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1974-01-15 - Orange Coast Pilot
' ' 1 • I ltx•associat-'2 ·indicted • • • • (;onvieted Trustee , Apologizes~ Q11its .Saddlehaek Post ,• Spa Jury to View I' Sanna Vietim Under Truth Dru,g ·DAILY PILOT rown, * * * 10 ' * * '* . """'. . . . . . . -. ' . , YOL. '7, JllO. 1S, J S£CTIQfllS, J6 PAO•S Mrs.Popeil ToRetrreve ' :fl:pl~ Royce • • ~ B1 JOANNE REYNOLDS , Of "'-Diiiy 'Hit Sia" .. Eloise Popell,' who' is facing a court ~ on police charg~ that she con· IPlred to have her millionaire husband mun!e,recl, today is expected io get back the ROUs Rcyce police confiscated dur· .iili her arrest in Newport 'Beach a week ~ today at her Newport Beach al"'~""' -Mrs: Popell said she had no ~t to make on any aspect or Uje JIOl~oe accusations that she and her )lpyfrieDdi Dariiel' j\jerS, · 37, of Santa ·~ hired a Long Beaeh man to murder liiamuel J. Popeil ci Chicago. ~Police claim the plot fell through when .1sae hit man called the Chicago kitchen .fjidget millionaire and told blm of. his ,.uanged wile's plan. , vAcoOrding to police, Mrs. Popell, 48, -and Ayers allegedly wanted Popeil murdered before . a pending divorce became: final so that she cou!d inherit approximately on~third ci bts· estate, tistimated to be worth up to"$200 million .. ·-·Mrs. Popeil, who wsa freed on $100,000 blii raised by neighbors on Linda Isle Bbd1 Harbor Islaiitf ROad i! sebedWed .... ~;;wear in municipal Court in Long , , 1 'Monday in the preliminary 1 aring.in the ~. Siie and Ayers both pleaded lnooc.nt · lr>-'ihe oaosplracy· .to ccmmit murder ·~~es:lt their arraingrnerita last week. 0.\Yera l lii ·still In cuatody, •JIPU'!'llUY .,fi>al>le' ·1o ratse the $100,000 ball set . ·Jr.Judge Charles Litwin. • 1)e Popeils, · who summered in their ,,Jl;:ia Isle home, separated this summer , , . I (See PLO'.t Page l) ~ ' · ~enafu Seat ' . , B<ir Request,ed : WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. ,car! T. Curti1. ,(R;Neh>); · asJ\ed . • Democratic IMder Mike Mansfield lodv to bor Howard Met>enbaum 'lrom taking ts Senate aeat, pending : 'an Inve.tJiaUon into the Ohio \ : lDdustrialllt's tax retwns. 1 " Metr.en}>alnn, appointed to fill the • unexpired tenn of William B. • ~ who _was named attorney _pneral, aettled a tax claim f~r ,\ 1118,tOI 'two days before his ~ appointment to the Senate. ' -M-um toolt the-oath Jan. ) . bu~ fOnnal sweartns·ln it not ' • ICheduled 111UI Congress reccn-- wnea Mooday. : . • Qne ol Kind Robert Stanley, 45, Martinez, ·-Oalif., has disease new to an- nals of medicine, according to a team of researchers. His body c a n t a i n s mysterious r c.qemical which will not allow _.wounds to heal properly. Cuts heal very slowly and 1without strength and his scars readily ~·p.-.u.llpa'rt. .. ' Brannon-Resigns Saddleback Post After Conviction BY. JAN WORTH Of 1t11 ~lflt Steff With a public apology and a testimony to "the crutch of prayer," Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana resigned his post Monday night. Brannon, 43, a charter · member and former president of the board, pleaded guilty to bookmaking charges in Orange County Superior Court last month. · 'IJe ·said M will ··remain in orfice. until a successor is elected ln the June primary. "I want to publicly apologize to my family for the embarrassment 'and shame 1 have caused them for the actiOna I may have dQne in the past," Brannon said. • "The past year and a half h8.ve been very difficult, and without the IOve and arfecti0J1 they've shown for me I doubt that I ccuid have survived," he added. -'!11e Santa Ana trustee· said he plans' to "dedicate the rest Of my life to repaying my family for their love." And he addod in making his decision I (See RESIGNS, !'Ice l) . -, .. President's • Brother Don Infuriated By L. PETER KRIEG Of 1tM D.iiny l"l/ot Staff President Nixon's brother F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach today was furious over alegations carried in a United Press International story Monday that he profited from the fraudulent sale of stock to billionaire Howard Hughes. Nixon said his only tie to Hughes was through fonner good friend John Meier, a former Newport Beach resident and former . mining consultant for Hughes. Meler was indicted Monday in Las Vegas on charges of income tax evasion and fraud against the federal government. Nixon for some time has been predicting the indictment and contended that Meier brought in the Nixon name in hopes things would go easy for him. "Mr. Meier is in very deep trouble," · Nixon said. .. But beyond that, r lbave no comment, other than to say those investigators are going to have some red face3 too," he said. Ij1 Its story Monday, UPI said the Senate W a t e r g a t e Committee is Investigating the possibliy that Donald Nixon received 0 substantial sums" of money from former Hughes aides for his beJp in mining claim ventures. The story linked Donald Nixon to Meier because of a trip the two made to the Dominican Republic in 1969. . Ni1on claims the trip was purely ; pleasure. He said he went to see Meier receive that counlry's C h r i s to p h e r 1 Columbus award. 1 UPI said the trip . may be tied to allegations by Meier that Donald Nixon !!CJUght peraonal financial gains by offering to use his kinship with the (See QON NIXON, Page I) . ~ - THIS P A.RROT'S A. STOOL PIGEON COLOGNE, Germany (UPI) -"He is here! He is here!" the parrot croaked in "the kitchen when police, acting on a Up, broke into the home of a fugitive · from a priaoo. Police said they found the Jailbreaker in the !!'ling room hiding behind the curtains. •./ ' ' • ~ana ., _.,. The Showdown Joli1i Wayne Off to Harvard LOS ANGELES (UPI I Newport Beach resident John Wayne saddled up I' a jetliner Monday and headed east for a showdown at Generation Gap. WAYNE IS NOT a man tq ignore a challenge to have it out, man to man, and that's what he received from the university's satire magazine, the Har- vard Lampoon. The editors wrote him challenging him to show just bow tough be is, asking if be is willing to face up to "a gang that would rather quote you Marx or Mao · Tse-tung than spit in your eye" and face demon tr a· tors and counter-demonstrators. . "I don't know a damned thing about it except they challenged me to come," growled Wayne, boarding a plane for the East. "I figure the Harvard boys and I are at opposite ends of the spectrum. They suggested.I didn't have the courage to go." TIIE HARV ARD EDITORS have promised to welcome Wayne with a mili- tary convoy, a mock cowboys-and-Indians shootout, a "stampede of some kind of mammal," and a question and answer session .after the showing of his latest.movie, "MCQ." "It bas the makings of a real ugly incident," Lampoon President Jim Downey said in apparent delight. The Duke was unfazed as he strode out for the showdown. 111 hear the last guest they had at one of these things was Linda Lovelace " he said in his parting shot. "I guess she met the challenge." ' Marla Parson JudgeOKs,Truth.Serum Movie in Sauna Trinl By TOM BARLEY Of ... o.lty ''"' '''" When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the wltnes.g stand today in the Orange CountY Superior Court sauna bath . trial the ,jury will view a movie made while she was under the influence of a so-called "truth serum." Judge William Murray made the ruling that enables at~rney Marvin Lewis Sr. to screen two . video tape films in the courtroom. The decision came arter a four-bQur out~f<aurt eession Monday in the offioes of Dr. Deane A. 'Benton, the Santa Ana psychiatrist. "I'll let 'em in," Judge Murray said after a bitter argument between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Donald A. Ruston on the admissibility of the · two films. . One of the movies run b.)I Dr. Benton fn the privacy or his office depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, 50, when she b not under the influence of oodium amyto!. The s«ond movie, shot by the psychiatrist J.,t Dec, 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redhead· responding to hiJ questioning in the slow, slurred manner lnd11ced by bis injection of the tranquilizer. The screening was carefully kept from the jury until today. Lewis believes the movies will considerably enba.nce his· hopes for a favorable verdict in the $1 million lawsuit (See SAUNA, Page I) , Hockey Player Records Loss Los Angeles Sharks profession a I hockey player Steve Sutherland should have left a goalie to teQd his front door during a weekend road trip. A burglar pried the door in bis absence from the apartment at 7302 W. Ocean Front, tn Newport Beach and a neighbor. discovered it standing open, Sutherland told police ·Mimday. . He said lie checked his belonlini!i and found the intruder had taken $500 worth of../ valuabi,., Including · h I s television set and asaorted stereo equipment. ' Leaves Road ·carrying Workers BLYTllE (AP) -Nineteen farm laborers drowned and 25 to 30 others were injured today when a bus taking them to work plunged into 10 feet of v.'ater in a drainage canal, the highway patrol said. The bus failed to make a curve at a rural intersection seven m i 1 e s southwest of this southeast.em California desert.town, the patrol said. 4 The fully loaded vehicle went over a 20.foot embankment and landed on its side in the water . The people were stacked up like dc.minoes against each other toward the front of the bus," said highway patrolman Robin Howard. "The driver was jammed into the steering wheel with all the others behind him." None of the victims was immediately identified. The patrol said most were Mexican nationals being brought from the border city of Mexicali to work in the fields. The injured, some in serious condition, were taken to Palos Verdes HoSpital (See 19 KIILED, Page l) Oraage ;(out Weather It'll be bright ·and sunny again Wedn~sday, according to the weather service, with slightly cool· er temperatures along the Orange Coast. Highs of 64 at the beache3 )rising to the low 70s inland. [.(lws tonight 3S to 50. INSIDE TODAY Colonel Sandef's and hi! wife, Claudia. are suing Heublein Inc., the succes&or fried chicken fi·rm' for'misusing ·the Colonel's name, image and likniess in . promoting some products. See story Page 12. L M. llrcl 11 Mll'lll• It (Ill,.,,. • -·-" Cl1ulli.I ..... ... ~ ..... • ClllllU 11 °""' (OUlll\I • cm'""' 11 ,,,..... hrtff 11 DMlll Nltl<H • . ..... 1•1t ••1i.1111 , ... • ·--tt-11 1"'*'1'6Rlltlflt " T-' 11 ,IJllllCI 11·1t -" hr .. ltlCoN I -• Ny 0'"9W " ....... , ..... , ... ,. --" --• "'"' Ll114'1n II l t"U.VI c Monday, JJnuary 14, l1J74 • ' HEADS HARBOR COURT J udge Donald Dungan Don Dun gan Presidi ng Judge for '74 Judge Donald Dungan has been elected Presiding judge o[ Lhe Harbor Judicial District Court. Judge D.mgan, 57, succeeds Judge Selim S. "Bud" Franklin as administra- tive head of the !ow-division muni~pal court. Judge Dungan was appointed to the bench in 1966 by Gov. Edmund G. Brown. He had already served Costa Mesa In capacities which won him honors. J_udge Dungan was a member of the city's incorporation commltlee In 1953 and was immediately named city attorney when cityhood was approved by voters. He served for 12 years and tor 11 years wu a member of the old Newport Harbor Union lllS)l School District Board of TruJlees. Judge Dungan'• colleagues for the current ye.ar and tbelr assignments include: -Judge Robert C. Todd, Division Two, where mos! crlrnlna1 cases are handled after being assigned from Judge l).ulgan'a Di vision One. -Judge Selim Franklin, Division Three, which bandlles small claims and other ciyil matters. -Judge Calvin P. Schmidt, bivlsion Four, wh~ traffic citaUons are handled. From Page 1 ROUTE ... new freeways is contemplated. The policy was formed to create the longest us8.ble portions of freeways and not to start new projects for which there may be insufficient funds. The De'J>arlment of Transportation forecast a $111 miTlion shortage in its budget for the fiscal year ending June 30. The total budget is $980 million. Blamed for the short fall are the new 55.mile-per·hour speed limit, h i g h e r prices for gasoli ne and the reduced availability o( fu el. If the Corona de! Mar Freeway is not built -as local officials are beginning to fear-Costa ~1esa will lose nearly $500,000 in investments m a d e contingent on the freeway! Pinkley pre- dicted. This includes money spent on the Bear Street interchange and on the plaMing of downtown redevelopment for Costa Mesa. Hammett believes that failure to construct the Corona de! Mar Freeway will spell the doom for continuation of the Newport F r e e w a y and tbe redevelopment plan, ~·hich is contingent on the Newport Freeway. I DAILY PILOT Th• 0••• Cotti o.~1(L'I' ,.LOT, wlfll ..tlktl !1 combl!lld Iii. w.w\.Prft1, ii Pl/bl!"* W "'' Or•nge CIMltl Plllbtltl\IJ'lll '°"'""'" ...,. ,.,. ldlllDnl ••• pUllllfllm, Mol!d1y llll'OUlll l'rl(lfy, ror (nttt MtH, Ntwpot1 8.-dl, Hun!!nttorl 8tKlll l"Olll!!llll VtllfV, L .. - 8MCfl, lrvlnt /s.ddltbldt Md ~" C""'*'lt/ ltti Jutn Ctp!11!'11111. A 1"'9lt .... loMI tdltioll It Plll!lli!IMll $11111~'1'1 Ind Sur'l41p, TN JM»MIPll 11'1lltlltlllrlt ""' 11 ti lJO Wnl ••r sir .. r, Cell• Mtw, i=.11iom11, m». Rob1rt N. W1tcl P'r•lllMI •1111 P'llOll""' J•dt It C11rl ty \'kt ll'rt1i.t..lt 91'4 Gme<11.~ Tho,..11 IC11vil lidltor Tiio11111 A. Mwr,trii111 111'.-.lftt t!.dltor Ch•rl11 H. Looi l ie.httd r. N1!1 A11hlt nl M-.lllf t!.4lltw1 ----JJO W111 lty Sh11t M1ilil1' Alllil•e11i'P.O. 1111 11•0. •2626 ..... _ Htwl!MI •Md'I; UlJ ... .....,.. SWi.v.l'f l.afUM htc~I nt l"-1 A- Mvftllfttlln l..U.1 HUS IMdl '°"'~ "" c1e'"""i.: »t foltt1ll 1.1 Ct""'"' a11i , .. .,.._ (71 41 MJ-4SJ1 Cl WW 4"9111illt 642-1671 """""~'· 1tn. °''"" Cliett ~11t111r1o1 ~. ,.. -"'""· ll11i11lr1!ltrlt, .. ntrlM -""' .,, .... "-" Nrtll! """" ........ llC*I ........,. tll'ICiill ..,.. mi..IM If (W'!'rlll\I ..... . ..... 0.. ........... " , ... , --. ~·It ........ _.,. ltAi ........ , lly -11 U.1t ""'*"""' !NI""" .......... ""' ,...,,... .--• S--auna Door Admittedly Defective By TOM BARLEY Of "" DlllY f'llet llaff Jo•ormer 1-lollday ffealth Spa mansger Charles A. Cassaua today admitted that lhe sliding glass door of the sauna room in which Marla Parson was trapped three years ago was defective before the incident. Cassazz.a, called to the witness stand before Mrs. Parson, 50, had completed her testimony in the Orange County Superior Court sauna bath trial, allo admitt.d that be found the 200-pound door of! its tracks Oli.r the hysterical woman had been rushed lo a local hospital. Cassazza attributed the slrength he hac. acquired as a physical fitnes.s expert "''ith the Orange health spa to hls being able to replace the heavy door without assistance. r-.trs. Parson wants $1 million in damages from the spa for the alleged neglect that led to her entrapment and for the creation of a "three faces of Eve" psychiatric condition on which she y,·ill resume tesllmony when Cassazza leaves the witness stand. It is alleged that the trauma created by her entrapment led her. to develop separate personaJIUes. She has stated that ooe of those penooallties, Marta, frequmUy become dominant and seeu mra marital ...uai relatiomhlps throtJih men picked up in local ban. ca ... ,.. today lldmitled that both patrons and employes had complained about the · sticking sauna room door before Mrs. Parson was trapped on March 2, 1970. ' The fdnner manager said the only attempt to repair the door prior to Mrs. Parson being trapped was made by two male instructors at the health spa. He also confirmed Mn. Parson's testimony that the handle of the door broke off io her hand as she tried lo force the heavy door open. Mrs. Panon testified that a h e collapsed in the 170-<legree heat after she wu unable lo open the door and the handle snapped off in her hand, She and other ·patrons have testified that health spa employes were never within shouting diltance on 1 u c h occasions and that many complaints had been filed in the months prior lo her ordeal Parents' Group Seeking Recall Of HB Trustees The flnt official step has been taken in a recall campaign against two HW1tington Beach Union High School District trustees stemming from the "Deep Throat" sex movie controv-.rsy. Trustees Dennis i1angers and Ron Shenkman now have Wllil Friday to .answer .charges made agaimt them in the notices of intent to circulate recall petitions filed with the Orange County registrar of voters. Members of the Cittzens for Par:ents' Rights Committee, led by Doris Allen of Westminster, filed the notice! Friday. The trustees have one week to rebut -after which time the actual recall notices can be filed. Although there have been threats of a recall campaign for months, this is the first such acUon. Mrs. Allen said today the citizens group plans to start circulating petitions tc. get the necessary 23,000 signatures to set a recall election soon after the trustees answer the allegaUOM. Tbe 23,000 figure represents 20 percent of the regi!:tered voters. Mn. Allen said the group intends to try to get at least 30,000 signatures in case some are thrown out during validation. 'Darn"! Peopki. • ~ ,_; ~~t Nixe~ Neighbors ~aJBe -~ _Kissingel'.'.~ Mr s. P opeil B'ail COSTA M E ·~ANl~~ ANN 1 N 0 Troop Plan By JOANNE Rt.'YNOLDS ot "'-0&11'1' l'lltl Sl•tf Eloise Popeil, the woman police accuse of a plot to murdt.. her multi·mllllonalre husband, returned to her Harbor !!land Road bome this weekend, thanks lo efforts ol four ol her neighbors . According to Mrs. Pope.ll's attorney, Phllllp Petty, Mrs. Popeil's neighbors pledged more than IT million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde's $100,000 bail. Reached today at her bome, Mrs. Popeil said she was very gratolul for her neighbors' geiierooily which led lo her release Saturday morning from Los Angeles County Jail. "I am very gratified," she said. "They are darling people and. H is particularly reassuring when you realize I haven't lived here too Jong." Petty said the pledges came primarily from residents of Linda Isle where Mrs. Popeil and her estranged husband, Samuel. owned a summer home. Mrs. Popeil, 48, spent four days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion of hiring a Long Beach man to kill Popeil, a Chicago kitchen gadget manufacturer. The boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana, remains in custody today, unable to raise the $100,000 ball set Friday in a hearing in Long Beach. Police nllege the pair conspired lo kill Popeil so that she could Inherit roughly one-third of his $150 million estate before their pending divorce became final. According to investigators, the couple separated this summer and Popeil returned to Chicago to start divorce proceedings while Mrs. Popeil and their two teenage daughters stayed on in Newport !leach. The · three women vacated the Linda Isle home while it was being remodeled and neighbors said work en the house located at the northwest poi:1t of the island, stopped when court action on the divorce started. Since then, Mn. Popeil and her daughter! have lived in rented homes in Irvine Terrace and oo Harbor Island Road. Petty nlleged today that PopeU was $14,250 h<hind .in his temporary nllmony and dtlld support payments of $4,250 a mooth. In Cllicago, Popeil went lo court Fri· day in a stormy session to ask for custody of the two ttirls and an end to financial support for his wile. 'Ibat hearing was continued to this Friday. According lo the Assoclatod Preu, Popell's lawyer, Samuel A. Rinella, · called the estranged wife an adulteress · and a "willful, vicious woman." ln opposing the motion to terminate the separate maintenance payments, Mrs. Popeil's lawyer, Charles Stein, charged that Popeil "has attempt.<! lo use every technique to starve his wife and children into submisskm in this case," according to the AP story. lie said tha t if the moifthly payments were cut off r.1rs. Popeil would be without funds to defend herself in litigation. AP reported that in commenting t; newsmen after the hearing, Popeil said, "rt1y wife bas two sides to her-a good side and a rough side." One of Popeil daughters related last week that the three women all had been foreed to take jobs in an apparent effort to support themselves in the bayfront house and maintain the three expensive European cars they used. One of those cars, a Rolls Royce, was impounded by police as evidence in the case. Long Beadl detectives who arrested. Mrs. Popeil and Ayers allege that they gave $400 cash and $60,000 w o r t h of diamond jewelry to an acquaintance of Ayers lo <ill Popeil A LI TTLE HELP FROM FRIENDS Mrs. Eloise Popeil ~~~ ~~~~ Newport Seeking Airp~rt Gro11p Budget Increase By L. PETER KREIG Of 1111 D•ll'I' PllOI Sti ff Newport Beach stepped up its legal battle against Orange County Airport today by serving Orange C o u n t Y Supervisors with a writ of mandamw in an attempt to force them to beef up the budget of the Airport Land Use Commission. I 1 . City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said the writ was served in the county clerk's office and he will file it in Orange Q>unty Superior Court Tuesday or Wednesday asking for a show cause hearing. O'Neil said Newport Beach was taking the action "on behalf of Mayor Donald A. Mcinnes, who is chairman o! the land use panel created in 1971. O'Neil recited repeated frustrations that Mclnnis has compWned about during the past 18 months .. He potnted out that Newport Beach succeeded in getting state legislation passed that forced the county supervisors to fwxf the panel, but so far it has been getting only $500 a year. "They asked for $62,000,'' O'Neil said. "The mayor feels this is an affront to the commission. It is still required to do all the land use planning yet it doesn't have enough money to pay its postage," O'Neil said. He said the show cau.se hearing hopefully will force the supervisors to · reconsider the panel's current budget. "We are asking for a public hearing to reconsider the b4<1get and a statement of reasons and finaings for the current $500 appropriation," O'Neil said. ·He pointed out that the commission is suppos::id. to be preparing a comprehensive land use plan for the airport. COMMISSION -Regular meeting; City Hall, 8:30 p.m. OCC ART EXHIBIT -Mixed media exhibit of OCC Art Instructors, Jan. 11 -F•b. a. Opening night reception tonight, 8:30-9 p.m. UC! LECTURE -"Mobile Hom• Parks: Past, Present and Future," Rm. 178 Humanities Hall, HO p.m. Adm, $6.50 nJESDAY, JAN. II DANISH GYMNASl'S -OCC Gym, 12 noon, Adm. $1. SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com- munity Recreation Center, 11 a.m .• 3 p.m. 1 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting, City C o u n c 11 Chambers, 7:30 p.m. UC! LECTURES -"Happiness in Creative Awareness." Rm. 51 0 University High School, 4771 Campus Dr., Irvine, 7-10 p.1n . "Professional Practices in Housing . Industry ," Rn1. 161 Humanltles llall . 7·9 :30 p .. m . "Scientific Medicine for the Layman : Cance r," Freshman Lecture Hall, Med. Surge I Bldg., 7-10 p.m. From Pllfle 1 AGNEW ... ,,.,, Willlam It McCWJoug!i lllld Agnew's conduct was 'harmful to the proper admlnlstraUoo of jusUce. "In our opinion, the p r op e r admlnlstral!on of Justice, the proper respect of the court for Itself and a proper regard for the integrity of the profession compel ll! to conclude that the respondent is unfit to continue as a member of the bar of this state," the recommendation said. The three judges said t h e I r recommendation was based solely on Agnew's no-contu l plea to the tax charge. They said they did not take into consideration any of the allegatiool · made by the Justice Department in Agnew's U.S. District Court appearance Oct. 10. In a to-page statement of evidence, federal prooeculon alleged that Agnew was involved in a system ol klckhacu lo Maryland politicians from ardl!lecU and engineers doing noo-IJld government business. Although Agnew has not practiced law In Maryland since being elected lo public office, It ls the only aiai. where he was a member of the bar. He appealed to the judgm at the hearing last month not to deprive hlm of hi! means of ' earning a living by recommending dis barment. No Jjnks Found Yet in Slayings FRESNO (AP) -Sher!U's officers said tOOay they hive not eistablisbed any oonnection between the slayings of two men wtx>se bodies were found less than four miles apart south of here. The body of David William Frances, 21, a Lemoore Naval Air Station airman from Detroit , Mich., was found along California 41 Saturday. The oorooer's office said a blow to the head had broken Frances' neck. Sheri(f's Capt. William Saum said Frances had been dumped from a moving car. By United Press lntem1Uoa1l Egypl today rejected the troop! disengagement plan worked out by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Egyptian ForeJgn ~1lnister Jsmall Fahrni sakl In Aswan. He said Egypt was demanding that it be redrafted Into an "Egyptian plan." The "Israeli plan Dr. Kissinger brousht with him was "not satisfactory," Fahml told a news conference near the eod of a day of negotiations involving Kissinger and Egyptian leaden including , President Anwar Sadat. Fabml said Klsalnger was returning lo !Mae! tonight "with an Egypttan plan and an Egyptian map ., n · disengagement with Israel" along the Suez canal. Kissinger told newsmen earlier after a \\'orklng luncheon with Fahrni that his attempt to conclude an Israeli· Egyptian agreement "Is 1thc toughMt negotiat ion I've ever been In." Despite Kissinger's statement, American sources said a major announcement could be expected Tuesday. Ki.s!lnger had Oown to Aswan with y;·hat basically was a plaO worked out by Israel calling for Israeli withdrawal to about 20 miles from the canal and a thinning out of Egyptian armed forces in the Sinai Desert 'on the Israel side of the canal. Work had gone so far on the plan llu:. both Kissinger and Fahml l&ld experts were using maps to pinpoint the exact withdrawal plans. An American , spokesman said an interim announcement was expected late today with the major &Mouncement Tuesday. The Egyptian demand for a revision of Kissin ger's proposa l forced Kissinger to delay his scheduled retum to larMI for more than four hours. American officials said he expected to leave this afternoon to place the revised project before the Israelis. In an indication of what caused the Egyptian objectiora to Kissinger 's plan, Fahrni said any d l se.ngagement agreement "should be s u f f i c i e n t 1 y det:alled that there can be no hangups, "Everything must be in ( 1 e a r c u t language so that there will/ be nothing again like Point B (of the ceue-fire COMO!idation agreement Egypt and l!rael signed Nov. 11)," Fahlni said. Point B of the November agreement called on Egyptian and Israeli military representatives to negotiate a return lo lines held when the first U.N.-ordered cease-fire went Into e.ffect Oct. 21 Cable TV Pomo Filmer Arrested PITrSBURGH (UPI) -Glen Kucera, 21, of suburban North Versailles township was held for c o u r t on a charge of showing obscene fl.lms on a cable teievisfon hookup. Kucera allegedly showed the stag movies early Dec. 26. Several penons complained and Kucera was arrested. ·He was later fired from his job with Valley cable Television. Defense attorney Daniel Berger argued at a hearing before mD.gistrate George BObich that police confiscated the films without a warrant and obtained a confession before Kucera wa1 advised of hls rights. Berger also claimed hil client was drunk and the films were seen ooly by adults. N body Sells Amana for less than 1'ultta,.f> Where do YQU want the freezer in your new 14m11n11. refrigerator ... County Superior Court Clerk to Run for Sheriff By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of "" DlltY """ ,, ... Orange County Superior Court Clerk ~!arshall Nomi, soundly deleatod the last time he ran for sheriff, said today he will lry again this year on a platfonn of sweeping organizational changes in the department. Norris, 47, ol Buena Park, announced his candidacy at a press conference tn Santa Ana. He is the second announced candidate lo succeed retiring Sheriff James Musick. Also seeking the job is Bradley Gates, a young department lleutenanL Another posslbl• candidate for the job -Cypress Police Chief 0 e o r g • Savord-ls waiting In the wings 6ut hasn't formally announced. Norri_• said Savord would be the hardest man lo beat. Nonia was beaten In June of 1970 by then-incumbent Musick by a total of nearly 150,000 votes. , This. lime he aaJd be la """*11 on a ~.-point platlonnlailllng for a major , •• overhaul in the county jail, a program of coo r dinated city county Jaw enforcement and reorganization of the sheriff's department. But the former sheriffs lieutenant said bis major plank will be an attack on the dependence of county peace officers oo federal funds--a practice be · said results in poor administration. "There is oomethlng baalcaJ4' wn111g with accepting federal funds and 1 am opposed to linking the f e d or a I government to local sheriff's offices because they must then do the government's bidding," Norris sald. He said a lot of the mon•r now being uaed lo subsldl%e 1 h e r ff ' a d"P."1"1enl programs Is going lo wut• an~ most needed expendltu.-.. could be absorbed by what .he termed "proper admlnl.stratlon." Norrta claimed the office of sheriff LI now virtually unreapoll!lve lo the public. H• said It has "be<n _.Ive only to a ltlect few.I! Norrli l&ld he will avoid talttng contributions from whit be called "big mooey" contr!butan becl111e be said be Is "frankly very scared of thtm. 11 .__ l on the side? on the bottoli'i? on the Jm>.1 1,f,,,11na gives you a choice 90 DAYS CASH· WIT14 APPROVllD . CREDIT 1115 NEWPORT Bl VD., • Dawlltrin Costa Mesa -1'1111111 541-7781 l I ' . ,, " • l ... I ' . . • ' ltx•associat~ Indicted - • Convieted Trustee Spa Jury to V~ew ,. Apologizes~-Quits Sauna Vietim • Saddlehaek Post Under Truth Dru·g . DAILY PILOT rown, * * * 10 ' * * '* • • , •• • ' I . • ' VOL. •1, MO. 111 l .SECTIDH5; M PA•l!S Mrs. P <!Peil 'To Retrieve ' ' . ! BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .... PliltJ ,.... .,, .. " .• Eloise Fopeil,' who' is facing a court · ieaJing on police charges that she con-4 Jplred to have her millionaire husband 111uroered, today is expected io get back the ROils Royce police confiscated dur· iJlll her amst in Newport Beach a week ~~ today at her Newport Beach pe, Mn.-PopeU said she had no ·~t to make on any aspect of ·• pol~ accusations that she and her: ~iid; llmiiel Aye..S, -37, of Santa ·AD• hired a Lonf' Beach man to murder ~uel J_ Pope! ci Chicago. (,!'"lite clafm the plot fell through when ~ Jilt -man called the Chicago kitchen -flldget millionaire and told Jlim of. his Of!ranged wife's plan. , .,Acairding lo polie<, Mn. Popell, 48, ..and Ayera alleged1y wanted Popeil murdered before a pending divorce becAme final so that she could inherit a.l'l""'lil'!"tely on~third , ci bis· estate, eotimated to be worth u~ lo $200 ll!illion. ---Mn_ Popeil, who wsa freed on $100,000 lilil raised by neighbors on Unda Isle Dhd• Harbor Island ROad, I! schedultd.- "i;appear in municipal court in tong Monday 'In the prellminary : " aring In the CU'!· Sbe and Aye" both pleaded lnnocont .~-'the-ccospiracf· ,tQ commit murder ·~.at tbelr arraingments last week. ' .~era; la «111 In -Cllltody, apparenlly ,p!lal>le 'to raise the 1100,000 bail-set -.l!f_}udge Char\es Litwin. • 'l)e Popeils, who summered In their ~ Isle home, separated this summer ' (See PLOT, Page Z) •: · Senate Seat ' I ~ -,JBq,r Request;ed l WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Sen. ,Carl T. Gurti• .(R,Neb>); · asl\ed , Democrt,tlc !eider Mike Mansfield todaY to her ~ward Met>enbaum I lrOtll lakinl Is• -... ,, peadlng , ; an lnvatlpUon Into the Ohio .. industrlallst's tas returns. ,, Me!Jeliballln, appointed to fill the • unexpired tenn of William B. v ~ who w~ ~ attorney g;aeral, settled a taX cl•im for , 1111,1112 tiro days before his 1ppolntment to the Senate. Mehenbaum took the oath Jan. I· ~ fonnal swearing-In Is not ICbeduled unW C.Ognss ......,. -Monday. ' One of Kind Robert Stanley, 45, Martinez, . .Calli., has disease new to an- nals of medicine, according to a . team of researchers. His body c o n t a i n s mysterious 1 c.~emical which will not allow • , wounds to heal properly, Cuts heal very slowly and without strength and his scars readily .~pull apart. '"' · -. Brannon.Resigns Saddlehack Post After Conviction B~ JAN WORTH Of ... O.llW' ''"" ,, ... With a public apology and a testimony to-"the crutch of prayer," Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana resigned his post Monday night. Brannon, 43, a charter member and former president of the board, pleaded guilty lo bookmaking charges in Orange County SUperior Court last month. 'IJe:Sllid he;,,will •remaln,Jn o!fico. llltil a successor ls elected in the June primary. "I want to publicly apologize to my famlly for the embarrassment 'and Shame I have caused · them for the actioOa I may have done in the pasf,'' Brannon said. • 1'The past year and a hall have been very difficult. and wi!.hout the love 8.nd affectiQn they've shown for me 1 doubt that t could have survived," he added. The Santa Ana trustee said he plan• to '1dedfcate the rest of my lite to repaying my family for their Jove." And he added in making his decision ' (See llESIG!"S, Plge ZI • - President's Brother Don lp_furiated By L PETER KRIEG Of 11141 Dany P'l/9t Staff President Nixon's brother F. DonaJd Nixon of Newport Beach today was furious over alegations carri_ed in a United Press International story Monday that he profited from the fraudulent sale of stock to billionaire Howard Hughes. Nixon said his only tie to Hughes was through former good friend John Meier, a former Newport Beach resident and former . mining consultant for Hughes. Meler was indicted Monday in Las Vegas on charges of income tax evasion and fraud against the federal goverrunenl Nixon for some time has been predicting the indictment and contended that ~feier brought in the Nixon name in hopes things would go easy for him. _11Mr. Meier is in very deep lrouble," N'IXOR said. "But beyond that, I have no comment, other than to say those investigators are going to have some red faces too," he said. In Its story Mnnday, UPI said the Senate W a t e r g a t e Committee is investigating-the possibliy that Donald Nixon received "substantial sums" of money from fonner Hughes aides for his help in mining claim ventures. The story linked Donald Nixon to Meier because of a trip the two made to the Dominican Republic in 1969. Nixon claims the trip was purely pleasure. He said he went to see Meier receive that country's C b r i s to p h e r Columbus award. UPI said the irip _may he tied to allegations by Meier that Donald Nixon sought penonal financial gains by offering lo use his kinship with the (~ DON NIXON, Page I) THIS PARROT'S A STOO L PIGEON COLOGNE. Germany (UPI) -"He is here! He is here!" the parrot croaked In the kitchen when police, acting on • a Up, broke into the home ol a fugitive from a prloon. , J'olice said they found the Jailbreaker in the living room hiding behind the curtains, ~ana • ,,._._, . . . The Showdown Joh1i Wayne Off to Har vard LOS ANGELES (UPI) Newpol'! Bea~ resi4ent John Wayne saddled up a jetliner Monday and headed east for a showdown at Generation Gap. WAYNE IS NOT a man-tQ ignore a challenge to have it out, man to man, and that's what he received from the university's satire magazine, the Har- vard Lampoon. The editors wrote him challenging him to show j'ust how tough he is, asking if ~ is willing to face up to "a gang that wou d rather quote you Marx or Mao Tse-tung than spit in your eye" and face demontra· tors and counter-demonstrators. "I don't know a damned thing about it except they challenged me to come," growled Wayne, boarding a plane for the East. "I figure the Harvard boys and I are at opposite ends of the spectrum. They suggested I didn't have the courage to go." THE HARV ARD EDrrORS have promised to welcome Wayne with a mili- tary convoy, a mock cowboys-and-Indians shootout, a "stampede of some kind of mammal/' and a question and answer session .after the showing· of his latest movie, "MCQ." "It has the makings of ·a real ugly incident," Lampoon ~resident Jim Downey said in apparent delight. The Duke was unfazed as he strode out for the showdown. "I hear the la st guest they had at one of these things was Linda Lovelace " he said in his parting shot. ''I guess she met the challenge." ' Marla Parson Judge OKs Truth.Serum Movie in Sauna Trial By TOM BARLEY Of IHI O.My Pli.t Sr.ff When Maria Parson completes her testimory from the witness stand today in the Orange County' Superior Court sauna bath _ trial the jury will . view a movie made while she was under the influence of a so-called "truth serum." Judge William Murray made the ruling tliat enables attqmey Marvin Lewis Sr. to screen two video tape films in th& courtroom. The decision came after a fOUr-bOur out.of-court session Monday Jn. the offices of Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psycbiairist. "111 let 'em in, 11 Judge Murray said after a bitter argument between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Donald A. Ruston on the admissibility of the two films . One of the movies run b)' Dr. Benton tn the privacy of his o£fice depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, 50, when she Is noi under the Influence of sodium amylol. The second movif, shot# by . the psychiatrist Jut •Dec. 191 •nd Jan . 2, depicts the buxom redhead'l'<!spondlng lo hl.s questioning In the slow, slurred • • manner lnd•tced by bis injection J the tranquilizer. The screening was carefully kept from the jury until today. Lewis believes the movies will considerably enhance his hopes for a favorable verdict in the $1 million lawsuit (See SAUNA, Page I) Hocke y Player R~cords Loss Los Angeles Sharks profession a I hockey player Steve Sutherland shoukl have left a goalie to ter)d his front door during a weekend road trip. A burglar'p.rled the door in his absence from the apartment at 7302 W. Ocean F.:ront, in Newport Beach and a fleighbor djscovered it -standif'lg open, Sutherland Ibid polie< Monday. , 1He said he checked Iii• belongings and found the intruder had taken l500 \\'Orth of valuables, including h I s television set and aS90rted stereo equipment. Leaves Road Carrrfilg Workers BLYTHE (AP) -Nineteen farm laborers drowned and 25 to 30 others were injured today when a bus taking them to work plWlged into 10 feet of v.·ater in a drainage cahal, the highway patrol said. The bus failed to make a curve at a rural intersection seven m i l e s southwest of this southeastern California desert 'town, the patrol said. The fully loaded vehicle went over a 20-foot embankment and landed on its side in the water. The people were stacked up like dc.minoes against each other toward the front of the bus," said highway patrolman Robin Howard. "The driver was jammed into the steering wheel with all the others behiifl him." None of the victims was immediately identified. The patrol said most were Mexican nationals being brought from the border city of Mexicali to work in the fields. The injured , some in serious condition, were taken to Palos Verdes HoSpital (See 19 KILLED, Page I) or .. ge Weather It'll be bright and sunny again Wednesday, according to the weather service, with slighUy cool· er temperatures along the Orange Coast. Higbs of 64 at the beaches rising to the low 70s inland. Lows tonight 35 to 50. INSIDE TODAY Colonel Sanders and his wife. Claudia, are suing Heublein Jnc •• the successor /rUd chicken firm /or misusing the Colonel's name, image and Jikt;less in . promoting some products. Set storv Page 12. 1 Mhift lt ....,.. ....... lt MatleMt Htwt 4 Ot' ..... (Mtlr • ''""' ,...,., ti .,..,,. , .. ,. ,,. ----t•lt '"'""'" ,11 -" -" ............. , .. ,, .............. • • • , • ,,... DAILY PILOT TUfldq, .11/111#7 15, 1974 -Starts,~Sto~s of Machine Blamed in Tape ap : WASHINGTON (AP) -Tedmlcal upen. told 1 f!deral judge !Od>y that the 11-mlnute gap 1n a subpoenaed \\'aterpte tape was caUMd by repeated stopping aod starting of the recording -i machine during the obliterated segment. tn a report to U.S. District Judge John J. Slrtca. the experts did not speculate on whether the gap was caused by accidental or deliberate acts. Slrtca then scheduled • heorlng to bear testimony from the experts. Mass Murders 'Ibey told the judge that their eumlnotlon of the tape lhow"1 "that .the buzzing IOUlldl were put on the tape In the procoss ol .. .,,1ng aod rerecording •t le.,,t five, •nd per!>apf as many at nine separate and oontquou,, aegmenta." 'Mley said the gap "could not have been produced by • single conUnuou.. operation." They also said that recovery of any speech that was obliterated "ls not possible by any method known to ..... Their report appeared to eliminate lhe posslblllly that Pmldeot Nixon's secretary, Rooe !,lary Woods, could have inadvertently erased a segment when she accidentally pushed the retj>nl button when Interrupted by a telephone call while trying to transcribe the tape of a June 20, 1972 conversation between the President and aide H. R. llaldeman. Mia Woods testified she thought she might have caused at least part of the gap ""°'1 she puahed that button ml possibly lnadvettontly kept her loot on a foot IN!!lal that operated the machine. But the experta said their examlnotlon showed oonclusively that -the gap could not have been produced by a sing.le continuous operaUon. They said whether the foot pedal was used or not "the . recordlng controls must have been oprated by hand in the making of each segment." The tones which formed tho buD "do not appear to be camed b,-normal ma,chl.ne operations," the expertl said. They also said they believe that conversation had been recorded on the obllterated segment. · "Can the speech be recovered?" as the report said. "We think not. We know of no technique that could recover Intelligible speech from the b u z z section." The experts aald that In their examination of the tape they used computers, lnatrumenta for meuurtac: frequency spectra and w a v e form •, .. techniques for "developing" mape!lc marks that can be aeen and meuuted directly on the tape, technlquel, tor,, measuring the pe rformance, characteristics of recordert 1 n d statistical met.hods for a n a I Y z l n & experimental results. From Pagel Sheriff ! Recalls: SAUNA .•. agolnat the health spa. Ruston angrily condemned the mmea as "self serving, leading and suuetttve and extremely tnnammatory" • n d repeatedly poln1"1 out to Judge Murray that he had no opportunity to m:u examine Mrs. Parson in e. i the r circumstance, dru~ed or otherwtae. 'Led to Graves' HOUSTON, Tei. (AP) -A drawling East Texas sheriff told a COllll hearing today that be t.lked with • i.en.aaer accmed of mass murder "like he were me ol my own aom" while the 17-year· old led him to four sandy graves. Today was the O<OODd day ol pretrial Couple Hold Up Midway City Store for $1,500 A Midway City market manoger who was lured · to the rear of his store Monday night by a female CUJf<>mel' Jost more than 11 ,500 when be found her male accompilco waltlng !or him. Sberifrs· officers aald mana1er Paul Willlam V08bell1 55, of the MJdway Market, 8121 Bolsa Ave., was robbed at kn!fepolnt by the heavily built male after the woman asked him to help her select a dinner wine from the display at the back ·o1 the store. Deputies said the robbery team took $1,553.M from Voshell 's cash register and $50 from the manager's wallet. They then Ded from the 1tore alter tying Voobell'1 bands and feet. 1be manager w... able to free h1mleJI aod summon help. FromPqe_J PLOT .•. and Popell filed for divorce In Chicago. Popeil will gO to court there on Friday to seek ·'an order giving him custody of the couple's two teenage daughters and abondonmenl of the 14.250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since their separation, Mrs. Popeil and her two daughters have been living in Newport Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday night at her home at 519 Harbor Island Road shortly after Ayers drove up to the bayfront home in the Rolls. Police conflSC&ted the car as: evidence In the case, but Newport Be•ch detective Ken Smith said today it has been authorized for release. From Pagel 19 KILLED .•• In ambulances and sheriff's patrol cars. The ambulances made three round trips bot.ween the accident scene and the -boopital. "1bere were some broken arms and legs but none seemed in critical conditioo," Howard said. He said the bus aeat:s: were ripped loose by the Impact, and the Injured crawled out through windows and the front door. The patrol said the 00. w.. one of three owned by Jesse Ayalo, a labor contractor of Brawley. . OUMMCOAn IT DAILY PILOT lM ~ Coett DAILY ,IUIT, wlttt wl!ldl h ~i.... llM H-~n1, II "*4llMll llf ,._ Onllg• ,C..al ""4Wllril c.ntlMrtY. 5.,.. r•M _..lllM •l"I ........ MWIM't """""' , ........ Mr C..19 ~ ........... ..... MunlflltlM htdl/~111 v........ 1...- a.dl, ,,..,.......a; ...,, ~ c.._..,, I.en Jwtn c..Nlr-A '""It N01-I •1111111 .. ,wlltllpll k~ ............... flit ,n..c.i.i !Mlllll"-,i.111 It 11 Ill WWI hy ,,,.,, c. .. N.n., C•llflnllA. nut. l•Mrt N. W•M ,,..!Miii .......... J11li l . C11rl.., \'kl~..,. OW.11 ~ Th-11 K••"ll """ n.te .. A. Mirr,til111 MIMtlnll ••lllW Cli•ftH H. U.. ltl•~•r4 ·p, Nill ----CIMll ... I nt WM! ...,. SltlM ......,..._I _~....._.. ~a.dl1 ID...,.,..__ 11 .............. 1 ,,.,. .... .........,. kif1 ~I ....... •I (loMiM .... • , .. 1111 cn•t MMn1 a tr"4M••ll .. :IMW11 .,_ c..-,,,,..1..,. .. """"9, ... •fl-,,. ..,. .,,... ~ oe•-•••••• _,._ ~· ~.:.--...=-n::.=: ~ .. t.iV::Alia '"' ...,.. _., .... 9 .• -................. ....... ...,,,..--. ....... ,.... .... c.-. .. ...., ~ ., ...... .,.,.... ,. ............... , . ......,, ......... -.. .....,. • • hearings on one of the six murder charges against Elmer Wayne Henley in connection with a 2'-h-year spree of homosexual torture--slayings. Defense lawyers are trying to exclude from evidence oral and w r i t t e n statements Henley gave police before, they say, be wu permlUed legal counsel. San Augu..Une County Shertlf John Hot said Henley led hlm to four shallow graves near San Augustine in deep East Texas Aug. 9, the day after he was arrested. • "I don 't really rec.all the deatils of what we said. We were talking like he were one of my own sons," the sheriff related. Hoyt, u D de r cross-examination, testified be complied with Henley's request to see a doctor" but Henley later declined the physician's .directive to take sleeping pills. "I asked him why he wanted to see a docctor," Hoyt said, "and he ..aid 'I just wanted to aee If you would can one.' " Protests Against . Tanaka • • . ' Uf'I T""""'I• Dr. Benton argued before he showed the films that it was , Only fair for the jury to see Mn. Parson at her most relaxed moments which could only be in the office of her psychiatrist. Her courtroom testimony has beCn offered under clrcumslMCeS that are particularly adverse to any puaon suffering the kind of p1ychiatric trauma J\.frs. Parson is undergoing, Benton told Judge J\.lurray and the ty;o lawyers. Mrs. Parson's statements under the drugs and otherwise "'""re Identical: that before .she was trapped In the saun' room of the Orange health spa od J\.tarch 2, 1970, she was a happily married Catholic woman whose life was devoted to her husband and seven chJldren. She staled In both video tape aequenct1 that any Spa!'e time she had was devoted to the C.thollc dnin:h, catholic 1"'1111 progrum aod the PTA. During Mooday's ball-day bearing, Mary Pauline Henley, the defendant's mother, testified her son had been hallucinating and was sick when she visited him in jail after his arrest. Rampaging youths overturn a Japanese-made car in downtown Jakarta during a wave of anti·Japan· ese demonstrations touched off by the visit of Japan's Prime Minister nesia. See story, Page 4. K•kuei Tanaka lo lnd<r Mrs. Parson broke down ml ftDI at the end of the ftr>t movie u s&o told Dr. Benton how Marla tool< possession of her body, doMed aezy clothes that she wouJd never have wont under nonnal conditions ond set olt !or local bll1 In a huot for mm aod sexual relatlonshlpt. District Court Judge William Hatten said the pretrial hearing could take as long as two weeks. Jury selection will begin after the bearing. Mrs. He D I e y said her son was "hallucinating -seeing peopl1i' who weren't tbere and doors opening from the wrong side. He would see people standing at the open door, standing there laughing at him, and then the door would close again." Oregon Coastline Ripped By IOO ·MPH Winds, Rain Frot111 P .. e J DON NIXON ••• President to v.·in decisions ravorable to the Hughes empire. Monday's indictments charge Meier and tlu"ee others wlth shifting huge profits from deals with Hughes to Swiss bank acmunts. Mrs. Pal'30ll, wbo w been lamm to her family aod fri.nda from an earf1 age as Belly, again nsmed IOVtral ol the many men she h.11 known. Oft?' the put three years. . She listed among her favorite bll1 in the hunt for extramarital mates the Newporter Inn and the Stull Shirt In Newport Beach. "When I'm Marla I just want to run away," she hesitantly mumbled under the Influence ol the truth dru(. "Maria wants se1 and she wants to be held by. a man-<>ne thing lelda to the other." Mrs. Henley said she received a telephone call from her son Aug. 8 From Wire Service• telling her he killed Dean Arnold Corll, Winds oJ more than 100 miles an 33, and was being held by police. hour whipped the Oregon coast during Henley called officers ln suburban the night and heavy rains fell over Pasadena Aug. 8 and told them ~ much of the state, causing flooding, shot CorII during a sex and paint-sniffing road Closures power"outageS and school party at Corll's home. ' _ closures. 'I'he ...storm also_ was briqging Police said Henley and David Owen rain and snow to Northern California. Brooks, 18, led officers to the bodies buried. at three sltea. Brooks Is charged in four of the slaying•. Brooks and Henley aliegedly procured 1'enagers !or Corll. Suspect Guilty In Molesting Of Two Girls A 61-year~ld transient arrested Jn Huntington Beach Thanksgiving Day while hitchhiking along the San Diego Freeway pleaded guilty Monday to kidoaping and child molesting. Bert Sturgeon was ordered to undergo examination by two court-appointed psychiatrists prior to his sentenclng Feb. " Sturgeon was tried in Los Angeles County Superior Court ror the Nov. 20 kidnaping and molesting of two Gardena girls. One, a four-year~ld, he set free hi Hawthorne shortly after her abduction from the front yard of her seven-year~ld playmate. Huntington Beach Patrolman Arthur Droz spotted Sturgeon and the older girl on the freeway and took the unemployed machinist into custody when the child told him .she had been taken from her home two days before. 2 Days At Corvallis, Ore. 15 persons were evacuated from an apartment complex just in!ide the southwest city limits about 4 a.m. today when rising water threatened their homes. Police Chief Jim Goodman said a fill department tank truck sloshed through 3;~ feet of water to bring out the families, most young couples with children. At Gold Beach, a Greyho.und bus carrying 15 passengers north on Highway 101 was halted because of high water. The passengers were lodged in the county jail overnight because there were no other .accommodations. "We drank lots of coffee, had a lot of conversation and a few naps,'' said a di6patcher. In eastern Oregon, a foot·deep snowpack at Baker vanished overnight in a downpour of rain. Road closures throughout Oregon were so numerous police agencies could not keep track of them. Slate police said Interstate 5 had only From Pagel RESIGNS ... he had relied on 11a crutch-a crutch many of us should use but all too often do not-8nd that is prayer." Hands clasped tightly to his chin, his vojce quavering at times, Brannon delivered his five-minute .speech to a packed board room. • ID Jail Assemblyman Z'berg Serves Time SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Veteran Assemblyman Edwin L. Z'berg quietly entered the county jllf Friday just after he was •entenced !or drunken driving and served a tw<rday term over the weekend, it was learned today. In sentencing Z'berg to jail, Municipal Court Judge Haven Court· ney gave the 47·yeal'Old Sacramento Democrat 45 days in which to comply. · It was Z'berg's sceond conviction for drunken drivfng sine<! I 969. Under a 1tate law el!ecltve Jan. l , second drunken dri"1ng convlc· Uons are punishable by a mandatory two days In jail. Z'berg, chairman of the Assembly Conservation and Natural Resources Committee, was arrested Nov. 17, 1972, after his car rear·ended another vehicle. There were no Injuries. ~ -Courtney Hntenctd Z'berg to 30 days ln jail, but suspended 2B days of the term for the duration of.on .. year probation. He also fined Z'berg $825 and ordered blm to partlclpote in the court's "alcoholic re-educaUon program." ' • • • one lane open where a mudslide crashed down &;~' miles north or the Ca lifornia border. Both southbound Janes and one northhbound lane were closed. A state police officer said he did not know when traffic would be restored. It~s a big one," he said. In Benton Countf, some roads were covered with 314 feet of water. ~fost of the water was runoff, not flooding streams , officers said. Along the coast, windows were smashed, trees blown over and telephone and electrical power oulages were numerous. A gust of 110 miles per hour was reco,rded at "°1t. Hebo Air Foree Station. The wind hit 86 mph at Brookings and 83 at Gold Beach. Meanwhile the winter storm, packing .southerly gales, heavy rain and snow, is on the loose in Northern California. The front, 200 miles west of California early today, will "bring locally heavy rains south to the Tehachapis today and Wednesday with heavy snow in the northern Sierra Nevada above 6,000 feet ," the National Weather Service said. U.S. attorney Devoe Heaton said the Indictment involves sales of minlng claims exceeding $8 million to the Hughes Tool Company, which was then owned by Hughes. Meier was named in two indictments returned by the Las Vegas Federal Grand Jury on two counts oi conspi:acy and on two counts of alleged tax evasion -1969 and 1970. Meier was indicted last year for income tax evasion for 1968. One conspiracy coWlt charges Meier with defrauding the United States by obstructing the collection of income tax as a result of the sale of mlnine claims by Alan Jarlson, Las Vegas televllion newsman, to the Hug!Jes Tool Company .. Others indicted along with Meler on a second conspiracy count were Anthony Hat.sis, 47. and James P. Cowley, 45, both of Salt Lake City, and Robert Kahan, 59, of Los Angeles. She also relates Jn both lntervie'ffl the nature or the dreams •he stat.es she has experienced almort nightly am her ordeal In the 17().<legree 1111111 room. Mrs. Parson tell• Benton of betnC Imprisoned In a cube ol Ice, of beJnc carried along In a flow of hot Java and ol looking down from the sty II bolling, steaming water. "Maria com~ out of the top ot my head and takes over my tou.l," tJ:tt redhead tells Dr. Benton. "I fight bet and Dght her but .,metlmes llhl II too strong for me." Lewis stated Monday that Mrs. Panan still eludes her husband and family wbm she Is dominated by the Marla penona1117 an ddrlves off alone from the Anlhelm borne. Mrs. Parson told Dr. Benton In bolh interviews that she will often offer her husband and famlly the excuae that she needs a loaf of bread or 1 pair of stockings to escape from the homo when Marla takes con~. DRAPERY CARPET SPECIAL SPECIAL COTTON/RAYON CASEMENT lwor'( I A11tiqU• Gala •::;.·:~~·SALE PRICE $2.9& YO. HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! ''The Trouble With Some Self-Made Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe." Maurice Seitter • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: Moo. Tin ,,,...., 9 19 l:JO -NI., 9 19 9 -SAT .. f;ll 19 I " ., I ' " .. \ · Cities Get - • Cigm·ette, ' I Auto Money Orange Coast cities have received a tQtal of nearly $118,000 as their share of December's revenue ~turns from ~ate cigarette taxes and motor vehicle hcense fees, state officials said today. M06t of the money came from deposits in the Cigarette Tax Fund during November, which totaled' $4.6 million statewide. Of that ·total, the· Orang. Coast will get about $85,000. The remainlng money comes from returns on fees charg~d for vehicle license plates, drivers licenses and other dri ving cha rges. Cities and counties throughout the state have been given a. total of $2.S million from that source. Orange County government, which oversees the afJai~ of all unincorporated land in the count y, also received funds from both sources. ' The county g~t a total or nearly $115,000 from both sources. Orange Coa(ll cities and their totals iqclude : - . -Costa Mesa, $26,400. -Fountain Valley, $11,000. -Huntington Beach, $36,000. -Irvine, 18,200. -Laguna Beach, $4,600. --Newport Beach, $18,000. -San Clemente, $5,100. -San J11111 Capistrano, $2,200. -Seal Beach, $6,000. Mercy Killing Dismissal Move ' Nixed by Judge llllNE:pLA, N.Y. (UPI) -A judge Jtas rejected a bid by defense attorneys , to dismiss murder charges against a surgeon accused of the "mercy killing'" of a terminally ill cancer patient. · Lawyers for Dr. VI n c e 1t t Mont~ marano, 34, dlief ; es i d e n t surgeon at the Nassau County Medical Center, argued t'hat national publicity made it Impossible for him to receive a fair trial anywhere in the rountry. However, Nassau County J u d g e Raymond Wilkes ruled Monday "there is every probability, every certainty, Uiat we will have a fair and impartial jury." The small, balding docWr pleaded imloccnl lasl June to cbarg .. he Injected a lethal dose of potassium chloride into the veins of Eugene Bauer, 59. · Nassau County District A t torn e y William Cahn, who has not tried a $...., since. he look lhe po51 in 1962, said he would conduc! Ille proseculloo "because of Ille philosophical and legal ,questions·" Involved in euthanasia, ar mercy killing. But defense attorney J. Russell Clune ~amed the "12 prospective jurors not IP forget about references in the news I media to a supposed "mercy killing." , "There has been no sta-tement about .any mercy killing in this court," he ~aid. "We 're trying a pure and simple qiurder case." :ceisel Elected · BRASILIA (AP) -Gen. Ernesto Geisel. chosen las~ year by the military I Tegime to be Brazil's next president, 'Was routinely elected today by the -government-controlled electoral college. 6ei5el, 65, will succeed President Emilio G. Medici, another military product, on .,March 15 when Medici's five-year term expires. •• • • Tangling for Tl' Television actor Ron Oxley and his lion Neil tangled at Lion Country Safari Monday -part of filming for a "Death in Safariland,'' a television episode of the CBS series "Cannon." William Conrad, stai of the show, Is on site ffiming today and staying at the Laguna Hills Hilton with the 70-person produc- tion crew. GET THAT DOG! WODDSEAVES, England (VP!) - Alan Bird has offered a :Cree pint or beer a day for life' at hls pub to anyone finding his missing Labrador Retrievre. Beach Erosion Emergency Work Put at $5,800 Orange County tax coffers will have to come up with at -least $5,800 to pay for emergency sandbagging and other erosion control activities perfonned to protect beachfront homes during last week's destructive stonns and high tides. A ·spokesman for the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Department said today overtime salaries tor county crews, sand supplies and bagging material were costly. Larry Leaman, chier of operations for the hart>or department, said he is compiling figures to present to the Board of Supervisors. Most of the inoney was spent on operations in Capistrano Beach, where high tides cut away the foundations of homes and trailers. Leaman said sand had to be hauled in from gravel pits in San Juan Capistrano for use in t~ sandbagging and the cost of that operation alone was $3,500. The remai nder of the money will go to salaries for crews aod flood control officials who worked to protect the homes from further damage. Leaman said he has been given estimates by some Capistrano Beach homeowners of the money they spent to shore . up their eroding beach!ront. ~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~- 4,900 Arrested in 1973 On Drunken Driving Raps Orange County Highway Patrolmen waged a war on drunken drivers last year, arresting 30 percent more than during 1972, a top Santa Ana CHP officer sa id today. Capt. William Fradenburg said his forces arrested more than 4,900 motorists for driving under the influence of alcohol last year compared to just over 3,500 the year before. During the sarne period, Fradenburg said seY'f!n fewer persons died and 87 fewer were i{ljured ' in accidents last year than during 1972. · "We would like to think there is a correlation between the increase in drunk arrests and injury accidents and maybe there Is,"-he said. ''But it is too simplistic since there are other factors involved." Fradenburg said, however, he gives a Jot of weight to the relationship since statistics show that more than 50 percent of injury or fatal accidents involve drinking drivers. According to Fradenburg's figures, 80 persons were killed in traffic accidents during 1973 in the CHP's jurisdiction as oppo.'ed to 87 the year before. The total number of fatal accidents declined, too, from 76 to 70. Fradenburg said 2,716 persons were injured in his area in 1973 compared to 2,916 the year before - a reduction of 200. There were a total or 1,895 injury accidents in 1~73 and 1,981 ·the year before. , F'radenburg said his figures cover only the Santa Ana office's jurisdiction. The Westminster CHP bureau hand 1 es freeway statistics in a Portion of northwest Orange County but their statistics also include a large part or Los Angeles County, he said. officers are responsible for all traffic enforcement in the unlncorporated land in the south county, whicti is an enormous area .'' Fradenburg said the aceident reduction figure is particularly significant when the rapid growth or Orange County is taken into account. He said there are a lot more cars now than even a year ago -particularly in the south county. Fradenburg said there are other factors involved in the rate redtK:tion, including weather conditions, highway improvements and possible auto trip reductions as the energy cri&'is took held. But, he said, Ille drunken driving arrests play the key role and without them , many more people would have been killed or maimed on ~Wlty highways and byways. The Orange County statistic$ are part of a total of 120,800 drunken driving arrests made statewide, according to figures released by CHP Commissioner Walter Pudinski. Pudinski said there was a reduction of five percent statewide in deaths and injuries because of it. "We placed a number one priority on arresting drunks," Pudinski said. "We followed through in 1973 and the pressure will stay on in 1974." Fradenburg said lr1'4 should be an interesting year to watch, particularly because of the -new low speed limits designed to conserve short fuel supplies and clean up the air. , •cultural Boom!' "But since there are mo s t I y incorporated cities over there, they· do mos Uy freeway patrol," be said. 0 0ur • . .. - • s OAiLY PILOT ;J ., l\'i.xed $fi2,000 Candidate Tells I Of Money Off er By WILLIAM SCllREIBER Of tl'll O.\ly PU91 llllr Marshall Norris figures It will cost him $63,000 to nm for Orange County sheriff but said he has already turned down a $52,000 "big money" donation to help him on bis way~ ''To be fr ank, I am scared or some of the money being offered to candidates for nonparlisan office these days ." said Norris, a 47-ycar-old Superior Court clerk and former Sheriff's lieutenaDt. . "A group of people in Santa Ana fame to my home and offered me $52,000 but I refused to take it," he said. "I won't name them right now because I , am investigating to see if they have done anything illegal." This wilt be Norris' second try ·to win the job. He was defeated by a landslide in 1970 by Sheriff James Musick, who is retiring this year after 25 years. Norris said he refused the big money in bis first campaign and has no regrets. "Mo.st of my financial support is going to come from people in my church and from many friends in the cowrty," he said. "I know there is money to be had from groups like the Lincoln Club (an organization of top Republican businessmen) but I won't tou ch it." The North C3rolina native said he will conduct a newspaper advertisement and precinct-walking campaign and put very little emphasis on signs and mailings. Norris lives in Buena Park with his wife and six children. He went into law enforcement after ·getting a bachelor's degree in police science and served in the sherifi's department for 10 years . He said be is hopeful of beating his opponents on the basis of his platform of departmental reorganization. So far, only one other man -Sheriff's Lt. Bradley Gates -has annolUlced he wilt run. If elected to the sheriff's job, Norris said he will undertake a major overhaul or the jail faciliti~s and procedures, reorganize the sheriff 's department, work closely with ci ties and manage • Youth Beheaded On Subway Cur NEW YORK (UPI) - A boy on l)is way home from school was decapitated when he climbed atop a subway car and was struck by a beam spanning tire tracks, police said. The youth 's mother was aboard the same train but was not aware of the aceident. Police said Robert l.arocca, 13, was · returning from school Monday with two friends when he decided to rii:!e on top of the subway car and cUmbed between two cars as the train pulled out o~ the station. As his head poked above the top of the car, the subwa}' ran beneath a low crossover beam spanning the °'"' ~lilt ll•ff ,...,. SEEKS SHERIFF'S POST -...; Marshall Norris funds better than they have been. I He said the county's jail facilities are not up to par and he agreed with manY criticisms broug ht out last year by the Orange County Grand Jury. "You can see how bad things are when it takes more than three and a half hours to get someone out of jail on bail ," he said. Norris said he would see to it that special officers trained to work in penal insti tutions are hired and will put deputies now working in the jail "back on the asphalt." Norris also said be feels better U!e can be made of existing field forces, particularly in the booming south county area and tsections of the county with high crime rates. Better administration could also make operations cheaper, he said, pointing to ways the county could turn over some function s to private enterprise. "Specifically, I'm taJking about motor vehicle maintenance and fueling," he said. 11It's ridicu1ous for a patro!_ c~r on duty in Dana Point to. drive all the way to Santa Ana county garages to get gas." He said he would get aedit cards for the officers and give maJntenance contracts to private enterprile: t Other items NOrris said he would pursue include : , -A need by police agencies to avoid federal funding which :could put undue contro.l.S on the functlons or local department s. .-A need to ·maintain Io w ·cost coroner's facllitiea -by continuing to · use mortuaries as morgues and pathology labs rather than building an expenaive central facility. -Closer coordination of patrol efforts wipi cities, particularly ones containing small , isolated county islands. tracks, police said. -A strict program to eliminate a "very serious drug problem" in the COWlty's jail facilities. ~===~ ~~~ ,, ~Pnest clothing. .• ~: •<.\' ' ""t' . ' ~"'"". "-\ Trustee Candidate Gives Forecast New York Solons Approve Tougher Bill on Rapists e Hart Schaffner & Marx By JAN WORTH Of 1M Dilly ~lttt Stiff Saddleback College In Mission Viejo could bloom into a cultural center rescblng the whole soothem half ol Orange CoWJty. Thal ii Ille opinlm of Jolm Tolle, 24, a saddlebacl< Colle&• sludent and candidate for &' va,cant 1 aeat on the seven-member bolrd Of tl"Ultees. An art major living In El Toro, Tolle said he believes Ille cultural e.- ._ed by the two-year community colltge have provided 10me of Ill -effective llnl<s with the community. "'There are all kinda of r<ally talented artists and musicians in this area," Tolle said. "I COuld llOe a cultural llllng developlnt here -ind ll I'm elected to the board l~I 'push for roore of that." Tolle, a oophomore, Is me of eight candidates for the Area Six (Irvine-El Toro) trustee sept being vacated by resigning charter ttuslee Michael Collins. Lack of pennanenf fac:Ullles may be partly· to blame for the lackl.ol cultu191 nc!lvily at !he school oo far, Tolle spoculaled. , Bui be added tbel Ille lack llDlld aot be on exCU!e for being 1111C!'OlUVt. "An artlol!c peroon will . -t .. ..-of where he'• at," Tolle aid. "Good artlltic lcllvily II no t lmpooalble a! Saddlebeck. Coo!rary 10 wtiat .Orne people thlnlt, l b I s ochoOI is not a total f1llurf. tn many ways It ii relaUvcly good," ·the candidate said. "There could be ·some Improvements In Ille atinospherc Tolle said. "Bui the po!erlUal It !here. A lot of people would really UM to see 10methin1 bl .... m." Tolle 1pent cloee to four years in \, •.'. .. • • Ollty ,, .... , ... """" SllKS CULTURAL GROWTH Tr1111M C1ndldaht Tollo the Air Force and was reared in Venlce. Slnco enterina Saddleback. he has been on lhc Dean's !Jsl each quarter while doing. Crectance commercial artwork. After gradualln& from Ssddleback, he plan> to attend the Art Center In downlo\vn Los Anaelea, or cal Arla al Valencia. -' . ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -The stale Assembly unanimously has passed a bill designed to make it easier to obtain the cmvictlon of suspected rapists, a meuure long advocated by women's lib groups and law enforcement officials. The bill, at extension of a revision of the rules of evidence in . sex crime cases which was begUn ·in 1972, would eliminate the need fOr corroboraUon pf the temmony of the victim of a rape or other sex offense. There was no debate on the measure, which goes to the Senate where approval is expected. A memo in support of the rape testimony bill, i n t r o d u c e d by Assemblyman Alvin M. Suchln (R·llobbs Ferry). said the change ls ne<ded because in many cases corroborative evidence was impossible to obtain and nuiny raplsll were thus freed without penalty. South Laguna Hit By Plant Pilierer South Orange County's potted plant pUferer popped qp aaam Monday nl&ht to add two display plants valued at $511 to bis mushrooming haul or filched foliage. Sheriff's olficers said the Ihle! look the plants from the home or laundromat operator Jolut R. llcllly, 29, 22t81 Paaeo de! Sur, South J.aauna, while lltllly Wll in bed Weep. e Gino Salvaggi e Kupp-enheimer e Eagle e Louis Roth· e Sedgewyck • " SoMth Co•1t Pl•t• I Co1lt Mt t• S40-4 bt I • 64 12 E. S pri~9 Le~t l••ch 421 ·4bll . . \ I, • • .J OAll. V PTLOT witla To m lll'phiae ···:...;.· Sheriff Hangs --Up His G11ns OFF AND RUNl'ING DEPT. -Over the past three decades, Orange County bas been blessed with comlderable new population. So tt may suprise many "'hen they are informed of how long incumbent Sheriff James Afusick bas held forth In office. Do you know how long its been since \•:e bad a rea l election contest for sheriff in these part!? Twenty-eight years, thafs how long. Oh well, the office has come up for election regular as clockwork, every four years. But against Sheriff Afusick.. it bas been strictly no-contest. Take 1972, for example, when a cotmty clerk named Afarsha11 Norris challenged incumbent Atusick at the polls. WHEN THE VOTES l\'ERE counted up yonder at the County' Seat, Alu.sick had 208.9-11. Norris gathered 56,733. Yet anoth er no-contest. So it was that Sheriff Alusick had v.·on his se venth four-year term. dattng back lo the election or 1946. Actually. be had been "ilh the Orange Coanty Sheriffs Office much longer than that. An All-American running back with t-sc·s ·'Thundering Herd" teams of 1929, "30 and '31. he came to the Orange County Sheriff's Offict und er Sheriff Logan Jackson in the early 1930s as a deputy. He rode night patrol cars. Ke-pt the peace during the citrus strikes of those days. Worked ro-Oour weeks for $150 a month. TO AUGMENT TIIAT grand 1150 monthly income. ?.!usick took off in fan months 10 play professional football ,tjth the old Boston Braves which, in 1937. became the \\'ashington Redskins. \\'hy, here was the big money. 'Ibey got a w,hoJe SISO per game in those days-just about pocket money for today's pro player. When the Great 'Yi'ar came along, Deputy M~ick went off to fight it with the Marine C.Orps. MUSICK CAME HO'IE in 1945. and it was the perfect "'home is the hero ... setting for a dlallenge to then-incum- bent Sheriff Jesse Elliou. Here ~iiS Musick, USC Al~Ameri<all, pro foot. ball star, yoong, handsome and re- turned from the Great \\'ar. Re defeated Elliott at tht polls rather decisively. In the elections since, Musick has l:ept that winning record intact. He bas nexer really fatea a ¥fiow: chaUenge. He may have held office longer than any other California sheriff. FA mER TThtE, howe,rer, usually wim; in the eod. And Alusick has decided not to seek an eighth four-year term. At 61. he is stepping down. nius for the first time in nearly three decades. Orange County will have a real efection race for sheriff. Already candidates like Norris, Sheriff's U. Bradley Gates and likely Cypress Police Cllief George Savord are stepping forv<ard to seek the vacated sheriffs post. And A1usick ~·ill be v.·atching It aD from the sideline. He isn·t really used to v.·atching from there. King Comn1emorated ATI.A~"TA, Ga. (AP) -Sctxiols ~·ere closed here today as part of a natioo- ~ide program of celebrations cornmem. orating the 45th birthday anniversary of the late Dr. Martin Lulher King Jr. A spokesman for the Southern Christian Leadershi p Con ference said aboot 1.000 memorial services 11.i U be held, including those in most ol the nation's major cities. Ttitsda1, J.viuuy 15, 1974 45 Injured _as Amtrak Leave-s Tracks By '!1le Al-111<d Prtt1 ruptt11$1 In a spono!y populllOd aru "The Jaat' thbJ& I r<rnember Is ...ing pear White Ila-~ •er< no rePorl<d btjurieo. fiying glass and fiylng people," Prlcllla The Texas Olief, ""1lhboomd from Hektner says of the derailment ol Chicago •to Houtoo wit.b 11$ p11sengm Amtrak~a crack Texas tbtcf passenger aboard, wu movin &tbrou&h an fDdU». train. trial area on tbe northeastern outaklrts 0The Tens Chief left the tracks near of Ardmore when ll derailed at 56 m11es Ardmort, Okla., ?.!onday, resulting in per hour. injuries to .S ptrsoru:. That wu one Several person.! were pinned lDside three train accidents around the couotfy. derailed cars for a time before being AT McGREGOR, Tez., two tank cars rescued by workmen with pry bars. carrying petrochemlca1' derailed and Two ol the cars, including the dln!"g exploded , but no injuries were report~. car, turned .on their sides. 'lbe d -1n-Pennsylvania:;-four·tank-cars-carry1ng--car caught-irre. • . compressed chlorine overturned and "Everyone and everything was gomg ' Modem Roundup eveaywbere/' saJd. Mi'I. J¥i!ner' of Auotln, TeL, who -In the diner. "My flnlt thougllt wai :' 'Thls ii the end.' It IUllend a ..... .., bad:. 23-car lrlin w., Iealrirc naphtha 11 lhe "II looked like M alOm bomb had train neared the McCr<go~ depot and ezploded," aakt John M. Gardner, a the cars derailed when the «t:'W M~--_..._. ol Ibo blut ot, the attempted an emergency stop. l;Ul1:e, ... ·~., The four twtk cars carrying Tuu community. com ...... ssed chlorine were among 10 ears "I JUST HUNG ·•·" aaid Samuel PGlk:e evacuated IOOl'f.I ot persans in :· ... Lehigh Valley Railroad f7-car H. Tr<adway, 74 ,ot Qtla-Clly: ln>m a :tl-lllocl< area II limnen IOUCht f~ght train lhat Jell the !rac:U near ·-· tarted Jum"'•• It was -a fir< !hat !ollowed the e-'""lon. •~ '"" car 1 ..-... ... ...,...... Ii t k Whlte Haven. the right aide o! the train, and the The Santa Fe R.allway aakl ve an Slate police advised mldents within care began lilting to the ltft, IO to cars among U cars that d~ were a hall·mi1e of the accident to evacuate kep lnMn being thrown ....,.. lhe car carrying vinyl chloride, chlonne pa, their • homes through Monday night l just bung on to my aeaL" !8~rail'~ otbertank co:,.i..as:~ Two~ because of chlorine fwnet. or the 45 pmons Injured, 29 r<ceived = ~ ~ .....-"A whifl o! this stu!! doellll1 kW you, emergency Irea(lnent and l'e<e r<leaaed.c_.:::bumed.=:::...----------but'rbir-dooe could;'!-eakl-Stat<-l'ollce- m..n,.ere·boopltalltod;1ndudllljfMn: In ••· • Sgt-John Hosking. llm Summers of Arlingtoo, Tex., -WITNF.liSfll SAID one car ~ . ,.. : ., ' . , ~ . U"T ........ Tanaka Jeered By Indonesians JAKARTA (UPI) -Thousands of Indonesians poured into the stre<ts .today, burning, 1masbing and hammering on anythin1 Japanese in a massive demonstn.Uob. timed for the visit of Japanese Prime Minister Kai.uei Tanaka. Demonstrators tor< down Japanese flags, burned Ja..........,..ie motor ·-and brob windows ln stores dealing in Ja-l!!!!!!s. They attacked a busload ol Japoneoe tourisls and UPI fi>otographer Tooblo Sakal, a Japanese, was forced to nee when demonstrators turned on him. One demonstrator ?.'as ...,.n.d kill«!. nea r the national residence where .Tan· aka cooferred wilh Jndoneslan President Suharto. The student.! regrouped later, lx>wever, and converged on the back ol the residence before troops had a chance to disperse them agaln. Thousands of paratroopers, military police and special forcea posted to protect Tanaka, chased the protesters down side streets away from tbt building. Trio Perish .!rflll'~ ~~1>'11~ ~J: ~ln-Mari7·uana-·--- -lions untie!' omtrol There were no sbob: flred and no tear gas h ~:!.,... ~ =-.~ ... u~ Plane Cras the day. . Sioux City, Iowa police had a tough time rounding up a steer which escaped from the stockyards Monday. Efforts to corral the animal as he beaded for the downtown area were unsuccessful and after charging a car and leading officers on a two- bour chase, be was brought down after officers shot him. Indonesian Pmldent Suharlo ordered a 6 p.m. curfew in the city. 1bere were stiU thou.sands in the street 1112 hours afttt the deadline, but their ranks POMPANO BEACH. Fla. (UPf) - Three men we~ kllled Monday night Yiilen a twin-engine plane carrying 100- paund blocks of marijuana crashed in heavy rain near. an unoccupied apartment building and exploded. Heavy Vietnam Bombings Assailed by Viet .Cong From Wire Senices SAIGON -The Viet Cong today accused the Saigon government of conducting the ·heaviest bomtiing eince the United S~tes halted air raids a year ago. M the fighting continued, 00DgreS3ional backers of President Nguyen Van Thieu introduced a comtitutional amendment 1o allow Thieu to nm for cffice a third time. 1be South Vietnamese constitution at pres- ent fort>ids a third try. SENATE SOURC~ said more than 140 legislators signed a petition to .support the amendment allowing 11tieu to serve until 1980. A tVt'o-thirds majority DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE CH-li'my of lht Daiily Pilot is 911Manttrd ,.....,...jl,.;,..,, II ,...,. ff ,,.i ~•v1 ,_ -I f S:lf 111·111.o U ll '"" r.vr c .... will M ""'91111 19 ""· Clill 1r1 '''" IMIH 7, ..... . S. ..... J ...i S-.y: II )'M ff lll't •Htl,,_ ""' '-n' ~, t '·"'· 5,..,,,.,,, ... '·"'· ,......,, Cl l tMI I n,J wlll IN ~ .. .,.... ~·-,,.. -..... ,~ 1t l .fft. T t ltph0flf1 """' Ort• (Miiiy Ar111 .... , ., '°""°" ...,._ti H1t111i•t,_ l tlcR .... Wntmiftll... •. . , • • ....... 