HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilotan
IInion Officials
See Additional
In Huntington
Two A.nested
Sus pects
B e lieved
..
In Drug Death
Huntington Beach police were
investigating possible murder
charges today in connection with
the apparent drug death Sunday
night of a 24-year ·old
Westminster man.
North Viets
Trap 8 Yanks
I n Capik!-l
From Wire Services
LookJ.Qg a bit like some giant, s,urre~istic flowers, steel sup-
-port columns for interchange that.wJU conne.ct.Newport and
.. corona del Mar Freeways rise out 9f ground. Construction
site is near Bristol Street in Costa Mfa. ·.
SAIGON, South Vietnam
Tank-le d North Vietnamese
forces blasted into the central
highlands capital of Ban Me
Thuot today, battling defenders
house to house and trapping eight
Americans in the city, field re-
ports said.
The communists also overran
a district town 30miles from Ban
Additional 1'.J ouglas
Layoffs Preklicte d
•
..
Me Thuot, the second in the
highlands In three days.
In Cambodia, rebel gunners
fired S6 rockets and artillery
rounds into the Phnom Penh
airports, dam aging two domestic
commercial airliners and killing
five persons and wounding 22,
.authorities in Phnom Penh said .
The campaign to oust President
Lon Nol also pi<:)edµp,-~t~m. Officials or the striking
machinists union today predicted
additional layoffs this week at
tlW McDonnell Douglas Corpora-...
van Lynch, president of the
IBternattonal Association of
M~lnlst.s Lodte 720, said the W aerpspace· wo'rkers laid olf ~~iday Will b~ foil owed by more ~m_backs this W edneeday and
..r.r;\~ay. .
Meanwhile, the lAM rewstet-'-rt reported worke~ wotild 'f'O = 'i"ecelve their $40-a-week
benefits beginning April l. 1119 "PO.rt said the benefrts are
~g '700,000 a week. and the "*n's tund wouJCS soon bJ
-.ete<I. · . . ,. He said he dld not kl»w if a~
~ S,000 figure was a~curateJ
trUI he added the layolfs could in:
....._ some enpneen· and pro-
h111t1J11aal etnployes •t the firm's
Mtlllttneton Beach plant.
• Tile JAM. with l.9,000 workers
n~lonwlde, lncl&1dlq 7,000 in
SQuthem California and 1,500 In
~Ungton BeHll, Mj been on
e 1inct Feb. 10.
id1y, 1,000 membeti of the U ted Auto •id Aerospace
9rker1 were plaeed on two·
~ ururlou1b1'' at. the ~.
... ... ... -... ,
Bea6h pl•nt because of a
shortke -of 'I&M--produied, paris
usecffhere to "rnanura<t&re DC 9
and DC 10 aircraft.
The company bas aeclined
comment"' •bout t;be layoffs, ex· <fff OOUGLAS, P•te~)
·' .
Seven of the eight miSStonaries
reported trapped by the North
Vietnamese in Ban Me Thuot
were identified today.
The Christian and Missionary
Alliance said five or the mis-1 slonarits were attached to the Al· ,
llance. It identified them as Mr. ·
• and Mrs. Richard Phillips, of
Bloominl(ton, Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson of
• 1 , Hamllton, Ont.
• 1 It said its fifth missionary.
LA'HONDA (UPi> -Sheriff's Mrs. Archie Mi~chell of Bly, 4,fep'!ljee are 1ay•t11atlns the Oreae>n, la th ft w1f e of another ...-Qij~ •x.Lltf~e ot a--~t ml.asionary ta.k~n captive ~ Ban
-ll'OtAt ~which _..., t1* ·aevE Me Tbuot tn a Commurust of-
&eadf_of W9'• rituls · 1"'8lte in lta. Her h~band has · dUct4fCS ~~~tn:1 ~8'iata ruz been beard from tn the 13
Moun\aill. --year& all\H. . Assistant an Mateo County A lpOllnman for the Christian ~ Suaene ~ut Micli.that and lili~ Alu.nae.~d the
· local resldedtl r~ ftndln& PbDUpe:CiUpM'"•lld Mrs. Mitchell
the ht•4lei• cam•• ~ pets ln baH takea ritu1e in_ th r• re~l weeks. 1*:1udla:I aoaa. sldeae• of t•e "~ cata and ceese. . repraentatlve in the .Ull uncap.
Carpenter D eJ S.fDPIOll '• lured pert or the elty, bat that the diaeovery of lall .SW pet,,___ Jobnlola couple b.S 8ed thelr
lta •ead carefully aevend and hom• and tMlr wberUbouta is
mtotn• -fed t.M rumor th.t a W\known. babd c)f culllltl WU eoaductin8 • Tl)41 Alliance aald two other
1rotesque rU&aal• tn remote mllalonarlt• trapped ln Ban Mo
back1'ooda hJdeaways. CSeeAMBRICANS.PaietU>
Gregory Sperring, 24 , of 7531
Brooklawn Drive, Westminster.
was dead on arrival at 7 p.m. at
Huntington · Intercommunity
Hospital, police said.
Two companions who drove
Sperring to the hospital in the
back or his pickup truck were ar·
rested on suspicion of murder.
police reported.
Held without bond today in city
jail are Deborah Ann Anzalone,
24, of Fullerton, and Charles
David King, 22, of 23871 Coral
Bay, Laguna Niguel, police re·
ported.
King also has been charged
with stealing Sperring's car.
which police said they have not
yelfound.
Police said murder charges
can be filed in drug death cases
against persons who may have
supplied the drugs.
There does not have to be a n in-
tention to commit murder, police
explained.
Both King and Miss Anzalone
told officers they drove Sperling
to the hospital after he became ill
at a home they were visiting on
Cameron Street in Huntington
Beach.
Hospital orricials notified of·
ricers after the three arrived al
the hospital, police said .
The Orange County Coroner's
ofCi~i' ~id. an exact cause of d~
ath cannot be determined until
the completion of tests. But Hunt-
ington Beach police said they
believe Sperring died of a heroin
overdose or of som e other type of
it\jectlon placed in his arm.
' The Orange County Coroner 's
Office said Sperrlng is survived
by his parents.
Ml CO!WEKIS
tAN TO CASH
"The ad produced a good
·response and I sold my van to one
.,-the people who read the ad and
~Ued."
That's the success story relat-
f.d by the Newport Beach man who placed this ad in the Dally
lot.
'89 FORD Eeonoline, 6
eyl, stick, $1295.
Call xxx-xxxx
JC you have a car or van you'd
like to convert to cash, call
842-5678. Put a few words to work
for you, In the Dally Pilot.
D•1ly P,lot SI.oft Photo
SUCCUMBS AT 70
Civic Leader Huddleston
Harbor Area
Civic Leader
Dead At 70
Donald I. Huddleston. a harbor
area .civic leader for almost 30
years. died Sunday. He was 70
Memorial services have been
set for 2 p.m . Tuesday at St. An ·
drew's Pres byterian Church, 600
St. Andrews Road , Newport
Beach.
Mr. Huddleston is survived by
his wife. Velma ; two daughters.
Mrs. L.J . Fillmon of China Lake
and Mrs. J effrey Grimm of Santa
Rosa ; and a brother, Leland of
Kansas.
.. A city co~ncilm an in South
Gate in the 19301s. Mr. Hud-
dleston came to Newport Beach
in 1946, when he began the lend·
ing and properly development
business he has operated since.
Mr. Huddleston's record of
civic activity includes past
service a s pres ident a nd
treasurer of the Newport Harbor
Boy's Club. He served on the
Boy's Club board of directors for
25 years.
He was a former president of
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce and was a member or the
Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club for 30
years.
Mr. Huddleston was an elder at
St. Andrew's Presbyte rian
Church and sat on the president's
council at Chapman College.
He was a member of the
Americanism committee of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Disttlct and held memberships
in the Seafaring Masonic Lodge
and the Irvine Coast Country
Club.
He was active in Amigos Vie·
jos, United Fund drives and
other civic activities.
Mr. Huddleston's ramily has
suggested memorial contribu·
lions to the Hearl Fund
)
Marines
Five passengers on a
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun-
day night by five m en who used a
shotgun to press home their de·
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of·
ricers said the five passengers
were robbed of cash. watches
and assorted jewelry while the
driver of the Santa Ana to San
Juan bus· dro,·e on. apparently
unaware of the activit,· behind
him. ·
Deputies said the five men, all
identified as off-dutv Marines
from Camp Pendleton, lefl the
bus al San Juan and boarded
another bus bound for the Marine
base.
Camp Pendleton Marines,
alerted by s heriff's officers, sur-
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took th e five s uspects
into custody.
Marine pers onnel today re-
ffl'!1ra to identify the a rrested
men pe nd in g further invesliga·
tion of the robbery. They con-
firmed th:.it the fi ve suspects are
Camp Pendleton Marines.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
(See ROBBERY. PageA2)
"' .. ather
Partly cloudy Tuesday
with s li ghtly cooler days,
according to the weather
servic.+. Highs 55 at the
beaches. 60 inland. Chance
of rain 40 percent tonight
decreasing to 10 percent
Tuesday.
INSIDE TODA~
The Central Intelligence
Agency once hired Mafia
gunmen to attempt os30Saina-
hon of Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro. articles published to-
day alleged. StOTy, Page A4
• DEARBORN HEIGKl'S, Mich.
<AP) -Police have released a
member of a tiny re'Uclous sect
who says he buried his inf ant soq
without reportine the death
because he doesn't believe the
.boydled.
Police said they dropped
charges against John Shirey, 27.
after he convinced them that re·
ligious beliefs prevented him
from believing his son actually
died.
Seeks R eturn
UPI Tele9110lo
Eldridge Cleaver, 39, now
living in Paris, says he
want s to return to
California "where people
have room to be human."
The former Black Panther
leader says he no longer
wants to bring down the
U.S. system, but to live with
it.
Man Ejected
For Biting
J e t Hostess
DENVER <U PI) -New York
film producer Norman Wexler,
detained in Denver on federal
charges of interfering with a
flight crew, says a kiss and not a
bite led to his ejection from a
nonstop fli ght from Newark to
Los Angeles.
United Air Lines flight 19 made
•an unscheduled stop in Denver
Friday and Wexler was met by
FBI agents, U.S. marshals and
Denver sheriff's deputies.
An affidavit filed by FBI agent
Bernard Hubley said Wexler bit
stewardess Laura Mansuto after
she objected to his verbal abuse
of a woman cardiac patient
a board the fli ght. The patient
was fitted with oxygen equip·
ment.
Rec Center
In Lawsuit
Damages totaling $1 5 million
are being d emanded by the
father of a 15-year-old boy who
allegedly received serious and
permanently disfiguring injuries
while riding a go-cart at the
Orange County F airgrounds in
Costa Mesa.
Named as defendants in the
Orange County Superior Court
action filed by Carlos Martinez
for his son, Kenneth, 15, are Skip
May, the F air grounds Recrea·
tion Center he operates and the
State or California.
The Santa Ana man states that
his son received serious and
permanent injuries on Ma rch 17,
1974, when his clothin8 became
entangled in the machinery of a
go-cart he was driving.
ORANGE COAST ~
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed
Pr•''*"' •ftd Pubhlhlr
Jac k R. Curley
Vin Pl'nl,..,, •"" o.-.. Ao\9-
Thoma<. Keevll
f.d•ll>'
Thomas A. Murphioe _.,..,,"9 £.itot
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
.... h l.tftl M.IM91 ... l.dl""'
Offices
c.-1.t~W UO-•t8lly\I'"'
--I 9r«" lUS._--1 --" ~ ..... ·-~"-' _...., ..... ,. i1an e. .. ,....,...,..,.,
t•••oOV•llfy UltlL.-,.•l--el\41•0-'•-'r
, Te..,...M (714) '42--021
QnlHled Ad<rertiSl"9 '42-5671
~~Velley-OI~
sa1 .. 210
he«! .... c.i.-4tS4JO
~.,,..Or...,. C-yC-tln
540-1220
Mond!t. Match 10, 1171
"How could I report a dHth I
dldn 't believe happened?"
Shirey sald ... l believe Jesus tbok
him straiebt into the Kingdom of
God.'' Two weeks aao. Shirey. a
member of a group c•lled
Cblldren of God, buried his aon,
Child of the Land, in what Shirey
calle.:i a mystically divined site
near this Detroit suburb.
Learning from a tip or the Un·
usuaJ burial, police arrested
Shirey l11t week and chuted
blm witb f allure to report a de·
ath, burial without a permit and
suapicion of homlclde.
An autopsy a day lat.er by tho
Wayne County medical examiner
disclosed that tho four-~th-old
lnf ant died last month of
pneumonia. Police uld the
autopsy satiafled them there was
no foul play.
Still confused, police asked the
Tapes Analyzed
'A Dozen Lied'
In JFK Probe
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An
analys is of tape recordings
shows Lee Harvey Oswald was
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about
From Page Al
AMERICANS
Thuot are Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller of Houghton, N.Y., work·
ing for the Wycliffe Bible
translators.
Also trapped in the city were a
U.S. Embassy representative,
Paul Struharik, threecanadians,
a n Australian and a Filipino
family.
In Washington, meanwhile,
both the Democratic and
Republican leaders of the Senate
today called for the removal of
the government of President Lon
Nol.
GOP leader Hugh Scott-the
highest ranking Republican so
far to make such a suggestion-
said Lon Nol s hould resign In
favor of a transitional regime
that could negotiate a truce and a
new government with insurgent
communist forces.
He said the truce should
guarantee the safety of refugees
who want to fl ee before the new
government takes over.
Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield did not qualify his re·
quest for Lon Nol 's resignation.
He told the Senate it was simply
the best hope for peace in Cam·
bodia.
From Page A J
DOUGLAS. •
cept to confirm the 1,000 figure on
Friday. A McDonnell Douglas
spokesman did say the Hunt·
ington Beach plant is Jess depen·
dent on !AM-manufactured parts
than some other facilities.
Lynch said today a federal
mediator has r eturned to
Washington after meeting with
both sides, and he is expected to
return soon for more meetings.
"We established our positions
for sure, and kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
of the meetings.
The mediation was asked for
by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satellite
launchings al Ca pe Canaveral.
A bout 200 I AM workers
employed by Mc Donnell Douglas
are stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Launchings are continuing now
with professio nal a nd
supervisorial perspnnel filling in
for striking workers. M~Donnell Douglas officials said. The firm
also said the strike would not af·
feet the Soviet-U.S. space mis·
s ion in July unless it continues
past Jun e, wh e n the JAM
workers would again be needed
to aid in launch preparation.
From Page Al
ROBBERY. •
passengers was r ecovered and
will be returned lo the victims.
Sheriff's officers s aid charges
of assault with a deadly weapon
will be added lo allegations or
armed robbery in view of lhe
statements by several victims
that they were beaten during the
course of the holdup.
their knowledge of John F. Ken·
nedy's assassinatioa, a for~er
Central Intelligence Agency of·
ficial said today.
· 'l don't know the name of the
man who pulled the trigger,"
author George O'Toole told a
news conference called to in-.
troduce his book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he even
know if the "real" assassin is
still at large. '
But the Warren Commission
which investigated the crime, he
said, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Oswal-0 and saying he acted
alone -because the climate was
so volatile in the country at the
time.
He called for a new con-
gressional investigation of ·the
case. saying his probe indicates
there was a conspiracy.
O'TooJe also reached the ''in·
escapable" conclusion "that at
least some of the people who
framed Oswald were members of
the DaJlas police."
Using analysis on the tape·
recorded comments or other of-
ficials, he theorized that (1)
Oswald was an FBl informer, (2)
some FBI agents may have been
involved in an assassination plot·
on their own and (3) some War-
ren Commission witnesses lied in
key testimony.
O'Toole based his findings on a
device which acts in lie detector
fashion to pick up stress in voice
recordings.
On the key question Oswald
was asked -did he shoot
anyone? -the analysis shows
absolutely no stress in his voice,
indicating he could not have been
telling an untruth, O'Toolesaid.
But similar analysis of other
tapes made of police figures and
others at the time of the as·
sassination and later show that
"perhaps a dozen" did not tell
the truth, he said.
"President Kennedy was killed
by a conspiracy," said O'Toole,
38, who was chief of the CIA pro-
blem analysis branch from 1966
to 1969. "The man who paid with
his life for that crime in the base-
, ment of the Dallas City Hall was
innocent.''
Advance copies of O'Toole's
book , "'The As sassin ation
Tapes," were made available to-
day to the news media and an ex·
cerpt was published in the April
issue of Penthouse.
O 'Toole said leading
authorities on lie detection and
analysis who examined Oswald's
statements agree that he told the
truth.
The machine measures
changes in human voice frequen-
cies, and when the modulation
disappears , it is as a result or
stress and is a strong indicat1on
the speaker is lying.
"His (Oswald's) categorical
denial that he s hot anyone con-
tains almost no stress at all,"
O'Toole s aid . "Stress is a
necessary , but not sufficient,
condition of lying ...
"But the absence or stress is a
sufficient condition of truthful·
ness ... Oswald denied shooting
anybody -the President, the
polic~ma n (J .D. Tippitt),
anyboay. 'J'he psychological
stress evaluator said he was tell·
ing the truth.''
Satellite 'Up'
VANDENBERG AFB
<UPI >-A satellite was launched
into orbit Sunday from the Space
and Missile Test Center at Van·
denberg Air Force Base.
3 Boys Killed
Train Sighted Too Late
TRACY (AP)-A flagman waved his lantern
frantically in the early morning darkness. trying to
get a driver to spot a train 1ondola backing across
a road north of here. But the young. motorist, whom the highway
patrol said was traveling at high speed, saw the
Southern Pacific gondola too late.
He hit the brakes 50 feet from the spur line
crossing, but hls car slammed into the train and
wedged under the gondola's wheels.
Three teen-age Tracy boys ln the car were
killed Sunday. They were identified as Edward
Michael Seggerson and Rodney Lee Holcomb, both
17; and Stephen Carl Eckman. 16. I
county prosecutor'• office to
check the 1talute on un·
aatllorllM b\ll'lata, a fdlld~
meanor carrytni a maximum
pe.!'ally of 60 days In Jail.
But county aulbonU .. ..W tM onl:Y case they could 11"4 µtat flt
the-Shirey incident wa too vque
to interpret.
All charges acain~t $hirey
were then dropped.
Shirey and his common-law
Wauaeard Bau
This Houston bus caused
quite a few s tares from
motorists after the driver
hooked a power pole guy
wire and took a skyward
route. The driver and his
lone passenger were quickly
rescued.
Pair Arrested
On Vice Rap
In Newport
Newport Beach vice officers
arrested a 24-year-old Tustin
woman over the weekend on
charges of soliciting prostitution
after they placed an order with a
radio dispa tched massage
service.
Officers booked Patricia Ann
Michael, of 1777 Mitchell St.. on
the soliciting charge. Officers
also booked her male companion,
Thomas Steven Gately, 23, of the
same Tustin address. Charges
against him relate lo the alleged
possession of m arijuana in an
automobile.
Detectives said they pl aced a
call la te Saturday to a Los
Angeles business specializing in
out call massage. Within 10
minutes, it was a lleged that the
woman and the man described
by officers as her "protector" ar·
rived in a m ote l room in
Newport.
· Officers, who did not disclose
the location of the motel, alleged
that the w oma n offered to
perform diverse sex acts fo r
prices ranging from $.10 to $65.
The massage, they added, cost
$35.
The two arrestees were held in
lieu o! $SOO bail apiece ..
w'il~. Mlcki Noblett. whoaay the
don't bell eve In ~llli dodon.
stW fniltt CbJld dll Dot&. "'ftey
say the infant'• body "wu beinl
cleansed" of polton\ before be left
lhem.
• •1 dldn 't eonalder blm sick or
eonaider calltnJ .a doctor,"
Shirey said ... It's not-that 1 think
doctors are evil, ll'1 just that
what 1 trust in is hightr than a
doctor."
'Married
. '
For lhre~ nlahta in a row, ln·
cludlna the night before the ln.
fant•• death, Shlrey said be Md•·
vislon or burytna his son. 'IM;
next day he acted on It. ' •
I
"The spirit led roe to a epo\'
where the a.round was thawed_.•
took off his clothes and laid hl1
in the ground . .A didn't fee
anything sacred about his bod,.
don't believe l 'm guilty o •
ortme, ··he said.
Co111Puter Printou~
Has Real 'Impact'
· COLUMBUS, Ohio <UPI) -
For Richard Brudzynskl, George
Orwell's world of "1984" -a not·
so-futuristic hovel predJotinl a
d.ictat;orla\ soclely of• alltoma.
tona .-has Hrlved. He Was
formally· married to·hls mother
bY. a com .,,t.ttei;.
tiructzynskj, a lawyer, was told
by a Cleveland credi~ bure'u he
had indeed married his mQther,
Flor,nce Brudtynut, BAd1• w
ll)ak~ matters wotpe, wl.A' ~
senUy em.ployed as astotkbcSy.et
a machine shop after previousl,Y
working as IU\. a(tomey.
.. t wasn't expe~~ aur·
prises;" Brudzynski sald o! Ms
.. spur-of-the-moment" visit to
the credit bureau. •·1 filled out an
application form to see my file in
about a minute, and this woman
came back wilb a computer prin·
tout with scads of numbers which
sbe reviewed very quickly."
Brudzynski, 30, a hearing ex·
aminer for the state of Ohio, was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and, ironically, a lso served as co·
chairman on an American Civil
Liberties Union committee in·
vestigating the impact of
technological innovations on civil
liberties.
The ACLU group called itself
"'The 1984 Committee."
Brudzynski said he asked the
clerk at the credit bureau what
all the numbers meant.
"'She pointed out one set of
numbers which when translated
said I was presently employed as
a stock boy -a job I had held six
or seven years ago when I was
still in school.
"The next line, she said,
showed that I was currently mar-
ried. I was really surpriaed
because I had just become
engaged but it was supposed to
be a secret between my gi.rl and
myself. Then s he told me I was
tmarried lo Florence Brudzynski,
who happens to be my mother!''
Brudzy n s ki said he was
"shocked , surprised and
amused."
"The way they married me
off," Brudzynski said he and the
credit bureau figured out, "was
that a computer program used to
eliminate double addresses for
'junk' mail a ssumed U1at since
my mother and I had the same
last name and since we were Ji v.
ing at the same address, we had
to be married.
"I was seriously considering
that if they didn't correct the
mis take I would go to the
Domestic Relations Court and
ask the judge for an annulment."
Brudzynski said with a grin. "My
mother got kidded a lot at work
and I took quite a bit of Ii bbing at
the office."
Brudzny n s ki said errors
similar to his own experience
with the credit bureau are not un·
usual.
U .. IT ..........
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Att~rney Bru~skl
GuardFofls
Westcliff
MaskedMcm
The ski-masked m~gger
operating in darkened colb·.
mercial sections of Newpdrt.
Beach's Weslcliff area failed tn
1 his latest robbery attempt o~r
the weekend. ·
A security guard checking
businesses near the scene Y:
parently startled the mask~d
man w ho uses a club for,.a
weapon. The mugger and an ~c·
complice fled before the he\st
was completed.
The latest of two recent inci·
dents too~ place 9efore dawn
Saturday as Joseph Arthur
. l{aleb, 31, of Newport Beach left
·a restaurant at 1617 Westcliff
Drive and prepared to drive
home.
Kaleb said the mugger ap-
proached his car, banged on the
roof and steering wheel with· a
short club and demanded Kaleb's
money.
At that point, the security
guard appeared in the area and
the victim heard someone shodt,
"Let's split." The assailant then
fled the scene.
Earlier in the week, the same
thug accosted a man taking a late
night walk in the same area ..
That job succeeded , and netted
$25 from the friJthtened victim.,
~ARIMERS PAYS
/
Mariners Savings hos alwoys paid
the highest inttrest legally poulble.
Now your savings con be worth even
more at Mariners -o Big ?*.4 % on
6-yeor certificates of $1 ,000 or mo,..,
Not only con you make money ot
Mariners, you con make friends too -
with a strong "hometown" savings
and loon. '
Save at Mariners. Now it makes
more dollart and sense!
Mariners Savi~s
and Loan~latiOn IN SUHE.O .,,.....,... ...........
WUTCl lfY et OOVU • fij&Wf'OaT MACll~. t-.o • 11141 M) ... 1.-W. Oflftl ICU IA YllDIE DIJVE • l"lWPOaTl&ACN. , ,,... • 17141 MJ...0 ,..,..., C:-.1
I.WO ~At I EA(>f llOUUVAttO• SEALttAC'H.(ALIF. "11«1• t)l.IU'll 7•2'
17•7 IEVlltL't' 90UlEVAtt0• l 0$ A...Oll.D. CAL.,, G41• Ul,1~7-4141
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news1
1973,
·Quest
our ni
toche
these
order•
the ti
friend
have 1
sever.
~' You ·t~'... d.rew
llroad
U.eae ·~to cui
U,S. I .~'eongrt · en ti "' 1Pnat1
... ;r'he ••
.; '..$.by I 'by 8-fc
.,~estE ,, use
~ 3. b~ 'i$4.3 , U.06.
•• 1.37.
are$&
.r!H.4.Z
.,/or a .._,meat
i flrlces
may IJ
moneJ
J mp
I f DEJ
''Umn ,
' ..source
hlna
~hem,
terns
and m
"belt•
this fi1
·mp Thi• List Haig Flying
r•./"' DEAR PAT: In a recent col-.. •
·'Umn, you pubu~ed several Pet Cmnne ; . .
ci$0UTCes of purchasing outdated· .
: hina patterns. I wrote to one o~ Again-Aspin
them, Glen Roe Old China Pat-.. -"terns Ltd. in Ontario. Canada, WASHINGTON (UPI) -For
. the 'lhird t\~e within a man.th, and my letter was returp~d for a, fonjer White House Chief of
"better"' address. Bo you kmw if Std .Alexander M: Haig Jr. has
been required to: reimburse the this firm is still in business? government for unauthorized use
M.A., Los Angeles of o(ficial•transport for personal
Ch• h dq _ _.... 1 conienience, Rep. Ces Asp,tn <D· IA;nox ana ea u .. ..::rs n Wis), says.
New Jersey was contaded re-~~his time Gen. Haig was
iardlDg your inquiry. It had DO ca~t flying his dog DU(lcan
ka&wledge. of Glen Roe otlller · tro~ Sttittgart to1 Beliiuin on~
than the address publlsbed In mi tary <aircrafi " Aspin said
AYS. I'll check wit.II' pel&al af. Su aynig'ht. " ·
flclals In Ontario mytelf·Qd let Haig served former President
yea know U Glen Boe laas Nixon for six years at the White
ca.aaged lts address. In &be H~. the last year as chief of
mean&lme, ~nox provided an staff. He now is .supreme Allied
"updated" oatdited cblna ~mahder of North ~tlantic purcllaae llst. Here goes: Pa&· ty Organization forces . as
teru of &lie Past, SM S. Main S&., wel as Commander of all U.S.
Prince&oa, IL. 111$1; Jl.r.i!ame1 tw in ''•Nne. · · Haa&y, Tbe Jewel llex, P.u. Oox -7
145, M•ta Street, Albertville. Al..· ·
3St5t; Toste• Ce., II Uada Lane,
Tlffto, OH.,'4HI; Byeot hie., 1'4
E. Gralld IUvet, Wlllamu•,
Ml. 41815; Dlclt ftlnk Qlaa Cba~ers •. P.O. aox IU,
O.aWeody, GA. 3G18; Ed Et-
tle111aa, EU1e•••'•· ltt N. MONTGOMERY, Ala. <AP)-
IDIJOre st., IU._ .. , TX. 7111Z; "He was dotog a preUy good job
· Mr. Fra•d• llaH. Abenteen of handlin1 the 18-wheeler." a
Crockery Store, IU S. Mala st., a-t~te troopet sald •tter he
Aberdeen, SD. 1Ht1; Mrs. ltbpPed thl'ee' boys in' a 30,000·
· Charl41 Tel&ele, ...._=:" ~.COr·traUii'ri1. Fl•wer fr Gift 81111.,, -1111 ~ -.,y Caliipotted the
Ferli, Ml .. ittP; lrvtal u ~:y Mcie 5! through Jewelen, 111 · S.'W, IS1lld. 81., w mabta at
· &eaUle, WA. •1111 1 ·~,:: 1p. m. Sat )4t ! 19c., P.O. aea ·J-:'l.Mlle . -?~sit wm~ on~ patrol
••. 71111; "--~·-=· 'iiltf~1--MMl li6tl,lllii tirailed .......... "!1t-11Wi:W • B°"abciut' ... u..""' lnK:k , seaa.. P.Oi!Jf• ~ Ule ·~~al'li• aald t~ 11· WA. 11ua, ·~=•·le•.,.., ~ out and
117 M. llMI. tK •• P9rt ~ ru r~ 8Wl_l', but halted
... PLEAS& ellp aid .av.. w1190 tM t,roOper ymed, .. Stop!''
I
Diiiy PllOt Stiff .......
RECALLS CZARIST RUS$1A
Bernard Goltger, 72
f.rAMURA'·s
,'7•'•'l · \5 DAY lllAlmt· SALE ~.
~ '~«·~\MoNDA Y, MARCH j~th THRU FRl0A Y, MARCH 14th '
~ ~~ \ .. . .·
• · .,
1
• • Fill that empty space f
in your Living Room,
Family Room, or Den
wjth an attractive fully
upholstered chair or
swivel rocker at
. -
fantastic low prices .
Choice of six
styles and colors.
Value
129.95 to 199.95 .
SPECIAL
&9111.12r·
FREE DELIVE'RY
SERVICE & SET UP
I FREE COMPLETE
•1 DECORATOR 51.:~VICE
Many other fine pikes of furniture also at special prices
TERMS AVAILABLE FRllCOMPUTI
DECORATOR SERVICI
•
Turn.Back
The Clock
From Mre Services:
Seventy-eight men have been
airlifted from tbe largest U.S.
icebreaker, trapped in. 25--foot·
thick Antarctic ice. The Coast
THE WAY WE WERE: Here Guard aaid the ahip, the Glacier,
on a soggy, r pther ' melancholy may be freed in the next two or
Pi1onday. we cootemplate leaden three days.
skies and a slate gray Pacific More than 130 persons re·
and ponder the future along this mained·aboard the ship, which ls
best of all possible coasts. How in no immediate danger and
shall it be? \\'hich has adequate food supplies
Clues might come from the aboard,theCoastGuardsaid.
P roposition 20 people, who have The Glacier, based in Long
now trotted ollt a new look at the Beach, is icebound in the Weddell
future. It is a preliminary com-Sea just off the tip of 01e An-
pr e h e n s iv c pl a n for th e tarcticpeninsula.Acrackinthe
Calirornia coastHn e. ice was spotted about two miles
You read it and Ylonder. How from tbe ship, and a Coast Guard
did we get he re? spokesman s aid, "If she can get
Decades ago our Orange Coast '
was populated only by the hacdy. ( 'JN SHORT ) They came here to be near the
sea; perha ps to rish; perhaps to
grub out some sort or living in a '------------serene place where lungs and to t,he crack and the weather
soul alike could be cleansed bj holds, they 're hoping to \\.'Ork her
the breeze a nd spray o( thE way into open water within a cou-
Pacific. pie of days."
JUST INLAND of the i·m:
m ediate co astl i n e, we had
ae;riculture. Ple nty of it in places
now called Irvine or Lakl? Forest
o r El Toro or J.luntington Beach
or Fountain Valle y or Costa
Mesa.
You could drive down our two-
lane country roads and the rra·
grance of orange blossoms rilled
the air. This was indeed Orange
County.
Bac k o n th e immedi a te
coastline, there really wasn't
much commercial activity ex·
cept tourism. There was open
space where people could sit, r e·
lax and view the sea. Or splash in
it.
NOTHING 1'1UCH was built of
s ubstance between the ocean and
the nearest roadway.
You co uld com e t o th e
seashore, pitch your tent and
have a happy weekend.
Campgrounds began to de-
velop, a nd hotels, motels and
publi c recreation areas. The
tourist and visitor was king.
Air or water pollution? Thal
\\.'as something that happened in
Chicago. On a clear day. you
could count the goats standing on
the clifrs of Sa nta Catalina
Isla nd.
Since the n. a lot of peopl e have
come to li ve and work along our
coastline. We h a ve commerce
and industry tha t would have
been cons idered wild dreams by
the fisherm e n or campground
oper;..itors of yesteryear.
TOD1\Y, llOWEVER, we have
u new compr e he nsive coastal
master plan. And wh at does that
plun propose to do?
\Veil . it proposes to save a lot of
open spaces for public view.
It proposes that la nd betu•ccn
t he sea and the nearest high\',•ay
be kept open for public use.
It \Va ni s land preserved for
agri culture.
It suggests that first priorities
on coasta l bu ilding should be for
campgrounds. hotels, motels and
rental properties.
It doesn't want us to build any
more hiAhv.•ays.
Somc ho \~'. it all sounds rather
fa miliar.
SOMl'.:110\\' YOU GET the no-
tion that the coastal pl annt'rs
have bee n brows ing throu gh
albums fi lled with old , yellowing
photographs of the Cali fo rnia
coastli ne.
And they u•ant us to be the way
we v.·ere.
Before the people came.
•OH Priced Pared
KUWA1T -Algeria has made
another slight break in the oil
cartel 's price front by lowering
the price o( its low-sulphur,
clean-burning crude oil by 21
cents a barrel, oil sources in
Dubai report.
Observers in London had said
after an ea rlier cut that it was
difficult to tell what efrect, if any,
suc h small reductions might
ha\.·e on retail prices of gasoline
and fuel oi I in the United Stales
a nd Europe.
•Drug Team Hit
WASHINGTON -Senate in·
vestigators s ay federal narcotics
a gents act ed in an unprofessional
manner by failing to pursue a
lead linking financier Robert L.
Vesco to a heroin s muggling
scheme.
Chairman Henry J\t . J ackson of
the Senate permanent subcom·
mittee on investigations said his
panel will continue checking into
"'the overall efficiency" of the
Drug Enforcement Administra·
lion because of its performance
in the Vesco case.
•Plant AU°"ked
BUENOS AIRES, Arget1tina -
Leftist guerrillas said today they
attacked an American-owned
auto plant with grenades to pro-
test the visit lo Argentina o(
William Rogers, U.S. assistant
s ecretary of s tate for Latin·
American affairs.
Strachan
Off Hook
WASHINGTON CUPl)-
U.S. District Judge John J .
Sirica today dismissed a ll
char ges against rorme r
White House aide Gordon
C . Strac han in the
Watergate cover -up at the
request-of the special pro-
secutor.
Strac han thus became
only the second person
charged with Wa tergate
ofrenses to have gone free.
The other was Kenneth W.
Parkinson, a lawyer for
the committee to re-elect
the President who was ac-
qui lted Jan . 1 in the
Watergate cover·up trial.
NEW YORK !AP) -Two
fonner aldea ,!• Sen. Robert r.
Kennedy HY .. .......iy !Old ._
ht blocked a Cleotral ioWlua.._
Acency plan le) uae the Kafta. to~
a1sa1slnlje . Cuban Premier
Fldel Ca1lro, the New ·York
nme11ays.
The two former aides. Adam
WaUnaky and Peter ltdelmU.
told tile new1paper about the plot in an off-the-record inten1eWUl~
im, lhe Times 1ald In tod&J'a..
editions. Lul week the l~ gave
the Tlmes perml.,ion "° at-
tribute the story to them. the
new&paper laid. ·
In another report Sunday,
Time macazlne said th& CIA
plotted with Mefia hoods tO till
Castro, the late Rafael Tndlllool'
the Dominican Republic, ud the
late Fraftcois DuvalierolHaitl.
Previous reports have linked
the CIA lQ plots against Castro
and Trujillo. Trujillo ruled his
Caribbean island nation for 31
years until he was slain in 1961.
Times said "reliable sources"
reported the CIA enlisted the'
Mafia in vain attempta to poison,
shoot or blow up Castro with ex-
plosives before and after the
abortive Bay of Pigs invasion.
The gangsters cooperated
because Castro h ad seized their
lucrative gambling casinos in
Havana, Time said.
Former Costa Rican president
Jose Figueres, in a taped in·
terview televised Sunday id Mex·
ico City, said he had. aided the
U.S. Smokes
(J()2 Billinn
Cigarettes
WASHINGTON CUPll-
Despite health warnings,
Americans still are smoking cigarettes at a record pace.
They pulled away 6o2.2 billion
cigarettes last year, a record and
:ibout 3 percent higher than last
year's record o( 584.7 billion.
The growt h has continued
e\•ery year even though Congress
has required health warnings
since 1969. The Federal Trade
Commission suggested the warn·
ing language on cigarette packs
is oot strong eno1.41h.
ntE FrC TOLD Congress this .
weekend the growth in consump-
tion·shows il is time to require a
stronger warning, and for a
stepped up public service cam-
paign to point out the dangers.
It repeated another suggestion
it has made for the past two
years-that health warnings be
required on "little Cigars."
In general, the FIC'.s annual
. report to Congress' said, tobatco
companies are using the same
advertlsin"g themes they always
have-appeals to taste and as-
s o c i a tion with desirable
personality characteristics. Fre·
quently. it added, the advertise·
ments associate smoking with
people who appear to be healthy,
young and attractive.
COMMISSIONER Stephen
Nye, who dissented, said he felt
the report should have carried a
stronger legislative recommen·
dation to deal with the "healthy
people'' advertising themes.
C ommissioner Mayo
Thompson dissented for another
reason. He said he thought the
government had gone (ar enough
and it wasn't its business to try lo
give people the "will" lo quit
smoking.
The current package warning
states: "Warning : the surgeon
general has determined that
cigarette smoking is dangetom
to your health."
Storm Hits Midwest
)
Kansas, Mi,ssouri Hardest Hit States . .
Tt!lllperat11re11
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\Weatller
. . ··--
•
'
.. . .. ... •
Effortij. . '
'Shift to-: ..
Turkey ..
ANKARA <UPIJ-5ee,.tary of
State Henry A. KWinatr. 1Ull
believing a Mideast agreement is
possible between Egypt and
hrael on the Sinai despite Syrian
complications, turned today to
talks wilh Turkish le.atiers on the
1ituatlon in Cyprus.
He new here from Jerusalem
alter an hoiir-long private
breakrast with Israeli Prime
Minister Yltzbak a.bin and a
two hour and '45·minute meeting
with the Isz,:aeli ·negotiating
team. Ul'JT~ ON DEATH LISTT .-Tllite maeazine reports ClA
• pl'!tted with" 'Mafia_ to kill Francois Duvalier, Fidel
Castro and Rafael Tnrjilio (left to right). ·
CIA in the plot to overthrow Tru·
jillo. '
Ft1ueres, 67, stepped down as
preatdlint o( Costa Rica last May
8 t.fter a four-year term ..
~ '· ' . The hodd repartedly told ~hlm
the CIA had given him immunity,
and when Kennfdy retum_fd to
Washington, he invesUga~ _
• .• 'He went ba"ck apd checli:ed
and sur• enough, it was true,"
Walinsky said. "They bad made
a deal with this guy."
AFTER HE LEFr Jeru..,Jem .. an. laraell government source
told I oews'meo that KJsainpr's
pe«oe·miltloqprobably would be
a ,.•'tong:textlnded and likely
hard" 'neeotlation process.
"There ·iii no ce.rtalnty and
pdlsibJ)' eve·n some·doubt about
reaclifng an agreement,'' the
sourcesaid. · ~ ·· /
According to the Times,
Walinsky quoted Kennedy as
saying he learned of Qae CIA-
Malla connection befOre his
brother became President. He
said Kennedy, then a Senate
committee investigator, encoUn-
lered a mobster in Las Vegas
who told him, "You cari't touch
me. I got immunity."
Edelman quoted KennedY as
sayihg, "I found out that some
people were going to try an at·
tempt on Castro's life, and I
tunaed it off."
President Kennedy was as-
sassinated in 1963. Sen. Kennedy
was assassinated in 1968.
Patricia Hearst
Stakeouts Futile
" •
NEW YORK CAP) -Police in
Colorado recently mounted a
futile stakeout of Anne Hearst's
college in Denver following re·
ports that her fugitive sister
Patricia may have been hiding in
nearby mountains, according to
Newsweek magazine.
Three weeks ago, police also
kept watch over a lesbian cor,n·
COST TO HIOE OUT
IN TORONTO HIGH-A7
mune on Duck Lake near the
small town of Nederland, Colo.,
the magazine said Sunday.
. Bu.t the FBI was quoted as say.
1ng tt knew nothing about the
missing heiress's supposed ;t>re·
sence in Colorado. 1 "I am not aware thii:t Patty
Hearst has been seen in this
area,'' said Ronald Maley!1FBI
agent in charge of the DenWr of·
lice. "I would thinJc 'that any
poli ce department that ha<bsuch
in£ormation would be in (ouch
with us."
In San Francisco, Charles
Bates. the FBI agent in cha rge or
the •tearst case, said he did not
recall that the commune ,had
been staked out but conceded it
was pbssible that It had. '
"BtK· .,..e~probab[y, ~ r.aced
500 places under surveillance
since the beginnina: of this case,''
he said.
Kissinger_{nevertheless still
was opllmlstic a:bout an Israeli .. EgypUa~accord,~pite an un·
expectedly bard stand by Egyp.
tlan President.Anwar Sadat, who
was under pressure from Syria.
·Turkish leaderl", sniartln.g
from the American Congress
cutoff or military aid and still
with only a caretaker govern.
ment, were not expected to give
him much to be optimistic about
in their dispute with Greece over
Cyprus. They also planned to dis-
cuss the Turkish role in the North
Atlantic Treafy Organization.
ACTING PREMIER Sadi
lrmak said last month Turkey
would· "r e view" its commit-
ments to NATO because ol the
U.S. congre·ssional action and
Turkey recently withdrew from a
joint NATO exe~cise.
D.tly Piiot Delivery
l1G ... _.....
Mooday-Friday: ti you do noc hlY9
your Daoer by S:30 p.rn .. call b91ore
7 o m. and your copy wMI be 09-
livered.
Saturday and Sundey: If )'Ol.I do not
receive your COPY by 9 a.m. s.tw-•
day. or 8 a.m Sunday, call bel«e 10
am. aod your copy will be OellY9f9d.
Clrc.....,_ T1l>lptnar1 •
Most 0r¥9e County Areas ~JJI Noftf'twest Huntington BENid!.
and Westmin&ler ........ l*IUI
San Clecftenle. Cec>lstrlV'IO Beach.
&an Jutn Caoi9tr-.
Dani Poinl. South llOIJl'l8.
Lagun1 Niguel •••.••..•• 4'5"1611
A UNIQUE, NEW AUTO MERCHANDISING EVENT ..
AUTO
Did You Know That With a 1975 Model You Get
GREATER TRAOE·I~ ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR? -
There's never been a better time to trade .. · ..
than right now. Local auto dealers inventory.
of good pre-owned·cars are low .... the value
of your trade-in is at 15 year high right now!
See for yourself at any one of these dealers
soon ..
•.-
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Officer Acquitted
On Kissing ~harge
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OXNARD (AP) -A Ventura City policeman bas been ac·
quitted or child molesta.Uon charsea after a Judie told the Jury. .. It's not illegal to klu a 1lrl."
Set. Robert Lee Hill wept when the jury returned its verdict
late Friday after dellberatln1 one and a baU days following a
three-day trial.
Hlll, 35, was accused of a ( J ~ozen counts of child molesta· Sta le liOn and contributing to the
delinquency or a minor. The
prosecution said the two bad
kissed_ repeatedly and bad made a daytime trip by plane to San
Francisco without the permlsslon of the girl's mother.
2 ••• ,,.
SAN FRANClSCO CAP) -A pipe.bomb exploded at the Del
Monte Corp. headquarters here. only 90 minutes after another de·
vice exploded at a Safeway store in nearb)' San Jose, police said.
Officers said no one was injured in either blast. The first ex·
plosion at 12:20 a .m . blew out most of the windows and did major
structural damage to the Safeway store at 6th and Julian Streets
in San Jose. police said.
Wedding Deatla
LONG BEACH <UPI) -One guest was killed and another
was injured in violence at a wedding reception involving mem-
bers of two Los Angeles county car clubs.
Jaime Ruiz, 19, of Artesia, was shot in the shoulder during a
fight, and he bled to death. Another guest was cut on his arm.
lnnaate Killed
SYLMAR (AP> -Police fired a barrage or bullets at a man
who ignored orders to give himsetr up when surrounded, after he
allegedly killed a hospital security guard, authorities say.
Police said two officers wearing bullet-proof vests fired 14
s hots Sunday at the suspect, who was arm ed with a five-inch
knife. His identity was not immediately released.
DlreC!tOr~
Academy Award winning
director George Stevens,
who made such films as
'Giant,' 'Shane.' 'The
Greatest Story Ever Told,•
died of heart attack Satur-
day in Lancaster. He was 70
years old.
Pair Sentenced
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Two
Southern California men have
been sentenced to prison in Con-
nection with a $135,000 theft and
fencing ring in Imperial Valley.
Harold Miller, 42, of Brawley
drew a 10-year sentence and Ken-
neth Wishon, 48, of Turlock re-
ceived a five-year term.
CH VAN.
No American van
is priced lower.*
*According to manufacturers'
suggested retail prices, no
American van is P.riced lower than
the G10 Serles Chevy Van. This
gives you a good opportunity to
save money and still get the fea-
tures van owners want.
[ ~118' [Jg
Engine positioned
for easy access,
compact overall length.
Chevy Van's engine is located far
enough forward to make It readily
accesslble for service. In fact. 27
separate maintenance Items can
be quickly checked. The engine
is still far enough back to maintain
a compact overall length for
easier parking In crowded areas.
111 Inch•• of lold space.
You get nearly 10 feet of clear
load space from the rear of the
engine housing to the rear doors.
Maximum road length I~ almost 12
feet.
natrt tumln1 circle.
Tht 110-ln. wheelbase Chevy Van
hat a short 41.8-ft. turning diam-
eter, a definite advantage In city
delivery work'.
Unitized body /fnrn• deslp
cub don on welpl
Chevy van makes use of a single·
'
piece body/frame design that
delivers maximum space-up to
246 cu. ft-without adding excess
weight. Body and frame compo-
nents are permanently joined for
strength and durability.
Sliding side door opens with
just 4~·1n. clearance.
Pull right up next to loading docks
and entryways. Chevy's standard
sliding side door glides open
easily, needs only 4 Y2 inches to
clear. And Its smooth operation
has been proved by millions of
owner openings and closings.
Hip, wide rear door openin1s
for quick, easy loading.
Che\ly's rear door opening mea-
sures a big 54.4 x 48.8 Inches. And
the doors can be opened all the
way so you can back right up to
the loading dock.
Improved economy Six en1lne.
Standard engine on G10 Chevy
Vans Is the Improved 250 Six. New
Intake manifold distributes fuel
evenly to cylinders. Newly
designed combustion chambers
concentrate fuel charge around
the spark plug for efficient burning
and fast Ignition. This engine even
------
uses its own exhaust gases to
warm up quicker. You get all that
efficiency and Increased horse-
power and torque.
Front disc
brakes,
computer-
matched
brake
systems.
Front disc brakes
and finned-drum rear
brakes are incorpo-
rated into complete braking sys-
tems computer-matched to gross
vehicle weight. Lining areas. size
and capacity of power assists,
wheel cylinder size-all are pre-
selected at the factory.
Plus: High Energy Ignition system,
Massive Gi rder Beam front sus-
pension, leaf-type rear springs,
aluminum-coated exhaust system,
rustproofing throughout, Integral
voltage regulator, coolant recov-
ery system, choice of two Six and
three VS engines.
DON'T MAKE ANY DUL
llU.lOUSEE
VOCJR CHEVY DEALER.
)
Mond!X· March 10. 1975 OAILYPILOT Al
Air Basin'
Test Toki
: Court 'Raspberry'
Denied by Jurist RIVERSIDE <AP) -A ·
potentially dangerous
deputy attorneys·• who disliked 1>01lutant is threatening the ca~tern portion of the SAN FRANCISCO <AP>-An
attorney for a Judae fighting ef-
forts to remove him from office
admits the jurist made an ob-
scene finger gesture in court but
denies h e uttered a raspberry 1
sound.
The attorney urged the
California Supreme Court on Fri·
ditY to simply censure Judge
William D. Spruance Jr. of the
San Leandro -ll uyward
Municipal Court.
THE C ALIFORNIA Com -
mission on Judicial Qualifica·
lions recommended last July
that Spruance, 49, be removed
from office on the basis of 10 find-
ings of misconduct.
Spruance, disqualified with
pay from sitting until the court
reaches a decision, asked the
state Supreme Court to re1ect thl'
recommendation.
Attorney Leland Bruzzone c·on
ceded the judge had engaged in
some misconduct. but challenged
several findings and contended
there were miti gat in g
circumstances in some in -
stances.
"We deny the raspberry oc·
curred," Bruzzone declared in
contending that testimony for
charges against the judge came
from a "small clutch of distri ct
him. South Coa~t Air Basin, ac~
8RUZZONE SAID there was cording to a :study by the
no excuse for the incident in Rockwell International Science Center. , which the judge made a vulgar h
gesture with a finger. He CX· T e two-year surver. ' done for the state A1r plained the judge did this Lo in· Resources Board under a
dicate a tardy defendant that he S2 3 million contract, said
had shown disrespect for the the nitrate aerosal pollu·
court. tant could pose health pro-"When one views the record as blems, reduce visibility,
a whole, the gravity of the mis· change weather conditions
conduct under the circumstances and lead to environmental
was not s ubstantial enough lo degradation. war r ;j n t removal," be said. !--~.:;:.;...;;.:;,.:..,;~.:.._------
Isle Drilling Opposed
LOS ANGELES (UPl)-A federal study has concluded that
oil drilling off San Miguel and San Nicolas Islands could severely
endanger wildlife on the islands.
A PRELIMINARY ENVIRONMENTAL impact statement
prepared by the Department of Interior said .. simple platform in-
stallation or exploratory drilling off San Miguel Island could
cause the elimination of sea lions, fur seals and harbor seals
forever from their princ1p;,il breeding area in Southern
California.
"Further lea-;ing off San 1\:icolas Island and other islands in
the future could cause the elimination of these species from
Southern California forever," the report said.
The docume nt, subject lo further revision before a final de·
c·1sion on oil drilling off the Southern California coast is made,
said oil spills were likely if drilhng is allowed on a large -scale
basis.
:;~~~~r:::==:=il1 21 .9 cu.ft. NO-FROST rr Side -by-Side
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• Ou•I Oe1e1gen1 011pe11Ht
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with 6.8 cu.ft. Freezer
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add an automatic ice-
maker now or later,
optional at extra cost.
• Power Saver Switch
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• Permalon Drawers for
Eggs, Meat, & Produce
• Rolls Out on Wheels
GE ELECTRIC
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• J T""'!Mf"tu'"· Norm•I,
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e fUlft' 9.,,_.t
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...
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
The Sinog. Thickens
•"Who's In charge here?" demands a confused re-
ader. One day he learns that the California Highway
Patrol will crack dOYtTI on drivers who haven't in -
stalled smog devices on their cars. The next day the
papers announce that the Environmental Protection
Agency is suspending anti-pollution requirements ror
cars.
The hapless citizen can hardly be blamed ror ('o·n-
rusion, but in fact both reports are correct.
The CI-IP drive is aimed specifically at the six
Southern Californfa counties where the NOX anti-
s mog device is s upposed to be installed on 1966~70
vehicles-unless the state Legislature acts to modify
the la v.·.
The EPA announcement has to do \vith the
federal Clean Air Act of 1970, under which auto
manufacturers were required to equip new vehicles
,,·ith another device. the catalytic converter, by 1977.
1'hc converter already is on most 1975 cars.
But the EPA, som cv.•hat belatedly r esponding to
repeated scientific warnings. has at last admitted
that the catalytic converter, while removing
emissions of hydrocarbons 0:1nd carbon monoxide,
spev.·s forth unseemly. and possibly dangerous
an1ounts of sulfuric acid mists.
So the deadline for the auto firn1 s v,iill be extended
pending further s tudies.
Mean\vhile. too bad for the n1anufacturers of the
cutalysts, the automakers tooled up to ins tall them,
i:ind the 100,000 service stations that have put in
special pun1ps for the unleade d gas they r eqttirc.
And too bad for the 400,000 Southern Californians
v.·ho have installecl the gi:ts-gulping NOX devices. and
the million more who risk running afoul of the li:tw for
•. delaying_ ('fhe latest word on that is that the
Legislature may take some action Wednesday>.
Both foul -ups are a direct result of well-meaning,
but poorly thought-out Jaws, too hastily placed on the
books by the stale Legislature and the U.S. CoJ1gress,
respectively. ,
Both probably could have been averted by 'Ide·
quate scientific study before the votes were taken.
Clean, smog-f\"ee air is an admir"ble, and indeed
un essent,i al goal. But plunging into panaceas that
turn out to do more harm than good is a costly way to
tackle the problem.
Confused Auth'!rity ,
So far. the Orange County Board of Supervisors
has ignored Juvenile Justice Commission recommpn-
dations for what the commission sees as needed am·
provements in the juvenile justice system.
Judging from the board's reaction to a recent
commission letter outlining its proposals, it's not like-
ly that the supervisors will ever seek its counsel.
One reason is that the Juvenile Justice Com-
nlission is a seven -member state-mandated pan~I ap-
pointed by the courts.
As a result. despite the excellent qualifications
'<.ind dedicated efforts of its members, a majority or
the board apparently feels the commission represents
the courts' viewpoint rather than its own
1-lowever. a few years ago, the board named the
Juvenile Justice Commission to serve as its appointed
Delinquency Prevention Commission
If the supervisors truly feel the commission in its
present form cannot serve two masters. then they
should make the Delinquency Prevention Com·
mission a separate panel
That way, advice on ways to he lp curtail delin
quency won't be lost on the question of whose intl.'rt•;..t
is being served The county is ill s erved by 1 he
supe rvisors' present attitude
-·-
•
Brooding Nixon D.epressed by Financial Plight
WASl-l lNGTON -Richi.lrd
Nixon, living in lonely splendor
in his C<Jli forniot SCiJCoast estate,
isn't exi.lctly a poverty case.
!"le has dr ~1\1."n hundreds of
thousands of dolli.Jrs from thl'
taxpuycrs to
help ease the
shock of being
reduc 1..·d to
e i v1Jian
status. I-le col·
lects :.i $60,000
annual pr1..·-
s id en ti a I
pension. I le 1s
attended by
aides. at an
a~ditionul ('Os t to the taxpayers of
$96,000 a year.
''et the former President is de
eply de(Jressed over his finances
('lose friends say he isn•t taking
1n enough cash to meet his oh·
li ga tion s '!'hey cl aim hi s
personal bank account is dO\\'n to
SSOO and he has only S2.800 left to
operate the San Clemente cst;1tc
until July I .
EVEJ'lo; J\llNOR expenditu re~.
such as an eastern trip his v>ifc is
planning to take next month. no .. v
c::i use a family budget problem. a
friend told us.
Nixon paid off his back taxe!>
"·ith a S284 ,740 check ., .. ·hich
cleaned out his cash reser.,·es, in·
timates say. He can't afford lo
pay a n additional Sl48.000 t<.1x
(JACK ANDERSON)
debt. v;hich is no lon~t..·r co\l(•cti
ble but which he had promised to
pa_.v. they report
lie neglected to take out health
insur<i nce v.·hen he left the \\"hite
!louse J-l e v.•as stuck. therefore .
\\ilh <J S23,000 hos pital bill for his
phlebitis treatment lie recentl y
patd off part of the bill \\'ith an
Sll .000 check, \\'hich left only
S500 in hi s personal bank ac
count.
lie had to rej uggle his San
Clemente mortgage to redut'e the
payment schedule 1 It> is left \\ith
little n1ore than an <H:re in his
O\\'n name. according to a friend.
Nixon bec ~1n1e so des1)Crate that
he asked his f<'lorida c rony, BebL>
Hebozo. to sell Key Bisc<iyne
houses ju st to pay off the
n1ortga ge
1pir.;STf:1\D. Reboio is leading
an effort to raise $500.000 from
the publi c 10 purchase the t\\'O
bays iclc hon1e s as a nonprofit
center for international study
This v.·ould leave Nixon a com-
fort ab I e profit . s ince he
purchased the homes in late 1968
for only SI25 ,527 :Jnd SI27 .800
respecti \·ely
On paper, of course. he is not ;i
poor man. Rut he lacks tke in·
come to ~u::otain his life-style. !"le
is desperat1..·l y look in ~ for\\ ays to
increase hi s cash flo\\". lie ho pe.·~
to rnake :1 subs11.1 nti:1I ~urn, for
t:"Xample, for his n1en1oir.s . But a
•Sl45,000 ad\·ance payment has
already gone tor 1·est'arth :.ind
salaries. says a friend.
In creasingly, the forn1 cr l)rc~1 ·
dent is counting upon hi s
hardcore supporters to b<1il hini
out of hi s financial difficulties.
Address cards have been prl'·
pared on 300,000 people "·ho h;.1,·c
written s ympi.lthetic let te rs to
him.
These cards have been turned
o\'er to the Nixon J-listorical ,.\!'!·
sociation. \\'hich Rebozo forn1ed
The Hi,story of Presidential Succession
\llASHINGTON -\Vould you
belie ve President \\.illiam E.
Simon? 'fhat could hiJVC been 1f
the presidential succession pro-
cedures of 61 years 11886·1947;
had been in effect v.·ht:'n !'res i-
dent Nixon resigned.
It could also have been Presi-
dent lfe nry A. Ki ssinger, save for
the constitutional requirement of
a president having been ··natural
born." Since there v.·ould have
been no replacement under the
old la\\·s for
resigned vicc-
P r es id c n t
Spi r o ·r .
Agnev.·. th e
old s uc cession
after l"1xon
would hav e
been firs! to
the Secret~1ry
of StatC'. lht•n
Trc:.isury and
on do\\·11 the Cabinet lin e. 'l'hcrc
would hav e bee n nu v1cc-
president, :.i s there was not Iii
times for._. totnl of 37 yc<JrS in nul'
history.
TlllS IS pointed out to il-
lustrate the many c hanges which
have been made in presidenti al
succession over 200 years. not :111
o( them good . Once a relatively
simple procedure is changed in
order to anticipate real or im-
agined contin~encies. new pro-
blems arise.
l"ow there is pressure for more
change. !"lea rings have been held
on Sen. John 0 . Pastore's pro-
posal lo require a special pre-
sidential election when an ap-
pointed vice·prcsident becomes
president with more than a year
to serve. President Ford wou ld
thus have been subjected to e lec-
tion. Other proposals call for
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Is 1t true that the lady
squatter who moved into
Newport's fancy Promon·
tory Point apartments
turned out to be a 5COUl for
Indians waiting to take
lheir land bitck ?
TONTO ....,.. .... ., .............. _.....,...,'9111d .. ......... . ......... ....... ...., ... ...., ......
abolishing the vice.presidency
and setting up a s pecial election
if the presidency becomes vu -
cant.
It is worthwhile to look at the
history of presidential succession
to get a better sighting on how
confu sing the v.·hole matter has
been made. Briefly, it is this: In
1792 Congress enacted a suc-
cession law conveying a vacant
pres idency. aftt>r the vice·
president. to the president pro
tempore of the Senate and then l o
the speaker of the !louse.
IN 1886 Cong ress changed the
line of successio n. after the vice-
president. to the secretary of
State, the secretary of the
Treasury and un down through
the Cabinet according lo d e·
signaled rank. ('rhis is the suc-
cession referred to at the 01>ening
of this column. l
Then in 1947 Congres:; sv.·un~
[
RICHARD ]
..._ __ w_1L_s_o_N __
back to placing its ov,1n officers in
line and put the speaker of the
Hou!'e and the president pro tem-
pore of the Senate ahead of the
Cabinet members.
Fina ll y , in 1967. the 25th
amendment t with the 1947 law
still in force ) created a pro-
cedure for se l ectin~ a new vice·
president after the elected one
had died . resigned, become in ·
ca1>acitated or had succeeded to
the presi dency.
This is the procedure which re-
sulted in the nomination and con-
firm ation of Gerald R. Ford as
vice -president and after his suc -
cession to the presidency. of
Ne lson A. Rockefeller as vice·
president.
NO ONE imagined when the
25t h <1mendment was adopted
that anything like this could ac·
tu ally happen. T.he chi ef purpose
of the 25th arheitdment was to
provide a procedure for the suc-
cession to the pr esidency of the
vice·president if the president
v.·ere found to be incapacitated or
so declared himself. The vicc-
preside ntial provisions were an
;Jfte rthought. 1'"1 ainly Congress
\\'as concerned v.•ith what to do
about a crazy or sick president
\\'ho \\'ou ld not or \\1as unable to
turn the office over to the vice-
president at least for the duration
of hi s incapacity.
1'he change made in 1947, plac-
ing the s peaker of the House in
line after the vice·pcesident, has
serious faults. Under the condi-
tions or 1974 there were two
periods when the speaker of tl'le
llouse was the successor .
apparent to lhe presidency.
/
Leaving aside all matters of
personality. the s uccession of
Speaker Carl Albert would have
reversed the presidential e lec·
tion of 1972, by replacing a
Republican president with a
Democrat. The Cabinet suc-
cession of 1886 is thus fairer and
more in accord with politicpl re·
ality.
THE MORE all these con·
tradictions present themselves,
the more attractive becomes a
procedure "'hich eliminates the
useless office of vi ce-president
and provides for a caretaker
presidency for a brief period
before a new president can be
elected by the people.
That is not v.·ithout its faults.
either. Since nothing is perfect,
the simpler procedures of the old
days don 't seem too bad, even if a
Simon or Kissinger had become
president.
Boredom Is Another Word for Fear
Boredom, and her big brother
Death. are among those subjects
that are s hroucled because "'C
find them too unplt!asant to think
about. Fortunately there are
those about who a re trying lo let
some rational light in on each of
these matters.
One authority on bor(.'<lom de·
fines it thusly : ··An 1ncon1pl ete
striving for
meaning. It is
!he desire for
meaning
coupled with
the inability
to get it .°' By
this definition
boredom is
the •·tension"
of striving for
meaning. It is
not apathy. where \ve accept lack
of meaning.
l\ly desk dictionary calls
boredom ··the condition of being
bored ~ .. as in a person or thing
that wearies by being, dull.
monotonous, 1.1ninteresting. etc.··
NEJTHER of these definitions
does much for m e. I <A·ou\d say
boredom is simply nnot.her v.·ord
for fear. especially a rear of giv·
ing yourself.
Boredom ~·aa known in lhe
Middle A1es as accldJe. and it
was then called the sickne11 of
monks. It is really a reli gious
malai1e, whether il Is suftf!red by
CHARLES
l\lcCABE
monk!-or tearing agnostics. One
monk uskerl one or his Elders
among the Desert 1-~athers :
··\Vhat shall I do. Father, for I
"·ork none of the works oC a monk
but here I am in torpor eating
i,j.nd drinking and sleeping and in
had thoughts and in plenty of
trouble. going from one struggle
to another and from thoughts to
thoughts.··
Tl-I E 1'10ST beautilul l!ll·
pression of s piritual boredon1 I
kno'" is Francis Thompson's
~real lyric ''The Jlound o(
lleaven." Here is the terror of
th e man who fears to give
himself to lhe greatest thing or
iii!, his God. ''Lo. all thin~s Oy
thee, !or thou fieest A1e !Strange,
piteous, futile thing!"
It is fear o( being ourselves. of
living up lo our fullest potential,
of using the 5trength of our iden·
tity, Chat ca.uses us to choo&e
bOredOJn as a defense. Another
form or boredom is sleeping
away the challenges or life. This
sleepiness has lb e same r()Qtf as
boredom.
creative pes>ple know and re·
coifnlte boredom as lheir fate
and their greatest challenge.
Performers (.'all it stage fright,
those terrible moments before
the .,,·ork actually begins. \\'hen
a ll our inslincts cry out against
doing that thing v.·e have sc:
carefully prepared ourselves le
do.
\\'KITERS. lik e\\•ise. The
critical moment in \Vriting is
usually that period just before
you hit the type"·riter or take up
1he pen or pencil for the ir·
Wicks
'It'$ •lth•r for Godf•tht1r II or
•n un•mploym•nt fine/'
reversible commitment. \'ou feel
just av.·ful. You "'ant to run. You
are abou t to be caught out.
You have. as one '-''riler justly
obser\•ed, a complex of fears -
"the fear that one will not realize
the inner vision, fear of ,sc\f-
exposure, fear or Sterility -but
in general the fear of the creati\'e
artist adds up to one O\'erriding
fear, the fear of giving himself.··
Of course he "'ants to give
himself. He is like the tale or
Buridan's ass, v.•hich Is the v. de-
finition of a neurotic: the poor
beast died because or inability to
choose between the water to his
left and the food lo hls right.
Boredom is just that .P~Ofitless
state.
WHO among us has not .been
bored? And w)1o among u1 has
given much thought to the causes
of that boredom? It Is, al base,
fear ot som~thing so strong
within ourselVes. and thu~ so·ttif·
ncult to live \vith, that we dare
not face It.
The funny thing Is lhat when
you do this thing you so fear to
do, tho results ere marvelous.
You feel unifled by t~e ex·
pcrience. as tt-e act.or ind the
writer feel unl(led "'hen ~hey
have made their leap from fear.
. .\nd the start. the gate. The
late John Kennelly'& is as good as
any. ··The Journey of 10.000 mil es
starts with a s in gle step.··
,•
to buy the Key Biscarne homes,
:.ind to the Pres ident i\"ixon
Justice Fund. \\"hich ll abbi
Baruch Korff formed to raise
lega l expense s. Direct·mail ap-
peals ha\'e been going out to the
300.000 names.
Of the Sl00,000 that Cong ress
earmarked for Nixon's lransi·
lion. interestingly enough, he
spent an a stonishing $59.721 for
stationery. He purchased a huge
supply of paper, according to one
insider. for the mass fund ap·
peals.
1\SOTJIER close friend con-
firmed that /\'ixon is haun:ed by
the rr.emory of his childhood pov·
t-rty. \\'hen he \\'3S a boy, hi s
mother used to get up before
dav.·n to bake pies for sale. She
scrubbed, ,cooked and tended
furnace so she could stay at a
nursing home V.'ilh an ill son.
Young Richard used to take hi s
turn preparing m eals of canneG
chili , spaghetti, pork and beans
and other cheap food s. "1'here
v.·ere many mornings," he has
said. "\\·hen I ate nothing for
breakfast but a candy bar.°'
1'hi s experience has driven
/\'ixon harder than most men to
seek an afflu ent life foi-his fami·
ly, the friend s<>ys .
/\'ixon still spends most of his
time. according to close friends,
brooding by himself O\'t:'r his
plight. App1n:cntly, he just keeps
turning over in his mind tbe mis-
take that brought his presidency
to an in glorious end.
His ability to \\'ithstand new
problems. they s ay, has been
weakened. One Saturday morn-
ing, he \\·rote a check that almost
drained his bank account. "l·li s
blood pressure fluctuated th:.1t
day to a dangwous point,'• a !'\ix-
on intimate told us.
··~JXO:"."" holds too n1uch in ·
side." suggested one friend ... lie
is like a boiler without a ste<1n1
\'l'nl. ,. This friend noted that Nix -
on i.il\\·ays remembered every
sli ght. every injury ever done lo
him. It v.·i:ts a trait he began de·
veloping as a small boy.
l lis brother Donald once re-
called: IDic-kJ wo1.1ldn't argue
n1uch n·ith him ... But once. \\·hen
he had had just about as much of
me as he could take, he cut loose
and kept at it for a half to three
quarters of an hour. He went
b.ack a year or tv.·o listing things I
had done. He dido 't leave out a
thing. 1 was only eight. and he
"·as ten."
It was this mentality, the
friend suggested, that led to the
White House enemies list.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rolwrt N. Wefd, Publi!her
Thoma.1 Keeuil, E!dUor
Barbaro Kteibich,
E:dilorioJ Page Edilor
..
The editorial page of the.Daily
Pilot 5eeks to inCorm add
stimulate readers by presenting
on this page diverse commentary
on topics o( interest by S)'!)diclt-
ed eolumnists'and cartooaisll by
pi:ovidJng a torum tor readm' views and by presenting this
newspaper's opinions and ldua on current topics. The editorial
opinion• of the Dally PUot a-pp.ar
only In the editOrial column •tthe
top ot the paae. Opinions ex -
pN!Ned by the columnists and
cartoonlsu and letter writers 1te
the:lt own and no endonemenl or their views by the Dally Pl.lot
ahou.ld be.Interred. '
Monday, Man:hlO, 191S
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Monday, March 10, 197& OAILYP1 OT Al
NulU! Bathing, Hantlo.ut
To Be Banned? Bid Oka
Cast to Hide Patty High?
WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) -The U.S. Park
Service has proposed a bon on sklnnydippln& on
Cape Cod beaches under lts control and said the ban
would be a test case on public nudity for the nation's
300national parks.
National Sea~hore Supt. Loren .c. Hadfoy said
any chal'lges in his proposed regulation, to be
published in the Fe4eral Reaist er this week, wo-..ld
affect only la ng uage and not substance.
NUDE BATHING HAS BEEN growing along a.
stretch or some 30 miles on the outer cape's ocean
beaches in the past few years. On Labor Day last
year, park ranjer s said they counted l ,200unclothed
bathers at Brush HoJlow Beach in adjacel\l Truro.
The Park Service says it is concerned about
over-use oft he near-wild section of the Cape.
··Elimination of the attraction is considered the
mos t feasible way to reduce the growt}>," the pro-
posed regulation said.
"WHATEVER OCCURS HE RE at the Cape Cod.
National Seashore has implications for 300 other
areasoflhe park system." Hadley said.'
At present, there are no federal lars or regula-
tions on nudity in nalional parks.
Brush Hollow Beach is a mile from the nearest
road. and many residents have complamed about ·
parking and traffic problems caused by the s un·
worshipers. Surf fishermen have complained about
losing good spots to cast.
BUT THE 900 VOTERS IN Truro several times
rejected town meeting articles to ban nude b athing
on the town's three beaches not under federal <!on-
trol.
No· nudity article has yet c.ippcared on the war·
rant for next month's town meeting, but residents
have scheduled a public forum Tuesday lo discuss
whether there should be one.
Hadley promised low-key enoforcement, pro-
bably by summonses issued by a planned extra 10
rangers. The reg ulation provides penalities of fines
up lo S500 a nd jail terms of up lo six months.
Distaff Tavern
No 'Lib' Stunt
WEST KIRBY ,
England <AP) A 17lh
century inn h e r e has
m ade his tory with a new
sign outside one of its
bars: ''Ladies Only ."
The While Lion Tavern
in thi s northwe s t
England town claims to
have the only bar in Bri·
lain from which males
c.ire banned. The click of
knitting n(•e dl~s has
replaced the thunk of
darts. and martinis perch
on tables once ~plattercd
with the foam of ale.
Not surprisin g ly, the
White Lion's owner is a
woman. But Margaret
Richard !>on do es n 't
claim to be a women's lib·
ber.
A VISIT TO a London
bar convinced the 36·
year-old dram a lcaC'her
that she wanted to open a
place wht•re womt'n
could go for a drink
without being ''humiliat-
ed, ogled or assumed to
bt• an easy pickup."
The ladies bar, Mrs.
Ric h a rdso n admits,
doesn't m a ke money
But she says s he isn't
worried. It is enough
''that I 've provided a
place where r espectable
wome n ca n h ave a
civilized drink without
harassment," she says.
"WHEN I WENT into
that bar in London," she
recalls. "m y reception
was s uc h th at I left
without finis hing m y
drink, a nd J was de·
termined to provide a
pl ace wh..ere women
could drink without fear
of insult."
So with the support of
her accountant hus band,
Mrs. Richa rdson turned
the White Lion's games
room into a female pre·
serve.
AOVt~TISEMENT
Hearth News ...
HYPOGLYCEMIA
l y Dr. Gery eo.twt, D.C.
"But Doctor. 11 I hav~ lo\\ llypoi:lyc·em1a. although I
blood sugar. shouldn't I l>c mpleasant. can be kept under
able to eat all the :.ui;:ar I control with proper diet and I
want?" a good dose of common
This question 1:. often sense_ror dessert .
asked by patients who have.• Wh1!~ the term · · 1ow bl~
just learned that they have s~gar would. se~m _to 10·
hypoglycemia. but arcn·t yet d1catc that .a diet high 10 s~·
REDWOOD CITY
<UPI> -The Hare
Ktlsbna religious group
can continue to hand out religious materials at
San Francisco Interna-
tional Airport, San Mateo
County Superior Court
Judge Melvin Cohn has ~
ruled.
Fifteen m e mbers of the 1 religious group were ar·
r ested by sheriff's de·
puties at the a irport over
a six-week period this
year, leading to a suit meet against the sheriff's
office by the I nterna-
tional Society Krishna
C~iousness, Inc .
Judge Cohn ruled the
a irport was public pro-
perty a nd therefore a
public forum in or on
which persons may hand
out literature .
The judge added that
the airport could require
licensing for s uch ac·
livities, but first would be
required to spell out re-
gulations for such licens·
ing.
TORONTO <UP() -U
heiresa·turned .
revolutionary Patricia
Hearat la biding out tn
Toronto. It appears certain
that it's costing h er a
healthy chunk of money to
remain underground.
Canadian and American
radicals in Toronto agree
that the terrorist Sym-
bionese Liberation Army,
whose bloodstained
philosophy Miss Hearst
now preaches, has little
support here.
.. SO SHE WOULD have
to buy her way under-
ground -and pay heavily
ror the privilege," said a
member of the city's large
coun~r-culture group.
"With a ll the beat that
chick generates there is no
way anybody is going to
take he r in and risk a stiff
rap for doing so unless
they're getting well paid
for it," he said. "Then
others would h ave to be
paid for thejr silence.
·'As for the SLA itself, or
what's left of it, it's never
seemed more than a gang
of cutthroats operating un-
der a phony front of social
justice for all.,.
IN TORONTO?
Fugitive Hearst
SPECULATION that the
fugitive heiress might be in
Toronto surfaced last week
when her sister. Anne
Hearst, 19, was arrested at
the Niagara Falls. N. Y.,
border cross ing when re-
entering lhe United States
from Canada.
She was charged with
p ossession o f am -
Save 40% to 45% on no-iron
percale sheets from Wamsutta
3 • 99 Twin Aat or fined. Originally 7.50
Wamsutca shows res green thumb culcivating Bachelor
Buccons on crisp wh1re ground.Available in blue, yel-
low 180 thread count polyester and cotton. Ultracale®.
Twin, flat, frd . Orig. 7 50. 3.99 Dbl flat, fed. Orig. S9 .. 4.99
Qn. flt., f rd. Orig. 13 50. 7. 99 }(jog, flat, frd. 16.50 ... 9.89
Save 30% to 35% on Bachelor Buttons cases.
Std. cases, pr Orig. $6 3:98 King C2.SCS, pr. Orig. S7, 4.49
Bedroom Accessories
awarcorit-;full ar content 1s needed. such 1s
implications not .the case. The idea is to As much a!> J maintain a healthy blood sug·
wou Id like t o ar IC'vcl, n!'t try lo "c.atch up"
tell them yes. with insulin produ_ct1on. C'.ln·
the answt>r is dy and fruits with a high
n 0 . T 0 u n . natural sugar content ma~ be
dcrstand why an excellent source of q~ck
this ii; ~o. wt> encri:y for peop le with
m ust look at normal sugar levels . butthcy
j u s t w h a t can be the _do~n~all of the
Dr.Chry hypoglycemia hypoglycemia v1otim. 1----------------------------r c:o.tw..D.C. is. T w o f o. r m s o r
Basically, it is an over· hyp~g l yce m1.a are r e·
secretion of insulin by the c~nazed, org~nac and fun_c·
pancreas. This surplus in· l1onal. W~de o r ganic
sulin means that people wit h hypo~lyce!'11a may r~sulf
hypoglycemia convert their fro'!1 inf~ct1on, the functional
rood to energy much more vane~y 1s most oftt:n caused
quickly than normal. by a d1sorderofthe hver, pan· . creasand /or adrenalglands. For this reason. frequent Nature intend£<l for your
feedings are necessary. 'l_'he glands to function porperly, ~let should gcne~ally be high but they must have a normal
an ra~ and protein <slow CO!'· now or nerve impulses to do version to energy l and low tn so. While all branches of lhe car~ohydrates (fast ~on· healing arts recognize that
vets1on to energy). ObVlOUS· the nerves pass down the
ly, a diet ~lgh in sugar con• spinal column and emerge tent would JU St ~om pound the _through nerve openings in the
problem by being convert~ vertebrae Chiropractic is
to1lucoseand "burned up" 10 the only b~a'nch whose main r-iftt form or energy even more concern is with the proper I rapidly. maintenance or the rela·
I Hypoglycemia can make tionship. .
its presence fell in many If yo u s uffer from
forms. hypoglycemia, il is qu.ite
I An attack generally occurs possible that you have a
nrter the victim has gone spinal subluxalion (mis·
I without food for several ~Ugnment of the vertebrae)
houri. At first he may appear ~hich is interfering with the to be intoxicated, as a slur· Oowofnerveimpulsestoyaur
tlnl or speech and 1enenl pancreas, ll'Per, or adrenal I disorientation are likely to glands. An txaminatlon by I occur. Emotional instability your Doctor or Chiropractic
I may also a,. indicative or can determh1e tr :1uch ls the
1 1'Jpoclycemia. case. ThJ"OUab bu care and I Other symptoms. while not reatment, the su~uxauon t ., apparent to the casual ob-can be corrected and the
1 .. MrVet, are just u dlscom· roperflowofnerveimpulses I .. btinitothe victim. Swur· to the aHec\ed organ
1
1 lng r« no apparent ttason, r•lored.
nambo • hun1er, tttmbl· Proper diet and Chiroprac·
·inf. fallsue, headoche and tic .are your best ~erenses
1 diulneu are common warn· 11amsthy1>91lycem1a!
SANTA ANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Martex Toile Country quilted
bedspread now at 50% savings
19 • 99 Twio. Originally S40
The ble nd of luxurio~s quilting with the ease o f
machine washability make this both beautiful and
pracdal. For ligbcwtight warmth, Dacro n® polyester/
cocron, puffed with poJyfill. Red, green, blue, brown.
Twin. Orig. $40 •.. 19.99 Queen. Orig. $60 .. 29.99
Double. Orig. $50, U.99 King. Orig. $75 .•• 36.99
Bedroom Accessories
phetamines and ordered to
appear at a pre Ii minary
hearing March 19. Donuld
Moffett, 21, who works at
the private Denver college
Miss Hearst attends, also
was charged.
The FBI indicated its in
terrogation of Anne Hearst
failed to turn up any in·
formation on Patty, who is
on the bureau's 10 most·
wanted list in connection
with the armed robbery or
a San Fr ancisco bank.
