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1973-01-29 - Orange Coast Pilot
.. , 7 . --• • ' • 18 I MONDAY .AFTERNOON. JANUARY 29, ·1973 VOL. U, ,NO, If, 2 SECTION$, ~ PAOiS * * * * * * * .. * * -Niguel Wo111an Waijs Communists ' Husband-POW Since1965-on.List, Heading Hom e .. By JACK CHAPPELL Of •e' Dfllt ·l"fllt I Nltt :;..nm. 1>eea1m11miil:;clwoitiJW~d: · .....n11on !IF' ~Plldlfoia""or Lal"iJI Niguel, wu, of Air Force Lt • .COI.; John .Pitchford, shOt down In Decemhel' it65. been over .tbere·one of the longest",'' Mrs. Pitchford said todaiil . o..SliLfJJ f:f~'!Jfuf!f!~~!"· tla.Y .. a _,.was onn ' !oWIU<UJU I name waa on the official list teteased by Hanoi. · "You wait: for seven years, and then you have to wait SQme more. • just 1a¢ ig a helicopter in the beach in !rol)! of. the family's new born' io ~ · , -~~"'1,!ll~N·'. ~ ai1raren.Euz!f:ui, 16, and JohQ, 1s. . live at the stlONI home, while James is a sluilmt ot Arlzoilo State Unb•µstty and dUabter ~ lives in .sacramento. While the news for 1ler was good, the wait for many wives was oot ended with Provi de Identities WASHINGTON {UPI) -Following-hi a list of California . prisoners ol war p~ vJded by the Communists. Hometowns were determined rrom a : And now that she knows John Is com· ing borne, the hours and Sk-onds just can't go fast enough. "l just hope Jolin is going to come home in the first batch. He s~d, he's ''My life -Is going to be So different when I don't have to Walt. It may take me years to adjust," she said. - joy. " . ;,I feel very bii.d about some ot my (~ WIFE, Page Z) . -. variety of non-governmental sources. - Next of kin are given '!,¥here available ... She said she wishes her bus~ could * * * . * * * Saigon Charges 500 Storm. D.:renches-- "' '• . -_, Northern Half . ·> Of California V iolati_Qns of Truce SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Moderate- SAIGON\AP ) -The South Viet· De~itiri'iEir 1.on~-u\fre were· heavy t:o-heavy rains pelted Northern catilornia JtMnese government and its Communist artillery barrages JUSt as before the . . _ .opponents accused each oUier tOOay of truce. In mahy ottier areas, small tMlt today;-and-mtermittem----ratnr,are ex· widespread violations or the cease-fire. bloody battles were fought for C(lfltrol of pected to soak the area through Tuesday, Officials of the ne\\-international villages and hamlets before the in-tu National Weather Service said. peacekeeping force expressed hope of temational observer teams are deployed. getting teams of observers into the field Military sources said a docuinent cap- by Tuesday. tured in the -Mekong Delta· instructed I.fl American soldier died today of Communist troops to keep figbUng until -}founds aiffered Sunday, the first .U.S. the 1intemational teams were. in place, fitallty .. sinc.~·.t1;1e ~ase-fi~·w.eot into et-and tO continue where there are no feet. Iti t& folfr days ·prior to the truce, teams. four American miillary men were killed, South Vietnamese officials reporled and 19 U:S. soldiers '!hd 12 U.S. civilians that casualties on both sides since the ~~edu .. S. "-mmand annOtmced the cease-fire was announced five days ago '.a.ur: \,\I approached the bloodiest weeks of last- Withdrawal of another '°° troops ~y. year's Communist offensive. the second contingent Of 400 men to. leave. Seuth Vietnamese air force pl&nes flew In a one.to.two hour period today, a weather front dumped .21 inches of rain o.i San Francisco, .29 on Shelter Cove in Humboldt County and .16 on Oakland, the weather service Said. Meanwhile, gaJe warnings were posted along the coast as gusty winds whipped the region. The aoow level in the nortJlern moun- tains is expetted to drop from 7,000 to about 4,000 fftt! ,. siDce the cease-fire agreement took, ef· bombing missions in support of govern- fect Sunday. . men.t . troops although the number of The w~therman said there were eight . 'I'b.e command saJd the men were flown sorties .was omitted-from the daily war chances m 1•-PI' ral.ri. 'in the Bay area 0ut11 of theTh.coundtryrop.lr cominercial cqmmunique. U.S. aircraft suspended ; tonight and. 7 ~fu.~10 ior more rain Tues-air ners.-is ~.. ·U.S. troop opera"oos ov •-·th v· tna · ' ·-strength-in Vietnam to 22,700 men.~ u . er ~ 1e. m m ac-day. ~"'\•·i c:eaa&fire a~~~ir;3 them to ~~~e':1~ai<t':'~e~1T.a:.ase-fll'e but con-fncreasing clQ_ucjin~ was expected in leave lhe oountry..J>y . ·· ·---" There-were coofli•Hn. rts -"' the Sierra Nevada""""· ~ttlbly turning /l'be SWt Vietnamese comman4. , . · .. , ""t'--'6 repo .wn· . ._ ~ ·-~ ~rled nearly Q v1olillons Oftli-··~~mbodia;--·U·.s:-: .OMcials in .. to ~ln. ll!, 1~ 'J)elday,. the National cMie-fire' by Communist forceS since it (Seti ~~£.FIRE, Page%) r Weather Serv~ce ~; . -~ I went into effect at 8 a.m: Sunday_(t p.m. . -:. -, ,! • 1 • · .. PSI').. ! ·~ ..... I ·~ Viel..Qo~ in a _broadc!_S!.__!~se:d---s to' the .8aigon gover!!_menra ,.un~lifglj p vlOllting the cea&e:-nre-a:greement by · milit&ry actions. . .throughout ·South--v· tna" ... ,.. ~ 1e m. · • • It said its forces ''tbtoughout tbe entire H • S T'J ,:!-d . area of South Vietnam ~~e completely UnttJtgton USpeCt ' ' lWQrte -Canild ou'-'the...ceaa.flre. ___ . . rtwn one end of the country to th.e • , , . · / , ~ other, reports n~wed into sa!gon of sharp Si.allng mooey from a hank Is liiely to gefryoo-ioto a lot of trouble with flghung. -the law, -~ • rn Quang Tri Province below the Stealing the bank · ls guailnteel to get you Into trouble, .u Huntington Belch reoldent, Richard John.Lee diacovered Sunday. -A~~~~ of !lllO Durhom__Dr!ve, WU leyjog-l<ulril D.Al.T v »JLO'"'A. off a__. Js· .as portlhte branch ~.or~a. .la-IL-~ .u. __ 1..,...-!'.!!~!!0!<!.Jlle,vJ!l .. ~.iwJre<Wn a lo> near the'~ orl!l1!b Xv .. • " • ' nue-"11'1 -Boulevard. Lee alle(<dlol broke. into lhe van, ,.moved $185 and MAKES HAPPY DUO was liYini to dri~Jt 1way, bul·couldo't get irln gear. Police 11id be _, to a nearby pr otatlon for help and lollnd <llrls J. ' DAILY PJ.L9T want ad!I just Jove to 1J6S RAMBLER Sedan, runs good $1!0. xxx .. ux Colini!ns who bod stopped at,tbe clo.ed tllatloo In """'11 Of gu. · eou-. 10ld officers he ]locome 1111Picloua wbeii lie siii ~the .,. had been ransacked and !bat it hid the name ol lhe Bank ol ~ on lbe aide. So he called police. • ' · · ' · Lee Is In custody today ,. a cltarre ol bq ~· it 1lils inf '111\rted "" fast thlt the car sold in one day aod mode two people. bappy-Jiotb the buy<r and the telleri Dl1l direct, 84™18, Md kt •· DAILY PILOr dustfied want ad•make you ha!>' py, too. · Detecliveo Aid ~Y thl!l lhe lllllon w~ ~ .., .-bod been broien llllo Solurday. About-~-~ -toai1. _. 'lbey-llid llley att"tllmlj8almg !lie pt'lli!IOJ 11111·-lools were the ooestued·ll> brMt Into the not*IDObUe bMlr. ! ---··----~.-~ • . . -I,.;, .. -;>•;c·-=: .. Tlae Big P la ·With a litt1e help from a friend, Matjorie, an Indian elephant, ei.iters her winter quartets at the ChesSington, England, zoo. Keeper Lionel Rowe supplies't.b'.e extra persuasion. Patron Stabbed " . ~ ,; ,,<\1~-- ln Co u~ty Bar A fight in the Playgirl CJub irt Garden Grove early today ended with the stab- bing of a patron. Joe W, Houser, 30. of Anaheim wa~ reported in satisfactory conditi<,in todaY in Doc:fors· Hospital, Santa Ana. He waS! stabbed once in the chest. Police are seeking Houser 's assailant. He ls~ desCrit:ied as being lr\1tis eiify 20r.-•. ""-"~t;:J>~t~ist Att~cked . on Road • _Stanton police are seeking four men who offered to aid stranded motorist and lhen attacked him with brass kou<kl· es· and a broom handle studded with razor blades. 'Ole vlcttm. Clyde ·E.~'Ear111, 24, of Anar heim, was treated for injuries early Sat-- urday, buWW not.bospti.tlzed .. Qflioers said tile auspecto ,..,. driving an "urr usual" car and attacked anothet motor- ist later. ' . • Truck _in Convo:y · • I anited.·hy Blaze !:l . An Army· t"ruck travelir'lg soutti througlr San Clemente Saturday In a convoy -~nd loaded~wilh-'live aminunition - Caught fire when a brake line broke, but the blue was.quelled wtlhout incident.-- Fir._, iilio hePJI fighting the blaze not lnowl!'tLJ~~, the ammunitio'!.i...._ said the !j(e "" *'nried 19 the rear'Wheels. A lletit~ID-:tbe eoilvoy fel>bntdif fiftl . told U... flnlf!ghters the . truck car· ried C.raUona.. 7,... ·· , -After:IM.libl'Wil .Ut !Ilg sa!.<t~f<!.ld !bemlfaauiQy cattftd ammumtlon;- .- 3 Inmates Charged - CHINO (AP) -Three inmates In the California j institution ror fl.ten have been charged with 'murder in the alleged gang ~laying of a Chino prisoner Dec. t 7. · a\lt.hQrit1es. said. Officials said Juan Colon, 23( Raymond Contreras, 34. and Frank Mendoza, 25, wilt be arraigned• this 1'tek n the killing of Rudolph C.d ... , 21. ., ~---- Where more than one address b liSted- for a POW, he is listed und$[_.l:!o_t,b_._ _ WIUr!'d IC. Abbon, Mr5 Wiifred Abbott, •1.n 11:.tdcllf!f C!,, S•n Oleoo, 11\d Allon, WYO. Ever1tl Alvirez, Santa C!1r1. . Anlhonv cn1rles And•IWI. Mn. S1ndT1 AnilNWI. 12 . Linde P1rk, (!'Kr<)> Jose Manuel Asl!ll'll, Slfl OltvO. Fr~rldC C. 9.110ock JrG Mr. F'"'rldo: lllldeck s_,iiObertw.;u\~(,;e,~·w::.i=: co11 Bl1clc, Mrt. Co11 9.l1tk. 2'15 Anl'OI Aw., .... DI~. C~1rlel G. Bol'd< Twry L &onr, Vll1li., 1rid Mrt. Ch1rle5 Bovd, Wknlt•. Kirt. Mic/Mel l-Br11elton,-L01'41 '"'h •rid SHI '"ch. ' Wiiiiam w. 8w!l,r, Mrs. Wllll•tn W.' Butl«, :.Jt 1Cnl<1ht Dr., San RI Ill. • AlllO!ro It Car!!IOn, LtmocH•. C1rl o. cn1mblr1, Vuba Cllv. Hlrl~n P. Ch1pm1n, F,..,,._I, lrid Mra. H1rl1ri Chapm1n. 20'7 E111 A"·· EIYtll, Ohio. Arvin II: Chll,lllCIY, Lllmool'l.--(11\Nlt' b. C._,, Mrs. Clludl Clowff, 51311 L1nc1 5!.1 Sen 01-.. Jamet Oul1'C'f' Jr,llN Jr .. Mrs. J•me Colllns. 71 Mercw.s Une A rton. . ll:ender C'r1vloii. In DIHD1 Ind Ch(l'loll1. N.C. Verlv.,. w. O.nlll1l l-llivw1rd. Eow1td o. eues. 9ll'IO(lr11 01vld Ar!MrlOl'I E\1A'tt, $1. Simon's Usl.,.,. Ga., Ind Sin DlfQO. John Ftr. Mr. and M...-. l!:r11111t ,.-.... 2831 Solllh Pacific Ave., Sin P9clro.. "lbtrl Kelly Fl"hef• S.Cr1tn1nlo, 11\d Raricho CO!" OVI. O.vld E. Ford, Mrs. Eldor1 FOl'cl. "''Clark l.111• W1v, ~ram1nto. Henrv_._P~ Fowtw Jr., Mrs. Henry Fowltr, 45 Seale A". P•lo Alto. • Cnarl1!5 II Glllnp!1 J_f;i Mlr1,,,.r. Mkl\ael P. Cronin, lwii;eltY. ~:~~1~,~~"'°"j'~1r,.M\ol Jr ~u.lm. CW,;ry hl'llC\M, 1 ~5 Coru lr Avt., N1v11 Ar sf11~ LI~. .. •. Collini H. H11net. Ml'$. R.oqllli \.. Hllllft, 141 Orlon Or., N1v1I Alr.St1.r_IOflr Mlrlmlr. Gret 0, Hln50ll, TllOVllnCI Ollkt. Tlioma1 J. Hilton. S.Cr1mento. . James M. Hlek.erson, M" J1mt1 Hlcll;trMn, 1•s Cru1ado:r1 Ltmoo••· -01vld Wtstn-Hoffman, Slri D'"°. · TheooOilrt Frink ICOPlmln, L-tt. ' C1rt Wiiiiam LHITlr, llfrl. Ctr! LISlttr. 14" T°"'" mv OrlW..1 &In OleflO. -Frank UOUQlll l1W11, Fair f:!"· Wl"f1m PMtl!1" L1wret1c1 lllO ltl<l'I, Mr. ll'ld Mr1. lltot..rt L1wr1nc:t, JJO~ r.ol!Un Rd •• Nl!llvlHt, Tenn, .. E1r1 Gardner l twl1 Jr .. -Mr..11n11111e L.wl1, ms 5tlDPtr L.alllj t'" °""' Danald IC1r o0tn. Los Arlotlff, Je51 Dltvld LUM, ~1111111, trid ltov, Ut1n. !See POWS, Piao I) Oruge ' • 0 About a 60 percent chance of showers is .the way the Wfillthef.- Jady sees it for·Tue~ with con· tinued wetness all day. Highs ·ot 15 • are expected albog tbe Orange Coast with, overnight lows in the, 40s. Get oot-the11aloohes'and-·rm· ..-11--coat. . • INSIDE TOM Y Lt. Col. William' Nolde waa tlie 143' American to die ln-Vid> na.m pno-r to t -==-Cease:.f• - agreeme11t on SO:tutday. Bit widow sgys 1he'1 "°' bitltr'CWlll. tllat he b·eutvtd;.,. tile WG"- crnd the Soutll. Vfctnamc1e . *" pie. See story on Poqe 4. L..M .•• ,, 11 •ll•ln• 11 t'•tlltrllll J ci.uu1et "'" Ctltllo 11 Cm1~ II 0.11~ Nork" 1 l!ft1111'141t ,.,. ' flllert ......... If ,11\11191:1 --1M1 ,., '"._.., J Htl'MUllll 14 .. ) • - Z DAILY PILOT s ~Nixon WASKINGTON (AP) -Presldenl Nlx- 00 demandod d<11b for dozens ol federal IPODdini programs today, coiled on COi> a-f<>< a rigid 1974 budge! ceillnl of ''388.7 billion, and caut ioned that greater spending would mean ··high taxes. high---4_, __ er Interest rates, re111:wt:d innauon , or all ~-" tRelatt.od l'ilori~s. Page 8.) "I oppose these 11ltt1rna11vcs; \\'ith I\ firm reln on si}ending, none of them is necessary,•· Nticon said in his fiscal 1974 Drifter, 20, __ aun..d G uil1~ In Slaying • ' A drifter from Oklahoma City has been convicted oI second-degree murder of a Navy offfcer "'hose body was dumped in an.empty lol in northern San Diego Coun- ty last fa ll. Je.rry Manning, 20. wl'IO first blurted a confession of the slaying to guards at a l.1arine base gate in San Cle,mente, was found guilty in &an Diego Su~r Court last Friday. Sentencing. for the Oklahoma City native was scheduled for Feb. 20. The jury ruled !bat Manning shot Navy Petty Officer Mitchell Quttn. 28. five times 1,1·ith a small-ealiber pistol and then dumped the {)fficer's body into a ·vacant fi eld in Carlsbad . The defendan1 insisted during the trial . that he shot Queen after the victim made severaJ advances. The prosecution, howe\'er. attempted to discount that theory .and Insisted that Queen was murdered for his car and lhe cash in his wallel · It was alleged that Manning was pi ck- ed up last Oct. 24 by the offictr in the Long Beach area and Queen then drove south with l\lanning. The murde r assertedly took place some,vhere in northern San Diego Coun· ty. . Manning then drove the car with Queen's body still in the rront seat to the Encina area of Carlsbad. There. he dumped , the re.mains and then drove north again. Queen 's car then.ran out of fuel a mile south of Basilone Road. Manning then set out on foot and ar· rived at the Christianitos gate before da\\11. Police reports said he told sentries ~hat he had "shot a man." Local police wtre called and drove Manning back to the stalled cii.r. \.beni-to · the spot· where Queen's body lay. Btu·ger Bandits Flee With $400, Employe's Car A pair of gunmen held up a McDonald's hamburger stand in Costa Alesa late Sunday and escaped with more than '400 in cash after commandeering the car of an employe. Co:;la Mesa police officers recovered the auto about an hour fater the 11 p.m. heist, but the two robbers, both in their mid-twenties, were long gone with the loot. The men entered the hamburger em- porium a'\t. 3141 Harbor Blvd. shortly before closing and ordered some food. Then one of the ba~its whipped out a small pistol and demanded the day's r~ipts. The bandits' ransacked the safe and took a bag containing alx>ut $180. They then removed an unknown quantity of cash from the register. The total take is believed to be in excess of $400. After ordering all four employes to "gel down on your bellies" the gunmen sped off in lhe stolen car, police said. . Investigators said both men were dressed in green coats and that one of them had two front teeth missing. DAILY PILOT ,,,. Onfttt C-r D,\ILY .. 11..or, wllll Mlldl ls camblned fhe H...,.P.....,, h pUDllslltd l:IY tM> Ot ..... CNJI l"Wlllhln9 C~. ~ r_.. tdlllont •ni l'Ubl~ MMfrf ~ Frld1y, Hr COiii Mn1, N--1 9"cf\, Ht111tll'l!ltari 9eK111"-ttln v11i.y, ~ IMCll. l"'IMISNdlellilcll end $111 C19mtntll l1n ._ c.,w.1,.,._ A all'llle nrsi'-1 edlllol\ b lllltlllshld Slturcllya lnill s.n.s.,._ Thll prlllclS-1 pt.lbllalllrll pl.Int Is II UI Wl!1I .. ,. Sit"', Colli 1'Wtl, Clll!Otnil, tMH. Ro~•rl N, W11d l"rnldtnl Mid ,.ubll&h« J1ek R. C~rl1v Vice Pl'WKltlll Mil Girner11 Mtlllllillf Tholl'lll K11vil Editor lhom11 A. Murphln• M1M1lfl0 IJll!Ot Ch1rl1s H. Loos Rith1rd f', N•ll M4iltlfll Mllllllne lid!Jo•• ........ Cetfl Mfll; SlO Wtll II~"!' $'1ftt .....,.. .. Kii: m.J H...,,wt Bo\lfmlrf La911111 1..0: m Forest ,,.,,_ Hwt1~4la1 lh«ll1 HIJ' 8Nefl IOlltVlfl S.11 CIMNn1e1 JU NWlll ll CllNnl ll:MI Tt11,h1111 C7141 "&42-4121 C1...W ......... '42-1&71 Pf'llW CIMlll A19H 5"111 9f ~ IMCll 492-4420 '""' Mer1lll or._ c-i., C•"''"""'"" 140.1221 Clr/'l"'ltM, ltn, Oraflllt Cotti Pubnt111111 ~"'· Mo MIWI .Ill' ... , llhnl ... llDM, tlftorl4t 1111ntr " 1dy~ll1fll'llfltt Mrtlll "'*Y M ,.,...llCH wltlllul t11«ltl ""' """"°" " atJ'l'ltf'd -· ...... cl111 ... , ... llltkl II C.!1 Miit, Clllflnll1. lulllKtlflflon b't u rrlrr U.U ""°""'"'' ~ mell u .11 mon111.1r1 rn1111wr ......... c . .s 11'6nlhlt. r •• • • Urges Rigid Budget · Ceiling --: Volcano Isle ' \ Hit by Storm , , ; I budgot message, -to thenow Oingras as the foremost ol the three ...ior .,,. nual ]>mld"'tlol ,,,...,.. ... The do<ument Uvl'd •P to advance bll~ In{ as an u job on many llOdal, lltallb, bolising, education and a.nUpoverty pro- grams of his Democratic predeces.ws - programs Nixon said failed ifter a fair tr ial. Despite the domestic cutbacks the bud,g· el called ·for $81.1 billion ln milltuy out· • lays, tho ....00 blaeol defense bucltret in history evm with the peace a.areemeot in Vietnam. It pro"Yided no runcts for n-- coostructlon ol Soulb Vletnain. Nixon called his budget a t11r111nfl point In oatlonal policy thotJ&h sUU .,.11ten In the familiar red ink -a $24.S.bllllon dtr~ left fhb year and 'a fl?.7~btll.lon dettcit to fiscal 1974. Bui tho Prcsld<nt pointed •• . 113 program cutbacks and terminations, . worth $6.~ billion in savinp 41 this fbcal • )'ell' alaoe, and told the lawmatf.11: '"ll>o 11174 budaot Is tho.clw - fll Ille kllld fll d>ailf• In dlnlCtkm de-l!lll>Ck<I by the great majority Of the Americaa peopl<. No tonier wW powel- flow lDeJ1J<ahly to W asblngton." '.l1>e lliuTel -,.... of tl1em 1 .. kod in adhnce by Nixon hbns<lf -were:- For (!seal 11173: Outlays $249.8 billion, roce~ 1225 bllllon. t•or fiscal 1974: "Oullays Slll.7 billion, I receiptl $211 btllloa. REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) -1 Nlxoo lnvltod an lnr-Illed -llelJnM!1 Island, wtiere tho Helg• I stnigglo wtlb the Domocratlc-eonU.lled )jell -...,..i to IUe lut ::i:;-t ~~ ~.t:~J.·~i:r ~:1.~~~:·~'~i;t:~.· th•r bundling ol 70 fl'deral ald programs t03ay aa too eruption wentt:' Ha ' Into four broad'"spcdal revenue-sharing sixth day ·without-any sl of • programs" for the stlltes a.Q;d cities, with subsiding. ' Jess federal contr<>I. And ht rcyealed his A ,torm with winds of1 •P to 70 cull ror=a drastic govemmeutal reorga.11• miles per hou'.r Jas~ .the lslancl ~ tJatjon which Congree1 has resisied for Sunday and spread the· ashet over i two yeart. · the Island, ffllmg the atreeli with a " ·•A thorough .overhaul of tho loderal black, aoggy mud and hlmplri111 bureaucracy-1:1 Jong overdue, and I am . eUorta of th9 reacue teams still l determined lo acwmpl~h It." the Prest· lbere. I dtnt said. A new storm .wu 1otec1111t f0t1 Nlxon propolltd no new spmdlng ~ tonight. ., 1 grams. Vtt., the 1974 budget will brlna an ' $18.9-bllllon Increase in speod1111f over the I year that eodl June 30, largely because \ r -ol-mllit•fl'"1lO)l-ond-p<i<e bi1ncrm. ..... .;;~d-7~=======~E"--4'"·hat Nlx'on i;atled "uncontrollable items" overnmen -indudini a 11.91 billion Increase tn ;,,. ' , Loved O.nes Wait lerest cOstsAn the cll.Iribini: federal debt. • The $6.$· billion 1n oo•back5 . •nd Rests Case withhold ing or runds already ap- propriated throw• a challenge to . , ,. .. Congress. where every program has ' I r I I King Coming King H~ of Jordan ~rill visit the United States next month, according to an official announcement. He is to meet with President Nixon Feb. 6. Long-ter1n Spill Damage 'M i11or' VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) -Long·tenn damfge to fish an wildlife in the area of a 100,000-gallon oU spill appears minimal, a spokesman for the Canadian Envirdo- ment Department says. "The future of recreational areas Is another matter," however, said Chris HaUield. the department's pe"""'1el coordinator. .~tfield said all salmon and her;ing spawning areas apparently esca.Ped pollution and Only one major clam bed "·as covered with oil from the fretibter Irish Stardust, whid1 ran aground ... Jast v:eek near this village on the Strait of Charlotte. . ~lethadone Discussion Scheduled on KOCE The. use of methadone, a controversial substitute tor heroin now given to 250 Orange County addicts, will be the sub- ject for discussion on a KOC&. TV Chan- nel SO broadcast tonight at 6:30 p.m. and Thursday at 8 p.m. The half-hour telecast will feature in- terviews wilh the corrdinator of the county's program and with two addicts currently on the methadone program. The show will be hosted by Jim. Cooper. From Pagel CEASE-FIRE • • • Phnom Penh said all lx>mbing was suspended there with lhe cease-fire, but a Washington report sa.id they continued. President Lon Nol also ordered all cambodian ground forces not to engage in offensive military operations from 7 a.m. tOOay. lo enable North Vietnamese and Viet C:Ong forces "to leave ou r coun· try in the shortest possible time." Thtre 9.'as no immediate indication whether the Co mmunists in Cambodia 1,1·ere cooperating in Lon Nol 's cease-fire. In Vientiane , the Laotian capital, military sources said fighting increased in southern Laos, but there ha ve been no significant oftensives lawiched by either side to gain territory before a cease-lire is announced. Prince Souvanna Pbouma, lhe Laotian premier, said In New Deihl Sunday that he hopes a cease-fire can be achieved in his country soon. * While families of nearly fiOO American pdsooers of war in North and South Viet- nam rejoiced or were sorrowed by listings of their Jovtd ones, families of men missing in action over Lao.s .re- mained ucertaln today. IDformed only by Defense Department ofllcials that their men were not on the Usts rele~ by Hanoi, wives, mothers and brotfiers and slsters of nearly 300 U.S. servicemen continued to wonder. , Mrs. Barbara Hedrick of Culverdale whose brotbe~ LL James"Wayne Herrick is lrvine-S adbpted MIA, said'today her parents were told "Jim's name is not on the liSt." "I called Washington and was told there were DO names of -servicemEn missing in act.ion in Laos on the list. The agreement (signed Saturday) includes ooly °""' prisooen of war In· North and South Vietnam," she said. 'l'be Defense Department also said ro. day 56 American servicemen previously carried by the United States as prisoners of war remain Wl3CCOUOted for by North Vietnam. A Pentagon spokesman said their names "are not on the two lists we have received so far ." Other area families affected -by the lack of information from Laos include Mn. Janice Lyon of University Park. Her husband, Major Don lq'oo, w a s adopted by the city of ~ Beach. He bu been missing over Laos since Mareh 22, 1918. Mrs: Carole Hamon of El Toro al s o waits woid ol her husband, Stephen. "I suppose ··we Will haw to Walt 'until we qult fighting In I.-to koow fO< sure wbat . ·ba--1 lo oor men," lln. Hedrick said today. '"U It doUQ't llOUDd too sWy I would like to ask people lo do one lhlnl· -•· 1 -wouJd-appreciat..-praY<rS-from everybody, now, until we know for cer- tain what happened to these meo, ... she said. Siie noted !bat there i.s stW hope for the men who baVe yet-to be listecf!lhce the lists failed to carry the name of an MIA who responded to the initial letter- writing campaigns to Hanoi. The lists include 55 names or servicemen who died in captivity but did not name all the potential prboners, Mrs. Hedrick believes. The Cnited States is pinning hopes on an erpected accuunting of Americans lost in Laos to swell the total of 555 U.S. ~gbting men known to be pri.sooers of the Commtmlsts In Indochina. The PenlJigon said there are no clue$ to the fate of 1,315 Americans still miss- ing in actioo in Southeast Asia. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said Sunday !bat the Laptlan problem Is being discussed wllb the North Vietnamese through dJplomatic channels in Paris. "We do expect to receive a list,'' Friedhelm said. "We hope to have It shortly." If necessary, ho said, Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. Woodward, chief U.S. representative to the temporary four- power joint • military commission supervising lhe cease-fire, would raise the i.sa:ue at the group's first meeting. The question of the missing , Friedhtlm said, will be pursued in the coming months with the North Vietnamese and Vic.t Cong by going over tbe list of miss- ing, name by name, to obtain information on their whereabouts. In identifying by name lbe 5S5 American: POW1 in North and SOuth Viet.-- nam lo be re1eilled by tbe Communists within the 61).day period following tbe cease-fire, the Pentagon said North Viet· nam also reported that 55 POWs died in captivity. FrontP .. el POW s FROM CALIFORNIA • • • He "id every .t:ffOrt wUI be' made to learn tbe cause ol·~th in each case. . Tbe dead lndudt.22 Army ·men, nine Navy, lfl from thi Air ·Force and 8 Marines. The 555 Americans awaiting freedom include 76 Army, 135 Navy, 318 Air Force and 26 Marines. Joyal supporters. and makes it doubtful In Buggi·nu that Nixon can maJe his ceilings slick. ~ However, he gains extra leverage by insisting on the four .special revenue-WASIDNGTON (AP) --1be govertt- sharing plans for education, Jaw en-ment rested its caae In the Watergate forcement, job training and community poliUcalespiQOage trial today. 1 development. Mayors, governors and The government rested after calling' local prtSsure groups who want to.save a 51 witnesses, including seven members. doomed day-care or health program, for of President Nixon's White Rouse aQd instance, might be able to do so.by using campaign staffs and two orticials of the revenue-sbutng money; they are likely Democratic patty. '-t~ply heat on Cong...,. to provide such The ,,.,. grew o.J1 ol'~ brea k·in and l'roM P.,e ·J f The. upturn in defense spending·, to a alleged bUgging o1. thiDeinocraUc head· WIE total only half a billion sollars smalltr • quarters in the Watergate building co,. ·E than tha the ••• 6-h;tn--plex June 17. • _, ,.,..! _ _ _ n -~ peak of -· ·~ WU ..-..led to --p1~-, warfare and atOm-lx>mb ollllaYs of t!MS, 41e ~eme ... _... ...._.. cwc- f · -•· h ha he also is likely to slrike sparks. its presentation briefiy, and presiding r1euu,, w o ve gotten t bad news. I u s Dis · Jud John J s· · hed know many of them. They deserve a Th~ tolal in cludes military foreign aid, ~ ~ct ge l · :~a .:;: . • bceak..aad they jui& aren'g-gelting-~" atomic energy and other in~t defense _ clost.ng arguments or 111 es m she said. · outlay~, but the share for the Pentagon tbe. ~ -.. _ -. "I f*1 so happy tmtil 1 trunk of some of _ alone.1~ up $4.2 billion from this year, to Sll'1ca S&.1d ·~ would deliver his charge the olJier girls whose husbands are not f19 billion. . to the jlll')', which will.nm aome 40 pages, corning back," she said. The Defense Department sak!, at the openins: of ~Tuesday. The case Since the announcements about the-moreover, that It may have to ask then would go Immediately to th~ jury. return of the prisooen Mn·~~Pitcbford Congress for more money to pay for Tbe government wound up with only has been besieged -by calle~ and 11 mine-clearing , troop withdrawals, and two witnesses ~ay ._ White House law- wishers. At first. John's name was 0;~t-other closln.g-out costs in Vietnam. Other y~r Fred Fielding ~nd Democratic offi- led trOm initial published lists r ~urces said prlvate~y -that funds for c1al _R. ~~r Obver .. prisoners and friends were an:do 0 Vietnam's reconstruction also are likely Oliver testified only briefly, but said However Mrs Pitchlord bas us. · ed to be as ked later. But Secretary of the his telephone at Democratic National letters fro~ h~ over the ia:~ Treasury George Shultz told newmen Committee offices in lhe Watergate com. years. .that if new costs are p'ut into the· budget, plex was tapped. "Mostly he talked about his health "Something else will have tc come ou t." Oliver, eu.cutive director of the Assocl- being good. JI looked like he was being The booming economy foreseen for atim of State.Democratic Chairmen, was "loery careful in writing so the letter calendar 1973 makes possible the curtail-asked on cross • examination by defense would go through. ment of some work and welfare pro-' attorney Peter M.aroulis if be had "ever "He tept telling me to buy somebing grams, the Nixon message said. Sllultz been the obl«i-ol blaci:mail." 'e xpensive. I'm not sUrt wby, 1 do .§Sid the government expect& joblessness Although Oliver answered the questk>ns anyw-"y," the overjoyed woman jaid. to decline from the present 5'.2 percent with a "No," Sirica ordered the jury to rate to 4.5 percent by the year ~nd. disregard tbe question and answer. And Crosby ln•lew Dies SANTA MONICA: (AP)·-Enrtrtalner Bjng Crosby's sister-in-Jaw has (tied-at St. John's Hospltai-frdm'a..'ef!eaS of a tw~~k-old tnJ~ •. docton~§8id. Ib.e. death OIMrs. Elaine CroslJ)I, 68, came Sunday after a blood clot formed from a wrist fracture, said a spokesman for the family. In a. nationwide radio address from his Oliver left the stand.-tbe last of the gov. .Key Biscayne, Fla., home Smiday, Nixon ernment witnesses. . made an appeal for support: Fielding an ~te counaeJ to Prq.1- , ··Every member of ti'< Congrl"' gets ~en~ Nlxo0; tesillled aboiJt the opening enormous preslure frorri special tntemi. or a sale lb the ExecUtiVe Office Building to spend your money for .what they !f'&Dl. used by E. Howard Hunt, a f~mer White And so I ask you to back up those con-House conwltant who pleaded guilty 1n gr:es.§me11 an~ .. thoR....w!.•ton . whether -the-Watergate case -Democrats or Republicans, who have the The · . · . courage to vote against higher spending. prosecution ~ted ~? witnesses The"y hear fro\'n the 11pecial Interests, let ~ .~ close of Fridays session. The re- thfm hear-from you " he sajd mmg defendants are G. Gordon J.4ddy, ' · (ormer counsel to President Nixon's cam. , ___________ ....:.______________ pa.Jgn finance committee, and James w. McCord Jr., Nixon's campaign security First Casualty GI Killed After Cease-fire SAIGON (AP ) -A U.S. helicopter pilot, wounded while flying an aircraft reported to bear~ in~ded .to i~icat_e its neutrality, died today. He was the first American killed in Vietnam since the cease-fire went Into effect Stmday 1Il411ling. chief. • lnltlall1. Asst. U.S. Atty. Earl J. Sil- bert pJ8.nned to r:all 60 witnesses. But five defendants pleaded guilty and the number of witnesses was reduced. The trial started Jan. 8. Hunt pleaded giiilty jllSt after the jury ~as selected. Bernard L. Barker, Eugen- 10 R. Martinez, Frank A. Sturgis and Virgilio R. Goozalez, all from Miami, pleadod gullty a few days 1*. One key witness, Hugh W. Sloan, form. er treasurer of the Finance CommJttee- to Re-Elect the Pre.sident, testified that former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and THE U.S. COMMAJ>:ID identified the pilot as: WO Anthony Dal Pozzo, 22, of Santa Barbara. It .said he was wowided by small.arms fire from the ground while flying a courier IDmioa 10 miles southwest of Can ibo, capital of the Mekoog Delta. .• fonner Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans approved his payment of al most $200,000 to Liddy, which the government says financed a spying operaUon agabfSt ~ second American aboard tbe helicopter suffered minor wounds. He was i~tifled by the COl!'Jlland as Lt. Col. Daniel Rickard of Williamsburg, Va., seruor U.S. adviser in An Xuyen, oouthernmost province in Vietnam. THE INCIDENT OCCURRED about 9:45 a.m. an hour and 45 min utes after the Vietnam cease-fire formally went into eHect, lbe command reported.. the Democrats. ..~· Mitchell served fer a tinie u NlJ:on'a campaign managerr 11bile·•Stans was chief fUnd raloer aoo· chairman ol the campaign fimnt:e committee . LOW PRICES AR·E BORN HERE ••• RAISE ELSEWHERE Adn1lral NO. DEFROSTING REF.RIGERATOR/FllEEZER ALL TI1ESE OREA t - e '20 .. ..,.FEATURES 1 1 'ull Wldltt "~ 'l'Mnf' Door ShtU -for tnittnt aYall•blllty. 1 Ou1I Tomper•tu,. Oontrolt- Hllct thl.r1Jtlt t91'11J*"*b1N for •..:It MCtlon • • Twin hfntaln Crftpn-kMjll fruit. 1111•!1blft 11roen frt•l'i. • &:t.1"11 l•fl• A•lrl11r1itot Ooot Sh1IV91-holdl ..,..n tall qu•rt botllHI Ad1nln1/. MHet NT 1JJ4 No d1fro1th19 r1ld91r1t.r ,;ctlo111 with Arctic Air flow l'(lt.tll for fwll ty,cl1 circul1Jloa, SUMUNE-REFRHllATll M ... Cllll , -· • Full Width ,,..., 0-t • W*AVCI T~ CoMt'4 - ALLTHIS '25995 FOR ONLY • Rtd Viwal Otfl'Olt·tfmtr lndk.ttor _ • IWn o.p Door lhllf • ruft"Wldth r-... ·Mlft alftlW °"'"' 159'5 --m Momlier of 90 DAY U c1111orn11•1 Laroost CASH Group With The WlfH "'"°na • _. Ul C-allve Buylnt YPl•m• Buylnt CUl1T ••lilt "•••u -•-Pow..-of 110 S-i·#i ~ 11, \'tlltMI HT ... -. ~ I h 1815 NEWPORT 81.Yll Dawnlawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7781 ' •• -,-. --------·--*----1---.. ·I . . • ._ ~irport Enhancement: " Buying Nearby Homes? . ' By L. PETER f(JllEG 04 .... ~lly ,lt9t .. lff THERE'S A CURIOUS !ltlle tlem In Orange Coonty Administrative Officer Bob Thomas' recommendations for spending County federal revenue ahariD& monies. He Usts Sl milUoo for "airport enhancement." But Orange Cowity Airi>Ort is supposed to be operated on an enterprise , • s OA.ILV PILOT :J Netv Trial? l Hopes of t~rona Rest~ th Pair FAJRFIELp {UPI)..:. Juan V Corona -convicted or the biggest ma murder in the nation's history ->has inned his tiopes for a new trial to a pair of \\'omen. • One has had a lot to say in public. The other is accused of making her ren1arks to only one ot her Person. The \\'omen are key figures in a.hear. ing before SuJ'.>f!'"iOr Court Judge Richard Patton today on a defense motion for a new trial for Corona, a 38-year-0ld Me!t.i · can fann labor broker. Corona was found Later the same day, Mrs. Naomi Un- derwood , a 63-~Mld widow, mad e staten1ents that defense attorney Ri t'h· ard Havt'k said "ble\v the \\'hole th ing WJ>.,. meaolngJl's,'"gAO,led to~yJoi ilself. ........:.-..., __ Church Nixes Priesthood -Fo.-Women ---'\¥ide-i!pen.P -' ~ County Av!atloo Direc1or Robert Bresnahan Insists he asked for the money -lo be spent for expansion of the terminal facilities. COUPLED WITH Supervlsor Ronald C8spers' declaration that he'll have a major @ool)WlCtment about ~ airport in the next 30 10 4S days, it 1las given rise to other specu1ation. That speculation includes the possibility the money will be used_ to start buying up homes under the alrport flight path. The million dollars wouldn't go very far -It might buy half the homes in AMlversary Est.ates off lrvine Ave- nue -but it would be a start in meeting a new state law that says airports must have zero Impact by 1964. ,.. THAT ISSUE JS now Wlder intense study bi Brtsna- KllRO flan 's office and the airport director says he's going to have a re~rt to superv~rs next month on how ln tbeivorld they're going to obey the Jaw. . Initially, agencies controlling airports are supposed to file master plans · with the state., telling how they're going to ~mplish it. Bresnahan concedes that buying up alJ the homes Wlder the rught path Is one way. Buylng easements over the homes is another. TO AN EXTENT, so is the current experiment to tum around the flights, so they take off ov.er empty fields to the north and land coming in over Upper Newport Bay. Bob Thomas is ~rtainly nobody's fool and B! an ok1 military man, be knows the distlnct advantages of fighting your battle! on a single front. In other words, why try to put an airport -anywhere else and incur the wrath of new homeowners' groups and other city councils? NEWPORT BEACH and Tustin are the ooly re.al vocal opponent. to the present site of the airport and buying a few homes and some easements over others would accomplish a number of things. Jt would eliminate the very real threat of losing some $30 million to the homeowners who have filed noise suits against the county -and woo1d buy a lot or time for lhe industry. to work out ways to build quiet jets. That possibility ls apparently so far off, still, that Bresnahan says he's not even including it as a way the county mJght get down to zero .impact in the next deca~e. THROUGH ALL THIS, the good office of Supervbor Caspers is reinalning mum . The Lido Isle politico refu.ses to discuss possi~ties of buying homes. An aide curtly brushes it off by saying, "J!ve oever heard of that." But observers of the monumental struggle by Newport Beach against the bother of the airport are insisting too many things point to aome immediate action. • THEY POINT TO repeated dissatisfaction with airport studies : the re- fusal ol San Diego County to help pressure for an airport at Camp Pendleton : a call by Supervisor Ralph Clark for an environmental impact report on the entire airport and Caspers' pending pronouncement, and the one millioo dol· Jars. And theysay something is in the wind. ·~ Delegates to a conven.tion _or the Epi S<.'Opal Diocese of Los Angeles, the church's largest, have voted against ordination of women to the priesthood. Meeting over th e weekend at the Anaheim Convention Center, the 1,000 clergy and lay delegates passed by voice vote a resol ution endorsing the "ancient and traditional" practice of ordaining on- ly me.n to the priesthood. The church does ordain women as deacons, who cannot celebrate Mass, a church spokesman said. , The Rev. S. J. Habiby , cbaJrman of the diocese's communications department, said the issue of women entering the priesthood will come before the chlirch's fall general convention in Louisville, Ky. fs DAILY ,.~OT S1'ff !"Mt• OWL MAK HOME IN IRVINE TOWN CENTER PLASTIC PLANTS Delegat es to the Anaheim convention abio voted to refuse to support the United Farm Workers boycott of lettuce, to divide the eight-county diocese effective Jan. I and to table a proposal to grant aJVnesty to men who refused to serve in the Southeast Asian \\'ar. M•yor Flschb.ch Suggtsts 'Birds of• Feather Flock Together' . \ . Cou~~il Bovie Will Bartenders In California Tot.Vil Ce1iter Resident Expecting? By-GE08GE LEIDAL Of ftHI O'!J.1¥' l"lltt Stiff A homed dwl, perhaps making its nesi in time for delivery of its young, ha s taken up residence am.iClst plastic plants in the hanging plantets or Irvine Town Center. Dr. Gordon Marsh, co-ch.airman of the UC Irvine San Joaquin Marth committee .and biological science's professor, visited the nest and observed, "The time is cer- tainly now ror owls to be preparing for their young." • City planning 5eeretaey Jeri Wilson spoUed the feathered vlsitoc three days ago and wondered if it bad bee.a hurt. She called the w\J.dli(e , eipert from ., UCI across campus Drive to investigate. "Owls have their young at this time of year ~Q take advantage of the abundant supply ohlewbom field mice whiclr-are not found until later in the spring, just in Wear Hairnet,s? time to feed the new owls," Marsh said. SAN BERNARDINO (AP) ·nie hanging planter is located above Bartenders here may soon be wearing the outdoor eating area adjacent to the hairnets ir the countY. Health Department Spritzgarden Restaurant. That is the bas its -way. Irvine nitery which is responsible for the Dave Oldenberg, superviM>r of the soothing, juke box rock music which county's restaurant inspectors, recently filters upwards into the Irvine City Qxm.. decided that because bartenders -male cil Chambers. • or female -legally come under the ·The owl's roost is no more than a same regulatk>fl8' _that apply to dozen feet away from the spot where restaurant food h:lndlers, "loose hair Irvine Mayor William Fischbach sits dur· -must be controlled." ing councU meetings. Out. to the public went the Inspectors. Marsh fears if the bird hatches its and since Jan. l about 25 citations have young they will fall out of the nest and betn issued for uncontrolled hair. crash to the concrete patio just 12-feet Oldenberg said be doesn't expect She identified herself as the juror \\•ho ·held out during the \\'eek of deliberations because she had "Cloubts" about Corona's guilt. f\frs. Underwood said she joined the 10 men and one woman in making the guilty verdict unanimous ·'to get some peace" from what she described as "tremcndolls pres.sure" by fellow panelists. Jiawk later produced a statement he said ~·as made by Mrs. Underwood that the night before the verdi ct was handed down she had talked with a Solano County· sheriff'S". matron 'vho had been looking after the jurors. The matron, Mrs. Georgia \Vallace, 38, had offered infonnation to "case your conscience" If she later had doubts about her decision to go along wit h the other jurors in convicting Corona , ~1rs. Under- wood said. She said the remark was made "after everybody knew, including my. self" that she was going lo vote Corona guilty. Hawk charged the conversation was jury tampering, a felony in California. The verditl of guilt y On 25 murder counts came after a four-month trial dur· ing which the prosecution put 117 witness- es on the stand and submitted 900 items of evidence in the circumstantial case against Corona. Immediately after the verdict. Hawk filed a motion for a new trial which he said would be based on "errors of Jaw." A refusal by th e judge to grant a new tr~al would clear the way for sentencing of Corona . guilty 11 days ago of slaying 25 itinerant field hands and burying their bodies along the banks or the Feather River near Y~ba City. ·'\- Teen Girl Dies After Stinging CLEVELAND (UPI ) -Ell,.n ' Residents along Anniversary Lane and Golden Circle-the most noise-im- pacted are·a -say they haVen't been approcbed, though, by anyone from the county. ' BUT THEY WOULDN'T "Decessarily be approcl>ed In altvanee .. that may mean nothing. Dr.-Manh speculated.the owl favored the protection the -l'own Center roof ov.tfba.nl provides while fli[ording the nesting t:iird the protection of a clear vantage point, siinilar to locations owls geoerally find for their nests in trees. below. . ...... ·······--···· ...... ba<tendeu ~ .. th. closelJ .cropped .hair .. to He added, however, a .previous ex-be bothereo,~nd said the first 'two cita- perience with new owl young will keep tions are considered "watnl.ngs'' by his him from getting too involved. olfice. Me€artf>1i · 16. -died -during · the ·weekend·· ....• after being stung a month ago by a I Portuguese man-0f-war while on vacation But they'll be listening carefully when their SUJ>ft"'lsor opens his mouth on the subject of air. . At Doheny State Marsh ruled out injury as the pos&ble reason the owl took refuge in the unusual gravel "nest." An earlier flock he raised, Marsh But olber sources say a bartender cited recalled "just took too much time. You three or-more times may be prosecuted, begin by feeding them dead meat and with a conviclion on the misdemeanor then have to teach them to hunt. . charge c.arrying a penalty of $25 to'$50. He motioned as he described the way Bartender.s have ·atready filed a · he taught them to fly. "You place them challenge through their union. on your arms anfl flap away until they In Los Angeles, a county health offlcial get the idea and fly away. It all takes said aJthough "what they're doing there ju!lt too long," Marsh said. is legal, it's highly unlikely that we 'll do in Florida. ~ l.9th grader from Gl~and Height. was stung on the right temple wbtle on a raft orr Fort Lauderdale, Dec. 28. She was revived, but haa l);etn fn a coma ever since. She died at Ralnbor Babies' and Children's Hospital here Saturday. Ho•~ver. some steps to protect cit y the same thing here." · Florida Judge Dies hall's firstborn owls -if they indeed are born.there -wit! be taken. Marsh neted Crash Kills Pilot JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) _ u.s. th.at with dogs continuing to roam the Dist. Judge WillJam A. McCrae , 931 once U~I campus, despite a chancellor's ban, INDIO (AP) - A Blythe man using his threatened with impeachment by former the young birds would not survive long single-engine plane to chase balloons was Gov. Claude. Kirk over a school Storage Yard Not Allowed nie property at the southeast comer of El Toro Road and ftiuirlands Boulevard called fora rezone from apartment use 1o service station. The change would have amounted to an amendment to the one-mile radius of the property. di · the £ ou' of the nest. killed when the craft crashed while mak-desegregation order, died Saturday or • it an ad hon to proliferati on ° strip nest during then ight, he added, to be ing:tia steep turn oear here, authorities heart attack. He. wu President John F commen::iatio:ting in tbe area. Students will be asked to babysit the said. The pi.lot, Charles Raymond Kennedy'~ [irst appo~intment to t~ Board Chairman RonaJd Caspers said ....... t during the -'•"', he added, to be " '9 ·~ f f h fed al bench he Dill b P ·th tbe 5 t ..... ., '"6"' .,. wan, " , was 1.111"'0wn ree o t e er and drew the governor's was ap Y wt pre en certain tbe owl's mate makes regular I and ---··--• dead ••-· ~ he ruled development of El Toro Road bUsinesses deli 1 1 fresh Pane wu piuuuWA.'l:U w.: ire "~' Duval County was not · 'El Toro general plan covering an area bounded by the Cleveland National Forest on the oorth, Mission Viejo on the tieast, San Diego l<'reeway on the south , and the Irvine Ranch on the west. Chan Fay of the Rinker Corporation, who planned to develop the property, said the new stations would relieve traf· fie congestion :.it El Toro Road and the Santa Ana Freeway. Robert t_ Snyder of the Environmental Coalition opposed tbe zone change calling with a surplus of service stations and Ii· , __ v_er_ea_o __ .:..•_1iel_cJ..:..pl_ck_ed_m_ea_L ___ sce_ne_. _________ ----tryin-'--' -"g_to_d_eae-=.grega-=._te_._· __ ~-- quor stores. He moved for denial and it carried 5--0. S~'t' '.5 . • • • ' B(O I .. Assistant Janning Director Stuart Bail&S" said the Planning Commission had held cight~hearings extending over more than a year on U>e,rezone. GOP Law1nakers Urge Cuba Ties 1'1le planning commission. finally ap- proved the shange by a 3-2 vote but re- quired dedication of parts of thi'pi'Operty for the widening of :6:1 Toro Road.' arid Murilands Boulevard. -• • • Supervisor Ralph Clark, himself a ~ice stalioo owner, poioted out that !here are 16 gasoline stations within a • . , • ~ • WASIDNGTPN (UPI ) -A group of Republican congresmien, including California's Paul N. McCloskey, joined today in urging that the United States take immediate steps to try to renew nonnal diplomatic relations with CUba. • "Unitec;I .State&Cube.n relations have been marked by over a decade of mutual !Jtlarclaing to El' Toro distrust, hostility and recriminations," the congressmen said in a statement titl- ed ·~ detente with Qlba." Two days before his re-election, Presi· dent-Nixon said ln an interview with the Washington Star-Daily News that he fon!ll.w no change ·in the U.S. policy toward Olba. ' I I Although the 400 students who signed u)> IAl appear days before didn't come, an enthusiastic Saturday mini-march of 43 students walked from !he ·rugh • school to El Toro Center where !hey bean! speeches -. about the Saddlebaclc Valley Uni!tell School 01 .. trict's Feb. 6 bond election. The Issue is for $28 mUUon hi local bonds and $18 million In borrowing caplclt~ for state aid. • II ~WPOR1' BLVD. .STAY IN • • • PL(NTY Of TIM:« TO SltOP 1110 SAV4 • 4-" i --~-----.... ---· • -- . . "t'.00 Ml\N'r' fOL\C.S llA.t S'flLL 'llYl.M&. TOO MUC\\ fOlt '1'11(19. fURM11'Ul'.4 • MOT TN{l" fAU\.1' "MA\.lV. "f"<Y ~AV~ $(,N m11c,1's A1>S" QUT" 1'H<V CAN'T flND 1'ff( S1'0R( • SO NOW" "' Tll-* ~A"f Mlt l4lOjU. \~lNG THIS AD llltTH YOU ~ND SfK Wll\. SHOW ~OCI. ~OUI TO G('f HO/n( ••• OP.. ~LS.C • i OAJLY PILOT MOflday JtnUill")' !~ l't11 . --- Amnesty IssUe: Qnfair to ' l w~~r l)ead? with Tom urphine Summer Crush . Starts E~rly ,SQUINJ1NG TOWARD SUMMER - «U.ial--<>f-lhe--morning weather report qgesttd v.·e-ha\'e a better than SO-SO -Chance of being Yisited by rain maybe tonight, maybt Tuesday too. Like alway s, the weather predictors deel in a l<>l ol ·~aybes. You know ho"' that g..,, Anyway, wet weather just seems like a fan tasy lifter the glorious \\'eekend tum- ~ on by Mom Nature here al6ng this best of -al) possible coasts.· Some long- time coast watchers will tell you that {' weather like that at this time oI year predicts a great summer aheag. THAT J\.1AY BE. \'ou can ponder. however, if the weather of the late weekend predicted how the swnmer is going to be, did it also predict how the · traffic was golng to flo\v? I don't know precisely how it was in your neighborhood over the weekend becau'se I didn't try to get too many places. This was probably fortunite plan- . ning .on .. my part. From my perch, it appeared that everybody in the universe decided this would be a great lime to traverse the Orange Coast. All those parties residing in San Diego decided to go to Los Angeles. All those in the LA area prompt- ly drove to San Diego. All I tried lo do was drive through Laguna Beach. Tried. that is, along Laguna Beach. Tried , that is, along with . buses, boat trailers. bicycles or whatever else they could get roW., Thus it wa s that in the peak hours, coast lligbway in ~he Laguna region rooked like Cal \\'orthington 's used car lot 01\'L Y DIFFERENCE was tha t Good 01' Cal mo\'es cars orr his lot faster than vehicles v.'ere progressing down C.oast High~'ay. Al the speed things were moY- ing. some falks lrom Anaheim may sUll be there. lt's a good thing we have malt . ~ ' . \ .... . .:.. THAILAND': .. . . . . . " . CAMBODIA • ·" j; . . . \ THE TRUCE LINES -The truce line along the 38th parallel that sep~tes South and North Korea (right) remained quiet at news of teh cease-fire in Vietnam Oeft). The Korean truce line has alma.rt been forgotten as the 17th parallel dividing-North and South Vietnam marks the split of that nation. Bratado 'It• Tahiti' 'Godfather' Takes Off~r; 4 Golden Globe Awards HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"The God- fat her" made an offer no one could refuse and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association responded u·ilh' fou r awards for the "fafia saga. "Godfather" '-1arlon Brando also wun the best dramatic actor award. The front runner for Academy Awards in March. "The Godfather" was cited at the presentation Sunday night for best dramatic picture for 1912. best ~Ion, by Francis Ford Coppola : best • -~.hy~Plao: Dttaft Resisters , ( iaws ,marm . ) tbrouPout Am1riea u the Vtlltod Slates completel tbe 1W o1 edDI Ill - China Involvement, Wltlrdrawtllr ill re- mllnlnr ---Ule .oil of South Vletnom llld nceMng ill pr!lor> ers d war. TllEllE NOW ARE 1n ..timated 500 droll ...tatenr in laden! jails IDd per._ haps u many IS "n>,000 otheT men Uvlng abn>ld In oelf.tm-1 exile because theY re!Uled to l<cept service-in the Wlr. In tho treat of tut fall's Cllllpalgn. the .Preoldent toot a hlnl Uno on tho isllie. "Don't WWl'J about that amnesty- never," Nixon cold an Oblo ram.Hy wh»e son had beeo illled in Vietnam. It was ooe « the dramaUc mommts fl: the campaign wbidl aaw NlJXn bury in a, !mrlsJ!cle his l)emo-:11tic oppment, Seo •. George S. 0M"°"""'11. who advocated 111 amnesty ooce the war wu over and U.S •. pn-n _.. roturned. NIUO· ello lllill during the campelgn: "It Is tJme to draw tho lino of this Issue once and for all. There will be no amnes- ty for draft dodgers and deserten after the war." THE PllESlDENT'S Cllllpaign stete- ments CCX1truted wttb a remark be made in a te1evbion interview in January, lt'n. He said at the time that he would be LAST YEAR BB lntmluced lecllfaUon which WOllld grant unneely .. _ - taln condluala" to per .... who l11tect or tt(Uled to~ for the dnlt or mllled 'lbductlm Into the mned t'oroa. Tiii at the time ho olferod his bill clfed Amedcan casuahles la the JndocNna war and l&id, .. ,.., ahould not grant ~y to dnft ttSi.sten -ttqUlrlnc them to tmdertU:e aervioe to their country." Tiii, a supparw of ~ llUQ'lted that YQ1D1 men currently imprlam or in ezile lllrould be .-or llto....i to tttu111 II they qreed In ..... tbe United Slateo·-In the mUlllry or In I form of lllemlte ll«Vk:e -lot - years. . "We must decide whether It Is more In our In-to blve them lp!Dci their tJme In Jail.and In blttor ..U. or to offer them a pnicticll c:oune of minesty," Tiii uld. IT IS A DJ!CISION that 1ppottnlly will have to ho made In the coming months. But It also is a decision In which the """ident would h•V>l to plly 1 rote, and he mams cm rea:rd with bis statement of "never." C'lergymen Hit Supreme ~ourt on Abortion Law • · shops and taco stands aloog Coast Highway or some of those peQple might have starved right there. So frustrating was the non,mo~ent of traffic that some motorists were playing games in the intersections. The contest was, "Pay No AttepUon to the Signals. Fill Up the Intersection. Don't Let Anybody EJse in Line. We Have Enough Pl ayers Already ••. " Six Tornadoes. Shike Eentral Florida 'Areas and best acore, by Nino Rota. .. . BRANDO WAS NOT present to receive · the award. "He's in TabiU," presenter Carol Burnell joked, ~'.and..l'm.going to · take it to htm right now." Brando also was named a world fllm W ASIDNGTON IUPJ) -Clergymen around the nation, primarily but not ti:· clus!Vely Roman cathottc, attacked the Supreme Coort'• abortion -from their pulpits Sunday. · One of the strongest reactions came from Msgr. Wllltam F. McDonough of the Shrine of the Imma.culate O:Jnceptfon in Washington ~.c., who compared the busing of 12.1100 students for lhe rint -time was implemented with only rninor incidents today In Prince Georges Coun· ty, 1'1d. a Washington suburb and the na· · !Ion's tilth largest school l}'atem. CJearly, if this is wh:at it's like on a pretty nice weekend in January, what's it going to be like at mid-~ummer when the good folks of LA all decide lo elude the smog and head for the coast? Seems like every year. we all \1iew the massive coastal traffic jams, shrug, and then declare that it can't really get any worse. Then it gets worse. ORANGE COUNTY'S planning com- mission has been looking at all this with some concern. They study things they call "Transportation Corridors." You wonder what they would have called Coast Highway through the Laguna sec- tor Sunday. Probably a Parking Corridor. Anyway, the county plaMers and road department are studying another possible Transportation Corrid or along the now- dead coastal freeway alignment. Even if they do get around to building a road on it, say by 'l985, you have to wonder how much good it's going to do. " THE NEW ROAD will necessarily be inland of the coastline proper. And an the visitors seem to like driving on a highway right next to the ocean, you know, where the view is. So what if they only make 2.7 miles per hour? This is the life. Inland Creeways and byways just . can't &ive them a coastline. rou can hardly wait for summer. ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!) -At least 18 persons were injured and 300 were left homeless when six toma,ctoes rampaged through CentraJ Florida. One of _the '"''isters struck an apartment comple1 in West Orlando. "Ifs a miracle that iio one v.·as killed,'' said Orllq1do Police Chief Robert Chewn- ing after the twister demolished tbe large apartment complex in Orlando's Washington Shores district. The entire top of the tv.'0-Story apart- \ ment building was tom off and dozens of rooms were smashed. Dr. Charles Hall, chatnnan of the Orange Q>unty ~mergency and Dl.sa!ter Medical Committee, said 14 injured persons i,ye re evacua ted to Orlando hospitals, but none of the injuries was believed serious. All six of the tornadoes struck the Cen- tral Florida area simultaneously dur ing the ea rly afternoon. according to a Red Cross spokesman. Four persons were hurt in Osceola County. wbere a leapfrogging tornado damaged homes and "picked up big oak trees like they were toothpicks ." ac- cording to Sheriff Erne!! P. Murphy. favorite aioni with actress Jane Fonda. , "Cabaret," the bittersweet musical about Gemuiny in the early 1930's, won thtte Golden Gloves: best CQmedy or musical; best aqrtss_.in.....a comedy or musical, Liza Minnelli, and best sup- porting actor, Joel Grey. Llv Ullman was named best dramatic ( IN SHORT .•• ) actress for her role in "The Emigrants." court decision with King Herod's order to Jack ~mon won the ~ward for best .., • slaughter all children under two years ~c"?f 10 a ~~Y or musical r_or his part old in Bethlehem at the time of Christ's 1n Avanti. And Shelley Wmters was birth. sele<:ted best supporting actress for her "The hand that is lifted against the un- role in "The P~idon Adventure." born child in abort.loa .. ia-tbe hand of a . Other awards mclud.ed.; .., murderer," McDooougb said, "and the PROJ\llSING NEWCOMERS -Diana decision of the seven judges of the Ross, "Lady Sings the Blues," and Supreme Court Is mucll llU Kine Herod, Edward Albert, "Butterflie> ... Free." In the days of Christ, who In lremy ..... best original !Oil( -'the title ooog of ing out to kill Christ, killed the lnDooent "1.en;" Englilb language foreign ftlm -children under two )'<Ill of age." "Young ':Vln!ton ;" best foreign language "I ~Y to you seven judges -that )'tKl ·foreign f1Jm· -"t1le Emigrants;" best have presided over the slaughter of the documentary -"Elvis on Tour," and Wlbom innocents and &bat you are in the "Wall of F!r~" Mexico, a tie. mold ot Kina: Herod," McDonough said. The lelev1s1on awards included : Comedy or mu$1cal -"All in the Family;" television movie -"That Cer- tain Summer ;" dramatic show - "Columbo:" dramatic actress -Gall Fisher, "Manni1;" dramatic actor - ePter Falk;>uColumbo;" comedy-musical e Cltapb1 Lea.,lng NEW YORX (UPI) -President Nil· on's appointments secretary, Dwight L. Chapin, bas ,.Porled!Y decided to leave his office, tho New York Times aald to- Coonty school Qfficlaq sal!! they had no early flgu~ on attendance but expected it to be lower than nonnal. 'Ibey said a number of buses were reported. running late or overcrowded and one bus was in- volved in a minor accident, with no in· juries. A bank of telephone operaton took complaint calls from students a.S parents. "tyrtle Fentress; in charge of the telephone bank. said "There's nothing but the normll pftblems. In aome·CllOS buses .,. late and the Idell doo't lmllw the new routes." e POW Eftfl_,e · GENEY A (UPI) -lmell Foreign Minister Abba Eben asked the Interna- tional Red Cross today to arrange a final escbange of pr:laoaers captured during tho Arab-larael stx-<!ly war. ''There are 13 Israeli pri!Oners in Arab countries and we are atlll bold~ more tl'IA1 100 Arab prllODers and we wan1 a final exchange," I1raell spoketmen quoted Eban u saying. · actr.ess Jean Stapleton -"All in the Family;" comedy-musieal actor -..Redd Fon, "Sanford and Son." day. The Times quoted oow:ces u saying e Beeton (J"'te Chapin WU being lon:<d out of the job. LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) ---~ ... Television speclat'-"l.J!e or lb>aardo da Vinci (luey)." The Times quoted ... -Uon ·- Snow • Ill Store for East official who aald Clllpln WU bellic -tloo'I ftnt Dltloaal pllyalcllnl IDd d<n- to leave because newspaper arllcles had tlsts -wu lonnod here SUnday to named him as a White House Ulltact battle interfert.nce by outside parties in with a key fliure in the Waterpte 8C11>-medical care. . dal. The Wlllrlnctoo Poat !alt Octol>u Six unlons repeoen...:ftt.:i:' !"""' linked him with Donlld H. SecreW. I Utloolfl 11...,.s Ule fil the t:ammn. lawy<r who wu repartedlf In-Amtricl!I Federation of Pllyaldans llld volved In espioalge Ind bar.-..,. -Dentists, orpnlsen told 1 DeWI coo- MUlwest, Rain,·soaked Coast Get Gale ' ' ~W!Antl IOIOC~$10 Tiit l'lloll 11'1 LM A""'elet llltM:lt'( t1 Ull9('1M fO flfCll .. toli.wiflCI t tow IOtlkll'lt ot 1:1. of $1\twt!'f tl't Ul*ftd fOftf.ol!I In "'OU!\ll h'I ttMI, Wiit ... llW 1now ltVll will o•oo IG 1oou-r S.000 fftl ' . ttvtUes 1galnat the D<mocratic party. fmnce. Two days alter the Poat report. the Other docton Ulllonl pleclced In join It warning uld SqreUt made at ~J!I the lw<><l1y "'°'.......,• brinc1n1 loltt~ . -diltance call• tO-lhe ·White -rnembenlrlp In lt,1100, ....u, pbyllcllnl, / \ ooe to Clapin'I Maryllnd i>lme they uld. • ~'"ter •tomi tx1.m1111t 1.°"" lh• °"''• between mid-March and June 2S, 1m. -Vtll•v to ltlt mlMIC•,..llc 11•'-• fn-1.ri=•'-"'°~J'l~l:.W =· ltlt •••• Pro•lenu .... -----------~ ~~r:.'\,'°"11 ~°"'~e~~~tic WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A court-1t'leJu ~otl• w•r,..t::"" ...,, l•111td"1!: eo111':1 orlft-• •--"--pl 1n·-'"'-the tE'I frCJm Ntw Jtruv tt lUol U'Cll'l:'lftlllMl ID YUi-.-.... "Ki'luMltJ. lt-fol'(f 'fll'lndl .. JO ~ pr.ell~ l.111!:'1~,~~t •2:fd '=]""" ~m1111n -• llWMI tor -ti-Tu"" MlJllulcd, A"blll'lt llO!'lllwllt l"IOrldt. LlftM r•IM ~ ttw _,,. ftf(ll<c rot•f. ''rn•lurft btforl Uwn r ....... f""" I IE\lilftttorl;-W'IO,. 19 fl ti I(" Wit!, •. .,, Coutal. Weather ll'OCPffilflO ttoudl!MM wllfl CMl'lt't el .,_., ....... Vei'I .... Wlndl lli9'lt .... """""' '*"1 "'°'"""' _,, ,. \OYltlWltllfty 10 to '° kftOh '" .,,.,.... l'Ollnl toOIV 6fld lwtdty. Hltl'I tclM'f I" IM' a0a. OM1ltl ,.,...,.,,_. ••llfl: 1"°"' M tt I&. I~ ~lurft rtftt!t #Mt JI tto 61. W•ttr ltn\PWttuN Jt. Su•,M-2'14ea MO•OAY • $tetoM Molt t :t5 p.m. 1.4 TUISDAY l'lril 111111 11110 a.lfl. t.S "''" low ". ....... t 1tt a.fl't. .. , S«ONI lllfll ' .• '"... • hll p..m.. 4.4 19¢W low •• l :N p..lfl,. .lt Sun •1-t:Sf 1.tn. Ith 5:20 '·""· • MO«! •ltto1 J:t• '·"'· lth l ;I• Ill·"'· . •t - , DAILY PLOT DEUVERY SERVICE Trltphonts 'SN.J.rna s.. .-.:. tNcher. s.. ..-.:. r.dtw Oii ltnh. ' ... _ KILLED BEFORE CIASE.flRE Lt. Col. Wll111m Nolde, 43 • 'Last Man·' .. , .... Believed ' In Viet War MOUNT PLUSANT, Mich. (A.Pl - He wu the last AmerioaD 1o die before a --qi "°""" began_ in Vletn&m, but i-. cliloe to him aay they Mid no blttemeoa for the cruel quirk of late. They aay he wu doing what ho wanted -helping a suffering people for whom he cartd cletpty. LT. COL WllJ.IAM Nolde. 43, of Mount Pleasant, died in a Communist artillery" bftrage 11 hours before the cease--fire began saturdi.y. The senior ~erican adviser in Blnh Long Province, Nold< wu talking with his Vtetnameot ~ter· part on how to get the coontry moving agaid. "My bu.sband was simpty doing what he wanted to do," Joyce Nolde said Sunday. ,1He-was 4 very , very sensitive man who catt:d a great deal about people." Mn. Nolde dae:r-bl( -u a caroer soldier who had stud!Ocl Viet. ,,...... blstoey and culture •. "lte really believed In the people and felt It waS time the people stopped fight. ing among themselves,'' abe said. While sa)'lnc hf< ootward calm bolled her true emotions, Mn. Nolde said. "I'm notJ>ttter at ail. My husband belli!ved in the whole thlng (the war)." MRS. KENNETH Olsen, a siater who liveo _.the family home In Menominee, expressed similar feelings . "f feet bad that he didn't make tt home;• abe said. "But be wanted to be over there. "Bill beli<ved he was d<Mng the right thing. He felt he was needed." "That was just bis life," said Nolde's oldest bn>ther, Henry L. Nolde Jr. "l doo~ !eel bitter because It could have happened anytime.'• Joeeph Nolde, another brcither who Uveo In &mex, Wil., said Nolde wu a "strong belleYer in helping the people ol Vietnam." . "I'm not reelly bitter about wh&t hap. peoed, but it seems kind of awlul that he came ao close to living ~·tt all," he added. ~- ~!" Holocaust in NJ . "- Nursing Home Claims 10 Lives PLEASANTVILLE, N.J. (UPI) -T<n persons, including a 106-year-old womJn, died todlJI In 1 fire that swept lhrouq a two-story frame uahtltered. care'' SS. Ing hoiile. .I Six other pel'IOllS, lncludtng ":!'" old patient at the Streets Sheltered ,. Home west ol Ailantic C\ty, - JW'ed. FIRE CHIEF ELWOOD Dil A It took IO llttllgbters nelrly 311 bomlii to ~· f~e under coatrol after IUfH re 1f 11 :12 a.m. Flteltgblllli*f-· fortl """ hampertd, Db: llld, be<llise the neorest hydrlnt WU lbout llite- quarterl of a mile away. Autliirltl<i ldeotllled the l°"YelAld pa!IMll u Coro OweDI. Identltl .. or o1bor v!cllms were not immedtal,y aYlllable. __ Slall members .at the home a"""1e dll!erenoe .belw«n • "lheltered~· IDd 1 rqullr convalescent n -that the former a~ oC ail..... - Mrs. Mlaor l'terce the homei1' 1-.U, said lhe had comp! rounc1.s when she saw names 8hoo · of the linen ctooet. Mra. Piere. 01111.. apnld rapidly Urrouch f. room home. _ ~';.1 Mn. Pierce Nici tbtre were 11 In the biiJldlng It the time. "We Oii~" Ibo uld. They were outal en the fire dtpartment urlved and ~IJ>. Juries !Im minor • -- ' ' ·! ., . ' . , / MOl'\dil'J, J&11~ 29, \97l DAIL V PILOT f' Suspects Missing -In Death.s -POW News Evokes · Elation, Sadness kno'<\'n to have been captured -was alive and on tfte list released by llanol. McGover11 Ma11 Neiv Chairmu11. SANTA CRUZ (AP) - SherUl's ·officers say they have no su11peetr yet: ln the murde r1 of nve 1ocal resldenta:, but weie 11checklog all possiblUties," SACRAMENTO r Al'l Shtrlff's lnveltl&aton said Sunday there II "no con- , necUon at all" between the non-fatal shootings ot two By the Associated Pre111 Tears flowed freely from men and woman alike when they received the long awaited . telephone call from the military. For those who learn- ed their loved ones were prisoners of war it. was tears of joy; for those who learned their toVed ones were not on the POW list released by North Vietnam it was tears of sadness. •iJT WAS lovely of him to call me personally," said Mrs. Sl ockdal e, national coordinator o{ the National League of ,Families ' Of American Prisoners and Miss-- ing in Southeast Asia. Zumwalt weal"3 a POW bracelet bearing Stockdale's name, she said, explaining the admiral's interest. . California Democrats ha 1 e picked a McGovern 1nan ;;.s their new slate chairn1an <111tl he says he will put the par1 y:s five gubernatorial candidatJs on a road sl\ow toor of joint appearances. The new Jead~r is 40-yc::ir· old Assemblyman Joh n I., Burton of San Francise~ co· ' BRIEFS ] Yuba City )'OUJ!lun4 the five. local murders last week. eFIM11sR•%ed "I've been smiling so much I have teeth cramps," said h-1rs. Albert Molinare of San .L-.-Uiego.Jiet.husband.-U. Albert R. Molinare, 27, shot down nearly a year ago, soon·will be free . "Yesterday was the longest day of my life ," Lou Page of San Jose said Sunday. "I was numb and still am." Stockdale was captured after he was shot down over North Vietnam on Sept. 9, fllM. Mr. Stockdale learned In 1970 lhat he was still alive. chairman of · the Grorge ._~ .o.. -oUPJ,.T....;...~ • .¥~)>er-il ,..~£~~t . Little Caesar's Friends Paying respects to "tough guy" actor Ed1vard G. Robinson at Hollywood services w.ere ~1ervyn Leroy, Jack Benny and George Burns. He died Friday and will be buried in New York. spring's bitter presidential primary ball.le \\'Hil lfubert Humphrey. That fight r emai nf·d soh'lething of a sore spot dur· in.g the 1973 Democratic State Convention this past week('nd. LOS ANGELES (AP) Fires Ni.ve destroyed two • · Ul"t T.iN11o10 !~ms In Los Angeles and Long WIFE Of H!GHEST NAVY OFFICER HELD BY HANOI Beach with . ,Iola! losses Mn. SybU Stockdale, Called by Adm. Elmo Zlimw11t SHE HAD been awaiting word on the fate of her hus- band, Air Force Maj. Gordon Page, who was shot down over North Vietnam .in 1986. His name was not among the 5S5 released by Hanoi on Saturday after the signing of the peace accofd. The wire of a B52 copilot shot down over Hanoi a month ago and listed as missing In action said "it's fantastic" that . her hmband is coming home, but added she was "mostly angry " with the way -------------------- President Nb:on handled the war and negotf!itions. NONETHELESS, B u r t o n said he had broad support for his election as party chairman and would work immedia!elv to avoid a party·splittini; prlinary for governor in 1974. e-stimated at M00,0001 firemen said. -. Party Curbs Smoking Ulng Beach firemen battled a blaze Sunday at the V.ogue Beauty Supply Co. for 40 minutes, but were dis tzlaCied by. minor explosions of aerosol cans. A spokesman for the firm estimated damages at $300,000. In Uls Angel~, a spokesman for the Monarch Records plant estimated the company's lOS3eS at $100,000. Trains -Roll "1'1tl VERY bitter ~d wasn't at all happy about him being sent over," sald Mrs. Samuel Cusimano of Riverside about her 26-year-old husband, a captain In the Air Force. "But we figured it wasn't worth the hassle about making a big prote!l. '' SACRAMENTO IAP) CaWornia Democrats have urged'that smoking be banned in such·public pli.crs as buses, markets, and public buildings, the air that others must breathe ." The resolution urges "that the appropriate government.al bodies at the federal. state and local level enact such measures as necessary to ban smoking in indoor public places. such as movie theaters, buses, markets and public buildings." Burton defeated la\\'ycr· !arlner John Merlo of Chico ~-180 Sunday, overcoming M)!lo's claims that Burton was a captive of the "qjtraliberals" in the state's sli':million\'.member party. _ New BART. Lilie Operaiing "I'm still waiting to see ho\( many new names will come out on the lists," Mrs. Page said, referring to additional lists expected to be released by North Vietnam in the next few weeks. "You don't give up after seven years o( walling." As if to prove they believe in clean ~ir, the Democratic State Convention adopted a resolution Sunday banning cigarette, cigar and pipe smoking in party meeting rooms, banquet bails and con- vent)on halls during future gatherings. . e Turk llf•rders SANTA BARBARA (AP) - More than a hall century had passed, but Ille Armenian Im· migrant still WB1 known ID harbor a grudge for what he said was the massacre of his family long ago. He blamed the 'l\iru .. Now Gourcen .N. Yanik.ian, Tl, Is being held for in· vesUgation o1 murdering two high Turkish officials who aulboritles 5'Y be didn't know penonally. Police. said he will be arraigned Tuesday and that tbe U.S. state Department and FBI have entered the in- vestigation. · The victlmt, Turkilb COMU! Mehmet Baydar, 47, and a deplity, Bahadlr Demlr, 30, In cllars:e of the consulate in Los Angeles, bad driven to a Santa Barbara hotel' al Ille invilatlon of Ya~an to pick· up a µire Turkish pointing the Annen!ah claimed to have: · OAKLAND (AP) -The na· lion's newest mass rapid transit system b e g i n s operating a new leg today despite some limping since the first stretch of the high-speed system opened four months ago. The 11.4 billion Bay Area Rapid Transit Di s tri c t, nicknamed "BART " got the first of its, .81'.f mile-an-hour silver trains rolling Wt Sept. 11 after eight years con- struction. Transit experts around the world watched in hopes the computerit.ed trains, designed to link 34 stations• in the S&n· Francisco Bay area, could lure automobile-oriented com- muters aWay from the car. THE FIRST leg of the "X" shaped line, C<>l1J¥cllng ti!• Oakland headqu~rs station with the city oJ Fremont 28 miles south, has carried 1. 4 million passengers more than 30 million passeu~r mjles since the ribbm ~cil:ltkJ.t,, ,\ Today, BART plans to St'.retch passenger service ~long a second leg • extending ' 11 miles nortbi through : 1riJ: stations to the city of Rich- mond. e AppoiRtee Hit When completed, the first SACRAMENTO (AP) regional rapid transit. syStem Gov. Ronald Ragan should opened in the United'StatH in withdraw his appointment to 50 yea·rs will .carry 200,000 the State Supreme Court of 8 passengers a .day Q.Vet 75 fonner top akle, says the • miles of track ~ .a~ve Callfomia Democratic State and under ~ and thrci.ugh Convention. a tu~lar tunnel under · San The convent.ioo. which met Francisco Bay. beet over the weekend, passed a resolution Sunday, urging Bur THERE have been Reagan to drop his nomination some bugs in BART. of William P. Clark Jr., whom A train overshot a station, the resolution describes as crashed and injured five ''far below the standards of passengers. experience and academic ex· There has been criticism of cellence desired of Supreme lhe automatic computer b:ain Cow1 jUJUcet." control system and the new Mrs. Cusimano said her hus- band was shot down last Dec. 'l'I -just one day before bombing o( North Vietnam was.halted. aluminum cars -and in· vestigations into the general safety o( the system have been started by the California legislatu re, a state agency .and BART itself. Still , BART Gen era I For Sybil Stockdale of Coronado the wait ended on a happy note -and in a most -prestigious manner. Adm. ~Imo A. Zumwalt, chief of nava1 operations, telephoned Mrs, Stockdale and told her that her husband -Navy Capt. James B. Stockdale, the highest ranking Navy officer "We're both against U.S. war policy," she said. Curbs Eased The Democi-ats will have . less trouble unifying behind the nominee after the 197~ gutJernatoria1 primary than they 4id .after the 1972 presidential fight, Burton predicted . Manager 8 . R. Stoke!nlelends it as the finest rapid transit system in the wo rld and says officials hope to de-bug it by September, when it begins \-oiling to San Francisco. Thieves Kill Former USC 'Footballer HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A(!. year-old appliance sa1esman was shot and killed during the holdup of a department store by iwo \o four hooded gunmen . w hl!la six emplbY.,s at gun-•. point, police said. The victim was identifi~ by police as Patterson Can- namela of Torrance. He was an All American linebacker for the University of Southern California in 1951 and played one season for the Dallas Tex~ ans of the old American Foot- ba.ll I.ague, said inv.estigators and sources in his home town ' of New !Andon, Conn. Detectives said -the robbers escaped Sunday With an arsenal of guns and about $40,000 in cash and checks after employes who arrived for work at Zody's on Sunset Boulevard were bound, forced to cover their heads with pillow cases and ordered tO disrobe. The mother of Navy. Lt. Everett Alvare z of San Jose, said she was "anxiously waiting" his return after BY. years in a pfison caffip. Alvarez ls believed to be the longest held American POW. "People ll8ve a right to brealhe fresh air," the resolu· tion states, after noting that smoke is a foul-smelling 98n· noyance -as well as a health hazard -to nonsmokers, "and no one has the right ffi pollute VALLETTA, Malta (AP) -HE SAID HE p~ "a HomoseJual act! by adults in series of fund raisers up and private and adultry ~ld no d<UVn the state showing off the 1'3nger be crimes under a bill---DemOCl'!Uc_candidates, giving the government has submitted llieiilexposure to lhe rank· BATH SHOP "Circles" by Yves St. Laurrnt are COftOn terty towels in deep purplr/p~nto, deep purple/ ttOP,ic blue, ebony /bron~. Both. Regularly l.lO. , ..... , , , . , ..... 4.49 H.od. RegulUly 2.70 ................. 2.25 Wuh. Reg\llatly 1.10.,., •• ,,,,,.,.,,, 95c -Viewpoint" by Yves St. laurenr, come in the 3Mle color combinations as '"Circles" abovt'. Buh. Regululy l.lO, ..... ," ......... 4.49 H.od. Regululy 2.70 ...... ,, ......... 2.25 Wuh. Regularly 1.10 ... ,, .. ,, .......... 95c "Lustre" v.·ashable rug from Ficldcr£Sf is qi__ oyloo in bronze, wisteria, blut', pimento, mos s, cognac, canary, sable and white. 27' n!. Regululy $8 ............... , .. 5.99 to Parliament. and·file Democrat." SUN SHOP l·p;= dirung "'· Regulady $299 ...... '229 lmpotted choir• Regululy 149, now 139 ... lmponed table. Regululy $129 .• :, ..... 899 Ch•U..w;tb pad. Regul&rlr $180 ........ 199. NtSt of 3 cablt'S in Jellow. Reg. 27.95 .• 19.95 Selection of bridge cha1a. Rrg. 1195:, .. 8.99 Furnitute' samples ., .Reduced 20% to 50% Patio accessories .... Reduced 20% to 70% BEDROOM ACCESSORIES "f\lorning" shtets and spreads by FieldettSt in yellow I ocange, blue I purple, polynter I w.ton. 42":136" pillow cues. Regulatly 5.60 .. 4.60 pr. 42•:r46" pillow cases. ~egularly $6, . , 5.10 pr. • Double. R<gutaily $2) .............. 19.99 Qu= m king si" blanker. Reg. Ill ... 2'-99 "Da.isy D.ti.c" no-i ron polyt'Stt't I cotton shcecs have blue or gold pretty ~Oii1 shadings. . 42'x36' pillow case>. il<gul.,ly l.l0.2.99 pr. 42 .. x46" pillow cues. Regularly $4 •• 3.49 pr. 'I.Win. Regularly 4.25 ..•••••••••• , ,, •• 2.99 . Double. Regu!uly l.)0 , ...•...... , , , .. S.99 King. Rtgula.rly $11 •• , •••••••••••••• 7.99 All these sale sheets are Bat or fitted .style. Lcderman's bean-bag cbait is in fright lea~r· _._ look vinyl in orange, red., black, gold, grtta. btown. Regula.rly Ill .... , .......... 2'-99 ~~~~ Conrour. Regularly $8,,,.,,,,.,,,.,, .5.99 Tv.·in. Regularly $7., .•••. , •••• , , , , ,, .5.99 '· GRAND OPENING ~~RTY FOR Richard's New Complete Party Shop I Me rket Meu:enine: lido I FREE REFRESHMENTS TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 3, n to 4 P.M. • CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS VALENTINE SPECIALTIES PARTY ACCESSORIES GAMES CHILDREN$ PARTY si;rs GIFT WRAPPING MATERtALS '2k~~- - Home d Gift S"lop J43.I VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 17J..6360 • OPEN DAILY 9-6 • , • .. ' I 24• 36" Reg I I 19 6 99 Double. Regularly $8 ,.,,.,., ••••••• , ,6.99 :r . uary .••••.• , •• ,,,.,, .• 2~ 4~ Regula ly $12 899 Queen.Regularly 11.50 .•••.••...••... 9.99 ••o . ' ...... , ........ . King. Regularly 14.50., , ...•.. , .• , •• 12.49 • • Twin spread. Regularly S22 •••..• , ••.. 18.99 Double spread. Regularly $25 ..