop I J.00 .10.00 13.00 6.99 7.88 10.88 D 12 only Lurex Sweater Sets D 15 only Embroidered Prints O 8 only Lurex Halters Orig. . r"' 3 1.00 2 1.00 NOW 15.88 12.88 7.88 12.88 11.88 4.88 4.99 D I 0 only Satin Jeans D 10 only Velvet J eans D 20 only Shirred Waist Blouses Angora S/S Tops 16.00 19 .00 23 .00 9.00 10.00 D 30 only lon9 Better Dresses & Jump Suits 54.00· I 00.00 D 28 only Embroidered Sweater Tops 8.00 O 9 only Halter Sweater Sets 24.00 O 15 only Sweater with Lurex Flowers 9.00 Shoe Dept. Pr.Tennis Shoes, Womans & Girls Pr. Tennis Shoes, Mens & Boys Boys Shoes, Sizes 1111 to 6 Pr. Girls Shoes, Broken Sizes Pr. Womans Clogs, Mostly wh_ite Orig. J.99-7.99 4.99 -6.50 9.99-12.99 6.99-~99 8.99 O 200 on ly 0 200 only 0 100 only 0 75 only O 200 only O 75 only O 50 on ly Pr. Girls Boots, Broken Sizes Pf. Mens Shoes, O 100 only O 200 only Broken Sizes 14.99-1 8.99 Pr. Slippers, Mens, Womens & Girls 2.99-9.99 Pr. Womans Flats & Casu als 7.99-10.99 Men's Furnishing 27.88-47.88 5.88 19.88 6.88 NOW 1.88 2.88 3.88 2.88 3.88 1.4'1 9.88 1.88-4.88 4.88 NOW D 38 only Short Sleeve Fashion Sp°'I Shirts IO. 98 5.88 O 40 only Lon9 Sleeve Leyer-look Sets 9.98 ~.88 0 60 only IOO Y. Acrilen Acrylic Vests 5.oo· 2.88 0 300 only Yellow or Blue So<ks 5/1.99 5/.99 0 70 only Wallace Beery Sportshirts 2.99 1.88 O 81 only Better Oren Shirts 11.98-12 .98 5.11 D 120 only Bulky Crewneck Sweaters • Siu• M. L 13.75 7.88 USE YOUR . PENNEY CHARGE CARD Men's Cllitfiing Orig. O 241 only Casual Sle<ks ,6.98-20.00 0 60 only Novelty Slacks, Broken Sites 0 24 only Fell Jedets 17.98-19.98 0 14 only All Weather Coats, Zip Out Lining 45 .00-55.00 D 25 only Rancher Style Leather J1c.ket 55.00 0 5 only Sport Coats, Asst. Sites 0 15 only All Wool Spo~t Coats D I 0 only Men1 Suits, Broken Si1e1 D 15 only Better Leather Jackets D 47 on ly. Mens Suit Clearance Girls' Dept. 57.95 115.00 80.00 0 60 only tSc.hoolage Girls Dresses, Sizes 7.14 Ori g. 2.88-14.00 ·o· 40 only Schoolage Girls Pant Sets, Si 2es 7.14 4.88-12.00 D 40 only Preschoola9e Girls Dresses, Sizes 4-6X 3.88-9.50 D 20 only Pres choo lage Girls Pant Sets, Sites 4·6X 7.00-10.00 NOW 4.88 1.81 6.99 39.'9 39.9' 1'.99 29.99 29.9' 79.99 64.00 NOW 1.111-10.88 2.88-9.81 1.11.1.11 4.11-7.88 D 30 only Schoola9e Outerwear, Slus 8·14 7.88-34.00 4.88·19.68 D P1eschoolage Girls. Outerwear, s;,,. 4-6X 2.88-17.50 .81.10.88 0 120 only Assorted Schoolage Girls Tops, Sites 4.6X 4.00-S.79 0 50 only Schoolage Girls Sleepwear, Sites 7.14 3.98-6.98 D 20 only Peanuts Character Banks 4.00 0 120 only Bells, 24".JO" 3.00'.4.00 0 70 only G irls Handbags, 3.14 .66-4.29 D 20 orily Pre5 chool Girls Skirts, /\ Sizes 4-6X 4 .00~5.00 0 40 only Schoolage Girls Skirts, Sizes 8-12 5.00-8.00 HALF PRICE SALE! 1.88-2.88 1.18•3.88 1.18 .88·1.11 .10-1.ll Z.88 2.18-4.88 Women's Travel Accessories & Notions by Celebrity~ • Tissue Cases • Novelty Soaps • Cosmetic Caddies • Hair Dryers • Lingerie Cases • Cosmetic Cases • Fragrance Sachets • Makeup Purses • Light Up Mirrors • Travel Totes Many More To Choose From-Huge Selection ALL HALF PRICE Boys' Dept. 0 200 only Schoolage Boys Shirt Vests, Sizes M-XL Orig. 3.50 O 40 only Schoolage Boys Shirt/Vest1 4L 00 Sites I 0.20 U-:1.N..... D 200 only .Sc.hoolage Boys Knit Shirts, Sins I 0-20 1.25-5.98 D 100 only Schoolage Boys Woven Shirts, Sizes 8-16 2.98.l.SO D 30 only Schoolege Boys Lightweight NOW .88 3.88 . 88-3.81 .... , ... Pajamas, Size M 2.88 1.88 0 IS only Preschoolage Boys Hooded Plaid Pile Jacket, Sizes M·L , I ].98 7.99 D l 5 only Preschoolage Boys Pila Li ned _ Denim Jacket, Sizes M.L ~2.98 7.99 O 20 only Preschoolage Boys Safety Stripe Jackets, Si2es M-L 12.98 7.99 D 12 only Schoolage Boys Down look ' Jackets, Sites M-L ·26.00 15.H D 15 only Schoola9e Boys Pla id Rencher Jacket, Sizes M·L 16.91 9.9' O 45 only Schoola9e Bo_ys Denim Rancher J1<k•t, Sins M-Xl 16.98 · JC Penney 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPOR-T BEACH · ' Toy Dept. D 40 ¥only Fisher-Price Airport 0 6 only M19nu1 Electric Cord 0N)an O 9 only F•mlly Shull-bowl O 21 only M•lehbox® Moll Pl•y Sot D I 0 only Fisher.Price Action Geme D 72 only Christmas Coloring Books Yardage and Notions Orig. 13.99 35.99 9.99 7.88 11.99 .39 D D D 0 , Orig. 8P only yds. POiyester ind Acrylic nKits 2.22 50 onty yd1 . Cotton/Poly Terry 3.99 28 only yds. Print Quilt 1.98 -40 only yds. I 00 -;. Poty·ester D D D· D , Sparkle Kn its .. 60 only yds. Metallic P.t1icls ~ 38 only yds. Acrylic Haw1.iian Prints 42 only Electric. Scissors 8 only Embroidery Kit Gifts 0 20 only Cordless EleCtric Clock D b only Electric iKtchen Clock D I only Eerly American L..mp 0 2 only Rockwell Prints Housewares 0 20 only Soda Pop Kit O 8 only Le Creuset Skillet O 9 only T ex•s Netiv-e Nutcrecker D 15 only Cherry Wine lngrJllient Kit Camera Dept. 6.99 3.99 2.22 12.99 7.99 Orig. 11.88 3.99 46.98 45.00 Orig. 9.99 7.95 5.99 4.99 Orig. D 5 only Kodak 30 "lnstem•tic C•mere 33.88 D 2 only Penncrest 888 Projector 77.75 D S only Keystone 60 Sec C•mer•s 69.95 Sporting Goods Orig. D 15 only Official Red/white & Blue Footb•ll · 5.99 0 10 only Boys Football Uniform Kit 11 .99 O 2 only Double Camping Cots 24.99 O 8 only Adirondeck 8 SeaterTobbagon 22.95 D I 0 only Nordica Ski Outfit 48.00 O 10 on ly Nordic• S~i Boot 28.00 0 60 only Special Purchase Mens/Womens Ski Warmup Pents Hardware Dept O 6 only Co• H .. rth Lo9s 24"-30" O SO only Rubber Door Mets D 12 only 17 " Furniture Legs O 120 only Dur•flame Fireplece lo91 0 5 only % "Variable Speed Drill Furniture Orig. 64.99 J.99 34.99 Orig. D D D D D D D I only Double Bunk Bed, Oak Wood 106.00 I only 53 " Lovest•+, Avocedo 189.00 2 only Sets Bunk Mattress, Red Pla id 50.00 I only Game Table, White & Yellow 99.95 4 only Dining Chair, Cane Back 52 .50 I only Dining Arm Chair, Cane r~ck 64 .00 I only Early American Love Seit, Brown 229.00 D D D D D I only E•sy Uphol,t'ered Chair, Gold 109.00 I only End T eble, Parquet Top 71 .00 2 only Donut Chair, Navy Denim 69.95 I only. 53"x7l" Mettress, Coil Spring 4•.00 I only 9 Pc. Corner Group, Campaign Beds D -I-only FUllOfQueeftAe•dbo•rd 0 I only Dinette Table w/ I leaf EJ I only Drop Leef Table O I only Dinette Table D 2 only Dinette Chairs Home Electronics O 2 only 22 " B&W TV w/stond O 2 only 18" Color TV 0 2 only 9" AC/OC B&W TV 0 3 only 12" B&W TV 0 14 only 8 Track Stereo 0 60 only Soi;d St•l1 AM R•dlo 322.00 42 .00· 49.00 4 L50 25.00 11.25 Orig. I 179.95 329.95 109.95 94.95 64.95 0 16 only AM/FM 01911•1 Clo<k R•dlo D 4 only Psychedelic E•ten1 ion· ligh-ti D I only Early American TV .. Stereo 12.88 54.95 34.95 Theatre Major Appliances D D _only 5000 ITU Air Conditioner only 8000 BTU Air Conditioner Floor 'Covenngs 995.00 0,.19 . 119.95 199.95 NOW I .BB 21 .18 2.88 3.88 6.96 .18 NOW .88 2.99 < 1.66 3.88 2.81 1.4'1 2.18 Z.88 NOW 4.88 2.88 36.88 24.88 NOW 2.88 4.88 . 2.88 Z.66 NOW t 9.00 (J.00 39.00 ·I NOr' 3.88 6.88 12.88 12.99 11.99 . 10.99 10.88' NOW I 39.99 .22 • ,J.81 \ ·" 24.99 I I NOW J ' 48.00 , 91.00 i 25.00 49.00 Z5.00 3Z.OO 122.00 41.00 20.00 31.00 u:oo 258.00 -20.00 29.00 \. .20.00 15.00 6.00 NOW 104.00 258.00 74.00 64.00 39.88 7.11 44.00 18.81 744.00 NOW 51.00 98.00 • Orl9. NOW D 12 only 6'•9' Are• Rugs;-Ass~t. Colors 27.00 13.81 O 12 orrly 9'• ll' Area Rugs, Ass.t. Colors 48 .88 24.88 D I only 5'9"xl''" Area Rugs, Orange 18 .00 9.81 0 I only 6'x9' Ar .. Ru9, Or•~9• Jl .00 9.88 Curtains and Draperies O 196 only pr. Novelty Curteins O 173 only Asst. Velances O 47 only pr. Custom Dr•pes D SO only'"'A11t. Olcor•tiv-rPillows Or;9. NOW 4. 79.5, 98 1.81 2.19-3.19 '.81 s ... to 50% 3.50-4.00 -Z.h STORE HOURS: Mon. and Friday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m •. . Tues., W.,., Thun., 10 a.m •. to 9 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. $unday 1~ to 5 p.m lien! care 11. ...................................................... "'!" .............. !"" .... ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.._,,..,..,.._,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.._,,..,..~ • • • • ~ .... · . ,. 1 v Sta livin chan Ange New Co serv mo Be the com deve 5 SA of i and ot I rei;i toda Dr com B, in I a Fra ,, ·a lo due of I disc H of I rctu the first Am cou In a fo Kon in I H '·Ho the ll"CI' pl.a H cau plic " Ko yea of of fe v H incl and do of Th B I J a an 34- do '" is • !IC Ill II w K; -.. . · • ' LaguDa~Beaeb EDITION Toclay's Final · N.Y. Stocks - VOL. 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES •... ORANGE COUNT'(, C(<LIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 19'74 TEN CENTS Laguna Niguel to Get Charter Bus Service Starting Monday morning. commuters li\'ing In Laguna Niguel will have the chance to catch chartered buses to Los Angeles, San la Ana, Fullerton, . Orange, Newport Beach and Irvine. Commuters takiitg the buses will be served coffee, breakfast rolls and the morning paper during the trip to work. Best of all, the first two weeks or the Charter service are free for rWers, compliments of Avco community developers. Persons are asked to sign up for the service between IO a.m. and 2 p.m. Sf turday and Suntlay at the Laguna Niguel Town Center at the intersection of Crown Valley PatRway and Niguel Road . Five buses are scheduled to leave the Town Center Monday morning - one to the city of Commerce and downtown ,..tos Angeles :1 one to Los Angeles In\ernatlonal Airport and Bever- ly Hills; one·to Fullerton, Anaheim and Orange : one to downtown Santa Ana, and one to Newport Beach and the Irvine Industrial Complex, ~uses heading for the . Los Angeles area will leave abour6:30 a.m . Those departing for Orange County destinations ~·ill leave at 7: 15 a.m. After the initial two ·week free period, the cost to commuters will be between $8.50 and $12 per week. depending on the destination of the rider. Buses will pick up riders between 4:4S and 5:15 p.m. at the various-loca- tions and retutn them to Laguna Niguel around 6:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served on the return trip. Don McMullen, Avco's director of marketing, Saj.i:! the firm has spent between $4,000 and $5,000 organizing the charter service as a local effort to help ease the energy crisis. He estimated that If all five buses are filled on a daily basis, more than 150,000 gallons or gasoline could be saved yearly. r.1ci\l ull en said lhc program is the first charter bus se rvice sponsored by a community develope r in the United St-ates. The officia~ name or the service is the "Laguna Ni guel Save the Fuel Pool." But that doesn't mean that only Niguel residents may participate. Riders from other q>mmunities. such as Laguna Beacfl, "South Laguna, Dana Point , --' \, Capistrano Bea ch and San Clen1cnte are \\Clcome to sign up. Duri ng th e t""·o week peoriod. Avco also \Y ill sponsor "shoppers'' buses to Laguna 1-lill s i\iall , South Coast Plaut and f<'ashion Island. The buses wil leave the To"'n Center "at 10:30 a.m. and return at 3 p.m. Avco is also developing plans for car pools, mat ching up riders ""'ho are heading for the same dcstinatk>n , Mci\lullen sa id. 'Mild' Flu Newflorter Inn Records To Affect 5% of State SACRAMENTO (AP) -A new form of influenza has appeared in C31iforn.ia and will probably infect 5 to JO percent of the state's more than 20 million residents, a state disease expert said Asked • Ill, U.S. Srihpoena today. Or .. James Chin said the nu is a comparatively mild form called Type B, "'hich y,•as discovered in Hong Kong in 19i2. It has n1ade its first California appearance by striking a South San Francisco family. "Tha: means there is most likel y quite a lot of infection-throughout California due to this virus," said Chin, chief of the Department of l~ealth's infectious di sease sec tion. •le said there have been a few cases of the virus ]>Cing discovered in travelers returning from llong l\."Ong, but that the Sooth San Francisco cases are the fir st to his knowledge i n v o 1 v i n g Americans v.·ho didn 't travel to other- counlries. Jn 19'8 California was struck With a form o( virus commonly called "Hong Kong nu" because it was first 'isolated in Hong Kong. Chin said. Weighty Issue He explained that this new ronn or "llong Kong Ou" bears no relation to l\tayor Orville llubbard oC the e-arlier vllriety except that they Dearborn, Mich., stanOs on a \\·ere both first isolated in the same scale at the annual weigh-in at pJace'-"=~~ =~-~a.,t,_,c'-'i,,,tyLh!'!all after vowing to lose The 1968-69 nu season was the worst seven offlis 283 pounas by in recent California history in terms Jan-:-fr.HUtibard~70, is start- of absenteeism and dealhs resulting from ing his 33rd year in office. inOuenza and pneumonia, Chin reported . ! Laguna Council Nancy Gasparian Out of Running Announced Laguna Beach City Council candidate Nancy C. Gasparian has been diiQualified from 1'111111ing, City, ~ Dorotby 'Mll!fett said today. Ms, Gasparian waa_nmoved ftom the list of official candidates after a check of the signatures on her nomination papers resulted in elimination of 11 pcJsons, leaving the candidate with only 19 qualified signatures. Twenty are re- qui red for nomination. Mrs. Musfelt said Ms. Gasparian may still nm as a wnte-irj_ candidate, ana lliat--ine-c·anctidate has indicated that sfle may do so. Ms. Gasparlan. 37. was the candidate of the women's liberation movement. The !l siinat.urea were elimina\ed- because the'"oigners wei"' ellher not 1egi.stered voters, or were oot registered voten in tfie. city of Laguna Beach. Mn. .Musfelt ukl four of the signers were residents of the South Laguna area, which is county terrltorY. The field o( official candidates for the ~1arcb 5 election is now down to nine ; Wayne Baglin, Marg~ Bentley, Jon S. Brand, James Gillenwater, Carl Johnson (incumbent), Beth Le eds , Theodore K. -Sparii:Uhl, ·Plfyllls Sweeney (Incumbent), and Gary Weber. Lasl year "'as also a similar epiden1ic season but "we don'! expect anything of that magnitude this season," he said. The nu season typically runs from December to !.1arch. He said Type B viruses generally cause a milder illness with [ewer com· plications and spread more slowly than a stronger form or flu virus known as T~'pe A. The 1968 form or Hong Wet, Winds to Cont_inue Kong Ou \Vas Type A. -ruiyone \\hOl'Om es do"11---with nu this )''car should take the age-old remedies of re sting in bed , drinking large amounts of fluids and using aspirin to control fe ver. Chin advised. He said Ou syrnp toms lo look for include fever, body aches. a dry cough and heada che. An estimated 700.000 doses of in1- munization for the new nu virus have been sent to California but nearly all have been used, Chin said . Condomi1iiiim Pla11s Rejected For Laguna New plans for a $2 million con- dominiun1 development in the 500 block or Norlh Coast •l igh\vay were rejected Thursday night by lhe Laguna Beach Board of Adjustment. · Board members said, however. that lhey would like the developer to retum Jan. 17 \\'ith a revised design. Plans submitted Thur~ay called ror n 32-unit development with less height and more open space lhan the original tu-unit development package turned down by the board last week . Board members .Carolyn Skenderian and Michael Scfllcy said the project is still too bulky and needs more open ...... .The property eannarked for the ctevelopmcnt ls, bounded ~Y North Coast Highway. Myrtle litrect, Cedar Way and HJch Drive. Etght 0eX'isUng units on the pro~rty would be demolished If ihe condominium plan Is approved. The developer Is Transcontinental J!ealty or Los Angeles, Architects ror lhc project are Peter Oslrandcr, a Laguna Beach city councilman, and Susu ·Kishiyama. -. W eatlier Service Sees More of Same for Weekend By STEVE MITCHELL Of th• D•Hv ,llol st,ff Shivering Orange Coast residents can prepare for more of the same Saturday , according to weather forecasters in Los Angel es. • A low pressure system located 200 miles off lhe Southern California coast is stubbornly holding on to its ~resent position. sending out waves o( extremely cold, moist unstable air over the Southland. \Veather service specialist Dick Stitt says the stationary weather front is packing wind gusts of up to :Ml knots along the Orange Coast and 62 knot gusts in the Newhdll area. Small craft advisories are expected to remain in effect through the weekend. "The low pressure system is just sitting out there. at the present time, and it looks like it plans to stay in !he same position at least through Satur- day morning," Stitt reported. "By the lime the storm leaves it should have ~oys Oul, Gets $13,5 91 Grant For Playg rotn1<l The James Irvine Foundation has granted the Laguna Beach Boys Club 113,591 for constructi<>n or-a play(!!.O•md adjacent to the t...aguna Canyon facility. The playground will Include a tcMls 'court. basketball courts, a football field, baseball diamond and handball courts. according to Neal Hopkins. club dlrector. The field will be lighted and enclOlled by a chain link fence. "'l'l\e-new plaj'inJ flekl~U •Uow the club to be able to offer a llll'le variety of new and exciting programs foi-the New Year," said Hopldn.s. ''This has been a dream or the club since it moved to the canyon location, and it will soon be reallf.<d through the generosity of the Jrvine Foun<taUOn." The club is located at-1115 Laguna Canyon Road. -'.I - --dumped nearly an inch of rain -in-the in an 1cy g~througb the rest ~f Southern California area," he said. the week, with temperatures near freez· Snoy,• and mudslides closed some high· ing in some inland areas, but with ways in Southern California, stranded at . least 250 motorists, authorities said. warmer weather due again by Sunday The California Highway Patrol 5'id afternoon. about 200 motorists were stranded on Highs in tht Orange Coast area are the Interstate 5 "Grapevine" route be-expected to remain in the upper 40s tween Castaic and the Los Angeles today and Saturday. Overnight lows Basin. · should dip into the low 40s. Between 40 and SO cars were trapped Sherilrs deputies reported snow and between mud slides along Topanga Can-hail covering the 2,284-foot Castro Peak yon Boulevard near Woodlitnd H'tlls, a northwest of Malibu and a three-inch Los Angeles .suburban area. The high· deep blanket of snow on roads through way patrol repocted there were about 60 persons in the cars. the ~geles Nat.ional Forest. • Some of the motorists were helped The cold spell, wbiCh sent the mercury out on foot, while others remained as plunging to a :ow of f degrees in Big road crews cleared. the mud ahead of Bear, 17 degrees ·in Bakersfield, 26 their stranded autos. degrees in El Centro, 27 degrees in "They should h8ve brought their Needles, 30 degrees in Riverside and lunches," a Highway patrolman said. 28 degrees in San Bernardino, forced Chances are good the storm will move citrus growers to tum on smudge pots into Nevada before Saturday afternoon, and other heating.equipment sooner than bUt the National Weather Service today .. expected -and right in the midst issued mountain snow warnings and call-of a· wors~ning fuel crisis in southern ed for wind and rainy skies over the California and the rest of the nation. l»s Angcles basin through 8aturday. In the LOs Angeles area, already hit The weather service said successive by an electricity shortage, na tural gas cold fronts will keep Sauthern California (See STORi\1, Page Z) * * * * * * -Stro1ig Wi~ds, Pelting Rains Plague Lagunans High winds with gusts estimated up.., to 30 knots lashed a pelting rain down on Laguna Beach today. causing some broken windows and loss of a boat. City officials reported .that a stnall sailboat whloh bM been moored off Diver's Cove was torn loose, had drifted .. !:\ground and was breaklng·up. Elsewhere in the Arl Colony, there were report.\. of broken window1 ln some Arch Beacli Heights residences ~as Laguna hllltop arw took the f\lll brunt or the heavy winds. Laguna Beach llreguarda reporied the wind driving four-fool awella on Main • .. Beaoh and predicted that ir the oouth storm surf continues a quantity of sand could be washed away. Clyde Sweetser, public w.o r ks ~perintendenf, reported masses-of-blow· Ing trash in the Top of till' World area aa residents Md trash cans stacked up for collection today. Sweetser said there were no major incidents reported . Rainfall occurred after the morning measurement was made by BUI Shields of Lagvna Hardware and no accurate early i:eport ol the amount of rainfall wa1 available. --_.._ __ . FOUND GUILTY OF-MURDER Ranch Hand Slatton Ranch Employe Guilty in Death At Hot Springs Ranch hand Robert earl U\Vhip" Slat· tan WaJ found guilty of first degree murder late Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. The jury added the new "use of a firearm" rider to its murder verdict and added the same Penal Code pro- vision when it found Slatton. 41, guilty or assault with a deadly weapon last July 10 at the Orteg a Hot Springs. If the verdict and the Penal Code provision survive defense attorney Daye Shinn's planned appeal it \Yill mean that it will be at least 10 years be.fore Slatton can apply for parole. It took the jury five hours of actual deliberation to determine that Slatton acted "with mallc.e aforethought" when he shot and killed trespasser Dennis Ray Glahn, 21 , of La ~tirada. Judge, Robert L. Corfman accepted both verdicts. called for a probation report on the Starr Ranch employc and ordered Slatton returned to h i s courtroom Jan. 23 for sentencing. · ''Do I have to sit here and tak e this?" Slatton audibly asked Shinn as bailiffs prepared to lead him back to the county jail. And he again audibl y added as Judge Corfman glowered in his direction : "I've already l>Ccn locked up in the jail for six months for something I didn't do ." A-1rs. Dorothy Carroll , Slatton's com- mon law wife, broke down and sobbed in the front row of the rourlroom as the jury verdict was read. ~lrs. carrou was identified during the trial as the woman who retrieved Slat· ton's Colt revolver from the ranch house wher~ he sought refuge a n d threw it down a cliff. . Slatton insisted from the witness stand that he was nowhere near the hot springs \vhen Glahn was ·shot 'in the stomach. He told the jury that he \'IOI being kidnaped and threatened with castration by three young men at the time that the La Mirada man 'Was dying from his wounds. . Slatton said he recovered con- sciousness from repeated beatings near the Bell Crulyon Road gate to rind himself in the front scat of his own (See CONVICfEQ, Pas~ I) . --., - Guest List Tied to Watergate? By JOUN ZALLER Of tll• 01l1Y ,Uot Slllf A Newport Beach source disclosed Thursday that the U.S. Department of Justice has subpoenaed records from the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach that may shed light on the Watergate affair. , The source also confirmed reports by United Press International in Washington that investigators from the Senate Watergate Committee have scoured records of the Newport luxury hotel. The highly reliable source indicated he ha s first-hand knowledge of the sub- poenas. ~1anagement of the Newporter Inn, however, declined either to confirm or deny reports of the subpoenas. - ,;We believe we have an obligation to respect the privacy of our guests," said a spokesman for the hotel. The investigation appeared tO center on the hotel's guest list and billing accounts, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. During the 1972 presidential campaign, '\\'hite House-officials -including At· torney General John Mitchell and presidential counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have staycd"- at the Newporter. In addition, sworn testimoey before the Senate Watergate Committee has indicated that Watergate·rclated activity, especially during the so-called coverup phase, took place at the Newport er. The investigation by the Watergate . Committee staff and the special pros· ecutor·s office or the Justice Depart~ ment appeared to be an attempt to rorroborate that testimony. according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. UPI also reported !hat Sen a t e \Vatergate staff membersJiad conducted interviews of Newporter employes in an effort to verify testimony of former (See INN PROBE, Pagel) ' Orange C.ut • Weather Look for conlinued showers and cold winds througfl most of Sat- urday. "'ith a chance of clearing by Sunday, according to the \\·eather service. The Orange C.Oast \\'On't get abo ve 50 degrees Satur- day and lo\\'S "'ill dip into the lo\Y 40s. INSIDE TODAY 1\fary Cassat t is the best knoum An1erica1' wornan artist of the 19th Cent·ury. Staff writer Candace Pearson looks at Cos· satt's life and work in tl rms of tlle woman's movement in to- d(ly's Weekt'nder. "' ....... $9"lct l IMlllltl l1 L. M. ltYf t C•lllor~I• •f Cl11a/llM 1f.-M (Miki ,, Cr.11~ 17 °""' l+ttktl • l!flklnM P990 ' .;~~: lltewf .. ,~ Mtl'MCtll'I 1J Allfl L•Mtf'I .,, ~11111• • MtY1H 1S, 111, a Mllhtal ,.,... t MalltNI tltwt 4. M O!'M .. Ctlffll' ' ltttllurtfll1 U.M • Syl\111 '""" t s..,,, ... ,, St.di Ml,.. 1•11 ltlffb'-u TIIH""1. JS. ff. ,. ·-. ~"" """ 1i.11 w.nc,.... ",. • .. ...., 11·11 -. • ' • • • -. : ,.,, t'U.01 L8 Populat~o11 ... Totals Vary Iii Laguna By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of fPtt O•llt ,.Hot ll•H How many persons live In Laguna Beach~ The answer seems to depend on whether you count noses or sewage. The estimatts range from a scant 15.050 to n whopping 45,000. The low figure comes from the U.S. Census Bureau. The whopper is the measure of an arnuent socie~y· effluent at the local SC\\'age treatment ant. _Th.ls method was recenll used by the city public works depar ent which found the following : In the summer 1 when beaches are jammed, art festivals are running 1n high gear and hotels have "no vacancy" signs lighted, the Art C.Olony population hits 45;000. . In the winter, when locals pretty much have the town to themselves, the popula· tion ebbs to 18,000 persons. · Both or the seasonal figures include the permanent resident 0populatlon, plus visitors. Both are more of a measure of people in the city rather than those actually living in it. During the summer season -about t\VO and a half months long -the plant processed about 3.7 million gallons of sew,ge each day. By dividing that by an 80 gallon per person per day figure, the population of the town works out to 45,000 persons. In the 9'h month winter season. the plant treats about 1.8 million gallons <lf sewage. _a day, equivalent to 18,000 persons. By averaging the high and low seasonal figures, th e study concluded that the average year around population of Laguna is roughly 23,000 persons. Jn 1970, the U.S. Census said Laguna Beach had a resident population of 14.550 in the corporate limits. •This figure has been updated to 15,050 based on studies by the city planning department and the st.ate Department of Finance. "But I suspect ifs a bit low ," city plaMer Michael Easely said. "Although, \\'e don't know how low." Easely noted !hat his department cur· renUy is collecting data to update the 15,050 figure. Public Works Director Stanley Scholl, citing an article in the magazine "Western City," said the sewage flow method of calculating population may be more accurate for a town with such extreme seasonal ups and downs. "I suspect many people arc; not being colUlted by the census taKers," sald Scholl. "All 1 can say is that we are getting much more sewage than we should for a populatlo~ of 15,000." .. Frfdiy, January 4, 1"¥74 -- Unemployme1it Rate 01i Increase WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate moved up !rom 4. 