WWLE THE possib1ht)
or Patty Hearst living un-
derground in Toronto
buzzed through this city'!>
bars· and coffee houses, one
U.S. exile said he doubts
she's in the city.
Jack Colhoun, a 30-year·
old Philadelphia-born 1J S.
military deserter, dts·
counts the idea that Mbs
Hearst is plugged into. the
community of thousands of
American exiles hving
here.
"If she is in Canada at
all, she's more likely to be
in British Columbia than
Ontario." s aid Colhoun ,
who works with Amex-
Canada, the exiles' main
organization in Canada
( /\£11S'4 '4L~ 1s .J
.. THE YOUTH cult b
more pronounced out west.
There, they have com-
munes in the British
Columbia interior aod oo
the offshore islands where
a person could Jive out and
never be hassled."
Colhoun added: ''I know
one thing -if police here
ever get to know of PaUy
Hearst's location in Toron·
to, they'll hand her back to
the U.S. government quick
as a flash."
Nearly four years ago,
anoth er U.S. radical ,
Karleton Armstrong, who
was wanted in a fatal cam -
pus bombing in Madison.
Wis., tried lo lose himself
in Toronto. Armstrong,
now 28, changed his ap-
pearance. used a phony
name and took a job as a
machinist at local ·tool
plant.
FOR S01'1 E months he
got away with it. Then the
Royal Canadia n Mounted
Police nailed him. He is
now in a U.S. prison serv-
ing 23 years for murder
and other charges.
1
Fine Savings o n Fieldcrest
Royal Velvet irregular towels
3 • 99 Royal Velvet Bach. If perfecc SS
Splash some color into your bath. Dobby bordered
solid cotton cerry classic, from Fieldcresc. In peach.
blue, yellow, ""hire, sable, moss green.
Royal Velvet bach. Jf perfecc $8 .......... 3.99
Royal Velvet hand. If perfect $ f ......•... 2. 79
Royal Velver washcloth. If perfect 1.80 ...... 99¢
Royal Velvec bach sheer. If perfect 12.50 .... 6.99
Bath Shop
lA&• or an lmpendln1 attl<'k. Or. Cary Couture1 D.C .• I JnmorucverecH ,thevic· malntalns Chiropracde oolL~--------~~----...... ~----'"".""---~~--:-----------------------------.... -------
1
tJm may IUfrC!r from CM· ficc a\ 20d Weatcliff °'1~~ Shop MDNh1 through FrnJ.ay, IO.OO a.m. to 9.3o p..m. I Bullodt's ~til Ana, 1 FtShion Square, 2800 N. Mains~ Santa Ana, Phooe S47-nll
'IUlllona or 10 Into • C(lt'M. SUile 10'1, Newport Bead!.: Satu rday, 10:00 1.m. to 6:00 p.m. ft •. 11-S-• ~-· h ,.._ Pl Sao n:-p 8 . ..J r~ M . m...--H6-061 l Fortunately. th ... latte in· Tt1ephooe6'5-5300. s..._ South CUUl Plau,Sunday, 12:00 noon co S:OO p.m. ll!UIJUIO&S ,.;JU\I( "-U"tJSt au. --ov rccway at rts.vo, ~ta esa., l"U\,J1K ,,,, t ll~MtUrerelatlvtly rare. (c)ARSlt1• '""l' l r.---~--~~--~~~~~~~~~~-1 I
I I ,
Monax: March 10,1 175
PAULINE WALPINE IS PATIENT CARE COOROINATOR AT HOSPITAL
Model Shows Services. Including Meals on Wheels Program
Work Co111pleted
Hospital Expanded
Coinpletion of m;.ijor portions of a
multi -million do llar expansion pru-
gran1 at South Coast Com munil\'
llospital provides tlL'\V and in crease(!
St'r\'iCl'S.
Dr><llcation of the South La:.:una
hu:>p!Ld fa cllit zl's is .SC'hcdulcd dUring
:'\attunal llospital \\"eek , ~l ay Jl -17.
TllE !\OSPROFJT eommu11itv
hosp1t;1l h<is been l'Xp:.indcd lo 268
beds of \\hich 230 ar(' in opc rution.
'fhl· h os pit al h ;:1s cx punded its
pc·dtatrt<' b{'d <.'Omplcment. private
roon1 facilities, the r:.1diology depart-
ment a nd en1c·rgt•ncr room facillties.
In ;1<ld1tion . it ('On structcd a
n1l'1hc:.1I uffil·C buildinj?. Expansion
con1pll·l1on ;1w ;.i 1ts fini sh Or .. 11
l'st1m;1tl0d S!i0.000 landscaped purking
:.irl';i in front of th e ho~pit~I.
·rh L' n1:.11n hospital expansion cost S7
millto11 : S! ::! million w:.i s spent on
cquipn1i:nt : Sl .5 million for lht·
medi l'•il uff1C'L' btuldin~: and $750,000
for ;1 rnultil(>\'c ! µ:.irkin g s1ructurt·
bl·hind lhl.' hospit al.
facilities in clude a nuclear medicine
division. ult ra -sound division. and oi
xero·ro1diography unit for e;irly detec -
tion of breast cancer.1'hehospital has
;..1 cobalt therapy d i\'ision for canc('r
treatment.
The hos pit :.d has n101:e than 500
n1embl'fS of the ;1uxiliury ;1cting ;1s
\'olunteers. Auxiliary projects inclu dl'
u resoci;;ilization program for stroke
_,·ictims, meals on v.·heels. :on activity
center, trans portation sel'vi<·c and
prenatal inst ruction for natural
childbirth.
The hospital administration invil('d
residents to visit the institution lo
\·i ev.· the n e\~· facilities.
HIP HIPPO
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5878 wi>;Lt:,, It, cu 11 11,1111 cc tl1c Of>CniuM
COMPUTER
TIME SHARING
• l<o•~' .;i•, low •.J. )) l)J • •
• t lo f.\,~nthly f.\,.wnJrt•
• T Jo In''"'',,,., (ha.q<'
•(4r\. Q.,., 10,.,.. v,.
• • r '" t ' .• ~ ., .• " I·' ,,
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•o,. . .,~,, .. ;nQ(
For htfor-fi0tt;
Catl/7141546-096 1
HOllS ASSOCIATES, IHC.
of l,i,. offi ce f<.ir
(jcncr.:i I P racl it:c
. "
25!);~ l::.11>ilJ>luff Uriv1-, Suite I 0'1.
Nc ... -1><Jrt l3c.n.:L, C •• liL,r11i., 92660
(ii 1) f>llJ-6iRll
ILL PBDUD DINIBS
DF PUlllllD DDIS
To enter Orange County's finest dog show ...
Hundreds of dollars in prizes will be awarded ...
Call 835-0311 now for more information.
l SANTA ANA FASHION SQUARE ~ Sant• An•/Garden Grove FWY$ It Main
FASHION
SQUARE
J ....
SATURDAY, MARCH 15th
Price.· fixing
Buye~s ·Might
Rake In Chips
By Tbe Alsocla&ed PrHS
Consumers who pbrchaaed p6tllto, corn 3nd
tortilla chips in the late 19605 m1y be ell&ible for re-
bates lotallng $2.27 mil.lion in a pri.ce-Cixin& case.
The proposed rebates are suttject to court ap·
prov al ln May or u setUement in the case, said at-
torney J ack Corinblitt in announcina: the rebates.
lie filed a class action suit in 1970 on bthalf of
consumers in California, A,rlzona end Neviida
against major sn ack food manufacturers.
ANNOVNCEMENT OF THE REBATE \\'US
contained in , advertlsemenls placed in major
newspapers throughout California by the clerk of
the U.S. District Court for the Central District or
California.
It contained a form to be filled out by the ;l pJJli ·
cant for a rebate, which is limited lo n total of SJ5
per consun1er household.1'he fo1·m must be mailed
by April 21, Corinblitt said. No proof of purchase• is
1·cquircd but a false statement is subjeL·l to perjur)
penalty . '
"fhe chips must ha\•e been purchased bet"'ecn
Jan. I . 1967 , and Dec. 31 , 1970. inCaliforniu. Arizona
or Nevada.
TJlt: $2.27 MILLION 1\l~LOl'TED fur con·
.su m crs is a part or a S6 1nillion over-ti ll settlen1 cnt
agreed to by opposing parties to lhc suit.
Others to rceei ve rebates if the seltlc n1 ent is ;.ip-
proved by U.S. Di strict Judge Manuel Il.ea l ill a·
hearing May 19 are retail groet·rs. $2.27 million ;
eating und drinking cstahli shmcnts, S699,000 ; Ii·
quor stores , $583,000, and public entities, $170,000.
DEF.ENDANTS IN THE SU IT WERf: Laura
Scudder. Inc.; Pet, Inc .: fo~rito·lay, Inc .; J>epsico.
Inc.: Granny Goost.' Foods. Inc.: Bell Brand Foods,
Inc.; Sunshine Bi!;cuit. Inc.; B.ll.F . Liquidating.
Inc.: Eggo Foods Products. In c.: Fearn Interna-
tional, In c .. o.1nd Clover Club f oods. Inc: _,
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
JTAT•M•NTO•AaANDOMMl:NT llMf.Mlllflt,llT.,..,C.U .... !114 .. o•u••o• O•nl•J .,,.,., ll•trtlt, tJ1t1
•ICTITIOUlal,lllN•llNAMS Meck.,.1k,llT-.C.tl!orftl•taxl
'TM. fol!Owlflf ,_,_, ,..,,. ...,._ Thh bOtlllftl w•1 COftdu(I .. oy •
lllil11M .. 1"4flcll'loln-: ""'ralptrlt141,UllO, '
aAllflllT 11101. WOOO ANO . _ JotrOlJlfrr,n
MOf-1.: $Tlll•l"l,.G, M2 •• 5UwtM, T'Jlh U•MmtM w•1 If~ -· '"' Sr.lltit •l,l.9flll~(.A11 .... n.lftfJ01 IJ CJ.9;k -1 Or• .... Ctvn!Y ..
Thi l"\ctlt'°"' lh .. 11111 N-.. '' IJ. Utl. * .............. "''' flied Ill Or1119t l'JDl1 ~,.,.a.,u 11, 1t1•. P\IOU~ Or~ Cot11t o.u, ~IOl.
J•T 0~1m1nd ll•frlll, ISlll F9D.ll,2•,.,._.~,,,,\.,lt1f JOf-1\
TWO POTATO COMPANY
BOUGHT AN 8,000 SQUARE FOOT INDUSTRIAL CONDOMINIUM.
THEY MANUFACTURE CLOTHES.
LELAND HOUSE,.. M.D. BOUGHT
A 6400 .-:iQ. FOOT
INDUSTRIAL CONDOMINIUM.
HE STORES HIS ANTIQUE CARS IN' IT.
RICHARD BROOKS AND ASSOC.
BOUGHT AN 8,000 SQ. FOOT
INDUS1RIAL CONDOMINIUM.
THEY'RE AN ARCHITECTURAL FIRM.
Whatever your needs, 10°/o down buys a 4,000-8.000 square
foot industrial condominium In the nation's largest, fastest·
growing master-planned industrial complex. Near Orange
Co unty Airporl and the intersection of the San Diego and
Newport Freeways. Hurry, lhis offer is limited.
Visit our sales office or call Dan Curlis at (714) 979-9205
or (213) 680-9415.
KOU.llRVINE CENTER
3t90A AIRPORT LOOP DR., COSTA MESA. CA 92626
IRVINE INDUSTRIALCOMPLEX
In June, you'll be glad you
joined the Health Club in March.
•
That's hindsighL
You can't shed that winter weight as easily
as those heavy clothes. But the sooner you.
start. the sooner you'll be able to look back
on improveinent.
So start today. Stop by-or call-and ask
our trained professionals about our five
different programs. Whether you choose our
$10 Plan or a Regular Membership-available
at low cost. lower on your first visit-we have
the steam , sauna, diet plans and body-shaping
exercise programs it takes to trim down and
shape up for summer. We even have sunroo ms
to give you a head-start on the sun, and
aerobic exerci~e circuit-fraining to give you a
headstart on the fun.
So don't wait. Changing the shape of your
body can change the shape of your life.
And the shape of aummer' •t•rt• tod•y.
Buena Park
510 Soutti Beacl'I Boule<Jard
Soutti of Lincoln A<Jenue
826-0381
Costa M•••
2300 Harbor Boulev,11d
Ha,bor Center
549-3368
•...clno
17031 Ven1ura Boulevard
West ol Balboa
966-6330
Huntln9ton •••oh
18585 Main Stree1
Mein SI. at Beacti Blvd
8-42-1451
Lont•••ch
.(101 Allantic BouleYard
Corner of Carson
426-887-4
Oran1•
622 Easl Katelle Avenue
West ot Tustin AYe.
639-2441
W.atmlrn.ter
6757 Westminster Avenue
Westminster Center
894-3387
Holiday Spa Health Clubs
For Men And Women
We suggest you try our apeclal Introductory 2 week• program
for only $10. •Maximum. 14 vi sits
' ',1
HOI
-Lai
actor horr,
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HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
-l.al'l'1 Vlach&, 50, aa .ctor bett known u the
horror movtea boat
Seymour. dled Saturday ol cancer at St. Joseph'• Ho1pit~l ln Burbank.
Vincent s 30.yeat' act.lb&
career cb1n1ed f orma in
1971 when he develOl*f
the character Seyn>out
a bolt Jor tolevislon hor:
ror movies 1arbed in a
black tuxedo, wide·
!Jrimmed hat and flow.
mi cape.
~uld merge the air pollution UR·
~ in each county into a 1ln1le
district known aa the Southern
California Air. PolltlUon Diatrlct..
BATTIN SAID THE central
agency would have all the
powers and duties of •county air
pollution control dlstrlct.
It would be governed by a
board comprised of two
supervisors from LOI Angeles
ORANGE COUNTY
County and one each from the
other Cive. S • Suup
.., .. ,.. ,...._,, u BaUin said voting would also ierra
............
01/flflrrllqfe
=-~~~=:=d"~ be weighted with the LA ::=.-= v1....,. M<ooe.t and representatives splitting three a.6 11 J-.
o.c-.S1-'1e,Lu1eu1tct0or1sA. votes, two for Orange County and 1rieet lleS~y· =Ir&. Olritune Loh ~o °"'"Y one for each of the others.
SANTA ANA -Two men, one of them a Cal
State FuUerton football player, have received jail
terms for the burglary last Oct. 29 of an Anaheim
modelina studio.
<?range County Superior Court Judge Everett
W. Dickey ordered a six· month county jail tenn and
three years probation ror senior tailback Charles
Wayne Kyles, 22, Fullerton, who pleaded gullty i,o
reduced charges or second degree burglary
Co·d~fendant Carl Eugene Johnson, 2S .
Fullerton, drew a one-year jail term and three
re~ probation after offering the same plea to
tdenllcal charges.
Police said both me11 were in the act or burgling
a modeling ~tudio on Lincoln Avenue when they
were caught tn the act by an employe. Officers cap·
lured them after they unsuccessfully tried to com·
mandecr a car driven by ~passing motorist.
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
CLIFFSIDE PARK
N.H. <AP) -lotepll ~
m1er, 82, a magician
and meatallat for about
six ,:lecadea, died Sunday
after a lone Ulness. A
1001-Ume associate of the
late Harry Houdini, Dun-
nlnger was elected to
Hollywood's Magical
Hall of Fame Saturday.
Rk,..nMll, wrn1•m N. •ltd 0e11or.ii '~HE SOUTH Coast Air Basin SANTA ANA -A swap meet a~ C illtak U..M199,N1NlldaMC.,.,sl...u oordinating Council or which I w e place when the Sierra, KE~~!'· COft1~ ''aft"" Htchotu ano S1nM ''THE BILL HAS been rein· am vice ·Cb a 1• cm an,' 1· nit a· ated .Club meets at 7 : 30 p.m. Tuesday NOTic• Toc••o•Ton u. ,,._. °' ~,,.u 01 •hi~ ..,,.be" SU .. EalOllCOUaTOf'TMI! lflaltmlttffspert.1ftingtottw~ot ~ •• Marla R. and Femllndll troduced this year and Gov. Ed-negotiations ror a unlfled·dislrict in the Saddleback High School ' STATEOf'CALlf'OAHIA~• wodo.<adeftl,•11t\lftf_.-N_Rf' " mund G Brown Jr has alre d as a lt t ' 'ti ti Fo· .. "m THE COUNTY Of' o•ANGE 11• II•\• pubh<•''°" 01 thl~ nae.a.
l'oa,00""1•L 4"WIC11ar1esE. • · a Y n a erna 1ve to unt aca on ~ .. · · .... ,..a"s o.i.01N«l1•.1tis
""4, O\arta1ne s. ane1c11ariesA. indicated he will sign it.'' on terms dictated by the state," Members and guests can bring ' ht•eo• JOHN G10N1s. oecns.o. icArHv x1L1KA1os Honea. K,uneJ •alld Carp Pyo The pact between Ora Lo B tt' 'd any 0 u· th . h 11 NOTICE IS HEREBY GI YEH to lht Admlnl•lr•tr•• ~ ·-r-•~-
HAJ)DONFIELD, N.J.
<AP> -Former New
Jersey Gov. Alfred E.
Driscoll, 72, died Satur-Hlll, Lynda Sw •nd Rotiert H. nge, s a tn sa1 . u ng gear ey W1S to se I credlton. of,,. •bOve ,..,.,.d ~ °' tnubove ,..,;;o~
Sm1111,enor1v e. 111os1.,..1.-,o. Ange 1 e s , Riverside . Sa n "This agreement, worked out or trade. Also on the a-...ta is a · 1t1a1111.-_.,, h•v1r111 c1a1ms<tQei..~1 a.uLno••••TY
Mallus, Sharr It O.an •nd Jeffrey Jay Be di S t B b b h · ~uu the w o .-ode t 1 1 --=---=-~~----LN<ll, G. Wllllarn and 8oMIO BH mar no. an 8 ar ara and y supervisors representing the s 0 w Ing 0 r the (i l m' .. By . • " are requ red lo I,. Al••Y •
1
Lii•
S
I ..... v c . I them,"""' Ille MCHWry voud•"· '" "'••Ue...-teeatltSlreet DeatJa-Noti~ ~~·r;::LJ:0·.':!~'~~i.~~10 entura ounttes, must still be southern California counties, in· Nature's Rule." . . 111eowc.e o1111e cltrk o1111e aoow.,.. s....uAN,caiite,.1•91, .. _.;;;.....;;_;.;;..;~M~ ... :=.1~ .... ~:.:.::..==--LAe formally ratified by each board. sures a untried district that The school is located at South t1i1ac1c-t,ortoprown1t11em,.i111111e T.......,.: 1110 MJ·~"
.,.. .... NustlHl.OoM•anob.rylL. The agreement wh1'ch Id' n t b i Fl St t d Se MC•~ary YOuc:llers.10 111euno.119Md ·~ylerA..-"41tr.tri• SUSAN K. MOSICH, belo•td z1inmermaft, Aoia Ann and Henrv • wou re ec s t e nterests and con· ower ree an gerstrom 1 a1 <1o CHAAt..Es GARlllTV, AttotrMty """''""o ora~ eoast o.11y "''°'
dauellter of Josopll F. end Ell• Fredorlo 0 into errect July 1 of this year cerns oflbe people'it serves... Avenue, Santa Ana: •• lA•, •
11 West s. ... htMnlll Str•I, Mlrcll 10, 17,?C,31, ms lt .. 7S Mllllt1t;~11erofJosapll,Jr .... Me11nir.-.;.;;;.;.;..;..;.. ___________ ,,2.;:....::::.:::...=.::..:.:::.=..:.-=..:::.:.:::.....:.~~.:.:.:=.~~~~:.:..::.:::..:~~~~~~~~~.:._---:.:.:.:::::::.:.:;::.:.::::_::~:.__-------J!is..>~u~At1~•~·~~~·11~0,~n~1·~n~1~~.~"""~<~h~h~·:.:.:.:::.~_::::,:.:.::___~~
o4 latboa Island, stUOlnt et UCI Pasted -Y Frida,, Marcll 7111. mS:
llltled In a iwtwaw plane crall\. MIM
Mnlcll would Ila .. boon tl """ oto '" .-.r11 and would lln• •ntorod Hlrvwo Law S<Mol Ill June. Serwkft an iwl•ale. lnlerment, For.st L.-.
C:.rneter,. Tiie fatnll' r~ "'° , fi-n C*a ... Gcleelgfll our ONrftl Suly. ..,..et•• DANIEL B ... ARK ER, roSkllnt ot
Cost. Mesa. O.lo of ci.111 Ma~ll Mtl
1'.7S at Ille -of '4. SIH'YIW'Od by Ills wife Harr loll, daugtiter, Oeboratll
FllWt'left of Kalemaroo MIO\ioM· son. Peter Parker of Tusu,., ea.'; """ or~s. la Hou of flowtrs
contrlt>utlons ""' bo 1naoe to u. HHr1Fund.
HAMILTON •
MELVIN RICHARD HAMIL.TOH
O•I• ., dHlll Merell ltll, 1~1S: Servlcn wlll bo held In PaMlllSM O· tr. OlllallOma. OHOay 8rolllers
Mortuary,17'U BH<ll 8f'td., Hun\· ..nuton Be.ch, ca. M t-1111.
HUDDLHTON
DONALD HUDDLESTON, resident
CJf NewPOfl lleacll, Ca. Dalo of death Mll~ll ttll, 1915. Memorial wrvkos wflt bo llold l :OO PM Tuoday, St. Art-orwws Presbytarlal\ Cllurcll. Entomt>-rnem, Pacific View Memort11 ,..,.
Newport -•a<ll, Peclllc View Mortuary d1'ectors.
MALL
JAMES W. HALL. rosldonl of Yue· ca van.,, ca. Sur•IYOd by 11;, wife,
Audrey M. Hell; "''" M>ns. Rl<Nrd E. Hall °' Spokane, WHll., J-W. Hell, Jr. of Mlulon Viejo and.Jenn
R. Hall °' Gres/lam, Oregon; nl11t ~andclllldron. Rotary and Mau Mono.., 7:30 PM al SI. Klltaft's' C.tho41c Olurcll In Minion Viejo, Ce.I
lntOf'mont, Hol., Cron C:.molary, I.AK'
Aftgelu, Ca. McCormick LA9UNll 8ta<ll Mortuary Olrocton.
YOUMANS I
EDITH A. YOUMANS. Oai.t of 0.-•lll N\lrcllltll, lt1Slft Newport Bea<ll, C•. Ruldeftl of Cott• Mow. Ca.
Suf'Ytwoel by -sl,lor, Mrs. Heleftl Gr•4:" of Coill Mesa. Memorlal urw1<os wtll lie lleld Wed,..141,, Merell 12111 •t 1 I :00 AM, First
• Meltlodl~ Cllurcll, COsta Mesa.. Olfl· c1anl wlll llO Or. Earl Osabollo. Inter·
mint will bo iwlnta. Ball l!lro.iw.y
Mrwt1111ry dire< Ion. , VAND•aWAAL KRISTY \IANOEltWAAL. Oete of
dHtll Marcll tt11, 1'7S In C:O.ta MB•.· AoslOenl of eosia Mew, ca. s..n.1..ci·
b' her molller, Mrs. Robert Row «1
Simi Valley. Ca; lllrH brotlle"
Mlctlnl VandorwHI Of Burbank Ca..'1
8111 Row of Simi Val .. ., and 'Joflft
Row ot 51ml Velln; Of•"""""~ Nettle venoenwHt of Hillmer, g.;
Qf'aftdplrenu, Mr. ' Mrs. George El·
Its of Morro Bey, Ce. Gr•••sldo'
iarvtces Tuesda' 1 :00 PM. Fall'Nwen Memorl•I P•rk and memorial wrvlcn Tuescl•Y t :OO AM, Souttwrn
C.llfomla Colle99 Chapel. OfflclMlt
wlll bo Gayi. E,...ln. Bell &roadway MortuM, di roe Ion. OeWOLl'a
EDNA L. O.WOLFE. D•loofdNtll
Merell 1111. 1t7S '" Costa Mew. Rosi· -.t ot Costa Mllsa, ca. SurYIWd b'f'
lie!' daughters, Mrs. Getty Bee<twr Of· Cost.e Mllsa Mid MaurlM O.Wblle of.
El Toro, Ca . S.rvl<H •Ill be held
Tuesday 3:00 PM, W1YOri., Olut<h, Felma~ Memortal Pork wllll Ao•.
Biii Ac'°" olflc I• nt. 8o II Broactwa.,
MortUMy Olrocton.
coo .. •• MARIE ELIZABETH COOPER.
Starting . . h lQthwe'll be
open m 8:30 a1n to 4:3opm.
O.to Of dHUI Merell 1111, 1'JS ac the ~ of 7S, resident of HU11lif194on
Bea<ll, C.... Sur•I~ by -OaUllflter. C etller ln e we,ant ; II••
9raftdclllldron and four 111•••1· 11rand<lllldren. W•lces •Ill be held'
TUHdly 2:00 PM, SlnllM' Morn-, I llNIMI
Qlapel. Interment will be ptlveto at' .... ~.
Pacific VI•• Memo rl•I P•rll, NewPOfl Bea<ll. Smltlls' MortUM'
•re<ICM'S.
IALTI·llRGllOH
FUHlULHOME
Coono dcl Mor b7).q450
(o\10 Meso Mb·2424
'llUHOADWAY
MOITUAIY
110 &oodwoy. Co\lo MeloO
b-i2·q' 50
McCOIMICK
MOITUAIY
Loquno Be()(h
.. ~.q4f!>
Son Juon Copostrono
49S-117b
PACIFM: YllW
MIMORIAL PAH
Cemetery Morlvay
Chapel
3500 Pocilic: v-Drive
Newport Beach. Coliforflio
i>-i4-2700
SMfTHS' MORTU.HY
627 Main St. ~S.oc:h
Sl6~Sl9
PVILICNO'l1CE
,.
Crocker proudly announces the beginning
of the end of"Bankers' Hours~
For years. bank, have been run just one way,
the bank's ,way. Ahd, they didn't seem tQ be
changing, until now.
. Starting Mar~h
}
8:30 a.m. until 4:30 in the afternoon. And on
Fridays until. 6.
It's one of the things you've been wanting.
And just one of the ways we"re changing to fit
yourn~
There's a lot more to cor.ne. More answers
.. ,
' to those banking problems that bother you most.
So stop in at Crotker, before or after hours,
and tty banking your way for a change.
~'s hours.Not bankers' hours.
Ctockersd,:mnging banking_
•
•• I
•
CapJut•ed
ByUCI
ee Nears
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Don it just sit ·
there on your
. ....
Small fortune •••
LoOk around your house· and 9arGCJe and you'll probably discover yoli have a
mountain of oldies but 9oodies you could sell., Move that mountain.
CaH a friendly ad-visor at the Daily Pilot. Use the direct line.
1housands of ready-to-buy ad readen ate 11shoppinc] the ads in the Daily Pilot
every day. Many are eclC]er to buy iust what you have to sell.
.
.. Adv~se in the Orange Coast Newspaper with ?<~ @ililj
•r • t •
'
l
I
l ;,431.1J"'IL!DAll:=!!:.• Y!.!:Pll.~O:.!T ______ ~..::Monc!!)'::::=z,.;• M="'=•h"""10,..~117$~ •
·lV Hig~~ghts ·.
NBC (4) 8:00 -''Tiie Cabtervlle
Ghost." David Niven pl.,s tile ttUe role
In lbia television reD)ake of tbe venerable
comedy on the Bell System Family· .
Theater. .
ABC (7) 8:00 -An Evening With
John Denver. Danny Kaye and Jacques
COusteau join the popular singer on his
thirds cial.
TV ·, DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
MA11CH ID
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
9 (C) "Diii II lllt J1tc1t9 ( .. )
'54 -D1J11 AnllrllWS, O.,.W Farrar.
Z:lO (i} (C) "lecUr" Pait I (dr1) '64
-Rich.rd 8Yr!Oll, P•lef O'Toolt.
~@ "Ille Dal'' .. ~
Jl:Oll @ "llllll If 111t T.......,. (dfl) (roniJ ·~ -G"!'• ford, likril
'60 -AllA lllld, Ju~nt Crain. DtHn1~. JI~ llif:ll. m (C) .......... .....,... (tdw) 3•00 0 (C) "'tallltf .. HaWt" (dn)
'47 -Rod Cameron. M11l1 lllonlll. • '69 _ [l'tis Prntey, MllJ lJler
il:llD 0 (C) "lllll W-• WM C..i Moore B1rblf1 McH1ir. m .. 1t1e ,., .. (111spJ ''4-i>."" . ®l cci -nie s..M " Meer" cm>
Addams. frlf\C.O Silvi. .. 'li8 _ Guy stodlwell, 81111 lws.. 11 :JOQ)"11b ' ,, lllth It ,.... ~tom) ·~ -M11jofie Main. ' J!)O []) (C) •A 11111 C..W Cit ...,..
IZ:llO Q) "M IN TN•( ..... (dB) '60 ~J '66 -laMS S.1111r.
-Man Ladd, Sidllt'f Ptilitr. R CCI ....... ._ .. C..-ff
J:OOO"'llH ,,.. Clirl" (""') ·s.c-t1iii brr CMd.. CICl·fil '61)....f•
CIOflC Ritt, ""11& Clfll CMa 8oonr, JaMa Ilk-. ~ llllll.
KOCE Television
11·1• S<"••• D1llflCI Nt .,1 CCJ
IKOCE 1
12:118ill -•tr•' "-"<n•I !Cl CP8!>) l:IDl11si1M IO..I IC I
1:t JlllWU11'.ou.,., IC!
1: .. ti-NDttw (Cl
!:ltE1MlritC.m ... 11y ICI ICTWI
!:•TtKIM"' C"Udrt11 It ltt.M CCI >:•uwt ... rri..11'1 CCI l:•"'-"' ... f.11 ............. , ,,,
4:llOCW.111'C.1j-CCI !PT!..1
4:-~lKlritC-N•Y lCI tCT\11111 J'OOS.U-5trttl (Cl IC TWI •:•Uwtwtlte1f'I (()
.,.Y ... WllllMaWH .. CCI llCOCEI J:•w-.. 1c1 IPBSI
J :H l'otot : Ot'.1•9t CooMr ICI IK,OC.E I
l:M~~11111 1..-.. tts ICI (PBSJ t :•GnMDIPt ...... lfCI
,_:MAdYMCI .. 0.11U$1ry IC I
8:30
TOlllGHT
•
Bootleg Signs Pl!igue City ,
•
Durin1 the ProhlblUoo era.· whtle 'the b\igs. are being cemed about the cl\ltttred ap.
bootle11e.n ran rum or other• worked .out, tave plannl!lg ·. pea~nce they li\•e the com·,
alcoholic brew put the mi-stilt authority to approve 10· mun1ty'.
nionaotthelaw. • terimdiiectiooalsigns. Some developers have Jn s,n Clemente today,. Donald B . Anderson , paintedthe sidesoflargevans
bootle11ers are runoinc si&11s thairJ)'lan of · t.~e,_develo1>,ers ~ and left them parked .at
by the Jaw -·uisually s\g~a.· sign committee, presented stratee:lca..,..atolbf"e~·
advertJsina housln1 projects. , artists' dr3wings of permanent live b(lyers to hbusi.ng pro-. · w~en silns which he 1tald the ALL THAT MAY change'µn,. developers would aiccept. Jects. d~r a plan ~lllile1ted by ,the' ANDE.ftSON SAID t~ere is
city's maJori housing de· ~JlE&Ef'JTLY •. bootl.e g $40millionto$SOmUlionwor:tP.· vel~rs and appi"oved recent· ~rdboard signs spring up hke of development in the city and,
ly by the City Council. o.,adstoo ls on weekend 5 that wit~ut adequate signi"41',
'n14 council 1ave infOrmal roughoul town, usually at there is·nowa'yto'getbuyers.
agreement to ,n idea ol a un-; mejor freeway offr1:1mps. . · the properties. ified directional sign program The cardboard signs are ii-• . . .
for all dev~lopments and, legal and the city has been COJl· He said lhe upcom1ng.spnng
period IP.Adltfopally the beat
for bom1ple1. •
Councf1man B. Palrlck
Lane, nor~ally a sharp critic
of si.n Mces11ee, Said he ap-plt~ded the erlort behll made
by the buhdlng trildes.
Anderson proposed that new
signs would combine all the cl·
ty housing projects, and also
give directions to beaches, the
pier, central business district,'
civic center and other points of
interest.
. . ., . ~'{.-. . . It's going to ·be an old-fashioned Qarty with games and pnzes. clowns w1 h
baUons, and pret$y ladies with flowers for; .. u. There -.ylll bejgood foods 'o
sample and lots.of birthday cake too! So come join in our ~hday-your parfy",
and enJoY the festivities. You may get to spin the 'wheel of fOrtune and win a gift certificate, valued from ten to fifty dollar3! '
Pantsuits ..•.•. s J.999
Long Dresses S'J999
Capris . . S899
3424 Ylo Liclo
·673'1'70
for appointments call
673-7850
7-oLM....-
ProtelooZl
Shampoo
•t .6t .... $•••-1r ...
~ . ~ht,.Guard
} ..... ~ .. ................... ct._
' ' s'i'.li' v-s•oa ~t1· :I .
' ;
MARCR-10 THROUGH 17
..
Working
together as a
•
' "
family, the employees of.
Richard's h.ave been proud
'to serve the !!eople of
Newport Beach with our .1b ·
hlQh standards of q~ality,
· value and ~rlllce f9' 27
.. years. We would like to
take this opportunity to
thank you for your support,
and hope that you will join
Newport Blvd;
-· P111nc Co1lt Hwy. tint left him
in our enthusiasm for .a
bright future In the years
.to come. Be$t wishes t~oor
community ..
Incl "U'N rlilltl
I
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•II
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<>I
nl
•1
• " '" •ri
" " outstanding,"
valuea,taltt
participating mereha,na!,
,ttl
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•
r: B1CAROL llOOaB °' .. .,. ............
"Let's see how often we can
use the word •partnenhJ~;' it'a
so beautiful," urged Adela
Rogers St. Johna, celebrated
author and newspaperwoman.
"I can't tell why God made
men and women different but
probably so we can go together.
Why go at lt in a.hostile way?"
Speaking to a Southern
California symposium of the Na·
tional Secretaries Association
<International>, she said that,
women abould not be typecast
nor should they forget their
heritage.
"Time was when the women's
vote was the single most
p<>Werf ul force for good that the
wotld has ever known," she said ..
"I don't see why we have to .
sacrifice the spiritual power and
leadership of women to come
down and do a few jobs we've
never done before!''
As for breast-beating feminists
who decry a feeling,of inferiority,
the 80-yc;ar~young lecturer re·
torted, •\Speak for yourself.
.. I'm tired and be~derecl by
their assumption that my
1eneration spent ita life under a .
rock somewhere. They should
look and see what women have
done forever, over and over
again-. .
"And what do they want to be
liberated from? Ordiriary, de·
cent human obligali~T The
kindliness of partnership? The
thin1s women can do best?" Mn. St. Johns referred to the
heroines of her latest book,
"Some Are Born O..eat" -
Amelia Earhart, Bess Truman
and J•Ci~ Garland -and sought
more ot their ilk who "ac·
compHsh (or humanity, not for
perso~·a1 ta'me or sat.isU,dlon."
She •lso warned that while try·
ing to do new jobs for which they
may not be fit, women are settl·
ing for mediocrity.
"We must stop dragging
ourselves down. Whatever
wotnen demand, there are
enoueb of us, already trained,
don't forget, to accomplish it.
'And what do they want to
be liberated from?
Ordinary,. decent human
obligations? The kindliness
of partnership?'
For example, last week we hid
a silly 4ll1pute about the car.. I put
an end to it by fillina the toes of
her hOUM 1hoe1 with IJ'apejell)r.
When •h• stepped into them I
heard het roar with 11\l#hl«·
"One thin1 the Mafia doesn't wut la the American woman.
She could atop them cold "
Mra. St. Johns suggested that
perhaps women had been too pro.
tecttve in their campaign against
the ilQuatices of child labor
••rd rather see children back at the mills and tooms than buy
ing drugs on their school
groundi.
''Today'& women should set
their sights on narcotics pro-
blems For each teenage drug
addict, there are 22 teenaged
alcoholics'"
As a member of Alcoholics
Anonymous herself, she noted
that these youths all blame their
mothers who "always kept a bot
Ue around the house · ·
.. You can do the story without
getting in there I didn't even
want them to think I would in
vade the dressing room I 'd
rather they take me to lunch."
.She further reinforced her
belief in the beauty and
knowledge of women
"Have you ever really wanted
anything a man could give you
that you couldn't get if you went
about it the right way"
"What do you put on eyelashes
for' And I don't see why you
shouldn't use that advantage"
And Mrs St Johns recalled
William Randolph H~t·s con-
sideration of secretaries as fnost
important people if you want to
fin~ out what happened to whom
and why.
Who rank as famous women lo·
dav'
···we 1hould thank God every
m.lnute for Mar1•cet San••r and
Rachel Canon and tbelr
~tened etroru QD behalf of
aoatrOI and~. ,,
.. Amell• brhart was the ar•at American heroine. She
pve her Uft for her rountry and
lmlw tt. On that last lllOt the
malt b"ave been ~Int to lee how tar &M~ap• ... were oomtna wwa llillr •hips and , ....... .. With all her transconttnelital
nhcbta. she was our aviation
Lindbei'jh ma hll .Olo
lltpQli dropped the ball.
1"11u& I widow. AJine Morrow
lJddbtrlti. la the areateat livloi
Ametiun. Her aucceeaes are
moltly ~ though."
The audience 1u1aested names
but Mn. St Johna wasn't con·
vlnced.
BllUe Jean King. ..SUcb bad manaen.''
Barbra Streisand. "Can't even
spell btr own name "
Isadora Duncan "Very
modem but 1ave ln to drink
ing and gave up the fight "
Connecticut Gov Ella Grasso. ''I'm coin& to New England next
week to see iC my research holds up."
Shirley Temple Black "Doing
the best she can carrying a
childhood image into adult life "
Should a woman be President'
"No' Let her marry the Presi .
dent Every President I 've
known has expressed utmost con·
fidence in his wife's decisions "
Idolizirig FDR whose White
House she covered •tor three
years, Mrs St Johns main
tained .
"The job requires total ntness
Women s hould be honest enough
to admit that by the time we're
old enough to be President. we
have physical disabilities. may
not b& balant:ed entirely to make
decisions at4 a m ··
When asked her opinion of
former Pres ide nt Nixon, she
replied, 'It's loo difficult to dis
cuss now I feel like a mother
whose child has gone astray I
admired him but not what he did ..
A compliment about her clear
thinking and orderly mind pro
mpted the quip. 'I 'm sorry mv
sons aren't here ·
The outspoken grandmother
regretted that some women shun
credit for their eHOIU aL .,e
because the greatest thb\i we
can do is brin1 up children well.
Anecdotes from her many
faceted career documented her
contention that there are some
jobs women just aren't cut out to
do.
She tried to be a G·woman for
the FBI. 1 "But they didn't have enouch
moqey They needed all-purpose
agents and couldn't afford to hire
women for specialized wort. My
aim with a tommy gun left qui.le
a bit to be desired. ...
She was elven the chance to
direct movies.
.. The hours and complexities of
directing hundreds of personS on
location are just too demanding •
Now, maybe women can succeed
ln television where crews are
smaller."
She covered the Lindbergh kid·
naping trial, Roosevelt's third·
term convention and the Duke of
Windsor's wedding among other
famous assignments, but bad no
interest in locker room in·
terviews.
..
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
BEST SOURCE: YOURSELF
By ALLISON DEElla "
Of .. ~ ...... Swt
What it really has to do with is
the personalities or people and
their feelings for each other. she
A torrent of how-to books and said
Uaclilon .\Ye-1a~ ldiias of what ~ .. ~c~jeving emotional intimacy
the .exual relationlhfp sboWd be IS important to the success or a
have produced ,ome unrealistic marriage, Mrs Stone said. There
expe~tations. are several ingredients.
"A good ret.tionship for one "There mus t be acceptance or
couple is not necessarily a good t~e other person at a given
aite for others," said Family ti.me," she said. •
Service Association counselor "That means living with the
Rosanne Stone.. lows as well as the highs," said
~·So many b9oks. so many one participant, "knowing there
sources have to make peopre feel are better times.''
scared and insecure." "It means knowing Ui.,t there's
During a session of FSA's Mar. a point · where you ~)' each
riage Enrichment course, Mrs. other and that you're not always
Stone discussed emotional and going to be there.
physical intimacy. "And, it means letting your
How important a part does sex partner be less than perfect."
play in marriage? CHANGES MADE .
"It's an individual matter. "Some people go mto mar·
Som~ people are fulfilled by ac· riage," added another, "with the
tivitiesotherthansex,"sbesaid. idea that they're going to even·
"The other areas of the mar· tually change the other person .
riage often infiuence the sexual "You can't change other peo-
relatlonship, but not always. In pie. You can only change
some problem marriages, sex is yourself."
the last thing to go." You must be able to trust the
The ability to be emotionally other person, to trust that the
and sexually intimate are often other's reaction won't hurt you,
related she said. Mrs. Stone said.
"Our' culture is hung up on "The little kid in us always is
Madison· Avenue's delineations wailil)g, afraid or the putdown.
ol what the perfect experience Our first reaction is to go on the
sl'iould be. Advertising h11s defensive."
decreed what we have to do to To be emotionally intimate,
have sex appeal. she said, you must be free to
UNREALISTIC share your innerspace with your
"Women are supposed to have partner and be willing to risk
certain measurements.Men have sharing your feelings.
fallen into the same trap. How "lnnerspace is what defin,es
sexy they are is determined by what you are, who you are inside
how much hair they have on their rather than what you're feeling
beads or what aftershave they at a given moment."
use. It mixes up the real and the There must be a lack of
unreal." facades and game playing.
'Our culture is hung up on
Madison Avenue's idea of what
the perfect experience should be
Men have fallen in the same trap.,
"What you 're .communicating
must be congruent with what
you're feeling . "
Coua;tes should be aware of the
partner's individual rhythm,
whether they are low key or
highly energetic and what their
cycle is, Mrs. Stone said. -
People who are emotionally in·
timate should be able to accept a
statement by their spouse as a
statement about the speaker not
the partner.
NO THREAT
"You should be able to reveal
yourself wit bout another
person's judgment deterring
you."
DifCetences should be enjoyed.
"Who wants to be married to
themselves? Wolddn't that be
terribly 'boring ? You can't
change anyone by sheer force of
will. And, you don't have to share
everything.''
Everyone has a right tQ
privacy, to set boundaries.
"You don 't have to have ever-
ything in common. You don't
have to like football on TV
because he does. I love to
backpack and my husband is
completely a city man.
''That doesn't mean I can't go
out with friends and backpack."
Too often, couples get bogged
down by "what the book says.
"It doesn't matter what the
book s ays. What matters is what
works for you," the counselor as·
serted.
"And, you have a 'right to say
•no' once in awhile. There are a
lot of good rea~ons to say 'no.'
Maybe you 're just too darn
tired."
But, she added. it's when you
make a habit of saying "no" that
_problems occur.
The partner may read it as re·
jection and try even harder fo r a
sign or acceptance.
.. Sex can be a power struggle
on either s ide. She can get
headaches a nd he can work late
a( the omce. ··
' One woman expressed a feel·
ing that the counselor noted was
not uncommon.
"I got to the place where l
wanted to go out and get a job
because I felt I was paying for
food and shelter with sex. Just
another kind of prostitute."
This kind or attitude, said Mrs.
Stone, certainly doesn~t help the
marital relationship.
"The key is individuality. Most
of us have to overcome cultural
conditioning. Whal is normal?
Some people are happy without
sex. Relationships are as in·
dividual as people."
Ann Landers
You kook• set 1tf e..donement
ftom me. Soti•d• a It you•re llOt
playlnS wltll a fal deck.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: After
readlna tboae letters from
women wbo produced only girls
and the responses from women witb all boys, I'd like to know
wtMre 1'°" dames have been
t.bei9 la•l five years.
Science has dlacovered a-
tectmlqlie that works about 90
percent of the time. A couple can ·,.a a bOy or a atrl if they follow a
1-~ abnple lnatructlons.
I eu can't aet too ialllelill:l,.lt' column. but it has
tio W.JrD tomltloe of the
fanaJe Cwt.le -m.-kes gtrls> and
• t
tbe alkaline condition <which
makes boys>.
Why don't you tell them about
it? Or -mal'he you are ignorant,
too? -IN THE KNOW
DEAR IN: We are ALL ll·
llOl'aAt -only n dlfterellt sub-
jeda. Oa Ws Hbjed, bowever,
1t•1109. v ... I have beard and read
alMNt U.e acld-alkalH u.ec>ry,
Ud ll .. a crock of crubentes. ~I• M ~leatlftc ~to
... , iii ~ accordlal to my di.It·
.. ...,..... eot1 .. 1&aat, Or. Roy
Gree•• wile laead1 llae
Lalllliorat.er7 of H••M ~
UGe Hi Reprod•etlve IMolo&Y at
Jbnard.
DEAR ANN I.:ANDERS: 1 hope
you won't think my problem ls
too weird to print because I real-
ly need help.
I'm what you call 118 closet·
queen" -a phrase I'm not very
fond of, but that's what lam..
My parents Ii ve in another clt.y.
but my aunts and cousins are
conatantly finding ''W'Oll(:hrful
&irls" for me to take~ These
women bore me silly but 14-'t
wish to appear unaratdw, aor do
I want my family to become ...
picious .
The real problem lS tltat my
boyfriend 1ets very Ullllet WbMa l
date •omen and It's cruttna a
lot~ trouble between ua.
Pleue don't tell me to see a •h!lnk. t ·~ NOT •let. I just Delcl
•• I t
t •
Youth
f Aided -
r
I
I
' Mesa Harbor Club's
' Thursday, March 13.
( ashioo show in the
Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club will
benefit the Youth
Problem Center,
Costa Mesa. Sailing
Into Spring is the
theme of the 10:30
a .m. event, for which
Mrs. Stuart Warrick
... (left) and Mrs. Dale
; ~artung are depart· ~e~ mg.
Horoscope, Capricorn
Ideas Sparkle, Use Them
TUESDAY, MARCii ii
By S YDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 2l·April 19): You may feel
slightly ahead of your time. Key now is to check
with one who directs policy for organization
club, institiute. '
TAURUS <A pril 20-May 20): Don't play games
where emotions enter picture. You tend now to
get inextricably involved.
GEMINI CMay 21-June 20) Versatile ap-
proach aids in achieving goal. You're asked to
--accept'Speciat-responsibilitl' Your timing will be
excellent.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) You reach beyond
current expectations You could catch brass
ring. Means s ky is the limit You're going places
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22> Your emotions, capaci·
ty to love -these are featured You could be
bruised.
VIRGO <Aug. 23:Sept. 22> Diplomacy is your
ally. Don't force issues . Applies especially in
dealing with partner. m ate
LIBRA <Sept. 23-~t. 22> Go slow Pacing is
more impo rta nt than u s ual. Health and
e mployment depend on "delivering the goods."
SCOR PIO <Oc t. 23-Nov. 21): Realize situations
entountcred will not be lukewarm. It is to be hot
or cold. a ll or nothing.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec 21): Finish
rather than begin -complete project, finalize
arrangements Build on solid base
CAPRICORN <Dec 22-Jan 19>· Ideas sparkle
-make use of the m Means be confident enough
to tru~l your own capabilities Cycle is moving
UP
AQUA RIUS (J an 20-Feb 18) Money and how
it got that way 1s a subject likely to occupy your at
tention You gain somemsighl
PISCES <Feb 19-March 20) Lunar cycle 1s
s uch t h at n e \\ projects are encouraged
Ilighhght humor, versatility
If today is your birthday you are mtu1llve a
natural teach er, one who is concerned with the
underdog You are due for added recognition
You are going to finish project this year a nd you
will be repaid for past efforts
,.tt~~A~~I~.$ ~ t~~Jf<J~g
CRISP SPRING PRINTS
VALUES TO $2.79 YO. SAVE TO $1 .80 YO.
A great selection of perky novelty designs including TWILLS.
SEERSUCKERS, FLOCKS, PETITES, all in new spring
colors. Polyester/rayon/cotton blends. 44"/45" wide.
Machine Wash Tumble Dry
Beautiful .. Martinique" Box·Stitch in a wide variety of all
new spring colors. Great for dresses, suits and sportswear.
100% Textunzed FORTAB. Polyester
Machine Wash · 60"/62" Wide.
Compare at $3.98 a yard.
1~
UNBLEACHED MUSLIN
Natural unbleached muslin. Great for ethnic blouses, western
thirts1 pillow casing, mattress covers or curtains. A hundred
Ind one uses. 100% cotton, 38" wide and machine washable.
COMP.ARE AT .69 YARD
! 3v~.J>O
I 1---------------------------------------------------------./......_~
.,.
•"
GMDBIGllM 11111. to .. ...........
llt•lla
SIMPLICITY •6844
UNA PAil CBml La ... ,, ..... ......,.
llWJO
MAli.Of--
JIU:.=Mll
tfN711
Fund~aisers Calendsr.ed
CHOC Sale
Cinderella Oulld. C.bllclren•1 HospltaJ or
Orance County, will open a garage sale in the
back mall of the Harbor Shopping Center Satur·
day, March 15, from 9a.m. tos p~ m.
Volunteers
Oranae County Council of ftospital Volun·
teen will meet Mondll)'. March 17, at 9:30 a.m . in
Mercy Hospital, Santa Ana . Pat Allyn, bead
nurse from the Orange County Medical Center's
Burn Unit, will apeak.
Clipped Wings
Clipped Wings, Unit~ Airline Stewardess
Alumnae Inc. will meet Tuesday. March 18, at
10:45 a .m . in Club 33 ol Disneyland.
LWV
The League of Women Voters of Orange
County's annual convention is scheduled from 9
a .m. to 2 p.m . Monday, March 17, in the First
Qmgregational Church of Santa Ana .
Thank You
I • The Mothers' March Advisory Council.
Orange County chapter March of Dimes will host
a thank you luncheon for city chairmen and
volunteer marchers at 11 a .m . Tuesday, March
18, in the Assistance League of Santa Ana
Clubhouse.
Rape Seminar
Orange Coast College will host a ~eminar on
the prevention of rape Tuesday, March 18, at 1
p.m. in lhe auditorium.
Betty Willis Brooks, who teaches anti·rape
technique classes, will be the featured speaker.
Big Sisters
Big Sisters will present a community service
program on VD Wednesday, March 19, at 7:30
p.m . in the Santa Ana YWCA. Dr. Korey
4lay. S.turday and SUnday. llarcih 21, 22ud.21,
In the Disneyland Hotel.
Fashion Show·
The Orange County .t\Ssociatlon for Relar~ed ~lizens will sponsor a fashion show·luncheon,
Sdtcbes 'n Styles, Saturday, March 22, at noon in
the Balboa Pavilion.
Delta Theta Tau
Nu Epsilon chapter of Delta, Theta Tau
sorority will present the annual dlnner and Las
Vegas nlght Saturday, March 22, at 7 p .m. ln the
Fountain Valley Community Center. Proceeds
benefit Oralingua School for Deaf Children in
Whittler.
Spring Sale
The annual Spring Fashion Show and Sale
spe>nsored by the Newport Beach A.sslstance
League, Junior Auxiliary will take place in the
Thrift Shop Saturday, March 22, from 10 a .m. to 2
p.m . Camp Fire
Orange Coast Camp Fire Girls will join in
lhe weeklong celebration of the organization11
birthday, ~ginning Sunday, March 16. On Satur·
day, March 22, displays will be set up at the
South Coast Plaza mall.
AARP
Huntington Beach Chapter, American As·
sociation of Retired Persons will celebrate its
fourth birthday at a 1 p.m . meeting Wednesday,
P.1arch 19, in Murdy Park.
Tax consultants are available every Mon·
day, Wednesday a nd Friday from noon to 2 p.m.
through March in Murdy Park to help ~embers.
Jorgensen will speak during the program which THE
is 'eared toward teenagers and adults. EARL'S 1L A Lawyers Wives ~ ... ,... .. c.,...
A county juvenile court referee will speak to Serrlc• Ta..
Lawyers Wives of Orange County Thursday, M f.:'5DMr
March 20, al 11 a.m . in the Silver Fox, Tustin. I 495-CMOl)
Symposium S. l• '°"'"° • .., •)•I•~' .}T04!l!'T __ _ The Southern California Affiliate of the 2Hll c.-. c.,.--
American Diabetes Association will present the l~=~""~o.q.~~="'~·~··;::· "'~ ... =~!.!
~ernorr
wuralfF PlAlA llALBOA annual Southwestern Diabetes Symposium Fri: To Place Your .. Fast
Res ult" Se rvice
Dirertory ad . . . . . call
now. 642-56'18. ext. 322.
NewpcJ1 Beach 216 Marine A¥e
My hus'band loved me too much to tell me the truth about my
weight but once I acquired my new figure he did admit that I was
chubby at one time. He is very happy because I now feel great and
I am happy with myself.
I am now a siz.e seven which is the sii.e I've always wanted to be.
BUST
WAIST
se.m1 67S-t~
befon .ti.
38~ 34
30~ 24
Believe me I lost inches and pounds at the same Ume.
Before coming to Gloria Marshall I tried group sessions, diet
pills, injections, and a water diet. Nothing seemed to work so that
is when I decided to come to Gloria Marshall's. Grace Bernardino
ABDOMEN 38% 31
WHY lliE GLORIA MAR.SHALL MElliOD?
No disrobing. No pills or shots. No strenuous exercises. Program
includes nutritional guidance. Because individual figure problems
differ, your results may be different from those achieved by
someone else.
OUftlNO
HIPS
THIGHS
WEIGHT
Gnce
Bemarclino
lost
lS pounds
43~ inches
FIGURE CONTROD SALONS
open d&Jty 9 to 9. Saturday 9 to 4'
40 35
24 19%
135 110
Wottd 'e leading figure control ayatem
Call now for a demonmation Of what 1tM Glori• Marshall method an do fo1 youl
. '
J
AGMEMTS
l NANCY
' I
I
I
l
i
I I
l GUESS AUNT
F=RITZI LEFT A
00WL OF CEREAL
fO~ ME
I .
NANCY, HAVE.
YOU SEEN A
BOWL OF
POTATO PEELS 1 u:~T·
AROUND
SOMEWHERE'?
~ . .• 1'
l TODAY'S CROSSWORD fVZZLI PEANUTS
UNITED Feature Syndic;ate Saturdays Pvuie Solved·
ACROSS 44 Briel
I . sleep
1 French A5 St1yed
revoMlonlsl 48 Nell to
8 Vehlcle 51 H0tsy
10 Pats noise
gently 52 lion
14 love, In food: 2 N1Plel wd&.
by &nie Bushmiler
1
t 15 Blbr!C#\ 54 Opposed
king to 16 Soll: 58 Betwffn
JUDGE PARKER
Comb. l>0'1•
17 !E_ 59 Defeat
~ 61 Erwaged
,,.... 62 Call 8 Violent .,..,... ,., meat ....-~
18 Unit of 63 Irish· speech 35 Far: Prefix ver.. G lie 9 Ruling high 36 Snowrnobue·s
1" Moat .. I t ... . • &e Afn pr es Pfe ...... easor i-...r11111 .,_ 10 River 38 ~vel's ... ..,... kngdom
20 Part of 85 Superlitlve barrier relative
Italy endings location: 2 39 Became
22 Flltlglng 66 ~cf wds. 1vislble
24 EurOPeans 67 Defense 11 Another 42 Beasts
26 Fi1111r11 time 43 PenslQMf of
27 Moton.rs 0tQ. 12 Edge a son
problem: 2 DOWN 13 Melodious 48 Egg 0-nt
words I Apostle utter1ncea 47 Whtll and
30 ·1 smell a of Christ: 21 Thrff: rye
· -··!" Abbr. Prefix 48 Indian
31 H.Y.S.E. 2 Ho.,So. 23 Bring warrior
statiltlca « Cent dlahOnor 49 ComlOtts
32 ::°"' 3 Aoeated: 25 ~zine 50 ~Blood ···-
37 Nethertands Fr~ ft1tures and tears"
C()fTllnLN 4 Pollee 27 Ran away 53 lacerated
38 Satisfy ttatltllea 26 NIPQltonlc S5 Califomll
fwlty 5 Pourer's victory ctty
40 Tr!'°'t J!*Sium: 29 ~ifH 56 Office COPY.
8-· ~ Wds. •1rat1ot1 tmonnat 41 tcOIM 8 Whoop ii 33 T......._,_.. 57 Coqiltlt: •llflnel up ........ 4 .... "3 f'.itllng 7 Arab rneat Prefix '°""' nllnt 34 Cloae In 60 Function
WMEH A6KED
WHETHER HE
REMEMURS
THE P~
WHO PURC:HASEC>
THE PLANf
TICKET. THE CLERK ANSWERS
P061TIVELY !
MISS PEACH
• I
J:i
1
b
by Chil ~s M. S~hllll
by Harold Le Dou
by Mel
NCA&.AM VE~ FlW l(IOS »IOW
TMAT l.AfT WEeJC 'fl.4EY ·~o
f 'tJ .'1$ ~OF ~I ~ O\AT'
A •it.21 PMC OF ~ICM'f, AMO ~
. 28'1& KILOWATT MOL«~ OF TV ••• •
by Cllnter Gould
ANO BISI~ l'VIClarA
IN1141 OWN.
r
.. You Lhinlr. we've goc a loCgoing out!"
DENNIS THE MEMACE
?(~
BUFFALO -Bob Coeleri. a t~t scout for the JktfaJo Bills
Of the National Football League,
died Sunday of a heart attack In
bis homo in s uburban
Williamsvllle.
Celeri. 47. • member of the
Bllls1 stall aioc~ 1988. was a
quarterback at the UnJverslty of
Calllornia and played in Rose
8owl 1ames in 1M9and1950.
He was drafted by the San
F'rancl$co 49ers and later played With the New York Giants and
Dalla before eoine to Hamilton
in the Canadian Football League.
In 1960. be coached football at
Waterloo-Lutheran University in
Canada. Celeri is survived by his
widow Ruth, t v. o sons and a
daughter.
Error Pa11• Big
PORTLAND -A woman felt
sorry for a race track clerk's
mistake and thus the clerk and
nine o( his colleagues shared the
$16.243 result of an incorrectly
punched ticket at Portland
Meadows this weekend.
The woman. who was not iden·
tified by track officials. bought
se\en big perfecta tickets at $3
each. but turned them back in
v. hen the c lerk accidentally
punched the wrong oumbers.
Coder track rules. the clerk must-
payforsuch tickets.
The woman returned and said
she v. ould pay $11 for the tickets if
the clerk and his colleagues came
up v. ith the balance. The clerk and
nine coUeagues put up Sl api~e.
The woman claimed only ball
Lhe v. inning amount and thl'
clerks split the rest when one of
the seven tickets came in with
the winning and second place
horses in exact order for the
ninth and 10th races.
Trade L..-"fl1
CLEAR WATER , Fla.
Personnel directpr Paul Owens
or the Philadelphia Phillies said
early today that new trade talks
have been held with the AtlaAla
Braves for baseball slugger Dick
Allen.
Top officials of both teams met
Sunday night and said they would
meet again today to discuss nine
Phillies who Owens said he would
be willing to trade for Allen.
Sed~•an Kallie•
SARASOTA. Fla. -Second-
seeded Frank Sedgeman has
captured the Grand Masters ten·
nis tournament by overcoming a
3-1 first set deficit to defeat un-
seeded Tom Brown 6-4, 6-3.
Top-seeded Torben Ulrich.
forced to def a ult to Brown Satur-
day because of a mu.scle, spasm
in bis racquet hand, came back
to win third place honors Sunday
b~downing_Hug_hStewart9-7.
Gbllert WilU
SHREVEPORT . La .
Second-seeded Juan Gisbert of
Spain downed Poland's Wojtek
Fibba 6-3, 5·7, 6·1 in the fmals of
the Shreveport International ten-
nis tournament Sunday.
1s·,oOOSee
Man Kicked
To Death·
GUADALAJARA, Mexico
CAP> -An estim~ 15.pOO
persons watched in ir as a
group of angered soccer players
attacked another player and
killed him during a game here.
police said Sunday.
The dead player was identified
as Felix German Torres de la,
Torre. 25, of the Club Deport.ive Oro team of Guadalajara. Police
said he died or multiple injuries
caused by blows and kicks.
The Oro was playing the
University of Guadalajara re·
serve team Saturday in Guadala-
jara, Mexieo'1 second largest ci-
ty 300 mUea west of the Mexican
capital when the incident oc-
~urr~.
The 1ame was scoreless w~
Torree 4e la Torre was expelled
by ttae ref e.ree over an alltted
foul Oii a uatvenity player. Wiien Torres de la Torre was ::::!?' the fleJd he turned &rid made an lnsulUng ~ at tile unlvenity players
Miii tbeft attacked blm, police
..-Witnesses as tayinJ.
POiice said one playtr ldcked
~ de la Torre in the chest
while the others 1bowereid him
With blows and kicks. even as be ·
bid on the around aboutlDC at his
tt.ackers to atop.
81 the time policemen rushed
to lbe fidd to tloP the attack.
7orra de la Torre was dead,
police 1ald. The 11me wu
JI •died. PoUce In Guad1Jajara tald
MVeraJ of lbe university pla1en
were bem1 qJ.anUoned about the
~ldent but denied any ari'elta
•crem.cte.
•'ThOM thln11 happen. eo«er
.i:J a vlol nt 1ame toinellma,"
one pobce 1poblman aald.
...
CORONA DEL MAR RESIDENT ROD LAVER MOWS DOWN ARTHUR ASHE TO GIVE AUSSIES THE CUP.
Uf'ITe._...e
LEE TREVINO GRIMACES BUT HE'S A WINNER.
Knew What I Bad
ORLANDO Fla. C P )-Lee
Trevino breathed a bii sigh of re·
lier.
·Tm just glad nobody made a
big move at me," he said.
Nobody did.
And Trevino, who seemed to
play just as well as needed,
fashioned a steady, Cront-runnlng
one-under-par 71 and st.alked of(
with a one-stroke victory add the
$40,000 first prize Sunday in the
'200.000 Citrus Open golf touma
ment.
''Everybod1'1 eonna say, 'He
didn't shoot a areat rouod to win
it'." Trevino commented. ••wen.
J bad to sboot three pretty Sood
round.I to 1et ln front.
"I k~w what J had to do tod1y.
J've won from In front before-. •
I've led all four roundl. It'•
b&rder to play 1o0et IJ'OID Ule
lead. Jt'1 a lot e-.ltr to come
from behind, to allOot a low
number and come from behind .
"Tber •1 a lot mor pre11urc
' f
Bloody-nosed Laver
Put~ Ashe, U,.~ .. QDt
. HARTFORD (AP)-Rod
Laver. the 36-year-old left·
bander. defeated Arthur Ashe
6·1, 7 ·6 Sunday and gave
Australia its fourth straight
World Cup Tennis victory over
the United States. Laver lives in
Corona del Mar. ·
Laver, who won his second
singles m~tcb or thet.oumament,
easily harfdled Ashe in the fU'St
~et as tbe 31-year-o~ American
Field Set ..
. .
For NCAA
I North Carolina Sta(e, last
year's champion. and David
.Thompson , last year's
superp~ayer, will be wallflowers
at'this year's National Colledate Athletic • Association college
batJcetball tournament.
The Wolfpack went uninvited
Sunday whep the ~CAA chmplet·
ed the field'..for its annual ex-
·\ravaganza, 'even though the
field bu been expanded to 32
teams. Iutead. lnyltations were
extended. Sullday to Maryl.and, ~nsas $late, MichiJan anaTex·
asrEI Paso.
The remainin1 28 teams which include top-ranked In·
diana. UCLA. Marquette,
Louisville. Kentucky and
Alabama -alreadybadeameda
spot in what may be the strongest
field evw anembled for a col·
Jege basketball toumament.
But the blf news was that N.C.
SUte a.nd Thompson would not go
to the NCAA. In fact, the
Woltpack will not play in any
post-season tournament. decliD·
ing a bid to the National 1-ita-
tion Tournadl•t• That catne
after they wTre beaten 10·86
Saturday n ght by North
Carolina in the final of the Atlan·
.Uc Coast Cohf er•e tourna·
ment.
had a great deal of trouble;wilh
his backhand, consistently lap-
ping shots into the net. Ashe lost
service three out of four Umes in
. the first set while breaking
Laver's once.
Ashe managed a 6·6 secend-set
lie, forei_ng a W10rld Cbam-
pionapip of Tennis Jlrpoiat 'tie
breaker. Laver won lhat easUy 1..e.,, giving the Aussies an un-
beatable 4·2 lead in t.he tourna-
ment.
" lrl a doubles match -which was
the final event of the day. the
U.S. won out it was nothing more
thank moral victory.
Atfbe teamed with Dick ~on to beat A1sltr.U.1s Jobn
.Alexander and Jten Rosewaat-6,
6-3, 7-6'. '
The victo~ e~u·ned · lhf:
Australians $35 000 •. 1be UniteCI
states got $20.000. Laver, suffer-
ing sporadically throughout the
mater. from a cold-caused bloody
nose.' said: ·•1 felt,I was timing
the ball very cleanly today.
Arthur was changing bis game a
little. I think it hurt him a bil."
Not unexpectedly, the post ·
match conversation turned to
Jimmy Connors of the United
States, ttie world's top-ranked
male tennis player. c.onnors sat
out the Hartford event.
Both team captains, Fred
Stolle. of Australia and Dennis
Ralston of the U .s., agreed the
match may have gone dirterenUy
if Connors was on the American
team.
And Laver. who recently lost to
Conqors in a winner-take-all
challenge, said, "I think they
would have bad a better chance.
But it•s a team effort and Jim·
my's not a team man."
Ashtt added : ••we wo\lld
welccnne him on the team if he
wanted to play.••
ONTARIO-Jerry Grant of
Irvlne Was plagued by mls-
f ortune Sunday and Duane
.. Pancho" Carter felt the rates
had dealt him ·a low blow p they
reviewed thelt participation In
the sixth anduat California 500 at
Ontario Motor Speedway.
Grant, driving the Spirit of
Orange County. wes runniDC at
the end of the race but wu the
victim of two unscheduled, pro-
longed pit stops.
His car, was a late entry and
was purchased only tlours befOl'e
qualilication runs were made.
As aometimes happens with
new operations where driver and
crew haven't wor1'edtogether for
any length or time, a foulup oc-
curred on his first pit..,,
"We never tried the fuel nozzle
lrom °"'" gasoline tank in the ~ ceptacle on the car before ,tbe
.race,•• Grant and his mechanic
~irmed afterthe race.
''The car had ~e ~rong nozzle
and we bad to run the car out of
gas and change it. 'l;'hat co5t us
five laps when we were runnini
well."
Grant had moved from 27th to
12th when he made the first pit
stop.
Later in the' race, a USAC of·
ficial on the line held the car for
four additional laps while the
crew tried to convince him there
was no oil leak in the, rear. He
finally let the car back on the
track.
Then a blotier went bad and
Grant could never again get back
up to racing speed although be
finished the race running slower·
on the inside.
"We'll have all "the problems
licked by lridy and the car will be
ready."
Before the race; Grant bad pre·
dieted, "I would be-very sur-
·Pnsed if we weren•t running at
the leaders by the end of the
second pit stop!'
Carter, a graduate of Marina
High and former BunUnaton
Beach resident, ~rbaps bad the
wont racing luck of tbe three
Orange County entrants.
/ He was running second to Foyt
and was the first driver to hit the
rain shower al turn three. He.
spun the car but kept it QJ>right
coming out of the tum on dry rac-
ing surface.
. Then when the green na1 came
back on on the Mth lap, Carter's
car failed to increase speed down
.the front straightaway and Ile
coasted to a stop in tum two after
the accelerating field went by.
.. I lost a gear box or clW:b and'
couldn't get back to racing
speed," a very disgruntled
Carter said in the pit area.
"I hate to drop out when the
car is running as well as it was." ,
Rtsutts wltll _.,won iinct taps~ in Sund11v·ic.1lfom1ei00a11wreC.:
1. A.J. FOyt, Co'i'Ot•Foyt $90,1t21St.Mlmph. 2. Bobby UnHf', E•11la-0t1yua.o1s2001eps ~· SW\19 KrlMIOff, Eetle-Offy$1•,0U tt7 i-. .. Lee K\llltm-.,, Eegla-OffyJll,OISltS., s.. Jonn Mert1n; Mc;Liiren-OffyJt.-is 1tl. '-Tom 5'19.,•, Mcl.llren·Offv'7.SIS Ill. 7, Al l.oQ~sto,#curen.Qffy$6,AIS ta L S.lt W•lther, MCLA"-n-Offy, SS,'1S 117.
' Eldon ltttl'llWMll RilS<M·FOiit, t,Ut~ ,,.._ 10: W•Her DlllleftMc'ti, E•11te-Offy, M.JIS 1 ..
11.MllleMMMy.Eegi.offy,U,.JUl7'.
12. Jerry Grent, Eett.ofty. '5,0IS 111.
11.lt8'9r M<Ckrllle,, RllaY·Oftv, $4,tlS 110.
I'. Gary 8e"""'9UMHI, E119...ofty,F.;,1S I ... IS. G«darl JollflCkk, Wilckllt.Qffy, IS I ...
I'-Tern 81tei...~11tedt.()ffy,ktt 111. 11.Jeflnny Ritt , MCUlftft.otfy,$4,IU ... II. Jim M<ElrMttl, Eegle-GMW,Sl,llJt4.
lt .... ncheC-W, El191e-Offy,JS.1WU.
10. ONree Sl\IW, E....-otfy, .,.11S .. 21, Jlmmf Carmllers, E .. ...oftv'3MSM. n . Lff 8rrttM, Q.,..l'oyt, $l,.61S ...
U. 8111 Vl.iteWd\. Ee~y, A.f4Sk , 24. DklL Sl,,..11, tt19M-l'eyt, Sol.SIS#. U..JoMny Pe._, Flnley-otfy, $tASM.
1'. Al Unsef'. ~Y. s.:&,41$24. n.RlcllMll~,Co,._.Fovt.~•U7.
2$. Merlo Mclrelll, l~~allJ U.. at. 8111 Scott, ~"Y• P,~1. iO. llOOHerUy, .(Mfy, S3,21SS..
31.1...ttfyM<Co'tl, l-..i-otf'(,13, MU. '2. Boblly.t.lliioift, NICLANft-Offy,'3.IU1. J).Mr,~ft ....... °"Y·~'·
South Coast League Cha111pio1as
,Mo,,dey, March 10, 1915
Eileen Yracebum was Ohthl winner with M wtth
named 1.ce or the moftth Ct'le Brown and Virginia tor February for "the Viallca tied at 65.
women's club at Costa Barbaro Malick and
Mesa Golf and Country Georgio F rm~r tied at
Club after posting a net 67.
ICOl'eO!G7. ln c nJght, Pat Bonnett
In a criss cross lOUJ1ll· was the winner with ~
ment, Ginny Stasko. Doris Buckles placed
Connie Lonergan und ucond at 65 and Darlene
Marianne Holt tied for Bouae, Sylvia Pranauski
first in A flight with 31. and Ty Hamano lied for
Cleta De Long and third ut67.
Jane Roderlck tied at 29
ln B flight. P~il Go~pper L agu na B~aC!h
was the C ~ltght winner Ola1'e Stys won a low
with 27 wath Eleanor net tournament for the Gre~ne second at 271,:l. Laeuna Beach women's
Esleen Y~aceburn won golf cJub recently with a D flight wath 25 and Lu score or 64 _
Willey was second al In B fligh\., Val Morton 21~. Carnell~ Ke~edy was the winner "' ith 63.
was the ~ fhght victor followed by Helen Drex-
wlt h Shtrley Hawks ellus (73) and a tie
second at 29 Y..i. between Pat Gulick Ann
In a low gross, low net Richardson and Th~lma
event, played on both Toomey at 74.
courses, Barbara Gen e Griffin , L~nar_d was. the gross Margarite Mac!arlane
victor in A fli ght on the and Margaret Moore tied
lo!1ger Los Lagos c.ourse for top honors in c flight
wath an_ 81., Mara.annc will' 80. Val Morton was H~lt was the net winner closest to the pin on the
with 71. 5 h h 1 J B f l r h J l t o e. n g t , a n e
Rod.erick won gross with _1 ....% ai.z .i 9 2 a n d z 0 1 a 1r• •••On • we_,o
Massa ... Kelly GltdeM,
Pat Cbrlaty and Beale
Gclb. The latt r h•"O In
each foursome U"e trom
Canyon Crest.
Second low arms went
to Nadine Ma.e, ()pill
Batva, Edie Pryor aod
Evelyn Fry.
Eleanor Wheeler, Jean
Grubaugh, 8arbnra
Christianson al)d Esther 1
Simon won low ne.t.
Second place went to ,
Florence Gardener, Nita 1
McLeod, Carol Dunn and 1
Audria Killian.
In third place were
Cece Coury. Sally 7.oag.
Grace Brent and Eva
Leake with Tudl Stter,
Brenda Agee, Clara
Sugarman a nd Arlene
Staff fourth.
Virginia Bransby,
Glenna McLean, Sue
Montgomery and Dottie
Lamb placed fifth with
Sherri Eastman, Edna
Leonard. Helen Stryker
and Dorothy Boop sixth.
ln a better ball of
threesome event, Phyllis
Hortman, Honey Carroll
and Bernice Griffin were
the winners with 58.
Coach Terry Wigglesworth's Dana Hills Dolphins cap-
tured the South Coast League wrestling championship.
Bottom row (from left) -Bob Larwood, Steve Ray,
Steve Sanchez, Joe Harris, Jean Duguay, Scott Davison.
Top -Wiggleworth, Keith King, Pat Sweeney, Joe
Cameron, Kirk Illingworth, Dan O'Donnell. Kerry
Crabb.
Bartholomew captured I Members of the Mis·
nelwith74. sion Viejo Golf Club
Marion Darlin g was women's club hosted Ca-
the gross victor· on the nyon Crest of Riverside
M~sa Linda course with women as part of a
84. Martha Osborne and home-and-home event. It
Betty Ziegler tied for net was a better ball of
A tie resulted al 64
with Edna Leonard, Sal-
ly Meyer s and Betty
Cate on one squad. On
another were Sharon
Lewter. J a n Schudel and
J ea n Grubaugh with
Nita McLeod, Florence
Gardener and J ean
Bransby on the other. Massacre
Lures New
CIF Boss
New CI F com missioner Q.
Thomas Byrnes will head the
CIF basketball team which will
oooose the Dailv Pilot soorts
staff plus Chuck ·Godshall Wed-
nesday night in the first feature
of Massacre JV at Newport
Harbor High.
That one starts al 7 with the
second game. matching coachin~
staffs from Corona del Mar and
Newport Ha rbor. going at8:29.
Tickets are priced at $1 for stu·
dents and SI.SO for adults.
Proceeds originally were going
to the society for the liberation of
pygmy women. Instead money
goes to various sponsoring stu-
d en t groups from CdM and
Harbor I ligh.
Although Byrnes now becomes
the feature attraction. attention
still focuses on Louie Joseph , the
man responsible for the relcagu-
ing atrocities committed against
some of Oran~e County's high
schools.
J oseph will probably be a
prime target of the w1;ters. who
began practicing downfield
blockin{! when they lei.lrned
Louie would be playing.
However , CdM principal Den-
nis somebody is also considered
a prize by bounty hunters and
rough players. Game officials
have sugJ!cstcd th al Joseph .and
somebody wear suits of armor.
Byrnes is an apostle of non·
viol ence but despite th<it
philosophy he'll take part in the
Massacre, which has traditional·
ly epitomized violence. Byrnes
was high scorer a year ago when
the CIF edged the writers 36·34
before 1,000 Cans at CdM. lie had
seven points.
How he got them is ::i myste1·y
since he has no outside shot, loafs
underneath and is s low. Perhaps
qis brother-in-law. who was la~t
year·s scorekeeper. cheated.
At any rate. Byrnes is backed
by a number of high rnnking CIF
administrators. One is Darol
Roundy. who empties waste
Qaskels and keeps the l~trines
s parkling. Another is Ray
Plutko, once in the center.fold ror
a Donald Duck comic book.
Then there is Kendall Webb,
whose brother Spider is sUll hid-
ing from truant officers at
Newport. Kendall Webb keeps
pencils sharpened for Byrnes.
Probably the player in (or
with) the best s hape is CIF
women's boss Margaret Davis.
'the Fi>untaln Valley resident who
got her job through threats of
militant women's llbbers. She is
supposedly the i,urest shot of the
CIFrive.
Unconfir med rumors hint that
President Ford is pondering an
invitation to throw out the first
. ball for Massacre IV.
Cale ndar
,,
I
Tay lor Honore d
Tritons Had Loop's
Top Two Players
Something good happened re·
cenlly when the South Coast
League coaches disagreed with the Orange County Sportswriters
Association and tabbed San
Clemente Hig h guard Dave
Taylor as the playero(theyear.
The sportswriters tabbed San
Clemente's Ted Kalota -but the
wealth was spr ead a bit by the
coaches and deservedly so.
Taylor, a two-year starter, was
ROGER
CARLSON -the steadiest player in thl' league.
according lo his coach, Stan
DeMaggio.
He has a ·gl>Od ('age bad
ground. His dad. Ben, was the
Westminster High vurs1ty coach
a few years back, but the ddcr
Taylor says that fact didn't in-
terfere with the surroundings al
San Clemente.
··when I was 1·eal young," ~ays
Dave, "my dad gave me a lot of
lips and "as a big influence on
my career. But lately it ·s bet•n
coach DeMaggio. ''
Ben Taylor has evolved into
the complete fan. "The beauty of
being an ex -coach is you can stay
in the stands a nd yell and
scream." says Ben. ·Td like to
jump down there a nd tell the of-
ficials how to ref. Whe n you
coach you have to S\\ allow ·the
calls."
And there w asn •t any 5ccond-
guessing from the ex-coach. "I
was just a dad in the stands and
hopefully knew enough to know
when to keep my mouth shut,"
says Taylor.
Edison High football coach Bill
Workman reports half or the goal
h as been reached in the
Chargers' quest for funds to bulld
an outdoor weight room on the
Edison campus.
The Chargers a re selling 18·
inch squares at $10 each, which
will border the floor or the welCht
room. The purchaser can ln-
scribe the square with bis name
and appropriate message.
Work started recently on the
racks and additional squares are
still available to Chargers fans.
llere·s two not to invite to the
same party : Mission Viejo
sophomore bas ketball coach Joe
Rei d and o fficial George
Selfridge Selfridge recently
levied nine tec hnical fouls on
Reid and his basketball team in
one game in the scramble for the
South Coast League title
And Costa Mesa lllgh baseball
coach Jim Hagey Isn't feeling too
restive, either, wilh the recent
rains and fouled up situation on
the playin g fi e lds pulling a
monkey wrench into the Mesa-
Newport baseball tourney-
agaln.
