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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-12-17 - Orange Coast Pilot• •, I ' OC Airport Pilssengers DAILY PILOT * * *toe* * * • ·Panic~ Leap to Bunmay MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 17, -1973 VOL, U, NO."»t, l SECTIONS, 21 l"AGE5 • • • es an I ··Ill ome -L --:::...... ------------·--------------------· ----·---- Kidnap Suspect Res~ne Efforts Futile Police Nab Man ~ With Bound Girl ' l :~A fleeing kidnap su!pect with a young girl bound and gagged on the front ~t of bis car led police on a high lveed chase down the Santa Ana f:r.eway early Sunday before eliling bi. .Mluioo Viejo and wrecking his car. ::Gerald A GIU.Spie, 28, of Overland . !Can., was captured at the scene of die pileup at Marguerite Parkway and Trabuco Road. He is in Orange County Jail, held on suspicion of kidnaping, assault and battery, burglary and armed robborl'· : The chue drama began at the home 91 Mr. and Mrs. Luther Mitchell in Buena Park, where Gillespie allegedly !nice in , threatened the family with a long screwdriver, tied them and took Mignon Mitchell. 16, as a hostage. :' Police said Gille3pie also stole $150 f1'9,m the family belore fleeing with the terrified girl. : Officers sakl Gillespie's big aedan was ipotted OD the Santa Ana F-y ln :Anaheim at about 4 a.m., weaving back bd forth across the lanes. tersection of Marguerite and Trabuco Road and piled it up." Manell said Gillespie fought when officen tried to arrest him. Officer Dave Meir suffered a broken finger in the melee. Gillespie's alleged kidnap victim was uninjured in the early morning cruh. GiU.Sple is facing other charges In his .alleged spree which started late Satun!ay when he reportedly tried to burglarize the apartment of John Bavelich of Buena Park but fled after a sculfle with the apartment owner. PolijlC believe he then went to the MilCheDJ' apartment. 2 W ome11 Hurt l 11 OC Airport Bomb Call Panic : Thinking he Wa.9 a drunk driver, a By RUDI NIEDZIElSKI California Highway Patrol officer atarted °' ,... Deity "'"' ...,. Jo pun him over but officers said Passengers panicked and leaped from Gillespie gunned the car and took off the wing of &' Hughes Airwest plane \ down tbe freeway at 110 miles per sitting on the ground at Orange COunty • hour. • Airport Sunday after the cr~w received Two other CHP units joined the chase word of an anonymaus bomb threat. _ th!"'lgh the Saddleback Valley and .of! 'l'll'o women who jumped ·lo feet to the .freeway at La Paz Road in MiJ.t1on the pavement after scrambling through -, . . Vij~JO. · . an emergeri(:y door suffered spraied. He proceeded through the residential .. ~nkles but were treated and later releas- are.a breaking numerous trafri~ law~ ed at Costa Mesa Memorial Hoepitil. FIREMEN CLEAR SMOKE FROM BUNGALOW WHERE COSTA MESA MAN DIED THIS MORNING Smoking Listed As Cause of Blaze; Fire Too Hot for Would-be Rescuers ----'----· --. -tryJng to elude the pursuing officers. The women were identified as itrs spld P!Jblic affairs officer Jerry Moxwell. P.at Weimer, .f2, ·Of· -24@1· N. SantiagO .. " . ... . ~ . ·. "Re .. ~pparendy lost control at the in-a1 .... d., Oi'a.nge, and Leora Van Wagener, , "' 6S, of Heriderson, Nevada. Both made .--------------.. thetrip tothe Ho.olpltal by ambulance. The Seattle-bound OC-9 jetliner was evacuated arter airline ofticials in Los Angeles said 'their reservation desk received a bomb threat at 1:13 p.m. The call wu placed by a woman who warned ifi a SpanlJh.accented voice, "My uncle has a bomb on your last filgbt." Terrorists Bomb U.S. Jet Weather It'll ho lair Ind mild Tuesday, according to tlie weather oervice, with highs at the beacbu In the mid 'Ills rising-lo-to dqreu-.in-~ land. overnight lows In the 40s and 50s. I INSWE TODAY LL Co!, Robert Stirtll-, POW fo r 6 ~ wears, says California's divorce la10 hos taken him "to the cr.0..,.1" aa hit IDife of 1 B year> '"'' for dlaao!utton, Storfl Pa·ge 6. ,. ,. --'"' . n !,,..M • ..,. u = a.J Ctll!kl lt (~L.. 1f -.OHfll _,__,, . ••'-"• ,.,. . ......... 1 111111 tJ • """'" 14-ll > "" ....... , .. ., "'4U£M 11 •u...n ,, -.. .............. 4 °"-c..-, ,, .,.,.,., ,..,.., 14 -•n ......... M-11 T.......... lt -.. -. .............. ,,.,, --. • Rome Toll Reaclies-23; Guerrillas Fly to Atli ens ·l The flighlorl(lnated In Mexlco_City. ATHENS, <inie<e (AP) -Palestinian Alrwest offidal! radioed the pilot as guerrillas bombed an American plane tie tuied the craft to the 11!!ll'•Y and In_ Rome"s airporl today, killing at least evacuation orders were given. Sheriff's 21 ptl'90R.S; police said. '.The guerrillas deP11ties llld -emergency-doors ,..... -later shot two of the hodstag ... rillas lnlormed the control tower that one or lbose aboard was "seriously in· jured and may die." An airport police spokesman said spcc.ial aroiy police and army units opened and many passenger's started . 'lbe terrorist$ escaped to Athens in climbing out onto .lhe wings. .. ~ ... • hijacked German · jet with an un-· Several of tho :13 persons on board determined num ber or hostages. : . Girl, 16·, F-.o,,;·nd juml>£d befOre growl tre.1¥' rolled ' . They ' began'' their' at~ck ... ai ~me U •W!"ly·to l!"i,'iitcrillt's D'lilln"doot'."",' lflth a submachine gun fusillade thaL _s _ hbe:;] ·n h FBI cifliiiih and Onmge County Sher-police said killed an unknown num}\<" (8 U 10 e8 t Uf's deputies oeardied lbc P 11 n • ot bjltanders. Authorities said the total , tho~"f'1J'el::~:~:.s'10 .,oo:·" tlte ltWed may reacb 30. • SAN DIMAS LUPI) -A sheirlf• injured' women, · said fie -• GT<ek police said the hijacked aircraft search tea m found the body of a l&-year- pa_.rs C:oming di the plane crttlclle' landed at the main AtheM airport and old Covina girl in tile San Gabriel canym the manner in which the crew hindled 1 the glltrrillas negotiated with Greek area, one day aner her parents reported the bomb threat Ind Uloucltl tho IUlbilrlUe1 tor release of two Pal estin-her missing. stewarde ... should hive dlJPla1od "I Ins held• by the military-backed Greek Laura Ann Lecuyer was found stabbed liltle _.. cool." Sovtm11161t. " to death. Mrs. Weimer said....U.... lbddoot ' -The bljact<ers threatened to blow up Miu Lecuyer was tut seen ali>'t._Fr_i- curred jmt alier the lllew.-bid p.. the 'Lufthansa Boeing 701 with all the day altcrnoon and was rcporled missing bor instructions to the pauenters on· hostages if the two were oot released, by her parents that nlght. lier body the use of oeatbelts. She suddenly t"Ullled · an airline spok .. man reported. , was found just off San Gabriel canyon · (Ste 11111EAT: Pqe I) 'lbe spokesman said the Arab guer-Road near the Ea•! Fork Bridge. • surrounded the aircraft. The atlack at Rome's airport began about 1 p.m. --4 a.m. PST -when the Palestinians were asked to open their:-. baggage [or a routine secul'iLY check in the crowded departure wing. -they did. pulling -.ut pJstols. submachine guns and hand gtenadcs and spraying the room with bullets, police said. The guerrillas .grabbed s e v e r a I policemen at the security ~int and went down a ramp toward the Lufthansa · plane. The terrorists were variously reported to num~ three or four. Two of them ran up the boar.ding ramps or a nearby Pan American World ' Airways jetliner and. threw incendiary bombs inside .. tting fin> to the jet. · A Pan Am spokesman said at least· 21 bodies \\"ere counted aboard the charred... wreckage. J>olice_ said all II passengers in the first-class section of the plane were killed. , , An airline spokesman said th!! ex- . (See GUERRILLAS, JI age ! I • • • ire. Victim,67, Discovered 10n Floor By ARTHUR R. VINSEL. Of tt11 DllllT Pllel Steff Costa ?wtcsan Arthur Compton was kill· ed today, despite an effort to get out of his converted garage bungalow when it \Yas gutted by a $6,000 fire during predawn hours. Compton, 67, of 141 Mesa Drive, Apt. C, \Yas dead at the scene after raging flames were extinguished, allowing police and firenien to enter the gutted struc· tu re. The victim was found curled up on the kitchen floor of the residence, ooe of several at that address rented out to elderly or retired persons. Investigators said that by the time they arrived there was no hope for Mr. Compton. "The house was just completely in- volved in flames," said Police Officer • Rod Haddock, the second policeman to arrive about 6 a.m. after neighbors call· ed for help. .He said the property owner told him ,his tenant might. be inside and if so, would probably be in the bedroom but that rescue e(forts were futile. "We tried to use the garden hosc,H said Officer Haddock. "but we just couldn't get to the house. It was too hot and too far gone ... " The old frame structure was listed as a total loss today folio.wing the fiie', which official$ theorize must have smouldered for some time before it erupted. They tentatively list smoking as lfhe cause of the fire, which apparently started in an easy chair. Invest\gators believe Mr. Compton, a smoker, fell asleep while watching television and either dropped his cigar· ette or that it fell out of an ash tray . His presence in the kitchen, they said, indicates he either tried to get water \vhen he was wakened by the fire, or was simply trying to escape and became disoriented in the smoke and was overcome . The patrolling policemen happened to be in the general neighborhood when the call was broadcast and so reached • · 1s.. nRE, Page 11 Nude Batliers . . 'Vff tlie Hook SAN RAFAEL (t;Pl) -A l\.1arin County judge has <li s missed -charges against five persons ac- cused of nude bathing and opened the way for a summer o( sk.in- nydipping on private land. · Municlp•I Court Judge David R. Baty dismissed the charges against the three men and two women charged' wilt\, violating the county's ordinance against nude sunnlng oa public land . Defense attorney Paul Kay[elz · "'id. the boaciies In the communltJ were owned to the water by prop- erty owners along the shore. _,;;,, .. ""''""' r11 .. v1 • '· ~· YafJl01ask-i Case ' - Boyle Indicted Vulgarity Dismissal - In Union Deaths Not Upheld t . ••• :: WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP\ -Former United Miile \Vor'kers President W. A. "Tony" Boyle was ind icted on murder charges today in the 1969 kill ings of Joseph A. "Jock " Yablonski 1 his wife and daughter. Boyle, 701 is in protective custody In a hoapital in Washlnglon, D.C., reeovering from a Sept. 24 suicide at- tempt. He already is under federal in- dictment on charges of v i o l a t i n g Yablonski's civU rights. !!le indictment issued today charg~ Court Rejects 'Heavy' Study WASlfiNGTON (UP!l -The U.S. Supreme Court denied today a bearing to a Miami woman fired from her job as a telephone operator for the fire department because !he was S3 pounds ovenrelghl !!le woman, Mrs. Madeline Wolle, coole!jdftl abe bandied the aame Job in 1964-a while she was as heavy as she is now, lf not heavier, and was rated as "satisfactory or out.standing'' lo Iler work. She asked for the same position in 1971 when she returned !O the Miami area after living in California . She was hired by Dade County subject to a physical examination and then fired her because 'she weighed nearly 200 pounds. Boyle with three counts or murder, <1ne for each victim. Jt came three months after state police swore out warrants charging Boyle In the killing•. 'Ibe indictment was r,eturned lry a special seS!lon of the W8'hington County grand jury. It heard testimony from only one witness, state Police Sgt. Elmer Shifko, a slate invesUgator. Washington County Dist. Atty .. Jess Costa said extradition paoer.1 would be •• prepared and filed In Washington, "as soon u possible. "We have to move as fast as we can here because we want to try him on the murder charges, and the federal authorities are moving ahead with their case," Costa said. Boyle 1, scheduled to stand trlalon the fed•ral charges in Pitt.burgh' In February. .The Yablonski!! -Jock, 59, hi! wife Mal1!aret, 57, and 25-year-old dau"hter Charlotte -were shot to death by three hired gunmen Dec. 31. 1969. three weeks after Boyle defeated Yablonski in a bitter election for the UMW presld•ll01· The killings occurred at the Yablonski family home ln nearby ct_a.rksyllle, in the heart of southwestern Pennsylvania's rich soft coal region about 20 m.lles from here. _ The government maintains that an assassination plot against Yablonski was hatched because or his election opposition to Boyle, ~ut the killing was postponed. It was reactivated. lhe government says, to prevent Yablonski rrom testi- fying before a federal grand jury in- vestigating alleged UMW financial im· proprieties. PAN AMERICAN JETLINER BURNS AFTER BOMlllNG AT ROME AIRPORT BY ARAB GUERRILLAS Lufthansa Pilot Forced to Takeoff for Greece After Bloody Confrontation ' From Page J GUERRILLAS .... plosions went off in the rorridor, destroy- ing the cabin and most of the first-class section. Pan Am originally reported the flight Originated in New York and stopped in Ro me on the way to Beirut, Lebanon, Suspect. Bunted Huntington Man .Shot During Fight at Bar WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The u~; Supreme Court relused today to revi,~ a California Supreme Court ~g upholding the right of a public SC!ii\!I teacher to read a short story contaln:ije: wlgar language. • • The brief order left standing the otabl court's decision that Stanley M. Lln~; hi gh school Engli sh teacher on Je8\ie of absence ns a Catholic priest, could not be dismissed. by the Torrance UniJfd School District for reading the offeftlU'e language to his creaUve wrltlng class. The appeal from the state cow:fs ruling was filed by the school d!stltJ, \\'hose dismissal of Llndros had b«n upheld by the Los Angeles Superior Court and the California Court of •4"'" peals. . . . ~ ·WASH! · could hav i1l)ti pri¥ g1*ms, th today to ·aeny disa '1tlatcd d' Californ filed the ~y a th with Cal Sch :Lu . . . .. Off Lindros, who is white, was d1sll!1ssed from his job as a teacher 1n a predominantly black school In the Watts Admini area because of his reading of a story Unified he had written about his altend~ more-th at the funeral of a black youth w))o .students died from a heroin O\'erdose. •· off prlvil The Torrance School Board dismiased. ., After him because the story, which he re.,ad · ud to numerous classes, ended with a hl&l)Jy :iii' st en offensive comment (white-mother·. ;~··-~t~ pig") made' to him by • yaung b!M:k llnch11m as he left the funeral. · 1 ""'"' lt sta Asking the high court to reverse .,iui: ·Darrel T state rourt the school board said Sli(:h a finding 'was needed to alii~. the ·Witb ve authority of states and locaht1es ~to Initial 'd •n .:b~nPfY regulate "what they COflSl er ..., ~ " unwholesome Influences and languqe · bamb ur in secondary school classrooms." .. not been The state Supreme Court, in . a ~ And l decision,' held th.at the lnclu.1aon··~of ;might n language used "in many solx:ultun:s" ~~ th4: F~_P.Gfle.J_ THREAT .•. Seven per.ions have either been con- victed or pleaded guilty In the killings. An eighth person L! awaiting a co_urt --appearance -on murder and ·conStllrm:y charges in connection with the kllllngs. Boyle was unseated as head of the UMW last year in a court-ordered rerun of the 196'9 election by Arnold Miller a Yablonski protege. ' and Tehran, Iran . But the airline tater Huntington Beach police today were said the flight was starting in Rome seeking a man on suspicion of attempted -becauSe-oLbad..weaUler..iil..Ne.w...York-mu-:-der afte;-a fight at a local . bar Thousands ran ..... in panic ln the ~rt--·left one m~ hospi~li~after -being when bullets flew around them. People sh'.'!t twl~". in the . shooting is but investigators declined to Identify him. The shooting octWTed 'at about 11 p.m. Sunday at the Rumpus 'Room bar, located at Yorktown Avenue and Beach Boulevard. in a composition presented for teaching , Othe purposes was not cause for dlsm.lssal!' 'who k'ec · :.1 hour," ...:---just- 16 Gl\1 Plants Close ' have .• at m1dd forward to the pilot's compartment. "She emerged and started screaming al us to 'Get Oil . . . Get Off . • . Right Now,' " Mrs. Weimer said . Airwest officials in San Mateo could not be reached for immediate comment. Tbm Chandler, Orange County station manager for the airline, said he was certain instructions to deplane were given but "we were on the ground and we don't have the slightest idea what happened Inside the plane." Mrs. Weimer, still limping from her injury, is scheduled to board the same flight Ofi•Y to reach Medlord, Ore., where her father is near death. Graham Says U.S . In Deep Trouble WASHINGTON (UPI) -Evangelist Billy Graham preached at the White House worship service, saying America is in "deep spiritual trouble " and every citizen must "repent or perish." Li.sting a series of dramatic events in 1973 including the "fury of Watergate," Graham Sunday told a con- gregation including the President, Vice President Gerald R. Ford, their wives and members of Congress: "I believe America stands on the threshold of divine ji.;dgment today. Morally, socially, e c onomically , politically and spiritually we are in deep ' spiritual trouble. We must reorder our priorities." 'Energy Crisis Phony' PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Consumer advocate Ralph Nader said Sunday the energy crisis was "the most phony crisis ever inflicted upon a modem society." Speaking before Tax Equity for America, an organization see king tax reforms , Nader called for a cutback in fuel for the nat1on·s businesses and industries. OUNM COAST ST DAILY PILOT TM 0r•rlfl9 Cou ! 0-.11.Y I'll.OT, with ""'lcll I• (OIMll'td ~ N .... Prn•. h Pllbl!lllld lly IM 0tlft0• ,(NII Pvbll1~1nt (tm""Y· 51~ r.ltl .Olt!ant .,. pUbll"*I, MOnday llll'VllOll .. rlHy, for COl!I Mtll, NewpOrl 8Mdl, Hlll'!tt1!9loil lltKll/Founltl" \lllley, l..1911M •Md!, INIJM/llddl~c~ Ind ~n C""""lt/ It" Jue" C111l•lrt110. A 11no;ile f .. \oMI tdlllon It pub1!1Md llNf'llY" Md "'"41\'I. T ... ,,lnc~I puOllMlfll plifl! K 11 U0 Wttl 11'1' ''""'· C-1• Meow, Clllfonllt , ,.,.,, l:ob1rt N. W1.d r r11kl..,I Ind l'vblilollt1' J1c6i II:. Curl1y Viet rr11~1 9NI G4M•1I Mt"""" Titom•t K •• .,a ••ltor 1lt6f'lllf A. Murplll111 ,..,, ... ,"" !"di ... C~•i4" H. loot ~!d11~ ·r. Hill ,..tlllllll M1 .... l!ol f.1111..,... , C.'lt M ... : no W...!.:f l trwt N.....-i &uc:fli D» N .......,_.,. u.-•ttdl: m ,_, A-·H ... lrlf*!'IMCll: 11"$ lttefl ......., .... s.i ~: -.S Ntrlll •I c.tftll'lt ltM t9l1f•••• C714l Ml-tJl1 a'ullfM "'"'" 111 641.&671 ,.,_~ ............ ..._ .... 4tJ-t4Jt """ ...,. Ol'""9t CWlltY '*m••• ........ ~·. lPli. °""'" C:-1 '-11.tllllf '°""""'· Ho -•ttrlll, lllwlrWI*"• M lltrltl IM""' ., ........,""'*"' ..... _, .. ~ ....... ..,.i.i ,.,. ...... " ...,,..... - ...... """ ...... Miit ., c.... ..... C..lllWlll&. ....... .. WYier .... _.,,,, ... -II Q,tt "*""'YI ~ ""1fWllu4 .... .......,. fell to the ground, ducked beneath chairs The victim, Roy Reid, %7, 7'19t Mandrell Investigators said Reid and a com- panion were leaving the bar as the suspect and his date were walking in. The girl was a barmaid at the bar that Reid and his friend knew1 officers said. DETROIT (UP!) -Sixteen of Gen<fal , Althou Motors' 24 North American car assem~y . ·.~equest and bebind columns. Drive, Huntington Beach, is listed in plants were closed tod ay in the start . ~~hool "! saw a man sprayed with bullets stable condition at Pacifica Hospital crawling on the floor," said an airport after underBoing surgery for bullet ·of a <1ne-'o\'eek shutdown that aol)le Still re Rapist Assaults Two Women In Huntington employe. wounds in his back and side. observers fear ma v be a romrnon be-·victory. currence du ring i974. G~-1's massive . It ma The two who bombed the Pan Am Police said they know who the suspect shutdown idled 137 ,CMXl 'o\'Orkers. blStory ---------·-----been gr Huntington Beach's Downtown Rapist struck again this weekend, for the second time in a month, police reported today. ln the most recent attack, unlike the others, the victims reported that he appeared to be carrying a sawed-off shotgun. -1be victims were two women who shared an apartment on England Street with ooe of the occupant.' 6 • year • old aon. Investigators said the rapist apparently got into the apartment by prying ooen one of the kitchen windows shortly after midnight Friday. The women told officers he trapped them in a bedroom and told them to cooperate or he 1Wuld hurt the child, asleep in another room. While he was assaulting the women, the child began calling for his mother and the women said the man finally left. Last month, a man police believe to have been the Downt<1wn Rapist tried a similar attack on two women living on Ninth Street. But the w om e n managed to Tock themselves inside a bedroom where they hid for four hours until they were sure the would-be rapist had left. Masked Bandits Hit Irvine Home Two bandits in ski masks forced their way into an Irvine home Sunday night, then hound, gagged and robbed their victim of cash and a gun collection. Virginia L. Van Lendlnghani told police the intruders took about $200 in .cash and her son's gun collection valued at about Sl ,600 from the Gennainder Way home. r- Thc victim was found bound and gag- ged by a neighbor, who noticed one of the masked men leaving lhe home and ca lled police when he became suspicious. jet joined their companions aboard the Lufthansa Boeing 737 with a German crew, a woman ramp agent and the undetermined number of other hostages. The Lufthansa plane appelll'<d headed for Beirut before It landed In Athens and sources at the Beirut lnte1l4tlonal Airport said the hijackers r«juested "urgent preparations for ap emergency landing." The Lufthansa spokesman confirmed reports that the pilot was forced to fiy low over the Mediterranean because "the door apparenUy rould not be closed completely." A spokesman said the plane was not loaded with enough fuel to fly as far a.5 Beirut, I The two Arabs whose release wu · demanded by the hijackers were Iden- tified as El Arid Shalik, 12, and Khan- touran Palaal, 21, both Palestiniana born in Jordan. They were arrested Aug. S for killing four persons and injuring 55 in a gun and bomb attack at Athens airport. The airliner was the third Lufthansa plane hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas in two years. Warehouse Destroyed By $30,000 Blaze A Sunday night fire in Orange I destroyed an abandoned warehouse valued at $30,000, fire officials reported. Cause of the blaze in the Holmes Roofing Company bulldlng, 1049 !I. Glasse11 St., is under investigation. The alarm was turned in . by a n_eighbor who lost 65 feet of grape stake fence. FremPageJ FIRE ... ' the bl81.e before the Costa Mesa Fire Department. Officer Jeff Miller was first on the scene, followed by Officer Haddock, but even their early arrival was too late under the circumstances. Coroner's deputies released M r . Compton 's body t o Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home, where funeral ar· rangemen~ were pending today. Whi~h Court? Military Pot Case Reviewed WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court akreed today to decide whether sale of marijuana by an Army officer to an en- listed man Is an offepse that can be tried before a milltary court. The court held In 1969 that court-martial jurisdiction covered only "service-connected" offenses. . The governme nt, seeking to overturn a decision by the U.S. Cir- cwt Court at Denver, asked the Supreme Court to consider the mari- juana olfense: The Army wants to try Capt. Bruce R. Councilman for sales of marijuana In 1972 at Fort Sill, Okla. . The government argued that marijuana selling should be tried as a~mllllary offense because it threatens mllltary diilcipllne, effi- ciency and authority especially when a lranucUon involv11 ll\ oW· cer. Woliday ~i§lt~e£. ·esaie • /, .... _ FOR ONLY $10 . MORE We will make .a normal re- placement installation of any standard undercounter dish· washer. YES, pNLY $10. MORE! The stainless steel :· dishwasher~ . . " . ' I " ' . ~·~ I. m ! j ' I l i ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEA~URES •CLEANER WASHING •RANDOM 1,.0ADING, •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION . ' •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILA BLE• , ACT NOW lll SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 .•••••••• •••!¥. • • • • NOBODY SELLS ·4 • WASTEKING ·• : DISHWASHERS • •FOR LESS THAN• ·• DUNLAPS • . •· WllY Waste King Universal is 5 ways better .......... ****'•· EXCLUSIVE H-ARM WASHOIS ACTIOll , SAFE. SANITARY llYING ~ \l.V..WJ.UJ.UJ.WJ.WJ.W tU.~ °gV.\UU.WJ.UlUJJ.WJ.UJ U.t(!_ l Jtln ~ ~ 5 ·~ ~IJWtl ~·YEAR j , 1: 3 .:,; STAINLESS ·1 ~ pons ""'""' ..,:; STEEL ~ lh• motor. P""'l'·J :,t i m er . w•s t c-= GUAJIAllTEE .~ ~ '"triti..t1on .,M•m.~ . • ~c ;. he1ter and pushbut·:! 91"'°"0 IASw"·s ...., ? IOql "" eoo '"' "°" · •ua"' I\<' , -, ;Hntsdtshwalhers. s RANDOM LDAlllllQ <llmnm'rtmommmnn! {; ' ~ .• "1"."r'lTlmrt11 111rnflYn'l'nt~~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • RAISED ELSEWHERE • 90 DAYS CASH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD Downtown Costa MJsa ~Phone 548-77n --• •, One ~stem fe teri · "It's toy." T "But is the ..Will co ...~ The ·Of ca Campus "~ "11\e been a ~· fello .,away a " , • HAN .-53, was ~n ar 4\telepho :In Okla ;: Isabe :a . ~oigbt \1he sh • prrest )1 .. ..., ~ • ' j. 0 ' 0 1o 0 s A 1-: - • isabilit1 ~ourt to--Study VASHINGTON (AP) In a case that uld have wide raDging Impact on public private _disability insurance pro- ms , lhe U.S. Supreme Court agreed ay to decide whether Calirornla can y disability benefits for pregnancy- ted d~abititles. lifomia Atty . Gen. Evelle J. Younger ed the appeal of a decision in June a three-judge federal court dealing th caJlfornia's program that partially chools Okay unch Hom· compensates Jor lm of . wages due to disabilities' not covered by workmen's com~Uon. The lower court heJa-tnat camomlas exclusiOn of disabijlties related to ~ pregnancy wa.s not bas~ed on a classifica- tio'n that had a rational or substantial relationship to any legitimate state purpose and was thus uncOnstitutional. Since that federal court decision, a state court rqijn_g !5s forced the state program to pay disability benefits to women who miss work • because of complications-related to pregnancy. Younger brought the appeal to permit the exclusion of benefits for "normal delivery and recuperation." The state maintained that normal pregnancy was neither an illness nor an injury and could thus be rationally -excluded from a program concerned with those two situations. Monday, Dtctmbtr 17, 1973 The three-judge court decision was prompted by consolidated class action Ad ministrators in the Capist rano suits filed by women denJed benefits. ff the Campus RE.ENACTING THE INCIDENT THAT LED TO TH E BIRTH OF AMERICA IN BOSTON HARBOR ·one 'Protester' Leaps Into Water With Boxes of Tea During Observance of 1773 Event ·ued School Dlsj.rlct have given a Their Jawyers asked the Supreme re-than.passing grade to high school Court to affinn the three-judge court's ents who recently were allowed walk· decision. ff privileges on the campu.s. "The issue is not pregnancy, but After months of .negotiating bet\ivecn pregnancy-related disabilities," read student committee of San Clemente their motion. igh School students and district ad-The U.S. Chamber of Commerce sided · lstrators, trustees finally granted the with California in a frie.nd-of·the-court ClltimeJ)rlvUege. brief. The chamber said the three-judge It started two weeks ago and Principal decision could prevent private employers arrel Taylor said the system i:i: working from making '"reasonable ru les to pnr ·th very few problems. mote the objectives of his insurance NiXo.n Target In Tea Party Re-enactnie11 t Initial fears by administrators that program.'' BOSI'ON (UPI) -President Nixon t:.ngry students \\'OU\d crowd a nc\v \\'as tarred and feathered in effigy here mbur'ger stand near the campus have t been borne out. Th B .k as 20.000 persons watched the re-enact. And their added £cars that students 0W8S 1•00 S ment of the 8oston Tea Party 200 years 'ght not return to classes have not _ ·, arter the historic event. en the case, either, Taylor said. W' 2 'd 'T Demonst rators Sunday threw oil ba·r· "Othei than the regular few students lllS ll ernt rels into Boslon Harbor from the de ck ho ~;tP tryi~g t~. driV'e away at lunch • o( a reproduction of an 181~ century s DAILY PILOT :J Nix on Says . Estate Not Tax 'Tool' \VASlflNGTON (UPI) - A spokesman !or President Nixon says the chief ex· ecutive. bas .no inte_ntion of reaping a huge income tax deduction from the eventual gift of his San Clemente home to the governrfient. The New York Times reported Sunday that such a gift could give Nixon a tax deduction of between $390,000 and $870.000 spread over six years. "Any assertion that the President \\'ould use !he gift of t.!_is home to the A1nerican people as a short term tax deduction in 1974 ii: false ," said Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. \Varren. "The idea that the President would utilize the gift of the home to the An1erican people for a short term tax benefit completely misses the spirit or the gift." Nixon had said earlier that the girt \\·ould be made after both he and his \\'ife are dead . The Times quoted tax lawyers famil- iar with Nixon's financial affairs as saying sudi. a tax break could some at the time that another huge tax deduc- tion is expiring. Tue President 's gift to the national archives of his pre- Presidential papers. White House press aide Bruce \Vhelihan told the Times that the actual deed giving the San Clemente property to · the American people has not yet been drau·n up because the President's la\\·yers have not had the time and added that "nobody has figured out the tax consequences" of the planned gift. . In the statement of the Nixons' net \\'Orth 1nade public last \\'eekend, the va lue of the · 5aILClemente property was set at $571,000. But that fiJ\lre \vas based on the original cost of the property and tax experts say the value ur, he_ sa1~ the rest have done __ As.-Wale"-Chi f ... .__ _ -Afil~ing ve~~l .in what thet termed the ~ t-great and ha~e proven-lnat-they .I." e "Boston Oil Party." The re-enacflhent-i---'b"'a~sjQ<;.r_ea~wn~iqeJa~ly1_._ ·-__ The property is currently vatue<i at $1.5 milljon by California authorities . ave . earn~ the right to leave campus of the tea party was the opening event t midday. . . . Thomas H. Brooks of Dana Polnt has of the nation 's celebration. of the 200\h . Although many of the stud~n~s llllhally been re-elected to a semnd four-year anniversary of the American Revolution. uested full ¥."alk-of! pnv1leges ~II term as president of the South Coast The crowd gather'ed in snow· that tum- hool day, Taylor said the majonty County Water District board of directors. ed to cold rain as a large papier·mache .ill regard the current system as a In a separate unanimous vote of the effigy of the President was rowed about ctory. fi\'e-man board. Robert E. Dwyer of in 3 small boat. Jt marks the first til'l)e in the district's 1'hrtt Arch Bay was re-elected vice A voice· from a loudspeaker asked : istory that secondary studeg,ts have president. "llow many people think he should en granted such a privilege. •. Brooks, 62, has been a member of be taken to the boat and hung?'" One strong side effect of the ne\v the water board since 1969, the same There was an enormous cheer. stem is a solid decline in school year he was fii"st electe;d prei:ident. "Is anybody 0 pp 0 s e d ? • ' the feteria income. He is a right-of-way agent for the loudspeaker asked . •"It's off by an average of $130 a Southern California F..dison Company. There was silence. y," Taylor said. °"'Yer, 60• has been a director on The official Boston bicentennial com- "But the , cafeteria people hope that the board for t~o years. . mittee to mark the 200th anniversary the novelty wears off. more itudents • In other action at the meeting, the of the day Americans pitched packages ~ ill come back and eat on camp\18." board accepted a low bid of $86,993.50 of tea off a British ship into Boston -~ · · 1 ·d th 1 1 from Kennedy _}'ipelille_ of _Santa. Ana 1. 1 B . . , 111e pr1nt1pa sa1 · a a new orm 10 install water lines for a l66-unit Harbor to )>\Otest po 1cies o r1ta1n s j( camardcrie has taken over in the tract in the west Thunde rbird area of King George III. tampus. Dana Point. ,The entire cost u·ill be But the official re-enactmeJt u•as ~ ''The other day a student who had overshadowed by the so-called ''Oil been a real problem W8! seen Vahbing returned to the district by the American Party" staged by the "People 's Bicenten- .a fellow pupil who \\'as trying to drive Housing Guild, developers of the tract. nial Commission" to demand the im· The Keimedy bid fell aboot $20,000 h ·away at lunch Jn violation of the rules. less thaD original estimates. peachment of Nixon anti protest t c ' Rayrnqpd c. lttiller, genefal manager policies of the major oil companies in .. of the district, told directors that""-50 dealing with the energy, crisis. 't. Ian Shot to Death new connections were made in Members of various veterans' groups. dressed in colonial costume. dropped • :Jn Fracas With Wife • HANFORD (AP) -James Austin. 53, was shot to death in his bed during ·an argument with his wife over a 'telephone call he had made to a friend 'ln Oklahoma, the sheriff's office said. ·: Isabell Louise Au.stin said she waved a .22-caliber rifie at Austin Saturday ,night but didn't realize it was loaded. ;the sheriff's office sa id. She was not iirrested. ... ... .. . .. .. • . . '; •. .: ' ~ .. . .. •• •• November, bringing the total number \\'ooden crates over the side of the of customers to 3,474. Beaver 11. a reproduction or one of · Egypt's Chief Ill CAlllO, Egypt (AP)-Presidetll-Anwar Sadar· has been put to bed after an attack of bronchitis. local newspapers report.eel today. They said he is at his country home 17 miles north or Cairo and reecived President Sese Seko Mobutu of 7..aire, who is visiting Egypt. the ships boarded in the original lea party 200 years ago. Minutes later, they cheered as the demonstrators. also dressed in 18th Century garb. boarded the brig from several small boats. and hoisted banners demanding Nixon's im· peachment into the rigging of the ship. An effigy of the President was tarred and feathered in the custom of punishing criminals in the 1700s and passed through the cheering crowd. 0.111 , ... , '1•11 ''"'' . ' On Wednesday, these youngste rs from Temple Siar· on Pre-school in Costa Mesa will see the first candle of eight Iii in observance of Hanukkah . Jonathan Arlin , 3, Sharon Cowan, 4 and Adams Zucltert. 2, will share other holiday customs including playing tjle "draydel game" and eating _the traditional p<>- tato pancakes -latke. Hanukkah marks a Jewi sh victory over the Syrians and the rededication of the temple at Jerusalem. I J U"I T1lellholH ALL DRESSED UP FOR BOSTON TEA PARTY RITES Chris topher Wilson Family Marks 200th Bi rthday Tijuana Woman Slain; Canadian · Marine Arrested TIJUANA, Mexico (UPO -Phillip Maracle, a Canadian serving wlth the U.S. M<fl'ines corps and stationed at Camp Pendleton, has been charged with the strangulation of a 40-year-old Tijuana woman. authorities said Saturday. ~larac\e, 26, was taken into custody as he fled from a downtown hotel Friday. He "'as charged with the murder or Maria Guadalupe Patron, a n1other of four. Hotel tenants said the y heard a woman screaming for help Friday but couldn't get into the room. ~1rs. Patron 's nude body was found in the room and civilians held Maracle until police arrived. A murder complaint was expected to be filed today against ~taracle, who \\'as held \Vithout bail • 'Jack' Improvements OK'd Parking lot improvements designed to reduce no ise and congestion at the JaCk in the Box dr ive·in have won approval of the Laguna Beach Board of Ad· justmcnts. The board has given the green light to a project to level the existing parking lot and drive·through circuit around the eatery . The project will include concrete block walls and landscaping to reduce noise to surrounding residences along Gaviota Drive. Residents ot the area have been especially crilica l of the noise since Jack in the Box went on 24-hour-a·day schedu le. Don Kroach. a real estate represen· tativc for the eatery, lold board members that the firm has plans to take down the pole sign with Jack's colorful head and replace it \Vith a smaller monument sign. Plarmers also were told that a house next to Jack in the Box will be demol - ished and additional parking provided on the site. All access v.'ill come from South Coast Highway. In another action, the board approved plans for remoQeling of the interior of the Outrigger Restaurant at the Surf and Sand complex, 1555 S. Coast Highway. Once Upon A Tin1e, • • , .,,. -.:-- -' ·" ~ ' ' ~ • .,--·,~ "£J ' • \ some s girls and boys and their aunt,;, grandmothers and mothers found ,,·on~erful things fo-r-lht>m to wear in our Christmas collection • Lisa is v.:earing • a skating dress by Ruth of Carolina. Available in sizes 4 to 12 at The Red Balloon Ltd., in Ne,,·port Bt>ach, Huntington Harbour, ' and Orange. 'Al MION ISLAND ....,., •• Mell ........ TOWN a COliMt•V Of..... Cfl41 "*"'" HUMtlM•tOM MA•llOU• cn41 .... 1 ... ! I l • ,,, . • ----~ i DAIL V PILOT Mondtly, Oectmbt't 17, 1973 ~~~~~~~---'-"'--'---'-'-'--'--'---'-- Jus t ~ Coas ting ,~J ~ wiib 'f'om urpbine ~~~ .. ,••• ' Oil's Well That · Ends Well? BLACK COLO l>EPT. -lt ~is nervous 1in1e here along our Orange Coast these d:iys as California and the nation began 10 cast eyes in every nook and cranny for the possibility of tapping new sources or oil. \Ve appear to be a bit short ur lhc stuff. . This condition has particularly caused so me jangled nerves among the forces o[ ecology. And then there are those who have campaigned over the past couple of decades to keep offshore oil rigs fron1 botching up the Pacific vista oul LOv.'ard Catalina Isla nd. l.roups like the Coastal Ar-ea Prole<:· 1l l'L' League 1 CAPL) v.1cre fighting this battle long before anybody used the 111ord ecology. 'fou used lo ·be ;ible to mount a prrtty good' attack against oil simply by 11.·aving about a few old photographs from the 1920s, showing the ugly dcr· ricks and !altered seashore or Hunting· ton Beach j:luring the early days or the. uil boo1n there. \\"HEN A FE\V exploratory wells were being punched dO\\'n in Costa Mesa a civic cry 11•as heard aga inst, "The Stench and Vomit of Oil. .. " Once a fC\I' years back. some members of lhe afore mentioned CAPL discovered i.ome oil people skulkiag around with equipment in the root hills of Corona • dcl ~tar and "Jct me tell you, there 11•.:is hell to pa y. The oil people were scattered in a full retreat. ._ . ------ AND S0~1E TH\'fE before that. there 11.·as a proposal that was actuall y en- tertained in so1ne parts to drill fo r oi l in Upper Newpor t Bay. It touched off a real countywidc flap. Think what a Bnck Bay oil proposal 1vould be like today. You'd have the Friends of Upper N·cwport Bay on the 1narch in ruu battle gear. Newport Beach, ho1vev.cr, has an of· Ficia/ prohibition against oil drilling \\'it hin its citv charter. There are some voices now.· ho1vevc r. who suggest ;i ballot measu re next April \vhic h could Hf1 that prohibition. Petroleum experts argue tha t easing the oil ban \\•ould not neccssaril v mean derricks 1vould start rising ail over Newport. ~lodern techniques y;ou1d allo\v l'Xl racting the black gold by slant drilling under the ocean from inland locations. THEY ALSO ARGU E that mode rn oil rigs can be designed in such a 11.·ay that all aren 't even awa re or the pump locations. · All or this may be good and true. And you can undersco re it 1vith the current and alleged oil and gasoline shortage. So you can expect our coasta l shakers- and-movers to trot out several brass bands and welcotne the ·oilman to our u11tapped territory, rlght? \Vrong. \'OUR BEST BET is that the protest line 1\•ilt be Jong and loud. · Oil is oil. And y,•hcn you talk to coasrat folks about lt. it's jusl like a knce·jerk reaction. Even if the cas gauge needle rests on empty. Nation's . Capital Socked In by Snow By United Press Jntemalioaal A snowsto rm took the. East Coast by surprise during the weekend and raged into a major storm today. At least two ptrsons have been killed in weather-related accidents. Up to 6 inches or snow piled up in parts of WashJngton, DC., and caused m05t schools in the capital 10 Close for the day. Even President Nixon reportedly remained inside the White J louse during the weekend because of t.he snow. ''WE'RE KIND of excited,'' a \Vashington highway spokesman said. "This Is the first time in four years we've had snowplows out." lleavy snow awooped down from North Carolina to New England, along the coastal plain east of the Appalachians and into the Ohio Valley. The National \\feather Service posted a vairiety of snow. gale wind and travelers' warnings for the area as the storm intensified and moved north from the Washington, D.C., area. Pp to 12 inches of snow "'as forecast in eastern PeMSylvaflia. Freezing temperatures 'g la :i; e d highways, making travel dangerous. Ul"I Tt"-i. Five Childreia Died Firemen seaich through rubble of three homes in 1t1axton, N.C. that were destroyed by fire early Sunday. Five children perished inside one ol. the. homes. A laborer was c.harg.ed with setting fire to his tor· mer g1rlfr1end's house and then watching firemen fight the blaze. Au1horitles sald at !cost two pmoas wen! killed on slippery roads In Virginia. The Virginia state police said many persons were unprepared for heavy snow and '"didn't even have snow tires." Police from New Hampshire to New Yorik and south to Vlrgi.l)ia reported laige numbers of "fender bender" ac· cldent3. SNOW, SLEET and freeiing rain blitz- ed the New York metropolitan area. New York City wu torct'd to cancel for a second time a plan to transfonn Firth Avenue into a pedestrian mall, Next and Ute city's Sunday baJr.rare mass transit plan got off to • slow start as subfreezing temperatures scared orr subway and bus riders from an in experu:lve rlde. ~1any schools "'ere forced to close. and the storm created 1xHo,·er outages and delayed thousands of commuters. Even the New York 8nd American . stock exchanges and some commodity markets were forced to del ay their usual 10 a.m. openings because or the weather, which slicked streets with Ice and dillrupted public transportation Into and out ol lhe city.• In many suburban areas ice-glazed tree limbs snapped and fell across power lines knocking out electricity ln scores of ~mes. Schools were ordered closed because most highways were coated with glare ice which formed os a SW1dny afternoon sno'"·storm turned to sleet ond Icy rain. SNOW SHOWERS lingered over Wke Michigan. A spokesman at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago said two planes owned by United Air Lines and Eastern Air Lines became st uck In the mud near the end of the airport run.,.,·ay. Take Bus? Ni xon's Train Ride Miglit Use More Fu.el Tlia11 Jet WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ever since a White House spokesman announced that President Nixon may take a train instead or a plane to Florida to set an example of fuel-saving, newsmen and railroad buffs have been trying to figure out just how much rue! -if any - will be saved. A LITTLE arithmetic shows that any saving would be slight. An Amtrak spokes man said that [..__N_E_w:_s_AN._A._L_l'._s1_s __ J because all the Florida trains are filled to capacity at this time of the year, Nixon will ride in a separate eight-ca r second section which will travel behind the regularly scheduled passenger train. The President's separate train will require its 0\\11 diesel engines, eiich of y,•hich burns fuel at the rate of 1.5 to 2 gallons per mile. Railroad sources say at least 111.·o diesel engines, ··and -posSi5lY tlli"ee.~\\.ould 00 neec!OO- to haul the presidential train. Assuming that each diesel unit burns !uel at the minimum rate Of l.S gallons a mile. the trip of 1,178 miles from • \\1ashington to Miami u.sing two engines would consume slightly more than 3,500 gallons or diesel fuel. By comparison, the preside.ntial jel bums ruel at the rate or 2,000 gallons per hour for the tw~hour trip to south Florida -a total of f,000 gallons. TIIUS, IF THE special train bums more than the minimum amount of fuel or if it requires more than two diesel W1its, Nixon actually could burn more fuel going by trclin than by plane. Deputy \Vhile House Press Sttretary Gerald L. Warren said the President was considering making the train trip y,•hen he goes to Florida Dec. 26. The arrangements are apparently still open . In addition to· th e engines. there is the energy cost of s e c u r i t y ar· rangements. Thousands or state and local policemen must be dri ven to every bridge, overpass and culvert to guard the President's train as it passes. Railroad rnen must '"spike down" every s11.•Hch. and every other !rain along the route must stop well ahead of li me and be standing still as the President passes. Fatal Plnne Crash Due To Need for Repairs? • ~IIAAIJ (UPI ) -An official for an Getty told police after being frct"d aviation repair firm said Sunday that Saturday the k.idna~rs sturmed him w~th a cargo plane which crashed into a a ~lub bero~e cutting off the ea r with . sld ••-~ talc 11 h d '--A-a kitchen knife. re enucu 1U'Ca bn-~ a ut:E,1--"\\'hffi the bl.iile cut the flesh I v."Ok"e groW1ded and awaiting repairs for a up," he said. " J fell everything -it month. 11.•as terrible. Afl cry,·ards they gave me The three crewmen aboard !he several injections." · Lockheed super O:msellallon bound for Venezuela with a load of Christmas trees and five persons in t11.·o homes perished in the ~ay night crash. e CPl"le Braml Truckers Cite No Action Richard J . Se kriiib, head of Sekman Aviation al l\1iami International Airport, sard !he plane's owner requested "maybe 10 items that he wanted done that the pilot on the last trip reported :" FUNT. ~1ich. (UPI ) -A motorcycle gang bra11.·1 11.·ith guns. pool cues and cha ir legs left four persons dead and five in hospitals. and police held eight persons in custody today \\·hile they ( IN SHORT ..• ) By United Press International Independent t1uck drivers who have bloc:kOO highways and staged a work stoppage to protest having to drive sloy,·er with more expensive fuel have gained recognit ion and sympathy from the government, but so far. lillle else. SECRETARY 0 F Transportation Claude S. Brinegar said the truck drivers "have got our attention and we are working on their problems." but at week's end the Senate approved a na- tionwide speed limit of 55 miles an hour despite truckers' complaints that they burn more fuel at 101ver speeds. Sen. Jennings Randolph ID--W.Va.), 1vho helped \1·rite the bill , said Senators considered se tting a higher speed for tru cks but decided "the appearance or preferent ial treatment rould undermine all energy." ~'lichael Parkhurst of Los Angeles. editor of Overdrive Magazine and one or the leaders of the truckers' stri ke . said despite Brinegar's statement, 4'no progress has been made." "They're not meeting the probl ems head on," be said.· DEMONS TR.A TIONS BY the striking ,drivers ended during the weekend In RVCral states, and tractor-trailer traffic appeared to be back to normal. But some drivers insisted a ""''Ork stoppage was still in effect today. "We're getting organized , now," said trucker Carl Bray of Middletown, Ohio. "There are literally thousands of rigs in Ohio and millions in the country \1•hich are not r61ling." There y,·ere a fe11.' scattered incidents of violence Saturday directed against drivers trying to operate their trucks. includi ng one trucker who was stabbed by five striking drivers in New Jersey. Bul there \rere far fey,·er disturbances than the dozens of shootings and brick thro11.•ing incidents Thursday and F'riday, the first two days of the "park· in." An association or independent steel haulers in Pennsylvania voted Saturday to end the strike, and Parkhurst said long distance truck traffic "should be almost back 10 normal" today. PROTESTING TRUCKERS who hod parked at !ruck slops along main highways, preventing operating drive!'s from buying diesel rueJ , ended their park·ins Sa turday in many areas. in· eluding Kansas City, Sl Louis, and North Ca rolina. and police in Arkansas reported truc k traffic was back to nonnal Sunday. But . in Ohio, truck traffic during peak traveling hours was reported very light early today. e British Budget LONDON (UPI) -The Cabinet today approved a pre-Christmas belt -tightening package that would mean higher taxes, pay cuts, part-time working and mount- ing unemployment !or crisis plagued Britons. Government sources said the Cabinet approved special emergency budget measures and Chancellor of the Ex· chequer Anthony Ba.rber would announce them lo Parliament later today. e NoSurgery ROME (UPI) -The grandson of billionaire J. Paul Getty toasted his release with a bottle of wine and refused plastic surgery for his missing ear. Le Due Tho Vows Aide '' To Viet Cong in Talks lJJUght lo learn y.·hat touched orr the fighting . A Flint hospital reported a firth man died today from in juries surfered in the bra"1 bct11.·een 111.·o gangs early Sun· day, but homicide detl"C'tivcs said the report wa~ wrong. e SkP1lab Leis ure SPACE CENTER, Houston IAP) The 'n'ork schedule fo r the Skylab J astronauts was relaxed just enough today to permit them more sll't'p, shov.•ers and about 1 .... ·o hours al leisure. Gerald P. Carr of Sanla Ana, \V illiarr, R. Pogue and &i.~·ard G. Gibson., fonner· ly of San Clemente,. still had much \rork and little play. But !hat's the "'oy they want it , officials said. Postcard Day in Southland PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnamese peace negotiator Le Due Tho said today North Vietnam will support the Viet Cong in any military action against the Sout h Vietnamese .anny. "TIIE GOVER~IENT of t he Democratic Republic of Vietnam fully supports the PRG position to take any action to punish the acts of war com- mittee by the satgon administratiOn in violation of the ce.ue-lire." Te111pe rature Cli1nbs l11to Upper 70s ; No Smog "In the face of continuous and grave violations of the (Paris peace) agree- ment by the Saigon administration with U.S. encouragement and support, there is no reuon for the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam and the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Viet- nam (Viet Cong) ta stand Idly by and let the olhl!e side do what it will," he said. 1h> commented in a statement at Le BolllJl't Alrfield when he arrived from Moscow ror an emergency meeting Thursday with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to try Ill shore up the fragile Jan. 27, 1973 peace agreement. Te111pe r11l 111·es Hi<rl! Co• Pc,. ,r.<r .,r~ n n ''· .... ,, " " I· '~·•"( • n "' ' '" ,, " e,o141c .. ~ t • ... '' " " ,. " " ' ' '"''II ,. .. '" "'"' ., " " 0 .. ... ,, " " ,, -· II II lil;J 1 !J ~I !ol i DlLIVERY SERVICE 0-.; !\ ") i \ f .\.II p,1,-,: ' J lr!OlcJ;l1.011 11 ''" ~I 11tt ~i't TOOi ~A~fr ~ ~.lG gr\, tlfl i~I llU! copr •1R br bruu1M 1~ ~ou ['911 ir' 1i~tn Yn1~ 1 JQ 'Ill . SitorC.1 ind !.llllUJ " ~1111 do 11111 '«'"' THI co~ by ! I.ID. ~1Uld'). llf ! Im S1iml1y. c1n ind 1 tllllf •ti be br1111zM !o !Oii. C1111 Me \Jitn ntl \U 11.. lt11:i ~ Af I Most Grllll:t Ca11n11 11u·1 ... ,, 642~4321 Moilhwut H~n111121an Butlr lfli WHllllllS!et • 140· 1220 SJn Ctmnlt. C.Sbn km Slit 11111 Caplstr•. CJll.I Pt11l, Soft~ htlN. htllftl M11;rl ,. t91-442tl ). -' ... ·" " OI " . " " .OI ' 0!1•&11 Ffir11tnlt1 Honol11h1 l1>0i1n1ooll1 J1tll!On11rn1 l<~n11~ (llv Lal VtQ~~ l ou1\vlUt 1.•e-mol!l' M;11-r11 Mllw~\11<" Ml"ne•P0111 Ntw Orle1ns Ntw York 01k11no S. California Miid iemper•rure1 •lld '"'CJll·lrH 11ir m•d1t 1 oleesl!nl div In Soull>trn Celilornla lodav. fi\or1 of !hit 11m1 wa$ eipecteod T~sdav. Skltl r~rn•in..:r ~vnnv over lhe blt1chlt1 wl!h s.omt hlgh tloud$ 11•thltr· lno ovtr lht mountain •rt•• Temper1!ure1 were e-petll!'<I IO Plover In !ht 7115 !n m111v •re•s lodav, •nd lht Los Anoeles Civic Ctnter 1111111 w•1 11xpee11!'(1 ro bll! n •lter Su"d~v's ~i<1h o! so. &etch areas had ptlt l!v mornl1>11 foQ, but otherwise It w11 fair tnd mild. Hlohs lod•V and TuHd•v should be In tht JOs with O\lltf"n!ghl lows from ,5 lo 1S. Fair and mild condl!lon1 1ho\tld Dtevan Jn !hit rnotm!1lns roda\I 1nd Tvesd•Y· Coastal We ather .C~'_.... Nl.WOll!lS:.,._ \J·--Felr wllh some cloudlnes1 tod~V· Llghl v•rl•blt wlncls nigh! and morning l'lol.!rs btcomlng we'I to 1oulhwt$I I to IS k'!Oll In a flt1"f!OOnS lodlV •nd Tllt'l41y. High lodlV Ill !ht 70s. l f GfHO----- ~IAIH'trp~JINOW ~ ........ ~""°"'in , ••ow •• .. Cot1l11 ttmiwr•tvrn rll!Dt from .SO ... ll'lltl'ld ~per11vret r•l'9' h'om 1.1 to n. · Waler ltm11tr11ur1 51. Snn, Moon. Tides MONDAY $~ond ~IOt'I ,al Stcond low •:l,.p,m, J.4 t:4' p.m. 1·• Flrtt .hlOh "'"' ·-TUEIDAY .OS StcOlld Ill.ti •43 s..:ona low .N $utl RIMS 6:S2 1.m. Mocw1 Rl1ti 12:30 1.m. •:Jt 1.m. s.• 11 , .. t .m. 0.1 5:'1 p.m. l .l 10:'3 p.m, 1.• left 4:•6 p.M s.is 11;1op.m, I (SNIFF) LOVE YOU VERY lflUCH MANCHESTER, England (UPI) -Dr. Ivor Felstein has been sniffing at Jove. He claims you should be able to find your ideal partner by smell. Writing in the medical newspaper, Pulse, he said there should be a new kind ol specialist, the semmologtst, he could tell couples if the aromas were not compatible, the doctor said. "When one considers the over au· value that a sense of smell may have for the physician or social worker, lt Is 11Urprising ·that neither ill asked about this sense at lnterilews." He ·said so tar only one meeting was schedllled and would take place at the International Conference Center oo Avenue Kleber, site of the years-long peace talks and the signing of the pact nearly a year ago. Tho said the meeting was being held at Washington's request. 0 AS YOU AU know, the present situa- tion in South Vietnam Is very serious because of the extremely grave viola· tions ol many essential provisions of the Paris agreement by the United States and the Saigon administration," Tho liaid. Tho said the Unllcd Stales w., giving massive military aid In Saigon and reneging on Its pledge Ill help rebuild the..war-ravaged north. He acx:uaed South Vietnam of unlwh- lni military operau.,.., "terrorizing and .massacring" the SOOUt Vietnamese population ond tocl>cdolng current Paris talks between Viet Cong and Saigon negollaton on the political !Uture Of their oountry. WE'RE IN THE DARK Dlspate Harry Curtis ·is being held by Chicago police for shooting deaths o! two neighbors. Police say an argument over who was to rake leaves on CurtJs' prop-e~y sparked dispute. The netghbor and his wife were •hot to death . . OUR LIGHTS ARE OFF, BUT THERE IS NO SHO•TAGI OF INIRGY WHEN IT COMES TO OUR MERCHANTS AND THllR WILLINGNISS TO SERVI YOU. I ' OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY THROUGH ·FRIDAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS . r ' •• I I t 0 a s f y e • a I . • Seeo1ad Jailbreak City Jail Bars Cut, l6 Escape ' -Monday, OKtn1btr 17, }q73 DAIL V PILOT 5 More S tati o11s Ope11 Gas A vailahle on Sunday shutting down the pum'f on motorists' road habits since drop in the amount or weekend Sunday. the nation was asked to abide traffic because-drivers seem Club officials said.r-o n to be fillin g thei r tanks , Interstate 15, the main route by the new g a 5 • 5 8 v in g midweek, or Saturday at the SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sixteen federal prisoners cut through bars over a vent and escaped from the city jail, authorities said SWlday. It was the second mass jailbreak from the fa cili- "August Seventh Guerrilla Movement/' ihe filth s"'"''-11~'!'.~!! message from the group LOS ANGELES (UPI) - It still made sense to keep one eye on the ruel gauge during the weekend, but the Auto Club of South ~rn Cali(ornia said for some reason there were more ~as stations open Sunday. to Las Vegas, Nev., open measures. latest. stations could be found en One, the CHP said, it's clear "I think," said one highway route in Cajon Pass, Barstow that motorists are traveling patrol official. "1hat after and Baker. a tot slower down t h e three weeks most pcopl! Jtave ty in a week. · Last Tuesday 12 federal in- mates escaped by prying loose iron grill'A-1lrk, officials said. One of the 16 prisoners who broke loose Saturday, Manuel Perez Marino, was recaptured later that day. How ever, the other remained at large, ( S tate ) authorities said. The FBI said Perez was caught at Imperial Beach, south of San Diego. Jail officials said they have sealed the remaining vents with cement. e School Plans received by the newspaper. The letter also threatened to "execute" more prison offi- cials,, including the state di- rector of correctlons. e Body Loca ted SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The Coast Guard Sunday found the ·body of a Milpitas womas in the cabin of an overturned trimaran about five miles We.!t of the Golden Cate. The Coast Guard !lid the body of Deborah Haney, 19, was located about 24 hours after her sailing companion, Dale Schlegel, about 30, of Alviso, was rescued bx a helicopter. The couple had planned to sail the homemade vessel Eldorado to Mextco. UJS ANGELES CAPl • Si I Plans have bwi completed ·Art to en for a joint medical school pro-SAN FRANCISCO (AP) gram at the Riverside and -An !talion Renaissance print Lo.s Angeles campuses of the valued at $8,000 has been University of California that stolen from the California would cut a year off the eight years normally required to Palace of the Legion of Honor, earn a medical degree. police say, Under the plan. 'A'hich Is The rare copper engraving, intended to increase the sup-created between 1500 and 1512 ply of family practitioners. by Nicoletto da Modena, about 100 · pre·mM sludents disappeared Sunday, officers would be enrolled each year said . It was part Of the at UC Riverside. During the museum's exhibilioo of early fll'St. three years. 24 students._ Italian engravings (rom ihe _ 'li:'OU!d be seiected to enter National Gallery of Art. the UCLA medicaJ school. although they would first spend two years at San Bernardino County General Hospital. e Letter Thre ats SAN FRANCISCO (UPll - A guerrilla group says it is responsible for the slaying of a prison guard and has vowed to set up ''air battery teams" for use against police aircraft. The San Francisco Chronicle said in today's edition it received a letter from the e Strike Ended OAKLAND (UPI) -. A spokesman at Kaiser Foun~ dation Hospitals says all workers will be back on the job by Friday and routine service will return to normal as soon as possible. Clerical and maintenance workers agreed to a new one- year co ntract Sunday, ending an 11--day,. strike against 11 hospitals and 14 clinics in Northern California. The Auto Club surveyed more than 200 stations and found seven percent more owners kept their stations open despite the President's request to conserve fueJ by Open stations also could be hig hways · and freeways in decided that !here are open found on Interstate 10, en order to conserve t he i r gas slations here and there, route to Palm Springs. gasoline. and they can find enough to The California Highway But two, there doesn't seem keep from running out of Patrol said they've also made to have been any appreciable gas." a few observations about ,------~~----"--'---------- POW Fight~ State Dissolution Law FOSTER CITY (AP) -"Alt those dreams I had in prison were nothing but dust," says an Air Force officer who spent 61/.r: years in a North Viet- namese prison and returned to a wile who wanted divorce . "That wai the first hint that we'd had an unhappy marriage or that she was unhappy," he told the Ex- One of the rare pleasures of Christmas: • At Travi's Air Force Base on St. Patrick's Day, U . Col. a miner. .-· $320,000 Fire UPI T•ltPhoto Robert Lewis Stlrm's famlly greeted him with hugs and screams of joy. But two months later, Loretta -his wife of 18 years -filed for Millions of Americans saw Stirm'.s homecoming in a newspaper photograph show- ing his daughter, Lorrie, leap- ing with open arms for her father as the res t of the fami - ly , including Mrs. Stiim, ran Firemen work from the roof of the Manhattan Fur- niture Store in Manhattan Beach fightin g a mid- morning blaze Saturday which destroyed the in· terior of the store. Several employes and customers had to be evacuated when the flames broke out at 11:30 a.m. No injuries were reported. The fire was believed caused by a short in an electrical wire. divorce. . to greet him. ~ In a court deposition, Mrs. Stirm said she has dii!icussed marriage with a San Mateo attorney and has taken trips with him , some at his e~pense. "The Family Law Act has taken me to the cleaners," Stirm says ruefully; " ... California Jaw presumes both partners shared in a com-OOUR't RECORDS show ... STEAlfll• ) . munity up until the date of that Mrs. Stirm was paid ·........__ e_ ....... · ' l Tot Killed in F cill "I haven't shared in a com-allotments while her husband )"-1~0• ~ • f; ""I' ~· . , ·~ separation. $128,671.55 m pay and . · ~ , i>' munity for 61h: ·years. I was was a POW. At issue in the ~ ~ 1c ·~I · . ,_ · _ ·' --· sitting in that rotten stinking divorce case are what con-~." ,&,. !' . ' . ·-?lOle."---· ·· ---srttutes-community property -~; _ · ~i;-· ~;~ll.<~;o-"'" -" and how much of Stirm 's 'f-.~~fj , ~;::~·~!'!. STIIL'1 GOT his first inkling resources his wife is entitled ~~·1 -~.::-'!~~" h · that the reunion wwld not to. ·~-""-· · ·· . ~~· From ~levator Top LOS ANGELES IUPI) - The uncle of a 3-year-<>ld girl was about to rescue his niece from the top or an elevator that was stuck between floors when the girl panicked and fell four floors to her death. Police said Alicia Brambila and her sister, Rosealva were playing on the -roof of an elevator Saturday in their old apartment building when the ~ quite as he envisioned it Meanwhile, the coupl~'s four ~ /. .... ~~~-, ~ elevator jerked u p \V a r d s . when he was given a telegram children ~re s~llt betw~en .. $.{/.~ ,,"".~ _,,,. <, '/ prevent ing the girls fron1 get· from his wife at Clark AFB them. Lllrr1e, 16, 1s undergoing .. ,;, " " , / tin g down. in the Phillipine!. psychiatric care. She and her __._.,,, Their un cle, Cc st er i o "I have changed drastically brother Robert Jr., 14. live fl , · • r Hernandez. heard their -forced into a situation with their father. Roger. 13.1 ~. screams and was able to pull where I had to finally grow and Cindy. II live in the fami- RoSealva to safety. But when . up," the message read in part. ly home with their mother. he Teached up for Alicia, she "Bob, I feel sure that in your Stirm has appealed a San panicked and top p I e d heart you know we can't make Mateo Superior Court ruling backwards off the side of the it together . , ." denying him a divorce trial elevator. Stirm was flabbergasted : by jury . • If~ like scotch, you'll love J&B Rare Scotch. • j 1- 1 I • Our last-week sales really help wrap up the holiday. ) 49.95 Reg. 59.9~ Mini·1lze pocket calculator Ballery operated, rechargeable. Features 8-digit entry and display plus floating decimal . Adapter !or A.C. operat ion 4.99 129.90 Reg. 138.90 SCM Coronet electric typewriter A fast. fu lly portable machine. Full 10" carriage. Pica or El!te type. Sturdy carrying case. Ch1rgt II on your JC Pt nnty charge c1rd . ORANGE BllCh at Ortngethorpe City Of. II Glrdtl'I Grovt Btl.td. 3900 So. Bristol No. of So. Cout fllllzl _ ~ Diiiy A SUl'lclay 9:30to10 p.m.Optci QM'\' & Sl.l'ldliy 10 1.m. to 10 p.m,0pen Daily & Sl#lda,y 10 •.m. to 10 D.m • • l ' 1 • . ~ • • •• .. !-.. • • . • • DAI LY PILOT EDITORIAL GE Crisis At the Dump Impending Sunday closure or all four Orange Coun· ty du1nps can be expected to generate quite a .few prob· len1s apart from irking citizens who are in the habit of cleaning up "their hontes and yards on Saturday and hauling the result to the dump on Sunday. ' 'l'he Sunday closures, that begin in January -along with a reduction of Saturday dumping hours -are designed to save din1inishing diesel fuel supplies. Re1narkably, earth-moving equipment used to bury trash at the dumps consumes 78 percent of all diesel fuel purchased by the county. The proposed cutback could save 95,000 gallons of fuel a year. 'fhe question re1najns: whal will happen to all the material nor1nally hauled to the dumps in steady st.rea1ns of traffic every \Veekend? l\. suggestion that the dumps be lefl open, but without the eart.h·moving operations, was rejected on grounds of probable heaUh, fire and wind-littering prob- len1s. So1ne offi cials fear thal similar problems will exist il trash and re!use is left piled up in backyards, or worse, dumped in vacant lots. 1 At prese nt. a trip to the dump is the.only solution for the householder with refuse too bulky for regular trash pick·up. Perhaps one answer might be speci31 :lrraogements with ·local trash collectors to accept extra material at specified intervals during the emergency to insure prompt and safe disposition of refuse. Winning Ways It was a good year for young athletes along the Orange Coast. The traditional winners kept on winning and. in addition, lots of ·long-empty shelves now boast shiny trophies brought home by teams that suddenly hit pay dirt. Perhaps appropriately in water-oriented communi- ties. the water polo teams were heavy scorers. Newport Harbor High and Corona del ltfar High emerged as Sunset League champion and Irvine League co-champion, respectively. Unlversity High and Laguna Beach High were Orange League co-champions, Estancia High was Irvine League co-chtmpion and Golden West College placed folirth in state ·junior college water polo champ- ionships. . · , In. football. Newport Harbor, Sunset League co- champ1on. won its flrst-ever CJF playoff game, losing In the quarter fmals, while El Toro, unbeaten in free- lance play, and with no seniors in the student body was Invited to CJF playoff and got to the second rou~d . 1i1ission ':'iejo had its best-ever season, 6·3, while Costa Mesa High emerged from the doldrums for a 4-5 season, second best in the school's history. Sharing in the good news were Edison and Fountain Valley both ~th 7-2 records. And in cross:country, Costa A1es~ won its league championship. The energy shortage may be overwhelming the rest of us, but apparently there1s still plenty on the youth front. Didn't Rally Round San Diego area Republicans can't be reading their of-ficial party publications too carefully. . ~he ~~~ubli~an State Central Committee Report headlines, B'oom1ng Grass Roots Support for the Presi- dent." The Republican National Con1mittee's monthly ~agazine. First ?.1onday, heralds, "Coast to Coast.-Amer- icans Rally 'Round the President." / And this week the Gallup Poll reported the Presi· dent's popU.larity had risen 4 points (to 31 percent ap- proval) from ·the October ·low and the Harris Poll re· ported a similar rise. ' But in San Diego last week, a "Support the Presi- dent" rally at which preparations were made for 1,500 persons, drew only 75. And to make matters worse, organizers revealed the rally cost $3,067 and wound up with a deficit of $2,910. Just can't win 'em all ... • • • 'Welcome to the tar pits.' Agnew Still - ~-~Enjoys .His- Peace Talks .May Reveal Neav Flexibility . • Privileges \VASHINGTON -Although former Vice President Spiro Agnew has been se ntenced as a criminal tax cheat. he still has enough clout to bump less celebrated passengers from their airline scats. lie still travels v.•ith a Secret Service escort. \Vith t\\'O bodyguards running in- terfencc, he barged ahead of other passengers \vaiting in line at Ne\v York City·s L'3Guardia airport for the 4 p.n1. Eastern shuttle flight to \\'ashingfln on December 6. Among the displaced passengers \Vere l\\'O Senate aides , Charles Bangert and (JACK ANDERSON) Gerald Hell erman. \Vho had been vtorking all d~y on the energy crisis. AFTER AGNE\V had been comforlably seated with his Secret Service protectors alongside him, there ,ras still one empty seat. The passenger ahead of Bangert and Hellennan \\•as offered the space. "No thanks," replied the ruffled traveler. "I \VOuldn 't ride on the same airplane \Vith that man .·· The bumped passengers \Vere obliged to \\'ait 21 minutes for a second shuttle pl ane. An EasterJl Airlines spokesman told us that Agnew \Vas give n spcciu l treat· ment at. the request of the Secret Service. A Secret Service spokesman said the agents had n1ade the request "to facilitate his security." Our repeated calls to Agnew's office brought no response. FOOT1\0TE: Eastern Airlines also gave favored treatment recently lo President :\ixon's friend Bebe Rebozo. Column ist f\:faxine Cheshire reported that Dear -Gloo1uy Gus I've been s.sving my papers for years -for Boy Scout drives etc. I think no'v I 'll save them for a big tax dedlJ':tion ! E. !'. G1oo~r Gvs commat111 l rt svb,,.111114 "' rt1der1 olld do 1101 111ct111rllv '"lee' 1111 ¥itWI O! 1111 lllWl•lltlf. Stfld fOllr •II ltfflll to GIMl'lll' G\11, Dolly f'llol. I a passenger aboard a l\I i a m i ·lo · \\lashington airliner was persuaded to give up her first-class scat and move back into the coach compariment in order to provide Rcbozo with a comfortable seat. Rebozo was also delivered to the door of the plane in a Hrilousinc, \Vith an Eastern official carrying his bags. PftlVILEGED PASSENGl!:RS: Ex-Vice President Spiro Agnew isn't the only big· ,11ig. apparently, who gets special travel privileges. \\lh ile lesser Americans are scrambling for reser\!ations during the holidays, their congressmen "'ill get favor.ed treat- ment. On December 10, Rep. John l\1cFall. D-Calif.. the House Democratic \\'hip . sent a memo to his colleagues telling of "special arrangements" to assist them ll'ith their travel plans during the "ad- journment period and the Christmas holidays." CONFIDES the memo: "Members ex· periencing difficulties in securing desired reservations may receive assistance by calling tlle congressional desks of the cooperating airlines." A listing of the priority phone numbers of 11 major airlines is thoughtfully provided. "A.~1TRAK travelers," adds th e l\Icl-~au nie1no, may also "receive assistance'' by calling special numbers. l\·lcF'all happens to be chairman of the Transportation ·Appropriations sub- committee. \Vhich controls the Purse- strings for airlines and rail roads. .<\ spokesman for him conceded that "it's only because of the committee he"s on that \\'e could ask for help.'' -Israel -Open--to---Suez_ -Compromise- '\'ASHING T ON-Israeli Prime ~tinister Golda 1.-Ieir has firmly but inCormally ~passed woi-d to the Nixon administrati~n that Israel would not o~ ject lo a reopening or the Suez Canal- e\'en wilhout Israel's guaranteed right or immediate pruiS'age-as ' part of a first · stage lsrat;li withdra,val from the Egyptian Sinai Pen· insula. What makes that private message to \Vashington so in· triguing is that it dramatizes Israel's growing awareness that it must display unprecedented flexibility in the peace talks which formally begin this ~·eek. ( EVANS·NOVAK) force "'OUJd. nlO\'e bet\\·ecn the canal and the new l.sraeli line, and the Egyir tians, \\'ith the U.S,. supplying n1uch of the financing. ~·ouJd start work on reopening the canal. lF BOTH SIDES managed to survive this initial phase , the peace conference ~ould then be reconvened and negotia· lions would continue toward a second phase. This would require further. Israeli withdrawal, possible discussion of bard guarantees -to Israel -on free passage . of, the Strait of Tiran into the Gulf of Aq8:ba , and many other issues. Again, the second ph ase would be another testing period, a slightly more difficult experiment in compromise, dur- ing which the Geneva oonference again \\'OU!d take a vacation to see how ii · v.·orked. "Call It growing old together," said one American expert with intimate ties both lo rsrael and the Ni:o:on ad· ministration. The Israeli objed is ob- vious: Egypt must learn to live· y,•ith a slo\9 pace of Is.raeri \\·tthdra\\'al because Israel wants each sta~ of the process to be provably self-enforcing and to pave the way for the next. THE ~JOST serious question raised by this piece-a t-a·lime strategy is no! ''i'hether Egypt will aceept so slO\\' a pace but \\'hether the oil-rich Arab coun- tries, particularly Saudi Arabia. 'viii ac· cept it For Egypt's President Anwar Sadat. the withdrawal of Israel from the canal to the ~1itla Pass, th e ~tart of y,·ork on reopening the canal. alki the flying of the Egyptian nag-over the demililar· ized western Sinai would be no s m a 11 victory. Inde~, /or Sadat, the hero of the Oct. 6 war, such progress by the middle of February might place him among the foremost heroes of Egypt. There is some reason, moreover. to hope that such preliminary Israeli \\'ithdrav.·al would begin to ease the oil squeeze. _Sonie highly placed officials here have learned from Mideast sources that Saudi Arabia ma.\' be rllllning short of cash in !he ,·astl~· expcnsi\•e put-chase of So\·iet military hard1rare for Egypt. Cnlike Soviet resu pply her allies afler the 1967 1\·ar. 1\·hen osco1'' accepted paymcnl in long·ler oan~ and in Egyp- lian cotton. ~Iosco ' is no1v belie\'l'<I to be selling lts ,1·ea · nly for bard cash. IF TRUE. King Faisa l of Saudi Arabia. the 1nos1 po"·erful Arab il·ader by \•irtue of hi s cont rol of nearly one-{ou rlh of !he \\'Orld's oil resc•rvcs. 1nay be ready to case his oil boyco11 in order 10 refill his d('pleted treasury (cash then lo be paid. iron ically. to ~Ioscow for Soviet v.'eapons). . Thus. Israel's confidential ideas about the shape of the Geneva conference are \\'orth se rious study here and in Ca iro. Th('y mark !he rirsl glin1n1cr of hard realization in Israel that Oct. 6 was indeed a turn ing point-that. as \Vhitc House counsellor ~felvin ft. 1...'.lird said on Ore. 3. "the only fr iend and supporter Israel has 1n the ,,·orld today is the U".S. governn1ent'·-and the U.S. govern· ment v.