7 percent to 4.9 percent of the work force In December marking the second consecutive monthly increase since the begin· ning o( the ~nergy crisis, the government reported today. The increase apparently was due to the general slowdown of the economy but analysts for the Bureau of Labor-Statistics &aid they lacked complete information to determine the effect of the fuel shortage on the jobless rate. Administration officials said previously the impact would be felt in December and even more sharply during the first three ·months or 1974. • According to the report, the number of people out of work in· creased by 17,000 last month to a total of 4.4 million. This followed an increase of 200,000 in November. President Nixon's chief economic adviser. Herbert Stein, has forecast a jobless rate reaching about 6 percent later this year. From Page I INN PROBE. •• White House officials. However the Newport Beach source said he had no knowledge of any such interviews. · It was learned a few months ago that Watergate investigators 1nade a similar inquiry into all the records of the San Clemente Inn near the Western White House v.•hcrc many of Nixon's key aides stay. They also looked for names <lf members of the lloward Hughes Corp. and other possible car;n· paign contributors on the guest list, according to UPI. The most widely reported visit lo the Newporter involved Martha Mitchell and her husband John, who was then manager of President Nixon's re--election · campaigrr. They reportedly were guests at the Newporter on June 17, 1972, when the break·in occurred at the Democratic headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washingto·n. Mitchell flew back to \Vashington a day or so laler, leaving his wife with their daughter, Marty, 12; his secretary, Lee Jablonski, and a bodyguard, Steve King. During the week that followed, ~1rs. Mitchell claims she wa! "manhandled" and told · reporters "they stuck a needl e in my behind." The wife of the former attorney general also claims t h e telephone of her villa "'was ripped from the wall while she was talking Jong distance to OPI reporter Helen Thomas. At that time, she told ?.fiss Thomas that she had given her husband "an ultimatum" to quit the campaign or she would leave him. She made that announcement when she was asked what she thought of the burglary and bugging of the Watergate. ?.frs. Mitchell has said that while she was at the Newporter, she could not get her calls through the switchboard and was kept in seclusion. · Boardwalk Buff? You Can .Have Historic Cliurik Bits or Laguna Beach history will soon be available free for the asking as the old Art Colony h1ain Beach boardwalk is wrenched up to make way for the ocean front park. Exact age of the creaking walkway is difficult to pin do~. but Laguna historians have pegged approximate age at between 4-0 and 50 years. Construction crev.·s will ~gin ripping up tqe boardwalk within two weeks, said Public \Yorks Director Stan Scholl Wednesday. Scholl said pieces of the oldest timbers and planks would be made available to the public inter~ed in the board· walk's history. Scholl said he had sev· eral requests from the public for the \\'ood. ~ A1ajor newer portions of the walkway -replanked several . times -will be salvaged by city crews and the weather· treated lumber reused for city projects, Scholl said. The historic pieces are free for the asking but Scholl n i x e d the idea or an individual garnering enough of the planks for a historic paneled wall or backyard deck. Application for the v.'OOd may be made to the Laguna Beach Public Worlts Department by letter or in person. After all the requests are in, the city will allocate the bits of boardwalk. Scholl said the city intended to donate. a chunk of the boanlwllk to the Laguna Beach Historical Society for prese~a· tion. The present boardwalk is about 1,~ feet long and Is 14 feet wide. It curves from the Hotel Laguna in the south, around the Main Beach sand line and up to the cliffs at the north end of the beach. Fire In juries Bring Lawsuit Mitchell subsequently resigned as Nix· on's campaign manager. But he re· mained in touch with the President as a political adviser during the campaign, -according-to MR.-r..litchelL _ At)hough Mrs. Milchell wanted to testify before the Senate Watergate hear· in gs, the committee did not call her. The new__boardwalk will be constructed of exotic Kapur wood , ex tremely resis- tant to attack by the elements. The treated Douglas Fir required comt.ant replacing. In Laguna Beach A hotel cook who claims: he suffered severe injuries a year ago when a Laguna Beach fire forced h:tm to leap frQm the window of his second story apartment sued ~e owners of the building \Vednesday for $500,000. Kay Woo names the . Connecticut General Lire Insurance Company as prin- cipal defendants in his Orange County Superior Court action and identifies them as owners of the structure at 1465 S. Coast Highway. Named as subsidiary defendants are co-occupants or the building: La Combe COlffures amt operator Helene Rockwell and the Surf and Sand Hotel and operator James W. Colachis. \Voo states that the fire v.·hich forced him to leap to safety started in the La Combe beauty parlor after a gas leak ignited. The lawsuit indicates that flames quickly spread through the building. OlAN&I COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM Ori~ C0.1! DAil'!' PILOT, wlllt Wf!lcl! .. Comttln.d Ille N9Wt-Prn1, i. PUllti.tied by tnt o, • ...,. '"'' Pllbll1ll1"9 CO'Tl(llnr~ ~­ , ... 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NO M'" tlOl'S.., lrfwlrtt ..... "'lfwltl tN!tw "' .n.tS-tt ...... ~ ._...., • ~ Wf1tWllilt ... 111 ..... "'--·~-· .._.,. NM ....,... Hiii ti CMll Mtte. c.11--. ....,._.,.. "' """" a.q .......,., ._, -n U,\J IMflflll't1 MIU!Wr ...,., .. •-" _,,.,,,, ------ Fron• Pagf' I CONVICTED • • • Land Cruiser with two of his three abductors flanking him. The ranch hand said he grabbed the wheel of the vehicle \\"hich veered off the. road and overturned, throwJng atl four men to the ground. Slatton said his next memory of the night of July 10 was that he was riding a horse bareback across Starr Ranch land with his \Vhite Stetson hat on the back of his head and his , .4S.Caliber Colt revolv er slung on his hip. His only companion in a ride outlined by the light of a full moon was a riderless horse which stayed close behind him and whinnied to him occasionally, he testified. But Deputy District Attorney Ted r.Ullard successfully argued In his final statement that Slatton had a long record of violence and that he bad been warned by hi s employers many times not to use weapons in ejecting trespassers from Sta~ Ranch land. Millard told the jury that Slatton "boozed it up" in San Juan Capistrano In the hours before the Glahn killing and that he •.rowed in the presence of several witnesses to "get me one of them longhairs.'' From Page I '; STORM... . service was cut orf to hundreds of in- dustrial. commercial and Institutional users, all with heating systems fired by other types of fuel. The action was taken to Insure gas supplies for residential customers and others "'ithout alternate sources of heating fuel, gas utility spokesmen ex- plained. The Palmdale Radar Weathei: Center wained up to Six lnches Or snow could be expected to ran In the area as the storm continues. 7 Killed in Crash · PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -A govern- ment '1'28 fighter-bomber returning from a bombing miMion crashed lnto a refugee cai:np 27 miles southwest-of Phnoll).Penh tote Thunday. killing seven per.ions and Injuring flvo. Villagers said they saw smoke pouring from the plane's tail .minutes befor:e It crubed. -- Council Se1uls Woman's Claim To l 1isurance A Newport Beach woman's claim that narcotics officers from Laguna Beach, Newport Beach and the Orange C.Ounty Sheriff's Office wrongfully broke into her house, doing $1,142 in damage, has been referred to the Laguna Beach insurance carrier in action by the City Council. Dian H. Colefield, in a claim against the city or Laguna Beach, anege.s that then Detective Sgt. Neil Purcell and Det. John Saporito were among seven narcotics officers who broke in her home on July 26. r.1s. Colefield, arrested on a variety of marijuana charges, states ln her claim that all charges were dismissed in Harbor District Municipal Court on Oct. 24. The claim Is for the amoilllt of damage allegedly done to Ms. q o I e f ie Id's residence during the narcotics Jn· vestigation. She alleges that both fron t and back doors were kicked in although both were unlocked and seeks $120 for replacement of the ·damaged doors and hardware, $45 for cleaning the carpets, tl2a for loss of wages, f/50 for attorney fees and $100 for other fees . Ms. Colefield lists her residence as 398 E. 22nd Street, Newport Beach. Similar claimS were made to Newport Beach and Orange Cowity. School of A11 Offers Co'urses Sculpture and Lile Drawing will be among several courses offered when classes resume Monday at the Laguna Beach School of Art, 630 Laguna Canyon 'Road. Lewis--COhen, a new Instructor al the non.profit 5choo~ will t<ach the two counes. Cohen hu studied at the Muaeum of Fine Arts In Boston , MaSI., the Grand Chaumier In Pafu and Ecole de Arts Decorltll th Parts. . The winter quarter will run dlrough Mardi O. B~ures deacrtblng courae olferlngs are available by calUng the school, 494-1520. • ' . 'Nixon Ship'-Retai•~ing Brat1no1a Teache:rs Assail Threatened By'Bomb' The U.S. Coast duard cutter stationed around tlie cl&~ o!(llie Western White liousc In San Clement.e, was the target of a bomb threat on New Year's ~vc, It was learned ~ay. IM ollldal source< are playing the Incident extremely quietly. Reliable sou_rces confirmed the threat to the white cutter shortly before mid· night Monday when an intoxicated caller phoned the Presidential compound and said the bomb was secreted somewhere within the bull of the vessel which patrols lhe specially marked area of ocean off La Casa Pacifica. President Nixon was at his residence during .the Incident. Immediately after teaming of the threat, secuMty persoMel ordered a thorough sea rch of the vessel by a special demolition squad. That took place at Dana Harbor bu_t it turned up nothing irregular on the vessel. Harbor patrolmen would not disucss the incident but indirectly conceded that the activity indeeed took place. "Anything relatln~ to the incldCJtt New Year's Eve would have to be discussed by the Coast Guard in Long Beach," said a patrolman on duty today. Sources said that comments made-by the caller gave strong indicatiom that he was either a present or past member of the Coast Guard because of several technical terms used during the con· venaUon. OfHcial spokesmen for the Coast Guard iii Long Beach promised a statement on the incident late today. Freed Suspect Suing Laguna Police Officer A man who claims a Laguna Beach police officer booked him for battery and interfering with an officer simply because of "personal dislike" of him sued the city and tbe officer Wednesday for $25,000. Drew Douglas Weir names the city and officer Donnie Abshier as defendants in an Orange County Superior Court action based on his arrest April 25. Weir .states he was arrested im· mediately after he backed his car <lUt of a parlting lot 'lnd · claims that he wa:: strock in the rear at the time. His lawsuit states tbal Judge Blair Barnette later dismissed all charges In South Orange County Municipal Court. l1e further states that the chafges were based on what Officer Abshier "imagined my life style" to be. Board Proposal 11 Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon retai.rni that poi\t dfspite his conviction on a bookmakirig charge, in· atructors assert It will be <reoli!lg a double moral standard. They say a teacher even accused of lhe same offense would bave been suspended long since. James Thorpe, a sdence instructor and president of the Academic Senate. said he and other faculty members will be meeting next week to consider a statement oo the Issue. Thorpe sa1d a facuJty member would be sU3pended as soon as a possible felony charge was levelled at him, whether or not he was proved guilty. "If he WA$ proved innocent, he would probably be reinstate!! and given lhe back pay be missed," Thorpe said. By law Brannon, a charter trustee on the six·year-old board, would be fore· ed to leave his post as soon as he is sentenced Jan. 'J:l -if the pilllishment 1s for a felony. But at this point the nature or the sentence remains UMure. Bookmaking is one of a small group <lf offenses \vhich the judge can make either a felony or misdemeanor according to the sentenee he gives. If the result of !he judge's action Jan, 'r1 is a misdemeanor sentence, BraMCln couJd stay on the board in· definitely. His term of office expires in 1975. "IC that happens, starting a recall might be a quieter way for those who want to get him out of office,'' Thorpe said. "Regardless , we feel It is iJ1... equitable for the faculty to be treated one way and the board another." An admlnlstraUon spokesman said there is no wriUen policy dictating pro- cedure on suspensions for a staff member accused of a felony . "I suppose there Is a strong possibility that an Instructor \\"Ould be suspended in such ·a case," he said. "But on the other hand, he might not." No faculty member in the school's history has been accused of a felony. But according to the state education code. any teacher charged with a possi· ble felony offense is suspended Wllil the action I! oompleted, Joe 1.teler. pel'80rtllel services director for the Orange C'.ounty Department of Education, said. "If the verdict Is against the teacher, his credential Is lifted and· he can't \\'Ork as a teacher from then on," t.1eler said. "If It finds him Innocent, his back pay Is returned." The fll'st meeting of the quarter of the Faculty Association will be next Friday. Thorpe said several teachers want to di~s a position at that meeting on the BraMon issue. f.lembership In the Faculty Association Is open to all instructors. The Academic Senate . is a smaller body with one representative elected from each division and at large. As to Brannon. "It's a dlfficull po!Hlca.1 situation.'' Thorpe said. "On a bOard that ls split on many issues, Brnnnon has a keY vote . "I don't know about the legality of all this.'' Thorpe sald. "But In terms of fairness It seems foculty 1nenll>cri: should be 'iMocent until proven guilty just as is a public official." If Brannon Is forced out of office by his sentence or resigns. he will be replaced In the June general election. An additional vacancy, created by the resignation of Michael C.Ollins of Ne•.:port Beach, is up for grabs in 1he March 5 election. 1 • Daya_n Visits Kissinger 011 Pullbacks \\'ASHINGTON -Israeli deftnse ministerfitoshe Dayan called today on Secretary of State Henry Kissinger amid reports that Israel is ready to pull .. troops far back from the Suez Canal provided ( 1) the waterway is reopened to shipping and (2) there is a "thinning out" of Egyptian forces on the easi bank. . . "Nice to see you, you look marvelous," Kissinger exclaimed ns Dayan strode into his seventh noor office at tht State Department for a mid-day meeting described by officials as "a significant and very important one.'' Afterward, Dayan v.·as due at the Pentagon to bid for jets, antitank missiles and other sophiticated v.·eapons. U.S. officials are convinced that enough of his. requests \\'ill be met eventually so that Israel 's forces are upgraded above pre.October war levels. George S. Vest, the State Department spokesman. discounted reports that Dayan was here to offer a unilateral roncession. Vest said he would "find it hard to conceive of either side" doing such a thing. But he did not rule out an Israeli \\'ithdra\\'lll tied ·io a concession later by Egypt as the Geneva peace process n1oves forward . Dayan's visit could mark a turning point in the Geneva negotiations from generally conceptua l discussions to con- crete gh·e·and-take. ''It has always been understood that after the Israeli elections the talks might · accelerate," Ki~inger told a news con· ference Thursday in San Clemente. ~-·,---...-------=-==--... --... 'WINTER SALE • ~''BIGGEST EVER'' SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL -HERITAGE - HENREDON -AND MPRE ..• ON SALE NOW! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WOODMARK CHAIRS AT S,6.LE PRICES. WOODMARK FEATURES: * LUXURIOUS 25 '/, DOWN & 75 % FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC *EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ••• ON DISPLAY NOW FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM ••• AND AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS. or. EXEL-HER IT AGE-HENR EOON-WOODMARK-KARAS 1 AN • INTERIORS WUKDAYS I SATURDAYS tJOO te l 1H l RIDAY 'TIL t 100 --------- NEWPO RI BEACH e 1127 WESTCLIFI-D•.. 642·2050 LAGfJNA BEACH e J4S NORTH C0 ... $1 HW'f. '494·6151 ror.P.t.NC~ • '.!1649 HAW1llO•Ni It VD, 10,,11 S11nd•y 11·5:30) ~-.c.1219 ' ' ( I I I ~Sh prop acco Ang A mile is s posit cold Sou IV says pac It Th de:Sc horn ident Stat Ac the th e mur Oran R F T A lot our for "I said. woul stud to f "I said abr coun " sine reco and w pro "' El ... -" ~=--=~...;-=-=---=-~~ -="'=----~-~. =-""""'::."--t-_:;_;::....j . -- . -.. • " • Saddlehaek Today's Final. • N.Y. Stocks EDITION VOL 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' . FRIDAY, JANUARY 4; 1974 TEN CENTS More Wet,_ Wind Expected Along Orange Coast By STEVE MITCHELL ot I'll• D•llr '"11•1 Still .... Shivering Orange Coast residents can prepare for mo re of the same Saturday. according to weather forecasters in Los Angeles. A low pressure system located 200 miles off the Southern Califomia coast is stubbornly holding on to its present positlon .. sending out waves of extremely cold. moist unstable air oyer the Southland. \Veather service speeialist Dick Stitt says the stationary \\'Cather front is packing wind gusts or up to 30 knots along the Orange Coast and 62 knot gusts in·tbe Newhdll area. Small craft advisories are expected to remain in effect through the weekend. "The low pressure system 1s just sitting out there, at the present time, a~ it looks like it plans to stay in . the same position at least through Satur- day morning," Stitt repoi-ted. "By the time the storm leaves it should have dumped nearly an inCh of ra:tn In the Southern California area ," he said.· Snow and mudslides closed some high· ways in Southern California, stranded at least 250 motorists, authorities said. The California Highway Patrol ~;:id about 200 motori$1S were stranded on t~.-e interstate 5 "Grapevine·• route be- tw een Castaic and the Los Angeles Basin. ' Between 40 and 50 cars \vere trapped between mud slides along Topanga Can· yon Boulevard near Woodl and Hills, a Les Angeles suburban area, The hig~­ way p<itrot reported there were about 60 persons in the cars. Some ··2f the motorists Y.'ete. ~cl~ out on loot, while others remained as road crews cleared th~ mud ahead of their stranded autos. ''They shquld have brought their luncl!es." a High\vay patrolman said. Chances arc good the storm will move . ·into Nevada before Saturday afternoon. but the National Weather Service today issued mountain snow warnings and call· ed for wind and rainy -skies over the - Los Angeles basin througti Saturday. The weather service said. successive cold fronts .will keep Sauthem Galifomia iri an icy grip through the · rest of th.e week, with temperatures near freez- ing in some inland areas, but with warmer weather due again by · Sunday- afternoon. · Highs in the Orange Coast area are expected to remain in the upper . 40s today and Saturday. Overnight lows should dip into the low 40s. Sheriff's deputies reported snow and hail covering the 2.284-root Castro Peak northwest or ~la!ibu and a three-inch deep blanket of snow on roads~lhrough the Angeles National Forest. The cold spell, .which sent the mercury plunging to a :ow of 6 degrees in Big Bear, 17 degrees in Bakersfield. 26 degrees in· El Centro, 27 degrees in Needles. 30 degrees in Riverside and 23 degrees in Jan Bernard ino. forced cit rus gro,vers to turn on smud ge pots and other heating equipment sooner than expected -and right in the n1idst of a worsening fuel crisis in Southern California and the rest of the nation . In the Los Angeles area , already hit by an electricity shortage, natural gas service y,•as cul of! to hundreds of in- dustrhil. -con1 mercial and institutional users. all \\'ilh heating systems fired by other types of fuel. The action \Vas taken to insure gas supplies for residential customers . and 6'fters 1vithout alternate sources of heating fuel, gas utility spokesmen ex· plained . The Pahndale Radar Weather Center \Yarned up to six inches of snow could be expected to ran in the area -as the storn1 continues. ·fit Mot11tta·i1as Newporter Probe I College Man 7th To Be Mutilated Records Studied in Watergate Case The victim of what investigators deScribe as the seventh in a chain of homosexual mutilation murders has been identified as a .24-year-old Long Beach Slate University student. According to San Bernardino police. the victi1n, Vincente Cruz Mestas, is the se venth viclim in the mutilation · murders which ave baffled police in Orange and Los Angeles Counties since December of 1972. ~1estas' body l<·as found Dec. 29 in a ravine in the San Bernardino Moun- tains near state Highway 18. The iden- tification of his body was made Thursday by members of his family . Like the previous mutilation murder victims, the young man had been strangl~ ed, sexually mutilated and sexually assaulted. By JOHN ZALLER Of lh• 01lly 'llot lllff A Ne,vport Beach source disclosed Thursday that the U.S. Department of Justice· has subpaenaed records from the NeWpdrter Inn in· Newport Beach that may shed light on the Watergate aflair. The source also confirmed reports by United Press International in Washington that investigators from the Senate \Vatergate Committee have scoured records of the Ne\vport luxury hotel. The highly reliable sourc e indicated he has first-hand Kno\\·ledge of the sub- poenas. Management of the Ne\vporter Inn, ho\\•ever, declined either to confirm or deny rep.arts or the subpoenas. "\Ve ·believe we have an obligation to respect the pri vacy of ou r guests," said a spokesman ror the hotel. The investigation appeared to center on the hotel's guest list and billing • ROTC Prograrn For Sculdleback 1-lestas' hands had been cut off above the-wrists and his head had been shave<!, detectives said. The so-called mutilatiOn murder chain began in December of 1972 with th discovery of the body of Edward D. ~Ioore in Seal Beach. He was the first to have been strangled and sexually mutilated, 'vhich m o s t of lhe victin1s Ra11ch Hru1d Cru~I Slatto11 To be Discussetl have been. . Found Guilty of l\Iurder Since then, there have been four bodies A proposa l for a junior Reserve Of· discovered in the Los Angeles Harbor ficers' Trairilng Corps program for lhe area,-including •¥ wbicb had•been hack· "' \~!-. '~~~f.;.c~: 1~i~; Saddleback Valley Unified School District ed into piects and put into green garbage g ...... , "i ... ~J i b Th ba f und murder 1a·te Thunday in Orange County ,\·ill be discussed at the board meeting can ags. e gs were o 'londay. throughout the harbor area and in SWlset Superior Cow:t. • lt UPI Ttl.,he19 T,_ nd · h Beach The i'ury added the n.e.w "use of a ·~ reromme at10n I al a program · .Wel9l1t11 Issue be considered \\'as made two months None of the victims found in Los firearm" rider to its mW'der verdict accounts. according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. During the 1972 president ial campaign, \Vhite House o(Cicials -including At- torney General John Mitchell and presidential counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have stayed at the Ne\\'porter. In addition, sworn testimony before the Senate \llatergate Committee ha!l indicated that Watergate-related activity, (See INN PROBE, Page!) College Banning Of Porno Pape1·s Will be Studied . Pornography will be pondered again klonday night U Saddleback Valley Unili.ed School District Trustee Chester Briner can convince fellow trustees to reconsider a previously tabled motion. ago by trustee Chester Briner. AJtgeles County have been i~en~ied: Mayor Orville Hubbard of and added the same Penal Code pro- . Sfnce~·tnen. Rich8Yd Welll',\!eputy--Another-lxld~fiillii(f1fi sear-Beacfi DearbOrn, Mich., stands on a vision "'hen--it-found-Slat-ton,.--4-It guilty 5uperintendent of instruction, has been in J ~ly. '.fhe victim was identified as scale at the annual weigh-in at of assault with a deadly weapon last Briner presented a resolution at the last meeting which would. in effect. ban vending machine sales of any +-ne\\•spapers. The proposal was aimed at a sex- oriented periodical, The Los Angeles Star. which is sold on the street next to a Laguna Hills restaurant. st ud ying the possibilities. Rorut~e \V1ebe, 2~, of F~llerton. . city hall after vowing to lose July 10 at the Ortega Hot Springs. A meeting is set Monday with· .a na\'al . Pohce are still trying to ~etenyi~ne seven of his 283 pounds by IC the verdict and the Penal ·Code -officer.J.rom...San.J)iego.Jhe__1wo_hi 1f the hacked up ~Y o!