Only once In four years has the
tourney run smoothly thanks to
sprinklers, lighting problems,
schedule conrlicts and various
other bugs.
Hagey had visions or expand-
ing the tourney-but that hardly
seems likely since they can't
even get a tournamMt Involving
only four teams completed with
reasonable success.
El Toro High·s Ed i\lcF.idden
has been invited to play al the
Albert Schweitzer basketball
tournament in Europe.
He's leaving March 2l and re-
turns April 6. One of the prere·
quisites to play in the tourney is
to be 6·8 or taller.
Goodrich Scores 34
In Lakers Victory
INGLEWOOD-Gail Goodrich
regained his lost shooting touch
Sunday night, scoring 34 points
as the Los Angeles Lakers de·
teated the Houston Rockets
116-95 in <1 National Basketball
Association game.
Goodrich, who scored just four
points against the Chicago Bulls
two nights earlier and has shot
below 40 percent the past two
weeks, got 16 points in the third
quarter as the Lakers broke a
four-game losing streak. It was
the Rockets' first loss after six
consecutive victories.
Goodrich's accuracy continued
in the thlrd period as the Laket·s
buJll a 1~-point lead in the first
four minutes, Goodrich also had
14 assists tblead the Lakers.
A field goal by Los Angeles'
Kermit Washinatoo broke a 6&-68
tie with 3:2& left In the third
quarter. Good ti ch scored 30
8tconds toter lo put lhe Lalcert
four points ahead.
Goodrich scored three more
baskets in the final 1 :20 of the
period and got the Lakers' first
two goals or the fourth stanza to
break the game open.
Stu Lantz scored 18 a nd
Elmore Smith and Pat Riley got
14 each (or Los Angeles.
S a n Clem e nte
C a ge Tilt Se t
A benefit basketball game is on
tap Wednesday night al San
Clemente High School, featuring
the San Clemente Police and the
San Clemente High lett~rmen.
Proceeds are ticketed ror Al
Sandoval. a student-athlete who
was seriously injured in an auto
accident during Chrh;tmas vaca·
ti on.
The gume gets under way at
7:30 with tickets priced al $1. ll's
the second or two activities
aponsored by the students to
raiae money tn help pay for the
many bllls incurred as a result or
the accident.
Tickeu can be purchased at
lhe poJlc department or at the
actlvlt1ea olflce on the school
umpu1f'toM a ....
Swimming
R esults
VARSITY
S.rvlte (161 Ill) M•rt11.a
100 Medin Rtl.ay-1. M.lrtn.a.
Time 1 '1.•
200 Fru 1 Tie between Golonkd
IMI. Bu<knet IMI 3. ~l\um•ker ISl
Time 1 •• l. 200 Ind Medley-I Aedier11 CSl 7.
1)4,1.ardl ISi 3 Culltn•nt IM). Time
1 0.0 )() Free 1 Conroy ISi 7. W._,qer
IMI l Pe~r tSl. TlrTW 13 s 01v1n9-I ~r'oOn tM I 1 Si.<li. IS)
J Wrt9hl (Ml Points 101 IS
100 Fly 1 Peper ts 11 'fum1a1a tSl
3. Redfern !Sl Tt~ Sb J 100 Free I. Sthumaker !SI 2.
McCoy !SI l Stone (M l Time· S2 3,
500 Free· I. Golonk• tM I 2. Maus ISi
3 ~··~Tc'='~ \~l·J"~~~~!/"1~. 1.
Yuml•ld ISi 3. 6elardl !SI. T"'"'' )1.7.
tOObrt-ast 1 w rn9tr !WI 2. Torr~\
IM13 Bu\Cht IMl Tl,.,.. 1:11.0.
400 Frei! Relay 1. Servile. Time:
J lS 2 FROSH·SOPH
M.ln11a l•'l ISU Servile
100 Medley Ael•Y 1. M•rtno).
Time 2 0. b.
200 FrH I Burke ISi 2. KlnQ IMl
3 Everson (Ml Tl~· 1 :~.3. 100 Ina Medlt y 1 MHlrOPOl(O (SJ
7 . .8auer (Ml 3. 01Ck•MOn (SI. Ttmr.
1 °" s. SO FrH t. Tunn1n9an ISi 7.
Ever.on IMI l Grove\ CM I T1mt\.
,. 2 so Fly 1 K1nq IM ) 2 W1lller '>• l
Stanen •Ml Ti me 30 ) 100 Fret I Pomprov 151 1
~\lropo•lo ISi l B•utr 1MI Tm._,
SS J SO Sn<~ 1 .... u9h1on ISt 1
S<hnt1(kr •M l l AO'P""'"I Ml
Tin,. 31 3 so &rent 1 S<h01>9 tMl 1 "'"""" 151 3 Colvin (Ml. Tlmt l•' IOO fre~ R@tay I s~ rv1h l u1-.
1 •• 1
100 M'dl~y Rt ldV J f ountdll'
l/etley, l:S. 6 •. E:a1.c>11. t )8 b 200 FrH J Pull IFVJ I >•O s
Holt•nd IFVI 1·s•.1. 8 O P•c~tora
1E11 o..t,10 c. Plcktord 1c11.oe 4
100 Ind. Medll't' I. HOiion,,,, IEl
I 018,2 WtlUU IE) I 02 6. ~ FrH-10. Spetlh IE) ?S S >0 Fly 1 Weluer IE l 11 6, 10
Ho9ur IF\/) 27.1. 100 Fr<'•-9 Holl.ind IFV) S? 9. 11.
Putl IFVI S8 1
)()8"ck-9.Ma'1U IFV) lt 2. )() 8rtdSI-I. W•l11JcOtl (F II) 30 8, 2
Hoffm.an IE) 31.0 (School r~cord l, 12.
HoQue IFVl lJ,4.
200 Fre« At>•v-7. Edl'oOn. I '4 4. 8.
Fount.Jin ll•tlty. I ·•S.4.
with 61. foursome event.
l n B f Ii g ht . Ann Low gross went to Dot
Keenan was the gross
winner with 85 while p
~larg.aret Ht:fle r was the ro
net winner with 60. Cage, Hocke y
M esa \/erde
In a better ball of
foursome competition at
Mesa Verde Country
Club, the winning group
of Shirley Kinder, Kay
Farley, Jos ie Tipping
and Sylvia Pranauski
fired a net 56.
Second place went to
Stella Scelsa. Bernice
Johnson, Darlene Bouse
and Mary Fothergill at
58. In at 60 in third place
were Phy llis Smith,
Georgia Farmer. Pat
Bonnett a nd Dorothella
Ikenberry.
In an Ifs tourna ment
where players take off
their worst hole and use
full handicaps, Bette
Hamre \\as the A night
winner with 65. Lucia
Johnston finished second
at 68 and a lie res ulted at
69 between Ali ce Derby.
Bobbie Wasco and lrem·
Ile ck.
Etl1t• Go"• "as the B
Banqu et Set
Laguna Beach High 's
basketball teams will be
feted with ;i s ports
awards banquet lonii:tht
at the school cafeteria.
The pot luck affair
begins at6:30.
H9A HHL
EA$TIEltN CONFIEAEHCE Div1St0111
AllaMlc Dlvl•t0n W L T PfJ. GF GA
W L PCT. Ga Phll-IPfll• •O 11 9 19 236 l'2 Boslon •II 10 1191 -N.Y. Ra~r\
Buflalo •1 U ot~ s 31 n 13 11 m n1
New York 31 J• •U ISV1 N.Y Jsldnder~
Ph1li1Mlpt11a 30 Jt •JS 17'.1 78 72 t7 73 1n 182
Ce111ral D1vl•1on Allanta ?o 27 tl i.s 188 192
W•S"•n<aton )0 18 1JS 01vtS1011 2
Hou.ion 31 31 SJI> 11 ' ()11~a90 32 2• 1 Clewl•ll<l J2 Jo •II t8 V•ncouver 32 29 6
.. tlant• 18 •1 •OO 23 St Louts 111 11 13
Ntw Orcuns 18 4<; 2o9 Jl'n M1nnes.o1• 19 ., 11
WESTERN CONFERENCE IC.tnsf~Oty H 4S 9
MldwHI Division DivhiOfl l
ChtCilQO •O 21 • S'7 Montre.al •O t 1 16
KC Omaha 38 31 SSt 3 LosA"941les lb 13 11
O.tro11 3S 31> ••3 I P1thburgh JO 1l 14 Mll"'du~te 31 l> .410 11 Ot>troll 1• J4 10
P.at1l1t l)jvlsion W•~hington b S1 s
11 ns 20J
10 224 71'
l>S 119 226 .. 1• -31 1S9 280
94 313 1'6
"' ?28 1)() 7• 273 20 48 lee 278 11 m 311 Golcl<n 51.ik JQ 30 .Sl.S 01v1Slon 4
!ttalll• J1 31> .41 l ~·, Bulf.Jlo 41 12 14 94 196 201 Portl~ll<l 30 JI .••8 II 8CY.oton JI 19 I 1 8S 2'3 104
PllOl!n•• 1~ JI .419 6 Toronto 28 2' 11 47 238 2S8 Lo~ An9<-IC\ 13 •• .343 h (.tl1forrua 11 40 11 o 180 2S9 P11ll•del~1d1•1\:'Jn>,ri:9'ot1100 $.,.dfy's Suns C:.Ol<len Stele 101• Bo•lon 101 MOntrul S, New York R"n90~3 • Buflalo 8, Pittsourgh • Oe1ro1t IOI>, l(an~a~ Clty·Om...,99 Ph•l.Jdetphia a. Dl'tro11 s
New Or lean\ •o. Cleveland 86 l:loston s. Atlanta 2 Lo,AnQele\ 1 lb, Houston 'I) Toronto 4. W•shlnQlon 2
To1119ltt's G•me St. Louis s. M111ne.c>I• •
II.( Om.ih,\ .ti M1lw•u~t1· Cahforftia4. """'York lsf.andersl
T ... sday's G•mH TOCl•'t''S Ga mu F notn1• al New York No gamrs sch(odulrd
NH•• Orleans •I Clevel•nd TIMM•y•s G•mn
V.a\tun9ton a t Al lento Ne• York R.allQ('rs .JI Bo\lOft
uo,1on•1 C111ta90 Dl'troottJt Nttw York 1st1noe_.;
Lo\,.,nQelc\•t O.tro1t Allanta•t St. Lou.,
'*•lllt'al HOU\IOn 6uffdlOtJt LosAn9~1~,
<. ~ldtn St,1tt' di M11 .... ,. .. ~. • "-•n~s City.ti vancou•~•
Nww'rc,,r•
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E~sterfll O•v•t•Oft W \. PCT
·~ 71 100 , n oat
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l><n-.• ~4 17 .l&t
~,, r.n1on10 n 30 .Siil
lndurn,, JI Jt ~·• u1<1n JI J I .41>4 San D1"qo JO 41 411
Sunel•Y'• Scores SI Louis 103, Kentucky 92
N~w Yor~ 111 viro1n1a 82
lnd11lnf\ l.at. !.An Antonio tOJ
'l\.tn Uu:QO ltl Mt.-n,ph1 ~ tO/
Tod~y·s G•m ..
NO Qdl'll~\ Hh<·dultd Tutsday•s Game
VH(,flfuct ell CktWt<r
GB
12
1 s •
1l
71•
FOR SIZE: 6~70 x 15 plus Federal Excise lax of $2.43 ond retreodoble trade-In.
Power Express
ltoc»-ltl S4le Sole Ptlee
670 ~ $25 SJOQ()
700 \5 31 46Q()
600·16 28 3750
66().IO 30 4020
700 16 )' ~00
7 50·16 l7 SIQO
·1 »'6 4() ~750
""6.70-~ 29 4060
Fecle<al
&cite
b
S7A1
2&0
211
2':)1
,02
327
35Q
273
• ideal for pick-up~,
panels, vans,
campers
·wide tread profile
• five rlb design
BFG d . h
B. F. Goodrich Store
COSTA MESA
2049 HARIOR l~VD.
''
S•MTAANA
200 SO. MAfH ST.
147·71 55
CYPRESS
6112 LIMCOU4 .
.26-4010
'
ANAHEIM
524 W . UMCOLM
7t4·7.17f.~,
-
..
.1
MOOCI . March 10, 1175
Decries Drugs·.
By VE&NON SC01T
HOLLYWOOD (UPI> -Will
_Elvis, ·the BeaUes, Mick Jagger
· live out their golden years in lhe
wealth and acclaim enjoyed by
Sinatra and Crosby?
Will Bob Dylan? Will any rock
star?
Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplan
didn't make it. Neither did Jim
MacLaine.
MacLaine is the fictional hero
~ of a new movie, "Stardust," a se·
quel to .. That'll Be the Day"
# (1973). It again stars England's
• No. 1 rock attraction, David Es-
sex, who's not at all sure he'll roll
in fame and fortune in his sunset
years.
BUT ESSEX IS reasonably
certain he will avoid the drug
scene and tragic death or
MacLaine and some of the real
life rock stars of the recent past.
David Essex is the quintessen·
tial British rock and roll idol.
He is a pale, curly-haired
Cockney o! 28. He is uneducated
but street smart. His manner is
self-effacing and hes itantly
polite.
In Hollywood to promote
"Stardust," David walks the
streets unnoticed. But in London
he is swarmed over by fans and
dogged by the press. He has
moved three limes in the past
year to escape teen-age girls who
break into his home.
"MY PICTURE IS about the
rise and fall of a rock hero," said
Essex, whose real name is David
Cook. "MacLaine is ambitious.
He uses drugs and he meets a
very terrible end.
"My priorities are different.
Bot it's rather weird bow similar
our lives are up to a point. The
teen-age hysterics in the concert
scenes are taken from movies ot
my own concerts.
··1 really• don't mind all that. It
shows belief in my music. But
MacLaine was different. He
wanted to be more Camous than
anyone in the world. Not me. I
want to be proud of my music.
"I write twerything I sing.
When audiences react wildly, I
appreciate it."
ESSEX AND HIS parents once
lived in a London workhouse. His
father was a stevedore. His
mother scrubbed pub floors. Now
a millionaire, despite English
laxes, David bas bought his
mother and father a comfortable
home in Essex (naturally).
He thinks of himself as middle·
aged among rock and pop
singers. Presley and the Beatles,
along with Jagger, he considers
elder statesmen of the genre.
"Rock is moving and chang-
ing," he explained. "But I'm not
sure it is changing enough. It
began with 18·20 year olds like
the Beatles. Now all the originals
are in their 30s.
"I'd like to think that
somewhere there's music com·
.ing along that I couldn't relate lo.
Music that belongs to a younger
generation.
"SOME PEOPLE believe rock
will disappear now that hard
times are coming. They think
kids won't be able to afford to buy
our recordings. I can't agree
with that. I 'm told films
nourished in the 1930s because
they offered people release from
~•,.ct ••~ ..,..Oil,~ ••tt»• "00. JD ~1\f90H II JO\ (I)
Sf..ftJO•• 'MOl IOA~ ., .., 100 ...... ~,*'·
2 ACADEMY AWARD
MOMINA TIOHS!
ISlANO AT TOP WOll.D "
TffAf DAIN CAT rG1
WINNUTHf~rGI ________ ,,
PACIFIC DRIVE-INS
ART ·~ARHEY
llURJtlolllO
rlUS A HURT & SOUl COMEOY
Ns
DIAHANN CARROLL
JAMES URL JONES
DIFFERENT PRIORITIES
Rock St•r EaMX
their misery.
··well today roclc music is the
mass entertainment medium for
millions, and they will want to
hear it to get away from the
harsh realities." .
David Essex has no personal
economic problems. He was ac·
companied to Hollywood by his
manager, Derek Bowman; wife,
Maureen; daughter Verity, 3;
and Bey Busch, his chief aide.
•·1 was 16 years old when the
Beatles became stars," David
concluded, .. and l hope there is a
16-year-old someplace today
listening to my music with some
exciting ideas of his own."
Burt's L e ad Lady
HOLLYWOOD (UPI>
Catherine Deneuve won the role
of leading lady opposite Burt
Reynolds in "Home Free" which
Robert Aldrich will direct for
Paramount Pictures.
MOft lh<M Tl>vU O!>•" 6 •S
Fro Sat Sun Op•" 6 >O SllO•• Sta•t at Ou•~
Cll~Ortn 6 lhtu 11 SOc
Chtld•~n UnO•• 6 ftu' HOT MIW FUCI ON
POOl IOOM HUSn.B c-..... Sliow ..... l:OO
2 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
GENA ROWLANDS
(BEST ACTRESS)
...... flw'tUtr
UINUIM IOU SUPfOID WIYlS ...._.
IUSTll & lllllf i-1
Th• hometown ,....,_,.,for •ti
lhe Orange Coa•t
•• th• DAILY PHOT
:/ido . .. . . . ... . . ..
MOW!
DOUBLE YOUR
fNTERT Alt~MfNT
FIRST RUH-
Oyan Cannon •S
Sensational -LA Herold
Examiner
Dyan Connon
"CHILD UNDER
A LEAF"
11
• "FOREPLAY" (R)
Ooen Mon tnru fro 6 30 P"m
Sal/S..n/Ho4 12 30
Mon r"'u Frt 10 1 p m-$1 25
THE CITY SHOPf'ING CENTRE
ORANGE •532-6721
f1\ CITY CENTRE CINEMA~ ...
S.A FRWY !MANCHESTER EX.I
G.G FRWY ICITY Di.. E><.J
.. CHIHATOWM"
"DUTHWISH"
"SOLDtU ILUE"' IPGI
"RIDEi OH THE IAIM"
"FOREPLAY" (R)
JOHN CASSAVflES
(IEST DIRICTOI)
lDWAlDS UISTOl
CINEMA IV
lltSTOl .. MidlMa
540.7444
Today more lhan ever
••. still lhe best buy
The i•7JIQµmll
llM GLES
l . BL.ACJC WATER-Doobie Brothers, Warnel'
Bros.
2. MY EYES ADORED YOU -Frankie V Hi.
Private Stock
3. LADY MARMALADE-La Belle, Epic
4. HAVE YOU NEVER BEEN MELLOW -
Oli~ia Newton-John, MCA
S. LOVJN1 YOU ~ Minnie Riperton, Epic •·
6. LADY -Styx, RCA
7. LONELY PEOPLE -America, Warner
Bros. · ·
8. EXPRESS -B. T. Express, Scepter
9. CAN'T GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD -Elec-
tric Light Orchestra, United Artists
10. DON'T CALL US, WE1LL CALL YOU
Sugarfoot, Claridge 402
TOPLPS
1. OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN -Have Yo.u Never
Been Mellow, MCA
2. BOB DYLAN -Blood On The Tracks,
Columbia ,
3. LED ZEPP EI.IN -Physical Graffiti, Allan-
tic
4. PHOEBE SNOW -Scepter
5. DOOBIE BROTHERS -What Were Once
Vices Are Now Habits, Warner Bros.
6. MINNIE RIPERTON-Perfect Angel. Epic
'.l . LINDA RONSTADT -Heart Like A Wheel,
Capitol
8. LABELLE -Night Birds, Epic
9. ROBIN TROWER -For Earth Below,
Warner Bros.
10. AVERAGE Wl-IlTE BAND -Atlantic
SH DlllCTOIY
FOi SECOND
flATUUS
s 1.25
( CllEMALAllD THREE 1~!i!:·~~1 )
"GREEN HORt4ET"'
Doily At I :OM:I 0.7:25-10:30
.. SPllCf'S GANG"
Doily At 2:10.~40-8:55
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
am.•mus A WOM'AN 11st D111CT10N GENA JOHN
ROWLANDS UNDll THE INFLUENCE CASSAVETES
DAil Y: 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30
KATHARJSE R~
THE STEPfORD WIVE.S ._, ........... .,. .... __ ....._,. __ [!!jl
DAILY: 1:10, 3115, 5:15, 7:10, 9:15
SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES
SAN DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL
-I ,, . ' '
EASY LISTENING
1. l'VE BEEN TIUS WAY BEFORE-Neu
Diamond, Cohambia
2. HAVE YOU NEVER BEEN MELLOW -
Olivia Newlon-John, MCA
3 HEY WON'T YOU PLAY ANOTHER
SOMEBODY DONE SOMEBODY WRONG SONG
-B. J . Thomas. ABC
4. EMOTION -Helen Reddy. Capitol
5. MY BOY -Elvis Presley, RCA •
6. POETRY MAN -PhoebeSnow, MCA
7 LOVIN' YOU -Minnie Reperton, Epic s: NEVER LET HER GO -David Gates,
Elektra
9. WALKING IN RHYTHM -Blackbyrds, Fan·
tasy • 10. LONELY PEOPLE -America, W~rner
Bros.
MESA
1884 Newport
Coda MHO sd .' SS2
~
.... , l-,._. A>Ao
CHARLES BRONSON ,,,,.,,,, .. ,,,. ,,,.,,
........ ..._..._
-Ii.MD--
CANDICE BERGEN
"SOLDIER BLUF'
·youHG flAHKEHSTBH·
ly Mef lroOki tPGI
0 MURDER OH THE
ORIENT EXPRESS .. CPGt
'"THE STRONGEST MAH
IH THE WORLD"
"TH.AT DAAH CAT' tGI
.... IDS DO IT -HES DO rr' tPGJ
.. AHHOMED~ STRAIM" CPGI
"°THI LOHGEST Y .Ur
SHPICO .. IRI
"THE GIEEH HORMET'
"'RYE RHGHS OF Du.nt"' CRJ
7113UING 8'1DD~S
t AC.UIMY AWAID
HOMINAY10H$ (POI
AHO
Mii OOMOll t tut COit PG
"HAIOLO & MAUOl"
Fro11!19 Wire Mnke.
li'r1ak G. AadrH was an early
riser who llked to open has ftardware store by 7 a.m. He
shunned somo lnnovauon em·
braced by other Tom h (Wisc.)
merchants, such as staying opt?n
Saturday niahts. But when he
<tied, he left the community the
bulk o( hls estate perhaps $1
mJlllon or more. Hls enterprise,
thrift and shrewd investment
amassed the fortune in well ov~r b~f a century in the west-central
Wisconsin community of about
6,500.
.. He had a good business, and
was a man who guarded his
money catelulty,•• recalled
Uolber Walley, a regired bolPital
JGrker and close friend.: • Actress Sutaa Georae fUed a
$65,000 breach or contract sult lo
Los Angeles a1alnst Italian film
producer Carlo PontJ.
The action alleges Mlu George
and Ponti made an oral agree·
ment in July 1973 whereby sbe
would CO·Slur in the (ilm "The
RePorter."
The suit claims Pontl later re·
fused to let the actress have.the
p<trt.
* Schooltuucher Harrl~t
Wardlaw, 29, pregnant and un·
wed by choice, waot.ed to retaln
her clauroom job, sayin• her
p~gnancy would not have a bad
effect on her hiab scbool stu·
dents.
Aus tin School District
authorities decided Miss
Wardlaw's pregnancy and her
reAtsal to marry the man ahc
lives with might have a bad in·
fluence on the !rcpecial education
students she taught. They
tra.nsterred her to a librarian's
job at a special center for preg.
Mesa's 'Share Our Selves'
Nets Disney Award Monies
By JACKIE COMBS LAND
Of th• D•lly P11otsutt
health service and social com·
munity service.
School Key Club and Amigas de
tos Americas, and Special Health
Services: Goodwill Industries of
Orange Co~nty and R~y of Hope
of Orange County.
Costa Mesa's Share Ow· Selves
was one of three top winners
when $60,000 in cash was dis·
lributed during the Disneyland
Community Service Awards program.
The volunteer group, based at
St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church, offers emergency aid
s uch as food , s helter a nd
clothing. But it received SS.000
for "fighting the causes or pover·
ty" by operating a well baby
clinic in Colonia Juarez and
working to upgrade the life or the
migrant workers in Orange
Orange Coast ~roups won all
three $1,000 awards in environ·
ment and ecology. They are the
Estancia High School Plastics
Club, Environmental Nature
Study Center of Newport Beach
and tbe Marine Study Institute at
Dana Point.
More winners were: Ac·
co mpli s hm ~nts by Support
Groups: Saddleback Community
Hospital Thrift Shop; Orange
County Children's Home Society
and Albert Sitton Children's
Guild, and Civic Community
Service: League or Women
Voters.
The .Estancia Plastics Club
was honored for developing pro-
cesses and methods or using
scrap plastic materials. The club
collected plastic containers and,
among other projects used the
plastic to build a bicycle trail in a
city park.
More $1,000 category winners
were Social Community Service:
St. Vincent de Paul Society;
FISH Organization of Harbor
Council of Churches and South
Coast Literacy Guild, and
Diversified Comm unity Service:
County. ·
Two other m ajor winners were
Teen Challenge of Orange
County, which won the $10,000
outstanding community service
award for its drug abuse pro-
gram and prison program, and
Glass Mountain Inn, Inc., which
won $5,000 for its work with dis-
abled and handicapped persons.
The club's next project is to build a convenient recycling bin
to be located in shopping centers.
The bin will be divided into three
sections for aluminum, glass and
plastic.
Junior Women's Club of Hunt·
ington Beach.
Nearly 1,000 persons attended
the 18th annual event, including
representatives Crom 40 or-
ganizations that won $1,000
prizes.
"We have to make it easy for
the consumer to recycle," said
Ron Drake, club spok,esman.
"And we have tc> make it pretty
enough that the stores will let us
put them out. Maybe this $1,000
will get us started.''
The six-member judging com·
mittee was headed by Dr. Donald
C. Kleckner of Chapman College.
Other members were Mrs.
Edwin D. Ettinger of San
Clemente, Mrs. Bernardo M.
Yorba, Robert W. Clifford of
Corona del Mar, director of Air
California, Hector Godinez and
James L. Webb.
Other Orange Coast winners
and categories are Cultural:
Orange Coast groups and coun·
ty agencies serving the area
garnered 19 out of 30 available
category awards in such
categories as cultural, educa·
tional, service to youth, special
Orange County Philharmonic
Society; Educational: Braille
Institute of Orange County and
Family Study Group of Orange
County (located in Huntington
Beach); Aecom plishments by
Youth: Fountain Valley High
Competing for the awards
were 394 organizations which
contributed on an estimated 12.5
million volunteer hours in 1974.
PUBLIC NOTICE
B S6Jtl
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
lhe to11ow1ng person " dOtnQ bU\1·
nttsas· .
MARKETING AMERICAS, Firsl
Fi-. 42'19 MtcArtllur Blvd., Newpo'1
Bet<h, C.lllorn1• 92M>O
MG M.,ketlnQ, Inc. a ~lllornl• cc,. ..
por•tlon. Finl Floor, •299 M.tcArtnur
Blvd., Newport Be.ell, Callfornl•92060
This 1>uslneu is conouc1ed by• co,.
llOfolhClft,
MGMll"ttlnQ, Inc By: 0. M.ta Mulllem•n
Pruloent
THOMPSON & VAN WERT
AllorMyS lit LAW
Se<oncl Fltor MacArthur Plue
42" MlcArtllur Boulevard
Newport Buell, C•lllornlll t24t0
lllis '1all~nt wa' filed with lhe
County Cler• of Orange County on
February 21, 1'175.
F414ll
PubllSlled Orangeo Coa~I Daily Pilot,
Marchl0, 11.2•.ll, 1'1/~ 82175
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
STATEOFCALIFORNIA FOR
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
No.A-1111'
Eslaleol GLORIA OLSON FRANCO,
also known as, GLORIA GRIFFITH,
0eCH~.
NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN to 1"8 I
cr~llors ot t._ abo-11emed dK~1
lh.ll all pertons having cl•ims ~Inst
lhe w1d decedent are required to tole
Uiem, with the MCessary vouchers. In
lhll olftce of the clerk of the above en-
lilltd CO<H'I, or to present them, wtlh the
necess•ry vouchers, to Ille under$1Qned
al Ille law Office of HOWSER.
GERTNER ANO BROWN, 4340 Cam·
pus Or., Box 2207, Newporl Beach,
Cahforn1a, which is Ille place of 11\AI·
ness of Ille unde"lgned 1n all metters
penaJnlno to the estate of said dee•·
dent. within lour rnonllls alter the 11~1
publlc atk>nof this notice.
D.Jted Much 4, 1'11S
DIANA OLSON
Cprevlously DIANE OLSON)
E,xeculrn< of the Will of
Ille above named deccedttnl PUBLIC NOTICE HOWSER, GIERTNE RAND BROWN
-----U*C.mp;is Dr. SUPERIORCOURTOFTHE Bo-1207
STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR Newport Buell, Calilorni•
THE COUNTY OF OltANGE Tel: 0141 540-5400
No. A t22M Attorney for Eaecutri•
NOTICE DF HEARING FOA Pub11Sl'ledOrangeCoUIDclllyPito1,
p ET IT ION F 0 R 0 RD ER Mlrcll10, 11,24,J1, 197S 820-7S
AUTHORIZING THE CONVEYENCE l-----------OF REAL PltOPl:ATY SOLD OH COH-
TltACT BY DECEDENT PUBLIC NOTICE
E\l•leolPATRICIA C SHILE"r,•k• 1-----------PAlRICIA CAROi. DILWORTH
SHILEY TO ALL PERSO NS
CLAIMING INlEREST IN THE
PROPERTY HER EIN AFTER
DESCRIBED. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tNI
OONALO P. SHI LEV 114S lllHI herein•
petition for Order authorltong the con·
veyonce of re•I properly sold on con-
tract by oocedenl, reference to Whlcll ls m.oo for furoier particulars, and tllat
the tlmct end place ol hnr1nQ the s.-i~
Nis bffn $«!1 lor March 2•, 1'17S, al 9 00 •.m .. In the courlroom of Otp.11rtl"l"l!nl
HO. 3 ol s•1d court, al 700 CIYlc Center
Drive Wtst, In Ille C1 ly of Santa Ana,
California.
O.ted March 4, 1'17S
The Property which Is lhr Sub1eC1 of
thlspet111onl"ltscrlbtd utoll~:
AP NO .OJ·l·Mt Lot 2'1 Tract No.
4'71, in the c.uy ol &.Jnl• Ana. as i»r
map recorded In Book 211, Page S lo a
i11eluslve of Mlscellaneous MIPS, r&·
cotdsol Oret1Q41 County, Calllorni•
ISi Dorwld P. Shiley
.l•IMIWllMr ltlMDELAND ANDERSON
AltorMYt
10a Nertll IHNWIY
SMta Alla, c.111.,,.1. tl70t
Ttl: 17141 SSl-7171 At..,.,.. ... , ter: PetllloMr
Put>li"'9d Or•nQe co.nt 0.1ly Pilot.
~o. 11. 11. ms m.1s
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUPEltlORCOURT
Ol'CALll'OANIA
COUNTY Ol'OltANGE
c:.tHN .... MrA•ll"8
NOTICI! 01' HIAAINO
Est•t• ol GEORGIANA TEEPLE,
... Hd. N()TICI! 15 HERE8V GIVEN llwt
WltAYANNE T. LEE, tlle •d·
ml11lstr•trlJ1 of the Ettl!• of
OEOAGIANA TEEPLE, the clKe<lenl,
flls 11190 11treln • Petition tor an order
•ut11orlalrua •nd CllroctlnQ lllf •d·
f!llllhtrtlrla of the ••l•I• of tilt above·
• r:'. -" dKeOtnt tp epnyey the proo1Wty
:"!'!'. -rlt>eel bel-to WILLIAM CO)(,
•Ito llno!otrn u 81L\. cox. In (Of'll-
pljtll(f wllll the terrllt of tNI Wfltltn
,..r1rltt1hlp Aorttm.llt t11ttrld lnto by
.. ttdtrll In hu tlftllMt and by
Wll.l.IAM ()OX, and ,,,. Ptllllen IMll
,.... Mt for l'!ffrlnt In Oei>af11Nnt hf
Ille abvft "'tlt1tc1 c:oun on IN a1.t o.v
et Mlt<ll HH. al t o'clock •
A.M. ,,.. perWMI prOC)lrty to be C011"9¥tCI
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
SUPERIOlt COURT OF THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR
THE COIJl!ITY OF ORANGE
Ne.A·IVSI I Estate of ROSE M. CULP •ka ROSE
CULP, OecHSecl.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo 1"8
credilors ot Ille •bove named decedent
that ell persons llaY1ng claims against
the said decedenl are required 10 hie
lhem. wilh the necessary voucners, 1n ,
Ille ofllce Of the clerk of the above en-
titled court, or 10 present tllem, with the
ne<esHry vouchers, to the undersigned at CIO PRENNER ANO BUNT, Al·
lorneys •I l.•w. 16S1 Ent Fourth
Slreel, Suile 121, Santa Ana. Cetifomla
97701, wh1c11 is Ille place of bu.iness ol
lhe undersigned in all mclllers Pttrlaln-
int lo lhe Mia le ot s.s1d deu denl, within
le ;r monllls alter lhe llrSI publicaliofl
01 this notlc.e.
Oeled M..rch '· 197S
FERNG.JAVNES
E .eculrut ol tlle W1 II of
Ille above named da<tdenl
PRENNER AND BUNT
AtlorMyS Al Law
IHI Eut Four111 Street, w .. 12t senu Ana, C.lifornl• '2701
Te~: (114) ssa-uu
Atler•Y$ for Euc11trl•
PubllShed Oran1141 Co.itSI 0•1ly Pllo(,
~rch 10. 17, l•, JI, 1'7S 11J.7S
PUBLIC NOTICE
• s..351
NOTICI! TOCltEOITORS
SUPERIOR COURT D,.T~
$TATE Of' CALIFOltNIA FOR
THE COUNTY 01' OltAMGE
Ne.A..UO
Estate ol ROBERT S. DENCH, IU
ROBERT SIDNEY DENCH, eka 1 HENRY SI ONEY DENCH, Oe<ultd.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lhll
cteaftor• of the •bovtt n•Nd decfdtnl
tll•t 111 person' hulng <tetms ~lns1
lllf itid dec:ttdent ••• r'ttqultl!ll lo Ille tlltm. with tM necuury YOU(llert, ln
11\f olllco 01 tilt Clerk ef the •"°'4 -1111.d cO\lf't, or to pres.111 iflf(n, with tilt
11t<tswry ,....,,.,.,,, 10 tllf Uft4tr•ll"fd
•• the trust CltMrlment of the BANK 01' AMERICA NATIONAi. TRUST
ANO SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, WI
v111 Nuy6 8oulev•r4, V•n Nuy1,
C..llfoml• tl.01, wlllcl'I ls 11111 place of
«MnlllftS ol the undersl9f'9d II\ All met.
Ito ...-t.1111110 to tM est•••-' ~lcl Clf. ceoent, w1t11i11 four montM ffttt lflt
llrttC1Ubllc-11IOfl of this l'Ollce.
0.IHMat<ht. lfH
ltOSEM.'111 IE lTl!WART
t&•tcflllld at fol-. "OM hfll IV.) ~ 111109Mf'al ptftntol\lpll-k lJ QlrJM ,1191iutlOllS loutecl tt
,,._ M011t• Viste ltoact, Clsl~•.
U~". .. ,.rtflte Is Slade '' the Petition on 1eNn111.., fuflllff partKula"L
DENCH 81!1111 of Arntrl<• NalltNI
Tru•t and S..111_. A~ltllon ~TEOMerclll. ms
Wll.,l.IAM V, SCHMIOT
AllOfN't '°' ""tltloner -.u.tAMV,l(HMIOf _..,,.y .. Uw ....
..... M .... IDrlve
·-·-... 1H<11, c:.1•f'lll•tl6M ........ Ot41WHtlt
By· C. 1', O•wlt, Jr.
l rint Officer C:.€ltit<vton .. thf '#II
ef lM etlOYe Mrn44 ~
• TMO#.U I . O.UCIN, INC.
t!UIV911._.aiw_ .._a..., ca111 ...... 11 ttm
fef ltltll1WM
L. !ti. Boyd
When a Wife
Is Happiest
In what stage or her matrimonial life is a
wife most likely to be happiest? That's what
the scholars wanted to know. Al the Universi-
ty of Michigan's Institute for Social Research.
After lengthy study of the matter, they con·
eluded it was a tossup between two stages.
Before the first youngster was born and after
the last left horn e.
NO NEW YORK CITY policeman is
authorized lo wear a curly mustache .. .IT'S
NOT the carrier pigeon
that carries messages. but
rather the homin g
pigeon ... THSEE OUT or
every 10 corporate
bankruptcies result from
employe theft.
PRESIDENT
Am asked if that job of
United States president is
harder on the man in the
office or on hi s wife. Debatable. Still, if you
don't count the assassjnated presidents, most
chief executives have outlived their wives. In
fact they've outlived their vice presidents and eve~ the campaigners who ran against them.
Would appear that.defeat is more likely than
victory to grind those Politicians to their
graves.
Q . "HOW MUCH money does a pro
baseball player get for letting his picture ap·
pear on bubble gum cards?"
A. Was $250 atlastreport.
RUM RIGlfl'S
Pretty Caney piece of construction, that
Parliament Hou~e in Sydney, Australia.
Three contractors put it up in 1811. Do you
know what they got paid for the job? The ex-
clusive ri ght to sell rum to the citizenry
thereabouts.
STATISTICAL ODDS are greater that a
wife \yill be murdered by her husband than a
husband by his wife.
BY THE TIME a working citizen now age
22 reaches retirement, said party's Social
Security pensibn is expected to run about
$3,166.67 a month. Or so report the money
boys. They say the new escalator clauses .ln
the Social Security law which match benefits
to consltmer prices will make that much dif ·
fcrence ~t today's rat.eofinllation.
Tff'AT GREAT ACl'OR Spencer Tracy on-
ce mistakenly wos given an Acad«!my Awards
Oscar engraved Dick Trat'y.
RECENTLY reported· that a. 1939
Superman comic book in good condition is now
worth about $S,OOO. Client asks the value of
same 10 years aao. About $100.
llOIT llEN who buy hairpieces take their
wives aloaa to overtee Ute firSt nttina:
ytltPITITICNtaa
P\111111..,_. Oflfttl CNM o.ty ....
,..,, .. 10, "· "· "" -.u
IA'*-V WC.l11ecltwl I
'9uli!W4 Of.._ C:oatt Delly Pli.t, \_,.-.,,._.. .......... ,,_ ..... .,._-...-..._.~_. .......... .._.. .... ~~-.:~ ~((Ill .. U,M,a•. ,.,. en 1J
'l ..
} (
.}
DA Hicks
Supports
Fund Bid
In exchange for a proposed 14
percent hike in his budget for
next year, Orange County Dis·
trict Attorney Cecil Hicks vowed
to toughen his approach to pro·
.se~ution of serious crimes.
Hicks was grilled for about an
hour by budget experts from the
County Administrative Office·
trying to trim fat out of depart·
ment propasals before full·scale
hearings this summer.
The DA is asking his operating
budget be increased Crom SS.45
million to $6.2 million next year.
With the added funds, plus ex·
pected revenues from various
s tate a nd federal programs,
Hicks said Friday he will :
-Concentrate harder on
tracking down missing fathers. to
get family support that otherw1se
must come from taxpayers.
-Create a special "rape unit"
in his offi ce to make pl"osecution
of such cases less difficult for the
victim.
-Concentrate harder on
violent crimes other than
homicides right from the stal,1. of
the justice system proc~ss to as·
sure successful prosecution.
-Concentrate on heavily pro·
secuting r esidential burglary
suspects. He said the economic
problems have pushed figures
for such crimes up dramatically.
llicks made his most extensive
comments on the rape unit con-
cept, which he thinks could en·
courage more women to report
such crimes.
''There has been a tremendous
amount of attention focused on
rape and the handling or victims
by police," Hicks said. "What
we want to try is having cases
handled by an extremely compe·
tent female trial lawyer and a
female investigator," he said.
'·J personally don't think an ex·
perienced male investigator
causes a rape victim any discom·
fort but the other should be
tried," he said. Hicks warned that any push by
his office to prosecute more crimes will result in increased
added hearings and trial dates.
"But after a first shock wave, I
· think it will be an insignificant in·
crease in cost." he said ..
Hicks got into a philosophical
debate wit h County Ad ·
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas, who said the entire
justice system is going its own
way, "costs be damned."
.. Don't blame the system jt..::~
because we've raised a genera-
tion of irresponsible people com-
mitting crimes," Hicks said.
"But Jaw enforcement has to
articulate what the problems
are." Thomas said.
''I 've got budgets to hold
steady that I can't control and
sometimes I feel like I'm trying
to leed the multitude with five
loaves of bread," he ad<kd. ,
Hicks and his chief aide, J.G.
Enright, argued that the best
way to keep the system working
is to cut out all the trials for mis·
demeanor offenses.
Ex-Playboy
Model Facing
Vice Trial
Former Playboy· model
Kathleen Ann Mahoney of
Corona del Mar was ordered Fri·
· day to race trial April 8 on pro-
stitution charges filed arter she
was arrested in a Laguna Hills
hotel. Santa Ana Municipal Court
Judge Philip Schwab set the trial
d_ata for Mlss Ma honey, 23, ot 900
Sea Lane. Corona del Mar. She ls tree on her promise to appear.
The def end ant w.as arrested ll\
a room at the Hilton Inn. Laguna
Hllls, after he allegedly ac~pt·
ed SlSO from an undercover
sherlft's officer ror services she
was not allowed to perlorm.
ArrHUns omcers uld the de·
readant had been under ln·
vesUsatlon for some Ume in con-
necUoo •·U.h all~ed prostUuUon
_actMUes. •
..
A San Francisco wrv~ 1ta·
lion dealer au'"1 rrexaco.~nc., for mor~ than $20 mwtan *•use
the company allegedly rort'ed
him to sell tertlliie,r, doll Md
Samsonite IUJ(aage.
William La-nillle said in his ac·
lion that the on company
threatened to terminate hls lease
if he refused to buy the products
for resale. • F9"11er A tty. Gen. John N.
Mltdtell and for~ r Asst. Atty.
Both were convicted Jim: 1 of
coru•pirana to covor up tbc
Watereate sc;mda1. Tho •u•·
perutlon Is routine tor attorneys
con\'1cted ol telonles.
* The Senate approved the
nomination of rormer Rep. Vidor v. Veysey <R-Ca!if.) as asslsta1 l).t
secretary of the Anny tor c vil
works, a new position. Veysey, 59, served four years
in the House. He was defeated
last November.
By JOHN VALTERZA
DI tllf Dally ~Uot Stall
Th,fasults, shouting and banging' on the walls have ended
(gr a while at reg_ional coastal commission meetings.
' . Bttt TnE effects of weeks of raucous debate over the
commlssion 's planning element which would ~erpetuate the
. systeJll well into the decade will last for so~e time.
For a commission used to more sedate g1ve-and·take, the
frequent appearances by hundreds of construction workers
have been a trial.
J\nd toward the recent end of the hearing phase on the
Powers, Funding and Gover·
ment element of the state's
coastal plan, the patience on both
i,1des had worn thin.
ONE SPIRITED debate took
place during a break in the hear-
ing.
It involved Commissioner
Judy Rosener of Newport Beach
and one of a bout 200 construction
workers who charge that her
nuuu commission permit rejections
" cost their jobs.
Md. RQ6eflet! has not tried to conceal her anger at the
com0misslqt! befng singled out as the chief contributor of the·
constjuction slump across the U .s.
"'WELL· SAY what you want." the hardhat insisted, "but
we know that all you commissioners are environmentalists
and those people from the Sahara Club tell you what lo do.''
"It's SIER RA Club. You don 't even know the name of the
club " said the exasperated Mrs. Rosener.
"Now let me ask you something else," she added quickly.
"have you ever read the document that these hearings an:
dealing with?"
: THE REPLV was one which has become a stock defense
of the men doing battle with the commission.
··well, I never had a college education, and all I know is
that you people are costing us our jobs," he said.
Mrs. Rosener did not back off.
"YOU PEOPLE have come to these hearings and have
been terribly rude, and I have to wonder how informed. Y?U
really are about what the commission does and what this 1s·
sue is all about.
"There are 50 states ln th.ts union," she added, "and only
California has coastal commissions. Do you really belie\'e
that we're responsible for unemployment in all the other 49
states?'' When formal hearings resumed that day, the issue of ac·
curate information rose again.
ONE WORKE R approached the podium, encouraged by
shouts of" go get' em" from the gallery.
He assailed the commission for curbing employment by
rejecting coastal construction, citing a Terminal Island
waste-treatment plant and a Wilmington refinery as ex·
amples. · Chai rm an Donald Bright interrupted.
"f;XCUSE ME, sir, but I wish you would get your facts
straight. We approved the Terminal Island plant perhaps 18
monttfs ago and it ·s on its way to some other agency on
down the~ine.
· :·As for the Wilmingt-0n refinery, sir, that is not in the
l,000-yard coastal wne where we have permit po\\er.
"You see, sir, we never even had the chance or the po'' er to·
look at that project."
Harbor Area Firms
Get Charity Kudos
Si]< Harbor Area firms received
awards of excellence during a'
United Way dinner at the
Disneyland Hotel. _
United Way honored a total of
277 Orange County firms for rais-
ing $2,802,000 during the 1974
campaign.
The Harbor Area firms were
among 47 county companies re-
ceiving the award for haying 75
percent employe partictpation.
The~ are the City or Costa Mesa .
Voluntary Action Center of
Southern Orange County, Harbor
Area Boys Club. Hyland Division
of Tra_venol Labs, Inc., Philco-
Fo rd Corp. 8)ld Southern
California First National Bank's
Airport, Bay"5ide and Superior of-
fices .
Leadership awards, going to
firms with 5<1 percent participa·
lion. were received byCelesco In-
dustries Coast Community Colle~e District. Harbor Area Girls Club, May Company·South
Co•&t· Pl ta, Orengc 'C•ast <;ollege, Sfars, Roebuck nod
Company.South Coast Plua. and
MonNntoCorqpapy. •
·Al so recelvinJ'( ~mn\unlty
·1eadersh!e. awards Wednetday
were.,_. CilY of Newport Beach,
ln'lne Co1npany,·Newport·Me a
Un10td School District, Oranc
Coast YMCA anct. lm\)'erlal
Savlnet and Loan Assodatlon's Newport Beach ud N1.wport
C.enter of ficos.
Harbor Area firms receiving
corporate awards for making $10
or more contributions per
employe were The Broadway·
.Fashion Island, Buffums ·
Fashion Island, Commercial
B~nker's Life Insurance Com·
panl:', Glendale Federal Savings and Loan Association of Newport
Beach, KOCM Radio Station, and
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Company.
Six more corporate awards
were received by the Automobile
Club of Southern California-Costa
Mesa, Bullock's-South Coast
Plaza, Cadillac Controls Division
of Ex-Cell·O Corp., California
Federal Savings and Loan-Costa
Mesa. Glendale Federal Sav1ngs
and Loan Association-Costa Mesa
and Standard Pacific Corp.
Firms that were honored for
making progress toward emplore
participatioo were Albertson s·
Corona del Mar. Collins Radio
Company, Southern California
First National Bank·Westcllff of.
fice, Connecticut General Lile
Jnsurance Company, Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospitah., Theodore Robbins Ford and r1sh-Harbor
Counci~or Churches.
Others were Bob's Big Boy
Restaurant-Costa Mesa. Gulton
Industries, Joseph Magnln Com-
pany~South Coast Plata, MunSOTI
Sportln1 Goods Inc. and Southern
Caltrornia First N aUonal Bank
Costa Mesa.
-~---~---.flHW.1•1 .. 11--1 ,_. S. Ci....,.el
•••. .. Fors. ·············-········ ................ -.... . ....................... ••• ,... • 002.i.-----------1 ~-.......
A&••-' 1002 .............. -....... MESA VEIDl'S •••••••••••••••••••••••
EHTERT AINH'S
OEUGHT
Beam ce1bng ooauly au
c itclus 1ve Newport
Heights. 3 l&e bn, 2
t rplc:. -Frent'b doors
uvcrlooi. 1ng encl o11ed
Spanish puuo & garden.
Warm & cozy forruly rm
OCEAN MONT
HOME PLUS
GARAGIAPT.
Comple tely remodeled
l\ome with two bedrooms
and two bat l\s. Sparlcllng
n e w kitchen . Newly
painted e~lt'nor. All this
plu:. u be aut1fut one
~droom ..apartmt:Ql warn
.. 'I NES T. ~h•rP 4
bedroom. ;,i IJa ttt·levtl
home Neur pravale com.
mun1ly counlry c lub.
Huge 1urntly ruom,
formal J1111n~ and over·
sized lot. Very flexible
finant·1ng Cull S46-5lld0
-'~• HERITAGE . • REALTORS -n•r u m 1c Lill• & parquet
lluor:.. .\I any vtllcr ~'
lr a :. Call 101 •'l>l>l
Sl'.HH.l:\1:
a \'lt'W or the oreao.1·----------1 r ran• h.i.. been l'Ul lO
~Jl.>.wu Callbi3~
tel-. \ L E~ I'\ rt-:
l\J.J J..>IX
C>Pfr. "' y . "\ ., "1061. tw<.f [~ltl\I
MOMEYTOLOAH
Ull llUllll'"· aU al'i!.a!>
t>rolt.'CI ) our crt'd1l. l'all
!jtt'.! li.l l l.!.l Ill'
!'>l'f\ H'•' I Ill-. H
FRENCH
CHATEAU
2 STORY BEACH
POOL $32,900
fo'ormal doubl~ door 1'11
ll' lO clramul1(• II\ 111i.:
room Formal cl1111·
H u ge i;;:.irdl'n \ll'W
k1L l'nt.·n ,\rllst11· u11l'l1
:--l.tlr:. "'41.·1·p tu M'Jla1-.1ll'
111.bll'I' ~llllt.• th1hlrt•t1 ~
IFYOUAIN7 ~ w111~ S1:l'ludt•cl .!..!
GOT A BARREL BALLROOM ~1100 pJrlY
room that ovt.•rluokl:i OF MONEY walled tourt~artl. llurry
Bt1l yuu wanl lo sta rt out tor 111 1,.. (•x1·1.·p111111al
1.1i..1.• .1 i:.1ndcr at 1111:. li .\ H (; .\ I ,"\ ' l ' a I I
~~ 7l!ll l Hu1111 ngton lll'Ul'h 3 0,.,N 111 ~.,.~1,1N i(Jtt'• 1 •
IJdroom. IL needs only ~.~:~~~1:::~:~~~::~~~;~ 1 ~ m1m1
s:i~.ow ! \'els wt-lcome. · =---::::;,.
Cla:.:._••_•~_·t-1 _\d_' __ t>-l_.!_·.Jlll_· _·;11-Call nuw ~i ·~lu. t\gen~ VA /FHA Repos
111 Orall~e (.'ou111'
t\ev-. 11111rl1n· Pl'BLIC ~OTIC'E
FICTITIOUS au SI HESS
NAME STATEMENT
lfllf' fOU0¥1J1nQ pPr\on 1 d01ng Dv\t
"-~>•\
SEREHll'I' 100 Vo• 0 Porlo
Nr#l)O•I B~~n C.A91...0
(or .nn~ R Murpny 1oRSI V14 Vt< '°' J Mt'\"ltOn V 1t IV (dl1f QJ•I)
J "• ou .. 1n, •"' ' nou'-1 .. d IJ1 dn 1tl
Ol•10U4111
(Ortnrit k Murpny
1n,._ stdt~ni•nt WCfS "•ro ""'''n u.
Covnly C.•t>H <H 0rdn9• l.)ut'ICv ~
f t:tJrUdr'j 1J l't/.)
F~I
f-ubl•VtctJ Or tnQt l.Od~t Oo1ly J,'itot
Nl.H <11 l, 10 II 2• IQ/' 11~ II
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITING
SEAL£0 PROPOSALS
NOTICE IS H E REBY CilVE N Illa!
se•l..S Ille!• or proPOuls wlll bor ~·
C4hved by 1!'1e Oran~ Coun1Y Tr•n\11
Otstricl a1 Ille ot11ca ol 1ne Ot•nQe
County Pur<,..Sln9 A9enl, 1300 Soutll c;,.na A,...n~. S.nl• An•. C.IHorn.•
92702, uMll S;JO pm. on W-Y.
Marcll , •• ltlS tor; Two Fout·Ooo<
Sed.ln Automobile pet 'pe<lflc•lton
7~•ndRFONo Ul&S.
Bids ,,..11 bor subm•lted on lhe pr0
POWI ~I lur1>h hed by th• Pl.or<ll~
•"9 AQfflt en<loYd In a ~•led"'~°""
m•rll.ed "OCTO Aulomobllo tor 0.•I
A-Rooe," Pl•tr•ly endor\t!O W>lll bid
oer·sNme
B•Os. will ~ •••m•nf'd •nO rf'OOrtt:'d
-1011\e Bo..rd of Otreclor\ ot 1~ OhlrK1
•I • mffllnq w 1lf\1n Ill orly UOl o.ty\
•tt~r the t»a oo.n•no
Tne Con1rac1 lo bt' l•I wtll bor \Ub~<I
to a t.n•nc.••I •\\t\t4n<~ <ontr.ct
t>rtwun the Or•nv• County Tr.tn"I
01stroc I •nd 111e U 5 Ot p0r 1rn-n1 01
Tran•POr1at1on
All bodoen will bor reQuored toce<ltly
IN! 11\ey a'9 not on 11\e Comptroll<!r
~nerat's 11s1 ot lnr1191b1e cont•« Ion
c.on1rac1or will bor reQuorea tocom()lv
..,tn •II •PPllt•bl• Equal Emp1oymet11
Oppor1un1ly laws ana r•9ulalto•"·
R•Quoremenls, spe<1llc•llons, ""d
fo-m\ of propca11t\ may bt' ob!allW!d and
on-.oe<ted at IM othce ol lf\e Pvt<M•
tf\9 Aqent
Jolln K A\Oer, Jr . Buv~r
Oranve County Tran•ll O.\lrltl
Publ•!tl\4'0 Oranv• C.0<1\I Daily P•IOt,
!"'"•<f\ IOil\d 11, 1q1~-__ 11_1 I~
P UBLIC NOTICE
----IS4Jl 4-----
SUPE lttOR COURT OF THE
STATE OF CALI l'OltNIA FOR
THE COUNTY OF ORAHOE
Ho A·I0140 .:
HOTIC.E 01' HEARING OF PETITION
TO ESTABLISH INTEREST IH
PERSONAL PAOPEATY PORTIONS
OF WH ICH AllE HELO BY AHOTHEA
CProNte C ... 151.SI
E•l•le of E5 THER PEARl
MARl(HAM 0..<~•\~d
NOTICE 15 HEREBY Cil VEH tf\,11 J
PAT RICK M c CARROLL AO
m1n1\lra1or .-w1tn tt'!• W•U Annev~d hd'
hied l\t'reon • peht•OI\ to Ot1trm1"" 11\1 1nt.,rt\I ot 11\1! E \1•14' .,,a 01,,.r pe•\O<'I'
1n iand to<ert••n •tc.ounts ._,., torO'l 1ntnit
prhhon •ltd 111•1 If\• Court ma~t 11•
OrcMr tn.Jt no01\tnbut1on t>t-n"kldi'> trorr
on~ of \41d o<count-. until th• , .. 1 .. 11w 1n
t e-rt\ts h•vf' b•en Oflt,.rm1ned. r't
ft_•r.-n(ll" H> wrurn '' nldO,. for furtht.t
l)drlirultlr\ dnO tnr.11 th~""""' dind Ol4l<•
of "'!~r1ruJ ft\•· \•H"W n .. H otcn ~t t04
Morch 11 l'HS, 111111 11 00 am . '" Irv
courlroom of Oeo.t1r1"1~n1 No 3 ot '"'' court.•t 700C1v1t C~nt•r Or1v,.Wf"'>l in
11\t' C1tyol 5An1• Ana, (Al1lorn1d
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
WORLD
REAL ESTATE
~pl'l'IJll:.L:. Ill ).!11\ l'l 11
mcnl 11nanc1·cl ll11tnl'"'
556-717i l':tll an.' u nw
M•wport Heiqhts
Charming J lk.•lln.M1111
dm1ng ru0m F1rt.•pl;11·l',
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... '.4 ~ HERITAGE
• . REALTORS
Perfect
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BARGAIN !!!
MESA VERDE
.I Large l1d111h p1u ,
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qu1el \'II I lit.• ~ .... 'I l'l't'l
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Pyramid Exchancjors
Realtors 833-1768
LEASE HOW
BUY LATER
SELLER IN
HURRY
Big IJt"JllLllUI llHllll ...
( 'l1:an & :.h.orp. \\ 1111111 1:•
µallo I l ' l'l'<llly lot ~\Ill
now. C.tll ri h; l'il
oPf'J ru q . ' , •
CAREFREE
LIVING
SAVES
4 +POOL
Cu l lie sac s11.·1•l
,\(an 1 curt.• t.l gr u u n tis
J> r C S l I ).\ l' l' II l I \
:·.;(; ,'\i KI·:.\ I'.\ HI.II I\
llu~c I 41111 11 ) recrcHI 1rn
r oom adJal'l·nl to 1urg1.
~ Ii r d l' II k I I (; n c 11 1-·o HM ,\ L IL\.'i(iU I'; I
I< U 0 1\I • W I 11 r! I 11 •
IXCLUSIVE LIHDA ISLE -$425,000
NEW fantastic luxur y home w;th
finest detail by a rea's best build~r.
Exp('nsn·c wall papers. <.d.>Undanl
murble. c rysl:.i~ li ght fixlurcs, top
quality cptng. gorgeous drapes, ce n-
tral ,·ac. pool/jacuai, pier & slip. 5
BH, FH. rec. rm. 3-t·ar garugc .
2 I I I San Jooq.Mn Hills Road
NEWPORT CEN'TH. M.8. 644-4910
I 002 Gettet"al 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
IF YOU'RE
FUSSY
\'ou lovl' this l'.\Ctullve
:.111 g le !'>lo1 y 111 pn rnc u i.' u (' ll I o 1: a l 1 v n .
Mat11(·un• l·orncr lol. Im·
m ;u·ulall'. t menor detor
1:-. ll'l'l'l l ll' F l·aLUrcs elf•·
c1cnt wrap a r ound
dream "1 ll'hcn. <:111.y
fa in 1tv room w it h
llreplal:l'. Formal din·
mg. One >ear new. J u~l
::>.'>!U.KHI' l' a II now to :.cc .
\;!('Ill
ESTATE SALE
BIG CANYON
Bordeaux ~. Onr
2000 sq.ft. of luxury
li•ing, spectacular
STEPS TO
THE BEACH
Live lhe good llll' As
soc1al 1011 rn;11nl.lll\t.'ll
gr ountl:.. ll1w year new.
Ha gh :,t•cun ly private
(·ommun11 y Take advan-
tage Ol In\\ ' lllW IJl'ICe
Just S:Jli,.•UO' Call nuw lo
sec 1:147-tiu 111 i\gl'lll.
VETERANS
Tired o l gl'tting the run
around'!'!: II )ou ha\e
any ljUC:..llUlll\ alJOUl b UY·
111~ a home.· \',\, l'all llll'
Vi\ E xpert-. at
World Real Estat.
Specia 11:..t:. 111 V,\ hou:.
ing. i\:-.1. lo r \'c11•rJn
Cou n:.dor. 55ti-.iii.
anyllme
Yiew. Many extras,!•---------
won't last long. c:all for
appolntme-nt.
AGENT 644-6056
AMAZINGLY
LOW PRICE
F or MJ 111 ud1 honw ! Jlugc
:.cp u ru L1.· I a mlly r vom
Ila:. Swed 1~11 11replat'l' +
Llur. 1'::1.lrJ 1argc tormal
t11 11 111 g. ~ll l tlt.'ll l
holl1l'mat.er kllchl'll All
l\111g,.,1l.l' l>t-tlrooms. 81g
Walk to Shopping
1-:a:.l.'>ldc. i..'11:,ld ,\ll•:.a
c lu:.e w 111aJ11r m.irkl'l!>.
You 1n11!'>t !'>l'l0 lh1:. quu11lY
l>utll , 1m111.1l·ul alc 3
bed r110 in pool h1>ml'
ICLllUl'lll~ l.1rg1· 1lin111g
room. :.l'P 11rt.l!>l mom.
11..ird wornl 1 loor~. srtakc
rool. 11rqil.1e t'. ('all lor
dl'l.11b.:>lll ll..11
~~HERITAGE
REALTORS
1·or111·r lul All 1or 0111)' l•----------~11 . .)IJll CJll now to :-.l'l'
X-17 til) 10 ,\ 1-:l'lll. ---
WESTCUfof
ELEGANT
POolHOME
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C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640--0020
OCEANFRONT
INV ES l'M l<:.\I I' PfWI'
1111 a ()Jo: I·: I' n:, ll lt1I
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SI 75,000.
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JACOBS REALTY
b; .i titiill
.::11 :1 .\1•\\ pon Bl\11
BLUFFS BEAUTY
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CENTURY 21
642-1771
SUM LOVERS
ATTENTION!
Sun ~ourM·ll 011lnt·11ui.;c
M'l'llllol "ll)I'} :>Ut11lt•1 I.
l'hl" µ<11'1~ llOme tw" J
to1y 1am11v l'otlm '41111
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hl'droom,. haH' ~oaring
\.tul1 .. ·d ('l'lllllg:. \\ould
\ t>U Ul'llC\ e 1)111\ l).);i,.)11\r' :.i~·t· 11 11ow 1 Cali~; blll1)
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HOME + INCOME
E,\STSI rn: :!IH{ hu11 ... 1•
Wllh IJ;tl'hl'lt11' .1pl t 1 llH
;,pl O\ 1·1 i,:ar.r~t.· ,\,
:-.umc I , \' \ 111.in. ~i\i
per 1110 1·.111 l'lO~Sl'l<il'.
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SELL 1dll' llt·111,., \\llll .i
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WILLIAME SIJOHN,
(ounlv (In •
MC l(EHHA & l'ITTINC'.
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
!'>tairway 111 :.c11ar<1u G I l'hildr~ns wini;. c;urnl G•n•ral 1002 enero 1002
l4U W11St11re a 1vd., Jll~ Floer
Lo• An99r.1, C•lil t0010
hi IJ1JI JN.t)JI
AttorNn to• Prlllloner
Puof1'.f\ed OrdnQf" C CJd\t Ut4' f '•'0' ~re~ l. 4, 10. t<llS 114 11
P UBLIC SOTICE
NOTtCl I NVI TI N G SEALED
PltOPOSALS
'-<)TICE t!. HEREBY CilVEN lh,Jt
W..ittf"d b•C:h Of proOO\dl\ "''" bf" , ...
, .. ,Wlf'd ov I~ Or•n?t County Tr.,,\tt
(""''><I "' lfl~ otto(f of Ille Oro>nr '-°""'Y PurrnH•nQ AQ#nl, 1300 ~II\
L•rdf"ld A vf'nllf' S,tnf• Att•. (4'ltforn10
'11rn uni ti l OC. o "' on Tu#sd•• Apttl
.1 141'.I •l wn1CP\ t1Mft' b1d\ w1U ~
~'< ly o.otn...a t'fnd ,,..MJ. ft)r ltw--t~lloi
•"9 MOBILE llAOIO EQUIPMENT
I JIAN~I T Vf;Hl(l l)
8100 .. , ,. nurJtttt1r.n ~ .n.tU ,,,. ltJdt'-
fUf'n•\h•"'1 ttv t:Qu1pmvnt for *lnd com
s:>tet~ in\t•ll•tion, tune vo oe>Um•t•"Q ....,d clltO ou1 ol 11\e •~l\•Cle com
l'ftlftt<tthOn\. e-qu1pm•"' 1n •Ctor<litn<.~
"""' the '9e<1tocal•on' lllertlore, 10
which 'oe<••I retertnct '' m.tO. Trv
fll\llomont \f\•11 or•ctuae. l>VI not ~
hmli.d to, Ille to11ow1n9
Mobile Unit\ lor BUM\ "'1d Olhe•
VenttlO\
Bio• U..11 be •ubm illod on Ille pro
l'OYI ~ fu<n1,ned t>v t~ Pu<th.H
tftQ N)eM efl<IOMd lrl e Ma ltd ~ ~k.O ''OCTD MOblte Radio I.quip.
Mtl\I," ptelflly erldOf MO """" lll*llf'• -· eid't •Ill be euml,,.,., '"'4 ~
let ... 6o9fO o4 Oittctors ot tf\e OltltlU
E 6
D 4
2
•
•I • mMli"9 wllllln lf\ltty llO) deY\ 5 •tie< IM IUCI -n1n9. Contrec10< w0111e ,...,.1ree1 to c.omoly
""'t" atl -li<at>le l!Qval (MfllO\lmtf'tl
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TP\C COtltr.ct 10 .. let "'""lie Wbjed
to • t1nanc1•I an1s1er1ct <Oftt•KI 6
bort-•n 11\e Qr..,._ Collftty Tr...,il
Olstr1c1 and ,,,. unoltel Statts 0.-1·
f'l"trntof Tr.tn\PClf'l•llOrl
Arly n a m• •POt•r lr19 0" lllt Comc>trol•~• (An~1a1·s h•tot •Nl•9'«H 7 conl••Clor• l0t ltOtr•lly l •rle"l80 -•~\I.cl <-lruchon "rlOI all tlilli* ......,,.,
AeQu•ttmonh s~cll1cat1.,.. •nc:I
•ms ol P<-•h ~ y bo OOf•I.,... b\I
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tnas tC'r ::.uttt .. ·. OONL". ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•••••
\\;;It. Ill doM.•t:. !'I'll(
1 .. 11·c1rce vu1·u..., + main
l en auce ~ 1u.:1<; pool C1n1
rccr~a Laonul fac111111::.
Won l la:.l t•all oow I<
s1•e. K-12 2.>J.>
()l'ftJ 111 9 • II S llJN IOIJf I,.(( •
[,talfiNHI
CAPE COD
TWO STORY
POOL
sa900DOWM
i"ormal e n lr y lo X larJ:
11~ 1n~ and tt1111ni:r rooms
~usLom m 1rrnrcd \lllll.
;.ind ro o rn c1i v1 d c r :.l
S1>ac1o u" indoor-outdoor
kalctren. Sw~eping ~turrs
to u 014 uc niasler amt
s 1·µ:ir:J ll' c h1ldrcni.
w1ng11 Very larg e
t•nl·losed pauo. Haml>I
ing park like grounds
and pool l>on l nu ss Uus
Ont! Ca II !kJJ -f76'7
Ot'l/4 111O •11 S I.JOI fO II N-('f'
IASTstbl CHAIMH
3 br -cl~ulu drtvt An
oldJe t>Ul a ioocUe Pl.US 2
aepar11le ttnl•I uni~
Harry!
SPARLJ NO
ReAL &STATE
llJ3~
VIEW PIHE TREES+ STARS
From living r oom and master s ui te
of thi s beautiful ·Tulane' model
separate home in Univers ity Park. 3
bedrooms & family room. Rare buy
at $69,500.
OCEAMFROMT CONDO
With bea utiful ocean view . 3
bedroom, 2 bath corner unit secure
and private . Well decorated and
maintained. Submit lease option.
$102,500.
CHOICE HOME-
CMOl<;IE LOCATION
DeJighUul Deane two bedroom, two
bath plus de n condominium in Big
Canyon. Exquisitely decorated &
landscaped. Many custom features.
Perfect for a smaller family of any
age. $139,SOO.
NJMI OCEAHFIOM'T LOT
Ideal site for your "Dream Home"
oo the beach. 1 Y.i lots on Balboa
Peninsula. $175,000.
DIAL 64~ 1766
216 t S-.le1;B ta Id.. M..I.
A COl.DWIU. IM«B CO.
HcMllH hf' ~ 1ncMa••• l""Of" SiM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••ritil t oo•...,.t I 002 • '
..... & ....... ........ . . . . . . . . fllDO.""
""'' ''" ..... T,.,.,.,..,...,, • •• • t100-""
• '4f44tUe S#dd ~
REALTORs'
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Bea utifully decorated Montego model.
4 Bedrooms, di\ing rm + fam rm.
Warm fireplace . On a b e autiful
landscaped corner lot. Shows like a
model. S81,500.
CALL -644-727,0
2821 E. Coast Hic)hway. Corona cMI Mar
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
ll0.::~10• NAllONAl MUlTl US1 SllVICl
11v1•r. wt u• <!ft' '" eur. 1111, 01 llf.tl llOCll\lll ' U"'"CI I# lllf •AllO#
Gewual I 002GHeral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DOVER SHORES
Sandy beach is the setting for new,
custom colonial home w /5 BR, fam.
rm .. formal din., air cond. $295,000.
LIDO ISLE
Large 8 BR. 6 ba. home on sandy
beach ; 50 ft. lot. shor e mooring.
$295,000. Will c onsider trade
LIHDA ISLE
Beautifully decor. 3 BR. & den, on
lagoon. Ramp & slip. $255,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Roy\rdP 0flvt· N B 675 616 1
GeMral I 002 General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
NO-FAULT CONDO
Only 111 The Bluffs can you e njoy s uc h
carefree Ii ving. Wl' offer this popular
Trina plan. with 3 bdrms. & 21,2 baths,
lgc living-rm, with frplc. Offered al
only $64,950.
([u~mN-Mll~TIN IHr]
'---REAL TORS----
644-7662 COROMA DEL MAR
Gttteral I 002 GNe>rol 100
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SWIMG AMOP
SAVE A LOT
:! ='tory Hxcr uppe r
I ' I ll' I' 1 l \\ t• I I I) c t 0 \\
m,11 l.t'l :-\;•lll'I' :--1a1·tl·d
u11;.:1aJ111 g JU!»l 10 be
l1.111-.ICl'll'U. 1'111-. h1•a\y
:--llal\l' r ool llolllll' ltas
gn•ut poa•nua1. 1 L111·gl'
lll'<lf'o•)m s. w1u1 l 1w.t1 ...
l'rt1·1· anti tc·rm:--an• 1•x
1·L•l l1.•n1 .I 11!>.t 111 ll•n•d ;fl
::.1.>.~1.i11 \11\h Fil,\ & \1,\
l 1·r 11 i,,
HORTH
COSTA MESA
$33,750
lh-.1ulll ully upg r;.idell
n11n1t• "1111 .J 1x•droom-.. l
ha l It I >t.·1·111-.1LUr tout· he:.
l 11rll11 ;.: It 11 ll l J US l 111
1rodul'l·tl into tnc man.et
1111-. \\ l'~·k Lo\ l.'ly pal to
1'111-. hllllh' 111.t)' IK' JU'l
\\hat ~ llll \ •' IX'l'll \I ,Ill
lllJ.: IUI'
545-9491
-Su~~}~~!~~~ !~!!m
home '41\h 1a11t.L,llt' u1·w
111 g rt•1·111w1t \\'.Ilk 111
poor and ll'lllll!> c.:uun::-
S hows 111. l' a mode l
St>J,aOO
640-'>161
~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
NEW BAYFRONT
CUSTOM HOME
lnYestor's
Delight!
E~1,..i-.1u.· l'11:-.t<1 .\ll·:-a
I HI l'LE~ Owners ui11l
11111• :.l<JI') t«11nplclc \\ 1111
l hl'U roum, 1.kn & I pie
l'nv ~arages \\ 1allcy ac
l'l'!>S I fllot•k Iii 17lh ~l .
l'l'l('t•d r1ghl Call
5 lti :ll!Xll
~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
FIRST CHANCE
() H l..\S r II :.old llllS
Wt.'t'KCntL SI l,llUtl. reduc-
uon on I n 11w Tt:rratc
\'It•\\ JB H "11 n puo1
Oul!>tamlrng n1rner llWJ·
lH)ll . NO\\ tolll\' Sl51,1IOU.
0'4 ncr \I all ht.'lp 1111;,m·c.
HAL PINC HIM, RJtr.
2727 E. Coast Hwy
675-4392
OCEAN VILLA
$4525TO
ASSUME
TWO STORY
H .1 mo 11 n g l wu :, Lon·
l11•a1·n home. Spacwu·s
II\ in~ and d111111g rooms.
I :,,urmct garden k1Lchcn.
:'>\H•cp1ng sw11·:. lO txmus
... 111.· ma-.lt'r ,'!,; t·h1ldrcns
!>Ulll'». l;la~:. duor~ tu
c n l'lo:.t•u p ;.1 11u a11tl
grou11tl~ l>nty ~l!.!J.)IJ
l'all 111r appo1111m1•11t
l;ltl:J--t; i ti7
OPfN Ill q. II~ '''" 10 81 ... ~I '
[«llflft1i1I
•$ 18,425•
Large ..'. oetlrm . ..'. IJa
\\;/f e n ce d patio 0 11
tlcaull tu 11 y landscaped
grounds Wt pool. SCCUfllY
gales 6c muc h more:
~1100. moves you in and
~11 p e r m o. pays 1t <111
1ncldg taxes. ans. &
matnl lees. Call Uan ut
XJ.'l -l!34!1 for appt to see.
A~L. _____ ---
4 Hdrm , 4 haltis plus
t: .ii l l' r y 1111 B a I b o a
l'l'llllll\Ul;a '41111 Prl\'UlC
pier IOI' OOIH up lo 00 It. 2
:i.l111 ;. Wllll 1·1rcular
s w1rt'aSl" :.! 11rcpluces
lone 111 huge hvingroom
& 0 ll c I II u p s l a I r :; bayrronl master bdrm. ___________ ,
wellJlilt . 1111 tJtulHns 10· Famil1 Growing? dudtn~ t!ll'Cll'OOJC oven. • l"l·c 1a11cl . ~279 ,0ou. Wa nt l c hc:H area?
t17j lill:!O tor more in-F-u t s1de schools, et c '!
1ormau on or .ee at l .!00 AsK to. see lh1s lovely 4
t:;, Hulooa Ul vd. bedroom 1am1ly -••·~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Id in rnx o 11 11 w ct • ~'reel. Move an cond1l1on. As·
1mme prc:.t>m VA loan
oalancl' or gel IX'SL IS() or
OO'k 1 inanc1ng.
4"UJ"e;J! C.lit'~
................................................ ·
\ I > I I . • • • fl•' !
'"" ..• ' '"' .. . '· I •ol ' ' __ .,..
I L~~ I •
SOUTH OH ACACIA
There's a cozy duplex: Board and bat·
ten, s huke roor. cross pane windows
nnd beam ceilings. 1l just needs you,
and a lit tle love and $73.500 .. You 'll
love the location! Close to the park,
the school and we 'll s how you a s hort
cut to the Coast Gua rd Beach. Do it!
UHl9UI HOMES R.alton-675·6000
Z443 E. Comt Hwy., Corotta cMI Mar
G ... ral 1002 GeMr'Cll 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
*Balboa Bay Properties*
Oceanfront lack lay
37o7 S.ashore . Shan> 4 BR .. 3 ba.
Dix D.uplex, w1 ll eondo. Frpl., patio. ~rad c to r more .un; pool. Try S42,500! tls . !!>105,000 cqwty. 675.7060 675·7060
Me.a Ver~ . Corona dtl Mer
Ve ry sharp 111.s1dc Oceanside of Hwy. ~out. 3 BH. &: lam. sharp tl c l u x e
1 "'! · 1 11 x 1 n } duplex . 3 & 2 BR.
11 e I g h b 0 l' h 0 0 d . ~l06.~5U ! ()75-7000
$58,500. 556-8800. ra REALTORS ra
G..wr•I IOOZGetter•I 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2074 PORT BRISTOL
l\ll. & night light view. Choice. large
cul-de-sac lot. 3 Bdrms. & family rm.,
al $75,000 inducling the land. Call for
app't lo ~L'e. -m VEA~
BAY ANO BEACH
675-3000
L'•IU l l r_QA~T HWY CORONA OLL Ml\R
1002 Gutral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
SPANISH
MANSION
ASSUME
$39,000
POOL-BEACH
--FUH OLDER HOME
Two Ill lots in Coron a d t>I
~lal'. \'1ew ol oc.:can.
roorn lo u s e nice l
bt•il 1•uo111 hunw ant.l llut Id
Ill'\\ un ~ IJ1::.1tlc 1l. ,\II Ln1:.
IOI' ~1~2.th.JO.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
1\1 J ll I C U I l' d ) J I'd ::.
Et~·\ al1'1l \ ,.,lllJull' St1·p
du\\ II It\ 111 1-: l'llllnl
Fur111.11 ii 111111i.: M'I'\ 1.·cl ll\
IX g;i l l1•\. l'lh>l'llllJU:-..
\\ 1111tl l·tl I ll'"l I l'tJlltl1 6U·S200 675·4060
"j \\Ill l~11llltt1'" ~l,•U't',l...,l' ~
l.'11'l·ular llall'Oll,\ ;, llllJ.!l' ----------s l' Jl :l I' It I t' 'I I l' (' I> I n ~ $55,950
2300 Sq.ft.
5 BEDROOMS
1111arlers K 1ng~ ma:.H:r
:.u•ll' UO "rnp around
d.1 nl·1: I'"'' 1110 11 A1osum1.·
i '. \' \ s:1.;11 p1:r momh
p.1 \,.. :111 ( )\\ 111.·1· lllll"l J.:tl t.1~.t· ud\;11\to.1;.:•· t'al l l:n•;Jt Founlain \';;lley
XI.! .!,1:1:, l111·al 1011. F a 11lU:.ll<' 1um1·
1~·1111 1 ., ·' 1 " 1 1r1 ,,, 1 I.' lt•Jmc: ~ Sul.Jnut your
[® f~~ ~ ~ ullt"r. Hume lit good con· ·,;, .~ii''': I tl1l1011. l SIOf,\' Wllh J
1 ~ I lll·clroum" up.:! clown, l'"!
lJa lth. li;i:. a:..,umablc
HORSE RANCH
1h AC.
$43,250
I l'l'l''· u·a1h. pa~Lurc., &
l'OUlll r) II\ 111g. 1·u:-.wm i
} r old. l'l'lllral air co11d1
ll I> II t.' ti IH' J \ \ !» h U j,. e
Stl111gk. ,Jll 1)u1ll lllS.
11n•plun'. .! o.1u1,,, huge
Ol'drooms & pool tahlt'
:.11e rumpu:. room. :,l)Ol·
le:-:--Call HI-. H %J 4:>43
Iii:! ;}l;jX
loan 11 d1..· ... 11·l·tl. ,..,.cw loan
tllll'l'l'"l l'un1111g UO\\ II.
"\O\\ I:, Liie ll llll' LU bu,\
t11111i.. jJt1 .. 1l1 \"l'.
546--4141
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE, INC.
SELL Hile llt.'lru. \lllh a
Dail) P1lo1l ( lu:.~1l1l'<.I ad.
ti.t:!<,tijl!
GeMral I 002GN•ral I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
macnab I irvine
malty
FROHT ROW VIEW!!
Ideal jetty view from this 2-story 3
bedroom home. Steps to sandy
beach. You own the land. $169,500.