••••... 20.99 HOUSEWARES 4-qt. Pmro pr"""" cooker. Reg."·12.99.10.99 · 74-pc. Oneida stainless Kt. Special •••••• 17.99 Adjustab le bed·tray ttble. Reg. 125, ••. 19.99 . . All 1973 deco•. felt calendars. Reg. 13 .•. l.Sj) ;6"x60". Jttsularly $21 •••••..•••.•.• 15.99 Lid. Resularly 3.50., .•.••.••••• , •.... 2.4-9 'Xoyal Velvet" rugs by Fieldcresr come in nylon pile in sable , bronz.e, pink, tangerine, CJ1oary, marina blue or 'White. Queen spread by special ordet. Reg. $35 .29.99 ' Oub aluminum 10" omelet~. Orig. 9.4' .... 99 27" rd. Regularly $9 ...•......••. , .... 6.99 Contout. Rt'gulatly $9 •••••• , •• , ..••.. 6.99 24; .. :136•. Rt'gular ly $10 ...•............ 7.99 27":r48". Regularly $15 ... , .•• , • , ·"', .11.99 34•xs4". Rt'gularly $22 .••••••••.•. ,.16.99 Lid. Regul,,ly 4.lO ...... ,,., ... , ..... 3.49 2·picce 1ank set to n1atch. Regularly 10.50.8.49 "'RQf.11 Veh•ct" to"'•els by Fitldcresc are COfton· in bronu, white, canary, cerull'tn, matina, pink, ran~rint', or cardin~I. Bath. Regularly 5.25 .••••.••••••..••.• 4.25 Hand. Rt'gularly 2.65 •....•••.• ,, .••. 2.19 Wash. Regularly l.05 .....••. , ..••••.. 89c M•L J.egululy ~.26 ..... , ........... 5.25 Fingertip. Regularly 1.15 .••• ,, .••••••• 99c Sheet. Regululr 8.9l ................ 7.49 "Ctlebrarioo" jacquard rowt'h by Picldcrat in gotd/ebonJ, blut/verdian, vttdianL~itfetftfff'. B1<h. R<gululr 8.70 ................. 7 .49 Hand. Regululr 4.90 ................. 3.99 Wuh. Regul&rly !.60 ................. 1.39 Mac Regululr 8.70 .................. 7.49 f'iogtttip. Rtgularly 1.85 .....•. : •.•... l .59 King sprrad by specia.1 order. Reg. $40 .. 33.99 '"Mont rose'" r2yon/aceta1e taffera spread is alive with blue or gold florals and is qu ilted. T"'in, Rt'gularly $19 ..•.••••.• , ••... 15.99 Double. Regubrly $22.,, :. , , , . , , . , .. 18.99 Qu=. R<gu larly $26 .• ,. , , • , , .•.. , .22.99 !Gng. Regululy $JO .. ,, •• , ..•. ,.,, .26.99 "Super Squares" polyrster/cotton comes in ,white with blade, olive or scarlet geommics. Twiii. Regularly 22.)0 •.• , •••••••.••. 19.9? Double. Regularly $25 ..•.. , ......... 22 .50 . Queen, Regularly $40 .•••. , •••••••••.. t3S King. Rtgularly 42.50 •.•••••••••• , .. ~7.50 'Watercolor comforters oome In pink, blue, goJJ 6or.U in duuble polyester/cotton. Twin. Regularly $19 .............. , .13.99 Double. Regululy $24 •••••••••.•.•.. 18.99 King. Reguladr llO ................ 24.99 Seve .oo blankt'tS of Aailan~ acrylic in 1hrtt ptttt.ms all with (; nylon binding. "Ebb Tide" in ahades of brown, blue OC' green. "Buttufty" red, brOwn, blue, pwplci or lime. Tru.ly 8ttlt. '!Win. Regul•<iy $20 ................ 17 .99 Printed kitehcn tt'rty towels. Reg. 12~ .• ,. 99e Novelty kitchen Ngs. Res. 17 .• , ••••••. S.99 Oneida 6-pc. scainles.s set. Reg. 7.9~ ••••• 4.99 Oneida 6-pc. Commul'liry set. R.e~ff 20'x3l' weshold mats. Rag. 7.99 ...... 6.99 Lucitt cookbook 6f iecipe holder. Reg. $7 ~'-99 l ·p<. TV mr set with t1Clc. Reg. $26 ... lS.99 9·pc. Reg.I ..,inlcss cooltwm. 29.99., .17.99 Decor. enamel teaktttles. lleg, 11!)9 .••• 9.99 Rtgalwue stainICss teak~ Reg. 09 • ..-S.99 All buome1et1 ue DOW ••••• , .~aeed4i Staclcable sp~ sa•en. R.eg. 11.9) •••••• 4.99 ' Discontinued panuywuc • ~ ..... Red1lClfld ~ . Hagerty fabric gu1rd •• , , ••• -••• Redaeed H . . lroostone jumbo cupsltiucm. Reg. ll .. 1.99 R<gina Elmrikbrooni w/ottt<h. i4.9l •• 29.95 Ewdta upright, sh>g.adjutt. 699' ••••. 59.95 HOO\'U Up<ighr with IOOb. Reg. 82.•9 .. 69.99 MUn> dee<. bu~et "'°""· J.eg. 249' ••• 12.99 !"""bowl stand <ad""""· llq.,19.99 .• lS.99 Sampl< sm'11•lmric1pp11._, .Redo«<! ~ Ever .. dr infn·red broilou. Reg. 2(.9) .• 19.99 Pollma back~ Reg, 3(.9) ... 29.93 _ Bullodc's St.au. Aoa, .M~nd1y 1h101111h FndJ)' 10:00 a,m, 10 9:30 p.m.. Sicu.rday 10:00 &.m. '° 6:00 p.m.. J Fashion Squuc. Sarua Aaa. Thkpbont: ) -•-I \ • • • DAILY PILOT -EDITORIAL PAGE ' The Puhlic'·s Rig~t I -•. A significant contribution to the oncoing cliscussion regarding a de!endanl's right to a fiir trial and the pul> tic's right to know what is goin,. on in its courtrooms has been made by Orange County SUperior Court Judge Mark A. Soden. \Vhen Herman Lee Clouston, accused of killing a policeman, waived Iris right to an open hearing, Judge Soden at first barred the press and public _from the courtroom. Then be reversed his decision. Tb.-defendant, the judge opined, bad the right to v.i'aive his own rights, but he did pot have the right to waTve the public's right to a publiertrial. ........ • • ,,.... _____ SOlHe wsm~n. f"ti)resenting' tile pO.blic, were sum- moned back to audit irid report on the proceedings. Judge Soden's perceptive interpretation of the full significance of a free and open trial should clarify s·ome . misuuderstandings: . .,. The open trial provision of the Constitution is as much a safeguard for the public as· for the defendant. The public has a right and a need to know how jus· Lice is being administered. It should riol be curtailed: by those \Vho feel it is \'Cithin their jurisdiction to decide ' what 1he public should aod should not be told. Marina ·· Rent Muddle \Vhen the i ,400 boat owners who rent slips at Dana Point li~arina gel their current billingli they will find their rates considerably increased. • • expl~ed, the cowity" failed to review the marina rent hikes. _ · _ Robert Dahlberg, whose company leases the marina from the county, says he lived up to !tie lefter <>I Ills lease by giving ample notice or the p~d increases to the Harbors, Beaches and Parks Deportmenl In a letter dated last August he said the boost - ranging from 20 to 30 cents per boat foot per lDOlltb on then-exl.!tlng rates of $1.90. to $2.25 per loot -was prompted by rising taxes and blgber operating e%J)ellSes. In-addition to the four months' advance notice, the county had 10 days after the effective date of the In· creases -in this case Jan. 1 -to review the request._ Since Dahlberg's request came In months before the legal deadline, the Harbor Department took the. time to send it to the Real Property Services Department for study. It ~as due to return by December but didn't make it until the second week 1in January -·technically too late for the county to comment on or do-anything about the rate increases. Their 10-day review period was over. This is not to say that the county would have or should have objected to the rate Increases. Dahlberg acted in good faith and his rates are still considerably lower thao olher_county marinas. He is a businessman who. has made a deal with the county -to which be pays 15 percent "oil the top" for rent, And _of course, the county g~ reve.1;.1ue Wben he gains. But it would have been better all around -certain· ly fairer to the marina operator and his customers and certainly better for confldence in the county govern· ment -if the county machinery bad bestirred ii..elf to act and announced a decision while it \vas still me.lning- / .. \ -I (, ,. -.. ... ,, ·~ _The County of Orange, which bolds the mast~r lease fo r Dana Harbor, has the technical pG\ver to review any rate increases by lessees. For some reason still not fully J.- fuJ. ' This "'·ay. the slip renters have a right to wonder \vbether their rights were duly protected. '7t's supposed to ward off the evil spirits of communisni. .. "·;;,_, ~,,J DoctorafR Dear Congressional Spending Controls Ignored -------------.. Ca11 Hid.e Gloomy Gus Fiscal Abandon ·in the -~entagon ' .. ,, Illiteracy ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Just read where Peru seited more American tuna boats. So there goes the price up again on a c'iin of. luna. You know. a baloney sand- "'ich isn't too bad after au. Try it, you'll ... WASHINGTON -The defense in- dustries have sµch a stranglehold on the Capitol dome that Congress is in danger of losing!' control over military spen- ding. . For th decades, Congressmen have -<:.H.P. been ~wmog greenbacks,~ confetti Quite a few Ph.Ps -most of them in ··· upon uic pentagon. Sta~erigg amounts ™' ,...,. ,....., .....,.. view.. .., have been lavished the field of physical education -have _......, .... et * ...,.._. sw 00 •-·ments that written to take heated issue with my re-""'r "' ""' • • ....., ..., o.otr .,...._ ........ cent column on the Ph.D. r~cket in this should "never have country. Their protestations have been been ,built. Cost ove!'- utterly unconvincing. _ subsidy '-¥d Jll)t one-teutll. w~~ ~ ·mlf . wasteful · •-·-• · u ·uctged by their ~ have Whatmakesmedoublydogmaticmmy ~ymg . ~ J -•I"_;~ Cl)l'1U1)on.. pos1t1on is the fact !!lat If' Ille -"' ~-!!''" JI ~ ~1et""te ~ pioeel Iii 11e1 .... year in a row I to deptrid Ull:Oft ~ supPorting. l rs Ol work. r.oogressme11 have just served ·OD ~' rtcommendatlon from tbell ~e~ who Would cliallenge . a panel of judges for depa~ent. heads, or doctoral advisers. every last detail of , , th.e National Endow· ONE CAN ONtY sbudderlngly inig!ne a $50;000 an~v~rty pro~ would ap-. ment for the Human-V.'hat such applications · must be ·like in. pr:ove a $50. ~on Pentagon prop:>Sal ities. This is a Fed· the field' o( .~tion _ whicb, in. the Wltb no queShons asked. ~ 1 eral agency lhat prO-U.S., comp.1---. the 'lowest 10 perOOi.tile vidcs Fellowships r~ 11llS HAS created an . ,~ere o( and grants for col· of all college s~1,1i;ti;i,ts. going on to fiscal abandon in the Pentagon and has lege teachers. And. graduate work -not to mention the led to a growing disregard ·for-civilian. for th.e s e co n d more restricted area of physical edll(:a· fiscal authority . year in a ro"·· I have gone over bun-tiorr. l ·can · see no more reason for Ttie Anti·~ficlency Act; fOt ·eiainpJ~. dreds of applications fr.om. college teach-awarding a doctOl'a.te for.. gymnastics forbids govemment C01ploy§!e& from rrs -all • them possessin~. Ph.D. de-than l can for cooking, crocheting, engirie spending or obligating more money than grees in the field of Human1t1es.' where repair. comnetology, or, for that matter, Congress appropriates, A violation is literacy is supposed to be or prune-~-journalism. considered a serious federal .. crime •. portance. If a professed Humanist t.·au't There is a Grtsham's Law in the cur· punishable by a $5,000 fine.and two years express himself clearly and su~ rency of )earning as much as in the cur-in prison. ~nd gracefully, how can we ex.pee · rency of currency: bad money drives out Yet we recently uncovered documen·. ( JA~ ~DERSON) . captain has been relieved from duty, another captain bas been transferred, and a clerk has been bawled out for a1tering official records. DEFENSE Secretary lwlel Laird tary evidence that the Navy had spent justified the light punishment. betause he. found no evidence of "intentional" millions' without the consent of Congress ... overspending. He mtl8t not have·read the Now we have tbtainecti some classified Navy's report. It cites two officials for Anny audits w~ch show that the Army , making "adjustments to official ac-~oo, is guilty or the pme financial finagl· counting records which ~torte<! the ing. .. · \ status of obligations." Jn anotlier in-We wrote about the Navy's "over· stance, Navy people attempted to write obligatio'ns," as the unautbo,rized ~n-$11,lti'l,591 worth of biQs -on a special ding is called,MJist Nove'm~r l4. Our Treasury account in viOlation o{. te2Ula·. story led to congresskl'lal inquiries, other tk>ns. , , r .-1 1 ~~~~per disclosures and a government i Like the Navy documents, the Army ·audits don't make exciting reading. But THE NAVY bas now sent Congress a they show illegal expenditures •dve"r~$180 report on its illegal over-spending. million, another shocking deflaD?! df Behind lhe dull fiscal details is a story of ... Congres.s' power of the purse. Two gross mismanagement. The document separate audits sb!Jw· that the Army, as explains, for example, bow the personnel the Navy, bas obligated mooey Congress people managed to spend $127 million for haiin't appropriated for salaries .and pay and travel' beyond tbe level autboriz· transportation. ed by Congress. T~ke the Navy's habit of moving peo-THE ARMY bursars b.lld their worst p1e around. Although the Navy had only trouble in 1970, fmding their ~dget 623,248 people on its roster in 1971, it underestimated .by More than , S1117 managed to relocate them 525;132 um.es million. In an attempt to balatice the during the year. Cost to the taxpayers: a books, they billed the Air Force,, Nationa1 . whopping 1240,m,ooo. • Guard . and Army Reserve for past For breaking the Jaw:-fwo admirals services. 'Ibis produced $.'tt.7 million, have received letters of admonition, a which was illegally transferred to reduce the pay deficit. '"" The Army performed some additiOnal··i.~ sleight-of-band · with the budget for ',·" clothing and subsistence for Southeast" ' Asia and magicaJJy jJnlduced anotb.. '!' $74.7 million to covm-the deficit. nie· ·~ audit sten\Jy calls this maneuver an "im· :'~ proper transaction\"· · · "'" The second audit showsJhol the budget· · for Operattoo and Maintenance was '·11• overobligated ISU millloo In the 1971'," fiscal year, most of It fOr traniportation.:;.~ Further investigation, ~ams Ute audit;~'.~ "could ... increase ·amount , , possibly:;. overobligated.".. • • ~ . • ~ ... ,, -:.t&-kwluP ';i; 1~ u.a?lui4 ·t>eOQ ':: illegally spent, tile Ailb.'f looked arou.,.d.~.,, for i available funds. aild transferred .• '~ mmey that had ..... wmail<ed for am-... munition t!sting and base operations: -1 ~ ~troactiv~ 1billings Wj!te· d"rawn up to,'.?t cover the dubious transaction. .' ... .J The audit notes WJ!)'lY that. ammwiition · - testing at J~ ..... Proving Groubds,''~ "asa resultof ihe~ve billing, was:·~~ pri>vided funds twice for the same i>ro-,~~ jeet.. . . ·-~ . ·1~ ~'se to our. inqu,iries i60ut the·-~ ~dential aqdits; the Altny said thet'.:; were ~r:t of an "ongoing audit." Any · violationS will be reported to CongreSI}~~ ahd the President, a spokesman ~~i mised. He could not estimate when· the.,.; final report would be ready. ;;~:.~ "''" New Routine for State Lawmaker·S ,~~; in the sciences and other fields to m~t the good and the more counterfeits or ·-··--·the .exacJ ing standards . .of scholarshiJ>_?_ -1hl1ated ·~ney on the market, the less JN TRUTH, the melancholy fact is that every real dollar is worth. Likewise, 90 percent or more of the professed when a Ph.D. is awarded for some Humanists cannot express "themselves marginal skill or craft (that may cer· thus: most of their descriptions and tainly be worthwhile activity, but does resumes of their proposed topics would not involve scholarslµp), then lhe_ ~e scarcely do credit to a high school st;nior value of the degree is shrwiken. . with a straight "A" average in English. Of course •. the d~rate i~ .a racket in The task of tpis panel o( judges on U.S. ~ucatto~. ~f 1_t weren t, t~e pan~I which 1 serve is t.o find one-fifth or so of v.:ouldn. t be digging for days l:O "find reat· the applications worthy of government p1ents 1t can be prou<t to l)Qffi,ma~e,. Streamlining Elections \Vhen the polls closed on' µte Novem- ber. 1972 e1Cctioos, most Americans - if they bothered to vote at all -promptly put all election matters out of th~ir minds for at lea.at the next several months and perhaps for as long as the next two years. Among those unable to enj~y that I~ were tl1f people wOO made 1t all possible; state county and city eloction o£ficials, who 3.re under the general aegis or their respective ~c:retaries of state. All over the nation . election employees and vol - unteers had to «mt.end with M aggrava- ting array of nuts-and-bolts voting prob- lems which included overcro\vded f.aciti- ties, bewildered. voters, illegible ballots, impervious punch cards, immovable lev- ers, ballot boxes and other h.assle-s, fias- cos and snafus. SOMEDOW, candidates got elected anyway, from a President right down to the city dogcatcher. But to better prepare for future confusion. the Na- tional Association of Secretaries of State wUI spcmsor·the first national conference ever devottd exclusively to the 'pro!> fems or elections. beginning Thursday ia.,New Orleans. Secretaries of state and tlir top elections division ad· mlnU:trators will talk over common dif· Quotes f1ortnce Henderson, 8 r o 3 d w a y mukal •tar -"Personal crises are times for complete re-evaluation : they are almo11t a 53fety value. They are tilnes when you are made to face up lo things wrong with your life.'' r EDl'l'ORIAL RESEARCH ficulties and proposed solutions, 'including the special problems of absentee voter registration, nominating procedures, voter education pamphlets and el~on law reform. Also -in the agenda will be effective aRd unifonn implementation of the 1970 VA.ing Right s Act amendments, ,vhich extended for five years the 196~ ban on literacy tests and similar voter~ualificatlob devices. Tfic conference chairman is Con- necti<;.ul's secreta"' of state, Glo!· Schaffer. "It's a very exciting deve mcnt in elections administration becau there's nev.er been anything like it, ~ 1ny kno\\•ledge, in the past, "COnntcticut elections ... tLOmey Amalia Toro1 told Editorial ~h Reports. "lt really should result in an 'improved election ad· ministration for the country." Many st8te legislature.~ hi:>W . are· i:OOStaerlng n<w election leglslalkln or draltlng ..,. tlrely new el ·on codc.s. THE 13RD CON also will take up numerous elecUoci I w refonn bills, including proposals to ake elecUOn day a national holiday, ulre all polls to • , k .. p all polls open for a Ultal of 2t hours within a .two-day period, and allow voter rtglstralion by mall. Clearly. elaciion laws and pro- cedures can be improved. Most changes are aimed at boosting the country's notoriously low voter turnout, which in tm was estimated at a diamal 55 pcr- ~nt of t~e voting age PoPtJlatlon. \ By ROBERT BURKE Assemblyman, ?0th Dis&ricl When Proposition 4 of. the .November, 1971, election ballot ·was approved by the Voters it marked the beginning ·of ·federal Congress-like two .Ye:~r .. ·. ~~inuous sessions for the California Legislature. Prior to 1966, when the people passed Proposition lA, the Legislature met for 120 working day legislative ses,,ions every other year and 30 day budget sessions during the even.numbered yean. 'Ibis !!Weeping change in 19fJ6 brought about aMual legislative meetings and a full-tu,ie. ~.l~ture. Since that time, the sessions have become nearly year-long epics. lnterim·{the time belWeen the end oC one session. and the beginning of the next) s.hidies; ·whicll in the past hove been helpfulin:lhe develop. ment of le~ation, have all but disa~ pea red. WITH TIIE advent of Proposition Four's· provisions will come even more chahges in the organization and the p~ cesses of the Legislatu~. The sessio~s will be two years r in length and, con- tinuous, replacing the present annual meetings. Terms of, legislators Wll1 'begin in December following dectio~ •. r,ather than in Jimuary, except for the first bien- nial session which began·Jan.·8.·Tlti~wUI do away with the ''lame-duck" period and December will lristead tie · ti:i<d for organizing the new ·Legislature .. Bill introduction will change allowing .---B11 G-ire ---, Dear George: · · · · · · , · · · My boy friend I!\ ~~t. ~1.1,ver ln safety belts. But tell me .•.. do all seatbelts have a. little Jl)Ck .on Ofem~ BLONDIE Dear Dloodle: .a>/ol yet -but there's big money iri1his If your boyfriend hurrtes and gelS the .first patent. -. (Send your mosl confusing pro- bleJrul to George, the naUon'• most confusing problem columnist,) ) . (GUEST REPORT) measures introduced during the first year to be considered in the second year without reintroduction. However, if legislation does not pass out of the house of origin within 30 -days into the second y~ar, it is to be consldere(t-"dead." Eliminated too, is the veto session apd special sessions since the Legislature is considered. to be technically in session almost continuously. The Governor can call the Legislature back from recess on '3 extraordinary occasionJ. Gone is the re- quirement ,that neither house may recess 1or more than three days without .permission fro1n the other. In its place is the new revision which allows either house to recess for ten days without con- currence from the other. mERE ARE changes too in tbe ef· fective date of new la'WI because of Proposition Four. SlAtutes will now go in- to effect on t~ Jan. 1 following a 90;-day period from tfie date of enactment. This shou ld do away with some of the con- fusion which.has surro\tnded the effective date of new laws in the last few years and should provide an incentive for ' I recessing by October 3rd of the ftrit"."' year. Under Ute new procedures ttfe>M Governor will no longer ~ abJ~ .tit~ _ ".pocket ve!O" (inaction) but p,>ili.ti<ln'!\',\! all vetoes to the Leg1s~~-.~everv ·: he will have 30day1·bl°"hichfO1'iililiaer · bills at the end ·Of the 1hd year instead of : the usual 12'Jd8.W~· · Hopafull)I ... th'is reorganization and c•e in procedure will make time . _.,,vaileble for valuable interim studl~s , during the last three months Of eacb, ~ year. Hopefully too, with these new-Pro-:.. cedural reforms will come strong ~~ reforms to insure that the duW "'Of'11 legislators to make just laws is ca.meas out. q.w 1 t r\ I Cigars As Mea$ure of Character 1 ,,., I Jumping to conclusions: You can judge men, to some extent, by the .kind_o{ c.i,g~r!.. they smoke. It h1 generally safer, for example to l~nd money to a man. who smokes a thick cigar than one who prefers a pencil-slim cigar. The slender cigarS are more for actors, the thick cigars f0< doen. Slurdy characters like sturdy cigars. (Editor's note: Boyle may be inspired ,..-----------other should not take marital vows l6ft' i ( • ~A ' , ·J will · "!JlY, break or sever later. ;rrue I Hi\L 'BvYLE · mutu8I hUman need is tbe only ·aeoalble 1 ~ -~ "'8son for marriage. Wher~ thal ~\S , ._ _________ • __ -_:_· -_.--6li1:liJth~er.ntre1f does·divorce--ensuie~i once they are sure you aren't looking at someone beyond them. Unfortunately, that is what you are usually doing. One of the things-that •nnoy me-a\lOU! women i& tha~ if you •teJI one silt!: kloki heautlfUI In any'color -pt purp\•• 1il1<f will Immediately rush to a department Ol' ORANGE COAIT DAllV PILOT ' . ' Robert N. \Veed , P1tbH.tl1er.~ to this fancy by the fad he ·tillmclf smokes cigars !bat look and smell like burning ship haws- ers). --s1ore~buyihe purplest d.....-"c -and no matter hoW horTible she looks Thomas Ketvil. Editor ' Barbara Krtibich .td,lioriol Page-Edit or .--"l"'.~of in i~ expectl you to admit that she hos A romantic Is a man who goes to London and expects that Ille Dower girls outslde the theaters Julie A.ndreWs. proved yoo wrong. Penonally, I cin recall meetinl: only four wtmen in my life who IOoked lovely In purple, but three of them wrinkled and tomed green will all resemble before they' were 50. lt la !O unusual to come upon a really good book nowadays that I feel unsatWled simply to read it 1 feel t should memorize it -just In cue I s~kl never chance upon another. Qiildren, young ladies and wild animals dislik• being stared at. Middle. aged women, howtver, like t!te (eellnl- '· ' THE BIG lrouble with inheriting money ii ·that you can ranly inherit money without Inheriting som~ kind of btc trouble a1 ... Needlesl divorce is not• the real curoe or the_, ... younger geoeration.'The rtal curse Is .-.. ~-1'ot ~ l!bo do not -llY l10ed . - I ._._ _________ _.·I • '' . • ' -J t • I ' c • c , • ., c • l • ' ' J L , J ' ' l L ' • • I • ' ' c • ' l ' • • , ., I L ' f I I ''1 I .. r I' I I . ·I l, '. ~Fortli~ 'Clwpping Of Trees Hatted ' l Rec~rd ' ., .8Nsoltitioas SANTA ANA - A property ~ -.:...z· .. -dLtputa that clme to a bead VT tJ•G• • !!!lf.t! wbiJn the prealdent of a Costa 1 • -J.IOia nursery company i4,....i, ~":: ~'I,, ~ . aq,fedlY N .an · tO cut down · a.ua11..,, ev....i1111 w :.\II"-"! ""' . ~)lptus trees borderliig ~ """':" "l"'I "." ·""'""' •· 1'rid I~ to hln\ by a lQcal =~:mc~t.,.w~ cou0 (!le Coun.is nowSUbealded,,,.~?.: OOHM. Dfllr• 1..,•1111 Wllh1•.i• . ranee ty per or~·~ Ttrr•• Jtult C. p"4I lloo.H 'QUlllO here, ' • '!;:,'• · OIM!a MIMI .... Htlnwt Presiding Judge Bruce Sum:-· 'tilt;,•, Dtlflllt L • .,.. °""'9'lt. ner "--' the -·lralnlng C•rMo II. JM/I tM Wtt\w -&'....., • ..., Pl°lfl .. lwtvn M...,.. ,.,...._J..-order ~l wbl halt further '"""' J-l ..... ~ M. •• 1 .... -. • klw'll!tt0-.. UM .;... Je111« ,,..,, CU....mg the to-tree stand at ldtt, o.Ntt s . ..,. .= ~ 0 • ..., ~ W. Wllsoo St. until Feb. 5 ~ ~ when lawyers for property cw.,; JoM t•Y*' •lld JJMt owners Clay D and Dora Mae !'IMllCll' · -..,., .,., "" a• .. M'""" Ellis and defendant Donald · L.) ,,_c:tA'-.. **'1 ~oY •llCI Elltn Hlr· Ward' areue tie issue before ~. ~ Elgln IN Hit Ngwe Judge Robert JCneiland J..-, '•"*' o. _.. C11t1 w. Ellis and bis il ' I : "· Ml""· O.vld Alltn ll'llt ''''"'" w e c aun u~t ~~-~•"1dt o.ic. anit Mldltl• A. Ward, the presid~nt of Orange_ ~. John J. Ml 0ir1st1oe v Cout NUJ'lel'f Inc., has ~ '=. L.. &"::w~ .. 1;. D1'114 already cut down U of the 20- 0cillolJ'!...t11 M. w ,.,. ,., .year.Old trees f r i n g l n g , LVM 11111 ·~ lM • the nurtery Site and the ad· -=· lan9rl A. •• ~ MldllM jacent home-of the Elli5 MIQll'll I.. "1111 l.toMr'd L. Couple. 0ttJ1, bl-ff'ld T~ .,,... ""'-c-111 ..... Want -ooo ·In -' J.IMt.:..1 ............... MlnWI _AUii ~ ....,, .. ~";;.-· •·---u •·-'what they -•-•-_,.,. _,_,., ·--.. ~ ~oori. • .,_. M. ·.nc1 C1r!J!lft r.. ·ls the unauthorized destruction ~ Wiiie rAIM ri f Jllipti Of'1boee trets;..-And ~y W8nt ~11er" ,.,.,.. °"91 .... ~l!.Al!ltfl ,_ 1etd evicted from the sile ~1~"::.•&;:. E~~~~ leaM to bis company on June ~r.~ •1VC• L•-.1111 """'' 12. 1951 tor 2S years. Citrau Sweet ''omp'-Dorothy G. 11111 c11r1ne1 c. Wafl8, who also operates the ==Di~"'t:=--~"1~·~in Ward Management Company da Se be g { W t · te 'II be Mu111tr, DMtld~. w ~-.. a( 1707 Westcliff Drive Lin a rry, 1 , o es mms r. WI a con-e"' Lind• J Ind J1m11 w ' test.ant in the Citrus . Queen Pageant, on the open-. • Ff'ldlrkii •· 9nd H-Y s. Newport Beach, is quoted by Sh M . J-J. eric1 ttOOyfl""" the eoupJe In their lawsuit as ing night ol the 58th National Orange ow, arch ~HJotwt °"""'* • av1st111J warning them : "You will be 29 through April 8 in San Bernardino. Sbe.,is 'the ~"-•-• • ""'""'' I all the bl daughter · of Mr. and Mr. s. Richard Seaberry . • ,-. 0.,.... c.-,·111111 J-Aib.rt' 11>rry or pro ems aod ---"-------~-----------expenses you have wrought upon me" Detltlt NetW. ~ ~ing tbal . ,..,._, Wan!' planned to cut oil the f;i;? 1-'ih..._~li"t'.'.'..;'£-wal<r ~pply to the Ellis bome · ·-=::;.,:~-. :;;r;; I am-1111t -.tption ol . ar,-=t;T{n,111.a &~: ~ actJoM as "foolish an-;ri~ ... 't""'Dlu 6... · , · tic, are also offered in sup. D:M:. A. ArmP~!~ Jillfllnl, COl'Ol'I• port of the ooupte's ~ent. It'• :i'· P~!:.1 ttl g ~ir:' .The EllL!U allege ttiat the ~'Ji1trton, tikt; ,:.,, ~l:.~vr .... :; original tease at a top rental l"l1nnl1111 emmlt1lon1 S.nt1 A~r-,11n BN,, of 11:111 1, g:11 at of $400 a month was con-t""" m~~m.T=1."·,._llfl!t;_ ditlnnal ~-Jibe un-C~ V1tW '~'1'tJ~1"p:?lk '~ d'erstandlnf that the leased MortlllrV~~°lli•r•T land Would be: restricted to the . =·~-,,.,~71911 ~~.t:A. ~,.~ niitiery business then ~ing Perjury Sen.tencing· l.Jelayed Six ·~onths SANTA ANA ..:.... A six-month probatkin department to im· delay has been ordered in the plement a num~ of . pro- sentencing of a San Clemente posals·for Evangehsto, among laboratory technician-found-therJ'tlhe -suggestion· thar he guilty of perjury in offering pbtain a psychiatric evaluation false .tesllrllOfly In fa vor of a 11nd Obtain new employment. ...,,,, ~~~" "'"· o-rai.d K1!111f I i.r Bll"Tlll, r-• ~ .... 1 :.J::':1 They claim the nursery •Ml ~ ... ' • business no longer-exists and ~~--JoM E. ~ 1SM -~mr,n, that Orange c:oest Nursery is ~1;!:..."Jf..T~~~ being used by Ward "as a cOn. ~ '1Jlrr11Mt11, °' ,!~·~ duit· for conduct of hls "" ""'· f.-~. ~ penonaJ .business, property ~~u ~-~·in."· , .... wt ....... to iNli. ~ -,_. ~-·c:=:"'~1r:v:!: ·TT.!_1 • "":""'' ""'"'~;r . ,. -.DIS onan Mtrlon s. fr-. I ~1111 Court, local house}"'ife charged with He faces a possible state drunken ·driving. prison, term 0£ up to }4 years Orange County Su·perior for his conviction on the per- Court Judge Herbert Herlaiids jury-allegation. - grant~ the delay to June 1S __. just one month alter a jury in his courtroom listened. to lestilnooy Illa! Louis Anthony Evang~, ff, repeatedly lried to dale Mrs. Phyllis . Wentz, 43, while she was a~ling court adh>n oil.,.the aUl!ged driving offense. Two Murder .Pi~ges Fowil•ln '111~..... Dll1 . J11111Jtv !'.J.::!', K-riit 041: l'r..M. ~= To T\! -..;.nss· ,,-,-~. Mf't1cn. """""' 11 AM, l>Kl·~ • • VI.at:: EVANGELIS'nO drew blood To Remain fie Vflo4 Cl'lapt4. lnmmtnt, Ml. 011.,. ' • ' • , • c1mtt1,.,. Ft. wor1t1. T1x1l. F.,,,11., • .,.. •" from .Mrs. Weptz at the hme SANTA-ANA -An Orange °"u "'°*' wlll'll1111 to m•k• """'°'""1 Jnd • Ills f he arrest and was later ~.''"",'-"'''. "'••'", ,, ""11!.l_!Mll!,_!:0, ... ~.: • Ia r 0 r County &g;ler~or Court judge r>rr:.:c una. ,,111 v ... ,._ .... • caUed by pa lice to testify on . . l'l(tors. 'l'll:'lfOM the alcohol level. P~d ~ refused to d1sm1ss . or ~~. ·~...nr:.r~~ . ~ ·problem; ,.;nr,.;;jiqg his testimony l!as lnaccur•~-~ l)\Unl" cha rges filed ~ "';rlfl!dOll, i:.-· 1rt .;.,.. lpdia upon indip(!fidence wlll and did not renect ·1he against two men who allegedly unt:llf, W1thlna't"l_~ ~ '"-· .u-._....a U ' ' ..,_ ' ,...,1e111, Alie• "'cil''-i.i~' •--n l,IC'" w-.~ by a C Irvine woman's impaired cpnditlon at led sherill.'s officers on a high :~=~ 1~~"'~.,: . ~~s~n1:~~ ~rfe!~d the t::~f arrest. d h speed chase titter & body was r.=.. ~· Tl/ltdlY, 1 l"M, _The ,overall , theme for l~· Bo prosecutor an t e found m the Cabot Road ares • .-•• ·, ~·'..,'-, ",111 """· w defense lawyer involved in f '"~-v · . ~~':'St~il~ L~· ~·r m~terty, ,~~Y ~ht,. .. ~ lower court action testified in ° .1•u.»Nn ieJo. 11:• G. ·~!?:· '?&> v11 Lido ~· 1.-C\;WJ.-c ...._~ Superior Court that dismissal , Judge Robert L. Corfman 's ~=:... ·rmes ~ o.~. :' 11e11~~ Challenge of Racial and of charges agaiMt Mrs. Went.z ruling means that MichaeJ ~ .~...:,,mw~.!!t......i:., t= EthniWorld·c .• !>Hferences Around the bad nothing to do with her McNab, 30, Stanlbn and 1,.,.. ~=.r.: ;,='"~:i ~= coope.raUon as a prosecution Joseph William Ruschak, 27, ~ ctv0, rf:.:0:-~..-..i witness against Evangelisto. Garden Grove, will go on trial !t.c,J~b.:;! Pec 1 111c ~;; THE FREE community lee-Feb. s £or the aUeged slaying in1=. "' 1111 uttit• lures sponsored by the UC! UDG ted f St A B-··• 21 Mlvlcl-.irn ""-· Pldfk VllW • J E Herlands gran o even very l i.i.;).11, , ~,.,. b~·a .. \.! Alumni Association, will be the delay Friday to allow the Anaheim; "~· ~ ;,:!!"1-~1''f1· held. in the Social Sclence'.---...:..--'--------------1 1~'7\. · ~~,C'_.~ \;i'.. Rill at 8 p.m. on the three re-1~~1 , . ~rcT.r ~ ..:=t:.:i rnaining co ·n s e c u t i ·v e Jl:t.r F~/1111: • ', ""· ~ n.esdays. Professors in the ~:mllll'l•'R"J'°"f'rillil~'" .,.,.,h ;"" flt!lds of the humanities artd 9r~11c1r-...~1c:M "~11111 11 s 111·1 social science will be the .. -ell't"'· '"'"'°'""' . . f tured k . ·1 H l"ttlmtn. •Olkllnt . .r Sen 'Ju.n ea spea ers. ' i ''/,itolf.· }1 o1 ~"" ~tn.,.,,, ,., Dr: Karen , Leonard, assis 11 .._,"' 1 - 1 W.~'· , ft"~.,~ tant professor of history, will rl 1v1n1 1r.111oe 1<o111 "'..:11, t k he to 1· "Probl .. ~,,, 11 '".:::i.4 ·, 1f•le w11t11n. a e as r p c, ems stocirton: Mr. 'n'""~ 1 ,~·~ of National Integration in i'l:r''r.11~~~·""! ~~~;]~!if!! 11dla." 1be focus of the lec-c1111~ n Lot · ~:rn"'~ 1 °'1~;.';1, t~e will be the numerous pro-;TS;'~n "l~'?;:S:~•no. s. J: -1:~·~: blems of paverty, traditional Mid, loci••· Mond..... Slllllff Lfe• ll f t I' . ~Mdt c"-!. 2 P'M, w1111 11:111. °"·.,.!lri.,' ran ng o cases, re lg}OUS ~'":# tw~t.. ~1111= and language· differences con. r:.'r':. "":"\o n:""~.rr:"r.= frontitli India upon ift.. ~~1 .fJ:f~of.Tr"~.":'o:':c:i1~ d,ependence. l-lolillllll of Lat A"°"". Shlfflr' l.11111'11 a-c11 Mortl,ltrv, D•~ DR. LEONARD spent her ... _.1 ARBUCKLE A SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJAl\Y G7 E. 17111 st., OORa --llM:I" MOST SUITS, COATS, 1,Pc.DRESSES 99c _the asury · DRY CLEANING BAL n.eLoERON ' FUNERAL mMI! C-0 del Mar mlllt r ..... _ !If.UH -year-Ii( undergraduate wort in lodia, stud)'Ing at the Univers.ity of Delhi. She presently"teaches comparative culture, courses ~dealing with IMJan 80Clety and poUtics ar)d colonial experience· and na- tionalist movements in the Third World. •••NADA M1lLs 1m cu"'°"' St.I ,o...,Nc•~ed3 111c1 11awt11on1t WOODLANO'Mlll&2·l!IOO YictorJ BIW. lAIUWOOOC.SOI St ii!d Palil!ll!llITT 8/lt lf¥11tlfDl3~ lylel •l IUINA l"AIW.Beacli 11111 Or~n1tthrop! IANTA ANAJ900 Soatb Bristol St. OUNGli;.t* Groq Blvd. ~nd Mandw:~la ""' . '"1"o&u,'elii>ADWAY ·JiYi.t" MORTUARY '1t~~Mtaa . • • f M <('OllMICJ[ LAOONA I BUCB~Y I ml '--:"1 ~ I ~ • I PAcmc '9lllW MBMOl\!AL WU'-~~,, 1 --~-' 1 Ne•pwl·-·~ t - II ~me :AMILY eot.ONIAL FUNDAL I l" ROME j • -'nt!BolaaAft. ,, __ _ l ~· J,.n,,nv I -117-81. Jll-lloltow - ,.,..._ WUU TE PRICES . OYER THE PttONE ••• ANYTI E -CHICI,,... MINI MU UIC&A~ ..... ll:tt. ow 11 ... Mel I .... Ylll ASll•IH. 8100 ••••·••····••·•••••••o.••r• $1 .11 ''' PHlSOOl•llll. 'It. s•111 Cleal'ltlr ••••••••••.•.•.• $1.59 $1.2S EYl•YNIWHT SHAMtoO, I oi., H•rltal .. L..mon1 1,1,,,.. $1 .47 Si.29 AU. DAY"-""""'-o.Mor ... t, 5 ... ••·•········~· $1 .59 SL29 2111 L Cast lllP'nf, at Femleaf. Corona del Mar • ·644-7515 .. I Mondcl't, Januar~ 29, 1q73 DAILY PU.OT 7 Political, Notes Grand Jury D.emocrat Optimist ~~~s~e~;: ' Urange C.Ounty Grand Jury By O. C. HVS11NGS by the President on the can-galned. 0 'in San Francisco. bas a new member. ot 1111 o.tlW l"lttf ttlff didate the Democrats offered. Foreman t.1arcia Benls nr HE TERAtS the party 's vote S~NTA ANA -Ir you are head ol lhe· Democratic Party In Orange County and the -Republicans have just about swept the boards , how do you assess your party 's showing ? "Qu.lte good /' is the answer of Richard J. O'Neill, million- aire leader of the Democrats in Orange CCl!nty. O'NEIL pointed to the plus marks -one-aided election victories for the county.'s two D e m o cntlc of!icebolders, Congressman Richard Hanna and Assemblyman Kenneth Cory. The Democratic central conunHtee chalnnan a I s o points out that t h r e e Democrats hold the majority on the nominally non-partisan county Board of Supei:vlsors. He referred to newly' elected Ralph· Diedrich, plus Robert Battin and Ralph Clark. O'Neill also sees hope" for -the future of his party's defeated candidates -John Black, Jim Thorpe and Otto Lacayo. "They are remaining active In the party and will be heard from in the future ," the party chairman said. HE SAID he didn't expect the 1a.year~Id vote to make a big impact last fall . President Richard Nixon defeated. S e n a I o r George McGovern by 2:67,89'l votes. Actually be received. more votes ( 44.2,587) than there . were registered Republicans in the county 1311,391). O'Neill blames this sbowing "As fa r as Orange County is concerned ~fcGovern was the worst possible candidate the party could have nominated," the Democralic leader said . as fighting a rea r guard ac-Newport Beach said Mrs. Evt>lyn Krakauer of Fullerton lion. "Any candidate that has been appouiu:U 10 suc·ceed stays close lo the registra· James w. Dick of Fountain lion figures will do well in ·the Va lley. state even though . losing Dick was not present \vhen "DEMOCRATS here. many Orange County." • the new jury was sworn in and of them aeroopace \\'Orkers , 'O'Neill said the p3rty is in later notifled Pres id i n g are coneemed about this jobs good sha~ financially wilh no Criminal Judge James Tu rne r abd homes. These are the gut real deficit. that he could not serve. I-le is Issues with them a nd The party leader was not a civil'service invest igator. McGovern didn't offer the one of those who predicted big The new jury now has 1:1 answers they expected." gains .in the county in 1972. I-le "'omen and six men . O'Neill sees the role of his is· satisfied to fight the rear t.1rs. Bents· said copies of party in Orange County as guard action and help the 1972 Grand Jury report nUn imizing the size of the loss statewide candidates by ha\•e beeO sent to all pull:lic of Democratic candidates. holding as many votes as ~d college li braries in the '\John Tunney Jost the coon. possible. 't!'oun1y. ty by 60.000 vo1es but ca rried ---;:~;;.::;:.;~~~-;:;;:;:;:;:;:.-- the state," he points out. • """'"-""-"'V:~:V,.., ""' "" "' "" "' " • "t.1cGo\'ern on the other hand lost by more votes thaft he Revie ·wing· \ Propos ed SANT A ANA Third District Supervisor Ralph Diedrich or Fullerton ha s pro- posed. the appointment of architectural review boards for construction along scenic highways. . The proposal followed a move by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to allo"' billboards in industrial areas on the highways despite the vigorous opposition or Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach. County supervisors have yet to act on Diedrich's proposal . ' ' ( ' ' ' ' ' < ( MIA eoUIR ) ' ) ) I ) ' ) ) ) ) ) ·1 .. ·..,..,..u • Portable Color TV • Family Size Picture I 1 • Cabinet of Walii.ut roller grain finiah on metal $ • Big 18 inch picture (iliag. meas .) • Color B,.ht 85~ picture tube for a alwp, natural color picture -( GibralW 85 TM ~h~is_for solid-state per!ormance and reliabllify • Stand available as optional extra MODEL CD1162W • man than yau'd lllPKl Ill' 111s II•• vm'd •••n • COSTA MISA e -ArM IL TOIO e h ....... Ytlof ~ ~ 411 E.st S•vtnt••nth Strttf El Tot• Rd. at Fr•eway fn•.xt .. S.v-Onl DaHy: 9-9: Sot. 9·6 ...._1614 DoHy: 10-9: Sot. t0-6 Ut.aao RADIO DISPA TCHID FACTOIT AUTHOllDD TV l AMIAllCI SllVlCI PHOlll 141 1437 . . . I~~.~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I! r, .. '' ' I, ' 1 • • B DAIL v PILOT Mond.ly, J&ftLWlry 29, 197J ' . Nixon Presents Challenge Spending • To Congress on 1 lJ.S. Defense Budget Biggest ID: History-Pe~ce or W~ _ . -,_ Welfare Cutback WASHINGTON fAl'l -Oonctdln& defeat l,n ill lour-year battle Io r ...U.... 1<form, the Nixon • Admlnlltration said today It wt1l lntteat help stateo _cleu.up llletr relief rolla Ind atandardlze many Special Programs Attacked WASHINGTON (AP) President Nixon again has chaUenged Congress to sweep away dozens of special aid programs -eaeh with a follow i ng among the la\1·makers -in r a v 0 r or broad-purpose grants states and local governments could spend for education. law en- forcement . manpower tralnJng and urban community development. The last Congress was cold to these proposals, which lhe administration calls special re\'enue sharing. It dld, hov.·ever, enact hill $30-bilUon, flve-year general revenue- sharing plan. ln a budget message certain to intensify the dispute betv.•een the President and the De mo c rat I c-co ntrolled Congress over domestic spend- ing, he wrote: "THE lNEFFICIENCY of the present grant systems makes favorable actioo on special revenue sharing by the C.OOgress an urgent pri- ority." The Budget Dollar fisca l Year 1974 Estimate Wh ere it comes from ... lndivid11 <1 I h~cnn1c 'l<i.r.r.:. 42¢ Other '-.... txci!:c laxes noirowint'. • Where it goes .... National Dclense 30* ""' .... Q9rtl BUDGET OOLLAR - A breakdown of the expenses of the federal government is given in the pie diagram on the righl Chart on the left notes the source of the federal inoome. · Total Outlays, 1972-1975 $ Billions 268.7 • ._complellUet and lneqWUea" In wt1!are ·~~ 1971 budi<I -to Coqrest .... -ticlpatal I cutbodt ot more than 11.S blllloo In otate-fedenl p u b II c • '•"loct-IW'Qll'l.ml. for I lolal ol ll2:7 blllJoo. -ol the-.... t111 be attributed lo the -tranafer DOit J~. 1 ot U mllllon aced. Jillnd and - diubled idult recipients Jb I newly federal)Jed pro. IJ'IDI within the Social Security l)'llem. NIXON SAID THAT despile varioul ftdudioot In overall lt\ID LOCATION O ........ lell!Afn. ''VIII .. • Center'' . .....,., .......... HUNTINGTON BEACH Education Form~iJ --.. theapend-Ing...,.. wt1l IO up next -- year because ot pay booN !or Renewed .. a11-vo1unteer r.... •nd , , _w.bat be called t:.oormal price WASHINCTON (APl -lncr"8ses." President Nixon renewed bis Fuurtbermore, ~ Presi- budget request tOC"ongr~ t: ... ~ forecast .a stiJ.1 bigger day to tie together more than ~efense_ budget .totaling $85.5 30 elementary and secondary billion 1D fl.seal 1975, the year educlUoo formllla grants into after next, for the same a sJn&le II.7-bllllon special ':ed t•-··h N. ' revenue-aharing package. .._. ""6 . 1:1on s 1be pro~ whlch qukkly arguments for It.is defense l1unked the JegblaUve test last OOd_g<t was· the .theme that ·year would earmark mooey military strength " needed lo 1... 'dlsadvan••·ed children · Jiii>mote successru1 negotia-. ' ' ... -• tlonl with the Russians and the liandlcapp;d, -.tional 'l"'C"u"1. impact aid and sup-Cblneoe looking Iowa~ a mott · SPEED READING COURSES TO B~GIN IN. BEACH ARit Arr••M•IITT have bet11 111ecla IJ.v An!tric•11 Retcli119 Fo1111° Oetiofl to cortduct • 21-hour count i11 1p"4I rtadi119: Tht co1ir•t 11 ope111 to tlt'(Ollt ebovt tht -t• of I] tlHf 911trt11t..1 ,,..ry 1rM11tt. to triple th.Ir Ntcli119 1pted with 111 h1cr1111 In COit\• prth11uio11. "A momentum or ex- travaJance." he said, "is speeded by requirements created initially by legislative committees sympathetic to particular and narrow causes. These committees are en· couraged by-special-interest groups and by some executive- brancb officials who are more concerned wi!h expansion of their own programs than with IOtal federal speodlng and the taxes required to 11Upport their spending." port oervlces. peaceful and secure world. ' " Stateo -.Id be glVtn "IN · -ter floxiblllty In spending THE P AB1' lour years After the ''"'" -..;k pfOfrtm, • peno11 c111 NM •flY •"'''9' book i11 '''' tfi•ll •II hotU 1111 .. und•nt11ricl It better. 111 odclitlo11 to 1,.M ,. ... 1119 th• court• •110 •111ph•1l1•1 l111pro...M •fvcly +.cllfliqu••· bet+tor hit f•kl119 1klll1, •11d'lncre•1M co11c•ft- tr•ffo11 11141 r• .. nt\on 1bllltl••· , Thi co1tr1• ,.qulljt'• • P•rton to •H•nd on• cl•1• ptr •••k 011 tho ••11111119 of , tholr ~~olc•. For tho1• ""ho ""ould 1111• 111or11 lnform•tion, withovt obll9•tio11 to 1111roll, 1 t•rl•1 of FREE on1 hout ori•11totlon l•ct11r111. ho¥• b••n 1chtch1l•d. Thus he linked his special revenue sharing proposals with a general warning to Congress that it would be res?)nsib\e for higher tax~. higher interest rates and more inflation unless it heeded bis call for a tight spending cdl- ing and cutbacks and abolition of some programs. HE CALLED FOR broad- purpose grants totaling $6.9 bOlion to replace "over 70 out- moded, narrower categorical grant programs." Nixon proposed $2.8 billion in education revenue sharing to replace 30 existing pro- grams. Among the affected p~granu. one· with especially slrmg congressional support is 1federal aid to ~ school districts • that euroU large numbers of children of federal military and civil employes. The proposal would cut out $146-m.illion in aid based on stude ·hose parents work for the go ment but do not live on fede I property. Pollution Increase 231 .9 1972 ·flSCllYWS 249.8 1973 1974 1975 flllM•' ,.,~ . --BUDGET OUTLAYS -Chart released in Waohlngton sbOWB totil' expenditures from 1972-1975, and 1e<ompanies the fiscal budget PresldenfNIXon 1ent to Con-- gress today. For the first time, the impact on the yeax following the budget pro- posed is noted. More ,Space Funds Song ht For Skylab, S h.uttk Era WASHINGTON (AP) Apollo ls dead. Skylab and lhe space shuttle are aborning. The space agency w\1.1 get a lit- tle more money if President Nixon's budget .proposals att accepte<! by Qingma. For the year beginning July 1, the administration wed 13.135,000,000 for the National Aeronautics and S pa c e Administration -, an increase of $74 million over the CUJTtnt fiscal year. for big.b energy astrooomy observalorie9, whkb had been scheduled for launch later in the decade. To date, $11 millk>o has been spent for the program to send two in- sUUmented craft -each. as large as a ~ -Into ll]J8ce. Money was cut out, the Pretldent said, "pending • redefinition of program ob- jectives." After the sbutUe, the largest spending classlflca.tlon is lunar and planetary exploration -r $311.S million. Lunar i~ vestigat.ions are the leftovers of Apollo: BCientists are still lludyjng -and will continue to study -rocks and data lo see what it all means. Requested But while the 1973 budget paid lor launching the lut two WASHI NGTON (UPI) -Apollo flights to the moon,~ . . new proposal put the funds 1n- 'ut Taxes €limb' Carl . Albert Criticnes 'Repeal' of -Programs Pres1dent Nu::on today pro-10 the shuttle _ $475 million posed a $44 million incr~ $200 million. It was She revenue for the Environmen-'-;;;i~ve category in tat P r o t e c t i o n Agency the spending plan. much of it to handle demands of new air and water pollution control programs paMed rteently by Congress. Tbe agency's operating budget would be increased to S51S million during the business year beginning July 1, EPA Administrator William D. Ruckelshaus s a l d . "COnsidering the budget as a whole, l feel we have done very well . . . remarka6Iy well." "DEVELOPMENT OF the IV ASHINGTON (UPI) - space sbut~e transportation Ho.,. Speaker Carl Albert bas syst= ls the key element In future space operation.!! in accused President Nixon of earth orbit," lbe President "trying to repeal the New told Congress. "The shuttle Deal and the Great Society" will have the e1pabillty to sup. by eliminating popular 80dal port a wide range of future programs to achieve a balanc. missions. tt will radically ed budget. reduce transportatJon· co1lts The speaker said It wu the and is expected to produce sole responsibility of Congress major savings in payload to chart the nation's fiscal cost.'i." course and said he for one By Ihe ei>Cl'of":'June the would be willing lo lilke taxes Unlled States wUI have spent If it woukl mean aalvaglng the separaUon of p:nirers, Utan I am l,n the President being right on every budget estimate he makes. You know, he makes mistakes, too." Albert said Nine Is "doing more than ltltJna budget cell- Jng1" when he demanda Congress spend no more than a specif~ amount -such as tlie $268 billion llguro tile President bas set for the fiscal yeormrttng-July-t. lhe money. we have demonstrated that Budget ouUa}'B for educaUon the.re can be meaningful in lhe Department of Health, negotiations only U ..,.e ma~ F.ducaUoo and Welfare totaled tain adequate m i I i t a r y 15.l tillljcjii, cit IIBZ ·nilllioii st7ength and e 11 e ct Ive more than anticipated spend--partners4ip· with our allies," Ing dllring the cumnt fiscal Ni:<oo said. year ending June :I>. ". •• • In lrriplementing our But the amount is · $170 strategy for peace we have mlllion less than was budgeted significantly Improved our ori&lnallY f0< fi><a1 Im. .Tbe rmtloos will! the Soviet Union combined Labor-HEW budget and the Ptople'1 Republic of for the current year wu Otma. At the same time, in vetoed twice, and both acconl with the Nixon Doc- departmentl are spending · trlne, our allles have assumed under lower Jevets thrQu'gh a a greater share of the burden continuing resohitkm. for their own defense." 'l'I•••• mHtlnt•. ''' fr•• to tl.o public and tha covrM .... 111 b• ••Pl•lnM 111 coll'lpl•to d.ta!l· lnclucfl119 011h1nca r•q11lr•morif1, "clonroom proc ... vr•t, tultio11, cla11 1ch•cl11lo and loc1tfot1, Yov "''cl to otttn.cl only 0110 moofirtt which · b th11 mo•f co11.,011Jo11t for yo11. TIM1• froo ·~ hour oriontatio111 .... in be hold a1 f11llow1;,. Thursday, Ja~u•ry 25, 7:30 P.M.; Friday, Jan~ ary 26, 7:30 P.M.; 2 meetings on Saturd•y, J•nuary 27, 10:30-A.M. and 2:00 P.M.; •nd On fin al meet- ing on Wednesday, January.31 , 7:30 P.M. -. All Mnn•s WIU .. Hll..D AT THI LA•UNA HOTIL -THI tlAIOIN IOOM 411 S.. COAST HWJ .. LAM NA llACH thru Feb. 10 *REFRESHMENTS * FUN Grand Opening lebration BRENiWOOD SAVINGS and Loan Association 1640 Adams (2 bloc:_ks West of Harbor Blvd.) TAKE A LOOK _...., at our beaUtHul new office. It's our moat modern branch, filled with all the latest equipment enabling us to give you the beat possible service. A few of our special features are: FREE safe depo11t boxe1• Our vault la just loaded with various sized boxet. We want.you to keep your valuables safe. Drlv•up teller eervlce • ~J .... In a hurry? Drive right up to one of our handy new outs!~ wl~s, and make your transaction wHhout ever leaving your car. • , ., New extended hours · · For your convenience, we will now be open durlng the loll owing houra: -~ Mon.· Thuro. 9-5 Frl. 10·8 Sat. 10·2 Here ere 1om..addftlon•I BrentwOocl Savlng1 featurt11 FREE Travelers Checks• FREE Money Orders• FREE Photo Copy Service• FREE Save-by-Mall FREE Trull Deed Collectlona• FREE Notary Service _P-ICK ABOlJK - There was one triajor cut - a decline of $24.2 million In the EPA program to find ways to . ..reduce and recycle the piles or ~ waste, including such things as paper and ~I containers. . Ruckelshaus declined to say what his agency had asKed the White House for Jo run the pt<gram, but lie iilil' wli&tlt ·got -$S.7 million -rtOected the fact that earlier e.ffona: in the lleld have evolved much of the teclmoJoay needed and the ldmlnlttritloo feels aolJd waste b really a state and local problem. about S300 mllUon on the Jl1tll· some· of thole program!. 11 TBINx: THE President tie, a reusable orbiter vehkle Albert was interviewed on trying to repeal the New Deat with a large elf)endable fuel Face the Nation on CBS. and the Great Society by tank and reusable twin 10lld While ~ "shares the withholdin( funds , and I'm rocl<et -· Tho -1e, mpoosibtllty" lor lldlle¥mc a acalnll Iha~ and I think the able lo carry four ,_ Ind I bllanced budge~ Albert said, CO-should set the large payload ls ezpeNd to NlllUI "baa '°"" much priorttles," Albert llald. "And be opmtiQOil llJ---11 IL..-Ilion the Gamlltullail-tlie-C.0., .. bu I rigllt lo -total cost o( IU l>lllien.. caot<mplated ' when be tty, U It wantt to, tbat'"' m '""' . -°"' Ci 11'1. --·-•••r-' --'""' 0..-. NIW 'T ... . N"'C*CS ... ' ~ We have Mlocled lour very popular booka. Wo want you to select ~r tavortte and take 11 home' with you. It's youra FREE; our w-v of uylng '1haok you" tor .taking lhl time to visit our beautiful new olllce. Happy reeding· from BrantwOOd Slvlnga. ue Slid tbe administration would eventually Pf'OPol'lt leJlslatlo~ to taclda the tolld Wtlte quution throlzgh IOme "'"l>loey lllW1I-He added Ihat It was watchlr1f care/ully Oftgon's attempt to ret1rl ct tbe u11 of nottfttumable con- tllnen through tax mean.s. ,I wltllbolda lundt •P!'l'01'riated lotlllI to -· the level ol 0Tl!E SKYLAB ~ by Congma In an 1ttempt lo ibe ~ llOOlll< ol thll lldleduled to becln ID mldoM+, '"'°9 spendinc In llne with bit CGW!lry, and llJlirade - will see U... cmn ol -· requeots. tional -=1tlel for aD the men eacli worldnC In ao eoi;Ui-people ol 11111 country. And h orbiting Iaboraloey for pertOdt "llE'!I TRYING to mu. 1 . Is on tlJlnp or tills 90rt tllat ot 28 and 51 da)'I. lesillator out of himaelf, and we find ourselves In JUCb 11ie bL'<iget estimated fial lt'a not U'le businw: of the disagreement." 1974 spending for 1pace Ollbt ~ident of the United Stateo Tbe admlnlatration made It optriUona -including Skyfab to · ISl\ltne Co n I re 1 1 ' clear ln advance of the fbcal and ,.ad)'lng the 1975 Joint respooslblllty tor the llscal ar-1971 bud.let Monday that tho Ruulan-Amertcan mgbt -lo ftlrt ot the natiOI>, u I ... It, Olfl<e or E<onomlc Op- be · ISIO million, down from whether It's aood or bad," portunlly -the keystone 61 1879 million. Albert uld. PnsJdtnt Lyndon B. J""'->'• Complellly dropped -"I'm ..... 1nlmlted fn areat Society "'"'111111 tho agency's tunds Is money pres<rv!ng t!Ni Constitution, would be eliminated. I 'MllllllWI bltlnOI requtrtd. 0 'W'twt tllld '° Ind Of qullW. , ' .I . .. , ... . I "· .... "\, •, -- ' ' • L ·~ .J r I 1'" For Journalistic Excellence, No One Tops Them . " ... ( -· • ' I . '- , ,, DAILY PILOT People Stacked .... Up · Pretty . Well In Press Club .Competition --Again - 19 .First. Place Awards The Or•nge County Press Club's version of Osc1r Night h.. come ind g~ the ORcOP. 1w1rds llove i.:..n distributed for t'1e best wJrk clone in 1972. · ' . • I -• ' It w11 1nother vint19e yHr for the PAILY PILOT .whose stiff .,;.,,,bers brought home 11 ORCOPs (more ihan helf of 1U . . . they were eligible to win) pluo first piece 1w..-ds in· eight out of 17 • Speci1I Aw1rd celegories. The 19 firm w.,. more ihan •I tli. firm put togetl.er by tli. county's o;her three 'topcf•ltoes-they divide<! 17·•mong the .thrH of them -•nd, counting seeOnd' pf•ce·•w.,ds ( 13) •nd . honor•ble , 1chievements (23), b ughf the tot•I number of •w•rds for the ... DAILY PtLQJ 1a '65! ' ,, • '• •••. t ., .. ALAN DIRKIN lleot Sport• FH!Vro J " L 1 • • TOM IARLEY Best News Story PATRICK O'DONNELL w-·· Section l'hoto • 4-WAY WINNER KOEHLE'R -Spot .l!t:ws Photo .. " -Photo Series . ' i . Best Medlcol Photos Beot.Anlmol Photo ,(. " ' ~ . . ... TRIPLlE WINNER VINSE-L -Nowt-Soriff lest News Feature BNt Medic.I Artlclo BEA ANDERSON -HMdllne JOANNE REYNOLDS Fl,. Pt o..,,tlon Artie lo • . • . ,, DOUBLE WINNER PAYNE -Sporll'Pholo • Best Artlcli ond Pholos On Youth Achle- TOM MURPHINE BestP190llput, . JOliN VALTllUA Beat Artlcle tfl Lew ' I i3 First Place Win·n~rs To mok1 it on this picture pogo, members of the DAIL y PILOT stiff hod to win first pl1ce prires in the ltth Annu1I Or1.ng1 County Press Club Aw1rds. / Thirteen m1do it ind, in 1n 1lmo1t incr1dible showing in the f1c1 of this kind of competition, thre1 of them 11ch won more ' ~ thin one 1w1rd. Chi1f Photogr1phor Lee P1yne won two; Stiff Writer Arthur ·R. VinsOl won three ind Stiff Pho+ogr1plior Rich.rd Koehler won four! With 1 r1cord· lik1 the! -better even thin the DAILY PILOT is 1ccustomtd to scoring -the re1I winners ire the rotd1rs who will, perhops, join the 1ntire DAILY PILOT fomily in soluting· its untopp1ble news still. 'nRRY COVILLI 11111 Nowlplpor Col- L PETER KRllO ·Urben Afftlra Aftlde • , .• .IOflN ZALL• . leltlwlt4111 ...... . ' • -·, ' , ' . 7 Dou o:)as ~ DC-I Os Ordered National Airlines has an- nounced a $148 n1illion ordel' for seven ~tcDonncll [)l)uglas DC-!Qs, including f i \' e domestic and l \I' o in- tercontinent~l versions o( the' FINANCE 1videbodit'd aircraft , L. B. l\laytag, chairn1an and '-------...;-" prt>sident · of National. said that fom: of.-the 2~9-passengt>r p~s would be delivered lull' .__ _ __,next year \\"ith the remainder arriving in Noven1ber . 19i5. Big Contract At Ce fesco, -Fe 1u Jo bs I National presently operates nine OC-lOs. Tv•u long-range n1odels prerious!y ordered arc scheduled for delivery in Junl'. - -The LX'-10 is equipped with hi~h-bypass t'ngines that ~c11· -govern1net\t contrac1s eclipse"" the thrust outpu! of to C'r!esco Industries that earlier jet en~ill{'S. The plane ultunatelv 11·ill exeeed $20 can operate fron1 all airports 1rullion ~re nol-expected to capable of handling tht:. add significantly to the work smaller Boeing 7"Z7. fort·e of the Costa ti.lcsa-based Air Nev: Zealand, !h(' aerospace firm. go\"ernn)ent-nin airline h.'.ls The cunfracts granted by ordered three of the ti.lcDen-the r.s. Air Force Space and nell Douglas DC-10 \\ride-bodied ti.Iisstle Svstems Organization trijet airliners. The first one is tSAi\ISO 1. arc $6.5 million {or . ready lo be picked up al the construction of a re-entry -company's di\"ision plant in \"ehicl(' testing con1ple x on Long Beach. \\"ake Island in the Pacific and C. J. Keppel. Air. -New· .. .ue.orlx $15 n1il!ion for lattnch Zealand's chief executive and St'rl.'ices .'.Ind Athena n1issiles. general 1nanager said. the $100 Hoth the Athena and the milliort being spcni. on the Athena H roekels are built by three planes is not considered the firn1 on 3333 llarQor Blvd. by his countrymen 10 J~ a The nussiles serve as S()-('alled lavish expen~iture. ··1ri"1;1:." tor the payloads of Noting that the airline helps o!her conlractors. keep . laxes do"'n by earning But l'Ven though the rockets go\"erriment-$27.8 million ,in are built in Costa !11esa, no fiscal 1972-Keppel...said Ne"' mass hirings arc predicted .. ac- -Zealanders are hopeful the big t·ording to R. Don a l d planes will help boost the Tompkins . dirt'Ctor of in· country's tou rist trade. dustrial relations. Tompkins said staffing had been increased during the last three months'in anticipation of the contracts and that only 25- 50 additionetl positions will be filled . In late spring the com- pany expect s to hire ano!her 25 1vorkers. according to Tompkins. PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS 1st l 2nd TRtlSl DEEDS $1,~ TG '2S0,000 VP TO 80'4 L0.4.NS ON Tf!UST OEEO COLL.4.lEF\A.L MEW.-OllT EOUITY FOMDS Newport Cen1er 620 N1w(IO<I C.n11r OriYI NIWPOrl 8e1c1', Cal~. (7i-'J 6-4 ...... , Qf the contract~. Celesco to date has been a\1·arded a total of Si.025.000. I 111111 lllLEVlll • IF IAll • H ; - SAN DIEGO FREEWAY THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHOR IZ ED DEALER FOR EVE RY POPULAR MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON COSTA ME SA'S Harbor Boulevard of Cars LOOK fOR THE EM l l f M AT ROBINS FORD DATSUN / 2060 284S .. THEODORE I COSTA MESA HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. frlhtdly, Con•e11Jetrtt, Reliable 1000 -ORDER ¥')' ' Beautiful .'·~~ Stick-on YOURS ,, \ LABELS ,, TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or a Friend· Mey be used on envelopes as return address le.bels. Also very handy •s identification labels for mar kin9 personal items such as •ooks, records, photos, etc. Lab els stick on g le ss e nd may be used for marking hOme ce nned focd items. All labels .are printed "!i th 1tylish {'o9u1 type on fine quality ~hit'-· 9umm1d peper. ' . r-------~---------------, Fiii i.n 11111 ,ot;pen, cllp •ncl m•1t wl!h 11.U 10! I ' ,1111 ,r!tlllftt libtl OIY., ,,0. ,~. 1»~ I I Ct1i. Mn•. C•IH, nn• I I I I I I f I I · : L ----~~L-~T -~~!~J!~~----J r § lflo1aey's Wortla U.S. Divorces Up ' Alon g With Costs By SYLVIA PORTER ?.1ore than l .500.00I)' oC you 1'11T be divorced and another 1,500,000 will take the first steps toward divorce in 1973 - all-lime high totals with financial implications reaehing out to many n'IOre millions of adults and children in the fam- ilies involved. "" This is almost four times the incidence of divorces only 10 years ago. · MARRIAGES ALSO HAVE been in- creasing at a rapid rate in recent years -but divorc:cs have been rising even more sharply. A decade ago, there was one divorce or annulment for every four warriag~ .. J~y .. _j)ne. old mar.. riage·'i'nds.ln divorce or .annulment for e\•ery three new marriages. . To dramatize the divorce picture POltTE• even more: _ * One out of every five men and \\'Omen getting mar- ried each year bas been divorced. * Some 15,000.000 Americans are or have been div~ ed -and 4,000,00G-plus ar~ currently divorced. * Nearly tWQ out of three di.vorces today involve dill~ dren. * "':-1'10 WHJ~ THE remarriage rate· has been ·rising along wnh the divorce rate, one in five remarriages also ends in divOrct. \Yhy? . Surely, !he upsurge in broken marriages is related to changing American attitudes. particularly about sex, to the dec_line of the, tradil_ional fa.IDiJy~ ·J:asier· div.orce.Jaws. to the growing financial independence of women, and man y other lesser (actors too. Obviously influencing the figures also is the fact that the .,.,·ar babies of the early post.World \Var It years are how into !heir 20s -the most highly divorce--prone age."' group. especially among couples who manied \'ery young, Who are lhe most.divorce-prone? . Nearly 30 percent of the marriages wbf;re .lhe woman's age ranges from 'Z1 to 32 will end in divorce. . NPN·WHITES GE:r divorced_. more frequently than "'hites. For every 1,000 married Couples, there are 78 divorc- ed persons among non-whites, compared to '45 divorcet'I individuals for every 1,000 white married couples. Divoft'e rates are higher in cities. On the farm, ther'e arc 2tl divorced persons for each 1,000 marriei:I couples in contrast to 49 in nonfarm areas. · · The smaller your family income and-the lower your ed- u~alion level, the greater the likelihood that you will get divorced -contrary though this may be to··'}XlPular belief. \Vhatever your finanCiai situation , a diV«ce is one of the most costly economic 'adventures you can undertake - \\•ith expenses which few to be div~ couples Weigh tn advance. · \ "~'OST-AAIERICANS TODAY liVe to the hilt ~ the breadwirlner's income and frequently ev.eo beygnct it,'' notes a prominent New York lawyer and fantily Jaw pro-- fessor. , "For young families with litUe or no financial cushioii, the sudden ecooomic toll of divorce can be catastrophic." \Vhen can a husband financially afford a divorce? \Vhen he is prepared to CJ.It his standard of Hving ih half: says the professor. "My advice to anybody contem- plating ·a divorce is lo count on its costing at least twice as much as he thinks." If you are considering a divorce, you must be aware oi all the coots -ranging from lega1 fees and plane fares to alimony and child support payments, division of property and· other assests, the complex but oh so important tax angles. and on and on. . \Vhat are typical divorce costs today? . NO DIVORCE IS "TYPICAL,"~ but there are general guides _on t!>e two major basic costs. The first is alimony and child support ' -sometimes referred to as the "high cost of leaving." These are usually the biggest items in any divorce settlement. · -The second major expense is the la wyer -~ith lawyers. ~ike physicians, tend ing to charge clients according to their income brackets as v;ell as according to the amount of time and "'ork a case demands. In IDgh Gear • Ford, Lincoln Sales Prove Bullish Trend By CARL CARSTENSEN Ford Division's tolal vehicle Of ,,.., IHllY 'liet s1att deliveries soared to an a\1- 1972 was a banner year for time high o! 3,066!695 u~its. It Southern Califon1ia Ford and was the first lime :n the Lincoln-Mercury dealers and -d~vision's History that com- 1973 promises to be even a b1ned car and truck sa\('s ex· be tter year yet. two Ford ceeded the three million mark. ~olor Company executives Car sales in 1912 "A'Cre predicted recently. 2,157,118 units, up 10 percent 0.f. Yando, Ford Division over 1971. Truck sales were 2.t west'E!rn . regional s a I e"S a record 909,557 for 1972, a 24 manager, and J.W. Lancaster, percent gain over ihe previous Lincoln·Mercury Los Angeles record of 735,370 units sold in district sales manager, said 1971. that 1972 was an unexpectedly' Lincoln-Mercufy Division good year for the divisions and posted record shattering South- they predicted that the gains ern California sales figures as they posted will be surpassed well in 1972. In 1973. Lancaster reported that Lin· "OUR FORD DEALERS sold more than 200,000 new ears and trucks in the Los Angeles district, once again garnering Southern California sales leade rship," Yando said. "This is an increase of more than, 21 percent over 1971 and our best year ever. Individual car lines showed the bullish trend of the Ford lineup in 1972 in Southern California. Dealers sold more than 21 ,oOO Torinos laSt year, compared to just over 13,000 in 1971. Another big gainer was Thurnderb1rd. In 1972, 4,196 units \Yere sold by dealers in the Los Angeles district, compared with' 2.764 in 1971( "Our Pinto. ho~·ever, show- ed.that it could really sland up to the competition," said Yan· do. "Since it was lntrodiiced in • March, 1971. some 108,llllll. Pin· tos have been sold In Southern California , and it is outstrip- • ping the other mlnicars by a wide margin.'' AT THE NATIONAL level, coin-Mercury Division sold more than 47,000 units in the Los Angeles district in 1972. "OUR DEALERS EVEN managed to better by 2.S per- cent our best ever year which was 1955 when 38,000 vehicles were .sold," he.said. In the Los Angeles district, the most notable Lincoln- Mercury Division gainer in 1972 was Montego, pasting more than 7,000 sales, up more than 120 percent over l971's figure ol 3,200 vehicles. The Continental Mark IV was up 67.5 pen:ent for 1972, posting 5,447 sales compared to 3,252 from 197t Lancaster noted that the Capri was up more than 40 percent in 1972. Nearly 12,600 C4pris were sold, compared to just under 9,000 in 1971. TRE NATIONAL sales pie· ture a t Lincoln-~ercury Divisk>n mirrored the local success. Dealers sold fi04,223 new cars during 1972, a 30 per· cent Increase from 11 record 465,062 deliveries In 1971. I •• • ,, Wall Street • • • Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock. Tikely the Or- ' . . We couldn't P!ove it, of course: but it seems that th.e percentage is ange · Coast qrea .. even greater here • 1n and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY '· PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the -first newspaper in Orange County to bring its reader~ "today's, final stocks today" via super high ,speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time . Wall. Street's computers .. "ta lk . to" co tn put er s in the [)All Y PILOT plant every trading day at ·the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It •• tdkes only 12 minutes to move the entire New "York and American Stock Exchange reports from the "ca n yon s of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when · technology finds a way to beat thot speed record, :the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the . . --firsr to use it to liring readers 'to ay's a~tion t9 day." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the '' ' ... ~· • . . • • ... ·., . l .. ' ~ .. • ) i i f I I I l t. l I ,, f .I I • • l !1 • ' I ' • ' I • ... • I --1 • Daily Pilot· .S.ory 'fOj!t,fs DAILY PILOT Is~ 11\~erp niwspapel' DAILY PILOT, Laguna Beacb DAILY PILOT, prod\leln& •l&~t edil!Ons a cla_t >f!ila seHn-day·• Saddlebaclt DAILY l'ILOT (for Laguna Ni111el, week cll'culation ol >OVer 46,000' Iii Oraiiie CoM! · Misaion Viejo, El Toro. 111d rtu;oulldll\( areas), communltiei from , Seal 'ilucli to San Clemente. Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT, ~r ~ Clemente.Cap- And it• 1 . lstrano DAILY PILO'I', • a, opg step removed from the turn· . • · -'7 ol·tllkontury. weeklies from. wlilcb 11 descende4. • · Editorial polidot . and JJews decisions . are I 'Th · • . . ·. , groaUy Influenced by editors In eacb of the nnous I . . e Costa . Mesa plant which houses ilai sup. areas: AdverUsers ire served by · adv~g staff • r port fundions of Ibis multi·newspaper 6peration , pe!'ilonnjj! aasigned to each of the communitie~ I ,\l~s 3!1,~8' square feet of working sp~ce. . served by the newopaper; •. : -:;:: I ·, Much of lb' space was ~rAted with the )97(). • Bul the Job of lltting the pieces ~¥.ether .,.... I • 71 cliamantllng, remodeling and expanding of the the co?:>plicated 1"'k ot processl!!t "!!d lJ!anufac· ! . 15,997-square-foot bulidlng which l""1f hid evolv· =~a~"W~~af:y n3t:'~Jl~"J.1!: andled at home t . · ed an cl expanded at the.Jlay and. Tburin -ta , The story can be told in the r e c I t a I of a site over the years that.the newspaper bu occupied string of facts : . lhe comer. . · • Ali of the newspaper's elgbt-edltiorus -seven tailored for home deli".!'ry in as many communi· t. tiea and one "street edition" for-ielf·sale from area D)lwsraw -are produced in lb~ main )!ant. · The newspaper bas staff writers and editors · who operate offices In. Huntlligton Beach, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and· San Clemen~. They ali feed material . to copy editors, photo lechnlctans · ~ the dally newspaper DAILY PILOT carriers deliver , from Seal Beach to San Clemente. . '" -Sophisticated equlpment.....,4 hliiu1-traine4- craftsmen . work In Costa .._ to prOci\itle what · amounts to eil{hl dl!ferent ne,j.olpaper, each il'ay. ' • Tlletr mUtbea4s Wlel,'lllltui as j.. p1aill I l "DAn.Y PILOT'' (the slnNll'.edltlon) or: ' CIRCULATION -Coven approximately 145 square miles, average more than 45,000 copies per day with a on&day count ol 46,025 for Dec. 12, 1972. Subocrlbers will pay more than $1.2 million this year to have papen delivered by nearly 1,000 carrier&. EMPLOYES -197 fuli·llme; 33 part-time - 62 in production and printing departments, 36 in news department and 99 in business and circula· lion offices. Artnual payroll this year will top $1.9 million. (That doesn't include carriers who will earn '325,500 this year, ,PIUS cash and other prizes oUered 111 bonus incentives. They're independent .contracton, not empioyes.) ADY••TtSIMINT f Huntington BeMl JFounlaln. Yall~y DAILY - PJU)T, 'Newpo~BeBcb D>a!.Y PlliYJ', Inine ADVERTISING -1,100 re~ar .adverttst:rs -700 relall and 400 In clusified. Newopaper's adYOrtiling revenue breaidown: 55 per cent retail, 37 pettent·dasaifled linage, 6 percent from nation· al Ida and 2 pen:ent from legal ·and miscelianeoua advertiaements. HOME BASE FOR ALL DAILY PILOT EDITIONS IS EXPANDED COSTA MESA PLANT · Editors feed In News and Photos, Get Back Tailor-made Community Newspapers iToday's News Today-12 Swps from Deadline to Delivery for the Dail y Pilot . ~ . . 1. REPORTER·PHOTOGRAPRER team collabora.tea OD' .local story which will be featured in the day's edition..DAILY PlLOT often teama camera specialist with writing specialist. .. ' 1 4. COMPUTER boosts words on their way at almost unbelievable speed by assisting with job of perforating tape which activates Lino- type machines. Here, paper tape is fed into $25,000 computer. 7. PHOTOGRAPHS, meanwhile, are being select.ed to be, processed in Photo Lab, putting pictures with words for the day's collecliDn of information about your world and your community. 10. MAT TAKES lmpr..sdon of ah tYP. and .,;graving cub when it lsJald on page form and forced under roller whlcb uerta up to 3,000 POU.Ml ot pressure per square inch. . . 2. WIRE REPORTS from llirougliout the world arrive on both Assoc- iated Press and United Press International wires at DAILY PILOT. Editors often select best elementS from both reports, ·combine them. 5. GALLEY OF TYPE is ready for proofing after tape-activated linecasting machines set it up in lines one column wide. The tray on which it is arranged is called a galley, hence the name "galley proof." 8. ENG RA VER takes really close look at the oegative after. making a photocopy of a p.hotograph to be reproduced in the newspaper. Image on negative will be etched on sensitized metal called a cut. · 11 . PLATE MOLDED from mat baked into a curved •hape can be IO(ked onto rotary press units, like the one shown here, where each plate prlnta one page oJ the newspaper. f ' 3. COPY DESK (foreground) is where stories from several di!ferent sources are checked for accuracy in spelling. grammar and style. Head- lines are written here, copy is pneumatic "tubed" to first floor. ' ' ' I 6. PROOFREADING is next step. Galley proofs, proofs of lieadlines and prin ted proofs of pages all are. ch ecked in Proofreading Room befo re next printing steps are laken. 9. PAGE MAKEUP sees words and pictures brougbf'together In a fo rm called a chase. It is like a metal frame, newspaper-page size, in which engravings ("cuts") and lines of type are arranged. . 12. WHILE INK Is •U!i drying after the presses spill out Ille dar,'• run of DAILY PILOT editions at 70,000 newspapers per hour, carr u hustles along bis route to drop "today's worl~" on yoW-lawn. . • .. . 2 OAll't' PILOT ~~. J~ Zf, ltl) -·-- -'Black Pantliel'' W 9n~t Run; Actors Cited T~-DiiiArnCllNICIAN . I • . , • • · -SI• ~· lnlel'.lllYe Trllnlft91 •· From Witt Sen·lct Mrs. Huggins, an elected !My &re· capable of hHolc who wu llCddenlalty hit by a "SklJI'. talent and dedlcated ~waytomedlan llerwll JID. Etirollm1~t In qOWN and IRID6E, ~nd .bENTURE E:rlka HuRfM vi'ilt nOl rt4Q member of the ~rk~ey Com-dtied.s ln rea\-lUe <uationa, pua1n& bolt, a apotesman for labor of ,n thm .,. being ..,,. ~ UoenM WU ..a e.rotr•"'' now .,." for tJ•y orMf ~"lftt ..._,,.,, for a Berkeley City. Council munlty Devtlopmelll Assoda· · the "-lcao lied Cnfs oays. wasted ," l8ltl ~In a lei· hardllllp ...._It_ tho . For lllfonwull•, .P.IRI llllRllclately seal because the Blacl< lion. hnd been expec\od lo The qanlzatlon awarded 1 ( J' ter to Robert Ball, coin-'.:. ......... .-:...u el .. -•· ' ' (714t 635-1450 P the ' ' seek • place on the radical Red cross ctrtUlca .. of merit P'~"OP'LE mlsslooer ol the Soelal Securi---·-·---_ .. ,i:n r~ ~~cu~~;~:~ April r.oauuon slate or~ to costar/Mike ,Dt..,u, the ~ ty AdminlstiitiOn. ~ · _.to ·aen hls-.. ftOUI. Royce«' . ,,,~;,'t:!• 1~.= =.::;,.. Debby S.ale's campaign for candidates in the Aprll treiec> aon of movie ,actor lllrt Soelal seturlty orllctals bin:•.-, · · • "'-th Calif ' C U 08kland mayor. lion. Four seats and conltol or Doqlu, and usimol di-Quinn-Martin Pnlductloos, the receotly told • congnalonal ' Mw _.., pltaded .:xi}l ern ' orma <! ege fi.frs. ffuarrins ·and Sea.le the council are at stake. tar ~ea.edl Sw.,. for savlnc sbow'a producen, sakt · committee that it woWd coat 11Ui1ty to a~ violatio~ ,..... ~ · of _ stood trial ~ether on nturder * -·~ the life'ot • telk>w actcf · · * tOILD'WCh '1Q aUow workl:ng, his •'kl~ ple&ded..cl§~ ~ charges in New Haven, Conn. -r.~ members of the 'l'he two jumped Mly cloth-Entertalner Biiiy Dalltls, elderly to collect 11111 . aoc1al cy. · · , Medical · & Dental Careers in 1970. n.. charges were "Slre<ts of San Francisco" ed Into chilly San Francisco '6.hasprotestedrultsthat.cut sewrlty payments. "He·hu .....0tly ·boulbt a 17'7 5, lltOQKHURST ;ST., ANAHEIM, CA 92804 dismissed arter a hu ng jury. television series ha\-e proven Bay Nov. 2l Ind went to the Social Security payments to + ,. Rallf.Ro~, ol w~ he ts ~ ....,, ~ .-dlttM" ,,. • Ttdlllklll ....._ ______ ::.;.._:_ ______ _:._ aid ol_stunt man Dkk Bodle< retired -who find work. ·A Judge decided lakinJ .•ery proud," the la~, "iY•iriAld~. tiiiliii · .. ·-' 1-·"Z:'j .·. C ;...,. r ... ,,. .. "'I,..!••'• ),.., , !~I• \\ "'IJ flcMo ..,....,.-. '"You 'd better SI.Op drinking. Your face is getting blurred." L.ltl.Bqyd Weekends Be·st Days £01· Cattle . Busiest day in the stockyards is Afonday. That's when 45 percent of the cattle go to market. OrilY 19 percent show up on Tuesday. Wednesday gets 25 percent, Thursday seven percent and Friday four percent. Report this because a client asks if cattle, like people, have good days and bad days. Yes . l think so. Their good days are Saturday and Swlday. ONE OUT OF every five raplsts is dnmk at the time of the crime, lawmen•say ... SEVEN OUT of every 20 servlcemen Wear pre$cription specs ... IF A SINGLE "'OllWl goes with an eligible man rOr three . months, chanCi!s she'll marry him are about 19.1> to five ... NO LAW in any state prohibits the marking of playing ca rds . . . SO YOU THINK you've mastered the language? All right. say "New York unique" three' t,jmes. QUERIES -Q. "Who invented the first brlissiefe?" A. Mary Phelps Jacobs. In 1914. She wrote a book, too. An autobiography. Called it "The Passionate Years." Q. 0 HOW ~fAl'lY angels does the Bible actually men- tion by name!" ~ A. Only three-P.lichael, Gabriel and Raphaei Q. "WHA T'S the most commoo cause of snowmobile 3C{'i<Jents?" A. Sticking throtU~. TAKE JOO BACHELORS each 36 years old. Exactly 7.2 ,or them will get married within the next 12 months. Now take 100 single ladies each 36 years old. Only t.4 or them will go to the altar \\i lhin the upcoming year. LOVE A.ND WAR -Pay attention, please, to th.is ob- servation on love by Vivian Crist o!: "If you lose in what· ever manner, the pain is lasting indeed. But I ~y subscribe to the old theory of getting back on the hOrse after the fall. There should be a 'next' in life. A next cat, a next dog. or husband. or whatever. There are too many joys to forego by being so niggardly ·with love, so afraid ' to be hurt." Excellent. ex~Uent. ALWAYS thought those carnivorous pJanls that trap bu gs to eat v.·ere farily rare. Not so. The· botany boys say they've counted about 180 different sorts of such, sO far. , BIRD \\'ATCHERS report that pairs of romantic r> vens oft en fly with their wing tips touching as though hold- ing hands. Isn't tttat sweet, Cynthia ? ' A~10NG the v.·estern music singers, the Nashville ex· perts define a star as worth from $750 to $1).05 per coo- cen, a superstar as worth anything more than ~1.!51. Address mail to L. /11. Boyd, P. O. Box 1815, New. port Beach, Cal if. 92660. ' THERE ARE OVER 10 ACRES OF NEW AND USID -CARS FO Ll•---- ON COSTA 'S Harbor B l"d af C:fu!1'1---... lOOl fOI THI IM,ILI . AT DAVE ROSS I AL GREEN'S PONTIAC . · lflt le Malllla mo · 2uo HARBOR BLVD. RBOR ILVD. ,. AD PRICES .GOOD . MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 3 FUERTE Avocados L•r .. • FRESH TENDER • --Zucehini Squash LARGE AND SWEET · Navel O nges LARGE SOLJD OS~ - Iceberg·.,. ·ettuce 29~ ... , ' wlie<fI[e:$'$"e:Fl RICHARD'S Barbecue · Chicken 1.29 lb. ' BAR M . : " All Meat Wieners I ·lb. 79¢ I Hoff mans Cheese . sa·rs ·~::,:·:.P::1:~ '· Ol . 