_an un1d~t1f1ed Jan. 15. Hubbard, 70, is start· provision .survive defense attorney Daye school principals, and Welte. man f~und 1as1 ~tarch ~unt1ngmtno1~1--"i1~1g"'"'Ji.i53'3Ci:l year in offt~c~e-. --Shinn's--plannedClppeal-it-will-mean ·'"c "An ROTC program could provide a Bea.ch is part of the mutilation murder (~tory, Page 16) tha t it will be at least 10 years before tot of good opportunities for some or chain. Slatton can apply for parole. our students," Welte said. "It can pay It took the jury five hours of actual for a college education." deliberation to determine that Slatton "It's open to girls no\V too," \Velte T h A "I p I acted "with malice aforethought" when said. He point~ oul thal the program eac ers ssa1 roposa he shot and killed trespasser Dennis would be voluntary and would prepare Ray Glahn, 21, of La Mirada. students for an eventual period of two Jud ge Robert L. Corfman accepted to four years' service in the Navy. both verdicts, called for a probation "ll's also a patriotic opportunity," he To J7eep~ B1·a1111011 1"11 Post reporl on the Starr Ranch employe and said. "\Ve need to ke.ep our students '-ordered Slatton returned to his abreast of how they can serve their courtroom Jan. 23 for sentencing. country. "Do I have to sit here and take .. Despite all the anti-military feeling this?" Slatton audibly asked Shinn as since the Vietnam war, we need to Jf Saddleback College trustee Alyn Thorpe said a faculty f!!enlber 'vould bailiffs prepared to lead bim back to Brannon retains that post despite his be suspended as soon as a posst'ble th l · ·1 recognize that we do have armed forces e coun y 1a1 . and that they need good leadership.'' conviction on a bookmaking charge, in· felony charge was levelled at him, And he again audibly added as Judge structors assert it will be creating a Corlm J ed · h' d. 1· "I' \Velte said setting up the program y,1Jether or not he \Vas proved guilty, an g ower 1n 1s irec ion : ve double moral standard. Ir d "· J "ed · lb · ·1 f probably "'ould mean hiring a full ·llme "If he was proved innocent, he y,·ould ·a ea Y ueen oc,, up in e 1a1 or Navy officer t.o dir.ect naval science They say a teacher even accused of rob bl ... . ed d . lb six months for something I didn't do ." the same offense would have been P a Y ut: reinstat an given e M Do th c JI SI tlo • courses on campus. rs. ro y arro , a n s com· Studenls would on oe<:asion wear suspended long since. back pay he missed ," Thorpe said. mon law wife, broke down and sobbed uniforms, he said. James Thorpe, a sctence instructor By law Brannon. a charter trustee in the front row of the courtroom as The board meeting to discuss the initial amt' president Or the Academic Senate, on the six-year-old board, would be fore-the jury verdict was read . proposals will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday said he and other facul ty members will ed to leave his pQ;>t as soon aS he fl.trs . .Carroll was identified during the nt Los Alisos Intermediate School in be meeting next week to consider a is sentenced Jan. 27 -if the ptmishment trial as the woman who retrieved Slat- El Toro. statement on the issue. is for a felony. ton 's Colt revolver from the ranch house But at this point the nature of the where he sought refuge a n d thre'v it Youth Gets 5 Y ea1·s * * * Latecomer Files sentence remains unsure. Bookmaking down a cllff. is one of a small group of Offenses Slatton insisted from the witness stand which the judge can make ei ther a ·that he was nowhere near the.hot sprjngs felony or misdemeanor according to the Wbeo Glahn was shot in the Stomach. {See BRANNON, Page ZI He told the jury that• he was being • FOUND GUil TY OF MURDER Ranch Hand Slatton kidnaped and threatened \vith castration by three young men at the ti1ne that the La Mirada m-an was dying fron1 his wounds. Slatton said he r e c o v e r e d con· sciousness from repeated beatings near the Bell C'.anyon Road gate to find himself in the front seat of his own Land Cruiser with two of his three al>ductors flanking him. The ranch hand said he grabbed the (See CONVICTED, Paie ZI SAN RAFAEL tUPI) -An 18-year-old who changed his plea to guilty in Ma;in Superior Court was sentenced to fi ve• years to life imprisonment on burglary and rape charges Thursday. Richard Alan Kisling was charged in the burglary last September of two Marin County homes and the rape or the housewives residing. in them . For Saddleback Tn1stee's Post Influenza Hits Ill State A latecomer to file for the single Saddleback College trustee vacancy r========----==1 brought to seven the number of Can· --ctldates. for-me post, ju.St four hours 2 Me1i Bli11d, Rob Collector . . SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A Sac- ramento coin collector was blind· ed With an acia solutiOn and h I '9 wife beaten when two ·men robbed him or $8,000 in rare coins, police r.port. William T. Juchnlk, 54, and his wife, 1Hldeko, were retuminj home from their coin shop when lhe robbery occurred. . Police said-the ·men ~thr.ew • -caustic solution in Juchntk's race. - The liquid was believed lo ·have in acld base. before the filing deadline today . Nick DiGuiro, 43, of 24101 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, announced his candidacy !ale Thursday. OiGiuro, an independent insurance agent. was active in the bond election campaign !or the S.ddleback Valley Unified School District two years ago. '4Because f became so close io the tmilicd school distrjct, I see a close relationship between what the college ha• 10 oiler and !ht high scbool students ot our area, 11 .DiGiufO said. HSome.Umes tHere isn1t enough clasp- ing of bands between tho two districts," he said. "I'd like lo do wbal I · cao tp encourage mo~ of that." · 'l>dGfuro 800bi.t wife'; Maly JO; have two children. A. seven.year ..akleot ol lb• area, he is active In the Saddleback (SH DIGIURO,. Page I) I • , MiW,_Strairi May Strike 5 to_ 10% of Reside1its SACRAMENTO "(AP) - A new form of influenza has appeared in California and will probably Infect 5 lo lO percent of the state'.s _more than 20 million residents, a state diSease expert said today. Dr. James Chin said the flu is a comparatively mild form caUed Type B, which was diScovered In Hong Kong In 19711. It hos made Its first California oppearance by striking a Soulh San Francisco family. "Tha! meao• the,. Is mosl likely qoile a Jot of infecUon .throughout caJifomia due to thig virus," _$Sid Chin, Chiel o!.Jb~J)epartmeol of Health's infectious disease seelten. • He said there h(l\lt been a rew cases of the Virus being discovered In travelers returning from Hong Kong. bul lhal j' the south San F.rancisoo cases are the first to his knowledge l n v o I v i n g Americans who didn't travel to other countries. Jn 1968 California was struck with a form Of virus commonly called "Hong Kong flu" because it was first isolated in Hong Kong, Chin said. He explained that this new form of "Hong Kong flu tL bears no relation ·to the earlier variety ~xccpt that they were bolh first isolated in the same place. T~ 1~9 nu ~seuon was the worst in r~n.t Callfomla history in terms of absenteeism and deaths resulllng from Influenza and poeumonla~Chln reported. Last year was also a similar epidemic seam bul "we d<ln~ expect anything of lhal magnitude lhls .._. ... , .. he said. The flu season typically runs from December to !\farch. He said Type B vin1ses generally cause a milder illness with ft'.!Wel' co1n- pllcations and spread more slowly than a stronger fo rm of flu ''irus known as .TY~· A. The ·1968 fornl of Hong Kong Ou was Type A. Anyone who OOn1es down \Vith flu r~,;s year should take the age-old remedies of resting in bed. drinking large amoun ts of fluids and using aspirin to control lever, Chin advised. He said Ou symptoms to look for include lever, body aches, a dry ~ugh and headache. An estimated 700,000 doses of 1m· munlzation for the new flu virus have been sent to Californta~but ne&rly all h~vc ~n use<r Chin said. · --·---------._J_ ---1. -.-· • • Trustees tabled the motion because of the five trustees, only Briner had read the tabloid. Other items on Monday'~ agenda in· clude : -Selecting a name !or the district's 18th elementary school in fl.1iSsion Viejo. -'Reviewing the districts' programs for mentally . gifted minors !ind the regional occupational programs. -Discuss a-possible Reserve Officers Training Corps curriculum for the two di strict high schools. -·Approve inter-distri ct attendance agreements for aphasic and trainable mentally retarded students. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. at Los Alisos Intermediate School. 7 Killed in C1·ash PHNOM PEN H (UPI) -A govern· ment T28 fighter-bomber returning from a bombin g miss ion crashed into a refugee camp 'lf miles southwest of Phnom Penh late Thursday, killing seven persons am.I injuring five. Orange Coast • Weather Look for continued showers and cold winds through n10st of Sat- urday, with a chance of clearing by Sunday, according to the weather service. The Orange C.oast won 't get above 50 degrees Satur- day and lows will dip into the low 40s. INSIDE TODAY l\lary Cassatt is tlle best knounl America1i woma11 .artist of t.he l9th Ce11tury. Stoff writer Candace Pearson looks at Cas· satt's life and work iii terms of tlie tovn1a11's ·rnovenie11t in to- day's , \Veekender. Al Ytur Se"'lct ) INllllt . .. 11 L.. M. It~• ' Ctllttr11I• 7 Cl•Ullled tt.J6 c-k• 11 Cl'MllWWCI , 11 °"'*"81 .... liC'fS • idllwl91 ,.,. • ~· ',.,. ,., 1119 Jteord • H.,_... lS An11 L.111Mn ll M1lUtel I 111•. ' Mtll'llt tf, H, " Mvlv•I IJ11ftl1 t H1tlttlll 1'1twt 4. a Or•"" c .... lllY • Rttl•t1ttt1ts t).14 Srlll'll ,.,,., t 5"r11 1 .. 1, ltocll Marlt•lt 1•11 Ttlt¥bliM -H T1'11•1en tS; 1i. • Wttlfl.lr f ~=·~:' ·~,.~ WMll....., fl·• -·- I ' ' f'rl•i!. Januar)' 4, 1974 'Years of H ell' --Mate Overcome At .sauna Trial By TOM BARLEY Ot "'-O.llJ l"llot SllH JTenry •rsua" Parson broke down and \\'ept on the witness stand late ThurSday a.s he recounted for an Orange County Superior court jury his many vain at· tempts to prevent his wlfe from seeking sexual relationships "1th other men. Parson, regarded by ~faria Parson 's lawyer as a key witness in the $1 million lawsuit against .. the Jfoliday Health Spa of Orange, said he struck his wife on one occasion before he realized that she was not responsible for her actions. Parson, 49, testified before Judge 'Villiam Murray called a three-day break in the trial that a psycbiatri!t made him a w are ot his wife's ~ multiple persooallty conditloo. Dayan Visits ' ·Kissinger On Pullbacks From Wire Services WASIDNGTON -Israeli defense ·minister Moshe Dayan called today on Secretary of State Henry Kissinger amid "reports that Israel is ready to pull troops far back from the Suez Canal provided (1) the waterway is reopened to shipping and (2) there is a "thinning out': of Egyptian forces. on the east bank. "Nice to see you, you look marvelous," Kissinger exclaimed as Dayan strode into his sevtt1th floor office at the State Dep<irbnent for a mid-day meeting described by officials as "a significant and very important one." · Afterward, Dayan was due at the Pentagon to bid for jets, antitank missiles and other sophiticated weapons. U.S. officials are convinced that enough of his requests will be met eventually so that Israel's forces are upgraded above pre-'October war levels. George S. Vest, the State Department spokesman, discounted reports th at Diiyan was here to offer a unilateral concession. Vest said he ~ould "find it hard to conceive of either side" doing such a thing. But he did not rule out an Israeli withdrawal tied to a concession later by Egypt as the Geneva peace process moves forward. Dayan's visit could mark a turning point In the Geneva negotiations from generally conceptual discusslon.s to con- crete give-and..take. "It has always been understood that after the Israeli elections the talks-might accelerate," Kissinger told a news con- f~ence Thursday in San Clemente. From Page 1 DIGIURO ... Valley Chamber of Commerce and has his business office in Laguna Jh11s. He said be decided to nm because -"I think people should get involved whenever they can. I like and work in this community and I take a lot from it. I would love to give something back." ~ On the issue or whether Trustee Alyn Brannon who pleaded guilty to a boomak· ing charge should resign, DlGiuro said he felt unqualified to make a judgment at present. . Other candidates for the area six post (Irvine and El Toro) are Andrew Mur· ray, Vera Snyder, Steve DeLapp and Gary Rasmussen· of Irvine ; and John Tolle and Earl Carraway of El Toro. The new trustee will be elected in the ~1arch 5 spocial election. ORANG-I COAST IS DAILY PILOT Th<! 0•~""9 Coat.I OAILV PILOT, wl!ll Wl!kll 11 eomblll..t "'• Hews-Pren, ll pybtl!Jled rry -Ot~nge COtil Pw'ol!llllnQ C0<n11tnv. S~· r••• fdil~t ••• P\*ll1Md, Moncl1y thrOVVfl FrlOtv, for ca111 M_.., Jtewport aekll. M11111i119ton &tKh/F911t'>tlln \ltll•y, l!191111t 1 .. c11, lrvln•IS..:lc:lll'Mc• tlld S.n (le,......t / i tll Ju.M Ctpl1lr111C1. A tlntlt r19\oNll tdlllofi ll 11Ubli1hed St1urd1r-tlld S\ll'Mlt\'I, llle prirlcl1>1I Pllflll'111"' pltnt 11 11 l:IO w._1 ''' s1'"'' eo.11 Mtw, Ctlifo.Mlt, nu•. Robt rt N. w~.d l'rt•lffnl •.wt Pu1111~1r J1clr It Curl11 \Ilg l"raio..1 Ind c;...,.,.1.¥1....., Thorr .. 1 K•t¥il Editor Thoffl l l A.. Murplil11• Ml,..gi"Q lldUOt Ch1it11 H. Li1un Ricli1rd r. Nill A11ll!fftt MIM9l"'O Edllor1 Oflk• (01t1 M .. t : UI w .. t ••¥ Strtlt Ht""!IO•I &tteh: 3.)):j Nt""'9•! llO'lllevl•f L•l""t &11cl'I: m Fe•tfl A...,,IM """'1"°to11 11•e11: inn &1e(ll eoiji.¥••• &.n Cltt'l'lllllti J05 NOrlll l!:I (111'1"'9 l.1•1 Teri. ... 17,41 '41.CJJI CS.HW 4.._.,bl•t 641·1671 S.. C.._... All .hp•,._..1 T~49J ... 4JO COllY"lf~I, l•tl. 0,..,,.. C...Jt PW!ltlllllf c"'"""''. N1 -uorlt1, U1111tr1t'-< ......... """... °'· ~,_llft ........ """ .. r..,..i\K... WI"""' loP«ltf ...... "''"*' of l»t!Y' ..... ' -· kaM tlltt .... , ..... 111 •t C•tt IUM, CilllOrnlt. a!IMC'r"llM I# carrltr st.II& fl'lllllfllWI "' min u .IS .-lfl"I ll'llNI•"' tittilMllllM • .,,., Mt<llttlj"; "Yoo say you've had 'more than three years of hell because of her condition.'' attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. co.mmentecL "How are you able to carry on and maintain the marriage under sud\ con- dit ioos?" Parson looked at the jury, tlMln at Lewis and at members of his famlly who were seated in the crowded courtroon1 before be guietly replied: "I Jove my iw·ife and I understand." It is alleged that Mrs. Parson's triple personallty condition is derived from her being trapped in the sauna room of the Orange health spa on March 2, 1970. Several pat rons of the spa have testified that the saWla room door was defective and corroded long before Mrs. Parson, 49, was -trapped and that health spa pel'80Mel were never within shouting distance en such occasions. Lewis claims that Mrs. Parson becarrie three women after that ordeal : sex· htmgry Maria who satisfied her ex· tramarilal needs through males solicited in bars , remorseful Betty who deplored Maria's escapades and the submerged real self of Mrs. Parson . Parson testified Thursday th at he once 1 had to bring his v.'ife back from Mexico alter she spent severa l days there \\'ilh a Fullerton stockbroker. The Navy veteran also testified, under obvious strain, that he once found . his '\•ife kissing another man in the parking lot of a Ne\\·port Beach restaurant. 1 Parson said he slapped his wife on that occasion but was unable to catch her date despite a vigorous foot race across the parking lot. Parson testified, as most of his seven children h.9.ve testified, that Mrs. ParsOn today is a "wmbie-like'' creature who watches televt slon all day and that she only snaps out of her apathy when she1 decides to seek out an eligible J!lale. "Then she lights up," Parson said. "She becomes angry, determined and free and takes Off in the car on her own. No one in the world can stop her on those occasions and believe me I've tried." And .the Anaheim carpenter fought back his tears as the jury was shown a number of color photogra phs of ifrs. Parson, all taken at Little C:Orona Beach by a man identified in the courtroom as her lover on several occasions. "Is that the woman who drove off alone from her home and whom you vainJy tried to follow so many times?" Lewis asked Parson. "It is," Parson said, rolling his handkerchief into a ball. ''Yes, that 's the woman who calls herself Maria." Health spa attorney Donald A. Ruston ' got in just one hour of questioning before the break Thursday but it was enough to indicate that Pa.non will face an intensive grilling when the trial resumes ?.fonday. Ruston produced copJes of Ohio_court documen ts in which Parson alleged 20 years ago that his wile called him "vile and indecent names, kicked me In the privates" and-threatened ·to kill herself and .the two children the couple had at that time. Parson told Ruston in a torrid ex~ change between the lawyer and the witness that the statements and several others in Vie same vein were untrue. From Pqe 1 INN PROBE. •• especially during the so-called cOverup phase, took place at the Newporter. The investigation by the Watergate Committee staff and the special pros· ecutor's office of the Justice Deoart· ment appeared to be an attemp't to corroborate that tes timony, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. UPI also reported that Se 'n ate Watergate staff members bad conducted intervie\VS of Newporter employes in an effort to verify testimony of former White House officials. However the Newport Beach source said he had no knowledge of any such interviews. It w_as lea.med a few months ago that Watergate investigators made a similar inquii-y into all the records of the San Clemente Inn near the Western White House where tnany of Nixon 's key aides sµy. They also looked for names of members of the Howard Hughes COrp. and other possible cam- paign C<Jntributors on the guest list, according to UPI. The most widely reported visit to the Newporter in volved Martha ~titchell and her husband John, who was then manager of Preaident Nixon's re-eJection campaign. They reportedly were guests at the Newporter on June 17, 1972, when tlie break·in occurred· at the ~ratic headquarters at the Watergate co1nPle1C in \Vashington. ~fitchell fl ew back to \Vashington a day or so later, leaving his wife with their daughter, Mart y, 12 ; his secr~tary, Lee Jablonski, and a bodyguard, Steve King. During the week that followed, Mrs. Mitchell claims she was "manhandled" and told reporters "they stuclt a needle In my be.hind." ·Th.e wife of the former attorney general also ctalm.s the telephone of . her villa was ripped from the wall while she was tall<inS long di.stance to UP I reporter Helen Thomas. At that time, she told Miss Thomas that she had given her husband ·11an ultimatum" to quit the campaign or she v.'Ould leave him . She made that announeement when She...wlls asked what she thought or the burglary· and bugging of the Wa \ergate. ' I \ '.'Nixon Ship' Work Crisis ' -.:Threatened V1iemplo yment Rate 01i In crease Ul'I Telelltltl• Ration Plan Oregon Gov. Tom McCall grimace.s as he announces plans for statewide gasoline rationing. Under McCall's plan, motorists would purchase gas dependent upon the last digit of their license plate on a cer· tain day of the week only. Kissinger Flies Friendly Skies Of Stewardesses . LOS ANGELES (UPn -Henry Kis- singer, following his boss' example, is flying on regular air flights these daYs instead of private planes -but there are compensations. "They don't have stewardeS&es on Air Force One," Kissinger told reporters at the \Vestern White House Thursday before boarding an American Airlines flight to Washington, ending a five-day stay. "The food is better," too," he said. FBI and Secret Service agents prowled through the airport _ for an hour before Kissinger's arrival, hunting for threats to Kissinger•! safety, and six carloads of agents surroWlded his auto as he v.·as driven directly to the boarding ramp. Kissinger was also asked about reports he is planning to marry his longtime friend, Nancy hfaginnis of New York. ''I woiild not make any comment on my personal plans," he said, blushing a bit. - Fire Official's Car Set Afire Orange C:Ounty Sheriff's officers today identified a vehicle set on fire and destroyed on the Ortega IUghway near San Juan Capistrano as a car owned by Capt. Brian Watson of the Orange County Fire Prevention Bureau. Watson told deputies that the car was taken from its parking spot outside his Santa Ana home Wednesday by unkown car thieves. Deputies said the vehicle was driven to the San Juan area and set on fire by the same thieves. I Watson told investigators he Is at a Joss to explain a motive for the destruction of the official vehicle. UCI's Spear New Town Hall Head UC Irvine development officer John D. Spear has been elected president of Orange County Town Hall . Spear succeeds Robert E. Hanson as head f>f the county branch of the ·national organization designed· to provide for discussion of public issues. Other new office!'! •re George L. Argyros , Frank Hughes, Thomas K. Stadlinger and Timothy P. Haidlinger, all vice presidents. _By 'Bomb' The U.S. Coast Guard cutter stationed 11round the clock off the Western White }louse in San Clemente, was the ~rget of' a bomb threat on New'Yeaf's -Eve, tt was learned today. • But official eourcu are playing the Incident e.tremely quietly. Reliable sources confirmed th~ threat to the white cutter shortly before mid· night Monday when .an Intoxicated caller phoned th• Presidential compoWld and said the bomb was secreted somewhere within the hull of the vessel which patrols the specially marked area 'of ocean 'off La Casa Pacifica. President Nixon was at his residence during the incident. -Imffiediately after learning of the threat, Security personnel ordered a thorough search of the vessel by a special demolition squad. That took place at Dana Harbor but it turned up nothing irregular on the vessel. Harbor patrolmen would not disucss the incident but indirec tly. conced...Jil that the activity indeeed took place .. ''Anything relating to the lncldelft New Year's Eve would have to ~ disC\i!sed by the Coast Guan! In LO!lg Beach," said a patrolman on duty today. Sources said that comments made by the caller gave strong indications that he was either a present or past member of the Coast Guard because of several technical temis used ·during the COil· vcrsaUon. Official spokesmen for the Coast Guard in Long Beach promised a &tate~ent on the incident-late today. From Pflflr 1 CONVICTED • • • wheel of the v.hlcle which veered off the road and overtwt1ed, throwing all four men to the ground. Slatton said his next memory of the night of July 10 was that he was rldlng a horse bareback across Starr Ranch land with his white Stetson hat on the . back of his ht!ad and his .45-callber Colt revolver slung on his hip. His only com panion in a ride outlin~ by the light ,of a full moon Wa.9 a riderless hOrse which stayed close behind him a n d whinnied to him occasionally, he testified. But De puty District Attorney Ted MJllard successfully argued in his final statement tpat Slatton bad a ·Jong record of violence and that he bad been warned by h l s employers many times not to use weapons In ejecting trespassers from Starr Ranch land. WASHINGTON (AP) -The naUon 'll unemployment rate moved up from 4.7 percent to 4.9 percent of the .work for ce in December marking the second cQJlsecutlve monthly jncrease since the begm· ning of the energy crisis, tbe government reported loday. The increaae apparenUy was due to the general slowdown of the economy but analysts for the Bureau of Labor Statistics said they lacked complete information lo determine the effect of the fuel shortage on the jobless-rate. Administration officials said previously the Impact would be fell in December and even more sharply during the first three months J)jJ974.~ According to the n!port the number of people out of work In· creased by 17,000 last month to a total of 4.4 million. This followed an increase of 200,000 in November. , President Nixon's chief economic adviser. llerbert Stein, has forecast a jobless rate reaching about 6 percent later this year. Laguna N:iguel -E1nployes Can Take Bus on Monday- Starting Monday morning, commuters living In Lagwia Niguel will have the chance td catch chartered buses to Los Angeles, Santa Ana, Fullert<>n, Orange, Newport Be3ch and Irvine. C.Ommuten taking the buses will be served coffee, breakfast rolls and the morning paper during the trip to work. Best of all, the first two weeks of the charter servlce--are free for rjders, compliments of Avco community developers. Persons are asked to sign up for the service between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Srturday and Sunday at the Laguna Niguel Town Center at the intersection of Crown Valley Parkway and Niguel Road. ' Five buses are scheduled to leave the Town Center Monday morning - one to the city of Commerce and downtown Los Angeles; one to Los Angeles lnLernaUonal Airport and Beve.r· ly Hills; one to Fullerton, Anaheim and Orange; one to downtown Santa Ana, and one to Newport Stach and the Irvine Industrial Comple x. Buses heading for the Los Angeles area will leave about 6:30 a.m. Those departing for orange County destinations v.•ill leave at 7:15 a.m. After the initial two week free period, the cos t to commuters will be between $8.50 and $12 per wee k, depending on · the destination of the rider. Buses will · pick up riders between 4:45 and 5: 15 p.m. at the va'rious loca· lions and return them to Laguna Niguel around 6:30 p.m. Refreshments will be served on the return trip. Don Md.1ullen, Avco's director of marketing, said the firm bas spent betwee.n $4,000 and 5$,000 organizing the charter tervice u a local effort to help ease the ~gy crisis. He estimated that if all five buses are filled on a daily basis, more than 150,000 gallons of gasoline could be saved yearly. ~fcMullen said the program is the first charter bu s service sponsored by a com.munity developer in ·the United States. 111e ofncial name of the service Is the "Laguna Niguel Save the Fuel Poot." But that doesn't mean that only Niguel residents may pafticlpati. Riders from otl}cr communities, such as Laguna Beach, South Laguna. Dana Point , Capistrano Beach and San Clemente are welcome \o sign up. During the two week period, Avro also will sponsor "shoppers" buses to Laguna Hills Mall, South Coast Plaut and Fashion Island . The bu ses wil leave the Town Center at 10 :30 a.m. and return at 3 p.m. Avco is also developing plans for car pools, matching up riders who are heading for the saine destination, Mc?.fullen said. From Page 1 BRANNON. • • sentence he gives. JI the result of the judge's action Jan. 27 is a misdemeanor sentence, Brannon could stay ~ on the board In· definitely . His term of office expires in 1975. "If that happens, starting a recall might be a quieter way fo r those who want to get him out of office," Thorpe sa id. "Regardless, we feel it Is in· equitable for the faculty to be treated one way and the board another." An admini:itratiop spokesman said there is no written policy dictatlng pro- cedure on suspensions for a staff member accused of a felony. WINTER SALE • • ''BIGGEST EVER'' SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL -HERITAGE - HENREDON -AND MORE ... ON SALE NOW! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WOODMARK CHAIRS AT SALE PRICES. WOODMARK FEATURES: * LUXURIOUS 25'/. DOWN & 75 '/. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * Cl EANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT WAY HAND • TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE OOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE Oire@r~ incl~!' JB.{l_~t Dunn Edg~r _ F. Elfstrom , Edwin ·FJniler, Rooe ir Hanson, Doreen MarshaJl, Peter Rem- mel. Robert Shelton, John Stahr, Thomas Stipe, Harold Walt .and Guy Wilson. * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE ..• ON DISPLAY NOW FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM ••• AND AT SUBSTANTIAL SAYINGS. T ruck Fuel Drained In Miss ion Viejo Trucks parked on a Mllskln Vlefo construction site wert' drained o~ fue l , Thursday ttlghl by tntnidars w60 a!Jo I cut the fuel lines on the vehicles, Orange • County 8berllf'1 offlcort1 aald. · Deputl .. said Ille lnlnld•rt broke Into_ • fenced yard ownecl by Barttlona Homes Construction Company "at the tntertM?Ctlon of Alicia ParkWly and Trabuoo Road In 'a raid that ooet th• company about 75 gallons ol guollne .. I I OREXEL-HERllAGE-HEN REOON-WOODMARK-KARAS"1AN NEWPORl BEACH e 7ed11111 . IN f ER I 0 RS WIEKDAYS lo ·SATURDAYS 9100 le 1:1 ' fRIDAY 1'1L 9:00 , .. - ._ 1127 WESTCLlflfo Ok., 642°10150 Lil.GUNA BEACH e . "'-J41 NOR TH COAST HW~. ., ... ,,,, . . IORP ANCl e · ?649.HAWlHC>RNf ltVO. ( .pt111 5··~do•1 ,:.;:Ji ~ 1279 --. - . . ~ ,--~ -----. --~-----~ -,, -'" ·-.