·a nts a settlement. • No final settlement that did not gua rantee lsrael freeQom of passage through the Suez Canal would be worth the ink it was written with. But wha t Prime l\>linister Golda t.:teir wants Presi· dent Nixon to understand is that even though her Coalition government is wag- ing a tightening battle 'for reelection on Dec. 31, and hence is highly defensive about publicizing concessions to the Arabs or the U.S., she understands the extraordinary emergency and the need for compromise. Nixon's Tax Disclosures ONE VARIATION of the flan now under study in Israel 'v o u d be the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces · • from all Egyptian territory on the west bank of the canaf to the mountain passes No New Grist for the l1np ell cli1 ne nt Nli l l 20 miles east of the canal. Coupled with that would be Egyptian withdrawal of all but symbolic forces from the east bank of the canal and Israeli con· sent to reopening the famed canal closed by the Israeli invasion or Sinai in the si1t-day war of 1967. Then, the Geneva peace cooference v.'Olild adjourn for several weeks to let both parties carry out this initiaJ step in the tortUOU$ process of transforming 25 yea rs of ~·ar to something better. During the adjournment, the UN peace-keeping WASHINGTON, D.C. -President Nix- on took alf1fie tax advantages coming to him, and ma ybe more than some auditors would allow, but his full finan· cial disclosure provides little grist for the impeachment mill. Nothing in his income tax returns (rucHARD WILSO~ take tf;em back on that basis. The judgment seems to be fonning that the President was nea rly enough within the law. and it will be surp rising if the Congressional joint committee on intern~!. revenue t8xation rinds to the contrary. President's financial operations the Ellsbcrg affair, the \Vatcrgate co~er-up. and rhe milk price rise. There is to be a fuller explanation of each of Uiesc Incidents based on laped conversation, memorand~. reCtJ!Jection, and records. If lhcse reports have the same effect as the rinancial disclosures. they ~·i ll also lend to reduce grounds for im· peachment based upon specific illega l acts. And such acts, as has been pointed out herein before. are the crux or tht! matter. How the Energy Cr_isis Was Solved for the past four years supplies a readily visible basis for criminal proceed· iogs as was the case with Spiro T. Ag· new. The financial disclosure may' call the President's polit- ical judgment into question, but there is no showing that he deceived the Jntenuil Revenue Service. Others, principally the !louse Judiciary Committee, "ill judge if being u·ithin the law was enough to dismiss the President 's financial affairs as a basis for impeachment. This is where moral judgments on what the Presldeni ought. to have done lnste.ad of what .he did do will wei gh heavUy, and from all signs this is the direction in which other events are mov- ing. . Th1P~ACllING Nixon on general pri n· c1~les is not likely to s u ccee d. Th e evide nce on specific acts has got to be hard and firm to convi~ the House that a bill or impeachment \vould not turn in!o a fiasco. Jt \\'as during lhl' Th lrd Enefgy Crisis in th e \\'inter or 19i5 that the President finally solved the problen1 once and for all. The Arabs had angrily turned off the oil again after the U.S. refused to bomb seven Isra eli refugee s holed up in the headwaters of the Ama1.on. America's excuse -!hat it had only enough fuel left for a one-\\·ay tr ip in a Piper Cub - T -was flatly rejected as "unacceptable.'' With !he coun- try's industry and transportation grind· iDI to a hall, the Prosldent had re- luctantly lowered thennostat:s to 33 de· grees . .,·Many are cold,'' he said \\'ith attempted good ch eer "but few are fro- zen." The pubUc, however, was In a true· ulent mood. Jt was thus that the President eagerly awaited tbe report an the latest negoti::i.· tiohs with the Arab leaders from his . ~· ~ary ol State, Omar Sharif, wbt, O}r1be derhaod.s of two sheiks arMI -a mue.uln, had replaced Or. Henry ~- "OOMll llCill'r lnlO -Dll' Oval omce and Jlllll up a burakln rug." said the PrdidmL •'Clreful )'OU doll'! bio" OU! (...__A_R_T_H_O_P_PE__,) my candle, though, !here's a match shortage. And how are lhings in Araby?" "\Varm, sir," said Mr. Sharif shiver· ing, ''and bright, too. Electric lights everywhere, big cars roaring do\lo·n the highways ... " "I had a-car once,'' said the President, wis1fully, "In fact. several. Even wit h the ten·mile speed limit. J could get to Camp David In half a day and . ; . But what about the negotiations ? 'i\'ill they accept Southern California for two tankersCul of Ethyl?" '"Not even regular, sir. A! per your ,instruct!~ I offered to throw in Key lliseayne, seeing as how you can't use 11 any more, and ~fiaml Beach. But they natly~refused." "Good grief," Said the President. "They already. won Japan, Europe, Puerto Rico 1nd \Southe1 1te rn Antarctica. \Vhat else could they want?" "Us;-slr," sald"llr. Sliilnf sadly. "WHAT!" cried the President. "\\'e shall fight them on the beaches. In !he hiD1 ... " . "With.clubs, sir?" asked Mr. Sharif. "Hmmm," said lbe Presid ent . ( - "Fighling a war docs require energy. mAT'S AJJOUT IT .• oo~cernlng ~is tax 1 suppose I have no choice but to returps. Wha~ remams IS t~e kind. of , send them my surrender." egal wrdoglmg over capital gams, "No need, sir. Their t 0 ugh e~· edu lo s;l tax shelters whic~ concerns negotiator, Sheik Emup Quik, 15 comi ve lawyers andvtbe United States here to accept it. He says he's always . of 1).x Appea~ ~ ery ~ay. , \vanted to visit a backward Christian From the moraliahc point of view, country. His wife wants to shop for there is one drawback. The income . tax good buys in our quaint bazaars -ret~ of Lyndon 8. Johnson, Dwight na tive handicrafts like antique televisioh D. Eisenhower and John. F. Kennedy sets, useless family heirlooms such 8! are net open for inspection, so there telephones, steam irons ... " is no ~t basis. of comparison wi&h "BackWard? Quaint ? Native?" The Whit other presidents considered proper President raised a clenched fist. 11Such legal ot expedieot indignitles are too .much. I shall have 1'h!s much ..Is known : Nixon &Voided to employ my Ultimate Weapon to save $300,000 ·In taxes· l'n large part GD . a Ame rica from these rJendish Arab basis available to previous presidents, blackmailers!" but 15 willing to pay up ii. the. tu AND SO IT \"IS that the President jlulled of! the_ Ingenious coup lbat was to make the N~Jjon strong, pl"O!perous and humming once again. . When Sheik Emup, Quik stepped from his btlicopter he was ·stunned ' .. , the doors of the White House opened and out attJ'l)fld ·u;e Presitlent, wearing a "ell-oil herrlngborie burooooe • "Salaam effendi " 11itl the President !. ' I ' bowing gracefully and touching his chest, lips and forehead. "Miy Alloh be with my fello" Moslom leaders and may the !lc6i ot a ;lhousotld 111111 shine on our beloYed .. b nations -yours and mine." ! experts ot Congress think he should. He ts probably rlg1tt·that the commercial value of his vice pr~klentiaJ papers is worth as much or. more than he ' claimed as a deduction, but It 15 probably bravado that he would be willing ·to Quotes . Roy AA, U.S. bud&et director In calif. news O>lllerence -"Democracy lVOricl best durinc I erllis. 'Thell, Ille 111811)' differing opiniono ...... ,~ end ta, tx1orlt.Y 11 given to lbe aolutloo of IOOll bondlt to lbe public:" ' -..;.>.-__::_ .. SHORn. Y, it is stated, the President will supply Congress with an explanation of .the operation of the '1Plumbers" unit In the White House, by-passing other intelligence agtncles on teaks of national security information. The results of this disclosure are 'likely to · parallel· those or tbe financiaj lnfonnalloo the President hn( given out That is ·to aay, ~there '!ii be room. fo~ moraJ ~judgments on '!fhethei; what he did was right or YrTong. In tl>ls coanectioo, If Is o( Interest lhat·lhe New York. Times, after plumbing aa deeply as It could in~ what federal investigators -and fomier 1iovemment of· flcials know, !nulkly oald It oould find nothlng to conllid with the President's atatementt,<M,l the Ellsberi matter. TllE PUSIDENT aid be did not •authorire and had no ltngwledge or such Illegal acll u breaking Into the office ot Danlcl 1 Ellaberg'i ,psychiatrist. The Tlmet could find no lnformatioO to refllte that statemcnl. ~t the paper did llnd 1'1S Nixon's iritense lntcmt In the ·opera· UOlll of Ille Piwnben unit' as a mea011 ol stopplnc ltob ol lnlo!'1UUon. J!ut tllllt aloDa II llOI' _,,.ii for lm- pi¥bmenj, ' Tbete .,. lhe. impotUnt rbaltm: the • '.he financial disclosure ill ustrates one J>O,•nt clearly. It is better to tell every· lhm~, even though this discloses embnr· rass1ng, erron eous and unpopul ar actions th.a~ ~ let public imagination run rlot'. N1~on s friends only regret that he has waited so long to realize this. · OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubUshlr Thomos KttlJil, £dilor Barbara Krtibich Editorial Page Editor 'l"e tctlltlrtal ·~ or 1hc Dally PTlot Sttk1 to lnrorm. aJ}4 sllmulate-~tra . by Pf'tft1rtJng on 1h11 page divtl'IM!•CO!Jlm«!ntacy'on topics o( in· tertst by S)'Ttdlcattd columnh1r1 llnd cartoon~ls. by providing a fon1m tor readers views and by ~lrig this newspaper's oplnionii lnd kleu on currtnt topic-. The editorial aplnloni of tht 0.Uy Pilot IPJ>C&r only tn tho editorial column at the mp ot the ~t. Oplnk>na tX'PT't!'f!'d by the col· Uniitiltl and, ClrMoonlstt and )etftt W'l'ltm are their own w no tndorse-i ~: ot their vil!\lo, tiy 1the Da.IJ1 nJIX 11tlou~ br: iJd~ I Monday, December · 17, 1973 ' ' ' t c e I f • ' Monday, Oecembfr 17, iq73 DAILY PILOT 7 Ed Clinch Got His Coconut Family Cir~11s 1>11 BU K~ane Gan gland W arfjlfe it1 ·California's Prisons ( PEOPLE in Fresno that he was "fit for the job" in convincing fellow student! to elect him • to head the student body at Lincoln Elementary School here. Tyront doesn't think name rtcognltlon with the other Nix- on made the difference. He ~ credits football where he gain- ed 10me fame by scoring 14 touchdowns for his slxth grade 1 team. ---*---. ~ Opening of an abandoned safe-deposit box has brought to light a ""alth of In· formation on Stepbtn Crane, the 19th century author ~c-. claimed for his Civil War novel, "The Red Badge of Courage." State Comptroller F r e d Dickinson of F1orida said . a gold wa tch and pen belonging to Crane are only "a small part of the large collection of unique and valuable Items." nit box at the Barnett Na- tional Bank of Jacbonville had been ront<d at the -of the century by Cora, Stewart Crane. Bank o(Clcials were unaware that Cora Crane wu the v.Titer's wife until they opened the box on Aug. · 8, lllSB. * . D<lortl Stokes of Bothwell. Utah Is giving vice president Gtrald Ford and his family a big bird for Olristmas. She said she was sending them a 51·pound turkey as she promised when she met Ford In October. Ford said he didn't think his oven could accommodate the turkey but, tr he wa s given such a gigantlc gift, lle would find an oven which could handle It. * Former heavyweight cham· pion Jack l>fmpsey came out fighting again -but this tlme in a court. Dempsey was trying to force his new landlord to negotiate a lower rent for hla nmes Square restaurant. T h e landlord, who says Dempsey's old lease 11 Invalid, wants $100,00) yearly. Dempsey pays $65,000. Judge Harry Davis of the city's housing court told the 7&-yeaMid champ to try lo -k out the dlfferenct and to come back in three w'eks. But first he atked for a handshake. * Norma Ltvy, the call girl whose disclosures led to a British government shakeup. held a news conference in l.DOdon to promote her book "I Norma Levy." The 26-year-old, Irish-born woman, wife of a taxi driver. claimed her notoriety has co•t her a number of legitimate jobs. Lall May, L«d Lambto<i, Br1t1Jh Royal Air F o r c e ' MJnllW', .. signed a f t er -per rtportl ol govern- ment hlih olflclal• consorting with coll girls. Shorily al• terwant, Bart Jelllcoe, Lord Privy Seal resigned because of the scandal. W'S 8£ FRIENDLY Jf you have new nolghbon or know of anyone moving to our 1r11, pleue tell u1 10 thtl •oe ~ atenrll • friendiT wtloome and hol~ them to btcome acQU&lnted Jn u.lr new 1urTOUndlnp. avls•brow We've added another · famous name ••• in time for your Xmas gifting! Onry General Electrlc , __ de~cr...usbed"ice, _ ·1· (::-··· cubes,or cold water .. -' - throug;, the door! with immense 8. 58 cu. ft. capacity freezer • 8.58 cu.ft, FrMJ.., capacity • l&.01 cu.ft. Fresh Food Section e Four Ad)Udlble Tempered Glw -• Pwmalon 1tor191 dtaWlrl for W • mMt, •nd produce. Meet conditioner NI control for conversion to •xtr• w•tabfe nor.tit • Fo..r Adjult8ble frllth food door -. • UtilltY Compe1t11wnt, ind butter conditioner with templ ratul"8 control ••ct loft or herd • Only 311 'II" wt•. MX" hlth • Rolts Out on WMlll GE COLORS: Avoado Copptrton or H•l"l•t, only $10 .oditionel PLUS DAVIS 9 B".O WN'; FREE 2 YEAR PARTS & LAIOlll: WARRANTY • av1s-• 26 Years of lnte9rlt11 & De pc11dabllltv General EJectric's ""ta Color T-#1, ~Tf\J-LINt- f'lcture T <iJe S)otem •• i/. 1' 15" . .,,.,.... Portable TV ' B /W Portable $9988 e Monocl,,om• Hybriclch111i1, I lncorporet•1 int•9r1t•d , cirt.uitry i nd l'llenv 1olid· 1t•f• d•vic•I fo r cool op•r•tion, d,ptndebility. Up-Fro11t control1 UHF Solid 1l1te tun•r Hi9h 91in VHF lun1r l " Dyn•pow•r 1p••k•r Hendy l1199e91·1lr1p c1rrin9 ~end l• l Cost1 Mesa • Harbor Area El To ro • Saddleback V1lley 411 E11t Stvtnln nth SlrHI El Toro Ro1d at Fwy. (Ntxllo SIY.On)" ==l~== Da;ly 9.9, SaMday 9·6 646·1614 •. ijw~···l3 Doily 9.9, Sohlrdoy 9-6 837-3130 liellvery and Expert lnatallatlen 0. ~ ;_,rt~1. 1rtil111•ll •1,.ff1 ll•llffr '"II hut.II ,._ MW .,,ll•K•• 9C<erlli119 .. l•ctety 1,.clllc•ll•11&. NIW TOLL PIH lllVICI PHONE NUMIER IEnl th 7-3437 .. .\ ! t ' ... ' 10,, DIAGONAL Porta Color"TV 1 • Porta Color~ "ln·Line" picture lube system • VHF "pre-set line tuning" control • UHF Solid Slate tuning system • Patenled GE crystal color filler • Cabinet -High impact po lystyrene with grey finish J-.t I ,. ' stack Matrix. i i 5~ctra·Brrle IV ' Picture Tube 19" C olor TV Oie9on•l e Bl1cli: Matti• Ad..-1!'lc•d Spectr1-Brit1® IV l'ict1ir• Tub• e GE S•n1itronie tuning 1y1t1m e AfC.Autom•tic Fin i Tuning e GfCHvbrid R1liacolor ch111i1-1olid 1l1te c•mpon1nt1 give you br ight, 1h1rp color pictur•1. cool operetion end d•p•nd1bl1 p•rfour1enc1. ' I • . j We hov• built our business on 101i,: fied, loyal cv1to- mer1. Y.ou must ~ IOli•fl•d or W•'ll make tt good. . --- 8 DAILY PILOT Monday, Otetmbtr 17, 1~71 . ' ' TUES. a wm. ONLY!- ' . .... , ... ' • PLUMP FEATHER OR ... ..,_.. FOAM FILL PILLOWS Comp . ot 2.99·3.49 ... Hygienic. od 2 s5 orless and res1l1ent bed pillows 1n big 10116" si1e. Re~lace ti1ed, sar, FOR ging pillows now and save . .... ,!'-, ... -. ·r ;G'.1~ .. ·~, f ' . . . ,, ai -------._ .. ..._ .._ .. _._.___ __ ...__ --. ~·--... " -arr SPECIAL GROUP OF LADIES' DRESSES & PANTCOATS OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES $35-$45 Luxuriou& king and queen l'linter -warm comforters in bed- room-brightening sateens, nylons, crepes. taffetas and polished cottons. Choo se fr om a l'IOrld of pretty pr ints and sensallo nal ;ol1ds. Some even have lace borders. Most are filled with Kadel· polyester, a!i are simply fabulous to give or to rec~ive . 80x90" queen s11e: !08190" king. Special group of LADIES' DRESSES IN MISSfS' JUNIOR, .AND HALF SIZES REG 8 99 TO 16 .99 · ~,'·., ," HOW REDUCED ~· L~iRK . 719 to 2159 o;)V..j, RED TAGS ~· Two-piece dresses ' One-piece styles ! Fa shion · ~.'i excitements in prints, solids • " • at this · · saving. buy up a batch 1 Not every size in every style .•. Hurry' • Special group of . LADIES' PANTCOATS in TOP FASHION STYLES ~~G:i91.~i9 '. HO~;;:CED 959 2399 RED TAGS! TO Regular-length pantcoats ! Bike jackets' Safari jackets ! Cotton suedines, corduroy s ... melton blends, velveteens, leather-looks ... plaids. Some with lake.fur! Misses' sizes ••• not all sizes in every style. DRUXE TEXTURm SCATTER RUG ASST. -r~ . t·~· U!~ . HOllDAY-REGANT DACRON ROCKm CURTAIN PANRS Ch oice of heavy·we1ght polyester/ nylon pile rugs 1n shag or sculp- tur~ textures. Fringed or uni ringed. solids or two tones. latex skid re sistant backs. Machine washable. 2r!5 Lovely flocked Dacron;-potyesli>r marq~1seUI! panels to u~e .ilon? or unde1 draperi~S. Generou~ ~ .. ~·I tom ~ .. m. wide ~1di> hemming. S4" pr 81" lenRths. White or color . 199 .------ • REG. 2.99.J.99 REG. 2.49·2.99 Save s3 t; MEN'S DESIGNER-DETAILm KNIT DRESS SHIRTS, FANTASTIC BOYi ;: COMP .AT7.99 4 g ,~-· Terrific values at our everyday low price. even bettec 1 ~ when they're price-smashed' No-wrin>le tailored knits ... ! ~ with long point collar, two -button cuffs. tapered with ta i · ' • Lots of great-looking new patterns and fashion col Sizes 14V,. 17: sleeves 32 -35. ''• : Special Purchase I MEN'S QUALITY POLYESTER KNIT -. ~ B·PC FLARE-LEG SOLID COLOR SLACKS "1 iale adVan tage • 7 handsome punc SUPER-SPECIAL ladle, s cups a LOW PRICE! ~ You won't find slacks of this quality for less ANY\'ili so better hurry 1 No-wrink le, shape -keeping 100% pol ter knits in the wide waistband, belt loop model ••• hemmed flare bottoms for instant wear. Sizes 30 tq :1 Save .•2 . MEN'S LAYERBl·SET OF NOVRTf ~ SWUTER ANO PRINT SPORT SH B g · REG. 10.99 . Compli ,e . . . .. .. Today's favorite. twosome for great gift.givin g! Nove ) • • ribbed acrylic knit sleeveless LI-neck pullover ove(i\IOM. :· · sleeve Sport shirt in a variety of color·harmonizih~ p1Hl8 !PC. terns. S11es S·M-L-XL. Priced for extra savings ! :!.B(ORUXE , Keep an extra -• ware ~andy. less set indud : , .ner larks, kniv . teaspoons, 12.401 !iHOP WITH CONFIDENCE AT WHITEt ERONT ••• !iATl!iFACTIQN G!JARANTEED OR \'DUR ~ONEY .BACK CRAIGE CHARGE IT ... USE JOUI CllDIT CAID n . :·::1• 11 -· ~-· Fii . Y•R SH•PING CINVENIErlE Jiil C•E IT TllAYI _,.A' ... " IH_tMot1!"1ctttllTtn$ ' 1 ' l .' ' ' • Monday, Dfcembtr 17, 1973 DAILY PILOT f! . HOLIDAY HOURS: •· 11IPu SUN: 10 to 10; ' TUES. I WED. 0 LYI SUPER SANTi-SAVINGS ON FAMOUS MAKE UALITY TOYS _________________________________ ;:_.,.· \!!~~------... ------------:....~ ~ \~ -FRONT Our Reg. to 2. 99 ' N· i; ~:,·en Po _\- v. ·J c .. ·c IT-tt~ 1• ":·J .~ -"·tiJI t :-• 1~· ·:~~ - I·· 1 • f ,-... ~I , .i a·~ ~~--~. '-\...,~!'!°!;'--'-"~-"1.=C H ESS/CH KR S. CANDY LAND GAME The classic beginner's game. Even children whG can't read or count can en:oy 1t. Only a knowledge of basic colors 11 necessary to play the game. ACEY DUCE'f B.GAMMON Double laced checkerboard, in- cludes chessmen & checkers. , Mattel Ge-Tar Asst. Musical fun with ctlorce of Mo1her Goose, Co -Nnoy or Snoopy Ge tar s. Assortment includes Z wran~ler single sho t pistol s. Styhsh ho1slers have tancy sten cil decoration. Re- movable belt. ' JOKER'S WILD Famous 11/ game show. 2 players compete to see who can win $500 liisl. Age.s IO·adull. • PC. PUNCH BOWL SB GLASS DECORATOR WINE FOUNT ~antage of our low discount price on th is 9 1 me punch bowl set . Includes big 7-quart bowl. 8 cups and hooks. Pt!rfect for holiday parties . • Handsom~ wine decanter makes a hansome table- piece. Wrou.ghl iron and etche d glass. Perfect for entertaining guests .•• distinguished gift. OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICE 88 o .. Reg: . 1.91 COOKIE JARS WITH ATIRACTIVE DESIGNS~ an extra set of dinner· handy. Pr1ctical stain· et includes 4 each, din· rks, knives. soup spoons. AS. ' \ Makes a dislinguished .gill or a luxurious liar addition. 9·Pc. Set •.• 4 -6\7-01. red wines. 4 • 617 ·01. white wines and 1 • liter decanter. Everr home shorlld have~ cookie jar. These big bright colored models are made of durable ste~. With tigl)l fit· ting lid to keep cookies fresh. 159 choice Our Reg. to 6. 99 3088 BRISTOL ST . •• -Sa n Dieqo Freeway a t R ostol \ B.GAMMON/ CHECKERS 2 e1m~-. rn l ! ·~. 1n~ ~JJrd v. t.~ ·- & 1m1T1Gn on I J·\ cti•·i~·s on u:~tr. • • • GOLDILOCKS & 3 BEARS II·,: 1 J 1 __ r _1 1.1" r ., ,.. , . ''':n · r :J"' J • I,,~, it· ,) b. Can't Hurt Socker-Boppers Safe, sock 'em 01 bop 'em rough-house tun. PRE-SCHOOL COOTIE • B ·'• ,, d d•~s~ct~tl•' tug. r~:' ~ul toi:eth~r bf 01te rdl. Greatest Super Heroes B incll action 1.,ures i·Jch dressed in authen- 1 c CIJ~tume. 24 PC. APOLLO TUMBLER SET :.E9Gi Elegant to give or to get. Handsome. con temporary shapes. Includes 8 ea: 16-ol . cooler, 13 -oz . be~'erage, 9-oz. roc~s . Choice of Dusky Blue or Tawny. .. DRUXE GLASSWARE FANCY FORTY SET :.1 9G9 A truly elegant home enterta inment set you'd expect to pay far more for. Set includes 8 ea: 6·0Z. sherbet. 4·01. cocktail, 6·0l. 1u1ce. 10· oz. beverage and 13·01.1ced tea . Fabulous buy! 41 PC. GLASSWARE D'LUX BEVERAGE sn REG. 6.99 Another luxury home entertainment set in · eludes 8 ea: beer kings, beverage glasses. hi·balls. rocks. roly poly cocktails. l shot glass. STOIE HOUIS: MON •• SAT. 104Mto10PM SUN. lOAMtolOPM • 8 DAILY PILOT I~ I \ \ I I• t , I Mond<Q", [)t(ember 17, 1CJ73 art= SPECIAL GROUP OF LADIES' DRESSES & PANTCOATS TUES. & wm. ONLY! OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES 535-545 . Luxu1ious king and queen wintH·warm comforters in bed- ro om-brightening sat eens, nylons, i:,repe>. taffetas .and polished cotton;. Choo se from a world of pretty pnnts and sensational 'Ol tds. Some even have lace borders. Most are filled with Kodel • polyes ter, all are si mply faOulous to give or to recetve. 80x90" Queen s11e : 108x90" king. Special group of LADIES' PANTCOATS in TOP FASHION STYLES ~~Gi~.~:9 NO~;;~:CED gs9 2399 RED TAGS ! TO Regular-length pantcoats! Bike jackets' Safari jac kets ' Cotton suedines, corduroys .•. melton blends, vel veteens, leather·looks ... plaids. Some with fake-fur! Misses' sizes ••• ,,,,.~ ... not all sizes in every styl e. FRT WALL CAl.fNDAR NEW 1974 VERSION • - PLUMP FEATHER OR FOAM FILL PILLOWS · • Comi. at 2.99·3 49 ... H!i'""'· od 2 s· 5 orless and resilient bed pillows 1n ' big 10x16" ""· Re~lace tired, sag FDR · ging pillows now and save • · Reg. 1.34 ... Colorful lell wall caleo -ggc DRUXE TEXTURm SCATTER RUG ASST. ... ,l.;, . .1, . . s. . f : .r·· . , .• d HOLIDAY-B.EGANI DACRON FLOCKm CURTAIN PANRS Choice of heavy-weight polyester / ny lon pile rugs 1n shag or sculp- tured textures. fr111ged nr unlringed. solids o.r two tones. Late~ slo.1d re~1stant backs. Machine washable. 2ro!5 Lovt!ly flocked Oacron:-polyester ma'QLl'-elle panels ta use alone or undi'r draper.~s. Generou'\ 5" bnt tom ~~m. w•de side hemming. 5~" · 81" len~ths. Wh1!e or color"' 199 REG . 2.49-2l 9 ... -"""i REG. 2.99·3.99 Save s3 ~ MEN'S DESIGNER-DETAILm KNIT DRESS SHIRTS, FANTASTIC BUYI '· Terrif ic values at our everyday low price, even bette~ ~ 1 when they're price-smashed' No-wrinkle tailored .kni ts.:.. ' with long point colla r, two -button cuff s, tapered with ta1 .-~ Lots ol great-looking new patterns and fash io n coj Sizes 14V,.17 , sleeves 32-3 5. " -:1: • Special Purcllasel . MEN'S QUALITY POLYESTER KNIT .• ~~B·P FLARE-LEG SOLID Cll.11 IACKS Tale adlonl SUPER-SPECIAL !Ii 7 LOW PRICH_ You won't find slacks of this quality for less ANYl'jli so bet1er hurry! No-wrinkle, shape-keeping 100% pol . ter knits in the wide waistband. belt loop model .•• hemmed flare bottoms for instant wear. Sizes 30 tq Save s2 : .1 MEN'S LAYERm-SET OF NOVRTf::i SWEATER AND PRINT SPORT SHI' handsome pu ladle, 8 cups . eg:. REG. 10.99 Compll : ,. ... foday's fayorite t111osome for great gift-giving! Nove f) • 11bbed acrylic knit sleeveless U·neck pullover ove(i\ IW..~ :P.C sleeve sport shirt in a variety of color-harmonizrniJ Jlllfl lt ' terns. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Priced for extra savings! ~!.BID ' Ketp an ut ware handy. less set incl .ner for~s. kn· •teaspoons, u ... , §HOP _WIT.H-CDl\IFIDEl\ICE AT WHITE1 .EROl\IT ••• §ATl!iFACTIOl\I ~ARAl\ITEED OR l'DUR MOl\IEY BACK CHARGE .11 y tot A ' • . ' : FDR . Y• SHOPPING . CONVENIErlE Jiil C•E IT TmAYI • • L --________ __. ___ _ I ... • •• Monday, Otcembtr 17, 1973 DAIL~ PILOT ~ • HOLIDAY HOURS: MON. Thro SUN. 10 to 10; ;; TUES. & WED. ONLYI SUPER SANTA SAVINGS ON FAMOUS MAKE UALITY TOYS WHITE REG. TO 2.57 ) Our Reg. to 2. 99 & LTON BRADLEY PASSWORD OR YAHTZIE N•1; t~,. n Pd\· ·,r,,·JC.:·~ 1t,•t~ 1° ~· l .~ ;;rul I ;. · f~'!;•·~ - I • T •. r irr··· ul '11 J"1 • ""'), ~ ==~-"'--'-,.~·:'r.,.,CHESS/CHKRS. CANDY LAND GAME The classic beginner's game. Even children who can't read .or count can 1:n1oy 11. Only a knowledge of basic colors 15 necessary to play the game. ACEY DUCEY &.GAMMON Double fa ce d checkerboard. in- cl ude s chessmen & chcc~ers . , Mattel Ge-Tar Asst. M!lsrcat fun w1!h choice of Moth er Goose. Cowboy or Snoopy G~ tars. Assortment includes 2 wrangler s1ngle shot pistols. Stylish h.D.lste1s have fancy slenctl decoration. Re- movable belt. JOKER 'S WILD Famous TV game show. 2 players - compete to see who can win $500 lust. Age,s IO-adult. GLASS DECORATOR WINE FOUNT t ROBIN HOOD ADVENTURE Based on new Disney movie. Play~rs try to win gold. A • s 5· 10. DEllGHTFUL MARY POPPINS Pla yers attend tea party, take part 1n horse race, etc. Ages 5-10. ·PC. PUNCH BOWL SET a~anlage of our low discount price on this 9 9 some punch bow! set. Includes big 7-quart bowl, , 8 cups and hooks. Ptrlect for holiday part ies. Handsom!! wine decanter makes a hansome t.:ible· piece. Wrou.ght iron and etched glass. Perfect for entertaining guests, •.. distinguished g1!t. 88 your choice p an eKtra set of dinner· e handy. Praclical stain· set includes 4 each: din· forks, knive's, soup spoons, spoons. 1 9·PIECE REGANT GlASS WI• SETS Makes a dislinguished gift or a luxurious bar addition. 9·Pt. Sel ... 4 -6\'i~1. red wines, 4 • 61'i·01. while 'f!nes and I · liter decanter. 4~! 5.99 OUR SPECIAL LOW PRICE '"' R11. I.SJ COOKIE JARS WITH ATIRACTIVE DESIGNS Every home should have~ cookie ~r. These bi& bright colored models are made of durable sleel. With t1&ht lil- ting hd to keep cookies fresh. 1·59 Our Reg. to 6. 99 • • . ' z fJ'nO, '" 1 f ·~­tn~ 1.~i1r~ w·:, .. i;1mmcn on I ~-'. che.'~rs on ot~ .. _r, GOLDILOCKS & 3 BEARS G·~: 1 Jl,1 J ·1,1'·-~ ·1· ' • ' J' '-,, ' I :~m 1, ~ ;. l n~1f l G. Greatest Super Heroes Can't Hurt Soc ker-Boppers Safe. sock 'em or bop 'em rough·hou5e tun. 8 inch actron l1iu1es each dressed 1n authen· t G costume. 24 PC. APOLLO TUMBLER SET ~~9Gi Elegant to give or to gel. Handsome, con· temporary shapes. Includes 8 ea: l6·0l. cooler. JJ.oz. beverage. 9·0l. rocks. Choice of Dusky Blue or Taltny. i ' <. 1, II DRUXE GLASSWARE FANCY FOm SO ;~9G9 \ ~· I \ A truly elegant home entertainment set you'd expect to pay far more for. Set includes 8 ea: 6-oz. sherbet. 4-oz. cocktail, 6·ot. juice. 10· oz. beverage and JJ .oz. iced tea. Fabulous buy! 41 PC. GLASSWARE D'LUX BEVERAGE SET RIG. 6.99 Another luKury home entertainment set in. eludes. 8 ea : beer kings, beverage glasses.· h1 balls. rocks, roly poly cocktails, I shol glass. ' . . EN IT COMES TO SAVIN& MONEY THERE'!i NO BETTER PlJ\CE TO SHOP 'fl1!\.N WHITE FRONT 12-401 \ COSTA MESA -I 3088 BRISTOL ST. . . . San· Dieqo l=r ee way at Bri st ol • , . ' • STOil HOUIS: MON.0SAT. lOAMtolOPM SUN. lOAMtolOPM ' . ' l(j DAILY PILOT Monday, Dtttmbtr 17. 11J73 , Paris Krishna Se~t Pays High Rent !'ARIS (UPI ! -Do\\'lt.lbc..,__folks in New York City as tro\1·dcd street s of Paris shuf· Joshua Green. flc rcllo"'·rob<'d youths. heads "The neighbors did complain ~haven. chanting · · II a r c at first,'' he added. ''But 11·e hw1g curtains to keep the in· Krishna :· selling incense and ocnse smell off the street and parnphlets on their spiritua l noiv some of them even co1nc movement for a few francs. in to see our ceremonies." GREEN AND the 50 French, $45-60 a month e a c h Furthermore. the four-sto;.I, 20-rooin graystone home with sculpted Ceilings cost nothing to funtish because they did not furnish ii. and food through selling in· per perspective." implements the high ideal1 of with the nicest people you'd censc, soap, perfume and Some members hold down the \\Wld's religions. We don 't ever want to meet." Both other such ite1ns imported QUtside jobs. such as a con1pete with any religion. My Einhorn; and ·Green married from India or made by hairdresser and a chauffeur. being here does not mea~ I temple .members. themselves at a factory they And "some people contribu~e have given up being a Jew.' Einhorn said his father, a organized in Fontenay-aux-regularly," including some Another Am.er l can, New York psychiatrist, "didn't Roses near Paris. Their "flare parents or American temple • l..ocanananada, 25, born in speak to me for a year.' ' Krishna" products are not n1embcru\'bo...apparently_hav.c Oysl..er. ..Bay, ....N.Y. as Ltwi.s "He kept saying he k.ne"' only hawked on the streets but been relieved just to know Einhorn, said he came to did h' bee y also SOid l·n Par1's' b1'ggest h th · h'ldr •· d he \Yhy I I 15• ause m \\' ere e1r c 1 en are. r ranee to stu y at t department store. u · .1 r p · bee mother did thls or that. Then THE !\tE~-tBERS laugh_ at ruverst Y 0 aris ause he came a few months ago Then they catch a sub\\•ay batk to thei r nc11• commw1al home in Paris -a $1 millic..n inansion off 1hc luxurious :l\'Cnue Foch .• a diamond's lhro1v from the apa rtment or .Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Americans, Spaniards a n d Italians living in the A\'enuc foch Temple do not regard themselves in the lap of lux- ury. as do thei r rftillionaire neighbors. The Hare Khrishnailes curl up in sleeping bags on the floor. They cook vegetarian n1cnls in cheap alum111um pots and eat off paper plates wit h their fingers, eliminating beds, forks and all that. '·Yes, \VC have a business," he \Yas avoiding the draft. h' said Svare-Green. "\\le don't questions as to whether their to sec nle. He saw t is was fif~llflff iw,.: temple Is a hipple commune AFTER !\tEETING some a very serk>us movement,. he THE JIARE Krishna Indian spiritual mo\'cmenls is "not as ·\\·ell established in Paris yet as ii is in London and the l lniled Stales" a n1 on g \\ll•stern youlh , the chanters sav. But• the Paris branch boasts 70 French and foreign ;1c1h'ists and ~s begil}l\jng to prosper. 'I - "The rcn1 is 10.000 francs :1 rnonlh 1about S2.353J." said Yoga Sv;1ra. an American n1embcr of the Paris !!are Krishna te1nple. S\"a ta. 23. is kno'wln to his FASHION j ISLAND NI:WfORT CI:NTI:R . promenad ing wit h Ela ine All of Fashi on Island's 60 stores a re now full y stoc ked with big gifts, s mall gifts, tantalizing tr eats, and trimmings too. To hel p you with your holiday shopping, we'd like to feature some of our unique -:.tores and thei r gilt ideas to make your sea5on brighter. The children on your Christmas list will love receiving a per s onally monogrammed cardigan or crew-necked pullover sweater from the RED BALLOON. Available in white, "navy, and red in boy5' and girls' sites 2-14, about S12. Excelling in se rvic e a nd individual attent ion , THE REO BALLOON also carries a fantastic selection of velvet dresses and suits, layered look coordinates, imports from Europe and custom clothes from the finest American de5igners. If you're planning for that winte r crui se t o Hawaii , WAL TAH CLARKE 'S can ou tf i t you with colorf u l Hawai ian wear perfect for s ightseeing or j ust pla-in r elaxing. Like their comfortable cafl a ns, in his and hers 5lyle5, from SJO to SbO. If you aren't lucky enough to be taking a trip to the Islands, you can at 1ea5t smell like you've bee n there with WALTAH CLARKE'S fine collection of Hawaiian floral fragrances, in perfumes or colognes, from 1.5010$10. Yo u'll recognize Fa s hion l51a nd'5 Popular gentlemen's clothi er, THEODORE V, by the many lovely Poinsettias now adorning their windows during the yuletide season. THEODORE V. has a bounty of Chri5tma5 gifts, such as fi sherman knit pullover and ca rdiga n swea t er5 from Ireland, S36 to \42, fine leather and suede outerwear jackets imported from Spain and Norway, from Sl 18, and a large selection of imported 5i1k and knit lies, 8.SO to S10. For the perfect holiday outfit, why not try wool flannel trousers adorned with Christma5 tree or s now man app\ique5 a nd coordinated with THEODORE V'5 smart red.~~~~el jackets. SLAVICK 'S JEWELERS ha5 a Jovelv collection of tinP Jewelry to give, to keep, to flaunt with flair. They have multicolored diamond r1ng5, f ine whites, goldc ns, r eds, colored precious stone ring5, and gold coin je welry, A superb timepiece from S LAVI CK'S •th at will ma ke a m ost memorable gift is the ne w Pul 5a r Di gital Electron ic Wat c h , S275 l o S:i',100 . SLAVICK 'S al50 olfcrs china, s ilver, and crystal giflware dnd fea ture 5 a comple te re pairing, e ngraving, and servicing department. H EMP HILL 'S SHOES always puts their best loot lorw0trd , provid ing an excellent selection of styles and hard to find siies for the entire family. Holiday gift slippers ideal on a cold winter's night and present perfect purses are gjttable items from HEMPHILL'S that will make srtoppers' spirits bright. Th is populir family shoe oper11lion ha,s enjoyed firm footing since its inception 40 years 1190 in Alhimbri, Cilifomla. l A The rent comes to around FURTIIERIUOR E. \vent on Svara-Green. the group pays the rrnt and buys clothing consider the spiritual life to or a solution on how to Jive Krishna members. he quit understood we nre becoming "VOUCANOOl'f,1i'ON!'5fblAAGt( be a renunciation ot the \vorld. in Paris without really work-school to live with them ,;urified. He made a subslan-oOr-CMtN oowi.1 ... s~OE~ Krishna means We can put ing. ''because they are very happy. tial contribution to ' o u r fORWARO-Kr.&Ees Sfp.ar-"\ the materialistic \\'Otld in pro-__ G:::.:re::•:::n_::_ex:'p::l•:lne:::d::·_"K:.:::ri:•hn:::•:_.::Kr:i::•hn:::•::o:l.::re::r:•:_Y:'":.::rr:.:i•:•::ds::h:::io::P':__::le:m:cpc:l:•·-"-------------------tJ ' Great gift ideas for that someone special! ,.,,"'r•nUTlt '···-=~1: .. 1~4 •• '-----111~ r}# - REVLON -CAARLIE-CO[OGNE- -· t) DANA . ENGLISH LEATHER OLD SPICE ·. --1>USTINC>POWDER · ·-· ""......., GIFT-SET TRAVEi: GIFT SET -,;< . 2'/• n. oz. 6 00 ·:::~~bJt in Tabu or Aril· 250 =~:.~:~~-andcoloeM.2 300 Afttf'Wvtlotion andtak. 119 ~==::i;::::===~-~~,~=::-. ===========~;""-------") Q RANCIS HARRIET PERFUME BATH OIL CRYSTALS ggc BONNE BELL 10·0·6 LO TION SANTA PACK Pint8ottle 5so ······ ....... ;;.:.!: COTY EMERAUDE SPRAY MIST NL wt. 3.S OI. 500 FABERGE BATH P"OWDER Aphrodnia, Woodhue, TI1· res:s alld FllmbNu. Nt wt 31s s oz. ·' ' .. ' * ' HAI KARATE SUPER MISTLETOE 3 PC. GIFT SET Recul1r.Orlt nt1llimt1nd 199 Oriental Spice Afttf' Shlwe1. . OLD SPICE BURLEY AFTER SHAVE LOTION 4Y• IL oz. 169 ~'!"'\"!~'!"" .. ~--------'!""~--· 11""'·,-!""""l,-_,,..-""l--""'--~i""lll.•,,!'. II. ~ .· . ,, r ........ m;:s-~· ... ~.-......-------""'-j'g'1-~$--;::;~=--"" MAX FACTOR HYPNOTIQUE SPRAY MIST N•. wt. 2 ... 3so • ' APRIL SHOW ERS DUSTING POWDER NLwt.5oi. 69¢ ,. '--------"~~~-------"" • BRUT "33" GIFT SET Scllolll on LAllion and 1 77 Colasot. .. ·• ... .· .... . ' '· .•. • "1 CANOE COLOGNE 3 "l u n. oz. 6 00 MON TRIOPH E AFTER SHAVE LOTION 4 n .... 3so . ').••'"-.... .----····-.~ .. .;, .. KING 'S MEN GIFT SET Aftef Shi't't lotJon Ind Colocnt. . ggc SANTAANA BUENA PARK -h II Orono-po °"".·""" ... ....., .,. " •• ,,.., _ ... .,_.No. of So. Coat ...... °"" llollr ... ....., 10 +"'" ",,.., -_r I < • ( ' ' ' ' ' ' : ' ·-~~----~\--• '• • .. ' - Q " to l' 8 Ro ca. au nc Ch sa. sh co ol In co ch a II p s ' t t m or e ca .. cl w so to an SI by bi i s w or Co m T ' ·a . .. m In si je a R 0 E s t sl c c 0 • • "Guess \Vhfl.t I'm getting all dciy: 'At this point in time, to the best of my recollection, 1 've been a good boy all year'.· " ------------ C:l111reh Stu1ly Priests Dating: The 'Third Way' By GEORGE \\'. CORNE LL AHo<l•ltcl Pr111 Wril1r NE\\' YORK -~-ta n y Ro1nan Ca.tholic priests oc· casionally gci out with \\'Omen :<1ocially. according to an or. ricial church study. Bu l American priests display high responsibility about stickipg io their VO\\'S of celibacy, the author says. 'J'he Rev. Eugene C. Ken· nedy, a priest·psychologlst of Chicago's Loyola University. says Iha!. V.'hile some priests share the sexual immaturities common to American -men. ··Thtrc is not a great deal nf breaking celibacy or abus· ing it among priests.·· llJS COl\V.1ENTS. :ind some concern rcgis1ered in the church. came in reaction to a recent article in Nei,i.•sweck pression created by the article on priests' dating. It makes it seem th21t many American priests are abusing their VO\V of celibacy and leading slea;:y and hypocritical lives. . .iThis is not true or men- who, according to the ex- tensive research I have con- ducted. keep tfie lr ·religrous promises and try to .approach all human relationships "'ith inle~rity and responsibility." The chu rch irformat ion or- fice, if'j issuing the statement , iilso included resumes of the psycl)olo~ical inquir~·. publish- ed in 1971. ai; part of the bishoos' extcnsi\·e study of the priesthood . lT SHO\\'S about half of the country's prie s ts oc· c3sionally go out "'ith 14·omen Socially but only as part of a group in 90 percent of the cases. Onlv 10 percent or them L.M. Boyd Perfume Sl1ould Matcl1 tl1e Hair Young lady, do you pick your)c.rrume to match your hair? Blondes should \Year flowery scents. Brunettes. Oriental scents. Redheads , spicy scents. That 's the con- tention ·er a oosmclics expert. Our Uive and War man con- curs, providing the foregoing perfumes are for \\'Otnen only. You may recall he once re<..'Ommended the creation or some na.tural native scents to be worn by men. To be named "Low Tide." And •·Barn Li1ne." And "Pulp \Vind." ?.·lost bartenders are \Yomen Dandruff isn't contagious ... Seals sleep underwater too ... No t\•:o snow- flakes are alike ... Some mi ce cat soap. EXPLOSIO NS During the 10 years immediately fo llo\ving Jan. 9, 1816, there were approximately twice as many explostons in the world's mines as there had been in the 10 years imn1ediately earlier. fl.1aybe you'd like to know why. l ~m not sure. Do know, t~ugh, that was the dale when Sir llumphrey Davy's safety la1np for 1nincrs \\'as first sho\o,rn to be successful . Q. "How long after human sperm is frozen can it sue· cess!ully result in a healthy baby?" A. Nobody knO\\'S yet. But healthy babies have been born there!rom as long as 11 years after the donation, l'n1 told. What. you have no interest in establishing your med i· cal practice in mainland China, doctor? \Vhy not? Those mainland Chinese physicians make an average income of $70 a mont h. How can you beat that'? SMOKERS Another thing the statisticia ns have figured out is that Cigarette smokers change jobs far more frequently than do the nonsmokers1 but explanation is not yet al hand for that. · EARTHQUAKE Why it n·a~n't more widely publicized I can't explain , Out the sCiSrfiologfSts ju~ this1'elii'-fina!Ty figufed out ho\v to predict some earthquakes. On Thursdty. Aug. 2. they foretold a qua ke in New York 's Adirondack 1\-lountains. And at 7;.Hl p.m. Friday. Aug. 3.t. a tricky little temblor of 2.5 magnitude rocked the region, precisely. And to his le,ngthening Ii~ of redundancies, our Lan- guage man also has added "prerecorded earlier" and "new innovation" and "remanded back." That nation for years which exported the most hippo. polamuscs was Hungary. Uird Byron put paper curlers in his hair. Address n1ail to L. !t1. Boyd. P. 0 . Box 1875, New- port Beach 92660. · • Playboys , EorSale --$3,000 AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -Now that Elmo Wagner ha s col- lected every issue ot Playboy magaz.ine, he is a little like an Oriental priest with foot· long fingernails -\vhat do you do with them? Monday, Dt<:tmbtr 17, 1~73 KLONDIKE ex tends a MERRY CHRISTMAS .. TUES., DEC. 1ll-8.10:30 PM FREE ADMISSION Skate Rental ......... 60c SKATE to"'• 1atettoh11ne11t. eyery Fri . & DAILY PILOT J J ICE ARENA 665 PAULAR INO .i\VE., COSTA ME SA • NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA • PHONE f714' e7•1750 \\la J!ncr, 43, took out ai classified ad in the Austin l American Statesman asking1 $3,000 for the collection. But a reporter "'as the first to inq uire about the ad after six da ys. • l~=-~~-C:-i::ii-;:;:iii~~~~;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~~~~iiii~~ "FOUR OR five years ago, I "'orked for the federa l government and looked around for hobbies," said Wagner. I-le said he noticed partial I collections of Playboy in used bookstores and decided to see l if he could compile a con1plete l set. A Cincinna ti. Ohio dealer charged him $225 for the first! iss ue. Dece mber 1953. 1 "l've got a considerable in-j vestment in this, but I prob- ably \Viii make about $1.000 on this." he said. "I think it's wort~ that.'' The collection makes a stack about eighl feet high. There are 239 issues he said, \\'ilh no issue published for April 1954. \\'JIY llAS he decided to sell? O""'N \I/,: . ·'ITS 'Th .. IJ SANT A SHOPS AT BIDWELLS 3467 VIA LIDO !Next to tit. Lido Tlteoterl e NEWPORT IE.lCH e 671·4510 • IANKAMEAICARD • eMASTER CHARGE • llDWELL CHARGE "They just seem to be ta~­ ing up ~.00-Jlly_ shelf,"I~'!""''!""''!""''!""''!""'~'!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""'~~'!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""'~ he said. "I need !he space - for books." Wagner's wife of 17 years -haS never objeCted tO ttie col-- lection : "I hzrdly ever look .at thP. ma2azines any more.'' she said. "She0! the one that reads the damn things." · Try Sat'firday's N-etfls Qy,i~_ We Dare You W.C~A:J OlSll\UAS C0 .. 11.Y.C.A:.Stim:.llll'IH!SUY-A !LW0.86 P~Oilf. ' ••• prle.rfy flfe- ••11le that l11cf11des personal refatlo11° ships mlth "'0111e11 leading 10111efl111es to se.'" but sefdo111 fo 111ciirrlage.' occasionall y go out with '=====================~! "'omen "as a cou ple." • - magazine saying ''lhausands of U.S. Catholic priests are eX])<'rimenting v.•ith v.'hat they call 'the third way.' " This v.•as described as a "priestly life-style that. i n- cludes personal relationships with wom en leading sometimes lo sex but seldom to marriage." Father Kennedy, author or an extensive psychological study of priests commissioned by the church's American bishops. said in a statemCnt issued through the Vlashington. D.C. information office of the U.S. Catholic Conference: "J J\1 UST di sassociate myself from the over·all im· Cocktails Out, Choir In Sunday JACKPOT, Nev. (AP) - The sign reads "Closed for Church" and it's hung once ·a week at the doorway of ·a. casino's cocktail lounge. : \Vhlle coins drop from slol machines in an adjoining gam- ing room, about 50 youngsters sing pi:alses to the Lord . "I~m sure God has no o~ jection to our meeting place, as long as we are delivering the gospel." says the Rev. Robert c. Schreckenbcrg of nearby Twin Falls, tdaho. Mr. Schreckenberg, or thr · Eastside Baptist Church. says t h e Sundny school ,group m o v e d to the cock- tail room of the H<irse!hU Ca- sl.10 when Mating a rormcr meeting plaee, Barton's :>J Club eonventlon· Center, be· came Wieconomlc'aJ for the size of the group. The younger clergy arC somewhat more likel y to l{O out with women "as a couple" -14 percent or them. Father Kenned\', \Vho n·as quoted in the Ne"'sv.·eek arti- cle. says he respect" the com- J>t'lence of Nev.·sweek religion editor Kenneth \Vood\\•ard but feels lhe article focused toe much on isolated cases of im- mature behavior on the plrt of the priests. · "This is not lrue of the majority or priests.·• he said in a National Catholic News Service story wide ly published in diocesan papers. ·"'000\\IARD SAID the gist of the Ne\\'S\.\'eek story was that there has been a "major shift among young priests in no longer hiding behind their clerical co llars" so that many · now have "normal. healthy. open relationships" w i t h women - a situation in \\1hich sex is a latent factor. ''There wasn't that possibili· ty under the old ethos." he said . He said that the cases likely were on I y "minimal" in \vhich g e n I t a I relations become involved, adding: "ln terms of numbers, noJ>ody really knows.'' AllYtrliMmf'ftl Tormenting Rectal Itch OfHemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved In many mscs PrC'p.1rntinn H drcds or patients sho\\'ed I.his g ives prompt,tempor~1ryrelief to be true in rnany cases. Jn I fron1 such pain and itching fact, many doctors~ them- and actually helps shrink selves. use Preparation H·~ or !Welling Of hemorrhoid.1! li s-rocoinmend it for their fam-1 sues ca~ by innammation. ilies. PrC'paralion H ointment Tests by doctors on hun-or suppositories. _____ , DELUXE AIR·CONDITIONED COACHES AIRPORT BOUND? SCHEDULE CHANGE-E1tec11vo Doc.23. 11rs To Los Angeles lnt'I Airport from Orange County Airport DlrKlvlaSan Ditgo Freew•.-$4 00 atl:30AMandl:50AM-• plus 10 other conv.,,Jtnt Clllld,.n s.11 ~ ,,,. teheduln dalty , .. ,.-_ ... v ... r .... 1 lfn&,, -0rc.~-111•1 na.s210 \\~ ~~~~~.! ~=~~~ '!~na 92io2 PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICI THUi SUPO SALi SPICIALS- NEUTll.OGE.NA SOAP TYLENOL, 100 T1bl1tt KOOACOLll. CARTRIDGE Film, 12 ••P· HEET Analg:ttic Sprty. 5·01. "'"· lttt. $1 .00 2.15 1.25 1.91 011r •11. l"t"kt '" 2.4t 1.09 J.6t 2700 L Coast Hiibway, at Fernleaf, Corona def Mar Salt Prkt 63c 1.49 89c 1.29 ···-644-7575 more shopping days till Christmas! $5.39 415 QUART Ph1t T~x • • Give l:cagrmn's 7Crown. lt'lAmerica's-~ _ .., . BcaUdfuly Gift·Padf,aged for the Holidays. ~ ··.~-%~~~~~~%~~~~M~~·.zj;.%~~W:~~ FASHION ·ISLAND OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9:30 • I -. • --' J;l DAILY PILOT Monday, D«:rmbtT 1'" 10·3 ~~--==~ TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS • AB,C 0 6:00 -Monday Night Football. To· nights action sh1tfs to the college game and Liberty , Bowl between Kansas and North Caro lina State. • NBC 0 8:00 -The Bear Who Slept Through Christmas. The voice s of Tom Smothers, Arte John· son. '!Jarb~ra Feldon and Kelly Lange· are featured in tlus annnated cartoon special. CBS 0 10:00 -The Bobby Van.Elaine Joyce Show. Husband and wife offstage, these Broadway sta rs appear together for a first time as a tea1n . Richard Thomas of The Waltons 1nake s his sing· ing and danci ng debut·. TV DAILY LOG .. self baby slttln1 for 1 cal wl'lil• Monday undei prusur• to turn out 1cNtr· t\sing art for 1 deadline. Evening m Mel'f CiriHin Show (1!) Novtl1 DECEMBER 17 * 0.ily at 12:00pm Ch 9 ''"'lomma;i•... DR. JOYCE BROll!ERS aon1ru1 in LIVING EASY • Courtship et Eddi•'• F1thtr co-host Orson Bean @ (!}Im Mond17 Nl&ht fool· ':001J (9 @ ) 00 Httt's Lucy Gut~t ti1H l hellberty Bowl, from Mem-Clluck Connon. plfJin1 himself, pills, lenn. North Ciro1ln1 Stal• vs. lums the pitf11ls ol try!n1 to usa Kluas. l LIC)"s house •s the location tor his I""""'-,,.fllm. ID Cll 19 Clll -0 ~Cl) !!) NBC "'""' ""'°' Tiit FlllrtltOMs (Cl (2hr) "Onct Yo1 IUu A StrtA- stat Trtk ( 1) ' rol Lynley, Paul Slnripl11111nt1 Marla Bu e, a 1 yer. Peter Lind Movie: !2'11) "II Klpptlltd 11 H1yes, · · rey. Th• wile ol 1 rrtt11 Aftnut" (tom) '47-Charl&s proleuional olfer turns detedive Ru111es, Gale Storm. in an ettort t protect her husband EE Hodppodp Lodp from a psycho · wom1n. 9) ThrH Stootes {!)The Bold Oties . l:30.(}) Ho1111's Herou O (}) The Rookie "So . -. ~@ (~(I)) filtW1 ---4fAu'.' Rookie. Willi:',:';;;,'(:~.';.·~:~ O Dick Y•n Dyle 1 personal search lor a r-old ('IJjJ Merv l:rlffln stlow diabetic girl who has run out ol iAndy Gnllith in~ulin. History of Art @)Movie: (C) (2h1) "WtJ, WIJ Llrin1 Euy -our {com)-'66-Jerry Ltwis. Novtl• @ 00 Movie: (C) (2hr) ''WomH UtUe R1stall Times Seven" (ram) '67 -ShirleJ 7:00 I B m """ Maclaine, Pelar Sellars, Bn11nt ' for Dollin I Roller Games Mavle: (C) (2hr) "Destry" (wes) ~::~~nit" '55--Audie Murphy. (i) Wild Wiuld ol Anhniab 9:30 () (Q!j @ ) Did Vin Drl• Show I Wh1t'1 Mr Line? Mn, Dick's producer, insists on 1n I l.Gft Lucy exp!1nalion when ht sees Die~ as Mod Squad ~Mr. Dazzle," lhe singing ind dar.c· Ume11ld1 ing represenlatill! of 1 bathroom fl')@ Dr•tntl cle1nsH in 1 te!e~ision cammefti1L £r) New En1l1nd Chrirtm1s (R) ii Los An1eles C<llltdift I~ (J)) lobbJ GoldJbo10 Siio• La Hien1 ltl El l'rimei Amor Variety CI!) Comedy 10:00 6 (~@I r.I} I SJIC!MI lobbJ' ti) Speed RKtr V1n·E11ine Joyce Sllft 1r1esh frora 7:30 6 11,ICll( I A Chrlrtm11 ll1e1m individual Broadway triumpllS, hus- (R) This musical l1n\asy sd al the band·tnd-wif1 Bobby Yan • and turn-ol·lhe-r.entury tills the liar} Elaine J~u appear lopthlr for thl of 1 poor young 1ir1 who falls first time as a team in this comedy· asleep in a colorful !OJ sllop tllt variety show. Richard Thomes, mak· ~ before Christmas. in1 his sin11ing and da ncln1 debut, O l'ollu Sa1rgeo11 Or. Lock• tries is the special 1uest. , to persutdt 111 escaped womtn con-I Ho11n's Herou vie! to r!l1;ue her host11e. 0 m 6) @ News 0 Help ThJ Ntlt:hbot" Nilht Gallery ((!The Thrlllseeter1 Dtptrtment S ''Tha OupHcattd O Concentrltion Man" A secret 11ent spends lD (iO) Wikl Kingdom years prep1rin1 1 double Identity m Btwltched so that he un dis.appear from th• fij (6J The Price h ltlcht worid of espionage but he does oot (~ {])) Nalh'tllle Mulit reckon with the agents from botll 6$'.ftnlmy Dttn Show • sidl!S looking for him, £!) Koltpooll S11oW ED Wtsllington Str1lrtrt Ttll (!)Thi Choul Can1 tJ:l lnlem1tioa1I Y111rt7 l:OO I) <9 {I)) Cu1smoM: "De1dly In-10:30 (J) Draprt nocenf' Russell Wl1pns IUlllS IS 9 Tt!_t. Bid Billy, 1 powerful )'Otlnt man with ii Twihlfht Zflll the mllld of 1 child. wllo erupts Tony ~ Susan. Al•• into unconlrallable violerKe when ' Ch1ngin1 Musit he sees tnyone-or anything-be-al News/Roller Gtmes ini hurt. · ail Praise the Lord Club 0 WORLD PREMIERE! 11,00; D 0 !D l'l '"' *New Family Special 3 ®~ifl @@ Nm ., h h TW1l1ght Zone T e Bear W. o Sle~~ 6 PerfJ' M1san Through Chnstmas O Phil Do111hue Show O ill@®l €Dl i~E?1p,~)T1lt m To Tell the Truth Bear Wllo Slept Through Chri1tm11 (E) Get"sm1rt • 8111s norma lly hibernate al Christ· fi.7' (!) Cl1$3it Wtllttm Theatre mas time but a young b1uin, Ted tf& Alfred Hltchcoct Pttsenb E. Bear, is determined to star (~ (i)) Trails West a'!9ake and go.in sear~h of Christ· 1t:306(~@)@ CBS Lite Movie: mas e_ncountering a seri~s of adven-(C) "Tei ind Symp1thr'' (dra) '56 lures in the process. This animated -Deborah Kerr John Kerr Spetial te1tures lhe YO!CIS of Tom rn Movie: NSin's of RKhei Cade" Smothers, Af1e Johnson, B1rb1r1 (dra) '6 1--Angie Dickinson. fe\don ~n.d Kelly t1~ge.' O @@®J m Johnny carw11 0 ,.Movie •. (C) {2hr) 'The Kenllldi •t John Davidson is 1ues1 host. Ian (adyJ 5S-B~~. l1ncasler. O MoYit: "Eqle 11M1 thl Hnll" (() Movie: ~2hri M11c~ ol the (dra) '33-Clry Gra11t, C1rolt Lom· Wooden Sold1en (corn) 52-Uu· bard, ftedric Mar:;1. rel & H1,rd1. . " I O Movie: "I Met Illy lcrtt Aa:1J.-O MHhon ! Movie: \2hr} Me ind (rom) "8-Henry Fonda. the Colonel (tom) 58 -Dann1 m Allred Hikheotk PrlSllltl Kayt. Curt Jurgens. I m Movie: (C) "Bordtt .Rlvtr" Tht Untouchables (2hr) 12.-= 0 5 8 d · mTl!e Ghost and Mrs. M11!1 (wes) '54-Joel McCrea LI Stflo11 Joven ·"" \.._6.J H ttp eyon ff& Mll'lie: (Cl (2hi) "Thie• CQlnsl 0 Baril Kirton l'menb iii t111 Fountain" (roml '54-Chl· m Movlt: "Ambus-at CllllllJOI tan Webb. Dorothy McG~ue. I PISS" (wesl '58--Scolt Brady. tt) I $PIC1l\ I The Kille11 "Genetic 9 Phi! Don1h1M Show Dlfecu" 11:00 0 ~ @ m TOMOrrow al El Com111Che 0 Wanted Dead or Atlvt CI!) Mlruefito V1lde1 Show 1:30 O Hlfhwlf l'ttrol m ~ovlt: (2~r) "John lows 1:45 6 Movie: (C) NRun ol tltt Arrow" Miry (com) 49-P11r1t11 Neal, (111es) '56--Rod St1i1er. l:J00 ~00@1 mD1 1n1 "Wha's 3:101JMovie.: "Meet D1n111 Wiison" Mlndin1 the Cat?" Oiana finds ht1-! (dr1) '52-Frank Sin1tr1. Tuesday 12:30 m "The. Gorpous Hu JS}"' (dr1) '36--Jcan Cr2~ord. DAYTIME MOV:ES 1:00 0 (C) "lsltnd in the Sun" (dr1) ·~1 -J1me1 Mason, Jc1n Fon· 11ine, Harry Bet1fonle. !:00 ~ m ''Subm1rlne 81ie" (mJ1) 3:00 00 "A Child Is W1ltln(' (dr1) '63 'r3-J0hn L1tel , .t.1111 Baxter. ! Judy Garland. Burt llnc1st1r. t:lD O (C) "This Sav111 I.Ind" (1dw) o '11omet0mln(' (dr1) '4S-Cl1t~ '&S-Blrry Sulliv1n. , I G1ble, ll"I Tu1ner. 10:00 (}) "Tiit l'rojedtd Man" (h<lr) "67 3:30 ~ ~ (C) "Wiid l WMICl1rfur -Bry1nt Ha!ida~. I (~) '&4-Tony Curtis, Chri$tlne 9 "Motor l'atrol" (1dv) ·~Rttd Klulm1nn. H1dl1y, J1ne Hlgll. I 4:00 6 (C) "The List W1f0fl" (wt1} U:OO O "Arnbulh In le.op1rd Str11rl '56-Richard Widm1rk, (mys) '59-J1mes Kenny, Mlch1!I 4:JO (!)St11e 11 lOAM Hstin1 Brenn1n, "Tht Dllllt Goes Wut"I ti,~) .iDrivl A ttoo•M ROii' («>ml '48-Udie Allart. (dra) 54-MICkl)' Roone.f KOCE TELEVISION LOG l :OI Hit!.,., ti' Ari IC) LfHOf'I J) "!•1ent10fli ol IM Go!ht('" f r• Malll"' Ttmlt• 6f'OW !CI .. .,,.. r11"1D!llf" -Thal1JH Cr~w olv.' flp1 on orowlng ""° m•lilt•ln•.-o 't'W1' "<IUMhohl P!t11l1. t i• At ,,,,." •.t11...., jCJ Ltuon 11 "tJMonKIM Mollv1l lon'"- l'lrc~og'I' COlll'"H for c.o111111 <rt<lll, 4iM llt<trtc Com1lnf !,J. MU1.1t, iwmor. Ind vart.tv to ''"fl \rflool ttitlo'"' ,,..:11no .~1111. •i• kMIN Street (() Otear ,,~,, a baf of Olf1 fer 00.-'1 tfKktd "°"".... llOt llllftll:lllO ,,,., fl-. 11 trltll:I"' lllm. •:• M<C_....,.. P:ln'Y1 Cllt\tlll'll' 1116 !Cl kN'Clal TM llory 11e91n1 flfl TM INflt.i Cll'" 11)1 Otl•wa11 11 ~ w1\ttlrioton ano ''"' r"9fM c.....iat Arrrw ll'fllol•t 1<1 crou Ula lu.llllld ti'ftl', • Would TV Cuthaek Delp? By tbe Assoetattd Press Billboard's hot hits for the week ending Dec. 22 as they appear in next week's issue of Bil\brord magazine. TOP SINGLES 1. Tlf8 MOST BE.\J!TIFUL GIRL -Charlie IUch.(.Epic. 2. GOODBYE YELLOW BRICK ROAD -Elton John, 'MCA. 3. TIME IN A BaITLE - Jlm Croce, ABC. 4. LEAVE ~1E ALONE Ruby Red Dress -Helen Red- dy, Capitol. 5. HELLO !T'S ME -Todd Rundgren , Warner Bros. 6. Tl1E JOKER -Steve Miller Band, Capitol. 7. TOP OF THE WORLD -Carpenters A & M. 8. JUST YOU 'N ' ME - Chicago, Columbia. . 9. lF YOU'RE READY COME GO WITH ME - Staple Singers, Columbia. 10. NEVER, NEVER GON· NA GIVE YA UP -Barry \Vhite, 20th Century. TOP LPS I. ELTON JOHN -Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, h'ICA. 2. STEVE MILLER BAND -The Joker, Capitol. 3. RI NGO Sf ARR -Ringo, Apple .. 4. NEIL DIAMOND Jonathan Li vingston Seagull, Columbia. 5. THE \VHO Quadrophcnia, MCA. 6. CARPENTERS ROSS HUNTER'S MONUMENTAL PROUCTION Singles, 196&-111'13,-A&M. 7. JIM CROCE -You Don't Mess Around With Jim, ABC. 8. JlM CROCE -Lile & Times, ABC. 9. JOHN LENNON -Mind Games. Apple. 10. GLADYS KNIGIIT & THE PIPS -Imaglnation, Buddah. EASY LISTENING 1. LEAVE ME ALONE Ruby Red Dress -Helen Red· By JAY SUARBUTT . NEW YORK (AP) -About 66.2 million homes in 100 United states have..... one , or more TV sets, says the A. C. Nielsen ratings company. It estimates the average household watches more than six hours of TV each day. Question: How much would It ease the current power crisis if we cut down on our television viewing by. just one hour each day? ENTERTAINMENT dy, Capitol. 2. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL -Charlie Rich Epic. Experts say there's no ready a.ns'\\--er. It depends on where you live, the severity of your area's power shortage and its type or po\\'Cr. The savings , _______ ...;J 3. WHO'S IN THE STRAWBERRY PATCH \\!ITH SALLY -Tony Orlando & Dawn, Bell. 4. LET ME BE THERE -Olivia Newton-John , MCA. 5. TIME lN A BOTlU: -J im Croce, ABC. 6, PHOTOGRAPH -Ringo Starr, Apple. 7. THE WAY WE WERE -Barbra Streisand, Colum· bia. 8. JUST YOU 'N' ME ~ Chlcago, Columbia. 9. TOP OF THE WORLD -Carpenters, A&M. 10. GOODBYE YELLOW BRICK ROAD -Elton Joha, MCACoUNTRY' SINGLES I. IF WE M.>J<E IT THROUGH DECEMBER ~1erle Haggard, Capitol. 2. AMAZING LOVE Charley Pride, RCA. 3. IF YOU CAN'T FEEL IT It Ain't There :--Fredrhe Hart , Capitol. 4 . SOMEWHERE BETWEEN" LOVE & TOMOR· RO\V -Roy Clark, Dot. could be large, small or moderate. Right here in Fun City, the energy savings from a one· hour.-a-day lfV turnoff a!One could tie substantial. according to the Consolidated Edison Co., which supplies New York's electricity. 5. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL_ Charlie Rich, Epic. schedule s by, s~y, an ~our ,_ &· THE LAST LOVE SONG ~ or half ho~ v.:1th the idea _ Hank Williams, Jr., MG~f. of enoo~agmg v1ewe:s~to tum 7. I.ET ME BE THERE o~f thelr sets ~arller each -Olivi a Newton~ohn, h1CA. rught and thus ~~P, ease the a. 1 LOVE _ Tom T. Hall current power cr1s1s. "BAnLE OF TH! PLANET Mercury. THE l\1ETWORKS take a \·erv OF THE APES" lP GI dim ,·ic¥t' of any suggested Ane1 "Since one of lhe primary effects of the energy shortage will be curtailment or travel, requiring people lo ..sp<nd more time at home," It said, "it seems to us the public will be relying even more on television for entertainment and information, and a cut· back \\o"Ould not be. in the public interest." ANY NETWORK program cutback ~'Ouldn't necessarily work a.s a means of getting the sets off and the J>O"''er drain reduced earlier eacti MESA c~~~: 1884 NfWPORT flllJO S4i11SS2 "THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING" MANN THEATRES "LOST HORIZON" + THE TRUE ST6RY OF THE WORLD'S FI RST ECOLOGIST - 9. LOVE ME -CRA WLIN" ON MY ~NEES -Marty l:lobbins, MCA. I 10. YOU ASK ME TO - \Vaylon Jennings, RCA. d "NEPTUNE ••ctor." im-out , although ii must be f ~~:;=~~~~·;:~~== ·, _f "THE DARWIN ADVENTURE" loth Color-Ra~d IGI See the brighter side of life aloitg the Orange Coast in I m 3459 Vb Lido Ne..,ort Bc1o<:h Phom: 613·13t>O A GREAT COMBINATION! Roar once again with the ori9inol movie cast .•. Orange Coast Rounctup . tJJi\1\1 An lngo Preminaer Production • R1 11lu!tll One of the featul!S that make Sunday raaeAr S Color lly OE LUXE •~ ~ Pana'11s1 on" lrlllJ -ancl - in the DAILY PILOT "THE fTALfAN CONNECTION" Robert llltdlon! Barbr• Strel .. llCI "THE WAY WE WEiti" IPGI --.~c;,-·"'' SrAotUM •I ;.:: " .&.l..Ulll.\.lU.11~ 4th & FINAL WEEK WALT DISNEY'S hol1tlous comed~ Tt4AT DARN "SOUND OF MUSIC" IGJ A .. "ROMEO & JUILET" IGPI "WHAT'S UI', DOC?" IPGI "PLAT IT AGAIN SAM" "APRIL FOOLS" "CAURET'' (PGI Amt "HELLO DOLLY" (GI "ASH WEDNESDAY" Ill A•D "STRAW DOGS" 11111 "LITTU llG MAN" IPGI Amt "A MAN CALLED HORSE" THE WAY WE • WERE ''°1 START~ WfONEWAY • "'·""f Plus Ryan O'Necd "THE GAMES" !GI ''WHERE'S POPPA?" 7 & 10:27 l',M. ••• "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" 8:34 P.M. CALL THEATRE FOR SUNDAY MATINEE .sct'tEDULE tRl '"' U.A. CITY AMO SOUTK COAST CtNEMAS-TUE5DAY 50c: (LA01ES AKO GOLDEM AGEll.S)-0,EM 'TIL 2:00 P.M. Sat .. Sun. a, HOI. l :U,M "A FILM ABOUT JIMI HEMDIUX"' Jinlct JDpllrt-Clluc-81rr,t "l(EE' OM 11.DCIC.ING" 8Dlh In ColOrl till "BATTLE FOii: THI! Pl.ANET OF THE APES" • '1N"E'rTUNE l'ACTOll" laftl In Colort tGJ ''THE S.\CRFD l(HIVES OF V:ENGENCE" "S FIHOEltS OP: ,DEATH" IDlll I~ CDJoil (Ill ''THE 'YX" (I.I 1'Y0Ullt J MINUTES AlllE U'" !Ill Sat. & Sun. n :le & T:lO "PINOCCHIO" IG) • CAT :::'· "PAPILLON " = TECHNICOt OR" PLUS -WALT DISNEY'S .Ati11AAreo ''DUMBO'' " STA•ts Fii. DfC. 21 "U\lllCAN GIAFnTI" .,,. __ A TIMOfCI YOUNQ-t!l'I ..,,. Wlotlltttl NllM" ~ PlUS ---. lurt . I == --~­·-·--llJll'T ~OYo\M CMM* -I!!!! HILD OVll -.. .. ' NEWPORT . ' (--. !" . .., ..... .. 1NI ToP MIT (i(oUfJ'o° C tkn.1.1 ~')!;'I J\ Lid'""" n•11a1 ftt'Cl.i\~S $TARTS ))loU ... ~·­--'°'"" ""' Sacnd · (II .... ... IM'llaf vengeance 7nd 101' loCTIOff HI I "flvt flNGllS OF OlATK" (~ " . f o w11n n·. CINEMA 'Vl~JO " . . . . .. • • j 1' • l l.\Vot ,lo;llo P..<M• • °"" Dooolil~ _, .. _ -- ' I. spokesman !or the Na- tional As.sociatlon or Broad· casters, the major broadcnst group In Washington, says he hasn't heard of any '!'V sta- 1 ions cutting back evening TV programming yet. "l think any stotlons pro~ flbly ~'OUldn't cut back until the government gives Uitn1 a clear slfn that they oosht to do it,'.. he said, addutg that nothing like pthat even has been proposed infonnany. SonD•••• ,, ...... , l•-"w,.1 (~.) 967-2411 "''"' 11 .... -· ... ,.- ~ll·l171 ..... "11 .... , S..olCl,.•n IOI••• ''*'"''" S).4·•112 1-.. 1 .. t•'• •''• .... "11 ... . """'_, ..... 11 1-1162 ................ GITAWAY !'II NII I OUSftM MOff...,. mLi llGMANll'lt S.nlo Mo ._ .... S101oc...._ Uf ·7011 ~-­''"'"'' ....... St. S(S-Jlll il<GulfNt ..... W GITAWAY "' NIJ f DUS11M NDfllWI LITTLE llG MAN"" I tlL•OH (i(l'J•O 00</ll~ .' I&! I• UlU~liWI ... __ ..... ...... , .. , ' -. Rocky's :· Private Citizen .. • By DICK WEST WASll!NGTON (UPI) The political climate ls such U1at Nelson Rockefeller is , seeking to use private life ;: as a stepping stone to Uie :-\Vhitc House. : In announcing his intention ·: to resign as governor of New York. Rockefeller did not specifically say he was quit· : . ting to run for president. .. BUT rr IS taken for granted :: he will go 1tfter the 1976 · Republican nomination and he , apparently feels his chances Y:il l improve after he is out of office. I can remen1cbcr when the situation Was reversed. It used ~ to be that politicians with • • < presidential aspirations view· ed gubernatorial service as a springboard. Puzzled as to v.-hat caused !he turnaround. I talked with Lu ig i V. Populi, political analyst and author of the book "The f\1aking of a Private Citizen." I SAID, "By most accounts. Rockefeller has betn a good and popular governor. How will ret iring from public li fe help him advance in public life?" ··1 can explain it in one \vord," Populi r e plied . _''Watergate." "But Rockefeller has neve r been mixed up in that mess," I protested. "It's true be wasn't standing on ground zero , but lhe fallout frOm Watergate threatcrui of- fice4K>lders indiscriminately, the innocent along with the nolo contenderes. "TO ROLD public office at this time is to run the risk of beroming iden tified in the minds of the voters ~ith a period or p:>litical scandal." I Slid, "Are you telling n:ie the surest way lo succeed 1n politics is not to be in govern· ment at all?" "Exactly," said Pop u 1 i . • "\'i'hy do you think John Con- : nall y got out when h~ di~? "Connally got a big 1ump on other GOP presidential hopefuls as a governmental dropout. It remains to be seen ·• whether Rockefeller c a n : overcome his lead." .· I SAID, "What Impact ~·i,ll this have on Ronald Reagan s presidential aspirations?" "Reagan m~de 'an astute move some time ago by an- nouncing he would n o t ' seek another tcnn as governor ·-or California . But that may -not be enough. "With Rockefeller and Con· nally already out of office Reagan will be under tremer: dous pressure to abort his own Incumbency. In other words, he may have lo .. step down In order lo step up. I-SAID "What about public ' . . servants who aren t running for president'!" "The same thing applies," Popull assured me . "Members of Qmgre"' who plan to run for rHlection ln 1974 had ~t­ ter get out of office now while the gelling'• good." ' A LATIN ROMANTIC FIDENZA ,Italy (AP) -A stubborn Sicilian was Jailed a ninth tlmC for COW'tlng an attractive school teficher. Stefano Cambria, 28,,. has been visiting Marla Barbieri, 33 In this north Italian town sl~ce 1971 when he was first jailed al her request. He said he plaas to try one more time -when he finishes his threo -month sentence. • r .. ond.1y, Orcei."*"' 17, 1913 UAILI l"ILUI J;j ' I -- BIG BOUCLE SWEATER SPEC·IAL now, treat every girl on your gift li st while you save on candy-colored cardigans in eleven different shades Christmas mint s. Have one! Ou r new S\veaters are light as marshm'all6ws. And a rea l trea t in many melt-in- /your-mouth colors. Shaw l-co llared. V-necked. Belted or not : All you have to do is pick a color. Aqua. \vhite, pink, peach, blue, yellow, red , beige, brown, black-;. n.1vy. WJ shable. Mi 'iS('S or \\'Omen 's large site~. ·. -a. shawl collar acryl ic, tie belt, 36-40 (16) 13.99 d. soilor co ll ar acr ylll, pocket> 42 -46 (85) 14.99 b. shawl colla r ac rylic in sizes 36·40 ( 161 c. acrylic cardigan, gilt buttons 42-46 (85) 13.99 14.99 boulev,ud sportswear lb, women's sportswear 85 -all 21 ~lores .. ' I' ' e. shawl co ll ar acrylic c.ml iga n 42-46 (851 14.99 f. V-neck acrylic ca rdigan , pockets, 36-40 (16)13.99 ordt•r by rn.u l or phone M;\ 6 · )JJS 13.991014.99 , specia l purchase , • .,;,' . v-·"<1'1· ., , • • .. • South Coast Plaza , 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa -549-9321 Shop Monday thru Saturday 10 'til 10, Sunday 11 'til 6. ' ' •• 1 ' •..; u .. 11 .. , PILOf Monday, Dtcembtr 17, 1973 Skylab 's Food Aid '¥0111• Money'• Worth To All? NEW YORK !UPI I Ltssons learned In fcedln.1t astronau ts aboard the \'ariou~ AJXlllo spaC"ccraft and the Skylab lTillY have significant applicntlons in the food in· ~dustry. llOSPITAL FEEDING is • Widows Bv SYLVIA PORTER Within 18 mo.,ths . 52 percent of all wlffows h-,ve .c:tisslpaied the tru:urance benefits of their husbands, 11.nd within 60 days one out of four widows has txhausted all her i'nsurance money. one area. Eventually, lessons l<'amcd in space may be im· portant in preparing foods for campers and \'acationers, for boaters, for people engaged ip scientific and other ex· plorations in remote areas and, to some extent. the military. -The average of all death b('nefits left lo ·a widow today is only $12,000 -including insurance, Social Security, . V.A. benefits, pensio~ etc. iprlJ;)Xi no,{ ~ puy ·ooo ·'H SJ ··~ '1e~J 'SJOl -oop 'reud Ul"I T•lttl!Mf• --sott juwn1;, It's Quicker, Too Geor~e Sp.iesschoark (left) drives his team of Belgian draft horses to deliv.er beer rn Hillsboro, Oregon._ Regular truck driver Bob Stenlund (right) acted as gu1d~ an~ lumpe.r dunng the d.elivery. Th'e beer ,distributor says usfng horses 1s quicker wa"f to make deliveries . ·UJ 'samid ·X3 QlWP JO isoo il~hua ·AB 3lfl IP!ll-\\ lSU!Bje -P'Otltf&R This is the conclusion of Dr.,_Jloberl Pavey, a Cornell Un i \' crsily-educated nutri· tionist "'ho has had overall direction at Swift & Co., Oak Brook, Ill .. of preparing foods an d menus for the astronauts in the Apollo and Skylab ven- tures. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pay More For Less \Vhirlpool Corp. of St . Joseph's. ?\-1 ich. \\'as the prime contractor on both pro- grams, and Swift oblained the subcontract to supply all the meat and meat-related foods and some vegetables and fruits. That's How Utilities Eyeball the Future "A GREAT !\JANY 01her companies \\'e re dra\'i"n in the program,'' Dr. Pa,·ey said. .. Pillsbury for bakery pro-- duct s: Oregon Freeze dried products : General Food s , Kraft and many others." It \Vas a -big--jump from the pouched. liquified foods sucked through st ra.,.,•s by the astronauts on th e early space trips . to the varied stock oj 70 virtually fresh foods en- joyed by the crew of Skylab, In the process. much \\'as leamed. Dr. Pavev told United Press International. Nol all that was learned concerned the food itself. For example. v.·ork "'ilh officials of the National Space and Aeronautics Administration helped Dr. Pavey develop a compact. in s ulated com· binat ion stove and table that can hold unmelted ice cream next to a steaming main course. Another mechanical development was an improved "'armer tray th at could have a revolutionary effect on the preparation of meals for airliner passengers and in schools and other institutions. DR. PAVEY said lhe pro-- gram developed more variety in five kinds of foods that have special clinical nutri· tional applications. WASHINGTON (AP) Consumers will pay more for electricity as utility companies seek higher rates to offset sharply rising fuel costs and energy-saving cutbacks. In recent weeks, at least 12 majo r power companies have applied for rate in- creases totaling $495 mill ion and an · industry spokesman said this was only the be- ginning. .. COMPANIES AU. over the country have got to t'aise tremendous · amounts of capital to build facilities to provide service, and this means rates will go up," said a sookesman for the Edison Electric Institute. \V l th higher rate s, homeo\vners probably \\'ill not save much on electricity bills e\'en if they turn off lights to save energy, The Consolidated Edison Co. or New York lasl \vt>ek asked the state public utility com- mission for permission to rai se rates nearly 30 percent over the next two years. The request included approval for a new "conservation ' ad· justment" ainolDlting to 6.67 percent to make up for the expected reduction in revenues from energy saving programs. In Los Angeles, the · city Department 0£ Water and Pov.·er said it .... 111 probably force the agency to ask for OWN PURE SILVER MlllioM of Arnerlca11• are ftJate<fl'"J t"-rMelwes OCJOl .. t hlflotla11, de'ICll•otlo11, oltd ffle lo•• of pvtchasl119 paw« of the dollar. They are co11Mrtln9 PAPER MONEY ta REAL MONEY' 111 tN far1t1 of PURE SILVER. Hl1tory hos 1how11 tHt SILVER holds in yalM oltd lncreows d11rl119 troubled times. FU.NKLIN SILVER CORPORA· TION, Sllftf spec:lallsts. sells for llft!Mdlat. deli•ary ,9tt fine IARS AND COINS. JACK HILDEBRAND I 714 I 673-1166 FINANCE at least a 15 percent rate increase to make up for an expected $45 million loss in revenue as a result o f measures lo curb electrical use. In citing the need for higher rates. Con Ed Chairman Charles Luce estimated that the v a r i o us conserJittion measures \\'OUld result in a 10 percent reduction in elec· trical output but would have no affect on operating costs. HE SAID THE company would have to pay the same taxes, interest, depreciation and billing costs and employ" the same labor force . "The only · significant s av Ing s resulting Crom reduced output "'ill be in· t·h e cost of fuel and purchased power from other utilities. and these will be passed alOng lo our customers," he said. The spokesman for the New York-based Edison Electric Institute, representing publicly owned po.,.,·er companies. said the $495 million in rate in· creases applied for by the 12 power companies was only a partial listing for the fourth qu~rter. · The fourth quarter figu re reported so far compared .,.,;th rate increases of $710 million already pul into effect during For California _Residents Only. GRUBB & ELLIS REALTY FUND IV Minimum Purchise-$5,000 the first nine months of the ye"8.r by 91 utilities, the spokesman said. Other increases sought this week included a boost of $63.6 million applied for by the ~ Pacific Gas & Electric Co. of San Francisco to offset higher fuel costs .. This \\'OUld mean a rise of 65 cents in the monthly bill for the typical household, a spokesman said. -tr Utilities Changing To Coal By The Associated Press Fuel starved utilities \\trich operate 26 oil·fired power generating plants along the Eastern seaboard are trying to convert their generators to coal by early next year. Under pressure of dirnishing oil supplies and a strongly worded telegram from federal energy chief William E'. Simon, the utilities have sent buye rs to Appalachia ror a quantity cf coal that would be sufficient lo suoplv all the oower needs of the state of PeMsylvania in any given day. The generating plants singl- ed out by Simon for im- mediate switches from oil to A Real Estate Investment Opportunity A California Limited Partn ership Offering These Potential Benefits •Tax Savings in '73 ' coal now consume 200.000 bar~ rels a day, or about seven percent of the nationJ s estimated petroleum shortage of three million barrels daily. •Tax Sheltered Cash Flow • Mortgage Reduction • Limited Liability • Potential Appreciation • Diversification of Properties ONE HOUR INVESTMENT MEETINGS TUESDAY-DEC.!&-7:30P.M. SANTAANA TUESDAY-DEC. IS-7:30P.M. NEWPORT BE.!CH E. F. Hutton & Co. Inc. 161 N. Main Strttt (714) 547·0101 E. F. Hutton l Co. Inc. 600 C Newport Center (714) 644-9111 Space is Limite,d Offering Circulars will be distributed at the seminars. Call for Reservations E. F. Hutton & Co. Inc. Tfrrit ................. • ... ~ ..,_ 11 .... lir tllt ........ lfMfwtltlf, 1J1a ... tf.,;.-* I• ....... ,....... ... .,. ,...... .. Dllteftl•, ..... 1•,..,. ....................... ., ....., ffl..., ......... ...._ .......,..., " .......... ff .. fatl UO,..,, tMI""""' lllfltiMl s-.._. ~ .......... " ...... It ..... RO,elOl .-....-, • .... """"'.._Ml_.. I~ lt• .... 110l,MO, ...... _, ...... • ......... ... ~" 1111 ,. ..... .. ' The plants affected have small and large generating capacities, and generally are located pway from the lari;iest population centers in the East. Most are among the large number of power plants in the area which switched to oil In the past eight years becaltse it was Cheaper and cleaner. -tr * * Standard Wins Bid accidental death and use only medical death, that average cost goes up to about $8,000. -Out of every four widows, one is under age 45 with children, and the average span 'D widow spends raising chil· dren is six years. -Social Security check take an average of four months before they arrive after death. Less than three out Of 10 widows' husbands leave a will. THESE STARTLINGLY grim facts were uncovered in a recent survey by Anchor National Financial Services, Inc. (ANFS ), a financial plan- ning se rvices company and subsidiary of the St.5 billion Anchor Corp., headquartered in Phoenix, Ariz. • U.S. Face Financial Woes Ill WUhout question. t h t " unAe .. line fb~ lm'OO~nce of financial plaMinl{ for ·women -b<'th PS w1ve9 pl'tf as possible widows. A<iml!ted -hut once you know the facts about the widow's plight In our land . what can you do about them? In response, here are so1ne common sense rules from ANFS y,•hlch miRht protect a family from the unhappy statistical categories sum- marized in the above horror tales. • Use professional help. Even if you haVe onlv a small amount or prooerty or J"IOnev. "vou will find compe,tent finaocial advi~e"S anTious to assist you \\ithout charge," insists Edward B. Burr. vice chairman and president of ANFS. Get suggested plans from two or three responsible life insurance a g e n t s , securities salesmen , bankers and trust officers , Burr urges. Then, with utmost care, select the approach that makes the most sense to you. l\IAKE YOUR wills. Both husband and wife need wills unleM you just don't care who gets your property, when or how, should :vou die. Qualified attorneys will prepare suitable wills quickly, and U they're simple, as most are, for miniJTwm fees. Start tralning the wtfe to be a widow now. "Let the wife take over the job or handling the finances ," Burr advises. "Let her leAm to pay the bills, balance the checkbook, keep the insurance "'''Ir-I•< li. fO"I";!. ~n•--e tht inc.-" .,. 18lt -e'n"YlS '' Kee., 11 s~ .. 1 ea'h accoont. So""ewhere In hep own-chflck: In~ or s"vin"R aix:ount. every wife should have Access to quick cash. Th.ls shnuld be enough to pav famJlv bills. at lea9l for a fe\\' "'eeks untll other ~ssets (joint aoo>unts, sarctv deposit contents, life insurance payments, etc.