1211 SH ci.-., CtJll•tr-ltftR, S,.,,. Jl l ft Cl,..lr-, OIM ,,_lfo!, *"' U.-, U,..a Mitllti •••• _,.... is required and oourees said the amendment would easily p.us. 111.ieu's term erpl.m Oct. 31 , 1975. He has been in office since 1957 when he . beat out fonner Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. He ran unopposed in lfrll for a second term. The government and the Viet Olng also held lhelr longest meeting of the Joint Military Commission (JMC) today. In the nearly five-hour meeting. the government propcxsed a banning of weapons -such as mortars, artillery and rockets· -which often cause heavy casualties to civilians. but it ~-as reject- ed. spokesman U. Col. Le Trung Hien said . On the war froot , North Vietnamese troops sbeDed several g o v e r n m e n l positions near the Le 1'finh border base today and made ooe ground assault. apparently trying to p r e v e n t reinforcements fn:m reaching the camp in the central highlands. AN ADVANCE patrol of 30 South Vietnamese infantrymen was landed in Le ~linh by helicopter on Mc.nday after tht area was softened up by government bombers., The government said the commandos met little resistance In retaking the camp, which !he North Vi_,,,_ captmed last September. A force of more than 5,000 troops was reported on the move in the area west ol Pleiku, but the Saigon command said it bas nm into resistance 311 miles from Le Minh.'- Boston. Se llout . For Bob Dylan BOSTON (AP ) -Boston Ga<den Vt'Q filled to capacity twice 88 folk-rodt supers1ar Bob Dylan """ r.ipidly thiMlng. ' Tanaka arrived in Jakarta late Mooday and 1' scheduled to leave Tbunoday. Jt is the last 1eg ol a five-nation .tour for the prime minister. 1bere were al3o anti.Japanese demonstrations in Thailand but not as serious as the ones in lndooesi• Other stops included Manila, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. Crowds 8tllged aevenl times against the Ja.,.._ embassy on 'lbamrin Street. Some got in and tore down IT WAS TIIE second 3Uch Florida crash in four days. A spokesman for lhe Ft. Laudenlale police said one of the persons believed to he aboard the plane had been linked "ith the crash ol. a .similar plane carrying mort than a ton of marljUIDI at Placida, on Florida's gulf coast. made his first two --here in nine years. Mor< lhan 15,000 showed up le< both bis aftemooo. and evening concor1s Monday. One of the vtctlnu wa.s Identified l!I the Japanese Dag and brolte It pones a Gainesville, Fla.. resident, but bis ol glass on the """""' ,!Joor o1 the , name was withheld. The other two modem buildi0 &. ~ Victims were too badly burned for Dylan, noted more for bis song lyrics than bis conversations with audiences, spoke tlree U m e s during the afternoon a!!air. . At the end of the opening omg, "Roiny Dey Women,' .. be told the applauding iuillence: ''Thank )'00. It's good to be-back in Bostm." He later said, ..You're too much," after prolonged applame for "Like a Rolling Stone," and be also anmunced the intenniMioo. TIDI: Y 0 U N G protesters, shouting "down with Japan" land "economic Imperialists," grew lncnuingly hooUle u lndooe>lan troops tried to break up lbe demonstrations. The youlhs, who traveled to the Indonesian capiJa) from as far away as Sumatra, IOO miles to the northwest, wer< protestlng against alleged Japanese eainomic discrimination. Earlier, demomtraton moved away good mWredly when army units with machine guns and armored can ordered them out ol. the Jakarta civic aquare . Reported by Press Wilkins Denies Oust,er From NAACP Top Post ' NEW YORK (AP) -Roy Wllkinf Hilda Krauae bled to daeth in her bas beet ousted as executive director • bedroom wlllle her husband, Marvin, ot the Natiooal ·Association !or the ' M. a)ot moclllne. nwuau ot Caaar's AdVan<emenl of Colond P<ople the New Palace, lay - York Dally News said todoy. &! Wlll:lnl As1t llmtlck, -eucutive o! the a:nd other NAACP o11icia111 categorically casino, eocaped -!nm a dynamite denied the llcry. ( IN SHORT ••• ) immediate identification. A medical examiner's rep«rt was expected later in the day. The spolcesmac, c;.,,. Fanner, said there were no reports of any injuries to bystander>, allhough the plane crashed In a densely J>opdlated """' of high-rise building> one blcx:k !ram the Atlantic ocean. THE PLANE, a white Lockheed Learstar with an orange stripe painted on its sides, radioed the tower at Pompano air park shortly before 9 a.m. and roported ooe ol its '"iinM had failed. police said .. Eyewitnesses said the platie. with fir< spewing OUf ol one of Its engines, rapidly lost allitude, and exploded i... lhan 15 !eet from !he Pompano Beadt Club, a 21-story coodominium under construction. .. According lo the police report, the plane exploded on impact, spreading marijuana "like seaweed'' through the area. "The plane caught fire and YoU could smell the marijuana burning all around," said Clle witness. Authorities said it waa difficult to determine how. much pot was ·aboard since wind and rain had scattered and spUt the blocks. "IF THE PLANE was fully I o a de d It would bold about %,400 to UOO pound.. of marijuana," Fanner said. 100 MPH Wind -in Oregon The ne-per said the II-member board of clirecton of die civil rigbts group took the actlaD Moailay In a closed leSllion. ''I haven't the debtest idea where the ltory came from.· 1111 . ., contrary to lbe medlng yestenlQ ·ml lbe Items that came up," Wllklno said loday In ate~lalenloor. -planted ln bla car lalt -. P-/ tipped 11111 be wu 1111r1i11t1 1t1' mmder, lapt ntdlcm .,.,. .... nallllel'a -......... Ille ......... • I ,, ev ... .., ....... Lol8 • VBGAS (UPI) -......, men wearing ski mulls ·-' ap a ClltDo executlft Monday. ·Ihm -bll n- year-eld wll• ·witb electrloal Cord anti cutberthroaL Cronkite served Court Subpoena •NEW YORK (UPI) -CBS -- Waller °"'*1te '--.....S -·~to ....... •tbar.b.11 trial of two P7 adltllll ..... -• .u.. loleooll '"' a....., ... ._.. -k-.......... _._ A CBS 11"+7-~ ltnll1 that Qanldle .... ,_.,..tho ....... bul decllaod ftirlbor ......... . • 1111 case. 11te two delendlttll. lla1i 8epl. 11, and lfanJ ""tr .. -" Phlladelpbia .... -of .. "Gill' lllJdoro," ·-dlllP.I WUb ~~-· ........ "allf Evmini ...... 11 ....... .... they lald ... 11111111111 Ml 11111 II t.be nttwart 1 1 ..... "• A'ft.ANTIC aft. N.l. (UPI) -Yb Pi.ltloot -ll. r.d ., c t I tlll Aft.:ao .............. ..,... " ....................... ....... l ,dtllrllbrttrllloll Pillltllll .ii I 'a • a 'ti .... 1111111 -............ ll ;. ltltalD .. -."r.dllld. ""lllllr m II -ftolll7 lor tlrtr 1hu .. ea&ll ~•.a, lar Pl I' , _ ............... . ............ _. ............ wua1iWiat, 1AP1 -i i:.g:-1 .................. _ .. Non =-•• .......... _ _...,,,,) ......... ...... .. D.11 'tf'll SIJll llld ••• CIII 6o .......... at fll lluiul Isl( tllt Mt•Q .... -11• I ... , .......... ,, ...... SIP •• -.~ .. •• I .. ,.. ,,,, ... Iii:......... .. .. • .., ....... 'I .... . .,... ..._, 1111 I I J la ""' t . I 'llJ'lll!WIMf-... _ JOJBM lll1T ' :~=:a:;-:: llld In.... pm. I ... ••••• ...., t p llllJ 11111•1'111119-f% I .. .. Dld:U.1111 -·' ...... J •• - • •• " • • • " Tuesday, January 15, 1974 DAILY PtLOT !j Driving Victittt's Cnr ... ' . . ' -Shootou( Suspects Cite Plea TWoMen Held in Murders ' OAKLAND CAP) -Tile man charged with the 1nurd~r of Oakland schools Supt. Marcus Foster, has pleaded Innocent to charges arising from a shootout with Concord police that led to a break In tile killing o! the black school chief. J~ph. M. Remlro, :II, __ Jlllw<Lhls_plea..at-a-hearlng in Martinez ~1unlclpal Court l\1onday. Russell Llltle, 24, also charged ln the shootout Thursday, entered an identical plea to the charges of assault to commit murder. The two were arrested by Concord police after the pair ( State ) Candldat.e? ROSEB URG, Ore. (UPl l -r.1urder warrants from Two men, one a convicted California were expected. n1urderer on parole, were in David R. Peterson, '41 , Santa · custodyi today for the killing Fe, and Donald L. Bemard, of a California teen-age couple 35, were taken into custody 8nd the robbery of a N'ew after a California Highway . Mexico bank. Patrolman alerted 0 reg on The men were arrested sulhorities he had stopped the ;. Monday in Sutherlin for the two near the state border for sbooting deaths of two youths littering. -in----\.'ictor-Yille-Sunda,~·'---Buf;-uttflware thej-were1he- apparent robbery victims -subjects of an an points and the the(! of $7.000 from bulletin , let them go , he said. a Santa Fe, N.M. bank last said. \Yt.>di1esday. TREY Al.SO threatened a Sulhcrlin resident wilh a knife when they wanted to use his car, but he was able to drive away unharmed. 0 o u g I as County authorities said. Pl-.'TERSON WAS paroled Speech Slated Capitol News Service Dr. S. I. Hayaka wa, 67, ex-president of S#n Francisco Stale:Uolver· sity, says he is ''serious- ly considering" seek- ing Republican nomina- tion for U.S. senator this year, j.f he can st,1.r- fired ~hots a't pol ice m en mount legal obstaclc- stopping them for a routine of changing registra- traffic check. Ballistics tests tion to Republican last on l~emiro's gu n led to his August. being charged \Vlth Foster's -----~-~ murder. They arc being held on warrants for as.sault . carrying a concealed weapon with intent to use it and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. SACRAMENTO -Elliot Richardson, who held th ree Cabinet posts under President Nixon, \\lilt be guest sj>eaker at the annual meeting of the Ca l ifornia Taxpayers Association here Feb. 27. e Bodies f'ou11d SAN BERNARDINO 1UPll -The bodies of a former Washington state senator and two other men from the Pacific Northwest w e r e ai rllfted oot Monday from the wreckage of their light plane \.\·hich crashed during a snowstorm In the S a n Bemardi~ • ~ountaii}S last \\'eek. I A 2G-mcmber 5heri££'s team retrieved the bodies of Dr. >-11---H.-L.-&humachu,.-62 a former Washlnl,rton st a t e senator and Va n c ouv er mayor; the pilot Howard G. J acoblOn, 63, PorUand. Ore .. and Andrew Toyly. 50. also of Vancouver, from the crash site, located on mowitainous te1Taln near Big Bear Lake. Pay Toilet Ban Launched SACRAMENTO !AP) -A new crusade to eliminate pay toilets in California ha s cleared it.s first legislative 'Sex Life hurdle over oppasition from a company that makes the coin.opening mechanism. People who have to pay to use restroom facilities take better care of them than do for an earlier antipay bill that died in committee. Another bill {also killed ) sought' to limit the number of pay toilets in a given public restroOm. It was nicknamed people who use lhem free, the •;one in three must be said Jack Ewald, spokesman free" bill. OJ_£m.b._' ____ .or_tbe_Nik.'"O~Lok-----.Co...___n_L Robert Toigo, a spokesman Indianapolis, lnd. for Mrs. Fong, said the bill R • d But on a .unanimous vote is expected to ha ve its e1ecte Mooday the A 18 em b I ~.' s toughest test in the stale ' Senate. Health Commltlee senl the _ -------SACRAMENTO (UP!l antipay bill by Asse mblyman I ~larch Fong to the \Vays and Mea nli CommittCe. Approval from the New ~1exico State Penitentiary three weeks ago after serving IS years for murder. They were apprehended in a car belonging to one of the murder victims. taRen , police said, when they left their car in Victorville tit the site of the killln~. Robert G,° Nyberg: I 9 . Victorville, 1:1nd Lore l t a Dickinson, 16, Hesperia, were found In a purk nea r the l\1 ojave Ri vrr eath \Vith a single gunshot \Vound in the bac k of the head . J d N • They had app;irenlly been u ge rxes robbed, police said. ---·-1----·-Atl¥•fll_,-:::--Dismissal ,Why Are You A Of Teacher . Poor 1'a ll;P r'! SAN DIEGO (AP) _ A1A noled pu.blisher in ~hicago . reports a simple technique 0£1 Judge says the Gros~m~t everyday conversation '''hi<'h Union High School District can pay you real divid ends in can't fire Charles Kahan, 41 , social nnd business 11dvancc- t1 teacher who was twice ment and \\'orks like magic 10 cleared of marijuana charges. give you poise. scl~-confidence . . , . and greater popularity. The d1str1ct s motion to According to this publi !'>hcr, in v a Iida t e Ka ha~' S1many pci>plc do not rc<t1 izc how reln,Jt1:1tement was .dent e di much they could influence oth· Mond ay by Superior Court ers simply by \l'hnl 1hC"v ):iJ~' Judge Eli 11. Levenson. and ho1v lhl'Y suy it. \\'hcthcr Kahan was first removed in business, at so1.:ia! functions. .froll) his job at La Mesa's or even in casual conversations Helix High ~h?<>I in 1971,. with ne\V acquaintances there after he was 1nd1cted on ~r1-are ways to n1ak e a ,::ood iln· zona charges. of ~ssmg pression every tin1e you talk. and transporting m~r1j~ana. To acquainl the readers; or The charges were d1sm1ssed this pa per \vith the cas~•-to-fol· and he returned to work. : \ow rul es for dcvcloning skill in . ln 1.972 a ~ed~al grand JUl_'Y everyday conversatiori. the 11ub- 1n Ar11.0na 1nd1cted Kahan m pishers have printed full dctai l':i I~ _same case. ~ school of their intcrestinJ!: sclf-trainin~ district placed him o n1method in a new booklet. "'Ad· .. ~m~lsory . leave and later ventures in Conversation." d1snussed hlrrl. . which will be ma iled free !o He was found mnocent of anyone· v•ho requests it. No l~e _charges last June, but obligation. Send your name. ad-4:h~tr1ct t~stees . refused to fdress. and iiP code to : Con- remstale him until ordered to versalion. 555 F.. Lilngc St.. do .so 1.~st September by a Dept . 509-84, h1undelein, IH. Ca hf.orn1,1 . school board 60060. A postcard \.\·ill do . hearing officer. __ __ Down l-l i11 (rarka) >$99~ ( IOOX Dow" Fill /: -. Qiiinte,sence (->wt~te .... ) .. "39"'- '" I "'..:., -.::ir GETAWAY 1i:~·~·~Ti.: ~···---. t VIU.AOI I:'. Sou1h Coast V1llaqe ~''""~-··="~+-·~· Su nflower at Plaza Dnve ~ ~g~~~. next to South Coast Plaza i "'Al" s. Costa Mesa ~F·~·-=.ao!·~·;;;,%=~ 714•556•8276 • TeRher Cited SAN FRANCISCO IAP ) - A teacher was arreated ll1onday and booked r 0 r inciting" to riot at a San Francisco Board or Education mttting last week. YvoMe Golden, 39, y.•as boo,ked on three misdemeanor counts after the b .o a r d meeting, whlch was called to consider a school integration plan, wu broken up by !lghLs bci.w~en 13 u nJ ( 0 rm e,d members of t)ie . Amer!~ Na;i Party and otllers at the meeting. The assembly has rejected a fre shman lawmaker's tongue- In-cheek atte:mpt to override a Gov. Ronald Reagan veto . Assemblyman Barry Keene CD-Santa Rosa), · Monday urged his fellow lawmakers to override Reagan'.s veto of a bill to pm•ide annual state fish and game dep!lrtment reports on the decline of the market crab "at a cost of !250.000. '!!o- Keene said in a floor speech: "His (Re a ga n 's) office inqµlred whether a bill numbered· 1984 would not he construed tis at •big brother" attempt to invade the privacy of the reproductive. habits Qf market ~b5." in WfJys and f\.1eans would send the measure to the lower house floor. EWAW TOLD commi~t~ that pay toilets contribute $175,000 to $200,000 annu&lly to the state treasury. "I think that's a disgraceful way to collect monev for the atate," said Mrs. fong, ·an Oakland Democrat. Her bill would prohibit pay toilel-1 in re:strooms operated by public ageJ'lc~1 inclllding airporta. Ready ReservAccount. Because-Santa is easier to play than to pay. e Croa1J11 'Good' BURLINGAME I UPI) - Bing Crosby'1 phy sic I ans today tried to kientify a rare African· fungus barterla which infected the singer's lung1 and cauaed him to be hospitalized alnce New Year's Eve. Crooby, 69, waa reported "f,.llog good" Monday night ht PenJnsula Hospital's lntemlve care unit, where he wu placed following surgery Sunday for removal ot part of his Jert Jung where an orange-alzed abscess w a s lrund. Samples of ti.sue ln!ected by "a species of .nacordla, a fungus bacteria picked up during a dUJlslorm while on 1afarl In Africa," were sent lo pathologlst.s at th e Unlvmity of California Medical Center In S a n Francisco and the S t a t e Health Department in Sacramento. e Fllel S•ur? SACRAMENTO (UPI) Elementary schools would be permitted to operate on a four-day week to save energy under a bill Introduced Monday by Sen. W. Craig Biddle (R-Rlvl\"'lde), A bill; 'pelied ·•)ut> _)'ear permlta ,fOIH',daJ Woitrwub for .Jlllior and .. ntor high achooll bal not eltl1lllltArY .. idlablt. "I believe we should · 1lve all ll<hool districts auch ' llo!bllitY,. It could t>e. a fuel aaver," ¥Siddle declared. . .. DO WE UYE IN A ~ST~PltANT W ASTIL:liND?' ''So'"t L.A. crltlt1 ••Y w• '•· l11t I 4•n't •tt••· Not If yo11 •now how to ••old th• 111Nle• ere. Not If you• ~•ow w~e;e to flillllf ,Uflu'1uol '11••1\¥ ,.,,~r•nh, •ftttt 11••4"'ttf-.4, '\i.ther• the I Of't tf flite •ldl1'ie It ROf '"001• M 11..,,ty (a.y 1ttlool11 .A114 t'i et'• wflet Th• Mortell -.,.rt h ell eHut. ,,.. ' ht'"4ueh191 • _.., "" ..... ,.u.,. . ... .. -· llM 11o ,-........... All4ile1lt11t. AVftierl~ tetl,.., C.11tr•••nl•I. Stren1lv "lfl40,.114011t. Ttte ~•rtell Report It 4t4l••t•4 to h1l11ln9 ytil t•t ftltft ,ltel\IPI fre111 41111111 011t In eur ltotch iltl•r 0114 011t1re OrM\we C.01t/S.11th l•v tr••~ '9t the ,.tfftlt,.. litv•, with ,,.•l•I chemr •ffet, ••'"' f "OO .. L..1i1l• ,.., •• 11. 1011 2462.0, '•'" •~'11•• '•11f••vl1 , ·c,, tl214 • , •• \ ln 1969, Mrs . Fong smash,!d a loilet to bits· on . the !root steps of the state Capitol in an e{fort to gather .support IT'S TQl}\y YEf GOLD COINS CAN . STIIL BE FOUND! You be~they can. But not in people's "ppckets. They're found in Today's impressive; classically formal jewelry. Shown here, some important places for a man, In 14 m1ryeliowgo1a. A. Money clip with $20. 90/dplece, S525. B. Ring . with S2.60-goldplece, S239: C. The massiye l.Q, br'acoleV $425. D. Cuff link• wiih $2,50 goldpiect1, Sl95. Do Something Beautlful .0 UM All'ltriean E•Prtu! ltnkAJMl'icerd •Meil'( Ch1rg1 • . " . .-SLA VICK'S . - Jewelers Since 1117 ' .11 FASH(ON ISLAND NEWPO~T 'BEACH -644-1310 · Opon Mon. •nd Fri, I 0 •.m. lei 91)0 p.m. Witt\ tKii!ft "r Torr•fi',, Crtntt, u Ctttl"'-l..t ~tltt't.._ :, /. ... r.kll 0-'"" u .. VtOH. • ~. ,-~~- ' .. - " . -· .. •• .. ' " ·' • , . • . " ...... ..-.. ..•.. ~.-. Christmas presents for all. Ho ho ho! Christmas bills just for you . Oh oh oh! ' ; Fortunately, there is a way to clean up last year's bills without hocking the family jewels. Ready Reserv Account. Ready Reserv Account means you can write checks for more than you have in your checking account. And all you need is approVed credit.So you can 'give '7 4 your full attention without lookin g over your shoulder wonderin g if '73 is going to catc h up 'vith you again. So long Santa . And a Happy New Year. ,. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK SOMETHING SPECIAL ' • • • I •· • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Jn its voluminous annual report. the Orange County Grand Jury has leveled some weJJ.justifled criticism at the Board of Supervisors. Political self-interest and !allure to display needed le3dership in cn1cial situations were key objections raised by the jury relative to board activities. 'fhe report didn't overdo the criticism -it only took up three of the 300 pages. The rest was devoted to such lhings as health, law enforcement, environment, social Ytelfare and other topi ts of concern to the pub· lie. The critique of the board pointed up weak points that have become glaringly obvious in recent months. These include petty pohticking, hurried action on critical matters, important items brought up off-agenda --.. v.•nh no preparation and crude handling of personnel matters. The boa.rd should accept tbe-criticism as construc- tive. Because of a new state law. this year's jury will have another six months to follow up on its suggestions. That's more than enough time for the supervisors to make some signs that Orange County can get better government. Disc losure Loopholes California's new finanical disclosure and conflict of interest law is a step in the right direction -as far as it goes. But it contains some rather unfortunate loop- holes. The law requires that most elected officials and some appointed officials disclose their business inter- ests in excess of Sl.000 and their soui:ces of income, gi fts or loans in excess of S250. Such disclosures are t'O be made with regard to interests in the jurisdiction in which they serve. Justified Two candidates for the Irvine City Council have ch~sen to file complete disclosll.IJl ~\lll!l!!JJ!ls \!bi!:ll pomt up the fallacy of this geographical limitaUon. ' Candidate Robert \Vest's statement shows that, while he owns a home in Irvine, his business interests are in adjacent Newport Beach and he owns some prop- erty in Dana Point. Neither the business nor property holding disclosures would have been required under the existing law. Incumbent Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley filed a dual statement -one covering required information, ~ .. e, his ~~terest? in the city of Irvine. Ute other report- ing additional income from real estate investments in Riverside County, which would not be required. . \Vhile it is doubtful outside interests such as these would influence beilavior in office the possibilities are obvious. ' The second loophole in the law came about in a sHght wording_ change which had the elleet of eliminat- ing many appoilited offic.iils from the Qisclosure re- q~irements. Disclosure is mandatory for county super- v1~o~s, city councilmen1 city managers and planning com- 1n1ss1oners. But the law now says that local authorities "may" require such disclosure from members of other ap- pointive boards and commissions. The original wording was "shall' Since a great deal of regulatory power and infill· ence rests with these lesser-known agencies, the change s ubstantially weakened Ute law. A much more stringent disclosure law is being pre- pared for presentation as a· statewide ballot initiative later this year. ?vleanwhile, the watered-down version will have to serve. Concern has been expressed that the disclosure Jaw will discourage candidates who do not choose to make public their business affairs. Unfortunately, revelations on t.he political scene during the past year make it es- sential that those who choose public careers must also be willing -to undergo public-scrutiny. .. I • Common Market Dear Gloomy Gus Jtlany Regard Crisis as Hoax Second Th.oughts LONDON -One year .afler entering the Common r-.tarket, most people in Britain feel vastly disappointed in the European Economic Community. When the Common Market is not being blamed for the Unitell. Kingdom's current crisis, it is being damned as irrelevant in solving pressing problems. One senior British official perhaps best summed up the attitude when he described the EEC summit meeting in Copenhagen as ''Eurocrap." TitE ALAR,.1ED perspective i n Brussels is that the community's very future may be at stake unless Britain •--and --'Vest _G_ennany are able to reach agreemenl on the size and distribution of the planned regional fund. Britain u'ants a fun d of about $3 billion over three years to build up its depressed areas. Bonn \vants a ceiling set at about one-fifth of that figure. The controversy is the most serious threat to the EEC since Charles de Gaulle ordered a French \11alkout in 1965. • Because popular feeling in Britain con- tinues to be so negative. Prime 1i1inister Edward Heath has been trying to provide a tangible economic benefit from membership. Hov.·ever, the Germans are also t~ of paying for community policies v.1thout deriving commerisurate benefits. A high German offici~l has said that to accept .Britain's demands on regional development because it might otherwise drop out v;ould be like paying one's spciuse lo be faithful. LABOR PARTY members of the House of Commons have called the first year of membership "an u n m i t i g a t e d disaster." :Foreign Atinistcr A I e c Douglas-Home replied that ' ' \Ve recognized v.·e had lo pay quite a lot in the earl y years but v.·e also calculated the great industrial advantages in the later years." The British contribution 10 the EEC agricultural fund in 1973 \\·as S240 million; returns v.·ere minimal. Because of the increasingly querulous n1ood in Brussels, it nov.• appears that - EDITORIAL RESEARCH regional economic unity will be delayed. The proposal that member counlries should pool 20 percent of their currency reserves \vas shelved a I t o g e t h e r . Transport policy has bogged down. as has a common social policy. The hag· gling in the EEC over the most effective \Vay to handle the Arab oil crisis serious- ly dampened the prospects or a common approach and was seen as a severe setback lo the European cause. HEATH maintains that the Comm1Jn Market is not to blame fo r Britain's rampant innatio n and has been hitting back at the "Little Englanders'' in both parties who have been urging Britain to trim its sails. But a majority of voters now believe it was wrong .for Britain to have joined the EEC. And many British civil servanls told the Sunday Times that they wou ld like to see the organization scrapped. In the Labor Party, which opposed the terms of entry. the consensus is that Britain would lose little by pulling out. The public has blamed the rising cost or living and higher food prices on EEC membership. Peter Shore, a Labor spokesman on the Corrunon Market , has argued that there should be "no government from Brussels v.·ithout the prior democratic consent of the British people." The French and the Germans are openly wondering whether to keep Brit· ain in is worth the price. But Francois- Xavier Ortoli, president of the EEC executive commission. pleaded with the British not to ''break up the com- munity." Despite all th e disap- paintments. the fee ling on the co nt inent is that if Britain should pull out, there ,,·ould be no winners in Europe -only losers. Not Old, Just Timeless • One of the nicest complimenlS any of my children have paid me came this fall from my middle daughter, just before she left for boarding-school . I make it publ ic not for the sake of self-flattery, but because I think it may help some varents betler un- derstand v.•hat their children v.·<snt and hope of them. \\le "'ere talking about "age." about being young and being old. and she said she v.·as gh1d I acted my age and didn't try to rompete v.i lh the v.·hole ncu· youth cultun.!. Upon v.·hich I was tempted to inqu ire. ··vou don'I ttunk of me as 'old,' do )'OU?" "NOT AT ALL;' she answered sv.ihly. "[ don't think of you as young or as oJd. but &!i kind of ... limeless." I was dcl ighled. Because it seems to me that this is v.·hat a parent ought to aim al-timelessness. To make a consctous elfort to remain "young," with all its current lmplicatlons, is too much d a strain for a middle-aged person : yet to sink inlO old age, disafrected from modernity, crabbing about the v.::iy things used to be, seems to me even more an obdicution of one 's proper role. as a parent. · AJ~O I WAS d0ubly pleased, because tbe conlemporartes l ha ve most admired . and would like lo emulate, have e\•inecd this spirit oC timelessness, no matter ho" old they beeame. The recently dead Casals, the recently dead Plcas>0, the l ' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ late lt1artin Buber, all were old in years and experience when they dit..>d, but in some ways as youthful as v.'hen in their 20s. Marc Chagall is another living example of this. Old ·age, in fact, should not be another "pei'1od" in the life or man, like infancy, adolescence, or maturity, but ideally should be a summation of all life: it should include and represent the earlier periods, and not obliterate them. To forget what it was like to be young, to fall out of sympathy with the "'new youth," is to grow rotten before you grow ripe. TO BE timeless Is better than to be young or old or any other specific age; it isJ in my opinion, what Uving is all about-so that you can Identify v.·ith Socrates or Shakespeare as well as v.·ith the latest proponents of con· temporary thought, and so that children's i;ames remain as meaningful end heart· v.·a nning to you as ·an the social and fintincial and medical impedimenta ol gro wing older. Youth Is neither a stage · to cherish nor Ii> reject: rather. It Is a sl8ge to incorporate within oneself, along with all the other ttages that go lO make up the full spectrum o( ou~ humanity unto deaib. Simple Simon met a Pieman going to the fair. llnfortunately, he be- lieved v.•hat the Pieman said. S. K. H. GIOOl'llr Gus comtllfllls ,,.. Wbmlllld IW r•~•l"S Incl llCI llot M<tUlrlh' AUtd flN .,,_, of trit 11tw$NP1r. hlld r.vr l'tl .... v. i. GloOmr Gvs. D•ilY P'ilot. Health Care For Indians ·'Deplorable' (JACK ANDERSON) WASHINGTON -Health experts fear that epidemics may break out on the nation's Indian reservations because of a critical lack of doctors and facilities. Indians already have the highest disease rate and lowest life expectancy of any group in the nation. In an urgent memo to Chairman James Aboorezk, (0.S.D.), the staff of the Senate Indian subcommittee reports evidence or "tuberculosis outbreaks" and "other serious disease epi· • demics particularly in the Aberdeen, S.D.· area. "We believe that the urgency of the present situation not be overe1n- phasized," t h e y stress. The memo declares that "the backlog ot people needing cor- rective surgery is now past 20.000. Of that number, 13,000 children are in need of surgery." Yet President Nixon has impounded Indian Health Service money four of the last five years. Th.if has caused a critical shortage of funds, which has brought on the Indian health crisis. \V ithout adequate funds, a "serious and growing shortage of physicians" has developed in facilities serving the Indians. "The physician shortage," states the memo, "exacerbates the a Ire ad y deteriorating conditions brought on by an increased patient load and inflated costs. By June, 1974, facilities may have to close down for Jack of physicians." TIIE FACILl11ES used by the Indian 11ealth Service have also fallen into deplorable shape. "In the Aberdeen area alone," reports the memo, "60 percent of the buildings being use<! by the DIS have been dedared unfit for use by state inspeclors. "For example, Rosebud Hospital was constructed in 1914 and has been COi> demned even by IHS, but for lack: of funds they will have to make do." Nor can tho Indians rely on their own people for health care. There are only S2 Indian doctors in the enUre United States. The !HS haa launched a new recruitment drive for docton, but the program is unlikely to help Indians in critical need of health care now. Quotes Joe Smith, Fresno. phllosopbizlng on tOllth birthday -"tr you ... aJt)'lblnC wrong, ltraighten lt out.'' ' Gas Rationing Backlash • \\'ASHINGTON-\Vhile the N l x o n administration ponders pros and cons of coupon gasoline ratiooing; ·a bitter truth is dawning on the White House: anti-rationing sentiment has risen so sharply. that Congre,. might reject a presidential request for it. Congressmen who left Washington Dec. 2'l for a month-long recess were unprepared for the backlash to the standby rationing plan tmveiled by energy czar \\rtlliam Simon Dec. Z1. Thus, even If Mr. Nixon requests auth- orizatioo of rationing when Congress re- turns Jan. 21, he might not get pas- sage until mid·April. Indeed, if the present tide keeps running, he might not get it at all. The anti-ratiooing backlash tias been generated partly by interested business groups, including re t a i t automobile dealers. But the N i i: on administration muat s h a re the responsibility. From President Niion down, policymakers have referred to rationing as a horrible last resort almost too dreadful to confront Now that chanoos are better than 50-SO tbal Mr. Nixon will go to ratiming after all, his own words come home to ba\Dlt him. If American voters only weeks ago \\·ere willing to accept gasoJine rationing In time of crisis, Coogresa:men retumJng home for the recesa lowid that spirit of sacrifice evaporated. Jn its place is rising -and heated -opposition· to Simon's standby plan for a 32-gaflon.per- month limit. A sampler of grass roots testing: in the Shreveport, La., area, Democra~ ( EVANS ·NOVAK J Rep. Joe Waggonner got an earful of anti-rationing talk from ownerS of roadside restaurants, auto dealers and just plain d r I v e r s. On Alaryland's Eastern Shore. gas statim OJ)erators have been "bombanling Republican Rep. Robert Bauman wilh anti-rationing argmnen!s. Around Moline, Ill., members of the United Auto Workers who work in the dty but live in the country tell Republ\can Rep. Thomas Railsback that Simon's plan would keep them !run "''Ork. " . A FINAL example: in Macomb County, Mich., coo.taining industrial s ub ur b s of Detroit, Democratic Rep. James O'Hara, during luncbeoo meetings of the Kiwanis, Liom and Rotary this week, was surprised by unanimous anti· rationing sentiment. Worse, he was positively stunned by o v e r r i d i n g skepticism that any true energy crisis exists. As of now, O'Hara would vote agaimt rattoning. The auto dealers, watching their lots lull of gas-guzzling 7t white elephants, have persistently buttonholed Congres .. men from c o a 1 t to roast over the last tMI weeb. Whether this coostJtutes · a nationally coordinated drive, few O>ogre.ssmen have escaped barangiog by local auto d e a I e r s c:ootending that coupon ratl-g would be the last straw bttaking the once-fl'Gl& back of all those gu guzz\ers. FAR MORE fllYSlerious -and some- what omlnouo-11 the mood Congre,.. men now privately define aa mass hys- teria: the conviction by onlinary citizens that the energy crisis i5 a Mu per~ petrated by big oil for higher pio(iil and by ?lfr. Nixon to drown Watergate. Once that devil theory is accepted, the need for rationing or any other emergency measure is automatically discounted - one of Simon's m~ serious worries to- day. Overlying all this is the role or the administration ilsel!. President Nixon has mi~ no public appoctunity to relate the horrors of r a l i o n i n g (describing it as "something the American people would . ..-ve<y, very much"). Simon, far prefsring an unobtainable bigh federal gaaotine tu, 1las """1ded !"uch the same note. EVEN SOME adminlst:ratlon offtclalli assume this1 doomsday rhetoric darm.1 rationing. But in truth, c:banoes are beUer than evert that Mr. Ni.xOR will have to swallow it. Simon's litmus test is whether the ti~ gas ~!1~Ji~c:11!~~~ol=i flatly predicl3 rationing will be necessary ii the Arab embargo ii not <l1ded by Feb. 1-an unlikely developmenl · Mr. Ni.ton's advisers now fear a Feb. I call for gas rationing would be cleloy.d at least t""O mont.M and, lf CGngressmen co_nttnue to hear grass roots hcmility, rrught never pass. Few of his aides would urge the Presklent to 1 m po 1 e rationing with the dubious lialutory autOOrity he now has. SIMON'S TASK is not enviable. 11.\ving described the horrors of rationing, he may now have ·to sell the necessity. More to the Point, he must oonvtnce Americans that the energy crisis 11 real and not another dirty trick, and he must do it without much help from the Oval Office. Noth.ing bet t e r undersccres the crisis of a President withoot credibility than the · developlni fiasco over gas rationing. The Happy Unity of Shared Hatred Well , you don't have to worry about the Energy Crisis any longer. I 've solved· it. You're welcome. The problem, Our teaders keep telling us, is that we must all voluntarily unite for the common good and comerve energy. 1bey have made a blatant ·~ peal to our sense ol brotherhood and love. Thua, ll11 an appeal that'• bound to fall. The .. iuuon came to me in a blinding fialh as I was driv4 Ing up to th• mountains to relax last weekend. Like all good Americans, I alWays drive up to the mwntalns to relas at 70 mlles an hour. This way It takes me thrff.utd- •·half houn to reaclt the mow>lalna to relax and another hall hour to .....ver from the wlllp1 and jingles. Btlf LAST weekend, in a noble oxpertmen~ I kepi the lpeedGmeter under ii. tr' like lllOI! good Amertcalis. you've never driven under 55, you1I llnd the. esperlenc:e -.g, vilually rewardln( and dQwnrtgbt'ldyUlc; True. I burned up 10 gallonl ol gu getllng there, bul I savtld at least a callon for my fellow Amorieans. 1nde<d. my only regret Is that my journey wasn't twice as long to 1 could 11ve them two gallons and fetl twice u noble. Moreover. while Ute trip took lour boora, I dido~ require a hall hour at the end to ..im clown. l nqulred 4$ minutet luleC -tlte ,.._ belnt ART .HOPPE all u-{..good. rotten, 1eWah, gas- guulfng maniacs who passed me doinlg 70. rr WAS then that the aolullon bit me. What we ·must do when we are pauOd on lhe highway, fellow M-mlles· pei'ltour Amrl'""" 11 bonk! And throw in a scowl, too, if you can manage jt. . Think ol ' the emotions churning in the breast of any dirty. e1omaniacal link plAing • line of honking, ..-ling, law .. bidlnc mqtorllill Think of the shame he'll leell 'llllnt ol the mental ancuioh we '11 inllfcl Upotl blm ! Think ot ·t11e 11oor of oe11-r1pi..us p1ea.m. that will nnn the codtlel of our bearll 01 We -and ..-J aWOJ. • I • 5oca ..,. lqllwa11 wtl1 be llJVIOetl Into baPPf -.. and delploed --Nol only will this prove a, llnl step In IOlvlllc 'l1le · EbersY Cr11111, but It wlll pnmoCo racial an117 ...... -and our bladt brolbm can halt tlte --IGC<lller.~ • PllOtll TllEIUC, K wW be but a lllmple olep lo .. , ....... .,.., .... eloctrlcity. All we ..e ck> ti ... cm 1 c.unmoa bate Qbjeet. -WU1 ...... the nendlllt • Arabi. -the .,....,, oil barottt. Bal I inp111 -baolcally r<sponlllble lot Illa .-we're In - Our Bumilllal i-. ,,,. ..... 1ln -Illa Iba 11-t ti' dim Illa QPll. .. can Cl'/ GUI In ......... ..,.... lllat. ,... ......... ' • Leaders, you!" And we can sit in the chilly darlr.nes.. aglow wtth the sweet fire of righteous revenge. At last, Americans will be unllod, ju.I as our Leadero havo urged. Nor can they be faulted !tr not dolnc their part. For U th<re's one thin« hillllnr It's tblt Jove 111<1 lntheriiood ,...,..1 ~ in ttieir place. Bui --;:.,.~ tnifies human beinp la a mutually -haired. 1 . ---DAILY PILOT llob<rt N. Wred, Pul>lllfltr Thomor K...U, Editor Borbaro K r<lblc• .E4itonal Pog< EtfUot> ,,,. -,_ "' ""' t>o1lr Pilot-to---· ,....,.... , bf P"'M•hc • • ~ -·-··-"'"" tmrlt • i ...... ed col• ..... cul llli, br puwldflc a lnln k ............... .,, ,... • .. tllll ............ .,..,l1w...tt6al• __ ,,,. ____ of ... Dollr Pllol --Ii u. odltorW -11 t1oe •111p al .. -.~ ......... .... UfMllll -C-.tlibi -... ,..... ----------"' --"' ... .,,,., Piiot ...... "" ......... . 'l'Ueoda7, 1111111117 11, 18'7t • ' ) . • r I •• . -. -. . --------.- Tue~11y, Januar~ 15, iq74 DAI LY PILOT 7 ' -. . -., • ",,. • -, I . . . .. . . ·' ~ ·•\{ .... ,.l . ·. ·:.,..·.·-.. '·)<-., , .. ,.... '. -. . . ' . .. . . ' ; . ' .. . ' .. . , ' . . ' . '. -\ ! , ., . .., .. . • ·-• . .• · I • • ' ' ••. .1 . ·If you just ' . ~ . . ' . ". . .. . ,,. ........ ..· ' ,·, -.·. .. . ~ • don't feel comfortable . ' ·• --. in a-·small c-ar, a e aer. - _, . After aJI, GM makes ·more kinds After all, GM makes more kinds of regular-size cars . than anybody. of small cars _· ·_ than anybody. . '. . , . ·-· ' . ·'. --~ . . . .;,• . 'l ....... · ,_ ·-.· ' ' • • ' • And -if you're simply shopping for a deal- whether for a~mall car, a regular-size car or -.. • • anything in between - eea · You might get the .... :.. best deal of your life. -. l .... , • , . . . . . CHEVROLET • PON,T tAC ··OLDSMOBILE • BUICK • OPEL • CADILLAC ' . • • • ' . ' • j • ·, 1 • -~ . ' . . . .. . . . • • .l . ---~ ' • ' . j ~ I . . . ~· .. ~ . . . I • • • • • . :·-.we want you to :r dri_ve what -you , like :'and like what yoU drive. . . '· . . . -~. . ' . . . . • ~ ' . '. . ... . ,,_-. • ... 1 .. ' ,. . .. . \ . . ' \.I ' r • ' ~ '1 1 • \ -!"' '-\ •• t \ • • • ' • :· .J " • f I " ' .. ·-.....-.,,,,,1 l • . . . I · I · ' i j Deatlis Elsewliere PASADENA l l! r I ) Otrnudotte P. Ltste:r, 77, a forn1cr officer or lhe Los Angtles Stock t::tctrangc and an invesuncnt b roker \\'ho helped the pulilic fina ncing or the Rohr Aircraft Corp. and olhcr Sou t h c r n California jndustries, died l'\'lond:iy, SA~'TA MONICA (UPll Fun eral scrvil-es "'ill b e c onducted Thursda y for Kt!north C. .,~rogley, 67. a f ormer L os Angeles nc\\'Spaperman and pub I i c r cla•ions d irector for a reg ional offict of American Air lines. A retired public relations 1nanagcr or lhc NEW. EAG~ES -·n1ese eight Boy-Stouts fro m Ir- vine 1'roop 36 will be<:orne Eag le Scoute \Ve d nes- day 1tight. I•'ro1n left are Larry Le Vo1r, 16; ~!arty ,ICTITllUI IOllMlll ,ICTITIOUI IU11'4•fl 'KTIT1001 IOllM•ll MAMI ITATIMIHT -.,AMI STATIMIMT MAf!\I IT.&TIMll!IT TIM foll•._il'IO "t lOM ••• f tillll TM ... ~,.. "'"°"' 1r• llOIAO ~lowl"ll otl'Ml'I la OOlnt Wtlna11 ~ 111 Wtllltft ,,-- • , MOTHlll:'I 111:.t. .. O, lffO H"'°" 11UT0Hlalf CALl,Oll:HIAI ",\A,Ml lt MAltlHI, IOl·I GrW l lYll., c .... MMt, Cl'll. t2'1f ITOHECll.Al"T. 1t.IU ll ...... Hvn"nttw! A"'" .. n11 AN. cenr, AJMrt HoU.wly, .Qll Monettem, •••c"-c1111. tUl1 lt•"41H "*'' "'!""'. 334 H, L•lllWOOCI. C•llf. t01U LIWrtne• w. l<•v .. • ·~ llho!lt.l Mlni1tl, l'Ulllr!Orl. Calif, Joll" H"""''"' IUU E. Cir.on. Hunllr19lot! B•lch. Ctllf. ... 1 1 Tt.11 t11.11lr1Mt It condvcffd lly '" H•w1ll1n 0.tdMI, C1lll, tl0.71• od Tlloml• C. 1(1vt. 1"'2 fthfNJ I llldlw10u1I, T~I• bull-It CONIVC:ltd llY I l!mll Hl,lt'lllnrit!Oll l..c:h. C•lll . .,.., SlgO.O: H •IMt'Ullp. Mirll S. Grae•. IU't llm.flf, I R. It. P1!1Mr • Sl91*1 1 HU"""''°" ltlCPI. Caltf. fM.11 Tllll lltl""""' wt• llltd WilPI 1"-,I.I HollOWllY llobtrt C. Ort<•• 16Mt ll:honf, c-•v Cllf'lr Of °''"" Cou111y Of\ Tlllt 1119-I \!lilt tlltd llllll'I '"' Hu1>ll"11ton B11<ll, Cell!, .u.t I Ja-y "' lt7( COlilllV Cllf'll " Of•• County Oii Tr.I• bll11Mll I• condllCltd llY I fllllfll Publl1Plad Ora"' Cotti D It "-:f11: J1nu1rv 7, lt74 l'~IS ptrlftlf1llfp, . ' • y ' t SIOl'td: I J1n11try I, \J, 22, 2t. lf7( 2 .. 74 'ubll1hld Or•ntt CNSf 01lly l>llo ' Tl\emtt c. Ktvs I J•l'lu1ry 1, lS. ti, 29, ,,,, 5'·1' l hl• ittNmtfll w•• llltd with '"' PUBIJC NOTICE COVl!IY j:ll•lr of Ortnot C1un1~ t" 1----;;;;:;;;;;c.;;;;-;;:;;;;,;;;;;---j_ __ :P~U:B:L:I:C~N:.:.:O~TI~C;E===:-::IJ•nui•Y ,, 1t14 ,...,, ''CTITIOUS IUllNISI NOTIC• 01' INTINTION TO •NIAOI l'ulll!tl'ltd OttllG~ C8tlt OellY ,.11,1. ! NAMI tTATIMINT IN THI IAL. OJI ALCOHOLIC J1t1111ry ... IS. n. ,,, 1t14 ,._,,I Tiii lolttWlflf Pfl'WI It 4ol"f ltlll/Mtl 1 llYliA•lt a1 : 111''" PUBLlC NO'nCE THE Flll$T lltAOING COMPANY, T• WHOM IT M>,Y CONCEllN : l---==c::-:::=;::::;:;;--.U10 C•mitW Orlv1, lvlfl f, N""'"rl luttlKf ._ liwenc• of 1t1e Uc1t11~ I· BH<h, (tlllotnt1 t2Wl PllllM lw ,_II«' Ii Mr..,. gly•n !NI NOTICI TO tlllDITOlll t:lobetl 0. HUJ, "570. C.mpu1 Oil .... ~ht llt'lll«•l"* ~ , ... u tlce!'IOttC ~ IOl'•••o• COUllT °" TM• Suitt '· N...-port •••<I>, c11Uornr1 .,....,. .... It Ille '"'lft'llM .. .,,.,1Md STATI Of" CALl'Olt,.IA P'Olt ~ THI COUNTY 0' OUM•I Tl>I• btlllnt11 I• tonduc:IM W •ft It frlllllWl~ttlJ MlfA~ l lvd. Ht. A•Jllll l"dlvldual IMM Cell'°'"1a Ellllt 1r JACK Wlt.t.THElt, Ill. sioned: louTJ OKU$ecL --J.auber, l6; Bit1 ·Czarnecki1 16; Chris Conn.oily, 16;· •obfff o. Hin --· 1111 oTice: 15 HS:1tl!1Y a1v£N loo tt>e ''ll.k e \l'1·11i an1s. 15, and Mark Connolly, 17. Not pie· This i 1•1•1Mft1 w•• •11H wl•1> "" 11~~~:i::i 11'!PC11~,,;._i~~~:r1m1"1<T:.11~.,, 1111 allow "'mtd c11ee<1tn1 !> C_,ty Cl•tlr ol 0<1nte Count'!' In .,, Al<ollollt ltvlrlfl Conlrot lot IHllll'ICt INll ~ll pen«it ll•Y!nt d4fm1 •01lnil turecl a r e Louis Cohen, 15, and Harry Kohaut, 16. Janu•rv 1. 1t14 •n •l<olw>llc ...,_... nce11ff 10.. h• .ukl c11cec11tn1 •r• rM1UI,... ta 111, P..JIW °'•-1 ... ,, ftlttwt• thtm. .,,·1111 1ri. ,,." .. ,... vt<Kl\lff, In Ga rreU Cor p ., Froglcy dil!d friday at his hon1c. HA IFA, Israel ~AP I -llr. Ben-Zion Kaunders . V.'orld vic e president of lhe J <' 1v i s h s<'rvice organization • B n a i B'rith, was killed 1\1onday in a taxi-truck collision. police ::innounced. T he 66-ycar-old businessman \\13S travCJing b y 1axi from T<'l Aviv to his home in Haifa. Pvblllhfiil Of'llllt C.-u D•llY 1'11ot, SW-OH &ALE Gt!N'ellAL IM ollltl ot !M tlert of 1111 l llOVt El. gl1t l1·vi' ne Scot1ts Get Eagle's w.· ngs ~·"u•ry •• P,~B::·~:.VE ,~,, !IOHA =~:!:~~~~.~~~1~3~~CEI ~:~7i=i;l;w,::~r::' :~:~r::: ( .. "'"'""' "'!"' '"" Dollr '""· "''"'""'" ..... ,, Bw•••<>• '"' J1n1111y 15, 1t1 1$2-IS s.ivln, o1$11 North llo~bu"( OtlV., IWtrly de 1 l>t4 HUl1, C1lll. 90210, wlllch 11 tilt pl.tr,c~ HOTICE TO ClllOITOlll LIC NOTICE Of busl l'llH of !he undlf'llllnld In 11 ' IU,llllOlt COUltT 01' THI PUB mill••• per!tlnl,.q le IM •1!111 "' N E h '·-t 'fus B1'JJ C k' 16 f th f • '' . pro1·•ct, hold at least STATI 01>' CALl,OIHIA l>'Ol 1110 dectdtnt wltt!I~ llMlr m.nth1 •lltr T USTI! -1g ! uuy scou s lln: zarnec 1, , :'01n c rvine '-'ompany, crv1ce '-THI cooNTY OP ot.AN•• •OTtCI TO c:101T019•• tht urit publlC:•tloo of 1~1• no11c1. f · T 36 ·11 •-f 'I d '! E •h1'cl1 sp 11s ors the troop 21 b-d •es of merit for past ti• •·IMlt 1u.-11l1011: cou T o' T oared J1nv1rv 1914 rom Irvine roop 11·1 uc sono 1~ r .. an h rs. ugenc 11 o · " "' Etllt1 11 ARTHU1t H. SMITH, O.C•••· ITATC tlll C.t.L1,oaau~ 'o" Dot1•ld 8 1111 ""' trow,., honored with the covele<I rank C."la 111ecki, Irvine; 1~ arr Y ·'Norn1a!ly, onl.v one or t1vo <1chieven1ents. and obtain '°NoliCE is HER EBY oiveH 1, the TH• to~'!.'I.M,:••NGI ~!«:~~.o~~~"'w~!c~~ .. 11 f .. V" 1 · h Koha ut. 16. son of Jl,:Jr. and SC'QU!s a )'c<.ir co1np!ctc the severa l l ,etters ofcrtallnrs of tile t t>o"• n~meci deced1n1 l•t•I•" HELEN OOTEN sMILE,Y.•••••• ,,,,. 0 ,, 0 N, oooow t H 1 0 "Eagle \ L-'ulleS< ny ntg l. ti II I I I 1 D SMlt.IY o.eet1.i ' t>.lrs. 11arry f\ohnut, 'fustin; rcnuirements and be co 1n e recon1mcndation from various 11111 • ,.r•on• •v 1111 c •ms If• nit 1k1 HELEN · • 1 1· ~ •••••••TI a fl!LYIN d . a l tl'!' 11'11 Ea I '1 • lhe ••Id llKedtnt •r• rftllllrtd to Hit MOTICI IS HEll!l!IY GIV H O Ut MMTll at.lllu<Y Orl v• unng ru 1 JO ' ·' g e i\1arty l.nuher, tfi. son cf {)r. elig ible for the rank of .. :aglc." superiors. He must also have them, with 1111 n1c11Mrv Youclltra, In ~rMltor1 11, tha 1t1tv. ... ,n1mM t11ecec1en: 1 ,.,.11, HI"" ci11fom11 ffl1t Court of 11onor ceremony. a nd Mrs. Don<.ild J. Lauber, With the addition of the eight been a Boy Scout for at least ~':111::r~ou:':. ~,0c1:;:!11~ :_a,,,,11~~~ ::::1 .!~ ':c9:'9tr111111",!.111;~l= 1:111~~. I::!:,"..:'~'!'~'~.,. JACKSON , Mich. (AP) - The Rev. Dr_ W. Harry Krieger, 59. viee president or the Lutheran Church-1\1issouri Synod, died Sunday. 11e \Vas pres ident of the · ~fichigan District of the 1\lissouri Synod for five years before 1965. \l.'hen he became a pas tor o f Trinity Luther3n Churc h here. The colorful r itual, open to Santa Ana: Larry Le Voir, boys this week. JO of the l\l.'O and one half years and'"' ntc:""'rv vaucMr•, to ttia vn· 111am, w1111 1111 ,._rv '¥..°"""'"·In l'ubll•lltd °''"" c o111 01nv "n"'. • dlf'Jl1ntc1 11 Ille 01n~1 01 Mr !llomrfl. tht etllc• .i ltM clerk II 'tie •boll• , lS 22 2t 1t1• t2·74 the public, will be held at 16, son of ~'Ir. 11nd ~1rs. Clive troop's 45 active nll'n1bc1-s will a lead e r in the troop for at LEF1Tz a. LIFTON, lOHt wuw.re 11wi •• "'""-' ceurt, "'hi,..._, 'Ii"'"• w1111 J1n1111rv • • _. __ ·_c_,---'- the Tustin pres by 1 t' r i 8 n Le Voir. Santa Ana. and ~1ike have received this high honor. least one year. !':,\~11 1l!" ~" ;:.•";; ~::~!··ct'°': :=..rai'::: .. ':1 i:,"''=~1 '!t" ~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE \Villinms. I ~. son of '.\Ir . and • In order for a scout to Irvine Troop 36. which is un<1tr1lgnld '" an m••••r• P1rt1rn1111 attDrntr•· MYE1t1. SMITH AM DJ -------c-=~~ Church :it ~1<.1 in a nd ··c" . I to IM Hl•I• of Mld llKtdllll. wltl>ln JACkSON, 61D Newport Ctr1lff Dtlvl, COSTA Ml!A IANITAllY OllT•lcT ' • • ~1rs. J ark \\'il!iams. San1a beC'oJn e elig ible for Eag le part o the Orange CoWlty tour month• •ll•r tne 11rst pubtrc1110t1 $ult• nu. Hwl*'I "'d1, c1111orn11 Oll.lMG• COUNTY. c.u.1'o'•IA Strccls al 7·30 p 111 An t 1 h t nd Co ·1 f -• d o1 t1111 l'IO!lc1. t lUO. w~lth la !I'll p11ca o1 t>utlnHI MOT1c• JNYITING .. DS < • • • :1. s a us. e nius u rrgo a unc1 . 1~ as ornlt."IJ ~ O•tM J•nu•rv '· 1t14. °' '""' 1111d..,l.tned 1" 1u m111er1 "IOTtCE is HERESY G1VE'4 1111t Recipients of the rnedals for "It's unusual for a lroop ~C'ries of intl'nsive int<'rvicws chartered 111 1952. An active 1vtLYN tAll:BAll:A w 1lH wt•ltlllll 10 1t1e ••1i. o1 wkl d.ctc11n1. 1M1td pr°"ou11 wrn 11e r«•'""' by I h b nd I "-[ · h I IE•ICUH I• of !hi wlU of Wllhln fevr fPMll'llM 1n1t !hi fir1t 1111' City Cltrk, It<! blh11f DI tilt '"'' this highest scouling rank arc: . o a.ve !'O many o Y s :1 con1p e tc a nuntOA:r o can1p1ng group, I e roop goes 1t1e abOv• namfd dtc'*"' l'Vbllc•""' 11 lhh llollct. M11• 5H1lt1rv Ohlfltt, 11 htr ottrce Lou'·, Cohen. 1,-, son ol .'Ir. be. coming .Eagle Scouts a.t oo e d ifficult r equirements. The on at least one outing a n1onth l.ll'ITI a Ll,TON o.led J1t1111,.., u. 1n• in ""' City H111, n r'1lr Drlv•. cn.11 " · ' l y1 Artlltw V. a..flh OAVID T. SMILEY aM Mt11. C1ll10rnl1. vnlll 11'111 hour of 11 :CD 1 • t1me." s ;ud Dt'an Buchingcr, prospecfi\'e E agle n1us1 pla n usually trek1ng through th~ 1.,,.. wu1111r. 1tw., s11n1 uJ4 .ADlllENHE s. KILLEEN. 1.m. on 111t 4th daY ol F.oru•rv 1'7• Dearh Notices and ~fa i.le lvin C 0 hen ·I in s titution:il rt•n, rcscntative and r arrv. ou! a co inmunity local mountain areas L ... ,...._ .. cau1. *" Co.bklllor• o1 tile wm or '' w111c11 11nw 1111Y ...,,. 111 ......, • Attor""" !tr l.l9C.nri1 tM •"°"' Ml'ISM ll9Cadenl ou11Ht1't' •nd r1MI 11eud 111 It'll COUMll Irvine; ris Connolly, 16, and ------'---------'--------------l>ubll•hld Or•ltil coe1t o.nv Piiot, MY1•1, 1Mrrw AND .IACIUON C11tfrlt1tr1 '°' lurnhhl"f 1t1 i..11e, •no ~lark Connolly, 17, sons of Mr. J111u1ry 1, 11, n. It, 1''' ,..,, A!ttrMY• 11 Yw "11Nrl•l1 for t111 <on•lrvctlon 01 • -::::ir:::'l~::ii-::::i l---'------------1"• N...., Ceehlr Df1YI wl'ltarv -r mt ln In Wiiton StrMI d • G C JI §1 -;: f11IN 1111 from Marbor lt'ld. lo 1>19<91111• AYI. 9EAV!ill lla1pn H. IJ•fU Braver. 191t Chub11co Oo .• Corwla d1J Mnr. Da!a cl de•ll'I. J1ftu1rv 14, 191~. S11rv1Yrd bY wlla. 8111/e, of tile homt: 1i;m, Rlcha•d 8 6ttYi!r. C11t0<1" (ltl N.tt; (11ug~ltf, Ntnt v McDowell. C'l.>Clnn.Jll, Ohic1 an ulrs. regory onno Y' ~~l.!:2.Jl~~lll --~P':.U~~B~L~l~C:;N~OTl~~C:E'.':_ ___ ,N•_,.., ._.. C14:1flntl•,,,... A "' ,, Pi.ni. "U11Clllt1tlM1 •nd Tll1 1n•1 611411t ' oOwr contr1c1 doc11monb m1v bt AllHMTI 11r C•lucllllrf ob!1l"«1 •I the -r olflc• ot 1111' 011'9Cter Jack~ 's . l.CSJ Pulllllhtd Or1n111 Coell D1Uy !"Hot, ol Public 51r~ktL Room 417. In ll'll' Forums Set Ot{ Wuste ;· brohll!f, LO)'d W, """vcr, Slerr1 M1<1•r: tlYi! gr,1ndchlldreo, Sc1vl(tl will bl l!rld Thurui.y. Jan. 11, 1 l'>M, St. Andrf N\ Prrotoyltritn Cl!urch wi!h Or. Cnarlr\ H. Oirrenlltld oltlcla!l~v. Family ~u11 oes!• mefl'IOllal <t'l'lh l1>ulion1 m~y bo made to R111J•!lor1 ll'!~rauv, Ho.:111 n~mo.-111 HOlopll•I. !"acl!lc View Morlu~ry, O!rectOfl. IOOHEll A1.!9rry E. Blllllltt .. Resldrnl cl A1Julc.n Vleio; d•I• ol a.atr., J1n111rv u 1~1~. . SUr'liVed by h\llil>and, llotlerl IC Bo1htr; ' molhf't. Mr1. Nellie H'ath; 1 .. 1t•. l'.lri. • M•r11a"I Wilson, t>oll• ol London, E09!1nd. Gi-1wtlde 1efvket, Wrdnn<i•y, 1 PM. El loro Clmtlery. McCormick ~11n• 8eKh Moflv••Y. O"r-clors. . IOllllOW5 • L:iorl1 M1• ll11rr-1. RHlden! ol IJ113 ; Brookh11r1t Aw .• W•1!mlntllt. Dalt of 1 dHllP>, J1nu1ry I), 1'7•. Survivrd by iwrentt, Mr. Ind Mrs. Pl>!JUp Bufrow1; bro!Mt. G•ry, of CMll MM•: •Il le" f M•rv srone, Ml11loro Vlt Jo. Vl•ll11ioo. . Wrdnew1y, from JO AM TO l ;lO PM. ~ Bell l •OlldwllV CllaJlei;-Gr I Y t 1 Id I '; Ht'llces. ThufW•Y• 1 PM. Hlrl>Of Ritt : .Yemorlil Park. Bell 8ro1<:1w1v Mortuary, · Oirrctors. ( FllOHSMAH ·Frink Frtncll Fronsman. Rttldtn! cl ' 14907 581h Avenue E111, Puv•ll110. , Y/111>1"910!1, Otlt ol de•ln, J1n111ry 10. • 1t14. S11rvlvtd by ~. F"rrd Frontml n, ~ ot W11hh111!0<11 d1u111>1er, Sally w11~1f. 0ftllOl'1 ; ""'" gr•nCkhlldren; I O \I r I brolhl'I'• 1nd tt1ree 1!1lets. St cvlcr1 1nd { lnJerment wtfe held In Mcun!ain Vitw Memorl1! Plfk, T1corTU1. WalhlnqTon. \ Btlll-Btr!l•ron F111>tral Home, Costa • Mr11, Farwtrdlr>g Dlr~lor\, KllAGEHllllHK . Paul& E. Kr111enDrlnk. 666 W, 191P> : SL. Ct»la M111. 0111e of de~th, j1nu1 ry • IJ, lt7,. 511,....lvord by two Dro!hfrt, : Lton&rd Kr1119nbrfnk, S<1ft!<1 Anft; llev, 1 Eric Kr101nbrlnlc, C1m"rlllo: 1wo •!Siers, ~ M••· E1lllar M. O'Brien, C111t• Mtsd; ' Mr1. Lro!M Strotdt. ·ri1wpor! !lct cl'!. · Servlte1, WfdneMl~y. 1 PM, Bell ·Broadway Cll•oel. will\ llfv. L .F. 'Hll\'Ol'M>n Ind Re v. Robert J'1'.0b• ·'. ottlclall'>';l. lntlf'm<'nt, F 1 I r P> II" t n · . Memo•!•I l'lrll. 8111 B•~w1v Mortuary, Oirec;tors. MC CLAIM' P•ul Rir..Mll McClllfn. M,ft HemlCK~. • 1moer111 8Hdl. 0111 of de1th. J1nu••Y 0 lJ, ''1•. SutYIYed bv ~rrnts. Mr. t nd Mrs. Ff•l'lt 1 MtClaln; slsl!r!. N•nc~ 111><1 Jearll!'tlt. !iefYi<t•, Frld•y. j1m11rt Water Plcui Orange County Sanitation D istricts arc seeking public input concerning the i r scheduled upgrading or 11•astev:aler treatment ilt the ir }lunt ington Beach plan!. Tv.·o public forums have been schedUfe d for \\rednrsday, at to a~m. Lalicf 7 p.ni., for the public to hear lhe various proposals and !heir potential impacts. and to respond to each propos al. "Public input from the t1vo meetings, from. both private citizens and <'nvlrunmenlal g roups, will assist lhe distriel's in the selection of the proposed improvement to be presented for evaluation by stale and federal authorities." explained a spokesinan for the sanitation districts. New laws to lighten up waste"'aler treatn1e nl have been iss ued by stall' and federal authoritie s . the spoke'Sman added. Cost or the proposed II. 1111 NOTIC• TO CllDltOaS Ji t111•ry 11. n, tt, 111d ,lbrUtry S, Clly Hill upon p•ynwnl ol l'IYI Ool!1r1 IUl'altlOlt COUll:T 01' THI lt74 }4'=M {IJ.OO>. An lddlllOtltl chi .... ol Oftt STAT• 0, CALll'O•NtA l'Oll ~ 6oll•t ($1.0D) Wiii bl rNldl Ir ~lndlad TMI COUNTY 0' O•ANll U OTJCE II HEALTH SPAS Ht. A·l'k7' PUB C N bVE~ ~d 111111 be mtdt °" 111t pt-Jal Si.•m.,,,,,,, Pooi • 105 \'\lhnlr:Ool B Hh 11!0 F1nn1s1> Rotk Saunil • O·• ol E'ut al·101us ''h1IJ!oOn Rl>O"ll 135 Tu•~15r1 s1 .. .1m H11om • u 111, Mod""n •t Phy·""' 11 f•!nl"s~ l 1'>11nn ((IU•DITIIJli! ' F'"!• ' '" f< [\n:~' '11 Arpar.11~5 r.,-ld'·•n ~l>v~·c ii F ll't u, EatJ.'.'"'""' V/(.'m,,n < F·C.<I'" f <tr"lt'S:: Pro,;·11T1 rJtn '>Phy~· ,1 F•tncs:.; >'rC'·::.1rr1 ·Jack a • Prohle FJr.•al M~t"•n{'!. r ,,v,1f'' Tiiermo~tr·c Conir ol!t>d Shower~ • P"va10 01es~u1g Boo!hs • P••1.1!e Clol hr>s Loc~ers • Nuirit•on~I Cot>nseh11g HEALTH SPAS Oi>i /l ~E V fN O A~', A W l(tl 3611 South Bristol, Santa Ana (714) 979-4800 corner of Bri stol & MacArthur E1t1tr er RUTH CHATlEllTOH, form •nd In 1!\t ml nMr prevlded In Otctetord. • llY tnto contr•ct doc:u1n1n11, •nd 1ha!I bl c,~9~e ,,,•s,i:E.':!!Y .;!~N ~= :~:::•:: cC:~::.:r .. ;:: Kc0f'IP9nltd by • ''"'Htd u (11111t r'1 thal •II penon1 hlYlf'ltl cl1ll'l'!I lftln•I TMI COUNTY DI" OltANll ~~k te:' Pt~ct~:d ii~ JOI' !ht ~.ri.!:: lh• ••Id dlctdtnl •r• req11lrH to Ill• ... A.fllal of t,.. bid mtdl PIY•lllt .. the (.11111 t11em, with file n«ll ... r'f' vovchtn, In NOTICI Ofl HIAll ... OP PITITION M9w Si nlit rv Dhl tn• offkt or t!'lt eltrk 91 111t lbew l>'O• ,.M.&TI t 0 U II: T T• NOTICE 15 l"Ui:lHEll GIVIEN fhal 1r1Htltd court. or It Pfllll'll flllm, wit/> D•T•lMUill TITL• TO l'ltOPllTY 1111' Bo.1to DI Olrtctori o1 It'll Coil• t1M nKH .. ry VCIVCl'l«L lo I ~I (f' .... tl (•a ltc. UIJJ Miii Sinlt•ry Ol1ltlcl hal ... r•tofort 1111dl!'slorwd at Ille "'lie• ol hl1 llllfl'Ol'f'I, E1t111 ol GEORGE CECIL 11.0SE, "tibll5htd a prtvlllll'll raN and Ki it PARKEll, BERG, LORO &. SOLDWEOEL. 1k1 GEORGE C, ltOSE, D«e1Hd. of WIQtl In ltCDrdlncl 'fll'llh tew, to m SIC11fllY flldg •• P1 .. dl"•· Cttllornla NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN file! be ptld Jn tht COtlllrucllOll ot 11>1 911111 . w!!lcll ft lht pltct ol bu1J,..u HELEN M. ROSE. 11 Mmlnl1lr1trl• lllo'lt enlltl td lmJN"•.....-..ntt. Tiit! .. Id ol lht undtrslolltd Ill I ll m•lf•t• ol 1111 nial9 II Geer,e Ctcfl llc-u, r11t Ind Kiii ..... td11Dllll by IM i;1rt1lnl09 10 Int Hl1lt ol ,., .. dlcfdtfll, h•I lllH heflll'I • Pfl]!l(lfl fW "" BDl•d of Olrteto<t bY lltHlllllol'I "'' within lovr month1 •lllr tlll llr1t c-t lo dttlf'ml11t 11111 to flw Plfton•I ,,.,,1 on ,,.. Jtd d•Y "' J•AU••Y; publl<•tlon of lhls nollc1. pr-ty d .. crtbld •• I P'omltlOfV "°11 1t1l 1,.,, 11 on !lit In the olfl« ol 0•11<1 J1n111ry 11, 1'14. In !Pit ort9l11tl 1urn ef 111),!('4.!IO dlltd till AWittnl SKrtitry, 7'J 1"1lr Dtlvt. L\.OYO M. CHATTERlOM Oc~ 2. lff.!. PIVtbll to C.Dll!t Colli MtM TJ\11 .. kl r•ff •nd Kiii E•tcUIOf ot lht wlll Row1 hi Mhor""nt lt>ll tlll ll'rlDMI ll herein r'eltnfd to ll'd adaclltd In ot Int •bOvt narnad d«edtl'll flMIPttlY la Illa '"" tommunltv Pl'Ofllrl'f' ll>l• notlc• 11 lhOVafl fully tlld c°"""'tt!Y "AllKll, ll•O, LOltD d ftM pill!~ -111111 -flle-Meta..C ~AC! ..e r.rtll Mrtln, ll'ICI lhet w l• sc•lt . a SOLOW.OIL that ""' 11111111-II 11\"lled to .•• tdopled lly wlc rlMfllllM It m10t 1n Stt11ri1Y INt. dl1trlbvtloll II 11'19 tntlr1 Kl.•'-· rlftr•Mt 1 !Nrl ol ll'lli noll(I ltY rtttrenc1, l>tMNu, C•lif. tllll lo wnlch 11 midi lot lurtntr Plrllcul1r1. Tiii' contr•ctor wll In Ille ptrformtnct All-•• fw l•Klllff 111d 11111 Iha 11.,.. •rid pl1tt of 11Hrlr19 DI 1111 w ... t and lmprev-11 conf.Qf'n Publlt~rd Or1nte COISI 01rty Piiot. Ille .. "" ~It beefl Mt fer Febru•rv i. 11\t Ltbor CIHle of the 5Ult o1 J1ftuary I~, 22. 20 and Ft0ru1ry 5, I. 1fl4, •I •:CIO 1.f'I., ltt Ille ICO/tJlfroorn C•!lfornla ll'ICI ofr..t' 11..,. of llhl 5t1lt, -"-"------------'c~_·_,;1•, ol Oepartmtnl ~o. , ~ I lo COllr!, ·~Hctbf• .... rtlo, with ,,.,. •JIClpflff •I 70CI Cll(lc C•nl•r Or YI Wttl, In Ollly of wch Y••l•ll•rtt I I m•Y °" PUBLIC NOTICE Ille C~ty of Sin!• An•\_C1IHornl1. rtQ1tlrtd vndlr lht tfl9(111 111111111 011M J1n1Hry u. 1'7( pvr1u1t1t i. wnlch P•DCMdlnos M••11not1 WILltAM E. ST J04'iN, 1,. t•-lft and W'l'llcfl lllYI Mt beln NOTICE TO c••DITOlll Ctunty Clerk flJll'rHlled by ttw> Pl'l'll1lc1t11 of Int SU,.ElllOlt couaT 0' TN• TNOM!s •. •El1C$ Ltbor Cadt. ,.,,,,,.!\(. te l1bor 11\ill STAT• 01' CAll,O•HIA l>'O• U2' WllllllN 11\0f., 21111 ,..._. bl o!v•n only In tilt mannar prov-ldold THI COOHTY 0, ORAHOI L ......... Caltf .... 11 by law No. A•ll:I.. Teh ltfl) "1•JJll The ' con1r1ctor 111111 "" on I .,, E1t1t1 ol LAOISLAOS VICTOll 1'00011:, Alflrllt't fl'1 ........... ""m1nlll1ct11rN !'l'll .. tl1l1 #foclKlld In IXI LAO V. l'OOOll, •kt L. VIClOll "ublllllld Orlllft C...I 01lly Piie!, !Ill ·Unlttd Slttn Ind Ollly lnl1'Ul1<!11rtd FODOR. Dec•1Hll. J•nu•rv IJ, ,,. :ti, 1974 lU-14 m1ll'rl1l1 mtnuf•ctvrtd In tile United NOTICE II HEllEIY GIVEN lo !I'll' 1!1tn. iubtl1~l1Uy ill fram mtlttl1r1 tredltors of !tie l llovt nt med f ecedtftl PUBUC NOTICE fltOduc:td In tl'll Unl!H llllt1. In JM the! all person1 h•Yllfll d 1lm1 •g•ln1t 1191for'm1nc• of tilt <onlrtct. lhr .. Jd dKtd1nt Ire r..::ruFrld to 1111 lllCTITIDUI IOllNESI Ho bid 1Mll bl con11dtttd unlt1i tl'll'm. wllll !I'll! 11ttt111ry YOUC:htfl, Iii NAMI ITATIMIMT It It mNe tn 1 bltnt lotm lutnhl'll'<I tht olllct of 11'11 Cllfk DI 1111' '"°"' TM fi0iwl"9 Pll'Mlll i ri fllflf by fllt c.,11 Mts• S.."lllry !M1trltl tMJ!ltd ceurt, or to ~ 11111•11, wit~ bwlnaM 11. el'ICI It made '" 1ctord1nc• wllr. "'' the nec•utrv YOUC11ff1, to I h I SOUTHfllN CALIFOllHIA CYCLllTI, pr .... h lon1 ot lhe Pr«>GMI requlr..,,...h . 11ndtrslgntd •I Ill• olllca af hl1 attorMy. 170 Wnl CNtllv Anlhllm Call IKI> b!dd11 must bt llctnffd 11>11 lHOMAS W. HENDEllSON, Jll., 3SO mOol ' ' ' •IH Pf'tc!Ulllf!ed •1 l'IQulf'fd ~y l•w. Ettl 17111 SlrRI, $11119 111: COlll MIMI, Floyd G. -.c!MUI, 115 fol, Mtntllttllr. Thi lo.ord ol OltlClll'I DI llM Cotti C1llfor11l1 nur, whkll " tfM Pl•ee Afllllllm. Cilfl. '2tl>I Mttl St nll•rv Olt1rlcl ttMrn1 thl rlghl of llu1lnan at tN underlllol'll!d In •11 Oettnl• o. Mckll. 2'M llOl'M AYI., to ••l•l 1ny or •II -'<11. Pnlfttrl Plrlllftll\I i. tile flllff ol Anaheim, C•lll, fl'l(M 0.Ctmbtr S. lflJ. ,.Jd dfCIOtnf. within four l'l'IOnlh• l lllf' """"'" ._.. :io:t• Sa. Ctn!•t. Stnl• BY OllDEll OF THr • 11. 11 AM. 1Sal!l·81f1itf00 COJ!a MtSI ·c111pel. lntermrnt, Cooo sr.~p P>e •d Cemt1ery, B•lll·Brroeron Funcfjl Home, C°'I• Mell, Dlr.c1or1. SKATES Homer E. Sll1tei. lltsi.,en1 of Hun!lnQ!on 811th; dtl• or dealt!, J1nu•ry IJ, 1914. Survived bV two dtugh!rrs, Ptulloe II. Cl1ncy, Huntf.,gton !leach: Berry Lou McClln!itk, Wyomlno: lwo P..oll•e", Cll1rlr1 ind W11ter Skl!t5: si1ler. Edith .CftN!i1 !hf" grandchildren; one Qr"•'· 11•1n<1chlld, S..rvlc1s, Wedne><!ly, l:JO P1.\, Sml!hl C~apal. lntermtnl. Sunn~side Memor ial P•rk. Lono e,1<h. Sml!hS Mor1u1•v. Olretlo•s. upgrading will range between p;;;;;;;;._,;;;;;;....;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;mm'I 520 and $100 million. 1 d <' p e n t:L.i,.n g on ll'hich 1111 flrll 11Ubfl<allll'I II 1111• l'IOllt•. M•. C.111. '2104 BOAllO OF OlllECTOltS Of" Daill! J1-rv 11, lt7• GOl'dOll ll. Mc.k". llUl GrtlnlrM THE COSTA ME~ £LllABITH FODOll Avi .• G•rden Gro"' C1tff. ftUl SANITAllY DISTRICT l•tc11lrlx ol Ille Wiii of W•Ylll E. Cllflt, llJI Ct•1 Gflndt f"l/l>llthfd Or lll(ll COllt Dtlly 'llot. 1"-tbon nt med dlcordt"l ..... , An1n.t1111, Ctlll, l'2C2 Jtftu•rv IJ, 21. 1'14 11~14 altematiVC i~ used, the spokesman said. Soc ia l. econ o 111 i c anti C"nv iron1ne ntal impacts of ~he differe nt plans \l'i\l be 1>rescnlcd. BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del !\lar 613-9450 TI1e trcat1nent plant is at the intersection of Brookhurst Street and Pacific Coas t Costa ft.lesa 64S-242.J J1igh\vay. • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa !\lesa LI 3-3433 Both forums n·ill be he ld at the district offices, at 10844 Ellis Ave .. F ountain Valley. • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach 81\'d: • lluntington Beach .-ts.Ji.'rnt 244 Redondo ..\Ve. Long Btach !ll--\.,lS-Ll45 • ~JeCORi\llCK I.ACUNA Ht:ACll ~IORTUARY 1706 Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-941 5 • PACIFIC \'IE\\' r.JErtlORIAL f'Altl\ Cemetery ~lorluary Chapel 3500 Pacific Vie"' Ortvr Ne\rport De<1<'h. t.::ilil'ornia fi11-2i00 • l'E .. ~K F'.\;\111.V COLONIAL l"U\EHAt J{O~IE 7801 Bolsa i\\·r. \\'es1mins1er 8t3-lSZ:i II SMITll'S MORTUARY 627 !\lain $01. Jluntinglon Beacb ~5!9 PUBLIC NOTICE 11 lUo SU,ElllOR COURT OF TliE ST•TE OF CALI FORHIA FOii THE COUHTY OF OllAHGE I No. A·IWl NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION FOlt PlfOllATE OF WILL ANO FOR LETTERS TESTAMENTAll'f' E1!ott1 &I MA!iTHA M. DeCe.tW\t. !JOTICE IS HER EBY GIVEN 1h111 WI LLI E MOHATT 1>15 !l<ed "r re1n t 1>41!111.,,, !or ProDarr of Will 1md lor l1sv1ncr o! L~ners Tts1<1menlftrv to the l>Cli!iont r, refere~e !o .,,.kh 11 mad' for lu'1!'1rr pattlcul~r ~ l'ld !l>el lhe time and pl.Jee ol t\tarlng lht 11mc ""' bttn set !Qf Janv•rr 79. !974, t i 9:00 a,m .. I~ lht cour1room ct Oeotr!mcn! Na. 1 o! s•id <our!, a! 100 Civic Cenrer Drl vr We~!, In the City cl San!a An~. C•!i!orn1,1, oa1(1d j ~nua•v 11 , 101~ WILLIAM E. Sl JOH N, County Cltrk WILLIAM V. SCHMIOT JU S•n Ml9~·· DroYt, Suire )CIO Jttwpar1 Belch, C•lil. •lUO 1110 •t4·1J12 ' ' ' Al!ornt• tor; Ptlilltner Pubtl•n'<l 01•n~ Coa11 I .l~ouarv B, 16 7?, 197i Dally P+l(lf, 144"1,• P U Hi.JC NOTICI-: ---~ a l•>t .SUPElllOll COUllt 01' THE STATE OF CALIFOllHIA FOii THE COUNTY Ol''OllAHGE No. A·7Mll NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION FOii l'ROIATE OF WILL ANO FO~ LETTERS Tl!STAME NTAll Y Esl1lt of All:THUll T. STltAHOAN, 0.Ctlted. ~===============JI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhll lot L. Str111otn h11 !Uto ti.rlf{n • PtllllOll for Pr0111le of Wiii •nd tor lu•.11n(1 of t.1n•r1 Tt1t1rntnttry to ltlt Ptll!IMtr rei.rentt to whltfl If PUBLIC NOTICE '"' ,,CTITIOln •os11r11sS- HAMI ITATEMEHT lofloWlnt per.on 11 lkllng .... rn101 tor lurlMr JNrllc11l1r1, l flll fl'lll ...,\111tu •~ ,11me 11111 1>1Kt of 11tuln9 ll'lt 11: s1me 1'11• ~ • .. , ~· J1n111ry 1t, MAN A 6 EMENT • INFOll:MATION 1911, 11 t :OO t ,l!'I,.' ln !he (OUr!r011m SYSTfMS, 9051 CkMnwvod, Hllf'IH\glon 01 Ot!11rtmtnt J<ln 3 or \l hl couM, Bt1cl'1 '21M6 11 100 Chrl( Ctfl1tr O•lve Wtit In Ol•rwt JHn Tlloltn. 9CS2 Ottlnv.OO(J Ille \II~ Of 5~nt1 An11 Ctllto;nl• ' Hut1ll119ton &attn '21M6 O•lff Jlnu~ry 11, 1911 · Thi• b\11fn111 11 COndU(ltd bl' •ft Wl\.1.1 .. M E SI JOHN, flldlvh:lu•I. County c..,. j Dl•llf J l nolen JONAH JONtr:S Jli. l lll• •l•t•merll W•I l+trcl wit~ tht lflh Fl-Jtt'fln1 Tt1111 11119, H-btt '· 1t n. LiMt ... <II, C•l!I. PG&V: I I I I I I I I I I I I ' 1Wo steak di111ters fOr -$5.95. Thars Right. Teriyaki for Two. Specially priced at just $5.95. Come have dinner with a friend and Jry one of the great steaks we serve. Teriyaki. Marinated in our special oriental teriyaki sauce and served with a grilled pineapple ring. Dinner also includes soup du jour or fresh garden salad. Choice of potato or rice. Piping hot homemade bread wllh bulter. Plus a bollomless cup or our own special blend 9ofle.:r,,,re's no shQrtaga here in our galley. We plann~ ahead anl!you should too. Begin now. c~~oUr·couponjrid enjoy two of our great steaks. t.I ~j " .•· ' ' ' ' • .., .. l • l t . .••• ,.~ ..... _~·· , .... ' I . .. I . ' I I I I I Costa Mnt S.tbom 111tnd I This Go~pon Good for "Terlyakl lor Two" Steak Dinners 2300 Htrbor 6f\ld. 203 Mlrlnt Allf. I 540·853!> 673·8720 Slnt• An1 Ntwport a.ch I JJ F11rt lon SQua11 3313 W. Coest Hwy •• &42-3397 642·2295 An1h1lm • DINI Point I f"tH1t T.i: l llU US·J471 f"lltllbri.-OI'-. CN 51 OlllY Piiot, Ali.,_,..y ,.,, "titlo11tr ~Ol,lnty C/ffl or Or•llt' Coun!~ on Ut I . OU.n AYtfltH h llllVP lJ.. n. 4', l llO flfllrNO' S, "UDll"*I Or.tnot C...1t 0.llv 1>11()1, 1'74 Y•·14 J,_,, U, IS. JI, H1• 1,._14 Specially Priced at Just $5.95 2250 •. uoco1° 25too °'1 "'"'°. I I 635-4453 496-0855 OP •••••• • Oller Exoires March 31 . 1974 • •• •• •• ) 1, ' • THOMAS W, HIMO••ION, Jll:. l<truitlh W. Ml:Klf, l)'m Slmmon1,J----,,.,---,------ lM E•1! 11"' 11rttt •• _._. 111 0r11111•· c1111. 12461 PUBLIC NOTICE Ctsll M-, C•Nflmll '2121 J. 0. Floc~ll1rl, 21'4 Rowllnd Clr.,, _______ =------Tl'I : fn4) Slt·nN Antl'lalm, Clllf. I • 114'4 Attornay ,.,. ••Kultlx ltttt1W D. McK .. , 121'1 A.1ptnw0Qll tUl'llllOll cou•r 0, THI Publllhtd 0fl"91 C1111t 01Uy "1101, Ln .• G~rdon Grovt, t •!ll, '2640 ITAT• O, CALl,Oll:illA •Oil J1n111 ry 1$, n. 2t, •nd 'ltirvtrv J, O•••ld Laird, ,,~ w. Ch1!11u. THI COONTY 0, LOI AHGILll 1'7• 1•1•74 Anflltlm, CaUI, 92tll4 NO. Sii' 4f7J • PUBLIC NOTICE FAdttlck F. llt04or. 167 N. 50lftn1k•t NOTtc• 01' INTINTION TO SILL II., Gr1no•· C•lll. Hua •••L l>ltOl'l•TY AT l'lllY.lTl IALI Oary L!Ytll(IOOll, jot So. Fe!con $1,. In I~• M1t1tr o1 1111 Eil•!• of Ane"-lm, Calll. ""°" MAREATHA E. CHILSOM, •li.11 known I lui Jal'r!H 0. ltos1 '°"'' Celtnduel Or .• 11 M.AREATHA E. KLIPl'EllT. 1lltl NOTICE TO Cll:ltDITOlt 11-1"1rk,. c1111. f06!0 kP'IO\oln •• MAAEATHA I LAFFLEll IUl"llllO• COUllT Llf/'V LUil, ~1 Aldltdtl•, An111tlm, o.c....... . ' OP THI STATI 01' CAll'•OJ:NIA Clllf. 92801 Nol lt1 11 "-ftby 11""' 11'111 t11b ltcl •Oil THI COUNTY 011 011AMOI Eutt ... W. Whitcomb, 2n4 CamtYll to tonflrmillon b'I' 1111 abo.;. .. ntltltd Iii• ••• ,..., . AYI ., Anehelm, Clllf. '2I06 . SUPlflllf' Co11r1, tilt Undtf•loned. ... Elllll Of MAlllON WI HIM AN Ol}f MtlC .. , 4H S. Emplrt, Anaheim, Admlnlilr•lor .t ltll tllttl of KIHNAllO, ak• MAlllOM W. ktHHAllO, C1lll '21tM T Dtc11H11. Thll .blltll'fll k CendUClld 11y 1 0-ll MAllEA HA E. CHILSotil, Wiii ltll ti NOTICI! IS HEllEBY GIVIH f.D 1119 partnerll'llp, P!'lvll• NI• lo IN h!91'1hl •lld bltl <redllors of '"-1bo\11 !'la.Md flc:tdlnl SloMd: ~ "i:'•t on F•tiru•ry l. 1,1,, 11 thet 111 Ptt'SOnl lllvlns t l1lmi lfflntl G•'Y "-t .OD 1. •• or lher11U1r Wllllln '"-tlrM red lhl 1llowtc1 b'I' l•w, on lfl4o tttm1 incl the Mid d«ordlftl ''' ftqlli to ft11 I 1t1ttment w•t fllld with !ht eOf!Clltlon• n.relnt"'' m1nt1tntt1 •II rl9ht, !Mm. with Ille l'llCl:l .. rv _,..,... In C01,1nly c~ of Ot•no• (Ol,lnly °" 11111, and ln lffnt of MAREATHA lht ofllc• ef 11\t dark ol !hi above Jl ft\llry 1. 1'1• I CHILSON f«lnld ol --" °' enllllld COl/rl, w le prtMnl ti..m, wllll '.asJ.4 · • • """ nM lllt n••• .. tY YOUChtrl, lo tr.• "Ublllhtd Or•no• Cotti OtUy Pllol. Mr dtllh incl Ill rloht, lltlt ll'ICI lnllf'•tt """•rtlontf •I 1111 elllc1 Of t"-1tt.rney, J•nUll"I' 1, 1$, 22, 2t, ltJ• 11·1• l~it It'll fllll• lilt •<QVll'ld In •ddltlon ROllERT w ANDEllSON :ll01 E 19 lh•t ol ctecld1nl 1t 11'11 time ol cotorado Bl..d su111 101 ' l'ntc1tna' PUBUC NOTICE 11tr dM111. In tile r111 Pf..,,., dl1e.rlbtd C ! t110i lltfll h I ' Iha I ' 11 lollewt: Lot 13 ot Tr1e1 Mo ''l ot 111:!s7.!u DI '1111 u~•r~rtH 1: '!1i lMOTtc;a °" SALi Ot' •a.f.l I" 1"-City ol L05 Ala1'Uot. ci.vntv m1lltt1 P,fl•lnlllO to 1111 1st111 of '° O"••TT AT lf"lll\'ATS lALI ot Or•not . lltlt OI C•lllornl1. 11 oer · 111>1 teu 1~ tt ..., In • M1~ recorffd 1" Booll 20. "'" '* WJf dKfdtnt, w n r "'°" I Ir lllMrilf' c;_, el Illa II Ml1e1ll•MOU1 M1p1 In 1111 Olfltt lh~;~I r.:~cr~'fi'. r,;,111. natlce, ... •••II If Cj'lhnMIA ltr .,,.,~'!' COW!ty JtKorft.r If Mi.I county, CHARLES ANTHOHY ICINNAaO tlffttY • Lit ...... .,_9c11111 -1 •n llllfl'llOld Dne·llllrd and NANCY LOU1$&: KINNAllD In tl'l9 M1tt1r '1f lht Ellltl II 'TIVE l"ltl'tpt In w ld reel ,,_.rly. lM • " I-I N. CHOftAtc, DlcllaH. unfttlltnld r1prtMftb ""-' 1"-othtr •tcu1ort """ w II Halll::i' _, ti""' fhet ""' twe-flllrd• ln1 .... 11 m1y llM M "'"'Cha.., of IN lbOYI "ll'l'lld fl~•nl M ... _ .... ftOllll:T w ANDlltlON ""• """" .... II 11rl111I• ..... •1'." .... Uftdtr1fan• win luMllth •1 • c-'• l lM Oft • flll 21 d1y 1'I J•~rv. Information t9'1•rcllnt ni. llfl'llt ownar1 sllhl 'm " ''''' 11 tllt olfl«..el Minn• •rid Morton, vpon rtqUftt. I'•'*"• Cllf lllfl J•mtt Palll ~· S2J W, Mh St.. lllt .. i. 11 tullltct te NNlll 1111t .. AtlDnMr '1., ••ICll!ln ltt. '124. LM Ai'lttf.. tOOlt. Covnty COYlfllnta, Condllt0<11, , •• I, I c I, 0 n •• Pub!l"1ed Of•lfll• CIM•I Dilly ,Uot, Of t..11 A~.• I• a, ., ... of Celll•lll• r-111ll0111. rtoh!I, rlthtl II ~·'· Ind Janu•ry lS. n, H •M ••uerr s, ._ ~ l'llthllt Piii '"' ...._,~ J11C1 ffltflllflll II recorcl. ""Y tflC\IMOl'M!Ctt ' "'I · 1)$.7 ~ect fe COfllnN!tM IW Mlf tuJiWlw tf fftON lrt te '9 Mlllfltd out of 1'14 'CMt, ,au lhl f'llftt, tltlt •nil '""""'""' ~ .. MIU. Tl'll Pt(lplrlY II PUBLIC NOTICE II 111• cllclt• II thl ""'•· If Mltlrl fO bl Mlltll OI '" "ff lall bill .. •J(l;tDI Ind Ill I,.. tlOlll, lltlt alld !nllfllt •t to II"•• lhtt 1111 Klllt of Mid dlclill*' 1111 l ld1 or °'"'* 1,. l"vllld !or IM• I IUI KQUlred by ....,lffClll of law or olhlf'wl111 properly •nd frlUll bt 111 wtlll"'ll -IUl'•ftlO• COUftT 0, TH• llttllr 11\4111 « fll tdfltl111 ti Iha! ti 'll°ltl lit F9Cl lYtd II Ille olllt • DI HAROLD ITATI Otl' CA~IHINIA POI wlf _.. ... , ti fill' 111111 ol dM"1, G. AYI!•, Jll., 1ll0tt"ln f.Dr wlct THI COUtt t'( OP ff&••• I" lnif hi fll tllt ctrtlfn rall flf6'trtY Adl'l'llnl•lr11w 11 Sulit t>S, 716C1 Ml111lon Nt. •• ,,... llllolflll Ill "" CM!l'r .. °"•llOI• 11\ft Cettltt Caurt, San Dleoo, C•Llforftll tflOI, NOT1c1 OJI NtillH '' 'nmoil el Cttlflfflla, pertlculerl'f' ft&crlDld •• ~ 1"41 2'Nn'S. °" m1y bl n1tct '°l lf"IOIATI ti' CODICIL. TO WIU. telttw.. 'M111~1 wlll! tM Clffll of 11kl SVD«lar Ctvtt lltlCUTl'li °" l1"9Mllft M. Im Lit .... llcll 4 ~ Tr.Kt Nit-121, 6t da!IYl'!"fd lo HAJtOlO G. AYEll, lbw! ....,.. *"' r ..... , n, fl! 1111 c •r fl l1n CllfWte, " Jll. ,.1-.nv. •I 111~ !Im. •lltr nr11 1m: w ..._.r 11, 1m1 T• ,., !"'f ...,.., ~--1t1 11111 ,ulllltal1011 Of "''' notk• •M bttwa "lllYIOUll.'t AIMIITTlt WILL I .. •!. ""illllft fll 11 ~ 1!1¢hrtl11t 11 fftlklf'lll .ahl Nit, DATaO APlrL a 1'11 llllflc...._,. ..... fKIHI ti Of""'9cl lN IH'Clfllf'tf wltl bl 9°'d for c11t1 E1t111 Of MAAYIL lillN l~I OWIN, QM!ty, ft Nfl ~ ('°") of tM lfl'IOll!!I -·--"~;#'.'."" " . ..... "' "' ..... '""""" "' -.,. NOTICI II M•IJlll'( GIVIN !E '" .. .. ........ In lllt City '"' bllanc• .. bt ..... lfl Clllflr:matlon IEVElll't ANN tll:AC!tlN tlef ti ... IM II ..,_ ~ tllt ~ c-.. Tim Mrlfn * ""'""" fir ~ if ltdld Tl"M II .... 111 ~~ 1fltll .Ill lf'Meiid -.. --Or tr1t 411t of 11 wtn 111tclltlf "' ... ,.,,... Ito 1\11 "" ......_ an '"" Clftfll""'ll•n 11 .... 11r "-...,,..,. lbUI bt.rl'lf ,_..., M o ....... , 1; tf H'*-W ~ •tM .n1 baf c-t, i11a'"l111tltn Ill !Hit. r9COrdlftl !:;~ '::""'~ "r~i~ ~ :1·~= .:C":.: ~ ~ .. ~= :::r:,.-..!:r"e,.·~ :: r.lfrtnet te Which ,_ "'"' ,;· ~ ..... 1 .. ttnOVilf lllf II ...... llM If lllt llllttl'ltHr or Pllf'Ctllwt. par!IC11l11rt. lfld !NI tlll """ W ,i.,. fie: 1114. llle llf'Mllrlltnfd tfttt\lft 11M tlOlll of hN1l111 tllt ... "" IMfn ... • " .. ~ Ill wrltll'lll .,.. .. relect . .,, Ind •M blft Offor ,., !or F•bnle"f " • ,,,... ., •=• 1.m., wl!I .. ,. " 1,forH114 °'""' ,,.,,., Of ." --CenflNltll'IO "" 11te. In Ill• COUflf'OMI " ~tl!Mftf .. " .,., .... 11,.1 ""'""1'°" DATIO; Janutrr t. '"" ' of Mlf ctllfl, ., ,. 'ilvJc c~ .,.,., P.if ...... '"'· "ll.lOH M, IJtAlCHl!:ll ' O{lv• W•I, lfl 11'11 City :tt lillll ;\11.. 0.... JlllUWY I Jt7• II Aclml11ltlr•tof Ill the ••t•I• CllllfO<l'llt, JIMMA. M. C~qltAI( of lllt tbc1'¥1'fMlll"lld Oictdlnt Daffd J111. t . 1t1• l•MVt.tl1el1111 HAllOLO G. AYllt Jll WILLIAM I . IT JOHN, ... wUt ti Mild, ftcidtnt A~y W ~mlfll*lriiW Clunl' Cltrtt HI -"""91" M.f.ftDLO •• AYlll:, Jll: THOMAl 0. KOll'ACOI'' a JIMll Pnf L..., A....., .i l.. ' llONALO H. l'lll .. Nlft nl W9ll IUflil lll'Mt, lft, 11» ,_ ,....._ C.,.._ C1Wft JIJ w .. 1 'l'llll'lf ''"°" L• ...... CellfWlll "'14 ... """' Cdflllnll1 nt• llllf• ...... Callflnlla nm A...,,.,_ fir ,__.,.. T""""°"' rn41 "'4lft •111n1ap rwi ,......,.auc11tn11 ms oc .,.,.,.,.,. fir MMflf•,..., Pllllll"*' OflJ'lfl CO.It . Dlll'f' l'llot 1''*11._. ar.,,.. ~ Dlil't' 1'1111, P•ltl'lllll °'"* CNlf D lff l'!Nt, JI~ It. IJ..' 21, 1914 ll1·14 JMIWY' 14. IS. ti~ "'' ~4 Jallllry t.&, IS, JI, 1'74 I ,..,,. /; •• ' I I I· ,, . " " ' •n~,li•t.ol>"" _,,,_i<I'_• .. • b11 BU Keane ' Insurance ' -Firms Hit ' On Rp,tes ... "Where's OUR hou;., Mommy? Where's OUR THE COURT action claims she was put into a pool of bad risk auto insurance customers, despite i. record or 15 years· of driving without an arrt:st or accident. ----house'l" Tokyo Lo"\7,ers Every Woman. for Self • The action against the insurance companies she filed MOnday as an amendment to Ms. Thompson's 1971 'federal court suit against Retail Credit Co., an Atlanta-based firm. By MARIANNE OHE TOKYO (UPI) -Tokyo may not be as notorious as Rome for girl-watchers, b4t ·• it should share in t h e ~ notoriety. ~ ha~ver~\~~~ for1~rer~omte: ~. newspapers here complaining of "rude and offensive stares from Japanese men'1 and " Japanese men have also been accused of pinching. squeezing and even name-calling. Although it's i.mpo5sible to ; say what Porlion of Tokyv's 1 • male population engages in sucih antics, 1 can "testify to • one or two first-hand ' experiences of it. ONE INEBRIATED man sauntered up to me on my way home _from work one night and said loudly in· ri>y ear, "Sex!" 'Ibat was all. Then be 'valked on, apparently 1 satisfied. · A Canadian girl I know had several grabs made at her during her year-long stay in I Tokyo. One .Australian girl J ~ met had a man grab her • . Reactors ' Opposed SAN FRANCISCO (A~) The board ol directors ol the conservationist Sierra. Club has voted 9-4 to Oppose the opening · o1. new nuclear reactors anywhere in the~ country until f u r-t h e r assessment of environmental safety factors. After a 1wo-day deb~te ending Sunday, the board supported the position Of University of Utah psychologist David Raskill. who cited the potential hazards of uncontrolled atomic power. Outcasts No Longer SACRAMENTO UPI) ConviCted prostitutes ri o longer would be marked 0 as social outcasts" when·applying for' a new j6b under a bill proposed by Asaemblyman Mike CUilen, (D-1,ong Beach\. •. The bill would prohibit employers f r o m requiri!lg prospective e~ployes from ~ disclosing wh ether they had ever b e e n .convicted or arrested oo prO s I t 'I tu ion ~ dlarges. It alsO l> •· r m i t S 1· pnllltltutes to Uk a :cOUrt' to .,..i their Tecords of such Violation.'I. . "Rehebilitatton· of these people will not 6e 1 accomplished by m a r k i n g them as social outcasts for -the rest of theit llves\" CUUen said when introducing the bill e Monday, .... ·~ ' ' - ) : . . " Splrtd Slleed W .. le~B•lf breast on a narrow street late at night. She socked him and he threw his ·briercase at her. Japanese girls I know also testify to pinches and squeezes in cro\vded subway cars and on train platforms. "I AM A YOUNG American wile who has too often been exposed to the rude and offensive stares of Japanese men whO seem to think that at 3ny minute my clo~hes will fly off revealing a voluptuous sexpot and whose dream is th3t I invite therh on a wild sexual adventure," said one distraught woman in a .Jetter to the Japan Times. Another American woman wrote the Times: "While I was waiting to meet a friend ,in ShU>llya station (in Tokyo)," she wrote to the Times, "I was appt'Q3ched by at least six men. When the seventh_ came up to me, ·I decided to try a different tack. ~ [ put my ann around him and said, 'Great, let',s -go.' \Veil, he pr_acticallr_ ftw:e in t~!r_or." A judge must approve addition ·· of the insurance companies as defend ilnts in the original suit, but such approval is usually given, according to a I aw y er defending Ms. Thompson, a _title she prefers .. The action filed Monday charges the insurance firms with violating federal antitrust regulations. A REPORT BY the Retail Cred it Co. of Alexandria. Va. said . a 49-year-old man "was a constant visitor" at her aoartment when she Jived in H3rtford. Conni. ·the "1Ction claims. She called the credit comnany report "meaningless gossip." ... Her attornev, Ka t,h e ry n Emmett of Bridgepo(t, said the suit is an attack "on the basic ' insurance c'o mp I! n y underwriting practices which are totally incomprehensible to the average person but which serve ·to enrich the insurance companies. - ONE JAPANESE business· "How can anyone refute a man theorizes that slight]>'. cl~im of 'practicallr. living' tipsy . jmen do m o s t Of" with someone? Ifs like ·saying l!l~' •:grabbint" wfl.en . tl~ey . someone is 'pr act i ca 11 y leave a bar after paying fl beating his wife,' ".the lawyer hostess. to sit with them. · · said. But then there was the tight- lipped, proper businessman who passed me one sunny day. dressed impeccably in a dark suit and tie. While still staring s~ra .ight ahead, he mechanically reached o u t , executed a grab. withdrew his hand -and -without missing a single step -continued past THE SUIT charges the Retail Credit CO. with violating the federal Fair Cr e d i t Reporting Act and invasion oi privacy. A spokesman for Retail Credit in Atlanta said there .would be no immediate comment on the matter. me. DEL'l~O . ' . WEDNESDAY NIGJlT• Make Wednesday night your night to eat out. At Del Taco, Wednesday night is Taco Night. You get three tasty Del · Tacos for juat 99c. This Wednesday, drive lhru for a family tlzt mtll you w'on't forget. At prices you 'll find hard 10 beat. NEWPORT IEACH SANTA ANA . ...... f P ........ I ·-4tlt Street oltd TUSTIN hd Hiii .... 5-N .... Fwy. J .......... Newport fwy. COSTA .MESA 111• .... otFelnlew HAMS · "So Oood ••. It Will "Hatsnt" You 'til lt's_Gone'' W. 1inc:•r•IY -eppr•c:i•f• your p-•ffon19• In '7J, M~y you h•Y• • fru!tful '141 , - JANUARY S,lCIAL ~ON~""K;D HAMS ................... $ I '~ . e R-'f M S.... with H•"Y '11 S,ke til ... e S,lroJ SllcM fMfll T Op '-ldtto"' • w. ,.. ... ...i 1111~ tr.111 eooat to e..., • ...u .s.mc. hlk .... Mtt e l1t1pirft.d C ....... •lid Wl"a • C-'-• s,..cto1ry • ' uoo Le-H......,,-....., Mw--.n-- ; 1 •i.t WW-• .J Cl'tWll1 tliit11r111I ' lt22 S. lro .. h11nt, 9t loll ad., A11.tt.l111 jJ5·2461 • ' l DAIL V PILOT • 9 ' . Orthopedic .Foundation. Hang Glide Seminar Set · Coast -Man Nameil to Board ... Grand Opening, Sequence 3 Above-ever-¥thins _else,_ ---The North -View has extraordinary values. One thing, perhaps more,tban all the others, stands out about Sequence 3 at The North View: the extraordi· nary value of the homes. It comes from a combination of the br!liitbt.ak- ing views of Saddleback Mountain, quiet cul-de-sic streets, greenbelt, and parklike-areas, serene atmo:;. phere ~plus the homes tbemse!ves. Ones whiFh create a whole new per- specti.~e of country-_ view living. The question is: how much longer will th""" outstand· ing values ren>a.in at these prices? Large expmjSes of glass have been blended with soft earth tones to create exteriors of wann wood, brick and stone ... much like a country manor. The front yards are land- S<:&ped and have sprinklers. The rear yards are fenced, especially designed for each lot Inside, these autiful 3 and 4 bedroom homes have large rooms, deep carpeting (in major living areas), fireplaces, built-ins, even the luxury of self-cleaning ovens. Surround all this with Laguna Niguel's 8,000 acres filled with fresh, ocean-cooled air and allluent neigh· hors and it's extremeiy attractive; even more so when you add in the poo~.clubroom; and playfields of The Highlands i::1ub provided by The Homeowners Association for a fee of $15amonth. And there's more. Goll at the private El Niguel Coljlltry C111b. Tennis at the private Laguna Niguel Tennis Club. (Memberships are available. Memberships in the ) . ..- - country club and the tennis club are -voluntary and are controlled by Avco Community Developers, Inc., which is the management and ,.._,,,_ operations 'agent of the club facilities.) The ocean beach _ areorily4milesa\V&y,andthe Dana POiht Harbor, "home port" for Laguna Niguel is down thecoasta bit. What more could Someone who desires a larger home ask for? From Los Angeles, go south on the San Diego/Sant.a Ana Fwy. to Crown ·~ Valley Parkway etit. Turn right • (approx. 31> mi.) to Niguel Rd. Turn right on Niguel Rd. to sales office at . ....,~ ~ ~~top of hill. From $48,500 to $59,400 Map not IO .e. .. N ~~~h ~View (714) 496-4040 830-5000 ' \ ' '' .1P,, ..... IL.V' PIL.UT Tuesday, January 15, 1974 'Sticks and B:~ne/'" Stun_nfng ·Drama at · SCR !~1 The experience of t h e Vietnam war is a part of his tory most Americans likely would prefer to forget . Playwright David Rabe is dedicated to the task of i~uring they do not... ~ ln his multi-honored drama "Sticks and Bones/' Rabe "STICKS AND •ONIS" A ll••m1 by O•vld R•Dt· dir«ltd by M,nlln Btn$0n, Stt de•lan t>r Grt00ry BollO!'I, H"tllln9 bY J•me• MCl(le. COllUrT111• DY (•role EH1wortll, Mii.inci trf B••rv Koron: prt$ji!nled WtdMWl•V$ lhrovgtl Suncl•Yf \U'!!ll Fib. 10 b'f SOullt C011t R~rtorv. 1111 Newwt Bou••v•rd, COii• Mtlf. ReMrYe1lon1 646-1363. THI CAST Onie _ ..... , . .. . . Jffl\H de Prlttl H•crltl •.•.•.. , .•.. A11n Sl-·Stllw•rlr O.vl<I ........... , Rl(ll••<I Ooyte Rick . , . . . Stew P•lltfllOll Se•91•nl M•lor . J•mn McKlt ZVA9 ...... Ell1•tielll Herber! F•lllef" Don•ld .......... H. J. P•rk1 shoves the ugly scars of conflict into the living room, exposing his interpretation of American attitudes about the war. Yet his values are not stacked against an Insensitive family -cruelly stereotyped as it may be -which gives the play a sense of balance and, consequently, tr ue dramatic power. South Coast Repertory has Intermission · T0m Titus mounted a cbaracteristlcally excellent production of "Stlcks and Bone!," the West Coast premiere of the controversial work. It ls a stunning and th o u g h t -provoking show, intensified by the strong direction of Martin Benson and a uniformly superb cast headed by James de Priest jn his most outstanding performance to date on the Costa Mesa stage. RABE LAMPOONS t h e family with a milk-and-cookies existence vs. the harsh and profane reaU\y of t h e retumJag soldier,· wllb only the sheer weight of numbers prevailing in the f i o a I conftontaUon. Yet Rabe (who has matured remarkably since "1'Je Basic Training of Pavolo \Hummel" which SCR produced 14st seaSonJ veers away from ptU'e propagandiz· ing by his characterizaUon of lhe soldier in a ligh t equally unfavorable as that or the fam- ily. mentality and dubs them DE PRIEST enacts the Ozzie, Harriet, David and Ozzie ch a r act er with Ricky lest anyone misinterpret remarkable accuracy _ the his motivation .. David is the b enig n cardigan. garbed war-blinded sohi1er who upsets f h f ' · the family's em 0 t i 0 n a 1 ~~ 1gtu-e \\/hose ineffectual equilibrium \Vith the ideas the rest can n e ith e r understand nor accept. Thus are the battle lines dra Wn -lhe balm of mindless WORDEB orrrau. "AEAT-NAJUllE RIM fOll 1974" 1 How 'Ham Actor' Got His Name By MARILYN AND HY GARDNER ,,__ nature turns to bitter and, Stevt Patterson plays· the u l t i m ii-te I y , vindictive mindless, guitar -sti:umming I r u s l r at I on . It Is a Ricky to perfection. His part perfonnance of u n c a M y is more deeply rooted in insight which ranks among the caricature and he brings it fines t delivered by S CR off skllllully with his in=ant actors. "Hi, Mom: Ill. Dad'~ and his steely sergeant major, who brlnga · David home,-while EltzabeU. Herbert contributes an omiDOUJ presence as the Vietnamese wMre whp·haunts David's memory .. a.ttempt tO reg_ain his self· identity. Yet on balance, the play ls a gri~ping experience ,presented w1th the sort of dramatic dedication th<Jt has given South Coast Repertory an enviable reputation of artistic achievement. · A NORMAN Jt;WISON f1fii "JESUS CHRISf SUPERSIAR" ._l ........ ~-~~-a oroTttersun ' SISTer MOOn .. 1 ALSO ON target is the surgary sweet character of Harriet. whose a p p a re n t dlngaling quips such as ''I'm too pretty not to have a good time." "S ticks and Bones" is a curious mixture of realism and fantasy which oversteps both boundaries on occasion -the father's overreaction on learning of Da~v l d's ex p e ri e nc es with the pro6titute; his inane address to an· empty household in ab Performances of "SlickS" S• TEOl'll(D.Ol"~l5ICJ'I· and Bones'' contlnue for four Af'IJtAAG.MfllCTUllE,J,n~ more weekends. Wednesdays .. ' , . through Saturdays, at the fl;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;:! company'S" 'J'h ir d Step['! Theater, 1827 'Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. primary !tmctions are the THE BEST OF the mlnor making of fudge and the going roles is that of t h e fl)r groceries. Ann Siena-presumptuous priest, we 11 Schwartz delivers a rich low-done by H. J. Parks. James key interpretation of this role.1 _lll~c~K~ie:._i:i•~f~rl_!gh~t~eru~·~n!g..:as~~th~e:Jr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-;~-.~:o;o;-•••••••iij[ The part of David, the\· l lST PLAYi Vlelnai:_n returnee, is tiqged """'" TONY AWAltD -OltAMA c••TICS AWA•o with inl<nse bitterness and ' 'S T-1 C KS A N D I 0 ,N ES' ' hate. Rick Doyle bites deeply ty DAVID ltAIS int.o the role, emerging with For tM flnf thne h1 So. C•llf., tN ptor.11M1, .tt.w eMtrownl•I I.SS empathy than the HE.LO oVEll1 work by tM -.C..dt't "'"' llrlllio11t yow .. ptorwrlt•t. Mo,. ri1•11 ''THE WAY otltlftohtl'llfflt -A MAJOI THEATRICAL IYINTlll p I a y w rig h t may have WI WER E .. frG) NOW SHOWING! intended, With the result being 81rtlr• S1r.i5'nd 11111 -& a £ mixed emotions of disgust and .... ., •""" >i'11tllll."'1.lljf,,"l•(f IIQlllMJI relief at his eventual demise. 1121 N•w JfcolWMifr 'o• 11.E\MThoNs, CALL .... ,,., ."1"":J FOUNTAIN VAllfY LIDO NEWPORT BEACH lHTl!.ANt'"I TO llDO ISl I ~ •1 RJSO Tiit' l fff"f Holiday C..blHtlo11! WILLIAM HOLDEN ''BREEZY'' .... IElllJ t••********•***•••***} I~~~!· : ~===~ CO•ONA Ol"L MAit .,.t,~~D .....-~~oOiiiiUii;, "4 lio.Ne1Q "EXECUTIVE ACTION" • "LITILE llG MAN" IPGI F11nniest love Story of the 'l'e•r - 'Very, Very F11n11y" • , , -Judith Cii1t Geo•9e Hti•I "A TOUCH OF CLASS" IPGI ••• U.A. CITY AND SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY SOC tLADlaS AND GOLDEN AOlRS)-C)PEN 'TIL 1:00 P.M. "THI STING" • lloHr! •tc1,. ... 111 Celer IPOJ 12:4H:GI $:U·J:)lt s ... o;·~ ,, ....... . ,, .... h~,., {$0.\ 962-1481 11oun IO .,.." -r.· CllWJ Llf'\llllOCl9 * MAGNUM fOICI 111 IAD MAN'S RIYIR tN I Q: Where did the expression .. ham actor'' or 11h1m- .. my" come· fiOm? -Irene-ir&ramo, Worcester, Afass. A: Several ~ries are advanced. One goes all the way back to the 1880s and a precocious actor named Ham- ish McCullough whose traveling tn:upe was known as "Ham's" actors. ,.....Ctadt.-.W.l!la .r.h111 l,..~ .. ltllllla~- LAST NIGHT : Marlon Brando I "THE GODFATHER" (R); 7 P.M. Nightly i * C•ll n..tre it .... ~,.~-=.~:~:~ ... ~ "THE NIGHT VISITOR" Stoniltf Tre••r Howord Uw UllMOll Cliff Otmlln "'CO,, AND •0181115• J1m" C1l11 "$L1Tltllti htll 111 Ctter IPOI Other historians trace the expression back to the era of Tony Pastor's Opera House in New Yark City, when free hams were given away to patl"Ol'l5 to bollter atten.. ' dance on week nights. Since the performers, not the hams, were supposed to be the main attracUon, they became ' known as "ham actors." Another version, also stemming from Tony Postor and advanced by the late comedians Buster Keaton, Har- old Lloyd and Ed Wynn, involves a blackface quartet ('Glad You Asked That') called the Hamtown Students. Their exaggerated mo~ ments, overplaying and lordly attitude pinned the term "ham" on other such ego-filled f dividuals. We tend to believe the most valid theory is this one: that minstrel men and early actors once removed makeup with lard because it was cheaper than cold cream. Since lard was devived from pork and ham, it was not surpfis.. ing th;lt aclorl,were called "barns." . ' Q: Wlial'• Wa aboal Pllyllll Diller saylnc she was posing fw a centerfold for Watclltower magailne -that "it was tbe oaly centerfold I coald make"? Since this Is a newspaper of dlpfly pabUsbed b7 lbe w.-wer Bible and Troe! llodely, I .. ,. ,.. --.,. Alll I right? -Mn. Ii.-V. Bla)'jock, ~· VL , A: Definllely. And we're ll1ln! the comedleMe will ap- preciate yo'ur digging her humor. Phyllis inade the same wisecrack before -sut:mituting FootbaJl"'News, Popular Mechanics, National Geographic, etc. for Watchtower. Q: Aly brolber-ln-law and I have a bet about which series Richard Boone played in first -"Medic" or "Have Gun WUI Travel." Your answer will save a lot of fights. -Carol Halford, Peoria, ID. A: Whoever said "Medic" wins. As nr.. Styner, Boohe , was twice nominated for an Emmy. He moved from the operating room to Paladin in 1957. In his early days, Richard \Yas a roustabout, a prizefighter, an aerial gun- ner. an artist and a writer. He's noted as an actor who ' makes a role famous, not vice versa. · JOIN US IN THE CROW'S NEST. N9w Appearing GENE GRAYSON PAMOJA QUARTET 9pm-1:30am (Tuesday thru Sunday) ) MESA .THEATRE COSTA MESA FAMILY TWIN CINEMA FOUNTAIN VALLEY ti.-on "'-coritrovorsl•1 book th«I thattwed com_,,ttoMI · ,.,,,.. ol hiltory and .ehtOlogy l •1ulllr -u1-11,31 ''&On'' l::.t !.II. & SIJI. FROll t~ll --. ' r •• or . STADIUM, I : '". .. _ •• :!..liU!.I.:L'..lil!;..!..J -"'" -'" STADIUM •4 ;.:.~ .. ,&ilil'-'--\:.'--'.lll" -' • ~ ·-.pn~~ ~.r,u il...'1 r • ' . . ,,, .. ; BASED ON THE CONtROYE.llSIAL 80011. 1HAT SHATTE.llED CONVENTIONAL t/fEORIES OF HIS TORY ANO ARCHEOLOG Y •• ·• .... "PETE 'N TILLIE'" CP'G) "THE MECHANIC .. IP'GJ • "THE GODFATHER" IP'GJ "SIRrlCO" tR) .... "IADflE l7J" II) .. TJIE SEVEN Ul'S .. IPCOI ''-' ... "SRELYARD ILUES" (I) " DID ll'ICDll \ TIIJT UITI II 11ICIDT TIJllll ·l lOWWI , B.lfB PIOOr! e AT All 3 CINEMAS e IN MISSION VIE..10 EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO >II" l)tfGO rW"¥ •I LI. P-.J nJRlolON 8 JO <fi9'1() - ............. 'JSD•erH•&iJri· •,fta•nuin':h"e . .... ,,,--"' -~ Plus This Outstanding Shafi Subjtcr "HOIMAN IOCICWUL" .... _ ....... 1.-.a:ao .. ..,1. -Pin, lt.1000 111111 KDlllWITED SHORT SUIJ!CT: '111£ FWDG STORY' llAll!tlMGr l!MOTl!Y IOTTONJ. Lll«ISAY WA!imo JOHN llOUWMN llCU!tMOIMNCO.M'll llf ~p 71:M-91M, s.t., lvllo 1 iSO.a1:10ol1M-7•»•iH ,;., WESTBROOK ' llOC'CIW'I.. ••• , .. .... , .................. ,.,. ..... ... -• ''°4'""' --. -. 1 ........ 1 •• 1 .. • .. ...... ''•"· ......... •··•· 171 -1161 _l,,...inAoo. .... 1"' ~""" $'7·'2'] • .... , ..,,.. , ... , "'°""' • ROUN MOOO 111 WHm,WILDllNllS 1t1 S.nt• M a ,, ....... ~. Stal•C111~ SSl-7022 All C§let' S11•nbll Pnttr•m 1..A OLIMPIAN £N MEXICO + OON JUAN 41 Clrte.ICI l•,...ln l"yiul Son Olo1• I.,. . • I t ••llt ..... Olf·••"'• ••i·•s•s IU-Yl-TMICl'w! THAT DARN CAT !l l "'ln·---APOLION & SAMA ... .. ' , I ' -· • _, ••• , .. . . L. M. BOfld ( Money's Worth Aussie Worms ' Lay Big Eggs .Ousting the Gypster Memory la lnherlled. ' Ea• o[ some of the earthwonns in Australia look like bll ollvea. • The register at St. Edward's Chapel, where Princess Anne married Capt. PbJlilpe, llsta that %$-year-old lady u "apiltlter." Wby Goor,ia 11 oo !fdely ·known !or ill peaches 1 -jUst can't say. South Carolin• · turns out more. LUtewtse• Califor ...... , :.-:-A·av l ' \. - . ' i •··. nia . A student of mental matters ,.,lth access to a computer con- tends the average person who li•e~ to be 72 devotes just about three years to quarreling. . COMPACf Nobody knows who invented that female makeup case called the "compact." What's known only Is that several manuracturer1 jum,ped into the markets with it at about the same time, each advertised it as a "compact beauty case." Some nameless ad men no doubt•'labeled the thing over drinks on Lexington Avenue. And the public Whittled ll down to flt the lingo. Now that'a happening to the small car of the tame name, too. , Hardly anybody thla side of the Atlantic c&n name the six langua1es betides Ellililh spoken In the British Isles Cao you? ... Exactly why panley haa been cultivated for more than 2,000 years I just can't say ... How can you call yourselt a music k>ver , if you don't know what note musicians uae to set the pitch? ... No aspiring author should forg et that It look. Stephen Crane only 10 days to write that great tale "The Red Badge of Courage" ... Three out of four llrebugs are under 21. And the boys among them outnumber the girls by 22 to one. ELEVATOR BUTfONS Maybe you've seen those elevator buttons that Ught up not from the pressure ol your fingertips , but from its heat. Almost magical , thought the plain folk. And the technical boys smiled wisely. But th>!e buttons respond to nre, too. At leut a couple of times so far , elevators have stopped dead on floors where blazes broke out. And coughing clll&eM thereat Poked helplessly at the stupid button.t, before bolllJ1i down the stairwells. Each family in Russia on the average subscribes to four magalnes. In l'\.fissouri, a JusUce of the Peace tacked on his hall bulletin board the follo<A't!!g l!.dyice !Q_all.omeys_;_ "G@tle-- men, please don 't ask me to step out for a drink during busine55 hours. I. can't go, and I don't want to get into the habit of refu sing." Add ress niail to L. !ii. Boyd, P.O. Bo:r 1875, New· port Beach 92600. Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers •' FINANCE OCC Offers lnsu~ance._ Courses Orange Coast E v e n i n g College is offering a pair of courses this sprlng to prepare sludents for a certificate in genera l insurance. "General Principles of Insurance" is a three-unit course that begins with an Introduction ot the concept of risk and the met.hods of handJing risks. It m e e t s Thursday evenings Crom 7-10 p. m. In the OCC applied science building. "Property Insurance" is a thr ee-unit class tha t emphasizes contracts a n d conl r:ict analysis. It meets \lledncsdays from fi-9 p.tn. in the applied science buildlng. Spring classes begin Fe b. 4. For registration information phone 551J:.5733. Westem's Passengers ' \Vestern Airlin e s has reported preliminary 1 9 7 3 traffic or 6.S billion revenue passenger miles. a_J'ecord (or any year in the company's 47-year hi story. The 1973 figure represented an 8 percent increase over 1972's 6.0 billion revenue passenger miles. Available seat miles ror the 12 months of 1973 increased 8.5 percent. Contributing to the increase was the iD.lrOductfon- of four ·DC-IOs into Westem's · neet. ASl\1's increased for the 12 months from 10.3 billion in 1972 to 11.2 billion in 1973. By SYLVIA PORTER What may tum out to be one of the greut 1nllestones in lhe history of the U.S. consumer movement r o d e through C.OOgress and into law unnoUQed late last year on the coattails of lhe 1973 Ala oka Pipeline authori.Z1Uon blll. THE lo1EAS1JRE was an amendment to the 1 9 1 4 Federal Trad~ Commission Act and1 in -the-words of-- a brilliant }'.9ung_J1._5,_ go vemmcnt official. "Is p .:> t e ntlally as import- ant" as the most basic antitrust nnd HJ•T•• consumer protection laws of our land. Yet , the probability is that few or you -including the most vigilant co n s u m e r advocates -are even a\v are that the historic legislation is on our statute books. To give you a quick grasp of what the amendment says and could mean, consider the following com.~ite case history of one o( the traps endangering the American consumer today. An organization of high- nressure promoters p u I s together an alluring campap:in prorrlising big-paying jobs for those who sign up roc an expensive training program in heavy machlnery operation, co m p u t e r programming, nursing, etc. 'Ille course costs several hwtdred dollars and is ofrered on credit. Thousands respond, send in checks, sign contracts to pay the rest. Then they turn up !or training. BUT EITHER the training turns out to be inadequate to equip them for the promised jobs ~ or the "training school" can't be found. The promoters have sold the contracts to a fin ance company, paid oU all the company 's officials handsomely and filed for bankruptcy. In the past, the Fed eral Trade Commission -the cOnsumer's top po I ici ng agency against d e c e p t i ve advertising and promotion -- handled swindles bf th.ls sort by issuing a "cease and 30 seconds . ,, Isn't ~nough. Ata llmewllen people are demanding more tnforrnatlve 1dVertising, televislo(l commercials are getting shorter. · The trend Is to 30 second spots. Or time for about so wordS. story without being a "fast talker." ' In newspapers, In newspapets you can give the full details-in 30seeonds the average reader can absorb 250 words, or 5 times as much Information as from TV. And newspapers let a consumer pause to Thal'• not enough to tell everything consumers wont lo knoW thole days: prices, colors, guarantees, wlllf91oflnd~, whatll'amadeol,endso much more. evaluate, re-read. and even clip your ed as a reminder. 1-d. a<Mnlse wtiere you can tell a complete Ne\¥spapers have always been the hardest working advertising medium. And we lhlnk their luture looks better than ever. l ( • • desist" order. But this mtrely up a new chapter in the Invited a backluh ol appeals, prot.ctlon of lhe publlc il the endless legal delays. shopping FTC takes advantage or it. II for Judges on appeaJ, and the Jn addition; punishment has like. The agonizing__ result has been sharply increased. Under been thllt it has taken as the "cease and d e s I a t ' • Jong aa a decade to put a system, a person violating the racke teer out of business -order is subjec t to a fine . not in jail, mind you, just Under the new amendment, out or the business he was 11 violator or an injunction In. co 1 udld be j 1 a 1 1ledh wdit.hln. a ~aidttcr Jn fact, really professional o ays t e 1str1ct Jl gc gypsten_ba_ve.managed to keep puts on the press~. one ~ong step ahead of the . Jaw in individual states just W~ UVING costs 5?ar1~g by-moving--their-businesses-and...-joblessness-spreading in from state to state whenever 197.4, it's ~ certainl y. !hat the complaints appeared to swindlers will be operatmg on be getting too loud for their a grant seal~. Consumer comrort frauds -parllcularly those · appealing to individuals NOW, TJlOVGH, under the looking roc bus i n es s op. new FTC Act amendment, the portunities or job training FTC may go immediately to and families trying to save the U.S. district courts and money every "'ay they can - anned with reasonably -will reach an all-time peak. solid evidence that a racketeer This "injunction J>Ower" then Is seriously deceiving us in could be crucial consumer the marketplace via his ads, protection. promotions, come-ons, sales How soon will the Federal pitches -slap an !njunction Trade CommissioQ use its new on the violator. 1be injupction powers to fight the racketeers? may be temporary or That depends on how soon permanent but the vital point evidence of i n d i v i d u a I is that. it can immediately halt consumer deceptions, n1is- the fraudulent operation, representations and gyps i 1n med i a t e 1 y provide are brought lo the F1'C's protection for the public. The attention. ·And that in tu111 district judge, under the new depends on how awa kened and , provision. may move jwt as agressive are the consu1ncr rapidly as he wishes or as protection agencies and Better the situation warrants . Business Bureaus across the "This ne\v power." says one land. And that. in tun1, legal observer, "could open depends on you, the ta rget. ·Occupational Safety, Health Seminar Set Employer and e m p I o y e rjghts a n d re_sponsibilities under the Ca l i forn ia Occupational Safety a n d Health Act, will be explained by the State Department of Indu strial Relations at a seminar at the Disneyland Hotel Feb. 5. · The seminar will answer such questions as : -What are employer record-keeping requirements and other rights and duties under the health act? -What part does a union business agent play during an inspection? -What are the consultative services that the act will provide? · Richard Wilkins, chief of the Di vision of Industrial Safety wilt speak on the general intent of the Calilornia Sec1trity's Shal'es Up Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -Security Pacific Corp., whose principal subsidiary is Security Pacific National Bank , has reported a six percent increase in 1973 per share earnings compared \Vith 1972. Consolidated annual income for the bank holding company before security transactions \vas $60,075,000, or $2.99 per share, on an average of 20,116,306 shares outstanding, compared with $57 ,219,000, or $2.81 per share, for the like period In 1972. that your< may not! Act during the m orn i ng session. The 1iftemoon s e s s i o n includes workshops on the state safety orders for general industry a n d construction. elect rical safety orders. record keeping and the role of the !Department of Health in the implementation of the act. VTN Corp. Tells Loss V'I'N Corp. or I r v i n e re ported a net loss for the six months ended Nov. 30 of $79,200 or seven' cents a share on revenues of $11.953,900 compared with riet income of $547,700 or 55 cents a share on revenues or $10,606,100 for the llke period in t h e preceding fiscal year. According to VTN Chairman James J. Trindle. the second quarter showed a $180,800 loss, or 15 cents a share, on revenues or $6,642,000. For the similar quarter in fiscal 1973. net earnings were $275,000 or 27 cents a share on revenues or $5,425,000. Newpo1·t Bank Tells Dividend Bank of Newport President. Ronald L. Rodgers, announ~ that the board of directors or the Bank of Newport has declared a five percent stock di vidend. The five percent stock dividend will be payable to stockholders of r e c o r d January 20, 1974. COltltELLEASE ~ i] YMr hchtry A11ftlwtaietl Cltew•c.t Leal119 DHler • New '74 .... H.tch~k su•o ,.IR MONTH Ph11 T•X & Lie, On APPi'. CrM!ll '' Mo. O.E.L. CONNILL CHEYROLIT 2121 HARIOI ILYD. 1 COMPLITI OU.Na.I COSTA MISA 146°1200 I 12 3 COUNTY COYllAGE 11~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 • ...... : l4t•• ..... S.• C.._.te, Mls:d.• Y~•• .,_. ~ ...... wen ....... .............. u .... MONTH TO MONTH 4 5 6 7 RINTAL IA.SIS , NO DIPOSIT Rl9UlllD ON APPIOYID CllDIT ONLY 117.0I PIR MONTH TOTAL COST l•ll•itff ,..... NIW COM,4C1 UNIT SIZI 11 V4 f 4 x Vt1 IOtCI MISU.•t PA•llS ALSO •1:1' AYAll.AIU fULL •an MAINTINANCI tll~\~t:I (OUN 11' li\1'(()11111'110~1 sr !!Vilt ·~· 71( ~ ., •• ,,., 4'1 SO, SAlllTA Pl1 IANTA AfllA INM ~ 1-.dl, Mf'M• Vk-19> ~ ,,_,, s.. c""'*'i.. '" "'" C.,itlr•lfltr 11 _ r-..,. HI *I fi'tlf 4t64UJ . ' HU•H MYMATT 1'119 Pwfect C•fHIHtl•• CAPRI DAYTIMl.aUSINISS ICONOMY-CONVIMll/llCI LINCOLN • M l!!!C Ukf NIONJ11Ml·l.UXUlllY l.UXUllY & COMP:OlllT H 'rl.Altl Ot' COMMUNITY llltVICI CALL Ml .......... ~ JOHNSON l SON Lincoln • Mercury "1626 ...... lhot., C:... M- • • • • Tu1~1. January 15, 1974 DAILY PILOT JJ,· TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS NBC ID 8:00 -Adam-12. When OfClcer Jim Reed (Kent McCord) walks into a bank to make a car payment, he finds himself a handcuffed ho.. I tage of two ruthless robbers. ABC 0 8:00 -Happy Days. In this premiere 1 episode of a new show abo ut growing up In the Fifties, a teenager gets fixed up with a girl with ,t a supposed "reputation." Ron Howard and Tom Bosley star. CBS ID 10:30 -Rape. The nightmare world of the rape victim is explorecl in this KNXT News special. TV DAILY LOG , Tuesday Evening JANUARY1 16 l:OO amall!!li!J Non (3; (~(!)) News lJ ~ ·np fJ Kinas n . Men· 11111 Can1ditns. I C.1~lp of Eddie's father Tiit Liie)' Sllow ne Flintstones Miallt G1Utry ._ Simple•e11t1 M11il - ltollc:tpoitt lod1t Spttlll Ricer •~ B <a Ci)) ([J "'" 11sk1tb111 All-$ta1 ,.... ' ~@ rn 11to1••'• Kl,... Ml'l'lt: (C) (911) "JM lfttlltrl ram11ov" Canel. (dra) '58 -Yul Srynntr, Marit Scht!I, Clatr1 Bloom, lff J. Cobb. I Dick Y111 Dykt Mtn' liiriffin Show ;~"":'!'" hOm! llvin1 Easy Mundt Lltil'll Desert Th11t11 m Utt1t R1sc11t room 11 the Boston Museum •n• Banattk 1fie1 lo !ind out how. Ct · sar Romero, .lohn Saxon and Sue Ant Lln&don_J_utsl. 0 @ (]) Q1 ABC T111tday Mo'IM: (Ci (90) .. Mn. Sil!ld1nce.. (WIS) '7l-Ult•beth Mont1om1ry, Robert fo~worth. L. Q . .lonts. Tht "widow'" of th• Sund1nt11 Kid finds herself in deadly }lopudy from bounty hunlers when sht ht1rs Iha! Slln· danct did not dit wi!h Butth Ca$-sidy but Is w1i1in1 IOf her 1t !ht old hlde·out with 1111 stolen 1old. m llltrw C1illi1 Sllow Hirtl C1Pp101t ...... t:OO (6) Tiit lkW On•• fE Coni911 ill Ntchu T1p11l11 t :JO II (9 ([))Cl) M1llllt Willer '"' M1ude h1vt ii out over whttlllr 1 m1n's wa llet should be olf·Hmlts ft his will. Walter's 1d1m1nt 1ttltudt m1ku M1ud1 suspicious, and when his w11ltt 1ecidentally 11111 out of 1 drawer,' sht e1n'I rultt th1 temp· "m"'M!,"'' ot II• 0>ntents. Slhrl ti AdVtntull LI HllU Ftltiwtl Mexlc.tnt 10:00 '-l Tiit New Trta1urt Hullt O O@@l tt)Pollet Sttrf 7:00 (})0tI1'Nns "Countdown~ PtrtJI After ht kills (•1 Movie: (Zhr) ''tolorldt Terri-1 member of the syndlc1t1 11 th• llirJ" (wes) '49 -Joel MCr11, Vir· scent of 1 ~bbuy, Sit. Joe LI· 1ini1 J.4110. frieda is 1111rktd for d11th. Vic I Whit's My Lint? Monow, Tige Andrews ind Laraine I lovt Lucy St1ph1ns ruesl Mtd Squid CI) l!!Jllt liialltry rn 1 Dr•t111 " 1t111nit a m ID ..... ~":,'!1~et D Heart Attack Strikes Book Beat "On Tour WHh P.G. * 8 year old Boy Tonicht Wodehouse" ''MARCUS WELBY, MD" I El Primer A~t. fJ (HJ(]) Ef) Mtrut Wtllly, Ill.I. Ustld J '-Pllid9 ''Ntw World A·Comln'" Trt1lm1nt nrtt Stoops or 1 b°' for 1 sn•k• bite nVttls • 7'!4,Ho11n'1 Heron h1ttdit11y blood dlstast wtllch re· · . '91 Hollywood Squirts quirts hospit1lliation for both tht . MiHlon $ Mtwlt: (C) (2hr) .bi ind his lather. " t T•ktt 111 Kinds" (s11$41) '69 -I S.n Dlt .. fhwa C.nftNMI Ver~ Milts, Robt:rt L.anslnL B11ry .~·.~·-·• P ~ Sulhv1n. ,.,..., .. ~.......... """"' m ltwlldltd ro La Alltlno• ~ ~Tt Tell tht Trulli <IS(()) Ket HIW Ltt's Mike A Deal lO:JO B WT Ntws Spld1I "Ripe" (R) 111111, Tr•e~s & Tr•stltt i'lils KNXT Naws Special looks 1t "Benchwor\ incl Wirina'' the nl1htm1rt world ot the rtpe vie· Ui) Sb8' \Ip 11111 a. .. ~ " tim to $how Wfllt tht rtal trimt LI El) DI INul Can1 all about. l:OOO i;iJ@®J tpMam·l~ "Trnu· (!I ~= "S1j1, tilt Awa-· ble 1n tht Bink' Olf1Cer Jim Reed ~"!!'::(· walks Into 1 btnk to make 1 c.u I ,.., payment 1nd finds himself a hand· Ill Cnby cuflecl host111 ol two ruthless rob· ""'* bers. Mlllkll [spectltular fJ Premieres Tonight! "*tu lift ci11ti *THE HAPPY DAYS 11'°4!~Rl! .. m m:::: Bright New Comedy ~ ~ eil Cl) a ll7l m m P1IM1m "'"' ...., ...... 6lys "AtTihe Wai' Innocent tMll· • Mwlt: "Tiit liitnUt lii111ull" 11er Richit Cunningham seems to (ltdv) '52-.lchn Mms, Dir1r loprdt. h1vt It "m1d1 In !ht.shade" whtn m Mbsloli: 1•'"51Wt hls btst friend, Potsle, lines him II Mnit: "'TIM AlllNk" Docu· up tor 1 dtlt with 1 tirl who has m1nlery. 1 suppnsed "reputation." ;n the l(f) Uvln1 Eaq premiere episode of this nosta l1lc Alfred Hltdlcoek Pr11111tl comedy series of lift in the 1950s, { ())) Tht PlonHn starring ~on Howard ind To:n Bos· 11:10 II (!HJ (I)) (J) CIS Litt Ntvii: ley. Ml~GIL Ross, An$0n W1Ul1m1, (l) •ifie Tut Rtbe1" (w1s) '71- Henry W1nkle1 ind Oonn1 Most also "'e Nimtt~ Jack Elam sta r "' "· · IThttllrt O Ql(l)i]Ja'l JGhnny C:.no• Dr tl Buddw Rich 1uests. •1n ' O Mnit: "It's A Giff' (com) '34 LI 5:fA911 Jwtn -JN C rl1lds M";": (2hr) "Thi (aSJ Wty" 0 tffj (JJ Ql WW. Wor1• tf (11-com) 52 -Cary Grant. Bttsr ll!ftali111tnl Duke. GI D1J tt Ni11tt I ::.:1 Puce IZ:CIO (i) Orte sttp l e)'!"",. CtMtllly m Mtwit: "Drr "I•" (rom) 'SJ ..,..._ C.ts -C1ry Grant. r Ktlf. l:lD 1J <a (I)) (j) H 1w11J fir•·O 1:00.~ 0 ~?!~row ~w1 "Stem Witness" A youn1 m111 Is 'D 0 m 1n eyewitntss to 1 munl!r. lhen be· 1:4511 ILhvlt: "Wtttrtronr (dra) '51: COllltS th• Mlf target of tilt •Slit· =R1tt11rd Burton, Robert Newton. ;: 9 (i) m NIC T•ld•J .. ,. Z;OO m All·~ilfll aor. °'Cfy " VIII• trJ -ltMCt• "The Y1nishln1 ll••c:t. "'T1lt Printt Affairs If Challee" A OM-of·•·klnd Greek eh1l·1 111 ~ml" ke, v1lu.d •t $1.5 million, dis· J:lO II Morie: (C) "Tiii Ovtcast" (wes) 1ppur1 from t elosely (Ulfdtd '53-John Dtrek, Joan Evins . 2:00 II) "r,.. ftr Air (coml '49-Rob· W edfMtsc:fay 111 Cummlnas, Ann Blythe. 9 "CtnHt Art tf lllurflr" Cone!. (dr1) '62-Rleh1rd Todd, Danit!lt OAmME MOVIES D11r1tu•. 3:00 (i) .. Alkt U.1111,. (dfl) '35--Ka· t:lOD (C) "W1,,.0,. (wts) '51-Ed· ilii1in1 H1pbu1n, frff NteMurr1r., mond O'Britn1 Dtan Jtutr, Forrest li2J (C) "WllldltttH n,. (WQ) '67\ Tuektr, Polty aergen. --Oa~ Duryea, Johft SUon. @(I) "St.'1-DMrs ti Ort~" J:30 12.J Cl) (C) "Tws Aatst tM l it· (m~f'4Z~lc• Ch•lldler. tr" (corn) '6t.-{)11n M1rtin, A11i111 ll!Oll ril "hi• s,rlap WttlltM" (rom) DtlOn. 'U-Troy Donehue, Connie Slmns, 4:00 I) IC> "lnMbttt" (wu) 'M -· II '"Bit "-"'!11 lof (d111) 'SJ All• L1dd, Chtrits Bronson. =tony Wr1(1'1t, 1rt1ar1 P111on. ll:JO II "Saftri'" (adv) ·~ -: Mtdtlelnt t:lO ! ~~ ~.-:m= le; Ct1roll, Do1.11l1s ,,f11rb1nks, Jr.1 You" Tht slOf}' ol how 1 curious. "Cllllll1 Dr. Dt.tfl (mrs) U-1m~1in1titt tl-y11r·old boy Mimi lon Ch•MJ. q to cope with 1h1 th111I of Ylol1nc9: 1%:00 ID "'lfWHt• .._. .. (rom) '34 •• 1 pert of Ill•. Chrbtbn Mtntr • -Norm• Sllt1nr, fndric: Mt1th. Unee P.tl'Wln and lim Salt atar. '; l:Jll D "A star It ...... (1'1111) '55 ( (I }) "Mic' Fllpt" (llh) '51-! Judy Garilnd, Hlllll MtM. llq MIT11~. Anlliony Ntwlty. • ' KOCE TELEVISION lOG . l. .. Mlll •l "Wr..t Mt .. U A Lt"< A \.tW"" -ll'le l .. l1YI~¥• ~ j,pt•k UP •M IM .... 111. •1111 Orf•l'll~ fftr K llOll •rt tM 1ublet11 to O!KUlllH. 7:l0 A.1 Ma11 1-'1•'911 CC) 1,.tt..J 11 "OrMc f"9rtttf' -S.. lhtlflt Moflffy. J..,\Mlry 14. •I •re.I P.'"· · t:OD Gl'WI .. U. ,._.. !Cl Sfl9(~ The tlrtl Mii f'Mlurtl !tit Tfl "'""' ..... "-.,,.., ...__,., to COIN IMlt of tflt -·· llber1! ___ ,, ttlt MCOflCI """' ,. dlKinatoft of tl'll flltn 1rt • trout of elf!'lt mtfl Mid .. ,,,,, .....,.,,.,., • tilO ._. .... IC) i.1 Miftl ' ' f2 DAILY PILOT Tuesd11, J111uary 15, l1J74 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings tor Moneflly, Janucu·v ta, 197.t First on Floor Miss Lianne Kim Brown, 22, became the first woman floor trader on Chicago's Midwest Stock Exchange 1\-fonday in the exchange's 91.year his-1 tory. She works for a firm headed by her father in Indiana. Col. SQ,nders, Wife Sue Successor Firm LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A suit asking up to $122,386,000 in damages from Heublein, Inc., the successor fii-m to Kentucky Fried C h i c k e n Corp., has ·been filed by Col. and fl.1rs. Harland D. Sanders. .the general public to erroneously believe that said products originate from and are the result of the cjuality control and supervision or, as well as having the personal endorsement of, Col. Sanders. \ ' Less Botne Beati9 Gasoline Hits 60c LA At·ea • Fuel Austerity, Beef Up Rationing Begins BOSTON (AP) - A New England chain of 1asoline staUons has raised its In &ice Ii - price for p re m I um LOS ANGELES (AP) -.', gasoline to 60 cents a WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government b e ff a n applying today a program of gasoline austerity and fuel oU rationing. Including less home beating for the nation. While no ration stamps are involved, Federal E n er g y Office officials have described the ~eum allocations sys- tem as non-coupon ,ationing for all major product3 except . -retail gasoline_ - . _ THE N E W regulations. which took effect one minute before midnight M o n d a y , permit exceptions for hardship cases. Normally , however, thermostats in homes and o t b e r residential buildings must be set six degrees k>wer than in the same month of 1972.. and in other buildings 10 degrees lower. Many people have already done this and the regulations will not require a further reduction on their part. Service stations will get less gasoline than before. Just how much less was uncertain, but an FEO official guessed it might be _15 to 20 percent less than the public otherwise would use in 1974. • THE ADMINISTRATION has asked motorists to limit themselves voluntarily to 10 gallons or gasoline per week, but there is no formal limit to individual gasoline use. John Sawhill, FEO deputy administrator, told a nawsman following a briefing today that the Administration's request that m o t or i s t s voluntarily limit themselves to 10 gallons of gasoline a week was "still consistent with c u r re n t estimates" of the ga.wline supply-. - In the briefing, Sawhill said the ~sic strategy j>ehind the petroleum allocations rules is to preserve jobs. Citing some examples of the gallon. Retail be<! prices bsve bit percent more throt in . 1972. Jam., Bolder, d)strl_d_ record highs In the Loo nevertheless \\'OUld be about manager for Soot Bay I nd -kel1 ' 5 to 7 percent short of State Petroleum Corp., Ange es area 8 mar ~ h b operators say steaks and other~ potential 1974 needs. w ic owns 40 stations, cuts may cost even more latert. ,.Id of tlte price hike, · RLINES WILL f, "We're not proud of it." this week. t, Al get Jve Most &......., cuts -up JO~. f But he said "we had to ~ .. ,...v .,.. percent less aviation uel I.ban charge more be c 8 u 5 e to 20 cents -from $1.48 to· in 1972 and have already Venewela. just tripled its '1.68 tor center-eut round and:~ started reducing f l ight price for Ute. crude oil from$1.98to$2.IMlforT-booe,.'., schedules. Crom which we get our KE ' Electric power plants are gasoljJle... THE HlG R. prk:u =i' to .get.as.....mucb .residuaLfuel which began showing Friday{1, oil as the FEO says they!....-------=--==::--;;;:. are--attributed·-·to·-the:- can have, depending how --= zooming-Cost ol. beef on the{~ much there is. F Sa hoof, up an estimated ~,. But essential services and .:u:XXOil ys percent since early Deceiiibcr.<, military activities will ~et just Food chain operators sakt."' about all the petrolewn tbey J • fl.1onday the only item that; need. holding top priorities in nventones has gone down is chicken.l · the ne\v nationwide petroleum At many stores, Cryers wen~' allocation system. S S less than a dollar -cheaper~: tay am e than 1940 prices. " IN ALLOWING for · Market operators also;· ''hardship" exceptions to their HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) _ reported ' 'extender s -·: specific limits, the regulations hamburger and tuna filler!· provide plenty of room for The Erion C:O. has become Yt'hich stretch costly meat -·· deciding what a hardship is the fifth niajor oil company "aregoingllkecrazy.'' ~: -apparently it could include in Jess than a week to disclose an exceptionally cold house "IT'S AN ALL-11ME high;\ inventories. reporting that f f I h'gh • id J "• or a business that's hurting ee too 1 ,# sa erry.\ from too little fuel. motor gasoline stocks as of Sgobassi of Lucky SJores, Inc".· -Jan. 4 were the same as a ff nd oth •etin"' • 0 Hardshlp," the ,_,,1Jatons e a er mar~ a-,. • ~i:.-w>ar earlier but all pe· troleum t' bell · ~ say, "means a situation .,~ execu 1ves eve prices a,~ involving substantial discom· inventories Vlere higher. likely to go higher. : '. fort or danger anckn' ecooorn· "It's going so fast," sa~. is dislocation.' 1'HE COMP.ANY said ·7'-ton-one executive, "I call up our. Agriculture Deadline All California employers of agiicultura.I employes a r e reminded by A.P. Spittter, Tax Administrator for the State E m p Joyment Development Department, in Santa Ana, t\at January 31, Is the deadline date for filing a contribution return and report of disability insurance wages and report of personal income tax withheld (optional), form DE 7003, for Ute fourth day the gasoline standoff re-meat men and even they say~ sults from curtai~ gBSOr 'W · · • · Hite production while 1·1 ........ -ait a mmute, I have to: ·-go look.' " ·. processing as mudt light .. heating fuels as possible. MARKET OPERATORS sai-. "We do not expect to be they view the prices l\D'g6 able lo build gasOllne inven-g'lumly. Some predic t ed~ tories in ~for peak customer resistance and evtJt summer demand levels to the greater p u r c h a s es oe: 1extent we v.oold oonnally," extenders. .;,.: a oompany spokesman said. · "But we do expect to be "If beef goes up lll to » able to maintain gasoline cents a pow:id," said John.. inventories at about their Fazio of Fazlo'.s Shopping Bag;. current levels, which is a tow ;;:.. ~)'111.Sgtill·~•~ •. · but operable level for entering ~·-else." the swnmer season." The suit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court, charges that Heublein interfered with Sanders' attempt to develop a franchise operation for sit· do"'ll -restaurants modeled after one owned ana operated by the couple in Shelbyville, Ky. THE ACTION s A y s impact of the allocations, quarter of 1973. · Penalty and interest \\ill be charged if the report is filed HE SAID CRUDE import> have been declining due to t~e Arab embargo on oil shipments to the United States and that, if this trend continues, lower refinery runs will be necessary. Schick Hikes Prices by 5% BEVERLY mw (AP) Schick, Inc., said Monday ii Sanders' efforts to franchise Sawhill said businesses and the "Claudia Sanders. 'The industries, to receive as much Colonel's Lady' Dinner House" gasoline as in 1972, would be date to Apr-il 1972. Heublein -short . a\>001 7 to _ 10 -percent is said to be interfering wlth of their potential I 9 7 4 those efforts by claiming "lo demand: homeolvners ~ould have originally acquired rights be getttng: about 15 percent in these names.'' less fuel oll t~ ~al, and after the deadline. · . Employers needing adaitional -information· n1ay contact the Employment Tax Office at 28 Civic Center Plaza, Suite 755, Santa Ana. or telephone 5584201. Shell Oil Co. said Friday that its .Jan. 1 inventory of crude oil. gasoline, home It<ating oil aitd jet and diesel fuels was up from Jan. I. 1973, but .supplies of residual and other heavy oils were down is raising prices of all of itai products by about 5 pel'C<llt. The compeny said-it had received permission from the Cost or Living Council to put UJe increases into e f f e c t · immediately. THAT REST AURA NT is called "Claudia Sanders, 'The Colonel's Lady' Dinn e r House." Sanders agreed to sell all truckers, v.•hlle getting 10 of his stock to Kentucky Friedl•----------------------------------------.. Chicken in 1964', according to the suit, and , with this sale went Sanders' three registered trade and service marks. Complete Mid-day American S~ock List • l'ffw Y'o•k -f'ol-Detll •.'*> I0.21 I S I: Rtver• F S.S3 6.(14 lowing i~ 11 HSI Of De!• F• t.ll 9.~ Grwtll 4.S6 •.98 Rlntrt .112.08 ... The ' suit also claim s Heublein is misusing Sanders' name, image and likeness in promotin g products w i t h which he has never been connected, including pastries, bread and dairy Products. These are described in tbe;i 1---------------------------------------------suit as the Colonel's "image," the term "It's finger lickin' good.'' and the term "Tender & Tasty Colonel Sanders Kentucky Fried Chicken." !)id _.,., .11$t.l!d pri· De!~ T •.» 4." 11\Com •.08 • . .w. S.lec Eq 7.IS 1.•7 Ct~ on M11tu.JI deVtQll !S.'2 SS.'2 1r~I !>II 1•.1• 16.11 5.l9IU"'r 2.Clt 2.1)8 F11rds .a§ q.uoted by Orit i Cp 3.'16 4.)1 lst~I Flld :l'0.1'1 11.•J SCUDDER FOS: ~ NA$D Int. Oo49U U.olO 1• . .o h t Fund 110 1 IQ 1ntr Inv 13.W 13.S<I ...... , Jan.wry 14, 197' Drt •el e 8.06 8.M J P Gw!M t 'IO '67 e11anc 14.k> 14.lll> DREYFUS Glt:P Janui Fd H.00 U.00 COm 't.01 't.01 Dry! Fd 10.116 11.00 JHan Qin 6.16 7.lS Spec.JI 2•.0ll 24.~ E:qtv Fd 3.62 l.81 JH.,n Si!il 1,69 8.36 Sbd LtV •.S1 4.9• Ory! Lv IJ.80 1!>.11 JonMin 21,19?1.19 SECURITY FDS: SP lll(m l.ll 1.81 KEYSJOHE: E1111111 3.JO ~2 aid. Asll Jrd Cent •.IS 10."9 Cu~I 61 18.S9 10.•• lnve~ 6.14 6.ll '-E&E Mu 3.02 l.02 Cu~l 82 18,91 20,13 Ultr<o F S.91 6.'9 Adm Gw 3.'111 4,V E1>01e Gr 7,0I 7.16 Cu~l SC 7.9S 8.11 SELt:CTEO FD5: Adm Int 3.3' 3.14 EATON & Cl.L~t llll 6.80 1.•S "1n 5hr l>.81 6 .• 1 --~~---a~w •N~n -• ww-N•--·-~~--= Aet,.. Fil 7,16 1.&1 Gwtn F 10,9i 12.00 Cust Sl t.•110.38 Sentl11el 10.1111.07 Aetnl In 13.08 1•.JO lnu1>e !.91 6.'6 (1111 53 6.llO 1 ~ Sen!r~ F 11.!J 12.52 Afulun 1.08 LOB S~il F 6.'16 1.61 Cusl !.4 3.~ 1:<io SHAR£NLD Glll:P : AGE Fd •.39 ..... Sick Fd 10." 12.00 "POllO J.'16 4.3" Cornst 3.4.l J.15 All\lllt 10.2311.00 EOtE Sii 16.9616.96 Pol.ar' 3.1• 3.•l En!rpt' S:4S S.'16 Alpiwi Fd ltl.113 11.M Egret Gt 11.0112.lll Knitllr S.83 6.J Flet Fd 4.11 4,$1 Anv;1p F •.16 4.66 Efl1111 Trt !ti (1\ ltl'lkr Gh 6.8' 7,,1 H1rbr 7,ff 1.19 Am Birt!! 'il.16111.73 EmtrQ l.U J.•l l.l'ldmrk 6.•9 1.111 Le9<1I L 6.]S ·6.9' Am On'~ 1.16 l .'1 E111r111 11-JS ll.l S LO Edie 13.311•.l• Pace Fd 7.U 7.81 Am Eoly 4.41 4,83 Ftir1 d 7.66 8.JI Len" Fd 4.6! •.6S SHEAR.SON FDS: AM £JtPlll:ESS. Fm Burl! (Z) ltl LEX GROUP: Appr' 11.01 19.61 FUNDS: Fed R~ 7.1f ... Cp l.edr U.'315.13 lnc:om 11.lS 11.1• That alleged misuse. the Sanderses claim, is "causing Restaurants To Douse Geis Ligli.ts C.p111 6.21 6.SS FIOELIT'I' Grw1h S.51 6.01 Invest '·l' 10,\0 lncom 8.16 l .'1 GROU': Revell 11.114 l•.07 Sii DNn 10.3810.:ie Due I th · · 1nvum 1.Jr 1.os 6nd 11et1 1.90 •.73 u te 1n1v 1.n a.•1 Sitt" Fo 6.s1 1.:10 O e energy cr1s1s, speu 6.6s 1.11 Ct11t1• t.u 111.to u nt cap •.oe •.6>C s1GMA FUHos : the Southern California Gas Stock 6.15 1.l8 Cantr1 8.11 ... LOOMIS C.1p ~r UI Ill Am Grt11 s.69 6.n cv SSe< '·" ... SAYLES' 1nv 1u 111 Co. is asking its restaurant Am ln~!n •.l9 •.aa Dl!st 6.11 •.. Cap Ov l T,7• 11.7' Tr ~t Ul (I) Am •nY\I 4.81 4.11 Eu ei 1.n ... M111ua1 il.•9 13.•9 ven1ur u1 111 customers to vo l u n tar i 1 y Am Mut 1,03 1.18 Eottr~t 11-W 11.SC LDlllO All: Smith 8 9.lJ '.2l d' · h f AmNI Gr 2Jl6 Z.?S Fund 1J.MI 15.11 Aflli.t . 6.41 6.9S 58 l&Gr 10.11111.11 ISCOntJnUe t e U5e 'p ANCHOlit Pu•itn t.1J 10.0<1 Lu1~rn 9.7310.~ so GenF 10.98 11.~ decorative gas appliances, GltOUP; Salem F l.C5 l .11 Lulllll In 9 191(101 5w\I Inv 6.61 7.15 ~~ ~:~ ~:ri ,~Ne~ciAl°·°"21·9'1 ~~!:mco: 2:11 s .. •s ~.:~ 1t~11:~ ~ Shively, Orange County ReSoerv 10.01 10.t1 PADGA,.Ml: lndp f 1 . .w 1.0.. S&P 1no s.s1 s.s1 Division manager for the SDKtr l .ll ,,19 Fin D'f'I l.% 3,96 Mils$ F 10.6911.n STATE &NO GRP: ut1'i1'ly announced. f'nd Inv 6.SJ 1.16 F!n Ind l.81 3.11 MASS FNCL' Com Fd •.18 4.S7 w, Nau 10 . .a 11.•8 Fon inc: s.w s.91 Ml T 10.J3 11.11 o ;vesit '·~ s.01 These appliances include gas "'''°" l .19 ,,. Venl l.6S l .l>S MIG 10 7'1111 Progrs . •:W .,, Auclf• F i..1a 1>.61htFo 111 10.'311."l MIO 11:i.o1J:66 St Fr Gr .:u .:,J lights which are not being AXE FIRST MFD 11.l4 11.S1 St Fr Inc 8.SJ SSl HOUGMTOl't: lfrt'IESJORS; MCO 12 SI> 13 ll Sl<1!~ Str 3'1 113'1·~s used for either safety or -•~U•-H W W ••••·~~--·~ Fun11 e 1>,91 1.11 G•th Fd • 19 r.n .Y.l!ne• •s1 9:s1 Am Ind 216 2 1i, security purposes, gas torches, !.lock S.'8 ~-'" !~tom 1,81 1.1>1 Mid Am i S9 S01 "'°'o Fd 1'12 1"11 f' · A.,, x 1 3.61> •.10 SH><:~ F 1.1a 1.11 Mo ny Fd ,·21 10·,. inwesi 1•11 ,-11 1rep1ts and other decorative BLC Glh q,83 10.IS 1st M1;1U 7.~6 1.66 M5B Fd 12°80 11"90 Ocll"n 613 6°83 gas a pi ' 8<1b$0n 10.0l !G.01 Flm S.r 7.91 7.91 Mii BnG a:s1 .:u STEIN ROE ·Fas! p 1ances. B8Y'°' 6.0S 6.61 FORUM GROUP: MIF Fd 7.~ 8 1S B•!anc:: 1892 11 92 Shively noted that the widest a.yr-IJT 5.n l>.1S 100 Fnd 9,SI t .11 MIF G•o 361> •"11 C...OiU 1"99 8°Q09 E!e•cn "' '·" 1.u 101 Fnd a_iJ B ll MuDm 9' .:11 •'s1 Slock 13'.n 1f n use of natural gas for flc•ton 'il.60 9.60 (olum l.•J 1.41 MuOm on 8 40 9"13 i!S GROUP·· . Blrksnr 3.2'1 l .60 2s Fund S1>9 S.•9 Mi;t s11r~ 1s·sc1s·sc Grwth 's M6 tl decorative purposes is in &or>ditk •.11 •.i.9 Fd~ Gr 2.n •.ie Mun Trs 1:91 1'.82 1ncom 1 <is in c ommerci'al establ'"'ments, 8osl Fdn •. QI 9,91 FOUNOEllS Nd1 lf!Clu t 11 911 5rmlil 7.88 8 6" ~I &oWtl 2.83 J.~ GRouP: HAJ sEc FOs· · 1ec11111 s·91 .:411 such as restaurants, and a 8fnhm 9.63 9,'3 Gr.,th • ll •.9S Balanc 1.1>i 8.ll ~urvey f'. 1· n t M CALI/IN FUNDS: ln(om 10.&1 11.M eone1 Sr •.st s.02 svt1t.ro G s:w. 6 !1 campaign to discourage such Bull Fd 11.11 12.13 F Mt""I 8.18 l .'M Oivlan J J7 3 1 Tt""'l (; Ill 1f1 <:dl'IFd 21.11111.11 F 51>ec•1 9.1210.:io Pr.i Sut 6Cs 6&1 rfin eao 739 8 01 usage isunderway. Oiv Sttr J,17 3.•8 Four~ F 8.JO 8.JO lncom i•• i91 Tr•YI Eq •n 10.6S H N11wd 'f.2s 10.1J FRANKLIN Slock sr , '° '" Tuoor H Ml:..110·•1 omeowners are also being NY Vfl'I 111.1• 11 10 GROUP: Gtwlh S.61 6 20 20!11 CG 2 ~ 2'1J ked t b CG Fund 1.14 9.11 ONTt •-Ill 1.~ NEW ENG LF· • 10th Cl ... lQ .-.9 as 0 conserve energy y C.p Trtn ,,s910.'8 Gwt~ Sr •.1s •.14 Ecrully l6.<l-f11•9 un11;f'd irs ,·,, voluntarily eliminating the use tflt St'5 12,81 ''·00 Fr lntrn 1.86 2.0<I Grwtll 9.0<I 9"113 Un\hlnd 6si. 1'11 CNo1 1t1v 1.ll 'il.O<J us Gv 5 ,,6J 10.ss s111e 1'.011s'.1l UN ION SE1t¥ici:· of decorative gas appliances. CHANNING U1<1i11f 4,JI •.Tt NEA Ml 1.'1 1.59 GAOU,: Th FUN OS: ll:f~ '"P 1 oe s.11 Nf y cent •.i.s •-•I Jlrd s iv 11 ,..11 56 e gas company is offering a.11ncc1 'sc11i33 R\ Eqiv J.11 •.111Ne uw111 1.1s 1.11N1t11nv ,·,1 1·111 ass1'stance!nshutt1·ngof!lhese &nd Fd 8.91 ,,,, F ~I Ltto 9,1910.1~ Nl!wton 1111 17 9' Un Ctflt ,·,, 9"71 eom s 1i.. 1.11 1,/'t Fo Mt op 1,9J 1.93 N"' Pl'rs u ·13 u'11 wMh.JI 11"s1 · appliances. fq1y Gr • !ll 1.4 l'UNO~ IMCP New W!O 10:.111: .. UNITED fuNos· ~:y ... ~ ~'.~~ J'!r Ge'!~':,;; 8.26 •.Ol :;\~1~~r ~~·,:::·~~ ~~u,,d 6.ll •. ,;. a:, Grwlh •.JS •.l't ll'npoK 1,49 1.19 °'™'!!• l0l>J 1'1~ Cont 9 ~·!J :·:~ 1ncam 6,11 ),11 lndu~tr I0,1l 11.110 Heo1 1<1 11"1011'10 Conti~ a·-u t'to Spe c! l.'3 l,11 Pllol 1.4.1 l .1•0n,, Will 15.J'tlS,ll IM.Om 11:M 1i•9 'V~n•"•'• I 61 I.» ~4.leJ . " ,,s·:? l.'H OPPENHM Fo: . Scittte S.9] ·-~ . ., S·~.. " ... Oo Alm 9.ll 10.:io Vanod s.?6 s.1• 9DSJON. Gen !let },'l'I S.9'1 ·0o Fnd 6.Jl 692 USAA C• 13.1 83! Fnd Bos 1.1> l.'1 Glh F"m 4.12 4.~ 0o T ~ S12 6u US GvtS 9'w.10"11 fron (Q ~ I.OJ Grtll lftG 11..ll 1l.Ja OTC Se' •'.JB 10::10 USLU'E FUNDS·' Pair USE OF THESE marks and images \Vas to ·be restricted to fast-food, take-home outlets of Kentucky Fried Chicken, the suit continues. B u t Heublein is said to b e marketing additional food products "in Texas and other locations" using those trade marks. Damages including $ I 5 mi!Lion on each of seven charges are sought. On an eighth charge, the Sanderses ask either $15 million damages or the return of Sanders' original stock. HQusekeep Cours e Set Orange Coast College ·is offering a housekGeping management course in the evening this spring. The three-unit class. which will be offered on Mondays from &-9 p.m., wiJI examine the principles of personnel management applicable to the stafOng and operation of an administrative housekeeping department. Spring classes begin Feb. 4. For registration information phone 556-5733. $111r 8~ 1.15 7.11 G ... ed ?l.]112,JI Ptr•ml 6•• IQ.I Ai>t F 4 30 <i 10 S(IKI S.M 6.38 HAMILTON GRP: P.tul litv .:11 6:1.e B1l .Fl\CI 7'35 t '.-i CMM Fd 9.(lt 9.1l Furia l.14 4.~ P~iUi F • JJ 4 11 Com !':..-10.S9 11 "ss Ctll• MMG FDl: Gtll'tll S.•S S.% PeMt Mt 1:911 1:911 V"LUE Ufrlf Fo"S· Llbrly 4.)(1 4.9' IMOm 6.16 6,/J PeM SQ 6 4.1 • •• V'1 lM S 11 J .; \ Brotliel Brokers Nixed Minh! 3 It l.'6 ka•1"1 e.99 l .tt P!tU1 Fd s:1s 6:>o 11a1 1ncc •'1s (66 scnu~ ~ 6.99 1.6' ~rl Lw I.OS I.GS I'll.GRIM GI': LEI/ Glll s"n s· .. 5c;llu $4t ~.&3 1.2S H<lO~ll 7.01 l,IJ Pi1 Fom ll l l 'l•I 5Pt 2:t.J• i 10 TMR A 6,llD l.•l Hf(!~ ~.17 ... C1ptll a:1, i.if llANCI! . • GOLOM!AL Hoeflt91 I.JS 1.91 lllC:Om 1.S1 •. 31 SANOElll'.$: l'UND$, "*'<1<:1 1•.2111.S• Pi19 Fd 1,01 7.66 tnV'tll 161 7..10 eon...,-9.10 9.9S lmprl Cp 1.14 9.111 Pllll St 101111001 VS Gom .. IQ J •S EQUl!r ),JS ,,GI Imp Gf 6.~ 1.U Pin Tr• 2:~ : .. SPld .:,s 613 F-und '·"'Ill ... Inc Am 12.JI lJ,Sl '10Nll111: FD: ll'ldfblt 3 11 4'09 Ofwtll $,1t i ,1} !nc; Eio!.I S ... •.2• PIOll tn 64J 7 2S \llflQ•d 1'u 1'19 into"' •.:Mo 1 .11 lttcr FAm 111 t • Pion '" 11 ,1312:12 \/i nf 10'90 i'•1 · Vtnlur 2.~ '-IO 1ni.oon 1 ... 9,1i Plonf II 9 ... 111,$6 v1u e0 1 3'11 iii Cohim G 11.SO 11JO Ill ln"'l')I 16 ?211,11 Pl.tnl>d 92610 n V!-1'10 (,;-4.tl ti CO¥MOfr4WLTH ln"'l'tn G 1,9' 1.91 PLI GMO IG)I 11)0 W411Sl II' ·~ ;·u T•u$f: Inv C.0 A 11.1112.M PAICE ROWE : Wt \11 Mu 11'1112'11 A " 8 1.06 1.IS '"v G~d at.» •.SJ c;. .. 111 11.211.20 wtino ll'CI. 111'12 10'11 C · 1.M 1,•I Inv llldoc. 2 ll Nw Erl II.it! 11.40 WILLINGTO.N ' Comp qr S.9\ .... Inv 8o1 10 11 11,0. Nw t<or J,IS J,7S OltOU': CbMO t4' •J6 t .11 INVIS1 tlro I'd 6 tl 6 •) titOior 1113 11 t7 Como (Id 1.1!1 I .SI COUN$f.L f'rO•lm ~·n l,Gf 1 .. ~1. ., tJ 1 6 Co111p FO t .. 1,11 CllP"" 1 111.t!PlovdGI 1148?6 MO•Qn !Ol611l? Coot<rd 9.tl •.1J C.Pll ,lv 1.W ?tolP•l.ldilP l 'l!l t 10 l 'Y\I 111.0110'1( (Ons Inv t,t1 111,i1 c.tl Sii $.)S S.1 'UTNAM ' wtl~t' 11.36 17 ,) ~ow s." 6.00 INllhJ o~u,, f'UNOS~ WeU1n 100? 1o'•s c:ot1M1111 tM t,M IOS 4'tri ~.n ... conwr 10 ~11.1~ W)tmn ttf>10,. Contn' C 11,..tS ll.>t ID!, NO 4,tl i·» lq,,lly l ,OI I,~ W•ndV .:~11 1 '•4 (..., 0.U !. .. S•I IOSli"f '·"° . Cito 1Jf'I U,)1 Wt)! ll"d ''3 le& C-'""" Olv i..U S • .O Mulu.Jl • I,~ '· V.•I~ 1.« 111 . .» W\l(d Gt 6t• 1 IS 0.11" i.1c ., ""• 11,n 11 111<-'·'' t.t~ w1'<°"• f c. s·l1 0."""9 "-"-"'" -"''«' •.11 '·'' '"' sn 9 0t trtQlfr 6' 10'1i I Oil.AWA•• VM fltf ..... 1.J.i V"ll F 1:•1 'h ll"~""hridtfld ' , OJIOVf'; In• All 4.it $, VO~t4 1,al 10.20 l•lil'lt•IHtblt •r , . NEW YORK (AP) -Two German promoters ' who promised doubled profits on investments In European houses o! prostitution have been barred temporarily from selling stock in New York state. Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Sidney A. Fine issued a restraining order Monday after Asst. State Atty. Gen . Stephen E. Miron said the stock was not reg15tered with the slate, as required by law. ~e securities were shares in two companies, Martlruc A.G. and Globus-Anlage.Verrnlttlungs- gesellschaft of Osnabruck and Hamburg, West Germany. whi ch were described as ''eros centers." The promoters, Hans Wolle Pieper and Monica Klippel, placed advertisements In local newspapers last August, leadlng to Mlron's Investigation: ' '· • ! Vol. Net Vol. Ntt Vot, ,_, 1..tst 0>9. Ulst °'fl, l.151. Otg. -A A-C:.rr11rt:"' :t i"" ..•. ~•rHH•rtrO ) :t•,.+.,.. AAV Co .10 l '~ ..• C.SU AM'" S !1'4+ '1t FsUtll'I' In"' 1 ni+ '4 ADtr Flttrol 2 1 -Vo Calt!lwd Ill 1 11\'J-Ill Flt $.&LA 1 12\lt-"'-' Ad•m,Rull 6 21/o ••. OwltroriCp l t • ., htVM1.'9b 19 11'i!o+ '4 AOM lndull s l'til Cet1 Sec ·°"' $ 4l!fo , . • F'1mtf11 .U 1 '~ V.. Mobt OitG5 1 11'/o ... ChrnpH .02b 101 • + ,.. Fl$othefl't ~ 6 t 'lt--~ Mtonc:• tnc 10 1'h-V. Chllr1er Md 1 l'rio ... Fh.r1rn11n .20 · 1 2t't ... ~rosol Ttc 1 l'lo ,,, C H 8 fd lk 10 6\11+ ~~ FlaQ Ind .It , 10 2~ : •• Aff!l<lldp ti 10 l~+ v. Clllrde • .w. 1 Iv.--Y. Flevorld .)Cf • 11' ... AffllPbt .Ostl I 7V. ... CICOnv.lOd 17 1 'l'I ... FlyTigerwt t 10\ll-"" Alrtio~ Fr U ..._ '4 CI Miili ""* 4 l'rio FooOr•ITll 1 31/o ;;;-, Al~•EI ~ 2 . s~·-V. Clner•ml I 1 -.,., FordC JAl;I ' 110 11\11-V.' Alrwlck .14 1 · t -'It Ort~ I( ,2' .i T-llt--I Fores!Lb 211. I 1'h-YI Alt~ Alrt 1 S¥1 CltrnAn. 16 3 ,.,,,_ , . • Fr•nkRt .a 2 .SYI , .• AIN W•ldn l 1~~+ \(o CltyGsFl .so I 1 + v. Fn1nksN .:0 1 4111+ "" Alcolk .OStl ., S~ •t. Cl•rl150l'I .1• 2 114--V. frflfllllo A m M"'+ 1~ Atltgh Alrl$ 1! s~ .... 'II c M I Corp 2 1~:. • . . Frl9!tranic 10 lSV.-Vo Atltg Air wt 1 3V. ••. CMJ Inv ¥l't$ I 1\lo-v. Fr1Kh$ .llllt J · 10~ Yi Al .. d A'11ft 1 l "'-Yi CO.crwnen • 3"'-+ v, FronllerAlr ... 3 •14+ Vo Alld COn!rot 2 ni+ Yi COit INt .!6 3l 19~+ 'llo FrontAlr ws 3 2V.-1/I AllK Corp 12 ~·1 Collll II> .1SD 4 l 'IJ+ 'lo ~ G--. AltfC"CPwt , 2 ~1+ 1/1 COii intl inc 1S 2'11 Gf!Drll ln jlli; 1 7,.._~ Amco lndst 2 • + 1,r, Col"1'1t!n . .-23 I + V. G1rtn I .7M ll 7~""' Am~SS wt$ 70 12'll<+ 'Ill CombO Com 1 11 -'It GirlMMf .)I) ' I 61/o+ V. Am&lllrt .SO 27 6~-V. COmb ECIUIP 11 lO\IJ+ :i.o. Geyr,or Sttf , • 1\tt-Vo AmFlt2.n b I 22"1+ V. ComlAlll-.30 1J '"-"" Ge1rflt .24tl 16 13.,..,+·""' Amll•11 .26'b l 6'\lt--'II COml M ,60g 3 161/o+ v.. Grn Ch,.-~ '14 10-V. AMtlzeA .lJ 3 .\,__Vo Comrnodor 11 IY, ... GnEmp.12b • 1 ~il .... Am Mot IM 21 1V.-'!. Comm Psyc 2 7 -\to Gn HOUW-· 2 1'111 ··• A Ptiro 1.20 I 11'!-i-Vo ComouOf'• "'' 2l~'1-1 Ge' lnl11tlor , • 5 ... AmPltn IC* 4.1 9~1+ 'A Comp ECNlo . 11 l~"o ... Gn Rewrcll 10 • -.... A Pl'K ,OSI) 4 3 + 'lo Comp ~l\i 1 2'h+ ~'t Gen' ~-3' 3\'t · ••• Am Rtl .lid s l\lt-'A Conlor' ~.!' .( 3..... •• . Gtn91 Inc I 3"'9--VI Am Rltywt s ~ •.. COndotc ..,. 11 3~""' Genh.co'tec' I 1~ •.• Am RecGrp 15 2¥. .• , Con~I GM '2 714-V. Geon 1111$11\t S.2 14Vo+ YI Am S.ltl A: • •l'· ... Con! 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Monday's Closing Prices • • Tlltsd&J, JMIUM)' 1.5. 1974 * DAILY PILOT J3 • l • NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows ,Appear Every Saturday :. . l . l 'l .... ~ Hloll I.OW U•I ttt:i'..~ ---·-----------------· • t For Weekender Advcrti ing Phone 6424321 • ... • " J4 D~ILV PILOT Tuesaay, January 15, 1974 Spare,Drummer Basie Gets . a Replac~ment From 'Wire Services Gover11or Pens Ballad Of Bugging PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Democratic Gov. Milton Sha pp is not only the chief executive of Pennsylvania, but also is a songwriter. A sample: • "Rose 1t1ary, oh, Rose Mary, pl.ease relate "To our Head of State "He must make things perfectly clear, yes my dear. "He mU3t tell what the beep went o'i at Water· gate." "Like a Jot of other people, I usually just write them songs and put them aside, but Utese were so timely," Shapp said after his -song was .. recorded at the Sigma Sound Studio in Philadelphia Sue Levinson, a-Spanish teacher and sometime drama coach at "' Germantown High School, recorded the two songs, "No Shortage of Love" and "'!'be Ballad of Rose Mary." Serious about Losing~? MEDICAL WEIGHT REDUCTION Lindora's unique program is a sa fe and practical method for Jhe entire famil y to lose weight and learn how to maintain pro per weig h! ... under th e strict supervision of Medical Doctors. Call for information Monday thru Friday B A.M. to 6 P.M. SAN BERNARDINO 886-4788 A!l'owhtld M1dlc1L Bldg. NEWPORT BEACH 645-3740 Pate Proltstlonal 8ldg. WOODLAND HILLS 347-5647 Warner-Victory ' ~1dle1I Bldg, COSTA MESA 5!1-1193 M"1V1rd1 Proles1lon11 Bldg. E. LDNB BEACH ' 597-0378 Loa Allos Mtciitll Cenftr -· GARDEN GROVE 534-2051 Plata ProfeMional lldg. LONG BEACH 426-6549 KB Pro!etslon1l Bldg. W£STCDVINA 962-343B MllOll Bldg, POMONA 623-1655 Pomon1 V1ll1y M1dic11 C1n11r HAWTHORNE 879-9236 H1wlhorn1 Mtdictl Cen11r · PASADENA 796-2614 Crocker 81nlr.Bldg, FULLERTON 870-9501 S1111 Ccil•g; Mldle•lll . CERRITOS 924-5748 Cef1Hot Protehlonal Bldg. SHERMAN OAKS 789-7103 Grltlh•-Von O"I Prol .. slonal 8 dg. SANTA MONICA 828"4513 Fr1nlr.lln Medlc1I Bldg. MISSION HILLS 365-1138 Ml11lon Mecllc1! Bldg, ORANGE 538·2395 Tustln..Ch1pm1n Pro!11slonl4 Bldg, LA HABRA 894·1029 Hltler11t Mtd!e1L Bid;. RIVERSIDE 787-8250 Mtdleal $qUlfl Undora ME81CAL ·CLINIC ' ~ • I F-1111 Cfr=:ea:;u:;...--..;":,:". ,Bii ,Keane -Ceremonies Slated ,. -. ~airview-·Hospital Fetes 15th Year THE-COMMITIEE FOR ART University ef C•liforni1, Irvine pr111nt1 THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER ENSEMBLE Arthur Weisberg, director works by: Castigfonl, Cowell, Crumb, Davidovsky, Stof;khauser, Schwantner FRI., JAN. 18th 8 P .M. If you're considerin .• a small car: consider the Ng 1 sel 1ng compacts in America. · · as! year Plymouth compacts utsold every other compact in A :ca, including-such popular cars as Chevrolet's Nova and Ford's Maverick. We think there are a lot of good reasons for this. So · we're going to list some bf them in the event you may be considering a small car this year. Beller gas mileage. Recently published test resulls by Popular Science on '73 cars (with figures adjusted by Popular Science to reflect 1974 model changes and the results of E.P.A. tests) show our Duster with a "Slant-Six" engine can go farther on a gallon of gas than a comparable Maverick or Nova. More room for hips, legs, shoulders, and heads. We try to make sure our small cars Plymou_th $camp Plymouth Valiant • aren't too small. Duster and Scamp have enough room for five. Our four- door Valiant has enough room for six passengers. And it has more hip, leg, shoulder and head room than either Maverick or Nova. More trunk space. For example, Scamp has more trunk space than Maverick or Nova. And Duster and Valiant have bigger trunks than Scamp. In short, we make small cars with big trunks. Plymouth compacts are priced low. Depending on where you live, Plymouth Duster i~ either priced right down with, or less than VW's most popular model. Alter all, one of the first things anybody considers when buyl~g a new car is the price. And in a comparison Plymouth Duster • of manufacturer's suggested retail prices, we stand up very well. Every Plymouth compact givel JOll something you can't get from the competlllol). Chrysler engin.eerlng. The kind of engineering that goes into our most expensive Chryslers and Imperials. So you get things like a standard Electronic Ignition System, with no points or condenser to replace. So ignition tune-ups are less expensive and come less often. Nobody has more compacts to choose from than your Chrysler• Plymouth dealer. He'll be happy to give you a test drive in any one of them. He's not satisfied with last year's sales success. This year, he wants you. .4~ CHRYSLER w MOTORS CORPOMJJa Valiant ... Dilster ... Scamp. Some of the eight great . CHRYSl.Ell small car buys from Plymouth .. . . Immediate .availability at y0ur Chrysler- I I ' • I ' 1 •, -~ • • -• .. • • • -. 1 '1 1 ••• 1 , , ' ' · Do~othy Wenck offers hints"'on slimming -- •• 'down (at right). ' •BelowL YW-Wome (l'eft to right) Marilyn Hansen, Hazelbelle Covert and Alberta Thiry talk over coffee. I Passion Not Past Oldie Still Good DEAR ANN LANDERS: l have read with amusement the letters in your colwnn from women who seem to be in perpetual search for sexual ecstasy .. Take it from an old lady wbo is past 60-it's all in the h6ad. . ~ - ' ~ ~ ._ , .. ... / Recently l was · involved in a minor I had lost a rassling match with two accident. While the insurance adjuster, gorillas. • a hand.wne young man in his 30s, Sorry I couidn't have turned up looking was writing out the claim, I felt fresh as a daisy in ord~ to protect a sudden surge of passion. (I had a my rePutation, but these are the facts, hystere<:tomy 10 years ago!) Ma'm.-NUTS TO THE GOSSIP Had I been 30 years "younger I'm DEARN.T.G.:'Let'sbearltfMaGood sure I'd have inade 4 ·,pass ,at. the sa'maqtan· with wrinkled clothes and young man. So )'JIU see, AM,. where meuttHIP. 'JWr. T111nks for wrtUng! sex is cOncemed, dW;re's a ·veiy' thin line beti.een . reai(ty and !~.-,DEAR ANN. ilm>ERS:· Yoo advised GUTl'ED BuT NOT DEAD mothers Jo teach their daughters to DEAR NO'J';""DE>tD: 111ere'~ •.~eat sew, cook, fix 'hems and make beds. deal of fa~y· couecttd ' ~ sexual You tben·went on to suggest that fathers desire, In fact; I91t ·ls lollded With~ it! teaCh .thetJ.. sons ~to be, "fixers" of Tbla doesn't m~£oa 1'tre, t.m*~g . wiid!ver ~ break .l!* ·~ Muse. tbote !eellags. A. -· 111 her IOI \Vb ha y· ......,, these 1 • 10 can be !ar !rom --'"'-·"· ~<'ptletl" , ere. ye · ou '"\:''7.' as, se......,. years1• Annie? Don't ybu know that His or not-and your e~ '!'°v.ed 8nd'liei duties are .things of tl)e past? it? • · Men·shouJ~ know how to sew and cook r DEAR ANN LANDERS: Whf'do,people and malte_'beds and W"""l" •hould be ha Web dirt minds' I reier to that able to flX lauce!s, ~, •P.Pilances, vale thedygOSS1·p who·-'no"-"• ·that chaiJge tln!s and repair wbl!te~ breali.s. 1 me y-mou ~ . ~ . ~ certain .1 '-1 . a certain girl in the office alway> _,. ' Asolgnlng iii~ t2 ""1ain sexes he tfl. t Tb-~~ ·that she is unfair, Wl(Jleasant and impractical. t same ou on ,.._, · W · shar the rk t ~--· But wore on Wednesday. i e e , wo a our ~. 'fbe, cat observed: "Her •dress ls how mucll'eaaier tt would be.lor both usually pretty wrlnkl~ her hair o! '"' ~. when we attended scbool, home is a meas." She concluded that the ec and woocbhoP. had been compulsory girl bas a s!eady an-angement and subjects !or everyone.-OVER GO -·t ..,, home I"!' WedneSda)' night. DEAR OVER: Righi you ..... Odd jobs That Jetter m..te me !urlous ~use know .. pndtt. Tb'" pul 1<veral 1151 W~y •night I we111 ciire<tly 1<11'1 blve -. a blurrtq o! lite sexes. from~ to a friend's bouae following Todly, pnelou few tbl,.1 , 1 re a fnlll~ ~ qill. Her bus-is · excluimly 1111 ucl Hen. ta !act, we ovOl'WM ilid bet tilior pains bad storied. blve tnablo lobellng He ucl Sbe. Tbanks The i-kid bas no relatives in town lor -,. and I am ber only close lnend. When 1 amved, Ille tu1 had ·already been called to Wire her lo lite hos!iltal. She was waiting for me With lriiltructloM on what to do for the two prHChoolen. Her 2-year.old bad a terrible cold. I slept on the couch and held that child in Ill)' arms all night, The !ollowmg momlnl the woman nelt door took the icld! mi 1 weiit to w"Ortl: loolllng like J Whl\t ldnd of wedding goes with to-dly's n<w U!e styles! floes anything go?· Ann Landers'• comt>letely new "Tho Bride'• Gulde" tells what's right lor today'• weddings. For a , copy, send a dollar blU 1 plus a long, self-addressed stamped envelope (16 cenla postage ) to Ann Landers P.O. Bcix ~ Chicago, Ill. 60llM. ' " . . • ,. 'Y' Not Socialize? By JO OL§ON Of "'' Dt~ Plllf t11n Take several form.er teachers and secretaries, an ex-post office clerk, a fonner office manager, a registered nurse and nwnerous housewives. Add an interesting schedule of lectures, socials, trips and surprises, and · the enticing l')'lixture is called YW-Womep. Fonned to give women an .opportunity to meet new· friends and learn without the red_ tape of enrolling for a,. class or the commibnent of joining a club, YW-Women also offers the benefit of free child care during programs. It is a good way for newcomers to the county to meet people and make friends, and, as Virginia Brown put it, YW-Women affords an opportunity to' keep up with new trends. With only one fund-raising activity, a Show"" ol Flowers luncheon il1 t h e spring, the pace of the group is relaxed. VARIED PROGRAMS The p~gr~ ~~is _ bro:ad!y a~g, as the fall ana winter offerings show: Oct. 4, quilting and other crafts; Oct. 18, learn how to select a wardrobe that is right for you; Nov. 1, the . wonderful world of color -using color in decorating your home; Nov. · 15, selecting and using wines* and J-. 3, slimmlng down a(ter the holidays. Future offerings will include party ideas, Feb. 7i y~ga. Feb. 21; Jlower arranging, March 21; words of wisdom from a psychologist, April 4; basic car repairs for women, May 2, and travel on a budget, May 18. The prcte is right, also, for the fee of $6 per year includes coffee at each meeting and child care ($5 is for the V; II is dues). The 7D current members come from all over the C0W1ty, some from as far away as Mission Viejo and Laguna Hills. They were attracted for a variety of reasons. IJKES BALANCE Mrs. Brown, a retired teacher, joined to "follow interests I didn't have time for when working. I enjoy the balance of younger and mature women. They are sincere and fz:iendly." Barbara Fuller, a fonner secretary, came "to make new friends and expose my preschool child to other children." Almost all of the women poDed also said they came for friendship and . fellowship. _ IL is tbe lament -of Ruth Schell, - president of. the YW·Women, and Eleanor Weir, executive director of the YWCA, that more women do not knOw about the group in particular end the YWCA program in general. "We have quality," said Mrs. Weir. "We are helping women prepare ror the ~ea 1hlt are all around them In life. We are both stability and a change ag~ in a1cbanglng world." She emphasized that the YWCA I>"' gram is geared to the working woman because of its evening classes and low cost. SUPPORT GROUP Mrs. Schell, a Santa Ana resident, added that YW-Women is important for the support role the g·roup plays for the YWCA. "It's like a church auxiliary," she said, pointing out the more than $1,000 the women raised through their annual fashiO?lShow;Sfio\Verof Flowers, last year. The women also assist with the YWCA 's Flea Aiarket at Christmas and any ether activities where volunteer help is needed. "Women need the social oontact and the enlightenment," Mrs. Schell added. Other officers of the group, . which meets at 9:30 a.m. the first and third Thursdays at the YWCA in Santa Ana, are Marilyn Hansen, vice president, and Barbara O'Donnel~ treasurer. .Olainnen and co-chairmen-are-Alberta Thiry and Hazelbelle Covert, hospitality; Sylvia Hetrick and Milani Demarm, publicity, and Phyllis Troudt, telephone. Perhaps the purpose o! the' group · was · best stated by ·C .... Bedord, r who s&id the reason she comes to YW-Women mE!etiD.gs is "change." Anyone wishing further information about the group may call the Y at 542-3577, .. Shirtdress ... SPK:iAL Wise· , January is big sale time and, faced with racks and racks of "bargains," it can be hard to know what's a good buy and what isn't Here are some tips on the sales you'll be seeing advertlaed in the local papers. An ad for a 11speclal purchase'' sale means the items are not the stc>re'a regu\ar merchandise ~rked down, but merchandise bought from one· or two manufacturers -maybe an overstock vf clothes already too late for the regular selling season -at a low price. You'll !ind good pargaina, but don't • x p e ct to !ind that sweater you Go-with-everything pump Lingerie bargains Country· walker Find Good _Sale Buys •aw In the la ll but couldn't afford. When the store marks down its regular merchandise the ad wlll usually say "mark-down" ucl this la when you'll find that sweater. A sale that edvertlseJ ••seconds'' or "iiregulars" liteana there'• 1 om e irregularity in the merchandiae. It can be alight or a real Daw. Just be certain you know what's wrong with anything before you buy IO you won't be sorry l&ler. Here are some good buys to watch f<ir: A winter coat - a good special p u r ch 11 e IDd mark-down item - . . ' can be a real bargain now. Pick a classic style like a trench , duffle, wrap or a short jacket coat that looks terrific· wilh pants, These are never out of fashion. A !ur jacke~ ll you've been wanting one -but couldn't afford "'-lt, is a good 1buy now. The little hip ones will still mak~ smashing cover for pants next winter. A classic V-necked cardigan sweater to wear over shirts and turtlenecks is always great. A sweater or shirt in a great of!-beat color may have seemed risky at lull • price, but on sale it could be just the brightener )'OU need now and later. A silky shirtdress, lf you can ;>ick one up, would be _ a real find. A pair ol good classic pumps or hlgh- heell'd moccasin shoes wil1 always wort. A simple sling • back pwnp·wooid also be a good buy. Check out the lingerie sales that are in full force now. You... may find your !avonte bra on sale, a supply of bikini pants or some beautiful sleepwear. All of these things are likely to be in a mark-down sale in January, ICCOfdlnl to Glamour maallllne. -· • • J6 OAILV PILOT Tue.ta1, Janu111 15, 1914 . . . . . . . . . Bargain $3 • 1n Mexico Worth a Few Scents By EIUlA BOMBECK MEXICO: I didn't reiilly write thia column in Mexico, hJt I like to give It a little class ooce in awhile. Actually, J was across the bonier just toog enough lo AT WIT'S END mink tlree Kaopectate •. Sting~. "'"""'1t my Spanish He s!oJl!led the car and "Look, Mayva," I said, "I've had enough of your innuendoes. I am going· to ti")' to be more of a woman so he can be more of a man." "It won't be easy," said Mayva, picking up the bottle and reading the label. "This says 'Por Homme,' which in French means 'For Men.' " So, it's more of a challenge vdth after-shave cologne. dictionary and say, "~ checked, then returned and Montalban; your-tlpper-is-00.....,-41<1 -'The smell i5 coming fire" and purchese a quart f~ inside the car. I think of French perfwne r~r $3. J t's ywr French perfume." ·r---~~~~-~ The latter is lDlpor:tant "It's a little strong," Ill because my husband ~ admitted. "But give it a always ~.me of being chance. When the alC'Ohol lousy at d1cter:ng. He once bums off, you won't be able told me I oouldn t sell a paper lo keep your hands oft me.'' roul;e two weeks b e f ~ r e We rode home with the ain.tmas. Thal Is, until I windows down. - got all that French peTfume The kids were the next to fo'.,I$3,;rn don't 00 ooti<e the perfume. One of . . ,,1 . see w you them said, "Why do we have di~ 1t, he said. . ., . a bug repellent burning in " Face it, Prepp~e. I S.!Jd, the winter?" .you . are_ m:!'rr1ed to a "It's not a bug repellent," fmanc1al giant. J said. . ''.l hope you're a giant at "Then how come the bird JANUARY CLEARANCE f1~mg fuel pu_mp~ bec~use .. r just died?" think otlr gas lulC is leaking. "It's not dead. 1 can still 2111 Lat.wen. 61s.n40 see it gasping." N•wport .. och ~-.-i 3 Full Service locat&on1 In Huntlnglon &.tch PRESCRIPTIONS e Clll'91 Ac-tie Dttl'fffilf LAI \It ,..i1t1 Y"',.,....... .,ncn,.-. ~ .. 11, •• '""' ........ ,....... H . .-i11111e. HI,_, , , ~ \ l!""*llWtt a M1mlltM HMIU --- MODEL OR REMODEL Put It All Together For Fun, Popularity, Conlldenc• John Robeit Powers tchool• ol ptAOIMll ..,....,_! .. ...,.,_ ' ORANGE -J Town & Co11•try Pho•• 147·1221 LONG IEACH-50J E. ltHclwoy .... ~ 4164221 ,.. ........ r -. My friend Mayva didn't getl'-~-:-~~===:;;:::;::;::;:~:;:;;~:;:::;:::;::::;::;:;;:;::;:~ a chance 1o whiff 1t until I a couple of days later. "Do you like it?" I said, waving the cap under her .... _ Climber Reaches New Heights Helen Higby, a 26-year-old part-time librarian. is believed to be the first woman to climb Grand Teton Peak in the winter. A diminutive 100 pounds. the former New Yorker made tbe summit earlier this month with her husband and five other climbers in the annual Pat Petzoldt expedition. Horoscope: Pisces Tunes Up WEDNESDAY JANUARY 16 By SYDNEY OAlARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): One who handles your finances should be asked s o m e penetrating questions. Laugh at your own foibles and be sure others are not taking themselves too seriously. You have right to protect i!lterests. Know it and speak up abQut II. T_AIJ!IUS (April W-May 20): Ue low; play waiting ganle. Study Aries message for valid hint. Don't push. lnstead, laugh and let mate, partner lead the way. You do best now by observing, planning and p!anUng seeds Coe future. Check legal ramifications Gf any proj>osal. GEMINI (May 21-June 2il. Be ready for charlge of scenery and "mind." Means March Ceremony what seemed set, cemented is subject to flexibility. Some of y.our most provocative qualities surge to forefront. Personality sparkles and only a few of us know you are chewing fingernails o v e r recent assignment. CANCER (June 2-July 22). Family member surprises by offering hand of reconciliation. Be mature enough to accept -graciously. Taurus, Ubra could play prominent roles. What appears an irritant could be encOuragement. -through proverbial side door. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Avoid self-deception. See situations, individuals as they really are, not through har.e of rose-colored glasses. Real eshfte values could command s o m c attention. Garrulous perso.n may be trying to get something for next to nothing. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ): Troth Told at Tea studied at Stephens College, Columbia, A-1o. Her fiance, son of h1arinus Coolant Jr. of CorC11la de! Mar Bu.ild ror future. Be aware of time and timing element. Older person wants t o cooperate -if you so pennit. Capricorn, Cancer could be in picture. Hold off on short trip, if practical. Directions and messages may not be accurate. LIBRA (J;ept_ 23-0cl. 22): Pull in money reins. Don't continue to pumie Josing proposition. One who leans and whines is not deserving of further consideration....Know- it and take appropriate actioo. Aries could be in picture. Fini!h rather than begin project. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): One close to you is aggressive, restless and aching for a fight. Know it and exercise ·""·"'·~, ... : restraint You are on verge of-receiving fine offer, chance for new dea1. A v o i d antagonizing partner, mate. Adversity wiU boomerang in your fa~or. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. · 22· Dec. 21): Pace shoold be slowed. There are hidden elements which need your attention. Take nothing for granted. Check behind the scenes. Older person may be envious and attempt to block plans. _ aear skeletons from closet. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Refuse to become involved in combat of friends. Means some will try to draw you-in middle -and then turn on you. Keep distance -and seme of humor. Those who do battle tod ay may be staunche!t of allies tomorrow. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Stick to course leading to goal. Don't pennit yourself to be sidetracked. Check details In thorough manner. You could make valuable discovery -if persistent. Keep books in order. Organize. Deal from position of strength. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcl! 211 ): Movement, creativity are featured. Yo.u shake off lethargy. Plenty of action indicated -dialogue is Sharp. Opportunities rooltiply. Key now is to ana lyze. Find ' ' MRS. NOYES Pledges Recited "Wee it? I haven't smelled anything like that since we left the cat in our cabin over the !UINDe!'. What is it?" "It's a bottle of French perfume that I brought baek from Mexico for t h re e dollars." "That's all they paid yoo? You sOOuld ha ve held out for more.'' -Qavidson Betrothal Revealed ~ . . CREPE ST. JACQUES Scallop" ,h,;mp, sliced fresh mushrooms in a bechamel · sauce wi1h gruyere cheese . • ... jluc onC ofJ7vmidiu of Cripe emruau...,..,.,. . Lunch • Dlnntt • Lttt Sup,,., • Coclrltlll • ll'lntt OPEN DAILY 11:00 A.M. Mcn.·Tlu: 'lit MOli&tlt Fri.& Sat. 'hi 1-'.M. Sun.'t~ 9P.M. !el. 65&-1225 lcMll CO;..t Plau-Cotl.l M9u ~wo1 ... 1W--Mldl1I _ ....... . ·----·- ~ Golden Needle's · 11 --s~ ~ tie -'kled PATTERN FILE BOXES Mr. and Mrs. Ge 0 r g 0 Hondy &:-convenient to Davidson of Balboa have store all your patterns. announced the engagement of their daughter Diane Alicia . Regularly I.ti Davidson 1o James F -Now Only l.27 ~a. Humrich, son of the Frank fii'I _ G Id. _ '). _ _ 11~~""~p!Fu!~eb. 17 l.!:!J 0 en 1eedle FABRICS Denise Cirillo and Dan Noyes of Laramie, Wyo. were mar. ried in Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, Westminster. 'lNVt" -'OUTM COAST PlAZA .• CAIU)Ulll LlVl\ wedding in Holy Fam i I Y'j_!,~==---~"~'".' ~"~'""'~'.:'~"-~-~''.!' ___ _!~=~ Catholic Church, Orange. Their parents arc Mr. and Mrs. John ·cu;uo Sr. of Fountain Valley and Mr. and Mrs. Jotm Noyes, Dacona, Olio. Miss Davidmn is a graduate or Newport . Harbor High School and attended Orange Coast Qlllege and Chapman College. Hpmrich is a graduate of Servile High School i n Anaheim and attended . Fullerton C.llegc, UCLA, UC Irvine, Sonoma State College and Cal State Fullerton. TI1e bride is a graduate of Fountain Valley High School and Orange Coast College. Her lwsband is a graduate ol Sterling High School, Colorado and now is attending the University ol Wyoming after having served in the Navy . Bridal aUendants were Vicki ~.