- • I I ' ,, • ·- Bontingioii B~aeh Fountain ·Valle ' -' --· ' 1 T oday's "F inal ' N.Y. Stoc k s VOL 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDA Y, JANUARY 4, 1974 TEN CENTS . ' Storm May Icy Whiskers I-tartan Shank surfaces from frigid depths of Rock River In Rock· ford. 111. He and four others braved 10-below weather to go water skiing Jan. 1. Trustees Studying Curbs F 01· Stude11t Car Drivers By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1M DfllY .. 11et Sl11f Restricting student USe of cars to get to school in the Huntington Beach Union High School District is being con- sidered by district adrqinistrators. Surveys are being conducted to determine the names of._ students who live · w i t h i o one-quarter and on~ha1f mi le or school and still drive their cars. But no decision has been reached on \\'hether to seek any kind of a b.1n on student driving. Robe rt ~1artin . assis- tant -superintendeftl_ In charge o f business, said today. William Simon. President Nixon's energy czar, said last week he wanted high school authorities lo curtail high school students• use of cars lo conser\'e energy. Such a move would affect thousands of students in the large Huntington Beach district and. l\iarlin indicated today, would impossibly burden the already crowded district bus system. a tv.·o-roile radius can ride a bus. But there are many students v.•ho qualify to ride who chose instead lo bicycle or drive a car . "Ir v.·e had to transport all student s eligible." Martin said toda y, "\ve're talk· ing about 8,900 students. ·~o \vay \\·ould we have the fuel . lhe buses, the personnel or anything else to transport · all the students," he said. "No v.'ay." Martin said distri ct administrators have been holding frequent discussion sessions on fuel conservation in general and the idea of a driving ban has tome up. Any procedure that \rould cutback stu· dent driving, he said today, would have to take into consideration the students who drive their cars because they have to -go to work after schQW. Principals at the disfrict's five high (See DRIVERS, Page !) l Stay Through Saturday ' S)·stem Clings Off Coast ; Boats Ripped Loos e By STEVE MITCHELL Of lh• ~II' Piiot Sltfl Shivering Orange Coast residents can prepare for more of the same Saturday, according to Y(eather forecasters in Los Angeles. A low pressure sy~tem located 200 miles off lhe Southern California coast is stubbornly holding on to its present position, sending out waves of extremely cold, moist unstable air over the Southland. l1i Moti1itai11s Weather service specialist Dick Stitt time the storm leaves it should have says . the .stationary weather rront is dumped nearly an inch of rain in .the packing wind gusts of up. to lO knots Southern California area " he said. along the Orange Coast and 62 knot . ' .. gusts in the Ne1,•:hdll area. )IJOV: and mudshdc~ clo~ed some nigh- Small craft advisories are expected -in Souther!l California: .stran~ed at · · rr h gb h 250 motorists. author1t1es said. lo ~~main in e cct t rou t e w~eke!1f1. The Californ ia Highway Patrol s;:.id .. The low pressure system 1s . JUSt about 200 mote-rists were stranded on s1tt1n~ out the:e, ~t the present ttm~. tl1e Interstate 5 "Grapevine'' route bo- and 1t looks hke 1t plans to stay in tv:een Castaic and 1he Los Angeles the same ~ilion at least through Satur-Basin. day morning," Stilt reported. "By the Bct"•ecn 40 ;ind 50 cars 11·crc trapped College Man 7th To Be Mutilated The victim of what investigators describe as the seventh in a chain of homosexual mutilation murders has been identified as a 24-year-old Long Beach State University student. According to San Bernardino pclice, the victim, Vincente Cruz :t.1estas, is the seventh victim in the mulilation murders which ave baf!led police in Orange and Los Angeles Counties since Decen1ber of 1972. ~leslas' body was !owid Dec. 29 in a raviile in the San Bernardino ~1oun­ tains near state Highway ta. The iden- tification of his body was made Thursday by members of his family. Like the previous mutilation murder victims, the yoi,mg-man had been 1trangl- ed, s~xuany mutilated and sexually assaulted. 1\1estas' h:inds had beco cut OU above the wrists and his beaii had been shaved, detectives said. The so-called mutilation murder chain began in. December or 1972 with the discovery of (he Dody of Edward D. 1\•Ioore in Seal Beach. He v.•as the first to have been strangled and sexually mutilated, \vhich most of lhe victin1s have been. Since then, there have been four bodies discovered in the Los Angeles Harbor area, including. one WhiCh had been hack- Mi p.or Flooding l1i Wes~ Courity Public works crews in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley took lo the st reets today to check on what they reported to be only minor. routine flooding coilditions. Dark clouds dropped about .14 of an inch of rain on the West Orange County area by 8 a.m., according to J. Sherman Denny, local meteorologist. He estimated another half-inch of rain would be added to that by early afternoon . Officials in both cities said there were no major problems from the sudden deluge. ed into piects and put into green garbage can bags. The bags were found throughout the harbor area and in Swiset Beach. None 0£ the victims fo\Jnd in Los Angel.l?s County have been identified. Another body was found in Seal Beach in July. The victim was identified as RoMie Wiebe, 21, of Fullerton. Police are still trying to detennine if the hacked up body of an unidentified man found last ~larch in Huntington Beach is part of the mutilation murder chain. Simon Predicts Energy Drought J For 10-15 Ye~rs From Wire Services \VASHINGTON -Energy Direc1qr \Villiam E. Simon said today the United States is faced with an energy drought lasting 10 to ts years. Nor will the shortage be greatly eased when the Arab oil embargo is lifted, Simon said in an interview Y.1ilh United Pr,..ess International. - "We have been a nation of energy wastrels, and this day is over because the day of cheap energy is over ," he said. He predicted that the energy crisis would end only when the United States developed new sources of oil and sources of power such as solar and geothermal power -"and that is IO to IS years in the future." Meanwhile, the Federal Energy Office decided against seeking Saturday clos- ings of gasoline stations as a way to cut fuel consumpton further . "It is definitely out," an energy office spokesman said Thursday. "Saturday closings would just wreck recreation outlets in the country, and it's a big business." SHE 'LL RUN AGAIN Councilwoman Gibbs 'I'll DO IT AGAIN' Councilman Coen \ bet1recn 1nl\d slides along Topanga Can- yon Boulc\'ard near \Voodland Hills, a Les Angeles suburban area. The high- 1vaXt_ pafro\ reported there ~'ere about iii) persons in the cars. "'-SC>me of the motori sts 11•ere helped out on foot, \\'hilc others remained a5 road crc\\'S cleared the mud ahead of their strand ed auto.s. '·They should have brought their lunches:' a l·ligh1vay patrolman said. Chances arc good the sto rm \Vill move !See STORJ\t, Page %) 04illy l'llet Sl1ff ""°'" 'YOU GET STALE' Retiring Council ma n GrHn 'IT'S A GOOD AVOCATION ' Veteran Council man Bartlett The district now transports 4.700 stu- dent.! on 39 buses al I of which run from 80 to 100 percent capacity each day. Only those students who live outside Harriet Weide1· Reveals Simon had said a y,·eek ago that the Saturday-closing move was under con- sidtration. Now, he reels the measure is not needed to deal with the gasolinl? shortage. The energy office has already aske4 the nation's 22S,OOO gasoline stations to close on Sundays to discourage con- sum ption. A high percentage have com- plied. Simon said the Sunday-closing re- quest will become mandatory if be gets Green ·tQ Give Up Seat On Huntington Council Candidacy in Huntington Coast Orange • r~iling doesn't open until Jan. 10, but Weat•er one Huntington Beach woman already Look for continued showers and has announced her intention to seek cold winds throug h most pl Sat-a city council seat in the April 9 election. urday, with a chance of <!!earing Harriet Weider. chairman of the city's by Sunday, according to the environmental council and a one-time weather service. The Orange Coast aide to former Los Angeles Maror San1 V.'on't get above 50 degrees Satur-Yortj., .haa~declared herself in the April ··---ll~day and lows will dip into the ·1ow ra ..... • (Os-:---------·-~--,,,,_-She took over chairmanship of the INSIDE TOD •y environmental council last y .. r from • L"-Margaret Carlberg, founder or the coun-Mary Cassatt fa -the best cil. Mrs. Weider is also a member . knourt~ America" woma" artl•' Huntington Harbour Property OWners of the J 9th CenturJI. Staff writtr Association and will serve as the 1974 Candace Pearson looks at C(J,8; March of Dimes chalnnan tor Hun- 1ott'1 life and 1vork tn terms of tingtoo Harbour. tilt woman'• movement in to-She worked 10 years as-Mayor Vorty's dav'.s Wetknder. administrative aide, serving as his liaison..for 7!nvironmental 'Bffairs. Al Y.W Sll"l'kl J ... ,IAI 17 I., M. •erlll t Cellllf'lli• 1 CIMl!ff.. Jt_,. C1mln 11 ~ 'C""""'" 17 --. ........ "... ' ,lllMIU .. u '" "'* •ww.i • -" A• l.Hlltrt. IJ -. Governor Reagan ·reeenUy RPP.Qinted Mrs. Weider to the state Solid Waste Manage'fuent-Board. Tetlow b o a r d members elected her vice chairman. "lluntlngton Beach needs lo be better, nOt bigger," ahe_ says. "We need ICadership efforts in bribglng new in. dustrles arid buflnesses to q(ir city with partlcular cmph"'1s on cullunl and com· mercial improvements. 11 . ' "BE.TTER, NOT BIGGER" CO<lncll C1ndld1t• W•idtr • • ··-. --. ' . ~--.---~---.,.. .............. -• (See CRISIS, Page !l W eatlier Halts Track Sessio1i Young distance-runners in Foun- tain Valley who had planned to participate in Saturday's citywide cross country meet will have to hang up their track sh6es for a rew days. City recreation o££icials today postponed the meet, which will be In ~1ile Square Park, because or the weather . All seven girls' divisjons will complete beginning at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday and the boys' divisions will lake. IO ihe track We<li>esday; • also at 3:30 p.m.,-Jim Erwin, recreation supervisor said today. Voutm from 8 to U years old are ellglble. to· compeic. The IOI> five finisMrs in each division wlll go on lo a countywlde nleet Jan. U1 also tn ·Mlle .sQuar-~ Regional Park • .. BY TERRY COVILLE 01 Ille 01llp ,llol Sl11f At least one or four city council seats will be up for grabs in the April 9 Huntington Beach municipal election. Councilman Jack Gi:een \viii ntlt seek re-election because or his position as dire~tor of environmental quality for the City of Ls Angeles. Green said under the Los Angeles city charter he will ha ve to move to the city by January. 197S, making it impossi61e for filiTITo hold atfuntln on Beach council seat. "I had already decided not to run. even If the state court had ruled the city charter invalid on the residency requirement." Green said today. "I'm more and more inclined to !eel eight years on a city council is enough for anyone. You get stale nrter too long. While Green is bowing out or the electipn race, the other three cOuncilmen whose terriis e·xplre lhfs. yliar·11ave fill said t~ey plan · to file for re-elettion . Jan. IO Is the rirst day residents may m~. Tt'd Bartlett, with 16 years on the council. s11id he plans to try it at least one nlOre time. "i was wondering whether to go for another tcnn. but so many people asked me lo run I decided to do it," Bartlett said. ''As Jong as your health is good, you feel good and you \Vant to s'erve. ifs a good avocatipn." Bartlett served one term on the council rrom 1944-1948. another term in 1954·1956. and t\1:0 temls from 1966-1974. Al Coen, v.1ho came on the council with Green in 1966, iind like Green has served eight years, also plans to lry again. "!_'..ye found__i a very satisfying ex· pericnce to serve the people. and if the voters approve I'll do it again." Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs. currently reco\·ering from se.rgery, said she would also file for re-election. She came on the council in ,1972, but had prtviously served as mayor of Seal Beach. Four of the seve n council seats will be at stake this April City Attorney Don Bonfa and City Clerk AJicia \\'e ntworth w\U al:t0 be up for election. 'Both ptaii lo seek their positions agaln. No1nlnation papers can be obtatned from the city clerk's office starting Jan. 10. The closing date for filing is noon, Jan. 31. There is a ·s100 filing fee which must be paid when lhe nol!tlnau011-papen 11re picked up. The filing fee 11'at IS.. ELECTION. Piae I) I • ' ·'f ~----·-- --... ___ ...._ ___ ·~·---' . -._._ • J H iinti ngum Officials Eying Ciits Huntington Beach just bought a 130,000, all.purpose street sweeper w hich, because of a shortage of diesel fuel. may not touch a brush to city asphalt this year. City firemen may have to practice their fire fighting techniques "ithout ever rolling their big rigs to the training center. Grass in city parks might not be trimmed nearly as often this winter because city officials don't want Lo waste fuel on the po .... ·cr cutters. Under a fuel allocation system started in November by the federal government, Jtuntington Beach will get only about ~ 25 percent of the diesel fuel it normally consumes. .. 'For the month of December, il·e were allocated 1,180 gallons of diesel fuel .'' says city JKUchasing agent Roy Howe. "We normally ~ume about 4,000 gallom." . The fuel allocation established by the Office of Oil and Gas, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, is based on 80 percent of the previous year's use. "The allocation gives no provision for a city's growth," complains Howe. "\\'e have been adding a Jot or diesel equip- ment because it's more economical than gasoline-run machines." Howe says the city's gasoline supply is not in trouble , but the diesel fuel sifiiition COUid become critical-around Easter if the city does not get additional fuel it has requested from the federal government. "We submitted a request several mooth,, ago, but still have not heard an answer," he reports. ''Summertime is when we start using a lot of diesel fuel. We can get through the next two montM fairly well because ol reserves." Floyd "Bud" Belsito, executive assis- tant to the city administrato r, has been infonnally designated as the city's "fuel czar" to work with department heads in an attempt to cut back the con· sumption of diesel fuel .. From Pqe 1 STORM .•• ' Into Nevada before Saturday afternoon, but the National Weather Service today issued mountain snow warnings and call· ed for wind and rainy skies over the Los Angeles basin through Saturday. 'Mle weather service said successive cold fronts will keep Sautbern California in an Icy grip through the rest of the week, with temperatures near freez· ing in some inland areas, but with warmer weather due again by Sunday afternoon. Highs in the Orange Coast area are expected to remain : In the upper 40s today and Saturdiy. Overnight lows should dip Into the low 40s. Sheriff's deputies reported snow and hall covering the 2,284-foot Castro Peak northwest of Malibu and a Utree-inch deep blanket of snow on roads through the Angeles National Forest. The cold spell, which sent the mercury plunging to a :ow of a degrees in Big Bear, 17 degrees In Bakersfield, 26 degrees in El c.entro, rl degrees in Needles, 30 degrees ln Riverside and 28 degrees in San Bemardlno, forced citrus growers to tum on smudge pots and other beating equipment sooner than expected -and right in the midst of a worsening fuel crisis in southern California and the rest of the nation. ·In the Los Angel~ ·area, already hit by an electricity shortage, natural gas serv ice was cut off to hundreds of in· dustrlal, commercial and institutional users, all v.·ith beatlng systems fired by other types of fuel. The action was taken to Insure gas supplies for residential customers and others without alternate sources of heating fuel, gas utili ty spokesmen ex· plained. The Palmdale Radar Weathe r Center warned up to six inches of snow could be expected to fall in the area as the storm continues. 0 1.ANl-l COAST HI DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•"'1tl CUii DAtL 'f PILOT w!"' wl'llcll It (Ombfl\fd·tht Nt-Pr•H, It Pl/illllMO lt'f l!lt Ofl"OI' Cllllll Pultll..,111\, CCHnCNlft'f, ·~ r•!t eoll!llon1•1t t Plll>l!tll«I, M&ftd.1y lftfOllO~ il'rlllt"f', lor Cotti Mttf, NtwPOrl l11c.ll, HUt1tl119ton llttc~/il'ou1111Tn v11,..,, l•o- IHch, lrviM/Saelidlt tM<• t ftd "" Cltt!Mntr/ 1111 Jwn C.o!t trtM. 4 1lne'-r .. lo!ltl •lllioil I• pvbll111fd ~lurlltyt lrv:I Sundin. rn1 prln(lo.lt pUblllfll"9 pltnt 11 11 uo Wtll ltY StrMI, (.nl1 Meta, C.1lllor11l1, f1')6, ' Rob1rt N. W11il P'rff~e<1! tl'ld l'Wllalltt Jack It. Cyrl1y Viet ,mil!MI Miii GtMfll ll\9f119tf Thom11 K11,i1 EtlW Tho111 t1 A. Murphi11t Mt111t111• t'.t•..,. Chtrln H. Lt•• ltlc h1rt1 P. N•ll ..... ltltlll M.tlltfl"' EllllDtt T 1rry C1 .. ill1 ""'"' 0rt"9f (-ty "'"' M_..,.,...._.C>Mc. 17171 ····" •r.1, .. ,,4 M1ili11i M1tlrt111 r.o. •• 1to, ti••• -°""" ~ ... "'~ m """' "-'"'' M ... ~ DI Wttf ltr Strwl M"11tff lvdl1 JU> H..,,_, 10\llr<ltrl Sett C.IMM!li.; _. HOl1tl !I Cl"'IM llttl T .. •••1111 1714, Ml-4111 c~ .u...11 .. M1>1111 ,.,.... ......... c-ty "'-""' 14f.1J11 Coft'rlptlt, ltn. 6,..,.. C...I IO\lftlltlllflt C...nv. Nt """" 110rie., IHvitrllltna, lldh•ltl l'l<llllf .,. ""'""-" ""'"' IN't "' •IP'~ wll!IWI MltCO.I ...,. ........ .. °""'"'" ......, . ~ d9N _..., MIO M (•It MDI. ~Hflwotlt. ~"'1ltol W Writr IUI """"""' ..,.. IMfl N.11 monlf'ltrl 19110 .. 17 ..,11•"'1111 GM fftlftlrllr. ~"-;;;..;;..;..;._~~~~~~ -"" ". ---~-- ll'elgl1ly Issue M_ayor Orville Hubbard of Dearborn, 1'1irh .. stands on a. scale at th e annual weigh -in at city hall after vowing to lo se seven of his 283 pounds by Jan . 15. Hubbard , 70, is start· ing his 33rd year in office. (Story, Page 16) James T. 6 gle, Coast Pioneer, Last Rites Hel•l Funeral services were held today for pioneer Orange Coast resident James T. Ogle, of Hwitington Beach, for whose family Ogle Street in Cost a ~1esa was named. He came to the Harbor Area com- munity in 1926 and bad lived in COsta Mesa for most of that time before moving to 20592 Go.shav.·k Lane, Hun· tington Beach. During his career on the Orange Coast. ~1r. Ogle, who was 74, operated both the Balboa Cleaners and the Harbor Laundry and Cleaners. He and his wife, Dorothy, were recently honored on their 5Ist wedding ailniversary. He had been a member of the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club and a deacon of the First Ch ri.stian Church of Santa Ana, according to relaUves. Survivors of ~tr. Ogle include a}.son, Robert, of Costa Mesa , daughters Mrs. Betty Jo Laurin, wife of Newport Beach Police Lt. Ernest Laurin. another daughter, Doris Mae, of Weaverville, Calif., a brother Joseph Ogle, of Santa Ana, plus eight grandchildren. During the time the Ogles lived in Costa Mesa near the intersection of Orange Avenue and 17th Street, the short thoroughlare near thei r homes was built and named Ogle Street. A total of four diffe rent Individuals or Ogle families occupied residence on that street, according to f\;trs. Laurin. Funeral services scheduled today were under direction of Melrose Abbey Mausoleum in Santa Ana. Fro1n Page 1 ELECTION ... established by a charte r change in 1970. Prior to that there was no fee. When a candidate files for the election. t.he nomination pa{K'rS must contain the signatures of at least 50 registered voters who live y,·ithin the city. \Vhile most of the state's cities, such as Fowitain Valley, will hold their coun ... cil elections in March . Huntington Beach, as a charter city , will keep its balrOting da te in April. The state Legislature recently switched all gene ral law city elections from April to ~1arch. Some charter cities also switched, but Huntington Beach did not. This year, Hwit ington candidates will also be Qpera ting und er a new campaign expendi ture limit imposed by the co uriclh, Accordi ng to an ordinance adopted' in November, no candidate may spend more than $5.000 on his election cam- paign. Th e new law also establishes other restrictions on how much In· dividuals and organizations may con· tribute to any one campaign. Details of the law can be obtained from the city clerk or clly attorney. Man's Ca r Hit On Lunch Hour A ""'Huntington Beach warehouseman Went ~ut for an expensive lunch in Co.la Mm Thursdo), eating up about • f700 in losses, according to police. Cary L. Stewart. 24, of 115 C.ll!omla Ave., said a burglar broke lnto his parked car and stole $500 Worth of Traveler3 Checks out of the glove com· partmcnt. The car clouter also took along a $200 Yameha guitar, In addition to the 20 Travelen Check, In $20 denomina· lions. -. Work Crisis ' . V 1iemploy ment R ate on Increase WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate moved up from 4.7 percent to 4.9 percent of the work force In December marking the second consecQUve monthly increase since the begin· nlng of the energy crisis, the government reported today. ' The Increase apparenUY was due to the general slowdown of the economy but analysts for !he Bureau of Labor StatlsUcs said they lacked complete information to determine the effect ot the fuel sho rtage on the jobless rate. Administration officials said previously the impact would be felt in December and even more sharply during the first three months of 1974. According to the report, the number of people out of work In· creased by 17,000 last month to a total of 4.4 mUllon. This followed an increase of 200,000 in November. President Nixon's chter economic adviser, Herbert Stein, has foreca st a jobless rate reaching about 6 percent later this year.. . ' Dayan Meeting l\.issii1ger ' Amid Report of Pullback -- From Wlre Se:n1ces WASHINGTON -Israeli defense minister Moshe Dayan called today on Secretary of State Henry Kissinger am.ld reports that Israel is ready to pull troops far back from the Suez Canal provitled (1) the waterway ~s reopened to s.hipping and (.2) there ~ a "thinning out" of Egyptian forces on the east bank. "Nice to see you, you look marvelous," Kissinger exclaimed as Dayan strode into his .seventh floor office at the State Department for a 21h-hour meeting described by officl.als as "a significant and very important one." Afterward, Dayan was due at lhe Pentagon to bid for jets, antitank missiles and other sophiticated. weapons. U.S. officials are convlnced that enough or his requests will be met eventually sO that Israel's forces are upgraded above pre-October ...,..·ar levels. George S. Vest, the State Department spokesman , discounted reports that Dayan was here to offer a unilateral concession. Vest said he would "find From Pllfle 1 DRIVERS .. ~ schools said a ban could seriously hurt students. especially those who work. District trustees may face the issue next Tuesday nlght wpen they have to decide \.\·hether to ei\Jarge the student parking lot at Fountain Valley High School. it hard lo conceive of either· side" doing such a thing. But he did not ·rul e out an lsraeli withdrawal tied to a concession later by Egypt as the Geneva peace process mov es forw ard. Dayan's visit could mark a turning point in the Geneva negotiations from generally conceptual disQlssioos to con- crete give-and..take. "It has always been understood that after the Israeli elections the talks might accelerate," Kissinger told a news con· ference Thursday in San Clemente_. The secretary flew to Washington Thursday night, arriving on a com· mercial jet a few hours before Dayan came in on an overseas flight. Meanwhile, Egyptian and I 3 r a e I i generals met for the fourth time in Geneva today on separating their armies along the tense Suez Canal front, where cease-fire violations are so rampant on e Israeli official said the war is still going on.· Despite pessimistic reports from both Geneva and Tel Aviv, however, U.N. circles in Cairo said they expect an agreement "'ilhin a week to 10 days on troop disengagemen~ in the Suez area. Firefights have been s t e a d i J y escalating along the cease-fire lines and Israel reported two of its soldien: wound· ed ln more fighting today. The military command in Tel Aviv said the Egyptians opened up with tank, artillery, mortar and antitank rockets north of Suez City and at the southern end of the canal. In cease-fire violations Wednesday, Israel reported three of its soldiers ki)Jed and 10 v.·ounded -the moot casualties since the truce took effect. "The war in fact ts still going on," an Israeli official said bi Geneva as Gens. Tahal El Magdoub of Egypt and Mordecai Gut of Israel began their. fourth round of talks. Ration Plan Oregon Gov. Tom· McCall grimaces as he announces plans for statewi(te gasoline "rationing. Under McCall's plan, motorists would purchase gas d_ependent upon the last digit of their license plate on a cer- tain day of the week only. From Pagel CRISIS ... the power from C.Ongress. . A.s for the government's conservation moves, Simon said after a news con· ference Thursday: 1'\Ve ' feel we've got everything In place necessary to lick this pro.blem." During the news conference1 he and other energy officials .said the response from the public on government con· servalion measures has given new hope that gasoline rationing can be avoided. A high energy official said later, however. that the key test \\'111 come this month as gasoline production is cut. Simon said major oil companies agreed to encourage the voluntary 11).gallon·per· customer limit on service stations sales. Company-owned stations will enforct that limit, he said. •le said that gasoline consumption con- tinued to decline in December, 'but added the savings felt far short ·of the 20 percent reduction considered necessary. Newporter Recor ds Subpoe~aed By JOHN ZALLER 01 ''" Otl~ , • ._.,11ff A Newport Beach source disclosed Thursday that the U.S. Depa rt1nent ol. Justice has subpoenaed recotds from the Newporter Inn In Newport Beach that may shed light on the Watergate alf•tr. The source also con!}rmed reports by United Press International in \Vashington that investigators from the Senate \Vatergate Committee have scoured records of the Newport luxury hotel. The highly reliable source indicated he has first-hand knowledge of the sub- poenas. Management of the Newporter IM, ;~~;~~~~ec!