} are released to her . KEEP A "LOCATION list." Where are the wills? The ln· surance policies? S lo ck s , mutu•l funds , bom&, other in· vest!""ents? Deed to the house? Savines account passbook? Slmilarlv v l 1 at paoers and proofs of as.sets? If the husband and wife keep an up.to-date record of the ktnds, amountS and location of all their' assets and family documents, frantic questions will be avoided. Copies of this location list might be kept at home, with your lawyer. a ·cl Me relative, your financial adviser. Try trusts. Ask your finan· cial adviser to tell -you how trusts can make your famil y's financial plan even sounder. And, says Burr; "If he doesn't understand trusts (and not all adviser> do) ask him to recommend someone w h o does. Or just go 'directly to your own lawyer for guidance .. on this. Don't be fooled into thinking that tru sts are only for \\·ealthy people, incidentally. The fact is that the use of trusts is the "trick" \rhich hai:: h"l~-i to r"Rke families v•11r>h ~v-arl't keot I hem wP.al'h" generation after generation . ~-- ONCE YOU have made a plan, review It at least every tl\rec years or whenever any imp(ii:tant family change oc- curs (a new baby, inheritance. new home, job). "Very Im- portant," emphasizes Burr, "If you move to • new stale, review your plans promptly with the local professional ad· viser to make certain that different laws In your new state do not frustrate your earlier good ptanning." Whether or not you agree \rith all these rules or disagree \Vlth details of them. "'hethcr or not you have others to add or iubstitute, the key point Burr makes is unassailable : the financial tragedy of millions of Wido\VS in our land could have been eased or erased if they had learned how to handle money while they "·ere wives. ECONOMY SIZED UP After a year or booming inflation and shortages, the U.S. economy heads tnto 1974 facing more or the same - and the real -.lba:at o f recession as. well. 5e'i7Page 23 for tron0mic re\'ielA· of 1973 and forecast for 1974. • ' . • • ...... • • . I • . . - ' ' . . I ' ( ' .. •, t. • omet ing For Every Bo y ong the range. oast ' -• Here's a "seven-pack" you can have delivered to your door for only $2.65 a month anywhere in the Orange Coast area. Nourishing too ... whether you have a taste for local sports reports, crave more news about the world of women in which you live, feel a lc;ick of community news in your diet or want the variety of top cartoons, comics, collJ mns and ·commentary packaged so they please you. The D?ilY Pilot delivers-seven days a week. Want to .order? Phone 642-4321 or the Daily Pilot office in your neighborhood. · . . ' DAILY PILO T • • ·. . • • ' . •. . . • • A' --. --1 i • • l • j . • . . . -• . • • • . • . ' . • • • • • • • • • • • . • ' J6 DAILY PI LOT Monday, Otctmbtr 17, 1973 .. Otlier -Deaths ] LAFC _Rejects Midway City. Bid WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. q..rle1 Greeley Abbott, a pioneering astronomer who believed the energy SOIJrce o! the future to be the sun he spent his life studying, died tOday. lie was 101. Abbot \Vas associated \vith the Smithso- nian Institution for over three· quarters of a century. By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of #le oai1r ~lltt •••ff SANTA ANA -1i1idway Ci- ty, a 350-acrc island of eounty territory in the middle of \Vestminsler, will be allowed to keep its place in the sun; Delbert Catron, f>l'f$1_denl of the Midway City Chamber of Commerce, made an emo- tional appeal to the LAFC Wednesday to "leave our peo- ple alone." "Five times we have voted a~ainst a nn e xa t I on to ORANGE COUNTY J Valley ~Man Wins -Goodwill Award ' SANTA ANA -The title of Goodwill Worker of 1974 has been awarded to Robert S: Frantz of Fountaln Valley. palsy, soutlc bemlplegla and visual !imitations, Frantz ·is confined to a wheelchair and has only limited use of his left hand. His eye weakness. demands that he work as close as four lo si:r inches from his work surface. ' r' VATICAN CITY CAP) _ local Agency Formation Com-. . missioners have decided. Card1oa,I Amleto Ci~ognani, The LAFC voted unanimous.- Westminster and to put their ..._ ________ , The Orange county selection was made by three judges who chose -young Frantz on the basis of his \4'0rk achieve- ment in overcoming his han· dicap; his physical, mental, social adjustment and achievement in overcoming hiJ han~cap; the severity of the ·handicap to overcome : and his penonality a n d development. ,.}.fter graduating from Carl 'Harvey School in Santa Ana, Frantz attended Cypress O>llege for one year. the ~attcan secretary or state · ly to Jet the 9,000 residents for eight years. and papal en· of Midway City keep their voy to the _United States for unincorporated status, re- 25 . ye.ars, died toda y after a jecting a bid by Westminster brief illness. He Y.'as 90. to lhrow its sphere of in- sphere of influence over us is like opening the door to annexation against our will, '1 he !ald. Catron said the people of his community are a "do it yourself breed" and in almost every instance, they have paid ror services lhev need without SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - SJd Barnes, 57, an Australian cricketecr, di ed Sunday. He was known as a grea t 1 batsman and a spectacular close-in fieldsman. EVANSfON, Ill. (AP ) -G. D. Crain Jr., 88, publisher of Advertising Ag~-and other b.Jsiness public:!!Jons, died Saturday. Other magazines owned by his company, Crain •Communications, i n c l u d e Ind us tr i a I '.h-1 a rketing, Automotive News, Business Insurance, Advertising Sales & Promotion and Pensions & Jnvestments. fluence over the small com· munity. usine: county fund s. Acti"on Filed "W.e have had sidewalks sin-ce the 1920s -all paid for To Reverse Plans Denial bv ourselves," Catron said. "We have a volunteer fire department which is one of the best around and we have the best possible police pro- tection -the Orange County Sheriff." SANT A ANA _ An action Catron described Mid~ay that seeks to reverse the Hun-Clty .. as a gro~p 0~0old-fashio~ tington Beach cltf OOWlcil's ~ barn raisers ~ho chip denial of plans for the con· 1n and do whatever }Obs need struction of tbree apartment to be ~e. . Death J\'otl<!es building! 00 Holly Street has He said Midway. City hils been filed in Orange County three water pump~g l)lants Superlor C.ourt. that supply four tnn~s the Judge Walter Charamza has water at fou: times less cost a.......1119 P • .,i:~,,!~t:~" 11, o1 1m yet to set the dale on which !ban Weslmmster could and fi«lera1 Aye.. cos11 Mn.1 011e o1 he wi"ll h e a r -ln"al 'l>i:obably su_ pply even more Oft;th, 0ec;_.,.,bll" 13, tm. Sur\llYed by ... ~ h h I Sa • -- al1ler, ""'· Pltrr•tt. F. en-. San arguments that the clty coun· t an t e ,Cl, ty o nta "'"" Gt>brl•li lltPftew, Pierre "· GUl'IMf. S•n could use M;iorlllO. SerYlcu. kldlv. Mona1v. 11 cil acted unlawfully July 16 · . ~ i~~:~~i'tt.~rno~7'r::,~n,,:~~ ~::::~ when it denied pl~ previous.. Carto~ added t.hat his people 1tn1 M-'•' P•"'-a.11 &ro1d~t ly approved by t.be city Plan· keep it1d~~y Cit~ free from MOrtuarv. oirec~~lio1:1ts · ning Commlsson and the s~um ~nchlions without fm~­ Anne HOll)el'"s. A111 ••· 01 2" &r01dw•Y Board or Zonln• AdJ"us•-·nts. c_ ial aid from anvone. _He sa_1d Sf, Costa MaU . .J)&te ol ckl!ll, O«ember 'I' i.u>e 1.&: 191i. survlwed bY t1rorrier. o r. Ant1'>01w p 1 Cl · d 1ust across the line 1 n HOl5pefs. wutern sor1no1, 11 1 1no1 • . roper Y owner arm a . th 1 ~w. or. Jonn HMPtr1. san M1r1no. Kirk Brooks of Honolulu \Vestrrunster ere are s urns SerYICH 11\d Interment will be ~Id -. -' h" I h k I I ( we.inesc1av. 2 PM. on P•H•. 1ow1. &en liawaii and her agent James--is peop e ave ep ou o !ll'Dildw1v MOrtu•r"" Forw•rdlno OlrK· D ,. •1 I H 'ti I Midway Citv tor11-05 . 1non gomeey o . un ng on · . : . i..1 C•tnerlni J. ;J~::~~~ A;e 66: rt1ii1en1 Beach. seek court action that He satd Pi.11dway City sho~.u °' L.aeun• &each. tu'• o• _jH•tn. \\'ill allow them lo build three be allowed to keep the m-~ IS.-191)...,..SWYl..ed-bV ... .w-:s, -'J ------.. "I · "t h · had ' -"t Oi"• Mlv Mel.Iran . Oakl•nd, c1111 ;L-1• 24--unit apartment OoiJ.Ses on ,egr1 Y l as: since l ~ Reno. HaYad•i brOThft", J. 6· ·d formed in 1919 Jann1no, '*'° of Reno; s1~ neon~· the west SI e of Holly Street · :a~·~~1·':~~.ia~on11,~;::','·ti!'~m~: 185 fed south of Garfield Commiss!oners ~ere ur~ed t\ nw co1ncer Fund. Shetter Lavun• Avenue to allow Pi.f1tfwav C1tv lo deode ••ach Mortu•rv, Olrectort. Th · . .1 · 1'ls own affall'S· 1•-~ a MAC MAHON ey name city counc1 man •uvu11;u t;::..2; ~~~ie 3:°c1e:r~.k~:1; Jerry Matney as responsible, Muni~ipal Advisory Council 14 1973. sun11wd bl" w11e, eu01•t1e,tn via his appeal to the ci"ty now 1n the forrootlon stages. ,, MKMlhonl two &ant, P1ul .• r. The ould •!Id ,Uth•rd IC. MacMahon, of Santa council against the planners' group w serve as a •••subff•· 1i11119hter, IC•thlHn A.· pseud-"1ty -unc"1I to make .W.cM•~· cos11 Mew; 11reNld•1J<1hter: approval for delay of the pro-.. o.r\o o..v Jfl"lnller MacMahon. L1gun• &uch, · 1 ' dec1s1ons about th• com· flii1hlf", Alma A.. M•cM•l'loll, E•slon, JeC • . , Pfnn1Y1~1nl1; brother, H-rold A· mun1ty s future. MlcM•hon Chlc1110; 1151e•, RO!.e~•V Ca "d th t rt" GninQf:r. N.wrllh, p I nn I y I" I ni,•. tron sa1 a a Po ion $«Y1ce1, lodly, MonC11y, • PM •. P•ciliC n· ata Offi•cer Of his City -Which iS split Vlew cn1pel. lnlerm..,,!, PK ll!C View Memorl1 t P1rk. Pacl!lc Vitw Mortuary, into three parts by Strips Of Dlracior11-MOGE SACRAMENTO (AP) Westminster. borders Hun· Edmond L. Mage Aqe 6,, ol 171 Atbt•I c_~•ce. c.ost• Maw. oaie ot ae11n. Fulton M. Smith Jr. o[ Fair tington Beach and some peo-~o?~~rwo1~!~7li1n~u!iv10fi~o. ~d,:,'~; Oaks has been appointed data pie have been discussing of Hunt1no:iton 1111ch' tour d•U(lhter•. processing o[£icei' in the possible annexation to that ci· Jomnne Dlc:klffl, Hunllnqton llffl:h; fher•M L.fflle ou1ard; l;abrlell1 Conn, California Department . Of ty. S1nf1 Aflll: K~r•n Mf!Cle, ros11 M...,..1 "'"'i-n-~, •-'th, a n-publlcan, r-mrru"s1'ooers ~ two bl"Ofherli flw t1ster11 10 11r111111chn-~ u1c:1.u\.ic: OXJu ne ......., were ......,... drefl. 11:.,..rv, Tu.Ml•Y· 1:» l"M, aeu b3s been deputy "state data viously swayed by Catron's l!!ro.d'w•V C/tolpel, Rf(!Ulem M•i.t. Wed· aJ ed d ) . nlsd•v. , AM. st. Joachim. c11no11c processing officer s i n c e appe and vol to e ay tP. CllU!'th, with Fr. Thomll J. Nevin of· FebMl::aMI. The post pays . de r in it e I y Westminster's t'ld•tlnoJ lnlermant, Hofy ~Plllcl'>er • -J • C9Pterr. B•H Bro.owar Mortu•rv. DI· $32,256 a year. sphere of influence bid,- rKtor11-OL.SOH Lo15 G. Olson. Alie 56, of 'JDBA John'IOfl, cost• Meuo. 0111 ot ae1tn, o..:tmt>f• 15, 11173. 5urYIYi'd by h ... llolnd. AuOolol'I Q11on; d1119hltr. P•lrlcl1 Sp.tutz, L• lCre.sctnl•1 mother, Mrs. H'nrletra Co1111r: bron~·•· A"'o" 1nd FD"e" "AnderlOn, •II of Ch•rl•slon. South C••o- llna; flY• or•nclchlldr1n: one great· er•ndChlld. SerYlces, T..-1day, 3 PM. I !lell 8ro&dw1y en~. with Fr. Howard C..rtvirlghl ofllcl1rlng. lnterme<1I, F1ir- MYl'!I Memorial P•rk. F1mil y Sll(I· 9"I* mel"TIOl'"lll contrlbllllons bt made 'O' 1111 Amerk1n Canctr Soel1ty. 6t11 aro.clw•y Mortu.trv. OlrK!on. SIMMON I -Sltphen IC. Simmons. Aqa 23, ot .Cl Pr"fnc•lon Or.. '°''" MHI. 0111 o! ctHlh, Oec;_emblr 1•. 1'73. SurvlYed by , wife, D1br• IC, Slmmon11 parentt, Mr. 1nd Mrll-Rlch.lrd IC. Simmons; brolller, Mlchffl; 1lstltf, C1ndace; 11r1ndmcth1r, F"rll"KH Roome. I ll ol (0'-11 M••JO. ~·' yrvkes wi!I be h~a Wed· nesa1y. 10 AM , Chris! Chlt!"cil by !hoe , $.N, ldl W. &llbOI !llvd , N-oort INCh. Familt rl!Qunls no now1r11-THOASELL ltoblrl H. Tltcir•ell. AQe ~1. o! 10"3 w.-(hayenne, Cosl1 Mew. D•!t of dllth DK-tmtier 9, 197] SU1"Ylved by _ _.wife ."1tutll: son, Rot.tr!, DI Potn n1ylvanl11 ; , dlUQlll•r, Roblrla. Ccs!a Mr•1: hrotllfl,, lkrt Tnorlltll; t Is t er. 61nv Tl>orull, bOtti ol Minne.or•: rhree qreNlclllld•~n. """'°"'' .ervice1, WedMMlly. 1 PM, • .. 8ell llrOldwev (h110!!I, will> ReY. Wllllem • Acton oflkl-11119. lnurnmenr, F•lrhaven MemOrl•I P1rk. 6tll 6roaaway Mortu1rv, DlrKl0t1. WOllLEY ., J~ Edw1rd Worlev. RnlO<!nl ot Ccr.1!a Mn11 d•te of de1Th, Dlc~btr 1~. 1'73. 8•1owd f11ner of Ror-err G. Worley •n4 l!lonlf•" L. ll•oler; brolllf!r of Waller ._ wonev •"" 0o<11 e. llQ!>SOn. Also ,,_ wrvfWd by tl• 11r1nclchlldrtn 1na elev&n ...,..t1'•n0ch!IOren. Services, TutsG~Y. · 10 AM, Hiiiside (l>urch, R~e Hills ~al Par-. Whil!ler. Ro~ Hltls , ,v.orwery, Director•. ARBUCKLE & SOS WESTCLIFF MORTUARY C1 E. 17th St., Costa r.lesa 516"1888 Bandit's Bid To Roh Two 'Backfires' · · SERVING AS JUDGES were Joseph E . Irvine, public rela-' lions director for Pacific Telephone, Tustin : May Russell, manager community association liaison, The Irvlne Company, Newport Beach, and Dr. Allan G. Snider, direc· tor of Melodyland Counseling Clinic, Anaheim. Born with· multiple bftn.. FRANTZ WAS plae<d by Goodwill at the Hospllal Laun- dry, Santa Ana, .. a laundry helper. Part of the recognition Frantz will receive is an ex· pense-paid trip to Sacramento in January for visits with State dignitaries and a tour of the State Capitol before attending the annual awards luncheon, where he will com· pete for the state title with the Goodwill Workers selected · y the olher_ten Goodwills __ SANTA ANA -A bungling bandit, whose bid to rob two occupants of a South Laguna motel room ended with one intended victim sitting on his head and the secood phoning Orange County sheriff's of· ficers, bas been committed for an indefmite term to the • State's Norco facility. ~ 1 Superior Court Jlfdge James 1'lmer ordered the com· rnitment after Clifford Dale Burkhart, 26, San Diego, pleaded guilty to robbery charges. The judge fowid on the basis or doctors' reports that Burkhart was in danger of becoming addicted t o narcotics. in California. '. Q.icaps, including c e r e b r a I rr======.I ~twant·~ <tlo~l fl ~ino\ Pair Fined $125 Each In Fracas CHEER UP THAT BOAT OWNER FRIEND Burkhart was arrested last AT YOUR Oct. lS shortly after he WESTMINSTER - A Hun-NIAlRT 1001 51'0RE Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers simulated possession -of a tington Beach couple arrested ., weapon and entered the motel at their home last Aug. 30 MARINE HARDWARE room occupied by Walter after a fracas with police over1~~~ Smith, 56, of Salt Lake City a hit-run incident has been /1 and Leslie Eaby, 54, of Van fined Sl25 each in West Muys. · Orange County J u d i c i a I ~, District Court. Both men quickly nd overpowered Burktia.rt and hiSal~a!lorEel Capello46. 55[. :m held 11-:-til -~ft ·a•s ~r. s "."~ e, e~nor, , o . --1Wu. un :i.sg:rJ · ·""""--Castilian Drive.-were-also ficers amved. ordered to !el'Ve one year's probation after being foµnd guilty of resisting arrest and !Jogus Cash · battery on a police officer. Nets Term The jury trial was ordered on charges that the couple attacked officers who came to their home seeking in· fonnation on the traffic ac-ANAHEIM -Ronald Peek. cident. 31. of Reno, Nev., has pleaded1 -----~-----·II guilty to passing a counter- feit bill at Disneyland. Peek entered the plea in U.S. District Court. Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 7. AdYerti11ment Bite! U.S. Secret Service agents ; said they found $3%,400 in cmmterfeit $100 notes in the ~ trunk o! Peek's auto and at FASTEElH"l'VllldK his home alter be was ar· ft tllles the wotrY resled by Anaheim police Oct. out ot ~ denllna. 6. . BIG WALE COllllftOY Water r11pellant, 9reat for jackets, car coats. Makes beautiful bed. spreads, a wide color ran9e. REG. $2.98 YD. SAVE $1.01 YD. Machine Wash Cotton 45"· \"Vide 197 YD. • • BALTZ-BERGERON Wlat -9' n •I• ltywuaaT Rlal• the .............. ._'°- ' l , • ' • " • ' I ~ERALllmlE Corona ldel Mar 673-9~50 Costa Mesa 646-2424 • BELL BROAOll'AY 'MORTUARY 11t Broadway, Costa flt esa • LI S-3133 • DJIJ)AY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17111 Beach Blvd. Hantlngtoo Beach Ml-ml W Redondo Avr:. ..._ Long Beach 21hJ8-1115 • M.CORMJCK LAGUN' BEACH MORTUARY 17M Laguna Canyon Rd. llM-IM15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary CbaP<I 3$11 hclfic 'View Dri,·e Newport Beach, Calllornla -• • PSKl'AMILV OOIAINIAL ft1NERAL .ROMS 7*MaA•e. ···b•1 .. U?> llllft'I :0.ruARV ...... 9 71 .... .. •• j ' ,,,,~ South Coast_.:· ?Illa "Take A Dus Shappl ... DRANGE CDUNTY. TRANBsT DISTRICT -Forlal•-U.• .. """"lllel,collOCrDalMT- """k•alllJILW~Aft,lloofaAaa,Ca.mOI T &HOUSE OF FllBRICS always first quality f abriC$ , ' . . . s..tll c..t ,._. Hear ,._ l rt1tol •t Sin Di•90 Ewy. I 7!h •I lr:sto l c .... M ... -141·1116 S.:tte AN -14l·9lll 0t •••• ,., ... -..... ,... c.... Or•119•thorit• •l'KI H1rbor l1 P•hn1 •f St1i.to11 ~ ......,.. -l2 .. J2J4 ..... hrk -IJl:'J2J .... .,.,._ 12111 lroo~hur1t ln•ri fa Yo11'tl -ll .. 1142 Hwwl ....... C...eT -Ecli119•r o1t l•1ch llvcl., Hunt111eto11 •••c.h -"7.nlJ • I 1 I I I I I I I I l i I l l d h I • I I - ·!:.--" • BEA ANDERSON, Editor -.. Mtncl•~··OKem~ 11, ,1m .. ,,.. tr • • ' Toys A .. 1.~.. Storitt by ALLISON DEERR Is there a .handicapped child on your Christmas list? Chris Chapparo. director of. the oc- cupational therapy department of the Rehabilitation Inslitute of Orange Coun- ty, bas some suggestions. "The physically handi .. pped child who is paralyzed or has difficuJty walking fs not able to move about and explore his environment as the normal child docs. 1 "Skateboard or scooter boards, which he can lie upon on his tummy or si t upon, allow the child to move al'O\Uld . It does not confine his movements or limit his experiences," ,she said. Them gll\s free the ct>lld to· aplore, to pull the pots and pans !rom the cupboard as any child would. "A child needs DlOl'elJM!!1l, handicapped or not, and when he can move around he is not dependent on someone else to.--provide--activities and stimulation,'!._ she said. A set of swings and slide (with swings adapted so the child With balao<e di£· ficult~ fall) were suggested. '"These children need movement most of all." MIRROR HELPS A full length mirror. that goes down to floor level , \\'OU.Id. allow the child to see himself play, anolher good gift, she noted. Toys for the handicapped' child should renect his interests and c.apabilities. Ms. · Chapparo suggested the child's te3cher or therapist be ronsulted. __ ""-:.. "Puzzles , things • ·take-=·1part and out together are always good." For the visually handicapped child, she urged gifts be chosen which would stimulate all of the senses. Tactile gifts .. • . ' ~>·""' .~· 'h •• > • > ~ " •. ,,,.,.... ~~~-.".;·i:i:f!'!l'. ~...;;..-"""" .i'u•L.~ ;l..4'~~-t!J<~lt".~~· '·""-~~~ !l)i;,~j.o" Exploration could include balls that are a patchv1ork of different textures. Scraich-aiid--smetf books have large pictures and stories for s i g h t e d youngsters and portions which c.an be scratched for the visually impaired child. A story on peanut butter smells like peanut butter. AUDITORY CUES Toys that make noises -such as rattles for the very young or a ball with bells inside -hClp the child become more aware of auditory cues. Sand trays, clay and play dough, trays for water play provide tactile ex· periences as well. Many of these tactile toys can ba homemade for gift giving, she noted. Activi,ty. , \qy! .such as blackboards, crayoo!, ftnge°l'paints and ~ kits, handcraft sets can be used by many handicapped children as well. "It is important to remember that all children learn as they play. The handieapped-child ·misses many learning-- experiences because he cannot explore on his own. So along with movement, he needs a variety of play experiences. Tovs should be ·challenging to the child but oot tmmanageable." Childre'.'l with limited arm and hand use may not be able to play complicated musical instruments but they can enjoy ·and learn from a drum, activity board, flipping levers and punchin~ buttons. Toys that represent familiar things - mailboxes, telephones, toy-scaled house-. h o I d objects and dolls -encourage learning and stimulate I a n g u a g e . "Children learn by imitation and these toys provide added opPortunities," Ms. Chapparo said. Anyooe needing suggestions for a. specific child can contact the director at the institute, 1800 E. La Veta, Orange (714) 633-1400. Toys can be fun as well as educational. Exploration is e ncouraged by toys that represent familiar qbjech, move, make music. DrLig Abuse Problem Studied I I 1 I ( i ! I' • I ! ' Answers to drug abuse lie in finding alternative ways of meeting human crises. This was the consensus of delegates to the International Conference on Drug Education in Montreus, Switzerland. More than 20 nations were represented . Presenting. a paper at the conference was Maril\ T. Speirs, Newport Beach, who attended as a delegate from PLEAD Inc. a self-supJ)orting Orange County organization aimed at drug abuse preven- tion. "! fffimd that enforcement of drug abuse Jaws is much ~ striCter in other countries. We (the United States) have the problem more extensively because we are larger and more affluent. But drug abuse is a concern or all cOWttries /' Ms. Speirs said. Many of the views she took to the conference for PLEAD were reinforced at conference workshops. "Many peqpte commented on the breakdown of the family. Yes , the family as· it stands ;now is a disruptive factor, but a ret~ to the integral family is essential,.they felh ALTERNATIVES ~ "We need· to find alternative means ,. _ ol meeting .people 's needs and teacblog people to meet their o~ needs and cope with life/' she added. Ms. Speirs noted that oµitr delegates listed .cigarettes, marijuana and alcohol arnoog hardc<ini drugs. "M'uCb' Of· society today bas been con- d.itioried _io use external solutions for internal pr0bJeffis. A~ of legal drugs, including those .by prescription, !s prob- ably greater tb>n the abiise ol illegal drugs because of the habituation and ovel'dosage of amphetamines, barbiturates or tranquilizers given to help people. tolerate the . stress of every- day ,life.· IGNORE PROBLEM ' "Abuse of alcohol. still creates ·more mental and physical suf£e)'lng among people than abuse of other drogs. Therefore, many adults, pi'tlperly ·-c:on- cerned by the Illl'eat ol drop· to. their children, fail to recogilize that they live in and are an integral part of a· drug society." Adults fail to see alcohol, aspirin and cigarettes in the same light as illicit drugs, she added. And ·ag~. makes no • difference when it comes to drug abuse. She called many school drug education programs ''counter-productive,'' noting they take time to provide facts about drugs rather than the social conditions that bring about their use. "Repressive measures to the sale or Import of drugs · bas not ceased its use or ·experimentation -but often · has . caused a division of parmts' and children, educators and .students, law enforcement and young citizens, government and youth," she added. FAMILY KNOW HOW Many delegates agreed with her premise that tbe basis for alle viating the drug abuse problem lies in the home with a strengthening of parental knotv-ix>w and confidence in parents' 1 ability to raise children. . . She described the Values-oriented Drug Abtise F.ducation · Program init'iatfd in Orange County by Herbert 0. Brayer, coordinator of drug abuse education for th~· county. · "It ~ a development process which leads a student from kindergarten through college to seek self-actualization productiveness, love, respect, skiU, enlightenment, influence, wealth, well· being and responsibility. 0 It gives the child .something 'within' which allows hitri to say 'no' to the - temptation of a pill or drug. The student learns to be involved in his own develap- ment. decisions, goal setting, choice of alternatives and attitudes.'' TRAVELS CITED After. the conference in Montreus, ~ts. Speirs visited the World Heatth Organiza· tion in Geneva, a program in Gennany, the head or a U.N. drug study program in Rome and the Bridge Program, another values.oriented program located in New York, ~d an innovative project in Philadelphia. "I foWld that our thoughts here were progressive. Many of the feelings we've held are surfacing elsewhere. It was universally felt that what was needed was a more humanistic approach. "We have been sending people to the moon and building cities and bridges, but we haven't been building strong people," she '8serted. Ms . Speirs, film chairman for PLEAD, is a lecturer on many people-oriented topics. Her training is in art and multiple philosophies of awareriess and percep- ti9n. She feels that what we need now is a calm look at the drug problem rather than overreaction or hysteria. "We need to say tbe problem is !here, we can cope with it and not panic. J feel we are coming lnto a more hwnanistic time, a lime of sharing and caring." • l Ne·ws Bulletin:. Skip Holiday Greetings i I I DEAR ANN LANDERS : The best eol· bits $Dd pieces<or several mailings and I umn you ever printeCl was the assault -bere it the composite: on Christmas "newslet ter\." Please, ''DEAR FRIENDS : What a great Ann, run It again.-DETROIT TIGER year! Jim was named vice president I DEAi\ TIGER: Thanks £or asking. of the Bank. We celebrated by going 0tber1 uktd, teo, to here It is: to Europe and buying a Mercedes. In DEAR , ANN LANDERS : Why do aadiUon to his 'Boy Scout N~tiooal Board nonnallt lnteutgent folks take 1 .. ve work, ~lm was ~ed co-cllalnnan of. f the! sen!es at Chrlstmu time and the \Jluted Fund Drive. He continues o r . . as a Ti:ustee ol City College and Is. ,.nc1 out thOOe mtermlnable cbronicle8 ' TreUilrer ol Klftllt. His lint love, of the year's aettvttleJ to eve~ wh6se ---howev~r, ts sUU conservation, and 1be .... name they can spell? is• heading up the Committee to Ficht • Dulch Elm Disease. It Is the holght of egecen!nclty to assume ·!hat anyoae, except a rew· In: ' umate friends, would wade through all that verbiage. t am galled by their 1-:ucrnpts Io portray glowing pictures I of arnuenee and success. I've taken "After completing my term as Junior i:,eaiue President, I swore I'd take life • easy but I am more Involved than ever. r accepted the Vice Prealdeney ol the Garden CJub and am still active in the DAR. l ran tho bake sa~ for the ' I ' -• ?I• ,t41«1.tM .. c .~·-· ' I Eastern Star again this year and. we Legion Essay Contest. Junior has been made $090. I also squeezed in a Oowcr accepled by both Harvard and ,Yale. arranging cJass offered by a Japanese His girl was turned down by both schools ~xchange student. All this with my leg and will be altending a small eollege in a cast. I fell ort a ladder while hang· near here. He may decide to go there, mg curtains at OID' church.· . --too. If be does, his father will kill ''Jlm1 Jr.,·was elected Class President and won his letters in rooiball and basketball, He Is on the All-Stale Debale Team and placed thin! in '1hc Nailonal Oratory Contest. We were surprised to reed in Ihe 'paper that he had won a $100 U.S. Savings Bond in the American him. 11Linda was elected Vice President of her class and was also Homecoming Queen snd a finalist in tho Regional Swimming Meet." And so ii goes, AM • • • until you could vomit. Next year I'm sending the following newsletter to all ~the bores who h a v e Inflicted theirs on us : -"DEAR FRIENDS: We've had a lousy year. Bill was passed over for promotion again, so be quit his job. He hasn't lined up anything yet but he is listed with the employment agencieis and looks in the want ads every day. In the meantime, he is drinking like a fish . Having him under my (eet all day hasn't helped my disposition much, either. , ''8111, Jr., was defeated for Homeroom Monttor. He flunked French again and will have tO go to summer school to graduate high school. College is out. Ho can~ get in anyplace. ••Bob (now 16) hasn't had a haircut ~ince July. It is quieter around here I because he had to sell his iuitar to pay for the repairs on his Honda. "Mary is protesting something and shaved her head last week. Her father is not speaking to he~ which is just as well because I think she is deaf from all that loud music. ··~ty mother-in-law~s JWle visit lasted till August and I am back tn ther11py. r hope nexl year Is belier. If t:OUldll'I be much worse. !.on, ·Mar)r." Is alcobollsm rotalng your Ille? KlMw the danger signals U4I wW It do. · Read tilt booki.t, "A!..Wtam -.....;J and llelp/1 by Ann Ludtrt. ~ ~ cent& In coin wllb yoar ...,._ ad a long,stamP<d, sdl·-Md ........ to Ann Lanilen1 P.O. Box Utl, 2:1t 1'. Bank Dr., Chicago, Ill. IOSM. -. ' • O>JL I PILOT Monday, Dt&mbtt 17, 1973 ., Horoscope: Virgo · Mak·es Inquiries ---....... TUESDAY DECEMBER 18 '"1lJ II 0 crunch'' time. Means you m ee L pre11ure, responsibi lity on co 11 i s I o n ARIES (March %1-Aprll 19): courae. Capri<orn could play Give attention to proposals, significant r o I e. Love, e1JJO- partnerships, joint effort s. !tons are spotlighted. If single, Renew harmony at home. YoU may be asked to make Take bac_k seat, at least tern~ a comm1tmeot. porarily la others reveal CANCER (June 2l·J!!ly 221'c their plans, show their hands. Flnlah rather than begin - Be diplomaUc -maintain siread inOuenoe. St u d y even pace. 'YO\l gain by main· another language. Find ways tainin~ low profile. of dlstl'lbuting Ideas, products. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Arle1 asks dite<l questions. Study Aries m e s s a g e . Be frank. Forthright approach Overcome temptation to act about hpme. property, basic in haste. Be analytical . Refine values will work to your ad.- and perfect teclltlques. You vantage. maybe drawn to metaph ysical LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): areas. Key is to separate fact . ldeall should be tried -quick· and fantasy. Don't fall for ly. This ls no time for pro- aob story. crastlnaUoo. Be independent. GEMINI (May %!-June 20): Highlight ot1itnality, fresh ap- Wbat bad beet beld in abeyan-proach in dealing w l th ce comes surging to forefront.. neighbors, relatives. Another Coast Ceremonies Leo flatten )'OU bot the!O could be ulterior motive. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. %2 ); Emphasis is on conaoJldatina, collecting a n d ev4luatlng. Build for future. Get beat in· terest rates. Make lnqulrles -and Wilt for answers. Meano don't pennlt unclUOU$ persons to J>U!th you aside. Insist on rights to exact Jetter of the law. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. tz): Accent versatility and remem· ber diet resolutions. You may be active socially and careless ahout eating, drinking habltl. Slg!tllrlan is likely to be in· volved. Cycle is high and )'OU get what )'OU ask for -be sure you ask for what you can handle. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2t): Wbat )'OU are looking for II being , deliberately h Id den, Couples Recit~ Vows ·> MULVEY-MAY Color Them Industrious Duting the 10 perfonnances of "The Nutcracker" ballet in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, members ol the La·guna Ballet Guild will be selling coloring books to help raise funds for the company. Enjoying one of the books is Eve Hender- son (right) whose attention is attracted by Sandra Rasmussen, a cast member. ' Perfonnances, which began last weekend, will be repeated Friday, Saturday and Sunday. '.Tis the Season Holidays Cheered r-BCYC Bahia CoQl!thian Yacht Club will have its annual family Christmas party Wednesday, Dec. 19, beginning w j t h cocktails for adults at 6:30 p.m. and punch for the children. a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 19, In the Park Newport for a Christmas program, to be presented by the Madrigals of Corona del Pi-tar High School. Bayshores Committee will have a cocktail party the next evening in the home of the .R<>bert Shipps. · RV Women Rancho Viejo Woman's Club will have a Christmas brunch at 11 a.m. \~esday, Dec. 19, in the Deane Swim and Racquet Clubhouse. ORT -•Garden Grove Community Church was the setting when Patricia Ann May and Michael Phil Mulvey exchanged wed- ding vows and rings. Tbe daughter of Mr. and J\.trs. A. R. May of Stanton and the son of the Phillip 1'-tulveys of Newport Beach were attended b y Tr u d y Jackson, Dean Pittner, Chris Przygoda, Paul Gray, Donald Comstock and Ronald Chlco. ·The bride attended Cypress College and her husband studied at ~ Altos High School and LaVeme College. -. ~WAµ<ER-ARNETT Dr. and Mrs. Nonnan L. Amett's Laguna Beach home was the setting for the riiar- riage ceremony linking their daughter, Jan Carol Arnett and Lee Dixon Walker. MRS. MULVEY MRS. WALKER 1be bridegroom, son of theJ~~~~~~ PROTECT Gardner D. Walker> ol Los Angeles, graduated from UCI SILVER and now attends UCLA School WITH of Dentistry. Wt.lie MOit, lnntlM9tl, "" Mn'i"ts. .... lost ,,..... .. , •• The bride also is a graduate ftcrtto11 I• tti. ._ 2 ,.... tM oJ UCI. prk• ot 1lt-rer HI -..led. F It ' ho Whll ,_ ....... perih t.c19t o owmg a neymoon at 111 111 '74, c• Y•• •hnl NOT Mammoth, the newlyweds will to lrto~ ...tttt IMa: a11c.• - make their home in West Los Cffi Qfi'S ""• 51'-7 .,.. , .... -... Angeles. catl hnfty Hlll1 (J1JJ Bridal attendants were Miss SPORTSWE.All 271-0ltO ., o,..._ c •. 17141 t63o4t79. ...w c:l your atteotloll. Take notlllni for 1 ra n t e d . Kmw II and Id acoordJnCly • Na ... In-to PYO you uythln( wttbout a price. Be '""' you .., allonl what you -=========::; get :..rbe mature and, u,. n<CeSllfY, cynical. Look FOR behind the ..,..., ror hidden DRUG motives. SAGl'M'AllllJS ( N 0' -:iz. PRICES • • • Dec: 21 1: Be pttpered !or Call cbango, variety a n d lnlv.I. You will be tn ..t4mtty ol 642-4104 s:=u.:~biul~= (w1::.; (.CIPJ on your feet wtll be·teJted. ntLIM ... etT ..... A ... Romance II very much In pie--,. ...,.. ,,. ... _ ture. C.... .._ MJ-41M CAPRICORN (Dec. 21.Jan. Miit. *" ,,.. '" ...._.., t • 1 19): You draw to your penonsil:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· born under THnu and Lllln.I: You are more sensiUve than ,.,.. ...... usull. You imptta superton. Ywr pmti1e swinp upward. One who can ]lllI ' strlnp makes an offer . Be cooperative wt-being HAS ARRIVED weak. AQUAllllJS (Jan. 20-Feb. I 18): Deal with the abltnct. COME MEET ~ Meana ride with the tide. Wbal ~ •lll'WI strictly symbotlc may IT AT THE ! oootaln rldl kernels of truth. Know It and don't b e bewildered by one who .....,. to talk aJ\d move In circles. .._, Vlrp tndlvlduals could be tnwlved. 14'7 ... LWe fi7Ml11 PISCES (Feb. 19-Mll'd! %0): .,..,... -One who takes charge o1 1 • ., ,.. ..,. ,._.,.1 mooty1 special accounts and IMfA e ..__ CIM,.. • tax obligations should be • ·-.._ J l'M.---------- ';})ear fiomeowner WATCH YOUR MAIL FOR AN IMPORT ANT MESSAGE FROM YOUR .... AUSTIN SMITH GORlWI & ASSOC. NEIGHBORHOOD REPRESENTATIVE AND ASSDCIATES REALTORS Dinner will be served al 7 arid santa•s arrival is scheduled at 8:30. Philharmonic: HB League Chlldren enrolled in the Jhmtinglon Beach Assistance League's Speech Center will be guests of the Hlllltington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors at a breakfast Wednesday, Dec. 19, in the Sh'eraton Beach Inn . A Cbanukah candle lighting is scheduled by the Newport Beach Qi.apter, Women's American ORT at noon Wednesday Dec. 19, i n Oakwood Gardens, Newport Beach. Mimi Blitr.er and Erv Hudes, W'utcllff Plaza. 17th and Irvine. , AMlllCAN MINT SILYll CO. and officiant was the Rcv.1l~N~c~wpo~rt~Bc;"~h,~Cal;~•~m~~~9;2660;:;.~=~·.,~·w~!L~SM~•·~·~·~LY:o~. ==1~~==~=============~ Roger T. Wa1ke. •IVlllLY HILLS ftlli CUSTER-HILES E a s t b I u 11 Philharmonic '· ... 1 Auociates will meet at 11:30 Costa Mesans Gayle Lee lfiles and David Eugene Custer exchanged n u p ti a I '74 Derby Cancelled The 1974 Powder Puff Derby bas been canceled "in view of the national emergency with regard to the fuel shortage," according to the board of directors of lhe all- wunan air race . The race had been scheduled to ~in at the Riverside Municipal Airport June Z9 and s. terminate at Boyne Mountain l Alrpoit in Boyne FaU.., Mich. A commemorative album is being plaMed to cover the history of the race from its beginning rT years ago. It will be available in July Crom Powder Puff Derby Head- quarters in Teterboro, N.J. HB Juniors Various retirement and mobile park arerui in Hun- tington Beach wilt h a v e carolers Wednesday, Dec. 19. Spreading the cheer will be members of th e J u n i o r Woman's €1ub, their children and the Juniorettes, a group of seventh through 12th grade girls. UDC Annual -christmas party of the Enuna Sansom Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy will be at 1 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 20, in the home of Mrs. L. A. Ame.son. Iota Upsilon Mrs Scott Leonard's Santa Ana home will be the setting for the Christmas party and gift exchange of the Iota Upsilon Chapter, Sigma Phi Gamma al 7 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 20. NB League C t Cl b A Christmas party for mem- e n U ry U ber. and their husbands will Century Club of the Orange be staged by the Newport O>ast YMCA will have its par· Beitch Assistan ce League at ty as planned on Wednesday, 6::11 p.m. Thlll'8day, Dec. 20, Dec. 19. in the Lido Isle home of the Instead of it.being a Parade 1'fartin Lockneys. vows and rings before the Rev. Kenneth ConnoTiy in the Berean Baptist C h u r c h , Orange. . The daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Max Hiles of Costa Mesa was attended by Mrs. Robert Schermerhorn. Karin Lundell, CynQa<:e Kephart, Jacqu e QJSter and Rhonda and Wendy Hiles. Best man was Frank Custer : ushers were Kevin Havelind, Robin Jaeger and Ralph Inns. and ring bearer was Michael Rust. The bride is a graduate of Estancia High School and at· tended Pacific O>ast Bap- tist Bible College. Her husband i! the son ol Mrs. Leo Simone . and Jack Custer of Orange. lie is a graduate of Pacifica High School, Garden Grove. and they will reside in Costa Mesa. Of Lights party, it now will ----,---~ be a Lights Out party and ••••-••-••••••-•• ' guests are urged to car pool 'p 1· ,_ las · '-I'/ 1 I or bicycle to the festivities. Ill a "'"' c "" '"'' 1 •· 1. GIVE HER A ~""'""'""""' RENT A RUG DOCTOR "STEAM" CARP.ET CLEANER I t""'Q'\ifcf!!!!!~lt..-I \.,:,......,....--I ! Bel~~nY,~RY G~~~e!1 vE1S~~~~.-i DELIVERY AVAILABLE to most arH1, or you pick up at our store. 10 MINUTES FREE INSTRUCTION tltowi ¥•• ... Doc"" 11 .... & .. ,ro.,....... •• .._ .. C .... Hf, ... lllMlllotW ... C•• 6'ffet• ft or "'• ft ., ...i 16ow11 1faln. . REALLY CLEANS CARPET SAVES YOU f<IONEY ~ French Antique Restoring Crochet i I Spanish Gennan Rug Braiding Cake Oe<oraling I 11 Investments Tapestry Weaving Stitchery Ji: Jau Dancing Slim & Trim Creative Writing I I Wig Care Basket Technique Painting & Drawing I I Macrame Dra ma Creative Crafts I Women & the law M~ssage Wood Carving I Flower Arranging Bonsa i Need lepoint Sculpture House. Plant Care Growth Group l iterature Crochet Papi er Tole I Bridge Cla1101 legln Ja.n. Ullo, I Call for Brochu,.,. & tnfonnatton 541·2211 + Hrs. for $12.50 c:..t I• -leto -•I .... 24 Hrs. for $2.0.00 c..,,.. -c-. WOMAN'S . nn n re! ntV1 lvA•v:-n ;uci§o;w;' • 6 P.M. to a A.M:-$12.50 RUG DOCTOR RENTS IN OIANM COUNTY IN LOS AM•ILIS (7141 979.7944 (2131 423-0454 UU$..___ 10611. ........ , .... ._, 1-------M MON. THIU SAT-----IJ I AND MIN TOOi i 321 NO. NIWl'OIT IOULIVAID, NIWPOllT Sl~CM .._ __________ _ . • • ( Ginghatn ~rt WQ£;12rl\ -style.8·20 ------------·--=~~:..~:-·-··------_........---=---·-··-----=--=.-""' -.. _,...._-~ ~-------.... ,........_ -----··-' .. . . -· -~.,-_:::_:::.,.::. --: -- ~---FJarod j@n \n<cnl.uro'). 4-20 44 htlion lllanCtt newport Cltlllr 644·5070 • • -,• • ' '-AMILER t TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF MONEY? WHAT'S MONEY? ANO WHO NEEDS IT? . . FIGMENTS NANCY MY BOY FRIEND IS SO AMBITIOUS t've GOT A RE\/Ol.VING CREDIT CARD FROMTHE SANK/ I CAN CHAR~ ANYTHING I Wf>Jfr JN· ANYSTORE: IN TOWN! ,, ":;$': HE HAS A J OB AFTER SCHOOL AND HE Al.S O MOONLIGHTS by .Tom K. Ryan VDU ~ tXPEl:T/NG MAYBE llOWARP COSELL? by Al Smith ..-~~~'"TTr=l'~M~A~R~EVO~~LV~IN~G:--.. MY BOY FRIEND DOESN'T HAVE A J OB AFTER SCHOOL--- PEANUTS CREDrT CUSTOMER ~ by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller --·ANP HE SUfiblGHTS 0,, . ; - " . • DOOLEY'S WORLD' 1M SORRY, SJR, WE DO NOT' HAV1' "OlAT INFORMATION SAL!.Y BAN A!1~S HI, Hel\le NlceNess f\Slll)S! IT'5 TJ.lar TIMe OF~R .:lGtllll). TlMe foR GOOl>NeSS <!llJD GIVING aND lliUGUING ~ qNPHUGGINGaNCI. "' GORDO MOON MULLINS AN IMAL CRACKERS TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 C.ndled e WMI Gef'Tnln 1'911 10 lndonM!lfl Ii land 14 ord 1t111an 15 Riwertotht No. 511 16 Arum pl.rt 17 Fla\\tnt 18 J1cob'1 wile 19 Without clothing 20 Oenllll'I ,._, 22 Wutu tl!M 24 He1lh g1nu1 28 Ta1!:1 umbr1g1 .. 27FI ... 30 Caylor 5'*1l1rd 31 Vl1--·:Fac1 lo tact 32 Dll1rently 37 Ctn 38 l"11r1nded 1tat1 .0 Tit tor··- 4 t Much mon1y: 3 ..... "'3 W11l1m U.S. '" " A• K!nd Ol VIM'l •5' Sc1ndlntvi1fll 48 East lr1d111"1 aec1 member 51 U1ed 1 low1I !12 8111111 &4 Crying: 2 words ~Work h1rd 5Q fUfOPlll1 ITIOUl'llll!\31 81 Olde1!1ylng u" 82 Noun 1ndino ti3 Money: Slll'lg 64 Ev1d1 65 TIU gr111 ee T\11, 1.g. 67 Fr1grant tiqutd DOWN 1 Foott>tll laid 2 Accumul1ted ballat1 3 K 11111 ol .kldah 4 Runt aaslly .5 Mika catta!n: V1r. e Tl'I01awl'lo "'°"" 1 Putl produel 8 ~rm --·· bOyr i S•com••olld 1g1Ln 10 C:Uiting tool 11 "Not as ••••• ~: Not genen1lly 12 Weighed .. ~ 13 Thal la:2 ..... 211Cr.elt 23 Untartnty 25 Aatonlah gra1t1y 27 Polynaal., cl'laslnul 28 1ntamou1 2i Garman glr1'1 nama 33 Wtllart of com1dy 34 Dalall 35 f1111on11 36 Boya' ICl'loOI 38 H1mioni1a 39 omcar• <12 Stole cettla <13 O!alributaa cards 1g1ln 43 Tentfl o1 a aen <11 Snuill ao!• <18 Ru11lan C1M' <19 S1par11• !JO Pl1c1 """"' 53 8!1c thorn 55 In····: Routll~z•d 56 Oomlntled 57 Ending w!tn gag lll'ld apln 60 Commonlun¢ 1nlonn1l JVDGE PARKER l'\V..;EN SLADE R06ERTS ~"'i'AT!:S TH AT HE HO 1· !..0:-4$ER REQUIRES I ~1S SER'llCES "'6 ~ ATTORNEY, SAM DRIVER LEAVES WITHOUT I FURTHER WORD TO !-llM OR A66EY! I -/f.,,qR.0/-P lf.iP,;:1~. MISS. PEACH SAM 'NOULON'T HA'lf eEEN MERE lF IT WEREN'T IMPO RTANT! MAYe,E I WM A LITTL.E HA6TY! !'LL CALL MIM IN THE MORl'llHG AND APOUJGIZE! ~~ND~. THI!. INl!lt6Y Cl!!+~ /MY Wl<LL. ll:!~tALT IN FIAll:THl<ll: l!.DIA'-'TION.AI-G~TIMCIC~ • P&RMAP, lVl!.N '-----r-,-:-i 1t> THJ P<>INT OF' CL051P>l6 'TM! ~MOOL ON! 011: 'TWO &XTIUo ! • DICK TRACY DAY~ Pl!.R we!K ! ----- YVH.AT DO YOU Ofll.PRliN 'TMNK ? by Harold Le Doux 1 DON'T !<.NOW WHAT COU\.O eE !JO IMPORTANT THAT 1T COULDN'T WAIT ...,,-.. ~E UNTl\.. TOMORROW.' DOESN'T \..11<.E 'fOUR £.EEING ME, A66'EY 1 . by Mell :t, FOil' ON! I T .... INK T><I'. WOrt.D Cit15~ ~ 1Jl!1N6 M1~~~eo THe~e DAY~ .. by Chester Gould •TMERE'5 /lol..-VS />. "ICl.ONK', T\lEM lll~ 1<10 COMES UP Wini AM AAN\LDN> OF WOOO!' GROOVY. GET ME TME HEAVY DUTY AXE OUT OF CAR ~~·s TRUNk. WU..L oo. • • Monday, Docombtt 17, Im DAIL v ~ILOT }9 by Roger Bradfield ~ -1t~ !MIL rr W/1'/IOVr TU~ 1 ZIP CODS ! 0 l • i 1-~ j l ~ l ' ' C •I By h:i rles Barso'!~ l ~H HUM-r BU:;. oH;ieaH,1\laN 1 rveaRty roReoT. o o • 1 by Gus Arriola , by Ferd Johnson DoPENDS·· H,AVE Y<>UBE~ AGOODBoY 'THIS Y O:AI< ? --:;-a?'.: - [ of!. MAYB'i! JILL JUST GET A SJ)(·P,ACK OF Bl''i!J< ... by Roger BoHen HEt>.~<J ct.TE i0t.lh9HT ! THE GIRLS ur jalt loft this time of year -yoa can spend beyond yoW" budget and Cbristmu gets all the blame." l'J,__,,~i's TH E MENACE .. J ) . . - 'JM~ASKHIM 'CN.AY,<:NAY •• I 'IQIT roltA~: ~Vft.I~ IT!• • - • ' • .)! 1W1. V PllOT Molldai. Or<tm"" 17, 1973 J .. Cowboys Next for Rampag·ing Rams Butts .Dies; _:_Gri d Riot_ • S korich Pra"ises Rams ... l -• LOS ANGELES -Quarterback John kadl guided the Los Angeles Rams to M reccrd 12 victories tbls season and tlow looU forward lo lbe playol!• at baUu &nday as a "super tough football !iame." He added, '"lbe CoY:boys are a great fbotball team but we are a great football (earn, too. The game adds up to who tnakes the. feY!esl m~stakes." a Los Ange.Jes finished its 1973 season ~ating Cleveland 30-17 for a 12·2 record. No previous · Rams club has won more <pan II. 'ntis must rank as a major aurprise in the first campaign under &aeh Chick Knox, since the Rams had lleer1 figured third in the NFC West before the campaign started. "You don't know how proud I am or this team ," Knox commented. "It is .a tribute to character and pride." 'Mten, just minutes after tbe victory over Cleveland. he began looking forward to DallaJ and lbe opening of the playoffs that lead w lbe Super j!owl. He declared he'll be · thinking about the Cowboys, .. right now and the rest of tbe week." Although tbe Rams beat Dallas 37~1 early in the season, Knox commented that woold neither be an advantage nor a disadvantage. The Rama aet both team and individual records. Lawrence McOltcheon rushed 83 yards in 19 came. to push bis season total to 1,097 yards, seven more than the club mark by Dick Bass in 1966. . . Kicker David Ray bettered his own team scoring record of IZl points with field goals of 48, 'l:I and 15 plus thre< convem~. for a season total of 130. He also bad 30 field goal5, one mare than his prior mark. Through the season the Rams had 178 first downs f!1Shing and 659 rushes, both ·NFb·recor<lsc------. Hadl, who threw touchdown passes of 23 yards to Bob Klein .and eight to Harold Jacboo, commented, "<lur record ill a tribute to Chuck Km< and bis staff. lie came in cold turkey Ibis year and got it all together so last it WU phemmenaJ. J ~._"He is a super coach and that is ;ii"; difference." All the Rams were looking forward to this Sunday as the gun sounded · to end the regular season. But there were !Varying opinions. , McCutcheon commented, "Dallas is __ ',a,..._hard team to run. against and I.hey "Will be even tougher thls time." • Jackson, who caught 13 touchdown R,asses d.uring the season, had four of them in the first hair against Dallas 11B11t It's a Pain on Oct. 14 when th~-Rams held on to win ~7-31. "\Vhat is going to make the difference this time against Dallas is our running gamt!:"-the· neet wide-receiver sa1a. ~ -· "OUr running game is going to lcill tbcm." Helped by a fumbled kickoff, the Rams jumped out to a £.0 lead over the Browns before Cleveland Could run a play from scrimmage. Ray accounted for thole points witH his fie I d goals of 48 and rl. Then came the Hadl to Klein pass and a l:l-0 lead. Cleveland quarterback Mike Phipps brought the Browns closer w i th a scrambling ~yard touchdown run on a the final play of the quarter. But from there it was virtually all Los Angeles. "I am very impressed with the Rams. They are weU balanced ofrensively and defensively . . . with a strong nmning game and they can pass well also ," Browns coach Nick Skorich said. "I wou1d compare them with Miami end Minnesota (both also 12·2). We didn't get to Stie or play Dallas , but off what they have done during the last six weeks, they are obviously on a P.ar with the Rams.'' Slrorich commented that the final game ol. the regular season "was more pride for. us than anything else" since the Browm have already been eliminated from the playo!fs. "Alter going through the Crustrations we've experienced this year, particularly last week when we were elintinated by Cincinnati, we wanted ·to come out ·and beat a good football team, in fa ct:- one of the best teams." Skorich said Greg Pruitt, the rookie from Oklahoma, "has improved for os eve'ry week. In fact, he's been great the last six weeks." -UP'I Tilepllol• ' Ptuitt return.ea:-a· Plmt -79-yaros fOl'- an appare!lt touchdown agafust the Rams only to have the score negated by a penalty, Ilia 39 rushing yards on seven carries led the Brown!. He returned two punts for _ 43 yards, ~te ~ penalty on one of them, and two,.kickOffs !or 51. LA'S STEVE PREECE BATS AWAY A PASS INTENDED FOR GLOSTER RICHARDSON. erowns R1m1 Al LOS Ange!~ -73,941 LA-FG R&y 48 7117-17 IJ 14 3 o-lD LA-FG RIV 21 LA-1(1.in 23 piss from Hadl /Ray kkk) , Cle...! PhlDIK 2S '"" (Cockroll ~lck) LA-Jed:tcll'I • PHI from H&d! (RIY kick\ Cle-FG CockrQf! 12 LA-Baktt 4 run IRay kick) LA-FG Rel H. le-PUIS 1 -PK1s lrom Ph!pbs !Cockro!I kick) INOIVIOUAL LEAOEAS . RU NG -Cleyelend, Prultl-1~. ICt!ly 7.2,, Pr.11191 -35; Los A119rin, M~ulcheon 19-413, Bertelsen 1-M, Joseflll1Dn S-l6. RECEI ING -Cleve14nd, Pitts 4-'A, Holden 3·21, Kelly l-24; Los Anveles, Jittk!.On l-4: PASSING -Cleveland, Phlr>p$ 16·2S-2, ll2 y1rcls; LO$ Al'\lll'les, H1dl, i>-14-0. n. Harris 1 ... -0, •· Snow Gave O.J. -worries And He Gave Fans a Record NEW YORK CAP) -"All week long t was worried about 61 yards -and I ended up with 2,000,:• O.J. Simpson sald. • and the 47,740 fans who ignored the weather to see a bit of history made. and I smiled and said to him: 'It seems allright, I guess.' '' Then Simpson and his mates set out after 2,000. By halltime he'd reached 108 yards -13 of them on a touchdown run -and 1,911 for the year. " ,,. Football's True Color The brawny running back of the Bu(- falo Bills got 2,003, to be exact. "It's really quite incredible," he said. trying to absorb \Vhat he'd done bday in snowswept Shea Stadium. rushing for 200 yards to break all sorts of National Football League records and power the Bills to a 34-14 victory over !he New York Jets. "When I sa w the snow," Simpscn said, "l felt bad, But then I remembered that it snowed last week in Buffalo and it turned out lo be okay.'' It turned out a lot better than just okay. On that day Simpson rushed for 219 yards against New England, leaving himself just 61 yards short of What had once seemed to be an untouchable record. "They kept phoning down from the press box so we knew how much he needed ," McKenzje 'S.3.id. "and there was no way they were going to stop us from getting it for the Juice." ' ,, Is Found in the Stands "Fantastic," the former Heisman Trophy winner ·from USC said. "Fan- tastic," he repeated -and the word was echoed around the Bills' locke r room . I ' " LOS ANGELES -Suriday I took a ~refresher course in enjoying football ~ames -leaving the refuge of the cC.Oliseum press box to take a seat in ·the stands for the Ram.s-C1eveland 111ebacle. 1: I did so oo the hint from a well-mean- 1lng frieod who cmtended that we ~ho bask in tbe comforts of the press facility have indeed lost touch with the true <3tmospbere of the game. We miss the !color of being in tbe stands. ,:; Better you should sit among a herd <'-of staJtV'ding catUe or to try and watch "lbe Role Parade from a sidewalk if you're Ollly five feet tall. 1: It sooo became clear what I had ~ ~; !. r!,_. -~ .......... t Ji-__ _... f _;, WHITE WASH ~~ OLINlll WMITE been missing peQple running up and down the rows with hot dogs, beer. soda ..pop. Or people with over-worked kidneys which requiu attention with about the same frequency as commercial timeoutS. One guy arrived at his seat just in time to miss the entire first quarter -which· in reality was a bonus for ~ 1ben he went out for a snack and came back just in time to missed the rirst six minutes of hlrd quarter. Tbe guy on my right utili:r.ed both an!K'ests and the guy to his immediate light had a cigar with a faulty polJutioo amtrol device. J bad one tollchdown obliterated from my vision when the )tid with the overloaded kidney! stumbled over me ae the score was being made. ut t did-better on his return. He y bloclied a field goal !rom my view. 'However, there waf a better side. Part had to do with watching an amatlng peanut vendor fire one oompl.elion after another with no lllterceptions. And he was as gilled In snaring the patrons' money, which was thrown back lo hlm -at timet from great distance. I thought Ml' much tun lt would be IO give him the supreme test -bUY # bl& of peanuts. then throw the 25 leeoll -all Ill penni0$. ' -Too. some folks wert ha'''"ll a grand \ -'··--- 1 time bowicing a huge plastic football and a mannikin through the stands. And \\'hat with the boring aspects of wh at the Rams and Browns were treating us to, that proved a welcome distraction. l\ty stay in the stands ended with 12:28 to go · in the game. That was the juncture \Vhen t.hat kid with the leaky kidneys came plodding down the aisle -armed with two giant soda pops, good for at least three more bathroom calls, I calculated. That was enough. I raised the white surrender flag and went home, much the worse for wear. ''It's a fantastic feeling knowing you're a part or sports history," said left guard Reggie McKenzie, who spent the entire season blowing out ttle bofes in th e lin.~.to clear a path for O.J. "But I'll tell you, that was one hell of a lot of work . for 0 . J, and for us," McKenzie continued. "The next guy that does it, he'll understand what we went through." What Simpson went through Sunday was the snow. It froze the turf - Kansas, W olfpack Battle In Liberty Bowl Tonight I MEMPffiS. Tenn. !AP) -North Carolina State, with a backfield averag- ing more than five yards each carry, collides with Kansas, led by passing whiz Dave Jaynes, tonight in the Liberty Bowl. North Garolina State, ranked. 16th, is On Tl' Tonight Channel 7 a t 6 g..3 while the Jayhawks, No. 19, are 7-3-t. The game promises to be a battle between the Wolfpack's stable of running backs -who gained almost three times that of Kansas -and All-America n Jaynes, the fourth leading passer in the country. Wolfpack running back Willie Burden gained 1,014 yards this season and Stan Fritts and Charley Young netted more than 1,300 between them. Kansas. coach Don Fambrough expect. his defense w get a mm test. '"On the basb of what J have aeen on film, I'd say Ibey have one o! tbe fmest group of running hacks we have seen this year," he said, Quarterback Bruce Shaw has passed for 2,999 yards Jn.bis three-ye.ar career, breaking Roman Gabriel's WoUpack record. Jaynes, expected to be a high pick in the pro draft. averaged lU com· pletlons a game this season and owns six Big Eight records and 17 school standards. "Everybody talks about Dave Jaynes being a great passer and without doubt he is," Fambrough said. "But the thing most people fail to reali ze is that he is a complete quarterback. 11He reads defenses and keys better than any college quarterback I have been llSSOCiated with. He has an abun· dance of confidence in himself and our team shares this," Celtics Rip LA; West Sidelined LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dave Cowens could do it all. 'l'be Los Angeles Lakera couldn't do it at all. Cowens led Iba division-leading Boston Celtics to their 9lst victory in,111 games this season by pouring in a personal season high of 35 points and grabbing 21 rebo!Ulds en route to a llli-110 victory over Los Angeles Sw!day night. The Loken, already slipping -in the NBA West. dropped a step lo•er with the loss. And the news got worse from there. Veteran guard Jerry West missed Sun· day night's game with a pulled ab- dominal muscle and is expected to be sidelined for ti gam'5. In 1963, Jim Brown 0£ th e Cleveland Browns, considered the greatest running back in the history of the game, amassed 1,863 yards. Two years earlier, be had carried the ball 305 times. They were both records, the fans believed, would stand for dozens of yea rs. But both fell Sunday. Simpson carried 34 times to raise his season total to 352. And less than 10~~ minutes into the ga me , Brown's yardage mark tumbl- ed when Simpson slammed six yards over left tackle for a season total of 1,865. Jim Braxton, who gained 108 yards for the day and scored two of the Bills' touchdowns on one-yard dives. was blocking for O.J. on that record-setting run. "I landed on Jim's back," Simpson recalled. "And he turned over and asked me : 'Was the hole big enough?' I looked around and saw everybody jumping up and down and cheering and everything They got it for him with 5: 56 to play, a seven·yard run behind McKenzie. The Buffalo bench, wh ich had erupted when Brown's record went under, ex- ploded again. The Bills rushed onto the field en masse and paraded around with O.J. on their shoulders, then carried him off as the Jets' fans cheered their approval. It turned out to be Simpson's last appearance in the game. He also became the first player in history to gain 200 yards three times in a season. "I would have liked to stay in for the rest of that drive," Simpson said. It ended with one of John Leypoldt's two field goals. But O.J. wasn't surprised or annoyed that he was taken out. Preserving that 2,003 was more im- portant. Actuall y. everyone thought 0.J. had 2,001, but NFL statisticians found more two ya rd s after rechecking Uteir figures. ""IT• ........ 0 . J. SIMPSON GETS HIS DUI Al'Tlfl A FANTASTIC DAY •. Kills"lJne - ATHENS, Ga. -Fonner head !ootball coach Wally Butts of. the 11nil'er<ity of Georgia died at his home today. Members of his family said he ~ just returned to his house arter his usual morning walk and died of an apparent heart attack about 7:30. Butts won one of the largest libel judgments in history -$593,916 !rom the Curtis Publishing Co. -following publication in March 1963 of a story charging Butts and Alabama (ootball coach Paul "Bear" Bryant with "rigg~g" the 1962 Georgia-Alabama game which Alaba ma won"ilS-0. Butt:; had sued for $10 million. Although Butts, 68, had an enviab~e record at the University of Georgia where he was head coach for 22 years, he was remembered mostly for the libel suit. The football "bugging" story was published in the Saturday Evening Post. The story quoted an Atlanta insurance agent , George P. Burnett, as saying • he accidentally was cut into a telephone conversation and heard Butts giving foot· ball secrets to Bryant. At the lime, Butts was athletic director at Georgia. Curtis settled with Bryant !or $300,000. In a dramatic lrial of nearly two weeks. Butts won a verdict for $3,060,000, but the trial JIJ!lge cut it to $460,llllO. e Fighting Erupts MEXICO CITY -Fighting broke oot Saturday at the end of a big collegiate football game. and a girl was killed and at least 36 other persons injured, a Red cross spokesman said. The police said they h~d reports only of four persons being injured in a fist fight at University Stadium. The Red Cross spokesman said Maria de Los Angeles Rivas. a university 8lu· dent attendln_g (he game, was-deait afttt ~g injuttd by either an erplodinr! molotov cocktail or a power f u 1 !irecracker during the one-hour ol fightjng. The injured told of firecrackers and flaming botUes of fuel being thrown during the fighting. Injuries of those hurt in Ille fighti"lJ included stab wounds, fractures and bruises. Earlier. a .Red Cross spokesman said 25 .ambulances were sent to the stadium to pick up the injW"ed. The Red Cross said that a,, soon as the American-style football contest between the National University and the Natiooal Polyteclmic Institute was won by Polytechnic. 19-13. fights broke out in and around the 80,000-seat stadium. - e Race Deatl•• QUITO, Ecuador -Eight per!Ol15 were reported killed Stmday during an auto race when one of the cars had a blowout and crashed into the crowd. Reports from Yaguarcocha, 90 miles north of Quito. said a tire blew out on a car dri ven by Bradzo Vicich , a Peruvian contestant In a 'six-hour auto race. It was not known if the driver was one of ·the casualties or how many persons were injured. e Cup Verdict MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay -South Africa completed a 5--0 sweeP over Brazil Sunday by winning both singles matdles in South America Zone Davis Cup tennis oompetition. Cli!f Drysdale beat Carlos Kirmair 2-6, 6-4, 2-6. 6-4, 6-3. and Bob Hewtu topped Joao Carvalhes. 6-0, 6-3, &-3. South Africa next takes on F.cuador at Guayaquil at a date to be determined e Goolafioltfl Rolls PERTH, Australia -Evonne Goolago~g overwhelmed Kerry Harris 1·?· 6-1 1n the women 's final, and Colin Dibley beat Bob Giltinan 6-1, 6-7, 8-4, 6-3 for . the men's title Sunday in all· Austral~an matches of the we 5 t Austrahan Open Tenn is ChampiOMbips. UCI Hoopster~: Host Wheaton UC Irvine reiurns to the basketball wan tonight !or the fint time in more ~ban a week to begin a series of three intersectklnal games ·to hoot Wheetai <;ollege of Illinois. Tipoff ls at 8 o'clock. Wednesday night It's Moorhead State College of Minnesota and S.turday · North Dakota Stale. ' ~e ~teaters . have been away frofll action since losmg to Idaho State a• the Anaheim Convention Center more than a week ago. Finar-examlriallone took precedeneo during the past -· Assist.ant coach Jerry Hulbert scouted Wheaton in" the Paci!Jc Northwest and feels the Crusaders are vastly improved over tbe team that was here two l'eart till• and dropped • 120-112 dedtlon tel UC! with aeveral »Phom-•llrllnc "They. h .. a a lfne alferll!ve ..:.m_ Thev shoot well and Ibey lhoot a iOi·;i Hulbert IA)'I. ' ,. To whlch head coach 'llm 1111 adds! Two years ago we couldn't stop then1 so we ....-ed more than 'they did 14 win. "'Thell' big 11111 l.s the C08Ch'1 il Randy Phund. He's a &-I auard he hit !Ii! polnll aga!Nt Seatlle-Pa the other night." • ' • • j to sl N lo y th 0 se in lb pl ~ w H J s w J 0 d s d • e ' c • , G G , • l s ' ' • ' ' c L ' • ! I I ' I • ' • II I \ • , Denver Gamble Backfires; Kilmer Sizzles for Redski~ When you gamble, It helps to have a lot of luck on your side. Denver, scrapping for an NFL Super Bowl playolf berlh, rolled snake-.eyes on a crucial fourlh down gamble and because or It, the Oakland Raiders return to the playoffs for the sixth time in seven years after a 21-17 win over the Broncos Sunday I n Oakland. On the final day of regular season play It was the gambl· ing ol Denver which created. the most excllemcnt in the playoff--berth showdown. \Vlth a fourth down and 10 yards to go just a minute into the fourth quarter, the Broncos were sitting on their 48-yard line. Oakland led nt the time, 14-10. Denver went Into punt formation , but the center snap went instead to Joe Dawkins. Ile d idn't fool Oak1'1nd coach John Madden who had In· structcd f\fonte Johnson to watch for just such a fake. Johnson nailed Dawkins for no gain and Oakland went on to score what proved to be the winning scort". Elsewhere in the NFL Sur.- day: PUIUDELPlllA AT WASH- INGTON -Washingtons Red· skin! bounced back from a 10-0 deficit in the second quarter behind Sill Kilnler's three touchdo\vn pa~es, to do\vn Philadelphia, 38-2v. Alamitos Racing Entries ''' TW"d1y, °"....,tie<' 11, 1tJJ (IHr 6 '•".'Fin.I 1"911 11;U pJ',, s2 l!•lcl•.,, !'Int 1:1<• IS Ealcll Oft •t11.. tlll 111• flll Fll:ST l:A.CR-lt:I y1rdL l v11r Old. (lelmlfto. PurM $UCO, Clllt"11ng ~Ice M.GI». VII .... FIHI BllU rT. Ll11hll'l'I) Mir ClflM!'lt,,. CIC Hirn Flr1t Sllftll CJ. Nkfdtmu1I Cul1'N c1111.., (0. C1r!IOU) B• Bltbbv 10 . Mor•lll JNnM Coon (0. Knlontl GIA9fr'1 P1\ll U!. A.d.ir C'..i Nolt Go t J, Ort~rl Miu Go llllOd1 CJ. "1111~) .Jo. Fr1rler (E. G1n1J Abo Elfglb~ Fly MK l=ly (L. Wrlgnl) MOlll!e 2 {II. A.d1lr) Go II~ Fo• CJ. Rlch1rd'I Mlr'I' Don 81r CH, Pl'QI) "' '" "' "' "' '" "' ID "' "' Ill "' "' '" SECOND 1:1\Cl!-JSO vtrds, ) w1r ol<11. C!1lml1>9, Pur .. i l,IOC. Clrl,..!"9 ptlcl ,,,000. Third lmeoe jL, M\fflil tn SI. Pele co Mon"lsl 1n "11m1 S1v1 Go CJ Akh1rdsl '1' PIMM COl'llln .... (J. Ore11t1 ~ 119 Sllrtday Sotl1I CE. G1r11 llt O\IQlde'tdOO (T, Llp111m! lit Bold ll""""n IK. C11rl1 .. I 119 THlllO l:ACE-lSO y1rd1. 1 old melMr11. P11r,_ $1,3Dll. Go Go Too CJ. Dfe..,...I otd!e'' Gf<TI IJ. C,.,.,., Trvl'f' Blt11 CO. C1r.so11) M•C~ll\I Q,...,, fH. Crosttvl S1r>dy E~"'" CJ. ltic:~rJ$) Cou,ln M•c~ (1:, M11lrJ Bold Torflldo CL. l1!1oul Llghl Lime /M, H1mlll°"/ Llllll Kid S l!ff' (IC, H•r I Kt!ICll\rp !E. Girtll Al'90 EllO!ble Two Fo Go IL. WtlWf'll) AeslltU CINilllt! (IC. H1rtl Mr, Cn1rger (L. MV!t') eombldltr (L. Mylnl ,.. .. "' "' "' '" "' "' "' '" "' "' l~' "' ID FOUlttH RACE-1SO Y•rcts. 3 Vt!.tr old' a. up. c111mino. Purse SJ ,900. Cl1!mino prl« U.000. M111111mlnou1 (II . .t.c;11lr) s11 ... Tiie ..... CJ. Orel"' O..p Tonio (L Myles 01ndy's Jct fE. G1r11l Lino Cnlme (M. Blclrel) 810bb1 810b CO. Morrht 01rt N Oandy CM. H1mlllonl Hll1l11l!n CL. Wrlgnl) "' "' "' "' "' '" "' m f'll"TH ltACl!-110 yards. ' y11r okls lo Ill> Cl1lmlno. Purl.I 11,IOO. Cl1lml1>9 price, Sl.JOO • ld1ho Go (J. Rlch1rd1I 110 Ml Pit CL, Wrl11ht} llt Tile lte Min CJ. Ward\ 111 B1tt11 Tin~ (J, Nlcodem\11) 111 Groovv Grumpy fJ. Cr1191rl 110 Our Genii (L a1lloul 1'7 ~ Kll!ltn IH. C•wbV) 1n Ole My111ry Min (C. Smllhl I 1, Al'90 Ellolbl<I. N1U.;e TW/11 CH. P191) UO PrOM1trou1 Qu-11 (J. 8u~J 119 P1~ Wini IJ. lllcnard1I 110 S•nolliM'I Jel IL. 81lloul IU SIXTH l:ACl!-3SO ytr!h. , old~. Allowlfl(I, Pll!'.e $l.OOCI L-.dvllllll'' Cll1r;1 IL. 81!1ovl Ml1!1r -,ro[ecl (J. NlcodumuO WF\1111 Ot~fl 10 Knl11ht) Truly Trild CJ. IC.rtlsl Scenl of Llmt Oi. P~l Phollbl'I Limit (J. Mllsudl) Fl"! ShlJffit 10. Cl~J•l Aebll Doll (IC, Hlrll Sh1rp Lulu (J, Or•~r> Miii Oandv C.tprl (,_, Ad•lr) Al$0 Ellblble. Mld~lgtil Btc:kv (J, W1rdl Air Cooled IL. Mvlt1l y11t "' "' '" "' '" "' "' '" '" "' "' 116 Kilmer, who Warmed up !or Woshington's opening playoff ga rne Saturday ln Minnesota with four touchdown passes, started the comeback with a 14-yard strike to Larry Brown. Alter Curt Knight tied the score with a 15-yard field goal, Kilmer found Roy Jefferson with a as.yard TD strike. Kllmer closed out the three. TO quarter with a 27-yard completion to Brown, who snared still another later ln the contest to give him three ror the game. Roman Gatiriel, p I a yin g against his fonner coach, George Allen , completed 22 or 39 for 302 yards and one touchdown. MINNESOO'A VS. NEW YORK GIANTS -Fran Tarkenton completed 10 of 13 passes to lead the Minnesota Vikings to an easy 31-7 win over the New York Giants in New Haven. The Vikings defense set up a pair of Minnesota touchdowns wit h interceptions after the Giants, playing their final game for Alex Webster. had marched into Afinnesota territory. One or the interceptions, by Terry Brown, went for a 63- yard score while the other set up a one-yard run by Oscar Reed. CINCINNATI AT UOUSTON -Former San Diego State speedster Isaac Curtis of Santa Ana caught touchdown hombs of 77 and 67 yardS to lead thE. CinciMati Bengals to a 27-24 y,•in over surprisingly tough Houston. The Bengals. who battle the '11.'0rld champion M i a ni i Dolphins Sunday in the AFC playoffs. had troubl e puttipg atA·ay the Oilers. tA'inners of just one game this season. Bul Cincinnati quarterback Ken Anderson prevented the upset with his accurate pass- ing as he completed a three. TD day with a IO-yard scoring pass 10 &b Trumpy. Horst ~fuhlmann boo t e d field goals of 40 and 11 yards for the other six ctncinnati poinls. The Bengals were forced to come from behind to win their IOlh game or the season as ~louston bolted to a 10-3 lead in the second quarter and were charging at the finish. SAN DIEGO AT KANSAS CITY -Coach Hank Stram of the Kansas City Chiefs did something he has never done previously. He called the plays fron1 t h e sidelines. The result: The Chiefs closed out their American Football Conference season v•ith a 33-6 victory over the San Diego Chargers. "It's something J've toyed with for a long, long time.'' Stram said. "This game pro- vided a great opportunity to ~1esa Girls Undefeated Costa A1esa High School girls gymnastics team finished its second straight undefeated season with a 92. 1~90.55 vic- tory over Westminster High last week in the winner's gym. Three girls did a majority of the scoring with C.Osta Mesa's Jani Smlth and Cathy Fisher each winning one event and copping second and third in the other two. \V e s t m i n ster's Debbie Sutherland won the vault and balance beam, was second in do this. By doing this, you have so much control. Jt takes the burden off the quarterbacks and their only worry ls about the mechanical part or the game." Slram, disappointed that Kansas City railed to gain the AFC playplCs, said !he Oticls "are going to start right away to work for a cham· pionship in 1974." Ron Waller, interim coach . or the Chargers, described the de£eat as a "kind of a disap- pointing game, one of the worst we've played. How many 'times did we fumble?" Th e game was no contest fro1n the ~arly moments. The Chiefs scored a touchdown in the first five minutes on a one-yard run by Ed Podolak , and Jeer Kin- , ney and Wendell Hayes ' added two more. Jan Stenerud kicked four Kansas City field gOals. With the score 7·3, Stenerud booted consecutive field goals of 45, 36 and 20 yards. Sandwiched around Stenerud's first three-pointers were field goals of 22 and 26 yards by the Chargers' Ray \Vesching. DALLAS AT ST. LOUIS - Roger Staubach cranked up his passing ann and picked on the hapless St. Louis Cardinals for 256 yards and three touchdowns to lead the Dallas Cowboys to a 3()-3 win . Staubach completed 14 of 19 as the Cowboys rolled into the playoffs for the tighth consecutive year. The Cowboys were staked to a 6-3 lead by Tony Fritsch's two field goals be f 0 re Staubach, t he 31-year"ld signal caller, warmed up. First Staubach found Drew Pearson for a 2 8-yard .. touchdown with 1:27 to .play in the first half. In the second half. Staubach followed with a 48-yard bomb to Jean Fugett to band the C.Owboys a 21).3 lead, coming back with a 17-yard connection with Pearson again in lbe fourth quarter. Staubach's passing . was complemented by R o b e r t Newhouse who rushed for 124 yards on just 19 carries. GREEN BAY AT CHICAGO -The passing of Jerry Tagge and the running of John Brockington combined to give the Green Bay Packers a 21-0 win over the Chicago Bears in the season finale for both teams. Tagge tossed two touchdown passes, one of 23 yards and another of 20 yards to Jon Staggers. while Brockington surpassed the JOO-yard mark rushing for lbe fifth time this seaSOll. Les Goodman scrambled three yards for the final Packers srore. NEW ENGLAND AT BALTIMORE Marty Domres of Baltimore passed for two touchdowns in a driv- ing snow stonn to direct the Colts to an 18-13 win over the New England Patriots. OoOU'es' TD passes were an 18-yarder to Tom Mitchell and a 17-yarder to Cotton Speyrer. Prep Soccer ..... ~ Edison l. Hunllnot°" llNCll t. EclllOl'I Scorlllfi Si.rll"CI 1. ~1111 1. J1111ler V1nlty Edison ,, HunHnolOl'l 8NCh 2. EdllOfl Ktrlna: l ovl• S. Lydell Mllchell a d d o d • 113-yard day rushing to pound the gartlf Patriots into sub- mission after Jim Plunkett had kept his club close with two touchdown ierlals. NEW ORLEANS AT ATLANTA -Eddie Ray .gave tbe Atlanta Falcons an early lead w_lth t\VO first half touchdowns and they managed to hold up against the fast- closing New Orleans Saints, 14-10. Ray's TDs were on one-yard plunges set up by the hard running Of Dave Hampton who fell just three.yards Short of a 1,000-yard season. Wrestling Result s For Area 11:111•1191111• V1r1lty WmlWng Tlltnllment T11m Stiltldl"!IS; 1. F111111t1h1 \11ll1w "' 2. Fot1lln1 1', J. Upl1nd 65, 4. WHlflrn 45. t~ -01n s1lrew111 (FVJ 3. 103 -1. YOllllQ 1Wrnl <Mf, D1nlel1 (West1rn) lo.6. nt -l. Oo!I snrwau (F\ll 11ef. Mli,u1111 !Los Amigos) 14 (Overllme). 110 -4. Mlltby IFV). 121 -4. 01vl1 (F\I). 138 -4 LOVllO ( FV ). 1'5 -2. Hughes !F\11. 15<1 -2, Hern.tnOe1 tFVL HWT -Grtllllrson (0) pfnJ'llld Stl~r· rcrr~ l :S3. 01n1 HUis IS6l lt3l EdlS111 95 -J1r•elt (0) won by lorftll. 10l -S1ncher IOI dee Boyle 1,., 112 -H1rrl1 (OJ, Gruner !ltd 1· 1. 120 -S1nder1011 101 dtc Grun1v ... 127 -Aevtmve (El lie< W1rrlngton l·I 133 -W•lker (Ml llllC lllV {.(I. 1l8 -OUQUll/ 10) dee SWMnll/ 11.0. !'5 -Sweeriev (El plnnftl Sw11en1y J:OJ. !Sol -AenJ'I !El <!« 01nnlnoer •·2. IM -s-n 101 won by fort.It. 115 -Hiii fEl ,.Inned J-1 1 :2~. ltl -Av~anl {0) won bv lortell. HWT -Greg1rson (0) won tty torftdt. 0•111 HUii IUJ (HI $1!111 Anl \11U1v 95 -Jfrn!lr (01 dte. Ltrum !SJ ,.,, 103 -S1nct11r (Ol Plfl'1ed Gocklv CSl 2:11. 112 -H1trls {0) dee: F lnnl111n CS\ S.1. 110 -!1ncllrlOll COi. llt1msdlll !led 2·2. 111 -01r-s (S) pinned W1rrlnglon 2:05. JU -Mlturlon (SI DIM<!<! RIV 2;ol0. • 138 -~uar I 0) plnntd G11!ndo 2:•5. 1•5 -\lll'Clll (Sl plnlW'CI Swttntv 2:S4, 15<1 -Stbreros CSl plnntd Olf'lnll'IQlr 1:20. 165 -S•t•n (0) P1nn~ A1v1v1vo l :U . 115 -Fr1,er IS) plnn9d JOl'es 1:11'1 1'1 -AwWlnl !OJ OK Orytr '"°· HWT -Gr191rwn {0) pinned AYll ""· . 01111 Hltl1 14') 1111 S111t1190 9S -CtrlKin IS! dee Jarreit S·{. 1!13 -S1nthtl (OJ plnned Ferber I :.SO. 1<lJ -S1nc~r (0! pinned FerDer 1:». 112 -H•rrls {0 ) wOI' bv forfeit. 1?0 -Purc1ll ($) Dinned S•nOeri.on :30. 11' -WerriJ'IQlon (01 pinned N>~e,..r 2:2l. IXl -.t,,,.n<on l.~l ll"'C P•~ •.O. IJ6 -Ouou1y (0) dee Struo•u •·•. 1'5 -Swenn IOI pinned Voll :3S. !Sol -01n!'lltloer IOI plnnld R1ynolds 3:SS. 165 -s111~n (0)"""" tlv lorlell. 175 -SI/fen. !SJ pinned J-1 f;17. 1'1 -Avewnl (0) die &osslm 12·•. HWT -Gr.;1ri.on COi plllflld Bouom ;'3. O•n.t Hllll \11~f\I ' W1y o-Hiiis 1451 11•1 5111 c11me11t1 9S -J1rrett COi die Murph~ 7.0. I°' -S.nche1 (0) Pinned Gl1111' l :ll. 112 -H11Tls (DI won bY lorll!I. no -LIHeckl CSI die S1ndlri.on ,.,, 127 -McKlnnev (S) dee W1rrl109ton 10.0. 133 -1M1oney csl ate R•v •·~. lJI -Ovquav Dl pinned Mellor 1:0•. us -Sweenev IOI Pll'lned Fu!n 1;.0. 154 -Swigart (S) dK 01nninger 4·~. 165 -S,gan CO) pinned Woo<h 3;~2. 175-Yogan (Sl dee JonM •·I. 191 -Allt!$tnl (0) plnnld R1mos 2;59. HWT -Gret11ri.on (01 olnMd Chel!nlll 1 :~ Mfslll<I \111!1 13') CUI 01111 Nllls ts -G1rsvtvm CM) IMC Jarrttt ... 103 -S1nchet tO) <ltc MMrt:Nt ... 112 -H1rrl1 10), Or11111r 11ed 2·1. 120 -S..ml11n IM) die S1nderwn 11.0. 111 -POMttOO IMI pinned W1r· rlnalon 1:1.S. 133 -Stolttlj"":CM> pinned R1y :45. .~ ll8 -OUIUIY (01 pinned Hf"nd.lrson l:fS. 1.S -Mortrrw (Ml plnntd SWllMY :lS. T~ -Dr10tr (Ml ptnntd 01nnlnger 2:2S. 165 -s111n (OJ dte Murwin 1-0. IN -HI I (M) oln!Md J~ :SS. ltl -AYISlnl {DJ won bw torltll. exercise. DOSTAERS TYHOAURRDC?AR IDLE ROUGH? WE Cosll MIM fft.111 CtO,SSJ WH!ml111llr the bars and third in the floor ;i Bin -1. J . Sml!~ (Cl 2. su11'1e'rl1nc1 IWJa~i1'~"r~ ~~lti.~'1~ (WI 2. Fl~her GIVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP CCI l. J, Smllh (CJ . '·'5' THE c•RBUROOR SHOP 88fllnc• be1m -1. Sutlllr11n11 (W) saVIHTN l:,t.Ca-350 vards. 3 'r't8~ 2. "''h'' !Cl l . J. Srnllh (C). 1.25. j old1 & up. Cl11lmlr111. Puru ,2,$00. FIOO• ex1n:lst -1. Fl\J'l"1r f!") lMI MARaOI: ILVD,. COSTI\ Ml,,. ~ flllfll',lnf) prlct ISOO. 2. NOOll11 (WI 3. Sllll!lrllr>d (WI 1\11 Ww1t OUrl!llMll I Meil, tr ... Miia Witch CrHk Chic (J, Ortvfrl l•O .r~·~-~·=========~~~~;:;~~~~~~;~-~-~~-~~-~-~ -::~~~-~~~-~~ LlgntnlnaBldfJ.Wardl 119 ~ ~-~~ Aotcllt P1111um !J. Mlllsud1) llt 1 Bid J~ (L. Wrlalll) U1 Sir NornlO (I(, H1rll llt' Mr. Bir HOOi CM. 11.-m1troniil llt WO!'l<llr How cc. 5ml!n) 11t 0!1!ntd Aocktl IA . .ld1!r) l lt l!llJHTH l:ACl!-3SO v1rd1. okli. AUow1nc1 Pu•t• 51.400. Jo. TH {J. Cr1.oerl Grl't o.vll fEdd)t C..rlll Bn.r<ed1le IJ. l(•nlll Flr1t 80 IJ, WlhOll) Gue<"•• C1ntlnt 10. MOrTl1) Oickly't MDIII/ l"'~Cltrl111I Br1!'1dy's Stir ( . ll tml s.-r,.... s1uu co. n1c11111 Moon Cllk Go IL. B1Uou} ' ""I la , "' "' "' '" "' '" '" NINTH IAC~ y1nl1. 3 'l"llf olds & uo. Ci~lrrifti1. P11r~. Sl.300, c;111m11111price11.600 Cot-y l(ld II. Ail1lr) j" ("'1 cnu 80b (W. S11oe1 If Fllbflll' Cl.. l•ltou) 11t l r11dlllck \J· W•rd) 1" ,_rrdl/ Oorll .t {0 . C.1rdo!1I 1:10 Trlplt Glnotr CC. Srrilll\ 11t lttteftf fN, P1rtlol 1U AkDld (J. lrook1I 111) MM;klY'I Cl1bt>tr (T, L1pt11m) llt ..... "'°'! !M. CrOlOYI 1n ,_r.o E lo!blt. Tl'tl1t11 llldy (J, NIC*lfm111) Mud Ft1u(', Smlllll .. Gott• ll•r oe n ... 'ft'l'ltllll P1Uto R (T, Llptl1ml '" 1~ '"'11• A one~of-a-kind • ' - The Seiko Bellmatic Alarm. It has Ila own·wonderl\Jl alarm !hat you wind up separate ly. Nol a toy. It really gets you go ing! Self-wind . Day-date calendar, Instan t dete sot. 9B.2JL wa1er-tesle~~LumlnQU.t. _ Yellow lop/slalnless stee l ba ck. Seiko amber die!. Ask for No . AJOSBM-17J Only $150. A .. H. WEfNERT FINE JEWEU> 32 FASHION ISLAND 644-2040 • .. - Monday, Otcembfr 17, 1973 DArLV PILOT Zl Pro Cage, ' Hockey JC Co·aches Favor , Standings Disbanding Playoffs ••• l11l1n1 C°""""91Kt Alla11ft£o Ol'fltlen . W L Pel. GI IOllon ,,_.. • 7tS Ntw York 11 13 ~I ' llulftlo 13 11 .•It 11 P11ll1d1loti!a )O 21 323 1• C.nlr• 01vf.i111 (.1pll1I 1S 12 .SS. • -A.t11n11 ll 1• .'411 3 Houlton 1 1 211 .21' •, Cl1!1nc1 11 ti .SU w1111n1 coni.n.tc1 Mifw41•1 C»11lll011 M'\w•ukH 27 5 .au Ch CIGO lS I ,JSI ,.~ OllrOll '° ,, ''°' 7\.'J K.C • .Orn•lll 9 t4 .273 11\.l PIClflt Oh'lllOfl Golden Still 1• 11 ,S,3 lo• •r,-IH 11 15 .J.(S 1 Porll1 13 It .MU .S~~ P'-tl x 12 10 .3,S ll'I ""''' 12 1• .m •Vr ,.,.... • .,., 01""'5 1<1n111 Cllv'°""h• 105. Olt•oll 10. Mllw1uf.H 121, Porlll<ld tt P'-nht Ill. .S.1ttl1 10t . .. ••• , OlrillOll w ' " " n " Pct. "" ·"' •• IC.rt Ive kV C1rol!111 N-York v1ro1nl• Mtmphl1 21 13 . " . " .~II ,,1 .n• .265 13 W11! Dl"111M Utlh 11 IS ,SJ\ Sin Antonio II 16 ,S29 lrrdlllll 16 16 .~ O.riw1r 1• 15 .Ill San Ole<Jt 14 19 .