69c CARRS TAILE WATER English Crackers . 7 \~ ... 79c ' ' RICHARD'S TOP OF THE ·GRADE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS . Round Steak s1rog•noflT••d•r 1.49 lb. SWiss Steak Prepare with.~._' -fresh mushrooms lo39 lb.: London . Broil Thick cuts of • top round ' 1.69 I~ 1.981b. Cube Steaks .Mok• •• , .. k . ,Mndwich ··~ di~ Stuffed Bell Peppers ovt n rttdy :.ifft· clit1tt 1.09 lb. . Stuffed Beef R()jjlades 1p1ci.il clrt11int 1.29 lb. Stuffed Pork Chops . . r:- p1rd1y clrt1 d1111 1.29 lb, 'If.• <1110 proce's meat for home freeiers. Please do not hes itate to ask for per1one/ 11rvice. .. Sticky Buns • Large White Sandwich Bread Rum Cake · Buttermilk Rolls ' DRIED VELVET Button Flowers 8 for 95c 5lc 1.35 6 for 49c colorful new 1hlpment 1.49 bun. QUOR lt!CHAID'S RICHARD'S PRIVATE LABEL Scotch Whisky . 1'-1 Proof Qt. 7.67 ~ICHAllD'S KffmJCICY =-~straight-Boorbon Whiskey -..-,, Qt. klCHAlD'S ~ • London Ory Gin 10 "··· Qt. 4.75 RICHAlO'S Lidj) Market VOOka _!0 h 11f Qt. ~ 4.75- .. Q'\JA~ITY ,.. 'VALUE -SERVLCE ,,.. ~-,_ j • • • • <l.~rg ,. :· ~ . ··vueAN ,(OfFEE i I:. ' ~ Yuben Coff~ ~·lb. f.69 ,..Yub~fet J lb. 2.-49 SPRINGFIELD • ~ ' "' ....;......i,.., .. ~ ' ' 85¢ ' Granulpted Sugar . scr FLEISCHMANNS Soft · Margarine : .I ... 45- , ' Cheer Det~rgeni Gi•"' ., •L ... ~69¢ ~ JELt-0 Instant PUdding Glorietta T crnato Juice · Bisquick Stokely Com B & M Baked Beans SUNSHINE CHIP'·A·ROOS Chocolate Chip Cookies Minute Maid Orange Juice • Stouffers Spinach Souff le • ' ' ' , . . ' L•rge ... , oz. 40 01. ~ ' oa.· II eL • .. ' ·' oz. 12 01. I . 59c 4 for $1 39c ~~ HARBORV!EW 1660MacArthur,Ntwpott -O/'EN pAtLY 9 -8, ~-9 - 6 6µ-2155 "£.~ .i.100 CENTER 3433 Via Lldo, Newport Beach . ~ dl'EN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 673'6360 ' ' ' I , . . . . • .. I I " I I I I 'r t 1 ' ' -- • f; • ; • .i • ! ;,.. I ! I -, '·' I I ~ _____ _.. ,......--'------~' I • .,.. 1' ·.~#\.~. t ·1 ~r I a ' ~u per .fixpe ' ,. ' ' I . ,, I I; I ' I I • • ' • • • - ~ • ... I " ~ . . i ' -· • ! • =~ i I i ' By JO-OIMN Of .. Deir, ........ ,YllJJI do you do . .wbeo.you hove 1 larp ~ w.U In your ~ waiting for on ut J~n . lhat bu "Yet to be purc!DUe4f ~· , I .. -' ry Yila nave oupergraphlcs dealgned for p;. ;..~ lhll"hane the alart ·o1 your . gallery around lliem, -• • Tllto Wll the llOlutlon ct\oien by Mr . and, Mn .. But •Balll!h when they began , -_\lni their' newly puh:haoed' 1ownboulelnlrvlne. . -i-.... - ' '!1>e blih, ~ ceilings In llie llV· In( and dining areu created a vut ts· puae -ol wall lhet seemed Gull and • "!""!""lleable. so ll(e Baughs decided . lhll wao the Ume to translonn their q. Ume dream of having llieir · own · ' I . ' supergrapbics, into reality. " ~ '!1>e Balliha fint saw oupeli?pblcs fl> llie lodge at sea Roocb; .. dejelopmeat ' on the nor11-eauton¥a ..,.. " · . , -San Froncllco '8nd 'MeodOclno, • ' ., ' • f • j, dllrbig ~ vacation trip two years qo; n-.. In klOP,lni ~ llfe, ,--. . ' munlty'I ocean ,~me,/....,.,~. "\'.I i wa\lel m~ two °**'·, . \ ~ : · " .... -: . 4 .!.. -.~.Baugbs' ~,.,~t .. -: . 4 of the·oronge.~desl&n .on .the , -, . -, -Orang~. J~ Vkd In S(>uth Cajt . . Moaa. Rib~ ol sblny t fiat orange 1!1Qot.1"'!"'9· the I Ing , curve arotm<f 10 ...,.1 the stair landing and follow the steps to the .a'e\ionil nOor baloooy, ~ 'lloStgned by Jann Cbureb and Denis Kurutz, llie supergrapblcs ...,. first ~ wben , Balll!b wandered inf<> Mn. ctiurcb11·design firm "to-•aee "What WU' going on there" after-a ba.ircut ,at · the berber1sbop neit door. ~Nqotiailona,.~imlnary sltetches·and ·the adDll pointing took sever'a! nionlhe when llie decision wao finally made to go abead. Supercjrephles. wind up the stairs in the Bill ' Baugh home · in Irvine. Their art · ,collection will be , 11 ~lin:r,18:.~.ft..i;~.J.o~~~ ~~~~.,,.plaeeCI erouncf it on the Baqhi''flUl'dlaie a ficus l!enJamtna for white wells of the townhouse. the llvlnC nlOl!I, to complement their aupergrapblcs. 'Ibo ...-! fig t""' droops In ·a !IJape wblch matches the top ol tf1e yellow· anil Ol'1lll(le .,,,,.. near the"statr' landing, he eaplalDed. en the remaining walls of their home the BaUiba will bang their oollectloo ol oootemporary art .. they acquire i~ :: Their lumiture wb!cb ,....,. ~'-• ;.. • -,.. DAILY • WK>I J._"'.i_.".., , .;ii-" t :1._ " aoquirlng a lltUe at a time, will moo-· • PILOT em and bright to complete the es:dting · =~ve establtsbed with their J"ll' ~S . . .., la Baugh, •. aa obstetr ician and · :.,.. f -1ociat, and his wile ~,<a dieti-. , l'ATRICK tian, have two Cbifdren, Billy, 5, and O'DONNELL Todd, 2, who ,both like the bright colors on the wall." · · · ':I 'Ibey a~ with their mother .,ho says; ~, :\ ~ ;:.,f ( ! · "It's kind oflite sunshine tn ·here." ~ -'-~-~~---~ •• • r1 .ence I I ._t ' . ~· ' .. ~ _ ... , J -. • BEA ANDERSON, EdiJ_or ~.,; ......,...., n. 1111 •-,, . .. . ... Discussing plans for the supergrephi<:s . ere ('left to right) Denis Kurutz, Jenn Church end ltetty Baugh. At fer left, Mrs . Beugh end Billy, 5, stena near them to show their size • • · Shoe-i.n May Be a Cast Off cllllllky beefs "ugly," and aay' It's lm-' possible to walk graceJully 1n t.bem. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My wife ls a reasonably sa ne, fairly predictable, 35- xear~ld womaJ!. So what am I wriUng abo.ut! Well, last night after dlnner DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm 23 and Qre~ys "Sit down. I want lo have be£n married three months to a nb:IC:I my neW~'Trni'Tew-ntlffiites-woiilerful girl. Here'.s the probl~m. My L •• ahw ~ teetering iii on a moruitrous v.1re wants a family, not right away, but ~tr'of lhlta and announced , "The latest some day. I hate kids .. Occasionally when 1 · • "tlllrig -m.lnch platlOrms. Sri\', eh?" I see a cute litUe boy er girl, well-man-bollfl Uta. One·IMJlc 11 certaln'-maoy me and f have no riaht to >xpect "U' Y'l'! li•O:" I replied. ''Those shoo nered and smut, I think, "Gee It would pareab overlook lbic• la lflelr owa anything lllO!<. Yet, I feel cbeated. For 1 'look iilte klflen. How do you•Wt them?" he nice to have a cblld like that." But cldidru. 1Ut lfley caai llaal . la ' tong time I thought perhaps some~ She became. ,defenaive and nplied. ,.most ldd3 are obno<ious brata. IOmtbody else's. WU Wl'Oll( with me pllyslcally w • '"l'lley're. comf.nable, They might look Here's 1n ewnple. Yemnfiy 1 litUe ---~•but now rm begin' ru·~· heooy lllllihe7're actually cork!" boy (lbout i-)·thttw dirt m me as f ' ' DEAR ANN.LANDERS: After readlif8 Ile M frfOf wlv,., I can' believe tbose shoes are safe, wu walking to my ur. I could have the letler from "Nothing In Newark" I lousy loten. -LOw IN CALIFO Ann.-And !f\ey give the body such an un-che«fully bulled that kid's bead In. I was relieved to learn that I wun' Ibo DEAR LOW CAL:,.....,. you"'.:;:~ natut.I Wt they nwst be murder.on )'OW' think lf be were mlne I might have done only manied wOman In tbe world•wbo la ....at. Be mere *lflldt. U lha.~. Dock. Mlybe the shoe stores are saying tt, &iingry for Jcwe. My huobood ii · II· _., lllr ,_ -lw 11me boony -but what ate the loot doctors My wile loves all kidl, Every lime she tractive, intelligent and to OU-., -. ud llYe -la your "ylng? -SHORTER THAN SHE IS takl about having a family I sweat. everything a .woman could want. , ....,... lw. V1-·1 Day. NOW. _. kl-Hry-ilord<Mo llke-ldda·or·ahGuld-. '· · • OR : are saylog the I tell her I don't want any? -JUST· Your suggutlon to wlvoa who i\lve • Pl1Ming a weddlnc! Wh•~ Dl1' Pott are bazModoaa IDd bid for the MOILY AND ME Unallsfactory $eX lives to '1Gulde him Wbat.11 wrong? Ann Landfn' ~~ back. • DEAR M. AND M: "Wtn ... -. genUy, let blin kndw what is feaatnr, new "The Bride'• Gulde" :.1 RillClredt of ftmea, bat e all'Mlt)t frkdy Uld •mart kids'' aren't borl ta.Ii&.._· and mipond with cnthu&Ulsm.' ..IOUDdl your anxiety, To recttve a ttffped • c_.., fllen dewa. atatn, way. ltm&aadf ...W wtdl ~.,.... ftne, bot It's not that simple. I've lried It. dollar b!ll, plus 1 klfll. 1pniaed lfle!T ufltH aad in --ll>ly 1 -Md f1k. II -be Nolllii1g linproved. 1tamped envelopt (JI cen ctt b'"-~ M81y fdldoo movtnt allfair to cleprlYe 1"r wife ol 1 flmfly, The"' ire tlinea wben ! boCOme bl\ler, Ann Landen, Box 3341, bave -~per_p1111ono1 llltl Get 10mt _.,. ud ~ -bul)lellJIU'IOl!be'1l1fthl11!1ndiooil to I06H • • ( ' • • • ..\ I f l I .. • - • ' ' ' \ ,_ l "i>AILY PILOT • Club Members Che Ck ·Up .e n Fl ealth Projects Diabetes IJvln& With Diabetes. a com- munity education program, will be presented on four con· socutJve Thuriday.s beginning ·Feb. l from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Orange Counly f\1edical Center's cafeteria. Ftee to all diabetics and lbelr families, the series y,·ill ,Co}'.er causes, effects and con- trol of diabetes, diet, medica- tion. foot care, emergency situations and community services. Advanct registration is re- quired because of limited spa~. Further infurination may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Sue Miyamoto at the hospital. Hearihg Advaoced educationa.J pro- Your Horoscope grams and job placement services for tht-hearing im- paired y,·ill be discussed by a panel Thursday, Feb. I begin- ning st 7 p.m. in che Hoag Hospital c..'Mferehce centrr. Speakers will inelude Paul Colton, counselor for Golden We!ll College's deaf program; Robert Oa\'ignon, program counselor, Orange County C'rippled Children's Society; flerb Larsen. pro gr a 01 spec ialist. Sel~DoY.11ey High School, and Bill Nutter. counselor, department of ,·ocatiQpal rehabilitation . Citizenship Newport Beach Cbarttt Chapter, American Business \\'omen 's Association. will mark Citizen.ship Pit O D I h Thllf'Sday, Feb. I, at 7 p.m. in the Costa Alesa Colony Kitch- r en. Roben R. Scott will speat on stocl<a, borods and In- vestments. Women of .Moose Women of the ?ifoose, C.OSta Atesa Oi.apte:r,. will have an enrollment meeting Thursday, Feb. 1, at 8 p.m. ln the Moose 1-lome. Past Deputy Grand Regent Evallne Bachhofer will be honortd guest Jl;t a Sunday, Feb. 4, college of regents breakfast at 10 a.m. in tbe home. A dinner dance is aet for Sa1uroay, Feb. 10, beginning at 7 p.m. and also on~ •Jen- da i. a joint meeting 'l'uesda,y, Feb. IS, at a p:m. Other events a~ a Valep- tine's Day potluck Feb. lf and a business meeting Thursday, Feb. IS. at 8 p.m. : Capricorn: Personality . . . Trojan Guild , Adelle Davis will -t on Your Heallb Is in Your Hands 'lbunday, Feb. I, It 10 a.m. when tnemben ol Trojan Gullcls galher J11 USC's Han- cock Auditorium. A luncheon In llle Town and Gown Foyer will follow her talk. M91'< than IOO members are expected lo; Trojan Guild Day activiUU Membel'l and husbrulcls will attend the USC. UCLA g•me Saturday, Feb. l. Volunteers Mrs. George Romney, vice president ol llle Natlooal Cenrer lot Voluntary Action, will spealt Friday, Feb.1 at 10 a.m. in Daniel FMman Hospital, Jnglewood to members of the Southern California Council of Volun· '-· )_ In HOlpltals. the l'taeareb i1oaD11a1> Mra. Jam" 'lbompooo baa !Urther . .Nu rse ry lnlormatlon. . Fathet's Oi*> HOllSO Is . Sunshine scheduled for Sallln!ay, ....... --- l, !or fatlien ot pr:tlChoolen A <11"'"'41p JIO.lhlC\ 41Door ~ttendlna tho Hilltop Nunery Is pianno<I for Sa~y, Feb. School, Co.ta Mesa, beflnnlni 3, at 7:30 p.m. loi: f.ui1lllal •nc\ at 9 a.m. Guided IOl\f1 of the alumni of the Sunihln• facili ty will be &Ivon by the Nunery School. J'roceeds will d/lldren. J)W'thase ~w boob for llCbool Asthma The Olildren'• A>thma 8-ar<:b lnsUtule and Holpllal will hoot_a.INbli< 11'1 exhibition and auctloo Satur- day, Fe6. l, In llle Sberatoo Beach Inn, HunUngtoo Beacb, •tJ~!J"ll'Uiocr~pbs, .. chliiga and oils by Pica,.., Olagali and Miro art among works to be auctioned for the benefit of library. Secretaries Oran&• Emplr» Valencia and Sleller Chapters of N• tlonal Secrelarl .. Asaoclltlon will ...... _. a sympoolwn, ·fl!hloo show and luncbeon Sa~, Feb. l, In llle Grand BallroooD of the Disneyland Hotel. · Speakers wlD Include ABC te!evision'i Nan Petntck and '. Vlnceot Price whose topic will be llle E!Uoymeot of Gi;tll Art. Period fuhlons wUt be featured. Philhermoni.e Toda! Las Ciudadei Coin. mlttee of the Orance County Philharmonic Socletr' wiU sponsor a 1' .. e.stlval o Music Sunday, Feb. ~. In the Cc?sta l\1csa ffigh School Lyceum. Students from L I n c o I n lntermedlale School, Newport Harbor High School and Golden West CoUece will perform. Winners of the November young artists com- petilloo will be !eatllled. Alum nae Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Xi Delta Sorority will ga ther Monday, Feb. S, at 7:30 , ' p.m. In llle Orange home of Mrs. Jerry Mooney. Art league Artist Bill Alr,ancler wtll · demol\<ilrate h s painting t¢miquo ·M<11diy; Feb. e, at '1:30 for mernber• of 1the Hun· tlna:ton Beach A'rt Luguc, In the city roicrealioo hall. • Marine Wives An orcantzallooal rneoUng for a club for wlvea of overseas military personnel ls 9Chedulecl !or Tueaday, Feb. 1., at t :lO 1.m. In llle Chapel An· nex, El Toro Marine Air SI.I· lion. ' A "'5>eaker wlD discus,, fecreatAinal t ·~ 111 t I e s available free to wives of enli!ted personnel. Baby-sit· ting will be provided. Cd ouple Attends tine Wedding " Will Bring Successes To avoid-disappointment; prospective brides are remlrided to have their wedding stories with·· bl.U-llld white glo""J' ~J[oto grapbs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De- partment one week before the wedding. Mr. and Ml'I. Frank Klock of Corona de! 1,Jar attended the Argentine w e d d 1 n g ceremonies Unking her son, - Patricio Colombo ,_Jurua and Ana Maria 1.1:aimoll in Salta province. ,poilUcal blato!T at the .vg.n. / ~.mlllllry academy. • , . TUESDAY JANUARY 30 By SYDNEY O~IARR Some fascina ting Caprico rn persons I've recently met .in- clude Charo, Tony ltfartin, Belly 'Vh.ite and Fernando Lamas. Let me know about people you meet and enjoy and their zodiacal signs. your best interests at heart. Know it and respond , ac- cordingly. · ' GEMINI (M•Y IJ.Juoe :IO): Finish cycle, project which bas been drairiing you finan. cially and emotionally. Stop trying to mate something ~t of nothing. What you seek Is . obtainable only if you slop bogging yourself down wtih past errors; You will com· prehend . privileges, you can e~t. to pay cowequences. 11 you heed health requirements, you make gairul beyond ex- pectatiollS. Act accordingly. VIRGO (Aug. :ZS.S.pt. 22 ) : Creative abilities surge to forefront. Young penon plays prominent role. Be ready for change, travel. variety of ex- periences. Gemlnl, Virgo persons are involved. Don't .{ight progress. Ulve is in pic- ture. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22): • Pictures re¢vecj. alter that time will not_ , beused. . -,1 For engagement announcemef!tl it is impentive that the story, also accompanied by a black and white ,gloay picture, be suJ>. milted six weeb or more before the weddiJ!g .date •. u deadline Is not met, only a story will be,.t. To help fill requiremen\s on botlt wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT o!lices. C.ANCER (JlWe 21.July 22): Details, fine lin~s, subtle ap-'---....,.---------------...J Lie low. nine is on. your side. proaches ar~ featured. !t Further questions will be answered by 'Vomen's section staff members at 642-4321. P .1 .,~. •· 1 ke becomes obvious someone ts ,._...,,...., . ~~m1 .. mate, .,... ~ "" a trying tq tell yofl something. --- KAREN HEFFERNAN Bef'rothal Revealed The bridegroom, presently Secretary of Health and Social Security, was nominated to be governor of the province the day btfore bis marriage. Nuptlal vows were ex- changed Jn a brief legal ceremony and then in elaborate rites at the Medallia Mllagr= chapel. - The bride, daughter of Mrs. Maimoll Cornejo and the late J?r. Cornejo, wa.s attended by The engagement and Aug. t8... her mother and brother, Gen. wedding date of Karen Ruth Jose Malinoli. Mrs. Klock and Heffernan and John Stephen her sons Roberto, a Buenos ~ the festive wett,. ·• Mrs. Kloct • ""'-invlled Jo speak befo"' 5nat!¢i COl'IVention on . ~ son" who ls credited suc- eeSs of the govemm'ent mu .... ing program and aocializalk>n or remote tribes in the Andes. ; Wedding f. In Offing / ARIES j ~1arch 2l ·April 19); Opportunity exists to grea ter exlent lhan might be apparent on surface. Key now is to trust yourself. Keep the faith . If you bcl1!\·e in your o\l:n principles, others will follow suit. PrOmo- t1on is due. You will gain recognition. m1t1at1\-~. You. learn valuabl~ Key is to evaluate. You could !eSS?~ iI patient. Judg.ment, · discover important phrases mtwllon may now be slightly t f text Get house · ia off target. One who is at a ~ · 0 con · di.stance d°'5 want to com-order. Gras.sbaugh have been an-and M·~• __ DOlm_c:ed hy her-parents, Mr. Aires attorney. 11.r\.'e!O, ~i'<l!'l and Mrs. RJchard P. He!· Argentine comul In Los The engagement of Callfomla State University, Fullerton students Patricia Gail Reeves and Gary Lee Norman has· been announced by her paren!s, Mr. •nd Mrs. Glem W. Reeves of La Patmi. · TAURUS (April 20-~lay 20): munieate. Be receptive. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Good4unar aspect now coin- cides with power, Jong-rang~ view, ability to transform ~ tions in10 workabl e co~pts. Older individual ~s · ha ve Get in driver's seat. Get feel , LEO (July 2.3-Aug. 22 ): Your of where you are going. Sense ' desires can be fulfilled in ratio of direction is featured. IG the keeping of recent .Gemilli and Virgo individuals ·resolutions. U )'OU abuse could p1ay prominent roles. ' . BARGA I NS GALORE! January Cl eara nce Merjori • St•mptr ••Yf . , . SEE OUR STYLISH COORDINATES fO~ WOMEN ON THE GO! F ashioIJ.]!?u tique 445 l. 17" St. e '4Wl 22 e C-. M .. B•n kAm•ricerd Mt1f•r Ch111rge 'ONE-WEEK SPECIALS! JAN. 29 thru -FEB, 3 Coastline 96°/4 Protel• Powder 1 lb. (.16 oz.) No t•rbohydratM 01::~';.''::;. ';;,,. SPECIAL '2.49' LECITHIN GRANULES 1 ~·;,.<~',,:;> SPECIAL •2.49 ROSE HIPS VITAMIN C "0 mv 250 ....... SPECIAL ~ 95 Regul•r $3.ts • STOCK UP ON TH ESE FOR TH E WINTEll L.A. APPLE JUIC E . ORGANIC-UNFILTERED •.• ~1.~·: .... , SPECIAL 5 1 .19 Coastline Health Foods TUSTIN IOM Irvine 11¥4. Near S•v-Oft 544-71.M • LAGUNA HILLS 1410111 T ... Rd. Nr ..... IU..70IO COSTA MESA Hllft,..., Sflu•r• 270 I. 17th St. 541-9"7 Status quo changes. You are on the move. Calls and visits are spoUighted. s.\bmARWS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Accent ls on money and how to bold on to it. Taurus, Libra persons coWd · be involved. Check assets, deficits. Tighten b u d g e t . Frank discuss ion with family member should rate high on agenda. Act accordingly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Cycle is such that you can successfully take iniUative. New starts, projects are favored. PeriOfial rna-gneusm soan. Members of opposite sex pay meanlngfUl com- pliments -and they mean what they say. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. 18): You gain cooperation of groups, organizations. You are due for reward based on re- cent efforts. Capricorn _now proves valuable ally. Push forward. One . behind scenes will come through on your behalf. PISCES (Feb. !&-March 20): Accent ls on how to fulfill desires. Key now Is to finiah raUrer than to begin projecta. Strive for wider appeal. )'opularhe concept, product. JYach beyond what appears to be limit. Distribution will im- prove. IF TODAY lS YOUR BlRTHDA Y you h a v e delightful sense of humor, could experience weight prob-. lem. February and November will be outstanding tnonths for you in 1973. You are inventive. versatile but\"tend to scatter energies. Remind him ., MRS. KERCE MRS. McKENNA Vows Recited · ' " In Ceremonies KERC E.HUEFTLE SI. John the Baptist Catholic OWfclt. Costa Mesa was the setting for the nuptiall llnklng Jeanne HueftJe and Kevin Lee Kerce. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hueftle of COsta Mesa and Mrs. ElyJe Kerce ol Corona del Mar, are parents of the newlywed.I who will reside in Coeta Mesa. Miss Julie Hueftle was maid of honor. Mrs. James Rangitsch and · Misa Linda Grant were bridesmaids, and Amy Crenshaw' was Dower girl . Stepheri Kerce was best man and ushers were Jeffrey Kerce, Randall Hu e ft I e, ~ight Jac!l!on and Jerry Leaper with Nino Proruato as , Eugene Graham Jr. of Balboa Island, beeame the bride of Peter John McKenna during ceremonJes in ·St. M a rt Presbyterian Church, Corona del Mar. The bride was attended by Mrs. Blake Halm, matron Cl( honor and the Misses Joann Radovich and JuUe Sullwold. The bridegroom's brother, James McKenna came from Klllelgh County, Ireland to serve as best man. Sean Rowland and Garry Graham were usben. A student at CallfomJa State University, Fullerton. the new P.1rs. McKenna graduated rrom Ccrona del P.·tar High School. The newlyweds will reside in Azusa. ring bearer. ''i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ The bride llnlduAted from I• Coeta M.,. High School and a"""'v Orange Coast College. Her .. ""I husband graduated from Corona del Mar High School. Mc KENNA-G RAHAM you are beautifu l -w.m p ofessio'llal Valentine Portraits 4 for $9.95 Cynthia Louise Graham, .~~ughter of _¥r. and Mrs. \ You are more beautiful then you think. Let our profes!ional photographer prove it to you . Now, today, while we 're featuring e specilll 4.portroit offer for Volent ine nivi nq. We guarantee satisfaction. I lorqe 8.10: I desk size 5x 7 oorl 2 wollet-<izo portraits Or 4 LifeColor® specially $ 9.95 priced. $19.95 11Ilu<19 IlDIBID~ HUNTI NGTON BEACH PHONE 892-333 1 'EXT. 283 •..................... , : I ''INCHES·A·WAY'' : • . :r> • • THE PROVIN M&THOD ~ • • NO DANGEROUS OR Ill • • • • • • • • • • • COSTLY SHOTS : $10 OPP Witt. Th~ M 5 INCH LOSS FIRST V ISIT IOUAltAHTllD) JEANS· INCHES-A-WAY 17'9 Newport Blvd., C.91• Mas• PHONE 645-1890 r ' • • • • • • fernao of La Habra. Angeles, stood with the The btide-~be studied at bridegroom. La Habra High School and Some fOO g o v er n m e n t Arizona State University. . associates and family frtend.s Her ftance , son of Mr. and attended the reception in the Mrs. Wi!bttt D. Grasabauah of · Cornejo a:JUDtr.,.. estate. "'Westminster, was vafedJc-'Ibe new Mn. MiJrua at- torian at Westminler High tended university in Clnada School and attends Harvard ancf teaches English. Her buJ. University. ' band · previously ta u g h t The future bride studied at Kenned,y High School and Cypress College. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mra. I;ee Norman ol Mission Viejo, resides In Newport Beach. He griduated from Corona del Mar High School. --FINAi. FABRIC SAVE Y2 AND MORE SPORTSWEAR PRINTS SOLID COLOR CREPE SCARF PRINTS TEXTURED FABRICS Dress, suit, blouse w•iqh ts w .sh.ble cotton1/bl•nds 42"/45" wid• VALUES TO $2.2' SAVE TO $1 .30 99:. ALL WOOL FLANNEL ........ & U•bDRdtd NOVEL TY SUITINGS COTTON .SUEDE CLOTH Dr11ti5 reduCtiori;I Shop ••rly_for ~•tt ·ltl_tc.~· __ tion. 'J'7 1i0" wfff. Woo/1/ ecryllc1/cotton1/ blends. 1 VALUES TO $3.ft SAVI $1 .tl YD • ' ' llHOUSE OF FilBRIC always first quality fabr ia S.... C._ "--~l1tol et $111 Di ... fwy, New ..... -17th •t lrl1tol Coif• Mo11 -14 .. l lt4 ' S111t• All• -141-1111 · ONltsfW Mel -°'*"llllhor,o 1114 M•rltor ........ C..., -La l'al111• •t Stt'fttoa Full1Hto11 ~ U W.114 • 111"1 '•rk ....... IJ J ..... ..... _ 121 11 lrto~hllrtt ,,,... .. v ...... _, ... 1141 tlM .... u C..,... Mlitt~ •t ..... l twl., ~ .. •d-"7 ... 11 • " • ..-I • • • . ·-. • • '· - • ., ' I • l I • ! ' • • " - • •---- " ( A MILER TUMBLEWEEDS AHAH ! 1'1fe SOllllCE OF 1llAT Vl!Ll!Crul.E AROMA!: Lrr!l.f: l.01SA LUO< kCOOKING! I . '"""""._, --~ I ' MUTI AND JEFF W&l.L.IMSIMGI.~ BUT COU\.DVOU LET ME M#ltrl& A . OOUW<R>RTH£ PRICE OF A ~ Sl~GLE? -· FIGMENTS NANCY 1.001<' AT THAT · . 1.0N<7 LINE AT THE Cl-IECKOUT COUNTER • YOU $EE,S!R, I ROLLARoUND QUrTE ... SIT IMMYSLEEPI • YIEU.,O.KI '!WIN FRONT! ROOM213• 1 :OON'l°,MIND THE I.ONG. WAIT-IT'6 THE LON<; TAPE: )r aDAY'S CIDSSIDID PVIZLI PEANUTS Saturt'a'('a Puu\e Solved: MISS PEACH I\ • DICK TRACY _ \ I \ by Do119 Wildey . by Al Smith by Dole Hale by Emi.• B11sl1111ller L, - Mo11d"t, January 29, l'l7J DOOLEY'S WORLD DAILY PILOT flJ by Roger Bradfield t I ! l .. ' ( ! • t l • 1-"l!I SAU Y BANANAS By Charles Barsotti ~.AND .~ IOINTIFll!C7 WITH MY FATM~, ONCE-••• I by Charles M. Schulz by Mell by Chester Gould I C~°T 56.»M IN <lll 11115 ~!?!• 5HINl~CIRMcR!! -BUT I MAY ViOt,l.TE»THAT ONSMYS5~F l ~~FIRH l>-OU ··.' I I~\ tr TINl<:as . /'Of< -n:::J WE.' •. "Birt, Alm, M'• .......... lo try .... ,.1 .... , _ ........ ~days, yoa've Sot to pllt up wtU1 Pl....,.," DENNIS THE MENACE ... ' I •' DAILY PILOT Mo st Unusual ·I've Ever Won, Sa ys Nicklau~ .. PEBBLE BEACH (AP\ -Jack Nicklaus lifted his eyes to !be skies and murmered: ''}Joy; in 1he v.·orld did 1 e\'er win this ooe?" He'd just picked up his 4.2nil tour triumph and his first of the young season in the. National Pro-am golf tournament and he got it in a fashion that Nicklaus (lescribed as "one of the most unusual I've ever \\'on ... He and Ray rfoyd \\'ert gi\·en a ~d chance v.·hen Or\'ille ?\\oody three-putted ' for a. bogey on the 72nd hole and set up a 'three-way playoff for the $36,000 first prize. . . Nicklaus won it, just as he did 1n a playoff with young Johnny ?\tiller for this title a year ago. Moody and Floyd both had missed their birdie tries v.•hen the Golden Bear step. ped up to a 12-foot putt for a thret oo the par four 15th hole . the first playoff hole. NlcklaUJ surveyed the situation, rhen &Iared at the hole in characteristic fashion -as if daring the cup to refuse his _ putt. He sU'Oked solidly and a smile broke out.:. He began "·alking after the putt. before the ball got to the hole. "As soon as l hit it. I kne1v the putt was going in.'' he said. It did and the Golden Bear was a winner q:ain. Noting that his victory on the 6.815- yard, par 72 Pebble Beach Goll Links a year ago triggered one of the most fan· tastic sea90ns the game has ever kno1,·n, Nicklaus said: "Yeah. I'd like to do it all over again. Only maybe a little heller this )'!at." He a d Floyd played the wind-whlpped flnal in one--under-par 7Is and y, who held a four-stroke lead •-~~Starting the day's play, blew to a 79 for a tie at 282. ,., ~foody. v.·ho \\'On only $13.000 last season. and Floyd each collected $16.650. So that putt. from some_ 18 inches, that ltfoody missed on the 72nd hole carried a value of over $1.000 an inch. ;.I bit a good putt," the heartbroken 01' Sarge said. "It was going right at the bole and it hit something and just squirted away. Just squirted away." "I feel sorry for Orville,'' Nicklaus said. •:J-Ie hasn't \\"00 in so long. But the lournament is over 72 holes. You have lo putt the last hole, too. l thought I'd made that birdie putt on the last hole, too. 1 ea_..'t Crash It thought it \\'a!I In. Earlier ht the day I missed fn5m three feet. and from 2~1 fttl. I missed mine. too ." ~lost of the drama \\·as packed-into the last fe\V hole-s. Nicklaus Dl\d Floyd, the 1969 PGA champ. crept to "'ithin two "' strok'es8t1er 10 holes . ~1oody. 1vh0se on· ly tour victory was the 1969 U.S. Open, scrambled for par on three of four holes -then three-putted the 15th and his lead d\vindled to one. Floyd made a miracle par on the 15th \\ith a magnificent chip· shot ari6" Nicklaus made a U-footer for par on the next hole. They had Jil!fshed when Moody opened the playoff gate with his three- putt on the final bole, missing the short one as his wife· brok~ into tears. · "That gave me a new lease on life," Nicklaus said. It "·as all be Detded. FNI KOt1K -moMY WllWI"-' -..,.., In "-UGS.000 N•1ia.i..1 Pn>-Am gDlf ~"""'' 1111' ,,... ... u .. ,.n:r, SI'• rz. Ptbblt Bwdl GoH L.lnlu i~. -,_ 11 .. 111 pl1y010; 1!·)11(-NIC-~ W.000 Or'\lil!e MOOlly 116"50 lf1., Flol'd 111.MO o. .... -M1rr UAW LH t:i..r w.m llod F"""l!I V,tXI Oo<I i,,....,,. u.ns e m., c11per 5s.Jli !'+Owl• J~ llollO L.te ·Tle'O'lf'O 1"1.:IQO G!btl'y1 Glio.tf M.J30 llutcfl klrd M,Dlo SltVI Melnytt $.1,UO O.wllt W..ftf" Sl.BO 8vcld't' Altln lJ,150 8-00 E. Smll!I Sl,150 M11111C1 VI~ n.G0 Ed $IW'llll l2Al0 C~r ~ $2.411 O.ve SJllC!lton DA 11uDotrt Grftn Jl,12~ 8«1 V•rt<IY II.SU Jf!rry '"'""' ,,~ PnH ll00Cler1 11-41' JOlln JM:-11,..llf Dou; Sanllt'fl $1-'lf Jim WllcMr1 11,419 LIMY WMflllns Jl,.llf Ji"' 8•"'"1: ll.41f CPIUC:ll Trif'Ol>I: 11,111 Grlft' J-11,111 H•i. lrwln 11.111 At G~r 11,111 Clllrllll Coody -11,111 TD!D Sf!IW ~ Voe. R•lldo .... Ml' Mc~ $161 MA< HUll!t'f Sl6I Brue:• Cr1mpton 1161 °""' l!ikhel~ ... Bobby Hlcholf, 1102 LDU Gr1Mm 1102 Bob Dick.Mn SJ'tt O.vid GriMri1 ""' Brvcl Dlvltn 1)ll J. C. Snnd Ust Geo1'"Qt! Artlltr ISSI o.i. OollgllJ' $43 Bob Btrblll'Ml.I J'"'1 Oo<I Mlt~le U0 llod C11rl $14 Amo1't! P1!m.r ''41 , ..... 11-11-212 71......,.16-312 }1.11)./C-11-ltt 11.11.10.n-m 1MM•1l-1N r,r.1 .. 11•t-• n .... 10-n-111 ""'1·11'16-211 1).11.n.11-1M 1 .. 111-n.11-311 , .... ,.,,., ....... ~~~ 12-11-ti.T+-lfl' 1s.11..a.1~ 11·1>-t .. 11-m n.11.1 .. 1 ..... m 7).llM .. ,......m n .n.1>-1>-2'0 1+n-1J.n-1'0 10.TS-'2·7 ..... 2'1 • 7S-1D-11·7S-2tl 71-JMl.n-291 n.n-1 .. 13-1'1 7+71·17·7S-19t n .10-n.11-m n.11..n.n-m n .1tM1-12-m 7S.7Mt-n-2ft 1S-1 .. 11·1J-19l 7S.11)..Jl..7S-2fl 1+11·11·'1-M 7S.11·1+1)....1'J , .. 1s.n.1l-l'tl 1+1+n.n-1t• )+fl.11.1......,,. 71-1S-7S.7>-2'" J+J+Jl.1l.-2'• n.,,...n-n• T1·1S.1'11-7J-1'• J0.71·1'-7S-2'5 71·1UM>-2'S n.1+n.1 ..... 1'S ,.._,,__ 1+n·J'c-I0-1'6 7J.12·71·7i-"'6 JJ.11·111-1+--2" 16"11·1+1+-291 , ... 11 .IW0-1'1 ••n-n-n-2'1 1 .. 1s.n.1+--n1 Jl.73--1 ... 76-l'tl Woman Writer Ejected By All-male Writers NEW YORK (AP) -SteJ)hanie Salter, "'as in a public place (the Americana who writes basebaU for Sports Hotel) and because they were not turning 111 ... •-ated. was ei· ected from a Baseball away male sportswriters without black ""'"' lie. indicates that my constitutional Ylriters Association of America banquet rights were violatett." Sunday nigtlt. "fm going to carry it personally as far "I asked her in a very nice way to as 1 can go, lf ifs financially feasible ," \eave, after explaining it was a stag din-she added. ner," said BWAA secretary-treasurer She said she does not know what posi- Jack Lang of t~ Long Island Press. lion Sports Illustrated's management will. .. The wail.en asked her to leave, but she take. wouldn't go. Then the special officer, who "We have a WOJ!len's agreement with "'as in unifonn, y2sked her to leave and Time Inc. which pub~bes .sports she left under protest.." Illustrated a~ in cases like thl.!i, ~he A1lss Salter, 23, acknowledged that the !flan~gement tS su pposed to s,ta~ beh!nci invitaton ·had said the ··e.ffalr was all ··· ttr lt& up t~ the ~agem~t.s ~t~\l.o.~ male. but added, "Because l had worked as to what is a val~d case. . in basebal f and followed baseball, I Lang said that 8111 Leggett, Keilh Mor- decided I really wanted to go," ris and Ron Fimrite of Sports lllwitrated She said she is not a member of the also "suggested she leave, but she BWAA. but neither were the male V"ouldn't go until t~ officer inter~ed ." sportswriters at Sports Illustrated who "In the past, Lang. ~ntinued, attended. "Women have shown up wtth tickets to A11ss Saller said her attorney had ad-these affairs b_ut they ha~e always. left vised her that "the fact that l had a after we explained that this was str1cUy black tie on, which I did, and because it a male dinner." Laver, Emo Win Double s;. 3 Mor e n1 Hall of F rune RANCHO LA COSTA -Rod Laver and Roy Emerson of Newport Beach defea ted Nikki Pilic of Yugoslavia and Allan Stone of Australia, 6-7, 6-3. 6-4 , Sunday in ~he dollblea finals ~f \he l!0,000 World Ch~mp klnslllp Tennls'"'C°lassic. Emerson Injured his elbow In the match and-bad to-forfeit his third--place singles mat.ch to Laver. ii' ... NEW YORK -The doors lo basi!ball's Hall of Fame SIYUllj! open Sundll)' for thrte mere eldllmen elected to the shrine by a vetetU'• committee that deUgbted In recallinf the feats of the trlo. Elected were first baseman George Xtlly pitcher Mickey Welsh and Umpire Biiiy 'E•IDI· 1bey will b6 inducled nexl 1U1M1er tlong "'ilh pilcbtt Wuren Spahn, "'ho was chosen by the Baseball WT!ten Association of America last ~ttk. ,, LOS ANGELES -Margaret Court took i. ,_, Qff the women's professional ten· Iii .,... I.tat yoor to have a bl\by, Some of ber rlvall ~ with r<U•f at !he ,..... .,....,. -an lniW'Y doesn't -down the :111-joeaMld queen of the ..,.n, Her son sitting on the sidelines. J\-lrs. Court endured the pain of a pulled left calf mu.scle Saturday to capture the $25,000 British Motors professional \\'()- men's tennis tournament and earn $5,400. Her 7-5, 6-7, 7-6 triumph over Nancy Gun I er ol Snn Angelo , Tex., keeps the AustraliinVCtefan unbeaten in 1973. ,, PHOENIX -Don Garlits, Tampa, Fla., the >,mtrlcan llol Rod AsJoclallon'a 1972 "Driver of the Year," appean to be headed fer: another oolslandlng year as he won the top f\lel drapter compcllllon in Sunday'11 Wliittr Nationals. The Winter N1tlonal1 11 the fint event ol the ....00 In the 11>-raet AHRA Grand American ccmptt.lllon. Carlils. 41 , ran throu&h lltfl quarter mile •I B<tllne DrafWI)' In an AHRA re<ord of a:It .31 miles an boor In his • Wynn's t'har1er1 with an elapeed lime of 6.16 """'"""· • I-le narrowly edged Jerry Rulb, Seattle--, Wash., for the vlclciry alltr Ruth oot an AHJ\A •l~psed lime r<t<Jnl of 6.0I - oodr. Ruth hit Iho quarter mlle !lnllh al 22U3 mu,. an hour. I ' I ' .. 7 -.. - UPl l_...... Seattle Ups Markto0-18 r -. ·At Forum L06 ANGELES (AP) -'l'hl"ll lrtn'I pttlnl any belier for the SeatUe 5uperSonl<1 1nd «>lch Bu ck 1 Qu<kwlller II laklq lhlnl• u cuu11ly at possible. . -• 'Ille SonlCI dropped I National Bllkel· ball ASSO<l•llon 11me 10 the Loi Al>(eles Lakcrs by 3tl point. SUnday nlahl , 111>-M, and Buckwalter moaned· ~n .the d~aslng that "Lhia was the 1''01'11 clelense I've seen since the eighth tnde." His Sonics. winners only 11 limes ln ~ outings. had pennltted the Liken *> score 130 polntJ, de8jil1' Loi Anple• coach BUI Sharman clearing hls bench at the start of the final period. Seattle. with only 39 points in the flrst ha1f, wound up with M. Since Seattle club owner Sam Schulman lives in Los Ana:e1es, 13\lckwalter wts asked if absentee ownership hurt! the team. ORVILLE MOODY MADE TH IS PUTT, BUT A 14-I NC H PUTT ON THE 72 ND HOLE PROVED TOO MUCH. . . "Pwtaybe," he replied, "but ~ doesn't play defenae for us." The new bead coach, takln1 over-tor Tom Nissalke, is 3-S since wlMlng the posl and he admit• the """" b clown the drain. • JACK NICKLAUS BLASTS OUT OF TRAP ON THE 16TH. Fittipaldi Zips To, ·Triumph In Grand . Prix BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Emer>0n Fil· tipaldi of Brazil. the 1m world driving champion. took the lead on the 8Stb lap and won the Argentine Grand Prix Sun- day by about two seconds over Francois --tevert of France. Fittipaldl droVe his _Lotus John Player Special past defending champion Jackie Stewart of Scotland, ln a Tyrrel Ford, on the 74lh Jap of lbe 96-lap opener of UJe( Fonnuta I racing season i!ld then battled cevert for the Jead. .... ---- Finally_. on the 8Sth lap, the. 2&-year-old FllUpaldl look the lead from C.v.rt, also in a Tyrrel Ford, and went on to victory. steward finished third, not far back or Cevert. .Jackie lckx of Belgium finished fourth in a Ferrari 312 and Denis Hulme of New Zealand filth in a Yanlley-McLaren Ml9. There were no accidents in.the 200-mile race. FitUpaldi was timed in 1 bout, 56 minutes, 11.%2 seconds. Cevert was clock· ed in 1:16:22.91 and $Iiwart in l:lll:Sl.41. A crowd of more than ~,000 cheered wildly when Filtlpaldl, in third pla<e most of tbe way, got past Stewart on the 74th lap. Stewart's tactics were to go wide on the curves and then CUI back sharply to the inside to block the Brazilian's at· tempta to pass. s.v.ra1 um.. FltUpaldl ra1sed his fist to the crowd to protest Stewart's manuevers. Jn taking the lead from CeVert, Fil· tipaldi managed to get hi! car between Ceve.rt's and lhe ir11lde lane and then pass the young Frenchman as they · roared out of a curve. Next on the 13-race schedule will be the South African Grand Prix March 4. "We just want to. see what we can do the rest ol the year, If "'e can get something ''sttf1;ed.'' Buckwalter noted that the Laketl played on bOth F)iday and Sa\urday night, "1Millj! both times. and he ,.Id, "I \hough! Ihe'!Aken would be tired. Obviously, tbey wered'tlfl , He a!IO noted that the 5onlct •rw 0-18 in the ·Forum. Asked about 1 JlllS, he said, ,;•we are G-and-1& here IO I pas there mUJt be something bad •bout the place for us.'' trlore than 17,000 -a near sellout - saw the Lakers take a M-lt halftime edge, expand it inlo 30 pointl early in the third perlocl and make it a rout With lllCh rookies as Travis Grant w>d Jim Price contributing 12 and H polnll r...,.c- UY.ely. WUt Chamberlain led lhe Lake11 with 22 point! and lt rebOUnds. ·Spencer Haywood had 29 for the Sonics. Chicago's Bulls art in Los Angeles Tuesday night. S.-ttlf CHI -Lit .btl*-CUIJ Ol'T .,T H1v.......i I) ,.. 2' McMUiien • ,., 11 . !.lllWOflfl I ~2 1 llifllft 1 0.0 14 Fu: ' J-4 IS Ollmbtrllln I ~16 fl Brown 2 H 4 Gooark:ll I N II Sn\"der 2 0.0 4 Wtil S ).t 12 811nf 2 0.0 ' COUllfl 2 M 4 Brl!.llet ' t·1 14 £rldl:IOl'I • I·• 10 Crou 2 1·1 S Grin!, ' IM 12 McDlnltl 2 Ml • Price S .M 14 ~< lntDlh O H 0 T 11rn<ll' 1 1-2 · 6 Wlrifleld ' 1·1 11 Wrillll l M 1 Tet11t " 1~1J t• Tt1t1IJ "2111-1' I• s.ui. n 11 21 21 -,. L.o. Ana-les 31 u i. 32 -no Ft11,1lld wt -Nllf\t Tolll foul• -SM!tl• ,., lo& ... ,... ll ... ,..ndM<., -11,101. Trudeau Balks ' . ' At$$$ Risks For '76 Games <JrrAWA (AP} -Prime ~1inister Trudeau said today he I• delennined to ensure thlt Canadian taxpayers won't be- {oroed to fil\11\Ct ~ deficll from the tm Montreal &unmer Olympic Games. "There has to be such a guarantee," he said. Reds Outdo -U.S. Amateurs Trudeau told the House of Commons that the government will not give special financial assistance to Montreal .But he said that if there were alJ.party support the government might give l)'Jll· pathetic consideratkm to requeata from the Games committee for special coinage, stamps and loUeries to help cover the cost ... ····· ---.... , Lighttveigh~ P rov~ ].'oo Much I He later told reporters there,,mut: be an ironclad guarantee that .the Clpdian taxpayers will not end--UJJ\'PIYini for LAS VEGAS (AP) -American boxers did well in the heavier divislons, but the Russians pounded cut solid viclories in the lighter welghts to once again win the international amateur bo~4 series between the two countries. The biggest surprise in the weekend event came when · Frank Williams of Cin- cinnall, a last-minute substitute with ooJy three hours sleep, won the ·ugh!· heaY)'Welght boot by outpointing Vladimir Mirojuk of tbe Soviet UnJon. AJthough the Soviet boxers generally are older than lhe Americnns -who tum pro il.t a relatively early age, while the Russians have no pro bol:ing -the Wllllams-A1irojuk match pitted a pair of healthy 19-)'ear-olds. The youngest in the matches wa's Ray Leonard, a 16-year-old from Washington, D.C. He stopped Valery Lvov at I: 15 ln the third and final scheduled round. The Ainericans could also ch~r when Nick Wells of Fort Worth. Tex. knocked out Yuri Nesterov in the final figh_!Jor tfie he,vyweii1"0ecfslon. . llowCver, thanks to a fast start of vie· tories In three of the fln:t four fights, the Russians topped the day's card, winning sU: matches to ·five . The Russians drew applause from the some 1,CM)O invited guests to the Caesars PaJace event when · Russia's mid· dlewe11ht champion, v I a c b es I a v Lemesiev, stopped Joey Hadley of Memphis in the second round. Another Russlan Olympic champion, Boria Kumebov in the 125-pOwld dlYblon, took a decision from Arturo FrlH of Los Angeles. BRUI NS RAP KINGS FO R 6-5 VICT ORY BOSTON (AP} -Wayne Cashman scored three goals for his second hat trick in a week and the struggling Boston Bruins held on Sunday night lor a 6--5 Na· tional l~ockey League victory over Lhe · ~ Angeles Kings___ - The Bruins &ullt a 4-<I lead and were hard pressed in earning only their second ,. victory in the last seven games. I Derick Holmes won a close decision over Boris Zarektuev and Percy Taylor stopped VictQr Pavlov in 2:04 of the first round with tbrte 'straight hard lefts to the head. Both winners are from Washington, D.C. Taylor had been given speclaJ )eave from the Lorten Complez Correctional Institution in Virginia to fight on the United Stales team. Taylor hopes to turn pro alter his scheduled roleue from prison. Ibis spring. The sbortesI nght occurred when Anatoly L<Ybche• stopped Ray Tberagood of Santa Fe, N.M. The end came at 1:05 of the fint round. deficits. ~,,,: .". Sources Wd the--.Games commJ~ has been "veny open." about providln.J{ budget details to the federal government, and that Ottawa la being fully informed about P\•nning for the Games. They said there hive been no mltunderstandinp and no apparenl bard feelings. · Trude.au has been saying for several years that there would be no "speciaJ finance usi.stance.'' from Ott1wa for the games. So far no money has been dlv<rted toward the Games from ellsllng programs, such as housing. Nastase Wins Anatoly KarMev put out Billy Miller of Belton, Tt1., in J:54 of the first. Vlasislav Zasypko outp0inted Chicky OMAHA -Romanian J1ie Nastase won Rivera of New York In the Initial fight of the singles champtoosbip Sunday for the Ihc day. Oleg Tolkov outpoinled Reggie third llra!Chl year In the Mldlanda ID- Jones of Newark afler bloodying his nose ternatlonal Twila Tournament, delcat- ln the 5e<.'Olld round. Ing Jimmy Connon of Miami wnen Om- Jones bad vowed to square ,aCCOW\ts non retired whlle trailing s.-0 b\ the open. after losing a controversial decision Ip m, set. lhe-Olymplci to-Valarie Tregubov .i---hochqnlned hf1-1111<Jecnear- Russia. However, after wbming ,the fint the end of his lf!l'Dlfmal match Saturday, round, Joner "a' lagged hard with · and pvo up when he uw ho could not rlghlhand shots In. lh• final two t"O\lnds. compete with NasJose. No Thougb..t o·f Retire1nent for Sh0e· .. ARCADIA (AP ) -Blll Shoemaker, hl$- tory·s wiMlngtst jockey who und~rv.-enl llll'gery Saturday 'ror a fractured thumb, won't rcll1'! beCause of the Injury, hi• agtnl uld. Harry Silbert, the 4l·ycar-old rider's agtnt, 1ald Sho<maker told him, "Don't • worry, we'll be back." The Shoe, who has 6,457 wlnn!ni rides in nearly 24 years as a jock{ly, tlped.I to be aide lined six lo cight w.·eeks . - He lllllfered the hreak ·at the hue ol his rig)\! thwnh In a two-hor1e spUI In • the ninth """' Friday al Silnta Anita Park. Jock•Y Jerry LMlbert suffered mulllple bniises In U\e mishap. A hand spcclallat ptr(ormed the opcr. tlon al Calllamla HQIJ>ltal In to.. An(tles, 1n8erting a ptn and placing tho hand in a cast. Silbert, speaking to turf wrll"1 Satur- d~y at Santa Anlto, said, "If yoo fellat lhink he:S going to retire, I'd be the Ont • to know. U he Wll mtly to retlA, l\e'd-' te.U me." Shoemaktr bad complained ()f pain In a .blp but Sllber) said Iha! wu b«luae "he lantled on II." The !\Well)', beuld, Shoemaker wasn'\ aore a\ alL The ICClcknt OC<:Umd when Lambert'• mOU(lt~ 'IWo World!, 1111pped • fortltg and Shocinaket'• mount, Cotmt Ettl•I, crashed Into Two Worlds. Videotape "P~ of' the raco lndl<1led Jhal the Sh:le -struck by tounl Eiffel bu! Silbarl Aid Shoemlktt wun'I awiH of beJng bll Two Work!I wu humanely d<otroyed. Colllt £11111 Ulalned mioor cull. The sp!U O<alrTed 11 the head ol the streldl, lhe lllTHI ..... -.-..ater sulfettd hi> Dnt major rldil>c lnJllTl' about five yean ap. He wu out ol octlcn for '"""' thin 1 year lhlt time with a l:<'oken Ie1. Lambarl, IS, WU tant> oil hll maunll Salurtlay bul -liJted to ride 'lllesd'1 at Santa Anita • .. ' • • • Sweetla.nd Ex peered .to Play U~s . For .UCLA Gridders in '73-Netters · Checking the JC scene : .:l'llrel ~ befOl.'o lormer Colden .Well star Pal Swe«land, one ol the better defensive outllelder Pat Cur}on. was to enroll at use, Strong lintmen ever to play' al Oranae Coast Col· be lumed up et;Cllapman -a coup ol '°"' teae, Ii upocted lo sign a lettor ol Intent l'or Panthn coicb Bob Pomeroy. with UCLA IOOll. CUmn, who batted over .400 l'or tbe UCI,t coacq Pepper Rodgm bu already Rlllllen tut oeuon, played Mnnmt.r tiall for O>ach M)'l'On McNamara ireeted the largest turnout ev~ l'or leonls a1 UC irv!M reoenll)I when 14 uplrant. reported for the Antuter.1 teem. corrtled OCC wide l<Ctlvtr Stove Monallan Po!neroy In the mldweat. and bad i lenethY talk with SweeUand last Golden Welt ettdler .I.lark ~ will play -k on the Pirato campua. , !pr use ilm llJl'lng whlle catdier Buel Bull: s,,..Uand 1pa>1 the weeilend In Hawaii, -'Ing ta now at Cal Stafe..(LA). Pttdier.s'Dave CRAIG SllEFF but don1 looC 10< thew, 240-pound lackle to play for the Rainbows next seesoo. And another OCC star -quarterback A!· vln Whlto -figures to atlend Stanford' oc Oregon next seaaon. 1 •• cngon aaya It ·want; the strong-armed ex-•' Newport Harbor flash ID att.nd the spflng quart« whleh would be a big blow to OCC track """'b Jim McDwein. Whlto Is tile track leem's premier javelin lhrower. Re's tossed it over 217 feet already In an all-comers meet, "1llch Is amd five feet better than Che ochool record. ... '* * : IO~' and Bob Sdvtda• are at Cal Stato (Fullerton) and Ken MurUlo Is thri>w· bJi for tbe Ulllvcnity ol Ar11.ona. Included In tbe' may taltiit McNamara Q)'I gJv., JC bol<lkll ... beea upuded IO a :If. UC! £11 ar<atost depth throug)I game oclledala ft< i.e trll --u t... all poaltlool are four let. crt.aae ol elO* 1amea. -termm, au veterans of NCAA Tbe I~ ol the year aWlll'Cf bu to go to competition. Tom Hennstad, tbe Golden West aquatlct Bob Chappell, a junior, ceach, reigned l'or the pest two yean · l&rmstad arrived i1t the Rio Hondo cam-as the No. I sinaJes itar of the pua -his Y<l'DlC da\ll)lter about 7:45 Frl-loam and will be playing his day nJabt to tee Ibo GWC bultetball geme. third campalgo with UC! He Bui wbeo his daughtor became Ill (In the woo the NCAA college divblon parldncr .lot), llormllacl made a fut trip back tiUe two yeers ago but bowed .ll>•hls 80al Beadi home. t o1 ••-., ___ , ~•·•-He arrlV<CI beck a1 Rio Hoodo just In Ume ou ~.na~ oom,.....~n to oee the -hall Up<lff. A few minutes. In the quarterfinals last later, the haA Roadnmnen burned Golden sec:: Jablonski, the lone West right out of the gymoasJum wlth a blis· senior On the squid, has bten 1'rlng lhootlng display. a member of all three UCI NCAA college division cham· Quotable qllOtet: pionshi p squads. He suffered a From Seddl11tacl: tract eoadl Duee Cain back injury two months ago -~lt'a tlile same Rory u cro11 eoutry. We'll but appears over the aUment.. OAJLY PILOT 17 St. Oair Gm ding Rustlers . . Ry CRAIG SHEFF Ot lfM o.i1y """' ll•H Jefr Sf. Clair is not an Im- posing figure in a basketball uniform. He is a rather bulky tigure at 6-5 and 215 pounds and doesn't really look like 1 basketball player. But that's rather deceiving. SL Clair, a sophomore for Golden West College, ls a yeoman at his wori:. He Is not sensational, but he'll usually lead the Rustlers ln scoring. In two seasons at Golden \\1est, the ronner La Quinta Hig h slar has taJlied 765 points to become the Rustlers' fourth all-time scorer. And he needs just 37 more to be No. 3. He's one J:tig reasoo why the RusUers are tn the thick of the Southern Callfomla Con· ference race this season. "He's not a spectacular player, but he just keepe: plug· ging away. And he's been working hard since the start of the sea~~ sn1s 901den West coach Dick Stricklin. emu .nom-. .. .. ecllpoed Jal al>oat every IMlvWaal Golden West Collep basket. s boll -pooalblo fa lbe 1•11 ud ll'lt-71 1e-., 11 HJleCled to play at ~ College next~ be pa)'ilg tile price, Our IPoPe 11 for next "We are counting heavily on ~ yar ud tt loob better rtgllt now." Jabo this year. He's got to From OCC tract ·COiclli Jim McDwahl -play-like be i5 capable of "We coold lane ICblol records la ewry field playing er there isn't much event Ws )'Mr. We really Uve 09t:ltlndlng hope for us," McNamara says. \\'he n St. Clair came to Golden West he was noted for his storing but had a defmite weakness defensively. •"I had to convince him that there are two ends of the floor when be came here. He wanted to play just the of· fensive end. So I bad to con· vince him to play the defensive end and also re- bound. And he has Improved in both areas,'" aays stricklin. .St._Clalr pulled down Zl .re- Thom-hr lbe UDlvonlty of -field event people." Randy S c h n e i d e r , a Fnm Gofdeo West track CMCk Tom Nooa 90pbomore, Is Chappell's eoa 1as1 reer 1s 11U1o1 ,.. lbe 1m-n campelp, -"It'1 tile belt Nluced l.eam we've ever doubles partner and also a ILtd. We'll be toap to beat la daal meets." quarterf'mals singles loser in tbe NCAA tournament a year Rustlers OCC Swimmers ago. Glenn Cripe, a Newport Harbor Hlgb graduate and a junior at UCI this year, played doubles with Jablonski In the NCAA tournament last year and the duo went to the semifinals before Joaing. -------bounds ln a conferenCe victory over LA Southwest, although he sat out about 15 minutes of the game. Swimmers ' ... Seek Banner Year loaded With five All-Americans returning, It's quite possible --·-otaiige -Coast Colfege couid Golden West College figures surpass Wt year's third place to capture its fourth straight rmlsh in the state JC swim- SoUthern California Con· ming meet. fcrence lwlmmlng c!Jam. Coach ·Jack Fullerton'• pionshlp this IJll'ing. Pirates, who llnlsbed secood Althougb the RusUers will In the South, Coast Conlertnce be minus coach Tom to Fullerton JC last year, open the 197l seuon Feb. a at RID Hermstad (who departs in Hondo wllh ·a ve'teran con- Febnwy'for a leave of at.en· t.l.ngent. ce In J;:urope ), It probably Heading the list o I won't make a Jot ol difference. sopbotbores are Dan Kent. Interim coach .. r u c e l'.p1g Mooa, Vince Frantom, Bradley Inherits a loam 'lbat R!cti Hyland and B 111 possesses some top lettermen McAneney .. mixed In with 90lid freshman Kent finished filth In both candida:tes. the state -100 breaststroke Bradley, a UCLA graduate, (1:02.5) and the 200 breut was the United states' leading (2:18.9) and was seventh In waler poki player in the last the ZOO individual medJey two Olym'plc Games. He's now (2:03.4). a grad student at Ca1 State MC~y was third in the (Long Bead!). 200 free (1:48.9), Hyland WU Heeding the list of lettermen fdth In the IO free, Moon is breaststrolw' K e v i n finished ninth in the same Williams who finished second event and.. .. Frantom and in the state 200 (2:16.S) and "1cAneney were part cf the sixth In the 10011:02.7). 400 free relsy team that clock- Other returnees include ed 3: 13.9 in finishing second in Fred Lanunen (butterfly and the state affair. indivldUal medley), John Matt Greer, Bob Wurster Mlltby (middle dlstanc.s, and Doug Jones, who 111 had. freestyle), Scott Moore (lndo, aftotbe. yeer of eliglb!lity at butterfly), Eddie White OCC w !return •-nd T'·• Reed ' w no . (breaststro~>. a ~ (beckatroke, butterfly).' Greer, probably the top Topping the list of fmhmen short freestyler In JC swlm- •1· are three Fountain Valley p~ ·1m1ngord ~·y;r~ nowan:~: ducts-:-r :._ Frank Browne·-wuue r-· ..: (bteaslltroke, sprints), ·Jim (a top backstrolrer) do not • MoA'illllllo (middle distances, want to compete this spring, frol;nyle,. ~ts) and l'lltor says Fullerton. Noah (butterfly, distances). "With Jones and Wurster we Others include • M a r c would be very, very tough. Cardenas from M a r I 11 a (sprints, mlddle distances), Rich Leon1s from Siem (breaststroke ), Larry Robertsori from Garden Grove (butterfly, back), Doug Dunn from Marina (breaststroke) ·• and Ron Maurstad ool of the ' service (backstroke). ~ · · Hermstad says the Rustlers I will probably be llrongest In the brealllti'oke. "All the other stroktl wlll be abOut the same. 'Ibey won't be super stronr but they won't be weak eltbtr." ' The 1:!1'n figure to lose ;.v 'pOlnti Ille of the lack of divers, but Golden West's • overall depth should mare " .. 'than make up for It. '" °'"91CMttS~~llllN; ...... , Feb.1-•TJllo ,), Prr.'t=. t -S1nt1 Mon • 11\1111 Cl1r111 I l, S:JO, Fri., a.1., Fib. 1~17 -Geld CMll CPW1molomlll111 •I UC Slfll~tr1>1r•. 2, TUft., FIO :ID -c;oest c~ rit•n lllomtJ, . Fr(, I"• tJ ·-UCLA OIOI,,.), ), Fri., MIRll•t -.t Mt SM AntOnlo" 2:». WM., Mtrdi 1 -SOUl'ti«'li (II rlll•n .,~,. Frt., Mlrdl f • •I ,_.,. •• 7 • Fri., Mwdl '6 -Slnl• AM0, S~:».. 5-f., Mlrm 17 -oc:c lfMttllolllt di ........ ,..,..., II t.m. • Sit .. M9rdl 1'-,, p ........ 1, P:rl., MWdl • -c..rra.• .JJJO, ~~~ r-. •n 10-11 ri c-1M. i. Frt., Aort1 11 -~. f, AJlftl .... -So(.11 CMmplOl .... 111 II Mt. Sin AlllOJI ... Mt\' W -SI ... m-loMll!llt at F~U. . • *""' IMll eo.1 c~ -· Lions Laud Polo Team Without them we'll be a very Cripe has been hampered •ooC! __ team." for his first two years at UCI • -with· s!cknesr but appears In Fullerton says he figures to top health this time around. DAIL v l'ILOT Pllllt .., L .. P1t111 he very sining In the short He could be a factor In the ______ GO_. _LD_E_N_W_E_ST_c_o_L_L_E_G_e_·s_JE_F_F_S_J_. _c_LA_tR~C3_2_l. ____ _ And against Los Angeles College, he hit six full court passes aftef rebounds . He's averaged 20.8 points in the Rustlers' seven conference freestyle races and the singles lineup if be remains breatstroU and more than healthy. 1.._,.to In the beckstrnke. '!be Anteaten loot Jim Ogle -.-and Chuck Nachand through Kent and freshman Mike graduation but have an abun- Yarwond (Coeta Mesa) bead dance of freshmen oo hand to the breaststrobn w b 11 e fill out the 14-18-player roS,ter. McAnaley, Fraotom, Hyland Bobby W r ! g h I !rom and fretbman Mart Desmood Fullerton High, I) a v I d Area~. Hoop ' Summaries Eastman from Newport (La Quinta) top t be H ....... Earl Lund from fll ..... ,_ .....,..., &rUUl • EllMdt C•I (tt) SA V•llrt free.stylers. Fullerton, Scott Endsley from Hiii 101 F 101 1111111 Steve Marron, a freshman Costa Mesa and Bob Farmer =.~" 021 ~ !:J ~;: I M 15 babl tbe top from Tustin are among the N11w111 121 G 111 Mor••n rom esa, pro 1 flrst·year stars vying tor a LIA..,. 01 G 121 MOrrt• distance swimmer. .a.A E1l•nd• ICOl'tng wti1: F1.,..1.., ,, place on 1o11e team. . icro11nt11c11 1 ..... 2. lllKllofl •· Gr!I· Other sophomores include· At the moment It would ap-nn s. Roo Misiolek (back, free), pear that Wright and Eastman H111rm1: .E111nc11, 1•.10. Preston Hobble (Dy), Nell have the Inside ~I: for two ,_.••n v111., 1111 1111 c .. 1. M"' RICbey (breast) Mike O'Brien ahlgles berths with the four v.1-... 1131 " 1111 0m1n ' ye..,.__ aJU'"""h. jx) )adder Y•rrlnoton 12) F Oil 8yers (·--~) Jim Bollman (free) . loQ-~ Ou111<1111ur....-fll) c (U Armtlllllfb Ul....:I• • • • has been established. . 8111'111.C•l G (1) Halltnd John Carpenter (back) and Sophomore Scott Carnahan Powwn Ctl o IJJ 1«n111 Larry Blatterman (back). could also be a big factor in -~~':'::1'JT'1.:.=~1Y .. -~~ Frt!hmen Include Costa the team's success ln 1973. '-croe1ey t. Mesa.n.s Mike Yarwood and McNamara's capsule run· H1111m1: r=aun111n V•Uey, n.u. Oran MarksM•-· ~sl ), down of the. top lour, Is that ,_ -· _, ppell better this °'"' 1121 ........ tr: .. ., .... . Eric Lund (free ) a John Cha ts year ; ·~ /fJ1 l ~)°'r~: Ready (breast) and Estancia'• Jablonski has improved bar· l::r-10 'In 1u !t1e1t!:~ Randy Blatterman (free). ring further back problems; o. Mo111nc1 c11 :121 L•AIM "We have the potential to do Schnelder ii much t.etter than 12~1':.ot."'ni. i.~'7~f. Gr1~lre better than we did last year, a year ago and bas a great at.. V•n Horn 121. it's juJt a question of how titude; and Cripe ls 50 percent tfllnlm1 "°°''' Eiiinm. n-u . strong some of the other better than las~ year -so ~Meu flt) 1n1 Lei Allfl!IM teams will be," sa ys much so, it scares the coach f~/i, iuifr5 Fullerton. to thlnlt about It. ..,., ,, l.1 ,,,_ TOOTll!oo In f) MW" ...... 11"1' Cot!• MIU -A. ....... ··11 I I.al Al•rnt!OI -L-mtf'l'!l•n ' H•ltllml KOl'I: Tll 17·17 • games. , For Tonight , St. Clair was not rerarded as a starter when the sea.son began, althoUgh he was the Rustlers' leading scorer in the 197t·72 ...... (451 points). Al.amitos Entries . But with &-10 center Mart Dekker coming back after a year off because of scholastic difficulties, St. Clair figured to be in relief for the Rustlers. CHfi•n (W1hllll) Flnll ll111Uftt (ICn19ti1t •l•ST llACI' -«XI y1!'0tl. l ~Ir Didi, Cl1lml1111. l'ur .. SJjQQ, Cl1lml"9 ptic1 '"°°· 117 Jud 1"111 (H•rl) ns ••sc. Clair'• effectJveoea ii "' 110 inside and l<l is Detker'a. We High Grou IV•Ullllnl F'lve Oh (l{nl11hll Sollney Gil (M1twd1! LI0'1 Pelt (AoblnlOtll E•tr1 Copy (Smlllll Prttty lnCll1n (Llplllm) H!lllOU'" (W1rdl MM'llllJl\I llY (Adllr) F111hl•n Chic CK1nl1J MIM Aoc••nlner (Wlbon) 11' Soinr!ff Specl1I (CrOIDy} 111 L!1Tl1 Go Fiii! IAHlrl 11~ S ne11y ~l1J (MYlnl 111 A\lff1n ltt.OV (Pe119) 117 Tlfly Piii fW1rcll 111 c1ro1•1 OrNrn 1L1p111ml 117 Caclll'I Copy (A!\hon! 111 Yaur1 F-!..,•Ir) 111 No Photo IAobl...-) S-Jll l•rGK• ll/1ugl'ill) P111y Doo (ll:nlglll! :~ tried a couple of games with 1is them playing together but It no took too much away from Ull. J:; ·•we began altematlng St. in Clair with Dekker, but Jeff l :~ was more oonslstent and ll: worked harder. He worked SECONO aACS -"400 W1nl1. J !"' otd m1ldlnl. Cl•lrnlng, Pur" s ..oo. ct1lm!ng prlc. '5000. hard In pracil« and he Pt"" •.t.e• -"400 v•rd1. ' ynr wo~ed •-~ In ,._ g•-, 90 Jor-Prldm fltlclltrdll Miry Twtrt (Wtlglll) Aocktt l1r Cliklr. (Cerim..l Git II On (Wlrd) ecno Too (ll:oDIMOnl Chklty Ple1t1 IT..,1111'1) Trlpjk1M Copy CS,,,.1111) . Go Go Holl IAd1lrl ' T1-n SN {AIUIOlll Shlrp Lulu !Ni-rnv.i no Gld• • llJI. Ci.lmlng. Pul'M 12t00. c.. muu 1o11e ... ,..,.. 1U Cl1lmlng IWk• uooo. Tiit Slll09f he got the , ...... u .... role." . 120 111111,,... MKNnn. .... wue St no Wond« How CNICOdemlll ) 117 stricklln feels that . l~ fn':..Jn~ l';.,~'<w•rdl ::~ Clair's blggest , uset 1n re-no Don't Look eKti (Jlk:Nint.l 111 bounding 1s bis-ability to get lU P111 C1r1n C,,_lrl 111 ond board position "ff ' 120 Hl s.n.-(Drfotowl 111 g • e S 11s Hy str1119« Clltrflt•I 111 wide ao he's hard to get THlllO JIACI -170 y1rd1. l year olch • llJI. CltllrnJng, PurM $2300. Cl•lmlno prlu '"°°- A Goin M•n (LJplilm) ',',', around," .. ~ Strlc""• "And 11.o.t Chlrlle IWlhOfll ~ • IUUJ.. 5p1<.111 Notice ITrllWfll 117 he's learned to handle hil body Homft'ilnll J._rd !MllM,ldt) Yo Qlero (H•rl) 911 0 Ill• ( 11.ld\lnll) Ml Pie CWrlglll! Kllllto P~ (TrNwrt) Cl,., l lnl IW1t.on) Cui For ACft (Ad1lrJ Mldw•r OandV !LIPNml '" SJXTH JtAC• -uo y1ro1. J rnr as far as p:=tlhe ball." 11t Gld• s up, c111m1no. PurM S2200. n2 c i.1m11111 pr1c. woo. St. Clair's future problbly 111 w11c11 ,..,. Tr1w1 trr .. wr11 1,•,,• al .a small college, says \If Dotll1 81 Good 111.klla•dll 117 r:11111 AHirllkll (ll.Dllln10nl 111 Stricklin. lit GOOd CllPY lH1rt) 1~ "So -~-• list ll7 "" Pippin IMy1n 1 111 many lfl,:IJUUIS )'OU on l!OUltnt aAC• -"400 v•rd1. ) r-r Old m11C11m. Pllf .. 11"400. Sl!urd1r Hero CNlcOOMnlllJ ,",', helgbt. U you'rt W, )'OUand're a On AIOWttl (LJP111ml s.nor P•ftdl 1L1p11em1 1,11 guard and u you're M M Tudyloc•• IKnlv/111 111 you have to be a forward. Ae11•111er jAOllrl 111 There's 00 way Jeff fiVUld bt S Kin t•V•lfTH a.t.e• -"° v1nl1. 'yew I ea tir old• • up. Flllllf • Mlrlf. Allow1nce. a postman In a blg IC:hoo • ' Pur .. "'"'°· c.111no Office. "At a -·11---.11-e t •"·" Sitlllel!Ml"I J1t'1 LMIV Luc:k (Knight) 122 lllllllW,... ~ .......,,. k•I-(OJ F (2) JOMPf'lllOfl &111y Wiiiow (Nlcocllmu1) 111 he would hive lftll IUCCel.!J. Pro Cage, Hockey Mltchttl Ul IF (2J Wint B Cupe'• Dolly fAlllJrJ 172 H , be .. ~~ ~llff~,1 u 11 1 ·1 \fl '!9 Ad1m• 121 c <oi ver11111 P11•, chladf(k IH••ll 111 es proven can uuuuu atfltnllft:,,.,_ ""' 24 lf { '--~n (61 G (12) Hlrld• arons, HIV Ann (YrHIUt•) 122 and score With the taller All1nt' cw;,111111 Pct. oa v=... \~ ~ 7 1 11 Flffehtr U) G (f) ltld'WirclllOfl 111rllmll1 tSmllh) 122 guyl.,, • :-v a I 1JI N.Y, ltl•ndtn 6 «I 4 j 101 m P-11111 \/'1Hey IJtl US) c .. t• MIN •tOHTH JIAC• _ ~ Y•rds. l yHr OI ·~ w.tt Scorl1111 MIDI -"-'•In \/'111-v -R • s "' L ••-• ,._ '" Ntw ork 4 1 • ... c~ ff " l D 1~ ·~ M••• ' ~. etam pots I llJI. "''· WM -· -~"~111111 . I~ ~ :Ws ~,,., Ph ohl• fl i ,n :a !:~' ~=-t~ol= 2~ w:r, J,c'H,':::: ~i:~ Futi...11111 Employ-AllO(l1· '""''1.DIYI.._ Mlr:.i.!:r.'"r. 11 22 I J 1~ 1"6 '°" •· Y1 Got Troutll• ll>rlyt1'l l1f 8•rtl,,_. ftu 1 :ffl . , ~" "• , !J llf lU H1lltlm1: Founllln V1li.y. ll·16. ll:oc~•I s.1u11 CW«dl 1n At111111 20 :,., 1~\'t 1 21 Undefeated Corona del ~far Joy-F1y CH••!J 111 ~'"'... 11 .36C1 14 Pl~ ll •t ~ l~ W 1tlc1•1 Oo14 !Mllf<INJ 117 Ml.., o.I 14fl l"I ltrftt9 CIM.. .,....,. C-""'-c111111nt11 ltMNY"t ~ Jwnlw ven1tv 1M11.iMD High's Sea Kings again claim Herclno Ckn1t1111 tit Ml,ll'INll 101 , 110 ~· Mllfwetf Oeroft '· Monll"MI 2 1(1'9lla (61} 141) MINIM """ n.A Ho 11.nlrtlnl ILl~ml 117 Eccllf (0) , IJO McOelllld E B I• m Ntw Y«ti; 11:~1, Torvtl!O 2 JI.OU (•1 F (11 llommet <ill; top spot in the ,.official LylWI '" !Smlthl 111 KIHAP"" U) c (4) ,_ .. ~~ f :,10 S\~ lloltofl 4 \el-~ S OUM (2) I" Ill It""" Qr 'e. t Top tO A,..i1 (ltlclllorOlll 172 8rlllfllll ('I G {I) s.--iiiQi'-·-.JI.. := ::1~ t= ~. ~. I ~ fll) c 10 a.rt ange ...... un y prep ThW W•kll .... {Aclfolrl l72 Hiii l'I G 11'1 --· ' 'l -,.y.' ~ ':;\, ~ ml".-';:::!: basketball ratlnga following """" uu -.. ,_ , ,... -_, -"" -•-...,..... 11 .no -°""' ..... .. ... Clelmlnrg. Plll'M 110. (II, tlNM Ill, DIM cm. Alcll (2)1 .. ., '""..JI. -..jf ;ti U 1a1r1111 wri.: K•"41• -1.ir n1. their 16th and 17th conquests c1.i,..1111 ,,1c• •fa. . s.mi. -""' m, IJlillktl ·OJ. I li if ::........ ':.":. 11 ,..,. .=i.:,.u~:-i~~'·c~"'~ cf the tm73 campaign.. ,_. ~/LIPfltml ::~ Klltnmr. 5-W!f9, »-n. Yortl UJ, Miiier Ill. ;iii.;~ l~rMwrwl 117 MAW? / WI > "" -lj I! Halfllm1: tute111, a.-1.. Irvine League rival Foun-ov. .... 1., '°' , .. rui 117 Miii not cm MHMol fl6 ,. lain Valley and SUnlel Leam1& '::!r; (C•rdOul 111 GltllMll ftl " l'I .., ·~ t! ....... lffl {n) L1t11M IHttl •-t M1•1 (WM) 117 ""1t'IOM' 141 C {I) Olt'llfl 41 1 ,....,.. ... ~ ·· Soc.al Tests ,,.,,. ni " 1•1 """' leader Huntlngtoo Beach alao Mr. F•n1• (11k111~0 111 anu cm o 1•1 ~ " eou nu ,. eti Ko.119 held on to their No. 2 and l 11:""' Croton 11t.nlllfilJ 111 k1.lw4Nkl 1t1 o 1'1 an- v1n Clllf !:r:ll C {4! Aklnl stJ f*•• -111 ..... to !her Coc~y Kid IH•rl) ll7 HI M* -C.-.. 7, ..... I~ Uktn (ti G {4) o.......... po a ~ •vuu• &n0 A"911'1 Suri MIM 111.oblnlOlll lit ~tllml: HW!it1""91\. '1'4t. =' F McAml.ri 111 G CJI McM•,.,..• pair of vk:torles. , ----------:::::;;;::;;:;:::;:::---------' " H p oe korl ... IUbl: ut\llM 8elcll -Allfl. Top clash o( the week com· 00 bun (1(1), OulM (I), loer'nno Cit). '' r;::r.:i Mir•• t2). 8!lholl 021. r:. wr1e1n1 t20). lng up appearJ to be a Sunset 'J.':1111 n PHOENIX -Winning eight HilfTI,,..: '°"°'' '1..)l, League tilanic between Hun· On1r """"' ltl!J\"4"' of Its Jut nine games and the c:i~,~ ~·~'• c~~ C'41 M:~~,:~~: ~:g~~~. Beach and No. 8 C•~llll~ r 'u ~.. 0 • last four in a row, Southern AOMrll (15) ,. OJ NWlelCI Marina's Vikln~ e,lay hosl ~~\~v , J~, , 1f-Calllomi.A-College-of-Q>sta-~Jrb11 c n:,,•= Jo HWillnifOO&ach Wednes-. ~r.' 11 as ' iU : ~~~ w,!1211 fa~~~-i~~t In ~· .:.!!.: "~ ci-!!' -"-~~ day evening in a 7 o'clock Wtlll ~JOO \A,IUege ~ Wiil.,, 1.,.. 1, 01ti 1, Hllfll 2, Ml9"11 vitto -clash. . JV Basketball ' ~ I,; n I :11"" an lnteneclional game before (111111 ,, GMI •• Mllltf' .. c..,111r.n f:i.,. f. I fl moving~ UC San Diego Tues-a, Ha..-;:-.,,:·.:;:,~ 1(MtMn1e »-U. ,.., 1::.."°/.J.OJ.llfTY TOP ",.. .... mo~al=~ :m: ~ ~r. ~~have posted s!:•utt-m~ 'm =-l ~Q·!:Jtf~ n Wntmlnlter Blgb waw polo ~ ~ ~ Vlrtl Tl • 17 .. reeor'CI for the leuon tterfrMn (ti , (t) lttlly t r:!t'Ti~r' u . THERE ARE OVER •·1m, SUndalMUaly __ ..... at the o.t... ... IJld ale --w-• .._ bid J'tc:llM cu c (t ) ~ &. 1.1,,.,,.,,,.. JI K ~·.,...... D11tY ........... ., .. -.. t.mc. (10) G (2) 0.0...19 j '°""'1" " Lions' ipOl'tl award · for a berth In the NAlA Herflt 1,1 o n1 ..,, / : ~ 1 t banqUet. DL1trict Ill playotft at t i::a:T ~ = ,~ .K~Jl:'~J.11~ t11t1w. ,_ J_ Special 1wud1winnen: lealOll'I eod. 'Ibe7 hope to bn-t. ' ~ NOlr•tlllll M t1 1lk• 1t1t111 .c-prove ~ mark qlimt ouv H11111m11 QIM. •1t. wtrM' illrlllltl ,.. ... ,.,..., Cl"'•'": v= Bowth; ot·•tato foea'to H with• v1co1fi"iiiii~~--~-:---~;:-~-.-~ji;;i'i...,""'"1I MV: ~ Hutfton· Most "' ' "'; 't lOl'1 over Grand Ca.yon ....... ""-:.-'J: ... \11 ,..._ • ....., M=•111 1mp1nt1onaJ:si.veGOldiie1n.~i!~·~~~r.!~-~·~t~1~i ~'l~8~l11~l~H~toni;;;;i.,O::.h=:t.~=:~~=--',!Q'~~-=;'o,.1~!::;:r;~:.:..._;,1;\ro': 100 WAYS TO FINANCE· YOUR CAR ON COSTA ME~'S Harbor Baulnarcl af Car• LOOK IOI fMI IMUM AT CHEVROLET BUICK cap1a;~~-Wu1: MV: TELEPHONE A Goff9!,S_ Distoac_.nt, .• c~r ~ ' Deve K>nt; Moot lnoplra--3305 _, -IOI:!] ' :.Sunday's Scores tlooah 11u.. Puloo. 1n41 ~ m w. '"" "· """-· c.. ..... II!!!!!. Fnlltl... ..... ...... HO 1.IN ..... h AND UllD-µ•GI rro<K - CONNElL I BAUER ma ms HARBOR BLVD, HARBOR Bl,; capatn: Randy Seut; MV: ............. c-.. -c... -LOWtn H:tCIS LOCALLY-otl ..... ....,. •• JI. , .. ~ ~-·-·. -....... _ OllANM COUllTT IAD~ lllYlCI, lee. T--"' -..... .. .....,.., CA~ ............ .. ... .._,_.a. ..... -., C....... ,,,_ Miii. " S.t, IWI ,_, II '9 I JACC SA1911. .... Mtr .. Uonal: llltdl Goldllein. I· I ' •• 1., -, J . . ---·--- DAJLY~I_L_o_r _________ M_ond.>_cyc_J_.,_,_·~-'-'-'-''-'' PUBLIC N()fll'E PUBLIC NOTICE PUlllJC NO'nCll lllCT!TIOUI ltnlNISI l'IC'NTIOUI lUSl .. ISS •ICTITtOW •usn•IM '9AM.I STATl.MIMT NAMI fTATIMENT ..... ST4TIMIMT Ti. fol"'"""' "'"°"' •f't "411111 Tlw '°''°"""" ·,.,_ -'• lloll'll Tiit ........ ..,_ It ..it11 ~ 111111....... ••• • ~ ... ..; llWMC ll'ITt!ltN).TIQfolAL. Alr-1 MONTcJuMA'S REVl!HOE. 1U$\~ (OITA MEU. ltOOTt:lll HIVICI. T~ Met-. $<1111 11S, llilt IMcAfl-W talllM 81vd Nirw-1 ltMtl, 10ll ~SI C.lt ,..,,_ ftlll ltlllev•rd. lrvliw.. C1Jltor11l1 '2101 . --• ..... " -··-" ... -It CAMAD I AN l llMAC tLONOfJNI c~=-·K-8 kf)a Md C•ro4 SW C.le~nal • ~IJl(IT'(Q, Ofll-11o. C-. Cllf1)0f1tl1111, MCKty, lf.U" W. ltlllOll 81-..t .. H-Tllll MIM9 h ...... <"~ ..,...,. -LHlllor11t 51fttt, L-. Oni.r!o, ~ IMecll. (t ll'9nlll ,,..._ 111411 ........ C....U.. Thll llUtiMM II 114'1nv C-19of ll'f I ,.... IV Tlll1 b~lb 11 tlting cOl\CIUCtff by ........ p.1,_111119, Tllll t fllH 111111"' tlllf (Wiiiy • COf'PMIJ..... ( $ Mtl(1r Cltttr ., Or c--.IY lllll ,,_ L ltn. Ii. A, Oruc1, \I.Cl Pr1aJ,oent ,.,.,, .i.~1 "'" '111'1111 fflS c-tv W/l,llAM •• ST .M>lo4N. COUHTY .-.. Tiii• ,lltlt-nl •Uto wi tfl lf>e C-IY Cl«l of Or~ C-ty on: JMU61"( II, CLEltK. I YI J , ........ Dwutv, Clotrk Ill Orf..,. C011r1t1 on: J111. 11 lt11. 1'1l. WILLIAM E. ST J~H, COUNTV • ; .... • WILl.IAM E Sf JOHN, COUNTY CLEllK. By kif'/ J. B•ro1'-Otpu!y. ~1.... ..... Col•t Dtlly it!Mt. -Cl.ERi(, bV Btny J B•lrQ>J'en, 0.llU1Y fl4IUI JtnW it, tr. 1'7J 11..,, FutJl 1'11bll11'1'4 Cl"&~ C°''' CMolly l'ltet, MICK&Y. CAPlll!TJ & BfYCt<tU!lt Jtnwrt 12, 2t •nil F~ J, n. PUBUC NOTICE ly1 JAMlS T CAP ll l!TI ltJl. ----c-c---,-,--l"t"l·n"l ---;;;;;;;;;;;;-;:;;;:;;;:;----1 / An-tt ti Law _ Al ..... 1 T-N0tlll-S.,l11 411, PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOVI IUStMIU 1wa MK&rtfllH' lll"ltvtl'lf, tu.Ml ITAT•MaNT IMM, C&llloNtlt '11111 TM tollowlnf --i. ..._ ~ l"11bll1,,.., o·-~ C!>l\I Dt•l'f P.lot NOTICll TO c•IOITORJ n : J.,.l.l.lry n, :1'1, tiw:l l'.i:>rulr't' !. 12 SUl'EltlCNI COURT 01' THI N.T.H, l lASUtO I.TO.. -R• 1t7l 11'·13 STATI! 01' C"'-ll'OltlOA l'OA Aw., hli.o. 19'Mlll ftW,I THI COUNTY 01" oaAHGI , J~hlt I'. ~ .. •*r , He. &·141M A""y h""'9 IMW<d n.d PUBLIC !'\OTICE E1t111 ol GJIACE GREllLE R0111$0tl, Tlllt w.iflMt ......... CIMductM • -' o.c .... Md. ll'ICll:~. CH&NOI' 01' -ZO!fl' , NOTICE II HEJIEllY GIVEN to fM, JICQWllflf ,r; T~' HOTICE 01' PUILIC HEARING TO 11! tf'ldlforl ol file .-,.,. Mm.d ~I Tlll1 lf•'-1 llr.G wltll ,.. (tllllltY HELO IY THE CITY 01' 1R\llJrtl! CITY lblf tU ptf"IOM l>tvlflfl Ciflml .,.!nit JM C .... of 0.. ..... (Nit)' tllll Jin. M, ltPS. COUNCIL ON THE P•OPOSEO LANO 1tlo OKfcltlll tr• rtqUirfd to n•· "'*'"' WILLIAM E. JT JOHH. COUNTY USE OISTIUCT CHANGES , wllfl IM .--rt ~...-.. Ill ti. offlcl CLERK. IV....., J, ......... , p..,._nl lo I~ Pl11111!"9 •nd 10'\l"'ljl ol IM d ... I< ol !hr ~ '8~\fd ~. or • _ ~ ff .._..... -....UY"Gf w C1fy lo Ol'f5811l "-l,----1iltlft l'lltttWi,.,. """"Piillillilliiif Or....-c ... , Dtlfy l"llot. o1 1:-V,"' Cl!v c,_..,..c11 noilce l• tll'ftflV YVUClle". '° "" ~ 11 n. oHkl J-. 1f -~lltl'Y 5. 11. "· Jil)""' th.II 1 !IUD'·< ... ~•1"4 .. ,11 tit Mia DY ot -11'l<ln'ley, WllfltM M. WlkGlllfl. Al• 1'13 :tn-11 u ld Counc•t "" • 1>11" D<Ol!Of•"'I lo ame~ IOmlY 11 Law, 22D P¥k A .... ., U9Utl' sectt...11 01s1 .. c1 .,.•r• 1111s " ... ~ te o1 11-="· Ctllfotr.11t2!UI,wnldl 1•"" p1tc:t PUBLIC NOTICE 1111 City o1 lrY·"f l"" n9 CCIOi!. 11 ,,.,,....,. of tluSI-ol ""~lgrwd In Ill ""!.1-------------1 fG, 1r~l,...<~1,:~ ~•• """ fM'l•lnlno lo llMI .,'-"'°'...id Ole l'ICTtTIO~ •~•N•s1 S..iG p1 ... !; <W•!l'llall"<l c .... No• n·lC· .,..,,, wttflln '°"" ~!!Iii •11er lhr fln.t MAMa STAftM&Wf 3 Incl r. lC 6 l'.~mo>ul VllltV Pl1/\'>«1 puDlktllGll ol 1"1s nofl«,. TM followllllil ~ Is '"""' b\ll.IMM Comm .... !ly (SftlPOMt Ol1tr1ct 1'11PI IRS· D1MdJ~~~ ~BE .. DILLEY 11: If llld Ml &iw:l .,..._.,. to clll..,_ from GYPSY J~ELS, P.O. IOI: ..S, 2flll lhr A·l "G-r1J ..,grl(ultur1t" Ol•t•k • lo Eittevtrlll 11!1 IM Wiii s-... Hdlow, Sllwrilllo ~ tht PC ' Pl1nl'Wd com.,.,u11otv" D•llrlcl. ol l!W "'°""' 111..-0 dfl:"6tnt ...,. c -1 2'151 s low Pr-rty 11 looct•f<:I on tl'll "°''n""'1n1y WILLIAM M. WILCOXl!H 1,.,.._. • ....,. Hal , • ..., llOflnlJ .. fr' Cl'!'~f'I O! lH SltHI Af11WMY 11 LIW ... s1Nw• not fnd Cami>ul Dd~t In !l>t Chv el lrvl11e, Ill Plr11 Aft. ...;.~~-ii bllllll ~ ~Ill ' .FlflgsMpSold 1 • tlll!lalt'd b~ "'""' P11nnln9 Cam-L .... -..C:ll. Ctllftlnill tun Dor!llol C"'"IMM'll minion. &!WMy' tor llunohilt 0 I"' P iiot Thh ~""""' ftllld wltll lllf (CMlty The _Columbia 46-foot .offshOre cruisin~' motor-s.1.; Put.ht Hftdno on IM lbO'ft PubllsMd Orlflll'I Ccwoit • " ' Cl"!<; of Orltll»I County WI: J .... ,.... 1m. --01 Pl'OPOl..:I Dien will DI l>tld 1! 7:l0 p.m., ot ~r,r"' l.t 2l, 29• 6nd f.t)IW7J0.13 WILLIAM e:. ST JOHH. COUHT>Y o.uert__flaiShi_p of the 31st &n.nUal San cijcG ••....,,, thfr~11•er •s pou•bl•, ~ T""·I C:C...-----------ICLERK.l'l'TMl'tu M. Wtrd,o.p.,ty, ~an.a BQ&l Show, bas "been ~Id f-"•58,00(). , day. Ftbfut<V ll. 1;11. 111 ll>t l'lt1r1ng ,,_.,1· lli:l74"4 -U1L • """'u"~ ·~"' ~1 '"' 1rv111e c•1v cou~11, PUBLIC NOTICE 1"111111"'-' Orangt c111111 Dtll'f P11ot, uyer chose to rell'fain anonymous, except to T-. c....... ,201 c .. n11u• oriv•. J1111Nrv at ""' febr'INnr s. 1a. tt. say he lives in the San Jose area. 1rv1111, C1l••o1 "''· 11 wr.1e" rrmt U ICI p11t1 lt11 m.n fll Pt•~s ~,t.,.r t1vorlr>11 or OllPOll"O NOTICE TO CRIEOITO•S ---~----------.C..----------w la Dtill>Olf<l plln .. 111 be ~ar6, 11 11 ,... SUPERIOR COUltT 01' THE QU•Ht'd t"ar 1~v v.rl!11n rlSllO"M to tflls ITATti OF CALll'OltllllA l'OR pWlic nal1<r b<! SYDml!lfd lo !M lrv1nt THE COUNTY 01" ORANGl PUBLIC NOTICE CH'/ Council prior to tnr llet flf\9 oi!e. M1. &·14m PICTITIOUI •UllHllU For !u•T""r 0.11111 r~&•dl<111 1tlO pro. Eslltl ol EONA WE II NE It HM• STATIMIMT _ ~d ol~, •It 1~ .. r•iled Dl'10lll .,. 1,... MICKEllSOH. .... E OJI A _w. TM fdlawlrQ 111111.a• -..... dolnO 1>11eii 10 (I.I I! llH! Olllcr of t~ iCITy NICIC.Eill.SON, Oecttlotd. ltull-.. , c It, It., , Io 1 C 1 ,., 11 ., 1 D , Iv, , NOTICE 15 HEREIY Gl\IEN 10< lllf M I W C~STJlUCTION CO , 16r.15 ttvi"' Cihl<l•11•• wr....f lll.l ~.ed crf<ll!or1 ol "" •-n&med -..nt Stn Gonlllo Dr., M~ Vltlo t'»l5 p1111 ;; °" hlf .,,l 1v•lliQle 1111' """' < 1,,. 11111 111 peri.an• Nvlll!I dalmt IOllnsl -5'-Mllllol.. 2'715 SM Goftulo Or., ~lion Ul<I OK-I ,,, ~rfd IO nit -· MlllMln Vlfjo 91115 CITY OF lllVINE wlm ""MCtulty _.,,... .. 1 .. flle,offic. 8ob White. I0$2 l"""'""I A"·· 1 C••ol J Fly"" o1 1M Clf<"l ol ltM' •-W1rillfd ~' ot Gt'*'°' Grow t16.u Deovty Ciri Cllrl lo l>f'HW'I lhtm, wi~ t111 ntC_.,. Thlt Ml-II bel"ll corducttd by 1 ' •• 0 < • ,. .......:11tr1, 10 11W ~ 11 tlll ~ ~. Si mplified Offshore Meas ure Rule Okayed u ,.,,..., •1n91 a.isl Diiiy ' • Pl r.... i!lome'!'S. GRISHAM. WINSTON. SleWll Mft kll Janutry 29· lf:'J 1"'"11 \IANDENBEllG. NOTT AHO CONWAY. Tflll 1l1!9mlnl nr.a wltll ""' COUlltY ---1000 J"'9i111 Trvsl &ulkll"9. lOl'lll llMdl. Clar• o1 0r..., Counl'I G11: JM. '· 1m PUBLIC )10TJCE c eurorn11 9Cll02. wtlldl b llMI pl.cti et WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. COUNTY ----1 bullnns ot llW lll'IClrol{IMld 111 •II rnltt.A CLE .. K, IV llel'IT ), 1111'911"" ~. CHANOI! 01' ZONE PfM•tnlng lo !I'll tsli'lf gt lfld dKIOWll, I' IDQ NOTICE OF PUILIC HEAlllNG TO IE wl!nln fwr''mon!M tl!M' 1'ht fif'll p.IOl!U· Pllblfslltd Oranpt COllt 0111'( Piiot, HELO 1'1' THE CITY COUNCIL 01" 11 .... ol lflh nolkl. JMl!lry I , U. 22. 2', ltn 11-1) THE CITY OF IRV1N£ ON THE PllO-OtteO JAnUtl'f 9, 1'73 P05EO AMENDMENT TO THI! llETTY IARNES 111\llNE INOUSTlllAL COMl"LEX ElKVlrl• ol file Wiii PLANNEO COMMUNITY. o1 ffle tboW 111rntld dfcedtfll NOT ICE HEREBY IS Gl\IEN THAT 1 Gll l~NAM. WIMSTOfll, YAHOllNRll•O, Pullllt He1rl11g Wiii ~ held by IM Ci ty NOTT AMO Cott~Y Covncll Pl tf>e ("¥ ol !•vlftfl °" TUffOty, A1"""9¥1 II L-- PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •UllNISI N&MI! IT&TIM•MT Tht fdlDwlnQ ~ II doinQ bullM:U H • Febr11&ry 11, 191J, 11 1.:JC p.m .. or ts~ 1000 J11'91u Tral 1111141.,. !~rrutter IS pess1Nf, In 1n• Cllv Council LMI a.adl, C&lllorlll&,..,, ASPHALT COATING CO., 2515 W. cnambers, lrvlnf Town Ctn!er, ~Xll ~,.,,. Tel: Ctl)J us-1m Oft119tlllorP1, l'ull1rt!lfl, Ctlllamf1 ~us D•1v•, Su"• no. i'~•rt. Calr!Qr11i1 "" Al_.,.. for Elte,,.lrl• n6Jl i pl1n prot:-Qst,19 10 ame~d l /\I Ir.vine Puttfl.!llt'd O!'tflli!t CH51 01ily Piie!, EIPfC,~lllC., I C•llfot11lt corp0rt!lon, The North American Yacht Racing Union (NAYRU) has come up with a new "simplified'' offshore measqrement rule designed prim.ply fur sailing yacht owners who are oot a.Q.-out racing buffs and for older ncbiLwbich.. hav.e~IM>l .been able to compete under the relatively new and com- plicated International Offshore Rule. l!'ld11strl1I Con,olt• Pl~nnt!<I (Dmm.,..11v J1,.u1ry 15, 22, 29, •"" Ftllf'\Hry 5, 11651 ..,.., KtnnM A-lrv!M, O.•el<>e>mtnl Pl&n 1nc1 lltgult•lom ot ,;,.. 1913 \Jl-73 Ct!llornf• '266.1 Tom Wilder of Newport Tnl1 bUilMU II condllCled Dy • CW· :!:111i:..:r~"'""il Co;.ce ~· tmf"ICIN. lrv ... e, PUBLIC N(111.CE p(l(t!lon. Beach, chief measurer for ~11d Pl~n 11 dtl•9nllfd Cai.e No. t cn-1.l--==:-::=-==:-::::--::c:c--I :;.:.c,~.N~•INr, PttskWll NAYRU, outlined the new rule 10!~ ~tvisrd lrv1f'lt !no1111t!tl ComPlt • SUl'ERIOR COURT 01' TlllE This 11119...,.m wti flied wflfl -c--f the Pl1111'1t!O (ommu.n•l-I i llO pr-.n STATE OF C&LIFOlltNI& l'O• "'Clerlo; of Clrtllge Caun!y Gii J&llVl"I' 11, at \he aanual meeting 0 rt vi•ioro• to 11>t l•vlnt t""usirl•l cemole• THE COUNTY o, oaUGE "73. Ocean Racing Fleet of P lanneo Communl•~ Re<OJ~lt!lorn QI\ c~· Nt. A-1UIO l'n.w.I llln jJl'Qotrty Foc:tlfO wlrflln ll'lt lr:vlne NOTICE 01' HEARING 01' P£TtT10N Ht« Southern California. Jiw:lustrltl Com~lt• . . l'Olt Pill.OUT£ 01" Will IJU> l'otl PuDlbllld Ortl!Of Cont DlllY Pllof, Wilder &aid the l'leW rule is l111t11lftl by !tie C1ly ol I"''"' Pl1<111lng LETTEltS OF &OMIMISTltATIOM JMUtr'I' lS, 21, 29 i'lld FIDr"""I' J, Commissoon W.ITN·THl!·WIU.. ANNUf.D. 1m 121-73 in DO WI Y intended to be a II hi •f<!utll«I llwl &ti~ 'M'lntr1 ~!Ill ol ETHAN PHILLIPS, 1t.1l.C:C...----.,----,,.,,.--_::::::1_=:__c:.-OCC.:::'..-.,.-,-cc==---1 ,_.., 10 tM• l>Olbloc llCl!lct be wt>-ETHA!f L. PMILLIPS, &U ETHAN PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE milled ID IM Cl!y ~oundl prior to the L.tF ... YETTE PHILLIPS, Dect&Md. Marl'IO datt, ti wllict! lime tll PtrlOlll NOTICE IS HEill.EllY GtVEN tNtl-----~====c----f~~==:-,.,-==:-=::=:;--;;::::;( ~rhf<" l1"'Dl'lfl9 Of ~t!O Ukl P!'OPOMd MlLOJIEO E ESTEP fll.S !lied ...,.. 1 "ICTITIO\IS •UIUlllSS STATllMEllT a. WlntOltAWAL l'ltOM P•~ wiH be ~·••d. . tor . fl'robeto ol wm .... .. llAMa STATIMl:Wf l'_AnMllSfm' ~,, ... UlllOllt For further de11lls •et•rdl"' uld Pro. pe1ftkll'I ol Len..-. ol Ad lfll.str1111-, ,,_ tolio.1ng ,..._ • 1r1 dolollg lllCTmOUJ SVSIM"S •AMI poHd pltn, 11\ lnterHltd ~ ••• 111-\._llC, m ~ M' Thi flit ....... ,...... JIM WI~ h vrted lo c1ll ti !hf Dff\C• ol !ht City ol ~~~I :;:::-:.tdl '!..!' .:.·= LEKO 0 EHGIHEEltlNG, t'l6l ,........, 1 ~ .. pl,_. from ttot.