-:-~~~~~~~~=-1 Ring, Angie Bowman, Keley Wakefield, l\.1rs. Jim Weaver, ~ Mrs. Debbie La.Mathe, Mr. FRANCIS-anc1 Mrs. John Cirillo Jr., Carrie Woody, Steve Weaver, q ORR /> Tom Simon s , Robert \g el Marquardt, Jim Copen, Paul Pappas and Gary Noyes. FINE STATIONEllY Pre• Inventory SALE of During a champagne tea in their Newport Beach home Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joseph Hayes announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Lu- cinda Jean Hayes to Robert Marinus Contant. and the late Mrs. Contant , is a f graduate of Corona del Mar ; · \ High School and Califon1ia ; -. State University, San Diego reasons. Check message which i---------- may have gone astray. where he majored in business and real estate. lie also attend~ eel Oiapman Coilege World ' · ' , Campus Afloat. ""1'<· M i s s Hayes, a graduate ol Newport High School, now is a senior at the University of Southern California where she is a member of Delta Gamma. They plan lo maJTY March LUCINDA HAYES IF TODAY IS YOUR BlRmDAY you are spiritual and introspective. Jun e should be your significant month or 1!(14. A 1970 National Charity League debutante, she also 9 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. ~i~~©i!1 i1°~~~~ IJI IJIJ/0 l" C\tEESE WHITEf\SALE HOT PEPPER. Tai.:~ aiJvano~ or 1hl. u111qut Jllluay t W!111t Chttt1t S..le. Sa~ on (our or CHEE! N ONION 001 delicious white clwC"K'S: Hol hppcr, SWISS M' SEEDS llM.~t N' Dnkln. Swi\I N' Sc.Tch and Ptpptr N' fktk. All arC" 2QI on per PIPPER N1 PICK.LE pound. Enjoy our Januuy ~hilt S..lt. zoc r:~ OFF ~~. $2.25 LB ;ra~~©r1 ;~·~·m~. or OHIO loath (oast 'Plaza COSTA MESA ONN DAILY ....... c......-.11t •rtlllt " ... Serl --,,..., ""*" Afttt at.rdl 1'1. , ... -·-r Come ••• Join The Fun Sale Ends Jan. 31st PHONE 556-0134 RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY Wlln Yo• Wat "'" .... 1t2J Horkr llYd. Cotta Mna -J41.021t S.Ml·A•11al HALF-PRICE SALE JIJJ (.CIAll •51WAT l li~lllt ClllU Ill IAI · CllWlltllf rAllllt The Lofty Lady . a unique LadiH Boutique f11turi119: fe1hio11 f1•otif11 ;, 1porhw11r ancf 1fttt•fi\11 ,,. i1 h1¥il19 h1r lit 1nnu1I 1el1. • • • ~- OFF ·r FURNITURE KARG ES magnltitttot selertlom of imported furniture an4 arres1orle1 from Italy France & Spain 25% off ydia's, Inc. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 400 w. Co•t Hwy. Newplltt l1adl 541-2350 \ M_ .... _.., ,, .... ,,,. ' MIXED SINGLES TUMBLEWEEDS MUn AND JEFF YOU MEN! IF I IF '>llU HAD WILL HAD WMAT YOU WHAT I HAVE. YOU HAVE, YOU '>t>U WOULDN'T PLEASE WOULDN'T HEAR HEAR ME ME AtN! COMP'l..AIN .{( NEITHEI< ! k "> FIGMENTS NANCY , -- by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson '!Uel'J '!Uee~ AIZO VAV5 IT ~~SN'i PAY 10 L.&A~ r~~ i.oci:e~ ~ooM . J l by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale Hale \ T~~. JaflUll")' 15, 1974 DOOLEY'S WORLD Dr. SMOCK D GORDO •• MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS • DAILY PILOT .J7 by Ro9er Bradfield by Geor9e Lemont ·' by Gus Arriola ~AAAD 00"<1 • by Ro9er Bollen by Ernie Bu$hmiller HAS THE PRICE OF ---''----..... TRACK MEET TONIGHT ADMISSION $4 .SO so >---MEETS PEANUTS ., by Charles M. Schulz !DDAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLE WHICH CAN ~E VER~ HARO ON 'THE BRANCHES ... OR OOMEONE'5 NOSE! .. ,,., .. "0 COWi' milieu •I C.,.clty unit 1 At• '42 Equines ol ttw ......... , ... 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"""""-DOWN "'22 Alk.O lor 2' lt'llCr!Md 1 ActmAl111 atOM 1lebl ......... ,. __ 2 a.tor. 111 7'8ol-, .. ~ 8 Footblll 3 Orlgh'lltld Pi1J1r ' A1PU l1!v1 ... _ 5 Poetlfffl I Arlb govlmOf 13 l>tte.OUl9Cllng ~-7 ANdJu1t !17 .. _ a ~hi 1ue1 • Add"" •Go• 10 Brainy 01me ~ 11 CIYU WfDJlg • Kllehln Hllft 12 If IYW • • "'11· Y .. t~I PuD:l•SolYtd . 13 Flut. 43 St1yed out " """" of light 23 V11Hls 45 More unlllnd 25 TIU1 ol 47 Hard ,._,.et material 28 PortrayaJa 48 S.91 30 Platform 50 M9Jtic.n 31 Concl'!Tllng:2 agave · wordl 51 M!1ICl·Ufl 32 Alrle111 Nlers light 33 LSD or gr1u 52 Ch«nle1I 34 Kind of po«n '""""'"" 35 Temporwy 53 ,t.rmed '"'"" K11fir1 54 Timi ol dl1: 38 Negatl\t'I Po1t conjunction SS M111'1llor 37 BoldlJ opln nlbllck -40 Lov1dto 5e F1mlnlM I KCIM ...... 42 A•alUJ eo Aa11, 1.g. " ~~.J .. .. l ~ by Harold Le Doux pnn=::::::::::::r;-:::rv;:-"'\' ~,-.L-L-e-.-,N-'t~o-u-c-, -.,-,,-,-..or---~,, -"EANWHILE, AT THE GATE SEE WHETHER YOU TOMORROW. A&0EY ! THE SECURli'Y GUARD WILL TELL YOU IF JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH DICK TRACY . ' I. GROOl/YS GOl'IG TO BRING POCKETS 'TO MV MOUSE AFTER SCMOOL. -- • R.OetRT!t IS HERE! by Mell C::AN"I' YOW JUST 1'0W· Ol,IT 'IN A IJOAT Al'IP PICIC Mt I.IP ?,I 0 [ [ "tF Tl-IE OLD GlRL FAll.5 1'0 MAKE IT, Ml! MA.V-'R. '\"OllR-ENT-D7 by Chester Gould W!U..MESANICE BOY AND I lllCE MIM . ' I l ' THE GIRLS ~~ ,•o~ ,_,5" "Our final meeting of 1973 opened with the singing of our club 50ng following which wt \\'elcomed 1974 with cocktail& -from there on my notes don't make any sense at all." DENNIS THE MENACE • • • • • • •\ , --..... • 4 • . . • - • -. • - ' I TOIJJ 'IOlJ HE'S A SLEO 003 ... 'JOll IWTA KEEP $HOVIN' MIM OfF !' • I I •• .-.-......----------- J8 DAILVPILOT Tut~y. Ja11uary 15, iq74 Marina Cagers ·Ranked No. l in CIF ( See Details Page 19 ) Maras Scores 30 Slow UCI Start , Ruins Upset Bid Special to the Dally Piiot NORFO[J{, Va . -Jerry Maras scored !O points and Scott Magnuson grabbed JI rebounds but it wasn't enough as a second half rally fell short for the UC Irvine basketball team Monday night at Old Dominion College, here, 84--77. Coach Tim Tift's UCl Anteaten were down, 68-65, with four minutes to play and bad poeseaion of the ball before a near capacity crowd of 4,610 in the echool's field hoLLSe. A mi~ shot forced the Anteaters to play a trap press to get possession but the Big Blues of Old Dominion It's Another :Super Bowl Mishmash Sometimes I wonder how a nation as large as America with such a supposedly sophisticated sports audience can aMually fall for an overj)layed, overrated event wbich seven 1imes out of eight turns out to be a leading candidate for bore ol the year laurels. I refer to the ~per Bowl football game, which mercifully is contested only once per annum. With the exception of the 1971 Super. Bowl , won by Baltimore , the much·heralded yearly pro title <lecider has been a gross flop. On e WHITE WASH team ha s dominated to the point where YQ11 welcomed the commercial timeouts and dreaded the return to live action. )'et people plan abstinence from n6nnal Jiving me day every year - a day called Super Sunday by those who have tried to make the Super Bowl comparable to the Last SupJlllr. Newspapers devote more attention lo one day of football than they do. to two weeks of the Olympic Games. And the wire services go berserk with stories on players, water boys, bellhops, pennant salesmen and anyone else they can even remotely associate with the Super Bowl game. I devoted 30 minutes or my Sunday v.·atching that debacle from Houston, wondering why I shut myself off from the rest of the world to partake ln such mishmash. Assuredly, that error will not again be repeated .. at least not until we get a few Super Bowl games that live up to the inference of the name. The U.S. Davis Cup team's loss to Colombia last weekend is comparable w the U.S. basketball defeat at the hinds of Russia in the 1972 Olympic Garnes. I Neither would have transpired had ~ simply sent our best players. ,Our basketball representatives at rt:unich wouldn't have been fifth slring o~ a national team made up of the cpuntry's best talent. And the Davis Q.Jp team we didn't send to Bogota {fHan Smith, Arthur Ashe, Marty Riessen, Clilf Richey· Bob Lutz and .ammy C.Onnors) would have taken dolombia with about the same ease ib which the Russian army would OOnquer Swaziland. , A step ln t h e ri ght direction for l'CSUrrectlon of o u r Davis Cup pride dtight be to put team captain Dennis Ralston out to pasture. Jn San Francisco . . o>nverted free throw attempts to put ·the deeisioo out of reach. "We totally outplayed them in the second half," a disappointed Tift said following the game. "I'm proud of the way our players came back. They .made a gutsy effort but our raUy fell short. "I wish we couJd get them flred·up in the first half and maybe things would be different." UC! !ell behind, 45-32, al the intermission but outscored the seventh· ranked college division team . 45-39 in the second half. This was the narrowest margin or victory for Old Dominion at home this seaaon and brings the Big Blue record to 10.!. UCI i! currently S.S. Each team bad 37 field goals with the Big Blues hitting 10 !tte throws to ooly three for the Anteaters. UCI didn't have a free throw attempt until 8:22 remained in the game with Old Dominion picking up three on a five--point play in the first half and five in the closing stages of the action. , The five.point play came on a shooting foul with both shots c o n v er t e d. A ,technical was also called because a UCI player raised both hands instead of one. Then Old Dominion scored on the Inbounds pass. Gary Eubanks, a starter before he was injured more than a week ago, saw limited action but didn't score. Maras hit 15 of 24 field· goal attempts and nabbed nine rebowtds. UCI had 46 to 44 for its h<ms'ln rebounding. Joel Olpeland, Old Dominion's All· American candidate who was highly·re· cruited by 1.1aryland, hit 29 points on 12 field goals and five free throws . The Anteaters continued the ir hot shooting from the field with a 51 percent completion figure. In the seoood half, it was 21 of 36 for 66 percent. Wednesda y night UCI will conclude the eastern swing at the University of Richmond. The next home game is a week from tonight in Crawford Hall against Cal State (Northridge). uc 1rr1 ... tnl ON Domlnieil (Ml ~ fl ,,, ,. ~ II ~ .. Miras u • ' ~ AOlll'llllr" • ' ' .. 81•er ' ' • • °'""'"' " s ' ,, M19nl/$Oll 7 ' I IS Slreet • ' , .. DIYIJ • • ' • PurnetU • • . " Tlv-n I • I ' Eubank • I • ' 8utlrr 7 • ' .. C1ruther1 ' • I • Mr1ule ' • I • HIWlclnt • • I • P•llWl!t • • I • lot111 31 3 1! 71 l olals 31 10 10 "' H11tllmt: Old Dominion, ..w1. Long Beach Goes to Court LOS ANGELES -Cai Slllte {Long Beach's) Glenn McDonald and Roocoe Pondexter, who played Saturday night at San Jose State under court order, were scheduled to go to court today. Coach Lute Olson of tho 49ers said a U.S. District Court hearing was set for the university to show cause why it made the two players ineligible a week ago as a result of NCAA charges that they entered school under fraudulent tesf scores. A temporary res training order was iSSJed late last Friday which enabled the players Co rejoin the team. "We want to show everybody that we're ·the team that shou1d be going to the playoffs," 1t1cDonald said Monday, when asked If the NCAA action tbat bars the school from pos"season play few three years has given an added incentive to win. Olson, a former ?.tarina High coach and a Fountain Valley resident, said the suit, filed on the players' behalf by attorney Harry SimOn of Long Beach, ''revolves around due proceS"S" since the NCAA rejected an appeal without a hearing. "I'm speaking as an individual," Olson said. "The NCAA hasn't talked to Glenn since October of 1972. They waited a year and • haU and dropped the bomb. It doesn't make sense." ! Evert Forced w .Rally f SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -CbriJ Ever!, In ber w .. t Coo9I debut, struggled before ~aying like the polaed tennis player lhe ts at age Jt. • "J was too tight." she admitted after i 6-7, 6'1, f.I opening round vicU.ry 9ver Mart.Ina Navratilova , 16, o ( ~zecboslovakla Monday night In the fS0,000 San Francisco Pro leMIS ~mament. •"I kJ1<W it w., going to be ti>ugh," 8ie Fort Laudordale teenager added. ~I'm starting my first full year on the pro tour and I'm p!Jylae In my flnl West c-1 toumammt. ·~ wu a big buildup. l'm 1Iad I pulled It °"t." Billie Jean King also had early.troubles In ber flnt round match Monday nlIIht. She beat another Eastern European teen-ager, Mine Jausovec of Yugoslovia, 7-ll, 6'1, and mlght have betn an upset victim ti she hadn't been sharp with her $Crvc throughout the match. Other opening day winners' Included fourth-seeded Kerry MelvUJe 7-5, 7-6 over Kerry Harris. fifth-seeded Rosie Casals M, 6-2 over Glynis Coles, and unseeded Karen Kranticke 6-3, 6-2 over sixth -1ed Frant0tse Durr. Following the San Francisoo tourney. tbc tour moves to M lsston Viejo nm Monday. • . " Final Word On Walton Due Today LOS ANGELES {AP ) -The UCLA Bruins could be without star center Bill Walton when they return lo the scene of their last defeat but if coach John Wooden is alarmed be doesn't show it. "I'm assuming we will not have him," \Vooden said htooday, when Walton's bruised back muscle kept him from practicing. "If v.·e do, it'll be a plus -a big plus." \\'alton, the senior who already has been honored as college basketball's outstanding player the past l\VO years, \vas hurt Jan. 7 against \Vuhlngton Slllte. He missed UCLA's 116th and 17th consecutive triumphs last weekend against California and Stanford. The top-ranked Bruins I e a v e \\fedriesday for Chicago and a game 'Ibursday night against Io"'·a and then move on to South Bend, Ind., to meet second-ranked Notre Dame' Saturday on national television . HADL HONORED, -Flanked by representatives Lloyd Buzzi (left) and John Vogel, Los Angeles Rams quarterback John Hadl talked over old times be· fore being honored by the Kansas House of Repre- Ul"ITI ....... sentatives ?t1onday for hls outstanding season. Both Buzzi and Vogel are from Hadl's home town of Lawrence, Kansas. UCLA's last defeat v.·as 89-82 at Notre Dame in January 1971. "If Bill can practice today wilhout any complications, he \\"ill go on the trip," \Vooden said. Trainer Ducky Or.ake, who gives the &-foot-I I Walton twice ·daily whiripool massage, ultrasound and bend fag exercises, said \Valloo "is moving much better. He's walking normally but bl can't move quickly." Sports in Brief Police Guard Dolphins; Soccer Player Killed Ml.Ai\fl -Police thre\v a tight ring of security around f\1i ami Dolphins' coaches and players upon their a rrival at ~liami International Airport Monday because or felepOOned threats. "\Vhat happeried Ylas that the City o( Miami Police Department received a couple of calls threatening coach Don Shula and the team and security measures were taken," said Dade County Public, Safety Department spokesman Frank Ramo s. Four policemen rushed up the ramp when the door of the Dolphins' airplane was opened. Police surrounded Shul l! and players on their departure fro1n the airplane and accompanied Shula on a podium where he addressed 2,000 fans who welcomed the National Football League's champions. "We don't want this out of propor tion." said Ramos. "Goel knows what it was. But security measures were taken as a precaution." e Player Killed ,\1EXICO CITY -Amador Silva Madero of the American team protested to the referee as soon as Eusebio Rosas had scored for the San Mateo Soccer Club. It so angered Ro~as tha t he ran to the sidelines, pulled a pistol fron1 his clothes and shot Silva to dea th. The g'ame between San Mateo and the America team v.•as under \Yay at Cuautitlan, 21 mil es outside Mexico City Sunday . Police put out a buJletin for Rosas, \\'ho fled the playing field after emptying his pistol into Silva. e Co11eh Fired V ANCOU\'ER -Bill tvlcCreary has been fired as coach of the Vancouver Canucks and replaced by Phil ~1aloney, the National Hockey League club said fvlondaY. e Kh1gs in Action MONTREAL -. The traveling Los Angeles Kings hope they can snap a 15-ga me jinx when they meet the Montreal Canadiens tonight in a NatiO[lal Hockey League game . It's on TV, Qlannel 5 at 6 o'clock. e LSU F11lb STARKVILLE, Miss. -Larry Fry led a second·haU surge that carried Mississippi State past a depleted Louisiana State 89-75 Monday in a Southeastern Conference c o 11 e g e basketball game in which the Tigers finished with only four players. l.SU coach Dale Brown suspended seven Tige rs earlier Monday f o r breaking curfew here ·the night before the ga me. That left LSU with on1y five players dressed fo r the contest. \Vhen Collis Temple fouled out with 53 seconds rema ining, LSU had only !our men on the court. "'"' '~· HAVEN IN ACTION -Co rado's Lee Haven, who prepped at New· port Harbor High, tries to ve by Oklahoma University's Jay Wil· Iiams during BJg-8 basketball Monday night at Nonnan, Okla. The host Sooners won the game, 91· · £ . ' ) -~ ·; . - ' t • King Named . Top Female Athlete of Year Wooden sald Walton told him be hu lost 15 pounds stoco Ille Injury. Wa!tm started the season listed at 220. --.,ore-Gerald Flnnerman, UCLA !nm- physictan, said, "It's a day-l!>day proposjtion." Wooden said "There's no v.·ay to tell just how lorlg Bill will be out." NEW YORK {AP) -Billie Jean King, who beat Bobby Riggs in her continuing crusade to upgrade the image of women in sports. was named Female Athlete of the Year by The Associated Press loday. ~ts. King, as she-prefers to be addressed, was the overwhelming choice in the voting of AP m e m b e r sports \vriters and broadcasters. She received 487 votes, compared with 143 for Olga Korbut, the Russian gymnast who received the honor last year for her Olympic performance. Kathy \Vhitworth, who was Athlete of the Year in 1965 and 1966, was a di stant third with 34 votes. followed by Margaret Court of Australia, winner of the French, Australian and United States open tennis championships, with 2Q; swimmer Keena Rothhammer, 11 ; track star ~lary Decker, 9, and teMis pro Chris Evert . 7. The ay,·ard is accompanied by the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Tr op h y , presented annually by George Zaharias in memory of his wife. the late golfing great who was AP Athlete of the Year six times. Billie Jean, who also was named AP Athlete of the Year in 1967, was overshadowed by l\.1rs. Court on the pro tennis tournament ttall. The only major international title to come her way was Wimbledon, which she won for the fifth time in her career. All-stars Clash Wooden said Walll!n's absence has been good "ifl a sense" for the team because "all the players have the opportunity to see what they can do as a team l'<ithout Bill. "A lot of people lhlnk this is juot a ~man tea m. It is not. ~ly pl.ayers don't think they're as good as they would be wilh Bill, but they don't think they'd be unbeatable without him or with him. And I want them U. R<p tbinldng that way." Woodec said thett i> pressure to maintain an unbeaten record but he refused to overly emphasize the Notre Dame game, just as he played down the North Carolina State game a m:>nth ago . "Our loog winning streak hat nol been a point of emphasis, even in my thoughlS. When we got close U. It {llO games). it was of concern, but once we broke it, the streak ceased beinat important. C.Onference games I n d tournament games are of utmost importance to us." In Waltoo's absence, \Vooden said Tommy CUrtis and Keith Wllkel - asserted tbemlelves aa leaders. Ralph Drollinger, 7-fooH sophotnott, and Rich Wasblngton, 6-9 freshman, "have stepped in well under a k>t ot preaure,'• be said. Wooden was on the casualty list himself Monday. The 114-year .. Id coa<h pulled a hamstring muscle SUoday morning during his daily five-mile walk. "I'll be all right," he said. "I'm worried more about Bill's cmditlon than . I am my own." NBA Expansion Looms; San Diego in Running SEATILE {AP) -"I think the league bas leveled off and this might be a proper time to expand," East coach Tom Heinsohn said prior to tonight's 24th National Basketball Associaticin All· · star game at the sea\tle Center Coliseum. While 24 of the league's finest players ·-12 each from the Eastern and Western conferences -were preparing for the All-star clash before a record Seattle On TV Tonight Channel 2 at 6:30 crowd of 14,360 and a natiooal television audience, expansion to an 18th team for the 1974-75 season loomed big on the NBA horizon. The poss ible addition of another franchise for next seaton. expected to be the major topic of discuaslon at today'• lal&l>r<Ulng Board of Governor1 meetlng, probably WU tria<red by the esplratlon In Congress on Jan. 4, of the l!lef8'I' _.1 bet..n the NBA and the American B a s k e t ~ a 11 As!Oclatlcm. Having failed In an effort U. Jnterlock with Ille younfer ABA, the NBA, apparently now has decfded U. expand. Where It ·will go still wu a matter of conjecture, bl.It te:veral c l l J e 1 reportedly were in the rwmlng, Including a late entry, San Diego. Allhou8h Son Dlegq previously failed as an RBA city, mOving to Houston at the ouUet of the 1971-'12 ,.. ... Iller four years In the league ol)d now flopping ' ' as an ABA site, it appears to have forged back into the picture wlth the reported presence of two groups from that city attending the all-star game • Meanwhile the West team bu a superiority In height with 7-!ooH IW!em Abdul.Jabbar of Milwaukee, and a pair of 6-11 center1 in Bob Llnler of lletnllt and Nate Thurmond of Golden State. The East starUnc lineup Included M Dave Cowens at center. &-5 John Havlic<k of Booton and f.S Lou Hudlon of Atlanta at forwards, and f.6 Peter Maravich of Atlanta and H Walt Fruler of New York at guards. Starting along with the towering Jabbar for the West were f.7 forwarda Rich Barry of Golden State and Cbel Walker of Chicago, f.4, guard Geoff Petrie of Portland and f.I guanl Goll Goodrich of Loa Aaceles. Cage Ratings r " I s • • I I g ve the r . . Alamito s Entries 1111"" tw TMltlll, Jt'S Pllt$T l ACI_ -400 Y•fCI" S 'I••! Oldl. Cltlmlnt. PUf'" 11500. Clelmlne orlct suco, MOii.Siur Pi.n1 IAcitlrl 111 Gold I• a11ut1f\lt (Wtr9) 117 Moon lltlll1nh'lf tOrt"ttrl 1n Ml P'tle MOOll lLlpl\tMI nt ll 111 DI.I~ tT .... t11r1I llt 1t«1 11:1v1r 1tU11v tP•r• on Dill A W•1 (Cr"81tf' 1n I Khtrl'• t i IA(m•ll'Ol'llll l'H Wl•flewood (Myl-t1l llt flV MK fl!y (Wrfill'ltl lit llCOND llACI -S4t v1rd•. ' VMr oldt .. ~ Aliow.11¢1. ""'l'M u,., . OMp TOllte fMorrl•I tit Roo::k.t Joe llUcMr<11) 122 Hv. P9wtll (MYltl) 122 ,,,, Ct1bbtr (Sm11111 lt2 91rrll'IO (Hirt) lit S1m'1 WOllOtf Min (TrHi1,1r1l \lf M•1n1mlncioua (.t.dllrJ 1:12 TMlltO llACI -... v•rd1. i .,..., old MtltMM. il'UtM SIXU. 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PllfM s:JOOO, Clt hnlng prltt IJOOCI, llun Blobby Run l"41lr) lit Tytlfllum IWflltl l lit Pl111ur1 1111 lPao-l lit DuPldffdoo ILlpMm) 122 lurl'I lttb IWll'"dl lit Mr. lar H09I !Arrmlrongl 1n ll1ck On Men t0r•Ytrl In Nifty NoM (SmllPI) lit S1!1dY'1 Sp1,1r (Cltrlu11 1n NOClf" Moo!'! IH.artl lit 11¥•MTH RAC• -350 Yl rd$. 3 yt ar old1 l uo. fltllt1 .. Mtrtt. Purae MOOD. Tiie Nttlontl Chlrlty Lt1gw. Twister 8f9tJI (Llotiaml llt Mls1 lllatk O.Ck (8r00ksl 11t Tiny Ctllc (ltlcMrds) 111 Air Cooltd IMytt1) llt Llr.1 Grandm1 tTre11unil lit WtlCPI Mln y Go (Sml!lll llt Pllolbl'I Limit (Malllldll Ht COPI' Welch (Adair ) llt N11_ Ann 11'19'.l llt lltbif ~•-4.IMrfbl ttt l lfHTM •Ac• -J50 v1rd1. J year old• ., l/P. ct1lmlng. Pur ... 11100. c111m11111 price UGOG. 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Oflll Min. u llMd• -1•••r w11 chic a l•S,.....I ........ ''Id Mtl M . Sl(OND •ACI -«ID y1rd1. l ..,.., old rn11dtn1, Clalmlnv. Pur11 11500. Go Coror11 (Llllhlml I.JO 6.AO 4.60 f'lfff LYllll (Richards) 12.20 S.00 St m MOCWt IAdllrl l.19 Tlmt -21.,.. AllO rt n -Qullo, Win A C1tCn, Ml11 Arur1 llt r. .1.lllO l1r, Miss Ta,i Lin\, MoOll PI l1r Baby, Oickey 1111141 Jo, THlllD iu.c:• -400 Y•rds. l ye1r olds .. uo. Clalmlng. Pur11 $2SOO. Sn11ky l ff•Y fWan::U 11.20 '·00 4.20 1nm1n•1 L.o Twff J.60 3.20 0111)11c1!9 B1rrfd IRlchard1) 7.20 Tlmt -21.0.. Al'° ran -FfrteMrg1, Blobl)Y CPll rlillf" Lynn Cl4. Mr. Mtrl 81r, Jtlllrti Jodi• Satin l t r. Dlllowtdllty. l'OU TH llAC• -CIO y1rd1. l year olds .. uo. 1'"1111•• and mart s. Cl1!ml119. Pur11 l.JOOD, Nurltan011 tlilrll lrll Dtc:k (WlflOlll 25.0D 19.111) j.111) 12 . .0· S.IKI •.M 2.10 OH .. ullY l egon.f• \Ward) DH-J1nt ""' (llroolUl Tltn1 -21.'U. AllO r1n -A.lure AnM, Cacllt's Copy, Miii GOOd 8ll'd, M•m• S•Y• Go. Pl.,w Conllnut. 'lfl'TH llAC• -t J'O ytnl•· J v1ar o1111 .. ud: c1.im11111. PurM iiioo. ldtflO Go (GolrUl 6.00 •.20 3,20 Llllil 11111 Tkll (Crt19fr) '·'° U0 Nt!IW TllW11! !P111el •.60 Tlmt -•1.U. AllO r111 -Mollhl, l•111t T1nl!,, Ollmoncl la,., Ht!WntllYt, [)on kllf. SIXTH llAC• -:U0 y1rd1. l yH r olds. Atlow4lnct. P11r11 UJOO. 'erucldtll (WPlllt l H .«I 2J,.0 13.40 Dut;I MIU tDreytr) t.00 ._10 Ml rtl Clf UUcMrd1J l.«I Time -. It .ti. Alto rlfl -Un And Oflly, fltet'1 ~· Dick~ MollY ... /Nry Don ltrn, Wiii C4111, Our ,, ... 09atl'l'9. war c111c•1 Ecne. .. l11ct1 -... "" ...... ~·0••1 Ml .. ,.,. II.Jn .. . llVIN1N ltACI -:MD f inis. i ytl r oldl • up. C)t ulfltd Al1ow111Ct. ,urM MllOO. Tiit Or•not c ounty L .. 10ftllllrts •. -t SP9tll k llll {Tl'M"1Nl 1.411 .1.20 •.GO Country Ct routtl tP10tl soo i.to llwrtlt'• Whir tKlrll '·'° 1'111'11 -1&2S. Also rtrt -Ht •m:kt l, FIN I Copy, flrlf St'lllfllt, Jel Ctmmlfllltf, t · lllHTH llACI -Pl Y41rd l yffr o4d1 a 1111· Clfilml111. Pllfll -Wiii Wllllt I01rttl IU.00 :it.ID ll.20 Sutlt!r SlllitY ''"'l •.oo 4.60 $Ir HOfl'llld (Wrlffl!I UCI Tlma -11.G. Alto r1n -8o0'1 841r End, Mltltf' Proltd• lit ,.,. Wttdl. Sharp Lulu. ""'°" .... ltoclltt To Mt. u l •act• -,,.,. wuw. a s.1inttr , ... ,.,.... .ui••· •11NTM IACI -3'0 r1rd1. 3 .,..,r Miit • Ull· C"'rnlnt. """" S20QO, ll~ l•r ltof lCINilla) D.00 11.• •. ~ "\''°" DltldY tWa~) 11.411 t ,IO o ti ca.c~ ctrMWJ•l 11.111 ' Tl,,..._ 11,lf. AIN rMI -11lod1tt Mlc:k. O.rld'f'• !• Jlf, Oii Llmlfl, told Adventurt, C1'1411Kt At, 1111'1 lllClllMf• Cl•= J. ,''t.af.;9 ~~;= ...... :.•r ..., ,·i;;i;i~~--lmiiii-- IA THI ~IW 1t74 DATSUNS . > con;;m· DATSUN f' -an. c.11. ,. .,__ ____ .... • ••• -1 ........ ~ .. - " D11tr Pflol PPlotos ~Y Ll4 ~IYrte -· ... . . '. Tutsday, January t5, lC)74 01.!LY PILOT J fl -Co sta Mesa High G1,.id .Job '• • . Attracts-Seventy Candidates b ())Ma Mesa High athletic director Bob Hunter reports when the deadline tell for vnrsity football coach applications Friday al noon, more than 70 replie.s were received. "When we made the announcement or the opening," says llunter. "we n1 ade it clear we wanted so1n1.'0ne with three years of successful varsity coaching experience or the equivalent. ''We'll be able to eliminate some right off the top, bul we have a lot of work ahead of us." The plan is to whittle the list to 20 STEVE BRAND or so and then condu ct intcrv iC\\'S. "! don 't sec how we could conic up 1vith a nan1c before mid or even late l"ebruary,'' says Hunter. Costa A1esa apparently has contacted some of the top names in the business, however . When asked about 'fc1nple City's Bob Hitchcock, whose teams have \VOil four consecutive CIF 2-A titles, Hunter quickly said, "v.•e contacted him but he said \\'C 'd have to hire his assistants. too.°' Hunter said that was impossible. There are only two indoor track n1eets in the Los Angeles area and Ora nge Coast area high school alhletes \\'ill be "'ell represented in both. Tbe Sunklst meet Satu rday night at the Sports Arena will hove vlrtunlly every top track athlete fro mthis area in the high school sectln1 wblch starts at 5:45. On 'Feb. 8, the Los Angeles Times meet wW feat ure a twl)omlle race where !\1arina 's Gary Blume 1!'.MI Ertc Hulst of Laguna Beacb "·Ill certainly be Invi ted. Ope Qf the early entn nt1 to the. Sunklst meet, Tom Lloy of EdJson ltf&b, has wrU te11 the directors of that mtet ann ouncing he \\•Ill be unable to fltlend. It seems he's tossing basketball~ through tbe hoop at such a prolific rate he ba$n't been able to practice running . Lute entries not )'Cl announced for the Sunk.lfit meet in C'lude the Ntl\'port llarbm 640 relay team ( Brtan Theriot, VlnnJe !\1ulroy, Pete Bro\vn and Brl'ant ll umann) and Corona de! !\tar's standout !-miler. Brian llunsaker. \\'hen Cal State (Long Beach) basketball coach Lule Olson says. "I may ha"e reconsidered taking the head conc-hing joh here if 1 knew \\'e were being investigated ." doesn't he really 1nean, "ir I kne\\' the •1: pUnishment (three years without post-season .r play, r.o 'fV exposure and .a limit en .. scholarships I \vas going lo be so severe, • I might have reconsidered·~" It doesn't seem possible Lute \1'nsn·1 a1\·are un investigation was being conducted since. \. 1hose on ·the inside specul ated that it \Va s the investiga tion. n1ore thun anyrhing else. \Vhich drove Jerry Tarkani an a\\'ay from ... Long Beach. Rumors have been flying that a major J. hand-slapping 1vas imminent ever since Tarkanian moved in. However, when the name Ed Ratleff is mentioned as a culprit, that seems a bit ludicrous. Ratleff \vas ·~ a good st udent and quite an ambassador ~ for Cal State (Long Beach). Dn,·e Kurraseh, the Santa Ana Hi gh _ ' standout in the shot. set an age group • record for l5-year--0ld1 with the 16-pound / ball, but it may not be accept ab le. llis toss or 51·2~1 eclipsed the 4~91h by Arvada, Colorado's Jloward Ranleh in 1971. '!II HoweYe r, because there was just one otherf competitor, UCI's Judd Binley (47·%~)! _ the mark se t at UCl last week may not be legal. Normally, three competitors constitute a competition. Yikes Clim1i to No , 1; Oilers 4 th in CIF Vikes Head · ·-;-,, Count)' Poll · · . ,. ritarina Hjgh·41 unbeaten ~ !\farina Hlgh's WKlefeated although Verb um Dei Vikings remain atop the UNI STANDOUTS JIM WHITE (2 51, SCOTT KAFESJ IAN CLEFT), KEN VIEIRA FACE DANA HILL S. basketball juggernaut tcxlay outgained the Vikes in first Orange County Top I 0 of~. sits atop the heap of Southern place votes, 11-9. basketball rankings a f ter ·• California him. school talent Vikings coach Jim Stephens rolling to their 13th and 14th. ·• Loop Lead On Line At Laguna The elevator ride to the top of the Orange League basketball standings ·was a ~IM..,.¥" brief one for San Clemente •• ~ High. Whether the Tritons' i stay there will be equally brier will be tested tonight when they tangle with Laguna Beach at 7 at Laguna Bench. in another league game involv ing Orange Coast area schools, Dana Hills is at .)' 1 University, alsO at 7. l After onJy two games, San ~ Clemente is alone in fi rst , place with two loop victories and has won its last four games in a row. It's an Wlfamiliar position for coach Stan DeMaggio's Tritons, who struggted in the Crestview League prior to this season. San Clemente, now sporting an M seasonal rerord, has won with superior board plaY from 6-7 Ted Kalota and M Dan Dodd· and the outslde shooting ol guard-forward Bob Yoder. Kalota and Dodd have chipped in at better than 10 points per game each in I -· --. • "" ,vas pleased to learn ol the u· 1r· phs ~ the as the Vikes become the first· f d ·d "I'd consecu ve ium "' lo ty rating an sa1 , first week of sunset League ever Orange Coast area cage just as soon be there and play. rteqm to be rated No. 1 lD trying to hold that position Marina is at N e w po r t the CIF. as trying to wotk our way Harbor Wednesda y night while Not far behind Marina in up from the bottom. No. 2 Huntington Beach (12-1) "I don't think being Ne. t is at western. this week's ratings i s will fire up the opposition apy ORAN.GE COUNTY TOP 10 Huntington Beach, w h i c h more ithan il usually is when Poi. Team, record Votes climbed fro m !ifth place a it plays us." Stephens had I. Marina (14-0) 60 a team head the CIF ratings 2 Hun"••lOn Bea·• (12 1) 57 week ago to folll'th today. The · w • .., 0 • • ,, once before when he coached 3. Katella (1 1-41 49 ...., HB Oilers (12--1) are at Marina at Ga rd en Grove High. 4. Fountain Valley (8-41 31,'.,, Friday night at 8 in the CIF Oth er key matches Friday 5. Santa Ana Valley (7-4 ) 30 · game of the year. involving the ClF 4-A top 10 6. Santiago (9-:2) 28_ Marina. 14-0, edged 1973 CJF have Torrance (3rd) hosting 7. Fullerton (7-3) 1;" champ Verbum Dei in the Palos Verdes (6th) and Buena 8. Loi Amigos (10.5) 13; ~ (7t h) dueling Santa Barbara 9. ~·ell t9-31 a : ballot ol Southland sports (ltth). 10. Kennedy (10-4) '(- writers, 189 votes to 187,---------------_;'------ * * * •• .. Mtrln• 11..0) '" '· V1r1111m Del (IJ.ll '" • Torranct (1'-ll '" '· HuntlngfonB11Cll (12·1l ·~ '· LB W!llOll (13-21 ~ • P .. los Vtrdts (13-)~ " '· fluen• 11'-31 " •• Pastden• ClJ.3l .. •• LB Jord1n (15-'l ., 10. Crt$Cllllll V1llt1' 00-3J " Oth1rs: S1n11 8ar1>era (l!-1) "· P1clflc ( 10-2) 10. •·• l. San G111rl1I (16-1) 700 2. Morningside (12-31. 1n 3. Clartmon! (\4-ll U1 ~. K1,t1!111 (11-~l 1(1 5. ll:edondO 02·2) 112 6. G1n11he Cl2·3) 89 1. c1m1rlno f11·5l 10 •· CMr>O (la·2) SB t . • 1ng1ewooc1 !11-Sl 39 10 Palm Sorlng1 (11-1) 31 O!~tn: Par1mounl (9..Sl 1,, S1n!l1110 (11).0 11. , .. 1. Cll'rltol (U·ll 191 ' San Francisco Seesensationa r . S campers gar t &Mark Spitz · Po s boa!~; • See fabulous Remington Gun Room Boat Show ··· ., Jan 11-20 • Cow Palace A ..... 2.00 Clll .... 75c Wffkdays 2 pm to 11 pm Saturdays lOam to 11 pm Sundays 10 am to 7 pm Free children's trout pond ' 2. AOOur• (ll-21 17' 3. W•lnul (1J..21 156 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 4. ll••lhrefl (12·31 13' -S. Mlrat11te (12..Sl 117 ,, '· Mayl•lr (11-3) ti 1. Stnll Cl•r• (•·•> ll •. Nordhoff (II).•! 4 I. Yuc1lpe (11).21 43 10. Gahr (11).]) 32 Olller1: Anna (II>-'! 11, JCPenney AUTO CENTER league play whit~ controlling , -, Prep Soccer 1 ·2·3 LUBRICATION SPECIAL! the backboards w_hlle Yoder SAN CLEM ENTE'S BOB YOD ER (22) CHALLENGES LAGUNA BEACH TO NIGHT has averag~ 15 polDls a game ----------------------------------- against loop com petition. V1nlty ' Sil!IOll I, H1111!1119lon ••Kii 1 Edison scoring: Gunn 2. S!trll1l9 2, Hlmmt!lbtlroe<" 1. sovt1 1. Huntington B••th Klrli\11: Ar••ndl 2. The Tritons will have size superiority, but will have to handle a quicker a n d sometimes bot-s hoo t i n g Laguna Beach squad. Coach Jerry Fair's Laguna Beach Arllsl.!, 6"' on the season and 1-1 in league play have been an on-again. off. again unit bu\,\ one capable of et.tending any team to the limit. No Laguna Beach starter measures in ta\\er than 6-4, but the Artists have great scoring pOtential from forwafd Dave Kie9oelbech (26 -In bis last game), and guard• Frank Wrlgb~ Mike Serrano and Mark Rflhbun. ''Ille Onlverslty·DM• Hills matchup pits two teams who opened strongly bu\ dropped league enqounters Friday to stahd at M in loop pJay. Basketball Res ults COlL!OB s .. 1111 P1dnc Jt. Havw•rd SI. " Penn St. 61. Prlnc1ton 50 All'tlf'lc1n u . .s. Ttmot1 ~ E. KtnlUCllJ 11, A111lln Pe1y IA Ttnnffl" •1. l(tntud•Y U AlatllrM 11, Ml1111110P( 71 Flarldl t1, .l.UDUl'n 11 Van.cMrb!lt t1 . ~1111 71 Mh1l11!pp( St."· LSU 1S Furma.11 t4. M1n111ttan 76 Merctr t4. UU IHtw Orlt<1111) IA Mllfl'tY St. 74. ,¥.orflltlld $1, 12 TUllflt '4, SltllOll 51 VMI JO, Cltlldt( U lllClltM 72; HOrfn'"lllfll '' Mlcllllltn St. to. UUM11 11. Oktalloml fl , CotOrlOO '' 1(1'11tl SI. 12, Ok141hOIM SI. 69 bayton 7~. l.o'fGI• tChlUIO'l # Amtf!Clll •1llltltllll A-.l1tl11 Si n Anlonlo fO. Ul1h 11 DON'T DISCARD THOSI OLD TINNIS SHOllll Wt ,.,.., ... ,.......... .. fytlllll If .......... Tmtf'JI SMts. AllTHONY'S SHOI SIRVICI ~ e WUTCl.IP, "-AKA e LIDO • ,AllltcMlt ISLAND e COl!OJIA DIL M•ll I , • Junior V1r·tlty !f!IOll l, Hwntlrttton •fftll 1 EllllOll Kaf"l!'lfj: Ctneeo. HuMlln;lon J11ch 1corlng: co-1. ¥1n nv HUMllntltrt 81•c~ 2, V11enc11 1 HunllflQlon Bttch 1Corlng : Ptrlrldgt 1, Phllllr»I 1. Pivotal Cage Clash For Diablos Ton ight Mission Viejo High 's Diablos Dean Egertson, Marty Zogg, f)\ !fl ~~..!Ml!!!:r invade the confines of Villa B-Ob Beane, Dave Harris and (ti INSURANCE Park High's Spartans tonight Dave Patterson. w: 1914 H•rb•r lo1l•••rtl CO!!>TA Ml~A &· in a pivotal Crestview League Roberts' major worry With 548-5554 basketball clash . coach Ron Lindsay's Spartans l~ijiijiii;;.iiiiiii. · · Tipoff is at 7 and for coach is the combination of 6-4 II Pat Roberts' Dlablos it's. a forward Steve Nelson, the chance to get back into lhc running offense and a man·to- championship race a f t e r man defense. spliUlng their first two ••we'll try lO match Zogg cin:uit tiffs with El Modena on him from our ione with and Saddlebadt. help from sauing guards." Roberts will be going with says Roberts. the same lineup that was' Also Impressive in the 1 successful against Saddleback. Sparta ns lineup is 6-2 guard\ 'Mle Diablos were paced by Dean lacopetti. • • Place & Recelv1 Telt phon1 Calls In Your 'Car-• No Llctns• • No C1ellol lnw1uirn1nl Monlll 11 Mon~ ll"1111 111t1 UlllNGI !OUN!\' llAll!Olll ll'tlONI SlRVICf 'H tlll k Slfltt , .. Slflll AH 83S.3l05 HERE'S WH'AT YOU GET: I. OIL CHANGE 5 QTS. 10-30-0IL 2. COMPLETE CHAS SI S LUBE 3. NEW OIL FILTER • MOST AMERICAN CARS USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARO JC Penney W! KNOW WHAT YOU'RE LOOKlNG FOR NEW PORT BEACH ON LY AUTO CENTER • J I • ......... ' * G1n1r1I General Genet" el General DAILY P'1iarci.As'Si'Fi'Eo ADs ll;;;;;;=========;;;;;l ;M;;;E;;;SA=v=ER;;D;::;E;;4~BE;;D;;RO;;O;;;;M;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... _ea..-w•.·-""'~>1'"~2---1 ·--~'-°""" 44950 f t [ -. -_.,,. -~· JSO!) sq. It QI living for only $ , . ea JlfeS include over size bdrms, lge d blo b rick ERRORS. AdYOrllHn sboutd_check lholr ods ally & report errors 4mmadleltly. The DAILY PILOT t11um11 lloblllty for tho first lncorr•ct Insertion only. lrplc, hvy shake roof, beautiful front kitchen, ti------·-AN0-eovel'OO patio-surrounded_ by any trees. 4tli Bdrrn convertible to Cormal din· ing or den. Won't last a \Veek-Cull Now! 546-5880. General General IN CAMEO HIGHLANDS-Great home for an artist who entertains (or for a lonely pool shark who writes!) Spacious game room with paneling and beam s, sunny studio retreat plus roomy deck overlooking canyon and ocean. Oh yes, and 4 clean bedrooms, a bright kitchen, t\vo baths and open Living- dining area. A new listing of Marian Reedy's at $67,000. -PENINSULA-POINT'S BESY.!-- Gl!EAT 5 BEDROOM HOME on Seville. Has everything! Including billiard room, \Vet bar, separate family rm ., ·maid rm., on quiet street near oeean, bay & tennis club. $119,500. Call 546-5880. ·~· UNIQUE HOMES Ree ltors, 675-6000 2443 E. Coa st Hwy., Corona del Mar AND ASsaCIATCS-Rf A llORS-l•G~e"'ne'"'r•"!'l """"""""""""""""G't"e!!!ne""ra"l'I """"""""""""""" WELL, ALL RIGHT!! RIGHT duplex on the RIGHT street, in the RIGHT location \Vith the RIGHT decor and t he RIGHT income. Don't be LEFT out. Call RIGHT NOW! A listing of Bud Austin. CALL 644-7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, . SELL. OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION Generf!ll ~nJa !Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4-bdrm., 41'.! bath home on lagoon. FuUr.-equipped island kitchen, \Vaterlront. family room, billiard room ........ $250,000 70 Linda Isle Dr. Prime 54' L agoon waterfront lot-$150,000 For Comple1e Information * Balboa Bay Properties * On All Homes & Lois, Ple11e Coll: OCEANFRONT MESA VERDE BILL GRUNDY REALTOR Nilly d uplex Cust. bit. 4BR. Lux· . . •. $155,000 ! 675-7060 urious pool \V/jacuzzi. 341 Bayside Dr., Suite l, N.B. 675-6161 Best loc., 1 blk from BALBOA COVE~ golf cou r se. Bargain at Gene ral 1-G;;e;;n;;oc;;a;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Better than new· •64 500 642·7491 257 FT ABOVE • $129 500 675-7060 • ' . . • ' MESA VERDE SEA LEVEL AND · ~ ON THE ISLAND Country Club "WHAT A VIEW" ti .. • 11th Green is right at _·,;;· ~!!:· ,..-""'ji Beautifully a ppointed your back d oor. 3 BR. Brea!htaking 1so. de g 1:ee duplex. Owner 's uni t 3 ba home \V /pool. 3 oC(>an & <;atahna v1ev.•. • \Vatch beautiful sunsets + 5 BR. Call to see! Ca r ga r . $79,500. Sparkling healed pool + 4 673--7420. 556-8800. bedrooms and family rm. + 3 baths + 3 car garage REALTORS 2 used brick ticcplac" + outdoor fire ring + --. 4 Local ORices-tOServe Y-o -~ -inter~·orn. --(AM-F.M)-+ • COM s finest area + .... lo find out about all the Sof6.5880 Open Evet. DOVER SHORES-$225,000 Finest construction in this gorgeous custom built home. 5 Bdrms, fam rin, lge forrµal DR & 41/:z baths. Huge jacuzzi. Air-cond. OPEN. SAT /SUN .1,5 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. 21 11 San Joaquin Hill$ Rd. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Genera l 5 BEDROO~ • 3'12 BATH $29,750! JOG TO BEACH General HIGH ON A HILL OCEAN VIEW $29,500!!! THE WORK'S ALL DONE CHARM I /Jxi·NtGEL UAIL-EY & ASSUCIATES l\1agnificent home on private cul-de-sac -su-cct. Parklik"C--The only 11o·ay to desc ribe surl'oundings 1vil h \'i{'\V of !Ills spadous fan1i ly hon1e the. Pacific Ocean. Farnily \~·ith 4 bdl'1ns .. 2~: baths. bcdroon1s. Cozy kitchen. fan1ily room and formal din· Covered"patlo. You ,viii b(' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•\ ing. $4~.950 and you O\l.'tl SHOCKED for only $29,500 it '''ith all its upgrading \l'ith low clown payment. and extras. l;G;;•;n~•;;r;;•';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 ~GFe'n;ce)iraiJluKi~iCiPi:EI othe1· +'s Call Now !!! -673-8550. IFYOULIKEPEOPLE O/>ENT<L9 •"SFUN108EN<EI CHOICE ESTATE REALTY FOURPLEX WE'D LIKE YOl,I MESA VERDE SPECIAL AT BUY BEACH ·-· DUPLEX''' Siµ.000 -Look at the To consider a career \Vith ••• featw-es: Central air 1303 AVOCADO OR. PROPERTY NOWI $82 500 the \vorlds fjncSt Real ~I . PLEASE CALL Lost tenants' LA owner conditioning, und er;ruund NEWPORT CENTER Start '7'1 \\'Ith tax shelter Estate company. Y 0 u .,_ . \vant s inimediate sale of utilities, Del Piso tile in In a prime Newport Beach Technl<:~lly realtw.'S are not qualified to give app1'0Luls -bUI they can gh,•e eatl-- 1nates of value. We \\1>rk as a team when asked to give an e11llmatc. Our Wbole office staff "'Ill Individually n1ake their O\\'n estimate. Then we ofteo disregard lbe highest and lowest and av· erage the rest of the e&tl· males. We are qu1te ac. curnle this \\'RY and can do this for )'OU if you wish. We can help YoU price your hon1e so Uiat it will sell. Call Cohvell, 675-7tl5. Corona del Mar Duplex Price Reduction l'f you are even vaguely in· te1-ested in an excepUonally \veil designed 3 BR 2 BA, ground floor o\vners uni! l\'ith a $'...l(M}/mo'garage apt. in an r-xccllCnt 1,.'01'ller It> euUon near a p:u·k, YOU CAN'T AFF'ORD TO OVER- LOOI{ THIS PH.OPERTY! Rcdu1..'i'd to $8-1,500 644-7211 /Jn NIGEL GAILEY & ASSOCIATES ' provide the desire and'=:::=:=::=:=:=:=:==:' 675-3000 NEWLY DECORATED Pe-entry, kitchen, and famil y 640~1120 l'E'ntal area _ summer & Oelu.xe unils ""ith ov .. "Tier's \\'e'Y provide the training. ninsula units! Charn1 pack-room, decordtor kitchen yearly -one year nev;! 4 ---------I 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home Together '"e'll earn you Corona l:lel Mar ed -Open beams. frplc, "'ith abundant s tora ge ........... ...,,.,,,..,..,.. ..... \ BR. & 3 BR., frplcs., bit-in Costa Mesa + 3 rentals, 2 liedrm each. $1,500/month lcomm.issionl B h I p d c:p!g, shullers. bri('k palio Hurry, see this delightful NEWPORT kitchens, . patio & view ---------1 PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP, Ask about our free licensing ac e or a -OVC'l'-sizl"d lot just steps 3 _B~., ~ BA IK.>me today. balcony. Custom drdpes & MESA VERDE DELUXE HOME and IN-program. Call 545-9491 and With Poof' to bay? \Von'! htst at Call a<l~ll51. HEIGHTS carp. Block & one half to COME all in one package. ask for Dist.rict Manage r. MOBILE HOME $83,9"".JO -[..()\,. d0\1'n or l . . oc-ean beach & shopping. See your accountant 011 this On a generous 60xl00 lot FOR SALE: trade OK! Call 645-8-400. I Beautiful, spa4?-1ous 2 story Asking $110,<XXJ. 2·STQRY tax saver. Buy now for full in \1•alk·hr private con1mun-9 01-F1 RV! y 1 NTIL home on quiet cul-de-sac C F C I h -~~· ity beach Corona I·Ugh-SILVERCREST I street \\'it!'\ to"·ering trees • • 0 eSWOrt y year be1=.ll. Walker & lee lands, a \\'('\I decorated 2 MOBILE HOME v. E. H~anl & Co. and that secluded feeling. Realtors 640-0020 2211 ~t Bl. ~••L ,,,.,, B_r._ 2 Ba hon1? \\'ilh forn1al 2l'.l' x 53• 2 BD 2 BA, carp., a...t i::.-,11ro .... .,.. j::-C-:-O:-C::::=::C::C . Walk to all schools. J:fl.!ge ~~ ,. -~Meta dining, spacious maste1· draped, bit-ins., refrig., -4 BR. CONDO : =s·a~drgl ~~~s,g~~~~ LAKE ARROWHEAD 040•8811 RE SALESMEN ~~~c,d~~~1· ?:;~d 1:! Pfi~~ /~~sh~ & :ii;c·c!~~~~· ~;~~ PJ'!nua7 Pool VA NO DOWN Pride of o1vnership home sl.~~/S85Ev5e~. PART TIMERS c'A•mLtLpool. ~69,500 . .tA•ntl clock, storage shed, land-Do .,r1ce!J 37,~oo, 2\, baths, fireplace, nice illon a rno1s''1hd"'lr1 ab!~ ,are•,· Great for year round Jiving -_.,.. scaped patio. Three yrs. old n pay une prices or patio, no maintenance. nus e O\V in eres & close to the village. 3 -like nu. Lo"ated in new a pool hon1c. No\v is the Clubhouse and JX>Ol avail· GI loan of 7~ percent that yr old Bavarian style 3 lev"'I ARE YOUR adult pk. a\vay from noisy time to take advantage of able. Close to park, shop. can be assumed by anyone. home with open beam cell· BUILDERS EXPENSES MORE f ~ £t. One-half bl. from club-Uris forced sale. Lots of ping and "lreeway access." ~7711 ·Open eves. ings thru~t. 3 br 2 oa New carpet, drapes & paint. Huge cul-de-sac Jot SI E THAN YOUR _ , , house. $15.49:5. Call EVES. living space in this 4 Full price $28,500. Walker & Lee + completely finished base· PRIME T INCOME? JOIN AN 213-694-4690. bedroom 2 bath hon1e. Big REAL ESTATE ment for playnn or shop. •,',acre zoned admini.stralJve/ CE WHERE YOU CAN BE SEEN AT: kitchen. Cozy living room ~ COATS CAN'T BE BEAT' Lndry facilities. $36,500. professional in Costa Mesa OFFI 6 HOMES!!! CRESTMONT overlooks patio-surrounded & • (213') 451-3898 alter 6pm or near hospital. Good pot ential HAVE NO EXPENSES. SIX ne,vlv decorated collages ESTATES, ~~~~i'j~ ~~!! 500..ro~~ -WALLACE $33,000 ,:;:l-~~-s. _ _ for prestige of1ces~ c."Onval-1 CALL CARL NELSON on enorn1ous tree-shaded 1051 Sile Dr., Bre?. Central OPENTIL 9 • ff'S FUN TOBE NICE/ . REALTORS 1,1 ...... ""U can buy a big ~ This beautifully decorated ' !\.1esa Verde home Is a must see for the value conscious buyer, The 4 huge bOOrooms & fatnily room with fireplace are just a few of the features offered by this fine home. For further inlormation please ca 11 : Walker&Lee escen t accon1n1odalJons, ~le. I 846-1305 country lot! Shag cpts, A\'e. across fro1n Brea 5,,.141 ·~ ... ,-J ¥ Call 546-2313, for all derails. • frplt·s, paneling, be 1-1 n1 Comn1. tlosp.l Wt #46. ~w ---~ family size home with l.2x22 IMMEDIATE OPENTILll •ITS FUN TOBE NICE/ j NEWPORT HEIGHTS ceilings, pvt pa!ios! Xlnt CONTACT RAY, PI..:. i\IGR. 1 1 • :1·.,J (Op~n Evenings) : s~parate FA!\.ULY ROOM, POSSESSION 1)-Nr Harbor tll. i1nnu1c. 2 incon1c? Super buy or lradc for sho,ving. , _ 1 """""""""'""'""""""""~·\ big bedrooms, cheer Y 1 • 1 BRhome.Overslzcdliv 1m, at $93.500! Call 1oday! ·--------•Ii ,~~~~====: BEACH GIANT . hom~maker'sd;ea~kitchen Ne"'port Shores, cut e & , fplc, din aren. Jg encl. patio. 645-8.JOO. for J~st $33,000. Right here comfo1tablc 3 bedrooms & 1 ' dbl e gar. S41,900. BIG BUCCOLA 5 + DEN ,1 -00n,ght no~v. ea7~"v'A0 ~sthk den. Oose to beach, pool \ 646-3928 or Eves. 645-2986 9 NTIL OWNER IN FLORIDA a u assuming ·1" w and tennis $45 000 lllAL I l l.I.Tl 8 UNITS Well maintained, x I n t location, no vacancy. 1 & 2 Br, garages. PYRAMID 5 EABESDTRSOIDOEM ~u~•~",:.';:~;';,~,! ":;:::;:;'. $25,950 : ~i'Z11~t,:"ENT 12H PETE . BARRETI inlely. Shag carpets, lots of RAMBLING RANCH nestJed . OPENTIL II• ff'S FUN 70 DE NICE! REAL TOR ''::========' Tit• "OST horn• ·ro·" lhc I ' p I C M near sandy beach. 5 ~ --t-,_ "' .. • extl'as. opu ar ost11 esa ~ 642 5200 1..ARGER family. location. Clubhouse /pools. Bedrooms, step down den. " \VHEN BOILING EGGS IN e c· al d. . N . ·' bol k Fonnal dining. Party room. I ---~ --..... ALUMINUM POTS add a rorm ining 011' pnceu oiv mai· et Real country kitchen. Large ~~ 54>-9491 SPAR'"'K""L°"IN°"G~G~EM=l -I 2 Story, detached garage. 5 BR, 4 bas. l.ge Famil)' Din·nn + formal Din-rm. Cathedral ceiling paneled f'an1-nn, new cpts, ireshly painted;, inside & out. Close to Scbls & shop. By owner, $69,500. 646-1>'.13 UNDER MARKET Assume old VA on &harp 4 Br in qlliet cul.de-sac. $l1,950. Agen t, 54~7739 EXCHANGORS BEACH GIANT 125.950. S LTORS ' + den Rambling P..anch REA I nes tled near Sandy Shors. 1 ____ 83'-".3-_1_768 ____ J _HURRY. Ag!. 645-0303. General General J I BACK BAY VIEW 8900 square feet in this fun family home featuriJig separate master suite + living~ room + den + dining room + 4 bedrooms and 3 baths. 1125,000. _ NEVER OCCUPIED But you can move in to~ay! Yes, ~he land· scaping and drapes are m, and this 3 bed· room 2 1k bath home is near the pool a nd tennis courts in University Park. Just listed at only $64,900. LIVE LIKE A DUKE Fantastic Bayshores with 162 loot p rime bay frontage. 4 bedrooms. 4 1h baths, large dock , pool, 4 ca r garage. Offered at '495,000. CAMEO SHORES Ocean view, very large Living room and master bedroom w ith beautiful parquet floors , beamed ceilings. 4 badrooms, 3 baths. $115,000. , BORDEAUX MODEL BIG CANYON OOgbtful 3 bedroom, S bath end unit with oeean view lavishly decorated with out· standing carpets, drapes and wallpaper. Large lot. Private master bedroom terrace. $145,000. ....--- 644-1766 Coldwell, Banker .......... 21" SM ,Jooquln Hills Rd., N.B. • , • Huie virl<'gar. This will keep • Family rm + brkfst area at $24,500. Cat: 540·1151. nd E · . RAISE TROUT? e 5 Bedroon1, 3 baths grou s. nter!a1ners paho. • nDn fron1 darkening. Useful s~ER HURRY' Call ""' •Boat or 1railcr space "'' • -'I You can in this 30 x 1'1 fish but no ton,er needed items B'-· 64" ~03 SINGL• ADULTS • Pa1;0 w/blto BBQ "' · ,,.....,.,.., · ,· -pond! Cu•lom decorated like sell fas1 "'ilh a Daily Pilot OR MARRIEDS • io~ruit l!'C'Cs & rose;0; 4 Bdrms & Den an old Spanish Mission, 2 Classified Ad. 642--5678. \\'hy =y ren1• Own ~u1· own Pclccd al ONLY l'l."'~. ,,~ · ,,~ St 3 B d 2 Ba 1· " "-Al & Family Rm apt. Prices start at $17.900. ory, r, en, ' ire-TREES, TREES HUGE R-4 LOT The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace · Pf11no out of tuner $K,f.t. cl:~ F ot CJusified Ad ACTI ON can A DAILY PILOT AD·YISO. 642-5'71 Call now for appt. -~-----N d G 1 G r .1 place, 2 BBQ's + gas Bl. ZONED C-1 o O\Vn .. ! real am1 y \Vilh no down to Vets, lo\V 2 fountains, 25 x 13 heated 400 E.17' I FOR All $55 000 home with dining rm, do\vn everyone. Just call pool, 3 n"lios, gcapc arbor. c.M. AREAS ' • kitchen built ins. io'amily 842-'1455. """ Older income property in rm, den, [ircplace. Rich WALKER & LEE Must see to believe! Only choict' location 3 units wood paneling. Forced air $47,000. Near Lake Forest! recently pai nted. all ne1v heat. Shake rooL Sprinklers. R7E682AL E~~ATE Call Realtor for appt. carpets, waler heater and Only $36,500. Call 540-1720 mger, 645-6646. garbage disposals. Call Red TARBELL, Realtors Huntington Beach 1--"'P"R'°ID=E'"O'°"F.--- Carpet. Realtors 5'1&-8640 or OWNERSH EASTSIOE VALUE 64"'°80. CLASS SELLS -oo..;;78 PERFECT COND. IP TREE LINED STREET General 3 BR., 2 ba. home on Point. Owner moving out of area, $28,950 ftG~e~n~er.ca~l~;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Close to ocean. Many ex-recent I y c ~ r p c 1 e d, Don't n1iss seeing this one. lras. Bring offers! $79,500 CQmpletely painted. Good Q\vner yerx an."ious. just t Call: 673-3663 67&6688 Eves. ~cdesa V~ru~f d baholhme.O l~ reducer! price for fast sale. ronis, e s. 11 .; Q · E ·d I · b' $42,400. Call Red Carpet, u1et asts1 e ocat1o n ig M ·Ac NA B Realtors 5 4 6-8 6 4 0 or lot \\'ilh 1nany f r u i I 645--8080 ll'tts. Cute ho111c, hardwood ==~=~--1 This beautiful country home in the city reminds YoU of a mountain cabin. Huge Palo Verde fireplace, large living room, m o d e r n kitchen, niet> shag carpets with room for 5 nKlre units. VA tern1s avallRble. For further information, f)lease c(!ll ~?-9491 Walker &Lee 111.1.l ,.,.,. """"· enclo'cd patio. See 4 BEDROOM-~4a~i!~t~~e54~~~~ I RV IN E . BUYERS-DELIGHT Sp!!:~~!1~e!~1h w~~~~~ g:an :ie~,:~ YOUR HOME $38,500 brand new w/w carpeting work surrounds this 2 yr. Double Brick f i r e p I a c e , & drapes thuout. Newly old home. 4 BR, 3 BA, AT THE BEACH WOWlll enhances your large living painted and shines and family & fire place. Small $80.,ooo & you own the land ! Gorgeous pa rk room also adds special l!lparkles. Prime CoSta Mesa solitary d e v e Io p m en t In the coveted single family warmth to the country area on quiet, dead end encompasses a beautitut residential area Soulh of lhe view. E legant adult occupied "P ortofin o" kitchen. 3 large bedrooms srreet. 646-7711 Open eves. park, Only $47,900. Owner Hwy in Corona de! Mar. w /3BR's, FR. DR & BONUS room. Lois and a tonnal dining room. Wa•er & lee 642-1060 1853 Park vi a ta An approx imately 2300 sq. ~tiller 642·8235. \IJith park like' grounds. Call "l:"il"Clo=•c.· -'C"'.M".'-----fL 3 BR :1 BA hon1e 'vith Red Carpet, Re al tors REAL ESTAT_E~ __ ,3BR, Fan1 rm, many xtraa, fa.nilly rooin & huge master "BIG CANYON DEAUVILLE'' 546-8640 er 645-811SO Secluded 0~1111 view Park see to a.pprttiate. $46.000. ~u~:n °~\~d~nc block b:om Firsl offer ing-beautiful, up graded condo-BY OWNER \Vrought iron & n1asonry Quiet cul.(]e--sac, 979-$856 11 can be yours ror only rninium. Extremely dramatic home-larg· ~v!':s;:-:n20:;!l';'g'!.:~~~ :rkho~~~~dh~~iis3 2B~1: BEAUJJfUl $96.S®Cau for Details est 4BR model. $139,500. Tom Queen lot. in Cliff Haven. Kew gold family & fl~ place. Small 644-l2ll 644-6200. (C33) -ccPis & dl"pS. Walk 10 Hill' solliary de-v e Io Pm ~n I CQL£GE PARK ~N IG(L ~AILEY & ASSUCIATES CHERRY DALE HOME '$33,500 Don't miss seeing this one. Popular 4 bedroom, 2 bt\th home.__ center. ~bloek _wall S, concrete "'alk all around. Sewing 1u-ea in lauodry room beauliful b r I c k fireplace llll'flC-doughboy type pool wilh oversfied filter, vacuum and Afety ladd(!l'. Call Red Carptt, Rtalton 64~-8080 or -. • bor High & Ensign Schls. encorn~ a beautiful COSTA MESA-$37,500 Sil3.500. Open House every· park. Only $47,900. Owner K eep toasty warm by the fireside in Utls day noon-8 pm 'til $Old. 642--1060 1853 Park vis ta big LR w/panellng & shag. 2BR 's, I ba th. lOOO Cliff Dr. Eve.. 6<2-U22. Circle. C.M. • R·2 corner near sh opping & theater . Elaine o.,..,548·4192. MESA VERDE Svedeen 642-6235, (Cac)) BARGAIN *' 4 Bedroom hOme lhugt Needs tendtr loving' care. master BR) + famfly room This 4 bedroom or 3 and + den, 3 bath!, many. l!X· a den home waiting for tra.s. Qt lct street. $55.~. lhem th at required a qule~ Roy McCardle Re1ltor rleighborhood cloH to tSl O Ne\'1'lrl" Rlvd., C.M. everything. Only $.14,$00. 541-7729 Call Red Carpel, Reallors _ • ~--·--64$-SO.'M'.I or MG-8640. ·~ [Irvine I • MESA DEL MAR Put your budget back on SHAG CARPETS 1 DOUBLE Fl REPLACE This bl:!autl~ Col!ca:c Park home muat be aeen lo bt fully appreciated. Inside ~ out, this home is for the dlscr1mlna1"1g """'· All •! this + no down te:nni to Vets ... Ol'. low 5% to a111 Far l'Ur111er information plenae call. ~l 1 IOI Dont Drlwe' ... 2•1211 1..U M•tAnhur "4•1200 N.,.po<t -cft, Callt""'lo 1:1111 4 BR, 2 BA. Fre•hly Painted the track . _ . Sell idle items Inside " Outl New •hag wUh • · low-«>11 Dall; Piiot Walklir & laa carpet. $35,950. 8 k r CIUlified Adi Call 642-6671 •••L 1111,1 549-22118 or .,.. 557-31168 today! I ..:::::==::=::==:::::=:'.;I --' , J ' t .. ' DAILY PILOT 21 305 CondoJ!'liniums -Unfurli . 320 lrvlM 1·;.:N;;_•w;::.<:;po:.:rl.:..::Be:.::.::•:;:<h::.,.. __ 11ncomo Propor!y -166 Mort909H, HOu-Unfurn. W !Houteo Unfum. $ ~~" Un u rn. 1.=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Trust DHds 260 $197,500 MANSION DUPLE/(-$39,900 ,;:;:;;;:;;:;;~;:::;:;:;pi;~,..!!;"~"'~•~1 -----Coil• Melo l•ke ForHI pll~~~~.ttlsu~~~~~t.l "ro~'i:u~~ C_a~t!~&ar~.i;;en~ ~~ 2_B~ ~ V~CA.\'T nUt hGuk, $1~5. LARCf! 2 Bn. 2 BA. ftunll) Newport Beach 60 Ft. l.'Ornct• lot: 1-blk. fo Bttlh, pMvnle ...... pat to s, CA$H NOW A}to tDR. HB, $11), ~·· ~1~: c:rplil, drp~. lt.•u. .... -d y{I. NE\VPORT CREsr CONDO. WOW -$ PRICE CUT Turtlerock· Terrace 'jPresident'' panoramic view exec. home. 4 bedroom, S bath, •'R, trl- ---I _l!le garage. De!Ulfe wallpaper, drapes. carpet. Quamy UirougliouL owner musrmovc. see t-Oday. GRUBB & ELLIS CO. REALTORS 675-7080 Cotti MHI TAKE over my loan of LIVING BY THE SEA S23,100. at $197 n1u. • l?cl for the discrlmating buyt'r T&I. Sale prl,ct S29.~. well this mngnificant large home mslnt.tLined 3 BR, ? OOt>. I over 3.000 sq fl perch bigh 2 car gar. \\'«l~lng dt!ilance on a hill overlooking miles to sch! & shop cntr. 645-4374 j of beachs v.•ith 180 degree Prln. only vi~y,· you see surf breaking Dana Point OCEAN HARBOR VIEW 2200 sq fl -4 BR. $66,900 15,000 sq ft lot $2:l,OOO Bkr. 1714' 675-7414 F.ountain Valley A REAL PRIDE & JOY owr the rocks & the shoreline. We feel this is one of the fin is! pieces of view,property in lhe area. This n1agnlficant home has it all from lg livilll> & dining rms v,•ith massive y,·hite n1a1·ble fireplace, y,·ct bflr, ~\'ell equipped kitchen \vith loads of i;torage &. breakfast area. 3 Lg. bdrn1s \11ith extra Jg. n1astcr suite. 3 beautiful bathroon1s y,•ith stt·un1 sho,ver & jacuzzi lob. This Is an exceptional home v,·ith lots of \\'ood beams, glass & tile. llouse y,·ide vie1v deck for B recretional use. An excellent viey,• from every room in the house. An exceptional buy at $129,500. bco_cb. enclosed gura~es, b_uilt·inl!. Kida!., pcla. Agl. • ec, $~. u~. A\a.tl. tl.'IJ, l. 2 BR, 2 nA. Wet bar. frpl. ---GEMi---Qultt street. Ex c c 11 e n t Sl .000 to $20.000 91H-m. -~nu'!~ ~837•9UJ ntar pool, triutiii. Jlt't»;, condition. t.oan t'(')1ntn1trncnts by phone HouMI * Apt1. Fovnttin Valley .. eoru.t. 2h Ba, fain I'll\ )(Jtas. $•125/nlO. 5.">2-0175. RF.12\}.ALFTOTuRSstin A\'<'., .NG·J·_J':;, . .,., (714) 87Q..6.500 Subjrct to verification ol * tCS•0111 * w/~·ct~~».~P· 11111111};. $-!zj •NF.\V 4 Bit 3 lmiC""fo~. ....,...., t11rti.. l\tunthly P1.1.Ymen1s , 1 SltAND Ne\\' TI bur ~n ~~i1i6 _ Din-rm. cptll, dl'Ptl, dblc FAST POSSESS. I ronson t:1ilored ,., rour individual 43J W.11th COSTA ME I A To1,1:n1>oose. fully crpt d. Lido Isl• i;ar .. a ti·a:i;. 6-li>-tii?S !!arbor VIE'\v Cflrn1el n1ocicL <'e<!Ulrcrp.ent.s. $15S . BUS routo 1 Or. turn drp d, seU clc11.11 oven & ' -·'-'=-= B_B ... 2 ba .. !anti~ mt., No need 10 t't'-fin:.\nt."e your apt, handy for student'. ds h'4·hi:. :va:s:her & . dryer. U DQ OiilJ9r . 3 SH. 3 BA, Oupltxts F urn. 345 101, o! ~x1r,<.1'l'I. . c• re•=u Realty & Investments .lo>LU1t~ 1st T.O. with 11~ L-~ 2 8 , 11,. 3 BR. 21, BA. Mns1cr SR ui-t, i..,:;i..1/Ul\J. u• ... ·n ,:s, ~. UU\, ... "-005 s . EUCUD NATIONAL ?.'tORTGAGE ta • II ILJ:. l .:it.'. O\'i'l'looks lOOI & clubhouse. 133' v~ \Vatle.rs ur~l46 Balboa island to SGT.950 incJudi11e land.. FUU.ERTON CO. Let your equity \\'Ork nlt.'t' yard, ·will l'Onsider pet "30/r.iO. Call 9 6 2 • 6 6 6 6 ~ __ • _ . CORBIN~MARTIN for you. Just give us 8 call: & child ""kdnyi1 beh• 5 pm. or Newport Beach STUD IO $150 nm v:intrr •. l REAL TORS 644-7662 6 HOMES!!! No obllgatlon. $1.Sa • HOUSE unf 2 Bl'. 49Hl96 eves & wknds. Br, $ISO wtnt~r, qu1e1 -~-CALL Gar. yacd, kid' & pet" rl . B TENNIS BUFFS "'"'"'~ man. 61:\-3613 No NEWPORT SHORES SIX newlydecoratedcottages $250. S.A. Hgts 3 Br. 112 unt1ngton each JK"l!1. 2·Sty. A-frame: 3 BR., (mstr. on enormous tree-Shaded Natlon1I Mortg191 Co. Ba house, nr elem. sch!. Only :Heps to h·1uu11 l'UUl'l. 2F8::.Ro..,.l ~,-,~V~J --.~--wfutriuml, 2 ba,, sundcek, COWlU'Y lot! Shag cpts, 835-2424 $325. LaQuesta Homo 3 Bi', ll\lMEDlj\TE occup1u'IC)•, 3 sw1nln1uig jJOUI !1\.1111 1-.c.11 · lit. nttr,S:'l\N mo. bltns, brktst area. Club. h·plCR, pa.nl'ling, be a Ill 2700 N. Main, SMta Ana 1'-'~ Ba house, ru' el~in. :i.chl BR. 2 BA, bltns, culdesac :,) i,)\.'(_u'Ql.1111, \01· ~ <\: 1.Jt_'ll!, \\ ll.LfAJ\.I \VI~TON tennis & pools nearby. cl'illngs, pvt "'atios~ Xlnl ..........,..~ $325 . LaQuesta Honle 3 Br. sll~t, lge lot, dble gar., 1onna1 cUuu~. l1t~11lace, SC11 l_!l'altor 615-3331 S.15.!lOO. 1n<:ome! Super buy OI' 11'/Jcle 2 Ba (.'()Untry kitch [rplc $250, n\O. At>k tor Dale CIC(l.IUl)g l)\lt!ll, bc1u1t1tu1 c • .01· Newport Beach CAYWOOD REALTY at $93.500. Call today! PUT YOUR MONEY yard'& cov'd pa1ios.' .. 962--1.\71 yon v1c\o,·/night lii;:11t~. 1n1- * 548-1290 * G<15-8"00. TO WORK FOR YOU! ~75. Pool 3 Br. 2 Ba, LovELY neighborhood~ br. u1l.,li<,1r1.·1y;tv111JablC'.Luo.:<1!t'l.!OC_EAN fR ~N T Btaut --· Fl 1 r. E~rn 10~;. or 1nore on v.·ell-frplc,pool servinrl. 2 ba, large lot, dbl gar, lugu on 111c 11u1.i; vI lu.u·001· \\1nh'rrental2Bf{,2B;\,_\v/ 1~~~rti'k~t~e~~rtdI, • V. E. l~ltnl & Co. 1 s:?cured 2nd Trust De-eds on \\'E HAVE ~1ANY, ll1ANY bltins, super condition. ~ .• ~ .. 1.:~~,,.l lllls. Sill.i IJCI' u1v1u11. frplt·, S300 l)('l' n10. 646-3839 . ...., ......., Jt..I F..iao ........._.,. Orange Counly real es1ate. ritOR'F:! ! Rent or lsc. Ask !01· Dale, .vrr:.;u..J 1• __ • _ _ Duplexes Unfurn. 350 3 Br. 3 Ba. Din rm. sn.5ll0. '======== SJC,AL MORTGAGE co. LANDLORDS FREE 96'-'1471 DREAM COTTAGE ON1 l--'----'-----....:...-1 Contract -0r Lease Option.! -(n ') ... "JOG -C d I Ma $10 000 Un Pymnt $650/mo I 1 ~ 3 Br. 3 Ba. Laguna • New 3 BR. l ~~ Ba, blt·ins, CANAL orona e r l·nc1' PIT!. ·~ .. ner, 64" mo · BUILDERS'. 4500 Can1pus Dr., N.8. H .. = d•.s'"•"as"<e c"rp drn""S ·· II ., I v" ~ omc •• · ............. ....,..,.., • .... " · " ·• '~ • :sn1a ~ Bl{, shu~ cpl. 1 1'(1S, BRAND N 3 B 2 ~ VIEW VIEW-VfEW-Solid \vestsidc pot:_nllal np-3 Br. 2 Ba. LagUna-Vie\v, h~"'·d. fll's. _Nl"ar f\1_ar1na bHns. ll'plc, lr~. Ji":I\, \111Jk-Rll. unit i i~r li:plc ~~ bltn!\: Pro,,lma!e\v 1.1 ~~ •quucc l close in •.......... $395 i!Jgh, shopping. $27:>/n10. iu ••:.UHi')', \1ushcr d1·"~·1·, 1c,;, ft 1 Cl &·: Harbor Vie1v, new Montego. · " " • '"" '" I 846--4017 ft 6 & k d " " wu sq o mrm 4 BR, F:\m rm. prime vle1v feet zoned County R.·4, '"Ith Rlfl• 3 Br. 2 Ba.. Ne...,•port -a 11· n s. ~cilx:K ~~.~111 . ld~ul t.,H' <; i.\ suPe.r Nf'ighbot'hood. to Joe., $7G.900. Ask for Gil !1 great 1-e~table house on t:miiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;::;iiiii Bny!ront to1vnhouse ·· S425 3 Br. enclosed in patio, g11'l~. ~· )•rl)'. ,\dulls, nul boot ! $350. CAii 67:;,_1076 It _,,, Asking $34000 CaU Bayfront 10...,·nhousC' .. $•125 forn"•I din, 1•,· tJ.,, a1·a1 I ·~·ts. 61..r:.H:!.£ Simp!'lln Bkr., 552·7500_. _ ,,,;·"71•1·1. ' ' I "' ..-Nl:~\V 3 B 2 B d l ·r ,,....... 3 Bl'. 2 Bn. C.0.M. \Vrt k imintXI $2ij 1110 agent VIEW 11 • I', a. c u.xe, SPECTACULAR Ol'EN 11L a. 1r'S FUN 10 BE NICE, Houses Furnish_ed 300 to beach .•... · ..... · ... S-125 842~i · i-;\·e_rything you 1\'l\lll. No L ~~ 2 Br. Fan1. & dining r1n. BRAND N~;, 1•1\LEH'.\IO lr-~M'. Call 67:>-4691 inda Isle 4 BR, faniily, ~ VAC \NT 2 Bil hou~ Sl4' J ,, t \ ,, 4~. BA, pier & slip. Only Genera l Shore Cliffs .... , .. _ .$500 1 · ;>, • u ( 11u. :! ~ ... a. crpts, 11rps, 2BR 11-/v,' f'p!« bl1in!· ;:..:c;.:c.;:_:_______ Bkr. 675-7225 also 2 BR. crii. $145, Si.;ls, l;Hl'dl!Ut:I'. rll'I SI\ llll & ll'll-: I I s·i:;o " ~. ~9!c~· 67~1J11 D e n I so n $110 . Util Pd. Quiet Bat•h Corona de• Mar l'ids, pets. Agt. fC'c. 979-S430 Jiu; c$-luSb7.s." Pmeor. IM''"o. b~~t~~~. i1.j. 70"1 t. n10., 7'.!(.JI ~ 1v/ garage & Pool. Corona ----------Slop H1•1-e~ 2 81·, SIRS. Gar. DUPLEX nr ocean, $62.500 4 UNIT APT. BLDG. del ri1ar SEAWIND fncd yd for kidst pers. 833-0780 BOB o_an_a_P_o_•"-'----- A1iles Larson Realtor $175 -Ulil Pd. I Br. Deck. H efind r 547 9641 673--8563 Start your j n vest nt en t beautiful vieiv, vi ct 0 r i a om e s • _ si5o--=-sn1al1TBI'. xlnt loc·l SP;\CIOUS 'l Bit 1\'/frpl(', Newport Heights program today 'vilh tltis 4 Beach, Laguna. Next To Spy9lass \Valk to Shop'g. 1 Br. Triplex. blk beach & bay, Ball.Joa. \'l't)' pri\'3ll'. N r 1v pa int, unit bldg. 2 BR ea. Great Sl!P • Nice 2 Br. Fi"Plc, VIEW $125. Srnl pet ok. $100 · 3 Br. bltns. shag crpts. drp~ 2 hlks to bcaC"h $200 BY O\VNER rIXER UPPER Joe. Costa f\·Iesa. Inc. $7,740 patio, 1 blk OC('an, Balboa Homefinders 547-9641 gar, !~ blk ocean, Balboa. IX'rtn. 49'-J...-3736 evi'. ' This lovely 3 br is almost too good to be true. Lo- cated in nn exclusive area of :Fountain Valley for the Joy,• priL-e of only $29,900. Call ui> & see th\11 beauty •. 962-2456 I' 11lage Real Estate 1 bdrm 1 bath with several yr. Try 10% d\V/I. $65,000. Penin 3 Bedroom, 2 bath hon1e, 2-BR ,_ 1-:"---"-\' ... --: $:lll5. Lt·g J Br. )'art!, patio,I ways lo go. Drive by 430 Wesley N. Taylor Co. NU-VIEW RENTALS fireplace, formal dining, ....... ~. ncu ya,~. \sc u , t.:hildpet.Coronadel~ltu· Newport Beach > ~W REALTORS "lf-doaning oven. Enjoy ~,covo/refng. N,.. 11' _!chi. I NU-VIEW RENTALS --'-------~~~1$1i:,~~ro! 1~a;~~~ 2111 San JoaqUin Hills Rd. 673-4030 ~ or 494-3248 private community tennis & $250/MO. ~ .... C}.2873 rrt3_1030 ur .J:}.1-J:l.JS' Deluxe Beach Yearly 673-1658. Newport Center 644--4910 ~~A.~E u~~·~~ riIO: ~~'!'if~! ~~ i~bot~i! Irvine f'·ORieasl', ;i l:iK, brantl :I ~R. rrplc. el'l?ts, clrps. ~1ie1v CORONA clel ~1ar, New Dplx· Corona 'del Mar. $495 ""r -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! ne111 vie1v l\Ome. Enjoy b,tlc:ony., bl!ins, cl/\\, .~ 494 .5117 1 ~•t-2100 ~outh Laguna by owner. 3 BR, 2ba/ 1 BR HOUSE HB. $125, [ n1onth • lease. 644-4687. r~ • tennis & swin1 club p1·iv. h~~s lo .ocean. No ~Is. 8843 i\da1ns at J\.tagnolia, i-lli -R:f"J-Block to beach -2 BR + den inunac .. hon1e 2 BR. 2 bu. all bll·ins, ('r>l 'd 2BR-S165 Agl. J.'ee 979--8430 NEW HOMES SliOO ino. \\'ill consider lease S2!a ~'!" utd, Toin ~hu phy !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.,.!!!!!!!!"I r hl . \Valk to stores, school & & cl1·ps. slumpstone {l'plcs, Balboa Island 2 BEDROOMS 2 BR, den, 2 ba · .. · .... $.(25 l\'/Otllion to buy. Call -'-'·-""-"'-·------ Huntington Beach 1~!ier.n P~~~~~n. in n~~in~~~'. beach. Great ocean YU. Tern1s offered. 6~7 1.::;::.:::::c.:;:.::.:.::.----3 BR, 2 baths ........ $435 !':,-l'i·!l.ti:W days, 01· 6-l.(-<:11is.JIS325 \'EARLY 3BR, 2BA, 1>3 f J\.fanr exlras. Only $52.500 170 \VATERFRONT-Avail Jan Ground level unit \Vilh 3 BR. fa m rn1, 2 Im .... S-150 eves. blk to beach, $295 yearly, 2 Bdrm. + Pool ::l~~~s. o~~ne~a~~;,y I~~)~ :~ Call for appl. 644--2442 days :lc:•..;••.__l_:;o;_r_So.•:;I.;;• ___ :....; l91h, $360. 4 Br, 2 hli, private patio. Rec e n I 1 y 1 BR.NfaEmAcRmL,Y2~;NbE'·w·. $475 BL u Ff' s TOWNHOUSE, ::wirl· ~bl:tss'O beach. nan<'e. 1 ~4~99-~1925~~c~ve~.~~~!!!!!~ COMMERCIAL bltins, frplc, 2 car gar, remodeled & close Io Elegant 4 Br, 2 ~2 Ba. · '. -$24,495 , Red Carpet, Rllrs. 497.1761 clock, pri. ply. ( 213 1 everything. $275 mo. 3l B8RR, ',""ba"lh1n, 21i bu .. S350 REDJ:.:C. Pool' view, schls; YEARLY: 2 BR .• $275: 3 ' LOT . 682-1236. ESTATE REALTY 640-1120 ' s ........ $300 s.-195, C11l l to s c e . BR. $350: 4 BR. $·100 2 Bdnn condo., desirable I Laguna Niguel 'r·· Mabhtlamel 2 BR. den, 2 ba ........ $400 '114--.J94-39W Balboa Bay Prop. 675-7060 ground level floor plnn, 1 ~~ DOWNTOWN Balboa Peninsula TOTAL PANORAMIC VIEW, 3 BR bonus rm 2 ba $'1:.!5 - Years new, Fre"1\y Painted I NE\V I br, 2,, ba, FR, No,1... ' ' . • . BA Y1''RON'I'S 3 Br, 3 Ba. 3 Br, 2 Ba has everything n " OS ESA Spyglass Hill, Brand ~e1v . & 1. 11"'" ,, u t . 1 11o·ith tastefttlly panelea and View. 2100' split !vi. $55,950. • C TA M YEARLY, furn 3 BR, 2 ba .\ BR 2 l ' Ba 2 fl'ple pier s tp, ....,, .. u1·, near ocean, enni s, poo mirrored living roo1n, plush 493-5197/"'•" ~35. Mobile Homes brand lle\V unit 3 doors . ' '2 ' • 1an1ily, 4',2 Ha. pier &. slip $285. 642-3573 ..rtV""V• 10.200 "". tt. C2 100 ft. tron-from oce•• .,00· mo ,90-, Lease SlC00/1no. 673-SOSS >I'°'"' ..... , •~"•t As, 0 " -wallpapettd-·-dining--8J't'.'1tr -.For-Sale 125 ..... -· .,.. ··1·~,~·3·1·1~J~.~. --·-_ ..... ,.,.li.". Newport'"Shores -··· · ·-~ --.. -··-shag cru·pet.1 & cus1on1 Lido Isle I tagc ... on._good_~J~-~$ .. -w,.-Balboa·-) 673-2058 A&t.-···-. e~es 11 .J-• drapes, oversized prulll'Y -MOBILE HOME 646...ri~i Ready to build. BAY view. 5 BR .. 3 baths, 3~~·. 2g!.~: '$300 s~~. cf~t ~·sR, 2BA. crpled, dbl gar, 3 BDRMS., 2 ba. Patio. Walk area, near scl)()()Js .. walking *MEDITERRANEAN FOR SALE: OffNTILl •rr'SF/JNTOBENIC.EI frplc., dishwasher & last. SlOO deposit. 005 "SINCE 1946,. tcnced, \1•lk to shops, S\11in1 to beach. $300 Yearly. rllstance to. H u _n t 1 n g Ion 3 Br's, !amlly rm, dining SILVERCREST Yearly 531)...1068 N . 673--8775 l st Western Ba k Bid & sand . $330 nlo, pri·r Property Hou~ 642.J857 ~:;r, :;:cnm~~a~ FQ~ mi .. 2~~ 189ba~tv\ beautifully MOBILE HOME 11J ~ Corona de~ Mir ~5~us. a 0 i· University Par~. Irving~ -~73-l·l~_l -Apts. Furn. 360 SALE BY 0\1/NER. Asking appotntCY. ,JW 20' x 53', 2 BD 2 BP carp., , 2 BDRl\1 + den, co1upletely Days 552-7000 Nights BLUrFS, viey,·, pool. Brand ~ ll d d bl I l •rnARl\!llNG 1 BR f I mod 1 p · & d k ::::i::;l:i' Ne1v lg. :t BR· .. 21 2 ba .. Balboa Island only $24,495 ca today *UNIQUE SPANISH rape • t-ns., refrig.,~ · • rp c, re e ed. atio · et: · fain. rn1. Only }l50. n1onth! 847-3095. 5 Br, fam rm, 4 ba. Ready washer & elect. dryer, wired '·========== wooded yd, BBQ. util pd, Available ne"" $310. n10. Ii 8 Do d RI 6l4-0l34 DELUXE JBR To for Zll air cond., kitch . .,.. $250. Adults, no pets, 833-8974 Realtor 644·7270. 2 BR .. 1 bath ...... $225/315 :_______:___~· ...!._ ___!.: __ · • • 2BA, a!I HILL p (or showing. $149,500. clock, storage shed. land· l...rg. ocean-view lot R-3 zoned 2 BR, 2 ba, den, al e .. ~275 * 4 BR, :i BA. 2 s tory bluns, color .TV: t,;plc, ava!l for 6 condos or apts. Xlnt lo-Costa Mesa 3BR 2BA + 1 BR Income 3 BR., 2 baths .. $385/425/.f50 tO\\'nhsc, Bat.:k Bay, pool, no1v June l::i .. $37a nlo, Uul $33,SOO scaped patio. Three yrs .. old cation, close to everything~ unit above gar. $81.000 cl Al I kl thr NESTLED ON A I-fl LL • like nu. Located in new in Laguna Bch $120 000 3 BR, 1 ba. Immac. home, Qy,'Tier 420 Fern I ea (' 4 BRC, A21>LLbal5hs52$425/450 '475 gar. 97 $3751n10. :Sl3-lU!J:S1 ~u;llm; ~:~.;~ Y u NEAR Tl-IE BEAO-f. adult pk. av.•ay from noisy Prin. only. 49-1-990'7. 642-iii44~ good furnishings, Westside, 675-1840 .. 7500 l:!J:i·S 4· · · A spt"awling 4 Vf· hUge add LIDO ISLE $65 000 St. One-half bl. from club-No children or pets, $260. BEAO-f horue, 4 BR, ·2 bas. 4 BR, avaH no,v, 1,t ,blk or1 den ,1·/piano & color TV - , house. $15,495. Call EVES. Mountain, Desert t.1o . Phone 1-492-788.i. LOVELY 3 br, 2 ba, swim'g VISION 1''an1-1111, pool-rm \v/pool to bay._ Lrg BR s • to boot!! Big: country llln(·h 2lJ.694-.4690. Resort 174 MOVE Today! 2 Br 4·plex, )°°1·~rvine Terr~. ;;·r. tble., frplc, TeMis & pool STUDENTS WELCOME. kitchen w/"Har\.'est Gold" Here is your chance to live CAN BE SEEN AT: DR. $185. Util Paid. se. m or Uun. 3 3· • d h II priv. Lease $425. 645--0836 $250/MO, 2l3--289--&1Ei6 eves appli. Plush carpets, cus-on Lido & enjoy preslige by CRESTMONT LAKE ARRO\VHEAD Homefinders 547-9641 4 BR, 3 ba, aduJts, 00 pets. re i HARBOR View Home, nu DELUXE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, 1om \\'ainst.'Oating, paper· the sea. Your.Ol\'n Spanish ESTATES Great for year round living Lse $350. 424 Poinsettia, 2 Br. Den, 2 Ba, beaut 216 Crystal yrly S32S mo. ing & spet;ial efJecls! Pool -Castle. Just steps to the 105i Site Dr., Brea. !Central & close to the village. 3 L~ Rooms • l Br. Triplex 673-5218/558-9683. ~TY REALTORS cpt.s & drps, $385. Eves 673-7178 or (1) 723-2'149 table goes \Vith it1 llurry beach. Vacanl & the oy,·ner Ave. across from Brea yr old Bavarian style 3 level 1 Ba . S175. All uUI pd. 2 BR, 1~9 blks to bch, kids, Univ. Park Center, Irvine 642·1536. Balboi Peninsula on this one! Broker 962-5511. v,•il\ even carry the loan. Comm. Hosp.) l.J>t #46. home with open beam ceil-Homefinders 547-9641 pets .. students OK. $290/mo. SPANISH VILLA Iferbert Hawkins Realtors CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., ings 1fhru1--out. 3 br 2 ba+ Huntington Beach Hal Piochin Rltr. 675-4392. 2 BR ~NDO ... From $220. s~rE:a, "i:C~, ~.;1:. ~n~~: $35 WEEK & UP , 839-1600 or 963-5681 for showing. compete y finished base. -t -$215. mo. lse _ club ii·/pool , tcnn•·s, '"JO. 9 Sl-·p;"" Roo-· appl'ox 2800 sq ft of luxury. S O ment for playrin or C ta M 2 BR condo $26: M /I "" "" ""' _.., .,..., Olyn1pie size pool , 3 BR, 3 BE T C R. TO BCH. NE\V custom bit beauty in * 3 BR nr. beach, nice OS eu · ... ;,. o. se 644--4186 • Housekeeping Rooms b t I d' I 4 BR 3 ha wi • " d It k th ba >w"Orkshop. Lndry t 8 c · yard. frplc, patio. \\'ater 3 BR Home · ·• $285. Mo/lse · • Ocean Vi ew Apt> as. orma 1nng, h uge , tuuugemaster au par on e y. $36,500. (213) 451-3898 after EASTSIDE HOME 3 BRhome •.•• $:{00.i\1o/lse NEWexec_4BR,3 .BAw/180 BALBOA INN ram·rnl + huge game rm. sv,ite iv /bay view. Red. lo $18,500. 6/a-0723. 6 pm or anytime weekends. Pd. $275/mo. Call G/;rSSlO 4 BR home .... $4.25. Mo/lse degree view, lenrus & pool luxw')' cpts & drps. Owner $132,500. Open Stin, 1-5 pm, BEST buy Lido ya c h 1 O f S 78 Houses Unfurn. 305 2 BR • 1 Bath · Double Gar· RANCH REALTY 5.ll-OOOO $600 nlo. Eves & wknds, 105 Main Street men~~AR REALTY 425 Vi1 Lido Nord. 675-7414. Harbor, double ivide, patio, ut o fate Prop. 1 General !~u; ~~~:la;. ;;ooil~~~~ NEW 3 BR horr:~ in Turtle 644-1791 G'iS-8740 96s.U7& 842.7411 LIDO Oppor. 3 Br. 3 'Ba, !poo!!!l.!g!ar!a!g!e!. !11ll50!!!' ~'1~5-8220!!!]~ [HAWAII Kona Coast Pt"Op. ;;;..:.:.;::.:.:c....------Owner/Realtor. Wl'ile Clas· Rock. Walk · to schools, ten· * EXECUTIVE View 5 Br FURN lrg ~ BR. frplc. DR .. $79,500. Open SIS. 133 Contact Don HB11 box 2.315 silied Ad No. 9137, Daily nis, pool & bus. $425. mo. H.V. hn1. t"'anl rm, din rm, Bal~ Pen1n. Close to ONLY $1400• DOWN Via \Vaziers, 641)..8146. 1 ~ Kailua-Kona, Ron Burla .ALA .IJNTALS Pilot, Box 1560, Costa ri1esa, 833-2708 tennis pool. $500. Owner. Pavillion. $260/mo. Yearly. N rt a_ h Re•f Ettatt, Assoc R.E. W1_si.ew.m1NKIV1C1 Ca. 92626. -. 640--0008 Wkdays Iii 5, 835-lOll J\.1r. Huge romer. 1600 Sq. ft. enclosed patio, roon1 for boat and IJ'ailer. Buy of ull buys! 11lage Real Estate IT '62-4471 ( :;;':) 546-1101 OWNER MUST GOI approx 1600 sq ft, Ext'el. cpts, drps, bit-in kit/dish· v.·shr, air cond'nr, 3 BR. 2 bas, covered patio, quiet street. GI, no down or tern1s to suit, $34,500. BRASHER REAL TY 968-1178 or 842·7411 $19,750 WALK TO BEACH VACANT -Surfside Condo Sharp and clean. Dishwasher, bltns. Call tn see! SCOTT REAL TY 536-7533 call anytime REPOSSESSIONS For information and location o! these Fl:IA & VA homes, I contact • KASABIAN : RHI E1l•lo 962-6644 ,Huntington Harbour WATER VIEW I Plushy pad with jumping jacuz:ii, d-Oodley deck, volley 1 ball court and one block to ocean beach. $24,500. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR REALTY 17'214 est. Hwy. 846-1381 ; Laguna S..ch ewpo P9•C . Gtner•I BEAUT. Pnnceton model 3 r • Swing! or eves/ w knd s -. _ Real Estate KIDS OK Bl', 2 Ba, lrg liv & din NE\\ PORT HGHTS, 4 BR, 842-2806 -PINE TREES & · Exchange 182 f -i1t HOUSl5 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, freshly pnld. area, BBQ & patio. XJnt 3 bas, \\'alk lo ail schls, BEAMED Cemetery I l ""5 New cpls & drapes, stove Univ. Prk Joe. $325/mo. J475. nlo. &12-SOll FU~ . Bache Io r , . nr. Lots/Crypts 156 TRADE NeW)Xlrt Beach ou,1S. & refrig. Near schools. Avail Feb 1st. 552.7355 3 BR fam rm 2 BA Harbor Pavillion. $150/nto. incl. CEILINGS Prop for Out .. ! town Prop · Wil""n & Pla-ntia. Fenc-" . v · ' H ' N . util. Wkdays til 5, 835--lOll · -· .ltllwrott & MY, c.M. '42·1313. "" '""'" CY NEW 3BR, 2BA w/bltins, te\v ~nies. -e w P 0 r I Mr swing or eves & wknds, 2 CEJ\.IBTERY lots Cypress Bkr. TI4/6TI-2058, eves CU1'E Baell Hse $125 furn r~1rn_;o=.truit Lrees. $275. crp!S, drps, comm. park & Schls. $450. SJ:r389-t •u"2806 and only 1 ~~ blocks to the section. Harbor R e s t 675-5487. -------~ -J UC 833-0 • -surf. One block to a huge Memorial Park. Call -util pd, sm pet ok. E/side. poo,nr I, O't47 * BLUFFS, 4BR, .2¥.s ba,1 3·~B-R~2-.-.--.-1---1 1-1 pool, recreation room. one Real Estate Wanted 184 NICE furn Bach $150 "°'" CONDO -3 BR, 3 BA, 2 BR Condo. Walnut Square. din~ rm, lam rm, pri patio, 2 ho~ses ~:"~~. $~'. ot Uie most upgraded 3 R37-2<!39. Laguna 111/util pd -Vie-.v. 2--sto1'Y cathedral ceiling, . $225/month. -~25___!110., 644-1480 t J ne 2Sth 675--8531 bedroom homes in Nev.'J)Ort Commercial WANTED: appl'OX 6 to 8,000 CHANNEL I Br unit $175 rec area, located Newport c 11 G42-:?007 S J C • 1 ,~•~u=~=·~~"'---I Shores. Just listed at $48,500. Property 158 sq ft on Pacific Coast Hwy, can have slip· Vacant. Riviera, $325 Bef. 5 PM , a In uan apis rano 45· Bay!ront pier, Ooat. 5 To see is to appreciate. So. of Broadway in Laguna CHOICE 2 Br & OR $175 61a-700J NEW 2 BR & convert den. .. Br, 4 Ba, 111inter or ;yrly, U "'"7tn NEWPORT BEACH Beach. to rent for Esicle, v,>inding staircase. Broad n1 oor Turtlerock NEW .s BR, Frplc, Shag cpt 673-2039 Ca U'll;J'-• -mmereial U•C. Se" d MOVE l 3 B 1200 I EASTSIOE, fresh 2 BR, 833--8647 evesiwlmds ' bit/ins, l lii ba, pool, gar.1~=~-"'"-"=-~--0PfN r1<. g • 1rs ftJN net NICE/ Pliml? Baylront Sile ... v n r c ean. service porch. crpts, drps, 2 patios. $325. 4~7210 WIDE selectio11 o( apts., For boat repair & sales availibility, location, rent kids & pets ok. garage. fncd yards. Gar. Water pd. Laguna Beach NE\V HOUSE 3 BR 2 ba weekly or monthly. _ Bill G d Rltr 6~ "lGl desired Write Classified ad CHARMING 3 Br $250 Eslde No dogs. . $205/MO. Ph: Sa d & Se R Jty 6 "-'~ run Y · 1""' #56, Daily Pilot P 0 Box fP, nu C/D, fncd \v /gar. 642-3289 $175 • Util Pd. Charming + fam lrplc. all bit/ins. n a ea l.roovu TO buy "·ell leased industrial 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca 92G26 }lOMEY 3 Br 2 Ba $275 1 Br. priv. deck, So. POOL Perm. $350 499-3736 lo'UR.i'l. bachelol' a~t by t~e or comniercial bldgs call bllos, C/D, gar, kids/pets. 2 Br unfum house avail Laguna. NEW 3 BR, in Village San ?t:_ach. $150. 010. incl. ulil. Mark Sullivan, Brok e r, N. Beach 3 Br~ Ba S.'i75 Feb 15· Adu 1 t • No Pets. $250 · Util Pd. ~ Bl'. Ne1v Juan, pool & lake priv. $275. 6'\:>-5714. GRANO OPENING "'"'' AA29 anytime / l~ f I ( 2 Ref. 1st & last. $195 mo. Id 2 · ==:.::..~~----,o~c::,=::_::===·---• urn, roor v, car-now' 675-559, aft 3 PM c:pt rps, patios, ocean 4~(.614, 496-5?67, ext 42. _Corona del Mar Newport Bay TOW9rs 'TWO adjoining income f111Wlal . ALA Rentals 642~3 a , view. I Santa Ana -1 & 2 BEDROOM proj)ertles, center-costal';;;;;;;;;;;;;~-;;~1~;,:,,,.,:.,,,-,-,,-:.,,,_=..:..,,'---]_BR, 2 _ _!?a._custoni home _1265 • Qiarming 3 B_J',,_____f . ELEGANTLY furn apt, 2 CONDPMINIUM HOMES Mesa. Owner. I lliNDLORDS·t frplc, fncd )'d. orx klt, d@e sa. WOOdsey set f in g. Oldie -but ~ie 3 Br 2 Ba .. bar,-lge Llv. -din. Bayfront Honies 645-2020/642-6560 Business \Ve Specialize in Newport gar. Nr. Schls. Lease ok. Laguna-Canyon. SlSS, Gar Incd KidS/Pets. kitch area, Superb view ol Boat Slips C nd , "--h • C d 1 M e 496--0738 alt 4 $350 • 3 BR. trplc, Sea H ' f'nd' · 547 .,.1· bay. Ideal fol' E.'Cec. cple, Full Security Highrise O om1nlum• Opportunity 200 &~ 0Qu~a R:ntal arSer-38R, IBA. glll'age, 2641 Terrace Condo, Laguna ome 1 ers i·""' $450. Avail short tem1. Steel & t.'Oncrete construction _.:;fo:.;r_;u:;:.:;l•:..· ___ ....;1:;:60:;: l-U.::_,"ec1"'°c;.ac:r""&"-L-e_a_s_ln" 9 '-'-vice is FREE to You! Try Elden, $200 mo., Niguel. Condominiums .l ~6c:73-:..::3268=~----- Fvate Balconies . EAST BLUFF, 01vner, 3 BR. HARBOR BLVD. Nu-Vle\v! 646-9171 NU-VIEW RENTALS Unfurn. 