•1' $UINl1v'1 G1m11 Kenlucky 106, Sin Olego 101 S111 Antonio •5, Mem!lhl1 10 Nlw Yor-1'9, Ullh 10J ""' E11t DlvlllOll ' ·~ ,., Wl TPU,9!11 Bos1on MonlrNI 21 , ' 's 1:M n N,Y. R•ng1rs Torori10 8ulf1lo Ot!lrOll • 11 7 4 38 96 ,, 13 9 9 lS 11S 96 1• 11 6 3• 10ol IS N.V. lal•~der1 VlncPUvwr U132:)1)9905 1l 16 2 26 9S l2S .5161116195 6 16 5 17 66 97 WHt Dlvfsl .rt Phlla<Hlplllt 17 • J ' 38 11 '6 CnlcAQO I• s 9 37 •5 51 Alt.tnl1 13 11 ' :n ,. lft SI. Louis 1l 10 6 3D 19 72 Mlnn1t011 I l( 1 73 83 .. Los An<MI•• ' 16 • n ~ n Pln\bU«th 9 16 ' tt 1• ll'K C1llfOl'nl1 1 10 l 17 70 116 Su11d1y'1 G1mn ('o,kl'll 6. Ntw v,.,.to; ll:l'flO'!f'l' 1 Phll1<Hlphi1 '' New YMk hl111ders O 60:S!OI' s, C1llfornl1 l D1!roll 1, V1nc0Ullt!• S SI LOUii s. 6111talo 1 Pith1>uroh 2. All1nl1 1 Pro Grid Standings ,JNAL NFL STAHOINGS .t.mlf'!c111 CMft!tiKI E11t Divlllon W L T f'ci. PF PA Miami 1:1 1 o .1s1 3'J ISO Buftllo 9 5 o ."3 2SI m NIW Enol1nd 5 9 0 .l57 1<e lOO New YM~ Jell • 10 O .116 :t.o lM B1lllmor1 ' 10 o .216 2'2.6 3'1 C1nlr111 DIVlllOll Cl1>r.ln111U 10 l O 714 116 1.'11 xPllll.bur91! 10 l 11 ,11{ 34 210 Cl1~!11na 7 s 2 .S11 23.t 1il H011$1on l 13 0 .01\ 199 «1 W111 Dl11tsi0fl Olkl1nd 9 ' I .619 292 115 Dlfl.;er 1 5 1 .511 3Sol 296 IC1nws Cilv 1 5 2 .Sil 2Jl 191 Sin 0 1"90 7 11 1 .179 181 :JM N1liM1I conft!r1nc1 E1tl OIV!lltn OAll1s 10 ' o .114 3'11 m ~W1lhlnoron 10 4 o 71• m 191 Phll1dei~l1 5 I I .303 310 l9l SI. Loul$ l 9 I 321 216 265 Gi1nl1 2 11 1 :119 :ti• J62 C.rtlr1I Olvl1lon Min ... IOll Otlroll GrHn BIY Cnlcego 12 1 0 .157 296 161 611.~271247 j 1 7 ·'"' 202 259 3 11 0 .21• 195 "' W111 Olrillon Lot; Angt!e$ n 2 0 .857 Pi 119 Afl1n111 9 5 O ."3 311 224 S•n Fr1nc1KO 5 9 0 '.\17 2~~ ~19 N1w 0r111ns 5 9 O .m 1&.l 312 X'911ntd , .. 11.l ,..,,'1 ,...,,, s111N11y'1 C1mts Bulf .. !o 34, New "'o•~ '•h 11 Mlnne1o011 31, New York Glints 7 .t•l•"'" 1 ~. N-!"'•'••"' 1n W11'h!"oron ll, Pllll1deipnl1 20 !111lllm..,...., 1~ N•"' 1=""'111''1 13 Cl11Cln"aH 27, Houlton 2~ Gceen B11v 21. CnlcllO<"I O K11",,..' !"II" 33. S•n Oleoo 6 D11t"1 :)I). SI. Louis l L"" l\MJ(!I•) 30. !"i•Y.l1nd 17 01kl1nd 11 . Oenv•<' 11 Pl11Wlfl S•"edlllt Ameriun C1111~n semlfli1111 s~,,.,...... n•c. 21 Pllhburo~ •• ()A~l•nd 5.,,,..i .... n.t. u Clncfnn1tj II Ml11ml N1tlon11 Ctnl1r1n<1 St mi/in.tl• $Alt1<'dAV, 0<'1;. J2 W1$hl11C1IOI' •• ,..I"-'" ~ .... ~~ ......... " LO'i A"911H 11 011!11 Oilers, MD In Tourney • Huntington Beach High 's un- defeated Oilers eye their eighth victim of the 1973 cam- paign tonight at the Anaheim Convention Center. Coach Elmer Combs' Oilers play Los Alamitos in a 7 o'clock encounter. Another Orange CQast area team -Mater Dei -meets Savanna in the 8:30 nightcap of the first hair of the first round action. Huntington Beach and Mater Dei will clash Wednesday evening at 7 providing both are successrul tonight. By CRAIG SllEJ!F 01 ftM Otlf'I' , .. ,, Stitt Is the stale JC football ph1yoff syitem dead? rr it isn't, it should ht, say the three area communily coll•ge lootball coaches. The costs involved to the school bosting a playoff game . have iisen In the past few years and attendance has declined. 1 And . that, com- pounded with the energy crisis, could mean an end to the playoffs in another year. Proposals have been discl1$- ed but most Je coaches are in favor or returning to lhe bowl game format. The latest plan is to divide the state's 12 ronferences into three divisions of four con- ferences each for a two-week playoff in each division (small, medium and large rol- Jeges) -with the Potato Bowl in Bakersfield determining the large college title. It has not generated much enthusiasm. Because of the Jack of interest in the playoffs and the lack of finan cial success, most JC coaches are in accord -there has to he something done to give JC football a shot in the arm. And all three area coaches are in favor of abandoning the playoffs and returning to the bowl game setup. Here's th eir reaction : George II art man {Sad· dleback) -"Junior college football has got io get its prestige back and to do that we've got to go back to the bowl games. That's what we all want. "If we returned to the bowl game setup, a t:o-champion or a second place team could go to a bowl. "We need something to re- juvenate JC football . The playoff system has become ex- pensive. By going to one bowl game, you have a rouple or ~·eeks w prepare and that allows you time to promote it. ''JC football in California is good football, but we've got to rejuvenate it." Ray Shackleford (Go Iden West ) -"I personally would like to see the old bowl game return for rn'O reasons. One, it wouldn't .drag the season out to 12 or 13 games, which is a long time. And, two, one bowl game can generate more enthusiasm. "There are many good teams that finish second, but are not able to go to the playoffs. This year we were a good example. "JC football needs a shot in the ann. When you only get 7 ,000 to a state title game (Fresno vs. LAOC this year ), you need something. The crowds are down and bowls would be better received by the public. "The smaller JCs wouldn't be i n favor of the bowl Diahlos Fete Grid Tea1n Mission Viejo High's varsity football team will be feled with a sports awards banquet Tuesday evening at the Hilton Inn in T\1ission Viejo. Festivities get under way at 7 and included in the pro- gram will be the presentation of most valuable p I ayer a"1ard. Coach Bob Hivner's varsity cornpleted a 6-3 mark -the best such record in the school's history. YOUR CHOICE BRAND NEW 1973 MARK IV's 57995 4 ~lly Joaded; Brand new , 197l MARK IV's to. choose from . Equipped with air conditioning, lea- ther interior, automatic speed control, AM/F~ radio, & much more! Take advantage of this offer NOW! Jol1nson & Son Lincoln I Mercury 2126 H-540•5630 c .... M- system, because. in the past.-playoff system makes the they didn't get invited. But season too Jong. Twelve or there could be a bowl game 13 games are too many. for small schools." "\Ve've gone to the Junior Dick Tucker lOrange Coastl -"I don't like the playoff situation. People are not in- terested. Look -at t h e Fullerton-LACC playoff game. It drew 3,800. ··It's bad from the standpoint that you only have one wiMer. You could have a heck of a team and be eliminated in the playorfs or finish second in your conference. Whereas you go to a bowl game and if you lose, at least you had the bonor of playing in the bowl game. "And another thing .•. the Hose Bowl. th<! Elks Bowl and the playoffs since I've been here. The Elks Bowl game was 10 times better that.\ our playoff game. And of courst, the Junior Rose Bowl wa~ the best. "I think the playo(fs are going to be eliminated because of the cost involved. Schools, just can't pay their way. And then there's the energy crisis.· "You might be able to tak~ 11~·0 leagues and have the' y.•inners play in a bowl game, let someone promote it for a couple of weeks and you'd see a much bigger interest. ) Positive Thinking " Transition Easy For HB Wrestler " By STEVE BRAND Df lht D1Hy Plltl Stiff When Scott 1'1allory was playing linebacker for Hun- tington Beach High this fall, he tried to be so psyched up he feti he would noat. Now, vtrestler Mallory is trying to do just the opposite. ''You can get so psyched up your mind fogs," says the all-Sunset League linebacker. "And in wrestling you have lo have a clear mind. "\'·ou have to be ready to react to the other man's move by instinct. In football you can read a guard, know you made the ri'ght move and just go crazy out there. ''Do that in wrestling and you're dead." 1be transition from the highly~mpetitive team sport or football to the equally com- petitive but individual sport of wrestling isn 't an easy one, says Mallory, a heavyweight. But it has its rewards. "In .football you can read the play perfectly, do everything in your po~rer to do the job and if someone else on the team isn't as ready, the other team can gain five yards ," he says . "If you do well in wrestling there's a great feeling of in- dividual accomplishment and you're scoring points for your team. too." Actually, ~fallory prefers football and feels his future is there. But, he says wrestl- ing is a great way to stay in shape :>nd now that he's in his third year of com· petition, he's confident he's gained the necessary ex- perience. "Last year I felt I could beat anyone and r e a 11 y shouldn 't have lost the league title like l did," says Mallory, .Y.'ho exudes confidence. "But when ~1 got to the CIF meet 1 was more nervous than I've ever been. Now I've gained that experience, I know I'm better for it." You must understand , MaJlory feels in a one-on-one contest, whether it be on the football fjpld or O!l th~ WT"estl· ing mats, he's going to win. The record hasn't been bad so far, either. "This yea r I want just one thing . . . to ~'in the league in wrestling. I'm certain I can do it because I'm stronger SCOTT MALLORY and much more experienced. Experience means a lot i;, wrestling . 1 "I've always felt when l got beat it was a freak and I'm aiming to prevent that from happening at all th1' year." l\<tallory is one or the stronger weightlilters i ~ hea vyweight wrestling circles. l~e can bench press 335, clean ang jerk 225 and lift 220 in the military press. Still, he says it's the man who has the moves who wins. "No matter how strong or quick you are, you have to develop moves," he believes. "That's another reason I'm confident. I've been arounC Jong enough now to develo~ some moves to go with my strength." Mallory says he was lured into wrestling by a friend even though he wanl.ed to play basketball. He says his frietlC quit but he liked it so much he continued in the sport. I Mallory plans to atterid Golden West C.Ollege next fall and eventually transfer to ti. major college. And beyond that? "Curley Culp (of the Kansas City Chiefs) was the NCAP.. wrestling champion a n d played football . too," sa.JtS MaJlory. "I'd like very mucb to do the sa me." B11t for ri11;ht now lhere·s a whole season of wrestling an-l a CJF championship to think about. And w i t h 1 Mallory's confidence. yo '11 , know he's thinking positi\'e 1 thoughts -\\'ithout gelling too ' psyched up. \ : - • • No E1ie1•9y Crisis He1·e Sailboats may be the only craft navigating Newport Harbor if t.ht fuel shortage worsens. Skipper of this sloop ignore s fuel clocks as he beats down the bay . • He is also well aware that mother nature can en- gage in an occasional rationing of the wind as she did the past weekend . ·Fuel Shortage May Halt Acapulco Says Fuel Powerboat Raci11g Eve11ts Sufficient P\IBUC N011CE PIJBLIC NOl'ICI ,ICTITtOUI IUllMltt PteTmovt lllMNlll M.t.MI ITATIMINT N~I ITAJIMIM'r T"' lollowillt J*'t\lft 11 dOfnt ~1IM11 Thi ftllowl nt _...,. It IMllW W.lnlM 11; l"Ell 'I CAltP'ET CLl.t.NIHG. 111 111 IU"O \lf.NDIHO, Sl01 ltlyer ...... For the Reco1·d Dlssolutlons- Of Marriage E.,~111 Apt A. ,.,. C1MNnt1, C1Jlf, N-.:n·,:Wr," ::="·Jo~·':.'!'°.,. Avt. '2 ll:IY J 111:.,,,'"'· 111 I . ...,,... tM. A. N...,t I MC!'.. C1llf. tlMt . Apt A. siit Clt1t1t11N, C•llt. ,.,,n, Thi• bltl•lllffl ~" <OfldVClf\t lY •ft WlfmOt•, CIWllllM tncl MICllHI 0. I Tllli: WtinKt I• ttndllctM • ., t fl llldlv'lduel, OIDMll, l1rNr1 JHl'I tnd 1-Mrv" ,_.., ,.. 1 •ollllld f:, l(tfll LM .....,v,,.v• · T"" , 1 .. .,, ., •• "t" wit!! 1"' G1rtttt. C.rtlf>ClfOI' C. 1114 H4-!tfl Mlflt •1¥ J, lft1rnlrtt nro 1 • C , Bv1bY, Htrrv LtJllt 1111i Eltllll FOiier Thli elllll'l'llf'll w11 fll'° with tllt COi.iii"° ti.rl of Otl l"llll Oii fY on Mllltr. Glot11 M. I NI Arel\!1 L. (OUlll'f Clttk of OtlllOI (1Wfll'f on DKtmlltr 7, lt1S. , ... , B.t thl. Don. Lou 1.1"1 G•".'tJ,,M ...... lie!' ' •• ,, • Av1b\H'n, A11M'ltnnt tl!d-Gff!l'On"ltrct --.11'1'1 ' '. -114ieti rui!Ti!IH or-. CNlt-Otll., "11.t, •11ttrM "'"""""" • ,,11nihed 0rit1t• CM1t 0 1t1r 'not, Otct1t1W 10, ''· 2 ... 31, 1tn 11,1.11 LIM· Htl•n Ind Howlrtl w~ I '' ,,,, ,, .. n SchUChl. Vklof'l1 Ann tlld 1.tlvl11 Jolll'I Oect mber 10, 17. 4. • l11flltll, OOn111tt1 Ind Vtfl\11 IN$le'I' PUl1bur¥. Oorothv M. Ind Milirlct Sl1v1111, St/>dfl R. 1nd MlcllHI R~rl Rfed PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE How11nc1, Ro11tlt ICtlhrvn •nd W1rCI 1--~~;;;;;;;..:;;;;;;,---1---;;;; Sth\11111· Ml \lrHn A, Ind l.trl')' Albert WUSOl'I "ICflf\OUI IUllNlll Lunaren. WUlltll'I Htll'IPlllll i ncl T1rrv ,IC1'1fl0UI IUllNlll NAMI ITATIM•MT 1Cr1vf11, Al!e1 Juf\I Ind Gltnn Robert Jlll'I , NAMI ITATIMIMT TIW tolloWlnt ~llOlll 1r1 •01111 S1r~I, Of111t1 J11n Ind John Curll1 Dt C1rlo, Johft Ancltnon 111(1 JO T"• fflUowl'f ,.,..,,, 11 dolfll 11\Nnt H ,,,1_01 ,,., Ttl!J-1, Pt1r!d 1 Ann Ind Mlth .. I A H 11 '"' ·-l11911m, OWt ICl\l Incl Wllmtr C. Jt, ~·...:=-J~-~"" A. 1111<'1 J"4tn11 S. 11: 0C II NEW,OllT COAIT COMPANY, 1lf.I All tl'I, Ledl11 Ann 1nd Thom11 Gre90N MortltJ, Jot Ind Otbrl M1rllll'll 1111.W. SI. f'tl!-.11111! ASS IAT£S, lfJ °'*""' Orlvt. lt¥1111, Ctllto•nt1, t1M' Wllll1m1;, C1111l1 Allen Incl Colleen SMi!llffCI, W-G. t nd Qotln1 M C1rnPUt Ort,,., SM!t A,._, Cllll. '21'0J 1 Afthuf 0 . Llnkll"er, Cit l.!flkll tlfl' Rl l Sorl1, H-.J.ot. 1nd vcv (;lorl• ll:obltl W1l'9t St, ,ltn"I, 1$ P1l1u 1nf.pl"t"1o t1" C\lpolll Ort~. lrvlnt , Htmmalaarn. Oinltl p1111 1 l'ld Cor1111r, Elt l111 II, Ind Htrold A. I ''·•Cotti MIN, C.UI. '262• Ci lllttllll Gll'lldllll J~I Ptttdlllo Gu1C11lv11t tlld M1urk O Thl1 "'-'"""' 11 toftduded W I ll t Jttll Unlt\ltffl', <• 1.11111.lettll'" LI F1v••· J11n11 Edw1rd Ind Sllaron r.~~ICI•""' l . '""' Ltrrv RtYfTlOl\d lncllvlllllUlll. e:11itt1t1 I-. 21n °""'"' Orl¥e. •rvlnt . Sue Wlt111m1. ltlcherd A!ltn 111d lt.ownn •otiitrt W. SI. '1"'1 tht C1ll fornl1 Cr1wford, ll\11'1 J.t nd Tholl'ltl J, a rown, C1thy and MkhMI Lff Thll lll llfflfl'll Wff Iliff wtlh J, 0NVt t C. lrowll H ., C"9 Liii 11111'1 Hlnu1, J1m11 Do1J9l11 1nd 11'.lrtn HtMfn, 5UMl'I E. Ind J:t:rt¥ l Count¥ Clttk fl Ottntl COVlllY Ofl Con1tr11tllon Co.. •120 l lrth l!rMI, Ann H~•d!~. 11:1'"111111 Ind NI! I St1iif1¥ Otc ..... O. J, ltJ>. NI""" IHCll, Ctll19rnll 51tl•r. Don1ld e. Ind P<11!rtci1 A. Arllolcl, Gtor•• H. Incl Htrtltt F. ........ • 01111.t D. 1.1111. c• lift •on Hln1011. Shll'rlll L. ind MinlHI W. AuJHn. Ntlllan Jr. Incl l!llt It-,Wlltlltd O!'llltl CotJI 0111'( Pntt. C-.rwc"Ol'I c ... •1:10 l !rcll Street, S~ur1. Fr1nclKI •tld Altl1ndro ~\111110. Ptlrld l Al'IM ,...., ,11ltU1• Otc:ltflbtr 10. lJ, :I(,,,, lt1l ,,,,.n M ........ t tHch. Ctlllornl• PiJ<:lllCO, Jtsut E. Ind Ttrttl 0 , A Mooo-!I l_.-.ld A!lll'I· Gledlne R. t nd ee1w1rd E. ICts!eloat, Riymond P. tncl "hvtll1 .....,..CE !. Natmt ll · '"'' Wyn!1. 5111'k1 E. ind E1th1r L. J. PUBUC Nv11 '''' LiO'UM t11dl. C•lltorr1l1 Gttrl tle<I. JO'f'CI Ind Gtrtrd T, Ho'JOf. l l"ldt l .. Incl 0.11l1t £utt l\I .. •00trt H. Ll1111. lOll l!m•r•ld •• ,. Stfj)llln11n, Ptlrld.i 'E t nd 11111 C. Wll""'1. 111111 C. Ind EllOfl"' C. PICTITIOut IUSINlll L.Mlllll t...cl'I. C•lllwnlt Chtplln, Jlll'llt Etrl Incl Geri. Al'lnt Hll'r1r1, Miry l.ou Ind Elf<!Ultt NAMI ITAflMIWT J. Al ltO•y1, >1' C:l'l'llr1ld 11'1'• LI • DllYll, Lindi S1>11n •rid J1me1 D~I• G ........... Doi ...... M . .ond Ootllltd M. 111'1 fol1owfflt ptflOl'I It dOl111 -u•lntst ·~Ill IMCll, C1tltotr1l1. WhUe, Ktllllttn Allct tnd Timothy Ct~O. M1ra1rlt1 Doretn 1nd Cht rltt 11. I. Jo/In f , Ktllol'Y c-o lldd • IC.1l11y, Sttvtn M~~e,:;·,~:PYI Joattrl ll'ld •k htrd . NOW AND THEN. 307 M•rlnt Avt.. 2'0 N-porl Ct l'lltr OrlYt , Ntwpo!'I Gittler!, Olc-11 C. Ind Peggy A. Amtsa111 Elvlr1 F. end ltn.clo 811~, Ctlll. t1M2 ltt<tl. Ct lllllrnl1. Towne. Fov A, I nd MIUorCI E. Gllddll, 11011 r. Ind Ed'Wj•d E. Mr1. Pt!rld • J, L•r1t1r. 3'0 ·~I· t . TMlmtoft l.tdd. c• l t dd .. ICt llfY'. c1rw1i.. C1therlne H. 1nd Joel A. So!VIY, CntMrlnt J. 1nd tmtl Ii. 1onwocd. 11r11, Ctlll. f1t11 t.O NtWfllOl'I C.nltr Ortvt, Newport O"Nelll, Cyn!h!1 T. Ind Roo1ht A. Nord1, °""'Id H. I nd Ptmtll J, Tiil• b\ltllltU 11 tondixltod b'f 1n IHtll. C1lllor/lll Groen. J11n ind Jent! Milvl1 ~~~~11 Sll•rl1111 Joll1nn1 •nd Ntll INlvldutl_. I T~I• butln111 It btl"' tond\lclld 11'1' Oftllt Magglor11. PhylU1 E. Ind JOWPh Jones. P11Trlcl1 l . •nd Stevtn ICtnl Mrt. fl'•trldt J, L•n... I 1tn1r1I p1rtt'llthlp. 0 . Ker1r, Lindi L. Ind S!tnltv E. Th!t tltllll\IAI Wll flltCI wit~ 1111 J1Ck llflkltlftr K1nn111, sustn L. tnd lvnn E. MOGA, Vlol1 M1v Ind John Wl!llem C111.1111r Cltrk ot Ortntt Counly of! Th!t tl1t1mtt1I tiled wit!! 11\to Covn1r W1lter, Pettr s. 1NI Merle J, Huahts, Miry Lo11l1t tnd Fr1ncl1 Dtc9m0. 7, \f7J Ctttll: ot Or111l1• COlll'llY Clll Dtclll'lbet Brown, Ar!llur Marlon 1nd Dixie Diane Robtrt P·'"'4 1 1m J-o,-, "'•rll J. and Roy w. Cvrrv. C1r11I Anne Ind Robert Ptler , .• ,1 ·--... (N'1 O•llY Piiot • ....,..., ''" ~· "" Oltmtr. Jtr0"1t EGw•rd I nd Anl'I "''" 1,..,. "'• ' I Clev•l•nd, R1ymnod L. 1nd Ctro4 S. Mitll Otc•mbtr \0, ,,, 24, :n, ltll JIU.n ,111111111td Ofl"lll (CM11I Otlll' Pt ot, Mllthell, Ste~htn P, Ind Htldl V. W~lltt•, Chtrvl Lynn t!'ld llonnlt Glnt ---• Otc:lll'lbotf 10, 1', f•, JI, 1tl':I J7,1•1l Slrlcklend, LIO'f'd W!ll•rd tnd cvntl\11 ICfY', LIM Annt t l'ld IUcl'ltrd A. PUBLIC NOTICE -LN llleeli:1, II, Ch1rl11 F. tnd J111nel1r PUBUC NOTICE Rowl11'1d. Chrl,!lnt A11n and Oenl'llt sJ~bert, 1v1 Ll<lnt ind 0110 w. lllCT1flOUI tUllNllS J.iv O<!P~lo, BetTY E. Ind Fr1ncl1 P. "4MI tTATIMINT tfATIMINT o,-Al.t.NDOWMINT Kurlak, Helen M1ri1 i nd GeQl'lle M. Tt!td1, Mirth• V. t nd Gon11lo M, 1111 fallowlrtl Pll''°'11 t rt lllolno o• Ull 011 PICTITIOUI INTERLOCUTORY • DliCRIEES McCtrtln. Norl'l\I J11n t ncl Ron1ld .... ,111111 11: IUllNl•t WA.Ml lillltrllll Novtll'lbtr tt GeorQI "" fldontllll Edw1rdt: Sllt!lll Fi y ind Forni R. JonH, Florls V. tnd Rkh•rd M. AYll:ES ACCOVNTIMG SEll:VICES, Thi lollowlllO 0--111111 hll ltll Prino!e, Richard N. 1nd No•Hn F. '::;~~~1~~1,t1~~n~::, •O:vf:SI~ "~51:1•t~1;.!\:'"n. w::;~1f.;1.~.111~vn· 1111 Z.'Oo~~t;l ~~,~~"'1'T1~~111::'MX1A;es, Htllt r, Miny Anne t NI Ruswll Scllt uer Jontt. lonn1 Ru 0. I nd ltobtrt ll'flon lttth. C1lltar11l1 '2 ... 7 •1 f11(1 Or!olt AYl!tue, Fwnltll'I VII· McCr11ry, Miry Je1n Ind Joll11 NeliOll R ll H Gon11l11, Arlhvr Htnry tnd Mlthellt ' Wlllll m Hswltll, ,, Shtll t• Ullo 11'1'. Ctlllornll H IOI ltrnH, OtlortJ M, •t1d 0.lll 11\ltlttl tlnal11t1 lucn. Cttll. t?W T1" 11c11t111111 tM,n111111 111rn1 rtlltrtllll Elt lnt White, ltll'I' Htllh Ind M1urlct EIQt n Thi• butlllHI I• coMucTtd bf I llt'lltll •• ..... '"'' flled In Dr•nG• COUFllY Jolil'IWlfl. Ru111 Al'll'I ind eruct H1l'li1 s,~,,,•. w'',"',.!.1,•~ 1t!!I,' •~ "''"'""lo. ~ , • ..:., 11, 1'7> llockenrnHh. C1rol C. 11111 Llovd E. -,.., ,,.. '"' '"' ···-Ofl 1 ICtnilOll, Al'ln Groce t!'ld Roger Dinltl Masi, Manloue M. 1ncl Sllohtn M. WUll1m S. Howtlff Olftltl Goroon Hood, t1IO o I Otnlict. Denni Jttn Ind Dontld Otle Wlllllll'll, Phylll1 J, In.Cl Jlmmlt E. Nt0ml Mowttll Avtn111. ,tl,lftllll'I V1U1y, C11iforl'llt Gll'llllner, ·Dorll I, Ind Pllll E. Mortlll, M1rl1 A. •nd RObll rt M. Thlt stettmtM Wit fl1td wlth !flt '210I , Rodtk1111r, T1r111 tnd V nctnt1 coun"' Cltrk of Ortflllt Cou111y on '''' lMtllftt w11 conducted _,, In l•tndk1mp, Hiid• FtYI Ind Charles SOl.llh, Dll'll LM •NI ~··••I H. ..... • •m Htnry 81l'lholtm1h, Ocrotll'I M11 t nd 01vld .,...imo. • lri11111¥111uat. N1v1rra, Edw1rd A. t lld !Mrityn w~uer ,...,, 01111.t GorOOl'I HIOd van Bt!>Mr, Sinclrt Jt.in tnd L~t1 C11lllla , Mtrl• El1111 •nd F1r11111do l'ubllthtd Or•l'IOI C111s1 Otlly ,11,1, ... vm C~ ' Miii Otc: ..... blr 10. 11. J(. ll. 1113 lU0·1l ,1111115htlf or.,,.. Co•ll Dlll'I' ,Jlot, ,..., Svper, OOnf'lt Lou Ind ltltll1rd C. "" '' I• lll':I '6U-7l L1vtan, Mlc!Mllt Laultt i nd Christian Morell!. Joseoh Wlllltll'I i nd M.•rv 0.tmMI' l. •v, • ' Edw1rd Elt911 PUBUC NOTICE F11rl1 ra, HH!htr lrtnt Ind WtYnt arown. Ron•ld Rty tnd Lvn11 Colby Himll"'" • Wllll1m1. Mir' Mldlltt Ind J1m11 ,ICTITl0\11 tUllMISI • I J -•..._ Moro111 T-• -Leontrd. 1vtr¥ 11n f•.-"""'' CollttO. Lit o. ind JOit A. lllAM• I Ao•M MT ,-1CTITIOUI lllllN•ll Jolln (Olltfti !ltrblr• Sue Ind Fr911klln Tiit fall(Mll'llt 1111'-11 dolflt tl111!ntll MAM• ITATIMIMT PUBUC NOTICE Ke<inlion. Oon1!d lee tnd J1ntc1 Ctrol S. 11: Tfll to!IOWll'llt per..ns 1r1 . 1tol111 S . h Cl b f St~ton, Sheryl 0. •nd Otnnls M. "'.'1',m. ""'M••'-M1.··~.·,"n~.·."!.'1o'h~ fr. CAAEElt COMSIJl.TANTS, '320 (1m· b;.1111'1111 1$; a n Di.ego Yac t u 0 . Wl\111, M1rg1r11 Alk1_ Ind Wll1l1m 5,,..,.,. (~. ;nd Doflt.IYlll w. PUI OrJ\1, Sulit m. Ntwiiort •••e~. tRAO'I Gt,T "' Cll:A,T. '450t . "· ..... t •• ' , ', "•l .. ,, . .; • .. '., ,. ' • f By ALMON LOCKABEY Dlll'I' Piiot IOIH~ Edllar Powerboat 'racin g -both the predicted log and the offshore speed. races -may be the first to be landlocked because or the fuel shorta ge in 1974. discussion rega rding fuel prob- lems for the 1974 s chedule o f events. It \\•a s 1elt that e ach racing driver could rustle up e nough f~cl to run each race. d el R ey -is APBA and Ul¥ sanctioned for n a tional and internatio nal Points. 11.Cl·aJ h eC ' •ed 1"0 d Htrbtrt Powles, OtvfCI R111d1ll Ind IC.llhlltl'I Ctl11. t1Mo0 Ovtn1k1 Or., El Ttro. CtMI. "'30 S ave r Cl\ ·•I' K!t ln ,JudyL.1ndDtnnf1C. Nincv · Ptlrk l Altn Wi it!!, ,,12 ll:td!thdt. Sttw1rt Minot l rMIWllll. ,.501 ) from·· ~texican o{ficials-tha t Le1tw. RObtrl wH111rr1 end M1•01ret M1tl'llJ, S1Nlr1 J. tnd 01nl111t. Ntwpert·111Kh, Ctlll, f'2MO O....•l•k• Of,. 11:1 Ttra. c1111. r16lll he Ann , Pftlltr, Vk kl1 01wn 111d Mlc~1tl Thl1 blllll'llll It COllOutltd ""' 111 Sumner Mi rk lrldford, Jilli Ml. · t re will be no s h or tage of · 1Ctt11'11tleY. Ch1rt1 He!tnt ind 01vld Dttt>trt 1--1vld111I • 0 L 1 , co111 Mor1le1, Jud)' YYD<'IM Ind Jllllo Cftlf ' .... ' VllW •.. Ulllll llC ' . . Predicted Jog com petilion may suffe r the least because high speeds a re not involved. The contest is to see w h o can get a round a g iven course closest lo the skip- per's prerat:i! prediction. The sport is conducted in cruising type boats that usually are not capable of high speeds which consume great quan- tities or rue!. BUT l\'RA T are the pros- spccts fo r. the off s hore powerboat people whose high- powered behemoths a r e capable or up to 100 n1iles an hour and gulp fue l al 20 gallons an hour or better. At a recent meeting of the P acific Offshore Po~·er Boat Racing Association CPOP· BRA) there was virtually no Privately, h o \\' e v c r , a number of driver s frankly a d · milted thtY we re \Vorril'd. Their main concern v.·as the public relations prohle ms tha t ,11ould be encountered in trying lo run such races. POP BRA RE CE NTL Y ra n a 100..mile race -the Rum Run lX -out of L<>ng Bea c h Yacht Club with no major problems. Howe ver. it was learned that LBYC got a number of calls from the non- racing public after the race was over. POPBRA has announced a s chedule of seven races for the 1974 sea son sta rting F eb. 9 and continuing through Sept. 21. Three of the races are Ame rican Pow e r Boa t Association s anctioned for na- tiona l points, and one -the 11ennessy Cup out of Marina Fred Russell of Ocean Rae- 1n g J>r omotions, N e \'I p or t Beach. said he w ill be operating on the theory that there will be no offshore rac- ing a s s uch in 1974. ''I feel public pressure \rould be monume ntal if a major race \Yerc a nnouncffi "s going a head on schedule ," R ussell sa id . Arens Ne,v President Of PHRF fuel for the yachts cruis ing coJn~~':. c nnton E• ... eni •rid Nin<~ coiemin. RObtrl M. t lld PllYlll• L. ,., '',",tck_~· W•1•h111,. 1_ ,, EIMnor Gr1c1 H111ttMc 1.,"42 K11rl'I ho r Sa . v. . AnOerlOfl, Tl'ollml l l . Ind Sh•ron J . .. I • I .,,, .. ,, Wit .... "' • SI Hllflllnvfatl t..ch. I ' m e rom the n Diego to Jene cirlln, 011111 M. 1nd Jo11n E. Ct11111ty Clerk 111 0••111• Co11n1y on rhi, IMI_. 11 cOflllll(ltoil .,., • ftl'\ffll Acannlco race next Februarv. . ••,",',',"''· Adrll'lt G1vta 1nd De1"1nl1 a11111r1 01r1-1nd WlHl•m Novt1t1t.tr tt. 1tn Ptfl11trlhl11o r -Btll, L !'Id• M. 111d Tl'ollmtJ R. P·tttl1 Slewtrt M. l rt dflfd Jn a Je tte r postmar ked in Wl1llnlck, Ytlt Slevm t NI LOl.lren Bouknlaht. Alond KtV I n.ti Mlcll11! l'\lblllhtd Orlflll COIJI D1lty Piiot. TM1 Ill!-' w11 !Hid will! t111 M . c· J . v I . Kt y ,,'!',!"',M, ••• -.. Fr111Cll Ind ."". OICtm~r J, 10. ''· '" 1171 3'51·1l C-'V Clwk of Dr•• Ct111nl'I' .... . ex1co 1ty, aviar e asquez Metlon. Ktrintth wn_. •nd Ch1rto111 ...... ,... -•• EUii-PUB ND'Vtll'lblr 17, ,,,.. Mane ro C~ha;•man of the Elaont Ambrosi~•. O.l'lnl11 J. in.cs o'"'' M. UC NOTICE •·""' • .,---.,. u Wlll1rd, ltsttr L. Ind Jtmle R. Gremt. J1,1ll1 MM Ind Mtlvln O.lm1r J -------~~-----I ,ubllshld Or11111 COHI Otllt l'Uot, race for the C lub d e Yatrs Ge•ii J1os11111 Ann and G11'Y J1ck Shirer, M1lvl1t Llovd 1nd Ju<1v Oli ne Otoe:lfflbtr 1, 1o, 11. l• 1tn ;sw.t-JJ of Aca pulco. inform ed SDYC ~=-· e~;:~: :: :;:: B~i111~1~ It ounc1n. J!::.!': ~:~'".~J f'°" Luc lll• '1rul~0~,,:~~N::• ha. H s .• -· '' ·--·· ' I "' e . Ell'llrV. Wlltltm E. l!'ld e, $11111 Tr.. 1o11-1,.,. a-t'IOl'I I• dolf\111 bVll~t·n c 1rman arvey ummers : / ,,..,,,.,.,.... °"' • uam•• '1.ei:ipo.El•IMS.•N1Wlll1mD. , ~\1r91ret Gr1naer. Nll•lit A. 1NI IC1nn1th G. is: .I·------,-,,,------"TO CLE AR do bl ' Godwin. Jos~lne Evelyn I n d Elli~. Jullt F. I nd M\lo lltAOFO•O ICN1TTtHG MILLS, lUOS I tm any U On (hrlltOl)lltr Dine ~r..nc;h. Jotl'll'll ltt t nd WUlltm <;. Overltkt Or~. !I Toro, Ctllf, t2UI IUNltea COVl.T OI' the rv><:"'jbility Of fuel sho,tage T 1ber. M111rice A1ron 1nd .Sn1ron !lanl-1$, Jahl'I Chrl1t!1n t nd Ct rol Sllwtotl Minot l rlellorol, , 'S 0 J 'fMI ITATI Oii CALlll'OtllOA !'OR ~ Kt~ Anne Ovt rltt<I Or" Et Tero. C1UI. '2'30 TMll: COUlfTY OI' Ol:AH• OJl the cruise ba ck home for Stinton, Ji mes Everett Sr .. i fld c1,,;1 Tll.l!Cht r. Mtt1nl1 M. t nd 01vfd NtU Tllll butlllfft 11 tonducfld by 1n NO, A..fttQ 7 --Ol1r, LINJI J , •f'od L1rry LM lndlv1dui l. a .... ·-IT10N any f th hoat t kl g rt !11~tdc1 r1l ffl)f'd. UMt L" tl'ld Cllarle1 Fr1ncl• NOTICI OI' MIA I •• 0 e S a n p a POPf, Arthur F. and Ldlre D1vonlc~. M1ra1rtl MM 111d Otrrttt S!twt rt M. l•1•1ford PO. 04lHlft DtltlCT1 ... tAL• ~ in the San Oi?ef·Acapuloo McCurrv, Jahn Al•on end Pa1sy wivni TPll• 1t1ttm111l .,..,. liltd with ""' INTIRll'f 1• "Al 'f • • l I M I " . f Sl1111ng. P1trici1 Ann t nd P1ul McC 1rtr1v, ll:Oblrl T. Ind StNlrt COii""° Ct1rl ti Ortnte Counl'I' Oii PUUUAWT ft (o.l'flACT U•D•• race, we are pie~ ed to 1n orm Wht •ton. LI» L111.1111 end M•tttiew c. J. NovtmMr 21, im. PaOtATI CODI: lllCT"IC* • aiJ partici~SS '~hat th e Pllen•~I, Ntnd Reid •nd Arthur Paul .. ,.,.... EtltM ol ,.EDl&.ll:ICIC. I . Ml\.llA.. . , _.n. . S111ter, Ronald L•e i nd Fern El1ln1 'INAL DIC•IRS Publl"*I C>r1nc11 C0tlf .,,11., '"°'• OtcN•. Acapu1co Ytlc • ...,Jub IS a Marlen''"· Chtryl l'l'ftM Ind Robert ll:lllll'M N.-W tf Dlclmblr i. , .. "· ''· Im :Wit-n NOTICE IS Ht:lll•Y G•VIN 111.t d. 'b 7 p d h Matlin CAROL MILLER, 11 11tc.ml1 II "'°' 1str1 utor,11or emex an as 0 ,,,11, B~•bara An" i NI Gertld E•rl 1Cn11111. M1rv1" G. •nd 1tvr11 Ann PUBUC N"""CE win 111 ""' etlo\'t ,,.."""' ffctdent, f I •-nd 'th SlrnPIOfl, Gino 5tev911 Ind L11'1dt1 ---=====V="=~--J ue tw:r..::i a pumps \\'I Keye1. Jovce K. and Ronald Rov Junttlt 1• hi! lltflf '*'"" 1 "'ltllft tor 1n •""' ca . t f I th f! t s~ldcl, Frar•~· Kent 1nd Jud/Ill Jovce Wellt, Jtmtt Wlltl1m Jr. Ind JMnlter ,.CTITtOUI l\lllWlll 1ulhorlr!ne Ind dlrtc:tl111 Pit"'-... pac1 0 re Ile e CC Perrv, eyrl JI. and Imelda De HtYfln MAMI ITATIMIWT eoml)tt'f1 1111 f1rrn1 111 tr.. cOl!lr1cl all th'e 1,•:ay back lo Sa n Diego. Tomlirum. 11.ilerl" ~ean and Gre;11 Huvgins, Glori• Let tnd Rix L. Tl'le fallDWl"f Ptr•on II dolnt bvllnl'll medt b\' lrtot dtc:M111t In hit llPtllme, PUllUC N011CE ,,..Of th' 1'11 not Se11rkJ. Glorlt E. 1N1 lltyll'IOl'ld G. 11: to 1t1n1"r -lf'll•tl lnttrltl 111 1111 J h A f N t course, lS \ 1 N ~r~·ne;, ">Jncy M, end Edward R. Orlowski, Wt lter J, tnd Sindri L. INTEll:,Oll:f, LIMITED, no 1:. 17111 p1rtn.r1hlp ol Mlll tr, IC1!1 Ind Ef!W- ' 0 n rens 0 e1.1'por .b"c neCe5SarV aS fuc\ \\'ill be r .. ~,ell. Lind~ K, •nd James C. Wilcox. tferald Jtmet Ind 01r!1n1 St., P.O. Bt-tu, Cotlt M"'' {1111. j)\lftNnl lo I writ~ 19r"""""I dllM Bea c h is the n e w presiden t , · Trorr~·~i. Elle~n 1nc1 Fred Dia11t '2627 Aprt1 •· 1971, rlilA'l'Kt .. Mllcll 11 r a vai1a ble \\'itho ut proble1n in 11 .. n, 5 ·n IC•~ incl Tom••w R ~v Chtl"I• o, JfH, 4111 t ri nlllrtl o r .• ~ for turlhll' 1t1rtlcv41r1. lfld lfl11 of the P er ormance Ha ndicap ti h t 1 h 1 ,. ... 11n, Llndft S11San and w111111m ~=i1t~~'J':; ~~~n.~ndJ;i:"11.~i11ony H11ntl,..ton tttcll. ciui. ""' ,,,. "'"' •I'll! flf•<1 111 ,_,,,.. "" R a cing Fle et (PHRFI whic h a l e per s a ong t e ~as V.'fl~~·,~rdHarold EYerell aOd Cvn1n;1 Jonis. J1mtS II . Ind M1 rl1 Jone1 Thi• iiu-1,.... 11 t ondUCled by II! .. ,,,. hit ~ Ill !tr J_.,., IO, . ri such as Acapulco. Manza n11lo. ,,... 1-1·•· .. ·1. "'•· 11 ,,. 1.m .. 111 111m ~ In r ecen t Years has g Own " G1rcl1, Geor11t i nd 01bor1h Ann .... ·"'-. Pu rt Va lla rta. M azatlan La 5,.,r,,nJ, Oline ind Jvi n Al. c111con. FrinclKa c. •NI Mt . Chlrt" O. Jfll' Of O'"""""' No.. > ot w11111 tourt. tO be fhe large st Offshore han e 0 1 P"IV ~1. Dornth~ Ann~ Ind Jtrno Off GuediL-Thi• 1111-f w" fil .. wllll l1'lm 11 1'0 Cl'lk Cl!lllr OrlW W.1, '-• Pa a d Cabo San Lucas Har>ini. Ml!drt<l Eli itlt .ind Brue• Ca111n.d;:"°He1en Ind JOH Jahn C.,,,IY Cltrll "' Or11'199 c_,,.., Ol'I ""Cll'y ol Slntt ""'· C•lltornl .. dicap racing fleet in ,the world . _ z ~. __ ·_ --"'o~o":·'.c' __________ ...:::.:..:...::.:::...:::..::..::.:-=:.:..::.:..:c_ __ Otc:ttntotr 1, 1m OttM 0tcttnw 1•, 1t11 ,.-, WILLIAM I . II JOHN ,1$115l'llllll °'"'" C"'st 0.1t., lol!et, C-'V CllA • Anaheim to Host CURRENT 1\1,Ei\IBERSHlP in Southe rn Galifomia alone n umbers O\'et l,400 boats al the s tart of 1974. o.c:.m-10, 11, 1(. )1. ltn J1)1.Jl O&Nlll.L • •&.NllU. ---------lnt1 ........ ,,.,..., hffl 1a T'Mtl1, Clllf. nMI T1I : Int ) ... ....,. PUllUC N011CE ------:;:-:-:,,------Aft-Y'I "' M11111t1r IU·nt Pullll1llld Ortnot CM•I , West Boat Sho'w l)~IR F or i gina t ed in t Southern California as tht•' Arbitrar·y H a ndicap class. T he na1n•' 11 as later l'hani::cd 11' P acific ~landir<i p Haring FI C'l'! and WHS n1udc up pri 1nari!~· ot" oldi.!r s a ilin;! .va chts and 1ho.~c \vhusc skippers p refl!r· rNl not to compete undl'r the Cruls ing Club of An1erica i CCA) n1ea surement r u 1 e \\'h ich la te r gave \\'ay to the Intem alional Offshore R uic l lO R I. T he big new expans ion building of the An a h c i m Convention Cente r complex will OOuse H. Werner Buc k 's 6th annual \Vestern National Boat and Marine Show J a n. 26 through Feb. 3. Various types a nd models of powe r c rart and sailboals y.•ill be e mphasized along \\'ith marine equipment a nd ac- c essories plus educationa l and safety exhibits. The enclosed nevi bu ilding Christmas .Regatta Curtailc1I Light airs o ver the weekend put a damper on J\1c>\'port H arbor Y ·a c ht C l u b 's Chris tmas R(.'ga 11a on both in- side and outside courses. At least one r ace had to be c ancelled because a n1ark w as not on the proper location. Resu lts: LIOO·UA -~con 5cnotk, 8 YC; Il l BrlKt Or1oorne. BYC; Ill C1>1d TWi(~ll. LIYC. Ll'D0-1(8 -fl) Ktn Ross, IYC.: 121 ll:ov WoolitY. LIY(1 Ill Htnk WIOflll", NH¥C LASE ii: -fl) M•rk G111dio, NHYC 1 I') Jlll'I !lucklngll•m. NHVC ; 1J1 E<> TrtYl!IYl n, vrialltc:htd. SABOT A -OJ lr<11d Wttee:e-. un11t1Chtd1 Bill l v<klt19llt m NHYC "! M1'\ Sn11n. NHY(. ABO I -fl) Rf911'1t Perk"•• NHY~j CJI B•l d W"tltott, Nf4Y( CJ) wvtl)dv 8t11!1. NHYC, -PHRtJ'-(I) Anltre1, Alen A11d•"Wlr I YC; in l nmt h.t •k, J~·n A·•n1 BY(: I )) l tlght Sllr. 8111 T!cke•, Nt-'YC, f TCHELLS·22 -!11 !911 Jeff Ft•,...11. NHYC, (JJ Ion eon. Jtooer Mtltlnotr, NMYC SOL ING -(I) ln1111lty. C1rt)lyn NIW(t)fl\b. NHYC: tn Cllmt . ltk -Jtl'll'llH. ave: in T1.H"r11. 0v1vnt Klint, BCYC. STAii: -Sol1.1tlon, ll:abble HJ1!11t11, so vr , ()) Or111111, 5~10 e111111. NHVC. SHIELDS -r-~•rloflt. ICall 1t•rt1, VYC, rn Torn11111, Mowt~ Wrloh!, Nll'I'(, LIJOl!RS 1• -01 l eOh,r, GrlQ W_._ 1.V(, .J. •70 -OIYI Utlm1n. IYC: 11> A\l't l •r\t v. CIYC1 CJ\ Jtfl Andt f'tOn. '" FINN -Ill '"II lttmmll\O. NHY C1 ''l J(lfln MC"Clurt, IYC; ll~ R1"4v Mld•rtn. 11r11!1tc:lilld Tf.Y,lfo(ST -l(M Wtl\! AB'l'C: 41) A,.Yle C1"'0bllt. I YC. o f the cente r o ffers 130.000 squa re feet of exhibit s pace under roof, providing wa rn1. clean and comfortable s ur- roundings for the public. The s how opens a t noon on \l.'eeke nds and a t 3 p .m . we ekdays. Admission is S2 for a dults. $1 for youngs ters 6·12 l\'it h childr en under six a d - m itted free. ~1embers of the Or<111ge Cotmty !\1arine D e a 1 r r s Association are among the m a n y eihibitors d isplay ing products. Ron G ibson o f F ullerton. association p re si- dent, s ays they \\'ill feature pr i maril y models ol tra ile rable boats, mo t o r s , m a rine equip ment a nd ac- cessories. DJSS,\'rlSFACTIO'.\' 11• it h in any <1spects of the JOR I pron1ptcd 1nany s kipper s to S\\"itch over to P H RF. thus causing the boon1 in men1- bership over the last 11\'0 years. PHRF a nnounced ea rlier this year that it 11·ould gol n111ional in scope in r esponse to !he queries of s kippers in other yachtin g a reas ,,·ho \\'e r e unhappy w ith the ion. --- $©\l~lA-LG£l?S ® That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle -------ldittil •y CL"Y •• ,OllAN O Rea rrange letters of tha lovr scrambled worch be· low to form four simple words. I HEEVAB ' I' I I I 1-I ~f~El_1 ~l~-'...Ml _.j i • ; r-.-N ,u _s,,E~E...---11 ! . I I I' I . Just by putting 11 ring on her f in ger, many a rn an winds up under her-. 11•11 I THELAC I ,11--.-, -.-, ....,;;.' -,.....:-,~, ~ 0 Compl'1• lh• chotllo ooolod •. -•.-.J.. -"·-"--.J.. -'· b11 fll!lng 11'1 the miUi11g word -you develop from ''•P No. 3 bt!O'll'. 8 PRINT NUMBERED l ET TE ltS IN THESE SQUARE S 8 UNSC•AMilf ABOVE lffTE•S •--~TO;:,,,,:G~E~T ~A~N~SW~E~i'------'-"'-_..-'_..__, SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 A C::\.D OF YEAR REDUCING SPECIAL NEWPORT BEACH 0 Poclflc Co11t Hwy. Phone: 642-3630 --.• Tl\E CITY -ORANGE 59 llr1111i1 South Phone: 997'°211 . ' PICTITIOUI IUllNlll Oectmblr II, ,,, 2 .. 1t n NAMI ITATIMIMT Tl'le fallowt"' po1r..,,_t •re .oi"t b111ll'lt11 11: PUBUC NOTICE EMT'liRPlltSE Pll:OPEllTIES. 1'141 '' Sky P••k t oultvt rd, 1rv1111, C1Hlorn!t t 11'1 f'107 IU,111:1011: COURT OP TN• <;r19trY I . S1fl1ll, 2:1'72 Gri v1.11, ITATI 011' CAllll'OttMIA POl L1gu111 Hltl1. C1tltornl1 nu1 TMI COtJlf'TY Ofl ot;AM•• l rl1n H. $111111, 1111 SOll'tlflll Llf'll, .... A~ N""'"'1 l11ch, CtlllWM1 '26'0 llOTICI OP' .. IA•INI 0,-PIT1Ttff MtrrUy O. IC••ttt· llSIO C1t11 M 1'04l OltOll DlltlCl'I ... TIAWlfl'll • ll•rco. ..,...lbl.f, CaHIW'lllt f0%'5 0, , I • I •• a L , •• , I l T 'f ' Gt¥ IJhlt r. 511 Gr1c.t1nd Ori...., PllllUAlfT TO COllflAC'f VlllD .. l.q"'N tMdl, Clll,.,."11 tU,JI PaotATI COOi llCTIOtl llt O.tnnl I(, ..... 121 corm SlrMt, E11tll ti Fll:IDtll:tCIC E. Milli .. Cotti Mal, C1llfwfrll1 ,.,._ Dolc"MCI. (trelM S. Mt0111l1I, ,.,. '"' NDTICI IS Hl•ltY OIVt:N tlllf " IClrnblrlY '1tc:t. NIW"JIOl"I llldl, tA•OL MILLIE•, " l'lrlet.ltr1• et 1111 .. C1llltrtll1 92"9 will fll lllt 1-. Mm .. -...nt, flit ..,.: Jutf1 A. Betltll, :kl NOP'ltl Cl!\.,.,, fttM lltrtln I l'lflllotl tor 111'1 .,... O••l'ltl•· C1l1!ernl1 .,,,.. flrtcTlng pttitt-t1 nlC\llt 1 11'1neflf' lrtnt E. McAdtm, 203 Otlft'Wood, of 1911 •Fll•M of ~fl\Ol'I 1lock Ill Coron• dtl Mi r. C1llfatnl1 no s l UE NA ,A.I( MEDICAL o•ou ... n+c"I Thi• butll'IHI •• c;onduct.d bv • ·-" lo CO!TIPllll thl ttrm1 "' I tOl'ltrld 1'lrtn1r1lllp. m1d1 b'I' tr.. eec-In hh llNll-lrt1n H. St flt ll "llftMI tt Wlllth t1 midi ter fllrlhtf' Th!1 llt ltffttnl Wll lllld w!th lhl p1rllc11ltrt, ,,.,. !Fiii 11\t 111111 Incl p~I County Cltrk ol DrttlOI Counly Ol'I l'I ""'l"I IM Hll'll h11 botn Ht Novtmbtr 21, ttn. fir Jt 'l!Mr'I' 10, \ti.. II t:OO 1.rn., ,.,,.. 111 1111 courtr_,. ti 0.Ptrt!rtll'll N!l. '11bllthtd 0!'111 .. Coast 0111'1' fl'llel, 3 ol 11td CCII.It'!, II 100 Clvtc C""'"' Oectm~ 1. 10. u, 14. ltn .w1.n Drive Wffl, 111 1111 City •' Stnt1 M•• · • C1llfornl1. Kida Like to Ask Andy I... Otltd 0.Clff!Mr 1•, ltll WILLIAM E. 11 JOHN CCl\,ll'lfy Clt rk DAMtlU. • NMlll.L 111t1 ,,....... llW.... '''" 1n """"' Ctll. ..... T.t1 cnt1 m.a1a .. ...,,.,. ,.,, ,..,,.... Pllblt1'11d OrlnOI CM1t Dtft'I' ,llff, o..::.mw ''· 11. '" 111) ,..JS .. • • • • 1 •I '' I. ,/ terJ , dange first h posstbl Some men ha Just •11l be, th• oil· their c States. rr . Pttskl messa great G 'S NE will be lure · nise it calls No New James Ind pub Uc Th.,. of cou the ml the • houses • • Monday, Decembtt 17, 1973 DAILY PILOT !:J 1973 • ID lJ .S. • • Year of the S·hortage By 81!J..NEIKllllC A...clltW ,,_. Wrltt, WASHINGTON (AP) -After a year booming lnfiatloo and shortages ol 1many key_ <~mowdities ...Jb\L .U . S.~-. ~ h<ads Into 1974 facing more 1ot the same -and the real threat f. f a recession as well. Even the Nixon administratiotl, not l known for pessimism in economic mat· ter:s. says the economy could dip !dangerously close to reeession ln the first half of 1974 with unemployment . possibly risiJig to arotmd I percent. Some private economists and busineS&- l men have issued far gloomier forecasts. Just how bad 1974'a eoonomic woes •ill be, however, depends on how long the oil·producing Arab nations continue their cutoff of oil exports to the United States. ANOTHER MAJOR uncertainty was whether the government could handle the fuel shortage well enough to keep Industry running without major disrup- tions while ending wasteful consumption of guollne and other fuels. There appeared to be no end to the shortages plagui'ng . the economy, from fuel to food to basic materials. Prices •we poised to go in only one direction -up. Despite the 1974 prospects, It appeared Americans were looking at t h e i r tc0nomic situation more realistically than they had in years. It \\-as· in 1973 that they learned the nation no k>nger had things In abundance. The meaning of the word "shortage" finally came home. IT .WAS JUST under a year ago lhat President Nixon, in his annual economic message to Congress, saw potentially great things for the economy· in 1973 Wall Street GoesAfter- 'SmallGuy' By JACK BRANNAN NEW YORI\ (UPI) -Wall Street will begin changing its traditional struc· ture in 1974, the first goal being to raise its stock in the eyes of v.'hat It calls "The small investor." No other alternative ts available. says New York Stock Exc:hanle ~ James J. N~5ll?Tl. il~ securities industry is tu survive and seive Uie public interest. There are other incentives for change, of course, not tne least being to reverse the millions of dollars in operating losses the stock exchanges and brokerage hooscs are experiencing. BUT THE BASIC Wall Street priority la to win baclt the conliden<e and then the participatloo ol Individuals who might invest or speculate in .no more ttWt 100 she.res of stock at a time. They havo be<n withdrawing Imm the ttock market at a recent rate of 500,000 pt< year. 0 Tbe ofl-track betting \\indoW has bea:ane the little man's stock market," says the pundits in New York. And for mw1)' the Daily Racing Form and the odds on a specific hor.se are perhaps more accessible and dependable short·term investment guides t h a n anything the securities industry has to otfer. An oplnklo survey commissioned by the New York Stock Exchange earlier this year showed that a major deterrent to individual participation in the market fa the belief U!al the InsUtutiom have the lnsldo track on all slgnificaot in- f«mation and that they receive favored treatment from brokers while the small In-Is all but Ignored. , 1be survey si.owed further that some individuals believe the bank trusts. pension funds , insurance companies and mutual funds not only influence but illO. can manipulate the market through their ability to make transactions in· wlvillc thousands of shares apiece. "EVERYONE WHO BUYS and sells tecurltles should have exactly the aame CJPP(X'tUnlUes and the same protection," Ne.dhlm said in a speech In New York lul· J8"uary. "What's more, it is not the public's mpons!billty to Insure that these con· -. exist. The burden rests primarily on the ohoulden of the !le<Uritles industry as a self regulated body." In the months slnce then, Needham and his countorparts -Paul· Kollon of. the American Stock Exchange and GordOn S. Macklin of the National ~laUon of Seourttles Dealers -have Wlelc• ' • Al' l'lloll 'BURNED BY RUSSIA' George P. Schult1 if £ec:leral spending was held under con· trol. It was, and lnnation still went through the roof. Hi s council of Economic Ad vise rs. v;·riting in the same rl'port. said. "By the end of 1972, the American anti·in· flation policy had become the marvel of the rest of the y.·orld." Then in 1973 consumer prices rocketed upward at an annual rate of 8 percent during the year, with food prices soaring by 20 percent. No one had foreseen 'BASICALLY STRONG' Harry Heiner ,. expressed their views on what mu st be done in several appearances before the Securities and Exchange Commi~ioo (SEC) and the Senate and House suir committees that must write enabling legislation. Separate pieces or legislation already have been drafted. one by Sen. Harrison Williams, (D · N. J.) and the other by Rep. John E. ~foss, (0.Calif.), and the SEC has ideas 0£ its own as well. There is controversy on complex issues such as allo.,.,·ing institutions to llold memberships on the e x c h a n g e s , regulating instutional activity , and re- quiring exchange membership for any broker dealing with listed securities. But while these issues are still being debat.cd, the initial reforms envisioned by ·Wall Street already have been scheduled . NEXT MARCH 31, brokerage houses will be permitted to do away with the 10 to 15 percent surcharge now added · to fixed commission rates. That will be the first step toward adopting com- petiµve commissions. Thirteen months later, on April 30, 1975, fiied commisi;ions will be. elimi· nated altogether for the first time since 1792, wh<n brokers met under the old buttonwood tree on Wail Street to con· duct their ~iness. The competitive rates replacing the fixed commissions ma y vary from broker to broker. depending on factors such as th'e amount of research or advice provided as well as the size 'Of the transaction. ln some cases, they may be higher than the fixed cotn· missions. Bui all will be ·subject to at least some negotiation. the worst Inflation since the Korean War. II all started wllh Pha!e 3. EARLY IN JANUARY, the ad· ministration decided to abandon Its man- datory sys em of-Wage-pnce controls, or Phase 2, for a largely voluhtary system in which busniesses and unions were expeeted to keep their ·wages and prices in line with government guidelines. The decision sent the stock market in a tailspin. ~Prices and wages soon began to explode. Speculators began a run on the dollar overseas. The U.S. currency couldn't withstand the pressure and was formally devalued Feb. 10. The .Cost of Living CounciJ, the agency enforcing wage-price controls. blamed the su rge in innation on short food supplies and on booming world com· modity prices. By March, the U.S. economic situatiqn had deteriorated so much that even the newly devalued dollar couldn't stand up under pressure. ·Finally, the United States and leading industrial nations gave up on trying to maintain fixed exchange rates for the ~·orld's major currencies. AFTER mAT, THE dollar sank lower in value, making many U.S. goods a bargain. Foreign nations began purchas· ing agricultural products in greater volwne, increasing the U.S. shortages and pushing up domestic prices. The Russian wheat deal contributed in large part to the great 1973 price surge. The Soviet Union purchased much more grain than U.S. officials thought it would, creating widespread shortages of grain for bread and for feeding ani- mals. Treasury secretary George P. Shultz; said frankly the Nixon administration 'STAGFLATIO N' SEEN Charles G. Bluhdorn Taking into account the time dif· ferences across the country, some pro- ponents of lhe national market envision it as a marketplace open around the clock. STIU. TO BE WORKED out are the issues regarding the institutions and the so--called third market. which is com- posed of firms or individual brokers Yi'hO buy and .sell listed securities but do not belong to any stock exchange and thus are free from regulation and supervision. The NYSE and AMEX chainnen dil· fered on which is the more pressing issue in their recent appearances before Williams' subcommittee on securities. Needham said "The crucial issue" is that all trades in listed securities must be restricted by Jaw to an exchange. There is no other way, he said, to offset the loss of the traditional economic incentive for exchange membership that will result from the elimination of fixed commission rates. If membership is not required for trading listed securities, he said, dealers will drop out of the exchanges in order to make private markets in securities at their own convenience and free from regulation. "THE PUBLIC have no way of CUSTOMER would knowing whether a \.J.AJ.l S l Under current market rules, a buyer or seJler must have an: order in excess or $300,000 to win· the privilege · of ... gotlating the commiaaion he pays the broker. -- ' ' ' ' ' I 'laok, th_ 'I room for two standing.' BEYOND THE BROlCER'S DESK, possibly before the end of next year, the separate New 'York and American Stock Exchange lapcs also wlll show prices and volume ol transad.k>M on each of the reglOMI exchanges rrooll Booton to Honolulu. Thtla composite tape wlll serve as the lifeline for creation of a central market, or national market system, eliminating the frequent variation In the price of the same stock from one ex- change to the other. _ Trading over the counter In unlisted securities, which is the domain of the national aaociatlon of securitle.s dealers, would continue through Ila already operative N A S D A Q communications network. UPllt._... CHANGES UNDER WAY J1me1 J, Nttdham got burned in !be "11eat deal and prom. is«! it wouldn't"-again. Steeped in worries over Watergate, President Nixon moved in mid.June to ~ to ~top the roc~tting inflation, frffZ. '°' pnces for 60 days. He didn'L apply tlie ·rrecZ. to wag... erplaining that wage increases had been moderate. They had, remaining just a Uttle over the 5.5 percent government standard. IT WAS THE SEOOND time Nixon had resOrted to a freeze to try to buy time to put a more effective anti·inflat1on policy inl<> cffed. But the second freeze didn't enjoy the same public support as the flfSt. Because the retail prices of 11ll agricultural products were frozen. pro- ducers found that it was not profitable to put beef and poultry on the market. Some drowned baby chicks. Beef was ~·lthheld from the market. · Nixon released the food and health industries from· the price freeze in mid· July but kept the lid on beef prices and across the' rest of the economy until mid·August. He replaced the freeze with a tough anti-inflation policy, in S91De cases squeez- ing the profits of industry by refusing to allow them to pass a·JOng on their costs. Still, Phase 4 as it was called, failed to restrain inflation, as world prices of many commodities went up sharply. DESPITE AN 0 F F I C I A L disen· chantment with wage-price controls, the administration held on to them tightly, fearing that Jetting them go \\'Ould lead to an explosion in prices far beyond what the nation had been experiencing. The Federal Reserve Board tried to give the anti-inflation policy a boost, holding on to a tight-money policy that pushed up interest rates to record levels Al' l'h•I• WRONG IN FORECAST Herbert Sltin throughout the nation. The impact of this policy v;·as felt imrriediately in 1he housing industry which had expected a good year. ~d instead faced a severe dOY.'Jllum. ~ite all its troubles, the economy rolled along at a high ra1e or growth. and in fact came dangerously close to overheating. Had not the shortages of many basic materials struck in 1973. the economy might have expanded at a greater rate Energy Concern ' - and pushed up priC<'I e\•en h!ller. It WM, meanwhile, a bil' year for economic forewting. The Council of Economic Advisers predloted In Jan.uary that· the rate of mfistlon would drop I<> 2.S peroent by the end of the year. By July, that forecast was abandoned. BUT THE COUNCIL, headed by Herbert Stein, ·was not alone in that forecast. ·~fany private economists made similar optimistiC prediction!, although with not as low a rate of infhttion as the government predicted. The administration made good on one forecast .:..-lti Pre<lic ron that unemploy· ment would drop .to 4.5 percent by !he end of the year. The fuel shortages, s u rp rising 1 y enough,-worked-,.io give the dollar a big boost near the end of the year. Analysts explained that while ~ United States \\'as in bad shape · l>ecause or fuel shortages. European nations and Japan were in worse shape. The monetary crises of early 1973 eased after most major nations agreed to abandon most fixed exchange rates for their currencies. 'tRE CALMER atmosphere caused leading industrial nations to postpone for another year refonn of the in- ternational monetary system and a return to fix.ed_U.change rates. Domestically, the Nixon administration also·· faced some major decisions as the New Year arrived. The Economic Stabilization Act, under v.•hich "'.age-price controls w e re established, expires at the end of April. With the gasoline shortage expected to get worse, there were tough decisions ahead Oil how I<> manage lhe shortage without rationing. Execut i ves Tell ' Economi c Fear s By DEAN C. l\.fiLLER and chief executive at GE: NEW YORK (UPI) -Ten of 13 chief Frank T. C;lry' chairman anc1 chief executives of major American cor-executive of RCA, Stewart S. Cort, chairman of Bethlehem Steel, and porations and financial institutions polled Charles J, Pilliod, president of Goodyear, by UPI feel serious concern about the 1974 economy. The other three in this all were in ·agreement that the «0mmy will slow. year end survey were more optimlstic -11U1Cfo1resaw-arrtt0n0mie-slowdown;---·Among_thLJDOSLoptirnistk:-wu-Harey Heltzer, chainnan and dllef executive The leaders in steel, banking , autos, of 3M. "The economy is basically strong, A SOFT LAND ING? J1me1 W. D1vant better tranuction price \\'ere available elsewhere-nor would anyone else," Needham said. "The concept of the best available price at a given moment -arrived at in an auction market responding in· stanUy to the· forces of supp_ly and demand -would simply lose all signifi· ciance." For his part. Kolton sees an essential need to regulate institutional trading in scope and volume. The lnstitutlon.s. currently accounting for 75 percent of total public volume on the NYSE and 25 pereent of that on the AMEX, have created a playground in 50 or so growltKlriented stocks. These can move several polnts in either direc- tion in a single day, depending on the whims of investment rtianagers as much as corporate developments warranting such activity. Meanwhile. the other 3,400 issues listed on the two exchanges are vitrually ig· nored. These make up the lower, relatively inactive level of a "two-tier" market whose existence Kolton believes compromises the fairness of the markeJ place. HE SUGGESTED I<> Williams' sub> committee that institutions be restricted in the amount of stock they may hold in a single oompany and. limited in the number of shares in a security they may trade wilhi.n a specific period such as a week. Both Kolton and Needham \\'Ould re- quire all imtitutions periodically lo disclose for public scrutiny !heir portfolio holdings and trading activity, as the SEC now requires only ot the mutual funds. And both chairmen would deny the inslitut!OM .membership on all regional excha nge., where some now hold seats, as well as the NYSE and AMEX. Among other aspects of such a ban, It would preserve for the industry the full com· mission income from inst It u t io na I trading. - "Get the actioh out in the open and have eveT)1>ody play under tne same • rules," Needham urged In his New York speech at the beginning of the year. It waa a straightforward, simple ap- proach. But aa· the htarings on all the laaues ln~lved continue in Washington, their complexities mount. Sen. Jooepii Blden (D-Del.) summed up the feeling of at leut one member o( WilllamJ' subcommltlee during a round of hearings in mid-November. "I'm having trouble understanding whether yau guys und~land what your problem la auppooed to be," ht i<>ld the leaders of Wall Stre<t. insurance, utilities, railroads, rubber, 50 1974 should be good," be Aid ... But electronics, computers and brokerage in-it all depends on bow the COWltry vestments represent a total of $65 responds to the energy crisis. billion in sales, another $41 billion in · operating revenues and assets and 2.18 Frank E. Banietf:, ·chainnan and chief million employes. executive of th' Union Pacific Corp .. echoed this thinking. "The economy as IN RESPONSE to six other questions, a whole is good bµt could experience the bosses at IBM, General Motors, a severe dislocatoo because of the energy General Electric, Bank of America, RCA, crisis," be said. 3M, Goody ea r, New York Life Richard C. Gerltellborg, chairman of Insurance, Bethlehem Steel, Union GM , foresaw a good but slower year. Pacific Railroad, General Telephone &i He, too, was worried about the energy Electrcrllcs, Gulf & Western and Palne, situation. >- :~ackson & Curtis gen<rall~ ON THE QUESTION of Phase JV _ ation and the energy crisis a~ wage and price controls, all but three the greatest dangers 'to the 197l of the executives were strongly opposed to them. And even that trio opposed economy. them in principle. -\Vage and price controls should be "It's tempting to say gM rid of them. removed. but we run the risk of a t'OSt·push -Dollar devaluation has helped the explosion," said the IBM chairman. "We United States reestablish its Vw-orld may have to stick with them a while trading position. longer, but I wuuld suggest selective -Recent and heavy foreign investment decontrols." in the United States is a positive, not "Dismantling should be done a negative, force for the economy. cartfully,'' said 3M. -Reforms are needed in the financing GTE, which had favored immediate of political campaigns. lifting of controls before tht energy Askec:l how the economy would be crunch, now says a "cautious approach'' affectec:l if Mr. Nixon became a "La.me Duck" president because ol. Watergate. seven declined comment. The others said that the economy wouJd suffer If the administration could not generate con· gressional and public support over the next three years. NONE OF THE executives polled natly predicted a recession in the classical definition of the word: two or mor~ consecutive quarters of declining Gross National Product growth. A few came close. And most saw significant declines In the real growth of GNP. "We're at a stage of deceleration which could result in a recession or a 'soft landing,' " said James w. Davant. chairman and chief executive of Paine, Webber, a big Wall Street finn. Leslie H. Warner, chalnnan and chief executive of GTE. Ute country's second largest utility, thought there was a "risk of an energy recession. 11 "I do not foresee an outright ~ion, but t do foresee 'stagflatlon ,' " said Otarles G. Bluhdom. chairman of Gulf & Western. Stagflation, a worn cross· breedlng of stagnation and Innation, pro- duces below average economic growth amid innatlon and significant unemploy· ment, similar to the conditloM in 1970 and early 1971. "A significant slowdown, If not a recession, Is a matter of genuine con- ,cem," laid R. Mannina Brown, Jr. chairman o( New York Lile Insurance. IN THE .IlllDDLE range of pessimism were GE and Bank of America. "It (a r~sslon l Is possible but Im· probable in our judgment," said A.W. ClaUS<n, president ol the big San Fran· clsco bank. "Bui we aee the toooomy growing only from 1 to i percent." uwt expect a &harp slowdown In the real GNP growth rate, from about 8· percent !tut year to about 1.2 percm_t n••t ." aaMI Reginald H. Jon ... chal""'" 'We're at •.1ta9e of fie. celeratio11 telaicla eoulcl retult I• a rece11ion or a soft landl•ll·' should be taken until. effects of the crisis can be assessed . lnfiatlon and the energy crisis rated about equal as the two prime problems facing the economy. On inflation, most respondents said the government should hold its spending within its inoome. Others thought the Federal R~serve should not pump so much mo'"'y and cnodlt into the economy. Other suggestions for ~ recting inflation, now around & percent and expeded to go· higher, were: eliminate COlltrols and let free mart.et forces take over, base labor negotiations on pmluctlvity factors, and erpand tne country's existing production flcillties. All the company leaders ..,....i alternative sourees ol tuel should be developed as quickly u posglble to eliminate our de~ oo oil. Oort of Bethieh<m and Sarnoff ol RCA llllf· 1ested a crash energy procram be 1n- atituted similar to the one the United Slates used in puttin& a man on tht IMOO. Many ot the executives tho<lltht n· tionlng ol fuel eventually would come and all agreed that new and tlgh!B governmental •nd Individual dlscipllnea will be nectssary to avoid an enero debacle. ON THE QUESTION of how poUtiCll campalgne might better be financed, the eaecuUvts generally agretd a new Sl*m must be devised. Cort of Bethlehem thought that ...,. trlbutlon.t and campolgn spending should be limited. "The spending bN fllllll f"'' "' 1'111~ at i.11 levell"I." he aajd. • • . - : ' • • • .. 2·1 OAIL,( PILOT Monday, 11tctrnbtr 17, lq7l General Genera l Genera Genera) 81 bo• P1nln1u • :The Blgcest Marketplace on the Orance Coast • 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;; I VACANT. 4 BR. fi\n\. rni.. d a FIXER UPPER tg. k11.i.s1y. 187.500 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS f\tanMll Reali.)' 61".r41.iOO ran •nenina NEWPORT BEACH -Big, Blg bargain, 2300 Coron• dot Mor r · -'if sq. It .. 2y, baths, 3 Bedrooms, family room, · YIUA GRANADA firepla<e, d,oublo gar,. boat storage . Bring Corona del Mar Yo1:1 Can ~I~. Fir!ci It, ( 642•5678 I Trade It With a Want AO . One Call Service Fast Credit -Approval yoOJ'pa lnt and pa-per you'll have a ball! Now Bachelor Pad 4 BEDROOM TOWMHOMES vacant. CALL 540-l l 5t· . With Pool ~"'"""" •••••• )00· S'M 1-0 ••.•••••• 200 -m M.w. ...._ i.. ~~ .... 121 . wt .............. , •••••• JOO • ..., COMFY COIY On a """"~'" OOxlOO lot ~ • • • • • • • • 9SO • 990 Ho.M\ lot Solir • • • • • ' 100 • t24 .......... • • . • ' • ·" \ • i2~ • i.f9 i.c..... .... ...._,... • • • ,,,, • )911 loon a Moth,........,. 'IOO •'M toit·• Jwrd ••••••• ~M>-JiM M ....t '-'-·.,, •• &50 -tM •--' ....,. • , , .6'00•'" EASTBLUFF TERRACE AND A LITTLE OCEAN VIEW -See this ab-i n w•lk·to-privnt• com· f54500 I t ! h I t h -IN v t n1unity beach Cc;i r o n!'-r-1 .. ..-11wn1 ., ••• ,,.100 ·1" Mlt<'-'Dw •• •••• ,.IOO ·M hell h-GowwNl., ••• !50 ·1911 """-..mw.. ... ,,,,1'!S•M f 1 so u e y c arm ng cus om ome n e\ por llighlancls, a \Veil deeoraftU Heights. 2 Bedrm. and large den. Dinlng ' 2 Br. 2 Ba. honu~ wli h General General OWNERS TRANSFERRED MUST SELL -Beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath ?.fonticeUo 'fo\\1nhou se. Cathedral style living roo rn, private patio. 2 car garage, and close to pool s. Com pletely redecorated, new pai nt. Plush carpe ts, lu xurio us wall paper. All for a lo'v $26.500. 90 ~0 Financing available. CALL 546-5880. GOV'T REP0-$26,500 JUST RELEASED -and on ly SIOOO. dowq pa yment . 3 Bedroonl, 2 bath Costa Mesa home. ·A great value with covered patio, bright cheerful kitchen , larg~ double garage on quiet culdesac. Vacant and ready for your inspection (hurry, bids close soon). CALL 546-5880 ' ~.-HERITAGE 0 0 REALTORS !General 546-S880 Open Eves. General IN MESA VEROE -Four bedrooms on the go lf course and extremely exciting! High ceilings, dramatic entry, courtyard portico and finest appointments an O\vner-builder could include. $195 ,000. r\ listing of l\1artha Beynon .. UNIQUE HOMES 2850 Mesa Verde General 1 STORY CONDO $26,900 I1nmaculate 3 b r, con· dominiun1 \vi1h g o r 1n et kitchen. private C'nclosrd palio, 2 t'a r: garAgC. Reel tile roof, con1n1unit y po o I, trailer 1mrking i; pa c e . Assumr Fl-IA loan SIS.I per 1110. includes principal, in- 1en-sl. loxes and insurance. Call 546-2313. OPE.N Tll t • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE' THE REllL ESTllTERS Realtors, 546-5990 Di;.ive, Costa Mesa General HARBOR HIGHLANDS Sharp 4 bedroom, famil y room home. Child's playhouse in side yard. 'Great fa mily home . $6 1,9iil). IRVINE ESTATE Nestled just benea th the cres t of the beauti- ful hill s.. of Irvi ne. Spanish vil la . 5 bed- room s, 3 baths. vaulted ceiling, air condi- ti oned . A panoratn& from n1ountains to sea. Large lot. room for pool. rose garden. Numerous cu stom featu res. $129 ,500 FEE. EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD VIEW Attractive Broad1noor beam ceilings, 4 bed- room home. Separate dining roo1n . 2 fire- places, 21h b(lths. Nice family roon1. ju st a few minutes to beach. St21.500. CLASSIC LINDA ISLE HOME Larger~5 bedroom, 4th bath v.1ith many cus- tom features. Elegant night vie,v, pier and float for large boat on quiet water location. $229.500. LIVE LIKE A DUKE F'~ntastic Bayshores with 182 fool prime bay frontage. 4 bedrooms, 411i baths. large dock, pool, 4 car garage. Offered at $495.000. ~ 644-1766 Coldwell.Banker ~ 21 61 's.n Jooquln Hiii• Rd ., N.8. ' MODELS OPEN DAI area, 2~ baths, 2 fireplaces, beamed . ceif· fonnat tlintng, , p"' t o"' . LY I 0-5 ings, dble. garage, heavy shake roof, en JOY a niaster 11ul1e. 1'l•111• y1t1'd '~·Ill~ 835 AMIGOS WAY n1inl vle \V of th e sparkling blue Pacific. Our 11Rtln stin dt't'k t1 nd 1~i-gc f1tt f111·1n J)(J()I $G9,500 Sparkling fresh -family sized 18 del uxe exclusi\'e at $56,500. CALL 540-1151 . CALL 644-7211 residences in a maintenance--!ree garden em co~munity -g?lf course vie\vs -pool - AND ISSDCllTCS REALTORS choice of. carpetin g -all elec.· kitchens -E'Rl.TAGE ' ' l air conditioned -close by churches schools ~ ~ ; & shopping . ' !Broker cooperation invited) OCEAN VIEW OFFERED THROUGH EASTBLUFF "EAL TY I':'.============~=~~ Forevoc vtow of '""re 644.7493 1-H11r t:io1·, Catalina, Pall).'! General Gen!ral Venll's. llon..e is adapted TERRIFIC INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY General Gen9ral to IM'rome from t w o four Identical duplexes, side by side. Can be sold separately or as a package . Priced right. $67,500 and $68,500. * Balboa Bay Properties * bedroom..~ to fiVl' bedroom.!I: J Custorn bu.ill . i\lo\·e in con~ • dition. Hnrbor View Hill.o1 10.11 Goldenrod. $86,(MXJ. C'a.11 61:.-7225 CALL 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar General WE CAN HELP YOU IUY, H.LL. OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATtON General SPYGLASS HILL -$125,000 Grac ious stone-trim 2-story home. Perfec t for a gro,vi ng family. 4 Bdrms., fam. rm., formal DR. & huge rec. rm. Beaut. ldsc p. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rd. LIDO ISLE Super clean! Ex tra lge., 2 BR., l 'h ba .. frpl., patio. Fast es- c1·ow OK. New Price $69' 950. 675-7060. DUPLEX Newport Shores Fee simple. Xl nt rent- al. 0 n I y $59,000. 673-7420 Buy, Lease, Option Best Newport Hts. Joe. Immed. occupa ncy . 3 BR, lg. den, form . din rm., frp lc. $45,500. 641r7491. MESA Vi'ROE SPECIAL Call 556-8800 For an Exceptional Value REALTORS 4 local Offices to Serve You INVE ST NOW! This lovely dupll'x -chonn· ing l BR.. 2 ba .. "'ood burning fl'PIC. + br1u1d nl'...,'. . , deluxe 2 BR . unit \\'ilh nice patio. Nm1·'!1 the time to buy & m11kl' money/ i"""""'"N'"E'"W'"P'"O'"R'"T"""CE!!N!!T!!E!!R!!, ,.N,..B,..'"64'"4'"-4'"9'"1,;.0 ..,. .. 1 m Gen9r a I Gener al I ~""'"'"~""""""""""o:"'"""""""""""""""" 1;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;·.;-; General MORGAN REALTY I 673-6642 675-6459 I HARBOH. \'ir11· llill~ .• 4 BR, J 2 8:1. fan1 rrn. Ftt Land. 1 S87.500. Q,1·1wr &i~J.5.M . -BLUFFS-CONDO The popular '"Dolores" plan -end unit -is available with short es~·. 3 Bdrms., 2 ~2 baths. Proper- ty in top cond., incl. new auto. dish\\'shr, & hot water ,heater. Carpet is like new & the draperies are BRAND nev.'. One of our best buys at $64,900 PLEASE CALL 675-3000 m DA\' ,\ llE.U:ll DANDY DUPLEX $38,500 ESTATE REALTY i lOJ AVOCADO DR. NEWPORT CENTER 640-1120 The Apple Pie Tree Is in the rear yard of this sharp 3 Br. ~lesa Verde home, but the n1ost in1- portant thing is th e home \1·ith it's shag carpet, family roon1, low traffic pride ol ownership street & park like front and rear yard only 138.500 CALL 644-7211 P .s. the tree provides the apples, you make the pie : LOOKING : USE YOUR YA AGAIN e For Aggressive, experienced sales people. e -;~~~~~~~~! VETERANS loans now ii '---=<'-'-''"'-'!.!!-..../ • OFFERING • avail up lo 1125,00J. E""n • II f d I . • if you have already used All the advantages usua y oun on y in • YQur VA . entitlement you • the.larger offices. Plus superior commis-may be eligible for an ad· e sion sched uJe-more frequent personal-e ditiooal loan ">ithout rein· • ized advertisi ng sup~rt -active office e slatement or down pymt. · I · · t ' · d llerbert Hawkins Realtors e loca tion -ful time recep 1001st an sec-e 839-t:iOO JJr 963-5681 • retary -NATION WfDE EXPOSURE of • • your listings . e * 6 UNITS * Four 2 BR.. 2 ba. studioR • INTERESTED?? 1 • k >-BR • 1 bath; ow"" Corona del Mar • • • • • occupied. Xlnt location, 2 Want to EARN MORE and LEARN blks. to beach. Sl3200J. Duplex Investment • MORE? Then take this impo rtant step • Call : 67N663 m-4190 Eves Olli now. we wm have a.,,. e toward insuring your future-call John e _ BESffN-BLUFFS !lnnncl•I analysl"enllo >OU • Allard. Manager, fo r yo ur confidential • showing the tn,,..tment oo-, t nt For fWw, for c:ondil~ for tentia1 on this betlUliful fie\'/ e. appoin me · 1 e price-reduced to. J t:.:,500. duplex. A prtme JocaUon In • AUSTIN SMITH GORMAN • ~~f"'i!.1r:ii~ 2~~~ Corona d<I Mo" 6™5511. • & ASSOCIATES • MESA VERDE ed . wide open. forevu view OPEN""•"'""' ro BE"''" • • '""'"' the Back Bay. V•· 1 ~ • 2828 E. Coast Ht..hw1y, CoroM dtl Mir e 5 Bedroom or 4 bedroom cant~ immed. occupancy I 'V + lorqial dining + dt:n poa1blt. • 5.u7z70 . • • lomll y rm. Interior c. F. Colesw=ri • 't't" • atrlum w/wRl<rfall . Hug< ...._ Ito Oi i'°'=:;:=:=-=~-::::: A A m11111.tt bednn with ttilc & tee• rs ll'a a breeze, . . l!e1l your •••••••••••••••••••• ~s.,e~&,':t;;t/~1 Ad:~~ Pilot o ... uled l:f~ c\"!1n'!t~·M~Dy General Walker &Lee lllA~ rt l ATl MACNAB IRVINE -~~~~~~·~~~~~- CHRISTMAS BONUS Inves t in a home for your wife & family Large 3BR , 3 bath Portofino Model ai ONLY $68,900. Joyce Edlund 642·8235 (Y12) . PRIVATE BEA~H-OCEAN VIEW Luxury 4BR, FR + studio . Completely re, modeled. At exclusive 186 SHORECLIF • · ROAD. $229,500. OPEN DAILY 1·5 pm (Y l6) . . HOW CAN YOU MISSl Big cozy LR w/paneling & shag . On R·2 corner lot -near shopping & theater $37,500. Elaine Svedeen .642-8235. (Y15) ·, 'I' lrvig;e tOI Dover Dtlff 142·1231 1144 M1cArthur M4-UOO Newport ... ch, Calltornt1 t211J ~!!!!!!! ' I ABAN ljXec s llrre:1 ichen. •ALL I TlllS ["" 1RE For : or th cont a I fRHI .~ • I ·Qce You :watc 1 lhe full : Just ' ' I Mo.lday, Dectrnber 17, 1973 OArLV Ptlor 25 Jiuntl"""" IMch L .. un. ---Ntwport hKh Income Property 166 Hou ... Furnl1h0Cl 300 HOUIH u ftliirn. 305 Rou-Unlurn.' 305 Duploxt• Unfurn. 350 Apt1. Furn. 360 ~o;~~~Tl~t~NI Com~~:n'!.cyU=~~ °'!~,~~~!~!~PBR EASTSIDE Goner~! Colla Moll L.,uno Beech Newport Beech . 0Nowport Be•ch Fresh, .. uy air, just 2 b'· Mt. ylew. Thia 4 bdrm., beech oolla&•· 'Hua• R·2 lot. COSTA MESA fl.1 0 • \J!il pdl. ~.,. S.dchi NEAT 1 Br c1J>1x M now. $160 -Util pd, Small 1 Br. FABULOUS VIEW OCEAN· 135 per wk A up. 1 BR lbt kl ,.. 2~ bath tamJb' bo.md' 15 Add a Wllt. gara;e "' poo • ....,rol),t ' m.&turt only, utU pd, stC'ps to beach. Deck. FRONT 2 Br, .t.ove, retrig, 2 Br A ba.eh's. Color TV' ~~ St>f~~r~ .... s ~: ~ ~~~ ;~.~t=~ WALK TO REEDXCLCUARSIYPEESET $~ I:-· Utohiloood kin&'. pLarl Pt'.i't~ .. ~ o:.' tn~r~:. ~· Nr~ be~b.</:;d°.ek.iew f~gf~· Yearly. :::~t. ... :Is. r1iiew~ -Ill•· Gounuet t ti e d spiral s Ill r case. pro-.UDO SHOPS ya ' "· c /p<t, EASTSIDE 2 br hie $180. • 3 Br, 3 Ba, new Blvd., NB. 646-41881 \ldtchen"'wtlh the Vtr.f~lale•l teuionall.f·~ _jor Ownt'r--wtll 1 $39 500 Duplex. -A 2 bdrm .~~t 1 ll _clean, b>e.d It gan.ge-.oon ~!'· drot, deck. beaut vu! )upl1x11 ?MK NE\YPORT. l u r n ,appltances and fixtures. ~Ci.refi"ee lfvfui. One of th~ carry •t trust ·~ 1 bdrm on one ot the .•J.Q>.1· bell.~ Br;-bu t·!ns, GARDEN 3 Br $255 utl ¢. ,!!U..;;YnlEWorREN1:~L .. ~Ao Fum. ~r-Unfum.-355 bach.-sub let olan.July. Ca.ti Sonny breakfast room, big finer homes In -Bay deed .• $49 900 be$t land.leaped streets In ~u ~i:w :iir~TiiiL'r· Jrplc, nu ...... 2 Cal'p<l. ··~ ..,,...,.... 640-0]10 'tna11ter auite with, prlve.te Terrace. $81,500. , Euttdde CO.ta Me.a. lOt'~ • REFURBED 4 Br 2 BA S325 Laaune Hiiis _81lboa Penlftsul• -~"'-------\•anity bath. Roaring ~. 646-6710 or 645-8400 down. 673-4030 or 494·3248 E'.P. & gar. Family & Pet. .:o.& .... Apt. Unfurn. 365 il!ropl&co,eathedral ceJllngg, · 1 $42,800.2hou8el. Cl21 ,400 eal. Balboa Island I ELEGANT 4 brFM3ba l520 * IUG!l.on a 81ulf, beaut. SPEq. 3 BR. 2* ba. 1 ·---";.....-.....::::1 :tampus~m;tormal-dln1ng -l}.r,'/Zh,-lOf1!CUSE!!y!,p YOUl()ffltntt Sll.Ptt-nea.L2J>drm._:Lbath huge_~~ home fo~J view: Hcluded_l·BR, 2 l)a., bl.le to )>af or bch. Oct~ Bal~ (tanln_1ul1 + a real budaot prlcel .Bkr REAL ESTATe I V. E. llowanl & Co.I ho""' up lr•nl "1th • 1 3BR. oozy, frplc, near water AtA R1ntalo '42 1-.Jy, condo. All elcc., <. trp)c, DOilil cellfng. ~ IW ......,....,,.. bdrm, 1 bath house In rear, t beach. 127 OpaJ, $300 mo. FREE Rental Service • a1r--cond, priv pe.tio, washer $350. mo. Winter. Avail yr-REN DEZVOUS Apt. 2" br Hu,,tlngton Beaeh's "'· ru.1J0013 Glenneyre ~~-"0316 folnr !no~-much lml o,re tlhO~ 673-2288. spacious 3 Br, 2 Balh home &: drye_r. $28S. 544-3606 eves. ly. 675-1455 ~ ba, cret. drps, t!Un rm: M t P I ~;>"I 11'1:>" GRAND Ot'ENING 1 g e ....... u.es ee or. 70 Lido Isle with 2 car garage, fenced 2 Br &: Den, 2 Ba Condo, 2 BR. 1 BA. nr. A'Jarket Bas· .am rm. ltg 11undk pat, self ' DI opu Ir EMERALD BAY down. yard, tlreplace, forced air Shag, pool, etc. Full malnt. ke t, yrly $225, 212;\ 30th St. cOnl•anlheeJ~ range.btdchwshr. 2 Bdrm condo., dtslr@le A llarml 3 bdrm ~ Newport Bly Towers $61,800. (S30,90Q ea .) Two 3 \\'INTER lease beaut So heat, carpete4 and draped ..,.. c&n t De c 1 s th . 644-0386. "'""'a.n Su e:rranean pound level floor plan, l Mi ba c u"f 1 ·• 'th 'L -4 2 BEDROOM ~. 2 balh houses on sep~ baytront horn~· 4 sR 5 thronahout. $265....., month. ·(7l4) 548-G595 or (2131 · ~ .. $3'10. Call (TI() )'eUl new, ~ Pa li'ltM tn ap t· fl".'t home-W1 CONDOMINIUM HOMES Iota:. Buy both & iell one 00,., beaut. turn'. Sandy heh ..., r-• F 360 ~-w.w. ~e~ ':'~tdpl~ ~rOC:l~~ rte~ ~:t:~ &yfront Homes $~~ ~ kr:ru~thThree bdrm P ier & float. $1650 Mo. . ~~ & i..ee ~':al E~~· ~~= Viei· 0 Apts. urn. ·2'"'B"'R:"°, "'1~"'s"'b-a,-bal-<»--ny-,-e-nclsd- wallpaptttd <ltn1nii ' area. use of wood thruout, make Boat SUps . 2 bath house:, 2 bd 'i Bill Grundy Rltr, m.6161 CLEAN B1lbo1. l1l1nd patio, $22'.5 .monthly. 315 E. ~ag carpets It custom this one of the moat at-~1S:c:~!f'c.!!:rucuon bath house, t~ee 1 bd~.1 3 BR. 2 BA, nr. te nn is ,3 Br, 2 ba. Freshly pntd, 2 Br, EIDorado. erpts, drps, LOVELY J BR.~BA,l sly. 2 Bay, tnqutre at Apt C. Call flr-pes, ovqslzed pantry tractive buys tn Emerald Private Balconies bath houses, pll!!I a duplex. crta & beach. S350/MO. 6 new crpl$, & drps, stoYe blUns, fenced yd, $250. f r Mwt nl 673-l52l or se..nn ~ near schools walking Bay., $101,500. 2 garage ipaces per unit All immaculately cared for, mos Lease. M6-3569 & refrig. Near schools. Nmonth. 83G--589B I h y~~r.s~. 6~ 0 Y· 1 Br. Beam ceU. ~ tub, diltMce to Hunt '1n 1 t 0 n TURNER ASSOC. Roof top sundeck · color coordinated and land· \VUson & Placentia, fenced ewport eac $185 incl utU.. &: Pllk'g Center Swimming pool and 1105 N. Coti.St ltwy., Laguna. Unusual Opportunity to Pur-scaped. A true prlde of o\vn-Houses Unfurn. 305 yard, fruit trees. Kids OK. DELUXE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, Slngl"es only 644-0991. ' JU•"I' 'parlt .,...,, Aaklng 494-1177 chase Bayfront Proper'.y In ership complex in pride of . .,, $275. 557-3850 TENNIS BUFFS 216 Crystal yrly 1325 mo. YEARLY, stepa to beach. onl)' $24,495 call today Newport Beach. owner$hlp area. General LUXURIOUS nr new condo. G73-n 73 or (l ) ~2749· Srigt bch Ilse. 2 Br. Avail. 147.3095, Laguna Niguel 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. For detailed information on 3 Br, 2y.. Ba, cl0$!d dbl Only steps to tennis court. J an. I $250. 673-4423 ll~•iiiii0ii0iiOii0ii0iiiO-gy OWner-Spacious Con· 675-1551 these and other units. call •tA ·'ltl!NTALS g(lt , pools. ree, play area, s3\vlmming pool from NEW Balboa Peninsul1 NE\V Ocean view 3 BR. , ' LEAS. E LAND'. do in' hi h kl La Red Carpet, R ea ltor". ~ shag n1gs drps, bltns Brad· bedroom, (or 2 & denl. BA nd -m ium I a P guna VIEW .. VIEW·VIEW 979-2550, 25'9 Harbor Blvd.. WIYKIAlftltHMMCt ford Pl, Nr sc Plaza. formal di ning, fireplace, self $35 WEEK & UP ' su eek, D/\V, gar. That'll what Village Real Niguel. Gracious adult llv· Harbor View, new Montego C.osta Mesa. cleaning oven, beautiful Can-• Sleepina Rooms 6 i5-3 7 60 or 493-7587 . bes Ing & ocean view. 2 BR, S275fmo. 963--4493, 979-4543 -... C • Estate does t. Where 2 Ba. Many amenities. lm· 4 Br, fam rm, pri~ view, 2-TRIPLEXES, Walk to E. f fill MOUSES 1 NR. SOUTll Coast Plaza & yon view/night lights. Con· • Hou.sekee ping Rooms ap11trano Beach ~se caft you buy a 2 bath, I t $49 900 49&-9408 Joe. S'l7,900. Gil S1mp&0n, lTlh St. Shops. Units lnclude ms l!ltruction \\ill be completed e Ocean View Apt.I .. ~room home with every nlacu a e, · · · Broker. 5-52-7500 2 BR, l 'i) ba, frplc + lrg W L ounS. · ~u~R,1'~ g~'d~:vf~H~~ by the 1st of J an. Located BALBOA INN NE\V 2 BR DupJe". 2 bas., i extra for juat $25,950. Lido Isle Newport Heights patio. N_,_ &IAY,C.M . .,,_1313. S3S5. 992 Carnation. CM. hi.gh on. the hills of llarbor 105 P.'Iain Street ~ . diahwahr, patio, gar. ' :.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;IYEAGER REALTY ~ln ,. .. ......,, 67;;.-0Til V1e>.v Hills. $595 per month. 675.8740 :>. c\'c 493-2590; !i36-4469. LIDO • BACH'S S85/Sl25 ulil pd. 644-4687. 2 BR. 2 bas, cpt, drps, bit· BAYFRONT o H TAX TIME BUY Ocean or inland·singltos. Dana Point $150 2 Br Cott IL blk 1 IXX)R to Beach. 2 BR. ins, dlsh\vshr, cov'rd patio. 1,.62-4471 ( :::.) $4W10J Pier & slip; 4 BR., 2 ha.; pen ouse PreU ~.~_dNEiWnterelslSIUdownE. 7 AS IS 1 Br $130 . uti l pd. l>Et~h & ~.Bal~. 7~ \UV~nfte.;.,., O~AnYrly. Furn or $200. 642-115.:! just reduced to $249,500, ru....-. ser. ast negotiate \York to be done. 2 BDRM, 2 ba. blt/irui:. frple, $250 :. 