~ lrvlne Pl•n"I"' Oepi.rtmrnl, lrvlM TOWl'I ''"'"'"'"' 0 c s Clttl• Wutml1111er f"'3 ~1tlt'og .....-* tkllll-~ c ... ter, •1Gl Ctmpus::liiw , ill.cxwn 244, ~rllcul•r1, ao0 mt! 11>1 II.,,. arid pllQ • 01vid Artll""' Sftlpl>trd, 93Q: AltJUry Mme o1 C • W Pllfll and IC!lty Shop, lrvlnr. Ct lltorn!•, 11!d PfClllC'Hd ol lltArlnO lllt """ "'' _,. loll tor Clrclt, W11tmln1ltr f2'IJ If lts5 Chvreh Slrftt, C0$11 Mal', Ctl~ pl&n " on Ille tiw:l &VIII DI• tor publ!C in· F<tll!'\N,..,. \), nn, It 9:00 l ,m., rn the Yvon ltYlgM tl62 A$IM')' Clrcltr lorn! ~Hon tourtroom ol:#:;""""1 No. 3 ol Wld w.s1m11111.,.. n6'J ' Ti-!· fletltl°"' busltlftl n&ITll 1t111m1urt CITY COUNCIL OF THE COl/rl,j .,~ .... i~'!uf"'7 Wnl, In Tllll bllllfllh JI ti.11111 conducted try. !Of the par!Nnhlp ..... tiled Oii JartVity . CI TY OF lllVINE . ltlf ty • am.. p1rt,,.,.1nlp, :a, 1t71 Jn lhr County "' Or••· Cltol J . Flvnn, Oepu!y C1!y C1tr• 01~ Jllllll~2~ 1f'JOHN 'l'YOll Ltvlfnt Full Ntnw •nd AddAU ol thf l'fl"SOll al the Cltv ol lrviM ~!,~y cier\ 1 Tiii• 1111-1 llltd with tht County Wlthdr1wlft;: ' Publlsllfd Qr1ngt Co.i" 01llv Pllp!, HUltWITL HURWITl. &NO lt~M£• Cler-of OrlnDt County on: Jin. 11, 1911. lllc"11rd WOocll, 965 Del Mir A't'f., J1n~1rv 79. 19/'J lM-73 AM ., LIW WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. COUNTY L119UN1 813dl. Ctlllornl•. ,-~=~=----uo ~~l"'I p o loll: lUS CLEllK, lly T.,_•tl-I M. W1rd, DftNty. Slgntd~ ltk ll1nl Woodt. PUBLIC NOTICE hK!I. i: 1iton11t flUl 1122w ,.un -~==~~==c-ccocc-oc--~:.~4) .,,.._1 Publls.l\ed Ortnol Ca.st OlllY Pllot, PuOlllolled Ort119t1 .Ctlf1t Ottly Pllol, HOT/Cl OF MlltSHAL'S SALE All. kw l"fllll_.. Jft"'"''V 15, 21. 29 Ind Fetiruary S, J1n.,.ry 21. 29 •nd f<tbtlltrY 5, 12, KEITH BLACK llACING ENGINES, p~~~ ~lngt Ca11t 01lly P11o4, 1973 l29-11 197l 17S-7l INC ., PltlntlH YI. LAltill.Y STELLINGS, Jinutry 21, 29, 1nd ffl>f'11•nr •· 1'73 Otfendant. No. 2 l)6 21).1') PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JWwr-t Oat•' 5.ep11mber 21, 1t6i IY vlrtlM ol 1n 1•tcutlon lliwtd on PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUS IUSINl.SS f'ICTITIOUS IUllltlSJ J1nu1ry 15, 1~72 by 1111 Munfc!Pil Court, Ml.Mil ITATlMIMT NA.ME ST&TEMlltrT SOUTH ORANGE COU NTY JUDICIAL SCP-Ill Tht ldlawlll!I ptrllllM and Corpor1tlon Tio! fotlowhie ll"Wfl 11 dalr111 Wtlnf\I DISTRICT. Coon!y ol Ort"9<', Siii• ol SUPl!RIO• COURT Of Tllll! ire dGl"O butlnftl 1•: n · C1lllornl1, \lftDfl I lud9mtnl tnl~ In STATE OF C&Li,OlllllA CASCADE TEltll.ICE COMPANY, .THE AJITIS.AN'S •EHCH, 511\'t 2'ltl fl"Of ol Kellh BIKI ll&d ng E111,,,..1, loc. !"OJI THS COUNTY. OI' OllAlllGI! 2110 E11I K1tell1 A-. An&IW!m, St .. N'6wport k.n f1..a 11 fudgment crt01!or(1) '"" 19&!111! Ltrry Nf. A-1Sfl2 O llfomll t2I03 Robert ChilrtH K&l!Mft. 2141 AllM' Si.ntng1 ts llldOmtnl llfblortsl, shawlllll NOTICE 01" H£AltlMG 01' Pf'TITIOfll Ktrry It. llfkttfr (~II P&rlnet') Pltcf, Codi Melt, f'ld1 • "'' bllltlCtl al M.m .21 tctually o...... FOil PROIATI! 0 1' WILL AMO l'OR 3111 Julllll A'ltnlll, Long llNcll, Tl'lll busl!llU Is btl"'I ~ try •n u ld ludgme<it °" 1111 dalt ol t!w l11e11oce LETTEltS TIESTAMEHT&RY C1lllorfllt '°'°' l!ldlv\~. of said l •11eutl.,., I hiv1 lf"tlfd upon Ill Es1111 o1 M.A.fl:GAllET E. WILEY, L-.1 C. Todd (GfMr&I P•rlnlrl R~ C. KauMft 11>1 rigl'o!, !!lie 11\d lnterHI al wkl 1\ld!I· 0ec ... 5f!O. 1111 $IHr11I" A'ft!Mlf, Long IHCh, Thi• sttlen"el'll li1fd wltn lhl (Ollfl!y mm! detllor!ll In '"' property 1 .. '"' NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEH mtl Ctlllorflll toll5 Cieri'"' Or&nge Counl'I on: J&n. 24. itn. Coun!y ol Orange, Sll!I ol C.al ltwnlt, Mlchilel Hughtl lo.as filed herein I PtllllGll Crutl"" E1111l!y CD r PD r I 11 On • WILLIAM E ST JOHN COUNTY CLERK, 6HC•lbed ts tallows: tor Probilt 01 Wilt and for 1u .... nc• ol A Ctllfort1I& CClf1!0r•llon 1~11 ' ' DepUty Loi 116 ot Trtel '905 ., rtcordoed Ill L•l1•u T11l•menl•rv ID !ht oe1111-Pittner") 211 Ylclll Club W1y, lltdendo Sy Tlltrest M. Wlf'd, • ..m .. &<>Ok 190, Pion JO.J6 ol MIJ.ClllllltOUS ~•••t11CI ID whk n ls ..,.,,, for f\lrl!llt llelCh, C&lltoml1 902n c I Otfl Pllol MIPS In Ille O!ltct ol 1n1 COllf'OIW ~rllcul&rs, •n0 111.111 1he time • ...., plKI Tnli bllllnth I• conctucltd by I Llmlttd Ptlbflshed Orlnoe Qfl w 12, 1•: ll11eor6er of lil l'1 Or111oe '°"""'· ol hr•rlng tM ••mt Ills oe<rn 1o11 tor P1rlntrshlp. Jtl'lllttY 29 •nd F•brv&•Y s, no-n Commonly known 11: 2tl01 LOI Strranos Fe!>t'Utl'V \J, Un, ti 9:00 &.m., Ill the. DATED: Ja1111try 19, ltn 1_c"...:_"----------- S!rtel, ln lflt C!Ty ol l.tounl NIO..el, courtroom of De~rlmlf\t No. 3 ot ulO LEONAill.0 C. TOOO. PUBLIC NOTICE CDll.,tY at Orar199, Stall ot Calllor.,I• courl 11 700 Civic Center Orlw Wt!'SI in Ge......tl PM!nfr NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllEH !Nil on !hf (11y of S.nl& Ana Calllornli ' Tnll 1111-1 Wtl flied wllll IM Cou,..·l-"'------------Tumty, Febr11tr~ lO. 1973. 11 10:00 Ollftl J1n111nr 2, ,m . ly C11rt ol Or"'fl'f Counl'I Gii J1nuarv :u, FICTITIOUS IUSINEIS O'doock A,M, ti M&rlhtl's Ottlct, ' 1973 H&MI STATl.MINT COllrtlJOU~e. 3Ql4J Crow" Vil!f)' P•r-w•y, WILLIAM E. SI JOHN . llll7.. Tht followfll!I ""'°"' •r• dalng Clly"' L•1111n1 Niouel, COVlllV of Dr•ngl, '('.O<m!y Clrrlt . ,UlOP. ltOLSTOM, •UltNS. MIMM &$: . -·~--- Stttt ol C.1lllor"tt, I will Mii &t pyt>llc WILLIAM V, SCHMIOT McKITTRICK, Atlyl. HILLGRE• SQUARE LIOUOR·DELI, fUCllon TO 1111 nlghul bidder, for Cllh hl W 1&11 Mlt\1111 Dr!"" Sulit )Ot A _p,_...ti-1 C~llOll lfw!ul montY QI t!ll U!11lld Stitet, all Ille Newport 9f&ch, C1llforlllt f2"'1I fUS WUllllrt •oullY•nl, nh Pl-:150 E. 17th SI., Coilt Mflt. right, !!II• •iw:l 111rer11I of .. 10 illdQmenl Alton11ys for: Ptl!HorMr lrltll'1~ Hiii.. Cillhlnlll "21t S~I:~.~~~:.,, 1~":~ ~ Wllltt dtfl!Qr(l l 111 tl!r 1bov1 ~rlbtd prOIJlrly, Pub!hhed Oririge Coait O•lty Pllol. PutiHilltd Ofll!flf C.Otlst DlllV Pl1o!, Marl!Yfl N. 1111911all, 103) Whit• S11l1 or so mocn tht•fOf 11 m•Y bl ntenury Jinvary 21• 29• 1"" Flbt\llry 4' 1913 J•lllllfY l't 11111 F1br11try 5, 12, It, w1y, Coron• 0.1 Mar '26lS lo wtllfy uld •~ecvllon, with &etr\led 111-2M-7l 19n 271-73 Tnls ""-llllil Is being COfldUCled by 111 teresl &rid ca1!1 lndlvldu1t. oa1~ J111u1ry :u. 1913, 0 1vit1ori: Sout~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JK1t: R. 11111 .. 111 M1r1n11 Tnl1 •l•tfmfnl flied with !ht Caun!y DlLLAllD O. W!LKlllSON SUPEAIO• COUaT 01' THI! I ,,,., Cltrlt. el OrtflQe County Dll' Jin. 24, lt73. Mlrstitl, Or11191 Cw111y STATE 01' CALll'Oill.NI& l'Oill. MOTICI TO CRl!OITCHIS WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUHTY Iv M L. Brown No. 20, Oll>u!Y THI! COUNTY O" ORAlllGE IUl"l!RIOa COURT 0 , TNE CLEllK, By T!lfrtsl M. Ward, ~~H.S ::·:.::YE~~ A""11ve NOTICE OF HMIE1i."i~~ Of PETITIOM ITATI OI' CALll'ORMI& llO• Publllhtd O•t"'f C!>lsl Dtll't' Pllet, THI COUNTY 01' ORANOI 2t Pl&ln!IH'1 All_., l'Olt l"ROIATI! 01' WILL AND l"O• M•, A-rtl'f:I J&n....,., Ind f dlrwry S, 11, lt, Pllbllshed Df•no• Ca.11 O&lly Piiot. LETTERS 01' ADMINl$TltATIOH Ellll• of M.AltV I! MARKS DKffffd 1rn 231-73 JllMltfY 2t • ...., flbrllttY l, 12, lf73 261·7l WITH·THE·WILL AMMEXl!O NOTICE IS HE .. EllY GIVEN IO .tie -------E1ttt1 of HAllP:!S WILLIAM AN-crtdllOri ol "-lbOW .._,., dtc.otnf PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE--D~tJt'..,~~~RS.OH. lllM...U ~ 111vr1111c111rns10&IMt flle•l-------------1 --------~-~~-1 1 :0T1CE IS HEllElly' GIVEN 'llWll Mid lltceCllnt •fl '"'""'"'-11..J!"'-~' NOTICE 0" PUSLIC Mll&al"O HOTICE 01" TltUSTl!l.'I SALE EVELYlll M.l.lllE ANOEill.SON IWI f\lld wlfll ffle nte.....,..,. 1IOUdlilr'I. In lllf OflkW ~+tS-t.IEAEA IS GIVEN It'll! I Ha. 1411-141 lltrllfl 1 Pffllklrl 10r P""-I• Pl .Jn ind ol "°" chin of 1!W •bow tn111ttcf court, « Public HNr\111 wlll -...... lhr °" Ftbru¥'1' 'D, 1'13, 11 11 ·00 A.NI., lor ISIUtlflCf of L•""'' ol AOmlnlllrltklll lo "'"""' '"""' wttll "" MCH"fY City Coo.Md! ol,,. City 1"4M .., T- CFS SERVICE CO .. PORATION, t wflll·tl'le-wlll-•ed rtttr111e1 lo wfllcn ~· ~ lhl ~=•I .m-N~ di,, FfttvlrY 13, ltn. 1:Xl p.m,, or M Clllfoml& corp;ir1ri<m H duly llll!Olntld /I rn-fOf t11r1111r J)lrtlcvlM" .. tfl!I !Ml CJIUTCH:R :s"'ioun. ll~!rNI Loi -!111ffff1M' 11 pool f, In tllt CITy Tfl,ISIN under &net pllrlUlnl lo Pied ol mt tlmt &iw:l pllU ol he&tlflll !111 UITll ""911 c.ilfomll f007l wllktl I ' tllt Counc:fl CMmbfn. d01 Drift, TN$! rtc!Jl"ded Oclotler fl, lt'71. II Instr. hfl bet1r1 Sf! for Ftbnllry 6, 1973, 11 _. t ':t ouslrNts ., tllt ... lollld 1 1 o1t Suite JCIO, lrv\l!t, Clllfomll , tG ~ NO »25t, ft> book 9164, PIVf )17, of Of· t :OI 1.m., 111 1'111 courtroom of Ots>lrt· ,...c • il• 0 11 ttll iOoptlol'I ol • .. noklllon ~Ill c..... flclll .,ICOI',,. In "" o111c1 of tl'll cauniy ,,....,, NO. l Qf said n11,1rt, ,, 100 c1v1c ;::::1 ~r,::'1"'io:! t11t ;1• •,::,. ";'.:: 11111 traffic ''""' 10 IM Plfkll'lll f1etll"11 ill.KOrOfr of Dr•no-Cauroty, Sl1t1 ol C111i.r Orlw Wis!, Jn tllf: City o1 S.nll f\nt 111/bik&tlolln ol !!Ill :'i.ct 1 t 11 file lrvl'll Tewn Cltlllw, lcullld 11 4201 C1Htoml1, WILL SELL AT PUl!LlC ... uc:-,t.111, Cllllornlt. Olltd J .. 1m . Cllt\P\11 Off", 1,..i.,., C..llfol"llll, TIOM TO HIGHEST BIOOEll l'OR CASH Dtl«I J111. 19, ltn ICA~YE$ HOW£ll """"""' to C.C!lom!• Vtlllde Clldf S.C· C~Wlbltt •I tlmt ol Ult 11'1 lawtvl money WILLIAM e. ST JOHN, .Admll'lltlrlfrtl wit!! fht Wiii tier\ Jtltl].I. ·Pl thf Unllfd SlllH) &I Ille Soutll fr'"I Courtly Clerll Ciro! J, E:lyN'I t11h'tl!Cf to !hf Or1n111 Coon1v okl ,RANK &.. OLOMEN • f!lllllfd ef tllt •l•I• of Dtpul'I City Cl&rlr. Courtlloust, City Pl San!1 A111, Sl1lt Pl O&VIO 5, TINCU.aa OllSO~ ... ="" fll'trufrT"' Of Ille C/IY ol lrYIM C1llloo'11l1. 111 tlQht, 11111 •nct lnter11t con-11w er-..., ,._. IW .. ~ :,,: ..9tvar " It Publlsllfcl Ortnot CNll 0111'1 Piiot y .... fd 10 Ind "°"" held by II .,.,.,., Hild C•ll ....... Calli. 9Hl7 1111 Swl~ ...... ,,,... J111111rv 29, Jt73 'Hl-n Otfd ol Tru1t In tht proptrty shUBled I" T&I: 1714) MS.1414 Lo$ Alltf\ff, CA "'71 llld C1111r1ly •nd Sltll Cltlterl-n : Al"'""'"" i..-1 PtotllloM!' T•h (tlJt .... Lot .. ol TrKI No.. n.u, t t Pl!' tnlll Publll/IM OrtnDt C11111t Oellr Piiot, AH-tt ftr AltrlltllhtrtlrlJr CT& rKorotd '" SODlr; 2n. ~ 2141 Jlfl...,., :D. U, "· Im 1lS.-7l Pvblllllld Or•noe: (!>Isl Dtlly PllO!, l'ICTITIOUS •uSIMl'SS Mlttefl_, M.,.., 111 1111 oltk t of """-------------1 (OUl!ty •econ:i.r OI .. 1o C-fy. PUBLIC NOTICE Jtf\Ulty •• 15, %2, It, U7l tl-7l MA.Ml ST&T•M•lt'T "'T!W •lrlt'I fd0r1U ,...., Ollllr corn"""" ~ TM tollowlr\9 per1IOI! I• doC!IO bulfrwu cMtltnltloll;-if t!'IV:111 ""'-n.1 -PUBLIC NOTICE ••~ dtKrlbld. 1b011t 11 pwporled lo Ill: II •IM7 SUPltEA(l Poat. SE•VICE, 2161 1fMi I GrollfYllW L&nt, S1t1!1 A111, SUPl!ltlO• COUlll;T 01' THa I mM S.llOllllW Or .. eottt IMN mM C•flfomll. ITATI 01' C&Ll~•IA "OR • lltOTIC• TO C•IOITOlll o..ld Chilrl .. Glfltfrl', 27'1 s.ndolltlr ~ .. rlitMCI Tm'" clltclf\mt 111'1 TNI COU•TY CW' OllM9• SUPlltlOlt COUltT 01" THI' ~; ~ ~ .. Ctllllfu(Nd ..., •n 11 1111r tflY i-rlC'1-i ol 1111 sfrflf\ He. .... 7511• IT&Ta Ofl CALll'OllNIA llO• "' ,.,.,,.. Ind°""' -~ 11 MOTK'I 01' Ml&at ... Of' Pl.TITIOM TM• COUNT'Y a. OllAMOI llldh•lduN......:_.,~ C. •-,-'"" ltflolwrl 111r91., llOR PltDIATl Ofl' WILL AMO Jtt. lt-""4r .,...,..., -,., ,;Id ..... Wiii be md but wllhlarl CODICIL AMO ,.. LITTllll Etltlltl of GEOltOl II: ICll:£SS. •lto Tiii• .tta""""" ltltCI •111tt1\.111f c-ty t1>vt11Mlt OI w1rr1o11Ty, .~ IH' Implied, 'Tl:.ST&MENT&RY ~ •• GEoaG• 11.1(HA11t;O ICJIEU tlft1; of°"""" c-rv Gii: Jet'L,., 1m. r1f11'19"11 !Ult. pc11MMlon, or ... E1l< "' ALllEllT M .. It T I N Ind Q, •• KRESS. o•Oll.GE ICltE$$. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUHTY CUIYtbil'~. hi ,,.., lhe ,....nine prirl-SCHlt0£0ER, &U AllERT M. Detwted <:UltlC. IT T'*-M. WfA, o.ut'I'• dpll M1m 01 11'tt1 llOtf<ll :-..hi SCH R 0 E 0 E .. • Ml ALIERT NOTICI IS HEltE•Y GIVEN to t111 . ...,..; f'tl1'1 o.11 ef Tr"'I, '°""'I: t11 In-SCif .. OEDElt, o.c .. tM. Cf1'61"'" ot thf ........ _,.. ~ tl'UllfllMd Orlllllt COit! _,,, PHO!, ..... , "*"'°"· ., Phi NOTICE ts HERE•V GIVEN tlltl tl\ft all .,...._ hfvtftt dlt1'!I ..-imt "" J........... " .... F*-T .. n . ,,, PUBLIC NOTICE substitute or replacement for !OR. I "It can be beaten,,, said Wilder. "It 15 . hope4 thal designers and builders ire not going lo build lo iL NA YRU has long believed that here is a need for a rule to apply to local afternoon -type · short races and that is what this rule Is designed to do. •t. THE NEW rule .....,..waa developed by Don Stromeir, head of, the NA YRU rating rule committee, together with Tom Young, Bennet Fisher and Olin Stephens who put more than a year of study and work inU> the rule. Their goal was a rule that would be simple, easy to measure and as c}Q9e to being equitable as possible. The rule would bot be manda'tory but would be for \be use, if desired, of any '"}'acbt club or yachting association ·tn Nortli America. One or the big objections to ORF that it is assumed that measurement -ranging up to $300. A certificate of measure- ment wider the new simplified ~ rule would cost only $10. ' Howevt;, Wilder told the ORF Iha it 15· assumed lhat every certiflcate holder would tre a member of both the ORF and NA YRU. Member>hlp in each of these organiz.aUoos ls $10 per year. PETER DA VIS of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, who Is the 1973 commodore of the Yacht Racing Union of Southern California, was in New York and heard the proposal and decision. He saJd he would of- fer the full support of YRU toward implementing" the rule In Southern California with the backing and support of ORF. ORF i& an advisory body which ajds !D~~ y~ and other yachting groups tn run- ning offshore ra<:es. YRU is a group of property-owning yacht clubs Jn Southern California. "U acceptable to ORF, it is assumed they would ·'mairltain the file of NA YRU offshore rule yachts, issue periodic lists and assist in the development of a technlcal committee," Wilder said. · AS TO THE ctrtiflcate proc- essing, Wilder said his office is pre~;o-furnlsb-a com- puter printout similar lo the format of a Crulslng Club of America or IOR certificate. These would be In trletJcate, with one co'py to the' owner, one to the measurer and one lo ORF. Wilder said the primary measurements to be con- sidered under the simplified rule would be the rolling and pitching factors. Most of the other factors could be taken from e.iBU!l&_JX:A_or-10R certificate$.' ' Jn preparaUon for the measurement, the only re- qulremeots would be that the tanks should be either full or empty. Wilder .. id all· .. nk1 forward .. ! the mast slmld he emply at the tllne 6l .....ure. rnent. -.<11, "'~"'"'·II •ny ltn'lll CLIFFOltD A. SCHJIOEDf:lt. "-' flltld Mid "°'°'"' .,.. ,..,... to fllt """'· 1m Ul-1J ., .... Dlld of TMI, ~ tllrtl" I lllllllon kw p~ of Wiii ..., ""'"' "" ..._,. 'o"fllll( ..... In ""-effk• THEY BOTH ~ ff ,,.. Ttv1"' •Id of t111 tn11t1 Codldl Md tor ltwara of l;tlll.,.. of Mt ci.A of flW ....,. tllllttlld cwrt or PUBUC NOTICE uwtocl Dy MN DMc1 gt lf'll9t.' Tttl-11"1' lo 1111 Petlli-, Alwrlllcl to ~I 1111m. wlfll ·"" ~1-------------1 TIM bl'l!ffkltry ""°"" uhl o. ot lo whkll l~ midi! lo• hlrllwr Plrffcwl.,... ~le tM ,. .. ...,..... •I ltle tlflce lllCTITtOUI I USIM•IJ BUY YACHTS Trvat tworstofort llltcllttcl fnd dtll....,ed ll'IO tllll TM !lmt '"" ol-of l'lftlrlnt 1111 tf SE'LIM I . lllANKllNt lnl $tnt1 &flf NMI STAT9MINT .. ,, '9 IM ·~ I Wl'IMll o.d11Mlol! lflM l'Ull b8lft ttl 1or ~ IS. lfnt AYWl!ollt Cotlt ' Mell, Clllfllrftl1 f'M27, TM fdlow'lllO f*"1rOl'll ll't f1f Otf1u11 ..Id' DtttllllCI for tale, tfld 1 II 9·911 1.m., In t!ll cwrtniom 111 DfHll· wl'lkll i. lllf Die« of Mlfll" Df ttw _,,.. M: Wfflllll Jf'Hct l'I Dtfttlll Ind EllcllOll lo """'"' No. J al l~kl c-1, 11 100 Cl.;!e ll!lllW"9nfd In 111 INl!llft ptrllffllt!o ID HlMlHQWAYS, 20 Ni•rlnt Aft .. MN. Thill ""'*"""" e&UMd 111d Nonct C.,,lfr °""' W111, 111 lbl Cll't' ot &.nit IM nl•t• o1 "lcl cltttffl'll •• wltnfn ~ l•lllOt ttt•nd, HfWPIH'I ltlcl'I t2t60 Of D1111ut1 dtlf I.~ lo Siii hi Ill' AM, C.Hlttrftlf, INllll9 1fltr I'-ftrlll •1ctllon of fMI llllill!H H, JOMton, t111 hrlidt Dr., NCOt'drtCI In , ... """'" Wllll'I ~ rul Ol!Od J1-ry lA, 1fn. notlct. ,_ ctll Mflr fH75 jltOOll'IY' II 111(.•t# .. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN 04!.o J-1 ... 1f7l Awloll Finl.,., 111 Ollp., l•lbol .~ ... Dito: J1nuM ~ •• 1m Covn11 c .. ,. Sll1¥ • FRANKLIN TM• tMlntU II ... ,. COl!tl.J(!ltl try • CF.$ 5(~VIC.I CORPOA-'Tl()fi GlllOM, DUNN AND CJlU'TCKllt I•~ ot !tit Will Pll1l'llnlllll,.. ., N10 Trwtw .,, W'Hllfm .... """'-.., !flt tllO.ft Mtnlll dectdtn! ...... n H, Jn-·~ WAV H• A. •01, Ill....,.,. Ct11ltr' Df1ft, 11'111.. la\.IM I . l'RANK&.IM Tlllt tl•ltlmllll llltld with tM ~ 1!'.ltKllll~t \llCt' ""91del'tl .......,. •t1dl, c.!Utrlllt ._ I• $Mff AN AWIWI Cltr'k: ot or...,. COl/!lt'f 111: .1111. 4, lf'1 ' Aimlorln d ....,.._. T.tz f"~ .......,. tflll ,_.., CA tat.tr WILLIAM !", $T JOHN, COllNfY L.tM1 No, O.l'h • ltlNNllO'r AlttftlYS ftri ,_lltt.ff T .. 1 fn41 ~ Cl llllC', lly htly J, &irst•ttrl, DtlMllT, IPS M1'1i !"VWllMd Or11111 Coett 0.lly Pit.ti, ""'""' Ill ,,. flw I'll* ,,........ er-...,. Cf1f1f pelly lllw, Jf/llMllY .. • • .,. "*'*'I' l, ltn Pllltllllltd Otantt Ca.it Otlly llflot, Pvblltlled Or.,.. Ca.tt Dirty ,...~ ~ 2' -,._...,., 1, u . 1f1' »n nt·n J__..., 1, 1!, n, tt, ttn •11 J-..rv 1, 1s. tz, 2', 1m 1t-11 f . I , • ' \ \ • NEW YORK (AP) -Some- one J ked O.vld R. l'orl<tt Jr., preskk!nt of flatteru Yach~ who WM In town for thl N11kllia1 Boot ·Show, whit type of '"'°pie buy )'lthlll 14'I'hose wtfo'Cllh afford• them and llloae who ...,>~ • he replied. "' ' • ' I I ' . ~· N~ Enten~Mftl1t1itder USC 'fakes Collegiate Yacht Race · Lido Race To Twichell Forest Work~ C&pllal--SOUTH LAKE TAHOE ,- U.S. Forest Service bN ..,. nounced ~ 15 coosolidaltnc management acllvltlet on foreSI oervlce tind;-1n· tlie Lake Tahoe t!uln. •· • ' • ~ Rec•t .. chalnuD, IHO El Prado A ... ,, Looi ~l~ ., . ..-;~_, Siin1 to , Visit'. Boat SJiow~Ge I ., \ ' I' ' I' 1, ~· I .... 1 • • 'f I I' 'I I . .... " "' ' ~ f.1 I' •• • •• ' • .,, "' • h -! • . t ~ ix ri' 1!-1 -Ii 1,-: Iii ... • ~; r,o; " ~ "" I• "' t ~ .4 i )i l! Ii f"1, ·~ . .. " ::·, ~· ., ~-~ • -,. J ' ,. ., f ·' • .:.'' , • :~ --~ • .. • • ' . ' ,., J '. .. \ . . • • '• .. ' • -... 1<: .. ... .. \ • ... - . . , ~ ,t, L , , ·'Eti Gftrde' • "wniNER OF 3 , ... oo~·oeN GLOBE ·•· -NOMINATION$ . ' 9. WAi.Tllt MAnt;tAU;;.., a.tAchf .• CAIQL IUINm • . _,...~ '1.!iit e •11).LDfNI PAM l ,, ... 1 ... , .... -~~~ LIDO ·:.:~~-, l" t ~ .. ' • ' ' " ' It .......... ,_. ___ ,,_ , NOW : EXCLUSIVE l OIANGI COUNTY ' . ' GENE HACKM!if;I .. ERNEST'• .. ,.._ IORGNIHE ... • RED Btlf10NS CAROi. •· lYl£f In Huntington Finch · to Speak ... -_...,.,-,, - At KOCE Rites Robert Floch, f o r m e r a third of its broadcast time secretary of Health Educa.fion each to l<Y.:al community ar- iiif Welfare ana CoWiSelor to . fairs programmirig, national J>T;sld~nt Nixon, Will speak at Public ~roadcasting Sy~tem dt.dication c ere in on i es f:~:~:~a~~al~ucauonal Wednesday f o r KOCE·TV .. ' -. MOtld~, JanUAry 2q, tq13 OAILV PILOT ifl ~_.:.;---__;__;---~~~~~~ ENTERTAINMENT • 'Co111ed)1' Tr}·o11ts At J_ido Opf'h 1 ~·"dingii will be he.Id Tucsd:iy .end \\'cdnesday e\l'n- ings b~· the Lido Isl£' Plav1•r.; for their .opri1g productu1n. "!:H11ck Comedy"· by Pch•:· Sharf·~r. Channel 50 in Huntington Beach. The station-has bee'.n on the Israel New Baclidrop Jlr.n i\!b~ rt;-;cn. -'whose prn· duetiun 1r ··C h amp a g n 1· Con111lf'~. ' i" curre11tly •H' stage in Santa Ana, will dirt«! the corned\ A casf of fi1 c men and three women is re· quired. --.. -~-.. StAO!OM •d ,'!; ·~ SOUTH COAST PLAZA # l' Co1t1 M111 -546·2711 UA CINEMA Or1ng1 -532-6721 HIGHWAY lt DltlYE·IN W11tminri1r -534-6212 50RRY~O "ASSES --Elle:::~:-..-=-s!.;"tf - ... ~-O'T•ll -5'jhll.~ "MAN OF LA MANCHA" IErc~t" llllP'fll"l'l'I w1,.., .,-J licffolmy 1ow1n11 "l'IDDLl!R OH THI! ROOF" "SLAUGMTERNOUll J" • "CATCM tt'' "ELVIS ON TOUR" . ·- "SKY JACKt!D" (l'Gl "JU0911 ROY atAN!' .... "THE REVENGIRI" ""ETE 'N TILLll" ... "PLAT IT AGAIN, SAM" UA CITY CINEMA e SAT & SUN e ll:Jf & t:Jf ,.M. "IElll:A IN TIIE IOTCH•N" (G) Cot:Ott Hl'lll OY.,.I tl'MI Wnkl "THE VALACNI • "":>Ell!" _,.,__ "THI! Gll:IS- IOM GANG" h tll I" C110r 1'72 c-.. 11 ... , ,.._,.. "$LAUGNT•R·HOUIR l'IVI" HCATCN-12" ,.,,. 111c.i.r11t1 • '" ' \ The him makers are of· Tryouts will be held cit 7 10 both nights at the Lido 1~11· Clu\JITousr,mr\'t rL,do--&:nirt Nev>'porl Beach. The play \\'ill open ~larch 27 for a fivc-da~ 'llt~MDNI !41-15St ,or !Nfo•MATIOI ~""' -HELD OVER "Vanishicg Wilderness" SHOWING NOW! UP BARBRA THE STREISAND "llYILY AND FUJ!Nl rARHA STREISAND IS EXCElLENTI" ·CUE MAGAZI NE BOX AJAiUilT ,t<.-.. .'~-_,, llW>.\C'.O:' " ll'UUUOWIOT -•hrk{11r-.! ·v1 1-.:I ..... mmwcl N.,.. Tljl s.t.ICJIOr' CO SJNlllWCDWC11i0.P •S0.1'1'\Al'lll'l'llll,\ IW.f( !l»~i ''•"" 'U·lil'"''' II:°""' V."""i. [qcltDll"-~•·~09"--•· .,_. ".UQIU""'"')" '*"•ICLl •l• •1 . .-io-c.t:·•~1>Ct~NlWl:ISfJiC•..-...~ BARIRA ~~ STREISAND ltl "80l(_j ,lUS • Llf ""All:Y•N (.tN(HllC ~ .... l\N "PllMI CUT" l"S•l.ITWUI CO·•rTI (.IN¥>1•C(Mll'-I H"llMICllt" McQU EEN MacGllAW TIIEGETAWAY .............. iou -""-'•• ..... - ... -· ... ll.."l•"'' ~·--~ lllll•- ' • ' DAIL V P'ILOf Everyone Hes Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PllOI COMMERCIAL: 6 offices; Dr. will trade for T.D.'s or ! FOUR stores, Bar, Liquor store, Printers & auto parts. SIX stores plus room for future develop- ment. RACE TRACK,! nil.-& \4-mi,-grandstand, - snack bar, house, office. Great for lea.sing to Groups, Auto racing, Camperts etc. 48 Acres. Elsinore. 3 Bdrm. -$32,800 -LOTS: No Down! 4 Bdrm.! C·l -IOOxIBO, Beach Blvd. $75,000. riA 750. N do G 1• 2 Secluded rear llvin&: nn. R·2-96xl98, .alley. $23,000. .-n. 0 . wn .. · · s. F'ireplace, J baths. Family R·2-216xl68. Corner. S BR house. MAKE baths.. PallO,. _d~ l'.11· rn1. Dining rm. Dishwasher, Move-i n_ conchtwxi. I' amily built·ins. 1 rnmedia 1 e offer. nn. Quiet c u I -de· sac. possession. New solarium. A-1-lOOxSOO across from Mile Sq. golf College Prk home. 54G-173J. 5'l0-1120. course. Variance possible. 1--------, _________ 1 . C4-229i444, Beach Blvd. Sharp 3 Bdrm.! $36.900. Cathedral ceiling. Qu iet cul-de-sae. Beautiful landscaping. Dining rm., buiJ t.lns, dlsh1vasher . Fireplace. 541>-I no. Pool Home! $37.950. 3 bedrooms, 2 batM. Patio. E.>,;tra stora,gc rm. Built-ins. 2 fireplaces. f'amily rm. Beautilul. 5'»-li20. FOR RENT /LEASE: Medical/General office. Beach & McFadden. air conditioned offices_: Flexible lease. Warehouse for rent ... minimum 1/M sq. fl storage area. !Oc sq. ft. Downtown HunUng· ton Beach. 4. ·Bdrms. - ' u;;r US KNOW YOUR NEEDS, if we don't Spanish 4 Bdrm.! ha\llri< we'll !ind it. w.l.400. Beautiful horM. ~ $30,900! Large covered patio. 2 full Lovely home. Indirec t lighting. Dining nn. Built· lns. Extra storage space. Well-maintained. !>4Cr173J I::'"';-~ -::.· ',i.'Jfr~ 968-4433 ~21968-4433 cllihwasher. Expe rtl y ~ 11, landscaped. ~Jn!. 2935 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA SU-1720 ~era I _ General ****** * TAfLOR CO. * CAMEO SHORES-$117.000 Great ocean view from this lovely 3 bdrm home with family rm, formal dining, 4 baths. Pool in front court-yd. Fireplace in living rm &: master bdrm. Separate bonus room. ••0ur 21th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RNltors 2111 S.n Jooquln'iffli ROOd NEWPORT CENTER, N. 8 . ~10 General ef;nJa !}6~ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT 1 HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 2S Linda Isle Drive Custom 4 bdrm., 31> baths, or 3 bdrm. & lge. game rm. Facing Harbor Island. Mstr. Bdrm. bas adjoin. study, Mstr. ba. has ja- cuzzi & sauna rm. Slip for lge. boat. $265,000. For Complete Information On All HomH & Lots, PIH .. Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 S.yslde Dr., Suite 1, H.B. 675-4161 Gener•I YOU ARE ---A---WINNER • \\'ESI'CLIFF -3 bdrm., family nn. and heated "POOL." New carpels &: paint. Reduced lo S57 ,500. 646-3928 646-4543 eve. e BA YSHORES • 2 Bdrm .. den, firepl. New S51 ,500. w..ma 968-5429 eve. e CO MMERCIAL - Restaurant &: a p t s . Fa i rv ie w St., C.~1. Drastically reduced to $1 .200. 646-mB 675-1817 eve. There is a rearon , 18 years rwne location Lochenmyer Rl' i ltor IOlil \I I Ol\0\ . ' General I General Gener•I _,..-,.7 AwtC:.-:~ tp..uV1lllllassnns REALTORS 2Gel!ASTCQqJ-y CORONA DB. MAll,CAUF, ·644·7270 A RARE RND A real CdM charmer, on the ocean side of Hwy., yet walking distance to all shoP.ping. This 3 bdrm., 111 bath home has additional sleeping room in 2 car garage; we have the · key -give us a ca!L Offered at $64,500 NEW USTING Eastside Costa Mesa · 3 BR -$31,000 CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS I I .. . ... ,; ""'•·-··· .. .. CLASSIFIED · AD-S . . You Can Soll It, Find It, Tra'de I+ Witli e Want Ad. • A~·~ DUPLEXINVl$TMINT Here's a tluplei lnyettn\Ollt amid the tall tree1 of old Corona de! Mar. There'• a 2 bedroom, 2 bath home with fireplace and hardwood floors and a cute 2'bedroom over- the-garage rear unit' with beam 'Ctlllngs. Owner wtU consider 1511 doirn payment. Now prtced'at 168,900. " U-1-ISOf-A Ill!. MAI,·- .A -.. :i.., Cote U Pl!jl(;)U I: tlfJM~S-. -- RIALTOIS ------------ in..AreA11 TopProleoolonll1 Since 1949 CLO TO HACH $28,900 Hunttn~ Beach -a!IDost new 4 bdrm., 3 bath conJlo -frplc., Irick patio, 2 car gar- age, swimming pool. Cbllclren' play area. Completely furnished! Easy terms. . -- BIG CANYON . , associated 6ROKE~5-ULA! TQf\~ 202~ W Balboa t>1J-Ji.iJ 2t ~'~~ s .._.,, :Ill bo\tia or JUe delJKht arw' trattftd in • Bl. Like -• 2 -01 thw"" ~ble ~ . -home. Slt In )'OUI' ~Ufully ,._,_ __ ... _, _ _. Ready to move 1n beauty • paneled living room and run I'" htl.le living rm " fan1liy nn, Your tOC!I through the new , A BAYFRONT English e11tate, limply mqnilicent 5 Bedroom, 5 Bath OOme with ...... pier. slip il maey, many expensive -.. lncludlnr wine claoet. fmp>rted Illa ud ftxtl.r:rN, wet bar, l'\leQ a cbau&r'a den 1115,000 HARBOR ,, • modern kitcb, lots of cup;-luib shag carpeting while board space, huge master you view Ull~place arxl bdnn, beam ceilinas, lo\v your kids ~--..lng in the dcN.u paymt. huge Pllril:-1.ik@ yard. Just 6«5-7221 one blOck: frotn the Balearic 1733 Westcl.Uf Dr., N.B. School, and priced at only JUST RIGHT I 148.900. Call 51&-231.1. • OPEN 1U. I• (Ty Fl.IN 10 IE NICE.I Executive Wntclltt 3 bed., 2 bath on manicured corner "Jot, :Pluah carpets, ·drap8., btdltinl, d1nin& room - _.., yard w1lll heatod =iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiO.~ pJOI.! Priced b)' e9I"' owner - at '181.950 -&ibmlt )'OW' HARD TO l'IND ~THE REAL ' ~ l5f ,qlLH~ termal ! ... duplex oa ~ Pt. 1 Comp. redeoor. inlide; ! BR. 1 ba. ffCh IJ'llt. Live in U~ I per , lower ieued $Ji5 month 172.500. Cilll~ 673-3863 675-8886 Eves. ~r. associated BR OKERS.--MEAL TOR S liJ2 ~ W 601boa ~71-J 66J · • HERITAGt . R[l\1 T(lRS •, . ' ' • l .1 ._ IBIT UYI? f~ r:Jj. • ·, Mond1Y, January 29, 197) OA!LY PJLOT 2l ~~1 !!!!!!!!!!~~~1~~~,~~~s:~1~~~,~~~~~~~~ _,,,_ I~ I _..,_ j~ I _ .. _ I~ I _.... I~ I -.... -.. -I~ I --l~I -..... -I~ -·I • 0.-ol 1'1; .. ~,· .. ----~-~, _port -h Busl.... HOUIOI Unfum. iijiij;iij~;:;;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ;;;;;~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 '"'L_l_T_T~L~E-R-:-±D...:..8-A_R_N_ , , NEWPORT Heigh ti, 2 BR, I Opportunity 200 Gonortl ELEGANT NEAR CLUll Hu slump 1 !lrtpla<e BIO llEAuTIFUL BA. 2 car .. r., l"'K• lot. -1---'----- 'BEACH" TENNIS . with mwtUe ·and ra1'<d OXPORD'MOOEL 126•950· S4ll-76S8. **PARTNER tt FREEll CUSTOM Fwt, • BR. home or -hearth, slncham wallpaper, Evorythlna "°" could ""' r ... W11tmln1t1r Aotlve pre! .. Ted with 125,000 • Landlordt-Ownors cio.c to Mesa Verde Country house. with pane 11 n I , warm carpeta, det"Orattd ln . . . 3 LdMn., 21l ba .. NEW home h.. 2 cub .ft manqement abilcy. We v.111 reler ien.nt1 to )'OU. dub -Larae executive 4 beam.1, It Sood maattt tulte. anUqlJl!t )'Ol.l Y.'Ol'l't believe. upended carpetlng and "I ewntr • Xlnt 1tarUna ialary A Iba.re FREE of cbaip .•. "Maey bedroom witl;l 34' eod, poo1. Owner is, rnovltaved.Movtna Z>'xll' .l&(Jlily ri;n, 4 dra~ ... ·allpaptr, carpeted •tocy. 4 BR, 3 ba, tam~ I profits. Should eu.Uy net dealrable t1.'fWllt on our table, wet bat, refria., etc. lnto new liomc. $n.SOO. :!: bedrna. Trarufen'l!d ·to hon~~ room, attractive bonua rm. 2700 sq. !!· party seJe.cted OYet $35;600 waiting list. Newly decorated wllh lwt· M. Vreel&M, --Chlcago,-N6--do'fl'n YA or Jand,scaping with fountain Completed by ·May, All ffi... tat ~ar. (F\llly secured). ALA Rent•I• • 6'~ V. ACRE rlSJSIDE unous 1 ha1 carpet.Ina. COLDWEU.. BANKER name your term1. J u.t '!19 a ereet areenbel.t loca-terior &: ext. options l;tlll Warehouse Dist. Two na- /4 -U Sp&rkllns pool and. kwely R.eallln 644-2430, 8l3--0'lO() Hated 1U<R 962-5511 ~ ~900 incl. 1-nd. open. Much less than aolna: tlonal COf'l\PM~I. Dutlea in. ~ . $34,500 =AaE~TO~ 5'0NtwPOttC.-J:'J ~-~~'i.:· ,!'~~ /8111d' •• ,,. pri.,.. 2"131'H9>2 att ''3'1 ~=~/:~fE~, Thi. ls a .mall ranch * B., •cH _,; "'""'" -on ........ I moot rigid ;...,1;..11on ' , ..,.. "J,lr Total e~erior maint~ I I Ret. Ex. For penonri-con: \ with gorgeous S bdrm 2 OCEAN BREEZE * DUPllX * total elecbjc builtlM and --jllp fldentlal toto.-vtew ""'" FURNISHED bath liotae, heavy shake NEWPORT HEIGHTS ~ 1 1 -~ , t "•ltd 2 """'°nd. 2 to • bedrooms. REALTY . Claulned ad No. 603, Dally • PRIVACY! s p ". roof wile saver built-in Cozy cottage ~c us ve ... "!-' ,us ~ ~k · ~!JI.ion. From A C.ompanf Wllh Vtak>n PUot., P .O. Box 1560 'Costa Bacllelor. Nr. shops. UtU kltc~en, huge massiVe B~:ytla=~e ~auJ~e 1 ~":r. ~nO~'heniA~beca~: Univ. Patk Cent.tr, Irvine Mobile Homo Mesa, Ca. 92626. ' incl. .sa~'-· ---- brick fireplace, forced n.oom ror boat-or camper fonnal dlnlne. llWMleck 4 built I.hem. of:! ~AMss;~M For S.le 125 NEWPORT BEACH e OCEANFRONT! Furn. air heat, owners are in Call agent 546-7652 double aaraa:e. Priced tor l•rwln Nalty Inc. Marine Contractlitc Ftnn Bacl\e.lor. "All uW incl. $90. h This . u lmmed. ""'' al 165,900. CaU <n4) -I T ..... _ Home Rentals Finest • q u t p m. n I & 305 a urry. . is rea Y 2 Story. 2 BR, 11Ai Ba. Condo. M5-8424 SOUTll COASI' -;;;;;;;,,:.;~:=;;~~--o..J-~rv::l~no-:=•::rr:.:•:!c~•~-:-"-'. ~UR __ waterfmnt Joca&n._JSJL • OOUJJOUSE? l BR. Nr. onwl·a·ldnd. See it -AU__bll:.ln~~_,,_....,..,.. REAL10RS:---~ Hunll.....,lliiCh old com,,.;,. gp... avail i!i>n!s-:-Yaii! lor pe£$11S: -Cati Red CarpetRe • garage. Qi.iiet Eastaide loca· 3 BR., 2 BA, lrg. Jenced SALES & LEASING tor boat salei 1: repairs. . , tQrs 546-8640. ~ns:~:·~~.0~~~ A TERRIFIC -8UYI SUPER ~~r2iop:i~t1::~~~~ hill service ract11ty BILL GRUNDY RLTR. ~1!, ~::em~· I ,. • - , ' ... ' ; Av - .r·l!191 , . ,., j ' c L A -· .";I I I F I E D 6 4 2 tl&l" . ' 3 BED-2 BATH FURNISHED NO DOWll TO VETS $26,900!!! So und unbelievable? Well here it is and it has a built-in kitchen, 2 car garage, forced air heat- ing. Hurry 011 this one- Call RA!d Carpet Real· tors 54U640. EXECUTIVE SPECIAL . $35,750. - This "beauty sold quick- ly once but now it'S back on the market. It's a beaull!Ul-3 -be<l!Wm home with 2 bath, well organized built-in kil- chetii shake roof, pres- tiege area-won't last- Best value in this price ~&-Call Red Carpet · tors 546-8640 oant. 2-Sio.." • b<lnns., 31> FANTASTIC Vu, Mu" "11· Aski•• Damnar Motor Homes 675-4161 Ulil Incl.' SUS. ' . b&ths, lam. rm. & fml. din. $59,500. 675--1689. • Beau'" Salon . UNFURNISHED Private Beach Ar•• · Bayahorea -the place to live lot° a happy, carefree lite. Gated area w/private bay beaches. Call to lee hornet from $59,900. Mary Harvey COLDWELL, BANKER nn. Home in excellent con-Owner tranafen-ed, must . "' e NEEDS Low! 2 Br Fncd dltlon &: overlooking Back leave this 6 month old 2. L•guna Beach 531 6800 Card & Gift Store • Bay. SllB.500. F.dle Olson story execu~ve home. Enor. _,.. * NEW * • ~t& S&leti!,:!rv ~ Encl Ill'. Kida/pet& Re~~w~~~ :i'::;: :m~:t "::. CUatom view home: lge. ~YAd~!!rk~ ~t HOLLAND8u1.Sal:1 e NF.AR &acb! 2 BR. Fncd 550 Newport Oentrr Dr. Formal dining room, 600 sq priv. awlm. pool. 2 Sty. stuc-$8). Cmta Mesa. $4500. 1(11;'11 1TI6 Oranae. CM 64.5-4170 yrd. encl . ear, kids/pell . ft master bedroont-auit.,e oo; heavy shake root 4 down. (Salesman Needed) $150. •• _ Realton 64M430, 1133--0'lOO Linda Isle L•- 1 .,.,sso_,N.,e!!wpo!!!!rt!!!!C!!•"".,.,' .,°'.,·.,· P Choice location on bea.1.U:ilul I ' Linda. 5 Bdnm. plus ~· plus 3 other bedritu1. 2'11 Spa.clout bdrms., lge. living American SST-9390 RepreHnt1ti'lfl W1nted • DEU-G-HTF_UL_! -I -BR. LrK Baths, custom Uc-back & family rms, w/bea.m 12X58 MAGNOUA, 2 bed, Business opport. for whole-tl'ff shaded lot. Util inc[ drapes w/lheen, shaa: car-ceU'a. Massive frplc. Lots o( lge screen room. Adlt. park. sale, retail bus. Full or ~ $l65. · pet thruout. All elec kitchen tile Ir. &la.u, Loads o( Rent $60. $4995. Costa Mesa. time, Couples pref. Sniall Have eomdbinc )IOI.I want to aell? Clauitied adl do It -• oall NOW MS-<m. The fam11,y room. Expenatve carpeting &: draperies. Never Occupied. Eileen Hu- COLDWELL, BANKER Realtol"ll S.24ll. 833-0700 550 Newport c.entel° Dr. Balboa Penln1ul1 w/dbl oven & 30larium tile storage area. See this ex· American f67-9390 invest. For intervieW, call e SPREADING Room! 3 •·-noor. Step down living nn, ceptional home at $89,900. 8X35 GARDENER, 1 bdnn, 540-0928. BR, h~ fncd )Td. well landscaped &. lots of * &--2800 * Newport Be.ach. Adult park. BEAUTY SALON, SUPER Kkls/pcta ok. $185: concrete. Call to inspect and .ftttfl»U«a. $1!lJO. . SHARP. \VE HAVE LOTS MORE di.scuu temu. 968-tefi. ~ American 557-9390 5 station•, low rent, Terms, All. PRJCES &. SIZES! .. •.• D:11i .o: C-'A•f fM'( UOO-PENINSULA Eves. 842-8780 Kltllll ~~ 2 Br 2 Ba 934 Sq Ft Beauty SECRETARIAL 8 e rv 1 c e If you need help call today *'... Gor&eou.s vw of bay&: area Laguna. Growl.na: oppor. tor ALA Rentals • ~ CH $25,000 ' 540-3li'T2 owner-manager. Carol, 1'41 ... wport Blvd. CM DAILY PILOT -NEW DUPLEX IOX41 KIT. 2 bed, adult pa'"' 494-3'81 · FREE 3 &. 4 BR. be cei.I' 4 · · · the mo Y !>OIU' inJ n Low rent. Cosla Mesa,1--------- . trplcs. Patios.~ ~-$24,950. ~bd~ r2mu~i&oa · 2-bubdltdnn~· ,: $2996. Money to Loan 240 Rental Book with DW1)' to Quit:k S101 soo American 557-9390 ctioo.e from. Stop by and __ ... _(i£M . . 4c!~p2 ~rg ~~~~~ ~~a';'°:W ~~lveCX~)S n~ LIKE new 12x60, 4Expando 1st JD Loans browR.:-. === 1610 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. ove1 nized dbl n~ar, patio, Dick John n. $57,500. lladvl~t ':!'~..i.2 B~ It:~· . • ~ - REALTORS 642-4623 Pants, treea.. D!:&ut entry, .-.n, ' 6% % INTEREST trg kiUfam rm combo, bltin ..I~~ 5.ll-'1232. 2 d TD L 2790 Hatbor Blvd. at Adam co .... n1 dol Mar ranae, dbl ..... !rg ..,..,., ..,./TOr-an 2·lx5.I', 2 BR. + D. n ' ' n . oans Coat• ..... 545--0465 OPEN HOUSE suite w/pvt hath. Plenty or RE BA. in Driftwood Beach IASTaLUFF l.ov•ly 4 Bedroom Lusk Har-storqe &: wardrobes, w/w AL ESTATE Club, H.B. fl.950. 536--0321. Lowest rates Orange Co. IndivlduaJ tl{>me over 2000 apt.a A drps, gd Joe. 1190 Glenneyre St. S•ttl1r Mt9. Co. .,,. ft unusual j,.,...., 4 bed· bor View, fee land, motiva· 1, .,Jst-9-173 M9-0316 ~ 642-2171 54~LI room~,. ··0,. 3 • .,-.·. F'am'"' ted .. seller, good view. $85,-ST V LUE' lteal Estate. ""' ~ 500. 1327 Keel Dr., 1-4:30 BE A • Gene~! Serving Hal'bor area 21 yrs. room plus lar&e formal din· PM.daily. Call 675--7225. t~ (=J~JQ So clenn it sparkles! A iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;miiill CONSOLIPATE BILLS in;&" room. Complete privacy -c beautiful J BR, 2 BA. VIE\v1 Privat~ money available \\'1th enclosed rear and front -11 1••· $26 0 home in En1erald Terrace. Buslne11 ~roP9rty 154 2ND TD'S -ANY AMOUNT yards. Ul\•ely garden. No I] ~ • 95 • Walls ol ~lo!!et!I & budt1ns. Call <TI4) 615-4494 Bier pet.s. ~month. 1-~f.;J ';~rp. ~usem~y ~1t~: ~!~e:!~~.5oo~uriei ~Y 1::. ~&.,. ~~ ]~ ~~~ hnin':,::7"3f& • ~;__· _, Uively carpet.a, drapes, NICHOLS REAL ESI'ATE trms. ~-or™· I ..._..,... 11! 1---------1 WUIDIAIY or tile cOLwru. co. shelving. Oversi.ied lot w/ 2025 s. Coast Hwy. Oupl1x11/Unhs ni LINDO AVE. 707 ACACIA room for boat or trailer. 494-72ai s•I• 162 New vtew home. 3 bdnna., CALL "84456 CHOICE LOCATION H p 1-L-• 300 211 ba. Stepa to bay, 3 bib A winner ln a duplex! 2 I: FOR Sale by owner/a&ent. ,5 OU1e1 um......,. to beach. ?: ';. 2~Pro~ H;'Ya .. ~n ~t:1nt~m':i.3~R~ units, 1.houae &: 2 dup1exea 1'hfte bedroom, 2 baths, DAVIS REALTY 60-7tm -""' ... ~! I tg •--1 F.uta:kte Costa Me a a, fireplace, ne~ --ta CoroM del Mir ........... ..,.,., w w cp • '"'"t'"'• .. .,c, Mon-•y,.nt-••• --~ Shown From Office blUns, elec. a t o v e, uu •• ...,, ~-A: drapes, dining 1-----1-----1 A bargain in a lovely 3 bdrm. dialunaalet, dbl a;ar, encld LARGE Deluxe Duplex, 2 room, bu!lt-in kitchen. $225 $%1.5, 2 br, b tn&. new crptl:, home in Eaatside Costa front patio, Jovel)' lnd.scP&. Br, l"' Ba ea.ch apt. $80,000. per month. Free rental drps, dbl carport. decl!:, ?i-1'esa. Good locatton, close $23 500 50' x 138' lot, 2 blka to Owner, 838-f949. ael'Yice. ~l. M' k-f I to.schoola.Qukk__., · • ' hlghschoo!. One or tho bot· ESTATE BUILDER ~·i!,.br~!~>d, 1 -ar e p ace MORGAN REAL TV 3 BR, 2 Ba, ovenlu dbl. IOI' built "°""' in Legw>a 4 UNITS 10%, DOWN C.M. $325. 3 br, 2 ba, frok, pr, 673-6642 67.s.6459 a:ar, lrg fenced lot, only B at $49,950. By owner, Units ran be uperaded I: Realtors IW&-m.t ydi ~tkl. 2 blks bch. ~ ,,, i....aii , , ·I • 't' ', I ' ORANGE '. COAST'S leading -HARBOR VIEW HILU ~·FA4!t. = :~: 4*-~i:· wkend. 2BA ~(&increased. 55T-tllm Xl43 Wtatclltt Drive NU-VIEW RENTALS Spectacular harbol" & ocean front room, crpta drps. N~ ~ =ll~ * • I Open 'till 9 PM 673-«l30 or 49t-3241 ' UY ON ' TH ' -) view· Lusk 4 BR A l.ge Min. $1200 down. Piymenta ocean w, $38,500. Inquire CoroN del M• r WOW, new Spanilh 3 BR., l Clisoifiod ,~ fam rm. Prof decorated A: less then rent. A real ......-.. ..., "'"" Ba Bl( r--na n •••• MARKET-$24,000. ~ lw.&/\ !an,isc:apod. 119,500. atartec hOrri•. It'• .~""". L-ldo Isle S<t>. Garaae unit $91). Also $400 "',;... 0~~ .,/:;"i -. Open daily 1-4, 6".1875 See Jt today. Cotta(,-e, C.M. $85. Md H.B. 67H510 ·m,$1SOC:-b,;1':al+mo;l~:.%0~ I : II ie I BJ.,~· ~~~:: I' · 3 BR. " DEN In_,,. Pr0t10rly 166 R'!.:'t~ f79.l430 3·"'=B°"R.~. "'2:-ea.;:,-,-faml,,..,,.ly__..nn"'.~:1 bedtm 2 ~th home, now tli&wtor5* . 11 vu ~ Idea1 family home · xtnt patio, view. mi Mo. ~:;:.•~lou~~~~ar.,:; Clonifio.t;on 100-,~124 0~~·b:::'. :::.:..~~.::~: ~ba:;:'lh~!Quist:,PendRl~~!~th~;; I~ ~er.A ~t~1:~;~;~;::;~br w/ ::in:-, ~PJ:~: yott'tt miss it-Red Car-MhHornet Jilll beaut. cond. 2 &: 1, 3 &: 2, baths. Rear' llVin&" rm. a. e o e a-4 Unifi .. , , , $60,000 $225, 1 tn;. nicely turn. Frplc, furnished home for rent in pet Realtors 546-8640. · . $610. mo. income. Prine. on-Bullt-tna, dinlna rm. Large ~l~500REAL TY gar, xln t Joe. Ocean vu . C.otta Mesa. Sparkltna: Cl 'f' 1• 125_ 149 ly. $79,500. Call 837-2447 By rear yard. Aaaumable loan, la Beach $250vu~ , 2 b_r_~kpt, ~aut. ocean treah. Fenced ka l' d , as11 1ca ion owner $27,500, bric. 842-2561.. 3377 V Lido, N'pt lrg..,.,.,; 0 -•·· . 67~7>00 NU' ·VIEW. RENTALS ~""' & ~. --1 I~ cozy 1 er '°""" 1n CdM Owner tranalorn!d. • bdnns., ""' per ·~ ~~t.. On R.-2 lot. $38,500. sY· 3 full baths. Pool and patio. Mesa Verde Phone 675-6900 673-4030 or 494-3248, 6tS-m1 between lam 4 . . Ownfor. Prine. only. Rear 1tvinR rm. Dl.nlna nn. '° Newport 8MCh 6pm uk tor Jerry ct Classification 150-184 673-4169. Bullt·lna, a i ab w a I her ... Bed1"ooml I: FamUY 2024 lndua'tr. •I Property 161 -. :.Barbara==,.·==;;;-;-;;:;:--;:' C 1 Mesa boaullhtl, 1311,900, brk Balear1o Dr, Mesa \'erde, BAY SUNSET VIEW $250-BRAND NEW 3 BR., 2 I n-;~ ll •I •. . ~R:J..El3Pl30SSESSIONS ~-1~" $46,000 (Sal & M· 1 • 1 For dllalmlnallna ooup!•. 2 Balh double r. r. r. 600 PA GE . . TRIPLEX Corner lot, ful mproved, BR, 2 ba. $lOl), Feb. Lot. Townhoule. ~ .drpa. $29 500 Classification 200-260 T§: 2-bdnn. unita in For lnfonnat~ and Joca.Uon Newport BMch fl'ontlna on t"-'O street.a. 214 644-7037.· bit-Ins. Klda A Avail I ' I I~ ' new condition. Nice of ..... FHA .. VA homes, Westcllff Area Th.~ "::' :;i; IOI~ H-Unlum, as ~ ~ ~-... S yr old 4 bedroom 2 _,.,._ -tin&. bit-In ran&• .. contact AsAltAN $ de~nt .,.. ot eoata Goner.I 2 BR. w·3 oar pr. l2lO. Ad- bath' home on corner ··--·-. -~ ha1 -~-~~':!'b~T ~~ K ~ -. --39,950 Mesa. Near Newport dldonalalorapprqe1$Z. lot;---Owner-contractor Cl•1s1f1cel1on 300-3..,S lighl.!I. On Jamts St., Over RMI E1t•te HUUC Large Rumpa ~7~~aif's:rs& per mo. Adulta. ftO pets. bas remodeled m Fan-I ]~ 80'76 loan at 7% can be as· Owner mxioua. 3 bdnna., 2 R Pool for mott lnlormaUon. 675-?65!. t.astic spanlsh design -AplltHWltaforRent • sumed. Asking $49,950. baths. Family rm. Built·lna, oom-INVESTMENT DIVISION NU home, 4 BR. 2~ bl. deep shag cpt., brick . _ CALL $ '•'·J•t• dis~washer, dlnl.na rm. Just begins to t.tll the story Ol'!NTlt.•. 11., FUN 70 BE NICE! ~~ !!?:;,.Wi:' ~"t:1 5 firepl~ce + super cus· Clessification 360-370 AtJ.& ~ianellng, $30,000, brk =· X!ii..:Jr~poo't'~ I· lut. $UICI depoe.it. Mt-W -. t~m kitche;n-S~ t-0 be· [ ]~ ?':&ALTY Owner must sell. 3 bdnna., 2 atmoapbere that fklwa llUJj!,rll MEM Verde 5 BA Dec. l1eve at this pr1ce--Call Rtntats ,,/' Near NtwpHt P••t orrice fW1 baths, din1n& rm. Built· through the ~ rumpu.s ljmi!;JI W.1tthCOITAMIU Home. FIR A L/R. 2 Red Carpet Realt-Ors -. _ 426 CA.BRILLO ins. Fireplace. Feooed yard. room with lire place and =-·-•••••!""!" 1beu Are Just A Few Of frplc'1. 3 BA. Partb' tmn. . 6 7 I J .. 546-8640. • 6la1sification 400--465 OWNER $42,75(1 :::x~ )'I.I'd, $26,500, :Sn!:: ~~"!h;· Three Loh for S.le l7Q Our MANY *NTALS .• · 2i:.mo~ caipeta, -11...-1 3~~r2p:;~, ~=: wALKtobeach,4BR,2BA. Ol'!NnL•·111 1~10 9EHICE/ WATERFRONT.~' boata1Jp$135 . 1 BR. COZY Cottap. drpt, f.rae )'&f'd. $200 mo. Classificetion soO.sio fr~~!,1IT"~:_nab1e. ~ce c:i:n Beaf:. ~-·1di;11f!JI ~Bal~7no~ .. ~ ColUns Ill-Dbl ear a:ar, ~ ac. lawn. J:1!37~t;y dt:poalt. l~=;;;iiiii=~[j] * BYrblOWNilli;' E'iiJR * Drape•, Formal J.. ~. ' iliim:~ RNI lltalo -l!SO .. I BR. 'tzy Cottqe. IBR iµo. Ganp. Y .... = _ IOvely landacape, $31~. -E .L. ll2 2 )TS old. WON'T LASI'! Privacy._ No_jltl:L • 8 W. s B&Or. l'ywinbl-1233 lncldl.All..YN . -•-• fi Wl!oon. MM11L '--:C----:::-'7."-:":"' Comer lot. No -· nime tho ....... vaoam. NEW""DT SHORES ""~TltADf) 1165 . 2 !IR. NEW Crpta,l3'"'B"'R°". ~"' ... ~.~-i-"'~liwp.,,___,,N"'IOe-1 ~~ Cl •n 1· 525 53· low down, 2nd T:D. avail. Call 113)-1103. • '"<' 0 •-•~ rar ___ , -"'· ,,,._,,_,..._ • EASISiOE IJOOZY! ess~·•c• •on • :t 826 Darrell. me. mo. p&)'I OWNER Ieavme°, 4 be&nia, 2 Walle: to btuh. Ice. 3 Ba. deaen!ie~~ FO,!'jl;r has (;ls.' .. : *, ...,, $M~bfteo:;n. AW. - POOL I , ~ -• -]!SJ all. "4&-3331. bathal patio, dlnin& nn., • -· 2~ baU... 811 Ins 110 ~ eq. tn bouJe at 36!.I EAB1'81DE ~ __.di -_, -MESA DEL MAR 5 Br, 3 Ba built-na, d I 1 h w a I her . .6"MUsf" SELL! ..... ~. Elli;;tta Dr., Riverside. $175 . PRIVATE 3 BR.. hie. 3 br .;-ms~-~ -lmmed. occupy. All new Fireplace, famll,y nn. Brk. __., w 1 to --·••-llvt A Real Find' Gar Fncd for ' ... ..., 15x34 heated Anthony Cl•ssificetion 5SO·!i55 crpta "-~ drpa.. Beaut. $36,SOO. 962-8165. -CAYWOOD REAL TY an• UT _......, na: · · pnp $225..,.. pool, outdoor c;oJored landscaped. Hup yard, nr FOR Sale Bf Owoet 4 br * S.1290 * ~ ~!!. ::~-:= kidtlpeUI. * 38R, fel:K'ed yard, JD>, mo. Ughtlng adds lo the I ..._ 111•1 ",_,..,,. Many extcaa. to-. 123,"'5.' l500 . OCEAN VIEW on cou1. Fl'ancta Dodd, LANOLOROSI 2548 WHbn""'er Aw, C.M. Lropical landscltpin~ -S4:i,900. By owner,~--under~ approval. Swim· Modl"m Dupltx 4 Bdrm. up, Broker. 5738 Carlton w~. FREE RENTAL Sf.."RVICE:i:':&<>--'8549~·,,..,,.,,,,..,.=--:::-:-I cab1;11a too! !louse ts, a Cla11ificatl0n 575-580 By ~~r.°1Y BR$29W'1°frplc. :°~~~· &l~tball 2 Bdrm., On. Very lar&e. l:.4Tle1, Ca 90028. (213) *BEACO~. ~1E1 N1 TALS* 1ff~~'~::'cd~ :~m:: aar. ·spacious 3 bedroom with 1· j LY~ wtcov'd patio. R crtflce 4 bedrm prl~6~~:~"·irAr'TY Rul estate W1nted 114 -Rent~,A,.HouN m.eao 2 baU.., paneled lam.Uy SiiiliifiiillliPOlii, ; 646-0156 or&«l'022T,__. E3'l"'~tha'.4 _._. .. ,~: AJk tor o.ve WHY RENT 2 ·--m noor to ceutng brick I ··~ • er, qu~t. crpt, -~· pr, r . _ PROBATE SALE buUt-lna, dl1bwa1uer, 615-UTZ 494-0615 * "'Irick Cash *uoo ""'-..,.,,,.., ard adu!t1 only, no pets. 1Uii. comer fireplace, v~ul_t· Clessificetion 600-69t 4 BR, 2 bath borne near Har-fireplace in ~~ ~· BY OwrM!'r' Upper Bay, WUI ~ >Wt propett)I. All mom~"'~ of $119 MS--S251 or •1U ed beam ceiling, buiJt·m I l~t 1 f bor A Wll8op ~UXI-\.~ -' · Med It err an ea n style. 1 .. , -hn c u will do lt for this lovelY 2 * SPECIAL * kit.cben-qUlet, priv~te ~n-f' BY Owner 4 Br, l % Ba, FHA OW;;;· anxious 3 be.tht. 4 Spanish tile raof, 4 BR, 3 cun w u'.aiSi . a bedroom, l bath bofM.. Cu 2 Bdrma. on l\alf acrt. street all for under · . loan, l25,f501 qulck pon. t, • Uo. Dlnfng BA, Din RM, all elect kltch bullt ... ma, carpeg 6 drape1 mo. 642-8638. '35,000-Call • _c;;[usl(ico.ljon_Z00-710 s.. 2991 MUbro, CM. ~~lns ... dllhwul"r, " •-;.. !lrs.o.~o! "" t •nd oven bu alr1:;1,-':11;ii1;Cu11'ff"----1 pet Realtors 546-M40. ~ 832-0221 eves. !1"111..,. ln family nn. Brk . land>Oa.,,.,' jllJY.I ~~l'!.:lf ~~~l="-4=11.;;.R-.. -D-1-N--t I .. dw!dlia ~ * R.EPOSSESSJONS * . $46,DI. 90-8885. KARBOR VIEW HOMES-2 WI riono;idtt.j, ,..._ . al u-. . V Thruout Or. c.ounty call tor BEAOi COTTAGE ' down BR + den. Seit blo' at Indlvidu iwmo:', onr O.uific•llon 1004l6 .a-~7739 a;;;:;. town. R-2 lot, 'iz,ooo, $51.~. Fee. 2024 Port -• N:. .,. tt. u.-i 1arp Foi.intaln Va"!f wume 7~ Gt In. 96H273 ~orP1"4~l-6dally. N. J. Oarpon.tion,. CHle-. Rft1SI HS-om ~;lllor=SAden. I ....... ~ 11~1 I B!a'. of~,Ooa!Otoli.t Com I< --,., Owntr l&Cl1Jlc<, • bdtms., 2 WAIW ham<, llne nel(h-. BLUFFS Condo. I BR. 211 Pane!laed Nodular Homes LANDLORDS! :;,,...,.. ,!., , . bethl. Secluded rter Uvlnr Ha nr sch bch 4 + 2 BA, tam nn., almo.t new. tn l<&wall ii ~ 1500 to Cle11ificttion 850.851 rm. Dlnine rm., bullt·lns, s:i.4,,,,, oMi, 'no .,...,• pert ()Ond. Mf-01 or 3000 acrta Jtate tMeral We Specialize in Newpor1 yud,, Lovtly I 1 dilhwalher. Shike: toof, ~ ' _.. 646-8824. private 41 t.w. i&nd Jeu0 Beach • O>ront de! t.1c.r • pet&. S411 per _r,:_--:.-.,-.,.-..1........,l[•Jfl FlrQlace, 1n famUy rm., g m..Oocs TO BEAat 4 BR. FIR. DIR, 2 BA. 1 or te-e t:l.mpJe on the '1a1and A Ll.runL Our Rent~ Ser-m-65111 or 5*-._ ..... 'q .. 1•1t "-$1),000, brio~ 4 BR a rn + OR bt:c to pool A park. Harbor Othu. Wrttt: P.O. Bolf 176. vtce 11 F'R.U: to You. Try El T .... Cl ·1· • ·oo· 912 ~ "'"" r .... • l><lnm.. BKR View Homes. SST.IOO Bal""' Island ea -. N•·Vtcwi l:'::::'-:7-::::--~-:S-:-·I 1'" ,.•hon ' • 3 baU... Pool A patio. lklilt· 131!.IOO"* l8H2l3 * ~ . ' . 'NU-VllW RENTALS S ~R. 2 ba, b!tnr. Thlt ls a must to ..., 1 J[i] 1n1. .___ Dtn!rc rm. BY OWNE!t s Br, 2 BA. -NEWPORT Sbon!t home 1 ~ 1900Ho":!~~ 673-4J30 or 194-32<! la. ~ at this price-totally up "'-"''°" .... ""'pla"' In r.mllt rm. ~ ........ ""ll6 ~:" Br, 2 Bl. •Int t'Ond. ~.iioo IG-1418. UPPIR llAY pd. T. graded It's a lot of h?u•e . . m Ma~xtru. $43,00J, bric. • • • • 230 Colton, 548--7933 . Bo.utltul f•mlbr home ""i:H;;un;;:.ll;:;s;;;;;.;;;; for ~e money. Built-In CNs1lficatlon 915-t4• ~ le 1 4 bdrm.. 2 lrvfne Duplexes near the ocean v;:nc-~ ~1 !':: country Mtt.11'11. Near 1 BR., c:r\)la, ki~btn, !!replace, g~t 1 J§J bati!. s:.:'i.."' ... i BuUt-in1, TURn..EROCK MU.. Lel'IOI\. Realtor bJdr. ote ..;,,. DOllt Pilot evtl'}'thlnr • 1 --10 yard -If you ... lt --.. 5* = !irepla<e 1n ~!:Ii rm. BAOADMOOR * ~ * Cl•iil!led Ad. &IHITL brand "°" . $G$. mo. er dlw . you'll buy It! Red Car--°"""'41 PIUo. , bric, N~. 4 Plan In ISO'~ •Br, 2\1 Dally Pllot Wiiii ..,. haVf StD ld! l1 142-0l71 ::· ;,t:J; 2 year '"-· Wuot ad pet Realtors 54&-8540. ClaumcaUon 950-990 . -80, Owner 833-131!11. -ia1ort. • ""' • · • • ' · ====c:.:..:.; ,• . \ '· \ - - • DAIL V PILOt -ll--~ ... -~1~~1 ;1 _-_ ... __ -:,~~~ , .... 1 .. -.1~ [ i-Aph., h.11 .. )1tent1I 440 House• Unfu rn. lOS I Oupl1xe• Unfum. l50 _A,_pts. ___ ~_um...;.. ___ 3_60_ Apt. Unlum. 365 ~t. Unfum. 170 · Pum. or Unfurn. 370 CORONA DEL MAR ApH., Fum. or Huntlnnton 8e1c:h Newport Bei c.h Huntlngton IHch C_•_•_•_•_Mo_,. _____ HuntlM!eft hach •-&Alt Huntl.....,n •···It L•gun• Be•d\ Apw'OX. 1200 IQ. U. olUce • l;;~~=p~~~::::;;l;~H;u;n•;l~ngt~on;;-;;;;;:;;;:;;;:2;;;;·-.?;;••;;;-;;;;;;;;;;l~~;f,~~i;i"T,~}o 11pace ttllortd to your • NO FEE. \'ACANT.,'rllE ltLUF>'s-5paclot.. 3 BAC11Eilif;; Ill~.""'""· AP~:~~~~TS r ON BEACH' sruortl. $!Ml~ l blo lo ~t·.:~! :~~'.' bldfl. $237 per month, firs t & I '''"""· "'""'v rm. 3 Ila, fn>k'•, priv ......... -At• Cond . '"""". 3 Swin> • ' HUNTINGTON ar•CH'S-FINEST =m_•.,,ln,c~~·J~~h~~"°""'!!!'!!=!C=llf=l =D'=-'1 A>lrlor Cbrl!tlt>e last. Near llC\V Clly 111111•lr), pool & yllt'\t Ofvtc1t-d 'belb &: Jou oI nit•• ·~-1,. 11•01 ... c-.... lA OOYDllEA'TOR~ u'"Tll.uwn Rs b lit' 1111t1nlt'l\al1CC, Sr:iO. n\O. 1111 \ R MU -·• & .... F\JU ._ •u .,..... AVAll..Alll.E IN F~"'B. T ti ... ~ ,...,..,,._, Park. 3 1-t · u in:;, & la.•1 " $150. d<'1ml1 .. \val! e '*11· ec. ' ,......... ~nnill cnuru • Quue arwt Uni 3 BR Oct \n UI n C<U.1-2750 1111 ft . front 001.W. BKR 'Oll'Ni::rt 002.5511 •••.-ch"'· s:\3-&;:l;. """' '"bl" ... w ... "'''"• n•uiaro ""'"" · · 'Wt ,.ow. ·spam'sh Country Estate Uving Tl"' ··--ruQuE ·-·s ..... noor. E11'va10r, ••• -· _ ___ _ ~ tor younrU. 11301 1 lift. f'rom $160 prlvtue dt."<lk. ..,. -~ ... ...,... "'IY ~ Prt\'. hollll' .111 :u·r1•ai1· $1 :'.0. NI-:\\1 Ouulex. 3 br, 2-he. Kecl!Otl l.n. Cl blk \\I. t>( 1 BR. & Of>n F'rom $1S5 Ont 2 Br. CX-enn Vh:w. l""ron1 AOU'L1' llvina;, rt9 ~1.8. cond, Clll'J'IC~ dro.peer, Also '! Br. sin. SJ~. SI51:1. rroa1 s~:.-s.110 ''r\y .. \Valk Beach, 1 blk N. ot Slnll!rl. .. ~EOITERRAN' •N ~ 2 Acre!. Beautiful )!atk·IIke surrowidings. Sp11coU1 t bdrm ape 1u ~arage & par ng lol. lt Rent-A-Hous.e ./979-8430 u1 bl.'h. Enl·I gar. t>tW1S8 or M2-'1MS M er. f'urn. 2 BR. F'rnm $298 Fo 1 $145. per n\O. Utll pd, 11rl11&te oUlctil .. Liu-p item IH2-7'J14. VILLAGE A1AKE Of'1'~En on Subloo!iC Sunken ~ool. Sparklmg Spanish u,nta ns. heated 11wtmi~ pool, 2 reccp~1 <tormer Pacillc l~=rv~i~ne;;;;;;;;;;;::::;::;:;;;;.I ~~~~~~~:~I Huntl"J'!' H•rbour ol 2 Bl\., 2 BA t"'urn. Apt. • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining 1iattol. ta.uuc.by tacil\Ul"I, Mutual o1nce1). 38c/aq b; STUDIO 1 blk to bch, dock 2400 llarbor Blvd., C.~t. Covered P1U1'i~. l..4f'¥t' · e WaUc in Closets ttntntl air oond. Localed: can dlvkle. 673-020. I l(e ] ,, __ , ~ <TI•~-.S03J lfcaled Pool. SlµlNu K.nd • H lik Kit h & Cab! t Com<·r or Ncwpe>rt t\vy le o~•v "-bl ~ 3 BR .. '.! R;i. s11111·JH ... S.'.'S.i £ 1 ,.,. avl. \Vtr. pd. J'1Cu.r.w VU'"• ll-tiO' Room . om&-e c ens ne s 1...,.,,. -... ,1 -8p&ce av&im • -3 BB . ,r., r,1111. rin., '.! h:11h.~ ,.p~rtment• °' ..,. $\99. tll 15 Jun c, RE?\T OJ.TICE "~"n n · 1 BDR.h<l. Unfurn. $165. Furn. $185. 1'1crll.ddcn un ..,_, ioa n mo. Will 'provide fl.&mitl.lrtl hr;inJ Ill'\\' Tu1'1!1·l'UI'" s:i;:; I ~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ;'c::ll"'o592-297'l===c.·~----OPEN 9:00 A." to ~:30 PM HUNTINGTON 2 BDRM. Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215. VlllBgf' \Va,y. 83&-4232. at SS ftlO. Anlwtrtna: ltJ'Vlce '4 Ull., !Eu11 nu .. ~1 J h.111\s. )1 L•nune Be•c:h PACIFIC T h 2 b J 'L avaU&blc. J22 Jo'~ Ave .. bn1 nd 111'". rur1l··r<>•:k s~2:i J A~p!:ts.::_!F~u~m!!:.. ---~3~60~1 ;;;~·;;;;-;,;;~;;~;;-;;; own ouse, r, l':.? ~ LaKuna Beach, 494-9t&IS. 1 liR .. !', 11.1 ., 1111· 1vnd. S:QO $110..F'urn sm. oot.Y pla('(' nr 7U OCEAN A'!Jt-.. fLB. ba. 1400 .sq il Furn. $240 ltm.t* I & DESK lfPlcct ivaUablt $S0 Corona del Mar bt'a<'h for l 1't'Sp0nsiblc, I lU<ll 536-1487 . ,. mu. \\'Ill provide furniture f'inplo)'('d adult.~ Of!.', open 10 lln1-6 11nt Dt1ib' ALL UTILITIES FREE ai $5 ino. Aniwe~ service 'llob 'l1i1!hl. 1 blks 10 Big Corona. &ch. •--h \\'lLJ..JA.\l \\!ALTERS co. \Valk to Hunti:ngt.oo Center llv1tllabJ.•, 11875 Booch Blvd. SHll). 6: SIW. Ulil pcL \'rly. Newport ~c _Adults, No eets Rooms 400 Huntt.neton O..•ch. &t2-4321. - - -'l·\.Pullor 1 adult, 00 pet. 6-15-l62.t $29~ per \\~k..& up. l..Bl'!.. .2 OVER 62 ? ? KOOMS Sl5 v.'k up w/ltit. 8 y1lne11 Rentet O«s 1 Br. furn., encl f;fll'. Aclj. lo BR & Bachelors. Color TV, O'ltt~ttllttccr UNDER 35 1 ? LA QUINTA' HERMOSA $30 wk up apls. Children "Sl~CE 1!116" I~! \\\•\<"lt'tll \Jank Iii.ti:.. l 'n1\·er<:1t} !'ark, Jr, 111•' Days 551-7000 Nights 2 l:lR, \1, h:t ., ;ll.1' l'OtKi, $2'.1.:"1 2 HR. I' 1 tl11 . ,\1r Cond. S16:i :1 01~. :! b.1 ......... s;:z;, 365 3 BR. 11 ~ U.1. .. .' ....... $.185 ·I BP.. 2 ha. r.un. rn1 ... S~Q co11tpl shop'g an>a. $175. 602 n1ald scn1., pool. The J\1f'sa .-<Ml 10 ~tu..-.~ "1111 IN BETWEEN ? '· ·-N rf. I ll<'hotropc. &31-llXI. 415 N. Newport Bl'!Jd., f\B. ....11t11.1111t1'•tt • B &: pet secfion. ~10 ew 646-96Sl. ,,i.i.1111 ~u"'' '°' 2 un. _ $14.;f 1621 I Parkside Lene, H. • Blvd. Qf, 5 4 8-9 7 5, Costa Mese l BU\: to ocean., Nl'.'\~lport. ~':n-~~i..CIOSiiuU AlL UTlLJTIES PAJO. 714 847 5441 645-3967. 1'ldo-pe1' ok. o "' llfa 2 ,.,.,..,_,. ... ,.,.,., VILLA YORBA : • WANTLMy6;+.Prlv.bath Casa de Oro ·1 J I J n1llM!le. MoOels :.pt~ 9-00 in lovely Newport Beach ~; ... ~~. -Unll u Y st. ta 7:00. 1l00 r~u'fffw Jtd , 842-96tt '"hOme. Kltcben priv, $75 mo. AU. LIT!UTIES PAID g-u.---..... costt W.u. Pliant: S4~l30..l. (4 blks. So. OI San Diego Frwy. OD Beach, 54l:h628fl. Conipare hl'.'fore ~·ou rent s,\CHElDR apt, pool. 1 blk 1-----~~==--* MOVE IN TODAY * 1 blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). Custo1n rlt>si~ned. featuring: ocean. Gar. ·$150 rno. 210 A PLACE FOR $145 A MO. LOVELY room for rent for · k' ., .. · U31 <•• -A A ~'Oridng woman e Spacious 1tcben V.'h.u Ill· Crdar. ~· or '"".•....., YOUR TREASURES Spac. 2 & 3 Br. in 4-ple.x. pt1., pts., ~5-6107 rl11't>et lighting <'\'es. Several avail. All. t:.x. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 G 1 Hom e Separale din'g .'.ll'i'.'.l BEACH 1 Room Apts. :\love tron1 a large homl' lo l'RAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kldstj·;~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~il ,;;"~e;•:~:e:=~~·~IS e·. · .... reel hi·11 e llonle-hke stoi~.age $rot$100. )'early. Util one of oor 5pe1clous garden ~·elcon1t" }~ron1 Sl45. See Huntington Buch Huntington Betc:h e Pnvate patios incl'd. 6n-12.tt, 61~. apartments ... your own ~tgr. 11371 Keel80n "B" 1 O Closed garagt' '\\'/Storage ._ __ .. lo gartij(E', lawldry area. patio, blk \V, o( Beach Bl\ld. oU * Prlv•I• Room * • ~larble pu\ln1an BEACtl front "'""'e r apt. Jireplace. t\\'O bedrooms. Slalttr. 847-4260. BEACH LIVING n~: .. \!.T\" e King·si Brlm1s SIZ-,. nlO. f'urn., utll pd. den. t'A'O bath.'i. Sal2-2l3. for . \ Cun1p.1ny \\'1°th ,.lSIOll 1 • Pool . BarbeqUl'S . SUI'-6.'.iOl °'-.-el\llfront, 518-2396. THE VEN DOME * FRESH AIR ( NOw You Can Afford J An1bulatory Lady or Man l'.ni\'. Park Ccnt<'l'. Lrv1nc, rounded "'llh plush land· 2 BR., on Uie beachlpier, \\'alk 3 bklcks to Beach. BACHELOR (Furn) From $195 Gooc.1, nutritious :rood. \• n-' · • ._. 1845 Anahein1 ,... · · · · · · Nice. chee~'ul atmosphere. (\ill An)11tn<'. jj].~~Jtl1 ·1 sC'ap1ng \\'/D. l'«.1• or '\\'toter -~....____,..,,,... Lrg 3 BR. ApU; NE"Wly l Bed Fr $180 ~ 5l Offl1·l· hours it A.\t lo 6 P'.\1 I ,\duh h\'lug at Its besl 1no .. prkg & gar. 53&-500i. Call l\1rs. Phillips .tt\T'V/o>1 decorated, w/w crPts, drps. 2 Bedroom .. '... . ........... F om .->?n * Call &48-47 * L\HGE J BP. Sl90 ~E\V fur ba hi ' N -New Duplexes-blw. except r <'trig. room . . . . . . . • . . . rom ~~ $.'!$. ~('"·· <'lean. big, .J RR. • . . ;o.;o Pets . , ~ . Bay & ~ach.c & :~i>J>i~ SZ'i0/1uo. No singles, no FULL SECUR ITY SYSTEM 1 "•. bltru<. w/w. d1-=. 1 :iw \\ · \\ 1lson tH.·19i l .,,., OM! e 3 Bdrm, 2 BA S&i. ....ts. 536-1711-HEATED POOL or the BEACH o;., .,..I . sr;:, nlO. Util Incl. u1:r-. T('(>nager or Infant OK. .... Summer Rentals 420 "TllE Factory" has shops 1:1.vail In the ma.I ranalng from $80/MO. Ideal tor book store, 11peelality card 6hop. etc. 425 30th St. Newport Beach. m-9808. C O 1'1 t.f ERCfAL.Lea»ef'l'OO. sq. ft . ~ mo. &: i:o> *1 · ft. $300 n10. 219.1 & 21?9 }>~alrview Rd.. C.?tl. Agt, 6:16-8811. Industrial Rent1I. 450 READY FEB. ht, 1973 LAGUNA NIGUEL . M-1 l.600 SQ. FT. & UP . On·San Diego Freeway Ca!l .83kl600 IRVINE Industrial Area, 10.000 ""· "·· dock higr. i;prinklers. rt4()-i0>. Rent•ls Wanted pool. Park. ~ts. kids. A.,.ai ! $30 WEEK & UP 1 BEDR~I. furn-pool _ 1 • 2 Bdrm, 1 BA Sl.95. 2 BR. Luxurious ApLS. Furn Elevator Annual Lease WllJ.. exchange our culc now. 55i-M09 or 891-1305 • Studio & l BR Apts. block 10 heh. ·Single adlL Beaut., spacious apts • or Unfum. 2 BR + Den. , . Adults Ooly, Sorr y No Pets Lake Arrowhead cabin, WANTED: Build\~ 3 Bl>R'.\I, 2 HA. 11C'"' honic in e TV&. !\laid &r.icc Avail. $1<1}1646-269&. Fenced yards, patios and \Vet bar, trplc. Sauna. Pool. LAS BRISAS sleeps 91 for your ! bdnn Thtth Shop. ~w~nL fot Turtl<'nxk ,\l"\'a, Ir.·1ne. • Phone Sc<tvic.;-Htd. Pool Si1n Clemente quiet prt\lacy. Adults, DO Jacuzzi. F\111 recreation. beach house, close ocean. ,1~~~Clll~~~~~~~~I $l'.6. TI\o. ~13n after a. e Children & Pet Section pets. 642·4837. facilities. From $2m. 5515 RIVE R AVE., NEWPORT BEACH June thru Sept. or 1esa. laiguna 8each e Sl20 ~lonthly 2 BR, 2 BA Laundry rm. 2040 Fullerton St. (at Ba)') HARBOR LIGlITS APTS. (The New Place. In Newport) (113) 243-3214. z;-;6 Nt'\i·port Blvd., CM Adu!ls, no pe1s. ~ mo. P•rk-Like Surroundi"" 16700 Say~AlLane, HB. Res. Mgr. Diane & Wm. Sharbaugh 642-2566 Vaicetioo Rentals 425 "''°''* , • Sl6.l, t:ti! fl!l. frplc, ol)('n 54!1·!lT"5 or 645-3967 lZl39 Buena Vista S.C. ·--. ,,...,..~.._ . • hf'ilrns. "hami~ 1 1 ~ blks Ad good for s.> on \\•k's renl . .-'-'-c'-..------QUIEi' DELAPTUXES \~ mi. north of Huntington A U 1 365 A 1 LAGUNA Beach. Luxury 2 ! ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I bcl El p Mesa Santa An• 1• 2 &: 3 BR Beach. $140. 2 BR. Bltns, • pt. n urn. P "• BR, 2 BA, furn. Avail 3 \1 s200" t'11I pr! 2bt So La~. uerto Sill). Bachelor or "'""'lit and Pvt Patio& 1t ~t1 Pool crpts, drps. pool, play yard. N t D-.. Furn. or Unfum. 370 mos. beg. Feb. l. Ocean Personals Gar .. \' rl. rit>l'k Ch1ktn.>n "'el 1 BR's-$130 & UP ... -. Nr. Shop'g tyA u ts only r ...1-. facil &: carpom. Cpl. ewpor P9aC Vinw & d·~ks. 4'.150 mo. child. 1''ree ulil. No pets. Also ~·-0 --h Ap1' __ , B Ibo• Peno"nsul• • <' ~ $300 u11.1 pd. 3 hr, 2 Oil rrpll' Unfurn. & Furn. ... wu D4I.: • & 2 sml children ok. No a 49'-2742. FREE! Nev.·ly det.'Orated. 541-6279. M__, • Apts ~''-"c=-~~,.---= hoi;ne. Gar, yd.JU' hl-S('hl. All Utilities P1id Apt. Unfurn. 365 Ullln1que • pets. Call S42-46&1. OCEAN and BE by yourself. Beach & Bay Rentals to Share 430 NU-VI EW RENTALS Pool & Recreation 1777 Sanla Ana Ave., Cl\t NE\V, 2 & 3 Br. apts. Near areu. 2 Br. Sundcck & c 6i.?.--l030 Or ~W-32-li\ 1959 ~taple Ave., Cl\I Balboi Island r>-1gr Apt ll3 646-5542 bch & schls. Dsh"·sr, crpts, HARBOR VIEW J:ai·age. $250. 673-:l332. YNG v.'Ot'king 'A'Oman will Mru.~n!le 1~U~~~ OUTSTANDING I Also garages for rt'nt drps. Dbl. gar. Fent'cd yd. "Rent A Piece C t Mesa 1hr nu 4BR Ilse in Mission Springdal<', H.B. Tues, Jan. OCEAN VIEW FOR particular people. Debc ELEGAi'lT 2 tr apl "'·tgar. NO\V VACM'T -lmmediatc Sllf>~'~" $250~~:.}J,,. 531).2914, of a Palace'' os a Viejo, w/samc. ~ uary 30th, 3 BR.-2 Bath5 mob. home. 2BR, l h ba. steps lo shopg .I: lx:h. Yrly. posses.sion, sparkling elean _548-"7.o-~.,-,.°'-;~,c-~='C·=..-El d . cd eves 1 pm W/w Car~ts, etc. v.•Jw crpt e\'ery rm. comp. Dys, &l!>-34.17, 548-7398 2 bedroom fully carpeled, WALK TO BEACH egant apartJnenis e&ign * * * SJIARE a nice home. Male Course conducted by llunl. •· h furn. dsh/v.'Sh htd pool. t'Vi:S/'A'knds. bulltins, l'nciosed garage. New 1 & 2 Dr., cpt/drp., 1,vith a Masicr·s touch, su· or female. for information ington Beach Power Squad· $325 Mont -"I'". no ......... "173 mo -4 \\'alk to shoppin£ Only $150 perb house security. exclu· SPARKLING NEW all .,~o =~A aft 4 pm and ron. lnlo ~"l""• Ty au"" Y"-,,... Balboi Peninsula BROKER. .. ;,,. DA'IA d w hr ., frpl. 316 ltilh. · v ·u CJ··' and c _.,,_,,,... er _.. ...... MISSION REAL Sea.sons 2359 Nv;11rt. ~ mo. ~... ~7-395'1. s11Je ersa1 es ..., weekends. -"'='='~===,,,,=~,I 494-0731 pool ...,·ith uniquc Aquabar, * HINDU sPIRITUALlST * l BR, Furn, 2 lrg. closets, 3 BR. 2 BA. Deluxe Apt. 1 yr B ** NE\\I 2 &; 3 Br. AplS. C.'rplS. loonlains and fonna1 gar· BA y SHADOWS FEMALE 21-28 to sh.are new Let this ad change your Lagun• Niguel quren size bed, priv dress-lease incl, Jrplc. Din nn, 3 tt 3 Br .• 1 Y2 a. drpg. bit-ins, l blk lo s.D. dens. All part Of the South duplex ln Newport w/same. whole outlook on life for the 111g rm. xtta lrg rooms, encl balconies. Close to both Bay Large, l\~·ly decor. Encl Fnvy. & tl.nlg. Center. No Coast's finest apartment ·Apartments $100 + util. &M;.8125 eves. better Professklnal advice E.XCE?TIONAL ocean view. New--3 bdrm. Exclusive gate !,,'\larded sect\on ol Sea 'Ter- raC'I'. Separate homl'. ~1onlh or \e8se $500. 493-.5769. gar \\·/storage. Adults only, & Ocean. patio, bltns, CI11IS, drps. pets. Call 6-16-3186 or community. NEED 2 maJes to~ 4 Br on llfe. Lie. Readings dallJ. no pets. lir;;,-2306 or 673-8148· Dose to everything. $170 & 54~. l Bedroom/studios from $195 Spacious, Light &. Cheery! house 1r; util. in Hnta Sch. 10 A~1-10 PM. 492-9136. to.35 Fullerton, C.M. Cepi1tr.no Buch Sl.80 mo. 868 Cf'flter St. Apt. NE\V 1·2 & 3 BR. B<?ach 2 Bedroom lrom ~ I BA~.~1..~.i'~G$157 $80 mo. !l6:H668. 492-0034, 312 NG. El Caalirkl •·SHADY EJ...\IS. POOL * 3 BDfilt'"' 2 Bath, crpts & 1, C.'1 or call 548-8"179. Apts. From $155fper mo. 4 Models open 9 A.M. tif'clusk l BR's FROM $177 Garllfl for Rent 435 -"'="~'·~Sa=n~Cl~e~mo~"~"~·--·1 Lido Isle TO\\'NllOUSE · 3 Br & study. 21 ~ Ba. Yrly. $400fn10. Rl'sponsible adults. 673-0844. e Adults Poolside $140 up .>, BACH. 1, 2, 3 BR blks from v.·ater. J\tgr. ~ ti1AGAZINE editor &: aulhot, ~77 ~ ~td~oc~2--3645 =:.C~~C,we'·.~';.,,°'''"c','o'.•O't,,_~"'-j:c:°"~-'._0ce_,-an f'rplc, poo~~ ~~ty guards. ::~'1i. Tobin Realty, l7!l. Ik>auliful appoint~ents In-~G~!:, r::;,~~· S~~ i~i:!t sirr!r ~S: utij. Dupl.EX .. Ne•• 2 Br crpl• HARBOR GREENS F elude Decorator FU'eplaccs. Lldo 1-•,, ~· per mo. Ex· ,·n N-·~ --a '--1-•· NE\V l BR's from $J.80..$IDS. drps. ~ ~tlns~io Da~a Pn1'. 3 BR condo for rent, 1 blk ON THE BLUFFS Shag Carpc1ing. Pri1Jate celJentl" fo;:"' storina boot \Vrit; .. &i's'sifl~·AdNo.'fili: Adults. Nr beach. & shop'g. 95 &16-6672 546-0371 front bcach, $235 n10 plus P1'tios. Pool • JuC\WI • gear. 642-9405 'I PU p 0 Bo 1560 114 E. 20th St., C.1\1. Atartna. Sl · · GARDEN ApL . 2 Br, 1~~ cleaning deposit, adll'I only, AT NEWPORT voue.ybali l'OW'I • Gas Garage for Storage. ~ Y M 01• 92626 x ' Mission l/iefo 543--0137. Coron• del Mer Bath, Large patio. ~ block no pets. 536-ll82 BBQ s. I~ Maple Ave., Costa Mesa' °'""la;c..o:;.•:o":::·,,.::=o.· -~ 1 BR. elcc. bit-ins, close gar. "'jiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I sl\Opping, Quiet. Adults no 2 BR, gas & water pd. 1 child From Newport Blvd., turn at .. , A I 5 PROBLEM Pregnancy. C.O~ PRll\fE vu lot, beaut Deane Honie 3BR, 38/\, huge fam, form din $425mo incl gardcncr & wit. 586-2912 Quiet. Suitable mature • pets. 642--0Wt-m Cabrillo, ok. No pets. From $140. Hospital .~ood {l block 409 BAY St, Cotta Mesa • ,. anager, P . . fidCTitial, s Y mp at he t l,c single. No 22rie,1s. Ref's. ~-...y , _c'°'.M=. :::-;.,-;=;;;;;~;;;;,..-1762'l Cameron ,.St. or =~:n~:c~ ~~lyi~~o Manager Bldg E-I03 Office Rental 440 f~nf1c:d:=li~f.A~: Sl40/mo. 640-4 .,. 1 NEWLY DECORATED S42-l6.52. Newport 0Bi:ach,Ca. 926ro.' * 646-338f.. * FULL SERVT~ tARE. 642-4436. l BR. Sl·IO & $135. Large. 2 BR, \\'/carport. $140 \Vil' FURN. or Unfum. - 2 BR. Telephone: (714) 615-0060 WESTCLIFF BUIIDING PALM le ~EADINGS Newport Beach ldeal for Bachelors. Adults pd. Nr schools. 2192 "D" shag crpl'g &: blt-ins. 1 blk LA MANCHA Comer Weitcllff Drlve & Tells Past, sent ' only. 1993 Church St. ON TEN ACRES Placentia Ave. Call bet l & to stores. From Sl50. 7731 Brand New Deluxe Units Irvine Blvd, Newport Beach Future (2l3) _1350 F\i"' 3 BR., l\"pt. Hi;:hts. Pcts. 548-9633. Apfs. Jurn.i wifurn. Lease _>_._636-4 __ 1_20~·~~~=~ Ellis or call Mgr. S42-l8.1l. PARK NEWPORT Rent now for your con· Mr. Howard 6ti-6101 lie. children 0.1.\. S2i5 r.ilonth. NICE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool, Nr. Jo-irepla.ce ; priv. patios. * SHADY EL}.lS ·POOL • 2 WEEKS FREE RENT-t APARTMENTS stJ'Uction allowance of 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH 350 ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. avail. Feb. lsL: I.;r. 2 BR. shops. Ulil pd. Adl!s, 1\0 Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. e Adults Poolside $140 up Br. Jo'rplc, shag crµt, $155. nJO's tree ren~. 1 BR. l B~ &: 900 !IQ. fL, cpt'd, pvt. Phonc 542-7217 or write 2 b.1. ap1. nr. Cd~I High, pets. 1884 Monrov ia. 900 Sea Lan, CL.\1 644-26ll e Chi!~~ 5 nex!CbMlock 6 A., .,.... a.39-1661, 9-5 PM. Oft the bay' ~ den, 21155Blt s D'~h J B~ s bath, prkg, util pcl., adj. P.O. Box 122.1, Costa MeSIU S26.'i l'ilonth. ;)48-0336. (MacArthur nr Coast •twy) 177 E. "'.., 1·• ' ~,c.....,:.ooi::i 2 Blocks ~ach. _2 ~R. ne.\v Luxury apanmrnl living S' rom · "' was • ..,r, P 0 $9&-$180 Mr Lang n•: S\VINGING SINGLES Ital Pinchi11 Rltr. liTM392 1 A-"l~tr-a"'1~i,-,-~-~'"n-floo~-,._-,-"-w SPAC. 3 BR, 2 B' pnv crpls, pa1nt, $150 incl util. O"erl--'·•'•g I'-., ... ,.,. E"· Garbage disposal, all wiits!. 54G-i30t ' . •~~ •··-·, s · '' 6 ~...,_,.,.,..., • ....... " '"" ... ~ " Encl gar. swim'g pool. :;;~":·.,,--,,c::::=--;:::;:, Call Jim 3-9 PM I BR, FIR, $.lj(). 3 BR,.......:;. painl, beam t:ei ., paclOUS PREFERRED area . Priv., 1 yard, encl gar, trpts, drps, call after · ~. joy Si50.000 hcalth spa, 1 BBQ's Pets acc.-eplablc. NEAR O.C. Airport, ~el, S39-Jl22 Frpl<'. St'lf l'lC'an O\ll'n. 2 Br. 2 hlks shop'g center: lovely 2 Br., 2 Ba. Crpts, sniall pet, adults only. $180 Lanuna 8eich s"·inuning pools, 7 lighted "~" """" 118 •-ti Pl .• C.M. restaurants. Dlx. space. 1m-COUP'ES PAR~!ES IJ\1,·hr. Comm. Po o I . ~1,::"='·""::;·~536=:,"'-'llcc.,.--,--~-drps, bl•-·, w/pn·v. g-•. mo. 54&-3776, 540-4431. -1r ~~· ""-"' ~ -... ·• ...... ..... "" tennis t-ouns, plus miles of d ... _ med. occupancy, ..... west ,..._11 Ph'! 3 1 9 PM c'=""~'="-"-·-~~-~-·i LRG. 1 Br, \VI\\' crpt, priv. A\rllil now. $?50. 61:>-4873, PRIVATE lge. 2 Br. 2 Ba, FOR a few woo appf'l'Ciatc bicycle trails, putting, shuf· Un er n.W ralcs. 21Tl DuPont, ....,. ~~ LIDO Sands, 3 Br, 2 Ba, patio. Bt"'" OCC & UCL 673--0937. pool, [rplc, sundeck. Water the unusua:I. 1 & 2 Bdrm .. 2 flcboard, croquet. Junior 1'11 Menegeri1ent "833-:=;:3'23.~~==;;;-=~- frplc, lrg yrd, nu crpts, $13.'i. 646-8226. 2 bedrooms each. B\Uns, & gas pd. Back Bay, ha, clLo;lom apti. Lfl1 rgc from $174.50 monthly; also 1 CASA VlCTORlA -1617 WESTCLIFF BE a Hotllner at Home drps. rlsh1,vhr. b It· ins. NICELY furn. lrg. 1 BR. carpets &: drapes, choice 548-1416. rooms, wide ocean \' ev.'5, and 2-bedroom plans and I & 2 Br. Fum & Unhirn. 1200 tt C 1 ·r d The Center will train ~.i "~/mo 646-1586 d Le s~ gardens. Space & p1i1Jacy 2.,,0..., to'\\11 houses. Elec· "-....... ts, drape•, D/W, TV sq. · ''P ~ ai . ~ • Call 642-0377, lOAM·lDt'M .....,., · · encl 'j,lar. Quiet. A ults, no location. a:ic wu pr. SINGLE lady, 2 Br. 1 Ba, ·J ....,..,"' pl pkg ulil Janitor 3 BEACH -·•""'· 3 ,, , BR. "'°-2'16' Call 613 ""'~ R"'R for consldcrale, mature trlc kitchens, private pa.')S ant. Pool etc. Come By & am c • • · Social Ch•bf 5-. ·~ -• pets. 52 EJden""" · 111onth. ·"""" ... , $160. + clog. fee. Ideal loc. d It Cl 1 '· ch & Baumg-~ •• , •104 stl-5032 '"" -a u s. ose o oca or balconies, carpeting, dra· Inquire about our Move.in un.1.•no • fpl. pritio: $21';,..,100 Yearly. l ""-m $150 mo incl. Util. ROO'IY 3 "··"-m, 2 balh, Safe & secure. 310 ho · Se!,.,,.·,.., of "'"' ••~ f •~ t ~ FIND YOURSELF -.] E TY 612-~o~ D\LI " ..,.. ..... "" .,A ... •"'-'A s pp1ng. ..,,,,,.,, ...... peries. Subterranean park· Allowance, 525 Victoria St. CdM. ~sq. L, ~ o _,., ABBEY R AL . .,.,.."' Call 673-167i . afl.et:. 5 .. P.1"!1 ground floor .. $350 pr. 1no11th ..Rochcslcr .St., <;HQ"~. & "'~llpapcrs. Partially ing ...,.·ith ele1Jaton;. Optional at HarbOr, CM. 642-8970. per mo. '1200 sq. ft. $;1200 JN SOMEONE El.SE I HoUHI Furn. or \VktlaY!f'Ol''arrytltPe wlti'id!J. ncx.t to park & IC'nnls, call 2 BR, l BA, l.'Otta.ge style Hv· ~~i;n~.,~ To $650 monthly. mai'c.t service. JllSI north of THE EXOTING per mo. 2.Jll Coast~ Hiway & DISCOVER . Unfurn. 310 2 BR. Trailer $12'i, l BR Bailey 673.s550 Agt. ing w/garage. Nr Harbor "•'1't"""lUJJ Fashion Island at Jamboree PALM MESA APTS. ?o.1acArthur. 675-7651. Ql.SCO:YERY Trailer. $120. No childfpets. J BR. 2 ba upper apt. F'l'plc, Blvd. $1'l5fmo, Call aft 5 OCEAN view lease · 2 & 3 and San Joaquin Hills Road. J\-iJNUTES TO NPT. BCl-I. DELUXE Office, paf¥1 114·835-68SS 2J3.J87-3393 Balboa liland G46-18tl9, 642-3315 bllns, 2 11undecks. Nr abops, pm !or showing, 8'1(Hl852, BR, 2 BA. Nt'\v. Blk to bch. Telephone tn4) 644·1900 • Bach, 1 &. 2 BR. From $145 walls, carpet, parking. 2052 3 BDRJ\I home, fll'\V crpL Garagc. Lots of ch<1rn1. l!I 010. lsc. $375. 673-1·11\~. Condominiums Unfutn. 2 BR, Utils pd. $175. mo. bch. $325. 962-2270 or 2 BR. Crpts, drps, palio, $245 up. 494·3383. 4942339. for rental infonna:llon Adulls, No Pt>t~. Ne~rt Blvd., c. M . No pets. '1277 l\111plc St. 8.13-l103 bllns. F.ncl garag@. Avl LIDl.'URIOUS ocean apl. 2 * 2 WEEKS FREE * 1561 J\-1~ Dr. Ground floor. 646-12.i2. I~ ··•0 -0•9t3 GREAT VI~" 2 BR • 2/lO. Call alt J pm, 2 I •~ J•• bl"-I N Bl I ) Loot --.....,-,,. • c.n • ·' Br, i.a, .,,.....,, or v.· r~rn. v· ta d I Mesa tj ""' ro1n ewport '!J(. OFJ>~ICE space & suites avail N!Cl': 1 BR FURN DPL.-\'. }"rplc, bltns. sundecks, pool 833-8731 · 675-1070. IS e 546-91WiO by Rivt'rsicle Ave. Pmt Of· l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I 320 Quill!, aclull, no pels. $120. s:::10 up. 675-3535. BAOlELOR, I & 2 Br Lido lile ADULT CARDEN llOMES EAJRA LARGE-I Br. Ne-.v fice. 215 Ri\ft'rside, 642-3347. II 216'ii l61h SI 6!2-.l.393 ~Pool. 2 park'g stalls. v.•f (urn. avail. Jf('atcd pool. IRVINE AVE. AT ?o.iESA crpt. paint, heated pool. 2 ADJOINING OFTICES, found (frff ads) SSQ Costa Mesa < d. 1 1 IJ9a nlO incld'g v.•ater. Sl:.!O & up. AduUs. 833 UPSTAIRS 2 BR, 2 BA. llfove in w/deposils only From $140. Mature adultll, -iq•·--·~, C.M. -.1---..:...---..---' Sl201MO. Furn . ._tu IO 1 P s. ~nlcr SI. 64!)..8005. 2 Bcrlroo ""'""''-uu ~ BLACK Kitt 'lh Phone sef\!ice. Heated pool. • 642-3073 * crpts, drpit. frplc. Attlls. no S200 m infant ok. No pets. 1887 Util'a inc. 642-6560. en w1 green SPACIOUS 2 Bit. l \:l BA. Cpts, drps, frplc, blt-in~. Pool. recreation roo1n. No children under 15. Avail now. E. Costa J\.1csa. 2400 Eldon No. !l S210 n10, 1st and last. 963-2187. 1376 N'\\·pt Rivel. ~iS-!fr1'l. NI::W 3 BR & Oen, fireplaoo 1 BR. New carpeting & pets. $775 lease. 673-3824. Day & Night Security, Pool, Monrovia., &t5-2174. SUITE SlCX). Pvt. ofc $80. ~i459~esa Verde area, &chclor Apts. Sil~ & up. S.17."i lse. beam cl&. 1xi pcl drapn:. Older coopie or Mesa Verde Fountains. Rec. Bldg. "''/ 12 BR. Fro1n $175. 1''ree utll. Desk/otc gpace. $41).SOO. No children or pets. 2129 ~10 Avocado SL 6""-'1340 single. No pets. $l25/mo. e.~erclsc nn billiards ail· I Pool. Encl gar. Dlhwhr. 241 All ore Services 979-m FND. Dachshund, fml, black Elden Aw., Apt. 1, C~I. so. of llv.'Y. 2 BR. t BA, ;"'8-9135.=.c=c.·-~_,,,.,....,,,_.,...1 oELUXE 2 &: 3 Br,~ Bai or TV. Ea. 'Apt. has 'dish· Avocado St. CM 646--l204. v.·ith sliver-brown feel. Vic, D1n1 Point ~~~e patio. irundeck, :,:, u~~';a;p~ :r~: ~1~ ~~'. ga~ SHiO~~~ ~!~. ~~;!°iW>rc!!g~~~ Fountein Valley 08~Z g=:. Ads have ~~~~~t.:.' ~~ LIVE itl the all n('W Dana Plush new 2 BR. 2 BA -Mi11ion Vieto Point Harbor at the Yearly S~fl\1o. 2212 College, No. 5 ••. 646-4213 5'1&-1034. yf -;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;:;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;~1 1996Mapl•. No. l ••• 642-3813 Newport Beach 3 1.o;:,;·~~:~=.' ..... Park Pacific ' NEW l'llngle ,o;lnr;·. 2 BR, l beautiful f.iarina lnn J\-1otcl, 67~15 d bl 34902 Del Obispo St . ~C,.-t,.-°"Meoc'----;--BA. crplg, 1·ps, tns. cov (496--235.1). Kitchens. cl· --'•.;.•_• ___ ,. ____ _ ~!lo, ....... ., Uf!C of pool, xlnl . · & 1 1 -~ . ...,ii)"mo. 83()...S89l fi1·1enc1es apar n1cn s. • STUNNING 7 Br. 2 .. heated pool, direcl cliul n~ G I A o ~1 "-· U I 350 . . u.1. nn: en p a. ruv • r.c1,;. Duplexes n urn. phones, tclcvunon, saunn -':.:":::"c.:':.:lD:..'"":..· .::":::'hc.;:St::.. ;;C;o.M:.:·~ bath, laundry facilit ie!>, , . Blllboe Island mrcllng roon1, rlosc to San 2 BR, un(111 n. Crpl.I!, drps, 2 BR. w/gar, 1 btk to bus & NE\V 2 Bdnn u•furn. apt. 3 & 2 BR .. 2 00. each. Pier shopping center. No pe!!. " ln\m d Avail. Feb. l j. $145. $2.iO mo. Annue.l lease. 511 & slip. ltlany extras. e · 642-2818. w. Bay-Newport Beach. occupan")" Call 8,116-18.12 days (San Cail; 673-366.i 673·!!056 Eves. NE\V 1 BR's [rom $17().$1M Bernardino) or 883-29·4:1 Nr beach & shop'g, Adult~. 114 E. 20th SL, C.M. rvrs. !">-18--0137. associated 2 BEDROOMS 1 MONTH'S FREE RENT Ot'mente an<I Lflgunu r11ngctovcn: rcf~~g. No pet!!. LOWER Oplx 3 br. 2 ba. yrly Beach. Con1e play in our $140/1110. !lffi-14;)."J. 3 BR. 2 BA. r.tonllc1·1\o $225 n\O. Gams;t' avail. harbor _ ll u r r in K. LOV~~LY I l:lr APL Near Townhouse. Crpts, drps, dhl 2BR1 wtw crpts, bllins, fcnL~ patio, SJ&;. 1st & last, 1003 11avcn Place'. Call V\'ITI~ Tl·llS /\0 for nppt: 64G-:l723 or-1 -----c---:===1 EU.RN.. & _UNFURN ... DR OKERS-AEAL TORS 202S W Bo1boo t.1l·l66) &I0-'1382 FOR LEASE 102SO LaHaci1nda, F.V. Sublse Park Newporl 1.uxu1:v Bayfront 1\pts. 968·3378 G73-9749 or 6'f3-.9466. sporisfishin~. shopping and occ & ucr. No pct!! .. St35 garage. Dslnvhr, Pool. B•lboa-P,ntnivl• ~au!'llnl~ S:il\-wftQk-5'lld --mo:-t."lltl !rf9·01l1:--Kids/~1t·o1Cl225. 673..fifiJO. up .. Brin~_ thi~ • ~rl ~nd • 111: ATIRAC ~w 2 BR, l e TROPICAL POOi. e Trader's Paradise lines times -- dollars :2 Br 2 6'. llnfurn. top floor . 1 '"2 Bl(!I, S350 'to $550 N 1·. BR 0 0 KHU RS T beaul. bay 1Jicw. 64().17i'la George Williamson & \VARNER l'------...;;... _________ _,I ii no anit., 644-2442 x47. Reiltor back ,Ex 1 2 BR. detl 2 ba, ~-blk bch It N."CC'IVC S5 ou on h1'3t BA, adults, 110 pt'IS. 1970 2 Br li!Udio, l ll Ba, frpl, 11prl bQy. $325 mo. yrly. J.359 E.. ~·eek's 1'(1\f. \Valla(.'(!. $!Xi. s.1~. 1th'C'~sc. Gas & v.·tr pt!. Balboa 8Jvd.. Apt A Huntington Bnch ~ 1(5 J::. 18th. No. 9. M8-Jt68 (dwnstn), 536-35tg or ---"-------1 l.RG. 2 BR. unfUm, $145. 158 l BR Stove & l'l'!ftig $90 I n.l,_..1008. LOW WEEKLY RATES Tullp L.ruM!, Costa f.fesa. mo. cicaniTIJt deposit ~·d. E I, 5 't Call for kc)', 51&-5$3l. 1 -n non-smoker. no \Cott• Meu XKU lVI Ut es *UNFURN 2 BR . $135 $50 ~.._~ 727 Yorktown Blvd. de 11 J>49 \Yallace No. c .~""-=·-="'°'7:-:o:::;;-=::--o 1 llR. df'aPCI. nJ\it. refrta le Beach Bl\'<l, al YorktO"'" ~JOi 1 BR. $145 incl util al80. '.l , ncloeed , prqe. No petil. S:J6..0411 BR. TownhO~. trplc. 2&2 'r~1-oon SlUDlOS & I BR#I LARGE 2 BR. Ca~ts &: N"o A Orange, Mgr, 548-1614 Hu nti'!'-!' BNch e t\111 k!t ch('n ' 1~~~~n:· 2 .l 3 BR..$150 A: $165. $.'U e l!calctl J){X)I . NE dep. Nl.'\vly n'dec. AvaJl IMMED. OCCUPANCY e t .. ·uinilry f:i,·11i11t's 1 Bdrm apt \\•f~;,rflie, 6i1i 211. rn Shalimar, tW5-00T.l N-· • 8r opts •""". n~. e FrC<! utlhti1·" "~c.i14i·~1. SI /mo. '" " -e ,.~"'~' hntn~ .J'tO"'> • Dana Point llbl .....,.e, dlhwihr • T.V. & n111lll l:!CTV. Jl\•ail. XTRA lrg. 2 Bit. 2 BA, ltuuvl 1------...----~ll ~t.B. • enr·B·Qt11' • rac. c3rport, no peta. su;o. sPF.CTACOLAR W h 11 t' • ~ e Phone ~·r\·u.:r ;515-~;1!14:::;:1·=-=--:-°"':-;;;-;; \Vattr Oceanfrol"tt VU! 2 ---------e l ~111c to ocenn 2 BR. Adulls, no pel11. HAY RR, 2 BA. $%15. LrnAC. Newport ...... nA.Cll ELOR uni! v.'nlk to At.EAOOWS APT. 387 W. CrptA. rtrp~. It.ow, refrig, -~ Ulll Bay St -~ G464>l17l IAundry. SJ7..(l.JT0. UPPER duplmt. 2 Br, w/w bc:-11och & tnwn. l·.-i\lttcy . · "-l' • • crpt, <tl')>ll .. bl~~ No Incl~ $!Y.l/nio. r~'lG-.'.507. _ LGE. nrty new l·Br. a.pt. No OCEAN 1Jicw, new 2BR 2BA, chlldrc~Pl!IL .,_, ~11 tht' old ~1urr Buy,;;-IV'W chlldrcn or pels. Near f!rPl3, drpg, d~, aaulTI('(l -,\il1' ••• e.t2•567S JtuU. 111ore:a. t..p. yard. 64S-9l33 ger. S200/mo. \ \ t I l'V"'l.~A .. n."RONT • 2 BR.. Huntington S..~h '68 V:.\!. Fut , ~ ~.,.. * ~570 * 1-----''----'---lcond. tt-bll en(. Val. lllOO. Garage. $325/mo. Yearly. BRAND NEW for Truck & Camper, equal t'um ur Unfum. Cail,~-=--,----66-S!m. 1San Clemente QUO VADIS Ill \lall\t. Anaheim. UXE 3 "· 2 °-CID ~ury G11.rden Apts. 53$.4647 DEL • .,. • °"· ' • h'ld •-1 I • 2 BR' bhns frpl encl gar. 2 2 8R apt. No c r rcn or •n·or0 .: a. WANT baby 'l)19nd or con- pAtioS, Adlis, no pets. l..M' ptta. Nl!Cd 1't!dOOnt nigr lo FR M $125 !Ole. Wiil tradt 1966 Kar- $240. 