Ken Hartley 642-8235 (R63)
"A GRANO HOUSE""
of gr acious e legan ce -formal
dining room -3 lu xurious bedrooms
-plush li ving room -bar room.
$189,500. J ack Cuslcr642-8235 (R64)
.....
1Vl1\.EltOCK -HEW lltOADMOOR
Beautiful 4 bedroom -2lh bath,
2-story home on lovely street. Steps
to greenbelt & recreation center.
John Watts 644 -6200 <R65 ) ..
NEWLY LISTED
Soarkling charmer ih Harbor View
ilOmes with 3 upgraded t> drooms 2
baths, huge country kitchen, for~al
dining room and a park location th al 's
unbeatable. $71,990 Fee. Emmet
McKune644·6200 < R66)
llG5
Ha rd to find s pacious 5 bedrooms
w/ramlly room, 2 fireplaces, wet bar, 3
car garage. Newport Schools. $96,900
Includes land. Joyce Edlund 642-~
(R67)
'°' Oowef.,..... .., . .,,. 1144 ~ ........
.......,, 9"eft, C...lefNI tmJ OtUI,,. lhtM UP •I 1"9 Olfl(t Of IN 8
)OM IC A'4tr Jt 8u.,..., 0r~covntvrr•n•••0tw1<1 t.:lassif1ed Ad ! Phone
1'111>11''"'" Q,.,..,.. (O.\I Oa1ly PllOC d-12 5678 lOdHy! --~!!~!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~l-~rtn tO II IVI) 1 .. 1S'-----------------...L--------------------...&. .... ...::..;,...:o-...;.;.. __ .-.. ____ _. __________ "!"__: .... ..;.. ........ L:::::::::::::::=:::::_-==--...:::::=:i:::::::::::=:=:=:=:::::::::::t.::-::::::::3;::::::::::;::::::::::::~::~~====:..s;
'1 • " r
1 • ' '1 J
LIMOAJSU
Meditt. villa on bay side, with slip.
Choice wood & brick Interior; 3 + den + maid's. $550,000
• I ~ SAH JU~H CAPISTRANO
A lot, scenic half •ere in rolling hills;
zoned single f amity & one horse.
S28.000 .,
1 CORONA D& MAit
Olde World Charm; So. of Hwy.
Custom, remodeled 4 bdrIQ. with
family rm. Wood flrs., beamed•ceH1s.,
wood pane .. n g; on 2 lot$.
t
IALIOA PINIMSW..
A way of life; sand, slip, view, pier. 4
Bdrms. Asking $295,000
567 S.. Nlcolcts Drin, Sult. I 02 ·
......... Cttthr 640-4050
---
Ci1w.. I 002 Ge•ral, I 002 ·•······•·············· ·········~············· '
SEVEN HOMES AVAILABLE
.. ~IN CORONA DEL MAR
WITH 100~ FINANCING ,,
"To qualified buyers. Gov 't. insured
CALL US FOR DETAILS
HARBOR INVESTMENT COMPANY
llAl.TOIS 673-4'400 ~165 I. Coast Hwy., COf'OM det .Mar
3 Br, t Ba. fam. rm. Open
Sun. I 5. 4733 CortJand
Or .. Cameo t-IJgnlands,
S87,000. Owner. b73-3177
Costa MHa I 014
~HXIOUS OWMH
EMPTY HOUSI•
... Opportunity! Ready to
move in~ c()C)diuon, on
lhls large atrium home. 4
Bdrm, fam rm, frml
dine. For 1:1ppo1nl.
008-4-lSO
1 "LOOK"
IS WORTH
A T110us-.d Wonh
Do n 't be content
searcbmg Lhru ads. Your
chou:e of ~ La C.:uesta
homes, • 3·5 odrms. All
wath ram rms and damng.
968·4456 ....................... ---------
WHEREIN .
MESAVERDE-
can you fand an eleganl,
spacious hOJne walh 5
HR. :t BA. 2700 sq. ft. for
living ~1luated m prime
location and
o.e1ghborhood·1·! Special
l't!atures include excep·
t.aon~lly targe master
SUJ te, very 1arge lam1b
room wtln 11replace and
wet bar. Priced at
$82,500. This can't be
------------------•) d Up II Cate d. (> h 0 n e ~6~2313 tor addiuonat
1002GIMNI 1001 •••••,•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••a~••••
I I LINDA ISLE
A m1trve1ous 5 'bdrm. 5
bath custom owlt home
1s featured this week.
Private <!lut>house and
Lennis court for residents
only. Pier and shp will
accomodate a large boal.
This nome has every
amenity. OPt:N HOUSE
EVl!:RY DAY UN flL
SOLD <I..> pm1 or call
our off ace
IJ!llQuail ~· liilPlaat
llla,•rlt.• 752·1~0 .MOO OUAlUt l\llWPOI •. II associated
li P (j I' f II <., ~ £ " · ., ·,
HEWrORT
IEACH
$57,950
• ; ..... .. Id 1 • ' ~ I
:i2,UOll Under price 01
comparaoles. New unit.
Tennus. swam. relax m
view of the Pac111c. Up·
g raded carpels. Liie.
Close to everything.
1-·1rep1ace. spuce·age
tt1tcnen w1tn u·asn com·
pactor and sclf·clean1ng
oven. ti4ti-1711. Op1rn
~ves.
~
Walkr.r t; lee
Reul l state
~
WalkP.r G lr.P.
R!!al f ~tat!!
TRUST SALE :~~~~-~~!~ ... !~.2:. FanhtSllC a br, 2112 bu. I
splat le~el. pool. lge
patio. Top cond. i!dtute
SliYS sela:
hplex-$74,900
10eeans1deof Hwy 1
SPARLING
.REAL .ES'fATt:
tl~-354d
pwner 544-L9!19
Class11"1ed Ad! 642·5678
•••"' 1002 G1Mral 100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~ become a LISTER!
USTllS make mcwe money I
USTIUhave
ll'lore runt
US111S 1olf more, ~
vacation more, and
enJoY life more! L.ll*I are apeclaUsts
who averaae *20,000+
pet" year!
info.
()lliN "' 9. II s ruN 108E NI((•
THE RE~llL1
ESTATERS ' ~-_ _;
ONLY 9 LER
l BR Condominiums
SUPER SHARP
3 .BR ID GRE~TREE,
a ir conditioned , shag
carpets, 'uppapered.
Short escrow poss1ole.
4101 Gtenwood. A&t.
8JJ 0780. OP~HOUSE
Sat SU.n l2·4prtt.
'
Newport Crest. •5 K1a1oa
Ct., ,4 Br, 3 aa. ~7~ mo.
Bltns & refr1g mcJ.
ttARBOR VIEW ffOME
For HJe oy owner.
.. ~auu1u1 l,,lndalraP«.
newly d ecor111t1•cJ. 2
8edroOmli & Oeo .
aliti.llOO. 4M4 .. U.l
BACK BAY
•CU ' roM BUJl..T•
8rarid New BelltJlJlUJ
ON t: t..EFt=.000. 4 Sr, 4 Sa.. 1ty' Rm.
Pue>ram1e1' cben. ~l2
Windward I.AM .. • ll•t 1
NO*ak. Brllr.~~
W. NEWPORT. Ocean·
view. l. oouses. 11,., IOU.
nu cpl, t.lrps, ~lJS,000.
llO 'k-lo11n + 2 t.d .
(213 )b\k)-5880
I UMITs..POOL
VIEW-$ 175,000
Prime back bay view
locauon! Just reduced :
All 2 bedrooms Swam·
mtn1 pool. SQ.OOU down.
Juat buck oa market•
tolre advaotaae! Call
now LO preview ( i 1'I 1
7SlM700.
INVESTMENT
DIVISION-IRVtNE.
THE RE"L ~'TATERS
L6ok what you can buy for
~."'>. llO'k loan com·
rn It me n t ·r r 1 p I e x .
Own r 's untt na~ 1rplc.
AU aood crpt.s & drPf •.
Live with an mcome + 11
tax wrtte -orL Ail
U'N-T'61l
S LANDLORDS S
FREE Service to you
lfuntington to Laguna
& inland Orange Co.
(;all prior to vacancy.
042~
ALA RENTALS
Costa Mesa ost• MHa J224
Builders special lot com· •••••••••••••••••••••••
plete w1lh plans for tO VETERANS
Umu zoned R4.
$49,500.
** NEWPORT
ICOUMTYJ
Ra near H~g Hospital
Wall hold approic. 2ll
Units.
Don't rent .... you can
own a home with no down
payment. No payment
for at least ao days.
World Real t:s tale
s pec1a1ists in veteran
housing. Ask for Veteran
Counselor. s;;6-77n. c11.ll
anyttme.
SI 19,500. 2 Br house. s ing les.
,...._ ramihes ok. Also 2 Br
Mrse ranch an Heights Costa Mesa nr. 8<1ck Bay. Agt. Fee. c 1-cr °" ,_97_9_-8_.t_ao ____ _
HARIOI •Lg 2 Br, duplex 1n court. IOUL.IVAID Gur,encl patao.nopets, l
$L200. a month mcome c·'h 1 J d 0 K ~ l 9 5 •
Better nurry-Won't 751~21545-0760
last ! PRIVATE over guage 1 $117,500. br.StVtn!f.~110. * * BRING kads le pctS 2 Br, ~UIO. 1ncd yd, gar . 752-046() singles ok
KJOS welcome l. Br, l'~
,,
An;t irne. ba. lill5. Stv 1re1. lncd yd.
S.A. HEIGHTS 3 br, bag
tncd yd, kids, pets • .,
garaie. a;tW.
HOMIN ... S
•642 ..... 900• 1-----------·.·
IASTSm . " COSTA.-sA
Separate, 2 btdroom. l
bath. stn~I car , ..... home. :;mall tenua -., ~ ard. $24$ per moftU\. •
CaUeves."61
f '
(
Ca1a.WGr.O
AL~ UTI Ll't'I ~ PA18 1 __ ...,;_...--..;.;... ........ --._,
• Com pa.re t>efotc )'OU reat ~ Custom de.1ped vn;w 18r~ 2~. H~ Cornat100. C1t.' t'ea~unni: B ko lo BtllCl\.
owne.r1ns m · DOVH SlfOllS ·~c101.1s tmthen ••"'in· ms mo.~
Rent or Lease, • Bdrm . ' FROM'f. IOW da~cl ll&htJog. CwoH .. ..._. 3122 ~n. :1 l"i~places," &a. 4-1:-t. lmmal'. • br, 2 ~. •sep.,ratedin'c1u-ea ••••••••••••••H••n••~ ,
Air, Hee Km, wiCustor d.1n rrn, lrpl, O!W · 180't>.yvtcW,5br,Sba, •Home·hkeslora&c NEWLY 1 ---..;;...-----'--•
Pool Table. Wet Sur. q~ttd.r~-.· rncd. yd. ~. car &1t.r. 4WO aq. n.. lu•· •l>r'IV»te patios REOECORA'l'€0 ------------1
Olympic ~1 , ... 1..__11 , .. ve ~i 34it2 u r Y homo. $91 s -Closed garaae w1stor1ce ...... , ··r'-•P ..... ...., .....
.., .... vu ....., ti 4 5 -ti I 7. 7, Ah. 5 •Ma rblu pulhnao ..... ....,. • .... .,.,. ' • .,..
ly R_t's1de nt11tl Arl!u. ~ 3 br, sep. den, 2 ba. 675--09l:IS •Kmasmi Sdrms ~·w2/~~r~'!·1:;. ~=j
7H-5S7 7257 1ncd. yd., boat gate & •Poo1 ...... liar1>eque£-1ur· 644•7'J26• • •
:;; BR, 2 BA,~. Cpu., pauo.8"6-8291 Harbor View 3 br. 2 ba roundedwiplU$b Jnd$cps ----------'---------
ga r .. bus 1neh o k . sprklrs. wtr. 8flner... Adults -No~ Very•spec. 2 bdrms, new Adults o nl • 2B R .
642-2221; o.io !1titi1; f"IM 1244 ~~~o~~·~'· tncl. l 00~·~ Fu~. '410 cpt, drps, app'l, 2 pauos. Easta1de. Nr. ~w upper
___ • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ~W.W'llljontia•JtnJ For spec.person.~5 trlplex.~lS.645-7.554
Monucello <.:oodo. l 8r, 3 BR, 2 Ba, College Park Townhouse 2 br 2~ ba Daya: 644-48-18
2ba, d~! ~~r, O~. "W_1D. oome. ~r. park, pools & poot, bllns, wash/dry: $30 WIM I Wt Eves.: 675-~ 2 BR, foot & retr1g.
Nt:w cp :>, d1apcio & elem. schooJ. ~-mo. gar.NopetS'.675~1118 •Sll.ON1ght&Up • Adulu. $l62. 325.J, HU\ painl ~15 + cleamng ti40-t5Jg· !r.m-2:J23 · •Stud1o&i SHApt:; :SUNNY, Ocean & Bay Pl., oU Sant~ Ana Ave. _e_v_e_s_. -------
tee. ~00 on be. No luds ' Canallrunl, 4 BR, 2•; ba. •J'V&,\1»1dServAva1I v I e w In q u 1 e l Seeart. llAM. -.-.. -S-N_"'_W_E_R-.--S INGLE, 210 Cedar, or "''t:-.,,51·~5&.I. •4 BH, 2 Ba. AJC, tale Yeartylse.~"M•Mo. •PnoneServ,Hl.dpool ne1ahborhood.3br,2 ba2 HEJ "LER PARK ~1" c. single. 1 N °-a h ~>o: mo ,.... ..,.,., W 'A B :S area. sm0 ll ch1ld1no1 ...... ""01 ~ ewpo. rt °"' c · -· , · roof, pool, nr snoppang, Caywood Realty •t;n11uren&l'etSecuon sty, a s h /Dry, gar .....,vely8 r.,2bn.upper: N 2 bd bat..b .. .,.... .,. '" 548 7200 4 BH. l U.\ l>ltns. Ile\\' fwy .., ...... 5. "'veso""-""1' .a .. _ ...... , ·~ 011 weeksrentW/itd space. i3SO 67S-1'98 oc bllns cpLS/drps. quiet 1 ice . rm., l apt. W.McFadden.542~7 -------------
1 l d ...-... .,.... u.. ~ ... o """' Ocean V1ew. Yearly, Incl. • cpq; . ll l' .~. bky . ---23iti .'iewport Blvd, t;M 675-5225 »r ea, 16th Phtce, nr. M r __ ......_ ~2;) ;).)ti IS2H6 •REMTALs• aBH. lba, Single Story ~-lli.;o.;orti4.>J!lti7 :.tores, Mamed, over .io. utilities. ~26S outh. -Laguna 3116 u Rental 4400
LAHUE J hr . .'!. l>J. bltn:..
frpl . Ii; ; ti . 1n Coll cg~
Part. ::>J7J .H.• ~!fl a:.k
lor Jot•
UNIV. PARK Condo. Ptun Lon MaJOr 01to MeH 1124 No pets. $225. &ki-2414 Mature adullllonly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-••••••••
2 IHt, 1 l>atn ...... ~l.>. Greenbelt in 1st secuon SUS CASITAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURNER ASSOC. 3 RM studio, Cny vu, blk Desk space available~
3BK.2'z butn ..... ~ ol lilulls.Cstm~igned Minutes to Newport HACl.ENDADtMESA OffleahftPath Realtora ~-1177 tobct).Utalinc.Nopets. mo. Will provide
fll t-: T~RRAC!:: anterior in earth tone:. & 13-0acn, b11cnelor & 1 8r 160 W. Wild, C.M. 1.2 & ;J Br A~l.tilS noi>ets. OCEAN i''RONT i&2 Br, _ ~00. 499 -41118 furnllu re at $S . mo.
2 Bit, 2 HA ... ~'~-re:.uwn~d wood. ~75 Mo. 1urn Adults no pets 2110 Beauuful Grou~ dshwnrs. s hag cpts. pvt beach acc. Poof. Tu· A,. •Mnh fwWshed Ans we r1 n g se rvice
a BH. 2 BA ... ~/S400. Lsc or monll"lly. IS33·1!4JJ Newpurt 81. CM. Adults . No Pets closed garage, frpJc. ble Roek Apts, So L•f· or Uftfwntished ~900 avai.able. 17875 Beach Large 2 Ur home. Crpl,
s t v. n·I. I Ol'U) ti. (;aritge.
Adult:-;:,lllO. tii5 HS27
WALNU'fSQUAH£ we~kday:. only. 10 minutes to ocean BBC-l Gas & water pd. i300/i 5oo '199-278 . "* Blvd H.unta.ngton Beach. -FU RN Lge 2 BK Apt. Large 1 BR $175 .. Gas & Pool 499_ .... c 1 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-4321.
LEASft: T ll IS CUS'fOM
JIO.~ E a ml mmc into a
gor~cous loeauun. neJ
.'!.Uth St. & Irvine Ave. It's
a big 3 1.Jcdrm W/lam rm
& :-.cp. utility room.
lieaullftH yards w1lh p ro·
ducmg ornngc trees! On·
ly ~ lO. per munth, so
DON'T WAIT! Vacant
now. Agent 546 11141
~BR. 7 HA ··· lurn.~. Vt:rY lO\'ely lltuff:. X plan. Adults only no petS. An· Water inc., Draperies, L"' M"'iucu• ·-s "°" ~· -M(i}7 ------·----J HR. l l>a th · .. · · · ~!JS. " Ud I l 7" •-u n A A'" '"""''1lfT' 150 I W tcliff D TUHfLcHOCK ., rms ., i<Amt y rr_!l. quire "v-.: no<: ester car pets, gas heal, gas 771SScou Place, CM 1'4ewporthodt 3169 es r.
38R 2 8A ·~-hu~~ W<Allt>d patio.· IKear1 stove, a ir cond1lionang, 042 _.5"73 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llt1TillC•lWCOllCl1T! Newporti'~inancialCtr
' .. " ... ' ~;JO, Mo Uroker 6-1-1 llJJ I AOlllT ••• .. 'OlllYlllC CORONADl::LMAK . 2035Fullerioa.CM SWlmm111g poo. rec .... .... LeasiftC)OfficeS,OU
:! HK . l BA ........ Sti,jO. l:k<tcou Ua ". J\ qui now on room, ~ashers & dryers. 2 BR studio. l •12 ba, cpls, i SMMl "" .t.ecimo Call on Site Manager ''lll NA''OV'" . l HH l"urn. 21rg c1o:;ets, --. -drps, W"'"hertdryer B h I "' • '-' "' I.st>. l l>r. I l.Ja. adults 011· ti .... • o< eon <714l642-311l exl 246 ., 8d ., •. ,. queen S l lC t>e . prav. MEDITIRRAMEAM hOO"UP In upt. lge patio, • 1 BR .. BR " rms .. ,, ua., urn. ly 5J I IUOOit>iJ 1:17~S d " .. '' ~.Mont11t0Month Pat ressing rm. extra irg VILLAGE s m pet I c hld ok •2 BR & Den DELUXE OFFICES
CALL 552·7500 r 0 0
1 ms . eAntlcll g a, r 1 Bedroom 546~ Fro. $175 AIRPORT LOCATION Harbor "1·•w 1uonle"O wis or.age u ts on y, ! Bedroom & ,...._n ----" ~ .. ., no ""'Ui ~ u · L' Patio suitefrom $125. mo. mo<le1 I brti ba, F1H.---.!:'..::. ------28edrooms pper 2 or~J~ .-amlly MeloV.rd.Eost&Adams I •VISION• LHUI( ll"l" "Bed .1. h Knge1 re1ng,crpt,drps 5 .. 0 •1800 lncl.AJC.crpts,drps,al 1 • ! • l'Om.poo . o " D P . 3726 ' room own se 7: .. 0 . "''" ·"'"'" .. util •-Jani•nnal serv • Pun SLcrl1ng. 67a-u77J . C11M1 Otnt 2400 Harbor Blvd -"'--~~aun:ar ~~ .!:========~ "" ""' · ~llU Bach LI P ,\vi :-.oon REAL TY --••••••••••••••••••••••• C M 7 ·7 8020 * 2 WHKS FREE No Lea:;e Req. * l .Mont..h
Sl45. I Br dplx. garage ,\ lted Hill Com-pany OCI': \:'11 l>ac h SJ2,; U.P '!. HR, 1urn d. ~. new1y _o_s_t.a __ e_sa_t 14' 55 . . L(; 1 br. newly redecor d Move in w Jdeposits 1'~r~R~_nt Bristol, NB
SJ75. I Bk hse. lrur\ CllA.'iN EL2br ~7:iyrly decor d & uu1s pd Part&-Ulle Nr shopg, adults no only 1 BR $190 2 BR "
lrccS.:-.tv1nd. L!.1'. Cniv. Park Center 1-'rplc. l't11ld. ~Lok 4!:1ti-Ol:15or:fti0-114l pets. ~laa. ti4l--O-ttil _ $230 Re frig, Security, e NEW e 557·70lO ~1751 $1!15. '!. liR hous~ lrvme W<>W '!.or ll"nts nse "M""' SWTo•~ ----P l J · R " _..,., O~LUXEl ,2 &3SrAplS ~UIET p vt, 2 br. 2 ba. oo . acuzi1, cc ~tv.C~D.<:h1!d:.1>et,gar . Bt:AUfffUL2slory 4 Br. l-~.P.w ,gardcner,2 car HwttiftCJl0ttleodl 3740 Also Furn Bachelor cpl:.. bltns. lrpl. pool, Bidg w texercise rm . YOU'LLBEGUD ~00/$235 N IC!:-.: 2 lir hl.e:. 3 Ha. ~!:15. mo. Lease or BIG <I lir + den~ Has ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt Patios -Htd Pool ~ar. adlts no pets 376 W Billards Color TV YOU W AITID!
Good area:-.. kids & pet mo to mo. ~-move:. at all. :.ee now LOW WEBCLY Nr Shop'g -Adlls Onl.v Bay I l b h ~10/S27.>. 3 BH, ~CM you 10 . Lea:.e option ALA RENTALS RATES ----Irvine Ave at Me:.a ntroc ucing new ac ~/S45U HI U llOMES a \ail.IU> O'!.ll,t!Xl ltiJY ___ 6_42_--8313 Ex•c...c .... r....t.t.--MartiniqueAph HuftthtcJto.leoch 3840 545-4855 and 1 bdrm 1:1pts well All applns. F P's. 2 car ............ .-~ 1777 Santa Ana Ave, CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• worth :-.eeing. Hel ined
ALAltEMTALS °s~H "41~a. ~..'iOO sq. IL.~ Npt. Hi:ts. 28H. ft'rplc. 727YorktoWR••d MgrAptll3 646-5542 NEWOELUXElbr.cpts.i---------· t~~i\~n°~~~~~~n~~~~a!
642--8383 1, 0 Q1'. gl e .: a~·rmld. :.50et· Cpts. drp:.. Newly paint Heach Blvd at Yorktown <.:ASA v ICTORIJ\ drps dshwasher. frpk. 1 urn 1 s h c d and u n . ~ar. ·~~._-Y,~0 0 :..., · ed. Obi. i;ar. Lg. 1cnce 536~411 Ad ultsl&2lk.nopcts en~I gar -~00 900-2198 COROMAOELMAR 1urn1s hed EasblUl' J bl.'droom home
with rang('. rclng. a nd
J:<H:J gc. Ch1ll.lrcn OK.
~~.) 1'1:r mo. F'rcl' renLal
:-erv1l·1· liW 7711. Open
t:vl':-..
~.0 · ;,s -1 J 0 r yard. t;Jrdener. ~J5 mo STUDIOS & I IRs Uniur/furn fr $l69 JU or_04_5-_30_a_3 _____ 3 Br. 2 Ha rum or uni. ~ ~o~__ 1sc. 6-lti liJHo Sun-.~lon. •full k1Lchen Pool, ret rm. ('lev. ssoo yrly • $185 to $215
•Coll. l'k. Hrand new li-tipmoniy •llt>atcdpoo1 Secgate.gas/wtrpd WALKTOIEACH OCEAMFROMT
JliR. de n. schl. park, --- -'•L~1undry t'3c1hl1es 525 Victoria. 642-8970 UTILITIES PAID 2 BR. 1 ha, unfyrlyS395 646 -84--5Jd
tJOOI, ma1nt. No pets. Santa Ana 3280 •i''rec ol1llt1es Beaut studio apts. 2&J STEPS TO IEACH
Lsc. ~~5. 551 -1:...166 •••••••••• • ••••••• ••• •• •free linens CHILDREN 0tC Br. I rplC's. bltns. dis -. 2 HK. l ba, wmler. S23.5 ~ ,. p --.8----4BH.,l umrm.~.Avail •l'V&ma1dsen·a,·a11 Lge2Br ~J70;3Hrl''.!Ha hwash<'rs.2 cargarage J BH,lba,$3:>.5unLyrly ... ~s
u niv. <irk. 3 r ., 2ba. now. lfrntal-(c Heall.Ors •H3r·li·Que ~100 Duplex&. 4·µ1 ex, 2 SundeC'ks From S275 3 BR,2ba Yearly.$4QO ~e 1~E."'
atrium. No pel'>. \r lse. 510 1151 •J>hune:.erv1te poo ls. crpls. drp ~. 536-2579 """'EW•ORTCREST ,~ 9~"
WESTCU FF BLDG.
NEWPOHT BfACli .,.,. .. ,., . . ' .....
Call Mr HoNard
6 45. 6101
FREE RENT
Office s pace, handy to
San U1ego Fwy. All sizes.
60 days free re nt op 1 yr.
lease. l:laJ-1400. Walker & lee
Real Estate S47S. 552 78~ ---•1 male Lo ocean 548.7:111 - -" "' ,.,ou\.1 ~ • ---, , liltlNG kids & ~ls~ or. • CHf<:Z OHOAPTS 2 BR. 2 ba condoSSlS r
i' !->H h~mes lor LEASE or. ;:,lJ..'i. Fnl·d , u .. "ar. MEN. s.n:ia.11_ t>eacn_ notel.. li23-1 Atlanta COMMERCIAL
~ "'in 11:! ·"' MOVELodiJ}:lOr,i-1ds & ,ooms $2,.50week Pl:> 1,2&3 BH Priv gar . Ot11cesune,{';pt~ I BR. I ··J Ha, cpts. drps. "ALL' ti IRVl~L· ' "' I' ··" A NEW N.EW pltsh office bldg, 2
1433 SuperiorA•enue lo 6 Km suites. Con-
Mewport leoch t e r e n l' e t{ m . ~e ro x coµ1~r. N r OC. a1rporl
~-3b4ll
patio. l>ltns. Av.111 ~JI . area Cail us! We are Jl('lsok. :SJ!:lj. Ytl.Sq.;ar ~100. mo. 536-7056 e e pool. was he r. dryer
::i3.SO. mo. rtcl:-. . .)4j 7~ ht>rc to s cn·e YOU & KIU · & HI<' ti 1 , k , .. Close lo beach. 536-@36 ---WILi \1 \KF EVERY ~ ~ lJ.:O ,c.ur. NO increase an summer
B11!:A U fll"l L 1 I1~1 r. :! oa. ~;Ft"OH. r 10 :-.~l\c YOUH ~ar.'i!.!~~~uccJ }d. dl>I rent. Beaut l or Jurn 1 BR APTS t:XTHA lg.!. or. 2 ba. dlx
Jm. rm. Irµ·., tn:.. et~ hous1n~ needs. .... H .. O .MEFIMOERS <1pts ~Jo~ & ~175 Sparusn poolside c1.pl nr bch Ad il,
A1mo:-.t rww li73 4ISISti PETTIT REALTY Style t>ldg, P''t ~nc1_i~ar , ::.orry no pets Sl65
associated
BRO!\ ER~ -PE AL TORS
1•ll~ W Bolbc,o ~' l Ho I
WATERRONT
M~wportleocll
Execut1 ve orfices * 642-9900• pool sauna lndry ad Its Like II \'In" in a Wei.tern ; ,., """" ~ UH '\ l'l 11,.:t-. ;:o.IH.J ~11 U n1 ver:.lly Park. Irvine • · · · ,.. v,,., 0 ""'-li301 Keelson Ln. 1 Olk m o\ re set ' Old We:.l --Large Spanish 2 bedroom.
J>t'. •t:.. l'n·I mJ.,r,rwd. <.!i!J 552-7000 3 ~I<. 2 UA. Ir •• lncd yrd. .. •. 01 ueach 011 -=1 ·•t-r fl th t I k " 8 I u t\. .. n C> u .. ~ . 3\'0r WI Cly s IC ' r . '·z u a. patro 0\'er· 1'"2 ba Patao. balcony,
Sl50, S225. ~Mo.
\'1ew ol boats & water
__!10X ::,L ·{1 "1 :!.!.Xt __ L -h ---Bltn:.. ,\ C. Nr. Mcl-'ad· g.&2 71:141S lealures Pool. complete looking goll C'ourse ~00 bltns. encld ""r. Nr Hoa" aguna Beac 3248 den & Ward. ~/mo -. .,u ,..
. DELUXE To. wnt.ouw_ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• >1!:17_14.,1 or 642 ,.56, 2 W••lcs E-....-R--A kitche n w1Lh re1r1gerator mo. 1213159ll·Sbl2 Hosp. Adults. £235 mo
llLLGRUNOY
Realtor 67s-i>l61
" -v -..... ~ nn met. Wall to wall plush ---- --. ----64.2-43lil · ·
J or. vacJnt t>-1J ;XJ;_l __ South Laguna. <><:. vu. eves. Next lO beach. Studios, carpeung Adults only, 2 BR, bllns. ~ ''.! Ba. close CO HON A UEL MAit
i Hr Townhuu.-.e, rrplc, MEWPORT BEACH .,.,., 1 • ldO'-" walktoB<:h.Uet·K:..:JUO.---i&2 nr irom $145 no pets ALL Nfo:W! t?_be.~c.h Sep. garage. -on,t'!Jl< ~m l'nl "· JB ·\ D riJ IJl.' u\·c n Westminst~r 3298 · 5J6 -6J2Jearl ·AM no pcL:. Mu:.ll1Jvt·crl!d1l r c t·ri·,.. wan"';, Im ·••••••••••••••••••••••• Ja.c u.t.t i s & Le nnis . Right now &only a \'ery ----2 ___ _ • ·1---.... ,,.,1 ..,.. :. ~ · 1:14tJ-l32J fewava1lal>le rtl :-. :) IJ ~ ~1"u~p c..:.• maculale. Sl<>IJ. mo. Unusu:Jl 3 HR. n1ust see -· Lge dcluxe3br,2'zha.all
Pl i.H'l.'lltia. u lti .)l)J7 4!14 !:17:!1. ll! Nr Mile Sq. Park. Studro-l blk from ocean. 1939 WALLACE features-& bltns at Hunt.
DanaPoint 3226 ---.-15162 Warwic k (.;1r l rplc. ds hwhr. Jacuu1. 642 745· 8 llarbour.a50mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••Lar ge O tean Vi e w , l!J!:l-lSSH :iili5.714tli46-7JJO. _ ALSO hillside privacy, 4 Bdrm. l l:h'. 2 ba ~f..i5. Sl'r>. ~LUS E l'l> 1't!~\IUNi\ i·~ tj ~1 . L euse. $500. Cowdornittiu...s LC1CJU8a leach 3748 ga ru ~es 1:14ti -4~H8 01
•1 or.!. _oa. ~'.J rx·r mo. 4!J!J·l2J:Joril-l·b!Q·52:17 Unfurnished 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E~lra large 2 Dr. 2 ba 8-tti 13ll Vacant .
Leasc.1l·,-4l*i·l:!IW __ . --.---.,---•••••••••••••••••••••••BACHnrbeach~l6S/SlS5. Ca rpets, drapes & -----
EIT 3232 Least'.~bdm,_tiatncozy H t Be h 3 b k ss· U I pd 1 bu1luns830CENT~RSt. LUXURIOUSlbrlurnor oro 1am1Jy no11w . Good urea ~n ington ac r . w . -;,. LI • c?. Lv. 646-1 UH unfurn. new s hag. drps, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'"''' mt .. 1 ... 1 k·'r 11':? ba, naraoe, nr. bch. 143a No. Coast4~-25<R! 1. 1 .,. 001.,.,.," .. 1 """'. II ... !:>v uu rn Ch Id n ... "'r~ ;)Jt;-7052 1NL'W en L'L'D A .. ,~ rp (', .. 2 ~. ' Ull .
Luxunou:.11cwtownnome apt. Bc;.ims , wvod . I re ·-•a._ -OCEANFRONT Bach. l""br~b'a'c":n"'.,,,,';,r~~~. r.~: 4ll0blks LO ocea n
on laKl', J IJr + rctrcul. s tu111ell g lass. atrium. Lt!:,\S£. ammcd avail. J ~1i5. Uul meld. Avl lhru "'°"' ""vv """
:!•::-ua, pool & l(·n111 s incl. Owner ;.il~erl.i.>l!:l7·Htl:!._. BK, clo"'e Lo beach. pool, 6115/15. 4!:17 -1a90 or Pool. 1acu7.z1, gar. Ulll Sfuu. mo. ~J:.! .~ -~ pd. frplc, adlls, no pets. 2 Hdrrn, 1 Ba, near beach.
---1J BK l l>a ·11rr vacy··1g t e nni s CrlS. ~l !JO . 5:}6--0Jll .Eves 6~5 ·4411. 3!J3 ne ts /children OK. "lu.; Fount . v ,.... 3234 . . . . 640-1236 a lt .. pm .. .. Jv •••••~~~ .. ~.":!......... lilm. 1·m, sunKt>n II\: rm.__ · · 1 HH, kitch. din. area. Ham1lt-0n 642·1~da~ 536-Q321 & 962-3533
J Ur . .!. "·'· npt1tlrps. ran,.;.: . .,, l.'n. 11 ... nwshr,
I n l'll .\ II !IN:! 10~ I
Monterey T ownhouff
,\l'w .> or. 2 n.t. Approx.
I llJO "" 11 Porn t1.•nnrs
e r\, many '1r<1 :-..
:ltiJ .!..It.ON or X.t.: ~ 174 ,
J'>k IOI' 'i1·llH0
lg dc<:i..; Otcan \'1cw ~Duplexes Funt 3550 Blk. from Victor Hugo.
,\111 Ag t. °":" 1.)51 ••••••••••••••••••••••• oeach. & dwntv.•n. No MEW 2 IR $225
.. -Bay I r o nt Ouplex peb, adult only. ~lU Pvt deck, spacious. 1 ~:111 .!. UH . "urlnLaguna. 38R .,0 . . "· lease. 4 !:1 7 -l til7 or child ok. 2ti75 t:lden. 1 rp1, le a-,c. adutls. nr. ·" a· ~un room "' . . . . . ,. M w d & J.lt!l:-. -'lH -J202 1~-ol:rl porcn. lam. rm. Pnv _M_2-iitiJti _________ , "'· . kn i. · eve:.
____ 1 pier. Yrly. 673-7l21S 6 4 S · ll 1 7 7, Wk da y:.
---l-'urn. Studio. Arcn Bch. 6-12-4005.
$275 tii!~H Duplexes u .. funt 3600 Heights. Wlln KiLchenett. -------
All Uttl. Paid ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4W-1457 attero pm. MEW 3 IR S29S.
l H H . w I w <:a rpe t . NP r. Uli rs. Medll·Slyle, • . . Spacious hous e s ize dl!ck-. ~ 1111 ocean & ta· J 2 b' . Beach i' root Apt. 2 t,d. 2 triplex apt. lncd yard.
WALK lo bch. & shops. 2
br. I ba. w/gar . 5H
Alallama. 9!:15-6903/
!>Jti·2..'i7!:1
2 Weeks Ft-ff Rent
Next Lo beach. Studios,
1&2 br lrom Sl45 .
Jacu tt1s & tennis.
846 1323
nyon '.~~"'. Uu11t -1n ne w,. olr. I d'1''1 oeam ba. patro. garage, laun· t'rplc dbl gar cpts dr"" ~ J Ct-I g.. rp • > · gar. dry 1·c 1·s Avail month · · ' ,. ... __________ ,
Huntington Beach 324 hlltt1cn. 546-2060 or t>-15 ~.;..;1 a 1 · • · dshwhr, <! children ok or
•••••••••••••••••••••• MISSIOM REALTY '? m?nL.n. SJOO. pt. util. adult bldg avail. No pets. $18 5. & UP
V;.i1·J nl I hr :)13."1 .. kid:. Ca11494-0731 ApartmenhFunt 4t1-1 -1~02 betore 10 am. 2675 Elden, C.M. Wkndi. 1.2 & 3 b edro9m s.
1Jl'lS.dpl.A1:-.o.I Br1K'l'a ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ekdays . &eves&t..'i 1Sli7.wkduy~ F1repl uces. Pat ios.
'1c w rn111111t• SllSU . LOCJUftaMi9ue-I 3252 · Mewportlcadl 3769 642-490.> Bltn s. ~ha g crpls.
:-.in1.:h ·:.. 1um11tci.. Agl ••••••••••••••••••••••• lalboal1lond 3706 •••••••••••••••••••••••. HUGeo b d · e n closed g arages.
I . 1• l"'I I A'-'I' "· l'OI l'('•IUIJ .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 "" e rooms. :Super
from SltiO. 1 Br trom $21.)5. Deluxe office suiLeS.Crom
NEWPORT HIDl::AWAY Pool. tennis, t·ontmental :SOS Mo. Broker
Yrly, 2 br, b.lk lrom bay breakla~l. Somc ocean & Healonom1cs 675--GiOO
& bea ch . I rplc. oµcn C<llahna news. Separate . -.• ~ . beams. ut1I. pd. Onlyl . . , . , Dt-4~:1 A~ ::>U~TE, 900 sq. ::;2i4.!IS. Iii:! -l!JW 1am1I} st:< lion. Uo:.e to It. No. CM. 4;7. sq. fl. Mr.
:-.llopp1ng & line beach. u ·Keel'e. 833-29.JO.
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
Bachelor 1or2
Hedrooms and
Towntmuse:.
F. $224.51.1 Open 9·ti Da il)
Spa· l'ools-Tenms
Across from ft'a:.111011
Is land at J amboree u
San Joaquin llllb !load.
C714t 644-1900
ti 14·2li l I.
St\N'f ,\ /\I\ A 2 lir, 2 Ba.
Upper :)ld\I. down Sl9tl. J
Ur uppC'r $115, down Sl25.
1\ll W/l'nt'I ~;.ir & ,'\1C.
W111 atl·cµt k11ls & 1>ets.
~2 tiS-17
* LAS BRISAS *
l Ur or Studio, I urn or un·
1urn. Adulls only, no
µcl:.. Snowcu:.e dc:.1gn
Jpt:-.. Slepi. lo bcacn,
sctlll'llY bldg, prl\ ate
JHtlhJ + neated µ001.
From ::;2 1 .;. .).)15 R1 vcr
OFFICE SP ACE Ml
Wes tcllff Drive. One
man oft1ce £65 rno., 3
man oft'1ce, air. etc. Sl75.
Call Gene Hrll, 642--0200
SS< PER SQ FT
ltil7 WESTCLJFF-NB
AGT. 541-5032
•I MO. FREERENT•
No lease. Dix offices adj
Airporter Hotel ; A/C,
full· ser\'1c~s. Frm $1~
mo
2172 Du Pont. Room 8 * 833..J2'l3 ·u1 noon•
'•DELUXE-
Eastblurr 3 Br, 2 Ba. lse
lncl. spac ma:.ler :.u1Le.
din rm & dbl gara ge
Auto door opener avail.
Pool & Recreauon arN1. 1\Vl' • N u. tH2 -l.'iti6 ·----------'ORONA del MAR,• rms.
~ mo. Coast Hwy ex·
pos ure . ocean view •.
garden. Suitable for law
oles. X lnl prkg,
fac1lit1es. Ph: 673-4120
Adults Only.nopcls. El l'oro ut J_e_r_o-nt_m_o_,
•$332• NEW LUXUHY ADULT
8W Amigos Wa}. !\B Al'TS. 1 & 2 uednn, pool
Managedby & r ec. rm. 2 ~0~2
WILLIAM WALTl..:R.' 1-'i\HTlllNGS ST. co --------l .)gt)-d lti\I ------
OCEANFRONT, 2 br.
:! ba Condo. Blllls, crpt,
drps. Security 01dg. ~~
mo. Adll::t. ti73-t.i719 o
l!JJ-2704 .
THEEXqTIMG
''-'l' ti ·1-IS· "" , '" '.. ._.: ' • • ' '~"' S:..'9115 WK UP. 1 Bclr.2 Ba location. Hearn ce1hn1ts. Cn1ldren & pets ac<:epl·
, , . :! Br . .!. Ba m nt111. S'!.5u.S.\t ALLOil<·napt,ulll pd. &Uach.Co1orTV.m<1id No p ets. $170 mo. ed. Close to beach. No THETOWERS l~~.A N 3 l:kd roo~. I.ii,, .!.1J.!Oor :1i:1 fiilO :i l SU. 'ir1~. No Pt!ts . scrv. pool. fHE Mt;SA. 645~10 Jee. 960-3221 Mg r ;
PALM MESA APTS
FROM $162
COMM 'L-PROFESS'.L
l 'lass A office bldg, :noo
Harbor Blvd. (al
Adams>. t:.M. Elev.,
A t C, e lec., janitor,
music, parking, sec.
pittrol. M. R. Stever,
mg r . 557 -0136 o r
646-8Jl*) halh. hlln:-.. llW. t·t pt:. • . . . -tii..'i ;!itli or tii'.>-•.5li 41 . N N rt Bl NB a39~l:!J R EF Property lith floor 2 Br. 2 Ra, 2 ter· i\14Nll fl':S J'U NPT BCH
drp:-.. :! i·.ir )!~r. Nice M1ss10tt V1•10 3267 --.--. --.-ti4~~~1 ewpo . • . 3 BR. 2 ba. enct pauo. r.r. Management. races. sla p avu1t. lS>Otl.
yard ,.., ~:!H.1 m o •••••••••••••••••••••••BAlllfo,l.1JR . $l ;>U. OCC ,. d . bit mo. !urn or unfurn . 8ach,1&21r•..6s IMON.FreeRent..Walk • .. , ,,...~ •1f·1 ,-.,.., · 7· y 1 n t · .... pt.s, rp;, ns. b42-l:l!J3lor646~1ti .,... ,II).,...,..."'" . >· '"" a:. ~ BH. l BA 11 ·yr l'.ld. I } r w1mer .~1-o._ . ~ y. ~uaet s £J'S to ot't'lUl, cleHn 2 ~IS. mo. 557_-03SO ____ _____ to ocean, new dk. Brwn. 1or~vorlfalt> 1ea :.e SJ-'11 mo. 1-rolll & adu1L::. tiia-~13 or. d s hwnr, palio. • . New 2 bdrm. close to .Bay 61 Ocean Vicw. l lir Adults,MoP.ts cpt'g. Sl75. 673·768.o/
UTJL. µIi I Br .... tv. rel _BK yd I~. Jb~-_:.~~--lalboa PHiMUkl 3707 g..!'ra;.e· Apr11 & May. 2 BR Upper, nr S,~nllower ocean, bll-1~, private ell. lpl. aenced palJO, pH. _6_7_3·_9_225_' --------
s.110 Sm_t nild&,...lok """'-wportl•--1.. 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o1J -~ & Fa1rv1ew. ~~00. No garag e . $240 mo . qu1el.642-tftiti6 5 81kst-:.olN\\ptRlvd JOO sn Ff, crptstdrps, . ,~ r-.c .,..uoi;.n peu.1ch1ld . 644 -8775 aft. 840-1441 "'
COU Pl.f. needecl. I Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• IALIOA I... i lir apt. furn. ~,mo. 6 ----------13 BJ{ or 2 +den. Ocean & ~95. per mo. Call
;:,JSU. l'°n(·d ~d. !-l\ /rl'I I Br apts. equippe d Je1st mo. iree. CO~DO 3 br. 2 ba, pool, Bay \'tew. :>350. ti\! 20tn 546-9860 04.t>-2130or 679-3709
move lOdiJ) · k11 cne ns lln1que 1oc. l 13t lat>-l&:!. •Tropical Pool• frpl, bltns, cpts, drps, St t>i5-3ll:l6 -------, • ~fo:/\R Ul1'. 2 llr ~IX.> HARBOR VIEW \\'inter rate:> oy WK or ---. 2 br, cpts, dr~. bltns, walk lO bch, s tores. . a OFF ICE. pvt. bath, AtC. t-ncd yd .~.ir.kuJ(ll. mo tii..'i·8i4o O~e an vi e w ParK s piral s ta i rcase, r eal sch l s . Leas(' S29S. BA\"i''RO~r 2 or,:! na. ootns 4000 uul inc .. reas rent._2400
CA r & I.ids 01.. '!.hr. )«I 1'\ewpol'l I Hr. p.ir11y lrplc. rel rig. l~e paLto, He a ch I Al I an la pvt. bcn. Pier avall. s.550. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "!· <;s~ Hwy (across l~m ~ara~t'. ,. Hui !--000 ii<!IO. 3 IR 2 IA + Fam. s r t!:PS to ot?acn 2 or. yriy 1.u rn._ t>1tn~" Must see. gas & water pd. 548-llti8. (213J249-!;240'J rollect yr ly. 91V-1!135 : t»4 4510 ROOMS ~O. "k up with :Stull :Shtrll 544-8678
HOMfflHDERS CARMEL Sl5omo.t11 .June~tns.t t:H0->4Jliallt> ___ . ---------kitchen S:W. wk up apt. FURN. ori1ce Bank of
•642--9900• "'t'ar Pool & Parle Im-mo.i\dil:;.l)iJ-tit).$U Un Lne Beacn. sl11d10 apL Large 2Br ~l7a.SglStory. SEEK & fJND• Fl•uresofSpeecb ~-!:1755 or64S-3Sl67 Costa Mesa Plaza. 185.
-----mediate ol'l·upanty. SH.l Bayiront 1 or iurn apt. ex. Sl<!J. mo. Adu1t:i onry. no b ea med ce.ilmg, cpts. ROOM & Bath. pvt. en· mo. 556-39oo
1 BH. w /Cpls, sl\'. drp:-.. p;·r mo . . • . .....ls 1e ·••<> 1'"' 1\1•·""'d· drps. Oltns. 2049 Wallace c M N • N o 8 " L I C o • M • T • M N tr"'n"e lor man w/•1d ~
I ·• d l'l)~' l'A\'LURGRuuu v rew:s. n1 :s_t or cs ,,... ·· .. '""~'.."" .. r.. Ave.646-9243. " " " " ., .. , ., . 'HARE )"' Be garage, ncu.y &patio ',, .. Baluoa -'l.>O. yrl". den 1>i.l ~l1StiJ emply m l. rccord.s Ufrces, J.Ch l mi 1rom beat·h. N ,, A 0 EEL IM I S 0 V N l 8 S I BR 0 4!n lilri) Blyd. H.B. Yourhalfti x
dogs . $Hl.> .. >J6-Ull(.JI) ' 752-0460 ti13-.S1W. Bt;A~ON ,BA'{ 1 or apt, 2 BR Studio, tth bn, bltns, T 8 £ T A N I 0 A E I 8 T 0 IE I U 'Crpts. Dl'pe. i70. mo.
Anyt · Corona del M• 3722 Swed111h 1rp1. ut11 pd. 'r'r· cpts. drps. encl gar , QUI 1-; r room nr. Irvi ne t147-51U
4911 Pearce. J,ge new 3 or. tme . ••••••••••••••••••••••• iy. ;W4JO. mo. ti7J~ patio, new paint. adults. o o H s s 1 R Lo Hoo L PT Jndu:-.try. J\tt. pn,gs. ~'7\1 ----------i...., ba .~25.1n<.'l.water•"' no pets. $t85. 1843 £ mt>.S.11'-05lu ExecOHiceSulte.' g;Jrdcner. Kids & s m pee __ _ __ l HR a~t , all uul ~ ~1_1;,, I ur, Up1x . l l.> l!lth SL. Pomona. call for appt. :r NO PT 8 NL f P NT Y A -----1500Adams Ave.,C.Jil.
ok.V11t·ant.840-4~jtjor 3 HEDROO\I . 1~dult:s, no pets. 2J0 ~B . ,'io c n110 1pels 543-6357 YAO O MIOAAEAH C 8ALlHMPcn1n SIJO+f.:Am Xerox.~l3S.S46-602I.
• ""' ' 1 • + ".1ew + :seav1ew/\ve. ..:-1·'-"7"7 •' .. "--'17'' .. N u.;u-1..,,!J pool + tennis i'ormal v .... 0 ..... _,, .. B"' d MTR g TT TN" , NA rr ... t Y, Jl Vl. ('llt. I 0 r • . I __ _ · l 11, cpts, rpe. ranee/ s m 0 k 1 n g / c 0 0 k 1 n g. Denta :suite-000 sq ft, re-
CCASS v sini:te blory1. 2 d 1n 1 n A · 1 1 re PI ace· Coste Mno l7J4 I trn '1 urn. :SltiQ mo .. pvl. refrig. Carpon. Clean. y o T e A g c N o g r 673 4 , rn mod. 4~ sq ft N. Colaa
8R. z UA Condo. :t \.'ar gard<•nt•r, c i ose lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• p1uio, adull6 only. 2020 $160. 731 W. 18lh, CM - , Me s a. <)'Keef•.
l Fasbion J s i .. nd. Im· t::asls 1dc ~M. 1 lJR. '-'Omp. Avon St .. tliJ-~ 673-7787 . • GiuHt Home 4150 833-2900. R r .. fp c. pat.lo, Lennt m e diate occupancy. redec .. , ... ..,..1.1\d1••.""'70 ________ .,..._
.6 .. a;! Jt. pool ' --~-liltl mo nl'V .... ...,._. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••
....... "" • 1...-c ~-• av•1lab1e now. 644-4tilii ti4ti -15o'J ~-527 EXTRA lg Uclbr.~150up. Medkel "'-115ft AkrlfJ:J-1.151 Owner. ....IMC•hu.fww Sp. discount to nual'd. · "' ,,,,_ .. Oll r 0 ... , .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :"t. 900 ~q r l. Btaullfu. ly .tU-:ACllWALK Condo,CondOD I 3Br 3 . " L OAK t;<,A..-J'. renters. lnfunt OK, no furnished . 601 Dover
n w. 11. 3 br, lb., c~ Den o:ru~ppx lOOo ~ 'l l>r. Sil;>, 1 or. :H35 pets. 1887 Monrovia Drtve. NB. Call64S-481.0
to oet('h. ~:11., mo. Ft •8485 ·1se. 2131:1-6SIJ8 Quiel. pool, encl d. g..r ~.~!.~~~.~'!!.~: .. ~~~1-~_-_97_4_3______ A, LL I 1' Ba• AT a 0 NM a 't AO ll
_.,1 .-u-. no c n11<Jr en or petis .,0 1 -AC 1r1 NOIR IPUPRI _, ••"'» b<l6-'liJIS Walk to bay/~Arh. 2 hr, •llAMD MEW• "' •
i BR + tu.tie aame r 38 Condo N 8 adult.t, H't ba, pr, lndry, Deluxe z br, enc I'd.
w iftplc a. NI'. · LAWtJY r . . ' · · l tJK, no cn11dren1pet1. patt0. ~40. yrly. Jte(s. pauot .• d ecks. Sep.
ok . ~aou . tt•rbar Att•. roomy. :ta... frplc, Pre t. m1dd1e •1e or re·'5"-7S58oc543-3607 oua1ea. See to •PPf'tt· ~DU'I ar <t, pal.IO. % car tared. ~150. t;<t4e~ • •
UIN411!1 aar. ntw c pu, l•undl')'. -3 BR, t 81, alJ modem, lllO V1Cl0n1, CM
~:J BR + dto, Jmmac. Lg ctloH ~o sh~pnc,. ~ Nm? 1 Hr ~pix, QW«'l, 1ep. yurl)' lea•~. 1araae. LARGE 2 br, i.tlo, .ao v•n:t. QMldrcn 6 GM mo. (.; wll ti4~ or by ~.ir. ~mpt. adlt ov• uso. mo. $11--0'72S peu. Sl.80. 78S w. Wilton. -.,,.». mo ~1rbur1 "6-Q7o.S. JJ. no pe ls ..;.w-llfll • M7--&$t0r~ -'l • 2 BR, frpl, peuo, w/w ____ ...,.. __ __........_
-t> DUPJ .. t!X4Dr.2 betuppcr lit.AM C'e11in11. wrcxifn& 1ha1. e"ci.1ar,•eP1 to The fut .. L iJraw ut Ole
NR B&ACH 2 bi'. ~Jer ~1.s.• br, Z ~ QIS, lrpt.t. 1ro11 Oa1<'un1e11, ere.UV ~h. bay, BaJ. Yury. Yr• West .•• 1 Daily PUot
d d pr Cpla l ~a; ocean. Vny. owor. a1mo~phNe. tte1115onw· 11. 10-1343, eve.-... c1 ... r ed Ad; C•• =:;:-!~. ~~u.':.U •115 tf4;l l. IUll ble. 644! 2tttk> wl.ods. 5414.1371 tM2.acs7t.
• , ;, f .')
' "'I
~fll•c•... . c.,et Senlcie C * t H_.. • •' ltKw Tu Mova.-pt. +IAt l••a .. ,,..,.... •!'········-··········· ... ...v~--.. ..... . ........... ·-········ . .................. ...................... . ........•..••...•..••....•.•..................................•.........••..•...•.......... ·· ~-..0........ JOHN 'S Carpet Ii Kttt~ ~bWuet.looAJ , .......... • Haultn1. ~d cleatiup, .•t.Yow..._• OUT.&ABOUT.'? Ja1tPlutnblftg? Home tou~--up, r~
Waa era-Deyers.Retria. Upbolst.ery. On .dtampoo bkl1. ~p11r or remodel Spec••llte Rtstor~ti!n P••ol 4c ~nl•I malnl 27 Yra £x~rien'cc Locat/Statewi~ Movana ti'~hll Service-"'c OdelAan~z· \:lv~r~~;~a Call Jack.~ tsoll retardants ). 101 fc tloc. nccda. 27 & Landscape. Mthly service £itpr.~--0347. Rea1t.fees . U&l-8lltl 7da,treee1tt.~l-2071 k eus Jtat.n r-0m • ac ... b.-
Decreasera & ~JI color Y e • r • I n 0 r • Co . M aunena11ce & Sprmkler • .. .. M h I & I .. Just One CaJJ To -~-.....:u __ ~------.... ,....... br1ahter.er1 & 10 mtnu~ .w.s~68 orS48~ RcpAlr 642_860 & Moving 1Haullng.~udent. AD llAHP ror Quality oviog au in~ cc.. J UST PLUMBING looflnt bl~ach (or your wblte 673.;jtJLO • lg truck, reas. Barry. Income 'fax Pre p•ra· ~p1s. A-1 work. redasona 642_..111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
!Avina Cue & Fncd yd. By ht /day /week. Nl•hu
wknda. Rera. SS6-0341.
carpeta, Save money by HomeJmprovemenll 5'd·~723&~98. · lion . 2o Yrs Exp -u e, collelle ~tu ents
auavin1 me extra trips. P1Uo cover&, concrete. PJtOJr'GARDtNfl:R Heuonable Rates. 1''or l:W7-2121> L.K. OTLS Plumbing J .C. ROOFlNG
Clean llvma room, duung maaonry • Plant. Rella· For Servtce •
1
A_ppt c all ~49-91M l or PaJnti-/Pa~ Wut~r hll'i, all s1ies, dis· Lic~nsed & Insured .
rm & hall $1S. Afl¥ rm ~}e. 71 Carel Doug, CallM8-WJO Ho.wcl on RC) 7a1-6937. • •••• ;~~ ••• r.:::~••••• posahs. 11topa6'e11, re· Free Est. 549-4000
~.50,couch$10,chalr~ ..... 6--0 81 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -paar:i,. remodel!ng und R EPAIRS. all t ypet.. ··~ JS yrs exp~ what counu, Ora....... Com pl I.awn Service. HOUSECLEANJNG u; our Cl''G fo'in Svc-962•0112 •Wallpaper Han&.&ng • rep1p111g. New t:ol\struc· Reas. Free est, He, Msk
e -..__. M..&ra.... not method. I do work ., (;omm I Res /Cleanups. Business Call Jatucc's 'fax pre pured. your nm liy tormer mslr\lcWr. lion. l4 firs. he & bond 1•0 r w a IL. "3<l-.. 020 _. -... my s elf. Gd. rets. ••••••-·•~••••• .. ••_•••• Freeest. 548-4>142 · 8kkp·g,fanplanning Carl Rt!bko.646-244~. 0
" ••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 531--0101 Oressmak1n1 Int.he Euro-Raggedy Anm:67!>-MSJ Yeu roundsenace -.---• 642-621>3 _a_n...;;.y_t_1m_e_. -----
Cstm CabirlelB, bo•t wk,----------• pean manner by appt. Clean11ps, Treework, THE BEST in Oomesuc - -l:st Cla ss f,xt/lnt pau\l.
puUocvr,kltchrmdJ tal MeaaCleaning,Carpeta Designed ror you. Cor· Oard~ninl/M1nor .Cleaning. Robbie·s Rag T".\X Appointment, phone .pape r.h_angang, aar!esr. R~PAUt , Repape, W~ler SICJll's
healers. Service lines. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.i~ wk. 646-s219 ' & Upholstery. Steamed day Fashions.~. landscp g. 10 yrs in area. & Mop. S48--<J757, :>crelary. 548-3777 Ef-spray 2a yrs exp 91~·5294
cleaned or shampoo. 64tS-~a. . fccuvc ta l end of March. • u "UA LITY• NEILL NEON, lNC. c.c7 _ -~1~"' A t "' I Cl b th ' "' ODAu WAT'-'R HL'ATER The Full ~rvace :;agn Co ~ -v _ ...__._. p ..... pecaa . ean, a , 1 & E u "' .,. .,.,.,
llol\c~t work. 642-9315
c_,...ter · _.......col Mushroom compost~lawn kitchen, s tove. refr1~. . nt4'?rir :o<~eri~r ln s lJllallon . Guar f'or Salesman~:n-;.;..4
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••STEAM•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• topper. plant mixes. Shampoo 1 rm & all $25. Janitorial Call Lee 11J0·7.:7t1 ev !>l'l'Vll"l'. 968·470ll lor info. I I R-..&.
CBbinet work, gen'I re· CA RPET CLEANING ELECTR IC I AN. Sm I Deb very & open 7 days. 548-5687 ••••••••• •••••••••••••• The Uangmen as tt,1ck .~:.!~ .. :'::"': ...... .
}>lira, drywall work, sm. fo'ree Est. ~-tiOll jobs. ma1nl/repa1rs. 22 Ag!~cape. "42~. -, . Ju~1lor l~okurg ror Off ace, S Cats b~sl WP hani,:cr:. MAR ~~~6~~~1NG
addlt. 551-<Jl71. CetMWt/COftCnte yrs exp._ he 233108. GeMraf Senfcn t.Housecleanlng by Rehabe o1 Build ~· to clean. M?n· Dan Schwaru ~ IJOI "''0 JO.,.,ll 'fOO.,,,.,SMALL
-.. -A-S_f_E_R--C-----•••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·5203 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Couple. References. Reas. ~hlr_rates. Al 494-0182. ___ __ _ ,, -----
. cialt raft mans CUSTOM Cement Work .. TlllNGs·· by Moose. Rat.es. S48~l . z Pro I P u t~lc r . honest Lew & Wayne s Plumb· ~i:sh .l~rk~e:;:,ei;~:~ Patios. Reasonable ~ ... lag Gen woodwork, .repa_irs. JA.PANESE LADY Would ROfOTll:LINti ~ most ;:[~· ~eeaf~ .10~~l'K'<li i~~~ '"il·, tJrr!> ~~P· Re~·ess~on
est, guar work. 499.3105_ Free Est 642-8514 ••••••••••••••••••••••• plumo111g, e tc. 642-5613. L11te to Hoose Clean. yards :sod sales & an-642.3913 pricelt . ~!J !J;, hr. 675-0261 ----------1,. w k ( 1 · European Landscaper -. 645-1587. stall Landscaping Day -Lac. Build All ConstructJOn ... ement or o a I kinds. . Pu:.t llole or :sttrubbery ur eve 'l'om 000-2170 CALI COTE PAIN t'lNG ---Homes-<:ommercaal lteasonable, free TreeServace-Cl~anup. 1--lolt'!> Anynumber,!>azc Will do hOU!>ttleanan g • . Cal1'17!133:JS lemoch-1/Repair
Kemodehng .54lf·ltla'7 eBllmales.Call6'8·332S. reas.noMaant.642•5329 ur tfoptn.NoJOb\.Osmall. E x p d .. Ret's., Own St<itch~&lnsure<l •••••••••••••••••••••••
l:ONCRETE Grdn'g/Main/Lndscp. l'all 54!1 -\:l~JJ or lrans.498·3245 Locksmith Room.AdclffOM
•TV !'ROUBLES •
Call fw1l1ght TV lor reas
work. no extra charge
for eve & w~e1<end serv-
ing llH & FV, llti0-J27U
'~KAMJC TILE. New &
Remodel. 1-'ree est. ::iml
JOOS welcome . .>3ti-2 .. ~
SAVE & Profit. Custom ROOM ADDITIONS sod, spklrs, cleanup. soil U.IU -tjlt)d. . ----;--••••••••••••••••••••••• Plaster /Repair HE MODELING ~mod._ repair, add·on. l'AT IOS ~5 ,,,.A, cond. 642-3331/646-4008 House, apt & ol tc. clean g. liur~lar prool )11ur home. ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY WORK op Soil ursula u on. Free .est & ""-uv"t.. . done b.Y lady wiex~. S<1ve S7 lli !)lllon 111stalla· PATCH PLASTl::RING ('all Now 1-'or •••••••••••••••••••••••
Designs.645-3439. Asphalt/Ce m ent,JAPANESEGAROENt:R ToPlaceyour Oepe.ndable, own tra ns. t1 on pm.:c:-. +material. Al l T ypes. Fr ee FHt::t::£STIMAT£S •TopS01l •ComposL•
br ea k /drill. Remove. 1,0 Yrs Exp .. Complete "Fast Result" 847-J637 642 08:Ji. Estamates.C:.111 540 68~ ,\nd Design •Mulc h•Redwooa•
MilNOR HOME REPAI H Lowest rates S4S-w33 or Service & Cleanup. •-----------i5l 501!} Call 5d6~~
Plumbing'-Carpenuy "AO·.Ol""'. Free Est 751 1937 Service Directory (''l"' > "'"7 57ti0 , C:?ramlc Tile. 54U-5Sti0 "" "" Income Tax Ma1onry Use the Daily Pa lot ·'Fast --w J ou --W.tdin9
To Place Your "l''ast ExperiencedJapanese ad .... Call Now ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••R es ult '' Service To Place Your "Fast •••••••••••••••••••••••
·YOUNG CARPENTER Resu l t" Servi ce Landscaping & Garden 642·5678 Adams Tax Consultants Wll.LIJ\M S & So n s pireetory. Yc;>ur service Res ult " Service •Arc Welding• Small
Qualitywork/low ratea Directoryad ..... call ing IJCt.JZZ Sen1t.'~·1nvour homeJl Ma s onry lie ~8304 6 . as our s pecialty. Call Directoryad ..... call JObs.Anylocauon.lS Yrs
All phases 548-0138 now. 642-5678, ext. 322. Free Est. 'J7'J-77:u No £xtra Co!>t ·~-·l_ss_·s Untk, block_. s_to_ne.:..~371..:. 642·5678. ext. 322. now. 642·5678, ext. 322. exper. o46 -i014 .
..,_ssRHfd 4450Al1RO•ce1Mllh/ HelpWOftted 7100 H.lpWanted 7100 HelpWa"ted 7100 HefpWanted 7100 HelpWaftt•d 7100 HelpWo..ted 7100 HttpWClftted 7100 •4••••••••••••••••••••• PctrlOllClls/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ' Lost & FcM.d As•...w.. & Cook. ex per m mod111ed L' ~ m a 1 e L· a c L 0 r y LEASING AGENTS _ .. _, d l l W 11 .-'" .-Sales-Latl1e$ -P :u t ·
THE COLO.._.Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lite Mrr+••llft 1e ts, app Y a 1 ow Heal r:state Lac. Req " . _... ,, Lake Conv. Hosp. 2615 Pack agers. :sl.10 per hr PART TIME rime work. 11t1me pa~. Exper d woman wanlod lo start. Merit ralSes W/lraan. Top commission 1· H .,150 pe k N 30 RETAIL SHOPS Lost & Fo...d 5300 · · Grand AveLong lieach, ;HlJ-512.1 p tl to ex c 1u s1ve1 ~ .> rs-., r w · 11
Prime reasonable space ••••.••••••••••••••••••• bymaraneeqwp.mfgco. CJ.213--a26-4>141 exper . neces!>. Call . Must be r eliable w/good -• ' r e prest'nt our <'l1~n ts EVENINGS l:IJ3---07J6. available, large & small. FOUND: Super gentle r efs. C.M. Call 549_8852 Cook. m ature. Mo<.lern G~s Attendant & Cashier. commercial-industrial ---------
Old worl~ charm with Siamese cat walh badly , C'onvalt:scenL home. 1-ullume. proJe<'tS 1n S. OnmgeCo
French wando"."5· gables hurt paw. Vic: New York AUTO C ARR IE H -Good sa lary & benel•L'>. . _Apply m Person, Qua lily s pace priced
It t r ees. Ad1acent to Ave. 546-9099 ftegasler. N 8 & CM. Hrs See ;\I rs . Hale. Heverly 21b9 .!!.arbor Blvd, CM below compet1uon, Ew-.c' est Iv a I of Ar t s 2to4pmweckdays;Ear· Mano r Conv Hosp. HatfD MicePay 1nA -lirown Realtors,
lirounds. Lost : Femi Irish Setter, lyAMwknds.Needrelia· ,4452 Via E_strada' M 2 ~ 4PM-640 03JU P .O. Box 41ill.
580 BROADWAY no marks, blk. collar. ble auto. L· H II ' 9A -or Corona del Mar .. C3h f. LAGUNABEACll S ml boy 's pet. ~100 Woody,540-3006 aguna 1 s. 9PM. Ea~n $100~+ per ----------•
H r; W A R D ! ! V ' c Custom Rmg Makers an S. week . doing enJOyable1----------1
T u s t I n I 22nd S l . Auto Parts Counter S~les Coasl Plaza is looking for work m. our brand ne~ LOAN ESCROW 494-7915 646_3541. full tameexper.reqwred a n inte lli gent well of.copenmgneartheO.C ·OFFICER
Apply lo Mr. Parsons, groomed person lo do lne Airporl. ~Int op.portun~ty Downey Sav an~s & Loan
----------LOST: Small Shellie Dog. Hub Auto Supply, 2120 bkkpng, pegboard & ore. for positive rrunded an· ha:.opcn.r.gs lor r xper\I
'fOPLO''A"flON Brn/Wht. Looks Like Harbor Blvd.CM Greet the people. 5 Day div . For personal in· Conv e ntion a l Loan ..., mini Collie. Nr 31st & terv1ew Call 833-8095 wk ., l night. Call Karen ' · 1<;st:row 0 111cers tn ats MESA VERD~ Ocean Frnt. Reward.I _________ _.
Adults with outstanding, attractive
personalities who enjoy working
with kids. Start at $3.50 per hour.
Phone 642-4321, extension 250,
between 1:00 and 5:00 P.M.
ASK FOR LAURIE
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Salesperson w /prove n
track r etord an bus•-1
ness/1nter1or ~ales:
Unl1m1ted earnings
potential w /Co. lhat has
the edge. Les Young &
Assoc ., In t. (<!13 J
i7H-7123.
SAUTE C()()t(
Exper'd. For 1st Class
re&Lauranl. Call Chef
Jim betwn lOam & 2pm,
044-1700. E.0. E. ti75·0291. Days 979-5660 AYON ior appt: 54'J-1424 HO USECLt:ANJNG Serv Hunt. He h omce. S&L
DRIVEPLA.ZA ~~ Mature, Bonda ole background preld Con·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lorstoreoromce.Ample LOST: Mans black wallet. t'ust.Ser v/Orddsk S55-0 women Part tame . l acL i\1 r s. Brehm.:: Seam1trtu
park mg. Town & country SS(). Reward. Vic. Bns tol 64 · • 123 lJ63-lJJ2 1. Equal Oppor a tmosphere. & Su nl l ower.C.M . LllEIATE Fund Raiser /PR SISK a-a l::mployer. Help Wanted 7100 H•lpWa"ted 7100
lSlSMesa VerdeDr.E. ~--0420 YOURSILF MEort.-.:E.a/r.ond Sl5KH ----k----C-,--k-l•---------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
lnte r v1ew1ng. expe r .
seamstress tor garment
manul acturing at• 1001
W. 17th St. Unit H. CM
lJam to Spm, Mon thru
1-·n .
C l M a c.•c. A123 ----------Fro-·-~m Jr Prod Engr to:bl2K o use ·eepe r. oo 0 . I t d' os a es.~-. ... ~ , . , L 1ve-1n . Unemcum · pport unn_, ."''~ 1m1 e . SALES
CaliLAnimalConlrol &lilts!! 1_nnu·,-Urpress to~lO~ bered . R e l erencc!> LIVE·lNMAIO . Look~ng 1or a t.ir~er.1.n l\agrt>ssive Tustin Agen-
lndultrial R"9al 4500 11.8 ./Seal BchShelter :sales Re p/EDP ~lUK 642 'Jti()ti For wort< i: 1am11y 01 2. !>cUes.'-Ht>re it as. :Sc.I .. .
Back of HumaneSociety 8 e A n A V 0 N KeypunchOpr/129 S575 -----·------no ch1ldn:n Ille hsekp~. Snaklec products to C} 1001<1ng ror career
536-6551 ARdEdP RneEwSEP~:PtT.1 Vnet:~ IRVINE PERSONNEL Housekerpcr . C'\pcr d & took·~. Must~ u:ider home & industry. Cntact ~ ilntl etl Ind• vd1~ udal 1·
Animal Assist. ~gue .. SERYtGS ·Ar"ENCY 1-'e mate lur large beach .k) yr~. ol<.I. >..Int. conds . ltutn :'11 a ·19H-3.)3-l alt 5. :>a ary to I al in "I ua Adoption. Spaying & places. & new interests lo IJ'rv....J area motel Senc1 resume hrs & s <ilary 5:.o-w-11; need:. + com!ll. Phone
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FREE RENT •Sec'y /MktncJ*
Start S750-~
1-;mployer Pa)S Fee.
(;uod typing. Ille s h . .,..
,\l arket1 ng backgrnd pre-
Commercaal-lndustnal
Space WO LO 3000'. 21 lo
• JO< ..per sq rt. :.>days rrt!e
r e nt w 1 1 yr. lease.
llJl-1400
Neuteranginformation your ill'e & earn good 4g8fo:.17th(Atlrv1ne) lo Class111ed ad no :J~I a nytime l#knd. alt ti ORGAMTEACHEtt l?rq~al.11y1ng 1nterv1ew, 960-~ money too! 1 ·11 show you Sulle 224 Costa Mesa c o Da11y Pilot. P I.) Box wkdys. For Class Instruction l:l38-J7 l:J _____ _
-Animals lmpoupded;::: how.CallS40-7041. Call642-1470 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca Enthus_ia~uo .. Kno~le~~e Saleslady. exper d ror
•-----------~~ !llti4!6. L V N 3 -1 I . P / t 1 m e . ut M u.:slC & Lhords .. l::xp Dress Shop. Over 25. Sal
' 11. ljood fi gure ap. O.C.
:\arpart area. Also Fee
.Joos . Stor-4550 OldEng.Shp.,gry,maJe BABYSITTER. Mon·Fr1 Mcd 1cat 1ons. Mesa not Necessary . Clas~ <;omme ns ur:Ht? w/abah · • ~;"jt ............... St. Bern. pup, male l :30-5 : 30/3 sch I age DENTAL H0US£KEEP£H. lave-an. Verde Conv. llosp, titll already lormed. Pun l'' 548 5:Jg3. Angus Gordon Personnel
Agency 04l~720
33J. t:. l ith No 15. CM LINK Shep, wht, female chldrn. S2.hr. 5.51·0592 Orlho Chairs1de ex per. Lado 1 sle · 2 cnlldre n Center St. CM time. 557 -U!:lti J
Terraer ,blk /wht,rem. . F / t t me . Jr v'1 n e. <oaby & 2 yrs i, mature. -----FULLERTON MUSIC. Want Ads -C..:all642·5ti7tl.
STORAGE UNITS Labpup,brn/wht,m ale BABY:SITTER Do yo~ 552-7800. English speakan~. Perr. MACHINISTS . P.V.
Shep blk/tan. male need a home + ? My ;J _ own trans. Rel s. Priv Perso n al business or
recreationa l s torage.
Jo'rom ~'J. J amooree &
San Diego Fwy. ~7~·0150
SJNGL£ car garage for
s torage only. sis. mo.
a.1lJ-ll 61S
' u b • 37 ., 01 vers1 lied work load D"'lmatlan, pup, male c h i I d r e n ne e d a Di::NTAL SECRETARY· _.-.m & a. ti7;,-.1;,. .. G d h I Mfg e l ectro ni c in · Lab,blk,remaleb c~u">.:~se~7~0 1ve·an. '~~ pro1r~ss1vte3& ~us~ lNSURA.'iCE Slrumenla tion. Modern Ger m . Shep, lk /tan, · olllce. L eas yrs ex.· New agency creates 1m-works hop . Ar1v<Jncl·d rem pe rie nc e front des k. . _ " . CATS IARTEHDER C ble of handling all med. opening ror Assa!> K11nt•. 12:11 vll"tor::a ::,t,
For leading NB hole l apa .. d tant Genernl Mtl'nt <;.M. 64ti-716.J. Lnghr. female, grey · · · dental_ oil ice proce ures. Strong personal produc
PART-TIME
Need (5) 1mmed. Must
have car. No age rl'·
qu1rc:menl. ilio t>xper.
aw« .! D a y t r a in 1 n i::
.>IX f1.1.J:J
Shlhr. male, grey Call Sam , aft tipm , <194-H;;ill uon + ab1l1lytorl't'rwt& ,. 1 1 644-1700. E .O.E. ---JNDl VJ DUAL s torage ... a11co, ema e DEHTALASsi: train . Pnone l or 1n
Male lull & p/llmc. Appl~
Kentucky F nro Chicken Prod&aetiOll &
2~w £. Coa:.t Hwy. CdM Assembly Wortc , 1 arages. S2.>. mo.. OTHERS BEAUTICIAN'S Assl. 3 Yrs exper. Expanded tervicw,iJJg-5713
downtown Hunt. Ben. FOUND We d. on Iris. n e e d e d . K c n duties. Salary open, 3''2 ;;;;; ____ .__;;;;;;;;;.I Medical As-s-·t--Avail. w;estab. sailboat equip. mlgr. tor hnght ~-4250 ''dM. black Shah Tzu Templeton's. day week. No Sat. Gen·1 " 642~7 Rewtats Wanted 4600 nam e d Br id g f! t , de ntis try. Prevenllve ID'VINE PERSONNEi ' Ex per. pre I erred under hard worker. Exper in
" L l.5. 1-'ronl olr. principal· h h bl SERYlas .,.ArENCY mac ane s op, as:.em y
••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-J9ti2 lookkeeper.pft :::i~~~~6e. ll.B. area. <rrf....J ly . Call Mon 642-4950. & marine hardware de
l or 2 Br Lido area ror 1-'ound: Lab, remale. ap· Exper. in safeguard 4l:Jt!E. l7th <Atlrrn1c1-Mgr Lrne. no layotls. s 1ra1Jle. C . M. Call
Su1te22.i CostaMesa Estab accts. U -46. _5-1_~_~_·2_. _____ _ genUeman. Local rels. prox. 3 m o 's . Call system. AIR. A/P thru
¥35---0211. ext 163 Y 557--0803 aft 3. Trial Bal. Payroll includ·
mg payroll tax lorms.
DOCTORS
ASSISTANT Call 642· 1470 ~:0-~4f~ar. Mr. Lyon:., Real Estate Salespeopll'
Join our pro1es:.1on;1I
stall (;re::it opportunity
for 3 laccn:.ed associate~
Private a nd Phone.
S<1m1• tocalaon ll~ yars
Medium size office. Ex
cellenl com m1ss1oplll.
...... H/
lnnst/Flnanc•
LOST : Shep/Husky, tan
w1blk. muzzle, lg. hair.
male, 6 mo. old, 40 lb6.
M u s t t y p e . P h on e Young l ady ( 18-28) to 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.. ___ 1-----r-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
545-3412 for appt. work as doctors assistan· •••••••••••••••••••••••
Vic. Mesa del Mar.l•---------JANITORIAL
luslHH REWARD 549-'l767 Boys &Girls
t /recpt. in health spa. No
exper. necess. We train
you. Apply in person aftn
or eve. 2112 Harbor AT EASE • Oppot lanity 5005 r al 5350 '••••••••••••••••••••••• ertOft I •••••••••••••••••••••••
10 to 14 years of age.
Oa al yPilot delivery
routes may be available
Blvd .. CM . Of Htwpori hoch
PRIMTSHOP
,Lcllerprcss/ofl'sel, C ·4.
Polar culler 35112". 1430
sq . It. bldg., o£1ice an
l •front. Te rms. 870-4564.
SPJRtTVAL READER iea. Earn profit for de· Doctors Assi1t. Desires to hire on a
Open 10 AM tolO PM liveries & cash, traps or 30 Yrs or over . Full pe rm. p/tame ba!>1s a
Advice on a:t matters. merchandise for selling c.; o s p e I <..:hr 1s t 1 a n Custodial Person. You
312 N.EICammoReal new subscrapuons.f'ran· w11ns ur.&DOOkkeepang must be neat an ap-
F formation plase call exper. 645 -0652. pearan ce & of l!Olld
11 EAL ES'fATE OF· San Clemente, orappt. 642 ·4321. .From San character. You wtll be ,,. Call 4!12-0034 492-!H36 0 l Sh a I AM ,flCE -super local1on.1-----·-----1Clem e nte -::ian J uan onu p, e ry r e quir e d t.o work
Completely fu rnished. PREGNANT? Capis trano area. call shill. No exper. nee. 8:.I0-4:30 Monday lhru
Already lo go! Call Jerry t:~ri n g, confidenual 4!15·0630 and M1ss1on Vie· Fe m. a ge 25-45· Apply Friday.
-..