2 Br, bltns, big yard, "· "''~ Corona del ' , STEAL ITlll. DAILY 1•5 CM. 833-9182, ~4. COUPLE needed 2 Br $145. crp/drps, close to Marina gar, Newport Heights. BAYFRONT 1 Br, $175. pr;iv 'ijiiijjiiijjiiijjiiijjMjjajjrjjjiiiiiiiiil HOUSE + 6 UNITS sm pet & child · see now. $230/Mo. 4~2986. $285 -Util Pd.. Compl redec. bch & dock, 1 ABANDONED BY OWNER 522 • Cotollno Drl---New units at 2637 Eld~n, QUAINT 2 Br & DP. $200 Fountain Valley 2 BR, trplc, gar, yard, CdM. 675-8005 or 675-0478 v.Cv· ~:: ~~ ip<ec type home. You fix •• CM. ht user w/200% wnte child & pet. util pd · n1ove. NU-VIEW RENTALS ,up and save! Need.a touchup * $19&,SOO * Immaculate, I~ 2 bedrm., ott. Call Builder 6464414. FA~1ILY unit lgc 3 BR $185 673-4030 or 494-3248 Corona del Mar 'andscaplJ1&. Assume low in· 4 BDRMS. Plus maid's, 4 1 bath home. Oversized llv· bltns, C & D, C/P. Pet ok. 4 BR in Tiburon ·terest VA loan with small Ba. El ---'"ed Ing room with fireplace. HARBOR Heights 4 plex. By C.D.M. 3 [r, 2 Ba $.100 lse 1800 Sq. ft. of air cond. lux· 4 B~ROOM, 2 B~~· ELEGANTLY furn CdM apt. ;ciown. tilspect and submit egance pe,............. ! Dining area. Large patio owner. $85,000. SW\deck, svc porch. gar. uty living, pool & clubhouse, Family rm, fo~al dining .Superb v..v of bay. 2 Br, jY.OlJl' offer. Seller is Brand new. Call today! tor entertaining. Profession· 5t0-92'12 ALA Rentals 642-8383 dble enclosed garage. $350. rm, private tennis & pool 2 ba. Lrg llv/din/kit.areas. desperate ... you can steal GEM ally decorated. New cpts & Lots for Sile· 170 ?-.to. Pr 1 "ileges. ~95/month. Ideal for exec. cpl. $450 lthis one!!! Open House All """F ~·-un· A NB drps, Dble gar on aliey.. larwin reolty inc. 644-5686 evening s & n10.Ava il short term . Feekond • Bkr 962-5511 REALTORS ve., £42..i623 CALL ANYTIME LOTS! LOTSI LOTSi · 968-4405 * (24 hrs) weekend•; 642-513S day•. 673-3268. -646-.-a or Eva. ~r. -" LAGUNA BEACH E I H · o SPYGLA$ HD..J... lovely -"-'-==------STORY BOOK BEST BUY LIDO • .,.,,.., _,.,..,. Ocean view, hillside acreage qua ou~tng ppty. ne\v Bren home, Monaco Costa Me~a CHARM 3 BA, 4 BR + Bay View. for development. Site for HouHI * Apta. model. 2 BR, den. $475 mo. C d TOWNHOUSE 2 B~. fu•eplace, pool. private patios, continental break- fast. Spacious grounds near shopr!:-.i :!: !Ine beacti: Fur· nished or unfurnishec:!, from $250. Corona de1 Mar 644-:?l!ll. ' •• l 88' to bch. 425 Via Lido 8 Units. Multi-Ple x * ··&·0111 * Huntington Beach Wlll consider lease option. asa • Oro f'"'Cle<:ted thr\lout this new Y Nord $137 500 675-7414 Bkr -T I & ~inted 3 bedroom home. · ' • · downtown . Commercial -all LARGE 4 bedroom Ranch enn s pool privlg's. ALL lITILITIES PAID 2 ew shag carpt"ting, cookie Mlssion .. Viefo buildable. 43:SW.11thCOS]AME,SA Style. Corner lot with 644-2696 Eves. Compare before you rent bJEDROOM, 1 bath, land gingerbread kitchen. _ I "'""'""'""'""'""'""''""""''I Red Cerpet Realtors $150 -OCEAN View 1 BR basketball court. Gardener NEW exec 4 BR 3 BA w/180 Custom designed, featuring: dish~h~epoo 1~ ~ ~ (!ORKBENCll in garage. NEW 3 BR & ~n home, Sin Juan Ciplitrino. 497-!761 unt apt, Costa Mesa. , included. Builtins, firepi.ilce degree view, tennis & pool • SpaciOU.i. ki tchen with in· bch, CoroUdo, ~.,,o. "'""-- !!amlly size patio ·with blln Barcelona. custom interior _ 1 $150 & $175 -~udget Cottage and family room. Excellent $600 mo. Eves & wknds dire<:t li ghting eves 55?-8968. _. ........--. t.!~· Boat or trailer access. viow lot. Divorce causes low BY OWNER., Sao Juan Hilla 1 ?m8r wt!, child -& pet ok. area. $325. Bkr. 962-44TI ask 644-1791. ' ' ' • Separate din'g area ;131.950. cAi.i . ~r~·ooo· 4-9.3.-3 2 ~.9 ' c .c . ·Adult ·comm .. ·2 ·bdrm j · 1~·· -$16.5-l:Jttle 2 Br unf hse' for . fol'. Dale. . ~ .I~R. 2 ~. ~t.d-w/bltins, : ~~=j~ik~,:ra~e . . ~~·~!: .. ~~.u~il~~;';. fn,e Re11I E1t1t• F•ir Newport Be•ch . ·~~ ~~urse, pool, ~ndal • sml family, gar & yard: Lovely 3 BR. 2 BA cul de sac, =-~~ :.00 shoy beppalnchg, Oc.wimcu • •Closed garage w/storage ruce. Adults only, 54&-8638 I "'"' 536-2551 . $22.5-Lrg.fncd yard 2 Br hse, street, Ref/R&O, lg fncd ··--e.• · p. e Marble pullman or. 646-09'T1. · .. · C S1nt1 Ana Heights child/pets, gar .. E/side. lot, dbl gar. ~. ask for 1.-1·74, S330 mo. PM 673-1417 e King·sz Bdrms LGE. 2 Bedroom, 1 BA. ··• · FANTASTI -$270.Everything for the Dale, 962-44TI. HARBOR VIEW, 4 Br, 2\1 • Pool • BarbecUes' • sur-So, -• hi-•. ,. • ...:::::; LOW tax "C.ounty" receiit, Business f ·1 3 BR r hse H B ba I -~---;ovwo 'i HOW GREE.N AXER comfortable 4 Br & den, Opportunity 200 anu y. un .. . . 3 BR, trplc, crptg, bltn., , beauL ands, $550. Incl. rounded with plush land· drapes,· range $245 mo'. WAS My VALLE Y WE HAVE MANY. MANY extremely trg. fncd yard. gard. Tennis, pool. 644-4186. scaping . 675-3717._ - i . Paint &: profit. 3 BR. 2 BA. !r Ba~l:!:.ho~~v!t ~~ Distributor MORE!! 2 min from HWtt. Center HVH 4 Br, executive view Adults, No Peta o;c:;:--,-;,..,..-----~~:"G~~1tt~~!:; ~\~ ~~~~ living rm, back yrd, 2 car gar MUSICAL LANDLORDS FREE 842-9783 home, tennis, pool, tam rm. _ ~BDRM. $185. 2f:;~~~ta. drapes, !(';~n!um. Near clu b-WALK' TO w/cabinets & benches. Pool GREETING LANDLORDS! 3 BR, 1 11 BA, bltrn;, dshwhr, din rm, l600 owner. 640--0008 365 W. Wilson 642-19TI $225/MO. 675-a;62 ·•-··· 3 pool& to choose rm w/standard sz tbl, may C S crpts, drpS, nr. Marina NEWPORT SHORES • 4 BR $30 WE Ek & UP 2 BR, J; $31,990. UDO SHOPS carry Joan at less 7% if ARD We Specialize in Newport High, shopping. $ 2 9 0. immac. Cub/pool.privileges'. • Studio & 1 BR Apts. 1 ba, frplc, stove, crpts , 962 2456 qualified tJuyer pays dmvn Makes 811 others obsolete Beach • Corona del Mar • 828-56n or 828-5200 $400 mo. Agt. 646-32S5;• e 1V & Maid Service Avail. drps, $235 yearly. Xlnt loca~ • • $59 500 1 · 000 1561 cards fur eve1y occasion & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· e Ph Se · H d Pool tion. MS-5300 • , to oan. $45, Owner · h · · · FREE y 2 BDRM ho.,., yard , Harbor View 4 Br, 3 Ba one. rv<ee -l · 0 ..,....,...,,~ each sold thru retail stores Nu.view! "~"&~ _,.,, 2376 N rt Bl d CM Duplex, ocean view, I' "-A"' """0 or 645-8400 Indus, Santa Ana lieights. wtt appropnate tune ,J.or Vice ts to ou! Try O'<>,..,.,_, close to beach. Kids Portaftno' Model tO'.tV\ • Children & Pet SecUon WNER'S Unit, 2 BR $450 tQfflCISWMMJ)'WIOMl1'1l t Westcliff established com oany. Disbi-NU .. VIEW RENTALS OK .$17S. 963-33'l9 Call 847-8583 ~or sG'.-3967 & $650, 675-2569. Adams~ Mapoll& ~ I• V..,.E. ~-& Co.l *** REDUCED *** :.~ 1f~e~an \,~"'\"~' 6134030 or 494-3248 21~iel ~~: bl;ns-, ~~ Newport loland (Ad good for $5 on rent) DELUXE Town 3 Br, 211 Ba ;:::: -. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Immac. $62,500. med. & make cash invest ot 3 BR house, C.M., $150. 2 Ask for Dale, 962-Mn WATERFRONT' 3 BR, 2 BA HOLIDAY PLAZA ~lc~2-blks. to bch, )'1' tse'. OU , By owner. 646-4219. 11990 d din N Br, walk to beach Balboa, ...,.._,..... Deluxe c1o 1 Br t ··~·~• bE Y · up epen g on °· $185. 2 BR beachfront, H.B. Irvine upper· uu~· No pets. $215 &pa ua · urn BUDGET WISE·? WHO NEEDS of accts. Wrtre Incl pb no. Agt F--··-. yeyly. 61J,.2256 apt. From $140 + util. Pool. Costa -~ Federal Induslrles. Box · ~. "~ N-H -,-h. Ampla.parldno-No..i.lldren ··-:::--:-=-----1---- 3 bedroom home ts the GASOLINE? --I,_ 2776, Anaheim, Ca. 92804 or NEW Home · 3 BR, Wik ewport oig II no pe1'. 1965 Pomona Ave' E. I p M .,...,.,. to a bargain. Fami· ,...... call Mr. Sheklon. n+.-53J.-to schools, parl< & pool, We P""'nlly bave a good CM " uerto 8SG I Jy aiie living room with People \\'ho live in Deane 1500 lmmed oc tA '>I: selection or rentals from RUSTIC & cozy 2 br, 1 ba, · 2 BR Apt Unfu tlrepla.ce. St~p-saver kit-Home at Big Cal1$ton Coun-· cupancy, .,._,, $235 a month · up. May we Beaut yd, Gar, crpts, drps, LGE FUU.Y FURN. 2 BR ., . m I chen. VETERANS AND tty Club can walk to Mobile -* COFFEE SHOP * 64&-lll86 be of service to you In $250. Gary JoJu<aon, 645-6625 Bltn•, pool, beam cell. $170. All Ulil Pold ;AIL TAKE A LOOK AT Newport Center, Fasllion For Sile 125 BalbOll Peninsula solving your housing needs? or Msg. 67J.12!l5. Adults (infant ok) no pets. No Children, No Pets '~IS! Island & RJchard's Market. Newport Sho $180. 642-953). Pool &: Recreation $30,500. Call 3 Bedroom. 3 bath homes. GOOD PRICE ON the Point 2 BR. Fam res * SUNNY API'S • POOL 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. Rul Eot1t1 Folr trom 119,950 to $88.000. MOFBOIRLESAHLOME •• E GOOD TERMS rm,. Fcolc, 2 car gar, $335 WALK TO BEACH • • e Adults Poolald• SJSO Up 839-6133 ' Phone TI4: -· from RIVIERA REAL TY yeacly 6'13-7495. . .. club, tennis & pools. e Also Chlldren'a Section .._ ........ 1~ M 1 10 AM to 5 PM. SILVERCREST 149 Broadway, C.M. Bayshor.. We bave 3 & 4 BR. homes 177-E. 22nd St. CM 642-3645 ~-U 21 I REPOSSESSIO 5 MOBILE HOME 642-7007 645-5609 Evei. from $350 mo., yearly 1 BR SWO & SJSO, 2 BR 2 BR, 1 BA Unturn 1195 . N rt Sh ro· x 53', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., REAL E k MUST sacrifice, health re-Call today! They go fast $UIS. New crnts. Xxtra lrg. 151 E. 21st St., CM For Wormatlon and location ewpo ores draped, btt-ins., refrig., state bro er:s or quires move, $39S/mo. 4 .. SINCE 1946" CAYWOOD REAL TY Adulta.1993 Church 5'8-9633 * 646-8666 * 'of these nti\ & VA homes. 4 Bedroom, newly decorated. washer & elect. dryer, wired. sale.smen. Small <,> f f 1 c e s BR 3 B 1st Western Bank Bldg. * 541-1290 * '"'!!!!!~~~~~ ... ,.I 1('(lntact _ \Valle to beach. Pool and1 for 220 air cond., kitch. available Westchff. area. • A. nr. beach, like University Park, Irvine LARGE Bachelor, $125/mo. NEW ADULT LIVING t KASABIAN tennis facilities, Private clock, storage abed, land· $75. mo. Tom M 1 l I e r, ,;"';;;;;w:..· ,;213-'='244-3640"'-7"'""~·,,_.,. Days 552·7000 Nights HouHS ~Furn. or Heated pool. Adults, ro I BR Ii 1 BR w/ loft. Frplc, I._ community. Will consider scaped patio. Three yrs. old Realtor, 642-4811 2 BR. 1 BA w/ refrig, Yard. Unfurn. 310 pets. Call 645-«965 beam cell, patio & pool Reil Est1te 962-6644 lease/opt. 48,500. • like nu. Located in new Money to Loan 240 $300 per mo. Avail immed. STUNNING 1 br garden apt. bltns &: refrlg avl. Startin& iJiVnt,ngton Herbour adult pk. a\lo'ay from noisy Call 673-9403 2 BR., 1 bath •••••• $225/315 Newport Be•ch pool, rec area, no W. 18th $180 util pd. Adulta, no pets. st. Ooe-half bl. from club-ls't TD Loans Coron• dol Mor 2 BR, 2 ba, den, a/c .. 1275 St. °"''"Mesa. 393 Hamllto>. 645-4411 I , house. $15,995. Call EVES. ---------2 BR., 2 ba ........... $225 BAY Ave. yrly-Yacht club Dani Point 2 BR, l~ ba, carpets & , l(lllo' • ~. SOUTil UF HWY 3 BR., 2 baths ...... $3851425 & bch; Ocean 1 blk away, drapes, oven & range, priv 1: ffH CAN BE SEEN AT: UP TO 90% CUTE 2 Bedroom unit 3 BR, 211 baths ........ $390 2 hr & d•n, 2 ba, cov. patio, cerport couples qnly "ll.!!!!I CRESTMONT 8~% INTEREST located close to the school 4 BR, 2% baths ..•. $425/450 patio, firplc, all bltinl, gar, LIVE In the all D No children tt...,,. mo. 610 = "-nd ' CALL 552 7500 Lend to the charm of this . . new ana J -• ESTATES 2 d TD L si-..pping 8 the beach. • prestige setting Ready to Point Harbor at t be oann Aph C, C.M. ~9573 FAST POSSESS. 1051 S't Dr B c~-~· n oans Reagomod. ~edmol.... than a ,..,ar VISION . F . ~i·~ heoutlful MARINA INN • TROPICAL POOL. Harbor View Carmel model. Ave. 1 ~~ r:;m v:~':e"i: _ . ., move m. or appnt v•.,. <t<JO, Motel. 34902 Del Obispo St. 2 BR., Ii,) Ba. Spiral strcse 3 BR., 2 ba., family rm., Comm .. Hosp.) Lot #46. Lowest rates Orenge Co. ESTATE REALTY 640-ll2> ~49 ~r n4-2'.l2-045.5. (496-2353). Kitchen, Ef· frplc, bltns, 1rg encl patio' lots of extras. Price reduced CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., Settler Mtg. Co. 483 MORN. CYN. RD. • red h'i(( ondom1nlum1 flclencles & Apartments. tncd yrd, Gas & wtr pd' to $67,95(> including land. for showing. 642""2171 545-0611 Arch's rental, 2 BR, 2 BA. Unfurn. 320 Heated pool, dlrect dial 548.ll.68 · CORBIN..MARTIN dbl. gar. trplc, patios, $375 phones1. television, sauna REALTORS 644-7662 GREENLEAF Serving Harbor area 24 yn. yrly. 613-7099. REALTY REALTORS Newport Beech bath, aundry taclllties, • VILLA MESA • DON'T BORROW Un iv. Park Center, Irvine meeting room, close to San 2 BR. Garden. Pvt Patio BLUFFS CONDO A private 5 "ar adult com· 'TIL YOU CALL USI 2 BR, den, din. rm. 211 BA, $80,000 CONDOS Clemeote & Laguna Beach. Pool. $180. Adult & Famlly Vu lot, nu 3 br, fam rm, 2% munity. 1150 Whittier Ave., Borrow on your borne equity ~a';:.: ~: ~~.os4o9 ~Id:!~ 2 BR Condo .... ,fZ25 Mo/lse Live in luxury, with 3 BR.. Come . . play in . our 719 W. Wilson. 646-1251 C barp,ld,inl rmm~ ... ~uutrapg~akarad-,11~8!1 C.M. has available a 24x60 for any good purpose. Serv-rod 675-G900. 23 BBRR CoodoH ·····~Mo~ 3N ba.rt Be+ hoceRean t vfroiew! ~=J· tt:n~:'f Up& $120-nonl Brk dplx, maJT.!f.Crpcple. -.., • "" ~ Key West in beaut. cond ., ing Los Angeles CoW\ty for ome ..... _.... mo11se ewpo ac . n 11 m . ·..,., . · ·smo ers, oo pets. t, low market $61,500. \Vill lse just like new. 646-796.5 9.am over ~ years and NOW in cozy Cottage 2 Br, 1 Ba, 3 BR Home ..... $300 mo/lse $400 Month. 675-6050 Bnng ~ ad &, receive drp. Ref & dep req. 954 opt . By anxious owner. to 6 pm. Orange County! near beach. Beam cell, 3 BR Home , •... $325 mo/lse NEW 3 BR, 3 BA, din. rm., $5 off on first weeks rent. \V. 17th St. CM 548-0358 ~ CheCk the Features ~64~0.~1~075~.'--------1 •""'""'""'""''""""'""'""'""1 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. frplc. $275/MO. 6T~ 44~BRBR ~~~e .. , . ·~ mo~se frple, dbl gar .. cptJ, drps, H . n •• h NEWLY OECORATED :r!1e entry family room BAYFRONT PRICED FOR QUICK SALE Cn4) 556-0106 4 BR, 3 BA, adults, no pets. e · ·· .. ..-,, mo,.se many qual. extras. pool, ten-unt1ngton -c 2 Br w/carport, $145. Wtr i'ormal dining. master suit~ NR OIANNEL ENT. Like new, SllYercre11t 4.500 Camp.is Drive, N.B. Lease $350. 424 Poinsettia. RANOI REALTY 551-2000 nis, sauna $450. 544-3049 pd. 21.!MPlacentia Ave, "E" l ~th deck and a greenbelt 6 BR, 4 BA,+ sauna, new SheNi>od Manor ~Mot 675-5218 or~9683 BEAUTIFUL NEW T hou U fu :135 $155-$165 Callbtwnl&S,636-02) location. You'll tlnd them Cl;IS~ tum .• ma gn it i c ent C.Ompletely set uP in ex: .; ~!-..1 * 2 BR, 1 ba, fireplace, TURTLE ROCK HOME own M n m . BACHELOR &: 1 BR. PatJos, 2 BR, 1 ba & 3 Br, l'i) all in this 3 Bdrm., 2% VJew, huge deck, Jg ~t quisite 5 star park in r . ...,.._,, 260 hugt! yard-trees. S285/mo. 4 BR. Fam Rm, bltins, crpts, C:osti Mell frplc's, priv. garages • Di· ba, bltn range, drps. 'm'2 I bath "--"'•" in Untveraitu, dock, $325,QX). Art Shapll'O Capistrano. Call Sll~'U&, · incl .. -ardner. 833-8974 draperies, 2 car gar, nr vlded bath & Jots of cloeets. pool cl ~-• , .. , .. ....., .,. I"\.. ""A" .. 1-Dir "" • park, pool & te--'• court&, b --hall ' UUll'w, carport. l'parktoronly$46,SOO. '""'' ~ · P.UT YOUR MONEY Costa Mffll AVAIL NOW 1;;Jea•• of EXTRA sharp end unit, .C n.=. ,pool&pool tables, College Ave.~ -CALL 552·7500 HARBOR VIEW/ $2200., 34' VAGABOND comp!. TO WORK FOR YOUI _, -BR 3 bas. Fam rm, 2 car sauna baths. See tor your-B CARMEt furrushed. Adult park. Walk Earn !0% or -on· well-* LOVELY 5 BR-2 BA, one S47S. !S.1.i-l323. gar, patio & pool. Harbor seU. 17301 Keelson Ln. Cl EAUT. l BR Duplex. Frple, ISION to shops, bank, tbus. See -....-A 2nd T.ru .. vst•< n --ds on story, Ira center island/ IRVINE-TURTLE R o ck . Hi dist. $375. mo 548-1266 blk. W. of Beach, 1 blk N. beam cell, priv. patio. No I · 3 BR. 2 BA, Fam/R.m, Din manager 2191 Harbor BJ"A """' .... ~ u= " N•w 3BR.2BA. Wet bar, of stater). children or pets. $170 util d h' (( Xlnt cond. Beaut. yd,_ up-or call s48-4m. vu., ~~~ ~'g'~~E~~e. ~~:ii~c[u~e~;ri·;~c/in~ atrium, nr. Ind u 8 tr la J Duplexu Fum. 345 S42-7&48 pd. 187 2ht St.CM66-l317 •. • re I graded. owner, $69,900. NEW custom bit beauty In CTill •= "106 water-gardener. ~74 Complex. All schools:, bus N rt n. h RETIRED people, clean, e HOME ATMOSPHERE " 644'6480. 1721 rort Ashley Pl. ~ service, many extra 8 • ewpo u.slC quiet apt.s. at lhe beach. Dix 2 5: 3 Br. S170 up. Rental rt REALTORS. SPYGLA$ HllJ.. Love\y aduJt park on the bay. 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. CONDO - 3 BR, 3 BA, 2-story Pri t party 552-8988 Ofc ~ Mace Av •-n home Monaco $18,500. 675-0123. cadiedral celling rec area va e . LUXURIOUS OCEANFRONi' $95 mo., ~iou. e . nlv Park Center Irvine new g&..: ' nc,ooo local .2nd ~1.-_ ' ' BEAUT new Broad moor 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, closed 53&-7tfi6 · · ' model, by owner $58,000 ..... , ..... v-1t. located Newport Riviera, BEAUT Gard 2 Br -... 1 ...... T.Mia •-_, privig'I. 1 ~ 5 yrs. Will discount or $325 Bets PM, 645-700J TurUerock home ac ro 1111 garage. $4SO. Winter. 673-9499 Laguni Bueft bl-· '"1a .. .....,., ~ ...,.,. ~ -•~ trad G from Univ. ui .. i., 3 hr, 2 or 98'1-4214. ""'• gar, undry, nu Comfy, Cosy Condo v. E. 8-nl & Co. .. ,_ ...... 644-2696 evtl ..... _ ... ,. ~. •.""·-. • pa Y men t · 3 BR 1 BA frpl ''"'6'' paint $200 67J.3364 be1 9 JUST COMPLETED -~ . ~ .,, lrg. ;.,,i, c & fi"<lin. ~'. ba + tam rm. Community Dupl1xN Unfurn. 350 Attention Rontonl aft Sor wk.ds · ' ~~~~~~~~~~l~!N~VE~STO~~RS~w~an~l:.ed~to~m~a~ke '"-'k pool & park. Avail Jan. ..... · · · See Us FirJt .. tor All Your " BDRM · 1326 S&ntlago Ave., · \Vest· n·iu to stores. $255 mo. 833-3622 or 6444018 BllbN Penin1ul1 Housing Needs. · • apt new l Y cJ1U • Dover Shores area, ~J:tl~=· ~lS ~U;:;til;;•;,,;:P4:;·c-67"'J."7737.::;,·:...,,.,---, BEAt.rr. Princetod• model 3 OPEN 7 DAYS decorated, $_175. mo. 2 blb 1 BR • 31> baa, 109,500. Cemetery SHARP 3 BR. 2 BA. good Br, 2 Br, lrg 11~. & din OCEAN YIEW BEACON RENTALS from shoppllti, nr tdlools Ownt':r ~ Bull~r, 5($.7019 Lots/C!lf;ts 156 location, No. CM, Must liM' area. BBQ & patio. Xlnt 2 BR, se~ lum, beam cell, Laguna Btach • 494-9fgl '. =~""'1285~=-~~~--I evea ~7. · I inside to appreciate, $295 Univ Prk loc. $354/mo. frplc, patio, apac. $260. 'SPACIOUS new 2 Br ·2 Ba CEMETERY plot , .._. mo. 64Z-0445 AvailFebbt.3.;2·735.5 673-8300 BACH. Nr. Beach, color TV, bltns drps carpetin& poo1' PALERMO Westmimttr M . m 0r1a 11;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii EAS'l'SIDE Cute old 3BR, NEW 3 hr 2 ba bit'--3 BR. 2 BA fr I be $1S6/$!6S. Utll pd, l43S N. trplc' gar.' Adults ..; pets Park Be ·• 81 d \V t • • "16' ' P c, am Coast 494-25()J· 615-4367 3 ' · ' 4 BR, taM rm, 11u ........ clean! ' · a.... v ·• ea · Ho fl · h•• 300-$250. Needs TLC, newly dee. trash comp, crpt11, dros, eeil, all modem. Gar. Close eves · 16 W. Bay St., CM """ mlnatcr. Paid $275 ytars UM1 urn11 ..,. Cple or family oo pets k & 1 N to beach t '>"ll:/mo ~ •~• · I BR ... ~ • H d -• '$76 900 ago l t $130 tak It comn1. par poo. r . ......., . ~ N •--'-wlU~• ap.. t .......,., ' 1142-iOtn~ cs . 0-ral 64H586 UC!. 833-8447 Corona clel Mor owport -er. $145. + $50 rec . d•p . BROKER •IJl.0711 c:-~=-..,-,------1 -'--------SHARP 4 BR TOWNHOUSE, UNIV park condo. 3 BR. . 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath Garden $18-9548 Eopeclelly for you Commerclol $85. OFF Gar Apl .. util pd, 11> Ba. Pool. Near school• 2* ba. FR, highly upgraded 32311 LMkJpur. So. of Pacific Apt FACING THE BAY & I & 2 BR. 113»155. Stove, new S bedroom .with #I LINDA ISLE . Propertv 158 mature mal e, Unens tum too. l shooPlni· 1295/MO. mo. Etlinbut1<h on Greenbelt. Coa>t Hwy. 2 BR. I ll ba. POOL. FANTASl'IC VIEW ref, crpl/tlrps, btd pooL Ut-ln vacuum l)'ltem. Drama.de intertainment ho'°' :..;,!. $100 -1 BR. Oplx $125 w/utll .=56;,7:-,-llill1'f:::;;,...,,.,.-.,---:-.,.-,,-I $390. 552--7098 Sundeck, garage. sm MO Located at Bllboa s.Y Adults, no pet&. &&e96S. ormaI -mm. Big w/pler I< slip. Only $195,000. NEWPORT BEACH em pet & ,mature peraons. DELUXE 2 bedroom, 2 bath NEW Turtle Rock Home w/ Year round. Dayt< 52l·'l703. Club. 644-:Mtl6 weekends. 2 & 3 BR, ba crPt/tlrps room. Flteplact. Open Sun 1..j5, Oerupaon .• Prime Bay:tront stte $225 ·ROSE Garden l Br La· townhouse. Pool, 2 car gar. rec facll, nr UCI, 4 br-$450 &.':onc:t963-055 Ask for Mt. Weekdays 64S-36S1 pools, playgrnd Sl50 up. ea.ti .~iz..ld=e.!1:~i..;:Alloc::;;;;;.:613-:;....73ll=::."--.==-I ForbootnoatrAW. JIWIB frplC, Im pet, 2 blks Adult. $225/mo. 645-6610. mo. 3 Br-$425 mo. (714) • J.ARGE deluxe 3 Br 2 Bo 64>-0140 I OUtltandlna value! Dl.JJ'Ll!X nr ocean "2,llOO Bill Grundy Rltr 61Hl61 :io ".a.PRIVATE 2 Br dplx 2 BR, crpt/drpo gar, nice 5G-3317 bctwn Sam & 4pm. SPAC "'\V.Jic 3:: ~S ~· 1 blk to ocun. Poo/MO: 2"-iiBR='."A"'d'"ul'"t-s,-oo-oe_ts._BA~Y· I Oil GH003, MllH I.anon Reoltar . TWO ldlolnb1S ht<ome 1't'O' nr beach down~ H B yard. Adult cpl, no p<ts. NEW 3 & 4 BR homes In ~mo IM 64i 9682 ' to June. 202 42nd Sl.. MEADOWS APl'S, 3IT w. . BELL, Rultor1 613-Sl!63 perile1, center Com Mcoa. 1275 • 3 iiR, 2 Ba suri.id.. $175. 5411-1405, SIW251. Turtlerock, walk lo pool, ' • upstairs. Vacant. 968-6767. Boy St .. CM. ~ s. emit u· ., L.B. TRADE N~ Beach _Qwoer. 645--mJ/642-«l60 .trplc, cov'd pe.UO, 2 car, 4 BR Townhouse. )'T. old. tennla & achls. 833-2708. Cost• Mes11 Beaut. 40' vu window beach UN.FURN l & 2 Br. Garden 111 ._ H n Prop. for Out .. C·Town Ptop. COnilomlnlurni .. $3:!0 • 3 BR, 2 S. B. l&lancl. 1 II Ba, nr So. Coast Plaza 2 BR ho""' e., veg gardon EASTSIDE DUPLEX frnt, w/d, 2 ba, 3 br. Apt.~ Frplc, Dr"f.i. .. prlv • ..,. •Ye Bkr. TI4~· for I 60 Ytiy • See to Appreclatt! & schools. $295 mo. 511H l26! 1285 Culverdale Trno!HS2-2 Bdmt 1 both, 64~1 or 54H757 pal>l. $110-$196. 567·"'1. dbl, lot "'11°S"'~ .view. S BR, 2 BA Monaco. 162,500 IO o I ALA Ront1l1 f4U383 COZY 2 Br, !pie, pool, sml 8101. ;...,., h'u-1-~-yard.' YEARLY 2 Br. Sle-to the LARGE 2 Br ""'v -·~ mac. 2 BR., 7S ~·· ~ lnclu"eo land. u·~~ Port Kim-~..-.~ """"'.,... ..-I ~· ~...., Uv. tn'I., SWC!dllh trpl, .... 1 u 64 4- 8317 U),ll WE8l'O.JJ'F CON DO 2 br, 1 BR cott•ge, mo. c.M. yrd, adultJ "onl,y, r e f , Laguna Belch Vegetable garden area. Rec. be~ V~ cu~. $18.5/mo .. crt>ls, drps, b nu . No pets. k w/octan vtey.'. .,.,,-:(' y. · 2~' ba \v/pool, sauna, Al!IO w1lk to beach, N.S. E-Sidt, .UX>. 548-7098. veh. atorap. Stove A retrlg CAll 615-5085 &ft 5 pm. $l&s.. 557-&:>80 /df1>1. Blt•Jn kltch. * DUPLEX -S34;950 .~ clbhM! In xlnt location-lots $150 A Bllcbelor unit N.B. Any dU ta the BEST DAY to FANTASI'lC new dupl_CX• lnc. $165. mo. Mature adu1t11 Beaut. «I' vu window beach I ~"2-'=BR,='_no_li~.--n-u-tlrpll~-.- '48,lilO. Colll!>1etely rtnovated ot l(>ICl!. $41,500. or lie op-$95 util pd. A&t. Fee. run an ad! Don't dtlay, • oceon. 2 BR. 2\1 BA. $500. only. No pets. &12-1119 olttt !mt, w/d, 2 ba, 3 br. To · N REALTY f!M.ml Qwner/Agtnt el524 tion. &15-417$ or 64&--0246 9'IM430 Closallled Ad. ...... f4S.ii'6!8. 494~ or 644-8194 10 am. June 3L 6'2·5251 or 548-4757. Tl!! ' • • .. • . --- . , r ,26 DAl,LY PILOT M...i.,, Dtctmbtt 17, 1973 , ' Help want .. , Ml p , ,QHelpWanted, MA F 711 Apt. U~furn. 365 Aptt., Bu1lnns Rental 44S ce,,,...t, Concrot. ~~e~IP~W~e~;J;d;~~/A~&Qii~1~i~o~H~o~lp~W~a~n~•to0~, M~l~ f' 7~1!0H~o~l~p~W~1~nhld~.~M~I &~'!_! P71!_!0~,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;::;;;;;;;=: -"-...:...------Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ;;.;;;;,;;:;.:;:;..;;;:;.:.;.;;.:. __ .;,;. , D•n• Polnt ...;...:;;;.:,;;..;:;.:.;..:..;,;,;,;;....o,-' ''Tl-1£ Factory'' has a h's PATfOS. walk!, drives, con-UTE C ..... 11hop avail. $18Sln». 1n c:rete pumplne. Llc. no. AcoounU,. Oertc ~ 0 I MOTOR RO 2 Bl' ••/Ilg pallo, 011• ~11 Cannery VIII••• 425 301h St., 255915 Don 64MS14 Bllllng Ork, Laa NlguCI $IOO Delivery-Sunday n y 493-~10~~,i_ PALTHMEMEXESACITlNAiTS. 1~6:.:~!~Rental 450 <!,~~~tlo, .. ~rt"'~ F~/Crel;r,5n·~:-. Pk ; OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· The Dally Pilot ha; an opening for a driver ... --·· ~--TION to deliver papers to carriers In Laguna .. Fountain Valley •DNUTE-' TO NPf. srn. remove. """ .. t. ~~-Secretary l6lO QUIRES THE USE QF A LARGE StA M d thr gh Fri 1------'"---I Badl, I t-2 BR.-bom mo *~CO.STA MESA-* ContrKlor -l'/C. B<>ol<k0<per $125 WAGON OR VAN. CON'l'ACTMR. BENTON __Beach-South Laguna _on ay • ou . • , XTRA Lee 2 BR, clooe to Adults, No Pots. 680 S.F. 220 power 1115. --------·I Call Jeannle Sbco WILLIAMS 330 WEST BA y STREET COS-day afternoons and Sunday morning, salary I mAJ<>r a!M>p cntr. $140. mo oo Mesa Or. t!OO S.f'. Prlvole omce, GERWICK & SON & Skl Holtman TA MESA.'TELEPHONE 64Z4S2l FOR AP· plus auto allowance. Phone Harry Seeley, j ~171M (5 blks trom Newport Blvd.) plenty of parking. Bldg Omtr. Add lt & Re:mod NEWPORT 642•4321 for appointment. l:lllJl!lftB!_on S..ch 54&-9860 1.>rocr unit.< av.Uabl6. State Uc. Bl·ll4321 Peraonnol Aeenc' POINTMENT. . • UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 2 BR. Blf·IM. Ne\\1ly <l<-1"- orated. Encl garages. 8f":11,1. Wul landacaping. J..rg ploy are, a child's dream. CIOAe to lhOpping & !IChool•. Otlldre.{L welcome. &lJ. S.12-048() I B r -m ~ Sl40 Ready for occupancy. 6tH041 5411-n71l I An equal opportunlty employer _I· ' urn. u ~· · mo. C. ROBERT l'ATTRESS l3 l>ovff Dr., N. • -An Equel Opportunity Employer I.i: 2 Br, unf, water pd, $15.i. REAL TOH. JACK Tautane. r ep& I r , '42-3870 ~;--:-::::---;-7::-:-::::;-:-:--:----:---::-~:;-::;:ll '!!.., ... ..,~~~"!"~~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'""i"'I 675-5800. Co'I" 'I _6571 remod, add, Lie. 8-1 2690721 ""l""""'""'""'""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ' " 1' Ctqt "'1a-M Co 642-4703 10 710 < Laguna_,Boach J.iioiii ... iiiiiiiOiiii ... liiiii l Y Way · · ACCOUNTING CLERK Help Wanted, Ml F 710 HolpWentod, MA F 7 Help Wantod,M AF Help Wanted, M & F 71,0 -''--=-----ROWl:EASING Eloctrlcol l GOMral F -p Id Bl h' flrnl --T STUDIO, !um $140. 2 br. L.ic'd . B42-a73l, 645-0357 re . 8 · uee ip . CLERK 'I'yplsl, -pR-tespon. FACTORY-help needed. No llOUi::EKF.EPF.llo l.Jdo_Wc._ i\tUtTJtTTlt OPR -$3.25 !lt unturn $230. North ('nd of Huntington Beech movu)i to N:B. Gre~t Days, (/tln1e Penonncl ex.per necesaary. Opening 5 da.y5, ll\'e In or oul. lA·r1l To start. Day sh.Ut . Vtfy Laguna Beach 494-1985 eve. NEW M-1 Gardening ~~:: J~udi~. p:u: Dept, Hoa& Hot:P, N.B._ on all 3 shifts, ~ 4~ f'f'fs. 673-9189 lflf'JI<' i-orp. No tralntfl Newport B11ch S.IO Sc1. l"t. ,t. UP EUROPEAN G n r ct e n e r . Fee Jobs. Eqtllll Oppor. COJ\fPANION (or elderly A~P,lcoReevnSan ,!tAumente. tP.fMED. need for sharp <'~-ple:tSl'. Expet. only apply. lfarnllto,, ~ '!r.,1land $1. 1'Iaintenance _ Landsco,p\ng. Employer. Call Sally Hart, lady, very light bou.5ekeep-.... • ~ ~r. cle~a.I tK>lp. 0Mn1I Ht'rw>fltit Ga.lore il rialHs Bachelor Furn $205 960-1970 Tn·e H.C!nloval. V C!ry :-..w-r.o55-coastal Penonnel Ing, S da)'s wk. 49l-9252. F /C BOOKKEEPER .,·ork. TYJllng req'd. Sh too. Xln't conds. "I ..... $14.5 _ 11.i mi. No. ot HS. O<·e;1n Viev.·. Yel\rly lease. I"""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,....,..,..,,.. reasonable. 642-.5.129 eves. Agencf.' 2790 1-larbor Blvd., 642-5063. P/time, ladies clothing store, deslrable. 640-1410. EOIO JOB AGENCY:: z Br., bltns, crpts, drps, ll~ucd Pool. Adults Only. NEW M-1. 3 Phase wiring. 1'tOW & EDGE Ct.1 COOK· TRAINEE Balboa Jaland. 34 hrs dally. INHALATION Tht'raplsls, 315 Jrd SI., Suite 203 1 pool, play ant, carport & LAS BRISAS APTS. 1140 &: 1950 Sq, ft. 782 \\'. a...EAN UPS ACCOUNTS Payable Oerk, Stl,lary accordlng fo exp. Pre· Exper thru T. Bal. Call All shift s. Fftimc. Person· llunllngton Beach 536-1439 lndry facil. Cple & 1 ~1nl 5515 Rlve:r Ave .. l\'B .3:lth St, CM • Saunderson, e 554--0657 e Construction Bxp. 10 key fer no 5ludents. Exper. 675-2870 9 Am·12 noon. ncl Dept. ffn.'lg Hosp. N.B. 1 ~tug_30ok,Pr: pets. 842-4664 Call 64.2-2566 ~2277~12• Ni 1 ea · General Services bcya 1bo1uch hTypendll 50 ::'!,m. pbcre,,r:d,. .. ,,bu21_30wU1&1ra14~30. App1n::,v FOOASSDISSTEARNVTIC 1 E • ~ ~ NO EXPERIENC~, ~ · · 1 BR, pool, block to beach. pa e a ng ""' vy \ · · · NECESSARY 2 BR dup. downstairs. $130. Yearly $150. Single adult. 4001 BIRCH, NB volume call 979-4550 8:30-J{nn1burger Hamlet, 1545 P/time, 2•3 hl'K daily. • mo .. Ocean vu, 119 Hun· .. Call 64&-a>96 3600 Sq. F'f. Sprinklf'rf'(i. Lt. ORANGE COAST 6:30, Mon-l-~rl. for appt. .Adams, CM. Ask for f.1r. $2.577 hr. App_ly to, TRAINEE POSITION tington Ave. at Baltimor'@ I---'=...:.:;;..::=--?\ttg \\'hsle. Stor11gc. B;1uni· SERVICE llagen. Irvine Unified ·NOW OPEN : .l Huntington Ave. Call Bob Rooms 400 £1lrdner, 511-5002. 455 Toi•! •ta1·nt'c·"'",... for ADVERTISING COOl<S • To f1·a1n for assls· School District 1;:,: GB Industries ot So. ciJ&. Meyer office, 644-6550 or St " .__........ tant manager. Graveyard • -•• I · f home, Mfr-3170. ROOMS ..,,0 'wk "" w/klt o rage the Home O\vner CLERK i>hitt -6 days "'k: Co. paid l •l600 SandE ea, nyol n Ave. la~ immedliate odpel rungls or UNFURN 2 BR, 2 BA. bright .... .... • XLN I r I ht bo t I c AR p ENTRY·ELECTRIC· bcnelils. Jack In The Box, a.st rv ne • U'l!.ln<!t'!I 11 s p a y' & .un"y. dra-. hol & rold &$30pewt ~utiopn•. p2376ts. NChewpolldrertn T or ito we g ~-~ THE DAILY PILOT •• 12ro Bake1·, Crn;ta Mesa. Eiual Oppor. n1nrket1ns: dis!~i~utlon & ..-~ """"' & trai_ ·1ers & recreafio,,..._ PAI'.~ JN_ G-PLU!\1BTNG I credlt n1crchunchsl""' 6 new waler tum. Closets galore. BJvd CM. 54&-9755 or vehicles. 1819 !\1onrov1a:, F·;~e Estimates n.eeds \>l!.rm11nc11t. PH_l'I-COOK, E...XPERlENCED mp oyer -locations 10 opc~~in tr\i· 1 child. no pets. $155 per 64!)..3967 ~la l\.1esa 21 Hr. Emergency Ser\'\CC Unlc J)C™>n to ass.isl 111th Top Pay & lnsuram•e FRY COOK n1edlate fulurc. l\.1any J1G!ti.. mo.R531-G515 d bit ROOM for rent. Newport Misc. Rentals 465 Dayl'l 546-5001 ~~~!s cl~tct\I'.:~~. ~\!~ * ~.~~VE DUOdoLPN';'BIN * ~dfalblure,A e~!:'1r. ~ depeSu~f lflYJNE ~Y •,,.io~~ ~1·10Jlf'~ ~~··full tlftie 2 B ' cpts, rps, ns, Island. $65. month. Girl only. Nights 962-3822 Qr 545-76.~ vt-:R1'fSINC <1Eipar1me11L ,>.;),"J..') ta ' ' . a t-. pp.., n pe."'"'n, CCD\N""ES•r4..£f'C\-,,, ... -n ~ fl.._. carports, nr. trwys, shop-.675--3971=="-------LICENSED-BONDED No C'xpcrlence rcquil'efl COO K tor Huntln~ton Hurhor & Sirloin, 5930 \\I. Coast .x.IV"-* XI .... NT TH, , .. rNG p~ ping &: achls. I child OK. G·-st Ho-• 415 INSURED hut typin~ anrJ nutn nl'•c:-. fnn1ily, over holidays. Ap-Hivy, N.B. Aco..'Ountant to $14K \~J~I ~ L FOR No pets. 646-3186 or 545--0760 -..... "TIIINGS" by !\loose. Gen'! essary. ~1inimum 2·1 hour pro:< 4-8 pnl, 213-592-2681. GAL • Only sharp & ex-Teleproeesslng, 360/BAL"2K • i\J,. , .'Al • ~ALK TO BEACH ----'---"---_;,; Carpen-·, Ren. .... irs. Plum-\1•cek 1_1•_lth possibilily of COUNTER LADY perienced need apply that Prof,.rrammer -1• 11 I G 11 -s r Hoo L le ,,..-•• NEW concept in living. Love .. :r ,.... I lJ I can handle responsibility Constr Lonn proc ~ COLLEGE STUDENTS 2 & 3 Br, Cpts, drps, bltns, is the M!N.'el'. se n i 0 r bi ng. EI e c. Remodeling u . time enip oyment Full time, top pay, for exp galore in a fast moving Secret~les ' to $750 * COl\IP1\.\I\' l:IENEFITS gar. 308 16th St. 536-Ba18/ citizens. 642-9278 , ' 642-5613. during summer monlhs person, apply in person, automoUve industJ:;y. It you ~1aril:eting Rep $750 FOR PERSONAL 847-3957. -Hauling or. sooner_. Person selecled Botique Oeanen;, 6 0 4 6 can handJe our books from Supervisor n.elail $700 INTERVIEW CALL• e WALK TO BEACH Vacation Rentals 425 '"'.111 ass~t dept. super-Warner A\-e Huntington $600 • visor \\'Ith some legal Beach ' payrOll, taxes to p & L Girl Friday 536-2591 Brand nu 1, 2. & 3 Br, cpts, TENNIS ANYONE? 1-lAUL. driveways l't'moved, clerical duties. Apply be-statement &: Jots more, call PayroU/EOP to $575 Mond Only • • drps, bltns, gar, 221 16th St. Beautifully furn. pa Im ~~~~~~~~~ grading, skiploader, dump h~n 9 Al\.1 & 5 Pr.1. CREPIT manager trainee. after 6 pm 96tr-'1922 Cash Receipts Clrk to .SJ15 ____ e~y,___~'"'-- 847-3957. Springs rentals. Homes or ; truck, tree trim, n1isc. PERSONNEL for subsldlary of a national GARDENER ASt"'enotng Oerk./Type l~J..i~ NOW HIRING ASSUME Lease at The Hun· Condos \V/6 tennis courts. I If •I 979-88.17. DEPART~f.E>.-'T fo00se1Vice company. Im· N I need lddJe """"' tingtOn Pacific on the sand \Vkly, monthly or annual Ptnonalt LOCAL moving & hauling THE DAILY PILOT nte~ .position for aggressl\'C ewporter nn s m P/time PBX Enjoy in HB, 2 BR. 2 BA, $252 rentals. Gloria \\lenck. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii by student. Large truck. 330 \\' B·iy St Costa :\tesa lnd1.v1dual. ExperJeducatlon ag~.oroldermale forpenn. working wifigures to $2.75 I •-9734 As Ca R l t I Reas. n -.....,, 534-1846 or · ' " ' clcsirabJt, Contact Mr . positK>n. No phone calls hr EXPERIENCED CtJOk • Bartenders • Ca.sh- iers e Kitchen help e Walt· l't'ss • Hostess e Busboys. mo. Cal ~ soc. nyon ca y Personals 530 uo. •• ., AIRBORNE! Olsen, 613-3450. An Equal please, App~y in person, Ask cAu. TRISH HOPKINS 2 BR. 1 BA. Bll·ins, cpts, 11141327-3500· _;::;_:..., ___ _;.cc 673-0647. lieavy adwnture for you Opp ty Employer. for Clay Ellll, Hearl Garden-488 E 17th St. tat Irvine) drps, 1 blk to beach $175 Rentals to Share 430 FULLY LICENSED 1 Sl\JPLOADER & rlump !.ruck Today's Army has er, 110'1 Jamboree Rd., N.B. • CM. THE mo.~. 536-1336. ---------* SPIRITUALIST * \\"Orie. Concrrtc. asphalt, 300 Job Oppoctunltles? DEUVERY Man for early GENERAL OFFICE Sutto 224 '42-1470 Sl(AR'-1a~c luxuno· us 2 Br 0 _ •• , .. ,-, •• , b-ak,-,,_ "'"7110. morning L A Times home VELVET TURTLE 3 BR. 1% ba .. 11pacious apt. ,-,, n ~ ., .. frpl f Spirilu<i,I readings JO a.m.-1 1,,=-=·=c_:::',::::"°"'··=-~"""° For more inforn>at;•,, delivery route. Must have XJn't starting salacy & re------.~.w. . !lESTAURANT O\ild ok. $175 mo. 64&-3."172 1 oa ap • c, new urn, pm. Advire on all mallers 32 FT. FURNITURE Van (7l<I ••• 1163_ -v economical car, 25 vrc or lmburSed lee for sharp in· -.--•--------• ·-Opeo ·-o ,·, Fa.·"loo !•'and 757 Shalimar. util pd, pool. Mill ion dolllU' 312 N. El Camino Real, for local !um hands & gen'I ~ older, 2 ~J hrs a d~Y~ No div. w/avg typing & lite·l-JAN=ITO="~R!A~L--p~/~l~i-m-e-.· I -"' M .~ .. A~· walk t beach view. Must see to believe. San Clemente. for appt call hauling. 548-1862, 557-Z736. Af.ffiITIOUS young man with soliciti""', no collec•i .... , exper. tots of PR & friendly 11,;_,_ E"es. Local. Exper. \\'e're a f.>Teal dinner house '~"'" . .,_,, o , 34315 Dana Strand_ Rd, Apt 490 9136, 4~9034_ , , 11 · · .... .....~ F J ~ Also ..... • lo \\'Ork for & hn\-e m-.u.r I 2 •~ • BR all ..-J.o-\VASHER, dryer, stoves $5. lll g ex per 1 enc e · ..-..... supplementary income. atmosphere. tt Oua • adulls only. $2 . .W hr. ...,.., ' IZ .:> av . No. a .. Dana Point. Green. Also catf'ring· to -.parties. H . $2 R fri Chemical , 01'. . construet,ion ,~~ . c-~ G Jo·-•·st A--y bfnef!ls, lnlervi~iQg flioV-: • 536-2579 Lant IV 01 C""sl h..,,, ""AA ot wtr. htr. . e gi!:r. ba kg d h 1 lul L · -..e1»tm1nstet1, ...... en rove, _._ •. 1>9 • ...--• ~39'l3. Noon to 3 p•f & cooti·a--'"g ' ""' ""#' ~ PROBLEP.1 Pregnancy. Con-free'. 847-6684. Scrap iron. c roun e P · UCJ'R· ~~~.gt-on Beach area . 17400 Brookhurst. F. Vlv. JANITOR 8:30-10:30 Ar--1. Sec dolly 9 AJ\t t~ 5 PM. <1111 1 & 3 Br. 2 blks to beach \~;~ED, Roommate. Work· t I den t ' s Y m P a thetic DELIVERY &: lite moving ~~e f~r~~:it~~l'O\V· ,_,..,.J.. Suite 213 963-6175 Mr. Sainz al llarris & Frank, Phone number 644-5313 536<063 ho in,.. lady, ~. w;·"-to ·"·-Pt.regna& ocdy cotion_ unsellngl · Abor-jobs by student. w/van very Apply ,.-pe-o, p 0 rt DELIVERY-HOUSE\VIVES GENERAL OFFICE, 1YP-3333 S. Bristol Costa P.lesa, The VELVET TURTLE 3 BR, 1~ BA town use, . .., -_.,.,.,. ,.. ..... ,.. ion a op s-re · R ••• """ ,_ P/Ti De ta! • ·b · ' Willi to --~ 986 frplc , shag cpts, drps, pvt. 3 Rm. apt. with same for 'Ii APCARE 642-4436 eas. U'N"W't<J-Theater 29!Xi E Coast Hwy Call~. ,,.,,n t:.N:.ouo. • ing,k endlc, A ng Bal";:,;l-,iori;;calliiiii;(ii2ii!3ii)ii6119-4ii.iiiii' OiiOii FASHION ISLAND • , rent. $50 & i,J light & gas YARD, garage clean-ups Cd,,I_ eo' ncess.,;, Cashiee ' ~ v.-ee e s. pply 11 NEWPORT CENTER 0° patio, pools, 962-1674 BEST f\.1ASSAGE IN N.B. ""' Yacht Club llm Bayside KEYPUNCH '' 2 BR. I,.._ ~ ... d-. pool, per month. Not detu.xe, but 3400 Irvine! Ave. Sllitc l0.1B re~ove trees, dirt, Ivy, ASSEf\.IBLERS G r 0 w 1 n ,.. DENTAL Receptionist, desk Dr, Corona det Mar · WEST · L;R ..... ., • ..., clean. comfortnble and reas-( 1 dri\•eways, slumps, 847-2666 el tro . f" 1 SA h " only . At least 1 yr exper-. -=.:!.0:=:::=.=:.:::=.---I gar, child ok, dog run. onable. 2079 Thurin Ave., at Bristol Open 8 AM. . ec. n1es irm n .. as Some Sats. Fringe benetlts. GEL..COATER NOW HIRING, 8U--0389 or 847-3330 C.M. Avail Jnn ht. /Inn. 557--0539. Houseclea!'1n9 I requirements. for two H.B. Bl'E!a. 846-3540 anytin1e. OPERATOR BALBO ~I b l'l<llderers, min of 6 ffiOl'l Exper. only. Top v.-agMi. \\'aitresses. bus boys, coek Lagun111 BHch NEED female to share with 2 A Bay · u mcm-HOUSE OF CLEAN exp on t?uch·up &:-re-work,. Dk: N T A .f~ .. A_ s s i s_tan t.. Day 11hlft. Trainees, kill'hen help. ?ihat others, 3 BR House furn, be.rship for 1'18.le. ST;iO or fioors carpets, \\'indows & Apply 1n person. CON-O~lhodont1c, will train, v./ MacGregor Yacht Corp ht-18 or ov<'r. Apply In 1 Br .a pt Cl\'51! In, uril SS:J ino 548-3743 alt 6 & offer. S4S--30'.'.6 "'alu;, Free est, G42-6824 I TROLS RES~ARCH CORP m1n _ _:-A~ yr dental exp, 1631 P\a('('ntia, c.r-.1. Min. 1 yr experiera. Pf'f'!.t)fl, C:ianino's llAlian ~ ::0. ~~3'or~~:a .~.:!A~'k-Ln-:~-•-_0_.-F-.,-,,-_ -to--·"---Ap~H0~~7217 A:ny:rii! p , t" & 2100 S. Fai1V1ew, S.A. S42-1 • i.> GIRL Wanted, lS & over, ~e:!!50:i s~~t r:-;taurant, :ti44 So. Bristol, " "' • ' ,.......,., P.O. Box 1223 Costa !llesa. a1n tng I AUTO parts delivery & slock DISH\\'1\SliER, full tinle, Exp·d in Caasette Loading, ~1o~a~~na 1-5 pm start~ FANTAmC new duplex, expense 2 bdrni-2 ha. apt. Paperhanging personnel wanted. Perm days. Weekends off. Call Full time-, 5 5 6-1 7 8 7 To s8•3< 3 u •pBl8ol3c""o·cw ocean, 2 BR, 2~~ BA. $500. $123/mo. 494-3566 eve. * PALM & CARD Rf-.:ADt:r.. I en1ployment. 494-81:84 or &l.2-0593. "-eekdays NURS&5 Aides, I mm ed . 494-5502 or 644-&tch94 Garages for l<ent 4l5 ad v.·/redU<=tion. 10831 Beach P~Of'._ wall~ver.ing state 54(}-4202 OONUT Shop, p/time. Eve Hairstylist wanted for busy Opening&. All shifts. Qll- Newport Bea Blvd, Stanton. 527-3400 he. !'o .. 279514, insur., all I AVON MAIC.ES &: morns. r·emale, age 25-45. salon. Niguel Hair Fashions. Computer valescent 1-tosp, &12-l'698 ... --WEEKS FRE-E~ MINI SWTAO~-~GHOUE SES ~7.1>es., of paper. 714 : Cl lRIST:\tAS TI IE S.E.\SOi\ ~i_>ply in person, Mr. Donut, 496-5728 or 49S-22Zl. :'\UP.SES i\id<'•. nil ~hlfbl. Jiii 1 1'l' """ • l:.!-1,,_$. TO BI:: JOU.Y--l;sa E. 11th St., CM. \\'ill tr:lin. C.Mrl 1\'Rg<'ll &: Vista def Mesa No ro.1ove-in or f\10\'C-OUt I la! PAP .E RHA NG ING. p~ Earn cxlra money for gift• HANDYMAN-Automation Inc ~!1i;.11~~·-Gall 6-1-2-241-0 . ADULT GARDE:\' 110\IF.S charges. f"1'01n Si.:iQ per Lost Md ro&n1 less1onal free est ..• Lo cost. as an AVOi\ Rc prcscn1a.ti\IC DRAFTSMAN/ Reliable oouple. For apl11. I ' .""'.rov'l'I • ffiVINE Avr.:. ;\'f :\!ES .. \ n1onth. ~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJm;: Do btfore Christ mas . in your SfllH'e tizne. C.lll: 1 day per week. Live tn. 11651 Von Karmen :\tove in i\·/depo~i is only liantilton & N,•\vlanrl St., i!B • 008-5129 aft s pm . • . :>40-7041. 171 E. 22nd St., C.M. I i ORDER DEPT CLERk :? Bcdroon1 ALLSPACE Found (frff ads) 550 EDDIE Pisz O e co rating BABY Sitler, for 8 yr old DESIGNER HELIARC WELDER to $8 hr rv ne :\fanufacturer of the flXl'llinJ!' $:?20 960-1970 S1'1ALL. \Vhitc lono-h.ii.ired Service. Rensonable rates. girl, live in, fl>ee rm & DoesM -noknot ha ve toklnbe "1"11111\cd. Equal Oppor. Employer Poly-Op!lcals & hobby kits Day & r\ight S...~'Uril.v, Pool, Off1'ce Rental cat. approx 4 nto."~ld. Blk Neat work. 492-3630. brd in El Toro, Age b<'twn u,st w taplc gP.I e '""1 has nn immed. opening ror Fountains. RN:·. Bld."'. 1\ I ;_c..;,o,.;_;.:c;,;;;,:, ___ 440;,;_; PAINTING. Paperl.n .. ..in,.., 21 .& 35. prrf teac1..>r or Electronics firm need 11 00 Y. need ap Y· enty 0 fl sharp aggressive ~i>man 'pot on top of head. Marina ....... 'f:i' 0 '~ ---,-e Oef•'ru'tely no · I e:i:-Prcise nn, bill iards. col· Master Craftsman. Int-Ext. prof. much free time. Phone qualified indiv. for PC ""'"''' m · KEYPUNCH in our Mes order dept.I or TV. Ea. Apt. has tlish· • High School, H.B. 892-J7J6 Local reL Free est. 979-5294 for details, 837-5647 aft 5. Board la,yout for complex layoffs. Be prepared to start Accur. typing~ a pleasanq 1vasher, refl'ig, shag cpl & ~~l~;,~.iOl~i.n. RAd!~ c;v:.r. EXTER $220 & . up Rooms BABYSmER Mature 3 1,1 digital l.'ire~ts. Some el~C· ~~6 ros AGEr\CY fin OPR. pl,,'°"(' per'N>nal1ty " mll'!t. I pn patio 01· deck. 545-4SS.. '" $18 N t work · Airl 1 . 1 ' ' rro-n1echan1cal packaging ~ 1 029 & you're n self start~. ORT , C.M. now at O.C. AnimaJ · Caea ..;.,..._1_.,.,,,ess yr_ od gir, Your home or Qf instrunicnts. Expanding 315 3rd St., Suite 203 059· yr exper, on ~ lll'OPlf' or:lentM individual • PARK NEWP Shelter in Qrl'lnge. spray. II Roy, ,_,... 'fV'· mine, eves, wkend.s, some t'Onu1wrcially 0 r i en t ed Huntington Beal'h ~1139 · Day shlfl. "'ho l'l'ln hRndlf' a varlet)'( APARTMENTS .. ' YNG. Siamese cat, lite 01.Uy p,\INTTNG & Papering, 21 ~3o2 Balboo I s land • 1nan1tf. Iirm. HOUSEBOY, ex(XT. Refs. Do For Appointment flf offit.<c duti~ including Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedroon1s · · • color, fem. nea coller vie. years in Harbor area. Refs Call For A...... evttything. Thurs. &: Sun Contact Carol Smfttt h ca v Y phone contact and Townhouses • · • Del ritar ,\vc., CM 546-1182 rurnished. 642-2356. BABYSITTER 1vanted, 1 nw•· off. Occas. nite work. "'/t·us1un1rr-; & reps Wt' ' ~9 • O 9 • D ·1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: I ;c'ifi;:'"jf,;i;;;;;~;;;;,~;;;,;~ h'ld ' O p · 1 Are 4 Industrial Relations 1 I "·1., ~~ t .50 pt•n .., a1 y PROF Pape• Han<ring, 00 c 1 an.'\ 01n a. Sc"-"""'le quarters. Hr !'I . AVCO 1111r1 to t,1 k to yau. T . Fi"\D: Rl'cldis h 1n11lc puppy, • .. .,. d k 6 2 •--I l'O S1>a Pooli> £>nni;: PRIME office space on C0.'11'11 niix<'rl btT'i~<L Vic. lk'af'h jobs too small or too large. a.vs 1w • "~~0;?2 berunl ·• (714) 494-9401 ~1011. 1hn1. \Ve<l., 7 A:\1-1 !.\"-OPTICS. INC. Ac1'f>!IS from r·a.~hiQn lslanil !Jigh\i·a:,." Cd:\L r ronl ,10 & Nc\vmlln. ll.B. ~47-00~ ~264. ' own rans . .iou-OO""t ore PM. & 3 PM·7 PM. Fri. l.Slj 1-:. Canl<'gle Ave. at Jambor<'e on San JCl<':qu1n CC'nls/Sq. ft. Lshld in1pr. PATNTER, highly qualified, 4.pm. --TELONIC & ~t 9 Af.1-2 P~t & 4 Financial Service I Snn!a A1111 1-lill!i Hoad. lo suit tenant. Fro1n 200 FOUND: llcig<' & \\'hite efficient, \\'Quid like your I BABYSJTTER nC'Cded my PM-o PM. $350 mo. starting 644-SIOO l r:'lual Of>!Ylr. EmpJoyf'r' (714) 644-1900 sq. n. to 7000 sq. ft. r-.lalc dog~~7rized. busines.~. Reas k?-3158 home. old<'r v.-om~n ~refC'r· INDUSTRIES ~J!an~-~2~nd'E-~~~-'fj!i;' ~~'."\ • ..;F.qual;::::~Oppo:;;"~'~'m;:pl-Oyc;~r !! \ PAYROLL CLERK GRUBB & ELLIS CO. INT/EXT PAINTING red. H.B. area. 963--!S< H o us EK E EPER-liv..ln; *LA PARISIENNE* 675-7080 r OUND. l·h.ild's i,:lasscs. on """""'E JI 675 3··9 BARMAID. top f'B.!acy. Open Laguna Beach routine cll!anlng &: lndry. LADIES RAVE ~·,ee Reimbursed. Dynamic 2 BH .. rurn & Unfurn. 1\!1 1.,.,.....,...,,.....,..,.,..,...,. Bay nr. Ne\vport C.~1. "•L~ st · in :r. a:> day, nites & wknd shills. assist wfcooklng, must T L ranchis ing firm see k 1 elect. Fircplncc. h1rl p.xiL1' EXEC. OFFICE -''-'-~-_17'-'6-'--------PAINTING, INT/EXT Call betwn 11 nm .t 6 pm, F,qual Oppor. Employer drive, Prlv bdrm, bath, col· OVER 18 capable indiv. lo handle i\dults. S195. & L'.p. 9i~l2ti.S I-"ND sinl white-cock-a-fXlO p 1 -•·•• •887 Mon-Fri ~ or TV Refs req'd call If payroll duties. ?\lust ha.ye At"ross [roni go\f ("Oursc OCE;}N Vil'w Ofc in Union N H h apcr1ang1ng. :-"tu-• • • DYNAMIC N 11 tfi 644-5123 · · you're lookhlg for nn f'X· com p uter reado u t 20432 Santa Ana A1·c. B.-1nk bldg, NC'.'·porr Cenier ~~~~1~'.h St., pt g Is. Plaster, Patch, Repair BOA_T CARPENT~ERS needs personabi.'?'trontod~ citing job see Mr. Mcl...ane, knowledge. F"ree med & \v/ri'ccp\, ph. SC'CY .s<•r\-. _ Exper1e,ne!ed only 55G-S920 girl. 640-l335. llOUSEKEEPl!."R, Mon-Frt, Shttaton Sch. Inn, 2112 dental Ins. Start $550 ~ 1 MO~"TH FREE RENT Avl nfan. !lh'. :\.tcFnrlil nd. FOUND S.-1n1oyed dog VicCainil·I * PATCH PLASTERING * ''BOOKETARY'' EXPERIENCED ··-mble-,r:mhands., 12cahrppeds. ~~lie~~ Pacific Co1.M H\vy., H.n . Fee Jobs. C11.IJ .lleltn 2 1 fi4.J.-.,..40. !y of .C.Osla Mesa. All types. Free estimates __. '" .. Suite 122. \Ve have openillgl'! ro.tason 5-I0-6ro5 Couts! Quality 2 hr, 'S l>a, frp . 1 -1~.,~R~S~T-------:MS-6f48. Call 1:.An ,,....., Local ro. v.·llling to train 'vanted, sail -boat exper. Balboa Coves l\1rs. Bailey for 8 ladiea free to tra\•el f Pc-.• ,·..,1· Ag•nc'y 2 7 9 0 tto Pl sh ls drps mr.. rent free, Dix. ~ b · I · d' I · "0 213 498-2210 ·-" boetd 2 ~ar ~'!.'Adults: of(ices nr. airport. 1.2 & lost 555 &n~ 1" 1~· '1.'ua1 1rf'1ng 1go,;) Babcock, Costa Mesa. : · U.S. & rein. High eamlng11, Harbor Blvd .. c.~t.' &44-6405 3 Rni. spaces from $135 !\lo. Plumbing ·" . ma_! ap tu e. re~t "\l.'hite Elepuants" · OYCl'-H 0 USE KEEPER & trans. paid. P are n I s ~P ---C'-'='---1 J anitorial scr,· .• ~ aniplc LOST our lovah!e fen1ale St st arti~ sa.lary. _Co. paid running ;'Our house? Turn childcare. Live In, 5 1J l\'elcom~ at lnteT'Vlew. l"Oo l . ay~o.11 Clerk $650 CHANNEL REEF. 2 BR 2 parking. S.13-32'23 Bcf. noon Bernard Vic:: Hunt Harbor L.R. OTTS PLlJr-.IBI:\'G bcne~its. 1-antastic oppor. Uiern into "Cash" , •• sell days. Some English nee. house to hou~ salCf:. )-('(> I aid F!b.,1rr your way BA Bayfront Conrto, slip, or ll.13--2i40 AfL noon !\lisi'ing since 12/6, 9yr ol d R<'inoclels & Repairs. \\'a t<'r for nghl prrron. them thru a Daily Pllol I Priv. rrn & TV. Call ~1rs. LA\\' ENFOBCEl\tFNT to lhC' !Oft. Gr('flt gro1vth pool, furn &\'ail. New in· PROFESSIONAL. Small of-II ear t broken' P..cv•ard. :;~l~1t~:;h~i.s:~~u~~~c~ ~ason Best Ag!n~y classified ad! Long, <notl 67:\.-911•1, N.B. No exper. rcq'cl. ,\·ut\rnir1. f·l'1~!1nne~'. 111 111h·1111('C. /\J~,.. terlor $450 lse. Owner lice builrting. Nor th Cmta ~l6-llO?. BIA. Complete Plun1hing 1·1400 Brookhurst, t · \ily. -Help Wanted M & F 710 Help Wanted M &. F 710 Ag€'s 1~-34. $32,", ni 0 · C Pos;itin~s. Call Control 675-8074/673-200i. R'"l'ARD lo· ,,,, -•urn 14 o. -L' -· S1ute 21 3 963-677J I . , Slar1ing AAIRI"" + '''"''Y l\l'C4'r '" n1 p I 0 y Jn e..n I !lfesa. Best value! Xlnt for c..• • '" =rvice. 1c. ~r.ro••·· . ·. • 1\grrl<'y ::1ro Jr,·tne Rl<"d WESTCLIFT 2 Br, 112 ba. n1 ed i ca I• ac c o un I in £"' carnl gold earring. Lost --'--OP~L'°UMBO--, ="1N'°''"G""R°"F":P"A"l"R-BUSBOY bcnehti;. i'\1J11· u~l ~T'\'1c11;r12. I l\'.R. 1i.~~i0; " Twnhse, Adults only, no architect or insurance, etc. Dec. 12th. Vic Feclro, No job loo small Appl y a n 6 P'.\l. EXECUTIVES IAllA8ERS A~my Opr-o1111n11tes,. (11·11 ~;°".,--;,;·===--I pets. 1728 Bedford Ln. Call 545-8421 Bkr. Ra lrihs or Fashion IS. 675-Cyrarll) Rcs111uranl -&1r116.l 1 RX OPF.MTOR $250/mo. 548-T:>33. 8160 673-1200 ** G42-~l2S ** 600 D Nc\vport Centt-r Dri\'C , Tf'lt-phoiw n11~. Sl!rv. Fashk'ln. ~~:1e~.UP~~/~o~R,6a~\~ ~~~~~,Le~~uf~ c~!~~r.I~~;~~ 1;;~'.·'~f'c·~_. ~~;·laf~~-ta ~~ Sewing/Alter.ltipns (~=-~~~ ~~~~l ''JOB OPPORTUNITIES'' MACHINISTS ~~111111:llii11~'BOrie;~IX'{Op o~ ~ \7lcjo 1\u!o Plaza. Good EA'PERTJSE • A11£>r. Ladies . . -Fnr Wl)lving vnlvc mrit. & hc>nr-fitl'l. Call 10-4 ?.Ion-=; Sat & L un • Fnry oUramp at Avery :.Oli!'Sion Viejo. ans Susie, & ~lens. Pi<'k up & dcli\·cry. Classified Ad Taker to $500 Pennanent <1-40 "'C(>k. ~'ri onJ~·· 644-7069 ' Parkway. Call Owner, Paul 11·earinr; flea c."Ollrtr. Josi Dec S48-7Ul7 after 6 R.1lses. Jmmed. hire to $12M $75M RallCJe PBX · · 1 BR, 2 frplc, drps, c.rpl. Brazenu '131-1'100 12. 830-5.~28 T I R • anyone v.·/nt least 1 yr t'X· • TURRET LATHE ~e· . Tcl"1~hone al\5\\-eripg Adults 1 S225 HE\VARD. male 10 wk Sablf' e evision epa1r pei'. Xln'l conds. No f· f'\'l('('. ull Or part time. _Q.ll alt ~30~-~. s.i~: DmoE~'K1v'w"ceo•vdailafuble.luS.~ Coll ie nr Harbor & Vic 0 TV R rt pressure job. PIC!asa11t sur· .. y U ,uu, INlff·M!GOyTIAISLI ,_. .. Ch BAR WORK ~~~~r rrcfclrod but riot . pr VJ e rn1 '" · -COi. R epalr, expe , roundirtg!I. · ,..rt ou "•'"P oy• ow-... r• ou ••••ng,... 1n91 llit & 2nd Shifts "~~·~ss:iry. n Stlnta. Aria 8lJ( lo beach, 2 br, lba, at $5 mo. Answering service loria. C.M. call Tom Evan.'I reasonable, most in home. Jo.:Cl-IO JOB AGE:--:CY -Worri1d About Your A9 t-Tir1d of lroktn Promi1t1-11rea. ~0-1962. f2l;O yearly. Util inf'lurled. available. 17875 Beach Blvd. al 548-2i18 or 64&-1411 1\nlenna ser\'\ce also. Bert .,1 S S -~-3 Undtc1d1d A1 To A Pro per Cour11 of Action-AQUA DIAL p Olli 673-0731 Ii t' gt Be I 642-4321 .~ 5 3rd ' t., uite "'"' E"rn.oLEUM ~ " · un Jn on ae 1• . Slj RE\VARD for f'"e,Jll f(fi'';':::''::.'"::;O:_:r'::." .::96:::·':.:·'.:.:'78:::3::.----1 ~il,,~0~1~;o~gt~o~n:.Be~ac~h ... .:.~";,;1G-~l~439 AllE YOU UNDER PAl07 Apply 1741 Plac~ntla, CM STOR..\GF: SPECIALIST ' -Bedroom bllo• D\V neo r PRii\'IE ol"cc •rnc•, a\'nil nt Brissc1 Hound, lo~t 12·1 1, 73 1 T'I No e• 'I • · · • u · • ,.1111 :l."il '"•'"IR'·.i ,,,.,,._, 1ru,n 1 e , If You Ca11 Anwer Tiie follewl119 Cott1qorl•1t 111 The M T • .. per. req 1. \Vlll train. lloag Itosp. AcluH s, $2'20 per Fushion !~hind Nc1\·port • -u ,.., " -<NOO L<IV CLERICAL Afflrflurtl.,., W•'d Uke An lwtervlew Witt. y01 an.ager rainee Ages 17·34. SJ26 m 0 , mo. 642--4387. Bl'tH·h, S61 SQF, 10 2,3.10 \\'Alson C.;\1. I CERA:\llC TIL1': NE\\' & Salary position. Apply Sta11.l_ng 5.lllary + meliy BAYFRONT 2 Br. 2 Ba wf SQF. rum or unfum. Reply LOST Blk cul poodle, fe111t1le I rcnlOOcl. 1',1w. f's!. Sm jobs -IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL In penion, 2-5 Tues-Fri. benefits. Nov.· inl~rvitwli\i. •-patio, prlv beach&. pier. PO Bttx 126-J. C.:\1. 926~. CM, nr Corrionder .~ ans 11·f'lcon1f'. 5$-2126. -WE CAN HELP YOU Carl's Jr. Army Opportunities _,.,..,~) $550/mo. 919-0031, fM-4510 Office \\•/beaut vie\v, 565 Sq. !o U<'. <HlrV'".d Top Soil 0004; " •• Bl ••• ·~ I NEYER A FEE -Warner., .• _ 645-IJSJ. ' ,.,,~ .. Ne-. rt HeJghTs ft. !\c1vpot1 Center. $421 nlo. :J Nl'o. b!Ack pooclll", ii·hitc ~ A. Do vou h•"• t lron9 .. oc1 tion~I d,;.,, 7 Huntington Beach PR~ _ Exp'd, 6 d~ -,...-l 'tof('!':;iona!Jy <]<.>('Orated. spot on chesl, unclipped no I * QUALM''' * I . Oo you h""' 9ood n•tiY• inttfllg1nc• 7 MARRIED pel'!IOn over 21 Wtt:k. Salary 0 p o h . Estate Rca11y, GU).1120. li ""iijlljj"i;i58&-i;i90jjljj7iiiiiiiiiiil * ~lt.:LC!-1 & ·roP SOlL * Order Desk C Do you f1 1l 1uffi1;ientlv ll'lolit•t•d to •chi1•1? Car & phone riel""eS!. $1 25 Valetone Cleaners, App'"'ln * PLEAS/\1'.'T 2 B1'. gar. Adult~. oo pcls. 548492'l or &i:l-~t I. Sen Clemente pt"J(l!, $180. I • 0. Do vOu h1Yt th• 1billty to "''~' dec itions ...... t 1·~ ro<-~ pe--W '" Ofe ~uite, JOO) rt. Suitnhle Typist 1 "'"· o I ....... ~ ........ , 0000 arner Aw. for doctor. 1-1 u n ting ton I r-------~'----~--~---P /time Teller ;: ~/~:~"':;,:d~:; .. ~~! .. ~d':h~i;*~:1~"'::: :~~~~;;1: would MASSAGE TECH. 1''"V ' ' .Gardens, 84&-l32.l I ~ I 1' ~!!!'!~~~ 1 Sales • you •cc1pl it, without d1l"v? TRAINEE PltODUCTION TRNEF.S NJ·;AR Ba.\. 1160 .i;q ft . Servfcltlftll = [jJJ Young Indy (18-281 v.•on!NI j~} NC'Cded at once. Be the 1 BEDROOJ\1 rir &:>a.ch: C.nrpcl. ~ B.'\Ths. Sto rage. I ] i I ) Dartnell P e r s onnel YOU SHOULD KNOW for leg!Umntt! iull tlnlc posl-fir~ to get hired ••. Alto, Ideal for Bachelor or l"<JU· -'"'°'"''-kl"ng,,_,S::c275::':..· _::49:.:7-e-1::21::5'-,_ i ~111•.t . f Service Agency e Th• b•t!1r job1 "'' not .J"-.erti,,d !Ion. No ~-"l'l· nee-. \Ve send lnsl>C('tor Trninces. MUt pie. Garagt!, lndr)' &-bl!n~. \rf!.l. shri n: n1y flfrlce. 2052 Babysitting 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;~~~I • Th:rd p~rty prof•••jon•I influ1nc1 ;, toll'l•tttn11 11•c••· to schoOI, eam wfule learn. ~~~!. good'.30 11:!.ealgNhl ~ SlfrO. 245 \V. l\.1a.rquila. ~{'\\'port Blvd, Suite 9 $60 1 500 Newport Center Dr, ••rv Apply in pcnon tlllY aft. or . ., -v0 • 0 exper, 4~10-,~1 .•• :,,, ~0 1 , 1 S:\llTl!'S Sch .• t\l't'tl. Your Job Wan~, f-emale 702 Newport Booch •••9470 e G•tli119 th• right door• op•n, 11 th1 right l•v•I t•· evo 2930 W Cs! Hwv ~'-No l910U1. I •~ 111 v. v-fV""' II.Ill. )n y, hotnc or m1ne $1 hr. 1.i '9'1 -q1.1ir•t techniqu•. • · ' .. ~., ECHO JOU AGENCY Westminster Business Rental 445 days, S days a wk. 536-3227. NEED tielp at home'! \\I~ I ii!! -e Eiei;uti .. 1 potition1 .,. fill•d thro119h 0111cuti•• lntor· ~ Beach. 3.l5 :ml St., Suite 203 I"''°"'"°";;.;;,;,;.;;"-----I h aid c I• ,,.,.,_ _ Medical Assistant/ Hunl1ng1on °··-h •v 1"' OFf'ICE cor~t Service ave '" nu" • • CLERK TYPIST ~~ -~ 2 br, 2 bA apt. crpt1, drp11. on Newport Blvd. ,..-h 0 us ck.prg, comp..'\nkln.,. e M.,11 rtiurn• m11i lin9. 11 not • tol•I •n1w1r, tilurH. ! PUBLrc WORK~! ~ llkt new, $160. per mo. A\•ail. on lease PaMially Jlomemakt.rl Up.John · lor bmy Jntemlst's off.lee In f1'87.f907. FtJ\n~~!,, Hot & cold WAier furn. furn, curpeied, alrfcond. J 0 Tr l'f' S Car P l!·t & 547-668J. -Good clerical skiff,; SEND R£SUME OR CALL TODAY Ne'h-port-eet\tl!r. Back olflce Jan. t, 1974. City ol ... [:' 642-5617. ;>n.rking. Approx. 1000 IQ. Upholstery DM Shampoo .;;_;_;__;_=-------Accurate typing -FOR-tx__.ence necessary. OW· Juan ea .. 1---., "'2 ,,..0 II. S250/mo. War•h°""' •I"" !rec Sco!ChgRrd <SOii .0 t · nonalll.Y ST EXECUTIVE INTERVIEW I:.;:::,. 1 1 be ~. ,.... ... m • • Apts., RV Ril. Ideol for controclor. Retardants). Oegreasen & TIME FOR u l:Ollll pe NO CO e.,. .... poalUon ,., x nt ne-rM~ Adelanto, Sarr Jh Fum. or UnflJn'I, 370 548-2b16. all color brtghtenrn &: 10 Apply In Tiit C fits. Call 644·1501· Capiitrano, C:.. 4!ll-1Jni minute bleach for while (j)UICK CASH PeJ'!IOMel Oepartmenl EXECUTIVE SERYIQI:'• Ill ' MEDICAL Technologbl REAL EST•: ' Cott• Met• Va.cant ~ore• for leAse •on cAl'p('ts. Save you r money H A fl.1on thru \\'ed 9am-Uam .U, lk.-emcd exp'd, P~Is. pa.rt S"LESME"'' l' Balboa Ptolnsuh $60 per ~ ... "n• mo c·t~ irip' THROUG only _ HOME OFFICE -llm• "' ~u •• :m " hod.., * ~·•A VICl'D~" * mo. Apply Kelly's S1eak v,. "" "' " ... · ,,..._..,., 'W'hy not \li'Oric tn the ~ "'" 11 Will olean llvl~ rm .. dining DAILY PILOT (7141 547·9'25 "IUSICAL I I. 2 A ! BR tum & uni ouoe, 209 Pnlm, Balboe. • II I • PACIFIC MUTU•L t .: •-· " group P '" area -Hunlinirton tr\' ~~. dra D/W TV S'IS-5714. rm" ~ ha ~ Any rm. CLASSIFIED AD " Ill N. Main St. ..nta ...,. Cocktall Waltre.,, _,,, Founlain Votr.1('. ' 1 • .' _.II"".... ~. • S7.:io, couch $10. Ch&.lr i r.. 700 Newport Center Dr. ends plus pt ttmc Cboltt tnun · -.. ant. Pool, ~c. 525 Victoria OORONA DEL i\fAR 15 )'I'!. exp.' ls whal counts ' Newport ~ach, Calli. 1$lcUAITY IANK IUt LDINW SUITE 7021 ' • you. Cnl Phil ~ SI. at -CM. w--a91ll Patio Shop 155 sq. tt not method. I do work 642°5678 Equal "'-· Employer w .. ,, SID W. J9th St. wr.(.!IE, ~~ ~~ 2 WEEKS FREE RENT l90. 4!17-1215 mY""ll· Good ref. 531--0101. ________ :..,...,;,.,;;;;;;,....,...,,;.,,..,, l!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!ml!ll!l•l!!!•l!!!•m!!!!!l!!I!!!!!! • • • I :.iii ·- • : ' " ll " • -l ~ " • N r ,E n '-1 • J ' c f G '• " •' . ' ' '" ' . ~- ,, • .. -'"' " .. : r.! ' '· :· ;, , .. . ' • ' • " ' :iu r' I·~ "\lf "--,, Help WantOd, M & F 11 0 ' _. __ ...;. ___ ..;.: REAL ESTATE SALES ll )'OU ~ lnternted ln tnie profesaionllllsm 6 poaeu · ~ I:ntt;rity A: enthuslatm, )'04.I t "'"" 'l)IA!i(y l\>r ... oi>rninl: • tn our n-1ldtntlal dlvilkm. J ola a 28 )'Mr old oonipacy, tuUy o~'l'M!d a optrattd by Us fou~r. "'hose llfe ls dedicated to rt_-.l estate It -r prOft"$SlOnal u1lltunce to ;-~ staU. A fine oUlc.-e in 'l l ' choice loca11on anwnc ! Newport'• prbne proJ>trlirs. • ..J:ntervlew by a.ppoln1ment ;. only. : Wesley N. Toylor Co, • Iii' 'REAL'rons 2111 San Joaquin llills Rd. Newpon Cf.nttt 64M9l6 REAL ESTATE SALES • • $49 . -LICENSING SCHOOL X!O s. Su.wt Santa Ana. Calif. 9270~ t\D equal oppor. employer ,.,, RECEPTIONIS~ reat co. sfflclng bubbly ln- d1v . .,.,./flair for peopfe 4' ·~ Trade your A\'I "'typing & lite expt'r. for fantastic starting salary & to. bf>~fits. Fee Paid/Fee Jobs Al<',O. Jason Best Agency 17AOO Brookhursl , 1'". \1Jy. SUlte 213 96.1-6775 RECEPTIONIST- SECRETARY Girl with an around om~ exiierience. MU!it be neat 6: accurate.-Requlre5 heavy .. typing & filir.1 experience. "·Uust have good tel~ne ' "" . 11kills. . , f;mpire Management ~ Corp. 83~711 N.B. RECEPT /SEC'Y Up to $650. ree Paid. \\'alk ,. )to work in N.B. Sharp " person w/good wo r k record. Sh & lyping. Abo 'F ee Positions . Call Control Career Employment 1\gen- ~. 3-IOO Irvine Blvd., N.B. " ' ' ' ' . ' •• SALES ro s1000 NEYER A FEE Shoot Metal W0<ken Immediate Hire Alum. Holl.re Welder Prefer Certified $5 hr. Shear Operator $5 hr Helper $3 hr Nite w~ Metil Spray Paint•r S"ing Shift $1 hr . AND ?ttAN'Y li.IANY MORE ECl-10 JOB AGENCY 315 3rd St .. Suite 203 Huntington Beach 536-1439 • • A BRAND NEW 25" COLOR CONSOLE TY AND A BRAND NEW 14" COLOR PORTABLE TY Sl0.00 WK. e One for the family • Orw. tor the bedroom e Free ln·home m&lnt. e FY<e • •II paru .l labor • All opUOna available e Approved cttdit RENTACOLOR 110 N. Croscont Woy, Anaheim, C•llf. ~~L 991-1550 Ollar E•plru Doc. 2t, 1973 Member of Anaheim Ch•mbor of Commerce '70 SUZUKI 90, Git Kit, Akron, loaded w/extru. good rond $JOO. "5-5142 197:1 'n'iumpb Bonneville, 650cc, 4,CKX> mi'1, $1,000. Att5.i-wkndl. 84:H816 1912 ~IINI Cycle 65 CC. Streel legal, Xlnl cond. S95. 847-7017 ' BIKE BUILT FOR 2 • 1100 Al.SO 5-SPEED $35 * 6#1445 * ·73 • :flO a: Bultaco. Punang Al.SO '7'l -l:lS cc. Bultaco punang 96.~272i ·n YAMAHA 1%i MX, t'f'Cl'Y, extra, just re-borl'd, >.:lilt rond. $385. 675-4252. HOOAKA 'Tl Super Ra~ W.. 1-nu, $373. John 551.-a11 5 I 3 SPD mens Schwim Bl- rycle.Uke new. $40 Aeytlme I 615-0006. \ 1 ·73 TRIU~lPH ?'ridenl, CIOO ?-tll~s. Xlnt oond. Clan It 1-·u1 nsoo. m-nt Ul $PO, Blk•. Xlnt cood.. rn. Oil! Mike 60-GI • • ' •, -' Je8 DAILY PILOT Oyc ••, 1 u~ Scooters Monday, Dr<:t'mbfr 17, 197·3 1~V.:.•":::'::;:-;:::::-;.:;:-'9.:.63; I ;.;A.::;ut.;;••::.• ;I m'::;po;rt;;;;;-..;9;.;7 : i ...:~.!.P!:E~U~G~E~O~T__ utos, I mportod 9 9251 --'-..:.;.;.c..;.;: _ _;.: -YOLKS •• EN Autos. UNd 990 FORD ------DODGE '72 DATSUN ~PEUGEOT TOYOTA "13 supers"". w1.U-1. CADILLAC * BICYCLES * 31 TON ·VAN FM/1tereo & tape deck. . -..... $10. ~OLDS ANY BIKE 14 WILL BUY YOUR EALER i;m II 1\0.P . ol ~. mo. "12 Cadlllae COV w/!Ull tank '65, 4 DOOR, lullyequlpt, Im· '''" F<?RD station wgn, Life Guerentoo On: R & If. P/S, auto .. '""'" DATSUN, TOYOTA O>mplct< Sal;._an<I Service. '74 TOYOTAS Owe $2ltl0. 67H1$ bet 9am ol ga~ 1*1<• ov.r . i.a.. m.e1 ...., ho ,..n, 74,000 power, air, xlnt cone!, $815. Nl11htki 10 •P from .... $99.95 mags, glt111t rubber. (52·t95K) ..OR VOLKSWAGEN 50 compacit~On1ti$play. -l.EASE or BUY ar alt6pm. Ask fol' Gftl. . .,pyinenll of1 $116, mo.· No ml. ~hlne1 workl. bit Call 586-<MT5 or 586-7737 Suntour<:q ~,1b···· .. $8995 $3295 Ptl~ ~~ ~J'..~: ~ PACIFIC hfGJOR New Model•.; New Colon ;!.;1W ... "= 21~• ~~~k ~'..T..r~i: =·=~ Immae local JUP New Itall;>., 10 sp •.•. $59.95 KEN T ALLEN, 540-0442. IMPORTS $2900/bst aft '9&--'1963 ' d~~ top. Hu he~".>'....-duty ·.car. «II equipm~nt~ ?.tu.st '42 MB wtllls, metal top, I 1 I ' I ' I • I I V<cd Bikes ...... All \ypes ·n DATSUN Pl •-· Del PEUGEOT/SUBAR U . J}ua l VOL-YO ~~. -,,. o•k••• .... u~ Mlle otter. 557.9349. ~~tires & rims. Xln't.cond. Beach Bic)'cies.,,!QO E. Balboa . c ... wp ~e. • ~ ~ eve~A' wkenda, 0Rvm£.-Call 968-(MMW. ______ ,B!Vil::-Balboa -6?!>'/282 -~.._.l m,081.i .. G.-BJ)36 ~~·o''"· IM>l7 w. Llneoln AV.., .__.-emu -67$.2190 ~· . -~""'-'-""M""A'=v=E=R"1"c"K::---'l-!1' '73 CHEV VAN ava1. ~--~ o• Anahe m 533-8220 . JOfOJA '74 VOLVO'S 'IO~CAD CdV Full pwr., I CYCLE WORKS L TO BUBBLE TOP 495-t!W9 Dir. 0 t U W/eo... '66 ())rvette. Auto, am 327, Bicydes Sales & Se"<ce V;~, iuilie1rrd-0f value IQBZ· FERR' ARI SAAB HERE NOW bi> ·· l!: ':Ok ,..J;: Both tops. xlnt. .cone!. l!B9!1. '1\l MAVER1€K, auto. I ·•· ' '' * RALEIGH t..W), 1966 lla.rtibt:. C.M. 646-9303 fmmediate Delivery .42,375. Call now,:-lt's a beau-}'In aVall. '66-72ltl radlo/htr, ntw paint, 55,000 I * PEUGEOT $3989 * SAAB 'w-TOYOTA Landcruls,., 4 On All MOO.ls ( "'· 833-9293 Atter. 6 PM, DODGE mile~ 11395, nrm. 962-3113 I * STEYR GUSTAFSON ·55 FERRARI · 330 G.T. wh!. dnve, H,T. & Xtnt. BUY LE 833-0096. -~o MAVE!UCK7 6 cy!, stan· I Chrilitm11s Lay·A·\Vays Llnt-oln·Meteury '72 1'~ord 351 cu in, Ford Best deal ahvays. Complete TAKE TRADE (ZNL 937) Or , . l9n DODGE ~stwood ita· dard shift, A·l cond. Nu I 1822 NeYipol1 BJvd., Costa 16800 Beach at \Varner 4 spd ttans. hurst shift, selection now. Bizy or lease 831-2(}.K)..ar 495-4949· Dlr. • CHEVROLET Uon .wagan. PQ.\WJ'.. !llfftlng tires, braket, $1425. 612-1893 , ~'IHA. 548-578.1or675-1700. S42881}411ntin*gton-12Beat'>'592h i::AA ~i~nfUC:ire~·f1M,ooora:, (NmJ lm P•rkln1on'1 1961"-TOYOTA Corona.'~uto, ~ , --&: broker, aircond. A?if/F?.I -&.IERCURY i ~~ i:;~::i~if0:n~~~':o1! :.ll~me or 1he Vll<ing':...,... $4,000. 673-5860 ' g°Zt2.fgg~· :ii7~ 642-8599""' VOLVO ·~Ive~~ ~al~: ~~~u:::~ ... ~;~js.~ '1()..lifO:w, VUlager, f\lll , l neville rel'Onl holder, like FIAT ./ Pwr Brit, Air O:mditloning mlles. l1lro new.11't'f""'l'lo7 powu air rM good new, $1.3!l5. AJS·Makhle'8 Auloa Wanted 961 TRIUMPH Harbor, C.M. "'6·9303 153BQS 11550 • . ma Typhnon, 600co, partially TOP DOLLAR PAID 'II l'IAT 124 SPYDER 5 A io. Used 990 CORT FOX . FORD "'11"""· enc) s:s:::~s. 837..0722 afte1· lMMEOl"ATEL y~ spd, new top, mag whl11.-645;6400--or------&0:6406 61'6, kl inl, gd-ga11-m1?i10 U •' y~ ~--f97t FoRO-..COWltry Squire-__ MUS.tAN_G_ -- ' · FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS 12400· °' oUer. 58&-8842 TOYOTA plus, call 64~ BUIC Deal St \V Pwr ••· Pwr TRIUMPH 64 • 650 Bon· before 4 pm. er a. ag.'. · ~... · '74 1\-fUSTANG II cpe, 4 cyJ, neville, Sharp bike, )O\\' ini. Call or come in to St'e us. , • . ~ tC.WAGEN , "'\: 2586 Newport Blvd.. C.~f. Brk, Air Conditioning auto, radials, tach, lft!at on reblt eng. 586-1206. 71 PIAT, 850 U> m1, Ex<el 73 LANDCRUISER VOL~ 70 BUICK EIO<h~. 225, 4 61>-3661 Daily 49!BSY $1150. gas mileage. Must oelt. cond.,. Al\.l·F?\1 30 l\.1PG. y -dr hrdtop, Joatred...._~st offer Sunday 64+-29,;0 CORJ FOX ~ 1 Mobile Homes 935 Days, 533-4456 Ext 733 Carol HJARBOUR takes before Chr~tmas. AfUSI' SACiUFiCE. '69 Olev _ _: -. -"Gs MUSTANG -Ft!bk. 32~00o ·,I MOB ILE HOME JAGUAR SOFT-TOP .~';1LARK custom de1~"· l ~~~~~~~~~~ 2586 ~~·~f~.. ~nt~teek;d. =· = FOR SALE : 3100\V.Co,.,t Hwy.,N.B. ONLY 3 LEFT! 0 I 2000 ., (54\iH¥0 i\'a.5o"/\.'/b, good cona, shltt, strato buc:k'C' seats. 64$-3661 Daily C.M ~att4'30 SILVERCREST 642-9405 ny ' $"'391es -7) v w or st offer. 846-3166. '~·er steering. Vinyl rool ' Sttrfday&lt-29:>0 'I!"" Must••g, 6-" stick,~ MOB LE HOME 1973 77 , '13 BUICK LaSa.bre oust all:_ cone! Red with whlte 1 =~~~~=---;-,,,,,.-I --· '" •• I TOP CASH , e • Loaded, Excel cond' $349S. top~&rl . 1972 FORD Ltd Squire ~ta. '~nd, $3S(I. ~axN>~,·· 2 b~~n! .• BA,~~{g•.· for clean late model can JAGUAR·'S CdM, 640-005.) • '72 ~/Sta "'ag, like wag. wfair, am/bn Sterea, 642-l98l aft. 8 W-8599 I •-J) l ' I •u lo · ,;.. ........1 •& radial tires, good c;ond. Sac. 'TI ?\fUSTANG Grande, air, , \Vasher & ele<>t. dryer, wired and trucks! 81tM ...... Can So ve '73 REGAL, vinyJ•roof, p/a, _.. • • ... t•""" ... """ -.nn Pvt ~. ~ y. Sb 18 000 t ' ,.,. m .;, <~••·· kltch. oword hevrolet AT TOYOTA P • air. A I ""'°· 644-7311.. ' , ·~·~. L~ -• 833-3399 , H C - WA UUIO /d/b · M/Ffw shocks, 75, pVt ' pty. -:-'°~"':~,..,. ro..~ 83~7 ··-iv.. PS/PB; arp. • m • ' clock, sloragC! shed, land· tilt whl, $3895. · 536-0862 • scape<! patio. Three yrs. old t1acAr,thur and Jan1boree REDUCED PRICES 'fi6 Chevy Impa~ Sedan. '66 MUSTANG auto, fact. • like nu. Located in ne1v Ne\\=ach y CADILLAC P/b, "p/11, ale, ra o, very air, ~·c:fi11e~i:,~8 ~:ce OLDSMOllL~ adult pk. tnvay from noisy 1966 Harbor, C.tf. 646-9393 our good .cond. Best o!ltt. car. a er St. Onc·h•lf hi. from duh-WE truY JUST ARRIVED ·72 CADILLAC U> mileo•e. 675-5068 . 4,00 Sal<1 6 !!r.vtce I house. $15,995. Call EVES. Ti\TPORTED AUTO.i; fully equipped & clean. Pri WILL take 1 carat, 2 c ~ '65 1.tUSTANG Convert. OLDSMOBILE j 't3tit'~ SEEN AT : BEST PRICES PAIDI • E ply Mr Funk, 644-lotll 3 carat diamond In on trade Cla,.k ttbuilt engl"" •tick GMC TRUCKS I CRESTMONT l~·~~,~~.w~~Ml'."':°..':k JENSEN LARGE So~IPMENT conomy :~:RADO Full londed. i: ';7E~~;ibu 307 :i_~ad!O, boater $350. HONDA CARS ESTATES CASH FOR JENSEN Black on Black. ~ .. t s.u: V·8, air, stick. Very dean. '69 }"()RD Custom, kgood UNIVERSiTY OLDS II 1051 Site Dr., Brea. (Central YOUR CAR INTERCEPTOR 1974 Car Needs Excellent Con d. dlr $800. Call ~~. cond. New tires & bra es. 2850 Harbor Blvd. Ave. across from Brea 546-7070 LARGE SELEX'TION C600GWW) $6996. 892-4444. '66 IMPALA 2 dr. Radk> $5..':i'J 830-4876 Costa Mesa . 540-911) I Comm. Hosp.) U>t #<&. WANTED II OF COLORS 1973 CADILLAC Eldorado. air, 1 owner, Good cont!'. 'Q; FORD WAGON PLvMOUTH CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., ; a IJ'.lakes of junk, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TOYOTA'S Good mileage."',,_ a• .. 4 FuU power, A·l cooditkm. ,, I for showing. cars. Free towmg, Cash }Or Fully loaded, Black on Black ~•D-u $500 of! 646-5848 l~'-:"~~-----1 .:so~m~e·c.:•~94-~100!'1:3~ex~60~2L,:._ FULl. SERVICE OVER !\-1U!t sell, Excellent cond., •n Impala. mue_ 2 dr, 45,IXll or er __ . •72" PLY~fOUTH Cricket,. 1 I Motor Homes / DEPARTMENT dlr f600GWW) $6995. 89'14444 mt. Perfect cond. Nu '70 FORD LTD country auto. trans .. Jo miles & 4 ii Sale/Rent 940 Autos, lmportecj 970 (Al.I ·Models) tire .. 11395. 644-4307. Squire wagon, fully equip. cyt. economy. 1911l FNF) I TIME 'FOR '70 IGNGSWOOD power, air, .-peel. $187S. 6_42..0090. -·831-21HO or 495--49-19 Dir. 1 RENT A·.MOTOR HOME -ALFA !JOMEO . v-cso good con<titlon. 11'00. 69 ~on! Fatrlane 500 .. Nu ''6 PLYMOU1ll Val~nt,200 ' ?\UNI HOME. OR VAN , · * 675-1592 .aft 5 * t~. xlnt me chani ca l 6'cyl,-auto, air, ft/B;' PIS, 1 CONVERSION, LOW AS $9 * ALFA ROMEO QUICK CASH '73 CHEVY .. uto, 4 wh! drive. shape. $100. 968-2676 xlot con<!, gd tires; 1450 I ·~r 'Day' &:•'6:c 'tlel''lrille'. · " · · '· -· • . air: ·P/S. ,·Bestr.-ofof·er·: J972 FORD Ltd.,.Blue/Dark ··55?·1'281>.~-·-··• · • · I RESERVE YOURS TODAY Ber st dC$3a1 ... :11vays! Berlinas 3100 w. c44"'2"940H"s'Y·. N.B. T VASE '74 TOYOTA ~""" USED GAS SAVERS 673-9376 . -----Blue Roof, J>\\T Str, Plvr PO"""AC 894-3341. rom •l1J <Ser. #0288). • ,...... UAAJ IN STOCK . -Brit, Air Conditioning -·EX· n11 '72's & '73's. Complete se-Corolla sedan ..• pet 30 THROUGH A 72 IMPALA a/c, p/s. very tremel.lt t:le"" 783 ·t>uu --------• 20' • 25' Motor Homes, lection 110"'· Buy or lease MAZDA. n1iles per -gallon .•• Only reasonable. 547-7427 0 r m Ue'btiOk •.-...i7' Ot1r Price ,72 PONTtAC .C do 0 r . 1 ~J:io~e~~~~: ~~~rr from $58.l4 mo. 2'> mos. oper. HARBOUR 633-UX> $2175. / I Sacri1lee for n100. =~~~%~ t';J't" Jim Parkinson'• * Ma;t,:~7'/iNri;~ary * •ndJ...,.. VW WANT AD CONTINENTAL CORT fOX Call 847.- e DaJe's Motor Home Rentals .~6 MONTHS O?EN LEASE '67 CHERRY Cont'T. New VEGA '73 23-26' M.H. & 1.11ni:; \Vill 11.~ept trade-ins 18711 Beach 81. 842-4435 642 5c73 radials. Stereo. 13 MPG. «o~ N-·...,Ee~~ CM '72 VEGA Hatchback +......1. Free miles 9 til 9. 83!µ)900 CALL MR. FRY"84?.·6666 6 • '1 Steal for $1000. 67J..2223 ..-.. '" .. ...,.. ., . . "t"' Troilors, Trove1 94s 645-&too °' -Hunt. Beach HUNTINGT N BEACH CLASSsEIU-oo.5618 =&!~ !!ur!'f;-,,v.W..fi;'"· Must 1970. 24 FT. Sliver Eagle. AUDI MAZDA Autos, New .980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New -980 A~, Nevr ~--~utos, New 9IO Autos, New 980 & '73 Chev C}leyenne 20 --------1 5,000 .mi. Both ha v e '72 Au<li 100LS. 4 spd trans, eve~th1ng. Sell l or both. radial tires, tinted 1\-indows, Huntington . By The Sea air cond, am/fm stereo 17'\3! Beach Bl. 842-6f'-;6 Travel Trailer P ark, 21sn tape, Pri: Pty. $ 3 6 9 5 .. 73 l\tAZDA Rx 2 c A Newland St., H.B. Space 112 SJ0..9363 aft 5pm. -. pe. ulnto. ['""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•[ ----~----1 trans., met. paint & x t. MUST SELL BMW 3 yr. tin. avaU. (013HHV) 831-2040 or 495-4949 Dir. IMMEDIATELY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\·12 M"'da RX2. $2100. Fm 1964 12• Ca · 1 il 1 THE RED BARON'S stereo radio, heater, Can't mping ra er, s ps be beat 645-1247 ~1.'1i.\\ :?:r.r':..!ri't of(er ~~···~) '72 MAZDA RXlll :ir.r.i.. .._,, A1nt cond. $2200. 675-2678 Auto Ser;ice, Part.949 MERCEDES BENZ REPLACEJl.1ENT & au.x· iUary ... tank<, pick-ups, NOW· OPEN 4 whl drives, vans & n1o~or homes. 892-8314 SALES .. ~NG a Mission Viejo Imports FXCPt I ICft I SERVICE =: SCJ"OOl.eBack MERCE~ES BENZ ....,.,,..,,. I~ 1~ ...,_/ Com71;10 ~~;~.T& Se"'ke -·~ ~ V1s1t Us Soon At Recreational . . . 28701 Marguerite Parkway Vehicles 956 28402 r.ra.rguerite. t;iark1vay Mission Viejo 495.1700 t--------l\1isslon \11c10 (USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) 1970 Chevy Blazer 4 \vhl 831·2040 I 49>49-19 -------- dr, 350, V-8, Good ~ndition, USE AVERY PWY. EXIT 50 USED eau 642-<345 MERCEDES S t R Rod 959 OR-ANGE COUNTY'S por 1' ace, 1 OLDEST ON Dl$PLA Y 21Xl MPH McLaren Racer. Sh N C !\.18D, Lucas injection, 700 0 arp e\V ar HP, O Time, Perfect rood. Trade-ins $10,500. 557-9323. Coming in Every Day Trucks 962 Ask About Our Unique --------· Excellent selection ot pre. Used Mercedes Lease 1 9 7 2 Chevy Blazer. price re·evaluation modC!ls. Plans 16,000 miles. Many ex· DEMO $ALE House of Imp rts t r a s $ 3 6 7 5 SALES-St::i {VICJ:.:-LEASING 0 Call 549-2367. · ROOVEYRSCEAASRDVEEL<VRERIY ~~~~~te;t~rA~~e;~~k '56 FORD Pick Up. 6 cyl, 1 nC. 523.7250 gd ~"d· $350. 6'2·l"l. aft 6. 234 E. 17th St. JIM SLEMONS 642·8599. 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" ·~ .. • 11111 all ue~ \_. • ·-, . • • :· San Clemente Today's .Final . Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks •• VOL. 66, NO. 351, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1973 TEN CENTS I Supervisor Attacks Caspers' A~trak Plans ·' By WILLIAM SCHREIBER _ OfHlt ~114SUff Anaheim Supervisor Ralpl\... Clark, Cbi.irman of the 'Orange County Traitsit !llltrlct Board of Dlrecton, today sbarp- 11 Crlticlied an· e ff o r t b( Supervisor Ronald caspers to win legal changes permitting Amtrak trains to make COD'l- muter runs in the county. "The way this sounds, p u b I i c tramportatlon funds would be used to . subsidize a few people in selected areas," Clark said. "What he's talking about • is a train from San Diego to Los Angeles subsidiied·by-Oranke-County~taxpayers." caspers appealed Fr i d a y to Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw (R· Newport Beach) io change the Jaws now prohibiting Amtrak from making commuter runs. Caspers' plan calls for the San Diego to Los A11 g e I es train to pull In to San Clemente at 7:15 a.m., into central Santa Ana before 8 a.m. and into Lm Angele! before 9 a.m . Caspers al.so asked_ for new Stops to be added aloeg the way In San Juan (;apistrano_and..Mlssion_V.iejo. CUrrently, the earliest stop in San Clemente is at 8:12 a,m. The only eve- ning return nm is et 8:4' p.m. out of Los Angeles. Caspers wants that changed to about 6 p.m •. Clark said there are many com· plications to such a plan besides the drain oo public transportation fwx!s that would be needed to support the Amtrak runs. "There ls heavy freight. movement between Fullefton and Los Angeles that ane om. Strong•ar111 Pair may be disrupted and many jobs rely on that freighl /!_Clark said.i.!:'I'hat is a lot more important than special com· muter service to a relatively few number of people." Clark added that the idea would also be ecologically unsound because trains need one-half gallon of fuel per passenger and buses need only one-third of a gallon. OCTD Director Richard Lynn, a Newport Beach attorney, said he thinks the board should support Caspers' efforts • ' if only to get a chance to talk to Amtrak. "Every time we've approached them. they've told us their legislation prohibits them from talking to us at all." Lynn said. "I'm not talking about the prac. ticality of Mr. Caspers' proposal or anything else, just about getting Amtrak lo talk to us." OCTD manager Gordon "Pe~'! Fielding said that if the money now used on buses -up to $3 million per year -were funneled to Amtrak, local .. systems such as the innovative Dial·A· Ride plan would suffer. "This type of lh.ing-does impact finan· cially," Fielding said. Directors voted to allow Fielding to study Caspers' proposal and come back with an analysis. But director Al Hollinden a Fountain Valley ccunci lman. remarked "A lot of people are running for r~lection and 1 don't know if each great suggestion should get intensive study. \Ve may be making a tempest in a teapot." • I Terrorists Robb·ers Beat ·s ··· .. Fle.e. Rome .. .• ... ,. In San Clemente ·strong-a nn robbers with a taste for bialing their victims were bu.sy early today and over the weekend in three aeya.rate incidents involving victims weilking along San Clemente streets. 'n the most serious of the three mug- gings, a Camp Pendleton serviceman sll(fered a bl'Qken ankle and bead cuts a\ the bands of two robben. jlobert Lynn Armstrong, 22, Wa! folllld • hr resident> of the 2llO blqck oC.\ftiilila ·Qj>oa lhortly helot.. 2 a.m. today, bleeding Crom numerous cuts inflicted ·In the beating. Police quoted Armstrong as saying t"A'O men -one Negro, the other C.ucaalnn -approad!ed blm and ol- lwed to Introduce hint "to 10me girls." Jnatoad, they beat him and loo< hfs wallet. Firemen took Armstrong to San Clemente Genera1 Hospital for treatment of the injuries. ·Police believe one of the two robben bad teamed up earlier in the weekend wHh another aceomplice. ·Shortly before midnight Sunday the Pair surprised Gary Wayne Tenbusch, Ji, abo of camp Pendleton, as the man walked along South El Comlno Real. . Tenbwch told officers one man pulled blm down from behind and the ofher ~bbed a wallet containing $70 in cash. ':Before the two left, they took turns . 't rial U1ule r Wa y :: : For Rancli Hand Jn I(.illi11g Case By TOM BARLEY • Of t119 Mt.-PIMll IWft' .• Ranch .band Robert Carl "Whip" Slat- ton, was on "a mission ~i bate and vengeance" when he shot and .killed •·young trespasaer at Ortega Hot Springs lut July 10 the prosecutor claimed today ln Slat~'s murder trial. Deputy District Attom<Y Ted Millard alleged before an Orange County Superior ~urt jury In hll opening state- pient that Slatton, 41, vowed to use • Ms weapon on the "Hot Springs 1ot1,hairs" several hours berore ~ Glahn, 2t, of La Mirada, was killed. Millard claimed Slatton bad several drinks at the Swallows Bar in San Juan Clpiltrano from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. that night a nd told the bartender before he left: ·-I'm golng to get me one." ,1110 prooecutor told the jury that Slat· ton then stopped at a San Juan capiltraoo oervice 11>Uon en route to ~ Hot SpriDp In hJI Land Cruller ~cle and lolocked ov~r a trub can •rtpUIJ.ng .garbage all ovea"\he area." "His l'OIPCJlllO to the request that ho 1!lean It up was 'to tell the attendant -tbat people spilled trash and garbag.e ·au over hJI ranch without picking 1t ·uP ao why sboukl he?" · Millard said Slatton, sporjlng, a 1'hlte Stellon hat -aad with a .4$ callber Colt m'Olvor alung around hil blps - "!u nat ...., by ,about · nine penom tillllfg on Ille """"'1 ·arouad tbe larito111 'Ortqa waa.r bole. . ... Be laid Slaltm ldentlOed blmlelf u 'tbe rand! owner IDll -lnnllent 'Lio 8-11, 21, a bodp that apponatly ~led bla aulllorlty to ' evict • fllet SLATl'ON, Pap I) • kicking the victim u he .Jay on the ground. Tenbusch was not wiously hurt, orficcrs said. In the third and last incident, ifanuel Vasque< of IOI Avenlda Marquita told oCficers fte hopped into a cab early Saturday momlng and joined two other men lor a ride from South El Cimino a..i Into the contnl part of town. . Alter all -bad e1116Jed, the lltl'lqtm -v-11111 -bll wallet. It bid flO In IL · Two Injured . In Airport Bomb Panic By RUDI NIEDZIELUI or ... r>.ify 11>1111 ...., Pauengers panicked and leaped from the .wing of a Hughes Airwelt plane altllng m the ground at Oranae County Airport Sunday alter the crew r«eived word of an anonymous bomb threat. Two women who jumped l~ feet to ·the pavement after scrambling through an emergency door suffered spraied ank.Jes but were treated and later releas- ed at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. 