~n:e ~~~s:n(inn or "We believe we have an obligation to respect the privacy of our guests," said a spokesman for the hotel. • The Investigation appeared to center on the hotel's guest llat and billing accounts, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. During the 1972 presidential campaign, White House officials -including At- torney Gene ral John Mitchell and presidential counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have stayed at the Newporter. In addition, sworn testimony before the Senate Waterga te Committee has Indicated that Watergate-related activity, especially during the so-called coven.ip phase, took place at the Newporter. · The Investigation by the Water&:ate Committee staff and the speclaJ proo- ec:utor's offiJ;e of the Justlee Deport· ment appeated to be an attempt to cwroborate that testimony, according to the Newport Be9ch 10urc:e and to UPI. µPI also reported that Sen at e Watergate staff members had conducted interviews of Newporter employes in an effort to verify testimony of fo rmer While House offlc:tals. However the Newport Bea<!h source · said he had no knowledge of any such interviews. It was learned a few months ago that Watergate investigators made a similar Inquiry into ail the records of the San Clemente IM near the Western White House where many ol Nixon's key aides stay. They also looked for names of members of the Howard Hughes Corp. and ott:ier possible cam· paign contributors on the guest lfst, according to UPI. The most widely reported v:lslt to the Newporter involv,ed ~1artha 1'1itchell and her husband John, who Wl!I then manager of Prt31dent Nl1on's re-election campaign. They reportedly were guests at the Newporter on Jwie 17, 1972, when the break-In occurred at Lhe Democratic headquar ters at the Watergate complex in Washington. If they do add to it, they may be enoouragfug more student driving , not less. lf they don't, 1'fartin pointed out, the students may still drive and just park on the streets, which is what is happening now. ~., ______ ._=-===---r-.. Martin said he would pr efer that the students involved would work out the problem their way. At Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach High Schools, student councils already are at "·ork on energy savi.ng steps, urging students to adopt alternate modes of transportation. At Marina Higb School In Huntington Beach, a "Crisis in Environment" class is doing the same and at Edison High in Huntington Beach, teachers are being ellCOuraged to use car pools to get to work. 'J'.he principals' estimates of the number of students who drive cars to school daily totaled a b o u t 2,000. That number doesn't include how many passengers those cars may be carrying. At Huntingto·n Beach High. principal Larry Lucas said about 300 students, about 10 percent of the student body 1 drive cars. At Fountain Valley, about 500 students use cars. The nwnber ls about the same at P.1arina and f.diBOn and dlps to about 400 at Westmtnster High. Thomas Kolanski, principal a t Westminster, said about 60 percent of the students who drive to his school do so because they have to go to work in the afternoon. He called that num b er a "conservative" estimate. John Woodlock, a student at Hun- tington Beach High and a representatlve to the school board , admitted that a lot of students drive to school for pleasure. "It's a privilege and a convenience,'' said Woodlock, 16, "but there are people '-''ho have to drive." He thinks Simon's suggestions or the ban and that gas coupon& wouJd only be sold to drivers over 18 years old are discriminatory . All school! r<ported that bicycling is stll~ on the increase. AJ many 1s 1.500 stupeots bicycle to F.dison dally and thoUsands make the same ktod of two- wbe<led pilgrimage to the other lclloo!J. Traffic Committee Qpening Announced -Interested Fountain Valley rt1ldent! can now apply for an opening on the city's traffic committee. Tb• committee hears cltlzea com· plaint& related to trafnc, and makOll recommendatl0111 of ·ways to Improve trafllc condlllona within the city, Ap- plication form• are available at the city clerk'• omc. In city hall, lllllJO Slater Ave. WINTER SALE •• ''BIGGEST EVER'' SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL • HERITAGE • HENREDON ·AND MORE : .• ON SALE NOW ! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WOODMARK CHAIRS AT SALE PRICES. WOODMARK FEATURES : * LUXURIOUS 25 % DOWN & 75 i', FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTC HGUARDED * Ct EANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED . von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE , , , ON DISPl:A Y NOW FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM ••• ANO AT SUBSTt-NTIAL SAVINGS. DR EXEL-HERIT AGE"'"H ENREDON-WOODM AR~-KAR!oS r AN NEWPO R I BEACH e • tNTERIORS WHKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 le l 1JO PRtDA Y 'TtL 9:00 • 1717 WESTCllff DR.. 6"2·2050 . LAGllNA BMCH e 145 NOltlH COAST HWY , ., ..... ,, rOr.rM~(;E • •J64 9 H4Wll l<>ltNl ll VD. !Optn Sund •v 12-~tJCI) 171-1219 .• --'----~~---=---~~------ \ \ I I, ) ' - IAt Your Service A Suuday, Wednesday and Friday Fe4t1te Of tbe Dally Pllol Go& a problem? Then iorite Pat Dunn. Pat wilt cut red tape . get the • answers and act iun ~ o u -nee:d to ._ l tolve inequi- ies in gov- ernment and business. MaiC 11 our ques· tions to Pat Du" n I At Your Service, ()rat1ge Coast Datl'IJ Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Cosia Mesa, c.:a., 92626. Include 11our rc:iephone numb1r . -' Harnaf11I Sleepwear~ ·DEAR PAT: Last year we purchased all flame-retardant sleepwear for our children. Then we were told of a report that the pajamas contained asbestos and therefore were not safe. Is this in- fo rmation true and how long does the flame-retardancy re n1 a i : . in the garments. J .H., Laguna Beach An official of the National Bureau of Standards who helped develop the standards for flame resistance says ht: bas never seen or heard ·of asbestos being used in such products. The federal standard for children's sleepwear for shes 0 to 6X requires that name retard- aney be effective through SO launderlngs using a high phosphate detergent. Flame- re&ardant material tebds to last longer wilb blgh pboSpbate detergents because of their superior ability to prevent the bo.ildup of damaging calcium salts. Virtually all children's sleepwear in slJes O to 6X either meet the Dame retardancy standard or carry ·a label saying they do not. Most sleepwear In sizes 7 to 14 already meets similar standartb that have been proposed but not yet made final. Heart'9 S~Md11led DEAR PA~·m a fencing contractor and a friend or mine in the same line of work told me he·d heard the contractors' State License Board is going to change our classifi cation. If this is true, I'd like to find out about it since 1 haven't read any\.hing about a classification change and my friend dldn 't know what the new classification is. E.\V., Fountain VaUey FoodStrike Vote .Slated; End Near? Sporadic food sh ortages on supermarket shelves ln Orange County and eight other Southern Callfornla cOUn· ties could be ended by a vote which begins tonight by rank·and·file members of four striking unions. Contract offers include wage hikes ranging from 77 cents an hour for some mem~i of the Meat Cutters Union . to $1 .19 an hour for Machinists and Operating Engineers Union members. uruon leaders are recommending ac- ceptance. Some 22,000 union members are in- volved in the strike-lockout at 60 Southern California market chains. Management and union negotiators an- nounced Thursday the agreement on a prOJ>OSed packa$e that is the result· of marathon negotiations onducted in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. No details of ihe package were an- nounced although union leaders are en· couraging their members to approve the pact. The unions had ~ holding out for an open-end cost or li vi ng clause, among other benefits. Bob Sexton, spbkesman for the Meat Cutters Union, said the ratification vote \.\'ould begin tonight and continue Satur· day. If union members ratify the agree- ment _w_orker.s \\'ould return to their . jobs Monday, sexton said. Pickets are scheduled to remain up at supermarkels until the vote is taken. An oral agreement, hammered out under the auspices of federal mediator Dick Hughes, was agreed upon Wedn ... day but It was not put in writing and an- nounced until Thursday, spokesmen said. Unions involved in the strike-lockout which began Dec. 3 arc the Meat Cutters, Teamsters, Operating Engineers and Machinists. Only three food chains were struck by the unions but the remaining chains locked out members of the striking unions ·contending a strike against one is a strike against 811 •.. Sporadic food ,shortag., also have been noted during the strike .• Nixon's Patrol Ship Target Of Bomb Threat The U.S. Coa!t Guard cutter stationed around the clock off the Western While House in San Clemente, was the target FOUND GUil TY OF MURDER Rench Hand Slat!on Sla(ton, 41, Found Giiilty Of Murder Ranch hand Robert Carl "Whip" Slat· ton was foWJd guilty of first degree murder late Thursday in Orange County Superior Court. The jury added the new "use of a firearm" rider to its murder verdict and added the same Penal c:ode pro- vision when it found Slatton, 41, guilty of assault with a dea dly weapon last July 10 al the Ortega Hot Springs. If the verdict and the Penal Code provision surv ive defense attorney Daye Shinn's planned appeal it will mean that it will be at least 10 years before Slatton can apply for parole. It took the jury five hours of actual deliberation to determine that Slatton acted "with malice aforethought" when he shot and killed trespasse r Dennis Ray Glahn, 21 , of La Mirada. Judge Robert I:.. Corfman · accepted both verdicts, called for a probation report on the .S.Wr Ran_c.h ~em_ploye ,_and ordered Slatton returned to h is courtroom Jan. 23 for sentencing. "Do I have to sit here and take tbi.s?" Slatton audibly asked Shinn as bailiffs prepared to lead him back to the county jail And be again audibly added as Judge Corfman glowered in bis direction: "I've already been Jocked up in the jail for six months for 90mething I didn't do." No change In your classlflcatlon bas taken place but It "ill be proposed at a 1 a:m. bearing Jan. 11 at th e R!vlera Hotel and Country Club, 1600 N. Indian Ave.1 Palm Springs. The purpose of tbis p~bllc bearing is to determlDe the feasibility or e1tabllsbln g a separlite C-13 spedalty classification for fenclng contracton, rather than eon-- tlnulng under the C-81 clu1Ulcati0n now med -for licensing contractors whose work Is not covered by one of the specialty classlftcatlons. 1 n t ere s t e d persons may pment oral or written statements at the hearing. • of a bomb threal on New Year's Eve, it was learned today. Mrs. Dorothy Carroll, Slatton's com· mon law wife, broke down and sobbed in the froot .;J'OW of the courtroom as the jury verdict was read. Promotion Disrontln11ed DEAR PAT : We sent a-SIS-check to Hanover House for a vacation offer. The $15 was for registration but ac· commendations were to be 100 percent free with no peak sea.son charge. Several months later, we were notified of reservatiOns at a motel not mentioned in U,e brochure and they wanted $7.50 per person each night for four nights in' advance. plus a SH> deposit. We asked for our money back and were told to ma il back t.he ce rtificate. which \li'e did. We still don·t have the $15 back. J .S .. Newport Beach Hanover House bas refunded your $15. 'Ibe company no lon ger uses the pro-- motion, whieb included a land sales promotion. The California attorney general reques ted Hanover House to stop using the promotion months ago because state law prohibits offering a prize that can be collected only upon payment for goods or services. Paper Shortage Woes DEAR PAT: tn June I sent a check to a magazine subscription service for Good Housekeeping for 14 months and my check was cashed. In July 1 received a notice that I would soon receive the magaiine. I sent a change of address and later a letter saying I wanted a refund . So far, I've re~ived no answer or magazi ne. \V.O., Fountain Valley George Olthoff, manager of Good Housekeeping's customer service, says Good Housekeeping, Town & C.Ounlry and llouse Beautiful were plagued by • paper shortage at a time of unan· tlclpated demand. Cards \\'ere sent In June and July telling of a delay, but the shortage affected tbe magazines tonger than expected. Subscribers were add~ed lo the malling lists as magadne' became avall8ble. Re sa)'s an back orders wftl he IUted by January. Yoo and otber1 have been lnfon1;1ecl that -your 1ubscrtptlon1 will start Ulen. Sportsman'• Club, Too DEAR PAT: I'd like ta add the American Sportsman 's Club, Inc. to the information you gave to J .S.. FOl.Dltaln Valley, who had Inquired about hunting clubs in this area. Our-club has been active in Southern california for almost two years and in Colorado for more than !;even years. \Ve offer over 60 untts to hunt1 lish and camp in caliromia alone and our fees are reasonable. N.F., -Sant.a Ana Your club 's brochure ls belng maUtd to J .S. Olhers whblng addlllonal In- formation may contact the Amertc1a SporUmaa's Clab1 I.DC., by wrl"'a: to Norm f'arreU, ll!O S. VUla~e Way, Salle E., Bania Ana , CalU., tz'lllli, or pllonla& sss.1437. • - But official sources are playing the incident extremely quietly. Reliable sources confirmed the threat to the white cutter shortly before mid- night Monday when an intoxicated caller phoned the Presidential eo:mpound and. said the bomb was secreted somewher~ within the hull of the vessel which patrols the spe&uy marked area of ocean off La Casa Pacifica. President Nixon was at his residence during the incident. Immediately after learning of the threat, security personnel ordered a thorough search of the vessel by a special demolition squad. That took place at Dana Harbor but it turned up nothing irregular on the vessel. Harbor patrolmen would not . disucss the incident but indirectly conceded th at the activity indeeed took place. "Anything relating to the Incident New Year's Eve would have to be discussed by the C:Oast Guard in Long Beach,'' said a patrolman on duty today. Sources said that comments made by the caller gave strong indications that he was either a present or past member of the Coast Guard becauu of several technical terms used during the con· versation. -• Official spokesmen fo r the Coast Guard in Long Beach promised a "'"statement on the incident late today. Mrs. Carfoll was identified during the trial as the woman who retrieved Slat· ton's Colt revolver from the ranch house where he sought refuge a n d threw it down a cliff. ~ Slatton insisted from the witness stand that he was nowhere near the hot springs when Glahn was-sh·ot-tn"the-stomach. He told the jury that he was being kidnaped and threatened with castration by three yottng men at the time that the La Mirada man was dying from his wounds. Slatton said ·he r eco vered con- sciousness from repeated beatings near the Bell Canyon Road gate to find himself in the front seat of his own Land Cruiser with two of his three abductors flanking him. The ranch hand said he grabbed the wheel of the vehicle which veered off the road and overturned, throwing all four men to the ground. Slatton said his next memory of .the night of Jul y IO was that he was riding a horse bareback across St-arr Ranch land with his white Stetson hat on the back of his head and his .45-caliber Colt revolver slung on his hip. His only companion in a ride outlined by the light of a full moon was a riderless horse which stayed close behind him and whinnied to him occasionally, he testified. Sunday Pilot Spotlights Fossil Site in Newport U you're looking for "Sunday1s Best" in the Daily Pilot, look for. these : VICTIMS OF WAR -The Vietnam . ' War technically has been over for nearly a year bul the maimed and Injured continue to make' their way to a small Quaker center in Quang Ngal. There are as many injuries from bidden mines now as during tile height ol the war. See story In You section. I OPEN SPACE -Roy O. A(ldersen School In N e w po rt Beach opens lis doors for the first time Mtnday. 'The Sl.4 mUllon school employs an Innovative architectural design known as "open loft" structure. Evcryo.ne involved Is anUelpating_ ~ great experience. SUNDAY SPECIAL -There's a fossil site in Newport Beach which bas the potential for yielding more lnformatlpn lhan tile La Brea Tar Pits. Both tile Irvine Company and the citx of Newport Beach appreciate the fact but neither of tllem can finance a "dig." And aclVI· tists certainly are ml fWldraisera. Staff • • -. Writer JohA Zaller examines the issue in the ·sunday Special. 4tS FAMILY -It's the code for one or the unfavorite police calls, domestic problems. The officer must become sociologist and psychologist while watching out for his life. Staff (Sunday's Best J Writer Candace Pearson explores the police side of battles in the home, along with some proposed solutions in the You Section. NEW SERlF.S .._ Jeanette Nolan, one of America'• most highly regarded character ... actresses, is "Dirty Sally:' a character she created ifi a "Gunsmoke"' episode a couple or yenrs ago. The episode drew the most fan mail lhc show had received in its 19-year history and has now been spun off i11to a series or Its own. 0 Dlrty Sally" Is the cover feature ln this week's TV WEEK. • . ' H DAil V PllOT 3 -,Three Years of Bell~ Saun~ Victim's Mate W.eeps in .Court Dy TOM BARLEY ot ftl• Oo1Uy Piiot lt•lf Henry •;Bud'' Parson broke down and y.•ept on lhe witness stand late Thursday as he recounted for an Orange County Superior Court jury his many vain at· tempts to prevent his wife from seeking sexual relationships Ylith other men. Parson. regarded by ~1aria Pnrson's lavvyer as a key y.•jtness in the $l million la'>'·suit against the_ Hollday Health Spa bf Orange, said he struck his \vile on one occasion before he rea_lized that she was not responsible for her actions. . Parson, 49, testified b efore Judge William Murray called a three-day break in the trial that a psyc hiatrist made hi m awa re of his \Vife's multiple personality condition. "You say you've had more than three years of hell because of her condition," attorney Marvin Uwis Sr. commented. .. HO\Y are you able lo carry on and maintain the marriage under such con- ditions?" ... Parson looked at the jury, then at Lewis and at members of his fa01ily who \Vere sea ted in the crowded courtroom before he quietly replied: "l love my wife and I understand.·· It is alleged that J\1rs. Parson's trlple pe rsonality condition is derived fron1 her being trappeq in the sauna roon1 of the Orange health spa on J\1arch 2, 1970. Several patrons of the spa have . testified that the sau na room door \Vas defective and corroded long before l\1rs. Parson, 49, was trapped and that health spa personnel were never within shouting distance on such occasions. Lewis claims that Mrs. Parson became three women after that ordeal : sex- hungry Maria who sa ti sfi ed her ex· trarnarital needs through males solicited in bars., remorseful Betty who deplored Marla's escapades and the submerged real seU or fifrs. Parson. Parson testlfJ<.'CI Thursday that he once had to bring h_ls wife back from "1exico after she spent several days there with a Fullerton stockbroker. The NB"Y veteran also testified . Wlder obvious strain, that he once found his wile ki$ing another man in the parking lot of a Nein·port Beach restaurant. Parson sa id he slapped bis wife on Enviro1m1ental Groups to Figl1t Coast Drilling LOS ANGELES (Al?\ -Environ- n1entalists sa id Thursday tht'y would fight 1 any attempt lo open up a vast section of Pacific Ocean territory off th e Southern C<ilifornia coast for oil drilling. The Interior Department announced \\lednesday that the first s--d"p had been taken to open up the 7.7 n1Hlion-acre area, in <1ccord \\'ilh a dir.cctive from President Nixon. The battle lines began forming almost immediately. "It seems a shame that· this ad· ministration's policy seems lo be that \Ve have to destroy what ren1ains of America 's grandeur in order to save it,,. said Ellen Stern Harris. a leader of several conse rvation groups and vice chairman or the state\vide Coastal Zone Conservation Con1mission. Our complete Spring selection of Bare Root Trees, Roses & Bushes have just arrived. SH the all new '74 Award winning Roses plus most all the favorites .•• ·• Dwarf & standard fru it trees plus 1trawbtrrles, boy1e11t1 IMrrln, youngkrr._., r11pberrifl, 1sp1r1gu1, rhubarb, de. Make your 1election early while the supply I.1st•-· NEW YEARSm8AJ.:.. .. REDWOOD SAWDUST COMPOST large 33"x44" size bag. $4.00 that occasion but was unable to catch her date despite a vigorous foot race across the parking lot. Parson testified, as most of his seven chi ldren have testified, that Mr:;. Parson today is a ;'zombie-like~' creature who watches television all day and that she only snaps out or her apathy when she decides to seek out ~n eligible male. "Then she lights up," Parson said. "She becomes angry, determined and free and takes off in the car on her O\\'n. No one in the world can stop her on those occasions and believe me rve tried." • And the Ana heim carpenter fought buck his tears ns the jury was shown <t number of color photographs of Mrs. Parson. all talien a\ Uttle Corona Beach by a-ntan ideriliti'ed In the courtroom as her lover on several occasions. "Is !hat the woman who drove off alone from her home aitd whom you vainly tried to follow so many times?" Lewis asked Parson. ''.Jl is," Parson said, rolling bis handkerch ief into a hall. "Yes, that's the \Voman \vho calls herself Maria." Health spa attorney Donald A. Ruston got in just ooe hour of questioning before the break Thursday but it was enough to indicate that Parson will (ace an intensive .. grilling when the trial resumes l\1onday. 1iuston produced copies of Ohio court documents in which Parson alleged 20 years ago -that his \vife called him "vile and indecent names, kicked me ln the privates" and threatened to kill herse lf and the two childrfn the couple had a~ that lime. Parson told Ruston in a torrid ex· change between the lawyer and the \\'itness that the statements (p)d several others in the saine vein were untrue. val ue. We furnish bag. From Our HOUSE PLANT ROOM You bag it : ........ $100 We bag it $200 ......... NEW SEED 'N START Indoor seed starting kit, everything you need to grow vegetables indoors. each . Save $1.00 On Three BLOOMING CALENDULAS 79c Value a Your C~lce of Yellow or Orange SPAGHNUM MOSS Lorgo Full Bog $1 .98 Voluo r ' Start out the New Year with a house plant from our giant display of indoor plants • • • • Orange Counties largest. KOP·R·OIL SPRAY CONCENTRATE House Plants 4 ~ s1 OR 29¢ ea. Bonsai Pottery NOW Y2 PRICE , PATI0Sf01' S&e o~., fl•w ·7~ collKtio11 et fi11e l'orlo F11rnlt11r•. COCOA MATS $4.00 •ala rLANT STANDS '-$16.0_0 vi::il11e 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. ·COSTA MESA NURSERY 646-3925 P~TIO 642·4103 ·m• ' ' • --·---"-----------------·---'-·--•• • _;:; -' , ., ··-, PI LOT Frld11. J•nuary 4, 1974 --·---' .Just ~ c.sting ,~~ 1 ~~" :@ 18!).000 ·cheer ~etllrn of Dylan with Tom arphine ~ :•;:' .. " There's No Rain Shorta ge SLOSHY FRIDAYS DEPT. -Out of the slate gray Orange Coast skies, the rains fell today, sometimes in slanting streaks or wetness propelled by winds or lots ol knots. BAC K FROM 19605 Bob Oyl•n CHrCAGO (AP) -Tho new Bob Dylan waa grateful and friendly > the older Bob Dylan was harsh, mysti cal and somewhat obscure; the oldest Bob Dylan was N!belllou!. All the Bob DylanJ showed up at Chicago Stadium 'ntlll'8day as the poet and 1inger who was the prophet for the tumU!tuous '60s began his first con· cert tour in eight years before a packed house of more than 18,000. "May God bless and keep you, may your wishes all come true, may you stay forever young," sand the 32-year-old Dylan in one of his new songs. "THERE htUST BE somewhere out or here, sakl the joker to the thief . There's loo much confusion , I can't get no relief," he sang ln a song from the mid 61l's. ··You who philosophize disgrace, and January in the rain. The stuff pooled and rushed -0n our streets. It sloshed into rubber boots of school kids tramping up sidewalks. It streaked the windshield of the dime store ribbon clerk who drove to work frowning, worried about where her next tank or gas might come from. ..... .a.. .. -~_,' ~,,, ............ ,., ........ .... Down it came. l t ruined President Nixon's vacation. It dampened car poolers, huddled and waiting on street comers for the ride to show up. It transformed our sparkling Pacific lnto dull muddied waters, matching the sky above. ! SO FOR PRESIDEl'liTS, {'()lllmuters, • ribbon clerks and kids, today was the Orange Coast in the rain. It fell with equal malice f« a\L And as \\'e sloshed along, life and our times went on too. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger held his press conference at San Clemente's Western White House. He addressed himself to oil and the Mideast. In those precise. articulate tones, Dr. Henry has pronounced ·the Arab·oil em· bargo ''increasingly inappropriate.'' THAT SOUNDS SO GOOD. Roll it around on your tongue. In creasingly in- appropriate. . . i'n c re as l n g I y in- appropriate. A whining con1plaint? An expression or hard-line negotiations 10 come? A veiled threat from the seat of govern- ment now reposing in San Clemente? Increasingly inappropriate. Only Dr. Henry kno~·s. ~feanwhile, we plunge orr the plane of heady internationalism which prevails at the southern extremity or our coastline and visit bleary eyes upon our County Seat , up in Santa Ana, where Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers has just delivered his "State of the County" address. CLEARLY, THE OUTGOING chairman or the board listed many ac· complishments. But among the failures, the frustration of not rinding a happy replacement for the big )et operations of CoWlty Airport. Chairn1an Ron tells us that sadly, the United States h1arine Corps doesn't 1J•ant the jets of commerce at El Toro. Ditto the h-1arines do not look happily upon contemplating a jetport at· Camp Pendleton. Neither do the shakers and movers of San Diego Counly. Next stop. Onlario. Or maybe Blythe, or Twentynine Palms ? Enough of the County Seat. U:>ok out to sea. The federals \Vant to drill for oil. State brass then says this might mean offshore drilling loo. Assemblyman Robert Badham speaks in Newport Beach. Chances of coastal drilling "ex- tremely remote'' he says. ROLL THAT ON your tongue. Ex· tremely remote. . .extremely remote. It has a comforting sound. And finally, we have the COsta ?11esa nursery where they put out those Bunna Shave-type signs along their highway frontage. TOOay's message : "TIJ_eM! Three Things \Ve Hope, "Wil1"Con1e to Pass, · "Prosperity, Health, "And a Tank of Gas." So it was, along th is best of all possible coasts, Friday, in the rain. Bus Pass enge rs Get Di1ne' s Worth LOS ANGELES <UPI ! -The dime that once didn 't go very far will soon buy Jong. long bus rides in a forthconting daylong experiment lo gel peo ple out of their cars. The Rapid Transi t District reluctantly passed the minifare concept Thursday at the insistence of city and oountv officials who see it helping easing th'e fuel shortage. Nation's Big r . Banks Drop Prime Rate NE\V \'ORK (APl -Several of the nation's biggesl banks annolUlced today they we re lowering their prime lending rates from 10 to 9o/• percent. The decisions followed si milar moves \Vithin the past 10 days by the First National Bank of Boston and New York's Chase Manhaltan Bank , third largest in the nation. Joining in the decre ase today, among others. were First National City of .New York , the country's second biggest bank ; Bankers Trust of New York, seventh in size, and Pittsburgh·s Melton Banlt, 13th largest. The prin1c rate is the base lending rate banks charge on loans to largest corporate eu~tomers. It is not directly tied to consumer or small-business loans, but is a key indicator of the interest and loan situation in general. Money experts said the prin1e . rate drops indicated a loosening of the na- tion's mooey si tuation. precipita ted at least in part by recent moves by the Federal Reserve Board to ease the restrictive money it has been following for almost a year. The experts noted, ho~1ever. that since the prin1e is a base lending rate. many corporations still would be paying IO to l l percent inte rest or higher for loans. Wife Beating . . Suspect Jailed A Capist rano Beach man was· jailed on felon y \\•ife beating charges Thursday night after allegedly inflicting injuries that led Orange County Sheriff's officers to rush his·\\·ife to the hospital. Deputies "''ho booked Larry James \Villiams. 