~-···-·~-~~~· A<·ctng Superv. Sl IK
1-:xper. with CPA
Bkkpr/S<•c'y to~i.~
Payroll Clerk S700
(;l'ncral Oil' ~
.:!192 Ma run. Ste 255
Dou~las Plaza1Jrv1nc
752-0331
Gillespie, 642~631 or counseling & referral. JO·EI Toro area, call in person, 135 E. 17Lh, Send Res ume To:
531-Sij()(). Abort.ion, adoption& 581-6310. <.;M Class1f1ed Ad no. 3!12 NURSES
J\SSOCI ATE.· Let Me keepA1PngC.ARE547-2563 EqulOppor.Employer Exp ·d . T e lephone C10 Da1ly P1lot LVH'S
Call Hill Lachenmyer
ii4ti·:.1928 E vcs 673·o!Sl7
REAL ESTATE
SALESMAN
For acttvi> adult com ·
mun1 q 111 1.aguna
Niguel. 4ll fiO \'rs ol age .
Call J\\011 or f'r 1d ay
ON L v l11..im -5pm ,
4!.19-4.)ll~I.
RELIEF RN
Chapm an, Harbor Conv.
<.;ardcn Grove 534-tWJO Teac h You How To Earn 1------------1 ·Sol&e1lor, 9 to 4 ; 5 day P . 0.r Box 1560 All Shirts. F /time., Xlnt Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 b ( · t 1n Top 2'k Income In AbraxasMosSOC)lt Carpellhn loah wk .~SOO mo + txmus.,~~~~~~~~~~I e n e 1 pr ogram. e!>ta11rant.res1dcntchc1,
''USA. ~100 aovest menl. 173J fo'ullerton Ave. CM Wests all Corp. needs Nace working cond. Musi I-$34-$35 per shift. Call to work under exccull'e
,Call M r . B arnes, Exp.masseuses.10-10 rouih exterior carpen-have neat appeprance JANITOR& Director or Nurses, che1.Xav1crKoch.apply
714 /997-\Hi30. ••642~** tens, with :t to 3 years Call 58t-7850 MAl ..... T~.._. ... ....,.E fountain Conv. Hosp. an person al Warehouse " ~ 1835 W. Lave ta Ave.
1, Health Food Stores marine carpentry exp. •EXPERIENCED• For restaurant. Mature, Orange. 532--6848 . Hestau rant. 3~50 Via ., 8 •. , I ''ountry Sancer~ Mustown ownt.ools.Xl't Floor &WandowCleaner re hablemanor coupleto ____ Opo_rt_o_L_ido_\'1llage.NB ~ eau.a u "' I ntellaaent Co. benefits for rap1dl" 673-71"'' ·Stores. Well 1'.:sl . Neetls'" expanding Co. Appl" 1~ -. keep in side & out spot-Nurses Aide. 11-7. exper. "'73 ·u09 cAo-6424 1 less. Good pay, I range or train""· fntervws Mon " -..... • '"° G et·Together~ person at Guard Shack. Ex. Secy"-"" , 1 • ,,.. benf'f1ts. 6 Day~. Apply thr u Fri 10am-2pm.
lNTERESTEO in super. Lonely 1638 Placontla Ave. CM 1 Girl ore. Various Ambros ia Restaurant, Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp,
• areal restaurant?? Busy ~ venings or ca II M 1 che l lc a t duties: Invoice typing. 505 30th St. Room 211, 661 Center St, CM
area in .Santa Ana. Right 642-5206. I n,·en. controls, phonE Balboa Peninsula. N. n.
·suirty m ay ('egotiate. Call551-ti042orU.:!-5769 CLERKTYPST orders. ~120 Wk
Mus l liquidate immed. (t:ves & Wknds> fol' In· CaluhaUng & pay ing Sports wear Mfg. N.8 JUNIOR SALESMEN NURSt:S AIDS te!>OOO All offers under formallon on Small 642-3472. Exper1 prt>tered. All tl 0' n i i de rat i 0 n . Groups now fornung for commisaons for hie an-...:..:.;:__:_.....;.. ______ Age 1U·l5. t:arn S20-S40 s hills. Beverly Manor
0 6 k ..... ,~ Cards. PotluckS, e tc. s u r 8 11 c e c ~ · 1 n 1-·arnaly Counseling Clinic per week gelling new 1 'onva1ecent Hospital.
RH's/CCUJICU
Days & N1~hL'\. siand hy
time. d1lll•rrnt1al P~•Y
F'ull or p1t1meExcellent
t>enellts.
Contact Mrs. Jensen:
COSTA MESA
Memorial Hospital
30 I Victorica. CM ~ r . .,.... Age·:J8-S5.Nonprof1t. ~ew portBeac hL1tf lYP· need:. HECEPT/SECY. customers lortheDAILY Laguna Hills. 24452 Vaa
.... IMH W-"td SOIO Ii mg & good w /ta gures. Also must be exp'd bkkpr Pl LOT alter school and Estrada . 1---------~
.... ••••••••••• .. •••••••• Rt-:AL £STAT£ Salary to $475 or com· & typist. ~ per mo. ::iaturdiay~. Yoo must be•-------------------• 642·2734 EOE
_wanted Oran1e Co. orr 'fRAINlNG m e ns urate w1upcr. Hrs : 11 :30-5:15. Call outof i;c hoolby3:00p.m. Offlc•Mwg1m1nt
:>&le movablellquorl.1c. Jndv. ins truction . Good co. benefits. Call 511ti-8ll0 Mon. Morch and be able to work at Man. 2 yrs f/lJme travel
• Afml 4!16-1268 Personal attenuon. Sales Mrs. N .. l aa;a~. 10th tor interview. lost 3 days per ~k. No agency expel". Handllnt ••Jo.. exam 2-3 wks. Academy CONV!NTIONAl-f • ... T•STIC deliveries or collecting. domest(c & lnt'I, hott\
1Trav•I A1enc1 Wanted 541S-11~:.l LOAN """ "" Transpor1at1on pro· commercial & pleasure. Ot"an1e Co. John Klein, 0 ..&.-"u .. 1d"d. Cati ti44.oa:f6. All ed • Albert Wade & Co. 11188 Jolt W.nd/ UNDERWRITERS ppo ....... , "E· "' 1 o · t It inquiries tre.:n .n ~ri ..Part £Mt. .LA ....... , 7050 For a1ureu1ve In· qua p por un Y str1cte11t eont1dC"ne<'.
i .llOl1 ~lJ~1'-lill ••••••••H•h•••••••••• Downey Savini•" Loan dlvldu1l1 to J oin Youna ____ E_m_.;..p_to_>_·e_r___ 644 7177.
EXCEL.Ll::NTTYPlNG has openlnJI ln Its ttB. Real l!:atale Ftrm. ............. T~ RlY home. Pleate pb. to olc. M111t be exper'd in CALL OOVER RLT"i 1031 ducusa needs. m~ u nd•rwrllln• qonven· Oen• Mayo 645-!l070 ....;;...~-------•tlonal loana, particularly N ~-ljllo wkly? F it
Exp. HouHcleaner. Fredlt Mac " Fannie ~+. House ot FUiier.
Mature adult. Ex. refs. M••· .For further Into. Nt. Richerda.846-5455
Own \ransp. Free cal contact Mn. Brehm,
648 7227 963-8321. ltqual Oppor.
Employer.
STIMULA'ftl
roune 111md•
S.lura,. lnttt.
DAILY PILOT
'
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Clo\'en Mtdjlt'
OU(' n I Coo.:tll
t:L~;AN~-:t>
01d )'OU hear eboot the
tupp1e who m.itle a kill ana on Wall SU-('et 11nd
really CLEAN~L> up '
ROBINSONS
Fashfoft l.a.d
PORTllt
Early nou1-s JI/lime
Excellent Bent>flts &
L1~a1 l>tscounts
Apply Pcr1<>rul4!l Olll<'I"
Jo· JO ll .30 Monthru Fri
No:l 1''11stuon l!ilond. NB
1-;q~u~I Ooportunit'
Employerm I
lhn1• on\ctnm!l /OU "ant
to M!ll ~ l 'IJ!\itllted ud., do
1t well
For Clft Ad ifl W OftWft1S Worid
Cal Sue · 642~5678, Ext. 330
Slimmed-Down Set Town-Travel Ca~
~
9169 34-48
"" 1lf ,..__i-11f """-T ....
Wit If I C>lll on brtt<hl d3) i< 111
thlf nf'Y.. ~lll-'f" cl C'a Pf"
i •1•alt• " 1"'1rf or l*UI» Qt.II rn .. 1111 1hl• •hmmln-••I,,.
• ro• lw1 It In ~ 1oh\r~ tn 11b
~m11nly -tit •t '"" •Id••' ~•ll<'h •II If•· 1 ... •"""""'' l'rtnted P111l .. rn t1b~ ~Ki n r l\tr••tU :n:.! ~"·''" '°!" ·woml'n°1 Sia•• •rt> 3 • U~·lnrlt 1u..auth"l
t11n1 "'"" 4(1 lorh hlpl; 16 l 111 Send ti 00 for •ac-h p11len1. h11•t. H 11111), lM (4~ huu. ti Add ZS' for u r h ~!Uf"n for
111p1 ; 111 t 14 hu•1 1~ 111111 . 4~ Orst·l'l•u mail and ~Ill
(IS 111111. IN hip), H Cl~ bu•l. handhnl'. S~nd to Allee rtt• hl11l , 1• 1S11 b1111, &2 h1111 llrooh. 105, 1M Datty Piiot,
4~ (U b1111. '' hlpl. NftdlKr•tl Dept., Boa JQ. • ~nd ll 00 for u ch P•llftn Old Ch•lua St1Uoa. New Add :Z:S t-enlS ror uch pallt1'n York, N. Y tOOU. Prinl
ror nrst-clau 'lt•ll and spet<tal N•mr. Addf'KS, Zip, Pat~ hanc1l1n1 . 01huw1n lhlrd Number
('lap dehvtry w1ll l1lle three S ave dollars I Cteate ""'ffll• or mort' Stond 10 M arlan bu11tJful U1inp. Scnct r. N-
Martln. 442. the 0.11)' Pilot. 1m NHdleu•I\ Cal.tot'
P•tttrn Otpt • m WllA Jlth > deslcns printed illMde •.• W ~. New York. N.Y 10011. fef"WI NIRy Fifty Qlab S1 00 Phnl NAME. ADDRES.<;,ztP. N~' IUpplt~ .. 1:1°00 SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. ~ + Knll ~ 11 ~ ONE f'RFP: PATT£RNof)'Ollr NHdl..,.int ~ .. St" ffloi~ ltUend ror. OM fl'M_,._I F1-Crodlft Book •.. SJ.•
l•rn 1n11d1 NEW SPRING· H1ir111A Cl'ochtt 8oak .. 11.00
S l.' M M " R r A TT f: R N a-an\ Cro<hlt BnS .It • CATAt.00 IOOatyln. 11hllft. llDUnt Watt•-a.oil . 11"
'""' patwrn roupoa ~ lk IMt.nUfoof)' lllDI* •.. 11.00 now SIW + !<NIT lleoll wllh Cotn".C.Glft '°'*· ... Ji• basl~ tlaawt p1Uft'l'I St ~i.tt Af1h-IH • St•
IAAtlnt f'HJllOn Boole II 1J ~ A(Jlll .. llJ ...•.. '111 l~l•°'~· .. 1n11 Oool&. II 8oo11 of llQ\liltOI ..... W
Museum Qlill\ no. P2 •••• w u Q!lllts for Today n ...... ..
llooll ol' It Jifb Rua-, ...• W
" " I• .,
• l ,,
-
H'
il
-
·--
Mand .w.cr.10.1•TS ..... ,....... 9090 TNCb • ..,o ........ ,.oW .....,, ;1rtMI Alllol.Ute4 Alllol.UHd •• ••••••• ;~ ·················-···· ....................... ........................ ...•................... ....................... .............. ~·
-I• IMO IOIO • 104TSTOlAGll · Roi 9711 M9 '741 AMc ttol 99-. ' •••••••••••·•••t.•••t~ '·'' •••••••••••••••••·•• D ii W •t ... · IL.ACtc SHOITY ,,,,,,..., •• ,. •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~, ~ •. , , a y -el!• y--on· __ C "'11•••••••••••••••1!;•• ••••••-••••·••-...t.•••• .W•~••tr .~' Y?f~t .... ntlie Waui1e~. WA~TED ·~~~:n·~0wf:::~0,,_ ~~::1'i~'iu~~:I~~ ~ '4JB '.1!~d~c1.~~v:1f . .,ee: "JJJjWI n • 304, /lr iUf,J ·~ Ll'IJ.14 a~~lWlt>tf,
.JIWU.1,.1( t:h•,a,104 t11red. w111 TOP CA~H DOLLAR ram I n41au. Blacjt aldd plpus, caab . .lil l.llOO t.akf•· to,000 ml •. .Msxi .blue, 111;,oooiJ1es. orbtl-1. IIM...,~<~l. t1o1dror£•ster.002...,..111 P!-11;> .1-on ¥OUR .N~Wi>O R'rOUNES. wheels&widu.ilra. OUM•ICC),UHTY"S "'2-oo:.ts. M~ll1,' tel l ! Oller. ofrt1·.1J42-1M•l't:i4or Ml"'~ l& a..wu c~' & !~;EJ-e~~c'ft.~~'. 11Jl0ac~&111"'10 N.8. :~~· b~'!Ite~':;A:,~;: MIWln&LM.•IST MGI '9744 ~-TMtans, . .•lldaywHk~
lmmldiite oPenlng lot J ot•. Mari11nburK SILVBR SERV1CE, 64..-rJdio lrtpe deck. See to lMMt:OlATt.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• WON_J\MCGremhnonl'.V lU M•ver1(-k.i\'11u&alrfr\•
ind1v1dua1 wM.i:xC.:Uf:fl\ !!~r:,> .. lu1e. Showqual. !-'IN I!: FU RN & AN · T rteffoR Appre~1t1te' $lOOO l-'1rm DELIVERY 'I» MGR 60 000 ml l.fard &bow. MMny xtras. Wall 1d cond , J'll • ~
Sl.41:ltllUCb.l l)'Pll'IB !iktlli &f-'--~-:::---7"""-::----1cT~·~~~U:'._!:E:;s~,-~·~··~-~·~"'°::'.:.·--1 ·!!':'.Y.~............... 531-29oli. . . AU Alodels4tColors & son io;;J. Wire. WhlS. ~I beJQw CCMK. l$1--t16112 MO-aiMU aCtS. ' :..
10 key by ~.h.. Mllit be Ches•pe¥keBay Lt. otue wood crplg, C~n, S-. Dick Miller Motors /\m /t~m. Brill.&h Rae1ng Md: 9910 Ma••riclc 9947. ne11l.~or~ .. uucd & ~.u Rvtru:vie.r Puppies. AKC or1g.~·)'d. uprx llll yd, A.wt 9120 .._ _ _._, w.,t-~ 9590 llO ~·Warner ~ reen · ii lOU. Ev ts ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••·••••••••·•••••• •• ~e-•·d. "···• --il5o ~•"' ,., . ..,, ,.,,,.•.Gdcond.67" """''' _.,"' ..-u ..ilSo ti:hun 673-5185 vol·--........................ ri:~ .,,...---u ...-........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ' . ' . J9738ulckCentu~lan '73 4 Dr. Au.IP.~VI. ~I I
<ithn& 4'.Jlll.&;'A• · •AKC REG.• lsc .. ..-s RENT: VW Camper Van. Wi: PAV TOP OOu..AR ~nta Ana SSI·il.J:t Opel 9746 App,rox. 37,000mile.. co1\d, Xlnt curid at )ow F~r i.\l'ornuoon AFG HA~ PlJPPfES Want.4 1081 Sips 4. AC, fully equip. fo'(JH. 'l'OP USED CARS '72 l"I A 'f lil4 We11:on , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 5:i6-l5ll prrce. fist ol'r over flj.UJ;
. Ple¥1JeCatl 'Call900~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .liyOayorWk..M0----0475. FORE I GN.OOM~'TlC r ad.1a l$, R&f~. <iut~: 11 Opel Manta lo. mi. Codllfoc 9915 847-'Jlltl.
714/,44-3Jlf. ----------·i<"PJNEl' piano Wan(ed. Motor Cycle'l/ ur CLASSICS peritict co11t1. ts:.U--0986, auto. xiJlt. cond. $1.dUO,or •••••••••••••••••••••••1-..:.c.~~~----:9c9o5o0-:.
Teacup Poodles AKC. P<iy top C<1sh. Wnte PO Scooten 9150 If )'our t'b-1' 1s extra clean 8Jl-:al9U offer556--8764 CADILLAC "'Y ~munlilNooo Be.11u111ully .P'•.P_•,· llo•'·'"·'·''d.•I."' .. """. 11ceu!;l1rst. ••••••••••••••••••·••••• OrSendKesuroe'J'Q.: lltined.Wh1le.5.:l.I~ .>'OJ " ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAUERIUICk Honda 9727 '73MANTA800om1,xlnt. . tllt t\1UN 'f£R£V, 4 4r
THI ntYl .. CO. L~ABRAOOR pupp,·e,, 6 Mtnfcol Jo, 0 K s 1\ L t: 1 9 1 4 . . ••·••••••••••••••••••••• rond. R i il. ~.400. Orange C:ou.nt~ ~ h1r.:e~t sedan.~ Air, gd ti,,_, kin',
5511,"· ·c 8 KA WA SAK 1 2so ce, 2.lll5 Hurbor Blvd'. Sfg-:.Wtl selection . IOOtl 11-1914 11 cond. Jdeal fOI:' sho~int:' .,.,..wpert trDr .,.,·ks At-'FECTIONATE. htstrvMenb 80 3 EXCt-:LLt:Nl' CtJN··CosLat\tesa 91~-tsOO ~nEver)'Oay. 0 ,,1 •"•<ate. Day•• Me~..... c; 5-1~ 1m ••••••••••••••••••••••• , llte 9750 n "" '
•
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' Equ1110ppor. EmplO)'Cr ~ -HI 0 n d GI I.I s on L6S ' orrJON. ~OOV.~-!k4J TOP DOLLAR .~................ ~~lJ-~4-tJ-113 Eve•~
meToYo• 8045 w/case. v1ntage3JO•f11n 'titi l'r1urnph 650 Don· PAID '62 One of a k1od, ..:.:::...-==-----~ •
••••••••••••••••••••••• hull ow body. Sac. ncv1Llc. llcOll cng., nu IMMEDl'TELY showroom per1" ;tOO mi. MustC1n9 9952 t
SECllTAIY Afo~FECTIONATE Calico, 1>15-5107 pa 1 n l . .: 7 .S O. Ca I I -"" on new eng. 6000 mi war-•••••••••••••••••••••t'!' t
w:.nt'ed 11' Phelps lmo.old,boxtrained,gd .-:---:-. 5.l:! 7Jtiti. FOR.ALL 10% ranty . Cust paint.Cad '7t.•'OVWhote•><••. 'tiiF1\STllACK300,4spd, l Ch1ropract1 c uic.s in homeonly.644---0139 11.1lia_1n111.t: ti _slr ~cousuc h I "" ..._... ..
Jo'asnion h11and ·:'-lewport · ., · Pvl . t•ty, Aft . 6PM .,',,· ... ~ 1·7,h., CMj. ....,-.,... . "Ullilr xlntt:und6n1oold 'i i! \'a111na11a 125 1\1.X . FOREIGN CARS . 0 c rome \Vil s, new int. pl Ply tW6--8d9-See ,'.'l.,o.~~~,.or t>e sl o1 1er.; I
Ctr. Good lyp;~ skills 2 YR . hunljl w/sl\O!s. Gd "-' /l'aS~Sl~~5. &14 -tllti!J Xlnt cond. Very cJc1><.•nd. 4~-H}:IO ~-~~'~"~-~~_:~~-~~---I::'':;-'-';"-:-::::-;.-:::::-:"
nt£:ess for insuranc w /ch1ldren .Ph :'5~-8142 0 .. ., . 1 1. S~50. l'n : bet. J llfO, OVERFACTORY , ~LOO Red ·10 J<'astbae1cApphmags., , 1,,.,-,,, 1u1ni;. u piece si;:, or "'''"-'""'"· 73 E whlle/m· I 1.orn1s. W1ll lra1n. Pano praclit·c, natural "'ood, -~-----·-------! INVOICE '72 !:Ill ·r, 5 speed, <u r, 1 412oLL,2llOUIJ mi Side pipes. J02, <1uto, AC, 1111mc PleasecallOon Am /f'1n. Aubergi ne. eraor. ''"ha,eoal•1·1vermt.'i.Ulllc. . . . . funtihwe 1050 good l'O nd . Sl.iO 11rm '74 Honda 20tl. !Wtl 1n11es . loaded Dir Blue book "" I na &JU 600l.I .a. As1t 'g $11 !ISO. 838-Sl'!IO. • · · ~must sell. o:.7J.~. · -••••••••••••••••••••••• 545-9224 ~. OM ALL · price, i7~. i\ly pnce, ~ 1
• S.c'ys, loolckeepe:ra
L1i Reinders Agency
·IO:lt.1 li1rl·/1 St, Ste 10-I
1~ewporl Hcach ljJ.;j_~I
MATTRESSES .•. Office "'mihre & .i..S-.»12_'_· ___ 1 JlOO W.C..st lfwry.Jtl MEW Porsche 'tiJ S·90. Sunroof. S6500. Days. 645-UUI, ·ix; /l.tustang", auto, 6 cyl. I
Equipm•nt 8085 Motor Homes,Sdes/ stereo-deck. Runs a:ood. Eves. 645-2'Jt>J H.uns good. Clean. $.SIX). }
Queen J<·u11 & Twin Sets
Priced to i\1ove Now!: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rent 9160 642·9405 •7 5 HONDA needs .bod; ... ~'Ork. Desi HliO El obrado. Xlnl l'Olld. Aslt for Doug ;i.32-at>4l:t
3 & 4 l'l'. Group up·•••••••••••••••••••••••!-----------oJfer.6"-:JwtiS. P 1S, P /U. Am 1 t<·rn o1dsmoblle 9955 J
Coll For Appl.
Established 1965
hol~tcrcd dccoratorchrs. Al 0 T O J( II O 1\I E , WE BUY IMPORTS SEDANS 72 Porsche ~111'1'. silver stereo. Very clea n .••••••••••••••••••••••• 1
Great Savings 00 Used sru.ca.l.:all ;\1\lorEvc, Thcrn1a si1~ Sys tem. :vour c ho ice of W/bl<ick air, ;11n 1f1n 714 /61J-ti451anti SalesandServiCi: ,;
H:i:l·!jtj2j & 646.ss&>.
F\I 1 &M 6-1::!-!.157·1 Urand ncwdualtank.dlx 't'op J)ollar l~or Any accessories plus lax & stereo. alloy wneels,Comoro 9917 OLDSMOllLE Service Station Attendant rn. a~p 1 ISC. ind!. L2·VOIL. COlll ""'20. MaltCOI' !\IOdCl. r 0 d 4. 000 <199 104:J
& Car Wasti 'Hclp. Over W1ls~n s U<1rg~1n 1'look EXk:C . d l·i;K -s tately, St•U ~400 . Also 1 2~011 t~~~~e. r er yours :>, m1 -••••••••••••••••••••••• GMCTRUCKS
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:!I. full & part un1e. Avv· _ ~;, W. 19th~ .. Ci\1 eurved. "'Ouden desk Jl.U . ~:l<'C. Urill. SQ;). JIM PANOS '62 POltSCllE S90. l-'1\1 '74 CAJ\fARO, xlnl cond, HONDA CARS f
Jy t....~.un~ tf~ll~ Car 2 N t:\I.' Jove seats, uphoL \111a1tat·t1. !en return & <i-til:Jl MAZDA tape, x1nt con<t. $J,:J50. auto, P ,s, P /U, A!\1 1t-'M, University Olds l
Wa sh. ~-l<kl.i El foro Rd. in n::iu){aWe\·e. t\lust sell! l'rl:'dl•nt;1. Nrly. $2.00U -·----------Ph: 847-47till stereo tape, air. ~altl. ''""''' Ha,•-·Bl•d. I
l.aguna Hihs.t!JU-li;)O. "''"'"For p · ir stl-95ld lh•W, 11o•1lt :.ell lor :.;600. i\llNI i\ltr. nome. '7:! E. 2001 S. !\.lantheslcr O-ID-4!1t.13 aft. 3 .:.o.iu ....... I -~-~~------1 -,-=:..:..:::..""'"-'·.::.:::_.=:::._1 ~-liJ.11 1\nahe1m UJti.tiOOlJ Rolla Royce 9756 Cost.1 Mesa 541).!Jt.>41) RV 'E Ooradu. :iti . .xJO. • CM I t 9920 St:: IL Sta'. Salesman Solid Birch. Early Amer,,-.--& O 8090 ____ ,_;.ci;~-cr_,,,,c. ___ 1.1•0 1, Doll ··o· p·•od 10, J-a• 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •roe ·.::.-ULU"' ··utlO"" ·•c.o• cu I & lu~ qiiin. fop pay & ext. ta!Jle 52 " rd. w'iar.y· ianos MJClltS .. .. -~w Rolls llenuey Sil, VI:!, fact ••••••••••••••••••••••• "° "'• .... · "-"·""" •• ••••••••••••••••••••• S i & B•'IW' ond alt oth<·' Im·••••••••••••••••••••••• •n V•'·• o, "···'oo Ht' t tr1noe bcnefns. t::xper. susan :S IOO.&W~7 . . , Auto er• ce / " air, very nite! Dys COHNB.L ·"' '.,,_. ' • man prcf'd. Fut! or . OllGAN HOBBYISfS Parts 9400 j)Ortcdtars. 'ti0.Xl\k:l.:uu1>e2+2.4 spd, 642 _!:1:.!37 : t::ves:JSJ--Jl4:J CHEVROLET nev.· ures. new R1v1er~ 1
p111me . shell, J7th & Brei1k1n g up hOuse keep· Fl•aturing Thomas ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crevier BMW to 1p1ll·:o;, \'('!')' t'll'an, SALES & SERV IC~~ Cltar. Pain~ Job. li~ i
l'••n•,,NB mg· . .: .. 11 10,. everythln". C;1hforn1aOrn;ul5 makco11l·r ti7J -~ Saab .9760 cond. ~. lllitil Eddy 1 .... ...... o o "' 2ug \V . 1st Street ----2828 H ~--Bl d. 1\ta1ile Bdrm . Ouun• set. \\I rColur f;io AUTO TUM• "P ••••••••••••••••••••••• arvur • Ur. Santa Anli. S•r•. Sta.Attmcl E-v S;1nta 1\na 1:13.i·Jl11 Mercedes &em 9740 ·SAMI co ·TA !\.IESA U('Sks. c 11a1rs, Queen Spct1al Sa,,·111g,,; Parts & Liibor ~ M::ix. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----~-·4'-~·_lc~~~---ti!f OLDS 9g, 1-'ully equ1pt. 990 E. Coast Hwy, NB Anne 11 Century. L:.lmps . Call lor Coupon OIJct' Exiiert work-"'hilc u SELL US YOUR CAR! Lit.I cond. Sll!f5. -=~~====~~-I E:tc . Etc. PrL ply . CoastMusicSenice w t · 1 64:1-Q.til SltorpAt..rtGirt 4':1;)-1556. Costai\les a642-:a:i.51 w;11l epay oppnce. 75 MERCEDES BuyorLtcne· '73 t:APR ICt:: Esl<ile l---------i.~or diversified ofc. FountainValley9tiJ·Sil3 lnstaTune549-()682 MUSTBECLEA.H 280 Authonzed Wagon. P 1S. P1B, 1•1W. 1974 Ut\IJ::liA t!atehback,'
work. MacGregor i\IUVING : \\le ha\·e a \l.'111 take any1h1nJ;! 1n Sales&Serv1ce A1C. !.I Pass. New sleel l lllUIJ mi , gd. cond.
Yachts., 16Jl Placenlia, ~ouse ·full 01 funuture. SportilH) Goods 8094 VW ENG. I &OOCC trade. watt:hl•s, rings, ~·uuy equ1p1>ed ; Ai\l /Fi\1 Beach lm-"'rls r<id1als. Top o1 tnc hne! ~.&11.1. IH:l-!1::!57 eves.
C.M. fopquah1y,1nxlntcond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·rv·s c tc.. s te reo,Juwnuleageexet:. '·I \ 1 ....-nd· Pr1\'. Pty. ~. !\.'lus11~~=-------·
-----------1 i\~ust see lo appret1ate. Colt Sauer JU.l.16. Hunting ____ 5_au_--"'1 __ o ____ 1 20lMJ MAR HOH HLVU. £:ar · 1-'u ll sale price: Jam::O~~; rt iur a sell ~ .54':1-9322. "titi-liood ruober, uphols., ----------•! J'lio reasonable offer re· Rifle. Nc\·cr u:-.cd. ~. ~1 .G .A . Had1alur.no lt"aks ti4;l -I;)(JLI ~ltl.1132· Lc<ise <tl :i;l7!1.89 1r & oatt RebU eng f~chnicalWrifers lused. Shortlx'd Can1pcr "l>-l•I"'"' l.:tJSl'A i\l~:S.\ per rn onLn . 141! mo11Lh 11-kl·Do,,·e i.:>2-0! '7.f NOVA llatenl.Jacl<i. a . ' • .... " ~O. ~t.G .,\. 1\lanual Slu. ,1 1 /\Ocvl'portUcal·h 1 d d ' . Id Or1g.u"•ner .5Hti-M7!1. shell. 544-!l·IZi ------<i-4Jll <iH ti. open enu ea~e. p u:. tax / .ua c . b 1no o ·1-~~--------
T•ch Illustrators 1 ~===~=~----lsKIS F1:.c herSuperglass. -----------1 Oran9eCounty's Ser.11 J7!:1i T t S3,4UU -Hest Ulter t Pinto 9957
Corner i;roup,n:wiil00;2 ne"' llc;1 d air compVW 1500 Bng .. a!rnost Hi9hest$luyer JimSlernons .~.-.:~.~••••••••••••••• H37-56i0/ti1;)-001•1. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Long TermASi>ignments desks. used 560 & ~. boots. Lunge Pro bools. complete new p<Jrls on Im__.., 70 CON.ONA !\.fark JI 1970 CllEVV wagon, air,·;~ IJlx 1•11110.Runa~t.
Send rtisume s talirtg til5-002;)NptBch. 615 ..:.iJ4.l:I SIOU. "'"'7·· ""-'"" BillMaxe,,-yTo ... yota Imports Wgn. Aulo, It & II. xl n P 1S, P 1B . Company t-m stereo. t,;ust. paint.
ava1l <lb1hty. fuJJ ex· wA·rr.:HBEDS & ac · .... , -,,.,= (7141833-9300 ('Ond., tires nr. nt!"''· t'are,c;u·l·Jullyc:1redl'ur. Ma g Whl,,; + Xlras. 1'.t(•Grcgor Goll Cluos. J ----------·! Call RogC'ror 8111 64 . tlJOO pericnce .ind back · cessor1cs, llC'W & used. Woods & Irons + Sn Antiques/ 817 is.:.5;l Sl.l:L.50.002-4H~7 Sll:I00.644 -IWIJ'.J -5. 1-~-•-----·------
g round to i\tar~ltret 67J-4atk). 129'':! 3Jrd St. duwncar1 .~5.b-lti--IJ21 . Classica 9520 - -How 6!fToyolaCorona 'i2 At UN fl:: t.:i\ltJ.(J 'ii PINl'tJ. Air t;ond. "4
l'r1e,,;1, 'f t::fl.1 PU. I 1t!u2, _NcB~-------••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE APPRAISAL .-"'• .... 1 s~1 . Uest U11er. SliyPark.lrv1ne.9Z7u7. ,. . loats&MariM-We Ou)· usC'd l'ars & PurchcrsiRCJ ~1 ...... 1oesl0ftl'r Silvt'r "·1wnt . "'nY.· 1"" ti:!l -OJ:!.11. """""""""""""""""""""""""""""~D1n1n g r1n scl. _lalt_ le . Equi·pmenl 1930 1-'ord. 4 Dr, good eng. 5·11:1-1711 , JO.Jpn1 t\lalie 011er. 011•ncr will!-----------·01 d 11 d y t · d fo trul·k::.. Call GROTll Top Quality cl1a1r::. & 11uteh. :>!~;:,or ••••••••••••••••••••••• :. 1 u . ra e r Cloc.·\'l<OL>'."J" lo' .• ,,,.., sac.ti4U -ti22ti .14 \Va go n·lli\I mi, Telephone Sohc11ors bst ofr. 552 -~. Lruci. ur 1i1asuc pipe SISUIJ. ..,. -0 ...... Used Men:e~-5 SPECIAL --P 1t1 me work a\'ail. 5-kl--til24 ;ii>pra1sal. UC 72 ,\'UVA v -1:1. (:ray. r<ithals. radio, rack,
Morning•, af1ernoons or •Lo1·Cscat & Sota. \·er)' Ge-Mral 9010 ---------LiH.0·r11 cu~;VBOLl';r Contact 14 Ll"U mt H,11 p ,.: hitch. l'1U lease or ouy.
evening hours. We pay good quuhty Never used . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sports Roce Rods 9540 11:12 11 Beact1 Ulvd. Used Cor u--TOYOTA SALEI. A ;C~ .iuto" lrans .' u~'. l'.I'. 541:1-:3761.
"-'ages & cun1m1:os1ons. ~-81'12.2 'l'AX ADV,\N !'AGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlu1H1H gtun 13ca(·n ··~....,-· 04\i-\)'ili/ g·JUt>•:JIJ ·.-----Ca 11 tor de ta 1 I s, H Uonatc your tJoaL VOH 1\l ULi\ FORU twi tiUti7 a.1::1.:!3J1 f'a£:tory Demos & t:x. -:> • • · ·72 H.t<:D ltunabout, 11uto,
540--0301. Los Angetes orse5 8060 Doy Scouts ;>.10--1~.lll Lolu "T · 2tl.2 ---Miss·ion\fiein '.~~uuv~ ~ars. Good Us Chrysler 9925 JO.ow m1. Sit>5o.
·rimes, 131;) Sunflo~·er ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Very t·Jcan. ready LO SELLING YOURCA.R? r-loyoia::>ch~l'llun ••••••~•••••••••••••••• ••644 -3742••
Ave. t:.~t . HORSES BOARDED loafs, t:i4a1nt/ ral'l' Li 11u1J u1»r:.t tcd TOP PRICES PA.ID lntpOl'tS A.LL PRICED '7J Ch.r)'s ler. 1n1mae. Full Plymouth 9960 -'-''-"~"-'~------I & For .Sale. R1d1n g Service-CJ020 motor. Luts ol 1;xlr.1 Forlmport.s TOSB.L pwr. Low nuok . :\luSl •••••••••••••••••••••••
'fYPIST. t;xp 1or Slat 1or Les:;uns & Training. Cun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• parts. SJ,g~: :..~ 14111 l'u1d 1u1·or Not 29701 ~ ~_,. l iwll! 5;)2-35JJ.
P.A. 0111ce 1n HB. BKk g tact Su ::.a n sfn1th . Yacht Hvy ;·Would l1ket ---• Dean Lewis Imports ...... ....,_ •~1·17.c» cdlJllllll A1n-:a·
exp helpful. Full time 7;)1-W57. "'·ork 011 Bual. P1unt, 4Whee1Dnves 9550 l9titillar1Jur.t:.}I t.\11, WJI01 ContiMntal
perm . SJ6-4ltil 6:. Clean, 1:-.:ng. work. ·l:H-••••••••••••••••••••••• &h;.~3uJ ·;4 i\iERCl-.:DES Bf';Nz •••••••••••••••••••••••
536--3193. Jewelry 8070 01112. '741:-.iTLSCOUT.6 cyl.11 --------·l.:'IU SJ.C' 7,000 mtles. TOYOTA 'i3 i\'lari. I V. IW'.? FI N.
••••••••••••••••••••••• mp 1=. low 1n1l eagc. I rted Joad.:d~·llht:Xlras.1\lust AVAIL. 1't) QUAL .
WA 1·r RESS, P /I' WA"'TED Boats. Marin~ s;J, 7UtJ. ti-14 -14~ Autos, mpo ~l'Jl. 646-!jJ()J 19b6 Harbo•. c M 64to.9303 BU YEH ~ See i l a 1ut J'he Stew Kettle n Equipment 9030 ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------!------pro\'t' to yourseh 1L 1> tne
.. C'osta Mesa,979--187~ ·roP C t\Sff DOLLAR •••••••••••••••••••••• 4 WHEEL DRIVES l ~ltib 'l'OVO'l'A s11;1rpcsl1nUranget.:ou11·
PA ID FU I< \' U U ll T"'·o n•~\v Barr1enl it2 · Alfa Romeo 'i705 SELL US 4 dr. S55U/IX>slo!fcr ty. Only 21!,UW in11es and
9930 ATLAS
Chrysl•• /riy-tl<
01.it:n Oa1Jy & ~n. 't1I JO
PM
2~2!1 Jlaroor Blvd.
t.:osla ~tesa
546-1934 'W AITllESS & J t::W~:LH v. WATCllBS, {1 n od 1 t e d 2 -speed li<HJU st-:L~:cr10," ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUR OLD CAR. • j3J -2'Jtjlj • loaded "'' 1 a11 cx11·ui..
8.4.ITEMDIRS AR.I' OU.JL<;-rS. GOLD. v.·1nchcs. L 1.~l ~-sell HEW & USED Alfa Romeo WE'U ----------I 1\lusl sel l 11n1ncU1atc1y ·1:1 Ous ter. f~con tieyl,
Mexican Re9taurant. El SILV~;H s ~;RV I C1':. $.l5t1.:>.11:1 -u1.1J Pncei;sl<1rl<tl .. BuyorLt'GH '•il't)YOTAL:orona!\1ark 1 0 r A~ J' u AL Autu trans. Well ma1n-
Ranch1loRestaurant,<lliJ f'INJo: FUf<,"lj & AN · --'-~----Aulhonted LEASEYOUOURS! :! Scd . .t Spd, air, Hi ll, \VllULt:SALI·: HOOK tu111edlownurcar.ti:l~1.
_ll!Ui __ S_t_.N_._B_ .• _·7_5_--6l!55 __ ·_. -11 ~TclcQcU_Ec·cs_. 6c·4_5_-_Zl00--'---ID~.~~.15 ~·~~=~~~e l~t $2177 S:1Jcs & Service r,~~~ ;)~~~~J!Jllke ucw. ~~7~.: t:~c~· 0~ti!~ ;)& :~~y 1~~~yl ~/!~· ~~t)~~t~
Wanted. L1,·e·1n nousc Miscellaneous 8080 Pr1.,·. l'<irly.548-:rltil . 6 :, I. and l' r u 1 ... e r Beach Imports I 00 Sun. ti-l4 -;lt}g __ · -"-·--~---
keeper. Able to drive. In ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ PBN•ldl J 1\1 ucArtnur and ,\lcw & Used to Choose ·7o i\tAHK l I 2 dr, auto.
good hcaJtn. Free to , . , . . Boats, Power 9040 D l • Jamwrce It/II. A i t:. ne w siecl
lr;aveL fop s alary. Jtcts . •l·I H.f,\l.OOD :::~Lt:• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 81111 111"11 1'-l!:l ·Uovc 7.i2-o90o H flmport rads. Superior cond.
"d -~"· . . Ori;:. Jo.UC . dcl :>1;:,. eord. ,-, "I'll' '' ,_ l l 0 (iJ""' Wl\O ouse 0 s $1 Jal/ 1~4 -4051 .., req ·"'".l~I. 'l"I ,., . I 5Bl -l l,.' I" " · Ullauvu , · . ~ .'l;c"porl flc;itll 523•7250 " .. --'~'---'~----~ :::;. ..• tore . ;:.o l V '· t k ·k .. , -
·u:; 1\11\HJ\ 111. 2:.l,llllll m1, ·i:~ t>us·rt::R 1.oaded!
au xu·as. ,\lay uc sel'.n 1'cw Slt!el radial t1rei..
1ar·c11d of park111g lot. ~!f5 . 21J -;l~2-ll!ti.2
. . . .., c . L· ' ·ood c.. ' ( ecp . ult I Lan 'i; I~'· .. 0.:: TOYOTA Volluwogen 9770 WllO "Ai'i r~ ro WORK . ~::.~.... ......µp y SJ.275. gJ~-1 55/S ·; BMW 971 2
1'HIV£ACAH! SUPi''H: SALE Si-iORES ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7l ,\IJJ 25UC', sunrool , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~t""~ec~:i~t ~~~Y~.~~i Ge11eraf 9901
C HOOSE your ll'?U rs. I N'r~R I OR. N 1 1 h loots,Soil 9060 1966 Horbo•.CM 64b·9JOJ ORA.NGECOUHTY'S be;1ut . i.1J1•c r. S6:JOU. ·,_;gULXC1\1PR£1795. O<hi -J3l2 or tiiJ-673.!I ••'!_••••••••••••••••••.t•
wort.: !or yoursctl oc . 1 Yon Pus ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------'------! 552 -ffi!l5 ·11 BUG x·rn.~li1Gl:l5. ·L ... c,1,,·1·iNEN"rAL 4 d, . . , . ; l'arpct ~.SO yd. N::itural . Q'§T vw ~ your own. l>OS.s. ,\It'll or linen drapery labnc S.:J COH.Q,"IJADO J;:,w/ lra~~cr, ·1:1 Blazer . A,C, sterco. lol ~ _, tent SIUO. 1:192-294 1 liood cond. i\1akc 01fer,
women-, t:an be sh~htly yd. Puo mirrors 4u,,; olf, x.lnl .l~O~nd . !\.lak<::. or/:r~ or x1r;1s. lo mi. !133-J4:H ·~I~~~ ~~ 1~~ ·~;~l~~rr~ i2 SUP F.R Ht--:t-:TLB, 1 Ph: i;3J -u3U h.anll1capped. Neat· 26 ,0 .,.00 St .. •"t!. BJ.l-J0>10day:.;552-{11 l days;5-lti-l!ll~cves. "l·----------A v ., " " An1 1 ~'n1 s terl'o. Ne >A' m1 , new tires, S1!150. Cor•ette 9'32 l_;lran ppcarance. ts .. 642 _22:.;; C\'l'S. T-·cks 9560 . 1 , .. ,.,,,,.,!.<. ''''' '°''''-,...,,.,,_._ .:A•_., ..... , retired. Age z;, to 10. Sup-•.. ~a es·:.cr\·1cc·...cas1ng ~ "'"· v ---"--'--""--------i•••••••••••••••••••••••
plement )'our 1ncome. Jrvine country Club Goll 2t>. ·r -Uird !-<loop. n1;iny •••;•••1•,:••••••••1•••••• Roy Carver, Inc. ~{3_~~~ ai~:e,>~1 .•ca .se . 1 BUY Junk vw parts / Good ust'd Corvettes .,
1Jrivc ac•b6hrsoc more i\1e mbcrs hip. SIUOOor xtras in c l. ti 111 5!:1 r or1 ll'kUp.xntrun· Ro!ls°R.oycc Bl\1W ---ICars.~al!Dan9'i!l--O!J 01ten .~_good s~1ccL1uno1
aday.Apply1nperson, bcsloffer.Lea\'Jng ,\re<1. Ev111rude OB, S4UU n1ngcond.ncwt19("5,nc~· 234 1-:.l7lhSt. ·12 J\-1 -HE i~Z 28osE, llHolOamorafter SpmJ new 1;,S. Outstand 1 n~
Yellow Call t:o .. Jtlti t.:. 6-14-illl\J. 675 61:1117 or wkUay clutch, oralics. gd ~·ork Costa i\lcs<i 546.4444 I 0 ad ed. 5 u 11 roo 1 . Co1·\·et1e mechanical,
16th .Sl., Costa i\lesa . tiJJ-3111 I lruck SOOO/ofr. 642--0462 clean /sound. 5.i7 -L 31 ~ 'ti9 V\V BUS. Jtolt eng, OOdy, H nd pa111l team re·
I H VINE Coast Country •7 4 BAVARIA , Aft. 5P1'.1 trans & generator. £1351.J. ad)' to serve you ..
Cl uo J\lembersh1p ~'75U + SA.IOT MOLDS PICKUPS Call 645-327:1. lloward Chevrolcl lransfC'r fee. 580-tl218 Naples·2U. ~50 CLOSE OUT Dove and• •uau ,. ······•················ Ccnleroo:irdSabotS.300 GOODS~Li':C'rl01" SAVE$$$ *'73 450SL 1\:111~ Fa stoack. Needs Sts.~ ~ 1005 WATERIED SA.LE Include s Palt crns & NEW & USED * 530 i * Brakes & i-;ng. work ,',jr. !\fuc,\nnur
••••••••••••••••••••••• Coronado Waler beds. Del'k 1\1old & Soh·Slruc Prices !>lart at ....... , IMMEDIATE White, red leather. SJStJ. 4!j7 -1295. i\1on. Jamooree and Ur1sto1
WEDGWOOD Christmas UKJO E . Edinger, Santa Mold. Ca ll 615-781 l. $2177 DEl.IVERY Mint, must sell Best of. Vol•o 9772 i"ew,.f.?r~.~~ach Plates. '69-'70-'71.$21C Ana , (ne.i r Newport ...,-.........,
se t. Po r s gr u n d fwy I .i4:l-20'.fl 1971 C;itahna 27. !I'" h GOOD s~ ~TIOH f«. ••••••••••••••••••••••• L\•lnrude.Xlnlcond. '13 Datsun cG1..;:l!IVJ ,, ""~ 540-7744 OR'HGE Christmas '69 S IJ -1,-,, , p ,1 .•. ~ ••. ""~'""''" s peed, s tere o, m3g • Consldning * A 831 -2459 · e i g . ·'ear .~ wr ""'"""".,.. """ v.·hcl'I.~. •LeoM'ng* or494·0167E•es COU~ -'-~-~-------1 Lawnmower, 1~ort. Dis· 1"111 I
Ford 9940 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'o; GALAX IE. 4 dr. l'1H,
P1S, UULO, a 1r.OllC'r!).
tii;)-t}J~ e\'CSOr ~·i.nds.
A.ppli•c•s IOIO hwas her, nth 5 mos old. loafs.Slip Doc.ks 9010 cd l • l::hm1n-.le the m1dd1e 1 ____ &_W ______ 1 VOLVO
••••••••••••••••••••••• SJOO.t'a.642-3-194 ~~~;~~;~:;J~f·~;~~~~;.;.· f.CUl fUJtA man. Lease d1rC"Ct from '75 M de EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO
G&S Hlt1n Dishwasher authOfJZt'd dealer! erce 5 Laracst Volvo dealer Ill
iSO. Ken more Washer *I BUY* 213..!~~~~ TOY OT A Exec. s-cials Orange County ! Huy or I 9 7 o· F 0 R D LT
i5().Guar/Del546-867Z ''ood u•cd '"'"''"'' &1 -----------1 There must be a reason r--Leased1recL BROUGHA/l.f, 4 dr. Im· u • •1 1 #l · Three low mileage ex-.ppll·,nee· "' woll •ell lo' '" OOCK 1·0, '"'''· """'· 1966 H b CM 6 930 we are " in sa es. in I moc co11d I '"ded w11n ~~~!~.z:rmRi!f~~~~c5~ you. " Harbour. lloJd.,. to 35'.l -~---'-'-"c·~_c•c•~c'~1 serv1ce,l!'l1nselection , ~~~1!>1P~d:cars: Fu Jy ~~-~l·•.19gq•J~l'9 •• ~~~~~7a.cc~sor1es .
613_5684. MASTERS AUCTION •i.zs ·. :>t>7 .~u min . '6.~CtlEVV 1'l'l'on.8'bcd, Crevier BMW l_T ~j ll.T1._ tj
----------1 646-1686 A llJ.9625 !14tl-l~ 43.00U Ori~ mi. gd otil. ZQM w . l !'lStr1.-el 2HU with Ai\1 /F!\1 stereo, 1973 Country Sqwrc Stu.
Kenmore washer, multi al l6orSunday839--09i4 . loot /S d / truck. ;>;uu. 54ti-1ti55 S3nta ,\na tlJ.'l·ll7l scr. Jl!Uti. lull sal(' pnce 2025 S Manchester Wagon, xlnt eond . f'ull
C'ycle. xlnt cond. $7.'i Cati CL? ,... 9080 <tll.6 iil0,!11!1: 1ease ut :>173.91 Anahet~m 750-2011 p w r, A 1 c . Am 1 f'. m
8fl-421'1i. Vari-kennel exceiJen1 "'""' 1-----------I & & mo. \4tl month opl:'n end ster~. 11o·ht. w1 o11t 1111. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '13 Chevy l llV new tires I I t . .-,..._ • IOr sh1pp1ng pees. ,\-1 . . . J ~ ' ease, Pus axi SPECIAL Co. cur-well serviced. FREEZEn, .GE. 20c(. no cond.:WO.B47-5ll!O 18 5EARA"(·55~ph spo~e °!'hl!!. J.llSt tun_ed . ~5. 714 1m-q.woraft fros,·upnght. Xlnt. 21(1 Hp,V·8foord&frlr. Ask g£2:400.8J0-8935or,_~-~----<SOS"' 1 11 1 · , ""· u sa e price 5pm, 714 1673-7d24
$,217$ .. '3 . 5 pm J 20312 LEATllLlt saddle, Sonic S:J250. 675-46ld 552-7'168 aft 3 pm. Capri , 9715 '14.1t4Y, ser. 3798. Lease VOLVO SAL[I
MNan. of( Ha.iclbrook s1c1hesco1le, 12xlS multi· ••••••••••••••••••••••• at SlS.5.81 mo. 146 month • 1~2 Fatcon R1:1nchero,
·'1f,BQlilhard; fLB. color crpt. combo safe & TAR GAZEKil ¥-M CAPRI ·n vs decor. gr .. open end 1euSe,ph.1s1axJ Factory Dem~ & Ex· rudio. heater, uuto. (jood ""r.'!:! 1020 file ca1>1ne1. anuque or· ---~--~--. Z1K 4.sp, radials, AM, eeuuve Car!'. Good Used economy car. As1t tn,g
. gan ltiOO. corner t:>drm BrCLAYl.POLLAN gd. •ond . ''"'00/ofr. 24UD. full s ale price ToyotttSe1ect1on $450. C.1111 aner .i:ati1>m ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ' M ,_o.1,~o..io. M ... "' LL
USED Bikes&: Parts . .,151~•"'-~~·-·-•4_2_~_•_·i_o ____ 11 v "-"'"' ,.,... ''''" v 4!H-171.i ~.082, ser. 3U-15. Lease al A. r«ICED \168-4971 • To ....... .....,...,..'°' T .... tdov, l --------~--1 $1.44 .37 mo. ~48 month TO SELL ~~~-'-'-------11
&: uct. ZttllJ Newport Blvd. HOMEOWMEl.S ._,~'*'_."'iooe'°,.,,...,.... 9720 open end lease, plus t.llXJ '64 Ford 1-'ut'ura. llal"t:ltop
C.M.Mt-7910 Paid Jor or not light for ofycj,orzodlocbi""•ign. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " twnA• conv. Auto, l'1S. ft1ll, ~ • ,_ lino.. ''"" 8111111 good t 11·es. Re1:ent
C1111r• & money w,.., isn t -we ~:::::-n=-~= WfLL IUYYOUlt Jim Slemons """ tuneup. Very CICl:lft. S42S
11 t1•1•t 8010 't:,~nu 5~~~~ f:\pci.~na:', "•""-~='" :;~ DATSUH, TOYOTA • or trade for m<ilorcycle. ,._,,. »--M--Ol 'fOLICSWAGEH Imports VOLVO -.•••••••••.••••••••••• 213-44ti-tl.i1Sti str1Clly ,,_ 11 -.-.....,. ,,_ _,_·7_5 _ _...,. __ ··------·ll
Al(AI port. Video tape re· eonrid@qual. sc-JIL-.. ..._. PAID FOR OR NOT. (7141 IJJ..9300
corder, camera, b•lt. ,0:.,. ~~.. ;::,::....., w 1 LL PA y TO P i----------l·-"'"'=~"'~·~bo~•__,_C ~M:....::•="~'~ ·1v LTD Country Sq .
.. hr"er. w /ca1e. "'150 . Blonlie mink slolr., as "°""'' .,,_ Jiw.-. OOLL•R CALI KEoNT . ., .. ~10 ... ,,.,.,L 1 1 d • v Wajon. r~ull pwr, : .. 1~gs74 • · new. Cosl ~~adefor ',f~ !~~ n= ... ""' "'?~'="1 " . ~ ....... 9"50", ~ 'x n con . 71 OLVl) ll:l<I. Power cond, radials. Low mi. -----------~11o'Od used car , J\ly ,.u;; .ur, ,.~ r-1.c"cLcLc~c·_Nc._•_•co_--OJ. __ lC_'·---I steering, power br11~es, ~lij,j(J.540-8612 . ....._ 10•• ~API·'" 1,,.., .,.. rlC.-530 -IZW AM 1Fm . f'aetory a1r,1 ~=='-"--="----..-,. ~ 1..ad1etpotuecabtnet,1tn· 111t•• .. ~ 41._ ,,__ 1973 Dat su n Pickup. -----~--=---1 1 •• "UPER --lollfT••••••••••••••·•••• c-·l. cop~, i·-•. ,~5. •'°"""" .,_ n,... ... , mai•. wide tireo, ,011 •73 '""· , 0 , "•dan. euu1er 11ttert01'. ~ 1a RANCtlt:RO Gr-.351 -,.~ u""' " :a.t0.1J. •IL~ .... ,i.,;.. neo.i.,. "' OLf;A 1~. ~-oltltW. CleveJo',nd Eng.4tl Gol ' W-"'-Anoqueold 8lbte.$JOO. 11c-"''"' "" bwr, am l fm stereo, Lo•ded , tlean, --lll l"'"" ~~· "'-11•1 ta.nk, 1n.stru. s.t.ereo,
• II, u " ll J r 1 , Cal I fi<tV-6446 "'ft I u. 1 11" ,1 °" 11 • ~ firi,n. &eor>Qmical t> cyl luxury, ..?o> ,..,_, ~ "''~ , n"' !>Jt• :1t:• $lf3U. '33-tlllO. daily 8 Wot, UMd air, !!p, conl.n>I, ,...,_,
, ua, tia;y ~I~. noon. ~ .. wt" ~!~. ~::__ .. ~.. to$. •"•••••••••••••••••••·,·-'-"'---'-'"'-'-"-"-'-•-""--.. "'--~b. peke, ~xie. P New 28 " boy's 10 !!peed "..W-1 ni... ll...., .. ,., _,,_ 9725 AMC 990
. J.a.coc:ka~poa.a>~,~J l)t«e. i'll~w :zcr· rotary ~:;:o-'•""r,=.,. r,~ PtKa •••••••••.'!............ ''69,ZIOSL •••••••••••••••••••••• 'tlw7 Ford L:oonll')' Sqw,. 1,(IUJl:~d pu .,. i,.... lawnmower. ~. Mu' ~f: ~'-:1::::::1" ,.,. •• ~ _ •aon. V Pan. Fullt Ktfke most . . , IHIO~l&I • ._ ;o::---.,.~ .. .-t. .. ~ '14 1-'IA t 4 &pd, 4 dr., xJn~. New cond. tltruout ll165UO '12 Gre mlin V-ti SUc equip. xint cond. Gooa ;ll'>'IT&hal P)lll rview.SA. 4 •erit«:e. 0 tQ.. tO\ ~-cond.lOOOml,18c.S't!,:IW. orbestcashoflerlealh~r aniJt. Xlnt cond. $1700 1 ._.5 milear.u. •tJOO.
Upl• ••••$31'"""6027. 551-2611 ~GoM \81..,_ w 756 Ull. l.'ll·K615 / 776-0536 546 15'Z •ll5;j\,), utU 32211.
' '. \ 1, "
, BARGAIN
SPECIALS
71 Toyota
(9600'TO)
5899
'68 Buick
(VTPt06)
5899
'69 Pontiac
leMans
l~':rcAJ
5899
'69 Chevy
IZ~81
ss9,9
70Chevy
lmoota (8'4ADSI
5899
'68Chevolle Wogon
(VHL-451)
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ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
T o day' Cl~bag
N.Y. Steeb
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1975 TEN CENTS
N. Viets r.[;pap 8 A1µ.ericans • ID Attack
From Wire Services
SAIGON, South Vietnam
Tank·led North Vietnamese
forces blasted into the central
highlands capital of Ban Me
Tbuot today. battling defenders
house to house and trapping eight
l\mericans in the city, field re·
PQrts sald.
The co~munists also overran
a district town 30 miles from Bao
Me Thuot, the second in the
highlands in three days.
Jn Cambodia. rebel gunners
fired 56 rockets :.ind artillery
..
round• Into tbe Phnom Penh . .trporu, dama1in1 two domestic
commercial airliners and killing
five pereons abd wounding 22,
authorities in Phnom Penh said.
The campaign to oust President
Lon Nol also picked up steam.
Seven of the ei1bt missionaries
reported trapped by the North
Vietnamese in Ban Me Tbuot
were identified today.
The Christian and Missionary
AllJance said five or the mis-
sionaries were attached to the Al-
liance. It identified them as Mr.
O.ily Pi .. t SUifl Piiot•
EXCHANGE STUDENTS RETURN WITH TALES
Laguna High S1udenta Hllary Kuhn, Chris White
Two Recall Study Abroad
HilarY' Kuhn, a Laguna Beach
High School student who recently
returned from a year's stay in
South West Africa says the trip
was perfect.
Well, a lmost perfect,
The only thing she couldn't get
used to was that cobra that took a
Jiking for resting under her win-
dow.
Cobras, it seems, are common.
ereatures in the rural areas sur-
rounding Windhoek, the coun·
try 's capital city.
They were particularly at-
tracted to the animals on the
larm where Hilary lived as an
American Field Service foreign
exchange student.
While Hilary convinced her
rather-for ·a-year to kill the
bothersome s nake, halfway
across the globe another LHBS
exchange student, Chris White,
watched Argentina pay its last
respects lo Juan Peron.
''Now after Juan Peron's de·
alh, his wife is guiding the ad·
ministration. I feel there will
soon be a revolution,.. White
said.
Miss Kuhn and White dis·
cussed their experiences and im-
pressions recently at a luncheon
al the Three Arch Bay Communi-
Weathe r
Partly. cloud'y Tuesday
with slightly cooler days,
' according to the weather
service. Highs 55 at the
beaches, 60 inland. Chance
of rain 80 percent tonight
decreasing to 40 percent
Tuesday.
I SIDE T ODAY
Tl'lt Central lntelUgtnce
Agency once faited Ma/kl.
gunmen to attempt c:aascsaino·
tion of Cuban Pf'lmt.t Ffdel
Ca.ttro .. arttcZ.1 J)flblWwd to-
doll alleged. Sto,..,,, Page A4.
ty Clubhouse.
"Although I 'm glad to be
home, I think that I wouldn't
want to exchange my year in
South West Africa for anything,"
said Miss Kuhn, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Kuhn. The
family now resides in Irvine.
'"In aJI, it was the greatest ex·
perience or my life," said White,
son of Dr .. and Mrs. William
White of Three Arch Bay.
Miss-Kuhn said education is a
no-nonsense affair in South West
Africa.
Required ·languag'es were
Afriicaans (a form of Dutch>.
German and English. "I really
bad to study ... lhe high achools
l are on a college level, and the
students really work at school .
•'Their attitude toward school
is different from Laguna's stu-
dents: they take their studies
seriously,•' she said.
White's school was completely
different. His class traveled
throughout all but two Argentine
provinces, taking in Buenos
Aire.s, the capital; : Iguasu
Faus; a resort on the Brazilian
border, and Mendoza, a ski re-
sort in the Andes mountains.,
Officer Gets
Suspension
In Laguna
A ranking Laguna Beach
police officer has been suspended
without pay for three days for
"sloppy police procedures••
which res\llted in loss of $180
given to tbe department as
restitution m oAeY.
The police department refused
to identify the omcer involved.
The suspension followed an ex-
tensive internal investigation by
Lt. NeU Purcell.
Lt. Pur.cell said today he
believes the money was simply
misplaced, not stolen. The funds
bad been turned in to the depart·
· ment as pan ol a restitution or-
dered in • case involving A theft
Jaat summer Crom the Festival or
Arts restaurant.
Putcell aatd the offlttr'a initial
mlstake was accepline the
money ln the first place. Restitu·
tlon orden by courts are strictly
between the person accus~ of
the crime. the court and the vie·
Um •.
'After acccpUn1 the money, the
officer f ail~d to fut out the
necusary paperwork, and when
marking the funds for atoraae in
evidence, •PJl>arently put the
wroai case number on the ta&.
,
and Mrs. Richard Phillips, ot
Bloomington, Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson of
Hamilton, Ont.
It said its fifth missionary,
Mrs. Archie Mitchell or Bly,
· Oregon, is the wife of another
missionary taken captive in Ban
Me Tbuot in a Communist ol·
f ensive in 1962. Her husband has
not been heard from in the 13
years since ..
A spokesman for the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phillips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
have taken refuge in the re-
sidence o f the American
representative in lhe still uncap-
tured part of the city, but that the
Johnson Couple had fled their
home and their whereabouts is
unknown.
The Alliance s aid two other
missionaries trapped in Ban Me
Thuot are Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller of Houghton, N.Y., work·
ing 'for the Wycliffe Bible
.translators.
Also trapped in the city were a
U.S. Embassy representative,
Paul Struharik, three Canadians,
an Australian and a Filipino
family.
In Washington, meanwhile,
both the Democratic and
Republican leaders of the Senate·
today called for the removal of
the government of President Lon
Nol.
· GOP leader Hugh Scott-the
highest ranking Republican so
far lo make such a suggestion
said Lon Nol should resign in
favor of a transitional regime
that could negotiate a truce and a
new government with in6urgent
communist forces.
lie said the truce should
guarantee the safety of refugees
who want to flee before the new
government takes over.
Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield did not qualify his re-
quest for Lon Nol's resignation.
I le told the Senate it was simply
the best hope for peace in Camw
bodia.
Shotgun Bandits Roh
on
Laguna's
Election
May27
By JACK CHAPPELL
01 Ille D•1ly Pilot Sl•fl
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
cil has called a revenue bond
election May 27 in an effort to
raise $800,000 for construction of
a two-tier, 233-space parking
structure near the downtown
business district.
If the revenue measure passes
-a majority vote is required -
the structure could be completed
by April 1976. Money to repay the
loan would come from parking
revenues collected from the
downtown area meters.
Tied to the bond measure is ao
increase in parking meter rates
downtown . On-street parking
would go from 10 cepts an hoyr
now to 20 cents an hour. Off-
street parking including that in
the structure, would be 15 cents
an hour.
The council action Saturday re-
duced the project bond issue
from $850,000 and ended coun-
cilmanic wrangling over wording
of the ballot proposition.
Council members had wanted
to include in the ballot wording a
restriction tying repayment of
the bonds directly to the central
business district meter collec-
tions. However, bond attorneys
have ruled out such a require-
ment.
Nonetheless. that remains the
intent of the council.
The bonds would run for 25
years.
San Juan
Funds Withheld
Plans Halted
In Oemente
By FREDERICK SCllOE!\1EllL
01 lhe D~1ly Polol Sl•ll
The city of San Clemente will
defer a major city construction
project a nd leave five police de·
partment positions unfilled to
counteract financial effects of
Governor Edmund Brown Jr. ·s
decision to withhold $117,000 in
state money to protect former
President Ric bard Nixon.
Governor Brown announced
Sunday that the city's applica-
tion for the $117 ,000 grant did not
meet the standards established
for such grants by the federal
Law Enforcement Assistance
Administration.
In a statement today, City
Manager Kenneth Carr said the
city would make up for the loss of
the grant funds by postponing
Sl35,000 in construction at the ci-
ty maintenance yard and refusing
to fill five vacancies created by
resignations within the police de-
partment.
San Clemente sought state as-
sistance to help protect the
former pFn1dent after los\ng a
similar federal grant when Nixon
resigned the presidency in
August.
Since 1970, the city had re·
<See FUNDS, Page A2>
Firemen Manpower
Petition Bounced
· The Laguna Beach City Coun-
cil refused lo accept the Laguna
Beach Firemen's Association in-
itiative petitions presented to it
during a continued meeting
"Saturday.
Instead, the council insisted on
a minor word change and or·
dered City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt
to resubmit the petitions when
the council meets again Wednes-
day.
Mrs. Musfelt said th e petitions
carried 2.367 valid voter's
s ignatures, 777 more than
necessary to qualify the peti -
tions.
The petitions demand the coun-
cil set the minimum fire depart-
ment manpower at 32 sworn fire
fighters. three more than at pre·
sent, but the number which the
force had before fire radio dis·
patching was combined under
the police department. •
The initiative process permits
voters to make laws. By securing
15 percent of the city's registered
voters, petitioners ran force the
council to enact the law they
want. or require it lo hold an
election at which the electorate
can enact the law directly.
In this instance. however, City
Attorney George Logan has ad-
vised the council that the peli·
lions need not be considered as
anything other than an ex-
pression of public opinion.
<See FIREMEN, Page A2)
has been stalled since 1972 when the
Coastal Conservation Act took eftect. Avco
ha now worked out an agreement with the
state to bcsin construction. Plans can for
2,000 housing units. ranging between
$60,000 and $80,000 ..
• '
Bus
Marines
Arrested
At Base·
Five pa sse ngers on a
Greyhound bus headed for San
Jua n Capistrano were robbed
and pushed a round en route Sun-
day night by five men who used a
shotgun to press home their de-
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the Ci ve passengers
were robbed of cash, watches
and assorted jewelry while the
driver of the Santa Ana to San •
Juan bus dro~ on. apparently
unaware of tht!\,activity behind
him.
Deputies said the five men. all
identified as off-duty Marines
from Camp Pendleton, left the
bus at San Juan and boarded
another bus bound for the Marine
b<JS('.
Camp Pendleton Marines.
alerted by she riff's officers, sur-
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the five suspects
into custody.
Marine personnel today re·
fused lo identify the arrested
men pending further investiga.
lion of the robbery. They con-
firmed that the five suspects are
Camp Pendleton Marines.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recovered and
will be returned to the victims.
Sheriff's officers said charges
of assault "ith a deadly weapon
will be added to allegations of
armed robbery in view of the
statements b~ several victims
that they were beaten during the
course of the holdup.
Liquor Store
·The ft Probe d
A weekend theft in which S525
in cash and checks was removed
from a rear room of a San
Clemente liquor store today is
under inves tigation by San
Clemente Police.
Arthur Leeman. owner of
Dad's Liquor and Deli, 2421 S. El
Camino Real, told detectives $400
in cash and $125 in checks were
removed from an unattended ftl.
ing cabinet between 2 p.m. Satur-
day and noon Sunday, s aid
Detective Sgt. Ardon Saunders.
Saunders said someone ap.
parently sneaked into the back
room while Leeman and a clerk
were busy with customers and
escaped with the money.
AD CO NJIEKIS
VAN TO CASH
·'The ad produced a good
'response and l 5old my van to one
·of the people wbo read the ad and
called."
That's the success story relat·
ed by the Newport Beach mac
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot.
'69 FORD Econollne,6
cyl, stick, Sl29S.
Call xxx-xxu
If you have a car or van YoU'd
Jlkc to convert to cub, call
642-5678. Put a rcw words to work
for you, lo the Daily Pi.lot.
---....
Al OAILY Pll.O,T L/SC
Dumping
Routing
Oppose d
By.AMELA JI.ALLAN
Ottlit o.tuv ,...,.SUH
Grumbles of dissatisfaction
'A'ilh the proposed route for the
new South County dump site are
continuing to «merge in San Juan
Capistrano.
A new group, called the
Citizens for Action Committee.
has surfaced to try to convince
City Councilmen to reject the
proposed route and put the qucs-
1100 lo a special vote.
'fhe proposed route to Prima
Deshecha Canyon is La Navia, a
road that will deadend on Ortega
Highway and intersect San Juan
Creek Road. Councilmen will
have a s pecial meeting with
count y officials tonight al 7
o'clock in the council chamber to
diseuss which ah~nn1cnl they
v•ant the ncv• ro:icn.o t:.ike.
But Citizens ror Actiotl , led by
Don Palme r, don 't want La Nav-
ia at all. 1'hey point out that the
road \Viii pass through current
and proposed residenti al aretis,
<.tnd would be localed a blot'k
away from a proposed elemen-
tary school on San Ju;;1n Creek
lload.
"Traffic statisti ts show O\•t·1·
5,000 \'e hil.'lcs, including hun-
d1·eds of co mmercial and hea\'Y
dump trucks. now enter the pre-
sent dum1>site weekly (Forster
C::inyon.) To place the burden of
this kind of traffic through ~1 rt·-
sidcntial area \vould be d1 ~
astrous :Jnd completely destroy
the environment," s:ud Palmer,
in a lette r to the Council !\Ionday.
The letter \11ill ask the council
to consider other alternatives
v.•hich \~·ill not ''endanger a
family-oriented residential 1.:om-
munity. ''
Another group in San Juan has
:.il so been active in fighting the
J,a l'\ovi;_i route. 'fhe linilt•d
llomco\\"Ocrs of San Juan l-l ills,
lPd by Tom Tully, have focused
their efforts on J:Oi fth Di strict
:-:iupcrivsor1'homas F. llilcy. Jn ;1
recent letter to Riley, they asked
him to reconside1· his vote in
favor or La No\'ia and to support
!he La Pata route, originally
f:.ivored by the county. L<.i P<.it:.i
\1ould join Ortega lli$?h\\'ay lhrec
m i l es cast of S<.i n Juan
Capistrano.
San Juan Capistrano City
Councilme n, \l•ho ha\'e been
grappling with the dump access
quytion for years, recenllf.
agreed to support La Novla ana
convinced th e Orange County
Board of Supl'rvisors to do the
s<.i me.
Their theory "·as that Ortega
lhghy..·ay, \~1hit•h is a narro"' tv.o-
lane "·inding road. has become<•
death trap and s hould be cli s-
cour<.1gcd from major use. Pli1ns
t·xist to "·idcn Ortci..:a, but the
state docs not expect to begin the
\\·ork until 1977.
Birdwatcher Flock
NJ::\VB t.:RYPORT . :'Y'l ass.
1UPl )-More than 1,000 <1\·1d
bird\\'atchers, some £rom as far
away as Kentucky and floridte.
invaded !hi~ small coastul city
during th e weekend for a peck at
a ~ull seldom seen this far south.
·rhe bird. a Ross·ii gull whose
normal habitat is in coldt'r
areas-Siberia. Alas ka, <Jnd
Northern C<.inada, wus sighted in
this area a week <1go.
Mond!y. March 10. 117&
FUNDS .•.
ttiYed more tbap SSOQ,,000 to hire to additional offlcer1 to protect
Nixon and bandle 'police pro-
blems that resulted (rQm Nixon•s
visits lo his :::;an ClemcntehQine.
The grant sought from the
s t~t e '>''Qu id have p.ttoid the
sa la rie s of one rull -ti nie
sergea nt, lhree dele<:lives, four
patroilnen and one halfd.lme in -
telligence ofricer.
Police Chief Mel Portner said
1he runds wer·e needed bccaus~
Nixon·s residence in the city still
creates problems. lie cited the
daily now or visitors trying to get
.a peck at Nixon's estate as one
problem thnl requlres police at-
tention.
In response to Brown 's de-
cision to "''ithhold the money,
1Carr said. ··1 hope there can be
understanding by San Clemente
residents that the level or law en-
forcement ser\•ice rendered by
the city \\1ill naturally have to be
diminished if the personnel is not
maintained at the le \'Cl th<.it has
cxis,ted s ince 1970 "·hen the first
feder al po lice g ra nt '>''as
av.·a rd ed to the city."
'fhe department to<la y h;..is •12
employcs. Befort' the shut off of
federal money, the department
had 49 employes.
The seven-man reduction
·1ran~lates to five police rerson-
nel \\.'ho h ~l \'t.' resigned since
Aug!lfi t .and l\\'O \\'ho ·art• on long
tcrn1 di sa bilit y lea\•e s of
:.1bsenre
Both Carr ;ind Portner said
they were not s urprist'Cl by the
governor's decision. Portner s~tid
it had ''politic al overtones.''
Br0\1'11 two \l.'Ceks ago ex -
pressed ('r1t1 c1sm of the SS00.000
~pent to protect Nixon over the
past fi\'e years.
Portner s:.iid hC' h;id taken the
t•nticis m <.is a stron~ hint that the
state v.·as not goin.c: to pro\'ide ;:1s-
s ist<.1nt·e to the police dcp<.1 rt-
mt'nt.
FIREMEN. ••
I ... ogu n maintains state law ha s
grantt'r! 1n the l'OUntil the ~o lt·
;1ulhority lo St'l n1anpO\\'t'I" le\·t·J~
in city de pa rt 1n ents.
The local firemt'n·s assoc1u -
tion. \\'h1eh is affili<Jled with the
Teamsters Union. has snid it y,•ill
take the citv to court should it not
accept the Petitions <.ind begin in·
iliative proceedin~s .
The issue v.·ill con1e lo u head
\vhen the C'Ouncrl reconsiders the
]petition s \.liednes day and
either accepts or rejects them.
· The fitemt-n malntain lhe pre-
sent force \e\'el is too low .
Jhe layoff or three firemen oc-
curred in Deecrn bcr v.·hen the
dispatcher pos ition wus cut.
City r-.1 .. nager Al 1'heal hns
1nai nt.ained that the :1ctual fire
fighting !'i trengt h of the for ce wa s
nol aff('rted by the layo ff as the
di spcit chcr's job required him lo
be in the s tation house.
Rehiring t.he three mC'n \\·oultl
cost an estimilll·d S.50,()(.().
R iley ~peaks
111 Cap istran o
Firth Di s trict Supervisor
1'hon1as f'. Riley v.•ill be the guest
speaker Thursday at :1 meeting
of the Capistrano Community f\f.
fairs Council.
La.,una Honie ,.,
Theft or St .235 worth of
personal property includin g :.t ri
fie . color TV, stereo components
~ind a clot'k radlo, \VD~ reported
to J ... a ~una !\cu.ch police f'riday
,by John R . Grifrith. 1667 Loui se
St., I.uguna Beach. Intruders en-
tered Griff ith's horn£> by remov-
ing louvered windoY..'is.
··Emergin~ Concerns in
Southern Orange County" '>''ill
be hi s topi c ut the 7:30 p.n1 .
public meeting in the Sn n Juan
Capistrano \Voman 's Clubhouse,
31 44 2 El J-l orno St ret•!. R.iflef.I ThC' s upervisor rccl·nt\y \\·as
appointed to a full IPrm hy C.n\'.
t~dmund G . Brov.•n Jr. J-lc \\'ill be
accompan ied by fltr ..... Anne
l"hristiun, ndminislrativc 11ssis·
tant, \Vho \.\'ill be liaison for lhe
;.1rt·a th <.1 1. 1n<'lud<•s S<.1 n .Ju :.111
Cupislr<.ino.
ORANGE COAST "" DAILY PILOT
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Roberl N. Weed Pr••l<lt .. , , ....... 111 ......
Jack R. Curley
Y•C• Pr"''°""' """'(,en•••• M,j""QOf
Thom111 Kee...,11
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Charle!I H . Lo('I., R lc l'l~rd P. Nall
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Telephone 171•1 M1.-•l21
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La9unA Be•Ch All Dtp.1rln'lent~ ·
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'
O wner Killed
By P e t Dog
\VA LN UT GROVE, l\.1o. CU PI I
--A pct doJt attuckcd and killed
itl'I owner. J\1 rs. f'"'ern Atchley, 7S ,
in her home here.
lier hu~band , MacAtchlcy, tn,
who was bitten on the hand In t(Ct-
tlnJI the doa out1lde, said the
mongrel had been raised from u
puppy and wait 7 yeorsold.
Greene Co unly s hcrlff'R de·
putiea s hot the dOA and removed
the he1id for u rt1ble8 test 11.t th e
s tate laboratory ut Jefferson
City.
Small Busineae
Lecture Slate d
"flow Can the Sm1ll Bual·
ne11man Survive a Rece11ton ?"
I• the topic or a talk to be prfll~nt
~ by Ch11.rle1 Neil durlnJI a
mectinA: of the Capistrano Beli ch
Chamber of Commcrct· a! n01)n
Wednesday at Tiny N :1 ylor ·~
Rt'ataurilnl in S11n Julln
Capis trllno.
Ne<i l ls the ~uthor Qf t~·o book~
on personal money manaJ:"ment.
hcad11 an 1nve~lm t"nt counsellnc
firm In San .Ju an Capistrano 11nd
is the city lrt·11surrr.
Rest'rvat lon, rn11\· he made hy
c:.1lling '196·2~.•,5 or 4!if; 210!;.
r,
• . '
..
Ta~ ~-ltf..%ed Mom-sol\ ' 'A Dozen ·Lied' I
·Married ~· ' '· ..
In JFK Probe -Card I
•:
~ i.
COLUMBUS. Ohio <UPll -,;
For Richard Brudzynski, George:
WASHI NGTON (UPI) -An
analysis of tape recordJ.na:s
shows Lee Harvey Oswald was
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about
their knowledge of John F. Ken-
nedy 's assassination, a former
Central Intelligence Agency of-
ficialsald today. ·
"I don't know the name of the
man who pulled the trigeer,"
Huthor George O'Toole told a
news cont"erehce called to in-
troduce his book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he e\'en
know ir the ''real" assassin ls
still at large.
But the Warren Commission
\\•hi ch in\'estigated the c_rime, he
suid, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Os v.·a ld and saying he acted
<1lone -because the climate wns
so volatile in the country al the
time.
lie called for a new con-
gressional investigation of the
case, saying his probe indicates
tht're y,•a s a conspiracy.
o·Toolc also reached the "in-
l'Scapable" eonclusion ''that ::it
le<.1st some of the people who
frarned Os"· aid were members or
the Dallas police.''
Using analysis on the tape-
recorded comments of other of-
fi cials , he theorized that CI>
Osv.•ald "'as <.i n }'BI informer, (2)
some F'BI agents may have been
1n\•ol\•ed in an assassination plot
on their own and (3) some War-
ren Commission witnesses lied in
key testimony.
O'Toole based his fmdings on a
de\·ice which acts in lie detector
fashion to pick up stress in \'oice
recordings.
On th e key question Os"·ald
\\ ~1 s a s ked did he s hoot
anyone? -the 1nalysis shows
absolutely no stress ln hi s volco,
tndlcatlng he could not have been
telling an untruth, O'Toole said.
But similar 11nalysis oC other
t1pe1 made or police figures and
others at the time or the as-
sassination and later show that
"perhaps a dozen" did not tell
the truth, he said.
"Prealdent Kennedy was killed
by a conspiracy," 'Said O'Toole,
38, v.·ho was chief or the CIA pro-
blem analysis branch from 1966
to 1969. "The man who paid with
his life ror that crime in the base-
' ment or the Dallas City Hall was
Innocent.'•
Advance copies or O'Toole's
book, ''The Assassination
Tapes," were made available to-
day to the news media and an ex-
cerpt was publis hed in the April
issue or Penthouse.
O'Toole said leading
authorities on lie detection and
analysis who examined Oswald's
statements agree that he told the
truth.