11te women were identi!ied as Mrs. Pat Weimer, 42, of 2401 N .. Santiago Blvd., Orange, and Leora Van ·Wagener, 65. ol Henderson, Nevada. Both made the trip to the hospital by ambulance. The Seattle-bound DC-9 jetliner wu evacuated after airline official! in Los Angeles said their reservation delsk. received a bomb threat at I: 13 p.m. 1be call was placed by a woman who warned in a Spanish-accented voice, "My uncle has a bomb on your last flighl." The flight originated In Mexico City. • Airwest officials radioed the pilot as be taxied the craft to the nun.ay and evacuatioo orders were given. Sheriff's deputies said emergency doon: were opened and many passengen started climbing out onto the wings. Several of the 33 peroons oo board jumped belore groud crew• rolled a stairway to the alrcraft1s main door. FBI olficers and Orqe Coullty Sher- llf's deputies oearohed the p 1 an e thoroughly but turned up no bomb. Mike Weimer, husband of one of the (Seo TllREAT, Pace I) Chamber Gettillg Clemente Ballot Memhen o1 the San Clemente Chamber of Cornman» lhls week are receiving a ballot containing names ol 18 nominees to ftvt 1>001> 00 the -ol dil\lClorS. ' ,,,. deadline ror recum ,of Ille man ballots Is Dtc. SI. On the II.st ¥0' -Bel'tlard. ~!l!ll. ~ "'"""II, L. •M!ft• 1llmer, 1'1111 Dlcbaa, Lowl s ' Elmel, Jama Everell, Ro)' Ral>m1, Pea Landell, R. staolord -... Klrll: M-. J. Wesley Neal, 0.. Pbllllpbor, Leon Riley, E. L. Rfaley, Dr. Tllamas RlallrUdt,. Famll E. Smith, Lawnmce '(t'llllama and Mll<l Wollt. , Ul"I Tt ......... LUFTHANSA AIRLINE PILOT, WITH PISTOL HELD TO HIS HEAD, WALKS. TO WAITING JETLINER · lniured Pauenger Lies· in Pool· of Blood After Bloodiest Attack by Arab Guerrjll1 s • Dana Harbor Bait Boat , Resurfaced. by Guards Da.Vincl's Mona Lisa bas enraptured men with her enigmatic smile, but Dana Harbor's creation of the same name gave harbor patrolmen, lifeguards and firemen. nothing but fits over the weekend. Dana Harbor's Mona Lisa -a live-bait boat -ran all the rescuers through their paces before noon saturd.ay when a deckhand goofed while shutting a large valve. ~. A small block of wood kep( the valve from cloalng and a few mln~es after the crew left the large seiner at ·her dock al Dana Wharf, the boat began to sink. Patrolmen were first to arrive and found the craft down so far her decks were awash. Patrol pumps were not enough, so Doheny volUnteer firemen and San Clemente llleguards were asked to bring everything at their disposal.. After more than an hour's work, the . pumps succeeded in lifting the heavy vessel from the bay mtxl, but the waltr damage to the boat's diesel engines and other equipment was extensive. The boat is the main source of live bait for. the ftshing fraternity at the ba.rbor. The only other one serving the harbor makes · oc~ional J'UWI from ~ewport Beach. Nixon Foes Decline PRINCETON, N.J. · (AP) -'l)ie percentage of Americans who believe President Nixon should be forced out of offlce dipped by 2 percent af!er rising steadily since June, tbe Gallup Poll re~rts. lo a Nov. »Dec. 3 survey, 35 percent of those questioned said the President should be Impeached and com· . pelled tO leave office. Not So Merry First Fir e Plio11y --Not Sec ond For "-8 boat owner F. T. Livermore, the weekend visit to his 36-foot cabin miller at Ilona Harbor was nothing but trouble. U.ennore, Ibo owner-skipper of the cruiser Merry·Merry, first thought be wu dailll[ a • 4'ell when he ~ amoke coming from a craft at .the end of Jt-doet.aro.tlllrbor"a marina: ... Ho· called lot 1, llroiioal, but tqe crews ·~'*=overeci that the amoke "'" • ltmeb'.llolm c.iolied on a lllb9chl aboard the era!~ · · :· "Wlb. iliat.iail aettled, Livermore set out for a cruise. Tine -OUI IO ... he called for a fireboat again. Tltll ~ -hll boat that.., llumlna. . __-~ but Uvefmore already !tad dou...t the flam .. In Iha "'Ila COllljllrtmeol. The minor flareup waa clused by a bacltfire In an ovorbealed ...._ ~ . ' '--- .Paper Donations ' . Told By HHH, Other Solons WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Hubert H. Hum~y and a number of _other prom· inent and even middle-echelon officials donated their papers as gifts on which they presumably did claim tax deduc- tions, the Scripp~Howard News Service reported today. Scri~Howard staff writer Dan Thomasson, who surveyed General Services Administration (GSA) records, NO TAX ·DEDUCTION SEEN IN HOME GIFT-Story, Page 3 said Humphrey's office confirmed bis gift as a tax deduction had been claimed. "He is oow JnParing the figures and a statement,'' a Hwnphrey spokesman said. · Humphrey, Democratic senator from Minnesota, was vice president from 1965 to I~ and donated his personal papers from those" years f4 the Minnesota State Historical Society. ScripPs-Howard said it obtained a GSA list of present and 'fonner public officials who contributed personal papers to the . (See HID! GIFT, Page %) I C.ash Box Hit At Laundromat Burglars made their way Into a locked laundromat in San Clemente over the weekend and rifled a cash box containing $100 or more. Police teamed of the b"'akln at )he Contlnelllil~ Cleaners shortly !Jefore s a.m. today. George Boaz, the owner of the business at 810 N. El Camino Real, told police ha could .not f1nd a point of entry In the thell . Detectlvu lald the burglan suc- cessfully pried open the cashbox. but failed In attempll to do the same to • safe. • Massacre A THK'lS, Greece (Al') -Pal<stlnlan guerrillas bombed an American plane in Rome 's airport today, killing at least 22 persons, police said. The guerrillas later shot three hostages. The terrorists escaped to Athens in a hijacked German jet with an wr determined number of hostages. They began their attack at Rome with a submachine gun fusillade that Police said killed an unknown number of bystanders. Authorities said the total killed may reach 30 . Greek poli~ said the hijacked aircraft landed at the maln .\thens airport &pd the guerrillas negotiated with Greek authorit~s for release of two Palestin· ians held by the military·backed Greek government. The hijackers threatened to blow up the Luftha nsa Boeing 737 with all the hostages if the two were not released, an airline spokesman reported . The spokesman said the Arab guer- rillas informed the control tower that one of those aboard was "seriously in- jured and may die." An airport p:ilice spokesman said special army police and army units surrounded the ain:raft. The attack at Rome's airport began about 1 p.m. -·4 ·a:tn. PST ..:.. when the Palestinians were asked to open their baggage for a routine security check in the crowded departure wing. They did, pulling out pistols, submachine • gW'lS and hand grenades and spraying the room with bullets, police said. The guerrillas grabbed s e v er a I Policemen at the security point and went down a ramp toward the Lufthansa plane. The terrorists were variously reported to number three or four . Two of them ran up lhe boarding ramps of a nearby Pan American World Airways jetliner and threw incendiary bombs inside setUng fire to the jet. A Pan Am spokes.man said at least 22'" bodies were counted aboard the charred wreck.aie. Potice' said all 11 passengers in the first-class section of the plane were killed. An airline spokesman said the e:t· plosions weni orr in the corridor. destroy. ing the cabin and most of the first-class section. Pan Am orlgtnally reported the ftight (Seo GUElllULLAS, Page %) Oruge • Weadter It'll be fair and mild Tuesday, according to the weather servJce, with highs at the beaches in the mid 70s rising to 80 degrees lo.- land. Overnight lows In the 40s and 50s. INSWE TODAY LI. Co!. Robert Stirn>, POW for 6~ yeart, IGJIS CaJi/orn1a'1 divorce law ha.$ taktn him "to the cleaners" o.1 his wif« of 18 year-sues for dissolution. Sior11 Page 5. I'---( ' • il UAJL., PILOT~-=-=sc.·_ --_::-..:M..:~cc;::·:""::':m:bti::l:7·:1:9:7':.... ____ _, . Saddleback Nude Bathers , Elderlw 1'1• ~ -' ., Meets Set Each Montl1 By JAN WORTH °' 11111 o..u, r1101 $1fll A meeling bet "A·een faculty represen· tatives and the president of Saddleback C.Ollege has resulted In a new agreement to meet once a month. Dr. Fred Bremer, president or the comm unity college since 1968, reportedly threatened to resign last week because of what he felt v.·a9 too much board ..of trustees' interference in [aculty·a_d· ministration relallons. "It is our understand ing !hat v.·e will now meet with Dr. Bremer on a monthly basis and with the board on a quarterly basis," said Lee Rhodes, president o! the faculty association. "We all cam e out or there feeling that great lhlngs were 'accomplished. Frankly, we are happy with this result. \Ve've been wanting more C()Ota ct with Dr. Bremer," he added. Monthly meetings between two board members and the facu lty began this fall after a staff sa tisfaction survey showed the fac ulty was unhappy with ... its con1munica tion wit h the trustees. Rhodes a biology lnstructor, said faculty ~embers want to set aside con- troversy and "put all our energiea into this school becoming what we want it to be." No board members attended -last week 's meeting . "We didn't ask for any," Rhodes said. Jim Thorpe , president of the smaller Academic Senate composed of 10 elected fa culty members, also attended the meeting. "We all agree that communicatlon ha s improved." ThOrpe said. "11le fa culty feels there has to be some other line of communication lo the board . than the negotiating commlttee." But SQme thlnss have to be hashed OOt with the presldeiif tiim sttI; RhOdes sa id. ·"There is a hierarchy of com- • munications here and we reel golng directl y to Dr. Bremer is a better situa- tion than just going to the board," Rhodes said. '"fhjs whole school has been under change ln the la!t six years and . especially in the last three years," he said. "With conerrui about ~ampu~ unrest relaxing, we are re-adjusting to a new attitude. "Dr. Bremer ls as caught up in those changes as we are," he said. "He came to us last week soliciting our help. What we are trying to do at th.is school needs everybody's help." Errol Whitney's Rites Conducted Funeral services were conducted Sun- day at Faith Lutheran Church , Capistrano Beach, for Errol Chester Whitney, a one·year San Juan C~plstrano resident who died at home Fnday. He W&! 79. Mr. Wbltney, who lived at 32712 Allpaz SL, Space70, leaves his widow, Jeannette L. Whitney ; two daughters, Joan Hillyard or Dana Point and Jane Grace Weaver of La Puente , and nine grandchildren. The riles were conducted by the Rev. James H. Knotek, pasto r of Faith Lutheran. Private burial followed in Williams Cemetery, \V llliams, Calif. Lesneski Mortuary, San Clemente, was tn charge of arrangements. Arizona Against Change in Time PHOENIX . Ariz. (AP! -Gov. Jack Wi lliams asked today lhat Arizona be excluded from participating in Daylight Sa ving Time. Under the existing plan, \\'illiams said, he expec ts Ari zona le> be included ~ith California in the Pacific Daylight Time zone. That would, in effect, leave Arizona with the same time It now has. 01.t.M•l .COAIT IC DAILY PILOT TIMI 0.t"'ll Cot1! OAILY PILOT. wtll'I ""'lcfl 11 CO!!'lblMld l~t H--J'rt1 .. II publl..._ .., rrie Orf.no• Cot11 P\lll!i1~l11t c.omp.nv'. ~ rat. 9dllk11'11 .,. Pllbll~hld, MOl\day lt\rtutft f'rlll•v. for ''"" MtN, HtwW! BMCll, t•hlfllllllltorl •Nd>lfOVnlllfl Vtll•y, l.119\lllt IMCh, ln11ntllaclcl1Rat~ 111111 Itri Clttntfll9/ Sin Jwn C.pltlrtno. A 1111111 '"lllonal ltdlllilrl H "YblltlMicl k"'"'-YI •11111 Sunotv., Thit 111"llKl1N1I Pll&llfl\'"9 oMnt It at U1 Weil a.r 5trwt, Cot•• fMH, C:.Mlomlt, ,_., Robt rt N. Wtt4 Pr"iclttll ,..,. l'vl>lllMr Joe~ It. Curlt y \llcf Pr•Wflll fond o.tle<tt MIP/llflf' Tho"'•• Ko •'<'ll EllllOr Jho,,.•1 A. Mu,plll110 M111.,1119 t:dllOr CllarlH H. Lo1111 ltidt1nl P'. Nall Allllllftl Mtftttl ... l.lfflWI S-C'-"99 Offk. JOI N•rth fl C1,,.i110 Rtal, f2672 ...... ""'-Ctt1• M•t1 UD Wn! I t ¥ lltttl ·= lelltft I UU fotiwpor! loult\lfflt ttun! l'Ol'I l11dl: 110 S ttttfl '°"""'',,. Ut¥'M IMCfll !!t ,.,_., A- , ........ 1714) 642-4)21 c..,,..., ... '"""'"' 641-1671 S-Ci....t. All D1pzt: u1f11 T1l•ph1• 4t2-44H C•rt11111, 1'11. Ort"" c..11 Publltlllnf °""lllflr. Ht -1torlet, 1~1'tl!Ona, lfllWlllt """" ., ad""1l.-tl ""'"' .... , M """"llcell Wlll\M .... , 1111" "''"*° l't C911Yr19M """fr. '-c. C .... llttl ... ,.foll ti C•lt Mf ... . II."'"'*'· Mi.co-111111ro w urritr a.u ,...,._1y, '111 ""'" U II rilenfflfri liiml'atY 1111i..1""' ""' nwtftl.tr, ' Off the Hook -Heat Foils Mesa Military Po~ Case Reviewed Whieh Court? SAN RAFAEL (UPI) - A Marin Counly Judge lul1 d II m I 1 11 d Chll'IU qalllll ftvt penono ao- cuiled Of nude bathinc and opened the way -for a -summer of skin-- nydipplng on private land. Municipal court Judge David R. Baty dismLssed tbe charges against the three men and two women charged with violating the count y's ordinance against nude sunning on public land. Defense altomey Paul Kayretz said the beaches In the community were owned to the water by pro~ erty owners along the shore. Avco Seeking Coast Panel Exempt Airing Avco Community Developers ls ap- plying to the state coastal commission for a reconsideration of the claims of exemption on two Laguna Niguel tracts. Avoo's $94 million, 473·acre Salt Creek Beach area development took a new step Friday when the company took two Loi Angeles Superior Court cases challenging the commission off calendar. The lawsuits, both of which ask for exemptions from permit requirements of Propositi::in 20, the im coutal zone act, haven't been dropped. II Avco Iola lta latest plea be/ore the State Coastal 2'.one CooaervaUon Commlaslon, the lawsulta will be put back on calendar and beard 30 claya alter lha k cDePUIY ~late Attorney General Alan Block aald today. The two tracta involved · are 7479, Oceanside of Pacific Coa.s_t IDghway near Crown Valley Parkway and_ 7185, Inland of the hlgl>way near Niguel Shora Road. Avco lw planned to build up to 917 "°"40mtnlwn unlta on -Iha port!oa ol ~ct 7185 within the commtsalon'a 1,000 yard permit zone. That tract alJO Includes a 1,053 acre golf course, for which Avoo recently had to request a temporary erosion control permlL A conatructlon permit for that tract 15 sUll being negoUated Will\ the State Coastal Zone ConservaUon Commlallon, which earlier denJed Avco the right lo flnllb bulJclJ., without a'penn!L Tract 7479 hu been planned for 1,218 condominium units, In bulldlngs up to five stories high. Both a pennlt and an exemption for th1s project have been denied . Block saki today that Avco's new ex· emption hearing will probably come up In January. Block bad argued ln court that Avco'! lawsuits shouldn't be heard because the company hadn 't tried again \to get an exemption under the State Supreme C.ourt's See the Sea riding. Under that ruling, projects are ex- empted from Prop. 2il if sub!tantlal construction was done by Feb. 1, 1973. The prior cut~ff date was Nov. 8, 1972. That question, Block said, hasn't been examined by the commission. From Page 1 HHH GIFT. • • government in the last 10 years for inclusion ln one or more of the seven presidential libraries supervised by GSA and the National Archives. ''While there was no indication that tax deductions were claimed uner the tax provision which Congress abolished effectively Ju ly 25, 1969." Scripps- Howard said, "Those making the dona- tions had the opportunity to do so and presumably d1d." The congrestional Joint CommJttee on Internal Revenue Taxation ls checking, at President Ni1on 's requeat, the ·pro- priety of the gift of Nixon's vice presidential papers and tax deductions. Nixon bad hll vice presfdenllal papers apprallled at '678,000 at>d claimed this as tax deductions spread over four years. GSA records showed the late President Lyndon B. Johnson, vice president for three years of lhe Kennedy ad· ministration, donated presidential and vice presldenltal papers In 19 8 5, presumably clalming a tax deduction in 196$. He also donated penonal papen to the government in 1966, 1967 and 1968, all eligible for use a!I tax deductions. A gift of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's pa pers was made June 27. 1969 - less that! one month before the new regu lation abolie~ tax deduc- tions Oil such transactions. His widow, Mrs. Mamie Eisenhower, donated papers to the government tn 1966. "GSA records ," 5crippe-Howard said, "show that a surprlsinlly lara:e number of promJncnt and· even middle-echelon officials in the last live admlnlstrallons donated their papen on which they l'OOld have claimed tax deductions from 11163 through the !Int six montlul of llMl9 whM Ott Jaw was chnnged.11 It said the list Included, In addll!on to Clblnet members and top presidential advisers, ~rsons who served ln rela tive- ly minor jobl, ranging from an u soclate diffi:tor of the Bureau of Land Manage· ment onder !'resilient Harry S Truman to a director or the Federal Housing Adminlstrallon under Jotwon. ' Rescue-Attem-pts W ASH!NGTON (AP) -The U.S. Suprelne Court_ agreed today to deelde whether aale of marijuana by an-Ar1n y o_f~1cer•to a~1 en- listed man is an offense that can be tried before a n11htary cou1 t. , The court held In 1969 lhat court-martial jurisdlctl on covered By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM O•llY P'll• tltff Costa Me&an Arthur COmpton was kil l- ed today, despite an effort to 1<1 out ol his converled garqe bun&alow wlleo It was gutted by a 18,000 fire durtni predawn hours. Compton, 67, of 141 ~1esa Drive, Apt. C, was dead at the scene alter raging !Ltliies w·ere extlngulslied, allowing police and firemen to enter the gutted struc- ture. The victim wu found curled up on the kitchen floor of the residence, one of several at that addreu: rented out to elderly or retired l>(!rsons. Investigators said that by the time they arrived there was no hope for Mr. Compton. "The house was just completely in- volved in flames," said Police Officer Rod Haddock, the second policeman to arrlve abou t 6 a.m. after neighbors call- ed for help. He said the property owner told h1m his tenant might be Inside and If ao, would probably be In the bedroom but that rescue efforts were fuUle. "We tried to use the garden hose ," said Officer Haddock, "but. we just couldn't get to the house. It was too bot and too' far gone •.. " The old frame str11cture wu l1lied u a total loss today following the fire , which offlclala tbeome must lulve smouldered for some Ume before It erupted. Tiiey · tentaUvely' lilt' allloldni 'u · the Officials Probe ·varied Accounts Of Plane Scare only 'jservice.connected" offenses. . . The gove rnment, seeking to overturn a dcclSJon by lhe U.S. Ci r· cult Court at Denver, asked the Supreme Court to consid er the n1a1 \ •. Juana o!fense. . . cause of the fire, which apparently started ln an easy chair. lnveaUgators believe Mr. Comp~on. a 1moker, fell asleep while watchln& televtslon and either dropped hb cl(11' •It• or that It fell out ol an uh tray. The Army wants lo try Capt. Bruce 1l. Councilman !or sales ol . , marl Juana In 1972 at Fort Sill, Okla. . . Hfs presence in the kitchen, they said, indicates he either tried to gel water when he was wakened by the fire, or WU limply trying to esa.pe and became disoriented In -the smolce ~anc1 wu overcome . The government argued lhal m~rtjuana s~lling should be tned _, _ as a mllil.ry o!fense because it threatens mt hlary_ thscl pllnc, elfl· , · ciency and authority especially when a trans:i.ct1011 involves nn offi- cer. 'l1le patrolling policemen happened to be In the senerel neighborhood when the call was broadcast and so reached the blue before lhe Costa Mesa Fltt Department. Officer Jeff Miller was first on the scene, followed by Officer Haddock, but even their early arrival was too late Wlder the circumstances. Co roner's deputies released M r . Compton's body to Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home, where funeral ar· rangements were pending today. Court Rejects 'Heavy' Study From Page 1 SLATION • • • tmpassen from the area. Millard said Burnell questioned the California Ranch Patrol badge and told Slatton : '1That doesn't mean a thins to me." Millard said witnesses will testify that Slatton then drew his gun, shoved it against Burnell's forehead and asked the young man: "What does this prove ?" Thole witnesses, Millard said, will i..uty that Slalton shoved lhe young man's head back with the w'eapon, repeatedly cocking the hammer until Burnell told him: "No lawman would WASl:UNGTON (UPI) -The ever do that to anyone.". U.S. Supreme Court denied today fl.tUlard said that victim Glahn, who a hearing to a fl.tiarui woman fired from her job as a telephone was standing nearby , then stepped operator for the .·fire department forward and told Slatton: ''Hey man , because ahe was 53 pound a this isn't cool ... " overweight. The deputy district attorney then all~g- The woman, Mrs. MadelJne ed that Slatton'& response was to fire WOife, C011tended she handled the the pistol into Glahn's stomach from , aam•. Job In. 1~ 11'.biJe_.lhe Wu two to , three . reel. )IOlster the weapon , as heavy as ahe ls now, if not and nm for the Land Cruiser parked heavier, and wu rated as nearby. 0 1aUsfactory or outstand.lng" In fl.1illard said sheriff's deputies later lier work. She aaked for the same found the overturned vehicle a few · miles poo!Uon lo 19'.11 when. ahe relurned from the hol springs and began to IO the ~ area after llvtns scour the area in search for Slatton. In Callfornla. · Slatton wu nuahed from a nearby She wu hired by Dade Cowity nnch house where he bad aougl>t n!fuge. subject to a phyalcal eumlnatlon Otputles said Slatton told the owners and then flred her because she of the property that he was. flee ing weighed nearly 200 poundJ. from a group of kidnapers wbo bad .. f'ron1 Pafe 1 . ' GUERRILLAS .. ; originated In New York end stop~ in Rome on the way to Beiru t, LebaQO'Ti and Tehran, Jran. But the airline latet' said the flight was sta rting In Rome because of bad weather in'New York. . Thousands ran In pani c in the nirport when bullets flew around lhem. l'cop!e. fell to the ground . ducked beneath chairs and behind columns. ,, "J sa\!r a man sprayed with bulle ts crawling on the floor," said an airport. employe. The two who bombed the Pnn A1n jet joined their companions aboard tho Lufthansa Boeing' 737 with a German crew, a v.·oman ramp Dll:ent and the undetermined number of other hostages .. The Lufthansa plane appeared headed Jor Beiru t' before it landed in Afhe1~ 'and sources at the Beirut lnt.enmtio~l Airport sa id the hijackers request~ "urgent preparaUons for an enlergcncy landing." ~ The Lufthansa spokesman confirmed reports that the pilot was forced to fly low over the fl.1edlterranean because "the ·door Apparently could not· be closed completely.'' A spokesman said lbe pl ane was not loaded with enough fut'I to fly as far as Beirut. Alrllne.ofllclall today...,.. attempting , ...!:====''===='=====:!__thre::_:::•:tened::::_:to:.:::cu:::tr•te blm. 'lo piece together acooUDta of Sunday's bomb threat at Orange Cowity Airport The tv.·o Arabs whose. release was demanded by the hijackers were idl"r\- tifled as El Arid Shafik, 22. and Kht1r1- touran PaJaal . 21. h"th Palestinians bom in Jordan. They were arrested Aug. s fnr killing four persons and in juring 55 in a gun and bomb attack at Athens airport. -~~~--~~~~- during which two women were Injured wheo they Jumped off the wing of a Hughes Alrwest jeU!ner. Larry Ulcbfleld, apokMmao for the .6frweat San Mateo ·office, aaJd today that the atewardeu •bol!d the threoteo· eel Olfhl bad DOI yet llled her n!pOl'I but Iha! the report oou1d clear up aome of the · confusion about what happened · Inside the plane. The plane was tailing toward the nmway when the pilot was advised that an anonymous caller had "Phoned the airline td warn, "My uncle hu a bomb oo your last flight." . IJtdtfleld said acoordlng to his tnror- matlon the steward... told -gera that they were to leave the plane by the main cabin doors. For some unexplained reason, several of the emersency windows were popped open as well and passengers scrambll!d out ooto the wing, Litchfield uld. Passengers had not been told to use the windows or to jump off the wing, according to information offered by Litchfield. Mr!. Pat Weimer, one of the women who sprained an ankle during the leap, however, said that a man across the isle from her popped open one of the windows and the stewarden took It from him, laid In on a seat, and ''told us to get out in the wing." Litchfield said be does not know how , many passengers leaped off the wing I but that he bellevtt most of them deplan-1 ed 'by using the main cabin door and the rear stairs. · FroM Pltfle 1 THREAT ... Injured women, said he overheard 'PM'engen coming off the plane criticize · the manner in which the crew handled the bomb threat and thought the ttewgdt!ISes should hBve displayed "a little more cool." Mrs. Weimer said the incident oc- curred Jul! a!IA!r the stewanles1 had ctven her Instructions to tne pauenge1 s on the use of seatbelts . She suddenly rushed forward to the~pilot'1 compartmen t. "She emerged and started !!Creaming at us to 'Get Off . . . Get Off . . . Right Now,'" Mrs. Weimer said. Alrwest officials irr San Mateo could not be reached for immediate comment. Tam Chandler, Orange County station mana ger for the airline, said he was ... certa in lnstructi(tns to depl:sne were gi~ but '1we were on the ground and we don't have the slightest Idea what lulppened Inside the plane." Mn. Weimer, still Umping from her Injury, II scheduled to board the ,.me flight today to reach Medford, Ore., where her father II near death. 'Energy Crisis Phony' PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Coalumer advocate Ralph Nader aald Sunday tho 1 energy crlslt was "the most phony crisis ever lnfllcied upon a modem IOclety.11 Speaklnc before Tu Equity for America, ao organtzallon oeeklnl ta• rerol'tlll, Nader called for a cutback In rue! for lhe nation's buslnes.oes and lnduatrles. Woliday <:JJWl.~ef ~e - FOR ONLY $10. MORE We will make a normal re - placement installation of any standard undercounter dish - washer . YES, ONLY $10. MORE! The stainless steel dishwasher. • ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSA L GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING • RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATI ON •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE' ACT NOWlll SALE ENDS NOV . 21, 1973 ...•• .. . . .. ... ... .. • • • NOBODY SELLS « • WAST EKING ·• • DISHWASHERS « : FOR LESS THAN• ·•. DUNLAPS « • • Why Waste Kini Unlver_sal Is 5 ways better *****""*****• •.. .-. 11111 lllllJUlJlll!LUlllltlltf!. '\:iU\U,IJ,l'' "'l''" "'' ,.A r¥¥V V VV V f r;;; • ......... .._w,IJ ~ 20 ~ ~ 5 ·~ WEAR i YEAR j ~ STAINLESS s "'"' I"'"""'" "'~ ~. STEEL ~ •h• moi,.. P"mp.'! ;.;t lm_e r , waite~ GUARANTEE . ~dis'""""'" •Y•<•m . .; SAFE , SANITARY , RUlllED BASKETS, l.. J. heater end puJhbut· : + _. :-lol'\I nn 80011nd 900: ,. ~ striea dJ~hv.·asbel'i. ~ ~ :. . DRYllS RANDOM LOADING n m 11m111 n 11rrr11l lf .r1u1111·r111n~1~onnn .. ~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE 90 DAYS·CASH WITH APPROVED CRl!OIT 1815 NEWPORT D!YD., ·I Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • -I · . , I I ,- t I I ·" \\ • "" '" A ACF A<m " ...m ... ... ..,, Mm Adv I A\t!n ,,,,, ., AU Al• Altc A J ... ... ' A1• ~~ .. Al~ A"> Ako A" AleK All AllA A AUg A Uy .. Ilg All Ailld Alli! AUd Al!+w Alli .. 11a Alli• Allt .,,., Aoc~ Amo Am Ame A,. Am• Am A"' Am ~ AA8 Am Am Am AS• 1~ Am ADI Am A Am "' AO' AO A AO Am Am A Am .. , A A ~ : :;:: ~ A Am Am Am ATT ATT Am Am AW. ,,., A A AM Am AM Am :"' Am Am A Am• A A~ A~ Ano Am A~ A~ A .. .. .. A .. A" A" A" A" Ari' ... ,,, ... .., A• .. A• A• .. .. A~ A~ A" A> .. .. A" A" All Al A• .,. A" -All ., A" A" Aw Aw Aw A '" A A An •• "' •• •• '" '" •• .. .. .. ,, •• .. .. ,, .. •• •• •• .. •• .. .. :· • ' • '" .. '" '" ' • • • .. I ~ E " ' ' ' • • • ' • ' ,. " " " II " " " i;· " " " u ,, " II A w -. • 1 .. 0ftdaY, Oecembtr lt, .1.'11J IJ,,.._ P1LO T JS Monday's Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows Appear Every Satur~ay ' -1 ---~------'------------'-I I ' • l OAILY PILOT Otlter Deatlis WASHINGTON (APl -Dr. Cbarle1 Greeley Abbott, a pioneering astrononler "'ho ' Mol\dly, Dfcembff 17, 197l LAFC _Rejects Midway City Bid . Va1ley,Man Wins • -Goodwill Awftrd SANTA ANA -The till• belieVed the energy source of Bf \\11.LIAAI SCJIREIBER. ""the tururc-to--"be-the sun,-h;,__: °' •a.oa11y...Pu.t--ll.tff---- spent his life studying, died today, lie was IOI. Abbot \1·as associated with the Sntithso· nian Institution for over thrce- quarters of a century. SA.NTA ANA -Midway Ci· ty. a 350-acre island of county territory in · the middle of \Vestminster. will be.. allowed to keep its place in the sun, local Agency Formation Com- missioners have decided. Delbert Catron, president ol. lhe Mldwa)'-City,.Cllamb<r-4-1--- Commerce. made an emo- -Of-Goodwill orker or 17.4 has been awarded to Robert S. Frantz of Fountain VaJJey. palsy, spastic hemiplegia and isual-limllltlol'l.s,Frantz..-ls confined to a wheelchair and has only limited use of his Jeft hand. His eye weakness demands that he work as close as four to six inches from his work aurface. VATICAN CITY (APJ - Cardinal Amlelo CJcogna11t. 1he Vatican secretary of state for eight years and papal en· voy to the United States for 25 years. died today after a brief illness. J~c "'as 90. The LAFC voted unanimous- ly to let the 9,000 residents of f\lidway City keep their unincorporated s t a t u s , re·. jecting a bid by Westminster to throw its sphere of in- fluence over the small co1n- munity. tionnl appeal to the LAFC \\ledoesday to ';lrcave our peo- ple alone." "Five times we have voted against annexation to Westminster and to put their sphere of influence over us is like opening the door to annexation against our v.1ill," he said. Catron said the people of his community arc a "do it yourself breed" and in almost every instance, they have l>aid for services they need without usin1t county funds . SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - Sfd Barnes, 57, an Australian cricketeer. died Sunday. He was known as a grea t batsman and a spectacular close-in ficld sman . Acti.on Filed "We have had sidewalks sin-ce the 1920s -all paid for bv ourselves," Catron said. EVANSTON, Lil. (AP l -G. To Reverse ' Plan$ Denial ''\\l e have a \'Olunteer fire department which is one of the best around and we have !he be.st possible police pro- tection -the Orange County Sheriff." D. Crain Jr., 8R, publisher of Advertising Age and other business publications. died Saturday. · Other magazines owned by his company, Crain Communications, inc I u d c Jn dust r i a I Marketing, Automotive News. Business SAf\TA ANA _ An action Catron described Midway that seeks to reverse the Hun-City as a group or old-fashio~ " Jnsurance, Advertising Sales & Promotion and Pensions & Jn vestments. ed "barn raisers" who chip tington Beach city COWld l's denial of plans for the con-in and do whatever jobs need struction of three apartment to be doile. buildings on Holly Street has lie said ?11idway City has been filed in Orange County three water pumping plants Deaf.la Notices Superior Court. that supply four · times the ~------J d aJ Ch · "lvater at four times Jess cost Fo1tt1E1 u ge W ter aramza has than Westminster could and G.,.rn11ne P. FMI~•. Acie 11, 001 i~ yet to set the date on which F-•• Av1., cos11 Mn1 11e a · he .11 h . 1 "probably supply even more o.rh, O«emMr 13. 1'73. Survjved by WI e a r . p-etr1a 11,1,,. w1. ,.1trr1111e F. Gvn<M•· s,•n arguments that the city coun-than the city of Santa Ana Gtt.-111; Ml)hew, Pierri F. Gunclt!r, •n • COUid Use." Mlrl"°· ~rvkH, 1ocH1v. MonO•Y. n c1l acted unlawfully July 16 NA s111 &rOldw•r, crwrPl'I. wirn F11w .. ~-•t de · d I · Carton added that his peoole Jal\n AilMIV 0Ulcl1t '1Q. l11vr"rnent. H••baf' Wua.1 I n1e pan! preVIOUS· ._.,, MlmOl'11t P1rt.. a.ii arllll<IW•Y Jy approved by the city Plan-keep Midw::iy City free from MOrtu11rv 01rtc1ors. . slum conditions \\.'ithout fman-, H0$,.&11 ,,, , _,, n1ng <;ommlsson and the """' Hos1M1•1. Ave a.. of r B d f Zon' Ad. cial aid from anvone. He said SI CM!ll Mf:ta. 0•11 ot (11111>. DK•mbe< oar 0 mg JUStments. u "'1t73 Survived DV bl'Olher, Or. AnlhonY p I Cl . da just across the line i n ~S. w''"'" spr1n111. 1 • 11 n o 1 , ; • roper y owner arin flll)tiew or Jo11n Ho11M1•1. sin M1r1no. Kirk Brooks of Honolulu, w.es!rillnster there are slums Sfr'/kti 11.id · lnrerment will be held h I h k t I f wedMMliv. 2 PM, 1n Pell•, Iowa. Bell ·Hawaii, and her agent, James. 1~ peop e. a\·e ep ou o ·~~dw•": ~~u1ry, Forw•'.dlllQ oirec-D. i\1ontgomery of •Huotingtofi . f\!Jd\\•ay:Ci,tv.'. . c.th«ln• J. J~~n~~~Gl;e u; ,,,111en1 Beach. seek court .1iction that He said l\·l1d\\.'ay City sho~ld 01 ~un• Btat n. oa1e 01 dt•th. will allow them to build three be allowed to keep the 1n- oicernt>tr 15, \971. Svrvlvtd bV 1l1!ff1. t ' ' h h d · ·t Ot• M•v McL1ren, D•kl•r>d. c11111 ;Leona 24•unit apartment houses on egr1ty .1t as a since I Lw. Rtn0. N1v1<1a; ·brothtf', J . 8· form d t919 J1M1no5, ••10 ot Rena: sl• ne1>11ew1 the west side ·of Holly Street e lJl • Prlv•!• 1erv1ce1 •nd 1nierm.n1. Famnv 185 feet sooth ol Garfield' Com.missioners were urged 1111111nt1 rnemorl•I contro1Wtton1 bf m&dl ._ ""' c1nc1r Fund. Shtff1r Laguna Avenue. to allow Mid,vav Citv to decide e.ich Mortv•;i;.c?';:A':C:N They name city councilman its ~ aflafr:s throu~ .a ,.1'111 o. M1CM1hlln. J3SO P11r1t NeW11Dr1• Muruc1pal Advisory Council tkwporl ee1ch. 0111t of death, o.c1rnbf• Jerry Matney as responsible, . . 1c, itn. survived bv wlle. Ell11bflh · vi'a hi·s appeal to the ci'ty now in the fornvition stages. p MllCMll\OnJ TWO 10fli, P1ul O. Jr. The Id .rid Rkhlrd K. M11cM1i-. of s1n11 council against the planners' ~p \\OO _serve as a aar1>1r11 01V1Jhltr. Kathleen A · pseud t rounc I to make T.;:;M'"'°"· c1111• Melli: or1n00aut11>1ft'. approval, for delay of the pro-.. o-ci Y 1 rno:;:r A~m?:._non;,..,,~:'.:. :::t!'. ject. dec1s1ons about the con1- Penn1vk.11nl1; t>rorhlr. H1ro1d ". munily's future . ~hon. ChlclQO; sltltr. Aosernarv ,..,. "d tha rt' <lfllllQl!lr, N•••••tn. P1 nn1vt'l11n11 . ......tron sa1 ta po ion s.,..1cn. 10C11v. MOnd•v. • PM, P•c!tic Data Offi"cei• or his city -which is split View Chuiel. 1n1trfl'llfll, P1tellk V•ew M-111 P11rk. PKltlC vi.w MOrlviry, into three parts by Strips 0£ D1r1etors. MOGE SACRAMENTO (AP) \Vestminster. borders Hun· Edmond L. M«JI A .. 6f, ot 171 Altier! PIK•, cos11 Milli. 011e o1 OH!'"· Fulton M. Smith Jr. of Fair tington Beach and some peo-=~~~1i:o,,!~~i1n~~v1~?o. ~dm~'. Oaks has been appointed data pie have been discussing ef Hvnlln11ton e11tcn1 tou• d•ueh19"· proc<SSing officer io the possible annexation to that ci· J1111nne ~ktf'I, Hun!ln!llon 8t1ch; Thlr1!11 L11111, Oxn1rd: G11brlet1t Conn, California Department O ( ty. sinll ,l.nl r K~r&n M(l(lf, ,...,,, M~•~r 'th R bJi Co ' ' ob-f'lw t>n>thll'ti nw 1111tr11 io grandchit-Finance. Sm1 , a epo can, nuptS1oners were dfl!I. "°""'' T11111d•Y· 1::111 f'M. Bell has been depo'ty state~ data viously ·awayed by Catron's 8.,.dWIV Chl!llll. ll:tciu!1m MIM, Wfd-nnd1y, , AM. .!ir. J1111ch1m c1t11o11c processing . officer since appeal and voted to delay in· c11un:ch. witn Fr. T11orn11 J. Nevin of-February. The post pays def in i t e I y \Vestminster's ftd1l1nQ 1nt1rmenl. l<lo!Y Sepvl'h'r c...,.1ery. sen BrG1dW•Y Morrvarv. Ol· $32,256 a year. sphere of influence bid. IJciDl'l-OLSON ' Lois G. Q!Ml!l. Ao1 ,50, of 30IA Johnsan . • A'.!o-ltl Mesi. o.,, bl de•th, OKtrnber • ll. 1t73. SVNlv.0 by hut.Nnd, Rudolph • ()1111111 ; d1111)hler. P1lr!cl1 SINUlt. L• : ~~~~111 ~ro1=~·R~1:r•-.,d H'F':!~~~ Ander11!f1, 11t ot Cl\lrlntan, Sovth C11ro- l1r.-: Hvt gt1ndchlldret1: -;rHI· gr•nckh\1(1. SeNlcn, Tvnd1y, l PM. ! Bell 11rv1<1w•v Ch1pel, wtltl Fr. How••d C1rtwrl;lll CJ(licl1ll1'9. ln!frme-nt, Fil•· l\lv.n Memorl11I Perk. F1mily 1111)· gnll ,,..,._111 con1rlbUllon1 be m11de ~ Ille Amerlc•n C1"'er Society. Bell er01111w1y Mor1u1ry, O!rectorl- SJMMONS S!ePhtn K. Simmons. Aot 23. ol <ICll Prlnceton Or., C111t11 MHll. 01!t of oe1th, 0tcembtr 1~. 1•n Survived Dv wlft, 0.tlfl K. Slmmont: 1111r1H1!5, Mr. and Mrs. Rlcllard K. Simmons; brother, Mkll1t1l1 sl1ttr. C11>11Ke: 11r1ndmot1>er, Fr11>Ce1 Roome, 111 ol CO"lll M-.~. M.Miorlll i.ervicn wltl be held Wed· neM11y, 10 AM, Chris! C~urCI\ bV !tie SN, 1~ W. 81lb0il Blvd , NeW!)Ol"I 81•ch. F1mlly riaqvnts no fl ower1. THORSELL Rober! H, Thortfll. Aoe 51, ol 10AJ w. cnevenn1, Cos!1 Me16. O•!t of ci.ith, oec.mr.er t. 197l Survlvtd .tJv w1ft ,Ruin: ..,.,, ROberl, o! Penn1v1v1n11; (11uqhler. R<>berr., Co111 Mesi : nroTn~·. Btf'I TMJrseth 1 I' It" Setty Thors~ll. both of Mlm1t1or.: lhrtt 11randchild•~n. Meinorill ...-vice-I, Wtdntsd1y. 1 PM, 8111 Br111dw1v (l\l1Pf1, wiln Rev. Wllllarn Acton ottlcl1tlng. lnvrnrnenl, Falrh1vtn.. M-1111 P11r1!;. Bell SrOlldWIY Mortv1ry. OlrKI~. WOltLEY Jotln Edward Worlt v. Rt1!den! of Co•I~ Mf:u; (11te ot (leath. C>Kernbfr 1~. 1•7l Belo~ lalher ol Rotierl G. wo.iev •NI· Bllf'llll L. Ra11ler1 brother ol W11ller A Worltv end Dora E. RotJwn. Al~ Mv\v..i by th< gr1ndchlldrtn •nd tlfven 11re1!..qr11nckl>Udren. Servictt. T1111!1od~v, 11 AM, tlillslcHI C1>vrc1>, Roia HUit ~Dl'lll P••~. Whinier. Ro!t! Hlll1 Mor1v1rv, OlreclDl't. ORANGE COUNTY Bandit's Bid To Roh T,,ro 'Backfires' SANTA ANA -A bungling bandit. \\'hose bid to rob two occupants of a South Laguna rootel room ended with one intended victim sitting on his head and the seco nd phoning Orange County shef'i!f's of· fict\fS, has been comnutted for an indefinite term to the State's Norco.facility. Superior Court Judge James Tu.mer ordered the com- mitment after Clifford Dale Burkhart, 26, San Diego, pleaded guilty to robbery charges. The judge found on the basis of doctors' reports that Burkhart was in danger of becoming addicted. t o narcoti.cs. The Orange Q:>unty selection was made by three judges who chose young Frantz on the basis of his work achleve.. ment In overcoming his han- dicap; his physical, mental, social adjustment and achievement in overcoming his handicap; the severity of the handicap to overcome: and his personality a n d development. SERVING AS JUDGES were Joseph E. Irvine, public rela· lions director . for Pacific Telephone. Tustin ; -May Russell, manager community association liaison, The Irvine Company, Newport Beach. and Or. Allan G. Snider, direc· tor o( Melodyland Counseling Clinic, Anaheim. Born with multiple han- After graduating from Carl Harvey School in Santa Ana. Frantz attended Cy pr e s s College for one year. FRANTZ WAS placed by Goodwifl at the Hospital Laun- dry, Santa Ana, as a laundry helper. Part of the recognition Frantz will receive is an ex· pense-paid trip to Sacramento in January for visits with State dilmitaries and a tour of the State Capitol before attending the annual awards luncheon, "'here he will com- pete for the state title with the Good"'ill \Vorkers selected by the other ten Goodwills ln Cattrornia. dicaps, Including c e re b r a I 1;====== Pair Fined $125 Each In Fracas WESTMINSTER -A Hun- CHEER UP THAT BOAT OWNER FRIEND AT YOUR NIAIUT IOOI STORE tington Beach couple arrested ., at their home last Aug. 30 MAllNI HAIDWARE after a fracas with police overl";iiiiiiii a hit-run incident has been li stwardGHo. Gllo~l& ~ind Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers Burkhart was arrested last Oct. 15 shortly after he simulated possession of a weapon and entered the motel room occupied by Walter Smith, 56. of Salt Lake City and Leslie Eaby, 54, o{ Van Ny.ys. Bolh men quickl y overpowered Burkhart and held him until. sheriff's .of· ficers arrived. fined $125 each in West Orange County Ju di c i a I District Court. Salvatore CaPfllo. 55. · aild his wife, Eleanor, 46, of 8373 Castilian Drive, "'ere also ordered to serve one year's probation arter being found .. ~-~A-SRI~§ sale Bogus Casli Nets Term \ guilty of resisting arrest and battery on a police officer. The jury trial was ordered on charges that the couple attacked officers who came to their home seeking in- fonnaUon on the traffic ac-ANAHEIM -Rona1d Pfek, cident. 31, of Reno. Nev., has pleadcdi ------------11 AdwrHsement g\iilty":"""to, passillg a counter_. !eit bill at ~isneyland. Peek entered the plea in Bitel U.S. District Court. Sentencing • was scheduled for Jan. 7. U.S. Secret Service agents ; said they found $32,400 in · _ counterfeit $100 notes in the LOll!l·ldca111 trunk of Peek'a auto and at FAST'EEnf9PowdlC bis hom<! after he was ar· It talcas the wat'(Y rested by Anaheim police Oct. out d weamg denlina. 6. BIG WALE llRB8R8Y Water repellent, great for jackets, car coats. Makes beautiful bed- spreads, a wide color range. REG. $2.98 YD. SAVE $1.01 YD. M1chine Wish Cotton .is" 1.'lide 111 YD. (ft ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th St .. Cosla l\lesa 616-4888 • BALTZ-BERGERON Wl•f ilOI' m .. • It ,.._T 11111• the ..,....., .... I 'z. to-' ! FUNERAL HOME Corona del !\far ' 673-9450 Costa l\te sa 64&-z.&Zf • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa LI ~3l • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17111 Beach Blvd. Rimtington Beach lf.Z...7771 %4f Redondo A\'e. Loni Btacb !13-.JS-1115 • !11.CORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17M Laguna Canyon Rd. lff.9115 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctmder]I Mortuary Clllptl -- loath Coast __ -. ?lua 3519 Pacific: View Drive Newport Be ... , California 144-17IO • "Take A 2'• Shopp .... HOUSE OF FllBRICS always first quality fabrics · PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL 1'UNERAL UOlllE '.'Ml lolR Ave. We1t1111w...., m45t5 • SMml'S MORTUARY 1111 MUI SI. ll11Uapolled ~ --· ORANGE a;,UNTY. TRANSIT DISTRICT hrlaf_t ............... llllOOl'llllNT- •nlk•lil!JIS, w...,....1.,..e..1aAu,c..m11 I 1 i.di CNlt ,._ Ho:1tr Pino lrl1tol •t San 01190 Fwy. t 7•h 11t Br;1icl C... M-. -141-1116 $o;ita AMI -S4l·:i551 01012M1 M• -IMMI ).t C..ier Or•119•th•r,. 111d H1rbor L• Pelm• 1t S~ton fclbrtM -12'42J4 ..... ~.t -IH;QJJ .... .,..._ 12111 lrookhunt (111)1t to \lo'\'tl -11 .. 1141 ltc• .. I .. C:.-.r -Edln91r 1t l111ch ll•d., Hvnlin,tofl l11ch -1'7 ... IJ I I • • ' ' I 1 • • • ) I •• ·WAS lfllln 'illmt donlit ~ .t~. re5)9rt Seri Thom Sel"i .. Iii gl1" "tie ••• •• T ·----Ii --8 I ' B lffl• t~ .Ml iliJur piSse the t(lf : ~ lliile ' 11../.• ~· •• . . . . . . . . . . . ' . : .. ··Laguna Beaeh EDIJlQN ioL 66, NO. 351, 2 SECTIONS, 2S PAGES . . ~ Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1973 ' TEN CENTS Jlumphrey Also Took Papers' Tax Deduction . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hubert H. HWnphrey and a.number of other prom· · irleat and even J1}iddle«helon officials dl/l(ited their papers as gilts on which ~ presumably did claim tax deduc- ·ljoas, the Scripps-Howard News Service reported today. -Scripps-Howard staff writer D an Thciinasson, who surveyed General Services Administration (GSA) records, JaMI Hllmphrey's' office confinned his ilft'as a tax deduction had been claimed. ·:~e Is now preparing lhe figures and . ' .. . ,-.. a statement," a Humphrey spokesman said. HumphreY, Democratic senator from Minnesota, was vice president from 1965 to 1969 and donated his persooal papers from those years to the Minnesota State Historical Society. Scrippt-Howard said it' obtained a GSA list of present and fonner public officials who contributed personal papers to the government in t~ last 10 years for incluaion in one or more of the seven presidential libraries supervioocl by GSA and the National Archives. "While there was no indication that tax deductiotls wer.e claimed uner the tax provision which Congress abolished effectively JuJy 25, 1969.11 Scripps- Howard said, "Those making the dona- tions had the opportunity to do so and presumably did." 'Ille congressional Joint 'Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation is checking, at .President Nixon's request, the pro- priety of the gift of Nixon's vice presidential papers and tax deductions. . Nixon bad his vice presidential papers ane om • Arraignnaent Today Two -Booksellers • Facing C~arges • Ljlguna Beach booksellers Gordon and were expected to appear before Judge EVelyn Wilson, arrested Dec. 3 for selling John Griffin and plead . innocent to the undergrowtd comic books, were schedul-charges. .,no be arraigned today on pornography The Wilsons' arresfcame after a police ~es in South County Municipal Court. detective went to-the store and purchas-'\be Wllsoos, ownen of tbe Fabrenbeil etl ~ ol Ult "adult .. comics fealuring 4~1· Book Store, 509 s. Coasl Highway, """'tllld \ojo1'oce. -A dOt><!ty dislii!:I attorney later tuled . -' lhn ... ~-~t lbe.:..Nl!Djcs '11 I . d. ~ c:ontaiDed ..... ·~ ~ ~ 4 ~WO n ]Ure he'U'°at'~= ~':at~' ..:: I' Dec. 9. The rally raised more con-I n Airport lf'.:ier;~. police officers recorded Concemect protesters contacted Mayor ; Roy Holm and olher City Council B b Pan.; p memben,-objecting-to the use oJ-.!be om "'-' videotape surveillance of public gather- ~ ings. Holm, after consultinl with' other members or the councl, ordered the tape deslroyed. , • By RUDI NIEDZIEl.'!KI Of IN o.lty l'lllt St"" Two injured appraised al $576,000 and claimed Ibis as tax dOOuctiaps spread over four years. GSA records showed the late President Lyndon B. Johnson, vice president for three years of the Kennedy ad- NO TAX DEDUCTION SEE N IN HOME GIFT-Story, Page l ministration, donated presidential and vice presidential papers in I 9 6 5 , presumably claiming a tax deduction in 1965. He also donated persOnal papers to • ' • the government in 1966, 1967 and 1968, all eligible for use as tax deductions. A gift ol President Dwight D. Eisenhower's papers "'as made June 'l:l, 1969 -less than one month before the new regulation abolished tax deduc· tions on such transactions. His widow, Mrs. Mamie Eisenho\vcr, donated papers-to the government in 1966. ''GSA records," Scripps-Howard said. "show that a surprisingly large number of prominent and even middle-echelon Passengers panicked ahd leaped from the · wing of a Hughes Airwest plane silting on the ground at Orange Counly ~rt Sunday after the crew received WQid of an anonymous' bOmb threat. 4'wo women who jumped seven feet to tbe'"pavement after scrambling through a{ emergency door suffend spraied OOkles but were treated and later releas- ed at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. -t'J)\e women were identified as ?tlrs. Pit--:Weimer, 42, of 2401 N. Santiago Bhi, Orange, and Leora Van Wagener, 115, ;'qi Henderson, Nevada. Both made . t»lrip to the hospital by ambulance. More protest of the arrests is expected Tuesday nlgbt when the . City C.Ouncil holds a special public bearing on the ob9cenitY issue. The 7:30 p.m. session will be held at clly ball. May6r Holm stressed today Iba! the bearing Would not delve into the sPecllics surrounding the Wilsons' arrest, rather it will cover general community obsceni- ty standards. Both. occup~ts Of this station wagon suffered skull ·fractu~.Suliday .at 12:25 p.m. when it went out of c<inb:ot,-lna struck ·a large tree, beside Laguna Can· yofr!!oid' near ih.-Iakes. The pair were fr.eed f!orp the wreckage by passersby. They were identified as the dri~er, John P. Machan, 20,of Temple City and Jan B\lfchtold. 19, of Arcadia. Both are in semous conditjOn today, he at Missi.im Community Hospital and s~e at Los Angeles County. Medical Center. :r?ae Seattle-bound 009 jetliner was ey«CUated after airline officials in Los An~es said. their reservation desk ~ved a bomb thresl al t: 13 p.m. ~ call was placed by 1;1 woman who W,a,cned in a Spanish·accented voice, "My UIJ'le bas a bomb on your last .fligbl." 'rte flight originated in Mexico City. A.lrwest officials radioed the pUot as ht, taxied the craft to the runway and eVi.cuation orders were· given. Sheriff!s ~ies said emergency doors were ~ and many passengers started climbing out onto the wings . • Several of the 33 persons on board jumped before groud crews rolled a s&lirway to the aircraft's main door. f 1"81 orricel'I and Orange C.Ounty Sher· Jfff• deputies 1earched the p I a n e thoroughly bu! (urned up no bomb. .. Mike Weimer , husband of one o{ the itijured women, said he overtieard passengers comlng of£ the plane criticiu the mllMer In which the crew handled q;.. :bomb thresl and thought. the iltWar<!esses should have displayed "a Uiile more cool. 11 :Mr&. Weimer said the locide~l ~ Cl!l1!d jllll aller U>e stewardess had given ~,ijs to 'Gel Off • • • Gel Off . . • -~ ins1ructions to the passengers on tlil·U,. oJ seatbelts .. She suddenly ruahed lft!l.ard to !he pilot's co'mpartment :c:~ emerged and started screaming • .~, (Set THREAT, Page J) ,, . n ndians Arrested ~ . • AJW STATION (UPI) -Five Pi! Inillns weri arresled at a Sugar Loaf Mitintatn timber· cutting site during !he "'*1tend when !hey mu.ed to !eave .1111 •~• illey claim belongs lo tbelr . tflbe. Abotll IO. other Indiana remain •la· .\he vicinity of !he closed Lwtn !llllqnal Foml land and armed rangers ,,._ flown Jn Bunday to protecl IOtJglng ¥'11ons. c j _ ,, "Holm said be expecled supporters of the· Wilsons' to present petitions en· couraging the council to go oo record supporting an adult's option to read what be wants. Barte nder Files For City Council l 1i Laguna Beacli Hotel Laguiia bartender · Gary R. Weber today became the seventh can- didale in the Laguna Beach city council el<ction in March. Weber. 38, of 1570 N. Coast Highway. has been a resident of Laguna Beach for the past two years. He said today that a long time interest in politics and "generally what's goirig on in !.agw)a Beach" sparked his inleresl in the coundl race. Prlor lo moving lo l,.!lguna Weber was involved in restaurant and hotel management in Newport Beach and Hun- tington Harbour. Other candidates era .Wayne Baglln, Ph)'IJ!s Sweeney, cart -· Nancy Gl8J,llrian, J<i91 Braod IDd C. Richard Lemon. ' - The fifing dtadllno for nominalion papera is noon Dec. l7. Two Television Sets Dana Harbor Bait Boat ' Resurfaced by .Guards DaVlnci's Mona Lisa has enraptured men with her enigmatic smile, but Dana Harbor's creation of the same name gave. harbor patrolmen, lifeguards and firemen nothing ~ but fits over the weekend. Dana Harbor's Mona· Lisa -a· live-bait boat -ran all the rescuers through their paces befort noon Saturday when a deckhand goofed while shutting a large valve. ' A small block of wood kept the valve from closing and a few minutes after the crew left the large seiner at her dock at Dana Wharf, the boat began to sink. Patrolmen 1were first to ar.rive and . found the craf~ down so far her decks were awash. J;>atrol pumps were not iioough, so Doheny volWJteer firemen and San Clemente lifeguards were asked to bring everything at their disposal. After more than an hour's, work, the pumps succee<ied in lifting the heavy vessel from the bay mud, but the water damage to the boat's diesel englnes and othet equipment was extensive. The boat is the main source. of Jive bait for the fishing fraternity at the harbor. The only other one serving the harbor makes occasional rwis from Newport Beach. • lmpeachn1 ent Sought CHARLOTrE. N.C. (UPI) -The · Charlotte ·Observer, which endOrsed Preside.ht Nixon in the 1960 presidential campaign but remained neutral in 1972, called.Sunday for impeachment. Not So Merry , ·First Fire Plio1iy•-Not Second Stolen From H tel Ftr Pomona boa! owner F. T. Liver.more, lhe weekend visil lo his 3&-fOOt 0 cabl!I qui,or:,.i ~: J!!lrl/Or .was notjung .but trouble, . .. . . _ ~. ~~pper of!IM crwser Me.rry·Merryi f1Tsl lbi>t11Jlrt he LalWIL Beach Polle• todW1-ore in-ns·'dltl!W-. alllMI'·~ wllen .:he noUced smoke c:Omtngiti>m a cratt ·ai the vesupting lhe thefl .. ef .. \lt'O w 1 -~~,Xf!o!!cll a.:liorlior•• Jtllrioa. . • , · · .• teiev1110ns valued •I *°'~·lb. .' · ·~,lit. e.i for 'i'Preb¥t, but the <rews·dllcoven<Ctha.l lhe ainb!le was Surl and ' Sand Hotel, Jl.i s. eoul I ~ Otl a hibochl fbQard, tlie '\?aft. ·.,, ~ ' · J. · · I Iii; ,.Wed, Livtrrllore .. 1 oul'tor ·• crt1lse. , • Highway. tllllll'-"·1 Id·-be called for a Oieboal again. ·' ""'. ,.,... 1 ,"' Lt. Nell Pur"'11 Aid a guest l1llled • --,... 1111 boat !hit was Jiumina... , • . J.< •. • a ll>Om Saturday. Who be lef4 lhe ~' bul Uvcnrio/e aJl:!iatfY lflld tlOU.!ea' lhe ~ m . ~m~ The mllfor fll'...ujl' was cauat4 by a backllrt In an televiaion from the room and an adjlCflDt , ~-:~i...f.-t<: • ..,, i • · ~ ' ., "' unitwasmiJ&inl. 1 ~ • ·., •• ~'~ • i!~ ~ . ' ' • Attorney Cleared In Kill-for hire C.ounty Tria l An Orange Col.Ulty Superior Court jury today resolved its 11 to I impasse and found Fullerton attorney Michael Kester Remington ihnocent of all charges iil his "murder for hire " trial. Remington, 33, bowed his head (lJ)d wept as -he heard the verdict that cleared him of alleg::itio'ns that he planned the killing of plaintiffs and witnesses in clVil actions filed against him. The jury had gone off for the weekend deadlocked at 11 to 1 in favor of ac· quittal. It took them just one hour today to achieve unanimity. Judge James F. Judge accepted the verdict and confirmed that Jan. 22 will be Ute next court date for key pros- ecution witness Gary Michael Rollo. RoUo, the self-proclaimed karate ex· pert who has assertedly performed several bit parts in the "Kung Fu" television series, is scheduled for sen- tencing to what the prosecution eariler agreed would be a six month jail term. That arrangement may now be revised in the light of the Remington verdict, the prosecution conceded, today. Rollo, 21, testified during the 10-week trial that Remington hired him as one tS.e REMINGTON, Page%) 2 New Motorcycles Taken From StQrc Two brand new moto~ycles valued by the owners at $1,275 were stolen during the weekend by burglars .who broke into a Laguna Niguel Cycle Store, Oringe C.ounty Sheriff's officers said . Deputies said tile machines were taken fl1)nl Niguel Yamaha, 28162 Cjlmlno C.pistrano by Intruders who broke open the Iront door lo' gain entry. officials in the last five administrations donated their papers on v.•hich they could have claimed tax deductions from 1963 through the first six months of 1969 v.1hen the law was changed." It said the list included, in addition to Cabinet members and top presidential advisers, persons who served in relative- ly minor jobs, ranging from an associate director of the Bureau of Land Manage- ment under President Harry S Truman to a director of the Federal Housing Adn1inistration under Johnson . • I ·Terrorjsts - Flee Ron1e · · · Massacre ATHENS. Greece (AP) -Palestinian guerrillas bombed an American plafie in Rome's airport today, killing at least 29 persons, police said. 11ie guerrillas later shot three hostages. The terrorists escaped. to Athens in a hijacked Germtln jet wiUt an un~ determined number of hostages. A dead man also was repoi-fed ·aboard the plane when it lanedd in Athens. They began their attack _at Rome with a submachine gun fusillade that police said killed an unknown number Of bystanders. Greek police said tbe hijacked aircraft ]anded at the main Athens airport and the guerrillas negotiated with Greek authorities fo r release of two Palestin- ians held by the mililary-backed Gnek · government. . The hijackers threatened to blow up the Lufthansa Boeing 737 with all the hostages if the two were not released, an airline spokesman reported. The spokesman said the Arab guer- rillas informed the control tower that one of those aboard was "seriously m. jured and may die." An airport police spokesman said special army police and army units surrounded the aircraft. The attack at Rome's airport began about I p.m. -4 a.m. PST -when the. PaJestinians were asked to open their baggage for a routine security check in the crowded departure wing .. They did , pulling out pistols, submachine guns and hand grenades and spraying the room with bullets, police said. The guerrillas grabbed s e v e r a J policemen at the security point and went down a ramp toward the Lufthansa plane. The terrorists were variously reported to number three or four. Two of them ran up the boarding ramps of a nearby Pan American World Airways jetliner and threw incendiary bombs inside setting fire to the jet. A Pan Am spokesman said at least 29 bodies w e r e counted aboard the ch<\l'fed wreckage. Police said all 11 passengers in the first-class section of the plane were killed. An airline spokesman said the ex- plosions went off in the corridor, destroy~ ing the cabin and most of the first-class section. Pan Am originally reported the flight (See GUERRILLAS, i'age I ) Oruge «:out Weather It'll be fa ir and mild Tuesday, acCording to the weather service, with highs at the beaches in the mid 70s rising to 80 degrees in· land.· Ovcrnigbl lows in U>e 405 and 50s. INSIDE T ODAY ·L~ Col. Robert Sttnn, POW for 6 ~ years, say$ California's divorce law has taFcen him ••to the cleaners" as hi& wife of 18 11ears sues for di&sotution, StofJI Poll" 5. , . ' .. Whieh Court? Milimry Pot Case Reviewed WASIUNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Col!l'l aireed today to decide whether sale of marijuana by an Anny officer to an en. listed man is an offense-that-can-be"trledi>efore·.-mllltlty-tll)lirt.-- The court held in 1969 that court-martial jurisdiction covered only "service-connected" offenses. The governme.nt, see king to overturn a deciiion by the U.S. Cir· cuit Court at Denver, asked the Supreme Court to consider the mart· juana offense. The Army want s to try Capt. Bruce R. Councilman for sales"'Of marijuana in 1972 at Fort Sill. Okla. · The government argued that malljuana selling should be tried as a military offense because it threatens inllitary discipline, effi· ciency and authority especially when a transaction involves an offi· · cer. Supervisor Clark Attacks Caspers' Amtrak Proposal By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ,._, D•llY ,not Sl•ff Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark, chairman of the Orange County Transit District Board of Directors, today sharp- ly criticized an e f f o r t by Supervisor Ronald Caspers. to win legal changes permitting Amtrak trains to make com· muter runs in the cowity. "The way this sounds, p u b I i c transportation funds would be used to subsidize a rew people in selected afeas," Clark said. "What he's talking about is a tr'ain from San Diego to Los Angeles From Page 1 .subsidized by Orange County taxpayers." Caspers appealed Frid a y to C.ongressman Andrew J . Hinshaw (R· ·Newport Beach) l.o change the laws now prohibiting Amtrak from making commuter runs. Caspers' plan calls for the San Diego l.o Los Angel es train~ pull in to San Clemente at 7:15 a.m., into central Santa Ana before 8 a.m.. and into Los Angeles before 9 a.m. Caspers also asked · for new stops to be added along the way in San Juan Capistrano and Mission Viejo. CUrrently, the earliest stop in San Clemente is at 8: 12 a.m. The onfy eve- ning return run is at 8:4& p.m. out of Los Angeles. Caspers waol.! lbat changed to about 6 p.m. Clark said there are many com- plications ' to such a plan besides the 'MkdOft ef Bflte' -, Trial Under:W ay --. Eol!-Ranch ~Hand By WM BARLEY 01 "" Dalb' r1i.1 St•" Ranch band Robe.rt earl "Wh1p" Sia!· ton, was on "a mW1on oi hate and vengeance" when he shot ·and killed a youn1 Jmpasaer al Orltp Hot Springs i .. t July 10, the prooecutor claimed today iD Slatton's murder lflal. Deputy District Attamey 'Ted Millan! all!ged before an Orapge County Superior Court Jury In his opening 1tai,- ment thaL Slatton, 41, vowed to uoe bjo weapon on the "Hot Spriqp Jongitain" several hours before DeoftiJ Glahn, 21, of La Mirada, wu kille4. Mlliard" claimed Sl1tton had ,.veral drinkl at the SwalloWI Bar lh San Juan CapistraM from & p.m. to I p.in. that night and told the bartender before he Jeft: "rm going to get me one." The prosecutar told the )Ill')' that Slat· ton then stopped at a San Juan Capistrano service station en . route to the Hot Springs In bis Land Cruiser vehicle and knocked over a b'ash can Court Rejects 'Heavy' Study WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme Court denied today a hearing to a Miami woman fittd from )ler job as a telephone oper'tor for the fire department becalise she waa 53 -pounds ovetjreight. · "spilling garbage all over the area." "His mponte to the request that he clean It up wa1 to tell the alltndant thal people apw.d trash and garbage all over hla ranch without picking It up, 9o Mty lhouJd he?" Mlllanl Aid S)alton, •porting a whlle stetaoo hat -and with a .4; caliber Coll revol•er slung around hJs hips - was next Hen by about nine persons altting on lhe ground around the famous Orte1a water hole. . He said Slattop ldenUfled hlmself as thO' ranch owner and showed lranslenl Leo Burnell, 21, a badge that apparenUy reprtt.ented bis authority to evict tmpwer1 from the area. Millan! aald Burnell questioned the C.llfomia Ranch Patrol badge and told Slatton : "That doesn't mean a thing to me." Millard said witnesses will testify that Slatton then drew his gun, shoved it against Bumell 's forehead and asked the young man: "What does this prove?" Those witnesses, Millard said, will te.stlfy that Slatton shoved the young man's head back with the weapon, repeatedly .!OCking the hammer until Burnell told him : 0 No lawman would ever do that to anyone." Millard said that victim Glahn, who was standing nearby, then stepped forward and told Slatton : "Hey man, this isn't cool ... " The deputy district attorney then alleg- ed that Slatton's response was to fire the pistol into Glahn's stomach from two to three feet, holster the weapon al\(I run for the Land CrWset parked Nude Bathers Off the 11 ook . SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -A r.jarln Cowtly Judie hu 411ml11ed charges qalnot nve per-. ac- cuoed ol nude bathlnt and opened -the way for a summer of skin- nydlpplng on private land. Muplclpal Court Judge David R. Baty dismissed the charges against the three men and two women charged with violating the county's ordinance against nude sunning on public land. Defense attorney Paul Kayfetz .aid the beaches In the community were owned to the w>ltr by prop- erty owners along the shore. Laguna Planners Set Discussion On Subdivisions Sphere of Influence and proposed revisions of the subdivision ordinance will be discussed tanlght by the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. The 7:30 p.m. study session will be held at city hall. Commissioner will r e v i e w what utiUUes and .services would be needed if Laguna Beach eventually aMexes all land within the city's sphere of influence. The sphere runs from Crystal Cove to 'Ibree Arch Bay and inland to the ridegllne ol the bills ·surroWldlng the city. Discussion of several additions and deletions to the .subdividion ordinance also Is on the agenda. Avco Seeking·· Coast Panel Exempt Airing Aveo Community Developers ls ap· plying to the state coru:tal commission (or a recon.sidcraLlon of the clal~, 'of exemption on two Laguna Niguel ira~,; Avco'• $94 million, 473-acre Salt qMI. "1••· Beach area development took a lf41" step Friday wpcn the company ~ two Loa Angeles Superior Court cettS challenging the commission o1r caleJ14ar, The lawsull.!, both of whlch uk' ~ • exemptlons from permit requiremerf11 of Proposition 20, the 1972 coastal zOnc act 1 haven't been dropped . If Avco bes its latest plea beJilfe the Stalt Coastal Zone Conaervil!oh ConimiMion, the lawsuits will be put back on calendo.r and heard so. dp'S after that, Deputy State Al~y General Alan Block said today. The two tracts involved are 74'{9. oceanside of Pacific C.oast Highway P'Wr Crown Valley Parkway and 7885, ~ of the highway near Niguel Shores Road. Avco has planned to build up l.o ..917 condominium units on the po rtion , .. of tract 7885 within the commission's 1 ,~ yard permit zone. : That tract also includes a 1,063 ~e golf course, for which Avco receit1y had to request a temporary eroalo11 control permil. .. 1 A construction permit fo r that ~t is still being negotiated wi th _the ~f!t:e C:OOStal Zone C.OnservatJon Commlsstrin, which earlier denied A,._ the riJbt to finish building without a permit. . Tract 7479 has been planned for 1;218 condominium units, in buildings up ,!Q five .stories hilh. Both a permit .. ~ an exemption for this project have • denied. found the overturned vehicle a few miles Q GVEB.BI,LLAS ...... : ' originated in New York and stopped in Rome on the way to Beirut, Lebanon, and Tehran, Iran . But lhe airline later said the flight was starting in Rome because of bad weather ln New York. ~ ·drain· on public transportatlorr ftmds~tbat ..... would be needed to support the Amtrak l'Uilll. ii~:. =~~ :S·h~~e~: 'saJD~.'Jdb '1n·1-· wlille'itiewis ' as -heavy as she is now, J( not heavier, and was rated a s "aatis(actory or out.standing" in tter work. She asked ror the same po1illii!t In 1971 wben she returned ;o the Miami area after living In ~ornia. ne~~i;.i .. id sheriff'• deputies later Arizona Against ~12,000 1•0 Jewelry -·· ···~:::~e;::,1~;:~;~~.~.~, iu ···Cha'i1ge ih Time ······stol~~·hy Bu~giars ·;:· Slatton was flushed from a nearby PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) _ Gov. Jack· Thousands ran in panic Jn the airport when bullets flew around them . People fell to the ground, ducked beneath ~s and behind columns. "I saw a man sprayed with bullets crawling on the floor," said an airport employe. The two who bombed the Pan Am jet joined their companions aboard the Lufthansa Boeing 737 with a German crew, a woman ramp agent· and the undetermined number of other hostages. The Lufthansa plane appeared headed for Beirut before it landed in Athen s and sources at the Beirut Intemiltional Airp:lrt said the hJJackers requested "urgent preparaUons for an emergency landing." The Lufthansa spokesman confirmed reports that the .pilot was forced to fly low over the Mediterranean because "the door apparently could not be closed completely." A spokesman said the plane was not loaded with enough fuel to fly as far as Beirut. The two Arabs whose release was demanded by the hija ckers were iden~ tlfied as El Arid Shafik , 22, and Khan- touran Palaat, 21, both Palestinians born in Jordan. They were arrested Aug. 5 for killing four persons and injuring 55 in a gun and bomb attack at Athens airport. . The airliner was the third Lufthansa plane hijacked by Palestinian guerrillas in two years. 5 Die in Helicopter ' Smashup in Borneo SINGAPORE (UPI) -A helicopter chartered by an oil company crashed and sank into a swift.rwu1iJlg river in a remote part of Boreno 1ast week, killing three Americans and two Indo- nesians aboard, industry sources re- ported here today. Five persons esca~ ed before the aircraft IA'ent down in an estimated 80 feet of ""·ater in the Baritu River, the sources said. OU.NGI COAST .. DAILY PILOT "There is heavy freight movement between Fullerton and Los Angeles that mey be disrupted and many job! rely on that freight," Clark said. "That Is a lot more important than special com- muter service to a relatively few number of people." Clarlt added that tbe Idea would also be ecologically unsound beca""' trains need one-ball gallon of fuel per pasaenger and bll'OS need only one-third of a gallon. OCTD Director Richard Lynn, a Newport Beach atloniey, said be thinks t1ie board sbould IUJlPOll Cupen' efforts if only ta get a chance to lalk to Amlrat. •. "~ time we've fJIPIOldWid them. they've told WI their legfsJatJoa problblll them from talking l.o us at all,'' Lynn said. "I'm not talking about the prac- ticality of Mr. Caspers' proposal or anything elle, jlllt about gelUng Amtrak to tali: to WI." OCTD manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding 11id that If the money now used on buses -up ta 13 million per year -were funneled to Amtrak, local systems such as the innovative Dial-A- Ride plan would suffer. "This type of thing does impact finan. cially," Fielding said. Directors voted to allow Fielding to study Caspers' propo.sal and come back with an analysis. But director Al Ho!linden, a Fountain Valley councilman remarked "A Jot of people are nmninti for re-election and I don't know if ea ch great suggestion should get intensive ~tudy. We may be making a tem~t m a teapot." From Page 1 REMINGTO~ ••• of four killef'3 commissioned to eliminate principals Jn civil actions that named Remington as defendant. Those lawsuits followed the collapse of Remington's Cal-Vend ven d l n g machine enterprise and the accumulation of .substantial debts by the Fullerton lawyer . It was alleged against Remington that at least one of the intended victims would have met death if two men sent to eliminate him had not been given a wrong address and had not been halted fo r a traffic violation en route. Rollo testilied, and the piuecution us~ a tt.pe recording to support that testimony, tha t he offered to lure his victim out into the desert and bring back hia right index finger a.s proof of the witness ' elimination. Remington's two lawyera IUCCelafully argued In the trial 's final boura that the tape recordings were "nothing more than an elaborate Kung Fu ecenarlo. 11 They et.o argued before !be JID'Y that Rollo was an "inveterate liar" and had been proved to be so in many court actions that preceded the Remington trial. About That CofC Dinner ••• If you were planning to go to the Laguna Beech Chamber ol Commerce Chrl&tmu breakfast thl• WednQday - don 't. A Dally Pilot atory appearing Friday listed the event as thl! week. I! actuallj> took place last WedneJday. '!be Dally Pllol 'regrell the error and any inconvenience It may have camed. • She was hired by Dade County subject to a pllyalcal eumtnatloa and 11len fired her becauoe abe weighed nearly JllO 'poundJ. . Officials Probe I . ' Varied Accounts Of f>Ja~~·~ Airline Offlclall today were altemptlng to piece \.o£ether accounts of Sunday's bomb threat at Orange Counly Airport dQ:ring ~ch two ',women were.. lnjured wben Ibey jumped oil the wing or a Hughes Alrwest jetliner. j I.any Litchfield, apokesman for the Airwesl ~ Mateo oUice, said today thal the lltward ... aboard the lbrealen· ed fl igh t had not yet filed her report but that the report could clear up some of the confusion about what happened inside the plane. The plane w.u taxiing toward the runway wben the pilot was advbed that an anonymous caller ·bad phoned the airline to wa.rn, "My uncle has a~mb on your last flight." Lltchfield said aCl'Ol'ding l.o his infor- mation the stewardess told ~engers that they were to leave the plane by the main cabin doors. For some unexplained reason, several of the emergency windows were popped open as welt and passengers scrambled out onto the wing, Litchfield said. Passengers bad not been told to use the windows or to jump off the wing, according to information offered by Litchfield. Mrs. Pat Weimer, one of the women who sprained an ankle during the leap, however, said that a man across the isle from her popped open one of the windows and the stewardess took it from him, laid in on a seat, and "told us to get out in the wing." Lilchfield said be doa,. not know how many passengers leaped olf !he wing · but that he believes moet of them deplan- ed by using the main cabin door and the rear stairs. FromP .. el THREAT ••• . right DOW,' "Mrs. Weimer saJd. Airwea1 official! In San Mateo could not be reached for Immediate comment. Tom Chandler, Orange County station manager for the airline, said be was certain imtructions to deplane were giveo but "we were on the cround and we don'! have the 1llghtest Idea whal happened Inside the plane." Mrs. Weimer, ltill limpl~g from her Injury, ti scheduled to boaid the 181De Olgbt today to reach Medford, Ore., wbere her f.iJ>er Is near death. Ford Holds Meeting WASIUNGTON (AP) -Vice Preoldent Gerald R. Fon! preotded today al the Jut In a series of three meeUngs with .congressional leaders on AdmJnittratlon leglslaUve proposa!J for next yur. Jolqlng Ford and three cablnel membero at lbe Whllt no ... to dlscua "human and community af!alr1" were throe IOJlltoro and five Houle membera, all Republicans. ranch ho111e where he had aougbt refuge. Deputies said Slatton told the owners \Villlams asked today that Arizona be Jewelry valued at nearly $12.000 W~s stolen during the weekend by burglirs who may have had a key to a La1uua Ni~el home, Orange County SberU~'s of the property lbal be was Oeelng exdude<j Crom (>Ortlcjpaljng in Dayljgbt . from a group of Eidnapers who had Saving nme. threalened to castrate him. u d th pl WUll said Millard said hJs 'witnesses will also n "' e exllllog an, ams ' officers said . . DepuUe.s said Mrs . Della Pab1os Golenor, 68 , of 31538 W. Nine Drive, reported the theft of lhree rings jointly prove that Slattoo's common·law wife he expects Arlz.ona to be included with later retrieved the weapon allegedly used Calilomia iD the Pacific Daylight Time in the slaying and threw it down a zone. That would, in effect, leave Arizoi:ra nearby gully. with the same tJme it now has. · \•alued at $11,700. They said there Was now .sign of forced entry. •I 'Holiday _:CJJWL~ef CSa/e i FOR ONLY $10. MO RE We will make a normal re- placerrrent installation of any standard undercounter dish- wash'er;·YES, ONLY $1 0. MORE! . . ' The stainless steel . dishwasher. \/'JA.STf K IN (, ~;: " >: " • I ' r.• • .. • ' ,. OHL Y WASTE KING UNfVERSAl GIVES YOU All THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING• RANDOM LOAD ING.· •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION , ! STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE •.:. ACT NOWlll :•'•••• ...... ,.. . .. .. •NOBODY SELLS ,. S Ai E ENDS • WASTEKING ·• Nov 21 9 : DISHWASHERS ,. , 1 1 73 . •FOR LESS THAN• ·• DUN LAPS '" '. •· Wby Waste King Universal ls 5 ways better ***********••· EXCLUSIVE H·MM WASHING ACTION · S.AFE, S~ITARY IJIYllG ' ~1~~1 ~ STAINLESS i . ~ ~"' '""'nt" J . $TEEL 1· ~ ht mo?o•, pump.~ :_.t i mer , w••te SUARAIJEE ,:t dl$tributlon •YSWn.,; ~ :, hetter •M poshbul-:j' ... ~ ~-t.ons on IOO and IOOi: . IUCSP ~flS, · · ~ :i: ~ 1erindishw11hers. ta ~"DOI LOADlll& mT1mm11111111~ i.