543--3108. MAnage 5 apts. $190. leS!I 1I1d Pool.Jacu'l:l.i·Slunas m11nn Chia or 'S,, Meyers "'~D N n......~(l'Olt $50. for mgnlt of 5 nptg. Re rta.iinn Ronni A J\-1Qn!! Manx dWMt buggy. B·~· . f"W ""' ..... ,, 1 ~ ""12. ~"''---"""~. A•u!t• ~· No~, "'° -Condon1ln1un1. 2 BR. 2 BA °'"...,,.,. ...,,~ '1 , JO.!)'. • rti I b::-::::=~~7':::::::'-;-:;::-n;; $400/mo. Y<!ar tease. San Juefl C1p11trano IMMEDIATE '116 Toyota Crown 4 dr. o.o. 67!i--7RM OCCUPANCY R.H. Ex. 1ransp. Trade for ' · NEW '.l BR. Condo. \\'lllt-'1' pd. JA!l92 J.'1ond11 Sf, jMVtlry or anything of 10 CUOICE lx!a~.opls. 2, 3· Crp1.s, drps, bllln-,. P<l<>I. (\a blk. w. of Jarfield val~. 156 \V, 19th, CM: 4 Oft. Sffl To $6.-iO Yearly $195 32'105 Puco Carolina. t~~~_!8'~ac~h!_!!Bl~v:!!d·:!l __ l~S48~-"1!!181!;i~IWU2Tf~~~· ::--:::= ABBEY REALTY 642~~ Call· 493-7078. ,-• ol l 2.84 acreJ, idelll mobllt' 3 BR, 2 BA. '1,.c, Ins. yr 2 SR, 1 BA. l'tove, refrig, "\Vecd It A Reap" !~mt' aHe. near Elsinorf!, old. blk from beach k gar dlgp pool s~ mo. From tn&SUftll to lruh l\'altr & elec, value $11,500, !lhop'g. OB-St or 6l&-02'1li. itfll.)..2'lll, 496-7916. att's. turn them lnto cast\ _ · g<I ca.r/inconte prop- Plush f'll>W 2 BR. 2 M CAIL DAll..Y P!LOT ~ .. this aret. 8.as42U. WILL Trade Etnenon 21" Color TV, 6 mos old contOte for Cab-ovrr CamPtt. Anahetm ~7 TRAD~ 5 acrcs In Cew- laf\d .Na.rJonal ~! tot hotlae In Newport ~•ch or £.1\dc Cotla Mf!A. Ow~r. 548-3625. U'lL.L h'ade el11\ff J20. ,.n.oned 2nd TD: IJ.1,000 >r $12,000 2nd Tl)'j-1 ~ !qUlty ln llnlll, Newport ,rea. Coast Proper11,s, m i410. YtMly $26.">/Mo For lhl\t Item Undf!t $50, lt:Y ... ..., 673-9:>1'.; 1 '· the Ptnf\Y Ptnc~. CLASSlfJ:ED • ·• ·• .• &4 I••••••••·-~--------\ J , ' .. 1. • -- 1·F1. ---lrsJ 1 ---i~·i --JLm 1.b1 -"·•-111•• JLDJ,::1 : ..... :, 7:1~rm 1 lo~1tf1LDJ1 . ~~~~ ' 1-iiiiiiiiliim 1-l!l nd u-lldal ,$50 H•ulln! H•lp W•nled, M & F 710 Halp W•nt..I, M & F 710 H•lp W•nlo\f, M & F 710 Holp W•nted. M,. F 710 Htlp W•nted, M & F 710 Auction Monday, Jaf'IUitr')" 29, 191) DAILY PILOT 2:1 l[HJ I -I I l rJ'()UNO SrtY cat, ma1e, with LOCAL nlOVlnc It Daullns ~ Al1l1tant M-n•1•r 0=.lt~Mt~=--~ Over 2~RJus~~~ 4 L.~~· ~ Umebnfts~ S:~~~ ~;;~~~ !!~i~! clear pluUe collar. Near tludtnt. 1.ul{e truck. Ret.a. Womma apparel. Need tor Ramley Rex&1l Dntc. CM. nea1. APPi)' In Jl(ftOft, &u1 fltanor Conv. Holp. 496-5786. for exp(lrlcnced \!)(;ttl R.E 1 La.SUM lfi&h School can $34-.1846 Ol' 534-2164 o>C)U)' So. Coe.It PJau It~. No phone calls.... A Slrloln, 5930 w. Cout LV:N " EXPER &alesmen woo Wl•h lo ex· l , (Tit) 497·2735 evet.. YARD, p,ra&c cleanupt1., 'MUlf hAve sOlld l&WI <!xpcr. l{wy. N.B. N \des 549-3001 pand lnto the f!elda of R.E. 804 Auction SHORT NOTICE 8-04 I ~ TAN A white Boxer approx 'il.emOve trel'I dl.ri Ivy. Plea1t1 write lnfannal EDP SENIOR i;1JLL Time Depe.ndable day Lll'let .!.., .... ,CE •-('---development&: land pack.ago e to lQ ll\OI old. vk eutvu DrlW:W)'a. ara&ne,,*41·2966. rt:aume to liubbub, :Ml 'Ho. OPERATOR Diahwashl!T. Apply RJae:r MAIN'Tl;.l'ltu, m ........... ing. ~ • Walnut. lrvln4t. W~ Ho Oni.na;e Mall, Ora.nae, Cl, Rl'ltaurant, 16 FutUon dyman), part Ume, llto M. Gumbltlfl' & Ast0e. l-red collar. 55.2-«122. Carla. usecleanlnt( 92665. Attn: Prelktent, New~ Center N~rt 8cb bet 9 &: D&int!n(, e&rpelltr)' &: elec-1550 s. Coast Hwy. AUCTION ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT RESERVE OF RARE VALUABLE STOCK '-t'ND' Pair o1 "'°"'' vie. HOUSE OF CLEAN AVON CALLIN~! g.,.,.,., Imtttutloll .., in), U or 3&5. iilcol. ~· IDOis. S3.:IO IAg>tna S.och. 4'~'1'1 ! Bay Hartior ttlr park on TI-1£ PROl!""E.SSIONAL To help with thoee a.ft<!l'-the-mediate. openlfli. You will GARDENER. At least 8 hn. ~f~ tor·=· Tillot.on, R . E . TRAINEE I• 2:llt nr. Tu1Un A'(e., C.M. CLEANING SERVICE hOlldays bills. A •plendld operate 360-37[) oc..mputers a day. Experience helpful. R.E. Broker & Oe~lopcr PERSI AN RUGS • 54-6791 after 3 pm. 10% Discount w/thlt 11d ea.mine opportunlty In your on a 3 day shl~t bf.lb. Can· * "2·2814 • .... ..: 10R will train &: spensor lor .... 00.......... dldete must have minimum """" I FND' l'rqnant larae mixed '42"814 or '46s2517 own nc~. "-· 3 yean heavy mM os, DISTRIBUTOR Ice .... Call "4.;.1.l2l. 1107 JAMBOREE RD. I Wei.maraner I SP r l n ae r or1o~1CF. CLi:ANING, TOO! 540-7041 MV1' Clq>erieDCe piua .coocl GENERAL ., NEWPORT BEACH AND OTHER ORIENTAL RUGS NEWPORTER INN Spa~~I. tn Fairview In S.A. COLUx:E stude:tt will do BABYSIITER, moturc ror l8 knowl"'1t<• of JCL and POWER TOOLS Recept/'fyp"' Jr<JO TUESDAY JANUARY 30 '8 p M }, Cant keep 847~. hotJSC\\-'Ork. Aflemootu1 4 hr. mo old boy. \VOO & Fri 10 utlllt leA. f R General Office $450 • , I ·~o F ·"' bl k • O • T p ACTO Y Exec. Sec'y to pres $700 . . "', cn.....,e ac dog with mlnhnum, $2.50 hr. Me1111 am-.fni. w.. rans· Unique working environment F/C Bookkeeper ST:iO Viewing and inspection from 6 p.1n . until tune i white trim. Medium size. Verde or CoUea:e Pk. area, "640-""'"'';:"=·=~-,--= & top beneflts. OPENING NEW &:cretaries $550 or auction 1971l.quna8ch Uc. ta• vie '4H478. . BABYSITTER, day>, my • SandiOi & deburrtng & OFl'ICE IN Property C..uolty AUCTIONEER, Joe Safarady I-Katbar View, 61'3--3962. Dedicated CINnln9 hooae or yours. In NB area, Apply 9-12, Mon. thru Wed. 2nd operation '"1'ol'k. COSTA MESA UndeNTiter $15K S _, b ... GERMAN Shorthair Pointer *WE DO EVERY"ll:UNG * tor 2 girls, age 2 &: 5• PACIFIC MUTU~L Inventory Clrk $j()O ponsoreu Y f, puppy, "6 mo1., fou.nd vie Re!s. Free est 646--2839 "6"73-4""182"==~-.,,-,.,--, 700 Newport Cent.er Drive • Exa!llent -working cond.s * -F.anta.atlc opportunity-tor Accounting-~ $<12' GLOBE EXCHANGE! COMPANY f Ml.in &: 13th Htg Sch Thurs. -Xlnt Houl8Cleanlna: .BABYSITI'ER, reliable. 2 Newl)Oi"r&ICH "'-fringe benefits. advancement. Recept, Hunt Bch $"35 Terms: Cash or Chi ck CaU.6$1~ lo-Identify. -By Day. Own Tranaportation children. Days, various A pl A/P Clerk ~I~""'""'""'""'""""'""'""'~~ I GERMAN Sbephttd, ma.le) 4 •·83&-0648 * boon. 979-4289. Equal Oppor Employc>r SHUR L~Ky CORP • Guarantee $150 Wttkiy u A1P & Pa.yroll ~I~ Appliances ~ 802 I' lo 6 l1lOI old. Vic. Santiago BEAUTICIAN-Hair Stylist • • per written agreement. Cost Accountant $1JK LilJ ' ~and Hewes,· Orange, Prof. CarpetClt•nlng needed wllb clientele, top ELDERLY housekeeper, 926So, Lyon, S.A. NEWPORT [ ] ii *REFRIGERATOR*! I , Westminster tag. 633-8197. Ala> wlhdows & floor ca.re. commission or rent space. live-in possibly. 2 chtldrcn, Equal Oppor. Employe:r * Start work immediately Personnel Agency f.lt'lllo)'n.i: . f 5 ~·rs tild, auton1ati1· il•·h"'' ~ SIBERIAN Husky, female. CaJl Dutch 537.1508 Newporter Inn B ca u.t Y 12 &13. 642-2622. 833 Oovtr Or., N.B. I ~'.'f'.....!:.!<'ttn. ~9(~1() fl Mesa Dl",, Cost.a Mesa, JAPANESE lady to rlo Sa.Ion, 644--0340. Gtntral Ofc Work * Complete company train· 642 • 3870 SN! t VR . ~arn, di·! ,\ 1 I . 546-7308 s~c;. house"'Ork. Own transp.:r'..it· BEAUTY Operator. fltime EJeCtronic: 1882 ReynoldA St., S.A. ing J)l'Olram Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 stHll. 1 ~,rc ni0t1. nll ,.1 , rouND·. 16 1pd b1·ke F""'"-tion. 540-l332. Ahampoo ...1~1 & assistant. GELCOAT TOUCHUP ir~s K~nnmrr \\·nsh•·r. S::J.1n' ! ......... 6 .. Assemblers . ..Callf79.5222,9am.1pm Receptlonist~o SER VI CE Stntion -~: , taln Valley. Owner ~ntify. I c6 T 1610 W. Coast 1-IW)', N.B. • E'xpc!r. Coastal Recreahon Monday. Jan. 29th cute, outgoing girl needed by Salesnian-Top pay _ lrlnge • D!Slf\VASllEP.S. \111i.hl'Z.>.I f 968-2949. -n me ax • BUS Driver 2'l or ovtt for Solderer Toucl:!l.fP lnc, MU542. Eq, Oppor~ Tuslill Co. Type so. benefits. Exper pref'd. Full dry1rs, rcblt, l,.'tltlr11 •· , •• Lost • SSS Sm'1ley Tax Semc' e private Christian School. ~r .J::bly Employer. MANAGER Hospital RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT & pt time avail. Apply Shell d~·!v'd. 839-7620; f.46-521 ~. I -Short hrs. Will train. Good 011 ., & ]'Jlte Shitbl AvaiL GIRL Frtday, 1 girl ofc frr teen, Exper. In rei.ni .. ~~ AGENCY, INC. Station, 17th&: Irvine, N.B. OVER 200 v.'8.Shers, ili'ycn:. LOST, reward! One yt old driving l'f:j.'Ol'd required. Ap--v NO -FEES busy retail bla.t 00.. in foods. m.-2819. _....,. 208: Business Ctr Dr. Ste 290 SECURITY guard for pi•t rerrij'.l:eratots lrot11 $~-~.,. 1-mln SchllalU!er, 111ilUf:i e 15 Years LOCALLY • ply tn---pmron. l~ Newport Bch. Bkkpnr Irvtne 833-9410 community . entrance gate. 0:"''.2;.-0780"'";:;·,,,_.....,.....,_,...,,,... • per,~Rufua). No8la(s. Let ~ee ~~tde ~~l. Fountain II GvllleA':ly, 3502 So. ~~~ ~· = (Qraneee.o. Airport Areal Uniforms furn. Full time. G.E. Rrrrig, 4 yrs, 2 door. II' at amer I pringdale, M ed ="=""·'-~-..,...,,-,,,.,,, reen • .A. ~ Claaa:ified · d RELIABLE hard worker Rm 230, ~ W. 4th St., San· self defro!it. $90. Xlnt rond \ H.B. area. Jan 6. Call W. A. SMILEY, .P.A. OflLD care in my home for HOTEL desk clerk, exp only, 597 I Dail Pilot, a p re· who wants opportWlity to ta Ana. 9fi8-1148 I 846-5686 de.vs. 846-3169 after S:U.2221 (Me8A8.ge 6'6-9666) 4 & 7 Yl' old, Tues & Thurs -5i apply In penon. Jamaica &¥ c t.5m ~ i\1esa. ca advance with small growing SOBER mature 40 + kC'nnrl -R:oec.n:,:t.:;W;,,-.-,·h.-r-.~/~D~r-ye-,-;· 1 2. $4. min, Open 9 AM-8 PM from 3 unl:U 8:30. Nr UCI l.• Colrui, 210del Pac. Cit. Hwy., 9263). ' ' • codrlm 1 pany._ M~ hav•a't -... man. $2.50 per hr. 6 day l\k, $ 2 . \\lk, Full main!. 1 LOST: Gray cat i'!Wht Jeer , 438 N. El Camino Real mature alrl, refs. Mi-"7932: iamatt.C~ rona 1 Mar. v ng '"co'"• n 6 hrs daily split shirt. 1~ • G39-l20 2 • It undenlde. '"I'll flair, Ilea San Clementi!', 492.-67f.6 .:w::o.:orkc.1135s=:::9'l62=·c_ ____ 1 (/ • MEN wari"ted f/tlme for pearance & p I e a s I n g •t O..I C M __ ...:..--::.,::::.."---'"' v·· ,._ ,..._ HOUSEKEEPER • Llve in • varlou. car wash duties. II ""'r&onality. Ph. Mr. Baxler, "esa ve, · · C:•m•ras & collar, li'l'L rt" eyes, le. Ironing CHILJX!ARE, my home, 500 NC"NpOl't ...enter ...,,. com"""km who dn·,.,, < ~ T EA C >IE R p cl I -~-• M D CM · 6 Sui'" 520 ,..... ~ · ' yau·-re""ble & lookln• tor "'" "-, days 'Or "'0 2381 . • 1· e-s KJO • Red.I..,~·· esa r., • · Balboa Pen. Boy 10, gu·l u:; -w '"~ t t I.JOO '" .,. u-w-.u.ou ;.rso-Equ1·pment J II Be h o"" ~ s. a"""'""" ap • · •leady work, •t•PIY in eves. p/hmc, 2:30-5:30. Also, sub. , ;Pleate contact, enn er, Pro'-oolonal lronlnn from 2:30-approx 5:30. 3-4 Newport ac ~ pei· mo "-ply Bo• 153 Bal ~. 30 ''° "°' .,. •= °'" "<7 "' • , n<: "' , • peraon to .......... , Udo Car n -1a··--t . Fast l"ood ""-"per, ovr . .....,.'""""'. day•~. eves.~ , *** ,.,8875 * •• days week. some wkends. boa Colit """''" ...... n.ca ....... , - 808 ~ 4 bel 2 30 EXE Ct.rr!VE <;1~ .. -·. ' .,......,,, Wash, 481 E. 17th St., C.A1. "-'-·. '".die -~ wom•" .,. LOsr male cocka poo , ref req. 675-661 ; ~"'°"7 1. ... .,., •. v •nJU <>g=> " TELLER ASAHI Pf'nta.'C tspormatir' Super-Takumar 1;1'1 ll'n:s. Vit"itar Tele-zoom 1!5nim- 205n1n1. P hone. 642-A970 I·" ·apricot, 6 mo. old. Anrwe:n Janltorfal CHIID Care-2 Irvine school dynamic Newport Beach Housekeeper to ive-in. •0 MERCHANDISE handler, p/timc, if.B. Call eves. DA'-•· DA'-•" Vic V'· •I CPA firm b.a.s openlna for ClU\! for 2 children & home. lull lime, contact mont."'er """'.J!728. NCR PROOF OPR ~. to "DtMU~• · • "-"JEFF'S CLEANING ...;..i .. , 3 eves wkl)'. ust · R •~ brd + aal•"' East ··-.,,..i......, I •-• n... c M ....... ....., """" Int e I l i gent, Cf"efltlve m • -J ' · at Beal'• Furniture Store, REPRO p.,i. Up •"'•!, . . o.... .-umona, • ' SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL, haw own car.~. ,,. ... , w/an ·n1ttati"e & blull Call ,._ Boileau, .,. ~ '~ Co "' b k n-··--' .,..._ • ....., sea-e__,;, I • • · a.u.""111. ~ -~,, only. Wrl 1 ,, mm,t'tCl•u, an exper. min, "'"'"'IU"Q· .,.,-.L;J0,.1. --COMMERCIAL. •--°'. b t 11 t •-a 644-4917 = . . ~ a y w • -uume , MILL FOREMAN aasilied ad No. 602, Dally 6 mo s req d. NeYlport Bea.ch c:'.'101d.en0r"!~e"Ae~;,larr. • 's.nmoleta Palntlrut & Clerical Temporary re 11 pons ibll!Ucs. Only tr you. work at a plant or co 5 yrs m1n exp, Furnlture Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 , Costa area. Furniture 810 • -• • .. ·-. career-minded need apply. that emp)oyH more than 15 -....1~ G l tutu for M Caill 926'lli Isabel. 2417 Orange Ave., • P1perhantint * Typists Must have good typing & people & you need xtra ~~ •~· Manyrea be n! f1ts. esa, · · · ' 646-38lO. °CUStOM PAINTING * S.Cr•t•rles shorthand sk1lla &: pleasant cash, call CTI4J ~ a1t wp man. oe RN '1 -bVN!.--Ptad:tcals Bookk"Siio' telephone voice. Sals.cy 6:30 & \\1tnds. Days C213) Domino Jnd\lstriea. 11672 (ma~1 & female), Private ***Sofa & lovl-scnt. never i' (71.4) '46s7J21 Mr1. Rios '72 Sony Color TV 12" push button lni.1an1a1ic pore., $175. Upright {reeZ('r, '72 €onrinentn:I $100:--SU-4253. lnter/Exte.r. Unturn. lnter •. i -B·v-n..;;;; · open. Call 640-1333 5.S'l-4223 Armltrong, Irvine, 557~ dl.ifY'1e gtaU relief needed. used. bolh for $160, usuaUy 1pec. price. Free color con· 1'" ".,...,..ra rs XEC SECRETARY ' MOLDERS-Fiberglass, ex· Lllldsey Nur•·n, Reg., Equal Oppor. Employer homr. !168-7910, suiting & est. Uc. loa. *.Receptionists E • It.1MED. Openings tor 10-15 per. &: trainees. Hl.rin& for 3 8.10-8500 or 646-4816. HIDE-A-BED ..cuucli..-0Ul¥ln \Vor.'t be underbid. 60-6005. * Stenos Preg, ot rap1dly growing ladies full or p/lirne. Paid shifts. ApPly at aate, i'am, RN ' SUpervlsor for . small TELLER vinyl. Go.ICI ooiid, $1-Ml. ~ No Wuti~ * Office Cltrks firm needs ind.iv. who is wkly. Earn xtra nioney oi 3pm, I: llpm. AfacGr-eror nursing home l.n beach area. Beautiful modern savings & 832-9405 alt -!run. * WAl:.LPAPER * :~t~~ &T~~ci!~J~~ s.'f1rv:1~r:u~~ Yacht Corp. 16.ll PlacenPa. Call n4: ~tor appt. loan needs bubbly type in· CURTTS-~luthc!! ··color TV 3•~yaltti-When yau call "Mac" NO FEES "" •-· ~---1 ••• -CM. oll div. Some exper. a plus. 1 · ... Page, ~~. .........,.,. 7826 or~. N RN Supervisor for am Salary to $475 Call S1illv \Valnut cabinet, Good cont! BABYSrTTING-Motber will 548-l4" APERIN646-l1l1G PHer:nn~vd A~~· 2700 INSPECTORS, s a 11 boat llN7u&rsa~~ MdedShlfto Callnunln11<4 004~~~!~:h ~a. Hart, s.fil..60a5, Con111RI ;!"ISO"-';"''.::':ch::.· '°!IG"'=""'·'"'·'--..,,·-babyglt any age. Hourly or PAINTING &: P • Immediate Short & Long ar r ., .... molding & auem. in-~ vt119r : ;:J'r"QV r app · Pent0nnel Agency, 2790 Jewelr y 815 d"ly ~~·-2 Z> yrs. In Harbor area. Lie • Term Tem .............. AMign-Exp Moldtrs & Toolers specUon. Some prev. inspec-Top"pvt~ duty pay. ROOM CLERK Harbor Blvd., C.A,i, I ~--.'------ • .....,.-.>,)U ' &. bonded. Ref'g furn. ments wuhTh: Service c.o&.!lal Recreatlorl, .940 w. tion exper, helpful but not Immed. pay ~for floor duty. Exper. l PM-11:30 PM, ti ""'AINEE INDIAN Jl'Welrr. '11\.'er ~· a;!I~~ -~e~ ~642~-;2356~·~---,--,.. That Works For You .•• , 17th St CM ~-Equal mandatory. 3rd Shilt. Apply c.ouniy.~ .. Need RN · nttes:. C.all Bill Schneidei r" ~ u r q u o 1 ~ e. li.P"< r\·at11•n ti c:=:.~~~· p::.~r:r.~~~ . ,m ::;;~~~~::0~rpat ~~~:~~.: ~~.£~~.;n~\~!~ ~.~~~~OONeWl"fterlM, ASS~~~LERS ~::~··-;~!~~~1~~:3: ',...,......,.. •• l!I ' salesman. Top eamlnga, '" ·• pltal Rd. N.B. (Lobby Park SALES clerk, part time, Instant Personnel Na1·njo Trading, 2 4 l:: •i JOHN'S clrpet &: Upholstecy PROF. Palntfng, alao roofg, -5i 49&-0655 """""' l'ER.50NNEl Udo Bid&.) 642-9955 or preler drugstore exper .. 1~ Temporary Servi<""~ N•·11·1M•rl Bh·d CM 6-12·7251 f Ori ~--~ tree Scotch· accous. cell. 1nter/exter1. EXPERIENCED d•ntol ft~-U\,YN"'CC !<All.....,~ 15 hn/week. Bushard s 106 --- ..,................ Lie/Ins Free est "5-519 • t• ....-CCD\N""rr "'3";:JJ.n. Pharmacy 49 4_1059 3848 Campus Dr ~ Suit~ Machinery 816 guard (Soil Retarda.nta); · · · tan:ia t.C~ i;istant with x-ray llcenae. <A;l\l'A..C.>~ NURSES Mde-lmmed open-4M--Ol4S • 'Newport Beach ~741 ~ [)ep'euen I: all colcr BIG Dtsc. -W.P. & labor, ti 548-8844 Fee It Free Positions lng 7-3:30. & :t.ll:30, "-'•T .,....,.,.. ... , Ex'p "~w .. -Equal Oppor, Emplo,y{tr COMPRES.SOit for sale ... br:libleoen: It lA minute call for aampl.es &: eet., The 502 Ntw-rt Centtr 'Dr Bkkpr 0 I/time Parle Udo Cbnv ~ ..... ..,, 1ian1. ..... , TUTOR I 3""" d' bo.;. 2 5 !IP r.!O V(11ts. 2 mos old ble!ach lor white ~\&. HafllTll(n M7·5846. I ._. FACTORY ' F/C ' Ole Mar pen , . nJtea: Mon thru Fri, Apply ln .or '"' gra e Y· $450. 61.2-1,413 • Save YoW' money by ia\ting ,, v PAPERHANGERS ' ' ~ '83:>3861 . \ Sales Secretary $600 Hosp., 4r.6 Flagshjp, NB. Perton Kerm R im a Hour&' AM. O'edentlals & ..!..'.C".,-""-"'"'----~. me extra trips. Will clean Reduced· rates for the cf! N.-wport ac Girl ~ to $500 OmCE Narse-LVN or Hardware, 2666 Harbor exp. Send resume A. Hayes, Mlscellarflous 818 • living nn., dining rm. It se&IOll. ~. ~. l Girl Office to $500 medical usiJtant. Starttna Blvd Costa ~fesa P.O. Box -746, C?i:t. ball. $15. Arty. nn. $7.50, ~ER. M•-ter Ext-and c 0 0 KI H 0 u. s eke eAd~· Announcing *** SecPu.!!~~p.!.... ~c! ~.ssoo mo. Moo-Fri, s .. · -tary/Recapt TYPISTS Fair \Veather Friends ~ ooucb $10.·0>air $5. 15 yrs. ~ .-u• • ... Bayfrmt N.B. Uve-tn. wt ·~ .....,.., .... -.,,.,....olQDU •• L Anybody can h,• [ril'ndl,v exp. la what O'.lllllts, not 1n.ter. Reas. rates. Call lan1ily, refs. Salary open. Recept/Gen'l Ofc 'lo $500 OFFICE Manager tor hosp. ~ilJ~ to ll'ansa'ibe from VO T wht•n )'OU IAl"C !>i\'ing l b('ni method. I do work m.yr.eu.-Dick, 9634065 eve!!. 673-2459. ~ q, ~ =~.B~~~ to = lab. D<cy1, I/time. Person-~~~&is~. ~~= Instant Personnel business. llul voice u <.'Om Good ref:53I-OlOL APT. INTERIOR COOK$, f/tim~, 1 yr exper. ~ ~ 0 1 __ ,,, , _"_ Ork ••An nel Dept, Hoag Hoep, NB m•allN °':r''tion spell· Temporary Servi.ce plaint • nnd U1at's anothc1· It c 0 -t cleaninz. Ref's -M5().$M5. Parle Lido Conv. .d 'J tr 6 ~ ~• -ron.. ..~ v ·r: ~848 C&mpu.g Dr Suite 106 ntatlt't. Pol:tt•nCM diSl!OIV<.'~ C•rpenrer FRE'EEsrIMATES W-7059 NB. • . Tellen ~ OPE:RA ~· sln&le needle l.ng, ae secretarial Newport Beach ., 546-4741 . sn1iles drop to fl'Olll"lt> • I · Al l -ol Pl p 1~ R I COO-K·.· 1u 6 11 tna.,lm< :~ ... time AIP Bkktlr/Constr $550 overlock. Zippenetter. Top lkl.lll a: appearance Int· Jo.;qual Oppor. Employer 111lrd!: bet"01ne shoulg • 'Jt-" as.ttr. • ...-., epa r . t--• 488 E. ltth (at Irvine) C?tf pay, exper. orey, RoU's portanl --I TV some!imC's. At AL'S CAR· • •CARPENTRY• for holpitaJ, N•w Lite 1-,ustrlal 642--1470 Mlg., 865 Production Pl, Robertabaw C.Ontrols C.O. UNDERGRO~D C.a,!?_el PET, we like to he friends lg. & sm. 53&-1648 * PATCH PLASTERING 645-5707 uu. NB. l607l Gothard, I-LB. Installer. Exp d or .,a nee All lypes. Free estimates Division For Women ___.'t ,. ¥t,. ~ ORTHODONTIC FR 0 N T ~-·ol Op~rtuntty Employer considered, Apply 2624 W. w!th our custon1crs, CVf'n :t:-emtnt, Concrete Call 5'»-6825 CUSTODIAN, Part time/full • --• ...... e:!: .. =.~~;;;;;;;~""'=~1 Coast Hiway, in "slonny Wl'athrr." Is 1 time. Call 842-4461 fur In· NHdtd Immediately JOBS OFF1CE Exp nee. SECRETARY TELEPROMPTER CORP. 110methlng 1vrong? 1'l'tl ui;! . SPECIALIZING In patios, Plumbing terview. Community United URGEN"ft.Y NEEDED ,.,...,..,=,:!112..J<l5:;::=:;:=-,==:-:! S500 Frtt An F.qual Oppty Employer \\'c'll make it ri&ht -without , 'sldewalkstes tree• drlt,.,..,..XI ·( Lowjob ;,.;;:;PUMB:;;:;;;;::IN_G_REP __ AIR __ J;iMi:ei:lhodlstiiiiii;i°'Oii""iibiooiiii.... Exparttnced e Dmce-Clerlcal * * Painting in exchange Youna m!Clltlve needs bright WAIT'DESSES a figAhtL. 'S CARPET ra , es · n I • ~ Operators tor apartment, '4 hn a day. attr&ctlve airl to auls~ him. L ch & 01-" Shilts Ex· done~ Howpct, 644--7423 or No jcib too small Data Processing PC AsMmb tr• • Assemblers/wire wrap tar your rent. 548-9'r.6. Irvine. un nner , &.RUG.WORKS David 642-9852.. * * 642-3l28 * K nch e Accounting PAYROLL CLERK AillO Fee Jobs per. only. Apply In pel'90n, 293 s. Main St., Oranac CEMENT Work, drives, Sewing/Alteratl?ns T:tr~"'av~~le A190 Irvine 540-4450 ude &: ll RIVIERA EMPLOYMENT The Derby R:eila~t 542 -6400 e 542 • 9009 walka, patios, desks, ad-•. .-...t Oranii; C.Ounty Tr•inees For Anaheim 533-2322 Good fi&un!ll aptit te ·AGENCY INC 1262 S.E. Bristol, dltioM. Fm osl 54H705, Altar•llons-'42s5145 thro~'"ifo FEES Lil• lndustrl•I Work NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO ms""' •i land this pocltion 2082 Buslneu ctr Or. ·ste 290 '4&-<l360 * AUCTION * 64+-29'Jl. Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. Tempo Temporary Help Poaiua::..ee ~ 1~ Irvine 833-9410 WAITRESS, exper. not under Fine Furniturn PATIOS.PLANTERS Tile II • Many aaaignmenlA In the JUNIOR Salennen: 10.15. ~ Coaatal Penonnei (Orange Co. Airport Areal 21. P/tlmc 5 pm-9 pm. No & Appllnn<.'CS AU Concrete work. Brick, Newport Beach, Irvine, Earn ~$40 per week aet· Agency,' 2700 Harbor mvd., SF.cRETARY p/time, g..2, ~n!'·s ~~~· 10~g~~: Auctions Fri<!Jy, 7:·30 p.n1. itlump1tone wk. 894-3533. CERAMIC TILE NEW & Santa Ana &: Costa Mesa ting new customers for the C.M. S/H, General oUice, send 512 W 19!h St CM Windy's Auction Barn remodel. Free est. Small areu. DAILY PILOT. Th.It la not a resume to Box •575, % ' " · • PATIOS, walka, drives. Sa.w, )> 2426 Siamatics • ~rienced & traintt newspaper route and doe• POWER machine operalor, Daily Pilot, p 0 Box 1560, WAITRESS, expet., Coffee 2075% Newport, 01 646-86lll ~tnak. remove &: replace I ;~"'~""~1'°~""'~·~536-~~~·~ '6 PoslUOns. Excellent earn-not lnclude collectln2 or experience a b s 0 1 u t e 1 Y Costa Mesa, CalUomta Shop, Apply in per11<>n, l ; »-Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l I <'OOCl~te. 548-8658 tor est • "' rt"· t Dr ingll. Weekly paychecks. delivering. Tn.nlportatlon ia neceuaryly In • ~ 0~ .. Aine~ 92627. 4:30 dally, 2633 W, Coast 2 DE s Ks and BOOK· • W .. v on •---te. Not ][ill Sul500te520''<Wl"Ntif°~nertrBe.ach -•ded We-~ ....,_ p ,....._,, vnu HY NB -~~• [ prvvi ' wua... ...,,... Interiors. 1733 Monrovia, SECRETARY · w ' . . • SHELVES · SU IT AB L F. MUD~.',' , Max, Cement ~;;•It 833-316 hours after school and 8 on No. E, Costa Me-. Administrative, The T. M. WAITtallRESSES . -Joodsld~ FOR C!IILDREN or else Cbn~. 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. ~r~ia't:ev~":y~l ;iiii;ii;iiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiml Communicatlong Co, A Cock exg.g: o y. 1 would be ide'al ror cxtrn ' CUSI'OM ~ORK DE A L E R g H I p g I rvln. 133-1441 Hunrtnaton Beach areu on-PRINTING Subaidl.ary ot the Times Mir· Blue Beet, 9004. · &lorn.gr spaL-e In your 1Zar- Drlvet, WALKS, ' Job Wanted. femele 702 AVAILABLE Nr. Orana:e Co. Airport ly. You must be out of ror 0>, 1w an excellent~ WANTED EXP ER age. Pl1JCED !-'OR IJlf. Pool decks, Don:-fl. Excltina new home package -------. school by 3 PM t 0 EXPERIENCED portunJty fer a brlcbt. am· Scamstreu, good wares, MEDI.ATE SALE. 1:.112 s. Child Cart COLLEGE Atudent 10.C.C.) all 1¥-tum Easy sell. ~Fae. s;.:pate. Expef'lenceJ bltk>us secmtary to work xlnt working oond. Apply RoM St., San!n Ana, ' """"" part ttme oltice work, Repeat business tt•ms tory ~"n pr I or It y BINDERY GIRLS directly for the President or 148 Loe Mollnol San 542-3120. 1 DAY Care, tnf.ants to 3 yrs, clerical, P.B.X. etc. Costa yielding xlnt profits. No in-Temporary Trainees _ this Cable T.V. SubA!dlary. Clemente or caJI 49i-821.l. STEltEO, 19TJ G 11 r r a r I.I 1,"18 per, ~k. Call 646-9788 Mesa ar~a. AVa.llablc after-vestrnent nee. C.Ontact C.H. NO FEES KE'Y Punch operator lBAf We are looking for a ~U WHO WANTS TO WORK? model. S)'llcm.izl•1J a ut o ( or 645-4302. noons 1 pm • on and Satu.--Ma.Ming beN."ee.11 10 Afo.1-2 Short A 1 ...... Tnn 029, exp'd on IBM 407 &: 084 1tarter who ii mature, pot&-DRIVE A CAA! chnnaer, 200 "'1111 am/fn1 d·-Cati ',_ .. a S4S-f478 P'! -,,_ -~ Sorter helpluL Ftill u·me For ni••t lhlft (3:40 ed and has excellent typing CHOOSE >H><•r houni. work ~Iver. J t n sen II.Ir I "·onlr•ctor ....,~. ........ ' "' ~. A8'l1nments In S.A. &"' _.. JV-_,, .. ta -· Be h o,,. prn.12: 10 am) in large le shorthand skUls anu at ror your!M!I:. be your ov.'n 11UJpension gpe-en • lit' , NEED help at home! We DELIVERY ol DA IL Y lrv:lne & Costa Mesa areag days. Newport ac · ,....,. least 3 )'l'I n!Cent ex· boll.S. t.ten or "-'Omen. Co.n il~·k. SllJI brand new in ~ Add llioM Remodeling have Aides, N u r I e"I • PILOT, SlJNDAY ONLY, to , .,,Hiieiinkaii;;;&tiiiirii3934iiiiililiiiiiiii..., J wlume print shop. pertence. Apply Mon. _ Fri. bf> sll:;chlly hatullcappt:.'1.1. box. \Yas Iett unclaimed on I Gerwick &. Son, Llc'd Housekeepers. Companions, newspaper C&J'l'iers. Re II Ii 84.::IO. Contact Carol, (714 J Vta. re£1red. A~ 21. to 70. Jayawn._v. Now. $134. ~n1 I *-549--2170 Home.makers, UP J 0 h n • quires the use of a Slation Labor Jemnnrary Apply in Per.on 557-6402 Supplenicnt your income. depe. f714l 893--0601. JACK Taulane _ ~ 54 7 ..e681. . Wagon or Van. C.Ontact A1r 'I"" M T. M. Communications Co. Drive a cab 6 hrt or mere" *SWIMMING POOL* """'"·· addlL l!) yn ..... Holp w.nttc1. M & F 710 Hen'y Soeley, 330 West Bay Siamatics -General Lehor a rtec An Equal Oppt;y Employer. day. Apply In If""~ t.oclll pOOI boll••··· will tµk< ;:-tJ;.;•d. My Way Co. 547-<I036, ACCEPTING applk::a.tioJ. St .• Costa lofesa.. '6 ·Fork.lift Driven 1375 Sunflower Ave, Costa Yellow Cab C.O .. lRS , 16t unylhlng of v11lm: in trade.. oft!-•tor ................. '"'-'-·-'-er. DENTAL Rec e pt Ion Is t c:hlne Ope ton R d t• Meta, 9262166 St., Costa Mesa.. IOQt,.;., flnoncing on U11! '~ Col .,_ .. Kl,-.~· -·2'ii'• 2 Newt>Ort Beach Orthodontlc Sul500te 520Newl"rtNMr'C.oter Be°'"-· -Ma NO FEES epro UC IOI An """' OJ)pOrtunlty WIG St;yllltl. 111!"'8i'" tor bel•""'· No .. y ....... •nUI I -·~0....,, Remod, Ort~ HwylU.len~·-Jn• .. Ottlce. Top 18.lary. Uberal '""' rmployer Omige Coun tlti finest WI& May. Ask ror l\ti·. Rhul~. r""""',o:rn ....... ....,, -· be_...,,., Pl t 133416 Lons A Short Term I ton! ch.a!n Call Connie I Room AddiUOOI. $50 up. Ca lltrano • binp .......... eaaan en-A.a.lpmenta thn>out Orange nc ~ s . I ~-~t.;4500<·=-,,-,,,..,-~.,...;;:::: I 557-oal 551~ p • vlronment. Dental exp req o. • e Secretaries to $MlO (2l3) 96&-4455 today. SEARS 10" lt:.dlal Ann S8w fina ca. le I ~ 25-35. No smoking r I BER Ci LA s s I hand . • • Sec'y{Bkkpr lo $800 WOMAN OYf!I' 18-! You can with dntwi'r r:tblne-1 "extni I Gardenlftl Accoun •Paid· r 1 ~ikls~l628~' ~· -~---lam1naton. ~ work. tJ 1577 Placentla Ave. • Jr Sccn!tary lo S5DO earn $60 per week:, P/Ume blndts. Jricl\J~ Dodo Set & i PROF§SIONAL Qardenor, A-..tt (A= exp) ~ to = DENTAL AsslAtant. exper. Jlelmet Mfr, 1 Plactn11a, Newport IMach, Ca, e c:Miputer Opr to $7&1 Job. No delivery with Sarah inoWlnR ~""1,...J. Soill!ns ror I 11"' wodc, prupl nf, ~t to chalrakle w/knowledj[e of CM. • F/C Booldceepet'I to f750 Cowntry. 962-37TD $340 81 ~·ar.i for salt' "' I sprlnlden, clearn1p Jobt, Exec Sec'y (sh flt) desk. Sa.lwy open. Send s· tic Equal Oppor. Employer m/1 . Insurance Sec'y to $900 WORK at home·phoor u.Je1. $275. Np! lk'h 641-4711 i landlcaptng. G ci or re.., A,pplioaiit P~t Fee resume to Box 1799, Lag FORMS ANALYST lgma $ ""!!J'!!""'!!J'!!"'"""!!J'!!'!""!!!!I• Legs! Sec'yw ~ITSTto ~ Exper. Pl"t'f'd. Call C.Olleet CAIU'E'T LA)'\~r ha<i AcTI''"< l fi4&.689l. .., Sec:')" (no sh) $450 !Bch~·c..,,---===o:c .. Rul Estate Sales • Acdng Oerk to $450 ITI4 > 8%.1~3438. lfl 100 ,,111s nt cnrpotin_· 1 1 .1un.i Servict, mow, edge, T)op1st S«:lO D Er+ TA L REC E P· . .Our hOme Office-la 11il· 500 Newport Center Dr fR[( * 1 00°/o FREE * bC'ln"' ..,, hQll'MI'" Prit,•s. aJM> I ~~-itil.lif~--~{ll)mnt1. Gefilral~omce----S425 M1-0""N'"l"'ST*-1 OP'P-fCE'" ua1rd ot.1 a blurt over· Suite~ Newport Beach Ui Reindc.n A~ncy N"n1n11n1• & ~h111ie11 n1 di11- cleanup. Tl'ff work pnni· Othef' Free A.Fee PotlUont MANACER~Flllt moving looking lhe Pat:lfic Ocean IU.3161 I 4500 C&mpu.a Dr. [ 11~1 oouni pr~·1·.:::_rl!J.7M2tJ:__ I I .... n ""'w ta-~1, ;;;(I, rus. RUTH RYAN AGENCY '"'""'P practice In El Toro • Nowport Harbor tr LlcenH Tra nl~ ........ 2118 •-"·•ch •d -· ~ ... _,. 1 ' 5'5-29C ..... 179.1 Newport CM 848-4854 ~.. managerlal pocitlon yoo q~. tl.'e offer.you LAUNDROMAT deanup, Ute F llmltedllce Time Onty ~411 ~~~·1~!.~-llk~Nl'll'w~ ~~I 'al j ifi; H .. Gardener 17931 Bffch, RB 847-8611 open for an intell\cent., lh!Jt ui1Jqut work en· -work. Ideal for retired amoua ae course now f • 7 loot wrfboard, ll'°"9 ~et:~n ·l«V: c~tlve wom~ M'::r have vlronment + a ehallenr· couple. ~alt 6pm, available thN 'fvbe.U Com-SE~RE~!.r..u 800 sh~pl'. m11ko otfC!r .. ~ JCanWani, 14 6-48 7 6 , Acctna Clerk $525 ~~lvtyltleslO °'l_ a•• u ~~ Ing protnslon&I CIPJlOI" LEGAL SIC'Y TRNE pany. Applleant• fully ""' Do )'OU ve ve AntlqUtt 11r1 :il'M or 't\."t"f'ke -1,_ ~·-eafll I..mnUne ...... • 1unity. tmburled upon qual\Ocatlon. ability'!' Pftl. of land ; ~w.oi•. repoftllbllitiet of ottk-e. Must havt mtn. 10 + typln&. New or exporienced .-le• devtlopl1:11 oo. radt you. GER~tAN grandfather clock. BEGJi\JNER'S lK't Of LAWN maintenance a.od W~ff Salary open. call ~13l3. \Ve n.re 8Hkina: a Sr. Salary optn. Irvine area. Pl!OQle, OpvUnp ava.ltabao. Rclaxl!d abnosohcre. Start Doric Oak. 7 f~t 1aU. Clob!I; $1'!1. Goltt&:r ... ::W..-. tree Ntlrnate, ~ ~) DENTAL Sec'y-Bookkffper. Fonn4 Analyst w/mtn. 83.W(l.14. Corilpltte tralnlna proen.m, $&XI. Call Helen HA)'eS. Omale fa.ct and "A'Gl,thtfi ~ 11.n .3 • .....u. sa.a» Exptt. or colle.ge. Call 2-3 )Tl uper. In forms UFEG\WW. W/Rniar ure Future "'~"' OPIJ(JI'-~. o:ula1 ~llOl'ii'lel $675. 642-Hm. I BltADBUR.'' Sf':tsct!Of otMral S.rvkes~ ,=1'&~-~=·=-=-:o:--::-dttlan, control It ana-aavt~ l5 hn ptr tunltiet. Call Mr. Sloan a1 Aeency, 2190 Harbor Blvd., * ANTIQUF.S~ 20~~ orr .s~ Br"qoo LlllKa A/R CLERK DIN: NE R Co 0 k A: 1,vs11. Colltre dtlJ'ff pre-wtoek, llta m•lntenanct 132-MtO. C.M. Andquta ror lntlfl'ioMI 3545 E Otht-rs. Pvl." Ptv ·Rain Guttm !Jdlled. Growllw locol -at1mt dl-h<f, AP!>\!I lo omon l•rnd. Sal"'Y will ho In ,..rk. APPLY, LAKE TARBELL SEttVJa: Station, G•aoe Cit Hwy, CdM 6'1;s251S. USEDillCYCL • work. Reaonabfe. f!:t ops:~ 10 advllliCt. at\~f:.t ~~,)5.1 1\Crol'dAnce w/expcr. A -F'Of\EST 0 COUNTRY yard lull time, pref coll~ Aflj'TIQUE Mt mt>~ r 11 p h All IVlllH • • ·tr-i=._~atet. £188..m du!;t lunch be&= ~ Eu ~~u•R •,~l:!ilOn, ',j:: ::d g-~~.24752 T~ledo/~· RIAL TORS a :: "~f_~ue~bi ~:< ~acnA. ~l~lsl· $"60C ·,, r S.nla SPECIAL 411 MI me. I ""'"---Call Reim .Hi,,.., 5*«11!1; :01sn~~ ,.:;;;,,~, & ~ hl>tory • REAL ESTATE-wtlocol ;·Amt, lath -A ~~ "'· • . . 801 """" 12.,.,, "' , R.'te ~ F\ltn. va.ft. Will CoutaI PtrlOMtl ~· Mat lit clean A •t· Apply to: DAILY Plt'&t SA' ESMEN • Wby not work Newport. CM.. Appli.nce1 Jle.u.. tau-1r. &U '~ ''I ~..d-J~ ~ altics, c e 11 a r a. 2'm llarbcr B!vd., C ' In ~SUrf Ir ~r~, CLASSIFIED ADS Jn uw boltnt area Jlun-SERVICE 1tA1ion 1111endant, AUTOAfATJC .,,oa:dttt S!IQ, NE\V battery ~J w U ,~if mw!!t = ~ =:;:No~e:.'i-.eceS: v~ar!. cut~; ftent Cl"!~~aJ.'i: ~1 !i88 llnatoh Beach/.-ounfa.J.n hlll ~~'f.,.~~n Elrctric cbyer $~. PntUble =· 1 A!1u-r-1.11e 1 =·~no. l<&s.18112. 3 t<I ohllt ~Toom. Ar.! ti"': -· ·~· ''"" Cool• Mn., Collf. ml! FOR ACTION. • • Calv"/"~ le~':,' 1<":1:;. ~'. Stat ' ' ' · dlollWuhtr MQ.sMHila. ~Jl~~;·~00'~· ~~~~r:J ' -1•-A-s I P1Jo( 642·5671 •m' 'GE D••L ESTA-"~ ~ ~~, Qur -~. MA\'TAG Wh!J<. """"""" ™ADERAdumntNck at plfl at 1pm or am. =--t:U:• ui&w 1.~ ...... 1 r..-, Em..i--... ,.....,_ n.1:on ·~ ~., ... _ •.--e •• , ... 1 A. ~--COncrttt UDbalt Ma.Cerep:ir "Yacht c.orp, \.1UIUlfa Ad. SeU klle ttenu .,.,. .... ..,.,........ -~~· 90-4m. Paradm cdumn la ttr )'OUI taa dr)'\"f $50. 536-tm ~rt !Waiili.!!!!!!~:,.!-!!:!!!!~ I lS3l -~tJa. ot, nowf Call MH6'1I Nowt ., I I • l ,-.~' . - ' ' • 1 ' I " ~~~~~~~···~~~~~~~~~-L--~~~"---~~~~~~~ -,~,~~l ~l~~ .. _ ... _ ... ;;;,~~~, ........... l!BI T~ .. ·-J[i][ --1§:.f ·--_l[~IE ---I§! l -~'* l§JI l!!~~~~-,!11!_!1 TV, Rlcllo, HIFI, °"'" 154 Auto S..-.lc9, Puts,., ... _ w-"' Autoo, l~~e!-m A .... 13.!¥4 911) ......... Now SCRAM -LETS Stereo 136 OBEDIENCE clw to 11&11 CADni.Ac PARTS • 1959 , !!!!.:.:::: 1!113 ZENml & RCA'• at Wed. Jan. 3l, 1:30 pm, ;, Mod<! • HAVE GOOD REWARD ~AZDA . YOli,S)YAGI~_ ANSWERS tremendol.lt savtngf at the Newport Bt.ch/IrvlnC! TRANS lrDSSlON. AIR ~ -. °"""" County'• ,, .. ,.... ..... °""" .. all does ..,..,. cormmONING u N IT' * Muda 'n R ... ry * .. BUG, • ..., 1llO ml'• .. de&Jt:r. Priced less than tht 5 mo. ofd. 54&-4m. RADIO and R.ADtA'IOR. $66 MONTH 1800 Reblt •re. Xlrl't cond. --~ -Admit -d""°""'"' with 3 " pie-TOY pootll•" -Cale 1212 s. """SI. San .. -WILL PAY ova 36 lllONTHS OPEN LEASE suoo. -· ~ _ NED ture lube, l )It' pfU'b l l yr Au !..alt, 5"1'110. Quality brPd. so.J12> K_._ II look WU1 accept trat».lna-'61...___V.W~ Good c:ond. f1eedt A newt~ ani.f'd's corn· sef'Ykf,. Cash 90 Plan or Beaut. stud ·to approved CO MPLETE 1900 Ford 6 cyl. -rSI -CALL MR. FRY au.e&66 m1J1C1t t:ns_lne work. ~: "When ~'e Unt mar· t~rms to 36 montM. ADC bitches. Pvt Pt)' 5.11-1446 motor $35. 11 fWll but out For l•ta lftlldtl, cl .. n, •ff I B h C50. Cl.ll: 147-ftO! ried, we/starttd light.house-Q)l{lr 'JV,' 9021 Atlanta, Horses 856 ol Clll'. Al.90, heads for 3$2 tow mlt.... dometa un • eac >fl vw Bus.· Am·Fm. New ~~...J?ing, It was just OM Huntington BeaC'h, 968-~. ~rd w/ret.'(•lll ,valve ')ob. tk1, fmportt., tnick1 or MAZDA steel rad.I.ala, b(~. low ,_,-,NED thing after an· COLOR TV ste-reo, Swedish HORSF.S·Back Bay &ttl, ~ }~ord e1igint bklck, c•mpers. milff. Rul\I areat. ~ other." modem ronsole, xlnt cond. Board. feed, cleania&:, dM.11¥ Stnlght axle $20. 544-3417. Call and uk lot n..u 1971 vw Super eeeue. Xlnt Miaceflaneou1 CoCosl $999.95968-, sacrifice $325. exercise, ~7-1063 TOWA.Bt.E P.twnbing Van. . DA' YE ROSS .. ...,er , cood, RA:JI, )'ellow. , WantH 820 me see! 2111 PALO~tINO Quarle:r Ge~ing Hina, .shelves 111.$ide. $75. No 17331 Bea .... Bl, •• ,,_ $1495 846-1¥1 ~lOFTMAN hi fi. 1U11 fin ra· $375. Western tack $100, lie. aft 5, 919-1274 "" C1U"'VlllU vw -* WANTED * dio-""""' P'"'"'· eon.o1 •. """'"' •" ,,30. cusroM PAINTING PONTIAC 12 MAZDA RX-L AJJIJFM, 1n1. :.,;:T:'.""'ivu~~C"~ S40. SJ&.tm. T\\'O RIDING lfORSES No job too complex for us. ~· j.~nuam~. -~ pm12'196.. ,lint. Lo mt. $1590. 646--1484. T'rallcr fat 21 ft, boat. ?.1ust Wl'nl TACK }'fee estimates. 89)-05'13 ~ °"'-.ua be In aood condition l rea· -------• 637~ • I ~~~~~~~~~ I 2408 Harbor Blvd. MG 69 Red VW, autolltlck lhlfl THiRI ARI OVIR 20 ACRES OF' NI W AND USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S 1-farbar Baul9vard1 90Mble. CaU 837.5003 art Jf' I .~~~~~~~~~ I, Cost• Mis• 546-8017 8,000 roUes, good «ind., S 11m. ,,.. to Yeu 1 J~ tan BNch $850. 962-3130 Office Furniture/ ------I jr:Jel _,.... Autos, lmportod 970 '12 Mldgel, wires, l\llchellno, 'o v.w. Bua. ,.....,, Ex- 1----:--•_qul'-'P"·-____ 1_24 3 Lines. 2 Timu, $2.00 _ ...._8T.;c'-_. .~ _ __ IMW ::;/ia. roll bar._At_t_6 celle~m=~ l'9dio. $~ . car. ' ... Sunrool Bui:. I ' WD DESKS $3)..$70 ~·k/4smb GERMAN Shepherd puppy, benches $3J.S50 file slor dr lem, 5 mo. Hsebrkn. Diana, $L 867 \Y . 19th 01 642--3408 546-MOO or m-8792 Pitnos/Orgtm 826 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii ~ntiques/Cl•Piu 953 900 '47 Fol'd Woody, good ene, FREEi f&.l:r body & \\'Oi.Xl., needs , •urk, Xtra peru. "57-3276 Bo.ts, General LEASE A Red • Cute-. Ex. Cond. Saerltl.ce! S575. m-5;J91 Autos, Used 990 I 11 'L,,} $650. '70 MGB Conv. Xlnt '12 Gremlin, ~low mi, mint P'ltsand ...._ ,-.. Basic Boa.~ Course Sports, Race, Rods 959 CREVIER BMW o or · s. 39,<M»· mi '. cond, auto trans. $1675 or ' 1 ,~· miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ ~larina High Schoo.I, lSSTI Sal Wire Whls. '196r-173-2'111 b6t tifr. ~ !~::;::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Don'i buy any 1 gan until Springdale, H.B. Tues, Jan. TRJillifPH TR 4A·IRS. x . """ews · Service · Leas' eves 4 Wknds 'AMX U I • N I 30 f ""° . l11t SI .. ~ta yo can pay. On·p ayrrr Pet•, Gener•• aso uary . actocy, Daytona car, Every 835-3171 '67 MJ;B-0. T, am I ( m. ~Autos, UYd oan Autos, UMcl ORGAN HUBBY welrome to attend tree work 7 prn competition option, plus fac-bile '68 / 'r• ahopa. For information Course ronductcd by Hunt· IOry trick stuff. ! trans VtJll our ne1t• homr! tan/ Ult, @I.!~ Qdials, * A.MX·Pra, P/b, auto. CONTIN-•L -M ~ Contact: Tom Uieterich Ga~OOb?.~.89~· P~~ ington Beach Power Squad· spare tire se1,' =rs suit'. top cond. 1 owner, $1250. ~.OOO mi. Clean. 6'2..2303 or , liJ" Ull · UST ANG -~. 1 c .. 11 :;~~rvlct c~~~::~Poodl· pup• c*c.".c.·coln!=w::,,.:::~=N=l~::,:ci:_D __ *_ Ti':"rucw :Uk""'· av':u.~~;·~2-& :E~CEDES BENZ 191 -IUICK ·~.LIN= =~ -.. -t.M-,!-sr-.~-AN-.. G-k-.:.-~--ve-rii! ___ v_.s~.· Newport Blv<l. at Harbor Ir• 852 "' $44XI 639-1711 or'548.5609 auto ••er. due to ne Costa Meg Trailer for 21 ft. boat. Mu.st SQ USED '57 BUICK WAGON. NU ra· · ' ' .....,, 41 *PIANOS*ORGANS P=-•~';:;.';',·;~ ~~'. ·::.~~1r"' ~~~ ~i ~~~co~ ROY :::~!E!, Inc. MERCEDES :~e. ~I heatu. No CORY AIR &;5.'b;u 1mme<11aU:i,.. ~:~~ =~!s~rv. ity, aoo stud servic-e. 6 pm. ~t'!1nor~a: e dRa~.,;th. Cmt• Mesa ~ ON-DISPLAY ~a 8:t'!!:..~!n\ . '65 CORVAIR.-Coru.. Good ~~=V8~p~. A~ . Bal . 11t 892-2970 * 15 Ft. OUTBOARD. 40 h.p. -· =~;:::..""'=:.=.==--! 1st car, Clean. J.tags, --r.. ~...__ .. wiu·Steinwa.y-dwm. etc. Evinrude. big wheel tilt SHELVES • PRICED FOR DATSUN Sharp New Car '&I SKYLARK, very clean, Aaking $350. 675-8153 .~~';,~~·must sell. Player Pianos & Rolls 1 _Dog_,,.,•-------'854"'-' trailer. all llOlid mahogany, QUICK SALE. Tr d · $400 best If ORV -Rentals ...... • \\1e Buy-Sell Glen "L" hull, cove.r . .,CIVI, 1212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana Comt'nt 1"n e-Emsvtry Dty ~rafter 0 s epmr. . C mE '6T GT Fstbdc, Artclean 390 Daily lG-6 Sun 12-5 DOG School InstructiOn New _.,.., 542-3120 $ very FIELD'S "!ANOS Cl"""' •tarting T"" • 636->20S • Ask Abo t Our U · CADILLAC eng, 4 spd holly, 4 """11 I " ~ 30am CO' ET -~BU-u ruque I 9 6 0 CORVE'l'l'E-Cberry ....,, big ........ l1lOO linn, Costa ?.fesa tTI 4> 645-3350 9:.:.u-10: • \Ved 8-9pm A. .. 1 Boot Trailer. Xlnt '72 Ford Courier w/camper -" -Used Mercedes LNM cond, 301 eng, Mags. Best 673--4253. • P l ORGANS Sat 9:30-10:30a.m, Martin.. cond. 14' long, wench ad· shell, radio. Western style I '71 EL DORADO offer 6'1&-ll87 alt 5 * ANOS* * crest Kennels, 546-0989. Ju.stable to all sizes. mirrors &. hvy dty bumper. P •n• · pm • i"OR 18.le, '65 Mustang VS. Hommond, Wur\;UCr, many • Purebred Bloodbou00 pup.' ,;c$:::1.2S:;:,/:::831).'-l""47"'6.'---,= $1900. Pvt pty. 837"'362 NEW 1973 House of ,_ Beautllul m.ialllc brown . COUGAR new U..1, llOOd cond. $8\IO. others. January de~ ii' 7 ks. 1 D--•-r--•• with matching vinyl top, air ~ on now! The best dealJ are ·~:.:·,,~=::.· -·-·--$50--e'_'_h. I :.-:;.;;.:h.;::,~P:.•w::•::;r_; _ _,;906:,:: 1~. ~Per~ ~P=r. ~ ~~:=~~ ~:iiereo). • a: tully equlpt 196? CouPr·P/s, P/b, auto.1 "'·ss="'M°"usr=~AN~G~-~V~~.-.u-to.'1 alway! at -31' CHRIS Ca_ho .. Cruiser, lop ~f 51 1 $ SALE ~ ..... J' New tires. Looks ~h..... Xlnl tlres batt 1 W II. h " . C'ty AKC l"t'g German Shepherd ..._ u see 0 apprec. UOO, 523-1250 $6495 .-.1cn. Eveo·. ~·· ...,..,,., ......... ..., ,..,.,_,_ --•-,' -. 2•.,.,!n& , c1 IC s MUSIC I Puppies. R in.Ti n.Tin shape, twin eng. radio, c548-<ll03c=-o==alt"..-""''----~......... ~ ..,.......... -.,,.,,, 'l ........ IVilo South Coast Plaza 540-2830 B1oodtine. $50. 837-5487 ~1:u~'. m~thxtr'!s~~~Cc~ ·ro Otev % T. & Camper 1200 '!,,i:e1:'. ~t C.:: 1J:9 n.~i!~1Nnt~;l. ~ ~nr~.t~ OO~T.i 1 --="-Allen PRNATE PARTY \VANTS BEi\UT Irish Setter fem. in comfort $89Th. 675-8577. sheU. Clean, low mi, aux. Autom1t1c Below book. 61S....Mml. Call~q --beST o!(i · TO BUY PIANO FOR pups, AKC reg. Shots & g8JI tn)t., $775. 646-5621. or 230 SL,--1'64:-conve 52, ~ -~r. . -~-;r'"( Oldsmobile l:..'.~' Cadillac CASH 835-2278. wormed. TI4/8'S-7353 3;;~"!x~'.":=~p "61 Chev, Corvair Pick Up New '73 Pick-Up mt., mecll 'xl•t. J/so,o:! DODGE -OLDSMOBILE Store, Restaurant, ADORABLE Silky Terriers, n1ech cond, many xtras. Truck. Good cond. $275. -· or S.18-3869, 673-3045:. Bar q 2 7 ·wks, 2 !\tales, I Fem, $~ Best oUer over $15,500. Priv 0Cs"•h;-.~894s51~0,03."'=~~--OfEL San Dle&Q Frwy e.t Avery 1971 DODGE Demon, 340 cu * OLDS '70 Cutlass Supreme Coupe. air cood, -.it!JO ......_ riimC Cootd. r. . $150. Call 644-6178 party n•.·•" ••-. '64 M....~. % T. Xl•t. --•. New '72 510 -----',_---•t.ot...n. La ........ "' ln, US Mags._ new brakes&. ' ~-sooo':'~'' •~N IMMEDIATE ~~ 831-ifr diiiCks. clean. Aslilng D.::t rt'trig clo u n t e ~ s • AFGChamHAN . Pur_! .. IES 20' FBRGU boat &: trlr, Call s.1~150ll DELIVERY 'TI Opel ' Spt C p e' --,,~=~,.,.;""'=:.:1 $2300 or otter. 64.5-ntS. •=-oranlkt equdrp,&g8!_~ CallP.,~!1 !~~ FanWy. F1ybridge. Sleeps =~--~~~--white/Blue, R&.H, wide YOUR ONLY .70 ~-~"le••-SE. cvt!n, w in ... ..,,""s, "~=='~--':~.=..,:::::-~ 4 Head·stove.tdnk, AC/DC FORD 19S9 F250 pt,.i.. .... , % AJll C..... .. SNcll I •'~ 32 000 · $1""'" ..........,,. uwu ... ~ mileage $2450, 84+-2750 -.f9&.3U3 ~ nl:fll'll ... "*" ova ...... =. ' Jill. '""'· FACI'ORY \fteyl top, A/C PI S. 383 V-8. . OUSE Hunting'!' Watch the refrig. 15.S HP o.~1.C. in-ton. .,...,_, NO DOWN '4&-9292. OPEN HOUSE rolwnn. db/outlxl . $4'ISO. 961H!673. 491>-Q;08 AUTHO'RIZED Xlnt C<>nd. $2650. 642-1523. '68 DELTA 88 Olds, 1 owner, top condition. Sl~. 64&1148 '°il ........... .__._. ....... 1 ·n OPEL, GT, Exe cond &: • 25 fl Csbln Cru"''· 115 HP V•n• 963 PAYMENT! mt. ' spd, R&H, oew CADILLAC FORD Chrysler, Plank bull~-'llSS0.1 ______ ~_;;.;,: radials. $1595/Best Of.fer, '68 ~. RAH, fact air, 1 owner, XL cond $995 68)-3'21 I 833-M86 A. CON'fW attoPPINCl AND 8EWWG CiUIDI fOlt ntE GAL.ON THl CO. For an ad In Woman's World Ctll Mory Beth 642·5678, ext. 330 Eight Great Tops Instant Afghans! n:..:•'-.·..:673-4935=::::::..· --'"--I '69 Fonl 8 Super Van $6833 >16-<3115. DEALER 1971 FORD LTD Comper, E--300, retng, ONLY ••• '70 Opel GT, modified. $2300. ~fu ..i~ 01~~'!!!-lro·'""-4 '---Boats, San 909 stoYl', pop-top, toilet. Daya. 834-5044 or eves. ..,. • ...,.e .....,..n.,. .,..,_ .. 'lll'lil'll'I'" 54S-32'l.S alt 5 pm. MO. 646-6090. Sales-Leasill&. ~rcltop SAll.. BOAT a21J11t2 BeautilUJ car, fully equip. PINTO • •n 2 DR. Sedan. 4 CHRYSLER J.S.13 on lilt-up '69 VW Van, browo blk. ;,,_ PORSCHE •. N..._n ped with !Ur condl-;-, •pd. • -· ml. -cc. Xlnl trailer, like new $950. terior custom extras, new [ 1 UV'9'I «IO Ld V-8 -... ww ......., "'1°""97 ~ ;:;..~ ailing 11•600• N,eit1purt llnteun PORSCHE .. m. x1n·1 C•lllac ~,-..,a:=: ..... $l500torr. 1112s=. · 'TI lSl... Z7, fully eqpt, -~-------.~ --·-~ ...,_. con!. 5 spd. dlrm. wb1s. 2600 HARBOR Bl. deluxe interior witb~aplit '12/hWI& • bl11e, Ulm nnr.,.t;,' custom teak Interior. Pvt '72 FORD Van-Crpt'd in. ~ MH40o amlfm LY. + m&n)' xtru. COSTA MESA bench teals and rilhl re-' r ' tntd &)au, cult: '• pty, sa~. ~143 terior, V8, auto. FM tape, $6'XI. SD-1545. 54(}.9}CI) Ope atnrf diner IUt steer!nc wbffl Isl $261 t&Jca m."644 *HOBIE CAT $650 porlhol-..$4200.537-0687. ·1973 DATSUN '68-912,SUPERd•an,oeeto CADILLAC"s ·· ·~ ~., Pofy11,e"I . PONTIAC 14 IL '846-Isi-z :69 Dod, ge Van VB. ~uto. air, ALL MODELS apprec. Blau punk t, W!UtNall tires. Finished ' exp bte top Po -AM/FM, chrm t'inis.. ".~. 1970 Cps • Sed DeVWea in medium 2 tone -n LeM•••• '66· bkt -·•· •·- Bo t Sii /Dock 91 . Sl·u, nu IN STOCK-<f;>.,..... a·~~ .......... -. ..._ __..!._ s, ps s O paint. JajOO, 842-2609. 673-8735. 5 to cbooae Jrom with dark green vinyl pwr nu tirea RfH ale ·-Autoa Wonted 968 lmmodltlt O.llvtry 71 914 PORSCHE PRICED FROM ~795 top. o.i,. 28,lll!O miles b.si ottor. ~ i.:'r 9,30; Sa~~ 2!:~$2.~~ ~~ WE PAY TOP ~'it~~] ,58s~i:. ~ =~ew ~v~ =e~~Uon. 1: 4 ,CATALlNA t door $137.50 per mo. mf•. 611 CASH .-_,.., .. ._ -fuu mi. $2,795 ~r & air, !~ mile ... · Lido Park Dr .. N.B, or call _ ~ 8-l:ft'° ~-* 546-1919 * full price • nt cond. $1300. 557-1952. 54&-1608 aft 5 pm. See in DAILY PILOT f.'m· '7 2 FIR EBffiD..Loaded '72 DATSUN 240-Z 1963 PORSCHE 35&C SUper plnyee parking lot anytime, $385(1, Call Ted 979-5522 *si~e tie. r-.i!!i'~fs·~~: for med ears & trucks, just Auto, air, mags, extru. ~ue~ =pl~~ver ~~~~-~N . •t 1Avery ~Mrs. Greenman week· &$6.-8548 aft 6. ' 894-3523 • call us for free esfunales. _14=790c.·_Cs=l\co~.=.;="· __ ~ ..... ,, .._. .. na igUe • ~,., T BIRD GROTH CHEVROLET 71 Dau"" Pidrup, r/h, RENAULT 49~ 831-642-4321' 7 Bo.ts, Speed & Ski 911 camper shell & boot, low ''l'l "E!OOrado ! Like new, -------- IS' F'be t mileage. ** 842-4827 NEW fully _,,...-. l9,0QO mt. 1968 FO~ LTD Sta W~. 6 '12 T·BIRD 1 rg ass ski or . fish A· .. for Sales M···g-.,-~ pess. air stefto tinted p I lo p rty boat. w/trler. 50 hp -. ....... ..... FIAT RENAULT Rl2 $7Dl Call days· 821-8130· ' ' ' r va • Evinrude OB. Xtru. Sl095. 18211 Beach Blvd. •2:384 After 6: 6t&-9IS3.. ' &6!.:_~ck. fine cond. $1300. Dark saddle l~lher interior. 6T;rlrl&I Huntington Beach ' ,......_.., Special onler alnut fire ~·~~~~~~ 1847-6087 KI 0.3331 '70 FIAT 124 SPIDER. 5-spd, $209$ * '55-CADILLAC * '68 GALAJ;IE s .. tion .Wgn body & wh<el ·.,;.... w/"°"' = C h fo Cl maKSI new radial&. Abartb $200. * 64.5-2728 500 42!}-\12...V-8 e:ng, Air· trastlng textured vinyl top C ------'11 •1 as r ean exha.un system. Xlnt oond. '63 Ll.MOUSINE 7 pass, nevi' power. Pvt pty. $1556. 4fiO cu. in, engine, cntl11 TJJIN90l1•tiofl Used Can & Low mt. 968-4003. tires. all power. air, etc. "642~·"3472-='"~=--~-control, tilt steering wheel, * 1970 850 FIAT SPIDER • $1150/oUer. ~ 1966 GALAXIE _ Auto P/s AM/FM stereo radio & all Trucks Good cond. 36,ooo· mi. $1000. '66 CPE DeVllle, full pwr, tinted glaH, extras. 'Good avail power options. $4'700, Camrwrs, Sale/Rent 920 Howard Chevrolet 644-1564. fact air. Gd cond. $1200. cond. $500. 59'l-5878 or make offer. Eves a.tt~r "' Newport Beach 1959 Fial 4 dr sedan !200 Call ~. LINCOLN 6 PM 838-'1869. Custom Camper Shells MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree Granluce. $190. Interesting TOYOTA '6.5 COUPE de Ville Xlntl ---------'10 T Bird, SUnroofP...r~ * $119 * 83USS5 transportation ~l70l ---------1 cond. HI mileage All CONT'L, '70 Mark II. A Very 1actory option. • 1~1 \Ve hnve shells &: sleepers l\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR '70 FIAT 850 Spider, am-fm 1970 Toyota MK n 4 spd, 4 power. Make offer. 642-7!M7 meticulously kepi car. Low $3200. 548--5609. I_ to fit all .size lrucks. Over FOR TOP USED CARS 29,000. ml, Britlab racing dr, air 20,000 ml. Lite blue. CAMARO mileage, all xtras. SacrUice. 196 19 T\Viunderoodbil'd~! l'r11695-• 50 sh.ells in stock. Financing u your car is extra clean, green, $1095/offer. 645--0734 $1795, 642-:5958 only $4895 (Ser.7450). Dlr, ~o; g l;P.H''" avail. 89l-05n. see us first. 1970 Ftat ll4 Spider, air '68 Toyota Cbtona. Xlnt '67 Camaro SS-4 spd-350 eng.· ..:C:=•::.11..:l;:TI,;:4>;;,546-411~~1;:· =-- •NEW custom sleepers, all BAUER BUICK cond.., mags, very clean. cond, fo. miles, Mags & headen $1005. MERCURY •'.66' T·Bird convert. Oean, truck sizes avail, 13$. 292S Harbor Blvd. Must sell. 499--4367. Radio/heater, $975 •2810 545-2183 between 5:00 It 6:30 1 --~~----_,, · rUns xlnt. 57.CXKI ml. $450. :'893-ffiC.0-~-n~~----Costa Mesa 979-2500 '68 Flat 124 Spyder •n COROLLA, R/H, air, 4 p.m, '68 Moiitego, 2 dr HT, vm1,1 --"'•~1133-00M"""""~*=---I Cycles, Bikes, tMPORTS WANTED Needs ~ ~ $750. speed, xlnt. condition. $1,600 CAMARO ·n RS-Auto, P/s, lop, auto, air, '.PS/PB. VALIANT Scooters 925 Orange County's --7,;;,;::;:;;~:_--I ~6!!73-!:5121~':_· --~---1 P/b, air; new tlrel, batt, 1$1~500"-. -!!-~~;."':,,,.~--1 -::::;-;-:::;:--:--;::---:-".".'"'I 7057 TOP$ BUYER HONDA TRIUMPH lune. sms. 6#-1517. Put a lllU• "lOor' In ~ '67 Valiant S\gnant 4-d~ IO.SPEEDS v.·e're gtill going BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '68 CA.MARO 327, stick, ra· Levts-eell those b.:.ub&es for auto, P/S, lint glus. "" (\,, "?_,,,,!'. fyt~ 'W!~~%aocl~v~':". H. Be~ Beach:.il.vin-8555 1972 HONDA car sedan 8l!at 1-.67-TR_-4A __ Coo_wrt ___ Ex_I dio 1tereo, tinted 1lass, "buclc1".' CaD CIAasifled cu. In. 6 cyl. Very elem Htlc& o .. -~-.. otter. Good cond. 49:H396. cond, low mL ~ h $1,DI. 67J.7654. &12-5678. owner $850. 586-7'185, • ' hurry. 11412 Beaeh Blvd., I For Junked or wrecked JAGUAR $815. 5494367.' CHEVROLET Autoo, Imported __ _1111 _AUfJ>s,_ hnl!l>rtlcl Curl up and re.lax -it'1 H.B. auto&. . ""'"with thil rozy afghan. SUPER BUY! 71 Yamsha 494-1003, ext 6<l! 24 hrs. YOLKS~ AGEN i. • INSTANT CROCHET_ use 250 OT 1 w/GYT kit. $525 -T--=::..:;:.:..;=::.:.::=-1 '62 Mic U, S.8 1. Sedan; Xlnt 70 Chev. MOrtTe C•rao bulk;y yarn and a big hook or best oiler. 837""5813. ~ll the old 8tUt1 bu¥ the new Int; $800 eng Job 6172. '64 V.W. BUS. sliding doer Low mlle~a.ir, full power. T he I stuff. Needs trans, front end tt ~ ndltlon. ~ ... for ' squares; t OOP-Schwinn Vanity lillpd, work. Ro t fr 644-3464 8-S new res, ......... CO ....,, ' • stitch lace, 3-D flowen Rn! 6 mo (l)d, -uow, f75. Don't gtve up the ahlp! -r• 0 • • $875 MS-4333. '64 Corv&rt Spyder Comrert. 4 worked over cantboard, 'Pat· 64i.59ss "U.!t" It tn classified, Ship "M"·:..F:... ------' IJ>d. good oond. 557-1123. --!-::•What do you need most otof t~rn 7057: directions, color "·n,,.-."350"'°'H,;:_:=..;da::,::E.o-.... 71-_-,.. to~ Result!? 642-5611. Sell idle items . . 642-5678 Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! •n EL CAMINO, xlht oond, au nowt Tops, tops, tops he v.. _.. .. .-'-V"" --====:::::::==:::z;o,;.z;:::::;:==::=::;:;:;;:;;:::,:_;;;;:;:;;:::=:=:=;;,; -, •., to team with pants, sklrt1. sc mes. A-lust See $495 58&-7449 A .many e,.u..... .,,,.-.:: ap. • lhOrta all spring and sum· 8EVENTY·FIVE CZN'l'S . ' ' preclate. '$2100. p)O, billow mer. Whip up 8 """t •hlrta !or e.ch pell"" , add 25 'TI YAMAHA 125 Enduro, ,, 1 ., ST' l't.R G.A:,.E• 'D•~ ¥. blue book. m-571IJ alttt 6 cents for each pattem tor $.100. Hrm! 'lf ..£'1 .~ ~,.. '1' (IC wknds :=tye=~blOUBCs in cotton, Air Mail and Special Hand.I · 640-1308 .UllS BfCL.\YJ.. PO '·ss"=-'1"=MP::::,..ALA~SS.~~P~/,-,~P~/b~. Prlnted Pattern 9l7B: NEW Ing: otherwise third-clMs 1970 Honda 450 K.J 1200 rill 1"~1.i 1, }of_ v-DoJl;.AdM!y Gelid• k :!~,..$ RAH. Dix interlor, xJnt u o.-• S''"' 8 '" '" 14 16 di!llVf!l')' V.'lll take three fact.or)' de~tr~tor $65() 0 " ..,.. • .. , , 1L .. V ·,... tires. Runs en.at. «'* or Ja~ ....,,. • JJJ, _.., • • weeks or more Send to r .. ., ..,,.M • • .., f' ~cc•ra 111 o ri• ~1or1, _ .... -..,-U. Yardages in pattern. • ~.. · 1~ 'ifi To dtvtlop messoge for Tuesday, -··"ltl...,,JI best offer. fl44.Mn Alice Brooks. the DAll.Y TRIUMPH. ,69 ~ Oa . ---'··-....... ---..t1 .. 7-SVEl'iii·P1VE CENTS PILOT, 105. Needlecraft ·.,..... ytona. n>;Nwurm._,._., ... ngto~ ., '71 El Camino, ll~ • each pattem -add 25 Dept.. Box 163, Old Chelsea Wc.U taken care of. $750. ofyourZodkx:bfrthslgn. actual miles. Full power. ~ each pettem tor Station, New York, N.Y.6 ·~73-4:...:;190.=------1 F"-dlll 31 k~I h.rlan 637-19:5 IUl -:-2 ,..... 32 Ge0t. 62 FIN:liflt ArllWI &nd Special Randi· lOOll. Prlnt Nan1et Aclc1reU, Motor Homes aGM4 llO!htrt 63Squtlc;h * '69 CAPRICE* otbu'wbe third~ Zip. Pattem N11111ber. S.lt/R-t 940 ... J.cA.old 6'M i.ctr. air. Good cond. $1(115 will take lhrff NEEDLE CRAFT "TJ! _,,;,;;.;;;;.:;;·~"---= IA j 3!Y-65;.i~ ~!!!~ or make otter. 546-8539 ..... Ol more. Send to Crochet. knit. etc. Free '11' TR.AVCO ~i':',.. ~¥.·IC 11m w :t::t:·""' ~ ,..-Martin. the DAILY dlrecdontl, SOc. 25' DISCOVERER IM9Gn •o.d.M 61~ P!IDl'-M2. Pattern Dept., hnut ~1acrame Boot. 20'·22' CONTINFNTALS '~ 3'~ 6'™"81> 232 18th St., New Buie, fancy knots, pal· 3>' PRIDE & JOYS :~f:" :f::' ri't::11 Y<rl, 11.Y. lOIL Prl•t ternl. SI.Ill\. · VAN CONVERSIONS 121.. ..,_ 72-~!::!;!!!Mlf.. lf!IO'., ADDll£M wtth lnebltt Cmrhet Boolr; -,.._, e •-•-R A IM llYou .tlcmt 111>1,_.._, I ZIP, mil and STYL& Learn by pictures! Pat· .,.j:.les .:;io;i"W"""' e cnt..,. l•Add .Ullr ''"-""' ~ """'· 1100. * Dan11111r Inc. * ll~ !I!:::'.. n~ IEE MORE Quick .... ~.!~1001 Glg1ft~ J3110l Hltbor Blvd., G.G. 17Stwdit' •7Suildllil 17()...r J'aahlom and chooee one u"ll• ·~ 531~ llShouW ""To ~""°"" em he from our Slc!plete Atrtwa ftOol _ Next to O.G. Datsun J: ~. : =.':"' 40 i;:..,. f"'!=.'': :r;.;.~g:;m:;;_ Catalog.~ i11L~;.,., R •-•· u.A R:!'! A Motor Home Il~ '\ji;'"'""*'°'~&-1"9TAN'f' SEW1NG BooK •u., "I ...... ,,. .. · ....... ..,... yfl4lr Vec•tlon 23~ s.:t,..,.. llAnd .,, h:xlq, war tomorrow. ::'~Prise Arr:hana. * 839-4301 * ~f:...,. tgr :~~""'t:-~~~ii ~ANT FASHION QuUC loot 1-18 ~ttems. Tr•ilert, Travel 945 .~~~ ~=.. ft~'-Y 80QIC -Hldldnda of SOc. 21~ 51~ ea°'"'""" ..... faetl. $1.. M.._.. Qaltt Book I -13' '62 Airfloat. good cond. "..,.... "Fer n .......... CONTINENTAL '72 MARK IV S"""""g 1>ursund> with • White vtnyl top, FYlt Equlp1 ilJllXEG) $71'5 . · i.llrn ·1· ·( Old,mo~de l ,__ Cad illac ilOc. • Sips 4, 12 wit.,..,, propane .. ,,_ 4t1T-'°'i'l!l;' ~"';=:::wan~f~ld•lo••~l"~•.~.ln-.:.~-~="":"""'::·:•~U="':"~• -3 burTi 1tv/1Mm l 1.rr1g.. Gaol '°'~ ()N:...r Don't .iw up the . odllpl L •nt. 15 belqUfUL patterns. M:. e.ltt bib, WiQ. &«-5S8S or \SI .. l.Jlf'lt \n clullned, Sh1p da)><· 67H6IO. .. -.. R<tullal ----~----~--------~-'•..::.:=.:..::>:""'-"""'"-'=- I . ' ~~-~Au•~·~~·~·~·~-~--.~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-_"!'--~~--..:._ ______ ...:._..::_ _____ ~------------~--------~ 7 ' I r • • • ., .. • • - ' Clemenie • 1reno EDITION t . -* v~t.' 66, NO, 29, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PA&ES I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDA'i'. JANUARY 29, 1973 . '- • OU . . 1en • I , ..... , ... '.Securities • . -• .. ~. . \In Nigu el Case Found- -·Arson Su.sp¢cte~· In House Blaze •• By JACK CllAPPEIL Of ... Dall'r ~ ......... 1 FBI agents have ucovered more than $1,400,000 in securities taken in the. heist <! the Laguna Niguel UCB bank last ·~· 1 The negotiable bearer . bond! were recovered from a buriesi suitcase, unearthed in a five-acre field of an dhio firm Saturday. ,All but one ma~ accused in the bank burglary~~ the largest -In American history, have been captur~ and three 1 afe now terVini 20 year sentences for the "Mission Impossible" heist of the MonarCh Plaza bank, knocked Oil over ~farch 24 and 25, 1972. Harry James Barber, 31, is still being sought on a federal warrant for the bank job. His brother, Rooald L. Barber, 29, ol $outh Gate was mested by FBI agents .on Jan. 15 jn NeW York. . 'lbe found loot represents one of the largest recoveries of stolen property in m,nt history,' Joe D. Jamie90D, a!Slstant director in c11arge o! the Loo Angclea o~ Bee, said today. Ac-. -hoilldoun; )licb """ -ell In lllo -far _ .... "' --a-tr. . • TJam-iald tliO .-ail! Wllitl -Of neaotlUle ............ 111 · various uWltlell one! n»mk:lpaiitliii. Lou In the heist bu -"t'lrioufly peaed at•fU m1111oD and IS•millloo aild apparently is dependent on the current market value of the property. Some fOlD' months after the burglary, a cft• of county workers found a gunny sack with fl million . in registered securlUea stuffed in some bruSh near the bank. ..In adclitJoo to. the securities, jewelry, rare coins and .cash were taken f r o m the vault. Nearly 500 safe deposit boxes were rifled by the cn>0u who worked fWer the weekend after blasting their way into the roof Qf the big vault \l'be thieves entered through ~ roof, alter ct'llllng holes In the ceiling and packing them with dynamite. The charges we.re tamped down with burlap bags filled with earth and exploded. The vault was breached with a two foot hole. Sliding inlo the chamber, the Weves systematically tore through the safe deposit boxes. Property not taken was dumped on the Ooor. , Charles A. Mulligan, 38; Amll A. Dinslo. 36, and Phillip Olrtstopher. %9. are aervtng time fot the theft. Legal ac· tfons are pending on the junior Barber. An afterDOOJJ fll'J '1'hich police insist was the work of an arsonist calllfld ex· tensive damage to a house owned by San Clemente City ~ Tbomas O'Keefe late Sunday -afternoon. Firemen set the ·dt.mage lo the vacant dwelllng in i!horecll!fs al IS,000. 'lbe flrt first was.reported at 5:18 p.m. by a woman' who saw smoke coming from tbe rear of the resideDce ·at 2721 Via Verbena. Fire™ arrjn!!_l!l<LgyLckly ex- tinguj!he!l th§ b~. wbis)t",..l'aa generally confined to the UvfuJ room o! the hoose. Firemen noticed that the' fire started at the base o! '.curtaina in tbe living room where someone had stacked newspapers. The arsonists, appare,iUy two j1N.eniles seen running from the house, started the stack of papers burning by taldng some to the kitchen stove arid lighting them there. . Fire Capt. Don Hndgson said the bllu ate Lhrough one wall of the llvi,ng l'009l and did extensive damage to the carpets and drapes of the residence. A new painl · job alsQ. was rulnM by smote and beat and ieveral windows damaged. O'Keefe baa bad the • house on the ' ' . . Nixon De'fnan,tU-, Rigid eeiling On 1974 Budget WASlllNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on demanded death for dozens of federal apending"]lrOlnUJla today, called on C<ll- gress !or a rigid lt7t bud(et celling ol $2M.7 billioo, and cautioned that &reater ~ ~ "!_<an '"llJI!! ~..,_ l'Jgl>- er interest rates, reneiffa iillation, or all three." (Related stories, Paa:e 8.) "l oppoae these 'altematfves;, with a firm rein. oo spending, none ol them Is ~." Ni>oil said Jn hil fipl 19'14 liudiet mesaage, aent lo the new CGngress aa the loremoot ol the lhree major an-. Dual prealdential meaaages. The document lived up ID ad•ance bill- Jng u an u job on many IOCial, healtb, housing, education and ~Upoverty pro- grams of bia DemqcraUc predeceuors - programs Niun said !ailed alter a fair trial Despite tbe -k: culbacill the budg- et called !or'$81.J blllloo in m1!1tary out· lays, the .......S blaeot de!enae budget in history even with the peace agreement in Vietnam. It provided no funds tor re- Ge l Plan constJiJction ol South Vietnam: · nera . Nixon called hil buclge1 a turning point • in national policy lbough still written in ~"s1'on Slated the !amlliar red ink -a IM.i~bllllon def· 't-"-"' lclt thil year and a $12.7-blllloo deficit in !iscal 19'14. Jiut the President pointed .. B .., ,,. Co ·1 1n -·m Olllll!!cllLand..lmninations, y --u.1po-UDCt l--".,.'L"1b°ii.i'billloo 1n aavJngs in uu. 11aca1 year alcme, and told the lawmakers: San Juan Clpislraoo city councllmen ''The 19'14 bud(<t II the clear evidence lriJ1 meet in apeclal seaalon -one! for a of the tlnd ol chonp In du.ctlon de- IJ>"Clal ,..... -tonight at the mandecl by the creat 'matorlly o! the auditarllan o! Marob Forster Junior High Americu {IOOP!e. NO longer will power Sc~\.·....., has been call.a to dll.;,.s ~ m;:!'':.1:J.~· ;".ued in the preponlton one! the contents o! the advanee by MJoo hllmeli -"!re: clfy genml plin with the relldeoll o! Fnr lllcll-1111<.-o.tlan•l24t.I blllloo, the clly. will be-' (Sot lill)QiT; Po# I) • The opecli1 lludy ... slon .. n al --•c -. market In recent weeks after moviqg to a newer one on Camino Capistrano in the Palisades. Detectives have taken over the in-- vestigation into the incident and planned to make inquiries in the neighborhood tbrougb today .• POW Families Stilt 7t wait- Laos Listing While families of nearly 600 American prisoners of war in North and Soulh Viel· nam rejoiced or were sorTOwed by listings of their lov~ ones, families of men l'Qissing in action over Laos re- mained un<ertain today. Inlonned only by Defense Department officiiis lbat their men were not on tbe lists released by;Hanoi, wives, nt0tbers ljllCI. IJ!llllloq . . -. ol iiur!; ., U.S. Servi.,..,,.. eoollnued lo wonder. 111'1. llltborii -.. --_......, u.,-wiyja - Is ·-·a ••IOIU llA;: -today lie• parents were--to1d "Jbn11 name la oot °" the list." . . '"I called Wa.JiJnglon and was told there were no names of servicemen miaslt!g in aclloo'i!l J.i!os oo the ~ The ag,..nienl (Bign<cl .~llttday), li!dudes only. those prisoners. Of war in North and South Vietnam," she said. The Defense Department also said to- day 58 American servicemen previously canied by the United States as prisoners of war remain unaccounted. for by North Vietnam;------.-- A Pentagon ipokesman said their names "are DOt on the two lists we have received ao far." Other area fam1lie9 affected by the Jack of infonnation, from Laos include Mrs. Janice Lyon of University Park. Her buaband', Major Don Lyon, w. a s adopted by Uie city o' Laguna Beach. He has been misSing over Laos since March 22, 1911. Mrs. C&role Hanson of El Toro a I s o waits word of her husband, Stephen. "I suppose we will have to walt until we quit fighting in .£aos to know for sure what ~ppehed. 1 10 our men," Mrs. Jledilck si.ld tod~y. "U it doesn't sound too silly I would Jike to ask people tb do ooe thbtg. "I would appreciate prayers from everybody, now, until we know for cer-- taln wbat bappene<I lo these men.'' sl)e said. ' She noted that there is atill hope for the men wbo have yet to be listed since the liats !ailed lo cany the name o! an MIA who reof>ond<il to the initial letter· writing campaigns to Hanoi . The lists incbJde s.5 names of servicemen -who died in captivity but did not name all the potential prisoners, Mrs. Hedrlcl< bellevea. . The United Stall:f I& pinning hopes on an espected accoUnting ol Americans loot in Laos lo, swell ' the Iota! o! 5SS U.S. (See LAOS, Pqe I) *' r.uc-' . ' " . Thefllfl Pwla With a. little help from a friend, Marjorie, an Indian elephant, e~ters her winter quarters at the Cbessington, England, zoo. Keeper Lionel Rowe supplies the extra persuasion. Saigon Charges 500 V iokttwns of Truce SAIGON !AP) -The Sooth Viet· namese goverrunent and its Communist opponents accused each ot~ today of wide!prtad violation.! or lhe cease-fire. Officials of the 8'!W international peacekeeping force ei:p~ hope. of gelling teams or obsei;vers 1:nto the held by Tuesday. . by Tuesday. (See related stories, Pages 4 and 5) An American · soldier died today of wounds suffered Sunday, the first U.S. fatality since the. cease-fire went into ef· feet. In the four days prior to the truce, four American military men were killed, and 19 U.S. 1soldlers and 12 U.S. civilians wounded. The U.S. Command announced the witbdrflwaJ·of another 400 troops today, the second contingent of 400 mep to leave since the cease-fire agreement took ef· feet Sunday. The coinmand said the meni. ~ere Down out of the country by ~rcial airliners. Thia dropped U.S. troop st"""'h in Vietnam ID 22,71111 men. The cease-fire agreement requires them to leave the country by March. 28. The South Vletnameae Commarid reported nearly 500 violations of the cease-fl.re by Communist tore.es since it went into effect at 8 a.m. SUnday (4 p.m~ PST). The Viet Cong in a broadcast accused the Saigon government of "unceasingly Violating the ~ase-(ire agreement by military action.s. ·. .throughout SOuth Vietnam." It said !LS forces "throughout the entire area of South Vletham have completely carried out the cease-fire.'' From One end of the country to the other, reports flowed into Saigon of sharp righting. • · In Quang Tri Province below the Demilitarized Zone, there were heavy •rlillery barrages just as before the truce . In many other areas, small but bloody battles were fought for control of villages and hamlets ; before the in- ternational observer teams are deployed. Military sources said a document cap-- hired in the Mekong °'lta Instructed (See CEASE-FU\E, Page II Truck in Convo)' Igqited by Blaze 1:30 p.m. and anyooe with commentJ ·-·- relillnc tO !uture planning ror the booni· , •-N. • J w ; · w • ( ~cltyllwclcome,c~yomclalsstreu/ Jdfte om_. ~n 81 s Councilmen the,n plan to organl7.e a 8 An Army truck traveling south through s'an C'M!mente Saturday in a convoy - and loaded with live ammwUtlon - eaught fire when a bra:ke line broke, but the blaze was quelled without Incident. Fl~. who began fighting the blaze not knowjnc about ttie ammunitkin, said the fire wa. confined to the rear wheels. clY!c ll'O"P 10 llrlll<r explan the upecls O! lln>Wll! In the oomtmnllty. ' , Delore ~ Forster seillon, colmcllmen 'wlll prepore for the meelinl al a •pedal 1'lrt -at the -GI Councilman Roy Bynea. : • Capo Beach Burglars .Get Stereo, Camera Burglan wl>o tmaahocl a wlndoof end cul their way through the --to 11a1n entry left a CoplllrlllO --during the ..... wKh .... eqpipment and a camera -II $lllO, O!IJlll County Shtriff11 Glftcel'I ukL Oeputl .. aald the equipment ..... lll"1t from the home ol Blleeo 'Ptailer Mmden, It, ol 3'11l-Rold, 1lldle tbe occupant was away r<>r the dl;y. ' • ' ' HusbanCt-POWSince 1965~n ·List, Heading .Hom e· -'- _ • ~Cl IJIAPPl!Ur ..... ,... ........ II baa -..... )Mn-ti"~ one! &_ .. __ .., -ol 1-Nlliol, wllo ol Ar ,_..LI. CGI. John ,..,., Wit don In Docomber IMS. .... ., . And-fhli•.-1almlacom- lng -· Ille baura ..,.i -• Just ... ~ .. 1111-P. "l Jail hofl Sollll Ii &lilltl .. ..... bQme In .... ----lle-..W. he'• ·--llln -111 ilit loapol." loin. PltdiftN """ loday. ' Siie ncolvod a coll at 1:10 p.m. Satur- dly and -lnfGI mod ha ~·· naine -on Ille lllldll lllllnluoed by• BlllOL ' "YOlt wafl lor llJftll, years, and ·then YoU have to ,ratt nne more. "lly !Ue II .... to be oo cUOtrent wblot I dao'I -10 wall. II .,., lake ... ,... lo IMljual," obe said. She """ Ille -ber busband ""*' juat i.llf In I llll' 1ij4er In the beacb la tr.nt ol Ole=·· --In tlie :i11ores deW=~·1-Nlguel! Otlldnn. II, ad "'1n, l, · live at Ole e· , .::a-Is I lllMleol ' 1811-ty and.......... .. .......... Wblla liio -lot h<r WIS good, !he nil !or 1D11J -wai not endOd with JOJ. ,., feel 1'ft!')' bid: aboot IOmt of 11'1.Y lriendt wile haft pl1'tl tho bod -· I tnow many ot them. 'Ibey deserve a brealt 1111<1 ·they jull aren't getting i4" abe said. "I foci IO happy unW I think ol some ol the other ckls whosl bllSblnds are not com1ng back, .. she aaid. Since the announctmentJ ahoul the relum o! tbe priaon<n Mn. Pitchford bu been bealeged by callers one! well wlahcr11. At fint, John 't name was omit· led froni Initial published llau or prisoners and !rtenda were alllloos. However, Mrs. Pitchford has received l(!ttcrs from tum over the last three year1. "MosUy he talked about bis health being i ood. It looked like he WU being !See WIFE. Page I) ' A lieutenant In the convoy reportedly firtt told lhe flreflghten the truck car· rled C.ratlons. After the fire was ou4 they aald he told I.hem lt actually carried ammunltion1 . . DA.IL¥ PI LOT A.D MA.KES HA.PP¥ DUO DAIL V PILOT want ads juat lovt to 1165 RAMBLER Sedan. runs tlOO<f ltlO. Dl·DU Thia ad worked llO fast that the car 10ld In one day and made two people happy-both the buyer and the aeller, Dial dlrccl, 142-51?1, one! let a DAILY Ptu:rr clusllled want ad make you h•P"" py. too . ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS • I e Fatal Cra sh Near Onofre Checkpoint By JOHN VALTERZA Of t1M Dllf't P'llH Slaff A 16-year-old boy being smuggled Into the United States from Mexico wu killed instantly in a traUic crash at San Onofre Sunday - an incident that closely resembled a similar tragedy several weekends ago. Ismael Gomez Guerra of Guadalajara , t.iexico, was killed Instantly when the station wagon be was riding in was struck from behind by a truck also laden with alienS. No one among the dozen or more oc- cupants of the vehicles was injured. The crash occurred in slowing freeway traffic-about--two~ miles 30tlth of the border patrol checkpoint. It occurred at the peak of another record weekend of arreslS of illegal aliens by patrolmen. And it occurred in the same pa rt or the freewa y where four ~rsons were killed several weeks ago as they tried to avoid arrest. Those fou r persons attempted to flee across the freeway after sunset and were struck repeatedly by fast-moving can . Border Patrol Ca pt. Eugene Harris said that his men in one shift alone Sun- day captured 187 aliens tryifl&: lo cross the checkpoint. The day's total was 244 persons. Harris described Sunday as "almost a carbon copy" of the tragic earlier SWl· day, OlllcJals have said that smugglers i.p- pareutJy are becoming more careless and are not checking to see if patrolmen are operating the roadblock before the heading north with their passengers. Dozens of cars were left abandoned along the freeway shoulder through the day and Harris said "there was no way of telling" how many "wets" got out of the cars and made it north on foot, evad· ing officers. Elderl y Woman Struck by Auto Critically Hm·t An elderly San Clemente woman re- mained ln critical condition today at South Coast Community Hospital from severe injuries suffered. Saturday in an auto-pedestrian accident. ~frs. Helen Katherine Todd, 73, of 156 W. Alessandro. suffered two broken legs, a fractured pelvis and serious internal in- juries in the accident at Ola Vista and Avenida Granada. Police said the woman wlf:s struck at 4:25 p.m. byi& car driven by Richard Harold Bryan, 23, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton. Mrs. Todd first was taken to San Clemente General Hospital, but no space existed in the facility's intensive-care ward . Alter emergency treatment the woman was taken to South Cout. ' Police said Bryan was not held after the crash. Orpge Weatller About a 60 percent chance of showers is the way the weather· lady sees it for Tuesday, with con- tinued wetness au day. H1ghs of 65 are expected along the Orange Coast with overnight lows In the 40s. Get out lhe galoshes and rain- coat. INS IPE TOD-'Y Lt. Col WiUio m Nolde - iltt lo&t American to die m Vlei. mm prior to Ute ce:at·fir• aar•tmeni Oft • S4111r4ou. widow savs 1ht'1 ft()j 6itter that h< btlicved tn the war gnd tilt South Vletnamt1c f}lf. Stt tto~ on Page 4 . I.A "" "' -" CM-I c ........ ~ ,_ 11 C,.......,. 1S --' --. ............ I' ,...... ,.., ............ 1 -.. • • I I I .. .2 OAILY PILOT ~ '-SC ~vrif~t ·~· l(in Sweating It '. Out I !Convicted Researcher ~ \ , Gives1alk . \ , . County Re~tive~·Hope for AnotMr List BrtRllm :irll Uded-Q_MIJ." for lift years. 'lbal am-. bis flilhlr 81!1. .. oewsttel showed_:.•a gllmpae" of.l!1111t~· _ 4L -• .,. ;f ~'-Sfuying On Caneer ' I ' ' . I , lly CANDACE PEARSON 01 trlf 0.llW l'iltl Slttl Orange County rclati\'es of servicemen who have not been identified as Jiving prisoners of \\1ar are still "holdina on to hope that there \\'ill be another fist," a spokesmiln at the Qlncem !or POW·fi,1IA olfice in Tustin said today. So far the name_s of seven Orange County men have been on the Jist given to the U .s. after tbe cease fire agree- mpt. {Jnited Press lntematlonal (UPI) gavt;: an eighth man as being from the county, but the local POW office bad no local relatives listed. He is Lt. Robt'rt \\'ideman, from Lakewood, Florida, captured May. J9r2, aroirding lo the POW office. UPI said Lt. Wideman is from Philadelphia and \Vestminster. Threo most recent additions !rem Ille county att: -Cap>. James Kula of Allllh<lm. Tho Navy officer was born in Manebesltt, New ltampshire, and was captured July, t97'l. fl.trs. KuJa was out of town with relatives today. Air Force Lt. Col. John Pilchrord Jr. of Laguna Niguel. He \\'as caplur'ed in December, 1965. -Air Force Cap!. MiChael Lee Braze1ton of Seal Beach. Brazeltoo's father, Lee, lives lo Seal Beach. Contacted today, Lee Bnueltoo said he's kitoY."n his son was alive for abou t two years. "But it's ;-eal nice lo icnow it's eon- finned," he said. "It's quite a change fro m what we've been putting up \\'ith in Fout other names Jtsted early Suoday wero Marine Capt. Paul Montague qi 1\lstin, Air •'or« Capt, J. P,,vld Luna of Orange, Air Force Lt. Col. Edlson w. Miller of 'l\13Un, and Air ~ Capt. O..rrel Pyle of 'l\Lstin. . • "As far as we're COO<.'emed the list is not complete, 11 a POW office s~kesman satd. "We'~ bopin( to prw IOI' more names.•~ One ·-an who WU lold by the Marine Co1J1S Saturday nigh! lbat her husband's name was not oo the list refus. ed today to give up. Mrs. Mary Helber, wlfe of capt. Lawrence Helber of TU.stln, sa1d. "There's no way I will accept this as August, 1966, Ca pt. being a complete list. 'lbere's got to be more." , the i)ast." Shot down A drifter !roBI Oklahoma City has 6e.n convlctl!d 'of second'llegree murder pl a Navy oflicer whose ~ was dumped in an empty lot In nonha san Diego Coun· ly last fall. " - Jerry Mann.ID&, 28,. ~no first blurted a coofession of tbe"i '11111!>1 to guarda at • Marine base ~. ln 1ia.n Clement~, was found guilty in sen Diego superior Court last Friday. Sentencing for the Oklahoma City native was scheduled for Feb. 20. King Coming • I I t A Cnlorado resc.arcber wbo belleru ht Juls found the ogent In cigarettes Wblc;fl causes lung.cancer wllJ dlseuss his.fin~ lngs' at 111 rneeU.og of lhe Americlfl Chemical 'Society, nuclear chcmlltry an-' technoloo division tonight In Newpott Beath. • Dr. Edward Martell of tbe, Nation~ Center for Atmoapberlc. Releon:h at Boulder. Colo. will address the group olf 100 sclentlst.s at 9;30 Jn the New~ Inn, Newport Beach. \ CaliforniaPOWsNamed * * * Reds Reveal Tbe Jury ruled ttl.t Manning iflot Navy Petty Officer Mitchell Queen, 28, five times with a small-caliber pistol and then dumped the officer's body into a vacant lleld in Csrlabad. Tbe defendant insisted during the trial that be Shot ~ alter the victim made '"-1 d . j " I se .. -~ a vances. • -.., . > • • 1 King Hussein of 'Jordan • will visit -the United States next month, accordi11g to an oUiciaJ announcemen~ He is to meet with President Nixon Feb. 6. The confttence arr8nged by UC Irvine Chemistry professor F. S. Rolands coit. tinues through W~day. ' Dr. Martell's lecture ts ~ of " discusslon.s of r~ research to bt presented. ' Martell bas "tentalivaty concluded thf. polionl ... .it, ao alpha emitting particl\ , is the princlpel agent .for. lrMluctlon if lung cancer amOng clgareUe smokers," l UCI spokesman aaid. t ' d , . From Com1nunist Lists Prisoner ~isi ~ Tbe ~· 1111" .. '"" etttmptocl to dls<ount lbat tbeQry and il\llsted that Queen was murdered tor his car and the ca:th,!:shl~~~eiitat>~ pick· ed up last OCI. 24 h1. t~' liflicer in the Long Beach aroa ..a 9'1!*'. then drt>ve Fro. rage 1, Tuesday night, Dr. Albert Ghiorso ~ the Lawrence RadiaUon Laboratory a& UC Berkeley, will give the award ad· dress. Ghiorso was cited by the ACS tal- his work with nuclear applications (, chemistry. The Lawrence labs have been responsible for the lddenUllcaUon of 10 new elements in the past 10 years. • \\'ASHINGTON (UPI ) -Following is a list of California prisoners of war pn:r viCed by the Communists. Hometowns were detennined from a variety of non-governmental sources. Next of kin are given "''here available. \\1here more l.han one address is listed (or a PO\\!, he is listed under both. f'ro1n Page 1 WIFE ... very careful in writing so the letter would go through. "He kept telling me to buy somehing expensive. I'm not sure why, I do anyway," the overjoyed woman said. No word has been received yet about the exact date that Lt. Col. Pitchford, a 22-year career officer, will be back in the states. ~ Mrs. Pitchford said that more than 600 people who wear the POW bracelet bear· ing her husband 's name have written to her. She said the most frust rating part of the ordeal was the n i g h t I y news broadcasts ("no one \vatched the news more than me") and kno\ving that "we did not go in there and win." Olbt.NGI eo•n •< DAILY PILOT i11t Oranwe C•HI OAILV P ILOf, wltn whidl ls combll\fd Ille Hew1°Preo, II puDUV!td JIY rn. 0t11111e coal! Putillshlng COl'l'IMny, s- ,..,. tdllk>ns are Pllbl!i.hed, Mondty lhrovwh Fridt y, for Co1t1 M ... , HtwPOrt 11~ H11nlf119lon St KhtFoun11111 V11r.y, L•11-8ff.d'I, lrvlne/SeddleHdt .-..,,, ci.m .... ttt S.1'! J lllll C9!'1Stftfl0. A llftDll rrolo<\11 «li!IOll Is published S.lllrdlYS .ti.I S\lld•n. 1"h1 prf11clp.tl publllhllllll pllnl I• I I ~ W~ll "' S!rffl, Cott• Mtw, C.lllomlt, fMM. Rob•rf N. W11d .. r'"tdflll Ind PlltlUM!er J1c~ It C11rl1y Vk t Prnlclet11 Ind Gt,,.r1I Mtnaott Tho'"'' Kt•vil Eollor Thom11 A. M1.1rphin• M111•1f119 Ellilor Ch1rl1s H. Looi Jlicliard P. Nill 1411111111 M111111T119 EdtlOrl s-c1 ...... 0Mc• 'JOS N'6rttt II C1'"i110 k 1 1I, t2•12 ' OtM Offlcn CO.II MtH; JllO Wttl 81y llf'ttl NIWPOl'f lffd'I; UlJ N....,~t ikvlt'l>lrO Hllnlll!Vtln 14t(hl Intl Beac~ hllr.vtrd ~ affO: m For1i1 ..,_ 'Tllo••••• f714) 142-4Jl1 c--.. A'*"IU.. 14Z.1171 h• c ........ Alf O.,c1•w"": ......... 491-4421 (Opv<tGflt, 1m. or.. C'Nll P!olofllhfnCI co..., J>ll~'I'. Mt MM t ltflft lllu1tr1llonf.. .. lo•<.1 ~ ~ ~''""""" htrtl!I ..... y be ,..,........ Wlll\ovf U*lil lltl'· sloft ., .,,.., OWfllt· 3'icllfld (lt H ........ ,..., 11 ""'' M"" C.llforn11. """°"'""°" ., n'!'lef n .u IMf!l~\'I lil'I' 'fNI 'l.J.lf ,_»i/Ji ' lftft'jtfn' ...,,..., ......... INf!lllly. ' ,• From Pagel LAOS .