320 Costa Mes• ~{~:: ==~r unit. :11n ba. pool, schls, w i 11 Auto body & paint shoo. NU .. VIEW RENTALS •3 BR. 3 BA, 2 story town-673-4030 or 494-32'18 F • V I unusual Opportunity to Pur· take 2nd T.D., lo\v int. 4 man crew. 673-4030 or 494-3248 hse, Back Bay, pool, gar, NEW 2 BR Arch Beac:h ounta1n al ey Casa de Oro chase Bayfront Prope.r'.y in $49,500. or Lease w/optlon RIVIERA REAL TY Think of what you no longer S.125. mo. 833-1653/833-8974 Heights Ocean & canyon vu. Sh t T R t I ALL UTILITIES PAJD Newport Beach. $390 per mo. 644-1932 149 Bx:oo<'hvay, C.M. need, make & list, then sell Selling anything with a Daily Beaut c:pts/drps, decks, T'b or 3 Ber'ri,, i:n a d Compare b<•lo1-e you rent 310 Fernando Rd., N.B . NEWPORT CR.ESI', Plan 3, 642·7007 those items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad is a V!'C3!1l. $3SO rent or ~Ii W5ro':no r, ' t.'On o, Custom designed, featuring: 67S.S.S5l 3 BR, 2\.iibas. ocean vu, Pilot Classilied Ad! Call simple niatter just S::i7,950 497-2..1,02 or 494-S.S55. FULLER REALTY • Spacious kitchen \\'ilb in- pool & tennis across st. BARBER Shop, No :64~2-<"6,;:;;7:;,8=. ======-"'al"l:..;&12-5678""=='=====-=C=LA=SS=S=E=L=LS==00.=56:::78:;;;: 0 ,.~14 0. direct lighting CHARMING , $67,IXX>. Owner hel p finance, . competition, prof. building 1~~7-ccc.~::..:.c:•:ony="~"'--e Separate dln'g area Lovely & charming 2 br call 67"3"8726 opposite Hoag H o g P i t a I Huntington Beach e llome-tike storPge hon'e in prime heights D · I /U I Newport Beach, Beauty S© 4U}A ft • Private patios area. Lg. !iv t'm w/lrplc up exes n ts lJhop owner will negotiate -0 ~ _ ~ ~C! l!I NEW luxury 3 BR, 2 bas., e Closed garage ,v/stotoage & beam celling. Lg sale 162 fie;tibJe terms, 84&-3678 J.-'-P<J• ~ Rec. facl\s. blt·in.s, wshr & •Marble pulJma n tands<apod yard w/double NEW DUPLEX CARRY out ,..,taurant on That /11,friguing Word Game with 0 Chuc'fE dryer, Adul<s over 4-0. 962· • Klog·sz Bdrn" garage on alley. $39,500. & n1onthly rental basis in SC. II\ 1973 • Pool -Barbeques • sur· owner will finan~ 3 p~~· 2 2BA8~ous. e21~v/ W.k FuJly eqWpt. ready to roll . llfit94 •1 Cl.AT I.~------l BR. New ct-pl. drps. relrig, .~~~ndpin~ \\'ilh plush land· CALL "=" 646·241• ...,, » 492-ll74. OR t.ftt f the washr/dry, patio, pool. ..... ~ .... \:I' Townhouse w/frplc. -8~u~s-in-0-1-1-w-1-n-ted---2-1-0 ,:;ro,:•n1bled '!ords b.-s110. 548--I405. Adults, No Pet!I •A 4.., 214 Knox St, CM. $69,950 low to form fou r slmpl• wo·"• L N' I t BDRM. Furn. $190. i._....., 646--4414 rg _•gun1 19ue 365 \V. \Vilson 642-1971 IEALTY \VANT TO BUY MENS Panoramic View SINGLE LEVEL Xlnt value & terms. By NEWPORT BEACH AREA. • magnlficit nt ocean & coas1 e Studio & t BR Apts. N1ar1'1wper.tP•ttOfflct 2BRUP,-2down,_spacious. HAIRSTYLING SHO P . I AK ILLA I ~f ONARCH S u n'lnilt, $30WEEk&'UP I Outstanding home with BLUFFS ''LINDA'' owner. 34595 Calle Paloma, 1.,.:6,:;'134:....::m=-----= I I I I' r viC\\'1 new lge 2 BR. 2 BA • TV & Maid Service Avail . sweeping ocean & Catalina C. B. 556--6208 Monav to LNn 240 . _ _ _ _ _ w/m cruwave oven & many • Phone Servl(.'<l -Htd. Pool view! HA.fl 3 bedrooms, 2 3' BR, 2 ba, comer lot, deep Income Property 166 -, unusual features, ad u 1 t • Children & Pet SectiQJ1 b&ths. Forced air heat. pile crpUng, private patio. 1st TD Loans I H 0 G 0 R I J community w/2 rec . 2376 Ne1vPort Blvd. ~M Ma!lter suite & Uvng rm Mi&ht conSlder lease oPlion. IDLE MONEY -I facilities. Lease $475. rno. 54$.-9755 or 645-3967 both wtth view bnlconies. $69.500. CATftERS NO INCOME! I I I I I k ~ Pr-In. only. 831-0550 or (Ad good for SS on rent) lligh beamed celling . CORBIN·MARTIN T f J I vi UP TO 90w. 1 • 6T>--0255 F l I l k If h REALTORS u• 2 his ourp ex n tea )'Our in· "" ll~/~fo. 1 BR, dclu.xt-mob. "n as c C en • .--766 spection. Prime location In 814 % INTEREST Newport Beach hnnle. Mature adult couple. Approximately 1000 t t . COsta Mesa. Qill 2 J I A I ... .. N Qui •~-,.. le·~-·~.soo. 2 BU<S to ocean + comm. d D L H G E L • SHARP 1 Bl ,. a pets. ct, secure. c;J1'k~ ~· -pool, teMls. 3 BR, 2 ba Tho RHI E•l•lo Fair n oa ns ~·~-,;.;-:-r::.;.-=.~ 6 Th• fellow who doesn't 3 BR •,ty B uu•voondo,. PoodC""1\ Mobile E>t. 1991 ~ I ~ .. ,. Llk --.. "7 900. '"2551 •-•1•• j~ j j j know whe h' t d II r Is · · a. acan · Ncw~rt BJ·~ ... 0 •n. TARBELL, R• ton }.'Q; f>nJ.!4; ~. ~ ""9" _._. -re ts nex 0 8 $395/mo. Sa,Je by O\vner, 1 "' ~u. V'-fO""O.J lD> s. cout rtwy, L.B. or 64~ 6 UNITS tn lovely residential lows••l 11 r 1 atasMOrancg• Co. ':~~:;:;::;~'.__, coming from usually has credit $40,00S. \VUI 'ftke 2nd. • SUNNY' AP1'S -POOL I ..nNARCH BAY ma on Balboa'• Pt.ninsula • er tg. o. rl cards 1~ show where it --.. SJ3..%35 • Adulls Pool$ide $150 l1p !1~ HARBOR VIEW/CARMEL Pt. $1200 per mo tnc. 642·2171 SU.0611 W 0 D R A T I • Al~ ChildNn's Seetion.1 I A unmue 4 Br + den + 3 BR 2 • • F /Rm DI ~,. 000 Own <>• -•·-"ng Harbor ·-a " yn, L-,r;..;,,:..;:....:;..:.,...-l /-'' NEW 3 DR, 3 BA. rlln. m1 .. 177 E. 22nd S• CM 6"':16t~ I I II., f , ~. am • n. .._, . ~r ......... ~"· """•"• ..... ~ r I' j' j I I 0 C I h h 'I d Jrpl" dbl ,, d-' ..,_ •m y -"-"-e o m:r, xtnt --" , • -·· yd omp ete t • c uc~ • quofe .._, far .. cp.,., ·"~· · .... •1Vt11 '-"uu. -· co •• ~ • '""-''"RP 2 ho DON'T BOR_R_O_W b 1 NICELY furn t BR Trnlle:MI I tmtlttn!:ll buUt around a poo . Own& $6l,500. lnl Port ~ sep. u.ea on '-..1.-L..l.-L.L_J y lillino In 1M tniuingr words n1~ny qu11. _ t'xlra_~. poo , '° • _ ·,· Thts warm oontt'mPorat'j, Ashley pt, 644-&I*) 1 lot. E/skte. $400 gross. 'TIL YOU CALL uS.1 you dewlop from step No. 3 below. tCMls, [$:tuna, $44-.104~. $1~ & UP. Adul~. l:U "· bu11t by al) &tthllcct for $38,500. Owner. 642-6583 Borrow on )'Out homo equity l::xc rrtNG Bluff~ 3 bi-. :flt \V!l50n, CM. &45--4330 I his own home. has •n ocean BEACON JAYFRONT 13 UNITS w/ _Pool in E/aide ft>r any good purpose. $trv. e PRINT NUMBERED tEnERS IN ba, nr tennll' cl11h. !.~ $4!1$1 NfCE lBR. duplex. Qui L I view in thtii ·Pr iv a. t ~ Finest view, pier A slip for ~. Inc. Sl.tOO per mo. Ing Loa AngeleJJ County for THESE SOUARES tno. Sale by oivner SG9.!l!P. Sep. by j)t\J'. En1ploy(.'(I ndl1s i •,:t._.!."....,t coirununlty:~· =r~!. ~~?W-'Dtn-$ljl;,OOO. Owner. S4M695 .-over lO )'<?W'll and NOW Jn _""c;,_;U~NO!SO!..o!:AM52!!lE!E'-l-ETt_rn __ ,o..J.f .....1l1.-l.....1l1.-.. J l Will fake 2nd. lll:h"13.5. ~.no pell, 518-l021 ..,.,.,..,. " HOUSE + I UNITS Ol'tlllfl<t flountyf V GET ANSWER _ _ Suff•rlng a storage crl•I•? ADULT ltu'gt, Ju;« 2 llR, TUllNltt ASSOC. BLU,FS CONDO N.W unti. at l63T Eldon SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. Sell no-longer ....ooJ Item• pool bit-ms. •uf•" ci<M, •. • lllll N. ~l"°"1' ~ .3.JlR. U,platl, frpi<, llo3,'lllO, CM. lit -wt200~ wrllt <714> lll6-0lD6 SCRAM·LETS AN$WERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 with 1 Daily Pilot Cla!Sitied $!60. No J)<l!S. &IS-697• } 1177 Owner. 64111183. oll. C.U Btlll<lcr 616M14. 4500 Cantpu1 Drive, N.B. Ad! &4U678. CLASS SELLS -6Q.&;78 . -" . \ ·1 ' • " • c·•P:.:•::·..;..:u:.:r:.:n ·;..... __ ..o.;~ • n um. , ~ • ~ urn. ·-Fum. oi '"Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfu rn. 310 ,. .:.. r~ 'I Co1t• Mes• Costa Mei• H un~npton 8e1ch NEWPORT SHORES F'Nu New Yun: d•y, "'TIUNGS" b)' Moose. ""11 -Nt~rt &.Kh Newport Beach r,oo To 1600 Sq, tt. spacet;, Oral\i'4! It wh.lte· cat Carpentry, Repairs, Plum-ARCJllTECT F urni1hecl Bachelon & ;;:;-::;~;;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; avail. tmmedJaiely! 6200 It w/v.•hll' Dra collar Vic, bi1__11. El e c • Rcrnodelln& t Br's E xcep11onolly UNDER N EW Pnd11c °""'' HW)<., Newport Cl!" & Tw<t1n, N. a . 64Rt6t3. Manager Of h d MANAGE MENT Beach. For office use, bar-.~. • CARPENTRY, t!ltcirl<tll , nice. 21 10Newport B., 2BR .Bltm,newlydecotaled, ber !bop or~~. l!"'OUNO nude puppy 3-4. plunlbina. ru.~tt. F & 8 J Costa M••• rrwl g.'I.~ Beautiful Rcnls vtry re•aonablc; nlol. pl cocktr1 No colJar. Honie Repair, 64.2-1403. Product *$25 P E R WEEK * landsca~lni'· l.rg play 11.ttu, month to month or lease. gtulf('r -.·llh white &. blk l-lAND\?.1AN bome repair. & Up. ~11,kt ~rvt~. Klt!!hen11 a child s iln•am. Close 10 675 ,050 () nmrkhu:1. Sll\ter &: Beach. :arpentry, painting, plbft. Desi"gn avail, :\lotcl Tahlli. Com1•1· lhopplnK & JSChls. Children M .. H.B. OOl-5413 alter 5 pn1. !'prlnkling 11ystems. 54&--0879 llatbot & Vlt'torla, CAI. v.·elcome. 8'12-0-ISO: it no 1 0 -l'Mft-CI & t'OUNO 1m. Black S1111uy Hiullnn 1 l BR SlGO & Sl50 ALSO 1 PINECREEK ans 847·7331. PARK L D •• dog Vic Golden \Veit & ! ~ BR Sl9J. Ne"'· cpl, i.:tra lge... LIVES UP -3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Steps to commUnily 601 Dover Dr .. Suite 3 Wc¥1mtn11cr, \VeslmJl'lflter. YARD, garngr etCon.upa, \Ve ho.vc "" immediate Adults. tdeal for Bo.c~lo&'ll. TO IT S NAME $220.-NEW pool. Unfum(shed $325. month. NEWPORT 8.EAOi !J.IZ-0251 remove tree11, dirt, Jvy, openlni;: for a II quallfl~ ' 1993 Church, s.tS-963.1 • 2 BR, 1\.S Bl\ <'100) sq. ft. oU~plant. Nr. 1'--0UND: Reddllih Bro"'' n dr Iv c ways,' s I u n1 p8. lndlvlcluel to < l't'Ct tuu BACl lELOR Apt, tum. one 0\'l'r ~ tr1~I tt·ces nnd 10 • Blln.s + D\Y GRUBB & ELLIS CO new Sheraton. Ide11l·l\r~:hl· long.haired mixed ~-2 847·2666. nctlvllit'S or our Pi'odu<.1 ' person, respecrt1b/,.. tlllh• strcan111 \Ylth \1·t1tcrfttl!A • \\'et Bnr • Real Est.·Eng. or Tns. yn;:'!' Vic. \\'n1ner & GoJdcn LOCAL mpvlng &: haul\~ llc11tgn group. Q u n 1 i r i e d I l'l'e1tlc a f"C'h"od '" ~Hl lg !or e Enclw;ed G11n1gc 675 711_ offit'f!. Con v" n I< n \ I y Weil, 11.B. 84" '539. b I d t La " k f! II 11 d Id ll t e !i \Viii be pd. See Geori;:e. ()42.4613 1 · · '"' · 1 e 12 81 k t •· 1 REALTORS vvv " -.;i Y 8 u en· rge u·uc · t•e .. •··f(•l"''I 11rchllects and Huntington Be•ch t::'.~I'nac~~~r1•:~~';,1.1. ;.~,~ • \Va lk °:"o ~l~'k~ac ' • llill't_hk>ned. Cpts, dl'l)lil, peat FOUND sn1all male black Reas, Barry. 539-9438 or h11~~ at 'icust 3 year1 ret't'nt ' $15S-$16S UACllEl.OH. & 1 BR. P\.'t itrir. laund 1'1'11, adults. 8-12· 784R. I BDfilf, t block fro1n oc~a.n. Redrcorated, pool. Sl30. 961>-25118 Lagun1 Beach Rcnhor 5.16·8.S."6 A Re nt als to Shore 430 & air. 43c. isq. ft . 4301 Birch poodle, long t11\I vk·lnlty 673-0647. ('xperience In all phnsf!s or $170. .Furniture 11v11llnble. pts., 979--9941/6'13-t3'1•1. Owner. Ne.,..•poi1 Ileights School, SCH.AP iron, Wll lh er 11 , rcsldenllal h<>ui1Jug. I ~~i~lco:~~'.~ J~~~OO~i~:. ~~J:P1tf~in:s~r.~h c.J..e:I~ r ~ furn. Or Unfurn. 370 WANTED, Roommatl'. \\'ork· 2lfM> of 4000 s:. ,]· building Costa lt1esa. 67&-8493. Rcbig., Stove&. lit. \vtr. P1ione: $1:>-2300. rchiR. e ncl gar. 11~"'' cpl'~. Costi Men Uw: lady, 55, "''lsh:s to 11hare J\~~rcl~~sePrese~tly ~~~P"fcd FND: Hydra-Klt \v/oontact htrs. Tin, Metals 847--6684-111 addition to libl'ral 1111u1lng t"UR IU~Nl', Jfunllngton Hnrbor arM, 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;; 3 Rm. apt. -.·Ith 111mc for\~ · . lens Vic. Beach a.I N.B. SKIPLOADER & dump truck salary, \\'C oltf!r an I 8·1&-2007 aft :-, P!lt ii·krtays. rtnt. $62.50 &. ~. llght Jc gas by ~lar Vac · Eleccroni~. by thr jelly. 536-&189. \\"Ork. Concrete. asphall, out1Utndlng progra1n . ot l\tESA VERDE AREA LA MANClfi\ l\PTS. I p<'r nlonth. Nol deluxe, but IS29 Ne\\·port Blvd., 01. L 555 sawing, bt't'aking. 846-7UO. bcnt!fils and an opportumty Spacious J..bcilroon1, 2 bath IX>G llU1' NEW Lu.>cury Apts, closr 10 i;lr11n, comfortable and reu&-~.~~.Deno Va C ch er• Olt •·!OVING'. Loc•I lu•tt. or to &ro"'' w!U1 e leader In apartment. Priv;itc fllllio. S('J:ll'-2 Br. CID clOSt.'<.I gar. t<hop'g & beich. Gas & \Vtr onnble. 2079 Thurln Ave., '1'f\.-.uou • I nsr G·-nn Shcplt•~ . .ll • Its llrld d r · 1 ~d. Adults onlr or fan1ily C.l\l. A\•all Jan Isl . A1TRACTIVE 5000 sq ft Sliver -.·/black muu.lc & MS-1862 557 2736 garagl'. 1IL'>hv.•asher, nc\\' Pool & rec rn1 Slt).'l/r 10. I ~ '• "' · ........ gen. hauling. 32 Ft. furn. · rapes, ~place. Ne 8 r ~A2.•4~:.. $199. 842-0389 or w/tcen. Blt·lnS IIK'I dsh\\hr. J\!ALE ,\;u share oceKnlront building, in busy Costa saddle. 4 yr old female, van. -Pleas<' apply immt'dlately by $13-$75 "'~k. $15(}-$275 mo. M.·hoolJ!. phrk. Son1e kidis -'=~=""~"'=~~~=--$hag Crpts Snui.11 pel ok I lu•n , 1, .. ,1 <BR 00...... l\tesa, at only 22c per sq 60 lhs, needs medication. MOVING, Hauling, Cle"n· ~£>ndlng your r e• um I!, Hot'I room' $36 "·eek •125 ok. can 54G-2Z79 f1f1cr 5N :--:~·v 2 ~-1 G BB • " • """ I 1 -"-59 ~--• k 0 REE es1 1 '-r•-.. c.• BR & 3 BR Apts. .-uu ·, as Q. . .,,., stable niale ~. t, :10.>"t•..:i • \Vearlng black (lea collar up. \.WUU .,'Or · • · {ho.nd1vr tten ia un;J, to; nll'.>nth. lleated pool LagUna pni. Please ~llUTY & Call. $200 ro $240. Adult & f'11n1 1, 2 &. 3 BR Studio. , ......... u bea"h, <"' -·'t PRl'IE -tail 1-at~,, ne•I & choke chaln w / l, A -"'~"""'IS81"'-'------ri.totor Inn, WQ N. Coa!t \\'I' \\'11111 just th~ right · p · I Pr .......,..,,_ ~ ~'.> w " '"' ..,... ov "' b 5 k I il I section, Pl'L'i. at10. enced I\'. Patios :'! I to Radio Sha.ck. downtown Cou111,y Uce11sr. Vic Npt Hou•-lunlnn Bo win !!"""' 4!»-3537 I wn y or our apartn1en1 . ,--~ n• "" h •~3166 11'" to 1·~ '1 "--h be I R ~ -· • ~ tu\I, •· .,.•at• . O'fQ" • g\I '-J<J per" o. NEED n1alf! over ;1l "'Ith Costa. Mesa, e/c, approx. i>I! ' on ac i. ewa1u. MISSION VIEJO o.£".ANk 'SoFRu~N'f~~~.-2T~~e.1 s·ierra Village e WALK TO BEACH 778 Sco~:7c.t.1. bdmt set to ihw-e niy rondo 2CWXl sq.ft. ~403 l-'61;-'-'-'!6=96=.· ------HO US.ECLEAN lN G, J:: x P · """" ~u BrHnd Ou 1 & :? br. crpts, in C.1\1. Bill, 546-20;;4 or , LOST: Mele Go Id en estl1natcs given. Call liero1~ 2 BA Yearly renlnl o~ly. Sn1all Adult Con1plcx In Lush rh·p~. blln_!(, gar. 22_1 16th THE EXCITING j.10-3006 & leave phone no. Industr ial Renta l 450 Retriever puppie, 6 n10 old, 10 ant or a.Iler 6 pin. COMPANY S600 ~ 111onthly. R "· f s · Forest Selling. Locuh.:'(I .; St 5.16-0063 or ::147 3!} 7 ---·-• -A -h'OSI color, Inst k110\vn 675--3357 .. 499-28.11 or f213J 6..~-3509 l\1ln. froni &at h & ri-·Ny. . . -a PALM MESA APTS. \VANT \\"or1cln.g lady to shnrl' * COSTA MESA * \\"ea1·1ng blk nea collar. An!' 26137 Lo P H Rd EFt .. JC. ai1ts trou1 $50 \\'k 1 Br, $Ii5. 2 lh·, 1'4 Ba Sl~J5. 3BR, 2BA, duplex, dht gar, I ~!INUTES TO NP'f. BC~r. ni,v furn apt, Laguna 680 S.F. 2'.20 po"'•er $115. to Orion. lie Is ex1re1nely HOUSE OF CLEAN 01, $170 mo . Pool, mnid. 1 Gtts & \\!aier Pnid. yrtl, laund hookup, d/\v, I . Bach. 1 & 2 BR. fron1 $1571 Bench. 494-826•1 l\-1ornings. 1300 S.t... Prlvllte oUil'C, loved. REWARD. Plepse • OOES ~VERYTHING ~ Mission Viejo, Ca 92675 ph. lclry, \'illaie Inn 114 E. 2Ulh St., C.~t. nlile froni beach, no pets, Adults, No Pets. plenty of parking. brini:: ho111e to 31921 Virginia 494-9-136 548-{)137 or 646-400~ 842-2178 1561 Mesa Dr. . j \VlLL share n1y Jgc llome Larger units available. \Vay, So. I:.aguna. Honlfll!, Offices 6'12·~-<'1 I" al O Ii • , ·~u· 11po11un y Dedicated Cleaning En1ployer SO. Laguna. furn Bl\CH APT. Ocean View, near beach. No pets. 1st & lnsl mo. Sat & Sun. 4!)9.1656 LARGE 2 BR. frplc, patio, oc.·eanfront. $300 incl. util. 494-7873 STUDlO full kitchen, close in yrly, util Incl $150 oo peots. ,\dults 494-7413. BEACON RENTALS Laguna Bea<'h 494-9491 Newport Be1ch BACl!ELOR Apr. yeru·ly. Al Beach.Sl20/J\10 . + S35/n10 extra for thC' 3 summer nto's. Also I BR. until June 15th at beach. $135/nio. No pets. 6ia-2833 or 675-5800 Bkr. $35 per 1,11k & up. 1 BR, 2 -Br & bach'1,.·Color TV; , maid scrv, pool. ntE MESA, 415 N. Ne\vport Blvd., NB. 64&-9681 . 2BR. tront dupl.x, IW'n/unfurn I blk-oc-ean: $21.0 avail now 128 46 St. SHAG, 644-4340. OCEAN front, luxurious 2, 3 & 4 BR, 2 ba, api:s , gar, lnClry. 646--3114 CUSTOM Bu .IL T. H 1 g h Clean, qulel 1 & 2 Br, nearly (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) l\'irh female from 2;> to 40. Ready for occupancy. GREY Persian 14 lbs color quality apartment with 3 new bldg. \Vlr/gas pd, child 546-9860 Ne"'port area 6 ti 0 -016 6 : C. ROBERT NATI'RESS crean1 a t skin 1 J pp e d *WE DO EVBRY'I111Nli *I':=========! Refs. Free Clit. &IQ.2839 I• bedrooms, 2 baths, plush ok, no pets. $145 & $160. * CASA VICTORIA * 61a-4630 REALTOR • w/grey :shades, full tall, carpets, builtins, covered 842-1652 1, 2 &.. 3 BR. furn & uni \VANTED-l\1ATURE niale to Costa l\'Iesa 979-6571 dark top. cream underneath patio. \Valk to J!arbor SUPER Sharp! 3 Br 2 sly Carpets. drapes. DJ\y,( TY shr 4 Br hse &. uUI. Close NE\V Bldg. M-1,23 Units. also tummy. Lost Sat. Shopping Center. Available Twnhse, all appli's, pool ,t, ant. Pool, etc. 525 V~cloria to beach, HB. Slro. 962-8668 1250 11q. ft. $189.50/ 1no. morn. 64&-7903 now at $?X} per month. Call clubhse. No dogs, no "''ater St, at Harbor Cl\f. 642-8970 1'"EM w.111 share w/same. 2 Units 1500 sq. ft. $230/mo. LOST Lz-g Gerrnan Shephed, Agent, 5-16-4141. beds. $250. 846-3410 E>...'TRA Large 1 or 2 Br. I across from !he bch. $108 l Unit 4000 sq. ft . $650/mo male, dark w.•/oral\lil;e face, CLOSE to shopping. Nice, Y' WALK TO BEACH heated pool. Fro1n $145. l.111· n10 +~ii util. ~2559 Front Orfices. cl'pts. ii;g hair missing on rear, Vf'ry Income T•x Income Tix Ser vice per110na1 or business 23 Years Harbor Arca (7141 675-6676 For Appointment clean 1 & 2 BR apls. No 2 & 3 BR. Crpts Drps, Bltns, ture adults. No pets. 1887 1 rear . doors. A.nahe1n1 & iohy, I mh;s hi1n very n1uch. pets. Bltns, dshwhrs, crpt!'I, garage. 31)1 Hith St. 536-ZIG5 ?11onrovia. 64a..-09'.!6. Gar1ges for H:ent 435 Terminal. \Vay Sts, C~1. Needs tuedication. l.o!ll nr 01rcc•::•:.;ln;cg,_ _____ _ drps, "·aishlng facil., closed or 847-3957. LU~URY Lrg 2 BR, adults, I MINI WAREHOUSES Day!!. &16-5033. l'\·es 616-0681 l::astbluff, c"ll Lisa 673-2tiR! I * • • PllOt"t.:SSIONAL ga:61_eLl, UTJL. PAID * Hunt1nglo1\ H•rbour bltms, pool, nr rhopplng I STORAGE . NOW LEASING LOST Black/Gray Tii:er cat, lllONING * • * (5) ASSEMBLERS E xperienced VOLT lnst•nt Personnel T('mporary Sr>rvl<.'C 38-UI Cllmp11s Dr .. Suite 106 Nt>\1·po11 Brai·h !tt64741 Equal Oppor. En1p!Qyer center & bus, ]941 Pon1ona. 1 N ,1 . lrg nlll'red male, 2 i; yr I 64:>S875 $160 -l BR. $18.'l -2 BR. FOR 1 b I . o 1• ovt•-1n or !1.1ovr-0ut Huntington Be•ch old , \'le: 19th .~ Tuslirl 1 Call &l2-8378 rent or eas(', ra!1<1 Fountain Valley chargt'S. }'ront S7.:,0 IX'I' NEW M·1 Cl\'!, 1/8/71, plcuSf' call Masonr y ASSISTA.r-.tT t.'111 .. n.-rs: to nt"IV 2 BR TO\\Tlhouse, S\\'lm -. 111011th. "" .. "3277 ----'-------1 ·-· TIRED or small 2 br apts? pool & . rec. Clos~ to I FROl\Y $1i0. You can ll~·e Hamiltori & N"ivhinrl St. tlB !).IQ Sq. Ft. & UP "'"" 1 SHICK block & stone ii-ork. train . .11:ruveyard shift. 6 BRANO NE\\' 2 Br, 2 Ba, ocean, pa\IO &. very private. "'·here :ou play: 3 pools, Ja-ALLSPACE ' lfantilto"I & Ne1vland St. Bl.ACK & \Vhite ternnlc ~ualitv \iorknuuishlp. nit~ \\·k. Co. paid benefit.~. 1150 sq. ft, adult apts Nr call collect, 213-3~27 aft cuzzi, billiard roms. parly 9,.1970 I ff0..1970 Tabby cat. he1 wht. flea Stey,•ai't ·!\Tasonry, 640-007 Jark In The. Box, 120j 20th & Npt. $235-$250. For 6 pm roonts, volley & basketball IN" oollar. Vic Glcni\fur tract • Buker SL. C.l.1. resel'vations, 675-6900, agl. t.'0Ul1s, barbeques. babbling 1\1.-1 \\'AR EHOUSE Space, at Bl'ookhw'St & Adants, Moving APT ?\!GRS. -Old<.'r cpl. No MARTINIQUE APTS. Irvine brooks. SUNDANCE, best Office Rental 440 300 sq ft, Costa Mesa close l!B. 962-3848 pets. 30 Units, HB. 2 Br ed t & 2 bedroo HAULING $10 & up. l\tovlng 2 & 3 BR. Priv. patioi;. Pool. manag m • • in. XJnt for storeage or sml LOST 2 Irish ~tteni, 1 male, Yard & garage clewi-Up. apt + 1nlary. 846-3927. Nr. shopg. Adults only. 2 BR. Condo. \Valnut Square. apts in Orange County. ~V~C~IBVE AO!r1' ~ICE S __:~hop, call 548-5392 1 female. 11 mos. Bnck Bav * 642-4032 * AVON 1TI7.sruita A:il A e· CM $225/mo. ··· .10200 ... \Varner .In .Fountain ·· •. .1 ... _J,..E: .-p:>.t lm'.a, RENT-f\.1·1~-600 ·sq;""1t 2944 -arett. -May bf!· :separated·: •• · · · · · · ·· Mgr. 113 a " "646.5542 --~Ca_l_l ~64~2~·~265~·1___ Valley is your kind of place, 1250 sq ft, Suite tor lee~e. Rondolph No 10 ·CM Re\\'ard. Please c 8 11 P a1nt1ng & CHRISTMAS MAY ..,... (714) 962-1202' Estab bldg alr-cond cpt d · · • · · I p h · BE OVER NEW 2BR, util pd. children Laguna Beach drpd.. pan~led Re~ptio~ .EOO '1\fO. 675-5116. 673·70.19. G42-'8.'.l71 ae!'r •n91n9 ... 8 t E Stlll welcome, no pets, Crpts, NE\V deluxe to\\'nhouse, Huntington Beach ar~a in ofcs. attractively l\1·1 SJ.(OP 1600 SQ. FT. LOST 1 blk poodle & _ l 11·h!te j PROF. \\'allcovering stale Ne:C.~ A~:~v;~~ucts drps. patio. manager 1960 2BR d ba 1 . priced. ALSO l or t' l930 PLACENTIA AVE. Cl\! pciodle ~th sm.l min. Lost lie. No. 279514. insur., all ' \Val!acc, Apt 6, &1 2_7364 + en, \\'('t r, ocean DELUXE adult po o s 1 de I \\'/l'<-'l'pl, phone iini;\\'ci·ing e 548-l5:f2 • i·ic Aliso Villas. i\l.\1. ,,~, of pai-·-71 ,1 ·. y._,,_ AVON ffii.lly care pro. view, "·lk 10 beach. 1 y1· garden bungalow, nr ocean, 586-1339 64Q.--08lT R ,.. "'"' ducht & 1~mell<:11 M""ll vear EASTSIDE;, 2 BR. 11h Ba. leaSf', S<'IOO per mo + frpl, Jrg patio. 6 pools. scrvil'e. Incl in rent. Seely 4001-BIRC-H NB · ' or ey,·ard S.12-4386. around (r ~"'' 11' ~ -Cfttt eefrig, bit-ins, ept<, dr~. I I N d I !BR . 01" N):n & l'Opy se1vice ava.ll ~1uv I wsr 1\link color 1nall' ---. • r~ .. -c ea.11 ng, ew e uxe ioauna, tennis . .,...,.....,""". be J'C'nlcd nio. 10 ni~. "cail 3600 sq. ft. 541-5032 Burmei,:e eat 1.0 l-•l••e p,\JNTING in I er i or & 1.ln\{' to tw~;ome a Repn.'- fresh palnt. pool. No pets. Townhouse, ocean vle11o·, Also l Br. Fron1 $135. 540-2564 850 sq ft Garagr zoned T Ge • '. l' x t c r i or 2 7 y car :s i;cntolh£>. ~ou r-11.n 1uaki> $170. 646--0-174 \\•\k to beach, $300 mo + L N' I . ' C"rrnre, nerous rc11a.rd C'X""rien ..... , free esl;ntot•s. n1"n1'>' "I ~.-o''"" pa-' 1 B•-lum-slite o c ea n aguna ague -Cornmcrc1al. SlOO. n1 o s~ "04' "I · 123 0 ,r_ ... -".. ..... ' " .. J VU• ·" ' • SPACIOUS OC\\' 2 Br, 2 Ba, •·leaning on lease. 536-81~ _ NEWPORT CENTER ,,,.11 '"'-!~". 64,21~,_ ,,,. .. ..,or'" -J · .,..... ......., n1l•ct rk'\\' J)t!()(lie .ln }11ur vle\v·pool·single adult $155. . ......, .. """" """ ,,. "'' Li DIE d yrly. 646-:2696 bltns, drps, carpeUn.ic, pool. Rustic Charmer * BRAND NEW * NE\VPORT CENTER . . \ S gol half gla!ls~s. *W II H * 1l11nu1u11!1y. too. 1-or 11101'.:' frplc, gar. Adutls, oo pets. 1-Bdnn. unit close to bPnch 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA. Fronl 2 ~OOl\1 office "·ith fentRslic ~k~ 30l0 Ft. \\ood \\'Orking Vl.akg.uln500a .• ~.~~14s7.0eoo_ st H"'")" C. R:bk~per ·~449 . dctnils, Call: 540-7041. CLEAN 1 BR. best Bay, 376 \\.'. Bay_ St.. CM. & shoppl"• in South La"una 1195 Unfurn. Furnished units view of Ne\\'j)Oi'I. Harbor & Q'I n \BYSITI'ER fo1· young Beach Joe . Adlts. no pets, ~ Catalina. 565 ""· ft. 1-1"" Call sst-8003 or 962-8986 eves LOST·. ..,,1, ... , ~-Id Bulot·a PROF painter-, honest •·ork, ' , 1170/~••. s~ ~72 2 Br, 1 ba. & 3 br, 111· bo., Sto\·e ,t..a. !'efrig. Incl. St7j Avail. -.. <.J ..... ~· uv 1 I 11tudent Jr. \\orklng mom ~.Lo.J ,.,.....,., 7lf pe1· mo. irn.·ludes utilities, reas. nt ex1, tn-e rstlmntc. • =""-'='--'==.=-:---==I bltn range, dl'JIS, crpt. pool. n10., all .ulil . !ncluded. Cati I' CROWN VALLEY Apts. w11tch. Vic. Ne-wport Bch. _Refs. ~2759. 2-39!3. 11,'nm"' edo,u~ • .?r~.,}~ preferred Bachelor ept utll furn n25 clubnn, carport. 2'212 Col· 01\·ner fo1· app 1. 4!l9-3930. San Diego Frwy or Coast janitor service, carpeting Dally Pilot. Call 673-526.1. _ .,..M-"t.lO"I mo. avail lmmed, lege Ave . .,.,,,,,,-Yo_ H H"llh 1 ...,.,..,, & lot!I of free parking. II ~~1 Bl Blk INT/E AINTING -"'"'u·•;iv.:u; 1 BR Duplex nl n1 o 'It wy to 1 us . ""'.:i>t ESTATE RE;\LTY 6'1(}.ll20 ~ g /l\'hl long hair fi."li:cd -BABYSITTER for I yr old 8J3..082l DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA. New oceanfront. Vicloria Bch. Hillhurst. La~. ,Niguel . nialc cat. Pink collar. 16th Free Jini 675-~l)9 girl. ~1eim del J\1ar area, STJ-:PS 10 OCh. 1 BR, Now crpt'g, drp:s. Laundry htcil. $240 yrly. !714) 831~730 NE\V Oflice space near Pl, Cl\1 642-4797. Painter,_ highly qu11.lllif!d, Your home. 557-3160. until Juoe 30th. 2 12~ 1 ed * •01 7·32 * Orange County Air Port Ill · t Id l"k 1.,.,..,.. ... ,..,..,..,...,.iiil Call 673-nlHO car gar. JU. mm , ~~-=,'""-'--'-• Newport Beach y,·ith vie\Y, carpets, drapes, Auto Tr 1nsport1tlon 525 LOST Small bla<'k cat, Vic e c1cn ~·ou I e your1• occupancy. &16-4757 2 & 3 BJt ocean vu. new nlr, 460 sq ft Ill 11c per Santa Ana .~ ~tonic Vl!1ta, buslne~s. kcas. 642-.1158 BANK ... d" I San Clemente 1·-~B~R-_...cC~lo-,.--,-.-,-1--p-·g-. \1·alk to beach 1240 & 1300 1 BR's. From' $185 -$225 CAR POOL SERVICE ca.ll &l()...1329 aft 6 & ""kl'nds Pa""'rhsnging & painting. Progrc1sh·e, .c.span ing n· iv sq fl. Includes 1 private ,~ 1 d ba k •• S122.::.0/1\10. Also I..al'Ji(e 2 494-3383 & 4N-23:l9 Bac,helar Furn $205 office, ample room for 3 I For Information LO~ J\>fan·11 glasses in Vil' I 21 yrs Harbo; at1."~, ~-;_r~ < cpen eni n ne.:us San C~~t;e~~~i~ Hotel BR SI40/MO. No pets. Mesa Verde I Ocean Vie\v. Year ly tease. desks in outer otlice. 1st I Call 833-2195 llarthstone, CdM. !um. No. JS3:1Sl. 642·2:.G6 NCR Proof Qw"et _ .,.~_,,..,., 67:;..2833 or 675-asoD Bkr. tleated Pool. Adult!!. Onl.v. ntonths renl fl•ce. 5.Xi-S:MO Afler 6 PM 9m-9039 Plaster, Petch, Repelr Oper•tor ~-· 2 .BORM, 1•V:2 BA HOME AT~lOSPHERE·Dlx 2 LAS BRISAS APTS. & 54:i-59:>8 Ex~rtcncerl. F.xC"ellenl sal-1'Urn-utll -y,.·alklng distance to everything ADULTS. $160. & 3 br. $170 up. Rental 5515 River Ave., NB * PATCH PLASTEHJNG * RI)' &: frln,ae ~n~fitJ. SAN CLEMENTE !il'1 Joann 548•9573 Ofc, 3095 Mal'e Ave . Call 642-2566 All type!li. Free cstin1ates CENTINELA BANK HOTEL 546-1034 1-3-8-R-.-',=bo-'."r:.::d::oo::.r_•_lrn_m Call 540-682:1 646-7121 ?\Ir. llollowRy QUIE.I FOUR-PLl!:X M ission Vie1'0 "Sh S275 l l'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiii ~ __ 1_u_m_n_1_nJ! ______ I An Equal Opportunity • 114 DEL MAR. s.r. • 3 Bl' 3 BA ·~o ocean. arp. · mo. E I l =-"===~"'7=,,-'0--::;;;-1 " · ~ yearly. 673-2825 m· Tis--0709. mp oyer BACHELOR apt SI.JO. + util . No pets 2868 La Salle No. 1 DARLING & clean, condo PLU~IBING REP.UR l '"~"'l'~~~~~~~ or $125. util included. Avail . 1 ~-"""--352-4-or_~___ living, 2BH., frplc, crpts &: ~S-"u"ns=e'-'t_B"-•;..•oc<;;.hc....___ No job loo small ' BEAUTIFUL NEW lmmed & Feb. 5th. 492-0318 l & 2 BR. $135-$155. Stove, drps, laund fRc in the apt, LICENSED SPUtlTUALIST BABYSIITING In my home ~-_:*_:*:...:c64.::2-3:..::.:1::28:...::*..:*c__ orTl4-U77 ref, crpl/drps, htd pool. Rec. fac. enclsd gar, $220 LARGE 2 BR. 2 BA, for Sp .. al d" Costa Ale:sa Arf!a . Pl COMPANY °"'-!-'~U-."if;:.-.----;3"'65 Adults, no pets. &l5-8965. mo 830-9569 2 people. ni<l mo. "'==h====== ir1tu rea l1l&;i 10 a.m. References. Phone 00--0384 . _;;:u:;m,;:b:;l:;ngL-----1 Apt. n urn. , beach. Nort Costa Mesa -10 pm. Advice on all -SUPER \\'ORKlNG CONDS 1:.C'--'--------2 -3 BR. ba, ci"pt/drps Newport Beach •213:592-1942* mailers 312 N. El Camino Carpenter L.R. OTTS PLU?i.fBING For Electronic ASSf!mblers Balboli Pen1nsu11 pools, playground. $150 up. I---'--------Small profe55ional building Real, San Clemente, !or Ren1odel:s & Repairs. \Valer "''"1,' lillle RM 6 nlO'!I exper. Call 645-0140 PARK NEWPORT Rooms 400 w.·ilh up to S offices avail· appt call 492-9034, 492-9136 GEN~RAI;-ca r pentry & heaters, disposals, furnaces, Great pay &. benefils. Call UNFURN. lrg. 3 BR, frpl c., newly redet.'Oratcd, 1 blk. to heach. $275 /nto. Yearly. \Vk· davs Ill 5, 835-1011 ~1r. S";ing: e\'eS &. \\'knds, 842- 2806. OCEANFRONT lUDEA\\'AY Single cozy sludlo. 90 degree ocean view. l adult yrly. ~72 or 987-.1988 2 BR, bltins, $250. n10. patio. Partially furn 2 Br. 2 ba . 673-9591 2 BR. l BA, stovr, _ refrig, mature adults. 1st. last, de- posit. $160., no pet~. 496-3764 \VALK to beach. n<.'w 3 BR , 2 ba, sundeck, di"·· gar, $270 6'5-3760 or 493-T"a87. Corona del M•r APARTMENTS . able. Excellent for medil'al, repair 1' rt'c " I I d h h "" '26.1 '1/C & ~1tl N > ·~·~ 2 BR. Adults no pets. BA1' ROOMS $20 \\'k up ~v/k1t, dental, accounling, etc. Bes! \VRITER doing research on · ~.· re reas s v.·as rs. ~ •• ..,.., e, ow . ......,..,..... MEADOWS API'S, 31'17 \\.'. Bachelor I or 2 Bedrooms S30 \\'k up apts. Children ! value! Call M.>8424 SouthCo medical film, would like to ready Frank, 615--5436 after B/A. Complete Plumbing NEVER A FEE AT TE~IPO 2i'n~tfi;:r~ ~l'p. No 1 ~-r. SI~~ Toion:nu9~6 Dail_y 64~p3196'7~. {~n. tlJ~~"~~I n:a;r;~~ r_n•·E RENT * ~:~rvi~~ -.·~:ie~io~1Ml ~~1 A 6 t P~rpentry s1nall job ::~~i:l~c·R=~ Tem!:r~~O Help pets. Children ok. 830 Spa Pool~ . Tennis .,... ""' hon10sexual!I \\'ho hHve bl'cn specinlist phone Gol'don Center St. Ci.I. 646-78'29. /\cross from Fashion Island -. DellL'<e' offices a/port, full in a hospital. Call 644-2221. 530-345-1 COLOR TV repair. E."li:pert, t J ho Sa J RC?Or-.I for renl with use or sc1vicc, flniple parking. lc·=:.::.::::.:.______ -•.••n•blo servi·ce. F•ee 2 BR part! I N' "Id a am rce on n oaquin kitchen ?llen. or women. Lo, .. ,,1 rate•.. o1~0, 1 •m PROBLEJ\1 Pre gn an c y. •r-t Service ..... '"' • Yum. och1 l'Cll HillsRoad. Ph 0 ,0 ,959 B • -~ r u • C I 'd r• f'.:!ltimates . BERT or pets. $155/nto. one .,...,...,. . et \Veen lo 1000 F'T. Also desk space on 1 en I, sympathetic , BUSBOYS EVENINGS Call 642-{)84.~ (714) 644.1900 12 & 13. Costa Mesa. rrom $60-ino. 833-3223 9 10 pregnancy c 0 un 5 e 1 in g, JOHNS Carpet & Upholstery GALLEMORE TV 968-2'783 Deluxe 2 Br. t·rpfs, drps. -~S~P~E~CTAClJLA~ ROOM, oceanfront bldg, priv noon. APCAAhortRioEn & adoptlons,.~,';,36 ~tardsw~'1s"1mDep~·.,,:,So.i1 Tile l'"i Apply In Pcr1"'1 '2' bl · OCEAN & HARBOR ba & entrance. Central La-· .. -. · &·~ • "'"ore noon 01· a pnt tins. Eas1stde. No pets APPROX. 500 s.L u1>stairs. Rll color brighteners & JO CERAMIC TILE NE\V & $165. Call 644-1103 I VIEW guna. Sl25. 497·1232. Cheerful. carpeted, heat & LIFE O~ DEATH minute blench for white remodel. Free est. Sni jobs 3 !l1'1S, $95 mo. Adult., over 3 Bdrn1., 3 ba .• nC\\' condo _ ROOM to rent $80 n10, close elec. incl. Plenty parking Let our. babies live. For carpets. Save your money v•elcome. 536-2426. ~-no pets. Inq. at 240 never lived in ~ Di!lposal, to college A shopping. space. NC'xt to Secu1·ity alternatives to ABO.RTI_ON by saving me extra trips. -"'=s;;.::,'-1 ===--- Sierks St. conipaclor, rlisll\\"asher, f·. 540-8083 Pacltlc Bank. l88 E. 17th ~I LIFE LINE 55I--5522, \Vill clean llvlng ml., dining Top OI 4647 MacArthur, N.8 . 3BR, ZBA, deluxe, 407 C pl~ .. 2 patios. 2 car gar. AI:BOAlsr:-st7:50-per-wk St., -Coiota J\.1e11i1.. 642-4210 4 hrs. ...., rm., & hall $1 5. Anv l'1n. •QUALITY* Equ11I Oppor, Employe.r m, r l1emillon, $275, 8J3.-8160 for $5.?0 Mo .. eduHs rrclel'fl'_rf; up \\'inter. Quiet, mature $175. mo. BEsr MASSAGE IN N.B. $7.50, oouch $10. Chair $.i I * Jl.IULC..'H & TOP SOIL * appoinlnlent children ac.'Cepteri. G75-!i050. man. 67:).3613. DESK space a.vw.J&ble $50 ::400 Irvine Ave .. Sulfe 103B 15 )TS. exp. ls what counts 586-6930 BUSBOY 2 BR I BA A N '!AKE THIS YOUR HO'lE. I mo. Will provide furni ture lat Bristol) Open 8 AM. not method. I do Y.'01'1< .<olory •-·dl"g 10 •xpe•, NE\V 2 story, 2 BR. Crpts, • pt. e""' crpts. " •• A 557 ~~ 11 Good I "l "IOI ""' ' drps, bltns. Adul!s. $225. 381 hlln oppli's, drps thru-out. LRG ROOn-1. PRIVLG'S. at $51 mo. Aosy.·ering service nn. -v.>=· mysc . re . ..., ...,, . 111 JI Prefer no 1tudt'nt1. Expe1·. All Ulll Pd " t 119· COSTA '!ESA. Call ~-'• "m aval able. 17875 Beach Blvd. BUSINESSMAN, 39 \\'ants lo STE A ~'f C L E A N ! _... pre!'tl, hut 1\•ill trnln. Apply Vicroria . no pe :s. . :i :::==="===c.::~:.:~'-"C fluntlngton Be h '"" ,,~ llm trl SANITIZE I d [11....,1Mt1l per mo. 160j Haven Pl, -= ac · .... .....-..u, n1eet s & m com-! A I irt out, bet"'" 2:30 & •1:30pm, 11\f&IAC 1 br. ne1v stove. Newport Hl'igbts. 646-2723 Guest Hamt 415 BAYFRONT OFFICES palible gal 19--35. Cail Aladdin House of Service, Hamburger H1unlcl. 154..'l r cf 1· i g. shag, Quie-t Prestige area. 140• 550, 3.1() 548-1479. 557-2678 Adani.~. CAI, Ask for l\lr. COCO'S ' rl('1ghborhood. $150. 542-6609. Jut?i~· ~ Ba.a1$<1!~40-~10 ,t. NS~~\.' c~~:~s.in l~ing ~o~ sq rt, 3700 Newport .Blvd., EXECUTIVE, 39 to n1eet DIBERNARDO & Sons .l Jab W•nted, M.lle 700 Hagrn. in Corona de\ 1\Inr. clnl'c 10 ILRG 2 BP. apt. ne\1·ly Oceanlront I/l9-l/20 or ph . appreciate, 64z_.9278 N.B. 6"5-1220 slim & Uin1 compatlhle carpet 11a1e.1J -installation ) •1., 0 ~ d nd bl BUSRO~"""Y°'S--,\~l'"'A"'N~'T=E~D~, !lhopping & bC'h_. 3 Br, 2 ba, deeorated. nr ~hop p; n g • I I" "' p O Bo• 1093 and repair 963-2639 " •'1.1...oL., ""• neat, cpe a c, "· U 30a '1 Sa brand ne\\·, $350. rno. Cl'nlt'r. no !"-'Is, M0-8.S23. l.iefore IOam; &12-87l"J. Vacation Rentals 425 PRIM.E office space, avail gn , ;:r--v;,. • • ·'· ' • hard 1~-orkin , wttnls tralooc "!1111-: m " 0 n • I · \YESTCLIFT 2 BR, l 1,11. ba. f ~~iiiiii;;iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~ at Fashion Island, Newporl Santa Ana. Calif. Cement, Concrete ~ltion ,v/g~, 11tat·t. salru)'. •~-..:p. req. S1.7:i/hr Call RENTAL HARBOR 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns, I0\\1lhouse. Adulls only. no Beach. !161 $QF, to 2,350 EUROPEAN Health Sp a Rehl. avail. 97!)..(1967 Jacklti \Ve11tbrook 494-6S74 pa1io, garage. AduHs. SlSO. 1 l728 Bcdf rd L $250/ LIVE · th 11 D SQF. Furn or wlfurn. Reply membership ror sale-very CEMENT & Block Work. Mon lhru f'r1 only Qtll S.t"J-8731 ra.6 pm only• ';io~·5'lS·TS.'l3 ° n. Point in Ha~~r n:~v ,a~~ PO Box 1264, c A1. 92626. reasonable. 64:'>-7672 Walls. patios, sidewalks, Job Wint.cl, P.•m•I• 702:liiili_ii0..,..,Miilliim! Dana Po;n1 NEAR beoch. 3 BR, 1 ba. beautiful MARINA INN 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB ALCOHOLICS Ano".Ymo"-' -'1'· By hr. or job. 646-<9Is. NEED help "' ttome! We CLERKS NEEDED New carpel. Lg. bdrms. Motel, 34902 Del Obispo St. 2300, 1710, 1200, 7:l0 sq. ft. Phone 542-7217 or write CEMENT: Patio, drives, have aides, nurse 11, NOW 3 JJR. 21:.i BA. split IE'vel Sundcck. \'early, $300 mo. f4~2.153J, Kitchen, E r-55c per 11q ft. J\inple prk'g. P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. walks-Repairs, saw & h 0 u 8 c.kprs, l'Ompa.nlons. • vie"·· cpl, frplc, gar, lndry. 6r.,_2216 licicncics & Apartments. Utll. Bauntga.rdner, 511_5032. * PALM & CARD READER _!!move. Free est. 544-8998'.... H 0 me make r s Upjohn $295. n10. 496-1920 Healed pool, direct dial eed tt l083! Be h PATIOS WALh'.S DRIVES 547~1. Must have the following East Bluff BAvfront spac. 3 Br, lse. phones, television, sauna OFF(CE w/ storage, panl'd ad w/ uc on Be • • • • klll good fl k $350 inc utU . z blk from bath, 1 8 u n d r Y facilities. walls, 11hag crpt, air oond, ,!!~l_anton. 527~. CONCRETE PUM!,'ING CfilJ.EGE grad needs full ~ !lb, 1 • gullrel ~lit· 6= '397 I / · k 11 h 1"2 I b 35 Call Don 64i-8514 or pa-time empl.'tll April. ''OCa 11 ery "' .l!ll>C na 111 e _ e DELUXE e ~an.~-. • 1necting room, close to San re r litn , sta s wr. w Soci1I Cu s 5 Muitil\~ ..... al 5'lG--02S9 typing . ...v 3 Blt 2 BA apl ror lea.~e . * 1BR. up~tau·s Rpt. fl30 C1en1cnte & Laguna Beach. _!'1e~r1 Blvd, C~I. 548-97~ ·C __ •;,.n;,.l r_•;.:c.;.to;;.rc..______ ·~· '11 b I lnclll spat•. masler suitt'. din ~~~s _S20 ut1l, yearly lease, Co1nt' play in our I Sl-l'ARE exec ocean view IN Orange Co. for an iNltan1 l':xp. Cleaning Lady, Top Apply Jn The ores rm .~ dbl gara£f'. Auto door 6•.'.::6524. 30.i 1,2 33rd S1 i;portlishing, shopping & !lulte 8c M!C In Union !)(ink date. Cell CER\YJCK &: SON References. Bondable. Call Per10nnel Department Of)!'ner avail. 1-'ool & RecN'i'l· I \rOP.hlNG Studio for artl11I/ restaurants. $50 "'eek &: Up. bldg Nc"'·porl Cl' n t c r . 836-6679 Hrs 12·7 Mon-&tt Bldg Conlr. l\fldl! & Remod otter 5:30, 979--9632. ri.tonday -Fri. 9 am-12 Noon TOWNHOUSE lion nn:11. 1 1·rafl11n111 n, skylight, lrg yd. :~~f 0~~i8~.ce~·s =l.ve 644-~\40 [g] ~~:e Lie. Bl-ll:i.2110 Help W1nt.d, -MT P 10 PACIFIC MUTUAL 2 Br, fircplaci\ pool. private _ •. 297 ~ , $8:1/1110. 6·1~>-<HIR l!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I OF'C Suite, 100) ft. SUltable I patios, continental break· 86:i An11gos \\11y. NB 1-RDRl\I nonthou'j .... oi::. for doctor. H u n t Ing 1 0 n Loet Ind ftund JACK IJ'aulane, r l' pa Ir, ACCOUNTANT 700 Newport Centtr Or. S lou d i\lana .. crl 1 ··-~-... DELUXE 4 BR Condo. Lake c-~ "' oA" l3"" ren1od, add. Lie. B-1 269072 ~.,•-·ctl-•i•bu-cmet•t Newport Beath ts.sf. pac !I groun .,. near . ' .. 1Y mo Isl io last tu-ue • O"V-'"'1· My Way Co. 64~103. l.N u.u "" " ~0 ~pp!:--.l -1 tine brach. Fur· \\·ILLIA~1 \VALTEP .. S m . ' r2l3)6'.97-1496 Te.hoc. Close to SIOrt & 700 SQ ft oft\Ct'. Oct!an view. d0pt. AA degree Or equiv. nl5ht't! or untumlshei1, from Huntington Beach M bl OW 6s!! ~f2t. Da.Y or \Yeek. 1111 s. El Camino Real, Faund (frH Mlsl 550 Electrlul In exper. Xln't Miary, COLLEGE STUDENTS •llel'I:-Corona del Mar, 2 BEDROO • tns. , ·~ "'A· a nt ,~1 ~, ;;:.c;;;;.;.;.:.;;;:,;______ benclill &: advancement To call on estab • .Fuller ....,,, C'ar Hoag }f()ll;p Adults .-.ii eme e, """"""' ...,..., e ELECTRICIAN e ni I 1:EOE Ca.II A $3 50 6#-261L NE\V Apts. \Valk 10 Bch. 5 1tSJ loS220permo '642-4.1B1' LAKE ARROWHEAD, Buslnell Re ntal 445 FOUND: Bicycle 1110, vie Uc. #l5631.0 OPIJOrt~ .. ~ 833-8383 cust~ vg " per B&ch, l·Z.3 Br. Fr. $150. · wk/wlmds, G BR, nr Lalre, ;;;.;:.:;;c;,;;;;;._;.;,;;;,:;.;;;.__...;.;: 1-ltmt Bch -Broekhurtt •• ,,..1~, • Mn. o:.oI<M • • _h~"===~· ~~-=~ 1 ~~=LY PArNTED-2 BR. Ex1ras. 53&-2:>79. eve g Newpart Heights gar. Cnty roed. 64&-8105 ot W REHO IN Hamilton. Gree" Schwinn ...,... ~ e ADMINIST Tl E COOKS-DIETARY AJDES • ·~ a.16--0269 ~ A US G, ofl~ or .,..,__. 1 BA. Crpts, drps, bllns. ;-;;-;;--;---;=--;-;--~-* PLEASANT 2 Br. pool, ;:55::."1:..;::-"·'--~---.._ commercial. New build!ng. Ra.tnhOrn Call 962-4793 EL.t;l...i.""'CAIN Uc. old JObl CLERK LVN'1-Nur1lng Aides CoroUdo Apt.s. $210. ~2288 LRG 1 BR. Upper. Crpts. d 1 t Rental• to Shire 430 16' ctlllng, downtown CM. SMALL Shaggy aray, blade new jobs Any Jobi. Any Busy SAies ore neeat per· HouM?kccpel'I, rull. p/tlma OI' <.'Vt'5 557-8968 d~. bltns, CIU'ports, nr ~~.fotm:. U ;!'4 8 ~~ 9 ~: ~~ 548-3403 (~, female .. rtd collar. place. 836--7689 ~ \V/min. ) yrs bus, ex• (642-80441 {sJ..:Jo~ -5 8 61) 2SR + dt'n, 2 BA, duplex, fN'Y &: shop'g.$140. No pcti:i. l'l•l:!·!!Oll, GIRL.. to Matt 2 BR, 2 BA "THE Factory" has a Jrg Vic: Coats Hwy • Helltrope 0_ ;o••;.:~;,;•;;n,;:l~n_,,g_____ per. Min 60 w.p.m. ApUtutle lst lfcalthcare Centers crpls, d rp s, appliances, Cnll 646-3786 or 545-0760. -apt w/ !IBinC In Laa:una. ehop avail. $185/mo. rn Cd:::;:M::.,.;6:;.'13-,..::;345.'l=·c....----I ... tor flium. Ablt' 10 11-ork'l--"':...C='='='-:...:;=::..::- .:arage. 675-6369. 2 BH, I BA, blllns, g11ragc, San Clem •nTe Call 644-2700 Cannery Village 425 30th St:. FoUNO lt1Sh Setter puppy, EUROPEAN Ce rd e n er . linder pt'C~liUl'O & like v11r· , COOK I NE\\1 large deluxe 3 Bil, $Ui Ask for Dnlc. 3 UH. ]I~ BA. W/W SHAO, '-'UICK CASH NB. 642-1960. IT'l(l,le, vlc4Jity So. Coast =ten~cl!I . !if'nd•c:plrt«. iCt)'. Cnll Clara Hnrpei·, Exptrlenced. Santa AllL Call 2 BA, frplc. Shopping wilhtn 962•4471 Pll IV YD&: PATIO, IDEAL ,.-A°R'f' Center, Laguna Bench, Plaza 54()...5837. ~ cmov ' cry s:iU-7800. M9-3061 1 hlk. $395. 673-~8 • 2 BR, 2 BA· 1149. Jno. I.OC. NEW, 4 BLKS TO THROUGH A •ml "'°P· y<ar l•as<, 1416 PAIR 0 Pr.,ctlpt;.., glasses -l"eHoriable. &42-M29 ev.i. -=;;,,;;:AS::;;,S=E-M~B~L~E~R~S~--l'coo°"''°'K-. •"•""Jt!!"r-. "pr."1'"°, -=o-ve-r°"'t8, •~ Cost• Mes• POOL, cpU!, drps, bltn~. BEAC!I. $215. 492-&.IO. DAIL y PILOT South Coa,!11_ SI*>, 494-2186 child! • 161h PlaL-e nr LA~20 Sclrvl&a. Mow & Ed~ cap 11 0 l tor' l'tlllnutar.lurtr • Full or part dml!. 960--2064 (Messit l)M..9966) Ntc1-; npt for rent 2 br, , _&~llJS.~52'1-'.....,='-----1 "!Nl'-'-'ne"'-54"18"-"8:!02=·----1 ff.J1oir. ~~J>t an needs remale electronic u-~14 Beach Blyd., Ka. ' I VERY 0~111\, 7BR. apt,., IW,W drps. blfiM. l'IO pet~, ll'?i '186 Sha llmor, 612-m'I . -• ,. • I LRG 2 Br, 1 '~ Ba 1\IUdk>, 2 BA.11 \'C nn, k11 w/panlry, WANT AD BUILDING sul!able ror FOUND ring of ke)'I. Vic. G _,_ M lnt/Lnd ~blera. No txperlent.'e Cla.salflt!d •d• 11111 bla ltema, f'ncl gar, yard, Oluple. flln aren, a:ar. 219 Sarn.a 64"5678 ml!n'1 halntyllng. Newpon I of Harbour lt.S. Ca 11 •rvmn a scp neoeuary. Full tlmti dayt. •mall lt,m1 or 'llY l\lm. $157.SO/mo. 847-4440 0.1rhAra1 Apt D 63.1-6132. ----"'"-----L.:.A::."::•o.· ..::673'tl;,::...:::246;.::...____ 646-18t2. Cl1!00UP1, Recond. 6~ Start at SL90. 549-0Z41. Jwl call 6U-5&711 .. • . '. r • , • TtmdaJ, January 15, 19'74 DAILY PJLOT "H"•,.;l:'puwo.1::n:.1oc1::.,;:M;ol.-;Fo;7;:1Q:r. n::.r.1p'.'1W~1n~.,..,,,.., .. ,.,F=-=1"1o=H""•.,.lf-W=~-n'"t0d..,.., M~1.'"""='~""Hol.,.,.p-W""1"'"'°"=:-, "'M"'1.""Fr;f;;1~o'llH;r.T.lp'.'1W~on::1'-0Cl':1,-;M'"'l."'F;r:i7~fo"7iH;u:;)::p1'W;;:1::n:.10d::r,;:Mr1.i:iiF~'7'11no;J~l::Jihi:1::nc;:n:;----'1 Mu11col ln11rumont1m 1P;.;i:;.••;.;o;;•::..i:;.r:.itt:•;.:M:__...:.;;; COOK: (() !Jury's N.Y. U.r EJ.ECTRONIC HOUSF.WIV'ES oe mature Tho RUJty Pollcan DOUBLE tloctr1e oven I~ F~~ ,., .. ~ ~':"11 ANTIQUE & Grill. Nr O.C. llrport ASSEMBLERS ,,,_,. fo• kltdl<n worlt. D 1• S d O I Now~letWwlng For elec!J1c oook top. Oven ony old.-•-· o• ~!f!.r. -GRAND PIANO Nttd exp. Fry cook. broll<r Sold · 3'-4 hOUn. Clean, neat e !Very-Uft ay ft Y ~tor Bar WallrnHI 16(). The oook too ls oo!y 6*-3116 asll.!o< ~·" EMERSON man, Apply tl2'1. \Vetterly cnng req'd. Day lhltl •PP<trance. $l .... r hour. _,. $35. phOne 5.ST-2010 WANTED uatd or new B-B OF BOSTON ,__ Sul 106 N Pal El~. 6391 \Yett· ,.... & Hostanes W •-/D -·ba gd --• • Puv..~. te ' twport minster A\'t., w-·-·--ter. Apply 10:30. 1 pm, l.ori'I ...-: w O:iast H NB Rent lllowrl ry•r• nat II.I ' 1.VUU w IOne. (circa 18611+} Doh. m3301 '""'m~ Kltohcn. 3303 Harbor Blvd. OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· ··-.,. •y.. · · 12. Wk. Fltll molnt. 541l-7S95 TABLE TOP Coomotlc SalH Clerk • Didi K. Suite 9, Coot• QUIRES THE~E OF A LARGE STATION TREATMENT PLANT SUP· * ~1202 * Ollie. fur nllurof GRAND PIANO Leading Independent dn,,. ELECTRONIC M .... 979-0747. WAGON ORV . CONTACT MR . HARRY ~'Wsrrr:~~~de$111:no: f'REEZER, ch••t type . _ _:E:::qt:u:::IP;:· ____ :;.12::.;4 itore ~kl exper. lndlv. Ex ASSEPCBMBLERS 11 o ul1 e k : .. ~~!sh/Cook At.:!~ SEELEY, 330 T BA y STREET, COSTA ~uired. Jo'lllt\a deadline • Perfect condition. P.tust aeU. Ivory K~~~~lru1 Wood 10 handle busy <'O!mcuc per on 's. 0t1y 1hlft. coupe. ""~ spe ......... ,.. MESA. TELEPHONE &42--432l FOR AP· Jo ebruary 25, l974. Oty of Call 67J..-0215, WAREHOUSE walttng to be lovt'd & re· dept.. CAii llelcn P.1 u~n. General J\1onltora. Inc. 3019 S1>anlah ok. BeauWul home, San Juan Capistrano. 32400 w As HER. or ye r, CLEARANCE stort'd. fi n• nrniis 110u11d 541)-6()5r5, Coastal Pct'liOnnel EnterprlM! St. CM, 5')0.4800, Ii v e ·I n. Uncmcumbered. POINTMENT. Pilseo Adelanto, San J 11 an dishwasher, is:; each. OU1ce furniture, wholesale & OO.nL Agency, 2700 J-larbor Bl\'d., FEJ\IALE SOLDERER &12--9606. C1tpistr&no, 01. Call 646-5848 below. New & used. Chai~. CM. required. Expd only, New II 0 US EKEEPERJCOOK, An Equal Opportvnlty Employtr (n4) 493-Un LIKE new Kenmore t-let·t files & storage cabi.nCl~. COUNTER MAN plant in Costa Mes.a, Apply full or p/ttme. LIV4! ln/out. TREAT?tlENT PLANT OP· dryer for sale, $75. Xlnt 1733 Monrovia St, Unit P. f R I_, .. _, E 'd SAE Advanced Packagln&". Non drlnk/Sn)Oke. Re.fa';-:-;--;-:,..-..,-.,-'°"'""°'""'=-,.,,..,--,,-,.-..,-.,-~~~= ERATOR II.·-.• $993. condUton. 4"''·9771. CD&ta Mesa. 8:30 n.m. to or to:n tu Yw"', • .11p req ' 3080 Airway D•. Costa '1•"" 'd •-1 N t H l l "H I W td -· " 1 8hould hnve knowledgf' o( "" ""' rcc1 · ·~ ~n. wp g: 1 s IP int , M & F 710 Htlp W1nted, M & f 710 State Crade II Rcqulred. O'KEEFE & Menitt range p,m. vark>u11 types c..'Onlilructlon :FUU.. Chl\l'ge Bookkeeper atta. &1&-• Fillng deadline • i'"ebruary 4 buniers w Jg r Id d le USED Price i m Pr I 11 t ! n g equipment. • atr 100111, elec knowledge ot general ledge?' lfOUSEKEEPER. Compun. MAIDS wanted. part or full RECEPT /GIRL FRI. 18, 19'14. City of San Juan between broiler $3S. 673-4009 machines, elec. p I n n 1 n g tools, compacllon C!Qulp., a must, Salary open , Age Ion, for elderly lady Uve·ln, tJane. Apply Seacllff Mote?I G_r>wln& p.rofeulonal Reill Capistrano, 32400 Paseo machine, tables, st o o I s , gen,raton1, compressors, no balTier, Apply 3 O o lite cleaning & CtJOking, Cor-1661 S.C.H. Laguna Beach. .r..state cornpany in Laguna Adelanto, San Juan C&pls-Bulldln" Mat.rials I06 Chairs. Good prices. Piert"C, fork lifll, etc. Perm. etn· f<'i.l!chcr ST, Irvine Complex, ona del f\1ar, 6#-5142. 1.1ARRIED person ovtr 21 &ach has need tor part trano, Ca. (714) 493-llTI . • 867 W. 19th, CM. Ge-3"°8 ployinent tor right n1t1n. _C~"--------i H ousekceper/Bab lllc.r. car & pho • S • ime recept. with 110me e Surplua.8u11dlng EXEC SWVL CHRS $15/25 ()ppty to grow "'llh Cont· GENERAL OFFICE p/Hme tar 2 girls. rs 2· "'k. to start. ledge ot bookkeeping. MATERIAL. lQllO's of NEW See chrs $8/24, dks. Pierce pany. Co. benefilli, Apply 111 Exrellent starting ul""' tor 6pn1. 979-9X6 8 am · Pm · MASSAGE TECH. Weekends a mu!ll + 2 half TYPIST ITEP.1S! Doon, lumber, pty:,-"867"-\"'"'-.1"9~. ~°''-l'-&l=>-3408-=~--;,=='$~100~1~•ho~n<~>~l<~·R~-l~~l~-I llartley & Nixon Renlalil, ~" Home Sll-5503. days during week. Id 1 ' 1900 Iv .• naheli•. Long "-, .. 1, outgoing person \vho enjoys TRAINEE ~ v.'O'XI, alum lhttlina:, mo · I FRE" QltGAN LES~N " ~ • lot• or -~., • I OUSEKEEPER lnl Ill t 1-.. ~-~-•IC. P!1nos/O.,-£:.::n•:_ _ _:8;:.:26 y "'"' 1 as ,,.,,., Y · cusomer J-1 , e n . Young lady (lS..28) wanted I a·U~IL•D••~ER••, SURPLUS ...:-long as you hke! Adults COUPLE, exper. to manage contact Inn busyoU!ce. Avg Assun1e responidbllily. lrg for legitimate full time posi· '()~l'/IA An immcd. opening for •n :t • PIANOS \i·tlcome to attend Tuesday ~~~.2'J o~tsB~afro~w s:~ ~~i~1~·ropo~e~~~r.&he~ ~:nC~n~~~· u nder ro0~~=1~~e;hu~e1eS::. REAL ESTATE ~~~:io ~~ m ~~n~ ~ni""',M .. ~s.1!}tiA. • ORGANS ~~~~~ 7:t~ fe:~1 \~~ '~~; ctr & 3 major grocery benelits. Call Pat. HDUSECLEANERS App1 .. ln norson any att. or ll90 Glen-SJ. turately) .., ._.. ~ T o · t r1 h 1tores. R.tnt ~ + addit. Jason a~st A ~,. •• ~W C H 40, .,73 ·--,-· 540 •ns the organ? on1 tee c benefits. 6417-9016 bctv.'n 4 ~ gency Babysitters, llve--lru needed. eve. ""' • st. W'j., .,..-.,... ~ For Appointment FOR u.le exceu building FULLERTON MUSIC . In charge &12·285l. Coast 1 17400 Bmokhurst, F. Vly. Ov.•n transportation. Ref's. Newport &acb. . RECEPI'IONisr for CPA Contact Cerol Smith materials Our Newtat Location l\tu.sic, Newport Blvd. at & pm. 1 Suite 213 963-6775 Mlrasher * 641)..9172. MECHANICAL wizard for n during tax OH~ seuon, 897-2998 alt 4:30 18191 Euclid, ~ountaln Valley _f_Ia'-'-bru'~·-°'-''-·-----I DELIVERY men needed n GENERAL VEHICLE wide variety or tooling, 494-9751. AVCO Ci-rat & 1 Blk. No. of San Diego FV.'Y H.B. & F.V. area, early MECHANIC HOUSEh"EEPER, Live In & design & ma ch In e ="oc.=.O"--------.. _ 5574836 mom LA Times auto route. No exper. req'd. Will treln Companion, for e Ide t I y maintenance Pr 0 b 1em5 • SALES _E:;.q,_u;;.lc:;P.;.m.;.•;.;n.;;t ___ .;.80"-'8 I Rentals from $S Sporting Goo4s 830 Prefer adult w/c.>conon1y A.1tes 17...Jtl, $3Z m 0 • wontfln 548-6330. Degree not r equired . Salesperson, pcnnanent, e>o:· Financial Sarvict NE\\' K·2 short ski~. \\'/Or cnr $200 + per nlO, 847-8979 starling salary + ntuny 1-10 USEKEEPER, Jive-in. Ma<..-Gregor Yacht Corp, per, aggressive & articulate. 5800 WANTED 1 \\'/out nu1rkc.r bindings, ENTAL A I Ch l~d St d J OI< I · Co t M to call on retail stores • 644-Pentax spot1nntle t , ,. ""'t).-0 u, a '"' e. benefits. Now interviewing. 01vn tni.ns. u en · 1631 P acentia, s a esa. • "-II "'·!!'" e e Pianos & Grands uscl ·' imcs . .,., ......,,,...,. M l be .x tu- R •1 y o "" •166 or """ &e'.!l'I for direct mail advertising Equal Oppor. Employer ........ .,..., "I.I us t pcl ,r, mt ad':-'• A 6 ,. ,.., __ pportunitieti,I~~~~~'-'"::'.:'~"°''---r.1EDICAL Asst., wHh exp., co. Est. 14 yrs in Orangt? ,,;;;;;;,,;;;;;;,.;;;;;;,;;;.;;..,1-;;:::::~~~==:....:"-;;;: ALL MAJOR BRANDS NE\V AUSTRIAN SKIS for very nca, n cres e in 15-1164, un;ta Mesa. 1---------· front fam. p""ctice off. F I 810 -• & bull · I tall n1an. Cost $200. Sae. _........,{ d t I l Good!-~=-'--="'-'==--•a Co. Qualltled appt's, xlnt urn ture · Ust:ti re t pianos a so ~I~~ ea:1 ~~iooo. aft Gen'I Ofc to $550 INSURANCE SALES ~f111Y & conditions. Tel. comm. & bonuses. 54~9052 TYPIST /RECEPT. Uprights trom .......... $69 ~1"1"'00'=40:~~143""4 =-~-,,- 5pm or wknds. Excellent oppor. tor bubbly Sales Order Desk. Girl In growing businesa. Ofcs in DOUBLE Bed inc I u d Ing Spinets '.~ ••...••..• !1-15 BRUNS\VICK VrP regulation lncllv. w/lite exper. to enjoy 1'.f OT EL Maid, neat. needed for busy sales order Newport Bch near Airport. headboard $50, 2 velvet Pia.yen •...••...••. .,995 piX•l lable, 1.1%." slate, ini.:ls , DENTAL office-Strong lnsur. plenty of variety & public No exp nee., eam while you energetic 6 dey v.•k. LagUna desk tor Orange O>. Boat Req. xlnt typing & trans· hassocks $5 each, Blue Grands " · ........... $395 ne1v. cloth. $500. 962-5125 bk,gmd. Able to handle at.... contact. Avg typing & sh learn, part time. e\'es & Beach resort 494--U96 u .... f . . 0 crlbing skills. Sh not necei;s. Vt'lvet chaise lounge $35, 3 e Organs TV R di H'F ' ets. ~able/receivable & hel r 1 Great be 1-1 v.·lmds. full time when quali· .. !P-'.u acturtng brm. fc Sal·~ comme·-·-te w/ .. v. f\1aple Bar, stools $20 ea, ALL MAJOR BRANDS s'ter~ o, 1 1' l36 ba.ck up front otflce. Typing, P u · co. ne 1 s. Newspaper Carriers -exper. a must. Position -" .......... ..... M 1 1 k $2S _ Call Ten')'. tied. BOYS & GIRLS req's phone \\t>rk & good per. PCM Inc. 1801 Dove ape ~wive roe er, • Optlgan . demo . $195· 1-...:.=cc;, _____ _ h~~ rs~a. ~I?'. Jason 8tst Afeney t~arrners Insurance Group 10 yrs & Older figure s k 111 s , Salary St., N.B. slJ..3313. ~ ~~ ~II~ ~~8:ts l:~ps $:s Spinet . new .. $499 ZENffil & RCA. col~r, B&\V P · · · · 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vl.v. Ed La.nl * 541}.~ Daily Pilot has ROt.rrES commensurate wt ability. TYPIST ea 673-5106 ps, Free Organ Lessons TVs & stereos pnced to DENTAL 'Ass Is Ian t • Suite 213 963-6775 OPEN • Dana Point, Cap-Contact Carol Hill, 979-2880. XJ 't t · t needed t NB ' Phone 5.57·4839 clenr. Priced less than the ehalrside. min. 1 yr exp, Gen'I Ofc to $600 INSURANCE Aa:ency girl lstrano Beach, San Juan Sales Oiamondl $J5o++ 1 n ~tstol utor ...... i.,.." ELEGANT custom 9' sofa FULLERTON MUSIC discounters "·ith 3 yr Expanded duties. good x-ray Friday needed, 35 hr "'k. Capistrano. a":"' e;am a 0· .,,..,..,.. w/matehlng loveseat. 4 picture tube 1 yr parts & technique & Uc. Beach area, Fet' Paid. >..1n't typinq: skills. Pref. some experience, but CALL 1'.1R. L0\\1DER Exp" must. To" refs. Y•rder . Prevtous ~lTST or mos. old. Herculon hide-a· 122 N. Harbor. Fullerton service. N~ charge for 847-2569 6 Yrs olc. exper. New of. "'iii train qualified person. 492.4420 WESTCLIFF other word procetisJng ma~h. bed F/F Deluxe Frigidaire 871-1805 delivery or set-up on 19" ENT "L ASSIST \~1' fire in Irvine. j\lso Fee? ~ Reply P. 0. Box 1208, Sun Pel'llOnnel Agency exper. helpful, but not req d. "·/Ice maker, 1 yr. Also hrs: Open Nights 'ti! 9 & l~r. 25.. Solid State D •• . ' . ~1t1'0n,·. C•ll ~ontrol "-~r Cl \ NURSES Call 540-5400 for appt d •--'I Sat 'til 5 30 Sun 12 • Ch.lrslde & X·rn)'. Nnn n " 1..1 ........., .. ..., emene. RN-L'~. •!DE {l\1ark Ill Center) · eep """'zer. •• ust sac. _ : ___ _: • · ·:J from , Cash 90 Plan smoker. Preferably under 1-:1nployment 'A~en('y, 3400 • ._ 542-8836 TYPIST EXECUTIVE 673-0275. or terms. ABC Color TV; 30. 644-0filt 1 In-lne Blvd., N.R. INSPECTOR 111·7 & other shifts. Top P'1 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Strong English background * SOFA & LOVESEAT * PIANOS -ORGANS_ 9021 Atlanla Ol' . 190 46 GUARDS * duty pay. Imrned. pay for N & Used G t I t B kh t I{ t t DENTAL Recept. i\t'!lk only. * floor duty. C 0 u n t y \\' d SEC-VERSATILE We will pay tor quality. Never used e Very gd. qua!. ew · rea se ec ion. too urs, u n 1 n g on Op,.N!NGS NO\\' M J • t h di Call .""Sm Usually home. -•1910 Com....,titive ..,.;ccs. Open EJe.ach, 968--3329 or 962.55.59 l yr. dental exper. nee. y intervv.'S, l\.1on-Fri 9. 5. a ure ...; exper. o an e Q"t'r "°°"""' .. ~ .... f'rlnge bcnE'fits . Some Sats, FULL & PART Tl~lE A new division of Allergan Lescoulie Nurses Registry, t ec.hnicnl corre1pondence, UTILITY MAN NE\V 9' match.Ing sor. & :~~ !e 5i!:l~aayyss~1'!he best RICE'S TV SERVICE H B area 846-3540 • Retired OK Ph ce ti al involved ln 351 Hospital Rd NB telephone, quotations, etc. 12 •10. ~,·tlo-. !AM to love seat. Sac. $280. 494-mt w 11· h M •. c·t (formerly in Pantry s Cntr} · · · · anna u c s · ' ' · · in one-man sales oUice. " ..-~ " 2 oo I IC S USC y ~ • Xlnr Opportunity College the new, fast growing \Lobby Park Lido Bldg) Good salary & all fringe 3:30PM. $608 to $737 per after : 1 1 * TV Specials * S.tuden!~---···· , nucl.i:~r medl~lne field, has 642-9955, 540-9954. benefit& for someone who mo. BOAT Slip for rent Newport South Coast Plaza 541l-2S30 Used & Color TV sets· While Design Engineer e Car & Phone. req. an Immediate need for an .NURSES: Morgan-Nurses ·· Ciiil "j;e.i'!orm llftlclently on Apnly,~In._ Pe~n ~ach. $2.00 a IT. they last!! Color from S65 Micro-wave fllten to $953 • Time & % for over 40 hril. inspector. Registry, C.?tt. now taking her own. Send resume to: Saddleback V.illlY · -645="8'ttS .. cii 543=7066" ··REMBRANDT Mali.(fgiftff p-; B··,t"·W·from $35 up.-·F'or Teleprocesslng. 360 BAL$12K PRO~~~~RVICE Inspection ' \\'lit be on applications for RN ' s . Princeton Applied Research Unified School Dist, 8 FT. Spanish ao.ta, $35. 2 upright piano. Xlnt tone & service call: Programmer to H electrical, mechanical I:. LVN's, Pracs., aides, Live Corp. 905 N. Euclid Suite 25200 La Paz Rd gold recliners $20 ea.. all cond. $300. 497-lTll Bob 5'l)..6002 or 5..t6-fi003 ~:k~A~S90~ $~ 403 NSant~:a Blvd., valve assembly. You must ins. M&F. 548-9361 or D, Anaheim, 92801 or call Laguna Hills needs recovering. 546-8392 Vacancies rost money? Rent 1375 Logan Ave ., CM ~-. •-'y/Ofc lit'"' $800 + 554-143.3 be able to \\'Ork with ft 83.l-2365 635-6710. By Jan. 25th, 1974 II Ill your house, apt., store 22" Sylvania console blk &. ~/Btanro.,kcrage t'oo I~ HAS your job become a &. be familiar v.·/electronic Xlnt working condition & SECRETARY Clas.stiled Ad. Call 642·3TI9. '"'"""'" ~ ... minimum of documentation NURSES AIDES Equal Opport. Employer ~=J~~~~~c~1:M;;ls;;co~;•inoouiii~'~i;;;;;;;11~bl~d•~·~· ~·t~c~. -~~a~t:>~al;l~y~P;il~ot~~w~h~ll~v~. ill~OO~.jiij'iiiiiii-1 ~"' "" crisis or is It about too? good --• 54• ·~ VETERANS Sec'y/Marketing to ~ Let us show you how to hand tools. \\'e prefer a -.i.ary. ~ This co. pres. wants a new INTERIOR Supervi.~r/Retail to $850 1um your crisls into money! max. of 2 yrs v:ork exper. OFFICE l\'IANAGER right arm. If you enjoy chal· HEY TIJRKEY! 1tnterested in Sec'y/Life Jns. exper. $600+ Call UPl-UU. 83G-829'l" in the are a 0 f Convalescent hospital. To lenge, have good skills & college? No? Well then, in-DESIGN Order Dt>sk/Typlst S..56.1 ..:::~~~~.;:;c;;::~~ e 1 e ctr o J mechanical become part of our lite exper, U1is immed. terested ·in money?? Con· STUDIO Maint Man/ Anaheim $5.1(1 HOSTESS/CASHIER assembly &/or small fluid management team. Must opening ls yours. Xln't co. tact: Steno $500 + Ove r 71, mature, Exper Ap-valves. know Medi-Cal & Medi-Care itlts, salary $600 up to Veteran's Affairs Office Opens its warehouse Typlst/G. Of<!, ply Hamburger Hamlet, 15-15 Good '-'"' . 1 w/exper. in bookkeeping, . Call 1ifarty. Orange Coast College clearance sale . • 1. Viejo to $4/J Adams Ave, O.t aft 2:30 .,..".nning sa ary typing & goeneral office --n_ ..... A--rv * .. ,5853 * FURNITURE " .,. __ ~1r H coupled with an opportunity oced ....._ __ ,.,~. bl _... ue.• .......... -, ~ CALL TRISH lJOPKINS p.m. ~ l agen. to build a tareer "''ilh a Pr ures. ~a e 17400 Brookhunt, F. Vly. J !!~~~"l""l""'!'!"l"~'"'I LAMPS A COHYOIJENT SHOflPINQ SEWING CUIDE fOfl TtlE CM. ON THE GO. JERRI \Vl!:rrrDtORE 1---------· I Wlique company. tu~~c ~=~t ~~:~ '1.fu: Suite Z13 96.'J.6775 WAITRES~OOD IMPORT ACCESSORIES ~ PERSCJNNB. llOSPITAL Contocl ol Your Clark. 892-6688 bet. 1().4 EXEC SECRETARY Natuntl looking young lady, Savings Up tO 70% ~rc•tr\I START THE OUice Help P/time Corporate president needs over n w/pleasant person-SERY1CE5.-:l'\Utl....... Conv1nienct 8:31).l2:30. Typing, .u....ne. part time execuli\•e secre-ality. Must be dependable Employ" Rolr1tion1 1"'"" t t he! ,... & able to work any shift. OPEN WEEKENDS For •n 1d In VVomr1n·1 ~·orld Coll Mary Both 642..5671, ext. 330 488E.171h St.(ntli'V\ne)CM NEW YEAR I "Young aggressive sales dnry o._ pwu1lcoflnr:res~rrl Apply moms or phone 1649MonrovlaStreet Sult. 224 642.1470 organiz. Irvine· Indus Pk. ence., pen;ona anc1a '"'-~1 M ... ~33 ALLERGAN Call 979-2333. record. Al Newport Beach 67S.2548 for 11.ppt. l..l.lll a esa O'l>Ml.l office. Hours can be flex· WOODY'S WHARF Curves All Snu9 Sleepln(J llOCJ Vs a ,.,,... 1f; 11 11 DRUG C l erk/Cashier. downtown HB, P.1Ature, ex· perienced , 536-2701 HERE OPERATORS·single ncedle, Ible. Top pay tor qualified 2318 W. Newport Blvd. AVOCADO Frigidaire 2525 Dupont Dr. exper. on dresses &. puson. Send resume to: Newport Beach Reirig, w/lce ma k er , Irvine, Calif. sportswear. Top pay, 865 aassifled Ad #MS, Daily -~W~A;;.IT::;:;R~E:::S:::S:::E:::S~-1 dellL~e. 1 yr, Freezer, The Wa.y * RN'o-LVN'1 * NA'o-TECHS * Roiplratory Production Pl.' N e w Port Piiot p o Bo 1560 ~-1 assorted dinette tables le Be h 646-0308 ' . . x ' .....,. a NEW ta . ln Equal Oppor. Employer m/f ~;::a::';:::.· .:.:::::::::::.· ___ Mesa, Calif. 92626. res urant openmg chairs, expandable lattice Dana pt, Now hiring for work, area. rugs, Zenith TV, El.ECTRDlllC ltCHMICWI Electronic firm n e e d s e x p e rlenecd lechnician. Electronic checkout o f digital or RF components. Knowledge of 6SCRloicopes & test equipment helpful. Technical or service school training ln electronics & mtnimwn 1 )T related experience. Call For Appl . lndWJtrtal Rt-latlons (114) 494-9401 TiLONIC INDUSTRIES L1gunr1 Beech Equal Oppor. Employer ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Openings exl!!t on the day shlft w/manufactun!r of commercial t est instruments located i n Irvine near the Orange County Airport. Requirements I n c 1 u d e exper. In wlrlnP' & M>ldering of electronic component!!. Good benefit packaie & pay ran~. Please. ~pply , DANA 2401 CampWI Or., Irvine (Near o.C. AitPOrt) Equal Oppor. Employtt rn/f ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Pltase Apply DANA 2401 campus; Dr .. lrvlnie (Near o.C. Airport) ' Equal Oppr. employer m/f mm Exec. Secretary Acct:a Pay. Cl.erk -· Receptlont.t Bookkeeper, G. Otc Girl Friday $!00 A/Pay>ble to $7rlO Th1repists * Billing Clerks *Custodian Houa.kpr1 Full or P/time * BookkMplng * Admitting Clerks SADDLEBACK COMM. HOSPITAL 2l561. Paseo de Valencia Laguna Hills 837·2121, ext 106 Equal Oppor. Employer H 0 US EKEEPER·EXP'D. Se Habla Espanol. Laguna Beach. Call 4994<K:i. Sugar Bowl. Cotton Bowl, Orange Bowl or any kind of bowl will sell with a Daily Pilot Ouslfied Ad! 642-5618. 'iolp Wonted, M I. F 710 (50) INVENTORY CLERKS NEEDED IMMEO. VOLT Instant Personnel Tempora.t Service 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Newport Beach 5464741 Equal Oppor. Emnloyer LEGAL SECRETARY heavy recent probate experience, I n c I u d i n g accounting, So. 0 r a n g e County. Send resume ro: Write, Classified ad No. 977, Dally Pilot, P .0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Callt:-926ai. Help Wanted, M & F 710 EIECUTIYES-IAIABERS "JOB OPPORTUNITIES" $15M-$75M Ran9e SALAllQ..NIGOnAILI Are You Unemployed No-Are Yo11 Seeking A Ch1n91 -WotTi ed Abo11t Your A9-Tir1cl of l rok1n Proml1e1- Und•cided A1 lo A p,oper C .. t.tr•• of Actron- ARE YOU UNDER ,AID? If Yn C• A...,. TM,. ........ C:oallo••11w'1ot,Jo. I• n. AMlwwwllMt We'4 LA:• Aa l_.,H WI .. Toa IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do you h1v1 1trof19 voc1tioft1I driv17 I. Do you heve good n1liv• lntelllg111ce7 C Do yo1f.1l1ufflcl1ritlv moti.,1ted to 1chl1v17 D. Do you hive the 1bilit, fo "'1lr1 d1citlont E. Ari you r11dy to 11t • r1alhtlc c1t11r obJacti..-17 f. If you ••t• corivirictd that h1lp wat ew1ll1bl• •011ld 'fl\I 1ccept It, wltho\lt d11ay7 YOU SHOULD KNOW e The D.tter job• •t• riot aclverti1td e Third p1rty profat1lon1I infh1enc1 ia aom1tlm11 n1ce1• .. ,., e $affint tf11 right cloon open, et the rltht l1w1I fl• q11ire1 t1chriiqu1. • • h 1c\ltive po1l61n1 1r• flllM ttir1u9ft 1x•c11tl'fl lnt1r· vi•••· It Mitt r•1um1 m1lllri9, 11 flOt • t1t1! 1f11w1r. 3 mo's commute lo L.A. o..tan Encln«• Mk:ro nve ftlter · $9.13 SEND RESUME OR CALL TOOAY -FOR-Orrk Typi!!lt $500 Reoept. ·o.n1 Ole. $!00 PAGE Boy SECRETARY dining nx>m &. cockWl B &: W, IDde-a·bed, etc. service. Must be bet. 21-76. 673-0275. Employer will split fee for Neat &: pleasant. Apply in ~::..:;;,:.:;~~==~-- MATERNITY sharp person w/good skills person at 24312 Del Prado, I BUY'.'• CLOTHES & Mme exper. Great poten-Dana pt, (across from tiaJ w/nationwlde develop-Brookside Winery) Mon-Sat Good, u--• furnll"-& Now OPEN ment co. S700 to start + 9AM-4 PM ~ -· xlii't co. benefits. Call Val· · appliances or \\i ll sell for You AT erie. Alto Fee Jow.. WAITRESS MASTERS AUCTION SOUTH COAST Joson Best Agency Expe•. Dependabl_e. MalUre 2075\\ Newport, CM 646-8686 PLAZA 17400 Brookhurst, F . Vly. & Neat. Apply lJl person, 839-0794 aft. 6 for Sunday Suite 213 96J.677S Surf & Sirlnin, 5930 W. Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l. TAKING APPLICATIONS SEC/BOOKKEEPER lull Coest Hwy .. N.B. WANTED' Good me pi e ALL nus WEEK FOR t 1 me d 1ctaPh0 n e, WANTED shampoo girl for dttsser w/ mirror C If PART·TIME hookkeeping. gd typing beauty won 962-7705 Ala~ ""'81blel or high boy. Alto speed, knowledge of office w/Halr Med. size dog hse. Mssn SALESLADY procedures, 1 girl ottioe. WELDER Viejo. 831-2268-=---- MUsr BE EXPERIENCED PleMe submit resume . No exper. req'd •. Will train. COAL FOR SALE AND ABLE TO WORK Write Classified ad #60, Ages 17-34. $326 mo· for fireplace or pot bellled EVENINGS Daily Pilot, P .0 . Bdx 1560, starting salat;y + many stoves, Hiett Bros Feed Co, PHONE 557~734 Costa Mesa, C8Hf. 92626. benefits. Now mtervle~g. 1735 w. 5th St .. s.A. 542.7293 IES ARMY Opportunttles, • . PBX Opr. exper. pref'd. * SECRETAR 645-1664 Costa Mesa. SAROUK Persian carpet. P/timc. Steady work. Top rate of pay • Handmade, 5x8'. 260 knots Huntington Beach. 536-8881. NEVER A FEE \VHO WANTS TOCABWORK? sq in. Blue & creatn. Xln't P1tli1 Vncations DRIVE A ! cond. 497-l193 eves. PERSONNEL * HELPMATES CHOOSE your houn. work . MANAGEMENT for yourself be your own SACR.InCE: Natural nunk SPECIAIJST 8.15-8876 1~ E. 17th St. boss. Men Or women. Can stole $300. Washer $35. No exper. req'd. Will train. Suite 115 Sant!\ Ana be slightly handicapped. Portable TV, stereo, Fum Age! 17-34. $326 m.o. *S.C'ys, BookkHpers Neat • Clean Appearance. & other Misc. oUer. 552-0326 starting salary + many Uz Reindel"! Agency Vts., retired. Age 25 to 70. ORIGINALS. ALVAR LITHO benefits. Now interviewing. 4020 Blrch Street Supplement your income. $95. Picasso Etch. $125. A RM Y 0 P Po rtunities, Suite lot, NB 833-8190 Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a Oury Etch. 1135.. Utrillo 7 0 3 0 645-ll64, Costa Mesa. Olaf A Job 833-0l55 day. Apply in penon, Lltho. $350. JS.>5595. "" ('\,, ~ PETROLEUM No Chr1rgt To You Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th CUSTO?\I \Vall 1-'I u ra 1 s . t-t\1c.C o~ STORAGE SPECIALIST Established 1965 St.. Costa Mesa. Olildren's le Liv Rm!, etc. No expet'. req'd. Will train. ~=""'-""=7'-7'-"""""" WOMAN needed d al I y Wa 1 ha b I e. SUrprizi.ngly I Ages 17-34. $326 mo. LAGUNA Beach Un I I I e d routine cleaning & machine Reas! SJt>.B!!i1 Whip this up tor camping starting salary + many School District has immed. laundry, 8 am • noon. $3. WASHER xlnt cond, i60. trips, extra ilJestl at home: benefits. Now interviewing. opening for Seer et a r Y hr. ~recllfi,Oifl.1.. Must be 6 piece dinette set hand Youngsters lo\'e to suuggle ARMY Opp 0 r t u n t t 1 e s , Typing skills 50 WPM on need liabl &. SIZES 8-11 ....... Exec. typewriter. 90 WPM exper1e , re e carwd li<lexican $ 5 O O • Into R cozy sleeping ~· 661l64, Costa Mesa. shorthand. Apply at District furn. top-notch references. 5S7-4900 r.., -1'IT • 11T.-r Use felt for turtle's head, PIZZA man no exper, full No smoking or drinking. P . .::::;~.::::;~~==~~ lll"""1-... Ill""-'.... fl'l't. features. Easy·sew! time, apply at Tinos 30242 ~nel Of(lce across O. Box 7fir, Corona del Mar. p 0 BOX RENTALS Pattern 700U: pattem pieces, Crown Valley Park Way, from H1gh·School. WORRIED abotit your 149G Riverside Dr., N.B. C ~RV E . AND -FLO\Y direeUons 34,1.67" sleeping Laguna Niguel SECY/RECEPTIONIST future? Now is the time. Behind Graham Renlty. shaplflg begins at I.he top bag. .:=:.,::::=-:,;:o=:,-,=~E=N~I Pllrt time. Type 50 wpm. Thlnk about the U.S. NAVY. DECORATOR has 200 yrds with a cool c;Rp sleeve a~ SEVENTY-m "E c.·t~NTS RE SALESM Near O.C. Airport. CAii S326 to start + training. 3 lone gold carpet, terrific follows all the way d0\\'\1, for each pattern • add 25 PART TIMERS alter lCEpm, 979-3797 1 Ages 17·31 of. prior service. for apts. 00.2210, 54&--4654 =n~~its, blends tor cents tor et1ch pattern for SERVI .Station 18. esman PhOnc 64i-42'72. '69 Chev 283 en g . , Printed Pattern 91 8 7 : Air ?olall and Spt'Cial 11an- ARE YOUR & Jubema.n. Top pay &. YOUNG Man, 18 or older. owrhauled, compl. Skis & Misses' Stzes 8, 10, 12, 14, dllng: otherv.·ise third-clRSS EXPENSES MORE ~I!:= :r~e= must be good drlver w/ boots, trade or sell. 536-~ 16, 18. Size 12 {bust 341 ~~!;~ry or v.·~~'."<~~17o THAN YOUR time. Shell. 17th &: Irvtne, valid Ile, run errands for TENNIS Sale, Everything % takes 2a yards 45-lnch ,\lice Brooks. the DAIL\• INCOME? JOIN AN Newport &ach. tMnvalld,begoodfitsWOl'$2kln&hr~ price, 901 Seagull 29Lllne, (&b~:.r .... ._ ..... <lE-Pll.DT, 105. Needlccrnfl any ne • • Nev.·port Beach, 645--11 SE•s:..••Y·n..-~ ,.,,., Dept., Bo.x 163, Old CMl5"R OFFICE WHERE YOU SERVICE Sta. Salesman, ~or &n.lOOZ MISC. rum, ch-'-, -fr;•, tor t1ch pattun -ndd 15 , !/'Im • days Ille ~!!!!!!! ~· "~ t l ch f S111.Uon. New York. N.Y. HAVE NO EXPENSES. "' ' dinette t 2 hlde-a·beds cen s or ea pattem or 10011. Print Nan1". ,\ddtt!d, mechanical knowledge, nea,t [ ~ !IC • • Air l\tl'lil and SJ>l!:('ial Hand· CALL CARL NELSON appear. Apply moms, 25ro I ~· 300 Catalina Dr, N.B. H--·, otheno.1se third-class I Zip, P•lt"rn Nwn~r. llerdr.... ..,.,. N EE D L ECRAl'I' '72! M'-1305 Nowport Blvd, CM -TRAILER AXie and parts deliwry will take thrff Crochet. knit, etc. 1-)'t.'f 'REAL ESTATE SERVICE Sta. Sa.lesman, iiiiiiii~iiiilJ for t>M1 iraller. $50. .,.eeks or more. Send to d' tio 50c f It Im e, d a)' 1, 11 t e 544-3417 ~lariM Martin, the DAll.Y ~==ta.n~· M•~nnte Boot. SALESMEN mechanical lmowled ... neal ~lquoa IOO OAK FIREWOOD P!LQT, 442. Palttm l>ept., Baik. fancy knOts. pet· Why not Hwor!_ ln theBehotchtl t appear. AmliY moms, 2590 995-3397 232y J. WtNs~. l!th10011St.,p N1ewt !ems. $.LOO. atta ~ W'\w•rton a • Newport BIYd~ Ot: ANTIQUE oa"l\, .... · r n 1ru11.a11t Crocht-t Root -Fountaln Valley. Let U!!I -'-"-=~,,,.""'~=~-TRIPLE Beam Scale, Yl?t'Y NAME, A.DURESS with , _ by I , p 1 train yon. Call Phil Mc-STOCK ROOM I. SHOW I. SALE ac<Umte. neves U>ed, tlill ZIP. $1ZE and 8Tl'LE ~am .. OO P '"""· a . Namee, VIU.:\.GE REAL IN~RY CONTROL LONG BEA.Of ARENA in box. $39. 49-H661 NUMBER. t=pete iJ."ta•t Gitt Book ESTATE, 96.1-4567. G,IRI.. Ocean & LOng Bench Blvd. BUNK or twin beds, kitchen SEE MORE Q u l ck -more the.n 100 a:ilt,. - REAL ESTATi Som~ expe~r. pre!'d. Call foe * $3 Million Display '°'· ••• "°"" It n!rlg. F":{'"'na ~ "l:" one $1.00. app • * 100 E:xhlblton 543-<M36 E: em m our OompJetc Afchaa Book • SALESWOMEN · HONE January 17. JS. 190, 20P'l Ml•conan-·-J>rlng1 -~~~ C.talog. All 11.00. COMMUNICATIONS Tht11'1, Frt, Sat i~1 •• td-·· stz.Is viu, .,,,..,. 11 .rutv aa1 Boot.1 • JOe. PART·TIME No exper. ~·d. Will tnln. SUl'l<W' JU PM Wint 120 lNSTAN"l' 5£\VING BOOK Book of 11 Prtp, Afrtwn•. 1 Prefer New L1cen1Mt Aa:ea 27""34. $326 mo . : SILVED COINS 11ew today, wtar tomom>W. 50c. NO COST EXECUTIVE INTERVIEW UECUTIYE SERYIOES,' llC. Gen'I Offtee to $600 Olli JeaM.le Sisco ' Sid HotfmRn NEWPORT p_,,.1.-....., m Donr or:. N.8. MWl7I ......... out the -• . • tum lhll Junk Into cull -HOME OFPICE - !714) 547·"25 Ill N. Main St. Sonia Ana 1secu•1TY IANI( IU11.DIN6 $UtTE 102) F• for COMlltll ~ Not 1111 ..... fif l Exctll~nt training Pl'Ogrtll'Jl · 1tllrt1nt sal1.ry + m11.ny FOR Sole or Tt3dt!: l.rJl !' $1. Qulll Boot I -l6 pnttcmt. Ask !or Ed ~4 bent.01.s, Now tnteMtwlnQ:. mAhogany Vtet:rolla, pert. Paying 100% owr face INSTANT FAS II I 0 N SOc. KASABIAN REAL ESTATE A?' my Opp 0 rt anlllQ, cond. Tr8de for oak Vic-value. Call 962-36t6 bd 9em OOOK -llundm11 of l\f.-n Qa.Ul Boot J - 645-oll64 eo.t.a MKll. tn>la, 1&me cond & al:tt & an 6pm. Whton factl. ti. 50c REAL Eltate Aa<nt lo< I .,;"'-,'-','~i'="7-'':':--=:':7 --•1 1 H~ """Ion ~ · Ud-commerclal ltflll• .. •, salary n.e fuWlt draw In the West. t:Jt aci or tJ.AN• WANTED old Tr fed I e ~ 1vm treuurt1 to truh Qulltt tor Today'• •u• - d••n• ...i-·• 00':!-'-'-Dall ,.,.--i-.. ~jo. 831-22fl8 lle\\'lng machine ar CUt Turn them into cash 15 beauutul palte.ms. 5&.. ~,,.0-~..-u;• M .a~ Pilot~ Cl.ASS SEW -6(2.r.818 only 546-7611 --------------- \ • • • AQUARIUM set 15 & 20 gal tanks complete. In good cond $45. 646-3566 eves. Horse~ 856 GlMIHI rn MAY 11 ~cf.~)JU~C 10 6-1.11.13 ,, ... CAMClll .. • • . . I Chrysler/Plymouth '71 PLYMOUTH 1 9 1 0 PLYMOUTH R 011. d runner $110 O. ; Semt~hOpped 450 Honda $150: Call 492-373> I ., • T • I San Clem.enie Today's Final Capistrano ED1r10N N.Y. Stoek.s ' • • V,oL. 67, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1974 TEN CENTS 'Clemente Seeks At-grade CrosSing for Pier . ' • By CANDACE PEAMON ,, Of .. ~ ,... ltatl .Armed with ooastaJ comm Is s lo n ,, bicking, San Clemente ls going to try afaip to get an at-grade crossing over Spta Fe railroad land al the municipal pier. •In an \ll'UIUll turnaboot Monday, San Cle-1e dly offlclals aaked the Sooth C4iut l'ellonal Zooe ·Co o se r vat lo n Clmmiufon to make the conditions on a propostd mOdllication of the pier 'J'oU If.Its 19 stiffer. Conuni&Mn plannert r e I u c t a n t I y recommended approval of a buic upgrading of the de\eriorating pier entrance at the end of Avenida Del Mar and Avenida Victoria. The present entrance is a narrow tunnel under the railroad tracks. A .simple at•grode crossing -not a tunnel or an elaborately ramped bridge -would be beat, planner Mike Dadasovicb said. Farm Workers • Drown Ill Canal 'BLYTHE (AP) -Nlnet""" ferm -. cll1>wned and ZI olberl ...,. I D j u r e d todlf when a bus takini Jltem to -'< PIUDCed into 10 feet Ol W.ier in a droinage eanal, the highwa.y patrol aid. ~ ol tho victims were -· · Tbe bus laDed to mab a cum. at . 1 rural tntenectioa eeva;i m i 1 e 1 Power Plant ~ets Support In -Newport JNewport llelcb ""'8Cllinen Monday nlght unanlmoully adopted a reaolutlon ~ the Hpalllion of the San ~ nucleor generating plant. "!be CallfornJa coastal COllU!liJslon wtJ1 -i next month to remnsider Its dedslon to kill the Soutbem Cal!lomJa wsOn Company proi-i to 'enlarge the blulltop station. Councilmen cited the current power Sllortage and !8ld It Is likely to become mere acute. • And they pointed out that tbe etpanslon would involve • • o n 1 y &l'Jl<Ollmalely one ball mile ol coastline, tilil _,Id meet the urgent demand !or ~-eledrtcal p>.wer arxi at the .enie Urne comerve between 25 and J10Uthwen ol this aoutheutem Calilcmla cJewt town, the patrol aaid. The fUlly loaded vehicle went over a :JO.loot embankment and W!ded on it.I side in the water. Tbe -le were Blacked up like dominoes against each other toward the front of the bus," said blghwa1 patrolmaa Robin Howard. "Tbe driver -j-Imo the -, wheel with all the "°""' behind him." -ol the --lmmedlatel1 !denlllled. Tbe patral •14 ' -..... MWi+n· aatlmalJ being tnvught from the !!order dty ol MWcall to work in the 'fteldo. Tbe injured, some In l<rioua condltlon, were taken to Palol Venles Hospital in ambulances and sberllf's patrol cars. The ambulances made three round trips between the -...... and the boopltal. "'lbere were IOIM broken arms-and legs but none aeerned In critical condition," Howard saJd. He said the bus -,..,.. ripped -by the Impact, and the injured crawled oot through wiOOowa and the front door. Tbe patrol said the bus was one of ·· (SN ·11 m1,m, P ... %) Councilmen Hear: Progress Report In Capistrano 11\mJJJlon bamla of oU per year." San Juan Capistrano city councllmen • Tbey ·•Id they felt the ad..,.. beard JireUminarY reports Monday of etvlronmental impact of the project pro~ 00 the $85,000 general plan 1lbiJd be minbnal. ··-::n.. endorsement eame after a lengthy revision program and then agreed to Qi Jmpaaaloaed ippea} to reject the allow consultants to cooUnue their job. -•-Juel In a routine p-report which ""°Jution that waa m-by Mn. Y will be followed by speclllc details late 'lhcy, 'IOll Bison Ave., Newport Beach, this month, the dty staff explained that r · member ol the dty's 'Cltl.... ---"tants Ha rth --• And tal "··lit trol Ad'• """'w ywo ~ enon are ~ ,.... Y C.. ••IOrl'. nearing the end ol the busiest phaae. I had -~aed "· ·-"'·" '!be interim land UM element of the Tbat pane .....,-~ ex.,........ plan. which -reviewed !or the public !Mt Mn. Tracy aald ber otatement at a --'•' """5ion laat weekend, forms led the vlewpoinll ol three ........ bers who feel •111e dedlion to the main segment of the clty'a new nuclear flaalon plants Is perbap,; pl~ elements In all will _,.,.,. ........., _.i •-ol cilir Ume." be Incl uded In the plan by' the time ll!zl. Tracy cited the' posslbillllea o1 it ~ the public bearing stage this auclear accidents Ill both the ceneraUng 'lpOlng. f1!an1 and 11 tbe waate itorap centers. Under lnltlal propooals by I be ~&le pointed out thal aome o1 the COlllR!ltants, the dty could 1camunodate ipnt b)'!ll'Qlluctl hM::fndlni plutoalum-Dt a population ol about G,000 pe!JODS. Will reqatre ~ from our '!be figure II baU the amount -ronm<llll for l40,000 ,..,._ caatemplaled aa tho final poutatlon under I "We mllll l'lllOh ..., -beYond older ptannlng guJdelJoeo !or San Juan. ... entire limo -o1 bli'man Tbe general plan Hema beaded the eper1ence lo ...i willl plulOnium-239," rolaUvely light qenda !or the council's 'Jin. n..., •Id. -'She aJao tall:ed about the dangm In olber actlona the panel: , iJl'. ndiolcllve m•tertala beJnc. lhlpped ~. to cootloue purnln( funding !Nm p1a<e to place""""' the country. lot the Valle Rood improvement project. • Wlllle """"'°"g the odds <4 a coatalner It will be built with hmclJ ralaed through opm1ng -~ .,.. a railroad an lmprovemmt dlJtrlct 11111 aurty ps derailment are low, ·-t 1bout tu tlnls. All' enYinmmental Impact ...,_ lnteftt apon ..... •the 11 llaloment wtD be drafted belor. the llolta ol the conlalner!" llbe Ntd. , aetaal cootracta m lel Oolllultanis !or '"'l'he ban1l))nl ~uea of .the.~ -win .be ~ wl!hlo _l'l!O. Agreeing with him were Bill Eaton « the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce; Phil Peter, city engineer; Mick Spencer of the cailfomia Paralyzed Veterans A$K>ci8Uon; r e s i d e n t Bill Waddell and Commissioner Art-Holmes, wOO is also a San Clemente city coun.. cilman. The pier entrance is an "eyesore.'' Eaton said, and attracts • • e v e r y undesirable element you can think of." Jn additiQn, Holmes pointed out, by state Jaw the cily ls required to aaiommodate handicapped and elderly person! in public facilities. The present pier tunnel is difficult for these people to walk in, be added. The city proposed an at-grade crossing five years ago, Eaton said, and still doesn't ~ have approval because of opposition lrom the railroad. "I don't know if the coastal commission recommendation will help," Holmes told his fellow commissioners, rannon "but we have to give it one more try." The commission agreed unanimously to approve the Improvement of the pier, but only if it is done with an at·grade crossing. . Spencer, who testified from a wheelchair, told the conunission that current conditions "deny access to at least 20 percent of the citizens in the area -the handicapped, the elderly, those with heart conditions." r 1'..;. • Dllf\t Plllt llllfl' ....... IN THE WAKE OF A 'BOOKMAKING CONVICTION, TRUSTEE ALYN BRANNON RESIGNED From Left are Tru1tM1 Hans Voee~, Brannon, John Ma r.shall, Instruction Dean R. L Platt Clemente ~Probes Water Mains at Mobile Park San Clemente City Manag<r Kenn<tb Carr ordered a thorough staff study Monday of possible Improvements in water mains and fire bfdrantl in the mobile home park whicll was heavily damaged in a $100,000 blaze last week . Carr said he believes that there is a "major deficiency in the system" serving the Qipistrano . Shores MobUe Home Park. He bad aaked Fire Chief Roo Coleman ~ suggest improvements. Coleman said later in Ille day that it waa too aoon to specify the exact ii umber of new hydrants . needed at the park. "lt appears th'at at the very least we will ask for a hydrant each 300 feet. That is the current requirement for all residential districts," be sajd, could have served the upcoast end of the park where the blaze erupted was . inaccesible. Flames kept firemen from reaching iL InMead, fremen bad to bring 5,000 feet of hose across rail tracks and along El' CamlllO . Real to tap water from a hydrant at the Palm Beach trailer park. C.Oleman said his men were without sufricient water for at least 10 minutes in the early stages of the blaze . It was during that period that the greatest damage OCCW"red to the (See PARK, Page I) Candidate J ailed The apace between existing hydrants at the lllrk ·ls about 1,000 feet, Qileman SAN DIEGO (AP) - A :IS-year-old added.. · ' 1 woman wbo ran unsuccessfully for the Carr ,aid 'he hopes the report will • City Council as · the Socialist Workers be ready !or . the dty council at its party candidate was sentenced Monday Wednesday aessioo. to fi ve days in county jail and fined '!be •Jack GI .,, nearby hydrant was $500 !or perjury. Dorothy "Salm" Kolts a lacl<i\" in !lie damage to mobUe homes waa convicted Dec. 7 .ol giving a falae -seven in a1f -at Wednesday'• blaze. home address on nomination papers filed Coleman said the one hydrant which for last September's primary election. ' Oemente Council Mulls Trash, Taxi Rate Hikes ' ~ Clemente city c o u n c 11 me n all, 30 separate rate schedules will be Wednesday will lit Jn judgment ol two affected by tbe proposed bikes. separate requests ,for rate Jnc:reases !or In the taxi issue, tbe increases arc also complex. 