The machin e meas ures
changes in hum an voice frequen-
cies, and when the n1odulation
disappears. it is a s a result of
stress and is a strong indication
the speaker is lying.
"llis tOswald's) categorical
denial that he shot anyone con-
tains almost no stress at all,"
O'Toole said . -·stress is a
ncc<"ssary, but not sufficienl,
condition of lying ...
"But the absence of stress is a
sufricient condition of truthful-
ness ... Oswald de nied shooting
anybody -the President, the
policeman t J .D. Tippitt).
anybody. The psychological
stress evaluator said he "'as tell-
ing the truth.''
.,,..,.~
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Attorney Brudzynlkl
Hearings
Op, Zones
. Tuesday
A series of public hearings on a
massive city ordinance which
will permanently assign zoning
to every piece of property in San
Juen Capistrano will begin Tues-
day.
The Land Use Management
Code hearina:s will be held on
three Tuesdays , r.1arch 11.
March 18 and March 25 at 7:30
p.m. in the City Council chum-
bers.
Orwell's world of "1984" -a nol.1-
so-futuris tlc no\'el predicting •
dicta.to1·ial society of-autom:.h
tons has arri\'ed. lie w<:1S
formally married to his mothet
by a computer.
Brudzynski, 'a lawyer. was toh.I
by a Cleveland credit bureau ht~
had indeed married his mother.
F'lorence Brudzynski, and. to
make matters worse, was prl'-
sently employed as a stockboy 111
a mat'hine shop after previously
.,..,·orking as an attorney.
"l wasn't expet'ting any sur-
l)Mses," Brudzynski said of hi s
"spur-of-the-moment" visit lo
the credit bureau. "I Oiled out an
<.1ppllcation rorm to see my file iu
..ibout a minute, and this woman
came back With a computer prin-
tout with scads of numbers which
she reviewed very quickly."
Brudzynski, 30. a hearing ex-
aminer for the state of Ohio, was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and1 ironically, also served as co-
cha1rman on an American Civil
·Liberties Union committee in-
"estl gating the impact of
technological innovations on ci\'il
liberties.
The ACLU group called itself
"The 1984 Committee."
Brudzynski said he asked the
cl~k at the credit bureau what al the numbers meant.
·she. pointed out one set of
n mbers which .,..,·hen translated
said I was presently employed as
a stock boy -a job I had held six
or seven years ago when I was
still fn school.
Report on College
Busing on Agenda
Assistant Planner Tom
Tomlinson said the hearings v.lill
be conducted by the· Planning
Commission which will then
make a recommendation to the
City Councll. The council will
then go through a similar hear-
ing process.
Although he would not call the
new code an attempt todownzone
land in the city, Tomlinson. did
say that the code would be the
mechanism tor the implementa-
tion of the city's new general
plan.
"The next line, s he said,
showed that I was currently mar-
ried. I was really surprised
because I had just become
engaged but it was supposed to
be a secret between my gi rl and
myself. Then :she told me I was
1married to Florence Brudzynski, \\-'ho happens to be my mother!''
Brudzynski said he wa s
''s hocked, surprise d and
amused."
"The wuy' they married me
o£C." Brudzynskl said he and the
credit bureau fi gured out, "was
that a computer program used to
eliminate double addresses for •junk ' mail assumed that since
mv mother and I had the same
laSt name and since we were liv·
ing at the same uddress, v.·c had
to be maFried.
A report on improvement or
hus service to Saddleback
College from the Tustin and
Irvine areas will headline
toni ght ·s meeting of college
trustees.
The board meeting ts
scheduled (or 1 :30 p.m. in the
conference room of the campus
library.
Trustees formed a eommittee
one month ago lo study the bus-
ing problem with the aim or im-
proving sc heduling.
P a rk P r o g ram
Coordinator
F or S an Juan
A first step v.•as taken recently
in what may become a parks and
recreation program for San Juan
Capistrano.
Councilmen voted 4·1 to hire a
rec reation coordinator at ap-
proximately $12,000 a year to de·
tcrmino the needs or the com·
munity. programs 3Jready
<.ivailable and to investigate
~rants available to help the city
sturt it5 own program.
'"We're putting the cart before
the horse." said the lone dis-
~e nter, Counci l man John
Sweeney. "The study should
comcrirst.''
S\\'t'eney said he'd rather have
;1n outsider do the study th<1n u
person who would eventually Im·
plement the program,
particulurly if the person'11 Job
depended on his findings.
"\Ve'rc up to our eyebrows In
consulta.nts," said Councilman
Jumcs Weathers. "It's time we
made our own declslon:s.''
Councilman Yvon J1eckscher
pointed out that a study was done
by th4' Parks and Recreation
Commission.
"Thlt1 ls their reeommenda-
tlon. Elthcr W<' aay we don't
believe them and hlre a conaul·
tant to see If th@y're rlaht, or we
.!lay we have con(ldence In them
and support their proposal," said
lh~ck11 ch<'r.
lfe nl!'lo poi nted out that every
new employc has a 1hc·month·
proballonary period. JC It 11 de·
termlned there Is no real need for
a cootdlnator, the PoSlllon can be
termlmited.
. J e.welr y Store
Hii by Thieves
· BurtJ1n looted a Ian Juan
Capl1tr•no Jewelry atore olltema
valued at 1everal thou11nd
dollars Sunday night after using
~ \l.'rench to force open the rear
door, Orana:e Count)' Sherlfr1 of.
ricers said .
Dfputles 111id intruders al the
s tore operated by Anthony
Tr1111ar1, 3 1901 Camino
Caplttrano, emptltd dl1pl1y
cabinet• of 1evtrtl t)'ptl ol
Jewtolry . The full loss at the1tore
has not yet been determined.
A college spokesman said the
Orange County Transit District
i s a s anxious as sc hool
authorities to improve busing
and is planning the addition of a
new route.
Service to the campus from the
Laguna Beach end San Clemente
areas has be en d escribed as
"good " but us "shaky'' from
Tustin and Irvine.
Also on tonight's trustee agen-
da i1 an administration request
. ror a new academic calendar
beginning on Sept. 4.
tf trustees approve that re-
quest, it wi ll give students their
earliest starling date in the his-
tory of the college.
It was explained that the early
starting date would allow s tu-
dents to get out or classes by June
4 and Improve !cheduling.
This school year classes began
Sept. 16 and will conclude June
16.
President Ousted
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) -
President Ibrahim Nasir of the
P..1aldlve islands has ousted
Premier Ahmed Zaki and Im-
posed presidential rule on the In-
dian Ocean republi c or2,000 coral
is land s and 100 ,000 people·,
diplomatic sources r epented to-
day,
The plan adopted in December
proposed that density be reduced
in the city so that the ultimate
population would be 42,000 rather
than 85,000 as projected under
the old plan.
"The code will specify what
type of uses can be applied to
each parcel," said Tomlinson.
'"It will be a guide line for the de-
\'elopcr. Although it .,..,·on't tell ex-
actly what he can and cannot do.
it will narrow down room for in·
terpretation ...
In addition to zoning the code
will also address !>igning and
parking regulations.
2 D a n a Residen ts
He ld for Pla nts
T\vo Dana Point rcsidenu were
booked Into Orange County Jail
on drug charges during the
\~:eekend after deputles allegedly
found marijuana plants gnw.•ln,I{
at their home. sheriff's officers
rCported today.
Deputies charged Michae l
\Villi am Thompson. 19, and Terri
Jean Stech, 18, both of 34042
Alcazar Ur., with cultivatinJ'
marijuana after confi11catini.:
healthy plants they allegedly
found while lnvestigatlna ot the
home.
"'I was serious ly considcrinf.!
that if they didn "l correct the
mislake I Would go to th1:
Domestic flelations Court :ind
ask the judge for an annulment."
Brudzyoski said with a grin. ··r.1y
mother got kidded a lot at work
and I look quite a bit of ribbing i.lt
-th('offict•.''
Brudznynski said errors
similar to his own experient·c
v.·ith the credit bureau are not un-
us ual and could have i;crious re•
suits since most information
(•on1piled by non-investi gati ve
credit bureaus Ci.In t•omc onl y
from creditors and whatever the
individual volunteers.
1st La d y 'Better '
WASHINGTON IUPll -Belly
Ford is "feeling much better" to-
day and continues to make pro-
gress after an attack or her
ch1·onic 11rthritic ailment in lb!!
back and neck. Sheila Rabb
\Veidenfeld, the First Lady's pr('-
ss secretury, said that l\1rs . Ford
h as been spending most of her
time in bed the past fe\\' days but
is "getting around a bit."
~ARIMERS PAYS
Mariners Savings has o lwoys paid
th• highest Interest legally possible.
Now your savings can be worth even
more ot Morlner1 -o Big 7*/, % on
6·year c1rtiflcote1 of $1.000 or more.
Not only con you make monev at
Marln1r1 , you con make friend• too-
with o strong "hometown" savings
and le-on.
Save at Morlnera, Now it makes
more dollars and tense!
"
I <
.. ,,
' '
' m •
Mariners 8avlngs
and Loan ~·latk)n . •
.'? ,.,..,......~
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Moftd!r. March 10, 1118
Monday's
Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
I'
..
Soughthy VW
Christian Science Monitor News Servlee
Art@r spinntng along in a U S -sales bOOm lAstln g some 25
years, the VoJkwngen HI hav11'g trouble getting traction Not
only havo U S sales taken a de-
~N HIGH GEA~
1
vastating drop In the last 12
months, but so has the Ame rican
dollar vis a v1s the West German
mark That adds up to a one two
punch for Volkswagen o f
Amerka (VW A) l
It ts no secret that VW A , "holly owned s ubs idi ary o r
Volksw.lgenwerk, loses money on every car 1t sells in the
United States I
TO 1'1AKF. MONEY VW Y.OUld h.tve to boost the pnce o fj
tts cars dram a taca lly a t h o u ght anathema to anyone in-
volved rn the markctmg o f VWs in a severely disrupted car
markC't
., he price or the vene1 able beetle a lready has gone up
more than 50 P<'rcent tn the last two years, and the cheapest
VW today, including some of t he basic e quipment w h ich
used to be standard anywa-., 1s well over $3 000
'I h ereforc VW 1s countm g on its two new product s, Rab-
bit and Sc1rocco, plus the.year old Das h e1. to pull it out o r its
sales rut The company also n eed s som e h elp fro m the ex-
c h a n ge r ate b e tween the dollar and the West Germa n m ark.
VW A. Y.Orks on a c redit bas is with the Germa n
manufacturer b y buying marks at what 1l h opes is an ad
vantageous rate
··vou HAVE TO BUY forward" says Stuart Perkins,
pres ide nt of VW A • You say, the r ate looks pretty good to ·
day so let s buy some marks, m other word:s, we stockpile
them
But ·he admits, "1f we had to go into the market right
noy, we would b e m real trouble '
Perk m s looks for an upturn m the rate before too long
We're j u st gomg to h ave to ride 1t out a little bit In the
rmal analysis, we must at all costs p r otect t h e organization
we h ave in the U S One can l put a price tag on 20 vears of
developing a fairly good 01 gam zat1on So we h ave t aken the
position that we a1 e p1 epared to ride with t h e punches m or
der t o protect t he organization '
Then he adds w1stfull} • Of course, you can onJy do that
ror a certain period ort1me •
Volkswagenwer k s till is reehng a fter a devastating
~ear of c utbacks . unemploy ment, and s ky high losses
LAST YEAR T HE WF..ST German a uto manufacturer
los t SSO m11l1on on i ts worldwide operation s Al the root or
the dec line 1s the huge cost o f r estyling its e ntire image a n ct
coming out w i th s uch car s as the Sc1rocco, R abbit, and
D ash er A min1c.:ar named Polo probably will n o t be sent to
the ll S
The com pan \ s pent at least S2 b 1lho n to deve lo p its a ll •
new lineup ct complete departure from ever ything vw h as
s tood for since the renaissance of the pt e World Wai Il bee-
tle b\ H e inrich Nordhoff
\ W has ditched the air cooled rear engine concept Cor
the ''at er cooled f r ont e n g ine front \\heel-drive
trans ' c:1 sc po\\ e r plant f athered by Prof Ernst Fiala, head
of dev e lopment for VW 10 Ger many
It clearly 1s the b iggest mode l switch m t h e his to r y o f
carmaking, d ownp laymg t h e venerable beetle and turning
instead to an array of car s which arc notable for forward·
look m g s tyhng a nd qwck r esponse o n the htghwa>
The b eetle, m fact. may soon be phased out o f produc~
fto n m Germany a ltogeth er a nd bwltonly m Brazil.
VW thinks the high cost was worth it The new cars a r e
finding a good reception m Wes t Germany But the question
remams Can the company shift its image 10 the m-
dus tnahzed worl~t notably the United States9
VW IN GERMANY. EUROPE'S biggest automaker.-
has J u st had a s hift In t op m a nagement with Toni
Schumuck e r t aking over the r ems from Rudolf Leiding, in
control smce 1971 Leiding ran 1n to oppos1t1on over some of
h is pohc1cs, mcluding his dnve to build a n assembly plant m th~ l s
Schumuck e r faces tough poht1cal and econOQllC
challenges in mold m g a s u e cc:::.:.ful future for VW
Back across the Atlantic VW A faces the equally tough
JOb of selling its n ew cars in u market which is m o r e com-
pet1llve than ever and at pnces that arc in an e ntirely d1r
ferent leag ue tha n that m which the V\V was wea ned and
g 1ew up
Wi ll e noug h people pay S3,500 to S5 000 and more for a
Volkswage n ?
Nl:W YOltW. CU,11 -Sale litl 'o<IOwl:;t •re r,•co on '"" N (hdl) CltM Ole. ~a:. Vor Sto< .. ~Mn .. •I II I'S I 20 " .. Utt+ "'
tft i I l: ' t 111/t-~ ~=OM 0.0 nt~ l !t j 4ii :1:-"
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AllrQlllA S4 1 2 1V. ~. C.~~:1r~ 6 :J :~"°';° ~
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ABrM\41 2 .. I I 1' ~ \\ Cnn!oe 1 10 • 11• J H1o Am8tul eo 1 I) 1• -Va Cn1 E Ill •S s I ll Am Bldo )6 7 ll q • 1 • g: ,.,, c A On 2 'lOa 1 114 34~ 1 '• 'M1
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AFamlly 24 4 24 S>o ~'r'~1;t ~: ~"°'• ~ ~ir .~ J! ,:. ; r: ~:" AJ:,'.1r ~ , 1~ i3~:
AGe11Sc I l? 14 ••'• ~. Con Ga~ 11>4 Ill 1>1 11 11 • -. ! ~ ~\: S t~ ~~>.. ~ C1nM1t• I 40 6 •S Iii« ,
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AT"TplA) •• 10 •S •-, > Cluell P 30 138 S 4 -\t
8 CluellP pf 1 17 91\ AlTpf l 7• 40 ····-\a CMI Inv Co 20 111 1oi.-Vo Am Tl.T wt 1111 H1 CNA FIMCI 109 4\t ~v:·; I~ ~ z~ 1~::-"° CNA pl I 10 H O ti• t \\,
AW•lfpf H. t100 UV.-'l'4 ~~ \'.'.~:~ ": I:~; :.; AWlt Pl 1 0 dOO 111 CNAlol 2 10 5 911,
Ameron 90 • 1 121• CoHt St G\ 4 t24 9''• ~ \It Arne\SI IOd 4 II 41') CJ\5GOI I 19 4 IS
Amcto In I 1 36 CslSGpl I t3 10 20 '•. 'It !~~n1~2~1! S~ 0><aco11J01• 311• 78 • '•
AMP 111c 3111 111 COC•Boll 4020 1•9S Ho• '• Ampco 40 3 2 C.010w8k 36 7 H I I ' '• Am~. Cp s 196 • Coleco lndu •• 70 J\o , ~ • ·'•' ColOile 6111 116 29 !~i~;:r ~o~~ ~ B 3~,: ~ Colf&All\ 40 1 m •'. + Amslr pl "8 3 81, Collons Fooo IS S J""' •
Ams1e<J J 10 6 ?a •8'• v; Col "-"" 40 IS 140 l•'• '• Ami el In J2 4 s I I I ColonSI I u I 0 1•~·-•
Mmo I 20 • .., 111;; I~ ~::.~':n~ l I~ !:~:: ~= Ancl\HC I 20 1 1 s 16 '• Col Gas 2 °' I 94 ,..,., _ ... AnaerCl•V I S 1S 25\e-It.I ColGs pl H• 12 ~'h
Al>gellca 12 1 • 19 •~•-'1'4 Col Pie turn 11 tOl •It ~~h~cc tJ ; ~~ :~"'· \o ColS on I .. I n 11\i.-lo Apco 011 c1 4 16 10ll'I-"-Col ... 11 MIO Sl 4~1 +I Apeco corp s. 21/\ + "-Combel Corn 10 216 1611)
API.. Corp 1 34 U\l'i • ~ Como E I to t I Ill '6!l + ~ A~ "'B SO l 11~ CmE jlf I 70 I 31\l'i-l f,a. ,.. ComStv I 40 I • 42'h APlufC I Of> • 13 -11'1 CmwEd 2 30 t tOI 2S -_,, A.Dolled Mg JI l ~E ARA Sv 1 46 IS 43 81 Pf I '0 1 90 + ... S Edpf t 11 19 29 Atc.alaN 36 32 I + 11• ComEd pir 2 I 22•/o ~~~~o e~~ 11 u; 1~'A-"" cwe0p4 1 41 m 1•h-~.
Atlsl•r Inc 111 11 3~, Cwt 11< I 90 6 211 t +-\,
Ath PS I lt b 20'1 1•~1-,,.. ~-::i~ ~ :1:-~ !~:L~~l I ~O jf 1!~; ~~ COtnw Ed rt 9233 l 32 3 •• Arltn RllOv ll9 1 COmw 011 •I I I 140 6' • •-
Armaae Co 1 b -. 11> &~:!rs!,1: I lo~ ~~ ' Armco I l>Oil ?01 26 • ~ ComPU9r• 1 IOJ 20'• ~;!~u%.'.~0 11~ t:~ • 1,, ComPUlr Sci 21 llS J Arm~ Ck 92 18 12 2H< Con Aor• In H 5 • • •
Arm\ I RuoD S 36 12 -'• COlleM I 104I 4 22 18 • • '• AroCOfOlll I s 2 u• I. • ConnMI I 60 9 21 1•
Ar•l11tnd 3k 10 2J 1\o\• ~. c,onreacdC,06()0
1
5 ,2°1
11111, ASALICI I 40 167 7Ht .-I on ~ • AsntnC>.11 , 4 11 111•11 -tt. CMsEd Pl• S St I•• •
MOryG I 40 ' 71 U'o t l'I\ ~:~~ f~~ I I~ ~!~. • , ~J~: 1 :g ; t J~lll • ~ COl\FOpl 4'> 4 $412 ,• '• Al1CO M ISb 1 15 Ha 0>n Frgt 70 t 114 ~. AllCIYEI lh 7 21 16\>a-.-. ConsNG 2 11 I 142 26"' • At!Alcl\I 2 , 10 lS2 79~1 + tV. Cot11m Pw 2 11 IOI IH't + , AAcll pl 11, 1'0 SO O>nP pt 4 1• llOO lSV>-1 '~
AIAt pl 1 ao 60 s•~+ I ConPwt pt. 3 SIV. + ~. AllACl'I prl 3 2 IJ•~ ~ S'"' O>nllAl 10k 10 329 6\ti + \, All•$ Corp 9J He-\lo CnllCall I to 7 221 21:\11 • "-ATO Ille 20 Sa llt 7v. + •-CnllCOep to 2 '14 Ho • "' c Coo p1 n. 1100 12 Aul 0..1 100 U •s 45''-'-CM> if Cl> 2 '° 11 1)0 ,, "+ ,,,. Auloml tno\ S '1 3~t-I/+ CUlllCp 2 20 • S3 Jl •-1, Avco Corpll 207 •'•+ ~ ClllllPr l2b 121 ,...,_ \, Av<oCorp Pl J6 14 C Al J" 1 > A"'ruPr 30 It 161 21 + '4 11 Ill IV "' • ' S~" MIQt SS6 1 • ~~,','~or~ t~ 5~~ '~: t c;;"~IOllt 7 120 .so,.-V.
AVMI oll\1 l • 35-,, + 111'> Co11l1111{:,' l ; ..sJ ~· .-1~1 AVMllll pl I 4 14\. +I 0 29 1 "a
Avon Pr l.•11 io 961 ll•, + ~• ~~n ~:: Its :111
1 ~~ : ': AllteOll~~~ a~-13'• Coop In 1 u 7 J 341,-~.
Bao&w11 IO " ua 11~.-~ cc~Trl u.~ 11
85 68~; Bacllt Grup 449 7 • 'I> ~,. r• "" Baker In 20 1 1tl3SO 8,. •1..,. Copelnd .0 I 102 9 -;,
S.kttOll 3711 211 J.4 .. ih ~=~ 11~ ! ~ H)! :-~ Bald 0 4o. 4 4 1'e-'• Cordur• Cp 21 1 • + ,.,, a.ucorp 60 1 21 1H.-,, eornG 1 12•,. 321 5Ha •2'•
S.ltG .. t .. 1 Ill 1• -'• Cou'1nS MIQ Sl 2V1-It
841nC..I I 3• 9 •'12 Ul-t-'I Cowl•~ c 30 • •• HI. '. B.,.daQ Inc l6 119 3H• • V. COll Brd 40 ' 177 ltV. + ~, g:~~ pre? l~ 1L,= ~: CPC lnll 2 10 278 m .. ~· B11k"NY210' lS 30 ·-., Cr•ne I~ l 71 l8 • 1
B•nk Va .. s ISi m.-'• ~~~~Fl, .. : ~: 2~': .. "" BMlkTr~ll 6 .. 31 + '• C Kr I llO 4 SI I'•-~t 8.JrbO•I 400 2 20 1 + h c~::'M~ 70 7 46 17'\t + '"
8•rd CR 20 11 llO It-It Crown Cork 10 121 21 + )o,
SOME A UTO i\SALYST think so Arv1d Jouppi, who
nlns ht:-i o wn firm m Detroit . r eports 'T h e outlook for VW
from her e fo1 \\ arrl 1s better than 1t h as been m the last three
Barr>tll Mlg 19 3 + v. CrownZ 1 to • 161 30" + 1. B.s"lllC Ml 3 111• .. flt+ "4 CTS C.p SO 7 311 12 Ii+ "'-
B•tln pf 21.'> lUl0076"'1+ "'° CulllQt11 40 1 '4 1"9+ '' 8•1H Mf 20 J S9 I& + V• Cutnmln\ it S S2 17'• .. • • -:::~~l~ u 2 ,.~1~'4•.,.. ~n"o~~u 11~ ~~;! t; B•uKl\L. Ml 11 171 l~+ v. Currlnc 2111 8 101,
B••l•r L ltll l20 -· 14 CurllU IOb I 11>1 l !o
) l ars 8•yS1G 1 IO I 10 I~ ~ CurllnWA 1 2 11 •• 8•yUkCO 32 1 4~ 'Ill CutlerH I Ml S 14 1• • BurlnQI 32 • 6S 20 + ., Cy<l~ I 40. 3 2S ,,,, ~ I
8HI Fds /2 12 llltl 19-V. CVOf'US t 40 S 37 2S 1 1
How did Detroit Beomn ~ 14 211 Jl~+ "' o o--IMCIOl\O 40 21 122 )t -1 Oarnonc 10 IS •20 IS • '. BHCl'IA toe! 6 Ul ti + "-DanRov 10tl S J• S 8tktr II\ .21 .S 199 It~+ .. D•naCp I J6 S 'I 21' • B•lcoPt SOt • '3 U V•+ \, Dari 1n oOQ 8 99 2• •
8t10tn 1 ~ S 4 U - It O.r!lllO pl j 39 11 '• BllOGH J S t ~ o.tl• Genrl l 17 &86 22 ~. t 1.V. Bell 'Hwt 6 169 U V• O•y<OC 4lb S 11 10~-~
Blow Estimates? 8em1$ Co 13 4 21 1•111+ ~. 0.yc pf • , 110 •6 1 B•M I• I I 1 as 32 + 'It D•ylonH bO 0 66 11 '" 8tndra pl J 2J 41+\ + l't Day PL I I Oil I 76 14
l•n Cp I.JS <4 324 11>\--"" OPL. Pl 12 l240 110 e11Cpe>l J~ z10 2' Da Pljll 1 10 • t 1 SO 71 • 1
NEW '\ OHK (AP)
Probably no oth( r s tat1st 1cs
ucept those for unemplo,>
ment and interest rates u1 t:
being \\ atch e d more closclv
thcs<' davs th;.in the f1gun s
for 1nv1:ntor1cs of un:sold
goods
\\hat do lhe l ale::.t f1g u1 l
s how' That 1n\ c ntones r e
mam J .11 g<.' 11s 1ng l>v mot<'
than $1 b1ll1o n m Januurv
.1fter a gam or m o re than $3
lnll1o n in Decem bcr
What does 1t m ean ? Th:il
the long awaited turnabout in
the economy h.1:s not b egun
liNTIL INDUSTRY ch ~
po:scs of those m ventones
unsold cars and O\ crlv large
:.tockpilt::. of commod1t1es
<imong them -lhe nation'!
factories , now opcratma at
o nly 70 perce n t or capacity,
aren't Jtkcly to expand out-
plll
There l1, In (act, a s tro na
hkehhood that production will
t nC pf 4 >O 1• 411/\>-1 h O..a11wtr •O 1~ 19' 11 ., '• 8tn $Id MIO ti 4 Otere I 80 1 JS7 39 • '· 8tnge8 IOt I 16'1 _,.,._ 'Ill Oe1P&L I 10 o 87 11 t • • fall even more before re atrkty P110 / ut 3A+ "' 0.1Mn11 lo • se 24'• -•
h h BHI ProCICI 419 S"+ W. Della" r 60 9 197 •O•t + 11¥ aC' mg :i roug e quiUbriurr a.111$1 .. 11a .. sse »11t+ .,.. 0e11ec 1n1n1 2 l \t '• \~Ith a thoroug h IV depreSSe( :::c!~ ~~ .sl~ n :-~ g:~o;:,. C~ 1 ~ 1~~ I~ 1 •I
demand eiair Jn 41 u 31 • -'l Otnnvs t ~o 11 121 11 •
Th b l BlluL..g I 10 • 20 IJ!/o t 'Ill 0.nOotv '° 11 SJ J) •• t: m ost 0 VIOUS eleamp E 8toc•l'iR 4012 21• U Y) .... 0.Mrtl OllblS •1 ,, ••• '•
of cxce5;s inventories can bE :::0,:1•r: • 1~t 1;~: ~ ~~~~~n1 :~O: U 1r'.
't<'\\ ed in the Detroit area, eoe1~ eo • 1u 11'4>• 1~ 0t1E llf 1 Jo l200 6•
'' herl' brand n ew car s are :00:: ~~: s ••o:o 1l.~ · : ~~.~ ~Ps lb / i.2~ ~~\.' 1
•\
s tockpile d hv th<.' scores of :::.~01 1: : )~ ri.!; :; 8::~:~us; ~ :~ Jg, : "
thousands And o n a s m a ller :~~; ~i ~ ~! 1~ ... ~ 1 8::s;~~ F~ s 2 :~ ~~:: 1 ••
scale the glutted lots of new so" Eo2 •• / w 19 g:~~K~ :g 4 .~: 1:~: 1:
c: ar d ealers 10 commu01t1es ~!~7.~' 81: 6 ~ ~.. ooc••oM '° 1 ~s 10 • •.
<111 over the country illustrate :~:~s~~ ~ 1,7, 1;~ ri t 1~• ~~1::: ~ ·~: 1: ••
1) t t t al 1 e ~ M1 p1 2 > N , ~ .,.. 01g11•t E11PI ,, •~• 8•'11 -1, e ro1 s g ren misc c u a -8~;1,..1 •Od 2 383 ~.... ,,, 0,n 11911 •o s 311 •1 •• :i..
lion erc11w., 011 • SJ 16 • ::; g;::~~ ~~ H ~ ~~~. ~ 8g~~;;•,1~ ~ 1~ :~~ • • 01\nev 12Q 27 '62 •S'•
HOW COULD IT hav~ h ap·
pened? F o r many year s
Detroit grew u sed to what had
becom e a lmost an a utomatic
formula for selling cars
Amencans could be expected
to grow w<.'<H y of their ·old"
ca& after oboul three years
Model c h a n ges and expert
promotion helped trans late
that into o vls 1t to the
showroom
rGrup 1 .o <1 101 18-.. 1 2 • 01s\1on 11 S 30 7'• • ,.. 8rn Snrp 10 S 19 b.. a Oowrsrld In 14 1J 1 lr't
QrFerrrs N II 146 1 •• + • • 01vMt I S4iO lJS 1' • • ') Sruns,., 40 «> S4" 124', • ... Orf'eppr >O 14 OS 11' • ~ erusn w •I) • 11 11-11o • • OomeM ao.. H 89 Sl''e •• 8 TMOt' zoo IMI .,.. +-' Don Lui Jtn 12 31• + '• ihicyru$ E I IS "3 lJn-11 Donnelly S6 16 132 2•''• \'II BUOd Co 1111 o q 1 'I 1t Doric Co to S 24 11' • 1 • 8Ud9lllld So • 5 J e-l'W OoorOv 11111 S S 81•-'"° 8UCICPl>I Ml J s OonevC 10 I 18 S• Bui Fro 110 lb 1<11 lo '>-\l't OovrCP I 20 I 70 38'• • '• BulovaW 10 t 16 8 1 Oo"' Cll I 40 12 )OS 1)-. • I\• Bullrtrti 1 ~2 4 n , o P F 1nc11 81 •'• 1 '• BuftorR 40 V 101 I t-• Or•vo I .0 1 3 31 •• 1• sunR pl 1 , 10 IJ~ • Ore\~r I •0 I U 4S • 1, Burllnd I JO I l26 114'• h ()(~\Pl 2 20 SI A8' '· 8urt No 1 10 } 188 lb 1 Orener Ill 2 8 411• '• 811rtN pl )) 4 I Orewel l.U 10 1• > + ~ ttufncl'f ,. I I 19 I Orrvls IOb 10 S2 • • • I •
Burrgns --C.016 CA-1J ')I•+ I t Ouk Pvl I 40 I 267 I"• Oukt II{ I 10 tlO IS -1 C•DOI Cab L. l J<I 4 ._ Duke II{ 1 to l 120 I• + V.
C c. 92 • 14 19 ~ • ~• OullP jlr ''' ? 10\IJ •001 P ~ Oun Brad .,. 20 2U 2th+ '-~nu Ind 9 2 't OuplAll Cp ti Ha• \>lo
·· BofA Dips
But · Americans rebelled
aaalnst tho high operating
costs ot cars Moro to the
point. they rebelled •a•Jnat
wh11t they believed to be an
lnereaslntlY rapid rate of h\·
creau In op~ratln1 costs.
'f,,~·f~ll~nO, t I~ ~ .. I It OuPol\111•1113 >OI 104\, I.I.
tPtJU 1 H t Ill IS + \o OUPn pf llr S •1 • "° •u•nn IS. • .. II• I OuqML.. I 12 ,,I IS'' •
tntronar 11 2-.+ '" OuclL P'lf• 120 1'Yi-\.'t mlU,. tO.t 1t 10. 37._+ ~· Oucl~ J 10 dO 2S + l°" '.,
••
Lend Ratf:'
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
'Bonk oC Amcrac:a, the world._
largest commercial bnnk,
•• 'S'ald lt r edu ced the p r l !J1e
lend mg rule from 81 1 percent lO on mdustry w1dc low or 71 1
percent toda v
1dorgan Guara nty Trust C-0 M New York lowered the
Rtlme to 7~ percent Inst ~ce?k.
First NaUonal Cll)' Bank
and Bankers Trust Co. in New
,. York reduced the prime b>
~ 9f)e-quart r polnL to 8 percent
Friday. .
\
In retrospect ll can be aeen
thal mUUona ot bUyers durtn1
1973 and early 1974 boulht In
anllelpaUon of even hlaher
pricee -both for the car and
the operation of the car. They
bought then to bul hither
pnccs later.
Mnrketlng men over·
~\\here were fool~ by this
s urKe. believing it t o be a
healthy s ign of ronhdcnt
buyers People Jus t don't buy
in anht'lpation o f hif{her
pnccs, they rt!asoned Well,
the people dld
"'-s 1.24 11 JA ''"'+ ~· 0\111~ 110 iao 76\.'t-"' nu. $0 J I 110 JA + ~ PllCll.PI 7 IS dOO 1t + I
•llPt( t 2d ' II lb~• t V• Ovmo 111 ~1• r~ t • llMt ~ 1 10 13 IOou-"' ..
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rt 4 I Sw •• (llll11M 1• '1 ~"'• ~ t 1S4 IS\41 + " 10:0 Jk II t•I J l4 + " KI • ,, mH :: 1001,c ' I) I ,, ,:'§'-~~ii.% 11 I~ ~+ \a f~& ~ t ~II ~l ,_:_ ~ rr II 4)ii ~ Ill ltCI AO~ II 1& ~ • ~H::•DI~'~ , I -V. ~Olt~= 'I at: l•1'-: ~
rt W•I ~ • In t ~ ~ITI Df ~ V. + "'°
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fi
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F•oerve 7~ '1-11-•~ • \o :~;~ ~ !°o: t 1J~ J:~! ~ ='Pw ~: ~ ~~ ~:~: t ::.'!., r,O: ! ~ W !+ "" ~:~~~~ 'Y ~: s:: ~~ • w.
Ft1rC.m to t 42' 31' 1 t I'• llltnOfl! 40 4 "" ~ MontS I t0. 1• 11~ t-~. AeocnolO tQ J w II•• f•••'lnl Co • 1a1 710 FaorctnCI )() • 110 ,, •• ,, 111'41(0 c 10 .s '°" ,~ .. Vt MOnyM II •• 104 ···-h l'ttlSIOf't tO 4 " >U+ •• ft ... tOO 0110 .. 11"-l'•lrmlP Ml, • ·~·-·· 1ns11c~11#1 v. s 11,,1 v. MootMl.0 ••• ••'·-"" R•IElt< fO) HJ u ... hPlT 70l>IJ 2) 2) + ,. F••rm1rp11 ~ 12 + v. •n6'1COllP' t 9 •• .,,.._"'" M4rOJP u o 1• .m. s9v.+ .,,. ~·.1100:.r .. ~ ", 111;,•, Tuu1111,,10 ,.. ii ... •-.
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"-·••Co' s 1 "" 18M COf~ .. Sll 11'#~ + Nt Molorol• 1010 312 SI'.+' RepSlfl .oa 3 •ll ll t . '· 111m6ell n " .n ... +I Feo Mo I'° 10 JI l}l,. 1n1F1•v 3-26'# J] • ' Ml F~I Suo IJ ... ""' '• ResrvOil 12 • lllOI , • '· Ttoornlll 40o I Jll4 t11 ••• FONllMI 1>11 I 2070 IS'• t lnl .. drv I I S ldJJ 70>\t "' M!SITtl I )2 9 SO 19 •, • '• R•l•llCrdl 2 I J 11 t "" Tllc>M.JW .~II lS 6 + ... Fea P•p I l & 22', It 1n11'io1d 440 14 10 •+ • Mu,,tord Jb S ~17 1 , '• Rev<oOS J2 IS t0 21 , TIVlfl~O 40 10 19 Sin• \• FdPolB I 20 4 IS' ~ lllM•nC. I 18 5 l<>5 J> • Munld 01 •0 •o ) • ' '• RevreC 12b 3 •• • • TICOtp.tlrl I 12 11S l•I Fea Sron 30 • u 5 't tnll M1n1no > 51 111 M J RevlOI\ 1io11 xl4t 61 , +I Toa.~r 60 1 10 l2h-"' FeoOSI I lo IS 06S •O • • 't 1n1Mu11 I 3' <> I J• • M~~~~: ~ ~! ~~ :J • 1 ' Rn~m 20 4 19 l' TIQettll •Od 10 .OS 11ta+ .. Ferro(o;p I 1 •O 21'• ln!NU I 40. b Ii 14 MurpnOI w 4 )J 1~1.-1 Rt•nrCI 1 11 s " 11 • ~. Ton..-In( 2 , I) ))l.1-"•
F1ortt>ro 60 • II 11' • ' lnll P•oer 2 I •Y> .., .. , Murrv On I • Al ISi•. ~ ~ .. '"", .. 1 4n S2'. \. lomt'1 M >O II »< ''"' + .... F d nncico 1 1 J. 1n1Rtc1 !Jo ) 2S , , • • M 0 31 9 isv. R•yln Pf 2 , 7 ss• 1 Tom~" 1.0. • 42 JO\,• ~ "OUB< 2 •O • • 19 '• ltH ra. r I )2 s l()Jo I~ •• -Ill MUI t'llLI I 61 " R•vMMel I l 111 II T"l\,.,..n RI 11 u ..... \, F~ldcrMI 114 ••O q \1 I ra.r Plt4 ldO Sd ••• ,, vcrs ~ N-·' R•vM•llf• I I )7 ... Tobn P•o 'I .~,. h
Foltrol(.p 60 S IS II ~. I ff 11114 11 II) 40 1•""' NalJiKOlJ\)ll 111 JS!h+ ¥< RtynStc j()l7 8• U • • '• 1::?~nl)~ 1 ~: 1• -... ~:~~11:.."01)1~ ~ 1n :r• 1 lt.T olJ4 ? 41 1-~. ~:~~~;~ ~l; ~~ ~ \lo =:~::::r~I~ J~ ~:'•• :: Tonk•CP 40 S 12 1~+ Ye
F•I Ol•rl )I I 114 11.. 1 l & l pfl( 4 19 41 ' • N•sn~C tlO • SS I~ 1, RCllmnd IO 1 t.O I' t ~, Too IS Al 409 I • I +-"" Fsl Cll•C 90 1 142 II•· I °TTrN,. b4 7b •• "' N6tAorln >O s 21'l u·-\t Rt~lls 110 4 n 11• •••• Trot .... CO "II , .. ~·"" l'\118u I 1014 81 4J4, • \1 lnTlrt.~pl10 .,L 111
1 )1~ ', '• : ', NalAvn J9o a,s IH• It RI~ In .0 4 S 11 • \o Trans•m "IJ .tat t -"'° FU MIU 24 ;) 20'I I• ~ •v • • N t C.. )J I t) ~ RtoGr pt IO 1 S a \ Trn\11\ I 6k S llOI'> + \'a F'IMI-I~ 91 1 lnlPobl Gr I S 1• IS -i lt "1 n 11 2' ' • Rite Aid 1• 14 ll19 I , , 1 Trn><L•n •S \ 19 •~'Al "s"'llo""s I 7 f:l JOI.~ 1111>1 Br O'o I •1 9,, Nl Cn pt I / 4 , t I "II • ) ·~ '" " -..,.__ 'o 9 S I•'• 1 t NCnm>n 2b 211 482 ,W • l'o Alvl•M to 10 •2 1110 frnonl' 20t 4 •-
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Dollar U p
BRUSSE1.S cu rn -The us
dolla.r opened the week fractionally
higher on E\.lropcan money markets
Monday to recover from record lows
last week
In Ftankfurt. the dollar was IL'iled
at 2.33 German marks, up from
Frlday'a cloae or 2 3270 In Zunch th e
dollar rose from 2 46.">0 at c losi nl{ lime
Frtday to o~n at 2 4830 Swiss francs
I
:•Jt..,.Jwl-,_;;DAJ..._L~Y~P~l~L~O~T~~~~~~~-M~o~n~d~ay~,-M_a_rc_h_1_0_.1_9~75
,
.TV Highlights
NBC (4} 8 :00 -.. 'l'he Canterville
Ghost ... David Niven plays the title role
in thi television remake of the venerable
comedy on the Bell System Family·
Theater.
ABC (7) 8 :00 -An Evening With
John Denver. Danny Kaye and Jacques
Cousteau join the popular singer op bis
third special.
TV DAILY LOG
\.
Monday
Evening
Tuesday
m-w.. .. ....,.... OfdtatnJ
(en ~ Drive A spllClll
preu~tltlOll of 1 trld1t10111t New
Yul's M COllCeff Wltll Wllh llo5·
~ COl\ductJnt IN Y1t11111 l'M·
h•ll'llONc ill 111 all·Strauu proe11111.
fI)DAu
1:30 m ...,. 5'tlfil sa..
~00 8 (lJj Cil (j) ..... O QJ CtldittHHC llu••• ~ (C) (2111) •• lie "* ..
tile uttlt .._,.. (R) (Ms) '66 -
Htnty Fonda, Joanne Woodw11d,
Jason R~rds. A ll111ily 1111n. who
1s abo 1 comp.ibm 11mbler, ~
tus list $4,000.--r\ed lor •
homesteadona dlim-10 parha111t•
in the bluest pc>ler 11111t 1• the Wm. 0 laillJ 'ralH Cnlildt
l6J I S,,
0 ***S.W.A.T. FIGHTS * CRAZED SNIPER!
OC~Cll)(})Ef) S.W.A.T. "Oe1th
Carrier" U. Hondo Harrel50ll and
his men seardl for an unknown
S111per whose weluJIJ Mltcted male
~i<:luns.hld but one thin1 i11 c:om-
mon-eldl wn romanbally in·
-.otved with the same roune WO!Mn.
Ronnie Troup, David Slletner end
Joanna Bamu pest m Slfari te Mvemre
m11"'~
~ti. (C) "Out! ii tlle Jllf!Cle'" (ldv)
'>4 -OanJ Andrews, David Farrar.
2:30 a 1 (C) "Becker Part I (dra) '64
DAYTIME MOVIES -RICl111d Burton, Peter O'loolt .. '1~ C•J "Tiie Docter l tile ~
10:00 00 ~u111 ff tf1t Tilllbttllnd" (dra) (rom) '50 -Glenn Ford, Glor11
'60 -A11n l.idd, Jnnne Crain. j OeHa~en, Janet Le11h.
&J (C) "l'mn If lihMerey" (aclv) 3·00 0 (C) "'Cllurt el Habit" (dra)
'47 -Rod C..meron, Maria Montez. · •69 _ Clvis Presley, Mal} Tyler
11:0011 (C) "Th .W•n ~ Came M00te, Barbara Mcfhir.
frt11 lt1t Su (MP) 64-Dawn ('19) (C) "The Stulld., Aa1tr" (dr1)
Addams. Franco Silva. '68 _ Guy St~ell, Burl Ivel. 11:10 i) "Ma & 1'1 kttlle It Ho111e"
(com) '>4 -Mar1011t M11n. 3:30 CV (C) "A Mall C1C11c1 '" Died"
IZ:OO Gt •Alf tht TtUlll Men" (dra) '60 (adv) '66 -James Galllfl.
-Alan Ladd Steiner P0tt1tr. O (C) "ltufNJ tt Ille Ceftttr tf
J·OOIJ "Ma11 f~tra Calft" (adv) '54-tllt Elrtll" Cond. (sci·li) '60-P1t
· Geor1e ~II. Gianna C..rla C..f\ife Boone. James Mason, Al1tne Oehl.
KOCE Television
11 00 ~<llool OtUrt<I Ntw\ ICJ
Ci<OCE I
11 tOB1llMoytrl' Journll ICI IPfl!.I
t .101nslck10UI (Cl
1 UNl•tll ,UIOry (Cl
1.•T•-toOr1w CCI
J OI Eitel rt< Comp.any IC I •r T1/.
J ltTt1<h1119Cll1tdr•11to Rt.oci ICI
l .OOL.Jw lorlllt 10'~ CCI
l lOllMn•nd EnvtrOllment !Cl
4 OOC00~1n'Cil1un tel tPl U
4 lOEll'<lrt<Comp;lny CCI ICTWI
S OOS.umtSlrullCl t(TW)
4 oouwlOf'tllt10'sCCl
• lOYoq.l Wtlll M.>ctl'tone ICJ IKOCEI
1 oowom.111 ICI CP&S>
1 30 Focus; Or•nge Count, ICI
Cl<OC EI
I OOAr•bs•nd llr.ulls (Cl IP8Sl
• >OGre•t O.cis1ons IC l
10 OOAdv•n<ln9 0.nhslry IC I
HEY, LOOK US OVER!
'
8:30
TONIGHT .
A s1licon ·bise grraffe on MarsJ Not likely, per-
haps, but when the V1k1ng spacecraft lands on Mars
1n 1976 1t will carry a camera just 1n case.
KO CE-Tso
Bootleg $;§ns Pl!iJ!ue Cit~
' During the Prohibition ~
bootleggers ran rum or other·
alcoholic brew past the mi·
nions of the law.
In San Clemente today,
bootleggers are running signs
by the law -· usually signs.
advertising housing projects.
ALL THAT MAY change un·
der a plan suggested by the'
city's major housing de-
velopers and approved recent·
ly by the City Council.
The council gave informal
agreement to an idea of a un·.
ified directional sign program
for all developments and,
while the bu1s re belna
worked out. 1ave planning •
staff authority to approve in·
terim directional slgns.
Donald B . Anders on,
chairman of the developers r
sign committee, presented
artists' drawln&s of permanent
wooden signs which he said the
developers would accept.
PRES ENTLY, bootleg
cardboard signs spring up like
toadstoo ls o n weekends
throughout town, usually at
major freeway offramps.
The cardboard signs are il-
legal and the city has been con·
cemcd about the clul~red ap.
pearance they give the com· munlty.
Some developers have
painted the sides of large vans
und left them parked at
strategic areas to lureprospec-
llve buyers to housing pro-
jects.
ANDERSON SAID lher;e is
$t0 million to $50 million worth.
or development in the city and,
that without adequate signing,
there is no way to get buyers to·
the properties.
He said the upcoming spring
t>f!~od ls traditionally t.he belt
ror home salH.
Councilman B. Patrick
Lant, normally a aharp criUc
of sign excesses, said he ap.
plauded the effort being made
by the building trades.
Anderson proposed that new
signs would com btne all the ci-
ty housing projects, and also
gJve directions to beaches, the
pier, ce11tral business district, ·
civic center and other points or
interest.
\.IDO'S
sample and lots of birthday cake too! So come join in our birthday-your party,
certificate. valued from ten to fifty dollars!
•
., V0-5 20's ~
Pantsuits ...... s 1999
Long Dresses S7!J99
Capris . . sa99
3424 Via Udo
673-t970 •
for appointments call
673-7850
MARCH 10
Working
together as a
family, the employees of
Richard's have been proud
'to serve the people of
Newport Beach with our
Newport Blvd.
high standards of quality,
· value and service for 27
years. we w ould like to
take this opportunity to
thank you for your support,
and hope that you will Join
in our enthusiasm for a
bright future in the years
to come. Best wishes to.our
•eroa1 Pacific Coaat Hwy.
flret left turn
community .•
and you're right!
Hair Spray Sinarest
sz.49 v.. Tablets sa!!$~02 s 147· ~ ,~-:-8 7 c:
7-oz. Me.en 8-oL GiUeff•
Protein 21 Right Guard Shampoo o.w. Protectl•
'1.69 v-. MK-1....,_t
So•• .72'. $1.99 Value $108 97c: San 91 •
---8 --·
For the
. '*imote ·in travel
planning,
consuft
the very best ...
the professionals
at
lido Travel Service.
3416 Via Lido, Newport S.ach
673-3310
THROUGH 17
'
,,
II ,,
r
'I ., . '
1 I
h
•Ct
I •
outstanding .:
values at all ~
participating merchant• •"
I
.,
•
1
I
VOL. 68. NO. 69, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
Today's Cleelag
N.Y. S ltllQl.8
MONDAY, MARCH 10< 1975 TEN CENTS
~~·Viets Trap 8 Ain.erieans . . .
• IR Attack
Prom Wirt eniices
SAlGON, South Vietnam -
T'llnk ·led North Vietnamese
force5 blasted into the central
Mghlands capital of Ban Me
Thuot today. battling defenders
hquse to house and trapping eight
Americans. in the city, field re.
po'rts said .
.The communists also overran
a"tlistrict town 30 miles from Ban ~ Thuot. the se'cond in the
•hlands in three days. . ii" Cambodia, rebel gunners
f.ied 56 rockets and artillery
rounds into the Phnom Penh
airports, damaging two domestic
commercial airliners and kilting
five persons and wounding 22.
authorities in Pbnom PenH said.
The campaign to oust President
Lon Nol also picked up steam.
Seven of the eight missionaries
reported trapped b~ the North
Vietnamese in Ba,,-Me Thuot
were identified today.
The Christian and Missionary
Alliance said five of the mis·
sionaries were attached to the Al·
liance. It identified them as Mr,
and Mrs. Richard Philtlps, of
Bloomington, Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson of
Hamilton. Ont.
It said its fifth missionary,
Mrs. Archie Mitchell of Bly,
Oregon, is the wife of 4Jl()ther
missionary taken captive in Ban
Me Thuot in a Communist of-
rensive in 1962. Her husband has
not been heard rrom in the 13
years since.
A spolcesm an !Or the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phi~lips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
O.lly Pilot Photo by RldWlnl Koefll«
HOT BLAZE AT OLD FARM HOUSE ON EL TORO ROAD APPARENTLY WAS SET
Fire men Estimated the Loss Early Sunday at About $20,000
EI Tor o F ire
Investigated
By Officia ls
Orange County fire officials
said today a mysterious fire
which burned down an old El
Toro farmhouse Sunday was or
•·incendiary origin."
However investi1?alors have
not yet called the S20,000 blaze
.. arson, .. leading lo speculation
that it might have been started
'by c hildren playing with
matches.
t Details or the rollO\\·UP in·
vestigation into the farmhouse
Ure on old El Toro Road between
l'rabuco and Canada Roads were
not immediately available.
A crew of 30 firemen battled
the blaze during the morning
hours, then gave up when there
appeared to be no chance of sav-
ing the unoccupied structure.
Hostage Slain
D uri1ig Siege;
:Two Arrested
MAMMOTH LAKES CAP)
7wo men were arrested and a
female hostage shot to death ear-
ly today following a five-hour
siege in a s upermarket, the Mono
County sheriff's oHice said.
Deputies said the victim was a
female employe or the Mammoth
Lakes Safeway Store. She was
not immediately identified.
Two men in custody were from
Hawthorne, Nev., and Mammoth
Lakes, the sheriff's office said.
Their identities were not re·
·teased.
According lo a sherifC's office
statement, the incident followed
a report of an armed robbery in
progress at the store. The store
was surrounded shortly before 10
p.m. Sunday.
"At 2:55 a .m . two suspects
were round hiding in an attic
nrea or the store." the statement
said, addtne that tho woman
hostage wos found shot and died
n route to the hospital
The two were held for In·
vei>ltgatton or murder and rob·
bery, the s tatement sald.
Tunney and Riley
Slated for Parade
Sen. John V . Tunney and
Orange County S upervisor
Thomas F. Riley are expected to
join a crowd of 10,000 Saturday
for the sixth annual St. Paddy's
Parade.
The parade will slart at 2 p.m
at Mission Viejo High School and
will wind its way south on
Chrisanta Drive, east on Estan·
ciero Ori ve to Marguerite
Parkway, south on Marguerite to
Oso Parkway, and west on Osolo
its ending at Montanoso Drive.
Judging of entries is scheduled
on Marguerite Parkway, with
trophies to be presented at the
conclusion of the parade on Oso
Parkway across from Goleta
Dn Vl'
Among the entries are Jenny.
an elephant from Lion Country
Safari, the Tin Lizzies miniature
Model A Fords driven by the
Valencia Shriners, a stage coach.
a covered wagon and a Tahitian
and Hawaiian dance group.
Entries are still being taken
and persons, clubs or businesses
interested in participating
:.hould contact the Mission Viejo
Activities Committee at 26137 La
Paz Road for entrv sheets
F o 11 o w i n g t h e A \\ a r d s
Cl'remony there will be a tradi·
tional corned beef and cabbage
dinner at the Mi ssion Viejo Inn.
Price of the dinner is S3.50.
1984 Foulup
Computer Goof Uncov~red
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
For Richard Brudzynski, George
Orwell's world of "1984" -a not·
so-futuristic novel predicting a
dictatorial society of automa· ~
tons -has arrived. He was
formally married to his mother
by a computer. ·
Brudzynski, a lawyer, was told
by a Cleveland credit bureau he
had indeed married his mother,
Florence Brudzynski, aqd. to
make matters worse, was pre·
sently employed as a stockboy at
a machine shop after previously
working as an.attorney.
"l wasn't expecting any sur·
prises," Brudzynski said or his
"spur-of-the-moment" visit to
the credit bureau. ''I filled out an
application form to S'ee my file in
·about a minute, and this woman
came back with a computer prln·
tout with scads of numbers which
she reviewed very quickly.''
Bruchynski, 30, a hearing ex·
aminer for the state or Ohio, was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and, ironically, also served as co-
ch.airman on an Am~rican Civil
Liberties Union committee in
vestigating the impact of
technological innovations on civil
liberties. ·
The ACLU group called itself
"The 1984 Committee.·•
Brudiynskl said he uked the
clerk at the credit bu.rcau what
all the numben meant..
"She pointed out one l or ·
numbers whtcb when translaltd
sald I was presently employed 8R
.\
..,,.,, .•.. ,,.~~""··~
~
have taken refuge 1n the re·
sidence of the Americ'n
representative in the still uncap.
lured part of the city, but that the
Johnson couple had fled their
home and their whereabouts is
unknown.
The Alliance-said two other
missionaries trapped in Ban Me
Thuot are Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller of Houghton, N. Y., work-
•ing tor the Wycliffe Bible
translalors .
Also trapped in the city were a
U.S. Embassy representative,
Paul Strubarik, three Canadians,
an Australian and a Filipino
family.
lo Washington, meanwhile,
both the D&mocratic and
Republican leaders ol the Senate·
today called for the removal of
the government of President Lon
Nol.
GOP leader Hugh Scott-the
highest ranking Republican so
far to make such a suggestioo-
said Lon Nol should resign in
favor or a transitional regime
that could negotiate a truce and a
new government with insurgent
communist rorces.
He said the truce should
guarantee the safety of refugees
who want to flee before the new
government takes over.
Democratic· leader Mike
Mansfield did not qualify his re·
quest for Lon Nol 's resignation.
He told the Senate it was simply
the best hope for peace in Cam·
bodia.
Robbery on Bus
• 5 Seized at Marine Base
Five passengers on a
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun-
day night by five men who used a
shotgun to press home their de-
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of.
ficers said the five passengers
were robbed or cash, watches
and assorted jewelry while the
driver of the Santa Ana to San
Juan bus drove on, apparently
unaware of the activity behind
him.
Deputies said the five men, all
identified as off-duty Marines
from Camp Pendleton, left the
bus at San Juan and boarded
another bus bound for the Marine
base.
Camp Pendleton Marines,
alerted by sherifC's officers, sur-
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the five suspects
into custody.
Marine personnel today re-
fused lo identify the arrested
men pending further investiga·
lion or the robbery. They con·
firmed that the five suspects arc
Camp Pendleton Marines.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recovered and
will be returned to the victims.
Sheriff's officers said charges
of assault with a deadJy weapon
will be added to allegations of
armed robbe ry in view of the
statements by several victims
that they were beaten during the
course of the holdup.
CTA Funding Rapped
Losing Candidate Cites Campaign Role
In the wake of news last week
that the California Teachers As·
sociation (CT A) had invested
about $4,000 in the campaign to
elect new trustees to the Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School
District, def eat'ed Incumbent
Chester Briner can barely resist
saying "I told you so."
Briner, who made the possibili·
ty of CT A funding and a "teacher
takeover" one of his big cam·
paign issues, said "This is exact-
ly what we kept telling people
would happen."
Money from the organization's
politic al arm. the Association for
Tapes Show
Oswald Told
.Truth-Author
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An
a nalysis or tape recordings
shows Lee Harvey Oswald was
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about
their knowledge o( John F. Ken·
nedy's assassination, a former
Central Intelligence Agency of.
ficial said today.
"I don't know the name of the
man who pulled the trigger:·
author George 0 'Toole told a
news conterence called to in ·
troduce his book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he even
know if the ''real" assassin is
still at large.
But the Warren Commission
which investigated the crime, he
said, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Oswald and saying he acted
alone -because the climate was
so volatile in the country ~t the
time.
He called for a new con·
gressional investigation of the
case, saying his probe indicates
there was a conspiracy.
O'Toole also reached the "in·
escapable" conclusion "that at
least some of the people who
framed Oswald were members of
the Dallas police."
Using analysis on the tape·
recorded comments of other of·
ficials. he theorized that < 1 >
Oswald was an FBI informer, <2>
some FBI agents m ay have been
involved in an assassination plot
on their own and (3> some War·
ren Commission witnesses lied in
key testimony.
O'Toole based his findings on a
device which acts in lie detector
Cashion to pick up stress in voice
recordings.
OT\ the key question Oswald
~· a1ted -dtd he shoot ·~t -the ~"alys" shows al>lohrt tr no ~as ln his voic.. -lnd\eati111 he could not have been
ttUbls ap untrulb, O'Toofebld. 1'ut almllar analylts ol other
ta m.,ade of ~Uce ti~ and
at the tlme ~ the as·
(Se.OSWAµ».,.,eAJ) •
Better Citizenship <ABC). helped
elect incumbents Dennis Smith
and George H e nry and
·newcomers Carole Neustadt and
William Kob.ler last week.
The CTA also contributed to
the campaign or Robert Brum-
fiel. El Toro dentist who placed
sixth in Tuesday's balloting.
Briner said he has no idea 1f he
will pursue the issue or teacher
control. But he said if it appears
there was anything illegal in the
way teachers obtained or dis·
tributed the money he would take
it to the district attorney's office
"Making the fact of CTA dona-
tions known before the election
probably would have changed
·some of the results," Briner said. ,
"Judging from the mailings
the CTA-backed candidates
mailed out. there was a great de·
al of money spent." Briner
added. ··t-;ot having that money
would have resulted in a much
different campaign."
Last week J ames Wehan . pre
sident of the local CTA affiliate.
the Saddleback Valley Educators
Association. said the CTA money
was requested "only as a means
to better education.··
Report on College
Busing on Agenda
A report on improvement or
bus service to Saddleback
College from the Tustin and
Irvine areas will headline
tonight's meeting of college
trustees.
The board m eeting is
scheduled for 7 :30 p.m. in the
conference room of the campus
library.
1 Trustees formed a committee
one month ago to study the bus·
ing problem with the aim of im·
proving scheduling.
A college spokesman said the
Orange County Transit District
is as anxious as sc hoo l
authorities to improve busing
and is planning the addition of a
new route.
Service to the campus from the
Eate r y Burgled
Burglars who kicked in the
back door to gain entry took
cash, a radio and a half keg of
beer during the weekend from a
Mission Viejo restaurant.
Orange County Sheriff's of£icers
reported today. Deputies said the
value of the loss at Blackbeard's
restaurant, 26061 La Paz Road,
has not yet been determined.
AD CONVEKTS
VAN TO CASH
••The ad produced a good
response and I sold my van to one
of the people who read t.be ad and
called.··
That's the success story relat-
ed by the Newport Beach man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot.
.. FORD Econoline. S eyt, stick, '12".
Cfl) XXX·XXXX
If you have a car or van you'd
lite to convert to c:aJh, call
642-567&. Put a few words to work for~ lo tM Daily Ptlot.
•\
Laguna Beach and San Clemente
areas has been described as
"good " but as "shaky" from
Tustin and Irvine.
Also on tonight ·s truste<.' agen·
da is an administration request
for a new academic calend;.ar
beginning on Sept. 4.
If trustees approve that re
quest. it will give students their
earliest starting dale in the his·
tory of the college.
It was explained that the early
starting date would <.illow stu·
dents to get out of classes hy June
4 and improve scheduling.
This school year classes began
Sept. 16 and will conclude Junl.'
16
or~n:rci coa~•
Weathe-r
Partly. cloudy Tuesday
with slightly cooler days.
according to the weather
service. Highs 55 ::it the
beaches. 60 inland. Chance
of rain 80 percent tonight
decreasing to 40 percent
Tuesday.
I NSIDE TODA'\'
The Central lntelltgence
Agency once hired Mafia
gunmtn to attempt asrossino-
tWri of Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro, arliclt>s published to-
da.u alleged. Slory. Page A4.
ladex
i\,il DAILY PILOT SB
Trailer
Park Suit
Levele d
Operators or an El Toro mobile
home park have s ued its neigh-
bor and Orunge County for
what cou Id add up to $10
milUon in dam ages for the alleged
·creation of rondilions that could
:lead to heavy flooding at Lake
1-'orest Gardens Mobile Home
Park.
It is alleged in the Orange
County Superior Court action
that drainage facilities approved
by the county's flood control dis-
trict for-the park at Muirlands
Boule vard and Canada Road
have been impaired by worsen-
ing silt conditions.
Lawyers for Sequoia Pacific
Realco, operators oC the park,
blame construction activities by
two co-defendants --Occidental
Land, Jnc. and R C. Jewett, Inc.
for upstream grading that is
im·re~1singly clogging run-o ff
"ater lines.
Also named in the list of def en·
dants is VTN-Orange County
with the claim that its faulty and
negligent designing of the up-
stream operations contributed to
the present s itua tion.
Lawyers for the plaintiff warn
that heavy rains could lead to the
flooding of the entire park and re·
suit in the abandonment of pro·
pcrty which normally has a fair
market value of more than $4.5
million.
4 Hearings
On Coastal
Plans Carded
Spokesmen for the state
coastal commission today an-
nounced the setting of four public
hearings. including two on the
Orange Coast. on the California
coast master plan unveiled late
hist wet•k.
The hearings, all scht.."duled for
dates in May, will include one in
Huntington Beach City council
t·hambcrs May 9 and a nother on
May 16 at San Clemente·s com-
munity clubhouse.
The other two hearings will be
on l\Jay 7 at the Torrance Civic
Center and on May 14 at the Long
Beach Harbor Department build-
mg.
The starting times for each of
the sessions set to examine the
document will be the same for
alJ-1:30 p.m ., continuing to 6
p.m. After a dinner break
testimony will resume at 8 pm.
a nd end at 10:30 o'clock.
The document, which was or-
dered by voters when they ap·
proved the Coastal Initiative in
1972. sets forth widespread plan-
ning goals and development
criteria for a strip averaging five
mil<>s wide along the entire state
c·oastline.
Spoke:.ml'n for the st<1te agen·
cv said that several thousand
copies have already been mailed
out to inte rested entities and in-
d1 v1duals. and that a limited sup·
ply of the documents will be
available Thursdav at the r e-
gional coastal commission of-
fi ces al 666 E . Ocean Blvd., Suite
3107. in Long Beach.
The document places s trong
emphas is on public ownership
and access to coastal recreation
land and places strong emphasis
on a widespread use for recrea·
tion purposes a:. well as en·
couragmg development only in
c>.isting a re as where the coast
has given way to construction.
Last chapters of the document
still are being heard by regional
commissions. most notably an
e lement which would put the
teeth into the coast<il plan.
That segment. known as
Po"ers, Funding and Govern·
ment. has yet to be reviewed by
the South Coast regional com·
mission
ORANGE COAST ~e
DAILY PILOT
lhf'<H~ (1 .lC,I D••IY PilC,,1 ""''"•"' h "tnrf\ bfW J l"fo ,., .. ,,. p, I:'.'' e>ubh\hlltoc:I .,,. ,,.. O• ;H'QI
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p...Of•.h"'O M()n(tt\' '"' •VOP'l ff1(M>1 fOf (~I ..
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Rob(> rt N . Wf>f'd
Prt'\ld9t'nt •M Publ1""tt
Jack R Curley
V\(• P<tt1.Wn1 •nd r ....... , ~-·
Thom;ic; Keevil
)(1•104'
T hOma'i A M urphlne -n•o•no Ec1t1w
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Good Citiz ei1s OlllY "lol Stall PllOto
Fourteen children, all with freshly
scrubbed and smiling faces, were honored
as citizens of the month bv the Sad-
dleback Valley Exchange Clu·b. One stu-
dent from each elementary school was
selected by the principal and teachers.
They a re (sitting ll'ft to right) Julie
Walsh, Joanne Ammon and Sebastian
Bennett and (standing left to right>
Veronica Mehrguth, Mike Etchepare, Kim
Daughtery, Gina Williams. Debbie Rud-
der, Mindy Carlisle, Jim Buck, Eric
Woodbridge, Jon F\azell, Jimmery Herr
and Mi sty Larson.
Additional Douglas
Layoffs Predicted
Officials of the ~triking
machinists union today predicted
additional layoffs this week at
the McDonnell Douglas Corpora
lion.
Ivan Lynch. pre!.ident of th«
International Association of
Machinists Lodge 720, said the
1.000 aerospace workers laid off
Friday will be followed by more·
cutbacks this Wednesday and
Friday.
· Meanwhile. the IAM newslet
ter reported workers would no
longer receive their $40-a-weck
strike benefits beginning April I
The report said the benefits <trl'
costing $700,000 a week, and the
union's fund would soon bt·
depleted
He said he did not know if a re
ported 5,000 figure was accurate.
but he added the layoffs could in-
clude some engineers and pro·
fessional employes at the firm's
Huntington Beach plant.
The JAM, with 19,000 workers
nationwide. including 7.000 in
Southern California and 1,500 in
Huntington Beach. has b(•cn on
Frona Page A I
CREDIT ...
engaged but it "as supposed to
be a secret between my girl and
myself. Then she told me I was
rmarried to Florence Brudzynski,
who happens to be m y mother 1 ·'
Brudzyns ki said he \\H S
"shocked . :.ur pri s t•d and
amused.··
"The "'ay they married me
off." Brudzynski said he and tht'
credit bureau fi~ured out. .. ,, as
that a computer program used lo
eliminate double addresses for
·junk' mail assumed that since
my mother and I had the same
last name and since we "ere II\
ing at the same address, '-'Chad
to be married.
:-tnke since Feb. 10
Friday, 1.000 members of the
l n1ted Auto and Aeros pace
Workers were placed on two-
1week "furloughs" at the Long
Beac h plant because of a
. shortage of lAM -produced parts
used there to manufacture DC 9
<rnd DC 10 aircraft
'Th<' company has declined
t'Omment a bout the layoffs, ex·
cept to confirm I he 1,000 fi gure on
F'riday. A Mc Donnell Douglas
~pokesman did say the Hunt-
rn~'ton Beach plant is less depen·
dent on !AM -manufactured part:.
than some other facilities.
Lynch said today a federal
mediator has returned to
Washington alter meeting with
both sides, and he is expected to
rC'turn soon for more meetings.
··we established our positions
for sure, and kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
of the meetings.
The mediation was asked for
by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satellite
launchings at Cape Canaveral.
/\bout 200 I AM workers
employed by McDonnell Douglas
are stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Launchings are continuing no"
wi th professional and
s upervisorial personnel filling in
for striking workers, McDonnell Dou~las officials said. The firm
a lso said the strike would not af-
f<>d the Soviet-U.S. space mis-
s ion in July unless it continues
pas t Jun e. when the I A J\·t
\\Orkers would again be needed
tu aid in launch preparation.
P a ir Arrested
On Vice Rap
In Newport
FromPageAJ
OSWALD ...
sassination and later show that
.. perhaps a doze n" did not tell
the truth, he said.
"President Kennedy was kiJled
by a conspiracy," 'Said O'Toole,
38. who was chief of the CIA pro-
blem analysis branch from 1966
to 1969. "The man who paid with
his life for that crime in the base-·
. ment of the Dallas City Hall was
innocent."
Advance copies of O'Toole's
book. ·'The A ssassination
Tapes," were made available to-
day to the news media and an ex-
cerpt was published in lhe April
issue of Penthouse.
O 'Toole said leadin g
authorities on lie detection and
analysis who examined Oswald's
statements agree that he told the
truth.
The machine measures
changes in human voice frequen-
cies, and when the modulation
disappears. it is as a result of
stress and is a strong indication
the speaker is lying. ··
A 1wtlier Day ·
Of Rai11 See11
A lo11 g Coas t
A 40 µcn:ent chance of rain
Tuesday is predicted by the Na·
tional Weather Service.
The Pacific storm. which has
dumped waler on the Orange
Coast for four out of five days, is
then expected to move on. Fairer
skies and warmer t emperatures
are promised for Wednesday
through Friday.
Gusty winds have pushed four
to seven-foot ocean waves and
small craft warnings have been
posted from Point Conception lo
the Mexican Border.
Sunday's respite from the rain
gave the coast's customary
flooded areas a chance to dry out.
Roads and intersertions general·
Iv remained unflooded despite
the heavy downpour this morn-
ing.
... . I
Leis11r.e World
Group Suing .
By TOM BA1lLEY
CH -DMly f'tlec Sol*" Earlier named as def end~ts
ln a $2.2 million lawsuit filed by
Ros:tmoor Corporation, Leisua·e
World Foundation of Laguna
Hills has in turn filed a cross
complaint that seeks more than
$3 million from fellow def en-
dants.
Principally identified in multi-
ple allesations of fraud are
former Foundation trustees
Edward L. Olsen and Otto
Musch. They now bold a eontroll·
ing interest in Golden West
Publishing, Inc.
It is alleged in the addition to
the Orange County Superior
Court action that Olsen and
Musch persuaded fellow found a·
tion trustees four years ago to
dispose of what were later re-
alized to be valuable foundation
holdings.
Those holdings were then ac-
quired by corporations in which
both men had controlling in·
terests, the action states.
Among them and named as ad-
ditional defendants in the foun-
dation's cross complaint are
Prof essional Community
Management (PCM, HDM, a .
Delaware corporation, and H<.;U
of California.
Foundation lawyers identify
Olsen as president and Musch as
vice president of those corpora-
tions, all of which are described
in the cross complaint as "gross-
ly under-capitalized" and all un-
derthe same control.
Also named in the list of defen-
dants are Golden Wes t
Publishing, Inc., which dis·
tributes Leisure World News,
Saddleback Valley News and
Beach Cities News, former
Laguna Hills Leisure World ad-
ministrator Robert L. Price and
Poet Slated
For Reading
Stanley Crouch, jazz musician
and poet, wiJI appear Wednesday
at Saddleback College to give a
reading and lecture. His reading
will conclude the winter quarter
Writers' Series, which included
poets Lynn Sukenick and Paul
Vangelisti a nd novelists Oakley
Hall and Ted Taylor.
Crouch teaches in the Black
Studies Program al Pitzer
College in Claremont. He is the
author of "Ain 'l No Ambulances
for No Nigguhs Tonight."
Crouch 's reading, which is
public and free. will begin at JO
a.m. in Room 313 of the Science-
Mathematics Building.
OCTD to Reveal
South Bus Routes
Representatives of the Orange
County Transit District will be in
..Mission Viejo Tuesday morning
fto acquaint residents with bus
routes and scheduling in south
Orange County.
The meeting will be held from
10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at the
Sierra Recreation Center, one of
the stops on OCTD's Route 91.
P ersons interested in attending
should come to the conference
room at the center on 26887
Recodo Lane.
Robert Milchett, a major·PC,.i
shareholder.
It is alleged that Olsen an~
Musch deliberately defrauded
Leisure World Foundation at a
time when they were trustees of
the organization.
Olsen and Musch, the cross
complaint stales. conspired with
Price and Mitchell to obtain the
Leisure World management con·
tracts for PCM with the explana·
lion that the foundation could ex·
pect nothing but increasing and
substantial debts in that area.
Similarly. the action stales,
Olsen and Musch "schemed to
obtain" the Leisure World News
di vision of the foundation at a
selling price or $48,000 which was
lo be paid at Sl,000 a month.
Other allegations of fraud by
the foundation include the
claim that trustees wer-e
persuaded through the use of
false data to relinquish manage-
ment of the group's New Jersey
e nterprise a nd allow HDM to
·take over the contract.
Foundation lawyers addi-
tionally claim t hat trustees dis· ·
posed of their control of t he
group •s Resales Division when
they were falsely warned of fall-
ing profits because of compe~
lion from Rossmoor Corporation.
It is estimated that the alleged
fraudulent activities of the defen-
dants cost the foundatiQn at least
$3,350,000. That sum is sought in
damages.
Rossmoor claimed in the
lawsuit that opened the mounting
round of litigation that during the
years 1966 and 1967 the founda-
tion failed to repay money ad-
vanced by Rossmoor Corpora-
tion.
That money, the lawsuit states,
was for the management and
operation of two Leisu re
World communities-one at
Laguna Hills and one at Walnut
Creek.
It is also alleged in the initial
$2.2 million complaint that assets
were transferred from the foun-
dation lo the pockets of named
defendants, among them Olsen
and Musch.
An answer to the complaint,
filed shortly before the cross
complaint was issued, accuses
developer Ross Cortese of violat-
ing the orig inal agreement
between Rossmoor and the foun-
d atl~ n by building com --
dominiums at Leisure World
sites.
Foundation lawyers claim that
the alleged breach of contract en-
titles the foundation to damages
of $2, 195,307.
Foundation lawyers have also
argued that the Ross moor
lawsuit was not an acceptable
cause of action and was uncer-
tain in its arguments.
Superior Court Judge H.
Waller Steiner cancel a heat\ng
on that pretrial issue when ihe
·foundation's lawyers apparjlfltly
decided not to press their argu-
ment.
1st L a d y 'Bette r '
WASHI!\GTON <UPI> -Betty
Ford is "feeling much better" to-
day and continues to make pro·
gress after an attack of her
chronic arthritic ailment in the
back and neck. Sheila Rabb
Weidenfeld. the First Lady's pre·
ss secretary, said that Mrs. Ford
has been spending most of her
time in bed the pa~cw days but
is "getting around a bit."
"1 was serious ly considering
that if they didn t correct the
mi s lake 1 w o u Id go to th l'
Domestic Relations Court and
ask the judge for an annulment.··
Brudzynski said with a gnn. ":\l y
mother got kidded u lot at work
and I took quite a hit of Jibbing at
the o(fice ...
l'\ewport Beach vice officers
<•rrested a 24-year-old Tustin
v.oman over the weekend on
t·harges of soli citing prostitution
<ifll'r they placed an order with a
1adio dispatched massage
service.
WARIMERS PAYS
Brudz nyn s ki s aid error~
similar to his O\\ n cxpe1iencl·
with the credit bureau are not un·
usual and could han-senous re·
s uits s ince most information
compilc•d b~· non-i nve:.tigat1ve
credit bureau<; can come only
from creditors and '' hotever the
individual volunteers
Police Seek
2 in C oWity
Knife Attack
Santa Ana police still have no
suspects in the throat-slashing
attack on a taxi -cabdriver Salur
day night.
Marvin Johns. 38. of Santa
Ana, was listed in sal1!-factory
condition today al Merr y
General Hospital with multiple
cuts on his throat and neck.
A police spokes man said in
vestiga_\ors are looking for two
young tHack men who fled from
the cab in southwest Santa Ana
after robbing and kmfing Johns.
Johns told officers th{' men had
asked to be taken lo an apart
ment complex at 2701 W Mcfad·
den Ave
But ~hen they arnved at the
destination. Johns seid one or the
men put a knife to his throat and
demanded the cab's recetpt11
'fhe men took an undetermlnM
amount of cash. slashtd the cab·
by'R throat and esc pcd.
Offict•rs booked Patricia Ann
.\11chael. of 1777 Mitchell St., on
the soliciting charge. Officers
al~o booked her male companion,
Thomas Steven Gately, 23. of the
:o.a me Tustin address. Charges
against him relate to the alleged
possession of marijuana in an
.1utomob1 le
Detectives said they placed a
('all la t e Saturday lo a Los
Angeles business specializing in
out cal I massage. Within 10
m inutes. it was alleged that the
woman a nd the man described
hy officers as h er "protector " ar·
rived in a motel room in
~ewport
Officers, who did not disclo~"
the location of the m otel, alleged
that the woman offered to
perform diverse sex acts for
prices ranging from $30 to $65
The massage, they added, cost
SJS.
The two arrestees were held io
ll(>u of SSOO bail apiece.
FBI Get8 Defense
WASHINGTON <UPI)-FBI
Director Clarence Kelley today
defended FBI surveillance of
radical f{roup1 as an "Im·
peratlve" response lo their
threats of violence and goal or
overthrowing lhe American way
of life. Kelley diacusa~ the
FBl 's domestic security
responsibilities in an address
prepared tor a Veterans or
Foreifn Wars cqnferen«.
M ariners Savings has alw ays paid
the high•st Interest legally possible.
Now your savings con be wor th even
more at Mariners -o Big 7i;. % on
6-yeor cert if I cotes of S 1 .000 or more.
Not only con you make money ot
M ariners, you con make friends too -
with o strong "hometown" savings
arid loon.
Sove ot Moriner5. Now it makes
more dollars and sense!
... ,
l
VOL. 68
From Wire Senka
SAIGON. South Vietnam
Tank-led North Vietnamese·
f orees blaated into the central
IUghlan.da capital or Ban Me
Thuot tod•Y. battling defenders
house to house and trapping ejcht
Americans in the city, field re-
Portssaid.
The Commun1sts al~ overran
a 'clistrict town 30 miles from Ban
Me Tbuot. the second in the.
highlands in three days.
-Jn Cambodia, rebel gunners
fired 56 rockets and artillery
Oswald
Story
Backed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An
~~alysis of tape recordings
~ ws Lee Harvey Oswald was
te ling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about
their knowledge of John F. Ken-
nedy's assassination, a former
Central Intelligence Agency of-
ficial said today. ·
.. I don't know the name of the
rpan who pulled the trigger,''
author George O'Toole told a
news conference called to in-
troduce bis book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he even
~now if the .. real" assassin is
&till at large.
But the Warren Commission·
which investigated the crime, be
said, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Oswald and saying he acted
alone -because the climate was
so volatile in the country at the
time.
He called for a new con-
cressional investigation of the
case. saying his probe indicates
there was a conspiracy.
O'Toole also reached the "in-
escapable" conclusion "lhlt. at
feast some of the people who
framed Qsw aJd were members of
the Dallas police.••
Using analysis on the tape-
recorded comments of oUler of-
ficials. he tbeorized that (1)
Qswald was an FBI informer. (2}
som& FBI agents may have been
involved in an a ssassination plot
on their own and (3) some War-
ren Commission witnesses lied in
key testimony.
O'Toole based his findings on a
device which acts in lie detector
fashion to pick up stress in voice ·
recordings.
On the key question Oswald
w.as asked -did he shoot
anyone? -the analysis shows
absolutely no stress in his volce,
ill(licating he could not have been
1elling an untruth, O'Toole said.
,.But similar analysis of other
tapes made of police figures and
others at the time of the as-
auaination and later show that
"perHaps a dozen" did not tell
thetrulh, be said.
, , ';President Kennedy was lcilled
by a conspiracy," said O'Toole,
38, who was chief of the CIA pro-
blem analysis branch from 1966
to 1969. "The man who paid with
hi& life for that crime in the base-
, ment of the Dallas City Hall was
innocent."