•• !ightlng men known to be prisoners of the Communists in Indochina. The Pentagon said there are no clues to the fate or 1,315 Americans still miss· ing in action in Southeast Asia. south with Manning. .. . ... .,.... Tbe murder assertecUy took place WASHINGTON (UPI) _Hen: is a list somewhere in northern San Diego Coun· receipts $225 billion. _. released by the Si.te llepartn\ent of 26 ly. For fiscal 1974: Outlays· $288.7 billion. captured civilians who have been iden--receipts $256 billion. tified by the Communists as alive,;and 13 n· h Nixon invited an inten.<1ified power who wero satd to ba•e dled alter .. P""" Storm renc es s1rugg1. with 111. Democrat1cxoo1roued in Jndocbina. c 1y Tbe departmeol indicated all wero cap. ongress not on on spending but also lured in South Vie1Dam. Northern Half on two other old battle.fronts. He urged Tboae 'listed u alive aloog with the the bwidling ol 70 federal aid programs date of captw:e were all Americans • • . into four broad "special reven~sharing unless specified. Of California programs" 1or 111e s1a1ea and cities, with l: t=.~nr,11""sli:t.1.\il:in111. Jess federal control. And he repeated bis 3. Artl.ro M. , , Z. 1-tPhlllocll,_J, ' "'ti..~ . •J·r.·15~ SAN FRANCISCO (AP} -Moderate-call for a drastic governmental reorgan--~ 1:f:"&i '°' <~ ~'1". · ""r.---to41eavrNbm1'Clied:-~:.G!lllo!Jlia-izatiori>vbich-Coogresi-lianeslatl!d-1 1: :£r.='r"OltN. ~ I:'fa · , Ht <Wat today, and intermittent rains are el· two Yelrs~ ~--- or."'Jol: :....~Jr .. • F• ~· peeled to soak the area lhrou~ Tuesday, "A bo • lf: ~§,,,.,. -a; J.·~'(la~ tt.~ NaUooal Yfeatber Service Said. -l rough oVerbaul. of the federal 112. ~ H•~•· J•"', ~.,,""-In a' Qne.ti>.two bOOr ..... riod '....aJlv a bureaucracy Is long oveidue and I am Of Civilians· BUDGET .•. : Ghiorso will discuss the .~arch for ne'f elements with atomic \\'eights of 106 ct higber. Just Like July AwngBeaclies Of South Coast 3. .-n D 1W:.:C:. , SI, 11'1.,I, IM&. ' , fr.' ...,u-.. • ' '11:t ~ .r= °"""" ~·l.~~·1 weather tront. dumped .21 incheS o( ra~ detennilied to accomplish it," the Pres!· 11 ·l~!.. ~,.~ if·J,., \ 1• o .• 8'11 Franci.wo, .29 on Shelter cove 1n dent said. 11: FU"''lMI ~o111~!t'. ~';.:.% ·J:t . Humboldt County and .16 on Oaklarid, the Nixon proposed 00 n din 1.-0w surf ·and wann temperatures : $'= ·~'f' ..... l!L~J"i;, ,.., <W•' --weather service said. -ew s~n ~ pr~ lured thousands of swimmers and -~· 1uc:hin1 Hambll ~ f.; ~ii tNL Meanwhile, gale warnings were poated grams: ~et, .the l974. b~dget will Prmg an bathers over U!e weekend. creating the /(,:O,.jml: .2:1:"..!';t ~·£It\ ~ along the coast u gusty winda whipped $!8.!f.bill100 increase in spending over lhe two biggest beach-going daya of Ille ~= ,,.O:~~.,i~ r.,._ , 1._m. the region. . • year that ends June 30, largely because winter along South c.oast beaches. a::r .. t:dwlnl w111 ~ Jw.. 1, ""' :nie . snow level in the northern moun· of military pay an.t price inCreues and taina " ·~~ to drop from 7 ooo to .,. City llleguards reported air tem-American dvilians who dled after ca~· about ,000~!"-'. ' what Nixon call"" "uncontrollable Items." r ., -. P'!f!lures of 68 degrees on Saturday and ture. in South Vietnam, including the 'lbe weatherman '8(dttbere were· eight -including-a $[9 billion increase ln in· 72 degrees SUoday and a water ,iem,. = :i,.dalla~r .,~pture and date of cbanc<e in 10 of rain in the Bay atta terest cosls on Ille climbing federal debt. perature of 57 degr<es bolh dayL 'Ille tonigbt and 1 in 10 ~ mor' rain Tues-The $6.5 billion in cutbacks and surf ran approsllnately one to two feel From Pagel CEASE-FIRE • •• day, . withholding of funds already a~ The9e condttkm attracted a a Increasing clo~·"88 ezpec\ed in propriated throws a challenge 1to 11 estimated 5,800 btacbgoers Saturday and Ille Slem Nevada todiy, posilblyll!nlfng Congress; where . every program ·baa· about 11,000 perlOllS Sunday. Tbe•jump fn to rain or ~ 'l'Uelday,:• Ule,Natlonal loyal supporters, and make.1 it doublful beach attendance wu probably due to Weather Service said. • ' that Nixon can make his ceilings_ stick. C:; f~g:ree air temperature lncrea9e r ------------------· _·_·_· __ _;_···-~ on SUnday, a lifeguard spokesman said. 'lbere were no rescues or 'other in- Stop That Bank cidents reported. Despite small craft wamlng flags out Saturdaf to ·.run beaten of ao Incroue in wind, the condition did not develop and sailing condiUons were excellent both daya, ~ to a o..a Point Harbor Department spokesman. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedbeim said Sunday tbat the Laotian Communist troops to keep fighting until problem is being discussed with the the internat ional teams were in place, Huntingto1i Suspect Thwarted All a result, the boat trallic wu heavy for this Ume of year. Two disabled boats were towed fnto the Harbor &mday. There were no major lncldent&. North Vietnamese through diplomatic and to continue where there are no Stealing money from a bank is likely to get you into.a lot of trouble with . channels in Paris. teams. tbe law. .. ' - "We do expect to receive a list," South Vietnamese officials ·reported Stealing the bank is guaranteed to get you into trouble, as Huntington Friedheim said "We hope 1b have it that casualties on both sides since the Beach resident, Richard John Lee discovered Sunday. shortly." cease-fire was announced five days ago ... According to police, Lee, 26, of 9680 Durbain Drive, was trying to drive u necessary, be satd, Maj. c.n. approached Ille bloodiest week.s of last off a motor home which la used as portable ~raocji of lhe Bank of America. -Gospel Preacher Held Gilbert H. Woodward, chief U.S. year's Communist offensive. Police said the '\'an was parked in a lot near the intersecUon of Ellis Av~ • representative to Ille temporary lour· Soutb Vietnamese air for« planea flew nue and Beach Boulevard. Lee "'1egedly broke inld the """ removed 1185 and For Disturhmg' Pea power joint military commission bomblllg missions in support of gov~ was. trying to drive it away, but couldn't get it in gear. ce supervising the cease-fire, would raise ment troops although the number of P~e said be went to a nearby gas station for help and found C'1ri.s J. A Young mBJ), iwertedly bellowing I.tie the issue at the group's first meeting. sorties was omitted from the dilly war c.ousseris who had stopped at the closed station_ID search of g_as. gospel in San Clemente's central busineSs The qUestion of the missing, Friedhelm communique. U.S. aircraft sulpended ~ens told officers be became suspicious when he saw that the van bad district bad his sermon cut short by sah said, will be pursued in the coming operatiow over south Vietnam in ac-been ransacked and that it had the name of the ·Bank of America ob the side. Clemente police over the weekend. ' months with the North Vietnamese and eordance with the cease-fire but con· So be called police. Officers took Kerman Taylor, 24, into Viet Cong by going over the list of miss-tinued raids over Laos. Lee is in custody today on a charge of bank burglary. custody Saturday and booked him On ing, name by name, to obtain information There we~ conOicting reports con-Detectives said today that the stat.ion where ..Lee was arrested bad been charge. of disturbing the peace. ~ on their whereabouts. ceming Cambodia. U.S. officials in broken into Saturday. About $400 and some tools were taken. -said businessmen inJbe area of Del In idenUfying by name the 555 Phnom Penh said all bombiDg was They said lhey are investigating the possibility that those tooll were the and Ola Vista complained the man s American POWs in North and South Viet· .. suspended there with tbe ceue-flre, but ones used to break into the not-so-mobile bank. · shouting at patrons ad causing pn)b- ru1m to be released by the Communlsts a Washington report said they <0!1\inued. Iems. · within the GO-day period following the President Lon Nol allo ohlered all ...':~~~~~~;~~::~::::~:::~~:::~~~=;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~ cease-fire the Penlagon said North Viet· Cambodian ground forees not to engage I ~~;~;,'reported lhat 55 POWs dled in :.:.'=;~ ,:i!:,~.~"~=..! LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED E.LSEWffERE .; He said every effort wUl be made to and Viet Cong forces ''to leave our couo- leam the cause of death in each case. try in the shortest possible Ume." Ad fJ I. The dead include 22 Army men nine Th"e was no immediate Indlcatlon • 'Ill ••-• NO• DEfROSJING- Navy, 16 from the Air Force 8nd a whether the Commllllists in C&mbodla • .. 1 Marines. were cooperating in Lon Nol's cease-fire. RIFRIGERATOR/FREUER •. The S55 Americans awaiting freedom !n Vientiane, Ibo.' Loptlan ,capilal, 1nrlude 76 Army, 135 Navy, 318 Air Force !"11htary 30Urces satd ftgbtJng increued and 26 Marines. tn sou!bem Laos, but there bave been no Ralph H. Pittman Of Capistrano Last Rites Held significant , offensives launched by either side to gain territory before a cease-fire is annowiced. Prince Souv'anna Pbouml, lhe Laotian premier, aald in New Deihl Sunday that be hopes a cease-fire can be achieved in his country soon. Bicyclist Strtick By Car, Injured " -• • ,, • • • • • • - Funeral services were held today ln Laguna Beach for Ralph H. Pittman, south coast resident ror nine years who died Friday in South Laguna at the age of 61. Mr. Pittman was a member of American Legion Post No. 3810 in San Juan Ca pistrano. He was formerly owner of Aunt Millie's and Uncle Pitt's ·Playhouse. a preschoo~ nursery in Lo.~ Angeles, for 15 years .• A !&-year-old San Juan Capistrano youth received minor Injuries when bis bicycle eolidtd with a car at lbe in- terseclioo at MacArthur. Blvd. and SID Joaquin llills Road in Newport Bea<h Sunday at 10: U a.m. .. • full Wl4tfl ,,_. Chwt .~,_...,,.......,. Ali. THIS $25 91s . w Yl•u•I Otfl'Ott-tlmW ""'""' ... ~~LY · , : :"w'::=.!~:.. Cllllltl' °'"'' -• ·-·-~ ! 159'5 The bteycllat, Ste,.. D. Whisler, - Calle Chueca, told polfoo he wu ..U. northbound on McArtbUr Blvd. and bad coterod the fnteraectioo thi'oilgb the amber light. m Momhr;, 90 DAY U c.111.,,n11'• i..,.e.t CASH " He ls survived by hi! wife, Mildred, or the family borne, at 32802 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano ; two sisters, Hele~ Wade of Clovtsµd Marguerite Varvel of Stockton ; two nieces, Patricia Quinlan and otile Watham, both or Fresno, and a nephew , Ronald Varvel of Stockton. Randa~ E. Schaller ol 1810 SID Joe- quln HUis Road aald the llgbt turned grc<n for westbound tralllc before he started to enter the Intersection where Group With The wriM .,.IO,.. r• m c-""" 1uy1,. · ·Volume luyl,. Cl-' " The family has suggested memorial contributions be sent to the h1axine Caverly Memorial Chapter, City of Hope, post office box 426. or the Orthopacdlc HOBpital, lA>S J\ngeles. the collision took place. · Police aaid Whlsler was knocked lrUn his bicycle but ·IUl!ained ooly mfilor abruiOlll and said bot would sed< private medica l trealmtol , • h•.•H•aa-'"'"'i of 110 Stomp! ~ . ............. ~ 1115 llEWPORT Bl VD. lltwlltm cw Mesa -Plllne 541-7781 • .. , • \., I j - I ,, ., ' •. ,, " • • ' i " I J • I I I • . ,. I I I ( I i I I I I I I I • ' I I I l . ·:; ii "i ~ ) I ·. , ------------··--------------------- 1--For Journalistic Excellellce, No One Tops Them \ • I .. • I 1.f " ' ·~· • l·h \· 1h • •Jl·' I ~ ' I 1~ I I I ---1-• I • I t l i I I I ' I I I I ~. ·' • ' DAILY .PILO.T People Stacked Up .Pretty -Well-In . Press Club Competition ---Again ·19 ·First Place Awards " Tho Orange County Pl'tlss Club's version of Oscar Night has como and gone . an<! tho ORCOP owords have been distributed for tho boil work done in 1972. It was another vintogo yeer for tho DAILY PILOT whose 1taff members brought homo 11 ORCOP1 (more than half of all ' .. they were eligible to win) plus first pl.co awards in eight out of 17 Special Award categories. The 19 firsts wel'tl moro than all the firsts put t09ethor by the county's othor three top dailie.-they divided 17 am!>ng the throe of.them -and, counting second ploce awards (13) and honorable achievements (23), brought tho total number of award• for the DAILY PILOT to 55! .... • \ TOM BARLEY Bott Nows Story 4-WAY WINNER KOEHLER Bott Spot Nows Photo Best Photo Serles Boot Modlcol Phofos Boll Anhml Photo ... TRIPLE WINNER VINSEL Bott No-par SorlH B;Ht News Feafure Bost Modic.al Artlclo BEA ANDERSON BottHoodllno t'l. •• ' ' . ' ~· .. ,~~ ., 1,l ~-...~-· DOUBLE WINNER PAYNE Boat Sports Photo Boat Article ond Photos _ On Youth Ad11evtrnent TOM"MURPHINE Bolt PlfO Loyout ALAN DIRKIN Bott Sports Folturo PATRICK O'DONNILL w-·· Section Photo l \ JOANNE REYNOLDS JONN .VALllRZA Boat Article on Low fire Pr1-.ntlon Arttcl1 . . • . . 13 First Place Winners To make it on this picture page, members of tho . DAILY • PILOT staff had lo win first place prizo1 in tho 18th Annual Orongo County Prou Club Awards. Thirteen made it and, in an almost incredible 1howin9 in the face of this kind of competition, throe of them each won more than one award. Chief Photographer Loe Payn• won two; Staff Writer Arthur R. Vin .. J won lhl'tlo and Staff Photographer Richard Koehler won four! With 'a l'tlcord like that -better oven thon tho DAILY PILOT is accustomed to scoring -the real winners ire the reeden who win, perhaps, join the entire DAILY PILOT family in saluting its untoppablo news staff. TERRY COVILLE Boat Nowapopor Colum~ L. PETIR KRIEG Urben Alf1lr1 Artlclo JOHN ZALLIR Bottluolnt11 A ' • \ 7 Douglas DC-I Os Ordered ~ ·----- N<11 ional Alrlli1es has an. nounced a $1~8 1nUUon order !or scvt"n f\1c0onnell Pouglrt:'i IX'·lf'ls. including rive <lomt>Slic and I "' o in· 1trcon11nent3l vrrslons of 1he \\'id(•bodiC'd a'ire.rafl. l. B. r.t:1y1ni.;. eh:iirmnn nnd president or Nl1ti6nal. said !hat rour of the 249-passenger pl.:tnl's \\'ould be delivered h1te next year "'ith the remainder :1.rriving in November. 1975. Nn1 ional prt>sently operates nine DC·IOs. Two long·range niodels previously ordered are scheduled for delivrry lfl June . The l>C·IO is equipped \\'ith high·bypass engines that <'CIL!>Sl' the thrust output or rarlicr ji•t engines. The plane l"an opcratl' front all airports t apable or handling the sm:illcr Boeing 72i. Air !\e\V Ztoaland. the i:;overnnlt'lll·run airhrw has ordered three o( I.he f\tcDon· nell Douglas OC-10 wide-bodied lrijet airliners. The first one is ready to be picked up at 1he company's division plant in Long: Beach. ' C. J. Keppel. Air New 7.ealand"s chief executive and general manager said the $100 million being spent on !he three pla nes is not considered b\" his countrvmen to be a IB\:ish expc ndiiure. Not ing thal the airline helps keep taxes do\\·n by eaniing guvernment-Sti.8 n1i!Hon in fiscal 1972-Keppel said Nev; Zealanders are hopeful the big planes 11•ill help boost the country's tourisl trade. PRIVATE TRUST FUllDS AVAILABLE fOA AUL ESTATE LOANS t1! & 2nd TRUST DEEDS $1,500 T11 $2$0,000 UP TO 11(1% LOoltHS OM TRUST DEED COLLATEP.AL Mr#f'O"T t:QUITY fUMOS N-s>ort ~"!•r «20 N.-riort C..nl•• 0flft H_,,.,., 9•Kll, Calll. (71•) ~· AlllJll'Y 29 l FINANCE Big Contl'llct At Celesco, -Fe1v Jobs New government contracts to Celesco Industries thlll ulli1natclv "'UI l~x.ceed $20 nulhon itre 1101 expected to add si~nifican tly to the ·work force of the Costa l\tcsa·bascd aerospace firtn . The contracts granted by 1he i.:.s. Air Force Space and ~lissile Sys1ems Orga nization 1 SA~150 f· are $6.5 million for construction of a re-entry vehicle iesling complex on \Vake Island in the Pacific and nearly $15 million, for launch ser.\'ices and Athena missiles. Both the Athena and the 1\thena H rockets are built by the firm on 3333 Harbor Blvd . Tht' ntissiles serve as so-caUed "ta."<is" for the payloads of other contractors. But e\·en though the rocker s 'are built in Costa f\t esa. no mass hi rings arc predicted. ac· cording to R. Donald Tompkins. director or Ill· dustrial relalions. Tompkins said staffing had been increased during the last three months in anticipation of lhe contracts and that only 2> 50 additional positions will be filled. In late spring the com- pany expects !o hi re another 25 workers, according lo Tompkins. Of the contracts. Celesco to date has been awarded a total of $1 ,0'25,000. . -........... --. persvaacu . radio pager_-'-,-: ~ TORt OB voum • 'Low COST < , ' lllW COMPACT 1'.QCWO- MODR : ~· 83•·.3305 THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZEO DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Boulevard af Cars LOOI( fOlt THl IMILIM AT ROBINS FORD DATSUN 2060 2845 • THEODORE I COSTA MESA HARBOR Bl VD. HARBOR Ill VD. 1000 ORDER -)' Beautiful ·~. '/ ' I Stick-on YOURS ·~ LABELS \ , TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Your1•lf or a Friend M•y be used on envelopes as rcturn address 1•bels. Al sO' ·very handy as identification libels for mo'lrk in 9 personal itoms such a~ books, recordi, photos, etc. labels stick on gl1ss •nd me y be used for marking homo c•nned fo cd items. AH labels nro printed with 1tylish Vogue type on fine quality white· gummed paper. -----------------------, r '111 Iii l'lllt ltll--11, c1i, .... !NII ,.1111 t1.U h l I I ,, .. , ~rlftlktlt ...... Div., ,,0, .... \WI I . 1 '-''1• MllM. C•ll•. nu' 1 ' '---•' I I I I I I I I L----~~L~!-~!~J!~~----J ' § ~~..¢¢"~..C-~~ By SVLVIA PORTER ri.tore than t,500,000 of you "'ill be divorced and another 1,500.000 will taft the first step.s toward divorce in tm - all·linle high totals· with financial implications reaching out to many n10re millions of adults and dlUdren In Lhe fam- lhes Involved. This Is almom""tour tunes the incidence or divorces only JO years ngo. MARRIAGES A1$ HA VE been in- cf'('3Sing at a rapid rate in recent years -but divorces have been rising even n1ore sharply. A decade ago, there w~ one divorce or annulm.ent for every four marriages. Today, one old mar. riage ends in divorce or annulment for every three new marriages. To dramatize the divorce picture ..o•r•• even more: * One out of every five m{!n and women getting mar-- ricd eath year has been divorced. * Some 15,000,000 Americans are or have been divorc- ed -and 4,000,CMX>-plus are currently divorced. * Nearly two out of three divorces today involve chil~ dren. * AND WHILE THE remarriage rate bas been rising along with the divorce rate, one in five remaniages also ends in divorce. Why? ~ Surely, the upsurge in broken marriages is related to changmg American attitudes, particularly about sex, to the decline of the traditional_family, .Jo easier divorce laws-; to the growing financial independence of women, and many other lesser factors too. Obviously influencing the figures also is the fact that lhe "·ar babies of the early post-\Vorld War I! years are now into their 2Qs -the most highly divorce-prone age group, espec1ally among couples who married very young. \\'ho are the most divorce-prone? Nearly 30 percent of the marriages where the woman's age ranges from 'rl lo 32 will end in divorce. NON-WHITES GET divorced more frequently than \\'bites. For every 1,000 married couples, there are 71 divorc· ed persons among non-whites, o:impa.red to 45 diV<ll'Ced mdiv1duals for every 1,000 white married couples. D1vQrce rates are higher in _cities._On the farm. there are 20 divorced persons for each 1,000 married couples in contrast to 49 in nonfann areas. The smaller .,your family income and the lower your ed- ucation level. tlie greater the likelihood that you will get: divorced -contrary though this'Tilay be to...popu!ar belief. Whatever your financial situation, a divorce is one of the most costly economic adventures you can undertake - with expenses which few to be divorced couples weigh in advance. "MOST AMERICANS TODAY live lo the hill of lhe breadwinner's income and frequently even beyond it," notes a prominent New York lawyer and family law pro- fessor. "For yoW1g families with little or no Unancia1 cushion, tbe sudden economic toll of divoree, can be catastrophic." When can a husband financially afford a divorce? V.'hen he 1s prepared to cut his standard of living in half. says the professor. "My advice to aJ'J.ybody C()ntem~ plating a divorce is to count on its (.'()$ting at least twice as much as he thinks." · If you are considering a· divorce, you must be aware of all the coots -ranging from ·iegaJ fees and plane fares to alimony and child support payments, division of property and other assests, the complex but oh so important tax angles. and on lind on . What are typical divorce costs today? NO DIVORCE IS "TYPICAL," but there are general guides on the two (llajor baste costs. The first is alimony and child support -sometimes referred to as the "high cost of leaving." These are usually the biggest items in any divorce settlement. The second major expen.se is the lawyer -with lawyers, hke physicians. tending to charge clients aec<>rding to their income brackets as well as according to the amount of hme and work a case demands. • COMPLETE NEW YORK. STOCK UST . - • I ( ' ( ' I~ I I !. I I I l I " \. ,, I .I •' ' ' j I I I ,If •'I ' OOC.V PICO! ..... ... P·I t9*1 Ktftl LIM Liii CJtoa, '. ,_ . '". .. lt'l-l'lt.'i!T~-----""'Oiiilif,'JiiiliiYf£,"m.-------- I TltAIN te' .. • 'Black Panther' Won't Run; Actors Clted DENTAL TECHNICIAN - From Wire Servicti Mrs. Huggins, an elected Erika Hap1D.S will not run member ol the Berkeley Com- for . a Berkeley City CounCl.I munity Development Auoci• ·seat because the Black lion, hid been expecte(I to Panther party is committing seek a place on the radical its-resources to Chairman April Coalition state of council ._ Bobby Sea1e's campaign for _caodijfates in the Aprll 17 eleo. Oakland mayor . lion. Four seats and control or Mrs. Huggins and Seale the council are at Stake. stood trial together on murder * charges in New Haven, Conn. h 'O mentbers of the in 1970. The charges were ··&ree'ts of San Franclsco1'' dismissed arter' a hung jury. television ser1es have provtn ______ __:;_:..__: ____ ~ QUEENIE - ... . ,,· .. ''You'd bettt>r slop &inking. Your face ts getting blurred.·· L. Jtl. Boyd Weekends Best D~ys £01· Cattle Busiest day in the stockyards is ri.tonday. That's \\'hen I 45 percent of the cattle go to market. Only 19 percent show up on Tuesday. Wednesday gets~ percent, 'Drursday seven percenl and Friday four percent. Report this because a I client asks if catlle. like people, have good~days and bad days. Yes, I think so. Their good days ar~ Saturday and Sunday. I ONE our OF every five rapists is drunk at the time I of the crime, lawmen say , .. SEVEN OUT of every 20 serviceme?l' wear prescription specs , .. IF A SINGLE woman goes with an eligible man Cor three months, chances she'll marry him are about two to five .. , NO LAW in any state prohibits the marking of playing cards . . . SO YOU THINK you've mastered the language? All right. say ''New York unique" three times. QUERIES -Q. "?lho invented the first brassiere?" A. ~fary Phelps Jacob!. In 1914. She v;Tote a book , too. An autobiograph y. Called it "The Passionate Years." Q. "HOW ~1At<..'Y angels does the Bible actually men- tion by name?" A. Only three-~1ichael, Gabriel and Raphael. Q. "WHAT'S the most common cause of snowmobile accidents?'' A. Slicking throttles. TAKE 100 BACHELORS each 36 years old. Exactly 7.2 of them "''ill get married 'vithin the next 12 months. Now take 100 single ladies each 36 years old . Only 4.4 of them ! "'"ill go to the altar wiUtin the upcoming year. LOVE AND \VAR -Pay attention, please, to this ob· servalion on love by Vivian Cristol: "ff you lose in what- ever manner. the pain is lasting indeed. But I personally subscribe to !he old theory of getting back on the horse after the fall. There should be a ·nex~· in life. A next cat, a next dog, or husband, or whatever. There are too many joys to forego by being so niggardly with love, so afraid to be hurt." Excellent, excellent. ALWA VS thought those carnivorous plants that trap bugs to eat "'·ere faril y rare. l\ot so. The botany, boys say they've counted about 180 diffe rent sorts of Sllch, so far. BIRD WATCHERS report that pairs of romantic ra· vens of1en fly with their \\ing lips touching, as though hold- ing hands. Isn't that sweet , Cynthia? MfONG the western music singers, the Nashville ex- perts define a star as worth from $750 to Sl.205 per con- cen, a superstar as worth anything more than $1 ,250. Address moil to I... Iii. Boyd , P. 0. Box 1875, Ne11r port Beach, Calif. 92660. ' 111111 lllLEllll * IF 1111 * THERE ARE OVER 20 ACRES OF NEW AND USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Baulevard af Car• LOOI PO• THI IMIUM AT PONTIAC Mirecle Mezde 24'0 2150 • DAVE ROSS I HAL GREEN'S HARBOR Bl VD. HAR.OR Bl VD. " I ' ' they aro capable ol heroic deeds In real-Ille sltuatloos, tile Amerlc111 Red Cross says. Tbe organlza.Uon awarded • Red Cross certfficate of merit 10 COiiar . lllJl<e Doqlu, tile son of movie actor Kirk Doaglas, and assistant di.rec-- tor Ktaoeth Swor for saving tht life of a fellow actor. Tbe two Jumped fully cloth- ed into chilly San Franc1st0 Bay Nov. 21 and went to the aid of stunt man Diet Butler ' who was accldentally hll by a "Sklll, laleill and '~IN •1'11 ...,,.., .. 1etw• - passln( boll, a spokesman for labo< of aD ldodl n lielnfl Uoc'I drtvlN ._ WU a Wiiied," l&ld Duiela In•~ ~ bacauoo II i\-111 llll ( ) ~~ ":': Ball,= petformw -id ellber ha~ PEOPLE _ty Adn\IJ\lllrJtloo.~ ·~ to ..Uh& new Rolla RoJoo or Social -lly -. hire • dlaulleur. Quinn-Martin Producllons, Ille _,,ll)l loJd • ~ After· llannlq JllOlde4 show's producers, said. commlllee Iha! II woold cool 1!11illy' to 1 ~ ,violltloo, · * loo much IO ' allow ironliir bJa attorney ~ cltlllll>- Entertainer DUiy Danltls, elderly to collect full ' .aoc111 ey. • ' ~. 5', has protested rules that cut security PIYM~._ ,"' -~ 0 He bu recently bOtlpt 1 Social Securlly paymenls to Rollt-Rojlce /Jl wbldl he la ,.tired persons who find work. A Judie .IUinfl very Pl'Olld.~ !be IMIJtr.l&ld. jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii AD PRICES G<;>oD MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, FEB. l . ~U"LltY -VALUE -SERVICE . FUERTE Avocados L•rgo FRESH TENDER Zucc~ini Squash LARGE ANO SWEET Navel _Oranges ) LARGE SOLID HEADS Iceberg lettuce 29¢ ... <fJe:lieede:$$B:fil \, RICHARD'S Barbecue Chicken BAR M · . All ·Meat Wieners Hoffmans .Cheese Bars CARllS TABLE WATER Hot '""p•r o("'' cit•••• 111' onion 1.29 lb. 1 lb. 79¢ l 9 01. 69c English Crackers . '1 ',~ 01. 79c RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRADE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS Round Steak s1rog•no11 T•nd~r 1.49 1~. l.;39 lb. swiss Steak Prepor• with our · "' fresh mushrooms . ' t: ~ 'rfj . •· I YUBAN COFFEE . I lb. Yub•n Callee l lb. 2.49 London Broil Thick cut• ,, 1.69 lb. top round Cube Steaks ~~~~:,~t .. k 1. 98 lb. Yuben Coff•e '2 lb. 1.69 SPRINGFIELD GJu/MJtcf{~ 0 .Granulated · ~ugar 5 lb. FLEISCHMANNS ·Soft Marpsine . 1 lb. Stuffed Bell Peppers ov•n rttdy with cltttl• 1.09 lb. Stuffed Beef Roulades 1p•ci•I dr•11i11t 1.29 lb. Cheer Detergent Glint 49 ol. JELL-0 ,,. -Instant · Pudding all flriois L- Stuffed Pork Chops p•r1ley dr•11i119 1.29 lb. We also proce'' meat for home freezers . Please do not hesitate to e1 k for personal service. 85¢ s' -45¢ 69¢ -l9¢ Sticky Buns 8 for 95c 51c 1.35 Glorietta Tomato Juice 46 OL 3 for $1 Large White Sandwich Bread Rum Cake Buttermilk Rolls 6 for 49c Jrf0wer-ll20fJ D~IEO VELVET Button Flowers colorful new shipm9nt 1.49 bun. LIQUOR RICHARD'S PRIVATE LABEL 11.ICHARO'S Scotch Whisky 16.1 Proof Qt. 7.67 RICHARD'S KEJ<lTUCKY Straight Boorbon Whiskey 16 Proof Qt, 5.86 RICHARD'S London Dry Gin 10 ,, ••• Qt. 4.75 RICHARD'S Lido Market Vodka 4.75 ' ' 12.~ UDO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 - 6 673-6300 Bisquick '40 ••• 53c Stokely Corn crltft'I ttyle or whole litrrltl "•L 5 for $1 . B & M Baked Beans 19 ••• 29c SU,NStilNE CHl,.A.ROOS 59c Chdcolate Chip Cookies 15 Ol. 1T~111'ee.ck Minute Maid Orange Juice . 6 OL 4 for $1 Stouffers Spinach Souffle 11 OJ. 39c J. ' • • • ~~ HARBORV!iw 1600Mac:Mhur.~ QPS\I DAILY9-8, SUN. 9 - 6 673-2155 ' .. I • • • ' ' • i • • - I I \ ' ' ' \ I I I I ' • 7 . ' ~i • •• I 7 • - Today's :Final N.Y. Stocks ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. M~NDAY, JAN.UARY 29, 1973 TEN CENTS k -. ·*· ~·...:..·-··. ,,.. ~VOL. 66, NO. 29, 2 SECTIONS, 24 P>lGES J~ .,; A • ' - •• • • '00 .ecovere Alie n Dies " . ln ·Traffic Acci4ent • ~ By JORN ·VALTERZA r Of 111e o.llY '"'' 11att A Jg.year-old boy being smuggled into the United States from Mexico was tilled iOssanUy in a tratr.ic· crash at San Onofre Suaday -an lllcident that cidoely Rlembled a similar tragedy sevenl weekends ago. • • ' \ Hus.,,,.nd Comi ng Ho-nae • • I Wife Gets News In ·titguna-~Nigri ~I . . - \ ,.--....... By JACK CHAPPELL Of the DllW l'iltt llaff It bas been seven, yeah of waiting and frustration for Shirley Pitchford of Laguna Niguel, wife of Air Force_,Lt Col. John Pitchford, shot down in December 1965. And now that she knows John is com· ' ' ' .. ing home, the bours and seconds just can't go fast enough. "I just ho'Pe John is going to come , heme in the first batch. He should, he's been over there one of the longest," Mrt. Pitchford said today . '!Til81 !1ij ,_ • .,, • • • · Ismael 'Gomet Guerra of Guadalajara, -Mo•1co~""-kili,.i~1nstanuy-when--theie--· ~N~,,·~xo-· --'--n· ~· -A~s-k.-----s... uoa waion he was riding in was atruck from behind by a. true~ al,. laden She received a call at 5:30 p.m. Satur- day and was informed her husband's . --:a':.wu on ~ offtpaJ list releclsed by "You wait for seven years, and then you have to wait some more. 'llith aliens. . o one among the dozTn or more oc- cupants of the vehicles was injured. Th~ crash occurred ln slowing freeway traffic about two miles south of the border patrol checkpoint. It occUrred al the peak of another record.. weekend or arrests of illegal aliens by patrolmen. And it occurred In the ,.,.. part of the lteeway Where four -penons were killed several WE!_eka. ago as they tried to avoid arrest. Those four penons attempted to nee M70ll .tbe 'heway afttr IUftlet and were ...-'~~·"'repeatedly by fas\.DIOYing cm. Patrol • Capt. Eugene Harris that bis men In -lbift alone Sun-day 117' aJlem ....... •to ~ the Int. ---... .'!'fie .,,, total_ ... ,....,... . "JI deecribed ~ u •111mo1t • OOrbon ' ol tbe trqlc eillW Illa> day. ' Of:ficlal5 have said that 1mugglers ap- parently are becoming more careless and are not checklng to see if patrolmen are operating the roadblock before the heading north with their passengers. Dozens of cars wert Jett abandoned alnng the freeway shoulder through the day and Harri! said "there was no way of telling" bow many "wets" got out of the cars and made it north 'On foot, evad- ing officers. Police Curtail lliegal Cycling In La guna Beach Laguna Beach policemen riding their per90nal trail motorcycles again this weekeod patrolled undeveloped territory at TOR d the World issuing 35 courtesy notices and arresting two persons, one for grand theft and the other for possesston o: marijuana. r~v=~:u:t ==~: vehicles on private property without ex- Pf'!SS permissioo of the landowners is a viQation of city law. llumerowi.clllulu:OmplaintsJrom Too of the World relicloota about the noise ml dirt created by the crowdl have pt'l!l!lpted the enforcement c:raCkdown, David ' B-.i, Laauna Buch, police captain, said recent · publlctty about the strict enforeement seems to have camed an tlOdUI ol local bike rlden from 'the ... a. Jocai.cJ ....,.Sly jul!I off the ex- tellslon of Alli Laguna Boulevard.. ' Of the 23 courtesy ootk:el Issued Sun- day by two police officers, Rick Louk and John Saporito, 18 were given to out-of- towoers. Many of the locals are moving to lbe Countiyman's area, orficen were told. • The armta Included I If.year-old Allahelm pi _.,ed driDklnl beer. A searclt ol the 1irl'1 pune revealed a small amount of marljuaaa, Brown-lald. Fir m R eins For Budge t "My life is going to be so different when l--donlt bave to wait~ It-may take me years to adfust," she said. She said she wishes her husband could just land in a helicopter in the beach in front o~famlly.ls-new-home-Jn.~the Shores development of Laguna Niguel. Children, Elizabeth, 16, and John, 15, · \V ASHJNGTON (AP) -President Nix· live at the Shores home, while James is on demanded death for dozens of-federal a studenr at' Ari1.0iur State Uy1versity spending programs today. called on Con-and daughter Linda lives in Sacramen~. gress for 1 rigid 1974 bud~ ceiling of )Vhile the new;s for her was good, the $268.7 6illion,·a00 cautioned tl\at greater wait for many-;trivei-was-not-eMed-With- spendlng would mean "high taus, hlgb-joy. L er interest rates, renewed inflation, or all "I feel very bad about some of my three." (Related stories, Page 8.) friends who have gotten the ~bad _.. 1 . "[ oppose · these alt~Uves; with a know many. Of tliem. ~ delfne a C1t111 rein oo· speodlnJ, none of them la bleak and they jpst aren't gettiJ!g i~" ""'"'iry,• !(a:illl ~ "'hil l*al 1974 ... -said. J • 1 ~ ,. 111111<! , ____ I to Ult nCW Ccipgress "I feel so batil>Y toltiJ I think of oome of .,.-tfii loNmiisi ol lit ..,.. major an-Ibo oils pi."lllioM bus-ire not lilal JIH'l!illalllJi ~.. comlng ~" lhe>slld. . , •. ·'Ille ~ flftil up 1o .ivabce bill-SiDce iba· a~menta -about the ing'il an ox ]ob"Gll .DllDY soda!; health, -return ol the Pf)sooers Mrs. Pitchloni boualilg, eidoca6on aD«I ant.lpove~ pr~ h~ been buieged· by callers and Well crams o( bia Democratic predecessors -wishers. At first1 John's n,ame was omit· programs Nixon said ·failed alter a fair ted from inltJal. published ' Hats of tri I prisoners and friends were anxious. ' With a litUe help from a friend, Marjorie, an '.Indian elephant, enters her winter quarters at tbe Chesslngton, England, zoo. Keeper Lionel Ro\~e supplies the extra persuasion. a ·~ ' ~ · HoWever, Mrs. 'Pifcbford has received ' - ·0espitetbe domesticcutbacksti,ebudg-letters ffom -rum ov·er the last~three ... ~S , .. Ch 500 et'called for 181.) billion In military out· g S lays, the second biggest defense budget Y'.~ootly he talked about his health aigo n a r e in hiStory even with the peace agreement being good. It looked like he was being . ' in Vietnam. 1t provided no funds for re-l/ery careful in writing so 'the letter · -• construdioll of South Vietnam. Nixon called bis budget a turning point w~J~ t~pi:u:ti-me to buy somehing v . . 1 ~iw· ns of . Truce in national policy though still written in -expensive. I'm not sure why, I do , rWif..L the familiar red ink -~ $24..&:billion def-anyway," the overjoye9 woman said. tc'tt this vear and a $12.7-billion,deficit in No word bas ~received yet-&bout fiscal JgJ4. But the President Pointed to !he exact date that U . Col. Pitcilfoni, a 113 Jl'(lgram cutbackJ and termbtatiOM, 22-year career officer, will be back 41 the ~ $6.5 billion In savings in ~ fllcal states. year alone, and told tbe lawma .. ers : Mrs. Pitchford said tbat mol'J! than 600 "The 1974 budget is the clear evidence people who wear the POW bracelet bear- of the kind of change ln direction de-ing her husband's name have writted to manded by the great majority or the her. Ainerican people. No, longer will power She said the most frustrating pa.rt of flo~ inexorably' .to. Washington." the ordeal was the n igh t I y new& '11le figures -some of them leaked in broadcasts (''ho one watched the news advance by Nlxon biinse¥-wert: more than me~') and knowing that "we For fiscal 11113: Outl.,.. '249.8 bllllon, did not go in there and win." (S.. BUDG~, I'll' II Russ Atomic Suh . ~~. STOCKS CONTINUE Near -Ireland· ' ' . PLUNGE,. OFF 9.56 SAIGOll (AP) -The South Viet- . namese government and ita Cort\munist, opponents accused each other tpday of widespread violations of the cease-fu;e. Officials or the ne"A-international peacekeeping !orce expressed ·hope of getting teams of observers into the field . by Tuesday. by Tu*ay. (See, related stories, Pages 4 and >) An · American soldier died today of wounds suffered Sunday, the first. U.S. fatality since the cease-fire went intO ef· · feet. In the four days prior to the truce, fou r ·American military men were killed, • and 19 U.S. soldiers and 12 U.S. civilians wounded. The U.S. C.ommand announced the withdrawal .of soother 400 troops today, the second contingent of 400 men to leave NEW YORK (AP) -Stock mar~et 1 LONDON jAPJ _ A nuclear-powered since the cease-fire agreement took ef-pri~ coo~~ to droii today,. with Soviet spbmarili ls,being-tracked off the ' feet S\lnday. ~era blaining the decline on cootmutd northwest coast, of Ireland, the Ministry The command said the men were.fl<>~ mv~orworrteruverthe-ecooomr-and -0rueR!iiie-Nporte11'1Dday:--------·----~our-ot-ttie count"' by commercial inflation. . A spokesman said a Royal A.lr Force airliners. nus dropped U.S. troop The Dow. Jones average-of JO ~striaJ _Nimrod ·reconnaiasance aircraft and the strength in Vietnam. to ~.700 ~· The stocU1• which lost D.65 points 1ut week, nuclear-powered submarine Conqueror cease-fire agreement requites them to ' was ou pe to 991.pe at 10 a.m.~. ""'watcblgg the .,,ft. leave the country Jiy ¥=11: 2!· , Larry Wachtel, a vice pr~nt of Tbe mbilsiry would not· comment on The South Vletnamese command Bache and ~· said, "'Jbei market newspaper speculation that the sub-reported nearly 500 violatiohs of the began ~ downsw.m.g J.an. 11 •. the day th.e marihti might be spyin(; on the U.S. ceast:fire by CollUJ'JUnist forces~ since it economic Pbase 3 was annoUJ1Ced, and it nuclear missile submarine base on the went Into effect at a a.m. Sunday (4 p.m. hasn't been the same since." Clyde estuary tn southwest Scotland. PSI'). ~ ' Relatives Stay Uncertain ' - • -IJ •· Iriformatioti Sketcliy on Men HeM Captive i11 Laos ~ . -~ The Viet Cong in a broadcast accused the Saigon government of "unceasingly vi-Olatini ~ire agreement by militarj~lons. • .throughout South Vietnam." lt said Its rorces •*throughout the entire area of' South Vietnam have completely carried out the cease-fire." · From ·one end · of the country to the other, report! flowed ·into Saigon of sharp fighting. In -Quang TM Province below the Demilitarized Zone, there were heavy artillery .barrages just as before the truce. In many other areaa, small but bloody' battles were fought ror control of villages and hamlets before the ln- (S.. CEASE-FIRE, Page I) Pageant Casting Sets New Record A new recor4 was 1et Saturday and Sunday by the Laguna Beacb Festival of Aita:' as 652 penona were signed up in the two day casting seuk>n for 'the Pag· eant of the Maiten . Last year, $30 penons were signed up during the two-day period. nie pageant runs from July 13 through Aug. 26. Volunteers are photograijhed, measur· ed and then the vital statiltlcs are placed in the Festival of Arts file.s. After the Pageant of the Masten works are "scaled" by Don Willlamaon, direc- toc-pn>duC:er, the rfal!t model 11 .. 1ec:ted. Volunteen inclUde back stage W<rkers lflso. FBI Says ·. Ohio Farm · Yield s Bonds FBI agents have recovered more than $1,400,00> in securities taken in the heist of the . Lagun a Niguel United California Bank last spring. The negotiable bearer bonds were recovered from a burieC suitcase. unearthed in a five-acre field of an Ohi-0 'farm Saturday. All but one man ac.cuse<I in the bank burglary, the largest · in American history, have been captured and three are now serving %0 year sentences· for the "Mission Impossible"· heist of the Moil.arch Plaza bank, knocked off over March 24 and 25, 1972. Harry James Bar~r, 31, is slill being sought on a federal warrant for th'e bank job. His brother, Ronald L. Ba~ber, 29, of South Gite was arrested by FBI agents on Jan. 15 in New York. The round loot represents one of the largest reeilveries O[ stolen property in bank history, Joe D. Jamiesdn , assistant director in charge of the Los Angeles of- fice, said today. Agents used bulldozers, picks and shovels in the search for the stolen prop- erty. Jamieson said the recovered securities COll!isted of negotiable bearer bonds of vari::ius utllitles and municipalities .. Lou in the heiat has been variously pegged at $3.2 million and $5 mlltion and apparently is dependent on the current market value of the property. Some four months after the burglary, a crew of county workers found a gunny sack with $1 million in registered securities stuffed in S()me brush near the bank. In addition to the securities, jewelry, rare coins and cash were taken f r o m the vault. Nearly 500 safe deposit boxes were rifled by the crooks who worked over the weekend after blasting their way Into the roof of the big vault. · '11le thieves entered through the roof, after drilling holes in the celling and packing them with dynamite. The charges were tamped down with burlap bags filled with earth and exploded. The vault was breached with a two foot hole. Sliding into the chamber, the thieves systematically tore through the safe deposit boxes. Property not taken was dumped on the floor. • Charles A. Mulligan, 38 ; Amil A. Dinslo, 36, and Phillip Christopher, 29, are serving time for the theft. Legal ac- tions are pending on the junior Barber. Copter Pilot Dies . EL MIRAGE (AP ) -A pilot of a homebuilt gyrocopter has been killed in a crash at El Mirage dry lake, authorities said. Spectat:drs said Peter Arnold Phaneuf of TuJuna:a was attempting lo turn the small aircraft when a gust o( wind caused it to cruh from an altitude of 100 feet f;unday. Oruge <:eut Weder About a &l percent chance of showers Is the way the weather· lady secs it for Tuesday, with con· tinued wetness all day. Highs of 65 are expected along the Orange Coast with overnight Iowa in the 40s. Get out the galoshes and rain- coat. INSIDE TODi\Y While f-ti ourlv ltltl,.Amerlcan thert reno no names of 1~ priMars ol war In North lnd Soatb•Vie>-missing m act1oi1 iLIMI on ~ Jill. The IJ'joic,o!d or ,..,. 101rowed by a,...men< (slgnoil Sablrday)· lncludea' DA.IL¥ PIWT A.D ol ibeJr loved ooes famffiea of ooJy those ~n of ~ar In North and m11oJn1 In .... l*r Laos ,... South VltlDa:n, she wd. M ~KES H ~ppy DUO malned -loDy Tbl Def-. Oli*Wt al90 uld to-n. n. Jnlomed ~by De[~ ~t !IQ' 11 ·~-,. .. 1ous1, adopted by the city of Laguna Beacb. He has been missing aver Laos since March 22, 1968. Mrs. carole u.n.on of El Toro • I s o waits ""nf o1 her ooot>arid, Sr.phm. "I suppose we will have to wait unlll w< quit flghtlni In 1-lo'-Im: -what happened to our men," Mrs. Hedrick said foday. Color TV Set Stolen FromLagunaFireman ' Lt Col. William Nolde toaJ the lalt American to die tn Vff!t- nom prior to iht Ct0$t-fire agreement on So.t1&rdo~. Hf.I widow &a~s she11 not bftttr and that he befiewd in tht toar ·- and the So~Q> Vjet.omeu pe°' plc. See 1tory on Pa111 f . DAIL y Pnnl' want ads Jlllt love to oUlcial• tbot lhelt --Ill .. the carried by Ult Slata .. ~" t-RAMBLER Sedan, Mini lilll nlelled b; Bimol, wtves: lnlllbtra ol war -"1 ~ for--North ----and-"'91ben ood lilt-ol--'f ·--··---""" &Ood~llO. Dl•DD us servicemen --.ued lo ...,..... I A Pmtaaati ~ aid their ru ad worked "' flit that tho car _ 'Mrs. Barbua ~ ol cu-. nama " .\iti tbe Jwo lllll we have sold In one !IQ' and DUl!le two llOOllle whOlt -u. J-Wayne Herrick ~""' fir." happy-botb the bu1w ..S Ibo aellei. Is J"lne's acfoP1oc! MIA .ics today her ( ~ l!l""! a flllllbs afftdtd by the, lll1l direct, 1C4171, llld let a DAILY Jllmlll _. llW "Jim'~ -• not 00 lad< fl from Laos lncludl PILOT claat!led Wini ad ..... ,..... tlle lilt." ' . Mrs. J111ico 'or unJvmlty P•rt6 py, loo. "l c:alled Wubln(ton and w11 told Her hltobond. Don ~!'Oii. w • • L "JI II -·t sound too silly I would like to ask people lo do one thing. "I would apprectai. praytn from everybody, now, untU we know for tt.r .. t11in what happeoed to these men, 0 she .. Id. She noced thilt there II sliJJ hope f ... (See LAOS, Pap I) 'l'llleoes who calmly strolled In thnqh the open door carried oil 1 color television aet valued at PIO thil weekend from tho borne ol a 8outh Laguna liremaa, Orana• Counly Sheriff's off!Cers said. Deputies said Simon St e v • n Baum!-WU .., duty In Ll(Uftl Beach wt.n tbe un-. Intruders' -b11·bolne 11 lltll tth St., South Laguna. No other valuable were liken. • L.M, .... U -II C.Mi..... ' c:a.ffl• »14 ~ 11 •-II --' •...n .. ,... • ....... ,.... r. ,..._.. ... , ,.., ....... 1 ...,_.,. If ----"•"""' .... -<-. ,, ... _ .... ·--= _., .... ........ • ' , LB • . I • Swe ating · It ~Out ~ • Counrilttaan'• Home I I I County Bel.atives Hope for A nother List Arson-Suspecte~ ' . In House Blaze I I I \ I By CANDACE PEARSON 01 ~· o.I" ll'!ltl ..... Orange County rclativt"s of servicemen who have not been identified Ss living prisoners ol war are still "holding on lo hope that there will be another list." a spokesman at tbe Concern for PO\V·lill';\ office in Tustin said today. So far the names of seven Orange County men have been on the list given to the U.S. after the cease fife agree- ment. United Press lntemalional (UPI) gave an eighth man as being from the count)'... but the locaJ PO\V office had no local relatives listed. He is Lt. Robert \\'ideman. from Lakewood , Flor-ida, captured li1ay, 1972, according to the POW office. UPI said LL Wideman is from PhHadelphia and \Vestminster. Three most recent additions from the county arc: -Capt. James Kula ot Anaheim. The Na\>}' ~offi.cei:.... was......batn in l\1ancbester. New Hampshire. and 'Yas ca ptured July, 1972. Mrs. Kula was out of town with relatives today. Air Force Lt. Col. John Pi tchford Jr. of Laguna Niguel. He \li'&S ' captured in 0...-cember, 1965. -Air Forte Capt. Michael Let Brazelton of Seal Beach. Brazelton's father , Lee. lives in Seal Beach. Contacted today. Lee Br12elton said he's known his son v.·as alive for about two years. . "But it's ;:-eal nice to know it's con- finned," be said. "It's quite a change from what we've beeo putting up with 1n the past.'' Sbot down August, 1966, Cap t. Brazelton was listed as MIA for five years. That Christmas. his father said, a nev.•sreel showed "a glimpse" of him. Four other names \isled early Sunday \\·ere ~1arine Capt. Paul 1'1ontague of Tustin, Air Force Capt. J. David Luna ol Orange, Air Force Lt. CoJ. Edison W. Miller of Tustin. and Air Forte CapL Darrel Pyle of Tustin. "As far as we're concerned the list is not complete," a ~W office spokesmao Cali for niaPOWs Na med Fro m Co m1n unist Lists \VASHINGTON (UPI> -Following is a list of California prisoners or war pro- vided by the C.Onununists. 1-lometowns \Yere determined from a \'arie ty of non-governmental sources. Ne:tt of kin are given v.·bere available. Where more than one address l! listed for a POW. he is listed under both. DAILY PILOT Tll• or •• CoQt Pl.IL'( PILOT, wllb Wlllcll b combintd Ille Newi-Prns. b publl"'-d by ftle Orengoo co.st Pllbll1hi"9 COmpa11y, s.,. n1-tdlflonl •re PUblJsMd, MonNy fl'lrw911 Frld•Y. for Cost• Maa, N"""'°rt ••di. H1111tltlpton 8tKtl/Founl11n V1111y, U(IUNI Bndl, lrwJne/Saddlact and s'" c1ernen11J Stn Jll*n C.pbtt•no. A 1h1011 rt0kwlel edition Is Pllbllthtdl $t1Unl1Y!i ltd Sund1ys. lhl prlncl(»l publltfllflt pi.nt 11 •I U1 Wat 111 Slrttt, Coei. Men, C.llfoml1, fMM. Roffrt N. W11d ,,..rdlnt •nd P\lblW'ltt J11ek R. Cvrf1y Vk1 l'ftlldtnt •td ~I MIMttt Thom11 K•1vil ...... Tlio"''' A. Mvrplriln• Mlnltlnt EctlfOr Ch*tt•s H. loot Rieh1rd '· Nill Alsf1t.Mt MIMOlng Editors ---221 Fo,.1t A••11u• M•llittt M4rettt P.O. lox 466, t2612 --°""' M .. 1 S'8 W• l1y SITWt N~: Jm N ........ IOl.t!Wtl"d -ffllftl ... di! 1711f lletdl tovt..1N tM 105 NWlll II C.111in1 lttel T41-•1•1 f714J M2o4J21 c ............. lt'hl .. '42·1671 &,.,_ ..... .AH De,._.....,.: ,, ...... , 494-t4U ~' .1tn. 0rel'lt' CINI! fltlMflltl"" ~-... ...... 1llrt11, llluttntlera. ... "'1t1 -"" ., ..,.,.,..,._... "'-Ill l"llY llf I ... ~ Wftllouf .,.Ciel ,.,.. lllltlllll "' .,,,.., .......... ~ dllb ....... ""' ., Cell• #Mtt. U)I'°"'""··~'"' .,, ~•rrlef _a:tU [ ,, ll\Oftlt\IY1 liF '"'" G.lS. montfll\'I lnll1'trr _ 0t11~11o111 GM ft'lt!ll?llr. \ FromP .. el LAOS .•• the men who have yet to be listed aince the lists failed to carry the name of an MIA who responded to the Initial letter· writing campaigns to iianoL The lists include SS names of servicemen who died in captivity but did not name all the potential prisonefi, Mrs. Hedrick believes. The L'nited States is pinning hopes on an expected aCCOUDting of Americans lost in Laos to swell the total of 555 U.S. !ighting men known to be prisoners of the Communists io Indochina. The Pentagon said there are no clues to the fate of 1.315 Americans still miss- ing in action in Southeast Asia . Pentagon spokesman Jerry · W. Friedheim said 81.mday that the Laotian problem is being discussed with the North VietnameSE' through diplomatic channels in Paris. "We · do expect to receive a list," Friedheim said. "We hope to have it shortly." If necessary, he sa id, Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. Woodward, -.chief U.S. representative to the temporary . fo.ur· power }oint military comrruss~on supervising the cease-fire, would rBJ.5e the issue at the group's first meeting. The question of the rru.,,,ing, Friedheim said. will be pursued in the coming months with the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong bj" going over the list of miss- ing, name bf name, to obtain information on their whereabouts. In identifying by name the 5S5 American POWs in North and South Viet- nam to be released by the Communists with in the ©-day period following the cease-fire, the Pentagon said North Viet· nam also reported that 55 POWs died in captivity. He said every effort will be made to learn the cause of death in each case. The dead include 22 Army men, nine Navy, 16 Crom the Air Force and a ~Iarines. The 555' Americans awai ting freedom include 76 Anny, 135 Navy, 318 Air Force and 26 Marines. l Storm Drenches Northern Half Of ·California SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Moderat .. to.heavy rains pelted NortMm Callfomia today, and Intermittent rains are ex~ peeled to soak the area through Tueoday, u-.! NationaJ Weather Service sald. Jn a one-to-two hour period today, a weather front dumped .21 inches or rain c . San Francisco, .. 29 on Shelter Cove in 11wnboldt County and .16 on Oakland, the weather service said. Meanwhile, gale warnings were pMted along the coast as gusty winds whipped the region. The snow level in the northern moun- tains is expe;s:ted to drop from 1 ,000 to about •.ooo feet. The weatherman ·said there were eight chances In IO of rain tn the Bay am tonight and 7 fo 10 for more rain Tu.>- reasing cloudiness was expected la em Nevada today, posalbly Mmla to rain or mow Tuesday, the National Weather Service sald. ' j llli. "We.,. bol*c I<) pna lot man names;" One woman who was told by the Marine Corps Satllnlay nlsht that her husband's name was not on the Ii.st rt!Us· ed ioday to (lvo up. Mrs. ·Mary H•lber, w~e of C.pt. Lawreoce Helber of Tustin. said. "11lere11 oo way J wlll accept ttlis il bein( a complete Ult .. There's got to bo more.'~ ·' Iler busband was lllol down ov.r Viet· 111111 Ill Ju11>1y 1111. She'• never beard 1nytblnr from him Ii -ail yurs. • She lllid the Merine Corpe phone coll "doesn't mun anything final. In August we were told even though they may not be on Uie list, the MIAs ( · · . in ac- llon) woo't be declared dea~ all the POWSs .,. interrogated and debriefed.'' That may take another six months, she said, indicating the wait wm"t be an easy O(le. Other Orange County famlll<s r.celved word their men .ftl'e not on the list. 'Ibey, like Mn. Helber, .,. still walU.S, and hoping tlJeir lllM will lbow up .. lllOther liSt . * * * Reds Reveal Prisoner List Of Civilians American civilians who died after ea~ ture in Soulh Vietnam, including the place and date of capture and date of death, wer~ listed a!: 1. GUll•Vil Her11. FRI. 3, 1"5, l!l!tll I-IN, Slol. 24 1"'· ; l. r Gr•lnoo-r, Al/II. I, 1'6J, fllHJ Yff\, Mlr<ll 17:,,1Jolin s~ Htnry, Slot. 1s, 1"6, Dtic •. J. 1~0cllnlel L~ N l~e. Nov. 21. 1"6, Long l(ll•rill, ADl"ll 12, !%7. S. TaflDI Emllt K..illl, Feb. I. 19'5. 81m H~, J- ll6.1WtfwT F. llload. Feb. 19611, Die Lie, Oct. 17, lt~~·&IT!Y ()bM, J1n. •• lffl, Slot. 2'. lM From Page I CEASE-FIRE • • • Kl119 Co 111htg King Hussein of Jordan Will visit the Vnited States next month, according to an official announcement:, He JS to meet with President NI.Ion~ 6. An ~· lire whlcll police Insist was the work of ao arsonist caused ex- tensive damye ~ a house owned by San Clemente City ... Councilman Thomas O'Kecfe . ~ SIJll!ljY 1lternooa. F~-the damase to the vaCAlll dwell Sboreclills al 15,000. The f wu reported at 5: ta p.m. by a wttnin wbO saw smote comina from the rear of the resldlnce at !'121 • Via Verbena. Firemen arrived and quickly ex- tinguished the b1aze which was generally confinfd to lhe Jiving room of tbe bou.'le. Firemen noticed that the fire started at the base of c~rtai11J in the llvlng room Where SOl!>eoDe had stacked DOWlpllpll'S. The arooollta .. appUtntly two Juvenlles seen running from ihl house, started the stack of papers IMlmhli by taklJt( -e to the kitchtn stove al>d Ugbtll>S them there. t S&op :TJtat .;~a;nk . ' ' Huntington Suspect t hwarted Steallng money from a bank is likely to get yo11 into a lot of trouble with the law. Steallng the bank is guaranteed to set you into trouble, as lluntiJlilon Beach ,..!dent, Richard Jobn i.e. di>covered Sunday. According to police, Lee, 26, .of 9680 Durham Drive, was trying to drive oil a molo< home wblcb is used as portable branch of the Bank of "-lea. Police said the van waa parked in a lot near the intersection of E11is Av~ nue and Beach Boulevard. Lee allegedly broke into the van, removed '185 and was 'try!ng to drive U away, but couldn't get it in gear. Police said he went to a nearby gas station for belp and fdund Olris J. COus$ens who bad stopped at the cloaed station in search ol gas. Coussent told officers he became suspicious when be saw that the van bad been ransacked and that it had the name of the Bank ol America m the side. So be caned pouee.--- --~ Lee is in custody today on a charge of bank burglary. Detectives said today that the station where Lee was arrested had been broken into Saturday. About $400 and some tools were taken. They said they. are investigatlog the possibility that tbooe tools were the ones used to break into the nowio-mobile bank. Volcano I sl.e Hit by Storm REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)·- Heilnaey Island,' where the Helga. fjell volcanO roared to l!fe lut week after being -dormant for centuries, was a black layer oi volcanic ash today as the eruption went Into Jts sixth day without any sign of subsiding. _ e atron Stahbed In Grove Tavern A fight lo the Playgirl Club In Garden Grove early today ended with the stab- bing of •. patron. Joe W. Houser, JP, of Anfbelm was, reported In ·;atlsfactory coodltlon today in Doctors Hospital, Santa Ana. He was stabbed once in the chest. Police are seeking HOuaer'a assailant. He is described as being in bis early IOI. Officer Saves Woman, Children From Fire • \ , Fire C.pt. Don Hodgson said the bl•'l< ate through one wall of tfie living rocin and did extensive damage to the car~ and drapes of the residence. ' , A new paint job ai.o waJ ruined by amokt and heal and eeveral wtndo-A . t damlgtd. t O'Keele has had lbe houae on l]\e market ln reeent weeks after moving m a newer oni on Camino Capistrano in lt.e Palisades. ~ 1 Detectives have taken o~er the Ip-I vestigatlon into the incident and planned ' to make inquiries in the neighborhootl throush today. ; FroMP .. el BUDGET •.•. I I ' I \ I receipts $225 blllion. ; . For lt!cal 1974: Outlays 1268.7 billion, I receipts 135' bUlloo. Nixon invited an fntensllled po"" atrusgle with 1be Democratic:-controllqt Coogress not only on spending IMlt also oo two other Old batUe !ronts. He urgell the bundling of 70 federal aid prognm\-i into four broad 0 specla1 revenue-sbar~ prognma" foe the Ill..., and ciUe>, wlljl leas federal control. And he repeated hfs call for • drastic governmental reorsair izatlon which Congress bas resisted for two yeAn. I "A thorough overhaul of the federel bureaucracy is long overdue, and I am determined to accompllsb I~" the Presi· dent aatd. 1 Nixon proposed no new spending pro- grams. Yet, the 1974 budget will bring an 118.9-blllion increase ilL!P@di!ll.J>Ver the year iliit ends June 30, Jargely because of military pay and price increases and what Nixon called "uncontrollable items" -including a $1.9 bUlion increase In iD· tereat CO!ta on the c11mbing federal debt. The $4.$ billion in cutbacks and withholding of funds already a~ propriated throws a challenge to Congreas, where every program has Joyal supporters, and malt .. It doubtful that Nixon can make his ceilings stick. However, be gains extra leverage by inBlstlns on the lour special revenue> sharing plans for edUCi!Uon, Jaw en- forcement, job training and comm\Dlity development. Mayors, governon and local preasurt groups who want to save a doomed day.-care or health program, for .Instance, might be able to do BO by using revenue--sbariog money; lhey: are likely to apply heat on Congress to provide sudi funds. 1 The upturn in defense spending, to a total only half a billion sollars smaDcr than than the $81.6-billion peak Of wlU'fll?e and atom.bomb outlays of 1945, also is likely to strike sparks. A storm with winds of up to 70 mites per hour lashed the island Sunday and spread the ashes over the island, filling the streets with a black, soggy · mud and hampering efforts of the rescue teams still there. A new storm was forecast for tonight. The total includes mllitary foreign aid, atomic energy and other indirect defense ~Uayst titlt the share for the Pentagon alone ia up $4.2 billion from this year, to A police officer on patrol re&CUed a $79 billion. mother and her nine children from a 1be Defense Department said, Cypress home early Saturday before moreover, that it may have to ask n di •11 000 dam to the Congress for more money to pay for ames d • age garage minH::learing, troop withdrawals, and S d d M . and upper floor of the two-story structure. other closing-out costs in Vietnam. other temational observer teams are deployed. tran e OtOrISt Patrolman Charles VanderVort saw sources said privately that funds for Military sourcea said a document ca~ smoke coming from the residence, sum-Vietnam's reconstruction also are likely lured UI the Mekong Delta instrocted Attacked on Road mooed· the llre deportment and rescued lo be asked la ter. But Secretary of the Communl!t troops to keep fighting until Mrs. Jaci: Leach of 10711 Knott Ave., and Treasury George Shultz told newmeji the internatlonal teams were In place, Stanton police are seeking four men her chlldren. A faulty heater in the gar-that if new costs are put into the budgeJ. and to continue where there are no who offered to. aid a stranded motorist age is blamed for the fire. "~e~~~ts; w!::;~ ltf;e~uti~ teams. and then attacked him with brass knuc~~ calendar 1973 makes possible the curt.U.. South Vietnamese officials reported es and a broom band.le studded with I\;-,.-: ment of some work and welfare prd- that casualties on both sides smc. the mor blades. . College Chief '\{;.;ts grams, the Nixon message said. Shulli cease-fire was announced five days ago The victim, Clyde E. Earls, 24, of Ana· said the government expects joblessne'Ss approached the bloodiest wee.ks of last heim, was treated· for injuries early Sat.-FRESNO (AP) -Stuart M. White bas to decline from the present 5.2 perceqt year's Communist offensive. urday, but was not hospitalized. Officers armounced his resignation as superin· rate to 4.5 percent by the year end. • South Vietnamese air force planea Oew said the suspects were driving an "Un· tendent of the state Center Qnnmunity In a nationwide radio address from h;s bombing missions in support of govern-usuaJ " car and attacked another motor-College District. White held the position Key Biscayne, Fla., home Sunday, Nlxon ment troops aJtbouah the number of i li;•t;;la;;;te;r·;;;;;;;;;;;:;;·;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'in;ce;;lhe;;;di;·slrl;;;ct;;;w;as;l;orm;;;ed;;;lo;;;llM.;;;;;;;;;;;ma;;;;;d;e~an-a~ppe~a;;;l l;;o~r ~su~ppo~rt;;;:~;;;;;;;;i;" sorties was omJtted lrom the dally war ~pe~:.~·~ve~·~tf'v~~a:."'toc1.~ LOW P.Rl""S . ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE cordance with the cease-fire but con-,, .. tinued raids over Laos. , • ce~~~ ~~lctJ".M. r:ro:.~ Admlr"·· NO-DEFROSTING :'°i!.iJ'U,1'.,. .. ~tth ':::. ::ri~. '::.~ -REFllGiERA TOR/FREUIR a Washington report said they cootinued. President Loo Nol olao ordered all C.mbodlan snlUJld IOT<el not to engage in offensive military operations from 7 a.m. today, to enabJe· North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces "to leave our COUD• try In the shortest possible time." Tbtre was no immediate indlcatlon whether the ConutJunists ln Cambodia were cooperating in Lon Nol's cease-fire. Jn VienUane, the Laotian capital, military sources said lighting increased in southem Laos, but there have been no signlllcallt offensives launched by either side to gain territory before a cease-fire is announced. Prince Souvanna Phouma, the Laotian premier, said in New Delhi Sunday that be' hopes a cease-fire can be achieved to bis country soon. Methadone Discussion Scheduled on KOCE 'lbe uee of metbldone, a coatrovmi1l aubltltute for heroin now given to 250 Orange County addicts, wtU be the sub- ject for dllcuaslon on a KOCE-TV Chan- nel 50 brooclc1st tonight at 8:30 p.m. and Tb\lnday It I p.m. t The half-llour tolecast wUl leatun in- terview• wtth tbe com!lnator ol the counti"• program and will! two oddlcts currtotly OD the methadalle prognm. Tbe show wUl be bostAd by Jim Cooper. • \ ALL TliES!: QREAT -.n:ATURES • Full Width ''lloollitaW' ,-,_. Do or lh1lf -for ln1t •nt •nll1bllltJ. • Dul l T1rftptn1lurt Colltt0t1- 11Mct tllt rltftt ttmptrttura fot Nth Hetlon, 1 Twin Patclltltl CrilptJ1-lMpt fruit, ...., .... 1•i'dln tr.II. • fttr• LA'1t ltffrl11rator Door IMIYM,-1111"6 Mn .. II cplltt ....... . M-NT tJI~ SUMLINE HEFRIGERA NO dtft•1tln9 NM91r• .. , 11tti•~• MMtl i:JJIJ wltfl ... retie Air flft 1y1 .. 111 for full •vc!• •l:f11l•ff• .. • '"" Wldltl ,.-t Gltat ~~:i1 s~599s . :I. .. 159'5 • Wlda>hnlt T""""'1tUN Ootitrd • "1d """" DaffOlt.tlitW fMloslDr I • lxtraDMpDoo(ll'lllf • 'ull Width n-,·Mttt Chlllat Dmwer •. Ma ........ ' u-;.;;1om11'1 La,...1 CASH rn '-<•llva l uyint Group With Tho WITH Ai,,ont • Volume l uyint Cll91T ............. _ l'owor of 11 0 s-m.1 ~ ---~ 90 DAY 1115' N£WPllRT BLVD. DawnlM Cesfl Mesa -1'111111 541-7791 • t I .. ,. ' ' 1. • 7 7 '. • --Saddlebaek . . " Today's Fln~l N.Y. Stoeks . :VOL. 66, NO,. 29, ·2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COCJNTY,' CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1973 TEN CENTS .. • Newport Hails Airport Effort I '· ·to " I By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of -. Dtlno .. ...,. stiff A n~w effort to muffle jet n9isie at Orange Co\lply Airport waa praiaec! loday by Newport Beach officl'als, but Airport DtrectOr Robert ·Bresnahan says he lsn't sure how long it can last. The •. !Xperin\ent calli for flights between 6 a.m. and 9 ·1.m. to take off to the north, Instead of south-over Newport Beach. ·-. .,, ,,.... _ . .... .... ' . . The "preferent ial runway u.se" pr~ gram, originally limited to flights bftween 6 a.m. and 8 a.m., now lasts Un· til 9 a.m. The object of the reversed runway pr~ cedure is to put the noilier takeoffs over the open land and Industrial area north of the aiport and the qliietef landings Over residential ~·in Nei9porl Beach. Bresnahan aid "be is certain the plan can't be extendeclheyond 9 a.m. and he still Isn't positive it will work between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. "We doa't really know what the out· come will be until we finish all our studies," Bresnahan said. Newport Beach Assistant City Mana,ger Philip Bettencourt said he is "very satisfied" with tbe flight pattern. "I definitely think this is a good thing," he said. "This will at least spare our peo.. pie that much noise in the early hours because landings are much quieter than takeoffs." Bettencourt said some people seeing jets landing over their hQmes for the firSt time were alarmed by the slow approach speed and low altitude of lbe plane. Both Bettencourt .and Bresnahan con· ceded that there Is lllUe chance lbe reversed takeoffs will be extended beyond e a.m. "The sl>ulherly wind picks up alter that time and, while it wouldn't affect the bjg jell at au, it would be terrible for the light planes and thole are still our m&in concern,'' Brtlnlhan said. Bresnahan discounted any possibility of having light planes come in one direction and jets the other. "II juJI couldn't be done," be aald. ·~ are.iregulaUons and it would also be a monumental air traffic ~trol prob- lem." Bettencourt said the three-hour reversaJ seems like on1y 8 small con- Cession to make to residents who have been complaining about the noise for years. "But if you add it to the little things like I.be 10 p.m. curfew on jet flights an~ the little thing like noise aj)atement pro- files, it amounts to a real good change _for the better," he said. Fighting ~ ~ ·~-·. ;Viet Continues Saigon Accuses North of Almost 500 Violations SAIGON (AP ) -The South Viel· i4Unese ·govBnmeJit and · its Commuitist opponents accused each• othef today of widespread violations of the cease-fire. Official.S or· the ne'*' international peacekeeping force expressed hope of getting, teams of observers into the field by Tuesday. ~-J\i~Y~ ~ relaled_s.J!lriea Pag~ + ... 5) An American soldier died today of wounds suffered Sunday, the flrst U.S. Nixon Asks Firm Reins ForBudgef ' . WASlllllG'l'oN (AP) -Proiidel>I NIJ. ap demUdod death lor -GI -.1 ij>eJdlng --today, called ... C.0-..... for a rigid 1974 budc<I celling of '281.7 bllllan, and cautioned that greater !J>enc1in1 -id ,mean "biglt IP.ea• big!> fr interest .rates, renewed inDaUon, or all Olree." (Rehited stories, ,Page 8.) 0 1 oppose these ~tematlvea; .. Wl~ a f11'11l rein oo spending,' none of lbein Is necessary," Nixon said in bii-flscal 1974 budget message, sent to the new Cmgress a,, the ·fofemost of the three major an- nual presidential messages. The document lived 'up to advance bill- ing as an ax job on many social, health, housing, education and antipoverty pro- grams of bia Democratic predecessors - programs Nixon said failed afler a falr triaJ_ DespU. lbe domeatic cutbacks lbe budg· el called for 181.1 blllloo In nilltlar)'. out· lays," the second blggeal defenae budget ·m hlstol')'·even with tbe peace agreement in Vietnam. It provided no funds for re- 1constn1ctlon of South Vietnam. Nixon called bis budget a tuming Point in national policy though still written in lhO familiar red Ink - a IU.8-bllllon def· iclt this .year .and a $12.7-billion deficit in • J!scal 1974. Bui the President Pointed lo .. JJS program cutbacks and terminations, worth 16.5 billlon In savings in this llscal year alaflt, and told the lawmakers: 1 "The lt74 budget ls the clear evidence <#. lbe • 1dlld of change In direction de- <manded by the great majority of the IAmertcaD people. No longer will• power 'flow Inexorably lo Washington." ' '!be 0,.... --"' them leaked In advance by Nl,loo hlmoelf -~: For lilcal 1913: Oullaya la4U billioo, ...,.1p1s -blllloo. For lbcal IV/4: Outlays 1218.7 billion, r'ecelp\i $1116 blllloo. NIXGll-invited an lnlenslfled Powtr II~ wUh the Democratikcotrolled Congress not ""1Y on spending but abo on two GUier olll btltle froatl. He urged ·the ~ o1 7' federal aid programa into four brold "apeclal tt:venue-sharing progri:ms" for the states and cltJes, with less f~al control. And he repeated bis 1 call for a drutlc governmental reorgan- tzalloo wblch Coqna bu raiated fot two,..,. .. "A thol'.wlb over)laul GI Ibo federal bureau<rllC)' la long overdue and l am determined io accomplish It,~' UM! Prell· dent said. NI..0 i>roflOled no new spending pro. · , (!lee lllJOOET, Pap I) • DAILY PIWT AD MAKES HAPPY DUO DAILY PJl.OT wanl ads jull love to i• RAMBLER Sedan, nn ...,i flll. m ·DU This ad -oo fUI that the car oold In one do1 ond mode two -'" • happf-baal the .,,,,.. 11111 the ..ner: Dial -· MWm, ond lei •·DAILY PILOr cluslfied want ad -• 1"" up-py, too. fatality since the cease-flre went into ef- fect. In the four days prior to the truce, four American military men were killed, and 19 U.S. soldiers and 12 U.S. civilians woonded. •. The U.S. COmmand aMounced the withdrawal of another 400 troops today, the second contingent of 400 men to leave since the cease-fire a~ent took ef- fect Sunday. The command said the men ·were aoWQ out of the country by commercial airl~rs. This dropped U.S. troop strength in Vietnam to 2Z,700 men. The cease;-flre agreement requires them to leave the country by March. 28. The South Vietnamese command reported nearly 500 violations of the cease-fire by Communist forces since it went into effect at 8 a.m. Sunday (4 p.m. PSf). Tile Vlet Congln a 6roadc"ast accusea the Saigon government of "unceasingly violating the cease-fire agreement by Stop That Bank Huntington Susp ect Thwart,ed • Sleallng money from a bank is likely io get. yb\l into a lot of trouble with &be 11.P" o ~ ~. • I • • • ' ol' • .l '>\ 9' • Steall!lg lbe t.µi'k !'I guarantee•l'to get xoo. Into lronble,_as Huntington -~. Ricba.rd Jahn~ cllscovered S\lndll. ' According to Police, i.e.. "8, GI 9680 Dulbam i)rl;.;, was-trying lo drive oil a motor home which is uted as portable branch. of the Bank of America. Pbltce° said the v'in was perked in ·a ~near tbe intenection of Ell.ls Ave- nue and Beach Boulevard. Lee allegedly brOte into the van, removed $185 and was trying to drive it away, but couldn't get it in gear. , Polk:e saJd be went. to a nearby gas atitkm for help and found C2ttis J. Coussens who had stopped at the closed station in search of gas. eousaens· tokl officers .he became suspicious when he saw that the van had been ransacked and that it bad the name of the Bank of America on the side. So he called police. Lee Is In custody loday on a charge or bank burglary. Detectives said today that the station where Lee was arrested had been broken into Saturday. About $400 and some tools were taken. They said they are investigating the possibility that those tools were the ones used to break into the not-so-mobile bank. FBI Finds Niguel Loot · Buried on Ohio Farm • FBI agents have recovered more than Some four months after the burglary, a $1,400,000 in securitie.i taken in the heist crew of county workers found a gunny of the Laguna Niguel United California sack with $1 million in registered Bank last spring. securities stuffed in some brush near the The negotiable bearer bonds were bal~k.additlon to the securities, jewelry, recovered from a burie<.: suitcase, rare coins and cash were taken f r o m unearthed In a five-acre field of an Ohlo the. vault. Nearly 500 safe deposit boxes fann Saturday. were rifled by the crooks who worked All but one man accused in the bank over the weekend after blasting their way into the roof of the big vault. burglary, the largest in American The thieves entered through the roof, history, bave .. been captured and three after drilling boles 'in the celling and are now ltl'Ving JI year. sentences for pact!ng tbe.m with dynamite . The the ·~Mission· Impossible'' belsL of-U>e chari~~~ down with burla Monarch Plaaa book, tnocked off over bags filled with earth and exploded. 'I1le vault was breached with a two foot March 24 and 25, 1972. hole! Sliding into the chamber, the Harry James Barber, 31, is still being thieves systematically tore through the sought on--a-federal warrant for the bank safe deposit -boxes,r-Property not taken job. His br'otber, Ronald L. Barber, 29, or was dumped on the _noor . . , sOutb Gate as arrested by FBI agents 00 Charles A. Mulligan, 38; Amil A. " ;!.. lo, 36, and Phillip ChrisloPher, 29, Jan. IS in Ne,r York. serving tlme for the theft. Legal ac- 1be found loot represents one of the ions are pending on the junior Barber. largest rec<ivertes of stolen property in military actions. . .throughout SOOtb Vietnam." It said its forces "throughout the entire area of South Vietnam have completely carried out the cease-fire." From one end of the country to the other, reports flowed lnto Saigon of sharp fighting. In ~g Tri Province below the Demilitmied 1.one, there were-heavy artillery barrages just as before the (See CEASE-FIRE, Page %) Seven Years Of Waiting ·· Nears End ... • •• .,fl By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. ....,'"""..., It llll --J<all "' wlUlnt and lruflratloo for Sbirley Pilchlonl or Laguna N'Jiuel, wile Of Afr Force Lt. Col. Jobn Pllchlonl, shot down in December 1965. And now that she knows John is com· ing .home, . the hotlrs and seconds just ~an't go fast enough. "I just hope John ls going to come home in lbe first batch. He a:bould, he 's been over'tbert one ol. tbe longest/' Mrs. Pitchford said ·today. She rece!Ved a call at 5:30 p.m. Satur- day and was informed her husband's name was on the official list released by Hanoi. "You wait for seven years, and then you have to wait some more. "My life is going to be so different when I don't have to wait. It may take me years to 1adjust," she saJd. ' She said she wishes her husband could just land in a helicopter In the beach in front of the family's new home in the Shores aevelopment of Laguna Niguel. Children, Elizabeth, II, and John, 15, live at the Shores home, while James is a student at Arizona State University and daughter. Llnda lives ~ Sacramento. While the news for her was good, the wait for many wives was not coded with joy. "I feel very bad about some of my friends who have gotten the bad news. I know many of them. 'Ibey deserve a break and they just aren't getting it," she said. "I feel so happy wttll I think of some of lbe other g~ls wbote lwsbands are not coming back/' she aa.ld. Since the annouricements about the rtlUril 01-me-(lrliOQ!.l'I Mrr.1'1tal!otd- hu been besieged by callers and well wishers. At first, John's name was omit· ted from initial pubtlshed lists of prlJOnen and.Cr:ienda were anxious._ However, Mn. Pitchford has received letters from him over the last three years. "MosUy be talked about b~ !See WIFE, Pare %) health CIA.IL Y PILOT Sl•M ...... 'f,"~~' · SigttS SmUe On A 11111all group of ~ Viejo Hi11h School students wait for the ex· peeled Cl'O'Nd to sbow Up for Saturday's walkathon to publicize the Saddleback Valley Unified Scllool District's bond election Feb. 6. Smile sigM; the. dection's tbame, alsn wait. (Additional pictures, Page 3) . Car Kills Alien Boy, J.6, . Near OnQfre Checkpoint By . JOHN VAL TERZA Of lie Daltr ...... Miff Ii IS.year-old boy being smuggled into the United States from ~falco was killed instantly in a traffic crash ·at San Onofre Sunday -an Jncldent that closely resembled a similar tragedy several weekends ago. Ismael Gomez Guerra of Guadalajara, Mexico, was killed instanttr when tbe station wagon he was riding ln was struck from behind by a truck also laden with aliens. No one among the dozen or more oc- cupants of the vehicles was injured . The crash occurred in 1lowlng freeway traffiC about two miles IOUtb of the border patrol cbeckpolnl II occurred al lbe peak of •nother record '(eekeod of arreais of Illegal lillens by patrolmen. And'it occurred In the aame part or Ille freeway where fou'r penona were killed oeveral weeks ago as• they tried lo avoid arrest. . , . Those root pei.ons· aifempted to nee across the b'eeway alter sunset ,and were struck n,'1""1y by faal-movlng can. . r -! r Bonier Jllrol· Capt. Eugene Harris sali! ii\i(lili men In one lhill ·alone Sun- day captured 117 aliens tr)'inl to crou lbe cbeckJ>Oinl. The day's total WU 144 penonL Harris described SUnday as "almosl a 'carbon copy" of. the tragic earlier Sun· day. Of'flcials have said that smugglers ap- parently are becoming more careless and are not checking to see if patrolmen are operating the roadblock before the heading north with their. passengers., Dozens of cars were left 'abandoned along the freewaY s~der throueb the day and Harris said ''there was no way of telling" how many "wets" got out of the cars and made It north on foot, evad- ing officers. Siln Clemente police detained more than a dozen iUlens Sunday. Ri~es for Democrat SAN DIEGO (AP) -Funeral ...-. will be held Tuesday for Murray D. Goodrich, former chairman-of the San Diego County D;emocratic Party Central Committee and a iilnoff ~te for San Diego mayor durin( the ltllOs. Goodrich , JV, dled-5unday _al his 1¥laie~ He suffered a ltroke two weeU ago . or .. 