2 Truth Serum Films Screened For Sauna Jury By TOM BARLEY Of tlM 0.lty f'lllt Stiff When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the·'Wilnm stand. today in the . Orange County Superior C.Ourt sauna bath trial the jury will · view a movie _ made while she was under the . lnfiuence of a , 111><alled "truth. serum." · Judge· William Murray made the ruling· that enables -attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. to screen two video tape rums in the courtroom. The d.ecision came after a four-hour out~-court session Monday in the offices of Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psychiatrist. "I'll let 'em in," Judge Murray said after a bitter argUment-between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Donald A. Ruston on the admissibility of the t~'O films. One of lbe movies run by Dr. Benton In the privacy of his office depicts his Interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, 50, when she is not undet the influence of sodium amytol. The second movie, shot by the psyCblatrlst last Oec. 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redhead reSponJing to his questioning ln the slow, slurred manner lnd1aced by his injection of the tranquilizer. The screening was carefully kept from the jury until today. Lewis b e I i e v es the movies will considerably enhance his hopes for a favorable verdict in the ft million lawsuit against the health spa. - Ruston angrily condemned the movies as "sell serving, leading and suggestive and extremely inflammatory" a n d repeatedly pointed out to Judge Murray that be had no opportunity to cross (See SAUNA, Page I) ·---------·-publtc aervlcea -trash and !axis. Taxi owner Jadt campbell has .. ked '11-panel will llOllllder an avenge !or an tntreaae lrom the msting fee THIS P A.RROT'S 11..-t lncttaae lo household trash of M cenls !or the Jint one-filth mUe . ,_ -· , -· . · and garbage collection lees Jllld ·to the ·anino imts IC!'~ lcMJ~·1rac11on '·,, STOOL P"'G'E.O.N San Clemente CommerctaJ ColJ?pany! It : or 1. ai.Ue. .. 1 ~ : ; : , • , ~ n. i 1 ..... 1sm. -.. 11111 bJaolanall, bOth ~ •1 r&ICIQr lltea llld durln( lhlpnent -Mreed· to 1U... Cl!y .At .... y J11111ea ' tln,pOlnl .ur , lncftaotnc nhlerablllty,", . Oltaaakl lo -..,_ In 1n ordlnuce also (as a mini·publlc utllltleil panel) " r. Under~ he·dow COtlt<l!I tJlo talal "°"'d • • .. • • · , will cooslde• an appeal IOI" taxi oervlce ~ tlO ceou '!or the Mt .-...~-· COLbGNE' . Gennony .(UPI) -"He. rate increases: . , n\lle and 10 ""lo 1or.~;Jlddlt1ona1 .Js her<! He ls here!" the parrol<(!>lked 11be tild. I bennlag COlllmll\:ial COllllrUcllon work ' Mri. 'l'rlcy told eoancthnen, "It Is 111 SUndlya Iller the Dlllrlct Allorney'1 1"'11' mcnl mondote to call !or 1 nuclear olllce doc!Jned to Jll'*CUle Yiolllon ._ motatorlmn 11111 lo call for the ol the current ordlnuce. Olwaki agreed -ol our nation'• r-wllb the D-"'• llltt Wbidl aald there prilr!tlel 11111 Wo to the en"'°"mental mtY be --llllloMI cpotiom In aa!er..,,... .t.._ 1upply.'' (loePROGllB, ..... ·I) • • I ~ • , .. J • ·' • T Both requests stem from ming fuel GOHOVODtb ' ol "' ~~ ·~ also In !be kitchen when police. acting on and employment oost'.s by the • local 1eeto. an 1Dcrt11e tn the Wli!loi a Up, broke Into the home of a fugitive bullneaaes. ·cllarie from 1$ per hour 1cJ fl ' . from a prlaen. Tbe houaebold feea !or l'Ubllllll '.Campbell _.Id thet ...,._ o1 the Police aalcl they found the Jallbreaktr colledlon are nomlnll, but the~ "'"""1 cill~ to Sin .a.mente In the 11_,.g room hldloc behind tbe for bulineMea and othlr I 1 r s,e t 1 t•bet:Mt . ~-.iar,· ~ ·Die" cm1ain& cu-. will be lllghUy bJPer.l Jn.;.,,.~~~··t~.,._ , __ ·,__ ___ .._. ___ _ • ..... 0 /T 1 / l .~ : / '\ ,•~ , • • 1 u . ( Waddell backed up Spencer's statements and added that the Public Utilities Commission {PUC) has en- couraged the city to apply again for the right-or-way. "lf you people will join tl!," Waddell said at the Long Beach hearing, "we1l have a good chance ol beating the PUC and Santa Fe." C.Ommission Chairman DonaJd Bright agreed to send a copy of the commission's vote on the issue to the PUC and the railroad. Apologizes . To Family, ' \ Saddlehack By JAN WORTH or IM 0.lty f'Mll Si.ff With a public apology and a testimony to "the crutch of prayer," Saddlebact College trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana resigned bis post Monday night. Brannon, 4.1, a charter member and. former president of the board, pleaded guilty ID bookmaking charges in Orange County &lperior Court tut month. He. said be wtJI remain in office until a successor la elected ln the June primary.· "f want to publicly apologlu to my family for lhe embarrassment and shame I have caused them fOr the actions I may have done in the put1" Brannon said. "The past year and a hall have been very difficult, and without the love and affection they've shown for me t doubt that I could have survived." be added. The Santa Ana trustee said he plans to "dedicate the rest of my Ille to repaying my family for their love." And be added lo making bis . cleclsloll he bad relied on "a crutch--a cnitcb many of us should use but all too Often do not-and .that is prayer." Hands clasped Ugbtly to bis chin, his vojce quavering at times, Brannon delivered his five-minute speech to a packed board room. ~ He said bebad talked to many friends in the last month to detenrune what bis action sbould be, and apoioglled to them for any embarrassment be bad caused the school and its stalf. "I am truly sorry," he said. Board members made no comment on Brannon's remarks, but two of them, Patrick Backus and Hans Vogel. said privately they had talked with Brannon about his possible reslgnaUon and urged him to do so. In the audience were acting student body president David Hall and five ol the eight candidates for another seat soon to be vacated-that of Michael Collins who resigned last November .. / One ol them, Norris& Brandt ol I~ •• had entered the race with Bamnon's resignation as a chief plank. "I am glad Mt. Brarmon has tboulht of the community," Mrs. Brandt said alter the speech. "He did the right (SN l\ESJGNS, Pqe I) Oraage Weatller lt'U be bright and IUDDJI again Wedneoday, according to the weather service, with slightly cool- er temperatur<S along the Orange Coast. Higbs ol 61 at the beaches ri&ing to the low 70o loland. Lowa tonight 3> to lO. --INSm E TODAY . Colonel Sandor• C1!1c1 his wi/•, Claudia, are 1•!11(1 HMl<in Inc., the tuccessor fNtd chicken firm /<>r ,.llwlng U.. Colond's """". lmag• Cl!lcl liM>lt1t In promoting •ome products. s .. •lo'll Page 12. .......... , l ,.,,, .. c......... ·' c~ •at C•la 11 c,.._.. . 11 --. ............... • ...... llAll Ill • I• .,...,._. 11·11 ,.,. ... ..... . .,_ " ,...,.... ,. ........... ,. ' ' : J;! DA.ll V PILOT SC Areas Flooded 100-mph Winds Buff ~t O·regon ~ Wire Servk<I Winds oJ more than 100 miles an boor whipped the Oregon coast during the night and heavy rains fell over much of the state, causing fiooding, road closures power outages and school closures. The storm al&0 was bringing ntn and snow to Northern CalifomiJ. At Corvallis, Ore. 15 persona were evacuated from an apartment complex just inside the southwest city limit! about 4 a.m. today when rising water threatened their homes. Police Chief Jim Goodman said a fire department tank truck sloshed through 3z;. leet of water to bring out the famiUes, most young couples with chlldtto. At Gold Beach. a Greyh<omd bus carrying IS passengers north on Highway 101 was halted because of high water. The passengers were lodged in the county jaJI overnight because there were no other accommodations. "We drank Jol3 of coffee, had a lot of cmversation and a few naps," said a dispatcher. . In eastern oregon, a fo.ot-deep snowpack at Baker vanished ovemlgbt In a downpour of rain. Road closure! throughout Oregon were so numel"QUS police agencies could not FromPqel PROGRESS ••. the unU!Ual city code. Councilmen also learned that another way to curb noisy Sunday work might be through a new county noise ordinance which will go into effect soon. -Agreed to a staff study on the costs and styles of new welcome slgm to the community· after hearing the idea from Mayor Roy Byrnes. Dr. Byrnes suggested several locations next to major roads leading into the city. -Formally accepted the turf work at the two newest nelghborhod parks In the city. 'Ille 19,000 lnsiallatloo took plaee at Bonito and Four Oaks parks. -Agreed lo schedule a study an long· range· parks needs at its next ~ion on Jan. 28 to give voters an idea ()f city planning In advance of the March S vote on a special parks taL Voters will be asked to approve a maximum levy of IS conts per $100 of assessed valuation to raise funds for new Parks. Solon Fights For Men's Rights DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - A group of Iowa legislators had moved to strike a blow for equal rights for men. The leglslalors filed biU.. Monday In the Iowa House to create a Commission on the Slatus of Men and lo provide by law for the observance of Father's Day as well as Mother's Day. "I'm serious," declared Rep. ~rge Knoke of Council Bluffs, chief spoMOr of the Commission of the Status of lt!en bill. "I beHeve in equality." President Holds Budget Meeting WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon met with his budget chief today f.o discuss his $300 billion spending plan,,. NW>n called Budget Director Roy L. A!h lo the While House lo discu<s lhe 1975 budget which is almed at avoiding recession becawre of the energy µisis. 1be meeting is one of a series Nixon is holding with key advisers to put the finishing !ouches •n the budge! and other matters as be tries to tum the focus of attention away from Watergate. OIANtol COAST sc DAILY PILOT I keep track of them. State police said Interstate s had only one lane open where a mudslide crashed down 6\1 miles north of the California border. Both southbound lanes and one northhbound lane were closed. A state police officer said he did not know when traffic wouJd be restored. It's a big one," he said. In Benton County, some roads were covered with 31,1 feet of water. Most of the water was runolf, not flooding st.reams, officers said. Along the coast, windows were smashed, trees blown over and telephone and electrical power outages were numerou!. A gust of 110 miles per hour was recQrded, at Mt. Hebo Air Force Station. The wind hit 86 mph at Brookings and 83 at Gold Beach. Meanwhile the winter stauv. packing southerly gales, heavy rain and snow, is on the loose in Northern California. The front, 200 miles west of California early today, will "bring locally heavy rains 90Ulh to the Tehachapis today and Wednesday with heavy snow in the northern Sierra Nevada above 6,000 feet," the National Weather Service said. Forecasters also warned of flooding ln low lying coastal areas north of Monterey Bay. Storm warnings for southerly winds of up to 60 miles per hour were issued for today and Wednesday north oJ Point Arena on the Mendocino Co u n t y coastline. Southward to Point Sur, the weal.her service expected gales ranging from 25 to 45 m.p.h. The weather service said a weak weather front moved across Northern and Central California Mo n d a y , spreading "light to moderate rain southward to the San Francisco Bay area and ni:>rtbem San Joaquin Valley." More than an inch of rain 1ell In Eureka while Red Bluff had more than a half Inch and San Francisco nearly a quarter inch. FromPqel SAUNA ... examine 1.frs. Parson In e 1 t h e r circumstance, drugged or otherwise. Dr. Benton argued before he showed lbe ftlm.s that It was only !air !or the Jury lo aee lllrl. Parson at her most relaxed momenla which could only be In the office o! her psychiatrist. Her courtroom testimony has been oUered under circumstances that are particularly adverse to any person suffering the kind of psychiatric trauma Mrs. Parson is undergoing, Benton told Judge Murray and the two lawyers. Mrs. Parson's statements under the drugs and otherwise were identical: that before she was trapped ln the sauna room of the Orange health spa on ~!arch 2, 1970, she was a happily married Catholic woman wtni.e life was devoted to her husband and seven children. She stated in both video tape sequences that any spa".'e time she had was devoted to the Catholic church, Catholic youth programs and the PTA. Mrs. Parson broke down and wept at the end of the first movie as 11he told Dr. Benton how Maria took pcssession of her body, donned sexy clothes that she would never have worn under nonnal conditions and set off for local bars ln a hunt for men and sexual relationships. Mrs. Parson, who has been known to her family and friends from an early age as Betty, again named several of the many men she has known over the past three years. She listed among her favorite ban In the bunt for extramarital mates the Newporter Inn and the Stuft Shi.rt in Newport Beach. "When I'm Maria I just want to run away," she hesitantly mumbled under the Influence of the truth drug. "Maria wants sex and she wants to be held by a ma~ne thing leads to the other." She also relates in both interviews the nature of the dreams she states she has experienced almost nightly since her ordeal in the 1'10-degree !8Wla room. Mrs. Parson tells Benton of being Imprisoned in a cube of ice, of being carried along in a flow of hot lava aod of looking down f.rom the sky at boiling, steaming water. "Marta' comes out o! the lop o! my head and takes over my soul," the redhead tens Dr. Benion. "! light her and fight her but tomeUmes .she is too strong for me." Lewis stated Monday that Mn. Parson still eluck:s ber husband and !amlly when she is domlnaled by the Marta personalliy an ddrlvos off alone from the Anaheim home. lllrl. Parm lold Dr. Benton In both lniervlews that she wUI often offer her ht1$band aod family the ....,,.. that •he need& a loaf of bread or a pair of ltA>cklngo to escape from the home when Marla lakes control. Lewis aald Dr. Benton, two oiher psychlatrlsll who have examined Mrs. Pmon and Lewis himself while the lawyer was Interviewing Mn. ParlOn In his San Francisco olOce have 111 betn lnvlied to join Mrs. p.....,. al a local bar and receive her eexual favors when she suddenly became Marla during the 1n1erv1 .... V1'1 Tt....,_ One of Kind Robert Stanley. 45, Martinez, Cali!., has disease new to an· nals of medicine, according to a team of researchers. llis body c o n ta in s mysterious chemical whi~h will not allow wounds to heal ·properly. Cuts heal very slowly and without strength and his scars readily pull apart. . .. Donald' Nixon . Furious Link to Howar~ Hughes Hotb' Denied 117 L. PITEK KRIEG Of .. Deflf Plllf SI ... President Nixon's brother F. Donald Nlzon of Newport Beoch today was furioua over alegaUons carried in a United Press foternallooal story Monday that he profiled trom the fraudulent aale of ltA>ck lo billionaire Howard Hughes. Nixon aald his only tie to Hughes was through fonner good friend John Meier, a former Newport Beach resident and former mining consultant for Hughes. Me.ier was indicted Monday in Las Vegu on charges of lncomt tax evasion and !taud against the federal government. Nixon for some time bas been predicting the Indictment and contended lhal Meler brought In the Nixon name Jn hopes things would go easy for him. "l\olr. Meier is in very deep trouble," NlJ:on said. "But beyond that, I have no comment, other than to say those investlgatoni: are going to have some red faces too," he.said . In its story Monday, UPI said the Senate Watergate CommJttee is investigating the pc:>Mibliy that Donald Nixon received "substantial sums" ol money from former Hughel alcles for hls help ln mining claim ventures. The slory linked Donald Nixon to Meler because of e trip the two made to the Dominican Republic In 19'9. Nixon clalma: the trip. waa purely ple•sure. He said he went to see Meler receive that country's Ch r Is top her ColumbUI award. UPI aald the trip may be Ued to allegallonl by Meler !hat Donald Nixon i;ought perional !lnanclal gains by offering lo use his kinship with the President to win decls~ favorable to the Hughes empire. Monday's lndictment.s charge Meier and three otbera with shifting huge proflll !rom deals with Hughes lo Swlu bank accounta. U.S. atlomey Devoe Heaton aald the indictment involves sales ol mining Frot11 P .. el RESIGNS ••. thing. I was surprised to hear him ask forgiveness. And I konw that wa hard on him but beat !0< all." Also present was Lee R h o d e s , preoldenl of the Saddleback College Faculty A!soclatlon. clalma exceeding II mllllon lo the Hughes Tool Company, which wu thtn owned by Hughes. Meler was named ln two indictment.a returned by the Las Vegu Fet!enl Grand Jury on two counts of conspiracy and on two counts of alleged tu evuion -1969 and 1970. Meler waa Indicted lasl year fOf Income lax evulon for 1111. One cooaplracy count charga Mela' wilh defrauding the Unlled Slales by ol»t.ructlng the collection of Income tax as a result ol the sale of mlnin& claims by Alan Jarlaon, Lu Vegu televlalon newsman, to the Hughes Tool Company. Others lndicted along with Meler on a second ooosplracy CXlW11 ,...,. Anthony Hai.ls, 17. and James P. Cowley, 15, both of Salt Like Clly, and Robert Kahao, 59, of Loe Anael ... Toner to Head San Juan CofC ·'Temporarily' Police Artist w Draw The faculty gave Brannon a direct communleatlon which wa s oot made available lo the press. But Rhodes said "We wanted positive action, and I think what has happened here torught wa.s posltivt:. We are satisfied with the outcome." John Toner, the husband of the Immediate pasl president o! the Sao Juan C.plslraoo Chamber of Commertt, has asstaned the role as "temporary coordinator" of the organization. Face for Myst.ery Skul~ BraTU'IOO was arrested in August, 1972 In connection with a $25,000 a week gambllng ring In the arbor Area. The new title, essential ly coJTeSpondlng to interim rrianager, was set at a recent meeting of the chamber board which has the iask of finding a permanent occupant for the post. Police artist Sandy Martin will he called on again this week to try to reconstruct the facial fea tures of a woman whose skeleton was discovered after last week's· serious gas main fire at a San Clemente mobile home park. Detective I.I. Mel Portner said that Martin has olfered to ·use .the same techniques he used lo draft portrali. of anoiher viciim of foul play whose decomposed body was found In the city recenUy. The drawings which Martin made of Marine deserter Dale Arthur Erlewein, 21, were described as "almost on the button" by investigators who came up with a positive identification late last week. - M in the Erlewein case,, Martin '!ill use pholographs of the skull, exanune them under a magnifying glass and draw from the bone structure. The veteran portraitist performs the services for police on a vohmteer b&iJ . and declines aoy paymenl, Portner said. Total Enrolled At Saddleback Declines 9.4% Total enrollment for the winter quarter at Saddlebacg Colege is 4,390, down 9.4 percent from the fall term enrollment. Saddleback Superinlendent F r e d Bremer said the drop was "normal attrition" experienced every y e a r between the two terms. Last year a reduction of seven percent was noted. Of the total, 1.6.19 students are full time, carrying 12 units or more, and 2,751 are part-time, carrying less than 12 unts . Eleven classes were dropee<f because of indequate enrollment -seven n the day program, one in the night program, and three in the off-campus program at six high schools. All three of the unfilled off-campus classes v.·ere at Laguna Beech High School. Night classes also are offered at San Clemente High School and Irvine University. In the extended campus program, a total of 420 students enrolled, with the most, 150. at Tustin High School. Residents in that area recently have complained of not enough course offerings and the distanCe to the main campus in Mission Viejo. London Railway Workers Strike ' . Besides the draw!ogs, police have .on!Y scraps of evidence and a dental chart to help them determine the ldenUty of the short woman wlme remains lay unnoUced for six weeks or more at the edge of the Caplatrano Shom Mobile Home Parit. · · Charts o! the leeth In the skull - described u being In poor condition and show!og signs of major denial work -have been aent lo dentists In the area for checklng against t.be1r records. Portner aald Monday that probes In missing-person records revealed one woman who could be the victim, but dental check! are not yet complete in her case. · 'Ille vlcUm -apporenlly slain and left lleneath the thiclt buabes at the edge o! the Santa Fe track& -was less than five-feel tall and bad brown hair wllh llecb of gray "" a lighter tint. • No apparent cause o! death has been determined because of the coodltlon of the remains. The severe beat of tho lira m Wedoeaday of last week bumed away the shrubbery and then nearly cremated the remains before authorities were notified by workmen at the scene wbo first noticed the bones. · From P .. e 1 PARK ... unoccupied coaches. "We were extremely lucky that no one was home at the time and that the standard ocean breeie was not blowing that afternoon," the chief said. The possible improvement! to the system would have to be installed at the expense of the owners of the heach!ront park. "I think lhat !here should be at least a six-inch water line there to serve the new hydrants," Coleman said. ''We plan to make the recommenda· tions lo the council In the strongest of terms," he added. "We have seen proot ·that what is there now simply Isn't enough." His partner, Robert Emmett Kelley of Newport Beach, was sentenced to six months in jail and three years' probation last month. Brannon has not yet been sentenced. Business Plane Crashes in Fog, Killi1ig 2 Men OKLAHOMA crrv (UPI) - A business jet atlemptlng lo land af Will Rogers World Airport era.shed in a dense log today !our miles short of the nmway, killing two persons aboard but ju.st missing several residential areas. Goo<ge .Clark, chief lnveotigalor a\ !he regional office o! the National 'l'ramportaUon Safety Boord In Fort Worth, Tex., aald the al=alt was o"1led by the Kerr-Mc:GeO C«p. of Otlahoma City and wu flying from Corpus Christi• Tex., to Oklahoma City. Officials of the Federal Aviation Admln!Jtratlon in Oklahoma City aald two persons aboard the aircraft were killed, ·hut apparently they were the only casualties. ~ Kerr~\!cGee offid ldelltl!led the dead as pilot Kenne Blair Hunter, 65, and co-pilot Jack ~ Gamer, liO, both of Oklahoma City. 'Ille plane, a t......,.lne N o rt h American Rockwell Sabrellner with a cepacity of eight persons, was on ao instrument landing in visibility of a quarter mile. Commuters Delayed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Commulers riding the computer-age Bay Area Rapid Transit system to San Francisco were delayed up to cne hour Monday because the doors refused to open automatically. BART officials said the problem on the seven-car train from Daly City was an electronic component that refused to relay door opening signals. The chamber. wracked by controveny recently over the resignation of manager Valerie Powers, now will go on a search for a pennanent office manager. Toner is the husband• of Mrs. Pat Toner, the owner d. Niguel Personnel and Immediate past president of the chamber. Mrs. Toner ...,1gnec1 u a dlreclor of the chamber last .... k .. • technicality so that her husband could asswne the paid position. A limit of 90 days was set on Toner's tenure in the Interim role. Olamber Vice Preskten: B r u c e Swarthout said a new recruiting program will begin for a manager and that Toner might very well be Included In the list o! appllcani.. A! a sidelight lo the lalest chamber action the board at I,. sessJm la.st week also agreed lo appoint two official spokesmen for the chamber -Swarthout and President F0<est Dun!Ytn, who cormiUy Is hospitalized aod uoavlllable. The previous manager for the chamber was literally locked out of th e chamber offiees after three weeks on the job. The incident marked the end of a fiery three weeks oC controve rsy involving lifrs. Toner and Mrs. Powers over a $75 employment fee. See You Again For First Time? LONDON (UPI) -A bole! has malled apologies lo ihousanda of BrlUl!b men for any embarrassment callled by a cirC"Ular letter announcing the reopeninc of its restaurant A epokesman for the Carlton Tower Hotel said the letler ended with "I look forward very much to greeUng you again." This raised suspicions of many wives about their husbandl, ht said. He said the malling list was aelected by ao ageocy aod dld not nt0esaarlly include previowl clienls. DRAPERY CARPET SPECIAL COTTON/RAYON CASEMENT f'l'ory l Antique Go!il ·~ .. ·:~~· UI E PRICE $2.11 VD. SPECIAL HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! LONDON (AP) -Most o! Brilaln's railway engineers st:ruck for 24 houfl ,.., today and commuters relying on cal'll snarled U'affic in London and other cities. • The traffic congestion was less severe than expected in some areu. Some commuters apparently were staying home as they did last week when a one-day rail stoppage caused massive tr&.ffic jams. All passenger train serviC'I! was halted,· but some freight trains kept rwmlng. FromP .. el · 19 KILLED .•• three owned by J-.11ala, • labor contractor of Brawley. , The accident occurred In the darkness aboul 6:30 a.m. at the lntenectlon ol Rannels Boulevard and toth Avenue nur the fanning community of Ripley. 'Ille patrol aald tho canal, which pa11es under the roedway, wu curylng more Wiiier lhlD usual, draining aalt !tom tho flekm. " . 1 "The Trouble With Some Self-Mode Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe." Maurice Seltter ALDEN'S CARPETS · e DRAPES 11163 Placentia Ave. COSTA MEsA 646-<t838 HOUU: ,,._, 1111'1 'l1lon., f te l 1N -.. L, f te t -SAT. fiJO te I " . ' . Tuesday's Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE --4- • SC DAILY PILOT Year's High-Low s Appear Every Saturdar Stocks Respond To Energy News DAILY PILOT ' • • ' • ·~ • \ ;_4_ DAILY PILOr 1ue:sa.ay, January 15, 1974 Family Clre:;";;;•:.---.. f»:,11:._BH Keane Ceremonies Slated Spare Drummer Basie Gets a R eplacement Fairview ·Hospital Fetes 15th Year When the ca ll "Is there a drummer in the house?" went out In Akroo. Biil Smith, a senior at CUyahoga Falls High School. pushed his way from the balcony to the stage. Jazz musician Count Basie needed a drummer to fill In because his regular, Sonny Payne, was late in arriving for a concert at the University of Akron. Smith, who ~as been playing drums for eight years, told Basie he k n e w tbe ar- ln~"13 years, has scheduled three shows in his hometown March 11>17. Col. Tom Parker, Presfey's mana2er, said the 39-year-old Conner teen ~ age idol will appear for matinee a n d evening perfonnances at the Mid-South coliseum. * A fonner governor and an aspiring governor were among thooe joining in a party Ill celebrate Ida Brown'• 96t.h birthday in Sacramento. Mrs. Brown:' mother of ex· SPEAKERS AT the bullet Gov. F.dunmd G. Brown and will Include Andrew ~-------.._ wandmother of Edmud G. Robertson, deputy director of ( J. Brown, Jr., secretary of state the State Department of PEOPLE of California, looked !lround "Be brave, Daddy, ifll only sting for a minute -Health; William Long, chief ~ at the family members and or the agency's h o s p i t a I "---------' said: _i·r•m so grateful for that'i a 9ood soldier. • .'' se rvices section for rangements and the Basie everything." ------de v e1opmental disabilities ; group "Plus One" performed * Rep. Andrew Hinshaw (R· two nwnbers until Payne Gerardo Wescesla'o A Newport Beach): Dean arrived. VU!alobos, a Costa Rica bortion Amendment McCoy, chairman of the The audience gave the youth presidential candidate, won a Fairview State Hos p 1 t a 1 a round of applause and a wrestling match. Advisory Board, and Costa PROGRAMS PIONEERED special curtain call. Villalobos, the Democratic NEW YORK (UPI) -society, tha~ all human life Mesa Mayor Jack Hamme«. by the Fairview staff under * party candklate, beat 8 Costa cardinal Terence Cooke, the is sacred -from conception Guided tours of the Supt. Dr. Anthony N. Toto Elvis Presley, who has not Rican professional wrestler archbishop of New York, through the nine months of ·hospital's wards and service which are being a PP 11 e d appeared on a ~1emphis stage known as "The Buzzard" in wants a c 0 n 5 ti t u t 10 na 1 growth and development in centers, including its school, elsewhere in the state hospital a two of three.fall match. the womb, through infancy, will begin at 2 p.m., according system are largely credited THE COMMITIEE FOR ART University of Cotlfqfnlo, Irvine .,......,. CIVH, WA• O"" OU THE CONTEMPORARY CHA•ER ENSEMBLE Arthur Weisberg, director works by: C11tlgionl, C!>Wetl,. Crumb, Devtdonky, Stockh1u1er, Schw1ntner FRI., JAN. 1 Btlt 8 P .M. amendment to overturn the c1i·1dhood d I Dr · I th d ...., ... ,......._ .... ....,....,....... Villalobos, who has made 1 , a o e see n c e, to . Irving Stone. or e ecrease. ~ ~ parachute jumps for publicity U.S. Supreme C 0 u rt' 5 maturity, midd1e and old age, He is in charge of the A system in which each U.C. Irv ine and ridden h 0 rs es to decision last year allowing to deatb," he told worshippers anniversary celebration, as county has a regional center F' Art v·u Th 1 dramatize the oil crisis, is abortion on demand. at a service in St. Parick's community liaison director for for treatment of the mentally ine s 1 age e1 er Governor one d seven candidates for "Despite the opinion of the Cathedral to honor catholic the hospital. retarded and the handling of Admission $3.7S, Students $l · Pens Ballad Of Bugging the Feb. 3 election. He court, we still hold, together couples who celebrate golden Some officials ~Y Fairview their cases has a I so for ticket lrtformetlon c.11(J14)11}6617 or m.66M promises to rule 30 years ill _wi::·:'.'.1h'_millioos'.'.'.'.:. '.'.'.. ~~of:_:o~the~rs'._'.'.'.in:_:ou~r _:rum::iv:'e'..'rsarl:'.'..'.es~. ____ ·:_:_:rn::a~y:..:h'.'.'.a'.:ve'.....'.'.lhe'.'.'..."gr:'.'ea"'.'.'.lest~d'."egree~:_~con~tr.'.'ibut"'.'.'.ed~lll~.'.:red~uc:':lng~.'.'lhe~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ elect<d. 1· P!IlLADELPIIlA (AP) - Democratic Gov. Milton Shapp is not only the chief executive of Pennsylvania, but also is a songwriter. A sample: "Rose ltfary, oh, Rose Mar y, pl.ease relate "To our Head of State "'He must t'l'Ulke things perfectly clear, yes my dear. "He must teU what the beep went on at Wa ter- gate." I· "Like a lot or other people, I usually just write them songs and put them aside, but these were so timely," Shapp said after his song was recorded at the Sigma · Sow"ld Studio in Philadelphia Sue Levinson, a Spanish teacher and sometime drama coach at Germantown High School, recorded the two songs, "No Shortage of Love" and "The Ballad of Rose Mary." * Anna KaH.fl, who was married during the weekend in Las Vegas, says her 1~ year-old son by A-I a r I o n Brando is embarrassed by his father's role in "Last Tango in Paris". "For a bachelor to do a role like that would be more acceptable. But he h a s embaJTassed his son," said Miss Kashfi, 37. • * A former divorce attorney who is the publisher of a forthcoming new magazine "Marriage and Divorce" has been divorced by his wife. "We had no serious problems with. our marriage until J ~ involved with publishing the magazine," said Jullan R. Warner. "And most of the conversation in our household began to deal, of oourse, with the subject of marital breakups. "All this talk just caused my wife Jane& to question our marriage seriously for the first time, and she just decided to end it," said -""':O""""'."~""'~-~-~·'!'·L-~':'!-~-~·1-..W~am~er. Serious about " Losing~? MEDIC AL WEIGHT REDUCTION Lindora's unique program Is a sale and practical method for the enlire family to lose weight and learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the st ric t supervision of Medical Doctors . Ca/I for information Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. SAN BERNARDINO 886-4788 ArrOWl'l•MI M•Cllc.I BIClg, NEWPORT BEACH 845-3740 PK.9 P1ofnalonal l ldg, WOODLAND HIUS 347-5647 Wtrn11·Vle!Of)' ~ldieal Bldg. COSTA MESA 551-1893 Mn• V1rdl Prol•11lonal Bldg, E. LONG BEACH 597-0378 LOI Al101 u.dical Cc1111r &ARDEii GROVE 534.2051 ~uo "o!Mllonll Bid;. LONG BEACH ·426-6549 l<B Prolnllonal BIOg. WEST COVINA 962-3438 Muon BIOg. POMONA 623-1655 Po111ona Valley Medical C.nt1r HAWTHORNE 679-9236 H1wtl'lot111 M1Clle1I C.nt9f • PASADENA 796-2614 Ctoeli•r Bank BIOti. FULLERTON 870-9501 Sitt• conrg; Meellcal Bl • CERRITOS 924-5748 c.trnoe Pro!utlonll 816". SHERMAN OAKS 789-71 03 Grlbln.Von fi7;1 Profes1i0flal 8 dg. SANTA MONICA 828-4513 f11n~lln Medic.al Biel;, MISSION HILLS 365-1138 Mi11ioft Meclle&I Bldg. ORANGE 538-2395 T ... 11ln-0.1pmtl'I ProlUllonal BIClg. LA HABRA 694-1029 Hilkfftt M.Cl1~I Bldg. RIVERSIDE 787 .. 250 Me4ictl $411111 Lindora MEDICAL , CLINIC ~ If you're considerin a small car : consider the Ng 1 sel ing compacts in Ameri ca.· last year Plymouth compacts outsold every other compact in America, including such popular cars as Chevrolet;s Nova and Ford's Maverick. We think there are a lot of good reasons for this. So we're going to list some of them in the event you may be considering ii small car this year. Better g11 mileage. Recently published test results by Popular Science on '73 cars (with figures adjusted by Popular Science to reflect 1974 model changes and the results of E.P.A. tests) show our Duster with a "Slant-Six" engine can go farther on a gallon of gas than a comparable Maverick or Nova. More room tor hips, legs, shoulders, and heads. We try to make sure our small cars Plymouth Scamp ' Plymouth Valiant aren't too small. Duster and Scamp have enough room for live. Our four- door Valiant has enough room for six passengers. And it has more hip, leg, shoulder and head room than either Maverick or Nova. More trunk space. For example, Scamp has mere trunk space than Maverick or Nova. And Duster and Valiant have bigger trunks than Scamp. In short, we make small cars with big trunks. Plymouth compacts are priced low. Depend ing on where you live, Plymouth Duster is either priced right down with, or less than VW's most popular model. After all, one of the first things anybody considers when buying a new car is the price. And in a comparison Plymouth Duster • of manufacturer's suggested retail prices, we stand up very well. Every Plymouth compact glvlll you something you can't get lfllm the competition. Chrysler engineering. The kind of engineering that goes into our most expensive Chryslers and Imperials. So you get th ings like a standard Electronic Ign ition System, with no points or condenser to replace. So ignition tune-ups are less expensive and come less often. Nobody has more compacts to choose from than your Chrpler- Plymouth dealer. He'll be happy to give you a test drive in any one of them. He's not satisfied with last year's sales success. This year, he wants you. :tlifllJ. CHRYSLER TAJ MOTOQ CWOllMm Yaliant ••. Duster.1ScamP. CHRfSLER Some of the eight great small car-buys from Plymo.uth. I '/1 I I I I ' . , Immediate availability .at your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer. -·- ' 1 ' ~Ji. ' ' • • \ • ' l • ' Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 15, 3. •SE9fl0NS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1974 TEN CENTS Saddleback' s Brannon Apologize ~, Resigns By JAN WORTH -Of llilt Dlif't Pw.t Stefl ith a public apology and a testimony t.6 °tbe crutch of prayer," Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa An~ resigned his post Monday night. ~Brannon, 4.S, a charter member and fonner president of the board, pleaded guilty to boQkmaking charges in Orange QMmty Superior Court last month. He saJd he will -remain in office until a successor is elected in the June primary. • "I want to publlely apologize to my family !or the emba(l'assment and shame I have caused them for the actions I may have · done 1n the past," Brannon said. "The past year and a half have beeri very difficult, and without the love and af!ectlan they've shown for me I doubt that I could have survived." he added. The Saota Ana trwtee said . he plans to "dedicate the rest of my Ille to repaying my family for thelr love." And he added in making his decision ' he bad nlled on '1a crutch-a crutch many o! us should use but all too often do not-and that ls prayer." Hands claaped tlgbUy to his chin, his vQice quavering at Umes, Brannon delivered bis five-minute ispeecb to a packed board toom. He said he had talked to many friends In the Jut month to determine what his action should he, and apologized to 'them for any embarrassment he bad caused the l!dlool and it. stall, "I am truly sorry," he said. • Board members made no comment on Brannon's remarks, but two of them, Patrick Backus and Hans Vogel, said privately they had talked with Brannon about his possible resignation and urged him to do so. ln the audience were acting student body president David Hall and five of the eight candidates for another seat soon to be vacated-that or Michael Collins who resigned last November. One of them, Norrisa Brandt of Irvine, had entered the race ''ith Bamnoo 's resignation as a chief plank. "I am glad ~rr. BraMon has thought of the community," ~1rs. Brandt said after the speech. "lie did the right thing. I was surprised to hear him ask forgiveness. And I know ,hat was hard on him but be.st for all." Also present wa11 Lee R h o d e s , presidenl of the Saddleback College Faculty Association . The faculty gavl.' Brannon a direct comm unl catici n whi c h was • not made available to the press. But Rhodes said "\\re wanted positive action , and I think what has happened here tonight was positive. We are satisfied v.•ith the outcome." Brannon "'as arrested in August, 1972 in connection with a $25,000 a week gambling ring in the Harbor Area. His partner. Robert Emmett Kelley of Newport Beach, was sentenced to six months in jail and three years' probation last month. Brannon has oot yet been sentenced. ore. una Ill Rest Room And Tower A pn>posal for development o f ;.odditional Main Beach Park rest rooms and renovation of the old lifeguard tower will he considered by the Laguna Beach City CoW1cll meeting at 4:3() p.m. Wednesday at city hall. The mt """''· U consti'Ucled to present plans, would he located behind the South Coast Highway stom, aloog the former right ol way for El Pueo, SI.In Schall, public ~ -· aaid. Sddl Aid -.... for the projecl woukl be avlllAbM J" the council Wednesday. . City At!Qmey TUiiy Seymour said In hi1 opinion, the construction of the not l'OOIDI at the -ond ol the heoch park would DOt coofllcl With the court oetUement reached In the suit brought 1gainst lhe cily by resident John Gabriels. Gabriela sued to block development of the park until a re v t e w of the ·)>n>Jecl's environmental bnpacl report was made by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. He 1etUed in time to allow completion of the park by 'sununer, but die city agreed lo at least temporarily omit some f>lalll!¢ J!Uildings from \Jl!p.Ject. Seymour said the buililings spelled QUI in the court agreement did not Include rest rooins. Scholl said H the facilities were not eonstructed, the city probably woold be !t<!ulred by the state to provide ~ rest rooms at a cost of about ,1.500 a month. Toll Bits 19 Farm Workers • Drown Ill Canal BL Y'l1IE (AP) -Nineteen farm labon!n drowned and 28 others were injured today when a bus taking them to ..,..k plunged into 10 feet oT water in a drainage canal, the highway patrol sald. Thnie ol the victims were wOmen. The bJs failed to make a curve at a rural intenection seven m i I e s aouthwest ol this ooutheastem Cllil<nia deli!it """" the ....... aald.' The fully loaded vehicle .... t .... a IMool embenllinel and landed 00 tta llde in the water. T,he people were stacked up like dominoes against each other toward the front of the bul," said highway patrolman R<lbin Howard. "The driver was Jammed into the steering wheel with all the others behind him." None of. the victllm waa immediately identified. 1be patrol said most were Mexican naUooals being b.rougbt from the border dty of Mexicali to work in the field!. The injured, some in .erious coodition, were taken to Palos Verdes Hospital In ambulances and lber)ff's patrol cars. The ambulances made three roond trips between the accident scene and the bOspltal •. . "Tbere were aome broken arms and lep but nooe seemed in criUcal condition," Howard said. He said the bus seat. were ripped loose by the impact, and the injured craw.led out lhroogb windows and the front door' . ''!Iii poqGl~llld 'tle Dao --of lltree -bJ -Ayala, a labor (Bot JI m 1,gn, hp I) Plane Theft Foiled MUSKEGON, Mich. (UPI) -An J&- year-old f""""1 )lls "ay on an empty United Airlinet plane at Muskegon County Airporl Monday and attempted to atart the craft, aaylna he wanted "to fiy the plane to Ariz.ona." The man, Demta Wyrlclt ol Grand R&pids, Mich. wa' taken into cus\odY by· airport police and admitted to North Shore lloepital for a poycltlatric eumtnauon. · Veteran Pilot Buxton Dies of Cancer at 61 O.ll't Pilot Stiff PMM The only other facilities are located (See COUNCIL, Pqe I) Veteran pilot Wllliam Buxton, who flew remodeled military plane1 in scenes of the movie .. Tora, Tora, Tora," bu died ol cancer In Idaho, where he moved from the Orange Coast. PBY amphibious plane from Long Beacl! to Honolulu. THERE'S A TOGETHERN ESS ABOUT ARCH BEACH HEIGHTS Lot Size Problem Now Being Tackled ~y Lagurui Pt1nner1 Library Plaza Project Slated For Laguna Study Tho Laguna Beach City Council will ,..lgh • dty staH propooaJ Wednesday which could breathe new Ille into the downtown Lltrary Pima. Tho council will meet at 4:30 p.m. al dty ball The ltaff propoeal calls for providing If odilltlooal parting tpaoes In the GleoneYn S!reet lot by redesign and notrlping an coot ol $5,200. 'stnOe one of the prime objecUons to Mr. Buxtoo, was 61. He had lived in Laguna Beach for 30 years before the family changed it. residence to Hagerman, Idaho, three years ago. Ftmeral services have been held and Mr. Buxtoo wlD he hurled in his family's plot at Rlalin. He was a native of San Bernardino and spent much of bis career as a pilot ·for petroletDD cunpanies after· !earning to Dy in lllZt at Pensa<Ola Naval Air Station. World War II saw Mr. Buxton usfJDed to the Army Air Transport Command and ooe of his tasks was fe!T)'ing a He returned to the Islands in another warplane under different conditions (our years ago to fly combat scenes for "Ton, Tora, Tora," a movie" about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. SUrvtvon Include his wile Pat, of Hagerman, Idaho; ,children Mike Buxtoo, ol San ~Clemente, William Buxton of Eagerman, Idaho, Mrs. Margar.t South ol Newport Beech, Mrs. Pamela R<oe ol Corona del Mar, Lynn Buxton o1 lallUlll Beech; his mother, Mrs. Bessie Atfimon and a sister, Mrs. Bette Srer-- win, both o1 Upland. Family memberl llllggelt memorial contributions to. the American Cancer Society. ' Arch Beach .Landowner s ' Blast Building Minimum By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ot IM 0.Hy Piiot St.tt' A contingent of . Arch Beach Heights landowners appeared before the Laguna Beach Planning Commission Monday ntght to protest a proposed 5,000 square foot building site minimum . The provision is contaifled ,in a draft specific plan as a way of reducing density in the troubled heights. · After 90 minutes of discussion, commissioners decided to continue the hearing on the specific plan unUl Jan. 28. _ file Lilrary Pima plc1 bll beon the Jeloo of etc!JI parttnc -111 the plaaa site tt II fell the new opooes OOukl help __. for lhal Jou. Water Rate Hike Studied Landowners charged that application of the 5,000 square fool standard was unjust and could lead to legal action against the c..,_. . Standard lots in the belghts contain 2,500 square feet. If the proposal is adopted, the owner of such a lol would have to buy an adjacent one before building. The plasa woald be deftq,ed on the p,rt Avenue appmda&e between the ltbrary and Plclflc Coaal HJcbway and alOna the deteriorated alley behind i"omtAVSIUellorel. Laguna Official,s Get Recommendation of 20% Boost Eallmated coot ol the plaaa is $441,000. The ataff recomniendalton II that the project be aent to the dty planning ~·for conalderation. • THIS· PARROT'S Laguna Beach County Water Districl directors· will consld~ lncrualng water ratea by an average ol Ill per<ent tonlgbL • ' The recommendaUoo to raloe the water ralel lollowa Ii• mo11tllo ol study by district General ~ Jooepb R. Sweany and blrlta!I. A STOOL PIGEON SWeany aald the rato ln<realt la ; · " •· -~ , -"· ..-becauoeAta 'Iii~ jamp '-O:>LOGNI, GrrmioY M11 -"lie> In die ~·1'....i ·lii "ats In 1he la hen! lie la llerel" the parrot croaked past 1ix yeira, That ' cool la w!lal the . in tlie kitchen when police, acting on local diltrlcl payi for water from the I Up, broke lnlo'lbe bame ol /A fqlllve Metnl!Jolitan Water i>lltrtct. prllon. . An lnc:reaae In the 1 .... 11 "COii at Aid they foml lbe ~et doing hml-" alao la a factor lor In Jtvtoc roam hldlntl blblnd the the rate lllcreaoe, s....., aald. l:lll1llDL · IDcllldld -Ille ntar rate 1- • ls • cballp In Ille lllDlnc IDnnat • Now, all water users pay a blmonthJy bring in about $106,000 more on an lee ol N.40 ttnt., entlUlng them to annual basis. 1,200 cubic feet, or· l,rtl gallons, of For the remainder of this fiscal year, water.· Sweany projects the dislrlcl will gain Uoen pay lt.S ... ta f91" every 100 $30,000. cubic feet, or 7'8 1anoa.. cooamned.. 'lbe five water district directors have In llddltloo to the ---been studying a re1>9rt on the water Under the p1u; ud·~ 111et1 will rate lriCl:eooe for 'sevml weeks and pay a $5 1'readtNis" fee, plda,23· CeMI Bolrd ·~Mifnt, ·Rlc,hard · J·ahraus for every 100 cubk:1!eet ol·wal<r. ' ,prWlcted,-th~ propqiar will · be adOpted For .....,......, G 1venae r..tilentiat tonilbt. \, "' • user In the -dlstricl, <Ol1SUlllinll 'the .7:)9 '#.m. meeting 1will be.'held 2,111 cubk: feet •""Y two IDOlllbl, 00'11 at ·~ 'l'aler district board room;: J!l6 payi a 'f(-11111 ol. ll.11,.' ' 'Third SI.• , ' U1lder Ibo ...,. ~ the hlD lot la jlllti(ying the rala· increase, Sweany thil ame --Ciel Wiier wlD cllmb lald that alnce the last water rate to $1L4L • incrwe In !ill, tbe coot ol doing ... ...., 11111 ... ~ ....... -~ ' .. .._ .. climbed Iii-~ Dwtng an ~·-.. J al \ ..... -~ , (llet WA'l'lll. Pico-II · · , , ' . "' '"-" , "I'd rather sell my lot to the city at its fair market value than have to buy from the guy next door at a high price," said Rob--rt Hu~hes1 a former Arch Beach Heights resident now llving in Laguna Niguel. • ''To tell a man who owns one lot that he has to have two lots to bu.lid ... well, it's unjust," said lJughes as applause sounded from ,several of the 100 persons 1n. the audience. ·~·n lell you genUemen; .If· 1 -~an·t build, l'.m, prepared, to ljlke this right to the Suprerne Court," declared Don ~ge of Gardena,, ,owner of. ·property in the hilltop :communily. · Support foe the lot ·MbinaUon ordinance case rroin. Clad ts Brady. president of the Arch Beach lletgbi. Aaaoci,tlon. Brady said moot members ol,the asseclatlon. ·111pported the specllic (See ARCH B!!IACJ!,. i:..-II • Old Moving Site Oears Coast Unit By CANDACE PEARSON Of ,,.. o.w., ........... A 15,000-square-foot commercal project in Laguna Beach with 30 parking spaces -53 spaces below standard -was approved Monday by the regional c:oastal commission. '111e renovation and reduction of an existing 18,CMXl square feet of building into about 30 sbOps at 580 Broadway St. near the Laguna-Moulton Playhouse is prop0sed by David Doherty. The South Coast Regional Zone Conaervation Coouni11loo has usually held nrm on its staff-suggeated commercial parking code. which in this case have would required_ 83 spaces . But In the case of "The Cotony" project, the issue was complicated when planner Bob Joseph su g g ea t e d eliminating all parking to s p e e d development of city parking structures. The city of Laguna Beach bas plans for centralized parking structures and, Joseph added, is in the draft stages of its circulation and transportation element which may call for one-way traffic flows, pedestrian malls and mini- buses or tram service. Joseph recommeD<ted that Doherty convert his 30 spaces into a garden or "urban plaza" and pay parking fees to the city, along with granting a pedestriail access Irom the rear of the property. Laguna doesn't have a structure yet, Joseph conCeded Wider questiorilng by commissioners, but it does have a parking district and Mayor Roy Holm has said an increase in oo~ite parking would only be a problem, not a solution. But Doherty countered with charges that the city bas "proven unreliable in orovlding anytl!lng, including paric-mg.\' lloberty said his project should he judged on its individual merits and added he wouldn't agree to go without parking apd pay fees to "somebody who hasn 't any way to build them (the structures) because they're broke." Doherty added that ~ lender won't agree to a loan on a project without parking. Jooeph told the commJssion that if (See PARKING, Page I) Cout Weli.tller It'll he bright and SUMy again Wednesday, according to· the weather service, with slightly cool- er temperatures along the Orange COast. Highs of 64 at the beaches rising to the low 70s inJand. L<>ws tonight 35 to 50. INSIDE TODi\ l' Colomi Sandns and his wife, Claudia, art ming Heublein Inc., tht successor fried chickt'1i firm for misusing the Colottel's name, image and' l'kt'ness in J>romoting some product!. Ste 1tory Paoe 12. L M • ...,Ill 11 C•llftrlll• J c1-..... ... ,.. (l!ftlft ... 11 c....._,. 11 OMllll...._ I lfllrlNI..... ' 1 .... 1 ... :A•I 1t •ll!Mce ,,.,, ~ ........... ' .,_ " .... _.. '' -~ 1J I 2 U/o\I LY PILOT LB Tutsdal, Januaty lS, 1974 Action Wedtaesday Laguna Tackles Disaster Plan A military jet crashes Into downtown Lnguna Beach, setting off a major fire that threatens to reduce scores of commercial and residenUal structures to uhes. It's not the sort of thing people like to think abou~ But lt could happen. If it did , how ••ould Laguna Beach respond? 'lb.at question is tackled in a fire emergency plan drafted for the city by Dr. John Atkinson. The "wide front " fire plan, as ·it is called, Is the first in a series of disaster plans being prepared by Atkinson on a volwtteer basis. Atkinson ts a consulting pbyslclst who has worked in varied fields including atomic research and communications. Other plans will list steps to be t.aken in the event of a major leak of Poisonous gas, gasoline truck explosion, flood, JXIWer failure, earthquake , riot or nuclear attack. The wide front fire plan, scheduled for adoption Wednesday night by the city council, details steps to be taken by the fire, police, public works, and lifeguard departmeots. · ' Funk Factory Owner Airing Case on TV Funk Factory owner Jerry Walden, arrested In Laguna Beach for sa1e and distributing of alleged pornography, will be a guest on the television program "Philbin and Company" a talk show on KHJ Channel 9 airing from 9:30 a.m. to noon Frida y. Walden was asked to appear on the program in connection wtth a discussion on the current U.S. Supreme Court niling setting commwtity standards as a determining factor in obscenity cases. The talk show, hosted by Regis Philbin, wiU feature Wa1den during the 11 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. segment. Walden was arrested by Laguna Beach police Dec. 18, the same day the city council held a special bearing on Lagunan.s' attitudes toward obscenity and censorship. Twenty-three speakers at il1e COtD'lCil meeting opposed censorship, and three supported it. Walden was the third Lagunan to be arrested by Laguna Beach Police for selling undergrowtd comic books, copies of "Zap Comix" dee med obscene after a review by Deputy District Attorney John Anderson. A spokesperson for the KHJ program said the Philbin show will attempt to take a look at what happens as a federal edict gets passed down to the local level. Walden, owner of the Funk Factory, 750 S. Coast Highway, is due for arraignment on the smut charge Jan. 22. • Gordon and Evelyn Wilson, owne.re of Fahrenheit 451 Bookstore, 509 S. Coast Highway, were to appear in court today for arraignment All three have said they will plead iMocent to the charges. From Pagel PARKING ... it wouldn't go for no parking, the staff felt 30 spaces were inadequate. Joseph and bead planner Rod Meade said they wanted to restudy the proposal. But a vote to delay action failed and the commission then approved the project 9-1-1, with Comm i ss ione r Rimmon Fay abstaini n g and Commissioner Don Wilson voting no. • • OIAN•• COAn La DAILY PILOT n. ~ C-1 DA1L'I' PILOT. with wllldl h ~l'llld lhl H._Preu, II CIUblltl!ld Illy ~ Or111t1 C .. 11 Pllllllldlint Co'"Plny, 5-· ''" ... llont 1'1 Jlulllll"-1, MOlld1y lllrOlllll'I l"rl01y, ""° COl!I ~. Newpor1 lffdl, Mvnl!llVIOll 0 lffdl/"'°""11111 Vl llty, Llg- llMdl, lrvlMl'-Nltbldl Wld s111 ,._.,, loll! J~ll C"~1tr1110. A •lnoll rt11ionfl e11111o11 " flUllllllllld '-hll'll•r• 11111 """'•ri fhl prlllclJl'I •11t11"" pllrll It II 1llO Wb; "Y ''""'· c.11 Mew, C111ttr111e, ,,.._ l ob.rt N. W1M l"rnllleltt '"" Plllllldltr J1cli l . C11rl1y Vice Prwsllllfl! "" Gwltr1l ~ The11111 ke1¥ll Edlflr Th1HP11t A. M11rphl111 MIMO'"' l!:dllw Cherl11 H. LeM ltii:h1N P. N.11 A.Mltlll1t ~1111 Edlllra ---212 Fer.it A¥tft11• Nl1lllllf ..Y,4r1111 P.O. 9n '"• t26SJ --c..11 M-: UO Witt ..,.-slfotM ,,...,,,.,, l..atr iW HfWl!lrl ......... I'll H1111I"'°*" ltW!r Hl1l hlctl ...,,...,_... s.11-ci-te: * Nor111 e1 Clrll'"' ... , M1,a111 17141 M2-4JJ1 0 , ......... I 5 642..S•?t ....... .._.Al 0111•• 1•: , ........ ,...... . ~I, 1'1a. or.,.. CAw ~ltlllllf ~. ,.. -........... ,, ....... ....,~ _...,. flll M\IW'llMfNllll fllr'llill _,. .. • ... ,. -"'*" ..,.,.. .... ....... . ., .,,. ..... """*'· _...., ................. c:.t1 Mftl, ~ ~1111 aor u""' UM ,,..,...., _. !MA P.11 .-lfl/'fl l'flllitwy ... b411&1a UM ......... J In the event of major blue threatening city neighborhoods, the city manager or the mayor would be asked to proclalm a "local fire disaster." City departments , county governments and utilities would be mobilized to help fight the blaze under the direction of the fire chief and the city dlsaster council . The police force will be used for traffic control and evacuation ; public \\'Or'ks crews Will join the fU'emen fighting the blaze, and the lifeguards will provide immediate first aid. Laguna Beach High School will be the chief evacuation center. The fire emergency plan also sets up special precautlon.s for times of santa Ana winds, when fire danger ls at its highest. -A three-man crew will be maintained at the Top of the World fire station. -Th.e police department will establish extra patrols to watch for fire in Laguna Canyon, Arch Beach Heights and Top of the World. -During particularly hazardous sanla Ana conditions, a reserve fire engine with crew will be dispatched to Arch Beach Heights. City Manager Al Tbeal said Atkinson has spent several months working with the city staff in preparing the set of disaster plans. When all the plans are completed, they will be assembled in booklet form am; given to all city departments. "In the event of a disaster, the department heads will know exactly what to do," Tbeal explained. He said the new disaster plan.! replace an outdated, massive book that was written mainly for nuclear attack. Total Enrolled At Saddlehack Declines 9.4% Total enrollment fllr the winter quarter at Saddlebacg Colege is 4.190, down 9.4 percent from the fall term enrollment. Saddleback SUperintendent F r e d Bremer said the drop was "normal attrition" experienced every y e a r between the two tmns. Last year a reduction of seven percent was noted. Of the total, 1,639 .Wdents are full time, carrylhg 12 units or more, and 2,751 are part-time, carrying 1 ... than ll unts. Eleven classes were dropped because ol. inadequate enrollment -....seven in the day program, one in the night prDgram, and lhree in the oU-campWI program at six high schools. All three of the unfilled oll-campus classes were at Laguna Beach High School. Night . classes also are offered at San Clemente High School and Irvine University. In the extended campus program, a total of 420 students enrolled, with the most, 150, at Tustin High School. Residents in that area recenUy have complained of not enou&h course offerings aod the distance to the main campus ln Mission Viejo. Laguna Council Meeting Set For Wednesday The Laguna Beach City Cooncll Wednesday faces an agenda of 39 reguJar business items, and six public hearings when it meets at 4:30 p.m. at city hail . Public hearings are scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. On the business agenda, the OOWicil will consider: -A change In city law to permit construction between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. on weekends and holidays. -A request for a spirituali st business license. -A re port by Fire Chief Charley Kuhn on a parademic emergency care pro-gram. -A request for a policy statement on possible rele!l!le of sale or distribution of the city's sewer billing mailing list. list. Major items on the public hearing agenda include : -Extension of the Arch Beach Heights lnterim emergency building crdinance. -Req uest for industrial zoning and annexation of a piece of county territory in Laguna canyon. From P,,.e l 19 KILLED .•• contractor of Brawley. The acddcnt occurred in tha dartmesa about 8:30 a.m. at the intenection of Rannels Boulevard and 20th Avenue near the fanning oommunity of Ripley . The patrol said the canal. which pw<! under the roadway, wa1 carrying more water than usual, dr1lnlng aaJt from the fields. DIUr Plltt Slaff Piii!• Mrs.Popeil To Retrieve Roll,s Royce By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tilt DtllY Pllfl lllH Eloise Popcll, who Is facing a court hearing on police charg~ that she con- spired to have her millionaire husband murdered , today la eipected to get book the Rolls Royce police conrJscated dur-o lng her arrest in Newport Beach a week ago. Reached today at her Newport Beach home. ~trs. Popeil said she had no comment to make on any aspect of the polite accusaUons lbat she and her boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, of Santa Ana hired a Lorlg Beach man to murder Samuel J. Popell ol Chicago. Pollce claim the plot fell through when the hit man called the Chicago 1dtche11 gadget m.lllionaire and told him of rbis estranged wife's plan. Beach Grading Begitas According to pollce, Mrs. Popeil, 48, and Ayers allegedly wanted Popeil n1urdered before a pending divorce beca me final so that she could inherit approximately one.third or hls estate, estimated to be worth up to $200 million. Heavy equipment moved onto Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park site Monday to start the contour~ ing of the oceanfront park. Demolition previously cleared the property of old buildings. and the beach boardwalk. Existing trees on the park site will be preserved, and others planted. The park is sched-· uled for completion by summer. Mrs. Popeil, who wsa freed on $JOO,OOO bail raised by neighbors oo Lindi Jsle and Harbor Jslaod Road , lo scheduled to appear in municipal court ln Long Beach Mooday in the pr<llminary bearing In the case. From Pagel ARCHBEACH ... plan. His statement also .drew applause Crom some members of the audience. Commissioners agreed to continue the hearing after learning from C i t y Attorney Tully Seymour that application of the lot combination provision could result in a host of legal actions against the city. "It seems we're taking up a questionable area," said seymour. "On legal principles a1one, I think we'll have trouble if we get into thi.9:1! Seymour refwed to say anytbing more In the public porttoo of the meeting, but did discuss the matter further with commissioners in an executive (closed) session. He said further discussion in the open meeting might violate the attorney-client privilege in the event the city is faced with legal action. Commissioner Sally Bellerue appeared to stand a1ooe ln supporting the lot combination ordinance. "We need a lot size minimum up there .•. and we need it now," said Mrs. Bellerue. Commissioner Jack McDowell said be would like to see the city "encourage" lot combinations on a voluntary basis. "I don't think we should rush to make a decision on this until we receive mo:-e information," said McDowell. Chairman Roger Lanphear, agreed with McDowell, saying, "if a person is able to comply we will get some reduction in density." Commissioo.er Michael May said be, too, would encourage rather than mandate lot combinations. City planner Wayne Moody had estimated Utat if a lot combination ordinance was applied,. the number of additional homes that Could be bw1d in the heights Would be reduced from 4fi2 to 279. From Pagel COUNCIL ..• at the north end of the beach. They are not large enough to accommodate the summer beach crowds, he said . The renovation of the lifeguard tower, ordered to be "'minimal" by the city council, 'i\,.ould cost between $5,000 and $10,000 if minor refurbishing is done . A majo< job wooid put coot. at between $14,00 aod $20,000, according to Scholl. A staff report on the beach project, notes the recent storm and tidal damage to lifeguard structures at NeWJ>Orl Beach and San Clemente , where facilities are located on the beach. ''This supports Mr. (Skip) Conner's, (director of the department of marine envirorunent, contention that the old tower shOuld be located behind the new sea wall. However, this would be a major refurbishing project requiring relocation and installation of new pilings," Scholl's report states. It is also suggested that a temporary lifeguard headquarters be set up In a trailer during the time the old tower is refi.Irbished and during the sununer season. It would be placed adjacent IQ the park at El Paseo and Laguna Avenue. Cost would be $175 a month, or from $2. 700 to $4,000 if purchased outright. The trailer would serve as a medical aid station, lost aod found and house local and county radio gear and telephone switchboard. President Holds Budget Meeting WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pnlident Nixon met with his budget chief today to diacuss his $300 billion spendi'I@ ptana. Niton called Budget lltrec\or Roy L. Ash to the White Hoose to d!llCllll the 1875 budget which is aimed ot avoidlnr ncesaton because of the eoergy cr1Ji1. The meetlna la one of a oerlea Nixon Is hol~ With key advise to put the fin toucbea on !lte et end other matten 11 be the focus of attentlon away rgate. Marla Parson Judge OKs Truth.Serum Movie in Sauna Trial By TOM BARLEY 01 lM Diiiy Piltt Sl•ff When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the witness stand today in the Orange County Superior Court sauna bath trla1 the jury will view a movie made while she was und er the influence of a so-called "truth serum." Judge William Murray made the ruling that enables attorney ltfarvin Lewis Sr. to screen two video tape films in the courtroom . The declsion came after a four-hour out--0f-court session ilonday in the offire. of Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psychiatrist. "I'll let 'em in," Judge "·furray said after a bitter argument between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Dona1d A. Ruston on the admissibility of the two films. One of the movies nm by Dr. Benton In the privacy of his office depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, so, when she is not under the influence of sodium amytol. The second movie, shot by the psychiatrist last Dec. 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redhead responding to tus questioning in the slow, slurred manner lnd1tced by his injection of the tranquilizer. 'Ibe screening was carefully kept from the jury until today. Lewis be I i e v e s the movies will considerably enhance his hopes for a favorable verdict in the $1 million lawsuit against the health spa. Ruston angrily condemned the movies as "self serving. leading and suggestive and extremely inflammatory" a n d repeatedly pointed out to Judge Murray that he had no opportunity to cross examine Mrs. Parson in e i t b e r circumstance, drugged or otherwise. Dr. Benton argued before he showed the films that it was only fair for the jury to see Mrs. PariOn at her most reJaxed moments which cou1d only be in the office of her psychiatrist. Her courtroom testimony has been offered under circumstances that are particularly adverse to any person suffering the kind of psychiatric trauma Mrs . Parson is ...OOergoing, Benton told Judge Murray and the two lawyers. Mrs. Parson's statements under the drugs and otherwise were identical: that before she was trapped in the sa una room of the Orange health spa on ~(arch 2, 1970, she was a happily married Catholic woman whose life was devoted to her husband and seven children. She stated in both video tape sequences that any spa!'e time she had was devoted to the Catholic church, Catholic youth programs and the PT A. Mrs. Parson broke down and wept at the end of the ftrSt movie as she told Dr. Benton how Maria took possession of ber body, doMed sexy clothes that she would never have worn under normal conditions and set off for local bars in a hunt for men and sexual relationships. Mrs. Parson, who has been known to her family and friends from 1iin early age as Betty, again named several of the many men she bas known over the past three years. She listed among her favorite bal'! in the hwtt for extramarital mates the Newporter Inn aod the Stuft Shirt in Newport Beach. "When I'm Marla I just want to run away," she hesitantly mumbled under the influence of the truth drug. "Marla wants se.x and she wants to be held by a man~me thing leads to the other." She also relates in both interviews the nature of the dreams she states she has experienced almost nightly since her ordeal in the 17G-degree sawta room. Mrs. Parson tells Benton of being imprisoned in a cube of ice, of being carried along in a flow of hot lava and of looking down from the sky at boiling, steaming water. She and Ayers both pleaded innocent to the conspiracy to commit murder charges at thei r arraingment.s last week. Ayers is still In custody, apparently unable to raise the $100,<MXI bail set by Judge Charles Litwin . The Popeils, who summered in their Linda Isle home, separated this summer and Popeil filed for divorce in Chicago. Popeil will go to court there on Friday to seek an order giving him custody ol the couple's two teenage daughters and abandonment· of the $4,250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since their separation, Mrs. Popell and her two daughters have been llving in Newport Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday night at her borne at 519 Harhor Island Rood shortly alter Ayers drove up to the bayfroot home in the Rolls. Police confiscated the car as evidence in the case, but Newport Beach detect!ve Ken Smith said today It has been authorized for release. Solon, Fights For Men's Rights DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -A group of Iowa leglslatoni had moved to strike a blow for equal right.a for men. The legislators !Ued bills Monday In the Iowa House to a-eate a Commission on the Status of Men and to provide by law for the observance of Father'• Day as well as Mother's Day. "J'm serious," declared Rep. George Knoke of Council Bluffs, chief sponsot of the Commission of the Status ol Men bill. "l believe in equality.'' From P .. el WATER •.• the same period, the dl.strld has grown i?Y 11 percent, bringing increaaes in transmission, distribution, pumping and reservoir capacity. "We've been spending a lot of money without much of an increase in income," Sweany explained. Sweany predicted the rate increase will hold until J976 when another water rate study will have to be wx:lertaken. DRAPERY CARPET SPECIAL conON/RAYON CAS!MENT Ivory & Antlqu1 Gold •::;, ·:~~· SALE PRICE $2.96 YD. "The Trouble With Some Self-Made Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe." Maurice Seitfer SPECIAL HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! ALDEN'_S_ CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave • COSTA MESA 646·4838 HOUIS: lthl. Tin 1'llllL. t le liJO -Pll, t te t -SAT, t:JO le I • • '<"-•• -• •• • • • . "l!li\' Saddlehaek ~, .. ~ Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL. 67, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1974 TEN CENTS • ran,non u1 s Here's Srnoke9 . Youngsters from the Ranch Preschool in Irvine met up with a friendly· ) .giant Monday -Smokey the Bear, alias Earl Bevan of the Orange ; County Valencia Fire Station. Smokey appeared by helicopter in con- nect.ion with a fire safety and equipment demonstration. Jury to See Mrs .. Parson . Under Truth Di-ug ,Spell .. By TOM BARLEY ot ffl• o.nr ''"' '''" , When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the witness stand today in the Orange County Superior Court Salina bath trial the jury will view a movie made while she was under the inlluenoe of a so-called "truth serum." Judge William Murray made the ruling that enables attorney Marvin Lewis· Sr. to ecree:i two video tape fllrm in the courtroom. The decision came after a four--bour out-of-court session Monday in the offices of Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psychiatrist. .. I'll let 'em in," Judge Murray said af~ a bitter argument between Lewis arlil Bollday Health Spa attorney Dooald • or .. IJ• Coast • It'll be bright and awmy again Wedllesday, accord 1 o g to the -ther oervlce, with slig)iiJy cool• er temJl'"lum along the Orqe ' Coast Hillis· of M at the beaches rlaing to !be. low 'IOI Inland. Lows . tonlgbt 35 to 50. -- INSIDE TODA l' Col&n<I SaniJtrs 011d his !Off<, A. Ruston on the admissibility of the two films. · One of the movies rtm by Dr. Benton in lhe privacy of his office depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, 50, when she Is not under the influecce of sodium amytol. The second movie, shot by the (See SAUNA, Page I) New port Mayor W ill Fig1it fo r CdM Route Link By JOHN ZALLER Of .. Olllly ''"' '''" Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis was authorized Monday by the city council to fight for reln!tatement of the Corolla del MAr Freeway in this year's state transportation budget. • 1be council gave informal affinnatlon of Its support for the freeway after the mayor said he waoted all the help be oould get in trying to revive the now dormant freeway. "This is one ol the few areas around here where all Ute agencies involyed are in agreemect that a freeway needs to be developed and I think we shoUld go ahead with it," the rnayor·said. Apologizes To Fami1y, Saddleback By JAN WORTH Of .. Dtlty ...... ..... ~ With a public apology and a testimony to "the crutch of prayer," Saddleback college trustee Alyn BraoDon of Santa Ana resigned bis post Mooday nighL Brannon, '3, a charter member and former president of the board, pleaded guilty to booJcrnaking chargea in Orange County Superior Court last month. He said he will remain in office unUI a succesaor is elected in the June , primary. "I want to publlcly apologlu to my family for the embarrassment and shame I have caused them for the actions l inay have dOoe in the past," Brannco said. ''The past year aod a .half have been very difficult. and without the Jove and affectl<¥1 they've shown for me I doubt that I could have suivived," be added. Tbe Santa Ana trustee said be plans to "dedicate the rest of my life to repaying my family for their love." And he added in making bis decision he had rolled oo "a CNtcl>--a CMltcb many of us should use but all too often do not-and that Is prayer." Hands cluped tigbtly to bis chio, his vQice quavering at times, Branr¥>a delivered bis fiV~'.,...,tl 1o & padied board roqm. He sald hellalt!llW lo DWI}' friends in the laat IDOlllh to determine what bis --.be, and aPIJ!Ollr.ed to them for Oll1 ~t be bad caUMd the ldmal and I llaff. "I am truly IOrt')' I H be sakL Board members made oo comment on Brannoo.'1 remarb, but two of ,them, Patrick Backus aod Hans Vogel, said privateJy they bad talked with Brannon aboUt bis possil>le feSlgoatioa and urged him to do ... In the aodience, were _acting stqde:nt body president David Hall and five of the eight candidates for another aeat sooo to be vacated-that of Michael Collins who resigned laal November . One cl them, Norriaa Brandt of J.rvtne, bad entered the race with Bamnon's resignation as a cblef plank. "I am glad Mr. Brannon bu thought ot the community," Mrs. Brand( said after the speech. "He did the right thing. I . was aurprlsed to hear him ask forgiveoesa. And I know ;.hat was bani Oil him but best for all.'' Abo present was Lee Rb odes, president of the Saddleback College Faculty Association. Tbe faculty gave Brannon a direct communication which was not made available to the press. But Rbodea said 0 We wanted positive action, and I think what bu ha_.,i • here tonight was ·positive. We are satisfied with the outcome." Bramon was arrested in August, 1m ic coDaectioD with a $25,000 I week gambling ring In the -Ano. His partner, Robert Emmett Kelley of Newport l!ofch, WU aentenced to sJx months in jail 8nd three years' probation last month. Brllllll04 baa not yet been seolelJ!:ed, Public Safety Firms Quizzed By Irvine Council Irvlrie clly OO<JDCibnen toolght will interview folD' ftrms to aelect a consultant to preparo a city public l&(ety plan. Expected to be present for the public Interview ....ion at 7r30 In ·city hall are ttprosentaUves cl the following firms: Claudio, are suing ·Heublein Inc., the 1ttece11or Jmd chicken firm flf" misluing lh.~ Cdlontl 1_ ftGmt, ffnbge a1id likmesa in promoting rome products. See storv Page 12. Mcinnis was referring to t h e agreement between · Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, aod Irvine that the !tttway ouglit to be built to relieve . traffic -... ,..lion m MacArthur Bouleva!11 and- 'Bristol Street. Arthur D. Uttle of San Francisco, Public Systeina UIC. of Sunnyvale, UltrasyslemJ of Irvine and Booze, Allen and Hamllton of Loe Angeles. t., M. lml '' -I ,, c......... ..,. C.ICI 1r c,....., ,, --. ....... , .... m ... 101:: 1 I 11 ........ 11·11 .., ... _, . ..,_ l'. ••111 Fl -~ II ! -" MllN........ '' ""''"'..... 4 or ... C.-ty I ..,.. • ......, 11 '""" 1•1• st.ct Mll'lllfl 11-11 T....... 11 ~ 11, ·-. ._.. ,. ... 1•1• --. The California pepartrntl)t of Traniporlatlon d!solooed last week that It Is delaying construction of tho Corona de! Mar Freeway becayse of a lag in gasoline tax recelpls. Bidding for coostructlon of the first major link of the freeway near Bmlta Canyon had been ldleduled f o r February . Councilmen toot no fonnal V<Jte m Mcinnis ~ for llUpllOft, but Gley (Seo FUEWAY, Pip I) ,_ - Costs of preparing the police, fire and health aervlces plan raoge from a $17,500 esllmate by the Little firm to I high of $44),000 llUillesled by Boole, Allen and Hamilton. , Actlni Publlc Safety Director' Paul Brlldy selected tho four finna for lnletvll!WI "-""" Ul ~ tolbmlt1ed by a 1o,1a1 of 11x Orma. No OCber I-~ llCbedlt1ed for 14oliM'• QQltDcil ..-. • Dllh! '°"" Sten ...... , IN THE WAKE OF A BOOKMAl(ING CONVICTION, TRUSTEE ALYN BRANNON RESIGNEO From Left are Tru1tff1 Hans Vogel, Br1nnon, John Mart hall, lnttruction Dean R. L. Pli tt 19 Drown in Bus Accident 28 Injured as Vehicle Plung es I1ito Canal BL YTllE (AP) -Nineteen farm 11\borus · drowned aod 28 ojbers were I n,j a r·e d. 1oi!iY ,when . a biis :toking' them,.to -k plunged i!!,to 10 feel of water 1n a drituge canal, the highway pat{ol IBid. 'l)lree of ·the victims were women. The bus failed to make a curve at a nir•I intenection seven m l I e a 80Utbwest of this southeastern California d~ towo, tho .patrol aai.d. The fully J~ded ,vehicle went over a 20-foot embankment and landed on its side.in the water.· '!be people were stacked up like . dominoes againlt each other toward the front of tho bus," said higbway patrolman Robin Howard. "The driver -ialllll1'4 'into the. 11eertng wbOel with all the otheri behlod him." iione .of the victims was Immediately Identified. The patrol 10ld moat were Me"1can nationals being brought from the border city ol Meslcali to work in the fields. 1be injured, some in ierlous conditkm, were taken to Palos Verdes . Hospital in ambulances and 1hetiff's patrol cars. The ambulances made !bree round trips hetween the accident scene and the hospital. "'Ibere were some broken arms and Irvine Council Candidate Smith Seeks Endorsement Fortner Irvine Tomorrow chairman Robert Smith, now a candidate fot Irvine City Council, vowed today to seek e11donement of the cltizeN forum organization by vote of all members, Jan. 31. Smith, an attorney who Jives it: Turtle Rock, was mt among the five candidates selected Saturday by the IT endorsement nominating panel. That ,.,v..,.member gro1ip, chaired by Dr. Invin Alber, interviewed nine persons who are seeking IT backing in the March 5 city cooncil election. The panel recommeodatim Is subject to vote of the full IT membership at the Jao. 31 meeting. · Smilh said today be -1d present his platform to the lull meml>ershlp "wbcb last year elected me dlairman." . Smith suggested that platform wlll dllfer litUe in basic philosophy from bis previ04S stands. Smith says be la neither a.strict environmeri.talisl nor sn advocate ol. "growth for growth's sake." Since his . appointment to the city planning commission aod election as vice chairman ol that body, Smith has authored hillside development report suggesting guidelines which may become city law. The report typifies Smith's stands as a planning cominissiocer in that the hillside study recommends approval of development by the city except OD the steepest or most hazardous sklpes. Smith said today he IVOtJld stand on his record. "I believe my record and achievements in the city make me a candidate wol1liy of Irvine Tomom>w support," he said. "I voluntartiy stepped aside as chairman shortly after announcing my (See VOW, Page I) THIS PA RROT'S A STOOL PIGEON . COLOGNE, Germany (UPI) -"He Is here! He is here!" the parrot-croaked in the kitchen when police, acting on a tip, broke into the home of a fugitive from a prison. Police said they found the jallbreaker In the living room hiding behind the curtains. Water Boosted ' ' Irvine Rauis Jump 19 P~rc.ent FehnlBll bills-malled ti> customers of the Irvine Ranch Water Dlstrlct- wlll be aboUl 19·pen:eot hlibet, reflecting rate increases approved this month by district illrecton. A typical Irvine family of four will receive a WJller Ill((. sewer service bill of abOtlt fl3.50, up from an average $11.45 before the rate increase, ao IRWD spokesman said. IRWD sewer ~ce charges Increased $3 a morith from the ·o!d charge , of'$2, and a base water eervice charge waa hiked ~ts to $1.75, according to the spokesman. The IRWD spotesnan aald the dlsirlci has ·aboorbed tWo rate Increases from Ito Wiler llU)ll!ller -"-Metropolitan Water Illstrist -since the last IRWD increilae. "" The -of providlilg service also baa rllen, the district <'Ontends. • ., • . ..... legs but none seemed in critical condition,'.' Howard said. He Mid the bus aeats were ripped_ loose by the Impact, and the injured crawled Out through windows and the front door. The patrol said the bus was one of three owned by Jesse Ayala, a labor contractor of Brawley. The accident occurred in the darkness about 6:30 a.m. at the intersection of Rannels Boulevard and 20th Avenue near the farming community of Riplf=ey. The patrol said the caoal, which under the roadway, was carry more water than usual, draining t from the fields. Vending Truck To Be Replaced With Cafeteria An indoor cafeteria soon will replace the outdoor vending truck which provides snacks to Saddleback C.Ollege students. Saddleback trustees Mooday euthorized a contract with R&R Food Service Systems of Fullerton to run the cafeteria in the old llbrary building. The building has been kept vacant for that purpose since the school's new library opened la.st summer. Saddleback Superintendent F r e d Bremer said remodeling is sdleduled to begin this month for the cafeteria with opening expected in mid·ApriL Tentative hours of operation will be 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Vending machines to supplement Ute hot food offeririgs will be installed both in Ute cafeteria and in the new library. 