20, of 34576 Calle Portola, Capistrano Bearh, today sai~his wife. Connie Lynn, 17. is recovering from her injuries in Orange County ~1edical Center and is doing well. Offi cers said ~·Irs. \Villiams told them her husband had been drinking and that a quarrel broke out between the pair. It is alleged that he st ruck her '\\'ith such force during the dispute lh<1t her head shattered the living room \Vindow. ~·-•~-~·-L!L~f"'".:".,2o;,~ ·-' ~~ .. ..,~ '"f!I ~ U.S . Weatl.ier ~ Te H1perat11res Ml1h ... Alti.ny " " ;l.IWQurrour " " .. ntl'IOrlOt 11 0 • Bi1m1rck ,,, Bo<se " .. 80tton " " Sulftlo " ,, Chit1go " " Cincinnati n " c1r...e1111<1 " " Daile~ " " Denver " '" DH N.oine1 " " Detroit n .. Hel~a ., ... 1ndl1n11101l1 " " l(an111 City " ., Ln V~as " " Louisvi r " " Mrm11hi1 " ,, 1>•l1wau~ee " ... Ao-.innNPOlll " .. Nrw Yer., ~ -~' Nori~ Pl1!1r .. 0~1111'1oma Clly " .. Dm11h<1 " ~ P11m S11rlnv1 " ,. P1n~wzh " " Portlan , Ml. " " Portlotl(I, Ori . " " R111ld City " ... R111c lO .. St. LOI.Iii " " Siii lt~e CllY " " Sl)Cl•anr " .., Vencovver ,. " Winni~ "' ,,, < COCJtol summary and tidal data appear today on Page 17 ) '"'"· ... ... ·" .01 .~ .Q ·" . " ·" Two Cltaric~s , He Kills Self ROCHESTER, N.Y. !AP) - \Vhlle his wife and t\\'O 'friends looked on, Jasper Perry took twc chances at Russian roulette. He killed himself on the second try, police said. Investigators said, Perry. 54, took the cartridges out or a .22-caliber revolver Thursday, replaced one and spun the cylinder. He then aimed the gun at his forehead ·and pulled tbe triqer, police said. When the weapon f~ed to discharge . .,!le repeated the mo- tions and the gun fired . He·· died in his li ving room of a gunshot v.·ound to the head. Fugitive Slai1i Ho'lding Knife To WQrnan's Neck J UNEA,U,-\Vis. (UPI) -An escaped convict, holding a butcher knife lo the neck of a ~'Oman hostage, has been shot and killed by a Dodge County sharpshooter before he could make his geta v.'ay in a helicopter he had bargained for with the life of his hostage. Edward Joseph Quagon .... -as shot in the head about 5 p.m. Thursday by a sheriff's department detective as the fugiti ve stepped from the front dcor of the F. Gerald Daley home. He had forced his way into the home about t1J·o ind a half hQ.urs earlier. THE EVENTS began about 2:30 p.m. "·hen Quagon bolted from a Dodge Coun- ty courthouse coortroom where he was a~·aiting sentencing for escaping from a prison farm last August. Quagon. authorities said. ran along Wisconsin 26 in town for about a block,. trying to enter several homes. One of the homes \Vas that of Dodge County jailer Willard Liske. \Vho was off duty, and !J'ho scuffled ~·ilh Quagon . Quagon then ran across the street to the Daley house aµd dived through a front ~·indO\\'. POLICE AND SHERIFF'S deputies surrounded the house but Quagon \\'as holding Mrs. Daley at knifepoint inside. Nehls said. - Daley, a biology teacher at Juneau High School, was called home and he and Nehls and district attorney James Olson entered the home to talk \\'Ith Quagon. Quagon demanded S.S,000 in cash. four pair of handcuffs, a revolver and bullets, plus a helioopter and pilot. \ NEHI.S SAID HE and Olson agreed to the demands il Quagon agre«I to release h1rs. Daley. While arranging for the helicopter, Nehls also.set up officers "Aith rifles t.o keep Quagon in their sights as he left the Daley home. Indictment Dis111issed CHICAGO (AP) -Charges of violating the federal antiriot law were dropped Thursday against 12 former leaclers or the Weatherman facUon of the Student s for a Democratic Society. The in· dictment, returned nearly four years ago, was ordered dismissed by federal Judge Juli~ J. Hoffman at the request ol the government. The dime ride experiment v•ill be conducted Sunday, Jan. 20. in Los Angeles, Orange , \'entura and San Bernardino counties. Pas5engers ~·ill be permitted to go as far on one line as they wish without further charge . Death of Queen · DAILT ~!LOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtli•try of lht Oa11y Pllol n IJUMlnltrd M•IMll••·'rlill"'' II riv •• "" ~•Y• r•v• PIN' 1r flM p,m •• (Ill I"' l"'Wr C•lr ••ti •• •1°"9111 ... ,... C'•ll• • ., ,.~... 1"'111 .,;,. •·"'· J.hfrftJ 11\11 lllllflrl If , .. ft ,., lt(.f .Vf .,_ '''' 11!¥ f '·'"· Sttvrl•1• 11 I 1.111. S11n•••· <•II •flt t <•Pr will '' •r•wthl t9 , ..... (lllt tro 11-tft v"tli II• fl'I, ~ T tltphonts MIJI Ort~ (l~ftl'f Artll N1tmw11f MWtlllfltlM ... ,c~ Ulf WKflllflfthf' " • • • · • . Demolitio1i of Famed · Liner Begins H01'G KONG (AP ) -Workers toda y began breaking up the wreck of the . once-proud liner Queen E 11 i a b e t h , destroyed by arson t~·o years ago . l>tmolition or the rusting hulk ia ex· peeled to ta ke three years. • A spokesman for the owner, C. Y., Tung's Jsl•nd Navigation Corp .. said the first Job will be · to cul up the superstructure showing above wat.et. 'I1M! 11<'1 step will be Jo try to rolloat the hull. But if this proves Jmpo'91ble. • workers wiU have to cut up Ltlc ship underwater, be said . The 83,tJOO.ton Queen Elizabeth went to a fiery death otar the western ap- prootch to Hone Konr harbor on Jan . 9, 1972, after fires broke o u t simultaneously In half a dozen places. An ol!Jclal Inquiry determined that the fire• were set •'by person or · pef'80l\li Wlknown." 1'Jni purchased the former llaphip of the Clinard Ott! In early 11171 and wu eonverttnc tt Into a.floll!llC unll')!rsl· ty lor O\apntan Oollcge or Orange. Tho ship was only a ,...k away from her rtnt trtpl !lllll wben she was sabotaged . criticize 111 fears ; take the ng awaY from Y041' fact, now ain't the time for lean," he sang In the Ballad of llattle carroll1 a 111.!1 protest SM4 about a black maid caned to death by a rich, white Marylander. But the biggest ¢heer of all from a crowd that cheerfd ail night came in the middle of a song written -m t963 when Dylan obseri>ed: "Even the President ol the United Slates som!tlm•• has to stand nakcd.'1 DYLAN w AS BACKED for motlt of the concert hy The Band, a l!O"P tltat played behind him until be<Omlni one or America'• top rock groups in its ov.'ll right. And most of the concert W8' rock, with either Tbe Band playing on its own or Dylan playing with The Ban<!. For five numbers after the in--• tennlulon, Dylan changed from the black denim jacket he had been wearing Into a white tunic.. He played early Dyl1,11, accompanied only by his own acoustic gutar and the trademark harmonica attached to his nook. , ffe•even went as far back as "Song to Woody," a ttlbute to the late soogwrlter and philosopher W o o d y Guthrie, Dylan's fl11t Idol w'!ten he transformed hlmseU from Robert Zlm· mennan of Hlbblng, Minn. The audience loved It. THE AUDI.ENCE N!flected the Dylan collltltuency. There were teen-agers there who knew him only as another rock star; those in their 20s and early 30s who see him as one of their own : and older fans who love him for his political views and his poetry. They even loved the flaws. All nigh\, for example. the crowd kept yolllng for one or Dylan's b\Uest sellers. "Wke a Rolling Stone." Dylan sa ng it at the end, forgot some of the words, and still got a standing ovation. Earlier, be and The Band started another number. had the tempo too slow, stopped and started aga in. tn bis own way, Dylan malntuined the privacy he has clwig to d~ring the decade he has been a public figure . His only spoken words came at in- tem1ission, when he mwnbled : "Back in 'bout 15 minutes." , . As the crowd was riling out, promoter Bill Graham announced that more seats "'ere being added for Friday night's performance and that about 500 tickets ~·ould go on sale in the morning. "I'm going outside 10 geL in lin e:· said a man in his 30s. A lot of people said they would join hinl. London Nabs Second Girl Srispect Linked to Arab Arms. Smiiggliri g l1iquir y LONDON (UPI \ -Police arN!sted a second American u·oman at the London Airport today and identified her as "a known associate" of three other persons, one an American girl, already in deten· lion for suspected arms smuggllng. Arport sources said Scotland Y a r d COWlterespionage agents, waiting at · Heathl'O\\' Airport for thr~ days, acted today when the lall, d ark-haired American woman in her early · 20s ar- rived from New York. ';A -yowig American girl who is a known associate of the three people being detained at Ealing Police Station was detained when she arrived at Heathrow from New York this morning,'' a Scotland Yard statement said. "She is being interviewed." Officials reflLSed to amplify on the statement. > POLICE SOURCE.S said they learned of the girl's planned arrival while ques- tioni ng 18-year-<ild Allison Thomp'.son of Santa Barbara , Calif. ~liss Thompson was detained at Heathrow on Saturday when 'she arrived on a f I i g h t from Los Angeles ~1th five pistols and ·J50 roWlds of ammunition hidden in a false bottom of her sultcase. ( ... . , .......... O' ~ .. ' ....... . ~ ..... ... ~ ....... r,,. ··~··•°"'"' ~­.. :--___.:..... j r ==-·• .. ,.~ ~AND soAr ·~,, ........ . '.'. .... -· Kt.POWll UH SOAP ~""'"' •• , lo ''"" M:"J' O'e. ..... ~·· °'""' p.,,, °"""'' RICI 'llFOIMUCI ClllSI , ......... 1 l .... L~-1 ... l ........... ,, .... 49• .. ..... . ' ,_.,, STA In I ~r.~"' A:"' 9,;.;_,-.... ~.... 1381 ·~· ~·1•···· 49· CHAii 'CUI r-•• ' ...... . ,,.,...... ... ~ .. , ~ .... ,, ...... ' ...... .. ....... 1..;.1 .. ~lo h,,,...._.,N A<lloi .. ]99 C.M.C. TIU<l MIHOI , .. , •fl eo .. ' , ... .u.. '"'1""" c.. ..... Cit 10!.? .. II COSTA MESA 111 ._H,.k . MMIM Ul"I l•IHlletl HELO IN BRITAIN Alli.on Thompson Airport authorities said' the latest girl arrested was in her early 20s. They said she arrivtd aboard a Boeing 747 Jumbo jet airliner. Cust<ims officials said Ollf ol her bags was discovered to be missing \\'hen sht arrived at · the airport. but that her other luggage was closely searched. lt was not known "'"hether any arms were found, they said. GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS said th1t it may be decided today whether Miss Thompson and two men arrested with her should be depofted to the United States or face arms smuggling charges in Britain. ~liss • Thompson. and the lv.'O men arrested v.·ith her, v.'ill be charged v.ith conspiracy in relation to the possessioo of firearms, police said. They will ap- pear in rourt Saturday. The director of public presecutims made the decision to charge the lhree. Scotland Yard and the Home Office impMed almost blanket secrecy on ~·ha t one official tenned ''this security mat· ter. ·· SA \'E 30% .-so% AUTO PARTS T"IB "'IElllT"~OlllT(O'lfPl.t.'lf. PllCU llflCTIVI THIU SUIDAY, IUUAIY A •1.,ow11- STO' Lill J..• ~... ... .... r.1., 1 .... ~ ~ ... , p.,.,. .. l .... '~ ... c-. . . , ..... I. ' . :, .... "' 29· WIPll ILADIS ..... ~·' .. .. .. ,.,., ~ ..... . Ai"• • ., l•o•I ' '• ;o C: ~ \ •~C:~ B "" 1•• . ~ ... _ '""""' llJt ··--~-' i {~~ ~ .. b 1 UllUllTOl llT h.,1.1 .. .,11. 1•• 5,,,. ''" ,.,. .... \•p• "· "'" P". " ,., •~•· ... A.'0-..1. " ,, All ADJUSTABLE SHOCKS A·AO .••ol.'o l>~•• To••T"l°'"Ci" c: ... r"'· ,_,. •• , ••J a.,'"'·"'" ria ,.,~ LI"'°" '""14 A I " ""'"" ... DO·I f-'l'OL·a1t:1.1· Al'TOCIE."TI:ll •1.,owr1· /~~ FAST ILUSM '·1 .... (,. .. ,!, .. •• I f::'' \ -•. ~,, ..... • "' .......... ~ ... :,~r.,,., '" ..... Ill. Ht 29' 12' HAVY DUTY IOOSTll CAIUS 498 •• .,1.v ... , ...... ,.c; ... c•c .... ,, .. ,,, r., '" c '• •• O' y.,. p,., .. , A.ouiM•I• ~···"·" c ... ,.,,, w,,, ,, .... 1 ...... ' 39!! HEAVY DUTY MUFFLERS °'""'' Qj 2'lt'""l l•'-" !~;·-"Soi'-" (uykl•~ ..... 11 ..... ._,....,. o·• .... IO.lllt.,, '"' •H-' Goo "•lotto A.; k'o11 YllYL FLOOI MATS ~:i ~..,1 ,,_.,, ~.b.:-'"';:.c.i ... (( , ~·II flMn ....... 399 .TWll , J7t •IOlt .... ' •. uml[i] ran ....... 2•• I SANTA ANA I SANTA ANA 124 S.. lrhMI 11162 Tdh' • -l26·77JI 141·11 11 Ml ·'OWll r!! an1. IUST ........ ( ........ .... •.-.. ;ANJI : • ... c ... i• c .. • .,1,. .. ~ f ....... ...... ~.,.. . ... ,, .. ~''· ,., '29' r.~ ... ' 1...-.1 -· ••• I I- DILUll C IMP IA TTllY CUIGll ll umn 11us• ~=-: ~:;:-,:::.. Ill. Lll ~...!Tto•••"·'"' 99 , ....... ~ ...... •..i e L.._I>''-'•~'• II KIAVY DUTY SllOCl . AISOHllS ,_ ....... 1 .. f.,. L·"'.,. 01 ¥0.-~ •• ,,. • ~.-... ""' ., "~ ... .. ~ ..... ... , .... . ---- ' .•. KJ.,OWll MOTOI TllAT· MIKT LIFITIMI CMIClll .,., , ..... ,. IATillY •••·11 ·" '-··-· 1999 r .. '" L•I• O' .... '" .. acn-• SILKotll W•ISIT , .... ,.. .... -....... ~-.. ·-~ 6'5 ..... QI, ••• Ao-olo SllO<l 11101111 SPllMCS ., •• l.Jll,1•(; l .. \~;;;, ~c .. 5!,~ DISC llHI , .. s ----.::.::;;::;:-;:·_ -~. ·----------·-'- • -------~-·--~----~~-•"-----=---=::::=::::;::-:'--.:-----'"'------. ~ _,,...._ ------·'· • -. • • • I. • . . Today's Final • N.Y. Stocks • ¥0L. 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, ~ANUARY 4, 1974 N TEN CENTS ' 'U.S. Faces 15-year Energy Drought'-Simon From Wire Services \\!ASHINGTON -Energy Director \Vi!Uam E. Simon said today the United States is faced with an energy drougbt lasting 10 to 15 years. Nor will the shortage be greatly eased · when the Arab oil embargo is lifted, Simon said in an interview \\'Ith Unjted Piess International. "\Ve have been a nation of energy wastrels, and lhls day is over because f'orecasier Says the day of cheap eilergy is over," he said. He predicted that the energy crisis would end only when the United Stales developed new sources of oil and so.urces· of power such as solar and geothermal power -"and that is 10 to 15 years in the future." Meanwhile, the Federal Energy Ofllce decided against seeking Saturday clos. ings of gasoline stations as a way to cut fuel conaumpton further. "lt ls definitely out," an energy office Coast Rainfall Should Continue • BySTEVE~llTCH~LL Of -. 0.11, 't"' ,,.,. Shivering Orange C.oast residents can * * *-What's Next After Storm? --High Tides Residents o( low lying areas in Newport Beach will hardly get a chance to dry out rrom the current heavy rains befor• facing what lifei'!'rds S<Y wiq be th< highest tides on !ht Pacific Coast in a dozen years. "Tuetday we'll have !ht bigbect tides we':ve had tn t0.12 yeart," lifeprd spokesman Larry Gibson said. He aald nooding can be expected in eeveral areas. "It could cause us some problems." Gibson said, but he said if the stonn clears by Sunday, as expected, the tides ri'!.ay actually benefit the shoreline by building up some sand-depleted beaches. Gibson said tidal chart.s forecast a 7.Z.foot tide, "but it Likely will be about 7.8 feet." General Services Director Jacob F. ~fynderse said he does not foresee any major problems. however. "'Illere probably will be some nuisance flooding," he said. "It will overrun 10me beaches, but we've had· tides up to 8.3 before." Myndene said h• did not f....,.. !ht waters rising above the seawall on Balboa Island. #"I don't believe there will be any trouble there," he said. "We will close the Ude gates and the catch basins and the stonn drain pipes." Mynderse sakl the most likely areas for fiooding will be the Balboa Peninsula east of 15th St.reel and the Finley tract in Old Newport. · Gibson said there also could be some problems near the Newport Pier. "It wouldn't surprise me If the 1.fcFad# den Squa"' parking lot is flooded ," Gil> .son said. He said the current storm has caused no beach erosion problems, at least not yet. "We've got a fair degree ot erosion, but y,•e've got a great deal of beach to play with," Gibson said. "It depends oo how long the winds keep up. "Right now we've got no big swells, just some local wind blown chop," he said. "There will be no problem In the groin field ·of West Newport. The Newport Pier wlll be lhe only spot we might have to worry about," Gibson said. prepare for more of lhe same Saturday, according to weather forecasters in Los Angeles. A tow pressure system located 200 miles off the Southern Callfo'mia coast is stubbornly holding on to Its present position; sendil)g out waves of extremely cold, moist unstable . air over the Southland. "'eather servitt: specialist Dick Stitt says the stationary weather front is packing wind gusts of up 10 30 knots along the Orange Coast and 62 knot gusts in lhe Newbc11l area. Small craft advisories are expected to remain in effect through the weekend. "The low pressure system is just sitting out there , at the present time. and it toob like it plans to stay in the same position at ~t through Satut· day momlnf," Sutt ropi>rted, "By the time lbe storm )eavea it ahould have dumped aearlY an inch of rain in the Southern califomla area," he aakl. Snow and muasHdes closed 1Dme "high- ways in Southern Callfomia. stranded at least 250 motorists, authorities said. The CaUfomia Highway Patrol s:..id about 200 motorists were stranded on the-ihterstate 5 "Grapevine" route be- tween Castaic and the ~ Angeles Basin. BetY.'een 40 and SO cars were trapped between mud slides along Topanga Can-· yon Boulevard near Woodland Hills. a Los Angeles tuburban area . The h.igl.- way p;itrol reported there ·were about 60 persons in the cars. Some of the motorists were helped out on foot, while others remained as road crews cleartd the mud ahead ol. their stranded autoe:. "'Ibey should have brought their lunches," a Hlgbway patrolman said. Chances are good the stonn will move Into Nevada, befoN! Saturday afternoon, but the National Weather Service today (See STOR~t, Page Z) Registration Set For Recreation Newport Beach residents will be able to register for ~ter recreation classes Saturday from I a.m. to noon at the Community Youth Center in Corona del l\far. The special registration is open only to city residents. Eenons outside th~ city will be able to sign up for the variety of classes Monday through Thursday. , Most classes will begin Jan. 14 and continue thf9l18h March 23. There will be imtructioD in activities ranging from golf, gymnastics and judo to ceramics, Olinese cook,lng, folk guitar a n d decorative l\-.?aving. Ther .are 29 classes in all. Newport Appeal spokesman said Thursda y. closings V.'Ould just wreck outlets in the country, and business." ''Saturday recreation it's a big Simon had said a week ago that the Saturday-closing move was under con- sidtration. Now, he feels the -measure is not needed to deal with the gnsolinP. shortage. The energy office has already asked the nation 's 225,000 gasoline st ations to close on Sundays to discourage con- sumption. A high percentage have rom- .,.Wf..,.,.P.1P9' St'f. -""'· HE'LL SEEK RE·ELECTION Fourth "District'" Dostal Jet Noise Foe Dostal to Rttn For Re-electio11 Newport Beach Councilman Milan Dostal said tOOay he will seek re-election to his Fourth District seat in th e April 9 election . Dostal. elected to the council in 1970. has been a leader in the city's fight against jet noise at Orange Coun- ty Airport. He be<:omes the second incumbent lo declare he will seek another term. Vice l\1ayor Howard Rogers announced · his candidacy in District 1 last month. Councilman Carl Kymla announced Wednesday he will not run again for his District 3 seat. / Dostal. 44, said he thinks the continuing noise fight, the implementation or the general~ plan and his role in en- vironmental affairs are the three main reasons voters should re-elect him. Dostal is 'chairmar. of the · council 's Environmental Quality Control Com· mittee. He is also chairman of the Procedural Ethics Committee, a dirCctoi of th e five-city Public Cable Television Authori- ty and is NewP9rt Be~~·s representati\.·e to the Orange County League of Cities. He is also chairman of the newly formed IDtergovemmentat Coordinating Council for Orange County. Dostal is .also director of the National Organization for a Sound-controUcd Environment, (NOISE). A Republican, Dostal is a lawyer with ornces in both Orange and Costa Mesa . (See ~STAL, Paget) plied. Simon said the Sunday-closing re- quest will become mandatory if he gets the po'ver from Congress. As for the government's conservation moves. Simon said after · a news con· fe rence Thursday : "We feel >we've got everything in place necessary to lick this problem." During the news conference, he and other energy officials said the response from the public on· government con- servation measures has given new hope • that gasoline rationing can be avoided . A higtt energy official said later. ho"·ever, that the key lest "'ill come this month as gasoline production is cut. Simon said mnjor oil companies agreed to encourage the voluntary 10.gallon-per- customer limit on service stations sales . Company-owned stations v.'ili enforce that limit, he said. He said that · gasoline consumption con- tinued to decline in Dedember, but added the savings ren far short or the 20 percent reduction considered necessary. On Feb. I. ne snid. tne energy office u•ill announce another gasoline price in· crease to compensate service Stallons for their loss ot sales volume because of the fuel shortage. By ri.1arch I, he said, gasotine prices nalion"•ide "'ill average 8 to 11 cents per gallon higtter than t e level prevail· ing in Decembe . e increased cost or foreign oil i a major reason for the expected rise. Newporter Probe . Records Stu~ied in Watergate Case By JOHN ZALLER Of Ille O.Hr 'llot Stiff A Newport Beach source disclosed Thursday that the U.S. Department of Justice has subpoenaed record.S from the NewpGrter Inn in NewpGrt Be.ach that may shed light on the Watergate affair: The source also confirmed reports by United Press International in Washington that investigators from the Senate Watergate Committee have scoured rerords of the Newport luxury hotel. The highly reliable source indicated he has first-hand knowledge of the sutr poenas. ~fanagernent or the Newporter Inn , however, declined either to confirm or deny reports Of the subpoenas. "We believe we have an obligation to respect \he privacy o.f our gµe$.," ~Id a ~· ·/ot the bot4, The invesUgaUon appeared to center on the hotel's guest li.!t and .billing accounts, accordbig to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. , During the 1972 presidential campaign, White House officials -including At- torney General John fi.litchell and presidential counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have stayed at the Newporter. In addition. swom testiriony be!ore the Senate Watergate· Committee lias indicated that \Vatergate-related activity, especially duriog the so-called coverup phase, took place at the Newporter. The investigation by the Watergate Committee staff 3nd the special pros- ecutor's office of the Justice Deoarl- ment appeared to be an attempt to corroborate that testimony, according to the Newport Beach source and to UPf. UPI also reported that S e n a t e Watergate staff members bad conducted interviews of Newport.er employes in an erfort to verify testimony or former White House orficials . However the Newport Beach source said he liad no knowledge of any such interviews. It was learned a few months ago that Watergate investigators made a similar inquiry into ail the records of the San Clemente Inn near the Western HHH ENTERS NAVY HOSP IT AL WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-i\finn.J, en t·e red Bethesda. Naval Hospital today after complaining of a stomach upset for several days. A spokesman said the former vice president entered the hospital at the recommendation of his doctors and would undergo tests. There was no indication how long Humphrey would remain In the hospital. \\'tlite-House where many or Nixon's key aides stay. They also looked for names of members of the Howard Hughes Corp. and other possible cam- paign contributors on the guest list, (S.. INN PROBE, Page%) Case Closed Officer Finns Missing Casli. Newport Beach Police Officer Mark Johnston has endeared him· self forever to Lido Isle resident Tom Quinn. Quinn walked down to the bank Thursday and as he left the house, he stuck a roll ol bills -totalling $330 -in lils shirt pocket. "I NEVER DO THAT," he said, "but I just didn't tl!lnk." Anyway, when Quinn got back home, the money was miss~t "I tore the house apart looking for it," he said. "And ·I ed t1ie baili and theyrcowdD't ~d it." .. : .. . 1fe·said he caned p01Jce .and officer Johnston came to his house. "HE ASKED ME at lot ol questions and even wanted to -.my driver's license, .. Quinn said. · "Then he asked some more questions and finally he asked me what denominations the bills were. I told him they were three $100 bills, a $20 and a $10," Quinn said. ' ''WELL, HE JUST reached into his pocket and pulled them out. He told me he'd-found them.in lhe gutter." "It really makes you feel good to know that we've got that kind of policemen in our city/' Quinn said. Irvine Company Offers Help n1 Fossil Probing Tbe Jnrine Company offered Thursday to assist in scientific exploration to determine whether valuable fossil bedS" really exist beneath its propose<f Big Canyon condominium site . Following Ille company's formal offer, Newport Beach planning commissioners unanimously approved a m o d i f i e dt version of the company's proposed 16- acre, medium denSity development. The commission's preliminary air proval amounts to a minor milestone in the company's 11-month struggle to win approval of the controversia l project. However, bottt the commission and the company acknowledged that they v:ere side-stepping a major question that · still haunts the project: If the fossil beds turn out to be more valuable ttran the La Brea tar pits. as some scientists believe, what will be done to preserve them? "If that happens, we'll have a whole new ball game,., said l:Arry hfoore, deputy director of planning and ai:l- ministration for the Irvine Company. · "But there's no point in discussing it before we rind out 'for sure what's really there," agreed commissioner Joseph Rosener. William McLain, developer of the Irvine Company land, said he had an "honest disagreement'' with the com- missiOO on both conditions. ri.1cLain told commissioners that "the people who buy condominium!I are not interested in the kind of org~ recfeation you want us to provide." The builder also presented e1.tensive st.atistics which he said proved that comparable condominium develoixnents need a maximum parking ratio much less than three to one. ~fcLain indicated that he may seek: removal of the planning commission#im- posed requirements when the project comes up for review by the city counc il. Oriuige teut • Weatlaer He said Tuesday's 'tides may push sea water over the beach berm into tilt streets between 25th and 35th streets, 1 as well as the areas ~fyiiderse men- tioned. "If there are no winds, this wilt likely · build up the sand." Gibson sakt. "but If the stonn continues we can expect more erosion and a lot of flooding. Church Presses for Sign Commissioners spent 45 minutes in the evening and 90 minutes in !be af· temoon discussing tne paleoritologica potential o(the sile,.