1e Weadter bank history; Joe D. Jamieson, assistant diret:tor ln charge of the l.os Angeles of- fice , said today. ~ Uled bulldozm, picks and sbove!J In lhe "areb for tbe sloler> prof>- erty. Relatives Uncertain ' About a 60 per..,I cbance ol showers ls the way lhe weather· lady sees it for Tuelday, wltb eon- tlnued wetness all do7. lllflf>o ol • are especled alooc Iba Or-. Co8'I with overnlilll lowt la 6a 40s. Gel oat Ibo pkllheo ond rib Jamieson aa.ld .tbe Tecovered securities comlsted or, neaotiable bearer bonds of vul:)lll ylt1Jtles and munldpa11Uea. 1-'• Ille -bu .... ,yartously peaed,11 ~ mllUon and 15 mWlon and appe,.q la ~11-..111e·cumnt ltUlrllei value ill Ibo p11111e1 I(. Copter Pilot Die1 EL lllRAGE (AP)' -A )l4lot of a -UI OTOOllPl<r bu been llllt<I ia a crasll al £1 lllnf• dry lab, IUll>Grttl<s .. Id. Speclatan said Peter Anlold Phaneuf GI TuJunp wu attempting lo turn the ...U alronft whon a gust of wind .,,._ II lo ~ from on allitude olll!Olat~. r. In.form ation Sketchy on Men Id Captive in Laos -· -. While families of nearly 600 Amedcan prisooen of war In North and South ,Viet· nam rejoic'ed or were 10rrowtd by listings or their loved ones, families of men missing tn attlon over Laos re- mained -In leday. Informed dnly by Del<nse Deparlm<nl ollldaJI that their _men w.re not on the liJb releued by Haool, wl•es. mothers •od bl'othen and oillen of nearly 300 U.S. -<111•1Poed to-· . Ml'a. !II.-.lledrlck of CU!Yenlale ,._.,_U. l ...... lfa)'!W! Herrick i• Irvine'• adop&ed MIA, said to4ay her parenta: Wm: told "Jim'• name ta not on the list. II I ' "I called Wubingtoo and WU told ~!! .. w~~~~inna~ ~ ·~ llll. ~ adop4ed by the city of Laiuna Beach. He ,_,. w ~ ~ ~· -, ~ 1llll -llllaolnc "" Lloo since March 111reemen1 (signed Saturday) inchidel n, ta . Ol1ly thoae priJonen GI war in North and lln. ClrOle• -GI El Toro a I 1 o SQoth Vietnam," lhe Ukl. waltl .....,.., lier bu-, Slepllen. '!be Defense Department also aald i.. "! llUf'llO!O . .., wtll have 'to wait unlll day 11 Amtr1can -pnvlollaly we quit ftllblllll In Lloo lo khow for oure carried by Ibo United Stai.. aa pi-a what ._...... to 011r men," Mrs. of war remain .unaccounled for by lj;)l1ll lledrlcll Rid today. ' Vietnam. ''II ft -·1 IOUl1d too siny I would A Pentagon opokelmM Ukl their 1111e to •-people to do one thing. names "1ra not on the 1wo llllS w~bave "I wOuld ~ prayers rrom ttef'lvtd IO fat." , now, watU •e know for ct"'" Other am lainllles affected . taln Wbll blpponed lo lbe1< men<"'lhe lack of inlormallon from 1-bidude aald. Mn. ·Janice Lyon of Unlvmlly Pod<. $he. 11111$1 lhat there ls 11111 bope IW Her lnlebaftd, Major Dan Lyon, w a 1 (Ito LAOll, h1• %1 coat.. " . • • ' .. t 1, .· \ J DAILY PILOT ~ro•Pagel BUDGET ... arams. Yet, the 1974 budget will bri,ng an $18.9-billioo increase ln spending O\'t.r the yeu that ends June 30, largely because of miliwy pay and. price mer. .. ., and •bit NJxon called "unl'ontroUable items" -including n $1.9 billion Increase in ln· terest costs on the clin1bing rtderal debt~ nie $6.5 billion in cutba cks and wilhboldlng cf Junds already ap- propriated throws a challenge , to Congress. \\'her.e . every program has loyal supporters, and makes it doubtful that Nixon can n1ake bis ceilings stick. However, he gains extra leverage by insisting on the four special rt.\'cnue-- sbaring plans for educs.tion .. Jaw .• ~n forcement. job training and eo n1mun1ty developmen t. ~tayors. go\'ernors and local pressure gte!ups who Y:ant to save a doomed day-care or health program, for instance, might be able to do so by using revenue-sharing money ; they are-likely to apply heat on Congress to provide such fund s. The upturn in defense spending, to a total only half a billion sollars smaller thalt than the $31.6-billion peak or warfare and atom-bomb outlays of l!MS, also is likely to strike sparks. The total includes military foreign aid, atomic energy and other indirect defense outlays. but the share for the Pentagon alone is up $4.2 billion from this year, to $79 billion. The Defense Department said, moreover, that it may have to ask Congress for more money to pay for mine-clearing. troop withdrawals, and other closing-out costs in Vietnam. Other sources said privately that funds for Vietnam's reconstruction also are likely to be ~ed. later. But ~etary of the Treasury George Shultz told newmen that if new costs are put into the budget, "Something else will have U. come out." The booming economy foreseen for calendar 1973 makes possible the curtail· ment of some work and weHare pro- grams, the Ni.Ion ~ge ~id. Shultz said the government expects JOblessness to decline from the present 5.2 percent rat e to 4.S percent by the year end. From Page l LAOS ... the mea who have yet to be listed since the lists failed to carry the name of an l\-UA who responded to the initial letter· writing campaigns to Hanoi. The lists include 55 names of servicemen who died in captivity but did not name all the potential prisoners, Mrs. - Hedrick believes. The Cnited States ts pinning hopes on an expected accounting of Americans lost in Laos to swell the total of 555 U.S. !ighting Illfn known to be prisoners of the Communists in Indochina. The Pentagon said there are ,DO clues to the fate of I,315 Americans still miss- ing in action in Southeast Asia. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said Sunday that the Laotian problem is being discussed with the No rth Vietnamest-through diplomatic channels in Paris "We do expect to receive a list." Frie<lheim said. ··we hope to have it shortly." tr necessar)•. he said, Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. \Yoodward, chief U.S. representati ve to the temparary four· pov.·er joint military commission supervising the cease-fire. would raise the issue at th e grou p's first meeting . The question of the missing. Friedbeim said. will be pursued in the coming months with the North Vietnamese and Viel Cong by going over the list of fOis.s. ing, name by name, to obtain information on their whereabouts. In identifying by name the . 555 American POWs in North and South Viet- nam to be released by the Communists within the 60-day period following the Ci!ase-fire, the Pentagon said North Viet- nam also reported that 55 POWs died in captivity. He said every~rt will be made to learn the cause of death in each case. The dead include 22 Army men, nine Navy, 16 from the Air Force and 8 Marines. The 555 Americans awaiting freedom include 76 Army, 135 Navy, 318 Air Force and 26 Marines. • OU.N•I COAST IS DAILY PILOT 1"M Or•• CO.st DAILY PILOT,~ wtllcJi> h (Ombin«I flle N-...Prns, 1' Jll,lbllsllld by fflll Of"•• Cotst Publls1'1"'9 eom,,..,y, $@11- ,._ •lllOns •rt Alblbhed, Moftdlt1 .._.. f"r'llSIY. for t:Mt1 Me"· Newport 8titdl, H11ntllllllfeot llf•(tl/FOlll'llfln v'it!ley, l ag111>a llldl, trwiflt/$1ddltblct Md s~11 Clement~/ S.11 Juan C1plstrl110. A 1.!1191e •t9ioMI M!lllon 1s outtllsMd $ttwdl'!' 11111 $und"ys.. fl>e ptlnclpe/ piblisl'lfirlig plfnl k •I 1112 Wttl 11•1 $trett, Cotlt Mftf, C..lttornll, t:!'U. lo .. trt N. w •• d Pruldtnl •nd PllDll~ J1c:k R. Curl1y YiQ1 Pt~idern ..W Gtntr•I M1Mfeir Th1tm•• K•••il "EClllOI" llioM•• A, Murphi11• M-OiftD Ectllw Oatlet H. Loot llich•rd P. Ntll Aabt-Mltn&Vll'lg EClllon Oflk• a.t• M..-i J30 Wfsl a~, St""' .......,, ~: JW """"" 11611 ....... i,..... lMdll 222 Forni Av ...... Hwm ....... lttcl'll 1111$ llt•ch llolflevt•ct SM C...._...t as ~ E.1 Clmlno. RQI , .. , •• 11 J714! Mz.4)21 dslslfW .......... '42·5671 S. C.._... AU htte"-.,: Tals•l••• 492-4420 CiwrfaM, ""-' or•noe Cot11 PutitltlllllO e.r;,.n,. .... -...... 1n. 111""""''"'"" ...,.... INllW or MWr'llMl'Mll!I llHtlll _.... • ~ WllflOlll U«-111 PW· ... " CIOOYl"1tlll ..,. tlDllllr cltll ,.., ... Hkl ti Cotti MffL c•utorni.. ~-t1¥ a nitt" n.u -1)11¥'1 lw llMll u .1s mon1111Y1 lfttl!r...., a.Hil&I• au nMlf'ltftlr. I '• ... ,,.. The Big Push . . . -· • .., ut I I ' • ~ County Relat~ves ~()pe· for Another List I be an easy llJ C&NDACll-1iWtSON ..................... Orin(• County relatives of wvlcemen who have not been ldelltllled as living prlsonen QI war are stlll 11bQlding on to hope ,bar there will be inotber Ii.t;" a spokeSllWI at the ConC.m for POW-MIA office in Tustin said today. So far lhO ~ of sevtn 01'1ni• County meo. have been on the llst given to the U.S. ilter the cease Oro ~ ment. United PreSs JntemaUonal (UPI)' gave an eighth maµ as being from the counly. but the local POW oUlce had no local relatives Usled. He ls Lt. Robert Wld<man, from Lakewood, Fjorlda, captured May, 1m, according to the POW of11ce. UPI said LI. Wld<man ls !nm Philadelphia and Westmln.ster. Three ll10$I recent lddlllan• fn>m the county are : -Capt. James Kula of Anaheim. The Navy officer was bom in Manchesler, New Hampshire, and was captured July, 1972. Mrs. ~ula was out of town with relatives today. Air Fon:e Lt. Col. John Pitchford Jr. of Lquna Niguel: lie was captured . in December, 1965. -·AJr Fon:e Capt. Michael Lee Brazelton of Seal Beach. Brazelton's father, Lee, lives in Seal Beach. contacted today, Lee Brazelton said he's known bis son was alive for about two years. belllc a complete Hsi. Tbm'• got lo be . more.'' ; Her busbarid was $belt down over Viet· nam ln January 1966. 600'• neVtr heat'Cl anything from him in those 1ix yean:. She S§ld the Marine Corpe phone oall ''doesn:t mean onytblng llnill. ln Auavst "'C Vi!Cre told even thouch they may not be on the Us~ the Mt>..t (miallna jn.ao- tton> woni be dectare<I 1le8clwitlf all tbe POWs are interJ"Olt.ted -and debriefed." That may take anOlherSii QiOOtlls~ilie · sald;lodlcatlnt the wait ..,. ooe. Other Orange County families receiv word their men were not on the list. They, like Mrs. llelber, are . still .w•ll!!'I, and hopl~_lbclr m~~wUI sho'fi' up on another lfst. ., They include Carole Ha'nson , wife Of cap1. Slephen Han>oo or EI Toro; JauloO Lyon, wife of Marj. Dooovaq ~on ot Irvine; l!)d partnts of Roger Hillburg ol Fullertm. ' -'"'1 Sit.Ila N.:~in Viet ,Cong In Delaying Truce Unit SAIGON (UPI) -The first American and IO others stood nearby. They jok~ plants to land in Hanoi ail><e 19$4 bl'Ollgbt with the North Vlebtamese and Viet c.ng 90 North Vietnamese Clfficefs to Saiion \1f..hUe impustve, stonefaced South Viet~ today -and \ht Communists prompUy ~ riilnese security men, all ~ing side- joined Ufe bureaucratic dlsI>clle with. the arms, stood nearby ignorlng the Com, SOutb V\etnamese government begun rqµnists. Neither tbe Americans nor the Sunda.v tilt the Viet omg. ' Communists were anned. As did tJie Viet Cor«, the North Viet- namese refused to fill out aUen immigra· ti~•;: U.S. Air Fore; Cl~ H~-;-H a1ioi Names . With a litUe help from a friend, Marjorie, an Indian elepban~ enters her winter quarters at the Cbessington, England, zoo. Keeper Uonel .Rowe supplies Uie extra persuasion. ' ••But it's J'i!al nice to know it's con- firined," he said "It's quite a change from what we've been putting up with in the past." Shot down August, 1966, Capt. Brazel.tea was listed as MIA for five years. 'l'bat Cbrlstmaa, bis father said, a newsreel showed "a glimpse" of him. transport planes, which spent an hour on the ground at Hanoi, were the first American aircraft flown into Hanoi Since a commercial. airline stopped lll'inl there at the end of the Frencb lndochlni war, POW Civilians, ·Tlwse Who Di.ed military source3 said. CaliforninPOWsNamed Four other names listed early SUoday were Marine capt. Paul Montague of Tustin, Air Foree capt. J. David Luna of Orange, Air Force LI. Col. Edison W. Miller of Tustin, ~and Air Force Capt. Dan-el Pyle of Tus!In. '!be military did not mention the abor- tive 1971 American raid of a POW camp, when American helicopten ·wert ~ tQ. have landed in North Vlelnam. The North Vlelnameae wbo landed In Saigon foilowecl the lead of -Viet Cong officers and refused lo fill out the imml- graUoo forms South Vieb'lam 'a govern- ment requires of aliel}I. Like the Viet Coog officers, they contended they are Vietnamese citizens, not aliens. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Here ls a list releued by the State Deparlmenl of 26 captured civilians who have been lden- Ufled by the Communists as alive, and 13 who were said to havo dJed after capture in Indoclllna. From Com1nunist Lists "As far as we're concerned the list is not complete," a POW office spokesman said. "'We're hoping to press for more names." The department indicated all were cap- tured ln South Vietnam. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Following is a list of California. prisoners of war pro- vJded by the Communists. Hometowns were determined from a variety of oo~governmentaJ sources. Next of kin are given where available. Where more than one address is listed ror a POW, he is listed under both. Wllfrtd I(.. .t.tltlOtl, M,_.. Wlltn1d Abbott, '1Q Rllkllffll a .. s.11 ~ ..., "'"°"· wro. f'romP11gel WIFE ... being good. It looked like he was being very careful in writing so the letter would go through. "He kept telling me to buy .somehing "expensive. I'm not sure why, I do anyway," the overjoyed woman said. No word has been received yet about the exact date that Lt. Col. Pitchford, a 22--year career officer, \vill be back in the states. Mrs. Pitchlo'll said that more than 600 people who wear lhe POW bracelet bear- ing her husband's name have written to her. She said the most frustrating part of the ordeal \\'as the n i g h t I y news broadcasts {"no one watched the news more than me") and knowing that "we did not go in there and win." f'ro1n Page l CEASE-FIRE • • • truce. In many other areas, small but bloody battles lvere fought for control of villages and hamlets before the in· temational observer teams are deployed, ~filitary sources said a document cap- tured in the Mekong Delta instructed Communist troops to keep fighting until the international teams ¥{ere in place, and to continue where there are no teams. South Vietna mese officials reported that casualties on both sides since the cease-fire was announced five days ago approached the bloodiest weeks of last yea r's Commun ist offensive. South Vietnamese air force planes new bombing missions in support of govern· ment troops although the number of sorties was omitted from the daily \\'ar com munique. U.S. aircraft suspended operations over South Vietnam in ac- cordance with the cease-fire but con· tinued raids over Laos. There were connictlng reports con- cerning Cambod!a. U.S. officials in Phnom Penh said an bombing was suspended there with the cease-fire, but a Wasbington report said they continued. President ton Nol also ordered all Cambodian ground forces not to engage in offensive military operations from 7 a.m. today, to enable North Vietnamese and Vie~ Cong forces "to leave our coun· try in the shortest poM:lble time." Tbt.ire was no immediate indication whether the Communists in Cambodia were eooperating in IA>n Nol's cease-fire. Jn Vientiane , the Laotlan· capital, milltary toUl'CC':S said fighting Increased ln southern Laos, but there have been no slanlflciat offensives launched by el lhe.r side to gain ttrrttory before a cease-lire is announced. PrJnoo Souvanna Phouma, the Laotian premler, said In New Deihl Sund~ that .be bopea • cease-fire can be 11chieved ln his coun.try soon. f I Evtrt~ Al,,.,.L $111111 Clfra. Anl'ho!IV CMrl• Andrews. Mrs. $Melt• .t.ndrtws. 12 Lindo Park. C!llco. Jo.e Mtnuel A11cna. Sll'I Oltto. • Fredtrlck c. llaldodl Jr" Mr. Ff911erldl 8•1dock $!>., 130 Will!'\ Of., ~ .,..rovt, ~°':11:.. ::::_nc::=::. AIWOI Aw,. S... Dleoo. Ctlarlts G. IS<mtt Tenv l 8-r, Vl$lll1, tlld MrJ. Cll.lrlts 80\'d, WICl'lll•, K111. Ml(hdel L. Braieuon, LOll!ll ktd! and SHI Bead!. Wllll•m w. llo,rtltt, Mn. Wll1l11m w. Birtler, lf l(nlqlll tw .• S.11 R.tfltt Al~n E. C.rbon, ~·· C..rt O. CPl"'1WS. Y• Cit.,. H1rl111 P. Chl-n. l'AO'nOnf, and M'1. Hlrll ll cnaoman, 2Dl2 Ent AYt .• EIYl'"lt, Ollla. . Ar.tin llbtNounc.w, ~•· Clal.ldt , ClcMw, Ml'"'-Cllollde Oowtt, Sl30 Latott StJ.~ 0~Tnev COlll"' Jr., M,...'· Jflfltl Coll!M, 11 Me«tde& l..IMt. Atlwr"IOll. Rencltf" Cny!Ull, $In ~ lfld CPllfiolft, N.C. VerlYN W. P.nltl1L H1yward. Edw1rd D. &tit _., D•Yld .AndtrlOn E~. St. $!mon'• 111.1.nd. GI., and S.11 Oltoo. · Jotll'I Ftt, Mr, tnd M.rs, Erlltt:I Ftr, 2831 South PKlfle Ave., $111 Ptdro.. One woman who was told by the Marine Corps Saturday night that her husband's name was not oo. the list refus- ed today to give up. htrs. Mary Helber. wire of Capt. Lawrence Helber of Tustin, said. "There's no way I will accept this as Consumer Law Course Planned At Irvine School · c:='. Kt!l"f FIMMr. Sler1...._.,to, Ind RtlldW 0ev1c1 · e. Ford, Mr1. e1c1or1 fort!, 2S1• c1art L»:• Consumer law, a course .l....l-...a to w..,, Saer1mt1110. ~ Henrv POPe Fowltr Jr., Mn. ....,,., Fow1tr. AU teach N>l"tilRS how, where and when to !.Nie Ay1. Pillo .t.rto. ,..~-~ c111r11s It GHlesole Jr., Mlr•mtr. "do sOmething when they feet they've M1<ria11 p. cronlro. 8e:n11w. K.,,,,.,,. R.avmond Hw'-c11i-City. been short changed," will begin Tuesday Htr,..,. TlrllfOll Jfftklft!L Jr., Mrs. Harry Jtt*IM, i.u c .. IT Av. H•-••,.,... ~1.11on.. LMnOor• from 7 to IO p.m. in room 517 at co1i'f111 H. H~""' M,... 11:-.tie L. HiiN.. "'1 Un1·vers1·ty Ht'gh School '" lrvme· . Ofloll Or" Nfv1I Air Sl1llOl'I. Mir-. ..... Gr" o ..... .._... Tllov!.fnd Olks.. "It's gomg' to be a fun. exciUng thing," Thom1s J. H•Hon, Sier-to. J•fllff M.. Hk.lr..-.on, ~ J1""" Hlctttuo11, 1&s the course teacher, Lansing Otis, en- Crusadtr1 .. L_.. th····• 01Yld weskv HolfrMfl, 511'1 0""'°-~. ~~!ru~•t_f~,,.'i ~_.~.., .... l'om-The class will run every Tuesday night m~ 0r1·ie S•" DI~. until June, or "1·ust as long as the people Fri•..: 600011s Lewis, Felr O!oki. Wl;ilem Porter LIWl'Wl'ltl Sol1roo. &eldl, Mr., llld W8nt," he said. ~. ROl:lltt L1wre11«. 511>~ l"r"*11" 11:c1 .. Nutt¥ Int. lt is offered uner the auspices: of the The Viet Cong offteers ended their· sjt· Those listed as alive along, with the in this afternoon after more than 22 date of¥ capture were all American~ bourt abolrd a tr"-1 on whlcb they unless spe<ified : ·· -.. • flew from Bangkok. '· J~ "l'!'J. -•-m, 1?\=r.· !dr,:._ The end came when the Saigon Foreign 1: frtUro'M.~91:~; Jl;';li,: 2, 1~7Pl:lirP01n!i1. Ministry ced •t III llow ·~ t 4. Mkl'IMI .,,.,..., a/, J111. lNI. announ 1 w a UJCUl o s. NOtm1n JaM ..--. ~ J•n. ., '"'· deplane to ·attend a thre&.hour clo.wd t: ~:;:: ~il.":'~\:°~· ~~.k 13~ '"'*"'· meeting of t)le U.S., South Vietnam, North o!m::~r.""' J. DltN, 11. Apdt 27,,,,.,. tWtst Vietnam Viet Cong commissiOb. which '· Joltl'I JMllll 'r:J:,n ~ ...... 1"'· • . ...,.. It. AJpa~ .iw, Jin. 19'&. will · wprk "w1tp four--power truce inspec. ·--. {I: £~~ Hua'.il\J1ctl.:.l~~'C:1• ~1• '"'· tors. . . . -tt •i: r!.'!!.c. ~rd: 'JT, .• \14!9't. The muustry· made it clear, however. It :~FM<k1£E'JJ .o.;, JHL that release {,f the nine would not set a {:· PiiUil'ii~" ir."M: ~~.n. 11r. deadlock toda;y. oe ' . ""'-ae,: -'tl"V. """' precedent for o.tbers, resulting In the ~ ~!l"o.lt,•".t""'. -· 1 Fifteen American,,, including a Marine Y: ~ ~n .f:',..'t~ ""· ~cer and Army intelligence offtcers, J3: ~ $:.'dl::·r.'?}.W: ~m. wtthout name tabs on their khaki uni-H: Brr::-=-.. wiiTr.: ~ J:: ,,: 1...: fonns, were in the official greeting party College Chief Quits FRESNO (AP) -Stuart M. Wbile has announced his resignation as superin· tendent of the state Center Community College District. White held the position since the diltrict was fonned in 1964. American civilians wbo died afler cap- ture in South Vlelnam, including the place and date of capttire 8Dd date of death, were listed as: I 1. GUiii~ Htrb:.·f'tb. S. !KS, 11111'1 Hot, Slpt. 24. 'f°'JMl9 Gtel ....... AuL I, 19'1. PllV 'l'lflt Mardi ' 17 ""· .. 1J.: Jollll SIHMllMlfl HwY. Slot. II. lff6, Ok. J, '· 0.l!ltl LM H'*'--• NOii. 21. 1"'-L.olllil IOtlnll, Aorll 12, IH1, J. TlflOS Emir. !Uolll, 1"1b, I, 19'5, Bien Ho.. JUllt 13. '"'· • ~-H_..,. F. llood, FID. IHI, Dk LK. OCT. 17, 1. a.ttv OIMft. J1n. JO, 1'61. 51p1. 3'.1"'-.STOCKS CONTINUE PLUNGE, OFF 9.56 sttT:;.!. G~~~rs.i:t~~· Mrs. $In.I,.. Ltwbl, = adult education program of the Tustin 5::'8..~··L~ufttn,A•~°"· u1lfl. Union lflgb School District and costs $5. Loot Worth $650 Allln P1tra Luri., .v.111 v .. i.,. Last semester, Otis, a teacher at Edwfrd HOll'l'ln Martl11, M'"'. EdWltd Martin, 911> 11.1-Ave .• corOl\ICIQ. ' University High, taught the cl.ass under T k • B J Jotl11 Sidney Mc.C.111 Ill, COr~ •rd Orarqe J.a ' b d a en Ill urg ary P~~nFJ:k111oe1 McGr~ Mrs. JCllfl McGnPI!. seot the name "Business w,' ut he sai NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market Sec11tm1Mr s1., $In Ol.io. that phrase "scared oil" too many pot en-, prices continued. tO drop today, with .Hlhn Brv111 MCKlfl'leY, ~. tial students. brokers blaming ·-decline oo. cmtlnued Jewelry, cash and cameras with a total GeorOt P1lf!'lff Md-111, Mofllrollt. '°'"' Revmord J•m11 M1n1tt. M'"'· RIYll'IOnd Mlrfttt, "It's designed for everybody wtttt little investor worries over the economy and vaJue of ~ were stolen during the t260f Lt P11•, COl!Ofl. fro eo1$0fl w. Mll111r, M,... uni:tP-.. MJlitr", 1122 or no background" in the field of con· inflation. weekend m the Laguna Hills home of M~~~A~AU~~"~'1n. sumer Jaw, he said, emphasizing that The'DowJonesaverageof30industrial a county employe, Orange County A!bert Ak Molinar•. s.11 Dlevo. "people really need this." stocks, which lost 21.65 points last week, Sheriff'• Officer said. ~)~~MO':,!~ ~:n:'rM,!;~"~trc1 Mullen. •• Lectures by Olis and guest speakers was off 9.56 to 993.98 at 10 a.m. PST. Deputies said burglars slid open the Aosffl!Olll, IJ JOlll. Gordon Rou Htltaoewa, Auburn. will cover subjects like contracts, door· Larry Wachtel, 1 vice presldent Df window to the master bedroom at .the JOM Heber N•smyth Jr~ Mr. •rod M"' John to-door sales, owning and renting real Bache and Bache, said, "The market borne of. county bullt!f," services worker N1smvt!15r.1 1US N. o.111 $1 .. 5111 GabrMI. 0.11 Ha•~-OsOcwne. Mn. oonn. o.tior,.. 44 -la'" and small claims courts. began a downswing Jan. 11, the day the Thomas Edward S ey, 38, of 23&15 E. Svcamor~ Or., Hll!ford .,_, u; JalT\fl Greoo P•r1e. ·""°°"· Interested residents can sign up for the economic Phase 3 was announced, and it Messina Road. Stanley was away from Lt!i~ J= P~::':3r J~, 't~:t'::!~ ::=: class at lta first session Tuesday. hasn't been the same since." the bomtraNhe lime. Arll. 1 ~:::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::;; LIHY Ool\f>fd Prla , ,.Cf"lmtnlo. 't:r~rl:'d':?np~~~I~ PYlt. 11., Armt :~.i!"G~ ..... ~\\'~:;.. ... , ........ .,. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED EUEWHERE Al!Oflso A:1w Rllll, llU,. G"*"'- Wendell llur1te ll:lyfh. Mn. _......, R"""-22S .:~~~1.~J,il\'i;n-... c:...: ••II~"" A-'n1lroL NO-D. EFROSTING Howard Elmtt" l:UI ..... Mnbl:.C:,•d • ...,..., ... ~ m• Mooll'lt4.1P1111 eovtt.-Sll'I-Id R Rebert J.,,. Sdlol>elfW, Ml'l. .roe.rt ldiwll•, -----···----.,.. • ,~ .. ~,,-~~ .. ,.~. '"' -., ... , .-ra •RA•v .. P.tul ~ Sdl\llJ, Ml'I. P.vl $dll;ll, Jal lMI - Pl.. S.ro D"'9o. WUll1m Lto,.,.nl~Plllnktf, JICbol\. -I:~ HlrMt .511urn111;..-, Mn. tll'abtrt 12~5 EM:l1 AOl9 •• U Jo1t1. OfYld WUllMI sootw, ~i.. Chlrlts E019x $0Ull'lwld: MrJ, K•r.n ~. c..o Col. e. . $WMtl1Nf USA!', 2 Clrclt Or. V.rlClenbe>11, A. a tlld Olllolrll ..... Chlrle• O.vld !11ekflOlll•, l1S ~I• A.,.,. 9Clll CS. Lemoort. Wllll1m Roti.rl $1•rk, ~°"'°°' Johll Ectw.rd $18¥•1, M"-$111rltv $ff¥Mt, SU S!1nlord Dr. tleremol'll. . TllfOCIOrt Gtrt11rd $tltl°, Mrt. T'*'CIOr• s11..-. 1,i:t Mobl1v s1., $•11 Dlfcro. RObtrt Lewis S!lrm. 219 CUT"llW" Coutf.,1 Fos,••r Cl1Y1. JUT>f!t Bond S!'Oekd11t, Mu Jlmel ;,locl(C lie, 5'; A li~~J"'Z1::0·s1r1tlOl'I, H•nlorcl, .,.. P'•lo Alto, Gll'"Y L~"" thorlor+. )(Jrtll"\'lli.. Loren H1rvw TorttellOl'I, C.~, frod Cl"Ol&IJ, N.~ WllllC:. Trlbtl, llifl . °'* Ind lfn 8er""1!1no. T.,ry Jun UvtY-. Slcr1mtnto. tfld »QS 111•, wood Line, Austin, Ttll. Aoberl E1<1 Wldttnln. W..hTdnsMt, 11111 Pllltldelol\lt. P1. l r!1n Dunu~n Wood1, Mrt. lrlt11 Wood., '4 Arc1c:n1 or .• U'mtOT•·.. ... CWi.t Pti.t 1!11'111111, J.....,,, N.Y .. ft ·- Methadone Discussion Scheduled on KOCE The use of methadooe, I "'°troV<nial substitute for heroin "°" glveo to l60 Orange County lddictl, will be the 1111>-Ject for discussion on a JCOCE--TV fl>an. nel 50. broadcast tonight at 8:30 p.m. and Thursdll!' at a p.m. ' The half-hour telecast wlJJ feature ift.. tervlews wlth the comlinator of the county's pJ'08ram aod witb two ~ currently on the metMdone program. The ~"l.W\11 .~.~t-l!ill_~. • . ~-· . ·• J ' 1 SUMU. llffl&Mllll ---·~~ .. . ( • .. 7 ' • .. - ' . Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks I . • VOL. 66, NO. 29, 2 SECTIONS, 24. PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 29, 1973 TEN CENTS ---·------·------····-~·~==~· --. ---~·-· ---~-~---------- 'Viet Fighting Continues Saigon Accuses North of Almost 500 Violations •· . ~SAIGON (AP) -Tbe Soulh Viet- .namese governmen" and its Communist oppo,tMints ac:Cuaed each other today of ~Ide.spread v\0].11ilons of lbe cease-fir£ Qfflclals of Ole ne"" international wi~eeping , force expresied bope of getting teams of observers ipto the field by Tuesday. (See related storles1 Pa1es • and 5) . An American aoldij:r d1ed today . of Wounds suffered Sunday, the first U.S. Nixon Asks Firm Reins ' For Budget • WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre!ldenl.Nbc· ~ demanded death for dozens of federal !!!Pending programs today, called on Con- gress for a rigid 1974 budget ceiling of $268.7 billion, and cautioned that greater spending would mean "high taxes, high- er interest rates, renewed 'inflation, or all three.'' (Related stor.ies, Page 8.) "I oppose these alternative!; with a firm rein on spending, none of them is necessary,'' Nis:on said tri his fiscal 1974 budget message, sent to the new Congress es the foremost of the three major an- nual pres~idenUal messages. 'l'be document lived up to advan« bill· ing u an as: job on many IOCial, health, housing, education aod antipoverty pro- grams of· bis Democratic predecemra - programs "Nis:on ·said failed after a fair trial. Despite the domestic cutbacu the budg- (See BUDGET, ...,, I) * * * Nixon's Budget Summa1ized, Up $18.9 Billion WASHINGTON (AP) -Here is a look at.President NLl:on's fiscal 1974 budget in brief: fatality since the cease-fire wenl into ef- fect. 1h the four days prior to the truce, four American military men were killed, an<hnl.s. soldiers and u U.S. civilians wounded. - -Tlie U.S. Command annoonced the wilhi;lrciwal of anOther 400 troops today. the second conUncent of 400 men to leave since the 'cease-fire agreement took ef· feel Sunday. --· The_ CoQunand said the men were Jlown out 'ol !)le country by commerolal • airliners. This dropped U.S. ~P strength in -Vietnam to 22, 700 men. The cease-fll'e agreement requirel them to leave the country by March; 21. The South Vietnamese command reported nearly 500 violations of .. the cease-fire by C.Ommunist forces 1ince it went into effect at 8 a.m. Sunday (4 p.m . PST Saturday.) The .vtet Cong ln a broadcast accused the Saigon government of "uuceasingly ¥lolatlng the cease-fire agreement by St~p That Bank Huntington, Suspect Thwarted Stealing money from a bant is likely to get you into a lot of trouble with the law. · . Stealing the bank Is guaranteed to get you into trouble, as Huntington Beach resident, Richard John Le< discovered Sunday. According to police, Lee, 26, of 9680 Durham Drive, was tcying to drive off a -motor home which is used as portable branch or the Bank of America. Police said the van was parked in a lot-near the, intersection of Ellis Ave- nue and Beach Boulevard. Lee allegedly broke into the van, removed $185 and was trying to drive it away, but couldn't get it in gear. Police said he went to a nearby gas station for help and found Chris J. Coussens who had stopped at the closed station in search of gas. Cous&en8 told olficers he became suspicious when he saw that the van had been ransacked and that it bad the name of the Bank rA America on the side. So be called police. Lee is in custody today on a charge of bank burglary. Detectives said today that the station where Lee was arrested had been broken into Saturday. About '400 and some tools were taken. They said they are investigating the possibility that those tools were the ones used to break into tbe not.so.mobile ~· .Hugtiitgton Urg~d ·to Keep . Meadowlarlc Air Facility By TERRY COVILLE Of .. DeltY .. ..., lt•ff A spokesman for1 Harbor Aviation, which operates a fUgh~ school '-nd Cessna dealership at Meadowl~k Airport, has urged the HunUngtori Beach City Council to consider preservation of the small, private airport. we suspect are not recognized," Gulick wrote. "There are obviously many more such as vacations, sightseeing, general business use and others including aeronautics training in cooperation with our local colleges." In a three page letter to the council, .,SPENDING -Total is $2S8.7 billion, Walt Gulick, vice prtsident of Harbor up $18.9 billion over the current fiscal Aviation, outlines several reasom Gulick said be agrees with airport critics twbo don't wan( Meadowlark to become a jetport, or heavy commercial center, but adds, "The opportunity preaented by the counly proposal offers a far-sighted way to develop and control aviation for our coastal area. It is realistic and at the same time futuristic." year. Me:adowlark is needed in the city. Councilmen are expected to consider REVENUES -The Administration ex· the future of the airport al tonight's 7 pects to collect $256 billion from the tu o'clock coum:il session.Uthe city refuses system, an Increase of $31 billion. to help" fmance an economic feasibility study of a county-city plan to buy the BUDGET CONCEPT -Nixon con-aiport and Meadowlark Golf Course, it tinues, as last year, to budget under the may mean the airport will disappear He also said the recreational needs of (See AIRPORT, Page Z) ... military actions. . .throughout Soulb Vietnam." It said its forces "throughout the entire area of South Vlett\8m have completely_ carried out the cease-fire." From one end of the country to the other, reports flowed into Saigon of sharp fighting. Jn Quang Tri Province l>elow the Demilitarized 1.one1 there were heavy artillery ban'ages just as before the (See CEASE-FIRE, Page Z) * * * North V i.ets 'Join Dispute In Saigon SAIGON (UPI) -'l'be first American planes to land in Hanoi since 1954 brought 90 North Vietnamese officers to SaigOn today -and the Communists promptly joined the bureaucratic dispute with the South Vietnamese government begun Sunday by ... the Viet Cong. As did the Viet Cong, the North Viet- namese refused to fill out alien immigra- tion forms . The two U.S. Air Force C130 Her<!tlles transport planes, which spent an hour on the ground at Hanoi, were the first American aircraft Down into Hanoi since a commercial airline stopped Dying there at the .00 of the French Indochina War, military sources said. The military did-not mcnllon the abor· live 19'll•Ao:1:erican.n,id of a POW camp, when American helicopters were said to have landed in Ntrlb Vietnam. The Nortli Vletnamele wbo landed in Saigon followed the leaci of nine Vlei Cong officers and refUaed lo fill out the immi- gration 'forms South Vietnam's govern- ment requires of aliem._Like the Viel Cong officefS, the)"' contended they are Vietnamese citizens, not:allens. The Viet Cong officers ended their sit· in this afternoon 'after more than 22 holll's aboard a transport on which they flew from Bangkok. The end came when the Saigon Foreign Ministry announced It will allow them to deplane to attend a three-boor closed meeting of the U.S., SOU.th Vietniln, North Vietnam, Viet Cong commission which will work with four-power truce inspec- tors. The ministry made it clear, however, that release of the nine would not set a precedent for others, resulting in the deadlock today. Fifteen Americans, including a Marine (See LANDING, P11e I) aS!utnpUon that income would be slightly within one to two years. greater than spending i[ unemployment Jn his letter, Gulick points out that the were ol percent or less. This is the so-call-airport has considerably more local use ed/'full-empl,oyment" concept. But since than counCUmen might believe. he predicts at the same time that He said 300 professional pilots are First Casualty unemployment. won't be that low, registered with his firm and often rent diminished receipla and slightly greater Harbor planes out of Meadowlark. He sP,e!lding mean the budget y;olll have an said most of thqse pilots live In the tri-ci- e4!J.mated $12.7-billion deficit ralber than ty area of Huntington Beach, Fountain a }.1oo-million surplus if unemployment · Valley and Westminster. drl)pped to the 4-percent mark. Gulick lists a few incidents when the ·"' airport's location was put to good use by .. DEFENSE -As lbe Vietnam war local residents: ends, the budget nonetheless proPoses .- A Huntington Beach housewife nown speodlng $11.l billion on de!,_, up $4.7 to Meadowlark from Arizona following a billion from the current~· Tiie budlet bad traffic accident. · atirtbUtes Uie bU!kOlllie J"'um=pT.to'°'pa"oa"viiillyro~ff-~"oiifiiiiE'lftliJliiil;;'i;f';;Cilr.'a'i;IOcill=..,car=ae.r:c ler to a and price increases. It Includes U.S. Olympic Primmlotl group meeting transformation gt the armed services in-in Bakersfield. to an au.volunteer force. -A Universal St.udiol contract pilot -DOMESTIC -'l'be budget la dotted GI Kifled After Cease-fire SAIGON (AP) - A U.S. helicopter pilot, wounded while flying an aircraft reported to bear marks intended to lndlcate Its neutrality, died today. He was the first American killed in Vietnam since the cease-fire went into effect Sunday morning. THE U.S. COMMAND idenlified the pilot ·., WO Anthony Dal Pouo 22 of Santa. Barbara. It said be was wounded b~ small..,,.. fire from tbe ~wJ. Wbile_Oyjng..a~iermissiorr10muesi0ilthweit of can ThO, capital of the Mekoog Delta" A aecoad American aboard the bellcopter suffered minor wounds. He was identified by the command as U. Col. Daniel Rickard of Williamsburg, Va., stnJor U.S. adviser in An uyen,..aoulhe,,._ province In Vietnam. . ' ..z:zz: __ z:rno ss_e:z __ .., U .. I Tel....._ .SOUTH VIET SOLDIER CARRIED ·PIGGYBACK FROM BATTLE Even After Cea-.flre Signed, Fighting Still Goa On Valley. Panels Combine To Battle Drug Abuse . By JOHN ZALLER I C)t ...., DA{fW' ...... Stiff Plans for a coordinated assault on drug abuse looms as ·a top issue in Tuesday's joint meeting between the Fouritain Valley city council and the Fountain Valley School Board. Both agencie~ currently have drug abuse programs, but officials say thcv could be strengthened with bettef coordination. Other issues to be discussed at the fourth meeting in four years between the two public entlties will be fiood danger from the Santa Ana River, slrategjes of opposition · .to · the proposed· Beach Boulevard Freeway, and better coordina- tion between city and school recreation programs. The joint meeting will be beld at ! p.m, in the city community center building, 10200 Slater Ave. · "J don't think there are any areas in which we have disagreements," said Fountain Valley Trustee Fred Voss, at whose suggestion the meeting has been called. "But· based on private converiations with clly people, I got tlle-reetfng thaTS little more coordination between us would be helpful." Drug abuse ls one such area . 1be city. through the community services project, offers various education, counseling and probation programs. The llChool district also oflen dnlg education and aome cowuellng. Both agencies cooperate closely with the Foonlain Valley Police Department, but, until rteenUy, they saw Ver)' little of each other. . Staff members from the city and the -Flood danger from the Santa Ana River. Both the city .and the school dislricl 'have pa.....t. re>0lutlona urging (See DRUGS, Pqe J) Storm Drenches· Northern Half Of California SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Moderate. to.-heavy rains pelted Northern California today, and intermittent rains 'are a. pected to soak the area through Tuelday, ll.! Wational Weather Service aakl. ln a one-tcrtwo hour period today, 1 weather front dumped .21 Inches of rain () .. San Francisco, .29 on Shelter Cove in Humboldt County and .16 on O.kland. the weather service said. ~e~l'.'l.'!fill~,_gale~ warnings wert~polted afong the coast as gusty winds w~ the-region. -- The snow level in the northern moun- tains is expected to drop Crom 1/M» to about 4,000 feet. The weatherman said there were eicht chanees in 10 ·of rain in the Bay area tonight and 7 in 10 for more rain Tues-aay. . . · Increasing Cloudiness was es:pected tn the Sierra Nevada today, poulblY turnln( to rain ilr snow Tueiday, the N1Uooal Weather Service aaid. . with' _scores of program redUctionS and terminations. Spending lncreues ln some pr<>grama are traced prlnclpallY to higher payrolls or lncreaMll benefit letels fixed by law, as in Social Security. The )>l'Olfam V...nnlnationa ran1e from. abolllion of the Office of Economic O!> l)QrlJJnity to an end for Hill·Burb hospita1~ostruction grants. T b e 11 e reductions and ttrmlnatlona total $17 billioo .. who lives in H1mtington Beach who flew the company's Hughes helicopter in from the de!eri each nlgbt. THE INCIDENT OCCURRED about 9:4S a.m. an hour-and 45-ntinutes·after the Vietnam cease-fire fonnally went into effect, the command reported. actiOOl-dlitrtct now'1lave begun nieeuhg --O'ruge -to-discuar' ways-of incttaslng-CO!)pet'a ..._ - 1'1S PREDICTIONS -'l'be budget kloks ahead to ftSCal 1975 and anticipates spending In that year of $2lt billion. It envisions another Al million In program termJnaUooa mi reducllooi. DAILY PIWT AD ~IAKES HAPPY DUO DAILY PILOT want ads jolt 1 ... to 1165 RAMBLER Sedan, """' good fUll. IU·DD ·, ad wor!ted ao fall ~t tbe <M sold, in II"" di)' and m.de two -'< ham-both lho tJov<r and lhe ..u.r: rul direct, -. ad let a DAILY PILOT claastfled want ad mab yoa bap. • PY1 WO. • "These are just some example! or uses made of geperal aviation airplanes that 33_ Vie for School Posts . . FQur More Hopefuls Enter West Cou11ty Board Races With the addltloo of four more can- didates, the tally of scbool board hopefuls in -oran,. County has risen to 13, a spoiramM for lho county Registrar of v-. uld loday. , Tiie -addllloos are: -fnncts M. Croy,, a housewife who lives at Wit Ellla Aft., Fountain Valley. She Is ninn1D1 lor tbe Fotmtaln V.U., SChool board. -Bi:blnl P. Alex , r, • .... wbo u... It 1741 A1'llanl DrtN, illa>- tlngtm Bealb. He Is i;-. ... Ille Ocean V1ew -board. -J-i>1> -.... ol All -d Drive, lllllltlnpn Beodi, who alao II IUlllllQr lor tllO Ocean View board. lie Is .1 ...... ...Jlf . Mldiool -. • ldlool Jlll'.-.ist wbo u-at 1• c...t view· -\ Ave., SeaJ Beach. He has filed as a cm; didate in tbe Seal Beach Scbool District. Tiie list ol candidates for the ail acbool boards wilhln the Huntington lleacll Union High School DIJtrict includes: RUNT ING TON BEACH HIGH SCHOOL -· Siepllen Hadland. 11851 Ari>or Circle, Huntingtoo Bole!>; Mldlael V-, 117U Debra Clrde, lf11111inpn -: J'4gN -. llOI EIY!ra A,.., 11estnlinsM!r, aad Kennelh Fiske, 1172 Cory Ori .. , lhmdopin -· Ill)' C. Brud, 116 liar Villa Ave .. Seal Beacll; Kurt Wldta, lllfl Nillel Cirde, Buntbllton Be1cl1> -Y. Chung, .1111 Blobop Ori ... Qunttniton lleacb ; Ralpb -. Jltlt -.ird Di1vt=R•m. tlnctm lloch and Jef!ny G ~ S, ~ St.. Hunt HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY SCHOO!.') -K. Dale Busb, 1220 Main SL, Huntlqton Beach: Stephen F. Holden. 949 Illlh St .. Huntington Beacll: Jack K. Clapp, 1%10 Main SI., H1mllngtoo Beach; Kurt Loedtko, IGll Niguel Circle. . lluntlngtoo -. and Ricbord Ste ..... rm Verde Mar Drift, BuotinclM Beocb. • • • FOUNTAIN VALLEY -John Hardy, 11911 Sld<up Lane, HuntlngtGo Beach 111d Rocer ~en, t11681 Sln\a Ynei St., F .... taln Valloy. · OCEAN VIEW -Cral~ 1boft!pron, Illa Kellog Clrde, Hunt,initon Beacll; Judith Malla, 1111 GaHpean Drive, Jiu .. tlngion Bftich; tr1111Ce1 0. Minn, 4061 Figaro / $Jorde., H1"'tlnglon J!elch; Muy1nn Blank. Alil Jardlnel Drive, (S.. ELECTIONS, hp 11 • . c' l • • Uon. A maln proposal under consklera· lion is the hiring of a community drug coordinator who would act as a lJaiaon between the two agencies. ' However, before any proposal is made to an oulllde ftmding agency, bO~h the cl· ty CotJDCll and the acbool district w 111 have to agree on the proposal. ' '"l'hese kinds of things could be handl· ed at the staJJ level or by mall," Voss 11id. "Btlt If we gel together and t;ilk about ll, It abould help things go more smoothly." Other Items of mutual concern are: llun~gton City Clerk Stricken City Cler'< Paul Jone• suffered a heart 1ttack Frld•y ·1rtemoon at Huntington Jloacll City Hall. I He w a 1 taken to PaciUca Hospital 1 where autborltleo today said his condi- lbl had bnliroved aod he baa been ri"' moved from the lntenstve c11m ward. Rt ti oow llltod In 11111foctory condition. .Jones, a, has been city clerk for Jl yean. He wu re.elected for a new four- year' lerm last April wea'. .. er. About a io percent 'chanct Ill showers IJ the W., lhe -lady lees It for.3'ulldloJ, wttll _, tlnued wetnou .• a . ..,, 1111111 ., • are expOc:ted' ~ o._. Coast wtlh overn -ill tio 408. G<t out the llld -ooat. ,. • . . 1 · INSID& ,_~'W Lt. Col. W-N~w IM 'laal Amorlcmo lo die ta V .... ' """' """' "' lit ~ ogr;-·.,. -.,,.;,. 8lt __ ........ ..._. .tlwd u kHfM'llr-. - - • ...i tM ""'"' ,.... .. ,... . pjf. ... ..,.,, .. """' " • • •• I ' " " Mondq , JatWl'Y Z9, 191) I tl!fC! J ·California Soft on ·.Kids i. • • • tl called. tor ~1 1 billion 1n mllilory out- lays. U1e sl'Cl)tld bijtgcst defense budget in history c\ cil "'lth the pe~ce agn.~11'le.ut in Vi.e tn1m. It provided no funds for rt-- consin1c11on uf South V1t\tnt1.n1. Nix'on ca\k<d tus budgl'I a turning point ln nalionnl poll<·y though still \\Tillen in the faiuil111r red ink -a $2t8-billion de!· icit th.ls yeM and a $12.7-b11Hou deficit in fiscal 1974. But the President pointed lo 113 program t'Utbacks and temunations, worth $6.5 billion In sa\•lngs in this fiscal year alone, and told lhe lawmakers:, "The 1974 budget is the clear evidence of the kind of change in directioo de- manded by the great majority of the American people. No longer will power Bow tnexor11bly to \Vashington." 1be figures -some of them leaked in advance by Nixon himself -wtre: For fiscal 1973: Outlays $249.8 billion, receipts $2'l5 billion. For fiscal 1974: Outla.ys $268.7 billion, receipts $256 billion. Nixon invited an intensifi~ po"-et struggle with the Democratic-controlled Qlngres.s not only on spending but also on two other old battle fronts. He urged the bundling <lf 70 federal aid programs into f<lur broad "special revenue-sharing programs" for the states and cities, with Jess federal control. And be repeated his can for a drastic govemmenla1 reorgan- ization which Congress has resisted for two years. -·A thorough overhaul of the tederal bureau~acy is lorig overdue, and I am determ1:"ed to accomplish it," the Presi-dent said. Nixon proposed no new spending pnr grams: ~et,_lhe1974 budget will bring an $18.9-bUhon mcrease in spending over the year . ~t ends lune 30, ~argely because of military pay and price inc!Jases and what Nixon called "uncontroUabltitems" -including a $1.9 billion increase in in- terest costs on the climbing federal debt. The SS.5 billion in cutbacks and withholding of funds already ap- propriated throws a challenge to Congress, where every program bas loyal supporters, and makes lt doubtful tha t Nixon can make his ceilings stick. However, he gains extra leverage by insisting on . the four special revenue- sharing plans for educotion, Jaw en- forcement , job training and community development. r.tayors. governors and local pressure groups who want to save a doomed day-care or health program, for instance, might be able to do so by using revenue-sharing money; they are likely to apply heat on Congress to provide such. funds. The upturn in defense spendi.Dg, to a total only half a billion sollars smaller than than th e $81.6-billion peak or warfare and atom-bomb outlays of 1945, also is likely to strike sparks. The total includes military foreign aid, alomic energy and other indirect defense outlays, but the share for the Pentagon alone is up $4 .2 billion from this year, to $79 billion. The Defense Department said, moreover, that it may have to ask Congress fQr more money to pay for mine-clearing, troop withdrawals, and other closing-out costs in Vietnam. Other S<Jur~s said privately that funds for Vietriil'lll. 's reconstruction al.so are likely to be asked later. But Secretary of the Treasury George Shultz told newmen that if nev.· costs are put into the budget, "Something else will have tc. come out." The booming economy foreseen for calendar 1973 makes possible the curtail- ment of so me work and welfare pro- grams, the Nixon message said. Shultz said the government expects joblessness to decline from the present 5.2 percent rate to 4.5 percent by the year end. In a nationwide radio address from his Key Biscayne. Fla .. home Sunday, Nixon made an appeal for support: "Every member of the Congress gets enormous pressure from special interests to spend your money for what they want. And so I ask you to back up those con· gressmen and those senators, whether Democrats or Republicans, who have the courage to vote against higher spending. They hear from the special Interests, let them hear from you," he said. Who Needs It? TORBAY, England (UPI) -The town council decided to cancel a "marriage lesson" course for engaged couples. Only one couple enrolled. OliN51 COAST Ma ' I DAILY PILOT Ttlt Ot"af'lll't Coes! DAIL'( PILOT wlfh wllJdl lr. ~ t'1t H.-l"rns, b llUD!Jshrd trt tlle Ot"afl!1e Co.11 Publitht119 (.ompeny. ~ r•~ edition• are publlslled, Moncllly lt!nlu;h Friday, fof" CGlta MHll, Ntwl!Ort lfecll, H1mll119lon Deldl/f"Olll'IMln V•lley, L-sJlll'IJ 8MCl'I, lrvlne/llddlffedt arid 5•" Cltll'ltnlfl Sut JUlft Capl1tr•no. A 11119!• ntlon•I edition 11 pWll&Mit S.!lll"d•Vl •nd SllN:I•~ , t he prlnclptl Pllbllltll11411 plfnl II •I 3JI We.I .. .,. i trttt, COiia Mtw, Ctllloml1, mlO. Robert N. We.J PmlHnl tfld ~llhft' Jeclc R. Curley Ykt·Pntlderll tlld Gmertl MtNl!ilft" Thom•• Kenil Editor TI10111e1 A. Murpliina Mtn101no Edit« Ch1rlff H. lAo• Ricliard P', Nill .MltU&11I toU1111!nu Ellhor1 lMry C.Yill• ... WW °"'91 aunty Edltot H ....... • .... Offlce 17175 lttch lovlt.,•rd M1Ultt A4ldre11: P.O. 1011 790, t2641 OtWOffk.. ~ 14itd1• m F••I """""" (m .. Matti QI W-1 .. ., SITtOI M""'°" '"cti: nll """"°'' aw1 ... 1rd ..... tltmtrrtt: J05 Ntr* El Ctmlna 1t111 , •••••••• (7141 '42-4J21 a.tlfW Achwrtltl11t '42·5,71 ........... °"""' 5_., ~llltttl 140.1221 lf7I.. ~ C:Otll PWlllllllMI ,Ht MWI 1H1rlt1, llMJr•tloM, ""'"" ., ld""'11.-h. lltffln ~ WltfloUt tMtilll Pf!"• .. ...,..IOht ........ --.... •Id .. ~· ~. • ..._"'*""" tw urrler U.U , 1W 1'1)111 U.IS monlttl'I"; tnl1!1111 ,,i.u '""''""· Klllfl Co11lhtg King Hussein ol Jordan will visit the United States next month, according to an official announcement He is to meet with President N"IXon Feb. 6. Hanoi Names POW Civilians, Those Who Died WAS!DNGTON (UPI) -He,. Is a list releued by the State ~t or 1A, captured civilians who have been Iden- tified by the Communists as alive, and 13 who were said to have dJed after capture in lndocbina. 1be department indicated all were cap- tured in South Vietnam. Those listed as alive along with the date of capture were all Americans unless specified : I. Jtmn Arton ,.._llll!lllm, 32 FtO.. I l"'· ?. Candido a.i1u1. .... Jan.JI, ~'61.1Ji"hl IPO!MsJ . l. Attvro M ... i.goi~ 4. tO.. 1. I-tPflhlCIPlristJ. '· NUc:Notl o.nni. ...... S1, :'l"· 1Hll 5. Nornwn Jam Brodi-~, ""-4 HI. "= Odlloll ~-. "'· Fl..., I, 'M tC..nMMI. ,.~ l~~&:ni":"•:-~1.27,..,Nt !Wat ..... m"lell'l'l. Tii.Jti:'J::;:"'~Fr1h Jr.,"·~~-'fJ.~•- 11. cioo-....,_ ,,, J.,., J, 1Ht.. lt. Mia-I 11111111 ICiom., 3'. JM. '1, 1"9. 11. l"lllHP W.lltct Mallhe!'d. SI, Jtll. ~1,_ 19'1-lol. l.ewbl E""""t M ...... , )f, Feb. I, 1-. 15 .. RobwT Fledi: ~ S4 FtO. 1. IHI. 16. R~I JHll f'.-;ie, J2,"J11l. JI, IHI. 17. Oouolu K9"t R1mstv, JI, J•ll. J, 19'l. 11. J1,,,,. l/fllef'd RolllN, :Mo, Fib. 5, \,.._ lf. Tllorn.I!. R.,.,.ton, JI, Fdl. L l1'f} Ge~me1t:r.Qu Sd'lwlnll. JO. APrll 1 , "" CWesl Jl. RlcMrd Htmblot Solllllclll'IG. ». J•11. )1, 1M 21. ~ Jmws Stt=J~ Ja11. l. 1\1=; n. RltNnl. W1111Mn Vt • -. Fltl. 4 1 . 2-l. IUd'lllnl c.-,:ie Wt .... 2S, AUG. 4~.~m. u. E-Ard.-. Wu...,.. a . J•"' JU, 1-. :14. Cfttrlts E11wtrd Wlllla. "'· Jtl\. 1, 1MI. American civilians who died after cap- ture in South Vietnam. including tbe place and date of capture and date or death, were listed as: 1, Gusta~• HtrtJ, Ftb. 3, lttd, Bletl Hol, Seot. 2,, 1941. ' 1. Josec>h Gr1IM11Q«, A1111. I, 1ff3, Priu Y111, Marti! 11, 196.S. 1~ Jofln S!Mlhllrun Henry, Stiit. ll, lti6, o.c... ,, 4. C..nlel L .. N\etlolll1, Ncr1. 21, 19", Lq Kfl1nPI, Aprll 12, 1'61. J, Tu-Emllt 11:1111, l"dl. I, 1"5. 8 itfi HOI, Juri. 11i.1Wen,.., F. lllODd. l'tb. 1'61, c.c u c. 0o;1. 17, 1972. 1. lltttv Ohtn. J1n. )0, lt61, Slot. 2', lHI. Bryant to Head Teen Help Group Franklin D. Bryant has been chosen president of the board or Fountain Valley's Teen Help program. He replaces outgoing president Fred Voss. Other new 1973 officers include Ray· mond Hill, vice-president of Internal rela· lions; Fred Voss, vice-president com- munity relations; Don Holland, vice- president for grants and governmental assistance, and Dr. Connie Stee\e, medical advisor. Teen Help, Inc., 18490 Euclid St., is operated under the auspices of the Foun- tain Valley Community Services Project. Softball-Signups For Coeds Slated Registration for the 1973 Fountain Val· ley Bobby Sox softball season begins this week for girls aged 9 to 15. GirlS can register at Von's ~1arket, at the intersection of Talbert Avenue and Magnolia Street, from 10 e.m. to t p.m. on the next three Saturdays, Feb. 3, 10 and 17. A registration fee of $5 covers the use of a uniform, equipment, and insurance. An optional payment of an additional '3 covers the co.st of a team picture. Parents are asked to accompany their daughters and to bring birth certificates to verify the girls' ages. For further information call Arlene Te:rrcll at 96&-6287. Pacifica J-lospilal Nantes Di1gger Chief Pacifica Hospital Medical Staff 'mtmbers have elected Dr. Andral F. uer as 1973 Chief of Staff, succeeding Dr. 'Wendell C. Witte, who held the po>t al the Huntington Ueach hospll.a l for the past two years. The new chief of staff Is a graduate of the University of Mississippi School of MedJclne, Interned at the U.S. Naval Hoipital, Portamoutb, Va. He Is on the sttl(s of Hoag Memorial, Costa Mesa Memorlal, and Huntington 1 nterc:ommunity hospitals . P1·isoners Listed W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Following Is ~ l!Jt of Calllornla prisoners 01 .,., pro- vldell by the OOmm1mlsts. Hometowns were deten:nlDell from a variety of flODo&OVemm«dal. aiurcea. . Next_ of kin are giftD -a..u.ble. Where ~than ooe oddnu II lls1ed for a POW, lie Is llSSod -lloth. •~"" ... "!(. MOotl.i._~,._ WIH,... AMiii!, t141 -· •• $M ,,,_ "'° """" """' "l::..L"C ~ =-~~,:;., Stndr• And-. IJ L Peril. Cllte.. , -~'*"'" . .:i::i:~ r..'!' ..... ~---~lkil, Mrt. til; .... tltS Atn6 ......... 5tft ADDITIONAL POW, MIA STORIES ON PAGES 3, 4, 5 l"l'f>!" Pflfle I • 1i-Y outl&-Empk>ymen.t D_ire~l.or Get.s Kud-0.!.._ _ Janey Koch la a Leo, • bard worker, aOCOldlng to the •i&US of utroJosy. "I'm alw•ys really Involved ln thlngs," says the eiuberant, 33--year-old dlrector or thtt Hwitin&ton ll<ach Yo~th Ell>Jiloy. "ment Service ... Whatever 1 do. 1 like to put my whole heart In It." '11le Huntington Beacb =a cees have added credence to her u cal •l&n by &lvlni· 1"' thalr Im D Cltllen Award. "I always fell olher people '""'1d be honmd. I """" placed J1111t11 iii this position,'' she says. • She is best known for her ditilcto(Vllp at the Youth Employment Service (YEsl in HunUogCoa Center. Her work with YES beian almolt two yeora qo. "'Ibe first summer we set a goal of Oil- ing JOO jobo. We filled <00," Janey recalls. "We felt there wu a need for thi! !CrV!ce and we started witboµt , a dime. "Now we have a .-i,ooo budget. Last Aug\l!t alone we filled 4ot joba. In 1972 we found 2,838 jobs out of 5,016 request!. We placed about 68 pereent of our a~ plicants." She became involved in the youth work tbtougb her member>hlp In the Hun- UJll&OO 'Beach J~lor Wome'• Club. ''l wu youth chalnuan for lhe. junlora. l fllst worked with looter chlld,.n. ll you can't. help the youth, how can you do anytblJlg else!'' She joined the womeo11 club eight years ago u a "sanity keeper1" 90Dlethln2 to do. "Things just grew from there and I found myself branching out. but-always Involved wU.h youth." • She Cl'edlts her ~~ Garey, and fbur YQllJlJlslen, Nancy, 10; Debby, 9; Bobby, 5; and Tommy , 4. with much of tier success. "If they hadn 't bt..oen patient and un- de.rstandlng it would never work." In her early days with YES, .she'd briJ1g tran&ient youlhJ home for dinner. Olle night she brought four young men home for dinner, let them stAy overntghty washed I.heir clot.hes, mended their pants, r"""'l,them jobs ind even <lrov them to work the next morning. "Sometimes kids really n<ed a helping hand. I'rn soft lhat way," she admit!. Besides her heavy involvement in YES, Janey belongs to 15 other organliatlom and serves u state youth chairman for the junlor women's club. 'REALLY INVOLVED' Huntlntfon~t Koch f're•P .. el ELECTIONS. • • Builders Say Northcutt School Will Open Feb. 5 Huntington Beach; Laird B. Anderson, 16821 Green St., Huntington Beach; Christoffel Driessen, 16061 Craig Lane, Huntington Beach and Henry Lyday, 17421 Breda Lane, Huntington Beach. SEAL BEACH -Thomas McGuire, 13338 Del Moote Drive, Seal Beach; Jack Cal.ms, 640 Taper Drive, Seal Beach, aod Gordon Powt:rS, 1545 Crest View Ave., Seal Beach. WESTMINSTER -Frank Mormul, 15242 Vermont St., Westminster; Dewey L. Wiles, 16421 Van Buren _St., \Vestminster, and Marion Aguirre, 716 16th St., Westminster. f'roM Pflfle I AIRP ORT ... flyers ought to. be considered along wilh other aspects of recreation, pointing out the airport use may cause' considerably less irritation than other fonns of recrea· tion. "I submlt that the thunder <lf one n1otorcycle be.Ing gunned along Heil Avenue at any time during the day or night creates much more nojse pollution than our largest plane on its landing ap- proach." Gulick Uves near the airport at 6322 Heil Ave. Front Pflfle I LANDING ... of!lcer and Anny lntelligeoc< officers, without name tabs oo their khaki uni- form>, were In the o!flcW gttetlng pany and 10 otben 1tood nearby. They joked with the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong while Impassive, stonefaced South Viet· namese security men, all wearing side- arms, stood nearby ignoring the Com· munistJ. Neither the Americans nor the C.Ommunists were armed. A SJ>Okestna.D fot the construction com- pany ·wblcb Is bulkling Northcutt school in Fountain Valley said today the school will be ready for oecupaney Feb. 5. The opening date Is 21> months later than the Nov. H opening called for In the original Aug. 22 contract between the W. J. Shirley Construction Company and the Garoen Grove Ullllied School District. The contract was. for $924,386. The school, 11303 Sandstone Ave., will house 460 elemenwy studenll who live in Fountain Valley near the northeast corner of Mile Square Park. These students are currently bouaed at Monroe School, 16225 Newbope St., Santa Ana, and at Post School, 14641 Ward St., Garden Grove. The delay In opening bu been the source of controversy wilh parats of Northcutt student! asking the Garden Grove school board to assess penalties against the contractor for the delays. But Don MacGregor, spokesman for lite Shirley Com-. Aid todaf \be delay! 'bllve been the result of llrUCtaralo changes required by the state Dlvi!ion of Architecture. . MacGregor said tbe changes in the wall and door C011structJon were man- dated alter the original draWinp bad been approved by Lbe · atafe and con- struction had begun. The school Is composed o( three prefabricated building! lhat are put together en the site. "It's important to remem~r that this kind of construction ls much futer than the more conventional kind," MacGregor said. "Even with the delays, the school ha.s been built in five and a ball months instead of the usual nine to ten montha." Alton ?-.1orse, associate superintendent DRUGS ••• the federal a:overnment to speed up Oood. protection work, but relief from . flood danger is still considered at least 20 years. off. Q -City and school rea'eatlon programs. College Chief nits The school d~trid Is launchlJli a broad community recreation and education pro-- I for business of the school district, said the school board has only granted Ill!! coinpany one flvetiy delay. "Tbe school board has taken no !onnal adioll In ......mg penalties or granUng delays," he .said, "but lhey asked me to in!orm the contractor that they feel there ls no jll!tification for a delay beyond Jan. l ." Sniper 'Paying' For Two Slayings OAKLAND (UPI) -Stokely Col' michael, former Black Panther and now a dti:cen of Guinea, 18)'1 the sniper kW· Ing of Ii> penoDS in New Orleans WU in retaliation for the kllliDg of two black studenta: at Southern University last No- \lember. In an Jntarview, Carmichael callQd the -<it ·Mark Essex, thi: black Navy ........ ldDed Jan. 7 by pOuce alter be shot 23 whites, killing six, "a clear re- taliation for the two students killed at Southern." carmicbae~ 31 , who heads the A!Jicon. ba!ed >,!lAlrican People's Revolutionary Party, said Essex's attack showed that blacks are willing to make "the supnfule sacrifice" in a fight for freedom. 1 -· Volcano Isle Hit by Storm : REYKJAVIK , .Iceland (UPI) .L Heimaey Island, where the Helga· !jell volcano roared to life last ..e.!i after being dormant for centuriei was a black layer of \lolcanic aifi today as the eruption went into rQ sixth day o;rithout any sign 6r sub!lding. CEASE-FIRE • • • FRESNO (AP) -St"uart M. White ha.s gram, using Its buildings and announced bis resignation as superin--playgrounds after school hours. The city tendent of the state Center Community may be asked to take over fuod1ng for truce. In many other areas, sman but College Oi!trict. White held the pp.sition that_program after the school district's since I.he district was fonned in 1964. federal funding runs ouf. A storm with winds of up to 1o miles per hour lashed the !!la.pd Sunday and spread the ashes over the island, filling the streets wlth.9. black, soggy m:ud and hampering efforts of the rescue teama sUIJ: there. ,, A new storm was forecas t for tonight. f:I ·~ bloody battles were fought for control of,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;=====;;;:;~~;;:;;~~~~~~~~:; villages ~ hamlets before the in--I ~ lematlonal observer teams ... deployed. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHER t: r.tilitary ·sources said a document cap- tured In the Mekong Delta lnllnlded -1/1-.a. ,.. ,_. Communist troops to ke.p figbtlnc until ............ , ...... Cl-DEFROSTING'--t------.il the international team! were in place, and to continue w)Jere lber< are no RIFRIGERATOR/ftllZIR teams. South Vietnamese oflldals r<perled that casualties on both side! since the cease-firt wa! llMOUllced five days ago approached the blooillM weeks of lut year'! C.Ommunist olfenslve. South Vietnamese alr force planes flew bombing missions ln support of govern· ment troops allhouah the numbtr of sorties was omiUed lrom the dally war communique. U.S. airc:ran suspended operaUon.s over SOulh Vietnam ,In ac- cordance with the cease-fire but con- tinued raida over Laos. 'niere were coofllctlng reports C9R- cemlng Cambodla. U.S. officials In Phnom Penh said aJJ bombina was SU!pended lbert with tbe .,.....n ... but a Washington report said they continued . Pretldent Lon Nol also ordenld all C.mbodlao ground lon:t1 not to 111(!•11" In olferuiive military operaliont from 7 a.m. today, lo enable North VietMmese and Viet Cong forctJ "to Juve our coun- try tn the sbortect poaible tlme." There was no immediate Indication whether the Communist. In C.mbodie were cooperating in Lon Nol'• ce&M-fitt. In Vientiane, the LaoUan capital, mllitnry sou,rces said flghtln1 incrdsed In southern Ulas, but there have been no significant offeusivea launched by either aide to galn territory before a cease-fire is announced. Ptlnct S«rvama Pbomna, the Ll-Otlan premier, Aid In New Dtlhl Sunday that he hoptJ 1 ...... lire can be achieved tn his country soon. AU. 'Tl-IESE OR!Ar A ha'* _,.FEA 1'\JAES l • f'll• Width ~ ,,.... Door lh•ll -for ln•t•nt av.ililMUtJ. • Du•• Ttrnpe11t1i1rt Ctnttol•- Nlld tPlt rilM llft'll*aturt fOr ..ch l«'llon. • Tw111 Porct) .. tl Ctl•~ fl'\llt. WCltlbMI ..,_ f,..ti. • btr• Uirtt hfl'ltlfMOr Dool' ShetvflWtiokll fWll btl flUW\ ...... .. ... "" 1JJ4 No dtfro1tl119 rtf"t•rtffr lt&titM wltli. Arctlt Air n-ty1'-' ftr full tycle clrcwlatl111. AUTHIS $25995 FOR ONLY r· L ·' I 1nl ... 1 io' ilil A SUMUNE llEFHIGEJIATill ..... C11l2 . ,.,.,~,~a.it ,, .. t{ • ~ .. T.,.,,.,.,..,. Col'ltrol .-t • fll94 Yltutf Mu.Mill• .,._,,, • [lltn DMp Duvr-""" "" • M Whftfl ,,_·Mart 1.:;h a.llWOrt ..... 159'5 ...... ... ,. ... 90 DAT ... CASH • ' • \ • ' Molld;)'J J111u11ry 1~. l'11 J H DAILY PILOT ;J Loot • Ill ~iguel Bank Heist Found < Alie~· Dies Farm County Families 1~ --· Traffic Still· Ilold Hope By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. OMrr Plllt Sletf Oraoge County relaUves of servicemen who have not been identified u living ~n of war are stllJ "holding oo to bop, that ther'f: will be another Ii.st," a spot......, at the Concern for POW-MIA off1<0 Jn Tustin aald today. So far the names of seven Orange County men have been on the list gtveu to the U.S. after the cease fire agree-ment. . Uoited Preas International (UPI) gave an eighth man as being from the county, but the local POW office had no local relatives listed. He is lA. Robert Wideman, from Lakewood, Florida, Cl\Plured May, 11172, accordlng to the POW office. UPI said Lt. Wideman is from Philadelphia and Westminster. Three most recent additions from lhe county are: -Capt. James Kula of Anaheim. The Navy officer was born in ?i.1anchester, New Hampshire, and was captured July, 1972. Mn. Kula was out of town with relaUves today. Alr Force Lt. Col. John Pitchford Jr. of Lagwla Niguel. -lie w.., captured in , .. December, 11185. -Air Force Capt. Michael Lee Brazelton of Seal Beach. Bra!elton's father·, Lee, lives In Seal Beach. Contacted today, Lee Brazelton said he's known his son was alive for about two years. "But It's .-ea! nice to know it's con- firmed," be said. "It's quite a change from what we've been putting up with in the past." ~ Shot down August, · 1966, Capt. Brazelton was listed as ?\11A for five . years. That Oiirlslmu, bis father said, a newsreel showed "a glimpse" of him. Four other names listed early Sunday were ,.farine Capt. Paut Montague of 'l'u,stin, Air Force Capt. J . David Luna of Orange, Air Force Lt. Col. &Uson W. fl.filler of Tustin, arid Air Force Capt. Darrel Pyle of Tustin. ;,As far as we're concemed the list is not complete," a POW office spokesman said. "We're hoping to pres5 for more names." One woman who was told by the Marine Corps Saturday night that her husband's name w'as not on the list refus· ed today to give up. Mrs. Mary Helber. wife of capt. Lawrence Reiber of Tustin , aaid. ''There's no way I will accept thls as being a complete list. There's got to be more." ' Her husband was shot down over Viet- nam in January 1"6. sne•s never heard anything from him In those six years. She said the Marine Corps phone call "doesn't mean anything final. In August we wtre told even though they may not be on the list, the M1As (miMing in ac- tion) w<>n't be declared dead unUI all the POWs are interrogated and debriefed." That may take another six months, she said, indicating the wait won't be an easy One. · Other Ora11ge County families received word their men were not on lhe list. They, like Mrs. Helber, are stlll waiting, and hoping their men will show up on another list They include Carole Hanson, wife of Capt. Stephen Hanson of El Toro; Janice Lyon, wife of Marj. Donovan Lyon of Irvine; and parents of Roger Hallburg or Fullerton. I * * * * * * Facts ,on Prisoners Held · In Laos Remain Uncertain ... "· While families of nearly 600 American .i..prisooen of war in North and South Viet- nam rejoiced or were sorrowed by ... ,rlistings of their loved ones, families of .men. missing in action over Laos re-' mained uncertain today. lnfonned only by Defense Department oUicials that their men were not on the .. tilts released by Hanoi , wives, mothers and brothers and sisters of nearly 300 U.S. servicemen continued to wonder. Mn:. Barbara Hedrick of Culverdale whose brother Lt. James Wayne Herrick Is lnille's adopted MIA, said today'ber parents were told "Jim's name is not on the list." "I called WB!hingtoo and was told there were no names of servicemen m1ssing in action in Laos on the list. The agreement (signed Saturday) includes only those prisoners of war in North and SOulh ·Vietnam," she said. The Defenae Department also said to- 9.&Y 56 American servicemen previously ,carried by the United states aa prl!oners of war remain unaccounted for by North Vietnam. ,A Pentagon spokesman said their names "are not on the two lists we have received so far." , Other area famili es affected by the lack of lnfor.nation from Laos include Mra. Janice Lyon of University Park. --tier husband, Major Don Lyon, w a s ).°'8dopted by the city of Laguna Beach. He r hu beb missing over Laos since Marth f 22, 1968. • I -*-*--*- Mrs. Carole Hanson of El Toro a I s o waits word of her husband, Stephen. "I suppose we will have to wait Wltil we quit fighting in Laos to know for sure what happened to our men," Mrs. Hedrick said today. "If it doeSn't sound too silly t would like to ask people to do one thing. .. I would appreciate prayers from everybody, now, until we know for cer- tain what happened to these mm," she S<l.id. She noted that there 1.s still hope for the men who have yet to be listed since the lists falled to carry the name ol an MIA who responded to the Initial letler- writing campaigns to Hanoi. The lists include 5$ names of servicemen who died in captivity but did not name all the potential prisoners, Mrs. Hedrick believes. The United States ls piming hopes on an expected accounting of Americana lost in Laos to swell the total of ~ U.S. !igbting men known to be prisonen of the Communists in lndochina. The' Pentagon said there are no clues to the fate of 1,315 Americans sUll miss- ing In action in Southeast Alla. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said Sunday that the Laotian problem Is being discussed with tho North VietnameBf' through diplomatic channels in Paris "We do expect to receive a list,"• Friedhelm said. "We hope to have it shortly." --*-*-* I • • Nigsel Wo111an Acci,dent By JORN VAL TERZA ot H 0.111' Pllet "•ff A 16-year-old boy being smuggled into the United States from Mexico wiu killed ~tintly in a traffic crash at San Onolre Sunday -an incident that closely resembled a sinillar tragedy ~veral · weekends ago. lSJllael Gomez Guerra of Guadalajara, Me~Co. was killed instantly when the station wagon he was riding in was struck from behind by a truck also laden with ·aliens. No one among the dozen or more oc- cupants of the vehicles was injured. The crash occurred in slowing freeway traffic about two miles south of the border patrol cheekpoinl. tt occurred at the peak of another record weekend of arrests of illegal allens by patrolmen. And it occurred in the same part of the freeway where four persons were killed 'several weeks ago as they tried to avoid arrest. tbose four persons attempted to flee across the freeway after sunset and were struck repeatedly by fast-moving can. Border Patrol Capt. Eugene Harris said that bis men in one shift alone Sun· day captured 187 aliens tryini: to cross the checkpoint. The day's total was 244 persons. Harris described Sunday as "almost a carbon copy" of the tragic earlier SWl· day. Officials have said that smugglers ap- parently are becoming more careless and are not checking to see ii patrolmen are operating the roadblock before the beading north with their passengers. Dozens of cars were left abandoned along the freeway shoulder through the day and Harris said "there was no way of telling" how many "wets" got out o( the cars and made it north on foot, evad- ing officers. San Clemente police detained more than a dozen aliens Sunday. Lecture Slated On Cigarette Link to Cancer The Big Push • With a little help from a friend, Marjorie. an Indian elephant, enters her winter quarters at the Chessington, England, zoo. Keef>er Lionel Rowe supplies the extra persuasion. 'Pressured' Corona Juro1· Called in Defense Motion FAIBFtELD (AP) -A woman juror who said $e was pressured into v~ting to convict mass murder defendant Juan . corona will be called ta testify next ~fon day on a delerise motion for a .new trial, it was decided today. The decilllon came shortly after throngs of Corona supporters marched ou'..side the courthouse building in this rural California town -chanting and carrying pickets. Superior Court Judge Richard E. Pat· ton delayed hearing testimony from juror Naomi Underwood after the prosecution objected to late filing of a 14-page a£· fidavlt supporting the motion by defense ,By FBI Crew FBI agent! have recovered more th.Jn Sl .400,000 in securilics taken in the hcisl of the Laguna Niguel. United California Bank last spring. The negoliablc bearer bonds were recovered from a buriPC. suitcase. unearthed in a five-acre field of an Ohio farm Saturday. All but one man accused in the bank burglary. lhe largest in American history, have been captured and three are now serving 20 year sentences for the "Mission ln1possible'' heist of the Monarch Plaza bank. knocked off over March 24 ilnd 25, 1972. Harry James Barber. 31 , is still being sought on a federal warrant for the bank job. His brother, Ronald L. Barber, 29, of South Gate was arrested by FBI agents on Jan. IS in New York. The found loot represents one of the largest recoveries of stolen property in bank history, Joe D. Jamieson. assistant director in charge of the Los Angeles or- ficc, said today. Agents used bulldozers, picks and shovels in the search for the stolen prop- erty. Jamieson said the recovered securitie,, consisted of negotiable bearer bonds of vari;)US utilities and municipalities. Loss in the heist has been vari011Sly pegged al $3.2 million and $5 miUion and apparently is dependent on the current market value of the property. Some four months after the burglary, a crew of county \VOrkers found a gunny sack with $1 mlllion in registered securities stuffed in some brush near the bank. ln addition to the securilies, jewelry, rare coins and cash were taken f r o m the vault. Nearly 500 safe deposit boxes 'vere rifled by the crooks who worked over the weekend after blasting their \\'ay into the roof of the big vault. The thieves entered through the roof, after drilling holes in the ceiling and packing them with dynamite. The charges \\<ere tamped down with burlap bags filled Y.'ith earth and exploded . The vault \\'as breached with a two foot hole. Sliding into· the chamber, the thieves systematically tore through the safe deposit boxes. Property not taken was dumped on the Door. • Charles A. Mulligan, 38; Amil A. Dinsio, 36, and Phillip C'hristopber, H, are serving time for the theft. Legal ac- tions are pending on the junior Barber. • A Colorado researeber wbo believes he attorney Rlchard Hawk. has found the agent in cigarettes which The judge also told Sutter County Dist. T G • } D • causes lung cancer will discuss his find-Methadone Discussion Alty. G. David Teja to have Sherill's een Ir 1es ings at a meeting or the American matron Georgia Wallis "prepared to Chemical Society, nuclear cfiemistry and Scheduled 011 KOCE present oral testimony." After Stin' gm' g technology division tonight in Newport Hawk said Mrs. Underwood in!ormed Beach. him the matron told her during delibera· Dr. Edward Martell of the National The use of methadone, a controvenial tione Jan. 17 that Corona was "faking a CLEVELAND (UPI) Eileen Center for Atmospheric Research at substitute for heroin now given to 250 heart attack to avoid having to testify" McCarthy, 16, died during the weekend Bou1der, Colo. will address the group of Orange County addicts, will be the sub-in his lrlal on charges of :murdering 25 after being stung a month ago by a 100 scientists at 9:30 in the Newporter 1 d KOCE-itinerant f.arm workers in 1971 at Yuba Portuguese man-of-war while on vacation Inn, Newport Beach. ject or iscussion on a TV Chan-City. in Florida. 1be conference arranged by UC Irvine nel 50 broadcast tonight at 6:30 p.m. and The 63-year-old wldo.w also said in The 10th grader from C1eveland Heights Chemistry professor F. S. Roland! con-Thursday at 8 p.m. numerous news Interviews after she was stung on the right temple while on a tinues through Wednesday. The hall-hour telecast will feature in-broke the 11·1 jury deadk>ck that the raft off Fort Lauderdale, Dec. 21. Dr. Martell's lecture is one or 4-0 tervlews with the corrdinator of the matron told her she would tell her She was revived, but had been In a discussions of recent research to be county's program and with two addicts som thlng about Corona that would "ease coma ever since. Sbe dJed at Rainbow presented. currenUy on the methadone program. her conscience" if she voted for con-Babies' and Children's ffospJtal here Martell has "tentatively concluded that The show will be hosted by Jim Cooper. viclion. Saturday. pollonium-21, an alpha emitting particle, .--------'-----''------------==============-- is the principal agent for induction of lung cancer among cigarette smokers," a UCI spckesman said. Tuesday night, Dr. Albert Ghiorso of the Lawr~~.Rad.iation Laboratory at UC Berkeley; will give the award ad· dress. Ghiorso was cited by the ACS for his work with nuclear applications to chemistry. The La~lf8 labs have been responsible for the ldCfentification of 10 new elements in the-past 10 years. Ghiono will discuss the search for new elements with atomic weights of 106 or higher. . Waits IN ?J(D I • • PL(N'fY Of TIM• 1'0 SllOP a110 SAV4. mAGGI . 'S~'('.s ••• _STR~ ........ r l I l I I • Husband-:POWSince1965-011 List, Headi;ig Honie 1'00 MANY f0L¥.S -~ S1'1LL PA'tlMG TOO IWllK" fOR 'TM.Cit. fUkNITU"4 • MQl'_J'.ll(IP. f.B.\.l\.'T "MALL.'t-. T"-(Y "AV.( S{'N IYIACCl'S A'>~" QUT" 1'11.(V (AN'T .flNI> 1'11.C S'fOR.( • SO NOW, 5't 'TM~ ~AT Mlt '4LOW • \~INt: THIS AD CU/TN \'OU ~ND---SHi WILL SNOW 'tOCI ~OUI TO G<'T Hom' ••• I I By· JACK CB . nu;--,--~•naug!rtl!rlind• 11 .. 0-in Sacramento. Of flN DMtf ,..._ •••tt While the news for her was good, tbe J tt has been .even yean of waiting and 'frustration for Shirley Pitchrord of Laguna Niguel, .wife of Air Force Lt. COL I John Pli<:hlord, shot down in December 1 1965. I And now that she knows John is com- ' fie home. the hours aod seconds just t .dl't1 go fast eno\igti. t ' 111 just hope John ls going to come I hcime in the fll"!t botch. He should, he's • been over the.re one of the longest," Mn. r Pitchford sald today. t She re«lved a call at 5:30 p.m. SAt~ I day aad was informed her husband 's t name w•s on the offlclal list relt!aMd by f Hanoi. t "You wait for seven years, and then t you have to wait 90mf more. I 'rMy life 11 iOing to be IO different I when t don't hava to wait. It may take ' me years to adjust," she said. 1 She said &he wishes hor hUJband could 1 )ult land Jn a helicopter In the heath In front of the family's new boine in the Shores develbp-t of Laguna Niguel. OJlldren, Elizabeth, 11, tine! John, 15, live at the Shor<S home• wlllle Jamet Is a student 1t Arizona :)tatfl Unlvtnlty - • wait for many wives was not ended with . joy. "I feel very bad about some of my friends who have gotten the bad news. I know many of them. They deserve a break and I.bey just aren't getting It," sbe said. 0 1 feel so happy until I think of some or the other girls whose husbands are not Patron Stabbed In Grove Tavern A fight in tbe ~ Club In Garden Grove early today eocled with tbe 1lal> bing of I patroo. Joe W. H••\lO• of Anaheim WIS reporl<d In saUs!actory condlOon today ln Doctors HOIJlilal, Santa Ana. HI WIS stabbed 'once In the clltll. Police are Hff1nc Hollltr'• usaUanl. He ii dmcribed 11 be1n( 111 bll early ll)o, ' . ) . I coming_back," she said. Since the annoUiicerii'ents about the retwn of the prlsone~ Mrs. l>ttchford has been besieged by callers and well wishers. At first. John's name was omit- ted from initial published lists of prisoners and friends were anxiouJ. However,' ?i;lrs. Pitchford has recelved letters from him over the last three years. "Mostly he talked about his heallh being ..food. It looked like he was betng vuy cartful In writing so the letter wo<lld go through, "He kepi telllnC me to buy somehlng tspenslve. l'm inot sure why, l do anyway," the overjoyed woman said. No word baa been received yet about the ua<I dale that Lt. Cot Pltchlonl •• 2i-)'6lr care<r offi<er, will be back ID the '"'"'-Mn. Pli<:h!O"d said lhat more than !00 people who weor the POW bracelet be"· tng her husband 's name have written to her. She aald lhe mosl frua!ntting put of lhe onlW -the nightly newt bl'Oldcaatl ("IO one w•l<:hed the ne'!'I more than me"I and lcllow!ni lhat "we did nol IO ln-_thert and win." • .,. • ... AT '"'1' · N N~WPORT SLVO. -COS"fA muA -~ -. opiN 7 Da'(S --. '1'1?