,,Advance copies of O'Toole's
book. "The Assa ssination
Tapes.·• were made available lo·
'"'<See OSWALD, PageA2) . .
Coast
Weather
Partly· cloudy Tuesday
with slightly cooler days,
according to the weather
'· service. Highs 55 at the
beaches, 60 inland. Chance
ol rain 80 percent tonight
clecreasing to 40 percent
Tuesday.
INSIDE TODA V
Th~ C~ntrol JttttWgeACc
Agency onu hired Mo/fa
gunm•n (o ctt~mpC.calOllfna.
tion of ~ban Pr1mf.,-FiMl
Costro,. ortlc~I rbluhed to-
dcJ11 allc1ftl. Sto'I/, Pao-~4._
Index
.~
rounds 1nto the Phnom Penh
. airports. damacltla two domestic
commerclal atrUIMhs and killing five persona ana Y..oundJns 22,
authoiiUn ln Phnom P~ said.
The eampaJgn to oust Pr~ident
Lon Ne) also picked '!P isteam.
Seven of the etcbt "missionaries
reported trapped by the North
Vidftames~ in Ban Me Tbuot
were identified today.
The Cbnstian and Missionary
Alliance sald nve ol the mis-
slonar1e.t were'attacbed to the Al-
liance. tt Identified them as Mr.
and Mrs. Richard PbUUps, of
Bloorpjngton. Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson ol
Hamilton1 Ont.
It said its fifth mlSsionary .
Mrs. Archie Mitchell of Bly.
Oregon, is the wife of Another
missionary taken captive In 'Ban
Me Thuot in a Communist of.
tensive tn 1962. Her husband has
not ~n heard from in the 13
years since.
A spokesman for the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phillips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
Freeway flowe~ng
Looking a bit like some giant , surrealistic flowers. steel sup-
port columns for interchange that will connect Newport and
Corona del Mar Freeways rise out of ground. Construction
site is near Bristol Street in Costa Mesa.
Today's Closlag
N.Y. Stoe
~
. .
Attack
h•v• t11•eQ refl&le in the re~ •hlence of the klneri'can representative tn t.be still uncap-t-.ced partQf the city, but that the
Jtbnaoo couplf bad fted their
home end tWr w eabouts is
unknown.
'fhe Alla.nee said twri ottier
mi11ionarie1 tra~ 1n Ban Me
Tbuot are Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller of HoughtOD, N:V., work-
ing for ,the Wy~litfe Bible
.translators. •
Also trapped in the city were a
U.S. Embass y representative,
·Paul Struharik, three Canadians.
ah Aus tralian aad a Fllipino
family. ~. -
... Jn Washington, meanwhile,
both the Democratic a nd
Republican leaders of the Senate
today called for the removal of •
the government of President Lon
Nol.
GOP leader Hugh Scott-the
highest ranking Republican so
·far to make such a suggestion-
said Lon Nol should resign in
favor of a tr a nsitional regime
that could negotia te a truce and a
new government with insurgent
Communists forces.
He said th e truce should
guarantee the safety of rerugees
who want to flee before the new
government takes over .
De m oc rati c· le ade r Mik e ·
Mansfi eld did not qualify his re-
quest for Lon Nol's resignation.
He told the Senate it was simply
the best hope for peace in Cam-
bodia.
Robbery on Bus
· 5 Seized at· Marine Base
Five pa ssen g er s o n ~
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun-
day night by five m en who used a
shotgun to press home their de-
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the five passengers
were robbed of cash, watches
and assorted jewelry while the
driver of the Santa Ana to San
Juan bus drove on, apparently
unaware of the activity behind
him.
Deputies said the fi ve men, all
identified as off ·duty Marines
from Camp Pendleton, left the
bus at San Juan and boarded
another bus bound for the Marine
base.
Camp P e nd leton Marines,
alerted by sheriff's offi cers, sur
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the fi ve suspects
into custody.
Marine personnel today re-
fused to identify the a rrested
men pending further mvestiga-
'-'o.w•incmne Romes
Fair Housing Unit
Sues City on Zone
The Orange County Fair Hous-
ing Council •nd a group of Irvine
~nu h•ve sued the clty. can-t.end.inc tbe 10Jle ch&na$-allowing
developi;nent of the lrvine ln-
dvstrial Complex-East. vioiates
state laws.
The suit, filed late Friday. at·
tacks the lack of low-income
housing in Irvine.
Residents filin• .the CQJDplaint
included Wesley and Judy Marx.
Dorothea Fry, Florence Fry.
Leon Napper and Angelo and
:\Iarilyn Vassol)
The suit was the second fiJed
against development of the
2,058-acr e pl~nned industrial
complex. The complex is planned
between the south end of El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station and the
Santa Ana Freeway.
State law requires that zone
changes be consistent with city
genera l plans.
lion of the robbenr. The\' con -
firmed that the fi\'e suspects are
Camp Pendleton l\1 arines.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recovered and
will be returned to the victims.
Sheriff's officers said {'harges
or assault wit h a deadly \\Capon
will be added to all<'gations of
ar med robbery in \'ie" of the
statements bv several \ 1ct1ms
that they were beatt.•n during the
course of the holdup
Sta·dium Accord Near
The suit charges that the zone
change wi ll bring in 54,000
workers who will not be able to
afford to live in the city, said
Wesley Marx. who also fil ed the
first suit against the complex.
The ho us ing e le m ent in
Irvine's gener a l plan sets a goal
of providing housing in Irvine for
those em ployed in the city
UPI T~ltpl\010
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Attorney Brudzynski
Joint Use of UCI Facility Scheduled The plan a lso notes the lack or
low-incom e housing in the city,
Marx said.
Negotiations !or joint improve-
ment of UC Irvine's athletic field
for stadium use by the city of
Irvine, the Irvine school district
and UCI are nearly compJete.
But the lighted stadium will not
be ready for Unive~ity High
School football games next fall as
had been hoped, according to
Irvine City. Councilman Art An-
thony, the council's negotiator
in the $300,000 proposedpact.
A review of the proposed·
agreement a~d a status report
are scheduled for the council's
meeting Tuesday. The 7 ~30 p.m.
meeting wm ,be held in city hall;
4201 Campus Drive.
The school board is set to take
up the matter at its 1:30 p.m.
meeting Wednesday al Rancho
San Joaquin Intermediate
School , 4861 Miehelson Drive.
The proposed joint agreement
to light the stadium, expand seat-
ing to '5 ,000 and install a
scoreboard and public address
system was to be considered by
~eport on College
Busing. on Agenda
A report on improvement of
bus service to Saddleback
College from the Tustin and
Irvine areas will headline
toniabt'a meeting of colleae
trustees. '
Tbe board meeting ls
scheduled for 7 :30 p.m. in the
cOnterence room of the campus
library.
1 Trustees formed a committee
one month aao-to study the bus-
ing problem witb the aim o( im·
proving scheduling.
A coUeae spokesman said the
Orange County Transit District
'is as anxious as school
authorities to lmprove bu.stng
and ls plannlnJ tbe 9ddillon of a
new route.
Service to tbe campus from the
Latuna Beach and San Clemente
areas ha• been described as
"good" but a• ''abaky" from
Tuliln and Irvine.
Allo Oft t.olilpt•1 truMe ~
da la an admllliSltitloft request
for a Dew aetMkmle c.iendar
t>ealnnlnl on Sipt i·
It was explained that the early
starting date would allow stu-
dents to get out of cl3Sies by June
4 and improve scbedulin~.
This school year classes began
Sept. 16 and will conclude June
16. .
the UC Board of Regents this
week.
But the stadium has been taken
off the agenda and will not be
considered until May.
"Beoause of their ruJ es, the
UCI people must oversee any
construction project on their
land," Anthony said. "The lead
·lime they need tor improving the
stadium to our mutual needs re-
quires that a decision to com-
mence construction be made dur-
ing March if the sl~dium is to be
usable for night activities by Sep-
tember oJ this year.
"Thu.a, the opportunity to have
a lig,Med footbaU field for
University High School games at
home in Irvine d~ring the fall of
1975 i& no lonaer with us," he
said. ·
Jr all the agencies approve the
pad t.J\is spring, he said, the
facility should be ready by Sep-
lelJlber 1976.
The UCI field may be ~ for
daytime pm es next fall. Tbe dis-
trict pre1ently is preparing next
falJ's home game schedule.
''From a personal point of
<See STADJUM. Pa1e A2>
Workerl) coming into the cit~.
but being forced by economics to
live elsewhere, m a kes the zone
change inconsistent \\llh the
general plan. the s uit contends.
City Attorney James Erickson
could not be contacted this morn·
ing to com ment on the new suit
The first suit filed by Marx at·
tacked the environmental impact
report filed for the industrial de·
velopment on much the same
grounds as the new suit lack of
housing for the workers who
would be employed by the firms
in the industria l complex.
Hostage Slain
During Siege;
Two Arrested
MAMMOTH LAKES (AP> -
Two men were arrested and a
female hosta ge shot to death ea r-
ly today following a live-hour
siege in a supermarket, the Mono
County sheriff's office said.
Deputies s aid the victim was a
female employe of the Mammoth
Lakes Safeway Store. She was
not it:umediately identified.
Two men in custody were from
Hawt.horne, Nev., and Mammoth
Lakes. the she riff's office said
Their idenliti~s were not re ·
leased.
According to a sheriCf's office
statement, the incident followed
a report of an arm«! robbery in
pco1ress at the &tote. The store
was surrounded s)\C>rtly before 10
p.m. Sunday.
''At 2 :55 a.m . two suspects
v.-ere Cound hldi~ in an attic
-• ..-bf tbe •to~ .... the slattm~bt. iiiid addlnat that t.be woman
• hOltaie was found hat ahd dled
en tulle tot.he hoa.,Ml. If truateN approve that re·
quest. It wUI ljlve ttudimU &Mlr
W'llttt ttart!ita date ID Ute hli·
tor"Y ol th• col14l1t.
i--. two were, held for l.D·
.. ""·~•·u.:~:'\i vesUcatlon of murder and tob-
L..,_...._ ...... -..i!!o;.....~~~~~~ ..... .;....;a~~:-!11~~--w.l~~ beiJ. the at•tem saJd.
)
Credit Card
Holder Vexed
By Coniputer
COLU\IBL'S . Ohio n;rn
For Richard Brudzynski . George
Orwell 's world of "1984" -a not-
so-futuristic no\·e l predicting a
dictatorial society of automa-
tons h as arrived. lie was
formally married to his mother
by a computer.
Brudzynski. a law~·er. "as told
bv a Cleveland credit bureau he
had indeed married his mother.
Florence Brudzynski. and. to
make matters \\ orse, "as pre-
sently employed as a stock boy at a machine l)hop after previously
\\orkmg as an a ttorney
"I wasn't expecting an) ~ur
prises." Brudzynski said of his
"spur.of-the-mom ent" \'is1t to
the credit bureau. "l filled out an
appli callon fo rm to see my file in
about a minute, a nd this woman
came back with a computer prin-
tout "ith scads of numb<?rs whi ch
she reviewed ve1·y quickly "
Brudzynski, 30. a hearing ex-
<See CREDIT, Page A2)
AD CONVEKTS
JI AN TO <ASH ·
"The ad produced a good
response a nd 1 sold my van to one
of the people who read the ad and
called."
That ·s the s uccess story rel at·
ed by the Newpo rt Beach man
who placed this ad in the Daily
Pilot.
'69 FORD Econoline. «
cyl. stick. $1295.
Call u x·xxxx
tr you have a car or van you'd
like to convert to cash . call
642·5678 Put a few words to work
for you. in the Onlly Pilot
Deseris(•ape?
It rese mble~ the Arizona desert with mesas
and plall'aus eroded by wind and water but
1t is a 912-ac re site south of Monarch Bay
that has been carved by earth movers and
bulldozers for Avco Community
Develope r s I nr The $120 million project
has been stalled since 1972 when the
Coastal Conservation Act took effect. Avco
has now worked out an agreem ent witb the
state to begin construction. Plans call for
2,000 housing units, ranging between
$50.000 and $80,000.
f'rflm Page 1\l
CREDIT ...
aminer for the state or Ohio, was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and. ironic all). also served as co
chairman on an Amencan Civil
Liberties Union committee in·
.,estigat ing the impact o f
technological in no\ ations on civil
liberties
The ACLU group called itself
"'The 1984 Committee."
Brudz) nski said he asked the
clerk <1t the credit bureau what
all the numbt•rs meant.
. ··she pointed out one set of
numbers which when translated
said I was presently employed as
a stock boy ii jol> I h<id held six
or seven year s ago when I was
still in school.
"The next line. she said.
showed that I was currently mar-
ried. I .... .is really surprbed
bee a u~c I h u d just become
engaged but 1t '-'a~ supposed to
be a secret bet ween my girl and
myself. Then s hr told me I was
married to Florence Brudzynski,
, who happens to be my mother!··.
Brudzyn s ki said he was
··shocked, s urprised and
amused."
.. The way they married me
off,'' Brudzynski said he and the
credit bureau figured out. "was
that a coTnpute r program used to
eliminate double addresses for
'junk' mail assumed that since
•
my mother and I had the same
last name and since we were li v-
ing at the same address, we had
to be married.
Poet Slated
For Readi1ig
St..inley Crouch. Jazz musician
and poet~ will <ippcar Wednesday
at Saddleback College to give a
reading and lecture 111~ reading
"ill conclude the winter quarter
Writers' Series. which included
poets Lynn Suken1 ck and P aul
Vangelisli and novelists Oakley
Hall and Ted Taylor.
Crouch teaches m the Black
St udies Program at Pitier
College in Claremont. lie is the
author of "Ain't No Ambulances
for No Nigguhs Tonight.''
Crouch 's reading, which is
public and free, will begin al 10
a.m . in Room 313 of the Science-
:\fathematic·s Building.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Robert N W~
PO·\lditf\I ttrd l'\lbf1VWt
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\If(,_. P r-9"1c:M'f'H .tnd t"~nf''AI M.U'WQ"t
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ld1IO<'
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4tS4JO
Additional Douglas
Layoffs Predicted
O fficia ls o f the s triking
machinists union today predicted
additional lavoffs this week at
the McDonneil Douglas Corpora·
ti on.
Ivan Lynch, president of the
International Association of
Machinists Lodge 720, said the
1,000 aerospace workers laid off
Fridav will be followed by more
('Utbacks this Wednesdc.1y ~nd
Friday.
.Meanwhile, the IAM ncwslel·
ter reported workers would no
longer receive their $40-a-weck
st!'"ike benefits beginning April 1.
The report said the benefits are
costing $700.000 a week. and the
union 's fund would soon be
depleted.
He said he did not know if an·
From P11ge A I
OSWALD ...
day lo the news media and an ex·
cerpt was published in the April
issue of Penthouse.
O'Toole sa id leading
authorities on 1 ie detection and
analysis who examined Oswald's
statements agree that he told the
truth.
T h e machine m easures
changes in human voice frequen-
cies, and when the modulation
disappears. it is as a result of
stress and is a strong indication
the speaker is lying.
.. His (Oswald's) categorical
deniaJ that he s hot anyone con-
tains almost no stress at all,"
O'Toole said. "Stress is a
necessary. but not sufficient,
condition of lying . . .
'"But the absence of stress is a
sufficient condition of truthful-
ness ... Osw.ild denied shooting
anybody -the President, the
policeman (J .D . TippitU .
anybody. The psychological
stress evaluator said he was tell-
ing the truth.''
Man Ejected
For Biting
Jet Hostess
DENV ER CU PI l -New York
him producer Norman Wexler.
detained in Denver on federal
c harges of interfering with a
flight crew, says a kiss and not a
bite led to his ejection from a
nonstop fli ght from Newark to
Los Angeles.
l "nited Air Lines night 19 made
a n unscheduled stop in Denver
Friday and Wexler was met by
FBI agents. U S. marshals and
Denver sheriff's deputies.
An affidavit filed by FBI agent
Bernard Hubley said Wexler bit
stewardess Laura Mansuto after
she objected to his verbal abuse
of a wo man cardiac patient
aboard the fll ght. The patient
was fitted with oxygen equip·
ment.
Carla Hills
Takes Oath
WASHINGTON <UPJ)
President Ford today presld~ at
the swearing-in of Carla A. Ht111
es secretary of Houaing and
1Urban Developm~nt and said she
faces an Immense job becaute tt
Is "a tlmt ol rcctsslon in the
h<x;sine industry."
Mrs. Hills 11 the third female
Cabinet member In hiltory and
previously served H assistant at-
torney genenl In ch9rp ot tht
civil rights division
ported 5,000 figure was accurate,
but he added the layoffs could in-
rlude some eneineers and pro-
fessional employes at the firm's
Huntington Beach plant.
The JAM . with 19,000 workers
nationwide, including 7,000 in
Southern California and 1,500 in
Huntington Beach. has been on
strike since F eb. 10.
Friday, 1,000 members of the
l 'nited Auto and Aerospace
Workers were placed on two·
1week "furloughs'' at the Long
Beac h plant b ecause of a
shortage ol JAM -produced parts
used there to manufacture DC 9
and DC 10 airer alt.
The company has declined
comment about the layoffs, ex-
cept to confirm the 1,000 figure on
1''riday. A McDonnell Douglas
spokesm an did say the Hunl-
in~on Beach plant is less depen-
dent on !AM -m anufactured parts
than some other facilities.
Lynch said today a federal
media tor ha s r eturned to
Wa shington after meeting with
both s ides, and he is expected to
return soon for more meetings.
··we established our positions
for sure. and kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
of the meetings.
The mediation was asked for
bv the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satellite
launchings al Cape Canaveral.
About 200 IAM workers
employed by McDonnell Douglas
arc stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Launchings are continuing now
\\llh professional and
supervisorial personnel filling in
for striking workers. McDonnell
Douglas officials said. The firm_
also said the strike would not af·
feet the Soviet-U.S. space mis-
sion in July unless it continues
past June , when t h e IAM
\\ orkers would again be needed
to aid in launch preparation.
Poor Polly
Bites Dmt
PAWTUCKET, R.I.
(UPI> --A Central Falls,
R.l. man has pleaded inno-
cent to a charge of cruelly
killinl{ a parrot.
Edwa rd Gelinas. 30. al·
legedly went to the home of
James Corcoran here Feb.
27 , grabbed the parrot
from atop its cage and
strangled It.
!'o motive had been
established ..
AIWtherDay
Of Rain Seen
Along&iast
A 40 percent ~hance of rain
Tuesday \a predicted by Uiie Na·
tional Weather Sorvice.
The Pacific storm, which has
dumped water on the Or..._•
Coast tor fout out ot flve days, as
then expected to cnove on. Falter
skies and warmer temperatures
a re prottli&ed lor Wednesday
lhrou1h Friday.
Gusty winds have~ four
to seven-loot ocean wav.-and
small eralt warn'"=~ posted from PoV\t _ to
the MuJcan Border. •
Sunday 's rupke ~UM rain
gave the coaat"• euatomary
Oooded ue11 a cba~ tiCt dl7 out.
Road• and lnteraeQttonl ,..etal·
ly femalned uollOodlid despite
\h he•vy downpow tbil mom-
Int
Farming ia on lls way out In Oran1e County. even t.bou.gh the
'county retains its third place
spot in agricultural prodµctlon
amons the 1tate'1 counties, mem~ra of a panel at UC Irvine ••f'ffd· The panel, made up of Irvine
Company Preaideot Ray Watson,
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
DiedJi~h and UC Farm Advisor
Harold W. Otto, said farming will
be phued out.
The demlae ot agriculture in
the county was variously at·
tributed to high taxes and the
coal of water plus vandalism and
the simple fact that farmlng will
be a more profitable venture
elsewhere in CaUfornia.
The Irvine Company, for ex-
ample, just had its best year and
recorded a $171,000 loss from its
aartcultural operations, Watson
said.
Watson referred to the firm's
farmland as "lands in transl·
tlon,'' that is, awaiting develop-
ment.
But while farming may be on
the way out', Diedrich believes a
good deal of open space can be
Police Seek
2 in County
Knife Attack
Santa Ana police still have no
suspects In the throat-slashing
attack on a taxi-cab driver Satur-
day night.
Marvin Johns, 38, or Santa
Ana, was listed in satisfactory
conditio n today at Mercy
·General Hospital with multiple
cuts on his throat and neck .
A police spokesman said in-
vestigators are looking for two
young black men who fled from
the cab in sout~wesl Santa Ana
after robbing and knifing Johns.
Johns told officers the men had
asked to be taken to an apart-
ment complex at 2701 W. McFad-
den Ave.
But when they arrived at the
destination, Johns said one of the
men put a knife to his throat and
demanded the cab's receipts .
The men took an undetermined
amount of cash, slashed the cab-
by's throat and escaped.
Driver Hurt
In Car Crash
A Santa Barbara man re-
m ained hospitalized today with
head injuries suffered Friday
night whe n his import car
hurtled off the road in a rural
area of lrvine and crashed into a
eucalyptus tree.
Roland M. Vickery, 25, was
listed in s atisfactory condition to-
day al Tustin Community
Hospital, where he was taken
following the 8 p.m . crash.
Police accident investigators
said Vickery was driving east on
Barranca Road at Jeffrey Road
when his s mall auto s lammed
into the tree for no known reason.
The victim was unconscious
and too severely injured to be
questioned about what caused
the crash near El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station.
nved. Diedrich proposet • now
form of &onln« ln which de-
velopers trade the development
rights on one piece of property
for higher densities on anp&Mr.
The result of that ~1>roach
would be lower taxes qn UM open
s paco land because the develop·
ment r l1htt would be tak4'n
away.
Diedrich ~cknowled1ed that
his approach would result ln de-
. velopments ol condomtn tums.
town housea or other cluster
housing rather than alngle-
family detached horn~.
The property owner would still
own the land without develop·
ment rights and could use it
economically for recreation 01·
farming, Diedrich said.
Taxes on Irvine Company land
totalled $12 million last year,
Watson said. Taxes on the com-
pany's farmlands totalled $3.4
million.
In addition to the high tax load,
Watson said, farmers face com·
plaints from residents over the
smell from chicken manure used·
as fertilizer. Rising cost of farm
equipment was another factor
Watson cited.
"The point now is that farming
serves as a productive, though
very difficult, interim Jand use.
with the landowner looking
ahead toward future develop-
ment and enhancement of his
properties,•' Watson said.
"Farming today represents his
investment in that ultimate pro·
mise. That is the carrot that
leads him. Take it away and he's
gone."
Diedrich was critical of the
Williamson Act, a state law
which sets farmland aside in a
lower-taxed agricultural pre-
ser ve. Land in the preserve can-
. not be developed.
Diedrich said the Williamson
Act kept the county from getting
open space Jand. Without the act,
he said, landowners would have
been forced to deal with the coun-
ty because of the pressures of
high taxes.
Watson, however, argued that·
the value of the act was in giving
developers enough time to plan
their developments well.
The discussion Friday night at
UCI was sponsored by the
Orange County Environmental
Coalition.
f'rom Page A I
STADIUM • •
view," Anthony said, "this ex-
perience of wending our way
through the university system's
hierarchical maze of decision
channels has been very frustrat-
ing lo me.
'"I certainly hope that all cf·
forts to cooperate with UCI will
not be so lengthy and complex in
the future."
Aliens Hurt U.S.?
WASHINGTON (AP) Un -
counted millions ol illegal aliens
are having a severe impact on
the nation's economy, the com-
missioner of the Immig ration
and Natur~lization Service said
Sunday. Retired Gen. Leonard f'.
Chapman, former commandant
of the Marine Corps, said there
may be 10 million lo 12 million ii·
legal aliens in the country.
Seek11 Ret 11r11
UPITt ...... le
Eldridge Cleaver, 39, now
living in Paris, says he
wants to return to
Culifornia "where people
have room to be human."
The former Black Panther
leader says he no longer
wants to bring down the
U.S. system, but to live with
it.
4 Hearings
On Corutal
Plans Carded
Sp o k es m en for. the s tale
coastal commission today an·
nounced the setting of four public
hearings, including two on the
Orange Coast, on the California
coast master plan unveile..d late
last week.
The hearings, all scheduled for
dates in May. wi 11 include one in
Huntington Beach City council
chambers May 9 and another on
May 16 at San Clemente's com-
munity clubhouse.
The other two hearings will be
on May 7 at the Torrance Civic
Center a nd on May 14 al the Long
Beach Harbor Department build-
ing.
The s tarting times for each of
the sessions set to examine the
document will be the same for
a ll -1:30 p.m .. continuing to 6
p. m . A Cler a dinne r break
testimony \\ill resume at 8 p. m .
and end at 10 :30.
The document, which was or-
dered by voters when they ap-
proved the Coastal Initiative in
1972. sets forth widespread plan·
ning goa Is and development -
criteria for a strip averaging five
miles wide along the entire sta't.e
coastline.
Spokesmen for the stale agen-
cy said that several thousand
copies have already been mailed
out to interes ted entities and in-
dividuals. and that a limited sup·
ply of the documents will be
available Thursday at the re-
gional coastal commission of-
fices at 666 E. Ocean Blvd., Suite
3107, in Long Beach.
The document places strong
emphas is on public ownership
and access lo coastal recreation
land and places strong emphasis
on a widespread use for recrea-
tion purposes as well as en-
couraging development only jn
existing areas where the coast
has given way to construction.
Last chapters of the document
still are being heard by regional
commissions, most notably an
element which would put the
teeth into the coastal plan. 11
That segment, known as
Powers. Funding and Govern-
ment, has yet to be reviewed by
the South Coast regional com-
mission.
WARIMERS PAYS
.·
•
Mariners Savings hos olwoys paid
the highest int•rest legally possible.
Now your savings con be worth even
more at Mariners -o Big 7"/• 'Y. on
6·yeor certificates of $1 .000 or more.
Not only con you make money ot
Mariners, you con make f r londs too -
with o strong "hometown" savings
ond loon.
Save ot Mariners. Now it makes
more dollars ond sense!
Mariners Savi8-Q
and Loan ~·iatlOn
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ll4' lfi\ll-RLY IOUlfVARD•l.OS AHOl!LU.CAW • ..,._. 1>U1• )-414l
Fed1111ol reg.ilollon1 require inlerMI p•noltlH on cer101n •Orly withd1ow0f\
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Huntington Beaeh
Eounl&ID ~!i~0'y ~
VOL. 68, NO. 69, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES
The price of a bic)'cle license in
Huntington Beach will triple
tonight if the city council ap.
proves a 'eries or proposed
changes in the local bicycle or-
dinance.
A city license now costs $1 for a
three-year period. Police
authorities are recommending a
bqost in the cost to $3 tor the
Sfl'lle three-year period.
Residents )Yho already have a
bicycle license will not have to
pay the new fee unW their CW"·
rent license expir~s .
Along wilh the higher price will
come a more thorough, statewide
licensing system and possibly
stronger law en!orcement to see
that bicycles are llceosed.
In the past, licensing was o~
tional with cities. but the state is
now m•ndatinf .bicycle licenses
and requlrinf all cities to
estab~ or change codes. The tttng of the fee has been
left up 0 the local agency. or.
fleer Ivor Gitsham, who beads
the police bie~cle safety pro-
gram in Huntington Beach, said
the $3 fee bas generally been re·
commended for all cities.
Under the new state laws, all of
the money raised through
licenses must be used for bicycle
sarety, development of bike
traila and the maintenance of
thos~ trails. Jn tbe past, license
fees were put in the city's general
fund.
Bicycle licenses have been re-
quired in Huntington Beach since
1960, but the enrorcement has
been difficult, Gitsham said.
Police estimate there are at
least 100,000 bicycles in the city
About 25,000 have lic .. ertses.
The licensing program wa!-.
pushed by the state because of
the high bicycle theft r ate.
Gitsham said more than $100,000
worth of bicycles were stolen last
year in Huntington Beach alone.
One new section requires all
Today's Cl~bag ·
N.Y. S&oeks
TEN CENTS
l>icycle dealers to supply police
\\1th the names, addresses and
phone numbers of anyone who .
buy$ a bike. as well as the bike's
make, frame number and license
tag, if 1t has one.
People selling bicycles in
private transactions are also re-
quired to notify the police depart-
ment within 10 days of the sale.
Gunmen
Rob5
On Bus
ROEN N. Viets Attack
Five passe ngers on a
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun·
day njght by five men who used a
shotgun to press home their de-
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the five passengers
were robbed of cash, watches
and assorted jewelry while the
driver of t he Santa Ana to San
Juan bus drove on. apparently
unaware of the activity behind
him.
Deputies said the five me n, all
identified as off·duty Marines
from Camp Pendleton, left the
bus at San Juan and boarded
another bus bound for the Marine
base.
Camp Pendleton Marines,
alerted by sheriff's officers, sur·
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the five suspects
mto custody.
Marine personnel today re-
fused to identify the arrested
men pending further investiga·
tion of the robbery. They con·
(irmed that the five suspects are
Camp Pendleton Marines. ·
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recovered and
will be returned to the victims.
Sheriff's officers said charges
of -assault with a deajlly weapon
will be added to allegations of
armed robbery in view of the
s tatements by several victims
that they were beaten during the
course of the hold up.
Valley Board
Sets Budget
Trim Session
Members of the Fountain
Valley School Board will meet at
8 p.m . Tuesday to discuss how to
trim $670,000 from next year's
budget.
The district expects to make
the cuts because of failure last
week of a 67-cent lax increase.
The school board Friday njght
voted unanimously not to place
the tax measure on the ballot
again May 27.
District teachers this week
suggested a list of 19 possible
budget cuts, among them district
administrators, librarians, assis·
tant superintendents and clerical
personnel. Their list did not in·
elude teachers, and they suggest·
ed keeping the cuts outside the
classroom.
Newly elected trustee Richard
Plum opposed the tax measure in
the first place, contending lhe
board had not first explored cul·
ting the budget.
Sea Victim Found
PALOS VERDES (UPJ)-The
body or a man who dove into the
Pacific last weekend in an effort
to save his teen·age son washed
ashore Sunday off the Palos
Verdes Peninsula. Authorities
said the body of Melvin
Ridgeway Sr., 45, Los Angeles
bad been badly battered.
AD CONJ'EKIS
VAN TO CASH
•'The ad produced a good
·response and I sold my van to one
of the people who read the ad and
called."
That's the success story rclat
ed by the Newport Beach man
who placed this ad ln the Daily
Pilot.
'69 FORD Econollne, 6
cy~ aUck. $129$.
Catl xxx-x:itn
l( you have a c•r or nn you"d
Jlke to convert lo ~••b, call
642-5678. Put a rew wordl to work
foT you. in the Dally PUct.
'.
'
Mill SC
TRICT -· •All(
....
0 ·B American Missionaries Trapped
O.lly l'llOt ...... M9p
MAP DISPLAYS GEOGRAPHY OF UNIFICATION FIGHT
School Di•trtct Boundaries Don't Coincide with. City's
4 Hearings Slated
Over New District
Those who favor a new unified
school district within Fountain
Valley city limits and those who
oppose it will have a chance to
air their views in at least four
meetings this week.
p.m . in Fountain Valley School
District o!Cices, Newland Street
and Talbert Avenue.
Jones said be called h.is meet·
ing tonight to tl")l and clear up
what he said were distortions and
misunderstandings on the part or
the Huntington Beach parents.
<See HEARINGS, P.age A2)
From Wire Services
SAIGON, South Vietnam
Tank-led North Vietnamese
forces blasted into the central
highlands capital or Ban Me
Thuot today, battling defenders
house to house and trapping eight
Americans in the city, field re·
ports said.
The Communists also overran
a district town !JO miles rrom Ban
Me Thuot, the second in the
highlands in three days.
In Cambodia, rebel gunners
fired 56 rockets a nd artillery
rounds into the Phnom Penh
airports, damaging two domestic
commercial a\rliners and killing
five persons and wounding 22.
authorities in Phnom Penh said.
The campaign to oust President
Lon Nol also picked up steam.
Seven of the eight missionaries
reported trapped by the North
Vietnamese in Ban Me Thuot·
were identified today.
The Christian and Missionary
Alliance said five of the mis-
sionaries were attached to the Al·
liance. It identified them as Mr
and Mrs. Richard Phillips, of
Bloomington, Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Johnson of
Hamilton, Ont.
It said its fifth missionary,
Mrs. Archie Mitchell of Bly,
Oregon. is the wile of another
missionary taken ca,(>tive in Ban
Me Tbuot in a Gbmmunist of·
fensive in 1962. Het husba nd has
not been beard from in the 13
years since.
A spokesman for the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phillips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
have taken refuge in the re·
sidence of the American
Carl "Bud" J ones, leader of
petition efforts aimed at forming
the new K -12 system, has
scheduled an information meet·
ing at 7:30 tonight ~ Tamura
School, 17340 Santa Suzanne St.,
Fountain Valley. Huntington Case
At the same time, families now
in the Vista View School atten·
dance area will meet at the
school, 16250 Hickory St., to dis-
cuss opposition to the plan.
Vista View is in the Ocean
View School District, but inside
Fountain Valley city limits. It
se rves c hildr e n from
Westminster, Huntington Beach
and Fountain Valley. But if Jones'
plan su cceed s, it would
become part of the new district.
The plan also is expected to
come up at Tuesday's 7:30 p.m .
Huntington Beach Union High
School Board meeting, at Marine
High School.
Betty Mignanelli, a resident of
the Huntington Beach portion of
the Fountain Valley elementary
district, bas written the 'high
school board about her com·
munity's opposition to the plan.·
Her letter has been included on
the board agenda.
W~esday, the Orange Coun·
ty Committee on School Dlstrtct
Organintion wUl meet in Foun·
tain Valley to discuss ways to
give those Huntincton Beach re-
sidents some option. most likely
a chance to vote on wbetber t-0
join the new Fountain Valley dis·
trict or remain a seven·school
district.
That meeting will be at 7:30
Pair Held in Drug
Death of Man, 24
Huntingtop Beacb police were ·
investigatine possible murder
char ges today in connection witn
the· apparent drug death Sunday
ni g ht of a 24 -year-o ld
Westminster man.
Gregory Sperring, 2A, of 7531
Brooklawn Drive, Westminster.
was dead on arrival at 7 p.m . at
Huntington Int~rcommunit y
Hospital, police said. .
Two compenions who drove
Sperring to the hospital in the
back of his picltup truck were ar·
rested on suspicion of murder,
police r«u><>rted .
Held ~ithout bond'.today in city
jail are D etiorab Ann Anzalone.
24, of Fulletton, and Charles
Davii Kln&, l2. of 23871 Coral
1 Bay, Laguna Niguel, police re·
. ported.
King also has been charged
with stea ling Sperring's car.
which police said they have not
yet found.
Police said murder charges
can be filed in drug death. cases
against persons' who may 'have
supplied the drugs .
There does not have to be an in·
tention to commit murder, police
explained.
Both King and M,iss Anzalone
told officers they drove Sperring
to the hospital a fter he became ill
at a home they were visiting on
Cameron Street in Huntil'\8lon
Beach.
Hospital officials notified of
ficers after the three arrived at
the hospital. police said.
The Orange County Coronet's
office said an exact cause or de
ath cannot be determined until
the completion of tests. But Hunt-
ington Beach police said they
believe Sperring died of a heroin
overdose or of some other type of
injection placed in his arm.
The Orange County Coroner's
Office said Sperring is survived
by his parents.
'Oswald Told Truth'
Ex-CIA Aide Says . Many May Have Lied
W ASHJNGTON <UPI> -An
analysis of tape recordings
shows Lee Harvey Oswald waa
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other p&raons lied about
their knowt::1~ of Jobn F. Ken· nedy'a ass aUon, a former
Central Jntelll1e11ce Agency of·
fichu said today.
"l don't know the name or the
man who pulled the trigger,"·
author Georao O'Toole told a riew.s conference called to in·
lrOduce his book on tbe IW>Ject.
Nor, he added, doet be en
know 1f tho "real" u11aln ii
1tlll at latte! •
But th• w UHD Commilaioo
which invHt11ai.ct the crime, he
said, bad no cholee but to mum
the verdict It did -blaml'11
.., I
representative in the still uncap-
tured part or the city, but that the
Johnson coup le had fled their
home a nd their whereabouts is
unknown.
The Alliance said. two other
missionaries trapped in Ban Me
Thuot are Mr. a nd Mrs. John
Miller of Houghton, N.Y., work·
ing for the Wycliffe Bible
·translators.
Also trapped in the city were a
L'.S. Embassy representative,
Paul Struharik, three Canadians.
an Australian and a Filipino
family
In Washington. meanwhile.
both the Democratic a nd
Republican leaders of the Senate·
today called for the removal of
the government of President Lon
Nol.
1984 Arrives!
Man 'Married' to Mother
UPITe....,_o
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Attorney Brudzynski
VnionSees
More Layoffs
At Douglas
Officia ls of the striking
machinists union today predicted
additional layoffs this week at
the McDonnell Douglas Corpora·
lion.
Ivan Lynch, president of tht:
Intern ation al Association of
Machinists Lodge 720, said the
l,000 aerospace workers laid off
Friday will be followed by more
cutbacks this Wednesday and
Friday
MeanwhLle, lhe lAM newslet·
ter reported workers would no
longer receive their $40-a-week
strike benefits beginning April 1
The report said the benefits are
costing $700,000 a week. and the
union's fund would soon be
depleted.
He said he did not know if a re
ported 5,000 figure was accurate.
bul be added the layoffs could in
elude some engineers and pro
fessional employes at the firm's
Huntington Beach plant.
The IAM, with 19,000 worker~
nationwide, including 7,000 m
Southern Ca!irornia and 1,500 in
Huntington Beach , has been on
strike since Feb. 10.
Friday, 1,000 members of the
United Auto and Aerospace
Workers were placed on two-
rweek "furloughs" at the Long
Beach p la nt. ,because of a
.shortage of IAM·produced parts
used there. to m a nulacture DC 9
and DC 10 aircraft..
The compa ny has declined
commertl abOut the layoffs, ex·
C<ept to conltrm the l ,000 figure on
Friday. A. McDonnell Douglas
' ~ch plant is l• depen-=UD'UlD dJd say tho Hunt
illa'rt,A M-manuraetured parts
e other tacilit.lt!I.
' ch sald toc1•1 a f edtral
iat•r bas returl\ed to tnaton after mci:tbii with lldii. and be ti expected to
1Hw..-llDU0L P-r~ !,
COLU MBUS, Ohio <U PI)
For Richard Brudzynski. George
Orwell 's world of "1984" a not·
so-futuristic novel predicting a
dictatorial society of automa-
tons has arrived. He was
formally married to his mother
by a computer.
Brudzynski, a lawyer, was told
by a Cleveland credit bureau he
had indeed married his mother,
Flor e nce Brudzynski, and, to
make matters worse, was pre-
sently employed as a stockboy at
a machine shop after previously
working as an attorney. ""
"l wasn't expecting any sur-
prises." Brudzynski said or his
"spur·Of·the·moment" visit lo
the credit bureau. "l filled out an
application form to see my file m
about a minute, and this woman
came back with a computer pnn·
tout with scads of numbers which
she reviewed very quickly "
Brudzynski , 30. a hearing ex
ammer for the stale of Ohio. was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and , ironically, a lso served as CO·
chairman on an American Civi:
Liberties Union committee in·
vestigati ng the impact of
technological innovations on civil
liberties.
The ACLU group called itself
"The 1984 Co mmittee."
Brudzynski said he asked the
clerk at the credit bureau what
all the numbers meant.
"She pointed out one set of
numbers whic h when translated
said I was presently employed as
a stock boy -a job I had held six
or seven years ago when I was
:.till in school.
··The n ext line. s he said.
sho\\ ed that I \\-as currently mar·
ned I was really surprised
because I had just become
engaged but it was supposed to
be a secret between my girl and
myself. Then s he told me I was
rmarried to Florence Brudzynski,
"'ho happens to be my mother!"
Brudzyn s ki said he was
"s hocked. s urpri sed and
.imused "
<See CREDIT, Page A2)
Or~n:a Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy Tuesday
with slightly cooler days.
Jccording to the weather
:-.crvice. Highs 55 at the
beaches, 60 inland. Chance
or ram 80 percent tonight
decreasing to 40 percent
Tuesday.
INSIDE TODA V
The Central lnt~lbgcnce
Agency once hired Mafia
gunmen to attempt auo3$1'14·
hon of CMban Premier-F'idel •
Co!fro. arhcles publtshm to-
dayalleged Story, PageA4.
t
I
'
41 OAll.YPltOT H/F
Coll~ge Oaoice
Richard V . Simon. 33, is
now working as director of
community relations for the
Coast Community College•
District, a $27 ,000-a -year
position created four years
ago but left vacant until
now . Si mon previously
worked for a Sherman Oaks
public relations firm.
4Hearings
On Coastal
P lans Carded
Spokesmen for the stat~
coastal comm is~ion today an-
nounced the setting of four public
hearings; including two on the
Orange Coast, on the California
coast master plan unveile.d late
last week.
The hearings, all scheduled for
dates in May, ''ill include one in
Huntington Beach · City council
chamber s Mav 9 and another on
May 16 at San Clemente's com -
munity clubhouse. · .
The other two hearings will be
on Ma y 7 at the Torrance Civic
Center and on May 14 at the Long
Beach Harbor Department build·
mg.
The starting limes for each of
the sessions set to examine the
document will be the same for
all-1:30 p.m .. continuing to 6
p . m . A fl er a dinner break
testimony will resume at 8 p.m.
and end at 10:30-
The document, which was or-
dered by vot e rs when they ap-
proved the Coastal JnJtiative in
1972, sets forth widespread plan-
• nine goals and development
criteria for a strip averaging five
miles wide along the entire sta'le
coastline.
Spokesmen for the state agen-
cy said that several thousand
copies have already been mailed
out to interested entities and in-
dividuals, and that a limited sup-
ply of the documents will be
available Thursday at the re·
gional coastal commission of-
fices at 666 E . Ocean Blvd .. Suite
3107, in Lon g Beach.
The document places strong
emphasis on public ownership
and access to coastal recreation
land and places strong emphasis
on a widespread use for rccrea·
tion purposes as well as en-
couraging development only in
existing areas where the coast
has given way to construction.
Last chapters of the document
still .are being heard by regional
commissions, most notably an
element which would put the
teeth into the coastal plan.
That seg ment, known a s
Powers. Funding and Govern·
menl. has yet to be reviewed by
the South Coast r egional com-
mission. It sets up provisions for
enforcing the principles in the
state plan and lays out an even-
tual transition or control back to
local government.
Once the hearings have con-
cluded on the master state docu-
ment. il will be sent to the
California Legislature for debate
and possible approval.
ORANGE COAST ~· F
DAILY PILOT
fhr'0r~(W\t0.1h Pilot W•lt\•h1th 1 .. 1t.t•'
~nt'd •ri.t Mt •' Pt,.'t\. I\ P"bll\hNI by tht 0tdl't;
(N't' Puot•\l'!•,,Q ( ••"''M"Y ~~r411t ... f"'CS1hon" Au
pubtt'\PWO Mi"lf'WJ•• throu9ft J.rio.tt' tor Cw\M
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... Uab'*k. bl•Ddl '"*' ~ to tte ... ~man wtto ~d wt his~ fbr that crime ln tM b
'ment of the Dallas· City Hall was
inJlO('ent."
Advance copies of O'Tooh!'s
book , "The Assassination
Tapes," were mode available to-
day to the news media and an ex.
cerpt was published in the April
issue of Penthouse.
O 'Toole said le a ding
authorities on Jie detection and
analysis who examined Oswald's
statements agree that he told the
truth.
The machine mea~ures
changes In human voice frequen-
cies, and when the modulation
disappears, it is as a result of
stress and is a strong indication
the speaker is lying.
··ms (Oswald's) categorical
denial that he shot anyone con-
tains almost no s tress at all,"
O'Toole said. "Stress is a
necessary, but not sufficieol.
condition of lying ...
"But the absence of stre~s is a
sufficient condition or truthful-
ness ... Oswald denied shooting
anybody --the President, the
policeman (J.D. Tippitl l ,
anybody. The psychological
stress evaluator said he was tell
ing the truth."
From Page A I
DOUGLAS. • •
return soon for more meetings. .
"We established our positions
for sure, a nd kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
ofthe meetings.
The mediation was asked ror
by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satelhtc
launchings al Cape Canaveral.
About 200 IAM workers
employed by McDonnell Dougla:-.
are stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Launchings are continuing now
with professional and
supervisorial personnel filling in
for striking workers. McDonnell Dou&las officials said. The firm
also said the strike would not af·
feet the Soviet.U.S. space mis·
sion in July unless it continuc:s
past June, when the IAM
workers would again be needed
to aid in launch preparation.
lst Lady ~Better'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Betty
Ford is "feeling much better" to-
day and continues to make pro-
gress after an attack of her
chronic artbritic ailment in the
back and neck.
Se~k• Return
Eldridge Cleaver, 39, now
living in Paris, says he
wants to return to
California "where people
have room lo be human."
The former Black Panther
leader says he no longer
wants to bring down the
U.S. system, but to live with
it.
From P a geA J
HEARINGS
The parents claim they were
misled by Jon~s. who had pro-
mised them a vote over joining
the new district, Huntington
Beach elementary to the south,
or remaining on their own. They
now oppose the Fountain Valley
petition.
But the stale later said Jones'
suggestion would not be legal,
that the parents would have lo
petition to join one district or the
other. They have refused.
Meanwhiie, Sheila Marcus.
leader of the Vista View opposi-
tion. said she opposes the plan
because parents at that school
were never given a chance to say
whether or not they want to join a
Fountain Valley d istricl.
The group also 1s concernea
about what would happen to the
Huntington Bea c h and
Westminster students now at-
tending Vista View
2 Die in Crash
SAN RAFAEL <UPI> -Two
men were killed and two women
critically injured in the weekend
crash of a single-engine am-
phibious plane near the Mariq
County Civic Center, the sheriff's
office reported Sunday.
Rewards Offered
In Four Crimes
This week's Secret Wit· s w•
ness column will briefly re-ecrel •lness
cap four of the most recent·
local crimes for which
cash· rewards are still of·
fered.
The cases involve a
tavern slaying, a midnight 1~~1 purse snatch , a pair of ~
rooftop burglars. and a
bomb threat-extortion plot
against the Ocean View •
School District.
Anyone who might have
information which could
help clear the mystery on
any one of these cases
should phone the Secret
Witness at 642-0700, or
write to : Daily Pilot,
Secret Witness, P .0. Box
790. Huntington Beach Ca.
(92648).
The cases. in summary. drc:
-The Jan. 30 cocktail
lounge killing of Kenneth
Aubry King, Huntington
Beach. He was shot after a
fight with four strangers,
two men and two women.
The killing took place at
th e Capri Cocktail Lounge,
406 Pacific Coast Highway.
in front of several wit·
nesses. The four strangers
sped away in a 1957 GMC
or Chevrolet half-ton
pickup truck . It was
described as a faded aqua
or light green color with
grey primer spots all over.
The man police believe
pulled the trigger was
described as long-haired
with a shaggy goatee, he
spoke with a western drawl
and wore a floppy mod cap
that said ''Angel'' across
the front. He was about
5'8" tall, weighed aboUtl50
or 160 pounds and liked to
drink blackberry brandy
-About midnight, Feb.
18, a young man atlachd
June Scott near her home
in the Greenbrook Tract of
Fountain Vallty. He
grabbed her purse.
dragg~ her throUMb Utt
street. th n tried to run her
down with his car •she sot
away
Polit'e des<'ri be the sus
peel as a male Caucasian,
about 5'10" or S'JJ " tall.
'
170 pounds. with shoulder
length, sandy-colored hair,
a moustache and a four·
inch full length beard.
In addition to cash and
other jewelry, the thief
took three expensive rings
described as: a five-carat
topaz; a clugter of 10 small
emeralds; a nd a diamond
~urrounded by eight small
sapphires in a figure-eight
shape.
-A pair of Tooftop
burglars hit several Hunt·
ington Beach s hops during
the pre-Christmas season~
following a common
operating method.
Police said the burglars
often enter a building
through a rooftop air vent
or unlocked s kylight. They
worked several downtown
stores, at weU as scattered
spots throughout the city;
taking either cash or
drugs ·
-Jn late November a
mysterious letter was sent
to the Ocean View School
District. t e lling ad-
ministrators five of the dis·
trict 's Huntington Beach
schools would be blown up
if the district did not pay
$250,000.
Hundreds of children
were evacuated a nd local
police as wen· as FBt
a•cnts scoured the ubools,
tumtng op nothing.
Thou1b nothing hap-
pened, a nd no money was
paldbthc FBI consldtrs the
bom threat a ~erious ex·
tortion plot and ll still ln-
vestlaatlna.
Anyone who has in-
formaUoSJ on this, or NIY or
the crhtttt llsted abo\'e, ts
ura9d to cootact the Secret
Wltn .
'
Farmln1 is on its way out in
Oranae County, even though the
• coun(y retains its third place
spot in agricultural production
among the state's counties,
members.of a panel at UC Irvine
agreed. ~
The panel, made up of Irvine
Company President Ray Watson.
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich and UC Farm Advisor
Harold W. Otto, said farming will
be phased out.
The demise of agricuJture in
the county was variously al·
tributed to high taxes and the
rost of water plus vandalism and
the simple fact that farming will
be a more profitable venture
elsewhere in California.
The Irvine Company, for ex-
ample, just had its best year and
recorded a $171 ,000 loss from its
agricultural operations. Watson
said.
Watson referred to the firm's
farmland as "lands in transi·
lion," that is, awaiting develop-
ment.
But while Jarming may be on
the way out, Diedrich believes a
good deal of open space can be
saved. Diedrich proposes a new
Police Seek
2 in County
K n ife Attack
Santa Ana police still have no
suspects in the throat-slashing
attack on a taxi-cab driver Satur-
day nigh't.
Marvin Johns. 38. of Santa
Ana, was listed in satisfactory
condition today at Mercy
General Hospital with multiple
cuts on his throat and neck.
A police spokesman said in-
vestigators are looking for two
young black men who fled from
the cab in southwest Santa Ana
after robbing and knifing Johns.
Johns told officers the men had
asked to be taken to an apart-
ment complex at 2701 W Mc Fad·
den Ave.
But when they arrived at the
destination, Johns said one of the
men put a knife to his throat and
demanded the cab's receipts.
The men took an undetermined
amount of cash , slashed the cab-
by's throat and escaped.
Police Probe
'Gris l y Rites
LA HONDA <U PJ) -Sheriff's
deputies are investigating the
possibie existence of a cultist
group which uses the severed
heads of animals in rituals con·
ducted deep in the Santa Cruz
Mountains.
Assist .. nt San Mateo County
Sheriff Eugene Stewart said that
local residents reported finding
the headless carcasses of pets in
recent weeks, including dogs,
cats and geese.
Carpenter Daniel Sampson's
discovery of his dead pet goat -
its head carefully severed and
missing -fed the rumor that· a
band of cultists was conducting
grotesque rituals in remote
backwoods hideaways.
form of zoning in which de-
velopers trade the develQpment
right& on one piece of property
for higher densities on another.
The result or that approach
would be lower taxes on the open
space land because the develop-
ment rights would be taken
away.
Diedrich acknowledJed thnt
his approach would result in de·
velopments of condominiums,
town houses or other cluster
housing rather than single-
family detached homes. .
The property owner would still
own the land without develop-
ment rights and could use it
economically for recreation or
farming, Diedrich said.
Taxes on Irvine Company land
totalled $12 million last year.
Watson said. Taxes on the com-
pany's farmlands totalled $3.4
million.
In addition to the high tax load,
Watson said , farmers face com-
plaints from residents over the
smell from chicken manure used
as fertilizer. Rising cost of farm
equipment was another factor
Watson cited.
''The point now is that farming
ser ves as a productive, though
very difficult, interim land use,
with the landowner looking
ahead toward future develop-
ment and enhancement of his
properties," Watson said.
··Farming today represents his
investment in that ultimate pro-
mise. That is the carrot that
leads him. Take it away and he's
gone."
Diedrich was critical of the
Williamson Act, a state l aw
which sets farmland aside in a
lower-taxed agricultural pre-
serve. Land in the preserve ccin-
not be developed.
Diedrich said the Williamson
Act kept the county from getting
open space land. Without the act,
he said, landowners would have
been forced lo deal with the coun-
ty because of the pressures of
high taxes.
Watson, however, argued that
the value of the act was in giving
developers enough time to plan
their developments well.
The discussion Friday night at
UCI was sponsored by the
Orange County Environmental
Coalition.
F r om P age A l
C REDIT ...
"The way they married me
off," Brudzynski said he and the
credit bureau figured out, ''was
that a computer program used to
eliminate double addresses for "junk' mail assumed that since
my mother and I had the same
last name and since we were li v-
ing at the same address, we had
to be married.
"I was seriously considering
that if they didn't correct the
mistake I would go to the
Domestic Relations Court and
ask the judge for an annulment,"
Brudzynski said with a grin. ''My
mother got kidded a lot at work
and I took qulte a bit of ribbing at
the office."
Brudznynski said errors
similar to his own experience
with the credit bureau are not un·
usual and could have serious re-
sults.
UPI Trlet> .... lt
Wayacard B aa
This Houston bus caused
quite a few s tares from
motorists after the driver
hooked a power pole guy
wire and took a skyward
route. The driver and his
lone passenger were quickly
rescued-
Anotlier Day
Of R ain 8ee11
Alo1ig Coast
I
A 40 percent chance of rain
Tuesday is predicted by the Na-
tional Weather Service.
The Pacific storm. which· has
dumped water on the Orange
Coast for four out of five days, is
then expected to move on. Fairer
skies and warmer temperatures
are promised for Wednesday
through Friday.
Gusty winds have pushed four
to seven-foot ocean waves and
small craft warnings have been
posted from Point Conception tc
the Mexican Border.
Sunday's respite from the rain
gave tbe coast's customary
flooded areas a chance to dry out.
Roads and intersections.general-
ly remained unflooded despite
the heavy downpour this morn-
ing.
Beach W a tc h
Meet Tonight
The third meeting of the new
Huntington Beach Neighborhood
Watch program will be held at 8
o'clock tonight, in the auditorium
at police headquarters.
A lecture and film on bunco
<swindle) techniques, and in·
formation on bunco gangs work·
ing Huntington Beach, will be
presented.
About 100 residents already
have volunteered to help local
police through the Neighborhood
W a tch program, but a
spokesman said at least 30 more
volunteers are needed.
Through Neighborhood Watcb,
residents in each part of the city
are taught how to spot criminal
activities. report them to the
police, and le nd a hand to dis·
tressed neighbors.
WARIMERS PAYS
Mariners Savings hos always paid
the highest interest legally possible.
Now your savings con be worth even
more at Mariners -o Big 7>;. % on
6-yeor certificates of $1,000 or more.
Not only con you make money at
Mariners, you c:on make friends too -
with o strong "hometown" savings
ond loon.
Sova at Mariners. Now It makes
more dollars ond sense!
Mariners Savi"-Q
and Loan 'bl~latlOn
I) re..,... a..r.-.i
W TClr,, .. DOVER• l>IP.WflORTltACH,CAU1.ftMO•l1U1 ... J.fOOO CllWllOClttl
IO'J4IAYSID DIU\'F.•~llTQACK,(AW,tJM9•11141 ... J.-.1~c--..i
P8.!0 SL Al 8t At H to\JI rv.ao. HiAL l!AO.. ("Alf~ _,740. tJUI \'Ill ,.,.
.,., lt'Vl:.Ml y M>ULl VA Jin• t.O~ Al't¢t:Ln. CALI'. «l04a. tJIJ10.S7 .... ,
\ . '
·Trustees to
By HILARY KAYE
Of W.. 0.lly ~-SUH
Suggested cutbacks that would
vrobiblt roughly 2.000 Newport.
Mesa children from rldlng school
buses and would hall the dis-
trict's special reading program
In grades one through three will·
be considered Tuesday night by
~chool trustees.
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Dispict Lrusteea plan to apend
several more meet~a debating
which areu to cut m order to
balance the proposed l9'7S·76
budget which currently shows a
$2,396,212 deficit. Cuts are belng
planned in the event thecdistrict 's
proposed 'revenue increase fails
at the polls May 27.
ine, sch~uled for 7:30 p.m. in
Costa ~esa City CouncU cham· bers.
Tr)&stees have been told they
could save about $100,000 ii they
extend the $ludents' ~g dis-
tance by one-half mile. This
would mean that about 2,000
school children who currently
ride bus~ to school would have
Today's a .....
N.V. Steeb
. MONDAY, MARCH. 10, 1975 N TEN CENTS
to walk or find a lternate private
transportation.
A spokesman for the district
explained that in examining the
proposal, trustees also will look
at safety hazards at about a half·
dozen schools near dangerous in·
tersections.
Another $20,000 in transporta-
tion costs could be saved if
a thletic bus trips were limited to
team members, trustees have
~en told.
The cutback would mean that ,
school bands. pep squads,
c heerleaders and subsidized
rooter buses would no longer be
available.
If the existing primary reading
<See CUTBACKS, Page A2)
N. ·Viets Attack
8 American Missionaries Trapped
From Wire Services
SAIGON, South Vietnam -
Tank-led North Vietnamese
forces blasted into the central
highlands capital of Ban Me
Thuot today. battling defenders
house lo house and trapping eight
Americans in the city, field re-
ports said.
The Communists also overran
a district town 30 miles from Ban
Me Thuot. the second in the
highlands in three days.
In Cambodia. rebel gunners
fired 58 rockets and artillery
rounds into the Phnom P enh
airports, damaging two domestic
commercial airliners and killing
five persons and wounding 22,
authorities in Phnom Penh said.
The c~mpaign to oust President
Lon Nol also picked up steam.
Seven or the eight missionaries
reported trapped by the North
Vietnamese in Ban Mc Thuol
were identified today.
ls11 't Soiling F1111?
The Christian and Missionary
Alliance said five of the mis-
s ionaries were attached lo lhe Al ·
liance. It identified them as Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Phillips, of
Bloomington, Minn. and Mr. and
Mrs . Norman Johnson of
Hamilton. Ont
Crewman carries loose equipment from 24-
foot s loop, Dingo, which was washed
ashore on Balboa Peninsula Saturday
while maneuvering for start of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's Gold Cup Regatta.
Skipper Dave Anderson said boat was
swept into surf when it was hit by squall
and auxiliary e ngine failed. Anderson and
two crewmen escaped jnjury~ ~oat was
hauled back into water with minor
damag~. For details on the regatta, see
Page AlO.
It said its fifth missionary,
Mrs. A9119' tliteMll of Bly,
Oregon, is the wife of another
missionary taken captive in Ban
Me Thuol in a Communist of-
fensive in 1962. Her husband has
not been heard from in the 13
years since . 5 Men Held Coast Civic Leader
In Robbery H J JJ D d
Of Gre hound Uut.Ueston ea
A spokes man for the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phillips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
have taken refuge in the re·
sidence .or the American
Y Donald I . Huddleston, a harbor Newport Ban
On Palmis try
·Faces Court
Five pa sse ngers on a
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun·
day night by five men who used a
shotgun to press home their de·
mands.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the five passengers
were robbed of cash, watches
ahd assorted jewelry while the
driver of the Santa Ana to San
Juan bus drove on. apparently
unaware of the activity behind
him.
Deputies said the five men, all
identified as off-duty Marines
from Camp Pendleton, le~ the
bus at San Juan and boarded
a nother bus bound for the Marine
base.
Camp Pendleton Marines,
a lerted by she riff's officers, sur·
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the five suspects
into custody
Marine personnel today re·
fused to identify the arrested
men pending further investiga-
tion of the robbery. They con-
firmed that the five suspe<:ts are
Camp Pendleton Marines.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recov~r~ and
will be returned to the v1ct1ms.
Sheriff's officers said charges
of .assault with a deadly weapon
will be added to allegations of
armed robbery in view or the
statements by several victims
t.hAt they were beaten during the
course of the hold up.
VA.N TO CASH
·'The ad produced a good
·response and 1 sold my van to one
otthe people who read the ad and
called.··
That's the success story relat-
ed by the Newport Beach man
~ho placed this ad in the Daily
rUbt.
'69 FORD Econol.Lne, 6
cyl, slick, 11295.
Call xxx·xxxx
If yoo bav a car or van you'd
Ulce to convert to cash, call
642-5678. Pul a few words to work
ror you. in the Dally Pilot.
area civic leader for almost 30
years, died Sunday. He was 70.
Memorial services have been
set for 2 p.m . Tuesday at St. An·
drew's Presbyterian Church, 600
St. Andrews Road, Newport
Beach.
Mr. Huddleston is survived by
his wife, Velma; two daughters.
Mrs. L.J . Fillmon of China Lake
and Mrs. Jeffrey Grimm of Santa
Rosa; and a brother, Leland of
Kansas.
A city councilman in South
Gate in the 1930's, Mr. Hud -
dleston came to Newport Beach
in i946, when he began the lend·
ing and property development
business he bas operated since.
Mr. Huddleston's record of
civic activity includes past
service as president and
treasurer of the Newport Harbor
Boy's Club. He served on the
Boy's Club board of directors for
25years.
He was a former president of
<See LEADER, PageA.2)
O.lly Pilot Stall Photo
SUCCUMBS AT 70
Civic Leader Huddleston ·
A la\\SU1t fil ed by the plaintiff
with the stated intention of test-
ing the constitutionality of the Ci-
ty of Newport Beach·s ban on
fortune telling will be tried Sept
29 in Orange County Superior
Court.
Presiding Judge Robert A
Banyard set the trial date for the
action filed against the city by
Barney Marino, a fortune teller
and palm reader who identifies
himself a s a Romany Gypsy.
Porks Proposal
Marino a lleges in his action
lhat the city ordinance which
bars him from telling fortunes is
uncons titutional and unfairly
bars him from practicing what is
part of a Rom any gypsy's re·
lig1on.
Costa Mes a face::. the same test
in a laws uit filed by self declared
gypsies Diane and Alfred
Stevens who are due in court
March 14 fo r pretrial action on
their lawsuit.
Commissioners Eye
West Newport Bid Judge H . Walter Steiner will be
asked by the Stevens couple to
sign a restrain in~ order that will
·allow the m to practice fortune
telling and pa 1 mis try pending
trial of the issue raised by the
city's ban on such practices.
West Newport citizens wlll
bave another chance to speak out
· Tuesday night when Newport
Beach Parks, Beaches and
Recreation commissioners take
a Cinal look at a plan that would
bring an oasis of greenery and
recreatioh to West Newport.
Commissioners will decid~
whether or not to recommend ci-
ty council approval to the West
Newport Master Plan following a
public hearln1 set for 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the Newport Beach
City Councll chamben.
The plan catl1 for the old
Pacific Electric riaht·of-way
runnlnJ alona Pacific Coaet
Hlchway to be develop4'd lnto a recruUon complex, complete
with etbletlc courts, bUc trails
and play fitlds.
All homeowners groups in
West Newport already have been
1 advlaed of the hearing, and
• I
·anyone wishing to comment on
the plan will be allowed to speak,
city aides said.
If l\PProved Tuesday, the
master plan would then be
forwarded to the city council for
final approval.
The entire right-of-way strip,
fro01 the Santa Ana River to 56th
Street. would ~ landscaped and
DOW CLOSES
ON PLUS SIDE
rilled wltb recreation facilities. NEW YORK <UPI> -ThE'
No cost estimates have yet stock market, shaking off ear ly
been given to the master plan. profit taking, closed higher today
The improvem~nls would be in a late rally and accelerated
mlde ln several phases. trading on the New York Stock
The ficsl developments1 EH
already budgeted fl>r tile 19'75-:7t ,.._ ,.T·.,..,.-n.,..,.,
fiscal fear, would include a laq • av{ ll loff ;!~ 03 Wints
on the east end ol tbf ~ pre-t>O ar er, 1...a dffi'-paratlons for a handba toutt at to 7 .13. dvnce .,. .......
59lb Street, lnlUal blke~ tills and
rest rooms at Oran1e~
Commlssloners also
< e WEST. Page )
I
representative in the still uncap-
tured part of the city, but that the
Johnson couple had fled their
home and their whereabouts is
unknown.
The Alliance said two other
missionaries trapped in Ban Me
Thuot are Mr. and Mrs. John
Miller of Houghton, N.Y .. work-
ing for the Wycliffe Bible
translators .
Also trapped in the city were a
U.S. Embassy representative,
Paul Struharik, three Canadians,
an Australian and a Filipino
family. .
Jn Washington. meanwhile.
both the Democr.atic and
Republican leaders of the Senate
today called for the removal of
the government of President Lon
Nol.
1984 Arrives!
Ma11 'Married' to Mother
UPI Telephoto
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Attorney Brudzynski
Union Sees
More Layoffs
At Douglas
Officials of th e striking
machinists union t9day predicted
additional layoffs this week al
the McDonnell Douglas Corporu
ti on.
Ivan Lynch, president of thl'
International Association of
Machinists Lod{{c 720. said lht•
1,000 aerospace workers laid off
Friday will be followed by more
cutbacks this Wednesday and
Friday.
Meanwhile. the IAM newslet
ter reported workers would no
longer receive their $40-a-week
strike benefits begmrung April I
The report said the benefits are
costing $700,000 a week, and the
union's fund would soon be
depleted.
He said he did not know 1r a re·
ported 5.000 figure was accurate,
but he added the layoffs could in·
elude som e engineers and pro·
ressional employes at the firm's
Huntington Beach plant.
The JAM . with 19,000 workers
nationwide, including 7,000 in
Southern California and 1,500 in
.Huntington Beach, has been on
.strike since Feb. 10.
Friday, 1,000 members of the
United Auto and Aerospace
Workers were placed on lwo-
1week .. furloughs'' at the Long
Beach plant because of a
shortage or IAM-produced parts
used there to manufacture DC 9
and DC 10 aircraft.
The company has declined
comment about the layoffs, ex-
ceptto confirm the l .OOO flgureon
Fl"iday. A Mc Donnell Dougl•s
apq e:smao dfd •Y th lt t.-~ Beach ph1Qt ii l d n-
dellt Oli lA ·m ahuf actured parts
than.e1ne oU.er f acUiUe3.
L')fttlr sa1d today a. f cderal
• mediator tus r e t&rrned to
Washington after meetJng with
bo~ stdls. and ho ~Xl)Ccted to
COLUMBUS, Ohio <UPI)
For Richard Brudzynski , George
Orwell 's world of "1984" -a not-
so-futuristic novel predicting a
dictatorial societ y of automa-
tons -has a rrived. He was
formally married to his mother
by a computer.
Brudzynski, a lawyer. was told
by a Cleveland credit bureau he
had indeed married his mother.
Flore nce Brudzynski, and, to
make matters worse. was pre-
sently employed as a stockboy at
a machine shop after previously
working as an attorney. "
.. , wasn't expecting any sur·
prises," Brudzynski said of h\s
"spur-of-the-moment" visit to
the credit bureau ... , filled out an
application form to see my file in
about a minute, and this woman
came back with a computer prin·
tout with scads of numbers which
she reviewed very quickly.'·
Brudzynski. 30, a hearing ex-
aminer for the stale of Ohio, was
working for a Cleveland law firm
and, ironically, also served as co·
chairman on a n American Civi:
Liberties Union committee in-
ves ligating the impact of
technological innovations on civil
liberties.
The ACLU group called itself
··The 1984 Committee.··
Brudzynski said he asked the
clerk at the credit bureau what
alJ the numbers meant.
··she pointed out one set of
numbers which when translated
said l was presently employed as
a stock boy -a job I had held six
or seven years ago when I was
stall in school.
""The next line. s he s aid.
showed that r was currently mar-
ried. I was really surprised
becaus e I h ad just become
engaged but il was ::.upposed to
be a secret between my girl and
mvself. Then she told me I was
1 ma rried to Florence Brudzynski,
who happens to be my mother!"
Brudzyn s ki said he was
··s hocked . s urpri sed and
amused ··
<See CREDIT, Page A2)
Coast
W eathc."r
Partly cloudy Tuesday
..... ith sli ghtly cooler days,
according to the weather
service. Hig hs 55 at the
beaches, 60 inland. Chance
of rain 80 percent tonight
decreasing to 40 percent
Tuesday.
INSIDE TODA\'
The Central Intelligence
Agency once hired Mafia
gunmen to attempt assas.rina·
hon of Cuban Premier Fidel
Castro. articles pubbshed to-
dayall~ged. Story, PageAf
Index
' I
.,
\
Richard V. Simon, 33, is
now working as .director of
community relations for the
Coast Community College
District, a $27,000-a-year
position created four years
ago but left vacant until
now. Simon previously
worked for a Sherman Oaks
P,Ublic relations firm.
Pair Arrested
On Vice Rap
In N e wport
Newport Beach vice officers
arrested a 24 -year-old Tustin
woman over the weekend on
charges of soliciting prostitution
after they placed an order with a
radio dispatched massage
service.
Officers booked Patricia Ann
Michael, of 1777 Mitchell St., on
the soliciting charge. Officers
also booked her male companion,
Thomas Steven Gately, 23, of the
same Tustin address. Charges
against him relate to the alleged
possession of marijuana in an
automobile.
Detectives said they placed a
call late Saturday to a Los
Angeles business speciali zing in
out call massage. Within IO
minutes. it was alleged that the
woman and the man described
by officers as her "protector" ar·
rived in a motel room in
Newport
Officers. who did not disclose
the location of the motel, alleged
that the worn an offered to
perform diverse sex acts for
prices ranging from $30 to $65.
The massage, they added, cost
$35.
The two arrestees were held in
lieu of $SOO bail apiece.
Police Seek
N e w Leads in
J e w e l ry H eist
Few new leads have developed
in the probe of a $2,000 heist
Saturday of a Newport Beach
savings and loan office at the
hands of two grubby gunmen.
Detectives said they have de-
veloped artist composites of the
two bandits who s truck Western
Federal Savings at 2744 E. Coast
Highway shortly before closing
time.
The men each approached a
teller window. tossed paper
sacks on the counter. produced
pistols and demanded cash.
Police said the two men said
little during the five-minute
holdup. other than to demand the
money from each employe's cash
drawer.
One gunman was described as
having a two-day growth of
beard. The other had hair which
witnesses said was greasy. Each
appeared to be in his mid 20s and
stood about five-feet, 10 inches
tall, witnesses ~aid .
ORANGE COAST "
DAILY PILOT
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Robert N . Weed
Pt'f"\1otn• •nf P·u~•stwf
Jack R. Curley
v11,.. P'"''a-nt tfnd C...n«•t ..,_.,,..,
Thoma\ Keevil
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Charles H Loos Richard P. Nall
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" •
Spokesmen for the state
coastal commiasion today an·
nounced the settlDe of four public
}learings, includin1 two on the
Orange Coast, cm the California
coast master plan unve.ile:d late
last week.
The hearings, au scheduled tor
dates in May, will include one in
Huntington Beach City council
chambers May 9 and another on
May 16 at San Clemente's com-
munity clubhouse.
The other two bearings will be
on May 7 at the Torrance Civic
Center and oo May 14 at the Long
Beach Harbor Department build·
ing~ ... ..--
The starting times for each or
the sessions set to examine the
document will be the same for
all-1 :30 p.m., continuing to 6
p.m·. After a dinner break
testimony will resum~ at 8 p.m
and end at 10:30 .
The document, which was or-
dered by voters when they ap-
proved the Coastal Initiative in
1972, sets forth widespread plan-
ning goals and development
criteria for a strip averaging five
miles wide along the entire state
coastline.
Spokesmen for the slate agen-
cy said that several thousand
copies have already been mailed
out to interested entities and in·
dividuals, and that a limited sup·
ply of the documents will be
available Thursday at the re·
gional coastal commission of·
fices at 666 E . Ocean Blvd., Suite
3107, in Long Beach.
The document places strong
emphasis on public ownershiµ
and access to coastal recreation
land and places strong emphasis
on a widespread use for recrea-
tion purposes as well as en-
couraging development only in
existing areas where the coast
has given way to construction.
Last chapters of the document
still are being heard by regional
commissions. most notably an
element which would put the
teeth into the coastal plan.
That seg ment, known as
Powers, Funding and Govern-
ment, has yet to be reviewed by
the South Coast regional com·
mission. It sets up provisions for
enforcing the principles in the
state plan and Jays out an even-
tual transition of control back to
local governmenL
Once the bearings have con-
cluded OD the m •t.e.r state..4ocu-ment , it will be Hnt to the
California Legislature for debate
and Possible approval.
Coast Pl<mt
Thief Busy
A fast.working pilferer struck
at six separate doorsteps in the
Harbor View Homes area of
Newport B eac h over the
weekend. purloining potted
plants with a total value of
several-hundred dollars.
Police were s wamped with
calls for a lime from residents of
three streets who found that their
doorstep decorations had been
taken.
The victims, police said. in-
cluded:
James G. Horn, 1836 Port
Stan_hope, a loss of $40.
-Russel K. Wilson. 1842 Port
Stanhope, $40.
-Robert T. Wall, 1951 Port
Bishop Circle, $57 .
-Leonard W. Mc Null. 1848
Port Renwick, $15 .
-Robert L . Burke. 1935 Port
Bishop. $50.
-George B. Smith. 1943 Port
Bishop, $100
O.lly PllM ~•••telly ltl~.-ICoehlof'
Freeway Flowering
Looking a bit like some giant, surrealistic flowers, steel sup-
port columns for interchange that will connect Newport and
Corona del Mar Freeways rise out of ground. Construction
site is near Bristol Street in Costa Mesa.
f 'rom Page A l
DOUGLAS. • •
return soon for more meetings.
"We established our positions
for sure, and kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
of the meetings.
The mediation was asked for
by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satellite
launchings at Cape Canaveral.
About 200 IAM workers
employed by McDonnell Douglas
are stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Fro• Page AJ
LEADER. • •
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce and was a member of the
Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club for 3(f
years.
Mr. Huddleston was an elder at
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church and sat on the president's
council at Chapman College.
He was a member of the
Americanism Committee of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District and held memberships
in the Seafaring Masonic Lodge
and the Irvine Coast Country
Club.
He was active in Amigos Vie-
JOS , United Fund drives and
other civic activities.
Mr. Huddleston's family has
suggested memorial contribu·
lions lo the Heart Fund.
FromPage AJ
WEST ...
Guard Foils
.Westcliff
Masked Man
The ski-masked mugger
operating in darkened com-
mercial sections or Newport
Beach's Westcliff area failed in
his latest robbery attempt over
the weekend.
A security guard checking
businesses near the scene ap-
parently startled the masked
man who uses a club for a
weapon. The mugger and an ac-
complice fled before the heist
was completed.
The lal4'at. o( two recent inci-
dents took place before dawn
Saturday as Joseph Arthur
Kaleb, 31, of Newport Beach left
a r estaurant at 1617 Westcliff
Drive and prepared lo drive
home.
Kaleb said the mugger ap-
proached his car. banged on the
roof and steering wheel with a
short club and demanded Kaleb's
money.
At that point, the security
guard appeared in the area and
the victim heard someone shout,
"Let's split." The assailant then
fled the scene.
Earlier in the week, the same
thug accosted a man laking a late
night walk in the same area.
That job succeeded, and netted
S25 from the fri.Rhtened victim.
2 Die in Cr ash
SAN RAFAEL (UP[) -Two
men were kiJJed and two women
critically injured in the weekend
crash of a single-engine am-
phibious plane near the· Marin
County Civic Center, the sheriCC's
office reported Sunday.
. ' Farintng ls on lta Y!_q out ln
Orange County, even ~b the
counfy retains its ttllrd place
~pot ln aaricultural production
among the s t ate'• counties,
members ol a panel at UC lr\'ine
agreed.
Tbe panel, made up of lrvine
Company Preaident Ray Watson
Orange Coun'y Supervisor Ralpli
Diedrich and UC Farm Advaot-
Harold W. Otto, uld farming will
be phased out.
The demise of agriculture in
the county was varioU5ly at-
tributed to high taxes and the
cost of water plus vandalism and
the simple fact that larmina will
be a more profitable venture
elsewhere in California.
The Irvine Company, for ex-
ample, just had its best year and
recorded a $171,000 loss from its
agricultural operations, Watson
said.
Watson referred to the firm's
farmland as "lands in transi-
tion," that is, awaiting develop.
ment.
But while !arming may be on
the way out, Diedrich believes a
good deal of open space can be
saved. Diedrich proposes a new
form of zoning in which de-
velopers trfide the development
rights on one piece of property
for higher densities on another.
The result of that approach
would be lower taxes on the open
space land because the develop-
ment rights would be taken
away.
Diedrich acknowledged that
his approach would result in de-
velopments of condominiums,
town houses or other cluster
housing rather than single-
family detached homes.
The properly owner would still
own the land without develop-
ment rights and could use it
economically for recreation or
farming, Diedrich said.
Taxes on Irvine Company land
totalled $12 miJlion last year,
Watson said. Taxes on the com·
pany's farmlands totalled $3.4
million.
In addition to the high tax load,
Watson said, farmers face com-
plaints from residents over the
smell from chicken manure used
as fertilizer. Rising cost of farm
equipment was another factor
Watson cited.
"The point now .b that farming
serves as a prodacUve, though
very difficult, interim land use,
with the landowner looking
ahead toward future develop·
From Page A l
CUTBACKS
program were to be eHminated,
the school district could save
$250,000.
Jean Harmon, administrative
assistant to the superintendent,
said the district wide program, in
operation for the past two yea.;s.
is "an attempt to make sure that
every child can read before he
gets out of the third grade."
The program involves pouring
extra teachers and
paraprofessionals into grades
one, two and three to keep class
sizes small and insure maximum
reading instruction.
Also Tuesday, trustees will re·
ceive the first presentation by
dlstrict teachers concerning
1975-76 salary proposals.
. :
I' f
' • I
~.
ment and enhancement or h~
properties,•• W.atso,d.
"Farming today esents b~
investment in that t.imate pro,
mise. That is the carrot that
leads him. Take it aw~ and be).
gone." . .
Diedrich waa critical of the
Wllliaiuson Act, a state law
which sets farmland aside in a
lower·taxed agricultural pre-
serve. Land in the preserve can ..
not be developed.
Diedrich said the W-lllianuon
Act kept the county Crom getting
open space land. Without the act,
he said, landowners would have
been forced to deal with the coun-
ty because of the pressures of
high taxes.
Watson, however, argued that
the value of the act was in giving
developers enough time to plan
their developments well. .
The discussion Friday night at
tJCl was sponsored by t he
Orange Courlty Environmental
Coalition. ·
Tapes Show
Oswald Told
Truth-Author
WASHINGTON <UPI) -An
analysis of tape recordings
shows Lee Harvey Oswald was
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about
their knowledge of John F. Ken-
nedy's assassination, a former
Central Intelligence Agency or.
ficial said today. ·
"I don't know the name of the
man who pulted the trigger,••
author George O'Toole told a
news conference called to in.
troduce his book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he even
know if the "real" assassin is
still at large.
But the Warren Commission
which investigated the crime, he
said, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Oswald and saying he acted
alone -because the climate wa~
so volatile in the country at the
time.