\\'hich borders Ford Rond near Jamboree Roaa . They also devoted another 60 minutes to discussion of recl'eatlon and parking requirements for the project Look for continued showers arxl cold \Yinds through most of Sat· urday, with a chance of clearing by Sunday. according to the \\'eatbcr service. The Orange Coast \\'on't get above SO 'degrees Satur· day and lows will dip into the 1ow '°"· INSmE TODAY "tf It Is fairly calm·, the wateP. will just slosh around a iltlle bit ," Glboon said. • Amtralian Youth Killed by Umbrella J.IELBOURNE, Australia (UPI) Glen Jackson, 14, was fatally stabbed In the beftd by a Beech umbrella al Parkdale lieaclt, police 1ald. Wllnessea ,aid Thursday a freak rust of wind uprooted an umbrella, rolling it "'°"' !ban SO yanls along the crowd· ed bellch before """'rin1 the letn·ager. who was. standln1 cm the beach. lf ii ii legal for a Newport Beach movie theater to advenlse for a near· pornognpbic movie, thtn it ought to be legal·lor • cllurch to adverUl!e the word ol God. ... ~ Tbat WU the view of ml!mbers of the Ji'lnt"" Bapttst:-Oturc.b of NeW(ilJrt Beacll who were trying ~ persuade city plamlnf oiltnllllssloners to i)lprOve a 200-lquare-f~t alsn 'for the aide of their Newport Heights building. The sign would read "Pralle Ye The Lord." Commlssionen \D"lanlmously refused Jhe request, however, polntlna: oot that rnoVle D\lf1lUttl are allowed because they att iTI 1 commercial area while > the church is in a residential zone. "The ntessage is immaterial," saitl Commissioner Joseph Rosener. •iThe point is, whether signs or any klnd should be allowed in that nrea." An attorney for the church said !ht decision would' be appealed to the City Council. The church is localed on the Newport Heights bluffs overlooking · Pacific CO.st Highway. Earlier this year the sign was up, and at that time'tt \\'a.5 clearly visible from the Manners Mile se1.11on or Paclrtc Coast Higl!way. The city forced Its removal. bowe.ver. becail,. the church had neglect«! to seek city approval for_ it. Dr. Francis Williams. a member or the congregation, complained to com- miSSloners that ·fieedom of speed\ was "allowed to Pla~boy t.1agazine in drug storea but not to the church when it tries to do its y.·ork. '' Ile said 'the sign oould not be offensive to surroundlhg neighbors, sinCe ·11 was vl~bie moinly from the highway and not from the neighliorbood.-· - ttowever, commissioners said they didn't want to set the precedent or allowing 1ign! oo bh.1ff residenUal pro~ ertl,. overlooking the highway. "'Ille next sign we got ~Id be entirely different from the one thjs <!hurch wan ta,.. said Commissioner wunam Haiewinket. In the end. commissioners added t\\'O major conditions to the proposed project. which still m~t be .....reviewed by the city council: -The lr"ine Company has proposed to provide aboot 2.75 parking-spaces iier dwellipg unit. The commission In· slsted on three spaces per wiit. . -The j>roject pro\1ldes four swimming pools for Its 156 proposed units, plus" access to the 150-acre Big Canyon golf course. The commission voted to require removal of enollgh units to make way for an additional three quarters of an acre of recreation space. "The buildings are .being pushed In there too tight. In my opinion," said Chalnnan Will iam Agee. ~lary Cassatt Is the btst known American woman artist oL the_ 19th Century. Staff writer Candact Pear1011 look.1 at Ca. .satt's lift and work in· terms of the woman's movtmen& in to-da~'s \Veektnd<r. Al Y1111r llf"'fl<I I Mnlff tt. .. tt ... ._ 11 MllfV• ..... t I.. M-l ttC t 1t1t._.. Nftn~._....__ Cltli.r.11 1 °"'" .. Ceffty I CleulHM 2f-l4 ll:M11W.... HoM C-ltl 71 IYl'fl• P"'9W t , (l'lllWVf ,, '""' -, .. l, Dtattl "'llcW I lttc:ll Ml,_. 1•11 ·1•1w1tt '''' ' T1tit'rilllll , n "IMIMI t •11· TllM,_.. U1 tf, JI llllf" fM ll:ICWf I ........ • ~ 11 ·--·· ,..... 1).1J A"lll ,LeMtrt lJ Wlf"llll Mewa t. 1' Mi nta ' WMIL..._ 1141 --~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~-~-.:--~.-;.~~~~~~~~~-f..:--~-.~~~~··~~~~·o.....li~J,-~~-~~~.~~~~-J~· ~·. .-~~~~~~ -----.. .. ·-----• . , • • ----- ' ... .-1LUI H Deadfu1 e Passes-No Nixon Tap es BULLETIN Acting from the Westem While 1Joase In San Clemente late today, President Nixon flied a letter "'itb the Staate W1Cf.11ale Commlli.te l•respec:Uully re· fuln1 &o &am over tapes and doc. meats 1ubpoenaed by lnvesUgatora. The Ptesldent cited the separation ol powers between executive, leg!slati\'t and judl· clal branches. • WASIUNGTON (APl -Tbe deadline , passed and, as expected , no . truckload of White Ho--tapes and documents was delivered today to the Senate Watergate committee. There wasn't even any word of re- jection to the committee's three sul>- poenas for hundreds of items from the White House vaults u the 7 a.m. PST time limit went by. They demandtd tapes of 481 president· ial conversations, and hundreds or documents including those relating to the milk fund case, the Watergate break· irn. and coverup and executive clemency offered to Watergate principals. . One section of the subpoenas asks materials bearing on "any relationship between F. Donald Nixon" of Newport Beach and 44 individuals and 21 cor· porations. Donald Nixon is t h e President's brother. The refusal to comply had been ex- pected and the 'committee already has plans to accelerate a decision in U.~. District Court on an attempt to put teeth into its subpoenas. Chief counsel Samuel Dash and White Hou.5e lawyer J. Fred Buzhardt met Thursday with U.S. District Judge John J . Sirica and scheduled resumption of arguments in a previous suit. That action, involving only five tapes and some papers, will have a bearing on the newer and far more extelllive demand for materials. According to the plan, the committee will amend Its complaint l\.1onday and file it with the court The White House then will have 10 days to respond . James T. Ogle, Coast Pioneer, Last Rites Held '.Funeral services were held today for pioneer Orange Coast resident James T. Ogle, of HunUngton Be'.ach, for whose family Ogle Street in Costa Mesi was named. lfe came to the Harbor Area com- munity in 1926 and had lived in Costa Mesa fOf most of that time before moving to 20592 Goshawk Lane, Hun- tington Beach. ' During his career on the Orange Coast~ ~fr. Ogl e. who was 74, operated both the Balboa Cleaners and the Harbor ' , , Laundry and Cleaners. He and his· wife, Dorothy, were recently honored on their 51st wedding anniversary. He had been a member of the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club and a deacon of the First Christian Church or Santa Ana, according to relatives. Survivors of Mr. Ogle include a son, Robert, of Costa 1'.fesa, daughters Mrs. Betty Jo Laurin , wife of Newport Beach Police Lt. Ernest Laurin, another daughter, Doris Mae , of Weavervtlle, Calif., a brother Joseph Ogle, of Santa Ana, plus eighl grandchildren. During the time the Ogles lived in Costa Mesa near the intersection of Orange Avenue and 17th Street, .the short thoroughfare near their homes was built and named Ogle Street. A total of four different individuals or Ogle families occupied residence on that street, according to P.irs. Laurin. Funeral services scheduled today \\'ere under . direction of 1'.1elrose Abbey Mausoleum in Santa Ana. 01.ANGI COAST M DAILY PILOT Thf .Or1 .... CM1t OAILY PILOT, wLlll wtlldl I• Cqmblnt<I ltlt Htw1·Prt11, II wttllllled tty llW Or1ng1 Col•t Pllllll1h!119 ComJ11ny. ~tPI· rtlt edlt0!~1 1r. pUttlllMcl, M°"41'1' lll•OllQh f rldty, tor COlll MUI, N~ 81K11, H1111ll119t11n lllKll/fwnt1 1ft V1l11y, L10..n1 8eec.h, 1,...1 ... 1s1<1111e1M1ck Miii Sin Cftmt!l!t/ S111 J~1n C.pll1r-A 1lnglt rqlorwl Miiiion II pvbll1Nd '9111Nf.,, Incl Sullll1y1. Thi prlnc~I M l!ll'llf>I pllnl II II J.JD Wtll .. 1 sntct, Cn t1 Mut, c.11.1ornl1, t2'26. Rob11t N. W11d Prftkfllnt Incl PlltllltMr J1cll R. C~rl1y \/let Prttlcl111! Incl GMll'll ~l'llfft' Thorn11 IC11•il Et !IW Tliorn11 A. M11•p~in1 Mttlaflffll Etlior I.. P1t1r ICrltt N--1 lffel'I Clly EdHw ""',... .... Office JJJJ N1wpori l111l1w1rd #111lllnt A4dr11t 1 1'.0 . lo• 1115, tJ66J °""' ~ (otlt fll\t'H l :UO Wnl .. .,. Strftl ~ 1 .. c111 m ,_, "-HU!ltll'lflllll lttcl'I: 119'1 lttCll MIM'HN &ell (;1tm1ni.1 .S Nfl'f!I I I (.tf!!lnll lt•I Tllcpl111 f7 14J M2-42Jt Cl•llW Aihetf~ .. '4l·ll7t Clrfl'ltfll, 1m Or•• '°'" '-!lt111"' ~. JN ntWt ''°''"· 11hn""'°"'• ... ~ -• ., ei1vt111~"'*'n P1tt1111 ,.., • ~ wlll'IOul l!IKlll ..,. m..,,• "' *"""""' ......,. J..cw,I dNI ... ,... Niii t i C•ll MljM, e:.fl..,...11. ...-U""""" IW urrltr llM ~I W M91 U.IJ n1111111"1 lllllfff!Y _.,..,_ .... INM!llt, )~----,_ Frlda1, January 4, 1974 • Jloves So11th Snow Continues ln SF Bay Are:i SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The rilatn thrust of a blustery winter storm moved south toda~. but the 'A'eather service said cold te1nperatures and possible snow showers would continue ln the B:aY Area. At least one person was dead as a d Ire c t result of the storm. ?.!rs. Barbara Knlte died aft er a tr ee fell on her and buried her in snow in the Santa Cruz P.fountains niursday. increasing clouds and a chance or more snow. Despite the cold, rnolorists pocked to Mount Tan1olpal1 In Marin Count~·· Ranger!I hod only moderate success 1.n keeping them off the slopes wh~rc they played In the snow. Road conditions beca me so hazardous In the East Bay that Oak land ~l!cc set up a tasi syste:n1 for people livi ng above a certain area. New Police Bt1lldi11.g Efforts by rescue crews to get to th~ scene were hampered because of heavy: snow on -Hlghway 17 near Los Gatos, where more than 150 cars were stalled. Residents were asked to park their cars at designated lots and then police drove them to their homes. Guards were pos ted to watch the parked autos. port Center in the background. Police hope to move into tbeir new facility by next fall. Taking sh·ape at Jamboree Road and Santa Barbara Drive is Newport Beach's new police facility. That's the city's newest fire station on the right and Ne'''· ..--''---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. Metorolog ist Clyde Holmes of the Na- tional Weather Service said the snow storm· "'as a freak of nature . • • r ••' About 160 students and 11 teachers at the Valley Christian Church School near Saratoga were snowed tn and spent the night at the school which was without power due to failu re. Coast College Counselor's . Death Probed Orange County Coroner's invesUgalors today were studying autopsy reports in an attempt to determine the cause of death of a )•oung military veteran's counselor wM worked for the Coast Community College District. No apparent reason has been developed for the death of Thomas A. Hamilton Jr., 28, who lived at 3139 Sumatra Drive, Costa Mesa, along with two roommates. He had just left to return to the University of Kentucky to obtain a master 's degree when he was stricken Wednesday @nd entered A n a If e i m Memorial Hospital. . Some type o( lllness, or complication of flu which is rampant along the Orange Coast this winter, is blamed for Hamilton's death but investiga tors have not detennined just what. No suspicious circumstances were discovered, according to c o r o n e r ' s deputies. He· bad complained !hat he felt sick and Was coming down with Intestinal flu the day before New Year's. according to Jim Carson. director of the college district's veterans affairs office. •(He said he was sick when he went into the hospital and told the nurse he was going to die," remarked a spokesman for Bell Broadway 1'.1ortuary in Costa Mesa. "And he did." A veteran of the U.S. Air Force, Mr. Hamilton had been employed by the Coast Conunlll\ity College District since September and had the tltle o( outreach coordinator. His duties Included helping young veterans find jobs and counseling them about educational opportunities \\'ithin the Harbor Area. No local rites are planned but services and intennent are schedu!OO in I..Exing- ton, Ky., where his parents, f\.lr. and Alrs. Thomas A. Hamilton Sr., live. Bell · Broadwa y 1'.!ortuary is the fonvarding funeral director. From Pagel INN PROBE. • • acairdlng to UPI. The most widely reported visi t to the Newporter involved 'Martha f\.fitchell and her husband John, who was then manager of President Nixon's re~leetion campaign. They reportedly were guests at the Newportcr on June 17, 1972, when the break-in occurred at the Democratic headquarters at the \\1atergate complex: in Washington. Mitchell flew back to Washington a day or so later, leaving his· wife "'ith their daughter, l\1arty, 12; his secretary, Lee Jablonski, and a bodyguard , Steve King. During the week that followed, ~frs. P.UtcheU claims she was •·manhandled" and told reporters "they stuck a needle in my behind." The wife of the former attorney general also claims t h e telephone of her villa was ripped from the wall while she was talking long distance to UPI reporter Helen Thomas. At that time, she told Miss Thoma's that she had given her husband "an ultimatum" to quit the campaign or she would leave him . She made that announcement when she was asked what she thought of the burglary and bugging of the Watergate. Mrs. Mitchell has said that while she was at the Newporter, she could not get her calls through the switchboard and was kept in seclusion. l\.1itchell subsequently resigned as Nill'.· on 's campaign manager. But he re~ mained in touch with the President as a political ad viser during the campaign, according to Mrs. Mitchell. Atthough Mrs: Mitchell wanted to testify before the ·Senate Watergate hear· in gs, the committee did not c.all her. The Mltchells separated 1 .. t Sep- tember as a result of Water.gate related problems which interfered with their rnarrtage. Both are now living In New York and Mra. Mltohell currently ls worldtig on her memoirs. Fire Kill s Wo111a n .• SAN DIEGO CAP) -A ni cl I• Annbrister, 81 , was burned to death In t?M! living room of htr hoine, the San Ditgo county coroner'• office said Thursday. Fir• official• said the woman was sleeping on the floor near a fUlnlce ~'hen her blanket caught fire. ' , .. Work Crisis U1iemploy1ne1it Rate on. Increase WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate moved up-from 4.7 percent to 4.9 percent of the work force in December marking the second consecutive mo nthly increase since the begin· ning of the energy crisis, the government reported today. The increase apparently "".as due to the general slowdown of the economy but analysts for the Bureau of Labor Statistics said they lac ked complete information to determine the effect of the fuel shortage on the jobless rate. Administration officials· said previously the impact would be felt in December and even more sharply during the first three months of 1974. According to the report, the number of people out of work in· creased by 17,00~!ast month to a total of 4.4 million. This follow<d an increase of 200,000 in November. . President Nixon's chief econom.Jc adviser, Herbert Stein, bas forecast a jobless rate reaching about 6 percent later this year. Dayan Meeting IGssinger . Amid Repo1~t of Pullha4 From \Vlre Sen •Jces \\' ASHfNGTON -Israeli defense minister Moshe Dayan called today on Secretary of State Henry 'Kissinger amid report$ that Israel is ready to pull troops far hick tram the Suez Canal provided (1) the waterway is reopened lo shipping and (2) there is a "thinning out" of Egyptian forces on the east bank. "Nice to see you, you look marvelous,'' Kissinger exclaimed as Dayan strode into his seventh floor office at the St81e Department for a 21ti-hour meeting described by officials as "a significant and very important one." Israel reported two of its soldiers wound- ed in more fighting today. The military command in Tel Aviv said the Egyptians opened up with tank, artillery. mortar and antitank rockets north of Suez City and at tbe southem end of the canal. In cease-fire violations Wednesday . Israel repor.ted three of its soldiers killed and 10 wounded _;_ the inost casualties sinCe the truce took effect. "The war In fact Is &tUI going on," an Israeli official said ih Geneva as Gens. Taha) El Magdoob of Egypt al'HI 1'.1ordecaJ, Gur of Israel began their fourth round of talks. In the Oakland hills. commuters who couldn'l get home Thursday evening because of Snow on the roads were given refuge in a e h u r c h and then taken home by police cars. nie mercury reached a low or 38' in downtown San Francisco and was in the high 20s and low 30s in many nearby areas. During the night !he rain and. sno\v . slopped in the move southward and skies began to clear in Northern California. The weather service "'amed, however, lbal another storm was headed down from the Arctic and would bring Carl E. Troy, • Ne,vport · Beacl1 Executive, Dies Funeral services will be held SWlday in New York for laundry executive Carl E. Troy who died Thursday in Newport Beach. fltr. Troy and his "'ife, Josephin e, have spent the past five winters in their home at 31 Linda Isle, Newport Beach. The 67·year~ld buslneMman was chalrman or the board of directors of Cascade Laundries, described b y members of the Orm as the world's largest .J4undry oPeralion. He wu a1so chairman of the board of the Martin. Lin~ Supply Co. of San Antonio , Texas. ?<.tr. Troy leaves his widow; a son. William B. Troy; a daughter, Mrs. Morton Schiffer : sisters, Gertrude Siff and Eleanor Slden; a brotlle r. William Troy and five grandchlldre n, all of New York. He said the mechanism that brought the storm from the frozen shores of Alaska was a rare high altitude, fast moving bubble of air called a "cold lo\v aloft." The steady rain s and gusty winds forced postponement of Thursday's scheduled open round of the Bing Crosby pro-am at Pebble Beach . tn Sonon1a County. l'A'O feet of snow closed Highway 128 between Cloverdale and Booneville. llighway 101 closed for a lime north of Cloverdale and motorists were required to use chains. Fro111 P1141e l STORM ... i.Mued mounlaln snow warnings and call· ed for wind and rainy ski~ over the Los Angeles basin through Saturday. The weather service said successive cold fronts will keep Sauthern California in an Icy grip through the rest or the week, with temperatures near freez· ing in some inla.Od areas, but with "·armer \Vcather due again ·by Sunday afternoon . Highs in the Orange Coast area are expected to remain in the upper 40s today and Saturday.• Overnight lows should dip into the low 40s. Sheriff's deputies reported snow and hail covering the 2.28-t-foot Castro Peak north'A'est of 111a!ibu and a three-inch deep blanket of snow on roads through the Angeles National forest. The cold spell, '11.'hich sent the mercury plunging to a :Ow of 6 degrees In Big Bear, 17 degrees In Bakersfield. 26 degrees in El Centro, '1:1 degrees in Needles, 30 degrees in Riverside and 28 degrees in San Bernardino, forced citrus growers to tum on smudge pots and other heating equipment sooner than expected -and right in the midst of a worsening fuel crisis in Southern California and lhe rest of the nation. Afterward, Dayan was due at the Pentagon to bid for jets, antitank nlissiles and other sophiticated weapons. U.S. officials are convinced that enough of his requests will be met evenbJally so that Israel's forces are upgraded. above pre-October war levels. WINTER SALE •• ''BIGGEST EVER'' George S. Vest, the State Department spokesman, discounted reports that Dayan was here to offer a unilateral concesSion. Vest said he would "find It hard to conceive of either side" doing such a thing. But he did not rule out an Israeli "'ilhdrawal tied to a concession later by Egypt as the Geneva peace process moves forward. Dayan's, visit could mark a turning point in the Geneva negotiations from generally conceptual discussions to con- crete give-and..otake. "It has always bee'1 understood that I afler the Israeli elections the talks-might accelerate," Kissinger told a news con- ference Thursday in San Clemente. The secretary flew to Washington Thursday night, arrivlng on a com- mercial jet a few hours before Dayan came in on an overseas flight. 1'.feanwhile. Egyptian and I s r a e I I generals met for the fourth time in Geneva today on separating their armies along the tense Suez Canal front, where cease-fire violations are ao rampant one Israeli official said the war is still golng on. Despite pessimistic reports from both Geneva and Tel Aviv, however, U.N. circles in Cairo said they expect an agreemenl within a week to 10 days on troop disengagements in the Suez area. Firefigh ts have been s t e a d 11 Y escalaling along the cease-fire lines and Fro111P-.,rJ DOSTAL ... He ls married and bas thrte child,... There ls one announced ~ldate to blm Hu b R. "Rod" MurchllOll ::"::da 181e.-~t Murcl!lson say1 he may pull oul of th• race be<auae of the newfmanclal disclosure law. lli5lric1 4. incliidea moil . of the Westcllf! and Upper Newport Bay 1 re . .idcntlal areas, Linda Isle, '8a)'lld• vui.ge _Baycmt, Dover ·Shoreo and Beacon Bay.--' -The !ourth-lneumbenl dly coundlman whose term expires Jn April, Richard Croul In DiJtrlct 8, hu not declared •• SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL · HER ITAGE· HENREDON . AND MORE •.. ON SALE NOW ! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WOODMARK CHAIRS AT SALE PRICES. WOODMARK FEATURES: * LUXURIOUS 25 '/. DOWN & 75 '/. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC *EIGHT WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED .. HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH , MUCH, MORE * A TED 1 von HEMERT EXCLUSIV; ••. ON DISPLAY NOW FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM • •• AND AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS. DREXEt-HERtTAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARk-KARAS"1AN • INTERIORS WlllCDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to l 1JO PRIDAY-'TIL t :OO NEWPORl BEACH e 1721 WESTC:LIF) D•.. l•2·20SO LAGUN" BEACH e 14$ NORTH COAST HWY. 494-6151 TORRANCE e ~1649 HAW1t10RNE llVD. IOp•" Sund•y 12•!1tJOJ l-.: 127 9 hla inteotlons, although .he Is not ex· 1.--------"'-------"-----------------------pected to seek re-election1 • .. -----------. ·-.. • \ I I I I • .. ~· ·oran•'e .Coast e EDITION Today's Final. N.Y . St ocks \ VOL. 67, NO. 4, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNI A FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1974 c TEN CENTS More Wet, Wind Expected Along Orange Coast By STEVE MITCHELL 01 111•-DtH~ Pltol s1,u ShivCring Orange Coast residents can prepare for n1ore of the same Saturday, according to wealher foreca sters in Los Angeles. A low pressure system located 200 miles off the Southern CalifQrnia ®ast is. stubbornly holding on to its present position, sending out waves of extremely cold, moist unstable air over the Southland. Weather service specialist Dick Stilt says the stationary weather front is packing \\'ind gusts of up to 30 knots along the Orange Coast and 62 knot gLL'>ls in t.he Newhdll area. Small craft advisories are expected 'to remain in effect through the weekend. "The low pressure system is just sitting out there,. at the present time. and it looks like it plans to stay in the same position at le,ast through Satur- day morning," Stitt reported. "By the time, the storm leaves it should have dumped nearly an inch of rp..in in the Southern California area." he said. Snow and mudslide~...<:losed some nigh· \Vays in Southern California, stranded at least 250 motorists, authorities said. The California Highway Patrol s:.id about 200 motorists were stranded on tile Interstate 5 "Grapevine " rou te be- tween Castaic and the Los Ang&les Basin. Between 40 and 50 cars were trapped bet\veen mud slides along Topanga Can- yon Boulevard near Woodland }fil ls, a I.cs Angeles su burban area. The higt,· ~·ay patrol reported there \\'ere about 60 persons in the cars. Some of the motorists were helped out on foot , "'hile others remained as road crews cleared the mud ahead or their stranded autos. ' "They should have brought their lunches," a 11igtnvay patrolman said. Chances are good the storm will move into Nev!!da before Saturd ay . afternoon, but the National \Veather Service today issued mountain sno\v warnings and ca ll· ed for wiqd and rainy skies over the Los Angeles basin thr9ugh Saturday. The weather service said successive cold fronts will keep Sauthern Californi a in an icy grip through the rest of the week, with temperatures near freez· ing in some inland areas, but with \varmer weather due again by Sunday afternoon. · Highs in the Orange Coast area" are expected to remain m the upper 40s today and Saturday. Overnight lows should dip into the low 40s. Sheriffs deputies reported snow and hail covering the 2,284-foot Castro Peak north\vest of Ma:ibu and a three-inch . deep blanket of snow on roads through the Angeles National Forest. The cold spell . which sent the mercury plunging to a :ow of 6 degrees in Big Bear, 17 degrees in Bakersfield, 26 (See STORM, Page ZI Newporter Probe Records Studied in Watergate Case By JOHN ZALLER 01 Ille Oell~ f'llot St11f A Newport Beach source disclosed Thursday that tbe U.S. Department ·or , Justice has subpoenaed records fro,m the Ne wporter Inn in Newport Beach headqua rters at the \Vatergate complex in \\'ashing:on. attorney general also claims t h e telephone of h:r villa was ripped from the \val! while she was ta lking long - distance to UPI reporter Helen Thomas. -.that may shed light on the Watergate Mitchell flew back to \Vashingt on a day or so later, leaving his wife with their daughter, l\1arty, 12; his secretary, Lee Jablonski , and a bodyguard, Steve King. During the week that followed, Mrs. At that lime, she told Miss Thomas that she had given her husband "an ultimatum" to quit the campaign or she would leave him. She made that announcement when She was asked what she thought of the burglary and bugging affair. · The source also confirmed reports by United Pi-ess International in Washington that investigators from the Senate \\'atergate Committee have scoured records of the Newport luxury hotel. · The highly reliable SOl!rce indicated Mitchell claims she \Vas "manhandled" an d told reporters "they stuck a needle in my behind." The wife of the former 'V•S. Wasteftil' (See INN PROBE, Page%) he has first·hand knowledge of the sµb-s • s E p• h ~~~~gement of the Newporter Inn. 1mon -ays nergy Inc . however, declined either to CQnfirm or deny reports of the subpoenas. "\Ve believe we have an obHgalion M• h L 10 15 y N iglat Ligfils to respect the priyacy or our guests." ___ 1g_ L ast . . . ears said a spokesman for the hotel. ~ __ _ --:--'" °'!