'lbe college will receive five percect on all food service proceeds fl5,000 and under; 5.5 percent between $15,000 and $19,999; and six percent between $20,000 aod 124,999. * * * Board Request., Language Lah Saddleback College trustees voted f.1 Mooday to apply for federal funds to help build a 137-000 language laboratory. Trustee ~ticbael Collins cast the "no'' vote. Funds for the lab could amount to $20,000 and would be used only for equipment. ) Sextuplets Thriving CAPE TOWN. South Africa (UPI) - Hospital spokesmen said today the Rosenkowitz sextuplet.. were thriving and had put on a small a!DOUDI of weigllt since their birth lour days qo. The babies, weighed for the !Int time since their Caeoarlan birth lb Mn . ._ Roseokowitz, gained an average of aboUt half an ounce each. spokesmeo II Mowbray Matemlly HoopKal said. ,. •I • ' 2 DAILY PILOT !S T11tsd1y, JanLIMJ 13, 11:174 --------' Mrs.Popeil To Retrieve Rolls Royce By JOANNE REYNOLDS CH ""° Dtltr ,l .. 1 Sl1H Eloise PopeU, who 'Is facing a court heering on poUce charges that she con· spired to have her millionaire husband murdered, today Is expected to get back the RoliJ Royce police confiscated dur- ing her amst in Newport Beach a week ago. Reached today at her Newport Beach home, Airs. Popeil said she had no comment to make on any aspect of the police accusations that she and her boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, of Santa Ana hired a Long Beach man to murder Samuel J. Popeil ol Chicago. Police claim the plot fell through when the hit man called the Chicago kitchen gadget millionaire and told him of hla estranged wife's plan. Acoordlng to police, Mrs. Popell, 48, and Ayers allegedly wanted Popell murdered 'before a pending divorce became fmal so that she could inherit approl.imately one-third of his estate. estimated to be worth up to $200 million. Mrs. Popeil, who wsa freed on $100,000 bail raised by neighbors on Linda Isle and Harbor Island Road, i! scheduled to appear in municipal court in Long Beach Monday In the preliminary hearing in the case. She and Ayers both pleaded innocent to the conspiracy to commJt murder cba.rgea at their arraingments last week. Ayers iJ still In custody, apparently W!able to raise the $100,000 ball set by Judge Charles IJtwin. The Popeils, who summered In their Linda Isle home, separated this summer and Popell filed for divorCe in Chicago. . Popell will go to court there on Friday to seek an order giving him custody of the couple's two teenage daughters and abandonment of lhe $4,250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since their separation, Mrs. Popeil and her two daughters have been living in Newport Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday night at her home at 519 Harbor Island Road shortly ar~er Ayers drove up to the bayfr'ont home in the Rolls. Police confiscated the car as evidence tn the case, but Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said today it has been authorized for release. Total Enrolled At Saddlehack Declines 9.4% Total enrolhnent for the winter quarter at Saddleback College is 4,390, down 9.4 percent from the fall term enrollment. Saddleback Superlntendent F r e d Bremer said the drop was "normal attrition" experienced every ye a r between the two tenns. Last year a reduction of s~ven percent wa.s noted . Of the total, 1,639 studenta are full time, carrying 12 units or more, and 2,751 are part~time, carrying less than 12 unts. Eleven classes were dropped because ot inadequate eIU'Ollment --seven In the day program, one in the night program, and three in the off-campus program at six high schools. All three of the unfilled off-campus classes were at Laguna Beach High School. Night classes also are offered at San Clemente High School and Irvine University. ....._ In the extended campus program, a total of 420 students enrolled, with the most, 150, at Tustin High School. Residents in that area recently have complained of not enough course offerings and the distance to the main campus in Mission Viejo. DAILY PILOT Tiie °''-C-t o.r.1LY ''LOT, -4ttl ~ .. ~,,,.~ i. ....... .,, fM Or ...... c .... ''*Wlllle een-.. """ ,." e6l1io... ••• "'*'"'*• fllloon1S.r .....,.._ Frid..,, tw (Mt1 Mft.11. N....-1 llNdt. ~.... hlo(llfF-NW. Vtl"'Y, L ...... hKfl. ll"rintl~IMIKt -kn c ......... , S.11 J-C101ttr1110. A tlfltlt f'WtlMil ldl!iM 11 ....ollslltd S.111t4*n ....-SuMen. Tiii prlrlclpe! llUlll!i.lllnt OloM 11 1! l3CI Wttl lty $1rwt, C•I• M-..., Ctlilorfti., t)Uf,, lto01rl N, W•M ''"iMM -'"°' ....... Jtck It. Curl1r V\c' ,,_iclol'il Incl GelWrtl Mtn~tr Tho"'•' K•••H t:dll9r Tlio1T111 4. Murphin1 Mt"IOl"ll Elltw Ch1rt11 H. loo• ltith1•d '· Nill AMW.nl MMlll!flt El!l11u °""'" eoti. MtM: 3» Wt" 91y Slfttt MIWJIOl1 INOo; U1J NWWM•! i9ovlf•t"' L~ ltlltfl~ 11' l<w~I "W<llli Mllfttint!Oll 11.oit: ll'tlS flffdl &o.l'-"tr(I kfl Clomollfo: J0S Nim Er C."'lr!e lltAI Tll11• •• 1n41 '42 .. Jtl ct ..... A4h11tlll I '424671 ._ Clim•••• Al hp.,. ••w ~ T:::k;l1•1 4H ..... lt c..,rr...... 1m. or-.. """' ~ ~ .... -......... """"It ..... .....,... """"' .,. .....,,._. .... ..., ... ,.,,...... wftflMf .U./ "" .... ., "'1'rllM ...... . ..., a..,...... ..... t.11 ... =.... ............ .... CtrNt .... =;;;;;;;;,;'.;"' 191111 ta.IS fl9llllr1 llll•rwr -................ t 2 Days • ID Jail '-President's Assemblyman Z'berg Serves Time SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Veteran .AJ.emblyman Edwin L Z'ber& quleUy entered the county Jail Friday Juat after he wu sentenced !or drunken driving and aerved a two-day term over the weekend it was learned today. ' In sentencing Z'berg to jail, Munlclpal Court Judge Haven Court- ney gave the 47-year-<>ld Sacramento Democrat 45 days In which to comply. It was Z'berg's sceond conviction for drunken driving since 1969. Under a state law effecitve Jan. 1, second drunlten driving convic· tio"5 are punishable by a mandatory two days in jail. Z'berg, chairman of the Assembly Conservation and Natural Resources Committee, was arrested Nov. 17, 1972, after his car rear-ended another vehicle. There were no injuries. Courtney sentenced Z'berg to SO days In jail, but suspended 28 days of the term for the duration of one-year probation. He also fined Z'berg $625 and ordered him to participate In the court's "alcoholic re-education program." Business Plane Crashes in, Fog, Killing 2 Men OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -A business jet attempting to land at Will Rogers World Airport crashed in a dense fog today four miles short of the runway. killing two persons aboard but just ntis.!ing several residential areas. George Clark, chief investigator at tbe regional office of the National Transportation Safety Board in Fort Worth, Tex., said the aircraft was owned by the Kerr-McGee Corp. of Oklahoma City and was fiying from Corpus Cllrlstl· Te:r., to Oklahoma City. Officials of the Federal Aviation Administration In Oklahoma City said two person,, aboard the aireralt were kllled, but apparently they were the only casualties. · Kerr-McGee ol'ficials identified the dead as pilot Kenneth Blair Hunter, 65, and e»-pllot Jack Ernest Garner, 50, both of Oklahoma City. The plane, a two-engine N 0 r t h American Rockwell Sabreliner with a capacity of eight pel'!ons, was oo an instrument landing in visibility of a quarter mile. Couple Hold Up Midway City• Store for $1,500 A Midway City market manager who was lured to the rear of bis store J\Ionday night by a female customer lost more than Sl,500 when he found her male accomplice waiting for him. Sherifrs officers said manager Paul William Voshell, 55, of the ~fidway Market, 8121 Bolsa Ave., was robbed at knifepoint by the heavily built male aft·er the woman asked him to help her select a dinner wine from the display at the back c:i the store. Deputies said the robbery team took $1,553.84\...from VMhell's cash register and $50 from the manager's wallet. They then fled from the store after tying Voshell's hands and feet. The manager was able to free himsell and summon help. · Little Leaguers In Irvine Area Set for Sign ups From Page I SAUNA ... psychiatrist last Dec. 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redbead reopondlng to his quesiloning 1n the slow, a1urred manner lnd'lced by hla Injection of the tranquilizer. The screening was carefully kept from the jury Willi today. Lewis be Ii eves the movies will considerably enhance Ills hopet for a favorable vmlict In the $1 million lawsuit against the health spa. Ruston angrily coodenmed the movies as "sell serving, leading and suggestive and extremely tnnammatory" a n d repeatedJy pointed out to Judge Murray that he had no opportunity to cross examine Mrs. ParsOn In e I t h e r circumstance, drugged or otherwise. Dr. Benton argued before be showed the films that it waa only fair for . the jury to see Mrs. Parson at her most relued moments which could only be In the office of her psychlatr!st. •Her courtroom testimony bas been offered unCl.er circumstances that are particularly adverse to any person suffering the kind of psychlatrtc trauma Mrs. Parson is undergoing, Benton told Judge MWTay and the two lawyers. hfrs. Parson's statements Wlder the drugs and otherwise were idenilcal: that before she was trapped in the sauna room of the Orange health spa on March 2, 1970, she was a happily married Catholic woman whose life was devoted to her husband and seven children. She stated in both video tape sequences that any spa.re time she had was devoted to the Cathollc church, Catholic youth programs and the PTA. ltfrs. Parson broke down and wept at the end of the flrSt movie as she told Dr. Benton how Marla took possession of her body, donned sexy clothes that she would never have worn under normal conditions and set off for local bars in a hunt for men and sexual relationships. ~frs. Parson, who has been known to her family and friends from an early age as Betty, again named several of the many men she has known over the past three years. She Usted among her favorite bars in the hunt for extramarital mates the Newporter lnn and the Stuft Shirt In Newport Beach. "When I'm Marla I just want to nm away," she hesitanUy mumbled under the Influence of the truth drug. "Maria wants sex and she wants to be held by a man-one thing leads to the other." She also relates in both interviews the nature of the dreams she states she has experienced almost nightly since her ordeal in the 17lklegree sauna room. 11rs. Parson tells Benton of being imprisoned in a cube of ice, of belng carried along in a flow of hot lava Signups for the Greater Irvine Uttle and of looking down from the sky at Lea~e will be held In two Irvine OOiling, steaming water. locations Saturday and again on Jan. 26. ''Maria comes out of the top of my Brother Don Infuriated By L PETER KRIEG Of .._ DIA' ,llet Jltft Pl'osldent Nixon's brother F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach today was furious over aUegaUonl carried in a United Press lnlematlooal -story Monday !hot he prnflted from tba fraudulent sale ol stock to billionaire Howard Hushes. Nl1on said his only tie to Hughes was through fonner good friend John "'Ieier. a ronner Newport Beach resident and farmer mining conaultant for Hughes. Meler was Indicted Monday In Las Vegas on charges of income tai: evasion and fraud against the federal government. Nixon for some time has been predicting lhe indictment and contended that ~1eler brought in the Nixon name in hopes things would go easy for him. "Mr. Meier is in very deep trouble," Nixon said. "But beyond that, I have no conunent, other than to say those investigators are going to have 80me red faces too," he said. In its story Monday, UPI said the Senate W a t e r g a t e Q:immittee is investigating the posslbliy that Donald Nixon received "substantial suma" of money from f!>f111er Hughe! aides for his help in mlnlng claim ventures .. The story linked Donald Nlxon to ltfeler because of a trlp the two made to the Dominican RepubUc In 1969. Ni:ron claims the trip was purely pleasure. He said he went to see Meier receive that country's Ch r Is top be r Colwnbus award. UPI said the trip may be tied to • allegations by ~1eler that Donald Nl:ron sought personal financial galna by offerlng to use his kinship with the President to win declslom favorable to the Hughes empire. Monday 's indictments charge Meler and three others with shifting huge profits from deals with Hugbea to Swiss bank accounts. U.S. attorney Devoe Heaton said the indictment involves sales of rnlning claims exceeding $& million to the Hughes Tool Company, which wu then owned by Hughes. Meier waa named in two Indictments returned by the Las Vegaa Federal Grand Jury on two counts of conspiracy and on two counts of alleged tu evasion -1969 and 1970. Meier was indicted last year for income tax evasion for 1968. One conspiracy count charges Meier with defrauding the Unlted Statea by obstructing the collect.ion of lnoome tax as a result ol the sale of mlnlng cWms by Alan Jarlson, Las Vegas televlaion newsman, to the Hughes Tool Q:impany. Others Indicted along with Meier on a second conspiracy count were Anthony Hatsi.s, 47, and James P. Cowley, 45, hoth of salt Lake City, and Robert Kahan, 59, ol Loo Angeles. Solon Fights For Men's Rights DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -A Jll"OUP of Iowa legislators had moved to ~trike a blow for equal rights for men. The legislators filed bills Monday In the Iowa House to create a Commission on the Status of J\fen and to provide by law for the observance of Father's Day as well as Mother's Day. "I'm serious," declared Rep. George Knoke of C.Ouncll Bluffs, chief sponsor of the C.Ommission of the Status of Men bill. "I believe In equality." 1();0-mph Winds Buff et Oregon From Wire S.mcto Winds of more than 100 mllt:s an hO\lr whipped tba Ortgon roast during the nl1ht and heavy rains fell ovtr much of the st.ate, causln& flooding, road closures power outaiea and school clooureo. The atorm aloo was bcillglng nln and onow to Nortbem calllomla. At Corvallis, Ore. 15 peraona were evacuated from an apartment complex just Wide the southwest city limits about 4 a.m. today when rising water threatened Utelr Mmes. Police Chief Jim Goodman said a fire department tank truck sloshed through 3\.-'a feet of water to bring out the famille1,' most young couples with children. At Gold Beach, a GreyhQund bus carrying 15 passengers north on Highway 101 wu halted because of high water. 'nle passengers were Jodged in the county jail overnight because there were no other accommodations. "We drank Iota of coffee, had a lot of convenation and a few naps," said a dispatcher. In eastern Oregon, a fQOt·deep snowpe.ck at Baker vanished overnight in a downpour of rain. Roid closures throughout Oregon ¥.'ere so numerous pollce agencies could not keep track of them. Stale police said fnterstale 5 had only one lane asieri where a mudslide crashed down 6"2 miles north of the california border. Both southbound lanes and one northhbound Jane were closed. A slate police officer said he did not know when iralfic would be restored . It's a big one," he said. In Benton County, aome roads were covered with 3"2 feet of water. Most of the water wu runoff, not flooding streaw, Olncers aaid. Alona the cout, windows were smashed, trees blown over and telephone and electrical power outages were numerous. A gust of 110 miles per hour wu recQrded at Mt. Hebo Air Force staUon. The wind hit Ill mpb at Brookins• and 83 at Gold Beach. Meanwhile the winter storm, packing r.outherly gales, heavy rain and snow, is oo the looae in Northern Ca!Uomia. The front, :tOO mllea west of CallfomiJ early today, will "bring locally heavy rl!IAa. aouth to the TehachapiJ today and Wedneaday with heavy lllOW In the DQrtbem Slerra Nevada above 6,000 fee~" tba Natlonal Weather Service said. ' Fl'Olll Page I FREEWAY ••. gave clear verbal support to h1a position. "We have so few chances to agree with Costa Mesa that I think we ought to follow through wttb this one," said Vice-mayor Howard Rogers at one point in the discuasion. The proposed Corona del Mar Freeway is planned to originate at the San Diego Freeway between Bristol Street and Fairview Road in Co!ta Mesa .. It would then read !Olltheasterly. intenect the Newport Freeway, nm along the current alignment of Bristol Street to MacArthur Boulevard, and down MacArthur to Bonita canyon. Costa Mesa officials, wbo flrst became aware of the omiMion last week, have been working to have the route reinstated in thiS year's budget. Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett said Monday he would appeal lo Governor Reagan U necessary lo keep the freeway comtruction on schedule. Forecaslen also warned of flooding in low lyiof coatal areas north of Monterey Bay. Storm Warni ngs for southerly winds of up to 60 miles per hour were luutd for today and Wednesday north ol Point Arena on the Mendocino C o u n t y coutllne. Southward to Point Sur, the weather service 8Xpected gales ranging from 25 to 45 m.p.h. The weather service said a weak weather front moved acros.s Northern and Central California Monday , spreading "light to moderate rain &outhward to the San Francisco Bay area and northern San Joaquin Valley." More than an Jnch of rain fell in Eureka while Red Bluff had more than a half Inch and San Franclaco nearly a quarter inch. Led to Grave Of Victims, Says Sheriff ' HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -A drawling East Texu sheriff told a oourt hearing today that he talked wtth a lee!Hger accused of mus murder "like be were one of my own sons" while the 17·year· old led him to four sandy graves. Today was tba aeoond day of ptttrlal bearings on one of tba aiJ murder charges against Ebner Wayne Henley ln COMection with a 2~year spree ol b<rnosexual torture-slaying•. Defense lawyers are trying to exclude from evidence oral and w r l t ten statements Henley gave police btlore, they 1-.y,ne was-p<rmltted legal-.,._I. San Aug113tlne Coun!JI Sbertlf John Hot said Henley led him to four ahallow graves near San Augustine In deep East Te1as Aug. t, the day alter he was arrested. "f don't really recall tba deatllo of what we aaid. We were talking like he were one of my own eons,'' the sheriff related. Hoyt, under cro.exlmlnation, testified be complied wtth Henley'• request to see a doctor but Henlity later declined the phyalclan'• dlredlve lo take sleeping pills. "! asked him why he wanted to see a docctor," Hoyt said, "and be ..aid '! just wanted to see U you wwld call one.' " During Monday'1 hall-day hearing, Mary Pauline Henley, tba del~t'a mother, testllled her ... bad been hallucinating and was sick when abe visited him in jail after his 1JTML District Court Judge William Hatten said the pr<ttial hearing oould take as long aa two weelcs. Jury leleclloo will begin afler the bearing. J\frs. H e n 1 e y said her son was "hallucinating -1eeing people who weren't there and doors opening from the wrong side. He would see people standing at the open door, standing there laughing at him, and then the door Y."Ou1d close again." Mrs. Henley said she received a telephone call from her aon Aug. 8 telling her he killed De.an Arnold C.Orll, 33, and was being held by police. Henley called officers In suburban Pasadena Aug. 8 and told them he shot Corll during a sex and palnt·snlffing party at Corll's home. Police said Henley and David Owen Brooks, 18, led officers to the bodies burled at three sites. Brooks ta charged in four of the 1laylng1. Brooks and Henley allegedly procured teen-agera for CorU. Registration tables will be open from head and takes over my soul," the 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at ~lb the Unlver~ltY__redbe!d tells Dr. Benton. "I fight her i--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.----.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Park and Walnut Village Shoppmg and fight her bUt -'i>mettmes shelr - centers oo both days. too strong for me." Boys who are at least 8 years old Lewis stated Monday that Mrs. Parson and will not be older than IS on July still eludes her husband and family when 31 , 1974, a.re.. eliglb1e. Any boy who she Is dominated by the f\.1aria personality has not previously been enrolled in Irvine an ddrives oU alone from the Anaheim LltUe League is required to bring a home birth certificate to the registration desk. Mr~. Parson told Or. Benton In both UtUe League fees are $20 for each interviews that she will often offer her player or $30 for a family· husband and family the excuse that ~formation about the program ts she needs a loaf of bread or a pair available from PauJ Van Hom at 833-of stockings to escape from the home 8096. when f\.faria takes control. Irvine Voter: Registration Set Irvine residents wishing to register to vote In the rtfarch 5 election may do so three afternoons next week In city haU. City Clerk carol Flynn said today 11 deputy voter registrar will be at city hall from l to 4 p.m. on '11onday, Wednesday and Friday. in room 200, Town Center, 4201 campus Drive. The Orange . Coast League al Women Volers Is sponsoring tile registration effort. Commuters Delayed SAN •'RANC!SCO (AP) -Commuters riding the computeMge Bay Area Rapid Transit 1ystem lo San Francisco wtre delayed up to one hour Monday because the doon rtlused to open automatically. BART officla)J said the problem on the sev.n<:ar train from Daly City waa an •lectronlc co-nent that "'fused to relay door openins olgna!a. Lewis said Dr. Benton, two other psychiatrists who have examined Mn. Parson and Lewis himself while the lawyer was interviewing Mrs. Paraon in his San Francisco office have all been invited to join Mrs. Parson at a local bar and receive her 1etual favors when she suddenly became Marla during the interview. FromP.,el vow ... candidacy, in order not to Influence Irvine Tomorrow's n o m I n a t I n I proceduret," SmlLh said .. "r am, however, disappointed in not receiving the-nominating oommlltee backing, although I Wldenland the dlfncultlea ol chooelng ll'om a good field of coadldateo," Smith said . The five candidates stlected by the IT panel are Councilwoman 01brlell1 Pryor al Unlvonlty Parlt, Councilman Henry Qul(l'l' ol tba Randi, former planning comm!aaloner and fonner commission chalnnan Robert West of the Colon)', plannlnr commlsaloner Franklin S. Hurd and Greentree Homes Asaoclallon dlttctor and I o r m er prtsldont Rldlard B. Clark. • DRAPERY SPECIAL COTION/llAYON CASEMENT l•ory I Anti11111• Gold a~;.·:~·· SALE PRICE $2.91 YO. "The Trouble With Some Self-Made Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe." Maurice Seitter CARPET SPECIAL HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. ' COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUU1 Ma Tin n.n., f te liJO -I'll. f te f -SAT. f:M le I t ·- 7 I, i \ ' \ • • • -• Huntington Beaeh Today~s Final N.Y. St.eeks ' ' ' VOL 67, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TVESDA Y, JANUARY 15, 1974 . . TEN CENTS • • • Coast Board Nixes _Huntington J Fourplexes • Nino !ourplexes In tbe lown lot are.a ol Hllllln&ton Beach were tumed down ).fondly by. Ille ,..ioaaJ co a I ta I Oommlasion lo make way !or a city itudy the ·developers say won't get dooe. f , Denied "without prejudice" were j>ennlt applications by Joseph Sholler to construct fourple1 apartments at 401 f:d 405 18th St. and by Clulrles ennanaen to build seven fourple.1es ong 22nd and 7th Streets: The sectlm from 8th Sine! lo Golden West SO'eet la currently being atudied by Ille city In a report due at almoat anyt1me._p1.anner_Mlke Daduovlch k>ld me111bers of the South Coast ReglA>nal 1.one Qimervallon Qimm!Jsioo. Much of the ana, especialjy west of 17th Sine!. la still undeveloped and is spotted with' oil wells. The city b Coosidering several alternatives .for the older section of town, Daclaaovlch said, i n c I u di n g dowl11.onlng part of I~ a multlatory high density district, commercla! sections and Ille realignment ot pert of Pacific Coos!• Highway. . Initially, the IA>wn lot report was due now, he said, but tbe resignation ol city Pl81U1ing Director Ken Reynolds has set It back. Some commissiooers didn't like the Idea ·or a slow. clown of development In the area. O>mmla8iones Don Phillips ol Long Beach said that lo him, ii sounded like a moratorium. But Deputy State Attorney General Denpis 'Antennor said it is "proper for the cprnmission to temporarily delay a development given confusion over local planning." And Commissioner Robert Rooney supported the move because he said he )t'ants to hold out for a higher density. With more unita allowed, Rooney said, more "lower income people would have a chance to live at the beach." Sballer objected that the city bas been ''stu_dying the town lot area for eight years. I don't know if they're any closer. l've been paying taxes while the land is growing weeds." Hermansen also complained that the town lot study has "turned into a political football -it's ridiculous." The area near the beach already 0 caters to every walk of life," contended !ape Gap Deliberate, Panel ' The Showdown John Wayne OH to Harvard LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Newport Beach resident John Wayne saddled np a jflllner Monday and beaded east !or a 8bowdown at Generation Gap. WAYNE IS NOT a man lo Ignore a cballenge lo have It out, man lo man, and that'•. what be received from the university's satire magazine, the Har-- vard Lampoon. The -edilon wrote him cballenging him lo 1bow jual bow toogh he·is, asking U he b willing lo lace up lo "a gang that would rather quote you Marx or Mao Tse-tung than spit in your eye" sad face demootra- lors and counter-demonstrators. "I doll't know a damned thing about it ucepl they challenged me lo come," growled Wayne, -g a plane !or the Ealt. "I figure the Harvard boys and I are at opposite en4 ol lhe spectrum. They suggested I didn't have the courage to go." THE HAllV ARD EDITORS have promlaed lo welcome Wayne with a mill· tary convoy, a mock cowboys.and-Indiam lhooloo4 a "stampede ol ...,. .ltlnd of mammal," and a question and answes seaslon after Ille lbowinl or bla latest movie, "MCQ." .. It bas the maldnp of a real ugly inddent," Lampooo President Jim DoWney lald In apparent delight · The Duke was nnfaud as be atrode out for the atiowdown. 111 bear tbt last guest they had at one ol these tbJngs was Linda .Lovelaee," ha lald In hll """'4 !li!>L •• , _!he met Ille c{Jal~. ~. .: . - Plunges Into C•nal 19 Laborers Drown, 28 ·Hurt in Bus Accident BLYTHE (AP) -Nineteen fartll laboren drowned and 18 others ...... Injured -Y when a bus talting tl\em lo work phmged lnlo 10 feet ti Wiiier In a drainage canal, the highway ~ 1181d. 'lliree of the victims were women. Mexican naliooal1 being brought from the border city of Mexicali to work In lbe fields. The bua failed lo make a curve at 1 a rural intersection seven m l 1 e s 90uthwest ol this IOUtheutmi Calllomia cleserl lown, the patrol 88id. The lnjur<d, ..... In serioua c:onclitioo, were taken lo Paloa Verdes Hospital In ambulallcea and lberllf'1 patrol cara. The amhUlancel made thres round trips between the accident eceoe and the hospital. '"lbere were aome brobn arms and legs but none seemed In critical condition," Howard aald. The Mly loaded vehicle went over ·a . »loot embankment and landed on ' Its side In Iha water. .• The people were atacked up like do--~~otber-toward· the • front ol Ille bul," said bigbway P.trvlmoa RolJln Howard. "Tile driver -jammed lnlo Iha ateertnc wbee1 ' with all the others bebi6cl him. .. -of the --Immediately ldenlllled. Tile palnll said moet were He said the bus aeala w.re ripped looee by the ·Impact, and the Injured crawled out lbnJugb window• and the front door. 'Ille patrol said the bul was one of three owned by J-A,yala, a labor contractor or Brawley. '!'be accident occurred Iii the darknels ·about 1:30 a.m.. al the lnlenectlon ol Rannels Boulevard and 2Qtb Avenua ... r the lai1nlng community ~ Ripley. 'Ille patrol said Ille canal, which -~ the load.way, was cai'rying more water than usual, draining sail from the llelds. Opinion On Bible Study Asked A legal opuuon on Voluntary Bible study clubs on bigb school campuses will be requested this week of the Orange Coonty Counsel by" Hunlinglon Beach U n ion High School District administrators. . The request follows last week's board meeting, Wiler< more than 100 students . aDd parenta ukOd lruStees lo allow cainpus ciubl to study Ille Bible during school bqw's -ouch u lllllcb. tkne. Spencer Covert, ~ c:oun1Y .coumel, =:-i~~,=:::.= mtbl~. .,....., _ ~ •"Ill .................... ..... been Iii touch . with all tlie .. lndpali and have lnatructod ·lhem lo let Ille clubs meet,'" said Glen Dysinger, usillonl iupesloleodent· A previous Orange Coonty Counsel opinloll had ruled that !acuity qlembers could nol 1ponsoc religious groups on campus and the state education code states that campus groups must have 1 faculty sponsor. ''Tl)is Is why they were ruled out," Dysinger explained, 0 b1Jt we11 . work around it. Prlnclpals were lold lo .have some kind ol 111pervlaion ol the clubs, faculty er otberwbe." Covert, who spoke with William Setile, deputy aiperlntellden~ m Monday, said lie la awailil!io a fonilal nquell before bla ollloe can proceed. , , 0 We have to examlne the first Ameodment rigbla, and then look at the specifics in the case," Covert.said. Fill 'er Vp? UPl ·T......,. This sign in front of the Calvary .Baptist Church tells everyone that . here, is one "service statiori" that isn't closed on Sundays. The church is located in Camas, Wash. ~ Mrs. Popeil ~ay Receive Rolls Royce . 0 It's a diffio1Jt question," Covert contended. "There'• no!hlng that says bn d d a student can't talte a Bible with him poun e to campus. But on the other hand, a Billy Graharn·type crnsade, or a (See BmLE, Page I ) THIS PARROT'S A STOOL PIGEON . COLOGNE, . Germ111y (UPI) ..,. "Ile Is borer He la here!" ·the pam>l cnioked · In tl>e titd>en when police: acthig on a lip, brote 'lnlo the home or a fugitive from a prlaoO. . Police said they found the jallbreaker In the living room hiding behind the aJTlalnL By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of !ht 0.1ll'r Pllet Sl.1ff Eloise Popeil, who is facing a court bearing on police charges that she con· spired to have her millionaire husba'nd murdered, today i.s eq>ected to get back the Rolls Royce police contiscated dur- ing her arrest' in Newport Beach a week ago. Reached today al her Newport Beach home, Mrs. Popeil said she had no . comment to make on any aspect of the police accusations that she and her boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 11; of Santa Ana hired a Long Beach man to murder Samuel J. Popeil of Chicago. Police claim the plot fell through when the hit man called the Chicago kitchen gadget millionaire and told him of bis estranged wife's plan. According lo police, Mrs. Popeil, '8, and Ayers allegedly wanted Popell murdered, before a pending divorce became Una! so that she could Inherit approximately one-third of hiS estate, estimated to be worth up to $200 million. Mrs. Popeil, who wsa freed on $100,000 bail raised by nelghbors on Linda l$le and Harbor Island Road, Jr scheduled to appear in municiRal c::ourt in Long Beach Monday in the · ·preliminary hearing in the case. • '·Suspect Guilty ~ Molesting _,. Of Two Girls • A 'fl.ye1N1ld lramlonl arreotec1· In Truth Serum Film Okayed She and Ayers both pleaded innocent to the conspiracy to ·commit murder charges at their arraingments last week. Ayers is still in custody, apparently (See PLOT, Page %) ' Huntington Beach 'J'hoMql'llng Day '\ wblle bltd>~ alonJ the San DIOIO Flwway pluded 1Uill1. _, lo kldnapin& 11111 Cblld molootlnc· ··Bert Sllrpon wu ordered to undergo " ,Umtn.11on by two c:ourt .. ppolnted poydila~ prior In hli"oenlenclng Feb. t ~ • Sim"'~--.wu tried In Loa Anples O>uaty Superior Court for Ille Nov. :Ill Jclduili.-1 and mol~ al two Glntena iir11. . • Cloe, a folr.yeardd. he oel "'" In Hatrlbaroe allonl)' after her abdudkm -Ille !r<nl. 7~·ol her ....... )'811'<>1d ~~-' • llllllllqloo peach Pair.lmu ~ llm spoiled Sllr.-11111 the older lltl ... the freeway and look Ille unompl.,..i "'"""*Into a-, wben ... c:blld ... 1dm ... """ """' taken ,,.. ........... .,. ......... ·' . If - '· Sauna~o":~t .Jur~ to fiew !lfovie of Mrs. Parson . lly ToM•BARLSY ' ..... ..., ........... Whoo Marla P""°" completes her testimony riom the wt-lland -1 Jn the Oran;. Ciaunb' ..... -.Court 1111!1& bolla trial lbe Jur1 will Yin • a movie made while abe ·wu under the ~ of •• .....iie<l ·''ttutb. aerum." Judga William Murny 1111de Ille ruHn1 that ..,.bles attomey Marvl1I IAwla &-. In llCl'celi two video ta)Jt fliml In tht .eourtroom. The declalon came afler a louNii>ur out..,,.....rt aeulon Monday in the olllces ol Dr. DeaM A. Benton, the Slltll.,Ana .Pl)ldlialrilt. "111 lef1 'em in," .lddp Murniy eakl after • bitter &J'lllllH!bl -Lewla and llollday Health ::. lllorneJIDonild A. ~ Ga 111a1e1wu17 al the two lllilll. ' •ODt er Ille -* nm llf·Dr.' Bealoll In 'lllO privacy tit hi• olllce' depicts hla 'liltervlew 1ut 'Oct. 25 ·with Mn. Panoll, SO, wtien ahe b not IDlder the Influence of llOdlum amytol. Tbe oecond movie, lhol by the psydllitrtit 1ut Dec. II and Jin. I, deplcta the busom redhead nspon.llng lo bis quelllonlni In the slow, •lumd mllllllOr lndt.....r ' by bla Injection of the tnnqullber. The ocreeninl wu carefl111y kept from the Jury mttU tod&Y. Lewis b e 11 e v e 1 the mov1.. will considerably enhance his hopes ror a • favorable .....iict In the $1 mllllon lawiUlt acalnll the.health spa.. -. 811"117 condemned the n>0vles u "oell oervtna. loodlDa and sugatlve and ntremely lnflammalorY" a, n d nJ>!Jltedll, l)!Jlnled aul to Jlldll Mlll'tay tba\ he li8il DO .,...limlty lo ..... e•adM Mn. Pw-. In tllb•t . . circumstance, drugged'or otherwise. Dr. Benton argued before he showed the fdms that il was only fair for the jury to see Mrs. Parson at her moat relaxed moments which could only be In the office ol her psychiatrist. Her courtroom testimony bu been ollereil under clrcumsW!ces that are partk:ularly adverse to an,y person sullering the kind ol psycblalric trauma Mrs. Parson la 'undergofng, Benton lold Judge Mu1Tay and the two lawyers. Mrs. Parson's statements under the dr\lll• and otberwlae were Identical: that before lhe was trapped in the sauna room ol the Orange heelth spa on • Mardi 2, ll'IO, lhe was a happily manied Catholic woman whole We was ileVOled to her husband and seven childreo. , She stated ID botb Video tape sequenees that &by Vo"' time Ille ba4I WI~ devoted (See l!AVNA, Pap II .. Countian Gets 90 Days Aft~r Fraud Convictio,n SAN DIEGO (AP) -Edwanl S. Golka, 41, ol Tustin waa sentenced lo 90 days tn jail after pleading no contest to illegal sale of real property ~ritles and Ulegal advertisement of subdivisions and securities. The sen1eoce imposed Monday by Superior CC><lrt Judge Franklin B. Orlleld was a coodltlon to three years' probation. A code!endanl In the case. James P. Tucker ol Hunllngtoo Beach, pleaded no contest earlier lo ollering lo .. n 1ubdiv1Sioo lands Illegally, was lined !250 and placed oo proba!ioo !or a year. Dist. Atty. EdWln L. Mille< said they ~ a.....t of defrauding local lnveston ot mon lllaD .-.ooo. Hennansen. 11\Ve have millionaires living next door to surfers." He said he has $16,000 invested in his project that he'll lose unless he can start v.·ork by the end of February. The density on fourplex the projects was 24. dwelling units an acre gross. A denial "without prejudice" means the commission can consider the project again. without regard to its preVlouS actions. Hints 18-minute Hum Caused By Erasures W~INGTON (UPI ) -Tbe 181>· minut ap in one of President Nixon's key \Va rgate tapes was caused by erasing and re-recording the tape as many as nine times, technical experts. reported lo U.S. Judge John J. Sirica today. Further, the experts said, the erasures had been caused by hand operation of the maChine on whJch it was played , -not by a foot pedal as Nixon's secretary, Rose 'Mary l'\'oods, Insisted under oath she used while working with the tape. 'Ille __ rb ~ there was. evidence the tape conlalried conversation but tllat there Wlf no known way of recovering an Intelligible 'mlion. Without saying so directly, the panel o[ six audio experts strongly suggested In their Iinal report on the June 20, 1972 tape that Its oblileration apparently was deliberate. "Magnetic signatures that we bJve measured directly on the tape dow that the buzzing eounds were put on the tape in the process of erasing,. Ind re-recording at 1eut five , and perhaps as many as nine, separate and contiguoua segments •.. Tbe 18.S<nlnale segment could not have been produced by any single, continuous operation " the report said. • Sirica, who receaaecl hearings lnlo the tapes issue last mm.th while awaiting the experts' report, Immediately called an open court 'hearing al which the etpests were summoned lo testify. Copies of the report were given to special prosecutor Leon Jaworski and his stall and lo White House lawyera at a meeting with Sirica this mornin(. 'Ille While House Issued a slalelllenl saying the experts' report bad been receJved and was wider review, and that "it would be altogether inoorrect and improper for premature judgments or conclusions to be reached" about the tape al this time. The tape involved a conversation Nixon had with then White House chief or stall H. R. Haldeman on the first working day after the June 17, 19'i2 Watergate bugging arrests. Haldeman's notes of that meeting, introduced int,o evidence earlier in Sirica's J::Ourt, show that Watergate was discussed d\D'ing the 18\0·mlnute ...,nent now obliterated (See TAPES, Pace I) Oraage <:eut • Weather It'll be bright and sunny again Wednesday, according to the weather service, with sligbUy cool· er temperatures along the Orange Coast. Highs 'ol M at the beacbel rlalng lo the low 70s ·inland. Lows tonight 35 lo so. --INSIDE TODAY Colontl S~TI and hi1 wife, : Claudia, are 1uing Heubltin Inc., tht: 1UCCessor fried chicken ·firm for-misusing IM Cololl<l'I 1i.ame, imcgt ond likeness in promocing some products. Set S!ol'[/ PQ{/e 12. •'I • ·, • .. ;: DAILY PILOT H Judge Says Evidence Ad1ni ss ihle Judge William 1'1urray is bucking an appellate court for the second time on the same issue in his belier that an inlen'icw carried out while the patient is under the Influence of I.he "truth serum" sodium 1unytol Is admissible evidence. His controversial ruling in the Parson· trial is identical to that he made two years ago In the murder trlal of fonner Marine Mark Allen Johnson of San Clemente. Jud!!e MUIT3y's thinking in Jobnsoo's lim trial was rejected by the Fourth D~tricl Court of Appeab wblch onlered a new trial. But he drew powerful support in that decision from db3enting Justice Robert Gardner of Newport Beach. Gardner vigorously defended Judge Murray's ruling and commented: "This case represents a classic reflection of the attitude of the courts towards the rules of evidence which I find completely out of step with the fact.s of life as they exist today." Johnson, now 22, was fowld guilty of semnd degree murder in his first nonjury trial on charges that he stabbed and killed bis pregnant wife, Connie, 22, in the couple's Monterey Lane apartment. His second jury trial ended in a lesser verdict of voluntary manslaughter after the controversial truth serum interview was barred from evidence before the jury. Both lawyers In the Parson trial commented late Monday that, whatever the verdict, the issue is sure to go before the Supreme Court. From Pagel SAUNA ... to the Catholic church, Catholic youth programs and the PTA. trtrs. Parson broke down and wept at the end of the first movie as she told Dr. Benton bow Maria took poueaslon of her body, donned sexy clotbea: that she would never have worn under normal conditions and set off for local ban In a hunt for men and sexual relationships. Mrs. Parson, who has been known to her family and friends from an early age as Betty, again named several of the many men she has known over the past three years. She listed among her favorite bars In the hunt for extramarital mates the Newporter Inn and the Stull Shirt in Newport Beach. "When l'm Jilaria l just want to run away," she hesitantly mumbled under the influence of tbe truth drug. "Maria wants sex and she wants to be held by a man-one Uling leads to the other." She al.so relates in both Interviews the nature of the dreams she states she has experienced almost nightly since her ordeal in the l7lklegree sauna room. Mrs. Parson tells Benton of being imprisoned in a cube of iCt!, of being carried along in a flow of hot lava and of looking down from the sky at boiling, steaming water. "l\1aria comes out of the top of my head and takes over my soul," the redhead tells Dr. Benton. "I fight her and fight her but sometiriles she is too strong for me ." Lewis stated Monday that Mrs. Parson ... still eludes her husband and family when she is dominated by the Maria personaHty an ddrives off alone from the Anaheim home. htrs. Parson told Dr. Benton in both Interviews that she will often offer her busband and family the excuse that she needs a loaf of bread or a pair ci stockings to escape from the home when Maria takes control. OU.N•I COAtT M• DAILY PILOT TM Ort"" c..tt DAILY ~ILOT wlltl whktl I ::,. C:c~llilN;:;:~::· ~:..:~!;~.:. I rt1'9 Wltloft5 1r1 PllDllthtG, MO!ld1y tlu1M,lgtl Frlhy, tor Co1t1 Mt... ••W?Orl 1••<11, 1 HUf!ll11910n lt1th/1"°""'!1h1 Vtllty, L~Urlll •MCI!, lrvln1/SMlll1~ ,,,. $111 Ckment1/ I !:1~~J~n ,:i~=·:tyr:1~m:: .::..~: f"-P"lnclPlll ,.....ltlllnsl l'!IM II 11 IJD WUI ... , Slrttt, C0.11 M .. , C1llt11rnl1, n.2'. "•'"rt N. w.n "'"~ 11111 hOll....-J.,k l . Curley \fa p,..!Mnl 111111 Gtootrt l Mtf\tllll' n-·· k11wll' Ed!tw 1\tll'll l A. M11t,hi110 M-tlr\J £eiW di•rt" H. lo11 IUch1ril P. Nan Altllltnl Minellnt Etlltwt Terry C1\'tll1 W•I °"°"" ('wiry &ci• " ........... OMce 17175 ....... ~''"''" l M1lllfli M14t1111 P.O. lo• 7tO, tJMI ..,._ L..-. IMlcfl: tn I'...., A- C.II M-l nt W-:.!C,r 11""1 ......,. 9MC:ftr D» N llOlillt'Wtff it~ (:~1 JOJ Norltl I Clfollrle 1. .. 1 T .. 1.•111 17141 M:l-4121 C' 'C'W Mi...et._ 6424111 Pf99 .............. c-ty Cl!n"""'"8 -lilt f ~. m::a. Ononte C...11 P~llthMt I ~. ... -••'-'• lllwlr1llWlt. ........, --., 1111~'*'-'t ........ 1 _,. • ••I t vt Wllllllilt .,,_llil ""' I ......... °"""" -· I ...,.. _. ....., -"' • c.ie """"' ~ ............... ~a.t.1 ...... ... ... 0 ,lf """"'"'' l!'llNlwy r i==:.::: ..... =-:;.....· -----J '· I' ' .. New Spaee Champions President~ . Skylab Creiv men Break All Fl yi11g Tra veler Records Brother Don SPACE CENTER, Hollllon (AP) - Slcylab S's 11u .. au1t, the new world champions of space fliih~ today bel•n four ,days without darkness fn sunlight that could cause heat discomfort. I~ike many energy-conacious earthlings, they turned off some lights, but for different reasons. Tbey want to cool the station. Gerald P. Carr of Santa Ana, William R. Pogue and Edward G. Gibson, formerly or San Clemente, '-1onday nlgbt became history's longest.flying space travelers as they broke the single mission record of $9 days, t l hours, 9 minutes, whi ch bad been set by the Skylab 2 crew. "You guys are now the world chainps," mission control communicator Richard Truly informed the astronauta at 8: 10 p.m. PDT, "the longest man has been In space." No Challengers "Let's bang ln hert and &et the re1t or It, 11 mlasloa commander CarT replied. "Yol/ IUYS oo tile ~ have kept us here. Send our compliments to everyone on the ground . It's not our record, It's everybody's record.'' The astronau1' soared on toward thelr goal or 84 days. They are to return to earth Feb. 8. They might begin to feel somewhat Wlcomfortable today at tem~ratures climb inside their orbltln~ station becall!e of the blgh aocle of the sun in relation to the spacecraft. "They'll aee no darkness, only daylight, until Saturday," said fllgbt director Charles Lewis. For ID03t of the ml!slon, the astronauts have whirled through either a sun5et or a ~se every 48 minutes as they orbited the globe. But for several days, the sun has City Attorney Boni a Takes Electwn Paper~ City Attorney Don Bonfa has picked up nomination papers to seek re-el~tion to bis post in the April 9 Huntington Beach municipal elections. Bon!a took out his papers Morxlay. So far there have been no challengers Bea~h Ecology Panel to Tour City Resources Members of the city environmental council will take a four-hour "grass roots" tour of Huntington B e a c b Saturday, according to Harriet Wieder, chairwoman of the council. The tour is desiglled to give most of the city's environmenlalists a first- hand look at oearly all of the city's major land resources. "The emphasis of the tour will be the city's environmental and economic needs," Mrs. Wieder says. "Tilere has to be a balance of both.'' Some of the tour spota lnc1ude the central city park, the Bolsa Chica Bluffs, the state ecological preserve In the BoJsa Marsh and more than a dozen other significant sites. City staff members, such as Public Works Direc t or Bill llartge, environmental planner Carol Schwartz, environmental engineer Jerry Jackson. Parks Director Nonn Worthy and economic deve1opment director Bill Back, will explain the significance of some of the land resources. ldrs. Wieder "'1d the toor will help the environmental council b e t t e r understand its work in reviewing proposed projects which could arfect both the environment and the economy.'- Plan to Turn Bunker Into Bar Goes on Agenda A proposal to convert an old World War JI Army bllllker into a restaurant- night club will go before the Huntingt on Beach planning commission tonight dur· ing the commission's 7 o'clock meeting. The thlck concrete-lined bunker is on top of a bluff overlooking the Bolsa Chica marsh at the CT1d of Graham Street. It sill! lo couoty lerrltory but lbe owner, Donald E. G<>Odell, a Huntington Beach resident, wants the city to prezone his six acres so he can be assured the bunker-style restaurant can No w·0tt He first suggested this project in November, 1972, but has not obtained approval from city planners because the entire marsh Is still under study. Staff planners will ask the commission to delay the requ ested prezoning until Feb. 19 to await the ou\come of a special traffic study, rounty studies and development plans for the marsh being prepared by Signal Oil Co., owner ~ most of the marsh. The bunker restaurant has been one of the sore points which recently touched off a heated verbal exchange between h1ayor Jerry LMatney and Che planning. commission. Matney criticized commJssioners for delaying this specific project as well as many other projects pending the outcome of studies which never seem to finish. Commi"'looers had blamed the staff for the slow studies, but contended such items as the requested pret<111fng should not be granted until the en Ure area '1 future is decided. Couple Found Dead SAN FRANCISCO (UPf) -The bodies of Cynthia Washington, 19, and Maurice McFarland, 45, were found Monday with bullei. In their head in what pollce described as a murde r -suicide . lnspe<ton Ron Schnelder and Al Podesta quoted a friend of the couple, S..trico Lnrson, as saying the couple argued in a bedroom and then sbo board Miss Washington cry, "Go ihcad, tboot me." ( , for the attorney 's post. No challengers have stepped forward yet tor the city clerk's job with incumbent Alicia \Ventworth the only person who has taken out nomination papers. In the city council race, with lour seats open, seven persons have picked up nomination papers indicating their interest in the April 9 election. Of the seven contenders so tar II.sled, two are incumbent councilmen, Ted Bartlitt and Norma Gibbs. One other incumbent, Al Coen, has said he will see k a third four-year tenn of office, but has not picked up bis papers, while the fourth, J.ac.k Green, is stepping off the councll 1this year for a move to Los Angeles. The five challengers who have ~ their hats in the ring so far are: Dr. Ralph Bauer, a trustee on both the Huntington Beach Union High School District and the Ocean V i e w (elemeotary) School District; Bruce Gabrielson, an electronics engineer and surfing official; George McCracken, a former oouncilman; Mark Porter, a city planning commissioner; and Harriet Wieder, bead of the city's environmental councll. The deadline for ming oornioallon papers with the city clerk is noon, Jan. 31. Dairy Burglars Get Everything --Except Milk Cravings !or beer, cigareltt!, beef jerky and potato chips -but not milk -brought burglars to the Rockv:lew Dairy in Fountain Valley early hlonday mo ming. Owners of the dairy, at 9"80 Talbert Ave., could not estimate their losses this morning, but said large amounts of beer were missing from the dairy. Cartons of cigarettes were among the booty taken, police reported. According to police, the burglars exited over the rear wall or the dairy, leavlng· footprints in a freshly plowed field. The suspects also left samples of their haul on all sides of the wall, and in bushes and street comers surrounding the dairy. Police today dusted the items left behind for fingerprints and examined footprints left in the field. f'l'Olll Page l PLOT ... tmable to raise the $100,000 bail set by Judgt Charles Litwin. The Popeiis, who summered fn their Linda Isle home, separated this swnmer and Popeil filed for divorce in Chicago. Popeil will go to court there on Friday to seek an order giving him custody of the couple's two teenage daughters and abandonment or the $4,250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since their separation, Mrs. Popcil and her two daughters have been Jiving in Newport Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday night at her home at 519 Harbor Island Rood shortly after Ayers drove up to the bayfront home in the Rolls. Police confiscated the car as evidence In the case, but Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said today it bas been authorized for release. London Railwa y Workers Strike LONDON CAP) -Most of Britain's nllway engineers struck for 24 houn today and commutera relying on cars snarled traffic fn London and olber cities. The traffic congestion was lesa severe · than ex.peeled tn some areas. some c:ommutors apparently were staying home as Ibey did Jul -k when a one-day rail stoppage ceUMICI maalve traffic jl!Ds. . All Plll'"ll'f train oemco ,... ball<d, but some frel&bl lralm kept nmlllng. betn movtn& Into 1 potltlon where they hive teen ?ewer nlghlt. The position. called 1 hip beta angle by mission control, wW bathe the station in direct sunliiht W1111 Saturday. Then nonnal- night cycles will begin to return. The most noticeable effect has· been a temperature rise inside the station Crom 71 to 79 degrees. "Thls thennat situation is goini to worsen," Lewis told newsmen. "We expect the temperature to rise to somewhere between 80 and 85 degrees." Lewis said that, In the oext few days, some earth resources survey! might be canceled because these r e Q u i r e maneuvers that expose more wlnerable areas of the orbiting craft to solar heat. A week ago, the astronauts shut off about hall tbe lighta in tbe station, turning certain ones on only when needed, to keep the heal down. Couple Hold Up Midwa y City Store for $1,500 A Midway City market manager "'ho v•as lured to the rear of his store l\londay night by a female customer lost more than $1.500 when he found her male accomplice waiting ror him. Sheriff's officers said manager Paul \Villiam Voshell, 55, of the Midway Market, 8121 Bolsa Ave., was robbed at knifepoint by the heavily built male after the woman asked him to help her seleet a dinner wine from the display at the back ol the store. Depulies said the robbery team took $1 ,553.M from Vosbell's cash register and $50 from the manager's wallet. They then fled from the store after tying Voshell 's hands and feet. The manager was able to free himseli and summon help. From Pagel BIBLE •.. church service, fs another matter." "The issue at band here seems to be in between, but we still need to get a lot of facts and do a lot of study before a decision can be reached," the deputy counsel maintained. "There's no value in our giving an opinion overnight, for then it wouldn't be worth anything,'' be added. The renewed emphasis In religion bas brought a growing number of such legal requests to the Orange COunty Coumel's office, according to COvert. It Is also a heated issue on the statewide level, and the high school trustees will also instruct the county counsel's office to request an additional opinion from the state Attorney General. FromP .. el TAPES ... by a loud buzz. The experts coocluded that tbe buzzing "originated in tbe noise picked up from the electrical power line to which the recorder was cormected." They also concluded there had been conversation on the tape at one time although they believe there ii "no technique that could recover intelligible speech from the buzi section." They said they bad been able to find three spee<:h fragments, each less than one second in length, on the tape at place'! where tesls indicated there had been brief interruption in the erase ar.d re-record process. Infuriated By L. PETER KRIEG Ot rllt D.llly l'llOI St11f President Nixon's brother F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach today was furious over allegations carried in a United Presa International story Mooday toot he profited from the fraudulent sale of stock to billionaire Howard Jlughes. Nixon said his only tie to Hughes was through fonner good friend Jolln ~feier, a former Newport Beach resident and former mining consultant for Hughes. Meler wu lndlcled Monday in Las Vegas on chargea of income tax evasion and fraud against the federal government. Nixon for some tlm.e bas been predicting the indictmeot and contended that Meier brought In the Nixon name in hopes things would go easy for him. "?\-tr. Meier is In very deep trouble ," Nixon said. "But beyond lhat, J have no comment, other than to say those investigators are going l.o have sOme red faces too," he said. In its story hfonday, UPI said the Senate \V a t e r g a t e Committee is investigating the possibliy that Donald Nixon received hsuhstantiaJ sums" of money !rom Conner Hughes aides for bls help in 11),ining claim ventures. The story linked Donald NiMn to Meier because of a trip the two made to the Dominican Republic In !116t. Nixon claims the trip was purely pleasure. He said he went to see ~teier receive that country's Chris t op her Columbus award. UPI said the trip may be tied to allegations by Meier that Donald Nixon sought personal financial gains by offering to use his kinship with the President to win decisions favorable to the Hughes empire. Monday's indictments char.Je Meier and three others with shiftmg huge profits from deals with Hughes to Swiss bank accounts . U.S. attorney Devoe Heaton said the indictment involves sales of mining claims e1ceedlng $8 million to the Hughes Tool r.ompany, which was then owned by Hughes. A-feier was named tn two indictments returned by tbe Las Vegas Federal Grand Jury on two counts of CXlnlpiracy and on two counts ci alleged tax evasion -1969 and 1970. Meier was indicted last year for income tax evasion for 1968.. One conspiracy count charges Meier with defrauding ·the United States by obstructing the collection 9f tncoml;? tax as a resuJt of the sale or mlnlog claims by Alan Jarlson. Las Vegas television newsman , to the Hughes Tool Company. Others indicted along with Meier on a second conspiracy count were Anthony Hatsis, 47, and James P. Cov.rtey, 45, both of Sall Lake City, and Robert Kahan, 59, of Los Angeles, Solon Fights ' For Men's Rights DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -A group of Iowa legislators had moved to :strike a blow for equal rights for men. 'The ltglsialol'B ftled bliis Monday in the Iowa House to create a Commission on the Status of Men and to provide by law for the observance of Father's Day as well as Mother's Day. "I'm serious," declared Rep. Gtorge Knoke of council Bluffs, chief sponsor of the Commission of the Status of h1en bill. "I believe In equality." U'I T1l9_.. One of Kh1d 1 · Robert Stanley, 45, Martinez, Calif., has disease new to an- nals of medicine, according to a team of researchers. His body c o n ta ins mysterious chemical which will not allow wounds to heal properly. Cuts heal very slowly an<l without strength and his scars readily pull apart. Valley District Classes Open To Old, Young I 1 Classes and semlnan for ev~ryone -from children to senior citizens - are again being offered by the Fountain Valley School District Comm un I t y Schools program. Registration for the various classes continues through Friday, from 9 a.m. to $ p.m. at school district office~. Number One Lightouse Lane, Fountam Valley. Those who are unable to register In time, however, may do so at , the lndivldual class, a spokesman for the program explained. In addition to classes on a wide variety or topics, the program clfers individual one night only workshops and seminars. One such workshop will be "Preventing Fire in Your Home'' Jan. 23, from 7 to 9 p.m. Another \li'Ol'lcshop coocems drugs, entitled, "Family Lile and the Drug Scene". This workshop, taught by county drug educator Dr. Herb Brayer. will be held Feb. 28, from 7:30 to IO p.m. Sports will also be a I a r g e part of the pl'Ol{ram. There wiU be a sports clinic which will cover common sports injuries, how to prevent them, and how to care for them . It wUI meet Wednesday evenings, Feb. 13 and 20, from 7 to 9 p.m. • Another sports class will b e "Self Defense and Exercise for Women", meeting Monday evenings from 7 to 8 p. m. ror six weeks , beginning: Jan. 21 . The C061. is $7. For children, "Youth · Bowling" is offered oo Tuesday afternoons at 4 p.m. The class spans three weeks, is free and includes professional instruction. Another phase of the Community Schools schedule concerns crafts. Paper tole, a 3-D art, and liquid em.bro1dery are two of the craft classes planned. Both begin Jan. 22. Supply Boat Sinks AMSTERDAM, Netherlands CAP) An American supply boat for oil drilling platforms in the North Sea sank today off the Dutch coast, but all 10 crew members were reported re s cue d • DRAPERY CARPET SPECIAL SPECIAL COTTON/RAYON CASEMENT l~ory I: A11tlq111 6old ·~;::~~· SALE PRIOE S2.9& YD. HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! '• "The Trouble With Some Self-Made Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe.'' • Maurice Seitter ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646·4838 HOUIS: M-. Tt... n.n., t te l1JO -N L, t te-f ,._SAT. tiJO te I . • • • • T ~'=""~'='~,J~'="=u=y=1=5,=1~9-14~~~~H'--~~O-A_IL_V~Pl_LO_T_,3,_...,·, 100 M H Winds Whip -Oregon Coast Sheriff: 'Led to 4 Graves' ' HOUSTON , Tex. (/\Pl -A drawling East Texas sherW· told a court hearing !Oday that he talked with a lee!Mger accused of IJla!S murder "lite be were one of my own IOM" whlle the 17·year- old led him to four sandy graves. Today was the second day of pretrial hearings on one of the sis: murder charges against E~er Wayne Henley in connection with a 2\2-year spree of homosexual torture-slayinga. Def(!llse laW}'ers are trying to exclude rrom evidence oral and written statements llt."tlley gave police before, they say, he was permitted legal counsel. San Augustine County Sheriff John I-lot said Henley led him to four shallow graves near San Augustine in deep East Texas Aug. 9, the day after he was arrested . "I don't really recall the deatils of what we said. We were talking like he were one of my own sons," the sheriff related. Hoyt, u n d e r cross-examination, tes tified he complied with Henley's request to see a doctor but Henley later decllned Ule phylician's directive to take sleepirig pills. "I asked bJm why he wanted to see a docctor,11 Hoyt said, "and be ..aid 'I just wanted to see if you would .call one.'" During Monday's half-day bearing, 1t1ary Pauline Henley, the defendant's mother. testified her son bad been hnllucinatlng and was sick when she visited him in ]ail after hls arTest. District Court Judge William Hatten said the pretrial hearing couJd take as Jong as two weeks. Jury selection will begin after the hearing. Mrs. H e n I e y said her son was ''balluclnatlng -seeing people who weren't there and doors opening from' the wrong aide . He would see people standing at the open door, standing there laughing at him. and then the door would close again." ·' Business Plane Crashes in Fog, Killing 2 Men OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -A busine$S jet attempting to land at Will Rogers World Airport crashed in a dense fog today four miles short of the runway, killing two penons aboard but just mis,,ing several residential arel!I. George Clark, chief investigator at the regional ofHce of the National Transpomtibn Safety Boon! in Fort Worth, Te:x., said the aln:ralt WU -by the Kerr-M-COrp. of Oklahoma City and was flying trorn COrpu1 Ouisti- Tex.1 to Ok1ahoma City. Officials of the Federal Aviation Administration In Oklahoma Clfy said two persom aboard the aircraft 'ft'ere killed, but apparently they were the only casualties. Kerr .... 'AcGee officials identified the dead as Pilot KeMeth Blair · Hunter, 65, and ~pilot Jack,. Ernest Garner, so. both of Oklahoma Clty, D.u, ,not stiff '"°'' SEEKS SHERIFF'S POST M1r1hall Norris Candidate 'Tells Offer Of Funding By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of 11111 Deity '"" 11111 Marshall Norris figures it will cost him $63,000 to run for Orange County Sheriff but .said he has already turned down a $52,000 "big money" donation to help him on his way. •·rO be frank, 1 am scared of some of the money being offered to candidates for nonpartisan office these days," said Norris, a 47·year-old Superior Court clerk and fonner Sheriff's lieutenant. "A group of people in Santa Ana came to my home and offered me $52,000 but I refused to take it," he aaid. "1 won't name them right naw because I am tnvestigating to see if they have done anything illegal." This win be Norris' secood try to win the job. He was defeated by a landslide in 1970 by Sheriff James Musick, who· ls retiring this year alter 25 yep.rs,. . . .i _ Norris said he refused the big money in hls first campa ign and has no regDets. "Most of my financial support is going to come from people in my church and from many friends in the county ," he aaJd. "I know there is money to be had from groups like the Lincoln Club (an organization of top Republican businessmen) but I won't touch it." The North Carolina nattve said be will cmduct a newspaper advertbement and precinct-walking campaign 'and put very little emphasis on signs and mailings. Norris llves ln Buena Park with his wlfe and six children. He went into law enforcement after getting a bachelor's degree in police science and served in the sheriff's department for 10 years. He said he is hopeful of beating his opponents on the basis of · bis plaUonn of depart.mental reorganization. So far, only one other man -Sheriff'.s Lt. Bradley Gates -has annoWlced he will run. TGllfllfng fer TV ' Heavy Rains Close Roads And Schools From Wire Services Winds oJ. more than 100 miles an hour whipped the Oregon coast during the night and heavy rains fell over much of the state, causing floodina, road closures power outages and · IChool clooures. The storm also wa. bringing rain and snow to Nct1hem Cali!omla. , At Corvallis, Ore. 15' persona were evacuated from an apartment complex just inside the southWest city limits about 4 a.m. today when rising water threatened their homes. Police Chief Jim Goodman said a fire 'department tank truck sloshed thrOµgh 31h feet of water to bring out Ute' famil~es, mo.st young couples with children. -~,, ...... At Gold Beach, a Greyhound bus carrying 15 passeng'Fs~north.on Highway 101 wu baited bec•wse of hlib wa~r. The passengers wire lodged in the couoty jail overnight beceuae there were no other aceommodaUons. IN THE WAKE OF A BOOKMAKING CONVICTION, TRUSTEE AL YN BRANNON RESIGNEO Froni Left are TrustHs Hans Vogel, Br1nnon, John Manh1ll, Instruction Dian R. l . Plitt ' Bookmaking Co_nvlctlon "We drank lots of coffee, had a lot of conversation and a few naps," said a dispatcher. Branrwn, 43, to Quit R<>ad cloaures tbroughout Oregon were so numeroua police agencies could not keep track of them. · State police said Intentate 5 had only one lane open where a mudslide crashed down 61h miles north of the California border. Both southbound lanes and one 'northhbound lane were closed. A state police oliicer said he did not know ~·hen traffic would be restored. As Saddl,eback Trustee Along the coast, windows were smashed, trees blown over and telephone and electrical Power outages were numerous. A gust of 110 miles per hour was rec<U"ded at Mt. Hebo Air Force station. The wind blt 86 mph at Brookings and &1 at Gold Beach. Meanwhile the winter storm, packing southerlMales.~ rain and snow is on the loose tn Northern Calilomia. The Iron~ 200 miles west cif cattfomia early today, will "bring locally heavy rains south to the Tehachapis today and Wednesday wiUt heavy snow in the Il(U'tbem Sierra ilevada above 6,000 feet,'' the NaUonal Weather Service sakt. Forecasters also wameG of flood ing in low lying coastal areas north of Monterey Bay. See You Again For First Time? By JAN WORTH 01 ttll OlllY l'Uol Stiff With a public 2pology and a testimony to1 "the crutch of prayer," Saddleback College trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana resigned his post Monday night. Brannon, 43, a charter member and former president of the board, pleaded guilty to boo.kmaltlng .charges in Orange county Superior Court last month. He said he will remain in office unlit a successor is elected in the June ·mary. "I to poblldy apo!ogiie to my family for the emban'assment and shariie I have caused them for the actions I may have done in lbe past," Brannon said. "The past year and a hall have been very difficult, and without the love and affection they've shown for me I doubt that I could have survived." he added. The Santa Ana trustee said be plans to "dedJcate the rest of my life to repaying my family for their love." And he added in making his decision he bad relied on "a crutch-a crutch many of us sbJuld use but all too LONDON (UPI) -A hotel baa mailed often do not-and that ts prayer.'' apologies to thousands of British men Hands clasped tightly to bis chin, for any embarrassment caused by a his vo,ice quavering at times, Brannon circular letter announcing the reopening delivered. his five-minute speech to a of its restaur.ant. packed board room. A spol<esman for the Garltm Tower ~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:= Hotel said the letter ended with "I ll look forward very much to greeting you again." This raised suspicions of many wives about their husbands, he said. • He said the mailing list was selected by an agency and did not necessarily include previous clients. • • He said he had talked to msny friends in the last month to deteimine what bt.s ._.action should be , and apol~gized to them for any embarrassment he had caused the school and its staff. "I am truly sorry," he said. Board members made no comment on Brannon's remarks, but two of them, Patrick Backus and Hans Vogel, said privately lbey had talked with Brannon about his possible resignation and urged him to do so. In the audience were acting student body president David Hall and five of the eight candidates for another oeat sdtln to be vacated-that of Michael Collins who resigned last November . One of them, Norrisa Brandt of Irvine, had entered the race with Barnnon's resignation as a chief plank. "I am glad Mr. Brannon has thought of the community," Mrs. Brandt said after the speech. "He did the right thing. I was surprised to hear him ask forgiveness. And I know .hat was hanl on him but best for all." Also present WI!! Lee Rb odes 1 president . of the Saddlehaek college Faculty Association. The facWty gave Brannon a direct comm'unication which was not made available to the preu. But Rhodes said "We wanted positive action, and I think what bas happened here tonight was positive. We are satisfied with the outcome." e Hart Schaffner & Marx e Gino Salvaggi ' e Kuppenheimer e Eagle I e Louis Roth e Sedgewyck ' ! Mercy Killing ; ! Dism1ss al Move ~ Nixed by Judge ~ MINEOLA, N.Y. (UPI ) - A judge has rejected a bid by defense attorneys to dismiss murder charges again.st a surgeon accused of the "mercy killing'' of a terminally ill cancer patient. Lawye rs for Dr. Vi n cent Monte- marano, 34, chief :-e s id en t surgeon at the Nassau County ~1edical Center, argued t'hat national publicity made it impossible for him to receive a fair trial anywhere in the country. However, Nassa u County J u d g e Raymond Wilkes ruled Monday "there is every probability, every certainty, that we will have a fair and impartial jury." . • The small, liaJding doctor pleaded innocent last June to charge. be injected a lethal dose of potasaium chloride Into· the veins of Eugene Bauer. 59. Nassau County District Attorney William Ca)m, who has not !tied a case since he took the po6t in 1962, said he would conduct the proeecut1ort "because of the phllooophical and legal questiona" involved In euthanasia, or mercy killing. But defense attorney J. RI.Well Clune warned the 72 prospective jurors not lo forget about references in the news media to a supJ>O:led "mercy kllUng.11 GET THAT DOG! WODDSEA VES, England (UPI) -Alan Bird bas offered a free pint of beer a day for life at bis pub to anyone finding bis missing Labrador retriever. nasiri's South Co1st Pl111 Cost• M,,, 641 2 E. Spr!P19 L~n9 l•tch Televlalon actor Ron Oxley and his lion Nell tangled at Lion Country Salari Monday -part of filmlng "for I "Death iii Satariland," a television epllode of the CBS nrtu "Cannon." WUllam Conrad, Illar of the show, Is on site fllmlng today and 1taying at the Laguna Hills Hilton with the 70,person proauc- Uon crew. • 540-461 t 421-4611 • ' I ,, , • • I j I I I .-1_or with Tom ~phine ~ ····'11i .. .. , :sheriff Hangs ,:Up His Guns '1 OFF AND RUNf\'ING DEPT. -Over , the past three decades, Orange County '1as been blessed with consklerable new .J>opulatiofl. SO tt may suprise many :When they are informed of bow long )ncumbent Sheriff James Musick llas held forth In orfice. ; Do you know how long Its been since iwe had a real election contest for sheriff ~n these parts! · Twenty-eight years, that's how long. Oh weU, the of!ioe has oome up for ~lection regular as clockwork, every four ;.il?ars. But against Sheriff Musick, it ,ifi11!J been strictly rMrCOOtest. ' Take 1972. for example, when a county clerk.named ~1arshall Norris challenged tncumbent Musick at the polls. WHEN THE VOTES WERE counted up yonder at the Coun ty Seat. ~1usick bad 208,941. Norris gathered 56,733. Yet another no-eontest. So it was that Sheriff Musick had won his seventh four-year tenn, dating back l-0 the election of 194fl. Actually, he had been with the Orange County Sheriff's Office much longer than that. An All-American running back with P,SC's "Thundering Herd" teams of 1929 .30 and '31, he came to the Orang~ P>unty Sheriff's Office under Sheriff Logan Jackson in the early 19305 as a deputy. He rode ni ght patrol cars. Kept the peace during the citrus strikes ot those days. Worked 60-hour weeks tor $150 a month . TO AUGMENT THAT grand $150 monthly income, ~1usick took off in fall months to play professional football \\•ith the old Boston Braves whi ch, in 1937, became the Washington Redskins. Why, here was the big money. 1bey got a whole $150 per game bt those days-just about pocket money for today's pro pJ.lyer. When the Great War came along, Depuly Musick went off l-0 fight it wllb the Marine Corps. MUSICK CAME HOME in 1945, and It was the perfect "home i& the hero" setting for a challenge to then-iocum- bent Sllerill Jesse Elliott. Hore was Musick. USC Alt-American, pro (pot.- ball star, )'OOllg, handsome and re- turned from the Great War. He defeated Elliott at the polls rather decisively. In the elections since. Musick has kept that winning record Intact. He bas never really faced a serious challenge. He may have held office longer than any other California she riff. FATHER TlME, however, usually wins In the end. And Alusick has decided not to seek an eighth four-year tenn. At 62, he is stepping down. Thus for the firs't time in nearly three decades, Orange County will have a re~! electi~ race for sheriff. Already candidates hke Norris, Sheriff's u. Bradley Gates and likely Cypress Police Chief George Savord are stepping forward to seek the vacated sheriff's posl. And Musick will be watching it all from the sideline. lfc isn't really used lo watching from there. J(ing Conuuen101·atecl ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Schools 'were closed here today as part of a nation- ~e program of celebrations cOmmem. orating the 45th birthday anniversary of llje !ale Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. A ~kcsman for the Southern Christian Lfadership Conference said about I 000 ~mo:ia1 services will be held, including tljose m ·most of the nation's major cities. • , .. Tutsday, January 15, }q74 45 Injured as Amtrak Leaves. Tracks By Tiie Auodated·l'ms "The last thing I remember ii seeing Dying i'-and Dying _,., .. Pricilla Heldner says of tile derailment ol Amtrak 's crack Texas Ollef passenger train. The Texas Chief lefl the track> near Ardmore, Okla., 0 Monday, resulting in injW'ies to 45 persons. That was one three train accidents around the country.· AT McGREGOR. Tex., two tank cars carrying petrochemicals derailed and exploded, but no injuries were reported. In Pennsylvania, four tank cars carrying compressed dllorine overturned and ruptured in a sparoely populated area ne.ar White Haven. Titere were no reported injuries. The Teus Oilef, llOUlhbound from Chicago to Houstro wllh 115 Plllf'lf..., aboard, was movin &l!Jrough an Iniluo- trlaJ area on tbe northeastern ootsklrta of Ardmore when It deraUed at 15 mllea ptr hour. . Several persons were plMed inolde derailed cara for a time before being rucued by workmen with pry ban. Two of the can, including the ~ining car, turned on their sides. 'Jbe dlnlng car caught fire. "Everyone and everything was going ...,,..mm," IAld ldn. Heldner fJl Allllln, Tu., Who WU In 4111 diller. "My flnt lboutht wu: 'Tblo II the eod.' ti # l 'ii JUST HUNG en.'' llld Simuel H. Treadwa1, 71 ,of Oklahoma City. "The car 1tarted jumping It was on the right side of the train, and the care began tilting to the left, IO I<> kep from being thrown acr.,. the car I Juot ·hung on to my oeat." Of the 4fi penons injured, 29 recoived emergency treatment and were released. Simon were bospitallud, lnc!udlng Mrs. !loo Summen of Arllngton, Tex., who oulleredabrotmblct. "II Iooiced Ute 111 atom bonlb bad upioded,11 'takl John M. Gtrdner, a M<Gt-e&cr -· ol the blaat II the Teua community. PUlc:e ovacualed ...,... of penons from a ZM>lock UM u firemen IOUght a Dre that followed the explosl<n. The Santa Fe Railway Bald five tank can amooe: 12 can that derailed were carrying vinyl cbloride, dllorine 1as, naphtha and otbtt combultibleo. Two of the derailed link cars esploded and burned. WITNl!SS!S SAID one car in the Jkar,lnlin wu Ieak"'8 naphtha as the train neared the McGregor depot and the cars derailed when the cnw attempted an emergency slop. The tour tank cars c 1 rr y l n & compressed chJor\ne were among 10 cars in a Lehigh Valley Railroad 67-car frel&hl train that left the track• near White Haven. State poll<e advised r .. ldents within a haU·mile ol. the accklent to evacuate their homes through Monday night because cl. chlorine fumes. "A whiff of th1> stufl dotan~ kill you, but a big dose could," aald State Poll« Sgt. John Hooking. "' Tan~ka Jeered By Indonesians Ul"I T........,. Modern Roundup JAKARTA (UPI) -Thouaands of Indonesians poured into the 1 streets today, burning, am as bing and hammering m anything Japanese in a massive demonstration timed for the vlsit of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. Demonstrators I-Ore down Japanese flags, burned Japanese-made mol<>r -llld broke windows in stores dealing in Jape._ lfOOd!. They attacked a buaload ol Ja-toorlsti and UPI photographer Toobio Sakal, a Japoneoe, WU forcod to flee when demoiBtralon turned oa him. One delnoi'wbator was ~killed. DESPITE THE nm-, police and army troops appeared to have the demonstrations ~ cootrol. There were no shots fll'ed and. no tear gas was used, although pollce turned firelxlses on demonstrators earlier in the day. Sioux City, Iowa police had a tough time rounding up a steer which escaped from the stockyards Monday. Eflorts to corral the animal as he beaded for the downtown area were unsuccessful and after charging a car and leading officers on a two- hour chase, he was brought down after officers shot him. Indonesian President Suharto ordered a 6 p.m. curfew in the dty. There were still thousands in the street 1 Y.i hoon after the deadline, but their ranks were rapidly thinning. Heav.y Vietnam Bombings Assailed by Viet ,Cong Fi:-Wire Services SAIGON -The Viet Cong I-Oday accmed the Saigon government of conducting the heaviest bombing 5ince the United States halled air raids a year ago. As the fighting continued , congressional backers of President Nguyen Van 'Illieu introduced a constitutional amendment to allow Thieu to nm for offJCe a third time. The South Vietnamese constitution at pres- ent fori>ld> a third by. . SENATE SOURCES said mare than 140 Iegislato!B signed a petition l-0 support the amendment allowing Thieu to serve until 1980. A two-thirds majority DAILY rILOT DELIY!f Y SERVfCE Drli~trr J tht Daily Pilot is guaranlrtd Mt,..t1'·Frl••1': ti y.u dt Ml ~•v• 1'tllr IH~r •1' Jilt '·""·· c111 •Ml ''"' c•.., wm " ,......,., I• '"· Cllll 1r1 tilt" ""Ill ,,. '·""· J.ll11rtll1' ..,, 111Mt1': II \'tlU ,,. .,., r1c1lv1 .,.., Ctl'J t1' t 1.111. Sllunl•1'· tr I 1,111, '"""'''' clll •~" 1 c''' wlM .,. t...,...I 11 1'11. Ct t15 1r1 llll1t1 1111111 II 1.111. Trtrphonrs M111 °''"" c_,, ,.,.,._ ....... .u .. n1 ""'111Mtt K ... lllottlll ltldl Niii WHlllllflllff •. •• •• .. •• MtoUit SH (8-... t , Ct'41to'I"' llKll. S.11 J,,.n C1H11r1111. 