He ~lied for a new con-
gressional investigation of the
case, saying his probe indic~es
there was a conspiracy.
Gunman Robs
N e wport Man
A leasing corporation E!x-
ecutive s urrendered his wallet
containing $650 in cash late Sun-
day to a gunman lurking in a
parking lot of a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Police said Eugene Marcus
Armistead, 59, of Newport
Beach, said that he exited his J;ar
on Coast Highway shortly be(Qre
9 p.m. As he walked toward ~he
entrance, he suddenly felt pte
barrel of a pistol pressed agajpst
his back.
The gunman demandfd
Armistead 's wallet, then ordered
his victim to walk away.
Armistead, who managed a
. glimpse of the mugger, went into
the restaurant to phone police,.
scheduled to discuss a proposed
city policy that would allow
private commercial interests in
public parks.
The policy would allow such
uses as food concessions ,
restaurants or perhaps a tennis
complex, all privately run within
city parks .
~ARIMERS PAYS
Low•i1~ome Home s r
Fair Housing Unit
Sues City on Zone
The Orange County Fair Hous-
ing Council and a group or Irvine
residents have sued th~ city, con-
tending the zone change allowing
development of the Irvine ln·
dustrial Complex-East violates
state laws.
The suit, ti led late Friday. at
tacks the lack or )ow-income
housing in Irvine.
Residents tiling the complaint
included Wesley and Judy Marx,
Dorothea Fry, Florence Fry.
Leon Napper and Angelo and
Marilyn Vassos
The suit was the second filed
•«•inst development of the
2.058-acre planned industrial
complex. The complex is planned
between the south end o( El Toro
Marine Corps Air Statioo and the
Santa Ana F'reeway.
State Jaw requires that 7.on~
changes be consistent with city
general plan~.
The s uit cherie~ thal thc zone
C'hange wlll bring In ~•.ooo
workers who will not be able to
afford to live in the city, said
Wesley Marx, who also filed the
first suit against the complex.
The hous ing element in
frvine's general plan sets a goal or providing housing in Irvine for
those employed in the city. .
The plan also notes the lack of
low-income housin1t tn the clty,
Marx said.
Workers toming into the city,
but being foTced by economics to
llve elsewhere, makes the zone
t""hanee inconsistent with the
general plan. the suit ~teoda.
Cl\>' Attorney James Ericbot\
could not bt contacted thbmorn-
lng to comment on the new 1ult.
The first suit ril~ by Marx at-
tacked lhe environmental Impact
r~port filed for the industrial de·
velopment on much the same
1trounds as the new suit-lack or
housing tor the workers who
would be employed by the firms
In the tndustrtal complex.
Marlnera Savings has always paid
the highest Interest legally posslbl•.
Now your savings con be worth even
more at Mariners -o Big 1'1• % on
6-yeor certificates of $1 ,000 or more.
Not onty co n you mak e money at
Mariners, you con mok• friends too -
with o strong "hometown" savings
and loan.
Save at Mariners. Now it mokn
more doltOra ond sen,el
, .......... ~
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V\JonJlktedswsagenwerk, loses money on every car ll sells 1n the 1' ~·eao(~ ~ 11 .,11 1,• -. ~ ~~~112 !~ t 11t w· .. .,.,, Ml9 71 ~. Vt tales ...,,;._ • .-.. ~ Mtl#Cp 2 OJ ¥,_ Ftddeo Co •11 1'• • 11,
• • A...-. l~ 1 "' lA-+ ~ IM1IGp ol 1 IJ.;> ~alCo I S 1 11'•
TOMAKEMONEYVWwouldhave toboostthe price of j ~~rM·~· I~~··.. p~"""?.~ :! ~·11· ~::..~1 1 :1~10~~ :~!-;· ~~
lts cars dramatica lly, a thought anathema to anyone in·-~~':i'1Yt l 21~ ~!t: ~ ~b~~~1: : ·~ :~~ ~ ~::,;-;e,1;0 3 : ~t:: ... ~·
\IOlved tn the marketing or VWs in a sever~ly disrupted car it.01Jt~~11~t~ 115t .!~.·,· rom• 1u s ,. "• Fta ~ .. on lO • 1s s~ •• •o
market. AmC>w1 v,t • 4"' + YI. 'P1 s · 1 •1 -1 ~=~~~~ 1~ "J ;~,. l, Th j f AmElcPw1 • 116 lt~o-\') Gft/':" Cit " "/1 II~+ 11' F11Ytbrd 60 • 11 11', • \, e pr Ce 0 lhe Venerable beetle already has gone Up AF..-nll'I' 14 4 IA S~ ... <: r ~~I .'. it i~+ ·~ rtd Ftn<ICO 7 2 l\. '"'
• rnore than 50 percent tn the last two years, and the cheapest ~ ~tl'.lg . ;i 1:::= ~ ~:n ::1•,•r :,g ·; ~ J:t! ~ ~~.~~J,•~ 2~ •• ~ 2: •• ,; :~
VW today, including some of the basic eqwpment which :~~s' ~ s ~ :~.t:-~ c.n ou 1 ... HI w 111, ... .,. F••tro•CP ~ s 1s 11 •·
· used to be st andard anyway, ts well over $3 ooo • Gn f," '°. 1M> l' -._ g11,~:~ Hg : 1:~ !:,..-; ~: ~:~:~ed1 ~~ ~ ,n :~'·
Therefore. VW is countmg on its two n~w products Rab-~'::o~J:J .~ ~= ~ g:~~~ .C: 1~ ·~ ~~.;: ~~l ~~~·lo ~ ;!; ::;:
bit and Scirocco. pl us the year-old Dasher, to pull it out' or,.. ~Ho.nt0 ... ,.l01mt4 ,.., 'l~ + .~.. C11uni M19 4 11 , .. + .,.. F$118cs I 10 14 81 43>, •• l t Th ..., ... n .... Ctlln:So .ISO • 108 s~. ~. Fll Mlt4 2• l 104 I• '• Sah eS rU · be COmpany alSO needs SOme help (tom the eX• ~=~~~ ~ m ~t+ .~ C1IV Intl .. I J'/Q 1-.+ w ~:~";.,9:11; 1 ;~ ~!: :•
c ange rate et ween the dollar and the West German mark Am Motors 12 471 s v-.+ v. ~:~~ :~: :.·~ ~ ,:;,t.•·~ FsP•CP 1 32 1 xru 19 + .,.
VW.A. works on a credit basis with the German ~~~:1 s.2~ 1•1 3t~· ~ c.1.., 51ores J J ~:r~1~4~1: ~~ ~ ~
manufacturer by buymg marks at what it hopes ls an ad· ~~ote1~. 142• •,J5' 1•1:-: :.· ~::~:~.:~a ~~ l!i.~ !': Fs111e• uo • 2~ n .-••
t -0 ... nll • -• CLC Am W J 22 a"' .. "" FsW11C 1.7• 16 19 1• van ageous rate. • Am S\lld IO s IOS u ..... "-ClvClll 2 '°" '# 4 m-YI FtKnM I 10 10 10 ll"'1+1 'YO H Atn$tdpf 4\w .. S Sii?-Vi Clft1 Et 2 4' / T~4 7~ y, l'1M1er F 40 I ~ 144-+ Vo •. d u r ~ v E TO BUY forward ... says Stuart Perkins.. ~~s2f 1J 1n 3~ t 1 ~ ~lftlE:J' 11 • ,..,., llSV. • • F11nerSc 20 II 21 1"\+ ....
l>res1 ent o W.A "You say, the rate looks pretty good to-AlnUU..0101342 s1°"+ v. c.'::o~eo'.: 1) ~\T ~h:!:. ~ ~l:0~~~1 W: 1:: g:;; ~
day so let 's buy some marks. m other words, we stockplle !~l~I f.U r~ m:~ ~ Cluttl p lO 138 s•.-v. ~:~:.·.~~~ ~· ; 4.~ :!....+· ~ tb ATTr.831 O uttlP of I 17 9~ em • •O 46\•-\It CMI Inv Co 10 121 I~-~. Fltnla pt 4'n l.500 )J -"• "B , . .&m 'T wt 1111 111, , CHA F 09 Ft• EGo••I 9 18 2lv.+ ·~ ut, 'headmits,"ifwehadtogo intothe marketright •mW•lrM s 1J •'--V. CN•Pf'~J ~40 ~Y:. ~ F••GH ao ~ ..... ,..1. ·now. we would be in real trouble." !:'.'1,~ 1
1t .·. ,ro00 :34:~_· ... °'" 1n 31b ... 11\'o-"• Ftif>w1' 1 9s 9 112 21~~ (• "' •• .,. CNA Lawin 8 I'>+ Yo FlitPwL I 36 9 182 'l'.!-11•+ 1• Perkins looks for an upturn m the rate before too long. "A~'ron°' 1 ~·4 11001 1162~ • c NALp1 2 10 s a\. F1.s1 .. 1 iv. 3 12 22 ~ 1• ··~ "' .,. CO. t St G • •2 qt v. Fluor Cp 20 12 29'1 2Aft-. ~. "We're JUSt going to have to ride 1l out a httle bit In the Ames5t 10c1 • " • .,, •• es1~011 1~ : 1s "• F1uor'4lp•, J t.J + ~ fi J 1 . t t Jl t h '. Ametek In 1 7 36 14'.+ II. CslSGol I 83 10 20~ + v, FMC Cp 92 • 191 IS nab ana ysti~, wuesm0us a a 'tcostts pro ect t e orgamzat1on ~~n1~1~ '! )r. :~~::\. couc.ou 30,. lt4 ,8.~. ,. ~~t~.2io 5 ..c1: ~t ~ we ave Jn e . . ne Can pU a price tag On 20 years Of AMP In' 3127 117 ~>1-h ~:.,.eg~ ~2~ 14n 1~'•: ~~ FooleCB 80 10 ) 8 -''I
developing a fairly good organization So we have taken the =: ~ ~ ,J !:: .. '• eo•eco tnd"•• 10 3~• •• ~~~d~K3 ~1~ ~ ~~'.;! ·~ J)OSltlOn that We are prepared to ride With the punches In Or• Amrep Corp 6 15 l'• + 'to ~:ii:~ .. ~I~ m 2!,,; ~: FrM pl 1 80 141 24'/H "4
d AmSIM 1 AO 2 ?l 301 • + 1/1 Co I F 1S S • F tOBrn 31D 13 IS'llt + 'I• er to protect the organization " Ams1r of c.e 3 8'• 11 ns ood 3'MI+ '" FortHwd 48 12 1se 11i'lll+ .,.
Th h dd tfull "Of nl d th Amllf'O 3 20 • 2• 48~•-,,, Col Pwnn 40 IS 140 3••'1-~. FO\terWhl 1 1 31 'Jh-,,_ en ea s w1s Y course, you can o y o at Amce1 1n .31 • s• 1 v. g;ris~2i ! •3 19'~-•· Foaooro 601; xs1 19i..-~
Cor acertainperiod ofllme" . ~~\~; ·:~ :r~·."'.cowno1,v. 1r =~: ~ ~~:~~MM1 :1~":::> ~r 0~ ~~ Volkswageowerk still is reehng after a devastating •nc1erc11y 1 s 2s 2s:ft-"' gi0~2s: • 1~ 54t -14 Fruenut 1 80 9 ua 11• ,._.,.
f b k 1 k . AtlQellca .12 7 Xt9 1>112-~ Col Pl 1 to3 • Fuqu" lndu 6 241> c. + ~· year o cut ac s, unemp oyment, ands Y·h1gh losses. Ans111 e.o •1 • u m .. + "" Cots &t~';: 11 n 1t~-~ --o G-
LAST YEAR THE WEST German auto manufacturer ~~fi ~ ! ~~ :&-.-·t. ='~ 10 2U 1:~·' ~~e ~c:'fi : ::: ~::~ ~
lohst S80 m1Jhon on its worldwide operations. At the root of ~c0~~~ s ~ 1~~: ~ Combe 18011 11~ r.~~~~. g~~ P~~ ,J s •9: :~.,
t e decline is the huge cost ofrestyllng its entire image and ~~L..f!ce, ~ ,• l3
1'-_ ~ g::srv 11.11 • 4 42'\to o.m i.• 1 AO • •11 242."r:,!'1~·.
com mg out with such cars as the Sctrocco, Rabbit, and ~1r.4 ~ 31 2 n ~~i :g ~ 1°T ~ :;·~ g:='ft' ~t21i i.o .14"; :~
Dasher A mm1car named Polo probably will not be sent to t~1!~1 j,, 1~ ~~ , + v. cwe'l:2.t1 • 1~ Ilv. g:~~~ ·~: 1: ~ n_..: ~
the U s. t~~o e~58i 11 u~ 1~v·-'"" g:n~'l'.~ :: m m.-~ G•riou aa ' t ,,__ '"
The company spent at least S2 billion to dev.eJop its a ll·' ~1,!'~ ,·~~ 112 2!! 1J.:z_ ,_ ?;:.:Ed'~:: ~ 2m~ ~: &!~e~v.'..,1,'J ~ 1.> 1J...:. ~
I 1 t d t ( th Vw h -• "" ,.. v .,.. " .,. ComEd &wt. 4 I ',_ .._ GCA Corp S 24 4'11+ Vt t1ew meup, a comp e e epar ure rom every mg as ""'ees1 " 19 s .... ~ Colllw Ed rt ttu ,_32_3... Gem1n1 C•P .. u t¥t+ v.
stoodforsmcetherena1ssanceoflhepre·WorldWar IJbee· z~~111d: 2~~ 1;•1+ \It ~r.3\':~~1 I~ 11~·=~ g'j.'~;·~~::· :~ 1~!':+ \11
Ue by Hemrich Nordhoff ~r,mm~0•1 E" .. 4 20~ .".~',:-~ c.ornm s.t 1 1 1u se -"• Gno11011 80ll / xii lA..-~ Vw h d t h d ~ ~ "" 4 ' • .,. ~re 1 10' 20~ • GenATr I.~ I 4J l4~H ~
h as 1 c 1 ed thfe air cooled, rear-engine concept .for ~:::u%.2.~~ 12~ ~::~+"" eon ~ ~~ 21 1f~ ~:;; ~: ~~J.:: 2r; s ~~ 4~::: ~ i e water ·coo e . ront·engrne, front-whee l-dn ve Arms o. 921a n 2s.\. • eon. 1 20a 4 12 18,,. ~ Gn ~, 1 20 1 " u+.+""
transverse power plant, fathered by Prof Ernst Fiala, head ~~::C~r~n~ ~ s; H1..,".; ~ ~~, :g : 2! :;1,~ ~ ~11~~:1:: ~ 1~h: ~ or development for vw m Germany Arvlnlnd 3k 10 23 n •• ~ Con Ea JOI> s 421 ll'o-'• Gen Oynam i 2JI :l'I~-')
It clearly IS the biggest model switch m the history of !~~,\~ 4
1t: m:~\,. ~:~~f.PI~ ~ ~~h+ \• 8~F~11 :81'J 1~ft ~t!!2..!
carmakmg, downplaymg the venerable beetle and turning !1~~~ ~ :g ! ll ~~h! :+. ~}~:. .~! • 1~ ~"" ! i: ~~11 =1 ' ll 1~! ~
tnstead to an array of cars which a re notable' for forward· ~!1111<0~ 1~ 37 ,~ 41~ Con FrQt 10 • "' 121f>-~. Goh •n.tr '' s 4lA J ..... '• -,.. ""' • .,. Con$NG 2 11 t 14'2 U\lt+ \ 1 Gent::::!ft 3 • I I • Jookmg StylJng a.nd qWCk response On the highway ~::~,~~n\;1~ 3}~ m~;I~ Consm PW211 IOI Ult+ ~. g:~Mtll l ~I: l~ !1t ... .'~ The beetle, in f ac:t. may soon .be phased out of produc· •Rel) of »~ z90 so CollP of 4 16 1100 3so;,-n.. oe11Mo1 -13 1190 41tt+ ~
ti G It th d bull 1 B l AtRc pl 2 IO. •o S4\lt+ I ConPwr pl. • 3 sev. + "'" GnMolpl J.I. I so onm ermanya oge eran tonym raz1 . At1Rc11pr11 2 1~•1t ... sv. C.ont1A\.10tt 1o 329 wu v. GenMo1p1; s i.1•;.-•
VW th. 1.-th h' h t h l Th At tea c:Mp '3 14-'I Cntlc.t\ 1 IO 1 221 21"9 + ~ Gen Port .ilO 28 2St lit.+ ..; lDiu> e 1g cos was wort 1 • e new cars are ATC lr1< 20 5 111,. 7.,. -•• : er.ueoop eo 2 •• 1~ • 0 p .. 0v 1 •• ,, 290 , •• f . di ood · · W G B ... c eoo ot 1"'. 1100 12 • v -• m ~g a gc r~~eplion in est h erman~. utthe questi_on ~~11 i,:: ,t ~~ 4~:::: ~ c:on1tq, 2 60 11 130 J1~. "' GnReir 10o J " Yvi+ • •
remains: an ..... 1e company s ift its image m the m-Avco eoro 11 101 •~h ~ g::::~n~ ~ 1~f 3~~:= ~= ~~1.~ 1l ~ 3:'?-"'
dustrialized world. notably the Unit~ States? ~~~r,i> J: 1, ~ ~ ,.. ~ 9.J.11' ~~1l. 334 l~ G ' e 1eo 11 1048 W• •
VW IN GERMANY~ EtJJtOPE'S biggest automaker, •• ~~:.~~1: ~ '~! :': ~~'ffl~ 1~ ~=;~ gl~~Fl,'i~:'.~~ :r+:~
has just had a shirt Ln top management with Toni ~=:1~,~~ • 2! m:::v. e.on11nne1 1 ·, 1157 ,,,. ~~· 1•109 .! 10~ 1::;-; ~ Schumucker takl·ng over the reins from Rudolf Le1'din., 1n AvonPr t "'20 t6I Jt'l'o+ ~ c.ontr• O.I• ns 4" 171" • "' ......... Ko inc ... A 11,.. ••
t I 1971 Le·,u.... • . . &• Allee Olla.G II ,. llh • CoollUn Ue 218 2~ + ,,. Gel\~ ... , 110 • J s con ro since . i...uqs; r.an mto opposition over some of -· ·-=.n ~::. ~ 11~ >:~:-i. g:n~~"!.~ ~! r~ !o~.:1~
hispohcies, lncJudlnghisdrivetobwldan assemblyplantin l:~n~: • ~!: 1~"":; ~ ~lr!d' ~, 10~ ~"·-"'• 8!ic:~'td~101t:: ~ !1r:
the U S rJ:Jn r, 1f w1so 3~~: :~ Cool>Ro 12b l 30 24'.'t-~. Gett'(OI I SO 9 S9llSth+1~
Schumucker faces tough political and economic a.td o .o. • • n .-... ~~~.1,'g 4 ~~ 'tt;! ~ ~nrg~~ ~~ 4 x~ 1.u':::
challenges m molding a successfulfuture for VW ::::~1~ ~ 1ll :;~·: t! ~~,·~2i," 31~ s~~~1~ &::~·~~s: ~ ~~ ~~! ~
Back across tbe Atlantic, VW.A faces the equally tough = ~::,: m m~: :~ ~·~; 40 : M 1:~: ~ g:~~~.-1~: ~ ,~tl~ job of selling its new cars ma market which is more com· e.n9 ~,Pen 211 1•3,_= ~· cPc 1n11210 211 3,~. '111 G•11ttw 1 so11 20J JMll+...,
h d ""IP' .. P • " '' c r-1 60!I l 1t 38 + 1 01110s 1ncor S 503 7\4+ "" petitive t an ever an at pnces that are m an entirely di(-B11" Nv210 s IS 30•.i.-tn Crtd•I Ft .• 1 , ,. svu .,.. Gttai.on w11 11 ,.,..,.. ._
ferent league than that m which the VW was weaned and g:::T~~~ : 1~ ~~\·: ~: g:c~:~: t : l1 2~::-v. g:=• :t,.•r '1 1;~ l!~! := grew up a..11D11 o101> 2 101-i + v. CrouteH 70 1 46 17~ + v. Go1<1Wst Fe• / it 121'!+ '4
W 11 h I $ B•rd CR 29 II IO 1.,.. • CrO#ft Cork 10 ne 21 + "'" Gooclnc I 12 S 1l lo•\ • • l enoug peop e pay S3,500 to 5,000 a nd more tor a B•rnettM111 • l'I J +\fl erownz uo • 1.e lC»lt+ v. Goodyr 1 10 s ss1 ..-• ._ ....
V lk ? 8asKln< .0 J xl6 m+ V• CT5 Co .SO 7 36 U V>+ ~ GorOOnJ 32 6 4J II"'+-'11 o swagen . &•sin pt 21'! 1u 1oo 1w,. ~ cutllQ<tn 40 1 34 7~. ~ GoY10111 1 20 > 20 1<1 ....
SOME AUTO ANALYSTS think so Arvi'd Jouppi' who &•i.s Ml 20 i s• 1• + v. cumm1ns'1• s s2 11•0+ '" Goutdpl 'JS 32 11 ~ '• • 8<11esM pll . lO » C11mnl SOp1 110 ee>..+ l 4 Gr.tct W I 60 i> 21' ~•+ .\,
n1ns his own farm in Detroit. reports "The .outlook for VW t~~ :g :p ~::'Jr:! ~ ~~.~~o~ •~ ~ 1~~ • • .,... g~:~1 v1 :il ;: ::v~ ;t:
from here forward 1s better than 1t has been m the last three e.-1., L 1u1 a10 ~· v. curuu 10t1 1 w a+.-•• Gr•n• wr 101t s~+ '"'
years''
MARKET HIGHLIGHTS
NYSE Index
ASE Index
Dow-Jones Ind
S&P 500 Stocks
INDEXES
44.88
78 22
776.13
84.95
up
up
up
up
0.33
0 56
6.03
0 .65
Goi11erx flHd l..o"t-rs /\'t-1c \lork 15
/Host Acth.·e
NEW YO~I( (UPI) -The IS
.t<tl•t ~lock.s tr•ded on the New Stoel( EHNJnge Mo nday
R~r Sys Sony Corp
Evans Prod Alt1n Alum W$11\Qll\4! EiC Fluor Corp ~m•d• Inns Ff'd N.tl MIO US Ind R C A Kaulmlf\ &B Coca att NV Union c.ttll
TealT'On l(re'llf
win •12.•00 3Uf>()Q
l&J,400 3~ 600 2U~1:>
a22S •OO 20S,SOO 172,SOO 1111 •00
163,toO •• 1$).300 •••• IS0,100 •• ). 1't,SOO , .. ,200
AtnPrit-n11
10/tlo"f Acth:«>
,,
~t York
8•YSIG I eo 1 10 1..V.--114 Clll'UUWA, • , 21~ t" .,. Gr•yOro so • 21 9 ........ ""
B•VllkCO 32 I 4~ l't C11llerK 1 60 S U 2•' • GtAMI I &7d 160 2~+ i\ BearlnQS 32 ' 6S 10 + "' Cyclop I olOa. 3 2S ,, ••• I Gte•t A&P I 4~ 9., .... v. BHI l'ds 1212 x l9/ 19JM.-'" Cyorvs 1 40 s 32 7S -l'tt GIN Ir 1 IOd 11 IJ , ,,,.
B«kll'ln SO 14 211 32V.+ 'Ito -0 O--GtNN•k I 80 • S9 31 -t I
BtctonO 40 21 111 3' -1 O.monC 20 IS 420 IS•· '· GNN pl I 60 1 21 BeecnA 60Q • UI 11 + ~ O.nRiv IOI\ S 34 S"-\1 GIWiFtn 44 I 29) l!HI++ '4
8eller In .2t S lt9 I~+ 4' 0.n•Co 1 36 S 9 21~• GIWtU 2 910 I 2d 2S + V.
e.icoPt .500 • •3 14V. + v.. O.rt Ill l>09 8 9'I 14'. GrtW DI I 118 . la 11> -v.
Belden 1 20 s 4 U -l't Oerlllld pl 2 39 211 • Grn G•a 1 08 6 12 II~ llA BeldaH ] s I 5"' Del• Genre! 11 68o 22~·+ 1>.1. Grynd I 04• 9 x1o9 12~+ ~ Bell liwt I> 1'9 1S~ D•vcoC '1b ) 12 10~-It• Grortnd wl 32 I~ • 9em" CO 1 4 21 1W•+ V. O.~ pf •'" 110 46 1 Groller Inc St I~ Btnclla 1 1 IS J'1 + 'h O.'t1onH l>O 6 I>~ 111~ Grum.tn 1>11 l ltS I••/,• ~.
8•n4•X Df l 23 47~+ ... O.yPLI I "" 8 16 u I . '• GUcJ•d I 100 I I 9 ... .,..
Ben Cp f.u 4 32• 11"'-\'I CPL pf u•' 7240 110 Gu.trO MIQt 21> 4 + ~. 8tt\COl>t tv.. l20 i. O.PLpl1 70 ztSO 11 -2' 1 Gul!Ltle SO l)S I'.,_ 'l'o
8enG pl 4 lO. " fl-Ill'> OonWlr 40 ,l 14~ 11 .. \. G11llMtge RI 49 1~-;-•• Ben Sid Mtg , 11 4 OHrt 1 10 7 3S7 39 • ~. Gulf Otl 1 10 ~ IOI 2Ch o 8enQ08 10. I 1'9 3111-WI OtlP&L I 20 b 87 11111, \• Gutt AC S0o 2 1'3 l4111t + ,,_ 8tr•eY Pl'IO , U9 311+ + 1-Ott Mrtl 1 30 o S8 20•-110 GllR plA 20 2 19/.1-'14
BHI Proekt I '" ~ .. V. 0tlt1Aor 60 9 891 •Oh• lo Gii ApB 1 JO 10 Id • 8tlhSIHI 2• • sse 33 ..... ~ Otttt c lntnl ' 3~-,._ G11llSIV' 11 8 J28 ll' •• 'h 819 ~Ind 48" 11 39 -Vo Dettone Co 11 1411 7~• .1 Gull a.ws I• • 40 Jl'll+ ~ 811<11&0 4030 5S2 ll + "" Otnnlaon I s 14 17 Glllf&Ws ws 3J9 ) 0 ....
8 1•1r Jn .. u 31 • -... OtMyt I 20 II 117 14 • '. GlfW~ pl J'• I) Sti•·· ..,.
911ULO I 10 ~ 20 1Jlit + "' OtftlSOI'( to 11 S3 33 , • " Gullon Inds! IJ 12J J~t+ "
BlockHR •O 12 219 1Sllt->;, OtMret Ol>b2S 41 12 '• • '• -H H-
BlueBel1 IO • 11• 1M41+" OeSotoln 60"8 2s b'• '• ~::::ne~ 1~ 1: l~! ~
&oObie Brkl » JV.+ "" Dtll!dl' 1 4s 8 87 ,, • 1" H .. ltOln I J2 II }QI 1~1•-"" 8oel"9 eo ' A2 ,1 .... h t DelE Of 7 31> 1200 ~· H•mPe 1 20 J 'It IS Bot•CH SO S lllO.O 11~ + ~ Del E pt 51 l l )3 • 1 H•mmond 7 7d •"• • •n = JZ'1U~ • •I~ .)::;; ~ ~.•llrFf: /: : •!; :g '• :: H.indlt'm AO 14 SI ~~t-1•
lloteleft I lO e iS& 'l'.!~+ Vo Ot•mcllnll 1 7 94 78'• t '• H.indy H 80 4 II 23,' • 8org W I JS • II II' 1 01•m5h 1 40 ) 211 30'• -'<! Hane~CP bd bi 8 •+I &o<m•nsln7 14 1'1"•+\l'a OlaShmff2 11 311•.-1~. Hanna IJSI/ IJ38~· ''t 80SI Ed2 •• I 90 I~ -'It 0.•Shpf 20 ti> 11> .... -11 H•rtrl 170 I 1)1 22• >+ -ti• &oslliEpf I 88 , 110 Ill> Otck AB 40 • •311 8'\to-'• HardeH Fd 18 )S 4'H •it
8ra111!1 IOD ' 48t "" OICT•pllll .0 1 SS 10 • '. H .. n~IO 1 80 5 •9 3J .. + ~.
BriosS 1.o.12 ., :aa•.-1.,... OlebOtd •OO 9 1176 111• • ..-•, H•rr•ns 22 10 II IS -•I•
Bris My I 60 11 t2S 631.~ OGtoro Olb 19 4 H•rr1sC I 20 8J 20" t-~ Bril My pl 2 S ~I'>., \/'a 0.Qtl•i Eqot t2 494 8•~• HarKo Ill > 11 IJ >-"' BrtlPel 40d 2 383 .,.,._ 'I> OllltnQh AO s Jll •'•• ~. H .. 1:.Mx "" • 421 '"+I
8"'kWY GI 1 • &3 ,. + .,.. Olllil'!Qh o• t • 1 n• I '· H•rl•Hk 20 I n II -...
BrUllO• 1 It 1 " 16'/ ~ Diiion I 109 n s 31 ~.-... Helin I... xS "~"" BrQWfl Com 2 5 l<Ht+ + Vt OIStley 12r,i 27 '62 4S \a , H•wel!t I "8 I •• 1'l9 • eroru11 l..O • 101 ltlt.+21/• otuton 12 s 30 I'". ~ Hl '(H AID I I> 14 •IN-v. e~Snrp 20 s 19 ~-'"' otvet')lfd tn If 23 71, 1._ tla1tt11ne 9 10 J1'+ "'
lo • '" 11. w OovMI 1 S6d llS 2'. + "> KCAMI SOd • J ''-"+ Vo Br trrtJ 1 • + ~,,,_ppr 30 24 ASS 12,, + ~ Heck inc 12 1> 9• 10 , + 1''>
8runswa 40 • ~ a:+ ';: Oo-M 90<1 U 8' SI • ,1 H0<l•M1n 21 I} 41 Ill•• l\ g~~.w,: 4 .4 ,.,,.: ~ Doll Lui Jen 12 l'•• '' He11mn IN • tJ '"'• '• 81KyrulE 1 1S 4 331'>-'h OOllnelly 561• 132 2•~•-''-H•iniHI 121J 14.l 48 1)-~
Blldd Co 81) • '1 9 1 • Doric Cp 20 s '' 171, -11 Httene Curi S H Jto
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DoUarU1>
BRUSSELS (UPI) -The U.S.
dollar ope,ned the week rr ctlonally
hJ.gber on Euro~an money markets Monday to re-cover trom record lows .
lutweelt.
IJl Franklu.rt. lhe dollar WfS listed
at 2.S3 Oerman marks, 9'p from
Frida)i'• close of 2 .3270. In Zurich the dollar roae from 2.4650 at closln(( tlme
Friday to open at 2.4830 Swiss francs.
~ .......
: A,, 0.\tL y PILO~ Monday. March 10. 1975
·r.rv Highlights
NBC (4) 8:00 -... Ille Cante rville
Ghost.•• David Niven plays the tiUe role
in this t levision remake of the venerable
comedy on the Bell System Family·
The ter.
ABC (7 ) 8:00 -An Evening With
John Denver. Danny Kaye and J acques
Cousteau join the popular singer on his
third special.
rv . DAILY LOG .
Monday
Evening
MAACH 10
&:t0 !•r~.!';9-~ ,~ m""" ~~{l))llnl
I ~, ....
Trwlll • C1111,1•w Uilllril ,_
~Siar,,... w o.drit c..,..,
Q) a.a, ' frillm
6:l0 ..... Crilfil .. AMJ lriflilll !~ ........ n.iu Tl*lll Fiii
Ullt ......
l:OO I= re Della~""' .... ~
T"'* tr CHKC!utn<U
· Wllat'a lly Unt?
I l-lalCJ
Tiit Fii
(11' (t}I S,,
fl) La lluie1 P'ro~1lllcl1
~ Tiit Iii YaMtJ
m Y1etM ,....,... OlcMstri1
itCT Mulbtnllip Drive A special
prt$tlll1bon ol a trachllo111I New
Yw's ew C011Cert witll Wilh b ·
~ conduchq 0i. YitMI Ptul·
lwmonlC 1• u .U·StrtuU proe11m.
fI)lkau
1;30 m...,. Criff• si..
t:OO Ettl rn [!) ..... QJ@djfDHC lhdar
. · : (C) (2111) •A lie HIM lw
tM Utile UdJ" (R) (wes) '66 -
Henry fon«M, ~ Woodward,
JHOll Rob.ids.. A fHUly mn. who
is ma a compulsM ra!Mlef, ~
bes lut $4,000-UllHRed I« I
homntu d1ne clllm-to putlci!l'I•
in the lliU UI 111*.e< 11111e 111 Ille 9'\a, Crllla• er.-
Cl) I fir
0 * • •S.W.A. T. FIGHTS * CRAZED SNIPER! O<~OO>@Q) S.W.A.T. "'Oeatll
Came(' Lt. Hondo Harrelson and
his men search lor an unknown
sniper whose carefully setecttd male
v1ehms had but one thins in com·
mon-eacn was romantically 111-
volved with the same ycMJRC woman.
Ronnie Troup, DaV1d Sht1nef and
Joanna Ba1nu euast. m Safari .. Mvtllblrt
E!) lluy AcrMtciclt
lhe C-1 Moast11: Jen
Bii Ca'*9 Sptml Je1n Marsh
of "Upst11rs, Downst1ir~." and Grov·
tr ol "Sname Stretl" host a11 hollr 9:1S ED HtUt Dali for this unique pro·
of tht btst an11111ted hims lrorn 111m, a British film t1ew followed
"Sesame Stmt" and "lht Clectnc Salvad« Dah, the famous wtTUI·
Com!l'llJ " Proaram os lol'-d br 1s.t and eccentric around fus home
1 KCU lh mbe1sh1p Appul. and mu~um, uptur1111 llilll 11 -'
Dnlll 9:30 O @CD@ btcla Mary lldl· I (j)) 1oMaz.1 1ad at e-.
. lilly ;nu. Crusdt ards 1rrrve$ uneipectedly and
Tllm sa.,es throws a lllOOkey wrendl illlt
7:l0 I $2'.S.000 P'Jf•_, Rhoda s and Joe's pllll to l11we a
· P'elice S.r1tt11 lona·awa1ttd wtetend alone at Cape
tw, T'1 Ncl&M* Cod. Mary Tyltr Moore p~
Miliee s 11tw1r. <C> (21w) "Oii La rltlll
... -SuUe m "-!:. Tell lllt T~ Wndlrlust
llcllt 1.1(' (mus) ·~1-Dom 10:00 O @OO (j) llealCll Cetlllt •Af.
Day. Gordoft MacRu. tef11lock" Trapped in 1 basement
00! ltt'1 ... ._ A Dtll opeldhnc room Without wntolalioll CD ~ wh~n 1 hospital w•nr collapses, Of.
m
@ Wild Wotlcl ti Alli•als G•nnon is uraed by Ills fellow VIC· :i~ f Advtlltare ttms to use the oxygen of a patient
LltttanRo 1 in hopu of living their lives.
t u ca s omm 11ews
1:00 6 UZ, {11.!J Gun 1111th ·The (•J (CW LI)) l~ly Crahara Crusade
Busters" lwo bronc: Mters, H1rve 0 CARIBE-NEW BIG HIT
Diley and Mitch Hansen, risk then *STACY KEACH STARS' nKks to raise money to settle on a •
rinc:h in Mont1na, only to have 0 (3) a,) Carib« Bu and Maril
their drum ru111ed wllen Harn i$ capture 1 drug peddte1. wllo thttl
rniurad by 1 wold stalllOll. G1ry Bus· falls vrcttm to a sniper's bullel, thus
ey John Beck 11\d Lynn Benl)Ch pos1nc a double mystery. eu°est. fl) Cita C.. Las Estrelu o DAVID NIVEN is ~~ u:-*'~ MG flf * The Cantetville Ghost He.II" In 121=U1J 1!';, •. aa':eau·
on BELL SYSTEM t•ful woman is used to c1ea1y rebels
FAMILY THEATRE "'"'Y lrom the £111f*O(s !1'1-.
0 il1 a.g, m rnrnm kit 10:30 § *,.., .. MwNtwt Sp1t11 f111ily Tllutr~nttr· P'~ JwadiM
v1Ut Ghosl'' David Nnrea sWs • ~,.a•
Sor S11non dt Cantemlle, a troubled 10·45 fll llltw1 ~ !~~ ':~ ::.:~·1:::W~ 11~ I i om m 2.. "-
ltll'5 who rent Ille Clll1t lie haunts · iii lit @
-until the <Uuthltr ol the f1m1ty 1at,. '!.~ ma~es po$Slble hlS etefnll rest 6 tr1J ......,.
limes Whitmore, Audra Lindley. · Tll~-~l~;i.i.
Lynne fredertdl, Dime Flo!• Rob· MDMVn: .. "" ...... ~
son and M1uriu Evant also star. (E) Ott lallll!Ct 0 c:nm!O Tiit Nallrie AH111 ,6 lllCHlt Tu Rt'9fl/Wild WiW
Cltle Noberts narrates lh1s ob1ect1ve West r,-.
looll 11 the reasons behind 1nd the (';19 t,) Wanted: Dud If A11vc
tffll:IS ol Sm<l~•na. I 1:30 0 ll7 Cil 00 CIS Litt Mtvit:
(4) Mile Dou1ll1 Show "Whistle Stop" (dra) '46 -Av1 0 AN EVENING WITH I Gardner. George Raft. * JOHN DENVER I 0 ~ (6)@1 ~ Jthnny C1rsat1 'th D Ka and Shecky Greene 1S ruest host w1 anny ye I 8 Twilipt ZoM Capt Jacques Cousteau I <~00> @ Wide WoM llp-0 (~ (IJ) (}) m ammJ An tery "Please Stand By for Mur!W'
hea1n1 Witll Jolln Di11ve1 John Den-I O Mftie: '"Mirldt ti fltlltf ....._
~r. popular smcer composer, wel I ch1as" (dra) '67 -Horst Bolhmn.
comu Danny Kaye ind Capt I m Movie: (C) "Slltrflle(s lslaed'"
Jacques Coustuu as spec11I r unts (d11) '51 -Jeff Ch1nd1e1.
on hlS third spec11I, ind, 1n I h11h IZ:OO 0 Movit: "CHd1..r {dfl) '30
ltcht ot the pro111m, roes under· -Ronald Colman, Ann H11din1.
wll« with C,,pt Cousteau to uploie (!)Allred H~ Hour
one 01 the mos1 btau1r1u1 reels '"I m 111tun
!ht WOl1d I l:OO B .l9lT-!I ~~ ~ moo ;, c6J Ntwi ~ Secut-fr09 Mclice 11:45 0 Movit: (C) "Slt4J" {com) 'SO-~• 11t¥1t: (C) {Zlw) ..,.,rrW (d11) -Walter Brenn1n, Mar1aret O'Bncn.
'61-Troy Don1hue, Colln1t Stevens.13:00 O lltwlt: "FictMI Widats" (drt)
11.irl M1ldtn. ·57 -Keefe Brauelle, Kay Callard.
Tuesday O.• (C) "Oud ii tM llracle" (tdv) ·54 -Dana Andrewl, David flrrar.
Z:30 ~ l(C) "lecbt" Part I (d11) '64
DAYTIME MOVIES -Rtehard Burton, Peter O'Toole. ~ "Tht Dtc1or & t11t Cirt'
10:00 (t) "Gus .i IM Ti•IMNnd" (dr1)' (rom) '50 -Glenn ford, Glori•
'60 -Alan lldd, Junne Crain. I OeHaven, Janet Ler1h.
~ {C) uP'iratts .t ... r!WNJ" (adv) 3:00 g (C) "Cllln1• ti Habir (dra)
47 -Rod Cameron, M1n1 Montez. '69 _ (lvis Presley, Mary hlu
11:00 D (C) "Tht .. wo~•n ~ht Car11t Moore, Barbara Mcffair. frM tflt St• (susp) 64-Dawn llOJ (C) "The Sound .i A111ff" {dra)
Addams, Franco Silva. I '68 _ Guy Stockwell Burl Ives II :JO (!) "Ml & P'I llfttlt 11 Ht•t" ' .
(tom) ·54 -M11!011e Main. 3:30 r3 J(C) "A Mu Coutcl Ctt Ule4"
12:00 m "All tltt Yeu111 Mu" (dra) '60 (adv) '66 -James Girner.
-Alan Ladd, Sldnty Po1l1tr. O (C) "JollflltJ '9 Ille CHltr ti
J:OO 0 "llH flM Caire" (adv) '54-tltt u rtlt" Cone!. (sci·h) '60-Pat
Georre Rafi. G1111111 <;,111 <;,nit. Boone. James Mason, Arlene Dahl
KOCE Television
H 00 Stllotl 01i lrltt Ntw• ICI
11(()((.1
n llBlllMer•n' Jo11r11.11I tC I tPO!>I
I IOlnMM /Out CCI 1 tl~ttl f'"•ctory ICI
1 4CIT1metoOr.11w lCI
J·OOEi.<troc Cem~ny CCI •CT\'.I
J.lOT•.cll1114 Cluld ren lo Re.cl ICI
l'OOuwl•rtht 71'l CCI
J.lO~"•nd E11vir•nment CCI
• OOCoolun'Ca111n tCICPTLI
• lOElet trt< ComtNny CCI ICTWI
S OOS.um• St rut (Cl CCTW)
• oouwtorthe 70's (Cl
• l0Vo90t W1lh~CS.hne (Cl rKOCEI
1 OOWom.an CCI IPBSJ
I .JO Focul: Or.1111ge Co•nty CCI IOC:OCEI
I OOAr.11~.11nc1 lsruris !Cl CPBSl •.JOGr••• O.t•SIOfll CCI lO:OOAC1onc111g O.nhsltv ICI
HEY, LOOK US OVER!
8:30
TONIGHT
A silicon base giraffe on Mars? Not likely, per·
haps, but when 1he Viking s~craft lands on Mars
in 1976 1t will carry d camera 1ust in case.
KOCE-T50
l
•
l>urina the Prohibition era.
bOotleraers r n rum or othe r·
alcoholic brt!w past the m i·
nions ofthe Jaw.
In San C le m e nte today,
bootleggers are running signs
by the law -· us ually signs
advertising housing projects.
ALL THAT MA\' change un·
der a plan suggested by the'
city's maj or ho us ing d e·
velopers and approved recent·
ly by the City Council.
The council gave informal
agr eement to a n idea of a un-:
ified directional sign program
for a ll developments a nd,
while tb bus• are belna
worked out, 1ave plannln& •
staff aulhoril)' to approve In·
terifTl directional si1ns.
Do nald B . Ande rson,
chairman ol thedevelopera~
sign committee, presented
artists' drawings of petmanent
wooden s igns which he said the
developers would accept.
PRESENTLY, bootleg
cardbo~rd signs spring up like
t oad s t ool s on w eekends
throughout town, usually at
major freeway ofrramps.
The cardboard signs are ll·
legal and the city has been con·
cemed about tbe cluttered •Jt:-penOd is lradlUonally lb t>eAt
pear-dee they 1ive the com·
1
rorbome 181 1 munlty.
Somt d e vel o pe rs h a ve
painted the sidal of large vans
and left them parked at
strategic areas to lure prospec-
tive buyers to housing pro-
jects.
ANDERSON SAID there is
$40 milllon to $50 million worth.
of de-oetopment in the cit)" and,
that without adequate signing,
there is.no way to get buyers to·
the propertles.
He said the upcoming spring
Councilmen B. Patrick
Lane. normally a sharp critic
of sign excesses, said ho ap-
plauded the eflbrt being mada
by the building trades.
Anderson proposedtbatnew
signs would combine all t)\e ci-
ty .housine projects. and also
give directions to beaches, the
pier, central business district..·
civic center and other points of
interes t .
\,IDO'S
.,
ballons. and pretty ladies with flowers. for all. There will be good foods to
sample and lots of birthday cake tool So come join in our birthday-your party,
certificate. valued from ten to fifty dollars!
BLOOMIN' SPECIALS
Pantsuits ...... s 1999
Long Dresses S'J.999
Capris . . s399
l4J4 Vka LWo
673-1970
for appointments call
673-7850
YO·S 20's
Hair Spray Sinarest
u .49 v-. Tablets ~!f.-02 $147· Sl.4tY .. 97c • S..eUc
7..0Z.MetlMll
Protein 21
Shampoo
... ., v-.
So•~ .72'
ki.GIUette
Right Guard
Do.Me ProffdlOR ..............
s1.99 vaau. sioa
San91• .
for the
. ultimate
·in travel
planning,
consult
the very best . . .
~~~J
the professionals
at
Udo Travel Service.
3416 Via Udo. Newport leoch
673-3310
MARCH 10 IHRMGH 17
Working
together as a
family, the employees of.
Richard's have been proud
'to serve the people of
Newport Beach with our
. high standards of quality,
value and service for 27
years. We would like to
take this opportunity to
thank you for your support,
and hope that you will Join
in our enthusiasm for a
bright future In the years
to come. Best wishes to our
I• .. ~ .
1\1 ".,
<I~ Newport Blvd.
acroaa Pacific C"°aat Hwy.
flrat left turn
and you're rlghU
community •. out9tandlng? '
values· at alli;
participating merchants "1
'
}
I
~
I
} •
• .
Ora·age ~oast
..,. . . Et> I Tl 0-N •
Today's Cl••-. I
N. Y. Steelul
.. . VOL. 68, NO. 69, 2 SECTIONSi 2A PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR IA. MONDAY, MABtH 10, 1975 c TEN CENTS
. Truste~ to Stud~ School· Cutbacks
. 'lly HILARY KAYE Of .. .,..., ft .......
SUgg .. ted C\ltblCQ that Would•
prohibit •<>•&fily 2,000 Newport.
Mesa children from ri<llng school
buses and would bait the dis·
trict's special reading program
in grades one throuah three wlll
be considered Tuesday night by
school trustees.
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District trustees plan lo spend
several mbre meetings d'ebaUng
whicli ueas to cut in order to
balance tho prOposed' 1975-76
budget which curreotly shows a
$2,'96,212 deficit. Cuts an being
planned in the event the district's
propoaed revenue increase falls
.attbepolls May 27.
cutbacks ""Suggeste:iJ, cam piled
into a 12·page· budae...-planning
aulde, have been offered by both
ct.Ulelll gr9'1PS and district statf
members. 1
Tran~port.ation and reading
program deducUons are the first
areu trustees will examine in
depth. No definite detillons are
expected. at . t¥ Tuesdy meet-
ina. scheduled for 1:30 p.m. tn
Costa Mesa City Council cham-
bers.
Trustees have been told they
could save about $100,000 ii they
extend the students' walking dis-
tance by one-halt mile. This
would mean that about 2,000
school children who currently
·ride buses1to school would have
t.o walk; or Cind alternate private
tranaportation.
rA spokesman-for the district
explained that In examining the
proposal, t~tees also will look
at safety hazards at about a half.
doten schools, near dangerous lh·
tersections.
Another $20 ,000 in lJ'ansporta-
. lion cos ts could be saved if
..
(
athletic bus trips were limited to
team members , trustees have
been told.
The cutback would mean that
school band s . pep aquAds~
cheerlead e rs and subsidized
rooter buses would no longer be
available.
tf the existing primary readinf
(See CUTBACKS, Page A2)
Oswald
Story
Backed
N·. Viets Attack.
8 American Missionaries Trapped
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An
analysts .or tape recordings
shows Lee Harvey Oswald was
telling the truth but perhaps a
dozen other persons lied about ·
their knowledge of John F. Ken-
nedy's assassination, a former
Central Intelligence Agency or-
ficial said today.
.. 1 :don't know the name of the
man who pulled the trigger,"·
author George O'Toole told a
news conference called to in-.
troduce his book on the subject.
Nor, he added, does he even
know ir the "real" assassin is
still al large.
But the Warren Commission
which investigated the crime, he
said, had no choice but to return
the verdict it did -blaming
Oswald and saying he acted
aJone -because the climate was
so volatile in the country at the
time.
He called ror a new con·
gressional investigation or the
case, saying his probe indicates
there was a conspiracy.
O'Toole also reached the ''in·
escapable" conclusion "that at
least some or the people who
rramed Oswald were members of
the Dalli:lice." Using ·alysis on the tape-
• recorded mments or other of.
\
\
I
<
o.ity PllM,. ... l•IW Rldoanl II.Miiier
Fl-om Wire Services
SAIGON, South Vietnam
Tank.Jed North Vietnamese
forces blasted into the central
highlands capital or Ban Me
Thuot today, battling defenders
house to house and trapping eight
Americans in the city, field re·
ports said.
The Communists also overran
a district town 30 miles Crom Ban
Me Thuot, the s econd in the
highlands in three d ays.
F ive Bus
R iders
R o bbed
Five pa s sen g er s o n :.i
Greyhound bus headed for San
Juan Capistrano were robbed
and pushed around en route Sun·
day night by five men who used a
shotgun to press home their de·
mands.
ficiala. be th eori:r.ed t.hat ';(l> Oswald was an"FBl UUoi"mer;l2)
some FBI agents may hay been
fnvolved in an assassination plot
on their own and (3) some War-
ren Commission witnesSes lied in
key testimony.
Lo6k1Jfg a bit like sornegiant, surrealistic flowers, steel sup·
Port columns for interchange that will connect Newport and
Corona del Mar Freeways rise out of ground. Construction
site is near Bristol Street in Costa Mesa.
Orange County Sheriff's of.
ficers said the five passengers
were robbed of cash, watches
and assorted jewelry while the
ckiver of:;fJ'ae Sflnta Ana to ·~n
Juan bus drove on, apparently
unaware of the activity behind
him.
Deputies said the five meo. all
identified as off.duty .Marines
from Camp Pendleton, lett the
bus at San Juan and bo arded
anothe r bus bound for the Marine
base .
OToole based his findings on a
device whic)l acts in lie detector
fashion to pick up stress in voice
CSee OSWALD, Page A2)
A lc oholics'
R eco very
House E yed
Mother, Son 'Wed'
By Ohio Computer·
Camp P endleton Marines,
alerted by sheriff's off icers, sur-
rounded a bus as it rolled onto the
base and took the fi ve suspects
into custody.
l\1arine personnel today re·
fu sed lo identify the arrested
men pending further investiga·
lion of the robbery. They con·
firmed that the five suspecti; are
Camp Pendleton 1\1 arines.
COLUMBUS. Ohio <UPI> -
For Richard Brudzynski, George
Orwell's world of '11984" -a not-
so-futuristic novel predicting a
dictatorial society of automa-
An application for a new hair-tons -has arrived. He was
way house in Costa Mesa for the formally married to his mother
recovery of alcoholics will come by a computer.
before the city's planning com-Brudzynski, a lawyer, was told
mission tonight.. by a Cleveland credit bureau he
, The planning staff is recom~ had indeed married his mother,
mending that the perm.it be de-· Florence Brudzynski, and, to
nied for Newport Mesa Halt-way· make matters worse, was pre-
House Inc. in a single-family. sently employed as a slockboy at
home ai 1865Anaheim Ave. · a machine shop alter previously
The staff recommendation working as an attorney.
notes that the permit would "I wasn't exJ'ecting any sur·
create a boarding home for 10 prises," Brudzynski said of his
persons, though the lot has only "spur·of·the-moment" visit to
three parking spaces. the credit bureau. "I filled out an
Meanwhile, a bid for an addi· application form to see my file in
tion to an existing alcoholic re· about a minute, and this woman
covery house is recommended came back with a computer prin·
· ror approval. This is tor toutwfthscadsofnumbenwhich
permission to build a new kitchen she ~eviewed very quickly."
and add manager's quarters to Brudzynski, 30, a hearing ex·
the First Step House of Orange aminer for the state ol. Ohio, was
County at 2015 Charle st.. This working for a Cleveland law firm
. house is licensed for 11 boarders, · and, ironically. also seiied as co-
at: cording to the First Step or-chllirman on an American Civi!
ganizati9n. Ubertles Union com~ltee in·
Among other items scheduled .vestigatlng the impact or
for the 6.30 p.m . meeting in city techoologJcalinnovationsoncivil
council chambers Is a r.,ublic libertiei. •
hearing on signs planned or the The ACLU group caJled itself
Segerstrom Center, \he shopping ''Tht!•t9Mc0mmittee.''
center at Harbor Boulevard and Brudzynakl said he asked the
Adams A venue. clerk at the credit bureau what
A planning aide said that dil· a11 the numbers meant.
ferences exist with the developer ''She pointed out one set of
a.M the statf is recommending. nwrib;erl wbi~h when translated
that the matter be held tor two said I was pres'ently employed as
.more weeks. a stock boy -a job I bad~eld six
DoWCLOSES -QN PLUS SIDE
NEW YORI< <UPI) -Tbe
stock market, shak,inc on e1rly
r.rofit laking, closed higher today
n a late rally and •cceleraled
trading on the New York Stock
Dcliaoge.
'The Dow Jones industrial
a.tera1e1 off more than four
pdlnt.t earlier, gained 6.03 pginla
to 778.13. AdY1nce• led declines
:f¥y1bouUnloe·lo-llvemar&1n.
.PricOI alto were hi&bcr 1n ac·
U'V1 tradln1 on the American
StOek Exchan1e. . ·
r
or' seven )'e'an ·ago when I was
still in school.
"'The next line, she said,
showed. that 1 was cilrrently mar-
ried. f was· really surprised
because ·I ·had . just become .
engaged but It was supposed lo
be a secret between my alrl and
mystlt. Then she told me t was
1 rnarried to Florence Brodzynski. wbohae~ 1o be my mother•"
Brud&ynakl ••'d he w11
.··shocked , surprised and
amused."
• .
'"Th.e way they marrted me
off," BNd1yn1kl taiclbe,and the
credit bureau fliured out,:"Yi••·
U.at a tom,,Ut~r prolram.med to
flli minate double addreues for
'junl<' mall ... umed that aince
my mother and J had the same
'
last name and since we were liv·
ing at the same address, we had
to be married.
''I was seriously considering
that it they didn't correct the
mistake I would go to.the.
Domestic Relations Court <ind
CSeeC REDIT, PageA2l
Gunman Wounded
SIGNAL HILL CUPU-A 33·
year-old man was ,shot and
wounded Sunday after he fiTed
three shots al the police station
and then started shooting at a
policeman who came outside to
investigate . orricers s ay
Salvador Hernandez, 33, of Mon·
tebello, was des pondent over
marriage problems a nd told
police he wanted to die in a gun ··
batUe.
Marine officers said the loot
taken from the Greyhound bus
passengers was recovered and
will be returned to the victims .
Sheritf's officers said charges
o( assault with a deadly weapon
will be added to allegations of
armed robbery in view of the
statements by several vi ctims
that they were beaten during the
course ot the holdup.
1st Lady 'Better'
WASHINGTON <UPI ) -Betty
Ford is "feeling much better" to·
day and continues to make pro·
gress after an attack of her
chronic arthritic ailment in the
back and ne ck .
Coast Civic Leader
Huddleston Dead
. Donald I. Huddleston, a harbor
area civic leader for almost 30
years, died Sunday, He was 10.
Memorial services have been
set for 2 p.m . Tuesday at St. An·
dre.w's Presbyterian Church, 600'
St. Andrews Road, Newport
. Beach.
Mr. Huddleston is survived by
his wtte. Velma; two daughters;
Mn.,LJ. Fillrbon of China ·Lake
and Hra.. JeffNy Grimm of Santa ROia: Ind a tlrother, Leland of
~-.
A cJ,ly councl.lman in South
Gate to the 1930's, Mr. Hud·
·cllaton came to Newport Beach
in ltNe, when be began the lend·
lil,t ·and property development
bus.ineu behasope'.rat~•lnce,, .J -· Mr. Huddle1ton·s ~~ Or · '
civic activity Include• qa1l
servlc' as .pre,rcre t· al'ld
, trou•rer of Ill~ N Ha~!><>r
Boy'1 Club. He 1 on lbe
Boy'1 Club board of ~
2Syem .
He wu • former , eot ol
!SeeLE ... DE•,~°';2~. )1~~!2
In Cambodia. rebel gunners
Cired 56 rockets and artillery
rounds into the Phnom Penh
airports, damaging two domestic
commercial airliners and killing
five persons and wounding 22,
authorities in Phnom Penh said.
The campaign to oust Pr~ident
Lon Nol also picked up steam.
Seve n or the eight missionaries
re ported trapped by the North
Vietnamese in Ba n Me Thuol
were identiried today.
The Christian and Mi ssionary
Alliance said fiv e of the mi$~
sionaries were attached to the Ab-
liance. It identified them as Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Phillips, of
Bloo mington, Minn. and l\1r. and
J\1r s . Norman ·J ohn s on oC
flamilton, Ont.
It said its riCth missionary,
~1 rs. Archie l\1itchell of Bl y.
Oregon, is th e wife or another
missionary taken captive in Bao.
(See AMERICANS, PageA2)
M yste MJ Probe d
Former Estancia
Athle te Dead
D•llY '4191 SUit f"llM:o
MYSTERY DEATH VICTIM
Mesa's La rry Moulton
V n io1iSees
More Layoffs
At Douglas
Official s of th e s trikin g
machinists union today predicted
additio(ial layoffs this week at
the McDonnell Douglas Corpora ·
lion.
Ivan Lynch, president of tht!
International As sociati on or
Machinists Lodge 720. said the
1,000 aerospace workers laid off
Friday will be follo\•;ed by more
cutbacks this Wednesday and
Friday .
Meanwhile. the IAM newslel·
ter reported workers would no
longer receive their $40-a·week
strike benefits beginning April I .
The report said the benefits are
costing $700,000 a weelr, and the
union's fund would soon be
depleted.
He said he did not know ir a re·
ported 5,000 fi gure was accur.ate.
but he added the layoffs could in·
clud.e some engineers and pro-
fessional employes at the firm 's
Huntington Beach plant.
The IA~1 . with 19.000 ~·orkers
nationwide, inc:luding 7,000 in
Southern California and 1,500 in
Huntington Beach. has been on
strike since Feb. JO .
Friday, 1,000 m embers of the
United Auto and Aerospace
Workers were placed-on two·
· 1week "'furloughs" al 1the Long
Beach plant tiecause of a
. shortage of' IAM·produced parts
u.sed there to manufacture OC 9
and DC 10 aircraft.
' The company has declined
comment about the layoffs. ex·
~pt:.toconfi,rm the l,OOOtic~on ~"r!~•Y· A McDonnell oo.ialat '"""Oman did SIY the H\U1t~ t,nttoi Beach planf is less depe:n-,
·dlhtoo. IAM ·manulactured parts
1thkleomeother faclftUe ~
Lyn'tb uld today a 1"1eral ·~r_a(or ·has. returntCl to ~gton after meetln1 with
~lldes.<1n4 h'e'~ e~od ~· "~ 'DOV~~agel\2) ·
' I '
•
Medi('al authorities in Boston
today were investigating the-
mystery de ath of a rormer Estan-
cia Hi gh School Cootball player
found dead Sunday in a n ex-
perimental section of an Army·
affiliated medical laboratory.
No obvious ca us e. could be
round for the death or Larry
Moulton, 22, who was undergoing•
Lr.ainin& as a U.S. Army medic a l
the N atltk· Test Laborato(Y.
"They say it was some kind or
acc ident," s aid his father,
Laurens Moulton. when contact-
ed today in Reno, Nev., where
the victim's parents moved 18
months ago.
Army authorities in Boston
were still conducting an autopsy
today arid indicated it ~ould be
some time before their findings
are known. .
His father s aid the Army
planned to fl y Mr. ~1oullon 's
body to the Orange Coast on
Tuesday for pending funeral
s ervic es at Wes tmins te r
Memori a l Park, tentative ly set
for later in the week.
No information was ava ilable
regarding the type of training
and work being done at the Natick
Laboratary, wh er e the victim
was found dead when employes
lSee l\1VSTER V, PageA2)
Kurds Attacked
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)-
The Interna tional Human Rights
f'ederation reported tod ay that ·
Iraqi forces lau nched a large-
scale offensive against Kurdish
rebels in the wake of the agree-
ment between Ira n and Iraq lo ,
resolve the ir undeclared border
"'ar .. The (ederation's secretary.
general, Jean Claude Luthi, said
Iran closed its border with Iraq
and cut off all suppli es 10· the
Kurds .
Coast
Partly cloudy Tuesday
with sli ghtly cooler days.
according to the weather
service. Hi ghs 55 at the
beaches, 60 inland. Cha nce ot rain 80 percent tonight
decreasing to 40 percent
TuesdJU>.
I NSI D E TODA\'
The Cent ral Intelligence
Agency onc e hired Mafia
gunmen to attempt a1sauino·
tion of Ct.lbon Premier F'idet
Castro, articles pvblUhed to-
day alleged. Story. Page A.f.
1
•
A I DAIL y PtLOT c
OSWALD •••
r~s.
On the key question Oswald
\lo as asked -dtd he shoot
anyone~ -the analysis shows
absolutely no stress U\ bls voice
mdicaUna he could not have been
telling an untruth, O'Toole said.
But similar analysis of other
tapes made of police figures and
others at the time of the as-
sassination and later show that
.. perhaps a dozen" did not tell
the truth, he said
"Preside nt Kennedy was killed
by a conspiracy," s.Ud O'Toole
38. who was c hi ef of the CIA pro:
blem analysis branch from 1966
~ l~ ... The man who paid with
hts ltfe for that crime in the base·
!flent of the Dallas City Hall was mnocent."
Advance copies of O'Tool(''s
book. ''Th e As sassination
Tapes,•· were made available to·
day lo the news media and an ex-
cerpt was published in the April
issue of Penthouse.
O'Too l e sa id l ea d ing
authorities on lie detection and
analys is who examined Oswald 's
statements agree that be told the
truth.
The machine measur es
. c~anges in human voice frequen-
cies, and when th~ modulation
disappcur~. it 1s as a result of
s tress and is a :,trong indication
the speaker is lying.
"His <Oswald '~) categorical
denial that he shot anyone con·
tains almost no stress at all "
O'Tool e said "Stress is 'a
necessary. but not sufficient
cond1tion of l; 1ng . ·
Dance, Drama
Classes Set
In Costa Mesa
Interested in belly dancing? Or
laking par l 1n a drama
\\orkshop'?
The st.' a rt.• l wo of the classes
that will be offered this spring by
Cost(j 1\1 esa 's 0('partment o(
Leisur(' !:)('rv1ces. Hegislration
for spring classes will be held
March 20 from 6 lo 8 p.m. and
March 22 from 9 a.m . to 1 p.m. at
the Com munity Recreation
·Center on the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
City offtc1als urge citizens Lo
sign up, pointing out that there
a re classes for all age groups,
from tots to senior citizens.
Classes inc lude body fitness,
-yoga, creative dance ansJ music
for children. dog obedience train·
ing, and art clas~<'s.
For m or e information. call
551-5300.
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING
COMMISSIOl\ Re~ular meet
ing. City Hall, 6 :30p.m.
UCJ LECTURE -"Residen·
lia l Income Properly, Invest·
ment and Management." Room
174 Computer Science Bldg .. 7
pm
Tt;ESOAV, MARCii ii
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB
Community Recreation Center.
Tues., Wed .. Thurs. 12·3 p.m .
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD Regula r meeting .
Costa Mesa city council cham·
bers, 7:30 p.m.
UC I LECTURE S
.. Professional Pnict1ces m Hous-
ing Industry," Room 178
Humanities 7 p.m . "Manage·
ment Development for Women,"
Room 140 Social Science Lab, 7
p.m.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
l,.,. Ot ... Qe (IMS! 0.tly PllOI, ... th 1"ll•Ch "«>"'
"'""d u. ,.. .......... " C>Ul>ll-lly ,,,. °'-C.0.4<t F\,bl'''U"t Go~•nv S.O.r•t,. tdnoon' A ff """°'"""' MoNIO '"'°""" '"11-1' '"' Co I• -W. Ht-I le.Cll, HUflli .... Oll I"'"'"~""" t•t"' V•ll~'I l r ¥1nfll". S•ddl•Dott lf. V•ll~Y 11tnd ~ .. ~~"'t.,':.:~·., ~~~~~:~ r.::~~~:.':.!1.~:.~~.~·.;~:.100 Whl fl,oy
Robert N . Weed
Pr •~•cknl end '".,.'"'-'
Jack R. Curtev Y~f'" PtMlcttru •nd ~MT•l IMnr',,.,
Thomas 1<ee11ll
CnolOf'
Thomas A. MurS)tllnt M<i"•o•no Edit•
Charles H Loo~ Rlchltrd P. Nall
A\\O\l'"'I M•M9\llO COi ... •
OttMr Otflus
...,.,._, n.tKll llJl Hoo._, 8ou'••_,O \."O""" 9'1Mfl. 11 .. 00.-yff\ttHI ""'''' ... °" .. Kii l ltH leA<fl 8-<i~•.,0 ~,.Ml• V•ll•> tUtl u ""' -•I~" 0• ... r '""'•Y
Telephone !714) 642..Ul1
CIHllfled Advertising Ml-5471
c'''"'"'· "" o.~ .. c .. u 'v•tt111•~• Cilm!Mlh'I Ne NW• .. , ..... lll"'t"ot'-', .-ttMI .. "'""-' ., .... , .... _,,h ............ ., '" ,.,.,odllCt d •• , ... ,. •• .,..t••' P•rll'llU ..... .
0•1r19lll-fl•.
'M'titlO c110 po~••9'1 P<l•O •• Co~•• Mn •, c:..iirort1I• \ul>ll(rlpO•)ftOT•H•'*•W tomomllly,
tw m•ll M 00 mnnthly """'-•' °"'",.."°"' t ttWI -·"'"
-.....
College Oaoi~e
Richard V. Simon, 3:1 1s
now working as direc·tor of
community relations for the
Coast Community College
District, a $27,000·a -ycar
position created four 'cars
ago but left vacant ·until
now. Simon previou ~l y
worked for a Sherman Oaks
public relations firm.
Plaza Bids
Get Second
Mesa Okay
Costa Mesa councilmen haH'
approved \\-ithout further com·
ment t"o agn•cment~ '~1th South
~oast Pl aza on C'Onstruct1on pro
JeCtS.
One pact is for the city to share
the cost of building :i fi2Q.foot
road east of Bristol Street and
south of Sunflower Avenue. Th('
road will be built over a flood
control channel and will provi<l<:
access to new office buildings and
a 17-story hotel.
The city's share of building lhl'
road, boxing the flood channel
and raising the grade has bC't'n
e.s~imated at $267,000. City of·
f1c1als have said it would co!it
from $315,000 to $350,000 to build
the r oad if right of way had to bt·
acquired instead of using tht'
channel.
The second agreement calls for
the city to pay $47,000 for con·
struction of a bridge over the
channel at Anton Boulevard
South 9oast Plaza gave the city a
2'~·acre park a longside the San
Otego Freeway at Fairvie"
Road. near the Halecrest tract
in return for the bridge. ·
Coast Lio11S ...
/11 Pancakes
-Not Fish
There's nothing fi shy about 1t
there are simply lwoL1ons Clubs
in the area.
One, the Cosln Mcc;a.~cwport
Harbor Lions Club 1s \H'll known
for its fried fis h. symhol of the ex-
travaganza it stages 10 the cit}
park every year
_The other. the 01 angc Coast
Lions Club, is cooking up a re·
putalion for p a nc akcs and
s ausages. The Orange: Coast club
is s ponsori n g a pancake
breakfast Sunday in th(' city park
to raise scholarship funds for
Orange Coast College students. A
Sl donation will buy a pancakc
and sausage breakfast. complete
with orange juice and coffee.
from 8 a.m . to I p.m.
All proceeds wi ll go toOCT
scholarships. Tickets are being
sold at OCC's book store :ind'' ill
be on. sa le at the park Sund<Jy
morning
f ' rom Page A I
AMERICANS
Me Thuot in a Communist of
fensive in 1962. Her husband has
not been heard from in the 13
years since.
A spokesman for the Christian
and Missionary Alliance said the
Phillips couple and Mrs. Mitchell
have taken reruge in the re
s idence of the American
representative in the still uncap·
lured part of the city. but that the
Johnson couple had fl ed their
home and their whereabouts is
unknown
AD CONJ/E«TS
VAN TO C4SH
"Tbe ad produced a aood
re:i;ponse and I sold my van to one
of the people who read the ad and
called.•·
That's the success story reh1t
ed by the Newport Beach man
who placed this ad in the O&Jl)'
Pilot .
'68 FORD Econoline, 6
c~l. stick. S129S.
Call xxx.,qc:xx
lr you have a car or van you'd
like to convert to cash, call
642·!5678. Put a few word.44 to work
for you. In the Daily Pilot.
Spokes men to r the 1tate
coastal commission today an.
nounced the setting of four public
hearings, including two on the
Orange Coast, on the California
coast maste r plan unveil~ late
last week.
The hearings, a1J scheduled for
dates tn May. wlll include one in
Huntington Beach City council
chambers May 9 and another on
May 16 at San Clemente's com·
munity clubhouse.
'rhe other two bearings will be
on May 7 at the Torrance Civic
Center and on May 14 at the Long
Beach Harbor Department build·
mg.
The starting times for each or
the sessions set to examine the
document will be tbe same for
all-1 :30 p.m .. continuing to 6
p .m . After a dinner break
testimony will resume al 8 p.m.
and end at 10 :30 ,
The document, which was or·
dered by voters when they ap·
proved the Coastal Initiative in
1972, sets forth widespread plan·
ning goals and development
criteria fo r a strip averaging five
miles wide along the entire state
coastline
Spokesmen for the state agen·
cy said that several thousand
('Opi('s have already been mailed
out to interested entities and in·
div1duals. and that a limited sup·
ply of the documents will be
available Thursday at the re·
g1onal coastal commission of·
fi<'l' al 666 E. Ocean Blvd., Suite
3107. in Long Beach.
The document places strong
('mphasis on public ownership
and access to coastal recreation
land and places strong emphasis
on a widespread use for recrea·
l ion purposes as well as en·
couraging development only in
t•xisting a r eas where the coast
has given way to construction.
Last chapters of the document
still are being heard by regional
commissions. m ost notably an
element which would put the
teeth into the coastal plan.
T hal segment, known a s
Powers, Funding and Govern·
ment. has yet to be reviewed by
the South Coast regional com-
mission. It sets up provisions for
enforcing the principles in the.
state plan and lays out an even·
tual trans ition of control back to
local government.
Once the hearings have con·
eluded on the master state docu·
ment, it will be sent to the
California Legislature for debate
and possible approval.
Newport Ban
On Palmistry
Faces Court
/\ lawsuit filed by the plaintiff
with the s tated intention of test·
mg the constitutionality of the Ci·
ty of Newport Beach's ban on
fortune telling will be tried Sept.
29 in Orange County Superior
Court.
Pres iding Judge Robert A.
Banyard set the trial date for the
action fi led against the city by
Harney Marino, a fortune teller
and palm reader who identifies
himself as a Romany Gypsy.
Marino alleges in his action
th<tt the city ordinance which
bars him from telling fortunes is
unconstitutional and unfairly
bars him from practicing wh~t is
part of a Romany gypsy's re·
ligion.
Costa l\t esa faces the same test
In a lawsuit rited by sell declared
g}ps ies D i ane a nd Alfred
Stevens who are due in court
!\larch 14 for pretrial action on
their lawsuit.
.Jucl gt.• IL Walter Steinen\;11 be
,15ked b} the Stevens couple to
sign a rcstrnining order that will
all°'' them to practice fortune
telling and palmistry pending
trial of lhe issue raised by the
city's h.1n on suc h practices
Fuchsia Fans
Meet Tonight
The Costa Mesa-Bay Cltles
Branch of the N atlonal Fuchlia
Society will introdu ce Paul
Breehl as member-speaker at its
meetlrs, today at 7:30 p.m. in
Veterans' Memorial Hall, 56S W
18th St., Costa Mesa.
Brtcbt wUJ speakoD "Plant.sfor
1 Horne itnd Patio," ur-e and
culture, fertilJzeni, feedln.I and
equipment, aJld 50il mixes. He la a
ruchlla and orchid bybridber,
and author of "Garden Chatter"
fortheruchllafan.
Paul Keaatef will live a lhort
talk OD ••,FUcbalu for March."
Stuart. Price will l\lPG'VlH the elant table. Ma. Oeor1lanna
Dollnll. Laurl Trahter, and
Barbar, Gollman anlncUrceof'
refreshments. Vialtors are
welcome.
'
UPI Te...,._
COMPUTER 'VICTIM'
Attorney BrudzynskJ
Front Page Al
CREDIT ...
ask the judge for an annulment,··
Brudzynski said with a grin. "My
mother got kidded a lot at work
and I took quite a bit of ribbing at
the office."
Brudznynski said error s
similar lo h is own experience
with the credit bureau are not un·
usual and could h ave serious re·
suits since most information
compiled by non-investigative
credit bureaus can come only
from creditors and whatever the
individual volunteers.
White Front
Sign Coming
Down in Mesa
The tall sign -referred to as
"a 55-foot monster" -in front of
the former White Front store on
Bristol Street, Costa Mesa is
coming down. '
It will be taken down as part of
the $7.5 million renovation of the
property into a Montgomery
Ward de_partment store.
City Councilmen were told
Tuesday night that the sign
wou ld be· rem oved by
Montgomery Ward
· The large -r etailer was allowed
two sign~ on the wall of the build·
ing and Planning Director
Willia m Dunn said that these·
would b e compatible with the
city's new sign ordinance.
f~rotn Page A I
LEADER ...
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce and was a member or the
Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club for 30
years.
Mr. Huddleston was an elder at
St. Andrew's Pres by terian
Church and sat on the president's
council at Chapman College.
He was a member of the
Americanis m Committee of the
Newport·Mes a Unified School
pistrict and he ld memberships
m the Seafaring Masonic Lodge
a nd the I rvine Coast Country
Club.
. He wa~ active in Amigos Vie-
JOS, United Fund drives and
other cif.'ic activities.
Mr. Huddleston 's family bas
suggested memorial contribu·
lions to the Heart Fund.
---
eounty FarmS
' On Way Out?.
Fanning is on lts way out in
Orange County, even though the
'county retains its third place
5pot in agricultural production
among tbe s tate's counties.
members of a panel at UC Irvine
qreed.
The pan.el, made up of Irvine
Oompanf President Ray Watson,
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich and UC Farm Advisor
Haro~d W. Otto. said farming will
be phased out.
The demise of agriculture in
the county was variously at·
tributed to high taxes and the
cost of water plus vandalism and
the simple fact that farming will
be a more profitable venture
elsewhere in California.
The Irvine Company, for ex·
ample, just had its best year and
recorded a $171,000 loss from its
agricultural operations, Watson
said.
Watson r eferred to the firm's
. farmland as "lands in transi·
tion," that is, awaiting develop·
ment.
But while farming may be on
the way out, Diedrich believes a
good deal of open space can be
saved . Diedrich proposes a new
From Page Al
MYSTERY. •
arrived to begin work Sunday.
A strong athlete and musician.
Mr. Moulton played on the Estan-
cia High School football team in
1969 and 1970 and was recipient or
a spot in the All-District Honor
Band.
He a tte nded Orange Coast
College for two years before en-
tering the Army in April or 1974
and was a memberoftheOCC ski
team and chess club. according
to his father.
Survivors of Mr. Moulton, who
observed h is 22nd birthday just
six days ago, include his parents,
plus sis t e r Mrs. Nanc y
Tillmans, of Grove, Okla., and
Mrs. Treva Klingler of Auburn,
Calif., and an aunt, Mrs. Ruby
Beck, of Ontario.
Frorn Page A J
CUTBACKS
program were to be eliminated.
the school district could save
$250,000.
J ean Harmon. administrative
assistant to the superintendent.
said the district wide progra m, in
?Peration for the past two years.
ts "an attempt to make sure that
every child can r ead before he
gets out of the third grade."
The program involves pouring
extra t eac h ers a nd
paraprofessionals into grades
one, t wo and three to keep class
sizes small a nd insure maximum
reading instruction.
Also Tuesday, trustees will re·
ceive the first presentation by
district teachers concerning
1975·76 salary proposals.
· Satellite 'Up'
VA N DENBERG AFB
CUPl)-A satellite was launched
into orbit Sunday from the Space
and Missile Test Center at Van·
denberg Air Force Base.
form of zoning in wtt1 ch dt.'"
velopers trade the devctopmrnl
rights on one piece ot propel'l)
for higher densities on anothc•
The result of that approach
would be lower t axes on the o~n
space land because the dcvcloµ
ment rights would be taken
away
Diedrich acknowledged that
his approach would result in de
velopments or condom101um:.
town houses or other 1.•lu!'.t e1
housing rather than :.1n gle
family detached homes
The property owner would still
own the land without dcn·lop
ment rights and could u~!' 1t
economically for recreatwn 111
farming, Diedrich said.
Taxes on Irvine Company lam.I
totalled $12 million l ast Yl'al.
Watson said: Taxes on the com
pany's farmlands totalled $3.1
million.
In addition to the high tax load .
Watson said . farmers face com·
plaints from residents over the
smell from chicken manure UM'd
as fertilizer. Rising cost of farm
equipment was another factor
Watson cited.
"The point now is that farming
serves as a pr.oductive, though
very difficult, interim land ust.·.
with the landowner looking
ahead toward future develop
ment and enhancement of his
properties," Watson said.
"Farming today represents his
inve!:tment in that ultimate pro-
mise . That is the carrot that
leads him. Take it away and he''.',
gone."
Diedrich was critical of the
Williamson Act, a stale la'~
which sets farmland aside in a
·1ower·taxed agricultural pre
serve. Land in the preserve can,
·not be developed. 1
Diedrich said the Williamson
Act kept the county from getting
open space land. Without the act,
he said, landowners would have
been forced to deal with the coun
ty because of the pressures of
high taxes.
Watson, however. argued that
the value of the act was in giving
developers enough time to plan
their developments well.
The discussion Friday night at
UCI w as sponsored by the
Orange County Environmental
Coalition.
•""ro1n Page Al
DOUGLAS. • •
return soon for more meetings.
•·we established our position::.
for sure. and kind of got an idea
of which way to go," Lynch said
of the meetings.
The mediation was asked for
by the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration after the
strike delayed some satellit('
launchings at Cape Canaveral
About 200 IAM worker !'.
employed by McDonnell Douglas
are stationed there to help in
launch preparation.
Launchings are continuing no"
with professional and
supervisorial personnel filling in
for striking workers. McDonnell
Douglas officials said. The firm
also said the strike would not af·
feet ~he Soviet· U.S. space mis·
sion m July unless it continues
past Jun e, when the IAM
workers would again be needed
to aid in launch preparation.
WARIMERS PAYS
Mariner• Sovlng1 hat always paid
the highest Interest legally pouible.
Now your savings con ba worth even
more at Mariners -o Big 711. % on
6·yeor certlfk:otes of $1 .000 or more.
Not o,,ly can you make money ot
Mariners, you con make f rlendt too_
w ith o strong "hometown" saving•
and loan.
Save ot Mariners. Now It mokea
more dollora ond sense!
' 7
•