~1i.i-s1&1~ "....., ____ ~-J,n:vesU~Ml&l appeartifli cen~ · . .. iii .''" on the hotel s guest list -and billing , Advcftisi ng billboards .glow in the night along New-PubLic Utilities Comn1i ssion (PUC) has ordered a porl Boulevard in C9sta 1'1esa. They have been un· billboard blackout after g p.m. each day. The order touched so far by the energy crisis. but Che state wili take effect later this month. • ~~~~~·~~~~~-~~~~~~ Nixon Refu se s Panel's ~counts, according . lo the Newpor t Beach source-8nd-t0 UPI . ...., - During the 1972 presidential campaign, White House officials -lnc1udl0g At· tomey General John Mitchell and presidential counselor John Dean -have been reliably reported to have stayed at the ..Newporter. In addition, sworn testimony before the Seilate Watergate Comriiittee has indicated that Watergate.related activity 1 especiaJly during the so-called coverup phase, took place at the Newporter. , • Eiom Wire Services WASHINGTON -Energy Director· William E. Simon said today the U!litl!d State, is faced with an energy drought lasting 10-to 15 years. Nor will the shortage be greatly eased when the Arab oil embargo is lifted. ~imon S3id in an iajervi~w lvith fJ_nited Press International. "We have been a nation of energy wastrels, and this day is over because the day of cheap energy is oyer," he said. decided against seeking Saturday elos-- ings of gasoline stations as a way .to cut fuel consumpton, further. "It is definitely out," an energy office spokesman said Thursday. "Saturday closings would just wreck recreation outlets in the country, and it's a big business.'' Simon had said a week ago that the Sa turday-closing move was under con· sideration. Now, he feels the measure is not needed to deal with the gasolin~ shortage. Coro11e r P r obes Deatl1 of Young College Counselor Orange County Coroner's in vestigators today were studying autopsy repofts in an attempt to determine the cause of death of a young military Veteran·s .counselor who -worked for the Coast Community College District. Subpoena for Reco~ds BULLETIN Aeling from the Western '\'bite House !n San Clemente lale loday, Preside nt Nixon filed a Jetter With the Senate \Vatergate Committee '"respectruuy-re- fusing to tum over tapes and docu- ments subpoenaed by investigators. The President Cited the separation of powers between exec utive, legislative and judi- clal branches. / passed and. as expected. no ·trucl<lo'ad o[ White House tapes and documents \\'as delivered today to the Senate \\latergate committee. The investigation by the Watergate Committee staff and the special pros- ecutor 's office of the Justice Depart· ment appeared to be an attempt to corroborate that testimony. according to the Newport Beach source and to UPI. . UPI also reported that -S e n a t e Watergate staff members bad conducted interviews of Newporter employes in an effort to verify testimony of former He predicted that the energy crisis wou ld end only when the United States developed new sources of oil and sources of power such as solar and geothermal power -"and that is 10 to 15 years in the future ." . A-1ean\\'hile, the Federal Energy Office * * * Gas Limit Irks The energy office has already asked the nation 's 225,000 gasoline stations to close on Sundays to discourage con-- sumption. A high percentage have com· plied. Simon said the Sunday-closing re-1 quest will become mandatory if be gets the power from· Congress. --- No apparent reaso n has been developed fo r the death of Thomas A. llamilton Jr., 28. ~1ho lived at 3139 Sumatra Drive, Costa T\Iesa. along with two roommates. He had just left to return to the University of Kentucky to obtain a n1aster's degree \\•hen he was stricken Wednesday and entered A n ah c i m T\lemorial Hospital. Some type of illness, or complica tion of flu which is ra1npant along the Orange Coast this ,.,.inter. is blamed for Hamilton·s death but investigators have not determined just what. No sus picious circumstances were discovered, according to c o r o n e r ' s deputies. He had complained that he felt sick and was coming down with intesUnal flu the da y before New. Year's, according to Jim Carson_, director of the coll ege district's veterans affairs office. "He said he .,. .. as sick when he went into the hospital and told-the nurse he \Yas going ·to die," remar~ed a spokesman for Bell Broadway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. !'And he did ." A veteran of lhe U.S. Air Force. Mr. Hamilton had been employed by the Coast Community College District since September and had the title or ouJrcacb coor~1nator. _ , --His-duties-lncluded___hclpUJg_yj)ung veterans find jobs and counseling them about educational opportunities . within the Harbor Area .. HHH EN TERS < \VASHINGTON (APl -The dC'adline James T . Ogle·, Coast Pioneer , Last Rites Hel(l Funeral services were held today for pioneer Orange COast resident James T. Ogle, or Hunfingtor;i Beach, for whose family Ogle Street in Costa Mesa was named. ~ tie came to the Harbor Area com· n1unity in 1926 and had lived in Costa MeSa for most of that time before moving to 20592 Goshawk Lane, HWl· tlngton Beach. During his carerr on the Orange Coast. Mr. Ogle, \\'ho was 74, operated both the Balboa Cleaners and the Harbor Laundry and Cleaners. tie and his wife, Dorothy, 'vere -recently honored on their·-51st wedding anniversary-. - -He had been ·a111embCr of the Newport Harbor KlwaniS C!Ull and a deacon of the Fi rst Christian Church or Santa Ana, accordlng to relatives. Survivors of Mr. Ogle include a son, Robert, of Costa Mesa, daughters Mrs. Betty Jo Laurin, \vile of Newport Beach NAVY HosplT AL Police Lt.__ Ernest Laurin, another ' .. daughter, Doris Mae, of Weaverville, WASHJ NGTON (UPI _ Sen. Hubert Calif., a brother Joseph Ogle, o[ Santa H. Humphrey (D-Minn.), e n t et e d Ana, Plus eight grandchi10feh. r During the time th e Ogles lived In There wasn't even any word of re- jectio1.1 to the committee's three sub- poe nas tor hundreds of items from the \Vhitc House vaults as the 7 a.111. PST time limit went by. They de1nandtd tapes of 481 presideot· ial conversa tions. and hundreds of documents including those relating to !he 1nilk fund case. the Waie~ate brea k- inl!. and coverup and executive cleinency orrered to Watergate princip als. One section of the subpoenas asks mate rials beafing on "any relationship between F. Donald Nixon" of Newport Beach and 44 ind ividuals and 21 cor· porations. Donald Nixon is t h e President's brother. The refusal to comply had been ex· pected and the con1mittee already has plans to accelerate a decision in U.S. District Court Qn an attempt to put teeth into its subpoenas. White House officials. However the Newport Beach source said he had no knowledge of any such interviews. It was learned a few months ago that Watergate investigators made a similar inquiry into ail the records of the San Clemente Inn near the Wes tern \Vhite House where many of Nixon's key aides stay. They also looked tor names of members of the Howard Hughes Corp. and other possible cam- paign contributors · on the guest list, according to UPI. The most widely reported visit to the Newporter involved h-1artba A1itchell and her )lusband John, who was then n1anager of President Nixon 's re-election campaign. They reportedly were guests at the ~wPorter on June 17, '1972, when the oreu·in occurred at the Democratic - Case Closed Statio1i O·wner 111 Costa Mesa "That guy Simon says the oil com- panies speak for us. I can tell you nobody's talked to us. The oil co_mpan ies don ·1 run our businesses." Thus did P~il Evans, a Costa Mesa sen•ice station owner, angrily diagree today with the statement by energy chief Will iam Simon that oil companies and independent distributors have agreed to set a 10 gallon per customer gasoline limit. Evans is the chairman or the service station and garage committee of the Costa Mesa Chamber or Commerce representing the 77 gas stations and 115 garages in the city. He-said he and the other station o~'nel'S are upse t because the major oil .,companies apparently agreed to the l~gallon limit 'i;rithout consulting the gas station O\vners. I Off ;ce.r F;·rids M:ss:n g Casli "If th• government wont• rationing, ., ., ., " why don't they just do it? This way, the customers get mad at us,'' Evan s _ Newpo rt lleat lr Police Offiter Mark Johnston has enaeared him· noted. . seTf fore-Ver tOLldo Isle resident Tom Quinn, -·•-N'ObOdy rrom Che big &mpanies or Q · lk ct ct t h ba k Th d d h 1 f h the government has asked us around u1nn wa e own o t e n urs ay an as e e t t e here. We're able to speak for ourselves house, he stuck a roll or bills -totalling $330 -in his shirt pocket. if "'e're jusl asked and we haven 't been asked ." "I NEVER DO THAT," he said, "but J just didn't think." Evans, who's been in business In Costa Anyway, when Quinn .got back home, the money was missil1g. Mesa for nine years, noted that he 's "I tore the house apart looking for it," he said. "And I called cut his hours of operation and tried the bank and they couldn't find it." to •institute a rationing system on his He said he called police and.oflicer Johnston tame lo.his ~ouse. own. "But you know the customers don't -"HE AS KE D ME ·at lot of questions and ·even \va:nted lo see my gt! mad at you when you have to driver's license/' Quinn said. tell them you're out of gas. Jt's "'hen As for the government's conservation moves, Simon said after . a news con· ference Thursday : "We feel we've got everything in place necessary to lick this problem." During the news conference, he and other energy officials said the response frOm the public on government con- servation measures has given new hope that gasoline rationing can be avoided. A high energy official said later, however, that the key test will come this month as gasoline production is cut. Simon said major oil rompanies agreed to encourage the voluntary !~gallon-per· customer limit on service stations aales. Company~wned stations will enforce that limit, he said. Orpge C::.ut • Weather Look for continued showers and cold winds through most of Sat.. urday, with a chance of clearing by Sunday, according to the \\'eather service. The Orange Coast V.'On'.t_gtf._above..50 degn:es_Sityr • day and lows will dip into the low •Os. . INSmE TODAY -Mory Cas~att . is the btst known American woma·n:arti1t of the 19th Century. Srofl writer Candoct Pearson--lookt at Cas· satt's life 011d tcork in term.$ of tht wo1nan's m6Vtmtnt :tn to- 'day's 'Veekntder. .. r I ' ''Then he asked som~ more quesllons and finall)UlusketLme you tell them ·ou can only give them what denominations the bills were • .! told him they were three $100 solnany galliins !hat tlley get ups6t bills, a $20 and.a $10," Quinn sldd. ~ • ' witb you. ' Beffiesda Naval Hospital TOOay a tcr Costa Mesa near the inlersection or complaining of a sto mach upset for Orange-A'f'!nue and 17th Street, the seve~al days. short thoroughfare near their homes was A . spokesm~n said the f?rmer vice built and named Ogle Street. Al Vwr Slt¥k • ' •••llllf • IP L:-M.-l l'YI t C1\1Wfll1 f c,........ tt.U t- i president ent.cred t~e hospital at th e A total ot four dlfferept individuals tecommendahon or his doctors and .woUld. or--Ogie families oceupied resi~ on ~der_ao tests. ... , ' that street, according to Mrs. Laurin. "'M'lcrc was no lndlcabOlf""fiow -lon g ~ Funeral senices scheduled today were Humphrey would remain In the h0$pital . ,t under direction of Mtlro.-Abbey ------'--~--~-~~ Mausoleum in S8pta ~na. ,"I t ~ ' I • ----- "l[ that's what the government wants, :'.WE tL, H.E ;JUST reached into his pocket and pulled.them out. lino. Let them be the one that the lie told me he'd found lhem lb tfie gutter." ' ~ ~~e;:~::.:::m~r'~:'8chcdw· "!!'really makes yo-u-reet. gOOil to'.'know.\hal we've got that kina ,_ ed a meeting on-t he problem a\ the (Hlk• ,, Crt .. -f !7 DMltl .... le" I .. , ... , .. ~"'" ' Pit1IM'e t•11 fllr 91141 atUrt .I M1r1tc'" 1J A1111 l l lltett 11 ... _ . o( policemen in our city," ,Quiiln.said. t · end of Q'le month with a r,epr~tative '---------------=·'-·--....:..--------' of the Cost or Uvlng Council. • '--------------' • ·---.... ---·--.. ~-·· -, -. -. I ·-- •• • '· - t· • ' • I I ... • _2 U~ILY PILO T c; Frldly, JJn111ry 4, 1974 ---~ ------ - UPI Teltpllo!O IC1J .ll'hiskers }larlan Shank surfaces from fri gid depths of Rock River in Roc k- ford, UL lie and four others braved 10-below weather to go water skiing Jan. 1. Work Crisis Uneniployment Rate 011 Increase WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate moved up from 4.7 .percent to 4.9 percent of the work force in Decembe_r n1arking the second consecutive monthly increase since the begin- ning of the energy crisis, the government reported today. Th e in crease apparentl y was due to the general slo,vdown of the economy but anal ysts for the Bureau of Labor Statistics said they lacked complete information to determine the effect of the fuel shortage on the jobless rate. Admin istration offi cia ls said previous1y the impact would be felt in December and even more sharply during the first three months of 1974. According to the report, the number of people out of work in· creased by l 7 ,000 las t month to a total of 4.4 million. This followed an increase of 200,000 in November. President Nixon's chief economic advi ser, Herbert Stein; has fo recast a jobless rate reaching about 6 ,percent later this year. Dayan Meeting l\.i 8rsii1geri Amid Report of Pullback From \Vlre ServiCes \VASHlNGTON · -Israeli defense minister 1toshe Dayan call,,.>d today on Secretary of State Henry Kissinger amid reports that Israel is ready to pull troops (ar back from the Suez CMal provided (I) the waterwa y is reopened to shipping and (2) !here is a "thinning out" of Egyptian forces oh the east bank. "Nice to see you, you look marvelous," Kiss inger exclaimed as Dayan strode into his seventh floor office at the State -. Department for a 21l.i·hour meeting described by officials as ''a significant and very i1nportant one." • AHerward, Dayan \lo'as due at the Pentagon to bid for jets, antitank missiles and other sophi ticated weapons. t.:.S. o(ficials are convinced that enough or his reques ts will be met eventually so that Israel's forces are upgraded OU.NII COAJT CM DAILY PILOT Tht Or111,1t (NH D"'ILY PILOT. WOii wtlldl i1 <omD!nlld IM Newl-Prn 1. it Plllllltlll!d 111 "'' 0r•"99 C.Otll P\llllltll'"9 Com1>11ny. Sf:?&· •~It 91!•1il>n1 l fl P<olllll)Md, MOtldtY lhl"IHIOll Frld1y, toi COiii Ml .. , N••POrl tl~1ch, HU<'lllntton BllCh/FounMln V1li.y, U9U111 1.-dl, 1rvlM1$-1"'9ek .nil. Sl !l C1ot .... nt1/ S111 J u111 (.fpJ11r1no. A 1lnttt •"8I011el , tCIUIOn II llUfi!llMd S.lunll'f'I 111d ~-1y1. T!>I prlrKIPll PVbllt/11119 plenl 11 I t 1)11 ~II It)' 51'"'• (ot11 M.w, C1!1'9r11l1, tMH, Rol>erl N. W11~ Pr11111ent 11111 PllOlli:P!tf Jeck R. Curit)' Viet P'ruodtnl .,... G!ner11 Ml!Mttf Thom11 Ktt•il [d<!Ot Th o"''' A. M..,rphlne M1,,_.,,,, i.0119' Cltorlo1 H. leot lticlt1'11 P. H•ll A1tl111~1 M-liriD' l:dlllln c .. tc 111 ... Office JJO W11t l1y Str11t M1111~1 Addnou :·,.o . l o•'l 560, t26Z6 ~°""" H..,,.,.t flOfcr.. lll) Nt"1>0<f eoui.v•rd l..•911'11 BN<r., m Fott11 _.......,,,,_ l'lwotinv'on •11tr. 1111J &ttCfl •~tevord Sill Cllmll\lt~ .. J Hell~ El C.mlM AMI ' , ........ 171•1 64Z-4JJI ~ A'-'tifet "111·1671 c...,,..... lt71, °''"'. (O.tt f'ulllltll .... <~"'· NO "''"' 1!9r'", Uhn rr411011J, -~ _,,., .,. ldv.,.l"-f'f lltf•lll _, -,_~ llrilho.I! wiwi.1 ,,.. ll'IUIM ltf '*"""""' ·-· ~ U.M -ltve H iii .. C..lt MIM, Celt""""lt" Mto-No111n •~ !t•rltr a.II -"'"'' 11¥ .... ll U.1! mt11"'"'1 "'llllMY ffitfNI... j\U """'"'IY. ----- above pre-October war levels. George S. Vest, the State Department spokesman, discounted reports that Dayan was here to offer a unila teral concession. Vest said he would "find it hard to conce ive of either side" doing such a thing. But he did not rule out an Israeli \lo'ithdrawal tied to a concession later by Egypt as the Geneva pea ce process n1oves forwa rd. Dayan's visit could mark a turning point in the Geneva negotiations from generall y conceptual discussions to con- crete glve·and-take. "It has al"'ays been undcnlood that a(ter the Israeli elections the talks might accelerate," Kissinger told a news con· ference Thursday in San Clemente. The secretary new to \Vashlngton Thursday night. arri ving on a com- mercial jet a few hours before Dayan came in -on an overseas flight. Meanwhile, Egyptian and I s r a e I i generals met for th e fourth time in Geneva today on separaling their armies along the tense Suez Canal Lront , where cease-fire violations are so rampant one Israeli official said the war is still going on. Despite pessimisu'c reports from both Geneva and Tel Aviv, however. U.N. circles in Cairo said they expect an agreement within a week to 10 days on troop disengagements in the Suez area. Firefi ghts have been stead 11 y escala ting along the cease-fire lines and Israel reported two of its soldiers wound· ed in more fighting today. Th e military command in Tel Aviv said fhe Egypflans opened up with lank, artillery, mortar and anti tan k rockets north of Suez City and at lhe southern end of the canaJ. Jn cease·fire viola tions Wednesday, Israel reported three oI its soldiers killed and 10 v.·00nded -the most casualtles since the truce took effect. "The war in [act · is ii till going on," an Israeli official sa~d Geneva as Gens. Taha! El Magdou ol Egypt and Mordo<a i <:fir o el began their fourth round of talks. Fi1·e Kills Won1an SAN nIEGO (.\I') -Ame Ii !1 Armbrister, 8t, was burned to deam in the living room of her home, the San Diego County coroner's olfice said Thursday. Fire officlal1 8aid the woman Wa! slee plnq on the floor near a furnace when ber blanket caught fire. I 'Mild~Flu ·To Mfect 5% of State SACl!AMENTO !AP) -A new form of influenza has appeared in Callfomla ahd will probably infect 5 to 10 percent of the state's more than 20 million residents, a state disease expert said toda y. Dr. Jam6 Chln said the nu Is a com paratively mild form called .Type B, v.·hich v.·as discovered in Aong Kong in Im. It bas made i~ first California appearance by striking a South San Francisco family. "Tiia: means there Is most likely quite a lot of infection throughout California due to this virus,'' said Chin, chief of the Department ol Health's lnfectiOU3 disease section. He said there have been a few cases of the virus being discove~ ln travelers relurning from Hong Kong, but that the South San Francisco cases are the first to hls knowledge I n v o 1 v i n g Ameri cans Ytho didn't travel to other countries. In 1968 California was struck with a Corm of virus commonly called "Hong Kong flu " because it was nrst Isola ted in Hong Kong. Chin sal4. He explained that this new form of "Hong Kong flu" bears no relation to the earlier variety except that they "·ere both first isolated in the same pince. The 1963-69 nu season was the worst in recent California his tory in tenns of absen teeism and deaths resulting from mnuenza and pneumonia, Chin reported. Last year was also a similar epidemic season but "we don't expect anything of that magnitude this season," he said. . ·The nu season typically rons from December to March. He said Type 8 viruses generally cause a milder illness with fewer com· plications and spread mor.e slowly than a stronger form of nu virus kn own as Type A. The 1968 fonn of Hong Kong fl u was Type A. Anyone who comes down with flu this year should take tbe agMld remedies of resting .in bed, drinking large amounts of fluids and using aspirin to control fever, Chin advised . He said flu symptoms to look for include fever, body aches, a dry cough and headache. An estimated 700,000 doses of im~ munization ftJr the new flu virus have been sent to California but nearly all bave been used, Chin said. Long Beach State Mein Sex Victim The victim or what investigators describe as lhe seventh in a chain of homosexual mutilation murders has been identified as a 24-year-old Long Beach State University student. According to San Bernardino police, the victim, Vincente Cruz. f\test.as, Is the seventh victim in the mutilation · murders which ave baffled police in Orange and Los Angeles Counties since December of tm. I 1fes tas' body v;a.s found Dec. 29 in a ravine in the San Bernardino ~Joun· 1 t.ains near state Highway 18. The iden· tlfication of his body was made Thursday by members of his family. Like llle previous mutllatlon murder victims, the young man had been strangl- ed, sexuany mutilated and .sexually assaulted. Mestas' hand.s had been cut off above . the wrists and hls head had been shaved, I detectives said. The so-called mutilation murder chain began in December of I9n with the discovery of the bod y of Edward 0. h-foore in Seal Beach. He was the first to have been strangled and sexually mutilated, which most of the victinlS have been. Since 'then, there have been four bodies discovered in the Los Angeles Harbor I area, including one which had been hack· 1 ed into piects and put into green garbage can bags. The bags v.·ere found throughout the harbor area and ln Sunset Beach. None of the victims found In Los Angeles County have been Identified. Another body was found in Seal Beach in Jul y. The Victim was identified as Ronni e Wiebe, 21, of Fullerton. Police are still trying to determine if the hacked up body of an unid entified 1 ma n found last March in Huntington Beach is part of the mutilation murder 1 chai n. 1 From P .. eI INN PROBE. • • of the Watercat.e. Mrs. Mitchell has nld that while she was at tbe Newporter, she cou\J not get her calls through the IW!tdlboard and was kept in AtCJusion. . ' UPI Tt19"1ttt Rallo11 Plan Oregon Gov. Tom McCall grimaces as he announces plans for statewide gasoline rationing. Under A1cCall's plan, motorists wo uld purchase gas dependent upon the last digit of their license plate on a cer· tam day of t~e week only. TONIGHT OCC LECTURE -"The B a j a California Story," Lloyd lttason Smith Lecturer, Science Hall, 7:36-9:30 p.rn. BASKETBALL -OCC v. Pierce College, OCC Gym, 8 p.m. Costa Mesa liigh at 1-tission Viejo, 8 p.m. Estancia v. La.Quinta at Estancia, 8 p.ni. FRODAY NIGHT FILMS -"D!rly lfarry," OCC Foru m, 7 p.m. Adm. $1. ~ATURDAY, JAN. 5 ESTANCIA ADOBE -Stale Historical Landmark. Adams and !\.1esa Verde Dri ve \Vest, Sa_t. &-5Jln. 1·5 p.m. . ) Thousatads Stt'pnded -Blizzard Stuns San ·Francisco SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An Icy blizzard rare, in these parts stwmed the San Francisco Bay area and left thousands of unprepared Io w I a n d reakh~nta 1tranded, shivering and shovel· Ing out fr1;1m under blankets of snow today. · Snow choked usually sun-bathed moun- tain ridge rpads. The white stuff spooked horses on a sea·level ranch. Startled drivers in the Oakland bills were forced to abandon autos. The accumulation ranged from just a light sugar coating of the ground In many places near sea level to 20 inches on Highway 17 between 8anta Cruz and Los Gatos. "We sunny Californians are virtually paralyzed by this weird snow -It 's the worst in 30 year!," moaned Sgt. Michael Alu(fi of the Santa Cruz County sheriff's departmenl With temperatures In the 20s, his men were digging out shivering cabin dwellers and hauling hundre.ds of onowbound motorists from Highway 17 over the mounlalns to the seaside resort of santa $ruz 80 mUes south of San Francisco. "It may not be as bad as those Man's Car Hit On Lunch Hour A Huntington Beach w-eman went out for Jn expensive lwtch in Coeta Mesa 1bur&da), ea Ung up about $700 In Iosoes, according to police. Gary L. Stewart. 24, or 415 Cal~•rl\la Ave., aald a burglar broke into his parked car and stole $500 worth of Travelers Ciecb out of the glove com- partment. The car clouter $> took along a $200 Yamaha guitar, in addition to the 20 Tr.avelers Olecks in $20 denomlna- Uon.s. Hardships Hit Amtrak Riders l RENO, Nev. (AP) -Efforts to keep an oft-delayed Amtrack cros.! • coontry train on sclledule resulted in some 50 pagjengers facing hardships ranging from frozen toilets and v.•ater taps that spit icicles to unheated cars in freezing temperatures. Amtrak spokesman Brett Tyler said Thursday the train was stopped here to keep its return to Chicago on schedule. "At the cost of inconvenience to these passengers, we stopped it at Sparks. cleaned it up, serviced it and will be able lo return it on schedule/' he said. Eastern storms, but for 'us ·u·s really bad . It makes you realize how vu.lnerable we are tQ the weather," Aluffl said. Children played In the snow, and delfghted skie rs, whose neare.st sport usuall y L5 175 miles east In the Sierra, frolicked th rough mountain traffic jams Thursday. But for thousands of oth~N: the storm meant cold and frustration -and In one casl death. Driving snow piled up Thursday in the San Francisco Bay area and In the us ually temperate Central Valley. As many as 20.000 coastal midentJ from Santa Cruz 10 Fort ~ -a 120-mile stretch straddling San Francisco -were without electricity Thursday and today, and some without heat and v.·ater, because the snow felled trees and power lines. The freak snows closed several scho<tls Thursday and today and pupils huddled happily with rations of candy ,bart'untll rescued. One "·oman "as crw:hed to death Thursday when a snow·laden tree col- lapsed oo her In the Santa Cruz ?.1oun· talr\3. Hundreds of giant oaks and redwoods shuddered beneath strange stre.sses and one gave way, falling atop a school bus. No one was injured . "It's miserable," said a harried lineman for Pacific Gas & Electric Co. which mobilized 4,000 men. contract tree trimmers, helicopters and hundredl of snowmobiles and snow removal equip- ment to put lines ha.ck in service. "We just don 't build lines In temperate areas to withstand this much snow," he aald. ., FromP"#I STORM ... degrees in El Centro, 27 delrees in Needles, 30 degrees in Riverside ind 28 degrees In San Bernardino. forced citrus growers to tum on smudge pots and other heating equipment aooner than expected -and right In the midst of a worsening fuel crisis in Southern California and the rest of the naUon. Jn the Lo.s Angeles area, already hit by an electricity shortage, natural gu service was cut of( to hundreds of in· dustrial, comme.relal a'nd lnsUtuUonal users . all v.•ith heating systems fired by other types of fuel. The actiOn walll taken to Insure p .s supplies for residential customers and others without alternate IOW'ces of heating fuel , gas utility spokesmen ex- plained. The Palmdale Radar Weather Center warned up to six inches of snow could be expected to fall in thC area aa the storm continues. • W1 ~~TER SALE •• ''BIGGEST EVER'' SELECTED GROUPS FROM DREXEL. HERITAGE. HENREDON ·AND MORE •.. ON SALE NOW! ALL UPHOLSTERY INCLUDING WQODMARK CHAIRS AT SALE PRICES . WOODMARK FEATURES : '/It: LUXURIOUS 25 '/. DOWN & 75 ~. FEATHER BACK * PRICE INCLUDES SKIRTS & ARM COVERS * EXCELLENT SELECTION OF FABRICS, ALL SCOTCHGUARDED * CLEANING INSTRUCTIONS FOR EVERY FABRIC * EIGHT. WAY HAND TIED CHAIR BASES * ALL DOUBLE DOWLED HARDWOOD FRAMES AND MUCH, MUCH, MORE * A TED von HEMERT EXCLUSIVE • · •. ON DISPLAY NOW FABULOUS SALE MERCHANDISE TO CHOOSE FROM • , . AND AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS . Or.EXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS1AN NEW PQ~ I B~ACn • 1117 WESTCLIFJ. DA. • MZ·2010 LA GUN/ Bf ' CH • l-4S NORTH C0A$1 HWY Mitchell subsequently resigned as Nix· on'.s campaign manager. But he re- mained In touch with the Pr"ld<nt as a pollllcal adviser dwinl the campaJllJI, according to Mn. Mitchell. Although Mn. Mitchell wantod to testily before the Senate Watergate hea,.. • lnp, !hf committte did aot call bor. • IN r C: R.I 0 [t S WIEttOA YS I SATU !:DAYS t :OO to S:JO FRID/I Y 'TIL ·t :OO '19'4·6111 l >)'!''NC' 0 Oollll ~AWTllt i tNi ll¥D. The Mltchclls separated last Sep- tember aa a result or Watergato relsted problems which Interfered with their marriage. Both are now living In New I York and Mn. Mitchell CUrTently iJ working on her memoln. -• . . . . -· - ' --, 1 ~ 1nd o1 .2.;:;Q) .J.'l ·l27f -. -. ... - • ni v si c v a 24 c • w ti m lh Ii 0 p p cl T p p