-tfiln~1·n1111l1'1\'1rl'l'f'1i • LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHE·RE 90DAYSCA SH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548·7]88 • \ • • • , YO chai Dislr ly c Ron ~rm mute ... trans 1ubsi Cljlr B. ' ,. . ~· "•~· ' I .P the &i I I ; • • • • I • • .. . • • •, • Saddlehaek· ·. Today's Final N.Y. Stoek.s I VOL. 66, NO. 351, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PA~ES • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .MONDAY, DECEMBER 'l7, 1973 - • TEN CENTS I I Supervisor Attacks , Amtrak Plans By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of .... DlllJ ''"' lllff · Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark, chairman of the Orange County Trarusit Olstrict Board of Directors, today sharp-- t)t criticized an e f ! o r t by Supervisor Ronald Caspers to win legal changes Pi"rmitting Amtr.ak trains to make com- muter runs in the cowity. "The way this sounds, p u b l i c transportation funds would be used to subsidize a few people In selected areas," C~rk said. "What he's talking about • " i.s a train from San Diego to Los Angeles subsidiud by Orange County taxpayers!' Caspers appealed F r I d a y to. Congreuman Andrew J. lllnshaw (R· Newport Beach) to change . the law• now prohibiting Amtrak from making commuter runs. Caspers' plan calls for the San Diego to Los Angeles train to pull in to San Clemente at 7:15 a.m., Into central Santa Ana before 8 a.m. and lnto Los Angeles before 9 a.m. Caspers also asked for new stops to be added along the way in San Juan Capistrano and Mission Viejo. QurrenUy, the earliest stop in San Clemente is at 8:12 a.m. The only eve- ning return run is at 8:46 p.m. out of LOs Angeles. Caspers wants that changed lo about I' p.m. Clark said there are many com- plications to such a plan besides the drain on public transportation funds that would be rieeded to support the Amtrak runs. l"Ibere is heavy freight movement between Fullerton a!>d Los Angeles that may be dLmJpted and many jobs rely on that freight," Clark said. "Th.at is a lot more important than special' oom· muter service to a relatively few number of people." Clark added that the idea would also be ecologically unsound because trains need one-half gallon ·of fuel per passenger and buses need only one-third Of & gallon. OCTD Director Richard Lynn, a Newport Beach attorney. said he thinks the boai:d should support caspers' efforts if only to get a chance to talk to Amtrak. /";'1Every lime we've approached them, they've told us their legislation prohibits them from talking to us at all." LyM said ... I'm not talking about the prac. ticality of Mr. Caspers' proposal or anything else, just about getting Amtrak to talk to us." - OCTD manager Gordon ''Pete" Fielding said that if the money now used on buses -up to $3 million per ane • ' Bmnbing Threat . ' Passengers Panic By RUDI 1'1EOZIWKI ot llMI D•llY ,.illt ll•ff .Passengers panicked and leaped from the wing of a Hughes Airwest plane silting on the ground at Orange County He'll T.ake It ·--on tlie Run "I'll lake this one," the man said. · He did, and Newport Beach police today are looking for the tall handsome man whose alleged fianCee -if she exists -has a 114.000 diamond ring. all unpaid-for. The man dropped into Charles Barr Jewelers. 1048 Irvine Ave, Saturday,· said he was shopping around for a ring for his intended and discUssed stones and settings with some knowledge. . He admired the diamond rmg, with a 2. 7 carat stone and aald he would take It. But he didn't bother to pay, acrording to sales people, who last saw his blue denim-dad form flying out the front door. lrvine Council Race Attracts 17 Candidat~ AJ of today, 17 persons have ind.lea~ a interest in being elected to the Irvine City Council next March. Two more took out nominating papers Friday. . Deadline for filing papers 15 Dec. 27 lor all candidates. Jack Kish a businessman-industrialist Of 4502 Robinwood Circle, the Willows, became Ule 16th to indicate interest :fn the council race. ' Incumbent E. Ray Quigley Jr. of 18751 Y!a Palatlno, Turtle Rock also took '.oUt papers on Friday. Quigley an airline pilot and founder of a mobile auto piaintenance business, announced.several -.eeks ago his Interest In being rHlected : (See PAPERS, Page II Council Back ; In City Hall : The 1Jte of Tuesday's Irvine City · • COUncil meeting hi! been switched from Rancho San Jo a q ul n · • Intennedlate School to council · • chambers In city hill, llOI C8mfl\IS Drive. City Clerk carol FlyM said the 1 ' change was ordered by .councilmen who expect smaller audiences than origlnaliY anUclpated for t h e general plan, zoning ordinance, Turtle Rock Village and Unlverolty Park apartment hear!np ICbeduled for the 7:30 p.m. !e&slon. ;.. • Airport Sunday after the crew received word of an anonymous bomb threat. Two women wbo jumped seven feet to the pavement after scrambling tln'ough an emerg<ncy door suffered opralned ankles bm were treated and later releas-. ed al Colla M,.. Memorial Hoopital. The women were idenUfled u l41's. Pat Weimer, c, !'f :14111-N. Santiago · Blvd., Orenae, end 1-a V111 w.....,; · 65, ol .lleoder-.Nevad&...Jloth llllda- tbe trip to tbe llolpilal b)' ~-· Tbe SeatUe-bound 1lC-'l jeUlner was evacual.ed after · airline officials in Los Ancelet said their reamallon desk received a bomb threat at l : 13 p.m. The call was placed by a woman who warned in a Spanish--~ted. voice, "My ll!lcle bu a bomb o your taal fligbl" The flight originated . l\!Uloo City. Ainrest officials radioed the pilot as he taxied the craft to the runway and evacuation orders were given. Sheriff's deputies said emergency doors were opened and many passengera started climbing out onto the wings. Several of the 33 peraons on board jumped_ ~.... groud crewl nilled a •talrway to the aircraft's main door. FBI oflieen and Orange Clounty Sher· iU's deputies le8l'Cbed the p I a n e thoroughly but turned up oo bomb. Mike ·Weimer, h..,band ol me of the injured women, said he overheard passengers coming off the plane criticize the manner in which the crew. handled the -'bomb threat and thought the stewardesses should have displayed "a little more cool." Mrs. Weimer said the incident oc-- curred just alter the stew"!"iw bad elven (See THREAT, Pqe I) Mission Viejo 'Carol' Parade Set W ed11esday A parade of some 1,400 caroling school cbildlln jg scheduled for. Wedneoday night from Eldorado Park in Ml!sion Viejo to a live manger scene on a nearby hlllside. Though the event was ~eduled as a candlelight para-ie, cooi-dmator Terry Balchtal said p-am organizers are urging children to uae flalhllghta lnltead for greater safety. Carols will be IUDi by choral groups from all elementary· schoola In Mlsaion Viejo, Balchtal lllld. 'lbe Misolon Viejo lllih ScboOI band wlll perfonn In the • procram, set to begin at 7 p.m. Eldorado Park jg at the romer al Jeronimo Road and ¥on- tilla Laite. - •Wedneodoy's _,.m Is the fourth In a aeries ol h!>lkl•J even1' 011an110C1 by tbe Mlaalon Viejo AcllvlUOI Com· mlttee. The ·fil)al ev1111 ii a communllyl'fkle 11Jwninaria" acbeduled for asn.tmM Eve. 1be "lumlnarla" or Ughted candles In a ~a'g of sand, la a llUlcan euatom. • All Mission Viejo hOlllOowllln have been invited to buy lumlnarla ldta and place tbem on !heir curbs. Acconllng to lq.00, 'jfie )umtnaria llghtecl the way to the manpr for the Virgin Mary and Joaeplt. Kits may be obtained a! any Mission Viejo elemenUlry 'IC!tool. l. Two li;;ured D•ll)t P'tlect Sllff P'lloto Both OCCUJ>¥!ls -o'r this station wagon suffered skull fractures &inday at 12:25 p.m. when it went out of con\fOI and struc1< a large tree beside Laguna Can· yon Road n~ the lakes. The pair were freed from the.wreckage by passersby. They were identified as the driver, John P. Mochan, 20, of Temple City and Jan Bercbtold, 19, of Arcadia. Both are in serious condition today, he· at Mission Community Hospital arid she at Tus Angeles County .Medical Center. . HlfH,Ot·hers ·Bonated Papers for Tax Gift,s WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hubert If. Humphrey and a number of other prom· inent and even middle-echelon officia1s: OOna.ted their pipers: as gifts on. which they presumably did claim tax deduc· ioos, the SCripps-Howard News Service reporte11 today.; . ~ipps:Howard staff writer D an 1bomi.is0d, ,who · surveyed General Services Adfniuiil:ation (GSA} records, said HilmJ>IVey.s .•!lite ~nllrmed his gift as. a ta:r. ded1JCtion had been claimed. "He is no!f prej>aring the rigu'res ru'Jd a slatement," a Humphrey spokesman said. Humphrey, Democratic senator from Minnesota, was vice president from 1965 to 1969 and donated his personal papers from those years to the Minnesota State !Ilstorlcal Society. Sdipps-Howard said it obtained a GSA ' list or present and fonner public officials who cootributed personal papers to the ·government iri t~ last 10 yeafs ror inclusion in one or more of the seven pre~idential librartes supervised by GSA and lhe National Archives. -------NO TAX DEDUCTION SEEN IN HOME GIFT-Story, Page 3 "While there was no indication that tax deductions were claimed Wler the tax provision which Congress abolished " errec6ve1y July 25, 1969." Scripps· Howard said, "Those malting the dona· tions had the opportwlity to do so -and presumably did." The congressional Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation is checking, at PreSident Nixon's request, the pro- (Sea HID! GIFT, Page %) Kidnap Suspect· Nabbed With Bound Girl in Chase A Oeelnc kidnap 1uspcct with a young girl bound and gagged on the Iron! seat of hill car led' police on a high speed chase .down the SanCa Ana Ftteway eari)I Sunday tlefore ultlng In Mlsalon Viejo toe! ~ktljl his car. Gerald. A GlllifPli_. 28,\\tl' tlftrland. Kan., wu captlirfd...af 1lle ·~ne of lh,e pileup at Mal'l""'ite P.arkway and Trabuqo ROod. Ht II In Orana-e County Jail, helcl cm · Slllf>lcion ol klilnaplng. auault and battery~bu11taey and Inned robbery. '11\e chase drama began al the home of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Mitchell in Buena Park, where Gillespie allegedly broke In, threatMed the ramlly with a long M:rewdrl~1r,,ked the!)\ and took Mignon Mitchelf,'li, jj9 a &dllage. · Police said ~~ also-• •tole $150 from the fanllly llelllrt fleeing with the lerrill«! _(irl. • ... .. tlOi burl. Officers ..... GIU..-ple's big sedan was (8'1 QUSF0 Pap l) ' .. ' .----.. ' • Attorney Oe.ared In Kill-for hire County Trial An Orange Cowity Su~rior Court jury today resolved its 11 to J impasse and found Fullerton attorney ~1ichael Kester Remington innocent or all charges in his "murder for hire" trial. Remington, 33, bowed his head and wept as he heard the verdict th at cleared him of allegations that he planned the killing of plaintllfs -and witnesses in civil actions filed again.st him. The jury had gone off for the weekend deadlocked at 11 to 1 in favor of ac- quittal. It look them just one hour today to achieve unanimity. Judge James F. Judge accepted the verdict and confirmed tha1 Jan. 22 will be the next court da~e fol" key pros· ecution witness Gary Michael Rollo. Rollo, the self-proclaimed karate ex· pert who has P.SSertedly performed several bit parts-in the "Kwtg Fu" television series, is scheduled for sen- ISee REMINGTON, Page!) Masked Bandits • Hit Irvine Home Two bandits in ski masks forced their way into an Irvine honie Sundaf night, then bound, gfigged and robbed their victim of cash and a gun collection. Virginia L. Van Lendlngham told police the intruders took about $200 In cash and her son's gun collection· valued at about ,1,600 from the Gcrmainder Way home. The victim was found bound and gag· ged by a neighbor, who noticed one of the masked men leaving the home and called police when he beCame susplc:lous. year -"'ert funneled · to Amtrak, local systems such as th e iMovalive" Dial·A· Ride plan would sufrer. '·This type of thing does impact finan - cially," Fielding said. Directors voted to allow Fielding to study Caspers' proposal and come back with an analysis. But director Al Hollinden, a Fountain Valley councilman, remarked "A lot of people are running for re-election and 1 don't know i[ each great suggestion should get intensive st udy. We may be making a tempest in a teapot." • I Terrorists Flee .Rome Massacre BULLETIN ATHENS IUPI) -The Greek govern· ment this arternoon released the t"·o Im· prisoned "Black September" guerrillas as demanded by bJjackers aboard the Luft,hansa 'plane at Athens airport, police sources said. ATIIENS, Greece (AP) -Palestinian guerrillas bombed an American plane in Rome1s airport today, killing. at least 34 persons, police said. Tbe gii!rr!llas later shot three hostages. The terroris!.1 escaped to Athens in a hijacked G~man jet with an Un· determined number of hostages. A dead man also was reported aboard the plane when it lanedd in Athens .• They began their attack at Rome with a submachine gun fusillade that police said killed an unknown number of bystanders. Greek poiice said the hijacked aircraft landed at the main Athens airport and the guerrillas negotiated with Greek authorities for release of two Palestin- ians held ~Y the military-backed Greek government. The hijackers threatened to blow up the Lufthansa Boeing-7'11 with all the hostages if the two were not released, an airline spokesman reported. The spokesman said the Arab guer· rillas informed the control tower that one of those aboard was "seriously in· jured and may die." An airport police spokesman said special army police and army units surrounded the aircraft. The attack at Rome's airport began about 1 p.m. -4 a.m. PST -when the Palestinians were asked to open their baggage ror a routine security check in the crowded departure wing. They did, pulling out pistols, submachine guns and hand grenades and spraying the room with bullets, police said. The guerrillas grabbed s e v e r a 1 policemen at the security point and went down a ramp toward the Lufthansa plane. The terrorists were variously reported to number three or four . Two of them ran up the boarding ramps of a nearby Pan American World Airways jetliner and threw incendiary (See GUERRILLAS, Page I) Oruge Weadaer It'll be fair and mild Tuesday, according to the weather service, with highs at the beaches in the mid 70s rising to 80 degrees in· land. Overnight lows in the 405 and 50s. INSIDE TODAY Lt. Col. Robert Stirm, POW for 6 ~ years, sa11s California's divorce law has taktn him "to the cleaners" as his wife of 18 years sues for dissohttion, Sto'll Page 5. lMllM 21 l..M. ,... II C-•11,.l"l'll• • Cl•»lfl.; tJ.n C1mlt1 lt c-mn .. 111 lt 0..111 Ntlkfl la l!fl!Wi•I f'Ht a 1111"1••-t 11 P-ln•Jl(t 14-11 l'M' tM IKW11 It. )1 "'"*'" ,. • • • From Page 1 CHASE ... 1potted on the Santa Ana Freeway in Anaheim at about 4 a.n1., weaving back and forth acroBS the lanes. Thinking he was a drunk driver, a California Jilghway Patrol oHicer started to pull him over but oflice rs said Gillespie gunnM the car and took of·f down the freeway at 110 miles per hour. l Two other CHP units joined the chase throµgh the Saddleback Valley and off the freeway at La Paz Road in Mission Viejo. ___ "II~ p~ed through the residential area breaking numerous traffic laws {rying to elude the pursuing officers," said public a(fairs officer Jerry Maxw ell. "He apparently lost control at the in- tersection of Marguerite and Trabuco Road and piled it up." Maxwell said Gillespie fought when officers tried to· arrest him. Officer Dave Meir suffered a broken finger in the melee. School District Eyes $3. 7 Million ..... Sale of Bonds saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees are expected l o authorize sale or $3. 7 million ln bonds at a special meeting tonight. The sale, part of a $28 million bond issue authorized by voters in February, would bring to $7. 7 million the total sold since the election. In other businesS, the board will: -Award bids on furn iture for two new elementary schools scheduled to open ne!J. fall, Glen Yermo in Lake Forest and Carrillo in Mission Viejo. Gle!'.1 Yenno students are now me~ting on double sessions at Santiago School. -Award bids for two new trucks, a half-ton and two-ton size-far m.ain-, Olilr 1>1111 st•ff P1101t Curb Service Sean Schmidt, 12, of Park West Apartments gets help with gasoline saving way of transporting family Christmas tree. Irvine Jaycee Jim Cook and University High School water polo forward David Specht, 17, assist in loading Sean's bike. Fortunately the trip home was a short one, across Michelson Avenue to Park 'Vest, in Irvine. Tree sales will help pay for an August tri p to Hawaii for 15 Uni High School swimmers entering the Hawaii invitational championships. From Page i Officials Probe · '·' · ·' ~al~~;,e--adverti'S1rii ·ro~ bids On · PAPERS .• :.-~ .. · -,·-vaned ":tt~countS • Ubrary equipment for the new El Toro High School and const ruction work on an eleventh elementary ·school. to the City Council. Of Plane Scare The meeting will be at 5:30. p.m. in the district office, Laguna Hills. The regular board meeting scheduled for tonight was called off due to the holi· dl!yS .. City Clerk Carol Flynn sa~d two others have returned their papers with the required 20 signatures and have com- pleted the nom'inating prOcess. They are Airline officials tod8Y Wele &tteffipting Mrs. Hazel Myers of the Ranch and to piece together accounts of Sunday's Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor o f bomb threat at Orange C.Qunty ~irport University Park. during which two women were injured They join four others whose names when they jumped off the wing of a are certain to appear on the ballot Hughes Airwest jetliner, Edwin Fiedler as Irvine voters choose five councilmen Larry Litchfield, spokesman for the I to serve staggered two and four year Airwest San Mateo office, said today Services Held terms. that the stewardess aboard the threaten- Others who have completed the ed flight bad not yet filed her report nominating process are: Councilman but tha t the report could clear up some Funeral services were held today for Henry Quigley of the Ranch,. planning of the confusion about what happened Edwin W. Fiedler of 78-D Calle Aragon, commissioner Franklin Hurd of Universi-inside the plane. Laguna Hills, who died Friday. He was ty Park, retired Marine C.Orps officer The plane was . taxiing toward the 80. . . . • Arthur w. Anthony of TurUe Rock and runway when the pilot was adviled that A native of San Francisco, Mr. F1ed1er de~ent manager .. "Boker' J an anonymous caller bacr' phabed the became vlce-president of the CJauber-•ffolnutedt of Callfornl&~~ ) Ir.. ' • airline to warn, "My ~uncl.e baa' a bomb Wangenhetm Company, a wholesale · on your tut flight." distributor. Two Y~ ago when Irvine re,ldents . Litchfield said acc.i>rding to his infor- A nine-year resident of Laguna Jlills, voled to mcorpora~e th? new ~. th.ey mation the stewardess told passengers he is survived by his wife, Bernice; select~ the founding five-member Ctty that they were to leave the plane by two sisters, Gertrude Henderson of CoWlc11. the main cabin doors. Buena Park and Laura Spencer of North Under sta~ law , the first councilmen's For some unexplained reason, several Hollywood . terms were limited to two years each. of the emergency windoWs were popped. Dr. Lawrence Hawley of the Laguna After March 5, the city will be govern-open as well and passengers scrambled Hills United Methodist church officiated ed by a council with th'ree members out onto the wing, Litchfield said. at 1 p.m. services. Burial was at Pacific elected to serve fQur years, and t\.\'O Passengers had not been told to use View Memorial Park. whose terms will end in twn years. the windows or to jump off the wing, according to information · offered l.ly Litchfield. Not So Merry First Fire Phony--Not Seco1ul • For Pomona OOat owner F. T. Livermore, the weeken d visit to his 3&-foot cabin cruiser at Dana HarOOr was nothing but trouble . Liv~rmore, the owner-skipper of the cruiser Merry-Merry, first thought he was domg a good deed when he noticed smoke coming from a craft at the end of K-ctock at the harlx>r's marina. He called for a fireboat , but the crews discovered that the smoke was lunch being cooked on a hibachi aboard the craft With that all settled, Livermore set out for a cruise, TI)ree miles out to sea, he called for a fireboat again, This time, it was his boat that was burning. Patrolmen responded, but Livermore already had doused the names in the engine compartment. The minor flareup was caused by a backfjre in an overheated engine. OU.NOi COAST " DAILY PILOT TIM Orll'llt CN1! 04.IL Y PILOT, wllh wllidl 11 combl~ed tn. HtW1·PCQI. Is lll,lbllJl\ed lly ftle D••"llt C:o111 Publl1M"lt C:omNnr. ~· r•I• 91111~ •••• Pllbllsl\td, MOl'•"Y fflrowll Frlcilty, fllf °'"'' Meit, N1woo11 llNCl'I, Hvntlnt1ton 8•tel'l/F01,1n11~ V1lll)", L..,_ l eedl, l!'VIMl~•ddl.i:i.ct Ind Sin Clemffti./ ~n Ju.n C111111r111C1. 4. 1;nt11e tf9ionll tdl!IOll 11 Mii~ S.rurd1y1 1nd Sllndtf~ fM ptlm:iHI PU&!!lhlf\9 pl1nt ll 11 .U0 Wiii 81r $!•Ht, Cotti Mt1o1, Cllltorlll1, "'"' Rob1rt N. W11d P111W:l9"! and Putl!llll.,. J1clc R. Curl1y \/re~ p,.,.,..,, 1roc1 GtlM'f11 M1n .. tr Thorn11 l(,,,;1 fd!lor Tho111t1 A. M Yrpili~• /.11n191n9 E<11tor Chaifet H. Loot Ric.h1r' r. Nill Atlt1t1n1 M1111tlnt1 Ed!f0r1 Offk .. Co'9a M .. ,. l30 Wtll Sty Strt" Ntwllarl INUO: JW Ht...,,.rl llOU!ftt"' L•1vn1 latch. 1" Forot """"' """llntl!Oll 8tKht 17111 llHcti llOU1tv1'11 i.tn C""*'": JO$ Norttl l!.1 C.1?111111 Iii.HI , .. .,.... 1714J 641-4111 c ............... 642-1671 s. c....,. .t.11 h,•rtM91tt: Te ....... 4t2-t4JO ; C#Vflflll, lf'l. Or.,•1tt COcur PubtllMllCI (lr'!'IPlllY, Ho Mwt l!O•IM , Jl•u51•tllofrl H llorlll\ INlltr or 1<1v .. tl1tmt'I!\ ~trel~ INlf lie ,.,,....iltH ..,lft0\11 tD«!~I Ptf· mll•lorl of tef1Yrlg111 ewne• l4'Cft C.l•lt MJl~t •<I It C~t• ~ ... C.Ulorn!•. Sll~1il' ~" t••1,., n . .i "*"lnl¥/ II'/' 1114111 .J 11 'W>OnlM'I', Mllfttry CIUflNliNll t2.tJ moftltll~. Couple Injured In Auto Crash Near SD Freeway A Laguna Hills man and his wife were injured Sunday night when he lost control of their car while coming home from a Christmas shopping trip to Costa Mesa and hit a telephone pole. Gordon C. Hewson , 44, and his wile Florence, 42, of 23301 Ridge Route, were treated at l¥Iiss ion Community Hospital and released following the accident. She suffered severe facial lacerations and bruises. Her hus band was cut. The accident happened, according to police, when the Hewson car started to veer off Moulton Parkway at the San Diego Freeway and the driver over· corrected, throwing it out of control. Thi!ir late model sedan was a total loss, according to accident investigators. 16 GM .Plants Close DETROIT (UPI ) -Slxtetn or General Motors' 24 North American car assembly Mrs. Pat Weimer, one of the women who sprained an ankle during the Jeap;-- howeve r, said that a man across the isle from her popped open one of the windows and the stewardess took it from him , laid in on a· seat, and "told us to get out in the wing." Litchfield said he does not know how many passengers leaped off the wing but that he believes mos t of them deplan- ed by using the main cabin door and the rear stairs. From Pff!le 1 THREAT ..• at us to 'Get Off . • • Get Off • her instructions to the passengers on the use of seatbelts~he suddenly rushed forward to the pilot's compartment. "She emerged and started screaming right now,'" Mrs . Weimer said. Airwest officials in San Mateo could not be reached for immediate comment. Tum Chandler, Orange County stapon manager for the airline, said he wu certain instructions to deplane were given but "we were on the ground and we don 't have the slightest idea what happened inside the plane." Mrs. \\leimer. sUU limping from her injury, is scheduled to OOard the same flight today to' reach Medford, Ore., where her father ls near death. From Pagel GUERRILLAS •.. bombs inside setting fire to t.he jet. A Pan Am spokesman. said at least 29 bodies were counted aboard the charred wreckage. Police said aJI 11 passengen in the first-class secUon · of the plane were killed. An airline spokesman sai d the ex· plosions went off in the corridor, destroy· ing the cabin and most of lhe first-class section. From Pqe~I H:HH GIFT. • • :1:'iety r / th gift of Nixon's vice p:~id.'"n'1a1 pn ·e"~ and tax deductions. Nixon had hla vice prtaldenUal papers appraised 11 $676,000 and claimed this . ·: El.derl1 Man-Dies New Policy 'IP· ?ll Administrators are exN>l"ted both to:+ I~ r Heat Foils Mesa ' On Caqipus .Rescµe Attempts (fpp~oved ' -' r I ' \ By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of t11t l)ally Pilot Steff Costa Mesan Arthur Compton was kill- ed today, despite an effort to get out of fus converted garage bungalow when It was sutted by a 16,000 fire during predawn hours. Compton, 67, of 141 Mesa Drive, Apt. FJ"o~ Pagel REMINGTON • • • tencing t_o what the l>rosecution eariler agreed would be a six month .jail term. That arrangement may now be revised in the Jight of the Remington verdict, the prosecution conceded todpy. Rollo, 21, testilied during the 10-week trial that Remington hired him as one of four killers commissioned to eliminate principals in civil act ions that named Remington as defendant. Those lawsuits followed the collapse of Remington's Cal-Vend ven d i l'! g machine enterprise and the accwnulation of substantial . debts by the Fullerton lawyer. It was alleged against Remington that at least one of the intended victims would have met death if two men sent to eliminate him had not been given a wrong address and had not bee.n halted for a traffic violation en route. Tools Worth $2,000 Stolen Frpm Station C, was deo.d at the scene after raging flames \Vere extinguished. allowing police and firemen to enter the gutted struc· ture. 'lbe victim was found curled\ up on the kitchen noor of the reatdence, one of several at that address rented out to elderly or retired i>ersons. Investigators said that by lhe time they arrived thtre was no hope for Mr. Compton. "The house was just completely in- volved in flames," said Pollce Officer Rod Haddock) the second policeman to a_rrive about 6 a.m. after neighbors call~ ed for help. He said the property owner told him his tenant might be inside and ll so, would probably be in the bedroom but that rescue efforts were futile. "We tried to use the garden hose," said Officer Haddock, "but we just couldn't get to the house. It was too hot and too far gone ... " The old frame structure wa s listed as a total loss today following the fire , which officials theorize must have smouldered for some time before it erupted. They tentatively list smoking as the cause of the fire, Which apparently started in an eisy chair. Investigators believe Mr. Compton, a smoker, fell asleep while watching television and either dropped his cigar- ette or that it fell out of an ash tray. His presence in the kitchen , they said, indicates he either tried to get water when he was wakened by the fire, or -was simply trying to esc;.pe and became disoriented in' l,he smoke and was overcome .. • The patrolling policemen happened lo • .~., .. ~,, ... "'~-.·~,,,,, .... .., .... ,,~····· ·--be·'in"the ~gei'letat 'neighbothodd 'when Tools valued by the owner at more the call was broadcast and so reached than. $2,000 were stolen d~ng the the blaze befofe the Costa Mesa Fire weekend· from a Mission Viejo service Department. station, Orange County Sherill's officers Officer Jeff Miller was first an the said. scene, followed by Officer. Haddock , but DepUties s8ld iritri.lders· at the retenqy even· theit early arrival Was too late built station, 26411 Crown V a 11 e y under the circumstances. ,.. . 0 ' cooperate with police and act as "31 ~ Ir frit!nd of the student" when polico of·:· · !leers come on campus in the Saddleback .: ~" Valley Unified School District. ·.::: · According to a new policy or the cUslrlct board of trustees administrators . also are instructed to notify parents''.· as soon as possible when a student' , t' is subject to questioning or arrest. Police activity on campus became an issue when several students at Mission Viejo High School were issued citatlo~ t by the Callforoia Highway Patrol for traffic violations on the school grounds early this year. . Stymied by worsening parking an~ traffic problems on the crowded higlf school campus, administrators asked for police help . . Several students protested that poUc' • did not belong on campus. . So the district board of trustees re- quested that the legal rights of police. students, administrators and parents be clarified. Based on a state attorney general'~ opinion, the resulting policy n1akes clear that law enforcers have an absolute right to make a lawful arrest on campus. In most case~. the-officer must dis play a court order or warrant. • An officer's right to question a student on campus. however, is qualified. Beforehand, he must ide ntify himseU to school administrators and let them know what he plans to do. During the questioning of the student, a principal or other certificated witnes~ must be present and ls urged to ac.t as "a friend of the student" and inform him or her civil rights. If possible. di strict administrators prefer that ·an ·officer's· confrontatioD with a student be arranged off campus. . "But we realize that isn't. always possi· b\e," said Jack Schumaker, assistant ··distttct~superlntendent~ ~· ,.. · ··· · · .... "The officer is on an eight-hour day fust like the rest of us. and sometimes school is the only place he knows he ean reach the student . .. It is our feeling that a spirit of t.OOperatlon should be extended to any bona fide poli~ or law enforcement ., ll the om cha or "" ni the he • Parkway, used the key left for con-Coroner's deputies released ,.tr . struction workers to enter the premises C.Ompton's body to Baltz-Bergeron- and strip them of brand new tools and Funeral Home, where funeral ar· official," Schumaker s:'\id. "Dneor--our-Jobs here -~-to teach ~·~l----;''"; good citizenship, and cooperating with tool kits . rangements were pending today. police is one part of th3t." ~~-'---~~~~- • Woliday GJJWL~er~e FOR ONLY $10. MORE We will make a normal re- placement installation of a·ny standard undercounter dish- washer . YES, ONLY $10. MORE! The stainless steel dishwasher. './'./ASTE KtNl· ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU All THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES • •CLEANER. WASHING • RANDOM LO ADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE' • ACT NOWlll SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 Why Waste King Universal is 5 lays better ............... .. . •NOBODY SELLS • ,. WASTEKING ·• : DISHWASHERS • "FOR LESS THAN• ·" DUNLAPS : **'******'!\***•· EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTION SAFE I SAlllTARY DRYING ~JJ,l,IJ,U,OJ.v.111111u11111,WJ(/_ ~!JW.U.l'''Ul _, ~ ~ ~ · -tLl,1.1,lV,i.tJ IJ~~ ·1 20 ~ i 5 ·~ ~YFAR~ ·~ YE.i(R :~ a ~ ~ o ~ STAINLESS ~ ~ "'"' '""'"',. .. ~ I STEn ~ ~th• moto•, pump.~ i: . l lmer , wa s te-: GUARANTEE 3' ~ dlstribuhon syMem :' € ::. heater and p1.1Mlt1tit!·'i ---~-~ z.. toM on 800 and so;i'= RUGGED BASKETS. l ~..... ., ~ """ dlshwashe ... ~ i .• ~,,. . i; RANDOM LOADINa nm<Tmmlmmmnl> ~ .. """'""""""''"'",;~ LOW PRICES'ARE BORN HERE ' RAISED ELSEWHERE 90 DAYS CASH. WITH APPROV•O CREDIT 1815 NEWPDRT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 I f I Ca Re Ni ki ite v Pr wi of a w . . •h -• • . • t -' "llanta were cl~ed today in the ~tart "Of a one-week !!hutdown that some o servers fear may be a common oc- currence during 1974. G!\1's massive shutdown ldlt'CI 137.000 workers. · :\S tax deductions spread over four years. 1-----------' -" _,_ ---_, • . . ' , . Totlay's Final N.Y. Stpcks VOL. 66, NO. 351, 2 SECT IONS, 28 PAGES bRANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1973 TEN CENTS ! ' . ' Huntington Seeks Charges Against Mom of 7 By· TERRY COVILLE ot Ille Dill' P'lltt Stiff Hlllllington Beach detectives went to the Orange County District Attorney 's Office today seeking felony child neglect charges against Peggy Kirby, the mother of seven children, whose five bedroom home was gutted by fire Wednesday night. Detective Sgt. Jack Bullar, head of the juvenile invesligation division, said he did not know if the District Attorney's Office would seek the felony complaint requested by Huntington Beach. , He said, however, Mrs. Kirby's 6-year· old son, John, would be kepi at Orange County Medical Center under the authority of t h e Probation Department until a decision on the charges is made. The boy suffered second-degree burns when a candle used for light ignited Wednesday's blaze in his bedroom. No one else was injured in the fire . Johnny had been left home that night .. wilh older brothers and sisters, while the mother worked as a cocktail waitreM in Garden Grove. Mrs. Kirby also draws welfare funds in order to maintain her family. She said today she plans to fight the Huntington Beach charges with an attorney and -wants-to-get-her son out of the hospital. "I really am going to fight this, because I. certainly do not neglect my children," maintained the mother of ane om UPI T1"""8 . LUFTHANSA AIRLINE PILOT, WITH PISTOL HE LD TO· HIS~HEAD,WALKS TO WAITING JETLINER Inj ured P11stnger Lies In Pool of Blood After Bloodiest Att11ck by Arab Guerrillas Wary View Cast On Nixon Taxes WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mortimer M. 'Caplin, fonner head or the Internal Revenue Service, says that President Nixon's tax Tetuim were "handled with kid gloves" by JRS ageiits and some items warrant further speeial in- vestigation. Caplin gave his views on the President's taxes in an interview Sunday with the Washington Post. He said if h.e were still in charge of the IRS, "I'd obviously be concerned " and consider it "a special challenge" when Nixon's tax returns were thrown OOt by the computer because the figures showed high income and very low taxes. Two Huntington Women Hit h.y 'Downtown Rapist' Huntington Beach's Downtown Rapist struck again this weekend, for the second time in a month . police reported today. In Uie most recent attack, unlike the others, the victims reported that he appeared to be carrying a sawed~rr shotgun. The victims were two wol'nen who shared an apartment on England Street with one or the occupants' 6 • year • old son. Investigators said the rapist apparently got into the apartment by prying open one of the kitchen windows shortly after midnight Friday. ,. The women told officers he trapped them in a bedroom and told them to cooperate or he would hurt the child, asleep in another room. While he was assaulting the women, tile child began calling loi his mother and the women said the man finallY left. Last month, a man police believe to have been lhe Downtown Rapist tried a similar attack on two womep living on Ninth Street. But the worn e n managed to lock themselves inside a bedroom where they hid for four hours until they were sure the would·be rapist bad left. seven. And m a n y ol my neighbors have &Aid they will come to court as character witnesses for me. "Just because I . work in a bar for $2 an hour doesn't mean I neglect my children but the Welfare Department says because I have seven children, I have to work to continue drawing my $400 a month." Huntington Beach detectives . did not clarify why they are seeking the felony child neglect charge. • ' Terrorists Flee Rome :. . . . , Massacre BULLETIN ATHENS (UPI) -111e Greek govern- ment tbl• afternoon relused tilt two iJa.. prisoned "Black Seplember" guerrillas •• demanded by ~jacken •boon! the Laftlluaa plane at Atftu airport; police ~-said. - ROME (UPI) -Ill one ol their bloodiest attacks, Arab guerrillas shot up a passenger l<iunJe at Leooardo da Vinci lntematioaal Airport -1 bomb-• tel i i!lll a jotllill(r laWlJ ~ ~e than a "'°"" of passengen ln$lde Oew lo Athem where, they ~ollhelrbos••.... .JI ... .,.. .~ ... The death toll was at least 34. The gunmen, some dressed aS gro,Urtd crewmen, hijacked a West aemran airliner to Athens in an attempt to force the Greek goyernment to free two Black Septell)ber Palestinian guer· rillas jailed for an earlier attack there, One policeman hostage was killed shortly after arrival. Later, the pilot lnter/!Jpled negotia· tions ovet the radiotelephone to say: "There is Sboot.iDg gotng on back there ." 1ben be said there were two more hootages killed. Pan American World Airways said at least 30 penons were killed in Rome jn the attack against the Pan Am 707 jetliner, a shootout on the ninway and the shooting in a departure lounge after guards discovered weapons in the Arabs' luggage. Two of the those killed in the bombing or the Pan Am jetliner were Moroccan ministers of state. Pan American said there were 57 passengers and nine crew members (See GUEIUULLAS, Page %) Valley Tennis Group Aid s Court Project School authorities have agreed to re-- juvenate the tennis courts at Fountain Valley High '&boo! with the aid o( a $1 ,800 gift from the Fountain Valley Temlls Association. Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School District approved th< $12,000 tennis rourl project, but "'jected a proposal to spend $51,000 . more for a new baseball diamond, a 90CCtr field and a nature study area at the acbool. Or aage Coast • Council Faces Tree .Plea Weather 11'11 be fair and mild Tuesday, accordlDt to the weather service,. with hight at the beaches in the mid 'TOI rising to 80 degrees in- land. oVernight lows in u... 40s and • 50s. INSIDE TODAY • Lt. Col. Rob<rl Slinn, POW ; for 6 ~ 11ear1, sa11s California's ; divorce law ha.! talc.en him "to • the cleaners" as his wife of 18 11ear1 sues for disaolutlon, Story Pa.ge 5. A1111 L.....,. 11 M1vl" It N111of11I New• 4 Ofltlltt Ctlll'll'f U ''"''* '•tttr 14 '"'1• 2'-21 11.U Mllrtt•O 14·1S T•lftYll1t11 12 Tlloltft lt WMIMlr 4 ........... ""' 11'11 wwi. N.,.. ' Hµntington Beach cJly councilmen onct again are faced with a request to remove 2,703 shame] ash trees which line city J)arkway,s. Last spring, the council tussled with a proposed 11.1 million fl"'ll'am sug· geoted by the deparlmeol of public works to remove the ash trees, repalr damaged. sidewalks, and plant dlllmnt trees that wouldn'I upm1t cement wort. COuncilmen delayed any decision pend. ing t h e outcome of an envlroameatal impact report. Laguna Beach landscape architect Richard Bigler recently com- pleted the report, ancl, booed on that, the city's environmental review board will recommend tonight that the ash trees be removed In phases. The review board's report comet before councilmen during !heir 7 o'clock bus!· ness , meeting ionlght In city council chambers. Board members agreed with the public works department. and with Bigler's report , that the trees have to come oot, but preferably in some type or phasing process, with only the worst ooes pulled at first, so a neighborhood iJll't completely stripped of its foliage. When an ash tree is removed, it wlll he replaced with another, younger, tree. Acting Public Workds Director BUI Hartge said today he leers such a phasing project would prove to be too expensive for the city because crews would have to /llall• reyeo! ttlps to th< same nei&nborhood . , . , ... In~peac~ent Sought CHARLO'i'rl!; N.C. (U PI) -The Charlotte °'*""'' which eodorsed Preoid"l!I Nixon bl the 1960 presidential campaign but ,.,...loed neutral In mz, called Sunday. for I m p •a ch m 1 n I • The estimated cost of the entire 2, 703- tree project is $1.8 millk>n, based on about $500 to remove the tree, patcb the sidewalk and plant a new tree, Harlge sai<t He lndlealed, however, doing II In phues mlghl nm much higher. Hart&• said he tsn'I prepored to presenl a report to c:ouncllmen tonipt. Tho council already has aotborbed. the uae ol fQ,000 In federal menuo sharing fund! for the ash tree project. Hartp said that would rovtr about IO trees. One lhlng ~!men ·wanted -'the transfer of trees to the central park -dOes not appear Polllble, according 10 bo,th Bigler and Har\&< .. They sar. tho lrees arc too big and !Mt It would he both costly ancl dim~ 19 transp!1nt th<m -ni,; environmental re>'O ·board did n!Cllininond the lralllfer <f. )<111111 uli !reel "wliemv 161Sthle." ' While the confrontatM>n exists between Mrs. Kirby and the police department her other six youngsters are scattered in the homes of three different friends. She is looking for a new place {or the famJly to move. Since reading about Wednesday night's fire whlch virtually destroyed .the $55.lnl rented home, offers of help have been reeelved at the Huntington Beach Care Line from more than a dozen famili es who Want to SUPP.IY the homeless family / with clot hing. food , furniture and money. "Over the y,reckend people brought in at let:1st four cartons full of clothes and there have been offers of furniture inc lud ing a refrigerator" says Ann J\'fcLean. one of the Care Linc workers . ti.·lrs. Kirby has said she app reciates the offers oI help and can certainly use them, but her biggest worry at the moment is her youngest son Johnny and the charges the police ha ve said they are seeking against her. • I HORROR,STRICKEN STEWARDESS WATCHES BURN ING AI RLINER Passengers T_rapped in Plane Bombed by Arab Terrorists Fullerton Attorney Freed Of Kill-£ or-liire Cl1arges An Orange CoWlty Superior Court jury today resolved its 11 to 1 impasse and found Fullerton attorney Michael Kester Remington innocent of all charges in his 0 murder for hire'' trial. Remington, 33, bowed his head and wept as he heard the verdict that cleared him of allegations that he planned th< killlng, of plaintiffs and wllnes.s~ in civil 1actions filed against him. The jury had gone olf for the weekend deadlocked at 11 to 1 in favor of ac- quittal. It took lhem just one hour today to ac,bieve unanimity. Judge James F. Judge accepted the verdict and confirmed that Jan. 22 will . be the ne1t court date for key pros- ecution witness Gary ~ticbael Rollo. Rollo~. ~ self-proclaimed karate ex· pert who · has .,..i;tedly perfonned several bit· parts in the "Kung Fu" television aeries, is scheduled for sen- lenclnJ .to what th< prosecution eariler agrftd woU1d be a six monlh jail term. That arrahgement may now ~ revised In the light of th< RemingTun verdict, the prosecu\lon ronceded today. Rollo, 21, testi£ied during the 10-week triiiil' that Remington hired him as one or rour killers commissioned to eliminate principals in civil actions that named Remington as defendant. '!liose lawsul~ followed the ·rollapse of . Remington's C.1-Vcnd vend Ing machine enterprlle and the actumulatlon of substantial debtl by the Fullerton lawyer. , . n wu alltled opinat Remtnaton. that at' lean one o( tbe' 'lnttndf!d vi~ would have met death if (\VO men senl to eliminate him had not been giv:!ll a wrong address 3.nd had not been halted for a traffic violation en route. ·Rollo testified, and the prosecution used a tc.pe reairding to support that testimony, that he offered to lure his victim out into lhe desert and bring ' -back hts right index finger as proof of the witness' elimination. · Remington's two lawyers successfully argued in the trial's final hours that the tape recordings were "nothing more lhan an elaborate Kung ·ru scenario.·• They also argued before the jury that Rollo was an "inveterate liar" and had been proved to be so in many court actions that preceded the Rcnlington trial. No Chr istrnas Spirit Here Some people have laken the energy crisis too seriously for one Huntington Beach resident's liking. Police said they received a ca.II Sunday evening from a man who lives on Malibu Drive. He asked for a periodic palrol check of his house. He told officers that he has received two telephone threats or vandalism to hi$ home. The reoson, he said, 1$ beea;J>e he bas a lighted Chri!lma! tree displayed in his front window. . r • • I .. " • I I I H M...,.,, OKtmbtt 17, 1973 Bombing Threat • 1 County Airport Passenger~ Panic By RUD! ~1EOZJELSK1 Of r11t o.llY ,llol ll•ff Passengers panicked and leaped from the wing of a Hughes Airwest plane sitting on the ground al Orange COwlty Airport Sunday after the crew received word of an anonymous bomb threat. * {;: * Bomb Threat Investigated By Airline . Two women who Jumped seven feet to the D1V"!mt ·t a flel' I r. A •nll'lg lhrOU"h an emergency door suffered sprained ank le.) u1a were lfeate1.1 and late1· releas- ed at C.Osta "1esl Memorial Hoapital. Tbe women · were tde.Ulled aa Mn. Pat Weimer, 4.1, of 1401 N:. SlnUago Blvd., Orange; and IAora Van Waginer, 65, of Henderson , Neva'da. Both made the trip to the hospital by ambu1~:- Tbe SeB:tUe-bowtd DC-9 j~plner was evacuated, after alrllne official!: ln Los Angeles said lhelr ~ation desk received a bomb threat at 1 :1~ p.m. The call waa placed by a woman who warned in a Spanish-accented voice , "My uncle h.u a bomb on your Jut mcht." The Olght originated tn Mexico City., Alrwest officials radloeil tbO pUOt as he taxied the craft to the runway ! incl' evacuation orders were given. Sheriff's Airline officials today were attempting deputies said · emergertcy · door1 ! 1'ere to piece together accounts of Sunday's opened and many . passengers 'tltarted · bomb threat at Orange County Airport climbing out onto the wings. during which two women were injured Several of the 33 peraona ori tpard when they jumped of[ the wing of a .JUlllped ,before groud <zew1 ivl!ed a Hughes Airwest jetliner. stairway to the aircraft's main door.• !Juntingto1i , ManSlwt In Tavern ~- lluntington Beach police today were · seeking a man on suspicion of attempted 1 n1urder after a fight at a locul bar left one man hos pitalized afte r being Shot twice. The yidlm, Roy Reid, 27, 77111 ~•ndrell Drive, Huntington Beach, is II.steel in stable condition at Parifica 1-los pital after undergoing su rgery for bullet y,•ounds in his bark and side. Police said they kno w \.\'ho the sus p:ct in the shooting is but investigaior:s declined to identify him. , The shooting occurred al about''"t.I p.m. Sunday at the Rumpus Room bilr. located at Yorktown Avenue and Be4ch Boulevard. .:~;· Investigators said Reid and a CQff1 · panion Y.'ere leaving the bar as ., suspeel and his date were walking~~ . The girl y,•as a bar1naid at the lfar that Reid and his friend knew, offi~r.5 said. ·~· Larry Litchfield, spokesman for the FBI officen and Orange County 9ier-.. Alrwest San. Mateo office, !fB.id today if f's deputies searched the p J ~ n e that the stewardess aboard the threaten· thoroughly but turned up DO bomb. ·-..; ~· PAN AMERICAN JETLINER BURNS AFTER BOMBING. AT. ROME AIRPO,RT BY ARAB GUERRILLAS Lufthan .. Pilot fo....t to T1keoff for G,...ce After Bloody Conlronl•lion The tY.'O men greeted the girl ... whlth apparently upset her escort and a !1~l figh t ensued. Police said the 1nan we·s struggling with Reid when four shots rang out and Reid dropped to the grour-!, ed flight had not yet filed her report Mike Weimer, husband of one ~~·the but thB.t the report could clear up some injured women, sald he overneard of the confusion about what happened pas.wngers coming off the·plane 'ttldcize inside the plane. the ihanner In which the crew haodied The plane was taxiing toward the the bomb threa t and thought the runway when the pilot was advised that stewardesses should have displayed "a an anonymous caller bad phoned the little more cool." airline to warn, "My uncle bas a bomb Mrs. Weimer said the incident oc- on your last flight." curred Just after the stewardess had given Litchfield said according to his infor-at us to 'Get Off . . . Get Off • . • maUon the stewardess told passengers .her Jnstruclions to the passengen on that they were to leave the plane by the use of .seatbelts. She 1uddenly rushed the main cabin doon. ·forward to· the pilot's compartm~t. -· For eome wiexp~ined ·realOO,• aeveral " " -...'.'Sbe....emerged. and. •tarted ~ of the emergency windows were popped right now,'"~· WeimC!r.said. open ;., well and passengera scramblP.d Airwest off1c1als . In S-an Mateo could out onto the wing, Litchfield said. not be reached for immediate com~t. Passengers had not been told to use Tom. ~an di er, Or_an.ge County station the' windows or to jump off the wixlg, m8rul:ger. for th~ airline, saJd he was ·according to information offered lly c~rtam 1nst,i;uchons to deplane were Litchfield. given but , we were on the ground Mrs. Pat Weimer, one of the women and we don t have the sligh~t idea who sprained an ankJe during the leap, what happened lnsl~e the P}ane. however, said that a man across the . ~· ~elmer, still limping from her isle from her popped open one of the lf!Jury • rs scheduled to board the same windoW3 and the stewardess took it night today to .reach Medlord, Ore., from him, laid in 00 a seat, and "told where her father rs near death. us to get out tn the wing." Litchfield said he does not tnow bow many passengers leaped off the wing but that be believes most of them deplan· ed by using the mlln cabin door and the rear stain. From Pqr I GUERRILLAS ... aboard the Jeiliner, tnduding "many Americans '' when it came under attack. After reaching Athens, the Arabs shot to death an It8lian poliCe~ they took hojtage_ ll!.d Jhrµleneji \p. kJI! ;...the, )lostlop 1veey,l5.~<,111tiLthe Greek government met their demand to free two Palestinlan commandos charged with . an airport attack in Alhens Aug. 5. Officials at the Rome airport said one of those !.illed was an unidentified American caught in crossfire during a shootout on a runway between the Pan Am jet and the Luflhansa jetliner. Pan .American World Airways sources &aid some of the Ara.b commandos were dreised-as -airo'aft-gruund maintenance crewmen. They opened lire with sub- machine guns and grenades as the Pan Am jetliner Dearly completed taking on pasaengen for a Olght to Beirut. The guerrillas said they killed the hostages when the Greek government Valley Will Cons.ider Pa,y Hikes to WQrk(!r~ shot tw ice. • •, The suspect ra n from the scene. • H u11ti1igton H ig~ I Slates · Coneert · '~: ·Fountain Valley ·city councilmen will emp1oyes who .. me their own "'C8J'S . on ' · · ~ · · · ···· · · '~. · comlder salary Increases 'lit· Uie1r Tiles-' ,. City 1luStneSs. ~ · • .,.. · · · :·. ,_ · · Huntington··~ch High School studelfS will present their annual Chriltmas con· day meeting that average five percent According to Mrs. Hartman's proposal, . cert Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Fi~I for city employes and sii. percent for the old rate of 10 cents a mile will United Methodist Oiurch, 2721 17th si: their bosses. be replaced by a new rate for employes The concert ls being presented in ij)e: According to a memo to the COUl}(il who drive four cylinder cars of 12in church this year, a school spokesman from city PersoMel Officer Sally cents a mile. Those who drive cars etj>lhlned, because the 5Chool's audite-rium Is closed due to a remodeling P<'li· Hartman, the city employe raises are with six or more cylinders would get ect. . part tlf the three-year ®Qtract signed JS cents a aiUe. Choral groups and the stud «: ft t With employes in 1m. 1be si1 percent pay raises for ad· 1 orchestra will present the holiday pr(>-- Included in the proposed salary minlstratars would mean that City gram led by Jean Tyndall , director ~f package are a nwnber of changes in Admioislrator Jim Neal, would get a chonJ activities and Galen Vogel, dire<:· job titles that carry no salary dlanges monthly salary of $2,920, or $35,000 a tor ol instrumental music. and a boost in the allowance paid year. Admission is free. ~~~~~~~~~~ ' .. . " ' Go'ldwater Asks House to Act Councilmen Eye Civic Center's -&;o-impaet ,Bid • failed to ·meet a two--bout deadline for relwe' of•the Ml jalll!d>Palestlniahs~· They vowed to kill two more hostages, "t1~~ J~t1.e1•:r . . , met. But they extended the deadll t,.;...--~ Woliday · "iJiiJtMWier ~e On Impeachment BostoN (Ar'} -Sen. Barry Goldwater has called f o r the House leadership to ''shut up or put up" in the consideration of impeachment pl"I> ceedings against President Nixon. Jn an interview with the Chri!tian Science Monitor published today, the Arizona Republican and former preeiden- tial candidate said It is im~ative that consideration of impeachment be con- cluded rep idly. "They're (members of the House Judiciary Committee) not playing around wilh the Republican party and the Democratic party -they're playing around with the American people," Goldwater said. He criticized Nixon for fa iling to move quickly enough to di spel doubts about the President's innocence in l he Watergate affajr. "He chose to dibbl e and dabble and argue tl n very nebulous grounds like executive privilege and co nfidentiality, wh en all the American people wanted to know was the truth ," Goldwater said. If the President had open ly discusse d the issue, "I think Watergate would ha ve been history by 00\.\' and Mr. Nixon Wtluld be way back up on the popularity poll," Goldwater said. OIAHll COAST "' DAILY PILOT Tl't1 Or•no1 CM" OAIL Y ,tLOT wll!o ...,lctl 11 ~ fllt lrfll'Wt.,rn1, 11 Pllbll"*I 1rf IM Or•nve Co.11 ,ubll11'11nt COm~n1 . ._.. r11t ..:ll!loo't1 1r1 Pllbllllltd, Mond1y lf!r1lulll'I Frld1y, for c ... 11 Me11, Nt'WllOrl kldl, H1111!1nglor\ llutl'tlll-11ln V1!1ty, U9\N ... di, lrvlM/s.ddllbKt 11111 Sin ClttNnle/ Sin JloNln C•Dt•t,,no. A 11119!1 ,., ..... , "'ltlton t. put1ll11*1 SllllrMY' •1111 SvN11n. 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Two years after the start of con~ struction, Huntington Bea:it city aiin- cilmen will review an environmental impact report (EIR) on their 111 million ·civic center. Councilmen have !>een uked to tap. prove it tonigh~ during their 7 o'cloCk meeting. The city's enviromnental review .board has Inspected the document, oqyed it and suggested some steps for blndung adverse effects resulting from the am- strucUon of the new city ~ll. The Impact of the !acilil)'. ltaelf Is a moot point·now, but the-review board 00.. believe the potential irnpaM'-of traffic in the area tlf Main Street and Mansion Avenue should be dealt with. Review board members recommend that two residential st~ts south of the civic center, Pine and Park streets, be turned into cul-de-sacs so traffic can not use them to reach city hall. ,. It has aJso been recommended that Lake Street be widened and extended north to meet Gothard Street in an effort t<> take some ol the traffic burden off Main Street. The problem of Main Street Itself may be dealt with later, according ttl Jim Palen, chairman of the en- virorunental review board. The 107-page impact rerort was written by the landscape architecture finn tlf Erikson, Peters and Thoma at a cost to the city of ~.965. City officials didn 't decide to write an EIR on the m8ss1ve civic center until last January, when they discovered the city was in violation of the 1970 California Environmental Quality Act which requires impact reports prior to the start of any major public project. Huntington Beach had also failed to write impact reports for Its central park and central library. Those are also now being prepared, even though both projects are under coostructlon. when Foreign Minister Spyris Tetenes agreed to negotiate with them. "Okaf, we 'll wait for half an hour but that's the eod," ooe of the com- mandos said in Arabic. In Cologne, Germany, a Lufthansa spokesman. said there were lB per90ns aboard the hijacked short-range Botlng 1 737 jet, including the three guerrlllu. ' Palestinians Sbaflk El·Arid, 22, and Talat Khantounh, 21, had been ordered to stand trial In Athem for premeditated mW'der In the August pistol and hand grenade attack which killed four persons. No trial date h.u been set however, because the two still beld the right to appeal the charges to the Greek SJ!Pl'eme Court. Al-,,_the Athens airport, West Gennan Amba!l!ador Dirk Onken, speaking from the contrOk~wer, told the pilot of the hijacked plane, "We are doing the best we can do. It ls not up to us to free the two prisoners." , "But please hurey," the pilot said. "These people want to kill .us all. At [ least get someone to tell them that the two people (jailed Arab guerrillas) will be tree." "We dJd the best we could do. It's a matter. £or the Greek government. We are doing our best to -serve you . Have cOurage,'' the ambassador laid. "We can't. We need some hope. Please tell tl)em something," the pilot said. Probation Given In Valley Death A We1tminster man lnlt!4iiy cblrged with felony manslaughter after a col· lision in which motorist Heather LldeU, 18 of Fountain Vslley, died has been pl~ced on one year'i probation in West Orange County municipal coUrt action. Manslaughter charges against Gene Lease Defaults Edward Angell . 18. of toll! Margo Lane , I were reduced to ;nisdemeanor level after be pleaded no contest to the allegations. T'ed t R ho Angell was arrested June 30 after I 0 e zo, • collision In which witoelSel ' told Foun- tain Valley pollc:e bis pl<kup truck rM MIAMI (UPI) -A Miami shopping a red •light at Slater Avinlio Ind Brook· center CO<!eveloped by Oiarles G. hurst Street and am.,hed Into . the "Bebe" Rebow and later sold has aC. driver's side of MiU Liddell'1ur. counted for nearly a filth of all del1u!ts The girl dJed 1even bourt Ia~ at nationally In the lease guarantee pro-a local holpital. She &radl!tted fnim gram of the Small 8 u 1In•81: Fountain Vllley H!gb Scbool the week Adrninlstratlon, the Miami H e r a I d before and was drjvtng to her first reports. 'clay ol work with the FOUlllaln Valley '!be H~ oald Sllndiy tbt \louse · .~ Departmtml .wl>O!i the ac- Banklng •nd currency Committte, which ,ddeol occurred. Is Investigating the SBA, fowld 'U>ere had been more lease guarantee defaults within that single shopping cent .. than In any of the SBA'• 10 national re_ .. Statistics provided thO House com- mittee by thl! SBA llste\182 leue defaults natiopally. the Herald sald . with 12 of !\em In the El Centro Comerctal CU~ano Siopplng Center once jointly owned ~y Rebow. a close friend ol Prelldent Nix• on, and C. V. W. Trice, a real estate' "'roker. The stainless steel .. dishwasher. FOR ONLY $10. MORE ' We will make a normal re - placement installation of any standard undercounte·r dish - washer . YES, ONLY $10. MORE! ONl Y WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU All THESE EXClUSfVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING •RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE' ACT NOWlll SALE ENDS NOV. 21, 1973 .............. ,. .. " . .. ,. NOBODY SELLS «· " WASTEKING ·• : DISHWASHERS • ,. FDR LESS ~HAN« .,. DUNLAPS « . «- Why Waste · King Universal is 5 ways better .......... *****tr.', EXCLUSIVE ff-ARM WASHING ACTION SAFE, SANITARY . DRYllQ , ..., ~IJ.l!JMUUJ.U.U.WJJ/.WMi 'SI"·'""""·"''"""""'"'"' · ·-"JQ n i I s 1 I~ I .r.im. ~ YEAR l •. STAINLESS ! ~ pan,, gu8'1ntee ..,:j ' ~ STEEL ~ ~ lhe motor, pump.~ ~ l;: ~t i m e r , wastt..:: LUARANTEE ~ !i: dlslribut lon S)'stem,~ ' ~~ ~heater and Pi.&1hbue-i RUGGED ol s'KETS ~ :· torui on IOO i nd 1e11ia: "" • ~.-E ; """ disllWHhert. ~ RANDOM LDADlllG · '"""""'"''m.i; i;,.,,.,.,,..,,,.,,.;,,.,""""j. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE 90DAYSCASH WITH APPROYED CREDIT ,. I .. • f A girl aeat speed Free in Ml Ge 'kan., the p Trab .Jail, .... t'ob 1Pol 'ftqm the t Of spotl Ana A!>d ' Vie : "H .!fea ·tryln . said 1'He :.te ;.:Js ' r ;;A .. wit ·btl ' lni •' mo ,.. • '. . - -• . . • • • • • ' • • • ' • I • ' ' • r • • " . ,. . - I - • 1'idnap Suspeet . Police Nab Man With Bound-Girl -A fleeing kidnap suspect with a young girl bound and gagged on the front seat of bis car led police on a high speed chase down the Santa Ana Freeway early Sunday before exiting \n Mission Viejo and wrecking bis car. • , Gerald A Gillespie, 28, of Overland, Kan., was -captured at the scene of the pileup at Marguerite Parkway and Trabuco Road. He is in Orange County .Jail, held on suspicion of kidnaplng, assault and battery, burglary and armed '"bbery. The chase drama began at the home of Mr. and Mn. Luther Mltthe!I in .. 1'utna Park, where Gillespie allegedly broke in, threatened the family with a long""krewdriver, tied them and took Mignon Mltche!I , 16, as a hostage. ' Jfo1ice said Gillespie also stole $150 1ftqm the family before Oeeing with the terrified girl. She was not hurt. Officers said Gillespie's big sedan was spotted on the Santa Ana Freeway in Anaheim at abo.ut 4 a.m., weaving back )Iv! forth across the taiies. \ Thinking he was a drunk driver, a ~lifqrnja llisl!"l!IY .~atrol.of!icer st;lrted. to pull him over but officers said Gillespie gunned the car and took off c1o.m ·tfie' ffee;fay al uo·.-'.m1Ies' per [lour. '~ Two other CHP units Joined the chase ''lhrouah the Saddleback Valley and off fhe fieeway at La Paz Road in Mission Viejo. . ; uHe proceeded through the residential ,area breaking numerous traffic laws ·trying to elude the pursuing officers, u , said public: affairs ofticer Jerry Maxwell. · ~·He apparenUy lost control at "the in- :. teraedlon of Marguerite and Trabuoo :Road and piled it up." Maxwell said Gillespie fought when officers tried to arrest him. Officer 1s Pregnancy r ~ Disability? t. iCo11rt .. to Decide · . ' ' WASlfiNGTON (AP) In a case that .. ~uld have wkie ranging impact oo public ~ private disability insUrance pro- ~ams. the U.S. Supreme Court agroed 1i0day II> decide whether California can \leny disability benefits for pregnancy· ll'elated disabilities. t• California Atty. Gen. Evelte J. Younger ed the appeal of a decision In JWle , .. , -a thre .. judge federal court dealing ~th California's program that partially ·~mpensates for loss of wages due to ';ijsabilities nOt covered by worUnen's 'COmpensation. I The lower COUM held that C3litOmi8 'S ~clusion of disabilities felated to fregnancy was not based on a classlfica - ,tion that bad a rational or substantial ftlatlonslUp to any legitimate stale .~ and wax thus unconSlltullonal. -Since that federal court decision, a Atate court ruling has fortei! the state ;>rogram II> pay dixablllty beoefi!s to .women who miss work because of Complications related to pregnancy. • Younger brought the appeal II> permit the exclusion of benefits for ... normal delivery and recuperation." .. The state maintained that ·normal pregnancy was neither an illness nor i,n injury and could thus be rationally .excluded from a program concerned with 'those two situations. - ~ The three-judge court decision was prompled-by consolidated · crass action ·suits filed by women denied benefits. • Their lall'Yers asked the Supreme pourt II> affirm the three-jndge court's dedslon. "The Issue Is not pregnancy, but _pregnancy·related dixabillUes," re ad their motion. · • Tile U.S. Chamber of >ommen:e sided with California in. a lrlend-<>l·tbe-<Ourt #lei. The chamber said the three-judge c\eclslon could prevent private employers f~m maklng "reasonable rut~. to pro- inote the objectives of his insurance J»rogram." • .. Dave Mei,r ruffered a broken finger: in the melee. Glllese!e's alleged kidnap victim was uninjured in the early morning crash. Gillespie is facing other charges in· his alleged spree which started late Saturday when be rtportedly tried -to burglarize the apartment of John Bavelich of Buena Park but fled after a scufOe with the apartment owner. Police believe be then ftllt II> the Mitcbefll' apartment. Prosecutor Cites 'Hate' In Shooting By TOM BARLEY ot ..... D.ity net ..... Ranch hand Robert cart "Whip" Slat· to!lJ .~~"~ '.'a~ o( ~te and vengeance" when he llhOt lUid killed a ynunf trespasser at Ortega llOt Springs last . Jilly 10;. the ·~prOOeclJtor"claiineil today in Slatton's murder trial •. Deputy District Atll>m<Y Ted M!Dard al!eged befono an Orange County Superior Court jury in his opening state- ment that Slatton, 41, vowed to use his weapon on the "Hot Sprin(fs longhairs" several hours before DennJ:S Glahn.,..21, o( La Mirada . was killed. Millard claimed Slatton hid several drinks at the Swallows Bar in -Saa Juan Capistrano from 6 p.m. to I p.m. that night and told the bartender belono he left: "I'm going to get me one." The pn>Oealll>r told the jury that Slal· ton then stopped at a San Juan Capistrano service station en route to the Hot Springs In his Land Cruiser vehicle and knocked over a trash can "!pilling garbage all over the area." "His responae to the request that he clean it up was to tell the attendant \hat peopl~ apiDed !rub and gart>o,. an over his ranch wl~ ptel!ng 'It up, so why should be?'' Millard said Slatton. sportlng a white Stetson bat -·and with a .15 caliber Colt revolver slllll( around bis hips - was nez:t seen by about nine pereons sitting OD the ground around the famouS Ortega water.bole. lie said Slattoo ldentlfled blmsell u the ranch owner and -tnnaient Leo Burnell. 2t, a badge that apparently rtpmented bis authority II> evld trespassers from the area. Millard said Burnell q-uoned the Callfornia Ranch Patrol badge and told Slatton: "That -doesn't mean a thing to me." Millard uid witnesses will testify that Slatton ~then drew his gun, lbov .. r It against Burnell'• forehead and axked the'}'OW;lg man : "What does this prove?" Thooe witnesses, Millard said, will teslify that Slattoo shoved the yowlg man's head back with the weapon repeatedly "°"king the bainmer ·until Burnell told him: "No lawman would ever do that to ·anyone.',' MJilard said that victlin Glahn, who waa standing nearby, then stepped forward and told Slatton: "Hey · man this Isn't cool .•. " ' The deputy district attorney then an., . ed that Slatton'• response wax to fire the )>isll>I Into Glahn'• stomach from two to three feet, holster the weapon and run for the Land Crui!er parked nearby. Millard J!l!ld slierilf's deputiel later found the overturned vehiclt a few mnes from the bot "springs and began 11> 1oour the area In sean:h for Slatton. Slatton was lluabed from a nearby ranch house where be bad aougbt mug.. Deputies said Slatton told the owneri Of the property thet be WU fleeing from a group of lddnapen who had threatened II> castrate him. · Mlilard said bis witnessel will aJJo prove that Slatton'• COllllDOll-law wife 1,ter retrieved the weapOll allegedty uled . In the slaying and· !hmo ·11 down a nearby gully. . • Not So Merry First .Fire Phony-Not Second l For Pomona boal .....,. F. T. Llvei more, the weoteod vlllt to .hJa a&-lool . , ,,i qbln orullef It Dina Barbor WU nothblC but -, Livermore, the owner-Uipper of the ctulllel' Merry·Merry, tint tbouiht be , • was doing a good deed when he noUced smote comtnc from a craft at the ; end of K-dock at the harbor's marina. • · •• He called for a fh'eboat, but the crews dlacov.red that the omoke wu ; lunch being cooked "" a hlbsehl abqard the craft. I With thel all aetUed, Livermore set nut for a cruise. r.-Tllree mlles out II> sea, he called for a fireboat again. . This time, It wa1 his boat Iba\ was bum!ng. , ' • -l Patrolmen r..,,...ied, "11 Uvennore-a&.edy had doliMd the llllDll In , the enciM oompartmenL The minor flareup wu cauaed by a bocklln! In a •• overbsa!ed "'line· ' •• _ .. . . " Moiwtay, oec'rttber 17, 1973 H OAl[Y PILOT 3 DlllJ ""* Sttff ,,.._. . Waiting Lighting . ..,. ,• .... ~ ~. .. . ' . On -Wednesda~, these youngsters from T~mple mar. -ing Ute "drlydet game'" arid·ea\ing·'the traditional -0n Pre-scbool m·Costa Mesa will see th~fiFSt.~dl.e .. p,otato PAl\~,es-,,tatke. Han.ukkah marks a Jewish . of e1gh\ bghted ID ol>servance -of Hanukkah: Jona· !1£!0!J'.~V~r. th~ .Syrians and the-rededicationlotthe than. Arfin;3, Sharon Cowan·; 4'ind ·A:dam:s·zuc~er!, tem)ile at'Jetusalenl'. · · -" ' ; ·· · .. ,, · · ~ 2, will share other holiday customs including play· Eventual Gift (Jf Nixon Home 'Not Tax Tool' W ASIUNGTON (UPI) - A spokesman for 1""5ident Mm> sal'I the chief ex- ecutive hat no intention of reaping a huge income tax deduction from the 011entual gift of his San Clemente home II> ·tJie 10mmnent. Tlie; HOw Yllft Times reported Sunday that ouch a gift could give Nixon a tax dedudion of between $390,000 and $87.0,000·spread over six years. Food Srike Issues Still Remain, Mediator Claims From Wire 8enicet "Considerable • progrea~· -bas been . made toward setlling the Southern California food strike, bUt 'several Serious issues remain, the chief of the Federal Medlallon Service said ll>day. "Every effort .is being made to reach an -IO the peqi!e <;'II .. t back lo· '"'rk;" wtwam.· 11...ry jf. ';a;d at the coOclusion of a marathon session in Washlngll>n D.C. which la.ted from 11 a.m. Sunday until mi4-inoming today. U a setU,ement is reaChed between , Los Angeles and other S o u t h e r n California counties have been idled since the four unions went oo. strike this month and the Food Employers Council immediately carried oot its lockout threat. In Northern califomi~, where some noa-tt~ unions have refused lo cross plCket unes, . near!Y hal! o( t h e supermarkets of the major chains have shut down. Fund Use - By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of Ille O•llY ,.Uol $1111 Anaheim Supervisor Ralph Clark. chairman of the Orange County Tr ansit District Board of Directors, today sharp- ly criticized an c ff or t by Supervisor Ronald Caspers to win legal changes permitting Amtrak trains to make com- muter runs in the county. "The way this . sounds, p u b 1 I c transportation funds would be used to subsidize a few people in selected areas,'' Clark said. "What he's talking about is a train from San Diego to Los Ange les subsidized by Orange county taxpayers." Caspers appealed F r i d a y to Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw (R- Newport Beach) to change the laws now prohibiting Amtrak fron1 .making commuter runs . Caspers' plan calls for the san Diego to Los Ang e le-s train ~o pull in to San Clemente at 7:15 a.m., into central Santa Ana before 8 a.m. and into Los Angeles before 9 a.m. .. Caspers also as ked !or new stops to be added along the way in San Juan Capistrano and Mission Viejo. Currently, the earliest stop in San Clemente is at 8: 12 a.m. The only eve- ning return run is at 8:46 p.m. out of W, Angeles. <;aspeis.want,s.that changed to about 6 p.m. , . . Clark said there are many com· plicallon.s . tir:~-.11 ,:p!;I~--~\lei' 1;1~ · drain on public transportation funds that woukt be needed to suppo rt the Amtrak runs. "There is heavy freight n1ovement between Fullerton and Los Angeles that may be di.!irupted and many jobs rel y on that freight," Clark Said. "That is a lot more important than special com- muter service to a relatively few number o{ people." Clark added that the idea Would also be ecologically msound because trains need one-half gallon of fuel per passenger and buses need only one-third of a gallon. OCTD Dire ctor Richard Lynn , a Newport Beach attorney, said he thinks the board should support Caspers' effort.s if only to get a chance to talk to Amtrak. "Every time we've apj)roacbed them, they've told us their legislalion prohibits th~m from talking to us at all," Lynn ... said. "Any assertion that tht PreSTdent -1d 111e the gift of bis home to the American j>eople aa a abort term tax dedUClion In 1171 Is falae," said Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren. laboc-union leaden 'and. nuiilligement, ---·-- the terms-d otill1Iave II> be ratified OCTD Ok p . ha ~~$S:1~.0pe: ays urc se "Tile Idea that the 1""5ident would utilize the gift of the home to the American people for a abort term tax benefit ooinpletely misses the spirit of ~_gift." Nixon . bad said earlier that the gift would be made after both'be and bis wife are ctead. · Tile. nm .. quoled lax laWYers famil· iar witb Nixoo.'s financial affairs rui sa)'ing -llUCb a tax bn!ak could some ~t the time that anolber bilge tax deduc-~thell exi>U'lnl!· Tbe 1""51dent'a~gift "" ~ nationaf ardtives of bis PreildentiaJ· papen. . llhlte Ho111e Jlte#S aide Br u co Wbel!ban,tolil the /I'lmes that the actual deed givtng .. the San Clemente property 11> \be American people has not yet ~ drawn up became the President's lawyen ba\'e not bad the time and added that "nobody has figured out the tax consequences" of the planned gilt. . . In the statement of the N!xons' net wortb ,'made pubHc last weekend, the va,lue of the San Clemente property · wax >et at 1571,000. But that ·figure was bu<lCI oo the original ""'t of the property and tax experts say the value baa lncrtaaed oonslderably. The . propei'ty Is currently valued at fU lililllm-by caHlornla author!Ues. · Masked Bandits Hit. Irvine Home • •• Tim·bandits In ski maw forced their way 'Into an Irvine home ·SundoY nigh~ then •bound, gagged • and robbed their Victim of cash and a gun colkctlon. . \'lrslnfa L: Van LendlJllbon> tald ""'"'" the b\truden tool< al>Wt'-fl)O-lii'"'ciih Qd' ber "°"'' gun <10li<dlon valued at -'1,lllO fl"'!' tlie Oennalncltr Way hon'te~ ' ' Ttie·V!ctlm ,. ... f«md bound and gag- gad by a netchbor. "ho noticed OCle of the mWecl m.., laa\>lna the home and called police when lie became ouspldool. 16 GM Pl~ts Close Both llides have Indicated they art willing to .. accept wage and fringe Of ,.f }f N B • 19 75 benefitsset.up .by.the,Cootof .Uving ~ ew usesin C.Ouncil. 1be maln 1S1Ue centers around - a number of non-econoinic issues in- cluding centrallzed meat packing, which could eventually elimlnate sortie ~ ers' jobs In supermarkets. Another ilaie Is the union's demand for a cost.of-living dause which wnuld increase wages as the cost of Ii ving rises. • More than 25.000 workers in Orange, Egypt's Chief JU CAJBq, EoPI (AP)-~ Anwar Sada~ bU -put 'to ·bed alter an attack of 'bronchiils, local neW.papers reported toiiay. They said he is at bis countey home 17 miles nortb of Caln> and reeclved Preslden\ Sese Seki> Mobutu of-Zaire, who ,ls vlslting-Egypl -. ' The purchase of 44 additional buses to be delivered in early 1975 was ap- proved by the Orange County Transit District directors today. The new buses W9uld be larger - 40 feet long rather than the present 35 -and with seats for up to 51 paillengon. The district's present buses carry only 36 passengers. The larger buses would cost about $40,000 each.or a total of approximately $1.8 million, Transit Distrid General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fie Id in g estimated. The district now operates 47 buses on regular route.s -and wil1 ·take delivery on 6S new ~nger models early in 1974. With the 63 and the additional 4-4 Fielding said adequate bus service could be provi.ded to all parts or the county. . He pointed out that during the summer months it has been necessary to add as many as six extra' buses each-day on the Harbor Boulevard line from Fullerton .to Costa Mesa , Newport Beach and Hun ting ton Beach. He added that the line from the Orange CoWlty Medical Center through Santa Ana and to Laguna Beach also has additional buses at the present and there are standees quite often. This is also true · of the Balboa Peninsula-South Coast Plaza route. Fielding said. · Once Upon A Time, there \\'ere • ' f some special litlle girls and boys and their aunts, grandmothers and mothers found wonder(ul things for them to wear in our Christmas colleetlon. Lisa is '\'earin g a skating dress by Ruth of Carolina. Avail11.blc in sizes 4 to 12 at The Red Balloon Ltd .. in Newport }!each. Huntington Harbour. and Orange . llASHION ISLANO Nflw,trl INCl'I ........ TOWN & COUNTtt"f Or111tt 1n•1 "'""' MUNTINeTON 14AJllOUR CJIAJ .... 1 ... .. ' 1 ,,._ .•. ' ' \ • ' 4 OAIL V PILOT MondO)', Otcombtr 17, 1173 .Inst 19'\ Coasting ,~ J Nation's Capital Socked In by Snow with T om ar.,~e ~. ' Oil's Well That Ends Well? BLACK GOLD DEPT. -lt is nervous time here along our Orange Coast these days as California and the nation began to cast eyes in every nook and cranny for the possibility of tapping new 9Cturces of oil. 