•.' I O~ .(LS£, ' I j l I • DA1L V PILOT Just ~.(;easting ,'!~ J .·,,,_ ~ Amnesty Issue: Unfair 'to Wa;ir Dead? -- ".· r . ... ~ . " •:r~'., •th ''-t·','. W I " Tom u.rr.hine ' 'r,,., .. , Sunn11er Crush !Stai·ts Early SQUl1'i tNG TO\\'AR(l sm.ll\tER - Perusal of the nlOrning wea1her rtport suggested "'" ha\'e a bener than S0.50 chance of being \'isiled by rain maybt tonight, ma) be Tuesday 100. Like always. the wealher predictors deal in a lot of maybes. You know how that goes. Anyy.•ay. y.·et y.·eathcr just seems like a iantasy after the glorious weekend turn- ... : eel on by h1om Nature here alo~ this best of all possible coasts. Some long· time coast y.•atchers "i.U tell you that weather like that at this time of year predicts a great summer ahead . THAT l\IAY BE. You can ponder, bOwever, if I.he y.·eather or the la te weekend predicted how the summer is going to be. did it also predict how the traffic \vas going to now? I don't know precisely how it was in your neighborhood over the weekend because I didn't try to get too many places. This was probabl y fortunate plan· nmg on my part. From my perch, JI appeared that e\·erybody in the uni\'erse decided this \orould be a great time 10 traverse the Orange Coast. All those parties residing in San Diego docided to go to Los Angeles. All those in the LA area prompt· ly drove to San Diego. All I tried to do was drive through Laguna Beach. Tried , that ls, along Laguna Beach. ~. that is, along with buses. boat trailers, bicycles or whatever else they could ga rolling. Thus it was that in the peak hoors, Coast Highway in !he Laguna region looked like Cal \Yorthington's used car lot. ONLY . DIFFERENCE was that Good 01' Cal moves cars off his lot faster than \'ehicles were progressing down Coast l-lighy,·ay. At the speed things were mov· lng. some folks from Ana,heim may still be there. ll's a good thing we have malt shops and taco stands along Coast llighway or some of those people might have starved right there. So frustrating was the non-movement or tra ffi c that some motorists were playing games in the intersections. The contest "'as. "Pay No Attention to the Signals . Fill Up the Intersection . Don't Let Anybody Else in Line. We Have Enough Players Already ... " Clearly. if this is what il"s like on a pretty nice weekend in January, what's it going to be like at mid-summer when the good folks of LA all decide to el ude the .smog and head for the coast? Seems like every year, we all view the massive coastal traffic jams, shrug. and then declare that it can't really get any \\"Orse. Then it gets worse. ORANGE COlTh:IY'S planning com· tn1ss1on has been looking at all this with ~·1me concern. Tiley study things they call "Traitsportation Corridors." You \1onder what they would ha\"e called Coast Highway through the Laguna sec· !or Sunday. Probably a Parking Corridor. Any"'way. the county planners and road department are studying another possihle Transportation Corridor along the now- <iead c11a.~1al freeway alignment. Even if they d11 gl'l aroun d to building a road on it. say h.1 191l5. you have to wonder how much good 11 · s go ing to do. THE NE\\" RO AD will necessarily be inland of the coastline proper. And all the visitors seem to like driving on a hig hway ric:ht next to the ocean, you know, \\'here lhe view is. So what if they only make 2.7 miles per hour ? This is the life. Inla nd freeY.·ays and byways just can't give them a coaslline. You ran hardly wait for su mmer. • . . · ... ·.: .. THAILAND ':, • . . . ... . . . CAMBODIA . · ·• j; .. S.KOREA ~ THE TRUCE LINES -Thelnlce line along tbe 38th\parallel that separates South and North Koru (right) remained quiet' at n...S of teh ·r.ase-fire in Vietnam ~eft). The Korean truce line has almost been forgotten as the 17th parallel dividing North and South Vietnam marks the split of that nation. Brando 'In Talaiti' 'Godfather' Takes Off er, . 4 Golden Globe Awards HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"'The God- father:• made an offer no one could refuse and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association responded wilh four awards for the Mafia saga. "Godfather" Marlon Brando also won the best dramatic actor ay.·ard. The front ruriner for Academy Awards in ?o.1arch, "'Ibe God.father" was cited at the pnosentatioo Sunday night for .best dramatic Jicturt for 1972, best dlrection, by Francis Ford Coppola ; best Six Tornadoes Strike Central Florida Areas ORLANOO, Fla. (UPI) -At least 18 persons v.·ere injured and 300 were left homeless when six tornadoes rampaged through Central Florida. One of the twisters struck an apartment comple.i: in \Vest Orlando. "It's a miracle that no one was tilled," said Orlando Police Chief Robert Chewn-- ing after the twister demolished the large apartment complex in Orlando's \Vashington Shores district. The entire top of the two.story apart· ment building was tom off and dozens of rooms were smashed. Dr. Charles Hall, chairman ol . t1ie Orange CoWlty Emergency and Disaster ical Committee, said It in jured • sons Were evacuated to Orlando itals. but none of the injuries was believed serious. AU six of the tornadoes struck the Cen-- tral Florida area simultaneously during the early afternoon, according to a Red Cross spokesman. Four persons were hurt in ~a County, wbere a leapfrogging tornado damaged homes and "picked up big oak trees like -tbey were toothpicks ," ac- cording to Sheriff Ernest P. Murphy. MINNfl.LI ... y ' ' ' screenplay, by Coppola and Afario Puzo; and best score, by Nino Rol a. BRANDO WAS NOT present lo rective the award. "He's in Tahiti." presenter Carol Burnett joked. "and I'm going to take it to him right now." Brando also was named a world film favorite along with actress Jane Fonda. "Cabaret," the bittersweet musical about Germany in the early 1930's. won three Golden Gloves: best comedy or musical; best actress in a comedy or musical, Liza Minnelti, and best sup- porting actor, Joel Grey. Liv Ullman was named best dramatic actress for her role in "1be Emigrants.'' Jack Lemn;ion won the award for best actor in a comedy or musical for his part in "Avanli." And Shelley Winters was selected best supporting actress for her role in 'f<J'be Poseidon Adventure." Other awards included: PROMJSING NEWCOMERS -Diana Ross, "Lady Sings the Blues," and Edward Albert, "Butterflies are Free,"· best . origlnal oong -tl>e title SO"i of ''Zen;" Englbh language foreign film - "Young Winston;" best foreign language foreign Ulm -"The Emigrants:" best documentary -"Elvis on Tour,11 and "Wall of Fire" Mexico, a tie. 'Mle television awards included : Comedy or musical -"All in the Family;" television movie -"That Cer· lain SUmmer;" dramatic show - "Columbo;" dramatic actress -Gail Fisher, "Manna:;" dramatic actor - ePter Falk. "Q:llumbo;'' 6xnedy·musical actress Jean Stapleton -"""All in the Fam8y;" ·comedy·musical actor -Redd Fon "Sau!grd and Son." Tel~ special -'"Life of Leonardo' da Vinci (Italy).'' Snow ID Store. for East- ' . Mid1vest, _Rairi-soake~ Coast Get Gale Wa r1ii1igs • " Uh wt;A111t' lcnoc.ut $ I • ~ I ' Tiit l!lotl 111 lot AtiMit1 Tl.lftd•y I• "-**' to rffC.11 •. foliowr"41 • ... IOl'lleflt "' S3. $.,_. •rt Ulltdtcl IOl'!Olll Ill movnt•lll .,,..., 1'l'tlfr9 lhtP 111\0w le\Ofl ... 111 droa to •DOut $.000 IHI Draft Re·sisters M!ly ~Get WASHINGTON (UPf) -In tire llller- math ol the U.S. dlolllgqtmeot 'from Indochina, Amaiclll$. ·~Wc:bl"i with inte...t to ... It ~~ :JUp> slands by bis campaign pl~ to '""""'" grant anrnelty to the -ol tbodlonds of )'OlDrg men who r.luled -in tho war. nie emotlonal i..au. of amnesty la ""' tain to again be debated in QoDcrw and "vtry Ubenl wtll> .......i. to llllllel\Y." Nlmi's cu1j>llp liud obolaullp .... a~ -nore .. 111111Y whotb1Di< It juii jllalD -tat llQ' kind "' ,.. giv-9 O. arantOd i-. who Violated tJre la• and -to !Jihl for their oountry. Pemapa the --........,i againll .......,, lo thet It II aaf>lr to -who faucbl Ud dlod In VltlDlm - and to -who ..,..i ..... "' the belt NEJrS .AN,:.rr,no • But -ori the I'll*" aide ol the lolue ( ) ~ of their U... Iii prlooo Cll!lpl. ,.., ~ will make a flpt If IL Andwv .....,. --------,--' have pledged their-to wwl< for ~ America as the Unlled Slates compieles the ta.kt Of fiodlng Its Jndo. cblre involvement, .wilbdn\rinr tis ~ nurlntni servicemen from the aoll of South Vietnam and r«eivillg Its prison- ers ol. war. "ltlERE NOW ARE an estimlted IOO draft reststen in federal jails and per- haps .as many as 70,000 other men living abroad in ,.lf.lmpooed exile bees.,. tliey refused to accept servlee In the war. In the beat ol llll faU's campalgJ\ the President took a hard llDe m the lsaue. "Doo't wony about that amnesty-nevem:i'' N"ll:CO told ID otio family whole 1 son bad been lttlled in Vio!nam. It was one ol the dramatic moments ol the campaign which 11w Nllcn bury in a landallde bis Ilomocratic Qlll>CD'lll, Sen. c.-ge S. McGovom, who advvcal<d an amnesty once the war was aver and U.S. prjsoners were rebimed. l'Uxoo also said during the campaign : "It is time to draw the line ol this i!ISUe once and for all. There will be no ainnes- ty for draft dodgers and d;zer the war." . . THE .PRESIDENT-S campa.i state- inents contrmted with a rem.ark he made in a television tn~ in January, 1971.. He said at the time. that be would be amnesty. Son. Rol>OrtA. Tall Jr., (R-O!do,) limo member ol Cell.,.... wbo hoO takon a middle growrd Oii the quesUon. LAST VEAR HE lolroduoed leclslatlon which would grant ~ "mder ..,... lain condltiollll" to -1'ho~alled or refu!<d to reptOl'for the draft or refused induction Into the aimed forces. Tall at the time be allei:ed bla bill cited Amui.can casualties ln the lndocbtn& war and said, ""'! -not grant amnesly' to draft noilten without JOqUlring them to undertal:e -to their ccunlry." Tait, a suppor1<r of ~ llUlllOlled that -DMD CUITenlly lmpolaaoetl or in txlle lhl;tuld be n:k•d or allowed to retum If tJiey .... lo ..... the IJnlted states -elthor in the mJllllly or in I fonn ol al-le ·....ice -for lbreo years. "We must decide whether It Is llllill' in our interest to have them spend t})eJt time In jail and in bitter exile or to olftr tbet'n a pracycaI coarse of amnesty," Tait said. IT IS A DECISION that apparently will have to be made in the coming months. But it also is a debision in which the President woiild bave to play a role, and he remains oo record with his statement of "never." " Clergymen Hit Supreme Court ·on Abortion Law WASffiNGTON (UPI ) -Clergymen around the nation, primarily but not ex· elusively Roman Catbotic1 attacked the Supreme Ciourt 's abortion decisiOn from· their pulpits Sunday. One "Of the stron gest reactions came from Msgr. William F. McDonough of the Shrine of the Immaculate Q:lnception in Washington D.C., who compared the ( ____ I N_SH_OR_T_._· .___,) court decision with King Herod's order to slaughter all children under two years old in Bethlehem at the time of C1uist's birth. "'The hand that is lilted against tlie tm· born child in a bortioo ls the 'band of a murderer," McDonough said, "and tbe decision of the seven judges of the Supreme Court is 111uch like King Herod, in tlie days of Christ, wbo tn fremy aeek- lng out to kill Christ, killed tlie innocent children under two years of age." "I say to you seven judges -that you have presided over the slaughter of the unborn innocents and that you are in the mold of King Herod," McDonough said. •• ) ( busing of 12,cm ·'itudents for the first thne was implemented with only minor incidents today in Prince Georres Coun· ty, Md. a WashlngtOO suburb and the na· lion's 10th largest school system. County school officials said they bad no early figures on attendance but upected it to be lower. Own normal. They said a number of bwes were reported ~g late or overcrowded .00 one bws fas in- volved in a minor accident, with no il>- juries. A bank of telephone operators took complaint calJs f.... students 11-1 parents. Myrtle Fenlr!:u, in charge of the telepbjne bank, Aid "There'• nothing but the norm8J prvbleml. In some ...., buses are late and tlie klda don't lmOw the new routes." • I \ "UPI~ KILLED l!PORE CEAS!-!;IRE Lt. Col. Wllllom Nolde, 43· 'Last Man' . Believed In Viet War MOUNT PLEASANT. M1cb. (AP) - He was the last American to die belCft a -blance ol peace began In Vietnam, but thooe close to him Ill' tliey bold no bitterness for the cruel quirt of fate. '.11ley say be was doing what be wanted -helping a suffering people for wmm he "cared deeply. LT. COL WlLLIAM Nolde, 43, of Mount Pleasant, died in a O>mmunist artlDery barrage 11 hours before the .......ire began Saturday. '.l1le senior Am<r1can adviser in Btnb Lmg Province, Nolde \\'85 talking with his Vietnamese coooter- par\ oo bow to get the country moving < • agam. • ··My husband was simply doing what he wanted to do," Joyce Nolde said Sunday. ·'He was a very, very sen.91Uve man who cared a -t deol alroul. pooplo." Mrs. Nolde deocrtbed ber Jroaband as a career aoldier who had studied Viet- namese history and culture. "Re really believed In tlie people and felt it was llme the peopfe stopped flllrt· iDg among themselvts," she said. While saying her outward cabn belted her true emoUons, Mnr. Nolde Aid, "l"m not bitter at all. My bllsband believed In the whofe thing (tlie war)." MRS. KENNE11I Olien, a aiata-who llvec near the family home tn Menmninee, expressed similar feelings. · "I feel bad that he didn't maJre b home," abe &a.id. 0 But be wanted to be aver there. _,, '"Bill believed be wu doing the right thing. lie fell be -.-led." "That wu just bis life," said Nolde-'a oldest brother, Henry L. Nolde Jr. 0 1 don~ feel bitter becalrle It could have happened anytime.. .. Joseph Nolde, another bnrther wbo Uvei bt SUilel, Wis .. aid Nolde n1 a "slniq· believer In helping tba j)OOple ol Vietnam ." "I'm not reeIIy bitter about what hip. pened. but It """"" kind of awlUI that he can\e so clooe to Living thmrglr It all," he added. Holocaust in t r NJ I ' . • ' I , ' ' I \ I t --, ' VOL "66, NO. 29, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ~ .·' l MONDAY; .JANUARY 29, 1973 ~ ' • Nixon Calls · for ·· Donlestic -Slash ' •• Ill ' WASHINGTON (AP) -~t NI<· ............ dellli lw -"!eden! 111 ft1n& ~ today, caUed CD COD- .... (« • rips 11'11 budatt celUllf of Pl8:7 bllJlml, Pd coulloned that greater spending """1d mtl!JI "!>lah taxes, high-er tntercet rates, r,newed1nllation1 or all thrte.'' (8"la~ oloflea; Page !.) '1 oppaoe ~ altematiyes: wfth ·a !Inn ..... oo...JPtOdlni, ll!!lle of the1D.. ts ~:· mton said in 1lis fiscal 1'74 l>Udaet .,......, sent to the new COngrese a.a tlie foremo1t of the three major an- Dual~ JllelSal"· • The documeDt lived up to eelvance bill· "" u .... job 00 -ooclal, health, boudla. educalioo and antipoverty pr .. grllili ol bis Democralic predeceuora - : procrams N1Da uld failed after a (air trial., / .. • Pe!IP!le the~ cµtbocb the budg- et eilledJar Ill.I blllioo in military oot-. Jays, U.. -blast· defeme budget in hlstory,even with the peace agreement • in Vietnam. It provided no ftmds for re- construction of South Vietnam. · lfw•i called bis budget a turning point in nattonal policy lhougb sWI written in the familiar red ink -a ISU·blllton dtl• lclt this year and,a 112.7-blllton deficit in fiscal 1971. But the Pr'8ldent pointed to 113 ·program cutbacQ' and tenn,tnatlom, worth 16-> pillion in savings In this !iacal Year alone, and, to1~ the lawmakers : "The 1174 budget is the clear evidence of the kind of change in direction de- manded by the great majority of the American people. No Jooger will power Oow inexorably to Washington." - nie ftglll'<8 -some of lbem leaked in advance by Nixon himeelf-were: For flSCal 1973: Outlays $249.8 billiQn, receipts '$225 billion. For fiscal 1974: Outl•YB 12118.7 billion, re<eipts ·1258 blllillll. • Nixon invited an Jntenslfied po"'~' struggle w.itb the Democratic-controlled C.ongress not only on spending but also on two other old battle Cronls. He urged the bundling of 70 federal aid programs into four broad "special revenue-sharing programs" for the'states and cities, with I~ federal control. And be repeated bil call for ,a drastic governmental ,reorgan- ization whlctf Congfess has resisted for two yeaf!. "ti thorough overhaul of the federal bureaucfacy is Jong overdue, and I am determined to act()mplisb it," the Preei· dent said. 4'day's Flnal N.Y. St.ks _TEN CENTS B.udget Nixon proposed no new spending pro- grams. Y!t, the 1974: budget will bring an $11.9-bill ion increase In spending over the year that ends June 30, larg~y because of military pay and price increases and what Nixon called "uq1trollable iteins" -Including a $1.9 billiOO increase in in- terest costs on the climbing federal debt. 'nle $6.5 billion in cutbacks and withholding of . funds already ap- propriated throws a challenge to (See BUDGET, Poge I) an-1e ,, r ,, ' ' First Casu,alt.y ' . . ' . ' GI Killed Aher CeqSe-fire SAIGON (AP) - A U.S. helicopter pilot, woonded-~ fl1ing on aircraft reported to bear· marks intended to indicate its neutrality, died -,. He was tbe first Americim killed in Vietnam since the ctaae-!ire went into effect Sunday mornlng. THE U.S. COMMAND Identified the pilot aJ WO ADthooy Dal Pozzo, 22, of Santa Barbara. lt said be was wounded by small-armi fire from the ground while flying a courier mission 10 miles southwest of Can 1bo, capital of the 1 Mtkonl 0e1ta. A second American aboard tbe .helicopter suffered minor wounds. He was 1 • Identified by the command as Lt. Col. Dani4'-Rickard of Williamsburg, Va., 1 senior U.S. adviser in An· Xuyen, 30Uthernrriost province in Vietnam. THE INCIDENT OCCVRJlED about 9:45 a.m. an Mur ani:l 45 minutes after the Vietllam c:eaae-fire formally wmt into eff~ the command reported. ' ' c CoDll)lunis1@ Jheovide List ~ . ~ - Of California Prisoners ADDITIONAL POW, MIA l ~TORIES ON PAGES 3, 4, 5 * * ·-* Observers Into Field By Tuesday? SAIGON (AP ) -The South Viet- namese govemmerit and its Communist opponents accused each other today of widespread violations of the cease-fire. Officials or the ney,. international peacekeeping force expressed hope of getting teams of observers into the field by Tuesday. (See related stories, Pages 4 and SI An American soldier d!ed t.pday of wound•' 111ffered Sonday, 1he firsl ·u.s. fattllty sinte Ule cease-Ort went Into ef· ';'.f1al.-1n ·t11o lalr uys prior to 'the lruoe,' f'"1F Amiri<• mllltory men were ldlled, and ·it U.S. ooldlen ODd 12 U.S. clvUiona wounded. R~k~-4m tlae Jf.ocks Tl-uck driver Greg Harris of Corona was headed to-· ward the bejl_ch this morning _with a load of rocks for a groin. ·mnstruc\j.on project when his truck tipped over on Pacific Coast Highway near the Arches Overpass in Newport Beach. Harris was not injured. He said one of the big rocks in the tratler shifted and the truck 'ff ell over." The rig and the rocks blocked northbound Janes of the highway fol· lowing the 11 a.m. accid~nt. Jye wport _Poised For Re~idential . Density Skirmish Newport Beach planners are hopeful tonight will be the beginning or their long-planned attack on skyrocketing residential density ,in the city. Councihnen and planning com- missioners will meet, in a special joint se~ at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall to weigh the merits ol a llalf-propooed five-proog· ed pion to cut bock nmowoy popula· tion and bulldine densities prediced for 1980. In addition ·to consideration of tbe density .control -plan, the gathered of· lldals 111'1! eJi!ected to oome to some kind of cooduskm aineemtng·areas of the ci- ty potentlall)' eJdaded from controls lm- pooed by Proposition IO. 11Je staff's lengthy zoning control plan -wblcll ll!'!J!1clud~JJXllPOSecl ope- year moratorium -would only cut populat!Gn projections by 12 ~cent. Advance P I a n n i n 8 Administrator Rodney Gunn said that despite the tough zoning controb he proposes., the city~s pof)Ulation will bit nearly 100,0llO by 19911. That figure ii still 11,000 less tban it woWd be under current zoning and the staff feels the controls will do much to relalD the desired almoSpbere in the city. ' Newport Praises Airport ' ' Efforts to Stifle .Noise By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of Hit tNIHr Pli.t Staff A new effort to muffle jet noise at Orange County Airport was praised today by Newport Beach oUJcials, but Airport· Director Robert Bresnahan says-he isn't Newport Transit Group to Meet · The Newport Beach Transportation Plan Citizens Advisory C.Om.mittee will continue discussions of the general p1an'1 trafllc.study-aWls.regulBNneetlllj.!)'ues... clay. The committee. which meets at 7:30 p.m. in the lif~guard headquarters on Newport Pier. upected to discus8 review procedures COYering deleted freeway routes. Ted McConville, Orange county road commilsioner, ls also scheduled to speak on his plans for county-wide coastal traf- fic plaMing. sure ·how long it can last. The experiment calls for flight& between 1. a.m, and 9 a.m. to take off to the north1 Instead of south over Newport Beach.• The' "preferential runway u.se" pro- gram, originally limited to rughtl betweeil 6 a.m. and I a.m., now lutl Wl- Ult a.m. The object of the reversed nmway ~ cedure ls ·to put the noisier takeoffs over the open JODd and·induslrlal areo nortll ol the alport and the quieter landings over realdentlal .,... In Newport Beach. B ..... be Aid lie ill certain ~ pion can't be "eltebded beyood 9 a.m. and be still iln't poo!Uve It wlll woot between I a.m. and t a.m. , 'W .... den't-r.alirtnow-wboHhe· ou~ come will bt unUI we finish all our studiel." Bresnahan said. Newport Beach Assistant City Manager .Pblllp Bettencourt said he. 11 ,,_''very •. aatilfied" with the flight pattern. 1'1 defmilely think th is is a good OW./' be uld. "This will at least ,apare oor pec>- ple that much noise in the early· houri because landings are much quieter than (See NOISE, P11< II The U.S. Command announced the withdrawal of another 400 troops today, the second contingent o1 400 men to leave sinCe the cease-fire agreement took e[- lect Sunday. 'lbe command sa id the m~ were 8own out ·or the country by commercial alrllners. This dropped U.S. troop strength in Vietnam to 22,700 men . The cease-fire a~ment requires them to leave the country by March. 21. The-South Vietnamese COIJYlland reported nearly 500 violations '3 the cease-fire by Commanlst forces aldat It went into effect at I a.m. Sunday (4: p.m. PST Saturday.) The Viet Cong in a broadcast accuaed the Saigon government of u~ v)olating the cea..e-flre agreement military actions. • .throul!;bout Bou Vietnam." It said lta forces "throulbout the entire area of South Vietnani hive coimp&etelJ carried out the cease-fire." From one end of the country to the other, reports flowed into Saigon of 1harp fighting. . In Quang Tri Province below the DemUitsrlud Zone, there were heavy artillery borrqes just u befora the truce. in mon)' other areas, small but bloody battles were fDlllbl for cootrol of . villages and blmleta before the In- ternational oble"er teams I.re deployed. Mllltary· oouree1 Olld • clocwneot cap- tured in the !&.... Dilta instructed Comnumlll ~ IO ..... lilldtng until the lntenio-_, _,, In place, (SeoCllADi ........ Z) U~S .. Planes Ge.t .: 11t~ds,.:·~~, About a. • s.cent chance ol lhowm ii Ibo !!llY the weather· lady -JI for -y. with con-tlnuod on'.clay. lllghs of 65 are ~ aklns tbe Orange Cooal -,-.!Pl lows In the 40o. Gil • Illa ploolies and rsJn. COil, . I '*'DE~D-'l' LI:-COLWllljam Nolde wos Ille fad A-to di• In Vit> M prlor to the cew,.f/Tr GQfYl'Mltd w Satttrda11. Hil widow ... ~~ not tritttr 1uld Chat M hlivc:d i11 the war - cmd tM IOSCll Vietname11 pfcr pie. ·SH ... on Pagt 4. DAILY PIWT AD' ' MAKES HAPPY DUO DAILY PILOT want eds just love to make people boppy. See bow they do. 1t65 RAMBLER Sedan, -• good lllO. Ull•IJD Thi• eel wortcad oo fut )bat the car sold in one ~ ond .-two lllOllie happy-both the """' and die .u.: Dial direct, ICNl'll, Olll lei.• 'DAILY p!LOT, clOllified want eel mile ,.. Ill!>' py, too. r ' ' ' ) . . -SAIGON (UPI) -'Ille-lint American pi.-IO llml ID -since 1154 bnMl&ht 90 Nortll -olflcen to Saigon _, -ml tile Qmm-pmnptly joiaecl Iba -dlrplte wltll Iha laatb Viltz FF' pamnid bepl -, 111 Ila VIII Olli· Al did tba Vlei °""' the Nlrlll Viet· M 5 _ .. 118 ............ llrlll- Tbe tw U.S,OAl--CUO"""""" bwporl plnl, 1illldl IPOfl( M boor OD tlil.pM'lll ~ -.. !Int ~ --.... --' . -. , • COllllDtl'dil airlme .......... llYlDtl lhel. •at the tnd ol the,.,...,.._...,. War , milltary .....,.. said. The milllorJ did not mention the abor- tlve !I'll -nld or ..row comp, ---.... ~~.urto. bovo ialldod ID Nor1b - 'Ille NorUi v-.......... In &Jjpl -11111""4" .... V)lt c.., -ml -to 111 olll tile lmmf- grtlloo iw.. --·· -"'""t rdjilfti ol --Uka the Viet Caal -.. tlJoJ conleodod they are vtema-dtbem, not -- t Tb. Viet 'conj(oliio.n eni!Oa 111ttr 11~ ID tbla --Iller mani than :ti houri •board' • tr~ .. wblcb they flew from llaDPI*. . ''Ille eod ........ k 08rliCtll hr<jgn 1Jillai*1;•"'1roef ,k ... -them to ~ to altend • tJne.bour clooed ....Ung of the U.S., llGuUI Vlttnam, North Vietnam, Vlei c..,. COllllll11AJon wtJJch will wort with 1..._ lr\lce lmpec. tors. 'Ille rnlnlstry made II cltor, • however, that reJene of the Dine would Diii ICt I • precedent lor others, resulting In the deeellocl< today. Flft .. n Amerlconl. ioeludlng a Marine ofllcer and Army lnltUigence offlctn, without name Ulbo on tlieir khaki l!l'f· lorm•,...,. Jn the oCficlal greeting party and 10 Othon -nearby. 1bty jolJed with the North Vietllamese and Viet C..,. while lmpoahe, stonelaced SOOth Viet· namete leCUl'lty men, all weartna llidl- arma, ltood nearby lgn<>rinf 1he Com- mun'i.t.. Neither the Americana nor &he Cornm1mJatt were anne<i. I • ....... ... " """ '--'-II -.. ....... " .. ·--. .. II Or-~ f u ............ . ': ::: ....... :n ... '~ " '' ,........ " Moll ...... .: ~ ~ , ......... ,,. 14 ...... • • I 2 DAILY PILOT N ' Airport Enhancement: Buying Ne~hy_ Homes? By L. PETER KIUEG 01 .. 0111Y f'll>lt Stitt TllERE'S A CURIOUS little itenl in Orange Counly Administrative Officer Bob Thomas' ~mmendatklns for spending county federal revenue sharing monies. He lists$\ million for ''airport enhancement." But Oranie County Nrport is supposed to be operated on an enterprise basis-meaning it's supposed to pay for itself. . Coonty Aviatioo Director Robert Bresnahan insists be asked for the mmey -to be spent for expsnsion or the tennina1 facilities. - COUPLED WITH Supervi!or Ronald Caspen' decleratlon that he'll have a major announcement about the airport 1n the next 30 to '-\ days, it has given rise to other speculaUOo. ., That speculation includes the pnu!bU!ty the money will be used to start buying up home. UDder the airport tllgbt path. 1be million dollars wouldn't go very far -It might buy half the hontes in Anniversary Estates off Irvine Ave. nue -but it would be a start in meeting a new state law that says airports must have zero impact by 1984. THAT ISSUE IS now under inteme study by BreSDa· •11110 ban's office and the airport director says he's go1na: to have a report to supervisors nett month on bow in the world they're going to obey the law. Initially, agencies controlling airports are supposed to file master plans with !he slate. telling.how they're going to aCcomplish it. Bresnahan concedes that buying up all the homes under the fllght pa.th is one way. Buying easements over the homes is another. TO AN EXTENT, so is the current experiment to tum around the flights, so they take off over empiy fields 10 the oorth and land coming in over Upper Newport Bay. Bob Thomas is certainly nobody's fool and a.s an old military man, be knows the distinct advantages of fighting your battles on a alng}e front. In other ~·ords, why try to put an airport uaywbere elle and lncur the wrath of new homeowners' groups and other city counclls1 NEWPORT BEACH and Tustin are the only roal vocal opponents to the present site of the airport and buying a few homes and some ea•ments over others would accomplish a number of things. It would eliminate the very real threat of losing aome '30 million to the homeowners who nave filed noise suits agaimt the county -and would 'buy a lot of time for the industry to work out ways t.o build qWet jets. That possibility is apparently so far off, still, that Bresnahan says be'a not - even including it as a ~·ay the county might get down to zero impact in the next decade. · THROUGH ALL THIS, the good office of Supervisor Caspers is r!maining mum. The Lido Isle politico refuses to di.sc:uM possibilities of buying homes. An aide curtly brushes it off by saying, "I've never beard of thal" But observers of the monW11<!1tal struqle by Newport Beach against the botber o! the airport are insming too many things point to oome Immediate action. THEY POOO TO repeated dissatis!acticll with alrporl st1111 .. : the ~ lusal of San Diego County to belp P'essl!" for ID airport 1t Camp Pendletoo: a call by Supervisor Ra1ph Clark for an mviromnental mq,.ct ?'!port on tbe "1tire airport and Caapen' P<!!tdlng prooouncement, and the one million dol- lars. An<I they say !IOlllelhing Io In fhe"wlnd. Residents along Anniversary Lone and Goldm Circle-Ille IDOi! nol!Je.Im- pacted area -say they haven't been approcbed. though, by anyone from the county. BUT THEY WOULDN'T necessarily be approched In advance .0 that may mean nothing. ' . Bul they'll be listening carefully when their supervisor opens his mouth on the subject of air. Fl'Otll Pqe I AIRPORT NOISE ... takeoffs.'' Captured Civilians Identified I WASHINGTON (IJ!'I) -lllft b e list .. 1em<1 by the 'Stal~! of IS caplw<d clvillans who ha" -lden-tllled by the Communist.I 11 alive, and JS who were said to have died after' ~ure In tfidochtna, ' The department Indiclled all ftre Cli>" tured in South Vietnam. Tbose listed u alive a1oQa 1'\th the date of capture \\.'tre all Amtrlc&M unless specified: tt~-~-.li .. I: ~·l!!!!'· .i:i,.~li.::.,. • ~ J. or;,;;:-l' ~~ -· cor: "......... l"tl Jr .. & P-. L l*. 'i '"'"""' ··--!. c . .......,, :. ~.~ . '0''1.'tto.. lte.1~ ~ ~~.!: :t-=1=· It, 'l'!mnM llllth~ & t; - 'JO. Moflllr.• kl'lwlnft. • lt# cw .. Gf!rM1ny), , ti. lllcNord Hembfe S~"L .. Jiii. 31 ..... tt. U.1,1rwnct J1mes Sl•rll. 17. J~'19.i;;;; tl. lllch•rd Wllll1m Uttcl'lt, & 4 l.a, RICMrd GllCN"ff WlldMu. .• 15, iilt . S. Alllll'I WM , .0. J-, Jt. = EdWltd wm'k: .... J-, ""' American civilianl wbo died after cap- ture In South Vlelllam, Inducllttc the place and date of capture and date of death , were listed as: l. G11:1l1~ Hlrtt, FtO. l, 1"5. lltR HM, Sftlt, U. ,,.,_ . 2. JOI~ G••"-"'• Aue. L """ Piii! YMo Mtrtl'I 11, !"5. >. Jolln S~ 1-tt!VY, s.t. IJ, I .... DK. J. , .... '· Dtnlll L• N"'-1, Moo.I, JI, ,..._ ~ KMnll, .A.Pl'ff lt. 1"l. l'l.J.1l:,":°" Emile Kll!I. F• L 1MI. elt'll Hoa. .._ ,,ti_~ F. BIOOd. Ftb. I,... Die:. Lie, Od. 11, 1. """ C*M. J ...... ,.. s.t. .. ,,.. Band Collecting $20,000 for Trip To San Francisco Newport lbrbor High SChool band members are in the midst of ral.!l.ng $20,tltlO they need to play during the . Chinefe New Year's celebratlon In San Fruci.sco Feb. 17. The Sailor band .... -to nwcll In the aDllUll patade lhrou&b Ollnltown by w.,... Hu, -of the festival Band Director Rlcbanl Enaland bu dubbed the trip "'1be Golden State -• Patriotic Pllpimagt." Bia mn•icilftl will leave Feb. U and two days liter will play a special -on the steps ol the CapltollnSacramento. From Sacramento, the -will travtl to San Fruci.sco lot the New Year's ewnts. Band members have sougbl ftnancial support from civic, llOCial and cultural groops in the city, but al!O have been conducting a -nwnber of fund.raising ef- forts on their own. Contributions to the band's tour can be made to the Sailor Band Tour Fund, which bas been registered as a California tax exempt corporation. Car Recovered Before Missed Ne.,pert-Mesa Surveri Parents Newport-)!.,. school o!pclals want to fmd out II they're doing their job of teachJnc 27,000 l)IJplls to read, writo and otherwise understand lhe world around Uttm. . Tbty~re uking p&Mnt.s ror the answers. School SUperlntolldent John ·Nicoll said detailed questionnaires wm be mailed oot lhla week. They 'll be asking parents of elementary school pupils things lilte: FrntP .. el BUDGET ••• . Conirtss, where every program has Ioyil sapporten, and met.. It cloubttul that Nixon CIO Mike his ceJllnp aUck. However, he plns extra leverage by lnsllting on. the four special revenue. sharing plans for education. law en- forcement, job training and community development. Mlyors, governors and local preasure groups who w8nt to SIVe a doomed day-care or health prcgram. for lnstlnce, might be> able to do so by ming revenue-sbartna: money; they are likely to apply heat-on Congress to provide such funds. .. The upturn in defense spending, to a total only hall a billion sollars smaller than than the 18U·billion peak of warfare and alom·bomb ouUays of lMS also Is likely to strike sparks. ' The total includes military foreign aid, atomic enerv and other lndlrtct defenae outlafa,.but the lbans !or the Penlqon aiont 1Ia up fU bWlon from this yur, to '11 blllloa. The Dt!enae Depirtmenl said, moreover, that it may have to ask O>ngress for more money to pay for mlnH!eartng, troop withdrawals, and other closing-out costa In Vletoam. other oourcos said privately that (unds for Vietnam's reconstruction also are likely to be asked later. But Secretary of the Trusury George Shults told newmen that U new COJIS are put Into the budget, "Something else will have u. come out. .. Tbe booming economy -!oT calendlr 11'13 metes poosible the curtail· ment of some work 1and weUare pr,.; grl!llS, the N-mesaege wf. Shultz said the aovernment erpeCts jobleteness to decllno· from the present u peroent rato to U pen:ent by the yeor end. in I !lltionwlde radio address from his Key Bllcayne, Fla., borne &mday, NlDlll made an appeal for aipport: "E•ery D*Dlllr ol the .~pts enonnoua presture from special lntere!ts to spend your mooey !or !!)!,ti they ~I. And so I ulc you to ilock!UP -cqn-gressmen and thole sena"l6n, .thether Democrats or Republicans, who have the courage to vote against higher speNJ!Dg. They hear from the special interests, let them hear from you," he aaid. to Give a Grade -'"Do -11>U feel enoucI> empbaals Is being placed 'oo th6 'lhtte RI' -the ha.sic subjects like reading, wrltln& and ari~_.,,-·---~--'Do you rma your conterences with your cblld'• teacher' J.ol:atmaUve? -"llt ...,.,a1, .. )'GU feel ,... child Is developln(""good bablta ol cllllenihlp, as a result of his lchool experiences? ' And to the parents of hlib school pu· pils, Nlooll Is putting que.stloos like: -"Dou you !eel 1Ulficlent empbasla ta placed oo mllb>lalnlng dloclplloe ·In the high schoola?· . -"Should Ille blgb ICbools place ..... emphasis OD' belptoa: 1tudents cope with rul•Ille sltU1tlonsl -"Do you !eel enough emphula b , placed on belplng atudeots undenland themselves and their lllture role ln IO- ciety!" Nicoll said the ICbool dlltrlct 11111 will pay close attentim co tbe reapooees. "We want to know whether our pro- grams are mee!:4. the needs of the community," he 0 We want to know whether what we ale dolng makes sense to parents and to students." Altbllitgh the Newport-Mesa distri<t is generatlY rated and regarded u one of the mo1l outstanding in the state of C8J,. ifomla, Niooll says that's not enough. ''There is a belief on my part that we need to maintain constant assessment of bow we'Te doing -and in the eyes of the people bow we're doing it," Nicoll said. "f think It Is neceuaiy to make every effort we cao to get the vleWI ol the people who 1ro Pl1lol llw 1111 tdlooll and wbooe l:llb are In tbem," be said. · The queAloolng in the """"Y rang<1 beyood nornlll lnqulrt .. 1bout Jollllny's progress and ~' however. Nicoll alto Wlllll to know such thiDp u whether the k>cal ne~rs a.re pro- viding, "adequate and poslUve" coverage or the school district. "I have no oomDlalnta." Nicoll Aid this morning , "afthough the DAILY PILOT's coverage does tend to be spo- radic. "I do undentand the problen11 of the publlaher and editor, though," he llid. "We're simply ope.ratina: on the thesis of other national surveys ihat lnd.icate in order of importance to parenta:, new. papers rant third or fourth -much more blgbly, by the way, than superin- tendents' bulletl.os," be said. Coastal Realtor Du'~ne Mnistron g Succumbs .at 59 Lifetime Orange • Countla!l Duane A. UPtt~ KhlfC-l.119 •i King Husaein of Jordan wilt' f · vl< the United States next" , month, acoordlng to an offldal ~ announcement. He Js to meet,. ' with President Nixon Feb. 6.- . . ..,. . Hem·y Barriat, School District Official, Dead Henry D. BarTial, 44. a longtime fl(· !lciaJ In the Newport-Mao U n i f i ecd School Dlllrlcl, dled &mday lfltr .. )'elf.'S illnals. I Mr. Ban'iat, 2212 Margaret Driv~. Newport Beach, came to the Harbor Area in 1980 and a year tater he was named principal of Klllybrooke School In Colla Mesa. He beld that post !or ti" yean. . A spokesman at the district olfices said litr. Barrlat had been working ln· tennittenUY as a substitute teacher !Or the past year and before that worked In the district's curriculum office between illness leaves. • Mr. Barria~ also served for one semester in 1971 as acting principal of Harper SChool in Costa Mesa while that tcbool's principal wu on leave. He is sumved by bis wife Margaret and daughter Stella, of the family home, and an uncle in Redondo Beach. ~-ac pending al Bell-Broadway ~ln<Coa~ • -" . • CEASE-FIRE I • • • Armstrong, a realtor formerly active In and lo continue where there are oo many north county civic groupt, died teams. Bl.cyclist Struck Saturday JI hi• CorOne del Mar home. Sotttlt Vietoamese officials reported He w,as SI.. that casualties on both sides since Ute l. Mr. Armstrong, 702 Jasmine St., was ceue--fire was announced five days ago In, d ,,__ approached the ·bloodlett weeks of list Y r ) ure born in the 91ty of vrange. year!• Communist offensive. J / ' He was a paat cha.innan of the Soutll Vietnamese air force planes Oew -l&-yeaMld San Juan Capistrano Fullerton Planning Commiulon, Pul bombing missions In support of govem- youth received minor Injuries when his Exalted Ruler ol the Fullerton Elks Club meat troops although the number ol bicycle colided with a car at the in· and a member of the Santa ADa-Tultin 90rties was omitted from the dally • Bettencourt sa id some people seeing jets landing over their homes for the first time were alarmed by the slow approach speed and low altitude of the plane. reversed lakeofis will be extended beyc;>nd 9 a.m. "The 10Utberly wind picks up after that time and, while It wouldn't affect the ·big je1s at all, it would be terrible ror the light planes and those are still our main tenectlon at MacArthur Blvd. and San Board or Realton1. communlque. U.S. airdaft suspend;d Mart S. Millard of Newport n---• was Joaquin Hills Road in Newport Beach Since his moveto the HarbOr Arel, Mr. operations over South Vietoam In ao-~ cnrdaace with the ceue-flro bul ®' awakened at 4:30 a.m. Sunday by Sunday at IO: 15 a.m. Armstrong bad been eclt•• 1'\th the UDued raids • - Both Bettenccurt and Bresnahan con· ceded that there is little chance the 4 Firemen Promoted In Newport Beach Four Newport Beach firemen have been promoted . Fire Chief Leo Love said Engineers O. L. Jones and R. M. Toggweller have taken over duties as captains in the department and Firemen A, J. Wagner, W. R. Neece and 0 . D. \Vilcoz: will fill ' vacant engineer's posts. OIAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT TM CW.1111 ONU OAIL Y PILOT, wtfll wt!lctl k c:omblntd the Ntwi.•PCf!lo\, 1. pUQll1hed by or..., Co.11 '"'*"llll"9 C0""1»ft"t. ~ nfe .i1tlonl 1te Pllblltl>t!d, Mond•'I' ftin:iuoft Frldn', for CCl\IA ,., .. , NewflOr'I Be•tll, H111t!lllllklll Be•U•/Foun!•ln \11lley, L•9un.1 8Ndl,. l,.,lne/S1Cldl.WCll. -Sin Ci.mente/ S.n Juen C.pbtr1,. A 1lno11 tl9•o~I •lltkln 11 pub[.,..,_ kt11rd1y1 •!'Cl Sw1cl8ys. Tl'I• prltic:l119I ll'fblltl'l"1g Pllnl Is I I lXI w~11 .. ., SlrMI, COlll Mtw, Ctltl0m11, m:». Ro,il1rt N, W11cl Prllldtnl 11111 PllOl!M'lft' J1cli R. C11rl1y Vkl Prlli...nl •nd CO-ti Mlneger Thom11 K11.,il Ee!Jllf nOMll A. M11Pphin1 ~lflt Ed!IW L P1ter 1Cri19 ...,.,. .._,. City Ecflllll' ........... Offlc.e lnl Newport loul1't1NI M1'""' ........ i P.O. l or 1175, 9l66J _o,,,_ Clllt .,_, • Wllr ary ,,,,., t..1111111 ~1 m Forttt ""'""' '"''"WIM ._,.1 )IWJ lucl'I ~ l.n c""""* • ~ El Ctrnlno llul , ....... ,,,., '42-4)21 c ....... .w .. u., ••2·1671 c.yrf91'11, ,,,., °""" C..11 ........ ,.,. ~ ................. lll111tni1i-. .. ,,.,. .. , = -~·tntt l'lllf9ifl MIY be 1--wl...W a11«111 per. ........ ot ......... r llmitll "'" ...... ...., ., Olilt• "'-· ~le. IJttatc'M ... 1 .. ~ 12.IS Melllft1,, ... IMlf &11 .......,, "'"""" .... II• ILM ......,.,, N ch Whisl Co deI u-Civt ... _...__i.....i--.a over-.-. ,, ewport Bea police who asked bim if The bicyclist, Steven D. er, 30626 rona --c ~~-.m ..u. 'lbere were conO.Jcting reports QDJt- his car had been stolen. Calle Cbueca, told police be w. as goina was a past president of. that group, -1.... Cambodl U S officials · con~," Bresnahan said. · -•--• • H l.s -·-• eel b hl ~• u---t ~·-1 · · • "'° He ~~ed his parking stall at the northbound on McArthur Blvd. and had e ~u.i .,,v Y s wue, _...,.. ... • Plmom Penh said an bombin£ 19! Bresnahan discounted any possibility of having light planes come in one direction and jets the other. Oakwood Apartmenls and told them, in-entered the intersection through the of the family borne. 8ervlcel and burial suspended there with the cea.flre, but deed, it had. amber llfhf. wW be held Tuelclay at I p.m. at Plcl!lc a w .. blngtoo report said they contlnUlfj!. "It just couldn't be done," be said. They told him it already had been Randal E. Schaffer of 2&90 San Joa· View. Pruident Lon Nol alao ordered -all recovered. quin Hills Road said tbe light turned cambodian ground forces not to engq:e "There are regulalions and It would also be a monumental air traffic control prob- lem." Costa Mesa police said they arrested green ror \vest bound trarflc before he ? in offensive military operations fromt 7 the suspeeted car thief, Harold Eugene startocl to enter the lntenection where Who Needs It. a.m. today, to enable North Vietnamese Bettencourt said the three.hour Golden, 23, of €ompton, shortly after 4 the collision took place. and Viet Cong forces "to leave our coun· a.m. as he was driving the car through Police 1aid Whisler was knocked from TORBAY, England (UPI) -ne town try ln the shortest possible time." . reversal seems like only a small con· cession to make to residents \Vho have been complainlng about the noise for years. the downtown section of the city. his bicycle but sustained only minor oouncll decided to cancel a 1'Jnmtage Thtre was no immediate indication Police said they stopped Golden abl'Bllon5 and said he would seek private lesson" course for engaged couples. Only whether the Communist& in Cambodia because he didn't seem to know how to medical treatment. one couple enrolled. were coopentlng in Lon Nol's cease-~. drive~ecar. l r::;:;:~:;;;;;;:;;:::;;;;::;;;:;~::;;:;;;:;:;::::::.;;:;;:;;;;;:;:~:;:~~~:;:~:;::;~ .. f. "But if you add it to the little things like the lO p.m. curfew OD jet ffigbls and the litUe thing lilte oolae 1batement pro- files, It amounts to 1 ,.al fOOd cbanje for the better," he aald. College Chief Quits FRESNO (AP) -Stuart M. White has announced-lib reslgnatioll as superin- tendent (If the state Center Community College District. White beld the position since the district was foi;med In 1964. Conspiracy Alleged SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tbe Army says a youth missing lhtte toe:! reportocl to an tnducOon center ioper1DD1ling a buddy to belp him -the drift. Richard Dean Perrier and ltooald Wayne Caulty,l>Olh 20, .,.,..-liillcted !or ,,.;;,. spiring to evade inductioo, a federal grand jury announced. Stop T ·hat Bank. Huntington Suspect Thwarted Stealing lllOllOJ -I bank II UkelJ to get JOU Into 1 lol ol trouble witlt lhe law. Stealing the banlc Is llUl'lllleed 1o gel you Into trouble, as Uunllngton Beach resident, Richan! Jolm Lee dlocovered SW>day. According to pollct, Lee, 31, ol MIO Durham Drive, was lr)'lnc to cirtve of! a motor home wblcb b ...., d porllble branch. of the Bink ol Amerlcl. Police said the van -parll6d ln 1 lot llW' the lnteniectlon ol Ellb Ave- nue and Beach Boulevll"ll. Leo lllepdiy brob Into tlte VID, removed fll5 and was tryin& to drive It away, but coUJdn~ get tt In gear. Police said be went JO a ~ cu ltltlon !or belp and found Cbril J •. Coussens who had a1opped at the doled llatioll In 1earch of gu. · Coussena told ~f!cerl he beclme lllSplcloul when he saw that the van hid been ransacked 1nd tlt1t It had the lllJJtff'tll the Sant ol America on the 1Ide. So he called pollca. • Lee Is In Cllllody tod•Y on 1 dt111• of bank burgllry . DetecUvee said 1..i.y !hit lht llatlon whe,. Lee wu amsted had been • broken Into SlturdAy. About f400 and ,..,. tools """' laltfn. They said llte1 m lnwldgllln( 1ho polllblllty that tliose tools were the .... used to bteal: Into the not-bank. I • LOW PRICES AR·E BORN HERE ••• RAISED IUEWHERE ' Adntlral. NO-DEFROSTING RPRIOllATOR/flD'IR • • ------<f::r-- ALL THOE QRIEA-T - • neat ~NATURES • run Wldltt 0 to=t:c1M" ,,_, Door ll'loU -tor '"'tont Ml1blllt1. • 01111 T1mper1ture Coftt'1)l•- 1111ct tlll """ tlm'* ltwt fOt llCll Hcflori. • lWln P'Mtleln CMl*'l-""91 fNlt, vttft.ltllll """" """· • tictr. ....,.. ~ Doer SNIYll-hof* Mn ttll quart ....... ...... '"1Jl4 No 41fr•tiftt rtfr;p.1+.t 1ecitM1 wffti An+lc Air flow ..,...._ fw hll ..,..1. Mc1l1tlM. II 1 ' , • , ' l • ' \ ' • Today's -.~1na 1 ~ N.Y. Steeks \ Ol, '6, NO. 29, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PA~ • ' ORANGE Ct>UNTY, CALIFORNIA ·MONDAY, JANU»RY 29, 1973 c TEN CENTS 'Mesa ·· Indian TSettlements ~ Unller l4 ' ' Park· Service BJ RUDI Nlll'llBIBI.{ ............... N•Two =II ·o1 'Colla -·· eorlleol --who lived olooa the ~ta Ana River ln the area ol the futunl F'alrvlew Park -'-have been plactd under the protection of the 'Na., -~ Park Sorvlce. ' ·.~~.:.. Kellh A. Dixon, profeuor of ID· ' r!'."""loi!Y at Cal Sl•le Lolli Beacb, Aid lqday that be has bee~ lllc<ellful Iii ad· ..lJlni the m:beot01k:1I lite to the Na· pia1 R<glitir ol Hiitoric Places. ' . '!be clil oite adjactnt to the Sonia Ana River bluffs IJ port of U7 acm ol 11111 surpllll property tbat will be ~ U I r.......,i part by .....,ly olflctall under a JO.year, l!.IS.mlllloe cootnct. Dimn has been the principal ICienUflc investigator at the F11irvlew lite and wrote ·tJi appUCattoo r.r lncluiloo In the regtller. 'lbe purpose of the "'1sler Is "to 1'COrd the evidence ol our national berltage ,aod to provide an .aulborlllllve guide by wblcb federal, state ilid local ~ .•. ' governments, 1 and private groups of cltlseu will tnow what sbould be pro- tected from destruction or Impairment." Dixon says the Fairview site is now the only hldian site in the coastal regton IOUlb of Sao Francisco Bay tbat II ..,. tered in the National Register. In all of Southern California" there are only two others that have been similarly recogIDud. Both of these are in Riverskle County." All ot the other 26 archeolotical sites in the regiiter are in the norlbern part· of.the stale. ,, an ·1e. - • • .. First Casualty . GI Killed Aher Cease-.fire SAIGON (AP) -A U.S. beUcopter pllo\; ~ wblJe Oyillg an aircraft reported· to bear maib Intended to Indicate ita neulrallty,.dled today. He waa the !Int Amerlca,n k!Ued in Vietnam 1lnee the .,.,...fire went into effect SUnday morning. , THE U.8. COMMAND ldenlifted the pilot u WO Aotllony Dal Pou.o, 22, of Santa Barbara. It said be wu woonded by small..,,.,. fire from !be ground wblle Dying a courier millloo lo miles soulbwest ·o1 can Tho, capital of the Meiloog Delta. A aecood American aboard the belicopte~ suffered -wounds. He WU identifjed by. the command as U. Col. Daolel lllcbrd ·ol Willlamsb"'1, Va., senlor U.S. adVber 1n An X11yen, eo.themmast ... o•iuce in Vielnam. THE INCIDENI' OCCtlllllEll about 9;45 a.m. an bour.aod t5 minut.I alter the Vietnam ceaae-fire formally went Into effect, the command reported. Communists Provide List ' . . ' . -, 0£ Calif ornia'.,Prisoners T • I • ::' WASWNGTQN (UPI) -FoUowlni Is a f¥t, of ·Califomla priaoAers of War pro- vided by the Communists. . Hometowns were determined from a variety of non-eovernmental IOUl'CeS. · Next of kin are given where ayallable. Where more than one address la listed l9r a POW, be is listed wider both. • •McDonald's ·Violation ADDITIONAL POW, MIA : STORIES ON PA~ES 3, 4, 5 . CostaMesan Faces: Count · , ' Of Murder By ARTllUI\ R. VINSEL or .. --..,......,. . Exhaustive examin.ation of evidence in- volved ln the shooting dUlh of an n-coo- vict in a rCosta Mesa alley four months ago has led to tsouance of, a complaint cllarging the !llSpecl wilb murder. Joseph W. BU!ialo, 30, of Z5I E.illler SL, bad nev<!r beep lormall~ chaJied but ii• bald ip prifion" at Qle federal Men's ~ .1Dat1¥1!n at 'l'trmioal !=;~=~...._. ol po•I....,, of -llJ me in eo111 aetm =::,-~;:! ~~ ln I BullaJo It eipeeled to be arraigned lattr this week · In Harbor Jucllcial Dlslrlct Court, but no opeciflc day has been set. ---fl'he. suspect is one· of the first under a statt Penal c.ode change whose case bas been ponding longer !ban the prtvlou1 n. hour 1D11imum time period in which authorities must file charges or free the individual . C!Mda Keoi'. poli<e tfl:opped !be. iniUal charges and turned Buffalo qyer to federal custody on !be parole Y™atioo while studying evidenc=e in the ~er case. ;, He.ls DOW formally accUsed ti killing Marlon ·D. ''Dick" Perry, 29, who was cut down ·by. rifle shots In !be lhroa~ chest aod abdomen as be fired back wilb bis own .SB call~ revolver. Jnvestlgaton say !be key question in t~ case is who fired first, assuming Buf- falo ls the ooe~wbo-blaated Perry with a 7.62 millimeter rifle dropped at !be scene. Nelgbbois who heard the shots are ex- pected to ·be questioned closely about wbat type of IOW1d report they beard fil'lt. Many shots were ftred in tbe deadly duel between Perry and his slayer. Investl&ators have hinted at drugs beln( involved in !be fatal gunll1bt, since (See MURDEll, Page I) $1,lQO·,in Gems Dixon, p1eased 'that '1be , site was recognized for Its lcienUfic value, believes this to be "an important step forward Jn the conservalioD of such scarce ·l'tSOUJ"Ce!... ~ He said most of the coastal sites in this area have been destroyed or badly damaged by relic collectors, COMtniction and other causea. Tbe Fairview site is siW fairly well preserved. • Study of the Fairview site, Dixon said, has disclosed Jt was the home of at least two different Indian cultures, the earliest dating back about 3,000 yean. - "R8diocarbon dates show that lhe earliest culture begao at least by 1500 B.C. and the later one about 500 A.O.," he explained. "Jn such periods, the In- dians e1.ploited the rich food resources, including fish, shellfish, small animals, birds, and wild plants." Arcbeologists hope to keep further scientific excavation to a mininlum in order to keep as much of the site lntact as possible. Dii:on last Year submitted a plmrto-the-cowlty and the City of-Costa· Mesa to accomplish that. He suggested that a portion of the area could become an outdoor museum to display some of the archeologlcal re· mains._ show how the local Indians Uved. and to illustrate the techniques of modem archeology. Placement of the Fairview site in the Register now makes it eligib_le for federal matching funds for re.search. preservation, and development for the publle-beftefit, according to Dixon . Observers ~ futo Field ,_ ,, , ' • ' ' \r\ ,. W'l \T_.. SOUTH v1~,:"SOLD1ER: CARRIED PIGGYBACK FROM 1AnLE Evon After Cease-fir• Sitnod,_Fightlng StUI Goot 'On Death .to Spe~dlng Nixon .Demands Rigid Ceiling on '7 4 Budget WASmNGTON (AP) -President Nix" oo clemaoded dealb for dozens ol federal apending procrams \oday, called oo eon. grea r.r a r1c1<1 197f budget ceiling ol .-.1 blllloe. aod caulion<d !bat grealer ..,...itac1 ""'"1cf mean "blgb taxes, blgl> er 1nlerett rates, l'!IJewed, inflatiOJI, or all three." (Related stories, Page 8.) 0 1 oppoee uiese alternatives; with a firm rein Oil speading, .-of lbem ~ neceaaary," Nixon said in Ills 119cai-1974 budpl-, 1t11t IOtbene,. ~ • aa the foremost of the three major an- nUal preeklenllal messages. 'lbe docu!l'cnt lived up to l(tvance bill· \ Jng as an a1 job on miny social, health, 'boustna, education' aild antipoverty ~ . ' gram1 of bla Democi'IUc: predeces1C1"1 - progrllllll NlxOll Aid failed alter a fair lrlaL ' Despite .... doineillc cutback> the budg· et called for 181.1 bllllon in military ou~ layg, !be """°"' blgest def-budge! in history even Wltb the peace agreement in Vielnam. It provided no funds for re- &nstrucUon of Soulb. Vle&nam. Nixon called his bo,.ftet a turning point · in national policy thouch still written in the familiar red ink -• w .a.bllllon def· (See BUDGET, Pqe I) By Tuesday? SAIGofi (AP) -The South Viet· namese government and its Communist opponents accused each other today of widespread violationS of the cease-fire. Officials of the nc!'A-international peacekeeping force ei:pressed hope of getting teams of observers into the field by Ttiesday. (See related stories, Pages 4 and 5) An American soldier died today of wounds suffered Sunday, the . first U.S. fatality sinCe the cease-fire went into ef- fect. In Ille loor d·ay1 prior to !be truce, lour -Aimerican military men were killed, and 19 U.S. soldiers and t2 U.S. civlllw -· The U.S. Command announced the withdrawal of another 400 troops today, the second contingent of 400 men to leave since the c,ease-fire agreement took ef· feet Sunday. The command said the men were flown out of the country by commercial airliners. This dropped U.S. troop strength. Jo Vietnam to 2%,700 men. The cease-fire agreement requires them to leave the country by March. 28. The South Vietnamese command reparted nearly 500 vk>latlona of the cease-fire by Communist forces since it went into effect at a a.m. Sunday (4 p.m. PST Satunlay.) The Viet Cong in a broadcast accused the Saigon government of "unceasingly violating the cease-fire agreement by military actions. • .throughout South Vietnam.'' It said its forces ''throughout lhe entire area of South VJetnam have completely carried out the cease-fire ... From one end of the country to the other, reports flowed into Saigon of 1barp lighting. In 'Quang Tri Province below the Demilitarized Zone, there were heavy artillery barrages just as before the truce. In many other areas, small but bloody battles were fought for control of villages and hamlets before the in- ternational observer teams are deployed. Military sources said a document cap- tured in the Meiloog Delta Instructed Communist troopa to keep llibling until the internatloeal leoml 'nn In place, (See CEASE-FIRE, Page I) ..... , . WeliOler !· SAN FllANClSCO CAP) -McDonald's 'hamburger chain committed a violation '-Y laili"i to post notices ·that employa cannot keep their Ups, Slate -.iq ol·, fleer Bryan Seale bu ruled. ·He pooqioned a llllCODd decision con- 'eemliig Ue detector tests aHeiledlY •perlormed by Mclloaald'•· ... ~ ~ U.S. P~a~es Pick Up Reds • Ill Hanoi About • ., percent chance or shower• Is the way the weather- lady Mel It lot 'l'llesday, wllb COil· tinued wetne11 au day. Highs ol !5 are ~ along the Orange Coast wllh overnight lows in the 409. Get out the galoshes and raifl-cpet. INSIDB TODAY Lt Col. W!Ufom Noldt """ tht last AtMrlcoa to die in Vit*- nam prl-Or to tht ceau·firt oOf'ftmtttt on Scturdo11-Hil widoto -.. IM'1 tiot bitter oftd thot IN Hlintd in r.ht wr - and tM 8oMtl\ Vittnamtsl PfOo pie. Set •torw on Page 4. J l.4.ILY PIWT A.D MAKES HAPPY DUO ·'· BJdOi;m..-.., ~......_ 1.50. DX·Dll This ad -oo !&II that Illa car 'iold in ... day ... --two _.. bappy-llotb .... ...,., ... Ille ...... L Dial dlroel, -. ... lei a DAILY PILOT clwlfled want ad -,.. lllpo py, too. -- ' ' Tbe Viet Coq olflcen endod lh<if ill' ln lblo an.,_ alter DlOft than . 12 -. ~a U-t oo wldch tbey ne.. lrom Bqkok. · ibe md came -!be Salp FaroCcn M1n!m7 -jl will aDow them IO def>lmo lo au.nd a tlve&bour cloled meotlngal tho U.S., SMb·Vlelnam, NortJ> Vletaam, ·Viet Cooc OCllUDlslkln wbicb '1"ill -k wttb lour·-· tnJco lllpeo- torl. ' j •• The minlltry made II clear, bowtver, lbat.nleoat ol Ille ...... ....w '*-Ill.a . i pretedent for otberf, ...Wtlni ln the deadlock today. . Fifteen Americanl, Including a Marine ollicer and Arm// lntelllgeoce olflctn, l"ithout name 1a&a on their khaki uof· lonm, wm ID Ille olflctal greeUn1 party and 10 otw. -nearby. They Joked with ..... Noru, -aod Vlei Co.,. wbDe lq r 111 ... -.tlced Soat.b Viet· ---IJ -·all wearlng ,11d6. &rml, -.....,. 'IcriorlnB !be Com- munlala. Neither the Ainerlcanl nor !be Conulwilllta -armed. ' ~.... 11 AM LMIWI " -~ j .,,,... ...... -~ Ol' .... awtr c.ia 11 ti''* r... C........ If 1"rtl .-_ ....... , ----• .... • T*""""· .--i1 a · " ~ ..... tt-11 ....... ...... ~ 1 ,,_... ._ ...._.. " .. .,.. ..... ' . \ ' • DAILY PILOT c Monday, J.,,.,,.ry l t , 1171 . - I Airport Enhancement: B uying Nearby. Ho mes? By .L Pl!.'TER KRIEG ot .. o.llr ,.... .,.., THERE'S A CURIOUS U!Ue ilem In Orange Coonly AdinlnJstrative Olll<er .Bob Thomas' recommendations for speodiJlg county federal revenue sbarJna monies. He lists $1 million for "airport enhancement." But Orange County Airport Is supposed to be operaled on ao enl<rpriao b&s!s -meaning it's supposed to pay for itttlf. Coonty Avl>tloo ntr.dor Robert f!resnahon lnsi&t.s be uUd fir the moooy -<o be spent !or eq>anslon of the termlnal_lacillties. COUPLED 'tl'ITll Supervbor Ronald Cuper" decluaU<n that be'll have • maJ« ......... ment about the airport In the -JO to ts days, It has given rise to other ~tlOn. That speculation includes the pnstlbillty the money will be used to start buying up homes under the alrprt rupt palh. '!be mUllon dollan wouldn't go V«Y far -ft milbt buy half the homes in Anniversazy Est.ates ott Jr\l'lne Av~ nue -but it would be a start in meeting a new statA!l law that says airport.a must have zero impact by 1984. THAT ISSUE IS now under inlense study by Bmna- Kai1e ban's office and the airport direct.or says he'a aohw .to !lave 1 report to supervisors -IDGl!th .., bow In the world they're 80lnl to obey the i.w. . Initlally, agencies controlling airporil are supposed to me muter plans • with the stale, lelilng bow they're gain( to ~p&h ll Bresnahan concedes that buying up all the bom<s Wider the 11ight path Is one way. Buying easemeot.s over the homes is another. TO AN EXTENT, so is the current experiment to turn around the fiight.s, so they take oU over empty fields to the north and land coming in over Upper Newport Bay. Bob 'lbomas is certainly nobody's fool and as on old mWt.vy man, be knows the distinct advantages of fighting your battles <11 a aiocle front. In olber words, why try to put an airport ~ .... and lDcur the wrath of new homeowners' groups and other city coune1ll;tJ1 NEWPORT BEACH ond Tustin are the ooly ru1 \'OCll -II to lhe present site of. the airport and buying a few homes and eome 111ements Oft? others "rould accomplish a number of things. Jt would eliminale the very real threat of looiDi oome $IO m1IUoo to lhe homeowners who have filed noise lults agalnat the county -Ind WOll!d 00, a lot or Ume !or the Industry to work out ways to build quiet jell. ,.._.,,...1 'BUDGET ••• lclt tllll yw d ~ 112.7~ ddldt In lloeol ltlt. .... ....._ polntod to . llJ -........ ond lormlno-. Will IU .... •vlllp In this lllclll .,.. ... llild 1111 Ii+",: I 1. ""' ............ .... flllll M al• do. llllDlled b1 Ille -· ...iontl' of the Amelleon (llOJlle, No lqer wlJI - flow lnewUly to, w ............. • ~-!If Qwn IM"'dJn adv-bl'Nhm __ ,...., ...... poc.l tm: 0.0.,. .... billloa, 'r.==i~ llullQr -7 lllllloo, rocelptt ... blJllon. . NlxGa lmlted ID iuliiiillled liO't'"' ltruala_ db the J)emz<fet! I et11ttolled. ~ 1111 elJ "'l .... but .. ·--eld--Re ...... the ....... cl( " fedehl..old '_..... into four btold "'lpedll IGU I Ii i'llrinc .....,.. .. far the -... dtlll, with iooo federol -.a. And lie~ Fltod bio coll for I ... pa-IWJll>- lzotlon which c.rci-'Ill -for .... ,..,.. "A ~ overllllll of the llderol bur.aucraey II loll& O\'el'Clue, and I om determined to aocompliab it;" the Presi-dent uld. . N-proposed oo new ~ pro-grorilo. Vel·the ltll buqet 11111 bring an SJLtlllllloa -.. .. _..over the yoar !bot ..... JUDI It, .....,. bocouse of mltttary ,., and .... tnerJu11 and what Nixon Ciilled 'imcooll<>llobl lloms" -Including I $1.1 billlan -In h> teresl cosu on the climbing federal debt. The 11.5 bUUoo In cutha<ks and withholding of funds alrtady ap. propriated throws 1 cllallenge to Cion&ress. where every program ha1 loyal supportm, and makes It doUbtlul that N-can mote his celllnp llllct. However, be pins eztro leverqe by !mjotq on the four specill -. llllrtnc plans for ednc.lloo, low ... .._t, Job trlinln& and communlly dneklp1cnL Mayon, govunon and 1oc:a1 _.,.. groupr who wont to iove 1 doclDed day...,. or health pn>grom, for '-· ml&ht be able to do so bl' Uling rev-, money; they .,.. likely ~beat oa Congress to provide such That possibility Is apparenUy oo far oil, still, that Br<snabln 11y1 be'• not even includi!!g it as a way the county mlgbt get down to zero impact In the next decade. 111ROUGH ALL THIS, the good office of SUpervieor Caapen .. ,.. ... lninl mum. 'Ille Lido Isle politico refuses to -poeslbllltieo or bu.Ytal boma. An aide curtly lrushee tt oil< by saying, "I've nenr bwd ill tbol" But observen or the .... umentlll struggle by Newpcrt Beocb ap1mt tho botber or the airport are ln•l"'ing too muy lhlnp point to -immedlote action. The upturn In defense spending, to a total only boll I bllllnn IOilon IDWJer . £· than the 181.-peak of arlde ond otom-bomb out1111 or IMS, . I> Uilel1 to strike ....,b. THEY POINT TO ,.,,eeled dllaatisfactlm wilh airplrt ltudiel; the re- fusal or San Diego County to help l>""SUlO for ao oirJ1ori 11 Comp Pmdloton: a call by Supervisor Ralph Cart fer an m•b"a111ientaJ Imped report on the entire airport and Caapen' pending prommcemenl, ond the cme m1IUoo do~ larr. Tbe toll! lnchodel milllory farelin aid, otomlc energy and -IDdinct defeme outlay1, but the lhlre for the P«dqon ; ...... up $U blllloo from this year, to $11 'btlllan, The -Department said, moreot'•, that it may hive to Ilk ~· for more money to pay for -... troop wtthdmflls, Ind other clooln(-<Ut -In Vlotnom. Other -•Jlid privotoly that 'flmdl for Vietnam'• recoostructlon also ore likely to be -loler. !!!II s...etuY o! qie 'l'IHIW')' Georp fbtlll ioJd ·-n that If 111W COits ore put Into the budle~ 11Somethlna elle will 6ave t<. come Out ... And they say somethlni ii In lhe wind. Residents oJonc Annlvenary Lane and Golden Clrde-!he IDOlt, noi.im. pacWI area -say they haven't been appn>cbed, thoqb, 111 oJzy<llie from the oowrty. Bur THEY WOULDN'T nece>iarily be l pprocbed Jn 111Y....e .. 1ihll moy mean nothlng. But they'll be listening carefully when their llllpa'Vilcr openo hit moulh on the subject of air. 'Ille booming _,..,,, fomeen !or caleadar 11173 makes pnstlble the curtail· ment of some work Ind wtlfare .... grom1, the N-m .... ge said. Shults aald the 110Vemment·expecll· Jobleo- to deelJne from the present U , percent rale to U percent by the fW' erid. Newport Praises Airport Efforts to Stifle Noise ............ 1 CEASE-FIRE • By Wll.LIAM SCHREIBER Of .. 06!" ~lllt lllfl A new effort to mufne jd noise at Orange County Airport was praised today by Newport Beach officials, but Airport DI.rector Robert Bresnahan says be isn't sure how long It can last. The experiment calls for fights between 8 a.m . and 9 a.m. to take off to the nonh, ln1tead of IOUth over Newport Beach. The "preferential runway u1e" pro- gram, originally limited to nights between e a.m. and 8 a.m., now la1ts un- til 9 a.m. The object of the reverted runway pro- OUNN COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM °""'9 Cleft DAl~LOT, ~ ~ ts ~-the N-.............. 111 "'-ar..,.. C""st Publlshlflt c:.n-y. S..., "" -'ltllM .,. """'""*'· ,....., .... ,rtAy, 1'11' C.lt MeM, N........ h9ctl. H.,...tlngten 1'9dl/,_...111 V111ty, ~ S.dl, ll"l'IMl"Sadltlmdl: .,,,, S911 C""""tll S9n JlolM ~.... A 1lng.. nitleNI ' 911111Dn It .1 ..... ....,. .... 1ur1c1..,... Tht Pl'1"c1--I ~ """ Is It 2lO Wtst l1y Strttt, c.t1 #MM, CtllfotTl'9, f»2'. llo\1rt N, Woff l'r•ldmt Ind l''*lllMf J11li: ll. Curl1y Vko ........... lfld Gll!ll"lll MIMfw' TlloM11 K•e•ll ••tttr 1\111111 A. M111phl111 Mtlllllllf htlw di•rl .. H. l101 1 llich1"4 r, Heh Jl.UfllMll M11111lllg 1!111"" e.... .... '""'- • ,. W11t l1y Str11t Mdhtt AM,.•11 r.o. "• 11.0. tz•2• °""'*-....,...,. lelldll ml Ntwwt """"'"' U... ... I m "-l'A..,..._ ........... , IMClll 1"11 '""" ~ .... Qlf-1 al lfftfll II Clllftlrlt AMI Tiii ;' 7 11141 64Z-4U1 Cl,.....1111 A•sat1., Mt.a•n cedure i. to put the nollier 1Ueoff1 ovu tile open land and industrial area north of the aiport and the quieter laoclinca over residential areu in Newport Beach. Bremahan uid be 11 certain the plan can't be extended beyond 9 a.m. and he still isn't pQsltive it will work between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. "We don't really know what the out- come will be until we fintah all our studies," Brunaban Uid. Newport"Beoch Aalltant City M1n.1ger Philip Bettencourt said he Is "very satisfied" with the fight pattern. "I definitely lhlnk this i. 1 good lhinl," he said. "Tbll wW 11 Jeut apare.gur peo- ple that much noile In lhe oar!Y boun because landinp are much quieter than takeoffs." Betltnoourt uld some people oeeln1 jets landlnc over their homel for the !Int time ,..,.. lllanned by the tlow opproach •peed and low lllUtude or the plane. Both Bettencourt and -con-ceded that there I! llltle chance tbe novened takeolf1 will bo lllODded beyond t 1.m. •• and to coatlnue where tbere ire no teams. South Vietnamese officials report.ed that c.ssua!Ues on botb tides since the ctne-fire was announced five days ago approached the bloodiest weeka or lait year 's Communist oHen!lve. South Vietnamese aif force planes new bombing mllllcm In oupporl of govtrll· ment troops lllthouih the nwnber or sorties was omitted from the daily war communique. U.S. aircraft IUJP'llded openUona over SOUth Vleb:Wn ln ac- cordance with the ceue-ON but con- tinued raids over Laos. There were con.D.i.cting reports con- cerning Cambodia. U.S. offlcials in Phnom Penh said all bombln( was sulfl"nded !hero with the ...,..fire, but a W113hlngton report said they continued. President Loo Nol also ordered -all CM!bodlan ffTI>UDd lorcet not to encoge In o!f•Fllive military operotloos from 7 a.m. tOOly, to enablo Norlh Vlelnlmae and Viet Cong forces "to ltlvt our cilun- lry In the shortest poulble time.'' Th<re wu ,_no br•uedl•te lrtdlcallon whether the "°"""1lltll In combodla wero -•tlni In Lon Nol'1 .....in. Stop That Bank Hunti1igion Suspect Tliwarte d Sloallng money from' 1 bank II Ukely to 1et )'Oii into a lot of trouble wllh the low. Steallng the bani: lo guaranteed to get )'00 Into trouble, u Huntinstoo Beach resident, Richard John Lee diacovertd Sunday . According to ~. Lee, 2S, of MIO Durham ,Drive, wu lryinl to drive "' 1 motor homo whiCb 11 -u portable bnncb of tho 8mk of America. Police aald the'VID waa porbd In 1 lot ...,. tbe lnlenoctton of Ellil Avtr nue and Beach Boulevord. IAo ollepdly broU Into lhe YID, ........i fll5 and was lrYinl to dr1ve tt owoy, but couldn1 get tt In geor . Pollci aid he -t to 1 morb)' f111 1tetloe for belp Ind found Qirlt J. Cooiuent who had ltoppad at lhe doled ttaUon In .. ,rd! of 111. CouloeDI told orr1cer1 he beclme llUIPldoat when he aaw that Ibo vao bod been rwacked and lhat It bod the."'"" ol the Bonk ol Am<ricl OD lhe aide. So he called pollce. Leo i. In cuttody lndoy OD 1 char,. ot baol: burglary. . DetectlYes said todly that ihe station whtNt Leo Wll l1'Ntted bod been hrolcen luto S.buday. About flOll Ind...,. loOlo -·taken. 1lle7 aid Ibey are lnvtoilaatlna the poaalbWl)I that thole !Ooit were Cbe .... med to break Into the not*mo6ile --• .. • Neeopert-Jfesa Survev ' . Parents to 'Give Schools a Grade .' Nawl>Ofl·Mesa school o!Ociols want to Niooll S.ld the lchoot district stall find .Ut II they're doing their J~b..:l will pay c1 .... 1tlel\!!Oll to U,. i:esponaes. teachlnt· 27.-000-puplls· to---reed...wr -'We want to mf,w whether our pro--~i!e understand tbe Y.'orkl around grams •re meeting the needs ol the 'lbey'ro Bli<lna parenls for the onswerr. commttDUy," be llld_, "'Iii wont to know SCllOol SuportJ\lelldellt J'olil "N1Coil iala· whether wbal we '"I dolrls mates oemo detailed quostioanalret will be nWled to parents Ind to students." out this week. Alihou h M · 'llley'll be asking pmnts of elemenlary g the Newport· esa dJJtrlct I• ac:hool pupils things Ute: gene.rally rated and re11rded as one of -"Do yoo feel enough emphasil Is tbe moot oubtendlnf la .the stetll of Cll- belnf placed on the 'three Rs' -the llornl1, Nicoll aoy1 that'1 1111 enough. basic IUbjects like reading, writing and "There lo I belief Oil ID)t Ft that arithmetic? we need to maintain ocmtant 111eament .-"Do yoo find your conferences with of bow we're dolntr -and In the.,.. or your child'• teacher Informative! the people how we'"' dolnr It," Nicoll -"In generol, do )'00 feel your c:hlld said. • . Is develoPlna &ood habits of cltl-lp "I thlnlt It ii necessory to mote every as a result ol his acbool experiences!" effort we can to 1et the views of the And to the parents of hlih school pu-people who .,.. payln( for the ocboob pllJ, Nlooll II puttinfl questloos like: and whose kids are In them," he aid. -"Dou Y<MJ feel aulllcltnt emphasis ii '!be quettlonlng in lhe turWY nnceo placed on rnointelnfn_J discipline In the beyond normal .lnqulrle• ohoul Johnny's high schools? progress and problems, however. -"Should the high schools place more · Nicoll al.ik> wants to know such things · ernJ)ha&il on belpjng students cope with as whether the k>cal newspapers are pr. raJ.life 1ltuatJoUt Yidinl "adeauate met poslUve" coverage -"Do yoo •lee! enough emphaols Is or ibi ,ochoof dlstrlol. placed on lrolotng sludents undenWld "I bave no COllullaints," Nicoll said themselves ua their future role ID .. tbil morning. I "afthoueb the DAILY clelf?" PILOT'• cov.,... does lend to·be ...,. ndlc. . TONIGIIT UC! LECTURE -"Finlnclng Rai-tial Income Property," part of aeries on Residential Income Property . . . 161 Humanities Hall, 7-9:30 p.m. Admission 11. EXHIBITS -"Phetographs of a New Guinea People" OCC !Jhrary, through Feb. 18. Photo I Graphics Exhibit and Leslie Krims e:zhi.bit, OCC Art Gallery, through Feb. 15. TUESDAY, JAN. 3t BASKETBALL -UC! vs. Cal Poly l'<lnona, crawtord Hall 8 p.m. UC! LECTURES -"Dellgn or Pro~ ect." part of oerlea on frolelllonal Practie<s In Housing Industry, 1'18 HumlniUet Hall, 7-1:1> p.m. Admlsston 18. "E%perlmtnts in Male-Femat Rein· tlooohips," part of series oo Morality: Twilight Zo!le or the Low. Science Lec- lure Hall, 7 10 P-11\-AdmUoton Jt.(!IJ. "Epidemiology." 'p«l1 ol~es oD Vodr Heart Ind Circulatory System, Soph, Lecture Hall, Medical Sw:ae I jllldgo 7iD p.m. Admla!lon '5, 11Ida: Pnbllml of Natunil Integratioo," part of series on '!be Challenge ol Racial and Ethnic Dif- ferences around the World, Social SCience Hall, 8 p.m. Valentine Dance Set fo r Retarded A Volentine'• d1111<e for the mentally relarded Ind pby1lcolly bondlcapiied youth of the Harbor Area will be bolted Feb. t by the Coste Mesa Department of Lellure Services. '!be dance will be held between 7 p.m. and t p.m. ln the Community Recreatkm Center on the Orange County Fairgrounds. There will be no admlulon charge. Music will be provided by A the "Travelin' Band,'' a group of young musicians from lbe. Coata Mesa and Fountain Valley area. Groupa lnlerellled In parllclpaUng In tbe dance should cootact Debby Lamb, 834-5391 or 834-5300 between 8 a.m. and I p.m. weekdays. "I do understoDd the problems or the publisher and editor, though," he laid. "We're slmply operating on the the!ls of other naUonal surveys that indicate in order of lm.portance to pareuta, news- papen rank third or fourth -much more hlohly, by the wey, than superln-tenden~buuetlm, .. be said. Burger Bandits . Flee With $400, Employe's Car A pair of gunmen held up 1 McDonald's hamburger. ltend In Coste Meoo late SUnday and eJCBped with more than $400 in cash after commandeering the car of an employe. COJta Meu police officers recovered the auto about m bour f1ter the 11 p.m. heist, but the two robben, both In their mi<kwenUes, were ioug 10ne with the loot. The men entered the hamburger· em- 'Porlum at Sill Harbor Blvd. shortly bef11re closlna and ~ aome food. Thea one of the bandlls whipped out 1 smoll pllllol and dtmonded tho day's receipts. • The band.its ransacked the safe and look a t.a1 conlaintbg shoo: $180. Th<!y then ttnlOV!d an unknown quanUly or cash from the register. 1be total take is believed to be In excess of $400. After ordering all four employes to "get down on your bellle.a" the gunmen sped off In the otolen oar, police said. Investigators .said both men were dressed ID areen coal> and that OllO of them had t!lo Iron! teelh ml .. 1711. Costa Mesa Girl Injured by Car A f.yeJIMld Coste Meaa Kiri wu In- jured Sunday When the wu filt by 1 ct In U!e -t In front of ber bouoe. Police laid Colleen Mun>bY or 184 Costa Mesa SL received' 'numerous scrapes on her forebud. lilJI, arm.a and legs and that her fl'ont teeth we,.. ln>'oclled looee. She wu treated· ot Hoat Memorllll Hospital following the . { p.m. acoldentl but wu not hoop!tell2ed. Inve1t gators 111d the acddent oc- curred on O:llt• Mesa Street near Santa Ana Avenue. 1be automobile wu driven by ·Ray Phllllps Ill, •• of JM Cecil Place. Phillipa WU not died. · .. ·"' ";"' -. Ul'IT ......... 11 I King Hussein of Jordan will visit the Unlt4U States . next -month, acconling to an ofllcilll announcement_ He is to meet With President Nixon . Feb. 6. Henry B ~1Ti~~· School District ,· f p. Official, Dead HeN')' D. Barriat, 44, a longtime of- ficial bl the Newport-Mesa U n I f i e d Scboo1 Di.strict, died Sunday aft er a year'a .ll.lnel!I~ Mr. Barria~ Z:ltl Margll<t Drive, Newport Beach, came lo the Harbor Area in 1960 and a year later he was named principal of KlllytrOOke Scbonl in ccista Mesa. He held that post for len yean, A 1pokeoman at the district ofllcea said Mr. BBJTl>t had been wort<ing In· tennittently as a substitute teacher for the past year and berore that worked in µ.. diatrict's curriculum office between lllneao leaRes. ~tr. Barrtat . also served for one semester 1n 1971 as acting principal of Harper School·ln Costa Mesa while that school's priDCipal.waa on leave. He II llll'Vtv,d by hll wife Margaret and daughte Slella, of the family borne, and an uncle In Redondo Beach. Services are pending at BeU·Broadway Mortuary in ,Costa Mesa. . ' . l'l'OlllP.qe J ~ MURDER.: .• ' ' both Buffalo and Perry were hemin ad- dicts with prior o£fenses on their records. Bail for Buffalo bas been set at t100,ooo. evm though he lJ held , as .a federil parole violator and oou1d not be released. • Colla Meaa police searching for wit.....,, 0r nelghbon who bean! the 1hote amtted Bullolo and bit wife Sher- ri oo that fatal night, claiming they found marljuano In their 1partment. , · Buffalo w:u: atlll in jail on !hit cbarae about two days later wbeo evidence link- ing him to the rtne used In the murder led to his being re-booked oa the murder charge. Conspiracy Alleged SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Army says a youtb -minJnt three toes reportetl to an Induction center inperaonaUng 'a buddy to help him eocape the clrafl. Richard Dean Perrier and Ronold Wayne Caslily, both 20, were lrtdlcted !or con- spiring to evade ~ucUon, a feder.l.t lrond jury IUlllOUllCed. ,r LOW PRICES AR·E. BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE ~ Adn1l,-al. NO-DEFROSTING REPlllOERATOR/l'ltllDR ..... NT 1JJ4 N• lf•fto1tln9 rtfri .. r1t0t" MCti•I\• with Arctic Air fie# 1yttM f., full cycle clNul1tl•llt SLIMLINE flEFRl6EllATllt • to DAY • " ' "' .I• ;/ " "' 11 ~. • ; - ' I ·1 I ; I