01 ... "911ot. lelioltl Llp!W, U,... Nit• •••• ...,....,. Is required and -.. Id the amendment woukf easll)' P,.. ·· ' Thieu's term expires Oct. st. urn:. He has been in office since 1961 when he beat out fonner Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. He •ran unoppoeed in 1971 for a seCllOd term. The government and the Viet Coog also held their longest meeting ol the Joint Mililary Commissioo (JMC) loday. In the nearly frve-bour meeting, the government propolied a bannlDg of weapons -llUCb as mortars, artillery and rockets -wbidt oftal cause heavy casualties to civilians, but It was reject- ed, ,,......,.. U. Col. Le '!'rung Hien said. On the war froo~ NOrth Vietnamese troops shelled several g o v e r n m e n t positions near the Le Minh border base .today and made one ground assault, apparently trying to p r e v e n t reinforcements from reaching the camp · in the central highlands. AN ADVANCE patrol of 30 South Vietnamese infantrymen wM landed in Le Minh by helicopter on Mcnday alter the area was softened up by government bombers. 'lbe government .sald the conunan~ met little resistance in retaking the camp, wbidt the North Vietnamese captured last September. A force of more than 5,000 troops was reported on the move In the area wesl of Pleilru, but the Saigon command said it has nm into resistance 3~ miles from Le Minh. Boston Sellout For Bob Dylan BOSTON (AP) --Gsden -fiBed to capacity -.. folk-rock supeniar Bob Dylan made bis first lwo . ·-hen In -yoars. ~-!ban 15,lllll! . .!bowed up for both • lils an..-and •V<lliDC concerts Monday. Dylan, noted more for his tong l)Tics than his ccmversatkns with audiences, spoke three ti m e s during the afternoon affair. · At the end ol the .opening song, "Rainy Day Women," he told the applauding audience: ''Thank you. It's good "' be bock in Bostoo. .. He later said, "You're too mucli," alter prolonged applause for "Uke a Rolling Stone," and he alao anmunced the intenniMion. Tanaka arrived in Jakarta late Monday and Is scbeduled l-0 leave Thursday. It is the last leg "' • Dv .... tlon toor for the prime mlnbter. There -• aiao anti-JIPIDete demon1tration1 in niananc1 but not u ledous u the· ones in Indonelta ~ ..,.,. Included MlllllA, sq.pore and Koala Lumpur. Crowda llUrl'Od -times against the Ja-embuay. on T1wnrin Street. -Col in and tore doWn the Ja,POMM flag and brote It pones' ol glaSs on the lleCODd floor of the InC?dem bulkflq:, . THE Y 0 UNG ~ obouting "down with Japan" and ''economic lmperlallst.s," grew Increasingly - as lndoneaian troops tried l-0 break up thedemoollnltiono. The youthl, who lnlveled lo the Indonesian capltaJ trogi a far away as Sumatra, 11111 miles l-0 the nottbwest, were Protestio& against alleged Japoneoe eoonmnlc dllcrimlnatloo. Earlier, demonstrators moved away IJl'Od mtmedly when anny unita With macblne pns and 'armored can onltred them out of the Jatana dvlc aquare Reported hy Press Wilkins Denies Ouswr From NAACP Top Post NEW' YORK (AP) -Roy Wilklnl has been ousted as executive direCtor of the National A.ssodatlon for the Ad~ of Colored People, the lift Vork Doi1J News said today, But WllklDI and other NAACP olfJCiall catecorlcally denied the llory. Hilda Krause bled to datth h, ber bedroom while . ber b1Dballd, Marvin, It, alot madllne .manager ol Caeaar's hJace, lay 1DJIWdoul. Alll,Rmlldt, --., the costno, eoc:aped -,_ • "1mm!to IN SHORT. •• near the national residence where Tan~ aka conferred with lndooesfan President Suhar!<>. The students regrouped later, however, and converged on the back of the residence before troops had a chance to disperse tbf;m again. ~ds of paratroopers, military police and special forces ~ted to pro<ect Tanaka, chased the protesters down side streets away from tbt building. Trio Perish In Marijuana Plane Crash POMPANO BEACH, Fla. !UPI) - Three men -.·ere killed Monday night Mien a twin-<ngine plane calT}'ing UJI). pound blocD of marijuana craabed in heavy rain near an unoccupied apartment building and exploded. IT WAS THE S«OOd SJch Florida crash .in four days. A spokesman for the Ft. Laudentale 1 police said one of the penons believed to be aboard the pit.,. had '-' liobd with the a'ISh of a aimi1ar plane carrying more than a Ion ol marijuano at Pladda, on Florida's gull coast. One of the victims was ldeotllled u a Gaineovllle, Fla., resident, but bis name was withheld. The other two victims ...... loo badly burned for immediate ldenuncauoo. A medical e1aminer's report was expected later in the day. The spokesman, Gene Farmer, laid there "-ere no report.I of any injuries to bystlnden, although the plane crashed tn a densely populated area ol hlgb-rise buildings ooe blodt from the Atlantic ocean. THE PLANE, a white l.ocl:heed ~ with .. oraoce stripe poimd on lta lldes, radioed the towor at Pm_.. air park shortly before I un. and r-1ed one ol ita ..,.;nea bad t'aikld, Police sale!. Eyewi-said the plane, with fira ~ our ol one of Ill engines, raplcDy lost a[Utude, 111d exploded 1... than ts feet from the Pompano Beach Club, a 2ktory condominium unde r construction. . Accmling l-0 the police report, the plane elploded on Impact, apreeding marijuana "like seaweed" through the area. "The plane caught fire and you could 911\ell the marijuana burning ail aromd," said one witness. Authorities said It was cDfflcult to del<rmiile how • mu<h pol WU -.! lince wind and 111In bad -and• opllt the blockl. ' . "IF THE PLANt WU ·~· Io ad a d It ~ bold -l,ttlll to . pouDda o{ marijuana," -mid.' ' ioo MPH Wind • Ill Oregon The newapaper aald tl>t M-member boa?d o{ cliredorw ., the dvll rl&bta group look the -Monday In .• closedoeaion. "! haven 't the lllghiat Idea whml ', the •torY, 1 came from. It's ao cootraiy to the meeting yestenlay and the Itemt lhat came up," Wllkino aald today .in ( ' ) bmnb llianted In hll car lut week. Police, tipped lbat he WU marlted fer mordor, Up! watch "' Ille car and nabbed.a man plantlll( the txploslve. V'I wt •llltt rOIO<MI • V.S. Sa111111ar" • • a telephone interview. e Vegas Murder ~ VEGAS (•UPI) -Two men wearing ski masks beat up a casino executive Monday, then bound hll 71- yellN>ld wife with electrical oonl and cut her throaL Cronkite 'Served I Court Subpoena ' e Fori Attcek ' A:rl-ANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -Vice l're8ldent Gerald R. Ford •called the AFL<:IO and other "omall groupo fJl _ .. todt1 <I attempting to exploit die Waterpto of!alt lo brm, about Pr11'W Nmm'I dowafalL "Alld mab ao mlltab-11- lllo .. all ... .-. • Ford alill. ''11111r aim II lalal ftdory' for __ ml ___ _ ; .... f'lwldoal -bat ... Ibo ...... . ... wlddl be-· NEW YORK !w.I) -CBS --Waller Qoooldtj bla -.....i w1111 ........... to ._,. at tbe Feb. It ••••••••• , .. tr1a1 "' two P1.. aethilts wtio aubed w·~-·· · -a livt tol8Cll( of cr...lllo'o nicbt'1 ~·~•v" (AP) -A It parcenl not-k -_.,, lul month. dedlno la blclnrll'. tnllic hitaUUet lor A CBS opo1reomq ~ .......... , --'"!*tod In tbe 11- tha ~~-·-· ~ -..,.., -,,... ....... their "'""" limits, t ......... ,_ ,__ lllbpoena, 'Ille,.....,._ of --...~~ Aki but declined further -""the· .....--.. __ _ Moaday. !' ~ twn defendants, Mark Sep!, 23, 0. tha otbtt hand, Ille departm .. t and Hany 1aJ1cbome, 111, both of Nld tha blgtlwq death -deClined Phlladelphla and bo111 member1 fJl the only I por'Cl!lll la the -fJl the natlaa. "Oq llaiden," ... cbariecI wltb Dr. -Gnpy of Ille N~ tl'MpUl!na. Thq lnternlpted the' "CBS 111111""1 Tnfllc ~ -tratloa Evenlne News" Dec. II to proi.t wlla1 Nld Ibo ...... lpeod limits qiuld ,. .. they aald -tftltbamoaelUll blal in .. IDUIJ u a,IJID -nallaawldo Ia the '*-k'• .............. • ,...,.. ... ' "''~ /\'-elf la S1dt . Former "ncer Joonne Barr, 38, Iw sued pianist Uberace for •t.3 million, charging def. aniaUon .and lnvwon of priv· t"Y .,... a romance they sup- jiotedly bad :W yean ago. Le)). erai:e rec.iJed the romance Jn a book. I I Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoek8 ' VOL 67, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T.UESOAY, JANUARY 15, 1974 N TEN CENTS Newport Votes to Put Reins on Development Newport Beam councilmen Monday nlilrt decldtd to -ue· all !uture develop. men In the city to the availability ol en- tl'IY 10urte1 and oumldpel services, such u oolid wute disposal. : At the urglni! or 'COUncllman Paw 1\ycl«\{I, they. voted wianimously to kquire a report from all ut\llUes about tbelr ability to provide service. In addltton, the city will now require ~n environmental impact report on , energy avallablllty." The clty'a Environmental Affairs Committee wlU be charged w I t h oblalnlng an ana1ysls fi:om developers aa to Its "°""ttal energy OOOIW!lptioo and lllln obtain the nport from suppliers aa to lls avallablllty. RyckoH's piopolal 'WU amended at the suggestion of Councllnlan C&rl Kymla to Include studies of the ability ol other servkes, like the Orange Co u n t y Sanitation District, to adequately handle the in<Teesed -ancb. Ryckoff talked or the tremendous gl'0\'1h In the city and said, "This Is rather important. I don't want ·to think ol the day when oor homes are cut off· from gu.·0 Community-Development D I r e c to r JUcbanl V. Hogan esplalned Iba~ In the put, the Southern California Gas Company bal always said tt could provide wbatev.i-addJUonal supplies are needed and the city accept'ed that declaratiOn. ._ :'However, this is no longer sufficient. We'.re going to be amng harder questions of them tn the future," Hogan 11ifd. City Attorney Dennis · O'Neil pointed oU! that the city u'ill not necessarily have to deny future developments on the basls of Wtfavorable impact reports. "1be En v 1 ron men ta I Affairs Committee may reject the impact report u Jnsufficient if it shows there is an inadequate amount of energy to serve the new development," O'Neil said. "But that is only an informational docutrient to be used by the planning commission and city council to approve or deny a .project·," O'Neil said. "The mere fact than an EIR is rejected does not mean that a project cannot ~ to development," he said. "On the other band, it's up tq the decision-makers, the commission and the COWlCil, to decide how much. weight to give to an EIR when considering the project as a whole-" be said. "I suppose as the energy sources become more scan:e, more weight wou1d be given to consideration of that factor ," O'Neil said. O'Neil pointed out that e n e r g y availability ls only one. of several factors the Environmental. Affairs COmrnittee Tape Gap Deliberate, Panel Dona-Id Nixon Furious Link to Howard Hughes Hotly Denied By L. PETER KRIEG or 1111 c.11Y Plllt Si.ff · Preeklent Nixon's brother F. Donald Nixon of Newport Beach today was furious over allegations carried 1n a linlted PresS lntemaOonal story Monday that he pn>llled from the fraudulent salo ol stock to bllllollain! Howard Hughes. Nison aaid his nnly rte to Hughes -through !..-mer good friend John Meler, a former Newport Beaclt resident and former mining comultant !0< Hughes. Meier was indicted Monday in Las Vegas on charges of income tu evaskm and fraud against the federal government. Nii:on for some time bas been predicting the Indictment and contended that Meler brought In the Nh:OD namo In bopea thinga would go eaay for )thn. .. Mr. Meier is in very deep trvubk," . Nixon said "But be)'Olld that •. I have tto commen~ other -than to aay -mv..tlgatora 'The Showdown John Wayne Off t,o HarvartJ, LOS ANGJ;:LES (UPI) -Newport Beach resident John Wayne saddled up a jetl!Rr Monday and headed easl for a -wn at Generation Gap. \ WAYNE IS NOT a man to Ignore a challenge to have it out, man to ·man, and that '• whal be received from the university's saUre mqulne, the Har- vard Lampoon. The editors wrote him challenging him to smw just bow tough he ls, asking if he ii willing to lace up to "a gq tbat 'llOUld rather quote you Man or Mao Tse-tung than spit In yoor eye" and face dtmootra· · and counter-demomtrators. I don't know a damned thing about It except Ibey cballenced me to · ,"growled Wayne, boarding a plane for ·tbe East. "I f1g11re the Harvard boys •and I are at opposite -.of lbo.apectrum. They suggested I didn't have tbe courage to ao." THE HARV ARD EDITORS have promised to welcome Wayne with a mili- tary coawy, a moct cowboys-and-Indians shootout, a 0 stampede of some kind or mammal /' and a question and answer aesakm alter the showing of hJs latest movie, •0MCQ." .. It bas the makings of a real ugly incident," Lampoon Pnsldent Jim Downey uld In apparent dellgbl The Duke was unfued as he strode out for the showdown. •11 hear the last guest they had at one of these things waa Linda Lovelace," he said in bis parting sbot. "I gu.., she met the challenge." :Newport Authorizes .Campaign lor Freeway BJ JOHN ZALLER Of .. o.ltr ,.... .... Newport Beach M..,or Donald A. Vice-oµtyor Howard Rogers at one point In the discuaslon. Tho propooed Corona del Mar Freeway It planned to originate at the San .Diego Freeway between Bristol St""t and Fairview Rold in Costa Mesa. It '100ld then read 30ullleooteriy, (See FREEWAY, Pqo I) are going to have 10me red faces too," he said. In iLs story Mood~y. UPI said the Senate W a t e r g a t e Committee is lnveallgatlng the JIO'L'lblllty that Donald Ni.J.m recetved "substantial sums" of money from former Hughes aides for bis help in mining claim ventures. Tho •torx linked Donald Nixon to Meier because of a trip the two made to the llonilnlcan Republic In 1119. -claim&-the trip .... purely (See DON · NIXON, Pap I) Ne~rt ·f:.ouncil To .Take Stand · 10n Big Canyon City COUDdlmen promised Monday to CQQSider adoption ol a policy to grotect -. Newport Beach arclteologlcal and paloonlological sitea lrvm haphazard destruction. And eouncllmen . made clear that ir they adopt the new policy, tbe first plAce I twill' apply ii Big .Ca!cyut. As propose d by Planning OJm. mlsolon..-Jackie Heetber, the new policy -~ the city to hire a trained oclenllst to . be present on all known valuable sites during critical phases or bulldozing operations. 0 Jt seeim to me that preservation of Newport Beadl's lti$ry Is worlh the price ol a new traffic light, which is about bow much money we're talking about," Mrs. Heatber told ~!men. Mrs. Heather origlnally was most interested In aa]vaging looslls from the Big Canyon condominium site, but she bas rooentty been working to gain support for pro~g fcmils and arclteologlcal art!facts throughout the city." CouDcllmeb w o u I d n • t apecllically commit tbemaelftS to approving the new policy, .but Indicated Ibey probably will be !awrably disposed to it when tbe matter comes up to a .vote later tbls -th. Commuters Delayed SAN'FRANCISCO (AP) -Commuters ridln( the computer.qe Bay Area Rapid Tranaif system to San Francisco were dela~ up to one hour Monday because the doon refused to open automatically. ..... Mcinnis was autborir.ed Monday by the city couttc1l to fight !w reinstatement ot the 'Com>a de! Mar Freeway In tliis year'• 1tate transportatloa budge!. • . 'lbe council gave informal affirmation of !Is support for the freeway alter the mayor uld be wanted all the help he could get In trying to revive the -·dormant freeway. Second Time Around Ul"IT .......... Fill 'er llp"! This sign in front of the Calvary· Baptist Church tells everyone that he,re ~ O!le "service ~tion" that isn't closed on Sundays. The church is Joeafe.d in Camas, Wash. • • _ Sauna ·Trial Judge Okays Two Truth Serum Movies· By TOM BARLEY Of tM ~Hy Pllol -Sllfl When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the witneM stand today in the Orange County Superior Court saum bath trial the jury will view a movie made while she was under the influence of a so-called "truth serum." Jud'ge William Murray made the ruling that enables attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. to screen two video tape films in the courtroom. The decision came after a four-hour out<>f..court session fo.fonday in the o!fices o! Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psychiatrist. "111 let 'em in," Judge iturray said after a bitter argument between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Donald A. Ruston on the admissibility of the two lilms. One of the movies run by Dr. Benton in lhe priva~y of his office depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with Mrs. Parson, SO, when she is not under the influence of sodium amytol. 'lbe second movie, shot by the psychiatrist last Dec. 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redhead responJing to his questioning in the slow, slurred manner ind11ced by his injection of the tranquilizer. The screening was carefully kept from the jury until today . Lewis b e 1 i e v es the movies will considerably enhance hls hopes for a favorable verdict in the $1 million la wsuit against the health spa. '"nlll Is ..,. al tbe fow areu around hel9 where all the qmdeo illvolved an! In agreement that a freeway,~ to be devetopod and I tblnt we lltOUld ... ahead with 1~· tbe ...,... aa1d. Mclnoll was refearhC to the ~ between Newport Beaclt. Colla Mal, and Irvine that the freeway ..Pt to be built to re~no tnllic ........ OD MacArlbur lloolevanl and llrlllol Streel Newport Dredging OK'd Ruston angrily condemned the movies as "self serv!M, leading and suggestive and extremely inflammatory" a n d repeatedly pointed out to Judge Murray that he had no opportunity to cross examine Mrs. Parson in e I t be r circumstance, drugged or otherwise. 'l1le cOnlcmla Department 0 f Tr~tlolt cllaclaHd laal -that II II delaylnt construct.Ion of the Cotoaa de! Mar Freeway becalllO of a Ill 1tt poollne tu reoelpta. 8lddJn& for conatnictlon or the ftni major link ol the freeway near Bonita -~ had been -for February. • Councllmtn took oo formal wte on Mcbltll1 reqltell for .,~ but Ibey .. clear -IUppOrt to bit position. .... ha .... ,.,, ""-to ..... Colla -tbat I-·"" Cllllltt follow tltnlap wltb tblt -·" said .. -:., I aboonoe .. ·"'-said wlten he ~ tuiitd, I ~· Commlss1ontt Rober! Rooney 0 f llu!ltlnlton Beaclt, wbo had voted against the plaa. uld he -.Id move for immediate reconsideration "out o 1 oonsldentlao for Mr. CUpers." 1be leC<lld time around, the plan was approved :W. willl Rooney and Commlllslonen Doaald Briehl a n d Rlmmott Fay, both marine blologlsts, "'ttna tto. Fay argued tbat Newport Bay ha1 ormttnued \0 "deteric:nte ll I marine habitat and -~ tho ruJOn1 r. because ol ""ttnual clredPtl· •11t tUee ,......, ...umea decadel (a/w. 4hcfilnc) ..... ••bllslt a -••b•-1 "' tba ..... *' tlilo lo .... this la one of the things the commission Is suppooed to do," added Fay, referring lo the coastal zooe act, which calls for 1t>e commlssjon to help enhancement of marine life. Fay wasn 't against all dredging. In areaa where dredging IBit't lmmedlalely neceasary lot nav1sation, he said, it lhould be pootponed. Dredging abould be done on a -priority baals only, Fay said. Rooney agreed In opposing the mass dredging idea. C&spen, wbo la a1ao an Orange County SUpervi10r, said the maximum use of the bay oow ls recreaUottal "OUr priority is people and boa ta," he said, adding be has seen too many boats and docks 0 ieeled over" because or (ke DIUl:DGING, Pap I) Or. Benton argued before he shoWed the f111111 that it wu only fair for the Jury to see Mrs. Parson at her most relaxed momenls which could only be in the office or her psychiatrist. Her courtroom testimony has been offered under circumstances that are partlCularly adverse to any person suffering the kind of psychiatric trauma Mrs. P•non Is undergoing, Bentott told Judge 11\urray and the two Jawyera. Mrs. Panon's statements under the drugs and otherwise were Identical: !hot before she waa trapped In the sauna room ol the Orange health spa on Marcil 2, ttro, she was a happily married Catholic woman whoee life WN devoted to her husband and aeven cblldmt. Sile stated In both vlde;) tape sequences (See SAUNA, Pace I ) '• is charged vdtb weighing as jt reviews environmental impact reRQrts. "The council, for imtance, just told them to look al archeological and paleontological aspects of development," he said. O'Neil also said he does not think the intent or the council's action is, in any way, an attempt to slow down construction in Newport Beach. "I don 't know what effect it will have, if any, on development. But that "·as not lhe intent of the cowtcilmen," O'Neil said. Hints 18-minute Hum Caused · By Erasures WASHINGTON (UPI) -The 1811· minute gap in one of President Nixon's key Watergate tapes was caused by erasing pbd re-recording the tape u many as nine times, technical expert.1 reported to U.S. Judge John J . Sirica today. Furthe.r, the experts said, the erasures had been caused by band operation ol the madline on which it was pla,..S -oot by a loot pedal as · Nisoo'1 secretary, Rose Mary Woods, lnsilt<d under oath she 1lled wblJo working with the tape. Tho esperls uld there waa evldeoce the tape conlalned conversation but ·11ia1. there was no known way of recovering an intelligible venion. Without saying to directly, the panel of six audio uperta strongly suggested in their final report on the June 20, 1m -tape that Ill obliteration apparently was deliberate. "Magnetic signatures that we have measured directly on the tape show that the buu.lng IOUDds were put on the tape in the process or erasing and re-""'°rdlng at least five, and perhape as many as nine, separate and contiguous segments ••• The 18.5-mlnate segment could not have been produced. by any single, continuous operatai." the report sakl. Sirica, who recesaed bearings Into the tapes issue last month while awaiting the esperts' report, lmmedlalely called an open court hearing at whJch t.bl experts were summoned to testify. Copies of the report were given to special prosecutor Leon Jaworski and his staff and to White House lawyer1 at a meeting with Sirica this morning. The White House issued a statement saying the experts' report had been received and was under review, aJKf that "it would be altogether incorrect and improper for premature judgments or conclusions to be reached" about the tape at this time. The tape involved a conversation Nixon bad wilb then White House chief of stall H. R. Hal-an on the first "'Ol'king day after the June 17, 1m Watergate bugging arrests. Haldeman'• notes of that meeting, introduced into evide:Dce earlier in Slrlca's court, show (S,0 TAPES, Page I) Oraage • Weatlter It'll be brlibl and sunny again Wednesday, accordlng to the weather aeryice, with slightly ~1· er tempera!u1'11 a1oog the Orange Cout. Highs o1 M at the beaches rising to the low 70s inlaud. Lows tonight ~ to 50. --JNSWE TODAY Colonel Sander1 and his toift, Clatldia, are suing Hewbltin lt]C., the succea.sor ~cl chicken firm for mf.rwfng Ute Colmael'1 narne, image ond liknttn in promoting 1om.e productl. Set 1'°'1/ Page 12. t... M. •• ,.. 11 Mt'lhl • CtM"'* I loWtffl ,_. 11 Ci.MIHM •M MatltNI Ntwt 4 C-la , , C>rtftH c..i" ' (........ ,, .,hia ....... 11 DHWI _.. I '""" """ ~ .. _ . . ... ,....... '"'' lllttlt&lill I 1 lf T......... 11 ,!Mllff 11·11 ,,...,_ " ~ ........ w...... • "' ....... " ............. .... lltfl Mfl M ..,. ..... 4 A•~ '11 2 DAILY PILOT N Expansion Supported Newport Beach co.uncifmen ~fonday night unanimously adopted a resolution support ing the expansion er the San Qnofre nuclear generating plant. The calilornia coastal commission wiJJ meet next month to reconsider Its decision to kill the Southern California Edison Company proposal to enlarge the blufftop station. Councilmen cited the currtnt power 1hortage and said Jt Is likely to become more acute. And they poin!OO out that the expansion would involve 1 • on 1 y approximately one half mile of eoasUine, but would meet the urgent demand for increased electrical po.wer and at the same time conserve between 25 .and 30 million barrels of oil per year." They said they felt the adverse environmental impact of the project would be minimal. ' The endorsement came after a lengthy and impassioned appeal to reject the resolution that was made by Mrs. Judy Tracy, 706 Bison Ave., Newport Beach, a member of the city's Citizens Environmental Quality Control Advisory C.Ommittee. That panel bad endorsed the expansion but Mrs: Tracy said her statement represented the viewpoints of three members who feel "the decision to expand nuclear fission plants is perhaps the most far reaching moral is.sue of our time.11 Mrs. Tracy cited the possibilities of nuclear accidents at both the generating plant and at the waste storage centers. She pointed out that some of the spent byproducts including plutonium-239 will require segregation from our environments for 240,000 years. "We must reach our minds beyond the entire time span of human experience to deal with plutonium·239," Mn. Tracy said. She also talked about the dangers of radioactive materials being shipped from place to place across the country. While conceding the odds oJ a container coming open during even a railroad derailment are low, .. what about someone intent up:>n opening the 16 bolts of the container?" she said. ''The horrifying p:>ssibilities o f terrorism, sabotage and blackmail, both at reacta;r sites and during shipment pinpoint our increasing vulnerability," she said. Mrs. Tracy told councilmen, "It is your moral mandate to call for a nuclear fission moratorium and to call for the redirection of our nation 's research priorities and funds to the environmental safer SOJll'ces of energy s u pp 1 y . ' 1 From Pager DREDGING. •• •and and mud build-up. caspers also said he could "care Jess a boot bugs and barnacles." During his statement supporting the project, Caspers looked up to see O>rnmis:sioner James Hayes -one of the original seven yes votes -leave the room. "Jim," Caspers interrupted him self, 'are you going to be gone very Joog." "I'm just going to be in the hall," Hayes replied. He, was back in time for the vote. caspers said the maintenance wou1d be paid for by bayfront homeo.wners and added that a blanket permit was more logical than going case by case. City and county officials proposing the plan had left after their initial defeat. Commission Chairman Bright toJd OUpers that "as punishment" he would have to call the city officials and tell them the good news. OIAN•I COAST N DAILY PILOT Th• .or.,,,. Goa1! DAil y ,.1l0T. wl!ll Wl'llcll " CM*lllMI fl'lt NeWl·Prll!U, .. pUOUloh..:1 by 1M Ol'lflOt CO.ti Publlt~lflll CO,,..n\'. S~· nit llllllon1 •rt Pub!lslltd, Mond~r l~•D"'911 f'r!NY, ,_, Co.ti Mn1, N_,,..-1 611ch, Hlll'ltlntlOn •1Kh/f-llh'I VIiie~, L1gu~ 8..ch. trviMl~IMllck •nd SW! Cltrn9nl1f $M J•,. Clplllr-A &11'1Qlt revlOl'l<ll •UIDl'I It puttlltMd S.turHn '"" Sundin. "n19 ... ll'lclplll il>Utll1hlr19 P'-"' Ii .. lJQ Wtll .. , ·~ c:.te ~ Clllfomlt, ,,. .. R.Nrf N •. Weed ,,_.... •M PllDlltlW .f11k R. Curley ""' ,,...,.... -~-1 M.llllOtf' Tllotnt• Ket,11 .... ™"''' A. Mvrphl11• ~IHl!W L ,,.., knOI ....,.,. ...,. C'tly ldtler ............. Offtct JJIJ N•.,...t .... 1..,1Nl M.m,.. JiM, ... , r.o. to• 1111, t21,, -~ C.te M.e: Jiit _wett ltV SI,... ~ INefl: 22l ----"'=. .. .._,_.. fel(Plt 17115 • !'"'. .... oem.Mti as,Not"lll IJ C:-lllt •ttt f' Mer•••• 17141 '4.MU1 Cf ,.,. .............. , ... ,. ,.,,.,. ma. °'9fllt Celttl' ""'""'· '*"""" "' ... ....i... ~-.....,., • .....,., .. 1911twrt._,. .. , .. •• t ... ..... "'*"' ,... ...................... ~ --·:=st .... ., c.r. ~ .......... ~ • ~ • .. (tiTlllr ........... ""' ., ..• ,,...,.,,, ,........, ... , ...... ~. .. • ' . . . Tutsd11y, January lS, 1974 2 Days • ID Jail Assemblyman Z'berg Seroes Ti1ne SACRAMENTO (UPI) -veier.n Asse111blyrnan Edwln 4 Z'berg quleUy entered the county Jail l'Tlday just lftet he. wu nni.nced for drunken driving and served a twCH!ay term over the weekend, it was learned today. In sentencing Z'berg to jail, Munidpal Court Judge Raven Court· ney gave the 47·year-old Sacramento Democrat 45 days in which to compif. · · f d k d · · · 1969 It was Z'berg's sceond conv1ct1on or run en r1v1n~ since . Under a state law effecitve Jan. 1. second drunken driving convic· Uons are punishable by a mandatory two days in jail. Z'berg, chairman of the Assembly Conservation and Natural Resources Committee, was arrested Nov. 17, 1972, after his car rear·ended another vehicle. There were no injuries. Courtney sentenced Z'berg to 30 days in jail, but suspended 28 days of the term for the duration of one-year probation. Re also fined Z'berg $62.5 and ordered him to participate in the courl's '4alcobollc re-education program.'' Ad Hoc Group Newport Council Backs Bridge Over Upper Bay Newport Beach councilmen formed a citi z.ens ad hoc committee Monday to expedite rebuilding of the Pacific Coast fJighw ay bridge over the Upper New°port Bay. The committee is also charged to Frot11 Page 1 DON NIXON. • • pleasure. He said be went to see Meier receive that country's C b r i s t o p h e r Columbus award. UPI said the trip may he tied to allegations by Meier that Donald Nixon sought personal financial gains by offering to use bis kinship with the Presideftt to win decisions favorable to the Hughes empire. Monday's indictments cha~e Meier and three others with shiftmg huge profits from deals with Hughes to Swiss bank accounts. U.S. attorney Devoe Heaton said the Indictment involves sales of mining claims exceeding $8 million to the Hughes Tool Company, which was then owned by Hughes. Meier was named 1n two lndictments returned by the Las Vegas Federal Grand Jury on two counts of COOS'J)iracy and on two counts of alleged tax evasion -1969 and 197D. Meier was . indicted last year for lncome tax evasJon for 1968. One conspiracy codnt charges Meier with defrauding the United States by obstructing the collection of income tax as a result of the sale of miriing claims by Alan Jarlson,· Las Vegas television newsman, to the Hughes Tool Company. Others indicted along with Meler on ·a second conspiracy count were Anthony Hatsis, 47, and James P. Cowley, 45, both of Salt Lake City, and Robert Kahan, 59, of Los Angele3, Hockey Player Records Loss coordinate all local interests and to com.e up with a des ign for the bridge that will be ae(eptable to the C41ifQl11ia Department of Transportation. Rebuilding and widening of the Upper Bay crossing of the highway was llsted as a top priority by the city's traffic consultant, Alan i\f. Voorhees. A unanimous vote to create the committee was made at the suggestion of Councilman John Stoie. "The state says It will take five to eight years before we get that new bridge," Store complained. "But I think we can get it much sooner than that if we push for it," Store said. S t o re said that with A proper coordination bridge construction could begin within three years. Council appo.intees to the Cit.ii.ens Ad Hoc Pacific C.oast Highway Crossing P I a n n i n g Committee include Ray Williams, Richard Clucas, Willard Wade, Roger Turner, Bob Shelton, and Marshall Duffield. Ryckoff Reports He'll Discontinue Fire Complaints Newport BeaCh Clly Councilman Paul Ryckotf, a frequent critic of the city's fire protection policies for Balboa Island. said Monday he's going to quit complaining for the time being. "We've checked into the procedures," Ryckoff told councilmen at a study session, "and we think the situation is under control." Ryckolf, who lives on the Island, complained last month that the fire tniclc on Balboa Island spends too mudr time of! the island. He also questlooed whelher the truck was in proper operating con- dition. Mrs.Popeil To Retrieve .Rolls Royce By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Ille Dall'f Pll1t ll•lf Eloise Popeil, who Is facing a court hearing on police charges that she con· spired to have her millionaire husband murdered, today is expected to' get back the Rolls Royce police conriscated dur-.. ing her arrest in Ne'NpOrt Beach a week ago. Reach ed today at her Newport Beach home, Mrs. Popeil said she had no comment to make on any aspect of. the police accusations that she and her boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 31, o! Santa Ana hired a Long Beach man to murder Samuel J. Popeil o! Chicago. Police claim the plot fell through when the bit man called the Chicago ltltcben gadget millionaire and told him of bis estranged wile's plan. According to police, ~frs. Popeil, 48, and Ayers allegedly wanted Popeil murdered before a pending divorce became final so that she could .inherit approximately one-third of his estate, estimated to be worth up to $200 million. Mrs. Popeil, who wsa freed on $100,000 bail raised by neighbors on Linda Isle and Harbor Island Road, i!' scheduled to appear in .municipal court in Long Beach Monday in the preliminary hearing in the case. She and Ayers both pleaded innocent to the conspiracy lo commit murder charges at their arraingments last week. Ayers is still in custody, apparenUy unable to raise the $100,000 bail set by Judg, Charles Litwin. The Popeils, who summered in their Linda Isle home, separated this summer and Popell filed for divorce In Chicago. Popeil will go to court there on Friday to seek an order giving him custody of the couple's two teenage daughters and abandonment of the $4,250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since their separation, Mrs. Popeil and her two daughters have been Jiving in Newport Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday night at her home at 519 Harbor Island Road shortly afU!r Ayers drove up to the bayfront home in the Rolls. 1 Police confiscated the car as evidence in the case, but Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said today it has been authorized for release. Irvine Company Hosts Agencies Of Government The Irvine Company will meet \Vednesd ay with a task force of 10 governmental agencies it wants to review and approve plans for its 10.000-acre coastal sector between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The meeting will begin at 10 a.m. in Irvin~ Company offices where the participants will be shown topographical models of the property. A tour of the coastal sector will follow a buffet lunch. Seruan Movies Appelllate -Court ·Bucked by Judge Judge \Villiam Murray is bucking an appell ate court for the second time on the same issue in his belief that an inter\•iew carried out while the patient ls wlder the influence of the "truth serum" sodium amytol Js admissible evidence: His controversial ruling in the Parson trial Is identical to that he made two y~ ago In the murder tria1 of fonner Marine Mark Allen John.son o! San Clemente. Judge Murray's thinking In John3on'• first trial was rejectod by the Fourth District Court o! Appeals which ordered a new trial. But he drew powerful support in that decision from di.ssenUng JusUce Robert Gardner of Newport Beach. Gardner vigorously defended . Judge Murray's ruling and commented: 11This case represents a classic reflection of the atlilude of the courts towards U1e rules of evidence which I find completely out of step with the facts of life as they exist today." Johnson, nOw 22, was found guilty '"" of second degree murder in hi8 first nonjury trial on charges that he stabbed and killed his pregnant wile, Coonle, 22, in the couple's Monterey Lane Ralph Deaver, Phone Company Exec11tive, Dies Funeral services are s c b e d u 1 e d Thursday for longtime Pacific Telephone Company . executive and yachtsman Ralph H. "Jeff" Deaver, who died ~Ionday. Rites for Mr. Deaver, a 29-year Harbor Area resident, will be at 2 p.m. in St. Andrews Presbyterian Oiurch with Dr. Qiarles H. Dierenf.ield officiating. Mr. Deaver served with Pacific Telephone for 43 years and would have been 69 years old neit month. He was a member ol the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club, the H o a g Memorial Hospital 552 Club and staff commodore of th e Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Survivors include hls wile, Billie, of the home at 1919 Oiubasco Drive, Corona del Mar; a son, Richard of Corona de! ~tar ; a daughter, Nancy McDowell of Cincinnati,10hio ; a brother, Lloyd Dea- ver of Siena ti.fadre, and five grand- dlildren. The family suggests m e m o r i a I contributions in Mr. Deaver's name to the Radiation 'Iberapy lreatment unit at Hoag Memorial Eospital. · Funeral services and interment are under direction of Pacific View Memorial ~ark and Mortuary, Corona del Mar. Zonta Club to Hear I Noted Space Expert " apartment. llls second jury trial ended in a lesser verdict of voluntary manslaughter after the controversial truth serum interview was barred from evidence before the jury. Both lawyers In the Parson trial commented late Monday that, whatever the verdict, the issue is sure to go before the Supreme COurt. . . From Page l SAUNA ••• that any spare thne she had was devoted to the Catholic church, Catholic youth programs and the PTA . Mrs. Parson broke down and wept at the end of the first movie as ahe told Dr. Benton how l\faria took possession or her body, donned sexy rlothes that she would ne ver have worn under normal conditions and set off for local bars in a hunt for men and sexual relationships. l\1rs. Parson, who has been known to her family and friends from an early age as Betty, again named several of the many men she has known over the past three years. She listed among her favorite bars in the hunt for extramarital mateJ the Newporter Inn and the Stuft Shirt in Newpart Beach. "When I'm Marla I Just -t to nm away," she hesltanUy mumbled under the ln!luence of the lnlth drug. "Maria wants sex and · she wants to be held by a man-one thing leads to the other." She also relates in both interviews the natur~ of the dreams she states she has experienced alm~t nlghUy since her ordeal ·in the 1'10-degree sauna room. l\frs. Parson tells Benton of being imprisoned in a cube of ice, of being carried along in a 'flow of hot lava and of looking down from the sky at boiling, steaming wat.er. H Maria comes out of the top of my head and takes over my· soul,'' the redhead tells Dr. Benton. "I fight her and fight her but 90metimes she is too strong for me." Lewis stated Monday that Mrs. Parson still eludes her husband and family when she is dominated by the Maria personality an ddrives off alone from the Anaheim home. Mrs. Parson !old Dr. Benton In both interviews that she will often oHer her husband and family the excuse that she needs a loaf of bread or a paJr of stockings to escape from the home when Maria takes control. Lewis said Dr. Benton, two other psychiatrists who have examined Mrs. Parson and Lewis himself while the lawyer was Interviewing Mrs. Panon in his San Francisco office have an been invited tO join Mn. Parson at a local bar and receive her sexual fa v""' when she suddenly beoame Marta Fl'OlllPagel FREEWAY ... Los Angeles Sharks professional hockey player Steve Sutherland should have left a goa lie to tend Ws front door during a wee kend road trip. Ryckoff said that following a meeting with City Manger Robert L. Wynn and Fire Chief Leo Love, be now believes that firemen are careful to leave the island only when traffic is light enough to allow their easy return. Dr. Krafft Ehricke, noted space expert, He also conceded that any equipment will address Newport Harbor Zonta Club "The sole purpose of tomorrow's meeting is to familiarize the agency representatives with the property so when they see our proposals and models, they will be able to tie plans to reality," said Irvine Company vi ce president Richard Reese. intersect the Newport Freeway, run along the current alignment of Bristol . Street to MacArthur Boulevard, and down MacArthur to Bonita Canyon. A burglar pried the door in his absence from the apartment at 7302 W. Ocean Front, in Newport Beach and a neighbor discovered it standing open, Sutherland told police Monday. He said he checked his belongings and found the intruder had taken $500 worth of valuables, including his television set and assorted stereo equipment. " Two Candidates Take Out Papers Fourth District City Councilman Milan Dostal and Newport Residents United President Ellis Glaz.ier today, as expected, obtained their nomination papers £or April 9 Newport Beach City Council ra ce. G1azier is one of three announced candidates for the Third District seat to be vacated by CoupcUman.. earl Kymla. Other District Three contenders are Realtor Peter Barrett and acmuntant John McKerran. So far , there have been no challengers: against Dostal in bis dbtrict. Two other seats representing the First and Sixth districts will also be filled by voters . London Railway Workers Strike LONDON (AP)' -Most of Britain's railway engineers struck for 24 hours today and commuters relying on cars ·snarled traUlc In London and · other cities. . The trafflc congestion was less severe than expected In some areas. Some commuters apparently were staying home aa they did last week when a ane-day rail stoppaae caused maaslve tramc Ja1M . All PIS8Cn~r 11'1lin service was halted, but some freight traina kept running. r is bound to have occasional mechanical members and their guests at an Amelia problems. Supply Boat Sinks Eamart Day dinner Saturday. Costa Mesa officials, who first became aware of the omissioo last week, have been working to have the route reinstated in this year's budget. Ryckoff warned, ho"·ever, that he Ehricke l'las played a key role in inlends to continue keeping a cloce eye AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) development of the U.S. space shuttle on Balboa Island fire station operations. An American supply boat for oil drilling system for the Rockwell International "The houses are so close tol{ether platforms in the North Sea sank today Olrp. His speech will be delivt>red that we're really vulnerable,'' said the ofr the Dutch coast, but all 10 crew fotlowing a banquet in the Empire Room Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett said Monday be would appeal to Governor Reagan if necessary to keep the freeway island resident. "And we've got to be members were reported rescu'ed. of the Newporter Inn. sure that we 're getting the best fire 1 -"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-protection possible." I construction on schedule. From Pagel TAPES .•. that Watergate was discussed during the 18 ~2-minute segment now obliterated by a loud buzz. The experts roncluded that the buzzing "originated in the noise picked up from the electrical power line to which the recorder was connected."• They also concluded the re bad been conversation on the tape at one time although they believe there is "no technique that could recover intelligible speech from the buz.z. section." They sai d they had been able to find three speech fragment s, each less th an one second in length, on the tape at places where tests Indicated there had be<n brief ln!errupUon In the erase ar.d re-record process. M~• Woods testified that she had an "accident" while attempting to transcribe th e tape Oct. t. She said she was distracted by a telephone call and apparently pushed the "rec::ord" button by mistake while attempllng to stop the machine and apparenUy kept her foot ori a pedal that kept the machine in motion. thus etastng it. But she tesUfied repeatedly she could have caused a gap or no more than 411 to five minutes and not \he lull 181> minutes. .. " Couple Found Dead SAN F:RANCISCO (UPI) -The bodies of Cynthia WubJni!on, It, and Maurice McFarland, ff, were found Mondi,)' wttb bullet& In their head Ill what police de!K71bed as a m-u,. d • r • • u I c la e . I DRAPERY SPECIAL COTToN/RAYON CASEMENT Ivory l A11tiq~, Gold • •~;, v:~." SALE PRICE $2.96 YD. '7he Trouble With . . Some Self-Made M11n ts That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their f(eeipe ." Maurice Seitter C.ARPET SPECIAL HUGE SELECTION OF tflGH QUALITY REMN~NTS AT LAR,GE SAVINGS! ALDEN'S CARPETS e . DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave • COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUU: M ... Tin 1'ltllll., t te IJJO -I'll. f te f -SAT. f:JO le I ' . I • ,. I - Gr8D"e Coa8t ~" e EDITION Today's Fln •I N.Y. Stoeks VOL 67, NO. 15, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TtJESDA Y, JANUARY 15, 1974 c TEN CENTS Mesa Law Endorsed-No Sign of 'No' Votes . By RUDI NJEDZll!lSIU Of .. Dlltt', ........... 'l1lo c..ta Mesa 1lp ordinance paaed .. 1!nt t..i MOllday ntcht, winning 1 A endonement fro!'1 the city Plal)nlng ::oriunilalon. Colmnlaaloners toot the vote following -half boors ol pro and coo by homeowner• and who, despite cl I v I d e d appeared to be advancing compromise on t h e controversial .ordinance. commission recommendation u n d e r Nathan L. Reade wu the only member advisemenL ol the five-man commlaalon to abstain Minor changes In the sign ordinance from the vote. Reade is employed by softened the impact on the businesaman the chamber of commerce, one of the and although Eugene Bergeron, president protagonists in the battle over the sign o! the c.osta Mesa Clamber of ordinance. COmmerce, said he had not suffldently The final decisloo on the·sign ordinance studied them, he was of the opinion wW be taken ln three weeks following _ that the newer version is "a tremendous a second public hearing before the Costa improvement" over the original draft Mesa City Council. At that time of the ordinance. councilmen wiU take the planning Extremely complex, the ordinance propoees to cut down the overall amount ol signing in C.OSta Mesa by lowering the height and size of signs and phasing out erlstlng non-conforming signs under a slidini amortization schedule. To safeguard the small businessman, every site no matter how small, would be allowed a minlmwn of 75 square feet ol signage. Signs generally would be accorded on the basis of one square foot per lineal foot of frontage, with (See ORDINANCE, Page %) ~aps ~aused by on Nixon's Tapes 'Erasures' Freeway Ca_mpaign Autlwrized 111 JOUN ZALLER Of .. .., ........... N-rt Beach Mayor Dooald A. Mclnnll WU authorized MOllday by the city coundl to fight for reinatatemeot II the Ccrooa de! Mat Freeway In 11111 year'• •late ""-rtalloa bvdge!. • _The councll gave inlormel llfinmtloc\ ol Ill -" for tho ""°'"'Y after die mayor Bild be wanted an the help he could get In trying to motve the now dormant freeway. "'Ibis ls one cl the few areas around here where all the agendes Involved are in agreement that a freeway needs to be developed and I think we sboold p ahefd with u:· the mayor said. .Mcinnis was referring to t b e ,_meot between -Newport Beach, Colla Mesa1 and Irvine that the freeway oiiifil to oe built to relieve tnflic ~ on MacArthur Boulevard and Bt'lstol Streel The Callfomla Deportment of Tramportatloa cliaclooed lut week that ii ii deltylng ooostructlon of liii Ccrooa d<l Mar Freew1y because ol a Jag bi guollne tax recelpll. • Bidding for construction of the first l!lllJo« llnk ol the freeway near Bonita Canyon bad been acbeduled f o r . February. , CoWlcllmen took no formal vote on Mcinnis request f0< 111pporl\ but they ,. .. clear verbal support to his pol!tioo. · oiwe have to few chances to agree with Coota Mesa that I think we ooght tO follow tbro<Jib with this one," said · Vlao Mayor Howard Rocers at one point lit the dlacuuklll. .The pt~ Ccrooa del Mar Freeway Si planned to originate al the San Diego Freeway bet_,,, Brlatol Stnet and i)1"tew Rood In c..ta Mesa. ,Jt would then road IOUtheuterly, lntmect the Newport Freeway, nm aJooc the current altgnment o1 Bristol S!reet to MICArthilr Boulevard, and down MacArthur to Bonita Canyon. ' • . Or ... e ...... . t It'll be brjpt and ltlllDy &pin 1 Wednetdar, 1ccord in1 to the -tiler aervlce, with lllilbtlY cool· er temperatune aJoag the Orange , CouL lflibl Ill M II the beocbel riltng to the low IOI ID!ud. LoWI ~t !$to lO. --INSIDE TODAY Colcrn<I Sa!lclen and hlr wife, Clatolla, ar1 1tu1111 Heublein Inc., th< 1ucce1SOI' fried chicken firm for mu1'tlng tit• Colmltl'1 ...... '-• and lilitnt1• in ,,,..,..~!Ill 1ome productf. Ste lto'l/ Pag• JJ. L. M. atrlf ti -.. ==-»N " (,.....,.. ,, --. --. ... , ... ,. " ,_ 11·11 ='==" ,:, ::.·~ r. -" :=.':. ·: --I ,.,.... ...., 11 -.... ........... 1>11 ,...... ft -" -. ._.. ..... , .... --. Obliteration llllllfrl llM llY •l"l'N Alllllll Deliberate, Experts Hint SIGN ORDINANCE TAKES AIM AT COSTA MESA'S CLUTTER Dr1winv Shows The Way It's Not SuppoMd To a. ~~~~~~~~ WASIUNG'l'ON (UPI) -'!be 1811: mip.ute gap in ooe of President Nixon's key Watergate tapes was caused by erutni and re-recording the tape .. many u nine times, tedmlcal expen. reported to U.S. Judie Jolin J, Sirica Donald Nixon Termed today.. . J"ai11ttr, the Gperts said, 'the erutm!I. bid -..-by. hand operatioo ol the mid!lni. OD wtilcb II was played -. mt by a foot pedal al Nixon's secretary, ilooe Mary WoOds, lnatsted under oath ~ ll!ed while working with tho tape. Furwzis Over Reports . . UPI T ......... Fill 'er Vp? 'Ibe expert.I said there was evidence the tape contained conversation but that there was no known way of recovering an intelligible versk>n. Without saying so directly, the penel of six audio experts strongly suggested In thel; final regort m the June 20, 1912 tape that ill obliteration apparently was deliberate. 0 Magnetic signatures that we have measured directly on the tape show that the _bpzzlng aounds were put on the tape m the process of erasing and By L. PETEii. KlUEG Of * D1Uy PO" SI ... President Nixon's brother F. Donald Nlion of Newport Beach today was furious over allegations carried.,, a United Press International story Monday that )le profited from tbe fraudulent 1 sale of stock to billionaire Howard Huabes. Nb:on said bis only Ue to Hughes wu through former good friend Jolin Meier, a former Newport Beach rtsident and form..-mining consultant for Hughes. Meler was indicted Monday In Lu Vegu on charges of Income tax evaaion and fraud agalnlt the federal government Nixon for some time bas been predicting the 1lndictment aod contended that Meier brought in the Nl.xm name In hopes thlhgs would gil '8-'Y for bim. This sign in frqnt of the Calvary Baptist Church tells "veryone that here is one "service station" that isn't closed on Sundays. The church is located in·Camas, WaSh. -re-recording at least five, and perhaps as many as nine, separate and contiguous segmenll .. : The 18.!Hnlnute segment cou1d. Dot have been .produced by any sing1e, cootinuOWI operation," the report said. "Mr. Meier is in very deep ~e," Nixon said. "But beyond that, l have no comment, Sauna Trial Judge ·Okays Two Truth Serum Movies By TOM BARLEY Of .... DeflY Pfi.t ..... When Maria Parson completes her testimony from the witness stand today in the Orange County Superior Court sauna bath trial tbe jury wlll view a movie 'made' While she was under the influence of a so-ealled "truth serum." Judge William Murray made the ruling that enables attorney Marvin Lewis Sr. to screen two vi deo tape films in the courtroom. The decllion came after a four-bour out-of-court session Monday In the offices of Dr. Deane A. Benton, the Santa Ana psycblatrlal. 0 1'11 let 'em in," Judge Murray said Neighbor's Call Heads Off Blaze . A nechbor who ~ smoke beglnnln( to pour from !leneoth the ..... of a c..ta Mesa borne M.00.y nl(bt called tbe Fire · Department. l'lremen quckiy extirwulohed the atUc ltalze 11 the John Pyle honie at 81~ ItDowen Place, about 6 p.n, acoonllng to lnYM!gators. Damage was ' J lated at to ln~tors. Damage wu ll9ted at -•. '!be bla .. ;:·whldl ""'"'81ed in the .uic, wu bllmed oa a faulty unit In a forced-air system. ~ ti the lime and, If bad{not noticed the -.. ~. dlniflo· could •bave i-i fir -lll•allplM Nici. I -.. ·after a bitter argument between Lewis and Holiday Health Spa attorney Donald A. Ruston on the admisaibUlty ol the two films. One of the movies run by Dr. Benton in the privacy of his office depicts his interview last Oct. 25 with• Mrs. Parson, 50, when she is not under tbe lnfiuenoe ol aodium amytol. The second movie, shot by the psychiatrist last Dec. 19 and Jan. 2, depicts the buxom redhead responding to his questioning In lbe slow, slurred manner lnd•aced by bis Injection of the tranquili1.er. The scr<enJng was carefully tept from the jury omW today. · Lewis b e II e •. e s the movies will considerably enhance bis hopes for a favoroble ,verdict In the II million lawsuit agalnllt the health spa. Ruston angt'Uy condemned tbe movies as "self lttViDR, leading and suggestive and ertremely inflammatory" ·a n d repeatedly pointed out to Judge Murray Iba! be bad DO opportunity to Cl'Otll eiamine Mn. Paraon In e l t b e r circumstance, ~ or otherwise. Dr. Benton argued before be showed the film! that II wu only fair for the jury to see Mrs. Parson at her lllOll relaxed moment• which could ooly. be In the office of her poydll1tr1111. ~er courtroom testimony has been ollmd under clrCUlllltinces that ire particularly adverse .., ant penoa auflerlng the kind of Pl)'Chl1trtc tr1um1 Mn. Parson iJ undet'Kolnl. Benton told Judge Milml1 and the -two lawyer1 • Mrs. ......... Ill-undir ~ (Sot SAuNA, ....... l j .• Slrica, who recessed hearings into the tapes lS3Ue last month while awaiting the experll' report, immediately called an open court hearing at which the expert:ll were summoned to testify. Copies of the report were given to spedal prosecutor Leon Jaworski and his staff and to White House lawyers at a meeting with Sirica this morning. The White House jssued a statement saying the experfs' rep<rt had been received and was under review, and that "II would be altogether incorrecl and improper for premature judgments or conclusions to be reached" about the tape at this Ume. The tape involved a conversation Nixon had wilh then White· House chief of staff H. R. Haldeman on the first (See TAPES,_Pl(e %) CHART -to Get .Freeway Plans '!be proposed two-way frontage f0< the extens1on o1 the Newport Freeway through COllta Mesa will be esplalned for members ol the Citizens Harbor Area Researcl! Teem (CHART) 'lbumay morning. Speaker Bill Hoffman, president ol . the Eutskle Property 0 w o e rs Association, will discuss the plans at 7:30 a.m. at the Glendale Federal Savings and Loan Office, 2300 Harbor · Blvd., C:O..ta Mesa. The Showdown ' John Wa y ne Off w H ar.vard LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Newport Belch resident Jolm W11119 saddled up 1 jetliner Mooday and belded eaat for a lhowdown II Generatiotl Gap. WAYNE Ill NOT 1 man tot.,.... a challenge lo have It out, DWI lo man, and that 's wbat he received from the unl'll'rslly's satire magazi .... the Haro. vard Lampoon. The editors wrote bim c.'baUenglng him to abow just how tough be IJ, asking U be ii wlllinl to face up to "a gang that would rather quote you Mars or Mao Tie-tung than spit In your eye" and face demootra- ton and counteNlemonstrators. "I don 't tnow a damned thing about It except they challenged me to come,". growled Wayne, boarding a plane for the East. "I figure the Harvard boys and I are at opposite ends of the spectrum. They SU(lested I didn't have ~courage to go." . THE HARV ARD EOrroRS ha .. promised to welcqipe Wayne with • mili- tary convoy, a mock c:owbo)'Hlld·lndlans lhootoul, a •'itampede of 10me ki,.t of mammal,'' and a ouestlon and answer aeaalon after the llhowlnc of bis latest movie, "McQ." '1It bal the matings of a real 111ly lnclden~" Lampoon President Jim Downey said In •ppan!lll dellgb~ · The ~ke wu unfaaed ao Isa 1trade out for the llhowdown. "I hear the lut guest they hid at -ol 6-thlnp wu Linda i.o..ll<e," he Aid In _ hll poi:tlDI llhoL "I gum she met the chalienp." . -' --~ - • . - other than lo say thooe lnvesUgalorl are going to have IOme red taces too," be said. In its story Mond311 UPI a~ the Senate W a t e r g a t e C.Ommittee is inve91igating the posslbUlty that Doo8\d Nixon received "substantial sums" dt money !rom former Hughes aides f<i- his help . in mining claim ventures.. The story linked Donald Nixon to Meler because of a trip the two made to the Dominican Republic In 1969. Nixon clainu the irip was purely pleasure. He said be went to see Meler receive that country's Ch r ls to p·b er Columbus award. • UPI aald the trip may be tied to allegations by Meier that Donald Nlson sought •personal financial galDI by offering to use his . kinship with the President to win decisions fa\IOiable to th& Hughes empire. Monday's indJctments cha~e Meier and three others with shifting huge profill frotnkals with Hu~isa bank accounts. ----- U.S. attorney Devoe Heaton said the indi~t involves sales of mining claims exceeding $8 mill ion to the Hughes Tool Company, which was then owned by Hughes. Pt1eier was named in two ind.ictmenll returned by the Las Vegas Federal Grand Jury on two counts of conrpi:acy and on two countsillf>f alleged tax evasion -1969 and 1970. ~Ieier was lodlcted la.st year for income tai evasion for tfMla. One conspiracy count charges Meler with defrauding the United States by obstructing the collection of income tu. as a resu1t of the sale of mining claim~ by Alan JarlBOn, Las Vegas television newsman, to the Hughes Tool Company. Others indicted along with Meier on a second conspiracy count were Anthony Hatsls, 47, and James P. Cowley, 46, both , of Salt Lake City, and Robert Kahan, 59, ol Los Angelet. Realtors Board To Hear Raciti . Costa Mesa City Councilman Dom RactU wUI talt about bla efforll to Improve Cost.a J.1esa's west side Thursday wben he speaks at ~wporl Harbor-OISta Mesa Board of Realtors. The breakfast meeting is scheduloil for a at the Balboa Bay Club. Commuters De layed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Commuters riding the CQlllputer-qe 8-y Area Rlpkl Transit S)'llem to San Franciaco were delayed up to ,.. boor Monday beca,. -!be. doors reflloed lo open autom1ticall).- , , .. 2_!'AILY PILOT c Sertnn Movies • Mrs.Popeil To Retrieve Rolls Royce . ~--•••• ca\et\d•' TONIGHT NEWPORT-ME.SA SCHOOL BOARD - Reg ular meeting, City C o u o c l I Appellate Court Bucked by Judge By JOANNE REYNOLDS Chambers. 7o30 p.m. ot "'• 01nr 1"11111 '''" UC1 LECTURES -"Happiness In Judge William ?.turray is bucking an appellate court for the second time On the same issue in hls belief that an interview carried out while the patient is uoder the influence of jhe "trutb serum" >Odlwn amytol Is admissible evidence. Eloise .Popeil, v.·ho is facing a court Creative Awareness,'' Roo1n S I o bearing on police charges that she con· University High School, 4771 Campus spired to have her millionaire husband Drive, Irvine, 1,10 p.m. "Professional nt ed tod · ~~ b k ,.Practices In Hoeing Ind ustry," Room mu er , ay IJ ~x.-~ to get ac 161 Humanities Jfall, 7-9:30 p . m . the Rolls Roy~e police confiscated dur· "Scientific ltiedlcine for the Layman: Ing her arrest m Ne•1>0rt Beocn a week Cancer.c:...Freshman .Leoture Hall, Med. His controversial ruling in the Parson trial is identical to that he made two years ago in the murder trial of former Marine Mark Allen Johnson o! San Clemente. ago. Surge I Bkig., 7-10 p.m. Reacbed today at Iler Newport Beach WEDNE'>DAY JAN II home, Mrs. Popell said she had no COLLEGE PARK ' HOMEOWNERS comment to make on any aspect of ASSOCIATION -Regular meeting the police accusations that she and her ,Mayor Hammett and Planning Oiief JLldge Murray's thlnltlng In Johnson's first trial was rejected by the Fourth District Court o! Appeals wlilch ordered a new trial. But he drew powerful support in that decision from dissenting Justice Robert Gardner of Newport Beach. boyfriend, Daniel AyeNI, 37, of Santa Arnold Hamala, speakers, College Park Ana hlred a Long Beach man to murder School 7·30 pm Samuel J. Popeil ol Chicago. BASKETBALL OCC F II Police claim the plot fell through when -. . at u erton the hit m8n called the Chicago kitchen , JC, 8 p. m. E~tanc1a High at FAison, gadget millionaire and told him \or his 7 P·~· Magnolia at Costa Mesa, 7 p.m. estranged wife's plan. !\farina at Newport Harbor, 7 p.m. According to police, Mrs. Popeil, 48, ,. AL C 0 H 0 L ISM _LECTURE .. Gardner vigorously derended Judge Murray's ruling and commented : "Thii; case represents a classic refl ection of the attitude of· the courts tow ards the rules or evidence which I find completely out or step with the facts of life as they exist today." and Ayers allegedly wanted Popeil Alcoholism -A~ Add1ct1ve Disease, murdered before a pending divorce D~. Rober~ Schmitz speaker, Raleigh became final so that she could inherit Hills Jfos pital. 1507 East 16th Street, approximately one-third of his estate, Newport Beach, 8: 15 p.m. Information estimated to be worth up to $200 million. 645-5707. ,_irs. Popell , Y•ho wsa freed on $100,000 UCJ . LECTURES -"Fundamentals bail raised by neighbors on Linda Isle of Arumal Care," Rm. 167 Steinhaw and }{arbor Island Road, it scheduled Hall, 7-10 p.m. "Cali!omia : ?.-1yths and to -8ppear in municipal court in Long Realitles," Room 178 Humanitles Hall Beach Monday in the prelimhlary 7-10 p.m. ' From Pagel hearing in the case. · She and Ayers both pleaded innocent to the conspiracy to commit murder charges at their arralngments last week. Ayers is stUI in rostody, apparently unable to raise the $100,000 ball set by Judgt Charles Litwin. , The Popells, who summered in their Linda Isle home, separated this summer and Popeil filed for divorce in Chicago. Popeil will go t6 court there on Friday to seek an order giving him custody of the couple's two teenage daughters and abandonment of the $4,250 monthly alimony and child support payments. Since lheir se paration, ?.1rs. Popeil and her two daughters have been living in Nel'.'port Beach. She and Ayers were arrested Tuesday nig ht at her home at 519 Harbor Island Road sho rtly after Ayers drove up to the bayfront home in the Rolls. Police confiscated the car 85 evidence In the case, but Newport Beach detective Ken Smith said today it has been authorized for release. From Pagel TAPES ••. working day after the June 17, 1972 Watergate bugging arrests. Haldeman's notes of that n1eeting, introduced into evidence earlier in Sirlca's court, show that Watergate \\'8S discussed during the 18 ~?-minutc segmenl now obliterated by a loud buzz. The experts concluded that the buzzing "originated in the noise picked up Crom the electrical power line to which the recorder was coonected." They also mncJuded there had been conversation oo the tape at one lime although they believe there is "no teclmique th.at could recover intelligible speech from the buzz aection." They said thoy had been able to find three speech fragments, each less than one second in length, on the tape at places where tests indicated there had been brief interruption in the erase ar.d re-record process. Miss Wood! testified that she had an "accident" while attempting to transcribe the tape Oct. 1. She said she was distracted by a telephone call and apparently pushed the "record'' button by mistake while attempting to stop the machine and apparently kept her foot on a pedal that kept the machine in .QlOtion, thus erasing it. Couple Found Dead SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The bodies of Cynthia W~hington, 19, and Maurice ltfcFarland, 45, were found Monday with bullets in their head in what police de!cribed as a murder -s ui c ide. OU.N•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM or.,. C..11 DAILY l'ILOT", w1111 wflleft k amblMS "'9 ......... P'rH .. ft P\lll!lslllill W It-. Drlflle C0.11 l'llOH.i.lng Com~IH'lr ...... r•HI •llllon1 •r• 11111111,htd, MO!ld•r lllrwoll l'rlHr. fer CO.I• MtH, Ntw1111r1 a..ctl, H1111!1ntlll!ll'llt~F-1tln Vtlley, UO- llldf. lrvln'1s..lltbldt fllCI S.n C:llfMni./ lffl J-C.,ltt,..,., A 1lnti. r .. S-1 lldltllll "' llU~lltl'ltd $.llurdtys •11111 ~.,.. TN ,rlMIJlll MIW.lnt '4tfll It •I UO w .. 1 .. , ftrtilf, CO.If "'-· Clllfomli, nut. lt•bert N. W1ff 'r•ldtnl Mid l"llblltflv J ed ll Curl•y \'kit ~I lrllll ~11,MINtw Ttl'"''' K•••il Editor nOM•t A. Myrphi11e MIMtlnt e:.i .... Clitrle• H. l••• Richt"4 '· Nill "-tlt11n1 ~ifll Edllln c:-_ ...... llD Witt lef Strttt Mtillnt Atltlrt11 1',,0 . lo.r ISM>, 92•2• .,_ Oflk" NfWllf\"f hlCfl: #l;i fiMwlllff 9Wltv1,. L..-tMd'lllflD l'wnt A- H11ru1...-a..dl1 Ul1J •-"' ttultv•f'd s.n c1tment1: JOJ Hol1ft It ca"'~ 1t .. r Tlf ....... C7141 64Jo4l21 Cl_.,... "4i ... th'M1 MJ.f611 °"'""'· un.. Or-.. c-.t """"""" ........,.., Ho lllwt ,......, lllwfrtl .... ...... -·-.,. ~ ......... '*""' .. "' ,...,...,... wlfMvt ....... .... ...... .,~ ......... . = -............ Cdltl ,,_, Ci-iii!!!"""'.' .......... ~ ...... __ .. Jf!t',,!f'I,',:'""""'' ...... ' From Pagel ORDINANCE • • • SAUNA .•. drugs and otherwise were idenUcal: th1t before she was trapped in the sauna room of the Orange health spa on a maximum area of 300 square feet. hf.arch 2, 1970, she was a happily married Several 1ype3 of sign gimmickry would Catholic woman whose life was devoted be prohibited by the ordinance. to her husband and seven children. Bergerott's organ i 2 at i 0 n initially She stated in both video tape sequences requested a three-to-one ratio of sign that any spa':'e tlme she had was devoted footage per frontage foot but in earlier lo the CalholiC church, Catholic youth di.scilssions with the commission, settled programs and the PT A. fer 1.5 square feet . . h1rs. Parson broke down and wept There was no immediate reaction fro:n at the end of the first movie as she the chamber of commerce on a counter told Dr. Benton how · J\.iaria took proposal by the planning department possession of her bod y. donned sexy to Allow the 75 square-foot minimum clothes that she l'.'OUld never have worn but to keep the one·tc><1ne ratio originally under normal conditions and set off proposed. for local bars in a bunt for men and Planning Commfsslol\ers f 0 u n d sexual relationships. themselves deadlocked 2·2 on one Mrs. Parson, who has been known provision of the ordinance which would to her family and friends from an early limit sign applicants to a choice of age as Betty, again named several of only one sign from each of the two the many men she has known over sign groups. Group One includes ground the past three years. . .signs, Pl'C!jecting signs and roof signs She Jisted among her favorite bars ~ Group Two wall signs and canopy ln the hunt for extramarital mates the signs. Newporter 1nn and the Stuft Shirt in Commissioners Oiic C. Clarke and Newport Beach. Ed McFarland were in favor of leaving "When I'm Maria I st want to the restrict.ion in the ordinance '"t;~'-!::ef'wiJa~y~,'~' 11s~he~~ ntly mumbled safeguard against c I u t t er,. but under e of the truth drug. commission Otairman H. J. "Jimmie" "Maria wants sex and sbe wants to Wood and John C. Leonhardt declared be held by a man-one thing ieads the section was overly restrictive. to the other." During the public hearing portion of She also relates In both interviews the planning session numerous busines,, the nature of the dreams she states o w n e r s , a n d s i g n i n d u s t ry she has experienced almost nightly since representatives termed the en t Ire her ordeal in the 170-degree sauna room. ordinance too restrictive. Mrs. Parson tells Benton of being Some, including those representing Imprisoned in a cube of ice, of being lt1ark C. Bloome, Security Tires and carried along in a flow of bot lava Stearnmaster Cal]let Cleaners, predicted and o! looking down from the sky at a reduction of overall signing would boiling, steaming water. have dire effects on business. i·Maria comes out of the top of my They said they had noticed as much head and takes over my soul," the as a 20 percent drop in business as redhead tells Dr. Benton. "I fight her a result of energy conservation measures and fight her but sometimes she is which included turning off some signs too strong for me." and turning others orr earlier in the Lewis stated 11.1ooday that !.1rs. Parson evening. ' still eludes her husband and fam ily when Homeovmers , on the other hand. . she is dominated by the Maria personality argued that heavy s.igning is not and dtives off alone from the Anaheim necessarily correlated to business and home. pointed to Newport Beach and Irvine J\1rs. Parson told Dr. Benton in both as examples to the contrary. interviews that she will often offer her Speaking for the homeowners. htrs. husband and family the excuse that Monica Viotlo, said the difference she needs a loaf of bread or a pair between Costa 1Mesa and Newport Beach of stockings to escape from the home is illustrated most convincingly on 17th when Maria takes control. Street, a street shared by both cities. Lewis said Dr. Benton, two other "You can tell witliGut a sign or psychiatrists who have exsmined Mrs. anything where Newport Beach stops Parson and Lewis himseU while the and where Costa Mesa begins. Why?" lawyer was interviewing Mrs. Parson she asked. in his San Franci!CO office have all "The businesses are virtually the been invited to join Mrs. Parson at same, the streets are the same width a local bar and receive her sexual and in the same state of repair f h b ddenl bee '!aria Ol" disrepair. Why is it that you can avors w en s e su y ame 1• tell the difference. Newport Beach is during the interview. tastefully done. It's almost luxurious. Bu~ when you hit Costa Mesa the whole ' feeling changes. It throttles you. It's extremely garish ." However one business manager argued that there is nothing wrong with a business dist rict looking like a business district and one. sign company executive suggested tij?t part s of Costa Mesa might look worse without t'he signs. "~f y,·e look out all those ratty looking signs we might find out that we have a bunch of ratty looking buildings," commented Les Scott of Federal Sign and SignaJ Corporation. Others suggested that Costa A-fesa begin its sign reform by concentrating first on the elimination of billboa™ which advertiae products and services not direcUy concerned with the benefit of Costa Mesa. That theme was picked up at the end o! the session by Chairman Wood who urged Mayor Jack Hammett Md other council members sitting In the audience to "do something as soon as possible about passing a billboard or- dinance. Transient A1·rested LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -A Geort1la transient, who allegedly tried to extort 15,tllltl from Continental Airlines by threatening to blow up an airliner, was arre!ted at a downtown department store Monday when ho tried to pick up the money. lb• FBI said. Jeue R. Blngl!am, -40. Porterdale, .... booked In COW1ty joil on a federal charge or threatening destruction of an n!rcralt. Ralph Deaver,. Phone Compa11y Executive, Dies Funeral services are s ch e d u 1 e d Thursday for longtime Pacific Telephone C.Ompany executive and yachtsman Ralph H. "Jef!" Deaver, who died Monday . Rites for Mr. Deaver, a 29-year Harbor Area· resident, will be at 2 p.m. In St. Andrews Presbyterian Olurch with Or. Olailes H. Oierellfleld officiating. Mr. Deaver served-' with Pacific Telephone for 43 years and would have been Ill years old next month. He was a member of the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club, the Ho a g Memorial Hospital 552 Club and stall · commodore of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Survivors Include his wile, Billie, o! the home at 1919 Ctubasco Drive, Corona del l\.far ; a son. Richard of Corona del Mar : a daughter, Nancy Mcllo~ll o! CinciMati. Ohio: a brother, Lloyd llea· ver of Sierra Madre, end fJve IJ"Md· children. The family 1uggeall memo r la I 1 cn1tributlons in Mr. Deaver'• name to the Radlallon Therapy treatment unit at Hoag Memorial F.oopllal Fun<ral oervlcet and Interment ire under di-of Pacific View MemorlAI Park and Mortuaey,.Coronl de! Mu. Johnson, MW 22, was found guilty ol .second degree nlurder Jn his first nonJury trial on charges that he stabbed and killed bis pregnant wife, Connie, 22, in the couple's Monterey Lano apartment . His secord jury trial ended In a leaaer verdict of voluntary manslaughter after the controversial truth serum interview was barred from evidence before the jury. Both lawyers In the Parson trial commented late Monday that, whatever the verdict, the laue ls sure to go be!°"' the Supreme Court. Power Plant Gets Support ·In Newport Newport Beach cQuncilmen ?.fonday night unanimously adopted a resolution supporting the expansion of the San Onofre nuclear generating plant. The California coastal commission will meet next mooth to recon.sJder its decision to kill the Soothem califomia Edison O>mpony propoal to enlarge the blufftop station. • Councilmen cited the current power shortage and said it is likely to become more acute. And they pointed out that the expansion would involve · • o n I y approximately one half mile of coastline, but would meet the urgent demand for increased electrical pOwer and at the same time conserve between 25 and 30 mJllion barrels of oil per year." They said they felt the adverse environmental impact of the pr'oject would be minimal. The endorsement came after a lengthy and impassioned appeal to reject the resoluUon that waa made by Mrs. Judy Tracy, 706 Bison Ave., Newport Beach, a member of the city's Citizens Environmental Quality Control Advisory Conunlttee. That panel had endorsed the expansion but Mrs. Tracy said her statement represented the viewpoints of three memben who feel "the decision to expand nuclear fission plants is perhaps the most far reaching moral Issue of our time." . Mrs. Tracy cited the· poeslbijitie.s of nuclear accidents at both the generating plant and at the waste storage centers. She pointed o~t that some of ihe spent byproducts including plutonium-239 ' will require segregaUon from our environment.! for 240,000 years. "We must reach our minds beyond the entire tbne span of human experience to deal with plutonium-239," Mrs. Tracy said. She also talked about the dangers of radioactive materials being shipped from place to place across the country. While conctding the odds o1 a container coming open during: even a railroad derailment are low, "what about someone intent upon opening the 16 bolts Of the container?" she said. "The horrifying ~ibililies o [ terrorism. sabotage and blackmail. both at reactor sites and during shipment pinpoint our increasing vulnerability," she said. Mrs. Tracy told councilmen, "It is your moral mandate to call for a nuclear fi ssion moratorium and to call for the redirection of our nation's research priorities and funds to the environmental sarer SQU.rc'es of energy s u p p J y . 1 1 Super Scoop A 75-cubic-yard shovel dwarfs worker Robert Hamann at ibe Pu· body coal stri~ mine near Lenzburg, W. The shovel is pulled by a 9,500-ton mobile mechanical _behemoth ti mine coal deposits close to the surface. Afore stnp mIDJng may be done to offset oil short~ ages. 4,900 Arrested iii 1973 On Drunken Driving Raps Orange County Highway Patrolmen waged a war on drunken drivers last year, arresting 30 percent more than during 1972, a top Santa Ana CHP officer said today. Clpt. William . Fradenburg said his forces arrested more than 4,900 motorists for driving under the influence of alcohol last year compared to just over 3,500 the year before. Duril'lg the same peri9(1, Fradenburg said seven fewer persons died and 87 fewer were injured in accidents last year than during 1172· "We would like to think there Is a correlation between the ln'creue in drunk arrests and Injury accldenll and maybe there is.'' he said. '1Bul IL is too simplistic since there are other factors involved." · Fradenburg said. however, he gives a lot of weight to the relationship since statistics show that more than 50 percent of Injury or fatal accidents invol\-e drinking drivers. According to Fradenburg's . figures, tlO ZQnta Club to Hear Noted Space Expert Dr. Krafft Ehrlcke, noted space expert, will address Newport Harbor Zonia Club members and their guests at an Amelia Earhart Day dinner Saturday. Ehricke has played a key role in development of the U.S. space shuttle system for the Rockwell International Corp. His speech will be delivered following a banquet ln 'ltbe Empire Room of the Newporter Inn. persons were killed in traffic accidenUI during 1973 in the CJ-f P's jurisdiction as oppo!led to r7 the 'year before. The total number of fatal accidents declined, too , from 76 to 70. fradenburg said 2,718 peraons were injured in his area in 1973 compared to 2,916 the year before -a reduction of 200. There were a total of 1,895 injury aceidents in 1973 and 1,982 the yea r before. . l;'radenburg said his figures cover only the Santa Anaroffice's jurisdiction. The Westminster CHP bureau handle 1 freeway statistics in a portion of northwest Orange County but their statistics also include a large part ol. Los Angeles County, he said. "But sllice there are most J y incorporated cities over there, they do mostly freeway patrol," ~ said. "Our officers are responsible for all tratnc enforcement in the Wlincorporated land in the south county, which ii an enormous area." Fradenburg 1ald the accident reduction figure is partlcularly significant when the rapid growth of Orange County is taken into account. He said there are a lot more cars now than even a year ago -particularly in the south county. Fradenburg said there are other factors involved in the rate reduction, including weather conditions, highway improvements and possible auto trip reductions as the energy crisis took hold . But, he said. the drunken driving arrests play the key role and without them, many more people would have been kilhd or maimed on county highways and byway1. DRAPERY CARPET • SPECIAL COTTON/RAYON .CASEMENT IYory & Anfiq,,., Gold '~;,v:~~· SAL.E PRIDE $2,9&-'°· , ''The Trouble With Some Self-Mode Men Is That They Insist On Giving Everybody Their Recipe." Maurice Seitfer " SPECIAL HUGE SELECTION OF HIGH QUALITY REMNANTS AT LARGE SAVINGS! ALDEN'S- CARPETS • DRAPES ' 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 • ;,H .1:~ HOUU: ..... Tin '111111.. t te liJO -..... t te t -SAT. t:JO 19 I • " •• , 1