'Ye appear to be a bit short ()f the sturr. This condition bas particularly caused some jangled nerves among the forces of ecology. And then there are those who have campaigned over the past COUP.le of decades to keep offshore oil rigs from botching up the Pacific vista out toward Catalina Island. Groups like the Coastal Area Protec- tive League (CAPL ) were fighting this battle long before anybody used the word eco logy. You used to be able to mount a pretly good attack against oi1 simply by waving about a few old photographs from the J92jfi, showing the ugly der- ricks and tattered. seashore of Hunting· ton Beach during the early days o( the oil boom there. \\'HEN A FEW e1ploratory wells were bcing punched down in Costa :ftiesa a civic cry was heard against, "The Stench and Vomit of Oil. .. " By Unlttd Pre11 tntematloaal A snowstorm took the East Coast by SWJ>rUe during the weekend and raged into a major storm today. At least two person.! have been killed in weather-related accident!. Up to 6 inches of snow piled up In parts of Washing!OO, DC., and CAused rn~t schools in lhe capital to close for the day. Even President NI.loo reportedly remained lr111ide the White Ho~ during the weekend because of the soow. "WE'RE KIND or excited ,", a \Vashington highway spokesman said. .. This Is the first time in four years we've had snowplows out." Hea vy snow swooped down from North Carolina to New E!1gland, along the coastal plain east of the Appalachians and inlo the Oblo Valley. The Natlooal Weather Service posted a variety of snow, .gale wind and travelers' warnings for the area as the storm lnteoslfied and moved oorth from the Washington, D.C., area. Pp lo ll inch<$ ol snow was forecast in eastern PennsylvanlL Freeting temperatures g I a t e d blgbways, making travel dangerous. Authorities said at lM ttA'O petSOC'IS were killed on slippery roads in Virginia. 'Ille' Virginia alat•JOU~ Jald m.o.ny penioos were unPl'Ol)OnlCI !0< heavy snow and "didn't even bavt anow Urea.'' PoUce from New Hampshire to NeW York and aouth to Virginia reported large nwnber:i of "fender bender" ac- cident!. SNOW, SLEET and tree.Ing rain bliiz,,. ed th• New Yori: metropolitan areif.' New York City ..... forced lo can«! for a second time a plan to transtonn F1f'th Avenue Into a pedestrian mall, and the city'• Sunday half.fare mass trans it plan got off to a slow start ..as subfreez.lng temper~t\lfe5 scared off subway and bu.s riders from an In expensive ride. Many schools were forced to close, and Ule storm created power outages and delayed thouaands of commulen. Even the New York and American stock exchanges and some commodity markets were lortOO lo delay tl)clr usual 10 a.m. openinp because of tbe weather, wblch allcked atr..la with fee and dlarupled public transportallon inlo and out of the clly. tn many suburban areas lee-glazed tree limbs snapped and fell across power lines knocking out electricity In scores ot ~es. SChoo~ were oro~recl clooed because mo.st highways were coated with glare ice which formed as a Stmday afternoon snowstorm turned to sleet and icy rain. ~ SNOW SHOWERS lingered o""' Loke Michigan. A spQkesman at O'Hare International Airport In Chicago sald two planes owned by Unlted Air Lines and Eastern Air Lines became stuck In the mud near the end of the alrp0rt runway. Next Ti1ne~ Take Bus? Ni~on's Train Ride Miglit Use More Fuel Tl;J.ari Jet WASHINGTON (UPI) -Ever since a WhJte House spokesman announced that President Nixon may take a train instead of a plane to Florida to set an example of fuel-saving, newsmen and railroad buffs have been trying to figure out just how much fuel -ii any - will be saved. A lJTI'LE arithmetic shows that any saving would be slight. . An Amtrak spokesman said that ( NEWS ANALYSIS ) ' because all the Florida trains are fi lled to capacity at th is time of the year. By comparlsoo, the pre.identlal jet bums fuel at the rale of 2,000 galloos per hour for the IW<>liour trip lo oouth Florida -a tolal of 4,000 gallon!. THUS, IF mE special train bums more than the minimum amount of rue! or ll it requires more lhan two diesel unit!, Nixon actually oould bum more fu el going by train' than by plane. • Deputy Whil.,. llouse Press ~tary Gerald L. Warren said the President v.·as considering making the train trip when be goes lo F1orlda Dec. 26. The arrangement.s are apparenlly still open. In addition to the engines, there ls the energy cost or security ar- rangements. Thousands or state nnd local policemen must be driven to every bridge, overpass and culvert to guard the President's train as it passes. Railroad men must "spike down" every switch, and every other train along the route mus t stop well ahead or time and be standing still as the President passes. Fatal Plnne Crash Due Nixon will ride in a separate eight-car T N . d f R • ? 0nce·a few yeatsl1ack; some n\etribers , of the aforementioned CAPL discovered • some. oil .,people skulkh)g--around ·with - ·equipment .\in •the 'foothi lls· of Corona ..... de! Mar and let me tell yuu, there was hell to pay. The ·oil people were scattered in a ·full retreat: ·second section Which ·will travel behind -0 ee . or· epairs the regularly scheduled passenger train. • The President's ··sepa·rate .... 1raln~~w11t ' , , · ,, 1w, ''·'a -... ->·... ·.._-...:._. . ....,_._ ..... :.. t_ , · ··~ .... '-". ,,.., • !.... ( ,. AND SOJ\tE TBf E before that. there was a proPoSSI that was actually en- terta ined in some parts to drill for oil in Upper Newport Ba y. It touched off a real countywide flap. Think what a Back Bay oil proposal would be li ke today. You'd have the Friends of Upper Newport Bay on the march in full batUe gear. Newport Beach, however, has an of- ficial prohibition agalnst oil drilling within its city charter. There are some \/Oices now, however, who suggest a ballot measure next April \\il ich could lift tha t prohibition. - Petroleum experts argue tha t easing the oil ban wo uld not necessarily mean derricks would start rising a!J over Newport. Modem techniques would allow extracting !he black gold by slant drilling under the ocean ·rrom inland locations. TllF.Y ALSO ARGUE that modern oil rigs can be desig ned in such a \\•ay that all aren't even aware of the pump locatk>r& AH of this may be good and true. And you can unde rscore it with the current and alleged oil and gasoline shortage. So you can expect our coastal shakers- and-movers to trot out several brass bands and welcome the oilman to our untapped territory, right? Wron g. YOUR BEST BET is lhat the protest line will be Jong and loud. Oil is oll. And when you talk to t:oastal folks about it. it's just like a kilee-jerk reaction. Even iI the gas gauge needle rests on empty. u .. 1 Tt'"llolt Five Childre11 Died Firemen search through rubble of three homes in Maxton, N.C. t hat were destr oyed by fi re early Sunday. Five children perished inside one of the homes. A laborer was charged wit h setting fire to his for- mer girlfriend's house and then watching firemen fight the blaie. e C11rle Brawl ~ ~~~~~~tS b:~~ ~ ?~~eia·; ett~a;:a~ . MIAMI '<tiPl l . ·.::.&i v offiCiai (~ ~--,. cCttY tOid". 'jio1fCe · a'rtcr . being treed · I d aviation repair firm said Sunday that Saturday the k.idnapers stunned him with 1.5 to 2 gallons per mile. Rai roa a club before cutting off the ear Y.i th so urces say at least two diesel engines. a cargo plane which crashed into a a kitchen knife. and ~ possi bly three. v."ould be needed residential area on takeoff had been "When the blade cut the flesh I M>ke to haul th.e presidential train. grounded and awa.itlng repairs for a up.'' he said. " J fel t everything -it Assuming that each diesel unit burns month. was terrible. Afterwards they gave me fuel at the minimum rate of 1.5 gallons The three crewmen aboard I.he several injectioos." a mile, the trip of 1,178 miles-from Lockheed super O>nsellation bound for Washington to Miami using two engines Venezuela with a load of Christmas would consume slightly more than 3,500 trees and five penons in two lxlmes gallot13 or diesel fuel peris bed in the Saturday rtight crash. Richard J. Sekman, head of Selrnlan Truckers Cite No Action A\ialloo at Miami International Airport, sa id the plane's owner requested "maybe IO Items that he wanted done that the pilol oo the 1.S1 !rip reported ." FUNT, ~11ch. IUPI) -A TMtorcycle gang brawl with guns. pool cues and chair lep left four persons dead and fi ve in hospitals, and police held eighl persons in custody today whUe they ( IN SHORT ... ) By United Press lnternatlonal Independent truck dri\•ers who have blocked highways and staged a y.·ork stoppage to protest ha ving to dri ve slO\\·er with more expensive fuel. have gained recognition 11nd sympathy from the govemmenl. but so far, little else. SF.cl\ETARY 0 F Transportalim Claude S. Brinegar said the truck dri vers "have got our attention and we are working on their problems." but at week's end the Senate approved a na· tionwide speed li mi t or 55 miles an OOW-despite tn1ckers' complaints that they burn more fuel at lower speeds. Sen. Jennings Ra ndolph fD-W.Va.), ~·ho helped ~Tile the bill , said Senators considered setting a higher speed for trucks but decided "the appearance or preferentia l treatment could undel'inine all energy." l\Ii chael Parkhurst of Los Angeles, editor of Overdrive f\lagazine and one or the leaden o[ the tru ckers' strike, said despite Bri~ar 's statement, "no progress has been made.'' "They're not meeting the problems head on ," he said. DEMONSTRATIONS BY lhe striking drivers ended during the \\'eekend in several states, and tractor-trailer traffic appeared to be back to normal. But some drivers insisted a work stoppage was still in effect today. "We're getting organized. now ," !aid tru cker Carl Bray of Middle~11 . Ohio. "There are literally thousands of rigs in Ohio and millions in the country wftlch are not rolling." There '"·ere a few scattered incidents of violenee Saturday directed against drivers trying to operate their trucks . including one trucker who was sta:xied by five stri kin g drivers in Ne¥.' Jersey. But there \'lere far fewer disturbances than the dozens of shootings and brick throwing incidents Thursday and Ftiday, the first t\vo days of the "park-in.'1 An association of independent steel haulers in Pennsylvania voted Saturday to end lhe strike, and Parkhu~ said Jong distance truck traffic ''should be almost b'.ack to normal" today. PROTESTING TRUCKERS who had parked at truck stops along main highways, preventing operating drivers from buying diesel fuel, ended their park-~ Saturday in many areas, in- cluding Kansas Oty, Sl I.oui!, and North Carolina, and police in Arkamas reported truck traffic Vl'as back lo normal Sunday. But in Ohio, truck traffic during peak traveling hours was reported very light early today. e Britblt B1ulget LONDON (UPI) -The Cabinel today approved a pre-Olristma.s belt·tlghtening package that would mean higher taxes, pay cuts, port.time working and moont· Ing unemployment !or eris!• plagued Britons. C'r0vemment sources said the Cabinet approved special emergency budget measures and Chancellor of the Ex· chequer Anthony Barber would announce Ulem to Parliament later today. e No Surgery ROME (UPf ) -The grandson of billionaire J. Paul Getty toasted his release with a bottle of wine .and refused plastic surgery for his missing ear. Le Due Tho Vows A ilk To Viet Cong in Talks S>Ugllt to learn what toud!ed oil the fighting. A Flint hospital reported a fifth man died today rrom injuries suf(cred in the brawl between two gangs early Sun- day, bot homicide dctectiv~ said the report was YITOng. e Skylab Lrinre SPACE CENTER, Houston !AP) - The work schedule for the Sky lab 3 astrooaubl wu relaxed just enough today to permit them more sleep, ~-ers and about two hours of leisure. Gerald P. Carr of Santa Ana, William R. Pogue and E:dward G. Gibson, lo~ ly of San Clemente. stiU had much ~'Ork and little play. But that's the way they want It, ol!icials sail\. Postcard Day in Southland PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnamese peace negotiator Le Due Tho said today North Vietnam will support the Viet Cong in any military action against ''TRE GOVERNMENT ol t he Democratic Republic of Vietnam fully supports the PRG poaltion lo lake any actlon to ~h the acts of war com· mittee by the Saigon administraUon In violatim of the cease-fire." the South Vietnamese army. · Ten1perature Climb s Into Upper 70s; No S1nog "In the face of continuous and grave violations of the (Paris peace) agree- men t by the Saigon administration with Tho commented in a statement at Le Bourgel Airfield when he arrived from M~w for an emergency meeting Thursday with Secretary of Stale Henry A. Kissinger lo try to !bore up !be fragile Jan. 'll, 1973 peace agreement Tempera lures Alb1nv Alla"ra Sitm1rc~ S M!cn lluflalo Cll•rlc!lt ChitltQC Clnc lnn11i Cle~e11ne1 D•Tlas Otn~e• Oil Moi"ts H!•ll Low "Cl'· :n ll .59 ,z 26 11 06 .10 )' :33 .71 16 ~ .&l :;a ... .•l 11 '° .!l 16 14 01 11 17 ,LI .. "' " ~ 11 11 .~ .. S. California U.S. enoouragemcot and SUPflOrt, there Mil.:1 iemi>eritu•n ind 5m~·''" is no reasoo for the Democratic Republic 1Jr m"'* • ple1u"1 d•Y In Sou1,...rn of (North) Vietnam. and the ProviJional ~!~1~·~~1:'T~=-e cf Ille a.tme. Revolutionary Government of South Viet- ~~ ,;it;•: hi~h'l1~~;.~ nam (Viet Cong) to sLand idly by and lno cvtr ll>e mcut1!1ln trns. let the other side do what it will " Tefllj)tr11\/rn _. t"QltCMd to hover ' In 111e 10s '" ""'n' ,,..,1 tcd•v. he said. and lt.e Los A.rlQtlts Cl\lfc Cfflltr Mon w11 ••oect.d 1o t. n •ltw $undav'5 hl;h DI Ill. !leech art11 h&d p1tcl'r( mor"lrlfl tea. but oll!lf'WIM 11 was ltlr and m!ld. Hlqhl lcday 1nd TUHd.Y 1llould be In ,.,. 10t with Over?lll)ttl, IOWI from l!I lo 15. Ftl• ind mild condltl-U>oold Pr9Vll1 tn "" mcufll•IMI lcd•v t nd T1111!od•V. Coastal We•ther F1!r wllfl -clcud1f'ltll today, Lll)llt ~lf'ltble wtllCJt nll)l'll 1nd mcm!119 hours ~llt wnl to SCUttiWHI I to IS ~"°" '" •ftlf'nconl lod1v Ind Tl!91dly. Htoh lod1y t" ·~ ,,,. Coe1111 tem1>t1""1t11rts r•• fl"om so ... . lnl1nd ltmllel'llllT'ff rt• ffunl u 1o n. Wtltl'" t1ml>tf'11u!'e Jll, Sun, /tloon. Tide• MONOAY Steond hl9ft •:t7 P.,tn. ,_. I (SN IFF) LOVE YOU VERY MUCH MA NCHESTER, E!1gland (UPI) -!Jr. Ivor Felstein has been sniffing at Jove. lie clai ms you should be able to find your ideal partner by smeU. Writing in the medical newspaper, Pulse, he ll8ld !here should be a new kind ol apeciallst, the 1enunologist, be could tell Cotlples Ir the ~romas were oot compaUble, .the cloct4r aald. .Q 5ecOfl4 low •1• p.m. 1-4 "When one considers the overall value that a sense of smell may have 10< the physiclan or ooc!al worker, It is IU'l"'iling that neJther is asked lbout this seme at interviews." TUISOAY Firs! 1119'! 4::tf a.m. S.4 .CS Flltf lew 11 1• a,m. 0.1 ~ 5«0nd hltll !:•7 p,ft'I, l.i $tCtnd low lO:G p.,m. 1.4 kn ltltff •:52 I.Ill, s.te •:• P.."' Moon 11:1"" 12:30 •·"" Sttl 12.110 p.,m. He said so rar ooly one meeting was !Cheduled and would take place at !be fnlemaUonal c.nterence Cenler m Avenue Klebe!', alte ol the yeon.long pellet! lalks ond !be slgnlnc ol the pact nearly a year ago. Tho ll8ld the meetlnc .... being held at Wasblngtm's mj1...t. . "AS YOU AU know. the p1'eoelil st- Uoo tn Sooth Vietnam 11 very l!Oriou• because of tha extnmely grave viola- tions ol maoy -ntlal provillolw ol the Paris agreement by the Unilfd States Md the Saigon administratlon," 'Tho said. Tho said the Uniled Stales was giVing massive military aid lo Saigon and reneging oo Its pledge lo help rebuild the war-ravaged north. ' He aCCUled Soatli Vldnam ol lllleaoh- lng military operallON; "!errorizlng and mMSacring" !he South Vietname9tl populatioo and lor!*l!>ing cumnt Part. talks bet_, Viet ' CO!lg ond Salg<lll negotlaton Oii the pallllcal Mun ol their COUJ111:>'. WE'RE IN THE DARK Dispute Harry Curtis is being held by Chicago police for shooting deaths of two neighbors. Police say an argument over who was to rake leaves on Curtis' prop- erty sparked dispute. The neighbor and his wile were shot to death. OUR UGHTS ARE OFF, BUT THERI IS NO SHORTAGE OF ,ENERGY WHEN IT COMES TO OUR MERCHANTS AND THEIR WIWNGNESS TO .SIRYI YOU. -OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY THROUGH fRIDAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS l I l t t I • ' ' Ne be 10 I \ -. . • ~-I '" T --- - ·: Today's Final ' N.Y. Stoeks YQL. 66, NO. 351, "2 SECTIONS. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA MONDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1973 N TEN CENTS • ~ ~ewport Tackles StiCk y Oil Dy L. PETER KRIEG Of IM Dallr Piiot Sl•ff ·Newport Beach councilmen will decide tonight whether or not they'll ask voters to change the city charter to again a"9w oil drilling within the city limits. ''Tbe idea is absolutely insane/' was the reaction from former ··Vice mayor Hans J. l«eriz, a member of the oil advisory panel. Hospital, .says Lorenz and the committee are wrong. Gilstrap says there are 5 to 7 million barrels ol oil under West NeWport alone. He feels there couJd be even more than lbat under tbe public tidelands. wells within the city limits or offshor~,'' Gilstrap said. Tofiight enough deposit to change the current prohibition. And he says he doesn't think slant 1drilling will ~'Ork. "The dep>sits are too. shallow to get them any other way than by drilling almost straight down," Lorenz said. to drill and not let his neighbor do it He'd just be sitting there while all the oil under his property was drained out," Lorenz said. Gilst rap said be doesn 't think the city has much of a choice. trbe proposed charter amend!lll)nt will draw, opposition ftom the city's.Technical Oil Advisory Olllunittee but It w i ll get strOng support from the oil com· panies now pump41g oil from the fields . in ~unty territory 'above West Newport. "The chances of getting a sizeable production from under Newport Beach is absolutely nil," Lorenz said. But ,[a)!leS Gl!Mtap,_CJ>llSulla(ll lo G.E. Gilstrap stresses that he's not ad- vocating -offshore drilling, but says the pools_ol oil_ coul~_be _slant-drllle<l with a cOuple of dozen wells on the Beeco property. He agreed with Councilman Richard Croul, who proposed tbe charter change, that If tbe city doesn't permit the reserves to be tapped, the state will lsaue pennlts and take the lion's share of the revenues. He salil._tbo~ revel\U~ could total several million dollars for the city. And, Lorenz added, "nobody yet has . found a ·way yet to produce oil without l\_urting the enviJ:_onment." "Because of the energy crisis, the state has already moved in other areas. like Santa Barbara .~· h.e pointed out. Kadane and Sons and General Crude Oil Company, which drill on the Beeco, Ltd. property west of Hoag Memorial "They would not have to have any / Lorenz, however, says he doesn't think 5 to 7 million barrels is a siginifcant ane om . . • ' Terrorists Flee Rome Mas sacre BULLETIN ATIIENS (UPI) -The Greek govern·- ment this afternoon released the two Im- prisoned "Black September" guerrillas as demanded by hijackers aboard the Luflbaosa plane al AUiea1 alrport, police sources said. ROME (UPI) -In ooe o1 their bloodiest attacks, Arab guerrillas shot up · a· passenger lounge .•t Leonardo da , 1 Viloc> jol-"'"'al -Alrport,ljlday1 bami>. ed a Pan Am jetlinier' falally bl!l'n!/lg ~~· score of pasaengers inside and"' Pew lo Athenl! '!here lliiy ..-' • Of tbelr bodq..,_ . The death toll waa at leui 34. The gunmen, some dressed as ground crewmen, hijacked a West German airliner to Athens in an attempt to force the Greek government to free two Black September Palestinian guer- rillas jailed for an earlier attack there, One policeman hostage was killed shortly after arrival. LUFTHANSA AIRLINE PILOT, WITH PISTOL MELb TO HIS HEAD, WALKS TO WAITING JETLINER Injured P•S-tolllJOr Litt lo P09l·of-B1ood AfteicBloodl•st Attoclrby-Arab Gvorrillu · Later, the pilot interrupted negotia~ tions over the radiotelephone to say: "~is~ going oo back there." . Then he said there were two more hostages killed. Major .Irerm -Confront · . Attorney· ~e.ared In ·Kill-for-hire Pan American W«ld Airways said at least 30 persoris were killed in Rome in the attack against the Pan Am 71Yl jetliner, a shootout on the runway and the shooting in a departure lounge after guards discovered weapons in the Arabs' luggage. Newport Beach Council County Trial Two of the those killed in the bombing of the Pan Am jeUiner were Moroccan ministers of state. T1le proposed master plan of bicycle trails. the question of the. Irvine q>m· pony's vested right s in Big Canyon and amendments to the Land Use Element of the General Plan are only three of a hoot ol major ilems that will ~front Newport Beach councilmen lonight. : They will al90:conduct a'.JXib)ic ·~~g­ on a vpriety of . proposed charter llllttldmeols. , A public ·hearing on tbe Lido Isle Communib' ~tioi}'s ~uesr 'for a SS.year renewal ·of its-. private beach JWe,. orlgin8UY set !or !Qnight, will be postpoiled .until ne1t year, according to a declaration by counCi.lmen. Iast week. The bike trail master pliln ·may pro- Oraage Coast • • Weather It'll be .fair and mild Tuesday, according lo the weather aervlce, with biiha at lhe beaches in the mid * ' rlaing lo' 89 degrees in· land. Ovemlgbt lows ln-lhe 40a and sos. JNSmE TODAY Lt. Col. /!o6erl 'Stfrm, ROW fo r 61> .1/<0TI, "'Y' California's 4ivorce icw has tam him 11to th .. cl•aners'~ as hll ullfl of ~ B years '"" for dilsol•tion, SIOtli Pag< S. duce a major controversy since the n!structured Bicycle Trails Committee has asked that all ~sputed. trails - including those along the oceanfront - be deleted from tbe plan. · The · plaming commission has recom- m!nded that Irvine Company plans for apartments In Big Canyon be .killed, ·but' company officials Insist \h<Y have a vested tlghCtn• the project, and have thr.eAlelled "sue. tbe cj,ty if-they can't ·build them. · . · · • Councilmen tonight -,..11 al.O be asked to change the Land Use · Elem:ent as it clelils with portions ol Upper NeV<port Bay and the Lido Peninsula, · Amoo.g other agenda ·items, COWtcilmen will : -Art on energy conse'rvation measures. -A,_ct on the final map of the Jrvine Company's SS.lot Jasmine ~k con- dominium project in.Corl>na del Mar. ~ange tt>e residency: .feqp,i«ment to allow residents of Ule city for ooe "year or more to nm 1or' office: -Consider a PfOPOUl lo allow · an . eruarged Boys ctub In Eaatblull Park. . -Conduct a .publlc •· hearjng oo an mllnallce lo allow pollce .cadets lo write perking Uckels. • --Olnduot ~.,public hwlng. oti the recreaUon . and open space element ol. ' !lie . ...i plan. -Cive ·a roqllellt from the Amertcan li!glon 1or ·a »-year· extension of its leiae, on cllY-<>wll!'d' waterfront An Orange Co~ty Superior Court jury today resolved its 11 to 1 impasse and found . Fullerton attorney Michael Kester Remington innocent of all charges in his "murder for hire" tria1. Remlnglon, 33, bowed his bead and wept as be heard the verdict that cleared him of allegaltons that be planned the killing of plaintiffs and witnessea in civil actions filed against him. 'The · jury had gone off for ·the weekend deadlocked at 11. to t iQ favor of ac-. quillal. II look tbem '. jusl one hour todayio• achieve unanimity. · Judge James ·F. Judge accepted the verdict and confirmed that Jan. 22 will be the next court date for key pros- ecution witness Gary Michael Rollo. Pan American said there were 57 passengers and nine crew members · aboard the jetliner, including umany Americans" when it came under attack. After reaching Athens, tbe Arabs shot · to death M Italian policeman they took hostage and threatened lo kill another hostage every 4S minutes until the Greek government met their demand to free two Palestinian commandos charged (See GUEllltlLLAS, Page I) * * * Cre w Listed For Bombed Pan. A m Jet Rollo, the self·proclaimed karate ex- pert who has assertedly performed severa_I bit parts in the "Kung Fu" television-st(ies, is scheduled for sen· tencing to what the prosecution eariler NEW YORK (UPI) -Pan American agreed would be a six month' jail term. World Airways listed the foll°'wip.g crew , That arrangement may now be revised members of a Pan Am .jetliner blown ln uie light of the Remirigton. verdict, up by Arab guerrillas at Rome's the'prosecuUon conceded loday. Leonardo da Vinci lnlemaltonal Airport RoUo, 21, lesU!ied during lhe ID-week today: trtlil lbat Remington hired him as one Ciipt..Andrew C. Erbe<k olLaa·Vegas, of four killers commiMioned to eliminate ttev. pr~ls In civil actions· that named First olllcer Robert C. Davidson of RemJiliion aa del~L Stamford, Conn. Thole· !aWlults followed the collapse Flllbt englneor Kenneth M. Pfrang ol RemJngloo'1 Cal-Vend v e.n d rn g ol Pl)'llloulh, Wis. macj>lne enlerprtae and tbe accumulalton . Puner pomtni<.·K. Franco ol Comack, of subotantial debts by the Fullerton N. Y, . la'Wyer. . ~ Diana A. Perez, New York property on !Sib Street. . It f<as alleged against Remington that Cliy. ,...qon.lder a , recommendation by , at least one of lhe lnlended victims Stewardess Linda C. Jacoboon of NOWJIOl't 11Resldeflts1 URrutkedolf'tn ~~ would• have met death Ii two men sent Miltoo • .Mass. ol ())111c mJn Pa\I ye ' .. ..,.._. to eliminate him had not been given Sielfardess Barbara R. Mamock of citywide growth referendum. · a wrong addrtSs and . had ·DQt been Winier Park, Fla. ........ tt :.:._.._..,.. ,, halted for a traffic vlotaUoo en niute. , Ste~ardess Sharon G. Dyer or Albany, ~· '~ ,........ '"'" '~ · I "-~-· S '"t Rollo tu~, and · tbe .prosecuuon N~Y. -,.. •-_, " mpeacuweOt ' ougn used a lope iO<ording · lo sunnnrt lbat Stewardess Laurette R. Hamel of Bed· ctMln '' Sr1¥11 ,,.._ lt ;.rr~ f c,....... 1• .-. tt.n testimony, that he off~ed ' to lure his orct, Mus. =:':=. •: =.....-... 'of;:: CHAllLCYl'TE, N:C. ·(UPI) -'I11t victim out into the disert and tJring Pan Am said first officer John b. " -" Char"'"-Oblernr, ·which endoned back his rtcbl lndu finger as proof Parrott of Kew -Gardena, N.Y. was 1=•:=11cin•11.;°~ =.i......,,:1; Pn!lident·'Nlnn in th& 1980 p"'sidential' l of the witM8s' elimination. "deadbelding", that is, .riding off duty --""''"'' 11 ..,. ..._ • .canipalan bllt1rem11Diec1·neutral in 1972, .. Remlngion'a two Ja~ .successfully aboard 1he fll&ht. ,All the crew m bUcd ._ __________ _, ~.called SUndly tor· l m P·• a chm en t. (See REMINGTOi(.Pqe I) . •In •NtW York. . ' -- Lorenz also said there is no equitable way to allow drilling in Newport Beach. "You can't give one guy permission "They are taking the position that if there is oil the re to be produced, (See DRILLING, Page Z) I "";''•'""":"' .... ~, " HORROR-STRICKEN ST Passengers Trip ARDESS WATCHES BURNING AIRLIN ER in Plane Bombed by Arab Terrorists 2 W o .. · .. J ~""'.n h1jured in Leap omh Threat·Piane By nPDI NIEDZIEISKI , Of ftMo o.ily 'Uot Sl1tf P~geA panicked and leaped from the wing/ of a ·Hughes Airwest plane sitting on the grot.md at Orange County Aii'port Sunday after the crew received word of an ahonymous bomb threat. TwO women who jttmped seven feet to ' the pavement after scrambling through an emergency door suffered sprained ankles but \'t'ere treated and later releas- ed at Costa ~tesa l\temorial Hospital. stewardesses should have displayed "a utile more cool." Mrs. Weimer said the incident oc. curred just after the stewardess had given ber instructions to the passengers on \ the use of seatbelts. She suddenly rushed forward to the piJot.'s compartment. "She emerged and started screaming at us to 'Get Off . • • Get Off • . • right now ,'" Mrs. Weimer said. Airwest officials in San Mateo could (See THREAT, Page ZJ The women were identified as Mrs. • Pat Weimer, 42, of 2401 N. 53.ntiago .-------------. Blvd., Orange, and Leora Van Wagener.., 65, of Henderson, ·Nevada. Both 'made · the trip to the hospital by anlbulance. The Seattle..bOund :OC.9 jetliner was evacuated after airline officials in Los Angeles said their reservation desk received a bi:Jmb threat ... at 1:13 ,p.m. The call _was placed by· a woman wbo warned in a Spanish-accented voice, 1'My uncle.-bu a bonib.on Your laat flight." The flight originated tn Mexico City. Alcwest offlciala radioed tbe pifot as he taxied the craft lo tbe runway and evacuation orders were given. Sherif deputies ·said emergehcy doors wer~,. opened and many passengers started climbing out onto the wi,ngs. Several of the 33 persons on board jumped before groud' crews rolled a stairway to the aircraft's main door. FBI officers and Orange county Sher· lfl's deputies searched tlie p l a ·n e thoroughly but turned up no bomb. Mike Weimer, huSband ot one of the injured women, ~id he .overheard .. ~saeqgers coming off the'plane criticize lhe manner In wblch lhe crew handled the bomb threat . and thought lhe He'll Take It ··on the R un , "I'll take this one," the man said. He did, and Newport Beach police today are looking for the tall, handsome man whose alleged fiancee -if she exists -has a ll4i000 diamond ring, all unpaid-for. The man dropped into Charles Barr Jewelers, 104.8 Irvine Ave , Saturday, said be \vas shopping around for a ring for his intended and discussed stones and settin&s with some knowledge. He admired the diamond ring, with a 2.7 carat stone and said. he would take iL But he didn '\ bother to 'Pa)\ according to sales people, wbo last· saw his blll6 denim-clad fonn flying out tbe front door. ===--==:c.:;;,,-_o..._~ ' - .. •• ..... l .. ' PJ f • Elderl11 Man Dies Heat Foils Mesa Rescue Attempts . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tlle Diii-, Piiot $1ttt Costa Mesan Arthur Compton was kill· ed today, despite an effort to get out of bis converted garage bungalow when it was gutted by a $61000 fire during predawn boon. Compton, 67, or 141 Mesa Drive, Apt. C, was dead at the scene after raging flames were extinguished, allowing JX>lice and firemen to enter the gutted struc- ture. 1be victim was found curled up on the kitchen floor of the residence, one of aeveral at that addreM rented out to elderly or retired i>ersons. Investigators &aid that by the time they anived there was no hope for Mr. Compton. "The house was just completely in- volved in flames," said Police Officer Rod Haddock, the second policeman to arrive about 6 a.m. after neighbors call- ed for help. He said the t>roperty owner told him . Newport Elks File $250,000 Damage Suit his tenant might be Inside and ti so, would probably be In the bedroom but that rescue el/orta were futile. "We tried to use the garden hose'' said Officer Haddock. "but we ju~t couldn't get to tile boute. It waa too hot ·and too far gone ... " · The old frame structure was listed as a tot.al losS today following the fire , which officials theorize must have smouldered for some time before it erupted. They ttntattvely Iilt smoking as the cause of the fire , which apparently started Jn an •8!)' cbalr' Investigators believe Mr. Compton a smoker, fell UleeP while watching television and etttier dropped his cigar· ette or·thal It -fell-out of 111 Uh tray. His preoeni:o Jn the kitchen, they said, Indicates he either tried to get water when he was wakened by the fire · or was slrnply trying to escape and bec~e disoriented in the smoke -and was overcome. 'Jbe patrolling policemen happened to' be in the general neighborhood when the call was broadcasr and so reached the blaze before the Costa Mesa Fire Depe.rtment. Officer · Jeff Miller was flnt on the scene·, followed by Officer Haddcick but even their early arrival was too' late under Ute circumstances. Coroner's deputies released M r . Compton's body t o Baltz.Bergeron Funeral Home, where funeral ar- rangemenls were pending today. Second Hostage Viti T1l .. 11oi. PAN AMERICAN JETLINER BURNS AFTER BOMBING AT ROME AIRPORT BY ARAB GUERRIL~AS LufthanM Pilot Forced to Takeoff for Greece After Bloody Confrontation From Pflflr l GUERRILLAS ... Santa Claus Fogged In - From Page 1 I DRILLING ... -- It should be ~roduced," he said. Gilstrap said he has been told by state officials this policy will be applied throughout the state. He noted that Long Beach used ,jo have 100 percent of the income frcti oil wells, there but·-the. state h~ n<JW assumed control and Long Beach only sets a small portion of the inconie . "If a city doesn't utilize 115 trust. th ey will move to see that 1hese reserves are made available to the public." Gilstrap said . The oil issue is only one o( several that will be t.he subject of publlc hearings bcrore councilmen as proposed charter changes. The charter revic\\' (.'01n1nittce has also recommended a change that would allow· the sale of waterfront property to private individuals -upon a vow oC the people. · There are also proposals to pay pla- ning commissions and to increase tlte pay of city councilmen, among others. 1..:. If councilmen recommend the changes. they will be placed before the votorJl at the April 9 municipal election. i.j'.' ,, . ' ' ~ .1,. t"f. '• Smoking ·Blamed For Lido Blaze Smoking In bed has been blamed fo~ a Friday night fire that caused $5,0P,O damage to a rented home on Lido tSf'e in Newport Beach. Investigators said tenant Williarh Cahill took all proper precautions inl· n1ediately after discovering the blaze at 544 Via Lido ~ord. . , 1 'lb .;.....,.. !tack In Inspector Art Morton said Cahill Wl an .... t-• a Athens Aug. " • • · 'Iben one foggy Monday mom-were unable to deliver Santa C1aus to sprayed down the bla;ing bed with·ra 5. Ing, S..ta came to say, Rudolph with Harbor View Elemeotary School this carboa. dioxide extinguish~, 1hen clo6ed Officials at the Rome airport said your nose ao bright • • ·" morning because of fog. the door to cut off Ol)'gen ind draft one .. of. ,those ,I.illed was .an unidentified NOWJX!r! ~cb poil~ bellCQ2!~ pll$ !larl)ot View S~l w~ •c!ieduled to prevent ils spread. , : American caught in crossfire during a to be the first stop on Sa.nta1s week~IOni Damage·to the· home owned· by &bftt fi"~ N;_~ l!~bor. E;ll@ ,l!ldge ,has "Q.I , a .-..,WJ damage claim against the city of Newport Beach for approving a pedestriari ... oriented 11tr·e·e1 irD-I ·sh • . . pi:ovement. in Via ,Oporto in the .Lido . • n . . . ootout Files . shootou~ o!! a runway between the Pan .series. of visits ro lJ~wport Beach Callender was confined to the bedrooin Arn jet' and the Lufthansa jetliner. · 5 Die · in Helicopter elementary schools -eourtesy ol the ·and its contenls, firemen said. · ,;;;~~~~lc~ ~:;~d~~~~:! .Silia~h~·p iii' Bo;n~o ~~i!~:wh!t~.N<tjVport J1e~cl). "°lice , F .. d, .. _. •.. ,. ......... ,, .. .. . - shops area . The claim· charges that the project proposed by the Don Koll Company will limit access to the Newport·Harbor • Elks Lodge 1767 of the Benevolerit and Protective Order of Elks of the United States of America. The claim is signed by the lodge's Exalted Ruler, Suit on N~wport The second among two young hostages held by an alleged!~ drug-crazed kid· naper and hit by bullets when Newport Bea~ police were forced to open fire has filed a $300,000 claim against the City. Art Kroeni"l!. - - 1be project, as approved by the city eotmcil Oct. 29, would create a mall-like amiearance on Via Oprlo, which would include plan~rs. fountains, flush curbs, and a brick ~ surface. At the time of the approval, Public Worts 1J!recior Joseph Devlin told coun- cilmen that the jltVject would discourage ~ ~bi\ autumpbile traffic on 'Jbe Koll Company, which owns most of the land along Via Oporto between VU Udo, and Ceatraf . Avenue wo'lild bear the C06t ol the ~'pfovemeni. , 1,, , 1be Eilts Lodge, which i.s located oo Via Oporto near Via Lido, clainu city council approval of the project "bas, or will , substantially reduce or eliminate ingress and egress to the claimant's property; and-has s ubstantially depreciated the market value of the claimant's property for the use and purposes it bas enjoyed for over 20 years." 1be claim goes on to charge that granting "private use of said street right~f-way to promote a pedestrian oriented mall Is a de fact<> abandooment of Via Oporto." City Attorney Dennis O'Neill • has recommended that the city COWJcil deny the claim at tonight's regUJar meeting. The street improvement project is part of. a large Koll project to build a major parking structure and refurbish existing small shops in the area. From Pagel REMINGTON. •• argued in the trial 's final hours that the tape recordings were "nothing more than an elaborate Kung Fu scenario." They also argued before the jury that RoJlo was an "inveterate liar" and bad been proved to be so in many court actions that preceded the &mington trial. OUN51 COAST • DAILY PILOT ~.Ot"t"'llt C0.11 OAll.Y Pit.OT, wllh Wllldl 11 comblntd the NfWl..P,.._J, Ii pyD!lllhed 11-, the Ottrisi• Cc.11 P~b!lll\~ '°"""'"'f· ltH· '"' ed l!lons •r• PllbllJ~, MOl'ld1-, throvg~ F•ld•v. jot COllt Mt", Ntwpo!'t ll••c~. H\lflll"lllOl'I 81~h/F011nttin Villty, Lt g\ll'll IM(;ft, lrvlntlkdcll-Ck end Sin Clel'r\tllltl S•n Jutn C.plll••no A 1lng11 r~IGMI edition i1 P<>Dll~td S.t~r<t•n •rd Suna1n. The 11flnc:l11tol pU!)ll1~("11 Pllnl Ii ti UCI Wffl l l'f Strerl, Cotti Miut, Ct llfWnll, t1'26. Rbb1rl N. W1td Ptlt51dt'ftl 1NI hbll1htt J1ck R. C11rl1y Vtc1 p,_;,,..,, lf!IS Genlt1I ~ntgtr Thorne' K11•il £<7111)1 Tliom11 A.. M11rphin1 M1n1vll'llf Editor l. Ptltt Kr119 H..,POrt .. tell C!ty EdlW ~ .... '9ft .... ~ JJJl N1wport l o11l1¥1 td M1llln9 Addrt111 P.O. lor 117$, •2•61 .............. Cotll NI ... : no W11t 9ty S"ttt UflN llMd'I: m FOJrnl A""""1t H\lftllnl!On l ffd'I: 1711J llU(fl 80lllfYlrcl Jlfl-Citmtnlt: IOS Norttl fl C..rnlno 1t .. 1 T•,•1111 17MI '42-4J21 a.ww ..,...,...,.. t4t-1•11 ~1. ltlt. Ort• c...t ,111111.itfllti ""'-"'· '" -•iwltl, llh"'''''""" ........ fNllw ... •VVlllll'l'ff!" ~ ..., ... ~ .-lll!Ollt t.ptClll ,,.,.. ....... " ..,.,llfll o-. ... ..... ~ ... II .. MW II CMtt fMM. ~. ~"on W urrk-r a... .....,..., IW 'NII U.IS IMftlfll'fJ MIU..,,. _..II'"' N,6' ,..,.,,,....,.. '!be Newport Beach City Council Is ezpected to routinely deny the demand tonight, opening the way for a lawsuit. Dm.lne Baeseman, 17, of Pasadena seek.! the aum Jn return for pain and suffering, mental anguish and alleged permanent injuries suffered In the Sept 1.2 incident. . Her companion and Co-hostage that rugbt , Marco Ile Silva,. !II, of 3SOS Balboa Blvd., Ne>')>Clri Btadl; bu olready1 filed a almlJar claim for ,bJ.s WOWJdr. u.i. 'Ibe latest legal action stemming from ~ sbootput in a home at 2322 .Orchid Hills . Drive, Santa Ana Heights, was filed in behalf of the girl by her father Leroy G. Baeseman, through the family'; Pasadena law firm. :... · Misi Baeseman was shot tb~gh the lung and DeMarco was hit in the arm and abdomen to climax a police pursuit of them and their abductor. Roland D. Crawford, 26 who is al so known as Victor Heidlage' is jailed and charged with 14 felony 'counts as a result of the kldnaping and Is currently Wldergoing psychiatric evaluation. He was surrounded and eventually con- fronted during the episode in the Howard Feichtm&M home after one careful shot was fired at Police Officer Jon Costelow who was slightly hurt. -' Crawford, who had been staying with fri~nds in Htmtington Beach. then began trying to shoot two patrolmen inside the house, they claimed. His gun, a .357 magnum revolver, however, repeatedly misfired and the lawmen were forced to shoot back in self-defense. The suspect was not hit, although Officer Al Doum, who "'as already hid- den in.slde Ute home, barely missed his head with one shot before bis fellow officers opened fire. '!be claim to be comidered tonight accuses police of acting negligently or. intentiooally and thus causing Miss Baeseman's Injuries. Newport Beach 'Poli<:e Oilel B. James Glavas said in a press conference follow- ing intensive analysis of the incident that his men were forced into an un- fortWlAte situation by the circumstances wxler which they bad to act. No disciplinary action was taken or contemplated as a result of the ac· cidenlal shootings. Newport's Yule Party Merry; Tickets Sold Newport Beach city emplq~ bllt1 a merry Qiristmaa party alter aD. '!be fa te of the party was Jn doubt late last week when city employ,. disclo<ed they still had hall of their 300 tickets unsold and weni fearful they would be left with a $l,000 .0>mmltii<nt· to make up to the Balboa Pavilion. But everything turned out j~t fine, accOrding to Mrs. Eve Morvay, chairman of the annual party. "We sold an awful lot of Uckels at the last minute," she said. "A lot of the city employcs, the local )llercbants and city O>Ullcilmen and planning com· mbaiooers helped us." She said that the management of the Pavilion was also generous I n renegotiating the financial arrangemenls. -• dressed as aircraft ground maintenance Police Lt. G.ary Peterson explained UD lllg Revealed crewmen. They opened fire with sub-SINGAPORE (UPI) - A helicopter that Ute landing bad '° be canceled , machine guns and grenades as the Pan chartered by an oil compa.ny crashed for safety reasons. WASHINGTON (UPI) ·-Rep. Les Am jetliner nearly completed taking on and sank into a swift·nmning river in "We sure could have wed Rudolph Aspln (D-,Vis.), said Sunday tha t passengers for a flight to Beirut. a remote part of Boreno last week this morning," Ll Peterson sighed. members of lhe National Petrolewn The guenillas said they killed the killing three Americans and two mcao.'.. He said a scheduled vi.sit to Eastbluff Council, an advisory group to the Interior hostages when the Greek government nesians aboard, industry JOUl'Cf.6 re-School was expected to go without a Department, gave more than $1.2 million failed to meet a tw.>bour deadline for ported here today. Five penons esca~ hitch this afternoon, and that Santa to President Nixon'ii rttlection cam- release of the two jailed Palestinians. eel before the aircraft wen~ down in ~ would try to get to Harbor View Schoof paign. Aspin said the' amoWlt was They vowed to kill two more hoslages Rlestimated 80 feet of water m the Bantu Tuesday morning. He'll visit the five donated by 56 percent of the c.'OWlcil's including one of the two steward~ I __ ver-", _the __ ,,,_""_0_,.._sal....::.:d::.. ______ o::th::e::r..:scboo:=:='s..:l:ate::r this week. · 125 members. held hostage, unless their de.mands were ---- met) But they exttnded the deadline when Foreign Minister Spyris Tetenes agreed to negotiatt with them. "Okay, we'll wait for ball an OOur but that 's the end," one of the com· mandos saJd in Arabic. In, Co!qgne, Gennany, a Lufthansa ~ll18'! ~ t\>1f• w~ ,J.8 ~ aboard, t/lf!, lj!J,lc~ !l>nt·range Boeing 737 Jet, ~eliijling the three guerrillas. Palestlnians SMfik El-Arid. 22, and Talal Khantourah, 21, had been ordered to stand trial in Athens for premeditated murder in the August pistol and hand grenade attack which killed four persons. Officials Probe 0 Varied Accounts Of Plane Scare Airline officials today were attempting to piece together accounts of Sl.Dlday's bomb threat at Orange County Airport during which two_ women were injured when they jumped off the wing of a Hughes Airwest jeUiner. Larry Litchfield, spokesman for th e Airwest San Mateo of!lce, said today that the stewardess aboard the threaten-l ed flight had not yet filed her report 1 but that the report could clear up some , of the contusion about what happened inside the plane. The plane was tax.ilng toward the runway when tbe pilot was adviSed that an anonymous caller had phoned the airline to warn, "My uncle bas a bomb on your laal flight" Litchfield said acconllng tn bis lnlor· mation the stewardess told passengers thal they were to leave the _.2Lane by the main cabin doors. ' • For some unexplained reason, several of the emergency windows were popped open as well and passengers scrambled out onto the wing, Litchfield r;aid. Passengers had not been told to use the windows or to jump off the wing, according to informaUon offered" by Litchlield. • Mrs. Pat Weimer, one of the women who sprained an ankle during the le.ap, however, said that a man acrou the isle from her popped open one of the windows and the sttwardeas look It from him, laid in on a sea~ and "told us to get out in the '!ins·" !Jtchfleld •aald be does not lalow how many J>asaengen le1ped off the wing but thal he believ .. most of lbem deplan- ed by using the main cabin door and the rear stairs. From P"11e l THREAT ••. not be reached !or Immediate comment. Tom Chandler, Orange County otation manager for the airUne, said he was certain tnatructions to deplane were ·1 given but "we were on the ground and we tlon't have the sllghlolt Idea what happened lnlldo tho plarie." - '•Mn. Weimer, atlll llmptJll from her Injury' It scheduled to hOara the -· Olght today to reach Medford, Ore., where her father Is neor delth. -.. Woliday CJ):~Jw~,,G~·i. ~ .• •I ,, l.(!JiLW~~ef e , . ' ~ The stainless steel •· dishwasha-· · FOR ONLY $10. MORE We will make a norm.al rec ' placement installation of any standard undercounter dish- washer . YES , ONLY $10. MORE! W/\',lf ~ 11';•. • • • l ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLE ANER WASHING •RANDOM LOADIN.G •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION 'STRONGEST GUARANTEE AVAILABLE• ACT NOWlll SALE ENDS NOV •. 21, 1973 ............ ··;.·· • • • NOBODY SELLS ! * WASTEKING '• : DISHWASHERS· • *FOR LESS THAN• ,. DUNLAPS .. . . .. . Wby Waste King Universal is 5 ways better ***'**"****** •· ,. EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTION I SAFE, SANITARY DRYING RUGGED BASKETS, RANDOM LOADING ~1,1..1.W .. lUll,IU.IJ.w.r.u.JJ.!.l.U.~ ~ll.lt.W.WJ.1..U.lUULV.WJJl '{! ~ 20 ~~ 5 ~ " I " < IYFAR f YEAR I STAINLESS ~ ~ ..... guaran!ft .. ~ STEEL i; j! the motor. pump.~ 'E •. timer, was t cl: GUARANTEE E ~ diltributlon •ystem.~ g ; llt•ter •nd piaht>ut-·: _'®._ ~ ?, "'"' on IOO and 900:; ~F g ?. HHudish~•·he~. ~ lmvn·1'l'T1f'llnmmn'n~ Zf;nnrn.·r,1 1!1l'1rimrrr1\1~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE · 90 DAYS CASH. WITH APP.ROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downlllwn Costa Mesa-Pllone 548 ·7188 . . .. -. . -- I r I I • • • ' ' I I t , .. ! ., - • , • Orft.nde C,oast e EDITION --• • . -:-..-~-· ~- 'Joday's Final N.Y. Stocks VO~. 66, NO. 35 I, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • • 9MNGE COUNTY, CALIEORNIA MONDAY,_ DECEMBER 17, 1973 c TEN CENTS •'l Costa Mesa Mall, ·67, Dies • Ill '4 Bungalow Fire By' ARTHUR R.. VINSEL . Of tM -o.IW. l"tl!!_ SlllH f}ameS were extinguished, allowing police and,.JlreroOJl. to enter_the_gutted_ struc· Mr. Comp.ton. that rescue efforts were futile. erupted. indicates he either tried to get water Costa Mesan Arthur 'Compton was ldll· e!I ' today. despite an effort to get out of Jila: converted garage bungalow when II wai guffed' by a $6;000 fire during predawn hotirs. ti.ire. ~. · · .' . The . vlctbn was found .curled up on the kitchen floor of the iesidence, one of aevetal at that address · rfnted out to elderly Or· retired -persons. lhVestigatora said that by the 'thne' they-arrived there wa8-ni> hope -for _.!.'..The .bowie was just completely m,_ :;we tried to Wlfl the garden ~," .They, tenta,tive)y ~smoking as the when he was wakened by the fire, or valved la. names," aaid Po_Iice Officer said Officer Haddock. "but we just cause of the fire, which apparently was-simply trying to escape an<l~became Rod Haddock,· the second polic~map to couldn't get to the house. lt was too started in an easy chair. disoriented in tJ:le smoke and was · ariive,aboui 6 a.m. after neighbors caJ.l.. hot and too far gone ••• " lnvesUgators believe Mr. Compton, a overcome. ed 'for 'hetP. ' · The old frame stnJcture was listed smoker, fell asleep while watching The patrolling policemen happened to Hi said t~ Pi:QJ>f:rty owner told ~ as a total }OSI tOday following the fire, teJevjsion and either dropped his cigar· be in the general neighborhood when bis tenant might be inside and if so, which Officials theorize mu.st have ette or that it fell out of an ash tray. the call was broadcast and so reached ·Compton, 67, of 141 Mesa Drive, Apt. ~' w~s-. dead at the-scene after raging -would probablyr be in the. bedroom but smouldered-for aome-llme before t--His-presence.Jn-the_kitcben, they _said,-. (Sie-ll'lRE, Page %1 ,, ·, om . ·ane • ' " /. Terrorists .Fl~e~om~ "/ / ·.Massacre · UPIT ......... . LUFTHANSA AIRLINE PILOT, WITH PISTOL HELD TO HIS HEAD, WALKS ' °!9 WAITING ,JETLINER lnjum P11sena-r Lin In PoCil 111 Blood After Bloodiest .\Hock by j\rob Guerrll!H Mesa .R~~elopment Attorney Cleared ,. - ~.t !Qll~fQl:"~hlre Coui.ty Tiiai'' · • Plan Goes to Co~uncil ·. 'Down•·wn Cos•.._ M technical details are und·P,fstood and ac-~p -Orange County Superif?r Court jury w I.Cl esa mar get a today resolved i~ 11 to 1 . impasse new lease on life tonight if no technical ceptable. ahd found Fullerton· attorney Michael problems prevent the Costa Mesa City The redevelopment area Ls bounded Kester ~ington lnnocent of all charges Council from officially adopting a by 19th Street on the norpl, 17th Street in bis "murder for hire" trial. redevelopment plan. on the soylh, Orange Avenue on the and • I ll east, and the Newport Freeway n'ght~f. Reminglon, 33, bowed bis head '1te pan wi be aired at 6:30 p.m. -v li h · · ·1 way on t•e wesl ~ wept as he beard the verdict that cleared dilring a pub ·c earing m city counc1 11 Iba €_ lanned the -'-· Two development plans hav,e: ..._ him ·of allegatlona I ne P "'!"mbers, 77 Fair. Drive. , . . . _,. killing of plaintiffs and witnesses in Cooncilmen, SJtling,as the Costa Mesa . drafted ·for· the city by the Consultants civil cticns filed against him Redevelopment Ag~cy, will coqsider the . Wilsey and. Ham. One is contingent on 1 • end ptln 11 their flnt' item of i business ., the extension of Uie Newport ·Freeway , Tl)e jury: .had gqne .off for the wee.k on. a · l+p&ge ageod.a...,...No_amtro~rsy.-: and "tbe'other'ls;... _ . • . deadl0cte4. at 11 to 1 in favor of ac-- is exJ>ect'!i beca'!'e ' 'residents' . ar~. " . ·In bo~"Ci!.-S ~town ~ ·Wot\l(r · -qult(ii1.-·1f ,lo<)k them just' one -bour generally assumed oo .lie .in favor of •. be .. augiieil · aM Newport. Boulev~·, todfly·IQ al'tiieve ~ty. sprucing up the·~wntown area. dosed to tr~1c .. The do:wntoWn area Judge James. F. Judge accepted the Roweyer technical ~robl.ems. have wo~ld._ ~ refurbished. with· ·UJe · con-verdlct.and:confiimfd that Jan. 22 will prevJously stumped councilmen and· itnictiOb' of newer parking lots, a mall, be the next court date for keY pros- adoption of the complex redevelopi:nent ret~i1 ]area~ _and open space. . ecil.tion ·wit.Riss ·aar).., Michael .Rollo. plan tonight depends on ~h~ther the .Oity ollicials are trying, to . meet a Rollo , the self-proclaime<l karate ex- Jan. 1 .deadline for ado_ptlon1 of a. pert, viho haS assertedly performed rtdevelopmcnt ptan. If . the~ vote ~n • several, bit Parts in the "Kung Fu" the plan before then, councilmen will television series is scheduled for sen· Oraage Coast • • ·weatiaer It11 be fair and mild Tuesday; :-according' to the weather service, • with bllhs at the, beiches In lhe mid 71111 riling "' Ill degrees lil· ... land. j)yemlght lows In the 41111 and • .. 50s. INSWE TOD" Y -Lt. Col. Robert Stlrm, POW ; for 6~ veor1, 1ays Califoniia'~ : divorce law has tolctn htm' "to " th< cleaners" as ht• wife of 18 • ye"r' sues for dissolution, Stor11 :'~Page 5. ·-.......... n LM. IA1I ~I ·c....,.. • c~· »-• C.-.U If c,_. ;, ·''' DMtll........ ,. ,....,.. ..... ' .................. ::. " -II ,.. ........ ~ II '\~,I I II A1111 LlfMltl'tl 17 Mt¥1ft -A ~II ~atftllal Ntwr t Ore11R CMM'lf\' 16 ,,.,.. ,..,.., 14 _,. • ,.n •• Manliitt , .. ,, T ...... IM It -" -. .............. ,,... --. -··-..... _ ·-- ~ able to "freeze" the tax base · of .tencing to what' the prosecution earilet ;the redevelopment area. agreed would be a s.ix month jail term. This means that any tax return in· That arrangement may now be revised creases from big~ assessed vaJuation in the light of the Remington ·verdict, o.f properties may be <Ollected into a the P""'""'utioo oonceded today. ,special fund for the Cllllllruclion wort. ' .Rollo 21 testified during the Ill-week trial that Remington hired hinf as one Lockheed .. Fined •. , In T1innel Blast ,of lour killers comtiilssloned oo eliminate Jl'inclpala ·in civil actioos that named Remington .. de&ndant. . n-laWIUlta· tollowj!d the· collapse ti: Remington's ,caJ.Vend v e n d l n g m'!,Chine entwiae '!lid the aeeumulatlon of sulistanUil debts by . the Fullerton Los ANGELE!!> '(UPI) .-'Ille 'Lock· la~. . . · heed ShlpbulkllDt and OlliJtructlon Co. It 'was alleged against Remington that was ffned 12o6,Gii>. Ibis afttrnocln on l\S at least one of the Intended victims con-· of neg.ligence in the Sybnar would ha)'O mot death I! two-men sent Wi1ne1 exploolon disaster In wilkb.17 ~ to eliminate bbn hid not been given killed. . a wronc addre. and had not been M!llliclilll Jud&e Geo11• 'W. Trammell baited for'a1ralllc v\Olation en route lU ibo lionded ~wn jail -.f~ RoUI. teslifkia and the ~Ion the •Sylmar pl'OJect ,~•PI' ~ uiecl .., • .,_~to .. j,port that safety engineer but orileftd Ule '• -.... [ red I his ataYed until tm 80 lhe men could re-r t~tl~1 •tllat he of e oo !II" . cloein dllmoelves • victliu I GUI Into the. deter! and> brlna 'Ille firm and the tW. men, Lonn Sov· back iilf rlPI ·iilde1 linfler as proof ,llld Otho of illt ........ elimination ,• :~uly of M ~io~ ::r.t'. Bili$ 16'1 ""° lnym ~ latJnc ~ llfalJ ,and P'll"I· neali· l ...... jD lbe trtal'I-~ boln-~I geace ift .. lune »41, 1rn •qhtoo.s. -~~ ~, Pqe J) I • -. ---... ~ ' ._ ... --.. ....... ~ \..... . ~' I ' " --- BULLETIN ATHl!;NS {UPI) -1be Greek govern· ment this afternoon released the two Im· prisoned "Black September" gutrrtllas as demanded by bljacken aboard the Lufthansa plue at Athena airport, police sources said, ROME (UPI) -In · one of tbeir bloo4iest attacks, Arab guerrillas s\101 up a passenger iwnge &t Leonardo da Vinci International, Airport today, bomb- ed a Pan Am jetliner fatally burning more than. a score· of· pe.ssengen ·inside .~J.~t~ to A~;.. ....... tbey --e•""'°"' =ee of tbeli' hostages. Tbe death toll wa1 ·at least 35. - TM; .......... dre-.. 11\11!1!!1 "-crewmen, hijacked a West Germah airliner· to Athens in an attempt to force the Greek government to free two Black September Palestinian guer- rillas jailed for an earlier attack there. One policeman hostage was killed shorUy after. amvaL "' Later, the pilot interrupted negotia· lions over the radiotelephone to say: "There is shooting going on back there." Then be said there were two more hostages killed. A fourth was executed later. Pan American World Airways said at least 30 persons . were killed in Rome in the attacli: against the Pan Am 7rn jetliner,-. sllootout on the rudway and the shooting in a departure lounge after guard,, discovered weapons in the Arabs' luggage. Four of those killed in the bombing -of the Pan Am Jetliner were Moroccan officials. Pan American said there were 57 passengers aird nine crew members aboard the jetliner, including "many Americans" when it came under attack. After reaching Athens, the Arabs 'shot to death an Italian policeman they took hostage and threatened to kill another hostage every 45 minutes Until the Greek government met their demand to free two Palestinian commandos charged with an airport attack in Athens Aug. ~. Officials at the JlDme airport .&id .-(See· GUElllllLLAS, Page Z). * * * Crew Listed For Bombed .Pan Am Jet NEW YORK (UPI) -Pan American World Airways listed the following crew nlembers-of a Pan Am jetliner blown up by Arab guerrillas at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci lntemational Airport today: Cllpl Andr•w C. Erbeck o! Las Vegas, ltev. · . First officer Robert C. Davidson of' Stamford, Conn. Flight engineer Kenneth M. l'fl'lng of Plymouth, Wis. Puner Dominic K. Franco of Comack, N.Y, Purser Diana A. Perez, New York City. Stewardess Linda C. Jacobson of Mll1"'1, Mass. Stewardeu Barbara R. atarnock t>f Winter Park, Fla. ' Sfewanlesa 'Sharon G. Dyer of Albany, N.Y, ' Stewardesa Lauretle R. Hamel of Bed· ford, Mass. 'Pan Am said firsl officer John D. Pari'o\t Of Kew Gardens, N.Y. was • ..._.,, .. tllllt is, riding ?fl duty •bOord. the fiilbt. All the crew " based · In NerYorlt. • ~-. ,. ----· ·-Ul"I Tt""'*- HPRROR-STRICKE"I STEWARDESS WATCHES BURNING AIRLINER · : P11ser1gi;rs Tripped in Plant Bombed by Arab Terrorists 2 Women l1ijured ii~ Leap From Bomb Threat Plane By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1119 Dally l"llet Staff Passengers panicked and leaped from the wing of a Hughes Airwest plane sitting on 1the ground at Orange County Airport SUnday after the crew received word of an anonymous bomb threat. Two women who jumped seven feet to the pavemtmt after scrambling through an emergency door suffered sprained ankles but were treated and later releas- ed at C.Ost8 Mesa Memorial HGSpital. The women were identified as f\1rs. Pat Weimer, 42, of 2401 N. Santiago Blvd., Orange, and Le9ra Van \Vagener, 65, of Henderson, Neva.da. Both made the trip to the hospital by ambulance. The SeatUe-boqnd 009 jetliner was evacuated after airline officials_ .in Los Angeles said their reser;vatloo desk received a bomb threat at 1:13 p.m. The call was placed by a !'"'(WI wbo warned in a Spanish-accented voice, "My Mrs. Weimer said the incident oc- curred just after the stewardess had given her instructions to the passengers on the use of seatbelts. She suddenly ·rushed forward to the pilot's compartment. "She emerged and started scream~ at us to 'Get Off • • • Get Off • • • right now,'" Mrs. Weimer said. Air,vest officials in San Mateo could not be reached for immediate comment. Tom Chandler, Orange County station 1nanager for the airline, said he was certain instructions to deplane were . 'See THREAT, Page Zl He'll Take It --on the ·Run uncle has a bomb on your last flight." 11I'll take this one," the man The flight originated In Mexico City. _,___.said . Airwest officials radioed the· pilot as He did, and Newport Beach he taxied the craft to the runway and police today are looking for the evacuatioo orders were given. Sheriff's tall , handsome man whose alleged deputies said emergency doors were fiancee -if she exists -has a opened and many passengers started $14,000 diamond ring, all unpaid·for. climbing out onto the wings. The man dropped into Charles Several 6f the 33 persons-on board Barr Jewelers, 1CM8 Irvine Ave. jumped . before groud crews rolled a Saturday. said he was shopping stairway to the aircraft's main door. around for a ring ror his intended FBI officers and Orange Cotmty Sher· and discussed stone s and settings iff's deputies searched the p 1 a n e with some knowledge. thoroughly but turned up no bomb. He admired the ·diamond ring. Mike Weimer, husband of one of the with a 2.7 carat stooe and said injured women,· said he overheard he would take it. But be didn't pa ... ngers coming off the plane criticize bother oo pay,, aet:Ordlng to sales .the 'manner in which the crew handled people, wbo !oat aaw his blue the bomb threat •II\! thought the denim-clad form · lyin& out Ibo · stdiirdelses should hi•• dlJplayed "a front door • · litde more cool." • • • '• • . I o.flr.Plltt 1'1to11 br 11c1111'l1 kltlller si1ek1-••11ae OC Airport Newport Weighs BombScare ' · Oil Drilling Plan Stmlie.d ' Bf L. Pl!TEI\ J(RIEG ot lfli o.llY "Ill Sl•H / Newport Beach councilmen will decide tonight whether or not they'll o.sk voters to change the city Charter to again . allow oil drilling within the clly limits. The pn>posed charter amendment will draw opposition from the city's Technical Oil Advisory Committee but it w i 11 get strong support from the oil com~ panles now pumping oil from the fields in county territory above West Newport. "'Ibe Idea 1J ahololutely insane," was U. ~ from former vice mayor ijans J. L«enz, a~ member of the oil advisory panel. "'Ille chanceJ of getUng a sizeable producUon from. under Newport Beach is absolutely nit," Lorenz said. But James Gilstrap, consuJtant to G.E. Kadane and Sons and General Crude Oil Company, which drill on the Beeco, Ltd. property west or Hoag Memorial Hospital , says Loren?. and the committee are wrong. Gilstrap says there are 5 to 7 million barrels of oil under West Ne wport alone. He feels there cou1d be even more than that under the public tidelands. l{e s~d thos6 revenues could total several million dollars for the city. · Lorenz, however, says he doesn't think 5 to 7. million barrels is a siglnifcant eQOugh deposit to change the current prohlbitk>n. And he says be doesn't ~ink slant drilling. will \\'Ork. "The deposits are too shallow to get them any other way than by drillin g almost straight down," Lorenz said . And, Lorenz added. "nobody yet has found a way yet to produce oil without hurting the eovirorunent.'' Lorem also said there Is oo oqUilable way to allow drjllJng in Newi>ort Beach. · "You can't give one guy permlsslon to drill and not let his nelghbOr do it. He'd just be altting-there while all the oil under his property was drained out," Lorenz said. Gilstrap said he doesn't think the city has much of a choice. "Because .of the energy crisis, the state has already moved in other areas, like Santa Barbara.'' he pointed out. "They are takin g the position that if there is oil there to be produced, it should be produced," he said. Gilstrap said he has been told by state officials this Policy will be applied throu ghout the state. Airlin e officials today were attempting to piece tog ether accounts of sun.day's bomb threat at Orange Coun ty ~1:porl during which t\VO women wer~ tnJured when they jumped off the. wing or ·' Hughes Airwest jetliner. . Larry Lilchlield , spokesman for the Airwest San Mateo office, said today that the ste\vardess aboa rd the threaten- ed ·flight had not yet filed her report but that the report could clea r up some of the confusion about what happened inside the plane. The plane was taxilng toward the runway when the pilot was advised that M anonymous caller had phoned the airline to warn, "My uncle bu a bom!; on your Jast flight." Utehfield said according to his Infor- mation the stewardess told passengers that they were to leave the plane by the main cabin doors. For some unexplained reason . several or the e1nergency \\'indows were popped open as well and pa ssengers scrambled out onto the wing, Litchfield said. Passengers had not been told to uSt the \vlndows or to jump off the wing, according to information offered i>y Litchfield . FIREMEN CLEAR SMOKE FROM BUNGALOW WHERE COSTA MESA MAN ,OJEO THIS MORNING Smoking Listed As C1u,. of Bl1u; Fire Too Hot for Would·be Rescutn Gilstrap stresses that he's not ad- vocating offshore drilling, but. says t.he pools of oil could be slant-dnlled with a couple of dozen wells on the Beeco property. ' "They would not have to have any wells within the city limits or off.shore," Gilstrap said. He noted that Long Beach used to have 100 percent of the income from oU wells there but the atate has now. assiimed cootrol and Long Beadl Ollly gel5 a amall portion of the Income. l\1rs. Pat Weimer, one of the women who sprained an allkle during the le~P. however, said that a man acrou tlre l51e from her popped open one at the windows and the stewanlesa toot ·It from bJm. laid in Cll .... ~ and "IAllll UI to gel out in the wing.'' ' From Page I FIRE ... HHH Others Donated •. .. . ' . . . . . . . . -.. . . . .. .. "U a citY doeln't utilJle Ill !roll, they will move to·eee that -mervee are ~··~~le . 1\1 .~ pu~llc,'.' ·c1111rap • • -c-· Utcbfteld said be does not -bow maoy paaeengen leaped off the Wing but that be believee mOll of them deplan- ed ·by Ui1ng ihe ma1n cabin «1oor aild the rear stalra. ~:~:il::r :tafi:::~:n Ft~: ···Pa·p .. ·:-ers'·fo-r .. Tax ·::c.ifts· · -.. .- seen~ followed by Officer Haddock, but • . He agre<d with Councllman Rlclwd Croul, wbo proposed the charter chaoge, that If the city doesn't permit the resetVei lei be ' tapped. thO •late will isaue permits and take the lion's share .. · of,tbe, revenues. The oil iuue ls only ~e of several that Will be the subject 1>tpubllc bearbip · ·· ' " . ~' ·~ •' ··~·' . ·,· ,-_., ., · ..... ,, '" Ftinding Revealed • ···before-counctlmeo -w propooed. c:IW't<r, • .. , ·' changes. 'The charter r"tview committee hu FromPftflel even their early arrival was too la te under the circumstances. Coroner's deputies released Mr . Compton's body to Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home, where funeral ar- rangements were pending today. From Page I GUERRILLAS •.• one of those killed was an wildentilied American caught , in crossfire during a abootoUt on a runway between the Pan Am jet and the Lufthansa .Je.Uiner. Pan American World Air.Rays sources said some of the Arab commandos were <hissed as altaraft· grpund maintenance crewmen. The:Y opened fire with 81.ib- machine guns and grenades as ~ Pan Am jetliner nearly completed takmg on passengers for a flight to Beiru~. The guerrillas said they k1\1ed the hostages when the Greek governmen t failed to meet a tw1>hour deadline for release of the two jailed Palestinia?)S. They vowed to kill two more hostages, including one of the two stewardesses held hostage unless their demands were met. But they extended the deadline when Foreign Minister Spyris Tetenes agreed to negotiate with them. "Okay, we'll wait for half an hour but that's the end," one of the com· mandos said in Arabic. In COlogne, Gennany, a Lufthansa spokesman said there were 18 pem.>ns aboard the hijacked short-ran ge Boeing 737 jet, including the three gu.errillas. Palestinians Shafik El-A rid, 22. and Tala\ Khantourah. 21. had been ordered to stand tri al in Athens for premeditated murder in the August pistol and hand grenade attack which kilted four persons. - 'Energy Crisis Phony' PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Consumer advocate Ralph Nader said Sunday the energy crisis was "the most phony crisis ever inflicted upon a modem socie ty." Speaking before Tax Equity for America, an organization seeking tax reforms, .Nader called for a cutback in fuel for the nation's bus inesses and industries. OIANCll COAST CM DAILY PILOT The Orll!Of COl1t DAILY P ILOT, wlth whldl It cO<!lblll..i' !flt ,..,....Prn1, 11 pyblllllld IV IM Or•• eo.11 PubU,hl1111 Co~ny. ~· r1t1 9dllfol11 1r1 PllbllJlllCI, Mono:lty llll"Ol4fl F.r!d1y, IOr ColT1 M•i.a, He""°rl l .. cti, H1mll"flOn l•atl'llFOUn!lln V~llty, L191Jf11 lttdo, 1rvln1/SMldit ti.tcil •rod Sin c i.ment'/ S.n J...-n CIPf$1•11111. A 1lnt lr rev1on1r •Ulfon 11 Wbli'l'*I S.hlfOIVW lrol Sllfll:ll\'I. Tr.t prfnc!N I Pllfllltl\11111 pl1n1 h ., JJO w .. 1 llJ $1f"tt'I, COii. Mtw, C1lltornt., '2•111. R.ob11t N. Wied Prt&IOent 1nct Plll!IW"lr .lie• It, C11rlty Vici l"rnW..t 1110 Gtner1l.Mt "'9fl" Thomt1 K11¥il fllfOr Thom11 A, Mu1phi~1 M1~lng E.ollot Ch•rl11 H. Looi ~ch•td P'. Nill ...... 1111n1 M1~1Tng Ellllon JJO W11t l•v Stt1tt M1IU•t M'r•••:'P.O. l ox 1560, 926li .,.... ........ Ntwfl!Wf lltltfl: UU Newpo'1 I OUltwfl14 Uf1,111t lffdl: m l"Ol'tlt Avt n11t HV!lllnlflll lffCll1 1,.7S INtll &oulrvt l'll Mii Cllr!Wllel JO$ Nv lfl Ef Cemklo R .. ! , ........ 1714) '42o4Jll Ct "1'W A~ .. '41·1671 c.,orlSllf, 1t11. Or..,,. to.M ~ltlllrlf °"""""' ... -lffl'i.t, lflllt!rlllons, ....... .,....., -ef¥1ffl.-t1 llff•ln _, ... ~ Wll!Wvl tlllelel ,.. niMIM II C#Vrltl'H OWMf', ...... dill MllOf HW • CO.ti ,,..... C.t!WIMI •• "*"«Ill., IW C9fTltr a.M ...,,...,, \Ir .rll U.lf """"'"'' lfll!llwy ...,.,... ~ ... -111111. • WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hubert H. Humphrey and a nwnber of other prom· inent and .even middle-echelon officials · donated their papers as gifts on which they pre sumably did claim tax deduc- tioris, the ScriJ?ps.Howard News Service reported today. Scripps-Howard staff writer D an THREAT ••. also recommended a change that would Thoma sson , who surveyed General WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Rep. Les allow. the sale of waterfront prol>'rtY Services Administration (GSA) records, Aspin (0.Wis.J, said Sunday that to private individuals -upon a vote said Humphrey's office confirmed his membera of the National. Petroleum of the people. given but "we were on lbe ground gift as a tax deduction had been claimed. CounciJ, an advisory group to .the Interior There are also proposals to pay plan· and we don't have the slighteat Idea "He is now preparing the figures and Department, gave more than $1.2 million ning oo!'JUtliSlions and to lncrease the what happened inside the plane.'' a statement,'' a Humphrey spokesman to President Nixon's re-election cam· pay of city councilmen, among others. Mrs. Weimer, !till limping from Mr said.' palgn. Aapln said the amount was U councilmen recommend the dlangea, Injury, Is acbeduled to board lhe same Humphrey, Democratic senator from donated by 56 perCent of the council'• they will be placed before the voters flight today to reach Medford, Ort., Second Hostage In Shootout Files · . NewporJ; ')aim. , ! I ••• I ·· Minnesota, Wils vice president from 1965 l..'.125:=_,:mem::::::bers:::·: __________ _:a::t..:the::.:A::;P::ril:..:9..:m::lllll=·ct:::pal::::...:•::lecttoo_:.;:.=----'w-'b:.:er..c•..cbe...::.r_fa_the._.r_l•_oe_ar_de_a_th_. __ _ to 1969 and donated his personal papers from those years to the Minnesota State· Historical Society. Scripps-Howard said it obtaloed a GSA list of present· and fol'µler public officialt wbo cootrlbuted pei:sO!l'JI papers to . the government in the last 10 years for inclusion in one or more of the ,seven ]li'e$Jdentlal libratl°' 91lperyiaed by•GSA ' . • 'Holiday f:='"· ~,· '· . 'iJi§liwi$hef' '®ile 'lbe second among two young ~es held by ao allegedly drug-criii<c'I 'kid· naper and hit by bullets when Newport Beach police were forced to open fire has ii.led a $300,000 claim against the city. The Newport Beach City CouDciI is expected to routinely den y the demand tonight., opening the way for a lawsuit. Denine Baeseman, 17, of Pasadena, seeks the sum in return for pain and suffering, mental anguish and alleged permanent injuries suffered in the Sept. 12 incident. Her companion and co-hostage that night, Marco De Silva , 20, of 3508 Balboa Blvd ., Newport Beach, has already filed a similar claim for bis wounds. The latest legal action stemming from the shootout in a home at 232~· Orchid Hills Drive, Santa Ana Heights, was filed in behalf of th e girl by her father, Leroy G. Baeseman, through the family's Pasadena law firm. Miss Baeseman was shot through the lung and Der.-1arco was hit in the arm and abdomen to climax a police pursuit of then1 and their abductor. Roland D. Crawford , 26, who is also known as Victor Heidlage,. is jailed and charged with 14 felony counts as a res ult of the kidnaping and is currently und ergoing psychiatric evaluation. He was surrounded and eventually con· fronted during the episode in the Howard Feichtmann home after one careful shot was fired at Police Officer Jon Costelow, who was slightly hurt. Crawford, who had been staying with fr iends in Huntington Beach, then began trying to shoot two patrolmen lriside the house, they claimed. His gun, a .3~7 magnum revolver, however, repeatedly misfired and the lav•men were forced to shoot back in self-defense. The suspect was no~ hit, although Officer Al Do um, who \\<'35 already hid· den inside the home, barely missed his head with one shot before bis fellow officers opened fire. The claim to 'be considered tonight accuses police of acting negUgentl,y or intenUOnally and thus causing Miss Baese man 's injwies. , Newport Beach Polict Cltlef B. Jam~ Glavas said in a press conference foll9w· ing intensive analysis of the ~ that his men were forced into an Uh· rortwia te situation by the circumstancll under which they had to act. No disciplinary action was taken or contemplaled as a result of the IC· cidental shooUngs. •• ~ f'rom Page I REMINGTON ••• the tape record ings were "nothing more than an elaborate Kung F'u scenario." They ai.o argued before lhe jury that Rollo was an oiinve terate liar" and had been proved lo be so. In many court actions that pr<eeded lhe Reminstoa trial. and the National ArchiVes. · -- NO 1'AX DEDUCTION SEEN IN HOME GIFT-Story, P1go 3 "While there was no indication that tax deductions were claimed uner the tax provjsion which Congress abolished 1 effectively July 25, 1969." Scripps· 1 Howard said , "Those making the dona· tions had the opportunity to do so and Presumably did." The congressional Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation is checking, at President Nixon's request, the pnr priety of the gift of Nixon's vice presidential papers and tax deductions. Nixon bad his vice presidential1papers appraised at $576,000 and claimed this as tax deductions spread over four years. Services Tuesday For Costa Mesan I Mrs. Lois Olson Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon for Costa-Mesa nurse Lois G. Olson, who; with htr husband, operated a convalescent midence for disabled Vietnam war veterans. Rites for Mrs. Olson, 56, wbo died SatW"day, will be at 3 p.m. in Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, with Father Howard Cartwright officiating. Inurnment will follow at Fairhaven Memorial Park, Santa Ana, and family members suggest memorial contributi~ to the American Cancer Society. Survivors of Mrs. Olson. who lived at 3084 Johnson Ave., Costa Mesa , in· elude her husband , Rudolph , a daughter, Mrs. Patricia Spautz, or La Crescent a; her mother, lofra. Henrietta Collier; and brothers, Robert and Forrest Anderson, j all of Charleston, S.C.. pll.is five grandchildren and ooe great-granddlild. Sixth Calldidate Files 'in Mesa Myra Kirschenbaum. a real eotate agent from Colla Mesa. ha1 become the sixth persQn to take out nomination pepera .for tile ·Cos!J Mesa City Co\p>cll race. Mrs. Kirschenbaum ol U6 Lourdes Lane campaigned for city council In 1972. Her current bid Js to unseat eltller Mayor Jack Hammett or Vice MAyor Willard Jonlan in lhe March 5 council eleCtion. Other catididalel who have taken out . nomlalUoo papen In addition-·to the two lnculDbents are Joan P. Torrtblo, wlte liid molher; Nonna Hertq, preochool dlredor; end Raymond P. tvana, machlnlst. • The stainless steel •· ,. FOR ONLY $10. MORE We will make a normal re- placement installation of any standard undercounter dish- washer . YES, ONLY $10. M.ORE! dishwasher. • • . If<"°""'::=:::'&.-~.e.) . I ONLY WASTE KING UNIVERSAL GIVES YOU ALL THESE EXCLUSIVE FEATURES •CLEANER WASHING •RANDOM LOADING •FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION •STRONGEST GUARAfJTEE AVAILABLE• ACT :·•• ••• • • • •• •'"' • .. . NOWlll ,. NOBODY SELLS ·• SALE ENDS ,. WASTEKING ... • DISHWASHERS • NOV. 21, 1973 : FOR LESS THAN .. .,. DUNLAPS « . .. Why Waste King Universal is 5 ways better ······-····~*·· EXCLUSIVE H·ARM WASHING ACTION -. . - SAFE , SANITARY DRYING ·-. ]~IJl)IJ!!ltlllll/llUIJ.UJJ_ g 20 ~~ ·. ~ STEEL ~ ---L UARANTIE I ·RUGGED-BASKETS, ~"" f RANDOM LOADING ~im~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE • 90DAYSCASH WITH.APPROVED. CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVQ., Downtlwn Costa Mesa -P~ane 5U-7788 -- . " . • ' ., . , .. . l 1 \ I I I· . '